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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. MARCH 12, 1877, vowa ond promises, and lhence could | been studied by those riding abuve the carnage. nat take baek & word, though the word hadbeen | These destroyers, dashing afong the pathway of framdulontly obtalued. In the study of Justice | the human family, now aa a Hanntbal, and how he il gotten alang anty to the olifzation of a | 8 an Alvaagaiual the Netliorlands, now 13 a Pasha's downfsll: Twenlr dn&u before it hap- pened, the Sultan cafled the Grand Vizfer and told blm Uiat hie had been offered (through a fascinated_ Ly the study of the his- torikal Christ. Children wonld not giye up the golution of u puzzle, heeause they coull not bear to acknowledgn that they wera defeat- thiat T scnt, shall have everlasting life,"—(Lhat wan the present.)—* and aball not come Into cundemuntion or_judgment. That waa_ the RELIGION wns slone fn the office, he feft It until he had finlshied, When he came to look for it, it had disappeared, although he saw fu 1ylng there but future, When Chilst gpneared we shontd Lo | frim of well-known hankers Lerc) the s of | & st i e hy totn ; i o e aarament of & | Napvicon ngainat Enrope, now aa i Napolcon | ed. So 1L waa with unbellevers. Whils they | 1ike Him I we should arg Tim as He was. £2000,000 b (st Dimy i BHe FORresoniative | S e ahTooer conlectnred that The Great Discord that Divides | Promist, sud it sl b e e Fiven in | 111 agalonk Uermmiy: and even France, have | had wat . porticle of bellef in’ Christ a3 8 [ There wa nothig fn this world_ desceving of el has Al P Dher nentert | ayale b ectaed the spoll, and told tho Irishman of a Pawer whivh bag always shown the greatest Bostility to Midhat, snd whase Interest it was to displace him at any cost, ¢ But,’ sakd the Sul- tan, *knowing your Bdclity to mo, and your de- votion to the throne and your country, I have refused, and alwaga shall refuse, any stich pro- posale be the inducement offered whiat It may.! nfortunately, the reprasentative of this Power who triad to brite the Bultan with £2,000,000, appears to haye been successiul In corrupting s Ministers with a tenth of this sum.” e e + INDIANS. Affalrs at Red-Cloud Agency-~Savages Com- ing In, and Tielng Disarmed-—itting-Ball and Cragy-iforse Btlll Holding Oat. Bpectal Correspondence of The Tribune. Rzp CLoup AGEXCY, Neb,, March 8.—The Indians ¢rom the north are constantly arriving here, gising up thefr arins and horses to tho Guvernment. Little-Wolfy Big-Woll, Wild-TTog, and Duck, with familles,—all Head-Men of tho Cheyennee,~who left hers some time 8go, ro- tumed on the 28th uit. They wers {mmediate- Iy disarmed and dismounted by the Agent, First-Licut. C. A, Johnson, Four- teenth Infantry, and wero provided for by him. They stated that they had walked almost the entire distance from Tongue River, about 300 miles, to this Agency, and that they wero obliged to use what few ponics they had for food and for packing. ‘The snow was knco-deep from the Tongue River to the Belle Fourche, ‘They were alinost asked and starved when thoy arrived herey and were indeed giad to return, They pald that all of the Cneyennes (about 1,500) and most of the Bloux who left here from time to time, were anxlous to come fn, and had been trying to do so for sume time, but were prevented by the majority of the hostiles, who tuok many of their arms and ponlcs, and had sollicrs to watch them to prevent their cacape. They left twenty lod on Powder River,whom theyexpect In dally, claim that the Indians lTost sixteen killed and hsd a great many wounded in the Powder-River ficht, and that they suffered intensely from the extreme cold weather, Laving loat most of thelr lodgea and c!olhlnF In the fight. Two children were frozen todeath the day succeeding, and the greater portion of them were more or lesa frozen. Part of the Sjoux delegntion rent from here to cound] with tho Northern Indluns arrived here ypesterday, bringing with them a lostils mamed Plenty-Bear, After thoy had left here, i scems they had " o severe thine, owing to the deep show ond cold weather, They struck the Crazg-lorse eamp the World-=-Sermon by Prof. Swing. Havfor, they fuund themselves futerested In studying Him ns an historieal character—a phe- nonienun in whose study there was o certaln fascination which led thens on, In this way Christ was drawlng al} men to Him. Agaln, the indwelling Jmmortality of man’s nature would not he hushed, Chrlst crucified wan offercd a8 o refuge to man burdened and sunk in ain, and men were drawn to Hhn be- cause fle wns the only hope of snlva- tion, Binds in the winter flew towards Lhe Bouth, with the unlversal instinct for the sunnner land, and thonrands of en and women were spending the winter In Florkla bo- cause, such had bheen' the Inroads of disease, they dated not stay sway any lunger. 8o [t was with the sinner who had found Thope in Christ. Ile felt that he could not, dared not, stay away any longer, lest 1t be too late, thers atald away until Bome privato grief, some_family af- Slctlon, drew them towards Clirlast. 1t took thie last plagaie to subduc the Kr yptians and take them relent towards the children of Isracl and lct them go, nnd even then they started alier them ns soon ns, they had gone outside of the borders, Tha dealli of a child was olten the only thing that would bring a man or a woman to seek Christ, Fatiers aund mathers who were eatranged from Him for years on the death of a child were drawn to Him. under the fecliug that they must meet thelr loved one n{:nun and that thig dear hope could only be realized Dy thelr cotning hack to the Savior. And so Christ drew ail men unto Iim. The feeling nf gratitude at the perfect unsel- fisuyess of Chriat, tho alsolule sacrifice of Christ os an atonement for sin, stirred men's Diearts within them when they remembered that Ha was not 1lfted up for Hls'own sske but for thelrs. And so, by this nobler fmpuise of love and gratitude, Christ drew all men unto Hime seif. This doctrine of thelove of (God had. in even the short space of twenty years, succeeded that of the wrath of God. ‘This it was that had praduced such glorlous resulls In the great clties of the country duringe the great revival. Men who had been obatinute for years were belng drawn to the Cross by the doctring of the loye of Christ. It was nothing but the old, old story told with sl its saving power, and Christ, the zreat centro maunet, was drawlniz atl men unto Him, What cultivated audience would not, after listening to the perfurmance of the richest classleal musle, spplaud to the echo the singing by a sweet, pure volee of *lome, Bweet flome 1 It brought up recullections ol a)l that was dear $u 1ife, and the whole audience was moved. Suclh was the power of this fuerad- fcable home feeling, The old, old Mory was In- deed o)d, bt en had been reaponding to it for generatlons alter gencrations beeauso they had this Ioufglnu for home-rest, “1et us, satd Mr, Evercat, in conclusion, “1IfL up this Christ. FExalt Ilin fn the houses Thold, that our children ghall sce fIm lifted up to o to the meat-tuarket, a door or two awAy, and ask {f Majo wna there, Sure enough hio was, and, when the meat was glven him, ba lafd down the half<dollar. z Ona day my brother gave him a penny he went out, and soon returncd with rome meaty and went under the counter to eat it Ina fow minutes the market-man came In, and eaid he wanted to kill that dog. Hesald he went across the street for 4 few minntes, leaving s dog chinined i the market, and two nide porfere Tiouse steaks on the block. Ho lieand his dog bark, and lboked ovér, hut conld kca nobody, When hie eamo _back, howerer, thc steaka trerd gone, and on the floor lav the peuny. Maje waa called out, and the steaks were found in lis &ou'-m!on. My brother paid for this eplearean the splendid days of David and Rolomon there | kept dreadfully full the ranka «f poverly and waa to deep aequaintance with that Lroad Jus- | degradation, From such fountaing ‘mm oveed tee which might have gone far toward oqualiz- | toward our land-streams of human fife bitier lnl,r the cundition of mankind. waters recklne some aweetening branches in the Hut of the Tlebrew state, the study of rights | continent of the free. and wronus was still leas pn’mlnr and sucress- Ona grut cause must be confesred while Iu), and even more than fn the theocracy did so- | are secking the teasons of tho conflllet ins clely diylde itsell up (nto the bigh nndlow, the | dety. Our world has heen the victing, not only strong and Lhe weak. The classic States were a | of bad politics_ahd of bad niorals, but ol had Yo atep forward from tho Orlental despotisms; | philosophiy, The degradation bf Inbor made for, tn the Eastern Kingdoms, notonly was thero | all avold Iabor 85 an evil, aud as the pursult of a numbericss thronge of the pour, and the miscr- | only nslave. As soon'as an jndividual could able, but woman was thruwn_ fn among the mis- | seeitre property enough Lo 1Tt hins above work, urnb\c, and was not confuseed ta possces a mind | he and Elu family withdrow from toll as fromna ora soul. I‘znlmnvc of justico held possce- | pestilence, and bezan at the sama- tfme to look glon of those oll lands, just as ig- | down with euntompt upon those still In the norsnce of rallroading and telegraphs | shop or fleld. Fricndshlp, love, marriage, beld sway all over tho carth untll tho | could not cross the gulf between lubor aua Fruuml century. Bo sharply all tha Eastern | lelsure. - Only within our generation could the Cmplees follaw tha idea of caste, that wen fn | owner of o factory or a ateamship] take dinucr onic casta did not speak to a member of 8 Qiffer- | of equal terma ‘with an Enclish rentleman, ent. order of supposed excellence, The classle | Thu former centurics all tofled togethor to do- Statos came almost to the conflies of the iden | grade work, and over this rock socety sub- that the rich and poor ncet together In the uni- | divided itself, and dligged decper the gulf which ty of laving one Lord, but they dld not fully { had been sunk very deep by lgnorance, aud am- ereelva the trutl, aud heuce walkedon tn dack- | Intlou, and vice. . neess. All Greeve and nll Rome saw with com- But wo need not pause longer to_find csusca posiire and with perfectapproval the multitudes | for the fact, The fact I8 larro and the causes of their lnrge Enolres divided up futo bond and | are adequnte. Before us spreads ont the evil, free, the Euwerrul and the abject, info manhood | In iLs lowg march,the human armf has divided, amd ehtldhood, and never dreamed of any sub- | hob at the centre, hut upon one tank, and by ime equality. Even the wifs in those hrilllant | far the latrer multitude has filed oft toward Btates wos not a8 free, and not as hichly edu- Imvmy and iznorsnce, and ein and sorrow, cated, and was 1ot ns puwerful in polities or lit~ | leaving & smaller division to mova toward soma- arature a8 thosa Queensof sacletyliving outaide | thing of culture, and morality, and lnnFnlnung. tho marrlage vow. We all liear and read of When thosg Immensa herds of the Kar West l'flto, and admiro lim as belng almost a mem- | aro scen moving along - in counticss numbers, ber of modern elviltzatioti, almost a leader in [ marching os impreselvely as the old army ot the Chiristian Church, but when this Plato came | Xerxes, tnaking the earth tremble under thelr 1o write down a'play tor a perfect Republic, | heavy feet, a littla hill, ora sentinel rock, or a he tevesled gt once that D too had [ fallen tree will divido the host so that I win fajlled to find that hornony of human | march and separate, and be perhaps evermore life which we all now fecl should come, and | two armies of advance or occupatioh, Thus the which nlone lids the aky of the fature, "This | human famlly, setting forth from one origin, catest of all Oreeks divided the citizens of | from une God, were to journny sldo by sida to Hu fdeal Republic fnto threo classcs,—the | one common duuny, and the terminus was to magistrates, the soldiérs, and the Iaborers, | bo glorlous, but In their advance they cume to thus foreing upon the State three fixed grades | great obstaclos,—vice, despotism, lguorance,— of humenity, toclnsh and grind incessantiy. | and aivided lere, not soon to mcet again, In Tlato had borrowed the fdea from the Hindoo | this brenking-up many a friend has been sep- world, where the wise men sald all soclety | arated from “friend, many a Btato from sister must have men of gold, men of silver, and mcn | Btate, and blood has detuged every fleld oceu- of brass or fron. Over Plato's division of yo- | pled by man. clety inta rulers, aud soldlers, aod lnborers, { WL this goeat wound ever be healed? Isit keen-sighted modern sald, * Yes, Into shep- | cumble, or is It hopelesaly fatull This we knows herus, the dogs, and the slieep.’! ut sodifil- [ that God sves tho great Gmsoord down In this cult hias f¢ been for the workl to learn justice | beautiful corth, for Ho exprosscs every- that oven the Christian Church saw nothlugz of | where in Mis Word Ilfs pity and Iils willing- any brotherliood of man, but went right for- | ness to help, His wonls aré, * Come unto Me ward, dividing and nubdfrldlm: the huminn race | all yo that labdr fand aro heavy laden, and JT as rapldly as it _came under the Church's care, | will give you rest.”” Ilis scrvait has written It invoated the Idea that all things he- | down'in o'sweet psalm that *the expectation of Jong to the King, and it jolned readily | the pour shall not periah,” and the Gospel suld, with the old fdcos of barbarfsm, and held | * Blessed be yo voor, for yours i tho Kingdom slaves, and enthroned and supported any hind | of Godi" aud 1t was tha Srat divine shout of hupe. Hope was n Bible wond, u Christlan word,—one that Christ gave,—and nothing stould be allached lo it that was not linked with 1im. Whna there nnitmnx 1o be compared With the Christian's hopel A man had it when ne accepted Christ. lle was pover divided. Therewas one Christ, and His work was finlshed, He was the same for all, Tho apeaker had just as much of Tin as Paul or John had. low dil_we get Mliml . Jesus (nvited us to Yeowe.! Hg was “the way, the truth, and the We' We should reecise Him as He tvas preached in the Bible. Those wha had Ifim not should declde to tako Him. They should say, #1 will come to Chirlst as a sinner. T wil take Him as wmy Savior. Iwill trust Him, Iwill follow Him."* ~ We were told not to come into the Apostles, not tn the priests, not into the churches, not into ordinances, but to come into Christ, Weo dil not become Christians by golng to the ministers, to hap- tism, to the Lords table; but we become Christians the mioulg we got sight of a ‘ugrwun\ Bayior and reallzed that Hedlod for us, Ve must talk with Him, *“Icometo you. trust you.” In conclusion, Ma). Whittle made a pathetic appeal to thesinners present to accept Christ, drawing the tears from s great inany men as weli as women.. He sald the hours wero fast p:u;lmznwn{. and, if not pardoned then, they would soon he left In the world of sin, aud sor- row, ahd tribulation. No one was so strong that he did not need _(riend, Every one had his hiours of woakness when his heart craved aympathy—hours when his heart erled out fora fricud that sticketh closer than s brother. Jesus Christ wos such a friend. O that they would heed his words, ¥ Come unto Me all ye that are weary and are heavy ladenand I will ive yorrrest." The rezular exerclses closed with prayer, ln- quliry mectings being held subsequently. —— TRINITY M. E. CHURCH. TII¥ SECOND ANNIVERSARY of the dedication of Trinity Methodlst Episco- pal Church was celebrated yesterday by a ser- tmon In the morning by the Rev. J. H. Bayllss, postor from 1503 to 1871, and one In the evening Ly the Rev. O. H. Tifany, D. I, the present pastor, who assumed the dutles In 1875. The attendauce st both scrvices was good. The officers of the church aud soclcty submitted thbelr reports for the year In_printed form, a copg being lald lu eoci pew. - Followiag aro the maln poiuta: christ, the Deliverer---Discourse by the Bev, 0, H. Evorest at Plymouth Church. Whittle and McGranahan’s Re- vival Services at the Tab- ' ernacle. eal, His tasteran to meat and crackers, Bome- times, when moncy was given him, he would buy meat, and somietimes crackers, lmn o8 his fancy dictated. When he went marketiog, he would waik in, look up at tho marketman, and snifl, wageing his Lail at thesame time. Wihen themeat was given him he would first amell of Ity and, If It suited him, wonuld drop the benn and tako {he meat home. Bat, [f It ¢Id not suft him, he would keep the penny. Bomectimes, in ordor to make a better investigntion of his pur- chase, he would put down the penny, but, untit ho fully decided, he would kecp, lis fout on .. With Increasing age Wis teeth disappearct), and he was troubled with losin, his pennies; we therefore adopled the expedient of pntting the money in an cnvelo[lm, which he fully understoud, and continued his purchascs as before. In our care for him, we male hima mug place In the woou-shed for his winter sleeping- place, and evn? night we tucked him In with an old eoverlet, Maje keeping np a constant whin- ing. In Lthe morning, na soon asthe girl reached the kitchen, he would get up, nnd she would let bim up the back stalrs, at the head of which waa our bed-room, . We would hiear him coming and would feign siecp; Maje wontd solff and whine around the awhile, and then jam: on It ond lick our faccs; we vmuls boost” blin_ off the bed, ami then, esch armed with a plllow, would endeavor o prevent hisreturn, He enjoyed the sport ns much as we dkd, and I should afrald “to tell how many plllow-cases suffcred badly In these encounters, or how many times the wamlmi of “ Hoya! boys!" accompanfcd by arap onihe |Lovo—rl pe, was nnheeded. Y We look at his picture s upon the face of an old playmate, ana certaln it 1a that no other companion ever added half as much to our tioy- Ish happincss. Henoert P, HoBBELL. gecond Anniverssry of the Trinity M, B. Olurch—Beports of Pastor and Officers, foman and Ter Work---Scrmon by Mrs. Ellza Sunderland. TIIE GREAT DISCORD. SERMON DY PROP. BWING. _ Brof. Bwing preached yesterddy morning at the Centrat Chureh, taking for his text: A namo (e tdther to bechosen than sranl riches, snd foring faver rather than silver and gold. 0 vich and IITW mect fogethor, the Lord 14 the maker «of thent nll.—Prov., 721k, 1-2. Eurth preserts pletures of matchless beauty and pictures of unspeakoblo sadness, Ona can Jook out and 8ca joy or sorrow at one's wish. 1f the hieart i8 happy and the blood of youth and the fervor of romance and all pootry glows fu the soul {t {s casy thon tosce and rocall the Yeaut!ful citles and homes, and the mighty arts and inventlons of man, and over them to say, #Qh what nmaznificent world, and how blessed {¢ man, }t& inhabitant!" An old classic exile, homeless snd countryless, on - approaching s forcdgn stote full of success and hope, eried, *'Oh blessod people whoso walls aro thus rialugl” Over. that great marvel of beauty, tho bnll in which was tho Peacock Throue, were written tho words, * If everthicre were n paradiso ou earth it Is here,” Bhould ono move away from that scenc, aud from the memory of i, and pass st midnight through some of the dens of viee, and poverty ,and sick- nees In London or Parls, he might write on the walls n counter-Inscription, * If everthere were nhell on carth it fs here,” There are views of TASTOR'S REPORT, Sermons preached..., 1. Sundaysabient. ... .oie Eacraments administered, Children baptized. ] <t The Defeat of the Bounty Bl . &acramento (Cal.) Rrcord.Dnion, We are lhieartily glad that the perniclous Tounty hill hns been defested ot last, despite foorey G St ofn deapol.. When, in the tima of Henry VIIL., | the Gospol that unto the poor shiould that good | in the beauty of s juve, it Him up | Hasringos o 11 | ou Little Powder River, and & portlon of the | the desperate efforts of its fricnds, It wasn human life which make the rapt spectator sigh | Sir Thnmn Mooro sat down to imitate the no- | nesi be prenched. Ilcnuglhln great dl\'efglf_'nm our word and works, Lift Him up fn {::':fé::: 12 ?f'fiz;ll‘l’" '“"“ farther on llfl‘fl'l;-‘cl‘“hl’mflimnx:- :'t‘gx!'::i“;:’.ml"l:\cd ;lfl h:'!l“)'lfllluun, and the un- hat be cannot lve forever, and just at hand | ble Oreck in making out bhis Utonia, he shows | 18 Iytug pladnly fn the sight of the living Qud, | our busitcess,—in the crystal purity of our lives, ehnight. 1 ull, who was then suppored Lo be on bis gay to pulous tnanner.in which it was urged by {here aro scencs which hove mado s scnsitive | that little progross fiad bicen made fn the 1,900 | oud 1s made the espucial care of ini who dled e that the g e of lim:‘:i presciice nlmllrl’ndl DAL 1 fffl'fidr'\?@imb éfih"U&z;i'ffgrfl'“{;}.f‘fi,fi""& };m:: ry";g;,';]m«mm f,"l‘,’ 'hl'l‘l’::l;?:v‘t":"c&'kr.&l'::u nature wish that tho heart might have powery ",},’;;S‘;'f" S TR TG Lot e :‘u’i’.“o‘:’f‘b..‘;’é’r’:n Foum thie .f.‘.‘n"&‘fi!.-"i‘,‘-:fi‘.‘.’&[f.‘? e ?lx;)dln Ao teny LpuLol tha] Lalun e a7y | the Sloux und Clieyenties who formerly belonged | ment from thie unate, Senator Sargent, on au will, to lfo down and dle. Theroare pocts | doine the most frksome drudery of the Ideal | over the humble Ria pansed outward, and hus | day, a8 we eome o thu .xm?m feast,—simpio in | Classomeetiy 98 gumh"rflrqflltle c‘;""lnu to cosne |lr-~ thllnr (s | the *;:‘hurllm"&lv dlmm- great Yrmu for l'nls whose glowing words can ecasily mako us weep | natfon. In his Utopis the ricliand poor never | beecome tho theme of evory poct and the Iusplrae | form and decp and everlasting In {ts meaning,— | Frayer-meetings 40 hrm lfl' o c'l oud ).,'—'“'llu l‘r:l‘ heen with the m.rdn It ent and vl m'lraun ‘!nxmll on to the bill, hat we must go away from a world so beauti- inet. tion of every orator, Goldsmith raw— and this Chrlat, Lelug. Lited “up, shall draw a)l NEMRERRILIE, ostiles,~with twenty-elght mea, started fu, | mw lwdr'nam 80 Ingsmuch as the measure was Thus the more wilely ono studics this matter | 2 o i men unto Him. And the day will come—yon Probationers reported May 12, 1476.... 53 | and met 8potted-Tail, F. C. Bouctier, Jose Merd- | regarded by many politicians as affordling an ex- 1ul, but there wi sk tor who sct forth ¥ t The wratched matron, forced In age, for hread ¥ Tiscontinaed. d. 1 1 “ Poace: C {asl 4 ent rtunity f k ul, but there was o classic orator who {he tnore ho will be convinced that o clnss called | 0 strip the brook with manthng creases suread; and I may not sco )ts dawning, uniess we ook | it :}ut llu:en ar rlvmultu erssas 1 | vale,and party—moro ominissloners cellent opportunity for making capital at the tho lls of lifoin cnlors so dark and poworful | yh smiserable has been created, at Teast has been | To pick her wintor fagot from tho thorns down froin the eity abose and hehola 1t light— | A4 .','.'u'fifi‘,.g“., Lol 1 | from Spotted-Tajl Agency—nt Bear-Buttes, and expenis of “the” taxpayers. ~ The pretenss that tnony hearers of his oratfons committed n\\‘cl!l.il] beyond all x'mmml proportions, by the Tnl;Il.;nI; In;r nmxtly shed nn‘r\ ‘Lrup i morn, & }ml, &hu,any I\iv‘m c;:mc \vh‘:i-n n;u eurlzlh nh..nl hfl Ttecelved Ance S i (N. n (:nrt ‘;fl&:"’:fl’(‘"f&_fi“: ;‘lcn" usgcléu{gl az‘:zmll:»dn:c -«‘A‘lldlclr'; ;‘r,xl nl'x’z“ l.l‘n:% Iem‘ul ormm.., ‘rr(m.‘i.\_: cide that they e the present | utter Iznorunce of the old races as to tho detalls the far-sceing oyes of the present ¢ra mar] ed with” Ilis glory, and when all men ahal Admitted ¢ bership. i ), y 3 4 X :fi’flt nfifiéfidfné’ &x‘%l;l;:uw ‘rfl'&‘. e samno | of fustice, Depravity nlone will mot explafu | the presuice and I.lmrnumlmrfl c')( the puor, und | diacover the way, and’ overy being shall confess femaling o 7ol <oeer are now at Spotted Tall. lent miareprescntation. “The truth s that it o would havo taken something llke a huadred mll"amr{ dodars from tho Treasury, and dls tributed the hulk of [t among a rapacious geug of dlaim-agents, speculators, lobbylsts, aud pro- fesslonal thieves, The fuct that Graot veEm-\ the bill, and the reasons ho gave for so doing, Alwnld have convinced Congresa that it was an Infqultous rchenies and, after so full an exam- Inatlon of the matter, 1t Is smazing that soma; Benators should have been found willlng to pui themselves on record na voting In_favor of lta passage over the Executivo veto, It was a thore oughly viclous proposition, and the countiry has good reason to cougratulate {tself on laving escaped such a rald itpon the Tressurs. THE ST. NICHOLAS. Oliver Goldamith was often in warfare with his cook, Huil ho lived to enjoy the rare culsine of the BL. Nicholas Hotel, Now York, e would not have meddled with his kitchen or found fault with the productions of its cxperts In' gastrons omy. ‘Total probationers on rofl..., Whole namber of members reported March 12, 1874 teies 321 Recelve by feiters, .. Iecelved mace from prubatio; world aA-rlm(n tho lament of tho *Thanato) #l3y" and the rl.'lltmntlou of thehymn, **Iwould ot live alwaya, £ sk not to stay.” . Therg are Twurs when we, each one, have iished to stay, and other hours when we have laln down, not wishing ever to wake again upon such shores.” Thus Wfe spreads out in our eight as an me menso contradiction. Wo rejole¢ over birth- daye, but there was a natlon unce which cele- Urated only the duy of man's death, The Ro- maus and Greeks made no note of birthdays, and there is nothing [n their literature about clldhaad, alt this partly because lifa was to bo estimated only whon otie lind yeachied the end of It.—«mlll_v thon could 1% be deaigmated as o good oran evil, . . This discord of carth hns afsumed many shapes s a question of debate. In theology it }m»u along under the name of sin and virtue. n the romanco of o Hugo it appears under the Read of the Mieralles, 'In volitics, under the Tiead of the tyrant and the slave. In education- al cireles the discord springs up under the titlo, af the learned and fgnorant; fu the verses an- nounded na the text, the samo confllet enteva the scene under the titleof the * rich and the poor," To the announcement of this great division of tho awful grinding provess to which tho multi- | in li cmlun:' snd song, and hymu, and in goy- tudo wero subjected in the pust, for had the | ernment and religion, givo utterance at last to multitude known what thelr righls were they | o sympathy which hns' been for thousands’of would have risen mmin and agaln to Ecurn dead in the human bosom. Hoving to- sccurc them, Virgiulus was. mnde fmmor- | day studicd the Great Discord, let us next Sun- tal by killing his daughter whom the | day thiok upon the Great Harmony. 1P to b Mecmians courty The TAther lcar ring to his leentlous con ho father learn- D 0} D ing tho outlandish order of Claudins hnstenod C"RIST,’,‘T: IE‘? LLI::,I:‘{:ER' Nomne and kissed his Virginla farewoll, and then SERSON BT ZNG BB S Mo 4 e Killed her. Inour agothe father of such a | The Rev. Charlea 1L Evercst, the new pastor ehild would have apared the daughter and | ot Plymouth Congregational Church, preashed have slain the Kingas the less of the two | toalarge sudience yesterday morning from tho gh;msi l’:‘lw "tcluplcl hnvo‘ been ‘ns lllfl" tlo 'lcml'n texts helr rights as thoy have been to learn lhow to f make lghtning sbeak or steam drive a boat or n fli‘,:“‘l',f’u;'.é t’:l,“_'_‘.‘)%,',‘,? Trom the eatth, will déaw rain. Out of the fuct that the right lay Lidden Th 4 & u" 2 Tias come much of modern sorrow. Ireland, e sermon Was espechally appropriate to the nnd all Europe, and China, natlons which communlon service which followed, s will be pour millivrs {nto ‘our rich country, are the | scen from tho abatract given bolow. dreadful results not of deprayity, nallea | The character of dellvercrihatJesus nssumed, sforethonght, hut of oratico ot {hn art of | oo " 4 King, und priest, and p’cgonplo of tho best pal.h of | and in which Teatands grandly alouc, sald the Mlte, political, or soclul, or individual. The peo- | Revorend gentleman, had, lu a lasgo measure, Blut.l d not drean of thelr rflshu and’ wrongs, | diverted the thoughta of men Iroin those other | . ooked! upon o King as o kind of Alnight t Hi sustalned to the whose actiona they hEu uo right to dlsfinlé‘. felutians, £ B 2 o : ‘The returned Indiana all are of the n‘»!nl(m that no propositions for pesce will be considered hr clthier 8itting-Bull or Crany-Horse, but thay all the Indians'who left here will come In, If they can get uunr. ‘Thirty lodges more left Crazy-Tlorse for the Lower Hrule Agency, and are there by this time. Thers are many who claim that the bhostiles nro well” provided for, while others stato tliey are starving, having to kill their ponfes for food, buffalu belng very scarce. It 15 the gen- cral (mpression hiere that we will have lively times soon; even the Indlans llcrelmfiu ving wmore saucy and imuudent cvery day. Rgreat many langh at the idea of scuding soldicrs to fizht Sitting-Bull_and Crazy-llarse, thinking them Infatlible and unconqueruble. Red-Cloud has lost his powcr, having beon dethruned as Chiel, and the Young-Man-Afrald- of-His-Iorses snbstituted fu his place by (eu. Crook. The Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-[lurses s an uflnm’l’“nll’flf’ lisndsome man, endowed with more than oniinary intelligence and judg- ment, and haa great friendship for the whites. He is properly the hereditary Chief of the Bloux Natfon,—hl4 ancestors all having been Prlm'l al men, and his futher, from whom e takes his THE TABERNACLE. BERVICES DY WIUITTLE AND M'GRARAHAN, Tho services mt the Tabernacle, yeaterday afternvon, which were conducted by Mesara. Whittle and McGranahan, were ottended Ly nearly 8,000 people, the maln foor being nearly oll occupled, while the galleries were about two- thirds full, R Ag an openog, ** O where are the reapers that garner In?" waa sung. The Rev. Mr, Williams led in . prayer. e oaked a blessing upon those who had come fn the hopeof fnding Christ, and that God would enable thiem to find Mm, After the bymu, My hope fs bullt on noth- Ing less than Jesus and Ilis rightcousness,” had been sung, Mr. Mc(iranahan sang “The Other Bide," 3 Then Mr. Whittle read the twenty-sccond chapter of Ilevelations, commencing at * And Died. eenreasene, Prerent membership, I'resent probationcrs, Tatal members ond probationers. .. y..00 427 BUNDAY-HCHOOL BTATENENT, QnNlcera Bchulars, Hecelved ouuienens Minatonary roclety Coniuronco claimal Church extegelon. Freeduan's Ald K Banday-Behool Unlon Teack KONy svoevon, Edueatlon ... General Conferenca ox| ——— Telp for thn weak, nervous, and debilitatad; world, As n leader, o caused more | heshowed me a pure river of the water of 3ife.” | Buppurt of the Blaliop: name, baving been the Chicf for mang sea: fl',{g“ 'fi:g‘?fl';{;‘l‘d,}:g‘;m sarid without medts e cy V] e . 3 3 lances, all about. fifl?n'e'i'.‘l'.‘fr‘é é‘r‘"{l' 1".’3...‘5&'?.2’;"3.‘:2'.‘“1‘.,21‘6.&? },: '&..f“r'&«"»‘&'.}"%&'&fi Z’a"u'l'ui" J&Z’Lfi'{’ l‘l‘l]t:lul;g enthustasm, and elevated Tls followers to grea The duct, *O crown of rejoleing,” was sung B;xec;-l forpavement, [nsuranec, 11:\!!. on ecount of vld,age, abdicated in favor of | Sifom, and how o distingaish the genaine. :m;xb‘t,i‘:u 0 OF et ot s ol o | tho stroete, "1le could prct & seofo of Sengors | or devotion, carried them through ereater decds | by Mr. McGrunohun sud a Tady, the quartetse | Eo% Y oL AT e ushiy, o san. spurians. . Book, with full particulars, malled fese. asuuder by tncldent or aceldont, they aro one i | put to death, a hundred knights slaughtered of | of Adellty, than aiy other. Yet Il was not tho | joining in the chorus, L LR Toe Sloux xud Clisyernes st present hevo | Addrese >hivecnchar Galveuld Compang, 204 Viae 0 I ence year, 200 persone coutnbited; n er about $,300 sud the Arapahocs 100, | strect, Cincinuati, 0. . Lot us select 1o thcmes of thought Por this | fawn tho moro gt bia feot. One Homan ruler | Ratures that had takon huld of thousandsbefore, | at tho Friday mectings must havo been Intor- P kel = | Gueeniinent ovee dloga thelt srrival herey ot AMUSCAEATS: Sunday and the next} the ono we may designata | never would speak in_ presenco of o slave, byt | ahd thess nad followed them thruugh suffering | ested in the teatinony of the dear brother who Total. withatanding they have been very unjustly 28 Thd Great Discord, the othor a8 The Grent | mude known his wishes by motlous, becauso u | and cven to death. As a pliysician Ife stood | told them about bis falllug away from God into | pooores M PR flfl;}fi,‘ '351.?é"mgfl-'°meflr“fig$§' UAVERLY’S THEATRE, Harmony. layo waa unworthy of hearlng words from tho unparallcled, and yot taen Lad clung to physl- | sln, und bis golug through the strects of Chl- Af"f:.m.( arch, dhetgsy and. havlg® no power to mmserh A e dack ?f,,?;fi"&hfifi“’{fi..‘l-'.'fl,‘?fi,"fi.{‘;?f,'f",} Upzatabigh lomol , Tepeoples: id cluna ua for 1o for years before Flia advont. 1o | cago, fu bis degradation, and lonolinesn, and | Sublcriptions oiors:: 0000 | theie righte. They wery the frat to | o * TIOUSES CROWDED WITA TIR Aireatins o hpovesiahend chase, but would eon | OF 8to and ram thoy danced, or Ih e shade | CMRHLTCR o8 nan never epnke, aud yat ffo was | sorrow, without o friend n tho world: aud | yecoppua ,, -8 o0, | Tobeccly ko it the Lask expeditlon, sail all lite and Fashion of the City. tain an shinost uniform shape of condition, But Sung Crowar great and ternible (n war; not the first teacher at whose feet men had sat | while on the West Sldo ono duy he pleked up | Disbursemu 0] Gt 122 o A Becond and 1ast week of the a moet casual glanes ab the presont or the past allics could be cnlisted now if required, s all those who were out came back safe, were highl leased with thelr experience, and folt well reated and compeusated for thelr services; and, for this resson, agreat many would go Il au. opportiinity should present fteelf, Gen. Crook adopted & wise plan when he enlisted theso soldicra, aud they all want to accompany him again, haying o great regurd for him. TPuiLaxpzr, ——— ANOTHER CLEVER DOG. v (he Kdllor af The Trivune. Wixoxa, Minn, March 9.—Notldng. In your paper scveral articles In relatlon to clever dogs, taken from Euglish sources, I amn prompted to send you the followlng about an dwerican dog. 1o waa tho property of my brother and myself, and was glven us by & cousin, by whom he was ralscd. Ho was sbout hulf as large as a New- foundland dog, thick-set body, short limbs, very shaggy, and purc white. Howas vur constant companlon fn all our aports, and particularly enjoyed the tramp which wo took on Baturdays over tho hills. Ho could do a great many tricks, aud secmed possessed of an almost human fn- telligence. Ile would, at word of command, sit up, straight as sn arrow; wo would then place a cracker, or somcthing sim- flar, on his nose, and say, ‘*Maje [short for Major], make ready. One, two, threc—firol" Immedlately tho cracker would go up threo or four feet, and comedown fn hls amplo mouth, Ile always was glad when the tricks were over, and never was gullty of begging by golng through them with the espectation of getting tho usual reward, We had s pea-jacket, which fitted him; and wonred to dress Lilm up, by csusing him to sit up, putting on this jacket with his fore-legs through tho sloeves,—a stove-pipe hat, which wo bad cut down for him, on his bead, anda plpe fn his mouth, The effect was very comical. Mo siways took this approach towanls civilization with _tho utinost gravity, sud vever was more delighted thau when it was over, 1lle would * down dead » at wond of comiuand, stretching himself out at full length; and all our calling and whistling, tho erica of * Rats," ¢ Bick 'em, " and gven the putting of meat to his pose, would not arouse him until the signal was given, which waa g serapinis of the foot vn the foor. ‘Whon he was out-doors and wanted to come in, be would serateh, and tho door was cousiderably narred by the operations but, when he was {u- side, und the door was accldentally left open, wo would say1 * Maje, shut the door,’ aud he woulid put his fore-paws against it and closo it} but ho nover left a scrateh ou that side, Ile used to play hide-awtscek with me, en- tering Into tho sport with genulne pleasure. Mother would be sewipg near a window, aud would move out from It about afoot. 8he };-;n&efl:l:«‘a‘l"‘h:;ll-‘.l]fil“zfmllflmdl aud learned, 1lis fdeal of friondship wos per- Tho mlilions lived {n such a darkuess and In “r;:.' lnl,‘; p?“:f,? h‘:ut {lum«;wnnd:ll::r such servility of spirit that, Instead of belng | 2°°F 3 e sYy = and Tt men, they marclicd on down the conturles o | 0nd frindship, and yet Ife s nol army of unblushing begrars, What was thus | the begluning of fricudship, Thero had been begun by the Eustern or Urecle nnd Roman poit- | deep aiid haly affectlon lotie before. But a8 o tiea wua continued fafthfully by tho despolism | Bavior, s Deliverer from sin, as one having of Papal and motlern Europe, power to forrve slus hiere and open the gate Inwecking the parts of tho carthquako forco | yonder, ITe did stand alone, — No other one had munmlzxcd 10 mako tp tho great ¢lass of the | Prescnted himeel! and fed the way heavenwanis poor, let us add othor causcs to the estimate. a9 had the Jesus of Nuzarcth. Tlesides the deep Injury that jonornee of any In thoe words of tho toxt, Jesus appeared In a true politiea nas brought, personal viee has | still further relation,—as s prophet,—and gavo brought much, 8in of all forms, fromn low sen- | proclumation to one of the most ustoulshing suality to idlencss, from the oplum of China to | predictious oyer uttered. The mystic sayings thomalt and vinous drinks of Europo, and fo | of the old prophuts had beeu based on the flesy drinks of Amcrics, Lns created a | the authorily of God, * and men had cless of " degraded bemngs who cast thelr sop- | belleved, in” a cuemf way, _that ali rows belore” them Into the third and fourth | things were possible with God. But Jesus, [:ulwrmlulu. Lileness and sonsuality rival | when o declared Himsel? as o prophet, did not ho old uesrnu in the manufucture of distress, | g0 back of imself. He simply sald, **1will Cwsar wauld, {udeed, lay waste a provineo {u a | draw all men unto me,” and so centered in few weeks, Cusor, to mu{{yl splto at Cor- | Himself thd pgwer of the fultillment of what, dova, gent an army thither and alow 23,000 cltl- | ou lts very face, seemed finpossible, For tho zens, He was Indced o bloody destroyer, | thought uf Iils death—which He declared and having rutmuulll, {nn Ml & million men, “But | furctold—would scem to stay tho prophecy, Cusar tlourished only o fow years, wherens | How was It possible. 1f He wero thus cat off theso vices, Idlencss, sensuality, intemperunce, | from among men, for 1im to have the power to have been for thousands of yeurs dohig tholy | draw others unto Him and to make them bend dreadful work, without cover once having de- | to 11is willl Moscs hiad beon a wonderful leader, clared, even for an hour, an armistice fn which | When he went up tho muuntaly_side sml_tho | o bury the dead nd thihk of themorraw, Out | tribeswatched him sadly, and God burled hini, of vice has come a fearful lpx-fmnlun of theun- | they heard of hin ‘ws oue blotted out, fortunate, helping to divide soclety Into tho | and turned and followed wJoshua. Davil had lnlfih and’ the low, ¥or much of thls vice, | stirred the nutjonalheart to its very depths, but, abud political philosophy Is agaln respon when he latd himaclf down, the crown was put blo for wiien a governmont has taxed fts | upon the brow of Bolomon, And sowith all the peopla without pity to pay the enormous reat names that sccular bistory had furnished. reyenues of Kings, and the Innumorablo 'her had been despolled by death, anddhelr do- rotinuo of Kings, affer government bus sgain | minfon over men had scemed to shrink and be and u‘uln Invaded homes with the military | shattered at the approach of this fell destroyer, conseription, and has mado milllons of ite citl- | Yet Jesus, when tho thought of death camg to zens too poor o' find any education, or any | Him, could say that He would, by that very slul)u of carthly hope, §% I8 not o be expected | death, draw all'men uuto Rim, that clazses so torh from property anid hope will 1t wan of the deepest interest and Importance avold tdlencas and strong Arink with the hero | to fnquire whother the prediction had been ful- fsm of philosoptiors. It 1s hard for men toriso | Olled, or whether It was ln any degreo n when despotism bas been ot thelr homes, and | process of fuliiiiment, i1l words could not bo thelr fathur’s howe, and has broken the heart, | understood to mean all individuuls, tor multl- Frum bad govermnent sud vice, acting both | tudes had from tho beginning satd they wonld scparatcly and together, has come much of that | not have this inan to rwhin over them, ~ As the dead sea of bitter water which divides two con- | sun did not reach every ey chasin and Juv. was tinents,—the rich and the poor. The ubsence of | universal lu its lichy aid heat, so It could not bo tho truth, of sight, and then depravity, even | sald that Chirist had draws, or would dravw, all when the tight was known and scen, these arc | individuals uuto Him, Butit might bosatd that ure titanie forecs ablo to rend luto fragments | He biad drawn all classes of 1oen spirituaily, and the brotherhood of man, thot Ho huad drawn representatives °from Of courso_one secking very minutely the | all men. Nicodemus and the demonl- reasons for thia dlscord In carth must Lringdnto | scs,—representatives of $he two extremo Jils esthuate the pawer of human passion when | classes,—along with represeutatives of the It turns itsclf toward a throne or a name, or | intermediate clagses, had recognlzed towsrd gold. Powor dazzles and bewilders. | the power that drow them. Henco it tould be Let amau liko Alexander, or Cwsar, or Napo- | said that sll classes hud been drawn to Chrlst, 1con vnee faste the sweet of cmplry, and no cup { It could not be ssserted that every indlvidual on earth oifers a wilder intoxication. Man onco | waa educated when sny ons spoke ol public oisoned by this ambition will literally wade | education, for there were scores and hundreda [‘I:mugh blood to mcrown, ft was the glory of | of persous fu Chicago who could uot write their those” namcless negsauts, who slept Tu ‘the | names, and who were obliged to wagko thuir # Country Churchi-Yord,” tuat their humblo | morks instead of thelr signatures, Yet thera 1ife kept them back from the paths of bloody | was uot a palace or hovel into which education a ltttle ¥ dodger,"—au fuvitation to a Gospel meeting,—ot tho bottoni of which was the sim- ple word “come.” As hie went along the word Kkept singing In hisheart,—+ Come, come, come,"" as though there wero some meaning In ib for bim. The word lod him to the meeting, led him to tho Tahernacle, whero he heard the story of tho Prodigal Bon; and lig eame to Christ, and now rejolved fu Iifm oa his 8avior. Thia experi- ency had led to some thoughts on the text: Comu unto Me, all yo that labor and are heav) 1adon, and [ willgive you rest.—Matthew, xl., 28, o dkd not helieve thero was over a sweeter word spoken than that “come” There werg four thiugs In it: ° Tho cluss that were nvited to vome; what they would get if they eano; who it was that tnvited them; oand how thoy were 10 como, As to the firat: In tho country where Christ spoke these words burdens wers carried upon tha backa of heasts, and the camels and the mules traversed tho sands of the desers laden down, It infght have been the pussivg by of somo’ beast of burden, juat able to carry “the Joud, that jed Jrsus to use tho fyure. course, It meant labor of soul,—not labor of the Doy, —where & man's soul befors (ied was Jke a benst of burden, toliing along with a heavy load of sinthat he could scarcely bear. Men labored to get pleasure out uf this world, How meny men and women there werp who had po Interest [u spiritual things) 1iad thoss who had lived jusy for socletv, just for gafu, just to have o pood time, found it profitableY ‘The Savior spoke to them. They wera the onea who wero Iaboring, They wers not entistied. Their hearts wanted better things, It Christ were present Ilis eyes would bo on them, and to would say, ¢ Come to M¢, I will give you something better," ‘There was anothior class who were laboring. A great many peoplo wanted rellglon—wanted peace of mind; men and women who wera rolljr- jous by nature. ‘They were satlsfled of their own riightoousncss, and prayed and attended church. ‘Tho Biblo said theso things were in vain—that we could pot make ourscives right- eous by any hclp of our own, * Every wan that §a under tho works of the law fs under a curse.” What wo nceded was to bave thu curso removed—forgivencas, We could never get 1t by our own Jabor, Tho man who was trylug to make hiinscll righteous got bis footin deeper and deepor overy step, and his load became Deavier und heavier. 1€ the soures of thely Sn{ and peaco was not fn the living God and dfl not como through Jusus Christ, thelr llves would bo a fallure, Pleasurs and money would not satisfy them. There was but one enduriug source of pleasure and peace—a personal God through Jesus Christ, - Y1 any were lving with- out God and without Chrlst, and had nothing leyoud the grave, they were laburlnfi and heavy taden; and Jesus ssked them to Hcome” tu Hin, What was given if thoy came! “Rest.” It was a very sweet word, AUl needed ft—rost of soul. How would Jesus give it! It scemed to Mr, Whittlo that thero wers threo thinuw Ta bo provide WOMAN AND HHER WORK, BERMON DY MKS, ELIZA SUNDERLARD, Mrs. Eliza Sunderfand, wife of the Rev. J, T. Buuderland, pastor of the Fourth Unitarian Clurch, preached to a large cougregation of ludies yesterday morning, upon * Woman, and Woman’s Work.” Bue based ler discourse upon the breaking of tho alabastor box by the woman of Bethany, aud . her text was from Matthew, xxvi., 132 ¢ EVANGELINE COMBINATION. TUE BIT OF THE SEASBON. Sicasrs, Jce & odwin's Charming Extrvaganza, will remove all tendeney toward bollet fn nny such fdeat society, and will sel before the ob- server the fact thut society 18 full of ovil, At Lest, not w happy world beeause ot sty sud dis- case, and denth, it is rendered (oubly miscrable by ealamities which man has manufactared for hls race, To the sorrowa which naturo inade in the outset for man he has added o new involee from his own vaat fuctory, so that_between tho fullen cstate Into which”man 1s born, and the propeity of cevil which ho has nulm-r}nmuy ace cumulated, he I8 rich ot Jast in his misory, poor {u virtue and happlueas, It was caely confeszed that naturo wos willing to produce food for all, and clathing for all} that thero was no decred written down i naturo that o fow should liave food, und that the mauy should go hun- gry: and fience thero must bo some human ause underneath the lurge phenomenon, 1f o fault lay not with nature, it must lie in man, Aan aces it, and for the most part con- fusses tho mognitude of the rrm-uml steite, It existed in Christ's day, for Ho had compassion o the multitude, aid choso to.jive Hia fe chletly among the lawly, e saw how tho mor- ol world had been tippied to one skle by wealth and power, and to mect tho crisls e spoke many of His consolntions 10 the poor, and many of His robukes to thoss in purple. 1o remindes the mflcm‘\&tlmt the Bon uf Mon bad vo pitlow for tlis hiead, na fine rafumont, and that henco thuy could, evenina hunble condition, solve sume'of tho grentest L)ruhleuu of life, Ifocould not removo the evil, but Ife could teach tho un- happy how best to Lear thelr munifold troublea, ‘hus, before Clirlst then, as before inankind to- nx. thera lay the great gulf ln uublet{'; ssuming that no othor proof is heeded of the proposition that soviety s broken up intu two large hemisplierce, the rich and the pour, thelearned aud tho ignorant, the fortunato an the miserable, let us collect somo of the cuuses which have broken & world fn two and mude auocean roll between, The causes must be \'rr{ numerous, buty having once begun to gather them, any one cau run ou at lelsure in the Interesting task. Evidently on the vory morniug of any socicty, circumnstouces threw oMo ong ntan to the frant, made him leader of ailan or patrisreh of a tribe, and there bclu;i no conception in primitive times of perfect Justlce, too mych pawer ahd too much pros- Yerity must have found §ts way fnto tho hands of this chiof, Howevor fur back we read, the bistory of Gavernwment s the history of sfmple mecr rather than of justice, and power alwiys nplics tho nccumulation of riches an tho onc land, and hence the taxing sud erinding of the subject on the other. Not only an Indiffer- ence to the unllt;m. but an - lgnorance of the sight, m be allowod e vast (o fuence fu’ that awlul work of rveudlug soclety fnto two s, Justico laa truth that awaits to bo studied and learncd just as agri- cujture walted 0,000 years for inou to come and investigate ite laws snd phenomena. Bome as- sert that chere exists fu wan & conscience which telly bim what Is right aud what {8 wrung, but cvlden(l‘{ nian pussusaes no such 8 teaching face ulty, What wa call consclonce i3 not a teach- BVAN NH, With its Sparkling Musle, Besutitul Bcenery, Cos- tames, and great Cat. OFINIONS OF THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: +VTho buriesquo ia deatitato of morit. A atapld- er thing has not been dignifed by presontstion” on the lllli:! in Chlcagy for years, ic llbretto is an unworthy composition, “Tho puns are disgraceful- l{ bad. The muslc of Evangelino lsas bad as the Muretto.“—Bundsy Tribune, Chicazo Times—**1t is hollow, Dat, belng hol- low, it gives out & comical sound whea pounded, and'peoplo langh atit, 1f people want to laugh, why shonlda't they? "Some of the vocal numbers aro of & port that is coriain to pleass the populsr ear,and the Lons Flaherman 15 enormously funny. After all, It Is eaty to soo vlll( the extravagaizs will be successfal wherevee 1€ goes. The muslc will prove more sttractive {o the ceneral In than Wagnes's. . Thore {8 a jndiclons dm" feminine fgures, nicely stopped at thepoint beyond which lica the indecency of Roldenery. The scenes arghandsome, thore lsacrobatic excellenco employ- ed,etc. With all theas thinga to recommend it Itle suie 10 make maney. 1t may be na credit to I ton's much-blown-abont lufellectuality that It lad a'ran there of over 100 nights; bat posslbly Bos- ton, llke most other places, likes to o and make & fool of {taclf onco in a while, and {0 pay money for s0 dl)lng. i EVANGELINE overy evenlug and Wednesday sud Saiurday Malnces, Becurs sosts In advance. NEW CHICAGO THEATRE. Firat and only appearances In Chicago of tho naccessful Young American Prima Donna, MISH BEMMA ABBOTT IN ONE GRAND CONCERT, Friday Evening, March 16, AND ONLY ABUOTT MATINEE, Saturday, March 17, at 3 p. m, MISS EMMA ABBOTT Will be asalatod by J!\l;‘:h{:fl.lawlun distinguished SIGNOR BRIGNOLA, The World-Tlenowned Tenoz. SIGNOR FERIANTI, Tha Famoua Basse-Tafa, FIN. W, It OASE, The Emlincnt Planlst ‘ln':‘n:x the Conservatolre de ' MIR. CIARLES E. PRATT, Musical Director, Qgneral admlssion, 81, Reaerved scats, Par- uet And Parquet Circlo, 81. 50. Rescrved Balcony, 1. Salo 0f scats commences Wedneaday, Mari i M*CORMICK MALL, ‘Tho Inimituble humorit, the ONLY Verily I suy unto {nn, wheresoever this ol shall be preachied throughout the whole world, there shall alvo this that this woman lath doue be told for s memorial of her, Jesus was approaching, conclously approach- fug, the close of & short but tryiog and unsatis- fuctory minlstry. Tho clouds continued to thicken, the followiug to grow less aud less, and s falth fn the remalnlug fow lcss and less absolute. Just here, when worn down with & sense of approachiug lll, and chilled Into o feel- ing of deep toneliness aud isolation by want of loving, tender syinpsthy among His immediate folluwers, thore eamo an unlovked for and tan- glble proof of unsellish, uncalculating nffection. It was such affcction, or friendship, or charity as it bt been the especlal misslon of Christ to Inculeate, * The cuylot suffering was pressing closor 40 Hislips. In His ezony Ilo sweat great drups of blood, and while His disciples, bliad to the threatening, could sleep, Ho fought within Himaelf the fearful struggle with the tempta- tlon to put away tho cup of pain, Into thiscold naturally unsymnpathetic astmosphers camo tho warm, aympatheulc heart -of Mary of Hethany. Hor tender lovaneeded not to be fold of tlie low- ering clouds of despondency and dread which hung over the beart of hes friend, Her quitk futeution read all at s glance, and reading, she did uot stop to weigh and measure and decide upon the best course to pursue, but with the abandon of a noble nature sho did what she could, and did It grandly, But doea ker action atand alone! Ilave no othier alubaster boxes been broken and thoir contents of very preclous ofntinent been lm.-lr poured out! Aud huvenoother good works ! beou wrought by women for Christ os reveal u suifering humanity since Mu{‘ut Hethan' found a place in bistory,—works which, iu fm tation uf Christ's example, it were well we hold i memorial of them? Blio then gave a ruving sketch of the llves of Elizabeth Fry, ¥lorence Nightingule, and Dora- thea Dix. Bhe was glad of the story of theso livus, because of the fdeal they furnished of what a human life may imean It it be willed to mako the most of it, fn the light of suchan ideal, how paltry seems s life shut fu to the narrow limits of _per sonal eujoyments and soclul commouplaves. But were such 1deals possible of attulument to women. To be sure, to noue, in_this dav,ls given the privilege of soothing tha last bours of & sutferiug Bavior, sud possibly for nono uld earneat, scli-sacziice Je In Just the puths 1 hel 1 d vine ing facn) Impelllpg fuculty, which will | conquest. §n some way did not enter, and there was not a | which every man snd woman had to (e~ wol A 2% | would call Majo fn Dhetweon her und the win- Inln:'dlu1 mwuur‘l:l‘lly': Hiado u;;uhu‘r"x:ils‘»wmn ’l'hc?r 1ot forbade; nor circuniscribe alone T ‘!llc. hl:fi:fr :;‘l)g'zur. that wasnot represented Suse “u l:l(-:eyy werd fiuu;x wthh;':m'f‘in:ls ifl:""n‘: »"m'fii'.“?«‘fl‘uuK“’h or“m"m;lvu;\;:: ;};\yfl -nuwllfi;gr ‘va‘n;‘ lfiflffi’“fin y’“:nrn.lgl“lllllld %;r [ child as {t will fmpel an American mother to | _Thelr growing vistues, but their crivics confines it the public se 3 soul wi od, ‘The first was, the did A of . Bothany afore- cad, 4 4 " | And bispoputsr Troupe of slx Artlats, give thetr laat fiult Forlade to wade th laughier Lo @ thi Chirlst_had farnished 1be iink between timo | that their sine were forgiven. ' Tliers could be | Fo0 d, a8 ary ilace was ou tho bed-rail next tlie wall, pullbig e L e ot comcionte | - A shat the galeacl mercy on mankiad. gnd cternlty—tho magnetie Influeuco that drew v Ve’ ot ot Jesuat oet ana” drink 1 e | i ‘quilt over mo carcfully. When no rest fu splrit without forglyences, 1t could I sald ] Fuspel care hers, ani 0 " v 0P " in botly case In the same conscience | And 431t o Bolen o ewavases In tho | totr16 HU. That whiyorsal drawlose of fhe fe- | bo obraluod through dosus, bevuuse Lo slid dits | 9l of conatant lovo sud suse or bl 850 | 4 Coup, wotler would say, »Flud bln, Male, CONCERT B cames, Tl ettty Minct | rcocnt arcst. calieilon Wos- 0 Winchy ord e | licious nabire~—that Junging for it bryond— | blood o' pay T onaiy, Gl said tuas o | spacially fur the pigliest spiitual well-belg of | gud ho would Immediateiy begin the sedrch Tio | - fed right in one school aud the Americsu mother | significant aie of ¥ Ciesar.” e i riding up- found fn Christ somothing to realize. He was | didu's charge our sius unto us,—that we nced Giaetyes BENEER, M J would go utder the bed, and, smetllyg me, | In Cbicago hia season, Wednesday Eve., March 14. humblest aud wost clreanscribed 1ifo, infuse the spirit of the cross luto the huublest, most cominon-place decds, by wiving. freoly, luvisbly = of whatever ~ thoy had to ive, whetber of love or labor. Not merely to Il well and without question sho nlcho where circumstances wuy Bave placed thew, but Lravely so varve ot & niche for themselves, by dofug cach such work as they fuel bs thielr work. But they should bo sure always vud everywhers that they guve thelr best work, .sud with no fruda.'ln' and, sud 1 moay be leb it bo work uto whbich they could put their hearts and beads, as well as buuds, aud then, whethor as lutne-keepors, mothers of listle onvs, writers ot law-briets, winlsters uf Christ's Guspelof peac, ur docre 0f the most wenial work, so-called, llwn peed Lave no fear of thelr fual award, ++glie bath wrought a guod work." i another, The absulute right fs therefors comething to be learned, just as onumust learn what {s beat fn sclence, or tncchauics, or sgel- walture, Boclety was early rent In - twaln, therefore, wot slmply by 8 coue sefous fnjulUw, but by on fguorance of the right of wan fa the case. Belect the best wen of antlquity, 1nsacred or profane histary, and i‘l‘uu come ot once to men who did not know wwytling ubout thie equality ufi‘mm anything abaut the laws of equity, anything about 5 wise and fulr condition of wd':l , Certaluly Abrahum, Jacob, Moscs, and wost of the actora v that far- ofl drawg, desired and attempted todo what was right, but thelr knowlodge was not as great us elr deafre Waa pure, aud bence under their feet the blood of the fauvcent tHowed treely und cou- ftantly, The poor sprang up beblud these v ty chiefs; richea aud pcwrt'y power and ukuess, freedom sud slavery, ollowed theum nalmogt equal streamu. When Isaae blessed Jusob fustéad of Esay, through the gluru fraud of tbe fonaer, lsase tho father, did no Nota the unprecedestod price for réseryed sesla. Ade anlaslon, S Jiescryod seals now far sale st Janse, dicClurg & Co.'s 107 & 110 state-st., withuat extrd chiarge, oF only fx. eved deats af Lo on o charger which scems to share with the rider | the door just ajur—the anly door that opencd 1l passion of recklcss ambition. Thelron-willed | between the present lifoand the lifo to come. man secins cold o8 fce, but his ey 1 gazivg on | Men were drawin Ly a strong yearning to know globo held. fn his hand. e s marking how | what lies be oud‘,‘md they pressed towara Him wuchof the world fs already his, aud &t the | thut they migll know what is the life to coute. gates of what peaceful city or uation ho aball | Hercio lsy the power of Spirstuallam. 1t prom- thunder mext. Perhaps Lo s sclceting s vew | dsed mon 8 glinibse of what had never been re- route by mountain or sea for the campaignlyjng | vesled. Iu- this h?' fts peculiar fascination. just before his balf-brutal heart, !Xeuuw?aue wu | There was in men this desire to know the fu- dur that gmnchu; horse les a beautiful female, | turo—a desiro so_earncat that they could not with the hard hoof Just sinking nto her breast, | keep it back—and ibfs universal desire to Before il flica 86 offrignted wother, pule us [ Jook beyond Christ's prophetic words sppealed, death, and’ carryiug so ‘inmat on her beart, | As the creeplug vine, in suime dark spot, would Meanwhlle Cawir 13 studying the map of the | gradually emerge from its hiding-plae and world fn hishands! Emblemattc picture] Itdoca | climb over rovks and throusrh crevices becanse it tiot point to Casar alone, but tha louz soll of | sought the livht, su was jt with nien fa the dark- milttary chlcitalor who' have written thelr | nessof sin. His hatural fustiney was to suck the pameg {6 erimeon. And when wo remember | Mght,nod in this wuy waa the pruphiecy of Christ that thess have been the world’s rulers through | thut 110 would draw all ien unto Hit fuliitled, almost all {ts history, little wouder remplua that Agaly, the flncnomuun of Christ’s life uud from the boofs uf thelr prnclug horses maby | teachlnoge excited tho intercat of ali iutelicelual millofs have come with awful wouuds fo thefr | dispositions. ‘Fliro was o fascinstion about the bosoms. Bovlety, that beautiful femsle figure, | subject that drew thoughttul men to lLs coutein- uot let our sins kecp us from comine to Him. ‘Thu debt was puld b the cross, and God wus satisticd with it. Most all kuew of this forgive ncss. Thls was the resson why the speaker reached the Gospel—why nmu{ rescnt wet ogetlier to sing and pray.” 11 alt Kucw b they would fiud rest, The second thing s man inust know In order to havo rest was that ho hal security for tho prosent—that ho wouldn't full into sin. Blany sud mwany w one hoeftated about becomive & Citrlstinn right there, s We bud a Savior, who died for us, who lives In Hoaven to hear our prugers d ta give us gracy day ulter dsy, W ept from the powor of eln. Our wecurty fur the prescnt was that Chrlss would keep us we did uot bave to keep oursalves, Anotber thicyg we nceded for rest was hope for the future. 4 wan’s }nu‘ Lranagrysalolis nnlxhtbolur"l\‘uu und be feel sevurs for the Emem, Lut € left uncestain sbout the future, ¢ would think some dark cloud would asbe, would wuffl sud bark for sume tme. § would o perfectly still, wod, after s while, he would ’uum on the bed, scratel the clothes ol my uce, und uearly go wild with the exdte- went. Then be would hide, Generslly we put him under the table, wiere he woas nearly con- ceuled by the lange leaf banyng down. § would call hinn; aud wearch for bim, wmaking a ruu deul uf nolse, while from wuder the edgo of tho Ieaf be would watch mo with the keenest fnter- cat. Bomet{mes the excitument would by so great that Mother would have su speak to bl o be stll]; but, aside from this, be always walt- «d for e to tnd him, when Lis pleasure wus wnbouuded. He knew the valuo of noncyj und, i & peuny was given biw, he would fuae. diately start for the market, scveral blocke sway, The jivgle o mouey would put him on’ the wlest, and, it 8 pleco dropped on the fioor, lic was sure t0 make s rush for L One of my elder brothers was 8 clerk In the Post-Ottice, sud Alaje used to tind & comgenfal Teao evenlog of Coocert, Too McVIEKER'S THEATLE, Last Five Nights of tho great Comedy Success,’ LEMONS. Order carelages for 1n:a?. SArSRay aiTaco sud Mgt Bauett ot M. E.. ORNE, ) Next weck, DION BOUCICAULT in bis grest 1 Braer the SHAUGHIALN T 3 Office, oa i A Bribe of 810,000,000, TU-NJAHUT AXD WEEK,| Mullen snd Nagee, J, G A currespondent of tho Loudun News writes v & ET30% e . Afica,” dliec tan i iad ortglual dn-lum:fi-."u.‘k‘.c el au t knowing what was coming, would uot | frum Comstautinopler @1 bug to plus betore | spot vo the woll-baze under the vounter, One | | we? , calkins Mubesia, i Luow that » fraudulent convevance uf property | basthus been trampled dowd oua beaten intd | platlon,” This was sceu even wmvug wen who e, ¥ Verily, vml*l, uy unta you He | your pusders the followlag, Wil wiay pechiapa | day an Irisiman wus meking change, and | “FAFPRESQRELVING dedle, Yangfs Bewse, and Wua 1o couveysucs ub all, but be had studied | blood and dust while the map of uew Stutes bus | were Qeep In uubellel, but who werd | thut bearcth My word aud belleveth 1t und 10w | give thew o clew ws 0 the real reasou of Midhut dropped 8 balf-dollar ou the tloor; but, 83 be | Masfuecs, Wedeadas sod Satunday.