Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 11, 1877, Page 2

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s A Oy ¢4 i R R AT agid I SRt En T oR R LI ey RELIGIOUS. Prof. Swing's Sermon on the Sources of Church Power. The Cross of Christ Greater than All Bectarian Philosophy. Farewell Sermon by the Rev, K. P. Powell Lo the Third Unitarian Chureh, Mohammedanism and Christianity in Tar- koy—Address by Dr, Michaelin, BOURCES OF CHURCIIPOWER. BSENMON DY PROF, SWINO. Prof, Bwing preached yesterday morning at the Central Charch, taking as his text: wv!i"" Lye up s bsnner on the high mountatn.—Jsalah Tho Church s pletured as an army moving slong with fiying banners. Upon anclent banners and fiaga there were words which stood as symbols of the political or religlous faith, in obedienco to which the ranks were moving toward tho deld of battle. Lifting these significant words on high and Jetting the brecze tako thom, to make thelr gold or { parple colors gleam in tho sun, thoe eoldiers ad- " vanced under thelt lnepiration, and in history thero sprang up tho poctic phrasc, **Ter- riole sa an army with bonners” The Modern Church having becn marching proud- 1y along for centories, let us inquire to- day what inscription is upon Ils flage, and ban- aers, snd ahfeldat In the name of shat idean is its preat march being conducted? What words are fallest of Inspiration for the rank and the file? Unee, when an old_srmy wns just entering the fleld of Dattle, tho Persian commnander wi rised to bear a kind of chant rising from ek ]’vwh'm. and, baving nsked what that sound meant, holcarned that that legion, on enteting baitle, vas accustomed to chant the slmple words, **May Zena be onr Savior and our victury." It must bo that the Christisn army, which has now been upon the field of conflict for'eighteen centurics, has do- ~eloped or revealed mymbols which may express the mmnlnfial tho advance, and Inepire tho rank nnd tile of the roldiery, To find thesc words, and to fix them wellin the heart, will be task enough for the hour, All the institntions of man le around us to he examined ond mensuréd, and then to catecmed for thelr merit, or to bo deeplscd for their internal worthlossnces. Democracy and mor- olity. lberty and bondage, sociatism aud marriage und cellbacy, and many other slapes of hife, are #pread out before the mind to bo eatimated just as The‘sttata of tho earth are lying the ono Leneath tne other, to bo opened and stndied by the geolo- st, Fortunate are wo wnen any Instl‘ution h xen doing its pecaliar work long cnough to en: ble the rtudent to ind some lawa of its action, and 10 conclade what good ar 411 tho institution is itted fur |n this varied world, For cxample, despatiem 3440 0ld, reaching from tne Pharantis dowa'to tha modern autocrat, that one can cuslly study it and learn ita worth compared with a llinilted monarchy ara repubife. And republicantem his appearcd so wften, now In Greece,now In the Lebrew Common- wealth, now In Rome, and at last has lived such s graud hindred ycars in the present epoch thut any roflecting mind can look Into it and find its great Hues of merit, and from §ta life can cult the” words which should henceforth be written upon Its flag. Very trae and Impressive aro (heso luny-time rurveys, for they bring together much o number of witiescs, and from euch diffcrent olnts of observation, that amid all theso tu(ll{‘- g nouths the whole ' truth may bo caslly eatab. Tished, W one has known & man for d!g only, onc may form ais_estlmato of merit whicl Fiiall rovn noed rovision, o 4 complete recall: but when one bas stuod beslde o fellow.mortal for Lhirty or afty years, tien one miay render a Judge ment that will not necd to bo revieed, Ae with men, so with institutions. In the wmorning of their career tho observer may bo mlse taken, but when onc of thesa large ma- chines, this monarchy of this republican fm, has been oul upon its toil for many generations, then comes the true verdict In the are cace. Tacitas, looking out ot sgme Christe dnna who hiad Jnat begun to teach, and pray, and ring, puton o wiost confemptuous oxpression of fuce, und spoke of (he misernble superstition. *Ths did Fliny, and this did Aurclius catimate the young ndventirer. Hotirs make o poor liasts of an ‘estiniate of a religion, Ifouses bullt upon the sand will soon tumble. Uenturies nlone nre the rock unpon which one can Lulld up a fair conclusion us to the worth of a churct, or 8 philosophy, or a state. “I'liese foundstion rlunes Christionity ot last furs Tislica thie mind that desires 10 nd” ita causes of succens. Outof itn wuny centurica one may ub Teart dednce its most central and Infiuentlal words, and may doclare what muxim vr ides bas been upon 3in victorious bunner, and what ¢hont has passod nlong through the leglon. In seckinz what “watchwords have made the Churel tunnors teerible, one must noto Gt of ail o orroncous conclunlon Gf tho —muny pects, Marchingut loto the Suld with thelr own specal and new words upon hanner and tunpue, the varlous forma of thie Church have folt that cut of those leaw thero was flowing towanl them an wbundant uscfuincsss. Nothiug te go cqmoion ua 10 confound causes and muko of a contcuporary thing a creatfve thing, The euperatitious roldics will fasten o cliarin to his person, wear tomo bit of etotie, o brase, or guld o bls gird'c or oier hix hieart, snd then, »hoald he snrvive the battle, ho WiI biesa the (ali<wan with mony o Kiss for its minzical Induence axainst bullet or daet, Bt the relation betweon the chann and thusoldiar's afety ‘wis oaly one of time sod uot casuul Tho nlono ‘was worn at the tlmo of iho aafety, cnd thero tho relationshlp ended. — Bnt sols <her and man are ono. We all bow before ¢ Intlucnce of cotomporary things: * Much of tha if medicing coines from tho fact that the ' well while it Is waking the notion. Now iristian lsonly 8 won. A band of menin a Chnrch 18 much likea vund of men leagued tos gether In an army of Ravsiana or Yurks, — We all enter thu Chureh carrylug along our human na. tare, and we make thitus causal which ure onl; cuteinpurary. | Tilo” Episcopul Church looks onl and beholds that Its membership - has passed up into the milllons, and {ts clergy up into the tons of thourands, ond that ils soires ornament overy ylliago, and that ita chimes wake up Lesutlully tho ovening and morning alr, und It says "ho Trayer-100k tias doneal) thial \What & potency heto luin tho Churcy which possessos a history and an unbroken succesalon In the pricathood 1 In bie fond delight tho churchman wonders Tuw tho BDaptist or tho Methodlst can hopo fur succcss, ecelng that he has not thore potentlal_alencles that ha vouchsafed 1o hlmn, But pll thie peesonal happineescomus from & falthful chetlaliing of the nun cdusd pro cdusd, from a childilke error making u cause and an elfec! out of two things which stmply lived in the world atthe o time, It{sthesiory, in a new form, of 1ho 0] Kulng into batile with o charm on bis bosoni; comiug out uf the rnml]{u allve, Lo kisses the talivman. 8o the Illgh-Church enters the sintul world with its pequliar forma all nzound it, and coming forth ot theend of three hundred yenrs 41 great success 1t kiusca the Frayer Hook and the {Juhrllcs 08 though they were tho héroos of the many uttion, Not otherwise with Baptist, viniat, Muthodlst, e the Haptist Cburch there rlecs up (u-daya u which may well 0lt each member of that omination with” pride. 3lllons of men have en gathered toto that fold Ly a clergy full of energy and plety and adspration to thy wants of soclety, But by just as much gs they altribute theis ducecss to uny of thelr peculiar tenets about Junncralon or communlon, h{v Just sa much do they ere in tiuding the reason of victory, Inall their ardent welf-love thoy unly repeat once more the creor of thoso who' make crcative causcs vut of facts which are only companluns in time, The Juptiet belfoves fn imincrelon, the Daptists uro #uccesaful, but the success need not result from the bamersion ln{ more thau the soldicr's succovs wmay result from the stone worn about bls ucek, In thie claesic uges all men, h!f:h and low, resorted (o aagical ritee to protect life and 1o secure thelr ninie, but the averagu length of 1lfu was lower in those times than fn our day when uo one asks the ries to help him prolong ox B Jstect ruln of all clalme of wucce b faptinta midy baso upon immersion may bu found capalinns and Sethodiste in the faci that tha Epl who sprinkle thell cunuidates for thu Holy Come munion are equ ul In the conversion of anaukind. ‘This Gict will compel the immersionist 1o look away from tho baptismal-funt to discover his power, OF the linuit of sccts to attach tuelr success and thulr peculiar views tovethicr as cause and resuit, 1he Calviolats furnish 8 most striking example, Tiven Mr, Froude comes forth us an advocates of the Jdea thut Calvinlen was once 8 mighty power fn the relizlous world, But thu partiul error bles in attnbutiug to Calvinlam what Lulungs to other and far more ceuential ideas in the Presvyterian system, I Presbyterianiun had come furward o only the mame of thy pecullsr Calvinlan ideas, then upon thiewm ita succens could Lave been founded; but the theory it touk frow Calvln was only o winglo and suinll element {a the whole, The Presbyterian Clecty was ¢ part of thie mighty rovolt ygainet Jiuuanist, and camo afirmiog tho riglts of (ho jeople Lo education and hberty and a frve lluds of to Holy Scriptures, 1 came with & repudias tiun of Popinh vica pod idicoess mnd bouds azp, the champlon of a religion mnot of 3uvncy, Bot of rabes, and bells, und fncense, an Sudulzeuces, but of o spiritual fajth ond of right toustivas, \When you rumeisber tha rigld vimplics 1y of thut religion us cowparcd witn the old Ruwan forwis, bow it snuounced the ductrinus of & decp und universal educatiun, sud bow it inalsied upon 1 Yoly Baotath sud s holy 1ife, sud wade the muun- tains and woodd nug with its' prayers und bymi You 10 more ueed Calvinlaw t explain the suce ©f thot Church then you need 1t in order (o account fur the prugress of Armerics ur the achlovements of tho sazun ruce. Tn cxpisluing the yreat career of Yresbyleriantm, one wust ductude the ludomitably energy of the Gerwan sud Auzlo-Uorman charac- ter, That race Las crowded forward sll tae ldcas §1 bas ever cspoused, und under che lmpules of sucler people, which has ucver felt weorluvss au Lias suver becu conguered, tuat one Church leaped forward frow geuerutivn W generation. it wos nob clection and decrees which ht‘lr:d it, but Jtwass fuwstmple fdeasof faith sud vractice, and then the enorwous powur of the £4z0n race. ‘Fue suveral facte that Preabyteriun. $aw dewanded s separation of Cburch from btate, denanded spicitual freedows, dewauded public Citcativn, demanded & porcr tndividus) ey thaa 1l Staly inslsted upow, demanded vther couditivns of cowniuslon than wero citizecabip, dvinduded a 1uble withuut humab sdditions, expliln the noble carer of Shat Chuich W auch advgres st B vk need not even estimate tho probable bl:l\llnb',l of the mrtaphysieal theariea of Calvin and Luther, 11 may be, as ing theologian has eatd recontly, that the Presbyierian formnina dercend from the une doctring of vredestination, but the sonree af A philotophy and the source of anccesr may be for apart; and while the creed of that Charch may have made the cternal decrcea of (odn starting point, the Charch has drawn ita uscfninens from its efeady onrault of education, and ilberty, ana_righteanemess. fis ol thealogy has_played no valnable part out In the great fleld of buttle, When you look into that denomination and sce I long-lasting and decp Jove af liberty, education, and plety, amil what a Itoman Charch it met as an encmy, &nd what dig. nity of mission it nosscssed asides from the Cal- vinietic points, Lull will perecive that it has gained lutle of fta greatners from tlioso polnte, and wonld hence Joge nothing were thota pointa taken away, It appeared when roclety needed 8 hu'}p which no mfim“lh{llti conld offer. hat neither thia church nor any of s sister racioties are drawing uscfulncss from thelr dis. tinctive tenets Ia suscentible of most potitive proaf; and the proof i of this kind: 1f, for ex. ample, the Arminfan theory abont God's decrees and the human will, and the Arminian dogma that & converted man inay fail from grace, werd all influentinl idcas, then the church that repudisted heme ideqe wauld nppear ne u dnfective, lan- ishing body.—s body suffering with disease, §¥ater betng valnable for 6 plant. if one cnts off the water the plant withers. All Tfoliage has disappeared from Sahara. hecaure (he rains have ceared to fall an that continent of sand. Thae, 1f the Armininn theory were potent for goue 8| etk which tbes Aol poracen i shuald: be- fonnd lending a paralyzed life,~a 1ife led amid scanty snpplies. But, behold, Calvanism sets forth con. tradicting each lending Idea of Arminianiem, and, instead of langnishing, it cxhibits tothe world all the elctuents of a vigorond life, It conld ho cut olf from the rains snd dews of Arminlua without suflering, Hence Arminianism does not contain an essentinl element of religion. Suppore now we afiem with_Mr. Frondo and thousand others that the Calvinictic notlons of Wod, of election, of unalterablo fate, of a chosen peoplo, of the perseverance of saints, are tho causes of the power and plety and general rucceas of the Presbyterian ariny, then certalnly if such virtuo lle In there ldeas tho denominutions which are destituta of thero doctrines aught to langulst and appear in history ms flelda withont tha early and latter rains, “Bul slas for such expecta. tion| a8 thongh to drive us to the real fountain of rellglous good, a wise Providence permitted Ar- minfanism to arlse and contradict each tenet of Calvanism and then movo onward to A uscfulnces uite eq 1o that which issucd from Geneva, ‘What alesson 1s herel While a host of admirces are standing hg the one philosophy, loading it with enlogy, ancribing to it the worul's emancivation and redemption, np springs another phitosophy nnder Jotin Wealey, and, contradicting the former theory in all particulare, lt18 crowned with an oo~ tivaled victory, Only ono Inference 1s posaible, and that ix that noitherof thoss churches is draw- ing its bleasings from the n,u-lnm by which the culogiets are standing, but from unscen aprinzs neglected In the estimates of man, but bonndless ond never-falling 1n the providence of Qod. We nredriven to the conclusion that the Calvanistic churches ¢o not draw thelr utility from Calvanism, ond the Arminian churches do not extract thelr good from Arminianism, but that back of thewo 1heorles there aro mightier ideas which have stead. ily supplled those church.channels with watcrs of life. Instead of Culvinism's being bencath the Presbyterlan Church, litting it up into greatneess, thera lay the Duteli and English encrgy Inspired Ly the love of the Dible, and liberty, and God. “Fhe parallel march and ood of thewe two theolo- gles, denying cach other at every step. shows that Calvinism snd Arininfanism nre theories equal 1y puwerices, that may be embraced without blee: ing or Inj: (. and refected without detriment, rlynllml ar process of comparison it will bo found that the tlory of Christlanity lea not in the tmmeraion of the Daptidts, for “the sancuaries which'administer this rite by a fow drops, and to littlo children, are as full of Chirlstaml onth?. And this gloty lles not in sprinkling, for the laptists who Immerso aro 28 near as any of tholr chureh compagions to the, Throne. 1f you declare that the cesence of Cirlstianity Jies in the !IInplIclli of the Quaker, the enints from the Cath- olic and Episcopal Church will riso up from cosily tombs Leneath costly minsters, and will ahow yoit that Clrlet's feet inny walk abaut amid costiy dec. wrations, Not in the simplicity of tho Coveinant- er's muslc doen salvation lie, for maony falthful wnes have lived and loved Christ and died amid the elsborsto and sulemn music of tho highest art, Nor can the Migh-Churchman point to bin robos, and processions, und bowings, and say, ** Hero Is tha suprenio cood, " for 8 plain Quakor can at on: oveorthrow the lLi\mlEnl by woving across the licnn lv:'lfll Lis simpllcity of rite but beauty of character, Go whither wo may, we sholl at last find the glnr{ of the Church retreating from these outer circlea und moving inward, ns though Its home were away from tho onter strife. As thedoves of Virgil's atory, startlod by tho rattling armor and nolsy foutstep of approaching wan, ruse nnd aligated again amd agaln, always fying awny tuward the deeper forest, su the angelic spirlt of the Church will nut bo fnnd In tho outer confines of the sects, Lut before your sdvancing foot It will risc und iy furthier inward, ss though elsewhore, far awny, there weroa resting-place Tull of peaco. Iluving nuw appronched (he Church from many dilferent wides, and having found nowhere on ade- quate explanaifon of ayy jast power, and henceno pdequate basts of future Lopes, lct un follow tha fuyitive dove Inward and find wiewt glory thers may be nway from this first i of approach. We da not advince In vain, The word God appoars write ten everywhero, It [aupon feaf and’ Hower, mil ground anrd sky, 'Thu fior we adiauce the more Visiblo the worderful leters In this deep sulltade wao read alvo that man has transgrosscd 1o Inws of thls Creator, and micrlts jamlslment, ~ Lut, merit ing puulsinicat, o ta_ ko wonderfully iado | iniazoof the Almighty that tho very skles weep over bis enlg, ond wonder {f Le canbot be trans- formed und ilited again for itfe, And now tho nume of Chrlet wprines up and s secn engraved be- slde the name or Gad truth, and lifo. Just aund men, and st and 18 dug in tho roletin w worde, Heaven," These, then, aro the Inner dactrines whonce all tho Cligclica which have hind any success or potvor have drawn thelrintlucnce over 1ho souls of ‘men. God, ¢in, Christ, rightconsnesy, tho grave, Holt, and {feaven. theso aru tho idess which lio beneath he Caivinistic and Arminian, all tho ¥Protestant Lvangelieal Churches, and nlrlnln thelr trlumphal marchies lu oar workl. ‘I'io 'resbyterlan Church does not surpass llomanism because of ouy Cal- vinlan theory, but because It hos wado its people #ecc more clearly tha Gad, the Chirlst, the righteous- ness, the dutles that descend from thesv more clearly mcen facts, And the dMethodist Church docy 1ot prevall because of fta mnu‘?nh,-lul PrOPO. sitfons, but because under the cad of o Wenley It fl {n: tnore perfectly the inmost [deaa of Chris- Jan(ty, It 1 strong i the centro of al] truth, That the human (nmllysnlullt ece moru clearly thero central truthe, tac Protestant Churches afl #ed A wide and duep education, and that all the powers of religlon imght be developod they ca nusol ndividual “liberty : and thun with dod aud “hriat. ond the gavo aud_elernity, and earthly edvcation und development beneafh them, ono need notask [urther what agencies have been at work that these sccts have zuthered Into their folds s0 1wauy ut illlons of our cibizens, 17 the peronal gueatlun were asked of any of you who are profes- sors of the Christian religion what tdeaa flled the mind when you made such relizious professlons, daubtioss tie anawer would be that thu ldeas woro ¢, deatb, and the mystery beyond, Wnen adult miuds, at least, have pro fencd religion, theve words have been' burning in thelr hearts, "Thewe ore the wonds which coinpore the last sontences of the dying and that mingle in all tholr foars and Yopes, llenco these ure tho potent words of all tho pood hours that bless outh, and strength, and health, 1lence be Csivine stn, or Armintant; or Eplscopacy high or Jow, gyctuo iruo they ord only (hearic that attend cnmuunu{ und nut powerful cauxes that aver mwake it T'he grave In the gruss with the czoss of Christ standing vy that grave, Las surpsescd ali the aetalls of scctarian philosopby in leading man into tho sanctunry of religion. And thus hava wo sought and found tho words that are to bu Iifted up upon the Lanners upon the high mountains. Uther words way ba true, of curls ous, or wise, but the words that slonecan make the Church armles ** torrible with thy baunere™ are theso words: **God and righteotsncss and tho viour and heaven,' These were tho kind of words that Abrabam lifted up upon Lis mountalns n tho long agvs parti theso tne words which made 1o llebryw Church shine forth bnxlulg iz o dark crlod; thesa the worde which have brought the 'athollce what thuy huve enjoyed of pietys theso (ho words which nave’ urced forward the group of sccts In our century. ‘Ihe denominae tlunal {deas are Jike the local brecse that suakes a .+ OF makea 4 grove bend horo or thero In o e but which docs not adlect the yiobo 1toulf; but thowe ideas, which were scen by all the saluts of all ages, are that other motion which burls the whole' earth aloug a sublinw puth snd makes it puss through the smazing victsitudes of day aud night, winter and sumuies, A theological thuory may bu 4 motlon that shakes & leaf, Curis- tianify s 8 power that carrics u wor thought thut the sun fa mnving in & 0 that (b plauets, lostead of movlng sroun lonsry urb, are being dragged along thro space, 84 though a wmother were hastenin MHeaven, leading her childrey aud dowlng guruients, cliglon 0Ves BCT0sd Lhe wide area of man, snd, not bund. Ing frowm its path, drags wftur 1t all the sects, reach- tug out twward tbem her luving hapds, nod sutle; ing some of thew to calch ber truillug yornent aud thus e Lurries them oaward taward tha gul of leaven, 2 ——— FAREWELL SBERMON, TUE REV, B. P POWBLL AT THE TUIRD UNITA- KIAN CUUHCH. The Rev. E. P. Powell, who bas beeu pastor of the Third Unltarian Church for several years, preached bils farowell scrmon yesterdsy morning. Ho intends 1o aj bis fura pear Cllaton, N, Y., bis bgalth baving Leon somewhat impaired by twenty years of hard work, sud absulute reet being necdful 1o recuper- ata. ond theso [deas of Gody riat, we find o crave. 1t terness, and by it ar the Urhrough Uids mun passca to Uoll or Gracu be with you slL~7Veua. fil., 15 i be sald, in protracted fare- wells, Lis revigustion as pastor was soon (o ba ln e bands of the Trustees, aud to be lald betoro tne Boclety for sction. It had been thoroughly covsldercd, oud could ot be recoualdervd. Abuut & year ugo he sud to some of the ‘Trustees bat bo wishod W withdrsw frow this cld of work, but the suswer was, emphatic- ally, **1t you do, ibis ls the lest expcriment we will makv. e eoucluaed to put la voe year o7 Of us vuruest work us posstble. For the t Bwo inanthy (wa of Uhe Trastces hud known of Bl futcubivy W clvae bhd Jabosa Witk e your, al) betract Christ 1s the way, and . THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: Nis arrangements had beon made accordinely. 1o hnd aimed a8 far as possible 10 ro arrange hia plane an In o way to disturb theirs, whaterer their plann MONDAY, JUNE NEWBURYPORT. 11, 1877. conld steal ft, she wonld be like Fortnnat out hia with- purse,” or Alrddin without his lamo, or King Arthur withont Ex PENNSYLVANIA. shacked to ind that her hnaband hadb ndded: *In 1t not dresdtnl that he e lediand ithr, A 4 have might Do, T1in rensnne fur withdrmseing were: 1ty seem almont invidions to xingle ont thess | . B e o ey nnt el Virst—ile desired to lake fromoneta twayenrs | 5 pp h s namee, but, ne_publishers and editors, like the 5 T T ] A the mlior a8 LiSmera sticast of reat, from pulpt requirements. _ ila assachuselts Seaport, | heridn of mdievat and chivairic times, have so | Troubles in the Railroad and Coal | fii"Wers Wan no rink. Ve aaid the warat p.M B e P e e and Its Surroundings. L R S g TR Interests, tho thing woro (e growns of | the man /i and thin wan apolo 2 scd, onpecially since, In Newbnry- . \ Fottent from this King of application, nna s retreat port as well " whom e blopd wanintuesd.’ 116 braakfanted o In other tawns, the flrfil words are to thoso sources of recuperation which belonged auz dames.” TONEET, 10 him by his structare and birthright—a matter,as some knew, of ntrong heredily In him, Second—1e did not wish langer to atand face to faze with & church dent and endure the wear which wna robbery from the est mental work, The So- ciety's financial obllgations were no heavier than thore of meighboring chnrches, but that was not went out to work &3 usunl noxt morning, the saying that he was all right. 116 also wentont Lo work as msual on Satnrday, and ate dinner of roast pork on Sunday. 1Ils arm wan bandaged and In a sling tho whole of thia time, Jig complained little about the paln {n hin arm on Enniay, and hefore he went out on Mondav morn. Ing to work he yomited aoveral times, having had alwaye, '‘Place e — HORRID TROPHIES. A Yonng Hoosler Travelor Teturns from TNirazil with an Assortment of Iends of In- Reductlon of Wages by Varions Trause portation Lines. Some of the Literary Celebrities of the Vicinity. Harrlet Prescoit Spofford, Her ¢ Amher Philadelphia & Reading Hostilities—Oheap n very restlers night, He retarned In about an saying mach,” To meet them 'required the most dinns. " Dersistent work of an enduring, broad-shooidered Gods,” and ller Island.Home. et Tork Sun. . COonl for the West, e B Y e toaia Tt Mews o man, whose nerves did not lie on the surface, as ‘Thera were ten human heas vomlited several times on Mondny and Tnerda Well'an thelr own self-pacrifee. of ebony sticks 4 e b wan bl e sind was unable to go to work. On Tucaday cvent F Special Crrrespondence af The Tribune. en. Williame. wha was eryln mett o vttt RS TRYIROS | John O, Whitter, Loy Levoom, Harrict | el o Fulonseee, brookra. b st and | ueyaur, Tay June oot mae ek wn ro | 8,07 My b vas cizlog #id'ahe preparation for the pulpit. le umgnludlho ne- “ ckly pIea’ nitot patyat heroom. | eently inangurated by the loading conl-producing | Dr, Williams came to nee him, ani after they left gensity of theso requirements, fecling them ‘a8 MoEwen Kimball, and * @Gail Ernest Morris, (he Indianapolis boy naturaiiat, | and teansportation companies of Fennaylvania, to | the witneas saw the doceased, .who wan ncarcel keenly 88 noy one possibly could. A church to be " who {8 20 years nld, sat in a tattered snit at s small | yoduco the prico of anthrmclta foel at he sea- | BDle to apeak, —lo fact, he scomed to have J'.. strong snd” compact, ro ;llrm:m;h;-:t_:mxfir‘x: Hamilton,' table. An attendant, who Introduced the reporter, i donlyedliapsed. 410 rambled i histalk on Yed. board, has already begun to show its injnrious efects In all portions of the Schuylklll, Lehigh, Wyoming, and Lackswanna Districts. The companles, genorally, to savo themscives trom lose in the coal and carrylng departments, have been sdopting a policy of OREAT RETNENUIMENT AND ECONOMTY. Tho Lehigh Valley Rallrosd Company (the lazgest conl-carrier In the Lehigh District), the Lo- high & Busquelianpa, the Delaware, Facka. wanos & Western, the Delawara & IHudson, and expenditure of pationce on tho part of a pastor, and toll whero toil was not_altogether sgreeable. Many of the soclal demands were unjust, and ouglitto be abated. 1o did not feel willing to work himsclf in & kind of labor which grew to him more and more distarteful. FourlA—iie had broken off from Srery effort at connected work, the requirements of the church demanding much change of toplc as well a4 caro of #mall particalars, for every church, and espocinily o weak one, neded pastoral eare in'minuti= which did not probably belong in his arenn of labor. lo had been nnable to “NY]. wo volumes on bis removed from each head s white cloth, and ex- posed the grim, tittoed faces of men and women, They had been prescrved Hifelike from six months totwoor three years, The teeth were gono, the eyos had heen pulled out, and In thelr atead were sockets filied with lialis of black wax, but the halr hang as natural os on the living haman hend, *4These heads," explfined Mr. Morrs, *‘be- longed to Bouth Amorican Indians, and were prescrved by the . Mundurncu Natlon as nesdny morning, looked dendly pale, and oxprenre. 1 strong deaire to seo Dr, Thomas, who called in th aftornoon. Witneas saw tho bandage off, and ob. rerved that (he arm on which the wound was laoked inflamed, discofored, and much awnllen, He died at Gvo minates past 2 o'clock)ant Thure. day morning. Deceaned's general health was good, 1ic was a man of temperato bablts, ~The arm wa: ina l]lnr daring the whole of the time, and he did not usa it ezcopt to 11t little articlos. Mrs. Alico ¥illiams, widow of tho deceased, gaid thoy hiua boen marcied elght year, and during the wholc of that time the only thing of which het Bpectal Correspondence of The Tridune. - Nrwminrronr, Mases,, Jone 6, —Newbaryport {hthe moatdelightfnl of the old fowns that secm to be lying relecp along the shore of Marsachnacits Day. Althongh in Essex County, which s the most Important manufacturing county In that manufacturing State, it has happlly boon preserved from some of tho peculiarities of Lowell, Law- rence, Hlavershull, and Lynn; snd ro can give to Rts vietfors, ond its quiet and coltivated fn- our natlve Indians presctve scalps among thelr husband had complained was palpitation of thy hands while, hie | eltength was = sbeorbod | habilants, senec of frecdom and reposc, 1t han | trophlcs of war, Thoy ara the frst that have over tin Peoumlvania, Tislireta. f,““_“f"'“‘:; oDave a1 | heart and eovore Teadacho. On Thuradsy svaning e moer C aoigy g lese eheet | he Merrimac Rivor, with all its beauty, to riso | been brought to this country, and tho firat, I ba- > o foceaned told her fhat that moming his master, fal. 1t might scem eolfish to some, departments. Tho shortening in pay fn tho accond | Mr. Dirchall, had fold him that blood was wanied he intended to lead a life of idlences, Dot he | ond fall beside ft. 4t has the ocean and its pure | lleve, that woro ever taken from Bouth Amerles, that hns taken place in the transportation departe | fOF some poor creature who was dyl ked had never been 1dle, aod never expected o wished | breczes to Invigorato it, and the eound of the 2 cexcepl three which were picked up by traders from a civillzed tribe of Indlans, Two of theso were taken to France, and ane to England. I retarned on Snnday from my second trip to tha Nrazils, and 1 havo in theso lieads my proof that I penetrated o reglon in the south of Iirazil whero the faco of & whito man had not peen seen before, Tho Rio Tapajos, which s a tribotary to the Amazon, {8 well known, It has for its tributarica the Rio Ban Manuel, the Rio Jucnans, and the Rio Curraru. Prof. llart never went above Itainba, on the Itlo imIf he woull o, would, 1e al e him there was no risk, Deceased told witness that when tho fnstrument entercd his arm ho felt his henrt gtow cold. and that ha conld not stand tna gronnn of tho other mun, 1le atated that hio had told fhe doctors before the aperation thut he Tind suflered from paipitation of tha heart and head- ache. The bandage came off on Monday night, anil tho wound hegan to hleed, Sho droseed the wound with cold cream, 1lis faco changed much on Monday and Taesdny after the sovore vomiting, 10 be, not even in an idlo Paradiec after thin life, Ench one must decide for himself what wae his daty, and he muet have enough to act accordingly. It was owing to the cowardice and weakness of men that so fow dared [0 do what natore do- manded until she laid her heaty hand npon them, and thoy tere Inld aaido altogetber, Fifth—1a was wholly out of l{mpnlh with o Inyro part of what classed itsel! as liberal ro- liglon. He did not know that bo was In aympathy with citier wing,—the Unitarian or liberal faith, Tle certalnly was not with the rad- ment of the Lebigh Valley Ratlrond, Much dis- satisfaction was manifestod nmong the enginecrs, fromen, and Lrakemen, and at one timo it was feared there wonld bo a general strike all along tho line, The roduction went Into effect on tho lat fnst. ; and, while there has been no oggressive demonstration as yet upon the part of the opera. tives employed by the Company, the sitnation In uncertain, The membera of the Locamotive Ene gincers’ Brotherhiood aro still holding secret con- melancholy suef to soothe it. Plam Islsnd, with its beach, {a within casy access; and the Bar, with {18 Lreakers, 1s jost beyond, A fow old fragments of.wrocks, balf-burled In the sand, keep before the eye TS DANGERS OF TIB DEEP, and serve to prepare tho mind for tho storles of tempest, and per), and datlng, and self-racrifice, and deatt, which theold sca-captains, and thele Dr, Thomax sald 1t was intended totake ten ounces feala: cortainly not with tae conservatives: children and grandehllaren, like to teil. Old elws, ferences ot Dethlohem, Phillipsburg, Kaston, was In full l;mgalhy. o tog en bt sonid o aiC | planted 200° vears ngo, - overarch the fino old | Tapajom, and whon 1 got thera 1 was warned to | \Wilkerbaree, and . Pittstons —and s - raport | Of 2000 from tho deceased, but they unly took with Dimelf and hls 6'n methods of thaugit: and | streots. O1d houses, that haven history, speak to | slop. There wera iwenizthreo falls toascond, | prevatla that 1t “ia = posalblo “that | lir. Parker said the man Inta whoso mpatom the go de,mn&dtd positively, and meant (o azsert | tho eys of domestic comfort, and tho possitahity | &7 l;‘m;.l';‘gv:hnt e {55"1'1'&:7«"-'1'.‘11"0 :{’?n‘.flf’f; Tfi?‘i‘llh'}'{‘f"oum'flu donoe, . ‘,;‘;;;';;n Hlood was infased was named Walter Gernrd. and el and abeaking tremhy, et T noloeikIng | of fnteriors enriched with treasures of literature e 5 2 pi 3 that he had died sinco tho operation kad Loeh por. the white man, asno trade winds swept up tho Tapajos, a8 on the Amazan, 1 got a Mundurueu boy and a bont and deter- mined Lo see the country which no naturaliet had cver seen, 1 prased up'the falls and went up the Rio Currary, a journey of six days. Then leaving the boat I started with my boy acroes the campos 1o look up theso wild tribes, “The cmmlf{ through which we went was a wild waste of praltlo, with hero nnd there Isiands of Jungles rich in high Valivy Hailrond Company are sald to ba pre- lmod fornny cmergency that may arise,—ona of lio ofticials stating to TuE Tisuse correspomlent that 300 ugnllclllunl for situations as cngincers slonehad been flled sinco the frst annonncemont of an expectad strike, . "The annonncemont that Judge Lathrop, the Tto- celver of the CENTHAL RAILROAD OF NEW JERSEY, . Mr. Gerard was his patient Iisten, preelacly that which he Lnew to be the s REE truth, “Iie conaldered all religion emotion, and all faith that was not based on purs intclicctual work and careful study of data as tending towara {dlocy. We conld not know anylhing about auothor lifo cxcept as wo accurately studied and knew thls fe. 'Tho tie between him and tho Charch hsd been cxceedingly pleasant, They had never had a sln- and art, and of marvelona curiosities from beyond thoscas, For It was foreign commerce that, threo- quariers of a contary ago and moro, bullt these quaint bulldinga and gave the town ts aspect, that 11 neither of the land nor of the sca. I naver look upon any of theso raritics: which tho sca-coplains used to bring to thefr wives and daughters, after A Remarkable Crime. Arccent crimioal trlal in Feanco has atteacten canelderablo attention, on account of the atraclly of tho deed committed and tho singular fncldents connccted with the crime, 'Three bad fellawa, by thonames of Aublin, Crochon, snd Bernara, wero troplcal | had deter, o make atill anothior 10 per cent | imprisoned ot Loos, near Lilfo, and whilo' ther cle quarrl. Dut physically, ntellectunily, nad | MORhS and yoars of absence, without thinkingof | foliage. After wo had piocecded for two dnynp and P&x‘-gflnn‘?’l‘“m'wfln:‘nl c“y employes o tho tnt | the Iatisr told his compantons of tho location naq financlally ho conld not aford to romain, Iiis | the tender omotlons which moved the rongh old | a hnlf, living on monkeys, parrota and macaws, | high & Susquehanna Division of the road, has oc- reatdence of Francis Mourant, the Collactor of the leaving wan far from & heartiess act, as il know | sarlors when they bought them, in Madagas. | #ulleting everything from fho bites of ‘swarme of | castoned n Jively commotion. Within' tlie past | Town of Sivey, — Aller thel? reloanc, Aublin and wio knew bim, They needed no apology. car, or Calcutts, or Madras, ' for the. orns- Ivuu:u‘i wo saw algna of tho savage tribes. I was | siz = months he operatives of the Com- | Crochon wentto Slvry. = On tho 20th of June, After alluding brictiy to tho work of the Soclety i M " 'h‘ g 4 with. roceeding anead and prospecting, when suddenly | pany lave been subjecte to redoce | 1870, a person having bosinees with Mourant fortho last Lhirce yoars, and thanking thocongrepay | et of thelr Purltan homes; and with- | ) heard o crackle in tho bushes and saw sixnaked | {lons In thelr pay which amount, - in | Wenttohis house, and, npon entoring, found In tlon fo having guinited thelr pledgys 10 bim,—ho out focllng something of = the thenkful of- | savages with thels bows drawn and tholr whils: | the aggregate, (030 fof cent. 'Tho ciploges to | tho kitclien thio boily of ‘Rusalla Brogusz, wha bad Baving had o free pulpit. —ha said ihat Unltarlana | fection with which o lonely occupanta of those nted arrows almed at my boay, My heart | by ellccted by thadecreaso of wagad havo not as | beenstabbed in clghtoen places, and in the dintny. should remember that true growth was not alto- | homes dul‘ regarded them, joaped: and I ehricked oul Hn tha longusgo | yet decided asto what course they will pursue fn | room the unfortunate Collector, who was fearfully ther in one directlon, Tue good things of the Itepeatedly 1 have looked around for somecthing m( juide had taught me, ‘‘Don't shoot & | the event of the slice being taken taken from thelr [, mancle '!lnrg dead. Thero was no clow to the 1bie wero Just a8 ood ag cver, but the good things friend—n brother.” 1 at onco nppronched them | wage perpetratora o raro ond strange which might have been the **Am- tha crime, and for o time it was o r Gods" in "The mon cmployed in the varlous departe oatsido of the Hible bad Lecoma a vast deal bettes 5 with the gewgawa, of which 1 had'a stock, and [ | ments nro bnally circulaiing potitions auking for an | &reat mystery, Tivosirangers wore scon by a few 1o felt suro the leaven wan everywhero at work Mi8. HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOPFORD'S baught thele Lows fara knifa and a few pocket- | abolltion or rome modification of tho expected or. | Villagors, bubthe escription of thiom was g0 im- that would make honest men and abolish sectarlan | powerful and passionato story of that name. For | Mmitrora. They conducted mo into thelr villoge, | der. It acems to bu tho determinntion of Judgo [wrlccH at the police weroat aloss for oven a linte. The truth was perfectly eafe, buthowas | [t swas ‘1o somo of —thess very Nowburys | but bofara theother savages welcomed me, they ticory to atart upon, The nafe of tho Collector was Lathrop, tho tecclver, to mako the Centraltal. rond of Kew Jorscy profitablo, particulurly in ita coal tepartment, and hio {s retronching In cvery aestble way In the dilferont departments of tho 1t qulte so certain about what waa called truth, lig alluded to familjes who reaped the beneflt of an orgunization, sud contented themsolves with sent me out rome *dawn ' cakes. which I caulil suell before they reached me, cro very e ort housen that she must have secn the welrd Theso wi offennive, Lut I was told that I£1 dld not eat then racelet with its uncarthly wrvlnr-. As sho 18 o native of this place, from her childhood she heard 7ut robbed, and it ¥as sappused at that oo tint The falthfol servant was kiiled for rofusing to yield the nocret of the lock. landations of the work, and remarked that sclfish- | it legends of storme, and alilpwrecks, and the Iiar, | tiio Chief wonld not permit me to como 1 the ¥il- | Company, “The Recolver has publicly annouticed a fow days Bornard, who had suggested the nassniwnys found its own remedy, Negatlveness | and (fia Dead-Man's Reef, nm‘; all the wonderfal | lare. 1ate, but it wasa forced meal, Iam told | Kiw Intention of closing the road §f 1t cannot bo | foasibility of t{w robbery, wns arreated, and ho in churcli work alwaye ended in marsing the en- | ruo talés of sorrow, of ove, and paticnt walting, | that this fodd, which is inadu up In 8 qusntity and | mado o pay, The ralltosd 18 ono of th | Eavo the names of tho two murdeters, and shortly thustam of & pastor, and {inaily destroyed his fa- | which have thelr blEth In theso old towna along tho | kept in cakes, can be amelled ten milos off, "but I | finest and nest cquipped In tho east, | After hung himeclf in prieon. When thoy had dis- tarcet in the Ael. coast, Kvery day, if not In hior own home, yet in | donot believe this. The people could not afford to be nlone; they must have religious Instraction, — religlong cultare, w0 long as th public schools did not cover the whole fle.d. In closlng, he said tie would cherlsh for all an honest eatecm, and tho swect thiugs that had oc- curred In thele lifo together would grow inbis patehed the two unfortanates, Aublin and Crochon went to Drossels, and at onco Jaid thoir plans to escape to the United States, though thelr deed Lad becn without pecunlary recompense. Crochon ralled for flavre, but Aublin was arrested at Liv- :r‘mol nd while traveling from Ostend to Brus- d from tho cars and cacaped, The but reckleas and ~ extravagant management nhas seriously crippied [t 1t is bellcved thatJudeo Lathrop and his usslatsnts con put it on o paying basis In o comparatively short tine, Tho varly termination of the corporation's troubles will be greeted with delight by all _persons in any way connected with coal, 1ron, and ratlroad operations **Idiscavercd that there wers about 2,300 of these Mundurucus, They havo no employment, and they scem ta live to make \war on the five tribes about them, which Inhabit the country be- tween the San Manucl and the Juonna. Only on. of these Lnibes, av far as I could loarn, nre cannibals, the home of her playmales, sho saw theso name- less mementoes of travel and alection; and, in her atady of Imagination all by Lerrelf, myusi 0 woven thess preclous —malerlals Into fabriea of beauty and strength, which in after days were destined to eco tho light and etir our scln b Jumpo A | Theso eat the bralns of thelr enemics. Tho Mun. ) . DMeor Who had. hica {n chinrde sl Jumped while uemory. douta, Thvas only by brenthini e an Blmen; | L S O oty | 12 Fosaspivania and Now Jorsay, Do cars oo I Fapid motom, Ard was killed, TURKEY. ocullaritics in tho cholce and trentment of aub. | halr grow very long, and, as you will observe from | yyhile the coal and transportation corporations | Aublin went stonce to Lille, whero Lo was nzain . cts could have gainad tho ability to write na sho | thceo heads of thelr neiglibors, tho hair ia soft. | nave Leen putting things in shaps to make a grang | Arrested. ila denied thio crima, and, as thoro wau ADDRESS BY THE REV. DR. MICTAELIN, OF | hmawritton. Shels mostathomohero. Ifer best | Thoy shave tholr forelieads, pushing tho bale Dack | ateat of tne coal trado, with a viow of beating cach | B0 1ving witness of the deed, 1t appeured Imponsl- ARMENIA, tales are those that aro incased In the ecencry of | B8 fatas pousible. They aro ontirely nudos butthe | otiier at the scaboard distributing polnte, the com. | bI¢ to convict him. Fortunately, Crochon, aftar Chlcfs and tho warriors, when they go te’ battle, wear nbout their lolng a girdle, which is mada of tho shell of a nut, cut to about the slze and shape of a load-pencil point, driiled through with a flsh- bone, and strnng by tho thousands on a string made of the fnnerpith of a tree. They wind this glrdle round and round thelr bodies, using up two or thrae hundred fect of the string in ono ginlie. Tha Rev. Dr. Michaclin, a native of Armonia, educated fn medicine and theology at Yale, ai- dressod a large congregntion last evening in New England Congregational Church, laking for his subject ‘*Mohammedanlem and Christlanity In Turker. tho Merrimac, ond that have for thelr charactors i hardy men who ‘mads long veyages from the port of Newbury, and the patlont women who there prayed and waiied for the safe return of Lhusbands, and lovers, and brothers, and sons, Sho_must bo someyrlicrd in sight of Parker Rivor, of Sallsbury Beach, uf tho Oldtown steeples, and of Powwow 1111, or hor pinions have not so- bold and strong o visiting the United States, obtalncd a passport un der tho name of Durante and retnrncd Lo llavre, whero lio was arrested, Tha polica gave him to uniderstand that Aublin had confosscd, and ho wos #oon induced to give information, oud, an is vaunl 1in such cases when the two were confronted, thep sought to make tho fimnlcr responsibliity rest upon tho shoulders of the other. That one killed plicated and rainous effects upon the businoss has fallen hicavily upon tho small companies and Indi- vidual operators. In the Behuylwill region the sltuation fs pecullarly uncertain and upsatisfacto- ry, and tha troubles avzment dally, "the Philadelphia & Rending luurgudcom‘mny, whoso ralirond-lines gridiron the Bchuvikill ro« gion, and whose coal-ovgrations aro vory extons ‘Tho speakor regrotted the size of the anbject, | swekp, "There aro no marringes among them, ‘Tho women | give,' waa the originator of sll the pastand present | the #crvant sndths otherthe master, wasiinost which provented him from dolog justico to it in | " Now sho lives in a beantiful place on Jive together in ot part of the village and tho men | rowbica In tho coal trados and. 1 18 brabublo that | PIOBAbIe, L month. and Acblin e ono evening. Noligion and seeularity in tho East {hatiolliers Lech man s st libarts overy metalig nd ki 1 and. co ISLAND ON THE MERRIMAC, AN the buainess will continue to bo unscttled 80 long a mile or two above the town. e tenced te wezo not two, but ono thing, and this wonld bo his From her prerent xontaneerutn. to sclect any woman he wants for tho day, hfl.l as the Company Is & producer and carrlet of anthra- found guilty ns \.""' principal and e Romes o e o otnion her Brerent | tho Chicf Las always tho firet cholce. D winca the disruption af (v o1d and | deatin aiud Crockion wna sentenced ta impriron- TR pof pringinic, I NVhLL ARt seem | heautiful,—be it tho founded hills which ren | Yeapo of war consit of an Indlan club and & [ Lowcriui_conl-combination, tho Vhlladeiphia & | MRt forllfo, tbo dury havine fount some cxicn- it was thab #0 much iuterest as | dor tl Merrimac Valley so0_attractive, tha bow and mmui he warriors are unerring in | Jioading Company has been'operating its mincs to :"R"m pp el LA L vbvvl 3 Yaken I tulaconntey In maksrs In"th Ontoman | long redchies or tho river, tho dislant st :‘;‘;\'-'.,:\"“aonf”m::.",,“Jm‘i:“m?:;f:", o eor i | tosroutest uxtent, ond sending inuvunsoquentl: | s or thém he heads of b (o ur- Lmplre, whils solittle Interest compnratively was | tho neater and sombro ploos, In the summers a8 | ooinis arg cxposod, =0 that when (Uls driven Into 4 derers,” and posibly the jury resented thia ex- , - ) e has bocn slocked b ono_time 88 high A ¢ ather coumtzier "'“'r"""S;’.“'%‘.‘.'.,Y"gi‘.?.’flf,“3,',’,‘: amall Slesmcrs, sovered it leamnie.aeekert: | Do nesh 1”10 imponniblo to.dmw 1tout withont | 25° 108 Guo " tona of "cont Tio" lea was 4o | Ribit Of bud taaie by piving Bim oniy enc: ' The greatly Increauing the wound. Much tino Is spent vrepariug for war, When they make an attack on the cnciy thoy at onco soize the wounded and dead of thelr foe, and speed away with thein. At o _propor distanco thoy cut thy head off of ench Lody closo to the shoulders, rake out tha brains aud'al] the Nesh they can, and then hasten back to iwo murdercrs were astoniahed daring the trial to hear the evidence given which connected them with the erime, but they were evidently womeswhat in- censed when they heard that the safe which they cndeavored to break open waa not locked after oli, and by the openinz of tha door eome hundred thousand francs could have been obtained. overatock tho markot, force down pric tho end, compel the Gther companles to sell at sama prices as tho Piuladelphia & Reading Com- pany had been dolng through fts wholosale and retall agents, Blnes & Shea®, of Philadelphia, Tho plan was working snccessfully to s certain really ona of fhie grestest and’ most important In thy world in size, in position, in climate, {0 pro- and evary other thifie which made it fm- wrcat events had takon placo fu (his ho preatnvea of Uroeco, Versia,and other lind been ncqulred in the lmits of thls “Iheas thinw wero exciinca for tho great #1011 cema to belonyg to the movis at night, when enshrouded n the gloom of the Jong elindows of the hilla nnd of tha pines, it secma a kind of unearthly bubliaticn, woro ' ln sympathy with the Invisiblo and tho ‘wnknown, Emptro. their own village to beqn the work of preservac extent, anil might havo ended entirely sucecssfal, Y 3 But out of that island, and that tov bosy beain, but, unfortanately for that daring schemer, Frank- e el utastron e \e o g e sons | keep coming pugca of and power, which | Hon Uofors 1ao llesh baglne 1 Rty atose SSEin | lin s, Gowen thy FProsident of ths Fillndelpiia & Tho Slous In Nirltis Imml( Amerlca, iyt the prenent Mohaunmiodan ruls was abole | have somotines & fragrance of tho Oricnt, hinting | 9f the heads are all pulled out for neckiacen, Tho | ieading Railfoad Company, tho shaky finanolal il Merald, lucked “out, and then the heads antreal Mepald, whed? T ove g af the Indlan fslns, and a coloring of passlon that | EY¢8 are Dl conditlon of the corporation he reprosented an the | From time to time, siney tho tronbles balween i ad but ho Eietoan aations wers mevarihy | 1alla of o Tropice aud the Spanish Nain. PO i P ©f | exccutiva head alarined the Englivh_stackholders, [ go United States suihoritics and the Indtans havo less willing thnt Turkey should stand becanso | Go 8 fow miles farther . amd look to the | C4TroeRloR PR IO i Crumble, It was eesy | 8nd Cull-l_(lnr(lmv:n had to du[’vln rather hur- | heen golng on, we have expressed our belef that itwas weak, sl offerail naobjection to tholr going | BOrth, over soniu low, bare hills, and you cateh a | Gt WKL Tord, Tl Krwles b WAS VECY | riedly to Englund to confer with the capltalista Iu | tho complicatfans on tho othier siia the lines would in and comingont. So_far as Knglish intereat was ‘nlmuu of Amewbury,—a villago which wlll always | holly unable fo find the troe from which (g | thA% countr who Infioly control tho stock of tho {koly 10 pinco us In the posltion of having to concerned, It wan simly tho intorout of her com | b0 @ placo of pligrinage (or tho clect wnirits who Y Torit foom | Phlladclphis & Ieading corporstion, While he | control a number of the hostile Indlans whom the 1 manngod {o steal ono piece of it from tho but where it wastoncealud. As tha smoke of tha roat acts on the flesh, it shrinks tho skin Lo the bone, 80 that the ekin of the ncck drnws aver the base of tho head like the head of adrum, = The hule thiat remalne in the contrs Is left open to rocolve tho cbony stick, on which each warrlor carrica a hend. When tho halr iatao long it s cat off for tha decoration of thobows, The eycsaro flled with this bisck waz, In which theso parallol white e DIt seanind Ay Jave pure thoughts wedded to molodious verse, Thure, In o smnll, whito housc, for many years lirod and wrole ono of the **sercno creutors of immortal thiogs,* JONN 0. WITFTIER, Thore **Friend ™ Whittior, as bis nelghbors call him, has passod most of his 'peaceful days in full with il his race. No heart moro com- century, his heat for tho f to bu friendly with Lin. gland was to bo aheorbed by her by and by, The ,lrt‘lul oifered by Itussin waa a relizlous one, —that L was her duty to protect tho Christlany, and put them on an ‘equality with Mohawmmedans, This was agreeablo to tho Christians, wha wore willing to accept aunylling for nchange, The cause o! tho present tronble ran back three Jenrs, when the Chnistlan peoplowero overiaxed. The conduct of’ was abwent, the Coal snd Rallroad Barons cone cocted a acheme to EUCLRE PRESIDENT COWEN, A meeting was bold in New York to adopt soma !‘qenn- 10 regnlate the production and saleof coal. exigancies of the caso and their own robollious conduct had driven across the linca. Soveral small bande camo across s sliort thne ago, whily others, emissarics of Sitting Bull, came ovor und threatened our own pouceful Indiaha If |hc{ would lie Companies wera all reprosented ut the confor- | not go over and lhiclp them in thele confllct with ence, —Mr, Ueorge Do B. Ken reprosenting tho | the Amerlcans. We find, from Fort Walsh ad- interest of the I'hiladelphia & llnflfllnfi Rallrond | vicas, that carly in March Maj, Walsh came Company, The Companies arranged | clrlnlnnlA across 8 camp “of the Yankton Inalans atuut 1 0 passionaie, during thi the Lnglinh ‘Government was explained tho | onprewsed af overy land. John Woolman, of dear Ignoring the claims of tho er corporation, 120 mlles weet of the fort, Ilo fo tha cronnd - that It haa a prowpect of acquir | and preclos memo fs vonesaro placed ta imitatlon of tho natural | (EGicUFptch from London wWas recoeil, an- | hond "Chiof “sof tho' Tolons' and _fliy-revan ne Palestine . or return | den for his brethren vy than did this loved the villago, punncing ident Gowen's willinzucsa o agreo | jodges cromsing the lino and making o camp Eyypt a8 o lnfi"kunlp ‘ur “Thoy lust a lifetimo, and, ae they ace cumulate, they aro buried, 'They aro prized very Fittle after tholr annual feast, which lasts two or three daya, and, a8 1 happened thete then, I was able to by them for a fow trinkoets, " Each ona of the ghaatly trophics, over wiich the youny naturallst grew so enthuriastic, lad u coil of twine fastened into each ear, and from some of thess dangled lung strips of beauliful feathors, wolden, crimson, and purple, from the plamage of the birtia of tho birazillan forcats. The' v, Ll the for money horrotsed, sbhout 40,000,000 of _people,—unc-half Mohame- ‘medans and tho other half Chirjatians, Thess woro wmwdo up of many different npations, ' Tho Armenls ane wer (rom tho Aslatic alde and about i, 000, in number. The history of the Mohsmmedana dates from 100, when a I'rince came Into Armenia and conqueredclty after city, unill heand s comeades overran the country and }ald the fonndation of the Ottoman Empizo, which arew until Mohamned 11, took in_ 1454, This rule had man, who poured out In song what W4 Southern prototype, In on carlier day, labared Lo expross in speoch. In oll the reulon thore s no one man who s held in such roveronce by {mmg aud old as he, And, whon he left that vale ey and those hills, ~which will retain n glory from his awcet words, —to find some solacu for his deep fraternal grief, all tho "umplc moumed. Somu- thing is now taken out of the life of that cherished valley It {a as thongh hie had put on the spiritua) and passed from flunhly view. resent \ to any srrangoment that might bo adopted at tho oharhe Tcoung. " The wily manaucrs of the Companies consented to walt for anotlier dispatch from Mr, (owen.. Mefora the second mceling was held, lowever, several of tha representatlve Compas ufes pablished advertlscments to the cftect that they would dlaposs oyeral handred thou- ul tons of coal at auction. This rtior liad no ner become generally spread through the trad and created considerabls comment, than ware, Lackawanna & Westcrn Company, and the |hruun¥mleno' a mile north of the lins anil closy ta the Yankton camp, Iloat once put himsell m communication with tho. Toton and Yankton Chlefs, and a council was hold st which he was in- formed thst tho Indlans had beon told by tholr fathers they would find peace in the land of the Britiahi, "They had nut »lept souny for years, and ind 8 placo wher they could llo ool eafo, T o{l waro tred of living in disturbed state. Being arked as to thelr Y Morris cxplained, wero plerced in yoath, B Imalo {ntentions, they afirmed that they had no 8 Loun opprossive, and nover liked by the Under that hospitable roof not unfrequently vy Pennsylvania ‘Cosl Company, snnounced poblie | iden of recrossing the lines (0 make war, and wald o e ablt has'been 165 the poptn ta live | coBld be faund apuct of & lower sirain, {wtlo run In and out of the holea sud wrapped 10 [ 4yice,” Tho former Company offerad 150,000 tons, | they Would oboy (o Jaw in' thi regird, Thix emeclver, aud when more than ane M4 LuoT AAlCON, T e oarncbe o rlbo had noanis lta Tarcs | and the latter Company 76,000 tons, ~ Al this, of | parilcularly rofers to the Tetons. - As to the watlioradthen the setilement be- | who, by ber qulst verss, and her tnrivaled e ettt hand aress: of ponen taufores | courve, had tho most excliing offect ubon the trado; | Yankians, tho whole of tholr bands not havin city. Unliko “the custom in_thin | ceptlon of the beaaly inbereat in New-Eul B e e hieh e e oo ther | but Wi end was mot yet.” The excliement was | arrived tiley could not answer until after council country. §t" fa usual for the different | landacapes, has taught many to seo Inn truer light | otk “op " distinction, One head, that of & llmuwemngm‘!{whmlh_nipnwululcnrunmunn. bad beon held, wut ft fe bolloved thoy would notionalitios to keepithemsclyes entirely scparato, | materfal and spirifual things. And, besido “all | 010" man about sisty ~ years, ' was flled | tho Delawarc & llndson Canal & Rallroad Compa- | yetum to thelr agency on tho other side anid to cordislly hate each other, nnd teach . thelr her lofty alins, aud Ler Jook of sympathy, | with red paint, whigh” on ° belng removed in | BYs wdvertised that it would sell coal at the wrl of Fort Peck, "Tho ‘Tetonw clalm that cbildren tho wsiuo sentiment. It hud nover been | aud hor power 1o impart reposs Ly hor very” prces | Mo ylacos reveatod Yho gray baif, which It ha | lowest markot ratee. it Is sald that, although | the Slonx aro “Rrithh Indiane; that sfsty- pructicable to establish 8 commoun chool-house for | ence, aud her smilo, liave galnod for hior 4 decper | poen uded. to bido. 21T e savare s ant | tho Company v mining considerable eaal, it s | fivo yoars ago was the Aret they over knew of being il the wections. Instesd of this the Govarnment appointed ollicers for each natlonality, and thus kopt up tho hatred. Tho Chriatians, . d other sections had thelr own schoolsand ch Lut the Mohammedans, holng tulers, took tho beai part of the town—the busiucss part—for their cem- eterics, mosques, elc., 80 thata steangor coming irtoa city would naturaily wee mnothing but the holdupon the affections of all who know, tlan ey can woll describe, 'l"eu als0 used to come another poctess, MIS8 HABRIET M'EWEN KIMBALL, who, In Ler **Swallow-Flights of Kong, ' liss given comfort, and furnished food for holy thougut; to many minde, Lut, o8 lhc( came, thoy not only found genlal eniticlim and tender friendshin frum storing vast quantitios at Honcsdale, in the Lacka- wanna reglon, The 'bfladeiphla & Reading Company has alwaya pought to make largo inroads on the trado of tio Delawaro & udson and the Penirylvania Compa- nies, 'the movements, thereforc, of both Gomya- niva may bo considered directly oppressive ta tho former Comy nnder tho Americans. Thelr “fathera were told at that time b{lchlcl of the Dritish fatlicrs that if they did nat wish 1o live under the Americans they coula go furthier north into the Iritish territory again, They could not toll why tho Dritish gave {hicm and thelr lands to tho Americans. From children thoy had been taught that they wero A wholly cured, ‘I'ho marks of the club which cansod hin death are yet on the back of the huad, o was killed lust February. There ure aléo in the collec- tlon the heads of two or thrce women, bu| | would puagzic a novice to distinguish them from the others. A number of naturalists have visit: Mr. Motris sinco his arrival, and 1 persos have olfered him large suins for 0 Franklin I\, Gowen is slill In one of his heads, | whiing there iy ted with {‘n"lm:' 'm'”wl’ "x‘ld '1'1'fl'|’|‘°t!’1 r Bghtl '“f‘“l"",\b"t";‘l“ Mokammudans, The Mohammedans had always | **Friend" Whittier anid hle ssint-like sister, but i} nplan as- there I8 no ono connocted w! oir fathers by the sh for fghting tio Aweri- been g eaious beapl, and had never trcated i | thoy e e e, sefer et | but o fan retused, then: le exbocts o earny] e mpany ho reprosanta competent 1o it the ) liom they liad nover maly petec. e Clulatians vory well,* Thoy'laa Rover permiiled | lovulineas, Tho viver tie luils, Uio Nowburyport | furn' to Horth America for faritier cxplorations, | Maltfoud ang Cosl itania that Lave wwio tho un- ferabla a body of b+ hostiles e Chirlatia ca of wo conal o hiavo elther stecplea ar belld to I ho' mode of gove Pal ment was. by & for recular af. spires, the town that the distance wado compac ; slaught, tho oberationsof the Iifladelpkia Koad- ealculated 10 Inspiro uueasi: helr charchca. _Thoss, were small thing, but they | tha aican (0. the. ensts speckod with. saise hada | Haostedt HideE ho el of mojone but bl i Comipany must ceraluly bo alecled A dis: bolieyen that the Chicts snd wout to siow how tho Christian people were treated | now menning as scen with b, And, when they | Government fuvol ch from London has been reccived to-day, stat elr beat to keop fn_ their ol had come back t the peuceful fown, and met tho —— e ng that L'reaident Gowen has had a confirence | thosu who may bo af a rostle ruro circle that 0 of{cn gathers in on old, squara with the English ereditorw of the Philadulphia & 1t is wore than posalblo that, huuse, that gives no Indlcation of the brilllant and #ioux, who took up thelr abodo with A Mammoth Sugar-Iluntation, 4 lrlllll:!lll ond religious dutles. 3, they may Wl e ) et i leading Cownpanys and that bis propoditiva auto | 8 00k raboda with ¢ s § i g : onolulu paper printcd early In May contana | su arrungoment for’ carrying no funded dobt, und | becomo as qule y of the rest of our wards, e o ook Eatincas Tean chey e | brusdinindel Nomss, Aero the Siatco sonrita st | tho following: il TKrull” cotate, on o lulana poaing of the foating debt, had besn accepted, | Although wo inay not dewire hclr sdvent, b It stand that there was stroug mulnal hatred between | many States, they Infuscd sume of thoir own affece :‘I'fl}‘::“"-'“_'g;hv:gmgghfi; oo/ 000 .fn".{'::.{ “l'l s "‘.,‘°.‘:“";‘.'&:‘:§.“.:t r':tf.l'n“:'."fi fi"‘.’:h Avan g'kfly we stall Liave 1o make tha best wo can oub ho Christl h 3 7 0 MADUKLTS 3 an > :mz“' :l're;nlbnxs Mohamimedal ':’huml:l:gr. tlon intv those who heard them tell of him whose wulemfl logatlice with 5,000 bead of cholee eattiy, # Alr, uowenpfrom sunge and ballads Lave a richorand ore miclodious flow us he spproaches tho **ocean ho must sall so soun, Asitis nnl, Uamliton, 1t {s sgorted that, upon tho retumn of England, ALIVELY WAR will be opened npon tho Companles that have as- salled the corporation's Interusta, bolling-down worke, and vatusble permanent fm. provements, was recently purchascd by bia Majesty alakaus, Capt, Jas, McRev, and U, W, Maclarlane, In the proportion of eny-fourth, fve-olghiths, an Coal-Pit, it of Rocho-lae Mollere, near Baint-Etionno (Loire), Msy B, by Chrtstian Church ha Lagnan| The Mohsmmedans considered the Greeks the same ns Idolaters and healhens, d the speaker vartislly sgreed with them In thelr eatle Flve Days A fall of coal occurred fn the 8 few miles from Newburyport lo 1ot an unusuul thing to seo in that =11 1] two brothe Toator T Hiedid Mot ‘considor the Moham | setme o1 mateions - bider 1he beosd "ciuts, oy | one-cichtt reacetively, for (hé purposo of‘coni- | "'l coalcirads was nover in & mare demarslised | Mgk three workmen—lizcaard snil tho tio bioth medane ot afl lncapable of fudging botween | whoso mame for" miany years has been ' woll yortiti the asme lut il e eiste, Tor ;unflnxu:-“ynz;utb\pg-;lyu‘ 41 tha prospock s good yilsthe wurfaco. ~As Lopey Were enterisined that Fight snd wrong. o wpoko of the Protestan L o tho aitustion becomiug worse, ‘A vury intpore gt Cirapahe which bod Iately bus establishod thronghs | o™ wits ABIOALL DODGY aba, Biora uatural advaniaze (n tie Wey Of | fant featuro of the tradecwhich Ta particalary . | Lioyner solely Imprizoned, and not cruahid, g4ni of inen weea ak onco organ xed to liborate 'theu snd thosa clforta hiappily roved snceessful, aftct out tho Empire, and thougitt they wore far more undant supply of water, richsoil, flat, clear and reepected and feared than the (ireek or Armenlan that fs, *¢Gail Hamiiton™ Sl is falr, fut, and [ ADUndant sunply of water, rich soil, fiat eleat ad | soreuting to Lehigh und’ Wyoming coal operators, ven orlginated. s Ll 2! ¢! e gispected sa foayed than tho {ireee or Aricalan | forty,"or mediom buighty with a quick inotion, a | 400 bRty o o AR A St mock com. | by St ien oriknajod, bia ln thy apening ot | o poor en ag passei b2 hourufa thele duset: thiey wauld pevmlt the Prolcstants to carry an their | Gyoruowlig with bumor, keen, sparkiing, and with | Bany bua becn forned fur earrylug oo thu busineus, | iThe Western markets are being reached through | haatcd stato, Tho accoant thoy havo been sble work: 1t was the spenker's opinion that tho 310 | fius piay el rebarioce Bt nbearied fn wental | And o Satuntey ‘last tho Privy Counsil raceived | {uykric Canal, and large shipinenta of anihracita | to give is to the clect that, when (bo acchient ammeduns could ouly be reschod by the puro | activiey) ohe fs vate good comummer 5t s bt e | ta0 spplicatiun of tho Compony” for a charter from | fual have already beon made. Tho market= | happoncd, they ware dh a sost of chainber, Which Evaivelical form of rligion, - There vas o Tear | tovalls ahe larare peod company M ls ek pen | ho Guvernment to fncorporate thowsciven uathe | {00! of " theds | farge quantiites — of - coal | hobfemed thos o betnghare: iy of Mohammedantsm iteelf, which ag beat was anly | ek b i ron e i takes thatubs | Makee ugur Company, with o capitalof $160,000, | o o alurmed “tho Anthracite’ Cost Asso- | [ provialona they uad: breught fort 8 mixture of Christianity and Judatem, When ita [ Jook for from that feminine haud. "she. cay | 1% 200 slarew of the var vulue of %1-000 each with | clution. that » reduction of about | consumptions And threa Hieres 0f wines followers camo to see fust what 1§ wa would Cngent, and - aatirical, and . wiity, | liberty toincrease thelr capital slock to 00,000, | 5" cents per ton bLas beea made in tho prices of | precious articles they partook of with th maat ru largoly forsako ir. - They were about 30,000 Frot | ag, "ty " s pntirteal o 9034 Wit | Tus apolication wes passed unauimousiy by tha | Fuciueld by that orgsnization. 1tte loarsva that | Fut o e aotaa They ntw In tho countey siready, which showod the | But, morwithetendig il ber * Yolumes, Cuuncll. "W learn that operations will o com. | e belh b7 et DIRSERANAR, JhN Ciiedaon st | F2h7an Bood Tortiab. 16 dleover o sofing of pure ult of the work done, and gave promisu of the | and’coluun: d pars; ‘fi. f tiradcs, and pro: | menced at once, and cane !l-ntlnz begun without | waukoe, and other Western cltica, for Lch“n and | water, and to_which n all probability lgey owed Suture. feeta, w0 what sobis Thight call abues, It hia maver | SS14Y- Juto prigoscd v adont the eo-operative of | Wyomiry coais; and mauy othor uperaiars, hotln | Hoivives, rcurard lad waved bie lmp. dnd foF 5 yet seemed it the dear girl mesnt it | SO LIt nicans who have engaged. with the :T’;::'\?:l:l: '-&' l:;;: Tfl:m .‘;'“‘"""";l':n 523. lvlw‘dl')uhn had sume light, but t{zn'oll f’?.":.'hl Y. M. C. A, A tnons things ave atlours da jgrer, o has & | PUTISANIES ROM'S R DRGSRV, IV [5G | sivments o Durge Westurd dealars, who bave | diiniatied, and oy thon twers then plunged s CLOMING RXEKCISES, B uincer-liks iow of words, ' ke ko3 ationé | fcruigucra wilke willbe alowed thia prvitege. orwardcd. Fompunied by a5 jnundation of the lawer Bart LoutsviLi, Ky,, June 10.—Tho closing exor- | who *'dld pot'dare {o be as fuany as he coul — S e——— CIEAP COAL YOR THE WEST. the mine, tho men sutlercd severely from dawp sn clsesof the Y. M. U, A, Convention were moat in | She dares to weile us vigurously as” ahe N ] Rad ‘Thnes In Spatn, en the battls of the Coal and Tallroad | cold, but bravely kept up thelz splrits, The eldct The pruceedings were all of & devo- | hae a large vocabalary of nlnx{nx- ithetsaud racy | Although it s scarcely two months since the Cily and the competition for quick snd largo | Peyron cheored bla comrades by relating bow be racter. The morniug neeting was con- idioms, aud takes pleasute in secing them How | of Granada yave King Alphouso what was terucd | #ales, thore v 8 browpect of tho Western cousui- it ha bad limwelf been In s similar strait, *buf been lberated after & poriod of dsys. His efurta wore powerfully aided LY 1ho fact that they could boar the constant blows of the men outalde straining every nerve to releass I\‘xlcm. nn;l they all U L e{ never despalr- from hor,facile pen. And then she bae strou per- sooal sttacbments, 8nd, In her eacees of enyornoss 10 sauist ber frlends, wio, slie mistakenly thinks, need soine one wh shall atrike out froi tha vhoul: der I tholr bebalf, whe has taken up ber govao- oru getting coal at a3 low prices &, if not lower than, the consumer who lives near the producing distrlets. Thueo interceted stata that at loast 250, « 000 tona of the various krades of coal will be sent est, via the Eriv Cana), this month, while, dur- fug (he months of Jul an **cathuslastic welcome, "' 8 petition has been three ot up by the **leaguo ol u?n ere,* In which the f&‘nu'luurtuuhy infurmed. thut the property of *Vihousands of persons f now under selzure throughout Spaln for non.payment of taxes; that ducted at Library §Iall by Thomas K. Cree,of New York. Inthe afternoon 8 young men's meeting at tho same piace was conducted by 8, A. Taggert, of Pennuylvania, and a boys' meeting in the Avso. clatlon suoms u immense_sudlence aasembled | Quill, uncorked Lier ink-bottle, and u joue province of thirty purishes, numberiny and Auguat, this quantity | ed of belng eventually eav loweyer, el fur (he farewell weeting. W, K, Je gs, Of i VEREMENTLY LET FLY. 7,478 tazpoyers, pmfia‘:ue- havo been suld | will Le considerably increased. . fl. w. ruwcu of enduranco ‘were taxcy to tho mm:;g Plttaburg, preaded. Intoresting addro When sho has once permitted ber high spirite to | by the facal suthoritiess that 50,000 porvons wbo e —— imite. Wiea, tho pange of bunger becawe vty dsllvered by Col, Black, of Qeorgla: D. elfervescy upon the falr white page, and bass culumn | owe the Btate money for land purchaxed by thewn | Ap Eoglishman Yields Up Iis I3load to Save | durable they ate their tobacco, nlmu! Ilmwl'_ of Canada: tho Kev.' Cushing, of Oh! OF 20 of blusting eietoric befurs Ler, sbe 1o il | from It are put compelied to pay, whiio otherd have | ©g wrieuds Life---1uth Dl from tho Ettucts | NO05, Slc-y but ¢ leoyih Sudicg themuclves Krow, ‘“Cwn»qw of Pennsylvania; Col. Lo right. Youcsuld not help liking ber, I you tricd. You | beon turued out of thelr * estales because Fofesprichel) iug weake? sud weaker, they mauaged toarrang 3 icat, of eptucky; br, uar oblnson, of and brilllsnt retord 0 il neverseen ber | (ot sowe creditors ol e ol h ! h Loulaville; and Il ‘I'iane Miller, of Cinciunatls Lelore, you wuuld be buarilly glad to save dade ful ’ln wany Instauces, it ‘sppuars, | them belng even aslcep. OF course, 84 moou 88 n ot EARNEST APFEALS lsyo pays wore taxcs than the wers madv in bebalf of the young men of tho Countey, sud tho work of tue Aesociation, es pra” sentod” In tho Conveotlon, waa bighty' lauded, H. Thaoe Miller spuks earncstly in bebalf of tho Loulaville Asoclatlon. asking that s bullding be erected for them {n which they may conduct thelr ‘work in saving the youoy we of the city, All the dulegates aro tond 1n praiss of the kindness of the citiacns of Louwsville, whom tuey say Lave w ber arqualuotance, even alter thosu excoristing scn- tences which tho breezy **Uall™ bLad desigued for our row ticeb. Periaps bor resluenco ncar Wea- yin Lake—-which, with it Ice, kecps Boston aud 1he Kast Indies coul—compollud ber in childhoud to cultivate greast warmth of feeling, sad toln- dulge Ib Sery la ¢, in order Lo countorbalance the external frigidity, * And now sbe capaot Lreak sway from the ita of speech formed In ber drrvipousible youth. Pardon ber, ye editors st in 8 remarkablo case fn Eogland. Anin. §:ui bas commeuced at Liverpool bufore Corunee wuel, on the body of Walter tobert Willians, 84 yeara of a3e, 8 shlvping clerk a{ the Wappiog Station of tho Longon & Northwistorn Rallway Compuny, who lived at 55 Beaumont atreet. Mra. Margaret Vance Moche, who bad reaided with her husbaud at the houss occupled by the de- cuused for tho last fiftcen wouthas, testiSed: Up the 10th ult. , e enjoyed good hoalth. Onthemorn- g that one vl B ook I fat wositior, and that Uoverns they could bo removed to tho surface, they receivs ed overy attention, They wezo Laken tu the Coms pany's hospital, and are gettlng along very wel sitcr their long Interment. e ee—— A State of Slege Methodisd. ‘Why do the dafly papers tell us that “a state of sivie has been proclalmed fn Constantluo- ment servants with & salary of £1008 ycarpay & hligher ent than functlionarics recelving much larger emoluments.* ‘The ¥muuwu oo toatate d that an lnymeasy quantity of bad money, of furged potes, postage stamps, and bill slampe’ are In cir- culation, and that, though thu tradu is carncd on almast openly, fuw of tho culprity aze ioughbt to ustice. ¥urthenmore, tho petitioners complain lel That plirase is not English—is meaulug- Lospitably entertsfned the Conveatlow. The Con- | whom she aaid she meant to flug bior corboys of | ihat, &4 itaxpayers, thoy Lave (o pay botouly the | {ug of that day he left (o ¢o to bis work, but re- | P ! A Veation wes ugo f Hho wo utad prohtarte | VILrioL " Wamember thats if yourwounds should | lperial kud 1ocal taxee, Lut that {hay are inulcted | turned abuat 11 or 12 o'clock In the foreadon. o | 1698 gud tuere te 0ol Mhlfl;'l'“m"{m‘::‘:" once wver held, Thuussnds wers cowvslied to | be Lroad aud deep, abo'would guntly dreas them | i larye vunw—not jaid ‘inte ko public treasury— | then stated that bo Bad burt bis sru, aud that was | Licsut. Bay artlal law has beod PO tury sway to-night, not be e to accuro ads | witha band that bus besling in it—whes {0 ks | gither in tho shope of surchances or in uther ways | the reasun hu gave for seturnlug o carly, Iu the | claimed;™ fu uther words, use thy luguag whaafun, droppcdthe pen, 16 i wll to that ped. U yuu | which they ** doew §L vupatriotic o specify. ™ evuling Moo, Williams sald W0 wituued abu was Euglsh and Awerican pepple.

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