Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 9, 1877, Page 2

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N tion In Unity Church, Following s the scr- 2y eRe i ono of thubest shens of the thnes, oa they B THE THICAGO ''RIBUNE: MONDAY. JULY 9, 1877, B le ! wicked, utd | shat belongs t N, and s evle t h A whe 0t fod with the ex teea - RELIGIOUS e L RO L | hercymodditien notiieupatwithiin epercleen PIG-TRON XELLEY, 4 my awn most {ntimnte soul and that T will bear :lnvz. keeps hia heare and miod fo toe | healthful sport. e sellow aml white peryh, o and love of God, and of Fiis Bon Jesia Chriet. That wlooe I the perfect life, and antil the dayn have bronght et they have not brought thelr full biessini, The man who concludes to take care of him- relf elean alung, and sava that moral prhwlyllu, ‘withont any spiritual communion. is ewough for him, and he newds nothing more, and wants nothing inore, Is 1k 8 man who Jotermines to tiva {n some loncly spot on this earth, compared with & man who lves {n a sweet and goud socic- ty. He can do It in some stcrn self-reliant fash- fon, anl, it may be, grow atronger and of & ok, black, and Oaweiro bu-s, D1ka. and piekerel are thy Yrflncnml fiah Brou tht' {n by the anglera. The flveh of theae fish §a delictous, even (n this warm weather, owing to the great depth of the lake and the colduess of the water. TIHS WREK. Tucsday a full provranime will bo carried out, and many workers who have not yot_put in an appearance will como at this thng. On Tuesday a teraperance mass-mecting will be held in Ge. neva village, aud Wednosday will be entirely do- voted to temperance at the camp, Wednesday will be the only half-fare day on with me wherever [ gu, to hrlll make wy own el or my own Heaven, to it me for the gxxl or the bad, as T shall determine; that the shad- awsabout mawill be projected from my own sunl more than from all tire mountains of doom that wers ever buflt to keep out the eun, and that not_the puro eves, but the pure heart, shall soc God. If I hetleve all this, [ must believe that tho lesson for this day lics n no overbesring weight of destiny that will make mo like a drowning man caiching at a plank, but in great and sweet opportunitics, smple and full, by which t can grow up to the stature and fuliness fle Was Chairman of the Committeo ‘ Tho ey, Wo Shald Live to Which Demonetized Silver. H Achiove a Glorious End. Dat Did Not Understand the Effect of Dr, Ryder's Sermon on the Struggle for the Bl Bread—The Dignity of Labor. A Victim of Misplaced Confi- The Pope's Recent Allocution to dence. v of a man in Christ Jesus. more iron hardnoes, but the consolations and | the stovmers Liucius Nawberry and Lady of tha the Press. fiag then the uestion elecs, What havo, [ benedictions of Mite 'aro not tn hia cup.. 1o 1ives | Eaice, 55 conta 1 the camp nid roturd. 2 learned about dolng my duty and Glling the | slone, amil dies alone, cut off from all that &8 Friday wil be the closinz day, PRILADELITIIA, Jaiy 8, 1877.=3r, Willtam B. ' TIIEEND. place [ was made ta fill in_my nature and con- | sweetest and most racred fn human friendsnip BUNDAY. Earle, Needham, Maxs,—Duas Sm: Yours of the 10th Inst. Tas been rocelved. [ have read the Inclosure, being an extract from the leading articlo In tho Boston Jlerald of the 16th inat., criticlsing n dispatch sont by the agent of the sud merciful miniatrics. It must be so with the man who nttains through all his days to a stroug moral prineple, but nevor to - sweet epiritual _communion, and he ia a lancly man, Uod the Father is not in his heart, only God the principie. Heavon stitution? And when [ eav this, T mean to beain with, What have I learned of the commonest duties and accomplishments of life? For when I sce how very much of the life of the vast ma- Joritics of men is absurbedin the most common daties and the homelleat nccomplishments, [ In the morning the rain prevented a larwo at- tendance, _The lesson was conducted by Messrs, Burnell, Toownls, Sharp, Bingham, Perkins, Coburn, and Marsh, Instructive afternoon scr- mons were delivered by the Rov. Loomis and SERMON BY TAE UEV. NORERT COLLYER. Tho Rev. Rohert Collyer preached on “The End" yeeterday morning to r large congrega- Mr. Shiarp, and an evening prayer-meoting was iy ol - & must tellove that theso things take s grat | and Anmortality arc perhaps & may be. poasibly | helil abob @ hogo cuinp-fica. Thiarg " worg | Assocluted Press, which professed to_give the Then cometh the end.—J. Cor,, ., 24 place In the solfd substanco of the soul, nnd niot | & must be; but they are nut what his homo 18 to | some new orrivals, The Rev, A. L. Choe | Views of the Prostlent on tha sliver 1t I nutural, I think, o fecl a little troubled | uniy influence the present for good or'evil, but | the child In a distant school, who s goinginto | ptn, D. D., President of Bololt Collixe; | question, and demanding n retrsctlon abont the el of thos' things, which) as oue | the'tutura too; and in the work [ dowith my | its warmth and Hent when school breake up, | ¢ho Rev. 'Dr. Guodwin, and John V. | g 4is hands. Tha artlcle procecds any 533, have noend. T can fmagine the maker hands, ns well as with my head and heart, T d fa counting the moments until It ts timo to | Farwell will arrive, Monday evening. Monda; to say: “Tho President s mnde lo eny of o tine-plece or a telescone a0 perfect that | work out my own talvation, or my own dawna- | start, That ia the perfeetion of all the daye. | the Rova. Perkins, Rirkopp, and Mr, Sharp wil i It ¢ 1973, wi i d nothing be can ba desired, fecling very glad | tlop, not In this life alunc, but {n the life to | When we have won this sunny expcctation we | take up the theme io Blble and How to | that the legisiation of 1573, when silver was de- §x sud prowd when the last touch lias been’ given | come, It {s very gencrally felt that good works | have npplied our hearts unto wisdom thensnd | Swudy [t maonetized, was hasty and uncalled for, the weil- to by masterplec rawing n long breath and | betong only to t) nhlzmr{lhx but_you may de- | arc ready for whatever the days can bring. known fact being that this legisiation was well and carofully consldered; that the syver dollar of 4135¢ grafna was at that timo worth more than the gold doilar; and that {ts demonetiza- tlon was urged by such Inflationtats as Kelley, of Pennsylvanin,—the very men who are now yo- ciferously ealling for ita remonetization berause 1t fias now becomno consfderable fess than the pa- por dodlar.)? o, saying, “ that will d; the very best thera I8 in ' e is also in my workmanship, and [ can trust it to the judgment of thuso who know a good thing when thoy see 1. But it Is not so with Tife and thethbigs which seem to hold the Onest ¢ of life. We work at theee higher tasks the best we know, and still there Is s better ris- fug over Dest, which cotnpels us to cry not that I have already attalued; and eo whena mnan conies to aday like this on which there is an end, looking still to o beginafug, the end tpon It they helong to thelwhale life, and ‘v’r(;mtgrr::d works we do ln the lower no doubt work thelr way up into the higher, just an the good work that is done at the roate of the tree, and by tha roots, burst out at last into blessing on the branches, so that when the Master sald * Work while it Ia called day’? He nover meant to confine our thought to the ro] work of prayers, and praises, and practical enevolence, and gathering faith and Lope and Jove like great sheayes of ripe grain to our lite, The lights of the home shining throwsh the darkness and mist when we come to his bless- {ne, and atmost the sound of the muslc aud Aing- iniz from the bappy ores that arc gathered there waiting for us tocome, Honcst work and moral attainment may still leave the present cold to us, and the future s blank. But when we lave entered fhito this spiritunl communion wa have fouud out the full secret of life. And {f this church of oura finally stands for any TOPE AND PRESS. PIUS IS.—ALLOCUTIOF TO CATHOLIO NEWSFA- PER3. From (Ae London Reriemn, June 2. There 18 somethiug, we will not say grotesque, but startling ot first sight, in the fact of tho Vope delivering an alioculion ¢ to tho Catholle proea” on Lo use and abuee of journalism, - To the Popes,—not of the Middle ages only, whea reat aml good thing, keeping” {ts doors open You ask me to loform you bow much of trutn that b will have anotlier chance 4F it pl T mrcant. 6 romt well and with all your | Snd maintaming me 1o make the bost ploa 4 tan | Printing Fie a4 yetunknbn, CF OC "'f‘{‘fi"““; or falschood I8 contained in the artlele, nnd cs- G o dushed | ity Tearek | that eo | walght that ol havo to do with vou hand for | fn thls pulbi, thisfa what (¢ stands for, and for | SUCHPCHCS U U Rk SN AR MECECNS | octatly in the portlon of t reiating to myself, o by comparison has béen done w Ands ¢ no longer smonxthese | this I plead through all the thought and life / y tie” diva - which can uever return: )'“‘.‘.‘E?rfl'n“ :‘h‘llv‘qx:, ‘e great, eliaaco of learning | hiave to give,—honest work, Total attaloment oo sucha phenomenon would have scemed | and also whother tha legislation spokenaf fa Lhe same that was described by Thomas Balch In the March number of the Pean Monthy. That 1 ever urged or conscluml{ favored tho demonetlzation of sllver, as assericd by the Jerald, 1s uttorly folse. You will remari that 1 say Heonsclously favored the demonatization of sitver.”’ I dao this because I tas au the llour of the House whon the bill passed, and, under the uranco of the late Mr. Hooper, o re- o a question from Mr. Holinan, of In- o, na to whotlier the bil) afTected the coln- ace system of the coantry, that it did not, per- mittel it to pass without objection from me, os it encountered none from any other member of, the House. amd po the days wear on, and the ond comes to thedavs of our education and training for life, tothe fricmiships and reiationships, which are :uxgcllmua duarer than our life, aud we scem o b Yorever heyond or beshio onr Inteinsle existonce; Korcver nt hide aud scck with onrsunis— unt(l at last the end of all things isat hand; and stil because the end 13 but another begin- ningwe win the conditiun of doing better, L euppose, In the foeling that we have donhp so poorly, when once the uew chance opens to us, op) and find the deeper imcaning of the pout’s trust, They also serve who only #land ond wnit. lardly less atrange than s Papal alocution on tho nso and abuso of private judgment. The preea {8 supposed to be the orgau aud symbol ot public opinfon, and authority and opinfonare ususlly contrusted as rival powers. What, It nay be ssked, s the Pontif—and capecially a T'ontiff who has uumm{ and ex cathedra ro- fused “to reconcllc himsel (wlu:yrofi:cln, liber- slism, anil modern civilization "—to o with the press] Wiy touch the unclean thlnfi at alll "What comdiunion hath Christ with Bollult Dat the Pope lina d otherwise, Ile 1s content to recclve anodest obolo from the iuumnlhu. and to impurt to them his Apostolic hentediction; nay wore, ho del, will be over and gune forover. What bave wo Jearncd "fi’ to this time, theni ITaye we learned to do well, or cven to try to do well, that work which Providence has put into our hands as our days' works,—to sew well on n seam, to moke gom) bread, to keep 8 whole- gome liouse, to make a goot machiue, to keep a falr, strafizht account, to write a good letter, to build a good Louse, to deal in gool merchan- dise, ta preach a guod sermond And to do these 1hings In soine fulr senee, not 60 inuch for what they will bring us In moncy as for what lhu{ are fn thomesolves. Becauso we aellzhit In good- ness down among the roots of thin: Beenues in high standards of charncter, and that epirit- ual communion which fa the beatitude of all be- side. God knows I hava done but n poor and ncan stroke of work in comparison with my longinga and my vision, but tlis is what I meant todo, Yet,If out of it all, us I suroly belleve, tlcro hos been somie nutriment in theso great matters for sad and etriving men and women, and if you, my frionds, have tried to be, ns also surcly ‘mlluve. what I have tried to teach, wo have not lived and labored fu vain this year, an when wo come agalm rethor we shall come, I trust, with eagor hearts, regolute that beforo the end cotics shoot- e t ¢ gns to inform : beea ts I n Al rdd ¢ | had things uitront us and good things inspire | Ing nut fte signals of the greater beminning, T * | " "The bill parnorted to provide for the reorgant- e g0, 10 e, of | BRSO RS | RSl bRl e T, | T iyl ot | i il et ot e et things proud, and we fee) that » good hand s cluse kinsman to & good beart, 11 1 ko the tire for the wheel of a rafllroad car, and know thare ts & faw i It, but can Dide the law and pass the wofk, 1 can never pray oo and faithfa) servant; thon hast been faith- ul over a few thinxs, [ will make thoo ruler over many things. Enter thou {nto the joy of thy Lord. eroment. It wos not prepared, as it is claimed, by, thn:t{:cnummn, and [s therefore gencrally believed, by Mr. Knox, the Comptroller of tho Currency, algnificant becanso there can bo no doubt that his Hollncss has judged wisely, or rather that he has ylclded, whether wiilingly or not, to what fs ‘colled ** tha lucxorable logic of facte:” touch the spiritual life of man, that tne old bass dreud of death, tor the horrors Lhat may come atfer i, (s dying out, and the rovoit sgalust that ut Dr. Linderman, who untfl within nwiul blasphemty ofau eternal fire ounded Progressand modern civilization aro stall events | A few months had been Director of the Mint, 111t u revolution that lias been complotely suc- | that flaw out of the iron or helleve it out, and EXISTENCE. rm.,?n; i m.,,cm dangors to bo mmb:‘{c'd‘ and who was then on special servico in the ssfnl i and the most subtle and oxquisite in- | IF Lthereby insure an aceldent by which alife Is | 7y grnvagre ron pnEAD—3nBMON BY DU. | still they must “bo fought with thelr own weap. | Trensury Departmenty and (i that capncity had ment of torture tbat manever made lost, { carry the mark of Cain with me to my HYDER. recently visited England, But,ns he was not grave, though I rise to be & Bishop. 17 1 have ons, as tho Lm(ynn caglo t8 sald to bave supplicd the arrow wi . Dr. Ri cached to his con; e el s preas s a two-edged sword wliich may be nscd matton at 8t. Paal’s Universalist Church yester- then In a rocognized ofllclal position, his bill was for Its destructls Th S lieed ceiection. e escuted as that of the Camptroiler of the od either by their convictlons or thelr uatare | fob learned to do that work well that I doevery to ure it, ami*all the Imprisoned sonls that were dlay for the comnion rhn{ of wy life, I have not the ehamplons or assallauts of any causowho | Currsacy. It was a voluminous ono, coutafniny ¥ 2 ct | learned the first Iesson shat, I niust learn In this | day morning, on *The Strugrle for Bread, | pY y es, ;;fix;d ’l‘t'! :l\lxtl»u;;tnm O:?mc'zz:\rlgn ‘t‘mz.‘:l el“alr" '}': achiool of Gou, end for sasthing thet I Kuow, iy 3 ol have suflident skill to wieid it. It inay, to cite | many scctions, atnd covering tuany pages, an: taklug as hiis text: II, These., {ff., 10,— 1f any would not work, neithar shonld he eak Physteal toll, sald Dr. Ryder, could not bo considered a misfortunc, & calamity, something which It would be well to shirk. Tho sceret of the joy of mauy alife was *coough to do.” Tire tendency lucrcascd with ago to feel that our bodiea had great injustice done them. provided for s vast numbor of minute dotalls, speak of the original bill. irough Chairinan of the Committeo on Coinago, Weights, and Measurcs, T had, on the organization uf tho Forty-first Congress, been mnade a member of the Committee on Ways and Means, and had thenceforth given my almost undivided attention to tho dutlcs of that f portant Comtnlttee, In two questions involve the Pope’s lunguage, be employed * to combat error and to refuto the Insane calumnics propn- gawed by those who (Ly the same moeans) Wl u cruel war agninst religion, againet scat ' of Bt “Poter, and againat morality.” Bntno instrument can sct effocte ively tuat Ie not nllowed frev play, It may bo u safo policy to spoll the ptiane so long na tho spoil conafats of ol silver, but when can never learn after [ leave ft. Then let mo ruppose that this question of common duties wel rr!ouu Is disnosed of, what shout thase high- cr thiugs that stand between these 1 have men- tioned and the highest! In all theso solemn centaries since men began to live,—how many centuries fio man cau tell,—tha great human lumll{ has been divided this way and that, and one alde has gone for God, and the other, 5o far sliply the dellvernnee of o vast horde of crim- innts ta be tormented, 08 in the old days they were tormented {n Asfatfc and European pris- ons, there ts no fear of death. Emanclpation trow that slavery fs u-n.unlly accomplished. cannot, i 1 was ever so anxious Lo do IL! make 1y text read, so to number our days that we may have some {dea how far wo are from the eternal torments of hell fire. That firo, in the what Arlstotlo calls “live lustrumenta* are’in | in Dr. Linderinan’s bill 1, however, took spe- 14 sense of 1ty has gone out. A man hero and | us 1y [a lts power, uculost Hiio, You may well [ Without a healthy body It was t8 aré apt to it cinl interest, as the discussion d on it (for it fv ol ak th dead cmirers, but g eane | beliove that { will ot readily sccopt thoiviston | difleult. to cnjoy mich sy way. | Tucstion, even holote are ant to provo quite an | ®iil nteresty e tho dhelstion b Bl (Tor much of an embarrassment a8 a help to their mastera. The Janissarics formed for centurica tho flower and strengih of the Otteman armny, but they were drawn from a class whose fidelity could not fail to be looked on ns wnrlflonl. and thut has beea mado fu thls diacter by some of those thae bave clalimed specdal au- .thority to make ft. 1 will not pretend for a moment to make any such division. A dear old Methodlst bruther ueed to say that, whca not make thein kindle. Merey and pit moved from llcaven weep more fears oat of werciful awd pitiful human hearts than would drown such fires, shiould they flanic up to tha wzates of Heaven: and the better Christfan fafth brought forward at the next acsslon, and which Decame & law) will show. ‘I'heso were the estat- lshmont of o uniform system of minor token cul.:;I 1, EL and 5cent rlccch which I pro- 1 Dut to be compelicd to live wholly for the bodr was certalndy o infafortunc. Man was an_anl- mal, bis phiyaical wants needing to be cared for, but ho was more than an animal,—a being with asoul and mind. His inferfority was cnwlil ot laat tho human tribute which bad long bees to substitute for tho many cofus of 1, was delivered them who were all thelr Hfetimo | he got to Um\'_mp he expeeted to fall Into thres | geon whea tis physical strength was contraste: gm:ll, oxuctod was atill more cmcllydmt?uyuf "mll and 5 cents thon and now in usc, In- subject to boudage, though thiafear of death. reat wondora: Fiest, thet some were not there | with timt of Lho beasts, snd to gpend his timo May not the journalists bo reparded as the cluding the many forms of the old copper cont, 1t {8 not to be doubtod, either, that tho gener- | e had thought he was sure hie should meet; | fn proviling wholly for the y was not con- | Junfssarics of the Papacyl Plus 1X., while | the bronze 1 and #cent pleces, tho copper al conception of life {8 coming to bo brighter second, that so niany were there o was sare he ! g' ducive to shfiukl miss; and thind, that he was there bim- eelf, ho highest Intercsts of tho mind, nickel cant, tho silyeraud tho nickel3-cont pleces, There were many who found it a great problein ces L) Joesting bl grouiiaa tor [he sorvhie ey and the sllver and tho nickel f-cent pleces. wnd betrer, liave rendered to the Charch and to truth, Men aro gruduaily getifug the {dea into thelr hearts una minds that tho “lfo that He happily uever thought of ‘being bim- | 4 yot bread, and tu whom Ufs Was o mnoro ovidently feels that their eervicos can- |'For these I would bave substituted bandsome now 44, 13 not_mainly something thot s looked | self among thoso he cxpected to meet that | gtrupgle for existence. Vst hordes of men, t Lo accepted without a certaln | colns of nickol and copper fn such pruportions on by tho (ireal Glver with o grim disfavor, s | falled to come, but lua thoughe about the wholo | gud “women too, siaving from morniue til | Lok: ) ot o o e : risk; *ho felt tho meccaslty of reconr tending soma things to thelr’ conskleration. All human things savored ot thelr origls, and s to give themn brightaess and pollsh superior mattor touches my thousht about this division Scent patwecen the guod and the bad, thoes that are on the Lord’s side, and those that are agalnst Him, the trinl of those whosd guilt Is s foregone von- nlight, tolled for bread. Another class, with an cluglon, f{ablo at any moment to be concluded to the exlstin; smbition to sdvance {n iffc, were not ablo to icces, and by thedonominational mar] making upon them {nwell<de- when the Judge thinks beat, without appeal carry ont their idsas, compatled as they were to urnalisin, Like other thins airad caroful | fined ralsed HNoman fgures would have S withont hobes IF the Srimigal.hay hog | 1 enumoL draw the line, DUt avery mab cun Aras | sy nto. Lk strekele ot mmers anias cuine, | doarmatn, Uike other b ronatiod erroful | fioch raleed amau Dgurca | would havs cust Ufmeelf tpon et murcy it baa { 1t for nlmsell, Io wy Weart aud cancloncs T once, Then, ngain, thore wers thoso who wers | courso, Ly 66 obvious s to bo (ittlo Latter then a | wutter . darknees, o' Glstingulsh tho . do- been buzht by another's beartng s cullt. 1t | know, very oearly, how Eetand, Thess thines | 1ijerany cusfuvid W the world thoy Nved fn and | trutym, but when bis Hotlness went on to speos | nomination of cach by pussinz his inger over are nat reinots mysterles to senslblo mon and waonen; they ara s clear and plalu ds daylight. ‘The questlon ror mie to declde on this sceond 13 not poesible, as It waa once, Lo say that avery year nakes ever more inminent the dauger that the Courtavill rise, pass sentenco, send you to the guod fortuue they scemed to have. Thao iy Mth defect " ho had observed In foar- great body of tho people had not the time, y ¥ tho great defec 1 obsci its surfaco. To thia el labored wssiduously nallsm, hie caine ot onco to the root of the mat- untll [ Jearncd that 1 had subjected mrucll In 1 & mnny had not the opportunity, and many who | tcr, ‘L'hat vet was “‘want of concord,” for | the minds of suspicious incn, or those who were oo, and make an eud of you. 18 Is not | head la thiss What have all theso years brought | enior ot hgh of thoss. advabtarcs fad Mot | Soon 1ioG efect ras fwa ;wm,\u.n"’.'. dier | Shomauives Bivon to jolibug, to' the dhianrs ot it Lo’ b unrenionable nny fongor, by vaat | inc, and brought me, tao, tn thoss highee du- | (he gisposition to _fmprove their mental cipline and obedlonce In the army; which thests | belug nterested in a job for the sale of nickel, nnnhers, il o great purpose of onr fife fu | tles, that tu tho commou duties I have wen- | copattions. And, as If to make matters worse, | ho further proceeded to Mustrato by the con- | which unwelcome Intelligence canstrainedine to tolewn how tolive, Man fs not s criminal in | toned sro like tho bolu 1o tho ruots of thatreo! | thero was a _disposttion in cortaln quatters to | duct of Spanish matadors who ™ oyercomo thelr | ubsadan & proposed roform which would, I bes the Court of God, but a achulur fn the school { Aw 1 a‘croator or & destroyor of €00d | mako the burden heavier sud hardor to bear, | formidablo autagoulat (e bull) by advancing | lieve, have boen hizhly appreciated It carried of tiod, Ho cones hiere o loarn Tossnr, ol g tha Inast secieh reGate of it e Ita man o business could afonl to pav to om- | with calmnoss and steadinesa togethr, aword tuto eflact. _The other point was'to Becurm:ko MOes uway to pul cm into use, " o s i oycs reapectabl; wes 11 u polnt.” Ilut then, 1f jou WOl the Government, 38| the pru! ha Hienarant and nblenenod, bocawse bo hax neglects | World stand in the next nga o far | RIS RSSO N s BoRten Guty b0 | polu \LF Jourmaliets ar to wark Sitof tho jreat el tham, to blunder and stumblo und subinit 1o | 28 §t depends on what { am doing in this aget under bis rigid rule of misitary drill, it iay | citizens wera makiog out of tho great natlonal the fues now aud feet thut {t (s not s i€ wewera stunding on the thinerust of a voleano, Liable at any maoment to let us down, but on sotid ground, with solid things arcund, and beneuth, and ubove us. Su to number vur days that wo iy apply our hearts uuto wisdon i8 not to wost mety vow, und not to us who meet here, on exhortation to erininals to be quick sud tuke wivantuge of the merey of the Gourt, The bevt the means of reducing tho salary ofschool- | ucstioned whether thoy woul workahop called the United Btates Mint, to put tiie Juay uml paln of his fucaprcity, A great | I think that division, which cannot bo tade by | eichere $50.000. This sum to Bostan ot to the | {w vikar more trin tior A'.;llnedvh ml(:ynnul‘ .'33.’ Into ll?:’i‘ruaury rather than fnto the cn'flurf of dent of the crusity and unfafrices that balonged [ any mortal man "“"'3‘“' made In same larga | (avpavers did not mean tuuch, butto the school- uaflfin can bo sililer than an aflsciation of | cunning men the tensor hundreds of thousands fothia Lica of s lifeds dyiuic, aa tint g duad | a7 Dythe Almiglity Maker Lo, cloavs between | teaciiers it meant a reat deal, Boatan, Clilear Orlidaality, but. witiont Kemlon oriiiuality | of doliars Lt werw bolng appropriated thraugh m'.:l( ielouired to the lfo to come, Wa ean ool T2 ioss that budd up aud those that bres fii?‘ormlymuur city, vould nat afford to treat | thero can bo Do persussivo force. Bermons | & defect In tho law. On' theso polnts the do- noble class with discourtesy or discour: ment. The great body of the people were scif- suatalning, if m{o were _only piven o falr chauce, but cut - down fhe carn- fngs of the poor, In order that the rich might tnake as much, and enjoy as many com- forts anil luxuries sd usual, was noitbee just nor right. In Dr. Ryder's opiumion, It was far more pralseworthy for 4 woman (o economize uached or articles written to onler, however brillisut, aro ut best a flash In the pan! the; cannot carry tho convictlon they are not charge: with, If Catholicism las protited as well as suffored by the vrinting-preds—abont which we shull bave & word Lo suy presently—it is bocauss 1t hias found advocstes who allowed no arriers pensor or wond of command from hoadquarters Dats abova alluded to on the original bill shows that T had very doflnite views, The fact that cltizens could thus speculatv upon tho Mint, and the ‘rln\mhlu arguinents of tho bulk fonista coupled therewith, doluded we fora thne Into the bellet that a single standard would be proferable, While admitting this without reaorye, 1 wasert that | never “favored the des down,~thoso thut work for good, and therefore for God, and thoso that work just {lim, Lvery sonl Is one onc side or the ofher of this tino, and uvery soul knows its aide. I have holy paiwers, [ know, If Tpul them to & holy pur- se. L0 [ du :he( are all tho tima reach- ng up into princlples and becomiug ahine fug substancos {n my soul I love vur]lyl to supersede or dlstort their auprome devotion | monctizstion of sliver, nud that, having chal. dutrive, tHat wo are the eldtronof ot s 4. mporatice, Ll : hovearyy wid ‘"w::l';fxg:‘ i drous thon ¢ cut Uown fioe asrvaot's wagos. | Lo tha intevests of Liuth, Bossach, Fenglon, | loaged my memory Aal compared Doies with i e dozina that we are the criminal ol & ve: f ) ::l!“t:ml. \\"lu‘r‘u\'ur "o AT nul-mlxll the | tion aid sw_pearer to scorning all that thoy \f’fi‘hpl may unuwse thamaeives Just now | Pascal, Da Mastre, Moblor, N¥ewman, buve | geatlemen who were on the Committes wl King about church detits. 'Thu prola- i bey though me, I caunot remcinber or lcarn of having ever dock o the old eril sense. Lifo ond death | slawd tor. I presumd that the great God, our | pyy mug that. tho men who wrote thoss | wtie ey Cioeb L il Thilo. thale | b 2ol I ax 5 writings help in the maln to com leard the Ides of Its demonctization Lroached In do wot mean lomger blsck geuilt bete | Futher, found o way 5o good for huma souls | ariicles wers nos taxed tu tho cxsent of 50-couts m:.n: Tho sucret ab oneo" of L uw;nlny':n?.'f the commltteo-room or In the discussion of and blank despsir herusftor to all bat | us this that lles "“"“&]'" tho world we lve Bl | y'year, They did ot pay the Lilis. Mortuniscs | thelr power lica not in telr uzlon, bus tholr di- | tho provisions of tho bifl or substitute reforred o fuvored fow they eall thy uloct. u"t'&‘: I ven- Hmt!;;“l{:r-‘t oyl lon fimflh&lfl- R\“'Il::: wero awkward things, but thoss who talked wo | vergence, 1o, Lt Lo sy gl s i o e o | e oud havo e their S 1 Lt perfoss | lucl ubout the burdtus wor ol wia gauceal | - Beauwiilo it s onty duo to tho Papsto say | Tho proposition tosdd & now dollar, called thing, the ones who pald the bills Let peoplo tl offe aceond pi f adv(es to th the trade-dollar, ta the coins already autharized better cotieeptioa of the thng thot 14 sogreatly | priual fnnoeoace without awy trial st ally Ho { fiB 6 ®0r b C0uR, Tor (et | Cooie ,.:.!"r#.hu:“:fl.: Zo0d mon of u‘m'—; by law, In ordor'to cnable us to competo (n the o detcrmine botl klhlanmlfl;:l. 'u:-:' foruier: ;v):uldl;m, Keby the sernenk ot af it and tha and Jwok at e biuo tum:l" & half | creed will' bo ready sad nuxlous to indores. | markets of the East with nstlons which used ¥ the bal mukie time very short, the brief- 3 usteasd of Iscourmiring | 7] cithing that e woll b thowght f, and s | bry—Uie Lest, In the vast epan of tho Diving | Wiilions, - paid, i | ¥ They nust Ogs fidmt wrror, and not fudi- | the Mexican dollar, was often sreuv:d upon me Providence, s this that wo have now, 1 find | baople by burplng on thelr burdens. -‘fliord | viduals; thoy should spars nemes while de- | by Dr. Linderman, snd rocelved my assent, but 1ife that dependson thne to be liko » Lud drean, Was 4 tanla on the subject of expeuses, Peo- | pouncing vice, and oyercoming that thiey | that {t was to be & substitute for the standard over and dotis with befors you kuow whiro you | myself fo this probation, and flud Ieun take my | e hut morbld over iL, while they should 1 1 th Sti Tl werinons, e Vi, sd 1etLers, L o Ticaow [ha rood” and tho vl snd whik ]:",,";,‘ufu"’u“’c'm,:',mml,;om ity partaf | s oyercane "‘!“Vlfi"fll also. Thelr work | dollar, or that there was phrasology in that by charity, and It was his dumu the teacher, though an unworthy ono, of that virtue, o inculcats It Would that he could denouscste to thiam wiist ho felt in i heart in that respuck” There cau be aa little doubt, from what is known of Plus IX.'s character, of the sineority of this advice vs of the noud for (. Wo ‘should be curlous to kuow whether ML Louls Veultjul whoso pere sanal sbuse vquuls the viruleuce, If not tho wit, of the rival scholars of the Renalssunce, wus among the auditars of his Holiness, not to speak of curtaln of Lis English sllles or imita- tors who inight bo named. I3 1s true that the nulsancy, though {8 is a pecullarity of religlous, voluminons blll, or the omlssion from 1t of tho designation of a coln which would work the de- mouctization of silver, was nuver for one instant present to iny mind. Though not_an inflationist, Thad resisted tho contraction of our paper currency until tho Bouth should have obtained a circulatlng me- diuwm, and the progress of the developmeut of that stricken soction should have nsslated fn pro- ducing and malotalnlng a (avorable balance of trade, wlieraby motallic nonay might take the lace of paper as it shouid be retired, as #'rance s now dolny, and hud reapoudod to 3e, McCul- loch's Fort Wayno munifesto by denouncing his scheime, and proclalming ul{ bollef that con- ru| iuunmln WriLleD fuany years aZ0 ure very pult- ul, for this outery abwat tho shiortuoss of timo, Ben did nos see to Lhink then that thoy could et the whole trath of Gud, it they dId ot tuke ware to rhow how the Great Giver ad serimped. oud pured down Lhis moat {;ndoulpi . Kvery transiiory thing tucy could think of, Sheretord, was drugeed in us an image of the brevity of lils. ‘Tuey dean forgot what Solomon ssys, tlat “length of days wre fu the Lunda of whe dom," aud made all wisdom turn on the senno of thivir shortuess. J think this scuse (s dyiug out in thess days, und wen drs cowiog to feel thut time 1 fust us long a8 It e bo and My fs not Lidel atall, but a fuir span of it o they mean, and what m‘ come to, sl wakic my eloction ut last which 1 will sorve. Thon I culs settle down to my purposo and work it oat. il my purpose s nfi‘“‘ to-lay and iy action E:.‘vml. I'have spplled wy heart unto wisdom: 1t Lh are Lad, t folly wany hr g0 to-day 1 begau to dlscern this Ho far I am scitled duwn ln my heart on one side or the othes, thiok sunie” men do vot have o falr chancy, bus they wiil buve s talr jud;imzm. for all thut, when thetr time comes, and | shall haye bott, ft Iy nu dungerous wulk over crusted tiro fur e, with & biteer, bud beart fuiny breast, and ths mark ot 3 criminal on my brow, aud an uarvlenting J“duf“ on tho beneh, 18 1 8 ateady footing on a tho burden. [t was tine thal this averlsating croaking ubout poverty was disconraged, ani, in ‘hla opiulon, the nuwspapery could ba better om- ployed than in giving thelr types to the on- cuuragement of it Especially ‘was this true of the professed religlous newspapurs, which wera fuw laing the ciurches for putting up butld- inge of their own, lustead ol tinulag thele wurship fn bired bufldings. He pltied the man whose ouly object In life soemed 1o ba this mere struggle for bread, waa thece nat rvom tur (od's children In this worldl Must they dig oud AIg for years, and at last dig themaselves into the grave! Was thure uo boms, no rest, on the otber stls of the river? Wa4 it finite or irrelizious, Journallam, 18 not "the excluslye | troction was the road to ban tey and not to 14 24 foug us 4 seusible man kuows what to d. “i"' world, with :lixrelft n;tvlnwllwm ubavG | gorrow here, and infolte surrow therel Wea manoodly of .h'mm‘...me writers. Tho -n'v- resumption. Thus belleving, I could not bave with. with tuy peart, snid i sengs borne In uvon 118 | Godig goyornment inpartial! What meris was | aeo and daily denunclatious not only of Cathot. | consented tn tha sudden domunetlzation, so far 1 ot anartist once to go and take same every day thatthe Infinils ‘zfl aud gooduces that shonv out of the facu of Cl the Father, sud that ftto have buca born with a better braln than suother, if this 1ife were to bo speut lu a perpote ual strazgle for the nocessarics of exlstencel 8 this country might do it, of hall the mctallic money of tho world by a bill which challenged na discussion ou this point, and which, its man- ictsig, hut of Cathulics as such, u the so-called Liberal press ts thonght to have had a good daal to do with pruelpitatitg the rocent crisis in atireoscuple pictures of the flrat things 1 ree member, snd when I looked at them, sud suw m,yu;u {1 the old doorways a3 a_littla cul:fl‘ Wi irfat s o rovelattun of 3 wmerey roloics sgatnst 1ur!5uwut. 'lu..-n‘, of this has not won e to oo, Kyer; kad aoen sowe huwble home that | Krunce, And {twould uot bo diffieule to name | sgers assured tho [House, tnvoived no chuugo o kald, “T um nov what 1 sce I I" 105 Lleas! ““h|f|°l{";'"y bfi"‘ it Ood | gy r“k‘ty 4 bheaven on earth, and yot | Hncllsh journals, runrvlununx ver npp’(‘ulln o‘('olu'mumze systow, Yours verv truly, & other th the things I touch,” {t scemed | hua given me l’l(uul.y [ 1"3 to nslies; | 4y0rq were many splondid mapslous in which it | sections of the relilous warld, which for can- Wh. 0, KnLLET. us {f I bad Leen lviog for ages, with mnn& stronygth, and 1 am -gruux to discernment, | ooy anything but heaven, ‘The wood and 1l | dor and courteey may falrly compete with tho b — e L B B e e ek T e Be0m M | vt sk 1T, s € ous i wway’ e | org,about eually alusiced. ~ Thanks bo 0 | Uiere . GENERATION i, raunot understa iis outer uf 5 YL i : ——— . th l.vm'tll)’ 3! Iite. L'l‘o o there I8 Ilu’lenlu of | 1mukya suaro of ity wealtn, aud it buys ounly L1l for tuts concsptioit Ilislmpartion ki Yeoplu shontd beware of resting their salvation ou the guslity of the material they wore; be- sam that, wheu thuy were all disrobed beforue THE I0WA METEOR IN COURT. Brectal Cerrerpondence of The Triune, it anud thery was none o the soul of J Time, to Il fs full of unspeakable fnte: leasuray appetite, o " | omg and Pl uay 4t bears In ity heart wl) scereté that even ind it minfsters ouly to pas- ston; and this day has come to tlnd me " In this The Infected Alr We Breathe—Tow Desio. cated Germs Mafptaln Tholr Vitallty—i plight, aud 1 kuoir not that 1shall have suother cf 3 Dzs Motyzs, Ia, July 8.—~The wonderfal e «Aum):l.u{:ult:a-’ 31'.“ '.ffim. "-‘?‘n‘»,li..'f“{ open :x:ryq "mmuvffie w:fi:'_ mwi h_lmmfithl ‘:fil w.}",'..,';'u"%y.wu ‘.:‘n;“.‘:ufiffifi"‘?;eé“:‘ ::m::h:,’( mneteor which startled the country by its bril- {‘."’::“'?r":h}',“';'u;‘;’;';:d“'"; lecture beforo e, h, fuash peleatay F B | ST (or' ™ iy ponersviona o Yo | (bond whirm ey now okt dowa Upon with | liuk sud. swit swucp through tha suimosshers | ok rof, TYOU dalirred p fecture befora of such unspeakable worth that noliing can Stuts for S meglect.” Work while 1t In Sared day'; watch alwsysi stand as a wan stands on But thore 8 ovne thing moure, the greatest, and laat, thy Jem can bring me. Honest work s thy solid material substauce; moral principle lhl,y with contempl. **Let the lesson of tue hour,'” eatd Dr. Ryder In cun- clusion, **be, that whatever we have in the fn February, 1575 dropped a fragment, weighing days since, the sublect belng {n continuation of about seventy-ive pounds, on lands belo ln‘i adlscourae given by him in January last, Prof. & 14 we carn, ond that the test of trus dis. | to the Amana Bocm.{, s body of Comuun! Tyndall began by {llustrating the change from er i nenta; sco that not Yips | well establixhs reachiog through wll gy | MO Y o1 near Homestead, in Jowa County. Hoon after, | sweot and transparent animal and vegetable in- y“Withods chaliouze. Keeh your — Jasips | thougota snd setlonw, 1s tho. gyt sfeuir | o1shin fe tho judswent of God upon us e | WAL RSN \luting migsi the Dubil | fusions to. pitrelyin and trbl aace; ko trimmed. Beo that thy oll L in your vessels; e und time, togetlicr) is the Jewel that outs vidghs gold In vduys let nothiog rob you ot thoe. Allthis was 1o the heart of the Savior, and fu s l.nnxmsi and ft beals and burns in His Gorpel, But there £8 not & word that § ro- membor ubout the tatal shortness of uwe, ug wccurding Lo our meaud, our opportunitics, and our time, and not dmpfy by the results we are able to abow.” TIIE CIIRINTIAN CAMP. BUNDAY WITI TUB CURISTIAN WOBK ASIEMBLY biguway, dlscovered the (ragment, and curried 1t to tha store of the Buclety, where §t was held by the Bociety as their property, Maas appealed 10 the courts to recuver possessfon. The case was trfed lust week, bofors Judge Shane. The l-mnuu clabmed title by ducovery, snd that turbidity, he said, was duo to swarms of infu- 8oria, the lowest forms of which, called bactera, were the known ageuts of putrefaction, Ho referred to the two rival views regardiog the origin of thuse vreanisins,~the one deriviug them frum sceds, cggs, or germs, the aud aasurauea that £ i fu the rizhy way, und [ all nat be ashamed sad terrified when the jast it cowes to-worruw, But ahove piritual ifo that coues fn tho con- of communion with God, in the sptrit of Clrlst, and {u the dssurance thal Lam ot ol 10k elifldren. 1t s enough fur some men to at- 0N LAKS UENEVA. Lere waa 0o prior owner, ab Josb within the | othier from spontineous gencration. Cou- e, or of 1ifc, ws life, His soul, fu Lhat weuse, | tain to the drst. ‘Thoy never vare ta go further, Bpecial Dispalch to TAs Tribuns ?lurhdlullun of mundane courts. The | trastiog the power of & lumivous beam sotlcipsted und held all tbat sclencs bas dis- | or to do tuore thau that. They pride thew- GaxByA LAks, Wis., July S.~Tnroe-score of efendauts clalmed utle uuder the | with that of our best microscope, be showe, covered wbout, the fulliicss of thne that Gul & 3 selves on the good work they do, and so far law of accretion; tnat tho atone fell on land in e ¢ by referring to the recent observativng of Dal- ives 1 to s pebble to round ltsell, | they dowelly fur in theso tines when su much | Yeats 850, whuu the tribo of [udlang under Big- | which thoy Leid' the feo-title; that the fee n | liuger, that the beam cau reveal the existence Aud dle woutd not allow that ths Maker, | Is dune merely for what It will bring, they are | Foot occupled this region, but slikhitly molested | the Lighwsy was (n theus, subject only 1o the | of zerininal partlcies which baitle a_magultying why gives full Aplue to utter, | in their degres spostics snd preaciers of a real | byth palefaces, tavy were wout to hold the | easemcut of public travel; thal all accretions | puwer of 15,000 dianeters. Exposiug, s year truth. A very great many good men stop short at the sceond. “fo do thelr work faithfully, aud stand by good principles wanfully, they icel to Us as far us thev want to go. Honest In their to the bighway bejonged to the realty as much as If made ou lnclosurcs, The cuurts have established many rules uuder the law of accre tlon and riparisn rights, but, helng of carth, bluff ou which Cawp Collle s now slt- uated with all the superstitous yeverence of ‘which the saveyge hoart was capable The water %0, both aulinal and vegetabla wiusions, botled fur five winutes, bat emincntly patresvible, to air proved by the beant to by fres Irom tloating matier, they were pever found 0 putrefy or should pinch the portfon of living wmeu, ‘Ihe ucthr thought atwut life sod e In these daye, 8 the true Guspel of Jesus Chrlst, wud § presume the reason why wise men ars talking less cvery year ubout the shortoess of ddewtings, truthful fn thelr’ word, puro fu thelr [ of the lake was four (cet Ligher theu, uud the | thelr rules wore carthy, Colestial” scercilons | show the slightest lubereut poser to develup Ui fs, thut the Quopel truth 1s wastering the | deeds, whut wmore caun bs necdul than | shors sida was 5o precibltous that It required | are a novelty, and there are no wljudicated cases | bacterial or fuugold life. The evidence Iur- - O, wiong couccptious, 'Those who belieyo dn | this “to wake the perfect an, they | ereat strongthi aud sl to climb up tho bavk | on record, »0 the Conrt, in tho case ot bar, was | nished by hundreds of experhinents bearing upon Job above Jeeus, van stlil say thelr dsys ere | syl sud condinle whon this s | from th waler. Although the hill i of ineon- | compelied to bs vuldul by reason. The evh | this point. sud executed with the utihost phyals swifter than s weaver's shuttly,—thoas that be- all gutten by beart, they have learned the les- son of Mfe, und uced apply thelr hearts to no wore wisdom, It i3 s novle wisdom, bat it is uoL the noblest. Nivodemus went as furas that, und Nuthanlel, *lu wvhom there was no gutle''s aud charlas when came oub of the 02 tres, aud hosts busldes all over the world, sud in :il time,—oobly beatbens liko Blurcus, sud Julian, aud fly'}mh. and \muowphcu wod wor- alists of later days that wizht welt shame auy Chrlstlons by thelr example, und tea:h thens b thelr words.” But thelrs wus notibo best lifs witer ull, bocause the best things uever caug out uf it. Ounly when the pure heart ripens inte the luving heart. sod streugth futo puticace, uud paticuce duas {ta rest In prayer, aud prayere rlses into Heaven us sweetly a3 the voless ot tug chlldren rise bayour houics when they need yuur succor, and “the au who bad cousclouly given biwsell from bimsdi to God, wod fecl God b talicu bla, and takes care of Lin, and will tuhe vt of Lim, whatever comes, sud il eraulo Lieight, when compared with elevations o few hundred miles away, still R towers wbove ything Ju this viclndly§ aod a8 those redeking were ralied on the glnltlel of 1oy, this blu ed o them thohizlest grousd,snd thoy call. anitou’s Crest." ro was & lesend amouy vhew, that he who sttained (te vummic from the water's edgu catches o view of th luud of souls wud belolds the huppy buntin: gruunds spread out below, brighteaiug with tho wbudes of fre aud generous splnts. 4 CUANUR. How wonarous the chauge! The dusky [n- dlay, leauing o'er the parapels of cloud, watch- ing thy intervening mists, that, like u shroud, wrap the valley iu its folds, sud 'the ascending sounda of Iife falntly mect his ear,—vaguely, the murmur of prayer, aud pralso, sut song blundiuy with the uear rush of Waters raised to the Chicf of ull tho hosts. KECHEATION. Flshing t5 ong of fbe pleasaut oxuvations deu.e, however, made the gucstious one of fuct ruther than law. It was shiown that employea of the Bocloby, while pluwiuyg {a the tield, caiug upou the frazment, and. o remoys it out of tlielr way, carried {6 o the rosd, and deposited it bestde the fence, with the fuicol W take it 1o tbeir bome fur use alout the house; aud it was wkere uu;{ doposited {4 that Maas found It. But, durlng the progress of the trisl, uvon Jegal poluts ralsed by counsel, the Court rulul that a-cretwus to the soll, whietber from the sca or uir, by ostural causcs, becone 8 rul of the realty, aid the title Is {n owuer of the really; “also, that whatcver la added to realty bocomes the property of the owuer of the realty, uuless, prior to ‘the addh- tion thereto, ib i the actual property of au- other, Judgmeut was rendered for defeudant, ut plaotilyeost, The Sodety bLus presented the fragwent to Prof. Hiurlchs, of the Htate Uulverslty, where it wll be foined wlts other Lrugweutd of Lo pawe wetor, cal precialon, wse complete. Last autumn, Lawever, the orgame llquids previously ex- perimented ou, and which tive minutes bolllug reduced Infallibly to barrouness, were found ?:'lfl"’l" of withstaudinz Afteen minutes' bolling, o lieve In Jesus wbove Jub will bo yuiet, and fuel they can rest where o sedted in the perfece usaurunce Lhat 1A I no wore s roken blessing thun all the rust that come fiow the full hau ©f the Father, Aud [ buve mentioned this three-fold convic. tlon which i3 growing through aud vut ol the Gospel, beeause I want you to realize {t in whag 1 aay tealde. Tho better light ls the best fus urinuuu that 8 mwn cut bave for a beteer life, I 1 bave pleoty of tme, but nous to spare, that will be the strungest reasou thut can be fiven wby po thne should be lust about the Suljes that wait o bo done. 1f 1 etaud bu tho waition, not of a criwival before a Judx;l B or” o “Chuld o' fatber, that (3 beyo sl tulllug the belter motive for o better ity sud 1f the Lfe 10 cume hida B0 vast probabilith of ay futulerallo torticnt, that Ly pluugze Lutu betore 1 an aware, ur cacape by a deed thut D Lo Geu ad tuo Lot wutwent, dlter Uvisg s g thetsclves afterward with putrefactive bers 1 uo correction of error bere; the twy Yunwm of the luquiry are per- fectly correct. Either, therefore, the Professor reasoncd, fu 1378, the fufusfons bad become endowed with an fuherent generative Cuerdy uout possesicd by thesa in 1575,0r sume new putrefactive Xcontagium uxteroal to the fu- usions, and of a far wore obstinste character than that of 1375, bad beew brought to bear upon thein st the later dL{. By experimeuts long coutloued Prof. Tynda{l convineed biwsolf that in his later inqulrive the Juboratory of the Roysd Tustitution haa becowe tilled with a viru- leutly lufected atmosplicre. He tberefore re- woved bis apparatus to the Jodrell laboratory s Kuw Garduus, sud exposd ita infuslows to its teas {nfectisn nir. The reault swa that lignida, Nhich, In Atheninrle street realated three flours’ builtng, Alling themeclves afterward with putre- factlve organlsms, were completely sterllized by five nfnutes' boiling at Kew. Fither, then, the lost in Kew Gardens n generative enerey which thay rumm-d in the iatamtory of the Royal Inatitution, or thetr deportment in the laboratory must be referred to the conta- elon ol its alr, With a vlew of mnking nearer- home experimenta sfmilar those mado at Kew, 8 shed was crected on the roof of the Royal Institution, Chambers wera pre- ared In the shed, and charged with in- usions which had never heen permitted to come ncar the Inboratory. The first experiments fall cd ntterly, the oir of the shed proving senaibly as Infective as that of the laboratory itaclf. The causo of this was not far_to seek, Prof. Tyn- dall’s asslstanta had passed from the laboratory to the shed, and from the shcd to tholaboratory, unconscious earriers of infectlons, The shed wua_subsoquently iglofected, and uninfected clothes were employed for the preparation and exposure of the infusions. The result was that they remalned pelluckl and without an{ trace of bacterial 1ifo. ~ Now, a thirty leet long waonld stretch from the infusions in the ehed to thosc in the laboratory. At one emd of this rod five minutes' hotling rendercd the infuslons bar- reoi At Lho other end the same infualons resist- e 180 minutes bolling. Shall wo then infer that atone end the infusions possess the power.of spontancous generation aml atthe other do notl Or that at one end we have obstinately infective and at tho other end coinparatively uninfective nir! It Is ncedless to dwell upon the ab- rolute similarity of the spread of putreface tlon, as liere fifustrated, to that of infections diseasc, Thero Is not a phenomenon of the one which does not find its_parallel among the ilicnomena of the other. Whers, then, nre wo lo scek the contagiuin which so coploualy pro- duved the organlsins of putrefaction, after the ordeal to which tho Intusions in the \nbanlnr: had been expoecd! Prof, Tvndall rendered it visible. Placing a gmall truss of old and desfc- cated hay, obtained from Ifeathfleld, n Sussex, under o horizoutal beam of Hflxt sent through tho darkencd theatre of the Ruyal Institution, on heating the hay clouds of fine dust rose into the beamn, That was the contaglum. Mingled with that dust were the desleeated {.'urm! which had epread a plague among the (nfusfons, ns- rerting their vitality alter exposure for hours to & holling hieat. \Washing these germs from the hay tre ohtain an infectivo virus, which, it com- munleated in the most minute quantity ton lwrlcully sterilized Infuslon of any kind, causes t in twonty bours to swarm with putrefactive organlsma. It may be, for aurht the Professor knew, the contagiam of hay-fever, Certain It 1 that in the nostrils of porsons affected b thuls catarrh, utbrios similar to those dovcloped trom tho hay gerina are found fi swarms when the fevoris fgh, How would theso obstinate ferms act in tho wards of a hospltalt T ey cause both anlinal and vezetable infusions lo'lmln.-fy. flow would they affect the wounda and sores of lving men) -~ Would they succumh to ordinary disinfectanta) These are questions of the gravest import, which the enlightened student of the antiseptic system will know How to answer for Mimself. Or, suppose a bunch of thls hay shaken {a the air of an catabiishment dovoted to the preserving of meats and vegota- bles, 18 it not probable that the ordinary pro- cesa of bolling, by which such preserves aro sterilized, woulil ba thereby renderod uufinlor{ serlous commercinl loss belng the resulti {3 may bo added that a wiry hay from Guildford which 2ia not appear to bo old proved alinost as refractory as that from Heathficld. Boiled con- tinuously for four hours, these desiceated ficrmn delled llvoi »#ix, and, fn ono instance, elght hours’ holllng, Weo now turn to another aspect of tha question; followiug the plaln indications of the rerm theory of putrefaction, wo aterilizo n five minutes the, very Infusions which o moment ogo werd described as resist- Ing dlve hours' boiling, The eerms are indurated and reststaut; the adult organ- {sma which spring from them are plastlc and scualtive [n tho extreme, The greatest error evor committed by hlological writers an this question consists In the confounding of v.hchrm and ita oftspring, The active bacterla dovelopenl from those obstinate germa are_doatroyed at o temperature of 1409 Fahrenheit, Letus re- Hluct upon these facts. For all known germs there exlsts a perlod of Incubation, during which they prepare themselves for cmergence as the finlahed organisme, which havo been proved so scusitive to hoat. If, during this period, and well withia 1t, the Infusion botled for tho fractlon ornm\nulnl even before tho bofliny point {s reached at all, the softened gorms whic! aro then aporoaching thelr phasc of Hnal de- velopment will bo destroyod. Iepeating tha process of heatlng, overy ten or twelve hours, cacli successive heating will destroy tho gorma then mummdl untll after 8 sufficient number of heatings the last living germ will dia ar, ! m[-’opurly follawod gmn the n.ll::?god of sterilizatton here descried Ia in- falllble; a temperature, moreover, far belowtbe Mgfs polnt sullices for sterilization. Prof, Ty 1 showed infusiona of mutton and turnlp compatont to realst five hours’ coutinuous boll- {ug, but which hiad heen reduced to utter bare reuucss by the proper spplieation of a tempera- sure of 160 degreca Fahrenbeit., Numberless observations Indicated that oxygen was ncces- sary to the life of the organisms hors under ro- view. A thick scum would often collect upon tho top of an {nfuslon, which scum, greedy of oxvl‘ann. and appropriatine it, permitted no trace of tho to re: tho infusion underneath, which romainod on this account as pellucid as diistilled water. ilence tho fdes of sterilizing tha Intuslons by depriving thew of alr. Thls waa done - with perfect success, Subjecting an Infusfon for four or five hours to thc actlon of the Bprengel pump, snd subjecting it aftorward to one minute's bolling with a view to axtlugnish Ita already expiring Iife, in the great majority of cases gerins were destroyed. A minute thus accomplished what 300 mlnuites in the presence ol air faMed to accomplish. llers, as Ia nll other cases, oid aod deafceated hay {ntaston proved most intractable. Noris the effect hero mentloned to be sacribed to o mere suspension of tha llfe o the germs; they are deprived of lte b{ helng deprived of alr, for when aftar a sufllclent thine germless air s restored to the fnfusions it falls to revive them. 1t is obvious that these remarks also apply to infusions pus of alr by bolllog, There | afogulay slinilarity botween the vital actlons of these lowest isma and those of the higheat, Privation of oxygen stiffies both low aud bigh, d excess of oxygen nolsous both. Prol. Tyn- dall exhibited fnfusions of beof and mution which bad been subjected for tnany waoks to [y Prmura of ten atmospheres of oxymen, which wera sweet, trnnulmrunt, sud without & truco of Iife. In connectlon with this subject, tho Professor referred to tha beautiful expert ments of 3, Paul Bert, and concluded his dlscourse with theas words: ‘I hardly think it necessary to summarize what has been here brought beforayou. In fact, the wholo discourse is but a summing up of oight months of incessant labor. From the begloning to tho end of the (nquiry thers §s not, a3 you hava seon, a shadow of avidence in fayor of tho doctrine of spontancous genoratlor. There Is, on the con- trary, overwhelming cyidence against it; but do not tarry away with you the notlon sometimes erroncously ascribed to me, that I decn spon- laneous generation 'lmpoull)lc,’ or that I wish to linit the power of matter in relation to lfe. My views _on thls subject oucht to be well known, But possibility Is one thing and proof is another, and whon {n our day I scek for ex- peritnontal evidencoof tuie transformation of the non-living luto the living, I sm led incxorably to the conclusion that no such evidencs exists, and that o the lowest, 88 in the highest of organized creatures, the method of nature thaut life shall bo the Issue of autecedent life." e ———— Polsanlag by Chlaral Hydrate. The Investigations mado by M. Taurct shows that it a solutlon of chloral hydratc be mixed with an alkaline solutlon of potassium perman- gauate, tho Hquld s decolorized, s jzas s cvolve ol and aneanic oxide {8 precipitated. It the quallty evolyed be considerable, and the tem- perature ba kept frow rising sbove 409 Cunth fmlo, the reaction s slow, and tho filtered Iquid ta found to contain chlorids, carbonate aud formate of potassium. The gna evolyed 18 carbonous oxlde. The same reactions can b produced fo very dilute solutious, and take lace even when ihe alkaiinity is produced by horax, Froma these data M. “Tanret accounts for the action of chloral hydrate in the animal economy on the theory that, when taken into the body, it [s uot only submitted to the alka. line serum, but to oxidizing agencles st the sanio thng, and that both these causes, takon together, eflcct its decomposltion in the manner abuve described, carbunous oxide delug sct freg fu the blood, displucing its oxygen, and produc- vz symptomv anslugous to’ those vheerved In cases of poisouing by this oxide of carbon, The lowering of the tempersture of the body, too, noticed (n theso cases, and tho prolonged sction of chioral hydrate, are thought to render this bypotlesis tenable. ————— Aoction of Tobacco va the Bystem, Bome vears ago the Fronch Government di- rected the Acadeny of Medicine to Inquirs into the nduence of tobacco oo the human system. The repors of the Cominlssion appoluted by the Academy states that 8 large nuiber of tho dis- cases of the nervous system sud of the leart, votlced lu thecndes of those atfected with paraly- sis or jusanity, were to be regarded as the se- Juenca of excessive indulgence fn tho use of tLis article; and it is remarked that tobacco scems primarily to act upon the organic nervous |{uem, devressing the (acultics und influcoctog the nutritlon of tho body, the cireulation of the bluod, and the number of red eorpuscles fu thy blood. Atteation {8 also called 10 the bad di- Rustion, benuwbed fatelligoacs, sud clouded wemry of thuas who use 1ol 10 EXcusd 01110. The Approaching Cleveland Con-\ vention, Machine-Plottings to Pat Down I’roai-) * dent Hayes. Cincinnatt Commercial (Rep.), Jnty 7. Ohlo is again the national battle-ground. The first strugale witl ocour In the Republican party., {tself. The old Grant Ring, accustomed to su- promacy fn the party and perfoct frecdom fov perquisites, and the machino politiclans who Ret thelr living out of polltics and sneer at ro- form, are disappointed with the Adminlstration of Iayes. They wore defeated fn his nomina- tion. Thoy were disturbed by his letter of av- coptance. They were distreased by his inange ural, and disheartaned by his-Cabinet, and they aro exasperated by his Civil-Scrvice reform. Ilence there §s war, Tho Woodstock specchies. of Binfne and Chamberlaln’ constituto a declars- tlon of war, and war 1o the knife. There fs nothing in the pretcnided azony Rbout Lhie surrender of Lotlsiana and Bouth Carolina. The Republican positions (n thosc States st the end of Grant's Administration wero not tenables The apcctacle of zarrisoncd Btate-Houses was exceedingly distasteful to tha Amerivan people. ‘The iepublican party could not cousent to be reaponsibla for that “sort of thing. The influ. ences that caused the “abandonment 7 of Ms- sissippl by (rant were slinply Irresistible. Grant had substantiallv surrendered both Loutslana, and Bouth Caroffua, Ilo refused to recognizo the Republican Governors accoriding to thelr de- mands. ‘Those Republican Goveruuicuts had tottered to thelr fall. They were propped by hayonets, and hebind tho bayonets were & Dein~' ocratic House of Representatives, and n majori= ty of States with Demouratic Governors. Under the Adminlstration of Qen. Grant the! Ropublican party in the South had passed away, with the exceptfon of a few frogments tossing about to toll of shipwreck. Tho right thing fory Urant to do, when the troops had done their duty In presorving the pence and showing faie play through tho Presidentlal cloction, was to ramove them from tho State-Ilouses. o lafty the tnsk to Ifaycs, who was monaced on ono: side by the Democratic Housopnat and to come,, and on ths other by a desperately dissatiafied population. Hayes saw what must como to- pass, lle saw that the two State-Houscs occn~ pled by United States troops must be evacuated. e thought to let down his friends inthe Repul- lican 8tate Governments as easfly us possible. Hence the so-catled ** negotiations " which tho ungratetul persons most coneorned-~we rofer ol Chamberlain and Packard—have attempted to. mako odlous. It did not auft the Gubernatorisl’ gontlemen to rotire gracefnily, They assumed ab affeetation of martyrdom. It would have pleased them to have the world zazing upow hem o while longer. They desired Amorican politica to rovolve throngh “the Administrativny of IHayes around two Brate-Jouses hold against:’ the taxpayers by United States troops, to whom Congress, through the action of the lotse, hadi refused suppiles’ u!nthuywemlxmcmmhlsj business, [fayes was too” wise and fearless man to allow his country and his party to bo screwed fnto this attltude. Iie knew how eoslly the cose might be inalignantly mis- represented, but he did not regard that. Ilo ald his duty,~his simple, fimperative duty, But the South Carolina and Loulsiana (ssue fa o falso lssuc. It is perverted, exaggorated, mado spettacular; the horns are biown and the druma aro beaten about Ity but it [s unreal. The real thlnglta that If Hayes’ Administration goes on ns it has begun, tho Federal otlleers will not_bo syailuble to Ernpm delegates for tho noxt Na- tional_Nepublican Conventfon to nominate u noble Banator for the Presidency. Special Post- Otllico Agenta und Internnl Revonuo Suncrvisura will not ve golug up and dowan tho conntry st the public expense, ulumlnfi to bo nn;i'nund in ofliclal business, fixfug up dolegntions for noblo Honators. The Post-Oflice machiuery will not bo available. 8windling navy-yards will not re- turn Congreasmen ripencd “to vote subsl~ dies. The right of s whisky thiof to steal froif the Government, provided 'ho gives llbnrdulrv 10 tho Republican party, will not be recognized. 1 Un{es succeeln nmmlln? to_hls programme, ho will * give politics a Iift," and there aro somo thousands of lmportsnt politicians whaso occupation will depart fram them. Honce tho uopromeditated speeches at Woodatock, for- wanied In typo through the Assoclated Press— tho Iowa resolutions—tho Gall Ilamilton es~ says—tho Cincinnatl © Zimes* - criticlsma—tho fresh and fond affection of Bimon Camoron and Robeson for ox-Presidont Grant. Tho machino politiclans of the Republican peranasion—thaso who would throw mud ot Hayes with the samo delfeacy with which tbey licked Grant’s boots— proposs to capture the Cleveland Convention. ‘They wore thinking of this as long aco as when thoy ealled the Conventlon. Cleveland was the wol that had & Blaine taint in it before the atlonal Convention fu Cincionatt It cone tains a disappointed cditor. The Garfleld move- ment fs in that ncighborhood. Ben Wade's bursting fndizuation is not remoto. Travel be- iweon New England and the Northwest is on the Cleveland routs, Packard can pass that wg{. Chamberlain may mako s.call, ho attack upon the “Administration s to bo in the namo of super loyalty to the nm{. Proteatations of pocullar "party virtue are fo be the watchword of tho assallants of the Re- form pollr-{ that layes {s busily devaloping. In cose be is admonshed at Cleveland and bows to the yoke, hols to be cootoinptuously fors ven;” bus ho must change bis Cabinet, back down from all his high professions, smbrace thu Camerons, give Bialue his clioks of carpetbs evs for Postmaster-General, turn out old Dic! Thompson and put In soine rotten-wood rascal to make money outof the navy for his party and hitself, provide u Becretary of War suita- Dble for the next Prestdentinl campaign, and so on through the lst. But incase tlayca reslsts tho machine, he has a foretasts in Chnmberlaln’s Connecticut speech of what ho may expect. [fo will find himself denounced as wurse than Tyler, Buchavan, and Johnson comblowl, and to” the venom of the Implacable Democratic hostility, apparent in Inccasant hlssings of fraud, will ba nuded the worst that unscrupulons wen of his own party cau fovent out of the atoros of thelr nalice; and if thero arc any rascals in the Ro- turning Board Htates who are flln&) pointed be- cause they are not rewarded sccording to thelr own eatimoto of scrvices, they willcome forward to distingulsh themselves as’ llars, according to thetr ability, character, and predisposition. ‘T'he questfon ¢hat {s to come before the Cleve- land ntion s a very plaln onc, 1t Is, whether tho udmivlstration of R. B. lh{u shall boin plaln terms indorsed, This {a tho thing that must be done, or not dona. Equivo- cations will not befn order. The question fs between the Machine and the Admiudstration, between the blooted spectre of Grantism an the living present. This will involye the ques- tlon whether the Republican party is capable of re(urmlnileuel{.—w etheran honest man at the head of the party Is offensive to the organiza- tion,~whether tho party Is rcally so decayed and scandalous that it has no possible future. ‘I'hye success of the Machine s¢ Cleveland would, in our judgment, anuounce that the Republican party reached at least the beginning of| the “closing chapter of Its career,—that Its fow days with f{ayes woutd be fuif of pafns and! and end tn docropitude and dissolu-, tion. ‘The Republicana of Ohto who are moti machinlste—who are not disappoiuted about IE""’ affairs~and who know of their own nowledgze through lung expericuce that tho Preeidont 1s an honest and true man, falthful + and earpeat {n strugpling under great crnbas assments Lo reach the rliznt—the men who do. not get thefr Iiving out of politics—wust como 1o tls frout In tho primary nicetings and fn tho: County Conventions, or tl ';‘X will tiad the Btato* disgracefully mlsrepresented fn Cleveland, and bandod over to the Demovracy as a token that the President’s own Ohlo bas listened to ths chatter of slander aud the uproar of [foollsh counsel, and has deserted him—aud that the country belongs henceforth to the Democratic urty a8 the strougest, as well as the worst, of v machines. [ — A Priestly Kecluse lu Obina, Shanghat Currepondence San Frascisco Chromicle, Tcumne across @ new kind of Robiuson Crusos a few days ago, in the shape of & French Catho- llc misalonsry who bas resided in one of the border provinees for pearly tweuty years, dur- {og which period be had seen but gue white mau, and that but fora few bricf hours, I cannal bein 1o describe what isolstion from his kind had resulted in. He no longer thought of * La Bella Franve,” or, if 80, in » Yague sort of way, as of some balf-remembered dream. It was paintul to watch him, and to wituess his cager- Deas to sco everyting st all forelyn, and to converso in his native tongue; aud yet, when- ever he eqsayed the latter, he made such & jum- ble of Freuch and Chiuess that it was 10 catch bis meaning. Ho had journeyed all theso thousands of miles to sce sud greet a brother, aléo missiouary. That dune, he [s going back %fius for whom he 'had forsskea country, ¢, and fricuds. Betwoen now-msde lovers: ‘‘Then, Adcl- githa, will you bo mnluei¥ *Yos, Ferdinand, if pais willtog, I slwsys do what ho wants s Lo ¢ Bat will he give his cousent P! ¥ flo will. Pu slways docs what I want Lim to."! Ferdinaud Iu "his rapture nakes Adclgltba ;]bluk that bercoricts aroa mils o larke e 3

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