Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY. JANUARY 14, 1878, {munfly Leyond the day that Lurled their life- being the case, ©L us eat, drink, and he | mang n thorn. Botb were Inboring under op- becoming the religion of tho ' hoor. We have warning words In the Scripture, nnvlhu and execoted, and the astonished eyes of the merry, for to-morrow we die.’ oreesfon with deep lghs, exs hidles, Thux the fomnbatones, where man | 1< onr own fanit it we are dammed, jost the | children of fsrael must hase beheld many of = ey P 1t had been sald that Dr. Jolinson was droppest ¥ Jasses Ganrunors | " Tievond Moabh thacn e o yoint whiers s | Peann. seis s Lhet il Reeaneas pneac o |/ lsaneawn (enlbif we-sto damuid, - jort. the thoss *temples, palaces, and pileastnpendous, sipookkecners; Clerka from soclety because he was too gruff and aus- ——— strugple of existmice parts with all virtae and | of Lis pleasure, but out of his tafl, who ts warned of a broken rall or a broken | of which the very rainsare tremendous s 8o aid crlchce, Tan Apeak Geran, tere [n his manners, but the Universaliat Church IN GENERAL. hecomes an utter defeat. 8o tu all gool amd In nuch a world do we apend our uncertain | Uridge on the road, shanid he insist on running | the Egypt world Appear to them as they enter- | refereaces. »Aqqnligtwmnn had been left out by the other churches because i 4 AL 11l {s involved. The stwly which develops the | years, The thnes which we call “hiard " arefor | his train over the dangerous nlace. ‘Thisended [ ed. ifow waa it befora they came out? et Fimployment Agencies. fwas ton lovely B chooffal, Dlntarch sshd m?(““t‘l 'Il!:)lllw brt"lk lilli l'l ml’: m}("{t (‘!' L "“’n"""';‘x{,'"?n'.".ix"’:f&f" l“zlv‘.":hl:: '.'1'?'»‘;?2"}'13 "'fix‘fi"\'.:f.‘?:“?a then read a hymn and sang ft, }!:frgrfi{;ca;; 'a"ful’fi?«','.}"'".'&fifi:‘éfii’u?{h‘e"i&,‘:fi W ANTED-Loo) LABORENS FOR THE SOUTH; 5 mnkes the body sugged witl also breal own. | and e 8 hood. 4 Mr. Manaflel o b Rl ApoRens Fo F, 1 {bat It was 8 sign of the possession of tho rar- ADVERSITY. Nature makos o privislon fur exceson, (o | hand 1 (0o purslt of food Al Faiment, AR th | 00 " feer eaccr e! cofee i v Ang te | Lord thy God; that brought thee out, bondage.” [ cussinr TS AN A CO Y I e e T 1 SERMON DY PHOP, SWING. Prof. 8wing preaclied yeaterday morning at the Central Church, taking as his text: To bim that overcomoth will I glve to eat of the {ren af life which 13 in tha midst of the paradide of lod, —lev.y iy 7. ‘When thegreat bard sald, *Sweet are thouses of adversity,” he almost trifled with the worlil’s flls. It scems n hall-shocking sentiment that the strugzio of man, the struegle of womnan, the struggle of child, the struggle of nations, should be put down among the sweet things of the universe. And yot all history comes to indorio tho verss of Slakspeare. The abstract theory that trouble will often lead to joy, that suffering Teads to peace, fa as itlogical as that white leads to black, or that heat Induces enld, or that hate develops love; but actual experd- est womanly gifts when 8 woman could conquer an enemy to be & lover; but Universalism had met this nigh teat, and now counts her adorers Dby legions whore onee she found only bitter en- emies. Theso conquests had not been among the ignorant and rude, but poets, atory-tallers, andemen of science of the first order had taken the front line. The stranghotd of Universalisin was {o New England, and it was worth while to notfce bow the Church had galned In favor there. John Furray was tho first preacher of Universallsm In America, Jesus Christ and Bt. Paul the first {n Juden, Marray lved a lit- tle too 1ate to be burnt at the stake for his be- et In » God who was not a monster of crucity, and who would not, In the words of Jonathan Edwards, castsouls down on the pavement of fsaGod of temperance. All Intempernnco I8 fatal, There aro thues whose adversity kills fnetead of develops. But the statuts of the Creator stands that nature and men grow powerful only in the midst of storm, (ermany and England were_onca eminently lands ot flerce barbarians. What wild pirntes, callenl warrlors, passed 1o and fro over the North Sea| Aund yet out of s warfare of a thousand years were to come two natfons, atrong In Dody, owerful in 1awe, {mpreasive Iu lheratore, Em:n lessons arc thers :‘ylnz all over the pnges of history, to the eud that noblencss comes from endless contest; that it mny he what s called *hara times ' are the dim, misty morn- ing of each kolden nge. A writer. standiny so far back as Juljus Cicsar, sald that no nation could cnduro long-continued prosperity, and that, when the iminortal gods desired to punish [y pv.-oplef,:hey permitted that peopla first to found home, or school, or church, or State, ani nre weeping over the difficultios of the manifold task, an unscen lland ia leading usto a pro- founder wisdom, & nabler outcome, and n hap- pler retrospection. *Wa are oat on the ovcan salling,” with a mightier shore ahcad., Une thought remaina. In this strukile for a ood, multitudes sfnk hefore they hava found L flow can labor profit thoss who de in the tolll What avalls freedont to those' who die In winning it All tha facts of earth le biefore us In an unlinish which demands snotaer Jife. It God stands as tho Author of this scheme, He stands also da the Author of its completion upon some other shore, The grave receives the heroen of virtue and sl goodness so readity be- cause It Is the gateway 1o s second life. [t re- celyen man when a child, or when young, or i middle life, {n the midat of a battle, or in the noon of pawer, because the piece may be cone taple of the eventng, the text for which he had | Buch was oftentfines the worid’s promise and | © T T, lacorecot in 8 prassgs . tio Gospel accord: | the worli'a performance, T o ML P ing to Matthew relating to *‘earthquakes in The discipiine in Egypt was two-fold. First | qtanin to vefl new fast-saillag articios Cataiomns | dlvers places,” and prognostieating the end of { on the side of the evil In Egypt, when the disci- | trec. an Novelty Company, 181 #14te. the presont dispensation and the eecond | piine consisted in contact of the people with TANTED-WIDE-AWARE MEN AN tviiis toming of the Lord. = The words of Jeaus clear- { evil, issulng fu conviction of thetr own weak- ‘ iell tricks, neadies, eliromos, noveltise, photo- | l{ foreiold the end of the world, and when His | ness, distrust of the world as Fmplrlbory to K“Ph tatlopery, Shilery, notims, Jawel dieciples asked Ilim' privatcly when thesa | trust in God, and s longing desiro to get sy TRents Sroaes Cha any pin ke Arttc things were to come about, He ex- | from Egypt Into the Laad of Promise. Thl G NIRRT O plalued “that natlon should riss azalnst | side was obvious enouch, and well understood. nation, and kindred against kindred, | But there was another side, lesa obvious snd and there shiould be earthquakes In divers | Jess understuod. There waa zood in Egyut as plu.-lu." ;lu;. w‘nv; pl‘nltn talk, said the prlcu-l;ur. wcll'.:s u:'l'lim'r'l;e lilhletguwlhem‘mu 'm;‘mau. S ; Eartnquakes. ‘call knew pretty wetl what | on the zation or the leamning of Egypt. “r STED — OPERALUIS carthquakos were, and *“in divers places.” | There was a kindly feollug towards the peole | . & COATS: 9 week. Call for one week at 125 West ftaf g That meant many places. 1le would pass over | of Egypt which was ant to be overlonked (see Nursos, the reference to kingdoras, because there were | Deuteronomy, xxill., 7-5), Motes was riducated for i ED-GIRT, BETWER no kingdoms In these o 5: and come right to | hia great minston at the Court of Pharaoh, and ‘ A:‘Jl';‘l ,’lei‘..,'.’."‘JJ‘&;Z‘;LTJ‘;'?.‘;’}“.E,?.EE‘ 1’3 the subject of earthquakes, as a sizn of the sec- | was inatructed in the learning of the He{vtum. ;',‘.'I‘;",f,]“"‘ housework. Apply s¢202 North Wells-st., ond coming of the rll.\ml. An earthquake, rald | Whilo the spirit of Egypt, as embodied In ftg | thirdfvor front. enjoy unbounded success. tinued beyond, Tho tofling, the useful, the | Mr. Manafield, Is a great” shaking of the earth, | fdolatry, was bad. ita civillzation was good, and NTE! ¥ Hellto tread upon them. But he was subjected | ence often makes sed havoe of abatractlons, and | ™\ 31 complain porpetiially over the troubles | pood fal ol frcs. sainks Ho Uscfuly the | Mr. Manaficld, Ia Miote some Nty passagon | this elvilization was. the schoor the Habrean | ~-NITUATIONS WANTED_MALE, _ to every Indiguity the times would permnit of. f furnishes a fact nnd o law of which pura renson | of the times. . To overcome these tronbles 1s | jato oblivior, but jata immortality, in Holy Writ roferring to the subject, among | needed. ~ The knowledge, skill, fndustry, Rookkoepera, Clorka, &ce the highest daty, And that we may all fight ogainat exlsting ills, God has impiauted In the bosum an [nsatiable thirst for contentment or pleasure. We assall diligently all obstacles In tho way of our pleasure, Our” eternal cry {s, *(ilve mo happlness or give me death.” ~ The Creator who ordered man to work for food raw toit that man should get very hungry, To order the work and omit the hunger would have been a great oversight, 8o,'that man may always fight apgafust obstahles, his Maker planted within him s never-ouding longing for conldl not have dreamed. Thero Ia many a fleld into which reason cannot enter in Ita own name. Reason could not have journeyed into the polar zone, and have premised the changes which colid would bring to the color and coverings of anfmuls and birds, and the dlet of antmals and man, The human understanding ‘must often content itself by belng only a camp-follower of Nature, to obserye simply whither the General leuds, and to listen to the word of command, A town-meeting was called in Gioucester for the purpose of declaring him A vagrant and getting him out of the Btate, but lis fricnds folled this artful dodge by decding him enongh Jand to constitute him a freeholder. But.the preclous sofnta of the Hell party mado him a terget for rotten ecggs and stones. In sanctified Boston his “opponents put as- satetids In his pulplt, ‘and threw stones at the preacher and congrecation. lHe took up s rough, rugged stunc which just others the saglow of Isainh, “For thus | energy, they learned fn Egypt were all needed JTUATION WANTED—AS RALESMAN FOR A saith the rd, f will' stake the | in thelf subsequent life, and o when the time ;S.,,‘,"'i’,",:::’&"!,",“,",.'{'.fl:':;,.:‘fi.‘.;.’;m.,,:,’;‘::""}f;::;{: heavens and the earth, and the | came. they carried their clvilization with them, [ referenceegiven. Addiers 124, Tritune offive. dryIanil” Now that, said the preacher, was | though they left their bondage belind them. e i & Tenases - F'm talk. *Aodin that day men shall cast | Ezypt was not a prisoy merely, but & school to ITUATION WANTED-AS FOREMAN I¥ A hicir {dols of silver to the mules and the bata, | thiem, and so was it with this world, It is a | SITEATION clothing house, cuttar nf patterns, exs and go into the clelts of the rock.” Isaiali | mistake to denounce it as only and wholly iner of work, and 3 genersi spervialug of the'nte meant what he said. e referred to a shaklmyg | evil. It was the school iwe needed Lo prepare §Udress Q. T, HRICKLE, 48 Johue of the whole universe that wowid make men | tis for our future life § the Laod of Promise, alive toit. Paul also spoke of Uod’s promisa [ Our life thero would not be so wholly different to sahake the carth and the beavens, Now God's | from our life here thet our Acquire- proniise was shout belng fulfilled. 1Ie wue now | ments and attafoment o worldly NEW ENGLAND CHURCIL THE NBW PASTOR. The Rev. Arthur Little, the pastor-clect of the New England Congregational Church, preached his first sermon yesterday morning, and made s very favorable impression. ‘Thoagh be has not vet accepted the call, ho will doubtiess dn zo. IHe was born In Boscawen, N. H., and 15 40ycars of age,~a large-franied man, with pleasing ITIATION WANTE : - ) i ines would go for ~ nathing. We ; Y A OUND LADY AS missed his head, and, while acknowledging that | The anclents attempted often to cianorate a | happiucss, which forbids lim to rest in misfor- manners, aod a countenance which Indicates in- | MOVIng ou the world, and shaking everything | thl : K L, LY working fiousekecper: no objection ta chil iren; & it was s solid and welghty "'fl'lmf:‘dr“_'g‘ )"‘# plan of the nniverse, but they falled utterly in :;:,';",;,":,‘}2.5‘.;;".':“.}‘,‘ {'.l'e",“?u"'x'é'fi'?m"?'m T"]‘"‘n:: dependeuce of character, 11l volce fs strong, | P8 could be shuken an earth. should find in the tourse of the futuro use for | g Termancot hame winted taute (ban waics: Rord ‘The leading thought of the alscouree was as | &l the civllization we could carry with us from to the siuutlicance of earthquakes, Were thero | tho land of Baypt. But, just as aracl Je:t the cnrlhquh&e! before Clirist! Yes. And since? | Pyramids, and the labyrintn, and the palaces of Yes. ‘But lovk at the statistics, and we would | Exypt behind them, so we must lcave our rall- at once perceive that God was gradually fulfill- | roads sud vur telsgraohis, ‘The time wouldcome ing his promlscs, wheu these would he as ** avergrown ' as the’ Here Mr, Manatield took op s small scrap-book | Great Pyramld taelf. It would sppear that filled with newspaper cuttings,and rend from it. | there Is”deeper sclonce embodied in that vast The number of recorded earthquakes before | miracle of stone than even our ninetcenth Chriet was fifty.eizht, There might have been | century can boast. Yet even the Great Prramid n few more, he thought, but onty a few. Only | Was 1ot too great to dle. It (s not ratlroads, four out of the it '-éght were disastrous. Now, | aod tclegrapus, and modern Improvements that alter the time of éhrlu, see how earthquakes ( are of truc and lasting consequence. It §s the have increased. At tho close of the thind | soul, and Its trainjug for the life to coma in the century therc were 107, fifteen of which wore | Land of Promise. onsidered it as meltber a ratl cvlndm; one. Times bad changed sinco that day, snd there wers now over thirty libera] u{plll in Boston. Ballow, Streeter, and Wiittemore were soundiy hited and berated for thelr bellef in & merclful Delty. Youug Ballou was cxcommunicated for no fault but his_bellef that Uod would save all mon, But to-day the orthodox churches did not expel members for disbellef in the eternity of Itell, and there were an hundred thousand Independ. ents and Congregationalists who were practical Uniyersalists, A bellof In Chriat was now the only test of fcllowship, and yrcu:hcn and deacons were glad to ask no reference. 3163, T comparison with those later murinds, who have slmply followed tle royal Dame tosce her nctlous, aud thus learn her laws. In the moral world wo must often be simple observers fu the vast landscape: It wonld. at firat sight, scem that Mr, Ingersoll was not far wrong when he sald that had he made the world, ha would have made disease non-conta- #ious and good health catching. But It s prob- able that the wit was only valuable in that It shows us Low unable the mind is to run before Nature, and how shut up {t must be to the life and agrecable to the ear, andhepreachesas if he meant what he sald, Ife was cducated at Dart- mouth, graduating {n the class of '60, and spent one year in the Andover Theological Seminary and another at Princeton, From 13 until the carly part of 1865 ho eerved in the War as Chaplain, of the First Vermont Heavy Artillery. He- turning home, he continued his studles at An. dover as lcentfate untll theend ol the year, when ue Lecame pastor of the Presbyterian Chureli in Bedfora, N. H. This relation was sclicmo §s made perfect in the perpetual return of the contest, and the perpetual return of the longine to cet out of it.” To send the tronhle and omit the longing to get out of it would haye been an oversight. It would scem, therefore, that pleasure or happluess Is valuabic not only In itsclf, but also in 1te power to urgo us to maks war upon the sltuation. Hunger fu its gratitication not only brings pleasure, but it impels us to work for food. It works two ways, and perhaps the more precious philosophy of bunger ls, that it takes man o working anfmal, and’it is not he works that ho may cat, but ho eats that he may et £or anaie e family. . louire o kle mAR or family. third oor, M. AKERMASN: e Employment Agoncies, SITUATIONR WANTED-FAMILIES 18 WANT OF A gonl Scandinavian or Germs Jeimale hnib can be vplied at . DUSKE'S office, 173 Norih 11 Miscollancons, ITUATION WANTED—-AS I ARKEFPER BV AN experience % Tan. _ Address K 39, Triune, A PR GIn T teach the children the Fien: AL 717 Bouth Halsied: Deal uestions. 1If the congregation of the | o1 follower. Con to all absteact | Worlk, God made man hungry tokeep him | terminated In 133, when he accoptod s call of | disastrous. They went on lncreasing, until ot e e TO HENT_HOURES, C“;&"fl‘}; ot tho_Redcemer or Dr. Tgders shurc s n::&"’l“‘g "“Il‘:_"::;t yc“:’o':::’ nln(::x u“lntv'::xt-z from Idleness. Thus happincss, fustead of be- { the u.,nmgmml Church fu Fond du Lac, | theend of the elghtcenth century there were TALMAGE. Woat Blde, Ing un object of Individual or national life, is only & passlon which leads us cach year to fizht agzaluat lminense and ditlicult cnemles. No untlon hius ever surpassed our own In the rapidity and splendor of {ta progress, and in breadth and firmuess of foundations, It hnsten. cd from a colony to a natlon, and has moved onward untll it has no superior,—scarcely an equal; but at no thne in its hmor{ has it been relieved from tho pressure of some great shape of ndversity. When its times were good fn money, they were bad in litles. When we hud no bnttles on the ented fleld, wo had thein on the floors of the Cuneress; when they bafiled Coogre: he‘ fu- voked the sword, “In noneof our hanilred {cnn could any thoughtful statesman place his hand upon his heart and thank God “that ail ciouds had dlspersed, And yet the joyful vis- lon of & perfect nge cheers us on, a8 ‘it cheered our fatliers a century*ago; and the ever-re- turning absoluté fact'is not the blessed ago, but the adsersity, 1t onght to bhave “sweet uses,” for it 18 never absent. It at least stick- eteh closer than a brother. And f this ad- versity has followed all states which have reached prentuess, it must be granted the honor of being a part of tho tomplex aud mysterious ¢ause of that trlumph. Bince the ‘sunshine always accompanics the growth of grass and Erain, we transform this accompaniment Into a cause, When solomn music plays, the lsten- iz heart often falls Into a reverio about thno or eternity, aund at last finds the eyes Llinded with tears, The nearncss and pres- tnee of the musie declare it to be the cause, although no chemistry can pass in among the heart-strings and find why such yibrations gave pensiveness. O how hidden are the snal aprings of nature! Away off In mountain fast- nesses, wheru the wild goat cannot climb and whers human foot never rested, there are the unneen drops that mako th reada which arg woven futo o riverl Thus the souls of natfons oud of men flow down from fountains hidden amld fnaccessibla rocks. Although we have no chemlstry for making a perfect analysis of t, yut adversity must be acknowledged to be a mysterious and solemn music, powerful to wake thy heart. If man dared wish that be might futhom the plaus of Gud, he mizht ask lleaven to tell him why It {s necessary that the path of man should be always beset with dongers, and that cven thu gravo itself shonld be only a con- tinuation of the paluful solicitude. It is mot krlven man tofind any answer to such an {nquiry, Ve must revert forever to the fact, ‘Lhe fuct generally Is, that, whilo some grent cvil i3 being combaited in the front, an unex- pected goud s wnoving up iu the rear of thu arnly or upon elther wing, — While our land is now bending under munchr{.deprulluu. 1t 18 recetying grand relnforcemnculs not in the shape of sllver or rold, Its mind ts awake and bright, It never enjoyed w better terature, or a botter agriculture, or o better art, or 4 better religion, 11 all our niagazines and roviews and more pro- tentlous volumes thero flows as pure and rich and broud thought as has honored any century of man's carcer, Wittt may lackin the poetry of a Homerle aze or in the romance of Dante or Chaucer, It inore than atones for by n cominon sensu which fluds the best truth, sud by a scope thut cmbruces almost s universc. ~Our ago omlts notking, Nut a question fu mechaulcs, or i astronomy, or botany, or agriculture, or cdu- catfon, or government, or relicion is pussed by, but alf are’ roviewed, ‘and under the light of 4 learning and a personal liberty, which, for the flrst thine, met each other In” our fuvored ern, When the Greek age loved poctry, it torgot sclenco; when tho middle ages studicd meta- physics, they neglected common sense; when our futhers studgied Chrlatlunity, they over- looked humau lile; but forth froin Lho pust emerges the present generation carrging all the volumes of learaing and thoughe i1 fts' loving arma—ine poemns of Tennyson mlnfled with the volumes of Bucklo, the ks of the as- trouomer mingled with the novels of Ellot or MucDouald, tho oratlons of Suni sldo thoso of Stuart Mill, and indeed all forms of refiection, and wit, and sentiment, and knowl- edye, grouped like the atars {u the heaven that spans man's homo aod grave. Inmany of theso passing days not ‘s few hearts feel that this carthly Jot s unnece sorlly painful. And when ‘we look at fu vidual cuses wo may well wondor that such world exista, But these cuwplaluts are born vut of our small _moments,—they will dle Jn our greut oues. What mattera it, Indeed, 1€ you or ive and die half-fod and half<lothod sud are placed ln unlettered tombe, If only the rubllc uls which doumed you and me croated 1 should ask_admission to any orthodox church, they would be admitted and counted good Christians. The pity was, though, that the or- thodox churches would not call the Universalists Christiaus uuless they afllllated with an urilio- dox ct:‘urch, then they might belleva what they leased, s ‘The Unfversalist Church led the reform move- ment, and stood alone for fifty years. Tho Kev. Washington Gladden, a Congregationalist min- Ister, bad said that his sect would within twen- ty-five years hold esscntinlly Universalist views. ‘here ‘was a very rapld weakening of the ond- less Hell party both In Encland and Amer- fea, the signs of the times showed that thls once popular, but slways Pagan, idea was ylug out. Those who profess to atill hold it did not act as if um( belleved It, for if they did Ihc*lcould not possi- bly enjoy lifc as they do. The old Purltuns were somewhat more consiatent, for they sup- lemented their gloomy views of the future by ing miserable and mnklnfi others su around shem, Dr. Hamllton, of Leuds, wrote a huvk f”’“‘" the eternity of torment, but a man of ner wit and jovial, social charocter could not e found. IHe performed his professtonal duty 'y writiog in fayor of tho dummnation of his fellow-belngs, and thew dined and Jjuked with the men doomed to perdition, ‘I'wo or three weeks agzo o meetlug or Clifeago minfsters nd- journed a discussion {n_which the final doom of he icked wns aflirmed to attend o banquet at the Grand Paclfic They could surely never as Christians have enjoyed themselyes s they did It they fully belleved that all peopleoutsiile of the arthodox churches were doomned to everjasting fire, In canclusion, Dr. Ellls cuamented u]mn the general allence of preachers of orthudox de- nominations on this subject. Dr. Thomas had sald that it was a mistuko to aftirm that he ever denied cteraal punishinent. It was no mistake to say that for two years ba had not publicly sffirmed it. Tho rhetorical Swing was fast np- proachiug a similar position, ond, by his few ut- terancesin the last three years, it woull scem that he believed fu o little Hell of very mid character where people were quite willing to stay and where (od was quile will- fog to leave them. Tho Influcnce of the secular press, which reflected the actual sentimenta of tho people was all In favor of the more advanced and enllb'hlunml belief, and there wus no doubt that Universallsm was to be the faith of the futurc. over 2,000, Down to 1850 we had ‘a_record of 8,240, fifty-three of which were disastrous. From that time down' to 1853 the number fn- creased to 7,000, and they have since been coming npon us at the rate'of ahout alxteen per week, It was o wonderful shaklog up, and one which 1t behooved all men to ponder over fo the lieht of Scripture. ‘These things meant that tho Beriptures were belng fulfilied, aod that the ¢nd was near. The carth bad been flooded with water nnce, but that was not going to happen agafn. The second visitatton was to be with fire, and that was to purity the untverse, and Jet the saints enjoy thelr inheritance. The earth was full of fire, which found veot here and there In volcauoes, but which was ouly walting for the word of command tofulfil] the prediction of Malacbi that it would burn as an oven. God, rald Mr. Mansfield, was moving onthenca snd on tho land. All the land had been shaken, Californis was wicked enougl 8t one time to think that she could get along as an {ndepend- ent State, when up came 8 great earthquake, and taught her a lessont of humility, Look at the East, look all_over the world, and we flnd carthquakes on the Increasc—accompanled by great floods, and tlres, and fresh volcanoes, ‘These signs and wonders, sald the preacher, should teach us that the Bmuhm of uld knew what they were talking about, aud shiould pre- pare us for the day of wrath which was evi- dontly close at haud, Hc wanted Mr, Heecher, and Br. Thomas, and Mr, Swing to look a little miore elosely [nto the Word of God before they talked more sbout future punishment, and he clused his discourse with an carnest exhortation Lo bis lock to keep an cye on_ these physical manifeatations, and be prepared for the cumfvg of tue Lord, BIBLT READINGS. TIE REV, J. M. GIBBON, ‘The Rev. J. Al Gluson, who Is conducting a Bible-reading course at Farwell Hall Sunday alternoons under the auspices of the Y. M, U, A,y 8poke yesterday on *“Isracl.” Followmg is the substance of hls remnarks: Epypt was the most luterestiog of all the couniries which came fnto counection with the anclent history of Isracl. Since the discovery of thiRosetta stone, with its tri-lingual inscrip- tlon, in. 1760, and the deciphering by means of it of the hicroglvphics of the Egvptlan monwmnents some twenty _years luter by Champolleon and ~ Young “ Egyptology ¥ thas become u sclence by itself, There was uiuch in the Bible of historleal futer- cat concerning Egvpt, but most {nteresting of ull were thy early notices in Geneslsand Exodus, beesuse of their antiquity. Prof. Rawhinson had drawn up o llst of mofe than seventy items called from Genesis and Exodus, which had been veritied frow the Evyntian monuments, It had been o common thing for imldels i the last century to reject the history of the Bible as u fable. This 1o oue dared to do now. Though the miraculous clalms might bo de- nied vr toned dewn, the substantia) historical truth of the narrative was universally adtnit- ted. A comparison was here given as to haaty conclualons on the comparative chronolozy of Egrypt and lsracl, lnasinuch as there was great uncertainty on both bLauds, and scarvely two orlginul Invostigators of Egyptlan chrouology could ugree, aud there wak great differences among those who attempted o continunus scheme of Bible chronotogy. When there was uncurtaloty on both slaes thiere could, of course, be no certaiuty In the comparisun of the two, Attention waa called tothe nterest of the study of % Egypt fn the Bible,” which by meavs of prophecy we could carry us far as thio Exypt of lu-: ay, for It was® worthy of notlce that, ‘whilo propbecy speaks of the total overthrow of " Tyre and of- Babylon, it speaks - not of the total overthrow but of the continued humiliation of Ewypt, us in Ezeklel, xxix., 15 “It shalt be the Lusest of the kiugdoms; naelther shall jt cxalt itself auy niord smoves tho nutious; for I will diminlsh thom, that they shall no more rulc over the nations,™ After such pencral referenco to Egypt, the speaker then passed to the subject proper, Isracl in Egypt, and the question wes ralsod, Why In Egypti It had beenj foretold to Abra- hun (Geuesis, xv.), but why did it enter mto the divire rlnn at all} God had promised to nake iarael a nation, snd for this there was wanted, uot only time to develop the family into a nation, but disclplive, common ancestry, common language, a common country,—these were not enouch to make nuation. It was the where ho has been ever since, doing excellent work for the Master. - The subject of his sermon was ** The Perfect Man,” the text sclected belog: Till we all comein the unity of the falth, snd of the knowledge of the Eon of God, unto s perfect man, unto the stature of the fuliness of Chriet. — Ephey v,y 13, A perfect man, he sald, was what we were looking for, There were 10,000 vacanclos which awaited his coming,—pulpits which would be &lad to greet himy—homes to be checred by his presence. Most_of the professions could find room for him. Banking houses and Insurance companiea would perhaps insplre more confl- dence with him at their head, And in courts he would find a cholce field of labor. How usc- ul he might make himsell on earth It he could be found! The great demand of the time was for men,~the ceaseless cry of the nge was for niore manhood, a better, purer, higher, and completer type of mnn.—}xonm, Independent, trie. It ‘purported to be the alm of schools and governnent to ewell somowhat, at leaat, tho ageregate of manhowd, No work was 5o bleased, “He “who contributed toward it was a public benefactor. But where should we tind porfect men, and how should we make thetn, for they did not scem to grow naturally. Maify spoke of the Gospel as an In- cilicient agency to tbis end, and turned longing cyes toward scicuce and philosophy, This class of men claimed even now that Christianity showed sigus of weakness and decav. “The reigion of the future would not be nnd would IE DELIEVES IN CALVIN'S MBLL. Bpecial Innaten to The (Micagn Tribune, New Youx, Jan. 18.—Mr, Talnage took sldes today on the populur question as to whether there 1s a Hell, and held strongly to the orthodox fire and brimstone. His only argument was the Bible. If that was nceepted as God's revclation, the Hell It portrayed must be accepted with-t. If not, let people be consfatent, snd pitch the entire book Into the North River. He sald the preach- ing of to-day, which averaged $3 vut of every 100 un the side of God's love and merey to two on his Indignation, need reconstruction, He fo- stanced the fact that TUB BIOLE, OX THE CONTIANY, speaks twenty-eight tinics of God's love, and sixty-one times of his wrath and Indiguation. B8] ing of the expressions lu the Gospel, such as *‘{urnace of fire,” “lake of firc aud brim- stone," ete.,, he asked: What ls tho use of trying to explalu away the flrc and far- nuce when they are “therc! God mizut mean the words [iterally as well as He mieht not, and, if Iell had nofire, it had romething 2 mevere.” Me preferred (lod's comparisous heeause e knew God to be right. The sermion was o commonplace efort, aud the subject [s to be further covsidered by Mr. Talmage during the week. MISCELLANEOUS. * TUR JEWS, Spectal Dlavateh 1o The Chteagn Tridune, Lararzrre, ind., Jan, 18.—The twenty-sixth annual sesslon of the Becond District Grand Lodge I, O. B. B. mot at 10 v'clock this morn- ing, Victor Abrams, of Cluciunatf, in the chalr. After the introduction of twenty-eight past Presidents, and thelr adinission into the Grand Lodge, President Abramns delivered hls annual address. This was followed by reports of the Secretary and Treasurer, and & report from the Cleveland Orpuan Asylum, all of which were refurred to appropriste vommittees, At the afterncon sesslon the Irecdom of the city was tendered to the dele- ntcohnnd an nvltation accepted to examine the fire-department and water-works systemn to-marruw. Applicatlon for a charter for new lodgo was recelved from Wabash, Iud., and granted. Therest of the day was occupied In reading the reports of various committecs, resalutions amending the constitutios aud by- lawe offered and lold over. Permisslon was uranted to expend $3,500 in repairs on the asylum, Svectal Dinpetteh tn The e ribune, Fowt \WarYNg, Iud., Jan. 14.—Msson Long, one of the most notorious gawblers fu the Weat, wus intmersed ot the First Baptist Church to- night {n the presence of a vast nudience, includ- fug many sportinz-nien and saloon-keepers, e has been the proprictor of a faro baok in this city for the past Lwelve years, aud las ulso at times rin cambling-houses at Indianapolts, Lo- eonsport, and Latayette. He made an eloquent address, besecclilug his old assoclates o crime to follow his example. 88 PEK MUNTH 435 Weatern-av. | §3 per monih Western-: mionth, aix rooms w1 , fourlarge 5 433 Westarn. St To sty Drick houes 17 Fliimorsats Wo-sLOTY Frame 16 IIAFYARd-at. Apply *awect uscs,’ and the poat was right, all theory to the contrary notwithstanding. And now we il need the doctring of 8hakspeare, und of 8t. John, and all the observers between such far-npart orucles. Eight times does 8t. John say, that to hiin that overcometh there shall be'a creat rewanl, Success s the crown placed upon the bead of struggle. Tofl, toll, toil, and theu a crown. It Mr. Ingersoll’s fdea should prevail, man, in_ceasing from all atrie- Eling azninst foes of body and tnind, would have found ientnl weakness to be catching, as well us good health. Incomprehenstble as our world I+, man must not dare recanstruct 1t, for, while hie werg {mproving 1t upon the onc_side, hic might be deepty Injurlng 1t sumewliere clsc, Wu must all e students of {ta sctual law, and aceopt of earth de fucto {f not do jure, The facts urc as eyldent as they are amazing, Out of overcoming obstacles has come all intel- Jectunl and morat good, When the Presidents and Professors In colleges see o vandidate for ho cinsses come in from the rural reglons with clothing plaln and hands large, and hands and tace ruddy In sun and wind, they take courage, and feel that there will he no nced there of dis- ciplue, of secret lotters to father or mother, cauning tears. The explanatlon of this hope Is to bo found in the fact that the lad® has been aceustomed to coutend with obstacles, Ho hins braved work, and rain, and frost, He has rison with the sun, and has met all the encines of the ticld, and has harveeted the gealp which had escaped the foe, and hd appears on the college green an old-time conqueror It has licnco come to pass that many who never passed through o college or o untversity have outshions many who have thus passed, for in the rude world outside of the schools the have built up u hablt of meeting obstacles which has been more_precious than inuch Latin or much Greek. Tho best school s that in which the heart learns to conquer. But conquering implics a foe—an adyersc power--and hencathe “uweet usea™ of adversity. It Is tho wind which [s forever strengthenine the roots and trupk of the ouk, All the farmera b the swood- od lands know that u-c{ dnare not pass through their woods cutting down all thelr amall trees nnd knotty trees, leaving, as they think, their great,. tall oaks and poptars, for thuss ureat trees would be'mers “bubes” i July storm. Thelr ‘roots have not been strengthi- ened by a hundred years of west wind, ‘I'en thuusand other troes had helped them wueet the elements. Now they are too tall and too weak for sulitude. They ‘must statd with thefr companions or be cut down with them, Not otherwise, mun as au fudividual and man ns anatlon, must ut youth enter a noble combat and must “Heht it 'ont on thut line £ it takes him all the sumaier ™ of his three-score yenrs, From that poge whero the Bibla sali, * Whem the Lord Joveth Mo chastenceth,” to the latest page of literature, the lesson returns and returns that wa inust ol march to suceess over n difll- cult path. Apothegrins from un army of think- ers could be gathered from gil languages, Arae bie, Bunserit, Greek, Eulish, all to the effoct that hy who wins n crown must tirst urr{ 3 cross. - Tho curlous who have gathered up what all genlus has sald upon the large themes of thought, find that over adversity they ull grow cloquent; and ono reading theso utterances will 8oou fecl that triols are the wings by which wan flies frum the mire to the clouds. Let we quoto from oue of these rag-plekers along the strects of thought: Advorsity fs the condltion fa which man learns himaeif beat, —/ohnaon, Mow full of brlers e thls working-day world,— Shukspeare, Prosperity wae the bleasing of the O1d Testament —adversity the blesslug of tiio New—which earrioth the greater benealcl fon und tho clearer revelution of tiod. — Lord Hacon. Adversity fu tho trial of principte. Withont it, & man wonld not knowy hia were honeat. — Pielding, Adveruity fu the firat puth to tenth . —EByron, Cloude aro (ho vell bebiud which day coguettishly ),xl'd” or faco, to ouliance her aftorward Lcluly.— pichtor, Know how anblime & thing it ls to suffor snd bo strong. —Long/felloir, Thus mleht you read, all day, from the books of thy great, 1t, 1 hours of depression, when all scems 8o adverse, the heart would only fortity (teelf with Lines and evon paves of such sentiment, it woulit find a stimulus that no hall of vlezsure, amid the gay aud thoughtless, could bring. And as thouizh all the experleuco of the comuon hy- mun life, and all the utterances of common wis- dom, might not bu enough for our cheer and X LARGE B0OMY iarge roome. o 13 FETL MONTH=FINE TWO-~ 1017 L T e RS ony o T Weat Vau Buren-at . Bouth Side, [0, RENT=28 MICHIGAN-AV.—3.5TORY ANP hascinent, 18 rooms, newly jminted, papered, co cimined, otc. " Open all the time fur fuspection, or ke neat dosr. Wil put in furuace If desired. 1POTWI COI 148 Desrborn. Xvest 8k FCOND FLUDIL, 218 WEST MADIS Aujtable for hou ekeenin 0 tlow, WM. I, TH X3 W 8ECOND FLOUM. N I MADL- 720 West llldll_\b_n. 10 BENT—SICE L VRS i RoO1S ¥ at Itoom 30, 115 East tanduigioet oo AT X0 RENT-STORES, OFFICE: Storce. [0 BEST=TIE STORE 11 ROUTH ClLAR P D IHAMILTON, loom 1, 125 Sauth ciarc 'l'O RENT=8-8TOR' 8 NT BULLL win“ater An e Se e parue and MarkeCats. e ar 10 sulc teomut, Itent thea: WIS & COLIE: 140 Dearbornoat, o+ s SHOLESAL] It MEN—SEVEIAL ass {oeality. PUTY not be called Chriatlan,” was the oracular and praphetlc deliverance of onc of the modern .+ augcs. He would Agcnk of the relation of Christlanity to manhood, desiring to put in s ,llexl for a man- hood gouspel. ile had noticed in Wisconsin a very prevalent {mpression mnong men that the aceeptance of the Christian relizion In any other than a purely formal or complimentary way— us a personal, oxperimental thing in one's fife ~Iinvolved a compromise, if not o sacritlee, of thelr manhood. Many seemed to think {hat there were certaln processes to enter in, and de- mands mado upon those who would keep in, which were fucompatible with proper cotcep- tlons of manliness, and almost of sclf- respect, as If the Kingdom of Christ wrt[srel not & ‘ml‘nll“u?!u}{lfn&dorl,b ll’l‘"i an ‘effominaty ompira.dy for the imbeceil, luna- tle, and x‘:nuhgn. nx‘fn‘ m«: dra religious and sentlmentul sort of women, Among the seem- ing antazonlsms between the reguircwents of the Goapel and a noble manhood were these: Bome turned nway from the Gospel because they were offended inthe way in which it was put before them, buth as to” matter aod wunoer, Many revoltea ot the process by which and through which they saw others become Chris- tiaus. Ie was uot entirely clear but some of the methods needed revisfon, Ho was a wurm fricnd of rovivals, but he was wedded to no machinery. The result was what. he was anxious about. Conditions were jm- osed upon thuse who would enter the ingdom, but none of thein were Incompatible with our bighest conceptions of manbowd. One wus rcneutance, Was that unmanlyi Auother was faith. Lld tho exerciso of it compromlse a man{ There waa no Hmitation of thoucht ami tuquiry in the Pilerin Church. Those who could uot fncur the risk of scif-stultification by Joln- inc it, might unite with another two ur three squarcs ofl. JHut the creed wos not the prime trouble. In this day of short creeds, and new creeds, and revised creeds, and no creeds,—in this hour when tha iconoclnsts were laylng violent hauds on all the oldest aud grandest creeds, und either deatroylug them = or recasting them to it “the latest thought—whva evan- Kelleal and nuu—evnnwhml clorgyiuen exchanged congratulations through tho nows- imw" that at lust the barrlers were down, and 1oll so moditied as to be made respectablo and camfortable, woora sinners would be only just a littlo less hoppy than the sulnts,—it would #cem In such an hour that thinking men ought nat to be keln from loyalty to God, aod the open espoussl of 10is catise,” The fear of creeds waa largely spectral and ghostly, Truth was not hurt bocause it was old. 'Tho partieutur thome which was convulsing the beople now, dressed up as it was in its medioval costume, disturbed ‘nobody except thoso who were o mnxious to prescnt It fn that sort of carb, The storm would even pass by, and the atmosphere around the old truths would be clearer, sud they would be overywhers more conspledous, and challenge moru contidence than ever bofore, 1t the tive points of Caulvinbm would dluur- v l_‘o RENT=TC wery destrab) WIN & LT, Tt Froons ' FLOORS 130, ou three sides; cheap. tie of two class, and reasonabie terme; Address ¥ 70, Trihune otice. e TO EXCHANGE, 7['0 EXCHANGE=N0. 430" NUILT1} CLARKST. story and bas Lrick store, lot Kixi; front: Uils rents for §1,50, and 18 A1 properiy. { ‘want & good Improved farmof 200 se) Ilinula, Towa, Missourd, lodtaiin, Ohio, Rausay ur well improved and firs-ciass fand; res 20 miles soutl of ‘naif mile frum dewots Ang elc,, the hest of Iz, with CORRESPONDENCH. BTERNAL PUNISUMENT AND THE GIPT OF MIRA- CLES, To the Edltor of The Tribune. MaRBmALLTOWS, [n., Jan. 11.—*Capparho (whocver or-whatever that oy medn)is re- spectfully informed that I am no more to be canght by tho chaft of such an arqument as he uses than by tho * bottle of Prussie aeld " which, as hie says, he ‘‘keeps on hand all the time to catch justslich men? as Tam. [om s ready to fnterpret literally the promise of the gift of miracdles to the Churchas Iam to injerpret in ths same way the menaco of eternal punishment to unbelicvers. - *Theso signs stall follow thein that believe: In My name shail they cast out devils; they anal) apeak with new tongues; they shall take up serpenta; and If they driuk sny deadly thing, fusball not burt themj thoy shall lay thelr Landa on the sick, and they shall recover,” No fact of history Is more certain thao that this combined promise and propbecy has been lterally fullitled fn the Chureh. Aud thut it is not even now being fuldlled is something which no human belng haa tho power to prove or th rieht to mssert. And yet 10 say that (this befn) ranted) the lmy to drink polson unharme a proper test Lo prove \vln:rln:r OF BOL U lul .\fi:‘:ms right bellel" Is n the highest degres absurd. Let mo {linstrate: Suppose thaf bistory of tho Anelo-Saton. sace: She ooy rmph-v{ had been uttered lese algns shall folluw thia race of whrlder-workers n all thelr niigrations frow Iand to land: they shall ercct the moat magniticent architoctural itonuinents; they shall tivent tho most fugonlous labor-say: fug’ machives; they shall” give uttersuco t e profoundest cflorts of oratory; they aball gour to tho sublfmest helghita of it d they ahall subjcct to their con- the dwelltng $3,50 than 5 acree in_Tiline t be must 41 oul et ou o Culs chate, wa e dwelltaxs on Larrabee-st., near Divtsfon, fodlos SUxi: teated ab 8100 per Hiont, fur clear AT Wine Dicee of tmproved b rt ne picce of fmproved bantuess . clvar, and Jot DIRIC0, catner, 1 hearl of e :llr:lll‘ud :!c‘l"l‘ru ar luproved faruis must be Oisle nd civar. T. 1. BOYD. Room 7, 170 Madison-st. . NUSINESN CHANGCES, EPLENDID OVPORTUNITY TO ENUAGR N 47 psUsINESH, TEEM £Y “The undersigned belog deatrous of 'Ell!lnl fruin busi- neas, offers for sl stock of groceries, floue. graia, and such other el ndise &8 (5 usunily kept in 8 irate clase grovery estahlishment In the West, together with sl the Axtures connected with the sme. ‘Thestock 1s Arst-class, 8nd has been purchased from glr:"hu‘.n,dflrlll:l;:;lulvlhu' and eleganii sales over n. +tore Ia two-story brick butldlug 24280, with one stery in rear 24332, with good basient, Reat, $00 Per wonthi lease four years to run. Bltuate In Larsmie Uity, Wyoming Territory, ontha iino of U, 1% . 1t., sad {a tbe Lest location on this rafis Capltal tequired from §20.000 to 825,000 For fur- ther panttculars Inquire of Mestrs, Sprague, Warker & y dreas . w. ! Co., Ubleagn, or a N L. Lsranile Clly, Wyo. e ——— A bilious hesdache, aud ull the uncomfortable symptoms lcmmllml:‘!lnu a disordered liver, may be speedily I{ulll’n rid of by the use of Dr, Jayne's Banative Pitls. c:-:uulunl;fia i Gut th ity wo s 0 tiie ditercnt Divialons Juw, where suvertiseiuonia wil be i price na at the Main Ottice, aud will be recely: oty o'clock . i durlug tun wewk, and UGHL B B . M. WILCOX, Bookseller and stationer, 170 gar Wabaah Twentv-second: 2 Newsdealer, biationor, ste., 1000 ed Tiepubiteas Tiear Western sjand-av,, e ed- FOIGK HENIY, "Books, statiusiery, etc., 530 DI- . C. HERMICK, Jewsler, Xows. v Gbode 153 LAKE s Sommer Lhpeata,chicr sad Faaey =L CITY REAL ESTATE, = TFOR 8ALE~uY T. 1. BOYD, RoOM 7, 170 MADI- " Adams-t. § ths 1a an elegunt octagon froot, 3 Sator Vealdouce, brick baro. and lot 255180, squth front, Detwery Pailiua and Wood-ste. : 1t is paved. sowered, ete.{ house has every madern fnlahs the very best of nelhburhood; will take good farm-gouds of stu §uod country town as ayment; ook st {t. 2,00—233 Walnutst. | lirst-class H-room cottage Baru aud 1ot 30x123. souih front. Letween ltobey aad Hoyae-ats., 0na Liuck from sireet-cares It ta & bargalu WrrSiadian TROBERT ) LU: pi Valiied as eecomf hand materia, ; Broprictor has arrauyed tu ko fato, & Iarger bialieas Aud wiil aeil's0 2,500, which s half tho saiue. Good terme; but ers . without sume wmuney aeed not write, Address N, uf Mardes cado, i ‘A nl'dl'l.\flulfil Y :l- s0, Ioney loaned ui €olterate, Y il 8 ADE OX TIANUNDS, M DAY Ve viny k. loom 8 snds, Katabl Lven” b3 Yaliiavlnd a Tl Al ULU G e‘{ tuloan oo watches, diamonds $CH) Iy 'S L, 1 GOLE Fast Madison st Eota most subtla and powcrful cloments of | ulduncy, Jusus Clirist threw all the power of | heroes of thought and decd to clothe with wis. i cl L Wi ‘) ct - s ked ta love God, to eruel dlsciphing of the Revolutlomary War that made | posscssion how. A e, © (el B pranbicey wore found to | 1l divina ify iu favor of thla de facto world uf | dum and Krestness n mumberlors. turong b0 | DoA™ B L Bl e CrTuAL SiAS Bated of B hac dhate o T Ao ot Zoaey of Patcia. exlat, few, 1 think, would have the hardihond to | adversity, und willingly bare Its shume, that 1o come after usl Looklng back, wo caunotbut 1 qunlal, to maintain famtly devotious, to llvs | Union a great ustion, and groat as were the SVery Thodern Tl kOGS eurmoundinEa §1 .00 Howe wizhit reach its telumpl, o kuew the outcome of the soul wero worth the price of suilering to ba pald, snd He kncw, also, that that worth ‘fla tll'x‘-t the facts of history have lterally ful- But suppose that some man, insancly skep- Gk 62 AND COWATRDS (AN ge for cutrency atibie countiuye * upany. horrors of th late €ivll War, aud wuuy as wero the evils whicn followed " In Its ‘trafw, ft could not b denfed that it had mado the people be ?'hul now that u cruel shors welcomed our futhers, and that tho nights often resound. ed with the yell ot the suvuge. Juwd u tropleat sobuerly, and honestly, aud rlghteously fn this Lajaucy caay payinents. worlil,—lot these be thie conditions,—would nen cash~ sl aimed dwelling. 0 rooms ot 0x11s, be hed T2 juperlur-et.. betwuen Lincuin and Hober ¢ | room of the Tr Wil setl hou Heallot ouly sa to e gentinencss of o | vould hot, be wecured, uxect by paying tho | lant full of porennlal trutte tecelved thor ey | CoaT The Quspel was tho only atiosphere | ould not ba g States nore of & uation Lian thiey | entn watl paid) bere 18 & chauts tass ool. EXNIES CAN TiE 1A % prophiecy, but even us to that of the Anglo- | price, Fuilowln flim, thosy s At whott | would. hata . beon happier, but 0o sreat nation {‘;’;‘:,m"’:,‘;;‘; ',:',‘:“d;,'l‘l.':,‘;;',:';:i" ;:,',':,t',',,,‘,',‘:i had been befors. Eigypt was tho pluce for poedl B A e 2 on Adsme st el oF Wiaches: curreacy _al ihe cownting-room v axons themsclves, should I(BEPANI lmlue,fll ed nl‘!m!.lun ull(}'rwnnl nuuied ** Suluts "—~Paul and | would have been here. A 'few somi-barbarous would put grit, wad fibre, wnd nerve | discipline that ;.m.,“' teeded, Tut why so fomg | 16587;1 86 inaney dows, it sou wili nl.. ord yaars. Slli'l‘lhl:hllnelfim'l;mlurénnew CEIIR AL with tests to try upon all bis “friouds ¥ who | James amd Peter—eaut themncives willingly fnto whitey would havo now huen eatiug breadfratt | ung fores into bim, The Chirlatian religlun af- | and 80 severo s discipling! Fonr huudred years | wil il for cu st s bergaies &0 safioas. Tribupe Company. 1 MRy f;txm‘cmmw he ropresentatives of that race. l:nhorn,:‘ll auflvrlnw. that they mlght bo partak- | where woses the pageant of lborty aud the fordud fts apostlo aa opportuuity to cxbivit all | Wasa terrible time, and eve by lm-nmm,;i Lo (| B uech ST lota, ishen ool corner of Wabuh-ar, ANTED = SO IOV s ue of them happentog to call, he opcns upon | ers i the fual triutuph of humanity, Tuobywn | assembled 50,000,000 of stalwart wen. Bo the | ¢he atrength there was in him. thue of the sojourt fu_ Causan, for which there [ 300, Borir festat, (east frunti; not cheap |\ Bl it Llos after this fashlon: * Let ug'scct your name 13 John Smith, 1 bellevol” ¢ Yes," replics the gelend. % Woll, that does sound rathor Angio- Huxon, to be sure. But hers 1s & bottle of ink sayas Siase resident prope deal with priucipals,_ Ad TO 390000 T LUAN AT.7 407 B10.000) e 4350, 10 2R, A% 10 property, by JONN U. BHOKRTALL, 164 Kandoinh. next age lookiug back will be glad that our nincteenth century drageed its way slong through many u strugele, and was from year to year§ plunged into dificultics so docp ‘that it secuis too slight warrant, we reduce the time of the sojouru in Eg_vgt £0 200, sthl it was a lung, suvere discpline. "But it must be reweinbered that it was uot simple natiouality thut was the In onler to move alonz the highway to per- fection, mau uceded threa thinze—a worthy e, | motive, wud a falr start. Acceptance of the Christlan faith [nterfored with no rational em- off 0 dach=Two lots, 233133, on Irving-pisce, north ok $3, M0~ 1.0t 232170, on Jndlnlmr.. betweon Twen- ty- st and Twenty. decund-ats. s S400 own. 8 Lot 24 soutl front, ou Wars Muet 1 be carried Lo tho akies, Qu flowery beds of vaser Thus docs the lure law of man's Mfa reveal tbat I koep on hand sl the thne to catel Just | fusclf as tho gencrations march along, We need | could uot nd ouce that sleep of soul sud wind i ct, s Jakley.a FINC = | 3 - ent, ] . | ubject. ‘Fhe purpose of Glod contemplated *a | of Oakiey:. H R Such men as you wre. Tako it tugether with | much to road this hadwriting on tho sy, A | Which attcats Imoy micd oo pioyinil Al RIEnt, e Em R AL soei- Rt pociiar pecpiech i huge 116 | £$4705T T bouseand o aefzy, sout fron. o LODGING, -nhlfi:nozf;':llgn&:l and soar at ouce ‘1o the | large portlon of the hiatory of any nation, sn- Wiether Glod coufu not have made all 200d | wyg becwiise we dida't It our reileion conio futy | sbeclal aud protracted disclpling, Bestdes, thers i de, powtry,’ of renouuce forever all clatus 1o belig un Aug‘o-flllnu. Fur don't You see the proplecy " | procurable at a lesa price, {sa wonder that in. deed rises, When the mother sees her sons Liclds from the bat- was the priuciple thut “Une day 1s with the Fratiiod dwelltng, 12 room Lord ua a thousand yoars, and a thousand yeurs bet our manhood more, We were In danger of lz{z"filfikm DONCOURT. 3 AND 801 WEST MADIENN. spotling vur Chirlstianity by boxlog ft up, und Irst-claw aind p pleasant futlahiu ruomis, oF Ul erus reason wacn Deerfng and Pulle eurnest struggle. The. term” “hard times’ clent or modern, is the bistory of ndnnll{’ of 18 ubjectionable. It 18 too bitter and too fosignifi- it brought home upon thel occasons, "Thls | u8 one da This priveiole was (Hustrated | gporoaie s 1 51Y'3 Koo DATEALL. half dowi, o — ".llr. lE«u“ u}»{, would you call such a man | caut. It conceals from the cominon people, and | telield, sbie way wetl wrll;'.ll“ ber haods nud woep :fl.‘;‘;‘,fi,.{:.‘ ""‘“ °';,l.ym ""..,.-“- l‘“«:‘m'lxl:: from the vast cras of the past, as disclosed 0= touin Troned Uwelllug and \uu.uru. [} Hotel pomar '"C 0,8l 1 thlok you would call | from all, & principle of ilfe, sud makes us be- | out the wordy. ' On, Giod, could liberty uotb | and disgusted many. It sibuld come from | by geology and astronomy, = und tho Moot Qs aunth of Marstaun. . e Bialldl Fot HOWN'S HOTEL, 47 STATE-S RNISHED &—" Capparix . 8. PERCIVAL, beve that some une s mad ut us, and that but | have been wado purchasable at & hmblef cost | within and not from withiout,—he outspoken, .[{.u dovelopmont — of human history, ou Dearborn [ Erit g ly,,,q..(,.n.'un B Cult et £ $5.30 ek witbunl for @ ralu or @ froat or & vertain bad Governor | Must_that treo be watered with blood and frank, aud wanifest it fn the stinosphers wlf | sud @ distinetion was drawn between tieth, one Lluck of depot and Rock Talaud car-vhopa; board, $1and32.20: duy board, 83.80; lodgfiii, 20 HEAVEN, oF Preslilent, we should all Le havpy and rlch. T 4 ma edsy. T 1 Tteduccd prices., U davi 84 Wt 87 ver tearsd" The Infinite ons withholds all philoso- bhy, and continues, from age Lo ae, the fuex- plicable fuct; and when the gates of Heaven opeicd to lul fu the Chrlst upon the world,— benold! He, too, came not fn wealth, not (n E;u:tunu, uot fn pleasurs, vol {n peace, but caring uvon Iis suoulders & rugged cross. Within this law of struggie thero must o a wisdomsof the Creator, Buch veing the Lacts of life, the duty of cach duy 13 ot Lo seck or expect pleasure, but to go torth, llke true soldlers, uguinst the 'ab- stacles of Itfe. Al the ustions which, alwer geuerations of toil, bocame pleasyres seckers, began at once to die. Plessurs was woodas o reward, but poor as a destiny. It hay alwuys been such with individuals, as well ny with uations. Plessure, as au end, has falled, und bas been succossful only as an sccompange went ultoll. As after discords in inusic, the welody rolls on the more sweetly; aud, as beneey Buethoven preceded meludy by a discord, that the lurmony might scein the sweutor, 80 what man calls plcasure 13 vuly 8 melody of the wiud, which cotles the more lnum]uz('y after the discord of biard toll, Work s the prelude, &t least, of all bappiucas. Thé nations which becgio pleasare-seckers are the dealings of God with nations sad with causes, where brocess was slow, and tils deal- fugzg with fudividuals with whow a sivgle year, or possibly Lo speclal cuscy, u single duy, nifght secomplish what would demand 1,000 years in OWl-World blstory. o & century in theso fuster tinies, L accomplish for & vatlon, Attention was next called to the fact that the discipting fn Ezvpl was part of the covenant as wot forth in Genesls, 3v. The symbol of the smoking furuace, us well as ot the shivng lawyp, wus thers, and so it was throughout the Bible, * Whom the Lord loveth e chasteneth.” The diseiplive (o Egypt would bo better understood Ir{ remembering that Egvor was the * world ol the time, It was the carlivst home of the world's clvilization. Eveu Grecce was indebled to Egypt for tue elements of all her geeatuess. s yeb there was o Greece, aud Bfll“ wis o her :lor{. In the Jater history of Isracl, Babylon was the rep- resentative of the world, aud 1 tbe tms uf Chirlat the Impertyl Rome, but In that eardler age it was Egypt. The Beripture concoption of Egypt spoeared In such o passape us Rev,, xi., 8, whtt Jerusalem ln her worldliness und sin is spoken of as deserviug the pamo of ¥ Sodom aod Egypt.” Sodow stood for sius slmoly, 1 Boima ahd bourd 34,0 4 Foains and board $1.50 por i Day board, $4 ber Weeke . LLANEOUS. _ uround ux, and thus be commended to others, He appealed to his hoarers, n conclusion, to put themacives lu close contact with Clirlat, to per- foct thelr faith, and He would lead them luto reglous of attainment and elevation of mau- hood as fmpossible to reach without ltis help a8 Lo rival tfm eazle in hils skyward ight with- out his well-plumed winga, EARTIIQUAKLUS, TIE BEY, ME. MANSFIELD. Religious services were licld last evening, as usual, in tha little Mission Church at the corner of Fulton and May strects. It was expectod that Mrs. Mansticld, who goucrally occuples the pulpit in the evening, would address the cou- grogationon the tople of the hour—that s, Hell. 8he was unable to, appear, however, aud the Rev. Mr, Mausfield took her place. The services of the evenlug bezan with singlng, prayer, and thea the reading of a purtion of the eplstie supposed to bu written by 8t. Peter, fo which §t 1 stated tbat “The Lord s mnot slsck, as some mon count e brick dweliln lot, sad Lrick barn, ‘bound (o sell & &2, Ol SALE- ¥z o0 THLd HTORY BRICK Storo and basement, snd 16 0a the corner of two of our_best busin strvetsi fut fe 2aa Ll uw for $2,000; tagcs $180, lnsuradce $43, waicr roul tila frojwrty when ol fented will pay 8.4 3 to-day #2100 taeae hard tiuice, |1f you want & fon cant flcase cail and sed e st ouces whers cau Tou put ‘maucy 8¢ auch [aterests 1 say 16 b tso cheapest filumfl] ever sold fn Chicago oa Lhe coruer of two rat-class Lusloess streets; would (ke Lond clear dwelllox-house worth $3,(10. Call aid see for your selfy uo bumbag. T, L. BOYD, Rovm 7, 170 Stadic all wodern lmprove- To ths Editor o) Ths Tridune. S;Dgl*lu Je@erson Park, Raciws, Wis., Jan. 12.—The doctrine of ster- ol punishment as st forth by soma divines of this enlightensd sgo secims to us to be like & ahip which has sprung a lesk and the Captaln compelled to Swing ber round and * Beach V- Ler, Doubtless these distinguished men find themsclves “Farrar” out at seathanst first they seemed to be. Now, as theso emineat acholars {Beecher, Bwing, etc.) have abollshed Hell, we think that Hueaven stiould be abolished also. If Uell be overtbrown, Heaven must ful- low {n the wake. For if there Ls no * eternal punlstment " for the wicked there is no eternal “¥sward for the good, and yet we do nob think Sliat Lhere aro avy persous who would be willing tocuucede or entertaln for oue woment the o- tou that thieves, murderers, aud lml{ saluts Q{B t by sharers L the same beneiits Well, then, ot those who deny that there s eternal punishent coucede “this proposition, they must admit that there are two states of luture existence, Since, then, thero are two Stutes of existence, und thy soul is fmuwortal 2d caonot chaugy after it bae Isdt the body, ‘The history of man bas been such that, at lase, that condiifon so badly expressed by **hard time ® vught to be i, by the most thoughtful term In lauguage. Tus sciontific men do oot tell us 1t wus “nard times” that made strong the wing of the eale or the limb of theantelope. Tucy et duwn by thefr world In ruv-m-nu‘nnd flnd there **the struggle for exlstence,’” Mehe survival of the fittear,” and dothisovera realm full ouly of quadrupeds and birds, We walk in the subllwer plalus of mou and fu the streets of his citics and villages, amid his arts and facto- rics and temples claborata such vowels and congouzuts na *‘hard times.” Theso words Will, indecd, answer; but (¢ would seear better could we fecl thut the common struggic of life Iy uround us and within us bothus & na. tion ad as stuzle, lonely travelers along the ruad of mortalily.” What nation has ever found or beew able Lo Fetatu perfect prosy perityl Asa fact, adverslty, either political or ihunulnl. hay lwaya folluwed cach ation as studiously as it has Toliowed each lufty mao, Nutfons, llke inan, Like the Christ, Liave always been cross- bearers. No one cau real the bistery of Italy, or Erauce, or Germany, or Holland, or Swedeu, e e, Wil HAT OCCUPIED T wiedo o Moaruyiile, buusa for hersou 1o Chlcagy, will furmation by addnadig s 7d. Brvas, 0. - HORSES AND CARRIAGES, \ NUMBER OF FIRST-CLA: BECO 4N veblcles, includlug luur phaewna souie sollad: ncul‘ OUW ¥qUATe:box tnd-lrnnx top &3 bb‘"l‘l g twp- 13 AL E FALM, fesos. 2 large Uarus, lns Grchard, 8nd 19 rvutua, fasting water, 100 aczes B umber, 3 hours' ride frooi Caicugo. lu Mclleary Coul £y, 1. 3 wlle. l‘um Lulon Btation; this s vue of Ll bes d dalry Tarins fo ‘the M eats 45,000 ‘dow 0 ssrylaria: bea v-rom (ramg duclling. screa plowed, sil undcr Rud buard feuce, Tas ug walor,suids ror ioocalile, air Tyt st towi uF 40 beuple, wnd devol, ft Woudl Towa:s this fart i \wortl #3, W0: he land 1’ th Lest black fuawm sofl E T. BHOYD, 17 Madleou-st. o Koom 7, ° FOL SALESA WELL-ISBIOVED, FATNL GOUD house a0 barg, 10 screw thinber, L. . wagon. 't ru obliers that we will scll &l exirn NNOYER & CU., 590 (v 304 W B, —WITH 62,50 18 & WFLL Vaylug large pro0ts. Al Ude utices J LXTN WANTED. ____ | y ST 33 FOIL FT. s subscription ool l‘ou or address BUK- BOWS & GAU. Hoows 13aud 14, 12 Dearvorn-st. 1, UuPage County, ‘1lliuols, 83,700, 10 or Encland, o America without toarv. *The | all dead. It was to » nation busy it feaetingth, slackness, but Is long-sulferiog to us-ward, | sucre abomloation; Egyot stood rather for | scresch oot btk iias lures uih = o8 of ibeso states wust bu fur the good sud [ Borrows of Youug Werthier? that fnipressiyg | weiton spoc, bty 100 il Bes X e Yot L PE | Vel fruth Tarh, 4, 00 cherey, b BUOKN, 3 puearcd ou the wall : “‘Thou agt weighed - 4 pes but that all | worldliuess, a complex conception with worldly . % e, feaotber for thoevil, And, stuce th sour dyes | pleture from buwan Nte, wero only & culntonsed | 16t sars e oo fooanil s bou A nienaf ooy wUliogthat ady shiauld peeish, bu lore as well us worldly shamo 1 it How i |t s 8 ST o EL‘G FAID POl BOOKS—TANDATD WOIKS S ware rioy gd prices, sirarysco CiAEI 8 soedis Sl _HOUSENOLD should come to repentsnce.” The preocher comphasized this passage, and defended the Lord carnestly from the lwputation that He suught the eteroal destruction of say of His creatures. *JL I3 bot the will of God” sald, ““that min sbould be cternally dammel" e tu Hiluols, WHIPPLE, Chureh ock. Fewala (n the same state forali ages, there wiist eterual bliss und eterual wiscry. Bot, as echicr, Bwing. and otbers bLold thut eterual unlshuient uas been abolisted, accordiug to bewr own creed (hhfl must acknowledie that Vea L abolis also, Nowy then, this View of the sorrows of Germany; sod, fodecd, while that fdedl youth was writtiog down his sufferings tn 1774, the Cdlonfes were writing dowa their Lricts un this side of the sea. Young America aud yoang Werther wers both weliluyg tbe same story,—that the upward yosd has tull was turufug the chaonelof the Eupurates, aud the man of carousal wad sinklng futo oblivion with atl Wis glitterdug wold. Al tho fllus- trious nawmes of history are the uames of the children of tull; uawes of the chlldren of picdsure uot baviug {o thom power enough to tructive apd wmagubleeat Egypr must have seced Lo Jacob unnd Lis fowily. The pyrawbds were there, and mauy other world-wouders. not before their entrance thery, not long after it, the great LAIQ utl TRte M o mfen Ta ot Before you szil jour Deastur l('n.ur‘m FORSECONDALAND b e 4 U0 N3 MR Wan conatruzted: thy Vi o e Tear sart.