Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1878, Page 8

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-] THE CHICAGO TRIBUN MONDAY, AUGUST 19, 1s¢s. THE CITY. GENERAL NEWS. Fx-Gov. Willism Pitt Kollogg, of New Ortlcann, 14 at the Grand Pacite. Mr. Fred B, Wanle, of the *Diplomacy " company, arrived Jast might, and fe stoppingat the Girand Pacific, L. F. Burrell will lead the noonday pray- e1-meeting to-day in Farwell Hall, No. 148 Madi- #on sireet. Bubject: ‘*Christ's Coming Judg- ment, " At nbont 6:36 Inst evening Officers Laugh- 1in and Carey, of the West Twelfth Street Station, arrested Exdward Lally, residing in the rear of No, 3 Thietecnth place, 'npon suapicion of having stolen a horsg and bagey found in his posression, and which he was lr{ing to dlaposs of for S50 The animal e of medium size, and dark dapple fiz‘]mlun aud the buggy is of the open 8q [ x onler, and has bine cuabions, L awails an owner at the Armory. 1n giving tho particnlars of the recovery of the lewelry stalen from tha Paimer Howae, Friday, by the deteclives yesterdny, it wan incors Tectlv siaicd that Mrs, Knesener, whote hushand detected 1hie thieves, kept & millinery store In the Jower part of the house, U1 Siate sjrect. The Jady rons dressmaking eatablishment up-stnire. ‘An'crror was dl10 made n regard to the rental of furnished rooms by the Kucsaners. ‘They ate not n tho business, having bt one roum fiore than Abey need for their own use. An important bit of ovidence in the Clark murder case, at LaGrange, war mecnred by Con- ty Ihysician Gelger Satarday afternoon, i being nothing ices than the bullet which eaused the deatb of the murdered wmn, ‘The pattien who made the 8rat post-mortem exanination fatled to discover {1, but Dr. Gelzer had the body exhumed, and fonnd the bulet in the nght veniricle of the heart. 1t 44 from o 42-cartridge, such as would be used in the revolrer found on St Pelers, the mun suspected of the murder, The members of the Second Regiment were to have met veslerday nfternoon at their armory in the Exposition Building to decide the question sa to how many of Lhete number will ko 10 St. Lonjs tu take part ‘in the prize-drill tourn: Toent, which ta befors many weeks to take pin there, The attendance, however, wan not satts- factory in point of pumbers, snd the meeling was put off tili to-night, when every member of the reuiment 18 derired’ and expecied to be present. Col. Quirk wanta ot loast 240 men to go abd com- pete for tne tirst prize. The female Commnnists held another mecting yesterday afternoon at Greenebaum's Ifall, Wuat they did in'the line of bustness and the agl- fation uf the labor question they refused to_state, Une of the male Communista. under whose fosters Ing care the females vegan their tilustrions carcer an davblers n public mnticrs, toid a reporier tnat he **thing' had at lsst been complotely orgun- ized. Thele auma, ovjects, etc., would In due tinc be folly explained. The snlicring public may expect the revalation in **due season. ™ Salurday afternoon o number of ladies touk a eail in the yacht ina by invitation of .Mr, Young, onc 0f the owners, 'Ihe party was mét at the Lincoin Park Pler vy the tug Bret Harte, the yacht bewng obiiged to ay off the whore about inlly on uccount af shonla. All were bighly pleased with the entertalnment, and hope to fepeat it ngain before the eenson s over, If the Chicago Yneht Ciub could inaugurate the syatew of making hemnelves ngrecable 10 the Indles In this dirccs tion, tovy wuuld suon make thomselves extremely popuisr. At nboat 8 o'clock yesterday aftornoon, ‘Thomas Finn, of No. 34 Mllier street, and hls fricnds went into the saloon of C, Shcanan, 328 Weat Polk atraet, and after ordering drinks re. Tusediopay for them. In ine row that eneued, Mr, Flnn ran his hand through a giaes door, cute ng it so scveruly thot 1L was thought he would biced to death, Dr, McCarthy dressed the woun, and said that he would not recover unless exira good care waa taken of him. Sheahan was ar- sested ond waa locked up ac the West Twelfth Btreet Station by Utticer Twohey. At about 12:30 yesterilay morning Robort Ross, & deckhand on the vropelier Delaware, of Krie, lying 1 the Healey Slip, while enuaged in nZ 1 bareel of salt from the vessol to the Unon- ga dalt Comnpany's dock, wes thrown {oto the river by the shpping of the gang-plank. Kiforts were made 10 rescuo him, but ho did not coma to the suriuce.s The budy was recovered at 0 o'clack celerday morning, aud was taken to tho Morgue o mwuit the Coroner's inquest, Tho deceased waus a Scotchmun, about 40 years of age, single, and is thought to have reslded near Cleveland, Altout two montba ago, P. MecDonald, contractor of the Eye-and-Ear Inatitate, corner of Adumaand Peoria sireets, lost a woid watch and chatn, valued st 3250, 1t was laken out of his west-pocket, whicn wae hanglug un In the works shwu, aud & youug mnsh pamed James len. mat, who quit work the day -0l the thoft, was suapected. Fenman did not retnrn to the city un th ycatenday, when he was met by Detectives Bhea and Badder, whoarrested hinr. “The prisoner denles Lhe tholt, but fold a cell-matein the station thul the theft wan compiitted no long ago that he thougut 1t perfectly safe to return Lo tho city, ‘Lhat erring couple, Dr, Howitt and Mrs, Davld less, from Nora Springs, Ta,, wero yeater- duy taken buck 1o fowa upon the requisition for taewm bronght hero by Mes. Howits snd piaced by her In the hands of Bpecial-Detective Jamen Motarthy, who is sl a Deputy-Sherl of Mteheil” - Couaty, uwa, The case fs rather a aingufar one, and o little of the inatdo Juwtory Of tue case 14 known by the persons wno showed up in conuectson with it In this city, that 1o exnet wecount of the infatoativa could be galned. Iuis purely o matter of foeal intercat to Nora Spritgs and viclolty, Arrests: John Egan, larceny of a cont from a Loy enjoyirg 8 bath In Lake Michiga: Daryon, cibezzlement of o small sum of mouey frum Micnacl Costeliw; John Beolt, larceny of & coot frum une of o pervane who strioped for fight on Went Madtson atreet; Robert Adam “. o, 2 ‘rank Fround, larceny yer, of No, 08 Cottive Urove avenus; Jonn Burns and Lonls Aloorchuuse, thioy- 1sh uewaboysi Michael b, larceny of 8 cuat from Juhn Rehmndt, of Nuw. 30 unn 32 West Mad- i Jamies McCarthy, larcen: Latles of mortgaged property; Jennlo Adams sud eight in- fen of o Bunseof ill-facse 8¢ No. 181 Wollk "Lho 8t, Louia (Yobe-Democrat of the 17th sayws **The leading firemen of the country ore very anxluan 1o witners thy performances of onc of the 8t, Louts Fompler Lifo-kuving Compani at tog Chicago Flremen's Tournement, dept. Chiel Sexton referred the matiof to the Moy Tuw Hovor left 18 to the Chiof 1o decide whetner the men should go o1 not, aud be has de- clded favoravly, A company of nine men will Jeave, ore, b {he 24 of Septemoor, und they wiil o dount ive a good acaounit of theusolves, "hiey will go under command of Capt Sohi Lind; say.” Otters of reduced fure have busn mudo to the firemen, and there fn also somu talk of & general requctinn 1o the bublle, ue it b oxpected that won b1, Lonwans will vieit Chicago on thet occustun, A furtber mecting of oitizens to advanco the lnteresin of the Tousa of the Good Shepherd was livid at the institution yesteniay afterioon, Justice Bwnmerdcld i the chae, ‘The Cammitiea supuinted to prepare wn address 1o the public, sete ta torth toe labord and veeds of the inaotution, suumilted the which wus read, and, after 1oi, {4 to hanued to by pubiication, The Commitica to nanie a Committee uf Arcangemeuts for the pro- puseu fustival for the beneds of th House reporied, and the report was adopted. The Commiiteo was empowercd to lucreass 1te number, sl will hold dte st mecting Thursday evening at the Sherman llouse, The ladies are Lo organizu Lo take part in i management of the festival, and their Com- ot e will mest the Committes'of Arrangements Thutaday, 10 p. n, train on the Chicago & ern Halltond yesterday traught tu the remaing of 1. J, Monta) tho actor, and the memuers of the ** Diplomacy * company, ' of which ke wan lutely the wanuger. ‘Thers was & large Latheriug of teraonal fiicnds of the deconsvd and members of toe theatrical professiun st e Wells mtreet depot awalting the incoming of tne train, umone them being Pull Bimmonds, 1t M. 11 Ty, Dliss Whitiaker, L. L. Suarpe, Larry Pear- cons, Holand Keed, C, 11, Tirow, Missew Merville, Willlamy, wid Hosean, am Colville, Guo, Lovech, Euton, D. Iendorson, wud' B, Zimmer: cotmnitice from thy Benevolent Order % on hind, Exahied kuler Jos Mackin cral charge of Hhe armngements, which, were of the witiblest Kind, Fhers wers When the i drew up before the platform, the cuskct waa uluced tn au Adame Express wuron sl driven 1o the Pittshurg & Fort Wayne Depot, followed Ly the mewbers of ths ** Diplowacy ¥ coulpany In carsiages, sccompanied by BIr, Sywonds, who cauie 0ut frou New Yurk to et tho party. /Miss Muwdy Graiger aud Mr. J. W, Carroll lefi for New York vu th 5:15 tesiy, he Other niewmbers Fowaining in the clty to 4l the engavewent at MeVickers | heatre, MOTEL ABUYALS. U, mmith ‘New York: J. W, i o, S 1L B Wiislow Xowlon] U § Yyuliz, Ciuton, fu s, Pt Wilipie, New Yorks ‘3 D bar S bl v. k. S anger, Ferol rio, Lage ) S Bdrtier House— Urton, New Yorki b 1. iy, Puiladelpbia: B, L. Hall, focnes Taromias, . Suston Clayiuch, fud Jushen 1.8 b5 Eara Millard, O iy o ilie, X e S o fond, Grund Mac{fe~Frediric Lert de Ginglug sud K. Ctayp, lies Mouln 5 Bwords, Widulpess FRbburg; Geur, 1, 2 Fr4BCIacy, tavy’ Cratwer, bwitzerlan Ellfaly B, Burlioio 1. 3L Cawitiaun, Now ¥, Jouuings, o, e 0 3500, Matbiol G, L. Suoup, i W Cozicun Yon K. Pier,” Fuud du Lucs b, Jubiaon, I plit . L, Deoavan, Lostou; Ponen WP Wi, Dl Scnastany Watsbiiru, il N AR A B Rerlvby, New Yorg: Dr, C 40 No VU4 Latraie, bl Louist Livuel itackel, Avs MILITIA NOTES, ISTERESTING TO TUR BOYS, Adjt.-Gen, Hilltarg has fssucd & circular which #lules 14 substance (hat, & bortiun ‘ol the wilitary 5z having been paid Jo 1o the Biate Preasury, 4 payweul of 75 per ceut of the amount aue each scalweut or bsttalion cun now W wade. ‘due amonnta due each organization ars as fallows: First Regiment, $1.439.47: Sccond Regiment. 2, 308.52; Third Regiment, $3,032,00: Fonrth Regiment, $2,316.80; FIfth Reziment, $1,354. Sixth Regiment, $742.653; Serenth Regimes $2,054.87; Eightn Jegiment, Ninth Regiment, 82 106.15; mont, $1,880.73; Eleventh $3.441.09: Thirteenth R Fourteenth Reximent, 1, 01 fment, ~$1,000.87; artiilerv, 740, 50; econd Hrigade, $2:310,20, inelude riot compensation, but 8 only what is actoally dne the organizsilons from the State, under the Miitia law, for armory rent and ench rovided. ‘Tho voys will have to blood money ** nntif the next Leg- inlature has convened, and take theie chances then fur an extra appropeintion, ‘The bungling mannes in which the new Militia Taw was gotten up and passed the Ilouse precinded the possibiliey of | ally pa)ing tne \morn anything for aciualservics fl 18 expretea that the law will bo revised a amcnded during the coming winter. A HRALTIY CONDITION. The mortality report of the diferent mititary organizations of this city since their Inanguration han been very meagre, arguing that the study and practice of iactics {8 beneficial to heslth, in the way of_cxercise. 8ince the orzanization of the Firet_ Roviment, Just four years ogo, there has been but one death vut of the G0 members, —a vaie 10 Company 1), who icgl from natural canve: The ¥econd ftegiment has nut been quite so fortu- nate, having “been called upon to render funeral honors to fous of ~its members, s Michael Grifin, private In Company v. 17, 1470, from heart olscarc; alet, private 10 Company U, wilied. in Singer & Talcott's stone-yard, Scpiember, 1877, by etone €alling upon him: Wilkam Colfar, pri- vate In Company U, died Uctober, 1838, of con- sumptlon: and John Riyan, pilvate In Compsuy B, dlied Iast March, of small-pox. ELECTION OF OPPICERS. pany 1), First Regiment, tho following “This does nof expenses an nre wait for their ** ve taken place: First-Liout. Charles reabes elected Captai vice llenry resigned: Becond-Lleut. Qlenson elected Firat-Lientenant, vice Latrabee, promoted; First+Sergt, Porsuna Couke olected Secand-Lieus tenant, vice Gleason, promoted. An electton uf oficers has been called in Compa. n‘y C, Second Regiment, for a Firat-Lientenant, -vice Lusk, resiuned: aleo in Company F, for a Sucond-Lieatenant, vice Wilkinson, resigned. A meeting of the members of Company E, Secs ond Heglment, {4 calied for this evening at 8 o'clock at the Armory. "The following vilicers have been elected by Com- pany C, Sixtn Battallon: 1t A, Whelan, Captain; dJohn L. Whelan, First-Lientenant; It F. Schroe- der, Second-Lienlenant, 'This is & new company of this organization, but It bida falr to ravk with the older comuantes very soon. RESIGNATIONS AN DISCIARGES, Second-Lteut. Farwer, of Company. D, Fint Cavalry, hasresigned, Also Capt. Frank Senwein- forth, of Company A. ‘The following “honoradle discharges have been granted to meuibers of tue First Wegiment: Pri- vates Frod Il Hunl, of Company E; Lonng \ Ci ompany K: Whliam J, Miller ‘and Suw- uer Lewis, Cowpany F. . 1TEMS. Col. 8. B, Sherer, Chief of Cavalry on the Gov- crnor'a stafl, hos tnd his rauk ratsed from Coluncl 1er-General. [t 18 perivetly propur that eficient an officor In 20 responslule should hsve his rank placed 0 a_ position upon o level with thut of others Loldin? no tnure Important positiops, Lut it ia a question whether i mignt not huve been better to reuuce tho rank of many of the members of the Governor's division nnd prizade stals, which are all auply high, from the Adjutant.Genieral uown. ‘I'ne Second Rewiuent, the 8ixth Nattation, threo companies of the First Hegiment, Ui, C, R, have deciced to go to St Lout to dnll for the nr&ze hn Seplember, transportatiut having been reduced. TUE PALMER-HOUSE ROB- BERY. THERE WERE NO PURTIIGIL DEVELOPMENTS YRS- TRRDAY in the Palmor-llonse robbery. The prisoner, Charles Woodward, as he chooses to call himnelf, sth] refuses to talk to any extent, Detective Pluk- ertn interviewed him in the afterncon, and gleancd but Nittle regarding his exploits or hie laentity. Tnls much, however, Is certaln: el of English birth and educativn, and, belny n **crooked " mian, Is, of course, a very smuart one. His fauilly reslde In New York, and bie bolongs to the ang of professional **workers* fo that city who ‘make a specialty of following and entrapping jew- elry saleamen and moneyed men of ull descriptions, The fact that such & gany exists {s well known, and was the sole cause of the jewelry houses of New York combining in the Jewelers’ I'rozective Association, waich, one year ago last Juue, em- ployed tce Plnkerton detective nysiem to care for them, their agents, and’ all their property. The detectives eupaged i the e nre, oOf at least ought to be, well satisfied that the notorlaus Jewelry-thiel, Jack IHorton, not Nortan, s was misprinted in yesterday's Tuinuxe, 1 the heud man of & guny {n this cliy. Nevertnes lews. thero nre ressonanle doubts that bis arrest will not be elected Ju the present caso. The why or whercfore ia 8 malter not caslly explained, Ile was in town 89 [slu 8a yesterday aficrnoon, hut may not be here to-day, Woodward considers imsell somowhot of & martyr, and has not yet spoken of his sadnesd aud depression of wplrits. He 3 however, fulty dutermined apon bis course, and if 1aken fnto the Police Cunrt tu-day as s intended bo will walve examination. Then when he caines into the Crimi- na Court for trial ho will tirow binsell upon the merey of tho Coutl. and ondeavor to get as short a term in the Penftentlary ne poenible, This conrse he has delermined upon, becauss of the hudisputa- vlo proof of nlu gulitiness, The Jowolry recovered was yesterduy assoriod at Plikerto) und the following Iinventory was 51 camou scts; +.fnu canco earring hunting-cove watchey; 3 siivor waiches: & plated guard-chain itoman “gold ncck-chalns; 27 gold guard. i3 nock-chatua; BL neck-chalne, anotner patterns 447 gold lucketss 207 gold rinve, set with eanseon; 412 bund ringe 4 silver thimbies: 40 nickel chalne; 72 vest chalnes und 62 miver chains, 1t was then replacedin the orluinal packages, and all, save a tray of watches Lo by uwed i ovidence, was raturncd to v, Freund at the Palmer Hanse, and wae placed for aafe-keemng i the vaults, No preacnts wers given thus far. e, Knesaner, it f8 ruid, will recetve n maynifcent festinionial of his honesty oud Integrity, and he cerlainly de serves It for without hts ald the detectives might bave scarched from now wuntil dooma. day wilh no success, Indeed, he alone is entitled to the credit of the entirs job, thourh Uity Pinkerton aod Licut. McUarigle wanaved e arrest and the recovery of the goods ina wan- nor thut dova them honor, 3tr, Freund set up the buer for the party when the goods wera returned 1o hitn, and it I4 slncerely (o be hoped thut beer ut iive cente o glows de not to be dispensed an the proper roward for 50 large o service ns was re: dered by the pepsons concerned in the recuver ‘Fhat would bo hivaly diecoursging to future 13107 of Kuesaner's hunesty. Jesuo Ilipple, the Clork of the Palmer Ilouse, called upan the peisoner, and at uce ldentilod himos ' 18 Whlte, ' unc of the two wnspected men who encaged rooma ut the house on the inst., nnd who left vo suddenly linmedintel ter tihe commissivn of thu rohbery, **Whits* lefi vehina blm 8 bundlo of waxhing, for which by prowmiwed to return whurtly,” i, when Ilipole saw 10 @ urisoner, ho waid: **Your washlng is at the hotel. You will need St FLITN S guess we will send It to you, ner innde 50 ruply, but press dejected-lover foak be has shown since tho arce: Lator he wishod that he had s doas of polson fu order tu speedily reliove ymeelf of the jgnominy attached to his prewent condition, Another interesting delall of the recovery was tHerovered yoslerday, Vhu thievea Jeft the Falner House at sbout 1:24 in the afternvon, und did not runt the room of cosner until 4 o'clock. ine N re, Ku The {utervenlng thne speat In gutlier- fug together the tru sug valise In which the jewelry wus afterwsrds packed. \Where these “were “located dna mutler not yet ferreted out, Bhortly befofe o'cluik two meu, sweating, sud apparently tired with carrylne sevs era) heavy valises, onlered o Iito news-depot at No, 35 State streot, keut by Mew. Audrows, wify ol **Bhaug" Androws, publisherof a ** eportine® poper, A little girl was the uul{un« Tescut, snd of ber they requested the privilege of leaving the heavy sachels ther for a whort Lwe, 1L wus Tully 1w ‘bours before they retarued snd rented thu rouvin, apd thu puods wers ot LBKey from e tuwe depot until & balf-hour Jater. - — Ttousn in u Hospltal, jeic Yurk tortd, Aun, 1, 0'Donovan Rossa I how In une of the private rooms i 8t. Peter’s Hospital, st the coruer ot Hicks and Congress wtrects, Brooklyo, under treatinent fur puralysis ol the les, cauisel by N Jeaping frow the” tralu which cur ‘Torvute when he delivered bis lecturo there about four monthg ago. A man nemed Lavelle Kot an the train at g small station vear Torouto und sawd to hlin that there wus dunger of the Xoung Britvus sttacking bim i he passed through the wun statlon. Lavelle bad u car- riage waltluy for hiw st the station, nod usked him to get off there. O'Dunovan ugreed, und Juinped off the train, which was moving by that Ue, He wua very much Jarred, aud after bis return to this city begun to bave trouble with bis leigs, Mo cutered tue hospital luat Satur- day, Hols wuch better now, and can wulk s litile with the belp of cratcbes. Mo says that while he was |ll‘]lflwn i Chathan, Eugland, 8 keeper threw him down and jumped on bis cheat, fnjuring bis back. He tidnks that this predispused bl to paratyats. Hy Bis resigoed e Presidency of the Feulun Brofherhood on sceount of bisbad bealth, s g SN They Grew and Multiplied. Detrint Best, Think of & fatuer imbivg out of bed st doy- Nebt, und calllug to cuch of bis thiriy or wmore childreu to getup, snd then assigning then their several dutics for the day! Such o way wus Autolue Louuis Descomspr Lubadie. OId citizens say that it was nol sb uncominoy thing fufftue old French settlers to rulse fumllics of cighteen snd twenty esfldren. Au old resident wava that Van A who lved on the prescnt wite of tbe Water-Works, was the futber of twenty-thuce children, ull by vue wiic 0'Do RELIGIOUS. A Discourse on “ Gilded Vice” by the Rev. Dr. Clinton Locke. Rainy Services at the Methodist Camp- Meeting - Dr, Willlamson Preaches on Eter- nity. Man's Greatness Considered by the Rev. Dr. Qage—" Meditative Piety," by the Rev. B. Do Baptiset, “*Lawlessness in Modern Life,” the Res. Thomas Coleman--.** Christ's Teaching,” the Rev, J, Stoarl Robinson.” GILDED VICE, + SENMON MY THR REV. DR. LOCKE. The Rev. Dr. Clinton Locke preached yeater- day moruing in Graco Episcopal Clurch, on Wabash asenue, from the text: ot ye say, Ifamanahallsay fo his father or mother, it I Corban, that ia to say, a gift, by whatsoever thon mightest bu profted by me, he shall be free. Home Plarisces complained to our Lord that certaln disciples had sat down to meat without first divping the tips of their fingers in water. They sald nothing about dirty hands or faces. 1t wos sinply o cercmony tvhich the disciples chose to disregard, Ceremonles shonld be ob- served to some degree, It was as much of o matter of importance in the way of etiquette with those Pharisces then ns It was with us of the present day to risa to recelve a lady, or to eat with one’s fork, The only reaton for observlog these llttle ceremontes was because it had been found out thut certain acts were agreeable and others dis. nirecible to our fellows; it was an fustauce of uaselfishuess to regand the feelings of uthers, was frequently shown by these acts of mnrkns{. Outr Bavior did not rebuke the reformer or dls- contruge the ettquette of the day wnen He said to those wha came to Him, **Ye are too mind- ful of the ways of men,” Heonly did this to teach the pople that with His sanction evil could be made good. The Satun of the Middle Ages was a hideous monster, who frightencd people nto followiny him. The Satan of to-day was a smooth-tougued, unctuous fellow, who neyer frighten d, but sat down and talked with us a¢ our side; reasoned with us; told us that our natures were created ‘weuk by our Creator, and our Master would not Ulame us for a little fall, a few trifiing sins, In the baek ages sin was calied by tts right name, and was severcly punlsued—even unto death. In our doys the matter was plated wvver, the nan who robbed a treasusy was called a faulter,”” and his stenl was called a fa- crepancy.' 1L sin could be called by fts richt name and scen In its right light, there wonld be lesssin, Vice was excused by a ‘{,rm many sympathy-inspiring argumments. thief ex- cused his action by saving that it was for a starving wile and family that he committed his depredation, People would pass real misery Ly whon by lending their assist- ance they might prevent erime, and would 1o to the theatres, 1o witness upon tne boards the imaginary troubles of * Camiile,” tho giid- ed courtesan, acted by persous who wers pere haps true o the characier ol the representation, ‘There was no accounting for the eccentricities of lmman vature. Vice under one gulse was s seductive pleasure; undor its right name it was a ildeous woblin, Ho drew trom his diseourse the Iesson that the real nature of a vice should not be hidden under any guise not genulne, and the veople should aever allow an {ll-timed, wlsapplied sentimentality to atand in tho way of justies and thelr moral convictions of right ond wrong. TILE CAMP-MEETING. DR, WILLIAMSON ON ‘' ETERNITY." ‘The tremendous storm of Baturday night had a very visible cffect unon matters and thlogs in and sround tho camp-ground. The old-fash- foned, fron-clad Methodist is supposed o bo fire aud water proof, and doubtless can staud any ordinary shower of efther’ without flinching or dampenlug hia religious fervor, but not a del- uge. Sunduy mornlug dawned upon a camp pretty well drowned out, and the outlook for thu Baboath exervises was, to say the least, dis- couraging. The spirits of the brethiren soon, uowever, rose equal to the occasfon, auda much pleasanter day was passcd than wos ex. pecteds Uhe arrivals, both by train from Chi- cago aud Woodstoek, snd by privats convey- ances from the surrounding country, were Jight compared witl the crowd which ‘was rea- sopably untiipated, but belped to swoll the number on the ground duriug the day to about YU people. ‘Il bell was not rung at 0 a. m,, to the great 1chef of many, who, being kept awake by the rai, desired Lo inake up Tor loas of rest, aud 1ho early morning praver meeting was omitted. ‘The behievera' mectiug was the tlrst sorvice, held ot the ‘Tabernacle at 8:50 a. m. It was quite wetl attended, Etder Borlng conducted, und before ita close much leching wus manifest. ed, aud many wery reduced to the multiug noud,—~the eilect, bowever, of rellglous fervor, ana b oL raln, A congregation of some LU0 people taihered at the Tabernaeto at 10550, The FIION Was ?wnchml by the Rev. Dr. Willlam- 0, of the Michlgun Avenus Church, upon the b S Eternity,” from the text, Peslm, m everlasting to everlusting thou art God,” Bternity? Was evera word more richly lnden Jwith sublime weamupz! Burely it is a ticiber of the divine vocabulury, dropped rom the central house of God down to our poor world, 0 push our spints to the trout of elevating con- ception, Eternlly! How the serene elory ot the tutuless suminer ind vreaks In sweet el unchioly transports upon the soul, through this vust word! How wany of us have heard of eternity frum the lips of our pareats wollo yet we hgered in our childtiood’s homes! Llien wo lave geen our futiiers pass’into eteruity, oud dwell there nolselessly trum year to yeur, a8 we aro aoshied about tn'the tioubled waters on the snores of ting, No oug has ever returned to teil usanveliog ot eternity, It must v a very pleasunt, or an unalterudly” fixed, coudition, or home ong, rememberiog learts o has left e Inud on eurth, would come buck long suough to tell us just bow It s, Al who cross the mystic river thut sullenly rolls between the sbores of tmo and eternity permancutly sctilo on tue plains ol lmwortallty, Enugration s all vne way. ‘Tuus solltary boatnau who is rapidly Lransporting uur tuce into eterolty slwayva rows toward tlme usiaden. T euterorising aud yet feariul ferryman never wsses 4 top, sud never suts oul drom carth for the cternal shors without belng lunded to the water's edge, Oucs centnries fu- tervened walle the boat was oscillating, but uow It darts barkwurd und forward almost with the velocity of hgut, T thluk one reasou why i one ever comes back alter being carried deross 18 that no oue wants to, There are somne ot God’s unruly entidren who eaunot be fnduced twobey Mim, woo are bocked fu dunzeons Lho woment they are lauded, Of coures thess cun- not return, God’s obedient, saved children, woukl much rutner live in cternity thau i thoe, unhd pussibly that 3 one reason why puue of them ever revisic earth, Every bLreath of clernal hife may be 50 full of costasy ot delicht that ho redeenied soul van tet s own conseut 1w fureigo this biise for o single woment. is no trutn in wodern Spiritualism, Just what b goivz on in cternity no buumun beinee on earth Kuows, oF can Know, ‘Yhe Lext diyides cternity uto two parts, “from cverlsstiug " and © to everlasting,” that 13, oternity pust aud eteenlty to come, God, fu tho exalied languago ol Suripture, * jubabiteth cternity” Mo eni L these parts, and I8 fruin everlasting to everlustiug, o bad uo Leginuiog, and Hoshall have no coding. How God couid exist frum wil elerity Bo otle cun explaly, Thu fact, nowever, thub certain de- peudent reatitics do now cxist,—ds ovurselyes, for vsumpie,—aud the usturul objects with which wo are surrounded, cuch haviog had a very plulu origin, proves tfm there muse be at least, suvwewhbers I the universe, an o dependent reality from which all others sprung. As u mwatter of fuct, L wyself do now exisl, sud pusstively 1 Lud 8 begiuniug a few yoora uizo, aud uence it 1s just we certadn that LLe ultinate sourcs from woich I wus derived could ot have bad a begiuning, aod so is Inde- pewmlent or seii~exiatent. Ouu thiug canuot be dependent upon guosber thing forover und cver, ‘Fher wust coms st lust s {utluite reality, whose puteroity they all sckoowledge, Tuat w Uud, whose bouse 1 lwuiensity and whose age I8 cteruity, Boetersity most emplotically by- lJouveth unto Uod. It ls oue of Hisutisibutes. 1t 18 not u ighty substance steuding out in the universe by itself, or, rutber, Ulteg fuweusity ‘wita 1ie preseuce, but one of the qualitios of the Divine Bewg. 1t 48 voe of the fow thiuge lurge vuougl tu aay of Delty. Uod, buwever, conlers practical uteruity upou all bumun beings. We shuil, i consequence, live lu mmortal youth uicd WILer the Leayeus ore Do wore, We are to Tive as long 08 Qo doce, and for orecisely the same renson, We too often forzet tothank God Tor making us partakers of 11is ndividual cter- nity. We have no_eternity of our own, What we posscas I8 agift of Omnipotence, Angels and archanzels are not independent in thia mat. ter. They, tou, must draw on God for their supply. tiod be praised for shating with ua the plory of Tiis meck eternity. Standidg then, as tve (o, on the shores of time, let us gaze into cternity and sce how thereality will Impress our spirits.’ - ** Eternity 1s a duration which exciudes all number anid computation; days, aud months, and sears, and ages are lost in ity like drops In the ocean, Mitiions of years, 58 mnany yearsas there are sands on the sca-shore, or particies of dust in the globe of the carth, and these mul. fio'ed 1o the highest reach of numbers,—all these are nothing to eternity.” When a man of huge possessions was boast- ing to his friend of the lurueness of his estats, Socrates desired him to bring him & map of the curth, and to point out Attien thercon. When this was done, though nut very casily, as it was 2 amall country, he nest deaired Alctbiades to point out his own cstate thereon. When he could not do this, it was exsy Lo vbserve how trifling the posscasions were in which e prided himeelf {n comparison -of the whole earth. Nuw, arc any of us even a little prond of what we ownl Just think how small a portion of the globe our estotes cover, and bear 1o ‘mind how stall our entire earth is out of the {miensity of space. Man's life, tou, compared with eter- nuy.:s surely bul alavor, u breath, a momentary respite. Eternity impresscs us most of ali with its awlul permanefce, {ts fcy, remorscless dura- tion, There is nothing thiat fasts like cternity, Not even God Himsell can abreyiate it by a sin- le second. Eternity is Jehoval’s monument. t outlasts the soltdest human piie. The oldest monument er¢cted by the human specles, the Gireat I'vramid, 18 only the Incident of yester- day compared to a inouninental eternity, Itit was made Lo crown the lovely land Egspt 400 years before the birth of Abraham and 000 years hefore the era of Moses, or if, fndeed, it fs o llitlo more than 4,000 years old to-day, were Its foundations lald any nearer the morning twi- lMeht of eternity thun are those that are being hid in the carth at this nourl Surely not. Une hundred times 4,000 years, & mdte span in the sweep of the ages, s a period Intinitely too ahort to furrow o wrinkle in the faceof cternity, orsilver a hafr on his roval brow. Athens scems to have becn built to rival, Il uot defy, eteraity in permanence. There 18 no elty of present or past time whoso oruamental clegance so ase tantshes and charms as thie glorjuus Queen of Attlea. The fortunate traveler still paces its way-worn streets—desolate by contact with the sad and pitlable present—with feclings of pro- foundest uwe, ns I he walked “in tho shadow of the Immortals.” (lere Plato speculated; hero Socrates gaye his Iessonsin morals, nuddied fur hisopinfons; here Miltiades retuined afterthe splendid victory of Marathon, to rojoice in the howmage of his countrymens here was passed the E;uphellc vouth of, Atesbiadea: bere lived that rn commander of mev, Pericles; and here Aristides bore for couscience sake the batred of enemies, It was at Athens, in tho helzht of her svlendor, that enthusiastic crowds pressed into her theatres to be moved by the genius of Eachilus, Euripides, ond Saopholles. It was under tiie bright sky of this classic capital that surging crowds gathiered to_listen to the flery vloguence of Demosthenes. Here wore pointed those radient hues that have colored atl subsg- uent philosophy. Mere, In a word, burst forth that pure and ample stream of elegant eniuklng, fiom whoso erystal tides the taste and scholar- ship ol ecvery succeeding nze bave quenched their thirst, Athens deterinined to outlust eter- nlty In the splendor and permanence ol her monumental glorics. Tne Odeon, the temples of the Acropolis, the Propylea, the Parthenon— once conlidently promlseld to remaln an un- \'cu:{'lux varaltel with eternity,—but where are they all to-day, though the brow of cternity is still damp with the dew of its morning? ‘Titne, Wituout Walting fur etornity, hns wasted tholr strenpth, corroded their beauty, and turned to dust their foundatfovs. Can any- thing, then, be more hnpressive tu human thougat, amid the nable wrecks of time, thay tho subiime permanence of eternity Agaln, we arc impreesed with™ the inflnite letsurv of eternity. Moments, as once known, seem Lo have expanded into oges, Scconds, minutes, hours, years, and cven centurles, de- fing [wrlmla of duratlon altogetner too brief fur usu In an existenca of limitless lelsure. Notb- ing thero s In a burry, There §s leisuro for everybhing, - Here, in thine, ong can scarcely flud time to read a book, learh n sung, or study 3 puem, Michael Angelo and Raphael mnay pamt and chlael for immortality, but no one has lels- ure Lo appreciate them.,' Mozart sud Deethoven may prepare to charni 8 worid, but who can nr:\ru awoment tu yleld to thelr cuchantent! Homer and Shokspeary ‘mav_gather into the storchousea of Greelun’and Saxon specehs the thought of mankind, byt no one has time to sulnilt to the martlat pdsslon of Homer norto Shakspeare's summary’ of universal human thought. People that are good for unvintng fn this world are siwavs In a tremendous burry; aud wu can enshy atford] to keep busy durifig our lifetime wheh we reflect on the lelsuro of eternity. 1L not now, by and by we shall have all ll.nu duration we necd to accomplish all we ought, . Ve nlso should remember that eternlity, o8 a conditiop, Is divislle fv two parts. Forevery now there must be athen, for every higher thera must bo u lawer, for every befure there must be an after. 8o that for every state or coudition wo may be in, sn opposlte Is” possible. For uctual joy, thero s poseibie sorrow; for tsery, bilss] and for sickness, health, Ko that for on eteindty of eladness there must be vne vl weopitg, for an eternity of joy there must Lo one of tears, and fur an eternity ol boliuess there inust be one of sin. God cubuot let the human will stay fres and have this otherwise. Mun chioose the moral character they profer, for thuo and nlso for eternity. Eternity, theo, belng one of the few royal facts {u ‘the outlook of our souls, Iying es o shioreless realivy just ahead of us, the question ol the passing four la, How shall wo spend i1 ‘The object ol hutnan life, In this brief world, Is not to tritle away slmply In msking money, o reputution, or fricudships, but to al- forl mankiud 'Gud's ides “of un oppor- tunity to choose o Dblisstul eternity. Humayn probation I8 God’s benevolent urrange- mont to give all men a chance to muke sure of a happy destiny, Time bos no Independent meanng. Eterolty I8 reguired to st thine with au aduquate “explaustlon, without ctermty, iy o pretude without o song, s flust of twllicht without a bursting morning, an alpha- bet without a languuge, o breath of frugrancy without wie Hower, or a darug solltary ploneer without the succeediug civillzatlon, “Thnets o herald, appearing unsupouueed, and Larrying vuly lung enotgh to publiab the speedy adveat of etevnity, or thie {s a sample of cternity small enuugh 1 be examined ind underatood by finite wluds. Ur, tmo 18 merely the short and narrosy Isthinus counceting the human spinit on carth wich the linitiess expanse vl eternity, How, then, ay we meky sure of a glorjous cternity! Our Lord Jesus Christ came fnto our workd “on purpuse to tell us. The Goapel of the Sou of God 18 Heayen's way of telling us ust how Lo reach and cgfoy a radient eternity, s character will be detgfmined by our present chotces, ‘The bencvolenge of Uod suys to the sovereiguty of our freegom, Make' your own selection of tho eternity fpu cach prefer, und My omnipotence will hold yiga to the borgain. I a man surrender to Jusup. Christ us ot onco hits utoning priest and sovegelgn ruler, lo that su. preme eapltulation b rewarded with the wssurance of a blessed Bteruty. And where are we bound to speud jt1 Blall it be un the fracrant bunks of the river *clear as crystal,” and near tho glory ot thoplining throne! Are we now walkiug with God Jo eternity, twillzht of persunal gzospel experienced ‘Then the apleodur of our existenco with 1l forever shall exveed tho raaiance of the eternal noun, “The chilldrew’s mceting was catled ab hinlf-past 1 o'cluck, unid the Tubernacle wus neariy i, Mrs. Pllio Vearsons, of Evanston; ths Ty, K. Ford and Mr, I Wi'cy, uf Uryatal Lake, i uddreasee. Master Bddlo Webo, the boy oratur of Chicazo, 9 years of age, reclted * Fho Lattle Sparruw * very ucceptably, Ihe Rev. Bro McChesiey, of Park Avenne Churel, preached in the Tusernacle ot 3 o'vioe! Bubje e Prodigal Soui” text, Luke, xv,, 24, “'The service closed by sluging, ** 1 am pray- fug for you;" sung as u solo and chorus. ‘I'he Swedes bad service at thelr chapel for the tirst tlme Saturduy. ‘They are Just pegin- niug 1o cotne ou the ground, uid by lext ‘Tucs. dday U 18 expected thatseveral hupdred will be present. A uuuf People’s Mecting was held 8¢ the Park Ridge tent ut B o'clock, und ao lo- terest manifeated which was very gratiiying to all. Among the arrivals yesterday were no- ticed the Ktev. Mr. Burdock aud wife, of Bar- rlugton; the ev. Mr. G. L. Whey, of Crys tal Lake; Mres. 11, J. Allen, BMiss Ades M, Rodgers, Dr, Adams Miller, Chicago; Mr, John Morse and fanly, Col, T, P, Robt, Mr, J, Lock- wood, 8. Grannle and Gooree 8. Webls sud wife, of Purk Ridge; Mr. T.J. Tewpler, ot Roches: ter, Mion. ' MAN’S GREATNESS, BRAMON BY TUR BEV. DK. 008, The Key. W, L. Gage, of Hastford, Conn., _preached yesterdsy morafog ju the Fourth Presbyterion Church, coruer of Rush and Su- verfor streets, taking for his toxt Isalab xxvill, 20: “For the bed Is shorter than that s man can streteh himself on it, sud the covering nar- rower thau that & inon esn wrup himaelf with 1" The language of the text wight, sald the reverend geotletsau, be callied the vehlelo of truth, fsuplyiug that man was grester than the world e lved fo; that tacre was sumetblug du him greater than his surroundings. And vet many men would declaro that the world and its attrictions, its pleasures, contented them, amd that thers was nothingz more to bo desired, How was {t, then, that man was o sub- dued nnd forgot his glorious capabilitics, hin superlority, to the world ‘and the hings it contafned. ~Was it troe that he was too large for his conditions, or conld the world mect and _satialy all tho wants of the sowl? flabit and ussoxation made the hinpris- oned bird willing to remain in his cage, na habit and association inade men cling to their wonted vlaces fn life. The New Ilampshire farmer, at. tached to his ruczed rocks. knew nothing of the vast and teeming prafries of the West, 8o, in apiritual conditlons, the handa of our race were tied by tho sius of our fathers, and it was not untli men couid sec the open Heaven, the home of God, that they knew anything of s-de- sire to fiy away from eurth to llim, There were germs of poasibility in men not hinted at in thelr common judaments. The more a man ad- vanced In knowledee, the less contented ho be- came with the world; and the more of a brute 0 man was, the more satisied he heeame with things as they were. Go:d had given man fitel- Nlfiencn and” the faculty to improve him- self, that he might " have a stimu. ulus In . life, and that he should not rest confented Wwith the world. Searching In any denartment of knowledge lelt s man more dissatisticd than betore. Life con- sisted |n Jearning tho lesson that we were to g0 through the years trymgall tho resources of happiness, and discarding vue after another as wholly unrcasonable, Pleasure was llecting, wealth had no power to comuplctely satisfy, ane there wag not in all the world wealth enough to content the soul, which must_have an object it could love and reserence. That object could not be a thing. It oiust ben person. There was no humau belng it conld rest upon, and, dissatisfied nnd discontented with the would, it found in.Jesus acope for its {Mimitable trust, and discoverad that even this toiiful pilgrimage of time could be turned, through Christ's pres- ence, tnto the most delightful and satisfactory of joys. MEDITATIVE PIETY. BERMON BY TIE REV, R, DE DAPTISTE, The Kev. R, D¢ baptiste preached at Olivet Church lnst evenlng to a large audlence. He took the following toxt: 1 thought on wy ways, and tarned my feet to thy testunonlen, —Psaling, cxix., b9, % Plety, the speaker said, was not of spontanc- ous growth, but had to be cultivated, What- ever tended to the promotion of plety was worthy everybody’s consideration, and shouldibe diligently sought In the devclopment of our 1ives aud character, Whithout lioliness no one could see God; and without plety, bolincas was unnttajvable. To obiain the hignest aim of hollness we nedled other then stmply the nwakening of a desire for a better Iife. "The lives of good men wera examnples to e, and furnished much toward attaining that her standard of life—devout Christian plety. hie Word of God furnished many very profita- ble lessons, and Indeed It scemed that He had preserved in His sacred record the rich ex- periences of hls falthful ones for the education nud beuellt of succeeding generations. Tue Wre of the Paalinist, or bis experfence as ex- pressed in the text, was ono of the many mines of wealth leven us in hyinz letters. The Psalmist’s thoughtfulness and meditation con- duced to his plety, Mcditatlon had been 80 Incentive to the correcting of the errors and imperfevtfons of Lis Hie, which was called **my wiys in tho text. Man's ways were full of errors, tne spcaker contended, growing out of the_imperfections of hia unture, aud reflectlon analyzed the good and the evll, aud meditation gare bim knowledee, and protapted him to sep- arats the two. Thus was the sced of plet sown, and cultivation was nccessary nnd Incf- dental to thie growth of holiness. Retlection was one of thecuitivating means, in Shot it eoo- bled us to discover the crrors In our lves, and at the samo time directed us to aban- agon them aond cleave to the teach- Ings of Christ instead, In Christ’s teachings we had the surc and Insplred rule of life, which pointed out to us witll unvarying preaislon the true way to holiness. Tha speaker concluded by urging upon his hearers the lui- vartance of the fesson taught in the text, and the necessity of plu!(y as A weans to attaining a higher and better Nfe, LAWLESSNESS OF SOCIETY. SERSION BY THE RRV. THOMAS K. COLEMAN, The Rey, Thomas K. Coleman prenched yese terday morning at 8t. John's Episcopal Churel, his discourse, which constituted tho fist lcsson, belng based on tho narrative of the rebelilon of Koral, Dathan, nod Abram. It opencd by a comparjeon of onr socfal and religious condition, to modes of travel, and tele- zraphle communication, the tearlng speed of the train, and the impetuous zeal for novelty; a disregard for antiqui ty, a scorn for autbority; contewpt for ago or station; an ehminativn of the preclousness of Intellect, experiency, or de~ votion, and an Indifference to parents or toach- crd. Legislative aud exocutive oflicers follow s viclous public sentiment, and o man can now hardiy bo called a law unto himself, ‘Tho quotation from the catechism on relative duties was called an {nsult to our elvllfzatlon, and itseltan exhumation of sntiquated stupidi- ty. The speaker then attempted to prove that 10 class was an exceotion to this gencral law- lessuess, It was but the roproduction of tho l'rf)‘ of Korah in our soclal and rulleious life, ‘The present lawlessness of society was now as when Korah silirmed; tho Church was intoler- ant and exctusive, and true Christinnity was communal and democratics all the congrega- tlon are clerky. It is an anclent and Intlucntial weapon, Then and now when men plead for a liberty it s but ancther name for anarchy, ‘The reverend gentleman then discussed the leense and the limit of private Judgment and of con- science. His conclusion was that each of them woverned the individual only, but by assent to tho princivles and rules of a soclety the tudi. vidual passed himsell over to that Jurl tion,* and it was parumount over Jjudg- ment aund conscience. For then the rule of thu suclety, 18 paramount, aud Lecomes the law that must govern the fudividual, The rulv n thieory becomies diseipling in practice, and unleas the mu (s retractory sod fusurgent It whi end in cheerful suvinlssfon to sushority; or, In sep- aration from the body. ‘Then supposs the member becomes Lhe indnfstery the oblixation wrows of greater sigmficance. The officer must neftber evade nor deciine the trust, Dova he teuch 1 It must not be his opintons, because he slucerely believes them, but beesuse he s the volce of his Church teaching thelr precepts, the vxponent and the cxawmple, “*always vo to ninlster the doctrine nud sacranents and the discipline of Christ os the Lord hath com- manded, and us this Chuech hath recolved the sume’; and sccording to - the canons of this Church **to teach the people committed to his caro and charge with all diligence to keep and observe the sanme.” Ho wust be the Church teaching and obeying, ond less than that Is treachery to his ollive, falschood to Iits trust, and perjury to his vow, U1 coursy, ho dare not teach’ cootrory to his conecienve, but vet the law of his minlstry |s tha volee of bis Chureh, “The details of the inutiny of Korah were then exammed, und ts coinplicattons with politial and relilous Interests: the adroltuess of Korah {u enlisting populur s¥mpathy, und laveighing viunses and Juerests in the sclilim, and the pub- Hie position of lulucatial persous that capoused his secessiun, ‘Fhen, 83 now, thu frank and generous jolned Korah from Impulse; aud the can, and cow- ordly, sud worthilees, that had busily incited wen to join the & Church of Korah,” had skulked behind, und might bave bad the cf- fruntery to Zive * reasons” for tarrylng with Mosvs und Auron. Lawlessness way the epi- deraie that soread for o seuson, Bur sh awful destiny uwaited thew. The leaders clused theie day ' iguominy, the party was short-lived, aud not o trace remuined to tell of such un {o- snbordinate factlon. ‘Fhis fs the history ot oil sccts wud partics, of the wetlsms oud the heresies of the uwges, Thoy urose aud flour- Istied; enrolled scholars and stateswen; wers putronlzed by Kings and Ewmperors; coshared et of learn(ing, uud divines of the Church us Jderome and Augustive, a5 Eusebeus aud Oclgen, Thelr alfected plety wou the sses to their cause, Where are they now! The Novatwns, Ariaus, aud Donutiste, and Moutan- its, -aul Sabelliane, sccts that outranked (n numbers the Church of Chrss. ‘To-duy they ure in oblivion, tuelr chawuvions unkuown, and Qo Veatige of their Mtcrature hus survived their wreck. To-day the Church of Chrlst stands drus as adawant, asd of reaplendent wlory,—a triumphunt conqueror that unever wads a comprumise, Mr, Coluuan theu referred to two groupa of psulins wiltten by the sons of Koral that he sabl were uuequaled fu the whols book for loy- aliy and fldehity to the Chureh of God. Heap- plled It to the lurge wuluber that are Bishops und clerry bu the Church who camo (rom othor reliwtous "bodlvs, and that be asserted were ns doyal to the Church as the truest cbildren she had. Au fucideat jo the life of the ancestors of Washinzton when st Brizaton, Englaud, was @iven of & sound reactiou from religious fu- subordination to a devous aud loyal churchnan- ship. Tue trestoent of religious tosurrection Ly Moses was the conclusion of the discourse. It wua suld that whily Rorah wis very bbersl ln his views of the miolstry of Aaron, that the vatid wiuistry did oot “ulchurck '’ Korab aud iy party, but the reason was gived that it was e e e e impossibla to take from them what they never posseaned,—a valld mintstry, Tho resemblance of the two, Aaron and Korah, (n vestments, in Hturiey, in ceremony, in title, In functions, was dwelt upon—their unlikeness—tne minlstry of God, and the functionaries of the *‘Tabernacle of Korah,” Tha sermon reafMrmed at fts close the mssertion ot its beginning, that Christ's minlatry is no onc of tho heterogencous com- pacts or compounds of society, no philanthropic cxoositor like Howard, 1o ehoice of an elective trust by the sutfrage of fricnds, no supply of a want, as the teacher, or lawver, or doctor, ut separate from all compounding alilances, to ha an smhassador for Christ aud feliow-worker with God. CIIRIST’S TEACIHING. A BEAMON DY THE REV. J. STUART ROBINAON. The Rev. J. Stuart Robinson, of Loulsville, Ky., occupled the pulpit of the Third Presby- terian Church, yesterday. Ilo is a pleasant, carneat, and plain speaker, and a man well ad- vanced {n years. ile will preach fo the same pulplt next Sunday. He took as the hasts for nis discourse yester- terday forcnoon the following passages from the New Testament: The spititof the Lordls npon me, hecanse ho hath Inted me to preach the gospel to tho r; he listh sent me 10 hexl the broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recove erluz of Mzht to the blind, to net At liderty tnem that are hralsed. — Luke, vi., 18, Then Jdeaus anawering sald unro them, Go your way, and tell John what thinga ye have reen and heard; how that the bitnd see, the {ame walk, the lepers ro clcansed, tha dear hoar, tha dead are ;?’Iu?’.“lu the poor the Gospel 1s preached.—Ibid, At that timo Jesns answered and eald, 1 thank Thee, U Father. Lond of neaven and earth, becanse Thou haat hid these things from the wise and uru- :7:-( and hast revealed them unto babes, —MattAaio, o 2 Mr. Robinson said the text presented one gen- cral proposition,—that the Qospel was not in- tended for the poor in the inanclal sense, but for the meek and humble—those who were con- sclous of the needs of their souls. Then he proceeded to illustrate his point at some length by speaking of the subject matter of Chirist’s teachings, His style of traching, and the metbod he employed. " The spcaker sald that the Savior used the simple facts in His teachings, and made them plain to the illitcrate os well as the literate. 1le did not stop to argue, but assumed that salvaticn was o fixed fact, and taught accordingly. Christ's style of tcaching wus treated in alogical and clear wanncr, “and aptly llustrated. The Bavior's method of teaching the Uosvel was shown in the miracles perfusmed and the para- DLles related, and Mr, Robinson quoted several instances where Christ had wrought wondertul cureku., oud showed the effect it had u llis great wor ELSEWHERE, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 18.—Dishop Chalard, the new Bistiop of the Diocese of Vincennes, arrived In this city last evening, and was escorted to his future residence by o large procession of Catho- lics. Welcomoe addresses were made by his Ex- cellency Gov, Willlaws, Mayor Cavern, the Rt. Rev. Father Besson, and others. To-day special services were held In all the Catholle churchies, atter which all the Catholic socletics Jolned 1a'a strect parade. CHHAUTAUQUA. Fainrorxt, N, Y., Aug. 18.—Tha Tonth Chau- tauqua Assetably SBunday-achool was held at 9 o'clock this nioritig, Presldent George 1%, 1ayes, of Washington and Jellerson Uulversity, pase tor; the Rev, J. 8, Qatrauder, Superintendent; and George H, Batcock, Secretary. Two thou- sand seven hundred and uinety-four persons were present. At 11 tho Rey, Charles F, Deeins, D. D., of New York, preached from the ninth verse of thu fi{th chaptor o Revelation, s An announcement was made by Dr. Vincent that subscriptions would Lo received for the re- lief of the yeliow-fever sullerers in the Bouth- ara States,” ¢ At 8 o’clock Frank Board rave o Biblo read- {)noz.rdlllunmled with drawings on tho blacl ard. Young people’s and mivslonary mectings were held at 4 and 8 "Ihe sermon was ?’“"“""" by the Rev. W. H. Perrine, D. D,, of Michlzan, . THE FIELD AND STABLE. Veterlnary Hyglene: LI. Earth nnd Swamp Missmata—Thelr Efféct upon Animul Or- ganlsms—Kpizontic Diseasos of Swine. From Our Oun Correspondent, Avo. 17.—Noxlous cffuvia, or missmata, emauate from thy surfoce of the carth every- wliero wheré orgunic substances, 1z contact with air and molsture, are decomposiuyg aud putrefy- ing, Conscquently such cmanations tako placo cspecially {n awumps, slougns, marahes, bogs, oud [n all such low or level Jocalitles In which a compact and fmpervious subsotl—hard-pan, for instavce—~Is nuderlylog & loose and poroas top- goll rich fn humus or organic substances. In wuch Jocalities the ralu-water cannot escape Into the ground, stsguates in the loose tup-soll, and dissolves aud permeates a great many oruzanie substouces. The latter, un account of the looso aod porous condition of tho surface of tho Kround, are aceessible to the influcuce of the ntmosphieric alr, and the aoll ftscif, belug usually dark-volored or black, absogbs a reat amount of heary conscquently, all the cou- Mtlons necessary or essontlal to de- componition sand putrefaction are abund- sutly provided. New-broken ground (prairic), cspeclally, frequently develops noxious chluvla, or miasmats, becauso the breaking or plowlng has lJoosened the formerly-compact top-sofl sufliclently to hrlnfi atmosplicric air and mols- ture fn contact with tts orgunle constituouts. A distinction may be made betwecn the sins- mata cmanating from ground or soil, rich in organic subatance, and lovse uud porous cuough to abgorb sutlicieut alr und water to effect o rap- id_decomposition (carth-umissmota), and the etluvia arising from swwnups, bugs, murshes, alouch v,y ut from Tow ground with a rankt vegetatiun, saturated, and veriodically covered, with staguant water \lwumu minsmata), The dufferences tn the conditlons nnder which, and {n tha materiais of which, these mlasiats are pro- duced, bt espectally the physical und chemical coudition of the solf, the oricin and nature of tue decumpiping or puml{lm: substauces, Lhe temperature of theatmosphere, the moreor less liberal supply of ulr and warinth,—a very active factor |4 gencrating carth-ntasmata,—the #earclty or abuudunce of stagnant water, —na great abundance, excluding to a certaln extent the folluencs " of alr- and warmth, constitutes frequently an esscu- tinl factor in the production of swamp-efiuvia, —scens to cause the apecitic differences whicl are existing between the various miusmata, aml observerd nat ouly In thelr offect upou anital organisius, but manilested” also by the specific (wuaty, moldy, marshy, or swawpy, cte,) odors of certain (swamp-) etuvia which are abseut, or at least not I»crrc-lvud. m other missmatic oma- uations. Btil), the real nature of thoso differ- ences is but Jittie known, Noxious eftluvia remain usually coufined to the immediate neighborhood of thoso pluces lu which they have been produced, but, uuder tavorablo circumatunces, may bs carried off yuite » alstance, by winds, ete, TI[BIR EPPRCT UPON ANIMAL ONOANISMS, (ireat ditferences oro observed as tu the eifect ot the varivus carth- avd swamp-miasiata upon unial organisis. Bowe of them act very su denly, cause extrémely scute diseascs, effect suddep changes in the composition of the blomd, or causs polsontng ana ducompoaltion, —antirax-discases and typhus, Othiers act grudually, or buve s coumparsively slow cf- lect, cause chronic and cavnectic Ubseases,— wuch 88 rot, chloresis, dropsical conditions, ete,—and undermine the .coustitution, All, however, sgree 1o elfectiug serious changes {n tue composition of the Llood,~cuuss bivod- dlsenses, Dilferences are munifusted stso con- cerning thelr wetlon upon different unlmals, As a venerul rule, shicep suller soouer and more suriously than horses, horses wmore thun cattle, and cattle wore than swine, 8tll, there aro exceptions, Soms wmidsuista seem to afec only, or at leass privcipally, a certaln class of uvimals, or ouly s certain species,—hogs, for fustauce,—and Dave but very Jittlo or uo fu- fluence whatever upon otliers, Hesides that, youug svhualy, &3 general rule, sutler sover and more scverely thun fully wutured or older oues. Further, ull noxious efluvis, without ex- ceptions, 4rd WUCh more dasgerous lu the evenug, night, sud cool morulugs followlng a hot sud sultry dey, than fu thy duy-time, ‘Cliey are wore elfective {n u staguant atmuspbery than lo au stmosplers twoved by wivds; and cause wore damage—probably bLucauss mors fully developed—iu the latter part of the sutn- wer aud fu the fall thas at uny other scasun of oy year. ‘They aro wost dungerous.to young anfinals driven vut tos wissmatie pasture escly 0 the morniug, befory the dew baa disappeared from thu grass, because ot that thno tie wias- sutle principle, whalever its nature may be, not vnly hovers close to the ground aud 14 innaled, but 1 slso contatued o the dew ang ly con- suwed with the berbago of tho posture. ‘That foud uud water, bealdes betug frequently the Vehicle or bearee of the wiasna, 18 ulsv other- Wise, 89 to yuality eud qunnms‘ of considerable fporeance fn fucreaslug or decreasivg the ef- fectiveness uf @ wusws, by streuktheuiug, or weakeulug aud predisposing, the wulwas orgsns ism, may not need any special mentlontyg, A general rale, dry food, especlaliv t foy jn'y morning, has & tendency to weaken the egig of Allxc |=|lnsmnl.:‘c lllrlm-mle. ot s thu most dangerous must he coy thoso cliluvia. that einnate from L swamps, marshes, or boss, or, alter an fnun, i]z tion, from ground exceedingy rich in ppey. s Rubstanees, Such eflusia, especially g | Tatter part of summer, catise frequently po'? bloo-diseases of 8 very mallgnant circa o' unthrax and typhus, Efuvia emanating o usual conditlons from swumps partially e, with watefy or from other low and wet are less dangerous and are usually produ only of ehronic and eachectic discasce e Swamops, bogs, sloughs, poola of water, aud Jow amd wet places in cener), |, snutes prolucing miasmatic eflluvia, becomy fl:l:. Rerous to the health of domesticated animay atav, by affording the nicans of du\‘ckmun-m',,,“ A great many entoron (lntestinal Wkins) g t1 other anhnul parasites; hut ol uhieae -’l'll:l'\F:lrnJ.! RP1Z00FIC DIAZASEI OF 8WS Lixpes, fowa Co., Wie,, A, ETEmy, ntax "'t I have had W great ‘deai uf troatie: fo; 1 presume € 1n hos-chulers, 'y Staenany Tazy e nose, am! swelling of their cars, nntii 1. hurste open and the bioad £11ns ot o b Sometlmes thele eyes will swell and close iy, (i Wil not eat oF deink; A, 10 the €onca of fao ] three days, are deai.” [ have been focdin tnor o suaked 0a I} enmmor, besides runuing jo s clover-field, y are the 1'aand-thina Toryee, Can yon tell my ¥hat 1 cau do for them? if gy c. ot e answer jn Tuk Trinuae, and oblize youre, oy Jasies Roarn, Anneer.—~A Cominisslon lias been app.iy by the Conunlssioner ol Agriculture i Wy, ington for the purpuse of Investizating (s, dlscasea called ** hog-cholera,” und 18 now in gy held. As the researches may develop foxe pey facts leading 10 abetter knowledste of tue eneyy wo wish to conquer, 1 am not prepared jus ngy to prescrive for your hogs, but wiil sy gy mueh: 1. Beward of nlt those charlutan wy, apeculate upon your puree, und try to sell an *intalliole,""a “speclfic,” orany other * ayey cura? for ** hog-cholers, because’ such syfe remedies do not exist; they are an fmbossityly and the fellows who setl them ore swindlyy, Ulve them all a wide berth, 2. Sepurate yoyr heulthy hogs frow tho sick oned, and put {leq in a dry and clean pen, under cover of o rouf, i posslble, on high aud Jrv ground, and feed they, with round food, and clesn water, skhinmed milk, or buttermllk, 3. Keep nop mure than live or 81X In une aud the som: sty pen. 4. U you are oblized, for somte teasun v other, to let your liogs und pigs o ont iuzo the fleld, keep fhem, at any rate, shint up till the dew has disappeared from the grass. VETERINAUIAY, e ett— . Cheap Rurinls in Connectleut. o et find Retigrons Her-alit ‘Wo have scen it stated that thie town of Somery takes upon Itscll the responsibllity of oll buri.s wichin Its Umits, without regard to the cirann. stances of the persun to be buried. Rich and poor, high and low are treated alike in the wal. ter, and for 84, sexton, hearse, and grave ae suwplied to ali alike; so that tor twenty veu or mote every burial fu the town las been jen formed by thie town at that cost to those ablets pay. e —————— SJIFFIN=Anz. 19, farah Grltin, bolosed (aziicr of James snd S1sry UFIIn, a40d 7 vears anid 10 1 ki wneral Monaay, Aug. Iv, st 1§ o'clock. from Tejt. dence of parents, 371 Weat ‘Kinale-st., by ¢arrlazes in Colyary Camietery. Frieuds of this iilly are lislted end, R McCRACKEN — Aug. 18, Auafs Francls, belove daughiter of Joseph ¥y and Eilen T ';lellrlckeu, s 1 year nad § moui Funcra) Muadar, Az, 19, from restdence of pareats, a7 West Krla-sn, 8t 14 oclock, by earriates o Ca: vary, ‘Fricods of'the family lavited w0 atiein 1. CARMART — At Waukegan, Ill, Aug. 14, 1873 Archie, youngeat son of Lucinda A.and the laté ki ard L. Carnart, aged b yoar. Funeral Tuesdsy moraiog, Aug. 20. BRADLEY—At8 u'clock Saubath morning, Aug. 13 Bryson Deinvan, infsnt son of Willlas Hurrison 2l Miry C. Jiradley, aged 2 moaths. DUTHIE~AL Rtosehill, Sunday marnfug ot 8 o'l Willam Duthle, aged 43 years, Huneral frm’ his realdence Monday, tho toth, ‘cloc 3 . . FERRIB~Tho funeralof Edwin F. Ferrls wii take laco Monday, Auis. 10, 8t 12 1., ot Firo Inruran:e "atrol Compuny No. 2 1fouse, Those Wiahiing tooria carriagos can, and thoss wiehlig 1o Ko can tike can provided for at Clark aad Diylslon W Gracelaul All are inyited vo attend, CONNOLLY—AL e restdence, cornor of Fourtcenth ang state- 1%, F. Conaolly. y KDIDATES FOI Trincipals uf Grammnr Schools o platauta tn the High seliouts ot the city wil i tha oftice of the ifoanl of Education, No. Friday, Augt. =3, comnencing punctua A BUPPLEMENTARY MINATION "OF A\ didated for nitmiston to the High Nehools of il ©lty will bo hetd attho Normal schuol Bufldfig, M- r06-st, cast of flslsted, un Thuradsy, commnenciug st &, A By G XCo, ts'and 30 Wahmal-av, OPENING TRADE SALE DRY GOODS. 1878, FALL SEASON. 1878, Tuesday, Aug. 20, 9:30 a, m, Vory Desirable Lines of Goods particularly adapted to tho carly wants of both Country and City Trado. QEO. P, GORE & CU., Avetioncers, " Great Catalogno Suction Salo Baots, Shoss & Slipers On Wednesday, Aug, 21, at %:30 a, . An unususl full and completa line will bo offered among which wiil be fouud M. L. Kelth’s Alex. and Cong., The Chicago 8hoe Co.’s Goods In Gonf, Kid, Graln, and Calf, And the M. F. Prouty & Co.’s Sucker ts, ALL FULLY WARRANTED, ; d. b NEW v ADS WM WL NG i, YORE MAD The celabrated fland-made SUFFALD CALF ROOT, a8 well ws eholee fines of PINLADELPULA and NEW ENULAND Cust inade Uuods, At fs our Invariable custom, FEVERY BAMPLE CASR WILL BE SOLUD, aa well ws o largs ue of Duplicates R {Eibiata A Goods ready for toapection Mondar. GEQ. ¥, GORE & CO., Auctioueers._ W. A, BUTTERS, LONG & CO. REQULAR WEONESDAY'S TRADE SALE, WEDNESUAY, Aug, 21, &% 0:30 o'clock, at our st 14&173 I(,nn}lul‘al‘l'fi Q45 Bla0 avicew s aurald W, A BULTEQS, LONG & €0, Auctioneers. REGULAN SATURDAY NALE. (Entabilslied over 21 ycars ago.) HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE \ND GENERAL MEROHANDISE. Chattel Mortgage Sale—Enlire Furnlturo of a Firt-class Dwelliug, b BATURDAY, Aux, o u'clock -, W, At our salesroom, 3 » Auctloueers. By ELIQ()N, POMEROY & CO, Auctlonegrs, 78 & 50 Bandulph-ss. wrize Buocisl Sale uf NEW FURNITURE. Varior und Chawber Beln, +clase Manufactures, Easy Chalre. Louuges, &6 Carpeis, aud General Hodswliold Guods, BLISON, FONEROY & U, Auctiovcers By CIIAB, E. RADDIR & CO Auctlvueers, 118 and 120 Wabash-a¥. Opening Auetion Trado Sales Fin Tuesday, Aug. 20.B00TS, SHOES, & RUBBERS Wednesday, Aug. 21. DRY Guobs Thursday, Aug, 22. BOOTS AND BHUES Friday, Aug. 23. CHAS. Dy AL M, SANDEIS & CO., Thnnd T4 Wabast-ay, 1a oux lkmll‘n‘ Auction Ea‘la of - BOOTS, NHOBS, & SLIPPERS TUESDAY, AUOG. a?l We il ofer s prilie susoritment, daple Baly uneucy ut I Jris detre g to the waotd weluck, v Auttivucers. v,

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