Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 9, 1878, Page 5

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HE CHiCACO TRIBUNE pitre Ivors, and then so admired fte heauty and truth that ot bast . Larned bto e, Thus Gol made nur worlil, As under the sunshine ihe aced bursta and tures intg leal and flower, o under e lovine etudy of man the depthia of Natnre glve up their traths, “Thase guestions of sctenze apd niorale, which have or carelens, or erucl Kiuge, it erand Kinder stindy of Christianity, he able, Jike tie vory atatue, to ba Joved and studied futo a divii Hife. Above and aronmi onreoun- there Heen hetter state, cafted the Kingdom of Grl, 1t 4s atways ready 1o crowd sside the falze and harmful 1dens u{ Imperiect mang but by rome myrterious law of Nature man must seek ting bigher taw, or it will Jorever toncenl I L Philosophy, and polities, and religlon muat all geck 1t mud invite it or st 8 never cuter into and take part in the affalrs of man. ALL IN ONL. FERMON DY TIE REY, DIt THOMAR, ‘The Rev. Dr, Thamns, of Contenary 3. E. Chureh, occupled © Brother Ually " pulpit yesterday moming, and preached to a large con- greantion, s text was: That thes all may bo ones a8 Thom, Father, aet in Me, and I in Tnee, that thiey also may ha ono in Us, —Jofn, xeik.. 51, ‘The unedurated ese, o sald, Inoking for the first time upon any conplex mechanism, as an engine or a clock, mizht naturally suppose that each part had a sepafate existence and moveld by its own or n separate power. Bo, fn lnokinu upon the plhctomens of Nugure,~lite, growth, wind, storm, coming and golug of the roarous, ete.,—the uncducated mind might think that each had a being in itself,—wes moved by rome separate power, Bt a closer ‘attentlon to the engine or the clock would reveal the fact that cach one of its parts In actlon wes related to the other parts, and tint nll were moved by ono power; and & cloger study of the vhenomena of Natirs would show that a lew simple Jaws lay buci of all its manlicstations, Fluding the luw of uniting and pervading every- thing about us,and reaching out and grasping the whole svstem of thimes ahove ue, and waking one untverse, 3 wo turned our thoughts away from these things and vurscives,~aiitdied the human family,—we would meet with the same dlversity and complexity; and analogy shoutd teach us that sumehow there nhm,hl e unity,— thut the same law which bound other things should obtain here. o Attention was calied to some of the things that tended to unite mankind, or tended 1o ninke them onc. The first was found that ln the general fnct thmt, however different we might be, all of us wereone fn this: that our being was derived from a higher power, b did not affect the argument Whether wo eald that power wns onc thing or another, Thu proposition was not what was back of us, but that thero was somcthing back of ue, Nor did it affect the argument whether we eay that that power brought us fnto belng by aspecisl crisis or by o brovess of evolution or contluuity of the aejjou of the forees of Jife. The proposition’ was not Low we came, but the fact that we came by wiother bower; antl it was the same whether we said that that power made us it one specifie act, or, Wwhat was more prubable, and could prove to b tound at lst to be the truth, that we came aloog a line of continuity. ‘Thera was aver all men une sot of great lnwa— natural laws and moral laws. \When one reflected upon these facls there wam romething In them which gave riee Lo the feel- ing of unity,~the tis of unity. Another fact was the samences of conditlon in tnany things, —the strwegle for life, for foad, for ralinent, of thought awninst darkness. Tie did not say that mankind wers everywhere working on exactly the same plane, but what he contended for waa that everywhere thers was this strug- gle. The boud of unity arlsing vut of inter. uependence must be & very strung one, because \ve were each neeessary to the other,—ony de- pendent iu sowe way upon the other. If the world were owned Ly halfa dozon mon, what would they do with it7 Evidently it was by tho presence aud co-operation ol tke many i this world that its riclicst gifis were possible. Auother s was found in the relations of country and race, binding meo (nto groups; and another was the to of relleion,~found in’ the | fact that there was a oneness of spirftunlity |y ug,—n onenees of nature, however low of fm- purlect it might be, that somet appreliends that It §a divine. llowever diverse they might be, thero was runulng throuh all religions what was called the “ sympathy of roligion,"—u Hifs thot seomed cominon to them nll inthought, and fn spirit, and In worship,~n scnsa of con- sclence, of humanity, of reclvrocity, of Justice, ?r ‘merey, of brotherhood, of the liops ‘of tho uture. ( tsecmed strange, yet It was o fact, that out of the bonds which tended to make humanity one,~—the bonds of a common denendence on n higner power, of couptry, of a common condi- FONDAY. SEPTEMBER 9, 1878, ’ 5 punction to some telck in frade, and then his | to avold it before the team or the wheels are n would eay © No" But, aficr the [ a position to render asoldanen fmpossivie. The Wwith consclenee, he would sav, * Busi- | drivera who keep thelr team [ the road, and the ness (2 busnees,’ S A man mast Hve," ©They | wagon-alicela always In the gmonthest place, Al Ao, When vouare with the Romansdo ae | are entitied to alf credit, Too many men the Komana do,"and on that platform, com- | eive their teams the rein, gnd let them plek posed of four bloeks volfabed by the Devil, he | ont the road na best they mny. 1 the wheels fewk his stand, fecling that he was quitc honest | get out of the track, thes jerk the team hack enouzh, If a mitkiman, he sophffticated his | to their proper place, I a rus I8 to be avolded mhk: i n treastirer, b rebypotherated sccurl- | they walt antl) the wheels are i it bofos ties pat Into his hands. \Wall atreet’s motto | ing out, and then both team snd vebicle wast *Don't speealate (n 6ther people's fandes | ateainmd to get them . When th fuat I8 ae- but Il you do, be sure to win' With really | complished, aftor "“; Atraining and tugzlog, honest men ¢rimo by any other nmune would | thenceeesity is past, Every farmer shouldinstruch stmell as had. I a grocer, he rexorted to adal- | hia huys and hired men how to drive. Teach teration and falre measurvs, pnt the best fruft | them the importance of holding the lines taut: on top and the inferlor beneath, or used his | to be ready for any emergency; to watch the atock of flour-brands aceording toreqnftements, | team, and keep the wheels in the smooth track I a landtord, he rents Bis ouliding for the | and such otner nstructions ss wil readily occur Devil's dune, ~ Then, to cap the climax, | Lo an expericnced drves he resorted to o m le dn order 5 GATIER FRUIT RARLY. to go through bankruptcy. S0 inany Wa have Jearned by experlence that early- naprineioled men had fied to that moderir city | @athered winter-apples keep best. A8 avon of refuge thet it was in ordar tor the churchiek | as fruit Las attalued Its fufl size, we adeise that o appoint comuitteed to ook into the cascs of [ it be pieked, In Central 1iinots this will oceur bankrupta and deckle how many we by the last of thenresent month farther Noreh, fulluree and how nany were Irm a littls cartler. A few days’ nevieet of this fm- charch shonld vindieate liersclf against those | purtant duty may cause the premature ripening who Were kiiown to have nproved on the sin of | of the crop. B Annantas in pussing over o thelr wives or rela. HOW IT 13 DONE. tives vroperty belongitg to their creditors, and Ixptaxora, Ia., Aug. 30.—Will you piease tell then repurtlot a large faliure with the lucredible § or, through “Fhe Farm ond Garden,” how statement, * No nnete,” Clerks wore tanght o nurecrymen save (helr young trees frum being by thefr erpoyera to be dishonest toward cua- [ ¥0atei by rabbita? Can wo propavate cherries, tomers, and then, profitme by their lnstruc- | PGS, O pears, by s Or i guatling) tons, Wrned arpund amd cheated those enploy- e D ; N €18 often a diffienlt matter to save nursery- ors. Finciples nileht e ever so guod, I ABEs | b ol g raned by rebblie. e Make wera ol secund-rate value when they -aid nat Uassom oat into. eonduct, But thozeitic af | an elfort. to captura the fu traps as soon as Cheistian men—ldniself o better—ahould not | eoMd weather begins, Thew, wheh snow cosucs, sndertako to Judge his fcllowa, remembering | ¥e hunt them persistently with dogs and imas. that Mansachti<clta Butler was crying *frand 1 | Ve nlso keep o eupply of earcorn, sweet apples, laudder than wnv other man ln the country when | 8uil green cabbae in the nursery. tiil, in spite s of gl precautions, we sometunes losy the ale hg sas thot yery thimt himsell. Thi first cure for these evlls was toavold | Of 8 Zreat fuany teces) bucause they bave been I:mllr‘beuhu nem We shonkd make u real, prace | KEY \eat sulieraianibva favin) be from, 1ie ¢ ¢ text— o cal truth of the thouglit of the text—that God gatet, by FLoturmiin, bt baddiie T e within us continually. To p‘enlun.-v:unn_ulcm.-(-i Rt Dopuras it 1t ina te-dt i which wns abeoluteiy necessnry 1o o revival o ¥ ot 1o ‘ . { tany time when the bark will scparate frecly buslncss, there ust be a quickening of con. T Ahe R P y sclence, and that must cowe Ly a deepur scnse of Omulpresenca in apa around us, and of con- tinual accountability to Gud, There must be more of the avirit and backhone of the Proplict Danicl in our rellgion, more atern Chrictlan ~|»rluclnlu in the homne, the soclal, and Lusincss (fe, aml we must throw to the ogs Lhose mot- tous of the Devli, * Business i business,” "They all doit,” ete., and take the mottoes of the Word of tiol, * Not conformed but traus- furined, * [n the world nud not of It.” ELSEWIIERE, EVANGELICAL LUTITERAN. Epecial Dispateh to The Tridune. sprrivarisLD, 1L, Bept. 8.—The Lilinols Dis- trict of the Missour! Bynod of the Evangelical Lutieran Church held Its annual mission ab Concordia Collego in this clty to-day. Clergy- men and conzregations were présent frum Peorls, Pekin, Bloumington, Lincoln, Decatur, Mt. Pulauki, ElPaso, Iavana, snd other voints, Tho Hev. Mr. Lochner of Trinlty Church, Bpringtield, delivered the aadress of welcome, Tho Rev. Dr. Bartling, of Chicago, former)y of this city, preached tbe morning ecrmon, Jn the nfternoon the Nev. P, E. M. Zoree, of Bheboygan, Wis, forme;‘?'n missionary in the East fadies, ro- counted Ms misslonary expericnces, and Prof, Creamer, of Convordia Colidace, delivered a briet address ou church-work, Choirs Irom Blooimn- tur assisted the college choir aud that of Trimty Church, Soringficid, fn the mustiol exeeclses, " The visitors present num- Lered about 2,000, ‘The scrvices wore held in the college park, and the visitine congresrations were bhanqueted, A collection, amounting 1o $1R, was taken up for missionary vhrposes. ————— TIE FARM AND GARDEN. Paor CornwWhy It 1s So—P'nor Stacking— Educating the Froplo=l'oor Plowing— | Poor Driving=Uathiering Vrult Early— low It Is Done—A ¥Falr-Work. . From Our Own Correepondent, Crnasteatay, 1L, Scpt. 7.—During the last two or three weeks we have taken several trips, of fromtwelye tutwegty-five miles each, thropgh tho country, aud, Ity order to correctly ustimate the corn-crop, we have patd particular attontlon toit. In [act, vhcro [s nothing, except an ocea- sioua] orchard with its fruit, now growing to at- tract attentiun but corn. Wu bave falled to fnd what we sbould call a firmst- rate fleld of corn in our iravels, We did find, however, uearly all the furdicrs whoso places we passed by or through were en- T RELIGIOUY. the publfe war rebuked for disregsrd of this Inw, and wan necused of showing *a foolleh MY nd merey, and a new law waa passed, thet titers shohl be branded with the letter #3 (Garrabonid) on tire shonlder on first con- sletlon, on n_gecond convletion shonid he f with “S'* aud he u rlaye for lifo to the hizhest bickder; running away from this gerviee he was to 1o put to death, . Buch laws are to be quoted, not with appraval, but to show what a serfous probleiu theee ratiant beggars have offered the frieuds of good government, aud how grave the question of Curistian duty still remains, But ~ cracl as these Inws were, a soclal wrlter, now 1 very popular, expresses the conviction that ail theae deouua'of the hive shoutd be permitted to storve or dio of diséase. Tle differs from Henry V1il. aod Edward VL onfy in that Herhert Buencer would hiave nature kill off the Indolent, whilo those vid monarchs would bring in the gallowa and nx to hiasten the natural work of oxtermination. Speneor concests his cruelty hehind n drapery of clegant langnage and Mgzure, but within® the gloved hand “ts seen the handle of an n%, nune the less fatal drom be- Jonging to natural Jaw, Tlerbert Bpencer snys: o pPorvading oll nature we may sec At work a stern discipline. which fs a Httle cruel that b sy Do very kindo . L . It fs much better that the ruminant animat when deprived by, age of the Sucur which made extetence a pleasuro shonld be killed by some beast of prey, than that it should lnger out n life made pamful by infirmitics, to die eventu- ally of atarvation, Iy ths destruction ol such, not only Is existenco ended before it becomes burdehsetne, hiut rvom I8 made for a younger generation, eapable of the fullest enjosinent,” o s oo Meanwhlle the, well-known oxisting humanity and the unfolding of it into this ultt- mate perf e both sceured by that eae benificent thovgh severe discipling to which the anlmated ereation ot large i3 subject—a disci- pline which is pittless in the working out of goold; a felicity-pursiing law which never swerves for the avoldance of partial and tem- porary suffering. “Ihe poverty of the Incapable, the tistreesesthat conie upon the imprudent, the starvation of the fdle . . . arethe do- crees of a Isrge and far-seelng beneyolence. + o » There ure muny very amiable veopie who liave not thenerve to lovk this matter fairly In the face.” ‘fhus Lhe' great modern teacher of soctal sclenco joius hands witn the Chinese, who kil al) spparcutly surplis chlldron, and with the fabled Northinen, who put their aged patents 1o death, The relations of Christlanity toward able-bodied beegars muat be quite ditferent from the relations ot Henry VI or of Herbert Spencer toward thut cliss. Under the lead of Christianity there are amiable people who do look the niatter lutrly tu the fuce, and who do not seo thakind of face secn by the author of * docinl Statiea”” Recent Ericlish Poor laws have been tov amlable. ‘They have put beggam upon the parish, and, without competitng labor, have pald thein a weekly stipend, Tho good, ndustrious peopie of Enginnd hava pald poor rafes for genertions, without exacting {abor frain the recipient. hcmura are put on A pen- fsion, aud (lius rank, after a tashion, with old - suldiers, and old poets, and distinguished states- wmen, That millions of Wlers have been devel- oped and made wrremnl by Eugliat Pour lay adiita of no denfal, \Yhat shuuld be our Btate, or gencral, or our ciy leislation upon this mattert Guly the long thought of o large number of our wiseat mien could frame a valunvle reply in detall, To one speaking hastily and briefly no {ight comes clearly except that of general principles, and sume of the general priuciples of Christian philosophy aro these: Kinduess and the sacred- ness of life must mark all social legislation. Enitosophy may comiand the idle to dle, but Christianity canunot. 8he camne to save the ldle, and Is as enger to reform o watianl begyar as to retorm o man who will lle or steal, She curcs lenorance by teaching knowledge; eures vice by cultvating its opposite; cures drunkenness by temperancej and hepee, white Heonry VIIL and Spencer would kil an able-bodied beggar, Christianity would make liim_learn to work. Feoding tho * able-bodied and viltiant begaar !’ ot the basement-oor or ot a vheap soup-housc furins no purt of tho Christian philanthropy, unlvsa o pestilance, oro fire, or as carthquake s ereated a temiporary deinond forsuch ashape vt benelice Work Is o sacred word in tho Christiun system, because fdiencss develops Into crime aud vice. Becotlly, Chirletlaulty loves the good and the Indusirions, shd bence scorns the charity thot will feea the thoussnds of kllers who are ren- dering homus unsafo places fon life or pmpcrlf. ‘I'he home in the country 1s 1o longer the castle where the mother and children feel sale, but it 13 rathier thy place whera cach nolse terrliies, and whero the wife and children often tremble and wish morning would come. Now a Chrlstinn civilization will love these liomes moso than i will love the personal liberty of a trawp, and henee, out of love for the homes of the good, sud out of regard to the highest welfare of the vagabond, it will terminate his free wanderings, breaking the meshes, A second they got apon the beach. Thes had hordiy dropoed the eorls before he broke from the meshes, and, pring. ing hizh in the air, ptunged down the shore Lo- ward fhie sea, ten or twelve feet nway. The men dnghed exeltedly after bim, and vainly soueht to stop him with desperate kicks from their heavy fNshing-boots anf Glowa from such im- vlements an they eould plek un on the beach. No on¢ dared to grasp the monster, as & b of larzo site, armed with fts sharp fins and razor-lke tecth and clils, is one of the Hercest and mot dangerous of scafsh, The shore water wan already reached, and the hirs wns solashing furiously in the desperate endeavor to galn water that woitld float him. An lustant tmore and the wrize would be lost, At this moment Mr, Winship fearlesddy threw himselt un the strugglind inotister, clasping his arms arontu! his neck, with one foot under his body, and shonted for heip, The strugeiea of the fish and its eaptor had earried them fnto deep water; but the stout arma of the other fisher. men were quick 1o the rese both man and bass were rolled deltly ui whore, and_ the hass was securcd. Y r‘flv' at the end of the ulru(fuln, were breath- ess with exhaustion, but had escaped with scarcely a wound. The monster wetghbed 464 punnds. S L, RAILROADS. TIIE CHICAGO EXTRENSION OF TIE GRAND TRUNK. Mr. E, P. Hannaford, Chief Engineerof the firamd Trunk Rallway, §s now at Romeo, Mich., and has let the contruct to pushihe rallroad erading to Pontlae, The track fa to be lald with stecl ralln, alxty pounds to the yard, and will he completed by the 15th of Nuvember, ‘The I'ort Huron Zimes fu speaking of this new Thire ravas One of the projecta contamplated by the Grand Trank managere 14 the extennion of this Nine to Ann Arbor, “to conneet thiere with the hew toad to Toledo, snd alra to Lanring or Chariotte, con- necting with \he Penmeularnsa throuzl e to Chicago. Thix brojecl may ot be carrled ont, however. &4 the Girand Trionk wiil accept 8_more advantageoun proposition, shonld one hie offered, It newd not bo hold A recret that the Grand Trimic managers wonld prefer the Chicaco & Lake iln- zum, from Port fluron by way of Fimg and bLan. sine, asove all others, a8 (hronzh roule to Chi- cix, butthey will not buy 8 lawent, or pay more for the road than it wonld cort 10 baild a new o ‘They have the uoney {o oaild of buy a line tn Cut cago, atil arp rrady 10 recefve and congider prop- sitluna from all seurces, and will be hikely to Choose the most advantateons; bod they will not w prhpositions to any an The Juckson Patriof hus the following regard- ing this matter: ‘That the extension of the (rand Trank Line to Aliis erty would be most benesicial und bring with it ereatand perinanent advatitages, no one will ques- tion, The project, howgier, 1n pot & new one, and & company already txiats with officers and headnuarters in thia cliy, formed with the exoresa object in view of bringing the tirand Tronk Line throughdackeon. t'opany, the *‘Michigan.\lr- Line,” organized sume fen yearn ago, succeeded in constructiug a line of milrad from Jackaon weatward to Youth Hend, Ind,, 122 miles, whicih was lensed to, and 13 now beine operated by, the Michigan Central. The operations of the Air+Line Company east of Jackson were extensive, end, for » time. vigorously puaticd, Starting at Tidge. way, Macoml County, on the Grand Trank, ticy coustructed and Ironsd o resdway twently mites wesiward to Washinzion, in the sanio county. From Washingtoo Lo ontizc the right-of-way was lso secured by the same Company, and the road- graded by the way of Hochester. the entire distance of thirty-five milen, Hetween Pontisc snd Jackeon, fifteen miles, the Alr-Line Company made sueveys, 1mape, profiles and estinsics, and secured thu right of way between Pinckney, Livingston Countv, and Jackeon, tweniy-eurnt les, ‘'I'ie grading between Pinckney and Juck. ing erect, over alx feot tall, with his anow-whita bialr and spotless shictraflle, was the cenogtira ot all eyes, As 8ir Maoses talked with the Pro- mier, e stond between Lond Lennox. and b valet, towering above both of them, and as erect. as either. The London Jews regard thie pubila mectfng of the chamnlon ot nrfillxlrlt Jurdatem* with Lord lesconsfield as an evidence of tha estosm fn which the Premier Is held by the strictest members of tho Synacogue. — Frof, Swing on the Dnty of Christians to tha Modern Beggar. gho Able-Tiodied Tramps Must Be Taught ihe Habits of Imlbstry. A Dali Eogle's Belonse of Her Nest, i ) Revublican, Tasy wey ampbell waa engaged deging wild ginger on the side of the Ruan, about one and a half miles trom Clondland Hotel, ho found the nest of a gray eagle In fallen trec-top under the cliff of the mbuntain, «untalning one voung eavle. Whils examining the nest and its contents saddenty he iean! a~ ol maise, and, before o ould ssvertain whay he old cagle had struck im in the bl gud claws, and, taking a rir theaugh the alr, alighted on a tree about X yanls distant, but In plain view of the nest. Awain the parent bird made an attack, afmingat his head ; hut be avolded her, and sl struck hitn un the arm, making a slzght wound. 8n returned to her post of obeervation, but, as soon as he attempted to touch the nest contalning tho yuune earlé, she made a third attack. when Mr. Camphell struck her with a stick and hronght her tu the groumnd, where, atter aacvers strugele, he sticeceded in killing per, Bhe meaaured aeven feet and two juches Irom tip to tip of her wings., ‘The mala bird tvas not seen. The place waa 8 wild, unfrequented pary of 1 mountain. 1t has encrally been supposed that the eagle always bmiit her nest in the clefts of the rocke, but thix one had her nest in a fallen tree-tap, some fect from the gronnd, bt in o apot scldom sisited by man. This'bird Is the ohe kuown as Lhe eray oF bald eagle. e ap— Fight with a Shark. New Haren Hrqister. Capte W. L. Pattisun bad quite a fight with the gray man-cating shark waich he caugnt off Zhort Beach, Branforg, the other day, The monster was nine feet four fn length, and was as big uround s o flour-burrel. (lis {aws werg nine inénés tn dlameter, an cr hls head hat heen cut off, the Cantatn put his iead between hiia six rowa of foruidabls teoth and through his throat. ik Cuptain hus been uo the water for twunty-two years, but this Is the tirst time he has ever known of u gray shark's visit to the wuters of the Bound. "When he found the ugly tellow i hls fshenet, he had him drawn to bLis yacht, and grabbed bim by his lop fin, ms ‘he cxpresses ft. ‘The shark was decidedly opposedd Lo this nethod of treatment, nnd sngpped viclously at everything withindils reach, vcesslonally taking sometbiug out of the. runwate of the boat, and twlee bitie the Cap- tufw's lexr. Finally his capturcr ot 8 line around the mounster and hauled hite on deck, Hera he toak his long koife and cut his backbone In twa. Evea tuis severe treatinent did not cool the razo Of the man-eater: for two hoursand a hall alter- warnl, when a pine plank an inet thick was ore- sented to him, be immediately bit it (n two, The snapping of his juw could have heen bear.l distayee of ten vards, He lived four lours aiter his backbino had heen disjolnted, iy welzhed considerably mare than 400 poutids. pr. Thomas Discourses on Unity In Unity Church. The Epidemic of Fraud.--A Sermon by the Rev. W. X\ Crafta. CHRISTTANITY AND TRAMPS SERMON BY TOF. BWING. Peof. Swing preached yesterday motniug in the Central Church, taking as his teat: 11 nny wonld not work nefther shoutd he eale— 1. Thear,, fii., 10, The relatlons of charite and ealamity seemed Jast Sunday plain enough, When unavollabls tronubie contes unou an individual or 8 conumtte nity the lave at brother for brother nust rush to the ielp of the unfurtunate. Today 1 oro- p0te to you and 1o my<cif 1 more difilenit aub- Jrct of Inauiry—the relattous of Chylstian ethica foward the commnon heggar, At the dvor or gate of each one of you comes regularly the Vegaar. In(hefortn of wan, or woman, oF elnld, these bewrars have come for ten or twen- s years, and (n sucl fucreasing nusbers inat the outiook of the next ten vears I+ alarming. We all feel that our charity, so-called, witl wol bear the straim. Muny of the bost men, the most cducated, and most re- fincd, and the most benevolent ure Wondering what 18 the lue of duty towanl the mendieant lass, To-day Jet s whe have gathered here think upon this question. We cannot settle It, Lt we can cunfer over ft, and Isnall, for my part, speal not as oue who has nbsolute knoswl- edgre, but as une willing to be coutradicted, and anxioua anly to tind at last the right path, By Chirlstlanity In tiewo r¢marke I mean not the written rellgfon of the churches, but what 15 calted Chiristian civilization, that ethics which secing ta have come down trom not simply the words of Cnrist, bt trom His Spivit. Whnt should be the relation of otir nge towards the bezears that swarm at our gates! Tho reoly that we nust pity them, and feed them, and clothie them comes too bastlv, Those helped fn the chanters of the Testament wers not simply poor or hungry, but they were helpless, One of then who lay at the rich mno's pate was sfck; he was o victim of the scrofula, Auother had been on B journcy, and was waylnhl and beaton, and feft for dcad, Others had leprosy whito os snows others kad been paralyzed for years; others had heen blind from birth; one had a withered niand s all thuse who Iny aboit the poal walting for the heuling ange) to tauch the water were heipless throngh physieal itle. Thus It will ap- pear that in the roun upon which Christ poured lls blessiugs there 0 none of those beggars which with able bodies pour out their dramatic tales Into the ear of tho ninetcenth century. Asour form of bepgar i not to bo seen In the New ‘Festamient, 50 tho best mode of dealing will not be there In expross words, We muat hence ask the geneml splrit of Chirist—ask that refiection which posscsses sometlfing of Iils Juetuess, and calmness, ond Kinduess to come 10 our ald in this large debate. Chrlstianity iresents the genfal ideus: that man must be ndustrious: that the moral good of sodlety must be vourht, and that Juws must not be eruel bug mereltul. Whenco camo this stream of beggarst All rivers flow from sume rodree. Man in his natural state is avorse Lo worl. ITe will alwaya find the most possible of rest and sleep, In- dustry, ko tasternd learning, I8 not a natural virtue, but an acquired une. - Hénce tha strenm of beggears arose In tho ol ighinuds of ig- norance and stupor, and has flowed along and tolluwed the race. (recco lind fow mendicants, but the East ot large was full of these iuman drones,—Jerusalem was full, Rome was full. 1n the Jast years of the Empire_ alh the hlo and poor of Itome were fod by the Government, and no lubor-was requitod of. them. 1t was for hundreds of yuars the chief business of the A PAIR-WERK, During the post week nimerots fairs have Leen In operation, aud thy weather has been above reprosch. Bome of the falrs bave huen succeanful, both i int of attendunce and s exhibitions. Others, however, n spite of all that the managers could uo, have been failures, Inthis latter category may be placed that of Luis county. Althougli the premium-list was Hberal, and o fmmoral shows or gambling were permitted on the grounds, the people faticd to attend, We attribute 8 great deal of Lois apathy to the absence uf padule-wheels, chuck-luck, nnd fast horses. ‘Thers I8 no use of denying the {act that these three things form more of au at- tractlon—do wore to attract peoplc—ihan any other three things tn an agricultural extibition. - Runat dn. 1IOLY WELL. A Miraculous Fauntain ln North Wales—Its EMcacy In Curing Diseaso~The Logend of Its Origin, . Speeial Corrapondence of The Tribune, ® HorLrwesy, North Wales, July 80,—in North Wales, about & mile south of the brosd, bay- like mouth of tbe Itiver Dee, I8 the * Holy Well," or Fountain of 8t. Wenefride,—~Ininany respeets the moat intercating and remarkable spot fu Eugland. The fountsln is simply an cnoninous spring, giving forth about fifty tons of beautiful, cold water per minute, Over the fountaln, supported by high arches, stands o little Cutholie chapel, built, it fs said, some hundreds of years ago. Buch {s the roputation of this water for per- forming miraculous cures, that many thousands uf persons visit the springs anngally. Indeed, the little City of Holywell, nuwbering over 1,000 Inhabitants, is supported chiefly by the natronage of these pligritoe, On sisiting the wetl, I found the broad, deep paol of water linmediately below it Nterally slive with invalids and eripples,who were splash- inz sbout, shivering, founting beads, making crosacs, prayiug, kissing Images, ete. Lot the reader imagino an old man immersed in the cold water Up to bis ears, countlng beads. crossing himself, and praying vigoroualy, white his teett chatier, for ten minutes; snd ha will have a con- ception of constant occurrences at this spot. About half of the day s rescrved for females, whoin great throngs visit the well, and, it Is eaid, bebave even more ridictlousty In fts waters than the men whom I saw, "I'ie water looxks and tastes exactly lke thot of Lake Michigan, and, fn the abscnco 'of anychem- e —— e 111s Own Medichue, Allaang Jonrnal, One of the doleates to the National Cgnven. tion, on his return from Byracuse, went Lo ses hils heart’a delight, to whom tie hnd been cu- goged for six ecstutic montns, Blie met him at be hinge-weakened eate with the remurli: *tJames, | huve learned to love anotiier. To- night we part.” “Learncd to love another! Part! Why, Fan oy, what do you mean ™ ] mesn precisely what I say,” she answered, with su ley amite, “0, noj 1t vannot be, it cannot be. Say you are jokiug. You cannot mean it. Have I not sour absolute promise to be my wifel" *You have,” ghu replied inthe same unim- passloned tone. **And It Is because you have g: 'lnl’;:oluu promiso that I fecl freo to bo ckle. flo resched around to his hip pocket amt whipptd out his pistol, exclaiming: “If you w]onld"unl. soc me fai!dead at your fect, ex- sun has been perhaps hall - complefed, and & portion of the road-bed i Vend{ for the tron. The sectinn botween Rldge- way and Pontlac s cont d by the Urand Trunk, and is now betug tinjshed to the lIatter point.” The portion between Pontiac and Jacknon otill belonpe to the Air-Line Company, who have expended between Pinckney and Jackson, in see curing right-of-way, grading, etc,, ubvat $80,- 000, " As the mission of the Alr-Line Cowmpany, a5 stated sbuve. was for the purpose uf aidin: the ‘Grand Trank thronch (o Cnicago, an an it Is, of course, intereated In and favorable to the projuct, the partially completed line from his city to Pontlac could be atllized and this 850, - 000 exponditure made erviceablo fn the extonslon now belog agitated. — And if the Grand ‘i runk suthoritiee would pledire theniselves to adopt this ronte as their maln line westward, they would un- doubtedly receive sul ial additional ald and encourazement from the towns througl whicn they pass and from thiacity. The Girand Trunk, how- ever, has it eye on Chlcago, and hae the means to reach that termitnus, and 18 cares leea for local (ratfic than tv 3y the granaries of the West,.and if lhe 880,000 already cxpended on what scems to bo tho most direct and faporable routs, vz, the Alr Line Company. will not svcuro the extenalon throngh Jackaon of the Grand Trunk load, we du not inderstand how the formation_of & new Combany here Isto belo the o I will,” she said. " My ‘absolute * prom- ira 1s ke the absolute papier moncy yon dote —there {3 no pruvision made for redeemiog Ha slowly returned his vlstol to his pocket sod departod tront bier presenca without a wonl - ——— A Penny Raved 1a Twopence Enrned. A Hittle Sozodont uned right alung every day costs but litue troudle, and i« pleasant always, It saves euts of auffering from dlscased gume and feeth In nter da; Itn use is economical of time and com- fort. Use Sozodunt. 2 Eswperors to plunder forelpn cities that thele t rie, and izlon,—the: i i e ——— et ‘ and will compel him tolearn the pursuits and | tiuw st strucele, and of reliwlon,—thero sruso | deavoring to ralse two erops on the same land, | lcal anal conclude that JUIL 18 nol mate- | watter, To construct the line between Jacksun ‘ ;,'1“"'.],‘.1‘:: ;‘,f.{'}i{.':," v"\‘\‘:filfl‘ fi,;;,m The .1‘.%,;‘2} the_hablts of industry. A philantbropy which ".:'.g:"]":’r':"“"‘t"lu'g"’w‘;“‘j:j"‘gfi:;’l:fil"""}.“,’éh?"' —corn and weeds, Fifteen years ago the farmer fl’““ ‘1"!' erent ‘ml&) flnll'{u: nvrhllfl-v' W ll"- #ud Pontine would fHaLhan exbenditere of T e ol und ey ke Baulocd's Tha husmyan race Tavalzen ot oty @ Watory or | feads o swarmn of tilers, and which forceta thio | Metead Foterting fo tho competition bateon | Who sulfered his corn-ticld to grow up full of | fioec. the nropotors ol Lle epring—or 1L e | aous 8O O el oy the kit Ty sacreduiess of all tho humes of the vitlages aml farms of the land, 1s 8 charity too shorisighted to L denominated Chtistian, - \What waschorits 8t your gote to-day turus iuto raplne and mur- der to-morrow, ‘Tliirdly, Christianity Is busy ofer tho morals ol the present and fuiure, Fach adult begar 1s trainlne a fow children In vice, ‘The lazy val- fant mendleant souds uit bis ehildren 6 rgs and dirt, with well-practiced ties on thelr lips, and thus the charity that feeds theso In fdle- nres make the quantlty of vieu advanco with un advanciog pupulation, su that, cach able-bodled beguur well vared for by elurity becomen a col- ouy, o swart, I 8 fow years; aud henee In Italy and Spatn, where the rich have scattered colus to the lazzarond for centuries, tho strecta of these ouce splendid States are now alive with thonsonds ol beluge who, il conbined, have ot performed a good day’s work In a hundred years, On sccount of the vice and crimo which Tojls Jike u peatiience out of such almseiving, we shall not dare to cousider 1t auy partof 8 divine Gospels s the general principles of Chrlatian moral philosuphy point toward **each aoble- Lodicd and valiaut begizar ¥ asjan offender, and declare his act of begging a misdonosuor (n- Lecome o catchipeuny convern—do not claim that Lho eures result from the temperature of prop- ertles of the water, butifrom faith in the patron- eaint. 1n evidenco of the efllcacy of this plan of treatment, youarc shown a tnuscuimn of canes and crutches left by juralids miraculously cured at theapring. Of these relies I counted ninetecu caues, thirty-five crutces, andone * atreteher.” As ali ars not cured, faflure belag the rule, one wouli suppose Lhat the faith of the pilgrims would weakan In the faco ot the facts; but the Judicious salnt very perfectly rruvlded for this voutlngency by wnnounting in advance that thoss only would be miraculously healod who would bo'spiritually benetited tnereby. ‘There- {ore, those ot benefited go away happy 0 the belief that their aiiliction 1s a blessing fu dis- isol z“A remarkable l}\llllty of this water, placing It eutirely beyond tue competition of any uther Lealing spriars fa Europe or Americs, is the fact that bathivg in {t by proxv does just as well as (o proveia persona. Thus, 8 poor womay, bed-ridden for seven years, residing at Kidder- minster, eent & peuny n{ o pilgrim to the wull, to ba employed to hire s third woman to bathe for her At the very mosent when the strange woman 20 bired Jumped into the water at the well, the necessity be fori by the Grauk Trank. B fore Jackson contributes forther ald toward this Important project, let the Girand Trouk authoritics guaranteo that they will take hold of the proposed aricry aud pasn it to ompletion. NEW NEWFOUNDLAND ROAD. A London paper states that the Leeislative Asseusbly of Newfoundland has passed a serics of resolutivns offering facilities fer the covstruc- tion of = mailway acroes the fsland from St. Jolins to Bt. George's Bay, or some other con- venient polut on the west coast. A pre- lwminary survey bas been made for the purpose of ajcertaming the practicability and cost of such a schieme, and it bas been proved tuat no serfous physival obstacles exiat to prevent fis completion at u moderate outlay, It is proposed, theretore, to grant un aohual subsidy of €120,000 to any compavy which wilt construct and malntain such a rafiway, to sadi- tion to granting liberal concesatons of Crowy lnuds for the purposr, A gluucs at the map of North Ameriea witl show tho luportant resuits Which may be snticipated from -such un undertaking, In'the first place, the wealt h of the futerfor of the colany Wiil Lo opeted up to art, and pootry, and philosephy, and raligion, Lut also of tramploi,—a qualfly ot man that Las uover blessed Lhie uations with even o tem- porury absence. Tha stresm of meudicants that flows through Great Bratuin and Amerfea received wonderul Jmpulse pomo centurles ago i eauses which speana up additional to the watural Indslence ol man, Tho despotle Governments whivh carrled Tow took away the impulso aud roward of labor to the many, It Is com monly coufessed that the Crusades, which dnwrged tiie Western nicn into s roving Hte for threo centuries, which mado religions eypsies ok willions of th men and women hiclest. and Jowest tu Church and xtate, leit all the good deas of labor destroyed or unpopular tor many generations. ‘o the Influence of thoae great migrations wo must add the iniluence of the Church, which for A thousand years made tdentical o mendieant aud o satut, Out of mistaken exegesis of the ‘Teatament, the Churth offv & premiun to indolence Ly making the must rogged and dorlorti - beggar to be the wwost shipfug saint. Yo go to heaven os u Lozarus on m reword of crumb-nicking wan thuught the bess way of reaching that land, sud heuee the peoplo wer polnted to that routu; uticura THE GREAT SKIN CURE, Inypallibly Cures Salt Rimm or Eczema, Ringworm, Tetler, Scald Head, Dadraf, Dry and Palling Hair, Pimples, Blotches, aud Scraf nloas Dicers and Sores, Meurs, WERRS & POTTRIL Wholraala Drnes of llston, Sass. men and natlons, he adverted to sectarfanism, deploring that nien could not ot at one nltar, or even shrke, hands i tha work of humanity that was so much wveeded, Denominations could hardly be just to one anothere—tell the truth about one another,—rejoles fu tho pros- perity of one another. 1l¢, as a Methodlst, could stand in a Uniturian puiplt and preach, sl the sccts would wonder what bo would sny. Much as ho Joved Unity's pastor, and miuch aa the city loved bhin aud " Dr. Ryde?, and_ long as they had lyed here, had there been u Presbyte- rian, or o Buotlst, or s Alethiodist pulpit open to them? [One man rapped vnce with his cane ou the floor.} e feeling on the part of some, {f distinclons were not lived up to, was, “What is to Lecome of my churchi"” It was only a questlon of thne when all thie workers lu uod's great cause should be lnoked upon by ail tmen of senso aud hears as brothers and fellow-laborers—when tha sharp lincs of distinction should fude out before tho ouward move of the suring-thne of the worid’s mind and heart, and (lod's people would shake bands across tho chusms; und our cbildren would wouder that we ever stood apart i Ilis great work, ‘e conclusion he drow was that the goal was weeds was looked upon as a sloven; now a clean fleld s the exceptlon. WILY TUIS 18 60 ‘We nsked an old farmer whom o niet on tho road, to tell us why this is so, His roason was- slmplo: Beeause they tried to do too much, and ouly half finfabed thelr work. They dil not lke to hoe, and the wceds conscquent- 1y took the crup. ‘i farmers of the West will sooner or later realize that they musc cultivate better or how tbelr corn; for, it the tlelds coutfuue to grow ww‘llyu they haye in the past two years, weeds will be tho only crop grown. We'expect that, fu onder todo o ol Job of cultivating, wo shall have to roturn to the Uve-toothed cultivator, and cultivate our corn both ways. A little howioi then will suf- fico to keop the weeds out. In one place we noticed about twenty acres of what was intended for curn, grown so full of cockle-burrs that the stalks of corn were altnost bid from sight. The burrs stood #lx feot high and very thick, It ls fuily to sttempt to grow curu ot vuch foul Jand; but muny farmers try o do ity sud then blume Providence or the Re- publican party for thetr fullure. o latorm tho publi volving immodlate arrost. ~ Arrcat to what end 1 | unity, Thero were disturbing causes, but when Aitic womau Jumped o of bed, porfectly eured, | trude, nd the internal resouces of Nowfwnmd. | Chwonimistod wih' spyareiity thrurinlo. arfoett bt that the other poad of uroperey and luxury | Evidently i, that in ity o State. workebons | wo came to understand tham they wero orderly | , 108 ocent letier wo sndabvureld to impress | i, Ty ol sy otlhers quite ms N | Lead a56 Miiown £0.h¢ 47 £rEaver Shan have Aot S S ..f:‘;‘.‘,!fi,".,“‘,:{;".‘..'..",_':‘.7";;‘.‘;‘,’{;,“ 0 e s i ot 600 inead uns | and faruis e shall Intor for par; of bis support. | gug moved (0 0 great resalt, Each potion eacl | il st guve a fow dtroctions On toquiry we | Yiuchn, ars vouched for by Catualic pricats and | crally bueh recogulzed. Enionious duposits of | ditiiian fmm Veeciaing” frodicte nter ey Hytsal DAFE ok that mors 1 uriat seue of (rave h),wu acton, MIth eliuns aino ol it church, and cach Individual, while not working | gid “iae”s very large per vent of the oats clouds of wituesses.t The veopleliving about | copoer, dron, coal, uickel, lead, s} other i e ar imlican b irely St Duocite form of v would move every confirmed dler from s und villages, and would not oaly give thu country quict homes sid our citics some security, bt would turn vagabonda into work- on the akme plan,was worklnzon tho sanso gront prablem, By the processes that were ot work, God was preparfug ua for the flunl and blzber unlon, in which we should be tauzht to look eary oue with the relation of miracu- which they heve *‘seen with their the well luus cun awn eye: In the {ur 1630 a man was found lying dead cruls exlst, which arm ut presont lnaccesaibig, Tuu great pine und spruce forests of the uteriur ore Jying almost Weeless, Vst tructs of rich, srabio land, cupuble of produchig wheag of el ‘The muuks were ull bezprars; the nuus beggars; the bermits all byzeure; the splritual Ay mbuted wero begirars. What must havo boc! the elfect of o religioussyatem whicn could take crop of Ceotrwi 1llnols hus been {u- Juroa by indiffcrens stacking. At lfeast vuethird the crop I8 so damaged, aud sells from 8 to 8 cents below the pricvof a cus nfalilile curo fur every kind of Skin Discass. from o entutnon Pimple (o thy Worst cas0 of Salt Khuain, Scuid Tlead, or Dandrut, CUTICURA atnestiy beilgred to be thin only posl. h LR o 4 bove sect,—to lovk a8l humanity,—and wo ol 9 near the Tountain: A witness festitied that ho [ the tnest quatity in sbundance, are awaiting the | §ive niecific Eemady fue the cire af Sait Khenm or buch an ftetloct ua (it ot Martin Luther aud | ingued, aud tiels children slong honarabia | Sty fiat bo ona i, Aoariclr ANELIGICIE RUdIdbe CoDS | fiad heard bini, an hour bofore, derlde 8t Wene. | plaw of civifizatlon: wiilo the eluate, th the | Ferci, IHngwar, Teter, Fusher, Chin Whlky varcert 1 our muderts vHizanon could selecs § lae va Y Upport- o teach how 10 put up 8wt stack, if they | fride at tho same spoi; and sccurdiugly the | abscncoof the carly aud lato frosteof wuuny | Msterated itinbien and Minches, Iiiack Hedds, Gruos jue and tescliing these idiers, but 1t 48 not puss #ible to err lu tne notion that bepwary fa a mis- demeanor and sliould be followed at opeo by & removal of the offender from soclety, Thers would be thousands of pour peool® wortliy poor, who would be cured for by chitrches, anil sssociation, aud fricuds; but tho couflrmed trumps of city aua couvtry should ba re- moved at_once to whobls ot all induatry, It st be evileut tu al) that tho century which or Wurms, tiuaturai ledaess of the Coroner’s Jury returnied a verdict that * Death $Housi i Cracsed Skinn and ol Vealomiar, wua tho result of Gud's l;ym, ‘|muzmnm for his uncivil carriwre fi the pace.” Mad Distzsch been there, tho verdict woutd vrobably have been, ** Death caused by bathing in the cold water.” ‘I'ne power of the spring snd influence of the salut are, however, not guutined to the practico of mediciuo aud surgery, bul are sometimes FRAUDS EPIDEMIC. AEUMON BY THZ NEV. W, F. CHAYTH. The Rev. W F, Crafte, of Triolly AMethodist Church, preached yesterduy morning on the #Eplaemic of Fraud,” taking as his text: ‘Tuls wlso comath for(h from the Lord of ilasts, which I wonderful fu counsel aud oxcellont in Working, —/o,, aEciil,, 50, . varta of Canada und of the Jucust vlague of the 1Tnlted Statos, placss the country in advance of the adjoining coudnont i this respuct, Op the other hand, the comtructinn of the rullway wuuld bring Ameri. ca, 80 10 speak, nearly 100 miles nearer to Kigland, The formation of a reilway with a corres ponding servien of steamers vunuecling tho alund with the malnland on the vther siide know how it is done, aud give the reason for each operation. BDUCATING TUE I'EOPLE, Every now and then 8 political speaker insists that one of the principal things to bo dune is to oducate the people, and theu they will seo that his party, or the principics he advocates, If he las auy, sre nght. The folly of such a statement s ut ouco apparent when o jutellect Jiko that of Carlyle or Palmerstun, and could wiaka 1t fnd In fugeand beggery o noble shiape of §ife, it wunld tien bo a pleture to us ol the civillzation which shaped Earops and Britaln fors tuuusand veard. Iu wany goeat facts of the bast you wil) thus flud whebce fol- Juwad the ereutiriver of indolence and poverty, How large has this evil become? ln% gland sud Wales the becgars vompare with the whole Burna, iind Lineuatisin Sure ca ol the Hond and’ Boues, e & » B onfolioded with skin disoases DU B8 ADOVE BAMEL. wopulation us ona to about weventeen, In Tree , . . Tho text was, ho said, another modo of put- | we conslder that thers = are weli- | fuablfested du certaln judicial aud executivo | would eusblo the Atlantic trade—nasseugers, | sonfuaded with sin siseascs Beurur b ot bt il tho 10 1 much lurger, pothane on6. g | 1ty war et it Tevve. poumact izl | |\ tho truth of the doctrine of universal dl. | cducated people belouglug b0 ali partios, fuuctions, as (n tho bove cascy and 1o tha ful- | mals wnd werchandic—o bo landed stand | BRI, Someily dnd oTIGHEA RESLVENT to the world, should not leave fuumrlnn to e evil in Amerien_thaw it Was fn xtecuth century, Wo are Bading auswess to mauy old quostions which perptexed our fathers, We have learned how to travel; how to drag produce long distances; how to mall g sbip across tho Atlantic fu elght days; how to send nows: how to grow forty bushel of wheat from ad acre, which ouce produced ouly ten; how to muke nails; how to cast guus, ~Dbut not yet have we sat 1 sud reasunied together sbout the quantity aud quality of our bewgurs, 1t 18 periectly cortain thas should city or Stote it down by this question to solve i, 1t would not be threo years beforo the beg- gurs or thy yarabunds would disappear from road and ostreet. lu cur towes and cities wo ail love material splendor e wo o moral Leauty, and will pulld a Court-Ifouse t» please the eyo loug Uefore wo will buy » 50,000-acre fatws for the sceregation of idlers. There {s a county ju this lowiug: During she uizht a tulel drove a cow away from her stall vear the well. In tho mornlng the owner was' ablo to follow them easily by the deep tracks they both mado, eve in solid Mimestone, On dnving the cuw bac) 1o upusual indentations were mado by her fect.* Throughthe sgeucy of thuss * tracks ” the thief Was not ouly caught, but “euuverted to the true faith.” “Another thief, who had stulon a borse frooy near the well, soon sfter fuuud his right arin 8o bedly swollen und ‘:um_'ul that he was thad t0 retund the horse to oblati rellol, ‘Thy fegend concerning the orlrin of the fountalu t tnost romantic. A wealthy, beauti- tul, and retived virglo (afterwards 8t, Wene- tridup Yylug (rom the race of s rvjocted luver Wof high degree,” was overtaken near an old Cstholic ~ Church 1o wbich she was feciug for refuge. At a stugla_stroke with bis broad swurd, ber dlsappoluted sultor seut ber livud fAiylug dows Wo Lib) Hke & Joot-ball, At dispatched rom intof Northv Amierica almuost 1,00 wiles nearer to Enropo than New York, thus avaiding the most deagervus bart of the voyagzo between New York anda Cape Raco whers 60 muby disasters have ccenrred, TIF WABASIT, Ta the Hiditor of Ths Tridune. Proria, lil, Bevt. 7.—Your paper of yester- day states that anattempt was madeat tho meetiug of the Executive Ratiroad Committes Thuriusy to equalize the amount of baggawe sllowed free for each passenger, and also says the Chicugo roads allow 130 pounds, while thy 8t Touts toads oculy allow 100 pouuds, The Wabash Railwuy s an ex.eotion to this rule, that Company bas atwuys allowed each tlrst- cluss passenger 150 pounds frum St. Louls, as well ms all other stations, gotwithstanding the ‘wunilurtul cures. Drugaist, and wi be un recelf Lol prl 0 cents Tor sinall boxe arge hozew, contalnini two w1l oue-half tines tha ausbilly of suiall, aud tierefors wuch sbe cheaper for ol Culichra ftasolveat (san. ba set by axbres e of Cuido n be sent by exvress obily), 31 lbufllug‘(l boltles {fll’ 83, 14 Crepar K& ST Wholeto Drus- 45.; Hoston, Has, und belleviuge sl sorts ol rollsiuns. 1t I8 nut s0 nuch edueation that the people beed us it §s o good cxample. A good furmer will havo mauy imitators, Agricuitursl sud othier juuruals have been preachiug to tng pevple the vulue of thurough cultivation and preparation of the soil, and yet, in passing « duzes plowed flelds receutly, we notieed thut FOOR PLOWING *was tho rulo, end guod pluwiue tho exception. Why dovs 4 wan plow o stubble-tield, aud Teuve it Imkfl.gu though & druve of Los bud beeu rootivg (n ity awd ted becu drivenaway bo- fore they vumpleted the jobt Why not tury tbe weeds wil uuder, uut o sight, aud out of the wuy of the drill-teetht i s just as cusy to do it as It s to hull-plow, the ground, We asswue that lust sorg, after thors was ua further wee for thous, your biows werd wiped dey, sud all dirt cleaued trom the wood aud frou work, and thut the polished sur- Lucome o we aven the per to every twelvo of the population, Between 1he combined despotinn uI retigion and polities that unbiappy land has been enabled to export beguars Iu wonderiul nutbers, oue estute slone sending 2000 to Auwvrics, ono _year alung ship- |vl‘x;‘.' 4,000 poor yrirls ta Aunml{z. Italy, Spaln, Tloltaud, Belziun, and Portugal coniain one hauper Jor every eight of tho whals population. Vhat proportlon exists between tne beggars aud the whole beoplo of vur owncountry Ighnvu Lwen unable tu Juarn, but the bropurton must Ve more fuvorable than that of England, In Muassuchuseits slout v fv twenty 18 o Legear. Frown such o basie wo_hiay fnfer that our land vussesses tully 000,000 of depondents naide Trum those made dependent by belng deaf, or fiwgue, or elck, Aud when we remember thut of these milllune the citles contain the larzest ratlo and the most dangerous clsss, tus question of duty becomes limpurtunt to the degreo of panfulocss, Tho fael that of latg vine Nlunination,—anotber way of statlng that God was not only In all, but sbove ail. Religion was not o thing fora few places, but for all places, and adavted to meet all the wants of humanity, This universal divine illuoination, declared In tho text as given to the furiner, was not less given to thoss eupagod fo eoy other busluess. Bat, as oxygon united with s}l the othier chemical elementis excopt one, so relizion united with all the occupations of lile except one—sin. Among some of the Mobamnedaos thcre was po visible connection between moral ity and religion, & prayer after belng tho pi cursor of @ murder or ou adultery. Henes the Arsblsu proverh: 50 you nelghbor hus been on a pligrimage to Mewca once, wsteh hin; iF wwlce, avold bis coming; it T Wholesalo Aizeu Aeveuson & Ca,, Lord, Klauten| Hurlbut & Co.,"Vouinn & King, Mor SANFORD'S Jamaica Ginger The Quintessenco of Jamaica Ginger, Choice Aromatics, and French Brandy, A preparation 80 elegautly davored and medicinally URcetiva aa Lo alurly aurpass sil previous preparations, Kaseuces or Krtrscta of Ginger, Compoatilon, Slerh Tuas, Pmn Helievers, 8ad the bundred sad one disguste 104 aud nauseating bosseta whh whith we bave veen wunt 10 dose eursedves. 1ts Inktautancous wflect ln Chulers, Cholers Murbus, Crampa sud Faigs. Chruale Disrrhwa, Drsentery sud Chiolwra Infantum, Disrruca in Teething sud all Sumwer Complatuty, Dyspepsls, Matuicucy, Sluggiah Digestivs, Waas of Toac and Ac- thity o e Slomacy and Bowele Oppresiun after Emiug, Riang of Fuod sad swilar Allaeata Chitls and Yevers, Colia3ad CuLia Feverbl bymptomi, MalurGl Fovers, Palosin (s Bonze uad Julute, 5)uiptuius of Kbeumattam, Seuratata aid Uvut, Cold Extrewbtes, Buspended Circutation sud buprened coviiliion uf the Vital Forcea, feader 1t Wo Sandard Wuusehold afedl- clne tluuughivat the fvugth and Dreadth of the Lad, Ou sea, un laod, for the traveldr. CoF tbe Juuad. Uw aced, under all clrcuinatances a0d guaditioos, Lulh as s uigdlcine and aa s guutlo stimulaot or beverage, 2 Is the Most graleful and fective proparativn ever com- pounded fu the bistory ul mediclac, Vewary of diiuted 8ad worsliless imitations v medded by dealers (0r purooscs of €alu. sk for 04831 Upua baTISE SANVOID'S JANAICA UINGER. 3 3ears, shice our lust War und the last com Hiato that ts remarkable for fts Court House, | threo times, move futo auother strect.” There | faces were coatixd with vtl wud whiting, or white- | the point whery It struck the ground tho foun- | facy that the Unfon-Depot Toads at - 8t. Louds vial ¢riats, the number of ablu-bodivd bey v 1 " . . | lea low. I0they were, you noed not | taln” justantly burst forth, The priest, 8t | gretrying tocompel them only to check 10 Nioe rnmfily b “: g that (.‘Lnuumfi{‘n That bolacy of law cost pethaps three willions, | was too much conformivg to this practical di- | lead wud tullow, B .e‘_:b mmz‘: oud BOL | Hucno, und u[' plous cupgregation, hearing 1he | Srott f‘g\\'m i ot e iasy 0 much with & cloth to remove . will scour befure thiey hove s gone rod. If your weeds are 8 fool bigh or mope, 8 slugls wWeed. hook, such as has been duescnibied 1 this curse- spuudetics thue sud aguin, witl turn them under aud 08t of st U0 the weeds ane short, & chain way be fustened tu tho wluw-bean fu such o manner that 1t will drar jast ahead of the furrow-sllce us b gues over, und every weed will be covered. We pre- suwe that you always use a rolling-vutser; it makes the plow ruu eaner, und leaves e edgo of the Jurrow square, Thesc are sll littis thlugs, but ure Bt Beglected by the guod larwers FOOK DRIVINU. . Hulf the Toad {8 1u the driver. A guod stroug tewn attachied to a plow does DU TequIre o wreat deal of driving, 16 Abelr barness 18 prop- erly udjusted, the draft of the plow will keep them gulng straght. ‘Tuls fs el true of tean hitcbed to 8 wagrow, whew the joads are gouwd sod Lot avisals wre of cqual streogth and splrit. Sut this rarcly babpeus. Uits bureo 18 Learly siwsys lsrger, stronger, of faster than thu otber, wud such roquire @ driver. Docs oue burss start quwk aud the osler sluw, thu slow one sbould always bo touched with the whip, or gived sowes other adtaonitiuy befure the WOt Lu stakt 1s sbokza, ‘fbe retne should aiwuye be a little shorter ou tue fast Borse, 86 that Le way be geutly chock- «d, and 1o otbier ot fuel Wb ciléct of & tight reisn. Pue driver’s aticutisu should glways be ven to Lis team, sud the fuad oves whichi e b clisie, IF ghere is s gut or o wud-bole o ve oaveided, 105 L Jdaly o (avjue Had that money been fuvested fu stich o way that 1o tramp could roam {u the country, cach acre of land would huve been bought up st lnmge cost by mea auzious to live where there wus pramise of pesce atl around the homestead. Qur vatiousl Loveryment gave sixty willions of money to a rafirowd corporation, and count- lesa willlons mogy to huudreds of oshor cor- porations; but it las not yet cuwmu to 2By cul- wention of sl bcnuty', has made no study of thut ** vegear question,” which ju Europa has Tisen Up ulten fu bioody outlines belore Kings aud Purllaments. 1 would not have the come uulty take buck suy of the moncy ojfured to waterll - thgs. Oar rutiways aud our gumu bulldings urc & great gowd; ut 10 81l this zeal for the matertal we must aidd W zeal DOW tor moral thiugs, aud wust sea fu the arsest aud tndustrial education of tnggars vast work, demundiug slwost Junmcdial Yo, That uur wite can think ol bitier Jaw: Feaurts than pleased 1ho wen who brunded unfuriunales a8 slaves, aud of better laws aud busurts thay pleses the philosopucr who saye Uie idle should die, oue nuwy cuteriun uo suatt. It reuins for us unry 1o wmaky the sueation onie ol tarucat debate and efurt, for aut »f the antellectual attentlon suciety be- B'0W3 ULOL 8Oy polnt Lrogress sortugs. Watt lovked wiently lto a delicute elemcat. aud bis engine sprand up, Alorss sat dowu by snother uiystery of nature, wnd the teleerabh came to the world through bils medaation, A fow states- men pundered over huimas ngbts, wid great Republis erew ous of the dreams, A King ot Batiug tle dlaolute women ol €, wade an el dluvely tem cut of vorcement of religion uod morslity eveu amonyg Protestauts, and 't was the building of tuts fence, 48 1L were, betwe B LWo, 08 the mot- Lo of * busincss is busiveas,” which was ab the root of the epldemlc of fraud that bus been sweeplng su disastrously through the sunks of the Evangelical churches aud tuking somoe of the 1most pruminent Christians tbrougbout the laud, 1t was the iguoriug of thiv all-ucws of ro- liglon, the bullding of this fence between life i plety, besween the splicro of What was sup- posed 10 belung Lo Uod sud the sphere of what wus supposed Lo belon to the world, that was respotiaibile for this epldeaile. Yelluw fover was a terrible scourge, but it destroyed only the Ludics of nien, whilg this broad fever, sweeping through the commerclal world, was lar inure termble because of dts power o dostroy buth sout and budy lu beil. What truvesties had ULeen furnished (n the words v '? tidelity, % trusttunds? 4 Lru " cle,, us used In conuectiun with many T t vorporatious sl odiviuuals! * Neliabie had eome almost to mean * o e and relie.” “Muouy a Coiristian bad allowed his watch to run down on Suuday vizht pud not allow it to run In bis place of bugiuess. It wus beeomiug, thereforg, ta look 8y the quurantine regulutions of the Courcl, to sev the root vf the evil,and have it rouoved. flhe vrofessediy Chirlstlan muu went to eaticc on Seday, took ® epintual stiwulant fn - the service, had “fawily Jwarers and sald erace at bis table, aud on Mo v mornug weat to s place ot bushiess with- ovut really askine G, to biesa hit duning e crils 01 that bdsinesi. Lle caine Lo s puint <r¢ Ko dlias Wad WOk 1t WItsadt tuls winmuotion, fwmediately vusbed forth, sud were borrified by the Dbloody spectacle. The ood priest, 1n bis Tage cursed the perpetrator of the outrage,— Lord Cradocus,—whercupon the ¢arth a5 ouce opened aud took bt fu. The good inan thea replaced thy pead of the virgln, covered the body with lus cloak, prayved outly, aod lod the girl spraog up perfectly well,—the ouly trace uf the truly ** vapital?' wwputation belng athin white e arvuud ber peck, which ro- wuined dlitiuct unutil ner natural death. 1 proot uf these vecurreuces, 1 wis shown a gurge fu tho billside, sadd to be the crack in the curth loto whieh Lord Cradocus fell; also, & uwber of rustolored spots on stuucs about thy¢ umks:, sakd {0 be causcd by the blood Just Ly the decapitated salut. ‘That the crack ia uiore than 8 hundred yurds from the eprivg, and that wany ethe stonecs 3lone the sireuu are sluilarly colored \by.uxhle of tron), are lacts which du pot at sl *dblush the faith of the plous devoteww. AW the rebeadiug operution oa thy salut occurroy ju the brecuce of the whole ewuircgaiion, tuchuding lee par- cnts, and (s attested by the pridsy and many other cqually good auy plous weu, tis evidwice 1% Lo 3y the Jeast, wure wbuudavt agd of & better quality thag tbat relied upon lusowe cases wiuea dld not decur i North Wules, 3 1. D, Ganmisos, - Lias sprungg up to Lusten ou to crimivality many Who were vacs ouly indolent, does not lussen Lhe value and painfulucss of vur inquiry. ‘T thind quesilon way be, What leglslstion baye Btates In post times taken ln relerence to able-bodied mendicantsf Tho old countrles alt toutuin récords of perpetual legislation fn this durection, ‘Fhie Enghsh octs fu the fourteeuth Fentury vonfer 4 great favor upon our thue by Wnding ys sultatle lunguage with which Lo desiguate tlst peculiar cluss of bersons uuder consideration to-day. Our Bond *tramp soeis W apply W ouly & pare of tho great crowd, ‘The kayglisi scts denowinate thews as S abieduod od, sturdyg. wid valaud bege yare ayd Uret enbadivd the 1dea thut Bo 0no 0L thls cluss shoujd bug vut ol the town where e had been o pesident for theee yeora. ‘Jhis $ould dimuish the wuyyut of iniposture by hmiting thy \iluqm,-m\' ol the taly ol wo W Lhiose ears which could know bow fulse it were. A wan Lewgung fu onw viilage to amend 3 calua- Uty wunely bad befuilen i 1 a towu » bundred Lhles away was ut onee prreated. Thyp peaalty Ul thus taxlug Gutside charity was two days und uizhls in o duugeon, zud theo a dogging, $od Lidatltorcturn to the town lere B was newn, wude tu yesterday's papr sind oblize I C. Tuwasesn, G. . A, Wabash luilway, e —— OBITUARY. Bostox, Sept. 6.—Mre. Frank Whicker (Maud Hilton), uctress, dicd to-day at Jyde Purk, of consumption. 2 e —m— - * Beacousficld aud Moateflore, An interesting Incident ocgurred at the (Cbare Ing Cioss Siation lu London, la coanection with the peeeption miven to Lord Beagustield oo his return frop the Buerliu Congr Among the prowisest people preseut Lo receive ifu was the veteran Jewials plilavthropar, Sir Moscs Muout- ctiore, who I8 now 4 yeurs old. lord leus! Leauox futroduced the venerabie Baronet t tho Prewier, wbom e Lad bever mw befory, aul tke two sligyk bunds cordiully wud resi ed ln conversation tursume, wiuutes. Bir Sloac who b4 celebratod for bia Bleay services lu bo half of tho uppreseed dewd of tho East, exuress~ :‘dhhluhll ctho o T ihe Coonl u puarsnteclug relighus oguailly to the Jews ol kuumtfl:ll, and ¥Lu wll-.-uwnnl.\um re— plied that this W ome ot the Wost patisfactory Teaulta of . the work { dose by the Congress. Tho sceoe while tuis " couversativn was gowse on 1s described fu 6 pri- vate httee frow Londou as altugetber reaidrk- able. Tud crowd iy Lhe statiol Wiy inweose, aud the bubbub aud checrlug wers slmost deaf- cumig: but the Lero of Lhe Luur, upparcatly ob- Nvivds of LG pariiudgs, sceted entisely g 1 Henry VIL' day it was found necessary \0 Pasa 4 tote severe law, aod *rthe ablc- bodied, sturdy und vadlant begear ¥ suliercd e 10se of bis right ear for a secoud ulleuse, yiud fur @ third tranagreasion be was indicted or t Wandering, apd loiterfug, snd fdlvacss, Sudwus put to death as un encmy af s coun- V5 1u (e times that foilowed this beery, om T PO Fight with a Sva-Base. ‘The Norwich Huttetintells u story of a remark- able strugile WIth & gisbL buss, caucht fo @ Eoall GhoNedotic i Mondad. Uau escated by £old by sll Whulesale ana Retall Drugglats. Grocers, 3nd Dealers (0 Mol LuruugBout We Vulted Statcs BUd Caiaias

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