Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 23, 1878, Page 5

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THE CIIICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY BLPTEMDBER 23, 1878 i f i almost all minidz enn aecept of them ; its organi- zation by ao varied that all pions hearta ean find viace there. As the word hn"\u'lul"z('l witn changing climes anid sear4, nml was bhuilt of marhte for Ciceroand 8eneca, and of logs for you Aua mes was klseed by tropfeal breezes for fome, e L . §] # fally whiled away the postprandial moments by explalning exactlv which of tha monkes-tribes our ancestors had the honor to apring from. 1t wat, the Professar kindly stated, not fram auny known antbiropol], but *a hianch of the « in the shove, anil farmers who carry grists to il witl do sel! 10 heed it. : ROAD-LAW AMENDMENTS, Tt 1s generaily concorded tiat our present Roml Jaw iy dar from perfect, and that it witl requre £oe snendments at the hands of the next start Lhls young rongregation were evidentl naone finer, or even as fine, &y those worn Inet many who deserve great credit for the work | evening. The same play will be repeated this they have done and the sacrifices they have | cvening. and those wlsh{nz to ree a fiue Aoclety made, They must ot be discouraged If they | drama, thoranghly rendered, shonld not mies Ao nat recelve the credit that was due them. | the opuortunity. Next Friday evening Mra. What they had done they did for the cause | Hesseappears o her ereat part of leborah. TF T letter the land was knpt wet sith fraternal RELIGIOUS. Blood, {he Weas of the Christian Clnrch are therefore aeen fn fta arlein only fn the ontlines of the gpirit and not in the exsctneas of a Tet- : iatian | Ler that there mav be room for all, a oncnees what Constitutes the Christian | L E Thre 0 e i oiand secta. The aure | 11 tarhine monkeys of the OJd World.* Tiie ac- e el mind, sl upon the beneh of | shaken for othera by winter's atorm, but has {1 of tied, not for thelr own agzrandizement. Tne | She Is sabl to be superlor fn this part to any | Leglalattire. [0 order to get the law as near " o ¥ Church--Sermon by Prof. fiatice, tearned mopy fenerations ago that aleass becn omo_lnme=tie piace of ane prare, | oret fhini that could happen and whicl imlght | iy that hat set'pigued 1t in this e, Satur. | puriect as pgibic, the Comimissianees of High. Ebie ot ez, for the unfortiinale, . tendel, oue love, one macreldl meinory, xo the Church, ing. equity must_neser be Injured by a want of Swing 1 lrm.y Great matters must not be the shave of sinall rr’mlcrs“ b{unm m‘l“l'y:ur): ;::“uel'l_l u#:g D s { merey of a ryllable, a word, . Misstonary, Enterprises in Tar- | QU 5 o, Drinalycls that man ihust be Lcy--Address by the Rev. gosernc by general truths rather than by exact forms, Christ was a forerunner of com- Dr, Jessup. mon human greatness, and fle poured into the « | crucible, whete Iils church was formed, tho grand outlines of ilis holy oresniam, e a0 Dedieation of a Jowish Synae | detined *faith'" that no good man can cactpo n can_posse 4 5 gogue on the North Side. k;xl'ulm(‘i"l‘lsd‘:n?" Sil_pasoss It An Abte found e fn :‘fr plcrfl:ct"‘lu;lp‘lcn{: ‘n Jonl'; in his decp sdom, hut amid u;l;lwln]f yfi’l:g):‘gg;n :filf‘lggq“lc‘lll dnfil;‘lm::!‘lls lu! “"“:;‘l[y";, ncunfi e > * . nor Magdalen, nor . John could frof. Swing preachied yesterday morning at (,‘,",“:"2;2,Wl u.lu m‘z]ut ‘u:nlrel 'ul-filuru ."ld chy takin, it 3 . The only object of faith was to "';Ifi?‘n‘:l“ 'r-figif';hmtf.'fmfflfl' :n:;x: il bhafid ‘Alxllx;“e piety and rightecousnces, aud hence my Clinreh, and the gates af Hell shail not prevall | Cuirist left 1i to be an attachiment to the Ureator This verae I8 a part of the great case In courty | Subsequent with the Protestants and Roman Catholics par- "::';:‘;‘:;'I"l‘l!:";"fh""f\’,':a' hlea woulls have mnde ties to the larco and long suit, In the English | BEERPYCe Tenohottier 1n the jetter like wild Chancery Conrts sume cascs have drageed along [ heasts. All through the primary doctrines this for a hundred years, but such litigation {s ont~ fi""#".“fifi“fl:‘i'z'°x'«.’u'.’.'%‘x"é".;.‘,,"c 'u:.r.lgl :{.‘l:)\; rmn:::rl. ot e isfory st ‘“[‘,Klq ‘: "nuf:;?r';ll mcl:s by tne New Testament groun and scek his Matthew, for wlso men have. been fn COUS | iz from those centuries wiich made pre. over 1t fov at st fiftecn centuries, The R0~ | yion’an cssentia) and a varation a captal of- maniata beljeve that Christ gave His King | frense, dom to the man Peler, along with tl:m \\ly’hml:n v:;«l from the Inrlr{n:ry to llhe |‘ec- ower to transmit; the Protestants be- | ondary Ideas the same mode of cxpression fol- ;cve thiat Chrlst based His Church upon thoso | lows x""r Wo I}Hu the r-n!rl_v, of baptisin, but fed. It fa- | nottheform. All wemav certaluly kuow s 'I“'“":'!" :"m“—':hr "-‘";'l "'":"’ el:!clh::::: {hio gendor | thia? that persons comini into the Chureheliould vora this idea thal ntths | come wi a soleinn vow, wade jo the name of of the word when it passca from thoman tothe | (ud, that they will scek vunity of life, They Churct, It reads, *Thon aro petrot, & rocl, | will asle tho, Bpirit to wssh thelr souis e ruk petra T i founding my Church” | Ifom 'sin. o come n. the namo of " this divine purlfication is the spirit of the rite, Flius, the Churel was ot to bo founded upon | LY, B being B opee. e vor aE. ki o nait, bt upon & stroug truth, and henco [ yoiiism fades awny in tha distance of history, that gender which expresses ideas displaces the | ‘The *irepentance, the *‘confession of sins,” gender which desfzuates a molo personage. It umn“ld‘:-l:{mt ;»rntlhgtvlli h u"r;’l‘r’u‘,"" x::ru cul'c‘“\lx ” #cen, by ot of Julin, cture Matthes was inspired b must .l‘u\'u rc;(lmrtcd scenie of baptlsm, lina Tong siuco faded; and wo correctly the statement made Ly nis Master. | jp i yiot wiio may have been fmmersed, what But Jet us not add anytbing to the quantity and | gues may havo Y)u'n sprinkled, wime fittle e confusion of this debate. St Is my wish to | elildren tnay have been permitted to toke this wffer somo thoughts upon the Cll:rlnlon lchu:;;h :':;n".o urv ol‘r;: \;::(lt ;:;Kavg: cl‘)llunr’:nruuvr::: r't';:;:‘;tl:v":fi 1} erception and (£ il ad. ::,I‘mm bofdroiny OR1 ROITOR Bidehite detall was not lelt for the purpose of kindling "Ihie Church difiers from religlon. All men | strife, but ft camu from the amyple fact that the Tiold to o religion, but not all know of or Lelleve | Ereat minds which founded the Chirch were in acchurch, A churchi s o rellgious soutls | concerned only over the spirit of things, and ment organized into o brothertiood; and henco | hence lmfi]cuu’ll to establish au fron-like letter, the term relimion 8 much broader than the { That wiich is desthied to become great tust Yerm church,—tha fatier belog one of the forms | tieal only In great principles, and tnust accord acsumed by the former, Tie Christian Glurch | Hberty fo the minds and ages which are to rally {« the Curbtian seotiment ormanized fnto a | around it fu subsequeul vears. A churel m protherhiood, nud this term ds therefore_much | MI¥ing a small luea would nced some other narrower than the Clristlan relizion,—the re- | fotnder than Chirlst. greatly endanger the succesa of thelr work | day matinee and eventz, one of the most popn- would be discord and strife among themselves. | lar of (ierman singing farces, * Lumpusd Vaga- 1 they worked together in peace and harpiony, | bundus,’” with Bchmitz, Hclm‘m‘, and Puls, the he bad no doubt that thetr congregation woutd three excelient comedians, in the Jeading parts. cantinuie to prosper and much good be accom- - ;'“;Mdh I;«:lr :)mllu‘n;uh of vclu"uw llanoln.r-n STAGE NOTES, hail gulfered hardships, persccution, tortures, % = anid aven death hecanse they wouti fot give up | | Tohn McCullongh Teft last night for Cleve: thelr relimion, Thetr religion had taken deep | Jand. root in their hearts, 11 they meant to bring up Mr, Haverly returned home from New York thelr chll:{rnn in mlruhz:nn of tnetr fore- | on Friday lunt, athers and make sraciites of them, the hal to Implant 1 Aeealy. nto thelr Yeacta, | Miss Jennie Murdoch (Mrs. E. F. Thorne) has :ll‘lm‘xlru lvrv:re some who clnll;nllcdtll:n& ln:‘vlrotlx'l‘d folned the Opera-House Company, 8t. Louls, 0 thelr praying just as well at home 0 the Svnagogue b ors few wottld o thinin this | M8 Laurs Doun and other members of the practical age. The Synagogue was crected as a | Frhish Comedy Company are reported stranded, house for the King of ifonors. There was the | 8tBuifalo. Cause—bad business. place tn say their prayers, They must condut Mr. Ao D. Gordon (“Dr. Byntax" of THg themselves so that the King of Honors would | Trintxe during the Deecher-Tilton trlal) has 2:::;"“ to dweil tn thelr nudet and be their | had scveral new plays accepted by Eastern man- o agera, Iic also dwelt at some lenzth upon the neces- sliy of crtalishing 8 schoot n canncction with spickee. Hatiinaal his comoant, Insluling the new Synarogue for the purpuse of fustruct- | 71i%e Wianchard, Lewis Aldsich, and Charlen Ing tbe children In seligfous mattere. Too l:mloe.v,a;ull open al klaverly’s to-niht In * The miich war belnig done for #snagoguca and too | Davites. hittle for schiouis. ‘They now had ten synagogties The Evangeline Combination, after perform- to one school, while it would be oetier ta have | inz to fmmense houses at Pittshurie and Crex ten schools to une aynagogue. land, will to-ntaht commenve & iwo weeks' ene ‘The Itev. Dr. Horinan Bien, of the May street | gagement at Hooley's. congregation, delivered 8 Very eloquent ser- 3 i . inon, Alter delicating the hotiso anit 18 con. | winnre L 1 I0ra 8 play of WRilliards,t not tents to thelr proper uses, he then went on to fi'é?;‘,’.;‘!‘.";’lfi,,fi:“,;‘,{"g&';{,f, "ih;“(f('.m{,\"?'{’f say that It was now sbout 4,000 vears since the: | poriy. proved o failure, ana Mr. Thorne has first housc of God hisd been erccted in the des- | poneto Roston to il an nnrx;u‘mcnl at the ;_rll. n;h:u. hmurfi Im.!I bc'cn "!‘I‘d! llfll."(:}lh‘l':l. Sloward Atheneum, hen they were all praying to the same God tn > {he aamng Torine And . the same . language. | Mr. McKee Rankin, atier thls seskon, wil Where and what were the Jews to-day! Scat- | fettle on his large farm near Detroit and le- tered over alf portions of the world; oue por. | come a hierder of live slock. e recentls pur- fton reformed, another orihiodox, and anather | chased a cardoad of Bhetland ponies. in New semlorthodos, snd 8o forth. ‘The Gerianns | York, amd is understond to have sent an spent kept alouf froin tho Polanders, the Polanders | 0 Wales to buy a ship-load of the sauie clase of from the Portuguesc, and so oh. 11 this dedi- | animals. :T"un mnl:!jn hnu); I:"”H on nnhthdr l|lv:m; THE ];A'im‘x]"n\ ey woul anish a uses that sundere N SN. theim apart aud created strife and discord. ‘Thiey : S, 22 must become and iry Lo be one people that ol oPe G prased to onc (iod only. But one idea should ""l;y'::'r',‘:' rl'.':":l‘_',';:::wfh:‘:!,‘,,,r "",-,,‘"',""\ fusplre them, and that was, God alone is God, i‘ 1=, A "1 it T fi;‘ and Inve thy neighbor as tuysell. If they be- ontraMt=Eilrapeanilerioiture=Thy Iil; came Inspired with this, theu all would go'well, | 1ol Industeinl University—t ioneat stili- aud 0o iscord and atrife would gain a foothold ers'=Road-Law Amendinenta—Why We in their midst. Hot ono week more and Grumble—Corn and Wheat. Rosh Hashana, the new year, the day of pen- | . From e Oien Correrpondent, ance, would ‘|'“ nhon "‘37‘ und thls “"‘:‘l‘hc last | Cawratow, JiL, Scot, 3.—The season for opportunity he kad to imoress upen them tha : R et A g prl'.pl:xrlnx: the premises for winter ts now at thelr God and thelr fellow-men. They must not | hand. In some localitfes frost has whitened Ieave their * Beth EI" with o sensc ‘of hatred | tho corn-leaves, aml tender vegetation of all and ¥{1-wiil towards one nnotlier, But not alone | kinds has fallen a prey to the destroyer. We houin ob g fm‘;?.‘;él‘éi".“.;.‘:“fi,z'v‘:?n‘:,{h“fl.',‘i are admonished to make preparations for our come liere on the Sahbath because their busi- | ©D 8bd our anfmals’ comfort during the four tes o the hums s wags of cah county atiould meet fogettier at %,m'fini.‘;‘,‘;‘,:}‘,‘}.:.,',‘,:‘;{.‘{“,’,:‘;fi,‘",,‘;, AL some convenient place, and talk over thadmper- | for patent mdicines if 1ta ancesteal branch had fections of the present faw, and conshiler such | been s monk with sound breathing apparatus, amendinents o4 mav be suggested. The con- s ———— P clusions of each mecting shouhl be embndated in resolutions, shore amd to the point, that they OBITUARY. may be used a3 n gukle by the members of the Spectal Disnateh to The Tridune, {A‘p:llph"w:r l’lmf': m‘o{- tnme !nmlllxulcr lhuln\"l. lew Yonk, Sept. 22.—Mrs, Josebhine Bv heileve that legllators, as & rule, are syifle ‘oods, who for twenty - years has kept & house Ing, and Blso desire, to please their constifnents A L Wi e to do 8o i1 the latier . | OF -Tame In this city, dicd suddenty to-day fn dicate tn cxpreen terms Jurt what they want, | $h¢ bouse of Sallic Mouitrle, on Thirty-first When n new Jaw fe wanted. 8 petition in gen- | strect. She was born fn Nuw Orleans, and was cral terms (s presented, snd—the members | between 45 and 5 years of age. In 130 she heing, perhiaps, ignorant of the matter—sowme o . i feitow fieen ip 8 bill thst. will make | Teos(0 Caltforaia and marricd Judzn Woods, plenty of work fur the lawers, and, before Ite Of Sonoma Counte, by whom she had two ehil- Imnort Is known and apureciated, it ne- | dreny both of whom are lvinz. Her husband alaw, Thedesire of a majorlty, it 1s | dsing, Mra. Woods turned to this elty, :r.gum {;"u‘y l‘l!:'f;'l‘;llr;l hut, lll;cl"kl'mwlm( how | and opencd a baguin fn Mercer strect, which 0 do "y g iC) ‘ate n wrong. Hay T The resolighons Jst What. 15, wanted. 1t TSR Jusil docimbigtale soung rae;of this f8 dune aud they are pubilshed, a free”dis- | e town., Later #he mosed lo 133 Eighth cussion will'soon veseal anv fauite, Let the [ Areet. and, afier that, Lo Thirty-firs Commisshoners meet before the 18t of January, | She was once iweaithy. but has lost much money, e T although aho was never in actunl want, Her WHY WE GRUMDELE. health hnd declined for two years, and sho had \We have heeome chronle grumblers, and yet | becn 1ving in comparative privacy up-town, we have Hllie reasanto find fauly ‘with uny | hore hewns attemded by Dr, Quackenboss, one but euraclves. We scold beeanee we arc fu | STof. Alonzo Clark, and Dr. Willard Parker. Gebt, nd v erent inany farmers yould repudiate | 312 Was visiting gallie Mouitrle on Saturday, mottnes 1 hoy courde” They curse th | a0d was fortud dead on tio tloor of the room, o Juaned thent moies, and” loole spon | Javing, evidently fallen while crossing it. Cor- Vit They forget that, when they | 9Ber Waltman wiil hold an mquest to-day, burroved, they did B of titeir own lice will a Pt They got the maney, boneht morg 1 more BULLY FOR THE BLACKS | ¢ mluvrls-lnlmulur it about :I;( . In Special Ditpateh tn The Tridune, 1eing to the comiorts (hat tost rople L C. =, satmers weludad, ow enjos, tre. Bloumington ,aw_‘,‘l’." Rl i 3" et "',,fl“"}dm“d Lovter telis the sollowing trathst rallyerdoliarsiuw ayerages shout. four tons o doabt theoy 12, us Vot Samneeomarkn, o | 3007 This I8 less than the coinage, and ladica- marked ehsnge 1 e intel ‘l.r of most honwholde | tonsare that the Treasury will not be alle RHite cizticen. Fuare uvo, Bing car «tt | under the present order to circulate the amount. e s it by Bewssude | colned, Y here s 8 Jarge demand now from tho Dinsk gome o wWith "\ll\l“ulh Wantu Winm-or charea -?;‘)ul'l for (‘(J"Il.fr‘fl thIl:I the mllnn-olckul, e hair-cith and repeencied lonnges | tUE Begrocs nrefer them to any other. ueeveted, and the, I their turn, e e e cy 16 phuett, andd dlie plash to U Tutest The Phonngraph, » lv!r|vhnnr.l‘l-‘lvl~l;':ahl|'.”ll||vllli|mlrul ellnenknl mes- - reneera will all ime ntilized by the onlers for Sozo- Shuerad und, Whon coononits | dut, swinets will be fashiol ond sounded over the e dullar biuy be teade 10 by 84 | wires, 1214 2w well kijoten atiroad 32 st home as'a i gy ‘ % s Uk abeirime, 1 tntice of stand. | CCSNInE ogeUL for thoteeth, ards ety BRd ULy s Feadydo baistcs 10 | prome.woven wire mattrere, Eanal to Whittle GORN AN sy & Puteen', Priee, $il | 1o by Colby & The corn-cron of 1534 18 néarly out of the way | Wirth furulure deale toatrest, of damaze from trost. “Lhe yield will not be above an_ verage—peehaps tot up to lto—cer- | , Far the younz, the aged, and the tnfirm, —4 ity Dot wp o she vield of x-tm-,lmu'mm Ay} Jord e Juinsica Uttir, au enormous crop it the cauntry. In Missourd, e S T S S Janzas, il Nevrasha the crop I8 bester Ui v CETICVR, in dtlnots. We have to compets with the | =77 200 e anmaaanaa s furmers of those Nuates, which ten years ngo e Winter-wheat 18 betng extensively sown, In the southern section, where that Isthe leadiug i crop. o droucht motertally inteeferes with gote / o the seed the grouml i good order. Bome of the earlv-sown ticlds 1o this section ore alremly e, e 10 ook i Ging- of wluter. RuraL Jie SR e THE FIELD AND STABLE. Tupallivly Cures A Lacersted wound tn s trorses ec—rar- | Sl RHCU 07 Eozema, Ringworm, Teller, alyas 10 PlgeeCrib-Biting. e, T e .| Sl Hedd, Dandrud, Dy and Fallng i Hair, Pimples, Blotches, and Senof- come to man as it mn{. in Enropean gramleur —_— or in Western simplicity, come rs it may with n lung creed or with s brief one, with a robed Bishop or with & plainer minister, It will alwa; be the rame essence, having a place and an fn- yitation for you _and me, and whispering to us its vast lleas of faith and duty as te shall four- ney onward tosard that houe which separates from the duties and trutha of time. Against theso principles and such a soclety the gates of liell cannot prevall, The * gates ! of tho anclent walled citics were the emblems of ail the powers of learning nnd law and skill assembled within, Against “the sublime ldeas of the Christian Church the gates of fgnorance and wickedness cannot prevail, As wisdom (n- creases In tho world it will more and more read its happiness and full rucerss in those @ates which, massive as thuse of Home, beautiful as thoso pearly unes of tleaven, shall open upon the human throngs to admit thom to faith, and love, and righteousncss. TURKISH MISSBIONS. SERMON DY TIE REV. W, J8SSUT, The Rev. Mr, Jessup, for many vears mission- ary at Deyrout, Byrls, preached yesterday morning in the Fust Presbyterian Church, taking for bis text the tenth verse of the 76th Pralm. There were no mistakes in tho Providence of God, bo sald. This was most manifest in the history of the Turkish people. In the early part of tho Scventh Century two great avents toor place which were grent factors in the development of the human race,~the oriein of the Mobammedan religion In Southern Arabla, and the Christlanization of the peoplo of Great Britain. In order to show his auditors the full extent of his remarks, the spenker traced on a map, hnng bock of the pulplt, the gradual Incrense of the boundarles of the Mussuiman domlolon. Beginning fn Mecenin 623 A, D, the religion spread north to the Aigean 8Sca, east to indls, and ncross the Isthmus of Buez to Egypt, and across the north of Afriea to Mo- rocco. The Moors even Invaded Spaln, and threatened to subjugate the whale of Western Eurone to the now religion, Btrangely enourh, in 1482, the sear that Columbus discovercd Amcrics, Ferdinand gave the last blow 1o Mo- hammedaniam, and drove ths Moors back to Af- rive. In 1453 the Mohammedana captured Con- stantinople, driving out of that city the Chris. tian oceupants. The year before that printing wns discavered in Uerinany. In 1081 the Turks threntencd to overrun all Europe. ‘They be- sieged Vienna, but were defeated and driven el o T sl g A V8 g I Ve e A 1o reaily - back by Johin Sobleski, and sluce that tima they | pess. i not allow them to do 0. No wouder | OF five months of cold which will zoon follow. | Falted barely enough for hume subststonce, Iielon earrying its blessings often to many out- Wiiat we have marked In lmpllnm recurs In have bacn alowly bat shrely deereontg 1o inie, | nees did not o ow LI . No e atdo the Hines of the formal brotherhood. the communion—tho spirit ia evident but the etiee, tntth mewa“E ey ’t:onflnul hfuwh 8 thelr synazogucs were cmpty under such | First In importance, becausc they will be first “Tiw Christtan Chnrch comes to us as an as- | leiter la wanting. How often to cclebrata thls semblaga of kleas grouped together to become | Fite, who may come to the table, what age, what a foaudatfon of sotiety, Philosophy comes to | condition of falth vr plety, are questions tot up 58 An assemblpRe o% dens, but not with any | answered; not raisedi but instead of belng sorioly annexed. Frotn Bphioza, or from Hacon, | Prescated with a form defiuite anil complex we orfrut Locke came a group of thoughts fas- | e shown o table spread for ol who love the teaed torether in a chaln more or less stromy | Lord and attempt to lead a rizhteous life. by the connecting links_of reason,"but no so- In church govermment thia phenomenon o ciety.of any kint t8 founded upon any one of crices oceurs, and fnstead of being show! theee forms of thought, The Chitrch ia, there. et kingdom marked out like the motlons fare, hiot & philosophy alone, but o philasaphy | of Prussian infantry, we have o general Idex re- ng 1t society, jnst na a Revublic Is not Hoerty | curring ali along from Leviticus to the Apoca- alone but 1ibérty orgaulzed into a State for the .l’ylmt'; In the old Ilebrew iaw, and 1o 8t uenore of progress, Nappliicss, and dofenre, | Julim's poctryy, wu 6es that eilers rule. The «t ua think of the Church in fta two aspects; | elders wera eafled together by Moses, and in his 230 group of deas and then as an organism. vislonslohn eaw twenty-four elders. The Chris- Wit ficas forin this groupd As Christ form- | tin Church was “to be governed by €d this organisin, Hewili furnish tho most per- | it oldest men, It was not to be fect answer. We must study Him ond find | 8 monareby bub a republie, where tho :Im;rlnslnuu-lu. ‘l'h:;\.rln'houmlimg n:xe‘ rum{r used, are eaching, and everytbing would ba different. THE SHEDS AND YARDS, \! 3 e ved ;Arz”{l"g";';‘:,mrol;rf:g' l;:}:lr“:u’ :f,:mo"w',“’l':,?i whiere the anfnals congregate to ewcape the fn- heard but_one idea “fn the sams worn-out | clemencies of the ‘weather. ‘The droppiuus plirases. That won'tdo, It must belmpressed | which have been permitted to accumulato dur- upan them that, If they could not keen the [ oy the summer shiould be haufed to the mead- hale Sabatl, thoy must, keenapark ot 119 | ow; ditchies for the free discharge of surplus closed with an effective and fervent prayer, water shoutd be opetied; and the yards clearcd Another song by the quartette, and’ a chant { of pieces of boards, bits of rails,and ruch other and bencdiction” by'tho chanter, concluded tho | articles as do not belong there, The sheds ceremontes. should be repatred #o that they form a perfect " protection from the wind; espectally eliould ABIUSEBIEN I’S. they ba tight as the bottom, 8o as to he free i from draughts, When eattle are keot stabled PUILADELPOTA TITEATRICALS. | gt nizht, as ts usual in the dairy distsicts, these Apectal Dispateh (o The' Tribune. minion to a small district sround Constantino. ple. ‘The Koran, the sacred book of the Moham- medans, was not allowed to be tranelated Irom the Arable, and if the neople o thls evuntry were converted to Mobammedanism they would have to iearn Arable in order 1o read the sacred bouk, The Koran taught that the Ol Testament was inspired,. but that the Chris- tlans Lad corrupted it They ehutl the greatest reverenco for Jesus, and re:iunml Him as the Bon of Uod, The speaker M known a Turk- ish Pasha who was bastinadoed for cursing the name of Chirlst, The Koran was made up from the Talmud nod the Old Testament. There were also o Jargze number of traditions collected in manuscript, which the Peralans rejected and all other Mohammedans accepted s fusplred. amico, Wi SV ETERINARIAX Thave a 2-year. a folded mowiny that, In leapinz ! . K 2 1 exe. | The belicved In the fall of man, but' they ! sugzestions do not, of courec, avply. npilf re-log on Gne of the goard-ii % mfl'fls UIBEI'S flml som b ngll:(l’?)‘f”%rl;?:rulnl lfinfifll&:fi"‘“;g"1}’;:;2&2& all‘xlcu“;r.l:‘:ll:.m;\x:"m‘lh"srl‘mw'lll-:'ltlll:r‘l °;‘an'§: ".]lfl:gu thought It wan 8 literal fall, and that | TWEADELRALA, Scpt. 22.—There fs not much | “yge yyuet alwo begin to lonk around about the | oot an fch hel-w £ ke 1ot mii o of Interest In the smusement world, Therewans a howl of disgust when It was found that * The Woman of the People,” which Mr, Stanley Me- Kenna aunounced as a new play in which * the greatest Hiving actrens '—meaniog Rose Eytinge —nppeared at the Wainut Street, was the old Adam feil out ot Puradise and land- et on the Island of Ceylon, and thint Evo struck E:uuml ona mountdin in the Rsd Sen. They believed that any book tn be {uspired must be written in Arable, In Calro ‘was a university where there wers 10,000 dents who were langhit only the Koran, Arabie, together for the formation of this new sub- | should be preachers, or syhether goa might be stance, When our fathers were hanging over | laymen, whetlicr one of them might e called a thy craciole in which they were hoping to | DBishop, whetber the muetluws should havo the fashion n new metal called” Awmerica, they oy | form of o modern resbytery, or of o Motliodlat fall Into it, one by one, the clements of rght | Conference, ur ul‘u Cougregationsl Conuell, or of lie, right of property, tight of consclence, | o Eplscopalian Conventlon—are fnquiries whol- right of habplucss, rigut 15 ke the laws which | 13 lost sizht of by those whio firat fed i the louse. 1t will snon be time to store vegetables m the cellar, and it should’ be cleared for that purpose. Nearly ail MODCEN FARM-TIOUSES are so constructed thut vegetables can be ran Into thy cellar through a chute; or the wagon beluw the felloca-Jummt, 1 was not gware of 1t fuf a conple vl tuyn biter tue fnjary wan fuilciod; | Meurs. WEE have suico dresecd i wiile @ poaltice of **cuart: | o Bston, Mais pespectruliy’ intorin, the pavils aod weed, ™ \aricd with une uf bread und i, opoiied | (hevibilicted with saxrontty tncuraite afeedons ot twhee’ every 1wenty-four haure, with Dumt ninm or | G Sraring ooy b ihey iave suc slone (o kuep duwn th' proud-tiash, whica | dichintion from veueinoly Fontueie, i Vel er. the ReuWws eapidly. The tore fn tow aboii eleht ot | love, Berors uwmd i (s el warely Skis Hoters fnches, unu duew il eern Lo im. | OF tie canaistenco of Jeiiy. with thay beliove td be xn & POTTER, Wholessle Dra: X . : g 2 . irove, Vlease PR L Rine Iufalithle cura farevéry kind of Skin' Dieesse, from a ! curo. thewo forma of mood. Other | principle. The létter has fuded away, and the | lugic, and rhctoric. “1le uid not think that one | melodrama entitled *Madelaine, the Prideof | 100 o driven close to she duor, and potatoes, | JTUSe: | Fleare urmwwer throni 'Fuk I RineSe s to i 4 e T 0Ly P ) GUIieE | Frand law tint tho Ghureh 14 60 bo. govorned by | Of tlia Professors in that unfverslty understood [ iy Fauboura,” which had been played years | 1y be drive o ) 0cs, | {he Leat munncr f treatment, Sommon Fimule to the worst cass uf Salt filieuin, Scald the nultiplication-table, They cortalnty did not know that the carth was round, Qirls were of po account among Mussulmans, and In the census i 0 men'had ten doughters aud no son he was regarded as childiess, Christian issionarics weut to the Moham- medon countrles many years ago, but found mreat difticulty on account of the existence of tho dezd Christlan scets thero already, such os the Armiofans. ‘There was now an Evangelical Church established throughout the Turklsh Empire, with about 100 church-bulldings, Wuen tho traslatiou of the Hilnle Into Arable was flufshed, in 1505, » vowel edition was printed for the bepefit of apples, cte,, taay Le carrled direetty fn. I a chute Is used, o screen should be made of Iath, 0 that all dirt may fall outaide, and not o into tnebios, We sliould prefer, if possible, to store everytbinz fn bushel-boxes; but these are not always found. ready, except on fartns where s great deal of fruit Is hondled. . Such hoxes Modjeskn fa ut tho Arch Strect, and Armand 18 | gove relondiiug and sncasuring, and may be played by Mr. ¥rank Clement, who we arg told | ;1400 for conveying thelr contents to markel. I8 an Enulish actor of repute. Wo knew that | [n this clty ail kinds of frult and vegetabies nry ho was English the moment he opened | marketedin such poxes. Arrangements for bis mouth, snd when ho had scted a | ventiinting by alrducts should be madu i oll and years azo at the same theatre by Mr. and Mra. D, P, Bowers, T bas been worked over by Btuyvesant Park—which 1s another name for Mr, Willlam Stuart—and Mr. A, Oakov Hali, unca Mayor of New York., They have not im- proved it much, aud it was a dead falure here. day to day, and after the ealdron had bofled nud | 1ts oldest and most Woly men remsins grand in bu{vhll:(l for seven years out was poured that | it breadth and beautiful ju its power of con- politleal gold which we call America. To find | cilistion. Under the uencral law all the Prot- what {ngredients wero ponred into the cup | estant sccts, from thuse which assembio In & where the Chinrcl was muking, wo muse wateh | Congregational Council to those wlio asscinble the hand of Christ, for Ho stoud by ot this Bt the call of n Blslop, staud near cnourh to formatlon and wos' the supreme leader of tiro | tho lilew partly hidden: and. partly revealed in wyatery. ‘The Mosale age lind {ndeed gone lie- | the Guspel, fore 1lim in its long inquiry, but that ago was 1f out of the Indefiniteness of the Testament. related to Christ much like'the alchemists wera | denates hava arlsen, it will not be the firat time related to real sclence, There was much boil- | thut buman passion bas come to find discord Ingz and bubbling, but when the pot wos | where human wisdom stiould have coma to flod turned over not mueh pure gold ran | harmooy, fo an fenorant era a broad law al- out. Tho elements or aubstauvces which Chrlst | wavs adinits of gusrrels and confllet, but in en- Epwans Dosovax. ” k CUTICITIA Iscarngstiy belfeved to be the only post: Anaicer.—By all means stop your poulticing. | tive Specifie Hemedy Tt ths. wure of ‘;-u’l'n‘ge{nn 'Jr It Is the suurce of all the mischief, and the sofo | hezous, Wtinzwarn, Tetter, Fushes, tita Whelk cutso of the bad corditton of the wound. Tuko | DAterated Biumsios Al N sdinter Rrack Hosas Grams a perfectly clean Hinen pug, fold it smoothly, aud ol lednce | corer the whole wound with it, after it has béen wetted with pure earbolle acld dissiived in glye- erine (1:2). After the wound has been covered, bandage the Iz from the foot to the kuce. Druw the Landage, which ouphbt to be twvo and. a halt 1o three nehes wide, gud five to stx yards Trritations of the &xin, Reald bin il Failing Hatr, Premys 1l 8ealy Erantiang ltchings and te- Woitds. ' rulcs, Scalds, e, I'ain mod Inlanunationt 14 0f the Mitscies atnl Jolnteg L) Crou.”and usriencat, ilcors, and Glaadatar 4 3, Kerofula, Scratulon Uiy arediccascs of e Mol ant lioies and s not s cellars where vegetables ace stored, Itisa long, moderately tieht, especlally helow the | confounded with akintiseascs proper at atove named, o cambined mnst bo coufeasell of two kinds: tho | lighteued periods the sana brund law Jdevelops 1] ltho we were —quito suro that he 600D POLICY wount, and_conmence bandazing at the hoof, | SuEuie, mih extenial wud tneral treationt, A primary aud tho secondne it sealof impor- | & upiversal brotierliiod,and ndvancos o fntel | 140" it 211" BT St oo Aitsl. | oo, “ife 'was Sety bad, b seat of Cug | 35 Lhls Uime to. purciase 3 aufficnt supoly of | iowew tho dressiic and the bandasc,durlue tho | Bsepis et SeRe s e Lo o e ho_priniary eleinents wero righteous- | lect by al uin for motlon, and wo have ot e : uel to last durfug the winter. Th cou- pé g : IRy : b 3 n 3 ness, faith, love of tho Founder us a Kedeamer | found no proof that Chriat Tounded the Churel | uted throughout Syria and Mesopotawia, Bince | company except Measrs, Lacy and Bainbridee first tifee or four dave, three times, and after- | masled 1ree 0 receipt o u; Drize—~%) cenis for sinall boze i g 4w and oue-BAlf times the Atlicrefore tanea the cheader fue Itosatrent (ean T sent by exoress Hiwettlas fur #5. e & POl -,Il‘ Wholesale Druge . . i the Bevrout press had been started, It had printed 172,000,000 pages,—iast year, 12,000,000, in Ueyrout s a line college, i severa) hundred students, There are fu al) soventy-two schools under thy charge of the Clislstians, In Beyront thers were 9,000 children at school, while twenly-three years ago there were nut o bundred, Since tho Crimean war tte attitude of En. gland had been that of von-intervention fn the affalrs of the Turkish Empire. Lately the newa had been flashod across the Atlantle that England had taken Uyprus and sssumed o protectorate over Turkey. This was a realfza- tion of the missionaries’ "dreains. ‘The Auglo- Baxon race to-day encireled the world, Andall the wild tribes of the Mohammedan Emplre re- spected the Englisl. The Amerlcans were only known s Euglishmen in the East. When the war began between Russin and Engl sympathiva, and the sympathica of every Amer- fcan 10 the East, were with Russta. But after the war had cosed and the quustion of recon- struction arose, there could be no doubt but that Great Britain was the natfon to Institute and carry out the great refortus that were ncc- casary, Oue of thie most inportant yet under- toked was the abolition of tithing, “which had wergworse, | Last night she casavod Peg Wogfing. | MON Dractice of buying o ton of caal ata time oo hm st o s, ot et | 8 10 be dapgecuted (o Beotiably twadlinle the Adrienne. The Chestnut Stroet lias been doing | S9rmers of thee Wes e i Inaeait “8ho Btoops to Conguer® very badly to bad say that 8 majority of them buy it In small Jouscs. T this weueral condenmation Measrs, | l0t% T or more nelehbors should club b Sheridin and Uritlitis must be cxeopted, M, | Sether aud buy a carlond. 1t can Lo secured Sheridan Isonoof the best stock actors fn | B¢ ruduced rates, agd LHch be REWIGTTER e Auerles, snd ono of the fow whio ure at home | Fonds are good, | Where wood i burped, the in old comedies. 16 niover docs nuvthing badiy, | S50 l o walt. bl owiater: - olghiie ond sery often I acting riscs (ur abave the 9.5y g evel of his assoctates. v was In i bill ever, b g i hight lust scason, which witl give some ldes Ot | Peaplo i M1 frid "!“'ll fault w'l’h ‘"“;r tho work he had 40 du, By the way, in mv last coudlton, forgetting that there ure thousandy 1 expressed o dunbt. sbout Mr, Gewnmill's suc. | 2ud inilitons not s well oif, Our farmers ey cess this season. 1 havo since learned that tho | 2 degreo o l,“‘“{ ok ‘:":" bh;mk:m»‘n‘xmln i:‘]""' rent has Leen reduced from $18,0K to | BEAR cousirics 1o ahe farmers here. 7 OuT $10,000, This leaves s very much wider wives and daughters nre well dressed, and gen- marzin, and It may cnable him | $8IV not overworked—cspecially the latier. to niake some money, It will by new sensa- | Must of them awn caey carriazes of boine de- and a verr pleasant one, probably sceiption, houses well furnished, and ought to ativk 1o ihe old vomedies; + \Wild | Do vontepted. —As a contrast the followlng may Oats" this week, Tl Walnut Strect company | boOtinterests o has been buay ail the past week rohearsing Lo}y pyyion, ‘of the Baltimore dmerican, writes Cigale,” which has been very thoroughly goue | | 16 FUHGR, 0F (8 Bt Tre Ameriet, wr over with, ‘Chey bave rohcarsed with™ Lotta | 10 recent Jotter [OR BUEORRE L 0 prane since Wedneaday last, and they think that the | o o8t et A P Ty hroupn tommidembie pleee wil) go admirably, Maoagzer Gioodwin bad : Ly f Austria und Uermany, through Be.gtum abad fall one day laat week, but ho was only | B5d Northern: F ’ gkl and ot God, and devotion to mun's welfare; the | for ouly ignorant generations; 1t belog more sccondury clements were forms of church | probuble that 1t was founded for great doys and government, baptism, and thu Lord's Bup- | mreat nations, aud that ft hus possed through ver, Elther from flis own livs or from thoyo | small times uml small souls unly breause ol Hls companlons these few fdeas aro seen | they Jay In Its lousr vath, It is possible that belnge mingled for tho composition of the | for barbarlans the Intter of a lnw s better ecclesia. 'fhia geparation of primary from | than the epirits but barbarism Ia temporary; secondury deos 18 to b Tounded not slinply | sud had the Gospel been written for It,'iL upon man's reason, but wpon Christ’s conduet, | would have been udfitted for the splendor of for Ile wmade very prominent those notlons | civilization alwavs avout to follow tho which 1 have calfed orimarys Ile passed by | cloud of savage [ife. Al ml;imy nen hava wjth but little remaric the {deas I have called | spoksn for more apiritual nges, in “which those recondary, 'The Church, then, Is an organixm | truths will rise tn power which onee lay in wenk- founded for the development within and with- | ness, Our sge Is not yet very spiritual, but it {s out of the notions dear to Christ, founded to | already drawing s uu\tf,n Beuse of hrother- secure to fts memmbers the prize of a pure rellz- | hood, from that gencral vrinclble of baptist, or fun, oud to convey to otliers & knowledge of this | communton, or government, which once threw wrize, and $0 awnken in other hicarts o zeal Infts | mankind futo vioteut contention, pursait. You can percelve at onco that s society Iu the breadth ot 8 statement the mind finds oreanized for the pursuit of selence, or for ux- | that liberty which gives power, Old Egvpt had vlorations o remote lunds, or for makivg col- | no painting and no progross in severul paths be- lections In art or Hterature, {alls far below a so- | vause the pricsts prescribed exactly what should ciety whose purposes ure o faith fn Uod, the cult- | be the size, ud what the shope, and what the ol rightcousness, tho fmitation of Chrlag, | color, of cach sacred pleture. “The artist had no and the persuasion of others to accept of this | more room for his intelleet than hus tho Inborer higher life. who shuvels coal wto a vault. But, passing from We muast always measuro a moral work or act | Egypt to Atheus, you find each urtlst carving 8 wanls twice, o dag; but dilute the solutlon of | es: Iargs boves, v carbolic e with Watvr, ot thesecond dreaing, | Ga8atiirof small, with an equal amount, and at cazh fullowing Frice dresstnr with o little more, til finally you have 1 your solution about twelve o kixieen times ns mach water g3 you have carboile aeid. An- other way 1o bring the lacerated wound to a heatine will be to Wi carhobized atead of the solution of earbol catbolized cosmoline tay be - spreal ou a clean linew ray, folded smacthly so as to cover the whole woutd, and then tte bandage ? - must be apotied as bas been stated, ‘That raus, Loudages, aud everyihing used ust be clean, $ and that tho stable must be kept s ¢f voralble and be well ventilated, ehonld not need any mentionin [ dirty razs und disty bund- n [] ares, full of decomposing matier and exere- ments, etes, are used, it wlil be Impossible to Uripg such a woumd ton bealtug, ‘The fomd of the anhmal shondd be sueh as 13 casy of diges. ton and whalesome, and the wuter fur dnnking must bu fresh and pure. et iiler & ¥ . Moutex e Kiag, Mo ure. Vil Scehaa v ', & 1 o, i, Lluwiay o ¥ Co., Chilcary, The Quintessence of Jamaica ) s Wi v ot the yower. o o | (inger, Choice Aromatics - THom by ¢ 4k 6619 1, thote back, bt | et N 2 L and French Braudy, Over, 11 Hon !llllnk it is 1 their legs, They Irail their b or plitosopby by its iubierent truth. Aswe valuo | Alioblo or Minerva'to his wish, No tvo Venuses ¥ Northern Frauce, o distane velts bearly | deping thems 1t seemns to affeet the Joint wexi w " beeu s method of opbression imbossible to con- | canfined to his house for a few days, The pro- | 5,000 miles, we obseryed that the much larzest S thens. bav o ':R{f.',‘!{,‘,’n"fl.i'fi,',“.'fl:,‘.‘v’,"'.‘flm,'{‘ 1o Modanna or | ars slike, T pricst,auc tho statestian, st the | ocs by'one never haviog bad experisnce of i, | fessiun have all united ‘for o ellow-fever | portion ol starere i the ield wero waunen, “ihey | 7 Srcty 8o uf e bave, gl ey havs . never been penned up, bul have had their since the cure? TrIBUNE, ! erty | A pre camu Wlat is the teouble, caitye, aud | offecat, se to gnower throuch Tie WrEKLY | Kucaces or Bxtracts of Ginger, Comporition, Merh . JONNMULER. | Tegn, Latn itellevers, s ths humired and vne disgusts Anneer.—Yonr plis, it ap| are paralvzed | fng ond Rauscatiug posscts with which we bave bevn in tho ud guarlers,—iot @ Yerv uncommun we | wont 10 doso vurscleea, It fnstantageons ¢ (i currence. ‘the seal of the disease I futhe | Caiers, Chulera Morbus, Cranips wad Patus, Chronic - Jumbar portion of the sbinal marrow, Asto | Diarrhos, Dysentery and Chiolera Tufantum, Dinithaa the cause ot the morbld alleetion, theve are sev- | In Teethtng sud all summer Comolaints, Disgepals, eral possibilities, IT the paralvals Is not perfeet, | Flatulency, Slugilat Dlizeatlon, Want of Tone aud Ace —thatis, If the audmal has yet some controlayer | Ustiy tn tha duinach and lowels Oppresston after the hind parts,—the seat of the diflleuity, very | Eating, Jstng of Food sud slmiiar Allinents, Chill aud Hkely, Is 1 the membranes enveloulng the | Fuvers. Colds sud Chlits, Fevertel Symptomns, Mularial spinal marrow,—spinal mentngitis; but, it the | Yevers Palngdn the Yones and Joluts, Byinptute ot i paralyats {s perfect.—that is, 1 the' animal hus | Kheumatinn, Neuralgis and Gout, Cold Extromities, - 1 consrol whatever over, its hind quarters,—it uled Clreulation and Depressed vondftion of tha B 1s pretiy sufe to conclude’ that the spiual tar- | Vil Force rendee it the Standand Housetiold Mtedi- Tow ttseli s seriously tiseased, dn the formes | I throuzhoat the length and breaath of the land. casg, Ul nuist it ex: tmes. o ante tar the raveicr, for tho youuk. tho e emiperature, aed, under ali clrcumstances anid conditlons, both as e e Peratlry, byt | L ilin anid 348 suatlo ilmuiant or beverago. & 4 caralysls §a perfect, the disease oy | e mostersteful sad effectivy preparation sver come uvo * been caused by external violence, | Mnded in th bistory of meliehno. 5 fracturing & verlebra, or iluring otherwise e | Wewars of diluted and soriblen betintion veton? apinal calumn. A8 1o treaument, Hothing can | Toebiel b7 desterd Lor RIS OF SR AN ORI e aon If the paratyals 13 verfect, 17 the fattep | 1236t 9ban haviag BA3 i e fs noty a ol counter-frritant—composed, for nstencey of contliarides and oll (1:4), heated tor an hour I 8 water batli,amd th jed—inay e rubbed fu above U y UF fu the lunie bar region of the back, aud iy do soma gogd, Besides that, the paralyxed aninals niss bo kept 4n a pen, Which allords them sutheent pro- teetion seatist the Inclemeney of the weather and sudiden changes of temperature; aud the i ud water must be put within easy reach, It ts o easential to keep such animals alono and by themselves, because otlier, helthy ples \f L CAaly Duthier: S0 hvits DR e Oue Move Step Ahead, The tihe-gntherers were entitled to atenth; they took seldom less than ouno-fourth of the produce of the coun The apeaker knew of o beautiful village {n Lcbonun whers the people hud cut down all their fruit-trees because the JMuitezstn had got in tho hablt of takiug evorything of each year's crop, Now, Lord Salisbury had dcclared n Parliamoent that tithing "was to be abolished. Thero were other reforms, such as tho liberty of the press and = chaore in the Jud:cl-\r{. ‘The speaker never heard of a Judgu in toe Tarkisn Empire who could not be bribed, 1le himself bad a case in court In Boyrout last year. Fortunately all the witnesses on boih bides were Mussul- Christiune’ gvidence wus not admissi- ble. Ilo was plaintilt and had four Mok wedan wituceses, The defendant, s Mobam- medan, had twenty-five witnesses, The Cadl heard the testimony of the plalutiff's witnesses, and then fimvulv Rave a judguent fu his favor without licaring tho defendant. Very much surprised, the speaker nsked a Mufti who was triendly 1o him if that wag the law. * Yes replied tho Muftt, *if four Mussulmans declare in the face of God that a certaln thing s true it must be true, and the law would stultify tself mn “urmnu:d otaer wituesses to declare it uu- e, on so clegantly favored and medictnally or 8 study of feature or lmb, because of the | zenius but to admire. Toward such a finnl de- Lo mterly surFpaes a'l Previoe preparatl dlifercuce of subject, and as we place ap arfa | veloptoent the Lreadth of Gospel fdens tonds, above a light waltz because the arla awakens g | 2ud those [dcas will at soma time reach a placy bigher sentiment, s0 we must judgo of a soclal | whero the priests will cesso to ensiave, and organiun by ita cardiual theme; and out of | where millions will sce the variations of forin this method of Judgzment thy Church will | aud drapery, and will say, “*It {sall adniirable.’ cumne the noblest orguuization known fo man It remalie, while thus pondering over tho oreven possible to man, Itis founded upon | Chureb, to fuquire what abiout theclalm mada the largest thoughts and actions of wbich | by certain denominations to betng ‘The Cliurch? wan cun concefve. To sdvaoce one's | Thu Rowamsts and a part of the Episcopal own rightoousness nnd that of one's neigh- body clatin that the Church s an orgavism bor, and to love aud eceve God, and to follow | which bas been uherited by them just asa clusely Jesus Chirlat, Is to amass toguthoer fdeas | Inwful beir fnherits un cstato from bis father, s the Egyptlaus amassed stoues for a pyramld, | o e no clain could seem more un-Cl Bo mmense were sumo of the stones lu tho | or unscriptural or unreasonable, Christ was xrest pyramid of Gizeh that to drag ono of | tooesger for the epreadof lits truths and for shem from the r‘uurr to its place took 2,000 | thio sulvation of men to minke the Church meo three years. Ve thiok of earth's grreatest | something which must be handed alone like an works whon we try Lo measuro the truths that | old estate, must bo kept carefully o a make up the Chrlstian Chiurely, and feed that to | vertaln fawtly, This truosmission of o dru thiem out of their quarry and locate them | church s not so much after tho penfus of the in the walls of a beautlful teiplo would have | Lord 8a after the image of that kind of govern. taken many thousauds of men many conturiea, | ment which transwuits theoties, 1t had always Buch a grouping of majestlc principles was thu | been thought that government was a divine suc- work of a Jesus Chriat, cesslon of kiugs; that as the old family tres It nust follow (rom this evident composttion | were prescrved by Kecplug some cosls covered and purposs of LIS briuce of il socfeties, that | Up 8t nizht on the hearth, to be kindled up in a0 age or ail (ndivhdual does it a great wrong | the morning, 8o guverument was kept In a_pal- Nl that ggo or that person assumcs that the | ace and at thmes a few of its ols were carried Church 1s s wrena of debaty, or 8 compondlum | off to tart this royal blaze In sund new place. of profound vhilosophy. Its simple purpose, | Bume of this yeast for a new loaf was et in: uprightness, faith in God and ju Christ, and | Mexico under the nume of Maximilfan, and in the conversion of the world from darimess | New England under the nsmeof George; but it sud sin, sbould evidently stand forth fu | hiss reccutly becn learned that kings aro ot di- the ost possible of sluplicity, In the | vine, and that a new land may make a now ruler complex streets of 8 city u stranger may | aud call bl by what uamn it loves. Not oth- eually become bewildered and lost, Men lod | erwise from the study of Crist and the Gospel, tothe inuer room of tho labyrinth and there | and from the dictates of reason, I Infer benetlt, and have not had a sguabble yet, so far | wors not ouly maing huy, but plowing, wowiie. s 1 can learu, Thoss who g0 will g0 a gooil | hoelng, erusbing, and planting. They wero not nunstrel show; * Nun, thy ood-lur-.‘lolhfixm" pnly doing the ""’?{“ l‘l" ey ""J‘ rauchy sska; and an act of “Bchool’ with ire. | acuitivator, or any labor-eaving uplement, “Tho rew a8 Naomi Tighe, Mrs. Drew Is only 81, | oply caltivator was the primitive does sni a Jine and Mr. Gemmill s Seriously reflecting whetber | or women, mostly superintonded oy vav or two ho did not make & mistake in sassuming the rolo heir backs (o the Jabor, The only plows of Juck, A they might bave been modelerd atter wments which Nvab landed fram the Ark. - muchine standing oh A depot 10 Awstrin, which was the an) Tbe one weck's experlcuce that Mauager chinc tiat atimeted one atfention, Wurster has had with lls new venture of glving Hlnkeveuis oo "y:“lll‘n"t'gc :fin“:‘n 2‘;1:1"&::‘::-‘:;:3 o N1 Catpagna, Il German perfurmances dally at the New Chlcago | Lt liaingof o rich harvest, Every inchi of was such as to discourage the most cuthusiaatic | wround was made 1o yield ta tho wimiet, sud sdvocates of the undertakiug. Though the | wheat, corn grupes, an fralt all Lure cvidence of company that Mr, Wurster has eogagod for this | skiliful cultivutian. ; TIE INDUSTRIAL UNIVERSITY. Aeasgit 6 tak euperioe.aid guieh inare rt;‘mplelc The eleventh anvual onening of this Instltn- than any {erman dramatic company that bas | g5y occupred tast Wedneaday, With wh ficteased everplayed fu this city, and the plays glven 80 | pumber of new st The Rezent, Dr. far wera of & superlor character ana brillfantly | (irecory, has recently returned from tau Purs sbrought out, yet tha touse was nearly empty Exposition, and will,during thecomiue mont s, o . v | Prepare 8 report of what he saw for the (juy- every day of tho week, and 3Mr, Wurster | 8000% Wo'uuy expoct. many vatusble fucts in suffered » loss so far of over 8L,000. { yhereport. Vi buildings, farms, ctey are fn That he cannot stand . thiv sort of | the most mr‘nnlclle ungw.llml the new l;hrmlm} biog ve lorg must be apparont to | Laboratory is eaut to be the most extensive anid vers one’ antl paloss the Germuns arouse | Sambiete i the Untonc 1t has 150 deaks, fted thiomecives from thefr lethargy and comg to [ With all Jasies "“’l'"”‘““ for e the his rescue they may never fl)}:“ll expect 1o have sctence. nstead lil d "‘;’m l.nl‘“ :‘]“}*'. 28 o tirat-class German theatre i this citv, as no | taught I most callegos, the student hore re manager will aguin be fuolhardy v.-uu‘ugh 0 g{l‘:fl“u A""i\'r‘é':'.fiy' _~:gnng nr"f.'.'c hctlon. {,“.'.k:,;fi:h sffoonnd ‘sacrltiess 4 Hr, Wilnter lnoak lemlmm Gernwan ;lmvur-lflru.l has Irhnn.-c. ) u asslated by o corps of competent assistante !h:lfi:l::u:‘lfizgl::fi!w:xtflmflh?l‘l:’::":-{ “Thy lusiitution has, perhaps, the lareest facili- NEW CHICAGO, aud Rorall Deugylats, Grocera, 1 Mediciug throughout tue Yulted state TIIE ISRAELITES, OROANIZATION OF A NXW CONGREGATION. * Chebra Anshe Ames” (Soctety of the Men of Truth) is the titlo of & new Hebrew conkre- gation on the North Side, which dedicated lts nuw Synagogue yestordsy. This plsce of wor- ahiip I cn the third foor of & uew unpretending set free could not find the sunilght again. c " o4 o o 1 u ties for giviug a liberal education tu the Staie: CRID-DITING, NEW MODRL WALTIAM WATCHES. ey "Wouid Rropo and e Wi thoss visons | fmato ehuech, “Keepiog ‘b We ® uiasth | brick bullding, No. 2 Divislon sireet. The | £ HEAEGS Teb s MO AN HENE S8, 8 " HOXEST MILLES" Iasrron, — VETRRAARAN®: 1o thero any A wiudinge, I womo of the past centurice ver | conte. fram whicl® we> must all start onr | hall s platoly but neatly and comfortably fur- [ Piéih to bobn BUOIAy crenings T0nRE ke Raat | - Ao bouest miller bs worth tuking a Jong trip | remedy fora criuber? 1 avo oo jurt commenciug | Improved in Appearanco snd Quality, but x igion becatne s0 complicated with metaphyateal | fires, or keeplog in sowe loly vessel the leaven | nished, This s tho accond Hebraw cougrega- | oveulne is u stundard socicly play by | tosco. Wehink wo havo known some such, | toenb. duusiniarde, No Higher in Price, inguiry thay fow mindy any louger grasped ita | thut imust stortall our loaves; but on the cous | tion on the North Side. Its charscter la seml | Poly Ifeurlon, which ‘has ~ achlevedd “great ( &d wo havw knowis woiy witiers Sl wers ok | dusiers.- Gelb Uting fs a bad hablt, exerciiea * brimo ubject, and for hundreds of years the | trary, it scems obvious that the true Church may Church did not so much win wickéd men to?| spring up u sny place, islaud, or continent, kooduess s put to death wen who thought | where u few souls stiall carry togethier the great what it called fatso ductr] lustead of being | ideas of Christ, aud shall form a brotherhivod 8 misslouary to the wicked, it put to death | for the better practice and inculeation of these willlons of its own family, 1t 18 the glory of | truths. The Churct {s au assemblaze of ldeas, our day that the Cburch is returnlug to its sim- | and is not an estate. it never had any own ble purpuse, and is seckivi 1o moke wen plous | and heuce can have no Jawiul buiss; but it {8 aud good, rather thao 1o traln thein up 8 mus- | found where {ts fdeas are found, Flud some lers ol debate ud intinitesinal discrimination, | wortals banded together 1o help cach other fol- U you will read atter Christ and Hiy imuedt | Jow Christ, to baptize and be baptized, to join ate cutmpanfous aud will read fur s certalo pur- | fu the communion and fu chasity, aud there you Pose, uamely, to get exact botions from one or | have found & branch of the Chureb, u leaf ol Bl of thew, You wil svon find that you Lave | that vsndal-wood which was fragrant In Antloch Febaired to the wrong buoks or wrong persons, | with Paul, In Rome with Constatine, tn En- @ Und your want you will be cowpelled to go | £laud In the chapels of the Protestants, i the 1o men who wrote many centuries fater. Incou- | woods with the Wesleyans. buslug His Church Christ fotlowed the law of all Such are the reflectious which rise up fn my thegreatestund the wiseat, zamely, thelaw of the | own mivd over that oreanization which bas s Yideut posstule of princivics. The'mauy genera- , shuped the world, which so sings fur i1, so 1ous of expericace and tbougbt bave tausht | pleads with it, so prays for {s, and’ comforts it. wankind this: that the spiritual lwport of a { 1t moves beforv me Kot as & bicrarch to Eoveen, w!uwclunn will barwonize & vast imultitude | but as u group of truths, greater than the coms »ho would be torn into frugments by the letter, | mon-(ruths of man; moves not s Ezyptian ‘wul saw this when be said, * ‘The letter killeth | privst, but as & daiy fricod. You assumie quite “ur. the apirt glveth lite.” What o few e | 8 responsibility if yoa withhold your baud jrom fien kiew or dreawed of whole ayes now kuow, | 3t, but a deeper reapousibility if “you ridicule its success fn ail the and Indutzed In very often by energetic und in Germany. It is called * Koenle Slammon ambitfous horses suffering Tron {dlew Youutg unlmals of a restiess disposition, if kept togetier with an ol proficient crik and N, not_otherwise sufiiciently occupied by belng | - Alter nun experlence of many yenrs in welllng ¥ worked or exerciseil every day, are very 8pt Lo | watehes o all grudes, frous the Lest maners, taky lessons,—that ls, have g ureat tendency | wo buve fusud mune fhut bave gives suck to lmitata the strange duinzs of the old cribber, | pertect satlatuction ax the ** Walthaw," aud 11 they have _avquired the habit thempelves, | unbosttastugly recommend the WALTHAM 10 1o Jatter bas teen fully developed, acure | WATCNEN se suprrior to nil others. Is out of ,the questlon, Plenty of work uwd | Every WALTHAM WATCIL sold by us I museular” exerclse, and 1o opportonity to sce | #ecompanied by our ewu guuranieey fu sddis Ty another horso prictic clbbiting, coustitute | ton to tbat of thy Americun Watch Co. i tho best prfl'filulo;l. A“wxahu::r, l\l'lu “ytzur vorse, may sometlinea ba broken by lming the border of lus manger with sheepskin, CAUTION. with the wool=if o httle greasy, so cen demunstrated Y frequaent assays thay much the better—outside; by keeplng him oway ud shiver casee vffercd L the warket wre fromw suy ohl crlbber; and by gavioe bim all the | greatly debased from the yuatity th muscular exervlic or work he covets. A borso | purchasersof Walthum Waiches, d «an be temporarily prevented trom excrelsing [ tou,should voscrve that every penulie watel, w! his bud pabit by buc A strap woderatelt | wuld or silver, b o 1rade-wark of tu AMKEICAX tieng around his neck; but 86 suon as the strap | Wazcis Co. on both cam: {a removed he will commenve agalu, Bume ob- :fghtean carat” guld, servers are Juclined tu secuse indigestion, selill- | are suade of, 12 as nearly Dire yold as can b wade aid ity of thugustric juice, ele, 85 o couse: whelhier | be dorable. 11 contalos TA-1000 0f puro sold aud orthodox, about tho same s that of Dr, Nor ton's congregation, which worstips fn the New- Euvgland Church. The vew coogregstion has now thirty-three mewmbers, with the finmediate prospect of o large fnceense, 8 & latge number of Israclites roside tu that portion of the clty. ‘The ofticers are as follows: K. D. Davidson, President; Joel H. Hollander, Viee-President; L. Ilcmdbcrfzcr. Treasuror; E. Redlich, Will- fam Levy, Alfred Jacobs, Trustees; F. Kastler, Becretary. ‘The dedicatiug service came off st 3 o'clock yesterday altercoon fa the presenco of a crowded house. They were couducted by the Rev, Dr. Adier and the Rev. Dr. 4. Bico, " The ceremanles were opeucd with the singing of s psaln by u_malo quattctie, durlug which tho Wlhoras' (Scrolls of the Law) wers brouglt in, and, amid praver, deposized In the “Orsu 1ty eshy" (Holy Ark). & Suetoah Isrucl? (Hear, O Isracl) was then cln;m:d Ly the chavter and repeated by the cboir, ‘Ihe chanter sud coneregation then chaunted ‘ -4 | houcst. Uther men besides miflens are dishonest, i armealrcs | oo tho cralt Ia o execption. Sull 2 kreat deaf ssembles ol thu reputation of milis s caused, perhaps, (.v::‘f. %f : fm-} fids'::;‘l‘::':. ‘:‘I:ul:l:n"l.y;: by the lguurance or carclessness of their patrons, an_unusuaily fiiie oue, containlug uesrly every | b writer dn tho Jowu fioguter, upeaking of the clnclual tember of tho cowpany, The leaf- | diffrvuces of uplilon w e Irequently ariss be- fl,, vayts were fu the hands of 130se star actory, | tWeen customers aud whiers regarding 1ol on Me: Iward Haerting and Haus lavene, | Relsts, says: and Mra, Hodwiz Hesse. "As was to be expects | Often dirty, musty, foul wheat fs _taken (o et from the finé cast, the performance was a | Wil §0d & large turnous of Brst-class flour is ex- success. Mr. Haerilng, us Count wn Aruhemn, | peeicd. Ia thiwstate flowa]. there s uo law for ave ono of bis best eharacterizitions, and Mrs. [ {SESHBE IO | B 8 SbCK (akes SheRalf hiel Hesse. a8 Wu'dine, surprised everybods by ber | gnd'in wany cases, If he did taxe toat proporiion, exhibition of force und emotlon, Sbo is uo | e woald bo puorly compensated, But waen th doubt toe best leadivg lady that ever @D~ | whest 13 clean, sud & No. 1 article (or No, 2, peared hepe, Ay, Haus Raven as | tue imh a4 now), thoro 18 0 colmGa-ecnse ruly Ilutert, by Lis flus ucting cetablished {anuer can approximate uearly whut he bliusell still further 40 the favor of celve L tura from tho bl fue s wheat, d . about as followy: Toll, onc-sixth, of 1U i vllaly the publie. He s muml{ frec from runtand | BUORE s (00N 5 Tbe: Nour, 315 lbe; waste, & clap-trup, and prrfurims Lie parts with un case, | JuUti, Su6 et 33 fbei flour, i o grace, and elfvctivencss that takes the sudience | 00y eraze calenlation. 1n very cholce by sturw. A great perfonuance was the part of | wheat, and the mill in_ vatra order, the usiount of Erhraim by My, Carl Meser, who surpasscd uny | lour may go four pounds Bigher, aud amount of uhnls previous etforts. But wll the vtber partd, | oilsl four pounds lower, But tho great luss vea- without 2 swele exception, were reudered very | erally is fu b serccutoge. o sitempting fo ge sccentably, aud showed that the vew company | out 81l the foul sced, ficluding sald buckwheat ar Walthuu, T Wi Lo man, snd whose chtel work {s r UL L ey were caein Qut of the | tomake us pur hum of doctring Europe und Lugland milght | Jubof 3 lend that is etter, Btudy, and mcas- uauw tiseu o 4 grand unity of lie, of ert, of [ ure, aud loye the Clurch, Bebold (o Gilng VROl Lakguage, of fricudslip. bug by the | daelt to wanl 1ts lgk:.u ar¢ v broad thag watchivs constanaly on haud, eud are prepared to fur plabs thein o 4o loweat posalble cuat. . Patlately i (i Prof, 1acckil has fush Vidted the French N. MATSON & CO., Capital, wnh, ut a divuer pives bim there, chocrs State and Momroe-sty., Chlcago. ——— olutions psal. ter somo mjore sioging by | of Mr. Wurster i3 wade uo of snch muteria) iy | 894 cochle, unavoldably & consideravl of tbe | they arv rirht or not 1 cannot decide, 13 they | 201 of alloy, e o A or the tielda of Eusope ape red. with the blood | doctrinea and its work. Quiy & Tooltel Lan o B e o e bt the | 5 Geseory s apibort ol wrery SiabS At Iurs Siurab sl ko with pie scrceuloze, uod bt | are I miay b advissble o wifx bud aod Leu u | Sterling SUber (Pagtih dorcranient Sty oo i ol those whom the letter destroved. §n the | a very wicked man can speak couteusbluously of | pulplt and adurcssed the meetive fu Germav. | [ug Gerotan w the city. Particalarly noticeabls ot it ot Ve teictod fras oo amount | Wtle casbouate of waguests with Lbe foud. "‘3“;; il oo sl ibed < e M I B of Chrkattamity . tho Callolles nud | b orzunisw whuse essentla traths are “tg | J1e dwelt upou the nocessliy Of 1eadig & pure | in last eveuing's periorinanc wery the eeaald | gL of whi formera, would ertimate thevs thngs VETEmMRALN. e ¥ rotestauts werg frivids, but du the let- | Lighest ko aud virtuous 1ife in under to acbicve future K‘:»- 4 : and correet toltets worn by il the ladics that | careiuliy, aud weigh' thar grists and tbele Hour appeared fu the plavy aud espccladly bY | ung oo in returs, sud 1 case of diry wheat Mra Uewse, “There bave been exiibited fue | make hberal allowesce for screeninay, there woula toilts aud dressvs at Mr, Wurster's: theatre | be 1ewer corie of wiilesd sicallo dunog tue pust aasous, but 0o the whole, We belleve thae there bs @ gevab deal of truth for this world and uiore bope- | pineas. It took & great beart to bo a thorousl «raciite. Virue was ul'vays slded by religlon, Virtue lusted uutil the grave, but reliyton would £0 boyoud shat. Awoviz thoie who Lelied to

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