Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 10, 1878, Page 9

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1878—SIXTEEN PAGES : 9 not be licensed to preach in oneof them. In | In the 3 2 d to the gratuttous m- 5 e 3 ¢ year 1572 the Ammerzauers received | the attention of the Synod us - | is caused by confusion of il ] T L {ucc_( , but Christianity. When he | were offered a deposit of $30,000 to perform in by a member of this ';,_vnufl, ; shall speak of | it is always sinful? . Could we find a church | power of God's gra w ‘ni ¥ tue L‘ e anl | sneer worldly character. Musgleton and Reeve e o for confirmation in the Episcopal | Vienna during the Exhibition. This they re- | tais matterhereafter. Peaceisrestored,) 'The | court that would say so, we shouid have a duty | round itself, o T e A W | merelupriooniad & aulasnecs;, biE persecution Churel, he (rankly” told tho Bishop that, if he | fused. 1t 1 not probable an. s U0 | Samiof aul's teaching, s ald down i Komans | to perform towarda st court—to try t for | consugac Lwposcralpiost Hilmllable 1o S5 | minthaveiagmed wiin the; [or they lived 0 s on the ground of simple faith | lagers of Oberammergau have forgotten sud- xiv., is that a man who ducslnub ance lias no | heresy by regular and proper methods. " Itisto | clevat: it oF Sty X Phends h-‘l’_ SChY ";"‘,'» ¢ | old a2e, the former to 97 ‘The present Mug- in Ciisly ho was reads: bt If e was ro- | debly their sacred vow au the T orotten S5 | St o judge of one. wiio docs. The Genoral | be leared that uur danger s ot i nterpretine | that the ok sudeny. X dout beliere, miselt [ atstonizng wha aro ectiamels serlous, a8 S8 wutred { savlio believed fu the Thirty.nine | belleve thathe fact Is that the Ammersaliers ASembly says that oll danciog is evl. Paul | with suflcient strictness tho Word of God on | ety ins been ce6 Wil aver e poriied undfsest) small; hodles see prane‘io b, fecl Coons: Artcles Lewas mok, ready; that, as 8 lawyer, | aro In total zmorance That the AmUICTEMETS | fove The game of eating ments. But ho doesno, | worldly amusements, The greater danger i | and trast will be_ brousit ey dnd iae ] Jo0e | et tuele maission s tofcoavent alt pRUOREID he fudzed it would require many sears of | Is zoing on here abont, e e Facsover | sat thal for eatiug fneal one may bosumuarily | thal we are cxposel to the greatest critae | doubt aboct it that he tasies B oy s | ipwaval ihinkin As astep toward tais, hard study to Intellicently say whether e be- | Play. The Voruing Pt e antor. | taken betore the church gnd timed out. Mr. | kuown to humau or divine law, namely, the | arca litle lover and R ey | oy tild wlis st Sowrcesn o England should Usred lm;gluf not; and on that declaration he | tunate that = the attempt should” bave | Block had an entertainment st bis home on the | usurpation of our King's authority. I had | of the upper ten thousa i 3”‘1“ mflz es | embrace Muglctonianizt, aud that her sub- ras received. Lurist my good friend will par- | beon made to introduce the play ot ave | ok b o er. - Ilc inyited a few particalar | rathor stand before s ar charzed with the | thoush It was an utteranes of a o Leyp dois L Solow colved, | trust my good friend will par- | Bee Ha Ciha best. {Hotds of the drama | friends 10 meet sister, from a distait State. | 7iolation of every one of His laws than with this | I do not think hora mas. ever o moro falte, de- | o The Rer. <e, de- = RELIGIOUS. ethodism a8 Described by John Wesley---Has It De- parted Therefrom ? olas Bjerring, pastor of the <eited Over a Proposed | o 3 s 3 L‘;nflofl Es X 2 iolar uud a thinker, his experience stands for | are endeavoring to break down the prejudice There was a aance on the oceasion. Ouly two | one erime. vl 5 e o[ d Riietn Chanel 46 oW Yok Nas 18 Representation of the ::):;nauc‘;i(‘::::i‘\.::lrx?ufl:'buhe\‘c enough, but eau- | with which so many religious people have re- canples, ;n]uze%b“:n‘l: ;gu?zrv‘}d Joes ot any | ihe Syiod nally sustained. Mr. Block's so- Seifiie eenbimun i) masitert by Dokt larer e e ot e J{’fv‘,’f.fl:u:,h: i = . arded the theatre, and after so many lights at | wno waltzed, no_cvid ne | oeal, and the Presbytery took an appeal f ! lozes v b | e e ot r vy Qherammergan Pas- a B Totent Chiureh Coneress at Sheflicld had ex- | sexes waltzed together, ‘Thure i ho proof that | this ‘decision to o Generat Aigcul’lfl?olrr:: gifif%ccsctmcgflfi&lfi%rgcfif}: -i;-} -Muisliezv‘”‘é piririloh o’,,“;_lmfl J&l}.’“’-fi; g;‘r";:ge “;; 7 sion Tlay OBERAMMERGATU. S"“sscd thomselves so-atronrly o, fuvor of the thers: ".}Sm“,“s—“'m‘;‘{;’.'fi[:_fr“ o Jendne 1o this | Cliurdh, whileh mécts 1o May, 1519, much more powerful.”! ischicvous becase |y editor, be tells us, is to *-promote the unity ay. LDRROE B CrekD. OVER SRR PRGRosEn | UIamans & nicans of MnEnCIs e people for | house. fhag Hhite yus i - ¥ of the body of - Clrist, His visible Church, and O it o 2 the better. * Bur the announcement of the | ing, and they at once handle Mr. Block without B o b o > u 1 . mes— VIO SOp Te o ELIaIR REAT e better, B e e of hama re. | waiting to_ liear all about it (Dr. Leltwitch THE THEATRE. GENERAL NOTES. e T S ol Foxnos 0"”",’,;"“ Jew York lerald, demption at the Aquarium had not then | riscs, but Col. “Anderson says: “I cannot sive | THE ATTITUDE OF TUE CHURCI TOWARD THE ollsied by showing wherein we agree rather, NDON, Oct. 22.—Auother dramatic sensa- | shocked the public conscience. If it had, no | way for hall a dozen speeches,” and continues.) DERAM. The next anniversary of the American Mis- | than whercin we dilfer.” Hence he devotes ginfolness of Round Dancing Fiaborately Discussed Ly a Georgia Synod. e2 Neo York derald. sionary Society will be held in this city next fail. | thirty-seven pages to a description and forms of ever, the subject v ki ~ | and reprobated with the unanimous indiguation | which St. Paul refersalong with eating meat Loxpox, Oct. 12— . . . i " 5 i nal ’nmmn; o e rm,fl“,“,}’fl’;‘:"“" C:"fl and reprabated e e enlightencd assem- | and drinking wine. It pover was designed ihat | most interesting ébcu”,uns of 5,’;"‘32;,,2;‘;’ One s mivute s the ratoat which the Amer- | orot Sine e Satbai nmf\gfx‘xl;c s e aan | clergymen by the score bave | by “Yory justly has the manazer of the Aqua- | thess matlers Thould bo subjects of church dis- | wers th R ; o tean Bible Soclety can print Bibles with fts new | paces are given to a sharp review of “The Kus con driven to the verze of madness by oo an | D vy ademned by the public volee in | cipline. The fulure to mention dauclar, where ere those on ‘‘The Attitude of tke Church | rast press. bt e gl s t v Douncement, made a few davs ago by the man- | this matter. The mantleof the Argyle Roums | so many crimcs are specificd, is strong areu- | ToWard Popular Literature and Recreation.” | - g¢ 4h 353 o S nelere wahslation of S The Cossacks,” Uy azer of the Royal Aquarium, the home of fishes, | bas of late fallen on the Royal Aguarium, and | ment that 1o s e o ited with themm. (After | Tae drama came in for a large share of abuse, | Golloze. Buetand 263 cducated at Cuddiesden | oy Tolstoy. O e, ot Bromeny bas of late fallen on the Royal Zaueriiih Hv | Gl Colonel has taken up. the docirine aud de- | as 2 matter of coursc, as well as for some up- .y ?:’pf:?’iggvflehfiv:%“m“ 9 the Kit- | faraishes o interesting muticle on Western Sibe; E even ecome Catholics. { ria, and_ Mr. Botassi, tue Greek Consui-General tion; another prohibited play! This time, how- | doubt the proposal would have been denounced | Dancing belongs to that class of offenses to Correspony Attitude of the Church Towards the Tre mermaids, of acrobuts, comic singers, perform- 50 % % i t o v ces of the church concerning dancing, ¥ : rama-—-Views of the Bishop of g fivas, Fazet, and (he Tale womee oricen 1 both Cattoile and Protestant, would hase beon [ liverances of the s | preciatory remarks, especially by the Bishop of 3 n Manchester. the Dtke of Aneslls. The vomen driven from | outrased by the performance ot ‘any religious | Mr. McConuell says that he understands that | Manchester, who h oo m’”’o Semarly I the Baptist Chureh at Frauklin, Pa., there | 36 Now York, another on Modern Greeee, A3 . oy was | Subjecs there, muth more the representation of | Dr. Ciisby retracted uis offnelve Word, ©inde; > PROFLURILY L0 1 4.7/, dent, and th s H she desigu of the mazazine is to make Amor: that M. Tobertson “had been able to con | subsis from: the ¢ Passion Play’ by a band of | cent? soon after its utteraiice, bt not so that speak In fuvor of more enlightenedviews among ut, and the vastor and sexton are pald | jeays petter acquainted with Russia, the editor —_— clude arrangements for the appearance at | Sdventurers, who have probably never feen the | he and most of the Synod could hear it; he will | the clerzy In recard to theatrieal matters, List- every Monday morsing. - If & member of the | has made a good bozinuing. - But bejpromises church does not give he is visited und disci- | better things in the future. : the Westminster Aquarium of the world- bighlands of Bavaria. The * l’nssm{\ Play ? ¢ | give the bmthc':r:m.x ODP?"H;“L; to cxplain his en to the words of some of the lights on theat- i ikely to oxeite a vast amount of interest. The | Yot o seder o soe. thore. the charming per- [ tural souse of ~unbecoming, aud I stil St. Georges In the East, was of opinion that | Tbe Theological Seminary of the Reformed | Youue Mew's Ghristisu Associations, ropresent- mountainaces have now for the first time been | formance, in which an cntire community of re- | think the word applicable in _that "sense. | “those who take their chief pleasure In fre- (Dutch) Church, at New Brunswick, N. J., en- | fuz L0X) Associations, with a_membership of induced to leave their homes, in order to pre- | 1igious men take part.” I iotended mot 1: aoy Wy o e quenting dramatic performances of the coarser | ters upon its ninety-fitth year—tho sixty-ninth | 100,00, in accordance Wwith the instructions of sent in England, at the Royal Aquarium, aseries — B o e e ommgt. tho i | 2ot gonarally eare. litle for . xuy heurly play sinec itaransiectothat plaesov it iirtp o | 00 UELe SO0 o o Lond's Day o€ vl etk bt it il Jiondon Timer, 0ct.23. MeConnell: Aeapt the b which trles the limbs and lungs.” ¥or the sim- i N Etbivert s the most striking incidents of man’s fall aud osed to bring over to London for exhibition me.” Col. e 3 |3 conclntes Wl an elo- | abehe andteces atteoting the conser per | wins eteral dssembly of the brauselical Ak | blessinie upon, souop men-and work 15 thele General Notes--- Personals --- Pious Puns---Services To-Day. SUNDAY LESSON. FOR THE CHURCH AND HOME. 1t it meets with encouragement from the re- J N 3 ] K a 4 " readers of this paper, T TRIGUNE will redemption. The German Passionspiel, it is | some of the tableaux of the Oberammersrau Das- quent peroratiou. be that Mr. Biock wi 7 ons 7 el Toen: i epresomted but once erery ton | Sion Play, it mas be interesting to learn that | trowble sty 13, bo tbat Mr. Blodk will ot | formavces bave more than enough of linb and | Septemper noxt vear, wil be fn German Sad vehmlf. The World's Conveution of the Asso- . thiere is &till fo_existence a rude amphitheatre, | come on bende jority of the | jung work during the day. The Rev. Mr. Bul- | French, but the use of English will be permit- | 15157 e Beitsetland, Ang- 10 viot from week to week a Sunday-school lesson gigdlar o the one below, prepared by one of the ms:mm—sdmol workers in this city. years at Oberammergau, and thousands of spec- ] e £ i : 3 ¥ 'z o 5 ¢ L , | session and say: ‘I am wrong aund you are T } in the parish of St. Just, near the Land’s End lock thought “the atmosphere of the theatre, | ted fn these discussions. sented), joined heartily in this appointment, s0 tators travel from all parts of the elobe to sce | Corpwall, in which sacred plays, some of a | right.’ Tnere is u great principle involved in of which I am proud to be the | @8 it Is, the opera would not,. as a general The final revision of the New Testament by | that in ull parts of the world this seasou of these tableaux, ‘aud prelate, priest, and laity | Scriptural and othiers of a legendary character, [ this case, of ¥ .o l k A ; L bave alike vied in according their ivarmest { Were perfermedin the dnvslncf‘?{u r.heRcrt‘ulrmn& fumf’\‘?:&m‘:u': :fi:gfin‘?&lg g{lg;rfé:nenng!;:: rule. be found helpful to a close and :;;ca\;zccr;fi:_:eng;lfnzhsr; r;fivuffis mlg :le fi;; pr_at_\'Er is being gfibsfrfi““ The é\mrerimu Clom- 5 Py ¢! e v ) o - n 2 year, aod wil roba wittec sugzest {ollowi L{ (i} eet! praise to the representation. In June,.1570, »‘}f'éa&‘e’?fi'fié ::;l;mfm\‘xl; D thos o e wateltowers to euard uzainst the ;'::N’!’ walk with God” The Hev. the | puplisned soon R 02 vuate ‘ot the 014 | cach day o the hedclomacina s mem when the Passionspiel was produced, the cor- | ) ‘his * History of the Ancient Cornish encroachments of priestly power. Let us chng rl of Muigrave said “the clerzy were | Testament, the revision of which will mot be | Nov.10. Exhortation to Young, Mec. 7Titus, il respondent of the Tines wrote of these tab- | Drama”: *'Tne bare granite plain of St. Just, | to the principle. of Christian liberty and that wasting time in attempting to refuse to the | completed for some years. 6—8. 2 i leaux: “As they stand, ‘they nre marvelously | in view of Cape Cornwall and of the transparent o cpes, watmer focling of Cbristisn love. Let | drama its prober place smong recreations. | There will be a mecting of the congrotation 11 Young Men: Their Power for Evil, I. Kings, impressive, and living pictures of maw’s fall | Sca which beats upon the maenificent headlands, }?kve fif r":h m(t}:lcl; fi-'i:;‘m’.?i"f.;c 1-‘33'{3\;;113 Some action was required. _Asoclety had been | of lmmavucl Reforined Episcopal Chiirch (tor- | 3 3 3 xiil, S35 Acts, vil., and redembtion. 1 have never scen so aflecting | 1OIg 8.3 imagnificen theatre for the exhiul Hke tho mar G e eeerves ) nlering | orgavized in Manchuster called the Dramatie merly worshipine in_the building corner of | < Men: ‘Their Pawer for Good. Prov., a spectacle. or one more exeulated to draw out Hom O Wl I s %> tho genor histors of | even in frozen cliines.” Retorm Socioty, and. surely it michi be said o | Gentre 32 Dayten stocte)as thy Masonie Hal | =, 200 L e i onecr iaPi i i alinons: . 1§ S 8 Py B K an 3 c 2 Strongg 1! t St ¢ best and purcst, feelins of the heart?s | $EIoNS FCbIestRA it G Ml Fidcaiprion of | Arguments now beiog closed, the opinion of bo under the auspices of the Church when It | odnesday evening, Nov. 1 2t § oetock: | oS nathing Mgty e st af 1. How to Reach Young Men. Joba i., 35—46. [Luke, piiith chapter, 9th to 17th verses, in- awre] N—X0 PABDON. atican. rayer WAS M itation. . y fil‘l’:ur{ks God he peeded no pardon, 3 God could do nothing. 3 Prarer must sk for comething. 1 e praver masbrag. & e did more than lis duty. U’ N—PARDON, MAN'S TLA b nlier, while other writers of all countries have spoken s : ynod cen. ts Vi i stood afsr off (clf-condemned). 5 st . b maa, however it might be marred oceasionally the members of the Synod was taken. The numbered among its Vice-Presidents two Bishops " . £ jomnc Gormovtuly miost eloquently and eosiastionlly s el | by phaeazes ot 3 lite and exc of a ludicrons | SIORCCh o reieted o sk patkor 8 | oftho Curch of Eogland. Tho b of the - Tho anomalics of chureh establisments aro | 15 Young M, Ther Spec Tembiatons. ‘elt his J i & ¢ Rov: 3 ¢ mighty 1] C i ; ¢ UL A . 3 IL Tim., 11— 3 fune in Enyeland at the Royal Aquarium on the | Sharacter. he R ‘mmy”’mg“,_ said, sadiy: L would encerfully do s6, but T Socicty wus to further the -movement in favor | parish of Gairloch in Scotland. There the | 10 ""‘\’CS“‘;"’“},S'_"Zg‘““"“ Men. Luke, H., ¢ N . vy from many milés round, afternoon of Nov. 4, and will give five other | from maty UGS JORNL orienea ren- [ feel that the request would besuseicss ex- ¢ penditure of breath.” ances, and also by discouraging objectionable of dramatic art by encourazing good perform- | minister of the parish preachies to three fawi- 4. Pleadthe sione. lics, consisting of abouta dozen persons, and | Tie Committee issue a_circular to pastors 5 Justidea. §lwlie simphcity pleases God (otling | representations, on the afternoous of Nov: 8, | jou, ‘where nothing erows up to limit the o 15 e bing e any priorn | 1, E01E (SO ot o | D, s, iy, of Nownan, s Once | petermane by perons, iages, b e fhe Free Church misister to s congregatidn ot | asking teir co-operation, and requsty 1t prac, ¥ 3 900. cable, a se £0 youI cu ou the Lord’s absolutely necessary when so many people bad [ admit Mr. Block’s position and you open the | Jewal action as might be dcemed advisable, or B ates for tue forusbiug of all s of Sim- | e apsiisation to the Lord Chamberlain, They | ,Bishop Littlefotn, of Lonz Tsland, who has | 1,6y eern desirable. the oversight of foreizn Episcopal churches, has T.ast year the season was very generally ob- TRINCIPLES. Day, und such other observance of the week as 1. Noman natnrally nchicons, 1 {0 B2 can innocently boast of his own right- ”(In.‘.’i‘eéuisefis 2nd Pablicans alike sinners. " o wazn dare brag of himeelf to God. 5. Added 5ood WOTRS will not atone for sin. & More than even rizid bencvolence required 7. Oze may know when hix heart acties with sin. & Let God promote us in Llis own way. & Notbiaz but the propitiation can atoneforsin. 10, Tumibity 3 most. beautiful zrace. 1 Afterreal pevitentinl prayer is justification. 12. Childlikeness Ged demands of us. 13 What God here commandsall men prefer. CREED AND CONDUCT. 300N WESLEY'S VIEWS OF METHODISM. Dr. Thomas {n the Alliance. 1t Is & remarkavle fact in the history of the Chureh that nearly all its quarrels and divisions 10d persecutions have been about questions and forms of belief, and not ahout conduct or life. Jadeed, 50 intent has the Bhurch been about its ceaids, that too often conduct bas secmed a petter of almost secondary importance. A pamav bo trae, and honest, and kind, and So read the advert] camp. 1 was about 1o say *rizhteous” Indig- | Ve 10 the assembly a character probably more ilar sins. mirbt be surs of ultimate +if the Church tion, but, Banily feel ])“sfim_d S dain, | like what we hear of fn the so-called relizious | _Dr. John Jones, of Atlanta—The penalty was imate success if the Church | consecrazed the new Emanuel Church;at Ge- Y bt 3 8 mation, but hurdly feel justifid in g0 doin | ruyivals in America than snyluiog witnessed It | disproportiougse (0 LS tlanta—The penalty s | s Church would stand more boldly forward | meva, Switzeriand, of which Dr. 3. Van Rens- | oot Gafsorvis eratsennonsergproached, constant interferenceof the clermy in matters | OFC ‘sober Europe.” It may be remembered, | the policy of the Assemvly. The sentence was | and exert its infuence on public recrestions.’” | selaer is Rector. The church will accommodate niany speclalacryioss. NOe. O a0d toe 08t A s throurh the Infiagnes of the| Sioytls st iho Congress of the British Arch: | tco heavy for onlyone offense in a matter where | The Rev. George Everard, of Wolverhampton, | 200ut 230. It s built of gray stone, and is an i et ‘f‘{‘;{‘:‘ Lt uits Wwere, Te- e rpccissy of tae Cirareh that magy of | oloFical Assoclation held st Uodmin snd Fei | shiees iv Slb dillscoes of apinion 5 to its Fectl- | tnought the antagonism of the clergy chould ha!| iadunLel Gotliie. o gk the vfilus‘t charming operas cannot be prodiiced :fi:;‘;;‘gr}_‘ m;d‘{,‘:cu:[‘,')‘ e “t,’;on.’fl’l{':{.‘le,,i}te“ ‘t‘%c;n&)_ 'lldl:xedn?:::‘f;uwr’:gllg' s::cemr;}.ct this case | )0 qeainst sporting in hich places, and give | o Tie Methodist has discovered 1,000 families of | of grace thus begun was deepened and extended D e o e e oot o || Gormwall st Tormec vitibs, the o | e e e talt with 1n the spirit of | Smit advocated similur views. whe drama, be | g ivh, Mot of et btng Shise vl tiny. | dasuarys Zna Commltses ateomsny the it Dbibical test. *Moses m Egypt? ca o Meriasek,” _comprising the legend of the cou- | the Christian relizion. said, would never cease to exercise a powerful { ST SRR IORC, B e ex-Method 5,“).9!" at 98 | larwith 2 brie .S_L“W“':"T-O the important work il & o . U S 1 T'D T an only be | Torsion of Constantine, thelegend of the Mother s Rov. D Fraser, of Decatur—There is influence on mankind, while it was ‘capable of P i i;“exfl etho ists give bat one | in tneir charge amoug the S0),000 railroad men, Derformed a8 o Or . sthe ord's Prayer | Snd e Son, aud the logendary life of tie Suivt | nothing fu the Chureh O ainct dane, | bein mado a means of wholesome intellectuzl Teason, dnd thabile * the chanzeablencas and un- | the 30,000 younw men in collexce, th COK0 e e R 4 ’,‘Mf‘“f'.‘". Goibe word | pimself, oud of areat local jntcrest, a5 some of | Ie Cile attucked the suthority of the Church | gducation. as well 25 a areat moral teacher, if | certainty of the pastorate. - commereial travelers, Txd the 500,000 German- musieal text m;,ks \-g} 1,,“?, ago thero “‘m“'f the scencs were laid abont Camborne and Truro. | to bind any man’s conscience. “Yon can talk | it Wwere only properly cared for and . directed. The Rev. Thomas J. Meiish, D. D., of Cin- ;mlnkiil,’ {%fl"fi men. .Anl nl_l([?uz oue of these semi-religious wrfo"‘nmm for Sunday-school Not much, according to Mr. Lach Szyrma, is | of your church courts, but the people must be The action of the Cliurch in that direction could | cinnati, was formerly a Baptist minister, but | felus tiey J"‘:_ a lsfllmfl‘é"k II“ '-!l’flflb‘??d 0 e iied Joseph and ILis. Brothren, | EIOWI a8 o the oy i which these plays were | coisidered too. | The courts are for, the peoble oy e Telt aure, fall to be productive of much | disliked. the *close-communion " docirlics of e womesavarica com: ¢ i S -epresented, thouzh some of the *stace diree- vil U] e i at denomination, ceking larzer libert; E e R £ 3 By mven at a large hallin Shefleld toa very T ot ‘They ware, doubticss, por- ;3‘&.;},‘;‘;"3},&5" consent.there is uo Churen | FSRHY picyiop of Manchester's specch on the | found it iu_thie Protestant Episcopal Chaireh, | pavions. The workers in these orzanizations ary rfi;pegf;bl: tlSficu\b‘h‘E& The audience 3 | formed i the open air+ but there could bardly | " 3Ir. Flemiug—>r. Moderator, I do not object subject of dramatic aciusements is well worthy | into the ministry of which he has just Leen re- “‘“f‘.“-‘;]"he e whom te churches e tts e At stopped 8¢ | have been much scenery, though there | to the longitude allowed the speaker, bus 1 do | Of loug quotations. He said: *Allusion has | ceived, havine licen ordained a Deacon fn Christ liave the most conlldeuce, ‘"‘& tHiciealm s 1000 orice 5 suthorities, who could “fl“ Jerm vre- | BATe Lo o Girections™ " as 10 tents, | object to such latjtude os e has. d been made once or twice, always kiadly, to the | Churel, ‘Cincinnati. sueh “""t“’fi""}"‘?"fls itsclf to the Church, to iiglous sublects fo be profaned BY. & omom | Houses, et At the . oginlne ts; | object to sucn lattuude os be 805 stountain—It | port that I took, qulte involuntatily, o couce: | Dissenters in Russia number over 15,000,000, B 0 s s rabak W sple. T b of ‘Sheba are placed in the samo | e PISY of the 1 Ot or o tor ToEiance, there | is pencrally sdumitten. that tho. round dauce s | Hon with the theairs Guhg e, Hime of The | - I e e e tion 16 | inskis s In Koy of the. Dibie, sl are o i e Pl amo | the play of the 1 Creation, Okt Hell, ' when | Jassivions, and. yet they say there i3 no law in | Manchester Mission, which wis held in the be- | 41 Greel Church that the Methodists d lityna tn knozledep ol he, i SO0 509 fhflex of pronibited plays in Encland as the | eS8 KOG pa'wide, from which it may | the Word'of God to condemn such a practice. | EENIE % tho yeur 1577, That opportunity | (he Crees G ey B RS e b ot g e e o 1ay o7 scekite, but one of the See. | G ho Aimister of Bublic IWorship. has dis. | Christian work. s érsont in spirit, loving God and fan, but unless | adaptations made by rising dramatists of | i 2 3 “Niniche” “ i " e inferred that the Infernal regions were repre- | T never saw a round dance, and never saw much r = B 3 e belies just g0 sud so, the doorof the | “Nipiche’ and “Les fonnes Pouvres” an | fonted by the mouth of an infernal monster | daucing_ of auy o e 1 "betieve ft 1s an of. | Fetarics of the Manchester Mission said, 'We | paiched a commission to Odessa to fuquire into e is cosed spainst nim. He may be a teg- | ;o Wil the AmREet o hose who know | Just as sbown ie "01d pictures and on old painted | fense, and tnat the stssion treated it properly think that there is a body of people that ought | jpe circumstances attending the growth of that N {i sttendant upon the public services, pay his Eom dio \windows in Gothicchurchee, **As &t Oberam- | ip this case. not to be left out of the mission, and those are | guq opner hetorodos sects. y PERSONALS. 1hat the Ammergauers never intended to COMe | peragy 1 adds Mr. Lach Szyrma, *‘the back- - the people enmaged at our theatres. Will you gay,’ A y The-Rev. 8. 8. Gallard, of Grifin—The Church | come and address them? Well, 1 have ‘the ‘f'rouble has come among the colored Baptists e Rev. A. L. Thompson, of Greensburg, The Rev. A. 3 3 cove forits support, and his life may be in every way that of a Christiau, but unless he can phscribe to its formal statements of doctrine Zand the creeds of no two churches are just the same—whatever his life may be, his honest teliefs may be a bar to bis full fellowship with 52 church. On the other hand, if he is, orif te will eay that he s, square on the doc- tines, whetber he understands them or mot, e if he be strongly sectarian, that fact fothe sectarian eye, like charity, will go fac tovzrd covering a *multitude of sins.” These fatements are very broad, and are aimed at 3 reneral condition” of things in the religious orld, and intended to apply to a wide range of at all, but that Mr. Robertson had been taken : ol A e e Giroetor namel | Erounds ol hills sud socksm gt fiave been, and | wants no man's private’ judgment whon'itIs in | courage sometimes of my own opinion, —but | &} Jacksouville, Fla., with their new pastor. I abider, who wandered about Austria some | RFOPRLY Weres WHIRER 7 CF e o give Gral; | iis right place, _1ts presosterons for a maa to | more frequontly I bave O o iy wae | Thoir old pastor lind adopted the un-Buptisy | 120 is ot the Hot Springs. Sears ago giving performances *siter the man- | YER0 A G dded that e . | tallc of private judzinent and his conscicnre | pulses,—and when my impulscs toid me” that | practice of taking little children in bisarms to | The Rev. Dr. Mackenzie, Sub-Dean of Lincoln Der of the Ammerzau Passion Play” in the | 40, e miting a little more than a cestur: \When he is brought under the judzment of the | Pue thing was a right thing to do, und that it I [ bless them, to the great satisfaction of the mem- a1 and Suffragan Bi Yotting B bun “whestacs. mat i - provincia) | LUarE, WEILIDE LG O e ataphitbea. | Churel- e i s 8 e the message of tho | bers. Witn the new pastor came e con- Cathedral and Suflragun Bistop of Notingham, Sotns. " The announcement was made i Lon- | 50 (AT (0 oo o7 cirele, 136 feet fn di- | | After the riembers of the Atlanta Presbytery | Gospel to those people Who, periiaps, do mot | demned the ‘practice aud refused to foliow it. ln | 15 desd- don that the man (I forget his name) who bad | o morer the bank being seven feet high on the Tiad ben heard o motion was mado that they | always have i prescated to them in an attraci- consequence, there are loud complaints among ¢ Adirondack ” Murray has had -three flogers o e eramatar the performine feas, the | SIeLer the bagk bele tor e, and the seats | stiould withdraw, but Dr. Jones sald, "1f yoi | ive form, i wae O cuty as the Bishop of the | the members. amputated from his right hand. the result of an Sliet ts stay we will behave ourselves,” and | Diocese ' to go; aud I must gay [| TheWindham Association, fn Vermont, passed | accident which reccntly befell him. two-headea nightingale, the whales, hiud at large b s e % the b as still teaceable, the latter consisting of six s : L pemaiture succecded fn inducluse the “moun- [ 58 SN LREC L oic fnches in width, while | they were givtn scats in the rear of the hous was never more amply -rewsrded. I | ypanimousiya resolution withdrawing fellow- | i ponument to the Rey. William Smith, D, D., acrlebrated Presbyterian divine, was dedi- taincers of Ammerzaun® (?) to visit Londoo in i i The Rev. Mr. Cartled) { Augusta—Th lis of my vinie-1 k R 3 i the rampare at the top was several feet wide. Ak edge, of Augusta e { have on the walls of my drawing-room a | ship from the Rev. Sies order to give a limitcd number of performances | Ty, amphithestreat B RS oviit exists, thongh | General Assembly has distinctly decided that | work of act of considerable merit that was sent trutbfulicss, eec:‘mi}z’n'fv::gu b gD Now. | the fact that horses and cattle and sheep are the social dance is wronz. These decisions are | to me by the .principal scene painter of one of | ance in churches,” Mr. Shartleff sucd the Rev. | cated at Miller’s Run, Pa., on Wedneadsy. : according to the Word of God, and are binding | the theatres—a water-color drawing of Man- | D= "Stevens, of Westminster, and recoverad The Rev. Dr. Maltby has filied the n:s(on‘g of the tableaux from the ¥ Pussion Plas.” knowing _the Ammergauers intimately, having | gliowed to eraze upon it, ana that it erves also, Bonh | B e Mr Block sfned with a bigh | chester Cathedral, as a mark of zratitude£o me | £33 Otner Congregational pustors are appre- 3 < vo that sufte will be brought against them, | Of the Broadway Congregational Church at ve years. Heis now lived months among them, I know they are not | jiee g vil 7 plaveround for. enil- lived months amon them, § Kuow Y ¢ s | like a villase creen, as n plaszround, 107, S | haud of rebellion sgainst eayri's Kins and tho | for o syiupathy xieages, IOAe Wi As1 : B o reh when ho gave this | was leaving the stage of the Theatre Rojul— | Tie case i to be appealed. Tannton, Muss., for forty- {uts, and 8s such, in many cases, need material | before the time for their performance of their In ¢ level d st Wi Soviseations. They Goniot apply to_ whiat are | decadal ow (1850), and never dreamed for a paris,” and nearly levcled the old, stage Wit | feer v Block talke of bis livery. He | for Lbad to speak Trom i Swoke—the g &3'and n poor Healch. Toown s the liberal churches. They donot | moment that the anuouncement I have given 3 hould give up his so-called liberty for the zood | manager came to me and claspell me by the Cl?nehué the smflwrls :tttlm recent English | © 0 o Ty in Grace, of St. Marg's Roman td & > W =it v 7 4 urch Congress stated that some years 150 an 3 Skl 2.ary of his Church, \When the Gencral Assembly | hand ‘and said, *Bishop, I thank you for what years ago an | AHeCH | Lh” Newport, has becn made by wply, 53 mle, to_Congregational churches, above would be taken in so serious a mauner. which are larrely independent societies in them- ROUND DANCING. i i aEe ¥ xe y ¢ L e ole rWEAL | Anelican sisteshood weut over io the Church % r condemned the moaern eocial dance iv was act- | you bave said. - You have spoken to me kindly, = the Pope a Doctor of the Catholie Charen, the But lo! two papers came out in h‘ml': cdimrli’n] o gyt L - condemnations of Mr. Robertson. “ 1t is withu SINFULNESS DISCUSSED BY THE GZORGLA | ing In the constitution of the Church and | and i £ ¥ ergy would k of Rome in a body. The starement iscontirmed ape £ A e s Ul 5 ing within the constitution of ¢ Church and | and if more of you clergy would speak to us B Canon Oakely (Cathiolie), who 3 nfiened | rst digmity of the kind conferred by Leo XIIL gives. The same is true of the Baptist Church, which is composed of separate socicties, having | sense of shock,” suys the Morning Post, “in PRESBYTERIANS. aceording to the Word of God. It is evil, and [ poor piayers and think of us a little more than ! ” 3 8 speneral Church Confession of Faith, but cach | which indignation struggles with abhorrence for Correspondence New Fork World. oniv evil, and has swept millions to hell.” “I | you do perbaps we should be better Hian we | ‘going through a shoct novitiate at Paris, they | The Re. Jasper Coyne, Stormon, of Salt Lake 2 man working in a poor parish | Worked under me till calied 0 Lreland, where | City, says that if his Caurchigave up the doctrine the loudest power of cxpression, that the public | Arwanta, Ga., Nov. 2.—The.Presbytenan | never saw 4 dance until T was 20 years old, and [ are.’ A clergy: St 1 e o intimation that arriuzements have | g nod of this State has for the past week been | then it was one of those ol square dances. | wrote to me'a few days lacer to say I bad wiven | Hhe¥ Baie pYET S been living a most Loty aud | of Polygamy thetc would be a descent of wrath been made with the peasant actors of Oberam- | 7L 0 lof Brother Frank E.Block When T eaw that [ thousht I never saw such 3 | gome little grain of comlfort toa premier dun- devoted life in the County of Leitrim, as Fran- { from above sutlicient to burn everything in erEau for a serics of verformances of the | brying the appeal of HraLbEr rank E. Block | gnyocstive thing. Its motiovs were peen ciscans of the third order inclose Utab. sciety may hare its rules of admission to mem- lerstap_and communion, with this one condi- tion: oll must be immersed. In the Preshyte- fan Chureh I think the preachers and elders we required to subscribe to the Confession of Faith, but this is not, unless it be in a geoeral way, expected of the members of the Church. And 1 suppose each denomination has some- 1hing peculiar to itself that mirht require some Dodification of the above statement, but the fut of emphasis upon creed rather thau upon A rly | seuse at the Theatre Royal, Manchester, and that e Piay” at. the Aquarim Theatre. It | from the decision of the Atlunta Presbytery, | lnstivious, uud K lewiated to. inepire tho licen. | it had helped her o struggie through ner duty, | The Bible readiugs of the Rev. J. Munco Gib- | _ gishop Littlcjohn, In proot of' th fact sk bas always heen a dehatable question whether a | which sustained tbe sentence of the session of | tious feelings of the heart. It Was lascivious | —i was zoing tosay more mantully,—but Lwill | son, D. D., ziven in Farweil Hallevery Sunday Blsl:onspdo Wlejoln, I Droog of tho facttnte s matic reprosentation of the sufferings and | yuo Central Church suspending him indefinitely | aud Jicentious throughout.” 7y More as 3 true woman should. He told me | at 4:30 o'clock, arcdestined to become more | people suppose, states thau on a reccut Sunday death of the Redeemer of mankiod could be ad- from ail church communion for the helnous of- The Moderator—I do not consider such lan- | of the whole lite of this woman,—that she was | popular than cver, since those having them in | he put on and took off his episcopal robes seven mitted anywhere or under aoy circnmstance, so ; o o guage as respectlul to Lhe Moderator, to the | supporting un agred mother and & crippled sister | charge are disposed to make the music fucish- | yimes. Disciated s all that terrible history withi tho | fense of danciog. Dr. Leftwith conducted the— | Synod, or to this refined audience. [Apolause.] | out of ner earnings. I could not tell youmy | ed of & firstclass character. The choir of the | ™ most solemn feclings that human uature is cap- byterian Church, of which he is | _The Rt-Rev. Lawrence G. Mooly, Bishop of shall I say prosccution? He contended that “Dr. James Woodrow—The snepherd’s creok | experience on this subject within the time at my | Second Pre: ‘Elphin, bas been appointed Delegate Apostolic ;“c‘}lu_vl, 31!\1 tul diflslgns. and quarrels over | able of. o the sexcs did not. mingle in ancient dancing: | and not the sword or spear Is tne emblem of | disposal, but there are. one oF two points Lwish | pastor, cousisting of Mrs. Farsell, Mrs. Balfour, e Soostoll e i atiilramain, “1v woutd be revolting when placed upon 8 | that when dancing is commended in the Bible | toe Cbristian refigion. e Ei Jollow no | tobring befors you, B0d Messrs. Howard and Sloed, have kindly | to Americs, to i ths FEENDY sausel by the 4 . inJohn Wesley’s con- | London stage with aif the yulzar associations of | ;5 1y qvs wwhen it has been of the nature of a tnan,—not. Calvin, not Luther, not, Thornwell. | I hada discussion not very long ago with | volunteered to be present and sing to-day. recent duath of Bishop Conroy, who died at St. 2 commercial speculation. It is too much 1o John Calyin, bonor him as we should, is as dan- | one of the leading Directors of the limited com- “I'e annual Convention of the Iilinois State Johng, N. B. ‘The Rev. T. D. Anderson, D. D., of the First eeption of Christianity and ot Metbodism, con- duct and experience were the chief things, and religious exercisc, and that whenever the danc- | gerous 3 man as we could follow in many re- | pany which holds one or_two Manehester thea- | a8 A ontion, opposed to seeret socie- , ¢ ) peaking to him as Xnave spokento | w0 meet ju Wheaton Nov. 20 to 22, open-'[ Baptist Church of New York, proposes, it is hope that nobody will o and sce it. ‘That mast people of right Teeling wllll refuse it Ltith d..il;s- jng was for amusement it was uniformly con- s‘)ch;. If he werea dmgmb':{ of “llxc Sypod I | tres. Iwass| I eust we {ully believe, but there are those who nned, and sometimes very strongly. To jus- | would vote tosuspend him from the comuis- | the public, on the graverespousi ility that man- | ¢ °2 i s & e > cause it is sh - and the more shockinz the = o2 i reaking; for the evidence)s that Calvin was | the pal ¢ picces of the character of the uk £ h T vor better they like it. These are Lbe people who for promiscuous dancing, two propositions must | ,gdicred to worldly amusements and cven play- Do Pioes,” whichbias been, I believe, denounced | GA¢ orl ttllleum::t n:zporlz:nn[n?hcye history of the seventeen years. would gfo to executions if they were public, who | be maintained: (1) What may belawlully done | ¢d ball on Sundey. The proceedings in this | by every respectable journal fn the Kingdom as | § ngfl :chonfi 3 m‘i‘::i‘:“:‘; O &utlzmil,vslbfl union The Rev. Mahomet Abou, Mohammedan, of erowd to 8 prize-fight, and are never sowell | by the sexes apart may e done by the sexes to- | case were irrezular and arbitrary, and the sen- | an ourrage on morality, but is still represented “‘:'; experted, not.onl fl, uf e E!elz?_"o‘ns Meding, Turkey, sas that Allah bas decided to O osed as whion proprioty is outraged or deli- [ yoners (2) what may belawlully done as worship | 10u6e O 4 be reversed for mremularity, for | and is auended by thousands and bundreds of | ju¢ aiso from Lowa, 5 {rom el paies of llinoles || ave e s clan B the west oo and alter July cate feelings ure £bocked. ~‘these will 2o to the | = be‘ lawfully done_ss amusement. Thes prejudice, and for error in the decision. ¢ is | thousands in the Jand. Well, what was his an- | 1 \.5‘; b cater Ko udkw“fl“-r;'ll Ry ichizan. | 11,1870, and oo that day all Christians would nay aw ity Cone, ' e | B that the law against worldly amuseutents | swer! He said: “The people wiil haye it. Then | fue Nort toad gives a reduction in re- | be stricken blind. Maj. Whittle, of this city, who formerly ‘Passion Play,’ and crowd the louse whea the ; o s thrilling story of the four Evangclists is pre- Dropositions Dr. Leftwich thus disposed of: | had been violated. T do not kuow that we have | there is another poiut of view—itis so much » seuted to their eyes and earsas if it werea @It is lawful for the sexes to disrobe | suchalaw. Ihave searched far and wide for it | cheaper to put on, the stage) 1satd: *Give | Dr. Pusey, in his recent letter to the Arch- | labored in evangelistic work with the lamented trazedy of the ordinary type. These are the | geparately. ltis wrong for them to disrobe to- | and cannot find it What are worldiy amuse- | thema play of Shakspears’s. When Carles | bishop of Canterbury, admits that for forty | P. P. Bliss,is now in Fittsburg contlnctiog people that will thunder their applause at the [ o ither, 1t ds Jawful to preach and pray in wor- entat We hava not been told. Worldly | Calvert put these playson the stazeof the theas | years he has received the confessions of all who | Bible readingsand other religious services, great- discomfiture of Herod and hiss Judas, and make EECT: i ilege to do these things i mmuscrments are amusements in excess. There | tre in this city ‘thousands flocked to secthem.’ | came to him. These confessions, he says, in [ ly to the edification of the people- corn of St. Peter’s weakness, and whistle their ship. It is. sucrilege o these things in | Matsli“Uitue devotion to them to make | ¢Yes,! he replied, ‘butit did not pay. It cost | many places had pecome habitual at the wish of Rev. 3. M. Backley, Methodist, of Brook cat-calls at Pilate. ‘Lheir money will probably amusement.” There 1, hc went on,acreat | them harmful. God has given us all a desirc of | £3,000 t0 put such o piay on thestaze as Lenry | those who made them. OF porsons sull living | The Rev. J. 3 Backler, et! hut, of Brook- recoup the management for the ‘enormous oul- | Protestant consensus agamst dancing in every | amusement,and it is our duty to pursue it with- | VIIL? or, “Henry V1.” and were it not for the | he had received confessious for some thirty-five yu.d comtp mn; fizuu l;:‘-rnu t.o‘fl.?lm “z_ ‘3: T e etentatiously advertised. But can | form now practiced; could the united people of | I8 brober bounds. We should thank ITim for | Christmas pantomunes we could mot fn fact | years. What then, be says, concerns bim is to | Shildren to take OpMEE BEOrT N Bpallios. Y ihing make up for the iujury donetoasacred | =0 oondemning what God Himsetf had ap- Hhou musernents, which He givesus for our | makelt jpay. ‘Ihe public demand a spectacle, Enow whether in so doing e bas come under | -i05teac A6E" 0 thenL B o T t, for the insult to every 1eeling of oro- i Ged e good. We have often beard it cluimed that civil | and therefore it becomes a very expensive mat- f any censure from the hundred Bishops assembled ol D]flu“ andithe COUrigecus SUrmounting ol o r for the sense of shame witli which all proved? The defense contended that nothing | yuihorities are ordinauces of God, but When | ter to put Shakspeare’s great dramas on the | ut the Lambeth Confereace in thit part of their ficalties. e will see the most solemn of ail | was wrony which was not forbidden in express | they transcend their powers it is our daty to | stage. But,’ said he, ‘oucof our repertoire | resolutivn Wwhich rao: “JIv is the deliberate The Rev. David Dale,a missionary of the i opinion of the Conference that no minister of | American Board, died recently ia the Sandwich ts decraded into u theatricsl | terms in the Bivle, but, said tue Doctor, “To disobey their commands. So when a_church | we can get up the * Plnk Dominoes? for £40.7 t > i i 3 thor dict: Vi is si s f i 1 | the Church is authorized to speculation with a run of so mauy nights! The | g, inference from the Word of God fs toob- | goes outside of. its authori ty its edicts are [ Well, v is simply 3 question of finance, and e Church is authorized cven to encourage the | Islands, azed 70. He went to Honolulu in 1810, play was tolerable in its simplicity and among | . sroke thie noblest of all scienc orthless and worse. Obedience to the right is | do not think that point s always borue in mind | practice ‘of habitual confession.” Dr. Pasey | and was President until 1855 of the Oahu Col- D e stry with whom it oriinated. With | literate O hen .you L ol sclences, | snvolved n disobedience 10 the wrous, 1t is | 991t should be. . . . The reason why ob- | devotes nearlyforty.two pages tohis arzuments. | lege. He then removed to Kalos, Kanai, whera e D as & piely,—a tradition. It was to | EYSemetit IR, When Jou dostrog I, | said that In the pleasurs of the sompanionship | jectionable featurcs cxist in the theatre is this, | s smail refigious body. called the Amish re- | e taasut with great_success. He was a fine e i oratorio 15 tous. But it was not | CBCCS YE8 SETEY 16 noblest doctelnbs of 10| of e, sexes Some ‘of the purest R eaeurcs of | thetwe. patronize the very things which ifi | cently held its anwual conference vear Earcka, | Gassical scholar, and fitted many young mea for e o mor as & areat stroko of snoat- | Writ, Where Wil 30, B SICR T Fomals | lite areyfoust: O e B aad ok 10 00 | our punctilious and protessional moods we con- | Ti1"* ¢ an offshoot of the Meanonitcs, dating | Amerkan cofleds. jcal mansgement of _the last sensatioval thing Trinity ere 15y riLy fem: repelled. These pleasures are aiven by God, | demn. It may be true that there are many o L Jhe e s, dating 2 mealiny b 5 communion? Whcre for the doctrine of intant £ BT P b back to the seventecnth century, orimpating | The Rev. N. Bjering, pastor of the Russian T e ord and f1is Apustles were not put | COMMUBORG, UGG ic Christian Sabbatt” | S0 \e shouid thank Llim for them. Thereis3 | clergymen who would denounce the tuaure | i Germany, aud derivig its namé from Jacob | Church, bas received 3 ukase from St. Petsrs- O alternative with Zazel, nor the Croes of | DPLONT By Ceeich e gy | charm in the prescuce of woman like the fra- | loudiy and yet have not sufficientinfluence it { gjmep. When the mecting breaks up the | bure, bestowing on .him the Kamilatfks, con- Calvary uplitted as the latest noveity to l,)’cople é&u:%;m x‘;;o ved thut no further d!snussiuu ofit | Erance of .‘.hc \'lolcr,;lhxe tP:].\mm: hnn the ros? ‘i thetr own bouscholds to prevent Lhcl_r wives, | }rethiren salute each other with a Kiss, which ferred by the Holy Synod of the Church in Rus- sicic to death of acrobuts and the trapeze. b considertd necessary, & motion that was joy- Tt coverlng of the otherwise cold | sous, ud daughiers [rom, oz there. Ther | chey rezard as an important ordinance. They | sis gy baeailattia 18 o high, round-crowned andscape. what we have to deal wi T take no part in civil aifairs, and are sober, hon- | pink cao, corresponding to the beretta in tho emberehip in the church, aod recognizes no aued but the universal symbol of the early (aurzh, the Apostles”.Creed, and this only in the slwinistration of buptism.” Of few things con- mected with Methogism does Wesley speak cltener or with more devout gratuiation thau of s eatholicity. **Ove vircumstance,” he savs, ~isquite peculisr to the peoyle called Metbod- Ists; that is, ke terms upon which anv person may be admitted into theirsociety. They donot inpose, inorder to their admission, any opiuions wlistever. . . . They think and let think. One conaizion only is required, a real desire to save their souls. Whoere this is, it is G‘MMh: they desire no more; they lay tiress upon mothing else; they’ ask only Is thy heart hercin as my heart! ulnh«i.zive me thy hand.’” Is there,” he ;dds “‘any other gociety in Great Britain or reland tuat i3 o remote from bigotry? that is £otraly of a catholic spirit? so ready to admit #1serous persons withut distinction? Where X cre any other such gociety in Europe? in h.i: ,.ulnyxble worldt I know of nove.” In N_qu ear he wrote a short account of Meth- dism, fusisting upon the Lact that there is no ot ancient or modern, that requires I;fl.um:go( menin order to admission into it .;ltndunlre to save souls. *The Methodists Yone do ot iusist on your holding this or that panion.” *Hercin is our_glorying, and it is o glorying pecaliar tous.”* Tne possible results of fuch liberty were once di i x NI # nce discussea in the Con- ‘A LETTER FROM CARDINAL MANNING. v AL ha _ o i v L s ference, Wesley concysively dotermined the | From the above extrict o0 150 26 Sow feep g:,!_rl’:ncclr{fi-u{ha?fl'c%;&;culzilfifinfifufi:'filflo Dr. Clisby—ay [ illustrate this point Bess of society on_tbls watter. . Tho beart of | g, and wdustrious. 1f one of them meets with | Catlolic Chch, Tis wearer takes precedenco ) femtiiay Thn came a letter from | I meekly Rt ORL, SUa and caustie | D Weodrow Tles, ST Society is not sound on the question. L remem- | ynigtortanc sud eannot vay his debis, the church | in rank of the regular clergy. 1 have no more right to | the excitement Xrew. ning, W Dr. Chsi Recently A. T. Stewart’s magnifi- | ber very well in iy ovn classical readings that | goeg it for him; and they advise a member to The license of the Rev. A. G. Rogers, lata object 10 2 man hold i i ich I may be permitted t c ug 2 different opinion | Cardinal Ma ich I may be permitted to 9 been made as ne Chisoy 8 s Lrom me thao [ heveto differ from 3 man be: | quote in fu , . | gliusions, whict b et Tnp chiel s 10, W0 | cont Womaa's Hotel was broken up simply be- | the satirst Juvend, who fived 1 the period of | Soce it For B R0 b ehuren before. embark. joense of he Xow 4. G Rogers | o un fn :fi'fi g Wiz and I wear my own hair.” An advertisement nnn%unclng fl'“ the :\ulm(:ler; to the modern Gance, he said, s that it is | €8USE no male visitors were allowed. [Laugh- | the 'i‘rm:g;sfi gfi‘ffi?fig 55 :33‘:1:' :; gi;:::ch gre; ing in any new en,fi,p"s& and, if the church ap- {:&&x;fln m;‘; i, New Yt: y k" by gcm l}::r;ol_z‘!i ,’™ he wrif 6 g heliever i > i fon Play ™ 1s about 1 be represented af 7 Lk il pose er. seribes 4 4 roves, it W e b i i 7 ") it a0 By A ellOTCE I US| e Aquamium Play™ 15 avout 0 be repeeo st | liconsious. 1t is. omly enjoyed 10 sssecky terd seveland, of Gainesville, had | provineials comiug from some distant province raves, it will soe i oo o Lo e if o fails, | by the presbytery of Westehiester, of which lio 032" are ot auly the i, ‘l?ugec{i ssc"ffqfi e gy De Nwriter beticyed that, as the ** Pussion | ton of Ll}ctsi:{)t]:s. lSu;fi\r:m: &2:‘. sexes nulul “:“:esficv. fflhlciésbne!vmr]:w,, of Gainesville, nfiy B e tho atasor theres and therc is Tney nambe X nited States | OF 2% mgmgc,_b)“:. R"i'fm mfic e Tics that 1 make in o1 = B qui- | B its urigin in Catholic Germany, T might | you 1 g fatal blow to the mo lance. g g S bl ¥ ] mozaple line which occurs in the passage ip from Presbyteriauism to Universalism Desthat | male fn order 1o his adwmission foto Play s lte urEln e G st mpradent. intto- | Is laseivious beeause v develops forins that are Brokc upin o fow. But they were not as fasci- onc memgrible lije which gezurs 5 23 g | % reigion o ppeared fn Tadis 1t I Jump trom Pyl e mrestsier “Carformiy t e same historian says that | tion aato England. [ thank the writer of the | lascivious. I can remember when the waltz was nating as the promiscuous social dances he saw T e ound of dissipation an O ectticions | called the % ATya Somaj ot and of its tegets the | accopted ‘e pastoratof the Universalist Rl Tequired by ;.,2,5,"5 doctrines of the ChUrchis | joier, and would gladly do <o aitectiy 1t he would | toe most Jasivious; tuen came the polka; then | after e came ome. - He would vote to sustain | all thisround, ot BESIPEEN Shi 1 presented, | Zall Jal e ot s eteat | b Harlem: Thtige gy 1s statute low as functional qUal- | ecnd me s addroes. | ITEOPEL bofore done all |yl Gormans and then worse sull. The tend- | g ‘Presbytery. o thoir homes, of most of the fair humanitics of old relizion | gome tu a0 the Rev. E. T. Baird, pub- cannot be exeh o T e | Y e ot e 1 nt what Tbelieve wonld be 8 | deney s all one way. The round dance is | The Hor. Dr. Lrvine, D. D., of Augusts, bad | they KO W0F B iy axats mores, O OB O oo wIth some O the mEsterks |y, 0Tie Lo YELes A0 o akint: Baard of 1 106k lires sontor O personal opinions while | gesecration of ine Tassioh Tat ; zoandal 10 | Jaceivious, and the square dauce s of the same never danced, nor did he approve of dancinz. _ Sie pratexta & " An | 935 Tits of wbich the Trusices of tho Brtish ll!s ing azent of the Pt ishiog: Board of toe b Did W tscpane Sl j i re. ‘Ticoue grows into the other under ¢ case is entir ole | which, alish, 3 i dentls K ;i i . Conrizes eonlorm 10 the discipline of the | tho relelans, WECSCreq savjects of our fait, | Batures, ¥ square duuce 15 of th same | Berey ety wuproseduntod in the whole | whict, put nto local English, mag, mest %% | Museum pradentiy keeo Crustees of $ho Bitish | prespsteriaa Church {a tho Soutt. weas ried b ittt o ésley ever have the remnlest fanation of U TN S0 O roceived o request | favorable conditions,’; and e e oo st | history of the Presvsterian Clurch the world | thus they bring back to Shefficid tho maunersof | 1105 R P rclich member of the scct declares fore the Presbytery for enibemlement aad de; BV Artioier Io;n;al ticlief in the whole twenty- -;\“uul!‘a me persons 1o ‘sanction the introduction of | the party at Mr. Block’s the guests, alter dunc- | Over. There is no precedent tor this persecen- | Cremorne. And you, my iriends, who repre- | ity je wehe purest rcligious movement of posed from (fi&;n oistry. On JL re lc.—mm. of o el aith could ever be required as 2 n" " pansion Play™ into London. 1 declincd to | ing square dances, plunged into round oues. | tion ‘of Mr. Block. True, Jobn Calvin did sauc- | seut what may be called the upper stratum of | Ao B a times, anda reformatory agitation Which the case it was discovered that the Church ex- udidon of admizsion ot the Methodist | £16,sauction, saing L should e il my indu; | When e eme 14 ¥l ST 10, GG ies. | tom of M. Block, T emien for anciag, but at | midale-vass soclety in England, ace o great | iocylcates a morality ot almost unautainatle perts had made a mistake of 38,000 u strking {juurcs i the uited States? ’ But suchIs not® | Eice ot bore ana in Germany 1o 2rotent o, [ | loscivloshoss of GAtiios, racts to rove the | oD the EXPUISRADL bt pricon, 1 bave,” | extont responsibie for this Many of 30U, IS | geveriy, auding thateo fa [rom being 8 serct e blaucasheer, Dr. aira ricetved po cou- bec.e | Iustend of boasuine of Methodisw | aum informe thit 3 compeats [5% (o 1y o pent- | 1250 to close the doors, but it was lost by threo | the Dector conclidery ) Sy iws fauits to ad | in Shofheld 2o tb London for what is called €he | SoCfis s os been sald, It is iithe most active peasation for the Injury that was Jone him. thihe most liberal, be would bave 1o confess |} tents of Ammerzi, have enduntoted, (0 FIG Foui | Yotes. His finul argument was ko BroTe thet | twith Mr. Block: hc ought not to have submit- | London scason, and you bave ot the slightest | 204 Ghic propacanda now existing fu India. or | The Rev. James Kay Applebee has sccented 2o thls it s of all curches u fleland o | reseaations of e Rk hivited by the | duncing 35, 0% i Srgument ws 1o DrOve Uik | ed atail to the sessions he was not halt con | scruple in including 8¢ Inany MRS, G The | a0 BBl o o e Chti. | the Naaoiinous calltendred bt by tho Eourth yery e oartow and exrinsive: A fhers 218 | Bt o Geruapy, out have bech il Kecps ative. | that Mr. Block had agerazated Lis olfense by tumacious enough.” 5 heatres i the foriuight or the mooth that you | Fun missanary caterpriset, o whict, oo doubt | Unitarias s Al e Nosstad on Praiie cugy Joval Methodists who believe that the | Goverament. W3¢ 0% of a Divine mercy in 8 | conuumacy and coutempt, Tit sould mate from | The Rev. Mr. Butolph, of Marietta—In poarly | speod there a3 you possibly can.* X' say, then, | pic pirterly opposed.” avenue and Thirtieth street), aud with the view emauting of suctia law by the General Goufer: | BAr® (%, fujonce by the plously inienaed teprs; | the ey A o e avgumens in | every church thero is danluz. * There s danc- | that, vou bave o Fs to declaim _awainst the g i ATEa B0 e has obtuined for i ther an oversight or that in so doing fie':nc:uing 4t Ammerguu canpot be_transplanted | ravor of polyzamy than couid be made 1o favor | ing in my church, aud without sin, too. I am | theatre until you have by some defimyte acyof | Althouel the census of 1851 showed no \{we Dimsclt a residedce in that viaity, and will, rihn:msceudea the lezal uulhurit\'nsgnnrflud Ivithout losing its sacred character. Tueed notsay | of dancing, sud vet no man would be allowed | unwilling to adopt aoy principle_which will | your own tried tonmend it. 1 don’t believe | in England of the peculiar'sect known nsr.hll.,- i the coming mouth, become a Dermanent X e seueral rules of tne Chureh. They eer- | fiay the trasition irom Bavaris 13 London, 1rom | o8 S e Dolyzamy simoly because he said bis | bring such ruin to” the T erehes Daneine s | that-actors or playwrisnts wish to corrupt the | gletonians, it 14 “wssorted that & number of them | SUEIES M€ SO 0 SCCEIN herealter be_ divided mn Iy \ré.-nx Just as far as possible from Wesley's | amwergan to the Aquarium, compels me £0 €on~ | ¢oncijence approved it. Ouce allow conscicuce | not i sin- ¥ Lge, but they are oblized by the necessities of | now inhabit the norghern part of the, {}mgflqmv T e en the Foyrth Unitanan T:}.‘ aud that in which h ruch eloricd. Cemn with greater promptness than hcror'c to [ 2 olute rule and we are lost. It has caused the The Rev. A. G. Johnson—TI am sorry some of | their position to conform more or less to the | especially in the West Riding of nrkstm:l Chureh in the morning and the Hovley Taeatre The whole o e A et sxclu- | prave a disrcgard of the Christian instints of OUr | i, jogt crimes that mar history with their | the brethren O enildren o dance, | | demand of the ae; they meet that demand | They are reputed to have exactly the sameereed | it ey ciny ssed in a letter which SPRET the Dre e iotain the session, aud [ wish I | witha supply, aud those Wwho cresie, thal e | whien Ludovie Mugzletun, a journeyman tailor, It is not a | and Joun Reeve professed more than two and o = PIOUS, PERHAPS. Sivencss, and in fa\ s i v, 88 ¢ vor of 1 broader persopal lb- | country, 88 LXpre A 2 x Rty o 3l dentios e 7 -day- o, ir, your faithful | blood. A church has two ends—io convert and A . iy dor all copscientious men in matters of |, the Tuaies of's0-0ay T rema v Enwan, oo S auving ciureh can never do cither. | bad twenty votes to cast. - want i written In wmand are thosé who are supplicd. 2|2l coy sssed more tha Lo apd, 4 £ clief. 1t is utterly useless to attempt Cardinal Archbishop. Reverse this decision, and you open the door for Dbig letters on the record. disease or a particalar temper of the patural in- | balf centaries ago. useythe 10 » it of s e ev. W, A. Milner—I am not here to | stinct of the human mind, but it Is that the | so-called religlon, claimed o have the spirit o s prophecy and power to punish men; the former The new snake-skin shoes that the Paris 10 press all minds into the” & ve. same exact groove. inal’ evoked a very foolisi | all illicit pleasures. e attempt to do it must result either in a li: The Cordinal’s letter evoked & Fuiy ad ce you laugh, ke v d. or to | whole fabric of scicty at the present moment less indife st yeax t r. oked 2 e {2had | * Gol. Ciiftord Anderson, of Macon, made the | make you laugh, oF te WAYC ¥o, T0 0 or to | whole fabric of scicty at the ; ophecy a u VorMierence o velisions faithy or fn what 8 f-'i';’l{u‘xrc"amm}}fuf A ed’ reverence are neces: | spcecl: for the appellant. Dr. O e aris, | make you glad. Lam here to dischargo s duty | bas a leaven of erilworklog it 1t docs seen gf;‘;:;fl‘il‘.fi;",‘;;‘c;’:,;"}e!L‘L‘L;fg,:i;‘f{;":;fin‘s‘{ women are wearing realize tne bruisioz of 5 hyvocrisy s or clsciushutting many ofthe | 2 eibed limits of | ment reminded him of Mr. Evart’s in defeosc of | in the- presence of the Synod and those who | to me that mmza: :vaosr‘:nnofo A amone e | N ersses naiped in the Aposalvpic, e Aty | woman's heel by the scrpent.—Philadelphia s ] most " thoughtrul people out of the churches. | sardy confined to the circums ok, 4 ey r} 7 ke dis longs this Hling, wi o, is doi e by, anddo- | Prosident Jomzons b ad tried o mafe [t m | Boncr 82 og i bl g o o e | Bfager 1¢ you, mothers, wilt not allow o sour | tained their bsolate Tiahvocertainly an_ortho- | Bulletin. e Hou. Mr. Wendling, who, 1 belicve, is doing | St- Faul's and e Al 3 3 i vict i in tableaux tal by makmg it eternal. It had taken rove of danciug. d i . Q. Dinaynrestben taith; aud deleat ety dared e s dae e b | cloven months of study and twelve lours of Do O O o Ganting ot shadows on the | homes youne men,—howerer auractive In 3t | GoF prncpli- ) G ctermally WHomSOETer | 3 cleriryman was telling a story of rather in- Bl ey abe s, ime e | SSUSS voddss ol oyl | wmmer ol S e | s i UosSiE e e | n e oy b e ek p g b | e SRS e R | e e il hev oy that he was at one time imself an | 450500 Brow too suronely excited, and atter Mr. | violated, and ot 1t b6 il Sut om trial for | asslums. Dancing, abstractly, 1 do not disap ¢ dasrubleas matetes for sour marniageable | Bl olhr Secsi L hl e ookingGlass, | lagairy: * Father, I toat yeally trey or s it i’ Uhrist 2 ion tbat he | defending bimself. ~(Intermission. 3r. Me. | prove of. Dancing is not in “violatfon of God's daughters: if you will not allow in ¢ It 2 = : s i’ Josus Ghrist, a0 to-day stands upon tust | Koberteon bad some 15 e o e an- | Gomell asks Dr. L ST melon. avge ma | holy law. I do disaporove of the modern | and drawingrooms Hen whom vou, gour bus- | and also sdoressel 1o S o | 2T preaching: ! i - Dok, oL toubline bimeelf about the | B0 (Ca%i, ‘Gecermination to withdraw the | with indency I CH60 D o e arge.s | soclal _dance—that ~{sshionsble, _fascioating | bands, or your sons, \chow to b of corrut | stsace from the Eteenal Cod.”, 425 DOUSS |+ Ghiekeas allus como S caal Sormes over whicl the ciurehes bawe split iato | $300heeq ropresentations from the list of bis | The Moderstor (hiosiers {0 suspendalipusess | smusement-~for hat i In Vioaiion of God's | Nivesst you, vouns women, do nol, Slow fash- | o abeurd tenca, was thelrs, £ [8V0rS e | ity good prowert, bt dat dowt ales apoly v . otue » -the th fes are not stopped. Mr. Me- | law. ; ¥ Jod Yery = F % 2l p ‘?rm-‘ “’.f’&i‘a"‘e,,’;““ agceg‘fn'::.”h"“’nrf,_ "'[:.:,'Jfi :;;‘,‘E;}'?fif,, A:;nfg;;d:fifi;: g{":?n:ifuter. gonsifi:i?:nfiugtefhuc n::per t?xge [ will call | The Rev. Dr. A. V. Clishy—Auch® confusion | would hardly dare to say toa woman of the | in Eve, women are Very dAngerous creatures in dis pact. Kase I'm been look all day ax’ m

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