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2 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY NOVEMBER 25, 1878, RELIGIOUS. Talmage Preaches upon the Most Frightful Side of Sin. jon concerning. this d comlng. Ii srly c::l:lrh:u lfie qtlutl::.:v'n l‘:\":‘:rfiqur': ‘VASl[INGTON swered: ‘T et but 6a week, snd pay$4 for Loard. The $31eft wiil not permit me to pur- chase better clothing.! ‘Then get money eaough some other way,! sald he. ¢ \When [ heard that,” contioued Mr. Talmags, “it made every drop of my blowd tingle withindignation.” “Thousands,” contioued the speaker, * fall fnto crlme through the forde of circumatances, and it {s despicable to stamd shore lsughing at a wreck when one should be wetting ont life-hoats, The crime romn which New York ia suffering {s the result of the political dishonesty of ten years, when convicted criminal was the Auditor of Public Accounts, and TUR MOST ROTORIOUS THIRF IN THE WORLD was a State Senator. The principle was to get an oflice, no mutter now small, and steal right and left, and call ft perquisites, [Laughter.} Qur present criminals Were young men then. No wender hey chowm s lifs of Indolence and dissipation. The larce- nles of New York cost that city $,000,000 & year In pricons, courts. aud police rod other arraugementa for the suporession of crimes. This is a tax on every yara of cloth, foot of lumbier, every brick, and every pound of foodd in the city., It s nonsense to say such eriminals canuot be reformed. Jerry McCauly, a converted river ihief, s bringlug moro eriminals to the breast of a pardoniug God daily than twenty churches. There will Le 00,000 couverted (thieves, gamblers, and de- baucliers fu heaven. TIRRE TTIINGS, at Jeast, ean be done. Firat, avoid putting too much temptation lo the way of emploges; sec- ond, speak 8 cheeriul word to the msn who, having conquered his evil procllvities, and reachued decent soclety, wants to get inj third, Yestanch {riends of Prison-Reform Associa- tions, Home Missfunary Societies, Children's Aid Socicurs, and such institutlons."” The speak- continnous experiment, the nation which up fartheat from the first cradie of man ougl | hy the Inty of procression, to be the wisess am best. The God wha ordains that tnanliomd abiall be wiser than chifldhood, that the fipre of the oak shall be tirmer than the germ fn the acorn, ktows no other law for tho carecr of uatlons; and the Engiand and Ametiea which came ro late in earth’s history surpass the Egyptand Indlawhich shaped themsclees so near the birthplace of man. But we are not teft to a simple inference from the law of proeress. ‘I he moment you Juak Into the structure of aAn aucient nation you will perceive that its motives were inferior to the lcas which [mpel all the modern Statea. Into Egyut there ontered too much supersti- tion; Into Greece too much regard for the beau- tiful, too little study of the useful; into Rome too much military ambition; Into the medimral times too much iznorance nud {dieness, and also tou much of the battleield and tournament, As pure gold runs from the hot fire, and as our miners scek for it and jind it only waere tho vol- canic flanies have once inelted the crust of tho globe, eo Lho richest political truths come forth after the nations have been long undergolng the fires of experimont, We Inn{ well plty the early lands which had no great lights with which to gulde thelr foet, whose historles wers only leg- ends full of monatrosities, and whose slates- men were seers who watched the flight of binds fo get wislom, or who listened to the winds in thie groves to catch Iuspiration and orscles from ihe gods. The art of writing and printing came at Just to put upon Yermnnem. record the experlence of ench State rom Gireece to our day,—a period of 2,600 years, and thus to tell the modern times what “fleas would bring national fallure and what succesa. 1t ane vld nation built too tmany useless pyra. mbds with the industry ol mere slaves: it an- other overstudied poetry, and eloyucice, and art, and built up the power to adurn Lut not the power to live and save; if anuther consoll- dated all the known world futo {18 one empire aud then made war the etd and Lope of all the ofd awl young men; If other States came to be crushed Ly religlous bigotry, and othersto be cunsumed by royalty and vassalage, thess facts Ne oo record, and our country sces il aud, all, and marks the ldcas of danger. The fciam which has so blessed modern medi- clue, nnd modern law, and philosonhy, s bless- 8lx or cight thousand milllons of dattars wero | ontline of the history of the three great nattons | dlsc diverted trom Inwfal trade, and most of them | of mankind. It contained the germ of all his- | the blattea from existences but even that fearful | tory, na the fifteenth chapter of Genests eon- | w0 agtration, but never waa thers so much agl- nsfirl;l: did nm.' (-m;_'k I:he‘ln v rr‘al tlm: tiver :mr:(ml the ]m-rmlr saving lnm.: In ;I‘mhd‘r:rl: tation as {n tho beginning of the year 1000, The Mullett Gots Read which narose in England a thousand years | background was “angan, which wu S " ago. Tho Bouth dug & mow ('h:lnm-l,! but m:nnylnly tulillled; the ovorshaduwing of the | people were all talking of it, but all predictions plle o eady to Go the flood would not flow in its Mttle confines. | futnre historv of the Hamitic races In gencral | came to naught, 8o, too, In the. pres- Back on Buena Vista As natlons do ot rise In 8 day, so in a day they { and their comparative degradation. Foratime | ont century. What tas the meaning ¢ cannot be overthrown. There are some singuldr | the facts of history sectied to be the reverse. | (" yyoge repeated disappolntments! It - Bandstone. records in history. 1L secns that a great nation | Po'itical powee secmed to be in thoshand of ctation of Christiansas & eorrobo- nm;’% turn nnsllsnx!? are {"fi:’ -mml-lln 4r‘£ Iln.v:x. hlm. Giod and pm!l!hccyhcn;lhl“nl\'nn]t ,Iu Lol :rx'l’fb«r Tatthe Tt tho New. Testament or i years, Some of the old States lie oul wait. In n comparativel shor me the | T i e 2 L s tile tie baunds of Nitore, bt those iskle | pocr nm'!lulldorl‘n‘ o the tiands of Han Reramony. relCronens &0 theserd) adrent Certain Polnts of the For(j. these bounds shiow great uniforinity In marking | into the hands of Nhem, and fipally into H the timie of radical chanues of dynasty. Egvpt | the hands of aphet, Withln a fow hundred | svoke of the Lme being short, ‘snd in othier coming Message Fore- was under shepberd Kines about 500 years. Ier | vears, in fact, the Hamitlc nations were shorn 01‘"".- s 2‘{"3““ o B e shadowed Kolden age when_she so flourished in art apread | of their power, and cut no figure at all In the “EIL") U”“:l a0, i‘,n Hira thel\'lnpsom o gver 300 vears, The Hebrew Rapublle ran from | history of the world, ~ But, passing from tho | BEAL '? "'f o Moses to King Davidl, 500 years; and then came | beckground of the curse, he came to the fore- ‘(’) '-"’l or Wf'“dm"‘.’”‘“ it ; s 1'1 Tros gx o I the Empiro to enter upon 500 of Gt} years of | ground af the biessing: ' Biessed be Jehovah, | (0 twhat, then, did this fait ;l’( i tpf ot e President Wil Acknowledge sltular sticvess. The glory of Ureck liberty cov- | God of Shew.” The great bicasing was that | Would sav that thess men misfatervruted the tho Meanncss of the ered nbout 500 years, Rome enjoyed ail the | Shemn was to have the knowledee of the oue, "ord(.nul }h»l mx'lu i '-lw';n«Du b uf’f_l x 3 solendor of u republie for the aame sirange pee | 1ivIng, trite God, Tt was along the lne of Bnem ""“; PORERNAL Wolelt “3“ '|“" lc taciol '{hni Bouth. rlod,—4%3 years. ‘Thua between/Cinclunntus, the | that were foundithe development of the covenant "'Il ""L !Z'I the ‘muunm]ln, |l hls ltl el‘ Shat 7 Farmer l’rrcfilunt. sud i overthrow of the Re- | sl tho great salmation, But what of Japhett ol the é‘y'fl‘:h".:g. of ductsalom won it uetal 0 wpublle by Cwsar and Anthony, there intervene 'he prophecy regarding m was, ‘‘Uod shal Ener e J X the thamical five centirien: - Spnin, and Franco, | calarga dappete ami wonderfaily had that Sorifa, I the gt of (e bassago there wat Old-Time Republicans No Longar and Uermany, forined out of new centres which | prophcey been fulfiiledl All the great | Pome ol l‘\l‘ Ly. I'UIFI'- t"l'!l;‘ fi" oy V‘m“i“ in the Vale of Afflice fallowed the breaking up of the Western Eni- | monarciiles fur_centurfes—Grecee, Home, amd | Jome ""_"DD e ““U:; be fi "3“!' U ‘1?;1».’\)\'4 . ire, are uow livtiz well ‘and haopy in thie four- | the Selavonie races—were of Japhelic oriein. | be Aa ‘!"“-""" ohe ot bl &x\t et AD e tion. iundredth year of thelr ssparate lives, ‘theso | The * enlargement ” had buen cunsplenous tn :l"f“ ‘L’“‘ 'l“:l ""l' haf n’,;:"J \‘r‘lnll}{‘:u 2 lulelneuuhnr: nln:mclunllyltn:thrulhnthlensv. lfl "lmll‘l’fl"t:lml ;mli'"r. n;ul ml‘l\lflr{ll‘r“rnlwr;n.l ‘Sfi m‘“'l"fl lfl-‘::-mllu ‘:‘i':'l"":,l:d;“‘:a"’d d“‘?mzr‘c WH’_-'L, Assiire us that those greal stars which we cal civilization of e world. i ¢ he : 1 “oations ' can uelther bo placed in the sky ina [ duc to tie races of Jachet.” But the prophecy | S0mc standing then fho shold itos (dsts oL Some of the Political Magnates of day, tor o adar be blotted from the galaxy. | foretold, .in addition ° to ° this, ‘that | feach til they shoulg e the Son of Man com: Washington at Thoir Places Bebold throngh wiiat Jurmolls 4 France has | Japhet should dwell fn the tents of shem, and i ;0] s & e 0{ A e * ot Restden come. The Atheista and Communista asealled | it had been tulilling over since Teter recelved | (b Va8 MOTS, B vejstence Lo THe S7G B0 «+ OF Hesidence, bee. Napoleon drained her of men aud money | Cornelius, From that tine tha sons of Japlict | Lond & "““"’-.‘"_" he rig! It aan ""“h e : by wars of ambitiun, other revolulions vame, | bad becn coming, in little companies at first and :‘;0" & "'|‘S ek A "I(:: Lk s then came the usurpation of Napaleun, then the | then In grcat numbers, until be, far beyond the | {he froplecy of the cotuthiz of Cinglwastuldiled | Roscos Conkling and Mis Great Emi. German war with defeat and a ne of a_thou- | pillars of Hercules, was preachin, and the peo- S ngos S T A O nence In the Art of Politl sand milllon of doilars, and yet to-lay France | ple were sitting, n the tents of 8hem, anl pray- }{T! ! ‘-";‘zsf"{:wfw“h: 5 mll | o e ! olilies. conies out of motions a wite and | oz that the sons of Shem, who had jost their "f‘l""}"’u T ’d}““ il flfl'-‘l i(lu‘lrlhll powerful Republ, No Atheist or usurper | birthright und were now nway, might come :’”““"-" j he d(l:f (:) word ] .f “x::. nn‘r"llv-cdn : could change the main current of 50 mighty o | back Lo Jeliovah, God of Shem, and st in the | fnesuing, how did tha people of the carly duta | Thg Tuterior Department Much Dissatisfed atream. olatents, “The Bavior's messaie In seurling out | WAAE HNO Igea that e was 0 vome 1o thele gens with Gan, Pope's State If even In the past, when nations posseszed | the twelve and the seventy was not desfencd :"‘1 e I rdlhmm"omh?' “v y ""_E !‘!n:! i én, Yopo's Statemonts, few elements of life aud many sceds of death, | only for the twelva trities of Isrnel, but for tho | NS o lfl,"‘ a “‘flnfumk'; f uAunn;nin e they vet were unuble to perish except by a most | tribes of the Gontiles, Just_seventy of whom | btoby il 1’ ";“ 0.5 el i R MULLETT sluir ebbing away, what may we nut cxpect of n | were recorded In the chapter In Genesis, Wronz 10 Jie esposition of \ho' Lurd'a proe s TALK . nation whose people are educated, and whose After speaking of the breadth of the Bible, sm“fl n 7' s “W(! g o °‘m~';“‘ 8 Dvc UK TALKS AGAIN. idens nre thuse of industey, and liberty, and | especially in that it recognized good in those ,'ll'x"“;, ~°flu"= 'l' 2 “l““"g ‘t x‘x‘ n‘ Mnkf % Bogglal Mapateh to The Tridune. peace. and religion! Our relizfon fs nolonger a | wio were outside of the reguiar chosen hne, | %2 s carth agaln, according o the spe The @entle Dullness of IHis Congregailon "Tickled with Many a Joke. An Impressive Thanksgiving Sermon by Prof. Swing. The True Test of Church-Mem= bership-=-Discourse by the Rev. W. F. Crafts. From Noah to Abraham---The Third of Dr. Gibson’s Bible-Readingy. The Second Coming of Christ as In. terpreted by Dr, Ryder, of 8t Paul's Universalist. Egyptian Mythology--A Lectura by the Rev. Brouke 0 Wasnixaron, D. C., Nov, 2L.—A. B, Mullett Herford, er then Lold what e sald to two young men | jugylgo mnodern republicanism, and, mosing | ruperatition that has been wont to heip degrade | Dr. Gibon reached the time of the building of | ¢f's Widerstanding, Ite wished He wouid come, |/ bP0 e AR wh noplicd tor_advice. Ouo had stolen $2.500 | uhout ‘ovar tha Immense pasty It sclocts the | And ehalave 118 Yolnties, DUt it 13 a0 closated | tha Tower of Babth, the confuslon of Lonsacr Sniall be sl earrect thelulisppranstnions f&%fif:flfi'fli:fi?fl"fi: :Fla:xl:‘;’{::::y ot TALMAGE from his employers, and had no prospects of | priuciples which offer the most of success | reason, which unfolds the laws of God as calmly | and the disperaion. ' The sin of those who buile | Hiat were extant, Bu @ would wot comne. 4 P 8. Potter ) o and happioess to the largest majority. De- fevtive as we all feel that our United Statesare, il a8 we perceive them to be of crrors and weakoess, yeu there is scarcely a blunder of the past which our land bas not dlscarded, and searcely & virtue of the past which it is not at- tempting to fucorporats iato {ts present and fu- ture life. Our country resembies thu eclectle phitosophy of Victor Cousin, whera o most gift- ed intctlect passes over the wholy realm of tho deepest thought, and, taking a truth from Arfs- totle, and wmany a one from Plato, aud other thoughts frum” Spinoza. and a wtole armfull from 1he pages of Christianity, binds them to- boiug able to repav it. The speaker advised bhw 1o confers and &sk Lis employers’ pardon, ** 1P THBY ARE DECEXT JIEN, let alone Christians,” he sald, * they will give you another chauce.” **Suppuse they don’t," Ialsered the youug man. * tiod Almighty will seu you through,' awvswered Mr. Talmage. Aputher young wman had similarly stolen Jericho,” where, a8 Into as 1820, the fuglish | .70, ’nmuun!, but had ralsea most traveler was shot and robbed. “Such scencs | or 4 In two weeks more he are," be safd, “repcated every night In OUF | \pu10 be able to repay all, but was afraid be large clties.” He had spoken of nirhts of { mignt dle meantime, “You won't die,” said as the stutesmansliip of to-day unfolds the laws | the tower lay in the ides which possessed them | Fhe world was, doubtiess, to roll on a miilion, |'and Ml was started by the Jollet Stone Lo Of patians, Tou old rehigion carsied a sord and | in Lullding il.—ouboslllon to God. Referring Yl"""b'""“!""vr"a “"“ was but el a"’"-‘\ vany, and they waged war on him (Mullett) for atorch, but vur tenplea send forth words of | to the degreo of civilizotion then attained, Lo [ the Shinfuir of Christ wace sy desirable, the bea- |.ry)g ngatnst them, They wanted the eontrace, faith and wisdom, and ministers not of war, but | romarked that civilization could not take tho | Ple ouell to prepare their housenas i to be In |\ L5 BT G S e T SR of charity, More blood has perbaps been shed by | piuce of salvalion. Good government was a | Fevditiess for Ilia approach, The people in Lial- . it onlya soir cominsnd of the omcles:ol superstitious re- | zood thing, but the top of that tower could | ifux were expecting the Marquls of Lorne,—and, | mgnesia stone, totally untle for that sort of ligion than by command of any political science, | never reach'to Heaven. A government coald | LY “'d° “l';‘Yr '7 ] fl"dfl_’"” fl;“",“‘“'“l"f :" "); strucjure, He tounted thom out, and they at In fudia the wars sprang out of religion. “Mo- | nat bo any better than the people who made lt, | that distlaguished individual when he deferral | oo proceeded ngatusthim. A somniscionwag hammedanism slew its myriads in the name of a | nnd this was espectully true under republican | ¢ ."|m e bl :"", e b?l- 4 pm{" o | created, compdged of Gen. 8mith, Mr. Post, alvine message. o Romanism and Protestant- | fustitutions, _Tuere was no saving power. in | Jofe BORE Jorvierd o s Puble TevepHiun: L sud A1 Norerors: ‘Thass thece Brocesdiidiy ism made the world red with the blood shed in | legisiation. The only hope for the nation | The world onght always to be cxperting the Mr/ Nori d to the pame of their worship, Our nation contalns | and the world was God's Church and God's | combiuc ol Chirlst, ‘Yney should live true lives, | Chicago, vlewed 1he Jandscape, and made out a no such seeds of warand death, for its Chris- | salvation, and thoss who sought to separate | antl should havea constuut growth iu spiritu- | report stating thot it was unaafe and unwine ty tianity has becoma a charlty of this life and a | Christianits from politics, and make it & matter | alitys cumplete the bullding on the plan desiznated. TR TADERNACLE KESOUNDS WITR ANOTHER BUNDAY'S LAUGIITIL. Boeclut Dispatch 10 The Tridune, NEW Yonx, Nov. 24,—Mr. Talmage disconrsed this marnfu from the text Lake X, 30, describ- fng **n tilghway robbery and attempted nssassi- nacfon on the stony rvad from Jerusalom to _— trations of the principle he would sdvocate. He saswination, uight of the dirk, bludgeon, and | ci0fCh"\ith a graud pyrotechbical peroratlon, revotver, as he saw it. “1 sald to the Chiel,” | composed partly of Hailelujaus shrieked at the hie contjoucd, ¢ Give me two stout detestives, | top o€ lts valee. 1 waut uot only muscular meuy, but men who ey : T ¥ ce | Bether in one symmetrical whole. No volume, | hope for tho nest, Ithas fulilled In part the | of no aceoint whether politics and soclal fife e e - | 1t wos condemped, and thoy decided tuat the pauverism, debauchery, and sin. of "m“": ;‘L:;rggll;’;‘:fi}n:f?fln‘;f;"’l fskyoulodistate 50, voem, 1o oracle, no revelation of the birled | dream af Isalahy, And haa beaten Inton plowshata | wero pormeated oF ok )y Clristian princinles, ANCIENT EGYPT., Atruclure juust come down, and be comineucod neglect and bribery. Ho now oroposel | el o YOUE O again” These wore filus- | Jesterday, falls to contributo to his broad and | its sword, Into pruning-hoox itaspeart If, then, | were the eneinies of good gusernment and our LECTUILE BY THE REV. TNOORE MERFORD, azaln.an othed plaps. todescribe o night of burelary, thefts, and as- luu page. It may be that one may be decived nations which are founded uj e fa : Lry’s erity, We wanted tore of v 1 LAID TIE MATTER DEPORE PRESIDENT GRAST, With somo trus ones nnj it fi”i:l‘l:glt °t£» l.?f.:‘m Gua trutth i onr 6nwmmcn!: nlml, abova all | ,,The Rev. Brooke ITerford delivered last ulahty | and he said 1 should be permitted to- exoncrats caunot pussibly be overthrown fn less than hun- | things, we wanted the suving power of God | 8¢ tho Cuurchiof the Messial, corner of Miche | mysclf beforo any steps were taken. Accord- dreds or‘:'cnrl" what a pruspect of llfe exnands | amonz u4 as a people, fzau avenue and Twenty-third street, the third | fugly, 1 went to work and sueceeded {n obtain- tu-day before thosa who ktand In this Iand and | *‘This dispersion was a scattering of the nations | one of a serles of Sunday eveniug lectures to | 10 # Board composed of the most eminent arch- )y the glamour which patriotism casts over the senee. but I scem to sco In our Unlon an Eclectic natfon which, In a thoughtful and just mauuer, lLias tuved about lu the paat and has gathere: , up for present aud for futuro use tho idess | Jook toward thefuturc. This acene, whichis not | fnto the darkuess, bit, 08 before, there was o | wnich ho has becn tresting the lo of hig | dtects of Chlengo. They Inspected the butlding took muscular. T satd to the detectives: * Have THANKSGIVING-DAY, Whteh In 'tho bygzone centuries brought tho least | painted by fancy, but by the. tnighty reasons | bright licht in the dark clouds.' Codls mercy conjeregation, His- mb]effi ;ruw‘?Ancm“ ‘;":‘Gfl’f;'- mnfin“la "el;fl."_“‘ that 'd"" present you luaded pistols!? They produced fircarms SERMON BY PROP. S\WINO, distress and the highest weifare. We scem | which have made snd unmade cmpires, should | shone in, and therc was fiis promlse of a future desigun were simplo and sceure, and that the to loye the Leantiful as much as Greece did, and to seck this charm Inall the old forms, poetry, painting, sculpture, and architecture, Indeed, we surpass that Iand, for we have ndded a floc art of which that land knew lfttle,~the divinest of tho arts,—muslc; but to this beaut!- ful, s0 many shaped, otir nativn has added a political science. and usefnl arts, and sclonces of which the classie land little dreamed. Wae seem Lo be as good In war as wero tuo Komans, and to possess all the Roman mental power, an: have flung aside ouly thelr mania for war and thelr universal fdlencss in years of peace. Thus our natfon seems to have wandered over the old plains of experiment, and to have passed the quaiities which brouglit death to selzq the virtues which ave life. “We are a branch of an empire which bhad been experimenting for a thousand years from Alfred onward, and an actircandstormy thousand vears they wers, and, as this long conflict took place in our languaze and amid our ancestors, it alrectly affected all our moss fundamentar doctrines, What are at last the best Ideas that can cnter into the compusition of aState ¢ Evidontly they are the love of a home, the love of fudustry, the love of inteliectust development, the love of personal freedom, the falth in a rational rellge ion, aud 1he love of justice, If thers be greater principles than these they bava escaped my ob- servation. Into our land all those fdeas enter a8 component parts. Not that they exist here in a perfect form, but that they are heroin n power not equaled fn the past.” flere, though many are voor and homeless, yet there are mora men with homes than may be found In any othee mreat State. The Industrial habits of the land, urged onward by inventions aud by thy abo- 1ition of caste, which now renders the man ot business as noble as the man of leisure, sc- cure us sguminst the {dlences which h:\pml ruin many a nntion once bich in the roll of empires, The love and means of intelectual development are a natfonal quatity which are sccuriog us agninst the vagarics ol fome genfus or the caprice of u slugle General or Preafdent. When a Ciesar arose, the people of Rome, ke 80 many children, passed over to his standanl. The crowd which followed Moses wero ready to Iollow him with his Jehovahi or Aaron with his calf, but In eur day when & questlon of merlt comea before the publlc, tha common education gomes between ihe nation and iis detriment. Next comes the attachment to personal free- and clubs, shuwing they were ready for any- Prof. Swing presched yesterdny morning at thing, *Now,’ L said, ‘show me crime fo its | the Central Church, taking as his text: must nillajuous aspects.’ ,lb‘nnt dealt so with any natlon, P2, 1TOOK O COMPANIONS WITIt N2 this time, jur [ didn't wish to rlek any life but % oY ewn.' One officer proposed that © shoutd this andience-room on toe day set apart by the Uovernor aud by the President for Thanksgiv- bave disgalsed, lest [ should be assailed, but I Ing, T must ask you to join ma in appropristiog answerqu: * Noi Iwill take all the risks.’" } 1t was not for Jack of materlal that the speaker | tUi8 Bour to Mioughty: nhoh "'“‘}?‘l ullalrs, id vt tivst. ook after Wo criminal classes of | 1he festival called « Thanksgiving " is not any Brooklyn. Last year, o that city there weye | |ONECT 4 dov of simple feasting or of prayer, nearly 97,000 arreste, 200 burglaties, thirteen | V0t has become o u-yh ou which the pulpit 27, homicides, twenty-seven highway robborics, and :r"":"u'; be:;:lt. ‘::.‘l‘c""m:;"“x ‘“:““W U‘f‘ 40,000 statlion-house ludgers. Over $200,000 ;“l atlon A u]: lw mlo- ltmkun drels haid thelr pictures taken for the roguo's rather than vitialliyto. Tk ase Buck W, = t:,"f"-r',',',','f,"',‘f;'u":'fl'j;:,‘m:‘ll::f;u FLAUEE- | portunity for meditation over the condition and S Y, get vic's pocket picked, house burglarized, or :"":"": ":‘“{:fl"‘ "“";‘:'t““e:‘;y- r'f:°ll>;°l=hh'~‘f N sizoature counterfcited than Brooklyn, but | frart Miet BIwAyS ave of the Liour when New York was a ureat depot ot crims, When. | PNE Public elther expects ur whl cheerfally for- ;\, ot o depredation was committed in ‘nm“ 0 pive the discussion of a political subject; and ”J PRy 5% | fortunate Is the pulplt whena President or a b A‘I’.::ri’!u "\‘Gr;“q;::":;l NEAREST FFRRY, Gavernor kindiy commands the poopls to lsten * 0 t one d 3 sure of loding an excelient bidiog-place fo New ot peruiongday il yeary Lat e ik 5 threo questions to-day. What Is s natton? York, Noibiog impressed tho speaker more | wyat arc tho eloments which are making our than tue respect which crine pays to the law, | nationi How long will our uatlon probably e saw efglit or ten deaperadoes stop blasphem- | livel dng lostantly witen the detective threw back the | _ What 18 n nationl It Is a body of persons Iappel of his coat, The sccret was that, so far | Whom lancusge, snd place. and” centralized power have grouped into one houschold., As 21 the polica officer does hia duty, that far e | D S divtut dn anclens Smesoan Abrubam has heaven at his back. This was | or n Jacob—became tho head of s triba by be- how luspector Mursay, & slight man, coining 3"& l-l:- :uu "“(‘1'1“ Ihllul;,r'm lrlh:; a3 ¥ cld togother by associations of ant N':n‘;ufi’ !:“ ou‘:: ffif;tl ?;;';rm;"fi?“d‘; vlace, and by dislect and customs, and some- pe A i ks what of a central power, 8o # powerful lesding describe *n glazed window,” with *mysterioua | mtnd rising up {n a peainsula, or island, or part people passtug o sod out,” uotll somebody | of & cuntinest becomes the bead of a approached, then **darting into nlley-ways,? | Dation aiready bound loosely topether bv ‘Thiswas *aden of thicves, but it would be language, aud dursuit, and relatlonships, and g 4 hard to prove it, for the proprietors are the ‘.:{.;.,Ef,";g‘.’,,‘,’:" {: "br.' u: ‘R',’.,’,‘,’,'{::i,‘lf cutest men fu the clty, sud keep nostolen gouds | there Is always a harmony of ideas und Jan- sround. ‘Thers were Lwo tables, ot each one of fi\‘uzu n:lt'l lt“"u mg lcunon:l- wul\;-h #I‘vulll:'l;m which eat four men whispering, and bufore esch a4 Biato clog wade, and that a liviag % hcad is now possible. As God fashlons trees or 1nau was a mug of beer, The four men at o6 | yymals, s Ilo makes nations, The acorn adds open befaro us to-day to fill crery voung heart | matheriniz. ‘The same lien of & future gattiering | LRYPt" Incommencing hls dlscourse, hie said | ntilding could zo -ahehd with perfect safets. w?m ambition, and ni!rlu:llm. nrnym hope. All 5ml|hthmuuh the wholo Tible, and numfim w)lllzl tht he had expected to bo abie to Gulsh Jast | Beeretary Bristow dllmcml the firat report to be ye youn men who are here to-dsy can bulld | especial promineuce fn tho' account of tho mi- | night all he had to say of the religion of thg | FCt Asldé, and "I““ x'“""-'c““ with the deslen. | hopes upon this loundation which we call our | raculous cvents which oceurred on the day of | Egyntians, bnt ho had found so much more i reconincuded the Mueller frec-stone frowm the country. ‘The wisdom, and Jove, amt pawer of | Pentecust,~nll of which was oniy & picture of d b ) Buena Vista quarry, near Clacinnat!, sod the God aro In it, acting alovg with' tho wisdon, | the realily set forth in levelation. 1twas ain [ Lo Fublect than bo had at first supposed fthat | Ring went right fu to advance tho nterests of and power, and love of man, ALl greatness is | that scatiered us from God, but it was Christ | hio had been obliged te divide his remarks under | toat stotie,~in fact, did ¥ comparative, ludeedy and the times which sur- | who gathered us tozether to iimaelf aud to | two heads: *‘Tho Uods ond Worslin of Egypt,” | A GREAT DEAL MORB FOR 1T THAN I WoutD [ t 0 Y A e " % 3 :Z':,';v .,',',',,',’,‘:;Dfi;"." e L ::'.f l?ll’f‘a‘:’::’:o)nfil'-' God . :{"-l‘ Bll};t‘: fili_vpll:nmlden ,l:l Im":‘;l"fll”"{ Now there was Potter, who succeeded me. FPot. ing, for the curtain of the next centuey will riso CIIURCII MEMBERSHIP, Next Sabbath he would spesk upon the latter | ter was nominstly at 'the head of the concern, upon & country greater In all the dimcnaions of § liead, and'the " Ezyptian Book of The Dead.” | but, pracifcally, e had nothing to do with Ir, mind, and relfgion, and art, and happiness than SRRMON LY THR REV. W. It CHAKTS. The Egyptiane, suld the speaker, pussessed | It was run by him and Jacobs. They awarded the land which even now 1980 {mpressive. In The Rev. W. F. Cralts, pastor of Trinity | and professed more religlon than did nvy cther | contracta without any publiication, and the Act- that day all we older ancs will he under thu | Mothodist Eplscopal Church, preached yester- fi;fl:{ltd:’;;flgmgn&k: vfi'&?.»ff[?ff}'hl"&’f e g;g"imm:fi fi{fi'fi:.“fi?.“.‘,‘if‘.‘fl.‘.“&fi""fifi nlgl‘l ¢ |- L ¢ < £ ¢ 2 0 anticl . e et ooy sad abor i e ey el | day morning on * Chiureh Memberehlp,” from | 1l tha vellziou of tha Fgvptians dealt h-tho | g, nb ey, thst. Suelicy world i oo Kloritled perfod. the texts - s0lldest essences of Mife. “Flielr belil and thelr | thetn (tho.Ring), They went to work aud allowed 3 Foran the boay without the splrlt 1s dead, so [ reliztons cll!iulnliml oractives were @ miziure | eversihiog in the way of expenso—in foct, they GENESIS. faith without warks by dond wleo,—Jumes, i1, 20. | ot very difierent dlemetits,=8 statu of afairs | nllowed & grost ymay bills that had bion so. TAR THIRD OF DR. GIBIONS' BIDLE-READINOS, Mo began with reference to the fact that | thut might be accountable to the difereut eles | jected, and tien, Smith examlned the vouchers eleven years ngo ho preached his first sermon { Ments of which tha nution was composed, Tha | and foynd thut many of the Chicago bills wers ‘The Rev. J, Munro Gibson zave suother of bis | rony vis text, and be had ever tried to be trug | OTikiN of the Egyptians had by some bu excoedingly futereating and popular Bible- | 1g ¢l key-note of his minlstrye The toxt bad n | traudulently cxcessive, and hence thie de snctibud o, o yuees of Afrien wille others IEEREhILab Rl 20l Aenca Ll hroces i pointed perhaps correctly to the similarity Iu readings fn F""t" Hall yestorday after- | peon Lrowght fresbiy to his memory by an Fomo ot the words of tho Egyptian 1o wunds of THE MESSAGE noon at 4:30 o'clock, Immediately after | exymination of the credit system shown in tho | Asiatlc tribes; to tho like canformation of the o e the songservice Dby tho Bitis Cholr. | qercantile ngency reports, whichh ho wished | 8kulls of the two peopies, aud ta other TROPOSITION TO HAVE A PRED COUNTRT, The noudicoes, one of the larest that wight be sent out as lmcts’ among young tnen marks that fodleated an Asintie orlrin, in WasuiNaroy, Nov, 21.—~In his forthcoming haa atiended any of these readings, coni- | 4o prove ta them the truth of Sclomon's | DNE A4 Jeast. The religlon of Aticledt |.mesaage the President will make the reported 3 Egypt bore marks of this iningling of races, 1t " pletely fitled the seats in Lho body of the hall | proverts, which declare that integrity is world- cmmlneu-u e opreciotion of thadivis mys- | Outrazes and violations of law fn the Bouth and encroached largely upon the seatiog capoct- Vi I ly wisd terlcs of lifo and the love ol sudnal wurship,— | GUring the lato Cougressional cluctions & ty of the gallcries. :lyh:::::;" r:l.lyw:l"rc?un;:-:it zuma;;: :’;:fl the latter a relic of African Fetlcuism, dhy prominent topio of comment. These violations ‘[be prellmivory ;reading embraced selections | s yur heavenly-Interests. This mercanilo | JYFesakad attumptod.to systemize and classlty? 1wt be'tiddentted ds forcibly deprtving o laree from Acts L and Revevil,, —the Be acex st bl the rods of -the-Firgpttans, LireTHE" Roth anil | puinber ot citlzens, (n specilied localities, of rom Acts L and Revevil,,—t Hcrlnlurlf unt | wency " bbok Is'‘not'only & proof of Provesbs | thieir naues s poiers bad in the lapse of tino ek ferred by both the National and Stat of the Day of Pentecost and 8t, John's vision | for young business men, but an las- | become so hopelessly mixed that all attemptaat | FLEkts conferred by both the National an “'! of the Throne ond the Lamb, Tbe quartet | trarjon of the Book of Ievelation for all. | @ systematizatiun wers fulturcs. Herodotushud | Suthority, thus provonting rosults expresalvocl sang * Night's Tender Shodes,” by Blshop, with 10 three cinsscs, aud & aubscquent writer | thelr will in tho adwinistration . of publle af- flcgm(nmy Tood * uifect, Sser” which' "the | Men aro by their deeds justified or condemned, | M O & s 80 4 Lad subdivided cach of these classes into many | fairs, Buch procecdings will be further dep- audicuce wae led in prayer vy the Rev, Dr. | and on the Doy of Judgment, when the books | nacis, Animial worstip snd the beliel tty the | roo 5 Field, of New Yurk.p‘l‘ia r[uu’rt.u gaye * [le | shall be opencd hereln their lives are recorded, dmmy and powers of the anhmals so worshiped Tocatell hesause Lhoy illicata ghat the pach ? : cte, and that t,zoeth forth with weeping,' by Naater, and | will the credit of an eternal reaidence In heaven | was the outward form ot their religlon. “‘Ihus, f,zt-'::u: l'-hfl_‘v“l‘i‘;? tx:' r!:ur’::‘:‘thy:‘m;gn;:& e,',,;'.’:.. Dliss' * Seoking to’ Bave,” in aliost faultloss be granted them{ If their debt {s canceled by | Strabu's description of a visit to the temvle 8t | por tho infogrity of free fostltutions. The syle, p:lr’u-l;um!m br., ‘gn‘.m; lnuached ‘at |\ ndorsement of Jeaus Christ they shatl bo | Mempbis, which stood where Culro Mow standsy | gubjoet will be carnestly proscnted to the eon- stiowed that the heutie was the thing inost o - ‘The snbject, hosald, was the sccond cra of tho | saved, but *as the body without the l]hfllb 18 | gacred in the eyes of the Mewmphlans, Tho Ei'.’.fi,'."‘.l:{'c:’f;.g.".';‘fi’,‘;‘,.{,";:‘.‘f.': ‘r:)cllpurr;':;lmt confllct, the record of which, was contalned In | dead, so laith without worka is dead glso.” The | pequtitul temple bore scuiptured avidences of 34 800 z ey Gonestd roin 1o elzbtcantl Ycrao ot tho niuth | Chused, by maklng confetaion of Chrisitaniy, | e ura i Feveronco AECORLE Lhak Musks an | &, TELUrFEce oL sl wrange: wd to secuue s chapter fo tho ninth verse of tha eicventh, Tnis | scnds to tho world the request to Im; e'redmm l“ within the sacred shrine upon 4 cushlon of pur- d cra might also be looked upon as the third | nfl that fs siznitled by the word * Christlan” | 5ig yelvet was kept tha holy bug, Other ani- of the probation, It might be considercd that | ‘Tho world looks at the outward works, aud by | yiyls were tuken as wads in attier cit there were turee dispensations fn which God | theso accepts or rejeets the credit nvolved 1n | (o bull was oc one elty reaided L Iunsmuch as this congregation cannot occupy ) ——— ' 'CIVILTAN V8. SOLDIER. GEN, I'OI' ANSWERED BY TIE INDIAN BUNEAD. dealt with all mankind. First, thoro wero Adam | that great, grand word, “Chrfatlan,”” Let wmen | creq: at another the an Apecial Dispateh 1o The Tribune, table were taiklog over to {ta little vital priucipls until 1t bus become | dom, for this hielps the laad at once to keep far | yng Eve, snd all mankiud as represented by | look fito thelr outward lives, then, and sceif f crocadile, Marfot, diseoverfe Vor, ¢ 3 A PIETIOUS NIGHT'S EXPLOIT, an immeuss tree. Not otherwiso nations are { %8y all that rciards mind or soul. ‘This ib- | e, In Tden., We passed down theough tia | thiey can expect that this wrent eredic will bo | SUGHISE the crocmlile, facoverics | Wasursazox, D. C., Nov. 24,—Tho followlox erty of the individual compels the Government and the Church to appeal to the public scnse; and whereas King and pricst formerly stood upon authority, they must now stand upon tbe average reason of the age, and men whom they ouce ordercd thoy mnust now persuade. ‘Tho last virtue we shall mentloais the love of fus- tice. I: may scem almost a satire to speak of our nation ss possessing o love of |ustice; but vet this virtue must befociuded in our category. Hod we the politieal {njustice of the ald no- tions, and perbaps even uf England, we should fung since have possossed and plundered the Cansdas, aud have had vur tax-collectors fu each city and vliage of Mexivo. We lave, indeed, dishonest men In abundance, but s0 lias Scot~ land, France wasalmost ruined under Luuls Napoleon by the criminals (n the uriny ranks. Our land containg, s do all lands, dishonest lu- dividuals, but 25 § oation it has in all 1ts hun- dred years nttemnpted to be just. Canada, and Cuba, and Mexico rest ia peavo on iis confnes, because it has not tho political njustice which e i1 1500 showed that the bodics of the sacred 5 successlve stages of divine goodness, then trial, | granted, The same practical tests 8p- | Lulls wera most sacredlvand solemnly em- | Wi prepured at the lm&lan Bureau: i then fallure, then judgment, and then | blied to business = vursuits muag 8 | holmed, una placed in sacraphag! brought from L rn.‘:.:.;’m.on fll(l)m&' lo‘p:r .;“uerdml% of ?clnh.v merey, to flad God desting with mau- | spplied to tho children of Mzbti and | gt distances, and the wholo deposited aiost 0 eea e publlshed syl Tyipagu iy of 108 kind' o8 & whole fn " nntediluvian | first do they who ask the credit Imphied In tho | goeyroly fu vaults decp under ground. The Tupork o the Becruluey of Was ot 17, uzeure lis history, with the same stages of trial, failure, | word “Christian® atwend to their spiritual | yeopipaid all homago to these animal deltics, | Toavely sbe monthe or Lhe Post year 1o Cheyenacs long-suffering, udnmentb;nd then mercy - | busivess, 18 nat, they forfeit their right to tho | BArNui one of tho brieats at 1 emplea de- § und Atatahoes have been wway trom thete Azency {earing au the closc. symbolized in the rainbow, | etedit of o Chrlstiar, as negloct uf busiuess | yoted to thele uses bo Ao thess | gud subsisting thowselves upon bullalo withoit 1n tho subject for the afternoon was presented | destroys their cred In comaierciul clrcles, odui” e would probably answer that thoy | aid from tho' supplies In the posiossion of their tho third " dispensation, in which (lod dcalt | Anothier test fa tho question, ¢ What' com- | 070 viry awtul mywtcrics, The sacred buil | Aveat, et Hieso: sunoles, Iicwied for o whola with all mankind,—begioniog with Noah, and | pany does he keepi” Thero 18 no decper test | ywou supposed to bo a dunl odl, so to speak, cach | Year, were barely iclent on tho return of the coverinz the perlod of post-dliuvian history, | thau this of the reality of their inner Christian ‘,mhmpul beings was atriadar trimty, nml;wun Indlans from their six monthe' mmll to m’nl:ll: beginting with Abrabam, with the samo stag life, If men do not Jova the compantonship of | wyrigus fact that i all the Heyptlan relueton |-thom \rlm‘ hu!;-flllnlll luaum‘hrcmn"n’gg: or3he of failure, trial, judgment, and mercy i calllng | the godly rather than the uugedly: Mf, In short, | 1y jdea of the trinity was vidible, ‘Lho trinity, e e ioncd ar el Aurabam Lo Cod. As the treo of lifa wai | they preler those thoughts, words books, por- | 1oo, was always: represcuted bya fatker with | Viese budians dir the past yesr,duly reporiedhy broken, that symbol kept out of aight and only | sons, and gatherious that have lu theuselres |y runalo ailinity, and a son. Ouc thing ho | the commanding olicer near the Choysans sud reappearcd at the close {n Hevelations, whereit | o fellowsnip with God, an essentlal priuciple pricsts would have Léen surc of—that the pods | Arapahoe Agency, and confirmod by thu Indan Was scen on tho banks of the river of the water | I8 Incking In thelr tbner nature, which they guarded coutalued the divine pres- | Agent, weru reported by me under datu of Juno 8. of life. 1n the next dispensation wo had tho Another teat is, Wiiat Is your style of living? Cherubln and tho faming sword, the Mea of | 18 It pradent or extravoruntl And the auswers | S50 A00ut which diriully there was sa Httla | ooT. o ool tioas ayacisl Indiane s o+ which—justiec—~Liad passed (Lo b layguogeof | to there questions will serve as o thermumeter | Jorrs o o o which so fiktle was tiow kniow. | 26, ' reliabie s basis 18 thow of Giex, Fope may be e Das, to the lauguage. Ll Each ity had fts own odll und esch one was e o bow coi d New Testament Churell. The raju- | tu decido whether they arg entitlod to that | rivered, but underneath the outward fonn | 1earacd fron the following factst Iasting ¢ Ont bad hod o narrow escape from a dog In | Zrown from some little boat-Joads of Latins, or § Greeks, or Puritans, The samo wisdom and o basement, Anothor mearly fell from the W " 5 power which made the carth aud gavo it ita four Jedge of o second story. A bullet arazed the | seasous aud Ws dsy snd night made also the Lead of & third, aud a fourth had his bead bound | aws which zather mankihd {nto empires or re- up, where he had cut it in breakion the glass of K"w&" *The powers that be are all ordained a window, One had lost bis cye, three years | b3, ¥ before, through tho premature ush of powder | vor ot o p1C Spmaa g e ds e AN Al o In o store-lock, The other four men were plan- | vided Ioto three parts, . . . All these differ ning the pext pight's work, They koew when | awong themselves tn lsnpuage, fustitutions, Viotast memocr ol a fainlly would retlre, se | 200 Jowh? 16 whe, this discord of olan v 9 gus, ! ade three nations vl :huldwlms h;: .L;u"’l‘l(lln.)'l“l"ul the ecrvant, who | {3 TR GINE" Clina deBned Itself by & sall vould leave the back window apen, or they were | whiet ran over bill and mountain for 1,500 aware of the hour when the wan of wealth | miles, hut in peacetul, civilized azos the nations would Jeave his diasipation, aud desigued waige | b und them a wall of language, and law, Ing fur bint In some dark wlley, And knocking | At wwstom which keeps bue tiuzimavithin and in strangers without, wvu can tiud what a na- hin down with a slunz-shot.” Row mauy 1B | ;10,5 for onee you will €0 awsy from your owi keys, ucly pocket-knives, brass kouckies, and | country und take up ag abods (o s Germany, revolvers there were Ju the crowd the spesker | or an ltaly, or atice. A uew tougue aod new did nut know, A few chean plutures and @ Lur | bahits uud [deus surround you, and your heart ntly appeared as o token of the ever | credit a Chrutian asks, If in this City of | 550 ghow thero seemed to bou soft of fdea or AURNT MILED aut, ‘The synibol of thy covenant of | Chivato there could S0 men s, from timo to found with the | puife sreat Aivine power, The real think- | fnforms the Indisn Ot Y Ia the property of the Weakest. el hie [t vq | bellef 1 one great divin - L h tine, bean avkud by U or statoments of nible s s - | wwou longs to 2o buck. ~‘Vhe Lrue citizcu is like [ Ste8 the lawr passed out of srht, but vonc of thy | sell-sacrlilcing spirit which posscased Gideou's | wpg of Eyrynt acemed to bave that ides, but the: i cuco icb v u‘;:“,'o:,':: Frie 1:3:"2“"“ Weka:nob drik i carrier duvo, wiich, et loose wlar from i Buch are th cloments which Shmonse what | aymbole of ihe vovenant ot race wero ever | baid, Sbiulutely obcdient to the Word of tiod, i ‘:.’ot, TUF reasoni BknOWD, ciry b0 1oaYo B | havet bern o ureianat oyt Pisarnarit eat Al hroud, rse: L3 uew, strange 3 8 [rom Na- | Jost. s second ern of the coullict covered a hey coul N & Bl ear elose ne: r c| 3 17 g ) los disne, sud TO UZT COURAAGE 1P, scene, and by day and tielt avd by stofin whigs | ture of climate, aud soil, beds o mincrals and e “ i thing expliclt in thele writigs about thit | for tbe Chevenno aud Arapstioe Indisns, au period of history from the post-diluvlan world, | bublic brothels aud saloous, aud procun the | digigity, * Thoy were secretive, were thess | has Gesn Blad to farnish him with' e from Nuah down to Abraham, the space of thne, | message of salvation tu cvery precluct aud | pyinkers, but the way In which they changed | information nksdlnrzIhzl.wncnuwrluchuilm-;’ however, being less than in_the sutediluvian | nelbborhood, abous and mixed up the names of their famiftar | Mont has Loeu furuished, he bas always jnforn 4 period, and yet very loug, Of this period, the | ‘The last test fovolved in the word “Chris- | yods would lesd to the supposition that they | €01, Sliauer that tie list of supplios un! Eivire ought they woul ound interesting, ju- | puy prumptly et bim lool er bifs rows,— of whom under ough N gL ! 8 structive, vn’lunnln. and ussfut, % tbulpln [ ’nulu to God. llas he et them Gireat Lelnz of ) underlyliug thougnts wert | yracie periatitad tho Qoverninent to call for an sl r imnited out not expressed. Sotne said that the 123 cont |f I ded. Ane The Urat luterustiog subject et with was the | prowutly and regularly( “Aud leru comen up | worehio of the bulis, and. crocodiics, and catk | cinortuci: hon e ored oy 800 BIdm: wie: {dea of the uniy of mankind, There iad been | the questions: * s it wromr to dunced s 1t | wug put the outcropping of the real worship of | that the Indians roceived dunng thas year abuat 8 great deal of Gpposition to this [des, but the | wrong to ko (o the theatrel When men joln | the ygkuown Uod. It was a matter of history | £65.000 trom the ssles of bulfalo-robes and tbe dilliculties had beeu disappedring, and conllpma- | the Church they expresslly agree uot Lo 100uW | thar the Imaze-worstuplus inutlons first learnod | dressing of bo@slo-hides fof thy iraders, ol tions were cuming to the front,” Physical dif- ( these forms of smiusewent, and the Metnodist | (o base down to shapes of Wond und stone out af | MIEner, in thls +* reliabio basts ™ furmah hyl hl“l.! ferences used Lo be urged o opposition to t, | Wbo dauces or visits the theatre i unquestivns | yoonstant revercnce for the object that was fu- | 3¢ tiso, Lape, stuten ;nun,nq.u the h.’.]r'u::““r“ bue fulidelity now = soucht to wmake aa fmbly wullty ofabreach of contract lu which | ppyded only 4o call their attention to the deipy | SUS % mdw-‘r:’:m;nnn m;'r‘mw":dx: Fos e ln;'ln flbcml. physleal ditterence “d pql.. ul)lt_l and the l:hurv:hpnru th'.u oun-rhnnru‘cill. ¢ | wnow, and ot an fmake of whom, they were | Gedclonoy of 1 e fl{‘_‘_!uy.w ero wonld b sible, vause it was concerne: u ‘Fhere are many Protestants whuse theory ol den to worship. The lmages wers made to 3 bridging the chasm between the races, | religion 1s, praciically, that of the Homan Cuth bidg bl e JUT TR FAUTS ANR TUEIRL kb - express ideas and remembrances, ‘This inight in . 1670, 450, 853 tho latet infide] {dea belog that man and animals | olic. ‘They” vount ovir the veraes of the Hiule | §ole"meqnire, account for tha animal worahln | seeerd feon 2ok 4 et o o sprang from the same 'parcntage. Thue in- [ Instesd ol beads ol tho rosary, st bow, nut be- | of the Egyptia Thoy might huve been a3 | amount coutracted for, S00,000 pubns lidehty changed front from ago to age, but tha | fora » lifeless jmage, but wilh & prayer as iife- wysittica with the various forms of awe ¢ cont fucraase callua Tor 450,000 poun Wonlof the Lordendured fyrever., less as an hnage, carrviog 1o more ol the practl- ::fhuu,’"' tbodu of the present day wers g,m pounde: amount required W supply Differeuces fu languages bad ulso been urged | cal principles of relizion Ingo the busy tide of | gngzed ot the freaks of eclouce, snd, (o thelr | 4000 Indiaus for 3U5 days, three f'"""l"lf::ulr'—l {8 opou-itiun to this dea of thie unity of nian- | commerclal activitles aud tho wicked Currenté | mysters added superstition, it would'be bt a, [ Indian, e £,380.000 wounds, whus learine i kind, bug tho rescarches ‘of Jones, Schleyel, | of social lifu thau tne Cburch whose lower | 45 from the worship of an unseen god to the | Dius of J#hG7 wounds. Fhis ehows tiag ihe Bopp, Pritchard, Lathrop, and outiers, showed | krade ‘of sin makes It the church of the | Logieeat an ankusl takew opgluatly as e | So2ed detciency loa mythical quantity: Biie shat they hod 8 common orlgin. The investi- rmun und the scalfuld. Thero ure sowe | pepresontation of s wod. Four of (ho greatest | 4,000 fndians were on tie resersation be taket. Eations of Lathrop lead suvstautlally to that | lu Awmerlcan churches no better thau & Kkuds of the Egyptiaus bore Iking | curiug which time Gen, Pope suys there wae bascl vart of Asla where the Bible told us man hud | Mohammedan, whose - bowluze only delay | Semblance fu veputed chapucterlsties o | enoueh thoro (o' feéd thews, und Sllow escl his urizinal home. Harckel placed the liue a | bim & moment in pursult of the stesby lusts | cngrg ctcrs of the religlon of tolay. Isls | man, Wowan, snd child three pusads of littlo further south, for the purpose of getiing | thet war szailuss bis soul, und sli our church with a chiidin her srms was warshiped ss js | beef, there would have been ruquised 370 - it into the vcean, and then took refuge fu the | o b properly write the word “Deceased n some Jand tue Madanus aadjtle (nfant | 000 ' pounds. liat Col. Mizuer roporied tuat statement that' ticre used fo be o contiuent | uiraiist Gha uames on thelr Tecordby—bot only | Hy N e e s ke Judgy | Ihere were 3,000,000 pounds furalshed. Thus bl there, o1 which, if it uow extited, could be | of those lu the grave, but azaiust those ulso | pefore whom all bad to psss at the close of Hife, 0" it e ..x..mf-lu-d 1hat ther s found the missing Nk, “It 18 a verv con- | whose falin, being without wurks, isdead, Lut | The keeper of the Inferosl Reclons resembled i, pounds. ‘The fact, bowerer, ventent thivg," said Dr. Gihson, *to pluce your | the most serious hladrauce to the progress of | (he Satan of present repute in that he was once 000, 000 only, bat 4, 708, U7 evidenice on & coptineot barivd in " the | Giol's cause fu Clucayy 18 the amount of fakth | ope of the godsas BSatan tiad been an sugel, ed, and, allowiog the large e ocean” Not only were the arguments | thut iv dead and uop Lurled; the professivg | While Aminon, the gre: perbaps af all the w each man, womau, and cbild, the all polntiug & Qdifferent w now, but | Chrlstians who leave the communlon-table to | pods of the Egyoilans, was looked up to from toally 8, 843,057, Thus Uen, Poue there were distines evidenc of tue | driuk thelr mugs of beer; who are not mand- | gif parts of the ereat land of Eyxypy as (be one o Iy suouih '’ to wean uearly Deluge, Everswhere one would fud the same ing uny of Falth's ifo by work in the 8uv- | pod above all guds, This belef, [t might be | YO0 nounda too mucn. - As 8 matter of fac traditions of un orliinal deluie, which went to Becal year uvol, o the prayer-uiceting, 10 thy 1ok~ | termed, In one Fod seemed unmistakably to b | S/48e0ba0d at tue begioniox of the Bice] 70 vrove the uuity of wuukiud,—the fuct that they | stuns, or the temperauce work, a charscteristis, of the thinkers of the ;},..'fl:fi.‘,';‘».fi‘ H ;::::.:;3‘-‘::;': %Aum. by e broughit theso tradurfons frow their ald bonies, o May the Christ whu came Lo Bethany come o | race, though they, ss befora stated, uid | becdts of almple fact. that they came frow the same place, as from | Chicago, where 108y a Luzarus 13 sick, or sleep- | ot express much of their bediel. Hlowgever, the | Wi GEN, SHENNAN, THINKS OF THE TRANF the family of Noah. As rescarches into the sub- | g, or dead, or buried, aod ery Lo every inactve papyrus used fo the cmbalming of the de i ead, FEB OF THX INDIAN LUREAV, Ject of the antiquity ot wan fucreased, there | Clinstiun by the volcs of the Byiriy oK 10 | verses of povtry aud foscrivtions of adoration Witensngton Posl, anc. 23 Thne Nquor bad becu polsutied tour Uimes: By the Ilh"l":;v :lu Ita Nuine, "’!‘l: qu-hn“t"ncluug manufacturer, the wholednlo deuler, tha retail | tTussus the ilnes of Lls country & chilling win " rtrikes bim and he turys back,” 1t wouls dealer, and the saloon-keeper, Toatmadett ust | LN Thre, ' telinition e Shough for all som® rlebt to fit nwan torerueity and desperation. | non purposes should we way thut & uationisa ‘Tuese men were profeesional criminals, of whum | wass of peopl: held togethier by the stroo there are betwetn 2,800 and 2,400 In the clupter | bands of lauguage aod custum sod dess sd of citles, “Tuey were s thuroughly drllied as 1 uysuelations, Woitare, s meuical calivce, or- misietérs. in's It waas furtunate for ourcountry that the Civil tbeolomeal sewmlnary. Ihey had been AWar eiaine 2 faw years azo 10 Lrewk Up the ustts tution which was creating two scts of political soprentices sud journeymen, ;and wera pow | #ud sucial fdeas upon the two sides of the color Loss workingmen., They Lsd no wmbition | Hve. As two storns form about two contres for easy joba. They necded the excitement af persl oud the opportunity for bravado. Of aud rush forth, so two nations were forming these «lxty were Lank-robbets, who get into & sbout central bewds of phllosophy and custom, und but lur the puasions which buest forth ute buuk fu the ‘daytine, spring out sad find the wutclindn i the evenlnz, aad Have the whole war 80me futire Casar might bave written: ** Americs is divided luto 1wo parts, the Nurth nizht to go through the cusbier's books aud ave theyare correctly kept, [Laughler.] Of these and the Bouth. . , . These differ in lostitu- wlto Were men wbo got canceled checks, sud Uons sud laws, . . . aud casry on war be- Lween thuiuseives continually.” The Civid War practics unul they produce every part perfectly, ‘The speatier went on describing the various destrosed one of tue storm centres—a nation ventre—nnd opened the way for one uationfrom the gulf to thy lakes. The rallway which {s car- 1k Kokt the totat Commacrct, 1ho hurakaiey o 3 ¢ c ¢lasses ot criminale o na amustug style, and brotherhood which Jend lf:hf'm u‘-y‘.":r' 3:.{ THOVOKING GUEAT LAUGHTEL. tilence, 8 common literature, aud s comumon re- lle sald these people give thobulk of thelr stolen goods 10 recetvery, and thernselves all tive poor and die poor. Among the apeci tles ot profesgional crime 1o Brooklyn fs bluck- walllng. ‘l'o those who were gullty the spesker Ngion, sre toiling to fiwun {nte cue perfect na- Lad oo cuuusel to give, bul the inavcent shonld tlon aland which reaches northwurd aud soutn- ward a thousand iniles, and thrve thousand from vast'to weat. Thus we haye soswered in part tbe question, Whaut fs & nation! and bave have vo fear. Fvegy dollar paid a blsckmailer was bLut another step tewards s man's cver- lasting cuthrallment, No wan's character was ever sacriticed uutil ho sacrificed ft bimaelf, tonnd the wnswer Lo be au asseusbluge of per- sous bound together h{ lunguage, by custom, by 1applause]. The speaker tald of & room at ilook Lock, foot of Hoosevelt streel. It was wieas, and by assoclations of blood sud expe- & resurt ot Quck-thioves, who go about the tience. Tbe second question suggested was, What bay uuder cover of nirbt, and, when they sce iwo wea: rowing to a vessul, pursue snd rob coal, watercourses, lakes, and eeas, It sdds thy pursult of cducation, sud property, and common Justice, and religion, and thes combivea a loyu of the dbeautllul with s constant study of the uselul. ‘There 13 scarcel error of the past which it has uot rejected, and scarcely a virtua of the past it has not espoused. 1 ¥ppeal nos to our self-love, but to Listory, From the posftion assumed n anawerln thesu LwWo questious, ** What je & nation I .nfi *\WWhat s our nationi® {au may readily Infer what wmy own seply will be tu the injuiry, “\What will bo the luture ol tbe Unicéd Biateal" All such questions can be answercd oply in the language of & bigh probability, Extrsondinary forces may come, such a3 an earthiquake, to submerge our continent, or the iood earth ur the Lood sun may grow weary at last ol thelr dutly work of winistering to the wanis of the human family, It is » wonder- ful assumption of all our bearts that the earth will always turb upon her axis and luciine in such & manner &% to coutinue the seasous aml climute of the sges ove; ood it is a parallel assunption thst the sun Wili rlse for centuries o core in'the beauty of sl ite history. Extruor- divary 1ufluences are ilable 10 arlse and chanre the uasural destiny of, not vnly a vation, but of wag, The astronomers ud planets from wiich thoy thiuk sl llte bus disappeared,—planets whure the bird has ceased Lo siug, and the waters to rinple, and the ralo to full; but omit- tiog these thoughts, ai assunmiing that 200 years beuce the samu nature will surround our Kraves which to-day so beautitully encompasses us thus living, 1 bolleyve that In' that day, 20 years beace, our country will lle in pesce aud real greatuess all over tbis Northers Continent, ‘This Is uut the lauguave of siple bope, but of the 1aoat svident reasous o the rest cass, L have asked you to wark bow & nation is createds how, by & slow step, languae, und law, and custowns, and pablic, and dotueatic gs- sucistious beglu to vevolve around sume centre, und fusbilon the strange living world. Now mark las prire paniude; and 15~ toisl, P3 deas and customs are elewents which bave furined and are still forming our loved natlon! Are thicy priuciples of valued Upon tnls return of the ‘Thunksziviig mnniversary we may bies Uod that the group of priuciples whick ks Julned with lunrusge, ana geogropby, and blood 1u binding our willions {0to one 18 the uoblest Eroub upun which any uatlou bas et been peaki " anothier fact of histury, thut it Las always re- | seemed to be lews reason for the idea that tens | cousclence, “Cowe forth.’! Xud ‘if thers: be | sduressed to one G Omuipotent Jofintt ¢ Qeneral,” suld & Lust reporter to Gen. Shers tbem. It they sre tureasoushiy opposed, they luundql; We wan repeat with perlect wincerity | quired buadreds of years tu form & Bation, and | of thuusands of years bave been passed since strucgling soward life and lctlvl:{, fettered Th;lnz‘ :hgwe\.l what ,.{:".’:.m.i’:l‘ g‘i&figuu 3‘"u,3 man !nnmnhy, S have you read Becretary give thelr victins a watory grave. tho old Paati, ** fle barh uut dealt 80 with suy | to chepk g destroy one bas required snuther | man bedso iis career ou the curth, Geulouical She grave-clothes of busitation aot T, may cople were, ‘Thus there had been foi + | Schurz’s letter 10 Gen. Bheridan evilence bow poiuted the other way, ‘Flie re- | every such soul, bear the divive suyiuy, r:rl‘;‘.:imu bearlug out the Bibikeal {des u‘lm(l‘.::l * 1 wos published tn tha press before § saw searches, for Instance, of the State Geologut uf | * Louse bum and let blm gu.” .+ Work tot | oy the *1awm what 1 am.” Other writings ex- | the letter.” .+ - o Minuesota jn rezard to the rocession ol the Falls | works of Him that scot us while it fs dav, f0r | preseed the idew that (od wus & betoe sprung * Do you think Bherlidan witt soswer it!' . of St. Authony, aud the tristworthy calculations | t0e nlebt cometh, wheu no wan cun work." from Illwself and vocxistens with ting and “ O yea) Sheridan Is a wan of actioy, it bein:z vation.” Oue must tusasure s country just 48 une weasures 3 book ora paintiug by tbe uumber wud worth of Its thoughts. A beok of scusativoal and coarse slories can wever group of centurles. As Wwau s tweoty-tive Years In reachivg his mauhood, aod twentyv-live Yeurs iu mwakiug bis aesceus Lo the urave, with a scure of peaceful years butween, so nations They alwo Jounge sbuut the plers and thwb ou board the vesscls, chloroforn the Uaptaln, koock watchmen overboard, and tuka al] i Lring its author the fuwe which cawe to Ma- | wove In long aad aa it requlres d or | based on vertaiu bistorwnl duta thus found, T Vo K e 2 word and & Ulow with bim. He 1 uwply able tt ot alugbles.. Iw belloved a largy propare | coujuy fruu i catays, UF Vo, Heysot Trom Bla | 400, o8 0 fonrs sor theon poion iice 0, Or | baseiton certaln listoruol duta thug clapard THE SECOND COMING Sieraltreom sl Tt Lad boa found and | & w0r 8 e e I cloa's thii ke SR8 1ou of the professional criminals are men who, s aud thus s vatlon held together us | to form, 8o it requires ¥ wany centurles { wore thuu BUW years frow the close of the RICONT MING: thinkioy mf .5": T tflndlbw‘ ufu'ud 1d o b nutlce it, | question the good taste of pub- laving once commitied a erime, were down u | Boupielh ~Mexio ouce wus, by ths. Jove of | for thess - aturins of mind and soul ts | bostilacial eriod: to |ihe mececut: e | srwsox vy su wev. w. 2 myowk, v 0. a3 cluatly as that ides wus i posscasion of the | lsking & leiter before 8 pentleman to whoia it des0alry—wuen who et stole because they were | £uld and by 8 devotion to' superstitious 1¢- | di-perse, . The uaulcs of money “which 4 I e ey T ayd Dr. Avdrews, of this iy, frun ‘The Lev, Dr. Ryder preached o sbort sermon | ¢ninging mind of to<ay, The speaker closed | was weitten bag bad a chauce Lo ace it, snd, wers data - furoished 'cy Lake Mishizan, | yesterday cveniog at 8t Paul's Universulist | withy l:‘umu.’uls‘n'm ot "Ke lruhl:a‘:; u: ‘il“u?un 1 fu (Jcn: Bheridan's place, L wonld uot sotlce Lased ©n the eralon of the western | Uhurch on *‘ihe Becond Cowlug of Christ,” | with thy traditions aud custows of Ancleus | it. Whatever people fu ‘ghu East nuy thiuk sbore and the piifng of the sund on the southera, | o oy10,, 2 : * 1 Egypt. + about the matter, Y9 out ol every 1,000 persvus Lad coine b the conglusivu that it cvuld uot | $4KIvi the followlug text: Ll ud Jglon, cap oever squal fn worlh sud future expectstion tbe Jaud wlhose alws education und i)ruw:ru sud jodustry snd religion and_ liberty " beautifully mlugled. huogry, clerks who falsitied their accounts, bop- Sz 10 6 watteis up, and like persons.” A geotlewuu sitting fa this asscmbly,” said the our laud _experiences, the baliot-frauds Bouth und North, the cipher” dlaDatches, the dlishonesty of public ep, the color line, Morwon Uleuiab, srv alt defects wdeed, but » e e e e e e —_—_— 2 — — p———— in the West tadores Uen. sheridan's opiulon speaker, “told me of wu fucldeut that ocewrred | 1t pleased God to keep by cuntivent | wholly uvatle to tura the current ot bave beeu i than 7,500 years he cl But of that duy aud bour knowelh no mag, Do bout the fudian Bureau.” 10 32 establivkiveut which udden unuil oclet lauds biad experimented with | wbich bas been hUAredsof Yeare 1 gatherinn | Of (o6 Post Elacal period 1o 150 preacat e | Hob 0 ugely of Luaven, Vil by Fuiher iy, - ENOUGH, AND TO SPARE, | ubeus the ludun Burean ooy + BANKS NOUMTIL 1N TUE COUNTLY, 1le many possible motives of fudividusl aud po- | up its vast womentum of lauguage, und cus | Other Iuvestigutions had wade the time eyen | Foltheu e, g St Lotis, do. Nov. 2L—The stesiner Nellie | 0y, forred to the War Departmeut The proprietor s & T bl ask . | litical bife, oud then to uake this Weatern world | tom, and philosopby, sud reliziou. Tbo grest- | shurter, so ihat It came, within the limits of oue | The sccond coming of Christ was an old tople | peck bLrousht down from kort Bentou wcon- | % Such 8 travsfer woald cntall @ great deal of SYauMIAE drea hm‘:f",""r S :, =l:mt;- the urcoa of the trutls that wight be elimivated | eat disturbivg force caie du 151, when o will- | Bible cironcluzy. * fu the Curistian Churew, There had ot been 2 *1cunnot? sbe - ! shzument of Hour for this ciy. the Jirst exporta- | responsthility un't care pu the ariy, aods Ly the lour estenmvut, Asall bistery s oue Noaw's vropliceyv, wahd D Gtlson. ways the 1 g century since CLrian vl bt dhere bas Deen | nouof food e toade e tut fueasae Land, | ecouenthe O ot aesiel, The whole matted f01 1081 TUsE BD 10 BitaLl e [ravRawen