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THE CHICAGO TRIBUN!I: MOXNDAY DLCEMBER 16, 1878 5 which the rabject was Tooked at. Jacoh really | Jection of Jesus Christ they are wanderers, thefr weat to Exvpt on s own aecount, hut not | return to the Lord will gather them together nntil fest o Bl consuited with his God, s n, and while there are hut lew jn- pravet for Helit. fle thaueht, Eoypt was dark [ dicatfons of the fulfillment of this and unelean, but the Lond told B to go down | jrophecy, there are mnany indicatjons that the into Exvit, and promisel hlm tiat ne shouhd « will return toCanaan, “Lhere i a growing wax ereat and toweeful, wad that his seed | desire among them to return to the Holy Land. should rile the carth, So Jacob went down | Theee desires find expressfon simony the God- nto Eryptseleh his family, and grewin strength | fearing Jews all oyer the world : n thetr papers, until b and hin kindred got to bo grester than | on the pinftorm, and ingtheir prayers, = Jeca- the sovereizn hluself, onafichd snys it (s the dav-dream of his life, But belura this was sccomplished they went Anuther siznof the fulfllltnent of the prophe. through a lony perlod of darkness and trihula- | ey I8 to L found fn the fact that since the Cri- tlon; nmd yet, even iu this atate, Jacob | meanwartbe Sultan bas beeh compeiled to grant Dlesscd Pharnolt, Twlee over wo wers | permiesion todews to settle in Palestine, and told that Jacob Dlessed Pharaoh, and thos | Lo-day sesen coionfes of (German Jews live there, wan not ashamed to. confess to i | wotwithatanding tha tyranny to which they are ha was a pilgrim and a strane | subjected; and in Jernsafem they are pot per, Ther would find this testimony hedged | oblired to confiue themeelves to the roumd with Lenedictfons. The speaker ex- | Jewlsh quarter. Tho Jewk are 80 tircum- S S Prochyterian chnrelien of Pounsylvants, Many all the belleving miillane, farmous and unfamed, lders A deavons Fittrew rater than fmpert] | bave the teuth on thew elie. thelr ronla hearing such muske, it will Mr. Eftia further treated of the sad resuits to ¢ marn AN ta et the uusie of o g clstlization _and the Individual 1!fe that wonhl T dntrodaeed tato our strects, and fenoale, | follow g solilsm - ahould ealn & generul and hontess bit, o There, we shall perhaps | rdoptton, enoka of tho klenls that wonid o slow In goite ) 10 the boreld diseopdof | Yanshs the spirations that would come Lo an the former perirl. Uhat. thia new virtae may eml: the motives that woukl cease (o act on tome into favor, all our high rewards, those | human nature: and ol the lopet that would from the balint-box, thoss teom emploversof | fade and fail Hke flowerscut down by the norty- tens antof humdreds, the rewards (,& rocinty, | tro Blast, Tle pleturl the conirast between o he rewards of the Preas, should be offered onty | pilerimaze o ‘o beautitul land mnl s berfect fo theworthy, A fow yéars of rewarding thy [ e, and n yilgrimago tuwanl eternat denth and worthy woull yesult fn @ wondortul zeal n the | unrclleved darkness, Ingersoll wonid, Indeed, Young to build up, not physical property, but | UeAtroy the erroraul rellaion bydustroving relic- menta) and mpiritual worth, fon feells but in so doing he might aiso uc-tmi{ “An actor having been nalied a few weekango | the sway of truths, and princinies, and sentl- §f thero was not st present an unusnal number | neots, and all that was caleulated Lo exert & ‘of netora and actreases who were scen topossess | Uotiidiess fnfluence for good in the Niting up, veal oral excellence, replfed IhAt there encouragenent, and consolation of mankind. pedfency, but the ight or wrong of them de. | ine* Combination, which fncl ol o the ieation of The oer, “Tie mo. | MATU, Locke, ami Tarn bos n mat ax st ab | ot Bt rncalty by SR et 20 -‘r::thix‘-‘:'v?rlvll ;":l”mmrr!nfir.umo‘;«mmw {[':ltsl Is | thatof Rice, fle fs at his wits' end to getan | If I owed & note to be paid with 100-hueheis of may mean appetite, allurement, or 5nxénvfi1a‘|’f Ecangeline,. Clam Fistia atngs well anonsh; bt ‘:!‘ T 'llnn!"l.(l ?l" i whmlme o aera the oo bt Blliremcnty o anbeBUSlh | i not strong nor preity, and han s badcola, e | S, oAl 1eTL g, craiton, I bre, mero tho e it (10 Judge of h% | had Lonine Silvester at first, bat she cauahtacold | and IF wheat wors the Sheaper.T $hoatd 16l M | third sense. *fam not willing,” continued | 30 had to give op. Ile telegraphéd for Alice | hnd norye, the speaker, "to admit, in the presence | Marrison, but eonld not find out whero she fs. Bha | , THAC 18 what yoar correspondent ¢t P." cally of possibie silckiors for nomenelature on this | had left San Franclsco and no one knew where she | ooforce Of circumetances,™ but I call it force of '.’.’:"'v’,'l"}n}}';?.'x :I;rr'xml:lla m‘ly not 15‘ ‘mil It ‘.’«‘L’Qfi“.‘.‘fl}"‘ hA‘} la: h ulhtb r:mnaugvse'x lhc'"!,, pilon. e Fannzn, 10y bt u . (Langhter. o ow . I arteinml sio Yor, Tanes soritily (renemaq | 306¢. 38" can - bo wiihoat he- performere PORTING. inughter at the apcakier’s manner]; but § must | JSPE hosed off the stage Denman Thamp. :zm rd:':f:n":lgxl-';filx -"«‘r“-t 'Irk:'?: l.»‘ i llqln' tlmtlhu Wecka At the New Yorx Lyceum, and all the com- A WRESTLING CHALLENGE. Nou thae iy eaten @ chiid, Tho old ayatem | Messany, m vonibe of comparitons with Marney Tole Sdiar of, T Wikvnss says that the lion 13 a Tlon, whether he has eaten | the ure:c'fu :‘ur.",l'lymr)::"‘vl;m:)‘:‘:d‘:e’:‘:’;?n‘;‘n ?: Cricago, Dec. 16—, the nndnulzne'd. do u ehild o not. The new avatem save th PUiT] 8t the head of the Aren i ap | Challenge ~ McLangnlin, MeMation, Wrirht, iat he {8 reh Street progrsmme not adion unless he has eaten a child, Hut they | business mannzer. The original ** Evangeline ' | Bleman, or Brink, to a contest of shovinz up & 3 % M ¥ M — horted his hesrers ta learn (e this teason fo | stanced all over the world that they | arc equally afraiit of the Hon' [(ireat layzn- | tronce, with Venle Clancy and Lizzte Webster, mb- v 5 iy ".'('},lu-‘.“fv‘.'.,'"17.f.‘:cnk'éfi"v:"":i.m;\?.'-'.'."n!."5"& FITTY-FIFTII BIRTHDAY. confess our relations with heavenly thinge. It [ can return ot any time, which fs | ter and applause.| I01 am fl!kll.'lly Contia | €ome 1o ihis hoase foF Christmas woek: John E. - u:hmb:: ):“‘!1 i el e TNy Raciinees. noknomiodands. thaeans || o L | e e Ottt vk others to | another tsln, Thelr wealth ia wearlvall in a | the apeaker, whether an fonariterd oroponity | UKee 19 the rund Sircet: ani SicDoongh'a ( MALEE, both at samctime and place, as follows: o sena it foctly snrening: haLtI0f | EMMON'IY ZHE HEF. ROSRAT COLLTER. %t o3 traduce our fallowh but. Jet us | partable” fors thoy are Kot fovolved o the | evil 1s wot an ovil, [ answer *veas BUIE Do | g ol o with Annte Fixloy, io tne wWainat I wlll put up o sixteen-pound bell from the plt rather bave charity for the weakners of others | political eoncerns of any natinni st they are and bleas afl mankind, 2acub bieased Pharaoh, | powbere tied to any country, Tho desolate Jocob's mind was full of holy thougnts, nnd | Jand 1s the centre of attraction to all clvitized his soul was filled with love. e was not only }cmrle. Filty years ago travelers there were ready 10 mive, but he was alsa willlne 3o re- | few in numbery now they are nany. The pub- ceives he twas ready to occept any blessing, any | Jie Is Interested fu exvlorations of Palestine, and high position. any favor, even though It did | any work on the subject (s eagarly perused, on come from the world, witness the success of *Daniel Leronda,” n By this we should ace that one who has re- [ novel on the restoration of the Jews, which neked whether literal 81 18 noL 11 OUF anDeLites, | Brer soreaner, Chflsimas enteriainment miil | shoulder and at the rate of twenty-sight times Ianswer * yeq” inapopularsense, but thAstrict | my, with especial reference to rcenery ana the | ® minute against the sbove mentloned five men, sense [ ravthat it is a iotter of eitolee, A man | balier, The Cliestaat han teen dotng the =+ Mer. | Tto do It mors times than all of tnem combided, 18 not to he bamed for an fherited tendency to | ehant'ol Venice ™ a8 & spactacle with averaga suc- | for & atake of $1.500 & side: and five minutes evil, nor for its attractivencss to hloy, but only | €eon The rcenery I lgohn ot as very fine, snl | after tho dumb-bell mateh T will wrestie Wright for giving way o ft. Neither Is he {0 be pralse:f }{m costumen were the best that could e pob. | or Brink s collar-and-élhow match, best throa for thu pussession of intelfectual tastes, nur for | 47, te war. the manager was in A stew | oug of five falls, for & stake of 700 a side, the tho attractiveness of books, hut for gratifging i Jradinz Tady on Satorday, THO | jpgtch 1o come of fen days from date. Myself i #age tnana ] o thuse fastes with n view of doing good. Tin | o sne e v (e F L T o aicq | and monev can bo found corner of Twelfthi and Jate years the communiiy had become ro mvch The Rew, Robert Collyer preached at Unity more 'usl, that now an actar or_nctress enfoys | Church yesterday morning, taking us his sub- the Iull hope and knowledee that the | ject. * Meditations of My Fifty-ifth Birthday," world wiil give them_creditv for every oxeels | and as his text the following wworde: lence of eharacter.” They sct befure them the | gq toaels ns to number anr days ¢ same moral posaibilities” that 1le Lefore o | piy onr hearta unto wisdom, — Featn schiolar, or n statesman, of a lawyer. Thus, ns F ) Tahdiy os the world hotoines Just. enonzh, and | [ogald hie hud thought that ngreat mang Tteelt holier cnowch, to anprecate aml fewand | men soent fheir time as the prodigals spent r « d " y—taking to the hank-l nounced the uuclean thinzs of the world might | totiched the public heart, Bible apeake fna humnn sense whes [t talks of | narshiy reprove . Paulina streets. ANDREW 2 ;::‘(fi:)?..'.:m‘;.’ .xé\'v",‘(:,::,fih_'h','.l."",,",'m‘?,",',\:,‘,’:f :::fi:_, ‘;',:’,":’m]l:,',:x‘;o dn.:;e nm;;:(sl";‘(ln‘! ‘::rl:: atill aeceqt graud tifuge. \We were taueht to keeo But of ull the signs apparent there [s none so | a seared conscience. There s o perfectly o «’)\ru'fl'; y:fi ".'.‘.1‘.& !’,'nf«“., ,l",,‘:,,",ll"f',;.' |H,.°.' ffi',':":' e b— Conconax, Hong saving, I von rendly appreciate oot men not, . W from the tnetean things, and tonch nothing that | striking os the decav of a nation that has the | satent doctritie throughout the Scriptires on | There was the dence ta pay that night. — Miss Jef- No mirror ever yot threw back od w0 ol | ing from it when there was not, Wa pald | wouid contaminate or deflic us, will {0 prevent 1his,—the Turkish Ewoire,—un. | this subject. and thots who take them as a | frers read the part ot Zanttind, in > As You fike A more repuisive »ight, Than teeth that are decayed apd black: Of one mote pure and hright Then rowa of pearfs. that all m!{ ranat ‘Who put their taith in SOZODONT. anid good women, then here wearel Your Jove ¢ has cucouraged ua Lo comel very littlo attentlon to cur birthdays after Bt Jet us pass fram the value of the good | W passed our 50Uk year, and preferred to look name Lo the beaver, to mark tor a moment 1ts | into the future. I we had tact, wo hesitated to value to all who surround it. Fame fn all 183 | speak to one another about our days, and ns we shapes—fatng for invention, or for puetrys OF | yeaw old we kept the delleata ruestion of our for cloquence, or for lionesty, or for Kindneas— | & ¥ T ATt unty 118 osseasor’ bt all tho Air- | Years to ourselves, We forgot that when wo reunding throny. It doea not shut itsell up n | were young we thought thuse old who were 8 the little closet of one heart, but like the | good deat f"’""""' than we are_how. Kome of perfume of aviolct, it hastens to et ont of utedl the pasy years painfully, and with the Hetle cup and scent the great aly, No er-growing gorraw at the fast. I days, Foung man or youn woman can by industry wos 0 great deal of thisIn” the oid and care reach Al eminence fn study, or arty or | Journals of the Farftans, Wesler did much to character, without hlessinz tho entira famtly | tispel this apirlt, but there were many who had grotin. We have all secn that the father and | a brighter and better Gosjed than he tanghe} mottier foel that all 1ife's care and lahor were at | and reflection on the rast stimulated them to Jast perfectly rewanled in the succoss of thele | cheerfulness and kindness. Between the two, eild. But haw the ehild been reckless or Indo- | however, there was only o cliolee ol evlly, tenty all this domestle {m‘—me oy of alsrge | for as nis Dbirthdays™ smote bim with group—would bave been bllehted foreser. Sonie | thelr awlft rotuen, fie must be bhoyond ol the tonehing epeodes I listory nre acvounts | his intrinsie cxistence it he tried” to of those hours when a Christing Nileson went | eheat himaelf into the wotfon that it wasno back to her lumbio lhome, eareying to o cottage’ | great matter about the davs that remalned. It the trinmphs of her songes and when a Mac- | Paul wereto speak fn these latter tines, he would anlay'a wark hegan o quicken the heart-beats | vall our renatning days the ** home-streteh,* of those Inokiniz 1o hilia, not kimply for support, | und he belleved thev were more momentous but fur bappin ‘There have been trlumphs | than his whole life bestde. We should nelther ut ol Rowe, where vietors marched atomge with | prow morbid rud (retful over them, nor et many u charfot, nany an clephant, and many | licedless ant hopeless, The latter days coulil spofis of the Ensts and in all titmes money has | not_be to bim what the days which hnd zone been lavished [ the efforts of States to tell | could Le. Youth/ and ace should punder the their plensure in the name of some Generald | trutn alike, and our ambition should e mod- but more numerous and widesprend amd be- | erated a8 nature moderated the bloud, and on voud expression by chioriot or eannon or drumn | the eve of thrce-score years wa should conelude have been those trlumphal lours when some | o treaty with our destres, lest the greed o do son or daughter hoa returned to the parental | more should crown our lives with defeat, We hearth beautifu] fn the wreathsof mome con- | should be”plad of the daya through swhich we fessel o lence. Even (f fnmo empticd ailits | are pssing, beeause they are the best we will goodinonlyoneheart—in itapossessor*sheart—it | ever ace, Now was the neeepted thine to finish would b3 n most sacred impalsc, for spiritunl [ what . he had commenced fn youth, neace and Joy are not_so plentiful in this world | the masterful youth and prime belne that you and'T can nflnnf to throw them away | more than one-half the battle. John Adams or notrlect she sources from which they comei | sald of Iis son t 1525 that he was 53 years ald but when 10 this consideration we ada the fact | —a good age for a President, Wosbinzton, that all pereonal gooduess fmmediately passes | Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe wers about that out of aell and scttles down dike asunabing | age when olected, Adamsreasoned, but they had upan wholo ficlds of human_life, the obliga- | mede thelr stake and Decere Mluatrious in'thele tions of nan industefous and ambitious und | yonth, and thelr electlon was ouly the Hme and moral eareer Lecome solemn and yet sweer. chancee for them to wear thelr hohors gracefully When certaln mockers have made sport of | and finish a well-begun life. Newton madea fame, they muat Luve furgrotten what trensures | discovery at 85 years of age, being falthtul to the world has drawn out of this mightyimpulee, | the aced already sown, and Milton at 57 finfshed 1 nm aware of the quarscels that have grown out | * Parodise Loat,” aud Columbus at the wame of ambition, ‘Fhe pavers tell us that the sing- | nge discovered America, But, turming trom the cra quarrel, und that the painters differ, and | old men, Nopoleon at 27 vutmatehed the war- often pettichly break trlendships; but we re- | riors of Austrin, Charlemazne at 50 was the member that men and women arc only children; first man in Fronee, and Chatham, o and when we remember that Paul and Baruabas | young wan, rising to speak in the Eu- were jealoua of each other and separated, swd | glish Parliament, gave Elr Robert. Walpole that out of their embitlon there grew up a pow- a uain in the back, Wesley discovered crful relivions when we rememer thint Avgelo, | Methodism ot 14, Btepliensan the locomotive at and Rapline!, and Bromante quarreted long and 5, and the Savior of the world was huue to hotly, and that vet out of thelr‘amblition grew | the cross at %4 These greal inen stowed us the most magnffleent gerfod of art, we prefer to | our extstence, and what they hod done In thie endure the quarrels It wo can have the fioal | supreme way wa might do In vur humble way, blessinea of thelr ambition. A quarrel s the | but we coutd not hobe 1o pass over thuir Hves childish thing of an bour, but the ambition J amd strike u new taw, One micht seens to rise of n Paul, ur on Angelo, or un Isaac Newton | higher as ho graw oider, Uut it was not throuph f« the hlesstug ot all eubrequent tiwes, Cas- tho force of his genius or talent so wuch us tetor sald of Bramante and Angelo “that thele | thot ha was borne up to the new elevation on names, driven apart [n tho small dava of strife, | the hearts of thoro whe love and admire him were now reconefled fnimmortality,” Mankind | for what lie hnd done in days gone by, In our will forgive you sll many chilaish words aud | yonth we won our degree, und In agoe 1f we wera deeds {f only they ean see that your ambitfon Is Toithful to our gift wo simply kept Itat the ing to Beletice some new truth, to dlscovery some pew unachine, lo charscter some new charm, and thus to humanity eome new happl- ness, Lot na eum up now. tho study of the hour. Do we not veach thesy conclusions—that o name for honoy und wisdom, or for houor and a1t ur for honor und fuvention, or for honor and gentue, {s wore to te destred than atl out- ward possesslons? We looked at tho utter. wretehedness of the men who threw away ropu- tatton, ond would rather be rle erfininals in exile than be loved friends und persons ot home, We have:noted how prond man- Kind s becoming of honorable scholars and Jdndgzes andTionorable business men. We found that our age st budld up reputation by has- tening to reward it, Wao then saw that famo lumvu out of self, nnd blosses first rhe farher's heart and the notber's heart, nnd the 18 flies out upon the broad world to ve Hke a Chirlet who moved away from n manger to dwell pear all thronis awd homes, § conchide that you, so joupe and ve old, cannot aflonl to bear the urden of au empty or ann ¢vil name, A ool name s n motlve of life, It {3 a reazon for that great encampment which we eall existonce, Wiille you are hufidiug the hame of te-motrow, buftd ip also that kind of eoul that can sleep sweetly on home's pitlow, and can feed that God STt nearns au ovenger of wrong, but oy the Father not only of the verdnre and tho seasons, but of you, BOB INGERSOLL. KEBMON BY THE HEV. SUMNEN DLLIS, The Itev. Snmner ENls, of the Church of tha Redecmed (UnivereaMat), corner of West Wash- fngton and Bangsuion strects, pald his respects to Col. fngersoll Jast evening in an able und in- terasthg ermon on % Ingersoll's Campalen Aguinat Retaton.' ‘The following is an abstract of what ho bad to eay onthis thucly tople: ‘Mr. Ellls began by referring to the change that svems to have come over Col, Ingersoll In thustyle of his opposition to rellgion ann hia ud- vouacy of Athessin, Tlis temper, sald Mr, Eills, scencd Jess courtcous than of vld, and his rea- soning 1vss deliberate, His ridleulo carried miorg nsperity, and his rhetorle scemed more the mere Instrument of passion. Ta View of this fact, which Mr. Ells supposd all must have notleed, ho claimed that WO st ndorz one or more of the following conclusions: First, thut [nzersoll, goine into e warket with hils wares, felt that auduclty would pay best; or, second, that Lo was too weak to enduro the opposition lis hiai evoked In acalmn temper; or, third, that Athewm hus e for Wio, st blunted bis Lerter sensibiliies, At least, for soine reason or other, le sccmed to have Jost lis carlier sweetnuesd and complaceney, und could see only evil fn religlon, only mistakes fn Moses, only false teaching fn Chrdst; while e had bothlog better to say of Jonathun Edwards, that great, nuvle, sud soul of New England, than 1 bate bfin, 1 hate him dead, I hate his 1 hate his vame,! Jonathan Edwards, -, Ellin, wos u ctld of s thne, fearfully trug to the lizhit that was in him, burdeyed and bowed by the doctrines ho beld, ‘a gentlo and pathetic spirlt, und it was not to the credit of Atheistn ur un Athelst thut thu above n'.lm. should be uduteed toward Mm, Oue might l-ny aud oppuse htin, but only oue far enough roin hanmony with the paticat and Eenerous Christ conld hate wich @ namo and cast a stono o1 the grave where he reposes, . Mr. Elliy came pest to consider the lack of Jogic in Mr. Ingersoll's blind and bitter untpz- ovism to relliio ‘ot Tugersoll, he suld, went beyond his lugteal rieiit in hls denlsls, 1o had no absulute proof thal thee d wo od, no soul, ©vo licaven, and that all s matter, * and vuly mattery and heuee it became him 1o aflirm Athelsw with BUUIO FeBCTYE, 3 A view that looks true to him, but that, ueverthelees, aduits of some counter- arzument. David Swing had begutifully sl- tirmed tout *the proofs that there b a tod are wthousasd fo une that there s wone? Col, Jugersoll bad pot vet quite reached the funer- wmost and fiual secrct of the universe, und for sught he knew thers wight be s “spirlt In the whecls," 1o had not nuul{z«l mind to that exteat tbat be could doguwatically declare it tu be but a mode of matter, e bad ot passed on beyond 1bo limiv of this life to wet ample data on which to allirw there is no lite beyomd, A bold Athelsw, sald Mr. Elhs, was a yuckless bieve of lopie, sud needed to be tempervd by sowme sllowance. "fmll:la' 112 Myen Baroautr that uf 1o, Mins Dudicy thatof (l;n;seh ‘1‘1";! ;mm. ety xh;“ yntting l‘mhmm‘l one Wik Mies Glover's part, they shoved them all o a pev, and an areqnlt thire woa not nmv"::r 'Ing ladie on the w'avce that kiew e part, wirle somo Jable “ought” will ontwelel i br, Siaa UIGVEF WaNLed 81 AptOCY, And It “athgr Smother W ehlid, 1o | T4 ronible that she 2ot It for the mat B B T M Ll BTl {Applause,] Moral acnss full activicy - WM, cludes six things: Disect perception vt rivat or i = wrowe fu cholees feelluz that right shuntd e DRAMATIC NEWS. verformed, and that wrong should not be cotm- The theac highest-salaried stock actors i Amerl- placence fn paht and want of complazcnce in | caare ihnrles Coghlan. Chatles . Thorne, sud wrongs feeling of wertt In the pertormance of | Harry Let, The furmer recelves $155 per right. and of demerit o the perfermance of { week, Mr. Thorne 3275, and Mr. Beciet 8250 wrong; pain of remorac or bilss of scil-anproval, ey e il and o oroohetle anticitation of reward fur the | The Califoruls Theatre management have ro- performatice of rught or of punishishment for | Cred Mise Allee Slarclson to play hes favorite the porformance of wrong, A ditinesion | Characier of Lioby Kuy (** Libby Dear ™) in *+The shoutd be made between what conscience ju- | Miahty Dollar,” during the engagement of the cludes nln;ll lr’.l|xl’t l!"ln';p'“!:‘.w ‘!l ‘l\l |’h|uuhl be an- | Floreuces iu Jonuary, nounced thal e Hebels ushington dur- ) . ing the \War that would finply that the Fedorni | *ho Unin Santre Theatre companr, which forces tiad Lecn badly cut up, Freedom of the | G060 o snccemrul two-weeks' engazement at will cannot be infaliivly pereebved throuzh con- Haverly's last night, will play ** Mother ang ¥on selence, except In tbe Acnse that merit wind de. | Monday, Tueeday, and Wednesday erenings thls merit cannot exlst withoue freedom of will, Tt is | woek in Milwankee, and then go direct to New Implted. The divine existence cannot Lo fufahl. | Urleans, waure they will begin o twpsireeks' sed- biy perceived by conscience, but it Ja fmpdled, | %00 8t the Varictics Theatrs, on the 20 inet. g Cansclence approves of right and disapproves of Mr, T. Harry French. the owner of the success- wrol It s, therefore, constructed on a plan | f01 play ** Mother and Son. " will accompany the for the proclatnation o€ the moral law ju: m::;r;:‘rqnIfi‘l'h;'n;,fng-w::y t Now Grieant aa 1 . Mr. Fre e 4 brief visit to the structure of the hanil pr phivalcal | N iade many WA [fender ARd. & fow law. A plan reveals thought, nud thouzhl we- | b b 0o o e T onlc dead. hen mortality of the soulisalso {mplled by con- e Sttence, Tta prouheitc oiflce 18 ( Dot o erit Win W4, Dale wntit eeeciily Asistiunt or reward after death, and duration adequats to | (oqter basscncer Aent of the Michizan Southern the complete fuliiliment of the moral ne 18 im- | teloua from Mer Hnserly, wna will Toanese that mortality, *You accuse me,” coucluded the | gontlemans business in tiat city. Mr. Taverly Jecturer, ** of being absolutely certain of theo. | hiae leased Booth's Theatre for 8 seasan, and wiil logical truthe., \What I amn sarc of s, that I gre-enx. first, hie big miustrel company, aud then :‘mnd ,f? athin rusfdurh ls"-e\'ldt‘!ll l&\lflx- I | McKeo Rankin and ** The Danites. now 1L 1a surrounded by decp seas and envels | A Philedelphia correspondent of Tur T oped in dense fog, but with it asa base | can | writes as follows: **Manawer Goodwin, '.',"'m constritct @ navy with which 1 can circumnavi- | Walnut Street Theatre, has made Miss Funny zate the globe.” Davenport an offer, He will give her 880,000 for 8l 400 ighta. to be plaged suywhera toat na wisbes T —in this countey, England, or Australia. Mi AMUSEMENTS. Davenport. hesiiaios, o8 sh6 Wisiies {0 appeat i ::rni "‘n‘g‘la"“fi:" be{‘lc leaving America, but SHRISTY . 0D, c can hardly refase. 1t i & great sum to pay, THE GHIISTMAS FISTEDDEOD. | GGt Uietl Mo & reponsinis hassce 1 - 3 the offer I accepted, ft s more than likely that Cuicaso, Dec. 14.-The preparations for this | Col. Willtam E. Sinn, of the Brooklyn Fark Thea Welsh natlonal festiral on Christmas-Day are now | tro. nml“:ormerlr n‘lh the Chestnut 8 Ll‘nl o approaching completion. Farwell Hatl i to be 1n- Yo Wit Smnmocihe mansacinsntfefob-lessss vaded by the anclent Tritons, Tho Dards of the | i, Mr Goodwin, | He would mill fotain his 1 Brookiyn thosire. aud ran the two incombination, Narthwest will congregate. Poetical efastons will | as he thinks that thore are not paying stars for forty bo paesed upon by competent ani tried adjndica- | weeks, lie would bave a good stock wmwn{ 1o torn. Priza casayists will receive thotr roward,and | B8y i both cltles, and aiternate with combina- music wiil b dlscoursed thatwill remind the | M°OP% cymry of tne happy homes of their youth pmoungst MUSICAL NOTES. the hilla and valleys of Wales. Manv aro the | 7The second of ‘the Willelm] concerts will be viclasitudes and changes thts anclent Institation | civen this evening at “,c‘,,m,ck‘",,, As it will has expanienced and undergone since the daysof | po tho last opportunity to hear this great artlst, tho Tallesin in the fth century, the tragitional | ypusical public should Improve it, His own num- of he Enteddfod and the patelarch | pors for the concert will be specislly attractive, not sh poesy. 1t has fiourlshed under | o5 g every musician, but to every lover of the the leadership of flery bards, bas basked | reaily groat mualc which has been weitten for tho in the sunshine of Koyal favor, and has heen held | yiolln, They will fuclude the groat Beothoven undar the ruspecting vigliance of Royal commir- | Conterto, In which Mme. Carreno will play the Kinue have alternately been 1ta pateons and | second parts a pacsphrase of the **Prels Lied," persccutors, and Princos havo nppulnted its | ffom Wagure's ¢ dleistersanger Ernst's Judges, and have alsosatinite Judgwent seat; | yrammy will be as followa: ¥ but never bias it appensed more iy its truo chaeac- | 3. pnapiodie Hongrotse, No. 2.,..... ter, or more glorlous, than when the wholonation | * -+ " e, Teres tirrenu. raliles roand tho standard, ** Fowie yn erbyny | % Dallad—" Embirawinent o byd,"" and, with a burst of enthusiasm, wolcames | 3. Coneerso fa D... the day of decislon, confident that the poet most able, the tlmll}:! most r&u\wrlul. and the musiclan PR b 3 wostaccomplished would recelvoat tha hands of the | 3 Faranhrsss of tne = drels Judges thetr descrved rights, and thie ncknowtedg- e e acin ment Ly the wholo assombly of thelr undunbted su- pertority. The Institution In fts very nature is cssontially tho child of democracy, 7. bong= Ap 1t oppears that at the foundation of this Instita- | 5. Artemt* DI Provenza® tlon 1t was excluslvely & meeting of the bards of F Sto. Wales, who colebratea with harp aud song the | % Fastasle on airs frum Ffohall ..., decds of gods and heracs at rolizdous solownitics | To.morrow evening, tho annivorsary of Heatho: nud the festivities of Princes and nobles, They | ven's hlnhdl{. Mr. 8. 4, I'ratt wili givathe drat attended and oxclied the armies to bravery, pro- :‘v’hl:r.h rmy atoneene ;:Md prcranme ;-( ceded them fnto the lgbt, and were the heralds of o th LB eyl o8 Frinces and tho modlators of Feacn betwoen LHetr | oo o et i Sy countrynien and foes. In ttiese capacitivs they e it Sxervivod n dceldod natonal induence, and theros -~ Curlojimny Osrtiite It pusdlngh by Wrs fore at the national Sestivals they aituined promi | Athens.” ‘I miscellaneous 2 will bo th Devtce na tha laadors OF 4o pooDTe. OEN L ENEIR | Aeonre 10 D e P Foaveriary It eeame pecesasry to defne by xed Jaws their | the *> Amaryllls™; ond the marcn tempo from tho privileros and position Iu the comumunity, which | s+fenore Symphony." Jeaslo ILrl!rn will was duiio by the Jreat legislator, Uvwel Dda.dn thy | yinz the ** Ueb nun voler,' from ** Anns Bolens, ™ ninth, and _subscquently by Grilith ap Conan 10 | and Mr. Whitnoy the **Hongr and Arais* of Han- the tenth century. deland ** In Quests Tomba ™ of Boethoven. The Bards sabscquently Lecame so pawerfal | The fless troupe begin a season af one we through thiese feehivals, which were held at Caer- | Cincinnath this evening, helmy will pl wys, Averfraw, and Mathraval, from tlie (0 tine, | VWeduesday evenlng in indlananoliw; ‘i hursday, fn thiat’ they became abjects of suspleion aud bere | Cluciunath, with the Thutias Orchestrs; sud Frie sccation by the Kngiieh Government, their pro- In Lonlesiile, Remeayl plays in Hartford, ductious being connidered the meany of excite- | Conn., on Thursddy evening. The btrakosch ment smongat the people, and in the twellth cens { tronpe will sing this week in Cleveland. The tury, fo the relen of Edward 1., they ultunstely | Mapiwson Company ls announced for ** The Talle« loai their priviieges, and many were put 1o duath, | man™ this evoulng, **The Mazic Flute* Tuesday, Subwequunt Kiugs, bowoever, countonauced the in- | apd +*Robert fv Diable" Wodnceday, -‘-':‘m“h;‘rl--. |:|;I sull, Jt"nlm:x- of mox 'nm l:u\n;: ud! - ———— o [iards, they appainted commluxions tn atten the gatheringw, superintend the subjects for com- THE SILVER QUESTION. paflmlun nd pravet Inllammatory nub]!fu-b:lnz To ths Editor ef The Tribuna, offa opica for rnyme or sonz, unlil 1m va6i Ot Dec. 10, =Y 2 fifteenth contury, in tic time of Queen Eljzabe Chok Cues T, . Des, 10, =Yaur pitresgond tho last Elstedd?od under Hoyal romulssion wau | 0t **d. vayw bie Is not 8 guld-basis man, Leld, don't thunk gold should be demonetized i ’I‘h‘:‘ :I:Db:l’u:nl:n:‘fi ‘I.wl; lh{: -:-chnl ‘"":IIIHIII'KH futhls country,” 1don't know of anyoudy that an ppeeciated by oltendunce ot fte incete " fag In Chicago on Christmas-Usy, when dige “&"'\v" e lehes “’"‘h‘" sireulate by tingnlehed Welshmen, well versed In the custoine | 8lde With stiver ™ in 1ls country and iu the usawes of thevo gatherlug, will conduct the | Kurovean countrics wheroit bas boon demonetized, dinge. 1t may bo vaid that the Influenca of | he will foju hauas with us In removing the ob. teddfod fs folt throughout the civilized | gpacieq which prevent silver from elrculating ** sid World. Thw great exhibitlons naw so uiiycrsal ara | & Lt b velapment of tho intention. cibodied fn | bY wide with gold ™ and kecpiag a neck's-length al fustitutton, while the natiunal musical | ticad, When there I8 a law passed which por- nuell\:‘\t‘;llmsml:‘lliyufl{ 'll;nlntnlln‘ lil‘tm‘h;x rm;;e mitsonly two millions a month of guld to be avowed! mitation of the anclunt Woleh festl- | comned, and when three ar four Buropesn Statea val, Those munic mnectin:s will always be bis- | gymonvtixe gold, his alarm for the safety of wuld torfeally asmociatod with Walce, ~the tirat worlde | iy woll bo excited. wige cialleoye cup huving been awarded to the 111 his apuwer Lo niy first queetion, ko says allver South Wales Chioral U'nion 18 1872, uader the able | way demonetized before the sct of 1875, which leaderstiip of Caradoe, 10 the astumishinent of | ohows he don's understand the subjoet himeelf, o London snd the wholu Britlsh public. whes 430 | Ly mun who passed the act af 1873 were fo cup wos carricd 1o Wales, Where 1t reats tho | for. \f sliver were already dent ed, the several champlun musi chullengs cip of thy Unltou King- | acta dowmonctizing wilver are useless, . o, ] I “The practical utility of the Bisteddfod Iu s | o, hos petiectly ulliing (o secent, the Shoation resent aspect may be leamed from toe fact that | cdeof the ontlon to vav in siyer or gold, If wi- te children are sought atter as thu most ac- | Ner by cheaper than gold, we huve hag no hand fn complised nusicians of the preseut day by & Coutt | pringingitubont, | 37 the **guld nug™ in Eurape which, for purity and cullure, Lisa rarety buen | uui this country who profoss o feel s bad about witneased; Snd, furthermore, in ihe fact that | iho chieapnoss of silver would retrace their steps, scvural who bave pariaken of the vouuty of the in- | ey wonld soou seo wilvor abuve gold, and thon ;}',‘;‘“,‘,’.‘,‘m:’; mm g:v g?flhlfll“-wz 3 ”"!5 their troubles wonld be over, The **cheap-doliar ™' 20} cot, whe have eatablitiod | ¢ i m‘-’m-clvuu the favoritcs of the most critical £ry e maly d et i cor thols as) pujjuae bt au { eulde must believe that whenever thu HNoly Bplrlt tonches the hugman soul it touches thic conselence. %o It may be strietty sand that con- Acfenee e the touch of th hand of the Lord, ‘Ihe “The most beautiful thing of dacob's life was { der whose domination the country las degen- his resignation, his faith, and nia hope {n his lut- | erated.and the tribute, which formerly amouut- ter daye. A Do sottied down in hieold nze, [ ed to $1259000, was now, = at the nnd his troubles thickened about him, | clore ot cight' centuriey, but a rifie It was touchine ta sco huy he pn.-urvml over one miflion, Let that Powgr continue ils Iils fategrity. Jo the forty-seventll chapter of | poliey but a short tine lonwer, aiid nolhing can Uenesls, there was an account of his ron rroine ‘vu-vcnt the Jewl:h nation from recaturing nway from him, and bis lamentatiors on ne. Palestine and heeumine the eommercial natlon count thereof, and of 198 many troubles ami | of the East. May flud hasten the day when the sorrows. lut in the forty-cighth cliapter we | world shall sce that whatever He hus promised would read bow, after his clieckered experience, | shall cume Lo pass, after he had come out of his troubles un- Ezeklel prediets that after the restorstion on senthed, he had preserved his rellzion ond the | attempt to overthrow the new nation will fail. memory of his God, 1fe aliowed bis humlity, | The translators of the !lrunhl‘klfl could not see and aald it was 8 good thing to rerve the Lopd. | that the Russians wonld urize and make a nation 1l did not say he nad walked with God, for he | a8 predicted by Ezcklel; or that they would Kknevw that he had not at all thnes walked very | play an fnportant part In the war, the finai closely with Him; but he bleased the Lorl | setilement of which Is now at hand. for oll s woodness. It was Jacoh —— 1f yon need 8 harmioes stimulant, take Sanford's Jamaies Glnger. SANFORD'S -« R}DIGAE. CURE LTI Affidavit of Samuel Spinney, Esqu, Meadow Vale, Nova Scotia, fully at- tested by George Munro, Esqe Jus- tice of the Peace, and by three Cler~ gymen of Annapolis County. Ami- raculous cure effected by Sanford's Radical Cure, Thils may certify that I have beea 8 subjret of that terribia discenes Catarrh Of the Jiead ami T Aront. o 33 years, caused by taking coid In the munth of DO RUACK KL (e 1inie W1 by €o¥era that 7 friends thougn 1 must die. For iave liwen o0 sl that life has been The Eastern question, according to Jewish who first eald, **Tis the Lord that lias | Rabbis and Jowish authorities and bellef, will ted me Jacab eald this befare Dasid | bescitled In harmony with the prophectes of o1, 1le recognized the anpel of the presenca | Faeklel. The Turkish natlon shall evaporate; of the Lord, that had been near him all the thne | the Jews become converted and restored to the and had led him. Nome people kmagined tnat | Holy Land, when the Russfany will attack them Jacob went o little too far n thisand someother | sd be repelled by England, In God's thne ingss Lt now, at the close at uls life, he says, | and way the predictions of Ills prophcts shall “The atgel that has redeemed me from evil,”— | cuma Lo pass, but the onlv sufe path is through that had redeemed him from oil_ his fnpuritics, | Jesus Christ, whom Il geot to savu ils peo- oud brougeht uim out clean aud spotless from | ple. and blesscd aro they who put thelr trust the world, 1t was comforting to reflect upon | in Him, this portion of Jacob's Jife, It {s truc that man = hind ru!iro;:m;lulli l:;:l‘l‘v.wnu iontlrurllnu“w r’ull'cut CONSCIENCE. that, through al ¢ descent of man, the Jivine N1 o m‘:wr.;r lad remaincd exactly as it was in the be- L "'r“'x'"";.:;?;m‘,: ',,',’;"l',"’l,:_' “'so’" Q00K nuing, gt ¥l Dright, happy thoughts were inspired by the A lorge nudicner assembléd In Assoclation contemplation” of this subject of lsrael in Hall last evening to listen to the Rev. Joseph Exypt,—how Jacob and Joecph had performed Cook's second lecture on # The Infallibility of :lul: cxn‘.vluu‘mrulfllha lord, lll;d :m‘l lllllmd forth | Consclence.” Tho platform was filled with helore their followers as perfect, spotless men; vinel but thiere_sero also dark thoughts connected ?(lflmllnmkr:;om(uent umo.m;)whnm wers, the, with §5. There was tho death of Jacob amd the | e¥s Dr. Adams, the Rev. Dr. Ormlston, and slnugnter of the malo chtldren. Istucl eventu- | U'rol. Hitcheock, Mr. Cook opened the pro- ally Lecauia slaves fu thut country wherein | coedings with a shdrt prayer, and iave out ono Hiew, guihe tohave. bosn ‘foedn, T ! pils e | stanza of tho liymn, *Jesus shall reizn whero'er 3 caum? T Dosition, and onr self-respect, we become siaves | NG UM ' Then, seated fu Lis chalr, he partly 10 the wosld tn which we should retgn us farda, | 73ty partly extemporized o discourse on We snw the altars of Isracl deseerated and “Ciplicr Dispatches,” as o prelude to his regu- the iires burned out, - Where was the promise | Jar lecture. He discussed tbe great Damocratic of the lami{ Where wos the promise of the sca! | goandal of 1876 and its ex; 1 vhere c posura through the Q“':.','u,“,“‘?fi,‘;‘:,",,;':.fi o}"fl','.’.l;f :{,,0“:?":;";';',‘3:' publication of the notorious cipher telograms. ind there was not 8o much osarose to mark | 1118 remarks, which have niready been published the duat of thelr eepulchres, These were all | clsewhero, bezan with o little zood-ustured thinga of the dead past. ‘There came to Egypt | {rony regarding the Awerican Eagle, which, (n B Do mx’)’n‘;‘:‘lfi‘l?cm::wk':zwv‘::‘n?u‘::‘&nl‘x‘:hol 1";&“;'; view of the lote startling election frauds and nothinz but a few words the generaily willful stupidity of the people con- t Jaeob and - a few of the boues [ cerning their awn interests, the lecturer scemed of Juscpn. But in the words of those | to think might much more falrly be called ol Patrlarchs we micht behiold the promises | yhe (reat American Ostrich, What had falrly Hiaone ,‘;f, Juepndo ‘}w‘,{.‘,"&‘u“&'fll c,‘.‘,’:} been proved by the investizations thus far my bones out of Egypt." made was, first, that ln Oregon $5.000 was The suenker asked Iis bearers If they did not | offered for an Elcctor, and Democratic rcmt:lli'llul“hwhnl. llllfl;B wu:m:u |ugl rhun ‘l‘\l‘t:r wioncy was sent to pay for the frand; sccoud, vame to the sepulchre of our Savier.—'*\We ] 9 9 thusted that Tle should ruly over Taracl, hut flo | 060 I{':"""“ SN was fhew °fi""f" o iauend now."t Kt there was still the promise | Tesponsile egent at Gramercy Park, In Naw of Juseph tcit, and in this nmi- trusted. In the | York; third, that jo South Carolina $30,000 was endd of Genests we saw the end o he beglobing. | offered and the money sent o Bulttinore to pay The hook of Exodus was tie beglnning of the | for the fraud. Passing on, with the slight men- enrd. 1t would bo remenibared that Jucob sald, | tfon of the Potter Committes that it had not * Brine me nat into Egypt, bt carry mo 1o Ca- | proueht auy partieular odium ou those {6 hud naon to die.” Joseph said, (-'x'lrri'n vboues not | pttacked, belng o purely partisan investizuting hence, but leave them here—in Egypt, He | pody, the leeturer referred to the unclean satd, also, that his bones woull be catried 10 | records of both political parties fu Louistanu, Cangnn; but it was not the Causan of old, but | gud, eelurniog agaliit to his theme of the cipher the Cunnan of the future. Jie would rather his | (ispatelies, sald ciplintically that it might be liones should by carried to the cave and burled | gpt down ns a historfeal fuct that the exposure for the prescut, for he thoueit of the charze, |had recelved no adequute reply. Keening fn “Wuen the world 1a brightest, forvet not the | jnind the graye public denials by the prinelpal grave.? ~ Afterward, when in durknoss, . he | churacter dmplicated, and the high houor hie had prophesied that bis bones should b carrled | rocetved from u large portion of the Amerlean away, In thls mizht be realized the fact that | jeopte, he thought it falr 1o allirm that his ex- in the darkness of this world weshould not | plauations, in view of the great elrcumstantiatl- forgut to hope. ty und coberenes of the charges publicly The speaker extiorted his hearers not to nut | brought against his agents, have not becn satls- thelr trust I the riches of this World, but to | factory, [ he knew notbing of what they had vlnce it iu tie liviug God, who was uble toadd | done, is Indignation ought to be such s to all these things unto us, » cause him 0 drop them from_ his employment, Jncob died, Josebh died, and Barsh diedy but | which he has not done. The dentala of tho sub- all died fu the falthh, Ail tnese Patriurchs dled | pidlary agents had been sthl more lume in the faith, not having recelved the vrotmlse. | than thoss of the principal, The chief ‘They dled fn thelr faith, and so wure ulive in | of these agents says b has nothing to God, It was worth our while to stof u mo- ment and look at the falth fu which they died, ‘fhoe promise bad not been fulthled for 400 vears, What would we (hink now {f wo 1iad no hope of a promnise belne Tulftled s onr own Hves, In the lives of our children, or in the lives of ontr grand-children? In moderntimes we hegrd people grumble 4f they were not suc- cessful I thelr rouls’ ambitlon 1 ten vears, and If they had to wait twenty years they would lose thelr faith entlrely. Bot think of those men of olden times walting 400 vears for the fullilinent of ths promise mads to thew. Our fuith was not so creat as thot of tha Patrfurche, Sceo how bravely Joseph and Jacob stood. Ilow ureat n trin) was the nith of Joseph, Imt still e waa ready to say, waiod will surely viste you, sod He shall varry mny bones up from henee,” Joseph was the last 1wan uf Uenesis—the last manof the Putriarchs, The skolotuns wero around that lonaly man. The speaker rocited .a portion of [lood's “Last Man.” Ho sobl that when Josculs said to bis people, ** God witl suroly vislt you, aml shall earey wy bones up from hence,' it was a crand sight,—it was the gravdest sight the world ever sa. Intho forty-ninth chaoter of Geocsls they waould find In "the wonls of Jacob Just gs grand 2 saying a8 1ho words of Joseph. But the hour was getting fato, and ho had not thne to go on through this sccount, ‘Lhero was much to think of aud much to learn from this leason, Hlow much casier it was lor us of to-dsy to ex- ctclso fulth and patlence than for them n the midst of their darkncess and yerscentions, Ilow much eusier for us to sing, ** 1 have finished my works I have foueht tho good fizbt, and have, run with patlence the race set betors we," than for our forefatliers, the putriarche. In passing throngh the darkuess of this world, ot aflud- ini partleularly to death and the sepulchor, but I the sarrows ana disappolutments of this life, we should keep ever in view the lessoug of hope and foith set before ug by the bruve mon of the olden times, Alter *1 mn Wandering Around,” by tha :‘llxxulr. the audience was diswisscd with a ‘beue- tiou. uf« Vering, but thoso who sufler s 1 have suftered will Kiiow that | pever ceased ta look for Telief, and to try every remedy that promised It Uhava discharged fron my Buad and nosn & mort of thin ski inged with hlood and matter, 1§ to 2 Inches one. and from my troat & sort of elivw crust, mixed with bloud, aa lflff! B8 A large Bean. | waeso sick mnen- tally and bodily that I wished tu dte.and serlly thoughe 1'wda dyini ot flmes. T waxoften brosirated for weeks st thine, snd during nne of these devero stiscks § walked 16 the rivers edge with the Inteatlon of drows- fog myself, o littie dla 1 hopo for reliet, Now, sirs, this miny scem Incredible to you and others. Lut & groat yartof the tfme | cao give you boas R prood Of me sutferings, 1 firmly belleve | have bt gone 1o 4he end of the chiapter. 1 cannot b told. 19 Bepiember, 193, 1 hogan thie use of Saxroxp's RADICAL CURX YOR CATARRH, Nosooner dld 1 begin 10 use It than m! symypfomms changed. I cleared my tnroat it cleared mp uénd, i€ elearodmy mind. Tt ope? rated on miy syitem in p way that uothing cver befora kiven me by ductors had done. How raptdly [ improved snder the influchce of thle wonderful medicine thoa ‘who have known me fur yesrs can testify, And now, “1 10 make s lony story short, | willsay [ would not chany” the: puol 1 nas done mo tor e wilole world &nd all 1t contalns, My memory, which wae nearly ail ne, has returned again, and I conld tell of aMictlons have endured too grest for some people to eredit. L can, with & clear conselence and strongest faith, st- feal'to s on tho Haly Bible, _God iess tho man. that found oat This remedy, 1UEL ¥ __Meadow Vale, Annapolis County, Nova Seotis, Nov, 24, 1877 SWORN TO BEFORE ME, This 33d day of November, 1877, GEURGE MUNLO, Justice of the Peace, ‘This ls o certity that Samuel Solaney, For., 14 an old sud ”\‘J;‘cuml:llhen "';{‘"“'{,’""‘ County, Ills rep- utatlon'aa an uoriint and tratodul wan is beyond ra« (EV. W, A, J. BLARENEY, Nlctaw, N. 8. . DBED I’.\HL 18, Hflfimc&:n'lr:’ N. 8 T W HALL, Helvemn qusrs, é’ B n. Lests Tho speaker gave tho remainder of his dls- course n personal bearing, as his gubject would indicate, 1le suid ho wanted to be sure that his swilt-recurring birthdays—whlle he was not the man ho was—did not erowd him down and bring o lnel fustead of wealth of wirdom. 'The danger was I the Iater 1ifes that one was unable to tuke {n uew {deaasnd aze certainly Interfered with our judinent of what others were dofue, and was ‘onr stumbling-block amd rock of offense. Ol man Luther smote younye man Lutheron the mouth when he safd Af ho hod known to what the Reformution would other men wizht huve seen to ft. Ho p o that sucl slame mizht never come to him in his nge. If the doctriues he held were trug, the world was better now than it ever had been, sud tho men. ond women were hetter who were coming to tho iront, therefors ho woukld not Judee another servant, who had hls work to du ln this new day. This was God' world, amd Gud was nearer to Bifm, and his thoyghtaof Christ more restful, and his cternal hopea little brighter, Thongh theangels hovered about him and whispered that he was trusting n broken reed, it would uot break his confidence tn Ol and trae gooduess, or deter Wl from mmung; to keep what hohad now, No nuw tning, howeser steange, would find fn him an enemy, but be would rather como to Wealey's contluson thut us be grow older e could sep more common ground on which all lovers of truth and God ecould stand, Hehnd just passed a mifestane {n his life, and, had ft not bewn for the bivesed futerference of Giod more times than ho conld number, his ite wonld have been wrecked vast ull hupe, aud, ad hie continued to allde down toward the shadows, he would nurse iu lis heart o gruteful sense of the treasures e bure with him, Content was sald o be wealth, uut thinking su, he had a great deat more than that to look for in lis gwe, Ho was rich iy memordes, {n substances of things not seen, and eternal, It would by wo to the swyotest lower that ever bloomed If there were mo [all and spring, and it would be wo unto him were there 1o death and Hfol Bome persons feit a horror of passing lnto thue Wfe of God agaln out of which wo came, but, ho had no such feclings, for bis whole life hag sceined to point to anothier for which this wus the prepuration, 1 cxpericuee had nssured him that these days wmlhl‘m shiorn of their meaning und parpose, 1 not reach Into other davs for thele T2 e for hun could pay us it goes, for the damb things, he stould take about being lost in the asthe snow-llake b5 Just i tho Lk syeurs gerew thick about hhm, hie bl Yiehtly on her throve,—with vo by gooe, nor yeb overmuch to stav, sehooling hifseif to fear less the getting rid of is old body when {8 had sepved 1t gl he would “the gettime rld of u 1l would aiy to bis body, **You have to siay here. W have bad good thavs soucthior, but 1 uni eolng—that wus in the bargain, 1t would suit neithier of us to bo trouvled and fall vut. You wunt to hids yourself i1 the grass, sud How- ery, and trees, wlicre the birds sing, and sweet ruuning waters play, aud 1 want tv co where fuy treasutes ure and my hewiti aud so, oid friend, goud-by." That 18 tho lussun he wanted to Jearn, knowing that the thae was drawing ncar for im 10 depart, and ho would face deatii as cheerfully us e ever (uced Jife, and grow cu- rious aud eager about the blossed mystery aud the near-wuiting lscaven. Tu such 8 death thers could be no grlet or bitterucas, for as the rive apple 1 dightly loogened from ite branch, 50 the suwl without grieviug deoarts froin the body in which It huth dwelt, To dit resting Iu God way 1o seal all our living, 1ISRARL IN BGYDPT. SEVENTI DIULICAL LECTURE LY DI, GINSON, Fhe Rev, Dr, J. Monro Gibson delivered the seventh of bis serles of Bibiist lecturcs in Far- well tHatl at half-past 4 o'clock yesterday even- fug. ‘Ibere was a large sudience in atteudance, whio Nstened with rapt atteation to tho words of the eloquent speaker. The occasfon was well provided with wuste,—tie Bliss Meworfal Cholry led by the Rev. K, B, Willlus, asslsted by tho cholr of the First Presbyterian Church, not to speak of the talent displayed by the uudlence, which Jolned fo sloglug ot tho luvita- tion of tho leader, ‘Ihe Quartette sang theauthem, * It is & good thing to give thavks uoto tho Lord," after which Dr. Gibsou offesed prayer, The service uotlces werw read, and then oy sweetly solemu thought Arigiai iWitnetn 4. song—""lotl -nau.;'r“ "J' . yoni‘s ILANIOAL Cone contatng Ing Tubo, with full irece ; b il retall druggists thruehout She Ualted Cnnnlas. Mol k_1'0 Wholcaala Dragsista, Boston, Mass. HELPLESS With Rheumatism| This 6 to corsify that 1 have uzod COLLIYI sav, but, added the speaker, whosver {n hla vosition bus nothing to suy sbout these churges has much tosay, 'The inost suzgestive tacts proved, however, werethat tho Preaidency was for sale by a few corrupt men, and that third ond fourth rate polliiclans oftered to buy ity ond eame tear dofng a0, He belleved that the President himse!f was ua clear from fraud us the undriven snow from statn, but s reinedy for the great possibility of & fraudulent Exceutive acemed to be ln the ruconstruction of the pres- ent Etectoral. minchiuory, ‘The root of nll this evil was not with tha politicians, He supposcd ft to boa fuct that 8 wreat number of averagu voters of both politicul parties expect to sell thelr votes in closely coutested c¢lections, Im- artant reforms had been carrled in a city of 50, 0 or ¥),000 inbabitants by open bribery on the part of church-members at the polls, A lead- g voliticlan'had satd thit two-thirds of the un- fortunate vlusses could be bought In a close electlon, while political clubs of the lower arder sold themsclves fu bodies, In clostug, the lecturer appealed to tho ministry to rulss their volees and to stir themsclves In” this matter of remedying the dangerous evils, which will grow with tho country's growih. A signiticant feat- ure of the addross wos the emphatic applause which grected nimost every seatence, [Having thus demoustrated that meq at Pres- {dentlal cle tions were destitute of consclence, he proceeded to argus that cousclonce actually cexisted, and to atilrm its infallibility 1] Tho report saya: Mr, Cook lectured standing and without nutes, He sketched rapldly the uptlons of tho grest infidel philosopliers who held conseience to be exuremely fatlible and vucillathug, —somothing fuherited vr instinetive, or thu result of pecullar assoclutions of hieus. lere, he auld, are the highest metapbysical au~ thorltics 18 the world absolutely st swords' ints concerning muns highest taculty. Wha e usked, were layisen to when doctors au agreal, W soy, hie contlnucd, that a man has o blunted cousclence, und tuat he has no con- avience, but we also say that there s somuthing divine fn weu, ‘There s a popular saying which uxpressus 1oy dden of consclenve, that *every mau who meaus to be man julalifbly feels mead wlhen he means to be mesn.” [Laughter.) ‘The Bible {iself speaks of eared and blunted couscience,” amd also of a * jlght which Hghiteth uyery man who cometh into the world, uud the lghe {n the beglunlug was with tlod, und the Jizht was God.”? This {3 an nfilxmuul contrudic- tion, but it 13 not a cuntradiction by reality, but umatter of definitlons. Wuenuver people are iy 8 mental vapor mu?- should atteud closely to thelr definitions, Therv are twu defluttions of cousdence,—one populur and lvoss, the other strict aud scholarly, Tho flrst I8 that consclency 18 ierelv s sense of right sud wrong tbu sccond thut it 1s # sense of riche end wrong In choleea, By the addition of thess last two words it {8 possible tu recouclle all the autago- nistie views on the subject. The populur deti- nition dues tat decide whetber through con- scleucy we know what i3 the proper thiug to do ubout a reclprocity treaty with Canada, = 16 bas uothing ta say us to whcther canecieuce beloues to exterual sctlon or Intentions, or buth. It s fog through which sume people drifeall thar ‘I'he strict defluitton contines the activity nscience Lo choleea; that 1s to say, ioten- tous,—moral mutives. 'Tue lecturer Was uot cabied uvon 1o go into thy vrigin of conscleuce, He was wliling to take it for granted that it s funate or coguate. Hudid put suy that con- suiehvo oiways polnts out what {3 absolutety right, but it does polut out what s relatively nizht, [t I vot futatlible od o anotber’s mo- tives. Woar (4 knowu e the ~charecter of the motives posscssed by the person owning the vconsvlence. It uot only per- caives feuolees, but ft feels that the VoLtato PrasTxes fur (thenmatism, sad found then a great ve- Ief. 10 Aril, 1471, | waa taken with neumatle Fe- ver, Whict fefi ne Beipieat. The pain (i my back was 50 great that 1 rauld not be moved of Htted. | 1 wore a CurLINg’ Vorrate PLusren iwo week, and the piln and sirences were sl gane. | eould be moved without sufletlug. The relict T experisnced was wondorful. *_Narth Wilttamston, Annapolls Covaty, Aug. 20, 1877 PRICE 25 CENTS. Dacarstul tn ovtaln COLLING' VOLTAIG PL. TE(L, 8 comidoation of Eloctrie sl Voitale Fia Bedicated PTadter, nasean I tho abo cut. wonderful Plaste) 1w ! ", Hohl . 515t eatl) Drseqists theoinehout e Dulted Kiates and Canwlus, and iy WEERS & FOTTER, Froprictore, ustan, Maxa HMOLIDAY NALE. West nd Dry Goods Hoss, Madison & Peoria-sts, HOLIDAY SALE! MOED;AY CLOAKS 2,000 CLOAKS ALNOSY GIVEN AWAY! We will sell all owr garments now 4n stock jor less than any wholesale manufacturing house in the clty can mnuke them up, Matelasse Cloaks, trimmed with Velvet and Fringe, $3,76, Plain and Fanoy Beaver Cloaks, $4.00 and §5.00; extra value. Our Plain Beavor Cloaks, trimmed with Fronch Trimming Braid, and bound with satin, §6.60; usual price, $10,00, Our bost Diagonal and Matolasso Oloaks, trimmed with Gros Grain Bilk and Fringe, roduced to $8,756; former price, $12.00. 1,000 Elogant Imported Garments, THE BVASTERN QUESTION. BERNON LY TUE REV, A. N. COLLISSON. The Itev. A, M. Collisson preached at 8t Paul’s Relormed Epfscopal Cnurch last even- ing, on *The Enstern Question and Proplicey; or, Russia ond the Restoration of the Jows.! ‘The severend gentloman began his discourss by reference to the vislon of Johu, the drying up of tho River Euphrates, amd regarded (1t as s sign indlcative of the decay of the Turklsh Empire, through which the Jewish uation could be re- turned tothe Holy Land. The present condl- tion of the Jews was furctold fu the Old Testa- meot, as also the present conditlon of the Holy Land, now desolate, tho lund destroved, the clmate changed, the fubabltants almost beasts. The roturn thither of the Jews lsalso predicted in the propkecics of Awos, Jeramish, Hosea, lsalab, and Zacharlah, to each of which the speaker made frequent rofercuce. Canaan st prescut 8 natlon ot rulus. The modern tourist passces through tracts of laud more desoluts thau a wilderucss, aud bigh places that have been destroyod and lakd-waste, Voluey, ous bundred ycurs ago, surveved tbe lands aud cltles, and eaclabins: “Uood Godl from whenes pro- ceeds such rulng what has becowe of the aues of abuudance aud Jifel"" Ub, that ho had cou- sulted tho Bible, which teaches that natural sin s followed by tue natursl curse. Iszlali says that the land shuil no wmore be called fuy nces, e sormationof **J. 1%, " 1 witl state thal tn thecunfer- 1t only rematns to remind our countrvmon bero | ences which wero hild I Eurove bufury 1870 on 1n the Far West tust 1t behiooves thom toremember | the money questivn fhe object of demonctizing such glurtous asnies s Tallesin. Liywarch Hen, | yjiver wan openly avowed Lo be tho jucseaso of tho Aueurin Fardd, and Myrddin, Owilym ap Don, | vatue of monoy. and Golyddau, 'who, {n thy miduight of bararism, | V%71, Groat grisvance complained of was that men whooa 84 boacons, valling tholr couutry 4o 8 RIERer | with fxed Iucumies could not purchuse sa much civilization, and saking tbom o truca thele suc- | witl their Jncomu ae thoy would like to; Iu otacr ceavors who futlowed {hrough centucies, handing | words, an facome of & wnillion doliary would uot on the torch which never flickered, uutll we ar- | parchaso as mauy tew, A3 many Contresses, nos rive at the dawn of the present generation, when | ug many Kings a1 1ts posvessor would be pleased to souie of Cambria's Worthicat, sunis abbeat uboi | Lave |t 0,1, * sdmite that the demonetization of the horzou of the Eisteddfod. mauy still [ yiver ju Europe was foliowed by & reduced swonget us: men of and fame, whoso | gemand for silver, and consequently au nuince cover the whole fields of litersture. wuslc, | Yicressed demand | for goid, he rea: sud poetry, Eben Pardd sad Gwilym Hiraethom, | yon why thu fewouetization of siiver Nicander and Tanymariau, Pencerdd Giwalls aud | f"thie country e ot helped siiver wore 1a be- Uriuley Richards, Mynyddog ani Corsdoc, Llow | caups the sci of last wintee only very partlally re- Liwyfo, Taluatars aud Getrioz, Ialuyn and Bralyn. | Gored 16 sad the effect of ue law iu uiLiost neu- Owen Alaw and Goronuy Owesi, the Jatter of whORL | tralized by the action of & Sycrelary wbo oukhi 10 ¢, P Sece y c T e rton T W hich. B Umalorallatd Iueety |/ Dtaeanaus hi-eenf dillare, Y Chichto Tiaus 1u the wiost pawerful poem upon the most powerrul | UL ST B Y o be correet, and the Times sublect, tho ** Day of Judgmuot.” With theee tew | pleo, tho ** buszard ™ dullar bas luceeased fo value retlectious the Welah will awake to the bonur theys | 2itl1u ovor O por cent iu six days. *'Jd.P." qaoted will be duing thewselyes 1 aldiug and furtherluX | 3 w85 cents on the $th, the Tuies quotes It to- the celebration, when wo bupo Lo report 00ar | Gay'ai0o cetts: verlly siiver s **boaming, " countrymen fu Wales, whore the dizhity of tha | "% wuat dovs 41l such stull mean? graud old teatival is upheld by such lordly handdas | 14 gicans that te partics who cuit such stull aro Syr Watkyn Willlanae Wyan, war [tlustrious | o jor'of pettifosuing tricksters, oF 1o the condition :{,fl'"fll";l 13\5‘1“11 n*-""“ :w siaes "‘“?“0"“ of Goldemil noolmaster, who, *though van- alua, a0 ady Llanover iu Soul ales, thatvur . " e E e B tey! T Whiouted e ot vav | dlaliedy coi argue sulll,™ and mlalake niiag sor ward for its venersole inatitutions te undimiuisbed. | * Wycy awan asscris that silver dollsrs *could Bpeucer, und Tyudall offered sacrilees to ¢ g 5 eu, aud the desolation bere- Urvako, 2t b had I 1805." be nsserte wh 7 : e i & Dsaonauloss but Sire Consee tu wo u'ss uid o'er, paired; Zachariah (hat tha Lons of Hoste will [ rizcbt ought to be followed Just as & s Barely urdinary lowliigence ¥aous to bes—mir | to close, $13,00; extra good valuo Tugersoll sccaied to bave wcoubed be cubire | Was sung by the ctiolr, the mnwnzmn Jomlng | save Liiw people, Tivse passages ara but o few rcru;rlmu of the Leoutitul s necessurily fol- PIHILADELPRILA, roprescutativn, at $18.00. ubiverse 10to bis litle crucible, and sscertaiped | in the refrolis. of those which foretell tho veturu of Ieraul Yu | luwed by u fecline of Mmmluu‘ uud 4" thus Spectal Correapondencs of The Tribune. There wers no silver dollars lu 18635 to pav bt y wometbing differcut from o ercly futellectual pereeption. As pereeotlou and feelivg are fu- supurably Llended fu the edtbetic, »o tho woral cess thot bud attended tho Jubors sulouy the | schsols always fullowed by a sensu that the neathen were wondious, snd it would by we | rirbt ought Lo be chose, A bewg with pereea- weus be stravgu it at some date ot far re- | ion aud no smoral ublization, would be without moved tie Jews would turn L s Curist. | con: e, Tuke away either part of the per- But whetier thts date b5 1 t bazd or fur | fonman e und couscience §s destroyed, Exterval away, b b3 ceanude 1310 id bevause ub thelr pe- | acblous bave tuels gXbedawley oF BUGIE auda- Ler natdso land. Wuen this will cowe to pass cunuot be told, but, if judred by the stous of the thues, the date s vot furdistant. The sue- ‘The Rev. Ur, Gibson commenced by saying that this lecture would treat of the closy of “the Patriarchal e and the subject would be, s Lerael iu B i Ispeal, e sald, cotered ioto Egypt a family, and leit it a natjon. ‘The translton’ was made in E:)'[lm. wnd Ve speaker vurrated bow It was wade, 1t spggeated ot tuouslits, happy or dorh thuagusyy sveordicd G0 the wukder o PuiLAbELYuLs, Pa., Dec. 13 —This iy & burlesque | ebIs with, stmuly becunes They wore worth more gy , v sl sa bulhion. Creditors took their 0 sud comle opora fortaight. Tho Fully Tsouve gold dallars worlh & por cont et e wo Uave boou dulug & good business thia weck at the Bob Bear b wosd BLOUS - buzzand, Walnu Strest with ** Robluson Crusoe,” ** Our | "k Cinderells,* ** Oxygen,* apd **Dlus Beard.” 3 ¥ Next week thay will produce ** abew fa tho | [THCU sliver was worth 1.tente yeiGu, Mhuk Wood." John Stetson hax been Bbilng the Wet | jusl &y wuca now as 1t was theo. but thesy gold- Vipatiaor a6 tha Biuad Stovct wiph bis ** Lvaugels | luviaece ra (6 ing 9 culicct fruw tuels deutors that there wus 6o residuuin of polrip there. 1lo uot wuly dealed, but be raged [n lus denlal, ut {t was a bappy sedectivn they Le wilzhe Lo wistaken, sud God and all the grear soud 1 revious thinze which we ascribe (o the divine sido ol the unfverse wav be gvs) ulter ali bere was yuite o poseithigy that te Peorla bl'uuncl isthe far ¢ one, and that Mo-cs, and avad, WUd Jvsiis dies i latoe died Clsi ated A largo line of Children’s and Misses’ Cloaks vory choap. GARSON, PIRIE & U ped, ™ o Bil-cent doliace, bad & dillcrunt way of expressivz It tben,