Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1880, Page 3

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y . Enoch ts tho mask of anothar, and Baawnlition much masks have fallen mo fn00- truth appears. ‘Tho flowora ey WY Dos y not true, Holl Walt bur a litelo wiste add yon Wil us nitong Ita particles.” ‘The sult ai teflove not, in mo. My truth fe'In thet hea Ich Jald mu horn, and now renphes out tts virin- fo, rivers, and with fligors bf rain $4 pulling abnck into iteclf aguin.’; Tho sek says: "Bo t mocked, Jam but 4 fantom, Bohold mo host-lke clouds and-vanish away on tho nda The winds say: “ Follow not our forme 1s flight, Wo are but tho breath, backward awn, of the greatcarth na It races rovind tho n” thon the front earth punts: “Seek "more, Like tho flowers, tho soil, #e: tho wind, I’ too ant $ myselt, My weight, my shape, light, atmus- ere, frultfulness, all that makes mo carth, is the sun, and the run, [ know, how his being in ine other orb; and should you question nil the be of immensity, all would answor, * We have. ybelng of our own, and henca are furover ising out ‘of ourselves. Spnee fs filled with adust of our gradual disaofution. Wo do not ‘0: woonly dia, We tio beenttse we aro not,’ " it strange that tho old Hindoo, when ho ‘ard this wntvorsial death-monn of things, do- aired of lifo,and mado a religion of his despair, 2086 cred rin thus: Life isa patutul cheat. Alove is loss: Sta desire 1s disappointment; its rife, for victor a4 well ns for wangulshod tho hes of defeat, Nothing abidos, Nothing nilono truth. Nothing is tho only enlm, By medita- on and solf-onial lot the heart bo withdrawn am life and sink Into the divine tranco of othingness—into Nirwntia"? f But ie things have no life in thomselver, thoy nnifeat an life which {s not thofra: a life hich, because it {8 not any thing, {a ore thin all things; on life which mains throughout their perishings, so it ey do not perish Into tmught, but into hor, and thus lve while they dio; nlite whosa niveral presence unseen, untcanl, unsmelt, ntouched, untasted, beyond all rench of sense, pears to thought and fo thought alone, in the 2edlenee of ail its hanes to changeloss Inwa; life whoso cesential unity fs evident In the re- rranization of these Inwa by thought ns its wiy—sclonce belng the tasumption and deruon- ration that what js true in thought is truo in atures that Nature his one mind correspond. it to the mind of man—nay, that man's mind Nature's own tn completa development, ro- eating In itself her whole course, posseastog in acif Hier total form, the iden! which was and, fs yer ull her changes, and, therufarg, tho reallty ‘hich has been always benenth nnd within them, inking them the chiinges of constant growth. ‘hua mah, whose perfection Is the supreme re- lity to bimsolf, is himsclf the supretne reality «Nature, Nature, and he, and Goi ro “working for the game, ond, enim: jo the snme tune, wi i ot the lowest ‘to, the highest votes, from F thelr Universal neale, Tay ll bo Beard fas own apirit, if ho will only Nsten for thei with ave, 'Phis love transforma the universe. It beholds i the commonest things a presence which yokes tholr ugliness beautiful ond thelr beauty ieet for worablp, Its eyo docs not need the unset glow on Alpine panka to kindle its ad- uration for that God whom it beholds as well 1 tho coarse ttle Edelwolss that blooms on the iacter’s edge, whore Hig touch turns the bite Tf frost into a kiss of summer dew. Heathen rt could only express benuty by perfect form, ut tho art of Christ secs in the ghustly face of t. Jeromo as it bonds to the chalice for a Inst ommunion an inner Jithenesa which transcends ho graco of Apollo Belyedere. And whoroover ing tho sceret of this art walks the earth ng if it ‘ere tho mirror of Henven, and a heedless step ‘ght cover a pebble, or weed, or insect that colfacts some fanture more exquisit than x enraptured the aight of Rephuel 1 pintoratto: io hails God's Deanty verywhere and rejoices in it always, “urthermore, because this love fs above them, t rejoices in’ the vory hups of Life which falled © sutisty the man who lived in them alone. Jonsequently, It nelthor refuses their pleasure ior fears thelr pain, Knowing that man's ideal nd Naturo's are one, st is sure that all things work togethor for man’s good . Prosperity will show bin God's kindness in tho outward world. ag ndyorsity docs in the Inward, Hig enterprises wilLall auccecd, beontse thoir ultimnte niin 1s ruth and goodnosg, and faitures tend thithor- vard as certninly ng successes, His lowllest task vill be discharged as 4 Divine trust, and hence ¥y no leas ambassadorial In its dignity than an rrehangel’s mission, Mich or poor, his every Jollar will bear an image and superscription ihioh gives it currency in more worlds than ont superseription of righteousness, tho mage of that perfect churacter which ull righteous uses subserye. Hs friends will 9 tho daylight of his cnrthly fife, and, vhon death takes them away, their nbsence will bo tho nightfall that darkens earth o lght up higher aphores, where friendship vlaime a home by its belrship to the whole do- nain of Infinit love. “But, I hear some one object, you aro dainting the joy of a perfect chnractar, and that huracter ia as unattainablo asthe Sox we soitght h wealth, and place, and pleasure. hy talk of tropto freedom to _ice-bound souls? Your ideal Isonlya tease. By showing us what wo ought io bo, it only reminds us of what wo nroand gonds us to hopeless unrest by the contrast. If happiness ta never won, duty is nover done. ‘The more we do tho more we hitve to do, Excet- lence refines the sense of responalbllity and in- creases obligation, No man fecls Bo peor in attainmont is ho who has attained most. Bach york Of churacter when mounted brings into Hew higher peuka boyond. Standing on what. scoms tous Mutterhorn of holiness, St. Pan) xclaimed in sight of tho hollness which rose be- ora him Into Heaven, and which erhps mado only a lowland thero as motntatns it tho sea, muke {sands on its surfaco * Less than tho lenst Of ull saints!" Whore, then, la the rest that re> Nglon promises? Whoro' tho sitisfuction? Where the joy 7" + Bt Paul himself will answer: “If, when wo Were chomles, we wero reconulled to Gad by the death of Tis Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved. by His life. And not only so, but we ulso Joy in God through our Lord. Jesus pa ‘by whom we buve now received the atone- ment,” * ‘The brench between tho man that taand the man that ought to bo fs moral, and morality cans not closoit. Tt. Repnrnton tun in his specitle thoughts aud deeds trom man in histotal charace tor, which no one thought or deed, no endless serles of thoughts and deeds, can wholly muni~ fest, The total man looks sternly on those par- ‘Ual manifestations, and prononnecs thom Inde. quate. Honce, tholr law avoms to bon luw of sucrifice without satisfaction, the cross without the crown, But this is because, in taking tho view of mnorallty, mann aides with hia pardiak and ri translont, and ‘scoming self, rathor than ‘with tho self which 1g whole, and true, und gternal, Moligion reverses this posture, Religion looks upon the perfect, us tho resent min, Who has naught to reach beyond umecif, and consequently cinnot be sayed hy Works, but works because ho fs saved, his solo. alm belng to oxpresa his {nmoat nature by his conduct, aa the bulbous root oxpresses ita in- most uiture in tho lily. His ideal is thus behind 28 well before him, and besets him on avery side, Even now hois n'son of God, and thronghout eternity ho cnn nover beouma more thin God's trugson, What true sonship (s bo beholds in Christ. Christ's way is bia way, Christ's truth hia truth, Christ's lifo hia lifo, tho Christ that is inhimallke his hope of glory and its fulllilt- ment. With a gaze that fgnores past and future, God secs und loves the Prince and Jpetise: of Hig ‘throne in His ttle child; and when thiachild takes ‘wonally oxpressed thotr gratitude to Dr. Patter- fon at tha closo of tho services. ‘That tho pare tor's realynation will be acecpted, nnd with tho trittan by det | deopest and sincoreat rograt, ta, under the clrs cumstinces, tobe looked upon as a matter of omirsa, though Just whon such action will bo taken hing notas yet been dofinitly determined, TE wit not probably be deferred, howover, bu- youd n week or two. LATTEN-DAY SAINTS, A MONOGAMOUA MORMON BXPLAING 1118 ATTIC, At No, 213 Weat Madison atroet, In one corner of tho building, is stowed away a little hall, with ® sonting capacity for nbout fifty persons, in which Prof, Maofariand holds forth as n teacher of elocutton during week days,and In which soveral temperance soolotica hold meetings evenings, In thia little pont-wp pince tho Or- ganized Church of Latter-Day Balnts held forth yesterday. Tho representation of this religious seot cannot be large (n this city, since only thirty. Persons in all coupled the hall, Those who met thore yesterday do not belleye in polygamy, Thoy look upon tho Utah Mormons ng apostutes from tho Church of Latter-Day Buints, who. have set up a religion of thetr own, in which tho gratification of tho lusts of tho flesh {8 tho principal moving foree, Among those people tho Church hus sent numerons elders to bring them to the old truths, Tho services were Announeen to commonce nt Os o'clock. At that hour only six persons were in tho hall, and not until wero thore over fif- teen persons in tho hull, The porson who dis- coursed to this little congregation was Elder Mark HH, Forsentt, who inukes his home nat Plano, Hu read tho first ten verses of St. Paul's Kpistles to tho Corinthians, alxth chapter. andsaid that na the objects and plans of his Chureh hnd never heen given to. the publio, ho roposed to give thom and tho views of tho Shien which ho ropresented, Tio woitld outting its faith and the reasons for It, The hand of evil had renched the Churoh which ho represent ed, It was born in sorrow, and thoso tn power had endeavored to crush ft out. of existence, Hut {t grew in apite of thom, ft was hated of men, but he believed that the Church wns loved of God. He knew of no sorrow or feeling bo- enuad of tho indignities the Church had recelyod in tho past, Tho Apostio‘s instruction was wise, “Prove nil things, nnd hold fnst to those which are good.” Truth was tho mightiest force In Honven na well ng on earth. Ho helleyed thnt tho Church which he represented had the truth of the Evorlisting God to present to the pecple. If tho Bible was trie, and he belleved ib wis, thon tho doctrines which hts Ohurch taught wore true. Tho doctrines of the Church Woro ha ancicnt asthe doctrincs of tha ible, and ns unchangeable ns God_and the Word of God Itself, Ho thon presented an epitome of tho fuith’ and doctrines of the Foorgantzedt Church of Jeaus Christ of Latter-Day Saluts, of which the following are tho principal: We boltieve in God, the ternal Fathor, and tn Mls Son Jesus Christ, and tn tho. Holy Ghost, Wo believe that men will be punished for thetr own sing, and not for Adam's transgressions, Wo belfeve that through the ntonomeut of Christ nll men may bo saved, by obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel. The cpitomo then goes on to say that thesa ardinanees are faith itGod and the Lard Jesus Christ; repentance; baptism by immersion for the remission of sing; laying on of hands for the ulft of the Holy Gh resurrection of the body; that the dend in Christ will rise first, and the rest of tho dend will not livo ngain until the 1,000 year are expired; the doctrine of Eternal Judgment, whieh pro- vides that mon shail be judged, rewarded, or punished neconiing to the degree of or evil thoy shall have done; that i man must be enlled of God and ardained by tho laying on of hnnds of those who ura in authority to entitle him to preach tho Gospel and ndininister tho ordinances thereof; In the sume kind of orgine {zation us existed in tho primitive Church, tpostles, prophets, pastors, tedchers, evangullats, ote; thit in tho Hible fg contuined tho word of God, so far ag tt is translated correctly that tho canon of tho Soripture {a not full, but that God by His spirit will continue to reveal lily word. ‘until the end of time, ‘Tho most importunt of tho list are these: We belloye that marringe {3 ardulned of God; andthat the law of God provides for but ono compnuion in wedlock for either man or woman, except In cases Where tho gontrict Is broker by death or trinsgression, ‘We belleve that tho doctrines of a plurality and a community of wives ure horesics, and ure opposed to tho hiws of Gad. Wo cinim the privilege of oon Ale mighty God according to the dictates of our conselence, and allow allmen the same privi- Tego, lot thoin worship how, whore, or what thoy muy, ‘ipoit theso points Mr. Forscutt diinted at greit length, and preached again at tho aumo Place In tho evening. MOODY’S TABERNACLE. AN OJECT-TEACHING SERMON, In spite of tho-storm the Chicago Avenue Church—Moody'’s Tabernaclo—was comfortably. filled yesterday moruing. The pastor, tho Kev, Mr. Needham, preached 1 pietorid sermon on tho mountains of Palestine, illustrating bis sub- Ject with colored pletures and maps, Ils text ‘was follows: ‘ ‘Thoy that trust in tho Tord shall be na Mount Zion, ‘which entinot ba removed fur evur and ever. mound Gre round abust Jerusalem, 90 nd NbUUE Ly jeuple from hencoforth, hy CLE My 2, The speaker suid that ho rend thoso passages not so much nsntext nsto call attention to the fact that tha Holy Spirit has frequontly sym- bollzed certatn truths with mountains, Wo find Jesus Himsylt, the great model of preaching, convoying instruction In this form, Hs sor= mons were parables, and wore Mlustrated with natural objects about his hearers. He polnta to tho sower, ta tho fowls of tho nir, to tho flowers and tha Ilics of the fiold, Heused this ne of urgument continually, Iis mothod being object. teaching. Mountalus woro especiully prominent in Ila discourses. Thore is much in tholr geo- graphicn] position whieh connects thom intl. inutely with the historical associations of Pal- estine, The spenker thon rend the pnssago: “And the Ark rested {n tho seventh month, on tho sey- enteenth day of tho south, upon the Mounting of Ararat.” Ho thon displnyed a crayon plet- ‘ure of Arirat, situnted In tho enstern portion of agin Minor, on the high plateau of Armunia, on 4 line butweon tho Etuok and Caspian Seas, ‘Its Murat ( 172%00 feet. Some oventa connected with thoge mountulng are worthy of aur notico, becnuse tho Ark rested on Ararat. ‘Tho Ark could not Inve rested on a peak, because Noah looked out and saw tho mountain wbout hin, It tesupposed that tho Ark rested on tho sido near the buse, Whon the sons of Sennuvherib, tho Klug of Agsyrla, killed tholr futher, thoy. fled to these mountalns, ‘Tho Jesson to be de- rived from tho history of those mountulns fa one of God's judymonts on sin, The ‘Turks cil tho range “tho Finger Mountains,” while the Per- slang call thom Nouh's Mountains." They ro- mind uy of God's provision for those who would escape from ali, Lt Is the record of God's falth- fulncas in presorving Nouh's fumlly through alt God's catimate for his own, ns Chriat tenches dim to do, and, as by falth in Christ, he does, ho feels alroudy reconciled, alreudy itt-oned with Lis futuremost destiny, fo bas only to be him. eclf, now, henveforth, and forever imevit. and live his own divino life, And, {f he can never w= tains finished growth, it fs heenuse finished frowth Were death, whorens his life {8 fmmortal aving the consciousness of boing in and from God for its Joy, without intorruptions of satioty or peat pral Hents of longing, perfect in every Motnent, because all tty monienta belang atlke to cternity, For what more can divine lito ever ‘be than dlvinoly alive? Tt Ivos and srows this momont; {¢ can only live and grow in every other otornal .moment, b is na true now 1B MN evor be, od, tho blood of Christ as warm in tho volusof manhood, tho love Of God aa close and fond and full of hoxven, Why hot thon rejoice in thom now and now? ‘Why not rejoice sn tho Lord alwayg?” ¥ FOURTH PRESBYTERIAN, FORMAL RESIGNATION OF THK PASTOI. ‘Tho Rov. 1. W, Patterson ocoupled the pulpit of tho Fourth Presbyterian Church yesterday Morning, and preached 9 sormon inost appro- Priate under the olroumstanoes {n' which tho church now finds ttsclf—without a pastor—from tho text found in thesoventh verso of the thirty- Soyenth Peatm: ** Rost in tho Lord and walt pa- tently for Him." In bis closing invocation, Dr. Patterson prayed that God would be the shep- herd where carthly ourthly shepherds fails that this peopte might walt. Ppationtly for the dovel- Opmont of 1is Providence In tho midat of tholr front didappotntment: and that they might bo Hat fed Lactose Hhotasol vs and thotr inters hin al Wy rolutions, ta tha God of hureh and tho God of His urvants, ee lreasing the congregation, ho enid it was with Vory groat regret that be vuinpllcd With tho feaucatat tha pastor to roud tothe cdngrogu- jon she following papers HICAgO, bs Dd’ Pf cikctoothiutavau we inee A neste ener Fongaebeay with how much paln, to offer you my nite, Pater. ‘Of thin church, and ask ented Dire reli aae ca requesting tho l'rusbytury Ww dissolve My reason for ask! qf ly de bs attri unable tad iby duly as” pastor of such ‘a 1 bud hoped ta ep Balad paste tS weak ate rd hall not, throture, aitanipt to exproea my gratt- eu fOr your utivaryiny kinduoss xd aitoc ny on at rains atin sh ae Mau whtelt nto which Fy teat hopes of my life and my T hope fully, Vee 3 ¥o0n to meot you all and speak of It more {can only say ie 4 Be ME tour seca a pede, SouN AuuorE vill Congregation woro not ynprepared for {he announcotent of thelr DARtore, ‘dotwra ints ured ta ayaey fa Soe loepeRE reuret (wus, Blok, rt Pectin cae coe APpolntmont, to which thoy hal Sea rarwElok SER, the deluge. tis sttll truc that all who believe 4a the Lord Jeans Christ will be saved, The speaker thon dlapluyed n colored crayon of . Mount Moriah, and ‘roud the following: “And it caine to puss uftor those things that God ald tompt Abrabum and sald unte hin, Abra- bun; and he sald, Behold, hero J nim,’ And Ho sald, Take now thy son, thing only son lduno, whom thou lovest, tind got thee Int) the land of Morkah; and offer bin there for 0 burnt offerin ‘ppon eno of the imuuntains which 1 will til C0 of. . ‘This {3 ono of tho mountaing of tho founda- tlon of Jorusilem, Tho Tempto stood on It, and the Mosque of Omar wow stunds thore. It j4 700 feet above the Mediterranean, Thoro ft was that God ordured Abruhum to offer up Isino, Ita symibol na opposed to Ararat is that of substitution. Bolow It fa Jerusalem with tho Tver Jordan, in the part given to Benjamin, ‘Thore fa sett to be sven w part of tho mountain qaunlog up throigts tho floor of the Mosqua of Omar, On this nountam David offered up a burnt-offering, and the plague waa atayud. Here Solomon built hid tomplo, Tho story of this mountain teaches u# to belleve God, Abra- hum’s faith in God Inspires ua with confldone When David was ready to make his burnt-olfo: fog, Onan, tho Jobuzito, olfered bla threahing. floor und oxen for nothing, but David lnglated un. ying. Many peoplo would tke 1 froo rellirion, Hey aera which costs nothing fa nu ulfor- ng @ a singecam was thon displayed showing Eval and Goriziin—the mountalns of cursus and blessings, On cithor mountuln wero six tribes. tha Levites guthored In tho vale and read the Dlossinga und cursos of Moses, while tho poopto on both sides ochoed anamon. Gud wishpd to ipreason thom tho necessary ntttude. Wo have those mounts of clirses and blessings to- ay, Culvary wus 4 mount of curses, Zion ono of blessings, ‘To this duy Goriziin Is groon and Ebal barron, Tho noexterayon, was Mount Carmol,on tho Western coust of Palusting, the only bold boud> land on that shore of tho Muditerrunoan, It waa always regurded asd saerod gpot. 'Thore tho OO pijeaia of Uual gathered when chullengod by Elijah, nod there the fuluo.prophots were cone founded and Buju from Heaven, with fire” the King Abnezlah. aftor tho death wr KON, Consulted the prophet. ENjul prayed for'rain after the arouybt, and from Carmel waa seen the “ cloud no bigcor thun w man's hand which brought tha welcome ruin. ‘Chis mountain hos 0 athatlo 4 ween conneoted with it. It ion a line tho Red and tho Dead Sous, Auron diod there, and thore be mado the golden calf. Ho ba committod but ony ali, but was not allowed to ontor the goodly lund, The unbellof of Christians dé jit ita lonthsome to God ns that of the onthans, The speakor thon oxplninod tha picture of Mount Tabor. Hera tradition flxes tile sceno of tho transtiguration, | {t 1s in the coutral part of ,Pulosting, near tho Sea of Galllow. It wus tho seeng of many 4 battle. Gidean slow tho Midian ites in 1{ shade, and Doboruh with Baruch stood up for tho host of tha Isruc}ites at tts baso, fhe next eminence referred to wus Sina, ita rugged cliffs, where tho Inw was Binal and Horvb aro noar to iy about the bull oF throng, As ita foot HE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, JANUARY 12, 1880, to-day Is 2 convent whero was found the Tisch- endorf manusoript, dating. boek to tho fourth contury, and containing tho entire Now Testa- ment, Bhowing tho erayon of tha Mount, of Olives, tho apenker sald that wo can only'mention It with bated breath, as Cetiséinine was tho Beene of tho triumph of prayer and of intense ruifer- ings. In the future tho most remarkable eveut inthe history of tha worl Is predicted to taka place at Mount Olivet, the event for which wo are now wafting. There Chrint shall again al play Himacit, and tho whole world be illumi 10 pastor announoed that he would continits his folorint objeot-leason discourses, preaehing next Sunday evening on “The Sinitten lock,’ with largor maps and Stluatrations. CURRENT OPINION, What Ronsen Democratic Ire. Cinetnnatt Gazette (Rep.). Next to the presence of Federal bayonets atthe polls, there {4 nothing that so ronses the patriotte tro of a Democratic Senator as ®& $1,200 office under Democratic control, withattt a Democrat In it. A Recommondation to Garcelon, Introit Post (Rep). It Edlson’s clectric Inmyp proves a success, its charred paper "wick" will demonstrate that !t 19 really possible for mean and worth Tess Hite things to burn eternally in an ine tense heat, and-yet not be consumed. We recpmmend Gov. Gareelon and hig Counell to drop polities for awhile, and study seriously this alarimiog phenomenon, Sonator Blaine’*s Opportunity. Floston Traveller (Thep.). Any demagog can raison popular tempest, but it requires 9 leader of the first calibre to play the part of Cromwell and ‘ride on tho whilwind and direct the storm.” Can Mr. Blaine enact this most diMeult of all the rOles of lendersh{p? We believe he can, and thathe with And, if he enacts tt with sitccess, saving to Maine hor Jnw, her pence, and her order, and defending tho imperiled Nberties of her people so far ns they inzy be defended within those Hinttations, Wo will stand, with- ont dispute, among the few men that tho world has at any the produced, with ca- paelty enough to shapo and solve the crisis whore order and anarchy are divided as by a pin’s point. An Honent Voice from the South. Vicksburg (Mlss,) Heratd (Ind.-Dem.). ‘The situation in Malne {s serious, beenuse a large number of the people beliove that the will of the people as expressed at the polis ts not being carried out, Wedo not mean to say that those in power inny not be acting within the limits of the law; wo menn to say that any Jaw which makes {t possible to chnuge the count of votes actually cnst is evil, and will produce evil resulta, All pos- sible safeguards should be thrown around the exerelso of suffrage, nt the time It ts be- ing exercised, but after the fudgesand clerks atk elections have received votes aud counted them, the result should not bo changed by any higher authority. There can be nothing more dangerots than an exereise of power to change an actual cast of votes. ‘The most. dangerous frauds ore those perpetrated under the fornus of law. Republican Haste In Pennsylvania. Phitateiphta Press (Rep, The Republican State Comiittes at _n full meeting of the members, actual or substi- tuted, hayo determined, by a large vote, that it wae proper, and pradent, and falr, te call the State Convention on the 4th of next month. ‘This gives a period of five weeks be- tween the notice and the assembling in which to make all the arrangements for and actual- ly to select all the Senatorial and Representa- tlve delegates, So early ndate for a State Convention in Pennsylvania has never before beon fixed, nor has so short an Interval been before allowed between the call and the meet- Ing. This actlon was taken In order ta give Pennsylvania control of the Presidential question, but control of [t depends upon many: other considerations besides ‘haste of action, ‘The question will not be gettled by storm, It hag too many elements of seriousness In it, Must Take Of Their Coats. Troy ‘mea (Itep.). * Assurensthereisasun in the heavens, the Southern whites must, one and all, go resolutely to work, put enterprise and con- trivance into thelr business, stop robbing the laborer through the eredit system, encournge the colored people in habits of Industry, pro- tect every man, whatever his color, In the free exercise of ffs rights, set foot on re- pudiation of all sorts, pry, honest debts Itke men, Welcome capital and raspeetable Im- inlgrants from the four quarters of the globe to thelr poverty-stricken States, ‘The moinent the South shall do this, that moment it will place itself th tho current of progress and prosperity such asds benring all the rest of tho sountry toward a wonderful future, Otherwise the condition of tho ex-Confed- erate States will be but little, If any, better olf a quarter of a century hence, Grant and the South, Orford (Miss,) Fatcon (Den). Tf it fs a chaico between Grant and tho Devil, wo will take tho latter by a large wa- Jority, Tupela (Sttas.) Fournat (Dern,). Tho much-talked-of Grant reception at Loulsville tins taken place, and tho trimmers and tline-servors of Kentucky's imetropolls, headed by tho notorious Henry Watterson, outdid themselves,—Iiterally slopped over. Syeophaney and flunkyism. reigne supreang upon the ocension, We devoutly wish that atl sectional bitternesa could be obliterated between the North and the South, and that thoy could dwoll together in peace and har- Mhony; but, (€ thiy can be consummated ont! y the peaple of the South erawling with Dited bronth to lick the hand that smote thoin In their helplesness and distress, then, we sty, Jet tho storm of sectional hate con- {nue to rage with unabating fury, No Union Soldier for the Deniocracys Washtugton (2, 0,) Post (Dem,). Hancock would bo 4 strong man to run; but it would never do to oppose him to Grant, should tho, Republicans renominate the ox-President, “Both candidates would bo Union soliiors; but ono would bo supported hy a party whose rank and file almost entiro- ly elthor fought on the Union side during the War, or sympathized with it; the other bya party a majority of which wero men Who either participated In the Rebellion or helleved in ft. ‘Tho Republicans, by a ju- Aiclous process of elimination, would be able fo resolve such a contest Into one which would have for tte main Issue the question of the righteousness or hoinousness of the Rebellion, and the extent of popular favor that should attach to the side which the Wor proved to be in the right. This would be disastrous to the Democracy. - . Tho Way tho South Puts It. Clurksvitie (Tens) Chronicle, Judge Tylor took the ‘tloor, Ifo objected to the investment of county funds In United States bonds for several reasons, It ty true, he sald, that Government bonds can be at all thnes readily converted Into money; the yaluo of those bonds, however, fs always fluctuating, and may be Jess when the maney ly wantad than It snow. ss « But, apart from all these consliderations, he sald fe was ost! to the county's taking United States bonds, ‘Those bonds, he sald, were given to defray the expenses of the subjugation of the South, and the united South was opposed to thelr recognition; and, if ever the tino should come when the South had her duo welqht in the councils of the Nation, those bonds would and ought to be repudiated, and ho would give his vote for doing so. These Words were sald with great cnergy and exe eltemeont, Keep Cool. Hartford Courunt (Rep. People might bo adylsed to keep cool, and not to losu thelr heads over the notion that thelr only escape from Grant Is to take Blaine, or that thelr only escape from Blaine ‘Is take Grant; keep coal and look over the ground for themselves, and be ready to make -their conclusions felt In’ the State Conyen- tlons that nominate delegates to the Natlonal Convention. It would not bea bad plan if each State should present in Convention different name to choosy frou,—one of its own citizens if it havea man strong enough known. It is not seonily that we seared In advance like a flock of shoep, We might as well bs provided with a numberof good candidates, fur even the inogt prominent snen are mortal, and Grant {s about to trust flmself on the South- ern railroads, and Blaine may be disabled By i tnpevious to secitene ouseyh Se : lent excep! Es den} the Hopublieans ave nO such mau, THE COLLAPSE, Practical Termination of the Pigs Stickers’ Strike. A Dejected Mass-Mecting Addressed by Dejected Orators, Tho Union Men Now Willing to Work with Non-Untonlats. Intorlor Hog Dealers Requosted to For- ward Porkora Without Delay, A crowd of about 1,500 people, consisting of members of the Butchers’ Union and thelr friends, gathered In the pratrie In front of the Church of the Nativity, on South Ial- sted street, at 10 o'clock yesterday morning, to attend the mnss-mecting of the Union which It was commonly expeeted was to de- elde finally the future action of the body In regard to the strike, ‘Che weather was any- thing but propitious, and the crowd wore an aspect of -dejection sadly at variance with their demennor of 9 fortnight ago. The ineeting was called to order by President Dantel O'Connell, who Ina few words con- veyed the impression that the cause for whieh the Union had now strugeled for neara couple of weeks was ina bad way, and that the situation was such that tt required tm- medjateattentlon. Ju then called upon the ever-ready Mr. Powers for a few remarks, Mr, Powers was hardly \inself tn an ora- torleal sense. In fact, he was out of. hls element. If it were not savory of an Irlsh bull, seeing that tho speaker fs.n sailor and has sailed the ocean blue, he mleht have been deseribed as all at sen. His words falled to flow. and the magnetism with which he held previous audiences was conspicuous y apsence, As an agitator his earlier efforts, full of sweet promise and of yitupera- tion delightful to the speaker's ear, tind been. greeted with round after round of cheers, and hig oft-repeated joke of reminding the audience that they were not well drilled never failed, even up to Its three-thousandth repetition, fo evoke a Taugh; but as a pro- pounder of the virtue of patience under dire necessity he {s a fatlure. His speech, like thatof his predecessor, was a virtual ae- knowledgment that the Union had met the packers and were theirs, and though now and then (t bristled with biter phrases, failed to evoke the passing tribute of a cheer, In concluding his remarky he moved that. the Board of Directors of the Union be ap- pointed n committee to consider the situation of affairs, and to form asetof resolutions embodying what they considered would be ihe wisest action of the Union In the ruling dilema, The motion was enrried, and, after a few remarks by Mr. M.J. Downs, who wished to correet a inisstatement made concerning hlin in Horning, paper, tho meeting adjourned until? p,m. At tuk hour about 1,000 people were pres- ent to hear the resolutions prepared during tho recess by the Union Directors, Presi= dent O'Connell presided, and, in calling the meeting to order, said that for obylows rea- sons the meeting was not as Inrge as some which liad preceded It. The bad weather, which had tended to cut short their delibera- tlons in the mornin be looked upon by some as i, but ft was really =o proof that = Provi- dence was” on thelr side, One effect of the recent rains was that the roads in the country were so terribly muddy and cat-np that the farmers cotld not send forward hogs: during the strike, 60 that when they got to work there would be just about as much work for thom as ff tho strike had not oc eurred. Ile was able to say, with confi- (lence, that in aday or two the Union men would be back WORKING IN THEIR OLD PLACES, He had heard it stated that a largo number of Union men intended ta zo back to work ‘on tho following morning, He did not know whether this was so or not, but he would, first of all, beg all members of tho Union to delay taking this step for ut least one day, He would also say that, every man who did fe, to work would, be spotted and remem- vered; the brand of Cain would be set upon him, and it would bo well, after the inion got back to work, that oil such should einleento, ag thelr lives would not then ba worth the Hving! The question of whether the members of the Union would go back to work alongside of non-Union men was in the fiands of the Committers appointed at the morning ncetlng, They had considered the subject and had prepared n set of resoln- tfonsywhich, however, ff would not be politie to set hefore the present Inceting, composed as it was by other than Union men. Lf, how- ever, that decision was in favor of returning to work at tho packers’ terms the Union men would not take fong to show their uiuplover 8 the difference between the kind of work done by Unlon men and that accomplished by the ‘*seabs." ‘They all remembered how the Union men used to roll the hogs along the benches, and some few of them whe had been there on business knew ho = “senbs” had failed to do the sume work satisfactorily. Tho contrast, when the two sels of men were working slits by side, would bo so clear that it, would only be a matter of time when the packers would send the “seabs” about thelr business, In order that.the resolutions prepared by tho Committee might be presented ta te Unton for their action, ft ind been decided to hold a minss-meeting of the body atthe West Twelfth: Street Turner-Hull at o'clock the following (this) morning, at which tho simple questlon of elther continuing the strike or of return ing to work at the packers’ terms woul be considered. If it was deelded at this meet- ing to accept the latter alternative, the Union would do so, consefous that fe find made on gallant and honorable strug. Ble, ‘apoteun himself—the —_yrent- eat) warrior that ever drew aword— had tivaded Russia and been foreed to retreat vanguished, and to Jeave behind hin an ariny of 48,000 mien, For all this, ho after- wards rallied to 3s standard yn army whieh kept tho whole of Europe in wwe; and, though he was In the end defented, IC was ont ‘fitrou h treachery and deceit, ‘The Union teself might sutler defeats Ut iakght in the present atrugele be forced to abandon the high and righteous principles for which it has been fighting, but defeat would not mean annihilation, and the day would come, and it would nat be long Ie coming, when under more favorable elremustances they would re- new the fight which they had been carrying onin yal. In-conelusion, he begged” the Union, whatever was tho result of tho meet- Ing of tho followhns day, to net with tho guino good behavior which had characterized them through tho contest. Mr, Davia followed with a few remarks in Oo slmilar strain, and the Union adjourned to meot amin in, tho West Twolfth Street Turner-Hall at 9 o'clock thla morning, LATE IN THE AFTERNOON a Tripune reporter hada brief converantion with a member of the Committee on Resalu- tlona, who Informed him that, whilg he could not consistently Iinpart thelr nature, lie be Neved the Committees were unanimous in the opinion that there would be no use Inpro Tonging tho struggle any longer, They felt that the fight between the Union and packers hod been long and bit- er one, — hut iat 80 fur as the Unton was concerned, ft had been conducted In an upright and: honorable manner, for which reason they believed the packers should be willing fo meet thom ina falr and conciliatory splrit. ‘They were willlng to abandon the principle they had fought tor, but, being men of spirit, they should not be ed to Abandon thelr Us non as well, Front tis it can bo Inforred that the resolutions will embody the will of tha Unign to return to work along with 1on-Union men, but not to alyn tho resignation from the Union which tho packers are nowinslstIhg upon, Whethor tho packers will consent tothe removal of the obnoxlous condition remains ta be seen, Aa is usual on Sunday, everything was quiet at the yards. ‘The only pity now tron Hn the packers Is the small recefpts of ho ‘Thoy ‘tel that the strike fy at an end, that the only thing needed to atart thelr houses xunnlile at full blast is a suillelency of tha raw material. The recent cool snap ds auld to have hardened up the ronds In the West so a8 to make hog-driving once more ouible. Tho country consignor had now tor get his stock ready and send ft for ward, a8 the packers wil! ‘able to convert it Into mess pork us fast as te comes, Soni of the fnets appearing below have already appeared in Sunday's tssue of THe TUNE. FAILURE ACKNOWLEDGED, All of the Union men who pave returned to work acknowledge that the funds of the 8o- efety have bye menns been placed whore they would do the must good, and. fhat, while the officers and expert hands have Brown fat and fo} Wy dur elr three weeks’ holiday, the rank and dle havo, with thelr’ faullivs, suffered terribly, Tho rellef oceastonal sup- Hed from the coffers of the Union amounted ov next to nothing, while the applications of amnjority of the poverty-stricken ones wero disregarded altogether The packers are feeling better than aver over the situation. Every morning they are obliged to turn away from thelr doors dozens of Union men who are feady to go to work arany, Roses The event which transpired at Ar, Allerton's office In the Exchange Build. ing Saturday erented great deal of merriment fn their circle. aber, never wanted any arhtration, and felt that the persons favoring it were pinply the mfddle- men, whose profits are being Killed by the continuance of the strike, ‘nani, when they Tvarned of the sudden collapse of the scheme they were greatly amused. The Mea of arbitration found no grent favor with the Union atlarge, Hts members, wavering between n fadlug hope of victory over the packers and the temptation of re- turning to work at the packers’ terms, saw nothing to please them In a plain which necessarily postponed a return ta work. for sone dys longer, and whieh, after all, infght.| result In nothing, ‘Their officers, who give the new kien all the support they safely could at the open-air meeting, were not fong In learning how it wag viewed by thelr constit- nents, and there fs doubt that they at- fended the conference Saturday with the premeditated fntention of nethiyens they did, ‘The declaration of the non-Unton packers that they are confident of thelr power to con- duet their business In the Ardrretndepentent alike of the good or IM wil of tha Union ts supported by the fact that they entsed the comimission-ineu Saturday to advise thelr country consignors to forward hogs hereafter asfastas they wished, assuring them that they could handle them safely, . ‘The following figures, giving THE NON-UNION HOUSES which wilt be running thls week, and their eapacity, show that the faith of thelr owners 4s not without solid foundation: Toure, Dally capacity, Armour & Co. (twa henettes), 4009 Fowler feos, (two benches), + 4a Chlengo Packing Company Allerton Pav ig Company: Higgins & Co, (ane hetient 1. FE. Murphy (ane bench). Ricker Packing Company ane Chapln & Cudaby (ono bench)... Total dally capaelty.. The above statement de , of a q represent anything like the full capacity of these houses, but merely what they will be able to do during the present week with the non-Union forces at thelr tlsposal, As tine fAdvanees and the hogs come tn tore quickly the Union men will be taken fit ns they come, and operations will be extended, ‘That the Union men will be ready to go to work in suillelently large numbers cannot be doubted, It is kown, and this Information lind wt great deal to do with sending off the advices to consignors to ship hogs, that some 400 mem- bers of the Union, tired of doing nothing hut Hsten to the windy harangues of their oratore, have gutetly combined and prepared to enter the yards en masse thls morning and offer thelrservicestothelrol employers, The eapaelty of the houses running 6 9 Union basis amounts to about 15,000, so that during the coming week the tally capacity: of the yards will Be not less than from 35,000 to 40,000 hogs. Under these elrenmstances the shippers need not fear to send forward thelr hogs, and, strike or no strike, the conversion. of tie live animal into pork’ will hencefor- ward rush on with something so much ike the good times of three weeks ago that the universe, whieh, aecording to Mr. Powers, has had Sts eyes upon O'Connell & C the past thirty days, will have to look else where for something upon which to concen- trate its attention, Saturday was a dull day at the yards, he recelpts of hog reached the low fiznre of Uy The purehasers were Fowler Ure: 2163; Armour & Co,, 1,400; Chicago Packing Company, 600; William Small, 21; Teufel & Sons, 7} Tobey & Booth, 70, Higgins & Co. patd off’ their Union men Saturday fnorntni and informed ther that they could come back to work on Monday: inorning [f they had resigned from the Union in tho nieanthie, The Chicago Packing Company killed 2,5 hogs Saturday, among their ging be! a a munber of expert killers brought yesterday toralng from Mitnesata. Armour & Co, killed 4,500 hogs, being the Megest day's work the house hay done since the strike began, Fowler Bros, killed 2,750 hogs, three-yunrter time, The reeent attack upon Mr, Cudahy by Powers, the Union demagoge, who charged hin with having attempted to tribe Father Carten to use his [ntlnenee to bring the strike ta an end, hns eatised the reverent gentle Intn to write the followlng letter In refula- ton of the charge: Cuuncn oF TUR Nativity, Cuicago, Jan. 9 1880,~Dear Sir: Teonsider it my imperative duty ‘to omphutically contradict the quite sensationtil stutemont which rppenrs in the press reports of tho yrent masa-meeting Lield in Doxter Park yesterday: ‘That Mr. Cudahy, who, for rengons well-known to nll, commands my. est personal esteem and gratitude, ever trict to Uribe" or intluenco me ta nay manner. Lam deeply pafned to seo myself atid my ehvirch eo frequently drurged into w controversy, with which I hnye nbyolutely no connection whate ever, in elthor way, |. M. CAN; Pastor. vert few cases of bulldozing v brought to Ight Saturday, The only’ one of conse nea Was reported by ay dapldste Uritisher named Hugh Denny, who, while returning home from hls work “in the Chiea- fo Pagk! Hd Company's pliaee, was beaten, kleked, and thrown fiito a dlteh by alot of Unton men on Laurel street, near the hog- bridge. Being a stranger, he falled to reeug- nize his asgallanty, _————— Orig Tudlana Exoduntoras Indianapolis Jonraul (Hep. What right had Mr, Hendricks 10 emigrate from Afusktneun Cow Ohio, to this State ? He dit not bring any silver plate ortany broadcloth garments Into the State. Whit right hud Senster MeDonatd ‘to emigrate from Butter County, Ohlo, to thisState 2” He Was a8 poor as a South Carolina negro when he came here. | What right lind Senator Voorhees* parents to emigrate from Virginka fo thls State? Congress never authoried them todaso, What right lad Gen. Mun son, Who way born at Plyun, O,, to move Inte this State?) He never nnd any pet What Tight had Coy, Willams to move from Plekae way County, Ohio, to Knox County, India, When the whole family-posserstous searecly snonnted to the value of a Webster's Spotl liyg Rook ? Wi Tuported tho editor of the Sentinel Into this State? What were the enuses that led tots immigration, and wnt Was the object af hisintroductlon 2° What Haht had thousands of “ paor whites” In the Southern States, who were degraded thers because they were too poor ta own slaves, to thove to Indiana and assist In hultdlag ap tho Demoeratie party here?) What right bad Qhousonds of poor Irishmen, with nothing in, the world but the shirts on thelr backs, to eoing hero xtralght from the old country and become Demoratie voters yeurs before they were citizens? Tf some able Demovrat will answer these quextions, then wo will tell lin by what right the colored Ameriean citizens emigrate front North Carolinu to Indiana, $a. be (one bent q 3 running on ny Sonator Mortomn» Son John. AL. Laute Globee Demuceat, President Haven is uhout to appoint Mr. John Morton, son of the Inte Senator from Indhen, to. tho position of Royenue Collector at San Pein clued, AN the people of Bui Franeisco are ape posed to the appolitinent, nnd as Sr. Morton his, personul or polltienl chitin to ft, the content~ Plated netion of the President must be breed solely on bis esteem for tho yaung mun's futher. While wo can appreelata “the mative which prompts Mtr, Hayes, wo greatly duube fta real wisktum, ‘Tho office 1s one whieh, if honestly nd- ininiatered, cannot benetlt young Morton beyond mimediite mens Of living. At the nil of his term ho will have learned nothing of practical ao tobitn, and he will stil have his career to. opon and tomuke, Ve ho wore adaw student, a aubordinite position in the Judlelury Depart: nvat niebt help hin in hin profession, and Nt Rinat tho ond of four years for practice, But Sitch {8 not tho caso, and the placa offered ta hin i6 not calculated to help bbs future dn amy way. Sonator Marton served his party and his country well, and It {a the reveree of an honor to his memory to start his son in polities aga business, Ong-mut tho sons of our public mon Hiro injured tn thls way. Pholr fathers got then clorkihips at Washington, or potty ofloes at iy thoy grow up without éelf-rellunce, or profession! or business capacity, and with a change of parties they And thonselyes wdritt without # liviny, or the mncans of making on, oO ————— Fortify feeble lungs agatnat wintor blasts with: Mute's, Totty of Horehound and Tar, Pike's Toothache Drops cure fn ono minyite, FIEIMUNTE MRANOH ONTICIS, | [NORDER vo AccoMMoparH OUI Nustun cue, patruns theouytuut ths elty, wo tinve Katul Hiner Heuneh Otteus In tho difurunt, Divistuns. ws 0 ehurgat eu, and wilt ue Feculvad unth Sa'atuek pas qurii wook, i Hh, ot Baturbiys: & Ie. jugksullure und’ Stationurs, 12} . 1) Druwgiet, 038 Cottage Gruvo-nr,, northwest coruve Uhirty-ttth-at. 8 nt Ty Btatloner, oto, 10 west Staduan-sce niger Wantet, eat Sta . : TH BONSIONSHN, Drugiat, 30) luo Tsland-ar, Nowsdontor, and Fancy oar et EHC. dowotor, Oe ETE ATER hat ae averting Agunt, Nowe ig Blatt Topue ss Boat Oi vialone we URUNGH AMS COo'Rrugguty 43 North Ulark-aty coraue Division, ESS: UTY ROAD ESTATE, yor. BAL — FINK DOUNLE STONE-FRONT house, Jot 60 feet front close to Lincoln 3" {(oce sain Bnevain, TTT Walenta Dearbornen {Ok BALE-DESIRATIL TOMES ON TH WEST Bide cheap, $100) to $10.00. Hf, POTWIN, Washington-at., Jtonm 45. Prost HUSINESS BLOCKS IN HUSI- no ‘oat puch n low price that one will BOON 10 per cant Incrensa on pica asi PY xeton Nitty fienteat at = fAancrilice and on easy toriny; BNCIT, Prilelo-wv., twoon Fifty-necond and #ifty-third-ata. at a geent bar- gain, ena) five acres on Soventy-fttheat., near Guplea nnd ener, & THLOMASSON, Tit Denrbornat. COUNTRY. 30) ESTATE P Oe BALOO HY. T. 0. BOYD, LOOM 7, Iv MADI- amen #14 e-Atalf down=8A-nera farm.with fino doling, barn rohan, running water, hedya fence, one mila from Chillienthe, Poorin County, Hl: 20 neren uncor cultiration, palaneo ilratcelass timber, "rhe owner water: all under 01 Joree timber, ‘hiss an oloyant farm, und anions the hontit society, £1,1)-Ken)domn#0-nera farm five miled from depot in Emnghani rnty, Til; all under coud fence, Mixty Beres undar 7. balaneos timbor; new frame And “ood stables nnd corn-crihs, ANTED-IEA 1 WITH DEN und machinery, tin country town having ou NK faviiltios, for n itrmteclias pluw works of al to Famnclty by x party of throe plow-takers, Ad- 24, Tribune alice, TEENY \ deer D=t Wisit VO WY ACRE F je city nt cash prices. “Would juln another ne KHOU barualn, and make cash payment, 0) fF Dearborn-at. 3.4 WANTED-MALE HELP, Bookkcopors, Clerks, &¢e. WANTED =< IN WIHOLRSALM FUUNtSIING woods house, an onergotia youn man who has somo knowiedgaut hooxkeoning and willing ta Tinka himealt xoneralty useful, ‘Mist haya undontted rote erence, Salary to start #7, 18s "Trimine ofice, WANTED -Ex PentiiNcED DRY GO0pS ENTT Borg grR, AbnIY, by iottor to CARSON, PL ee CO, ‘and state what eninry expecta: ‘Trades. WANTED@A FIRST-CLASS CARIIAGE-1 fab lieawn’s Novelty Cagagn: Nunta ou diatorne WASTED Goon Tolow Waite sonD- gins See naa eee ct * a Apply tu CHIGBEN, BEXTON & CO, Nos. TU te wi Erle-at., Chicnyo, Ii Employment Agencica. WVANTED Sin Woob-cHrompecta AT at a e co if Bouth. CHIUSTIAN & CU aH South Waterton TMiscollancons, WARTERONE Oh TWO GENTIAMEN oF bustness oxporionce to assist me in placing 200 copies: (yeaa tad of wie latoricat Jteginter. Goud rot= gnees required, Avply, to KIUEDELICI C. COU, Manager, No.3 Poruand Block. War A ae rea BPE : my sample free, Merrill M'te Co, Ubiich block, Uhtenzos WaASTEDSADPSMEN Fore Grry AND COUN- Uy veho enn influence trade amongst druxntain, confectionors, brewers, and liquor deniers, elther on aninry or eominission, Address A 66, Trluune altice, VWANte ey hii TASTINGS HOUSF, 0 AND i Hast Adnms-at., a man to wash windows: gid buttd thres.% inn used to tint kind Of work pro> ferred. BEX, writ WANTED TALE HELP. Nura ANTED—-A YOUNG ‘0 TAKE CARH n ‘Of inbySmonths ld and to travel. Appl Woottunhisten ni: el Apply as HY Or, ROVERTY—ITAVE A aru: demand for houses, tite, and ateres. wi we make West Hide property a apecinity. Vropert Fented and-renta euliectad at reannnble rites, GHC BINS Dwieites etitmutan und Hniated __ FO 3 cian AN RLEGA FORY, AND BASE. whestone front funve 1 Onturinest., ern Improvements, GOODEN, SHELDON ACU, avuthweat corner Clue Miscellancoun, BY BAIRD & MILADLEY, 9 LA we BOUTIT SIDE, TH Calumat-av. Aentury nnd tascmont atone front, is 5 6H Wont Washington-st, 2-starr and basement belek, 8) modern mmproremont: ate, ba emgnt brick, a. G21 South Tab Ht Clybournep 17? Sedawick-st., teat tluor ns Improvements, 5D. —BRCK DWELL nd cold Cink) wat conventent to station at Summoeria on Rood. Rent tow to good tenant, 1, GREER, ‘Mudiaonent Went Side, TPO RENT-ONH FLAT CONSISTING OF FIVE. pleasant and deastrable rooms, furnished, for Ronavker except Hnun and china; rent €5 per month, ene Axhiind, NT-110 PHL WEEK. WEED TIGITED, ly furnished roumis to ventlemen only; warn OME MtiMCLO, iti Sint TPO, RENT-STONN I ANI 213 WATASIT-AV. Tour tory und haxemant, hore power Bax Snaine ready go min on top toor, ‘Terms will bo n saitetnctury, Apply to A. 1. ANDREWS & CO. Wabash, Mincellancoun, HAND SMALL WELL LIGIIT- mn fucturing: wwer and vlevawes. uth JomTerwat at FOUL FLOULS WITH 5 und 7 Weat Washington-st. TEAM RW. ipo a powers a Kane. eS WANRTEDOTORENT. WaAstep—ro “nes 4 Olt FOUR Fult- nilshed room, with kitchen, east af Rute, xouth of Fourteenth, and north of Trentyscuhtliertnn Ae Fensounble low rent, by a ratclass tenant, Address 2%, Uribuno omee, TANTED—TO Lot najoininic pane ot ndjolniii power, w buildin addres 4 TANTHD—T0 TENT Touma, fur housekeopin, Court-Touse, on elthor | Nari whout#l dilross 1418 Tribune RENT—FIRST AND SECOND With 1-horsu power: or yacant here awner will put Up Zestory. ‘clio often, ‘ADOUT FIVE, within one: mile of OF South Bilv, for oftice. =a AueAD OF ALT Cont] 1) iL ORGAN, ch ofall, “Can bo cold on ine ementa in these organs that ned. W. AW, KIMMAL Aa, Corner Bite sind Aduins-ats. At Maltmonts, 3 {nail othor mak NEW Store A Jus’ 4 PUPOLAT RIMD ATL PIANOS, OVER 4,00 NOW IN USE" NY dean ares UPRIG UTS Ay 1D ARES, Corner Stuto wud Adnineais, KEI BROS, “D® PIANOS,” noid 9 great lartist recontly, “are the Joominig plana,’ They ure to ait others. 1 nee thom when obs \ BLORY SE os Be aig acon 38) and IW Stature, yestx hava no equal. extends entire ans ary ON iM. ‘Sho sweet, eve tuner of nu Extes lotten mistaken for th Jor tho p u Invest in oe Hess atte, |v Jolotaatny aan” or quite, us Tul Role Ag 1S und 1 Siute-wt MAtuesnek PIANOS fedder (uogreeinrity. tterited AMIDA hive proved tho n nal ever Invented for the plano tort STORY, & CAMP, Sole Avonte, 183 anid Lad Statu-at, havo on warld- Thete ma Srony s caste PIANOS AN lara tho heat je atraments In Chicaga, Wo ally warrant then. We ew any of aur qoods on lensy Insualimenits, AND ORGANS rived in Stat dont, i WANTED-MALE. Mookkeepern, Clerks, &c. SITUATION it ea, A SUMS T CLARE: i anien rs’ oxperlence, A No, Tribuny oftice, TUATION hookkee rade, Good r SUTIUVATION WA: p—Y A COMPETENT AND relianle man pet roars experience ns bookkenper ierin this ells. Firsteoluas Tefurencess Ade South Dencrborn-st. LY A GENTLEMAN IN, taf reforcnces ns to ablie 5 1b 1, “I'ribune onice. ‘Trodea. ITUATION WANTED — DY A FIRST-CLASS $ lundsenpe wunfeoner, praction cbvlt ‘aaincer aed tlorist, to take chance of puulte or private arounds or fF. 010. Fitat-class references. trom private, rid Unlted States enuinger oflicora. Adurose V. HEINER, Rock fedund, ¥ ED—ny PItACTIONLS per of 13 years’ experince in the lumber Address ASS Tribune office, GS EEATION WANT SY ahnrdwurestore. 15 Wy and eharncter, Addo: VANTHN—NY A COMPETENT MAN aking pow?or, dr yy ieee id ton yeurs uw mumufacturer. , Addross 3: eS ie i sriva: WA? 5) to munufactire nd biuotn i, Tribune Miscellaneous, WANTED-RY A_GEILMAN BOY, 18 GituaTion q who wishes to learn some good trado, ) yeare Adilress &4) Noblu-st, GINUATION” WANTHD-IN ANY CAPACITY. bs re thy services of nn experienced ofice man would be useful, srillinig to work. hurd for vary mode erate aninry, evs Al. Adress A tH), Tribune. SITUATION WANTED—TO_COMMISSION MBIt- dD chitta, pucker ete. by «competent. business oy a responsible comnereint position; advor= who Is conversant with srvern) Ianwuages, tins & gO onnection in Europe, and could work up a prof> Hable tide with sovaral countries. Firat-cinas tef= need. Apply to 1, 203 Muson-st., Milwaukee, WI TOATION WANTED—AS TRAVELING SALES- mun; lumber preferred. _C i, Trine office, SITUATIONS WANTED—PEMALE. Domestics, ITUATION WANTED-BY A COMPETENT SY porsan tis conk ur housokeeper Ina private fame fiy, "Penne enti nua Divislonest. art of references, WANTED-RY “A FIRST-CLASS ral utrt, Amortean. Heat of references frum Call Yor two days at 39 Grund-boulevards At D ge Tast pole No poatuist Mouackeepers, g GUUATION WANTEDOLY A PERSON OF YD Inrze expertence ns honsakeepor for a widowors Thaulre of J, M. PORTER, 1 Bryan Block, Employment Agencita, SITUATIONS WANTED-FAMILIES IN NEED OF 1m good Seandinnytin ur German female help can be supplied atG, DUS: ‘8 offen, 1 Milwaukee-ay. BOARDING AND LODGING. ‘West Sido, WEST MADISON-ST.—SITELDON-COURR Hiutel—Bonrid and furnisheit room can ve had, 503 North Side. NONTH CLARK STREET, FOURTIE pooy 7 from the trldgo rant ranis eit Bose, fier Weeks withaue boar #1 £0 Be ne WMotel LARENCE HOUSE, CONNER BTATR AND TLATY Ten equines fou bideks south Uf Palruor Mauro , oar and rooms ay, j per week, roa rdishou rons ronted withoe bonne BR i, ST WARHINGTON-BY.— “Down nunin, Single room und boned, Hi te fi. Rees taurant tle 1 niealy, 810, 'Vranstents, $a day, FARWELL MOUSH-PAIRTIES WILO ARK IOUK= tna for coud huvte whd a pleaannt place to bowrd, should not fail to examine the Farwell House, conor of West duckson and South Halstedeste, 'Nranslunta wlko accummodated, N.W.—Only four Diocks west of the river. Pere an HUE south a few olngle roumin, winter, Wal WICK-W iE TAVE TWO Bla png roomie for gon nnd wits wlan, 4 Ute tim to lueata for the Now comer uf Congress-st. ne Gyaa ds HOUSE. 10 AND 18 HAST ADAMSe st.—Well-furnished room, with board, from iwi por week. ‘ransionte $1.28 to $1.0 per day. AOR MWOUSK, W D 3 STATEST.. RIGUT OF- posite Patiner Houso—loum and board, 8 to 47 par week: $1.04 por a NG espectanto locality with somo Fe muure thera are no other Ho lady can make boreulf gone. payment of board. References inde in advance If necessary. ich must be moderato, wien, 1. C. enilly useful in part und paymonte rede MBA mn eb Pe SON Ie, Wait BUSINESS CHEANCES. ° ESTABLISHED It YEARS—A ARB. to buy or rent an old-cstabliahed carriage n Uusinesss geod dwolling house in consiruos CORE lave: rowsin. Iishealth of pruprlotur. Ad~ WM, DOULEDTLE, Richland, Knlutuazoa, Mick, by “nex ¥ ACU, a Movkn be bt sold, and exchungud, J, Ey KIMBALL, 125 Washington-0t., Root 13, POR SALECHAVING DURCHASED MILE BUILD Inga nnd lunds intoly bulonging to the Reale Come buny, wo offer uur factory und’ lund fur sule, with or Wiligut n 2i-horag-power engine and boiler, shutting, Ae, Cis property te wall ntuated for manufacturing and fur nil at a low price, POWELL & DOUGLAS, pmnufacturory of puups ond windinills, otc, Wout eras por CCOUNT OF SICKNESS, A Iuerwtive tu uAtapla article of consump. don, fd. _Adurass 1) 40, ‘I'rivune. prot gar. KAPIMEAT MARKED IN GOO runnlig onder in, good Jocation, with ioud cus! (rudy watubllhod, Cheap rout, Adiiroas 18 2, ‘Tribe une ottica, A WHZ0NA“OTION Fol ial Vo MARE #00; ZA mongy returned (fe opion not aecoptody securl: Hex deposited Inu Chivago banks numberof eptlons to tin investtadon xolicited, Mi, BLT Mow 8, 16d Lat Balleont, ES MADE ON DIAMONDS, WATCHES, dh ote, at ongchalf brokars mites, U, LAUNDEIG Toomsd and, TAtindulpneat. Batabliahod 1h Ast N NEPUI t ut onu-half thy Usual rates, 1 ON FURS Vroom 1, ¥ AMOU: attire, pintius, ute, without ora Hh NY AMOUNT TO LOAN ON FUNSTTDIIE A 2A plans without removad, 5 Randotanest., 1 Cane VAID FOR OLD GOLD AND RILVER— ¢tunuy ta loam on watdhon timate ad vali: SMLN'K Loan guid Overy duinoription, wt Clas Wied diegnsu), 3'iust Mulisonat Bata Moxey TO LOAN UPON REAL F at Tol uma to wi, C.IL PERKY, Room 4 Batio-nt. N ONRV TO TOAN ON CITY DIPROVED Prone erty in wins to mult, Apply ot Union rust Come Vearburtiteatte GOOD” FAUM PROP: Wy Rowen 8 oe TO LOAN ON IMPROVED FARM $90,000: linaieand iowa. "Aone tw hi SPANLEY & DICKENSON, Wand 11 Washingtatent, errr nn MES CHLL AN ECO Pep MEAS AND COCK ON ENTEMMINAT- i by cantract (warrun me Sor pale, Cull ornddrows A, OAICL coum OVON-T WUstEY NOTIFY Abd, PAIRS enlist purchusinn a corti noid wf EA in favor eA Aiarga Ge at! AE ts otha i rene ufuve to EAA US aaRHR and rut oy th ONIGEMIRE BMITITE OFNTKIL 1OtKE NOW pevaclie Mater Altany atd frends bugle to eal Moapocttally, SUCK 83L Feit : RuMbsrATis— Stns. 's. A Car Wantiants A parMAuent cura to thay nufurlug with ehotmie itm oF nournusia. Conaultntion trea. tos Wubash-iv, OPS EEOC HAY BIS WANED, 4 INTHILEST fund tags nish Zoot Pare Ray aiiaed of woturunco. Address FAISIEIL sibune onic, Wit, BUY THE ENTIRE STOCK OF A 4 Mopartment stora complote, Worth, $00 ta $40; coxh nuley Inet year $1100; In one of the best lu fplitten tut the vity, “ust af references glvan. Ah 7 o tiitlea. * TO KO00—A. GENTLEMAN WISI. Anu to purehinag an Intergst as wetlys, ab the ubove amount Ino Rout, sbiinhedt mun facturing Ou ness In Chicige, Address ¥ 6, Teibung ofieg, svi full natu und partlealirs, & SIONAL, Ee nro ny PARKS, CHICAGO—CONSUL purxonally or by letter, on ehpunig junto or fetualo dineusos, Curus warranted. Miveat Ulustroted book oxtant, 695 yu beautifully bounds, freneriplons forall divans. rie, 6 postal. LANs SHNSION ON HARTH— A rhonguty inedieal treatiye, indieating how construed disa: UUElos. muy bu removed, ‘he axperiunes of QU youre study, observation, ahd professions! practice, shows ing the agoncles that will insure restored nuahond, stronuthesed vita: that have been i bY GvErtAxML power, A, atringn, and of thy tweand ktatament of ubataeles to try wnteit hoy enn bo rotaved iy mut Se eure ey ‘ar pusuizo seamins, “AWUEaS fury Masou Anatorty und Seinen gi slthon ys New Tare TANGE. (PO EXCHANGH—A HPLENDID WERIDENCHE AT L Hivorsidos hnprovementa contiwo yours usu $l woll loentad, two blocks af depot, Jane groun clung, Want hua of Norils Slsadurl Sarin. - fio cere farin i luwa, a mutica wost at btiselasiynl ulvai catttyatla, x all under e bik state of es cont gui THON cont Wantelty or quod suburbay prope erty in oxelt 5 A Wiconshy farm, hinprovod, and stocked; wortl, Tivo wn iat oF escape large ist uf exc sRIRFIN & DWIGHY,- uuu nineeteala, G Corner Washt race 2a ONS eased a RABY ID THE SIMPLE eed ota dipiunas ue Powe es r Byatgul. By WUTLIL BAL Varlure ds Statoeate ae yan EDA LADY TO GIVE ONK LESSON A Ridin 1S Wey enutte piloos ok MULES et Bly “a WHE A ALD FOr GAsT-orr KCB, ‘Stato-at, Uy Myitoniled tart Metabltabed Tanke OF Ws DRY AN EXPERIENCHD NUSINFSS than, with amplo cupltal, an interest in ni ve dwblished Jobbing of numnufuctirlig business: ali coi. iy a commdentint, Addrosy, with full particu« SSS wenan PEINEING TIATRIRIAL. BECOND-HAND | 81 KPROTYYS niotul, complete, und putin guud ure at this ottice, WASTED A Fins ‘Weather OF soporute. forse moist wolah teu! A to LAG Bas suund, kind, und tne stopper, ‘wos avatod Tight envy harnoss. state your A rar Uihor;, ok will rds good ba ti " uy bitrate. ross for five dass, A BY ‘Tribune allen, GATH Ov SMitSLineiNitte OV A Pacey GMantor dtradu, Nue ilie GH. Mos _BUSINESN CARDS. A, Gitnent! cliichan Adniou tuor'th vanes pees rns, vatihy ‘a \- uve. Wislodes qulvtly aud legally transuorod =" d SILT AID 20H -ADLES AND Gi RH ‘ a dais Ginoruddroun 1 HUNCH Ste biG Benton ee cen SOR BALES JU SALK-~-A COMPLETE FUL PLB OHI: i Fa Dolly und BuAday ‘luau for tha Fearn arg und isa, A eoinplote und valuable record of pol ica und other wyouta at ry ‘triuny ofiea, SAE Sere Ue whan SEOMAGH, [ORES TAGES Nox TT AND MAE 6 Van ttureu-st, 0: 1 Ui Tallabio; for furniture and worchmulldey arene, oar gun CHORIN ft ‘ Mune prarenuuin, de Oc& G, PAU. La We hanes JALOCUFION—A CLAWS IN WiOCUTION AND Fe eitkapuerouh foul, “undue aaa ayes wit in next Wednesday, Jan. 1h at Oiginh and Thiet Mlitbeats spleen Ab the Acadumy, fe ieaysee'ye Sittiauny't iis y oow Mey cahen uF pass aulony tuprayes ., Bre ee eons ear ee ee ne tier -

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