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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1880. | a gran Ae t é i . rT " fainted tn bites far beyond tho truth, Music, | sands undor which Uo the dently potson and | matter, mind, morals, and spirit,—oach depart- | tho allegation that he was a good Christian when t 1 ; RELIGIOUS. to uunloaa tho listener 8 protty lov dover Mond | fine holiest of thourts, will oven attempt An ty | fateful malndion go destructive oh tumnn ite | mene “olniining dln’ apcolal. aiudonta,-phya- | he wrote “Common Ronse". toll to ha aro an CO Eullovr Ito okie aoe at LO D8 oe | § lyric ode npon drink, and sane, paints don of drunkenness or of tufamy that | Opportunities for helping litte children in tho | loists, payobologiata, moral acfonttata, and | Tho Chicago critles of Ingersoll and Palno Und | tories, i MULE ereing. . s 4 von will think it a part. of the world’s beauty, | day of thot birth. and helping them throigh | theologians. hose four departments were | displayed every vico known to controvoray, —$——— re ; “ Whon Tdrink J fect I fool y (i Mey be a 7 it vA at f nowt zen, And if you are thowghtlesa your knee will bow | childhood and youth, and guldiig men In middie | artrmed to bo equal realities by minds of | They had resorted to angry vituperation ‘and MORE WAI-C \ Prof. Swing Preaches on “ False ions of povtie zen), he | tots i wtoeattp while te teumpetand ditel~ | life and comforting the oned and tho helpless. | the widest girth. ‘Tho largest eraniumns | atroolons perversion of feta. Yet, In tho opin VAR-CLOUD, i He but the world hna never quoted hia poom mg * | iner stint sounds bul if you rend this stary | The very glanco of this mun’s eye, the oxpres- | and tho heavylost brats, by netual welght, had Jon of thoxpenker, religion In Ita trio Kengo eines * Ornaments” in Religion out experiencing well-defined contempt for | tint and human life nvivht, sou will etep | ston of his countemmer, and tho ‘tones of hie | been those of thoologiths, DME nny’ one bellove | would autor nothing from tho uprising of #keps | yoy and Herat—Ituant sho rentiment nnd for Pe a nalde from tho mreat curchantment, and ack sone voleo have powor to hel ‘cholo groupe am eant- | thom any more apt Lo, Hie Hecolyed thin tho | tlalan, and! tho Inveatimation of falsehood anil Ne Sark tree tl Peraty an origin, un cits 1 6 teneh you to wMestof nen, women, and ebiidrea In a mo. physicists; qiiathy foolish wits 1o oO whe | error would resu jn the und] ol ie i yas! ‘4 i and Life. Tee ee ene A omtor “hours tho | AeGat Houesyed salltunda Wid TOT re ienalee: | mentor time.” flow muen more, then. his gene | batared ail accopted rtandards in tho solenes of | Hgbt, and justico, 4 With the position and history of Herat, i, fouaty oF sone Is eH a to orate ame hood and the sweoter decorutiona of a truth, ora! bearing ind courne at netlon. Andespectitty fanttor, tnants) nad min bait le tho ono who re 4 England te now willing to abandon tame j “ithe Opportunities of the Physician” | graaurnaneia ant Her lb alot acc peak, han | Maehorhcrmauteaeee te ASME ot | Rea Aen Woe ind tS ey | | INGERSOLES ERRORS, | alee hace drawn te ewont ts eran | b Dr, Cl Tne Tuto for determining the rine of a work | OAM, Ne Tie cite and sont Inthne aim | hasa tight to appropriate and admiulster for | of latgo beuda of modern times, COL, COPRUAND, OF INDIANA, twlco within a gancration, wo have alesis L Is tho Subject of Dr. Clen- in arta book ar an oration eM PGE SE p piece | hte drapery whieh will bo better toemarrow thin tho Alleviation of human Mla aud the comfurtof | tha | ano | having made motu | ecloned | dellvored a tectiire upon tho errors of Col. dealt. Our renders muy bo further Interesta}; j dening’s Discourso, Of eatin nC Wt a A | Lele tomdtays and will bring mo ton wenvo without | Wis fetta a nom opportumition come | Lieety ihnammahowed chat woneliots ot Nature | Morell toa full congregation yesterday oven Tower tormhioh i fe pronaced to ergcae ty i einbinzonry In whieh we are making our morus | TeHROts. a pnt gre sur that all these oppor Toe sone | Meera hanmunlourcand atte man woud tear | iat tho First Christian Churoti,on tho corner | Lower to which it ls proposed to cede the city i ‘i ingrtudy. When tha must ts sounding loud and PR. CLEND ENING. tunity of tho physician? Some inen scem go | of the supernatural ho must consult tho Wonl | of Twenty-ffth stroot and Indiana nvenne. Hee SER and upon tho Central Asian ay, © Disousston by tho Rov. afr. Willinmson | greet ine steer wen ‘nak what, thos THE PHYSICIAN'S ONVOUTUNITY. to thine, ovens aan, phyatelan, nnowr | of Gua, Want, should by An of ue Ie a ae, | Upon bola Introduced to his ailloneo by 1 | a an ae ata will show, omen “ : sthug marching for in gil thatr : 7 f mn t 4 t ~ | Rov. Georga Sweeny, Col. Copoland sntd that ho soe ae ecvtat noe ia rt ried Brine bana anodes vetigf0n Ue | mo tor, 0 Clondoning pastor af tho ane. | Howard and ak, wade the, oat ea | the NM IPS Teagan UAE: | wee nota instr ora mombor of any tre, | Arua, the Aro ves Hong nota ‘ Infidellty. Andit thoy aro trying to mate muste sec up or | ly Aare i Mee ea rene. | sloo mu with sich klorlons possibilities before | erning them? Newton was pretminent not | and that be did uot propose to proach or in ny plunBea, At its mouth Is Teblkistir, almontg £ Repurwbad candidate for iliac, or if the | ing aermon yesterday morning before tha stu- | fim! “Can you compute the value of tho mifece | oniyas a nutural philosopher and mathoma- | othor way meddle with tho work of tho preach- | enat aud directly above Herat Is Mery, the iter 1 imaate feaqounehng prize-fght, it ought to Menta ot {iabnousaun odes! Cotteyo, taking ns | thon of ene tuimin an? He na, thon multiply | Heian, ut as a theologian who reealvedl the | ore, Ho wns wot an infitol, but, wisn trove of Moora's pour, tie some 300 mlles wana , a ry he mado by cl . xt itt Value by athousand, Ca you estimite the Yort of God aga supernatuml creation, Any ri . y 2 * | | ‘Tom Paihe’s Critics Roughly Crite | Bye My tae Canto eae tower: | MET oea phyelotan, but | Wurtmor ike happiest one hauschold? ‘Thon | one war at liberty to bun tree-thinker tn anys | thinker, claiming that ho lind a eight to uso fully of Ihiva and 24) miles north ut Herat, ont ‘ A whisky ginss nnd a prizo-fght cannot bo ay that be whole necd not A pbysioing bat | increase that worth uthousand-fold. Can sen | thin eT ho was he to ho such by | tho powers of reason with which God hud en- | Civan roud from, Meshed to Khivu and i icised by the Rev. Mr. A ee feta mmenins winieerce. When wo | Mer that ure sick. Malt tr 1. tose | decide po tho importance of one Maman Tite | Feasuh of having. vast. knowledge Here | dona him. Since he had atartod out teeuuring, | Luft Ut, Wus ones’ one, uf, tho fntetnpent i Applebec. think thoy are, we aro dazzled Uy afalen dIeDIOY | ore my end wie: enum antl unite iin, GO Aby } proservel a ecora wr murc of sents? Lf eo, then | What wae tho nvemtua nara mn eo ieRe | ho’ hnd got to Uo nated ns a qood don! of 1 tho: Pera Sulenhsrvespeotihyr ng gat ! aa ae at artevoy ducks of patnted wood,—awim | ASs thy gon liveth. —John, to. ai, Intensity fiat fuiportance a thousand-fold; Ad | Dut faith In tho diets of Nowlar Iterechol ety | nenthen, and ho intended to make his reply to | dynasty, von Iu titer times, dvspltorge tt i sii ROL Ceny eK OTA Cworieo given | Noman ean rend tho Incident of which tate | eee eit tate etl ea ean harent ape | history weresinply those Who Delloved In tho | Lob Ingorsoll from a puraly:henthon standpoint. | Perimances, uf fia contig Tf wa io 8 0 flourishing - Bob Ingersoll Reviewad from a Honthon | to nll high ¢ rs, ina world where tho natural | Intter Scripture gives partin! history without | proximation of tho viluo In those directions of honeaty of whnt Grate had written abot, the town, surrounded by bouutitnl gurd t Tn opening the reply ho sald that in his opine | for tholr fi Slice th cas famoyy } i hatte red, man—will bedeck tlmself with | haying bla attention nrrested and his heart | dio opportunity of the phyaleian mensured by | subject. ‘There were, Hkawise, no froe-thinkers ortholr frutt, fliteo the Uabeuks sacketir, } Standpoint—Revival at Hyde Feathors and ribbons, and will daub bls fee wil | sroneg, Pho stcknesd of tho child, tho agony | tho Boar ae te ey erid at Is tho.trie | In ionulish or American history, or in mnths | 0% it woaa matter of congratulation not only | tho bewinning of this contury, It has ateattiyast or with bri; aint, we must still attspect ene, el " onsibitity ly i a that thoy all lived in un age when peoplo wero | clined, though It still hus a population 9 over with bright jiaiit, sy eet mensuromont. What [tho responsibility of this | niatics, or In eareely any of tho arts or selenices, $000 Sima t Park, inn fong after ho has edased to be n savage and ) of the father, tha startling ery" Bin coo down | man treciitige nll were cuntent to bellave tn tha hone | allowed to think as thoy Ikod, but also belonged | ME BN oan of Mery : dat OTE curate nud Again avhutie {ho sitnpie dew | oro my child iio,” tho given assurance of recov- | "'Siall 1 bo thought an enthitsiast, or to | caty of thoopintons put forth by those who were | to that country whoru this freedom was allowed | util isl that any Meg oe ays ta nag e, Nr Cr tier the dccoration, Whntdo those feathors } ory, ave all of sich character ns to Interest and | exugyorate tho truth, In asserting | thut | experte, ‘Toro wera scoming freo-thinkers In) to’ Its fullest extont. Ho wanted to otijoy this | with Central uy temo Ae tt ttt conncetiog : FALSE ORNAMENTS, and that point stand for? Is tho mana patriot | oto any ane who has the heart of a man, if alt that, has thts far beon Indented | medietno and law, but It was to be observed tht | jorty in tho orlticiam of Rob Ingersoll, Uitlomntu caerespondontos avec tt gts la ( SENMON NY PROF, SWING. orn gaged, Ts hou philanthropist or ts he a ine Tdi g tmohtent and othors of | could bo reallZod and nict tn the oxperienco aud | when danger came thoy rought tho doctorar the | iPemy in Ce kel man ok Nat alee vk ma | Senin aiid tl jeneg, After tho captury \ Prats BW ON RY IMOF, BING. nig at | ventore Or iene a remurkably” Kind neighbor, | | Hapoctiliy should this incident and ethers of | Work of tha phymietun, and ho stop thera, he yet | lawyer without, loas OF tine, What folly. thon, | Of genial spirit, great wit, and possessing tho | Of Kellva and Clo watehoms, Fuld upon an eg a tise ¢ Toni fn tal his toxt: nnd aro those fenthora set up to tell where those | Ike nature bo of interost to the matt whose pros | falls to cultivate aad davelop one of tha largest, | to be freo-thinkers In the Chriatian ‘ovidences | ability to carry away with him tho foclinga of quepsnent an Ey romney Gen. Kevshanottyy, 6 Contral Churoh, taklng.au bis toxt: virtues nro enshrined? Theso nro tho questions | feasion onlls him to hear tho ery of distress, the | and richost, and most {important dopartmonts In | unless possessing Vast resources of Information | hundreds of people every tine he made an ad- | wanton attuck would Teta eee ase tat At what thing yobearthosusind of the corn that will often Jay low a tuimense qQintsty Of | an whoea work {nlite ts the rellot of the auf- | his fleld of opportunity. on which to bage such free-thinking. dress, ‘Tho spenker bad be ttielsed: by: Tne |; Will nw bo necessnrys” ih i cilia war, "Up ;} Sute, harp, sackbut, psultery, dulelmor, and ll | devoration, When Henry of Navarre told the fering and tho healing of tho diseased ldo TO DORE atthis hour to argue atlongth Tt wns commonly rai by free-thinkors that i penker en cri ry In- Ptlone nine iio rarer O have oye. : sinds of music, yo Tall down and worship the | goldfers that, fn miist of tho noise and dust of iw and ie . tho truth of the Christian religion, Iathor, Las | Christianity and tho Chtirch were one and tho | xorsoll’s bellevers on tho ground that some Poe oS ark acon Gane ns for inany. } vikden tmige that Nebuchadnezzar the King | the initio thoy must follow his whito plume, ho This miracle, togothor with tho Seripturo first | sume its verity, and, thoreforo, ita divinity, | sume inne He'desired to show that thoy weru | of tho utternices of Ingersoll which ho criticised ahd ‘wo alall fad saree sensi and inthe a aul set up.—Danlel, (fl, d muddenty taticht: the meaning of ormmen’, for | road, teade us naturally and cnally to tt consider+ | Mut'smorni nature is na redias tis mentalor | not. identical, even though Voltufre, Patne, | worn nover muda by the gront orator, | Merve whict will undouttediy lout iced? tte i Whon aState and religion nro united, ench | bencuth the white plume, whut a heart that wus! | ation of tho work and opportuulty of the phy- | physledl. It is no moro certuln that the stomuch | Draper, Togorso)l, and the reat would huve Hap: ) With regard to. thishe would gay that Mr. In- | tons'wit England.” — Tho yeitietdag grea 4. -Yarlation of religious bellef sn motinca to the | And upon whnt a grand orraud Was thoremblom | aian. Wo mein tho opportunity growing out | Wants broad and Is eatisiled with ft than that the | peat, fo. ehristiniey aa beer ace wich tae | Korea dhatigod lig utterances with each leature, | rug,” Four ents before, the. Eustace : eatablished Government. If n new thouzht | Gy auirago the young ennnot lonk ton careful | of sis profession for tho Accomplishment of | OTHE AOLITO Wilts Ca Tt aiving | pellof-and omy. ao far us the Church had lived | Nowa lectures of hig, upon the muno wibdce’ | attehoran Bad suguestod that tho Hussane i should arfae “it might beconte the basivof a new | ty into tho ren facts that may exist far under’] great and destrable resutts,—results affecting | arrangement within ourselves and without our | up to that Idea was tt Identical with Christianity, | Mr, Ingoraoll apenk at South Tend upon the | munteations a srOSS {HO Coser t Ere ee com party, and that party might become nt Inst so | thoexterunl ¢lare and nose, Leis now afirmed | pingelt, those to whom ho ts called to minister, | felves, we. nny substitute tho word Natura for | | It hud also beon ral that the Bible was tin | ‘Error of Moses,” and that ho had hundreds of | tothoOxts, and. after sume. tril the Caepiag Dye Gaon Protestant Ae omnrte a cho Hoar Feu: mute UF the pxeceetnl Futon, (ets Mt may bo anindirest, yot mrealand potent, | MA{ESt OF Tree ee Oi Tint such | thie immornt book to tho falunds of tha rea, | VRE tne bean Kald on tnnt oceasion, Attrek, following tho course of that " 3 i and palin ban Of simple, st, spir! Influence, He thought Mr. Ingosgoll was wrong in fuding | river eastward sand t Teeacleth fautit witi'tho Dible’on neemunt Of fie nao. Ie | AMS, (he the direetion “Ur storm te was the shibboloth of inodorn inildels to allude | is not more than four mareies “Wel to this book, written 4,000 pons Ago, as musty | tho Oxus and within ten of Herat,” and ira and fusty, and unworthy of eredonco In this nya | added that the formation of such i route woul of rallronits, and telegraphs, and general prog- | afford (“matter for serious constderattoy ¢, rest, ‘Thoy held Hata hook written inthe days | Persia," though no suggestion wis male tate of tho ox-cart and tho dug-out could not net ns | could In any direct way fffect tho lnterests of a law In these duys of steum-plows and eteum- | Hngland. Insettiing the Afghan frontiora boats, Tho spenker held that It wos tine | on tho Russiun Forolen OMlce authorities ex. powiiie fornn oninipotent and Immutable God | pressly domanded that Morv should be left outs obe expected to provide one code of Jnws for | side tho boundary, the ground alleged being the people of the days of tho dug-out andan- | that tha place was becoming “ commercially othor code for those of, the days nf gnechintedl | iinportant” . progress. ‘Tho very fuct that tho lsws now 4,000 Tho first serlous movement towards Mery was yo ald were as applicable to tha gitinco of | mado last your, Late In Juno Lizaret’soxpedle human atfalrs to-day ag whon promulgated was | tion ngalust the ‘Tekke Turcomuans left Tehlkis proof of tholr excelicnee which modern inl- and, nftor autfering muy annoyances from delity could not overcome. heat, Inck of water, and defective meansot Tho speitker thon took up the sciontific napect | transportation, encountered tho enomy on the of the question, The Infidels held that sclenee | oath of August near Gook-Tepe. Mal. Francs proved the Bible to_be falsa. Mr. Ingersoll hud | Butler, who hid speut: some months among the claimed In his lecture that ff tho Flood had really { Turcomuns, had predicted: Tho Turcomany covered the earth to tho depth of five miles, the | will probably make tholr first real stand at water n couple of miles above tho earth und sen | Kurez, 0 fortified villigge on tho northarn bank would be converted Into solid feo, Tho speaker | of a‘ rivor, rathor less thi if=was bee showed that sclonce itself proved that thisinildel | tweon KlzlleArvat and Mor substitution “nover hax, does not now, | Ho had only to potas to Madngnsenr, tho brew, hove been bloody and glnful. Thoy have | worth; that amid the sound of cornet, ti! His profession makes him at once n reeng- | and | never will, satisfy | man’a moral Snndwich Islinds,and other furmer home sof can- 4 Veen 80 suspicious Icst nf new thouxht Pe wou dujchnar, “ant tho nrenshee, a nized nuthority, He 16 recived in the commtt- Benaations. ean fgets at arraat auue meen ‘ pital savas teahow: wont At had ER Oot might dovelop a now pity thnt thoy | Peete osnaneo huly religion whe, hind ever | nity a8 aman who bas lven thought and study | tronunea, words, and netons, Tho erent trath | Could ah tintnorel book do this’? Unagine. two : huyo hbnstened' to eheck with ecourges | fived asoberor houest dty,and that when, tho | to many ‘of tho thost Important subjects of | Implied and oxpressed In thls word enils for | eltles,—ono whore tho Immonit book was probity {, or fiames the buddings of any new doe- | enchantnient consed, these thousands found al | tronan interest; ins given thoughtand study | God, und nsserts Goi. If God fs, nnd man's | ited, and the othor where that. pure Hook, “Tho } an trine, It haa been only a few weeks alnce Russia, Bee a EIR hoor aoe ret undersuch clreumstances, and with tho ald of | moral nature ontis for Him, (t being tho giftot | Ave of Kenson,” was | ron : admired, His band, then (t {4 rensonuble to bolfove that He | Which of the two comtnunitics, even for no ns made provisions for the answer of this call. | higher than commercial reasons, would the av- 5 |, ° Whipped to the very cde of denth somo ahwople- Thome Nodoubt much good his vome trom an} such assistance, that. he understands thom. hearted men and women for tevehing a teligion | external show in reltgion, but it will wiways be | When. he speaks upon those interests espcelut- / ‘rhyt anawer fa found alone In the Christian re- | erugo, man and woman prefer te an abiding. slmupler than that of tha Greek Church. Trem- | teua that the best revival willbe that quick one | ly, his word Is taken by aniny at least as | jigion. For in thls rellvion alone iaGod revealed | plice? An experiment among the intnates of 9 2° Mle for rene some new iden i relison arin | Heh to, a tently Win agen | UNM UO Ae ON ee a: | AUN HE aa aos a ven uf Whe | mentored ie ute mie, the Abo eae a ball dL spirit, lend 28 BPEL cuts onde Fy y ud that pure book, Ago of Rea- politics, Russia hos for centuries boen making | Au anitit leading the seul un Beacely te | aicated au reited: nat only toenchoihor bit | fuot that brond, will attiaty, tho sfomiel mad | gan? aero antat fucks thoy chose W book which freo usc of Siberia and the kuout to keep back | {ie words tat will hot geem fatie when vA false | fo almost nll othor anbjects with which'men | movt ita demands 14 ovidency that {was mado | Ind cursod overy younie nin who had aver reud If possibla any yartations of humun opinion. pxeltemont batt bave dled ise es at sald (hat Biase to Hay ihat the man vee ans ator ie for the wtotnnely and the eomach (a ita esti It,-chose It Lead hele, Jaupatat HEUER y rickmnasoys ie not become y in Li] hese wi inva Very = grent Cl y the tho reveli a of Gad 17 ic of Beet Sate of doctrines aa thoes whl our highest buildings or towers, because they | nuthorits in ovety ollier department, Look, for esas CHFIAC will sutlaty tho mort pint oe anni Fite Ab Soueeria ot ene Teens : h f'wetfare in | cgcenddag ty day with tho rising wally: but | a moment, uta partial Ust of tho subjecta with | hetug und meet. ita demunds, 18 ovidence that | ‘The reverend gontloman related nn Instance of have reference to human temporal welfare in| ghoutd you and T suddenly yo up 100 fect wo | which tho physician 1s Aupposud to be con- | tho moral nature was: made for thls | gremurkuble conversion from Inlidetlty to we Ita tighest aengo that {t can tolornte all reliytons. | should turn palo and usk to be led down, In| versant Tho mechunigm of the humun body tn | yovelntion and, tho revelition for this | lef (i the Bible aa tho rovelution of God nad 1s Dur Government, beiry founded upon the com- | spiritual things thoy stand enlinest and happlest | Its normal condition. Ita hundreds of bones ) moral natire. If tho fact that the great law of | much of a supernatural creation 16a star, 1nd mon temporal wants of mankind, stands far ro- | Who have climbed slowly In youth up tho hight. | and muscles. its thousands af herve Ubres and | homeopathy, wsiunilin slinllibus eurantury | is | quito us unexplainable, The tneldent was that moved from tho discords which spring from ro- | U°%, enjoy tho geaud scenery and tho puro uir, | cells, its wonderful clrolutory systems through | efficient In the -heuling of the physically dis. | of i man who, Imugining he had fulton into a icaving ull dizziness and ndesire to go down to | arteries, velna, lymphatics, and vorves: ts | eased, ts ovldeues that It (4 the truth in to fleld | waysile den of thloves, found himself in tho Nglous omotions, sud will never scourge a help- | those whu wero lifted og by stoam to tho now | strane Internal power of crac rteint, thon availa i t ; wilution nad re- } of medieing, thon the greater aud moro impor- | midat of n praying Chriatinn funily. Satan hime i i At wag i tess woman for chorishing a certain bellef in | elevation. Fee ter Pot tentriction, DIKE UP | fntiet toto uelnue ich tae tho rollgion of | seit with Thunker il imanumont resting on his | MTRUInCE Was HONSSNSICHL, ar lt Ton | (ore, {hak thoy confronted tho Tustin : God, nnd will never ecourge or banish aman for |. But as'religfonista can ovor-decorate their | and tenring duwit, ‘Tho velution of honw to | Joatts Chriat will heul tho morally dlsaised. 1 | breast, couldn't have folt moro relieved. ile be- } ‘and should not be eriticised ns such. va ect ste iene ie! 1 deny von the oxistence of 2 Creator. work. and ent. bestow too much thine on tho | bone, of inuecle to muscle, nud muscle to bone, | oyidence tht it (3 tho truth In tho fleld of | came light-hearted, and eventually took refuge With regard to tho theory of evolution, which oes OF amen kited end 20 wounded, Gen, ? ony ing Bvch Shs Uxistenes OF: 8 Erenere Hore a oon too ittioupon. tho inner | and nerve to Ally he. ought te understand: | mornlse. if the fact that a ston wil wot meot | in the Honk whieh had afforded protection to lis | way unctior fond holdar the intidela, whe traced | Jat hta ten Command attye Tnztreirs deata, ; ‘This bloody relutton of Church and Stato.ts | substance, so infidelity. and skepticisin ean | With the eyo and Its strange, Intriette mech tho wants af hunter, is evidonco. that it 18 not | body, and which contd protect hla soul. Fea ee ee ee atou Gs teat ruced | Jed his tranps buek to i Salcon, an tho souths seen {n thls chapter from the annale of Habylon. | dazzle by wit and oratory until the bewildered | ism ns tho orgin of vision; tho ear, with ita po Aitted for this purpose, thon the fact that falas Tn conclusion, the reverond gentleman tool | tye utoms which started It all, the Testor se pet spur of they -onet Dugh, whero tho othor ine i Tho Hebrew cuptives {mported by war from | hearer will nd himself saylng, * Well, of 0 | orto henr: the voor) organs, with thelr wonder- } religions und skeptienl syateins of philosophy | up the taunting Intidcllatio statement that tho | sisted that there must hive been some omnlpo= vading foreos were to rendezvous nnd prepara i Jerusalem bad not yet conformed t@ tho Uaby- | Ht, there ls.no Clog. and man [a higher form | fut ability for apovsn and melon tho bru ut | whituot meet the wants of tho, Inuiman, gut, ix | Chuveh commanded poole, to beltove, and | font power at work to produce these ators, Hee a ely acy ere ae ; m4 a ute . i re an of thou + evidence ure not e 3 jefout | thrent would be eternally damned ft ’ oh wit RY ee i oninn religion, and in the Judgment of the King | Gkeantite worka equally and. in iil dircetions, | nnd ter thousand othor things of tho body ints | forthis purposes ere if they didnt, The Church did no auch ting. | fosuewoine the work of evolution which vin to | the possible appuintnient of a iropoan Come tho timo for religious unity hud come, Tho | If tho brass bands of religion enn sud- | normal stato, this man is understood to” 0 Ne= Tdo not speak temen who aro ignorant of | It waa well known that quinine would cure Siet narand triumpit of meee bee an ing. misston, for tha folsemont of, Persia's northe i flery furnace wos in tho background ns | denly bewlider men und women. and make them | quatnted, fe is then requirod to know, andto | this fact, Thecuriatinn reliyion deca tiring inon | chilisand Cover, but, without faith in itscurn- | Uehaorirer went itoa etreful nnniysia og | fever und Attrek frontige, " ahis probably Aer at tote ns lvoe as | HEH eeagy apne taney | nah ane A | Erm a a ae cu | ie Pane TR a AMG tn | GH fede tH ct | Hr er a oe ' va }e iH rine) fe id SUC: ct I u such a mnntiner as to mect tho deepest yearniny man helleved In Christ, that beltef enabled him prel 0! Rive: ta ¥ iM Xing had fortied quite an uttachment to Daniel | ee ey ie ate ot bevrilder the mises | tho Thiwo of tho posite, the ten thousnud | gna: antisty. thoy highest nsplrat ee or whlch | teluy hold of tho romedsedivinely appointed for the inowwang ee Sha “tritieg of Israels {agsrsall River Attrek takes fia, rise near Mestel ata ‘ and perhaps other Hebrew Chiefs, and, na it | until trey will suddeniy throw away thelr Hible | tines ten thousund neeldents and disvuses to | thoy have oxpettonce or ean forin conception. | tho cure of that mulndy of the soul known a8-| people could in 0 yeurs {nerense £03,NN0,000, Dit mountuin 6700 teot high, of course tn Persian H Beenia from tho etary, ho'dealred, If possible, to | and thelr God, “Most of the machinery whieh ir. | which this body ta subject. With fractury dls- }'rhia religion teaches law and ita penalty: Tt | sin. eo aetna bulioved that the Hitlers busts oF | crtitory. [ithorto the river hig been supposed 1 allure into his Pagun temple thofo new friends | religion derides it lao employs, und having | location, and tumor: with fever. jnilumiuttion, | teaches mun's ner! alcknesd and tho method of | In closing, Dr. Willlamson promised to con- iis to havo {ts aource at Boujdnand, much nearer ! his th i i te lauphed at religion for setting Up a revival ora | and ulcer; with all that thoy represent, together: BY Whom bo was not quite willing to drive, He mourners Neneh, it sete up a oviyal of athelan | with tho means for their repalr and cure, ho Is | finm Sw therefore asked ald from the bunds of musto | and a Inughing beneh, where sudden converts to | to bo as familar as with the membors of od seen Ht * auddun et caloulntion—00,000 fighting mon—did not war- | the Caspian, As tho Russians have wt treaty rant so large total population ns | making the Attrek the boundary between tho Ingersoll assumed thorefrom, and, also, | Cznr's und the Shah's dominions, it was rightly that neceeptitg ot nomuwhat —Jowor | observed nt tho time of Maj. Butler's retum: figure as the true ono [t did not seem unreason- | “The mere fuct that the river rises near the ablo when tho prolife powers of tho Jews, who | Porslan town of Meshed will sooner or Inter have. were not go udvanced in knowledge of u certain [ somo important politienl consequences, for it kind na the yenerations of to-day, wore taken | will give tho Russians a troaty right to bring into consideration. their Crontler close to that Important elty." A groas inistako made by Ingorsall tn his critt- Analliance of Persit with England ‘against visin of tho Bible was tho nasertion that thore | Russin hig not been oxpected,—was burdly tobe were 100,000 mistakes of transintion In the book. | looked for, Persia bud a Conimlssioner with the Tho spenkor did not know how thig was, but ho | Russian expedition of 1870 and Jont it consideni= hud yor to find an Infidel wko was ablo to aasert | bie help in tho collection of wupplics. Only last that tho yital portion of tho Book—that which | Septembor tho Czar ut tho Shih's request or. related to tho mort! regulation of tho world— | dered the manufacturo of & number of ight had beon the lenst bit changed Kinco it was frat | flold-guns for tho Persian artillery and written, If {t was trite that errors had crept in | to gend Russian artillery olllcers to organize the in the tranglation of what waa not vital in tho | force, aud almost the [ust mall nowa which wa book, was it reagonyblo that for thi tho vital: | had from ‘ohoran was that the favor with which truth should bo rejected? the Shut was trenting tho [usslans engaged in ‘Tho spenker give nn Ilnstration of Col. Ingot. trulning his troops had beon so murked as to soll’s burlesque of tho scene of Judgment-Dny givo offense to the Austrians. Tho lussians and held that that Jocturer knew when ho delly- | under Col. Domontovitch were training tho cav+ ored himself of this defamation of sacred things | airy, and the Austrians under Col. Shanorski the that what he suld was not truc, and that {twas | infantry. Tho lettor-writer added: not wirranted by anything In tho book upon + Stnee the arrival of tho Russians thero has whieh it was intended to bring ridicuto. Deen incessant intrigue botween the two Mise One gront suyiug of thoso Infidels was that tho | sions, in which the Russian and Auatrinn Am ehicf duty of a man was to feod tho hungry, | bassndors have had tholr share, and tho contest clothe the niked, and take care of his fellow: | {g still hotly proceeding, Tho Rusuians hayothe men; and that ho who did this dld all that was | sdvantayeof tho Austrians Inasmuch ns they necessury, and tho lecturer showed that tho | sponk the Persian Iangungo with tuency, while Biblo unbounded with instructions to this elect. | the latter have advanced very little slace thole Ingersoll. held nt the South Bend lecture that | arrival.” eS: the Mosnic codo of Inws was tho worst code over May not the English rapprochement with Pers written,—that it was writton by wbarbarlan, and | sito ono of tho frultsof tho anti-Russlan ale was only fit for barburiine, Ghe speaker was 0 | Ince of Austria und Germany? lawyer, ns well 18 Col, Ingersoll, and, tn his ‘According to the oficial reports tn the books of opluson, thore was not a inwyer in Chicnyo that } referenco tho Porslan army numbers 150 could say thera hxd beon written a book upan | men, ineluding 30,500 cavalry and 6,000 artillery. criminnl huwgvhich covered tho ground better | Of those the standing army on n peaco-footing than tha ‘flva shuple commandments of Mosos | contains about a third,—five batteries of artil- Ulreetad nyuinat tho sins of thoft, murder, adul- | Jory,—1.600 mon; soventy battalions of Infantry, tury, lying, and coyetousness, e000; 10,000 Irregular and 600 regular cavalry. Ono of the ae tolling points oF tho Heetuee ———— was acomparison between Bob Ingersoll nnd VAY ee eee ies pecullue habits oe tho Lind | CARRYING SEWAGE OUT TO SEA. were fully oxplained, aud the looturer eloquent. ly described tho bonutiful motion of tho vird | Novel Attempt to Solve the Sewage ae an tho Wing. ir He snend abate ng snsth Problem in Liverpool. wi asweoplng motion looked down Wpon wt sone whore eordant ticlds, rippling, brooks, | GEAsaow, Jan, 20.—Tho Intest wttompt to solr noble trees, and a thonsand othor objects of mi- | tho eewage problem haa just been madeby tho ture combined ht forming a beautiful und ot- | construction on theClyde of u sewiye steamer trnetive pieture, Tho bird, howover, which | hig novelty in marino architecture has been looked so nobte as its mighty wings carried it i gent through the air, hind ‘a oye fornil thoso | built to tho order of the corporation of Liver wuitles, What was attracting its attention wis | pool; but {tis duo to hor designers and paltd ee dead Unis I ie dana utce plot Ry ora—Mesars. Simona & Coy, Henfrow—to alate ered for amomont, after which; finding that th 10 sewage 0 fniinal emelebude-tor tuovullare.eured-onty | fae, the dea, of Wisvosing oo tie er to cP for such food ng was rotten and smolt,) pox water ii en tirely tholr own, It 1s now moro badIt settled upon the dead aninal und) han twee ‘our alco Mr, Willlam shinon jee of Ite unsavory meal, So [twas with | senior partner of tho firm, proposed to the Lo fab fngersoll and tho ible. Tho book abound | enoue' te Gineqow t sokume, of this kind for cd with passages of rure beinty, was Niled with ia ; ty, Buta frosublinostsontimenta und too finest and bose | (oul with te sowage Of tHe Oty istened of tonchings, but Bob wanted none of those. He | to, ‘tho dlitlousties surrounding the quc+ icked out only that which smelt bad, and made | tion then were not so great us thoy are ft tha subjevt of a louture for whieh ho got $250 } now, andthe plan proposud was too bold, to to $500 n night. ‘ find favor in tho eyes at our civic alignltatles. Tha Jeeturor thon took up Ingersolt'aabllity to | Neegimoua however, hud vontiluted ls Iea “catch the Women,” tolling u story that once be | and ine his brought hin his rewued. ‘Tho sola hoard tho wife of 8 Prodbytorlin minister re- | tlon that Gliagow could not see hor way to in inark, after hearing tho Intide! lecture, * Woll, T | 177 Liverpool has gmspod to-day, and It may » Et teaches human responsibility and othe sitbject next Sunday evening, dovot- rtulity. heed scarcely any that tha rent | ing hhaself to anothor branch of {ton which in- and important department of ‘the physician's | fdels had had a good deni to say of Into, Keantry and hoped that amld tho | unbellef go, uot to pray, but to laugh. Theso | his own household, opportunity. Itt (vital d last: retersed™ has raters tg e 8 atl xnltetion of music. the | two ecencs dre both alike within the domnin of | Now, take those subjects alone, and suppose & | ence to the moral und religlous, in view o} fuuddon effects and oxaltution of tunic the | te ate Are Ot tiaconmye Tho. man who | man Lobo invested wien al thls knowledge and | frets afreny ated, tho position ho ocetples, PAINTS CRITICS. compared with the tremendous gods of Babylon, | thinks he has suddenly got religion and the man | power, ns the phygiclin Ising goad mensure | tho Influence hgexerts, tho canfldence he com- THY REV. 3. K. APPLENER: Tt was nasnmed that all former and enter | who ls sure he has got athelsm are alike iis- | supposed to lo and required to ho by | mands, and tho nuthorlty he wields, tha stand | spoke Inst avening at No. 802 Cettngo Grove + fadginents would be averwhelmed by that | taken, Thoy are hoth the victims of fanutiolsm, | his fellow-mett, and = wo cin easily | be takes with rarrd ty, religious matters, i800 | ayerue on Thomas Patne, Col. Rt. G. Ingersoll, strange wave of passion, called music, —asudden glare has made both of theseowls | seo why he {8 2 recognized uuthority ) untinportant matter. Tho position which ‘he A by Gute Ue, Oe Dereon Tending this story of Daniel and his compan- | blind. After the gaudy skepticiain has marched | among thom, That list embraces omothings takes upon this subject ulfects hla position and and Thelr Chlengo Critics." Ie said that tho fona, one catinot put mitrk how inany tre the | and countermarched before us in all tho | more than a fow facts concorning wnntomy and | the sud; ruteay oust to some oxtent, of all the | effect of Ingersoll’s appearance In Chicago upon auths OF dishanor and temptation, how manyaro | splendor of | regula. and fife, and dru, | nhystoloy, diseaso and cure. Itlsanacquaint- | pro dee ils gd business mon within tho | its prenchers was about’ the sume ne that of a ho allurements ntong tho prthor each oe born | and we have, ike tho Hubrew youth in Babylon, | aneo with’ vegetable fifo in avery departinent. | circle of bis tittuonce, ‘Tho fet that Dee A. | red rug upon bill, Me could- not understand into tho world, and how problematical st is | gone to our quict room,’ and hive ritked | Itisaknowledye of tho nature, of tho offects, | fg a pronotined! Christian, or a pronounced eta = whotbor you or fwill come to the end of tife | tho window to lot In the soft alr of heaven and | that can be produced In health und disease, and | gkeptfe, or al pronounced mat of tho | Why If theso Prenchors were right, thoy phautd honorably, Those bands of muste playing in the | Perhups the sent perfume of tho Euphrates | therefora i. Knowledge of the valuo of every {a ono| of tho most Important | get angry, but bo deplored the fact that o man streets of Babylon, xo many years ago, attompt- | Toses, buck comes tho mystery of Gail to tho | vexetabte product, ‘Thivts cquilly trio of ove facts In any: conmuntity,—taking it always for | might bea perfectly orthodox Christian and yet jug to throw 4 lara, ‘of buiuty upan gods mide | heart, which hd uwhite igoscomed quite ompty | clomont fn tho mineral kingdom,—equally true | granted that DrvA. (9 mnt why connnands re- | nogentioman, With the excoption of Bishop of wood ur mud and not worth a penny a pound, | of the want of u Delty, of ull the forces that uct ond react In Nature | spect in his profession, Thitt roligious Tuct = is eee ee eae tia meee ateots ts | Nat only must Judges and juries bownre of | light anddarkness, eold and tent, storms and | speaks volumes Witkzevurd.-to scores of mon | Fallows, no Chtengo clergyman ‘bad acted muke men ebange thelr course of wulking or | the bewilderment of oloquonce, but we muatall | calm, The vast honilaey of chemlunt trith | and women ull arsind him, volumes with regard | deeently over the recont controversy In regard business, thelr destres, tholr friendships; thelr | buware of all tho biihly decorated speeches that | should bo xs oleur before this man's inind 08 18 | to many famillos dnd homes in tho mutter of | to Paine. bellefs, thelr pleasures, The campantons of { are spoken to us and the song that ure sung to | tho sunbeam before his physleal vision. He | moral oultnre aut rellglous Instruction. Tho ‘Tho spenker quoted certain utterances of tho Ulysses could thanaze tholr sips well onough | Us. Blessed are thoy who havo reached tho in | should understand wil necessary laws and reglt- | pruscnt na well ustho future well-holng of hun- | Roy, Honey 'T. Mlllor, whlch utterances wore ‘anild storms wid roel, tha regular onemfes In | tollectual enlumess and power which con deter- | lations for home-life, Tho architecture of tho | dreds of ebildron sre atfeoted by’ this one faut, «Honey Ts ¥ -Rature, but Law to eull b§ the tstanda where | mine whether the ornument be well placed, | house, its grounds and adornments, tho arrauge- | chitdron who will iso in Judgment to pronounce both vulgar and abusive, as well ug destitute of Ciree was pouring out ber. enchantments, that | whethor the preechor, or tho ntholst, or.the Int ment of tho bill-of-fure, togethor with the proper | him blessed or euried, nccordiog 28 his Ife-bas } cithor sonee or renaun. Tho iev. Mr. Miller was “was the pioblent difficult, Atlot us have niwnys | yer, of the palnter ts {mposing spon ano's ered- | methods of tunatication und dogittition, are | heon. a Chicngo Chadband, Mr. Millor depended on heen sulling on auch a kind of sen, where the | Ulity, or ispluelug upon waltnple truth Its ap- | subjects coming properly under hla curo and | 1 hnve snoken thus far only of his gonoral In- | tuo Hilato crush all bis opponents, but the troubles da not Ho, {n the common paths of | proprinte Jewel or penel. Happy thoy who oan | direction, Witt all that wppertalng to the pres | (inenea,—that kd and incastire of iaiuenca 1st ‘ eee iy MAhonghte Dae Cin those hours | tell upon’ tho far-olt battlelicld whether tho | ervation of physleal health, and this includes | whieh Inevitably flow out from this mun, be- | Worth of the Bible was not, to be measured by when alony ling come anne exeessivoornumenta- | fenthers ure in thy head of a Sfoux Indian, rush- | ment and, moral subjectsas well ns physteal, | cause of hie profession and hig work. We'muy | Mr, Millor's opinion of it Miller solomnly tion, When the oullating oftices In tha despot. | ing onward to murder womon and children, or | together with tha wholo aclenco roluting to the | cat (this unconselous Inttucnes. But thore [s | warned. tho young mon of his congregation ising stro opened to hire soldierdto become food | whothor tt 1s the pluiacof a hero fighting for | prevention, the mitigation, and tho curo of dis- | morg in this dopustiient than can be included | against purchnsivg tho “Ago of Reagon,” telling for vultures and wolves behind the advance of | human rights. Wiessed thoy who can mark over | ease fron {ts ulpha to its omegy, it ts hisuim to | in this genoral statemont, It is true the bh a Pt some conqueror, the {Ife and drum maken lively | whut reality the plitme waves! fous funilive ua with tho alphabet of bis own | phyalotan is cullod to uo work of healing. It is | ‘om thnt whilo ho was not opposed to Investl- t nolse at heudquurters, and the gingss of ule or Even into the business world this excessive | lnneunge. Uf this end were attained It would | expected that by. bly wisdom and etfortthat gation ho could not bellove that It wus nocessary i wine is cheap, and before tho aaekbut, and trum: cloquenes comes, nnd men young and old ire | indeed bring under contribution all laws, aud} broken Iinb will be made whole ngalns that | swallow belladonna to find out that ib was w ‘ “pet, and duleinter have sounded long the only | durzled until thoy see 100 per cont, whore fate | forces, nnd | products of Nature, all relations of | brulsod, mangled form will bo madg comely | Polgon, or to trond upon hot conls in order to us- : Bon of a poor cottagur has.slgued Tits namo to | Will permit but tive. Often the more worthless | material substances, and all relations of the mn- } again: that discassd, almost dying, one will bo | certain that one would this getburnt, But it follow a Napulon for three years, and nevor | tho business, to loudor ary ita brisé-binds In | terial to tho Immaterial nid aplvitiutl, Drought back te life and made to glow again | was ridiculous to say that, becuse pitch de- wns thero n mother's prayer touching cnoughor | tho street, In Babylon more trumpots were You do not understand ine to assart all physi | with all the ruggelness of health and ateonutie fled, the works of Inj orsoll or Paine would de- t A mother’s tear hot enough to get such namo | blown and duleimers and burps played to brace | clans to be posscased of such . rlehes of knowl- | itis for the accomplishimont of such onda us | biso, As woll say that, because two und two * erased, Muale, the most powerful of tho fing up the wooden gods than toannotnee the Father | edge and resources of pawor. ‘So far from this | those that hols usually enlled und bla servioca | make four, David wasn mon ufter God's own t arig, {8 thorefore the most dangerous in somo | of perfeetions. Much of dishonor comes from | no aueli clutin is advanced for ny ono of tholr | roquirud. Yet wo NaraW ‘tat auch rosutts | heart, excopt in tho matter of Uriah tho Hittite, i Teapeets, becuse It can ao powerfully decorate | the ditzzllug effect of fulae ornument. Same | number {n all the past or. presen Wedo not | ennnot always be reuched. The physician, In Mr, Miller owned thitt tho churches wore not ‘ nhadentse, Alile to be the Inspiration of a | form of high life comes to spread {te colors and | claim that thore aro such trensures of truths | the persons of his patients, must often mect the | Well filled, and his explanation wus that tho Gos- 1 rent And good soul, it cu, become also tho | thon money fs embezzled, or stolen, or borrowed | to” be found — to-dn, in the nrehives | Great Destroyer, He must moot doath tn almost pel wis not prencbed in thom, Mintstors preached impulse of a bad ‘tides, and can muko n | that the colors loved muy be constantly and | of any onc, nor yet of all tho modical colleges | ovary form. ‘Sudden calamity befalls thom: he | On selonco and culttre, and neglovted tho story wooden god nssume for the moment tho attris | abundantly apre ‘But all those false business | of all tho Kehodls, Butwodo clain that tho | fs culled, but searcely has hu time to respond ero | OF tho Cross, This atlegation was utterly uni- utes of the Almighty. That emotten whleh | inen who ore to-day fu exile or in prison tell ws'{ natural, the legitimute, eld of study, and | lire i¥ zone. Aili, he meota discus that buts trio, for tho only churehes which wore well WIL help pitrlots to rise to some conception of | that God bos passed a law that no one can suc- | thought, and netion, before gvery man worthy } ftes uli hia skill and elfert. Ho ‘gees tho truth, Allied Wore those whore solonce, phitosophy, and tholr country’s need and worth, and which makes ( cessfully decarato a He, Beauty will de unless it | the natne of phyxiclin leads him'to fice all of | he knows tho fact, this man, that wornan, must culture wore diacussed, while the pee! ly ortho- 4 anational hymn whole educution atid a whole | ornuments a truth, There is In Naturo an ever. | thosy subjects, Thore ja no ono of them con- | goon dle, Whitt, now, thos tho physloiin | dox pronchers held forth to ompty houses. heurt full of heroism, will also, upon goine othor Jnsting anlyafs taking pince which fevaratengold cerning which ho may wot bo consulted by his | nothing further ‘within his power? ‘This ‘The sponkor next pald his reapcota to tho Rev, aay tttrn a inere udventurer Into.a patriot and | from drosa, ‘Tho ugly ti tho classic world died, | fellow-mon,—consulted with contdence that he, | dying one 1s tle brothor =o mun, with James Maclauyhtan, of the Scotch Presbyterian will finpel men inte a war but litele removed | Lut thotruth, and langwuuge, and art wentonward | as aman of thought and education fn his vino noUl immortal and — destiny .' eternal, | Church. ‘To the fulrness and other. freed quali- froin plrucy, to blew humanity, As f healthy body struggles | profession, hus renched it conclusion, cout Tle oucht fo have hia attention turned to the | Hes of this gentiemun, nglde from his theoloxy, ‘All she fino arts have this disadvantage: that | to henl Its wounds and disenses, s0 ull Nature | sion based upon such ovidonce nnd fact ns make | Grent Honler of the soul. Who so well feted or Mr, Applobec paisa high vompliiinont. Butwhon io not only will thoy decorate a truth and rodouble | hastens to exposu its chants, and when men ems | his word and position authority In the case, | so competunt to do thia work as the man to | Orthoduxy waa concerned, Mr, Muaclaughlan its beauty, but alse thoy will devorate a lic, 1¢ | bezzle, or defraud, or ater}, and build up glitter- | ‘This confidences reposen in him, this respeet for | whom ho has canmitted his Wio? If it be proved to bo as bad ns the rest, Ho spokost I~ thore bun good cavent Tor ully young mon par- | iugsutronniligs, Nature histens to break up | the position which ho tikes, th{s reconition of | possible for tho physician to know for himself, | Beraoll gun unscrupulous lawyer, whose Intest Uculurly, to carry in tholr minds, it would scom | the enenmpment, and to cast her voto In favor | him as uuthority, constitute 9 part of the oppor- | tha¢ Jesus Christ can sive a soul alek of ain, eliont was * Tom” Paine, and who bad spokon of thias, “iioware of tho, decorations of a lie. | of the long life and huppinessat the home whose | tunity that fs ulforded ulm for the accomplish~ | rendy to poritt in ln, thon ho ought to know. | Paing ts the solo apostio of tWberty. | Why should Every art can hoe made to adorn and commond a | stones are laid In honor, And pertaps this isthe | ment of Hroat and important resutts In to. | ft. He ought to know Ht, Indecd, for his own | they insult the nian thus? Why catt bin" Pom "2 fwlachood. Wo are all such — hugrained | meaning of the verso in tho Fanti that, “Ex- | White thla conildenes 1s often overconfiuence, | sno and for tho siko of those to whom ha mine How would thoy Ike to hear people sponk of children ‘of the benutiful that we — will | cept the Lord bulld tho house, they Inborinvain | and) tho. vulua uf this authority ray Istors. And knowing {t, with what confdenco | “ Matt, the carpenter,” or * Jae! the Apostle"? run townnd it in all hours. Byon | that bulld tt.” Ita architecture, {ta carvings, Ita | be overestimated, oo truo oman $8 | and aucocas can he revommond Him to tho Mr, Machughlan had wleged that Paine was in parsing i How muichine of juste on tho street, | Pulnted walla, Ita heurthstone, must repose upon | not responsible ' for, ond will take | diseased aud dyin as woll na to tho healturut | ROL tho first to sound the tecsin of freedom, Lut Wo ure almost sorry thut we dire notstupnmong | the truths of Thn who mide tho worlt and its | no undue advantage of auch oxagzoration. | and the lv that some Scotch-Irish In North Carolina frat the children and lsten to it. Wo piason, ine | occupants, There nre, indeed, wonderful fort- | As u mattor of fret, ho alwuys being the true Tels a grand thisg for tho surgeon. to. saye tho | ‘leclured for Independenco, Tho spenkor. quot deed, 43 though the tnnehine wore nothing, but | wea, tnd honorable ones, too, ying within tho | tnan and the thorough student we hive In- | troetured Mink; tho ootlst the nlmost lost ing Bunoroft, showed that Patines “Common we pane pK tinder, protest, tory fron fie. san oe fi eneh Of pays ere fe teal weniger tt ulcated, ho is Re ee xe front cont ienen, ing in tho balarees? ‘Thon how much greater | Sense” struc the peonle wicn eich ae teks othe win fram person chofce, ut be those ITTY’, 1G C10 eet 1 TON ‘est, | and [8 very a tiuuthority in wl hese Hines o1 1 Te if anee Was nvove 1 ngs weeded, Bove 7401 others thin from puryoual choice, Hut bo these | Mik maNy. rent. connery Norte und South, and | thought and upon nll, thos important interests | Cates ee yetitonort Foul munethe duihions ¥iaion; tho pructitionortholife thatwamoedhang- | before tho, Declaration, of Intapondenco tho ico Bob anyhow, ho docs ao love his witoand id thu inan da all thramgh and through o lovor of | Enst, and West, Is not il false, but thore Istuore | This respect for hid Judgment on tho part of ; + Hoprosontatives to the Beoond Continental Con- | do like lob anyhow, ho doce fo love his wifoand | fulely ve assumed that the Alphn Is only, a Tho'bouueifiiyand 8 shorofore Hatig all through | of tho fulso thinof the rea},und hence tho young | athers will bo w RN dibrnct on ne nape Pee ae ee a Mi valna of ie lite gue sentation to fue Hecond Contingutal Cony | childrens’ The lechirer wanted tolnow whether | amy algaities, tho first Of a long lino of Bei : thls life to be the vietlin of loud omblazomment, | man cannot walk too cautiously it this wortd of | stinnulis to inyestigation, It will Intensity his h tld othor people itso did not do so, or whetbor Bob , ‘ |, not merely’ by Ingersoll bind got a patent upon family affection, ston mara irhicl will be demuindi ney ‘The fact of the mattor was that Bob's love for temporal whon compared with that which ts ow Jersoy, and othor of tho Colontos, were in- Evor siipo tho Dubylonian King attompted to | ruligion, aud pleasure, und business, ‘To ude- | dosiry to know tho truth for tho truth's auke— | eternal? ‘The opportunity of auving men | structed whove all things not. to entertain any: Tdverpool, but by overy great elty hiving ren snuke bis little gods lurge, by help of trumpot | gree wo must ull be Inquirers, and must walt for | for bly own siko ns Well us for the suke of othor ; i Y ca | Propvsition looking to 0 separation from the * Meecss to tho'sen., i “und dulcimer, there hus Beon no Intermission in-] a few days to pass between the loud imusicand | mon, In this dievetion wilt this confidence not eptetenatly fa 1 felloves eatin pane Totior country. -Yot nt this vory moment Wis wife and hls ehtldran was tho rusult of | ‘ho speulul object for which the Alpha is tne , this line of business, and tho world stands to-day | thoactlon, ‘The decoration which wo halt-auv- | only be a part of bia opportunity, but atthe | any other man pon cart, ave tho ministor | Palio eamoout with bis pamphlet, which echoed poe nis onate cht which elated tt ‘hich Wis | tonded muy brivtly bo stated to be the econ j all allyo to tho iden of making 0 anil thing | ages ityo {4 Btlll excessive. gino thne att nssistance townrd bis sclf-devel- | Of Jesus, And tyero aro mon nota fow whom | through the country Hke n tumpet-eall, Se oe ee aL much iit shat womnl | tuat aud apeedy conveyance of clty. parrated large, or a ful¥o thing true, by the helpof a | Pits rule will scoma quite true ono,—that fs | opinent, a4 well us an iugmontation of tho ti tho physielan onnrench mory rendily and etfegt- | _ ‘The Hoy, Mr. Mud jaughlan deolared that Palno | Wis the oquul OC ni a wa eee tig. | Rowe for deposition In tho deep ee trumpet or a hnrp, Some will hear sooner a | tho trac beauty which comes buck totho heart | fuonce which he oxerts upon tho whole vom | unlly than tho mialster. received £500 frum tha Pennsylyauin Legislu- ih ta. Sirsa at which mnyyo t Woniuy, f 0 f- | the necessity of any gigantic and Cir naive ne trunipet, othora will hear sooner the harp, after {t hus rosted nnd rollectod fora thine, ‘Co- | munity in which he lives, ‘Tho min who, ta the sacred calling which deate } tire for writing “ Comnion Honge,” and that his wenth part of A ini. Mobammodantaut was | tarvention dt candutts, “Like the authoritics When our suloon-men propoxo to sell drinks to | morrow is tho beat critic of to-day, ‘The ora- 7 Ills profession dusiguates hin. asthe felon, 0 Dutrlotisin stooped te swcupt the money. Tho Eee oan rE ot tr tr ee ie eHIe ati molexclten und | the ccunaeitr, nod {he iG por Of hc SITTerT | eee aoe ee recat tiave imnid,| suoment was dlsingonioua nid the nsivuation tho central stroots, they secure not the drinks | couvinced, and converted is not the ono that Is | and tho divoiged. ‘hls fast atone, Boones or | cars, not only. Tulirtomoot grind opportunity, { flko, "Common Sonso" was writton In 177, alone, but they Invest lirgely In the aceampuni+ | to be at oneo fully applauded, but that ane Jy to | Inter, will turn upon blm the earnes puzeand ) reuching ont in mmny directions, Peo eige | whilo Paine received {ho £50) from tho Ponn= ‘ mentoft muate. Thoy gay asof old. Atwhuttine | be npplauded whieh comes to you next week as | secure for him tho undivided attention fora | sumes most fearful, responsinility, The man | sylvunia Legislature in.178, nino years liter. 1d tho passer-by heart the sound of cornot, tute, | atl betng trio, and in whieh the heart when | tine of overy nan and woman within the circle | who hua all else that should oharacterize tho | ave tho copy sight to the prople,—he mady hot harp, sackbit, psaltory, duleimer, and all kinds | cold nds nothing tourase, Ho talks to us best | of hig ncqualntanco and Induones. Those mon | physician and this also, 18 the man, and the only | 8 cont out of thi ede which mot with 1 of musle, ho. Wil full down and wordip our | who uttera nothing that will need recall, Seulp- | and women turn to hint in tho moat goriona mo- | nan, who Wil souure tha beat possible re~ | Siecess nexiimplod up to that date, aud Ib was Bacchus bf the Greeks or the Germs, or that | tora and painters do not sot tholr portrait or | ments of life. ‘They bring to him the most si | suiteat tho physwhin's opportunity, God grant | not until ntter tho sucocsstul close of tha wir stronger yod of tho Amenean': and thoy say | {deals In the currant dress, for tho current style | cred nnd tnportunt [nterusts of tite, Thoy truat | that you, my. friends, may be mon and | that the Amoricun peoplo recognized in go smi too truly, for thousands step Into those places | Is trunslont, It delights to-day, it wil disgust | lin whore thoy would not trugé tholr lawyer or | women of sich physiéal, mental, medic, | 9 beyrue hia vast services to biimanity. Pulie's as though thoy wero templus of tho Mines, and | to-morrow. Monce the artists throw over tho | thofr mintstor, ‘Thoy trust hin where they vane | and mond abtlity” as “will quulity. you | Wnselilabtiess Wun resogmised by all hit orthodox thoy stuy and drink sgul and vgati, and otter { shoulders some slinple scart or muntle whose | not trust the dearest ourthly felend, uni where | to meot fully ond auecessfully tho great op. | Christluns, Tho Kev, Mr. Muclwughlan drinks to friends, ond feel ag though they were | porfect atmpllelty and gruco pice it beyond | thoy dare not trust thomaelves. Ho must often | portunitioa whiea nay’ severally open before | forxot, that ‘Yhomas Paine hended with iu the Louvre of Paris, or in the chumbers of | tuo roach of tho shops of fashion, Whut was | hour tho ory, “Sir, coma down ere my ehilddle” | you, Ltrust it may bo yours to auy to many an | Subscrlption which ran wp to 25100,000, and which: i Beothoven or Mozart. “Tho yuubling dens of | good for tho state of Domosthonos is good | If, In reaponsy to thls ory, he ean employ such | anxious parent who shill call you tocomaquiok. | 8 tho Amorigan army and enibled Wush- | Cullfornia and of Germany baye all been oper | for a Wobsters the robo of Canllta is still | means na will cnublo tli soon to answer, “Thy | Ly ero the child die, * Go thy wily, thy son Hyoth.” ae to defent Cornwallis, ‘ ated amid “delicious musfo, that, tho theory of cE le for Hoatricu, AS in art that ts best | son liveth," he jot ouly saves trom death tho | Stuy it bo yours often to. respond those wlio. 4 tothe allegation that Paine became o dis suddon richos might muke up indevoration what | whlch will still bo best on the morrow, 80 (n the } suffering one, but brings ty that home such glad | with Diunobed chock, frombllng hands, and ache | Teputablo chnraotor in intor life, it wasn Me it hicked fu truthfulness, IC (8 ono of tho stuns | Intellectual World that [¥ the best sermon, or { ness and Joy as spring frou no other earthly | ing hourta walt for your anawer, “Thy friond fe | Pure And simplo. Tt wus alle forgod Wet gone of numan childhood and weakness thut it is] orition, or poets whieh upon many reviews | Huurec, Fromm that day he lathe trusted friend | coming back to tte, and strength, and heatth | Xloted Mar who recetved $100 from at elas slow to perceive the esscntlal truths at the | tsks for tho least of ornaure und of repontance. | und counsulor of that “household, — His | again.” When thisennnot be, and yon know | Tract Bocloty to Alssoniinite tho slasturous bottom of nuything in wuny single corner of | Ono of tho best pictures In tho Molo fs the | word [s. law in modicing, His deelston | thar iiennnot niwaya be, L pray that you may | filachood. Mr. Appleboe branched olf into a foe It iv elow.to fInd the sinpio truth, but it ta | scone which represents Dunlol us moving away | 13. usually considered, tinal tn didunse, and | hive suena religions faith ‘and oxperlence qa | cousidoration of the tenets of tho Hrosbyterlin FE ee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee eae ee | La PARE A gelatine Sor tbs | tone Regaatony end Horo” pou Ua ‘ 5 he Pa dat a} a qi airdans, the drpery ority Upow every Other subject, ‘Lbat fumlly | ion, predestination, an indrod pi ee eey enor Bud porkupeor tho United | und eunoples of tho Wunut porsomuyess thy | fe seaunete-turaauh tole dduence amatuer | wal"ly Se Gods who kath nway tho sins of tho M 1 noxt took @ Wing at Dr. 8, B. Qoodwin, of H States, levtured inv largo Western town, tho | palaces, the pageantof tha King, tho bands of | thon anothor and anothor, until his hands and tho Hirst Congregationallxt “Church, Dr. audience and the leoturo comnlttce felt grently | mustelins,—gradually moving away from all | heart, his tuys and nighte, are tall. Tb i no. ito ws far at fuult In this respect, and ig tothe + bof Live Heytimentof somo inndels thae (e"was ‘niuturat | CHOE MAE Centre Of Poet tc ecting rid ot for monto love tholr wives and children, he | inuuh elty-refuse and sownge that 14 nut markel thought tho exumples provided by people, now | able astuanure, aud thut oven the miugplcker tiving {na state of nature proved otborwise, will not lookat. Alt this thoy buve beet io In conclusion the lecturer held that it wasa | tho hibit. of carting away to vonsideraule, infutake for church members to deetine to huye ( dlgtanees beyoud tho alty baunds—a tedious ay! anything todo with Tnervoll or hit lectures, | Very oxpenslye pracess, Lately thoy made 390 whieh, ho believed, were doing A good work ft | axporlments with Mr, Sinons' plan ‘Of deposltiox stirring up tho prenchers and in proventing | thy refiue in the seu, but. this proved samen bat Christianity from being narrowed, tunsuccesful, for the alinplo reason that (hey IED wero tried with an ondiaar, Pacnartcties sels every one nequiint wi hose cl IN TEE qaaware, tho! atdes of to well topo wud of tho Young Met's Christian Astootation aro |- qhoyaimenne, aad thle ponstrnctloty i reli swerablo for heavy mater! red rocolving numorous congratulations for tho | ings nf a rlyur-bottom, watch fForoes Ite wi) exeallont gourss of Sunday-attornoon Blblo- | Py the welybe of fg inet yeaa found Oe hoor show Hate een myn tn Farwell a0, Intweelianvous rubbiely, much of weieb, when 8 Tho Rey, Georgo C, Nocdham, pastor of the | a dry state, did not readily sink when the bo Chiengo' Avonuo Churob, delivered ono of his | door wore oponed. "In thot dlivouleles "0 Cr, Plctorint sormgua yoaterduy afternoon to an DUBE O ile to Musars. Binoy stoner Audlenea of ubout 1,000 pooplo, who wero great- | finhiven built, ‘Tho plan, tough simple enouRl ly interostod in tho manner Jn which the prouch- | {yan entire novelty. It ditfers from t 0 ordinary er presented tho subjoot of tho “Christian | hoppor-steamers in two Jnportunt Foster pote Armor.” ‘Tho illustration used was a large Iifo- |, fi the fest place, tho well In wider itt ud be ‘F Good ral a talao fuss, with tont thanat (ho top; and In the noxt, msteud disappointed tnt thoy had given tholr ontrunea- | this bigniy wrought prospoct—to Lo un hone | strutab of Hmuyiiation to ay, that such a mun INVIDELITY, Belt ee at pain on “curiaty® | sized painting of a Roman scilor In Tull dross ) tho yady of the vessel forming one lang talk, vagoney ta 8 anun that _ilid MoE try to speak wll, | Bion tu hls room ane u thore fa beckon buck to | will have frum 10M) to 0.000 persons ttuiler bie BERMON HY THE REY, DR. WILIIAMBON, Ho wanted to kviow who should, be held Muy ie {igulpped for battle. Jeyery Bar of the soldiers ts lived site ten oot mupartinents Laird Iu we Juwt wtoud , and ed two | hie 60 ry wlinple nd iniinence. 1 “ ts— » Volta nino, oF. Je I se Lolng perpoudicular in shape, Sey hauree Heldentiy what Woy expeciat and | (ruc religion, “One. would well Ue" uutueed | thaw puuyle Be ia Wa we tho homes of alt | “An Examination. of Bomo-ficcene Biato | Wes ian ree : Y ire eee thou Ne he if ws welcome i4 wry thelr ov ¥ wm Yaw}, dnd Josva Christ. No pono, hud ever doairad was f torruut of larga words und a gun- | to” And such “doup © thought "and truth Cae ea eo tort tahave hin comp | Weusof Intldelity" formed tho aubject of an | tha ap tho ilrat tbruo us dies mud the ques oral touring 19 pieces of passion and ideal. Thus, | in our own em but we do sea. tt | totholrdwollinga und sit ut thole tablog, Ite | !torating sermon delivered lust evening atthe | Yon wus at once Impertinont wid buside tho itio world Uver, emu ia ‘reddy to bg tukon | biden away in the, bosoms, of, Newton, | namo sano of thelr household wonts, Hiv overy | First Mathodlat Churen, comnct, of Clark and | pointy Dr, Goodyrin wuomod to think Cut overy t cupdve by a very bright color or a oud nolse, | and Sir William Mamilton, and Rox, and Poem; | eucouss tsa part of thelr family and personil | Washington stroots, by the Rey, John WMam- be of dirt he could pelt atan Jufidel helped to We all demand the awakening of tho atreet- | but to see such montul and moral dignity stand: Rebiovaiuenk, for be fa thotr doctor, Tholr doors | gon, clean Chriat, and bia gormon og Paine consisted t ud, andthe majprity will aften vote for tho } thy up in Babylon in Sines 40 long ago that in | ure opened to him, ‘Thoir confidence ts reposed ‘ of nothing put vn repotivion of w: splined whuiders, 1 eandlduto, not wlio. wands tipon thy best plat, | tha long Intervid oven taueblo templos have be- | iubita, Thole hives arv to his hand, and his | | Without the waual formality of takinga toxt, | ulthougif he had, doclarud thut ho should dou form fi cold logiv, but who stands up moet con. | come dust, fg something that wmazea more, and | word ta the law of thole boing, Wis imo isthe | Dr. Willlameon began by saying that a froc- | with Vatno'e work rathor than hls life. Whett ‘ ‘splcuously. A plitform of wood, covered with | niuat wake uy feel that God bie ulwaya walked | free thoy cull ater that of tholr Creator in tho | thinker was ono who fgnored all standards to | Dr. Goodwin alleged that Hine hold that f e gold cloth, (9a better pedestal than a platform | fi the tmidst of His uhiidren marching neross | day of sudden ealuiity, Els prosence t tho | control bla individual opinion, and who aceupted inate Infidelity wns exensable Whon twndlacoy af solid philosophy. Tho old Kings all lved by | tho platnsof life, It a oneot the morat won- | ourthly presencu whiel thoy court most i 7 red attd that adultery was lawful, Dr, Goodwin. menus Uf thelr splendor, if took the peopta | derv uf history how Dantel escupod tho oxcesive | before “the postiionce. which walkoth in] Hi® own Judymont ae bis only standard, A % nttored one of the nost untrue statements over f Ahousands of years to exeupe tho daze of purple | colors of ils era, that perpetual feast and gay> | durkness ho destruotton which wustoth at | frlond of his was a freo-thinkur In uatronomy,' | made even In a pulpit. Ne more digyriceful and wold. y, those bans of iniusig, and held thinly to a | ‘noonday.” id nN " 4 i 3d Ho wavOVer tolned by mn ortho- se Rte. ch na WG uhall lags Mwiky Teom tlie | aeaieteate acl area Yo tin thoy look flrat in disaster | and bo hud onco jneltentally observed to bin, und unfounded Hoe 0 which ta still th own | anid didonuse, and turn 1 t 1 vale | tox clergyman, und tho speaker chultonged De, Re ta iad. Une Caer of Uae te eee | one aie an FEO ee ee eer eeee te | Oye TTC Le eee ee eget aaa] || that tho ustronomera ‘wero rovising tholr eal | Gch din to substantiate his assertion or to Wein power to read the merit o Sg ombla- | one Ged, und in ita intinit ompire. they that do.) the oye grow dhn In the dreiuteas sluinbor.” | SUlstion of tho sun's distance . from the Chutstlut's fous represented by Put, wid the | iat of the contonta failing rapidly into thet carncat. juunner of the spouker hinpressed all Waters. Tho doors ‘again nreworkest ona novel nreaunt with tho cumplotonoss of the filustru- Prlneiple, ‘Along tho contre of tho lino of ey Be | ten ts a sdt of geurlag by which the doom ty ‘Tho twonty-sccond anniversary of the Agso- | opened and shut, the doors being kept clavion was Announced to ocotr noxt Sunday | strong tron rod’ until all the refuse prominoné Young sfen es 4 onying, whioh drives slmuitancously inen: froin wbroad Will be progont and address | shatts to ruleo and lowor the ‘deors—ah operitiod tho meoting, :. which can bu performed Ina very short 4a TYDy, PANE HEVIVAL, Hue whiten patunt pulse urate pups ee here hus been quite w revival scason of lata | dimensions is in tho a ne 2 ae peouuttortan chureh. tn tits Fate | with discharge pipe on deel, whlch | oeptol Berylees conduetod by tho cldon, Sundays | HP) piled to any of the tanka tu force, Peually Sei touohens: pastar and othars have been in | Hehe muterint out through the dours. Ex!orn progress for sorne thing, and tho restlts obtained my Alpun very rauch Soroae He " most gratifying. A Wook ago yestor- | Steamer, Tho bu! and dock stro bu ied wou! or cuvll forth one aulntilia of proof in regard toit, 3 fessl 5) Lutiu the construction af the hopper savy, ove by ee much will ite eran leegc amd | Habe wil rapt inppliess. tity that fo wrone | What’ kre theopparumiticrirmnoone reat | earth, ‘Tho froo-thinkor wt once pronounced | °Diamtasing Howssont usu Christian, und thore- SO OT eed hatcaighe wizard | steels ued, Tho veysel hus been i bweeter upon our bands, Wo must remulnal- | to shamo and contempt, and that they who Jead | opportunity of this mun to whom these thousands | it un absurdity to gay un was ¥1,000,000 | fore requirius no dofunse from un Infidel stand-" ways lovers of oruanientation, and we must oven | others to rightcotsness sbull sino us the stars, ao tinis turn aa thele Host Iimpartunt frlund, | milua away, fits gerne anemia polnt, Mr. a] pRlabos proceeded ta defend tho. Fallivato that love, Unt we, niust seu uot that | In ull thy niuny’ religions of eurth thore Id notlh~ | most trusted counselor, wud often ws thelr ent) saiteg awn “tho hunt boing do intense as to pro- | Teputation 9 Scales AVE Chon fecne Cha ie, a OUT mider ar pobler, ja strange in what | eur y hope In these y id ol he of orthod . pone falsuhood, but {8 entwined abauta truth, | lenuty he thus stood forth,—a cuilld ef raltqion' BT ET ene RR RIT OneCart Taney ; ~ important interests? Opportunities for tho.ue- | Quco sunstroke, OF course, asf frve-thinker, | Bisho! Fallows knew so lIttle ubout the life of Bee eek Ee OU ETE eT ae eae ae eT Tee ete ee te aes | ho hud ws rigat to bis opinion, Uelloving ta his | Fulny isthe aatd Patne did not bouome {mbued Whluky [na saloon Wait art whiol la attempting | four the soni of Cwaur or Wusbligton, nut ono | many directions, bat especlully In tho ine of bis | own Judgment asthe only” propor stand with dufdel tendencies until ho gut in tho tu decorate u Ilo, but the music which sounds in | thread of which cau fashion ghane le chosen profession, Ophortunttios for tha duyel- | T! thora wero frue-thinkers fn physiology, | French Convention ws a represontativa Pela icaps Re crear neh Roe SS ‘fhe application of this lesaon Ja obvious, Jt | opment of every truu clement of manhood, | freesthinkera in orthoopy, orthograty, and | of ‘Ameriot. Laine sat ‘in tho. .Con- orlu the domuln of friendabip or patriotism gomes too lute to many of those who ure old, | couraye, and fortitude, syinpathy ud churity, | 89 on, cach ous diseunting established usaye and } vention, | Bot, 88° a ropreaontative, of thy lofty ornument of Seats aan mauat be soyhe They have beard all the musiv of the strouts, good will wid brotherly icindness, pportunitios deetdlug evar thing for himself. A miu hud | Amoriva, but of tha Department of Oulais, and ‘everywhere and always. song cus entwine | and bave bowed to all tho fulso gods. Butto | for bailing disouse und saving Ute, of milti- | Justus much Rane len frou-thinkur {un these | he was ¥o populur in France that hu was clocted Deautlfully abaut a Crfendship or a momory of | those {in Ilfe's carly years, where bope 1s not dis- | gating disgase and bringing comparativo { dilferunt branchos, and to ignore all standards reprosentatlvo from four Departments. It waa someting beauttid or noble now sone, Buta | phiced by penitence, what a warning und prom | comfort, of provertting discaso and cacrylog |. therein, usin anything else, 4 rover by Putne's own weltinus that he wae an skiug culuuot culwino itself about a whisky bot ware hors) All tings will come before you | muiticudes over muny of tho plifulls and quick- Nuture wus d{yided tnto four departincents,— jnuidel even frompho time bu was 7 years old, 60 1 carry a dead weight of 050 tons, and ber 7) fo wauny shiny, wad a Sontaued Woriag tio | Mine Kole, Winvbour, shu wus wie prosunt wook. luuncbed a fow weeks ago and gont rel dl = Renee whaes tees i ber capabiiues es, S———_——— soon bu mady, resets Cremation, + eta bu dovoted to tua trarport of tia efUh ‘Tho authoritles of Gotha havo mado tholr ro- | the Liverpool structs to tho deep seas batt » pore for the your 1879 on fhe subject of cromus | proves a succosuful experiment 1h0°8 1 > fon, The tirat was troated onthe 10th of | reason why tho same systom should noth vase December, 1878, since when (iftoon others have | plicd to other kliuds a sawaga. Leu boon wailurly disposed of. he uyumuge time | Could, by youclv of, thla description. ages required for tha complete Incinoration of tho | conveyod to sea and ojected ua promptly A ope ‘bodies Was about to hours, and it ls regarded | refuyd, Nor neod tho steamers be trnlteds ong tua most satinfuotocy that not only bas no cont | Alpha fs, in carrying capacity, Tuy aa plulug ug to tbo result bees madg at Gotha, but } mado of 1,000 wns Just vs wally na af 2% +