Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 15, 1880, Page 9

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THE CHICAGO J=!BUNE SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 1880—SIXTEEN PAGES AMUSEMENTS. RE if Joves of Jacob tho le wayof | very displeased ete, Th EY y- and Rachel, thehistory of J him. if be ld - take-her-back by- ft pte eee | pb, : fo- | him. if he-would- take-her o ~ : RELIGIOUS. » | feRb the life ot Elton, the bletires of Native | Cunciestowarso tuat sue could call upon Hersis: | Feq%,,. ach. displensed with: tt, 2 ae and ‘sodia} supe-. |: ter-in-law, who-lived on Bow street;: that he'as-~} satistied with this answer, and.the matter ‘was l AKE FRONT! KNIGHTS Prof. Smith's Articleion “ He~ in tho pizhth century. lent’ stylist, ‘in ‘Whose “pervel it she had not the purpose for which suth call wus to be made, rlority of Ephraim before the confilet wi F swith .| seuted, and while doing so the-accident hap- | dro} a yria is reflected in the literature. The new. | pened:-that ing gota little fart {4 t Mgr. Dumont now publishes‘ Thies ned;-that-in doing so he gota little farther, pedis Bai fPoch beging with tho rise of written -proph butof bis way. than Bo meaut to. Upon cross-' | 1guet from the Bishop ot Liege, dated Dec. &, ee in which the latter prelate tells him that ho wy i B . = Mterary knowledge wore wid ‘examinution, the lady te: iced feel no uneasiness in signing the pastorat el > Hie lS "5 z €alled. upon’ this eister-in-INw for some years. | fetter, ; brew Language:and Pilly 1s ax, Bt x10. Amos, Relthae sho plaintiff nor the lady testified as to | erapbis digcatcn? of wee oe te a aN ‘bishop of Btalines, and mended its publi- aN ? . ts f iterat A “| genuity can trace marks of rusticite ei. ( Literature,” i . rusticity ¢‘im- | nor did it’appear that the piaintiff had any ac- | cation ev: e AFTERNOON AND EVENING, : f d A N OS ue | Retdstnan in tie litter eee Fares # Simple | quaintance withthe sister-in-law. ‘There was a | fuse ro sign it is fated, Wes noe cero soret , ~ Be = ‘Appears that the origin of ‘writtcn propheay was Terre eer ue gmg RE, and the defendant RJ is still worse. “Sune 18, 187, the School lav was f ize less to the spread re ns tothe, rulings Ing | carried in the Belgian Senate, v prond of education than tothe | Judge. These exceptions, have now deen eus- | day the Belgian pone nate, and the very next Cinnencing Monday, August 16, QF ALL AGES, SIZES, AND SEX. All appearing at the same time, AND CFLtZENS day’s rotice with best quality of Goods for less money than any- whee else in the city. WIRTS & SCHOLLE, | 222 Wabash-av., Bet. Adams and Jackson-sts. FURNITURE! ©. FURNITURE! SIR BRIGHTS, LADIES, AND.YISITORS 70 THE CRANDS, TWENTY-FIVE YEARS. ists and Amateurs. Our Patent Belf-Bearing Agraffe Attach- ment, Concave Name-Board, and Improved. Feneered Bridge are vuluable improvements, used in the Bauer Piano only, THE BAUER GABINET GRANDS, The Newest and Most Perfect Productionin the art of Plano-2Making. By the introduction of an Improved VIOLIN-SHAPED SOUND- PROMINENT ARTISTS PRONOUNCE IT A MARVEL OF PERFECTION. For the Publication of Which He Has Been Charged: with _Decisione: : 3. a Mere Matter of Useless Sentiment. Ea to The Roman-Belgian -Troubles— Diplomatic Equivocation from the Vatican, General. Notes, Personais, Pious Pleasantries, Services DROPPING A'SEED: The Jand was still; tHe 8 were gray with weeping; % ‘i Into the soft brown earth the seed she cast; lem, rise of a new school of men whose whole met ang aims were in Sontiiet with the official letios, 2880) Samuel and Elijah. SEAS he [Raeeestars In the terrible. stra; pastis spirit, and the r reU thing of the old force, play a subtler habit of. pathos which had its origin in the conflict of a sensitive and shrink; overpowering sense ot when the old Proof of the influence of the written word as vidual fuith, and in the historical books as the: wero tinally shaped after, the tail of Jerusa pular narrative was iilled out and ‘continued tn asplrit of prophetic ; | Pragmatism, and with the direct obje while thod | pro- id paving an ine pro- ‘eformution carried out by losiuh on the basis of this book is the decisive ct of on- $ prophetic teaching. ‘The exilo, which robbed Israel of every other inheritance, gavo increased value and authority to the written word, Sag iy ae aaPhoe: Of Isa., XL, Ixvi., we find 2 prophet who no longer appears in’ per before pie aualenee but does ie ork by the pen. ere are other short prophecies of the Bubylonian oge, as Isa., xii Sire which scem to buve beon tirst published as anonymous brondsiaes—a characteristic change from the the method of the former prophets, who wrote only what they bad first spoken to the people. ‘The earliest written prophecy is nervous rhet- whole work by they dis~ reflection “and a tompernment with the prophetic duty. Jere- miab was much occupied with the dark prob- tained, the grounds of the’decision being as fol jows: The plaintiff having: attended ‘the fu- neral, and boing, about to return to his home, extended his journey to Charlestown, in or- of HOW THEY ARE WASTED. . Rowland Connor in International Heview, August, 1880, uonal morality and theological morality are seemingly opposed in thoir teachings., The sub- Ject is of sufficient importance to merit some degree of fulness in statement. Patriotism requires a. man’s work to be dono for his own country directly, not for humanity in general. An immense amount of verbiage proceeds from poets, stump orators, sentiment- alists of all sorts, on the subject of our duty to humanity or our mission to the human race; and most of itis wretched twaddle. Indirectly, of course, everything that we do well is done for the human race,—that is, it may be supposed, in the long run, to benefit the world as well as our own land; but the long run is so very long man who attempts to work for the race, and not for some particular portion of the race, is as wise as the man who should sow, wheat for bumanity by scattering it broadcast wherever he might go; neither he nor humanity would ever be benctited by his labors in the least de- pastoral letter protesting absolut and in the. most’solemn manner against the lar June 20 the Belgian Ambassndor in Rome lodged a com= plaint aguinst the ete at with Cardinal Nina, Rl bishop of Malines, dated June 27, which says: “ The joint pastoral letter, of which you have a ey y 2, e iggle with Nineveh, “ ei ecg is, Mattresses UPRICHTS ae Heresy. :' the, Kingdom of Eporaim perished and Jaden | eet? call upon a friend: eis wns tho ube |-2ng, June 24 Cardin | vas nor knows bere ngs, 3 ra s Qu ARE Ss me Pree Of Vision ce ‘ope, the. new prophecy, :| "stitution of: a new and different purpose in the tik this mc io PiJows, ani 0 en all were blinded, calm in ite | pince of thar wcnke ¥ left |-they iomeacte gras, WES ab, Variance with Z & . 2 fee é unshaken faith of ultimate victory, and pursu- Be which he bad in view when he left |-the instructions :sent to the Bishops by ie. ai oh eee Sunday-Law Absurdities in Massa- | ing with untaitering stendfastress a grent pur. | necessity On Charity or ahs thy mening ef we | [o,curia: that thé Pope, though he bad uo ob . 3 . 5 : 2 oro : pose of righteousoess, catablished a.spirtual and | Lord’s-Day act. Davis v. City of Somerville. Re- deuce to fora ia pan ee moe 4 60 0 ER chusetis—Supremé Court whole literature of tho’ Assyriin and Gheidens | Script fled July 4, 1660 : ":| especially certain single expreasions,ete, Again, # periods. Inthe book of Deuteronomy the ancient the Belgian Government was deceived, for Mgr. 4 Q Ordinances of Israel w MISSIONARY FORCES. Dumont now publishes a, letter from the Arch gopye bas the unqualified consent of the Holy Father, but his Holiness wants this to be a . * eels = : the ‘organ of prophetic idens. The samo in- ‘ . ¢ Can have their orders filled at a | y, How Missionary Forces: Are Wasted on | ttuence can bo traced Me Sper 9 Sam Upon # single point ( know of no other)—the | secret.” Of course, these two letters explain sed and Recommended by 25,000 Art- i ae Boedin other ‘direstions, tisfactorily why” Igtan : y £9, in. psalms that express the type of indi- | SUbJect of foreign missionary enterprise—na- be yatnctortly why te oe lh reraaele and ‘they place tho Pope in_a position from which he will find it very difficult to extricate himself. ‘To give the Ife to the Archbishop of Sfalines and the Bishop of Liege is impossible. To dismiss Cardinal Nina would be useless; everybody would know it to bea‘trick. Nor will it do to leave the whole affair unnoticed. in our days of parliaments and parilnnentary interpellations it might happen either that the Pope should .be indirectly forced into an ox- planation, or that, some day, ne would find him- self alone with his intallibility, without any corps dipiomatique to which to exhibit it. THE SALVATION ARMY. ARRIVAL OF GEN. RAILTON. " The advance guard of the celebrated Salra~ ENG-BOARD the colume of tone is greatly in~ -Day.; oricot the old pregnant Hebrew stylo inter- creascd, and left entirely free from Metallic To-Day., spersed with bursts. of song. Even before the | 8d the service of any one man is generally co | tion Army, which created such a sensation in Qualities. exile this style bad undergone change; the | Slight that practically service done to | England, reached here yesterday in the person Prophecies .of Jeremiah havo lost some- | the’. world cannot be computed.: The | of Gen. G.S. Railton, who has a commission as & recruiting agent for the United States. As & preliminary step the General sought out some of the local exhorters and made arrangements fora meeting on the Lake-Front last evening. Acannon of Tobey’s Baatc:y.hnd been posted lems of Providence, und the meaning of the suf- ferings of the faithful in Istacl, a topic which | £TCe:, Fences must. be built somewhere and Messrs. JULIUS BAUER & CO., Chicago, Il: jounds established, ora man’s labor goes for | ** tke Van Buren street entrance of Camp TRIENNIAL CONCLAVE! | ObI-soon, she cried, will come the time of reap- | i ey GENTLEMEN: The Bauer Piano whtch I purchased ing. os bi | We have made special efforts in | of you, 1am nappy to say, is growing in favor every | mye goidon timo when clodds and tears aro | But forins a chick thome ot Laney preeneeF: | nothing. ‘he welfare of one's own country, or | Molal. Seizing upon this asa com- Jacing in our Warerooms THE | day. The more! use tt the better I like it. I have | any | and from a diferent point of view is taken up | S0MePurt of it next to that of his family, de- | manding position for the attack, tho placing ! H P Be ate Jal mands alt the time that. can be spared from ob- | General took his stand, flanked by two local”. ' ; had Pianos from many colebrated factories, but have | Thero camo a whisper throbgh the autumn | 20d discussed in tho Book of Job. ‘The last- | taining the necessities of lire. Each man's home f MOST COMPLETE AND ELE- | gounanoneto qua! yours in power and purity of | i * named book is the highest utterance of another | ahouads in opportunities for reform and conse, | ColPorteurs and a portly female of middle years - | charncteristic form -of Hebrew literature, the | quently for most offective missionary work. | With a good soprano voice but uninteresting- appearance. Gen. Railton was dressed.in blue ; breeches and a blue uniform sack coat, buttoned s close to the throat, the collar corded with yel-° low, and bearing on each tappel the letter S. He * also wore a regulation cap with a bright, broad ze, H thou shall find it after many days.” * Chokma, that is, wisdom or pnictical philosophy - ! in parabolic, epigrammatic, and poetic form. ‘Tho enrliest distinct trace of literary cultivation of this philosopy, which from its ‘nature must at first have passed unwritten from- mouth to mouth, is the collection of ancient proverbs ; * My country 1s the world,” ig a ractoricul phrase which may tickle the vague sentiment ofa superticial audience, but meuns practically nothing at all. Foreigu uission work is, thereforo, as a rule (ladmit somo exceptions), a mistake. Alt the tono, clasticity of touch, nnd durability. Iam glad that my first good opinion which prompted me: in EXCHANGING my KNABE Pluno for the BAUER bas proved a lasting one. Yours respectfully, JOHN RIEBLING. * GANT STOCK OF FURNITURE ‘in the city, which we sell at prices , . that will astonish the closest cash , buyer. : | wea, | Four after hour sho marks the fitful gleaming | Of sunlight steuling through the cloudy rift; j Hour ufter hour she lingers, idly dreaming fezekinh Teloeigede Between Sky and Earth, OPEN EVENINGS. ‘433 & 135 Wabash-av., S. W. Cor, Madison-st. A. BAN BERCER, | Pittsbarg, Pa., Nov. 23, 1879. i A Complete assortment of these Favorite ; Pianos will be found at our Warervoms. ! To see the rain fall and the dead leaves drift; by Oh! for sume small green sign of life, sho prays, 3 Have inot watched and waited “ many days!" At early morning, chilled and gad, she hearkens | ‘fo stormy winds that through the poplars xiv., 9 cf, LI in the service of Along with tho simple opi- grammatic proverbs which cuntinued to be a le of Jewish thought long ufter Hobrew had given way to Aramaic, the earlicst form of Hebrew wisdom seems to beve been the fable about plunts and trees (Jud., xi.. LL. Kings, ings, {y., 23). so different, fruin tho work. that can be given gratuitously, [ repeat, is needed here, in solving our own social problems; and the moncy is needed here. All our great cities contain heathan communities of the worst character, and situated precisely where they can do the most harm. The barbarian in Africa can- not possibly do the mischief accomplivied by the barbarian in New York, or Sc. Louis, or San red band on which was the title “Salvation Army.” Heisa man of unusual intelligence and power, with ‘2 high forehead, and dark, curl- ing, almost Jewish bluck, beard and hair. When the crowd had begun to gather he be- gan the services by alternately reading and singing the hymn “Hallelujah, ‘tis done.” animal fables of Kaliiag and Damnag'or Sind-" ban, which tho latcr Semitic.literuture borrowed 1 fom India. “Phe further development of the + Chokma ran parallel with the progress of proph- Francisco. In those parts of the world, more- over, to which missionaries mostly go—India, China, Asia Minor, Persia—the people already have ail the religion they require, the best possi- i blow; : | Par over hil! and plain the heaven darkens, - | lius Bauer & Co,,' * 182 & 184 Wabash-av. | Ab, Lord! she sighs, are these thy loving ways? od Sah Ve i ‘He auswers—" Spake I uot of many days!” And Wheeling Her Babe Over an Invisible Wire, 100 FEET IN 30D-AIR, | Prayer was then offered, all kneeling, Another song and the reading of passdges of Scripture completed theservices, which were compara- HABDWARE. wire. ts ym the Hi * Grossing the high wire, © feet from. fie ground, and ! ! ecy, and though itis generully muintained that | ble religion for them, because adapted to their ON af ao. Botween Monroo and Adams-sts., i The snaw-drop blooms; the purple violet glist- ; Jcromich quotes the Book of Job. it is perhaps | necessities, os Christiunity is to ours. Errors in | tively uninteresting. Now we are going to tho CxS. : | (AND ens z more likely that the contrary is the case, and | religion appear to: be doing them exactly the | Mission Garden, fall in, recruits,” called out the | d Lex! | Ouibunksof moss that take the sparkling show- | that tho latest and most meditative phase of | sume kind and amount. of hurm that | General, but none came. ‘Che quartet moved i Factory, Corner of 1259th-st. ant exineton-a¥., ! * ers; } Prophecy was absorbed into the poctry of ths | our errors are doing. to us; they are | Of after announcing a meeting in the evening. 8 f- Half-chcered, half-doubting yet, she strays and : Chokma. The brief revival of spoken prophecy | no more , conscious of their error, | ,,Atabout 7:30 Gen. Railton, with tive aids und NEW YORK. listens | after the exile lacks tho old fire, and presents | pnd no more willl to admit them’ | the soprano. started the work again opposit : tog {| the Grand ~ Pucitic Hotel. After a SENSATION OF THE CENTURY! no notxble literary feature except the use of that wo are conscious of or willing to udmit our To finches singing to the shy young flowers; a rs somewhat fantastic symbolic imagery, the pro- | own; and:they are getting rid of their supersti- | f¢V preliminary hymns, the commander b t: A urtle fongar set His love deine day. | Soe at the latter spoealppile literature led off down Clark street, shouting “ Rescue th H 6 prom! essing—" after many days.” * $ i “ ae og that eatery i ing * Rescue the i SPECIAL BARGAINS e-/ > , aoe pe vseuteings | oorneaceudenes of propheey and the synchron- Hone by eng same, processes chat ore eecury Perishing!” | ‘The little, army Joined in with : Ob, happy world! she cries, the aun ts abin! | ous systematization of the ceremonial law on ins : jzor, the leader marehing backwards, bare- PPY. es, z seml-civilized, although tholr civilization may | vigor tho lender marching, backwards, bare- ‘Will offer extra inducements to the Trade * this week. An immense stock of all kinds of General Shelf Hardware at less than Factory quota- tions. . a | { i Above thé soil I see the springing green; A could not trust His word without repining, | Tcould not wuit in peace for things unseen; Forgive me, ‘Lord, wy soul is full of praiso; My doubting heart prolonged thy “ many days.” -ROBERTSON SMITH. Hebrew Hterature. ductivity was past, and the narrow of the new Jewish settlement inns presented no favorable con- ditions for a fresh development of truly na- ‘The seribes took the pluce of political under the Poi | tional literature. Mnes first drawn by Ezekiel. marx the com- Mencement of. the third and last period of Tho age of religious pro- limits and nonit, not resemble ours; and nearly a}l their progress or change in civilization is due directly to com- mercial intercourse, not to missionary effort. Of what avail, therefore, the attempt to con- vert the Maronites, Nestorians, Confucians, etc., for the most part quiet, industrious, moral, re- ligious, and unoppressed people, compared with the etfect of the same expenditure of mission- | balf a hundred Rous followed, and these took up the song. The line of march was south on Clurk street, past the saloons and pawnshops, As the column passed one of the concert-bulls the strains of 2 ribald song from a short-petti« coated songstress mingled strangely with the enthusiastic hymn so persistently shouted by, the Salvation. Army recruits, They The Largest Stock of Locks and Knobsin the prophets, and the growth of traditionalism nat | 22 labor ‘at home among our heathen? Take redoubled their efforts and drowned the THE ALLEGED CAUSE OF THE SCOTCH HERESY CASE. ' the city at 15 to 25 per cent below present 5 Hl . imposed increasing restrictions on. ori: toe Factory cost. i | otiowing aro extracts frpm tho article on | tOUsHt. ‘The freshest and best products of thla | Gay in much ‘of the foreign missionary work | itty UF thebyma. When the Pacite Garden . lee i és erlud 8 ‘sali 7 I + 1» rk and Van Burer ,; 5,000. dozen Loose Pin Butts, | “Mebrew Languageand Litefature,” contribut- | The gecond temple, which occupy a large part of | Mnich 8, Sccomplishing no appreciable | G1 reota, was renehed, the column filed in, and itt 20 per cent below the | ed to the Encyclopedia Byltannica by Prof. | tho Psalter, and, though generally inferior to | Erty' or crime at home, ‘and the ' ton | thisstrange manner’ at least fifty were brought | ket. : | Robertson Smith, and whlch forms tho ground | the oldoriyrics inthe highest pogtical qualities, | thousand économie problems prossing for | {through that fecling which induces men ta : market. | for the second heresy indictment found aguinst | 2T¢ often full of the churm of genuine feel- | solution, and unsuived only because | follow ateader. They all entered still singing 2,500 | him, Prof. Smith says that tho article in ques- | Ng Qnd, swect, utterance, ‘any sometimes | of the lack of | devoted | men and | jlzerously the same: lines, “Rescue the perish : women toundertake them,—and {n ten years a ithin the halla song-service inane dozen Narrow Wrought | 5 faith. With these psulms the graceful fae idyl of Ruth: has a natural aflinity. ‘be other writings of the hist age are on the hundred times as much would be done, in every large city atleast, as at the missionary station where the result of ten years’ work and an un- tion dues not raiso any new point of doctrine not covered by the old libelen which he was ac- rated, while more .recruits were coming in. At first the voices were weak, and j utis. : 20,000 gross Screws. ' 100 tons Strap and T Hinges. | x, ‘ is | quitted of the churgo of heresy. The publica | Tio io\nueh inferior, . As the kinguage decayed, the “strains of the, cracked H . ’ : ‘ 4 . piano’ and | 3,000 set Bed and Plate Cas- | Fifty years of Trial, Experiment, and | ton of the new article is the occasion, but not j {hole much inferior, AS the unguaze deen} ed, Knoin crboncuare of mones is given as nine | screeching voices from, the ‘dive. over : tere ! changes; Fifty years of patient Industry; ; the caiise, of the attempted, fresh agitation, the | The memoirs of Hara and Nehomian, the color. Gravitation acts inversely as the square of | the way ware tho loudest, but the Gospel sing mw eee Se oe US! by Hon; w. Patents, and j real meaning of which is to rove the less‘narrative of the Chronicles, and cven © | the distance. Our efforts to do guod follow an. ers woko up to the work an whed out Oppo~ A full line of Ti =| Rie years of aventiqn FAtEn) BOS | ee ee Re Seees -at=Eather, aro, singularly destitute_of lit 39 sition with a Sulvation.A\ Ei ith th ! of Tinware 25 per Cte} «ow touches of Improvement are what it cost | *tfuict: ig aiee Par apres ree ee } analogole lae—t teen. foe Ista n ee a Sane. -chorus “Fight, the ight. Salvation artny, Goa Fer letters were sedulousiy cultivated. ‘Th G : hath given acaily earth and hell enn ne'er pre The earliest products*of Hebrew-authorship, says the Britannica, seems to have been lyrics ; and laws, which would circulate in the first in- HT i " scance from mouth to mouth without the use of § , Written copies, We have notice of early written ) | collections of lyrics prior to our present historic- | al books—the Book of the Wars of Jehovah | (Num., xxi., 14) and the Book of Jashar (Josbua ; x.,LL Sam.,i.). We have no clew to the age of the istan, or Bangweola, or.China, or Russia; if 1 devote my life to its overthrow, I shall probably accomplish nothing whatover. ‘But I know of an injustice under which my neighbor sulfors; I resolve to right his wrong; and in all proba- bility, with comparatively little expendituro of time or jabor, I meet with complete success. I can to-day—uny man can—bi ny subject, if of rea! importance, before ua gislature or a Judge, or a convention or a chureh, or some civic authority, and below the market. ‘Call and see the Bargains at the Cheapest | : place in the United States to buy Hard- Wi A. W. WHEELER, 141 Lake-st. FINANCIAL, vall—withstand us, we shall conquer all.” Prayer was thon offered by a brother, and the recruiting officer sank down on his knees, rock- ing back, ana falling alinost on his face, crying: “Amen,” “Every one of. us,” * Hallelujah to God,” “That's so,” and “* Praise be to God.”" <After the prayer he'made an nddress, reading a few verses irom the scene between Pilate and the muititude when they. demanded the release of Barabbas and the punishment of Jesus. The multitude to-day, he said, are the same in 1%80 The Midrash, or sermonizing treatment of the old history which hoids 80 large a pluce in later Jewish literature, had come in before the time of the Chronicler, who quotes a work of the kind by name,—the Midrash of the Book of Kings (I. Chron., xxiv., 27. of. xifi., 22). Along ‘with this came the beginnings of Haggada, the formation of parables nnd the tales attached to historical names, ot which the Book of Jonah is generally taken as an eurly example, and which A HUMAN BEING To give the world the Hallet, Davis & Co. Piano, to perfect their art forms, and de- MHOT FROM A IONSTER CANNON! ted with Powder, and caught by a Lady hanging peated ee ranean ose lofty trapeze. TRAINED GIRAFFES, LIONS, TIGERS, AND SQ PERFORMING ARAB HORSES, And the first and only mammoth CIRCUS IVY TWO RINGS, With 100 Peerless Performers, And the Largest Menagerie in the Universe, with 1,500 Wild Beasts! | Including Leviathan HIPPOPOTAMUS, ‘Usaster “6-Ton RAINOCEROS, SEA LIONS, and Colossal TRAINED WLLD BEAST SHOW. CHICAGO, BURLINGTON’ _—_& QUINCY RR. TRUST MORTGAGE 4 PER CENT | Sinking Fund Bonds, | i DUE 1919, ! ; FOR SALE AT 92 [-2c by: GERHARD FOREMAN, 1 WASHLNGTO: CHARLES HENROTIN, t 106 WASHINGTON-ST. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, COR, WASHINGTON AND STATE-ST3. A. O. SLAUGHTER, RW. COR. CLANK AND MADISON-STS. EDWARD L. BREWSTER, 10f WASHINGTON-ST. HOLMES & BROTHER, & WASHINGTON-ST. j And only as such are offered for sale and - velop The Grandest Tone’ ‘That human genius and invention have yet produced. By all candid criticism, by all high professional authority, they are the BEST PLANO EVER MANUPACTURED : exhibited in endless variety of forms and | styles by : W. W. KIMBALL, | Cor. State and Adams-sts. STECK former book,- but tho lincs quoted from it aro plainly of great antiquity. The Book Jashar1s not earlier thun the time of Solomon; fofa frag- ment trom it referring to the building of the temple has been recovered from the Septuagint of i. Kings, vill. (Wellhausen in Bleek, ut supra, p. 236.) “he earliest date of written law-books is certain. It may fairly be mado a question whether Moses left in writing any other lnws thun the Commandments on the tables of stone. Even Exodus xxiv., 4, and xxxiv.,27, may in the originul context have’ referred to the ten words alone. And it is certain that ancient law was handed down by oral tradition and local custom = toa much ater | date. The prophets frequently allude to the | oral decisions of the priests ag 2 source of law, | and the practice ot appealing to the local cus- toms of certain towns is alluded to in If. Sam., XX., 18 (us restored by Ewuld from the LXX.): > at Abeland at Dan whether tho genuine old statutes of Isracl have lost their force.” In like manner the story of the carly fortunes of the nation down to the time of David often pre- sents charactecristics.which point to oral tradi- tion as its original source. Yet written history begun comparatively early. A scribe was at- tached to the royal court from the reign of David downwards; and tho older parts of the books of Samuel, which must have been written not long after the time of that King (see David), are fra.ned in a masterly style,which sbows that the art of composition in prose was already thoroughly understood. So, tuo, the best writ- m: aking. attains much greater dimensions im the phal additions to the Huaglograp! tho close of the Old Testament period the author of Ecclesiastes could spe: much study and the endless sterility of book- His judgment was contirmed by pos- terity, for of these many beoks scarcely a trace remains. SUNDAY-LAW ABSURDITIES. DECISIONS OF THE MASSACHUSE:TS SUPREME ha. An OouRT. American Law Review. - A statute of Mussachusctts provides that that “whoever travels on the Lord’s Day. ex- cept from necessity or churity, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10 for every offense.” Gen. Stat., c. 84, Sec. 2. The genealozy of this statute is traced back to English statutés less objectionable colonial law. chusetts' Colony in form, 80 at ak of the weariness of prior to any An ordinance of the Massa- in 1653 punished both “‘uncivilly walking the strects or flelds,”. and “traveling from town to town.” In 1692, a statute.in some part copying an English statute provided that ‘no traveler, arover, horsc- courser, wagoner, butcher. higgler, or any of their servants, shall travel on that day or any part thereof, except by some adversity they are belated and forced to lodge in the woods, wilder- ry. | and have it investigated and considered by those who should know best what disposition to make of it.. The mun, therefore, who is at nil qualified to bea missionary can accomplish a hundred times as much good at‘home, with the same ex- penditure of effort, as in 2 foreixn Iand. But to all the above it may be replied, The do- yout Christian is commanded to go intw all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature, and be cannot choose between going abroad and staying at home. On the contrary. l reply, he must choose; for universal obedicuco to the supposed command would immediately depopu- jate every Christian nation, and initiate a new migration of nations, which would throw civili- zation into chaos. But the command itself, I am persuaded, was addressed only to the little group of disciples who sur- rounded Jesus; and the world of which he spoke was the little world of’ Judea and its immediate surroundings, the only world known to thosead- drossed,—a very different world from the one known to-day. ‘The missionary, I believe, istol- lowing a mistaken command to very little good. Asa patriot, I begrudge the wasted labor and money so sadly needed at home. Nowhere on the face of the earth’cen philanthropic effortbe expended by the Christian to better advantage than in his own native land. According to the missionary. ull praise for bis heroism and sin- cerity, 1 must remind him that he cannot be a patriot. Every one now admits that the eurly Christians, who foreswore patriotism from mo- tives of supposed religious obligation, were mis- taken. May not some modern Christians be mistaken also? as they were in A. D. 30. They would rather have a sburp, shrewd scoundrei in their com- pany than have the Jesus. He wanted People to join the Salvation Army, at least in spirit, and be hoped to see ail Christians to come forth to do battle against their fellow-citize although without the bitter feelings killing war. When Booth began tho work and organized the Salvation Army, it was because‘ he saw the snultitude rushing away from Gud. Ho said he would no longer preach to those who wanted to be preached to, butte those who tried to escape from preaching. These he would compel to come toGod. Out of this effort thus begun the Salvation Army now bas 200 corps established in England, and there arc thousands in the ranks willing to speak in the streets, while scores of thousands follow more quietly. ‘The Salvation Army bad proved that women‘ were mightier than men in God's hand for rescuing the perish- ing. The Army is determined to win, anc ae not seruple to:-make use of all ‘lawful means. They will fight it out on that line if it takes forever. They tell the truth and speak lainly. People now are fondof picturing ths euutiful side of things, the saving grace, but they are afraid to tella man that he will be damned. Jesus in sentence after sentence puts life and death, salvation and damnation, to- gether. The papersin New York said the Sal- vation Army was composed of the uneducated. ‘That was so, but in this country a superior class is belng obtained. Fi At the close of his address he stepped to the front of the platform, and, in a beseeching tone ness, or highways tho night before: and in such ease to travel no further than the next inn or place of shelter on that day; upon the ponalty of twenty shillings”; and all Justices of the Peace, Constables, and tithing men were re- Will it appease any irritation that may be ex- cited in wood friends of foreign missions who imay happen to read the preceding Paragraphs, if Ladd the statement of my sincere belief that the spirit of self-sacrifice, which tinds so noble an illustration in the missionary, is the spirit with outstretched arms, cailed out: ‘Will you besaved?” ‘ Who will be saved?" During his exhortation a rougo-looking man in the centre of the hall rose up and steadied himself by.a chair, while he shouted in a husky woice: “Iwas with God once, now I've lost Jehovist and the non-Leviticul Elohist—appears Agent forthe Steck Plano: In giving you ntesti- | to be unquestionably carlier than the rise of monial for the Steck Fiano. all 1 can say is to relter- ! i : PIANOS ! ten and most brilliunt. part ‘of the narrative of ‘a | the Pentatench—the combined history of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St, Paul j First Mortgage 7 per cent Bonds, Chicago City 4 1-2 Bonds. |* Also acholce line of other first-class securities for | sale by CERHARD FOREMAN, rophetic literature in the eighth century B. C. in this narrative—itsolf the product of more ate the one given in 1576, which I have indorsed + d'to take care that this act be observed, : ‘eet your i Sort Gra writer—are. included. geve o- | quired to tal : ra Deller Fimo madgyy ai. wiee AUGUST Tears ean one ee cataat WO have bern ee iy | ‘a8 also to restrain all persons from swiouning | pocpilrls calcd fa to 02 cee neRGIeNS | Hun, Dray for me, pray forme. “Bor tro vena ssU. cit ‘conable My a ve pril 14, time of David aud the age of Amos and Hosea | in the water, unnecessary and unsens tho best work that can be done for humanity | (Oo yo ye, y drunk,” and he staggered to walking in the streets or fields in ibe Towa of | everywhere? Boston or. other places,” on the Lord's day, or the evening preceding or following. The statute Ff ROME—BELGIUM. in its present form was enacted in 1836, but it | prpomaTIo’ EQUIVOCATION ON THE PART OF was in substance a reénactment of astatute of | ~ THE VATICAN. anxious seat in front: “Come up, come up,” called the General, “and we'll gave you by God Almighty." ‘The two -then kneeled togetner, and the exhorter threw his. arms around the penitent while he prayed eagerly for his salvation. a ftlouristing. bistorical and legal literature, in which and in lyrical collections like the Bookof Jashar were embodied many poems, legends, and other remains, transmitted, whether orally or by writing, from a much earlier date. To the .|-same period may be’ assigned the most inter- Agency for the Northwest, H. BRANCH, 208 State-st. 102 WASHINCTON-ST. ‘FIRST NATIONAL BANK, “CHICAGO, HAS FOR SALE $100,000 District of Columbia Bonds, guaran- teed by Government, at par. $50,000 Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Oma- ha Railroad Consolidated Mortgage 6 per cent Bonds at par, and other first-class securities. CARPETS. fered much from interpolation, and presumably was not written down until acomparatively Jate ‘date, and trom imperfect recollection, 80 esting and graphic histories in the book of Kings, the splendid episode of Elijah, and other remuins of Ephratie history; and to these must probably be added the main stock of the Song. of Solomon, though this lyricdrama has eut- 0. that its original shape is very much lost. Itis muinly from the admirable prose naratives, to which nothing in later books can be com- by towns or cities, ersons traveling ft For injuries occasior passengers asa sustained by a person so travellng. of 1877 this latter defense was taken away. been numerous decisions under de “provision; one of the most interesting of en, simply for exere! 1791. The above provision has been for a long time almost a dead ietter, except when invoked as a defense to actions by in violation of it, to recover ned by detects in the high- way; or when invoked by a common. carrier of defense for any tort or. injury By statute ared, that we must judge of the first bloom | this provision; ue Hebrew Mterature under the ancient | which is Hamilton v. City of Boston, 1 Alle Kingdoms of guaah ee Ephraim, be- | 475, where OE eet erence ‘ieee K 0. A wore SGombanied the | walking jrexereise and to take the alr, on the A curious complication in Belgium has raised the inquiry whether the infailible Pope can do that which George Washington and his little hatchet could not do, and whethor, if the Pope tells a lie, it becomes truth. Tho affair is thus told in the New York Times: The story is this: In the last years of the reign of Pius LX.,.B{gr Dumont, who was Bishop of Tourney, was employed as a spy not only upon his colleagues, tho other Belgian Bishops, but also upon the Papal Nuncio at Brussels, Cardinal Pecci, and his reports, it is sald, were rather merciless., But it so happened that A colored brother then made an impassioned er and exhortation. Then the peuitent: “Say, Colonel, I want to Bray myself.” He was persuaded to. kneel lown again, and with a brother on either side forced to remain with bowed head until ons after another offered up fervent prayers for the penitent backslider. During this time the large audience was thinning out, and the meeting wat dismissed with the benedictidn. The Army will start on another campal, from the west front of the Custom-House at o'clock this evening. : GENERAL NOTES. advance of Assyria and prior to the influence of written prophecy. It is u literature eminently “e, | fresh and vivacious, full of exact observation of , Nature and of men, always drawing directly | from life, and working on the reader not by elaborate description but by dramatic presenta- } tion of character and action. The authors are | too intent upon the story to interpose their own day, with no Purpose ng go- to or stopping at any place but own ielise, or of paest from one city or town to another, was not iiable to punishment, and might maintain an action for injury sustained in consequence of a defect in the highway. ‘The gnme court has now rendered two further which at least show that the statute. Cardinal Pecei became the successor of Pius IX., and one day, while rumaging in the Papal archives, the new Pope discovered in the reports from Tourney a portrait of himself which was anything but flattering. The results of this discovery were not slow in showing them- evening of a Lord’s |. LOANS. On Life Policies; samo bought. Send stamp. Failed |, j. Life Co.’s Policies also purchased. Beo-Hive and other failed Bank Claims bought. HOLMES & BRO., §General Brokers, 86 Waskington-st. A Mrs. Morse, of Rochester, was recently ad- mitted to the Jewish faith. Her husband Js an Israelite. . i The old Catholic Congress meets this year at Baden-Baden on the 19th of Septomber, and “Wes To the city during the coming ? Coy invi { comments or point a moral, but they tell their | docisions, 7 A The Merchants Savings, Loan & Trust 0. week, are: respectfully invited to ! tale with sympathy and often with 46 undercur: should not longer be allowed to stand, and be | selves. Rebuke xfter rebuke was admin: continues in seasion two days. { pansact a General Banking Business. examine the new goods now open- | rent. of dry humor. .It may bardly be said that | uged ay a deteuse in like cases. tort, under | tered to the unfortunate Bishop; whenever | “Oo MT dasa Syund of eight Presbptenied thier Jass Investment Securitics. ing in our | the writings of this period have a specitically ro- | _‘The firet case was an action. of tort, under } no did anything on his own account he was sure ‘ew Jersey has a Synod of e! , Buy aud pel! preci, ole Boats, Ealivey Houta: ge ligious purpose. Retlecting with admirable ver- General at Chap. Os a a ve | tobe overtaken byadementi trom the Curia; | 951 ministers, 267 shielies. (627 cence mem- le s ble 3 * e Fe St scholars. '+ Exchange on London and Paris. | fever shave been caused oy the defendant's | at Inst the Papal displeasure broke through all | bers, and 00,000 Sunday-se en She he eurne. dog. At tho trial ia the Superior Court without | pounds, and he wasdeposed. But Mgr. Dumont Last year the Burmese Bap’ gitve for missionary purposes. The Virginia Bap- tists, who number thrice a8 many, gave very much less, - : Enropean Circular Letters of Credit furnished for - Travelers. a fory it appenred that tho pluintiif, on Sunday, Ty ide was driving his horse and buggy Apr publle highway in the City of Boston; was not willing to end the game in this manner. He sought the aidof the liberal press in Brus- sels, and began to write against the policy of the ' acity the actuul life of the nation they are full of the relation between leraci and Jehovah, be- | cause that relation was constantly present tothe z people as a very real fact without which the his- tory could not be told. It is to this circumstance ; that we owe the preser-<cion Of so large a mass. MLESCELLANEOUS. MONSTER STREET PARADE. defense, or pi | eerie nee ee DEPARTMENT ; "I defendant's d ' fie so driving, the defendant's dog he lrsest, longest, most brill i TOVI EW T HE 1 ' Pe re ce by later histones | itumped ae the bead of plaintii’s horse and | Roman Church, more especially against the pol- | ‘The Primitiva Methodists of Cincianat! will Eilcmecession ever mato ene mamiscent | + We Guarantea the Voy Lowest Prices, | Bopteerieatte"” Settacty ‘religious teepoas: | tribtened the horse so that ba ‘became un- | toy of the Papal Curia. An attempt wos made | commence revival sexvices.on the 28th inst. ape R. Rec in vista ae ee i i While on tho other hand, the early lyric collec: | munngeable, min. and Oreehroperty of pluia: | toconfine him in a monastery or in alunatic | under the.auspices of the Revs. W. H. Farrow a'§ as, Sxtibilions afternoon and evening, at] ° . j | : J | Sons have disappeared. ie thelr teae ees ee | Nn was damaged; und that defendant, provious | asylum, but the Belgian laws proved too un- | and John Mason. Rite yoars 5 Admission. Vcents, Children under i mig sts, presumnoly, ee ones ifont, Knew ot no mischievous or | manageable for this purposo. Other methods of t to the American Board of Foreign Gari SS cents.” Admission to Amphitheatre a vailingly seculur, That the Hebrews once pos- | to such acc! a aid dog to attack or | silencing bim were tried, but he bafied intrigues | _ The cost to the sesadtatires and ee GON Pome, es Lor ae sessed u poctry of high merit drawn trom the | viclous propensity, IN Fon “8 62 derendant | as he had balked roree. He went on writing. and | Missions of each heathen convert last year wns niersin the “4 Yen thousind of ail'the above " Forty Sents and ‘Three Upper Windows of 735 Wa- MAIN STORE, themos. of ordinary life, appears not only from | harass persons or +. he Sisiutitt was | from two points he bas thrown a most surprising | $253.68. Tho average cost to all the other rs 2 the book of Canti id such relic fered evidence to show that tho pl poi rp G - bnsh-ay., opposite Haven Eehool. A PE OSTEN, 2 the book of Canticles and such relics asthe Song | olfered crdenes ting on the Lord's Das, and not | lghton the Papul poilicy in its relations wich | American Missionary Societies was $1428. E AT Windsor Europes not tibme bik | 114 and 116 States. | ote Me came eee served ie che meets | PolaNecessity or charity. But the Court ruied | the Belgian Government. Triveciored thatthe Pope's Boeyclical will 5 | i H = The Psalms. "thus we learn Isa, ixv..&, tuarthe | and beld that these facts would constituteno | First, when the present Cabinet came into ine religions questions in.the Bast, and Which fg ~ 3 taken’ revent plaintiff from recovering, | power in Belgium, 1878, its head, Frere Orban, dato feet Silly appeal to these two doo- “Wives of Sir nights | vintage song of which the first line was “De- title Al-Taschith (Ps., Ivii), is taken from a and found for t he plaintitf in double the amount suffered by him. Exceptions announced in the speech with which he open! the session of Parliament, in November, that he trines in demonstrating the supremacy of St. to, cnet ft Chleao one week, every At- i COANE ios. id for renee - And other Ladies (whose husbands caanot es stroy itnot for a blessing is init.” These popu- | of actual Nene: it bave now been over- | would bring in a new school law. ‘The law itself | Peter and the necessity of submission to bis See. LAKE ONT tem will sind supertor accommodations, with polite | : , lar songs, then, survived tho exile and long cun- | alleged 0) the defence tre forthe reason that; | was not laid before Parliament until February, | cardinal Manning bas decided that the En- Commencing attention at ‘The Fashion Restaursnt unt es | tinued to'live in the mouths of the people. But | ruled by rie cols fliegally traveling on | 1879, but on Dee. 2S, 1878, the Biahopa of Belgium ut ne Lourdes shall leave England omy 2 See Re ee Oe menicgye Ss base aCe : . they rere, without interest, to the latter “though Ine Peis illegal act was not @ eon- | issued Jointly a pastoral levtcr, ta wbich toy | Fup nlvr or secmnd week in: September, £0.98 to son-st__N.D.—Family trad a specialty. — guardians of Israel's literature, and fell in , hig legal 2 se omhich, th : ry,so as to defeat | censured the-new school Jaw—of which they rive at the shrine on the Feast of the Nutlyi AVTEENOOS, AUGUST 16. FOLDING BED. [ROBERT 1.A,T, donor inall Kins of Con, by ex | Pblivion when Hebrew ceased tobe sberornacu; } his ight, wig, recotge” White "vs. Lang. He- | pew nouning “and could know nothing—in the gee! essed Virgin, which falls, on the Sth of > " 18s seth 5 f the Jewish maidens in the Talmud | script tied July 1, . : d the full a : —_— : cg The Burr Patent Folding Parlor Bed | Offices. 280 Madison, and 126 Market-sts. | ftisins Taanie ion & atid the conespeua ‘The other case was an action of tort to recov | papers said, that the pastoral Jeter BAe Tos li, | ‘The next term of the Theological Seminary afotttean 7 ci] S i Gemara) shows only tite toinl dseay of tie pope er fer See ee ow avenuc, Somer fananion to the per whe, bad oe i eithes. ‘The | will open Sept. 15. Insiroction 2 alk depart~ atte a der erro cation sor ladies and children, and | — “ mae of One rio i ROGER & CO. a ae ae period—tue age of popular lit- Tile, upon the afternoon of Sunday,“Oct. 28, | Belgium Embassador in Bom S, <foummedintaly a0. ine we ee eves Prof. G. Hi Boaraman, TST duriog (Re eTuunds ichets wil be Sor ! weg The handsomest, most sub- 98 BEARBORN-ST., erature, as we may call it modeled upon tho | 1677 At the, sce at the pine Tic ht | State Sa a cxplanation, and Jan. | Middicbury College, will continue his labors as da the nana oneny meee, me exhibition 18 | stantial & comfortable made. | i,t NERIERERS OF songs aid bistories that circulated orally through | peated $3, oui TT coron, ia company with e fady | 13, 180, Cardinal Nina answered that the Pope | heretofore In the Seminary, Prof. 8, ives: Cur. LYon: TA. A a Grasso aco. | Anthracite and Bituminous Coals, | eice ot uger connected wit fue sorter | fiend cesta on Suving Sheet uesen ad | Baer ane ote ag tatgrapiodsocagcr | gion fer tuo ebenae of tho lente. term N & HEALY’S,' = A, H. Andrews & Co. FOE eee ore eeniae om | Risin aud ise sia ae natives tat | dv, ane icra ste nr lace co | Bablicwion cng Be, ba SEETSPRG en ar | Gragg th no a FGM cute of to el | a 105 W 7 . Pig Iron and Foundry Supp! are fullest See aati eho. BORE | Jeaving Mount Auburn Cemetery, tha lady asked | au tO sboay to do 80; that bo was | brated lectures of Prof. Delitzsch’s on the Mea 162 South State-st. Eifrs of Artistic Furniture, Wood Mantels, cto.

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