Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, May 16, 1881, Page 9

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE:! MONDAY, MAY 16, 1881°TEN PAGES.” petunl n n the | ehose the simple of logle and the sirug- | ern of probabliit nfterdts own wolfure, and what | fainty, whils the ath ton e (| serves, T om posttion whie phir 1 it o t Moy of S43 contel " - " ]‘I IGIOUL ilo of s st hu nothing but sevoghized prineiple of bk nature O | eaiture, and, aioer (e A b no !,’h,I.|:‘a5;-'{:;‘,:":’.’;‘;mtb\fl‘,,,flm ".‘s’\‘(lnli|",‘l"‘{\::;! i R VI ERS you fenr as the uprlsing of n new ereed 19 | doubits, TS certainly for the Interest of all o sme prin nieh ely contend abaut thelr minor | place fu Hieratiee, yet s tho g of | feg Conneil.” And e avers as motter i T only the gradunl dissolution of @ once pow- [ men that there showld be Sormon on the | erfil senthoent, 1 have scen my milllony divinity who pun- in - family ine [ differenees” when assalled by an o avers | the peny cannol Tepress,” | that Hs e fsan age for whieh bistory affords | whelmimg nod bimninent dinger! Fiio | etarm, some also bulld altars to many Htthe aud grent dol- ng to D' Atnliert akd: “ Yon por- | no precsdent, Nota century siiee me: reghnents of the snme nrmy e | coming down f Religion. ties, and have seen that theory sink wnd dlie | cefve that | speak only of su tHtlond as for { gan to put thelr: thoughts on revord, whi lows of each other, ot quarrel e 1o | translutions, butore the sublime thought that thevn 1= one | retinion, 1 love aud respeet § youdo,” 1 does not show that the men of that period ok itself, when 1yl mi Il.'I"u camp, But | from H1s 1 I e Huprome Arehiteel of the unlverse. Aml OF the otherwiembers of 1his gronp of *alx | thought that they stoond just nt the erisis : rushing charge of nemy, and thy | thon iy alws nsed Bt withog peeuliae | of faet that 1t was beeansy the lel s been lostin 1 | o0 tho Dioeeses, were atthorized 1) e ndouble setof | (o Court by the powoer, that 1t was i hieh - fell 1 ond, without te words of the power whini tho Chisneetlor ntnits to guote, thore woukl he some eolar far the ussertlon thit e power el and to create pd what human Just o gwing's "7 gonquests © very ) wad Leauthnl, henee » quola- e orment to any compo: times have been when fathery and motl Inlidels ™ which eom tho theme of a [ of all hwman” alfairs” No o oage ! | converzing fire of rles, ix tha reeons | ton, Wszhtine wp all about it and proving U= | and the res Aoy ool Choney’s Discourso on the | riod “Ghelr tend chilron and. ehit popular adidress even kin wone hefore nt all llke that one, mud | eiler of their differen [ Y Tinve no dise | self' Jowel fit for & settinie ot ure gold, ‘"]L:é"‘u_:‘““‘l'._:“!"\;"“‘n‘ll:'r:;lflll‘ll"t]"]‘l’lr“)h‘ihe i Plskop tanding of Qur Omn burled theie purents In tombs which kel than those safd of Voltuire aud none should ecome after 1L of an equal | piites i the fuee of th n the Cent Wher Milton wrote * Pardizs Lost?? ho Fof proeedure under whicl the Connell was to - s pnderstant » blewed only afinal separation, 'I'here s b 1 ks ot p f my task this mornin, Imporinnee W the desting of the race. 141 | ninl Exhibition st Phifladelohis. wis w winge | drank *from the brook — that flowed | arganize and mlmbnstor the Coust. showly Timess no hope of any feunion of friends beyond | enter upon any other line of thowught than | doubtiess well that it should be thus, For | net composed of a hdred thin steipsof | frony the orncles of God, Chirlat’s sens | gt Ty Instituted by the -several Diocesed tho sky, But'the drearler the scenn as to | that which shows that 0l soufety has wri the man who feels tho Importanee of his | steel, noone of which wis of n great at- [ tences were' alwnys Tull of nature and | wnder the isslon nlready granted hy Art, e Creator ar n houven, the further back s 1t | some rellgious lessona from its long past, and | own place In history is the one who is apt to | traetive power, but whick in unton wers | rythm, [andel might live set 111 words to W) & br i of the U senerad Cotvens oncement of tho | toward the origin of historle man. Athelsin | hns won & vietory whiel can nover bo taken | play s part the best. Make the man at e § eapable of [ithig n welght of 1,500 pounds, | the most exqulsit mnate, yet they lmve n ||.': olitiiution of thio Gieneral Conven " Anfl"f\l Jomm! E ¢ "Mihis provusition becomes Idontieal, In P ath und oblivion belong to the firsl yenrs of thig | from [s granp. ‘The nnan sace s trled | wheel believe that the shilp never before met’] Tthank God It even n bitter el blsplicm- | muste of thelr own that faselnates all who with o541 18T st el tiat Theological Eominary: human experimont, and aro not indleations | ntisir wnd fias rojeeted §t: it hns made the | with n unle ke the one lmmfih whieh he ds | tng infidelity has driven tha elinrelies of our | hear: thent, The s fing b o tone vmlw“l{’l"’“ ';‘v;‘:!]‘:;";:'l"‘l"b_fr uih {""»‘:fil)lag Bap of what hnmanity wiil seeept, bub are me- | sttempl 1o but its " loved ones into o grave | ealled to pilot her, and be will bend il hiy | Jand 10 unite to resist the 1Y, der prusnges I8 seen o 1is bupsts of tem- by virtne of the sixth article of the 1 mentoes of what I£ has been” eompelled to | that oifered tio hope, hug i ennnot wpprove | powers Lo the thsk of making no blunder In Anttnow Jet us conelude thils sermon by | pestuous wrath, bt there s never ruide or | Constitution, And this dentity s not only plalr's Letters on tho Legality of ruli In some sueh words would socloty | of or love steh an ondless sepnrntion, and | his stoering, the tonght that spontancousty springs ont | cours rd, anl their cltect Is buth to over- | {oo plain for argument on the faee of tha Toalgomeny t Hlinols. fuldress us eould it boconio o person anil | biek T it conia to u birlal nceompanted by | jut, on the other hiand, there Is asubtla | o th text, " What practical lne of aetlon | wwe il chatnie papers themselves, hut it s distinetly adinit- 2 {he Provinco 0! o spenke the things it s acen I ds 10,000 yenrs, | the Howers, aind words, and musfe, of ain dni- | porll ‘Tirking in this morbid sense of the | does this understanding of ontown fine st | Another gt of orntory 19 a good |t in that grent majority report of Hishap — 1t Tus aeen all forms of falth out i tha field | mortal Hfe, Doetrines these, not thrast upon | sirange, tnigue, and unheard-of elmreneter [Weest to us? David's. great Generals weia | volee, sl we rend Mhat Jesis diow vast mul- | Melaren by which the Chaneell '8 tha 15 r()\'QUESTS‘ of netlon, = 1 ignorant public by deshiznine priests, ply- | of the tine in whicls we happen to live, it uous not morely for the fuct tat they | titades avound 115m, amd that they were able majority wars “completely den Y m;r,mlo'(“— e AR Wo iy not sny that the world hos learned | Iy an att “for ‘mougy, but doetrings | pnralyzes some men with a terror 1ke that understanding of the thies, but win | to hear s burnine words, He bad no gor- |9 fientity s reeognized b overy fine of SERMON DY PHOK. KW Al Chureh, the absoluto final teuth in this or that diree- | they nry which are foreed | of tha eorpornl who fisle hlmself suddenty | wnderstunding of e tines whicl Jed tham | geous temple in which to sneak, it the Ser- | that report; but It witl he suficlent to * dee suing, pstor of tho Central ChUTEl, | fign, hut we oy wilirm that it hos learned | wpon clergyman by the sweet | ilieust into eoununnd of o comprny at th [ 10 knete wint Iaenel oughl to do, Muy 1he | o on the Mownt was deliversd under tho | yotih ™ tie Bishop's Chnneellor to quate L Tarco. congremntion yestarilny | st it neds ad would Jove to possess In | butawful elouenco of the humimn rec, | very erisb of tho hittle, e e that feeting | 50 with usl T have no doubt Ui the watehs | dsntvantumes of Ui Wion sitting postire and | its oloan Huos, Saeie e, by the resolu. ached 10 0 HEEC e, " Rollglous Con- { Its firest form. 1t Is sakit that by the time | As the bending reeds on the const tell ysdtint | jy fho mlids of somes. Chrlsthuia at the press | man whowm the United States Government § by tho open wir, 16 18 evident Trom the | gion of 1831, ! hoth Iouges canearred i oy oming, his lhunb' Wi setimon? nll](illfl\l(lllllllul D reachied 60 he knows | the (ide fs coming fn, or thut a great” whul | ent dny, They are simply frightened out of | keeps ot his post of duty In the Ughthiouss | frequent expresston * e erled” that ile praving for New York preeisely the powers M (s Following 1. LI Jples of the doc- whint he himself needs ws to foml or | I8 sw upln{t fromn far-of horizon, s the thelr Kenses the ifea that there never | ut the hathor's mouth 18 viglant to keep his | used the voiee with vigor, and 1t must have | whieh were nsked for by llhun)lu." Hoth re. AR herefare, tha principles nedieine, or resl, or exerelse, or sh or | minister at tl it ha altar, whon s pronounces | hefore, sinee Christianity sppenred on the | lamp e ning wtul bis reflectors hright I the | been smooth ns well'as sirong to sway the | ports, that of tho l"“m"r!,;u et 13 k0 6N UNLO prrrsetion: climate, We st concerde that so the namo of God, or rends o snered hymu, s curth, wus such an Infidel nge lils tast | cab t that ever fell on yonder | mltitudes who heard T, Yllslu;n .\lu’l‘urun," Jl'l‘(’;l\'\"ymntvfill{!rl‘?lllfihfi‘ll::‘ Yy Iy o 11 old enotely nt Inst to know its most pressing | only obeyinetho muidates of the wholtseurth, | inif of the nineteenth centitzy, ‘They he- fzan, . But aunot but be- The true arator wields 1 marvelous power | tion beforo the Coliventi vl Jietet T ¢ old enough to onablo . B " i vole " f ¢ q q 3 s it bt e Lt it r tvention was, whather the, y lias becou wantug ancd, IF 1 nust, wfter theso longe tees, | and 18 a feoblo voles eompared with the | Jjeve that the gospel §s losing growm , i tentold eare when | of the eye, to whose tofluence both humai | guthority of the D g ) ¥ okt hl-; Jearn yulte defnitly many of 8 | iy e u'to allow 1€ Godani o moral Inw, | heard and nuheard ntteraneesof the mitlions | g o kel i texoumtl, it Lhiiver i to tstabilsh Appol " 1 tthe loxis of unbellef are steadily ad- [T} i, anndl the waves moan,and | and bride ereation gre suseeptible. The | ate Conrts by voluninry eof o e 10 vie o tholr toreilivd “’M,,,.. the wind is howling armtne his airy tuyret, | gpenke atend How Webster, when addres e rccuunlzmi. aml put fl Ixey!)fiwlhIl‘lnnlllg“m otheruge of human bistory lms [ Brethren, these are certalnly dnys of teni= | G firy, was wont tofix his gaze ofi oo | uattir of Taet, that the 1lotse of Wisho e the ark of God In such tremeidous [ pestuous weather for the Guimel Tight, The | i, tnd s LS todny, And this fright hay two enits are elorged with stor I'he sky N them | effeets, either of “which is deplorable. On with omiuous clonds, Uhis I8 duty to- | thaone hafd are some who_ seem to thintk | the very bour for wsprecinl wat, v .m-nfl-" and most pressing wanis, ‘Tho | wo must not be stow to admit thatthe i [ who are st] here, or wiio have erassed thie mAnCy nity must have shown o | riee I8 old enouglt to be aware of ity own | flood, — Aceopt these reliots Tldeps, 1y jafancy of AU ‘it we now see In tho [ wants, You nud I' are newcomars into the | brouht to yout by men of taith aml wen of eskness much like wh sin it T domatn, We wore not present when Innman § doubt,-us sing by all ages, ns tanght b fter | et or early fifo af each person.- nature steugeled among the terrfile divinitfes | nture saered or brofane, and "i““"’('r e of great and rend wants. The e | o thg old East, of amoie tho sensual gods | pass onward tosard i perfection o | wanee otz PETEONS avcgreatlyoppressed | und godil 3 of (reeee, or ummuf‘ the | ward self aml nang onward, toward g ‘per- [ ghat selenee and Chrlstianity wnst be In flat | our own Tight to see thnt It burn beiehtly, were given of this magle Influence on the | Judd's resofution of the Ml of Jannunry, and ity of 30 ~enrs of munhood by the Indefi- | athelsts of lining Rowe, nnd do not know | fection of Mmith . plotys onward, toward | contradiction, and_ therefore sppyiose ns tha It s ot passionnte controversy witl an { part of Christ, repented In his recent” nrzumont that * I¢ early yeazs v 1y that como to the fn- Jrn.-\l Tiast priee the world conld afford o pay | o perfection of love nud all enemy of God all that scholarflilp and the In- [ wabelieving world which W best ndvance Still ther pte ull s oratory to that indi- | fused to recognlze any sucl 3 o vidual until he b gasined mhumn nuss | Bloceses, 5 rilianthortyhy tha f'lunmm 10 another until w ver ct 1 It s, therefore, cone d 5 Ty I Yor h 3 nnrlnslvnlfl‘cq(nbllshm 3 {nstanees | fhat the statement contalned In Chaneollor henevoleness an- orator wad | must he presumned th finess of the Answe Ible pursuit, | 1oV aod religlon [P I wers now bereft of | ward, towurd f porfection of mental and | vestigation of the renlm of Nature nre dobig | that eanse that 1s deirest to owr hearts, | aetl The speaker ol fooked np at the : o), lfi|lwlln|n»|:‘n‘ll;l;;’r,\l\"(;'(‘l?un;ul\,‘!?511!: ',: iy rognriting tho best possible 1 s | M falthy we ave Leanglents and strangers, | splltunt pence and hope. for the enlightenment of the rage, But sueli | 'The positive truths of the old-fush- | stntue of Douzlas, to whose cloquence o | g Dyt 1o the ..gmhu,h“,um ot an Appollntg i {splitter may haveaspirations toward | pud dare not measura tho, welfare of the e nre few compared with those who, in | foned “Gospel, 36 enforeed by holy | pahta compilment: and fhotht Tt wits the | Court of the Provineo of 1iuols, propased TR’ | o gitl [ the cotton-factory | enrth by the appaent welfaro of our OUR OWN TIMES. thelr pnnle at the utaupported assertiony of | living o ouy - parl, wre now, 09 | eubodiment of netion, “Therg must he 1o | By the same, was_ In laemony with and cone thol AN esome conviction thut sho | own i and - hearl, © Soclety 8 SENMON Y DINION CHENEY. some half-fledued selentiats, seeny to stamd at lhurnlwu 3 v been, the argament tut | monotony, Both repose aid netivily were | teolled by the said on of hoth Honses Ih yay lave a troubles novelist, All not [ somethinge far | greater {han Fou Shrist, Jteformed Episcopid Ch o the door of the Church, (ts keys In their [ 1o Infldesfty ean resiat. Abovell, the thnes | detwanded, Hke the pussaces in orehestralnin- | 1571, fsn mere ufterthought, wnwarrnnted shoald be an exsayist or anovelist, A ) | LoI0 I8 wn absolute, living samethlig In Christ teformed Episcopal Chureh the | sy, vendy to give up all that Is preclos to.| cell for fervout interéessory prayer, There | sie, from Towd to soft, from erave to gay, Thi by any fact, made to Justify’ n nnked nse .Mmln!osum« definit callhyg puss Lhrought |ygut wopt and Inughed before we came, and | Rt-Rov, Bishop Cheney delivered an ex- | (he Clirtstian 1? Darwitn or Tyneall shall | 180 dsuger In every controversy for those | ortor must be untstered by his thes atd | siimpiton of ' the very power witleh the Con- Jong period of doubt nnd solitoauy | will continne to hugh aml ery after we cewdingly Interesting discourse yeaterday | smnmon them to o surrendef! ‘Fhey are | Who are on the rilit skdo of the question at | yet luwve comnple efer- qull(a“\}w Is called the alm of ife. Overatiel | aregone. 1t hig discavered thit J0nceds o gye on % Undorstanding: O Own | Wilting to know what they may be per- | Bsste. Tewi tho dungerof “ailowing them- oses .o S ‘: Bl 1 hesitating career the Juman fam- | Gods and wo aro little qualified to deny Its witted” to bhelieve to bo the truth of. God | selves to drift abnost Inperceptibly into the e eontrol of hiniself, ventlon wad asked to sanotion, and which it ;lelnclly and deliberately refused to np- Irove, o v Times.” s text was taken from L Chron,, 3 Y ' D v 9 jong and ot epold clatm, At thnes, or with some one man, the v {1 the next man shall come with hammer | stiitide of mere purtisnn debaters, Perhaps | HEs manner was graclons, And It 13 In keeping wi = ?1]; xglls!urm g 0 saciety, has D"”"‘l'“"‘: need of i God Is denled, but ek cotnes the | XI, 32 % Men that hind undorstanding of th | yudt mierascope Lo 1ol then, that I8 especinlly the danger of those who | wis suitused with tendor emotions, 1113 | fiant movemens fo ,.‘.’ffi}.‘&,‘,’.'},‘}h&“fl.’;,}},fi, by one lts alms have appeared. A8 Bt great sen of huwmnn 1ife’ to voll fn s lood of | thues to know what Isrenl ouglht to do” [ Now, I may perhaps astontsh some of you, | it for the truth which Is dearer (o thews | oratary. ook 118 atmospliere Trout Ui einos Counctl, which, a3 the Chaneellor niny ne- bt )chmcum\Vu.«ltlnutml,nml Jetlerson, Jaters wnd wuslt away tha doubting ones. | phe diseourse was ng follows: Inexpressing the opinlon that the present [ selves than thousands of gold and silver. | tions of s heart, warning those who trod | knowledges, had no Jurlsdiction whntever st titon, mud Adums discovered what 11)1' athelst Is overwhelmed hf' Tinnanity, It was a anclent custom to plice an h outs | H&Y Is not one which stanas alone nun un- | They l*uulle that they are sefending the | e holf's month or eucournging those who [ over the subject, wid for whose netion In i Jamtiton s conld best live, 8o manlkind This great moving army which hadnoved 1nss I the coflin of the dead precedented intidelity, L lrcelf‘ achindt that [ cause of all that s hofy and pun-' and wre | stood nent Heaven's dove, The was o mng- | framing and ndopting u eanon for organizin jorm of 11fe they ¢ i 80 long and serlonsly, revenls tho need of g | gluss UL end, the unbellef of the nlneteenth century s | tempted to grow nnserupuious in the ehioles | netie orator, sud the multitude g nuon | Sithe Appellate Court for the Provines g ¢ s Jly Wi t the o 5 it 1 keeping its vigil witl Vet y ¢y el v Wi attor . . P entirety hns slowly wronght ou bellef In n future workt, From the eardlest | Shut up In the tomb; keepiug 1ts vIgll with | widely different i many partieulurs from | of Weabons that they emplioy, We are not | Ils fips. 15 matter of deliverss wis e | Iilnois,” and subimniting ° m:; o )su\'cml questions of pursutly | records friendship nnd love have besnstrong, | the departed, and elutehed in the bony fin- | {hat n’l" any forner purl{lf‘d}.,ln. I8 bolder, 1t | partelar as to the idsstle we use to kil the | greater than the manner, yoi the oxternal i3 | yhe sovern) m..c'pws, ‘;‘5‘5&5,5"2{25{9&’“}:0’&3‘% g teasure, and fafth, and being, | and the foved demd finve Been piieed i the | goy of the dead, §u shnified that for him [ 18 more outspoken, Lt 18 more wholesals | YDl dow which rushes on onr ehildren | o good fndes of the fiternit, it only suggesteid the draft of canon to tha ad plea i tman mind s been learn- | groumd smid tears aud infinit grief sud pain, i B )ll|01ll(’: it shared thue bad nscom- | Ml complete 1o it denlaly of everythinge with parted jaws and fouming fangs, What I'he speker elosed with the remark that 1t | Dioceses. 'i;,“, this is not i correct deseripe While the Lmmay o d houses, Theso parthies have grown move bitter us the | Wose sey < Y which has been considered Christinn, (vdoes | mntiees ithow we erush ont this blasphen- [ used to be the theory that the ministers of | tlon of the net, - 1t Is not suggeation, butan fog that it needed ships, an 'l mindund heart have undergone develop- | pletely run out ns hd the gmln's which onco not stop now, as it once did, to attnek this 1 Hines, provided ons [ the East woere representatives of thought and | get of the Federate Counell in its orgunia ad steam, el printing-presses, — md | yient, and long, long ngo loveand remson | marked the moments' fight. What o useless | or that specind doetrine of the Bile. 1t tngs uve. the younz froni itg aceursed | those of the Weskor actlon: the one hid fer- | eluracter, aid, belng unauthorized, wag eluetriclty, It os heen discovering what re- | bath ™ were compelled to” seek in the notion witenlngl Could those stony ¢3ts hear the | away thu Biblo ns unworthy of belief, It From that temptutiol thery huk the other Mterary polishi: the one thun- | usiepation, And 18 was not mercl{,mclmlcn] ¢ 1 wdditions were de- | of Immortality ‘asolution @ the drend- | fary of the partieles? Could'tho wasted eyo | does not now, as 1t onee did, atluck the Old | obe sure method of “escape, It Is never ty e sermons, e itlier rewd esauvs, wilel | usurpation, 1L was an nbuse of the ormpe . palrs, and "’“““""".“m e ful mystéry of this shore. ~ In barbiryuy = Y "Pestament wdricles—of Joshun making the | seuss questlons which toneh oife fiost ht the heat Hehtnlne of summer, but | fzatton and nuthority of the Federate Connel manded i \llll“ili;\x:ll{il:"txl?ll(:fh(:“‘::‘i;l[‘l‘:ll‘l";l‘;:- “-11 tods 16 mmy hove been - possible | mark the lipsing of the Uny stremm? Far | SRV HETIEE T S boinie switawed | feelligs " 0 o Connell, A 5 > would some sneering Jibel on | were aecompatiied by {no thunder. Ha { to shape and 9 o ulverses for . futher amd mother 1o put awny | better to put the honr-gliss in- the hands of | giive by @ e fish, It mocks at atl that s | one’s wife or mother, without: fiest. praying | thought the contrast no longer ! c‘\"f tin selitiie. thtongh the jsalaboratory of the experhimental selences, | thobody of o ehild ns though only wi anfial | Myvimg men, Let 3t reltorato in thelr enrs the superntural, wliether in the Old "Testament | for aurselves and for theone who attacks our | that thore had | 1 I Hian no doubt, b always been dofng mueh {:Nl I‘]‘]‘B{'(; '1““':“""':‘“(‘"‘:’1:30 Ticq "‘lfll:;":_f"l‘gfi warnhig of tho Savior, * 1 must work the ;il lth N]cl-\\'.munluns "f"g‘h"m& i l‘l o lh}, l'u}hi'{tlxlniml s e L|llllu‘fiéL\:IlllLlnl(\“z;;S':i y i COrY, | bem 88 out of burbarism, e v . ¢+ | find fault with some of the attributes of G, il you, dear triends, the 0 b e Lo colo) AT from the !‘.“m,‘"',' II“{,T.,,“&‘,’,’;?,‘,,)&Ibl::: l(‘.’:“l the power of attacliments, it was led toward \:urk? L;r‘l.“m !.:;nl "]m,n s “h,”“ ,l:,' l”‘ xlllz)’; 1t dondes that there §s nny evidence that there | like that to 1itt n'p our cottroversy ont of the | professors, ureing them to endenvor to mako | TIHE LISBON ?DNI‘L‘RENCE. 7ule bis world hns been ex J that compensation found’ in the hope of « [ the nizht cometh when no man ean work” |4y G, And so thi workd s exying ont | polsonous wid stiling atmosphiere of preju- | ortors p thelr st THIRD DAY’ SESSION, goom the netunl trial of things huve cowo | yeeond world, Burbarians do not weep, | For that solewn utterance of our Lord suge that there was never such an Infidel age ag | (tiee aml passion into the pure air where Its Lisnoy, In., May 14.—The third dny's ses. mostof ls valuable conelusfons. nelther do they Jaugh, Imumrmlllf' could | geats not merely that it is our highest duty | tho nincteenth centoryl But, does that fol- | Heht will hura undinmed.” But mostof oll, | ¢ pROVINCE? OF ILTINOIS, | sionof tho Conferendo opened promptly ni Vot knowing In the ontset nathe w popnint dogn until man had be- | (5500 with all diligence the thme Intrusted | low? Is despernty holdness and reekless vios | o these times enll on v for n sense of our i S AT TE e 5 o'clock, W Not Knowing et man ventured upon | oo sensitive enougl to shed tears, ‘Peary | Keeplig, b :‘u . ullnr wlsdom s | 161€0 of attacl o certain evidence of strenth, | indivilual vesponsibility, 1beg of this cop- 0N NOSTGOMEIY BLALL 8 u'elock, with Iishop Weaver in the chialr, purste ln gover! s ¢ wre here now, amd so §s the hope of reunfo 0 our e epilis, but thal npeeutlinr wisdomvls | vy o gurrison, which bis fong fowght une | gresation not to drewn ‘that any minister of ted, and | Diocesun Conventlong, which It nssutaed to T i happy interchange of | yepresont, MoNraontry Bram, s v A o April 27, 1850 =T0 the | 'I'he forenoon sesslon wns to get the differ- Uiollun of @ king, When Moses essayed & f g “tfy dogtia of mmortallty will ot de: | needed n its use, dor cover of its fortlientions, saliles out fn | the Gospel all tho ministers who ever or nf werdian [Now York)—Sme: | ent interests of the Church Into the haids of tepublic he was soon llr]ulg[lwd at by h‘:‘g it n:xnhh un:c:fit smm!l u?ll\'lllbfl(fllux;,ll:x:lhl I‘cmumlleumloy wisely that which I donot ulnu wlllcltt:nsl‘l’ ]u[ Iurlflw M!‘({-mpll. ml'l'mm }\"‘lflem(hl it {l,lcimnl:lwclk unfl u:u: cfi_eius)- Cltneelior Judd’s first number adds nothing | duly-sppolnted committees. These maka ol becanse the erowd hud propossesslons | come to divest the soul of sensth e | yoderstand, thronzh the beleaguerhig ranks, dovs It nee- v the infidel tenduneles: of the ne, if Iy 5 ¥ v s | thelr delfberntl :-T‘::»l::r awmotiareh, ‘Pt forw of o [ mote. “Wikile hummn passton rematus Heav- [ “Forexumple: £am overwhelmed with ad- | essarily arene that 1t fs srowlig stronger? | ieinbers of the elireh do not realize than | 10 Dr: [lupking' reasonlng on the polut dis- | thelr deltberntlons, dratt them, report thom v 3 BI Wi ! i . sed, ‘I 3 ' 1 Ped- | back to the Conference for nction, A nuin- cnutigre vine been | G WL hang it bunner over the otiter wall ton b, the exomination of such mue | Lot us not forget that the past nges of the | eich one of them s 1estine an_obllgation to | cussed, The whiols wgument is, that the Fed b . ml““:lln‘xgl(ldllfl :::::IIT:Lx\l?‘;.‘II,(: of this enreers The thought that wl the ko, rl‘l.!‘;:lttl)!lll!* thit W)';l\ltll in the mills of Lowell | Chirlstlan exa Divee heots mrked h‘;' thereli- | slaml Tike n rock for the truth. I | erate Councilof Ikuols did not violate tho | ber of Conference, sent in petitions, which * it of 1 diseove As lato us the nge of | M tho Innocent, and the worthy of this ex- | weaves into wondrous fubries the snowfinkes | ance ot the Church on the seeutirarm to | plesd with you, 1y brother, to nequaint | lnwana Uie will of the General Convention in | wers given these committees, to hnve pro- n'lu){\ 0},5"“;(_('] & grave wrlter composed fstenco will bo ngsembled somu dny In s het- | of the Southern cotton-tields, 1ts Ingenuity | ropress wl hold infidel opinfons in eheck, 1t | yourself with the word of God by el | ealling fisetf the Federate Counell of the | ratn representation aud lny delegation, nnd n o i show Stom e honey-beo that | Ber Tnnd meets a newd of tho WIS, 6 | anwzes we. s power appals we, 1is exe | fs undoubtedly true—the neeusation eharged | n experimental testing of ity teath ‘thatalt | G4, 500805, 09 Hmeris S nersisting tn | few Conferences nsked {0 huve s moditicas ‘!"“"?] ates n republle and 1% purtlal to o | Bevd foit by th psalnlst who went for g son, |- quisit harmony of netion appeals to my senso’ [ by skepticism_ on tho Chureh—(hat Govern= | these sheers uid nssiults shall be to you as | calling Btself wfter the Convention had | tonon the secreey Tnw, Nature s Elbabith was comforted npon It by thy Cleero who lnmented o fovely [ of “the beautiful. But L enumot tuke the | ments huve been Invoked to enfores a si- | the \\'lllsllln& of the wind wround tho ock of | 80 calling Itsell ufter the Conventlon ha ‘A commniteo of soven has been nppolnted fuce one by thowghts of -Lhe queen of <Iu|uglufl'l felt by unfold thoussids; and, r place of the aperative who dlvects uid con- | lene onthy part of those who would blus- | Gibtaltur, Men say that they fear for the | struck the word * Provinee® from s title, | {o consider the matter of ttending the Eeus b M imanted 5000 yoars, | cntling all tils throng, we st aitmit hat | tyols it. My untrained hands would throw | phems against tho Gospel, ‘There | Gospel of Ciiist, “Thuwe no siieh fear. The [ hocauso thit wis but. part.of the niwme which | mrenionl Sethodist. Gonforenen i 10 K in porhaps o dedtice tho superiority of the re. | 1 the dden of usecond Hfo the worldhas es- | all ifs perteet nrrangement Into w tanele of | were long perlods . I whieh *elvil | gates of Iell shull ot prevall wmlist it | gno" gssoeltion had chosen fo assume In | London early i Septenibor, anleatton i A gty 1L WU s il . | pressed i want Insueh colors us we' ennnot | eonfusion. 1 must wwderstand 1L betore [ [ penalties made theso who hated Clirist ws | Christ eannot break 118 everlnsting word, 3 elehs ¢ ' During the afternoon session tho comm pule s foriy ,gx!flfl'i;tll::;{llk"l}“s:“:}"‘x‘t‘; FoL | eastly ernge. ittetme th s it So 1w with theso. sabtto | bittorly ws any Ingersoll of the bresent thwo | 4 huve n fear that the billows of skepticlsn {i’f”“"fl “-’l _‘f"fi"l'f,‘“l't""' W l"F‘_']("‘“”‘“ B"'l:l tees hewan to brlug in - thelr reports., \le‘t:: ‘n;y::l:m\hs: wlse may be '.,1\-u.l from oxperl- | We mny state that humanity at large has | thieads of Buman Jite and motive which | shrink from the perilous utterance of their | Wit shake the rock, fint1have my fers | tle L, underwhich itorganized, authorlzed | ghoge come b discussion becomos lively, o v, Experime [ig | mnde two great conquests,~It bas won from | flash through the loom of history, pent-up enmity, % that many who liave not “""})‘ulnmesl thelr | it to assume, and of which the Conventlon ‘The Committee on Misstons hrought In a e«\'.“rglr ’l')ll';l"n:mi:)ncss nlrwelllull-lx‘r‘fntzn;:‘;uxlm‘(lfi- barbarinn, i from savge, awd from nthe- Tway tearn ail the paths by wfllch the past I am not here to disenss the questlon | fent Ubun the rock may be swept uwvay. could not deprive It, beewuse the constitu- | report chnnging the constitution of lihelr So- fare thought will ever ke that ugent o | I8t and from o i:cllul‘lll chnosof helefand un- | nies live been trucked, 1 may steal from | whether sueh bits mul befdies i the mouths | , T know what Ismcl oughit to do §8 to [ g0 oot required. to be submitted to or | elety, so that ench annual Conference shail slaw one or leas than smaziugly vapld, Thns, Deltof two cuplres,~u God ond o future lfe, | heavenly altarsthe Promethean iire of proph- | of skepties was an Injostiee, But Lam - here 1:!1!»\\ \\huLv 1 mmlll’ln do, W hmlv Nupaleon sunctioned by the Convention; and that, sub- send o delezute to the annual weeting of the whatlong frinl s taught nbout. govern- | It hns demonstinted that those t\vothmx:h(s ecy and light np the future “with Its glure, | 1o say that, rlght or wrong, they have been | Fetrented from the vast faneral.yyre of bluz- Altuting the word Urovineo ™ for the word | 30nrd of Missious. Soma of the Conferqnce mentimay be necepted ng w finnl teaching, | 07¢ to be nsuparable companlons of tho koul, | It L cuimot uso rightly nud profitably | vemoved, "Fhere was nover sinee the world | 11 Moseow, hie ntrusted n wouided offieer | stitu Inx., ie word ** Urovinee ™ for the word | yvere afraid of the word * shall,"” und watited foritdoes ot seem possible thot despotism [ —n Kind of inalicnuble proporty. Resuiting | the hours of the presont existence, unttl 1 | hegan o freedom so absolute i fty permis- | 10 one of the Imnylhll‘rmx_lmmgls. 1 the bat- State” meunt no more than the substitu- "um{y" wtibstituted, The fenrfl ones fell on eanever comment self to tno. human_ race [ partly from th wisdom and pathios of an nd- | understand the complex threads of the times | gion to any man or woman to givo full niter- [ e or on the saren, their first and Mghest | yon of the word * Councll? for * Conven- | the Kobertsvules of order, and sl nochango enl form of emplre. Equaily jn | vanelne ruce, they mustremaln with the race | in which Llive. Al through the tong, cold | anes to Inward hatred of relizion as [s recog- | 01y wasto be the punrdiuns of that sacred meant In Virginla, coulid be mado In n constitution unleas so no- gn%:g:u?llmwllu‘l“;:‘ Bt THeO feos u)n bo | until ltshail’ have parted company with dts | winter past wo saw, 18 wo crossed tho | nized in the ninsteenth century, What ingg | (rust. W hutover might }"’_"“‘ viekss l“l')k'““f ul”i“lm:'::u:lr,:: l::'o‘nh‘:\\'c:s 16 1S rensonlug. titied by n previous sesslon and a two-thirds Tearting surely, If stowly, fdensof mostvatue | wisdom and pathos, Dridges over onr frozen river, the grent | that prove? Not that thers 15 more Inidel | the entipaizn, e held them responsible, to * | vote, but the fenrless ones showed that that s 2 dng | 1L may bo remarked hero thatall theso re- | steamors Iylig motloniess a6 tiele docks, | opinion, but that tior 15 1o longer my mo- | tH8 IRsL it iy the ynks, for the. safety” of | First—Canon 8 Titls 111, does not author- | hoid'not goad In the eonstitution of this Mis- ?,T‘,fl?,‘hl,:."”:\f,‘,:{’ ‘v“n,.‘%“:;“I,‘S”‘,‘,::.‘u:?m}l{ll‘n ligions "conquests are of u. very impressive | No smoke from the funnel, no stema from ul\vu 10 goneenl or repre .",;;»~N..,5_|q, shows® \!lel‘rlvlmri.:(!. 'llmllug'r‘hlu relre bezun, | ze nny Assoclation furmed under it to call slumm’b&wlety.. Nevertheless there was por- rverrlmh\'lfiml will neeept s truo and finul | ehuracter. You cannot persnaile the nwn- | the eseape-plpe, no hand of holmsiith at the | gowething more thon that. It shows tint,| A ,}‘“‘ ."’_”"?‘ of T “‘i‘-“[‘" winter, WHIt | jyu] ¢ the Federate Counell of n * Provinee.” | feet good feeling, and.it was agreed to: post- thesa conelusions, for In mornls thera enniot | berless army of men to make o small aflivma- [ wheel, no - cheery evy of the sallor at the | Cheistianfty 15 strong enough to let go its ‘if'"“' ess Cossitckes swarnling r“" fraut wid | 50 nires 1t *tawfnl for the Dioceses now | Done this matter until Tuesduy next. ‘The befownd any aflirmation so evident that no [ tom, 16 a8 n ruce, his wo need of a Calvinis- | ropes, spoko of 1ife and aetivity. Dut the [ Jold on the skivts of himan law, e leans | okl rewr, U\uj\mllflhll-d.n the Journoy existing, or lereafler o oxist, within the' tlesire of the Chinreh s to erento a wlde-nwake mewill deny its truths and yot the human | tie God, nor of u “Ttoman Catholle Gad, but | snow lay deep on the deck, and the ehalng of | gu no govermment to sustain ft. 1t puts [ 58V "f‘" the 'Nklll}t‘nl sWept awiy. But [ existing, o ner h RXis| interest in the mission work," neg, 08 8 whole, may by snid to be ronehing | only of n sublimg Creator who will notsub- | feo wera stronger thun the heaviest itself lu the position that' it oveuy in the Ilnglr' churzo \uw,'l\tl't. 'llm,\ crossed the | Thmits of any State or Commonwealth, to = e terminntions of 1t few of Its long Journey- | Mt to # enreful definition, “Iha Caivinist [ For tho navizator understands wis tme, o [ earliest nees, when ull tho governments of | ley waters 'l'f"l“ Vistula reduced ton singlo | establish for thomselves n Federnto Cony . LAWRENCE & MARTIN agsof perplexing thought, may, personadly, sny what he thinks about | does wot sttempt to foreo the passago of 1he | e eurth wore Its enemles, when * the kings “‘“'"’“l" ""'J‘"‘fl oug, company farmed | tion or Coutiell represunting sueh Dioceses, %) Folliatinio s rmark let us reenl] how | this Ihm\'flnly Father, and o winy the RRo- | Steaits of Mackinge in the very teeth of the | of tho carth sot themselved, and the rulery | tround the wounded lhgl 1 1‘“ cnrri which 1y - delibetate . aiid - deeide upon e modern natlons e flung away tho old | munist, but the great”tide of hunian sows | midwinter, But. foday theso Inlnnd sens | ook eonnsel togethor naninst e Lord and | They entered the buumduries of France, Ton | the * common 'Interests .of o Chureli { Nothing New In tho Matter of tle notion of a plurnlity of gods, sud linvo run | has no need of “thoge thnlted words, “The | wro dotted with sufls, “and their skies aro | 1jis nnoluted.” 1t 1s dofling the swWaddiing- | e only “I"r‘,"""ll}"" treh, but "“‘{‘.‘-‘ Avithin ,the Mmits* nforesald; but, be- I'allure, ¢ along beforo togle th the sottled convietlonin | o educed from panthelsm, und polythelsm, | strenked with the smoko of steamers, clothes of 1ts infaney, I reallzes that the | ten “”v“-fl""l‘ll-“ ‘i‘;i“" ns ot 1 "‘“,i.‘ ‘}’"l‘;l‘ fore any, determiinte action ‘of such | Liitlocan bondded to what was!’said In teaueness of the Creator, 'The foreat wag | and nthelsm I8 quite " differont “por- [ AN history goes to show that thers have | guly government on wiiteh iU need rely Is | Jothine coulil lond them t hutruye LUrOuRl | Convention” ov Comnell shnll o lad, the | yegterday’s Tumusk about the falliire of densoand bromd through which tho people | Sonnge. ‘The conquest . won by religion | been Ih every igo men who, on the one hand, | (he govarnuent of tod, tha gantes of Parly one solitary soldler passed | powers proposed 10 bo exerclsed therehy Tawrence & Martin, The ath & tiveled, bk tho host worked s way througly | 18 10 “that hoped for by Rownnist i u [ wera In wdvincee of thele thne. and on the | e Chirlstlan who hns understanding ot | 10 revort himselC, the sole ghrvivor o his | gl be submitted to the General Conven- | 1awrenco & Murtin, ‘Tho atiorneys of tho “athorns and underbrosh, and energed ot | Whole world to w little Island, a8 is § other, those who were behhud their thme. | the times Is ono who <lenrly perecives” the I‘ul:hII‘LAlll. but in his urins he boro the ehurze | pon for npproval,” - firm, "Tenncy, Flower & Cratty, had o confer- it futo o beautifal conntry, Individunty [ enrth, indecd, to ong of s awn elods, Tho { Fherd hnve afways een thoso who Bve | get tha It dees ot show sveakncss on_ tho confited (qllus \vm(u commund, It wis the [ Flylg does nob authorlze the Federpto [ ence with them In the worning, which ree axbtiodeny the existence of any God; it 1 muy need his peendine estimate of | struek before tho fron was hot, sidd thess | yurt of the Clinrei when It suys to the gov- ol HA L “"‘_Yl'""’,“““"’L“’“S“ws’l' Indl- | Counell of the Dioeeses in 1linols to glve | gulted i the sendlng of telegrams to the ©firasthe natlons hnve renched the cone ut man universnl eame before tho | who huve waited to strike until fihmlgru\vu crnments and the lawsmnkers of the worly, | Visual respons .'lt). tted itselt any other nume, and cortainly does principal ereditors, stating that the store w. cluslon, [t I3 that the universe s tha work of 1, and will eontlinuo after thms and | cold. Our text is speaking of soma ot tho | wiet your chalns bo taken from the Hinbs S0 has our King cominitted tho truth to us. | not wuthorlze the. ugsumption_ by it of the Iodtl il o atatom & was uie Author, Tho other opinfons, fu thely | thereforenmong the needs.of our race wo [ Generals of David, Kine of Isrucl, wnd e | i youranwzzio from tho Jaws of this vaxing | 16 his heen sore “m'lllllltltl. there ura foes ot | fulse nume of the Federato Couuell of the' | closed and n statement would bo made up Bany forms, are Jeft far behind—consumed | must mentlon only s Fathor In Heaven oo | counting for the magnificont suecess which x\llu-ium of the nineteonth” century, Wu no | EYe Hlllu.v wo iy .I)I on the nuuuh,. but | Provinee of Wilnols, there belng no sueh | ns soonns possible, and n meoting ecatled, + o ships that hore the European Lo the | vast to be trneed with pencil o pen. Nor [ enabled them tooxtend tho dowinion of thelr | Jonger newd the Tielpof noy man” Moreover, | 1ot tho survivors carey onthoteuthi, It wonld | thjne gy the *Provines™ of Ilinols kuown | Nothlng wos done on the books yesterday, i!mhlml shore. 1t I perfectly certnin thnt mnis‘%hu hunmnlrnfn need uny Mllm“’l'dlm. ||||(\|~1lur.(fltlll‘!xxlllt!olf lll‘lt'llll{lll"rtl::\'iél‘:l;llltls l“»‘ ll’fl“l- }0 mlumlralnml our ot |llnl 5 W0 n‘llus;. lfm.p Il‘l‘l’nl: ‘;'gl',‘,:,‘}},‘;;‘:.':}..'.‘.‘.',2}".,:“’u.}l'fiu’u!'.5?1‘ Ié:n’:‘l‘; losllm ml""-'fl‘ '"11-5'1‘““" G 2 1, beforo 16, | M1 16 was hupossiblo to find out definttly ke twind wlil never et ( 2! sertntlons or conclusions reguwrding tho A'rin- | catine, stretehed frol Eypl to lsu- | gy anhid the point Lhave already atluded to, i " o ’ kS econtd—"The Federnte Connetl, beforo 5 s e Egyptions, or ¢ P‘K‘E{(‘h",‘ iy 'i’cfi':'.??(.'&{’ yu‘x'é ity or the noture of ariginnl shy, and hove | phrates. Buck of all their courige, all their | that the fafldelity of this etTod itoes not | one” felt that ho was respousible to ild, to | contd (ke uny determinate netion on wpy | 10W much the firm owe, or to who they aro Hiips of vetreat Daving been' w! - | ICeatnol record any conquest, but 16 lins | miiltary skill, all thelr qualities “of “leador- | dony some things ubout tho Gospel, the | Sustuin, to defend the truth, subjeet, hnd (0 obtaln its powersfrom the | Jndebted. The princlpal bookkeeper, it ap Ko, My rnc:;“llxln,r"nuh(‘uprl:vn‘:‘ll‘mfl 1‘.'1?[, found by an ox; mrfn-ncu aml an argument | ship, Iny lhumm{»la fuct that they bl “un- | Jiibfe, tho nnture of God, a8 tho' ulxnl skuh- = Gerieral Conventlon. 1t i, therefore, to fpeury, 18 sfek, and s asststant hus not kept bk long n8 tho exlatonce of mankind that it | derstandhige of the thines, o know what | jelam of tho ,Frenck philosophers (id DBAPTIST SEMINARY, appenrbefors the Convention under the name | Welr hecounts posted ‘to date. So, 1t nay In tho lettor of Paul to the Ilebrews, ha | needs righteousiess, the conscionee, wnd | Ismel ought to do.” Fhal” wis tl(‘m yoors | g fndred yoars ngo, * 11 Joiics averything, | * povnrersTi AL COMMENCEMENT. | 36 proposed to assuie: and, If the assuinip- ®_weok boforg the true ' “condi- 0 ntreats them, and p r doctring ot rewnrds und punishiments, Give | ago, But the principle which underiles this | 1t tries to tear downs but 1t maskes no ate e 3 tion of this uame was fiot Rself sueh netion | tlon of afairs is known. Upon opan- 1o debafe mre\‘:-‘rlol\’l;'::'mt‘l‘:gfil!r;:t (‘l:fl‘;‘lfil‘::fh(‘l‘x‘l’: socloty intellizont il righteous” mén, mid | toxE 18 ns teno to-duy us it wis when the son | teupt to butld up fny substitute for that it | A% ® portion of tha fourleenth sl com= 3"\ oy b deteratiate wnthl sanetioned “"i the mall yesterday worning sevoral bills 2l lessons of th rising Chrlstlanity, but ns- flou iy lllhl:uui'llnnu you choose about | of Jesse sut on Judal's tivone, 1t ought to | would sweep away. Its latest namo for ity | menee ient of the Chleago Baptist Theolog- | by the Convention, it was certulnly compes of luting were found, ™ ‘Cho shippers ware ad- sy that thy Lnd lenrned some things | baptism, or the fall of primitivo min, or the | b w marked churnetoristic of the Chrlstluim | own system Is the newiy-colned word, | Jeal Seminary, a unlon scrvice of all the | tent for the Conventlon to sny whother it | Vised of the shape the lirm wus 1, - and told lh!{!!\nuhl ot lopger tarey in- the alfabeg | nuture of the huwman will, ‘Tho world as | Sueeess in IS worls, either for himself or for | @ Aynostlelsm,” which, i{erally translnted, | Southh Sldo congrezations was held tn tha | Woull grant the Councll uny powurs under 'g stop the gouds en route. ‘This was-core uttings, but. shoutd’ moye onward toward | loarned dts peed. i the religious dirvetion. | others, Is dependent on” his- having windor- | yieuis *know'nothinglsm.” B8 teacling I$ | Fiest Thuptist Chureh, on ‘Phirty-first street, | SUCH unies wid, necordingiy. whew,the tuinly honorabls on "‘Oi'l\fl of Lawroneo & olter truthy and dutles, “Theso werds bo- | It hus passed through w loug and palntulex- | standiig of the thnes, that you nivl Laro s ineapable of knowlng [ Vo0 0 T As would huve beey | Crate Couneil ot Liinois nppiied us tho I Sarthn, Ou Suturday, it 1s sald, somegoods. cone an lustration to-day of a shdlar fact | perience, uud kuows well what ileas are Nostudy shoud forn moment withdraw | aaything about what 18 boyond tho seopo of [ Yesterday mornug, A3 would huve been | aryte Conncil of * Provinee,” tho Conyen- | Were brought to tho st but not recelved, il 8 shullar duty. e who now live | inost essential to Ute exlutence and hap- | the wing 0f the bellover from thit of tho | our wehses us th brates i our pastures and | espected, there wus o lirge attondunce. | tion ytonce struck that word from Its title, | sineo they”would have Boen subject ta ate thald assuwe that ‘our world ha learned | piness, Whilo the pssengers uro going | word of God, Tiw IHble fs ulwayw’topbe IS | wiables, Need I tell you that its wenkness | Among the gentlemen from abrond was Praf, | i thus refused 1o reconize it by Ut title, | tehment und the party from whou they Sutie well some valunble ud preliminnry | on bourd tho great steutnship, enrrying with | text-book, I5ut none tho less ought the | fles in_Just this wholesale usturc of its con- | Rhodos, of Granville, O.; the Rey, Dy, | OF 10 zrant Ituny power I that charmeter. wera purelased would” fave been Iike any *sous, and tht with ita netive, and loving, | thenr tiele hooks Lo read, sud thele’ ganes to | Chelstinn to make himsell acquuinted with | tpadiction of _relizlons truth® 13 attomnts Cuolc)"ol Freeport ; the H»‘\' Dr. Marsh, of “Themovers 1 this matter are not eandfd | other ereditor enught in the lureh, : “ wumberless ehilldren it should pass one | be phayed, and musle to 'be sung, and eloth- | the currents of thought, the prevalling deift 1o0 mach, For, 1t bistory teaches any truth A EhaTIE Bk IRt AL Bly 11i sayline thoy mean wo moro by their substl- [ What will bo the upshot of the business is, Tird lo other forms of thowght wnd Inbor, | g and Yces nud Jowels to ba worn, the | of the populur feeling i tho wge i Whieh | ugall, It certainly tonehes this: Thut no man, | Deloity the itov, Dr, Gotdo of Bulialo the | tution of the worl *Proviiee™ for the | WBKNOWN ab present. ‘Tlio suzgestion that a. Be lity of eacly Individun! 13 so brief that | Captain has hls wind fixed upon all thoso | God his placed him on eweth, Men who | gl o combination of men, P aueceeded | Rove ML M. Rogers, Montpelier, Vi the | word “State™ than is mennt by the trusteo b fl!glmllgll‘(l 80 thut the benefit of the s 1l afford to nssume that the nations | kraver affulrs, sueh s food, and drink, and | have seen servleo iy tho army toll us that o | ju rooting up ona religion’ except by over- | Rev. L, C, Sumes, of St. Paul; mind the Hon, | substitution of the word “*Counell mlwylnhp:l it Tolu, Itock, aid Rye may Le Yoot Setermined nothing, aud that I must | conl, snd sudls, und fifobouts, for great hvnds | courage of e soliller fn th evlsls of a buttlo | whndowns mid erowding 16 out by wiothor. | Gearga W, Chibman, of Boston, Other | f0r, the word *Conventlon® fn- Vir. | Teaped, will probubly’ it bo earefed out, "The “inat the nlfabet of il things, und muke | Winds or an aeeldent might protract tho is often nothing more than the overmmstoring [ oo I8 11 moen n roliglons tnstingt that wili Taota fanlline were the Rev, Profs, | B Fhey well know that the word Inpression is that, owlng to the Impossibllity ieragain tho world for himsull, It seems | R&e from fen dnys to u tonth, and I such | sense ot the Imum{sxhllltk' of dolme unything | havo some faith, tras or false, to satlsty it, | Sees mora fumllh 10 weve ZIOM | Provinea”” s not wsed by Chavehmen ng [ Of ot so many ereditors to ngreo, the farmankind has been out long enouglh fn | A event the gay passengers coula not, with o but push on 1o vietory, Amldst o | And our modern infidelity trios to knore | Sunford, Otson, llowe, and Riggs, of Chi- nf'nnnymmm with the word *State,”: und | three who hold jodzment notes md” kot out wadagsof oxploration and exporlment to | their Hlerture and Jowels, combnt the soll- | erash of the eollision ofarmies, when eannon | this hungorine of the hnmah heart for same | engo University; the Hon, L. D, | that the use of the ward “Councit” for | the executions undor which tho stock wus sarzant the nssnmplion that 1t hns fonnd out, | Ehele and harrenuess of th 3 for the ueenn | vour and Lutlfels whistio nll nround hiiw,when | rlfgious bulief, 1 may como to your howso | Bobne, N, ‘L% Gnssette, Esqi, tho Rev, | “Convention” tn Virginta s wot at all annle | sefzed, witl take everything, "menlluewn constant and pressing needs’ | offors tho stranded or successtntship nothlie | closout his sldew eomvads falls, tharo mny | and tell you that the bread on'which vou | Hy, Swithh, olitor of the Standqgrd, the | 05ons, und - does not Justify their hold at- The reporter found one happy man yesters hh"lmunmnm wan hus been on earth tn | but desolntion. The Captaln battles thut | come loating fnto his mind some sweot piei- | fopd your fanilly I8 rank polson. But ihat | o '1 S 'l Slilo Baptlst clergy, l‘ tept to sob up un Feelesirgtieal Proyinee in “."{- tho ngentof n Now York clkar house, kwgmmt Intelllgent, socinl forin for oply | desert by earryiug Into s great pulites nog | ure of tho dnys of unbroken pence, Whon by | only fonids you, 1 enso thut yout beliove me, | Yorious South Slde Daptlst clergy, mud nu- | jiiols, ‘Tho nurpnse of siyling theiv or- | Several wevks ago e sold Luwrence & Mur. of jears, wo must confess that such n group | OFiments, nor curiositics, nor musle, but | bis own fiésido he st with loved ones | 4o try sonie_other substiiiite for what s | Werous aumm ot the Semihary, Ocoupying | wanizationn * Provinee ™ fnsiead of by its | fn Q0.0UU clicars nt 855 u thousund. After farpg® mako no contemptible - uren | the food and drink aud tho fuel for u”lon | ironnd hiw, in seeurity wd confidence, 116 | heon T iafr o e, int when o to you | soats on the platform wore the pastor, the | shuple canonieal nai, and of fmrsh«llng i | they wore dotlvered, the firu claimed that the m’;“rlnni tud morul oxperiment. But tha | Wondoring, *‘Chug soclely, In 1 o sailing | uay long with wn witterablo desira to hava | i soy (int it food 1s nnneeessary and post- | Rov, George C. Lorinier, the. Rev, Dr. North- | 113 usurpation after the General Convention | el wers not up to grade, sid donndsd s 1 blity 13 that society s oceupid this | through tho seas, has learned to permit the | thaso duys come buek, Dt what gives him ll\'vlr\néurlmm. youtelbme that Lam a hope- | pup, President of the Semluury, the Rev, J, | has wseil o sanetion it, 18 indeed plaluty | redtiction of 60 conts u thousand, "The ugeng et fortens of tiousnidy o yeurs, ind that | Cutholio and Epizeopnilun to enbark with all | the yervi to push on into the thickest of tho | Jeus fdiof, - And that B vreclsely what tha | T, Burhog, of the University Place Chiurels, | to forea on tho Provineil system, in deflunes | necidentully hoard o membor of o whisky: mfi“’“’"'““ enjoyed an ninnzing oppor- | thelr ""fiel!’v wul thy Calvinists 1o puss up | Gzhigh the stuple conscloustess thut ho I8 | world will ‘sooner or Iater suy i the mon | wid the roverend nrml:ur of tho ocewslon, | uilko of the will of the Convention and of tho | housu say that they hnd had o good deal of for testing th morlt and domertt, of o | the plunks With all his Inege books of philust- | hergynot thore, Thu days of peueo and teans | who wro teylug o persunde iankind that | 'Fho ree cholr randored in adugrublo mi ll«nplv. This Ivolves o radical change in | trouble to get money from Luwreneo & Mure Brcfentithiudd of “wludos of bellef und | Bhy,—n great \’l|l‘l“lli‘fll mind and soul to set | quillity ure over, “Thess o tmes of warl | thay ean wot. winng with no rellion whatsn- | enl program under the leadership of M. | Chivreh government, climinutes the 1y el- | ti, and that they would nuver soll anything el 1 nilght seem wanly and Inde- | Oui for o fong yll; ut this society I Ttself | Ho st make up bis pind to fuce-the. Inov- | gyor, ‘Thuy slimply Iny thamsclves opon to l’n‘ol W. Rtoot. oment to n grent uXtent, und consimmntes | More to them unless the order was secous Junlu JaG 0 1610 1asyme {lmt asquare | busy ulmutlln&u Tuw greal things Which are | ftubfe, un pdvantigo that éhrlntlunlty will ke, ‘I'he serinon was bofore the ‘Theologlenl | the schume forwhileh swall Dioceses lwvd IJ“II'U“( by i;mfl‘lt'l!k- This made the agent mnm“m“"{‘" Were moro beantiful than n | the ‘basls of il things else,—the food sl | | think o like phitosophy is required of the | But the Intidulity of tho present ngd hus | Union, nnd was delivored by the Itey, Frank- | besn multiptied, mid Fedorate Councils pro- | susplcions about the solvency of Lawronce & 4 i o - | on L y v . Lnsa 6] b 4 . Tl i » Y Marthn, und ho went aver to'thoir place, and, lv\keu\dnlu”(‘:lq ‘|I"It 1 window shoulil by | drink of the mfl'l s lvpasses’ throngh i doils § Chrlstiug by tho ago In_whiel we find our- | niother lesson 16 teaeh tho Clirlstian who | Hin Johnsan, D, i, pastor of the Old Cam- | vided. With Apvullmt‘: Courts to vy us Marthn smd the elears did ¥ :’1 1 ¥ 4 gl and tha tudo and u desurt, i nedves, We Awerlean Chrlstlans, ospeelully, [ would have understanding of - the times, 1 | brideo Chureh, Boston, 1t wisan sl offort, | doctring, thoy hope to reatize thelr drenm of | 88 Al U clgurs didu’c sult, he :n’ifl.d l?:zfl“&fi,fl‘l:{xm VeIt o nlrl“(':l(n:::n‘: We shotld usstine at 1ast that monkind hus | ean nt this duy look buck ab Tt o whon | inenn L 1 S ityims tha Chrtetian Chares | and o i 3 [powoer, Moxraoseny Buaig, | Jonded thew up, Wheir the boxes wero ln. 0 8 held the lurge congregation futerested to | medloval -y nfor for us to take th | settled upon some principles, Our personnt | thy Chnrel of our Lovd Jesus Christ In this | 1tis bringing bellovers who ones wers wug- | the close, —_— tho uxpress wion Martin ngreed to tika Lm",fgemfllhy Laul, that wome principles | corcor 1s su hOTELIAE w6 canot ailard Tund seemud to busk In thesunshino of pence, | ing vlttor controversy with enel other to | . ‘Tho reverend gentleman, took for hisaub- | Wasnixatoy, Dy O., May: 5, 1881.—T0 the }""'."{.“,r"‘fi',"'.lcgfl“{'\.'{fi“‘h“"“"' The ngent, g thogg oot Atk that wo would hest ns. | speml thoss fow years [n doubt, bul, With | £de not mean that the mfority of ‘mon af | *bo of o wumoe wind.” As T pass nloms | Ject, *Jesus us i Ortor,” tho toxt bolng | Editor af the Gurditn [New York]—Sue: | however, drove J [ Berleijon ninl sailon toward the isles of | Paul, leaving thess prineiples we, should wt- | that poriod loved the Gospel w tter than [ our streets I hear the chattoring and sew | Tound in Julm‘ vily 40, *Nover man spako | ‘Po justity tho estabilshimont of the Appellate : ad elutiy “f vuchone of s must review | temink to go on townd perfectlon. Lven the | thoy do to-duy, But the oppasition was loss | the homely brown plumage of n kind | lko this man,” Coiirt propused by the Fedorato. Counell, A THIEVES' NEST. Belra g gl MoTsl world wo shiall all dio | *Six Great Infldels," vegardling whieh w dis+ | oy wnd loss open in ity bold attucks, The |'of bird, which, siwea thel ntroduction | - Such wus tio renson aselgned by the of- | Chunecllor Juid repeats iho allegations Last Bunduy Liout, Steclo nnd Sorat. Yal. Wogr jqipill make any wso of Its contenty, | thusnished publlc speakor Is how dlsconrs- | fuoritaneo of respect for roligion dorived | 1to our Amoricin clttes, seem to lave had | fie ho il been detuiled by the nrlests | sndo B Iis resoluttons of the 2ith of “dunits {140 "0 tho West Chicage Avenuo Stetlo, o o should, Before talking, walt | e, diifered from thelr onloglst i thut thoy | from our futhers wis still hald i honor, Wo | thele own way nhnost 'without opposition, | to nerest desus, and who had falled tn their | wry, that, although the Houge of . ishops of d 1ot of- shohe 1 Ty Mg o FURRS, thoy would never con- | 8N Atood firinly tbon tho most commion prin- | fad a quiot and holy Sabboth, Our publle | Our bluebirds and rablus have lott the field lmrpow. DPorhinps they roferred 1o the mat- | 1850 rufused to sanction l.lmlfi’worlhun naked | ¥on uoross a lot of stoleit propervy in a barn ek gl i"lt! ther would nover sing | clples of religlon, No one of @ien asked | press el not fenyned that seofling wiis tha | to thew to aceuny, and, having no other ong- | tor of 1is discourse, bt 1t ks worg probuble | for, it assented to the oXistence of the power | at tho rear of No, 146 Ada street, aul there oyt e they decline nll now known | soclety to gIve up tho worshily of Und ami the | way to make w journal profituble, | mies, they hnve gone to quurroling with each | thnt they wero so nwed by that vower which | recognlzed by the Cotvention of 18715 that | and then arrested a Mrs, Mullens, her son, velag vu'-“;‘d Haist on beginniug ab tho | hope of o blessed fo beyond the uxperlened | No” blasphoming omtois —gathorad gront | other, Tho vory succoss of the . English | had drawn o multitude of devoted foltowers | this wis an entirely difforent power: and tht and n young chap named Eddie Honkins, all ) llangt{' selence whero (e savages | Of warth. Jullan, the Apostate, hnving gous { Growds toapplwi to theecho thele ribaldus- | sparrow 1n colonizing our cululml' has mude | about Him, thut thoy dared not luy* hands | the Fodorate (onell - uder the power | o oo e T the promk: i Blggy °pF e Afvlean const or in cannibul | to Greceons o youug Christian to stud3, ho | gaults upon the Gospol, An avewed Athelst | Wi Intolorant of his own kind, We | on $im ruolumflu thoy did, the spell 115 | so vecoguized by the 6 of Bishops, L n D 408 ol tlety pay lnu:lLllll) WO must assume that so~ | beeanto convertod tmuk to tho piuanlsie of | was one from whoen the ninjority of our peo- | Chirlstiuns have no night to hlde frow our- | royalty il cast upon” them. “Tho spesker | To slinw this dliforenco and mulntain this | wore — supposed toknow, something ey ypg et A 100k nnd “patlent experis | that old Iand, wnd beeamo u disciply ot Socrus rlo shrank us thoy woula from tho touclt of | selves aud from othars to plaln fuct that onr | retorrmd to Louls XVL, who when tleeing | proposition, the Chancellor quotes 50 much | obout tho - goods. Ilearing “that somos -« Inln“"wltl}»iml depnrtments of rellgion, | tes and Plato, But he dld not dream of | [ifeotious diseuse, 1o n word, we could then | shametul divisions wnd wnnrmll have been at | from Parts was stopped by a smull bnmlufl of the power refused I 1850 w8 (declures that unlpuz further wight be learned cone 1lts gyyy 1 SO0 valuable concluslons | athelsm, e attempted to persuade hls eni- | honestly sposk of our land’ asa Christian | the root of mueh of modern intidellty, And | men who had wo ofticinl uuthority, One | tho Federate Council shonid have the corning the gang to which the Mullons VU i pebest ticed, l»lm to roturn to tha gods af thelr fatherd, [ country, the growth of Ullrlstlnnll{ inthe world, the ( woull Juwo thought that s royal de- [ power “of, “orgwnizine and - admine | fonily was lu‘mosud to bulong, the suine ol ey cull errogato this wonderfnl in- | Hlis tenehings diffeved utterly from thoswiof Well, holaved, you ond I mny look back at | possession of Influcnee with the powors that | mennor would wve Impelled thelr - linbltual | Istoring ah - Appollute Court for ad- LS, armed with a scarch-warrant, wont at “mmnnmmffl..“"“‘“Y—Wmulvrml I fts | tho publlc orutor Who deais the olil uame up | tlies to suel days wa tioss with sort of | e, the sccumulation of wealth, mid, sbove | reverence for thoir soverelgn, Alas? he had | Jidieatlng cases' brought Leforo 1t by ap- | o'elock Saturday "“,“'H"'E. to the Louse o fouru’ iy ) el B¢, Wondorful [y its so- | from its Komun tomb, o destred shuply to | home-slek longtug, Wo iy shgh o bring | ulf, the guthering Into the church of 'w host | no royal dignity, no princely bearings he | pewls from the Courts of the Dioceses within il B\Vt'l\lgl‘m No, 203 Wost Ohlo street, TOU the Epf e, midt I ity wigration | surpass the religlon of Chrlst by means of ummbuckurm 0. Butafteralf, therolsnosich | of wen and womon who bad o part nor Jot | conld” not assert -uny spoll of fif g- | the limits of the State of Illinels, the modo | Fhey routed William out of bed, and, much A2ty ang'pvondertul tn 1ts languages, | thas of Plato, wud, dylng, bo sald: "+ Ob, lhlmhns ru buckward, W bt recog- | i this matter, has loed to theso uncharitublo | ship, mud he turned Imur( n prisoner | of procedury havimg been first instituted by Nil“lm his wisties, went tirought his hous fowy, ""“‘fl\lhlmlr!""w“s' il oy, and kor- | Galllean, thou hust corquered. nize the fuct that for the Church thess are | oxhibitions, 'I'he Prnwurlly of Awerienn | to dlo, But Jesus had n prineoly hcurln;i tho soverul Divceses” but omits to quote the | Where they found 100 pounds of tea, 1 Rthetie g o J0 our ucstlons some | Spinozt wasu Hubrow, and passed from | days of war, o fuce the Inevituule Is tho | Christiity, especl nll". hus made much of | which tho royal fugltive of Franes coulil | words which follow,—Viz,: * under the per- | pounds of funey lnlhl-u»nrs, sOMY_ R, B Thayg Jiyai % responsdu, It would | an embodied God to s universal God, s | truo wisdom of tho hour. Like ono who, | 1ts history painful for s neodless and bittor | not wield for u_moment,~1lo could resist | misston already gennted by Art. 4 of the Cone butter, and obout $¥) worlh of dry guods, :ye ny hulx"ll ten thousand years, and | thus beeame n puuthelst of u dovout atd ut- | following his guide wlong s Alplye path, | controversies, arrests i yet when the time eamo He gave | stitution of the General Convention.” And | ‘The latier was !dum!fluu by Churles 3L lon miltlons of sub- | fee 3 discovera thut ho Is on a rocky shelf, too nar- ut s it never oceurred to you that thero msoll i Veluntury victin, Just what this | then quotes the resolutlon of tho Conventlon , No, - . Mr, J;un] g all foireds of il f fectlonate schiool, Instead of findiug the | (i, thut ho § ky shielf, t Lut has it ol ¢ that th Thimsole Iunt fetin, Just what this | tl tos th Tutlon of tho 1 Frahm, No. 4+ Wost Chiengo avenne. Mr, » upon the angry | attempt to patnt un acenrato portrait from | Court of Appeals, i€ such Dloceso oleets to —————mS—— L figyy 10 LIS of bellef and unbe. | Delty ont o throus he found WMasevorywhers: [ vgw (o poraift of any turnlug, however much | lins been in our thne s vost fnprovement in | steanze power was that swiyed the minds of | of 1871, declaring »that Art, 6 of the Constl | Sweendy was of coursu arrested, but Mray 1 n ;:‘l“ul ull the eups of political | b the song of 8 bird, aud in "‘"m"“‘KJ!fll(l' he mny’luuu 15 Tkt hl;“'s!aps. 50 wolks | this regard ? Tam not yot un aged man, but | men we ot know, s Dricr was T cnreer | tauon confers “fuum cach Dlocese In such | Bweonsy escaped through n window, Mesary it and o id hove found what [ st Ou thy b“lldfl{ worntag of his doath | the Aweriean Christfun In this ninoteenth | 1 have seou o chinige pss over the splrit of | wnd so short 1008 history, Auyoffort to solve | Stato the power to Institute the modo of try= | Willlani s u brother to the Mrs, Mullens m}‘ he, l"“hu! ones sweet, 1 mark | he urgod his friends to atteud church a4 wsu- | contury. I8 watehery must be “Ounward.” | our Nutlonal Christianity durimgmy own life- | 118 problem §s as unsutisfactory us an nrilst’s g Preshytors and Deacans, Including "o | mentionedabove. Otherurrests ura tofollow, ‘c‘:‘“flng Wat m‘t:‘\: ;\;x Individunl Is now | pl. To his hostess ho sald: * Your religion What do wu need to know in order to have | thue ke that which ¢ Uy no God, that man s | I8 & good onei you shonld not seek another, | understanding of the thnes? Nothlug s more | waves whon Chirlst sn Pencol be sthL” | some old lkeness ulinost faded from sight, | Iustitute sucl tiibunul for ftself: wnd | The lem herewlth was furnlshed by Mr, ‘,‘:‘lke .,w:); Y'p hhwself—u' curlous in- | nor doubt that 1t will seeuro your "‘-‘IV““‘""] clnrucwrlstluu! hunwan naturve than to muy No s In bis sonses will dispute thut thore |.Iho speaker thouxht the first clomont of | whother such Appellate Court shall alse be | John ublig, Poyugr, In: 1 have beens u\flktf“\vhulu“-:,'flf“""‘ itself, for there H,{:’.}‘ add to your plety tho virtues ot a guod | nify the tmportance of what 1s lumedlutoly | 18, o kindly< and loving regard among | oratory s h""’“{"[“’ —n. thorough commaid | the Appellute Court of nny other of the Div- | sufferor with' thewsntlam for the last six 2 Whig 1 % 1s of conntry und thme about s, To each man tha very centre of | Christinus of ditferent numies to-duy wileh | of words, Lo su that in tho thue of Chrlst | eenes i suld Stato iy matter of diseretion | yearss I'teied lots ot modicines without uny Al o, 1SARY 0€ tho Unlvorgo ling | Voltalre was an enomy of @ churel rathor | £0 WorkL1s use. whiro, 1o 13 Dlaceds -Wo | dl0 mob xlst oweis-hne senm om0y Wo | o Lhourow o e iyt 0F CIEISE [ cowed i suld Stuty b s niatier of diserston | years: Tl lots ot madicines without iy wips¥ L hud e lelst iy tho nhieteenthy | than of relizlon, Hu battled wrninst an 1n- | wonder that all the restof wunkind o ned | work together, we pruy together, wo' com- | the Araue, unothor branch of the Shemitle | Canventlons of such othor Diocoses respeot- | Wungler Bros., I Watorioo, 1o, thuso gens 3 ) Ul On 10y lunds at many | stitution which bad been mupdo” desputic feol us we feel tha linportance of that hu which | muno togother. Wo hoiestly try to help ono | sten, had taken its plieo s the spoken lan- | fvely.” tleman inducad me to try tho St. Jurobs Oil, soup g 0 Bt Whae ones I Y Vi iy . 5 ¥ o L now scu | nges of gread politlcal success and ugkran wo are speclidly fnterested, I have known s | unother.” [do not menn to assert that any [ guage, and it was this thut our §. uployed, It thys nppears, the Chancellor coutends, | telling o that it had 8 record as a ve m,“' ful} n?".f (::::‘? the few drops that lz«uu?nI. and which had brought down from | contest among” the rival factions in a sehool | one cnuse is at the bottom of this remark- ’i‘hu II{IIRHIIKullu used wus always the pur- | that, \\"nllsh the resulution of 1871 conten “feetive remedy, T bought n bottle, used 1§ T 2159 fust :xm)r Letora n great ruby, | autlquity o weasnireless muss of superstiton | or collego to usswime i virulencs Hko that of | able phenumenon of onr religlons history, | est. e never thought It necessury to bo | plutid the ereation of the court “by the v regulurly according to directions, llulm Ll dusllnfid“';l""‘ll h;mm| aud ervors bub Voltalre salds *The philloso- | some convalslon which rends w nutlon wsun- | ‘Thore are huny reasons for But Ebetleve [ conrse ln order ta be vigorous, and there 18 | untary coliperation of the several” Dlocesan | relieved” of the allment fiom which 1 s inder . ¢ vher who secosibes o God Las vith blaca | der, mud s completelv to onveoss tha § that ther 15 ang whieh 1s rrely uyslgned the | not w tow eavresslon fn all His sermons. He | Conyeutions coneerned, the power sought | sultered for six long yyars, b

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