Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, July 24, 1881, Page 10

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10 SUNDAY; JULY ~24, —SIXTEEN PAGES. ht them the s! est RELIGIOUS. Personal Recollections of the Late Dean Stanley by a Former Pupil. A Life The "as Full of Honor and Shed » Lustre on En- glish History. General Notes at Home and Abroad— Personal Mention—Sunday Salad. SUNSET AFTER STORM. The air is full of goiden mist, And the gates of Eden open swing. ere slunting sunbeams there in the West Make a Jacob's ladder to which may cling The soul of mortal that dures to climb Yo Eternity trom Time. is “ Whether out of the spirit of in, I know not,” but in an hour like this Surely it was, St. Jobn the Divine Bebeld that wonderful vision of bis, Of a city which bath no necd of the sua Since the Preseuce and tieht are one. Sard and sapphire and chalcedon— See them piling up there in the West. The broad foundations, stone upon stone— ‘Topaz and beryl and amethy Up this zolden stair, did we dure to go, We ekould reach the city. ] know. Soul of inine, why hunger and wait? ath. no nignt. oo late! veiled tram sight. stair at last pust. The hight is ta Whe radiant But—we shall climb th ‘When the storm of life i DEAN STANLEY. <A SRETCH WITH PERSONAL REMEMBEA NC! For The Chicnen Trettait. ‘The tidings of the death of Dean Stanley ve been received with widespread regret. His name has gone out through all the civil ized world, and wherever it has gone it has been honored and revered. Few men in the religions world, and none in the ecclesiast al cireles of England, have had a more prom- inent and intiuential place. For three-score years and six he bas worn ‘The white tower of 2 blameless life, and now, suddenly and all too soon, he has graceful from the honor: sof Jife, io where “beyond these voices there is peace.” A few personal remembranees laid gratefully as a student’s uibute by Dean Stanley’s open grave may be neither inap- propriate nor untimely. ‘The record of the Dean's life is brief and free from startling events. Th ry ON told. Hewas born in Alderly, in the love- Ty County of Cheshire, on the ih of De- ceinber, 18: This was an eventful year in Surope, especially in England... It wa: year of grace the year of Waterloo, when s.urope was delivered from the thraldom of an ambitious tyrant, and the long, : came to an end. Arthur Penrbyn Stanley would be sure to hear iunengst the first slories of his childhood of the bravery of the dron Duke.” and the valiant deeds of his heroie soldiers. The Dean's father, Dr. Ed- rds Atector of Alder] nid ppy must have been the . years: lesiastic, spent in) the peaceful Reetory and amid) the pleasant Jarm-lands of Cheshire. Rugby School, Tamous ts the best- middle-class sehool in Eu- gland,—known now all 5, very of the world over. through the romantie pages of Thomas Hughes’ “Tom Brown's School Day then under the ei ce and grove: n- ave ment of the ‘ Dr. ‘Thomas <Amnold, the thew Ar noid, the sa tan Jey udy that culminated in such deep and reaching scholarsiip. He had just py $s st Lirthday when events transpired big) with Rnporlance to the nation and to the quiet Rectory of Alderly. gteen hunted and thirty-seven was Starting point of a new era in English history. AVill- IV. died at Windsor Castle “on the Sth of June. and sneceedicd by his outhful niece, who, ascending the throne of rated what will be known psoas “the Victo se —* Queen's Year lud—prought a ere: to the Stanley famil, ¥ changed for an and the Rector of Alderly ne Lord Bishop of orwich, Which high office he adorned for twelve years, and then died in) Is, di Tamented by the Chureh of which be faithful a servant. and by th: the midst of which heh : ered vocation. In iy a the future. Dean #raduating at U Winning year honors: Hi s Wi soon di standard exam= Verace of diction 8 tor the best inade bis wor of style i Wea the pr Collese. “Fort Oxtord, Preac spomtedt Select hew upon his rot the first nd ii . a Canonry i In 1ss5 he w: { Eveleni zt high place he held Ind, when he was ¢ Westuninster Abbey. That venerable, stately pile—the nation’s chief sepulehre Jor her mu y dead—had Jong been the shri ilerims from all lands 10 look ee of ‘yo at Gxtord, whieh A honered ti the year led to the Deanery of Kings and warriors of old and statesmen and poets of a laterage. Here + Kings and Queer i. Here, der the huge, um ion chair, lies anunshapely stone, believed still by the ered- ulous to be the identical stone an whieh the wanderi Bethel, what time the a 0 descending, angels crowd: ed his fugitive dreams, ‘Lois great Cathe- dral,a_ perfect dream of architecture, that was chiefly attractive by the dust of the dead. lent ther became the centre ew attrac i A living voice nee ot the The tive as mightier x went on, it a London were su me point of their pilerimage, seen Westminster Abbev? U1 the Dean?" To sce the Abbe Dean were insepar: Very pleasunt remember some or thy in the great ADE of a . broke the si ing Dean at writer the pi Phe immense crowds: thronging every a) pie space; the marble monuments of the dead beeoming Lage- ground for the livi the Poets Corner thronged with worshipers, and sometimes one feit a sense of sacrilege as looking dow: ward we found the benchjo which the state- ly vergzer appointed u hwart the grave ot Charles Dicket nem music rolling through the es. Uke sun shining through “windows richly light” throwing fitful glories on sculptared ‘bust and imarble shrine. ‘The pe lenee of that v throng, as the Dean, little of stature, white-robed, wearing the erimson sash indicative ot his scholariy degree, with velvet cap on dis head, rising to the discourse. The small coupact figure, the features of the face, sharp ext and well defined, the brow broad rather tian massi ri 1 and pleas: ollections! And then the sermon, always brief and always impres aAvpealing to the enlixhtened consvience and judzment ot his hearers. | Presenting ever some great @eco spiritual truth; wot in illustrat e@etense of creeds or article Gz zaith, butas the bre nt down trom toe heavens, by which alone the souls of wen could be made brave and wise and true. The memory of Uiese scenes is sacred ind pleasant, tingéd now with pensive mus- ings at the thought that that voice is silent here forever. = It would be impossible in this brief sketch to give more than use merest outline of the life and work of Dr, Stanley. Ue has been * spoken of as the leader of the Broa party. It can searcely be said w that thre isa Broa y vpoint | I HS duties and privileges. | | the Abbey ' friends. Wit ' earth grew dim, and the way was very Ionel. i for the Dean, | too, & mo: Chureh party. ‘There are men of broad, lib- eral view, after the style of Dr, Lidden and rar, Canons of St. Paul's Cathedral; broad men are not organized into a party. It would) have greatly dis- tressed the Dean to have been) Te garded as a party leader. It would have rudely ned the bioam froin | the swee v of fife to have been rded as the Standard-Bearer of a sect, st ofall and hist of all the champion of clesiastical clique, Indeed, one of the ideals he long cherished was of a Compre= hensive Church where all creeds should find common ground. A fold big enangh to hold ail the flocks of the one Great Snepnerd. And because of these liberal modes of thought he Was hated by the writers of the Rock, the organ of ihe ri Evangelicals, and scorned the ultr i The publication by Dean Stanley of the “Lite of Thomas Arnold,” in 188, gave him high rank in the guild of Jileratu . “The deliv * Lectures on the Jewish Churel.” cred in Oxford while Regius Professor of ical History, marked him jas a most origi commentitor of Old ‘Les ment Instory, daring with fearless but r ef read. to. investigate and esplore the ‘This fearlusness. awoke ieism., Dut there are not a Evert dozen. well-selected clerical Hbrari in fen or England that do not contain = Stanley's Lectures on the Jewish Church. "The lectures are not orthodox, But they dare to deal in a free spirit with sacred history. ‘They compare history with history. They do not summon profane history—so- ealkd—to holster un Seripture statement, but they show how widely diverging streams spring from the same fountains, and, winding ach their way, pour themselves at last o the ovean of universal truth, Above w things, this History of the Jewish Church has provoked honest thought and has encour- a ree and earoest inquiry. Itis not a com- mentary in which idle clergy! theological pabulum served up il them to minister to their toc! It is for the student. It throws him on hi resourees, The author points ont the tie! ere the goodly pearls He: then leaves him ont the gems for himself. If Dean had done no oth » the pro~ duction of these lectures would have insured h rinent fame. and would have made all Biblical students his debtors. : In ts82 the Dean accompanied the Prinee of Wales on-his tour through Palestine, and the publication of his inai and Palestine” was hailed with delight. ‘Che Holy Land be- came real under the touch of his graphic pen. and from Dan to Beersheba the scenes of old renown became as instinct with life as Paris, or Edinboro’, or New Y But the true influence of thi ie lay not alone in the depth and breadth wholarship, nor in any special points but in'the broad. large charity d all his life with strength and heart was_ large enough and own wor sympathies were wide enough to en- compass all men, Dean Stanley very early erased the word oleration”? from his vocabulary and closed the doors of his heart and mind “against the narrowness of which that word was the sign, What right has any man to tolerate his fellow man? "As foundation on which this Repubt IHinen are born tree and equi. beneath the bi t univer arity, recugnized the rights of intellect and championed the freedom of thought. Inspired by this spirit, he welcomed to the Abbey and fo his pulpit: many man whose there a narrower “minded Dean uld have counted saerilege. He opened its dours.to the proseribed Bishop Colenso. He ask filer to unveil some of the my: ence of He invited the of the Brahmo . Somiaje, to tell of the great change that was coming over the religious thoughts of the edueated youth of India. We saw the Dean with bowed head at the grave of Dr. Thomas Binney, the most pronounced pon-conform- ist of his day. We was bold enough not to be ashamed of Dissenters. He counted on his list of personal friends such men as Harry Allon, Dr. Joseph Parker, Charlies IL Spurgeon, and the venerable Dr. Stoughton, the latter of whom he invited ‘to deliver histori lectures in the nave of the Abbey. He w prominent as the fast friend of Dollinger in the Old Catholic Congress of Cologne.in 1s’ He obeyed the Apostolic injunction, he loved the brotherhood, he feared’ God, he honored te King. And his dream of an_all-encom- passing brotherhood of men. may best be atnered froma short quotation from that most beautiful of Eucharistic hymns that tlawed froin his fertite and oft-poetie -pen. ‘Three stanzas will suflice to show how the Dean would have a place for all good men and true at the Lord’s Banquet of Love: When thé Paschal evening fell Deep on Kedoon’s hallowed dell, When around the festal board Apostles with their Lord, 3 Then itis parting word He said, islesseu the cup and broke the bread: “This whene're ye do or sce, Ever more remember me.” Years have passed: in every clime Changing with the cbanging time, Varying through a thousand forms, ‘Tora by facuons, rocked by storms, Still the sacred table spread, Jowing cup and broken bread, With that parting word agree, “ Drink and eat—remember Mev When diverging creeds sball learu, ‘Toward their central source to turu, When contending cburches tire Of the earthquake. wind, and tire; Here let strife and clumur cease At thy still small voice of peace: “ May they alt united be In the Futher and in Me. The sympathies of Dean Stanley were with earnest werkers in all fields of toil. He ap- ted fully the dignity and responsibi ies of journalism, and ane of the most elo- quent speeches we ever heard from his lips was in Willis’ rooms on the occasion of the versary of the “N per Lord Houghton presi and not Westminster proposed the toast, * Prosperity to the ‘spaper Press Fund,” in a most felicitous speech. Ife spoke of the great strain of the work which demanded sueh prompt and quick execation in the gath- wD ted, the Dei of reliable information, and the ex- sti ussion of great questions with- out time for mature thought. He closed a most masterly oration, by depicting the great ure of journalism, if only journalism to it- self were true, ica never had a truer friend than anley, Ali through her great strug is warmest sympathies and able advo- eof the North. His re- country made a large place in respect and aifection of many is, and endeared to hima land to 4 he always looked with kindly, hopeful vent tor ni the sad tidings of the attempted as- asination of Gen. Garfield reached England. Dei one of the very first to cable a ze of sympathy to Mrs. Garfield, and orders that prayers should be offered in daily for the President's recovery It is not very long since his honored wite, Lady Augusta Suuntey, died. She was one ot the Quee dearest and most intimate With her departure the light of But_patientiy he went tolling knowing well that for him the heavens Lon were rie! and that the separation could not be jong. The midnight ery came tedly, but the Dean was ready. dis trimmed, his light burning. He grave, God-fearing nan. He did no al. starting thing upon the earth, But he Jett behind him a priceless legacy of Work that shall have great wages set, And deeds that our God will never forget, ‘Done for the Love Divine. ELMo. THE SEE OF TRENTON. BISHOP-ELECT O’FARRELL. Tb the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. VARK, N.J., July 21—Rome has at once surprised and disappointed very many in the persons selected to be Bishops of the old See of Newark and of tne new See of Trenton, which is justcreated. For Newark speculation was rife as to whether. Mgr. Doane could add the mitre and the crozier to the purple which he assumed within a year on his devotion to the prelacy of the house- hold of the Holy Father. The Monsigueur being the son.and brother of Bishops, and, st Industrious ,priest, of spotle: life, it was_ supposed by many that Rome would not fail ty honor her meniber of the Doane family as much as the Episcopal Church had honored his father and his brother, ‘Then the nams of Father James Corrigan, Pr ent of Seton Hall, and that of Father Preston and Dr. MeGlynn, both very able gentlemen, were mentioned here und there as likely to have the bulls sent to one or the other of them for — Newark. In all the speculation, and surmise it never occurred to any one to mention the name of Father Wig- xin, a youthful, modest. and retiring priest, who has been for several years pastor of a lirde chureh with a rich congregation at Madison, N. J.. Rome, it would seem, has a knack of singling out retiring clergymen for promotion, and Rome, too, seems to delight in making speculations as to who will be ap- pointed valueless. The Rey. W, J. O'Farrell, selected for Trenton, i. from old St. Pt Barclay street, a chureh that had th jonable and rich Catholics in its pews before the uptown The church now honored for th nein having a pri¢st from its altar 1 ed for promotion. The present Viear-General Quinn was for some qastorof St. Peter’: Father Quinn's been prominent for promotion when~ ever avacaney oceurred in the Archdiocese of New York, ana itis said that bis name h been sent to Rome mse than once- thet that he has been recommended, As in Atnerican polities the gentlemen promit in people’s minds are ignored, some. ec! siastival dark-horse coming in with the Hon: ors, 3 BISHOP M’MULLEN. WIS CONSECRATION TO TAKE PLACE TO- Mor ‘ The Very-Rev. Father McMullen,. D. D. fora long time Viear-Generat of this dio- cese, and recently clected First Bishop of the Diocese of Davenport, It., was born March $1883, in the Town of Ballinahineh, in the County of Down, Ireland. The family moved to Am in 1837, settling in Lower Canada and subsequently moving, first to Oxdensburg, N. Y., then to Lockport in this State, and finally to Chicago, where the Tut- ure Bishopentered the College of St. Mary's of the Lake, graduating in 1855 with high honors. His edu completed at the? Urban College, Rome, and in 1858 he or- dained a priest, and returned to Chicago, where he was appointed pastor of St. Louis Chureh. Since that time he has bet gaged in promoting the growth of Chureh in this diocese, establishing church: and missions in different parts of the city and its suburbs. In 1861 he became President of the university where lhe grad and succeeded by Dr. MeGovern in 1st dn he was igned to the chureh at iimington, Ub. but was recalled in 1si0. by =the fate Bishop Foley. and ade Reetor of the Cathedral of the Holy Name, and in 1877 he wv ppointed Viear General of the diecese. Upon death of Bishop Foley he tecame Administr tor of the diocese, whiel position he held wn- til the arrival of Archbishop Feeha A The consecration of the new. Bishop will take p at the C of the Holy, to-morrow morning. bishop Feehan will be the celebrant, shops: Spalding, of Peort ‘The sermon of con: by the Rey. Dr. Me! Chureh, New Yor promises to be of GENERAL NOTES. eration will he pr lynn, of St. Stephen and the entire ceremony yery imposing character. At the recent triennial session of the joint Synod of the Norwegian Lutheran Churen, held in Spring Grove, Minn. it was deter- mined to use the Revised New Testament. A Norwegian Lutheran Synod in Jowa re- cently decided that it was not proper for one of its ministers to accept 2 nomination to the Legislature. The Synod unanimously de- cided in favor of “no politics.” InSaratoy, Russia, a rapidly-growing sect has appeared whieh reject all priesteraft and adopt the Bible as their guide, . The famous theologian Cyrillus was sent to convince these “heretics” of their error, A leader of the new sect, Sikoff by naine, opposed him so vigorously and put so nrainy questions to bin that he could not answer that he quit the field, and his defeat has greatly strengthened the * heretics.” The condemnation by the Vatican ot Father Curci’s new book has led to the result which might have been expected. Seven thousand copies were sold during ‘the first fortnight, and a second: edition wilt soon be brought out. The condemmation appears to have been wholly arbit Knowing that it would be impossible to convict Father Curei of heresy it fairly tried betore the Con- gregation of the Index, “New Ltaly summarily and mysteriously condenined by ihe inquisition without any notification to the author of the errors detected in it, Jerusalem Chamber in Westininster Abbey, where the English revisers of the Testament inet for conterence, has been the gathering place of many committees and bodies whese work was unable to find general acceptance, The assembly of divines who ‘prepared the Confession of Faith and the Longer and Shorter Catechism ot the Presbyterians met there during the reign of Cromwell. ‘The y ion of Comprehension, in the time m LU., which was to revise the En- eli ver Book, also met there, Henry IV. died in the Jerusalem Chamber in the year 1413. The editor of the Freeman’s Journal has nota high opinion of the “autocrat of the organ-lort,” whom he regare an enemy of true Roman Catholic worship. He de seribes what was called a sacred concert in achureh on Sunday evening, when ‘a full band “dashed into a selection in rapid time, ieh the venerable pastor, who we n, and who doubtless regarded th some wild, barbaric, American aitempt at re- gious mi dence with a smile of great satisfaction.’ tune, however, Was that of the song, “Tassels on Her Roots,” whien was followed by ** Whoa, and * Rock the Cradle, Pat.” “The organist,’ says Mr. MeMasters, “really rules the ritual of the church, tare the rubrics of the meaning of inspired words to him? He presides, and he is determined at the time that nobody shail forget it. There are in. counection with the United Presbyterian Synod ot Scotland 549 congre- gations, J Schools, with 10,809 teachers and §,440 young persons under in- been an increase of sand 365 scholars over the preceding ‘There attend advanced ch taught ministers and elders, 23,494 persons—an Tease of 634, The number of membe full communion with the Synod, which in sO and had increased to 174,134 ad again fallen at the close of 18s The decrease in the last two ye: has been nearly 1,100. peusive places of ship and fashionable occupants of seats ghteniny away numbers of workingmen from our churedes. The number of stud enrolled in the classes at the Theolo; Hall during the recent session was 116. amowut OF col zational income for con- gregational purposes was about. $1,223,740, and for missionary and_ benevolent purpo: about 3403,000, ‘om May. 1843, to Deve ber, 1880. the United Pri erian Chureh has raised more than 34,594.350. SCIENCE AND THE BIBLE. ‘The annual necting of the Vietoria Philo- sophical Institute of Great Britain took place atthe House gf the Society of Arts, London, on the 20th of June, the Earlof Shaftesbury: in the chair. The meetin: as very fully attended. Prior te the di y of the ad- dre “On the Credibility of the Super- natural,” by Lord M1, the honor- ary Seerei + Capt. Petrie, the report, from it appea that the — total of member snow upwar e than usual, especially ot Colonial supporte: having joined in the past year, during wl Sand short communications written in the Society’s obj amely: iv Fr which number sof WW. a greater numb e investigation of philosophical and scientific questions, especially those said to militate azainst the. truth — of Revelation—had been contributed by several leading men of. nee. including the Duke 1, Sir J. Fayrer, Profs, Stokes, Boyd J. W. Dawson, Nicholson, Balfour and other Fellows: s- Prof, Hughes, Dr. Rassam, and others. ‘Lhe report closed with a special tribute to the newspaper press The Treasurer's report showed that a con- siderable advance had been made by the Institute akers were Sir H. Barkly Sir rer, who strongly urged that the S mode of fully and uly x scientific questions special importance; the Christian philosopher need never fe . of in: fons so conducted, for the Book: of Natureand Revelation had the same thor, and if the former were f: partially inquired into, the res clash with the latter. Mr. J. E. Howard, Mr, A. MeArthur, M. P.. the Master of the Charterhouse, and others having spoken, the ineceting adjourned to the Museum, where re- freshments were served. THE HOVAN CATHOLIC cHURcH. The extent and elaborate organization of the Roman Catholic Chureh throughout the world are illustrated in riking manner by an official list lately published at Rome under the direction of the Pops. The enumeration of hierarchical titles in the Eastand West tu- gether includes a total of 1,155 offices, all of whieh, except about 19), are at the present* moment occupied. Of the dignitaries who rank next below the Supreme Pontiff there are sixty-three, and of Patriarchs, comprising | both the Western and the Eastern rites, there, areeleven. Tha Archbishops of the Latin rite number no less than 157, with 600 Bish- ops. The Oriental rite is administered by ¥ only fifty-one Archbishops and Bishops to- Of ofiidiais bearmg the title ot gether. t Apostolic Delegates there are six, of Apostolic “Vicars — twenty-six, and of Apostol Pretects 12. But of the hops and Archbishops as mia are appointed to titles led in partibus infidelium. Four members of the College of Cardinals are over 50 years of age, and only three are under 50. Twenty-nine, or nearly half of the sacred college, are be- taveen 70 and 80 y old, fifteen are between 0 and 70, and twelve are between 50 and 60. ‘There are twelve Roman Catholic Bishopri and one Archbishopric in Great Britain, while in Ireland there are twenty Bishopries and four Archbishopries. whole of the British dominions the number of Roman Catholic prelates was recently esti- mated at 118, PERSONALS. The Rev. Joseph Cook contemplates ex- tending his trip to Australfh, Bishop Quintard, of Tennessee, has gone to Europe fora tour of a few mon ths. ‘The Rev. R. Rock, a United Brethren pas- tor at Canton, O., nas been suspended for saying “d—n it? ‘Lhe Rev. Oscar B. Thayer, of Urbana, TL, has aceepted a eal) to the Presbyterian Chureh at Clinton, I. The Rey. Dr. Palmer, of New Orleans, de- clines the chair of theology in the Columbia ‘Theological Seminary, South Carolina. Bishop ‘Talbot, of Indiana, rezards the em- ployment of irreligious imu: us in the ehureh ch St most injurious tendency, and should not be encouraged. The Rev. Charles J. Shrimpton, late of Fayetteville, Central New York. has accepted the Reetorship of Grace Chureh, Galesburg, and will enter upon bis labors in September. Bishop Tywtue, of the Episcopal Chu: Utah, has traveled over e000 miles ins pringless ons, in making tations through Utah, Idaho, and zton Territory. A. Fisher, formerly assistant minister of Christ Chureh, and more recently managing editor of the Reforned Eptscapa- Tian, has ree 2 call to Emimanuel and Epiphany Churches, Detroit. ‘The Rey. James Freeman Clarke has lately been preaching that Christ was the type o the coming man, whose psychological and tavral developinents will a him to work the same or equal wonders attributed to the Founder of Christianity. ‘The Rev. Dr. K. W. Patterson, the sole re- maining member of the old Faculty, with xeeption of Dr. ial: hi just sent in ignation of the chair of Evidences and in the Presbyterian Theologica! Semi- nary of the Northwest, Chicazo, where he is been lecturing for the Leight years. Dr. Patterson bus accepted an appuintment to the same chair In Lane. ‘Theological Semi- nary, at Cincinnati, a position which will en- gage three or four months of his time each year, permitting him to retain his residence in this eity for the present. For forty-one ¥ a leader in the Chureh work in the 1. Dr, Patterson goes k to the theological training-schoul of his youth, to bestow upon it hs talent, augmented by the rescaren and reflection of his praturer life,— Anterior. SUNDAY SALAD. Every man who kan swap horses or ketch fish, and not he about ft, iz just az pinz az men ever git tu bein this world.—Josh Bill- tags. “Ltake my tex dis morning,” said a col- ored preacher, “trom slat po‘tion ob de eripture whar de Postol Paul pints his pis- tol to de Fesions.”” There was a young man from the Mission Who spent all bis Sundays a fshi He snid Hades, for Hell, When they didn’t bite well, For he read the Revised Edition. * What denomination do you belong to?” asked the leader ofa free prayer-meeting, ad- dressing a rough-looking customer who had strolled inand taken a front seat.‘ Hose wuny No. 12, was the Philistine’s an- “What's your favorit hymn?” whispered priest to the culprit as the Sheriff was <ing the noose around his neck. It wasn't no him that brought me to eadly remarked the condemued, “it her.” “Papa? said an inquisitive boy, “ this morning the Dominie prayed for more rain, and this afternoon Deacon Bixby prayed for dry weather to get his hay in. Now, if the the Lord loves the Deacon and the Dominie just the same, what do you suppose He'll do about it?” . * My son,” answered the old gentleman, sternly, * whenever you want tovask foolish amestions gv toyour mother: «lon’t come to Ine. Editor-in-Chief: “What are -you writing about there, « Seratchem!” —“Scratchem: “Wh. ir, ’m getting up an article for Sunduy pitching inte Judas Iscariot. “It will se our religious readers. itor- Chief: “O no, Scratehem, thavll never do. Get another subject, by all means understand me as apologizing for MM. lot—nut “¢ to never speak ill of the dead.” And Judas Iscariot floats over into the waste basket.— Louisville Couricr-Journal. Missionary enterprise: Two. fashionable young men, who are regular attendants at Dr. Pentecost’s Ebenezer Chapel, on their vay to church Jast Sunday passed in frontof Fritz’s beer saloon, on the corner of Austin avenue, when one of thein asked: * Do you think itis wrong to go in and get a cool glass before the church service begins?” ‘ou going te pay cash down?” asked er, “Not much. Lam going to make Fritz hang it up on the slate, with the rest.” SCR itall—only it isa rule of the paper “In that case we are doing a goo deed. ; Fritz will never get his money, and that will bea lesson to the d—d Dutchman. It will teach him that it is wrong to sell beer on the Lord’s day.” Tom Marshall was engaged In the trial of acasein the interior of Kentucky, whena decision of the Judge struck him as so bad that he rose and said _* There never was such a ruling as that ane Pontius Pilate presided on the trial of arist.? “Mr. Clerk,” responded the Judge, “ fine Mr. Marshall $10 for contempt of court.” “T confess, your Honor,” continued Tom, “that what id alittle hard on Pontius Pilate, b the first time in the his ory of Kentu jurisprudence that it is held that to speak disrespectfully of Pontius Pilate is contempt of court.” “ Mr, Clerk, make the fine 320 for a con- tinuous contempt,” said the Judge solemnly. “Well, Judge,” Tom added, ‘as you won all my money last night at poker, lend me the twenty “Mr, Clerk,” cried the Judge, hastily, “re- mit the fine. The State can afford to lose better than lean.” “TY congratulate che Court upon its return toasane condition,” said Tom, resuming his seat amid roa) of laughter. CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK. EPISCOPAL. July 24—Sixth Sunday after Trinity. duly 3—St. James. July 2—Fast. CATHOLIC. ‘eventh Sunday after Pentecost. dames the Greater, Ap. Anne, Mother of the Is. V. M. Murguret, Queen of Scotland (from St. Pentaleou, M. Nazarius and Comp., 1M.; St. Inno- cent, P,C. 8S. Felix and Comp., July pg Martha, V July %—Tne Seven Brothors, MM, (from July 1); SS. Abdon and Sennen, MM. A SUMMER-NIGHT, For The Chicago Tribune. Night and silence o'er the Farth are brooding; ‘The stars are out; the Moon above the trees Is hfting her calm face; the breath or flowers Scents with its tragrunce now the evening- breeze. Anon the stillness of the hour [3 broken By distant bird-calls sounding thro’ the nights <Anon the splush of oars and snatch of song Drift up from where the river rolls in sight. And now the sound of merry laughter falls in broken echoes faintly on my cars ‘The kutydld ta mournful notes replies: The whip-po'-will’s respouse rings sharp and Ar. ‘The lonely owl now wakes his ghostly call: The cricket shrill y sounds bis pipe; now gleam The fire-tlies' lumps amld the tangled brake That bordering swuys above yon quiet stream. And bere, beside the vine-wreathed window, L Sit looking out upon the picture fair; No discord murs the beauty of the hour— O’er all a peace rests, that a soul doth shere, THE MAPLES. WEN M. WILs Botls, pimpies, freckles. rough skin, erup: tions, impure blood, Liop Hittera cure. © | Pp LETTERS FROM REDPATH. treland Revisited—Leaders, Land- lords, Priests, and People. Recent Evictions in Ireland, Rack- renting, and Extortion. EELING. RIS PARTY. ; PUBLIC LL AND THE 1 Corresvoud nee of The Chicago Trisune. Dracix, July §& After a pleasant age, With pleasant fellow-voyagers, In suner Wyoming, I landed in Liverpool more than two weeks since, and, after a rapid to London and Paris, arrived here a few days ago. In London [ interviewed Mr. Parnell and the leaders of the Lrish Parliamentary party; and, when in Paris, I saw Mr. Egan, the ‘Treasurer of the Irish National Land League. ‘the Irish members do not regard the Land bill as an important concession to the just clemands of the people of Ireland. ‘They say that at the best it will benefit a small class only, and that class only of the tenant-farn- ers who are the least oppressed by the pres- ent system, even if it should pass the House of Lords without any vital ameadinents in the interests of the lords of the soil. But as the Irish people must submit to the bili, if It becomes a kaw, whether they wish to accept or reject it, the Irish members are trying, at every staze of the discussion, to eliminate the moreobjectionable featuresof it, and to make it more liberal to the tenantry. Mr. Parnell told me that he would probably revisit Amer- ica after the passage of the bill or as soon as it had passed its most important stages. FINANCIAL RESOURCE: 0,000 in hand, mostly contributed by Irisn aus; and with such a fund in reserve, especially as it is rapidly increasing, the passage of the Land bill will have no effect on the conduet of the agitation for the aboli- tion of feudal landlorism in Ireland. ‘The movernent will not only be continued with- out a pause, but it will be pushed forward with more energy than before. MICHAEL DAVITT IN JAIL. Dr. Kenny, of Dublin, was in London. He had seen Mr. Davitt. He says that Mr. Day- itt is treated as well as_it is possible to treat a prisoner in convict jail, but that, while his health is still good, his constitution, which was nearly shattered by bis former convict life, would at onve break down if he were to be subjected to the ordinary discipline of the prison. His spirit is as brave as.when he was organizing the Lang League in Ireland. A movement bus be imuuyurated io Englund to procure Mr. Davittl's release if be will agree to leave the country tad not return to Ireland. TUE LAND LEAGUE IN IRELAND.. There have beeu great changes in lreland since my lust visit here, ‘There are not so many Luna-Leagne meettags held, and [ notice unit the tone of the sp a rule, has been xrently modified. Not one of the conspicuous fenders of Inst autumn {3 in the field to-day. ‘Those whe arc notin Parliament are in prison. But, on the other bund, the spirit of the people, instead of having been subdued, Is not only as resohite as then, but even more lant. There re 1,800 Lund’ Leagues in active operativa. one bus bven disorganized. As svon as a jucal officer is sent to Jail his piace is supplied without a days delay. There are pourly 40U Ladies’ Land Leazucs in treland. There was not oue last wutuma. A thousand local leagues, at least, nave been established since September. IRISH PRIESTS AND PRELATES. Tho priests have joined the movement in large numbers since autumn. Only one hich ecelesinatic, the Archbishop of Dublin, bas asgumed.an open | attitude of — opposition to the League. His wuthority prevents the priests of his archdiocese from taking any active opurt in the witalion, but it neither destroys their secret. sympathy, nor bas it the slightest influence on the people bere or elsewhere tbroughuut Ireland. In ditferent parts of Iretund, last autumn, when the action of the Archbishop of Dublin was spoken of, the common answer that I reeeived, both from priests and people, was, “Sure there never bas been a patriot Archbishop of Dublin since 3 Lawrence O'Toole.” [tis a common expression to-day in Dublin, of which St. Lawrence O'Toole is the patron saint. he othe. prelutes—and especially the Arcb- visbop of ( nshel—who have tiken a conspicu- ous posit:on in favor of the agitation have greadly s7-engtbened their bold on the stfections of the pe ple. If Mr. Parnell und his Parlia- mentary associates, on their return from their duties in London, should be arrested und sent to Kilmainbam Jail, there seems to be little doubt | unat the Hierarchy and priesthood would at once step to the trout and boldly continue the agita- tion in detiunce of the drab-eoated Cromwell who bas sent ove member of Parliament and one priest to prison, The imprisonment of an Archbishop and « Bisbop or two would be the deuth-kneil of landlordism in Ireland. : EVICTIONS IN IRELAND. Eviction papers aro tatling thoek and fast In every part of iretand. With 2,04 soldiers and 12.000 armed Constables to drive the peasants from thelr bomes, the landloras are baviug their revenve, but stil—unlike the days of 18i—they tuil utterly to subdue the spirit of the people. The Queen of Englund will be known in Irish history as Victoria the Evictor. Statistics are always repeilant; but [ will venture to illustrate by a Tew ttvures bow thoroughly the work of the ruthless Cromwell has been done during the reizn of her Most Gracious Majesty. In 184% there were more than 90,000 persons evicted in Ireland. In 1859. there were over 104,000 cast from their vs into the roadside. there were nearly 3,000 persons evicted; in 1864, 9,200; In 188, over 10,000. DECREASE OF POPULATION. ‘The popul:tion of Ireland, which was 8,500,000 within the memory of men'still young, is now only 5,150,0W—less to-day than it was eighty years igo! And yet the Irish lundords and tho nzlish Government are not satistied; and they sill insist on inciting the emigration of the Irish by grants of public money? EVICTIONS THIS YEAR. During the first taree months of the present. | year a p:rliamentary paper just published Shows that in the province of Clster Si persons bave been evicted; in Leiuster, 253 person: Connaught, 23. persons; una in Muuster, 355 persons EVICTIONS IN ‘THE BLIGHT AND FAMINE YEARS. During the three years, ending in April last, ) perzons in Ireland Were thrown out of the cubins that their uwn bands nad built, and from the junds that their own labor bad reciaimed. In Munster alone last year over 4,000 persons were evicted. ‘This expulsion of the peopie oc curred doing and in consequence ot three bad sensons, and these persons thus evicted, for tho most part during the faniine of 18i#—30, were Kept alive by American, and Cunadiaa, and Australian charity! EVICTIONS AND RENTS THIS YEAR. Miss Lynch, of the Ladies’ Land Lenene, bas ‘prepured for moa list of the evictions reported to them from the diferent provinces and coun- tles from the 2d of February up to the 2d of July, with the total amouuts of arrears of reat for which the people were thrown out, and a suitementot the dilference between the rent and Griflith’s or the Government valustion. EVICTIONS AND RACK-RENTS IN CONNAUGHT. In Galway thirty-five families or 235 persons were evicted for the nov-payment of £511 Hs. $d. rent. The Government Valuation of the little farms, or holdings as they are called, was only 2202 108, 3d. In Leitrim there were ninety-eight evictions reported—Hi¥ persons. Total rental, £1018 ls. 9d. Griffith's Valuation, £625 Th Mayo ninety-two fumnilies, or 483 persons have been evicted, Rental, £886 19s. 9d.; Griffith's: valuation, £145 Lis. Sd. In Koscommon fifteen families of ninety-six Rental, £214 6s. 4d.; valuation, £U4 lua. In Sligo nineteen families of 119 persons. Rent, £100 183. 44.5 valuation, £77 145, In alt—througnout Connauzht—there were 259 families evicted, or 1502 persons tung out of their farms. The rent chifmed was £2,021 Us. 6d., while the Government valuation was £1,073 Ws. Nd.—a ditference ot £1,097 173. 7d. EVICTION ND RACK ‘3 IN LEINSTER, In Carlow one family, nine persons. Rent, 3 valuation, £19, in Dublin fuur families, fourteen persons. Rent, £25 Is.; valuation, 2202. In Kildare, four families, twenty-one persons. Rent, 40% 58. bd.; valuation, £195 5. In Kilkenny, three faintlies, eighteen persons, Rent, 2a ds. Sd; vuluntion, £195 5s. In King's County, two families, fifteen per- sons. Rent, £38 53.7 valuation, £4 15s. In Longiord, eight families, forty-nine per- sons. Itent, £155 Hs. Id.z valuatiog, 4! In Meath, tifteen families, sixty-nine percons. Rent, £5 6d.; "Valuution, £450 88. 3d. tn a's County, four’ families, mineteon Persons. Rent, £193 16s. ¥d.; valuation, £61 198. Sd. In Westmeuth, three families, twenty-two per- sons, Rent, £32'10s.: valuation. £51 ls. In Wicklow, four families, thirty-one persons. Rent, £0 123. 7d.; valuation, £68 In wl—throughout the Province of Leinster— there were forty-eight familles and 211 persons evicted. The rent demanded was £743 lus. ld. over Griffith's Valuation, out of a total rental of £2.26 lis. dd. There were tifty evicuons in Louth, but.thoir rental and valuation have not been ascertained. EVICTIONS AND BACK-BENTS IN MUNSTER. elgbtpersons evicted. Rent, £153-103.; valu + S90 58. : tn ‘Kerry, eighteen families, 127 persons. Rant. £404 12s. 20; Valuntion, £251 53. In Limerick, eight families, forty-six persons. Rent, £596 183. 8d.; valuation, £356 0s. 6 twenty-three per- four famille: sane Heats S22 s.: vuluation, £HU Tis. In Waterford, seven families, thirty-seven ergons. Rent, 4297; valuation, £175 Js. "to ‘Sie-eoroushout the Province of Munster— 426 persons were evicted whose rentals excced- ed by £1,055 16s. bd, tne Government yaluadon out of a total of £2,595 i EVICTIONS AND RACK-RENTS LV ULSTER. In Antrim, four families, gigucoan persons. Rent, £93 vituation, £28 3 In Armagh, twenty-three families, ninety- cight persons. Kent, £13: 93. 2d:; valuation, lent ab twenty-three families, 144 persons. H Li Cavan, c Rent, £512 tds. 3.7 valuation, £351 4s. seven famtl In Donegal. twenty: 1 sons. Rent, £100 4s. id; valuation, In Derry, three families, twenty persons. Reut, £25 4s.; valuation, £5 Ws. in Fermanagh, three famities, twenty-turee persons. Rent, 7 Valuation, £58 lds. fu Monaghan, en famities, forty-eight per- sons, Rent, £115 tis. Jud.; valuntion, £92 10s. In ‘Tyrone, twenty-one fatuiles, 113. persons. Rent. £290 15s. 8d.; Valuation, £703 Lis. In ail—throughout the Province of Ulster—111 evictiona of 615 persons, whose total rental wes S1431 16s. Hc.; and from whom therefore £2 Tis. vigd. was demanded over Gritiith’s valuation STATISTICS OF RACK-RENTING IN IRELAND. ‘Adding those four gets of returns we tind that 48t evictions bave been orted to the Ladies’ Land League wlone; that 2.744 persons huve been ronde bomcless vecnuse after blight and famine, for the relief of woich the Irish landlords Zara nothmg, they could not pay a total rental o| i is. 0 a which is SL Tes. 104d. over the rument valuanon! Gu Tn addition to these actual evictions, the Ladies’ Land League bas been notitied of 423 furnilies in Connuugnt, 134. in Munster, 131 in Leinster, 159 fa Ulster—in all, 987 famiites in Lre- land—on’ whom evictipn papers have been served. WHAT GRIFFITIVS VALUATION MEANS. Now Griffith's valuation itsetf is a racs-reat originally, because It was estimated on the fair letting value of tho farm after the tenant, Dob the lundturd, had reclaimed it, fenced it, and uit all the houses on it! These tigures are !o~ teresting us shuwing that rack-renting is unl- yersul in Ireland, and they explain why Catho- lies and Protestants alike are sternly arrayed aginst Irish landlordism, and why any potter- ing attempt Hike Gladstone's Land bill will fail to cure the great evil. James Reppatu. CONDITION OF IRELAND. THE PRISONERS AT KILMAINUAM—VISIT TO ‘THE IRISH BASTILE. Second Letter from James Redpath. Dusuiin, July 10.—One hundred and eighty persous have been arrested under the Co- ercion laws. Wherever the local Land Leaguers are giving too inuch annoyance to the Lrish landlords, the Secretary and Treas- uver are seized and taken out of harm’s way. When it is utterly impossible to give even tne pretext of a “reasonable suspicion” that they are inciting to riot, they are arrested under the vague generality of “treason- able practices.” Gladstune’s Government is as triendly te landiordisin as the Adininistra- tion of Beaconsfield. Gladstone desires, as Beaconsfield would have touzht, to maintain the institution. jadstone wishes to modity it, While Beaconstield would ve tried to keep it unchanged. The Trish peasantry and farmers are indifferent to the Land bill. They understand it thoroughly. “They know that it will only be another Sudom apple to then, s elféct will only be to prolung the lence of a system of feudal land- sia which has kept them in wretch- edness for three centuries. Americans in studying the Irish dand question will fail to understand it, and gravely misin- terpret it, if, they regard it from the point of view of bupiness or o7 political science onty —if they forget that land.ord and tenant here, unlike landlord and tenant in Ameri are not mere contracting partie i dependent and equally depen ina fair and open im are hereditary ene: tions have occupied the remtion Xu and serf—of persecntinz Sutte Religionists and martyrs of the.Chitreh respectively: that all the power of the Government is still mer- cilesly exercised on the side of the landlord; and that both Government and kindlord are trded by the people as aliens and usurp- —not in a zentimental or historical sense, wy daily hatred; that there is ‘act, Out only in theory, as any contract’? between Jandowner and fandtiller, but thatthe masterof the soil holds the toiler at his absolute mercy, be- cause there is no div 'Y of industry in Ire Tand; nd that, even if Mr. Par. neil himself should draft. a Land bill that preserved we principle of land- Jordism in it, and the Government sho uld accept it, and it should revetve the Royal assent, it would not and could not venetit the peasantry, because the Irish courts are exclusively coni- Dosa, and as long as the present British Consti- tun hists they must necessarily be composed, of landiord3; und because the judiciary of Ire- land to-day ‘is the most corrupt and partisan judiciury in Eastern Europe. ‘The Englso ttad- icals are conti over bere, and tuey are disvov- erinu the truths that [ tauzbt {a America. Mr. F. Winks, for exumpie, in plenditg after a here, with an English audience, tor selt- goveruineut for Ireland, astounded them by tellune them these well-known fac Mr. Winks usserted tho wauts of Irctand to be just laws tor ber people, admmstered justly, not t3 now administered by Chairmen of Quarter Sessions and packed juries, fur the frish people had no coniidence in such administration. In the yeur loi! there were brought before the Lund Sessions Cuurt claims amuuntiug to £t2),- Oud by ws tenant-tarmers, The courts awarded them ouly a paltry £12,500.—uhat is, about 10 per cent of their ciuiins; while io all eases where landlords _sued tenants the landlords were awurded 75 per cent of the gross total of their cluims. The whole official system in Ireland was rotten and corrupt. Taxution also tur- uished an instance of the gross imeaualities arisiug trom the legislative conuection between Englaud und trelund, for while Eagtand pard 1 in if of ber revenue in taxes, poor Ireland was mulcted to the extent of lin 8. * Equality 1n mutters of religion was exempli- fied “by the fact that, while the funds of the Protestant churches were protected against fraud, no security whatever existed for the funds'of the Roman Catholics; and. further, by the partisunsh.p exhibited in tilling up positions in the Irish civil und police services; for, while 76% per cent of the puptlation were Roman Catholics, 80 percent of the bicnest ollices in these services were filled by Protestants.” Politics isnot un ubstract science. Hatreds and sentiments, race and religion are far more vient factors than lozieu! propositions and phi- josuphical theories. It is because Gludstone, Bright, and Forster, and the English politiciuns as uclags, utterly ignore these great elements [national fife in Ireland that their measures shave been und ulways must be rejected ng worthless. Forster takes as bis companions whea he is bere Castie spies and Castle hirelings whose salaries depend on the existence of the present condition of society, and be sends to Kul- muinhum the most beloved and trusted leaders and exponents of the nation sentiment; aud then -ne grows angry becuse be bas not suc- ceeded us x pacificutor of Ireland! Lunve spent two duy's in vis'tmg “the Sus- pects "in Kilinaingam Jail, bo Americans know whit a Suspec* ig? Tt is a man detuned in jail without triul, and without accusation, there to retin uatil September, 1882, when, on bis release, he shall bave no redress. Some of the most eloquent denunciations of the French Hepublicans—of @ century ugo—that xdor literature of what is sometimes calted Eng! liberty relate to the Jucobln “Law of the Sus pect.” The English Coercion laws of to-day arm the “Irish Seeretury "—who is alicays un Englishman—with precisely the same arbitrary power Ubat the Jucubin leaders possessed from La Loi du Suspect, and with preeisely the sunie ower of leltres-de-cachet that enabled the ola French noblesse to send innocent wea whom they hited to ce Bastille. : Kilmainbum is the Bastille of Ireland.” It is an old prigon uf tho gloomiest description. Solid stone walls, outside und inside—a Jali within a juil—wulls of a thickness not deemed necessary ow in building eur modern. pr lon, low stony passuge-wuys, and beavy bolts and" mas- sive iron ‘doors ‘everywhere—musty ‘smells ¥ as you go alonr the stony corridors and uscend the stony stuirways—sileot otticers.in, uniform everywhere inside of it— arined, red-corted sentinels in the streets and argund the building—it is not u residence to be desired, even ulthough the rules that govern it, as upplled to the Suspects, are lenient enough, and wlthough the officers ure respectful to the visitors uud courteous to the patriots whom they guard. Each Suspect is allowed to bave one visitor daily. Tne interview is limited to fifteen min- utes. Oa my first visit I saw Mr. Dillon, Mr. and Mr. Brennan. cues Saat Along x low, tunnel-like passaze, stone above, around, und below you; across a large rovin; up an old stone stafrway worn with the fet of generations of prisoners,—we enter a sort of court in which the Suspevts are allowed to take exercise, although they are bidden from our view bebind a bizh ‘board fence. Enter a cell. It is divided into tree divisions (¢ coups. At the further side stanas a prisoner vehind a sort of wire fenes, breast-bigh; in the: middie coup between us stands a siicnt Warden, while be- side you stands a second Warden. your guide. The middle space fs narrow enough to enabla cuca to shake hands with bis friend, the uel Mr. Dillon proudiy denies that his bealth is precarivus; be insisted that he was in better health than when [ saw him in September last; but Dr. Kenny, bis physician, conlirmed my owe opinion rast hls del! ae and sensitive organiza- jon wou sure to si pS pigonment oe uccumb before a long © prison rules donot permit about politics. Yet a reasonable range or topics is freely allowed by the silent Wardens. Outside itisreported that the officers would willingly do anything in their power to make Nr. Dillon more ‘comfortable; if he would give tothe hospital, where ther he would be removed reater freedom and open-air exercise; but with courtly haughti- ness be declines ev overture from the prison authorities, and remains with the less distin- guished Suspect: ‘The alleged xtracts from Mr. Dillon's last speech—by which Secretary Fx in Parlin- ment justitied his arrest and iucerceration with- out triai—were disbonestly garbled by tat hon est Qual British Cyclops of tho Erich “ Buckshot Policy.” Thi ‘hewn by the report of it published nextday by the fro Timex, a journal the spirit thai Morgan until 2 unfriendly to the Land League. 3a oud cnoug: potent In ta, once said, rter election ts Bur highest political cfreles to-day as in the lower American war! heudauart Itis the reductio «td «ti about liberty to find in jailsuch a muna: Dillon, with” bis pure, mii man *reasonabt the people to rict! lit suspected,’ 1 ineitin; this Hamtet uf Irish polities, , this refined, poetic. introspective nature, driven ‘out of its rightful spsere because the tines are go outor Joint that his_consclei , bating action, t social &; |. Feeluse, secking fo net! Suetea n: to extend ve forces him, ure inany sans tem would ndopt the Life of an artistic the domaina’ of science’ or pbitosuphy,abaorring the strife of politicul agitation and despising its crude and rude rewards, Inthe hospital lL saw Mr. Boyton. He has been seriously ill. He hus’ been obliged to sub- mit toa surgical operation. His eyes are weuk and inflamed. looks ten years older thag when [saw bim rewry 1 A st. He had not heard of See- line's Jeter about bim, und be did oot know that bis own father had fulled to complete nis naturilization care anything spirits. America the: Ho tot ubout it Papers. MMe did not seem to He {3 tn excellent me to say to his friends in ed not worry ubout bim—that he could teave the prison to- morrow if be would agree toubstain from any further part in the agitation. He preferred to remain rather than wivesuch a pledse. He is rapidly recovering his health. Mr. Brennan, the former Secretary of tho Land League, is in cquully good spirits. Mr. Kettle and Mr. Brennan were tnprisoned be- cause they urged te furmers not to pay any. rents at all untill their grievances were re- dressed. ‘Chas Stalwart poli , it seems, bul been tully discussed. a week before, in acouncil of the Irish leaders 12 London. nd it came to the resolution that the time was not yet rive for such a policy—that fs to say, to or ‘Mr. Brenoan and Mr. strike. order a generat Kettle dissented, and urged the policy in Lreiand ou the following bunday. They were ‘There is a ood deal of feeling, 1 find. between the two wings of the party—the ~ Moderate immediately urrested. und the *Advunced,” but there is very little likelihood that it will resutt in any serious con- troversy every a sbould sit Indeed, throughout Ireland, neurly ve lender of the advanced (oF as we Stalwart) wing of the party ts in juil, and therefore there is no opportunity for a contest for supremacy. It may enable irish readers to understand the divergency when I add that the moderates are often termed the Parliamentary party, and the Stalwarts the Kil- tmainham party. ‘Mr. Dition and Mr. Brennan may be regarded as the represoutative men of the Stalwarts among the laymen, and Father Steebey ts kept in Jail for remsons ‘that [ sbull state In future tetters. and yet he, also, is in the Ir sh Bastile. Tum persouully acquainted with more than twenty or the sug in jail here £ use He ts one of the best men I ever met— cts. Long before they were to speak of them individually to Irishmen in America us my noblest types of Celtic character. In America they would be bonored by every one who knew rbem without regard to their rae rereed, Such are the mea wes Renporn, cat No Prerar acre, stxrez and cuza ‘SOLB BY ALL DRUGGISTS AUS DEALERS IM BSEDICINE. ny epg jon om earth oquals Sr. Jacnes NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, i ( BACKACHE, or 7HZ CHEST, QUINSY, axD na mai td spp ams, axD EARS, axD § aD xterual Remedy, IS ELEVEN LANUCAGES. A. VOGELER & Co. Beltimore, Md., U. 8.46 LUMBAGO, i it GOue, SORENESS SORE THROA SWELLINGS BRvARNS SCALDS, HEADACHE, i au. Ove PAIS Orn as a sa ‘A trial entail £9 Crsts, and every 4 FROSTED FEET General Sodily Fains, TOOTH, EAR SEWING MACHINE = I WiLSON OSCILLATING SHUTTLE WARRAN TED FIVE YEARS, "*QUIYOCIA, Bums The best-an‘l cheapest first-class Sewing Machines in the world, dt is especially alapted for the larg- est range of family sewing and manufacturing. sold on monthly payments, AGENTS WANTED. Ss. 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