Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 9, 1881, Page 23

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EPastor and His Congregation .ou-Trial for the Crimé- of Heresy. An Accoustant’s Examination of the American Bible Society's Report. What: It ‘Costs “to. Distribute Bibles— Notes.and Personals—Church News. ~ A HERESY TRIAL. ASAN FRANCISCO PASTOR AND HIS CON- GREGATION. New York Sun. Itis not often in the history of the Presby- terian Church thata pastor and his entire session are charged with heresy. Just how this came about is interesting, as was the trial that followed.’ Mrs. Sarah B. Cooper, a cousin of Col. Robert G.. Ingersoll, has for many years been the teacher of avery large and flourishing Biple‘class connected’ with the Calvary Church. Some weeks ago Dea- con James 5. Roberts,.of the same church, prought charges before the session against Mrs. Cooper, alleging that she taught heret- jeal.doctrines. The pastor, the Rev. Mr. Hemphill, and the session voted resolutions commendatory of Mrs. Cooper. Deacon Roberts called upon then: to rescind their resolutions or be presented to the Presbytery for countenancing heresy; and in reply the pastor and session repeated their vote of con- fidence in Mrs. Cooper and their commenda- tion of her Bible class work. Hence thetrial —for Deacon Roberts was as govd as his word, and brought the matter before the Presbytery- The trial was long, and the contest spir- ited. It was held with closed doors at first, put it was found that there were so many. leaky cisterns among the brethren, and that there:was so much testimony being reperted in the daily.papers, that it was finally de- cided to permit reporters to be present. To ascertain avhether Deacon ‘Roberts’ charge against the pastor and session was well jounded, it was necessary to ‘find out whether his charges against, Mrs. Cooper were based on fact. Briefly, they were that she inculcated heretical religious ideas; that she had expressed doubts is to the truth of some of the Bible narratives, notably the story of Jonah and the whale, and that of Joshua and the sun; thatshe had followed thelead of Prof. Felix Adler of this city in establishing kindergarten. schools, from which religious instruction was excluded; that she was own cousin to Col. Ingersoll, and had spoken of hiny with adiniration; that she attended a Unitarian church sometimes; that she had said that she would rather be in Hell with men like Ingersoll than in Heaven with men like Deacon Roberts, and that she had characterized her prosecutor as a “ce- lestial hound on an éternal hunt for heresy.” ‘There Was much/evidence produced on” both sides, and there, seemed to be some. ground for most. of-the charges. The fair defendant herself. acknowledged upon the witness stand -that once when Deacon Kob- erts sneered in her presence. at 4 picture of her cousin Robert, she resented it by saying that if she “ believed that Heaven was made ofsuch men as J. B. Roberts and iell of such men.as Cousin ersoll, she would prefer to go to Hell.” also acknowledged that she once, when yery angry, spoke of Mr. Roberts as ‘** the celestial hound on the eter- nal hunt for heresy that you are; you can put your nose on the ground and trace my. trail back to ‘my -childhood, and you v never find anything that will not grace a Christian woman’s life.” As to the kinder- garten charge, it was ‘proved that the little ones were taught to ptay, but not to Jesus, since there were’ Hebrew parents who ob- jected to that form of worship for thelr chil- aren. Mrs. Cooper’ herself, acknowledged that she had ‘superintended a rafile in the school to raise money for it. But when it eame to theexamiination as to Mrs, Cooper’s belief in the Bible, then there was deep dis- cussion, and. when it was found that even the members of Presbytery themselves were divided jn their opInions as to what should he taken as literal: and what as allegorical, the questions ceased. Mrs. Cooper defined her posiljorin the following languaze: When you, nait me down and ‘ask ‘ue whether Jonah swalioved the whale or whether the Whale swallowed Jcnup, 1 cannot tell you. Ido not know what tasay,sput 1 do know that an important lesson Tyeonvgyed in. the tox: And 4g you ask me whP\er The sun stood still on Gideon, what sbull fay? -1don't know. These things Seem wortnless to me. Ido know that £ Jean on Christ, our .bléssedSavior, Believe in the miracles? Yes, 1 do._ I acrept them as iilus- tmtion and evidence of spiritual power, tho greatest of all, If you want toe, dear Presby- ters, to teach Christ's teachings, 1 wil! doso until my eyelids close int death; but don’t ask me anything about whales. if you doI will say, “There isthe record.” If you-ask mo what L think of it, ] will tell you It seems singular. Here isa specinen- of her cross-examina- tion, It is int ‘ing from the fact that- the ae examiner isa deacon. thé .witness a teacher, of a Sible class of 200 mejibers, and the ex- aniination was before a Presbytery: Q—You write articles for the newspapers called star nosices—advertisements? -A—1 do. Did you-write euch an article on the quali- ties of Nabob whisky not D. rticle descriptive you writa,such a! of komers wine cdligr?7, At-t did; butt don't think you ought to. be/gliowed to question me about such things. ©. f ' = & ‘The Presbstery agreed with irs. Cooner on this poiat. ‘Q.-Did you say when I presented that paper aguinst you m the session that Iwas a mean Bypocrit? A.—1 shoufdn't wonder if 1 did; I ook it bacs, though. Q—What did you mean by saying that | ecause you had raised your face fn¢ered at Lol. Iugersoll? A~ a sneer on your face when yo! after looking ut bis picture. Q.—What did you tell me before that him? A.—That be was. relative of mine, loved bim very mucn. Q—Did you ever make this remark with re- gurd to Col. Ingersoll, that he would have # Perch somewhere in heaven? .A.—I suid that 1 ihodett he would: be leanmg over the parapet to pull you inz that he was large enough and good enough to doit. = = Q.—Large enough ana good enough to doit? A—Yes.°I thought be ;must. be very kind- @earted to do thar. ~~ . Q—You remember the session's. resolution disapproving of your proposed diamond brace. let rattle for the benetit. of tne Kindergarten? AI shall never Target them, on account of the Spirit that actuated them. Q.—What do you meun by the spirit that act- uated-them? A.—1 meant you, Mr. Roberts. 0.—Well, 1 am not a spirit, | trust? A.—Well, it's a pity you are not. {Laughter ‘Mr. Roberts—I sometimes wish I were, to be out of all this trouble. Deacon Roberts indeed seems to have found himself in trouble before the trial was over. Witnesses testified that he wanted to “boss things; that he declared that’ he would-get Mrs, Cooper out of the Bible class ithe had to split Calvary Church from ecllar to dome, aud that it would ‘afford him great pleasure to blow up Mrs.--Cooper and her Bible class with gunpowder,. and that hesald ‘thar Pastor Hemphill was such a weak man that Sirs, Cooper could pull the wool over his £es, and. twist hint around ber finger at will. That Deacon Roberts had not the entire rey spect af his brethren the following extrac fron the proceedings.shows: es * Elder Thomas Magee: testified: that Mr. Hob- ering ‘and -insoleat at the where be demanded. decision upow Mrs. Coop- about and J Meeting of the ees: Teconsideration of tho e's case, ee mn 2#WasT particularly insolent ‘that evening? asked Me, Kobests. rast Tee ; It; Lthinkyou did yourself injustice, ju were not near 50 ‘mgolent as usual. by your general insolence ana domineer- lug you fairly earned tho ‘title of James, Boss Roberts.” = ‘ “hat did 1 say and dot” Se You seemed much eluted ‘nt imagining-you had got ug in the door—in’ other., words, ia an awk ward position—and Said it wad 2 very com- fortable tight asit stood." oS rg ee “Am Tusuuily very insolent?” deidttiak vou have the, reputation. rightly of elur exceedingly bossys" ee “Have T tio reputation of raling the whole 5 syne Ses “You have tho reputation of prying to... [Bid Leuceeed?" faa {Nor with mi That's because you.were s pee gaat think the records “Well, don’t you know that I am trying to set Sut of the bossbip?” aes ‘Thut’s because you see we've been ‘ooseed so Much that we won't,He bossed any more. ‘Well if 1 proved“myselt tie most ‘{nsolent tian in that session that ought to be enough to satify any man in Bi be 1 assure you.” nerally absent.” ‘will show that I t line.” , At this’ ruiorsaid it was time to sdjoorn the: ays mate (and the sitting was brought to.a close with prayer. © Thus this remarkable trial went on from lay to day, and’ after, more than a week, out a meibbershilp of” seventy in the Presby tery, nine of the Présb; in’ ’. 0 ytery voted to sustai ee charges of Deacon Roberts, Che ed Bot ta Sustain, and four voted’ to partially au stain. “The case now goes back to the ses- : a of Calvary Church, to-give it an oppor- ean ity ‘Of reviewing its former decision. It cems to be rather certain that “the session will not do this, but will a S from the verdict of the Peebyten. ere Af this is a ry be expected lone another interesting trialmay ae THE BIBLE SOCIETY. B RESULTS OF AN EXPERT'S EXAMINA: TION OF ITS LATEST REPORT g: To the Editor of the Springfleld (fass.) Republican: Any contributor who may have expected to find in the balance-sheet (page 164) of the sixty-fifth annual report of the American Bible Society, referred. to by the Committee on Finance: (page 152), assets other than-funds and securities, a statement which would enable him to see ata glance the total value of the assets of the society above its liabilities, is doomed to disappoint- ment, If an attempt was made therein to furnish an exact and clear answer to the question, “What is the amount of the re- sources of the American Bible Society?” the effort -was a ‘flat faiture. If, on the other hand, an. attempt was made to furnish a statement which, while nominally an an- swer to the question, really kept back part of the resources, the effort was as successful, perhaps, as: the condition of the case would permit. x Let us examine the-balance sheet in detail. The balance of assets shown by it is $1,174, 749. On the credit sidg of the sheet is shown as a liability, “Balapce of Burr Fund,” $6,447. This is a “batt of a fund to be ex- pended for Bibles forthe blind, but it be- longs to the Ameriean ‘Bible Society for a branch of its charitable work, and is, fore nota lability. ‘Lo slow tie pecuniary standing of the society “April 1, Isl, this amount should be added to the balance abovo stated. On the credit side are shown, also, teust tunds, $45,683, and securities assigned ang. au aengeit S48, S80 ntak ue 2 total of Si2,318. ie cents are not ‘giv Tell but only eyen-dollars.) BN ea ere On pages 153 to 157 are detailed statements of “trusts and investments hela by the so- ciety’? and securities assigned by executors of estates. The. securities -therein entered amount at par to $112,289. The report fur- nishes no means of accounting for une differ- ence, $10,029. Premiums paid on securities held may, however, explain a part of it Se- curities constituting a part of the sum of $112,289, amounting. to’ $29,503, yield no in- come to the society, being held in trust dur- ing tne life-time of sundry persons named, and may, therefore, properly stand as a la- bility. until the expiration of the trust. if from the total of trust tunds, etc., on the balance-sheet, $122,818, there be deducted the trust securities yielding no income at present to the soviety—S20,353—and the differ- ence unaccounted -for (the society is given the benefit of this difference to avoid the vossibihty of an error against it), $10,029, there remains the sum of $52,906 in securities yielding income for the beneiit of the society, and not in any sense a liability, which should also be added to the balance of the balance-. shect. . > ‘The Bible House property “is entered among the assets at $304,000. Concernins the value of real- property men of sound judgment frequently differ, but probably no adult male contributor would puta valua- tion so low as $304,000 on the Bible Louse. An,‘estimate of its value derived from the net income to the society from rents above repairs, insurance, ta: and incidentals, and based on arate of interest of 4 per cent free from ta nobody will consiaer-ex- cessively high. The gross receipts for. the year from rents were 329, the manufact- uring and depository. departments are charged with. one-third the taxes, repairs. etc. It is fair to infer frum these eliarges that they occupy one-third of the — building; therefore. add rent ‘of. one-third, $1487, there is a total of $4,617, Deduct thence the expenditures for incidental repairs, $5,333; t: city and county, $7,590; taxes, water, S912; insurance, $458; engineer and assistants, $2,817; and fuel, $4,592; these make a total of $21,503. ‘The remainier, $23,114, is the net income, free of t which the building wouid pro- duce, assuming that the society occupies but one-third of the whole (it may occupy more than one-third) and is equivalent _to the in terest at 4 per cent on $517,833. ‘The®. differ- ence between this sum and the cost, of the Bible House as set in the statement is $273,- 53. It should be added to the balance of the balance-sheet. . Although no person familiar with the Bible House property can doubt thatits value is at least as great as here estimated, possibly’ some error in getting at tne netincome of the property may have been made, owing to the ‘unique manner of keeping the accounts. ¥or instance, “building fund” ascount is charged with salaries of three Secretrries and the Assistant Treasurer at $5,000 cach. “Temporary investment” appears in, the balance-sheet as $519,232. A schedule of the securities of which this item is composed is printed on page Their market value ‘April 1, 1881, was $595,610. ‘Che difference 35 between the value tn the statement and the market talue—S46,40' |, should be added to the balance of the balance-sheet. A ‘A note appended to the balance-sheet is as follows—viz.: “*Note—Larze sums of money have been expended by the society from year to year in the prosecution of its benevolent work in foreign lands. Portions of these e penditures remain in the form: of plates, books, and stock in the process ot manufact- ure; but if they possess any. commercial yalue, it is so entirely uncertain that it can- not be tabulated.” From this a contributor may perceive that there is an item of no In- considerable. amount: iissing from the side of the balance-sheet which exhibits the state- ment of assets. How large it may be he can- not tell, except that it represents portions of “large sums? and consists in part of ++ plates, abooks, and stock in the process of manuf ES 7 stock in the process of manufacture ugcests the existence of printine-oflices and binderies. . The total of the inventorigs of the different parts of the home bookmaking _ establishinent appear among the assets. Why might not sinilar estimates of the value of the roreian estab- lishments have been produced ? i ~ tories are to a certain extent matt piate. The statement that their value is 50 uncertain that it cannot be tabulated, when viewed in the light-thrown upon it by the general making ub of tho whole baiance- Sheet, appears, in colloquial phritse, “ rather thin.” But, bt making no: account of the missing item, for want of definit information, the following isa summary of the items which ‘should. be added to the balance given on the balance-sheet: Balance of the balance-sheet. Balance of Burr fund. ‘yrust Tunds, etc... - Bible House, additional value. Temporary investments.. Total... -.-- «Gratuitous Distributions and Appropria~ tions’—Under this head, on pp. 428, is printed a listof “rifts” ‘which is followed by this statement: “*‘The strictly benevolent and missionary work of the society in the ne and foreign fields h s thus invotved an at mn Ss. 0? ‘The plain 2 penditure of S32, meaning of this statement, read in connec- tion with the two pages devoted to this sub- ‘of which it furms a part, is that this been expended during the year in ft charity without retprn. Now, on 143. appears the forpial statement istant ‘Treasurer of receipts and disbursements for the year, ending, March 31, 1851, certified by the Auditing Commit- tee; the © manufacturing a unt? and **de- pository account.” An examination of these accounts son of the results With the statement made on page 3 brings to light a discrepancy not the less re- imarkable for being found in the report ofa society epee for its object the dessemina- ne truth. Nop oe eels from sales of Bibles were $266,239; deduct this amount from the total receipts (and on the other side of the account alike sum from the payments on. account of the manufacture of Bibles), and there is a re- mainder of receipts grouped on page 32 as follows—v1z: : Donations and collections. 0.673 interest Lewacies ject, $ js was the whole sum availe and tui cost of the manufacture of Bioles in excess of sales, expenses, of management, and for charitable works. The accounts on pages 136-143 show that it was appropriated as follows—viz: ” investment account: nerease_ of in te nou To the job. (consolidated) othe increase Of assetsin man facturing and depository depart NLS. .-2-2- se= =e Less protiis of manufactu: mToaiteration in building... Zo annunl reports, cireulars. ‘To Bible Society records To taxes, fuel, repairs, surance, without the approval of the convocations, ab certain principles, To office salaries, (including three Secre- fay and Assistant Treasurer at $5,000 ‘To sundries, not for benevolent purposes Total... ester oe -- $115,369 + This sum deduoted from_the available re- ceipts above stated leaves $224,886, the whole amount that cant have been applied during the year to “strictly benevolent and mission- ary work.” and which {s $117,700 less than the amount said to have been so applied on pas 43, This sum of $224,886 appears to have been appropriated as follows—viz.: To foreign ficds (details not given) in, excess of proceeds of eales abroad)...-$ 81,804 To salaries of twenty district Superin- tendonts and their expenses..,......... 35,153 To salarics and expenses of colporteurs = jn United States and Torritories........° 44430 Balance, which must include the total sum expended In gratuitous distribu- a tion of Bibles in United States.. ..... 60,423 ‘Total nosengsssustee in cess -0n 82H 088 ‘Tosum results of this examination, there is an understatement of assets of at least $409,014. ‘Thére'is an overstatemeut of the amount expended for “strictly benevo- Jent and missionary work” of $117,700. Or take this view of,the matter: What has been the net result in’ gratuitous Bible dis- tribution‘in the United States of the posses- sion of a capital of $1,585, u 5,303 and receipts of donations, collections, nnd legacies of $279,- 46 for the last year? And what has been the cost of administration’ and distribution ? The capital invested would earn at4 per cent say $63,000; add donations, ete., $279,- 446, will make the total $342,410, the amount which, the capital being invested at interest, should have been available for ‘Bible work. Deduct the sum expended in foreign fields— viz. : $84,88—the amount applied to the in- crease of capital,S56,808, ‘and “the Jargest sum that can have been expended. in. Bible dis- tribution In the United States (sce ubove) is $60,423. This makes a total of $201,625. ‘The remainder, $140,821, is a fair ‘estimate of the cost of administration and diStribution, and is equal to 932 percent of the cost of Bibles distributed gratuitously in the United States. ACCOUNTANT. >» THE RITUALISTS. A TEST CASEIN ENGLAND. — - The case of the Rev. S. F. Green, of Miles Platting, the imprisoned’clerzyman, Is, when considered in the amount of attention it has excited and the distinctness with which the lines of the parties are drawn upon it, one of the most. important which the Ritualistic controversy In England has developed. ‘The Ritualistic party seem to have deteriained to make of it a test of the possibility. of their extorting toleration within the Church. The ecclesiastical authorities seem equally dis- posed to make it a test of the extent to which the law assumed to govern clergymen in the Established Church in the discharge of their offices Gan be enforeed against those who per- sistently violate it. ‘The Ritualists represent Mr. Green-as a martyr for conscience’ sake, ‘and are carrying on a most lively agitation before the people on that ground, The law officers_and Bishops insist that he is in jail simply because hd continues to violate the Jaw under which he accepted it, and that his release is conditioned simpiy upon his 6 ing satisfactory assurances that he will cease to violate the law. Mr. W. G. Phillimore, one of Mr. Green’s counsel, has published a very strong presentment of his case, as Te garded trom his own point of view. Mr. Green is in prison, he says, for contempt of court of Lord Penzance, which was created by..the Public Worship Regulation act of. 1874, a court. which had _ no existence and which he had no rpyasou to expect would beset. up when he took or- ders. It was set up by Parliament only, o which: represent the clergy. and in thi sence of any bodies throuch which the laity can make theinselyes Ireard. Dis church was ritualistic before'he came into it, The declaration on which-he-was arraigned. wis signed be. three parishioners who were only, nontinally members of thethurch, for the in- cumbent did not know two’ of, them at all, and the third hardly, who only came forward nt the instance of the Church Association, so that the forms of law might be complied with, and have not been heard of since. The case was sent up to Lord: Penzance’s court bya Bishop who is charged with being as much a law-breaker by omission as Mr, Green is Ly commission, and was deciled inst the accused by a secular, in no way spiritual, authority. Mr. Green could -not, conscientiously allow that authority to con- trol hit in thé exereise of a purely spiritual function, Disobeying its decisions, he was. inhibited—that is, was -commanded by the; same wholly secular authority—that he, “should: cease from performing his duty, should give up ministering the- Word: and sacramenis—not in some particular: way, but altogether; should unfroc a self, it were; should y down atthe judge’s bidding that commission whichjin the name of the Lord the Bishop and priests of his diocese had solemnly given him. Is not that a pretty plain interference with the ministration of God’s Word and Sacrament?” For disregarding this interference he is in prison. Ife can be released if he will apol- ogize for his contempt and take an oath to obey the law as laid down by Lord Penzance, and “submit, to all his comtsands—that is, that he will give up his offige and cease from ministering at bis couimand*—just as the martyrs could escape the. stake by recanting but He could no mor recant than they.‘ Ordi- nary offenders :ara-released at the end of some definit time-and left to themsleves till they commit some new crime. Mr. Green, under the terms.of his imprisonment, can never be released without rending his con- nee; and, it he were released, would be compulled by his conscience to offend again. To meet this peculiar culty, a bill ha: been introduced in, Parliament fixing a li jtation ou imprisonment in such cases. ‘The trouble here is a logical outcome of the con- nection between Church and State, and is of a kind that ean hardly be avoided where, in the obscurity of doctrinal detinitions, clergy- men feel bound in conscience to adhere to es, and the ofticers of the law ‘consider it their duty to enforce it strictly. The controversy is adding much to the force of ine movement in favor of disestablish- men! . CHURCIL NOTES. 1tis proposed to build an American Prot- | estant Episcopal church at Dresden, Saxony. It is said that there are at the present tine 680 foreign missiozaries in India, represent- ing thirty-two missionary societies, an in- crease of sixty-seven since 1871. ‘the Executive Committee of ‘the General Christian Missionary Convention hive take: in hand the building of a chureh of the Dis- ciples of Christ at Washington to cost + 5,000" ‘The next General Council of the Alliance of Presbyterian churebes throughout: the world will be held at Belfast in June, 1S3t. The committee of arrangements ‘is already at work. i Twelve Presbyterian churches in the United States return 1,000 members and over, ana fifty-six churches more thar members, Dr. Cuyler’s and Dr. Talmage’s churches in Brooklyn lead the } Se The Methodist Episcopal mission'to the Chinese in California, employing five anis- sionaries and ten teachers, has five stations, four native hetpers. 111 church members, and 500 scholars in the schools. The California Methodist Episcopal Con- ference has denounced the facility with whieh divorces are granted in.that State, and has resolved that its ministers will not cele- brate marriages for persons who have been divorced -for other than the Scriptural rea- son, and in any case will marry “none but the jnnocent parties to the transactions. ‘The Baptist ministers in Gdrmany coni- plain that the Government has}iduring the last. year, carried out -a reactionary policy ‘mst chem. Mr. Jahr, at Frankfort, has been fined for speaking at the grave ot a de- ceased: member. His ‘Sunday-school has been prohibited because it meets at private houses, and teachers and persons who open their hoyges to Sunday-schools have been threatentd with fine if they’ disregard the prohibition. The Chureh is‘trying to secure the protectiou of a rezular house of worship of its awn. sas THE M., THATIRNOWS. This evening at the Railroad Chapel, State street, near Fourteenth, Ben Hogan and his wife will speak. Only-a few years ago he was one of the representative American sporting characters.” In 1873 he fought Tom ‘Allen for the championship and $3,000. Now he is a converted man, and, speaks notas a mere surmniser, but as onewho knows both the terrible power of sin‘and the power of Jesus Christ to save. His. lecture will be free for all. ~ “PERSONAL, ~ Cas OE: : The Right Hon. Mr. Brooke, Master in Chancery, whose efforts inthe earlier ses- sions of the Disestablisheds1rish Episcopal 4 Synod tu secure &\thorougl? revision of the | Prayer-Book were consp! 85 years. st 1706 and conscerated in 1839. Salists. Hammond’s Jove for the. News. Temple Church DAY, -QCTOBER 9, 1881—TWENTY-FOUR PAGE jous though- nat successful, has recently died, at the age of ‘The oldest Bishop in the Anglican Church is Dr. Ollivant, Bishop of Llandaff, born in ‘Mr. William: P. West, of Malifax, Nova Scotia, has left $20.000 to Tufts College, the principal literary institution of the Univer- The Rey. C. Hammond, of Bolton, is made of the right stuif. He was out berrying when he fell Into.an old well and_broke his ankle, Instead of going to the White Mount- ains for four weeks he remained in the field until he filled the pail. ‘The next Sunday he hobbled into his pulpit and preached. “Mr. Gospel is equaled only by his fondness for berries.—Danbury, Deacon George W. Chapman has just re- signed the Superintendency of the Union Sunday-school’ in Boston after a petal of service which will find few if any par: He became a member of the Sunday-school in 1840, and in 1844 was elect- ed to the Superintendency. He has there- fore held the office over thirty-six years, dur- ing which period over 20.000 scholars have passed through the school. The Rev. Dr. Dean, of the Baptist Mission at Bangkok, Siam, recently baptized two brothers, the Chinese five years azo, has been pastor fourth generation of Christianity. Conference, to the Christian sidvocate: historically,‘ praetically, It was, of course, to reach the overw of his conference, catory sermons in a touches of pathos which conference has clo: faction to the people. vis Street Church, preached during his mer home is at Fa lake from Toronto. Church, New York, te vacation. has a Conn., and tendered hi: During his pastorate o and experience. ing the time $80,494, e school work, and wiped out $3 ze debt, and is now and shows that Dr. Herr York. SUNDAY SALAD. ment.” “ Beeause of the famine in the land.” was down. great-erandsons of the he baptized in.the same place forty- and who was a member of the first Protestant church in Siam and the first Chinese Protestant church in the world. He ‘of, the church ever since its organization, and ‘has baptized the. seventh member of the family referred to, now in its first Of the ‘sermon. which Bishop Simpson preached before the Methodist Ecumenical Dr. Buckley. writes as follows “Intellectually, nd sviritually it seemed to be all that the occasion required. jmpossible for the Bishop helming fervor of some camp-eeting, and dedi- discourse necessarily covering so much ground, but there were _Teached every heart, and a power was hidden in many passages which will be felt long after the It gave great satis- Dr. Peddie, of the First Baptist Church in New York, his received x call froin the Jar- Toronto, for which he His sum- airport, N. Y., across the Dr. Herr, of the Central Iso received. a c to the Central Baptist Church, at Norwich, ignation here. x years he has bap- tized 193, and 252 have been received by letter "The church has raised dur- exelusive of the Sunday- 000. of mort- in debt less than $600. his isa record of hard and faithful work, can ill be spared fram the ranks of the Baptist pastors of New a call Aloverof King James’ English calls it the “reversed edition of the New Testa- ‘A. Sunday-school boy, upon being asked what made the Tower of Pisa lean, replied: Jt must have been a great relief to Adam, after his fall, that there was nota dozen or so of indignant neighbors to kick him after he A little girl in a London Sunday-school, be- ing asked why God made'the flowers of the field, reslied, “ Plea patterns for artificial flowers.” “Please, ina’am, [ suppose for A brother arose in a peenly. prayer-meet- ing in New Jersey ands: L consider the shortness of life, I feel as i might be taken away suddenly like a the night.” Althea to her husband, as from church. Algernon, who pew-rail for the: “It was anestheti aut mental faculties. you want to read an ar ‘Paradise Lost,’ sais eyes beaming with a dreary “Don’t you admire it, Mr. Crab?” don’t,” replied read it before I what ‘ Paradi 'This story, according to justa trif in Leadville sat *T Know I’m behind time. couldn't b by calling him. services were begun. EPISCOPAL, Oct. 14—Fust. > CATHOLIC. Francis Borgia, C. Oct. 9). Oct. 12—Ferl: oS Oct. 13—St. Edward, K, of England, C. Oct. H—St- Catlistus, 2. Mt. Oct. 15-St. Theresa, V- =>. MARTYRDOM. For The Chicago Tribune. Martyrdom is the rough road to light ‘A grand detiance of ‘the bizot’s might— A protest aguinst error, uld and new: Who Martyr shrines, Where Glory shines. Who loves Divine Foremost In eve! ‘The Martyr is the hero of bis age— crime: Martyrdom is not mere loss of life; ‘The brond world’ pillory Curcaco, Oct. 5, 1881, JULY 2 TO SEPT. 19, 1881. For The Chicag) Tribune. Adlash! A sburp report! A fall! In dread suspense, with bated breath, And waits the word of life or dexth: ‘And, while she waits, she prays. ‘A Nation bows in earnest prayer, ‘And He who heareth prayer attends; ‘The Nation’s tears she gladly sta, Her joyous song of praiz And stil the Nation pray: “Unfavorable symptoms! And now the Ni ‘More earnestly she prays.’ ‘The waitin time is o'er at last— “The President ix dead!” The noble heurt {s stilted for aye— ‘The martyr's crown {3 suroly wont ‘The weeping Nation can but gay, “0 God, Thy will be done.” God knew, and there we safely rest,, Nor question His decree. AS prayed His well-beloved Son “0 take this bitter cup away; Yet not My will, but Thine, be done,” Soshould we ever pray. A : “Brethren, when fi thief in “An esthetic discourse,” said the Lady they rode home *Right you are,” said Lord ad founda soft place on we epose, of his lordly head. “Chicago clergymen can buy lithograph sermons for thirty cents each.” Many per- sons have often wondered why Chicago cler- ryien took.a vaeation of only three months ‘during the summer to recuperate their worn- ~ ‘The .sentence quoted solves the mystery.—Norristown Herald. ‘A newspaper agent, being told by an old Jady that it was no use to subscribe for the papers, as Mother Shipton said the world was coming to'an end this year, said: “ But won’t count of the whole affair as soon as itis over?” “That I will,” answered the old lady; and she subscribed. Domestic bliss—*I_never tire of reading id Miss Posigush, her zuo0r. ang “No, & ‘The living champion of 2 dying time— Who dares the déspot’s ire, the rabble’s rage, Nor fears the code which makes the Trath a Lost? is without reading No wonder Mrs. Crab says Crab is a brute. Sam Tilden, is ifle exaggerated: “The clergyman : ‘Brethren,’ as he breath- lesly entered the pulpit twenty minutes late, But here is. my . I had a flush royal and Deacow had four queens, and though he bet knew he’d put his entire pile in and.1 to break up such a good thing Sol stayed and scooped his Oct. 9 Seventeenth Sunday after Trinty. ‘The Martyr is bright Freedom's pioneer— The sentinel that xuards the advance line— ‘Who dreads nog power, who feels no craven fear, the Truth, cad secks the Light y noble work to move, Hits creed 1s Peace, his liturgy is Love. “Lis the arena where Man dies for San— ‘Tne rugged highway through funatie strife Whereby the Martyr reaches Glory’s van— {ts scaifold high Where brave men perish, aud Reformers die, Cuantes J. Beattie. ation’s heart grows faint. ‘Again the words through weary days, And sadder grows the Nation's plaint; ‘We asked for what we thought was best; Crab, crisply; “I used to ats married, but now I know ” Oct. 9 —Highteenth Sunday after Pentecost. ‘A Nation stands throuzh hours and days, Long weeks of hopes und fears have passed, KM. pi Can you partion me for the {delay ” ‘And the congregation shouted ‘Aye,’ gave three cheers fur the preacher, and then the CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK. . Dionysivs and Comp., MM... (from 'frod by the brave, the fearless, and the true— lends the way to Freedom's j waits, and ‘Truth resplendent His the proud sou! that treads the way alone Nor dreuds the cowl, the mitre, orthe throne. CITY SANITATION. of a small-pox. sick. room directl: into a neighboring house, “into cho family of persons free from the contagion, thus exposing them indirectly to its.intlu- ences. -Ouralleys, too, have been very much neglected. One in particular has been, time and again. filled with the carcasses of dead dogs, cats, fowls,-ete., 25 weil as privy filth, filling the air with the reekine ‘fumes and sickening odors trom this mass of corruotion. I cannot swear that more than one nuisance has been removed. from this alleyin ten years, and that was the single carcass of a dead dog‘which had been buried there: and this, no doubt, was a put-up jobona land- lord on account of the fine imposed by the Taw in such cases, ‘These are but.a small number of facts that have come under my own personal observa- tion, showing that there is a screw loose in the management of sanitary matters in this ward at least. B. $x CANDY-PULLING. Reports of the Tenement-House Inspectors—Filthy Prem- ises. Progress of Small-Pox—State of Affairs in the Fourteenth Ward. During the past week the Tenement House Inspectors examined 203 houses, containing 2,245 rooms, occupied by 637 families, num- bering 2,752 persons. _There were thirty-one notices served and thirty-seven nuisances abated. There were seven new sewers con- structed and five new catch-basins, and in twelve cases defective plumbing was recti- fied, and eleven cases of defective drainage remedied. There were twenty-three privy- vaults and five filthy premises cleaned. Seven families were removed from basements unfit for human habitation. The following were among the worst defective premises found: . i SECOND WARD. ‘Nos. 680 to 68434 on one side of the street, and 685 to 691 on the other side, on Indiana avenue, owned by James D. Sherman. The places included. thirty rooms, occupied by tifty persons. ‘There is little or no plumbing in the houses, and no sewer-connections. The privy-vaults are full and offensive, and with- out, sewer-connections, The premises are overcrowded and exceedingly filty, the roofs lealsing, and there being no eavetrough. No. 124 Fourth avenue, owned by J. Greenwood, is a frame of nine rooms, occu- pied by twelve persons. . The roof leaks and walls are dirty, and rooms: are overcrowded with a colony of Italians, Mrs. Robertson owns No. 148 Fourth avenue, 2 frame tene- ment of seventcen rooms, occupied by twen- tyeleht persons. An overcrowded Italian dwelling with dirty walls and leaky roof, No. 158 Foyrth avenue, of which Crocker is. the agent, Is a frame of ten sinall rooms, in which are huddled twenty-five persons. It is overcrowded and dirty, and the whole place is ina sad state of dilapidation and unfit to be occupied. - THIRD WARD. No. 2131 Dearborn. street, ‘owned by KR. D. Buszazh, a tenement of seven rooms, occu- pied by six persons. The plumbing work is joor and the drainage bad. The roof is leaky, there is stagnant water under -the house, and the walls are dirty. : No. 1911 Dearborn. street, M. L. Pearce agent, 1s a frame of seven rooms, occupied by fourteen persons. It is overcrowded and damp. There is no sewer connection, and there is a filthy ditch and stagnant water pool near the premises: it is nothing better than an old frame shanty. FIFTH WARD. ‘ t.No. 2866 Hickory avenue, owned by Mrs. Menhall, the drainage and privy vaults are bad. The drain isa rotten and useless aaa and the sewage collects under the house. : ‘At No. 269% Main street, owned by Maria Ball, the plumbing is defective and privy yault full and offensive. The water-supply pipes are in a bad condition. No. 473 ‘Twenty-ninth. street, owned by William Wilkinson, isa tenement of ten rooms, occupied by sixteen’ persons. The drainage is bad and the sewer choked. The rainpikes are in sad need of repairs. Richard Cole .owns No. 69 Main street, where the walls are filthy, and there is a full and offen- sive privy vault. FOURTEENTH WARD. No. 462 Dudley street, owned by Fred Ros- sal, is a two-story frame of eight rooms, o¢c- cupied by nineteen persons and over-crowded. ‘The drainage is poor and the privy vault is full and offensive. No. 464 on the same street, ‘How the Business Is Managed upon a Large Scale. Printing Sweet Devices on Lozenges— ’ The Mint Drop. There is probably no one article manufac- tured within, the bounds of the United States which is more universally -a favorit, and the niention of which calls-up more pleasant as- sociations to old and young, than candy. The baby cries for it, schoolboys and schoolgirls demand it, and—principally in.the form of caramels—it is alleged to be of the greatest possible service to young men in their.court- ing days, not, of course, for their own proper use, but as a propitiatury offering to their re~ spective divinities, In this particular it far excels the. fascinating but -deceit- ful ice cream, and has the addi- tional advantage of being in sea- son all the year round. Staid fathers of families affect to disdain the toothsome dainty, and are apt to inform their offspring that candy will spoil their teeth and ruin their digestions, usually, however, ending the homily.by the prodiction of sundry small change to keep the children quiet. The truth is that neither the middle-aged nor the white-haired can forget the joys which candy brought to them in the long ago, and to all it is a thing of beauty and a joy forever. A reporter of Tue TRIBUNE was yesterday afforded an opporsunity of making a tour of inspection through one of the largest candy manufactories of the West, and of seeing for himself » THE DIFFERENT PROCESSES EMPLOYED) in the conversion of the pure white sugar into the manufactured article. Asked what partieular department he would first exain- ine, the scribe decided to begin the review where he oegan his personal experience— hamely: with stick candy—and he was led to the flour devoted to its manufacture. Atone end of the large room a. couple of men were industriously employed shoyeling white sugar into large copper boiling pans, each holdi fitty pounds. Side by side. with these were halfadozen similar-pans inwhich the sirup was boiling: fiercely. The sugar when sufficiently boiled is poured upon mar- bie slabs, fenced in with square pieces of iron, and there allowed to cool. until fit for a brownish color. and to get rid of this Ir Is “ PULLED.” Aman takes a. thirty-pound chunk of the stuif, hangs it on a large iron hook and draws it out at arm’s length. Then he doubles it over the hook and pulls again, re- peating the process until the entire mass as- sumes a snowy whiteness. It is then divided up into pieces of suitable size and rolled by hand on a wooden table. This mzkes rolis is owned by the same party and has the same sanitary defects. Paulina Rahn owns No, $27 West on street, where there is a full and of- fensive privy. No. 329 West Division street, owned by John Zingke, has the same defects as the previous tenement. SEVENTEENTH WARD. No. 254 North Market street, Mrs. Mary Fritzgerke owner, isa trame of sixteen rooms, oecupied by sixteen persons. This is a sinall house and a very dirty one. ‘The hydrant leaks and the plumbing work is poor. ‘Tho drainage 1s bad and privy full and offensive. ‘Phe owner is sick upon the premises. some ten feet in leugth—but along comes a boy with a queer-shaped pair of scissors and cuts it into suitable lengths. If only the childish consumers could get hold of that boy and reason with him, the one-eent stick of candy, which is the juvenile’s delight, might be made a little longer. But this supe- rior being, neglectful of his opportunities, woes on all day clipping candy as if his \veapon were the shears of the Fates and never once puts his fingers to his mouth. ‘The question as to how the stripes, those famous spiral stripes of delicate pink, goton to the candy had always puzzed the reporter, even as the knotty problem of how the apple got inside the dumpling bothered King George. And yet it is simple enough. On the outside of the cylindrical lump of white eandy the workman lays longitudinal strips of colored candy prepared in similar man- ner. A scientitic twist is given to the mass; the workman gets hold of one end of it, pulls it out into a long. string, which is, rolled by his boy helper, and there is the stick candy with its colored stripe... Half a pound of col- ored sugar suffices to ornament a batch of fifty pounds. The clear candy, the light- 56 North Market street, of which Baird & Bradley are the agents, is a brick of twelve rooms. occupied by_ twenty-one per- sons. ‘The whole place is in an exceedingly poor sanitary. condition? The. waste-pipes are untrapped, so that the tenants can have the full benefit of the aeath-dealing sewer- gas. The roof leaks, and the walls are grimy and black for want of calcimming. The water-closet is under the sidewalk, and is in need of cleaning and repairing. The place is overcrowded, filthy, and unwhole- sone. a brown variety, .is| not pulled. The SMALL-POX. process employed in the _manufacture The mortality from the small-pox contin- of “drops” is identical Le jee aoe making white stick candy, the stulf after being pulled is run through rollers. These ‘have depressions on their face of the size of the “drop” required, and one shaking-up suffices to break the cakes into hundreds of little pieces. ‘The coloring used for these is mostly carmine, or coch- ineal, or harmless vegetable colors. Hoar- hound candy is not pulled, and is cut into sticks by a hand-roller. TO MAKE ROCK CANDY in the establishment visited from four to five barrels of sugar are dumped into an ‘m- mense copper kettle heated by steam and there boiled until the proper consistency is ‘obtained. The sirup is poured into deep ues verv large in proportion to the number of eases reported. ‘The disease which is pre- yailing now is of a very malignant nature, and in nearly all cases. where it is developed the patients are found too sick to remove. ‘There were nine deaths. from small-pox yes- terday, One was at the Pest-Lause; a case taken froni No. 165 Waubansia av he other deaths occurred at Nos. 155. Augusta, No. 36 McHenry street, No. Fiston avenue, Greeley place, No. 33 Fifth street, No. 160 Mohawk, and No. 41 Fremont street. New cases were reported from No. $89 Milwaukee avenue, No. 10 Clayton, and No. 738 North Paulina street. Diphtheria was reported from No. 473 State street, and searlet-fever from, No. 37 Rose street, in the rear. SMALL-POX IN THE FOURTEENTH WARD. ‘To the Editor of The Chicago Tribune. Cucaco, Oct. 8.—It has been said by some of our newspapers, that there are more cases of small-pox in the Fourteenth Ward than in any other part of the city. Whether this is true or not, 1 do not know; but one thing I is strung from end to end... Tnese are con- yeyed to the crystallizing-room, where a temperature of 150 degrees Fahrenheit is constantly maintained, aud remain there two to ~three days. ‘The crystals form on the strings and there is your rock candy, red or ‘white, according ns you have added or omitted the carmine. Jelly goods, creams, and other varieties are crystailized in the same way, and the men who handle them need no overcoats while at do know—it gannot very well be worse. One » handie can scarcelyMtake an hour's stroll through | WOT Th tte department ubes, aiid paste the ward without meeting with some half | pooqs are made in niolds filled with corn- stareh. A board on which a dozen or more representations of the drop, square or other shape required, are molded in telief, is »ressed into the stareh and the melted sugar is poured into the depressions thus made. When cool they are sifted out and taken to the crystallizing room. LOZENGES are manufactured in an entirely different way. Crushed sugar is poured into a big mill in the basement, and pounded until it is as fine as flour. Five or six barrels of this ‘are thrown into a trough, some gum ‘and the requisitamount of flavoring essence are add- ed, and the entire mass duinped into the mixer, from whence it emerges In the form of a thick dough: ‘This is run through rollers into sheets, about four feet long and two feet wide, and carried to the stamping table. Here stands 2 man with a pad saturated with car- mine and a stamper on which the letters :to be imprinted on the lozerge—innocent aid to boyish and_ girlish flirtation—are set in type; And thus it-is that Do you love me?” and wtlure you going to the ball this evening: ”” appear upon the lozenges. ‘These are eut from the sheet py girls armed with ordinary tin-eutters of the kind familiar to every housewife;and atter a three days’ experience in the purgatorial swent-box the lozenges are ready for packing and shipment. English inint and all the countless variety of plain Jozenges are cnt by a machine. TO MAKE COCOANUT PASTE the indigestible fruitis cast into a machine resembling.a quartz-crusher, and comes out dozen or more persons bearing marks of hav- ing been recent victiins of this terrible mal- ady. During the past month there have been, includmg those *at present sick with convalescing, twenty-two cases of smal within a stone’s throw of our residence. But one of these cases has been reported in any paper L have seen, and I.takea daily, nor have there been but two taken to the’pest- house. tis not an uncommon thing to see asmall-pox sign on each of three consecu- tive houses. ‘Taking this'as a basis of caleu- lation it would scem that less than one case in twenty is reported in the papers, and less than one case in ten is taken to the pest- house. A certain man of my xequaintance owns a large two-story house which he rents to. three families. — When ‘two eases — of smill-pox. occurred dn one of these families he reported it to the Health oftice, hoping thereby to Ket the pa- tients removed to the pest-house, but they refused to comply with his request on the plea that the patients did not wish to be sent there, He then asked whether they were not compelled by law to Temove them, provided there was room in the pest-house.. ‘The an- swer was: “NO; itis entirely optional with is and the patient whether they are taken there or not. Our will and judgment is the only law.” This remark set me to thinking that if it were true that the will of the Health Departmentis the only law in, the case, then jt can be very partial, and I think it has been’ ‘The law interferes in matters of far | ! mes ON $ ii 2, v! i i Y | in a condition of - pulp and sbreds. ie Juss importance, and Tey ae on creams for chocolate drops and sticks are also? But it. scems it does not, le COr sulted party did not tell a tasehood about it. it seems perfectly incredible that just to whatextent and just where in the city this or any other contagion shall be allowed to spread, comparatively unchecked, is left en- tirely subject to the will of the ofiicers of the cast in starch-molds and dipped into the Chocolate mixture, Mint drops are dropped siigly on tins, and caramels are boiled and cutout. The sugar clear, dear to the heart of budding youth, is cast in a starch Or plaster moid, and - afterwards -painted and fixed-up by: band. All the sugar fruits, toys, city: but we are compelled to believe it, ite, which appear in so great pro- otherwise we must believe that at least one an toe oliday times, are cast in plaster officer told a “whopper ” about it. 2 ‘But 1 have been told that the pest-house is full, and it so-people outside have very little idea of the extent of this disease in the city. ‘Taking iny neighborhood as a basis of caleu- jation, nut more than one case in ten istaken to the’ pest-house, and yet they tell me it is full. Just think of it, ‘Che pest-house 1s full, and still there are more than ten times ‘as many cases outside of iin private faini- lies, exposed more or less to contact directly or indirectly with those susceptible to the disease. ‘These facts give the impression that the disease is waxing instead of waning, and that it will. continue to raze until every, imolds and hand-painted. ‘The prevalent idea that these articles are among the more ‘ob- jectionable forms of candies is an erroneous. dne. us they are made of the finest white sugar, and the coloring-matter is certified to as innocuous. SE ~ FOLDING BED. eee Andvews’ Parlor Felding Bis, ‘Burr Pat, Improved. 15 Strles. Elegant com- fortable. Save Room- § rent. Bedding folds out. “of sight (see cut) 4 rsoi in the city who is not small-pox proof : Shail have been ‘adlicted by it. Are not our esks, Bank Counters, E cs health officers some times responsible for the tes? “Artistic Household read. of the disease by contact? ave been informed, and L-believe it to be true, that .bealth officers sometimes: zo. out » “of best kiin-d=ied Inmber, and made by ourselves, dol, Andros & Cony 193 handling. ‘The process of boiling makes it of"| oval tin pans, in which cotton threads are’ + vill Do night | RATL ROAD TIME-TABL ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE.” OF . REFERENt TRAINS — EXPLANATION | OF cc SARES.—tSaturday excepted. "Sunday excepted. tMon exce| . # fe < 5 gohteare ‘& Nortnwestern Rallway. ‘or Maps, Time-Cards,Sleeping-Car Accommodations, apply at 62 Clark-st.. Gi 'Pacitic, Pah SbhMepot corner of Wells and Ninile-sts. sae cs eave. ‘Marshalltown Expr Cedar iapids Express Des Moines Night Ex Sioux city © Yankton. Froeport, Rockford Dubaque.. Krecport, Rockford & Dubuque Milwaukee rE Slllwaukae Passeuze MIL, Green Bay X Sia: Greon Bay, via Janeswl Sc Paul & Minneapolis Expres ‘Minnesota & Central Dakota:.--. Oshkosh, via Junesvitle .. Lake Geneva... Elgin’ ‘Express. Sign Express. Elsin Express. Elgin Express, Eizin Sunday Expres: Chteago, burlington & Q For Maps, Time-Tables, Sleep! Gations, Spply at i Clark-st. G foot of Indiat v;, Grand House, and i Canal sat. Galesburg, Ottaws & Streator Ex| bNepraskn Baprestc se. ubuque & Sioux ress. BAnboy tock Pails Seernng ES pDowner's Grove Accommodav’ Montana & Pacific Express... d3tJoseph.Atchlsons ‘'o) LRansas City & Denver Express. Aurora Sunday Passenge: | & [daha 1 Srgigaaagianans DAurora Passeuxer. eDes Moines, Omaha & Lincoln Nigh Express, i aSouthern Paciti cTexas Expres: akonsas City & St. Joos bree: Wed. ight Ex. rt & Dubuque Express. ‘Sat. Theatro Train... @ Dally. b Dally, excert Si . € Dally, except Tarday. aballe except Moudays, ONT ‘Dubuquetrains ‘eave and srrive from Central De- Pot, foot of te St Na cat Citenes: Milwaukee & St. Pant Eatiway. inion Depot: Corner Madison, Canal, and Adams-sta. ‘Wicket Ottices, Gl and 65 Clark-st., 258, Gueket PAGSS fh Stana sebepee er HO Milwaukee Fast Matt Milwaukee Express..0...0 Waukesha & Oconomowoc Ex «. ‘Milwaukee, St, Paul & Minne- apolis &: trains... Green Bay. Stennsha. and Ap- i xpress tral in Pass Dubuque & Cedar i Sfoux City & Dubuque Fast E: Elgin & Kirkland Pas'nger (daily) Elgin Special Fast Express. vi Tasca mmouation... ‘Trains for Humboldt and North Chicaro a.m. and 6:9) p.m.; arrive 6:45 a.m. and dally, Sunday excepted. Chiengo ¢& Alton. Union Depor, West Side, corner Madison and Canal~ sts. between Madison und Adums-st. bridges. ani ‘Twenty-third-st_ Ticket Urfices, at Depots, 8 Sor Clark-st., Grund Pacitic Hotel, and Palmer ‘Leave. Kansas City, Denver. Pueblo Fx. |*12:55 p m| Kansas City, Santa Fe, New Mex-| {o9,ArizonasCalifornia Fast Ex }+11500 p mi: St. Louls, Springfteld & Texas....|* 9:00 St Louis: Springneld & Texas. St Louis Ex., via Jacksonvill: Mobile & Now Orleans Express. Peoria, Keokuk & Bur- Magton Fast Express § Cheno: Pekin & Peoria Bx., via Jollet... Streator, Lacon, Washington Jollet & Dwight Accommodation.!* ;AiMnots Central Ratiroad. Depot foot of Lakerat- and foot of Tvonty secon ‘el # a. Grand ‘ket Offices, 12t Randolph-st., near Clark, Pacific Hotel, and Palmer Elouse, St. Lonts & Texas Express. St Louls © Texas Fast Lin €alro & New Orleans Express... New Orleans & Texas Fast Ex. Springteld Express. Springield Night Ex bPcoria, Burlington & Keokuk. cPeoria, Burlington & Keokuk. Pontiac & Chatsworth Expt Dubuque & Sioux Dubuque & Slous City Express, ‘b—On Satarday night to Gilman onty. c—On Saturday night rans to Peoria only. :~ ‘Wabash, St. Louls & Pacific Railway. Union Depot, State and Twelfth-sts. All Stato-st. cars run to the Depot, and Wentworth-av. cars pass within one block. ‘Ticket Offices, 85 Sonth Clark-st. Palmer House. und Grand Pacitic Hotel. St, Louis & Gulf Express... Sr Louls & Gait Fast Line. Kansas Clty & Denver Fast Bx. Peoria, Burlington & Keokuk Ex}* Peorin'& Pekin Special... Springtleld & Hannibal Fi § Daily. Dally except Sundays. - 5 OTe— Pullman Sleeping Cars from Chieago to St. Louis, Kansus City, and Peoria. Parlor Day Coaches, With revolving chairs, Chicago to St. Louls, and Reo ell 0 to Hannibal and Kansas City. aches Chicago te St Louis or Kansas City. ‘Chicago, Kock Istang 4: Pacific Batirond. Depot. corner of Van, Buren and Sherman-sts. ‘Ticket Offices, 63 Clark-st., Sherman House, Palmer House, Grand Pacitlc Liotel, and 75 Canal, corner Madison- ‘Leave. » Arrive. ie ntng-Chair Sieeping Cars, Chi ci fo change of Day Davenport & Peoria Express. Counclt Biutts Fast Express... Kansas City, Leavenworth & At-| chisun Fust Express. St Paul & Minneapolis Peru Accommodat Counelt Mums Night £: Kansus City, Leavenworth & ‘chison Night Express... St Paul & Minneapolis Fast Biue Island Accommodation, Blue Istand Accommodation! Blue Island Accommodation Blue Island Accommodation. Hine Island Accommodation, Biue fyland Accommodation, BUVUUEPUD UU! BEBSESBHB BB oo EEE Q ‘*Daily excep: Sundays. tNalty except Baturdays. Dally except Monaays. §Thursdays and Saturdays only. [Sundays only. ‘Michizgun Ceatral Katlrond- Depots.foot of Lake-st.and foot of Twenty-second-st_ Reket Ontices, Gf Clark-st., southeast corner of Ran~ doiph. Grand Pacitic Hotel, and Palmer House. Leave. | Amve. ‘Mal (via Matn and Ate L New York & Woston Ex. Bpecial Now York Ezpr Kalamazuo Accommodation. Atlantic Express (daily). Night Express...-..-+ thing itupids & Siaskegou ‘Stall. Grand Rapids & Petosky Express) GGcand Rapids & Muskewon Ext “Sanday excepted. ;Dally. tWaturday aSaturonys leave Bt 3:15 p. m- ; Enke Shore & Michigan Southern Rallway- toca at depots, Van Turen-s:., head,of La ker $ Salio, Twents-secund-st, and Forty-third-st Ticker Louse, BuUUPEROSS SREBOBEER | z i i aSatardays leave at 12pm. excep! Baltimore a: Ohto- epots, Exposition Building and foot of Twenty-sec~ end-si 83 Cl i. Hieket oflocs, &} Clark-st., Palmer House, Grand Pacitic Hotel, und Depot (exposition Bulid's). e j Leave. | Arrive. Morning Express. i? 8:02 m|* 80pm Porexpress. sign mit 73am ‘Hight Bxycess, 9:0 p mi} 70pm ally. “Sundays excepted. Spall. poe Or Yains run via Wasbtogton City, and the only line running {ts entire trains through from Ni York without changt nt 8. U.stec 32 ce. ing-Cars between and 9:2 p.m, ts, foot of Laxe-st. nnd foot of Twenty-second- Depote geet OMicea at Depots and LiL ‘Randoipbeet, Grand Pacific Hotel, and Palmer House. > ‘Leave. ‘Arrive. Cincinnati, Indianapolis & Louts-| le Day Express... + 8:00.2 roj/* 7-5 pm xpress. |§ 8:10 p mj} 7:0 am Pittsburg, Et Wayne & Chicago ‘Mallro: Depot corner Adams and Canal-sts. ‘Ticket Offices, ‘Clarx-st, Palmer Hous. Grand ‘Pacific ‘Hotel, and at Depot. : ee : ‘Leave. | Arrive. * 8:20.02 m|* 7:0 pm 3:30 p m]} 8:Wam 5:15 p ml) 9:00am 9:40 p mit 6:00am Pittsbarg, Clucinnat! & St. Louts ‘alread. ‘Cincinnat! and Kokomo Atr-Lines.) ©“ Depot, corner of Adams ‘and Canal-sus, West Side. ‘Licket OMces at Depos ant Clark-st., Grand Pacttic Hotel, and Yalm Day Express. Logansport Accomm ‘Night Expreas (daily), Chicago & Eastern Mlinots Railroad. “(Danville Route.), 2a Depot, Twelfth-st, near state. Ticket Offices, Wl k-st., 58 State-st., Palmer House, 200 Grand Pa- citie. Brink's Express (cor. State und ftandotph-ste.). = ‘Leave. “Arrive. Day. a < + 9:008 mf 4:15 pm Pernille s Florida Bxpressccssccl” 8:00 p ma atts 4Daliy. excopt Sundays. *Daily. Chieago & Grand Trunk Rallway. Depot corner of Twelfth and State-sts. dL Haadolph-st.. 69 - or Hons

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