The New York Herald Newspaper, May 11, 1868, Page 3

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NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 1), 1868—TRIPLE SHEKY. Py WP *, "eee foree than necessary, while Hose sttention was | thispurpose. The altaris of pure Ttaltan marble, | equanimity with which mortal rate er pam SUNDAY i THE CITY. | Feet found its way into cact every Bats to all the beautifal cadences which occur | peautifully soulptured, the base presenting the ap- t a, ey this individual “cropped a or noted and head ise: sph with the exception of a facd and an entombed Ouriat reciting upon ‘slab fleshy protuberance where. the nose ‘should MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC NOTES, The Richings English opera troupe give Ue fol- ~ gy BO i. at same time and some of it are most vulat be, and a couple of ears which serve simply to mark | !Wing operas this week at the French theatre, THE MAY ANNIVERSAB.TES) in tne face. of these aimculties we had | for grandeur of expression and aym- = pepniaien of the metropo- | ine terminations of an axis drawn through its com | commencing to-night:—“Martha,” “Macitana,” q before us now the problem of harmonizing the white pathy, and it is but to say that its interpret need of't! ‘and p Beg yy tre. In other words, they constitute a sort of North | «Crown Di amonds,” Sonnambula,” “Fra Diavo and black elements of So Bene, make headway | by the cathedral cl yesterday was entirely satis- | ment of the seating capacity of the ‘ediaoe have long | #24 South pole, being each located in the exact ane a i , avo~ s Cog ig my jo Ny As Sana te Mataone Chome with great taste | °%nfelt was inangu Re Re Ra gg erg SALE ~ ranean Sat SRR RIPON fe i Ps = our cus jung ie Grace ciream- | “Crown me 7 Interesting Exercises of the American and | téms ‘nd forms of government the thousands of feeling, “The Sanctus and Agnus Det, though Moat Rew OD Mecloa key, atts ean! the | Stance—a black necktie. very carefully adjister—ths re tet pgs ” emigrants which are every year brought to our | much inferior in point of brilliancy of idea to the | Fathers MoNierny aud ny Ao The Litany | 8) r is enabled to designate the exact line where ‘Asks and Faces” and “Town and Country” will urch U; ¥ | the individual's head is supposed to end and the noek, | N for the last timé at Wallack’s to-night and Shine ‘age of steam had, he sald, not added to our other Ae gd ay were harmoniously Gustavus Schmite as usual presided at the organ. —. eae as Py ‘ie Agi. jumstance the more happy from the begin, a ciret A ne ama » OW] ‘ockade,”” water, and the act of consecration was complete, | fact that the neck, or that which neck should be, new drama, the “White Cockade, Will be brought out on Wednesday. A rn sionary and Female Guardian morni strength, and much of the tone of morality at 5 ‘ashi mn was due to the preponderance given to | At the conclusion of the first the Rey. Will shrine was is nearly, if not exactly, of the same circumference @ . Societies and the Union Theo- Catania sian emparatea’ oe one hale eect Btarra, V. G.. a ened and impressive | sung by Kev. Delkin mien These Was aa the head which it is supposed lo support, Humpty Dumpty,” with Fox as clown, is still the 4 * communication. (Aud think of the scenes at Wash- | sermon, ch text the sixteenth ter as celebrant, assisted by Rev, Messrs, Farrell, | though a very slight protuberance of the | atiraction at the Olympte and is likely to be so until logical Seminary. ington a week ago last Saturday !) it was not be- | and ffth verse of St. John's Gospel:— “but now t go pope a gE Cnurehes: | UAdeF Jaw in front prevents the black tle trom | tne end of the season cause we had not soll enough, but because we were | my way to Him that sent me; and none of you asketh | as deacon and sub-deacon, and rey tion ell drilled hy , and also prevents the individual from slip- . tes. Generali not able to cover it with law, government, order and morality, and the moral decline of a nation was i) resage of its political death, and SERVICES IN THE CHURCHES. | so'vure as when evinced inh republic. For all these me whither goest thou.” The reverend gentleman adverted to the influence of the Holy Spirit and the propagation of the Christian faith throughout the world, its rapid and successful by aha over all a] The “Connie Soogah,” with 3 (8 mass in A was si r, ing rojection which must be called a head gah,’ with Mr. and Mrs, Barney the only feature of which noticeable as Bling, above roug! tle itt coliar and down out of si; ty some. | Williams as the Hibernian stars, will be given this the average was the rendition of the Gloria:in #x- | What after the manner of an over-modest turtle. Of | week at the Broadw ‘There is good material in | 88h Wonderful utility sometimes is the small mat- evils, however, political philosophy claimed to have its | nations, the many and apparently insurmountable owever, ter of a necktie in marking exactly where one’s neck Miss Fanny Janauschek will appear at a matinée | Temeay In suffrage and education, while, in fact, the | difficulties against which the aposties had to contend saa eation nace it con rere ve img | fe supposed to he whan somite han conlitod ta dome |: to-tay. athe Academy of Much selections from whole safety of a nation might be prej by | and the instraments smpored for the development mutual suppport so indispensable to success. any Resoeptinie dividing line, Seated as he is, to all | ner characters of Mary Stuart and Debor; h, for the Breakfast to Station House Lodgers at the | Putting the ballot in the hands of the voter upon | of sacred truths. He dilated on the fact that, al- | After the gospel hia Grace delivered a most elo- | tents and purposes, the {udividual puts the specta- anak Ae the Amores ae iagaghen2 whom suffrage, the great educator, had not yet ex- | though contrary to the expectations of many at the | quent and impressive address, appropriately select- | tor in mind of a huge, colossal frog, being exactly | beneflt of the American Dramatic Fund. An ope- Howard ji erted its educating and elevating influence. The | time, the Gospel of Christ soon became widely known, as the theme of his discourse the eighth verse of | Of the shape of a huge frog properly waistcoated and | ratic concert will be given in the evening for the ward Mission. and the same Spirit by whose influence the disciples | the twenty-fifth Pgal! “I have loved, 0 Lord, the | 8et bolt upward behind the desk at Dodworth Hall; | game purpose. speaker then proceeded to argue at very great length q to show that the foundation of all good government . Hes in the adoption of and conformity to sound / a pemcupen ce Epis right, equit Ppagtnde 4 and c volum! usly the various eras o! ie ne] Gathering of Spiritualists at Dod Reyvolutign to show the dangerous influence of politi- orth Efall. cal liberty when unrestrained by a healthful religious we sentiment among the people. ¥ In the course of a passing allusion to the moral soon of igs 0 Largo ages ane bly pr hows pati an oath to defend and preserve the coi (on, THE ANNIVERSARIES. which instrument eemed to possess a remarkable facility of construction and amendment, involved American and Foreign Christian Union. something higher than the mere violation of its pro- The annual sermon of the above named society | Visions; it carried with it the violation of the oath made before God; and as Andrew Johnson had once, Was preached last evening at St. Paul’s Church, | as Governor of ‘Tennessee, said to the speaker:—— jorner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-second street, | “There is somewhere in the universe a law of right, | and a God who will vindicate it.” The President of Pr Dr's. H. Hare, of the Central M. B. Church. The | io) nied acute imemtare know tint chee ae everend gentleman selected his text from the third | jaw of right, and that he must regard his oath. Chapter of St. John’s Gospel and the twenty-second Verse :—‘‘Ho that believeth in the Son hath everlast- The Unton Theological Seminary. ng life, and he that believeth not the Son shall not The anniversary exercises of the Union Theological life.” Complete faith is the first essential to sal- | Seminary of this city were held last evening at the tion, and without it no one can hope to enter into | Madison avenue Presbyterian church, Rev. William race; but the first step to obtain this faith is to | Adams, D. D., pastor. There was quite a numerous dicate all pride and conceit from the heart, and to | congregation present on the occasion, including the pproach the Father through the Son in an humble | students of the institution and the graduating class, ind contrite spirit. God cares only for such as have | the latter numbering forty-four members, who were his spirit, and it is a beautitiful thing to watch how | Seated directly in front of the pulpit. Rev. Dr. Adams ch @ soul develops into that everlasting life which | presided, and at about half-past seven o'clock been promised by the Saviour. Humility is the | the services were opened with singing by itepping stone to faith, and faith the direct approach | the choir and congregation and prayer o everlasting life, the latter being nothing without | by Professor Smith. Dr. Adams then addressed the former. Salvation and Hic pariah one | Congregation, and more Pte ae A the graduating nd the same thing, in fact there is no perceptible class, confining himself principally to illustrating com- [Biterence between ihe two, as they go together hand | Oror'to show the lack of tho easeltial qualtiea for nd hand. Nothing so much evinces the value attach- | such g character in some cases he stated that some- went forth cou and taught men the ways of God, still and recid ener continue to prevail, The reverend speaker was listened to with marked atten- tion, and concluded by exhorting the con; on to be faithful to the instructions of the Holy Ghost, and to continue their confidence in the words of the Redeemer, and at the end of life they would sail into the harbor of eternal peace, The services terminated shortly before one o'clock, Dr. Chapin’s Church. ‘There was the usual attendance at this church yes- terday morning. Mr. Chapin took for his text the first verse of the fifth chapter of Galatians, “Stand fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath Made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage.”? The most reasonable supposition is that they to whom these words were addressed had been heathens, and before their conversion through the instrumentality of the apostle had assed into Jewish proselytism. It was against heir tendency to fall back again upon Jewish ideas and ceremonials that Paul directed his argument. It was aimed, also, at all that darkens, corrupts and enslavyes the mind. ‘Though we of the present day may be in no danger of the particular errors of the Galatians, we may still find in the text something that is applicable to us. The text considers three things—bondage, deliver- ance and the Deliverer. The term bondage is a very large and comprehensive one. There is a bondage which is of the soul; there is that which is more common than political bondage; there is that which darkens and corrupts and oppresses mem more than fetters; there is the bondage of sensual habits, and in connection with this the bondage of materialism. Is not this a very grovelling condition? Now in every grade of human nature we may discover at least germs of spiritual life—some vague, dim apprehension of supernatural reality. So is not the contrast be- beaut Thy house and the and, however the spectator may struggle against the Reel, Sacetasteerany prerabitation of THY | ridiculous simile, tt will rise to the earface in spite | _ PIKe's Opera, House re-opens on Wednesday, this saying that the same divine spirit which anim of him, and for the very reason the resemblance 18 | time for the sensational drama. A play by Maeder, the holy prophet in uttering the sublime words of | Wpabsurdly exact even for purposes of caricature. | adapted from the French and entitled “Lost,” will the text, had incited his hearers to the undertakin, The audience is a curious one—a series of jokes of b) and accomplishment of the work of restoring and | 2ture—a collection of human absurdities-a muse- | be the attraction. Some very good artists, among ing the sacred edifice in which they were | UM Of physiological oxddities and whims—a very | whom we may mention Mr. McKee Rankin, are en. assembled. That devout spirit had always ‘animated pea i ioat ae soe net pmlcal eccentricision, a. its of the Roman C; rect); @ freak of nature in the ‘ aye an clime to vie with eactroter tne creek | fF of @ genticmaws head, with long ringlets of | The “White Fawn” wilt have anew prentre aan- pe churches, for the habitation of that | Curls very carefully cued arid twisted behind; on | seuse to-night, who has made a sensation in Europe. God, who, ail great and all powerful, inhabiting | the left is a ite Japaneselsh dwarf of awoman, | Her name is De Rosa. A Viennese named West- eternity, yet condescended to dwell in tabernacies | With very small black beads under her forehead ' % reared by earthly hands. He deprecated the | Which, out of courtesy to nature, must be termed | Mayler will also make her first appearance at Niblo's. action OF those’ who were opposed to the | ¢yes; on the right wriggles a singular individuality “Paris and Helen,” the latest bur!esque at the New expenditure of large sums ‘upon churches | Which seems to have outgrown its head, un exact | y ork, is still on the boards with the Worrell sisters and say “W! this waste?’ He compared | SPhere of about half the ordinary size balanced be- id eS a against. Mary ‘Mag. | tWeen two shoulders that seem to have descended | im the cast, dalen for her beautiful offering in anointing the head | fam Hercules; and everywhere and at every angle | Blind Tom gives amusical soirée every night this of the blessed Saviour with the box of precious oint- | Of Vision are scattered eccentricities of nature which | wee at Irving Hall. Ment. Those who thus object, he said, are not | ODly escape particular notice from the fact that e among the masses of the people; they ‘are not the | eccentricity 1s the rule. The Bowery will welcome the return of one of its poor who willingly give their all. This sentiment The *peaker 08 the colossal frog as you imagine it | favorites to-night in the person of W. H. Whalley. sprung frum the hearts of the rich and avaricious | t0 be) rises, and it is now that you become aware | yingard enters upon his sixth week at the Comique who, like Dives, abound inplenty, Thechurch upon | that the individual at the desk was no frog, except yi earth, he continued, was typical of heaven; founded | 1 the matter of a sti resemblance, which ceases | to-night, The Clinetop sisters appear for the first by Chirist himself it'was immortal and everlasting, | With mere externals, ‘The individual’s yolce has an | “ine. Tie Himself had declared that He would | Olly quality, remarkably at variance with the quality The San Francisco Minstrels introduce Mr. J. Acker- abide with it forever; that the Holy Ghost | Of 8 frog’s Volce, and far more suggestive of a certain | Man this week as @ novelty. A choice dish of fun is should teach it all’ truth and that the | species of moral commodity termed “gammon.” | Promised by them, ates of hell should never prevail against it, ne manner, too, is unctious, oleaginous, oily; the The “Grand Dutch §” until further orders every ft wag created for all people and all ages, for ali | Stile is of similar texture and suggests ois} the | night at Kelly & Leon’s, Also Blamphin, the harpist, climes and tongues. Its unity and Catholicism had | Whole gountenance above the line of the black tie is | 82d Naylor, the tenor. always been the intrinsic badges of ite divinity, | wnctious with olliness. Dickens would have named | Dan Bryant blacks hts face, hangs up the shill That unity had been transmitted through the Apos- | the individual in harmony with his own peculiar and black bottle and resumes the minstrel profession tles to thelr successors, and had always been re- | ROmenclature, Mr. Oleaginous Gammon. once more. On the 18th instd@it his handsome hail tained by them. Individuals ‘might withdraw them. | ,, The individual begins by remarking that—and here | Nx" the Academy will be opened. ‘Bont selves from her ranks; communities might depart | the manner is one of sllppery unctiousness—it the | , Tony, Pastor will ee ro lg oi ag from the fold; whole nations might abandon her | Meetings at Dodworth Hall are to be kept up, Scenes” and “La Belle Héléne” ballet this week. faith, but none could take frome her that light | funds must be forthooming. | He (the speaker) ie Panorama of the war is still at Madison Square and ‘spirit of Christ which had always been | @k8 nothing for his services; but the contin- re are eipibenione of the -wih fc enerinte. with het, If they dropped away it was in | Sency of rent 1s a@ consideration which must concer’ for the benefit of the widow of the Ia the manner of decayed branches’ which were at | D€ Provided for, and for which—and here sev- | A. Hirschman will be given at the Academy ou Sat- d by our Lord to humility as the parable of the | times in a minister everythin; “ Vai f oil 1 to the individual’: . | urday. 4 " rything ran to devotion, and | ty, “ . | Once renewed by strong and flourishing members, | ral drops of oil are added to the individual’s man “Blac will be the Phariaes ana que Publican wens. into ee temple Teme Techies Inokait wie sooen apen. s_.comman ternatly diferent? Eien tale ean iemaceetce Fee ee prpatee Soe pex cuselptine were ait holy, and Sane _ Sear rape ire ec Ars Eholegien Bevokiea cering Pb oi “4 world, for which he had no sympathy. en, again, 7} she had ever walked in the paths of tri te lece : "the Chureh of tho Holy Inna Po Pray, but what a different ee earns ae re- | all ran to ecclesiasticism, an these miintaters nee 7 = panaaRe. bot a fae ~ eoey ey pe | eousness, ‘protected from sit error aud evil neehee suMicient, and no person will be expected to give = lati or por fe CO aA Blot cetive devotions. ‘The religion of the one consisted | to think that the Church existed for thesake of order, | MOF Te Praia fo ine ‘ihe lange class | divine founder and instructor, The soul of every | More thin that, He continues by saying that he | cents will be held at the Everett Rooms this wee beggarly elements. Take for instance the large class who are bound and thralled in bondage to appetites, those who walk erect in the form of man and yet are in a lower condition than any brute; because the brute has not forfeited his nature, passing below the plane of his actual being. In such menali the higher elements of their nature go down into the mire. Some of these are conscious of their degradation, others proud of it. It is a right of their manf hood to do as they will. Though boasting: their pf forms and ceremonies! He was very devout; he ‘} as if the one object and the one aim was to be like an seas goes ot ae be ee ee puraped 80 army, perfect in the same unfform and make time to Pnction thbeaieths roper sense; and 1 question how | t2e Same music. Then, truly, he Is the best specimen aay of you Tramran’ can say ine mane thing. He | Of @ Christian minister wha combines ih his ih Igo ve alia, ‘and I suppose that not many ‘of you | Person, in happy. proportion, the several qualities bay bo sald 0'do tha eane thin But his mistake | of Piety, energetic action, religion, &c. No one who tate Mag Rinna tert vakedc dencon Grthens possessed these more readily occurred to his mind ie at a Gon te tell him what he had | tam Archbishop Light. Dr. Adams illustrated com- ne rather ‘than to ‘obtain. ‘boon that he ed for. pleteness of character in a Christian minister as the a pray: : | combination of the qualities diligence, faith, virtue, human being was a church; it was thi has deemed it best to have the contribution taken | Manahan’s band will perform, Ne God and the habitation of his holy spirit, UP? & | up before speaking (in other words, before the audi, | Bandmann’s “-suylock’” at the Theat In his peroration his Grace most forcibly set forth | euce has time to leave), and he will therefore call pocteel on ae HN Fess is much pr the holiness of the Church and the care that should | UPON the sextons to proceed with the duties sug- | Coming to the critics, a grand ste be taken to enter it with “pure minds and clean | gested before the services open. Taken by surprise, | | A child violinist, Mile. siebé, ci hearts.” At the close of the sermon, which was | the audience begin to fldget and feel in their pockets | Concert, given by ‘the “Cercle ‘dos i listened to with profonnd attention, the mass was | for stamps, which are reluctantly disgonged as the picay gp cine lrg resumed, at the end of which the benediction was | Contribution box passes; while Bullock, more | Siebé has the appearance edad occ pronounced by the Archbishop, and the vast cong more oilily unctious than ever at the success of nis | Of age, but handles her instrament Danie ae gation dispersed, the services terminating at haif- | fmancial joke, assumes or resumes the posture of an | 824 masterly style of an artist of lone si x Arts de ta is, Mille. he other, however, knew he was a sinner and that el » | independence, were such fetters as theirs ever 7 uprignt frog, and awaits the conclusion. She performed from memory dificuit vari lhe wasregared as such by all who saw him enter the ade Sa DOS et forged, for ithe limbs of men? There are vast one'o’elock: ‘anes ‘The lecture of the evening was an uninteresting | Richard Wagner's “Tannhauser,”’ and eects ‘o vemple. He approaciied the throne of grace in the | oivor by natural powih, and there was no com. | “2! In bondage to passion, When we find Charch of New Jerusalem. and exceedingly disjointed reply to the late lecture | 2U(lence by the force and expression she imparted @ man with consience and reason continually over- swept, we find one of the most terrible, the most amlictive forms of slavery. Very often we hear of proper spirit of humility, for simply cri his etenct i ‘ Ramis urnn tile beanet ha cade? Lon we heer to | Pletencss of character if one of them were lacking, m of the Rey. Mr. Giles on “Swedenborgianism.” SO RSh apenas nea sinner.” And said our Lord :—* I tell you that e reverend gentleman then proceeded to analyze The Dublin people pride themselves on their organ- ists, espectally on Dr. Stewart, who is pitted against The Rev. Chauncey Giles (Swedenborgtan) lectured “ these qualities and explain their connection with ] ‘i 4 last evening on the “Relations of Spirit to Matter = ff ;hat man went down to his house justified rather than a % men whose wills are sirong spoken of as stron; e 4 4 THE Ww iN Best by the /rish Times as the better man of the two, Ene other.” ‘The justification of ihe aon tate way Pies re i ypeag i fen = men, ‘he stong than {8 Hof ite than of ae ig com | 4 of Spirits to Man” to a crowded hotles He HOWARD MISSION. ‘the London ‘Review calls burlesque. araina Fuh b bers . a y the c 2 SA RENE SORE SH ° led Sigs " Ho obtain faith and consequent saivation. The only | of tne graduating class. as ministers. ahd reamed, | trolled by Is w th but who controls it. The strong | commenced by stating in a general way the relations mad” and extravaganzas “lollipop critice ulred of us an humble and contrite man is he who finding himself wrong, even at theelev- | of all things to each other in order to show that the Station House Lodgers at Breakfast. “Under the Gaslight,” with Mrs. Conway as Laura to them that “the desirable feeling to entertain was Rirectiy to Hitaselt witsout then ropuiing ca conse | always to expect to succeed and never think you | Sramate, It iva Hobler Ulug tovonfecea weve tha | hisfler and purerthe substance the more general and | The usual weekly drama, tn, which station house OI oO Coo et Ue help whatever. We require ‘no final, creed beyond | BAve succeeded.’ it is to maintain a wrong. After discussing various | Powerful its action, But no material substance or | lodgers are the principal actors, was enacted yester- | ” Ristori closed her engagement at the French theatre esingle one taught us to believe. ‘The only toi ‘The ¥eherabie Prof. Thomas H. Skinner, D. D., the | tier forms of soul-boudage the preacher heterned to force, however refined, could exist by itself, Au | day morning at the Howard Mission in the New Bow- | with a crowded matinee on Saturday. She cou ition imnosed nnon ns is to “come to Jesus.” "Here | Senior of the Le od the Seminary, next delivered | the deliverance. How often has liberty been miscon- matter is created and sustained by spiritual force | ery, With the usual results in the way of spectators, | Mences in Boston to-night, and will next visit 1 cell the valedictory address to the graduating class, and instructed them as to preaching, his principal point being that they should preaell Christ, that person 7 . who united in himself human nature with the divine; on fpoke iat length of the teachings of Bossuet, | preaching Christ was preaching God manifest in the fib Roman Oncholic relinion he a eophe rypeer esh ag the Saviour of the world. Let the minister et Hone of then). iusiructed thes Hecke thee wand | act the Christian and he would act the minister as (wept oratories ‘eceag fhe text cf our | he should. ‘There was no higher aim for them, as jon could be insured so cheaply as the text of our | they could not rise beyond the Christian. Let per- faviour has shown. ‘Their system of retigion might sonal piety be their supreme aspiration. He con- oid, (rut ao, ds Protestantlem—as old as the | tinued:—Make all your particular labors, acts and an oe perceive ng and. the charms ‘or | ¢X¢relses great and good and youare in the way to nuaio and the solemnity of an antique tongue to the summit of rfection as preachers, Personal pres he ignorant; but, the regan ot christs | Died ana yo wil ve ue happiest of maka ie h i ore ar ct Pett or pe lar rag hehe ts concinding Yemarks he urged them to emulate er to Protestantism so long as believers cling to the | eo] Perea Ee EI BI: ord of the Divine Master and preach it through the | pened iction. of men, women and children in all ts purit 4 ee implicity. What seems dark and obscure through | American Female Guardian Society and Home mnorance will in time a} ir clear and bright; it is word of God, and itv assert itself In the end, for the Friendless. br it has been the same and will be the same forever. The Presbyterian church, corner of Fifth avenue sep ation the on of “cana np 2c | and Nineteenth strect, was last evening filled to its Hant itrength eal the rocks which Kece them | Utmost capacity, the occasion being the preliminary it @ distance and defy them; I have seen the waves | exercises of the thirty-fourth anniversary of the out their brains against the rocks; but when | american Female Guardian Society and Home for aerial time still ae dria and. steedtast ay | the Friendless, at No. 20 East Twenty-ninth street. rr. It is the same thing with the word of | In the front pews of the body of the church were od. eg nore seperti vores € —_ seated the present inmates of the imstitution, about piltstand out again as right and clear aa ever. Ail | One hundred and seventy-five altogether, and nearly ho oppose its progress will be h on the limbs | 2! girls, and all dressed alike in a very neat and the tree of life as trophies of the faxter’s prowess | tasteful style of dress, ind examples of their own foolishness, while those | , After prayer and singing the thirty-fourth ho believe in it will enter upon the road to everlast- | Tunual_ report, was read by Rev. Dr. Tyne. hg ilfe promised by our Saviour in the text. is gives @ very encouraging ‘account ol the present condition of the institution. During e reverend gentleman did not allude in any Way | the past year there have been admitted. as mates Ledgers One Program Union 1 fot ine | $32 children, of which number 342 have been provided the regular anniversary meeting of the society | With homes, by adoption or otherwise, in Christian ill be held during- the week, When statistics and | families. Associated with the institution are seven ous reports will be presented. industrial schools, and two more are in progress of po 4 organization. Since the formation of these over 14,000 children have been registered as attendants lversary of the American Home Mission | anq peneficiaries. In addition to this much good is Seciety—The Theocratic Principle of Gove | also ni done for destitute respectable pe ernment. women. uring the year the receipts, including a 7 balance on hand January 1, 1867, were $65,540 77, and The forty-second anniversary of the American | tne disbursements $57,267 60, leaving $8,273 27 in the jome Mission Society was celebrated last evening — pb hag ny sae ; R Rey. Dr. John Hall preached the annual sermon, the Broadway Tabernacle, corner of Sixth avenue | wich, was listened {0 with marked attention, “He nd Thirty-fourth street. After the usual introduc- | took for his text the words of St. John:—“ Every pry services Rev. Dr. Coe read the annual report, — When & pe ae oe Un Psa Bus “phegend r r ‘ount of Olives. er explaining briefly the cir- mong the various items of which were the following cumstances calling forth the words of the text and teresting statistics:—Since the last report of the | describing the special sympathy shown by Jesus peiety they had been called to mourn the death of | Christ toward the unfortunate and erring of ail ‘0 of its vice presidents, two of its directors and s#ea, he proceeded to explain the origin of eiee- Worcester, Hartford and w Haven. Ont within it. All force relative to matter is spiritual, | Breakfast is now prepared for an average of one | Madame Ristori will appear in Brooklyn. | Tle All changes in matter—even its bare existence— | hundred and thirty persons, which is all the Mission | farewell performances will commence on June re On The i" . is due to spiritaal causes, The real world, | Dullding can at present accommodate, ‘That thou- | the Theatre Prat iis, Cast Rake. < Mal aaa ne then, is the spiritual world, Itis the source of all | 8ands might be gathered, were the accommodations | yrs. Cary, Miss Adelaide Phillips and M Sinp- power and life. We are living in that World | sufclent, is the evidence of ail competent judges gon and 1 Rudolphsen were the leading sing re At the now as to our souls, It is from that world that we | wy, ri is ston Musical Festival, which closed last night with receive all our life, If we destroy the eye the world | Who are at allconversant with statlon house statis- | me inroasiat.)? loses one means of communicating with the material | tes. The system pursued thus far has been to send | “ Oje Bull plays in Syracuse to-n'ght. world, i = irene i ares senses, bap the body | agiven number of notes of invitation to the cap- Pon eerste a . bien Leo gee nyo ee may retain life it would have no consclous connec- 5 pianist, has passed through Paris en route to Bay- tion with anything By death we are. freed from aii | *#i8 at the several station houses In the viclnity on | eet ie ee a enor May, le wits £0 conjunction With material things and the man comes | Saturday night. The selection of candidates is then | marry Mile. L¢onle Gore. i the = rend, _ — _ Lesgeney left discretionary with the captains who select those ue dean bee pala) Ca Ory: igre bpnaphre ds the law of affinity by which spirits are drawn to eac! . | one of their top-spinners died, and’ on April 25 their other and to men, In’ this world and in the spirit: | “8 seem to them most promising and dis lodgings took fire, which was hot extinguished until ual world we attract and repel those who are in | tribute the invitations among them. The more | three upper floors had been completely guited and a bevcntartah or cee roe hee se itr The ws hardened and criminal are usually omitted from the nye ope of Property Beatin ed. ‘ # musi surrender: spir fore they can act jeldom has so much enthusiasm been seen in a upon ft with much power. They are repelied by Mat, uniese.a¢, 36 bappens thes of more promising French theatre as was witnessed at the Italian opera, the determined opposition. of a strong will. A | candidates the number may not be sufficient to ab- | where Patti had her benefit, She was in splendid knowledge of this truth will lead us to resist the In- | sorb the whole number of invitations, tn which case | voice, and by chance Nicolini, Scalese, Grossi—all, in fluence of evil spirits. If we yleld to them titey gain | the more abandoned come in for a share of the bread | fact—sung above their average level. ‘The perform- Cae power over us—if we resist them they will | and butter and coffee. To take one's station at the | ance was an act of “Traviata,” the music lesson nally leave us altogether. Thus we open our hearts | door of the Howard Mission at half-past seven o'clock | from the “Barbiere,” an act of “Crispino ela Co- to the influence of the angels. Evil spirits take pos- | on Sunday morning would result in an opportunity | mare; and finally a most epicadia performance of session of the material body im order to lead men to | fora most happy series of photographs of low life | the last act of “Rigoletto,” in which the acting and destruction. The demoniacs mentioned in the | from types furnished by the occasion and selected | singing of La Patti were equally good. There were New ‘Testament are cases im point. They | from the mass by the scrutiny of a police captain. | showers of bouquets, and from a box close to the ve their victims supernatural stren; and | Not the lowest types, of course, for those are not | stage was hand by a lady a gold palm forced them to mutilate themselves with knives | even honored with an invitation, but of the | branch. Every straponiin even was taken, and and lash themselves upon the ground. They | better class in whom the seeds of doing better have | seventy-flve francs were paid for a stall. It sometimes speak through the human organs, | not been utterly smothered in the weeds of doing | was not only a benefit, but an ovation. The as they addressed our Lord and called him by name, | very badly. They are from all quarters and of every | next most striking thing to the performance and modern spiritualism bears testimony to the same hatlonalit -—American, German, Irish, Italian, Span- | was the spoearencty in the box which used to belong henomena. Swedenborg testifies to the same facts. | ish and mixtures of all these with every possible per- | to Major Fridolin, of Mme. Musard, in all her dia- le says that only similar spirits approach a man. | centage of either. Ragged—so ragged, some of them, | monds. She had’on thousands of dollars’ worth; a Ifa man is in the pride of his own intelligence the | as to merit the literal appellation of ragamuftins— | necklace like a small handkerchief, bracelets, ari- spirits favor his every thought and lead him on, as | foot-sore and bandy-legged some of them, leprous | lets, ear-rings, rings, a tiara, and above that a bright @ blind man teads a blind man, until both fall ito | with sores and filth some of them, vermin-infected | and most particular star. the ditch. The danger of such intercourse is appa- | all of them—for vermin hold high carnival amot The comic vaudeville of MM. Grang¢ and Lambert rent. Spirits excite our natural affections, and our | station house lodgers. These are the constituents of Thiboust, ‘Les Diables Roses”, has been revived at the natural affections are evil. They are not lead to | asungainlya iment as were ever invited to break- | Palais Royal in consequence of the complete failure of heaven, No man can follow his natural affections | fast with a gentleman and accepted the gentleman’s | ‘‘Le Pape du Prix d@’Honpeur.”” The lever du rideau and attain to a he y life, and any influefice that | invitation and went. . ig a piece of drollery by M. Jules Rénard, “Une noce leads him to follow them must lead him in the wrong: If you take pains to note carefully you will ob- | sur le carré” A young photographer, and a lingére, direction, Thi il _be better understood when we | serve that the majority exhibit a tendency to sore | his neighbor, watch the marriage festivities occur- understand the real power of spirits over men. They | eyes and* general cuticular disease, while some of | ring in a house opposite, the whole of the scenes be- have an intense desire to take possession of the ma- tiem have the appearance of having just waked up | ing reflected, like ombres chinoises, upon the window- terial body, and do, If they can flud aman whose | from an exceedingly long sleep, witi-the pecullar | blind. The audience is, of course, also admitted to this affections are similar to theirown many can take | stare of eyes and the tend lency Vo open them abnor- possession of his body at one time, Thus the Lord | maily wide which an exceedingly long sleep produces. cast seven out of Mary Magdalene and a legion out of | Some, too, are respectable looking, though downcast, jadarene. ‘This accounts for many phenomena | while others have adopted a sort of assumption of connected with modera spiritualism, such as table | bravado which is far enough from thetr real feelings, tipping and rapping. Spirits also have the power and | Every one exhibits his ticket to the doorkeeper— delight to personate the character of great men who | none others ase permitted to pass—and is have died. Thus they make others think, and really | ushered into the wash room, where an opportunity think themselves, that they are the person whomthey | js afforded for thorough ablutions, and if some y they have made Swedenborg | lose all identity In the washing there need ve imself. But evil spirits flee at the | no especial wonder, for there have been those before ceived! How many there are who think liberty is de- liverance from all forms of restraint! Ask the school- boy his idea of freedom, and will he not say that it isto be free from parental discipline, school disci- pline—free to do what he pleas ‘he prodigal found that frecdom was something very different from self- indulgence. Freedom is possible only where to some extent an inward deliverance of the soul has taken place. The speaker closed his discourse by speaking of the Deliverer, in the course of which he alluded to the anniversaries, saying that all were moved more or less by the spirit of Jesus and that all recognized the fact of the inward bondage of which he had been speaking and the necessity of deliverance through the Saviour of the world. The services of the day closed with a hymn and the benediction. n these simple Words are Cinbodied all the elements pf salvation and everlasting life and that peace which he world cannot give. The reverend gentleman final 25 at Baccalaureate Sermon Before the Grad Class of the Columbia College Law School. Divine service was held in ‘Trinity church last evening, the occasion being the delivery of the annual baecalaureate sermon by Rev. Mr. Cady, of Pough- keepsie, before the graduating law class of Columbia College.. The spacious edifice was nearly filled with a brilliant congregation, the peculiar demeanor of many denoting that the novelty of an evening service at Trinity had much to do with their presence. The, music partook of the same grandeur and sublimity that characterize the usual impressive services at this church. The members of the graduating class occu- pied prominent pews in the body of the church, Following the usual lessons and prayers with the reading of the ninth chapter of Romans and the chant, ‘For whosoever shall call upon the.name of the Lord shall be saved,” aecompanied by both the iarge and small organs, Mr. Cady ascended the pulpit and announced his text as the latter clause of the 2d verse, 6th chapter of Mat- thew—“Verily, I say unto you, they have their re- ward.” The hypocrisy of the Pharisees in the syna- wes was adverted to by the reveren’ gentleman, introducing the similar methods by which the awe and admiration of others had been and were being ccomplished in this day. The Hindoo believer who suffers torture or around him spectators whose expressions of his seeming contentment amount to almost reverence, The fussy, fuming retigiontsts of this age, loud and prominent in song and prayer, were regarded in tones of admira- tion ds pillars of the Chureh and very de- vout Christians—ali have their reward. The text was capable of far wider application than the modern Pharisee. Men indulge in the belief that to be born under a favorite star brings fortune; that was within the grasp of all who are industrious, prudent and toil to it vith indomitable energy. For- private view, the end of which is a proposal by the ‘outh to his companion tivat they should on the fol- ow ig day go together through a ceremony they have found highly interesting to coutemplate. ‘The offer is, of course, accepted. ' “Mile, Sylvia, just produced at the Upéra Co- migue, is a charming comic opera of a type which now has almost ceased to exist, or at least to be pro- duced. Offenbach’s gay and extravagant produe- tions have paved the way forthe musical buffoon- eries Which now hold possession of the stage, and represent. In this ¥ seem to contradi mosynary inattitutions as the result of carrying out his | tune: any man; let him always earn ruth, A quotation from the Bible | who, being washed, were by no means the same in- | anything like meaning in the libretto of a nic eof its missionaries. The total number of mls- | teachings as recorded in the New Testament, He y tohisevery It was this weapon our Lord | dividuals that they were belore that epldermic ope- | opera Py judged altogether out of place, “Alle. jonaries in the service of the society at this date | showed that it did not require any great knowledge iis piles of silver and gold, and he devil, The lecturer then | ration. Washed, cleansed of station house cobwebs, | Sylvia’ is, however, a step back to sobriety aud common sense, It is a one act plece by M. Narcisse Fournier, with music by M. Samuel David, It has a simple and pleasing littie plot, and its music is tinely written, easy and full of melody, Mile. Girard sung deliciously as Sylvia, and was well supported by Leroy Nathan, who was very.droll. Everychin, applauded and several pieces were redemanded. It would not be very surprising if this piece were shortly scen in an English dress. The Sultan lately patronized the Naun theatre, at fcr gpel gf are) and stayed in his box from seven entered upon @ concise statement of the general | the ragged regiment 1s ushered into the breakfast oer in this subject to be drawn from Swedens | room and ranged along the table, which Is loadea ru's teachings. They assert that the spiritual | with bread and butter and coffee steaming in its world is the real, substantial world; that itis near | cups. A few brief words of blessing, during which us and we are, as to our souls, jn it al! the time; that | the breakfasters keep most vigilant eye on the stacks nis are really, though not consciously, | or pyramids of white bread, as tf {t might possibly pen intercourse is not per- | take legs and scramble away if they lost sight destroy our freedom. The | of it, and then the breakfasters betake them. Lord giv s His Word to guide us, and leaves usin | selves to the repast—slender enough, to be freedom to act for ourselves. sure, but better than nothing, even better - than’ examining barrels of offal along the do! at the end of three usa re years and ten he will figure in of wealth—such have their reward. To be cdl of excellent physical constitutions was very , but that was incompatible with being a scholar. To be that, there must be sacrifice; there must be but littie rest; there must be troubles; there must be sufferings. You nnot be a first rate scholar and a first rate man of business; you cannot be a great general and an eminent jurist. Choose what your lot shail be, continued the reverend gen- tleman to the class, and pursue it by day and night, " of human nature to dictate the course that as 980, of whom 653 were in the service of the | he taxon toward the young who are cast u revious year and 268 had been since ap- | world fricndless, and with no one to care for ointed. Their field of labor embraced twenty- | It would not do to Jeave uch alone. _ Satan \ ” not let them alone, and evil and designing persons ine Stats aad Territories. The aggregate of thelr | Wouia not let them alone, and the result would be nisterial labors covered a period of 702 years, and | that instead of becoming useful members of socict he total number of congregations and districts com- oo bag ge 3 ie eo a — candi- i dates for the State Prison an he gallows, He ised within thetr charge was 1,710. The number | teaceq the vast good that had been done abroad and children instructed by these missionaries amounted | was being done there and here especially for chil- all to 66,300; the total number of conversions re- | dren, and thence proceeded to speak of the beneficial | toil pertinaciously, and it will surrender itself to Cl f street for the fishing ont of a possible crumb. An | o'clock till midnight. The performance commenced orted by thein Was 3,296; admissions to churches | results that had followed the organization of the | you,’ He then, telérred to the reason that weowated ‘The Churches in Jersey City. hour, or possibly. # little mote, having been con- | with @ hymn in Turkish by all the company—the 4, and 3,643 persons had made professions of | Female Guardian Society. He spoke on this last sub- | men to embrace the law as a profess they were In all the Catholle churches of Jersey City altars | sumed at breakfast an invitation is extended to all | composition of Pisani, written after the Oriental to make money; to attain political success; to clutch the most potential aud august power that a State has ever instituted—the bench, Some lawyers sell their legal knowledge a8 a merchant does his goods; they dispose of secret information at large profits, and pois such an existence with industry, prudence, insatiable avarice, they make their hundreds of thousands of dollars.” Others desire and have have been decorated for the devotions of the month | to return at two o'clock in the afternoon; a few " . 1 words of exhortation and prayer drop from the lips of May, a month specially set apart by the Church in | Ortie master of ceremonies, and the weird congrega- honor of the Blessed Virgin. The attendance yester- | tion 14 dismissed, to return who will at the hour day in each of the churches was large, and some ex- | specified. Sania axeato was discoursed in St. Peter's and st, | __It 1s but proper to add that a considerable number eh “ of conversions and many reclamations have been weary eaaenrrom the Gospel of the daye was de, | Wrought through the simpte instrumentality of this ith. The number of places of worship erected was } jectfrom pe cn observation,and the amount of good itty-six. The total receipts of the society during the | that was being done he pronounced incalculable. He ‘was $217,577, which with the balance on har in rated lis remarks with many forcible incidents, date of iast report made an aggregate of $292,135, | At the close he addressed the inmates of the institu- this sum $254,680 have been expended, and $14, tion who were present in a few brief and touch- still due the misstonaries, ‘Appropriations have | ing remarks, setting forth in clear and intelligible o been made to the mission of $145,852. The hr: their duties and obligations now and in the ptal pledges of the society amounted to $160, manner, Then followed the “Barblére,” an act of “Robert,” an act of “Linda,” an act of “Martha,” and an act of “Norma. All the court were present, and the Sultan sens to the tiopresario piastres to the amonnt of £1,000 as a present. Mile, Patti arrived in L_sdoa on the 28th of April. it is whispered that the Marquis de Caux will follow hi that they will be married here quietly, and that ), 200, 8 the cancelling of which there was a | During the evening several special songs were | guccdss us advocates; men who insult and put to | Settion, take i m fe i | breakfast, and that thus far it has proved @ most | they will then proceed to St. Petersburg to enjoy nee oi hand of $38407, The recoipta of the | sung ly the children. ‘The services terminated with | torture all wituesses, who frighten. juries, who crush repeiaty on Pg eg He dwelt | eiroctive means of doing good among (ie class known thel: noneymoom coolly. ‘A ropos of Pattlls match = a age gor to ‘ ca e rocelpts of the preceding year, and the diture exceeded that of the year ending May, Anniverseries To-Day. by $26,754. The number of missionaries em- American Seamen's Friend Society—Fourth ave. was sixty-two in excess of that of the -pre- | nue Presbyterian church, corner Twenty-second ear, and the aggregate period of ministerial | street, half-past seven P. M. jowed &D excess of forty-seven years. The Anniversary of the Howard Mission and Home number added to the Sabbath schools was | for Little Migs AA se agah roe A a 00 Singing by the Little Wanderers. iresses by Rev. ‘At the the close of the reading of the report Rev. | DriFish, of Nawark, He ty Pardee, Halph Weil, ‘A. . Thompson, pastor of the church, delivered a | 8. Hatch and others. Music by Grafulla’s Seventh ful sermon on the theocratic principle of aA regiment band. e Lo 009 in excess of the | prayer and benediction. out of existence all sweetness, all courteous feelings, vee making themseives famous, or rather tnfamous. There are others who pursue the study of the law for the love of it, who have been guided by some mysterious whispers, urging them onward; these do Not seek emolument as the chief object. Mr. © then adverted at length to the many additional char- acters in the legal oo reminding the class that Whatever kind of rewgrd for their labors they set their hearts upon could be attained by indomitabie perseverance. They must be con- tent with that reward; when the long- world was to be convinced by the Saviour, The | 4 StWon house lodgers. earnest Sirention shown by the oat rao hg the 3 mi . reacher durin, e delivery ol is discou! was ROOK h Bi Shother roof that the spirit of Cen not pov Bi LYN INTELLIGENC lives, but exists in a healthy and flourishing condl- * tion. In the ——_ Cn ay some Rw ag Ker- MIpNiguT DistURBANCE—ATTEMPT TO RESCUR wons were dellvere®, and ow sone lons were | prisoners FROM THE PoLIce.—Several men who itnessed in these ches sinc % teeta ase nurcl ing popalstion terse city had been drinking in Miller's saloon, at the corner of is not second to any in the country, though ostenta- | Bridge and Nassau streets, came out of the place Hon ta religions worship is not one of its character- | jas pefore midnight on Saturday night and com. aeae omictelly ae, the Lory that sie Was going to marry the Marquis de Caux. “Eilzabeth,” by MM, Mint Beer and De St. Georges, is in active rehearsal at the Lyrique, The first act has been heard by a few amateurs, who speak of it in the highest terms. Duchesne will shortly make his début at this house, ign in By a aR Aa = guphey |. Caspers, fa Tan' as been revived. Leopold de Meyer, the Austrian pianist, has re- turned to London, fife has concluded his American trip and returns immediately to the continent of Eu- ent, taking aa his text the words:—"'Th _ sought prize is clutched there must be no chagrin, - menced to turn over ash barrels and conducted | Tope, en route for Vienna—with £35,000 in lia pocket, 1 make the head and not the tail; and thou shalt HES no “indignation, “If you pursue. the law “like not ddollar having peen paid to the United States ‘above oniy and shalt not be beneath if that thou SERVICES IN THE CHURCHES. some devotes of natural stlence you wil find THE SPIRITUALISTS. thomselves in the most disorderly manner. Omeers | Government. 4d,” publishes the unto the oe grag hy the Lord thy ~~ nial delight; it will make you profound jurists. — Brown and Curran, who were passing at the A London paper, “Musical vor t todo them.” Weuteronomy, “twenty-clghtn Se, Puscsaes Cathodes. entertain tony OIMGNe delice eet, aes | De, Hallock om the Question of Finances, | time, took William Brennan and James Duffy inta | following:— 1, caw york Herald to entertain lofty opinions, delicacy, suavity, princi- ple, conscientiousness; to assist the oppressed and never soll their hands, He added he did not make any | ey to occult science, but with euch a guidance their life-work they could look back with con- tulation; they would earn fortunes, they would ave self-respect, they would have honor, they would have integrity, they would have consciences devoid of fear to God and man, and besides being sktiful lawyers they would by word and deed further the supreme laws of God and advance kingdom. t Steinway Hall includes Madame Gaumasign thee world-famed artist, id de Meyer (so ‘aptly styled the “Lion Pianist’), Signor Antavant, r, G. W. Colby, Herr Listemann, the vio- linist, and other artiste, de Meyer, that leviathan of pianists, was in all hy ‘shone ally with the lady as her twin , playing of his own piece, ‘‘Airs Russes,”” down the house in a torrent of applause, and an table en- core ensued. The same warmth of appreciation his inimitable taent attended his performance of own fantasia on the “Grand Duchess of assy and egy ogy he responded, to the great light of the , ‘We assure the writer of this notice that no in the colt fifteenth verse.) The reverend speaker then Few missions have resulted in the diffusion of more to argue that the promise of God had thus | spiritual advantages than that which has just been the spirit of prophecy been made to mankind, | ciosed by the Redemptorist Fathers, and the magni. as mtr Me ema pitenginen tay. 2 Na tude of their labors can best be estimated by a refer- @ matter of great moment to us, asa ie ence to the numbers who participated in the fruits of 7 po 4 ote ene can ¢ (ong their zealous endeavors. Since the inauguration of wits! the spirit of universal progress, to in- | the mission no less than eleven thousand persons, e ints the conditions imposed upon us and our | after earnest preparation and frequent attendances iment 6 i an romikorae ean ioe ine {moral | to the instructions held forth in the cathedral, par- ca the y'act HAL we Hud boon successtully en. | tOOk of the Holy Eucharist, while as many as fifteen d to bear \the convulsion of intestine war, that | hundred and eighty-three, including several convert: Executive he,24 of the nation could be brougnt to | received the sacrament of confirmation administe: . custody and started with them in the direction of By some sort of queer mistake in their advertising | te ‘tation house. A mob soon collected and a des- economy the spiritualists got matters strangely mixed rate attempt was made to rescue the prisoners, yesterday, so that those who expected to hear Mr. | Stones and brickbats were hurled at the officers, and when they reached the corner of Tillary and Adam 4. B. Conklin—in personnel a sort of mummy with fe peveral pistol shots Wore ‘Gane the its eyes open—a desiccated individual with all the vi- | McHenry, who was closing his liquor store at tality evaporated out of him—did not hear him and | time, was shot in the thigh and severely injured, He his adventures with her Majesty the Queen, and ao | wras taken to his Apartments over the store and. & ly 6 those who expected to hear Mr. Butlock—a doctor by | ouers, Hronnati ‘abd Duty, were locked. up in’ ice wer, some queer sort of degree and the exact opposite of | Forty-first precinct station house to ans Mr. Conklin—4id hot hear him, but somebody else in- EXPLOSION AND FinB,—A kerosene oli lamp ex- stead. So it happened that Mr. Conklin, the ossified | ploded about nine o'clock last night in the residence Charch of the Transfiguration—Consecration of the New Altar—Impressive and Interesting + Ceremonies. el McCullum, India a . folat on Of the constitation, had given the most Reverend the Archbishop. Altogeth individual with every ounce of his vitality | of Dani street, Greenpoint, but le over jumns of. the Ni Moree to th) vaguences of ‘our idee of | the mission Was & COMpIC? Arcee waving Teens | Yesterday morning the new and magnificent altar pumped out of him except the tittle that the samatey forzanateiy escaped injury. ‘The damage | Youx HERALD. territory and the’ extent of our power. It had | commencement elicited the ready and unanimous given to this nath 0 to become the great cosmo- | response of the entire parish to which it was exclu- ic nation Of the earl, and we accept it that this | sively extended. The services at the cathedral tion shall be the head @nd not the tall; that it bh age 3 were as usual exceedingly weil attended, i be above and not ,eneath. We had now igh mass was begun at half-past ten o’cl hed the point at which 6, 'f success became our | thé Rev, Mr. Kearney officiat ‘a8 celebrant, an feat source of peril, in that We were Hable to as- | was goné through with all the solemnity and impres- ne that God was no longer mh Cessary tous. The | siveness Gharacteristic of that ceremony. ratic principle, it was rn.’ declared, was a | The music performed on the occasion was Merca- of the past, and was repel ied by” the liberal and | dante’s masa in D minor, for easive rit of the age. But We had now | décidediy one ox his richest and thost brilliant compo- iched that stage of advancement when or the first | sitiona., Althoug possessing some very dimcult .in history rewnblicaniam had vindicd 4 itself it was nevertheless well the fine hose points where It was deemed most vy /nera- | unison displayed by y,hose wiio tool {n it render. its adoption ant erance of @ vast area 9.14 | ing it quite a grand feature in the Sr and monizing of a mix Teen under a govern. | of the day. The choruses both in the A’ and ‘of and by the will cf the people, But even ow a porta, Were sung very pMeouively, With no more of the Roman Catholic Church of the Transfiguration, Mott street, was consecrated to the service of Al- mighty God with all the pomp and ceremony with which the Church invests her ritual and discipline. The church itself has recently undergone repairs nd alterations of a most extensive and thofough description. A spire has been erected and a bell hung within it, and large additions have been made to the number of pews. The completeness of the renovation reflects great credit upon the skill of the architect and the liberality and munifi- cence of the congregation, upwards of ¢40,000 having been conirikuted by them and expended for DeaTH FROM INsuRiES.—William Jackson, @ iad arteen years of age, was struck in the head with stone by William Hester, another lad, on the 26th of April, and afer lingering Saturday night died. A burial permit had been by tuending pi ian, tthe ‘Bighteouth ‘precinct Police sto; it and notified a coroner, \ _—— Axotnen Kerosene AccIDENT,—Mre. Sarah A, Saunders, of 262 Rivington street, was about erase! from a table oikexp oued, bursting the Sag har wi Baunde a cl and bari her ina ere jothes, shocking belonged to alr =] Basten’ Disrercr.— aid Bot i Aa # bathe! olisal nena ootet North Tearteath otnon the antipodgs of the former and into whose capacious body all the vitality of the former seemed to have fietioon. and ‘consumed, wish gomiania Tie yn! e been pumped, distending the skin of its victim ex- ‘was cansed from a retort lodging on eceedingly, did speak, and spoke quite at length and | the roof of the r iam 000; uninsu with that good natured suavity of manner for which | A Prize Fié erelville p' corpulent individuals are usually distinguished, | *companied by a large number of thelr friends, vis- Entering the hall at half-past seven o'clock the spec: | tted Hunter's Point at an egriy hour yesterday morn- would have observed a cleanly shave: for the purpose bnt the police of pes ged ntieman at the ‘teak. whose eore face (eg Forty-sevonth da TY 07 ewtown consta- al’p it, in the placid com; re of its | bles followed ine that they concluded vipbrse tito me, prick me with pins, 1 am | to return to Ni Swale more favorable op- SSeowutr of tie most sod undistervable | porvuniy. Ne” ork ora

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