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f NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1869.-TRIPLE SHEET. 3 Ps SAS aA saa oe fier heart. Jest tt, | the Latin, seentu took no formal text, but spoke to them in 2 manner | other addresses and the taking up of another collec- | for the first time in their lives to the holy com- mantles 6 Oe eae Pgs Phas? of Fourenain, that plaubly showed that he aa the spit af | tan the services qosed. munion. At the conclusion of the mass Archbishop j » | divi tt wok, foaming in loving devotion, | doctrines, Viewed eS CE ry ate oe ‘ ‘Trenton. Spalding addressed thechildren briefly on the nature J ; a, forever, and sharing all thought | also that the grand from that took refer to the paid singers ‘TrENTON, March 14, 1860. | o14 salutary effects of confirmation, and then directed ‘Mid Moy, Mimere wis oace s'poor daxerswho begeed | care ‘of uct ip the. communion in The inu- | _In St. Paul's Protestant Bpiscopal church, in | tom now toappronch the altarin order to recetve the . he koities, and was | you can out of this life, But, he oes Communion, he suid, was now CODE | South Trenton, the pastor, Rev. J. C. Brown, de- | sacrament,” The boys were the fitst to. receive cone Interesting Church: fervices” a New York, of making ‘teas tigh of hit Yet | Duero and al : an “eh etpeland st totnyY™ soe | Urea a very ale annare on “Oar Coury | Sounds kneing [a pit bf te rebut Brooklyn, Washington, Poughkeepale, the the eyes of his soul, and he wrote | larites' way of taking care of number one is purely | Very” snperior musical tale Was true; | Deliverance and National Progress,” ‘The reverend | vonterrnten Noe ane all the usual solemnines ya, Olly the of which has charmea and | selfish, and selfishness defeats ita own end. When | but So far as the work of the geen, Ss wae gentleman commenced by observing that there 18 | Chapman and Mr. J. P. Ryan oficiated as godfathers, Dieased @ million hearts, We have seen similar | the leaves of the curl up aud hide the petal worthless. ibe ingees, woes w ame istasteful to unbelievers than to be- | Among the males confirmed was a very old colored Trenton and Other vities, ‘wonders in our day. Such progress of ilfe and such | from the eye, then it is the worm eata out its life with the parts en to them. ‘The work | nothing more man, Whose air of piety attracted ‘notloe, & growih could he ‘compared to nothing 80 well at 8 and its sweetness. perlahes. The er said he they ‘are now paid ought to be done by.| lieve that God governs this world, They would | ‘rhe piris were next made recipients of the sacra foreat grown from a single Otis planta. could not recognize a relygion which has no God, no Cee tee erate Tadae wee. calves have us entertain the doctrine that our world is | ment in the same manner, Mra. Berrett, wife of ex- , ok igs trash & It gives a theme of hope Creator, no, hereafter. world is pravania, | © AES to consecrate vaitare’so obtained | controlled by natural causes, as tié sun and other | Mavor Berrett, and Mrs. Riordan acting at got. at rouse us and prompt our best endeavors. | possible and destrable. The thought gives nsec mothers, After the sacred rite had been conferred SENSATIONAL SERMONIZING | 1: snows wnat powers of ars possible to ail, | Dieasure. It’ takea ‘off the darkness “hero to | t0. God's service onthe Sabbah. Give. we this | systems are. ‘They scot at’ the idea that He inter- ‘up@n all prepared to receive tt Archblshop ie Just auiainmenis MAY crown those who begin with- | Know that we omy | close our eyes hore | $2500 aald the preacher, now expended for music | sereqin our earthly concerns. But’ they are’ con- delivered a brief but toucning discourse, telling the Great author, scientist, hero, 0 Open em a brighter ai 5 } children Were now strong Christians sol- detlverer can rise from the heart of a little ¢ | beautiful to take care of the whole lite? anf ‘movement, | founded by the very words of which H child what may not we bocome by help of Dumber one i 7 learuingof Goa) by folowing the. | of Branch’ of the Catholic. church in, tis | Says that Gove sparrow falls’ to the ground withont ate lord ate nly pan Sees Opinions of the Pulpit on the | cures ndcarory” hanya eplen Bealaa wax | Advice of the 8 ie not slothru but Spartan ne tase sete, “He, Malley Ot, Mee | evidentiy take’ an interest: in man, toe noblest of | {em puro in order that the Moly Spin mieht awelt ; wi ung. ness; in; a pon Been i they Drama, ‘the Vulgar Press | siti nite taney ares | Saas aoa hn tm boro ot | Bova ty Ret iy oe Reichs | Wee Gard tact as dar tori | aro elas eos ona Gare ee le & ive je 0 aie.’ “ and National Affairs. ever. We should rise ad ulate wealth of | The Was one of those lively, sensible, || he what 1s hoped for the Episcopalian ey Buy merely St 8 epee benediction, “prongunce’ by then, Are op. " * mind and know! give it to and not } semi-cony discourses which it’ would be America is ever attained, is would be by,| Soe. iy Sue bad In the afternoon,, .at vespers, always beg. If such wi Of iife 8} out of | well for pastors riests to give more of. It was | following in the ranks of which St. Mary’s now their suffering of the from ‘again assembled at the-church and were treated to a carr mind in this world, what may we not, tise to in the | one of those during the delivery of wich the con- | the van. Pew doors will have to be xnocked off, debarkation from the Mayfower, and which } ifrring discourse from the Nev. Charles f; White, Yesterday was one’ of those peculiarly agreeable | future! What moral virtue and plies, gregation does not go to sleep. It was not a rehash | and pograred bits of silver indicating propric- Senenines on, down to the yn. of pastor of the chureh, who not oniy repestea saucht days which are always yweleomed ag foretastes of | f° folded tn the human heart, to be unfolded by the | of some gospel text, bat a sermon which could not | torship to little sections of the house Of (od USL. | (oe tere a ae Aare for achsice: | that had been explained by {pe Archbishop im the an They a d mak 4g Z approaching spring, and the result was, atleast in | foriugs, ave been converted aud filled minintries of | hens it vettor Gh ana bettas mam nind women: | asthe aif and the ircedoun, must be such, that al | thought and act. But slavery was ti great moral ey tater ue cocemade ot one direotion, that most ofthe metropolitan churches | goodness, Magdaiens have become saints of holi- 2 shall be able to enter it with as little restraint as | cancer they left us. Millions me low long, 0 parti 1 attend il be the. > tg | DE38s ‘wicked Sauls have become Pauls of Christian MADISON 5} PRESBYTERIAN ‘CHURCH one now does who owns a pew and thinks hiraself on } Lord, how long?” This generation its more per- looked with rin the ft day and Were well attended, 4p.will be seen. by the reports | 109 ang nimity. Most of these possibilities UARE RCH. @ the same level in every way with those wlio sit | fect Progress conld not allow liberty to be trampled | (oreo WPoven by parents, He alluded 10 an espe- from osher clties the weather was generally ne and | gre folded in. the heart of every cinid. Even Ciliinn, und ObristianicycLecture by. Rev, Br. | *2onsum. under foot. | The battle flelds of Chattanooga, Vieks. | cou! th next to God, Atthe close of his remarks the Bishop made | burg and the Wilderness gun, that no slavehold! and round manner to the abominable cancan dances, which, he said, ought to be condemned by had alike good effect in those places. A number of | Christ, in. his heavenly glory, " Martin. m aristocracy, no opponents of freedom could ex! the clergymen indulged in very marked sensational i Oat, al ot pertetion Ro, man can, reac Mai aianMetseaaameet TT ee here. ‘Our ‘constitution, our Congress and freedom | every parent having. e particle of decency In his discourses, taking as the subject of theirsermons | our ideal; it will shine before us lke & rainbow | pr, sanms?) was mumerously attended last evening PLYMOUTH CHUBCH, Sekeel cece ae een te Oe eal eaeetner amar taumaien teen tateaasinataoar various secular subjects, and treating thelr themes heaven. The highest Sermon by the Rev. Heury Ward Beecher. | our forefathers and the Caulfield and Noyes. as well as Cannon, Cg Ober eg to Foniana May." the soprans, performed Tm their respective parts with mach The President having been informed yesterday that a Looted ~ been a fae! at at ioe pen litan Methodist church, an e scene of last course last evening. The miracle of the blind man, | jig yherty, We stand much Guy prc eslous.of | Ennday was not likely to be repented, attenclen Aer- Bartimous, the son of Timeus, who sat by the way- or ‘of civilized nations than before the war, pines. pie pe moreing.eepempanie’ anny yn » cident occuryed. side begging ag Jesus passed by receiving rele, nomen amines Sp. Sommane eae rived a Ittle late, but the kexton seemed to beon his sight and the circumstances attending 1t were | ness pne mind is overwhelmed with the vastness | the lookout for him, and as soon as he mad@ his ap- eloquentiy described in the commencement of the | of our country. In thirty years we shall have a (pearance he was courteously conducted to his pew. i was the Rey. Dr. Haas, sermon, and the reverend gentleman dwelt at con- | Population of ‘one hundred millions of inhabitants. ba eee. suRrneD wa, he J pe a bg rt the mountainroad of ange kKLows That the numblest soul will yet be | to listen to a lecture by Rev. Dr..W. A. P. Martin, on bright as he is, and flourish his perfections, .Sucn 18 | “Ching, and its Claims.on Christians of New York.” our hope. The conditions of. ihment for all #10, | arrer the usual devotional exercises Rev. Dr. Adams Fl ICE! ' of repentance, conversion, atonement, are ail in- BEEIROUS MPUCRS 20, RP oa cinded in if, and sooner or Inter will be met. But | introduced, the Jecturer with a few appropriate pre- how important that we repent to-day and give our | fatory remarks, in which he alluded to the fact that ST. PATRICK'S CATHLDAL, hearis w God! The longer we sin against God the | twenty years ago Rev. Drs Martin was commissioned longer we shall Insult our own, nature and suffer; Sermon vy the Very Rev. Dr. Stzrr, Y. G. tne sooner we repent and live in godliness, loving it | by the Board of Foreign Missions a missionary to “ Tor Its own sake, the sooner our heaven will begin. | China, and had.so well performed his work that he Yesterday being’ Passion Sunday the images aad. Shall we pot rise and li 30d? Who would growi » pe Pictures of the eruckixson were velled in token of | ince @ dog when matte Losoue ikeardoves Who woud | ROW returned on a vistt a”professor at the Imperial mourning. 'The Cathedral waa crowded ‘to over- | sicep like a siaggard when ‘he should rise with the | College in Pekin, Rev. Dr. Martin, referring b cea cg lariat Gane notiniat ‘The forty-sixth and concluding verses of the tenth chapter of St. Mark's gospel was selected by the | which our armies endured them. Libby Prison aud Rey. Henry Ward Beecher as the text of his dis- | Andersonville show the price of liberty. oe towing, and the ceremonies were conducted with, | {4% amdclml wie bills of victory. to tue subject of his ‘discourse, the’ claims | siderable length on the manner in which the Jews | a" posi Hard Heats. WL Re MuliDHedARA'| Ooo ipnnnig, begataon soe kent wie belleved the usual religious, grandeur end solemnity. ‘The ALL SOULS’ CHUacH, of China on the Christian people of New | of the period travelled from place to place. There | now, The promise of a bright and happy future is ™ lei reg me not Tee ge thee Herp sea ieomeg Rev. Mr. MeGean was the officiating clergyman. At ped York, said that he would first take a brief | was a vast concourse of people passing from Jericho | before us. ‘We eme FORD UE | IB, war | eee ctally wanmteniod te Wee eli oF Lise soe Wo ie doe wit! 1 fi Sf to Jerusalem, and Jesus and His disciples were het Teta arenes, Ome A. Unter — among the number. Bartimeus, when he heard | our nation forbearing. We have dorne that Jesus, whose name was known ihroughout the | patiently with men who © oat not be allowed length and breadth of the land, was passing by, he | io govern for a single day. Whatever a man’s men- raised his voice above the Patiering of fect and the | tal or bodily endowments may be he is unit to ov- hum of the multitude and eried out, ‘Jesus, thou | cypy the most exalted office in the gift of the people son of David, have mercy on me.” He did not want | j¢ 4 degrades himseif by intoxication as did our to ask ‘who or what Jesus was; he was satisfied dent: ident, But now we have the to learn that he wno bade the sea to be stil, | Mw,seclcemtal President: But now we have the turned the water into wine and made the blind to | ington and Lincoln, in the White House. No one can seo was ing before him. Not in the usual | hetter testify to our need of peace than he. His post- ing manner of the helpless men-'| tion has taught him the sufferings and losses war dicant e speak, but earnestly aud man- | entaiis on the people. We need wise, prudent, fully. He sounded a note that was discord- | thoughtful and brave men to undo the evils we have ant to. the multitude. The Jews were @ festive | porne—men not afraid to punish trasgressors, high people, singing sougs, patriotic and religious, a8 | or low; men above sycophancy or self-adulation, they journeyed from city to city, when therefore | men who will not be bri A blow will be given to the poor blind Bartimeus struck in on this occasion | qishonesty. All will be held to stricta account, Cor- he Was quite unwelcome. Men who have their minds ruption in office and courts of justice is a sure precur- " corruption. as sorely tried us. We have ‘ ( icadings of @ poor wretch like Bartimeus. No single | passed through a fiery forums, but we have come | @S80r J. M. Clark, an enthusiastic temperance eart (on record at any rate) felt pity for the r | out purified. "Let our prayers continually ascend for | advocate and a heavy dealer tn adjectives, took up man, But the Saviour’s heart was touched, and he | Presdent Grant and others in authority. remember. the fight against the rum sellérs and rum drinkers on ‘stood still and listened to the er so earnestly made, They who at first pade thin to nold his peace ing cot Pb tp aig shineseae pitti: and for a time spoke eloquently. To-night the prin- cipal point of attraction was the Washinton street Methodist Episcopal church, where Rev. W. G. W. now said, “Be of comfort, rise, he calleth * shee.” How true It Jetuat when a man is determined Tears VOBATCHAS eae Warrants ot pan tata very obstacles turn success. ‘y mercies, Our country through the freedom panaht Lewis, the pastor, delivered @ discourse against theatres. The subject was doubly attractive, be- cause, for the first time in its history, Poughkeepsie us by the Bible is a refuge for the opj has a fine, well appointed opera nonse and an excel- the conclusion of tle first gospel the very Rey. Dr. | The Church—Whnt It Is and Whut It ly Not. | retrospective View, to take an account of our . at v. bligations to the Chinese, of such as can be traced Starr, V. G., preached'a sermon, taking his text'from,| ‘The 'Rev. ‘Dr, Bellows commenced last night a | fy ehetorn of benents rereivede We coke ites St. John viit., 46-49—"Which, of you convineeth me | Seriés of six Sabbath evening lectures at All Souls’ | our debt to the people of Great Britain io nee of sin?? ‘The reverend gentleman observed that | Churet, corner of Fourth avenue and Twentieth | tional, blood and our peculiar institutions; to the this being Passion Sunday it was sacred to the | Street. ‘The stibject of the initiatory discourse was Rog eee Fah OnE amen ia cult nS aaeee sufferings ‘of our divine Saviour, and hence ‘we | “The Church, its office, use and authority.” Before | dea tor the Bible, the hook ofjhooks, the source of ed ne ce portions of our langa: to India, tl in, and even. attempted his life by casting stones | ROWRCEd the subjects of the vartous lectures, and | Prati Resins Of race; a ee lay trace an ab hin. For that-reason this was calicd Passion Sun- | Stated'that they would ngt ‘be controversial, but be | to China, for a people so ancient cannot have ex- day, the images end pictures of the crucifixidn were | composed mainly of statements of his opinions of re- | isted. so. long without exerting some influence on the covered and veiled and the remainder of Lent was | ligious trath, The text was taken from the first | rising civilization of the West, As seeds of plants are consecrated to the glorious mystery of our Saviour’s | chapcer of the Epistie to the Ephesians, at the | carried by the waves, the winds, the birds to distant pasion and to mourning for His death. ‘Lhe gospel | twenty-second and twenty-third verse. ‘And }| lands and no human eye’ can discover the path by of the day was part of the discourse delivered by our | hatu put all things under His feet, and | which they came, so the migratory people through biessed Saviour in the treasury of the Temple. He | gave n to be. head over ail things | Central Asia carried the germs of future civilization Reece on many occasions asserted the trath of | to the Church, which 1s His body, the fulness of Him | with them and no distinct trace of its path is left. iis divine mission by the muracles.He performed | that filletn ali im all.” ‘There was atime, said the | But some of the more recent discoveries and arts of before the J va and, although they could not deny | speaker, when any:child who might be asked, what | the West can be traced to their origin and in all tie pupernatural power which He possessed by the | ts tie Church? would ‘answer that it was Christ’s | honesty we must award to China what is due, performance of those miracies, still they persisted 1n |} fold, in which were contained all, who.were to be | The art of printing and the manufacture of Siaung that they were performed by thelagency of | saved. In order to this answer being satisfactor, paper ‘was first known in China, where existed the devil. He conving them of the unblemished | jt wonld be necessary that both ‘questioner an ibraries containing one hundred thousand printed character of His life by asking them the question, | answerer ‘should have identical ideas as to the | volumes 500 years before Faust and Guttenburg. it “Which of you can convince me of sm?” to whic. | meaning of the words “Christ” and “to be saved,’ | cannot be belleved that travellers from that far off they made no reply, and He said, “if 1 tell} For ages Christ had been generally believed to be | land not have brought the knowledge of this you the truth, why do you not believe Me?” He | lit God, and everybody belleved that the whole | art to the West, jnst as by the same means the ascribed the infidelity of the Jews not vo the want of | world was under {he wrath of God and had | silkworn, the art of manufacturing silk and the seed testimony.on His part but to the corruption of their | to be saved in order .to es therefrom. | of the ‘mulberry tree, on which the worm lives, hearts and the want of disposition to hear His | If it was stil believed that all ‘men were | were brought to Europe. That splendid re Tollowed in wtny instances yen mi the present ay? | to\go ‘wo hell uaess they sooesonses sarsewsing | We ben se ate aaa onan rom “Chiba 4 ex) we owe se. Gunpowder they knew lon oh Bere, were some who believed in the doctrines of different from what their consciences pied before pears oy “4 “4 them. President Grant bas a peculiar habit ot always standing at prayers. ti r appears to depart from this ctistom, no matier what may be the faith of the church where he worships. RELIGIOUS SERVICES IN POUCAKSTPSE. Severe Denunciation of the Drama, the Ballet and the Scurrilous Press by a Meth- odist Clergyman. PovenKeerste, N. Y., March 14, 1869. There was a very large attendance at al! the churches here to-day. The pulpits of the various edifices were filled by their respective pastors, ex- cept the Congregational, where the Rev. J. W. Cra- croft, of Ohio, officiated. At Temperance Hall Pro- an was the voice of all the suffering that he had en- | down-trodden of every land. Look at Mexico and are rea ayn ammeter ets | Spam daluged mat peut hey ave oo, fun the Master’s heart, Christ stood still and then Mame daitcel eectdnernae Oke sald, er then eloquenuly depicted ti prom} Roger Bacon had known the art to | ‘Go way; thy faitn hath made thee whole.” The Pane Chinese ons. ent dramatic company. the latter haifway thro but failed to practice wnat their religion | them to, and if Christ came to to save it | make it, and it is sald that a Byzantine, Marcus shah roe na followed Jesus, while the multitude irhzation on ‘the old f Loe ee State High, Saar ‘weeks’ season of tragedy, comedy end ballet. tanght them. In re.urn for teaching the Jews the | would be clearly enough understood in going | Groecus, had introduced it; sotne ascribe its origin | glorified God. and said if States claimed a te existence our | Long before the regular church hour the church was Sayiour was reproached and ed. He mee back to heaven He would leave bel as } to the Arabs, but it is probable tifat it came from ‘The man knew he was blind, and felt a yearning | power abroad would be gone. e Pacific Railroad filled, so that when the moment arrived for nevertheless, patient and discreet, though he @ guide, and this would become the Church. 4 | China, where it was known and used in for the light of the sun and the beauty of flowers. | wouid never be bullt, or if built would be a source ,| the reveren ntleman to commence his remarks strong ean for remonstrance, thereby giving a Ee! A ade I of Christians, mowever, did not now | in war eyen before the Christian era, twelve cen- | His blindnéss was only skin deep, but he felt the de- | or trouble.’ So would the navigation of ar Seat was occupied. Mr. Lewis took grees ex: to the world. Chriatians ahouid be ve in theslong cherished idea of the godhead | ‘aries before it came into use In Burope. Chemistry | fect keenly and was not ashamed to confess it | the Mississippi. But our late war has settled aM | ms from the twenty-ninth verse of the nine- Er ga “de "ga tigen | Sater haan'the Aegmaren char | Cemtae ar ects ame Mace ems | seh Oe guglarmnte nes vies | te ctl gah Setter mi | etc at ean Spe ae He ,coneluded by calling attention to the | was +f ‘ae. ~ ie it of the wee The taeis tna ‘mare fins boo ripen inca es oe 1 Site Deaan his remeeest oer habetrsi-" no general sense of ca'amity which | with astronomy, which sprang from the astrol various circumstances in connection with | could: only iy Senseo by Christ and ning church. of the Chinese. “and iosr all are we ‘indebted to ace to praise and the Lord for F igi gentieman agente ws poe a thy stat- ‘ the Passion. He then announced that on St. | These changes in opimon were not erroneous the Chinese for the discovery of America, for it gave wer San wens to. the are the inistration of God’s goodness and mercy are ; glorious and free.” sto i administer con! ugh the books ascribe the dis- daily occurring around them; but they are stone |. Patrick’s Day a solemn pontifical high mss} temporary. They by themselves in ie | to Columbus a motive as well as the guide for his ituaily biind—and cannot see. To such thea h Stata agree tanas we | Eac ortais puma wal mg, fe | er tere ae ae Sera | matte arp bi iain te | » Avene nige ws iremet mane | asain ease, Sma an, '. l. J ry. im see, e move in Trance, are The tt id tent the Thomas S. Preston, of St. Ann’s church, and that the vine right Kings, these ancient beliefs had | on, and the / magnetic needle guided” him in content wi fe "What contrast is aiforded in the Pe rb ea Grane mi ee a3 in the xtreme to society orals, collection on the. occasion would be ap] riated | been exploded ce and g miore cultivated course; and alti to St. Joseph’s Home, a new ve | eben last | race Peete Ay / eae education were of the magnetic needle to @ Neapolitan in the covery hearsay; of course he never saw him, but theatre is not a school for m writers of May agan asylum for een un- | that also was Charch. ‘Jt was school. Christ | eleventh century of our cra, the Chinese had it eleven a ost Jesus is known. The RELIGIOUS SER’ NEC T. lays chastity; morals of them Ger the charge of the re of Charity. At the | did not cometo contradict the teachers which were | centuries before Christ, though with them, as their Knowledge of ‘him te the frets and the woof of their ' peomtelcs sa Eithad noe better ‘be isd foo Closely, The ol Mrs. Grosz Pity very sweet reta- | already in ba epee) but to add new light to that | books show, it pointed south, and they employed it | whole lives. The most Teminisences. of 0 apes ate scenes and age of stage excite the andi- ttomof the Ave Maria, by the organist, Mr. G ivus | which already ; he did not come eee ou land and sea twenty-two hundred years before it | childhood are entwined around that sacred name. Bridgeport. ence and ‘worst passions of human Schmitz. The mass was. by Sallteri, for | the teachings of life experience and The | was known in le ld gay more, but | Yet Jesus is constantly passing cf them unnoticed. BRIpGErort, March 14, 1860. nature. Mr. Lewis inquired who would be willing fo Voices, The services terminated shortly after |) world was a school before the Church came into ex- | this bill of obi! was enough to put us | The reverend gentlergan concit by an eloquent to die in a theatre the surrounding debanchery twelve o'clock. igtence, and the Church and the world should act in | on the inquiry, ould we do to pay back this to the egation to call upon God while | To-day has been one of the finest of the season, He argued that , PIAS tat Partnership as the same God built both. The Uhorch | debt we owe to China? We have two to com- was ‘was passing. . and the churches were all attended by large congre- | fear of ruin, dare not present true to hfe, but eee wens Denetits qwulcu ‘could not commonly be Eulmed else, | Belentite and teligtean wath ts atone eto featiomay oks the Boneh Consretations chia See" Si Pasaneucus vee my one of 3 Th ic Rite of Confirmation Administered by Bishop | where. Christ was: but was a supernatural | cancel whe stuigatons we owe them, and have } 5 BAPTISMAL CERERONES, morning the Rev, Daniel Lord, pastor, preached the | #® me ne gana plctonel, “ana in fos oretae or 7 Potter, — Dring eepreseasing His mission was to Fateh sw coh eae senrt O° 8 Huropese. “Opes Air Baptism in the East River By | fourth of a seriea of Well considered and able remarks his to the National Police ‘The Protestant Episcopal Church of St, John the | Wona “into Vacmothiig aed and to bat having 0 Anowiedge of abstract science m <0... Celene Aeltatontene, CR ee ae ee ereons | white Fawn” nanibty “Dampiy” and the Baptist, on Murtay Hill, corner of Thirty-fiflh street | them institutional perfect their connection the Christian religion, ‘have not and | It has long been customary among the colored peo- | sermons have been respectively “The Onrist Before} srooaies.” He did not tate to say that the out- end Lexington avenué, was yesterday afternoon ated GRID on See are now in the rear, We can now give t! thetwo | pleof thé Baptist persuasion of tocelebrate | the Beginning,” ‘The Christin the Beginning,” “All abe danse uerade and the thea- the baptismal ceremony in the river about this sea- | Things Createdby Ohrist and ior Christ,” and the gon of the year. Hence for the pest two Sundays | fourth, “The Christ in Man.” The following are lation into ‘and to estat a ritual powel well filled, the occasion being the administration of worstip. ‘The Ohurch was ® i a ‘rful seeds from which our prosperity has dra’ fe there has been no little enthusiasm prevailing among Tae ! the lg Ne Pago of the discourse:— the rite of confirmation by Right Rev. Bishop Potter, | timent, having for ita object the drawing oi Feyond aera eee, kee ee rn ona aichemy, in astronomy not beyond After the regular preliminary services; which were | Of Wen into intercourse with the beavenly world. is are He claimed Ls theatre had made thousands of rology, #0 they have remained sciences. stated in substance that it deranged boisterous Society generally, for tragedy mace men in all ‘other They are in a 5g ie ag et gyn ed. them rad it \- conducted by Rev. Dr. DumMe, assisted by Rev, Mr. CHAPEL OF THE UNIVERSITY. of crnde empyriam and need an infusion | ‘t¢ members of the community in question who | idea in the mind of and com: a pends. 7p 4 red en | Bruce, the Bishop preached a sermon from the text from the West, The government is uctive, An in- Colossians iL, 6, 7>-“As ye have therefore received | Discourse by “Messenger” Snow on the | *titute of learning has been founddd at Pekin as a : Christ Jesus the Lord, 60 Walk yo in Him; rooted} “Time and Manner of the Judgment.? | funilay scuools lave opened ar Oineney ent and built up in Him, and establisnea “in the'faith as | - Bishop Snow preached yesterday afternoon, ‘at | towns. But something more is wanting to enable yo Rave pees tue abounding therein with thanks- } tree o'clock, in the Umversity, on the “Time and | 8ienes to take fra root. The same tree giving.” He that these Epistles were not writ. 4 hy” ee which raises its majestic foliage to the heavens on ten 80 much to impart new truths as to cay. | Manuer of the Judgment.” His text was Daniel | the slope of the Sierra Nevada is a stunted shrub.in 2 pel ge Mg ln Be vill, 13, 14—"Then I heard one saint speaking, and oe frigid ee ftis the epee ae — nese advances in the one case an resses in the other Epistles shonid be written in order to eins, ut the another saint ‘seid to that certain saint who was the growth of the tree. ‘Even 90 the sum of ri¢ht- : paths of Cbristan duty to Christ's follow%rs, The | Speaking, How long the vision, the daily and | epugpess, the truth of God revealed in the Christian ) Swaling Zor aome tas on tiie opis ho pesedetes | see aumTeasion of Genolation, to give both | religion, creates, that, inteuceeaal atmoepuere with ; fol led t out which science cnnnot flonrish. Give them, there- BI venient to the water, in which the show how the principles of the Carls%ian Church are | ‘Ue Sanctuary and the Host to be trodden under } fore tie boon of science and civiiization—give them | henqsccuted convenient ro the water in wh those of the sacred Scriptures. Fie also spoke of | foot? And he sald, to me, Until two thousand | the fible. The earlier eiforis to introduce Christian- | arrange their tolleta preparatory. o tee cold. were either to be ‘made pure by the waters of bap- | tion of ran weough ‘Chets tism” themselves or were interested in witnessing | eventually, the sacrament conferred upon others. Yesterday | ™an Christ to God; both a ty] and practi eben a bag bd ed eae panrins = a the two sexes came fromone so th direction by sere houses ot wee the black so es to one in Christ; that marriage, an air of commendable resignation AG RM, to the Greenwood cars bound for the | Church. As the ee byl 2 cool banks of the river, ata t near the foot of | the Church was taken out of Christ; as man ent to the Dela man. | head’ of the woman so Christ is the in wile fat ot tee tenon Coat a ea eee oe ee rh yar ee AE meet to bea nan Me wii rane aan to be most a : fo |S The tev. William. Patton, D. D., of New: Haven, his subject without gloves, speaking of the theatre in most bitter terms, and denouncmg it and its sur- roundings violently. He closed his sermon by im- pone the congregation to listen to the word of |, and, as all ‘hoped for salvation, to keep away Gh the wuniedt ol tad thane fd masquerades at the- On the subject of the theatre an es a was taken out of man 80 | Second Reformed Church this morning. Rev. Dr. ania coe the Holy Gauri on ie church this morning? on the subject of missions. |A very large number of people listened fo him. This ooeon he ‘addressea the children of the Sabbath school. * those Who are careful to read the ‘Scriptures and act | and three hundred days; ‘then shall the | ity were abortive. ‘The Nestorians from Persta camo | sion. ‘Therere Were not many baptisms, the water | Oflctated at the North church in place of the pastor, RELIGIOUS SERVIGES ELSC WHER S + up to their letter, but: given te, gross violations of from a lower grade of civilization and could not ig decidedly cool, Ti nonies, W the Rev. Gearge Richards. ‘The Key. Dr, Warren, of their spirit. He characterize) the Scriptures as go | Sauetuaty be cleansed.” It is perfectly evident | erccaed, The Roman Catholic missionaries, though Fe cont pie were ‘performed ty ule pastor Boston, a meinber of the Baptist Board of Foreign Newburg. NEwsvna, March 14, 1869, This afternoon several hufidred Free Masons, in fall regalia, turned out to attend. the funeral of one of their number recently deceased. The pro- cession was a quarter of a mile in length, and was witnessed oy thousands of persons. The ceremonies at the grave were !mposing and impressive, The fuil Masonic ritual for burial was observed. Rey. Dr. 8. Irenwus Prime, editor of the New York Observer, preached the morning sermon in the Union church, of which Tis son, Rev. Wendell Prime, has recently been chosen pastor. Dr, Prime took for his text Fociesiastes il, ‘or God giveth lain that even those,“ who ran read | {rom reading uiis question and the answer, that the | many of them did good work aad were zealous Onris- | above pamed, Missions, preached at the Baptist church. His sub- nan cami, pin” the, fact iat ae | Mn aanten Mane jams apna temas | Linn ics they dia nets there te be or | "Ss Ct a Fe doc es, Ci an ers of their c’ “4 were they supporte: litical power or comm: . ry * churel he v. V. 5 achec based on the prinedea and truths of the Bile, gost, Fomother With the Urtle horn which beosite ét: enterprises NOW things Dave greatly changed, | RBLGIOUS SERVICES IN NEW JERSEY, | fom tue test “dring forth, therefore, traits. tn He defended the Zormula of their church, as full | ceeds Voge Rho ee the verses that foliow it | China is feeling her increasing connéction with the pT Rill 0 int for repentence,” and im the evening on the message of tiese fraths. | “Why should they aot have a liturgy, | Wil be pean that Gabriel 6 angel of Goa, was com- great powers of the world, Rnssia, England and Jersey Citys to Ephesns—two very able sermons. The augel trio & ritual embp“iying thew faith? Why should they | manded to expound the viajon Naya I. He there- | Vrance have becomé near neighbors, but they are outood Lekefiert t from “klijai? was finely rendered by ag at hot have % hook of common prayer, through me |S yp pias. raf hag the my with two horns signl- | considered dangerous aud encroaching rivals, The | In St. Mark's Episcopal catirch yesterday a sermon | this church. In the evening the Rev, Dr. 3 3. chosen Wes of Which they could lift up their voices the an a and Versia, and the goat the | Amertcans are jooked uponas the national irienda of | was preached by the fey, Dr. Matson, who took | Richardsod, rector of St. Paul's, preached st Christ in supiication or thankfainess to the great Jenova? { Kingdom of Gfecia or Greece, ‘the four horns that | China, and the empire is desirous of entering into for his text tne following from Hebrews xi, | Chirch,and the Rev. MroPaikner, reotoe OF Christ ‘hey ought to be thankiul for sach a book, It was | 2Foxe from the head of the Grecian goat are poe closer relations With us. The treaty of 1868 securey, a a Xi, | charoh, preached at St. Paul's, There were 8dped Vo all circumstances of diverse religious fecl- | t be four kingdoms, These were Egypt, Syrii the privileges of missionary labor, and white twenty | 16, 17--“Lest there be any fornicator or profane | the usual services at St. Join 8 chureh, <— fogs. and circumstances. He who prayed by the } “hrace and pe ge To the last of these belonged | years ; re were not Tour hundred native vit | person as Esau, who for one morsel of meat sold | reetor, te Rev. E. W, Marcy, omic tating. Bo K prayer book and Itved by the prayer book Was an ac- | the west, out of Pas g rte the Roman empire, | hese ¢ Lieir nutber pow exeesas foot | iis pirthright. For ye know how that afterward, .| te Methodist churches were well attended and the pled oilerer of prayer and lived a good Christian | Pagan end papal; and this was signified py the ex- | thousar ‘y contribute to missions and sehoois, | ua nee ares | services were interesting. The eve HN Me oy . His object, he claimed, was not so much to | ceeding great horn—a power which was to stand | gud some of them even support Chriaiian ministers | When he would have inherited the biersing, he was | at ali the clit Me easneth et By Pamiee hed cefefia thelr creed or the formulas. of their | UP against the Prince ot princes, that is, | of ihcir own Nat mw - aco-ot ance, | Methodist c' Serer Meaney ence ey rym we ele Aivainst Ohrist, and was finally to'bs broken with’ | Ofte! a aulity: Lhe lecturer then gave | ‘rejected, for he found no place of repentance church at twok. Me Latkeceoncresations attended somegettied faith, Many groped through Mfe with | out rues te, weston’ Raman poweR: TAGS We 1 ide pat chad putes deaeention though he sought carefully with teai The.| worship at both of tne Catholle churches, where | to a min ving geod i fits ght wind om andl no cevtaiu Feligions-convictiums. . They were lie te | see that-Persia, Greece and Kome are embraced ip | Gee Brus Wem and gave a grapiic, impressing | preacier Was severe in his dennaciation | there were thomsual services of most gud Vespers. | Knowledue and jos." Not every man who ls geod tn mariner at ea withont a compass. , He enfor j the vision. OG tot ottoog gusand thre? | upon is ,nearers the necessity and tiporiauce for | of the folly of sacrificing for some ‘paltry | The congregation as the Universattss churety in the | Appearance ear OL nee aan necessity of having a settled falth and itving in ac hundred days must mlerstood a8 meautiz | ourscives, nud especially for: New York, a¥.the eye |. ine afternoon was large, the Rev. Scldon ( » Dastor, | rascals are often thi ual ance therewith, He was not liere preaching in any | Yeors.and as reaching to the great day And heart of the American contineht, of planting | present gaia, all that, a. Christian should } onictating, and the serial couference meeting in the | virtuous. the most upt Ed ito Usa spirit. ke did not consider it his@uty to | Tous appearing of Christ. Gabriel expiained the | Christian civilization on the west coastor the Pacitic, | #4 ‘leat im a future state, ‘The corraption that eX-.) oventug was well attended. ‘There were services at | the commimity by the mot thelr words of argument. with any one, ‘Lo the | Symbols of ision) but not the time which t | face to tace te out owaute, . * | ists among politicians ts a sad exainple of tle ebd of! the German school room, on Gold street, ta the | Oniy God, could pronowice unerring! hers of this church, and partiealarly to thos given to measure it; for Daniel fated, and codid ‘ nage! ‘mormitty; 80 that we have arrived ata period whea | arternoon, The # ve Lyceum Spiritual met | hearts and the mot n eb © contirmed té-day, he urged, in conciasion, | bear, no more at that time. But by Teading the pt 7 nga 4 very iiti!e confidence ean t ed in men holding ‘Lanfaye’ ty, Raving | ised to those who ar ght ar pilctt trast.m the Book of Common Prayer } ninth chapter we learn that the same angel waa ST. J0 ible oillces, and the: reason io fear nur teli¢otual and spirit. we eae sent to him ¢ on, Will have to com ves the ttn his instract tant prc honors were pot w blessings God esto make It the guide of their live in doug 80 bh The Rev. Dr. Oix pteached an eloquent sermon hsidyea. Ue. re after the 1 pravity t » dependen | seventy Weeks, which are untversally understood to.| last night, at 5 , ernment of thd: co St, Punt’ tt 4 ‘ f ast nig ‘cis el, in behalf of St. Jon's yee St, Pani’s, | bo weeks or sevena of years, as the prand key of the | q y AE ‘dale chapel, in. behalf .o ro mn Whatever that Ma 4 that the tua? and the seal of the vision. ‘Therefore, wherg | GUNA. a coctegy of young men attached to this piace and | there can | be ¢ oa Raster the seventy weeks began there commenced the | Of worship, and who attend to the wants and dis | wonder that in such a state of things rel ee two thousuad three handred days of the viston, | tress of “he numerous poor In that district. The i in, great peril, Another subject on w Havens that pout of commencemeng) was, the going | Capel -wag filed to repletion. The choir—a re- | the “Shtakce ‘Givelt with great foro ; New Havss, Mabon 14, 100 fort of the commindiment to restore and bplld Je- | MArka/Aty st elections from the Ora | emphasis 19.the . disregard and © aim by se wa ean . . Day the Lee “The Wone | Tisalem, See tes Vth chapter of Ezra. The orio of Elijal " from Mosart’s | toil profanation of tho holy state of marriag Who At the morning service to-day al e ntre bees oa" ni? Tata * <2 gg ahead t is B. as given in all | TWotrth Mass, ud precision, | ean tell tie anxieties and Mental z | sareh ihov.! Proteasor Sakis, Af thie Wald! Thebi dit lors of Lite. é From that date. ‘the pertod in er the direction of Dr. James Pech, wio presided | ny xther of a@ family Who fir t e + putea a Cleat bes tne #ity The Rev. Day K. Lee delivered ‘a sermon on fils reached to the autumn of A. D. 1844, and he organ, im these distress in, 105 to provide foy lis childven eminary, prea . ; — sunject lost everiing. He took his toxt from St, Jom | Wen acrived the great “ay oF ine fleansing ot the _——-- the bare necossaries of life aud whose ing for ~ at Matthew Mippnwre ; f A waeluary, that 18, the Ohare’ ad. dl LELIGIOUS SERVICES IN Yt. rigiiteousnee voted malts PB hate” of ae ix, S Jn referring to the: blind man wh 7 aia number of passages proving the sate, RELIGIOUS SERVICES IN BROOALYS 3 io asin ‘oo be The weather being t sight «was restored, the stoty of that miracte, H pe the temple, with its surroundings, VAL ‘ “ery ~ martyrs of old, who ever ke vartou! arches he ver he sald,’ was retold in the simplest words to } turch of Christ, to which Paul says, “Y¢ Gro ST. MARY'S CHURCH. es-on that the Kingdom of eainé ch y. | to«tay, and were mainly very inte: bring the sete and [ts Characters before his hearers | ; saute oF Raped Fo ve of ‘st " aia aaner pach College, preached a-dia- | sosopi’s Catnolic choretithe w e of the ‘oll It18 abdolatesy | ae sv Ibi o Pak " ee a8 and make them seo ant feel It, The chapter was go It should be cleansed bevte irene | Tset Revs Bishop Licticjohe on Paid Singer na bewaK i . +44 profeasot Seotve, | M+ 804 vespers at four PA ati were we i © full of | Ohler nto possession of et ein the @pprence and Free Chnrches. win thet Street oharcls Rov. Fro! en tew ner Andrew .O'itelily oMlelating, ‘Cae congress pron Tt: Bean gy asec emi aH yaoi of Christ and Of God, fot in whee | This Js.a church to which'the stereotyped phrase, ge, preached as both tke morning | Father Andee * . @ivive and, human Ife that 1 convinced evFy | iixanctmuct Ibo olwanawat As wrttl core Wat yh agp Bh Th es men tt f baokviee, ft raing ho preached 1 church, was: densely sie tho her. * . ' is wer, read ‘& large and fashionabie congr jon,” does not oa .< i, 45, iniended to show the | 7, ii enlightened mind of its mspitation.. © The | isuian t., 27 aioh 1V, eH! LAKH, 6, 6, ‘ mery ‘ ich Christ un | we nurse from Johia ta 45, newer those | Charles A. Harv jetivered a mo: and preachér mentioned the wondets of Ilo brongyt | 173 Daulol vil 0, 21, ; Malachi “ty, 1; | SPP, or rather apples but in part. No one who u mas ehowld ner } divine character of Christ, and, to inne ‘id aici for a Wn this bike vemiee'a’’ “heart 1 | Matenow xa Second “ihessalontans 1, 8. | Ws present yesterday éould doubt that the congre- Mb ow i Soy en aaa Sino tang tie. ¢ we on thip ous j . ce art and | nese, with tude of scetgtures Of similar Im- | gation was large, for there wefe not seats for all od the Saviour, because they aro guilty of OF the Mivio. tn the a tr revealed to him, and passod to speak of the wonders | port, fiily prove that the Oyvindt: witl bs thoroughly | that ne uae . same orime, aeoording to the Ay jo Paul, whea | 0 Hdio, | Tn & { all thtetlectuai and moral life, and the goodness | eleahrod im Unis great day “Of the \ndcment of the | “At Cate and remained through the service; but as commit ain. Had the Jow upon “Chel by and forever unfolding them, ‘The bima | UYMg and the dead, by the wor), it and provi. | to ite being “fashionable” he could not but thank [as tie a have tg tte m an represent a all. The wmivadle was an acted acoomplish tie fe meter a \ rid An all] God that it was not. St. Mary's isn free charoh, "Wi pr ave .lar more.cruel when they and \ s . MtAGIe we ‘ necompillsh Vde judgun ol » world. ri s porte - vert J lore cruel « [rounise of greater Wonders to come, upon ot | Will ail things Lo praparod for the dessont of the | suPPorted entirely by the votuntary offerings | TG “Ponts Methodist F ont po irat, the wonders 12 tel ee Mat life an f king Of zio'vy, who will, by the first resurrection, or bugregation contributed weekly. The vered by the Rey ) world they whi be oy i ihe Ma may red by. ita eq ation, Make a con final ig thet would impress a stranger dodist minister in Ap e | plensn: Ky 13 NOB this ho that Rot and bexaod :” i | and etern 4 between the righteous and yoing in would be the fact that there at least Newark. | hortat 1s coull not De 18 fh child sitting on the catpet, and iow help- | ihe wick ms ax nteous wil! shite forth as the | Is rec et that ihe God whom the peuple poe " i . wade to a8 to-day, less, how bitnd to all thonelt and knot | aun in t Who hath as lo Worship is no reapecter Of per Again was there a grand turnout of the church BINA Hey i : AL the Metiouist Bpiscopal chiren tho Rev. I. As Cod and heaven | Contrast Ww with the nutho eare (0 8, Without regard wo apparel, #0¢ goers in this city’ yesterday, Every temple of the RELIGIONS SERVICES IN WASUIVETOY, Oakley; pastor, preac an eent sermon ob tronomer, « poet, prophet or Cirist— whi . oe ling or Culture, tuingie there on torma of perfect | borg had its full quota of worshippers. “At the “Laine n St. Paul's second epistld to Peter, Aistanoe ‘hotweei then! Would the distance, he- FONTYASEUOND STREET PR-SOYTERIAN cHUTOM equality, the manor te woinan in poor attire hay. | OF" Ms " " Diet Adatintureroa | first chapter, thireci ‘ea, | Uhtak it meet, Swees you and sons heg culate ae Ls ie beg re VATY 86 s R:SOYTERIAN CHURCY, ogi ate ne prainder Of the fact. The sp First Presbyterian church in the forenoon the dacrae | qe sacrnmont of Con Sal a A ag niatera ae long as 1 om tn thi acto, to stir yea ug by gar it ist Te bogs tor w rattle oF candy stick; vot | Seren y, | Of the place, as forced upon you whether you Will or | ment of the Lord's Supper Was parvaken of by & Howdred Children by Archbishop kr ubranee."? What wonder vf tio ave folded ti that heari, like | S€? Alavi of Our Tnes—Sermou by Revs We | not, is ove ul brotherload, oF kiasuip. as though wl ‘odes Invite Sonim, ai aed pr vebinag ryt ed Bid tonal Presidout. Grant at the. Methos |? 'At tiace (piscopal) church Rev. Aleeander petals in inly bad or onketn adorns! He may Do- | A. Hoots recognized (hat the love they thelr common | Very large c : ; bn on ge Rr bap he Capron, rector, delivered a very eloquent diavourse come at auton Defoe was ouce A little beggar iike | ayy estyterian church on West Forty-second | Father makes them as one iaintly, This feeling of | forenoon. The clarch was crowded, politan Methodist Church. hs isatan Mtt., 6, O—"Hut Me wes wounded for our that aud Whas could his motitor guess of hrs fature? lnterest one in another is so apparent, so hearty and ‘The exercises incident to the missionary auniver- WASHINGTON, March 14, 1809. dere #:’ He was bralsed for onr Iniquities, ef v0 be fe wre e < | 84ront, near Seventh avenne, last evening the pastor, my - 5 transgresstons; 7 Yet his eyes were: opened and he wrote & hook | * | so enconraging that no person who enters tue door sary of tho Sunday school “Attachéd ,to the Union t rameént of confirmation was administered }* * * and tho Lord hati laid oo iit ‘ini- hich mde his name tminortal, I thay becoiae a | Rev. W. A, Stott, delivered a clear, logi¢al and foret- | feels as if he Were treading on forbidden ground, | *'Y . we oy wen he Gacrawen’ " nity of ug ail iu) erieatist. Hambolat was once the samo, remarkably | pie discourse on the seowarism of our times or the | OF Was there by suiferance or the august | street Methodist Episcopal church, of which Rev. | to.tay by Archbishop Spalding to about one hin. | 4 uty of Us Oil 4 Presbyterian ohnroh, all even at filteen, atid giving e eat on des if Jobin Atkinson is pastor, took place yesterd: fer . st. 3 ; Bd parted: ' i x fost. But his apes were opened. teawn caine parting | NEW vysiem of religion which is being advanced, | Crm tescenslen, Sy a geemmolder, The mpree | oot in the meetihy house, Rome x08 jerenica were | dten children, hein akagdbhit? exe. ry be gb jennie agi ovat Coatsoatee Be a6, ta rivers on His mittdy ho waried to every Hort of’ | The system whose advocates do not believe | tion is more than. ‘confirmed as the services | present, Os Well a8 a large comeregation of | mthis city. The boys were neatly dressed and wore | ‘rhe ‘o you, do ye even go to them)? HA hould science gathering ricfest fretgit, ho beGatme king {4 , 7 ceed, ‘the music co: the organ | adults, After singing, prayer and the taking up of | pue rosettes on thelr jackets, while the little girls | soul’ dts evan’ 6os rad Of sclouicey receiving tribate irom a frindred pio: | 1% MAY individual future existence of | the | Eines sin a tow vate Ma Ee a heen creat | & eolisction, General” theotora: Kungon, delivered were clothed it gieinéals’ O¢ aybtioan white, ‘Tha | SCOT, TAs Green Sua nM, Mme cone Vinoes, and rom the dome of Wis towering “Kosmiog?? | SOUl such as promiged the Christian faithful, | part of the House the “pealing anihoms.of, praise | an address suitable to’ the oecasion. He declared : by eer eie rirst Presuvtcrian chrireh, Re. Dr. Sewand, he stepped Into heaven to éxplote ith wonders and | and who claim that the sole alm of oft oxistence | arise,” The singing has this merit, that if itis not | nothing presented such a sublime spectacie ns a | attractiveness of tho latter was much enhanced by vat Line a lveled) & Very eiogusur HuGniS 4 menaene sf master’ its Mehta, Tt may hecome a hero and | shotld be to enjoy ourselves m this lie; who, while | ae artistic as the notes in. an opepa, it has a spirit of | Sunday school. The children derived happiness in | jong white veils towing in gravefal foids atmost to nis argo, the charoh bday ¢ \ deiiveret, So Was Washington, whose tife was itsel they do not belleve In the existence of a God, will | devotion mit that touches The heart of every one | contrionting to the Mission fund, and in transmit | tor soot and fastened to thor Neade by wroaths of | “in the eventing, the Rov Mr, ¢ a shining world, It many write Boy ike David, | not permit neeives to be called Athelsts, becatike | wito hears tt. It brings out a spirit of fellowship, | ting the same to others in foreign lands, The | “ - ‘F 4 “a VE tine x od with | the ‘\merican and Foreign Migion, Qnd oxpress the devotions of ti Itman rage. | soviety attributes to that name an absence of mo. | of aympathy one with another, and awakens a feel-| General further remarked that many grown persons | artificial flowers, . The, services commenced tereats and of that Roeiery to the Gon Secondly, the Wonders of apiriimal fe... The works atin that. ovorvtnitig ehtataa hail | Ing at tenderness In the Bente oF aah seers ait, | Gxt not do am iniuir for ene good canes. us litte chil: | » wolcmm high maehaesoven o'clock in the morning, | iutereecs Me etOUat Sheet, DRA excellen' Of Jeaua Were KyIbols Of epiritual bicssinas, There & away With the besom of deairnction, Mm- | such aa one 1 wont to joved | dren. ‘The Catholics Walle magnificent cathedrals % a “nb aébtne Wit alr ete. | HOR a reciabito i wasn poor woman Drought betore fim blinded and PE Atheosia, thorefore, the. apeakor sana they’ | Ones of tin Own householae ee rere He Ove | Som smaneomeeivutiona’ lua erntehed dn exainols ectebeaned. WY Une AFeHiateD, AURIS hoa | sro, thet chemin bat teamed A SGM beggared by sin; bata germ of goodness remaiped | should be called Seculars (a word which comes from | ., ighop Liwtiejonn, in Addressing the congregation, | thereby that might well be followed. After several | chijiren aad Dumber of growa folas approache 00k 4 OUeEe ‘ * ooh wt | wen i