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Y ‘Ty ay 2 4 YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 23, 1869.-TRIPLE SHEET. teem ——$——— nn na i — i ma etrengthened agat aasociations and vicious | been adorted:—oTnat wrson be admitted mco | the improvements ¢ 7 On at the settlement and x PARIS FASHIONS RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE, | foisid thatiyernave mot carat or saved tw'87°3" | Gis cous -vence, either om tras or sno tut cooner. | {3e,dieuneas characte peop, There ‘re QUARANTINE. RIS " 0 7 » cl ts Ue v! eenoacchal’ : com ee Aoliare: Gale {08 DO ew * | ton, who napitually uses tobacco in any form. there 18 & nursery ‘or atmost every vanetpof zrapes | Gur Health Officer—His Perquisites and | Deputies d Divue—A Levety Toilet--Parts Boston iversaries. 4 2m Thi ored the | kuown im Kurope and America, which will be 1 May'anniversarics have become pretty neeriy | ii, smnsmanet speech somneihal open as chive stam | 2 OOeN SURFING ANP Guaniens snons sot Out and tried, Besides, there are, i hot houses, a ve etin New York, the Bostonians seem at prea | pays him the best of fte ‘aim Tt payshim | Cred people of Newburg at the expense of the | nursery of dowering planis and shrubs of different defunct in New York, " se rot, | more: manhood, prospertiy, happiness for himself, cheer for | White people of the place. varieties, which are sold to the people of the sur- ent resoived to keep them alive and this year take | his wife, sound principles, right habits for bia children. And ‘The Washington (lowa) Press 2 that the Con- } row country. A good many persons visit about two weeks to get through with vartous socie- | Sven forty dollars a year for auch results i# not, I think, ays the the purpose of purcli , and several ‘ nena away coere nee gregational minister there was recently sought out | were there at the time I called, with object In es. le thinks the cheapest way @ young man can receiy i- } view. So it ligious comm ‘The Baptists had last week alt to themselves, but | spend the Saobath Is to rent @ seat and go to church concep _ gsc me nae - yr has an eye Yo business and is mak the moat out the present week is to be divided among the Ortho- | twice. There are hundreds who puff away more inert jarepe. Bo to | Of ts industry and skill. In material development dox, Episcopalians, Unttarians, Universalists and | (oney tn cigars than wonte pay for such @ privilege, poi -4 see anes bectaces neptune reinycrge nh the Spiritualists for objects about as various as can well | wii! not go far in six cigars. To cut off the extra bt led ee aeeone aesspat wes {rious ana intelligent, and have be conceived. ‘The list of societies occupies & emake on Santer would pay not only for hts own ‘The Rev. Alexander Vinton, D. D., on the 23d inst. | upon; but how far they will realize their main object column of sini print m the Boston dailies and in- | Hive “ine” ten dollars the omokers Gaauet | Will preach the first of a series of sermons, to be | in perfecting human nature remains to be seen, At dicates that a good many columns of platform | all agree to make the ministers (who Copinger pag recon Mites foent about the experticn oratory ave about to be poured out, pod ae mee brn almoners of | street, near Second avenue, successively Sunday | Oliphant and his not alarm ‘fremont Temple, which by the way is used for | {U24, is for tno poor. the ofa ipsa ry the press of to hide waas light they have under a General Enjoymeut—Ship News Reporters Awusemeuts—Unoficial Proceedings in Hig’ The Doctor and the Pig—A Prison fur the Lite—A Chaos of Fashion—Portablo Beaa- Press. tifers—New Political Persuasions—Lofty ‘There are few institutions of which the public Christening—A New “Star.”? Know 40 little 43 that of Quarantine. It is one of : PARIs, May 4, 1869, these out of the way places confided to the charge of ‘The Corps Logislatif and the operas are closed, @ man bearing the tiie of Health Oficor, a title by | consequently the deputies and dévas have been les the way, that presupposes benignity, benevolence, | out. ‘The former are on the green pastures of their strict integrity and solemn consciousness of re- | departments holding forth to electors; the latter are sponsibility. People will gratuitously make many | differently occupied. Mille, Nilsson gave a farewell allowances in favor of a man whom they suppose | concert, which will long be remembered by all stands forever at his post a sleepless guardian of the | present. She was attired in one of tie lovelicat public health and running the daily risk of catching | toilets she has ever been applauded in, It was quite sonfe fatal epidemic in the discharge of his duties— | & la Marie Antoinette—a tarquoise blue poalt and all from @ pure love of his species and a trifling | train, with white muslin tunic and panier in one, salary of several thousand dollars a year and scarce | trimmed with muslin, full edged with insertion and any kuown perquisites thrown in. One could | Valenciennes. The bodice was open and square, but be Health Officer of New York for many | the throat and bosom veiled by a tulle fichu under- years and never provoke public comment, because | neath, while the contour of the bodice was frilted he is believed by ali to be looking after the public | with muslin to correspond with the tunic overskirt. heaith ana staving off the approaches of contagious | On the left side of the bodice in front fell a sneat of disease, Looking after the people's health sounds | blue poult ribbon loops, such as cavalters wore in well, and therefore tt is that many are slow to be- | olden times and some of the peasantry still in vil- eve that he who is thus engaged can be otherwise | lage dances. The front of her bodice was filled up same calculaiton is made wit rel mon reyman been found f, Baptist services every Sunday, was crowded by their | spent for Sunday riding, wilted: and veer drink. ay, ry tan eaeer are ey ry ees of ing denominational gatherings. The main features of | '€- By giving these up there would be » = Sie otienve of withonalnn the “Black Crook,” and his A TALK WITH OLD BEN WADE. ings have been presented in the daily | SucPiwe alter Paying for @ seatin church. In addi- | bisnop has janded him accordingly. these meeting: it, e tion to this saving is the in which such persons The Li Christian says that the toc nt in- reports of the HERALD. Usually the meetings of pes She satianathes ofa employers and the | sanity of Bishop Dugman, of Chicago, was the cause | why He Did Not Ge Inte the Cabinct—Why the national societies occupy seven or eight days, + a c, saying nothing of their souls’ saiva- | of his arbitrary and offensive measares, rather than Grant Don’t Like Him—His Vie the a*on this account they have found from year to | Hom. The expenses of amusements, including the | tie consure they provoked. pe ‘pelted * Sing difficulty in securing an invitation | Pet and theatres which the newspapers praise 80 | During the past year the agents of the American | Alabama Claims, the Cuba Revolution, &c. Fo te cur of te ot nthe ar clic | autre ie: este tosteeioney an ane Tock: | NGMenaP ap, sooth tanaorptaae! nr gam | | A corrwpondens of che Oucana Chromite gine Thus yeur neither Chicago, Philadetphia, Cincinnatl | Gentals, are also comlecrey upon, “Ou night's ex. Seasier enit eT in ae RS the following account of & recent interview with’ for ‘ew York would invite them, when Boston offered Ro hospitality, with the prudentiai unit that the | PO&## At the opera would pay for six months? pew | ment 00s missionaries, of whom 65 labored with » | Bea Wade:— meetings were only to continue three days, Proba- He concludes that the Gi single congregation, walle the others ministered to One OF THR Carne, than pure and self-sacrificing. Let us see what sort | with white lilac andwpink geraniums; the same were exe abri he jospel ts to-day the chea) wi ore. Mr. Wade ts to-day in @ more euviable position i bir Ra the exception of abridging the spesel- | ese of gil institutions aud eneeaicewitaens | or Oe Eee ond Neat braenten entenatesietener | than U. RArAmen With ine cares of orice et an inade. | of an institution calling itself Quarantine we have in | in her light, feathery curls. The effect of this Trianon rather trying, every one was satistied with the re- | T&M ‘Texas saya that it would require at least 250 practi- | quate salary, he had romained in Washington. Buta | our harbor. toilet was most elegant—tne train, however, incon- striction. cal ministers to supply the pressing necessities of | great many people in Glo think he ought to be SHIP NEWS REPORTERS. veniently long, when between the first and second ‘The first day was occupied with the meeting of the “Let There be Light” on Roligious Murcters. | that State. 1n the Cabinet, and not a few supposed that as a Dr. Swinburne’s flagship is a tug, called the Gover- 48 Missionary Union, the organization tor foreign mis- | TO THR Epivor or tag Henaup:— ‘the synod of Texas in their Boblished report | matter of courge he would be invited to such @ posi- eee pap and certainly no inn i rai veeeet pala parts of the programme the Swedish songstress, sions, In this Work great prosperity was claimed | faving scen an article in the Herat entitied | Se that, though the Presbyterian Church has | tion, [suggested as much, and reminded him of ! with silver plate in hand, went through every row ey p 7 1 existed in that State more than tl ears not a | the fact, known tn Washington just before iuaugura- and more imones, than ever Yelore Collected. There | «xfore Ligut Wanted” on spiritual matters, t would | siapie young than born in the State Greven grown | ton, that @ strong delegation of Ohio ien, “with of the society. For two or three years Dr. Caswell, | &MSwer the same through your paper, it betng the | up on Texas soil, has ever entered the ministry of Rey freer ile pet res! ners, waned ae of Brown Uuiversity, had eld the omee, but duriug | medium of light to the public, by asking the question | WM CHAT | oa) courier gays that among the tluned by the Olio delegation i favor of ‘Mr. Wade ng concenuing close ‘communion, which some or | Where shall we go to get the light? Shalt we goto | champions that city has furnished are “Kaward | for Secretary of the Interior. “What,” I asked, the more rizid ones resolved to punish by his super- | Man, shail we go to the preachers of the day or shall | Eggleston (‘Penholder’), the acknowledged head of Fir ae Pa in Rd Ae og Grant for deciin- Sedure. In this they succeeded, by choosing Presi- | we go to Him who said “let there be light and there | ian stepevity tee Chomp bilan. Hoth ane | “Sinever knew, said Mr. Wade. “T never was a sone aaitiomanly tactics: CUVeNS!O) DUEHOE LY 1 was uughtr (Gen. L, %) If he brought forth light | comparatively’ young men, and each stands at the | candidate for any appointment. Tard not want any ‘The Home Mission Board reported a prosperous | for the naturat world will ne not give light to the | ‘head of his clads.’? and I told them so, but they seemed to think { ar. ‘The Bostor os ally, have tad Rey. Charies Howard Malcolm has been electea to | would take tt, and so, without my knowing what Jot institution m the “Narional ibeologieal Insti, | SPutal? 18 not His word as immutable as when be | gotiver the annual sermon before the Mhode Island | they were ‘doing, tuey got signatures and tite,” chartered by Congress tor educating colored | 54 Sy His Son “1 am the light of the worid ” (John | Freewill Baptist Convention, to be held in the city of | look it up there. Perhaps 1 should have preachers, and have been somewhat at variance | Vill, 12) Aud if Hts Son be the tight of the world | Provideuce on the 26th of this monti. taken tt, though I certainty didn’t desire tho waters of New York narbor—useful in the sense | jp tne hall to collect funds for the starving popela- of doing all kinds of work that brings proft to the | tions of Sweden. Many had never seen her ae near, Health OMoer. Her deck has oftentimes been laden | ana to have this pleasure was well worth the offer- with @ more varied and interesting cargo than ever | ing each aristocratie donor tad down on the ex- tugboat held before. Yams from Utaheite, coffee | tended plate. from Java, bananas from the Friendly | prune Rosine, or Mme. Pattt, is in Paris, though Islands, cigaré from Quba, sherry from Xeres | incognita; she should be inaugurating the London and brandy from Bordeaux. ‘These consti- | season; but Dr. Nélaton having had to operate very tute the so-called perquisites of the Health slightly on an ailing organ, she is under medical Omecer—small presenta which every captain of | treatment for a week more here. Paris is ao very @ veasel is supposed, in the fulness of his grateful él fear, io tonoeiee Hiealth Oilicer of the mare The | Ovely at prosent that the éttle of society will not ot * bu Ve adequate. [ could not birds so early as usual; besid with the Home Mission functionaries; but this year | that must be the source to which we must go. ee i 1M Governor Fenton seldom has her steam shut off, | follow our singing y ; jen, tuey harmoniously merged their organization with 2 7 have held the position and Kept house 10 | wne instant a veasel heaves in sight the question be- | high life is enjoying the pleasures found in the oj tie Home Mission one, and seemed very willing to | $ it not true also that he sald “I am the THE NEW RELIGIOUS COMMUNITY. Washington as Cabinet Ministers are expected to, | comes on board that model tugboat, where 18 she | ain ieee Mnetiay With au early Cantar im the let it take vhe work. way, the truth, the life?’ (John xtv., 6.) It foi- ~~ for the salary. It would have taken $5,000 a year ‘ ee aNTE ne: was Cavehe ep ans lows, then, that He 1s the way by which we can | A Visit to the New Religious Community on | More {ron ty private, means, unless fd steal ond fs without doubt the most eiticient agency of the | Ser ie ‘threuge HM’ hase we Net eine | Lake Krie—faterviow with Mr. Oliphant—The | that ought to be smashed, and I should nave done from and what might her cargo be? A West Indian | Bois, continuing tt with the drive of an afternoon, is always a glad sight to see. Sugar, rum, molasses | and finishing It with a concert in the Champs Klystes and cigars are Hepponed to constitute her freight, | round M, jovre’s staff of musicians. The and any one of commodities is i favor at | Prince of Wales, who was not due in Paris before 7" them, aud of course that would BupUsts for promulgating their views. Curselves? He also says, “Tho desk profiteth noth. | Religious Tenets of His Party—Business | MY Dest to smash " Quarantine. Away steams the Fenton, ostensibly to | the sth, has telegraphed that he will be at the Hotel Que eveuing during the week there was a<re- | {nw it isthe sointe that quickeneth. iy Words are |’ Pareulta‘and Preapects: sare Bale sie DORR SS tush pera en- | capture and confine a raging epidemic before it ‘tan | Bristol'on the Sth. It 18 ‘supposed he wyshes to be union" fora supper and congratulatory speeches. | spirit and they are life.” (John vi. 63.) He says. DUNKIRK. Ni Y., May10; 1000. Shiny Pos thant 5 any- | reach the city, but really to tnd out ifthere is any | present at the Empress’ last Monday reception, or ‘The speakers generally belonged to New Enziand, | again, “Except ye eat My flea and drink My blood 0 » N. Yo, May 19, 1860. thing rnin’ Quien Own caKe uy better brand of rum or cigars on board than the last | at the review which takes place next Friday. This and if the visitors from the most distant States did | ye have no life m you: he that eathetn My flesi and T have just visited the settlement of the new reii- “Thad an idea, Senator, euauGenerel crane would | 2 from the West Indies brought to port. Tie | will be a most imposing spectacle, and the Parisians Fenton 1s supposed to bring back, aside from the | are to have tneir waritke instincts roused by salutes samples of cargo, news for the Associated Press. | from seventy-two pieces of ordnance, repeated ‘The pubite alre: knows what a secondary con- | twice. sideration this must appear tw the men Meanwhile we have the races at the Bois. Last on that virtuous tugboat. The columns @of | Sunday was the fifth run of the season, aad hon- contemporary newspapers illustrate very well | ored by the presence of the Emperor, with the Arch- what a mockery of ship news Dr. Swinburne and | duke of Austria, the Empress and the ex-Queen of the Associated Press get up between them. This | Spain. It was the first grand display of spring tex- combination has done its utmost to destroy the | tures, as the heat was oppressive, and notwitnstand- efficiency of the HERALD yachts. Swinburne, with ing all assurances that the aristocracy woald tus his five policemen, has time and again endeuvored | year go to the races in plain, business-like attire, wo Nhe wan the HERALD reporters from beetonge Sy hever was so much white muslin, mauve, gauze right, which every boatman and lighterman that | and crape seen to flutter. M. Haussmann was pre- chooses may use, of boarding vessels coming in the | sent, and as the Emperor frequently, while walking harbor. The reporiers of this paper board 4 vessel | to and fro in the weighing stana, stopped to speek for ten or fifteen minutes, and clear outafter getting | to parties in the tribunes, the Archduke withdrew the latest news and dates from the captain, Swin- | his arm by de; from that of Napoleon and clev- burne’s officials, when they reach the deck of a | erly manas to leave his Majesty unobserved to ship, proceed to search out the nature of her cargo, | joim some of the ladies, among whom was and then proceed to break 1t open to get at the | the Ambassadress of his nation, Mme. de Health OMcer’s perquisites. This is about the man- | Metternich. It was not an official thing of ner that some of the Caliph’s underlings at Quaran- | the Archduke to do, but @ very natura! one, tine generally act their part. The Doctor, after | iftempted by that arch-demon, beauty. Of course getting aboard, advances to the captain and in- | all arches are not made of stone. Well, but Mme. de not have a high uppreciation of the great privilege of | drinketh My biood hath eternal iife, and 1 will raise | gious community ou the shore of Lake Ene, in Cha- naturaily look to you for counsel, by reason of your treading New Engiand soil, it was not the fault of | him up at the last day.’ (Jolin vi. 63 and 54,) If this ” the Yankee orators. With characteristic modesty | be pate of the light fe sent ito the world, how dark tauqua county, {ts abowt ten miles in a westerly posit on eo eit eae ae Loe a they gioritied their own section with a marvellous | must be the teachings of those that say to man | Girection from Dunkirk, and near the village of account’ of views about West Point. [’m down obliviousness of the rest of the national domain. “You have eternal life; every man, Woman and child | Brocton. ‘The ride to it from Dunkirk, through | op that infele aristocracy--a sort ‘of close cor] ration; Two huudred years ago laws for the banish- | porn of Adam;” thereby making & direct contradic- iu ment of bapusts were in force in Boston. What | tion to the word of God and making it of none effect LS sateen dk esi? Lows; one. Seer? HIS sop Pieris enon and revere Would some of the Puritan persecutors have thought | py their traditions. ‘They forget the record that God | old high road, over which, before Lake Shore Rail. | (heneal pyaeene. by favoritism, =e romotion could they have seen the thousand delegates aa eu- | gave of His Son. And this is the record, that God | road was made, the mall stage coaches used to rua, from the ranks is impossible, ‘The whole thing is Honse seo fore piecarer ‘The cwhirigig of me? | nae! Sven £0, uss eternal lifes and this fe in His | is through a weil cultivated and settled coun- | anomalous in our government, and I have told hus wrought tts wed shiem second | not ‘the Son of God hath aot life. (lst Johuv.1Land | FY. Farm lands are worth $100 an acre. | Grant so, aud 1 sink he don't tike 11, pin aed one Prove ion in the United | 12.) They forget also what Moses said in giving the | There 13 an appearance of comfort and inde- To a question as to the V 1a election Mr. Wade it peeosn mf oe ny Teck netare yon ge pendence throughout the whole region, and many | sald the chief embarrassment appeared to be the fact Conservatism and Radicalism Among Ameri- 7 “ ‘pia Onr handsome residences with surrounding gardens and | Of two parties in the contest, botn clatming to ve re- you will, (Deuteronomy xxx., 19.) Did Christ come ie 8 publican; but he thought'there ought to be no can Israelit to do away with the law? but suid taat not one | shrubberies that have something of luxury about dumiculty’ in determining where to go when it was To THe EDCTOR OF THE HBRAL Jot or tittle of the law shall pass, till all be fullililed. | them, The grape is extensively cultivated, and al- | apparent which of the parties received the rebel Iisiacuned as 1am to enter into a controversy, I viding against the recurrence of such scenes of gotten through Chrisi, how say our preachers that (Matthew lit, 18.) Toe apostle Paul said he taught deem ita duty to notice a statement in last Sun- ould come. (Acts xxvi, 28.) Now, if lice and | of vines, and some several acres. Between Fredonia violence a8 are disgracing the State and people of Commenting upon the course of the Jewish papers of | We all nave an eternal life that must live in happl- | Whole several hundred acres. Part of the grapes | Gent Grant was determined to use the power con- hone other things than Moses and the prophets did | Mostevery farm along the road had an acre or two | Support. He spoke warmly of the necessity of pro- day's HERALD Which misrepresenis Jewish opinion, | death be taught im the Scriptures, and life 13 to be | and Brocton, a distance of seven miles, I sawon the | Georgia, and expressed full confidence that Presl- C ci . " - fided to him to suppress Ku Klux disorders, re : ah 2 Marie Walbt this city with reference to the recent consecration of | ness or misery forever? Is not this contradictory? | are sent to New York and other markets in the Kast, * Sige . | quices as foilows:— Metternich (Pauline Clementine Marle Walburga) a synagogue tiie unpression is conveyed that a vio’ Which shall we believe, God or man? I prefer to GENERAL GRANT KEEPING A LIST OF MURDERS IN | “ “No sickness, of course; but what kind of cargo | did not look so well in her now toilet as usual, ‘The ynagogue pres conveyed thata violent | | ieve the word of God, which liveth and abideth and part are made into wine. One establishment at LATE REBELLIOUS STATES. do you carry?” black and white robe was ruched to agony, was schism was tuaugurated, provoked or widened by | forever. (I Peter I, 2s) ‘Some say that fe means | Brocton makes over 20,00 gallons of wine a year, | ,_ 1a this connection ee oaiata ee Go Rot |, Captain, ‘seeing in his mind’s eye haifa dozen | overdone to death, was bunched up like—no, it ts days of detention before him if he tails to be agreea- | disrespectful in any gentleman fashion writer to bly accommodating, replies, “Sugar, chiefly, and # | she looked like & bundle of dirty curtains, half blac! amull, but a darned splendid consigninent of rum | and half white. Isabella of Spain’ was in red, covered from Jamaica.” with black lace and diamond jewelry; the Duchess “Ay, ay,'’ chuckles the Doctor, “rum. did you | d’Assuna in brown; the Marquise de Canisy in blue say’ Good, oid rum, too, 1 suppose’ Jamaica, | | and white; Comtesse de Janzé in black and silver- the address of the officiating clergyman on that | happiness and death means misery. Very singular, | and finds a ready sale for it in the cities and towns Grant early in the last year of Johnson's administra- occasion. The Jewish press is described as taking | ‘ be sure, to say if one man kills another, oh, he 8 | of this section, It is in the midst of such a country | tion had kept a list of murders reported in the rebel- t I. y . if 4 sides on the question, the Rev. Dr. Isaacs being | Zoi Gea he is only tn inisery. | Would ine ibe sat. | a8 this that the new relizious community bas estab- | Hous States, and when it was anticipated that iui- Warmly supporied by the Messenger and violently | istied with such teachers of His word? Did God say | lished tiself and where iexpecis to flourish. Pre become "President ho’ was anxious to. ‘have assailed by the Times, &c, The sole sentence in Mr, | '0 Adam, in the day thou eateat thou shalt surely w: i such a change of commanders in the South- rved A ra wi Marshal robert in gray red. os’ 8eT ch excl “ * die (Genesis {i., 17), or did He say he shouid go into ‘as at the head of the community—nominally, at . think, you obse! ? Better still, Any cigars?’ gray; the wife of Marshal Can rt and was thas wherein he intimated with his characose. eternal misery? No; death was Yue penalt oe ‘Now | least—while Mr. Lawrence Gliphant, an English gen- | ¢'0 military districis follow as would enable him to “Oh, yes,” replies the obsequious captain, “‘acou- | These toilets were all short and frilled, with ues ple thousand of my own, réai Partagas; dropped | and panier bows behind. The most striking of the into Matanzas and got twenty or thirty boxes, | demi-nonde queens was Mile. Marcowitch. in a cou, Smoked a few and found them bully.” lined with sky blue, She was dressed tn a bright light “Ay, ay,” again chuckles the Doctor. “Partagas, | salmon totlet, covered with white lace. Splendid I think, you aaid, mild, I presume; rather like Par- | equipages were brought out on this occasion, hao J tagas. Suppose you let me have a sample; just give | which were the hierarchy of grand daumonts, hall ‘ein to my man here on the Fenton. Don't forget the | daumonts and mail coaches. One of the char. rum, Id like to take a look at your sugar. The | acteristics tn dress was that the front of Jadies' stuif I got of the John Brown from Barbados was | round basques is in the centre ornamented wretched.” with large, square pockets, trimmed round with Captain and Doctor go down to see cargo. Doctor | marabout fringe, that two large revera observes, “Yes, that’s just the kind I’ve been want- | /a mousquetatre ornament the sleeves and two ing. 1 guess a barrel or two of that would answer | other revers fall back over the bust. The head- my purpose. For medicinal preparatious it seems | ing of founces is shelled, or a coquille of silk bor- very weil adapted. Just see my inan on the Fenton | dered with satin. Cashmere is trimmed with mara- about getting @ small consignment overboard. | bout. A very delicate shade of lilac is in great Nothing else you think of? Oh, by the way, | saw a | demand. It 18 not mauve, but something between goat up on deck. Suppose it gives milk. Goat’s | the hedge maliow aud violet. it is trimmed with milk is @ strong liygientc Nuid. It would be of nes- | Brussels “application.” timabie value at the Quarantine station. Can't be Before conclading my observations at the races F much consequence to you. Suppose you see my | must mention the bovqueticre Isabelle, who is @ inan on the Fenton and get it hotsted over." great feature. She wore & most elegant costume of th fe bluntness thst if chiauos were to be taieis ene | Whar did Adam transmit to his posterity—anything | tleman, and formerly # member of the British Variia- | Protect Uni piesa Sas! tan Wer tab unter ee ritual of his synagogue they should be adopted | More than what he had himself? Lanswer no. What | Ment, and his mother, Lady Oliphant, were the | My oan hundred on the suggestion of European authorities rather | /@W, then, does Adain’s posterity come under? Paul | principal persons connected with it. | On arriving at | SOVONE DMO" cue ALABAMA CLAIMS, SUMNER’S than at tue caprice of american rabbies. The | S4¥3—“Wherefore as by one man sin entered into | the residence of these individuals, which ls anew and | MH nlegdliear ar eerie ditterences between the radical and conser. | the world and death by sin, 80 death passed | Weat cottage. with a number of connecting rooms 00 | 14 reniy to a question as to what course he would valve masses of American Israelites are inuicated | ¥pOn all men, for that all have'sinned.” It follows, | the ground floor, | inquired for Mr. Harris, but, ub- | »oV. ine government pursue in reference to the Ala- by that very remark. It 4 untrue that the intel | Wen, that the law that Adam’s posterity is under 1s | fortunately, he was not at home. | The gentleman | on Cons Mr. Wade sald “have indi- gent Jews are witu the radicais, and the tguorant as | OMe of death. Now, has God provided any means | Who came to the door, and who politely asked me tn, | Core? before’ what I would do, I think our & class with tue conservatives.’ Without attempting | Whereby man can obtain ag eae Maple Mee ati terse wie Pad ie ek sy | government should appomt a commission to are vidio’ - 3, ac 4od says yes; throu is mu, who came to ot he a 0 0 YY: intelligence aud ignorance are Shout caually repre: | Uemg tite and immortality to light bythe Gospel, WR the Commie ee eee ee Goat SEMUINDIE Baik came oroDeRae nee entedon bothiniten, the meetin plier an 2d Timothy, 1., 12) This Gospel was first preached . he bec . ‘as with some dif- oun . sented on both sides. ‘The new senool has progressed e Percncgg leg Bt hag A pense thie Ménaek the fleulty that 1 brought him to be communicative at | the Alabama aad other gilt pirates and assume Yong fapidly a America, on the principal charac: | omau shall bruise the serpeut's head.” (Genesis il,, | all. He does uot want anything publisned about | the respousibily of paying for them, and then give - r ‘ bunself and his connection with the enterprise or | BOtice to Englaud of our intention to fol- of novelty, ‘The letuargy of the leaders and the in- | 15.) It was also preached by Noah before * low her precedent on the first occasion th diderence of the followers of the old school contri. | the flood, but none of that generation gave | establishment; though he says he is not alraid or | Crea’ Ming would at ‘once suk Engiana a 7 at . a | heed to it, so the waters came and de- | ashamed to avow his views and object, but he thinks and the other rusued Wildly over the courses Cir. | ®tYpe of Christ, and was saved, because he had | he has no doubt of sucoes#, the matter is still an | OOP Sood nee lan oopoeunity to et loose & host. oF Clustunces are changed, however. It is tie fable of | Prepared 1t as God had told him.’ The apostle says | ¢Xberiment. Then ne | shrinks from publicity | Or aleen thay would soon inake Teprisals for ow tie tortoise an the hare over agai. ‘The conserva- | las there 1s no other name given under heaven | through the prose, because having been a man of ea." tives have thoughtfully, quietly and earnestly striven whereby men can be saved but by the name of Jesus | ome prominence in Englaud the English people | "Sth 44 mink, Senator, that the President intends > the masse: e leche y vet | Christ, The question now arises, How shall we get | ™ay hear of his doings, misunderstand his motives “ “All right,” says the captain; “that shall be done. shade here called “strawberrica and pel onaeet ve mergien tier moran diner wot ound gay) ‘ne apostle says, AS many of youras | and views, and set him down as a cracked euthn- gf acts to | ERR Now, Doctor, when can vuis #!ip of mine go up to | cream’—pink and white in our own idiom, That Seeker ouniiented exter! five + have been baptized imto Christ have put on Christ; | siast. He was the more sensitive about this because Lage flee igorons course | the city 1”? the queerest little cocked hat ever imagined has gogue, conducted stricdy ou conservative principles, | Taye Pen Babies, ih, are ye Abraham's seed and | certain Bohemians of the press had visited the com- | than that even. He isn’t golng to be satistied with f 7 “Oh, right away if you like. Just see about 4 we it turf- is wu step in advence Which Ue radicals lack the ording to the promise. (Galatians, ttl, 2%—{ munity and had uot represented in a manner he de- anything but a vigorous policy as to our claims fay ity ubout these | come out is the laatnote worth mention about turf- A - : new preciate g heirs, a things, and tell iny man on the Fenton to dispose | 1 It 18 as near the shape of the hat worn by gathoucity aud verality of view to appreciate and | aol Wn at was the promise made to Abrahain?*| sited the opinions he expressed and the information Roa ee nee them quietly away on the Fenton.” pose | Napoleon 1. as possible. ‘The back corner stands up ae ig synagogue (as in the Thirty-fourtn | He told him that he would give him acercain tract | be gave. I was a little surprised to see Mr. Oliphant you regal . § necch ay a ex- “Allgright.”” again exclatins the captain, and the | behing, and it 1s called a Charlotte Corday, probably —(Gene: 7) have such @ dread of the press, for there ts nothing, | Pression of the President's views?” of land— (Genesis, xilly 14 to 17) told him to Walk | Jo far as could learn, in his’ community or its ob: | , “i think It ia; the tact is, the Logie of tuat speech ts irresistible.’ ally as he has had great | 'Tput could we fairly hold England to what is Doctor, looking like a man after part iz of a good | because this heroic damsel wore nothing but caps. dinuer, departs for other fields and pastures new. | Absurd upholstery arrangements lift up drapery ‘This is how the Fenton collects the Associated Press | over the panies region of ladies; rosettes and gim| news and alteuds w the importation of foreign | and metal holders of Ruoley and cords and street, formerly Dr. Raphai’s, now Dr. Vidaver's) al adheres clo: a through the length and breadth otf it; ve him the tho ritual waeres closely to that adopted by the | Fo onduries of Ie-(aenesis, Xv., 15)—aud sald:—To | Ject to be ashamed of, espec plese tie ag ind poten thee and thy seed will give thu land forever. He | €Xperience as a writer for the press, is an author, been made in the Sabbath service, so that at ten called tn law the remote damages’ e lock the congreg: seater said not to seeds, as of inany, but o: one, which is | and has been prominently before the public in other | C8) tr fevers. and toilet-table frills. Dangling chatelaines from o'clock Ue congregants may ail be seated, the doors Unters (Galatians. Iti, 16.) Geephen said that Abra. | respects. Mr. Oliphant claims the privilege Ba OTE ead ihe he eee FENTON AS A HIUMORIST. the waist not only hold scissors and thimbles at the Swinburne’s deputies performed a tremendous | extremity of chains, but mysterious boxes in morocco feat a few days ago, in the capture of a Heap | leather, which contain a whole arsenal of beautify. reporter on board the Westphalia at three o'clock or | ing contrivances, such agic pencil for the eye- thereabouts in the morning. This was enterprise; | brows, rouge for the chee*, white for the skin, it was a waking up of the Quarantine news gather- | Many ladies have taken the vell—not the monastic ers, for they seidom happen to reach any vessel in | one, but the white gauze strip of tulle, which the; Ume to come In contact with the ever wakeful yacht- | draw over their noses and tle on chignon beht inen of the HekaLD. Swinburne did his utmost to | The “Princess” hats, those worn by celebrities in make this case appear a fugrant outs of the law, | 1776, are supremely ridiculous when seen in the overiooking the fact that all kinds of characters, | strect; they were formerly ig ge Ey ay rovided they are in the pay of Quarantine, can | in powder and falbalas, which led so many to the board any vessel, ho matter how infectious the dis- rultlotine when the revolution broke out. These ease she may have on board, and come afterwards | hats are perpendicular on the comb ion, sur- up to this city without let or hindrance. | rounded by aigrettes and garlands, and sit on the Sut let us tell Swinbarne’s latest joke. After the | forehead. The remimscence ofghese head cover- capture already mentioned, and the dismissal of the | ings excited my laughter considerably at the Legts- case at the Tombs court, when brought before Juage | ative Assembly, a day or two before jament was Dowling, Swimburne set to work to get up an exploit | dissolved, when a deputy rose and, alluding to mili- intended to impress the public with the idea that | tary equipments, declared that the high “bonnet & the waters of the harbor were overran with repor- | foil’? worn by gendarmes on horseback was not to ters boarding vessels as they made their appearance | be done away with, for “tt was not a head piece, inside of sandy Hook. For this purpose, it is | but a souvenir!” ‘Rather a heavy and warm o alleged, he hired a whole rabble of men at Staten | and after this I think gendarmes are entitled to Closed aud tue exercises may proceed without inter- ‘ of rivacy, but his community is not ruption. ‘The service 1s entirely in Hebrew, except | Vim Never ted no erara Mine “ame. promises 16 | & family in the domestic sense: it isa matter or pub. | Deen closed within the first two years If it had not the sermon and prayer for the government. ‘’ » lic interest and has already been made public. Yet | been for the hasty recognition of ‘the rebels by Eng- satle e ’ jgaac and Jacob; and Paul says that ir | lic interest and has ly been public. Yer . «e atlemen ware seated below and the ladies Xn the | Png gee 3 hy < Br prow ‘made | its but proper to say that the people in the imme- tena as belligerents. Aa we ought to have Balleries. Scaris are worn by the tmaics and the | hie fathers that he was judged, (Acts xxvi., 6.) | diate nerhborhood and the surrounding country | @eciared war at the time, aud our prie hats retuine There is NO orgau—the chorais are | & 7 4 ct pou . vateers would have taken care of British chanted by inen snd boys. Notwithstanding the | Suoulda christain believe in the promises made’ by | Kuow little or nothing about it. Mr. Oliphant is @ | Coote, and dain them more than "th Gody 5 refined, cultivated, amiable and tntelligent gent retentiva of ail the old customs periect order pre- = sd tant Coane in Gos tesces ae taiek, Odie ban Mati, about thirty-five to forty years of age, and has they could us by aiding the rebels. They —_ 7 of the Tir rose from the conviction | tism. Eph. (iv., 4 and St) Paul had faitn in them, | the ease and naturalness of manner peculiar to the | [ an = = ree, pens te erly an that the ev. Mre Isaacs, ‘whose tiurty years’ de. | Avrahain had faith in them, and it was accounted to | frst class of Englishmen. He has travelled a great | Thy 2 °n't straggie of such Pro sreiobe, Look ‘% Votod service in tie Jewish pulpit aud press entitied | Atm for righteonsneas, But is this the taith and hope | deat in Asia, was in Ceylon with his father, Sir | MOCK loy Orkeiend im the Crimean Wor Sine hi to respect aud common courtesy, at ieast,) had | of the present tn nen hk na he be og io went Scans Gan Lora igi ails meee, bound herself to her allies by the most. solemn obit. > 2 embe! . r . (en mits y elgin. . 4 reason to a. nls nee oer cA conde pea ty en ahr den aes pa Lady Oliphant, who 18 with bit, is said to be a gations F ere oe oy ot —_ thousaad tie duccess OF the Lew synagogue, as a maguificent } Beard @ learned Dy Dw) ey thing arall) whieh | Woman ot superior mind and culture, and is heartily | MeN, and she never got above forty thousand. She edifice anu as & morai triumph. din the religious and social work they have | then seat her pen | agents here to enlist men, 7 ~ , vi path, in the tace of what | ¢ The radical leaders, who number many learned and | $9¢S to heaven at death, and this taken on the shore of Lake Eric. ‘The Rev, | and We were compelled to put a stop to it. If we talented men, ure disumited aud at variance among | frist tells hie disciples, that he should go, to, the Hee een on aso an Englishman bet secme’to | had declared war then we should have done But radicalisin does not mouopolize tie inteligence | Ye way be erking of Kings prin ge tsp auersas anything dso atthe shortest nother ick: | our claims now rest hot on the original act of recog- sand sincere devotion to true progress, It ls uot incon who only hath linmortality dwelling in the light | this geatiemen, it appears, has been a preacher, a -vallagg much a8 on these piracies of Pritish ee S uarathar or Soran soe pre. | Which uo man hath seen nor can see nor can ap: banker and @ farmer, and is now nominally the | “ i 3 that the anciené character of Jewish worsiip be pre- - 5tl t ¥ chief of the new religions community on Lake Erie, . CUBA. Island and started them out in boats served. Congregations like those of Dr. Vidavet | proach unto. 1 Timothy, vi. i Tan toe i | onthe religion of these people is like, or nearly like, | _ OW the Cuban question Mr. Wade said if the insur. | pretence of being reporters im boats under the mook | wear 1 under thelr. arms. Deputies, should ire aud Mr. Isaacs have saccessfuiy demonstrated this. they go right to heaven at death; and this 1s the that of the Swedenborgians or New Jerusalem | Tection had been abie to maintain itself since last | boarded every vessel by the dozen, and of course | talk or toen in the of ion writers, And they lave the best examples iu the leading s¥uu- | Io Fe Go from them. Christ tay said ithe | Church. They believe there 1 but one God, and | October, with the sympathy of the greater portion of | vecame a mos» intolerable" nuisance to | aid 80 should. country ow one of whom gogues of Europe, Bi oe bund lead the blind they will both fall into the ditch. | that Jesus Christ is that God. They reject the doc- | 4 e Bative pe ula we Ought vo recognize the | the captain, who was unable in most | gave some advice to ® fashionable bride, his AN AMERICAN ISRAELITE. One might ask how can we inherit the promises if | tine of the Trinity, or three persons in one God, | Patriots as belligerents. |The case was entirely dif | cages to discriminate between who were the chatelaine, that I do not sup) can be followed - we have no limmortality? [ answer by a resur- | and hold that under whatever name or form the wen pas a En: 's course towards us. | and who were the authorized representatives of for any great length of time. ‘Tas you had Is Christianity a Lie? rection from the dead tarough Jesus Uhrist our Lord: | Divine Betng is represented or spoken of in Seri hen the British proclamation was issucd there | press. ‘This move was also intended to awainp the | no sooner got the ring on her flager ‘and the arch’ To Tur Eovror oF THE HERALD:— for Paul say’ asin Adam ail die, even so in Christ | ture it ts the same person, though mantfested in = 1% no organized armies contending in the | reguiar reporters and make them pear ¥ portion | ceremony over than the the it to th " shall all be made alive. But every man in his own | different ways. The Swedenborgians, while they | Seid. Fort Sumter had been fired upon, but no | of the rabble seut out trom Staten island. It was | whole village out, advised her to with her bride You will permit to the writer under the abov® | Cote. Christ the first fruits then they that are | believe there is but one God in essence and , | Organized insurrection had taken thefleld and tain- | rather an original style of joke on Swinburne’s | groom, orange flowe! the violins and must- heading of the 29th wht, a word of reply to the cor- | Christ's a his coming; Corinthians, Xv., 224 and | admit there is in Hun a sort of trinity of qualities ot | ‘ued Itself for a length of time, part, but it hat utterly failed to accomplish ts pure | Canara the bridal salt and thelr attendants, we. rection by “Vindex,”’ in your to-day’s paper. “Vin- | 2d verses. Paul further says:—Some man will say feet ar tee ee comnentig na ae Ro igo aeRO Pose. diievabe cine ts to the member for the it, and all on this dex.” Itke asensible man, adnuts Christian tenets | how ggg eet ‘ (an ace | ana sccaliense vo trinberten Geeiee, They be- THE FRENCH GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. ‘The story about Swinburne aud the vig cannot ve | DAPPy, day implore him to have a Lo to be delusions, but not lies. Everybody 1s perfectly | ang on to show that’ there is @ natural | Leve that Jesus Christ was God manifested in the | award of a Gold Medal to Dr. Hayes, of the | £00 often told. That about the goat is literally 7. to the Importance of the deputy or member; but cen goe: at liverty, if it conduces to nis happiness, to | body and there is # spiritual body. How- | flesh, and that though He was in the form of man pelieve in fairies, blucbeards, &c., as "weil | Delt that was not’ first winich is spiritual, | He wae atil the only one God, omniscient, omuipres: | United States for He Discoveries in the but that which 1s natural; and afterwards that | ent and omn! it. They hold the Scriptures to be Arctic Regions. as in devils, Rell, damnation, transubstantiation, hac! " adivine revelation, and in other respects, except 7 finmaculate conception or. Jesus a Gods So tare | Syne gray seit at gt commune, Xv ott A: | With regard to the doctrine of the Trinity, Te, ae ene oe reeks Conerip- inerely cujoys his delusions as an unalienable rigut | geeond man is the Lord from heaven.” This ahows | lieve touch the same as most of the Protestant Evan- | ical Society took piace on the evening of the 20th of a freeman, aud deceives novody but himself. Bat | that our father Adam was of the earth earthy, aud | élical churches with regard to spiritual intiuence, | ult. m Paris, at No. 44 Rue Bonaparte, the Marquis if these notions are made dogtuas or tenets, ovsolete | tyerefore the penalty that God put on him Te his | Teweneration and @ consciousness of the spirit of de Chasseloup-Laubat in the chair. After an enume- The story, however, is more interesting. The | anything more incongruons be fancied than Dect eyes lighted one day on the plump . | ture ‘of coming Me) all creaming tons of a ‘oung porker runuing about the deck of fifes, drums and De India vessel, dee | — Lp nt = — sewers, railway lines and other improve: s a tien would be ice complete the ade the f tH sy bak . d o ising compliment of ham and lard, | alth Tam ont: . proper ‘The only diMculty in tue way was the manner of | the nesnand shoud have tone aeibeae, human trad: ious, mcompativie with the eterual | gin in saying, “dust thou art and unto dust thou | Christ or God dwelling in them. Like the Methodists ting piggy fromthe deck, where he roamed at igression: ‘somewhat far from. rulings of te unt twught to our children as “4 @ literal fact, for he was not purty: and some other sects they believe in personal expe- | Tation of the new members admitted since the last | large, to the narrow confines of the Doctor's long Tallertes ‘and the lame deme tol ‘worn by the Eine the only true revelations of God, in tue belief of ner. One might ask what is a | Tience of divine influence, or communion with God, | sitting a feport was read on the annual competition | boat. The Doctor's mouth watered most profusely | press, It wenn lovey poo train over wi which alone eternal bappiness is secured, spiritual body, 1 answer Christ. was after his | including newness of life and a consciousness of sal- for the most important discovery tn geography, ashe gazed on the sleek outline of the youthful | satin. Narcissus diamonds shone in her dissenters upheld to universal scoru, then they | resurrection, for he was raised from the dead by | Yation, though they seem to go a little further in the Ia gold medal w: wareed ’ | porker, and, determined to have him at any risk, he | coils of hair. The Duchess de Mouchy was in white become a lie und Churches that base an authority | the spirit of +; be said himself that he wag flesh | believing that this divine tnspiration enabies them | When rge go jas awar MM. | descended to the long boat and gave orders to lower | and pink, and, by the her newborn son, in a upon them swindling insitulons. Religious princi | ana bones. Lake, XXiv., 30: “For fesh and blood | W Judge of the spiritual life of others, or, as | Doudart de ia Grée and Francia Garnier, French piggy down, resolving hiinself to catch the degcend- | ciond of Vale has held on the baptis- pies never lie. Tuey do not dogmatize or denounce, | cannot inert the kingdom of God, Joun il, 6, and | the Apostie saya, to try the spirits, whether | naval officers, for their scieutitic expedition in Indo. | "8 Prize if be chanced to siip through the rude belt | mal founts by the and The name but Invite (investigation and correction, use the high- | | Corinthians, x : “Phe lite ot his body was | they be of God or not. They have no riage), and th id medal of ropes around him. squeaied at a terrific | of the small duke is Napoleon-| and It is not est gift of Human beings—the reasoning iaculties— | tye Spirit of ¢ ¢ blood Was before his death: | building yet for church worship, but couterpt China (priz partage), another gold medal to Dr. | rave, and struggled to unhitch himself, which he | supy it will be unpoetical to call ite for (he purpose for Wh.ch they are given, to compr as it is with us now.” “And he shed his blood | erecting one. They-have but just commenced, I. J. Hayes, of the United States, for nis voyage to | ‘id before reaching the outstretched arms of the po sg FR EO a8 soon as knows how head Deity ana to rule the conduct of to man | for the redemption of the World for he was made | everything seems to be ia embryo or uumatured, | the regions of the North Pole. On the announce- | Doctor, who stood with watery mouth and anxious | plebeian this demonstration is. ‘The same day this by the fundamental laws which nature reveals to ail | ike unto his brethren in all things, (yet without | though they are making considerable progress and | ment of this last named Prize General Dix, the | eyes to clasp his living ‘bacon. Away went | infant was christened a fire broke out in the chim- men for thtir guidavee—justice and tolerance. | yin), that he might be @ mercita wh priest in | laying the foundation for a large and prosperous | United States Minister, rose and said: pi into the water, and the Doctor, ‘losing all ney of the Duke of Bassaus, at the Tuileries, and, Doginas or Lorus, religious oF otherwise, megu stul- | things pertaining to God’'—Hebrews il, Pan! | community. oa M. LISPRESTDRNT—I have listened with the interest | Self possession, over after him, to the | strange to say, it is the fourth this season the Grand titcation and despotisin, inimical to liberty aud des | gays:—“pfehold, | show you a mystery.” W Ui not These people are socta)ists in the best sense of that | to the account given yy your secretary of intense delight of the captain and sailors on Chambertain has had to contend with by the sweat ted wo f se laws enacted by a few for their | aii sieep, but we sliall ail be changed. Ina moment, | Word- that is, there is real Christian equality among | made by Dr. Hayes in the Arctic regions, ‘and it will afford | the deck above who had been for months entertain- | of hia brow. over tue many involve injustice. | in tue twinkling of an eye, at the last trump; for tue | them, and they all work upon the co-operative prin- | me mach pisaoure to place in the hands of my distinguished | ing savory visions of pork and peans when their pet On Thursday last Princess Mathilde was honored i religion oF otherwise, means eniigiten- | trumpet sail sound and the dead shall be raised in- | Clple: but there Is no communist of the free jove | counterman me mele Ton Mie motlaat ie saueenes | Pig reached the years of maturity. ‘The Doctor and | with the company of the Emperor and Empross to nt, justicy, freedom, whic ponquer and libe- | corruptible and we shall be changed: for this core | Ofer or indiseiminate herding together. They are ins Point regions of ai epen sen, which. san be roach ce | Cle Pi Wore Foscued from a watery grave—the Doc- | dinner at her palatial residence of the Rue de Oour- rate tie world from fraud Se enn rupab) must put on incorruption and this mortal Suen a eae notser,, believi as ry De, Mayen cocnavered to ochee, ie reniine dus oreu uppeeie er fae pork, and piggy | celles, which I have described in a recent letter. darkness begotten children, superstition + | must put on immortality. So when this corruptivie | (octhe Ol itis c markable ‘a reserved of the Doctor. In the evening all the eminent Re He shall have put on incorruption and this morta shall | te moral’ as well as physical health, It A PRISON yo Victor iiumor om PRI POR REPORTERS. bled to hear Mile. it recite Victor Hugo’s A cw rin the lower bay is the | ‘The Return of Napoleon’s Ashes.” She also gm Jatest idea with Swinburne, Away from contact | an ode composed by Napoleon Ill, on the same sub- with the world, on the wtid waste of waters, these et in prose, which has, however, been set to verse intrepid purveyors of news that fall into the clutches | by Theophile Gauthier. Some one else will s00a put of the Health Omicer will be ieft to ruminate for the | it to music. The other brilliant reunion of the week term of ten days on pork and hard tack. Swinburne | was given by M. Leverrier, the astronomer, Will coastitute himself justice and jailer, and mete | Observatory. His brightest stars in the fl out auch punishment to his unfortunate victims as | tor he fancies they all belong to him—are scarcely he deems best for the interests of Quarantine—in | less bright than nes own daughter, Mile. Leverrior, ot her words the interests of Dr. Swinburne. @ most beautiful and accomplished girl, gifted with in he made ane! y or ouhor enterpriging and seientitic individuals; and it ts to . hava put on immortality, then shati be brought to | 1% Considered that ander this co-operative be Doped teas, Frene! Mensuring the Gespel by Dollars and Cents. | pass the saying, “Death is swallowed up in vic- | PTineiple of labor every one gets the full benefit the Ciicago Advance-religious organ—recentiy | tory” —1 Corinthians Xv., 51 to 54. ‘Thus we see that | of bis work. This system, 100, they boid, " man can get a Victory over the curse pronounced on contained a timely article trom the peu of the Kev. | Kann, rough Jecus Ohrmt our’ Lorde tye perfect Christian life, and this is the | Move E. P. Goodwin on the subject of the costofthe Gos- | resurrection from the dead. Nowhere in the pe mged im of the Fg They own & preserves | the pen Oo arene . church bulld- | Scripture do we find such expressions as +" ores of land in owe biock, where the head- | temperature, whether are up necrets pel. He tele that in the matter o ¢ SL rm “ammoreal. soul” dying spirn.” God | quarters are, aud bi purchased weveral farms in | of orgaule eximence om eamibers of [00h tate whieh mane ing good taste does not necessarily imply splendor, | giways speaks. to man Med and in- | We neighbornon a view, evidently, of fature | % . those researches, as and while there are thousands “lifting an wnane | telligent being, and ell ot him laws and com. | €Xpansion. The: Hout 100 persons belonging | as you bave ‘M. le President, that her ern; bo Mi 2 5 i . | mands to follow, If G 1 to Adam he should | to the community at this settlement, who occu that her votaries ackno' ‘no nati demaré te ol rash of them—compare to swored cry for the bread of life,” no body of Chris- | Manes to tollwm, et as lost be whe thing different dwellings, according wo. the accominode | tons, snd tha mle abject of ber aory ana he th he THE POST OFFICE, Patti's. hiearagest =~ es tians “las the right to rear one of these costly piles to be saved ’ and did net Chriat come to redeem man tion afforded. Among them are two J: panese, edu- Riccety, poe) of ‘aod truth into ape ee that swallow up so many fortunes.” But even t froin the power ot death? Immortality is always | cated im this country. There were several others, ~ ag te pos cpbhiin eaen tat ae About the Ist of Jane « considerable number ot | FRATRICWE IN ALABAMA. t, in his opinion, justify the complaint of the | spoken of in the Scriptures in connection with the | bat they are aWay ab present, though still adhering bave expressed to my eountry, that it | Changes will be made in the Post Omce Mepartment, eed Goes not, in his opinion, body, and men can see by searching them how | tte community, Mr. Le nen poke Highly Of | jee source of sincere eaiisfaction tome and tay fellow ott: “Since the last report in the H. {From the Montgomery Mal, May 19, costitness of the churches, The current expenses of | grosmy they have boen deceived and ied astray by | these Japanese for their intellectuat and moral quali- | pened eee France and the Untied Sates co-opersting. as FRALD only one change~ | Anout one o'giock Monday might Jaues b. Harris a leading church do not exceed $10,000 a year, which | the teachers of the day who teach the | Hes, ‘There are in Bngland and other parts of the their ancient friendship, In these questions of scienos, | thatof @porter—has taken place, General Jones will | shot and killed his brother-in-law, R. It. Bailey. 16 : 4 7? (Gen, tt, t v e cl o1 a " L, dollars each to 260 families, He | “alt ROt surly Cie eee te able’ te make’ then | which appears to be the nuclous 1] honorable vestimonials of ‘its approvation | to the eMotency of the working portion of his force, | WYAPpMY together, Ak ALP Tete sy tly or forty unto thew: ‘a just claim to our warmest aoxnowledaments. w " ‘The old Post office building is tn @ fearful state ot Harris’ house, and, after making threata nt homent, and is cenernuy end oh hostile demonstrations, commenced no credit to this great and prosperous city. In tie | to break into the house. Harris gow ou 1 a nt the plaster of the ceiling is | of bed, lighted a candie and seized bt ing, '¥ forced the door open and rushed vail, it dificult to see how the clerks jarris with @ bowie-knife in his hand. Harris (1 in that particular portion of the edifice | at lit twice, one ball taking effect in nis bowel can pursue = Weir labors = save = in fear | and the other about the right eve, deata ii and trembling. A waik through the present Post | about two hours. Harris surrendered himself OMice will convince auybody that a new structure i# | Justice Netties, and the -pretteninary trial was ti Solna ahh tpemea an |p eae a wat a0 Ox) jon of ly exper it Kn i e - ae cost @ family more | wise unto salvation. And Peter says of it, “We have | Gestination of @ witespread organization. Mr. Oli- ee ft riba: Ts tact | A stire Word of prophecy whereunto ye dio well to | Phant has had @ little toed of correspontencs ponte concn th Ineetine wean eve tad deans than that sum to stay away from church. give heed unto, as unto t that shinveth in a dark | !@ in upon him from various parts of the United de ‘a pat myo I ad ju that @ man has @ pew in acburch and isin itevery | Bigce’ 2 Peter, 1. 1 ut I will close, hoping | States, inquiring into the nature of the extablish- Beauvoir read a paper son Sunday i# an important influence in shaping his | that the inquirer inay learn to look for the’ light at | Meat and its prospects. No doubt he can find any ‘business relations, and indirectly affects his income. | its proper source—that is, the word of God. number of vistonary and speculative individuals im MYsTRRIOVS MURDER OF A NeGRO HACKMAN IN Chareb: hearing the Gospel, observing the Sab- this country, particulary carpet-baggers from the | TENNESSEB.—The body of John Thompson, colored, bath are, in the nature of th coupled with tempe- Ret N East, who would be ready to take @ in bis en- | hackman Mr. Ed. Goff, was discovered nagar n arotourity, theift and economy. Men are known gious Notes. ‘ | terprise if there Is any money to ve made and litte | Young's biéckamith shop, two and a half miles from the company jally on @ Sunday. The African Methodist Episcopal Zion Vonference, | work to do. 1 suspect, however, there is too much | Nashville, on the Harding ike, yesterday morning. ‘ ‘Leon tives aul He bed i i Jabor and uot enough money for auch been shot through the head ana breas' ‘are not mi wi vend | comprising about forty clergymen, has been tn ses. Thon there ‘seems bo be 6 dis people, tne heart, at nine o'clock reh that do not find themselves so #timulated {9 | A145 at Newburg for soven days and will adjourn on | tho managers of the. Comupunity to be, Paleo solace women Who had gone ont, trots aokrite ta Tow ) industry and economy, and so otherwise inspired paon’s hack.—Nashuttle Banner, May Yo stent in’ pairs of the old tuildiag to erect a mew one berty. Judge Falkner represented the Statet With ideas of the dignity aad nobility of work, aud | Monday. Aimong otuer business the following tas | ln tue admission of members, ( was struck with lag be an ornament aad a conveutence to the city, ington tue defence.