The New York Herald Newspaper, August 15, 1869, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 1869.—TRIPLE SHERT. : 5 of fanatical persecution. America, the firet to ttlus trate by practice the supremacy of democracy, must likewise be in the van of religious progress, Religious Notes. tn their artillery. On the part of the Paraguayans @ | slliance, which is now publicly known, end in which are set v purposes SOUTH AMERICA, | ius "acum's rm any conn mrt me | peatirrmmnntay tavuneeatete | RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. river without suffering greatiy. Protected by the | tbe provisions) government that may pow be established in a - P sball—it bef the war the yaa HS Sre of their cannon, the Brazilian cavalry and tn prescriptions, of the treaty bind tat totproceed in satire Religious Services To-Day. o you can reat calm and secure (a8 all Catholics do) trom that craving and yearning and searching after truth, which can only be found within the casket where Christ Himself deposited it, and where all are invited to enter that they may drink of the ving ARGENTINE CONFEDERATION, | tantry advances voidiy unter the are of the enemy, | Secor manne lien anh ihe termination of ewan rid; | Rev. Charies B. Smyth wil deliver one of his subr- | fountain, = GAPHOLIO LAYMAN. Vat of town—tne parsons. ~~ shrougd the flooded fiats, and threw themselves } sovereignty, acteristic sermons this morming in the Eleventh | Are Catholicioam and Protestantism Both Out of ume—church organs, Interview Between President Lonez and | apon the Paraguayans. ‘The struggle that then en- | gcrirem with Marshal Loner, narcutvanyhoree represent, | Steet Presbyterian church, between second and p Count #PEumSevere Battie=The Rebellion | sucd was obstinate, but short. ‘Three hundred sar- | ing bim, or whom he influences, because the allied govern: | Third avenues, * ments and their military and diplomatic representatives will 4 new dogina of immer Oldest living American n—surt bathing. fgyman—Rev. Mr, Rich. Failures? To THE Epiror ov THE HERALD:—~ i» Uruguay—Affatre tn che Argentine Re- | zuayans were surrounded and taken, the rest tried | gc in the same manner At the Presvyterian church in Forty-second In answer to the above question permit me to eral Washington, Ohio, aged 106. He sti: . /h—! ° a ic “ “Yes.” & Dae public. 6 cross the river, and wile doing 9 they suffered | fyi fhe atom of the allied generate wilt remain enisrey | street, W. A, Scott, D. D., pastor, services will | answer in one sense “No,” in another “Yes.” Juda- | P'Titryara Cniversity requires its students to attend wbiclas Brats AEN ANS aoa a $6 severely from the fre poured on them that the ] respects the cearnien of their military ‘pidction and he be held at half-past ter A. M. and at half-past seven ime ‘9 bringing about the end of the Parag: Brazilian commander estimates their joes at 500 | Operations against the common enemy. They may occupy | py 4 whatever piaces they ju cessary, and all | YM. War by the utter exnanstion of Paraguay, but the | kried out of the 1,206 engaged. All the cannon, | therenonresat un eoake. meee brrale propery f be Rev. Dr. R, S, Foster will preach in St. Luke'e precise mode of tts termination 18 not yet indicated. | wo gags, some arms, &c., were taken. ‘The victory | ‘Al#or {riends, the use of which aball give righ to ite tndem- | yy 641,045 Meséopay chutet asthe Cnbee tan’ welere President Lopez obtained a private interview with proves. however, to be of no advantage in a strate- ‘Sixth sien ts political and adminiatrative mevon, the | A. M. and ata “ * 7 3 ij 4 » M. quarter of eight P. M. the Prince d’Eu, the Braziitan Commander-in-Chief, 1 gicai point of view, tt being found that the country | [re toiitary operations of the allies bats impersonal and im | At the Church of the Reformation (Protestant but what transpired bas not yet been given to the | ig co aiicult that Only @ very large force could make wag maeril and ip provigons 20d provended, iin’ pial Episcopal), in Fittieth atreet, services will be held at public, It was understood to be upon terms of sub- | its way in that direction with any probability of bona! government aba! hot extend to the barracks, cam) quarter to eleven A, M, ism was not a fatiure in its day and generation. It was the Church of the Lord, and answered the end for which it was established untl the fulness of time was come, when the Lord Himself descended and as- sumed a visible form and established the Christian Church, Then the Jewish Church came to its eud and gradually became divided and scat- tered, and prophecies jong previously uttered some church on Sunday. So far as the Harvard arama are concerned this is a good “stroke” of olicy. . The German and Austrian bishops have now de- cided to hold a conference at Fulda on the lat of September aud the following days. r. Stone, formerly of the Park street church, Boston, and Mr. Murray, his successor, being great horsemen, the irreverent scamps of the city cali the church “Stone and Murray's Circus,” mission, but no cessation Of hostilities bas followed tt ” and individuals belonging wo the allied armies. [f an) in- a leds The Quaker farmers in Western New York, just a ia iraee ounaeibaen-ehanged success, pute occur between a'military man or ao employd of said Rev, J. V. N, Schenck wil! preach in the Thirty. | were fulfilled; at least, such has been the | neyond Canandaigua, bave experienced a change o! and no pian o! ged. The operations whicy the allies have made have | arm! id & person unconnected with them, the military | fourth street xeformed church this morning at half- | opinion of the Christian Church. The Jews, of | heart, and won't make hay on the Sabbath. ‘The Old School Presbyterian Committee un sys- tematic Benevolence proposes Lo raise $635,000 by penny subscriptions—one cent each day, except Sunday. Why exclude the Sabbath? Wouid the committee refuse to accept @ handsome donation ry It bas been an object with the allies to surround | thus developed che tact that the position elected by | {iFsdletion shall be preferved unless the proper, militar past ten o'clock aud this evening at half Lopez and cut him off trom supplies and concentrate | Lopez has ail the elements of a strong one; appar. tri ae ot delinquent wo'be judged oy the Para peep : 5 o and rear, and ‘on his camp when they are ready. This they have | ently cessive on the Hanks and y Eighth—All Persons, vessels, provisions, provender and formidable in front, it, seems to show that all the | other material of any kind bel f to the armies or tried to do, and the lines have been extend: | wid predictions waich were making, of 4 rapid and | to its urniahern may enter or depart from the territory of the | THE American Bishops and ihe Ecumenical past seven | course, Wili not admit that such conclusions are just; for they have been sooking tor a literal fuliilment of the prophecies in regard to the Lord’s first coming, precisely as the first Christian Churen—both the ed for the purpose, but the couniry is so | easy conciusion of the war, were Joolish dreams. | Tepublic with exemption from any onus and without more Council, " ‘y > 1 nave | {0m @ person who died on a Sunday? broken and the places of escape so numer. | THe range of mountains forming tne front s stated rotomaioh chan may be aureed upon with the generals OF | ft igrumored, with what degree of truth it 1s im- gion ate pidge ried pic A ie pis ae Ot Newuan, af, aWashingcon, proposes, to 0 Have a hetght Of about 960 to 1,000 feet; be; ports ae ; } 3 ,000 to pa} Dt, Ov ous that nothing Jike an enciosure has | that tue country gradually rises to the central chain prorkhiens oo rN HAS oR Pk) mar || Tomsble to say, chet ever since the calling of the Kou of Man tn the naturai clouds of earth, instead of in | YUY the chimes for the Metropolitan Methoatst church, That will be a big raise, especially when the venerable doctor undertakes to lift the tower, A local religious contemporary says:—A couple of steamboat companieshave offered free passage to Civita Vecchia vo all bishops proceedii to the Eeumenica: Council.” Where from—New York t Complaint 16 made that at the late national camp meeting all the sermons were over an hour long; algo that it Cook too much of the character of a pic- nic, What of that, provided the campites got a good Fick at Old Nick? it 13 stated as a curious fact that Friends, or Qua kers, increase in England and decline in the United States. If the policy of scnAlig: CHBKETE among the Indians is kept up the society in a fair way of being abolisped or tomahawked altogether. . The Observer has an article about training young ministers. Train a child up in the way he should Deen effected yet, dna perhaps wil! not be, In some {3 Paraguay, Where the pag as Feseliy Cvex 3,000 terial support ‘or the ‘tefonce of public order and Se a ai | menical Council by Pope Pio Nono quite a busy cor- ° ,, e ou eet. in those highlands the Paraguayan women | rule of the republic, wi present war may las! © | respondence had been carried on with regard to it arrections Lopez's supplies have been cut off, but | Ife" paimng tool © wine ther nen auerd. the wp. | manner they muy sludge moat caitaste. i eaala tas dcentie searchin bo : not from all, and Lopez 18 sul! defiant and vindic- | proacnes, and the Paraguayans can retire from posl- jhe of pe ERE OE ISR, Nye ihe archbishops and: bishops of ‘the Roman tive. Tae precise amount of nis forces and provi- | Won to position into still more and more dificult | pe made ins jaan tent by the three plaaipoveniaries to | Catholic Church in this country, The object of this, easy : é , country for the mvaders, if, what seems unlikely, | to the Pi ma mite companied with a copy of | itis said, was to come to some understanding be- sions it 18 nol easy to know, but they must be Very | the gaps of the range in face Of the enemy can be | the presentprecotol and of thar of che pach of allinnes Nee aaa Ciamnaalves ie tin to . aie ne mugh diminished, forced, As far as can be icarned from pylnbers a ans ct ie aforesaid conditions, notwithstanding its aible, fn fail am a ‘0 act, it ‘i i ie bins tm My last ietter conveyed to you the news of the | gaps are well defended by earthworks and abat fi That Pog co-operation during the deliberations ot Second ‘committee wil} declare by a return note : taking of about 12,000 women and ctnidren who were | Heaviest canton go placed ax oaweep ihe gape aud | Mieiber tacoopurthe conditions of the recognition which a | te Council. Que point upon which these rumors have under a guard and were being conveyed further { command the works below. It must be admitted, | crumont imccnatntes it aah ee thels Pre wdicutifen. | 1¢thatan agreement was arrived at is mentioned away from the lines of the allies. On the return of poweveie Hak che allies Know very Higa pd & mast aliable to the previous ugreement, which sball have | 8 being the relation of the State and the Church, rit 3 fom nm and entire rr. re General Juan Mena Barreto with these unfortunate | Gover tue works supposed to exist and swarm with | In winess of which wey the plenipotentiaries of his Ma. | #04 (hat this agreement was to the effect that the persons the Paraguayans attacked bim and a severe | Paraguayans when reconnoissances are attempted. Seis Ocarina be ae perenne a carom Ras ge han Mae Br battie ensued, They chose a defile in the mountains, rinete deat Bn eerily poe fent protoool to be made out ia three autogra and fa Wi kava pu urge for general na ae be Laahaces ' etre: 4 AsCUrTS ue o ere n with our own an ix | system ct Bi ureh where to go on under tre or to retreat would be | witch ie difticalt ground at the foot of the moun- | thereto oureeas. JOSE DE SILVA PARARHOS. | hearst ula lye roe adie gamivcat bes “the clouds of heaven;” forgetting that the words of the Lord are spirit and life, The Lord promised to be with his Church always until the end of the world; or, more correctly translated, until the end of the dis- pensation which he establisned when on earth— bear in mind that the Lora’s kingdom was not of this world, Until that end the Christian Church was no failure, for it answered the purpose for which it Was established, and prepared humanity for the re- ception of the New Jerusalem dispensation, which, the sure words of prophecy assure us shali descend from heaven after the last Judgment. When the Lord was on earth He declared, ‘Now is the judg- ment of this world, now 13 the Prince of this worid cast oat; yet men in the natural world did not wit- ness that judgment, and even the Jewish Church . go and when he gets old he will run away from it. about equally hazardous. ‘They planted cannons on | tains permit some degree of access to. The Comte MARIANNO VARELA, the State, restoring to It Tull liberty of moton. un. | NT eae a ee easy; therefore wit uta: | Fide Tyng. the eminences overlooking the roaa end raked the | “fu has ordered a sveam iaunch to be brought by ADOLFO RODRIGUEZ. trammelied by the political power of the country, | ments are performed in the spiritual world, It.was A religious contemporary has sometimes feared extends 1 en w 101 ie My 4 ¥ \- ants were exposed to both fires. ‘The detalis of this | railroad aud the mountuine By its-aid he hopes to BoRNos Axnrs, Janes 186%. | followers, at the same tme renouncing all active | Wein yma word were judged, and there Christians | don gives it a gimpee of something tatuer lower Swayed by the most friendly dispositions, the allied goy- judged. Have we no evidence that the than the religious press here has yet gone. A high Church Review, speaking of a publisiied sermon by the Rev. Mr. Jackson, remarks:—‘The father of she writer started a donkey show in that neighborhood some time ago. This sermon suggests that he wae hornibie butchery are not yet at hand, except that it Puallinie ae Ree noieante pene sien wc north, | ernmenia have maturely consi ered those wishes and legit interference with the political administration of 4 r mate purpones of Paraguayan citizens which were expresse ernment. founded in ‘was one of the bloodiest and mosp closely contested | themselves disposed to muke attacks upon the allied | in the manifesto signed at Awuncton on ihe fist of Maren | €OVeTmMent. Should thege rumors be foun’ batties of the whole war, posts watching the railroad. In fact, one of the | !ast and communicated tothe allted governments by anote, | fuct the American prelates may exercise a healthy Provisions ure scarce for even the army, and how | Failroad briuges was discovered to be half sawed | dated oF a! Laprmrmbal re dyed Legh iat influence upon the future of the Catholic world. long looked ‘tor last judgment has taken place? In fact, judging simply from the signs of the times, have We not good reason to think that the Lord tas already, in the spiritual world, judged the vast con- course of professed Christians who had lett this " througn; but Whether this was done by Paraguayaus | $otrusl —— world, and separated the good f: . moved thereto by the selfish but reasonable hope oi : berless pi yomnen Paragu itizens whi d that manifesto declared, in , Fr rom the bad, and a Ral ha Map a ocd ang ‘chilaren are fed |’ or by camp. followers could not be cuscovered, brief {Phat they are unimated by the desire wee the horrid | ‘The German Liberals and the Ecumenical | removed the former to Heaven and tue latier to | Winning the first prize with an animal of his own ig a question Liat concerns all. They are moved so The Argentine executive having consented to the | martyrdom of the Paraguayan people ended as soon as Council tell, thus rans up the organized spiritual socie- } breeding. often that few home comforts can be obtained py | Proposed provisioaal government in Eran, and } possible, and to organize @ government which would be the siege ties which were in immediate contact with men, An observing correspondent thinks it would oe a them, and lodging in th the conditions being fixed and agreed to by the | expression of a legitimate popular sovereigaty, estab- A meeting ot German Catholic liberals took place | and by so doing restoring men on earth to a more | 00d taea io have eclipses more frequently —it causee #0 Many eyes to turn heavenward. ‘The English bishops, when referring to the sudject of State pay, give a new rendering of the bymu “Mercy, good Lord, mercy | ask,” and read ‘t:— Money, good Lorg, money 1 ask; That'i# the tota, sum; For money, O Lord, ts ali my piea, © Jet the money come, POLITICS IN VIRGINIA, woods without tents and y a i Oy Vishii it in the territory liberated by the arms of the allies on ry Faraguayan commission, the, plenipotentiaries abd | andat present under thelrexciusive wie; ‘that hey consider | 00 July 25 at Gratz, under the presidency of Profes- subsisting upon mancioca and traits 1s the mode of } commissioners Nave adjourned to Asuucion to go td " ont miserable life common to tem. Even when they | through’ tue programme. By it the provisional gov. | the auly of ever Fer eer De ey otter a eheeting | sor Davidowsky. After’ an address from M. Uhiieh, are under the protection of the allies they are suil | ernment is to consist of three persons “freely | their ald and that of thelr countrymen ‘adhering to th same | @ Speaker of high reputation, the assembly voved the my Want, for there are Ho arrangements for tue sud- | elected by the friendly Paraguayan population of | cause in any manner found necessary and proper to attain | roilowing motion:— den demand for food and clothing of so large a num- } the districts berated by the ailles.”” This “friendiy | those ends; and tifey take God to witness to the sincer- § 5 5 ‘ ber. A society of benevolent ladies has been formed | Paraguayan population” consisis of about 1,000 men | MY of the intentions thus manifested to the allied govern- | Considering that the Ecumenical Council! which is here for the purpose of tving the comforts ot life to | mM vhe alited service, and of some 20,000'women, | Mens | ‘The commissioners charged with | promoting the | to meet on December 8 has bee imposed on the Papal these'women and children, children and decrepit old men ac Asuncion and | fied governments den in netecrent Git cach, oie, neal | goverument by the party of the Jesuius by which All conjecture is useiess as to when this war 1s t6 | Luque, who have been scratched up by the | ing the popular act of whieh they. tre organa 1 Ws 34 and will continue to be controlied; considering end. For four years it has defied ail caicuiations. | various expediuons sent out for the purpose. | then What appenred to them to be conduct that tue resolutions likely to be passed by that as- Reports of massacres of various c.asses of persons | The election will, therefore, not be very dif , | pirations of their countrymen, concluded their note | Sembly will thus be directed against intelleccual aud by Lopez conunue to reach u: ri | or wil the ruling be oH Th in these terms:—“Thus @ great opportunity has come | moral progress, this body accepts with extreme sat- ry Lopez con’ ut mone are sO sub- | NOY WL ng be much more so, The accounts stantiuted as to Warrant narration here. given o: the “friendly Paraguayan -populauon” are | {iF ,fmbodying into facts the “solemn declarations | isfaction the invitation wddressed by the Independent The awarding of the £8,000 sterling for the best { uot flattering. Besides being beggarly in the ex- | Country from the'war directed exclusively againet ie ruler, | CwaKers of Italy to those who share their opinions mode of preverviig Meats bas been postponed ull | Weme, even the young women are said to have | and tiat they place the inteyrity, sovereignty and independ: | 0 take part in the meeting they convoke at Napies, August, {tis supposed that one Herman Elizalde | Squat, shapeless figures, with broad, flat, stupidly | euce of our unhappy country, the republic of Paraguay, under | the object of wuich 43 to encourage civilization and bere will be the successtul competitor. His process | expressionless faces, and to gave but one idea—tuat tenure eae gt Rb itm pgm brig mee ne, Ha Wea eee a Ie repaint bay ; 1s simple, consisung v1 the application of ol and | Of Capering like 80 many animated Dutch wooden sire te bee bin ae coo "9 sabes , Vinegar, and admitling of ex yosnre to the air, Not | dolls whenever they hear the gound of @ violin. ‘Thus | ‘the aforesakd comin esloners tant the allied goveruimenta A | ae ed ae ce Only are nodes to be presented, but speciinens description agrees with the appearance of the major- | resolved to agree on their part to the wishes laid before them The assembly, composed of 4,000 persons, ‘then ried across Une ocean must be given in evidenci ity of the prisoners broughthere. A flat, carrot-tinged | inthe name of the unhappy Paraguayan people; and that, nominated M. Zimmermann, editor of Die Freyheit, One application comes from New York, and it lial cheese, with two Knuckle holes for eyes, a triangle {spe peia Apes the ‘most benevolent. co-operation, 7 : 4 pened nai all the preserved specimens sent along | Of skin slightly pinched to form a nose, and a siash | Clare at the same time they will recognize and treat with the | of Gratz, to represent it at Naples. were 80 badly kept that they could not be taken } of a Kutle to make a mouth, would give @ satisfac. | Rew Paraguayan government thas ray be constituted tn ac: es ashore, but were thrown overboard in the harbor, | tory resemblance of the pure-blooded Paraguayans, | fy the annexed provocol of ihe ugreament made for this par | ‘The Ecumenical Council—The Catholic Church The attempted revolution in Banda Uriental de} | The ollicers, however, seem to uave Spanish blood, pose, which is accompanied wish copies of the pacts of alli- Unchangeable Urnguay has not been put down as soon as appear. | and are five men. The rank and file are evidently | ance referred to. 68 more expilett enunelation of the s a ances promised at last mati, ‘Che revolutionary | Indians of the unromantic type, unknown to Cooper | wishes of the allied governments that the new Para- | TO THE EvITOR OF THE HERAL Jorces are sull pp the Heid, aud though the leaders on his Follow ore but Ce strong-oodied and active. We wet of ani pre And cues ie ipl aged ers A response to my letter of the 1st inst. appeared have not met as exteusive support as they | A great dea! of concealment 1s practised by the % - expected, yet tney have seriously embar- piseent government in regard to the real state of the Joshi ly sh esl atl ir ers og of. ibe, Teas Padre gues tg oa mi acre apameanea ips rusged and even” endangered the national | Braziilan forces in Paraguay; but a very respectaole | sioual government they undertake to establish beingcomposed | 8@ton that the Catholic Church is unchangeable 1n government. | The Frosident, Sellor Don Lorenzo authority writes teow there iat, including tue troops of thes members, ven though one of the members bear } its faith, and vefutes the fact by stating that the attle, 13 at the head of the loyal troops in | at Rosario and San Pedro, the Comte d’Eu has about | the title of president, and as such exercise special functions, | ¢y ol a the field, about 2,000 in number. and including the | 15,000 men, but could brig into. battle only 11,000,, | txt condition of concord and force will be watiated once the | Church has changed its faith at cifferent periods of milla Under arts there are about 2,000 In gat supreme authority reside in the collective body, the differ- | its history since its establishment by Christ, Its besides she Argenfine foro ent executive attributes of the governing board being distrib. Jn the Capital, Montevideo. The general belie men, The Orientals have only 260 men, most of | uted, nthe manner judged most reasonable, Ae Ben the } founder. In support of this assertion it quotes sev- 1 that a change of government will not be effected. | them Paraguayavs. Lopez is supposed to have | three members composing tt, ‘The alleged governments think cl c! in Montevideo business is at a standstill, gold at a | avout half the number of the allies, but to be still | ‘that in this way ther correspond traskiyesd amicably to | Cr! Gates on wnich councils wero held by the mi ‘periect state of mental 1reedom on religious subjects, and preparing the way for the descent of the New Jerusalem, or for an inflewing of new light and life into the spirits of men on earth? Mave we no evidence that the day has aiready dawned when ait things are to ba made new; when the light of the One God, Whose name 18 One, is graduaily shinius from the East, even unto the West; at presen iluminating only the mountain and hill tops, bur gradually descending as men rise above naturalisin, selfishness and sectarimnism, by the ald of the dawning ea of the new day, and the strength and freeaom which God has given them» Who can- not see that We are living in a transition age, when a new order of things 1s being inaugurated—a new heaven and # new earch? In mechanics, aris, sciences, medicine, law and theology old things and ideas are siowly but surely passing away and new ones are taking thelr places. This change is progressing ‘with increased momentum, and it 1s not 10 the power of Churches, States, men or deviis to stop the wheeis of this progress. A layman has as- sured the readers of the HERALD that tue Catholic Church never changes. That Church in the past has arrayed itself against religious freedom, or private Judgment in religious matters, and would not allow @ man, in the freedom with which God has endowed hun, to “prove ail things and hoid fast that which 13 good,” or to worship God im peace, accord- ing to the dictates of his own conscience, beveath his own vine and fig tree, The events of the last halt @ century proclaim, in language which no man, Church or State should disregard, that God Wills that all men everywhere in the incoming age shall be in spiritual freedom, A layman of the new age responds to the Catholic layman ‘that the Catholic Church, as well as the Protestant, and tue Jewish Church before it, has come to its end, and Mt must either change or divide, scatter and perish; for God ia stronger than the Catnoic Church, If the Interview with Governor Waiker=He Exe presses His Views as an Earnest Republi- in and a Supporter of Grant’s Administras tion. A correspondent of the Baltimore american gives the following account of an interview with Gov- ernor Walker, of Virginia, beld in Norfoik op the 10th inst. :— The apparently inexplicable poiitical sammersauls recently made by both white and colored repubil- cans in Virginia, Tennessee, aud probably most of the other Soutnern States, Induced me afew days since, while on w visit here, to call upon Governor Walker, the newly elected Executive of Virginia. £ found bim at his office in the First Natlonai Bank, of which tnatitution he is President, and its largest stockhoider. On entering the office of the Governor I found him surrounded by the Council of Georgetown, who were the guests of the Council of Noriolk, and had called to pay their respects. On taking leave of tie Georgetown delegation the Governor Opened a conversation on the political affairs of Virginia, declaring hunself to be an ear- pest repubiican, an upholder of the Reconstrucuop acta of Congress, tn favor of the adoption of the ff- Which is given at 3,500 premium of twelve per cent; there is nowing to ex- | very scare of arms and munitions, the wishes and legitimate aspirations of the friendly Para- | Church, confirming certain dogmas which, I suppose, | jatter would live it must forsake its old errors and | teenth amendment, and a firm and unwavertug port and no saies of imports. A change must soon Tn Kio the battle of the parties is going on briskly payee eopanes, and they Mitt Ae pros ethers he intends as proof of innovation on the fixed faith | come into the light and life o: the new dispensation | friend of Geverai Grant and his administration. On come tor the better or @ general crash. [The re- | in the Senate over the vote of thanks in reply to the | to'Paraguay, without ceasing to be, compatibie wah ihe not | of the Church. 1 cannot reconcile the inference. | DOW descending from God out of heaven. asking him how it was that he had been Dellion has been suppressed.—Ep.) Emperor's speech at the opening of the Cuambers. | jegs legitimate rights and pu of the allies themselves. Emanuel Swedenborg, in his writings, assures us | 80 earnestly supported by those who had hitherto been the most bitter opponents of all these men and measures, he remarked that it Was evident that people outside of Virgina did not distinguisn between the people aud the poii- ticians. He contend.d that the great aiass of the old politicians of tie State had opposed lus eicction, re- Tusing to vote (hemseives and infuencing all whom they couid contro! not to yote; that be bad sue- ceeded in cutting the mass of the people loose from the old pohticlans, and if susiained by the republi- can party and the administration would soon suc- ceed in making good republicans of them. A great Mahy men ue adinitied gad voted for him as what they regarded “the least of two evils,”” but he con- tended that the great mass bad given him a cordial support because they detested bis opponent, vecause ‘There Was an unusual excitemeat tn Congress last | ‘We voce of thanks is always kept on hand to givea | The undersigned salute the Paraguayan cominissioners | COMfrming a certain principle is certainly not hei over the Shooting ms a Seniltt m San Luis, a bletteg 9 Liaoning re, the Ministry, and ne ue Tig poorer ee their heartfelt esteem and most dis- | an innovation or change, and the articles of stant province, by order of General Arredondo, | What with the speec! upon it aad upon the various jnguished consideration. ‘The Minister of War was called to the lower House for ipiormanon the Mimistere are getung an Tel Cece: biases, faith: to which | he: a had: heen taaghs ana and gave une history of the case, and assumed for pie amount of badgering. As for ousiness done ‘ADOLFO RODRIGUEZ promulgated by the Church from the earliest periods that in the year 1757 ne witnessed, by the aiviue permission and mercy of the Lord, in the spirit- ual world, the Last Judgment, durmg which the vast societies of Cutholics and Pro- testants there congregated, and ali others, were judged and separated; and the angeis toid him that, as aresult of that judgment, men on earth would thereaiter be in & greater state of ireedom on religious subjects. 1s not this prediction veing veri- fied to-day? Swedenborg, although claiming to have been the human mstrament throagh or by whom the Lord revealed the traths of His second coming to men, differs wonderfully on the subject of religious freedom from the Vathoitc Churen; tor he exypressly teacues us that the truths reveated in his writings are to be received rationally, and man A 8 the Executive the responsipility, ‘The opposition | there is very little. The senate nas passed the bili To Jose Dias Bedoya, D, F. th smi D. Bernardo } of its history,as can be amply testified by the ear- alleged that the man was shot for his politica! | prolonging last year’s estimates into the first six | Valiente. Mest "writers and historians, and even by the writings opinions, and the government showed that le was a } Wonths of thts, ‘The Land and Naval Forces bilk has ACCEPTANOB BY THE MEMBERS OF THE COMMITTER. ‘ notorious assassin and highwayman, arrested by | aso been passed, and that comprises about all tne BORNOS AYRES, June 11, 1689, | of Lather and Calvin, who could not deny, in ail their military order, tried by court martial and executed, | business work really done. In the Chamber of De- GENTI.EMBN—The undersigned bav the honor to | neated antagonism, the traditions aud teachings of greatly to the reiief of the province, Atone ume } puues they are ceny engaged On pension bills and | receive the collective note which your Excellencies were | the early Church. 1 scarcely expected the writer the bar became 80 bolsterous that It Was ordered to | Uills granting degrees to students, aud, although the } pleased to send us under the date of the th instant, in- | would come so early and opportuuely to my support be cleared, aud the people refusea to go out till tne | Deputies are to a man supporters of the present | fotmminé Us Of the consent of the allied nations to the | in the aasertion that ignorance and prejudice sorm military was called in and drove them out ike so | Cavimet, they have begun to remonstrate warmly | lie of ‘Paraguay, and. enclosing the protocol “ot ‘agree. { the principal basis of antagonism to tie teachings many cattle. The door for une public was then | With the Ministers tor not bringing forward the mei- | ment in which are inid down ‘the conditions of | 40d principles of the Catbolic Church, for certainly closed and soldiers placed before it, All the Minis- {| sures taey had ied taeir party to believe they would | their recognition, and a copy of the triple al- | When a Protestant layman asserts that Roman Cath- ters of government attended und took part in the | originate. Mance. At’ considering this agasement with the { olics Worship images he betrays & lamentaple state t ueve the! 0 ” they were disgusted with the old politicians and be- explanations. ts ‘The 24th of June was signalized by the opening of | aiextion reauired, by “the importance of the mailer | of ignorance of the Catholic faith, from whicn it | tue Mueve Jum because he perceives them to be | Tes WEN ok nete ae ee oid becute thea a res: Congress has not yet made the appropriation for | the Agricultural School, waicn the Union and In- | $e . Would require the ald of @ vatnolic priest to rescue | in freedom thus receive can’ enter tnto our life and | resentation in Congress and the restoration of che uay Untouc! Es that: it does not impose on the provi- the national exhibition at Cordova. We are wichin | dustry Company were bound by their charter to | 4 overnment ditt t those to whi him, @ point which J, an ignorant layman, would not eight months of tue time when goods ought to begin | open for giving gratuitous teaching to a number of foyalty ‘cou nels it, fd that it 5 ves onl; be a wees attempt. The poorest, most illiterate Catholic will to arrive and not a stick is yet cut for it. ‘Tne tardi- | young men, practical and scientific, in the art of | necessary to the free military action of the allies. erefore, | tell him that when he kneeis bere the ness of Congress is unaccountable, and it greatiy | agriculuire. However, ouly ten of the sixty piaces | in the name of our constituents, the undersigned solemnly | image of his crucified Saviour he does not endangers tne whole matter. i are occupied, so careless are the Braziian plantera | (declare that we mecept all the conditions, placed tothecroa | adore or worship the image, but he adores The number of animals killed this year wilt be | of the aavantages such an institution Would afford | the advice relative to the aumber of Ite member Ties, | Aud Worships Him whom the image represents, and 160,000 to 200,000 less than in any yeur fora long } tw their sons, and this fact was deplored in the ad; | Gersigned will aol. State to 14 o.d position in the Union, which is now the Orst and ardent,wish of ali the peopie. Upon expressing the Opinion that he would be oversiaughed, as Governor Pierpotnt had been, by the shrewd and cunning politicians by whom he woaid be surrounded, the Guvernor promptiy replied that he was a Northern man, with earuest aud settied convictions on ail natioval topics, and that he tn- benefit us, This is the freedom with which the Lord would endow us in this new age, and ii we use it aright we shall soon bebold the rising sun, or the Lora in His divine humanity, Who Will mase us iree indged. Progress of Jewi rininate this note by declaring not lessaol- | Who ts brought more vividly and more directly to Reform—Awmerica to lume. All the products of the River Plate are so | dress presented to tae Emperor on the occasion of | emnly that this step of the allied government is the most elo- | 18 mind by the reflection of His bleeding wounds or cantly remarked that the new constitution gave to the Governor the veto power—that he nad been elected by a large majority of tne popular vote of the State, and would not come into iis oilice like Gov- ernor Pierpoinc, withjomy che meagre backing of a few of the new residents of two sinail counties. The title of Governor Pierpoint to the execuilve chair he had filmself regarded as a most mdiculous one, and it was so viewed by every Nonest and intelligent man tm the State. His administration was a tarce from beginning to end, aud no one The Jewish Times of the 13th inst., the organ of Jewish progress and reform in this city, has a rather significant article upon the principles of which tt ts the exponent. We condense the chief points of the article in question. The Times says:— American Judaism cannot boast of a synod nor of a conference, ho grandiloquent deciaratious and proclamations as Ww the aspirations and reformatory regeneration of Judaism fave been heralded to the ei burp Criticisum Upon the Proceedings x ‘uinously low as to retard and depress ever; the format inauguration, went proof of the sympathies with which the misfortunes of | the radiant smile of His benign countenance, or the Lead—si tended to be Governor of Virgima, and not # were canoe 7 Sahtenet ‘The Paraguassu Tramroad Company, in the prov- ‘araguay have inspired them, and by thanking them from | submissive aspect under the crown of thorns, or the of the Syuod at Leipsic. tool m the hands of any set ot hem He aleo signid ‘The works of the South American Steamship and | ince of Bahia, ts» m great dimculttes, and it 1s | OW Mmost aoul for their benevolent wishes for her future | bleeding aud sacred body under the scourge, or the " % ‘ity. Submarine Railway Company were inaugurated on | thought must wind up, Ue icacatnink eilatins Excelleni divine head meekly yielding under the accumulated ‘the 20th of June, in the presence of a large number In tuo Messrs, Battin & Hagerd have got the char- undersigned Rave tte cama Caphigtes seawater se sufferings and agony, the soul temporarily resigning of rejoicing people. Those works wi begun by | ter for tne Kio Street Railway Company, which has | their most profound respect and distinguished considera- | the boay to be soon reunited and resurrected. Or Captain King tor the company over two years ago, | bought the old Sejuca tramroad and the ‘concession | tion. ai does the Cathoitc, 1 bis humility before God when carried on by Colonei Church for about “one year, | for the St. Christoram, Caju Andarany, &c., sudu JONR, DIAS J BEDOYA. | he kneels before the image of the Sacred Virgin, and they are now compicted under the directton of {| Dan lines. The St. Christoram one must be com- Fanuande VALIENTE. Mother of Crist, hence Mother of God, aves he rev- Capfain Manton, Jt ts the only place sout of Rio | pleted m elguteen mouths and the whole in thirty- | To their Excellencies the allied pienipotentiaries D. Mari. | rence! the image or her whom the image repre- Janeiro where vessels can be- taken up out of the ] SIX wonths. The old ‘Teyuca projecting raii 1s to be | ano Varela, Minister and Secretary of ‘late for Foreign Re- | S¢nts, avd who ‘Was so much honored by God Him- water for repairs. There 1s a great demaad for a | torn up and laid with rails level with the surface of | lations of the Argentine Republic; Conselheiro D. Jose Maria | self when He sent His angel from heaven to honor dock of this Kind. The stock is chiehy owned in | the roads. The general city terminus is to be the | daSilva Paranbos, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- | her, as if to impress upon man ihe reverence He Providence, R. 1, ceniral square of Sau Francisco de Paula. otentiary on special mission of his Majesty the Emperor of | would have him pay her whom He so much distiu- | world, and yet the progress and reform continues | haa any right wo expect a ood Fesults to iow if A cargo of fresh beef and mutton has been brought B a elec g oper 7 Lie wae on } guished above all His creatures. its silent and steady march, plants its standagd in | from md : sable BR up from the river Plate, preserved with ice. As beet | *Pec!®! miss! when. teal For the zeal and anxiety manifested to enlighten } the West and East, aud carries out practically Mose In alluding to his canvass of the State the Gov- AZIL. can be got at Buenos Ayres for one dollar the car. | ACCEPTANCE BY THE poten he ent ov THR At- | my benighted mind I cannot but feel'gratetut for |‘reforme and modifications which the spirit of tfe | ernor said that he bad confined himself to a discns- nn cass, ani 18 worth five cents a pound, wholesale, at MED CON TENOS AYRES, June 14, 1969, | tue good intentions of the writer, however far | age and the demands of modern civilization Impera- { sion of what would ve best for the interests of the Rio, there seems to be margin for profit if the bu: War Reports from Paraguay=A March from | Ho, there seems to be n have had the houor to receive the note | Sort he may fall of attaining his object; and while date of the 1ith inst. by the members of | | mall sincerity would enhghten him, f beg leave pper Parana and Fighting by the Way= se spies Megat factory Migr ing ot inate eh eter e Sonn ae oaoagy of “omtec Pariiculariy tn Lopez? Situs | Charter. it is form yy parties in San Paulo, with a 1) Soteblishimen: neological matiers, 10 produ any permanent Se Alltel Paliee Teen, arapnicn) sitas | y"eupital of $100,000, believe the tauchinery is | of me,proviional governuient the Paraguayan veopieyropoxs | results, and it tue mulud sincerely seeks fhe (rath It ation—Allied Policy Towards the Provisional | giready ordered from the United States. Te ae Te poe tects | will appeal by humble prayer to. God, the Giver. of Government of Paraguay—Party squabbles | lstori 1s now here playing to crowded honses, | Solemnly that In the name of ‘thelr fondituents tkey aoceye | All light, for guidance aud Instruction and I believe te the Segliticute a Miemthdnatrial < and the companies of the Various small native thea: | all the conditions placed oy the allied to the recognition de: | the spirit of God will lead him to the proper source. Ristori and Her Critic te tres have been vying in addressing rhymes to ler ome ‘on them, and to soonrity of their friendly rein. | The writer rts that Protestants are enjoined to aress— an er Cm. and in putting crowns on her head as the Queen of | tons with the provisional government. The undersigned | readthe works of Catholtc writers—a very happy Kio Januino, July 8, 1869 ‘tragedy. The Portuguese, however, maintain she Sean repped hic rier Spray eg a the name | provision for the Catholic Church, but a very unwise ‘The news which we have received from Pur is very “small beer compared with their tragic ac- Sccepteds the allied J io faid conditions are 1 one for the Protestant ditto if the command 13 obeyed, full rninents will undertake to give, ’ toss Wis deuavrage OF toe lack raneat tar fe tresses, and miny and wordy are their conflicts with afar as lependa on them, the promptest execution to thd for perhaps to this circumstance may ve attributed does not tell us of any fresh movements of the re- The accounts from Para tell of the litile steamer ‘The Tindersigned salute the members of the Paraguayan | up into So Many sects, and the constant contlict be- uvely require, The new Jewish Temple in the city of St. Louis is nearly cempieted. * * * The congregation has unanunously adopted the ritual of Rev. Dr. Kmuorn, a8 Introduced already in many congregations. ‘This Titual reahzes practically in the public worship what has so theoretically been so often declared,as the urgent requirement of intelligent modern Worsinp. While there is enough of Hevrew retained in the prayer book to preserve the connection between tne past and the present, while in tuct, ali those pray which the Taimudisis term “obligatory prayers” leit in the original language, all the other prayers are composed in the vernacular, Partly transiations eople and what should be promptly done to make virginia a great, powertul and wealthy State.” He had denounced their neglect of their own interests for the promotion of the political interests of profes- sional pouticiaus, ana had told them that all their past and present woes were the result of thelr bad teachings anu worse actions, ‘They nad driven them to the verge of ruin, and had proved pheruseives ut terly invompeteut to sead them ont Of it. He satd that he was every Were complimented by the people on this new mode of electioneerimg mw Vir gipia. They were sick and tired of the vid political harangues from the hustings, and personally promised to stand firmiy by fin the Italians, all the commotion aud division aud the breaking of the old prayers, partly original compositions of | iu his effort fo regenerate and diseatiral the State. spective forces. OF one thing, however, it has made | 1a which Dr. Couto de Magalhaens set off to attempt Soda peitty ihe expression of their cordial esteem and | tween so many of its members, between pride and | the Kev. Dr, Kinhorn, these prayeraexpress m the | Virginia rec veted would be fooded wita a new ch tmnabeiiektendestt sated 4 the ascent of the Tocantius rapids had successfully | ™0*t dstingui og cone MAKIN DA BILVA PARANHOS the desire to spproach. and re-enter the sacred por- | most beautiul, olten sublime language, the loity and | and vigorou. palation, wealth and ski a Zs are Not So rose-colored as the | achieved them and had reached the Araguaya, thus MARIANO VARKLLA. a “4 tais of the old Church; and, more that ail, perhaps, | inspired principies and aspirations of prophetic | woula Now her borders, the price telegrams represented tiem to be. ‘Thus the expe. } proving the practicability of the navigation. This To D. dition of General Barreto, Whose advance to and re. {| €stablishes the possibility of running a steamboat | nardo 'ente, yearly take place, embracing Ld yeti Meu ex- turn from the Teotquant Was mnade by the telegrams | Of” thee nae maeon to within 200 mites bia afce eam RRR of the navigable waters of the Paraguay. " ‘ g, | Chureh, to be an uninterrupted sertes of successes, proves to | At rh port of the ascent ‘of the “fais | % MINISTER'S OPINION OF* THE STROUDSBURG HANGING. | Thit Gnee deny the prerogative of the Catholic Jose Dias de Bedoya, D. F. Ecusqniza and D. Ber | to itis due the immense number of conversions that | Judaism, they place in promment relief the uistort- cal mission of the Jewish race and blend the ‘deepest religions feeling with the enlarged views of Modern enlightenment. ‘he obsolete ideas of a political regeneration of the Jews as a «distinct political body, the rebuilding of the tempic as a hance, her citles bevo prosperous, aud in no way could this be done so rapldiy anu effectually as by the vowwntary return of tue peopie to their allegiance to the old flag, and the utter abandonment not only of the exploded ideas that led 1o the rebellion, but of that class of wouid rapid bave been just the reverse, Not only did that Gen. | tt <1 Co pUl@ tine out and haul, the power of the Srrovpspurc, Pa., August 13, 1869, | Church, and whence wili you flee? Where, ol! seca RN at spots vess@F not suificing to drive her up. However, the x Where, will you take up your avodey Where can | place where animal sacrifices are to be olfered | men who lad, since the close of the rebellion, labored eral, with over 2,000 cavairy, fail vo effect the main | pemoval of afew rocks would maze the channe] | 10 THE EpiTor or THR HERALD:— you rest In undisturved peace, notilable to be tossed | again, the prayef for the resurrection of | to keep them arvayed In bitter antagonism to Con- object of Lis march, which was to advance on | much more easy, } Feeling assured that you have no desire to piace a | avout by every wind of doctrine’ It is evident, and | the human body, allusion to the spirit of retrivu- gress and to ue great party of progress that bad Villa Rica to join General Portinho's pri. | | BXChange keeps rising slowly and ts steady at | Christian minister in @ false position, especially | V&COMing more so every day, that ths end Is not to | tion, the result of the dire persecutions ol the Jews, | shown a devotion to principle, and a capacity end o 187gd. Soveretgns fell to 12$720, P ve attained in the Protestant Church, or any branch gade, which ts attempting a kind of miniature | 124400. “The lait overthrew sone ghee eee ee | wheu he tried to perform a most painful duty tothe | thereof. Where ig your beim? Who has the come Sherman march from the Upper Parana, bu Tforward a copy of the appendix to the late om- | best of his ability, 1 write to you seeking the cor- } mand? From whence does it originate? In Eng- vor 4 a | ‘ is the head, Does he 4 on returning from the Tebieuart, on findmg he (cia! conrexpandenca between Brazil and Paraguay, | rection of some misstatements In conneciion with ees! fend! tee cham in rope cg could not get over that river where be struck It, He | puevistonaL GOVERNMENT IN PARAGuAY—scremMeny | YOUF Teport of the execution of Charies Orme, at } who is the ned in this country. oF 1s there a sepa: found it advisabie to make no further stay looking OF THE ALLIES. ” Stroudsburg, Pa, rate head for each country’ Where is your unity of all these are boldly discarded therem. They are laced by those hygher, prophetic aud humanitariag jopes, Wiereii all human beings share, wherem the Wohderiul progress of humanity trom night to ligt, from superstition to faitp, froin abject siavery of the mind to the realization of man’s dignity as a God- created being eudowed with a Divine sprrit, are re- decermipaiion to carry out ifs couscientious pur- poses of government toat must and did command the respect and aduiration of the whole civilized world. In the course of conversation he alluded to the effort being made to induce General Canby vo ex- clude fiom ‘he Legiviacare uh members who for fords, but t ry back Witt a LS ine 2, A. 1. 1889, the following plenipotentiaries of i 2] or faith? How can there be unity of iaith where each | cognized and expressed. All that is beautitul aud | could not take the ion-clad oath, ex: the Fe aad te coke ety back with all possible do- | gue nilenmet at Buenos Ayres, in the afoFetariat of we atin | LOUF TeDorter represents that after the prisoner | Temper, tultor bisown concelt and pride, can take up | gueitine iw theo agenda rs retained; ait cine has | {ove Heyy juke, te Arou-clad oath, exp: ‘arterupted. spatch; and, in tact, it was only by a series of forced | istry of Foreign Remtions, samel cellency Consel. | WAS on the scaffold, and had made his remarks, his | che Bible aud expound gach sentence or verse to suit | outlived itself 1s aWblished, IL 19 13 a mMavter of co If sach a course was pursued he declared that he Hg ueordinnry spiritual advisers demanded that the execution | his‘own selfish or perh corraptend? How can he ratulation then to see the young and striving co tion in St. Louis enier is new house of wor- ip With the recognition that only decided action aud fearless acknowledgment of Ue result of civil. zation will preserve the world-redeeming dogmas and principles of the Jewish religion to the future generauions, From Detroit, Mich., we receive the welcome news that the Jewish congregation Beth-Ei has been suc- cessful in securing Kev. br, Kohler, of Furth, Bava- Fla, as (heir minister. Witn such a teacher vo lead them they wili soon become active co-iaborers in tne great work of Retormed Judaism. The lagiae of the corner stone of a new temple in uincy, HL, has been marked by the practical Ulus- tion of those principles of toleration aud univer- sai brotherhood which sooneror later will lake Lue rm heiro Jove Maria. iw Silva Paranhos ie marches that he mauaged to escape veing caagutin | anda Miniter Pienipotentiary ot bi! is q fe ‘ the narrow roads ‘hroagh tie woods, Ag it was his | & Bracks on special miesion; his Laceleney DE D-Maregs | should bé postponed ull alter the arrival of the mail | dotherwiset He has no head, no Church toexpound S Gatch bad & Varela, Minister and Secretary of State for Foreign Relations Pht itfor him. the Protestant Charch has no conddence rear guard, wiitcl had fallen behind nine or ten } of the Argentine Repubile; and bis Excellency Dr,D. Adolpbo | ®t One o'clock, in hopes of a reprieve, which is cer- | in itself. It feels conscious that the power and the miles in trying to bring along some 000 Paraguayau { K° a _ Envoy agi sgt aad Minister Plenipot tainly a mistake. They demanded no such thing, | promise delivered to.eter and his successors do non-combatants, was ent off by the mam body, the | Han Me One public of Cruguay,on spegiat tm! and would scarcely have had the ooldness to Inter- | uot extend to tt, The sacred badge of authority - ' "The object of the present conferen rupt the officer of the law at such @ moment and thus | which commands ail men to obey 18 aot vested tu Paraguayaus Under Carabullo scomiag in oy « side | ite agreement upon the terms Of recugnieiie the necciniees. | Seem to prolong the horrors of thescene. Your re. | il. The divine spirit, which inspltey the Catholic road and fortifying during the night tie aaccow | goverament which the Paraguayan citizens maby to th eter evidentiy lost sight of the fact that during | Lhurch and it only, enables it to preach, to bush road which formed the coumunication. On pedir d selbst wi as appears us La pa on bad A of Ra by the Le Pat ge rah ne vot Christ " é 3 lege nee) 4 nam | totl riff and ex-Sheriif a communication was handed rouse, *" send gown the Holy Ghost, the being informed of this Barreto turned back, and he al ate Pood ed wie rom omens Pee, lat, from | to the Sherif from Judge Barrett, stating that if the Bpirit of Truth, to teach you all things; and, loll reports carrying an advanced work, killing tweaty- | poble and legitimate agpirat tan of the risoner or his spiritual advisers asked a pone. } ain with you all days, evén utito the consummation aitimate aspirations of the Paragu pie. orld.) eight Pavaguayans, but, being afraid of his own ce. | After examining their powerm which were touud tn good | ment or delay of execution wll after the arrival of | of the worid. and proper form, the three plenipotentiaries resolved:—That | the mail, in hopes of a pardon or reprieve, the Sheri | Whence the origin of the Protestant Church? treat being stmuerly pe 0 Hnully abandoned his | the wishes and pope mire zens erein | should grant the request. And vet, to the furcher Garmeand ome Beil VUL, in his royal vanity rear guard to ite fate. The Comte d'u, on hearing | Mat, as the allied weuoute y Bre sees discredit of this bungiing oiticer, he wished to say | considering himself superior to al) jaws, hiuman ava could not would not remain in tne State, He bad not the siightest fear but that be would ve able to contro! those men, and to bring-them up to the support of (ie administration of General Grant, The people were with nim and he had reason to believe that even a large portion of those who voted against him were now salisied with the result; hence they. would not dé sustatned by their constituents ip any factions legisiation, The people wanted peace ana were deterumued to have it, and if sustained and up- heid by the repubtican party and the administra- tion, he wold pledge himself to make Virginia the most loyal v1 aii ive Southern, States. If a conti course Was pursued be Would regard it as a triumpl to the old pouticians, who were already claim that their prouhecies are about to be fulfilled, ant that the result of the recent election would not be sto was. | y the. Paragua the .establiahinent Of i nothing of this commuutcation, but asked us ta pro. | divine, would have the Church of God prostitute tts | {place Of those systems that Keep up the spirit of ex- } accepted by Congress aa a resloration of Virginia to thas Barreto was inrerened py the Paraguayans, | the egteb Miers thaw ‘rhupent aud Gorcaehen aus weeneye | ceed with our, religious services, notwithstanding | authority and sudmit to his caprice, to bend to mis | clusiveness and separation through reiigtous bar. | fy) eauatity as vue of the States in the Union. hurried of brigades of cavalry and infantry to the wolennn, haneymants, Pxpresed in. various articles of hie warrant allowed him from ten till three o'¢lock. | autuority, to license an unlawful, act, to sanetion | riers, It will be seea trom the report we give of it . nereonns 9 Ra wy ty eeremonies of laying the corner-stone were performed under the sole supervision: and by the prominent represeitatives or the Masome fraternity Suppose he had proceeded and @ reprieve had | fis lustral desires. Wid the Church of 4a bear the come—tor it was currently reported that parties had | same relacion to the State as does the Protestant gone to Harrisourg and had nou yet.returned—wh Church now the Cuarch should yield to the mandate MOVEMENTS oF EX-SECRRTARY SBWARD)—Mp, d, .aie Secretary of State, aoc Frederick Seward and wife, Mr. i ' 8 9 t rear gua the treaty of Mag f 1885, abd compl rescue, and itis sata that all of the rear guard but agreed that the Paraguayan jasiote mehine par Of be ten men had been recovered, the Paraguayans | aimies might march ater the dng of frenkiions William i. sew aatiiedd Wy. his <0: avandoning their prey when they ‘oad suen num- relat OF the wat! aorepwementia accel | would have bech our feelings? We wade nude. | ofthe tyrant; but ave held her sucred office inde: |antiimor. A Uhiariin mister, Gaand Chaplam of | Pitch, oF Auourn, N.Y; Mr. Willan , tate bers coming against them; but alt the Paraguayan | sanguiowry; hat it. ie a need. called, for the 4 mand, but stutply stared the fact that the Jndge had | pendent oF Lue State, and superior to the State. ‘th the Masons, spoke ihe dedicauon.prayer-—4 prayer |.coector oi customs at Alaska, aud aw we Of teres held inviolable. No ktugly theeats could move {/ remarkable for is stinplicity and beauty and the citizens.of tae Lerrivory irom the lower part bead, oh ‘or the clvil population, both sont such a paper, and the prisoner asked the delay | #l refugees had disappeared.: Most of the BrazNAM | {orein, tubaiting she leiliee worn ‘ang other sete wate | Riruself. ‘The Judge evidently thought there was In- } her; not earth and hen conibined could shake her in rear guard saved themselves’ by abandoning their | Which tue aired, Seto have treed trom the power of the an; | decent haste; aud yOu will not doubt ft when tell | her resolve to preserve in Ali. its integrity the sacred ‘ ittfele friends cuake + nd eniay 10 ‘ e/Was about to lea prisongy ont of his ¢ell:— |. A) «then Henry formed a Church that woul hey could Mind until Meir friends came ap. Barreto | Koay to the monotaine where Lopes bap 4 “You ten must cut yor work #ibrt,” referring, to |. ve more docile and more yielding to bis will. . He saw the retains of bit pouted wrmy; thatthe En Js sald to have brougitt in(o camp between 9,000 and 4 Ireniiy Pategnayan government dog not w our prayers for'a dying man. I enciose you tne re. | that to indulge ms passions He mast broak with the _broad -spirit of Iramanity, which pervades. it. The fesnivity, participated in’ by the Whole population of the cify, Une pronnnert part taken vy the represent. alives OL (he. city government, We Mibiscerial share accorded to the Freemasons, mark a new era in Cie pre ess Of religious udyan¢e, and demonstrate beau- : of Sound, arrived sere by the Hunt ou Thursday mone ing. ‘The venerubie statestnan Was teceived with ‘ai the honor and reverence to which Mis, postion ti the aiatory ‘he country and his years. entile him.” A suiuie Wag fired, and the ‘ustial hosp} xtended talities And kind oMfices were “@: n ‘owe 4,000 Paraguayan women, children and oid men. wi or the ends of the alliaaee, and leaves ther . Port frow the Scranton Keprolican, which eubstan- | eld Oaurch. Hence the Kerormation.. No wonder } tfully Chat the artiticual barners exisung ate not (ie wineipal citizens About three PL othe eve woken ate “a Vs were rk apturea.) Pare fabatning with eanal foree vat, there Tintes whut I sny in reference. to the powtponement, | the old Church at uatierent periods of 18 history, |-work of tho people, bavot intriguing pric: Peovle assembicu i the, Ope. to mene i SSCe, Sia Tues Were BOX Foomptared. | | Tt wie ieamdal Gos aneenanT ie Let me also say that there commotion, but no | aud when Katermg tron ‘persecution and con- | oration of the Jey, I. M. Wise Was. 1h perfect keep: | An wddiess iva. the Misuagursherl vigor the bait ‘The victory obiained py the Braziliau force ‘that | (hey: tesper Wranglig. {0 att eiitorial you say “ihe prisoner } fronted by Its enemies from within and without, | ing with tat spirtt, and ty remarkavie for its logic | weimg viled (o repietion and @ large proportion of marched against San Pedro oecurred while the 1,200 | goayan. was not in a happy frame of mind that the Gler- | Would convene it faith(al diseipies (rom @ll paris | and precision, bY) * + bed * Me aiutonce ‘acdies, Mt Seward, im @ few well Varigeashint oink dy ves teqtueer nrestparwertiel gyman bad lim removed from the scaffold for fur- | of the earch to embrace more iondiy the old aud itis high ume, then, that America assuite the | chosen words, expressed big gratiicatios 480 goveroment, to enize | Ther religions consolation.” ‘This te Incorrect, ad | tried tenets Of its ialih; to buckle on their amor a wae following eon ditt What | have already said wil show. Beiteve me, | to renew the fignt with the devil, tie world and fey erin pelle Parnguay | Mr. Editor, [ do not think that the misrepresenta- | the flesh; to auimate their faiih, to renew their jominion of opens” Po “Fe | tow te wilful, but the result of a mistnderstandin geal, VO sustain and comforts ‘their venerable and 1 think I have only to call your attention to it head and to declare before Gol and. man ) have tt corrected. God knows | Would got volanta- } thetr firm resolve to preserve myiolate the sacred rily be present atsuch @ horrible scene, but a sense | truths and mysteries entrusted to their charge Wo Lie HA Ad bet Ct of the prisoner was ail Ane oa tis tures the Catholic Churen ig Raa : i‘ ine there, Your reporter justly saya ‘a } chan) Ne faith, As well might God Himsei of flooded Helds, wile bis extreme ieft waa protect Wan weal bs coueiea ie tan (renairivan ve anal een sanine more horrtole execution never took ed tn the | change as that Church with whieh He promised to ed by a ravine. The Brazilians haa about 2,600 men, | and for winch they do and can count on the most generous | United States.’ WM. M. RIDGWAY, aweil for @nd againet which the power of hell large proportion cavalry, and : aympatbies of the allied Pastor of Methodint Eviseoonl ehnreb, Stroudsburg, | shall not prevail, are! p' ds were much snperior | “7hird~These covers ra. , Come my dear friend, into ite fold, There lead, not only of Instituting practiea reforms, but | manner of ta proclam plone through ee Mouth of its recognized | He predicted (or our Territory a det cuders, th Uneqdivocal langaage, the principies by | as glorious as (hav of a th ation: Which it ts to be guided. America must give to Gers | domain, At tis COBMUMON OF the heeaieee rrr 4 many the example of practical, determined | our peopie Were presented to Mr. Seward, who re- measures; It must kindle a beacon, radiant and | ceived eacu wih a cordial of the hand ands bright cuough to shine across the ocean, iat she | grace vecoming one who has tied 60 many exalted hopes of tne enlightened massed be not crushed; | positions in pubic ile. About four m3 the it AG 10to- ‘ceptton at all pouite on tween (hem aud the greatly supertor corps mar tug to attack them, — However, the Paraguayans were reached betore they coud croas, and their conn wander therefore posted his army for a battle, with jue right wing resting in a wood, and his centre and right, with bie bweive Snrall cannon, behind 4 series | declarations of gratiude to the allies and tl that the demoraiizajion which must inevitabiy fol- rty returned 4 runt low such half meashres be stemmed; that Judaism Fis, ‘on whence Mr, Seward and part exhibit again, a of old, that vitality which wiii ena-.) to ‘Alaska by the Active, which bie it to withstand the nuilifying infuence of bias. | under special charter for the cocasion.—Oiympies Phowous atheism. 8 well as tuo soul-tryiog presaure } /Washinown reritorw Mandand July ww

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