The New York Herald Newspaper, June 19, 1871, Page 9

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RELIGIOUS. CONTINUED FROM EIGHTH PAGE. rating religion from education 1s palling moment to society He f@ bierarcny tm Englana, of estapiisned since attenden the Church in Kngiand, from whence | reverend pastor, Father Cauvin, commenced to | extremes. On one side we have the Catholics, on tures aunared of the first youths of Great Britain | celebrate the ‘solemn high | mass, Fathers | the otver the Quakers. ‘They are the antipodes of ‘Sot oul on A visit to ome to attend the anniversary | ‘Treacy and Paganini officiating as deacon | worship. The Papist has gone back to the days of Of the fvuaficate and to testify their sincerity to | and ~ sub-deacon respectively. Alter the | Moses and Solomon. — The Quaker has oscillatea to the Holy See and the steadiastness of their fulth! He decisred the dogma of the Immaculate Con- ception of the Virgin Mother of God and declared it as a. matter of faith that should believe that from the tirst | ¢ Moment of her conception she was pure and spot- Jess, To doubt "his 18 to incur the penalty of excom- mmanicauon. He has also elevated the spouse of the Blessed Virgin, St. Joseph, to be the THE PATRON SAINT OF THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH, ‘Who could doubt the great attributes of holiness Which belonged to the foster father of our Saviour, In 1869, in the miast of dificuities, he sum- joned the priests from every portion of the table globe to Kome, and there laid lown rules for the guidance of humanity hac the children of the Church should be guarded the ravages of tvfidelity. He urged that Ca- | sholic schools be established in every countiy and religious training be combined with secular instruc- God, which alone can bring true happiness and a fetter state of society. No wonder, when religionis jored, thut the evil passions to which'man ts heir reak forth despite all educational training, or that hudren bring shame to their parents and scandat all about them, “The Pope has silenced forever vallatiacks upon the meaning of the words of the xt above quoted, which has been constraed by “liberal” men (:) as giving too much power to one dividual. He has declared that he, as the succes- er of Peter, Who was commissioned by Ohrist him- pel, is {| INPALLIBLE IN MATTERS OF FAITH AND MORATS, To doubt 1s to incur ihe pain of major excommnat- ation, He has protested agalust the usurpation of he territory whicu for eleven centuries has been he property of the Church, and which 1s necessary conduc; the temporalities of the Church, untram- elied by worldly potentates, With a few further remarks eulogistic of the many irtues of the Holy Father, and urging his congrega- on to offer up their prayers to God in behail of tho ope, and beg of Him to stem the tide of infidelity, hich is spreading over the world, Father Cassidy losed his sermon, At the conclusion of the mass the 7e Deum was ung for the Pope, the congregation standing mean- JST. JOHN'S METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Provoking to Love und Good Works—Ser- mon by Rev. J. A. M. Chapman. ( Yesterday morning Bishop Ames participated in Whe exercises at St. John’s Methodist Episcopal |. jnurch, Bedford avenue, and the pastor, Rev. J. A. Chapman, delivered a practical discourse from lebrews, X., 24, 26:—‘‘And let us consider one an- dother to provoke unto love and to good works: not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as le manner Of some is; but exhorting one another, id so much the more as ye see the day approach- g.” After a few introductory words the preacher said hat in the text the apostle urged upon his readers fue importance of cherisning fraternal feeling Ward others, and it might with safety be said that, ext to the power of an indwelling Christ, the ®ecret of the eflicioncy and infuence of the early Aisciples is found in that extorted confession con- werning them from their enemies, “BEHOLD HOW THESE CHRISTIANS LOVE ONE AN- OTHER,” \, Nothing was more to be deprecated in modern ‘Gays than the partial, practical departure of the Church from this unworldly condition, whether 1t mere viewed as impairing her beauty or as ps -alyz- 4ng her influence upon the world, This human one- mess, unity of spirit and fraternity of purpose is the Quest of the world. To find its basis the profoundest pplulosophers have studfed and thought; to realize it {the sternest moralists have labored and dled. Chri:t reveals the one aud makes the other possible, Anu? oO other obligation devolves more solemoly upon he Church than to vindteate uhis aspect of Christ’s mmission to the world, Whatever might be the de- uctious of science or the opinions of men to regard ®o the identity of race or its common origin, no pen Would deny the unity of Christ's dis 5 hey are brethren in being the sptritual-cniidren of one Father, partakers of one nature, animated by sone spirit and travelliug one path to their Father's Mouse on high. ‘ne features in which they differ are saperticial; those in which they agree are radi- cal, The former are ephemeral: the latter are ternal. Shame ou that disciple of Christ who can- jot see through the superficial exterior of a Clris- Man brother and grasp the elements of A COMMON UNITY ‘with that warm hand of fellowship, love and sym- pathy that allows diferences in social position or external circumstances to hide trom his view the Vikeness of, a common Saviour! The old heathen Buge had etherged into more than the dawn of the Christan era when he said, “There is nothing that concerns humanity that does not concern me.” A disciple of Christ should be able to say witu a pro- founder and more vial significance, “There 1s Moihing concerning a disciple of Christ taat does ot concerh me as bis brother.” Chrisans shouid consider each other's infirmittes and weaknesses, and manifest a forbearing, for- giving spirit, Verfection and infallivility could be predicated of but few o! our fatten race, aud MEN WERB EXACTING IN THEIR DEMANDS sand severest in their denunciauons of those faults ‘ol which they themselves are the most guililess. I \knew a man who was most thrilling in his denan- sclations of the common amusements of life, and who would outlaw every Individual who indulged tn them from the commonweaith of Christ, and yet ‘was on his Kuees at tho altar of Mammon so con- stanuy and with such devotion as to eat out utterly ‘the love of Christ from his heart. I knew aman ‘who was most exemplary and constant in his attend- ance upon the means of grace, who would allow ‘Dobody to hope for heaven that did not follow his example, and yet 1 never knew lim to give @ dollar for any charilabvie or religious purpose when he could help it, 1 knew another man who was most Alberal and iarge-hearted in bis contributions to the ‘cause 01 Christ and the vartous humanitarian pur- jposes of the Church, and was most CAUSTIC IN HIS CRITICISMS UPON THOSE WHO TALK for Christ but did not give; and yet I never heard a gyllable from his lips In behalf of the cause of Christ, pendant rosettes and ciotn of gold. On the epistie side a canopy was adorned with rich lace and covered with the choicest fowers; beneath was hung a portrait of Pio Nono, with a picture of the Good Shepherd oe ao, side and of each side of the sanctuary, and the side altara blazed among forests of tapers that shed fearing God more than | While the ergan pealed forth the strains of the man. dow gis: has been the success which has Kurte of ‘Mozart's immortal ‘‘Twellth Mass,” the a) fa s—It 18 but fitting, at a time when the whole Catholic world rejoices on the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the elevation of Pius IX, universal thanksgiving to our God tor gine 80 that of Peter his end may not be so cruel. should all join in prayer to God to prolong his life jt mi ears 80 that he may witness the triumph ij cent aa ustioe. ‘sc P in spirit by bringing all our passions and appeti formed its style 8 wi eh ae ae agreeable variation in ton, that they may grow in the love and fear of prayers had been offered at the close of the Hoy diction of the Blessed Sacrament, at which Berge’s Tanium Ergo was sung, brought the sublime ser- vice to a close. Dr. Boynton Upon the Materialism of the ie immaculate conception on ther. The Papal arms were fixed on ‘A RELIiIOUS INFLUENCE, 1, Father Cauvin, addressing the congregation, (0 the Poutificate, that we, too, should joim in the clously prolonged the reign of our Holy Father. 1s true that his reign has heen clouded by trou- bles, but, like his illustrious predecessor, St. Peter, be enpe bot intetligent; and how 1s it possible to HE HAS WITHSTOOD HIS TRIALS know how to worship God without that Book? witha brave heart resigned to the will of Jesus | Without its Instructionsyou would be as ignorant Christ. Let us hope that if his reign has resembled | &8 the Pagans of the past or the Pagans We ‘Tho choir, under Professor De Graud Val, per- | 1 art in the usual creditable manner. was given formed an jozarv’s mass. Whew sacrifice lor the Venerable Pontiif the entire congre- ation rose, while the Messrs: Judge and Miss Mee- ian began to chant Lambillotte’s fe Deum, A bene- WASHINGTON CHURCHES. Interesting Sermon from Dr. Boynton on the Attributes of Heaven—The Celestial City a Material Metropolis—The Resurrected Body a Thing of Flesh and Bones— Dr. Newman oa True Worship. ASSEMBLY CHURCH. Body After the Resurrection, and of the Celestial City—A Picture of the Spiritual Form of Humanity and of the Eternal Home of the Blest. WASHINGTON, June 18, 1871, Rev.. Dr. Boynton preached at the Assembly church upon the attributes of the spiritual body and HEAVEN AS A MATERIAL PLACE. The spiritual body, as shown by instances in Christ's life often after the resurrection, was visible and in- visible at pleasure. It had the power to penetrate matter. It was not controlled by gravity. A body formed of flesh and bones, in which spirit power takes place of the blood on tne arrival of iife, | can euter upon the new conditions of life | in the kingdom of heaven, Christ was put to | death in the flesh, but quickened and reinstated in | the spirit life. The speaker was not one of those who think that all inquiry regarding cnaracteristics of heaven either forbidden or useless. Inasmuch as Christ declared that [ie was going to prepare a place for us, Jt becomes an interesting question to us | where that home of the Lord may be and what its character ts, The statements of the Scripture seem intended to excite our interest in regard to our future | home. Christ is sald to have passed through, not | into tne heavens. The phrase is significant and.not | carelessly used, but employed to describe a literal fact, that in going back from earth to His heavenly home tie passed through the heavens. The Jewish idea o! THE STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSE embraced three heavens—the atmospbere of earth, the starry regions, beyond ana without these the heaven of heavens, For such a general and wide- | spread idea there must be some corresponding truth, ‘This heaven Of heavens seems to be tie place of the | special manifestation of God, the seat of tis throne, | the ceucral city and metropolls of the universe. In regard to its character, fisrt of all it must be a place where @ material body with FLESH AND BONES CAN DWELL, for wlih such a body Jesus evidently ascended, Two | ideas may be entertained in regard to senses—one | that sensibility depends upon the senses, and wnen the body perishes the spirit has no means of com- municating with the material world. It is a | qnestion whether the body 1s & medium, without which the spirit cannot perceive at all, or whether it may not bea muMer, by whose witudrawat the | spirit would receive impressions from the external | world more readily than now. A covering over the | ear deadens the hearing, @ glove on the hand ren- | ders the touch less delicate, a shaded glass obstructs the vision. ‘he withdrawal of the body may im- crease all THE PERCEPTIVE POWERS OF THE SPIRIT. Christ rose as the first fruits of the redeemed humanity. Tue place He has prepared tor His | People must be suited to the resurrection state of | all His people, It will also be worthy of the great | King. Asa royal bridegroom first throws open the | parlors he has fitted for his bride, so tt may be that ; the Royal Son will on the great day when He takes | the Church, His bride, to Himself, first throw open | the new regtons He has prepared to the wondering eyes of angels and of men, We cannot even fancy THE PARTICULAR CHARACTER OF ITS SCENERY, the forms and hues of its glories or tne nature * its | ever new deligit; but we Know that temhocceb | every desire and want of the new humm, che description of the new Jerusalem shows %.»'side upon which God uses gems and gold, of which, if we possess a little portion, we are so swollen with vanity and pride, 1t matters not whether the de- scripuon 1s a reality. It shows God's estimate of and His use of gems and gold. With a few gems to sparkle and a ~~ id pieces to shine a man expects toed Hale us with his splendor; but God shows us a ‘¥y fifteen hundred miles square, with its foundathuweils’of prectous Jewels, each of its lofty gates a sond pearl and all its streets paved with gold. ‘This is thestdea which God presents of heaven, Christ ascendedas the head of the government of the universe, In this govern- ment the Church is to share, There are three theo- ries in regard to LATION F MENT. One is saat besides the angels there are many dif- OF THE CELESTIAL GOVERN- NT. et the spirit of charity take possession of the com- unity, the Church, the family, the world, and how much strife, confusion, bloodshed and desolation would be forever prevented! Chrisuians should consider each other's sorrows, trials and aMiicuuns, “pear each other's burdens, and 60 fulfil the !w ¢ Christ,” which was self-sacrifice for opwr hould be the ambition of every discif~™: hot only himself to obey the mjunchen o. -sne Apostie, to be always abounding Ln the work of the ‘Lora, but he should spek to inspire ‘thers a spirit of like aggressive acuvity. Keno sets an idle fan at work duplicates himself; he who sets two more bands and feet and another head and heart at in the cause of the Master has found the secret of the highest success. Social religion may be greatly promoted by diligently cultivating the various lueans of grace, aud they who were remiss in their attendance upon them were guilty of sin and ox- posed themselves to condemnation. The social Means Of grace were not only essential to the eill- ciency of the Church, but they were requisite to rhe buillaing up of persona} piety and the estabiishment vof the soul in practicai holiness, ‘The speaker, in cluctdating thts portion of the text, considered the excuses which many people amake for absence trom worship, and the depressing influence which their non-attendance has upon those who are devotional and manifest fidelity to God, Some might suppose that the reverend gen- Ueman’s criticisms upon those who allowed the ‘Weather and other trivial causes to detain them from public worship were inappropriate to his hear- ‘ers, but it was exceedingly appropriate vo “lair ‘woather Ohrixtians” in all parts of the land, Mr. Unapman spoke of a man whom he knew tna Now England city, who, when starting tn business, made it a rule to be faithful im his attendance upoo the social means of grace. He struggled along in the dry goods business for weeks, and one evening, as he was about to close the store, representatives rom tweive of the le families called to pur ohase . He was in a quandary what to do, for if he dtd not wait Lpon them he would lose their jeustom. fle concluded to be true to God and to risk ‘the consequences. He told them he was sorry to inform them he ad to Close the store, for he made e ‘a rule to always attend “olass.” of the Methodist Church In New Baogiand, Christ's second coming. His customers said there were Other stores open and left; but they did not go to them, To-day that merchant ts known as one of the truest and most tntluential members in con- Jusion the speaker said they were urged to the duty fe haa been inculcating by the consideration of ferent rwalers of intelligent beings inhabiting the rede worlds of the universe, and that redeemed umanity, with Christ at its head, will constitute yoverning family of creation, Anotner suppo- is that as the only revealed form for beings of uegree of intelligence 1s the human one that it the model form of the universe. ‘y 2 third theory “Is that there are only two races ot intelligent be- ings—angels, ood and evil, and men. Whichever theory of the universe you may adopt the position of the Church of Christ in that universe remains unchanged. In any case ft is the governing body of cre: Ue queen sharing the throne of her royal husband, Christ THE METROPOLITAN METHODIST CHURCH, Dr. Newman on the Efficacy and Origin ef ‘True Worship—All, Places God’s Holy les. boi Wasmtnaton, June 18, 1871. Secretary Delano and General Bavcock were among the attendants at Dr. Newman’s this morn- ing. The subject was “True Worship.” His text was taken from the fourth chapter of St. John’s Gospel, ninteenth to twenty-sixth verses, being the Evangellst's report of the conversation between Christ and the woman of Samaria, in which Christ said, “The hour cometh, and now is, when the true worshippers shail worsnip the Father in spirit and in truth; for the Father seeketh such to worship Him.’ Dr. Newman prefaced his sermon with an account of the origin of the Jewish and Samaritan religions, whose symbolic and ritu- alistic institutions were done away with by Christ at the well of Sycharand the trao idea of worship questions, First, WHAT IS TRUB WORSHIP? house of prayer. except where the worshippe! Worship aiso supposes simplicity in those exercises which are recognized as acceptable to God. We do not behoid Christ splenaid tiara and the Urim and Thummim, but we behold him privately in prayer and publicly reaaing eore tures, singing hymus and praying and sitting We approach to Christ the simpler we snall be in the external expression of our hearts.. Men like the other extreme, the spirit to move. Sometimes it moves to silence, sometimes to frivolity, everybody a yet he would have him receive the Lord's supper and bapusm and or any other pious people. of the be worshiped in spint and in truth—in the truth which is according to the precepts of the Bible, and ‘he Res in meditation, in hope and faith, and with you are in your Father's temple, aud your prayer can be heard as well from and the thoroughfare as from the place of public prayer. your hearts and tne service of your life, His Recent Letter—The Latin Racce—What | Sages have endeavored to describe them; but the | according to the wy dcolared. This declaration of Christ suggested two ‘The religious world has no centre r is, The simplicity of WORSHIPPING ARRAYED IN MAGNIFICENT ROBES, lown and teaching the people. The nearer He sits in silence and waits for The speaker would have uaker 80 far as imorality 18 concerned, SING AND SHOUT AS METHODISTS Worship must not ony resent. Lastly—Spirituality. God must e8 in subjection to the Divine law. Worship Kim in he joy of song. Remember that wherever you are THE PLACE OF BUSINESS Remember that you are to render unto Him FATHER HYACINIHS, They Onght to Do—Italy and France— Russia and Prassia—The Century of the Working Classes=The Temporal Power and Papal Infallibility—Tbe Father’s Last In- terview With Archbishop Darboy. The following is the full text of the letter of Father Hyacinthe, written in Rome on the 29th ult., a oriet synopsis of which appeared by cable asuort time since:— The Italian government and Parliament have tes tuned thelr sympathy with France in novie lan- guage, Without being surprised at this, I am greauy affected, and | feel impelled to express my gratitule, At a moment when men, blinded by Passions, endeavor to propagate falsehood and sow discord between two sister nuuions, It ts the duty of ail enhgntened and honest men w draw closer the ties which unite France to Italy, If the Latin races are to maintain, I will not say their independence only, but their great position in face of the menacing preponderance of the Germanic and Sclavonic races personified in Prussia and Russia, they must above all things be united, In no other way can they resume the traditions of that Western civilization whoge destinies are blended with those of the Catholic Church, and whose mis- sion, if sue would recover her ancient splendor, ts vo stife in her own bosom those two enemies whose combats are cruel and sterile—revorution and abso- lutism, superstition and impiety. Moreover, in de- fending to-day her own cause, France defends that ol society at large. Yes, human dignity, law and liberty, the civilization of the two worlds, have been outraged and trampied upon by new barbarians amid the bloody streets and burning monuments of Paris. In vain do the men of March 18 pretend to represent two political ideas which would be just if contined within their true iimits—the idea of that Comumuue to which M. de Bismarck did homage tn the Reichstug on May 2, and the idea of the moral «and material regeneration of the working Classes, ‘They have compromised these causes by most unacceplabie exaggeration apa by the odious means they have made use of. They would have realized the triumph of thelr cause at the expense of the uational unity and on tue Tulos of social and religious order, “ They were a barty of assassins, Inceadiaries and atheists, but 80 reat a party that they were, or at least appeared to e, a people. And waat is a people without God ? Jacts we liave Just seen reveal What such a peop.c 18 with a reality which detles words. The demonstra- tion of what social atneism is has been complete, Providence aliowed tt lor an hour to disport uself ou the greatest theatre of the world, to revel ta its ergies and periorm the most terrible of dramas, But ts tis people alone guilty, and is cannon the only remedy Beware of that easy and fatal illusion which would deprive us of the fruit of the dreadiul tesson. Mr. Gladstone once said, ‘tue nineteenth century is the ceutury of the working classes.” And in point of fact the question of the working classes pre-eminently occupies the attention of the statesman and the man of science, ana our society will never ki “ed till 1t is solved. Tne Second Kun Of this question, but It deg! nd Hmpire looked only and even in that point or means; as, lor ex nanem Cireenses! The Se Po narerias atiehorations, view 1 did not take the t pie when it for! orks n tite great citica, especially in Pal ped the fleids of hands, anc cougregated populations which lived apart ‘from the normal ‘conditions of family religious in- Nuences, and consequently of morality. Wuat should have been done was to think of that popular in- struction which is universal among our neighbors beyond the Rhine, and whicn, at least as much as her military organization, is a source of strength to Germany. An attempt sould have been made vo heal these two sores, which eat into the entrails of our people—the prolonged celivacy of soldiers and the legal prostitution of women, Above all, a better Xample should have been set in high places. And the Church herseif has not done what she ought to have done for the practical solution of this terrible problem, ‘Tne temporal power and the Pope's lu- fallibility distracted the thoughts and erlorts of those who preside over the destinies of the Church at & moment unparatieled in its history. Instead of the promises and teachings of tne Gospel to tue disin- herited of tuis world the Unurcli, in tue nolsy echoes of the press, and sometiines even by the mouth of its bishops, treated matters of bitter contro- versy about the Pope-King, the dogmatizauon of intolerance ana tie canonization of the inquisition, 1 donot calumniate the political and religious ég/me that we have submitted to for more than twenty years and which 13 summed up ta these two words—“scepticiam at Paris; Ianaticism at Rome.” Ido not calumniate, | do not even accuse; Inarrate, But I say that there is the lesson of the present moment, aiid that the question 1s whether ‘We Wish or not to continue this fatal course. In the presence of that Paris in ashes which I have dwelt in, which 1 have evaugellzed and the history of which | know, L have the right to utter this cry of a grief which God alone knows the depth of, Behold the work of a people which no longer knows God. And behold the work of those who render 1t impos- sibie for it to believe in that God and above all to love him, HYACINTHE, P. 5.—Just as Lhad finished these lines the tele- raph announce: to us that the Archbishop of Paris had been shot. Ts horribie crime ts tne confirma tion of lhe mysterious law in virtue of which the innocent suffer for the guilty. Mgr. Darboy was of the number of those who understand and wish for the alliance of the Church wiih modern society. if he did not realize ali that he had conceived it was because the fatality of the times was stronger than he. He gave way, however, (0 no illusions, aud awaited death with that cold enthusiasm which charac. terized him on great occasions. I still hear what he LITERATURE. Criticisms of New Books. Way Dip He Nor Dig? or, THe CuI. FROM THE EBRAERGANG. Alter the German of Ad, Von VolcKhausen. By Mrs. A. L. Wister, translator of “The Old Mamseile’s Secret,” “Onty a Girl,” &e., &c. J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia, Mrs, Wister's admirable translations are among the books that everybody reads. She certainly may be said to possess unusual ability in retaining the peculiar weird flavor of a German story, while ren- dering it with perfect ease and grace into our own language. Few recently published novels have re- cetved more general perusal and approval than “only @ Girl; and “Why Did He Not Die?” possesses in at least an equal degree all the elements of popu larity. From the beginning to the end the Interest never flags, and the characters and scenes are drawn with great warmth and power. The story is based upon the early loves of Herr Wilheim Graven- sund, @ young gentleman of wealth and position, and Marie Gunther, @ beautiful but humble girl. Through the carelessness and villany of a priest, the Pastor Siegfried, a sum of money seut by Graven- sund for Marie’s use and sustenance, aud accom- panied by expressions of the warmest affection, 1s kept from her, and she dies, leaving young infant and belleving herself forsaken and betrayed by her lover. The chiid is at first thought dead, but is finally restored to warmth and life and somewhat reluctantiy adopted by Marie’s aunt, the Frau Kurten, and her husband, with whom, it must be confessed, he has rather hard lines, The Pastor Siegfried Is, as a matter of course, the boy’s bitter enemy. Having appropriated the mouey sent him (amounting to the sum of 700 marks) ostensibly to the Church, bu! really chiefly to nis own purposes, under the supposition of Richard’s death, his fury upon discovering him to be living may be imagined; constantly and energetically he asks himself why “the boy did not die?’ The priest's anxiety ts the greater whea some years after (Herr Graveasund having in the meanwhile married), he finds that the Kurtens are not only near neighbors of the Graven- sunds, but that an accidental acquaintance between the legitimate children and poor Richard (as the boy is called) has actually given the latter the entrée to his father’s house. Siegfried then sets himself to work to destroy the lad’s reputation and tianish him from the Gravensund mansion, fearful that Herr Wilhelm may, through some unforeseen circum. stance, discover that his son is still living, and that he has been deceived by the wily priest. In these plots he is aided by Therese Juger, a deceitful and treacherous woman, who, having obtained her first foothold in the Gravensund home as housekeeper (a place procured for her throug Silegiried’s own agency), has contrived vo attain considerable in- fluence with the family. Through their com- bined efforts Richard Kurten 1s accused ot theft, and finally put out of the way by being sont, at the age of twelve years, to the House of Correction. To this step the foster parents, who be- Heved in his guilt, and haye never regarded tim ‘with much tenderness, consent, Tuence he is suffl- ciently fortunate to make his escape, and for atime he disappears altogether from the scenes of the story. In the meantime many changes take place among the rest of the dramasis persona. Madame Graven- sund dies, and Therese Juger, by @ sertes of arts, succeeds in marrying the widower, The children grow up; Willy, the sou, proving himself not only worthless and extravagant, but finally forging the mame of a companion, and only escaping tmprison- ment through flight. Tne Kurtens settle down to a ratner unlovely, yet comfortable, old age, rarely Speaking of their foster son, of whose fate they are ignorant. The pastor, Siegfried, still retains some influence and intimacy with the Graven sund family. The hero of {he tate reap. pears a talented aya ouccessful artist, as well as a popular and brilliant man, He thus proves conclusively “whythe did not die.” Having learned gears before that the Kurtens were not his parents he has dropped their name, and is known aa “Reichard,” under which title he has risen to Wealth and prosperity, The priest meets the young artist, and in spite of all changes knows him as the boy he disgraced and bantshed. With the Graven- sunds Reichard becomes intimate, while he remains unrecognized by them. He appears attracted by the grace and beauty of Anna, Herr Gravensuna’a young Yaughter. The priest sees the impending danger, nd fears he may be forced to unite the brother and siker or confess his crime. All, however, ends Well. Reichard’s love is really given to Netta, the mst charming character in the book. She is the siter of Gravepsund’s first wile; but as she was vey young at the time of the marriage she ts gen- erlly supposed to be a daughter of che hoyse. The arlst shares this beilef, and when Its father finlly discovers and desires to acknowledge hn, Reichard’s despair ai beleving Netta to be Nisisver far exceeds his happiness in finding a faier, ‘This misunderstanding is, however, before lox dispelled and Reichard and Netta made happy. Thpriesv’s crime 1s, of course, discovered; he 1s bashed from the Gravensund circle, but not pub. licl disgraced. As a parting arrow he discloses to chaycter, without, however, confessing that *° humuf was the author of her misforcunes, «tame Theke Gravensund ts thus deposed, her husband constng himself among his childrea; with whom he livin peace and happiness, 7e¢ declining years of the‘urtens are aiso passed In great contentment, Owing liberat remitcances from their foster son, Such isbrief résumé of this very interesting novel, Althou; it cannot be Claimed that all the outlines of the jt are entirely original, there 1s, neverthe- less, @ ¥t amount OF freshness about the book, MARRIF FoR Bott Worips. By Mra. A. E. Por- ter, aior of “Captain John,” &c. Lee & shepard: Bosto “Mard for Both Worlds” is a religious novel, as may beferred from its pretty and striking t tle. It 1s theory of the life of Esther Gray, wno, left a widow the prime of her youth and beauty, thence- forwardvotes herself to domestic duties, and to said to mein the last mterview Thad with him, a few days ago, at the moment of leaving for Rome:— “if they Kill me they will advance the principle that Lrepresent;” and 1 shall never forget with what an accent he added, “Au revo, here velow or else. where.” NGS RECENT PASTORAL, ARCHBISHOP MAN) On the 4h Instanta pastoral letter from Arch- bishop Manning upon the events which have lately occurred in Paris was read in the churches and chapels of the “arcadiocese” of Westminster. After congratulating the faithfal that ‘in the midst of all our contentions and divisions God is still worshipped “cast Him of ina neighboring country, He says, “We see there the legitimate working ont of a tical system which began some eighty years since with biaspheming our Kedeemer, * * * The joss to fall again. pon revolution, away. * * * he legislators of the rights of man and, secondly, how expressing state or condition, The origin of wor. ould it be performed? The worl ‘worship’ 1s of Saxon origin, &@ compound of two words, worth and ship, worth having reference bi reject to the excellence of the being worshipped and ship A Bi Meal nas: hon seclanen found sorrow and sympathy for Christian, Catholic and chivalrous France. For ts tt not France | flied sanctuaries, martyred the priests of in Engiand,” Dr. Manning passed on to consider the terrible judgmeuts of God’ on those who lis of the Knowledge and worship of God in Christ eaced the moral law from man’s conscience and dissolved the bonds of public and private Life.’? rt that day the French people has lived on “a L Mi snecvacls of mubeciiity, rauling pn rising, bul rising | Colonel A. Gillem, of the First Cavairy; Lieu- Dynasty after dynasty, revolution have succeeded but to vanish have now spoken thely last word, and worked out their logical and moral results in the profaned churches, the blool stained streets and universal wreck of Paris. The capital of the new civilization and progress is inashes. Wesay this with a pro- rseit ted God, insulted His Lesion ge de- jesus ship i @ question of profound interest. Is it @ | Christ, siandered Sisters of Charity, * * * trum- ted infidelity and glorified atheism, human invention or a divine revelation? From the ba ey eer Arent 5 aeeeaditta icenat ial onion Tt is a sect, a works @harity and love among the poor. Her hand iser extended to help the fallen, and her heart op to the sick and needy, She regards her husbanG absent rather than lost; makes the ful- filment dis wishes her especial care, and looks forward th cheerful confidence to their reunion where dh has no dominion and partings are un- known, ARMY INTELLIGENCE. Coloneames H. Simpson, of the corps of en- gincers, addition to his present duties, is chargea with the yervision of the engineer operations of the Eightighthouse district, west of Pearl river, By direen of the President, a board to retire dis- abied ofiq, in pursuaace of the act of Congress of August 1861, will convene at San Francisco, July 5, for) examination of suc officers as may be broughtfore it, The following are detatied for the boardMajor General John M. Schofield, tenant Coli M. D. L. Simpson, Assistant Com. mussary Geral of Subsistence; Lieutenant Colouel Robert Muy, Assistant Medical, Purveyor, and Surgeon Cres McCormick, The presiding officer will appoin recorder tor the board, AVAL INTELLIGENCE, Comman' Chester Eatfela ts ordered to the command che Kansas; Surgeon C, H. Burbank, to the Michigs Assistant Surgeon C. 8, Cassin, to the naval rendous at San Francisco, Detachedeutenant Commander N. H. Farqu- He) Wilhelin his present wife's former position and ! NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 19, 1871.—WITH SUPPLEMENT. RAILWAY MONOPOLIES. The Consolidation of the New York and New Haven and New Haven and Hartford Railroads—Big Dividends and High Tariffs—Remonstrance of the People— What the Officials Say. The residents of the towns along the line of the New York and New Haven and the New Haven, Hartford and Springfield Railroads have frequently complained of the exorbitant rates charged for local fraghts and passengers; but their voice has never been heard 0 loudly as at the present time. About a year ago these two roads, which constitute the line between this city and Boston, entered into terms of consolidation, and since September last the two lines have been run under one manage- ment, There is now before the Legislature of Con- necticut @ bill to legalize the consolidation, and 1t having been favorably reported by the joint railway committee petitions against the consolidation to tne following effect are being circulated, A corre. spondent in New Haven sends it to this office, with tho information that the market value of the com- bined stock is about $20,000, that the New York and New Haven road pays ten per cent dividena on tts | Watered capital and upwards of twelve per cent on its cash capital. The Hartford road pays upwards of twelve per cent, equal to eighteen per cent on its paid-up capital These large dividends is urged as areason why the rates of freight and farcs should be reduced and the public benefited. . The poittion 8 as follows AND Tlousk OF REPResENTATIVRS OF CONNEOTICUT, IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY gned, residents of respectfully remo: strate ayalust the pass. of the House bill No, 16, intend to consolidate the interea's of the New York anit New fn and the New Haven, Hartford and Springtield Railroad ¢o panies, uniess some provision be inserted in sald bill reducing the charges made for the transportation of paxsengera over and additional fands shall be necessary for the liquidation of the debts of said companies or of either of them, of for the prom secution of any new work which shall be undertaken, by the int consent of the parties hereto, or for any other legitimate urpone, then and in that event auch additional tunde shalt propo: “ ration shail ny manner, for that purpose or for any other purpose, em- umber its corporate estate, or issue any bond or other lian! ity on the credit of said corporation, without consent of the board of managers, 5. The netearning of theentire railway and peoperty bi {oto anion under (uis con! t il be from Ume to time, the board of managers, ¢ 1 between sald corporations, mm the ry aod proportion aforesaid, and the proportion thereof int to each corporation shall thereupon be paid over to the treasur orporation, to be and ra- main the sole and exclusive estate of sald. Corporation im severalty and to be divided amony the ‘holders thereof, or otherwise disposed of as may be ordered by the directors Of said corporation, 18, The purpose of this contract is to effect, #0 far as at present legaily be a compieve and perpetual union rights and Interests between the parties hereto, and, to the end that such union may be betier the secured and become {tm hereby agree! that, #9 soon as the same may legally be done, she parties hereto shall be merged and. come solidated in a single corporetion, aod in such merger and gontolldation the walue of the src of eh of aaldeorporae tions shall be taken to de in the ratio and proportion aid ted, and all apportionments of stock: or other adjustments: ter such consolidation shall be made on that ratio ame 0 It is hereby expreasly agreed that this contract shall be Perpetuai, and that the parties hereto sbail ie to each other any and all other and turther contracts, assurances and writings which may be, in the optoion of said board ef manaxers, necessary to carry into elfect the purposes of this. agreement, 14, But If in conse lation or jadictal gainst the will of the parties hereto this contract abull con purpose intended hereby shalt be ucapable of accomplisnment in any uther or differeat way, then, and in that event, the parties hereto shall be re stored, no'far as the same can posaibly to thelr original rig! nchises and position, and such eompensatio o adjustments and conveyances shail be made hetween the parties as, considering the origt nal atte and value of the property of each, and ita changed condition by additions, bettermenta, depreciation or other- Wine, or considering any and all other inatters and ¢Bings ap: pertaining to equity and good conselence shall be just and able, * executive officers of each of ald corporations shall in office and in the performance of thelr respective duties watli otherwise order board of managers, however, an ‘eby understood amd contract beoverative until the samme shall have been appro’ Kholvers of each of sald corporations at a meeting spectally warned and held for thas Purpose organic, Tn witness whereof, the New York and New Haven Rail road Company, acilng heroin. by te agents, William D. Bishop, Wilson, H. Trowbridge, hereunto ¢dréotorn, and the Harton ng herein by ite pre iy, authorized by fw to a duplicate hereof duly authorized by 4 and New Haven fa aident, Willian board of direc sald roads to uch rates as will sullice to pay fair remunera- | get their hands a ctlvely, sliridenda on the eapital stock of ald roncs actually aub- | “Dated at New Haven, the di day of August, 1800, bed and paid in. ‘The New York and New Haven Railroad company ae vould r roads | agents, WILLIAM D. BISHOP 8 three WILSON G. HUNT, and one-third cent transportation of throayh FE. H, TROWBRIDGR, passengers, and rates ranging from. four to eight 1 ‘The Hartford and New Haven Rnilrond Company, by ite WILLIAM P. BURRALLA ter, ceuts per mile for way passen That a charge ot cents per mile has proved remune in other States, and that raflroad companies which have been resiricted by law to w charge of two centa per mie for both through and way passengers have been and now are able to pay handsome dividends on even their nominal capital, notwithstanding said capital has, by the process ot “watering,” been greatly increased over the amount actnally anbacribed a ‘They therefore 1 reme age of said © bili, uni therein a cla ombined roads from chat ing for the trausporation of either turough or way passeu- gers more than two cents per mile, Witha view of ascertaining what canse there {s for public grievance an atiavhé of the H#RALD yester- day called upon Mr. Hoyt, Superintendent of the New York and New Haven Ratlroad Company, and | had an interview witn that gentleman and the treasurer. From these gentlemen it was ascer- tained that these companies, with a view of economizing in expenses, securing uniformity of rates and saving expense of breaking bulk, in Sep- tember last effected tue cousolidation on terms that Will bo reterred to hercafter. They” emphatl- cally denounced the statement that local fares are as high as cightand ten cents per mile as untrue, and that In no case between local stations was more than three and a half cents per mile charged, now or in the past. On the contrary, as a result of the. consolidation, in May last the freignt rpora rates were greatly reduced; bus this is usual on the opening of navigation and tne commencemont of water transportatiou. They also deny that the stock of their rvad has been watered; the capital, it is aauutted, was in 1369 increased (rom $6,000,000 to $9,000,000, half of wich had been paid in, and dividends are paid upon what has been paid in, it 13 clalmed that this increase of capital, or “watering” as it is termed, was necessary to keep ‘up the rolling stock, replace wooden by tron bridges and lay steel rails in place of Iron ones. Already about one-lall the Jron rails have.been superseded by steel, and 80 soon as the balance of the extra $3,000,000 18 pald in the other portious of the road will be overhauted in the same manuer and placed in supertof oraer. | ‘These officials claim that neither company Wil be benelited pecunlarily by the con- soldation beyond the slight reduction of ranning expeuses, and that, on the coutrary, shippers and trave Will reap the benefit by more rapidity in the transmission of ireight and passengers beuween New York and the Easter clues, As this consolidation 13 a matter interesting the public generaliy, who always iook with suspicion upon consoidations of companies, the full text of the agreement ts appende Whereos the New York and New Haven Railroad Com- pany js the owner of @ double track railway extending trom | the clty of New Haven westerly towards and unto tl of New York; and hereas the Hartford and New Haven Railroad © 4s the owner of @ dowbie track railway ext and easterly from said city of New Haven to the city Springiveld, Ja the State of Massuchuseite, with suidry ranches. Now this agreement between said New York and ew Ma- vou Kuliroad Company of the one part, and gah Hacttord wit: part, cel the bands on alt the other boats; President, THE EUROPEAN EXODUS. Prominent Citizens on the Ocean Wave Departure of Senators Creamer, Nortems Bradley and Others—A Grand Ovatiem Down the Bay. ‘There was an extraordinary amount of life on Sat- urday In the waters of the beautiful bay and harbor of New York, Steamboats of all sorts and sizes, fast sailing yachts and seven ocean steamers—all cruwded, and all plentifaliy and peautilully dece- rated with flags, signals and streamers—eut thruugh the water, while sounds of merry music, booming of cannon and hearty huzzas from thousands of stout lungs enlivened the air, and seemed even to make the flags and. whips snake and snap and quiver like sensitive things, The cause of all this extraordinary flutter was that several of the city notables were on their way to Kurope, and. thetr constituents, friends aud admirers had assem- bled to give them A GRAND PARTING DEMONSTRATION. Senators Norton and Creamer, with ex-City Librarian James Barclay, Mr, James W. Collier, the New York actor; Mr. Clarence Seward, Mr, A. J. Vane derpoel, Bishop Mclivaine, of Ono, and a large number of others, were passengers on the Inman steamer City of Brooklyn, “fhe Old War Horse,” Thurlow Weed, and the quiet physician, Dr. Sayre, were among the passengers on the Manbattan, of the National line; Senator Brad ley and wife were among those on the Abyssinia, of the Cunard line. The major portion of the demonstration above allhded to was tntended chiefly to HONOR “THUNDERBOLT? NORTON. A committee of his Intumate personal mends ha@ the steamboat Andrew Fletcher; tne Michael Nortom Association had the Seth Low; the Linwood Gta! Under Ue presi of Mr. Cirt-toplier Fine, hi the Virginia Seymour; the Thomas Jefferson and James O'Neill Cinds, ofthe Ninth ward, had the steamer Soardima: the Oriental Club had the P. CG. Schull The E. Cuddy Ciub had a handsome propeller barge to cheer Messrs. Barclay and Kerrigan, and the ro tund Judge Hartman, with a tew friends, had his private vacul, Senator Creamer. A demonstra- had been tendered Senator Creamer, but, as tofore stated in the Herat positively de- chued any spec down the bay. THE SCENE BEVOKE THE STALT, when the several boats lay moored at or near the steamship dock, Norta river, was exceed- ingly lively. What with the crowds crossing from. one oat W the ober to shake hands w.th the voy- ag 47s; the band on each boat doing its best to ex- the windows is Haven maliroad Uomspany of ths and housetops [routing on West street, the dock 1, Tint the parties hereto, under aw20Flty of, and inaccord- | sles and pier: arges and vessels of alk ance with, a statute law of the 570" @¢ Gum: Kinds in hnborbood filled with all “Anact ip addition to an ene sorls of the steamers of the Ie Siily 8, 10, hereby coveran oniideration of mitual promis ayree with each othe us follows 3, From ang first day of September, A. D., 1-70, ali the propertics owned on that d it as here r the a under the mauaged an hail be operated, 3, And to this end ‘and name, in possession or in man tue expectant migrates and their friends hur to and iro, wal and stevedo around bags and baggage, it was Indeed exc Shortly after one o'clock ore humber of others surrounded Seaator Norto: the deck of 2 aiiehen held asa | Pulled his toothpick out of Mis Joint aud common management, direc- | huadsome aud facing the “Thondert Il the personal property of every kind | liitie speech, and, ye bones Jon, boonging ww sald cor- | sseayy weight” ‘senator. line ecked with all their signal flags, ling out, Kissing and caressing; satlors shouting, swearing and shov! Alderman Mitchel and @ the Fietcher. Alderman Michell mouth, pulled » Kreen morocco case out of his pocket, »” “slung oul” a pretty Mn vehall of the friends of the presented him with an porations or either day and di chives. i | AMERICUS CLUB BADGE, claims and d : studded with diamonds and valued at $3,000. tions respectivels 8 ome and forever retin Doralions as tenants in common, ia the ratio aad proportion Of tlily-seven one-hundredthy parts thereof, to said New York and New Haven Kailroad Company, and forty-three one-hundredius parts thereol to suid Hartford and New Ha- ven Railroad Company, |. And whereas the New York the Hartford anJ ch called in and ¥ share on thelr increased enptut stuck ; + the amount #0 coliected by the latter som of its due ratio and proporiion under Wis agre ww, Lor he purpose of correcting suld exces anu di: 2 that the New York and Nw Haven | ti “oat Company shail, within sixty days from Ue day and | 6 hubetor ty pay into the trews um of g244,185 for their jointise atid as stave ander this agreement, ate of any kins, railways ancranchises eretoy ani ail interest he ny shail from th ir wast of their J PS. alluhe re as: Occupation anoint estate, | jt ds theres nd in the proots, reve ropariio EPA estates, railways and franchises, ai all interests therein, which inay tune thereat ired by said ties or either oi them, for tbe joint use pariies, or sa oF enber of ether ot ur of the wall be held | } 4 in the next ously Wie band, Alderman Connected with the presentation. promised to do all that aud more too, wear Une wile feel Like an American novieman. This was received With cicers aud @ liger, with huzzus. Down tt with undiminished earnestness, in held | Mitchell threw a bottie of chaimpagu Mitcheli hoped the Senator jong to wear the badge and think of “howe Whom it came and the circumstances Senator Nortom He would pride aud pleasure, and 1b in European society would ive rom badge with disportiug 1¢ signal of the Amert+ iM un Mlag-stady aud saluted buy ON CONTINUED From time to time up alougside the aud the crowds ex- us Club was run up th THE OV he accompanyimg boats steamed uigoing City of Brooklyn, ry d the joint | cuanged compliments wil 1 and gave “G Uy to the voyagers. cenhnParinlie >. It was indeed a glorions end-oif.” Alderman wo his weigt Irieod, the senator, who caught it with such st eclared | might excite the envy of any first class: hall pare r. Ba Clay displayed his agility in catching a tame es and p} * | bier, and the party ot frieuds oa the steamer stand- hereby deciared to be entitled ithe rato aad | ix Ou the bridge amiuships drank (arewel Vefore named. ae | trends. . Level) Se A PLEASING EPISODE occurred just as the accompanying dotilla w abou togive up the ra Te eo ee c On two of the boats simulta- ruck up “God Save the Queen? Theu there was a hurrying on board the Steamship, u The Engitsh portiou of those on bi fi 1 dave the contina- | visibly cited, wart ‘sailors rang ace of tule contrat bees tbe. Owner OBE intereted in | to" the “sterus’ antl the” gion og! TaN 4py other railway, railway property, irandae or other car . Tying business OF property, except’ with 1@ approval and | & Counent ol the board of managers hereiuatt created. & Ail the railways, propervies and {rashises of said cor. Porations aad of each of them, owned Lthem or ettuer of | tu them on the their joint use ied by @ rhe board of directors ot each corp’ation shail, before | tu this instrument takes effect, and annual thereafter, at euch Sucerssive annual election of directors, 80 8000 thereatter as may be, appoint tive of their nuver, Including their Presigent, to compose satu board of snagers, who shall hold their places (or the next suceeiog year and unttl that the term of On as OLETR aro stead, prided ted aball explo tue person appointed in their stead, and provideaiso that any person 0 uppuloied ceasing to'be a airecto, &s0 andal the me cease Lo be a member of ad board of manaze: All vacancies in oard of abagers shail b d by the toard of directors to whieh th memer creating sald vaca belongs. I. Sard bourd of managers may aby 4 Majority of their whule number, may appoint aud ap president, treasurer, secret: aud servants as they i ‘of the joipt busi and with and propel Thanagement and disposivon of ikbeir joint property, Dusivess and saterests, all the Were and authority heretoiore held and ’ exercised BW taid boards of Mei piimeut, ott tue fastest boat, specdity distanced h OC! sd homeward tip. able inane Seth Low was tne head of John Kelly, who st onthe roof of the pilov house, Lis curls Bustenwng: boutd journe sloniss, Bradley and lady were di suave a the waist of the v piieuied With & salvo trom the Fletcher's battery and adieus from those on board, which th ace. fuiy acknowledy Ree Amoug ihe company on the Fletcher wi Barnard, Cox. Mecunn an aud Connolye Caraochan Douglas Vayior, Benjamin ¥, Braay, deiegauon trom the United Erberhardt an Seen Cavanoagh and several ladies, Passed off without the slightest accident or amy wn- Dicasantness to mar tne odoaslon. ‘acetuily dipped in acknowledgement to the come. Arriving at sandy Hook the Fietcuer and boats, after a finul salute had been give: ing on rned thelr brows homeward. The Fletcher, ‘The last recognizavie mark ie sunlight. At steamar alter steamer passed on her outward she was saluted by the jolly excar- When the Abyssinia came along Senator covered stauding by the essel. They were com- ed. Mevunn, Hogan and Connoll aud Doveinus, Aldermen Mi Assemblyman Carey, M. Colonel M. 0. Murphy. cell, A Culk ed Association of Heavy Finneil, Ransom, Porter, J. Chesterfeld O'Brien, The ny Sarin ee Messrs, olners; Cemotstration was a grand success and directors respectivery. But vo acd said board shall be vaid without the concurrence theravt at least three mem- ei board of directors! i earliest time bestial sacrifices have been offered to though maxing its nest at the time in Paris: | jar, from tcommand of the Kansas, and ordered HEADED OFF. The Forty-Seventh Regiment in Church. | Jehovah, and the question arises by what’) strengtneniny aud arming itself with the anarcnical | + srecial a connected with the Tehuantepec and he shippers learn that last couvury, mM which neither tne Lane hcg ah Nee eee ea aecnnvcianmad:| taannedGins OF $08 01000 fi nb Pana’ or Sor ioe the ‘daties of man are to be | Nicaragua tvey; Lieutenant Commander F. PY. Westchester ediling of the blood of @ lamb or goat or other Coan The speaker thought | fuuna. * * * No place has so bitterly ex- The apostles and | plated this ‘Gospel of Anarchy’ ax te city prophets seemed so to regard it. If worship i8 & | whence it came Jorih to aitict the world. The divine revelation What are the elements that make | spectacie ts too near, too Vivid, 00 awful to need itacceptable? Doubtiess worship is a recogniuon | words. The smoke of its palaces 18 on our horizon: Of the supremacy and sovereignty of God and the | the neat of {ts burning may almost ve felt by all. Justice of His claims upon our couduct, Tne wholo | You see it before you; for days, weeks and months creation sings the existence of God, uu have been watching the last revelation of what BVBRYTHING IN THE VAST UNIVERSE an without God becomes and perpetrates, * * proclaims the Hand Divine by which all nature | it has come at last in Ore. Bot this ts not the worst. lives, The evidences of His existence demand a | The atheisin of the last century has borne its true rae fect 7 sald board powers herein con: County, At Mount Vernon, Westcnester County, on Satur ‘A day, a stylish young man, who gave his name as Lows. Miller, Was arrested at the instance of Jusuce Ba- mounds, on suspicion of his having stolen a horse and veitcle with Which he had just arrived in the vite lage. The suspected party brought with him @ youug woman, aod before they had been in the village many minutes he sould lis vest for a trite ia order to pay the giri’s fare back to New York. Smith, frome command of the Ajax, and awaits orders; Liewants R. BK. Wassey, J. M. Forsyth and William H, eb; Water Assistant poker a 2 Linusiey anqmuel Gregg; Second Assistant Engi- ) wine enck, every and Of the wodertaxings, neers W. B, giey and C.F, Nagle, from the Ajax, a vone and wabijies of e. Of sald corpo fone and await Ors; Lieutenant S$. B. Baird, Assistant agent, 90Uract oF tort, ex! Surgeon J. Veiisou, and First Assistant Engineer fore xed, and all under. W. D, Smithvom the Wyandotte, amd await or- ere ders; eee, H. Bryce and Assistant Surgeon fmately ers, m the attan, and await orders; 4 for, voth principal anpterest, out of the joi Pasasier Lewis, from. the Ajax, Slate of sunt corpure oh eames K nd estate of want Corpor ae Surgeon T. Wolver- Saat evening marclied into the Lee avenue Reformed chureh, Williamsburg, and listened attentively to a #ermon on the duties of a Christian soldier by their ‘Chaplain, the Rey. Dr. Taylor. The large edifice ‘was densly crowded by the friends of the Ohnsuan woldiery. NEW JERSEY beast be acceptable to God, through divine revelation. red. Heine parties hereto jointiy sn] Proportions aforeaald CHURCHES. 9 i HOBOKEN M ? iliation of a nobie peonie, hip or tp ahha ; orestares and frien tas okering woltim olethe Trine ttesholiy ofa atable dynasty, the extine- | and ordered heute 1 experses and losses of Kind and nature whien | The official above named, on communicating RAR ARN - ratitude. wortuy Lis benevolence. 1t {8 not | tion of tne very idea of country, and the disintegra- | ton, from the chigan, od ordered to tue Shenan- |. may arise to the parues berevo,) either of them, in the with the New York police, ascertained that Miller ‘Grilliant and Imposing Ce ier=The Jubie | Prough that we should feel gratitude. God calls | tion of France. * * * But happily the turbu- | doa, Goue'hy tem or either ot ivepmier thin agreemeat: al | Rewmnentue Horse trou a livery. stavle the youu lee Contin for @ significant expression in songs of praise | lence and tyranny of revolution have been struc Sey Pr repairs, renewals Fallway squlpment or | woman’ in whose company he lefe the mete p t 4 me 4 oi tthe Ateleven o'clock yesterday, despite the stormy | and adoration; not only gratitude, but | down by the conscience and will of the French pa- MASO.i--THE EW STATE CAPITOL. propert baionging 10 ead co ona cr held 4 twem or | oman 5 Bh poe <3 ats hae oe pe zacel 3 ith all its aberations, profoundly Gartaetaee bate minority of Angels can we, a8 | Ohristian—notwithstanding the no at orange, Miller was committed to the County Jali TRH | submission muse be manifested, to await a requisition from the Executive of New the sovereignty of God, N. Y., June 17, 1871, hereto; all works in progress bio tone bes weather, this edifice was filled in honor of the Pope's but re jubilee. Tite front of tie church was shaded with rebels, must do something more. We must | infidels, and tne tnertness of tne multitude of ‘TheGrand Miter Athe Grand Lodge of Free | bw works, ee OF ater id buard of rey | 3 ; aise of evergreen, among which foatea the Papal | outwardly express our loyalty. True worship is | who are indifferent.” In aap ae pee Aronbist and Accepted Maons f the State of New York Bites. vere Lander ihe autbory them, tor thelr joint t Mp Leauane Uk eten eo aaa Saptare of thia 1 characterized by simplicity, intelligence and spirit- | urged upon the ‘faitntul 6 duty of mereas and Dement, sball be paid fof tbe joint earaings a: me better circl it au % } flag. The scene on entering was dazzling, The uality. | ‘ihe day of symbolism 18 ‘The day | zeal in the work of Christian education, and of | having been ined the corner stone of the | finus of eatd parties, his ircle O: Orange soctety, as it is aid tI 4 high altar was tuminated and hung with a profe | when Jerusalem was tho contre of the | building schools and churches for the muitiwudes, | new Capitol, ith nis Wh thas all participating im | “Pest een partes, aes of the eares hereto bla feunuly Occupy w woud social’ position “in that ol + gfon of howers, The tabernacle was surrounded by | world whole universe is now my | to our larger citien, we Maswe shall ia the opinion of we

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