The New York Herald Newspaper, September 13, 1874, Page 7

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a? RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. ' Programme of Services for Fifteenth, Sunday After Trinity, September,-13, WINISTERIAL AND CHORCH MOVEMENTS, Tyndall’s Materialism Analyzed and Oriti- cised—Views of Oorrespondents, The Rev. James Morrow, of New Orleans, will | preach in the Second street Methodist Episcopal | church this morning and in the Thirty-seventh | street Methodiss Episcopal church this evening. | Dr. Morrow is the successor of Dr. Newman in Ames church, New Orleans, St. James’ church, in East Seventy-second street, will be reopened to-day and services held therein at the usaal hours, The decorations are sald to be | simple and unique. Rev. 0. B, Smith will preach, Rev. Dr. Goodspeed, a popular Chicago preacher, ‘will occupy the pulpit of the Sixteenth Baptist church this afternoon and evening. Rev. Mr. | Jutten, the pastor, is unwell. ‘The Rev. J. W. Chadwick, having returned from his vacation, will preach for the Second Unitarian Society, Brooklyn, this morning, on ‘Natural Re- Mgion.” Rey. George 0. Phelps will preach to-@ay at the | usual hours, in the Allen street Presbyterian church, ( Rev. W. M. Dunnell, rector, will preach in All Saints’ Protestant Episcopal chureh this morning and evening, Dr. Armitage will minister to-day in the Fifth @venue Baptist church morning and evening. Dr, W. H, Atkinson will speak in De Garmo Hall | this morning, and Dr. J. R. Walker, of New Or- Jeans in the evening. Dr. A. C. Osborne will occupy the pulpit of the South Baptist church this morning and evening. Mr. E. V. Wilson lectures in the New Opera House, Broadway, near Twenty-ninth street, this morning and evening. To-morrow evening the Brooklyn Sunday Senool Union will be addressed in Hanson place | Methodist Episcopal church by Kevs. French, Siniley and Haynes, o1 that city. ‘The Kev. E. C. Sweetser will preach this morn- ing and evening in Bleecker street Universalist church, Preaching in the Berean Baptist church at the | ‘usual hours to-day by the Rev. P. L. Davies. © Canal street Presbyterian church will be re- opeied to-day, when the Rey. David Mitchell will Preach. Dr. John Cotton Smith will preach at the morn- ing service in the Church of the Ascension to-day, and the Rev. E. W. Donald in the afternoon, “Robbing God” is what Dr. Deems will speak | about this morning in the Church of the Strangers, | “Judgment the End of the Christian Dispensa- tion” is the theme for discussion in tue Catholic | Apostolic church this evening. “The Higher Rock” and the “Paratytic Healed’’ @re the subjects chosen for meditation this morn- mg and eveningin Calvary Baptist church by the Rev. R. 8S. McArthur, pastor. Rev, Dr. Sproje will preach at the usual hours | te-day in the Presbyterian church, Forty-second street, west of Broadway. Preaching for Al! Souls’ Protestant Episcopal church, Brooklyn, at the usual hours to-day. Tne society worship in Elm place, near Fulton street, Rev. George B. Porteus, rector. The usual services will be held to-day in the Anthon Memorial church, Rev. R, Heber Newton, rector, Rev. Dr. Howland will preach this morning and Rev. Dr. Conrad tuis evening ia the Church of the | Heavenly Rest. Rey. H. Fisher, D. D., President of St. Lawrence ‘Theological Seminary, wiil preach this morning 1n the churen of Our Saviour. Rev. Dr. Ludiow will preach this morning and evening in the Collegiate Reformed Dutch church, Fiith avenue and Forty-cighun trent. Preaching at the usual hours to-day tn the First Baptist church, Rev. Thomas D. Anderson, pastor. Revs. Dr. Ball, W. F. Butler and R. Clarke, of In. diana, will address the Morning Star Sunday School this afternoon. Forsyth street Methodist Episcopal Church So- ciety will hold a praise meeting this afternoon at 101 East Broadway. Rev. J. Spencer Kennard will preaeh to-day in the Pilgrim Baptist church. “Tne Baptism of Fire’ and the “Prodigal Son” ‘will be talked about to-day by Rev. W. P. Gorbitt, at Seventh street Methodist Episcopal churcn, | Rev. 8S. M. Hamilton will speak to the Scotch | Presbyterian church this morning and afternoon. Rev. Fred Kvans will preach in the Central Bap- tist church to-day at the usual hour, Rev. W. H. Thomas will preach in Beekman Hill Methodist Episcopal church this morning and evening. Rev. Dr. Vincent will preach in the Churcn of the Covenant this morning and aiternoon and will address young men in Association Hall this evening. Rey. J. F. McClelland will preach in St. Luke’s Methodist Episcopal churcn this moraing. Divine services will be conducted in St. Mark’s Protestant Episcopal ehurch to-day by Key. Dr. Bylance. In St. Jonn’s Methodist Episcopal church the Rev. James M, King will preach tunis morning and ening. Br. Hawthorne, of Louisville, Ky., will speak this morning in the fabernacie Baptist church on “Losing Life to Save Lite,” aud in the evening on “Paul's Prayer for Onesimus.”” Preaching services at the usual hours to-day in the West I'wenty-third street Presbyterian church. ‘The Church of the Holy Trinity will be minis- tered to to-day by the Rev. S. H. Tyng, Jr., D. D. Rev. George D. Matthews will preach morning and evening in Westminster Presbyterian church. The Rev. George H. Hepworth will speak this | morning about “Work That is Good for Nothing,” nd this evening on “We Are Alike, Yet Differ- t,? in the Charch of the Disciples. Io Christ church (Protestant Episcopal) to-day Br. Thompson will speak on “Fixed Doctrine Necessary to Fixed Morals,’ and “No Thought for the Morrow.” Divine service will be held at the usual hour to- day in the First Reformed Episcopal church, Rev. W. T. Savine, rector. “Charity” and ‘‘Holiness” are the topics upon which Rev. 8. B. Rossiter will preach this morning and evening in the North Presbyterian church. Dr. Ewer will officiate to-day at the different services in St. Ignatius’ church. Scarecrows of Fools. To THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD: ‘'rhis is the way in which Professor Huxley, in Bis lecture delivered to the brainy part of the British Empire, stigmatized the logical conse- quences of scientific research. We have always supposed that the logical consequences of a hy- poth had something to do with our judgment concerning it, and constituted ratuer an impor- tant factor of opinion or conviction. Until science ean establish itself upon the incontrovertible ground of absolute demonstration we do not pro- Pose to be called bigots and fools and otter pet Dames if we do not at once accept the ipse déxit of either Tyndall of Huxley concerning questions which have been in abeyance for a couple of thou. sand years or go, and which are no neater & settle- Ment now than they were when:the first philoso- Dher asked them, ‘The recent raide which scientific men have made into the domain of religion are entirely unacientiac and unworthy, and the conceit which disposes of the Almighty asa kind of glittering generality, ‘while it draws over ita own shouiders the Olympic purple of Jupiter Tonans, may ve worthy of @ Sophomore, butis unbecoming in one who is & humble student of nature. So far as we can ut derstand the addresses matie in Belfast the Ab- | Dot ol. | | Sovereign remedy. | houest a knave as ever walked. | their moiecuies, ; On revered opinions, | {8 mot one of the theories nuw put tewwara in ane NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1874—QUADRUPLE SHEET. TesponsidMity of the race will evaporate from the | tion, whether God could not have created from eternity. human consciousness as the waters of the ocean l crave the attention of your readers in order to slong the line of te Equator. Whether they pro- | snow the Itberty, breadth and serenity of dlisens- pose to speak again and to destroy the sion which true religion josters in her highest delusion of centuries we are left in doubt, | teaching. - There 18 asense, then, in which Christian phil- Until they ao, however, we can go to church as | osophers can maintain that the world of mutter as Usual, pay our pew rents, grumble at the sermon, | well as o! spirit could have been “created from 8c "| eternity.” Hence, too, there 1s a sense in which and feei that this is @ very decent worid alter ail. a created being, spiritual or material, could bave How exceedingly considerate of them not to | been eternal. Do not start, gentie reader, put destroy our faitn all at once. We can never be | | hear the whole trath, Hall-truths poison the in- | sufficiently grateful to them jor not having ex- | ‘el/igence of men; complete truth is its health and | posed the holiowness Of the whole thing and leit | | us nothing but the ragged edge of despair on | Which ‘to bang our harps, Tynaeil seems to be | EOPe the sole Creator and Lora, can be seli-exist- under the impression that if he becomes an | ent. The dificulty lies precieely in this hypothesis avowed materialist that fact settles—or, rather, | one possible brea irom eternity, in noe — , . é Contradiction which appears 10 exist between unsettles—the /aith of Christendom, while Huxley our concepts or notion of eternity, on the one cherishes the fond delusion that if he proves to bis | hand, and creation irom eternity on the other, Own satisfaction that the frog whose brain he ex- Thomas Aquinas examines the questiou thor- or e . ‘§ sian | Ougbly. That the world was created he regards as sected is a type of the human biped, we are all to | ‘a™tratn “demonstrable sclentteally. by the. sole form in single file, and liké sheep to jump tue | light of reason; but the beginning of tue world in fence which the reckless goat cleared at a single — tape pg as an article of — vcd 4 | bound. Both of these Cesars paused, however, on | GeMonstrable by unaided reason. | Aristotie, be the orink of the Rubicon. They have not yet leaped | [A¥* does not peeve Revd hap en age nae bide into the flood, nor quite made up their minds | om eternity, Pesca Pte eae a aren SP whether they wili paddle their Way across or stay RUMGnts used to demonstrate § mete AH a little longer on this side. ‘Ihey soem to be St'nth must have created “in time and with time making up their minas whether ’tis better to bear | #4,All conclusive. ‘ The great reason put forward by schoolmen, the ills they have or Ny to others that they KDOW | tugs sah emoient cause must precede in time cat | | Which it causeth,” is not applicable, St. Thomas thinks, to a perfect cause. God is the only perfect and great first cause. He could have created an te, You must distinguish a thing that is eternal from a thing that ts self-existent. In no possible Supposition does the Church admit that any being, Ot one thing we teel reasonably sure, namely— that the logical consequences of Proiessor Hux- ley’s new theory, Wether they be the scarecrows eternal world rege ar not, would have an immediate practical | “'Nor'would ‘this possible eternity of the world Shrewa lawyers nove ge he eee oe Our | make tt to resemble Goa in. hia essence. It would ional insanity on our juries with remarkable suc- | p® Changeable and successive, while God remains cess, Hall the Togues Whose necks should feel the ‘This point is here brought forward to show the tension o1 a Manila necklace have already been let reader that in speaking of the world and of mat- Joos upon society, to laugh, in their sleeves at the | tor there is a vital difference between saying that credulity of the Common North American judges the world might have been eternal, and saying ad tor Diy thele trade of ‘murder and ronbery. | suas ig tm uncreated and sel-oxistant. Moa cf | Huxley tor peoving that, a cranks, to Frotessor | thorough education when they advocate the cause ey Na ¥ ® | of region should be caretul to do so with that | molecular change for which the prisoner is not re- c& in and discriminating and tolerant temper sponsible, censed Oy & kind of temporary abnor- | Which ‘her greatest doctors in ihe pam Dave | iar COngIMan Ir Lage lr ARTA ONE ana brought to the most fundamental discussions, ey, and t t Jays his neighbor to rest on the sidewalk by means muandpeint socio Thomas Aquinas. Going See eee tee oo nae rontal bone, the 180 | back in spirit so the conceivable, pout of duration rudely taken to prigon, but is tobe regarded with | When God had as yet called nothing into existence, Compassionate pity as a poor aniortanate whose | #04 Surveying the sole self-existent One, ail suil- bral hemisphere has been ‘tatoo eos’ | clent and happy in the intinitude of His own. |-er- not entirely paraiyzed. te te ae atte! | fections and the society within His own bosom of ROk CDHEOLY. PARA REL. 20 a ‘Avon, | the Three divine persons—he asks himsell :—Could Whose molecular changes take Place witn a cer- | God have been efficient cuuse of all things eter- tain degree of irregularity; and she old saying | nony, as He is eternally the principle of His Son Lg there’s @ screw loose somewhere is Jiterally and of the Holy Spuric? 7 bo We ure obliged to make 9 distinction. God is 1a prooL of hig theory of moral irresponsibility | not free in generating His Word of son, but lie. ig she Trotessor ci AY Consoha tenn sgnch. sergeant | tree in creating the world. As He is perfect God Whose whole spiritual consciousness has changed | by a bullet which shattered nis leit parietal bone, During the healthy days 01 this promising conva- lescent he is an honest man, but when he feels tle Paralysis consequent upon his Wound he is as d That parietal bone was probably driven into tne place /ormerly eccupied by his conscience, and whenever he pii- fers the pockets of the hospital surgeons they re- gard the theft as the result o1 undue inflammation and let it pass, If the learned Professor should ever saddle the star of empire which roiis toward this Western World and take a trip to America he wouid find | that most oi the occupants oi public offices have had their parietal bones more or Jess tractured. The cerevral hemispheres of a great many men are out of order just now, and most o! our poli- ticlans are acting under an abnormal condition of | by the eternal coexistence of the Three divine per- sons, could He have been periect First Cause by eternally producing the world? We do know. | Tne “possibinty” of the eternal creation Alscussed by the great mediwval scholars is, in itsell, a mys- | tery in which our limtved inteiligence is lost. Atany rate, it 8 Well that we shoud Know that this great problem is not submitted tor the first time to the intelligence of Christendom by our modern scientists. It is one quite familiar to our Jathers, Its solution in one Way or the o not alarm their conscience or disturb their Catholic faith, We can afford to take it up in our turn witnont josing our equanimity. Leaving to another letter the subject of evolu- tion and materialism, 1 must presume on your patience by quoting a little anecdote of an age an- terior even to that of Thomas Aquinas. face or Winifred, an Englishman, became tie It is very ridiculous and not a little sad that the | gentiemen whom we justly regard as our scien- | C&@try. He was a holy man, thougn not emi- titic nently learned. A St, Virgilus, an Irishman, fic teachers should think it necessary to attack | 3 ’ | r eminent alike for science and for virtue, had also | Feligion. There is little enougn of it in the world | heiped to evangelize these countries, Unt rtunately at best, but what little there is ought to pe let alone. “The common sense of mankind Insists that | OF° robbery and felony are crimes that ought to be | punished, and uf @ thief had stolen the pocket- | book of Professor Huxiey on his retirement irom heresy, aud Boniface denounced it to the Pope, the Beliast meeting the molecules of the lecturer ts 1 ay would have fastened on the coat collar of the | Wherever tke Irishman obtained his learning it i did not startle Rome. pickpocket be haga ot bis ieerret Core Sri the | mere philosophical opinion, Perhaps it was one Pe ences uote cheered tne (ppeaker ee a ive | not unknown in the capital of Christendom. Ce have listened a moment to the thiei’s plea that M8 | tainiy it was not looked on with disiavor. Rome lett parietal bone was out of order. After am e ot, | Allowed time, the great test of all that is true Menended ont the weetdeoag ;coames the simple tact, | and all that is false, to take its course. Virgilius y Le cl ‘an’ | Was only the predecessor of Columbus. Keuder, crime, tbat police courts and prisons can’t be dis- | Tet'ns ‘too, leave to time to complete what is now pensed with juat yet, and thay certain persons | juperiect,’ to harmonize theories which are ave no right to the undisturved possession Of | jarring and to reconcile What acems to Us— parietal bones and molecular chanzes. THE Fi —hop y contradicto: pene, THLOCRITUS, tures of a day—hopelessly contra PRUDENTIUS, Religion Friends, Not Enemies. To THE EDITOR OF THE H&RALD:— It is surely a good work to inculcate on scientists and theologians alike the vaiue and absolute necessity of the largest liberality and torbearance. It benoves scientific men to reirain from attacks Let them pursue fearlessly their investigations, Not one particle of the truth discovered and established by them but will, when shown in its full relation to the entire sys- tem of natural and revealed truths, contribute to shed lustre on the connected whole. Onristians have nothing to appreneuu from the Jabors and discoveries 0: true science, For, at bottom, there doctrine taught the ve aroused existed people at the antipodes. ‘This seemed a Ministerial and Charch Movements. METHODIST. Dr. E. O. Haven left this city on Wednesday for Syracuse. He is to be mstalled Chancellor of the University of that city on the 15th inst. Bishop Janes, of this city, 18 improving, and his entire restoration to health is expected speedy, Rev. Ross C, Houghton, of Utica, N. Y., travel ling companion with bishop Harris in Ins “tour Science and day evening, Mrs. Phoebe Palmer, of this city, well known throughout the Continent for evangelistic labors with ber pusband, ts so iil that recovery is considered hopeless. The Kev. G. Smith, Secretary of the British parent hostility to revelation that the Church has furnalldeiogeretorihe OatadimawWerieen te not discussed again and again in her schoois, from | Conierence, which opens its session in Toronto on the days of Origen and his discipies to the day | sue arenanae INCan invitee Revere ev. Dr. Keid, of this city, having declined his when trenty or thirty:thouasndisradente in Paris’! section to the canadian aethedie Episcopacy, were set in commotion by the contradictory theses | the Rev. A. A. Carman, D. D., President uf Albert on creation, maintained with such pertect liberty Univeral pele has age phomen tere to. i @ ‘Lompkins Avenue Methodist Kpiscopa around the chair of Thomas Aquinas. chureh, Brooklyn, Rev. U. B. Ford, pastor, having We have thus come to the very point to which I | been greatly improved during the last two months, wish to bring those believers who entertain a se- cret dread lest the scientific theories of the day will be reopened to tay. r The praise mise cine inaugurated last Sunday tn about the eternity of matter should turn out to be | ami git erect, Methodist Episcopal cuurch, true, and thus ujyset the very notion of a Creator, Let us tear one leaf trom the history of mediwval philosophy and present it to your readers fora Sabbath mornimg study. Its moral may serve as an antidote against more than one poisonous doubt hereafte. In the greatChristian schools of the thirteenth century the nen who, like Thomas Aquinas, Duns | Scotus and (eaarentute, taught theology and Philosophy in he name and with the sanction of the Church, mt only made it a rule, in their own doctrinal expsition, to set forth every adverse cosmogonic sstem, before giving the orthodox statement, bt compelled their pupils to discuss these variousystems publicly. Nor did master Sis evening? it having been continued during the week, The Rev. Dr. Deems, pastor of the Charch of the Strangers, has accepted the Presidency of Rut+ gers Female Coilege, of this city, The Methodist church of Hunter’s Point is pas- toriess. PRESBYTERIAN, The Presbyterians of Astoria have quarrelled among themselves, ind one clique ha altogether irom the denomination and’set up for themselves, Professor David Swing, It is sald by the corre- ; called to Robert Laird Collier's | , Kev. W. W. Eddy, of the Presbyterian mission in | lamily, to spend a year in recruiting his health, and scholars deem that they were serving the | alter an absence of ten years, during whieh he has cause o! trutl by seeking, in what we mignt call | been laboriously occupied with missionary work, ‘infidel theores,” the weak points only. They | His address will ve at Sing Sing, N. Y. | were especiay Carelul to find the strong points, | Rev. Cyrus Otier, of slbany, has accepted a and to suppot them with the most powerful argu- | Wnavimods call trom the First Presbyterian church ment they cald devise. ; of Chazy, Chuton county, N. Y., and wili enter on ‘This has evr been the method pursued age after | Dis duties there immediately, age in all thigreat schools of Christendom vy tne | Rev. W. H. Morris, pastor of'the Plane street reat teachig orders—Benedictines, Dominicans, | Presbyterian church, of Newark, N. J., hus re- Franciscansna Jesuits, ‘the writer can testify, | signed ine office. | with unfeignd admiration, to the spectucle which | _ Mr. N. B. ©. Cominge has been ordained and in- he witnesse for years in a training school or | Sialled pastor of the Mount Olive Presbyterian | seminary forthe young men of a renowned re- | church in Pittsburg, Pa. ligious socily. The chief endeavor of the emi- | | Rev. J. M. Smith, of the Presbytery of Alleghany, | nent profewrs of theology and philosophy was | hus accepted the pastorate of the Ceniral Presb): | not only to «tablish every truth as it came before | terlan caurch, Pittsburg. | them in coule in the most victorious manner, but Rev. J. C. Bodwell, Jr., of Thompson, Conn., has to array agast every Wells the and philosopm- | accepted his renewed call to the church in Stock- cal positionie Most formidable objectious offered | bridge, Mass, by science ithe past and in the present. Modern | Key. Willam T. Savage, D. D., has resigned his objections wre presented with arare candor. I¢ Pastorate In Franklin, N. He seemed thene absorbing duty of the professor | ‘The corner stone of the new Memorial Chapel of | that over aginst each dogma of revelation should | Madison square Presbyterian chureh (Rev. Cuar es stand in alls naked might what appeared a con- | H. Payson, Pe in Thirtieth street, near Turd tradictory nth. ‘To the most terrible objections | avenue, will be laid to-morrow aiternoon by Drs. every answ hitherto given was stated, itastrong | Adams and Rogers. and weak pnts laid bare to the student's eye. | BAPTIST, Each scher day the master’s thesis was taken | The Fourth Avenue church, Pittsburg, Pa., laid up and susined in evening disputation by two the corner stone of their new house of worship on students svessively, and the most victorious ob- | the 2d inst. Jections suained by otters of the class. Oncea | | Rey. W. J. David, a recent graduate of Crozet month thisime exercise o1 disputation was per- | Theological Seminary, has been appointed by the | formed wi peculiar solemnity. Now, on each | Foreign Mission Board at Richmond as missionary oc:asion itas the religious duty of the ‘‘ovject- | to Africa, and expects to sall in October, in com- ors” to sty OUt the most unanswerable argu- pany with two colored missionaries, who have ments agast each thesis, and to present them in , also been appointed by that Board. ‘The Rev. W. the 1orm Wch could best make them resistiess, B, bogas has sailed from Portland, N. B., as a mis- <—Thua to iths the most venerated were opposea | slonar) among the Siamese Karens, what appred other truths tne most contradic- Protessor ‘fustin has been appointed to the chair tory andrreconcilatle. And by this discipline | of Greek and Latin in Lewisburg (Pa.) University masters @ pupils, the very élite of their class, vice Rey. Dr. Hiliss resigned. Dr. 0. W. Lauson, of were matto see how far, of each doctrine of the- | Ringoes, N. J.. succeeds Dr. Tustin in the chair of olog; samnlloseP ay, they could affirm with cer- Natural Sciences in the same institution. tainty or obability, and what elements of trutn Rev. Preston Gurney, of Chelsea, Mass,, has ac- there we in the opposite error, For error is cepted the pastorate of the Baptist church in Cen- | only trutdistorted or incomplete. Thus were | tral Falls, RL ' these yoe men made tolerant of error, patient Rev. P, B. Byram, of Providence. R. I., With theilths of sctence which seemed the most | to a charge in Piymouth, Mass. irreconcple with dogma, and certain that a day Mr. Ji Robinson was ordainea to the min- would oe when what was now contradictory | istry at Lebanon Springs, N. Y., September 1; Mr. should Imade to harmonize in the iuil light of | A. It. Clarke was ordained and installed pastor of has gone truth. the Baptist church at West Koyaiston, Mass. Sach gentle reader, such hasever been the August 26, and Mr. Jas. M. Coon was ordained | enlighted, the large, the generous and tolerant | August 21 at Galva, Il, | \ainingven to tne intellect in ali the great puo- Rev. W. C. Gillette resigns at Sodus Centre, N. | lic scho of the Church. As she knows, divinely Y., from November 1; Rey. C. M. Herring ely kd eth. assistedat she 18, that no truth of nature can 1a | Hamilton, Me.; Rev. H. G, Smith resigne at the lonun be contradictory of revelation, so she | erstield, Conn., and Rev. Black at New Haven. bears all and discusses all wath a periect | Rev. A. B. Nixon resign Lena, Ohio; Rev. M. | | Hayden resigne at Ceresco, Ill,’ and Kev. D. L. ; Philips at Skiddy, Kansas. ‘The Rev. H. A. Sizer has assumed the pastorate | Ol the Plank Road Baptist church, syracuse, N. Y. serenttl judgment apd tag aod will have her somer ministers especially, learn jrom her to forb and to wait. ‘This ne lesson which we shall do well to lay to nea} But here is sometiting still more won-'| Rev. J, L. Whittemore goes from Bow to New | Gertul1 more practical, Londonderry, N. H.; Rev. W. ©, Wright trom Pau- In Serer Catholic schools of the nineteenth, | tucket, R. L, to Weymouth, Mass.; Rev. A. J. asin te of the thirteenth century, the possi- | Chaplin trom Conway, Mass., to Mansilel , Conn. 5 bility an eternal creation and of an eterna | Rey. J. Hunter trom’ Apnolo to Pistepurg, Pa., matteas been discussed without any detriment | to fait Nay, there is not a single point in the theorjevokition or in the “nebular yposhesis! whiclts not under one form or another been familpubdjecte ofstudy and diaputation there. Thit another imperative reason why Ohris- tlans ald not be startled by what is ialsely re- sed as “the hostile advance of sctence.” and Rev. W. H. Dorwar | Freeport, I. The Rev, EK. A. Woods, of Leahy: has been called to the vacant pastorate of the Union ave- nue Baptist charch, Greenpoiat, L. I. The Baptist church at vigcush, during the brief absence of their pastor, Rev. L. F, Moore, on his PI summer vacation, purchased three eligible lots of But Us take up 4m succession these two qnes- Ground and erected a temporary chapel twenty. tionscreation and evolution. We shall thus re ve by forty feet. It was opened for worship last im thery centre 1 the mtellectual battle raging Sunday, is 18 an instance of enterprise to be from Wilson, N. Y., to mighty exists only by the suffrage of Tyndall and, Huxley, The moment they determine to tell the froth, the Whole truth, and nothing but the ‘ruth all this superstition about God and the moral aroups. commended. Thearch mas decided that God created the The Baptist church at Hunter's Point is without \} worihings visible as well as invisible, matter | @ pastor. spirit, and from the beginning of time, @ Qld scholastic anes. ALIAN. ses hinaves BU onan the RPISCOP, ‘The annual convention of 1he diocese of Maine r did | St. Boni | apostie of Germany in the frst nail of tue eighth | It was only advancing a | round the world,” returned from Europe on sun- | and whieh resulted in six conversions, will close , cut loose | spondent of the Philadelphia Presbyterian, wiil be | church in Chicago. | | Syria, has returned to this country, with hts | | of this day and its symbolisms, , Temarked, is has just been Weld, qe diocese contains twenty- one parishes and tWirty-seven ministers, thirteen of whom only respended to the opening roll call, The clerical reports, by ignoring the presence and labors 01 the denominacious and representing their own as the sole evangelizing agency in the State, show a sad state of religious destitution, "11s not so bad, however, when we consider that many an indivivual Baptist or Methodist churen has added to its memberstup during the year more thun the entire Episcopal diocese together. Miss Catharine L. Wolfe, of tits city, has under- taken to build the tower of St. Paul’s American church, Rome, which, it 18 estimated, will cost 7,000, A lady has just given to the Episcopalians at Ellenville, N. Y., a costly church edifice, complete in all its parts, with everything essential for the liturgical service oi that brotherhood, Tue Rey, Thomas L, Bellam, of Pittsburg, Pa., has accepted the rectorship of Jarvis Hall, Golden, vol fev. Mr. Bush, rector of the Church of the As- cension, West Brighton, S.[., reached home in excellent health on Tuesday, after nearly a Jour | montis? absence in California and South America, Mr, Bush wail resume his duties on sunday next, The Key. Mr, Latane, who withdrew jrom the | Protestant Episcopal Church a few months ago, | communed with @ number of Methodist ana otier ministers at Sliepverd’s Church, Va., a lew days ago. Bishop Whipple, of Minnesota, in his annual ad- dress, states that curng the fifteen years of is episcopate fifty-three churcaes have been built in his diocese and twelve rebuilt and ent: . There | has been an increase of thirty-five clergymen, 4,116 aduits have been conlirmed, and the church offer- Ines amount to $561,335, Tue Kev, Anselan Buchanan has resigned the rectorsiip of Trinity churei, Cincinnati, and re- moved to New Jersey. ‘The Rey, Wiliam H, Van Antwerp, late rector of St. Paul’s, Evansville, [nd., bas accepted a call to St. Paul's, Kabway, N. J. The Key, R. G. Hutton, of Oyster Bay, L. 1, has j resigned his charge and removed to Brookville, Montgomery couuty, Md. Following the example of the Roman Catholic | clergy, some clergy of the Episcopal Churcu have arranged a cierical retreat to be heid at St. Saviour’s Seminary, Bridgeport, Conn., commenc- ing on Tuesday evening in the September uber week, The Rev. C. C. Grafton, of the Church of the Advent, conducts the retreat. ROMAN CATHOLIC. The corner stone o! the new St. Mary’s Acad- emy, Newark, Wili be laid to-day by the Very Rev. Father Doane. The sermon will be preaciied oy the Rev. Dr. MeGiynn, of New York. On August 26 a hew church was dedicated in th villaxe of Evart, Mich, and alterward cons crated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus vy Bisnop Borgess of Detroit. The Bishop of Nesqualy, Right’ Rey. A, M. A. | Blanchet, recently coutirmed over tour hundred | nee in Colville and a number more at Walia | Walla. A new Catholic church is being erected at | Lapwal Oreek, about eight miles irom Fort Lap- | | wal, Oregon, and will ve ready’ fur dedication about the Ist oi Octover, | A new Cathoud church 1s being erected at Me- | Minoviile, Oregon, to be under (he cuaige of Kev. Father Croquet, of Grand Ronde, ‘The Catholics of Wheeling, Va., are to | monument chapel over the late Bishop Wh | that diocese, Last sunday th | ) rect o an, of | Forty Hours’ Adoration was in- | augurated at St, Pairick’s churen, in Huntingdon. | | The Rey. Father MeCullum, of St, Patrick's | churen, Brooklyn, will lecture there next sunday | evening, on “The First American Pilgrimage,” ior | the beuetic of tue schools of the Sisters of Merc. | ‘The fact that Father McCu!lum was gue ol the pu- | grims, aud will therefore relite tis own personal experience, lends great intere-t to the lecture, Father Damen’s band of missionaries will open a | Dussion In St. riels church on the Lith of Oc. | tober, at the conclusion of which they wil pro- ceed to the Church of St. John tre Evangelist. ‘They wil also give one at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, | and perhaps Otuer cnurches, At present they are hard at Work In Michigan. Fathers Van Goch and Koopmans are preaching in lowa, The Bishop of Brooklyp will to-day bless the bell | Of Mather Zelier’s church, Winfield, L. Lo Next | Sunday he will bless the beli of the handsome lit- tle church which has been raised by the zeal o! the Rey. Father Kearney, of Rivernead, L. I. | The papers have lately chronicied the death at | Taos, Mo,, o1 a Venerable man, Father Helias, the first Roman Catholic priest who celebrated mass west of St. Louis, The deceased was tie last sur- | vivor but one of a band of Jesuit missionaries, who, over bali a century ago, came to America | | from Belgium, under the leadership of Father De Smet, and devoted themselves to the conversion ot the Western Indians. For tuirty-five years this | good man and his assoctates bore privation, uanger and hareship while iaboring in the cause of t.eir Master, and the success which has crowned their | sell-sacritfcing efforts will be denied by no gener- ous mind, * Many Cathollc taxpayers of Lynchburg, Va, have petitioned fora public tree school under the | | supervision of Fathers McGurk ana Murry, and | Qpea to all religious denominations or none.’ The | Proporiiion Was lavorably considered by the senool | board, but several Protestant ministers ha ov. | Jected und protestea and threaten to make sim- Jar demunas upon the school board, MISCELLANEOUS, The Rev. Mr. Pease has resigned the superin- tendence of tue foward Mission ig this city owing to failing nealih. to East Twelith street for Unis mission is taiked about. | James Armstrouc, a Quaker, was recently re- | Seived into the vewish churck at Vakland, Cal, by clroumceision. He took thereat the name of Isaac Armstrong. When, in 1869, the Reformed Dutch Church | Struck out the word “Dutch? irom its title there | Was: be minister, the Rev. Mr. West, of Lodi, N. J. who did not ike’ the cnange. He thencelurward j ignored the church authorities, and never ap- | peared in any of their classical or synodical gath- | erings unless when cited to appear. The Classis | | Of Paramus, of which his church was a Member, | Suspended him: but, sustained by a parc of his memvership, he continued to minister, Sixty- | seven members subsequently retired and reorgan- | | ized, and they have now commenced an action in | | the Bergen County Court, beiore Judge Bedle, to | } recover the church property [rom their late asso- | Ciates and pastor. ‘The case is strangely mixed, | On Thursday afternoon of last week the corner | ; Stone of the First Holland Reiormed church of | | Passaic (N. J.) Was laid with Appropriate cere- monies, | There are 1 } Universalist societies in the State | } 3 over these there are 79 settled pas- | tors. Seventy-six have reported an aggregate | | Membership Of 3,939, ‘There are 92 Sunday schools | belonging to the denomination, 84 of which re- | Port 6,393 schelars and 851 teachera. Value of | chureh property, $1,627,310, | | | NINETEENTH STREET SYNAGOGUE. Bo wncte bat A | | The New Yerr Calls to a New Lite—ser- mon by Rev. George Jacobs. The synagogue in Nineteenth street, near Filth avenue, was crowded yesterday as it has not been lor about a year. Whatever the Jestival days muy uot do they certainly do call the people tr m their homes to the synagogues in numbers larger than are seen in those places at any other times in the year. Yesterday Mr. Jacobs delivered a discourse appropriate to this New Year festival irom the story of Jonah’s sleep on the Tars bist mail packet, when, in the midst of a storm, the sailors called out in their terror, “What meanest thou, O sleeper? arise and call upon tuy God, 11 so be that God will think upon us, that we perish not.” Mr. Jacobs touched upon the importance Religion, he always the inevitable savior from evils that are the direct oMspring of ignor- ance. Where knowledge is pushed out bigotry steps 1, abd darkness is then made to supplant | light. Under the specious plea of pleasure it | throws open the floudgates to the opponents of truth. Hence the Talmud repeatedly cautions ! men not to make their fences higher thao their | principles, Mr. Jacobs refuted the commonly ac- cepted theory that this festival is an emblem of | the Judgment Day, and remarked that when tuis idea Was first promuigated it was strenuously op- posed. Man, headded, is judged every day and every hour of his existence, What then, he asked, are we to understand by this new theory o! the Day of Judgment? it is that memory summons us to A DAY OF JUDGMENT and calls us to account, This is the lesson of the text, and tt furnishes us enough for our guidance | in this life and in that which is to come. We heed Not the lessons of life and the lessons that ure proper that it akoulct thus caii us to judgment and p miss} st Inte voice thet amane doer aents in the past, | Peuetiied by ava xed sad orn erate the me in the voice that awoke Jonah it cries out, “What Meanest thou, O sleeper? arise and call upon thy God.” It preaches to ug in trumpet tones aad speaks to us Of judgment and meditation, Look around the synagogue on such a day as this and | 2 reservations, how many seats do nes see unfilled by their for- | mer occupants? The places that knew them once | will know ther no more forever. Do not the very dead seem to speak to us on such a day as Unis, louder than the Shephar? And yet we go on and on as if joy and pleasure were to be all of lie tous. Shall we siut our ears ana our hearts against all incentives to duty in sucha day as | vais—a day Of God’s judgments? On such @ day | ‘we are brought, to speak, face to faco wita | God. Shall we not then take heed to the lessons , which this day brings to us? In the morning we | are AS GWASS THAT GROWETH UP which in the evening is cut down, dried up ana Withered. Let us not put off those duties which now press upon us, Procrastination is the thief of | ¢ time, Let us not wait until we come down to our deathbed, but before we arouse ourselves, to call ‘abo God. | will preach the Ovcasional sermon beore the Con: A chinge of location up | cumstane spaten of the | conversation with ye English Carlist Committee, presents his compli- Ments to the editor of the London Standard, and begs to enclose him the transiation of an import- ant despatch which he has received irom the royal | Carlist headquarters :— To THB PrxsipeNt OF THE ENG made known leat it be then oo late and we verian, | ita members i ix Dame for their svmpathy with 7 the royal canse. Moreover, Ais Majesty the King, fully sensible of the homage offered to him, has been graciously pleased to declare bis intention of accepting, with grautude, the sword of honor Which the members of your committee have de- sired to offer to him; but, owing to the sacrifices of his devoted subjects, His Majesty ventures to hope that this gilt, ehef @avre of artistic beauty, as His Majesty Jeels certain it will be, will not make 1ts generous donors forget that suffering Spaniards are in creat need of ambulance munitions and alb that the charitable can supply for hospital pa- tients. King of an uniortunate people, my sugust sovereign tas suown himself the first to sacrifice for their good his personal fortune and State sur- roundings, But rather let us do this to-day and it shall he & day of memorial And let us go from Goa’s presence to-day and from [is sanctuary to that in- ber sanctuary o! Gou—the home—aud together with all those whom we love, and with @ faith strong and beautilul, tet us claim those promises which He has given us and make His command- ments and His judgments our deught, A very tender prayer closed this exhortation, | and the closest attention was manifested by th congregation during the delivery of the discourse, LIBERAL CHRISTIAN CONVENTIONS, Next Tuesday two important religious conven- tions will sit to discuss matters of interest and Im- | TA Uau at c sir, the assurance of my highest consid- portance to the future welfare of each. The Uni- | eration” sik as GE ERAL NINALKT turians will hold a national convention in Saratoga | 104, Great Queen street, Westminster, Augnst 28 and the Universalists will hold a general conven- Serprareaee tion in this city, This last wili meet dally in Dr, ART MATTERS. ied encoded Shas Chapin’s church, The Convention will be com- While the artists are still lingering by the Dill posed of the presidents (or in their absence the vice presidents) and secretaries Of the several | sides and river banks watching the changes of the State conventions in its fellowship, and | aatumnal follage and seeking out bits of landscape of one clerical and two lay delegates | that can be worked out profitably on canvas, the besides from every such convention. | picture dealers are getting ready with novelties to Any parish or society in any State or | attract their patrons on their return from the sea- territory where a convention has not been organ- ized may also be represented by delegates, and | any member of sucn churches so placed may unite | and send representatives to this Convention. Every State Convention having in its 1elliowship an aggregate of fifty parishes and ministers 18 entitled to two clerieal and four lay delegates, and | for every additional fiity parishes and clergymen to one clerical and two lay delegates. On this side, Owing to the influence of the panic the past summer season has been one of the dullest known Jor many years in art circles. Neither in the gal- lery nor the studio has enough business been done to more than pay currentexpenses, and the votaries of art are locking forward rather anxiously to the coming winter, in the hope that a reaction may set in and patrons display a liberality that in some t A 6 | Sort may compensate for the dulness of the spring ‘asis of representation over 1,000 representatives | oi this denomination will probably be gathered | #0d summer, here next week to enjoy the hospitalities oi their | Inetropolitan co-religionists and to legislate for 8CH. the well-known dealer, is 1m Paris, and has made mies gong. Co ARUERE MOOSE ORT ORSL ane ery important purchases, Some of these—works Ne ork 3b von ver as hel 3 7 sat days ago at Auburn, and the attendance | YY Bougercau and Tchaggeny—have arrived and and proceedings inaic the advance ol ul PROMI NALiOn, at large haa | RE nnettteaca sand wiarge | BUmDer of other very important works by native Lumber of schools, many of which are wellen- | and foreign artists have been ordered by this dowd and fourisiiog, ane a varrety of Pepa house—notably, several from Beaufrain Irving, lons Of wore or less iifluence in the country, It ami has probably raised more money, in proportion to | Who aims at becoming the Meissonier of erican, its size and means, or educational purposes within | art, five years tho any other denomination in the ig interest i | ere quietly stored away until increased activity and principles | wilt justify their production in the market, A f 2 SNEDECOR’S. nited States. ie Universiust+ and Unitarans very ims: ted out on th. ndependent course avout a | At this gallery there is on exhibition @ very tm: century ago, though «3 & distinct organization | portant example of the English school of art. The ne Universalists had the start. : ey subject is taken, evidently, from Shakespeare's have advances more rapidly nan their | py, . Unitarian neighvors, for they have had Henry ye) and reprecents: the: dismissal: of she! distinct creed irom the outset, and have not | great Cardinal—Wolsey, {he composition of the been hampered with acrowa of Nothingarians calling themselves by the jamily name when it Suited them und discarding both it and them picture is very strong, though decidedly theatrical, the artist making the mistake of endeavoring to when eitner pleased, The meetings next Tues- | tell too forcibly his story, But notwithstanding day and the succeeding days will no doubt be | this defect the picture is decidedly clever, The THORS int urrancoren bs eee eather denomi: | group of mocking courtiers, the despair of the fallen leaving clerical visitor® an opportunity to be | Cardinal, the brutal indifference of the King to tne heard in some of the venominatioual churches im | pain of the men who had loved and served iy ct'y und Brooklyn. Dr, Caper, of Providence, | him, are admirably conveyed, The work is ‘full of character, and though it has the fauits of color which distinguish English art is a well treated and effective picture, It is rarely that works of its importance reach this side of the Atlantic, as they general'y find a resting place in the British galleries. It,is creditable to Mr, Snedecor’s enterprise that he should have suc- ceeded in bringing it to this country at consider- Vention on Wednesuay mio! will preach on Thursday aiter:.oon, A mags meet- | ing will be beld in Ble street church on Taursduy evening, and on Monday and Tuesday sermous will be delivered by Dr. Patterson, of Bostoa, im Alt Souls’ church, Brooklyn; by Dr. | ixe, of Rochester, in the Canreh of Our Saviour, Filty-seventh street; Rev. Ur. Miner, of Boston, in the Caurch of Our Father, srooglyn, and by Dr. Sawyer, of Tufft’s Ouilege in the Bleecker street ing, and Dr. Fisher shunens a | able expense, | GOUPIL'S. THE CAPIURE OF THE VIRGINIUS. | The collection of pictures at Goupil’s is large ce fgarees ae and varied in character, and the number of im- The Britich Official Correspondence | portant works hid away awaiting the re- With the Madrid Government—Com- | turn of the wealthy members of society plications Concerning the “Unfortu- | 1s large beyond example. As a sample mate Affair’—“Certuin Reservations” | of what may be expected by tna by Spain, | public this season several important works have {From the London Standard, Sept. 1,) been already hung. Among these a poetic land- We publish to-day the substance of the recent | Scape by George inness deserves special notice. correspondence between the Foreign OMce and _ Out of a mass of woods, the Spanish government respecting our ciaims on | BATHED IN YELLOW LIGHT behalf o1 the tamilies of those who had suffered in | by the setting sun, flowsa river. ‘There is no signa what Lord Derby calls “the unfortunate affair of | of human interest; nothing but the harmontes of the Virginins.” The Spanish government ielt , color at the eventide, when the golden suns themselves hampered by a ciaim which had been light 18 softened and subdued by the shade set up by Mr. Caleb Cushing on benait ol the Aueri- | ows that begin to steal over the skYx can government and pleaded lor delay, but Lord Derby would not allow an indetinite postpone. | The mellow tone of the painting conveys ment, and within a fortnight aiter the receiptof | admirably the sentiment of peace that his despatch our representative ut Madrid was en- | pervades the evening hour, and even the abled to telegraph that the idemuity would be settled immediately. | dark, threatening mass of woods seems to lose its Severity under the gental influence of the warm ) sunlight, There is in the picture scarcely any at- ‘The London Standard of the same day publishes tempt at detail, The artist has sought to put on the lollowing in its news column: | canvas We have received from the Foreign Omice a copy | BROAD TRUTHS } ol Oa tS Ce ee ti oe | rather than insignificant detail, showing in thia a Layard-early ineaay insiructing hie vo press | te Nappy influence of the great French school of Jor an answer from the Spanish government to his | landscape painting, whose lessons are too ire nole relating to the execution of the British sub- | quently neglected by American artists, Jects taken on board the Virginius, but before the | ee ory uf ul I . noble Barl's note reached Madrid Our Minister nad bebe t IAs) | already addressed Sedor Ulloa on the savject. In | is the title of a pretentious work by Henry Mos- | reply Sellor Ulloa aske for a 1tcie time, pleading | ter, which displays quite respectable dramatio The Oficial Documents, | the peremptory aud urgent business con- | | aequgae; On; thes: change In. the’ Bonen | power. Tne composition of the picture is not, | Ministry, he having been then only @ however, very original. A farmer has shouldered: lew days at the head of his department. | his gun and has just crossed the boundaries At the same ume he offercd an assurance that | there shouid be no deiay on the part of the Span- | Of Ns farm on the way to join the rebet isp LACE DeBoer neuter bee ane ; army. He is waving adieu to his wife and to the principles of justice and to the-eordial seu- | timenis o1 triendship existing between Spam and | Culldren, who are seen grouped in the fleld, Great Briain, Wituim a month aiterward (June | Plunged in bitter grief at tue departure of hus. In the distance the farmer's 19) band and father. | cabin is introduced, with the old father seated av MR. LAYARD WRITES, Seiior Viloa spoke to. me yesterday with reference t " the demanuy. of ler Majesty's goverument ietee ques: | #H@ door. ‘The scene ts placed in the midst of a ton of ie eae ae aye} suuect bad been | wild country, and the landscape is treated with seriously discussed between bimscit and his colle and that they were of opinion that there would | @ broadness and force that would seem to indicate be no dificnlty in acceding to those de- mands; dul the “Ministry. "Tound | themwelves | Considerable power on the part of the artist im for | tng |, mol ae io} gimentty "4 The, United | this department of art. The story is touching, but States Minister, Mr. Cale! -ushing, had stato: at be Was prepariig &@ note to the Spanish governaa re- | bs et) Siacn OF ite Steet because spectiny the claims and demands of | THB TECHNICAL EXECUTION thin question, but b Merge hener Gastelar, sesior Ul oa weat on to suy, when | 1s not at all equal to the conception. The dignity, President of the executive power, bad treated the Vir- can as ginius affair wiih myself and. the spanisit Minister at psig hl Ketel ea i onl Wasiineton in an aliost persoaal and private manner. | trated by ® painting from the easel of B. Vautier,, uae uated ae Gey) Foreign Office was with- a French artist, which offers a strong contrast to ‘ qstauces he bexse “The Lost Cause.” This artist has taken for his q \e 1 % hote wilicu he hat reason to believe Mr. Calev Cushing | SAbJect @ scene in a village church, a simple in~ was now preparing, He repeated that, ae Jar asthe de- — cident of every day life, and by mands of buglaid were concerned, he did not anticipa any dullculty ia their satisiactory settlement, Pat? MARVBLLOUS SKILL OF BRUSH ' él LORD DERE DESvATCH. | and power of characterization has imparted to 1b Before this despatch reached Loudon Lord Derby lasting interest, The boys and girla of the vill; h add tervie Se X eye ad had an interview with Sefdr Comyn, WOO are assembied at catechism, and the pastor is examining two young giris, one of whom is puz- zied by some knotty point. Ali the otner children, onger dela “ ply,” Ww Dany fist Lavan hint in reply,” Writes Lord | arg interested in the result of the examination That it the condition of Spatn was so farimproved in | 82d enjoy the embarrassment of their compan= touched on the question of recognition and vook Occasion to hope tuat the oficial recognition of the point of tranquillity and public order as to wstity the re- . The boys, uuest {o whic he thal revered, whe e coud no longer be LU The boys, Neediess of the holy place,, Spanish Nepublic by England would not be muca . any reason ior w ithhoiding or, tur her deterring the set- | Are Irreverent and tne girls not very sympathetic. Uement of various niuish claius, which, as he mast be weil aware, der Muesty’s goverment had But though the artist has given ‘uniformity to the gay plorborne to bree. op na the present general feeling of the chiidren, the manner im date in considertiion of the condition of anarchy " ar which had lately prevailed, P requested | Which tt finds expression on the diferent faces aD h LALLY whet report to his go: xusted for a spe " eel the ty | displays clearly differences of temperament and the ‘aniiies of tvs who tad suiteredin the unfortunate | Character with @ success rarely obtained. In ad- agair of the Virginius, adding that, if these : iiahted mh foner tngeited, there was likely to be an | @1ti0n the scene ts perfectly natural and the tecn« ouitaurat oF feeling In Eenglanil ou the subject, which | nical execution of the work broad and solid, De might lead to disagreeable discussions im Aid place the zelationso! the tivo counties on aun | 2988 contributes two clever sea pleses, which saistactory fooung, 1 inentioned also, but without | have & smell of going into detail vexatious and ilegal proceedings | or the revenue rities in the various seaports, | urging the importance of putting an end to this per: petually recurring source of conflicts and quarrels.” THE SPANISH POSITION, Mr. Magdoncil sav Seior Ulloa on the 6th of July, woeu the Spapisi Minister assured him that uo diicuities should be raised by the Spanish governmen eltier as to the principle or the amount of the compensation claimed by the British government, but they would find ‘them- . selves hampered im their negotiations with the Alwericau government on tie same subject, which are complicated by Spanisa counter-claims, were the United states able to quote against them the payment Of a british indemnity. Under these cir- Sef ‘Moa appealed to Her Majesty's r the present pressing the THE BRINY DEEP about them. In the larger Picture, especially, tha water is well rendered; but this artist makes Ins boats and crafts too clean to be real. There is not enough ol@rope and tar about them. They seem to belong to Central Park boatmen rather thao hardy, browned and sea-stained sailora, SUICIDE BY SHOOTING. Dissipation and Remorse the Ca About @ week ago Mr. William H. Paimer, a re« Spectable gentleman, then living in New Haven, came to this city to dispose of some mining stock for himsels, his brother-in-law, R. 8, Woodruff, and | other friends living in Connecticut, Palmer, after. effecting his saies and receiving the money due ow the stock, thought he would nave what Is generaily sestiement oF the case. HURRY UP. In reply Lord Derby wrote 1 have re aid before the Queen your d ting that, in the course of ‘pation Minister tor Forewn 1. t Atlairs had appealed to Her Majesty's government to d ” given to us in God's word, but hurry on to our. ter for the present pressing tora setue nent of the vir. | called “a good time,” and sccordingiy in. destruction, Our trail bark rushes on until it giniusclaims, la reply | have to instruet vouto remind dulged in wine, fast borses and lewd . on unti is Hoa ‘hat many months have now elapsed since women, Some friends of the family wha caught in the breakers, ana it is then too late for ¥ LiaOd thar th GEySESE Darte baad he eelintee. | chouptit. Palmer wae’ reckicest extrav: rescue or lor salvation. But Rosn Hashana arouses | the persons executed are in distress, You will'suate thee bts as 4 pps omy us from our slumber and culls us to | tt Maiesty’s government are most unwilling toaddto WOtified his relatives in New Haven, j ith the didicullies o1 the spanish government, but that they | and accordingly on Friday evening the brother of a new fe, @ new creation, And it ig Cannot aliow the payment of these claims to be po: air, Paimer and his brother-in-law, Mr. Woodruf, cumiiely, and give a decide Xxcellenc, poned tn TOU matter sali Fou wall Urge Lis promise time the arrived in the city and found that Mr, Palmer nav taken lodgings with Ida Phiilli Hel lps, & depraved, ing in A telegram {rom Mr. Macdonnell to the Earl of | Twent yee Atreeun yar cance, tne ky | Soir Uilom hau agreed that tue Wagrenes inaeae | lage, Hiding. Ac." Yeatetday morning ‘Mr. Woote : d age be Virginius indem- i 5 1 | nity snouid be settled immediately, oder Corian | AN intecete eth se it question, and. Mendes an interview with ENGLISH SYMPATHY WITH DON CARLOS, Sir Gilbert Campbell, Bart., President of the Mr. Pai aaah learned that ne 0 portion of which was patd over, and at th tune Palmer promised to soon meet his friend at & pablic house corner of Pourth avenue and Twenty- seventh street, which, however, he failed to do," and an hour or two later Mr. Woodrud was in. formed that Palmer had shot Timeelt at the house iu Kast 'wenty-seventh street, Coroner Hickuot,, later In the day, held an inquest in the case, and ; Irom the testimony adduced there remains scarcely ae | 8 Goubt that remorse of conscience at the idea of, HH CARLIST Com. | ye ks oF and facing those whose money =, erly us uid e King, my master, to whom I have duly | man to sel-deatrue tone Breese seamined tie! i the organization of the English | taal and found tliat deceased while sitting In @ committee, charged) me with chair had shos himsel through the right temple. Carlist nas the pleasing task of communicating to you | He wast ty- Mi bis enure approval of statutes and to thank vhis State Hie iy Joes tanent to cuarwe GP iriends,

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