The Sun (New York) Newspaper, June 27, 1868, Page 2

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r= AMUSEMENTS, SEW STANT THEATRE, 45 and 17 Rowery—' the PIT Nonrd Grabber, and Jack Shey para. DOWERY THEATRE-The b Gisl of Genoa, 6 Fighting Yanke ADWAY THEATRE —Thaeb of Lie! this afternoon at iy o'clock. WALLACK'S—Lottery of Lire, With an ex bution of characters, WOMTELL SISTERS NEW Your 1 : . " AY, JUNE ADVEATISN r Paar, per “ Beersnse Sore Laapen Avy In We f tine a HE SUN t 5 ween. € for the paper te The Republi a polley hey want further ¢ » this, howe of Uh prey there are most intelli eu tin the fob the face ¢ ability andy re ty be token not how Jeserving a eondidat bas not the « can eed, We would by no ‘| w 1, have Not Pathe vot iherense n vote ba har creased ago, and the embargo wh | retary pute of tyranny that ean bo ia sance for th der, If Pera may not take hor ships out of cause she obedience to Church anthority, and those who prefer tl thet + ak CMicient, exorcise of the epirt, the liberty of individ ndgment. The € class exalts, while t 1 for th of the worsl 1 f ‘ | dul ' le oi ‘ 1 | be made to cont 4 f Bing | re, who linvet me numer | al influential ;¢ nth « try the Rev Mr Tyng and his supporter 1 more than enee expr their read t they ate denied the Hberty th nose cn ' ey to the Epis ne and thelr thet bat whick 1 “ ‘ repinion, man Joving: or ! r 1 . hott tem whieh nll Listory showe, and will ¢ wountl Christianity itsel svork of proving that the essen Tyion are to worship God 1 ietates of his own c nee ten Onvesided Neutratitys of the persons w ' der protence of enforcing: our netr a | the extinet vy ¥ yam Chi? have sought to prevent afrora sell ing. their property. to latter pow it is greatly to be od , Ny high — author ty an to Mr. Seward his dete n irene also without just'f Hostiti tween Spain and 7 lye athe deli ty of the iron | clads Oneota and Catawba, after they hov won bought aad paid for, is the merest pi ned, verb that what tisan oll 4 froose is # also for the our porta beens s! at War with Sy pain ought uot to take oat her, 1 is at war with Pora, Yet, nt this nent, a Spa n, and we ¥ ono “ obtain chit be | BoOn as Bhe y ward eave Piseulh N in namin hall 0, Kobert to help a sister republic ; and if he t# gov © ¢ Kepubiican ¥ f the Stare, w W tbet, we 9 think, insure his ele nm, W ntly | ty we do think tint t ‘ Thomas A. Mendvichss Fear vag ts tee tree ronal OF shonkd b Aa Senator Ileadricks sccins to be the man This is wise, and is the more remarkable | UPen Whom the warrhig factions in t from not being conce the Demoe nm, bo red in the interest of atic party ver, whether judicious counsels Uko these can prevail in the Republican Convention, If they do, the contest will be ubtful and interesting ; if they do not, the Democratic candidete will walk over the sourse, 3 —— i American Rituntisms Bishop Melnvainn, of Ohio, in Lis ad dress to the late Episcopal Diocesan tion in that Sta against the pract fam'lar here, but, ag it seems, Borcthing of a noveliy in Ohio, of opening and closing public worship by a procession of sarpliced choristors entering: the church singing hy! stand on thy shop objects that er Book prescribes a certain form of rds with which to begin morning and evening prayer, and that the hymn at all, and still more so in procession, # u violation of the rubric; that the weariug ofa surplice by any other person than or dined pricsts is an unauthorized § tion; and, generally, that this processional singing is a revival of a Romish practice, growing out of “that discontentment with the old y our liturgical and Protestant worship, as established by Jaws and usages of all the centuries sines the Reformation, and out bf ineroased ceremonial, of Hitualism of 1 ‘onvens tal «, quit sat morbid covet whi w doys in E vertain places, this th noto. rious manifestation.” Accor com ments on this 58 w find In one of our Epis the subject of ritualiam, pa singing, as Bishop Mellyaine part, is likely to come wp fordiscussion at thy General Convention of the Episcopal Chureh to be held in this city nest fall; and if it does: it Will assume quite as great proii the Tyng ease, plained of by ¢ nothing wifamiliar in this and other dioceses and an attempt to fi Torthe performances com teet with a stubborn opposition, ‘The truth is, that the Episcopal organtza. d y, 14,1800, He took his seat in that body ly those spiritual forces which produced the great schism ef the Church in the sixteenth eon. tury, kuown as the Protestant Keformat/on, and which haye been at work more or less ever since, dividing and subdividing the Pro. testant sects, and would divide the Romish communion itself were its affairs not admin- istered with consummate ability. Itisthe old eonteat hatwean those who make religion to 4 to the elase of De Non, both in England and in this co is experiencing the intlucnce of prec's Iisa curious ques tutional Convention of Indi prominent body Ms etronge ground | singing of a nova. f which processional says, is Duta the question of parish boundaries involved in Bishop are, a# we have sald, rhid or even censure them, or avy other form of ritualism, will proaching Democrat unite, the Tea come iy ng: foots in his pu He was born in M gum county, Olio, in 1819, received a col legiate education, sindiod law, was adm tted to the Dar, and commenced tho practice of his profession in Indiana, In ISS he was a Democratic member of the Legisiature of that State. In 1850 he was clected to the Consti 1 took a pert in the proceedings of that mg his collengruces was 8 Aui WUYLE Couray, then a Whig. Mr, Hexpntes who had now begun to tom rood de of attention in the State, was elected to tl United States House of Reprogomtag,y se ao Inst ombra ney where he served: twy cle Mio stvimy controversies over the re of the Missouri Compromise and the passage of the Kansas-Nobraska bi During this Mr, Henpnicks invariably acted With the large body of the Demoeratic party fu Congress, He Lis ¢ peal strugy vote! for the bill, one of ng JAwes I, Lax, wie asure, and subsequently where he becume ¢ wens 1 also sustained the ny removed to violent and as such was ch to the T States Senate, In the tall of 1854 Mr. Hunpiacis was a candidate for had awopt over the public mind of wna nthe repeal of th ‘ ren and Le was defvated 1EN Bannovis, w 1 him for the loss of Congrews, 1 Hexpricks Commi of the Gevera years, discharging its ¢ sith Sane able abil Governor of Indiana in 1240, be on by Hesny 8, Lane by a majority of 9,797 In 1863 he was chosen tothe United & Senate for ely years, his terms to ¢ Maret December, 1363, During the fourteen month: that intervened erc of the war, Mr MaNbiucns took an active part on the Demo: eratic side of the chamber in all the great questions that agitated that body. He did hot go tothe extreme of such ardent oppo. nents of the waras Powrin of Kentucky, nor was he #0 steady a supporter of war measures ae Rice of Minnesota, but belonged (oy the clos ef whom consist of outward nets and ecremonials, and | Brystoun isn fair type. Since the dow of the rebellion, Mr. Hes ontens has been res 4 tenong tho foremost men of New Organ at Dr. Oxgood's Charch, £0 new organ was ex “Church of tie Mes NEW hooK. SUVA AUMWS, chanees of other cn hibited at the r lesa conspleuous, but not for | nd, porhape, 0 Atos a= 8 Stevo meeet ‘ eoeents? a ee work which d ither the sdvanc Hialy basa public debt today wh poets fit to t © Pacts ond Specetations \ \ St 1 { and betting for Whe Mary Pow Ge ee Fditon of The Sia Hand Lost Bagenges heir time in vie wos born in New Berlin, ¢ city, und it is, theses to assert the preferences of any exawined before Proved tit the Hon irom murder, far beyond the confines ot athe Law Scho Western fronticrs, graduated frox sy Bot: in 185: in 1854 was cl . Were he Kerved|tliree terms. Lincoln as Minister to Ause savcount of bis sympathy wit ona, the Court at V vican Would be more weceptabl ve Aways felt @ reat interest Tins hoon tatu) abd pe aud Livy Were at Cumbrilge, Mai State Senate, @ amenities of debute are not altogether | the House of Commons Dr, Litthedate, Church of England, i spoke of Lord Bult and of Cranmer rostered yillaiusy” ¢ contracts for F naval supplice war awarded ou Phur large expendit t 20 Mrondwa, aur ty politir Vay, New You, Jiine d4, 193%, nly “proper vem is, that young gentlemen of in their aswert yous a frivolous ya hinted that avothes aod My, Bo wae wid have tho’ eal of Vat what eure ground, nnd the oy ment that wow to place the Obie vrecn bel {Dut fifertuation on those deeply interest the Wia-paslng com> WY Waa policed Laie nat borne out by the Gaeta.

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