Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, June 29, 1871, Image 1

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    IMAM UP PVWCLITION.
Tbs. Baiviemo tam Iberessmee Is pubilebed eseep Teluadagr Iffero to, B. W. its.rmat at Two
poilars e ram: tb *hake.
ma- la a aimir wiser of sabecetp.
lose to tbe pew.
t3pIb7LII4IIOTICIZe Insetted et "trio= ceners per
lee or &et immerUom. mad Irrri ems pee UM toe
rebeemeeet bleortiams.
yoe4T, Noma& mew deo am remalag wake.
!team own a Ilse. ' I
ADVIWVBEWEWW I win be ineemeed Gamest be I
be Moving bible of metes : _ -
CZ
1 11 / I dlri tot IMb ea 'I IP.
2.0111 LOO 111.011 1111.100 IILWO I OM•
t lotto
eiili
.14 edam I , UN I ISA We IMO j. 141.611
114 cohtm. 110,0011114010.1101 11144111111.11 g
Turn 1 30.00 I 40A0146.0 1 temil.loolll
Administrator'. and ituenfier's lfoliew 111 t AndLi
len 110 S imea Wadi. oM $2 al ; Badness Odd% dee Usee. par
oar) s ic omd •
yearesstentiodterienUtledtairverter=
Transient elearlieelsontanstelbipeid tor
AU Itembitions et hatmadlikettie I Ossoliostedttass
of Waited co Meddled Mimed. end mikes of Yon
tages and Diethe. exceeding dm Uses. ate dogged
lANpit UM 1, •
The limerrna tsetse a bonier otemOstion than an
the papers In the connt
amln l i onnhined. makes it thalami,
anima
1 ,1;11 l'Et ij rA li G bind . hi Plan and
t e tdoni, done with nemeses lidadaft
lidera'. Cuts. Pamsdikda. fonnments,
or eTem misty and ibis. -printed at the Meets*
iif,tice. The Werra Ogee la sell supplied Me
power Preama. a rood mentmeist of rev inie.and
verj•thing M the Prtsitatt Use am be -exemited in
most arilalie maser mad at the loved Mee.
ITEMS INVAILtABLY CAIN. •
:/ -
BUSMEN CAPINI.
"O . M. TINGLEY, Licensed Auc
ki. flower, some. Ps. All adls protaitty glen&
:pa to. MICOUNTO
WALLACE KEELF.A,
ROUSE: SIGN AND FRESCOPAINTER
rowanda..l3opt llno-rr
DAY, HUDDFJ 4 I.. & SANDERSON
' Miners snit Whippers of the'
IRULLIVAN ANTIIBACITE COAL.
ma.lll TairmsdA, PA
. .
only & INSURANCE
.1C11131151 , 9 4011041100 eampled by Yemen!.
it Morrow. ono door Mt* et Need Baur.
T. R. CLM. -m5710.10 w. L vrsvicrr.
R FOWLER, REAL- ESTATE
LUa DLALML. 160 Waaltlnittcif Street, be
t, r•on LaSalle and Weis area* Claidago, =bola.
•
pawl Estate invehased and sold. Investineuta made
;and Money Loaned. .' gay 10;70.
TIMM - MAKING, PA'rxr,il,l4
cuit th() ATM MI:UV tn - faiddeinabla
ylne on. ',hart notice. BOOMS Tn Ifferenea 'New
nindy over Porter k Eirtrra Drnst Mora.
MBB S . L. OARNITT.
Towanda. Pa., April IS, 1870.
.HAIR Nvoit33. or ALL RINDS,
'lamb sk SWITCHES, CREW, BRAM. FRES
kc., made In thei best 111111tlifT andbdeat style,
lat.the Ward Rouse /arbor Shop. ' Terms rosh7bie.
Towinda, Dee. 1.1569. .
CIAYLOR.D 8R05.,. • General kre
and Life bin/rano! Armfu,. Pollcien cn..Aing
i ind damage canned by lightning. in Wming.
and other reliable rominniee. •withobt additional
B. B. GAYLORD,
calming. May V. 14. O. GAYLORD.
JOHN DIJNTEE, BLACKSMITH,
MONSOETO3„ PA., Pala partierdar attention to
ironing Buggies, Wagon's: Rieigha. ke. Tire set and
repairing done on gent batter , . Work and chimes
goarantood Wieselefy. 12.15,69.
ADIOS PENNYPACKER, HAS
a z .lit established himself in the. TAILORING
ntisrsEss. . shop over Rockwell's Store. Work of
'every description done to the latest styles.
Towanda, April 21, 1810:—tf .
MAYSVILLE WOOLEN MILL
ra-
The puilersigneil would, resperttnll7 it to
the pnhlle that he keeps constantly on lurid Woolen
elotlia.+Paaalrnereit. Flannels, Tanta. and all kinds at
wholeiale and rctall. 3IAIGII it! IiIIIOADLEY. •
Ang.lll.ln. Proprietor.
11USSEtl,'S_
ci. - ~
omnAL
LI NS NC - E. AGENCY,
inal23lo—tt
CONRAD MYER t
intentor and - Marinfachirer of the celebrated trnn
'tame Piancia. Witirroarna. No. 122 Arch St.
ue receired the, Prize Medal of the 'Motid`a Great
tihilliflott, 'London, Itng. The bighead Prizes
otorted Abet Mid4thrtgrer ezbibited. Metal:dish
-11.4:13.1 . mar.29.ll4irti,
DAYTON 4.: .13ROTTIEl, 1
Deal\a in
- I
WOOL, BIDES, P ELTS, CALF-.
I I SK U n, Ft il4 \ ic., ...
i'o? which the highest c ash pr iAt is paid at all limes.
l Ohce in M. E... Rosonfield'a Store, Main-st.,
• .
At
•i 1. r,i 1 T , A TToI4.I pin . . 14..79 . 110 WANDA , PA.
TIIE (41T:a
Banking HAVE
- . Caine of 4a. F . gir V I V I " 1111/ 0 1 1, under the
• I Thy are prepared to draw Billa ofR • change, and
\ a„,
make collectiona in Row York. Pldladelp and all
porhons of OW United States, as alsoland, Ger-
Ea \ tro
many,'lnd.FrEnce. To lorttrnonel,rreetv deposits.
Ina to do a gonecal Ranking trnaineaa. -
I' 0. V. Mason seas one at the late: firm of rte,
Maxon k Co., of Towanda, ra., and him know' Ka of
.- -lis buena!a roan of Bradford and attaining cciannea
i f t l r t i4l .o l:e r ii . been l i lt
b b a i n tet i ll htutess Icz=i t t i
i hirh trnralN cc:410(110ns. O. F. MASON,
• Towanda. Oct.-1 . Man. ' A. 0. M l_ SON \
- \
F. :W 7 F I Il Mt
INF:W(7OOPS A ND LOW P 10F,,‘,7
1 .
~.. _AT SIONr.OETCP,N. PA. •
. •
1 TRACrYs'& HOLLOW,
11,•tall DPllers In .Cirocerteis and Piny"sinus, Dhige
iUld }iedtrinr,s, Kernsane Oil, Lampe, Chirui" ,,, .,
fhiad, , s, Dye Stuffs, Paiute, Dila, Varnish, Yanhu,, No
tions:Tel/we; Mari and Snug. Pure Winos and
I,l9unrs, of the beet finality, for realletital purpcises
t' r ui 4 All Gonda soldat the very 101 W prima. Pre
if riptimin , aroftilly vompoundod at all lire 'or the
2, and night give as a ea. .
TRACY & - 19LL015'.
I ;‘l,nrootnn, Pa., June 24, 1869—1 y. •
_\
_:_,__
CITEAP PASSAGE FROM OR TO
i IRELAND - OR ENGLAND.
. i Grro s s •5... WE Or ATZAMITTITNI }7IOII OU TO :
QUERNNTOWV OU rayanaocin. \
1. Williams k onion's old .. Black Star Line" of LI.-
i”l.oll..aoketa. Railing every•week. ' ~
I 14w111.0r-tad Lino of l'ackrta from or to London'
i . aallinr: t,cex. a month.
'lZ.nottances toT.ngland. Ireland and Scotland pay-
ILI.. on 6mand. •
'•
F ,, fnrthrr particulars, apply to Williams & Onion,
Z) try...lway, - New York, or • . .
. G. F. MASON k CIL. Banker'.
Towanda, l'a: '
‘3...t. 1. 1,74 e,
NCHOR LINE STEAMERS.
11.1 ti:kil every Wednesday and filittiaday. to and
frqfn . NEW YOUR Aiip atAscow,
n.,11, Londonderry,t o land )fails and piPassengers.
Tlntsfrainers of this favorite line arc built ex
, Or , s , :fy-for the Atlantic Passenger Trade, and fitted
re.feet sal) all the modern improve
, td..sftnlated to insure-Ow safety, comtort. and
',PM..• of pas,engers.Missies Rates, .Parahle
O,L,ArISti;OW,. I..p;;ERPOOL and
• • I'lltsT !LAS arierlS, aceordink to location.
- I:ETURN TICKETS. il3l. aecnring ac
-ren,,, ',non', INTERMEDIATE, $33. _STEER
.
3.E.
Pari Tor their trietitis in the Ohl Coon
!') twtetm at rettnerd rat,*. For fur
-1,1,1;1,1 tar% 811,1 y go lIENDEILs'ONIIROTIIF:ItS.
1 , 7 tireetl. N. V. or to MEANS. CA•fitral
Ti‘Walltill. hiar.ls'7l
IYERSBURG MILLS.
EA, 1 E A-ND BiJOKWHEAT
FLOU 1:2,
co RN MEAL AND FEED
hand and for ssle'clieni , for CABI3
CUSTOM WORK ITAIMANTI2):'
limy! a large quintitYTir OnoUND CATVGA
11.... 4 51 - Eit, from Old "tenpin . Beds..
" Oate Mitt to exchatutelor
'II 7
lc FAN' STEAM FLOURING MILL
•
Li, BRE:VIEQUES,' PS. . I
it • N•tlig•-ribci deAires to give notice that hi
J am
I IIM FLOTTRISG MILL
1 .
._. . ._. ' • .
1 •
g..,.... in ~t .,...aatnl op , rallon, mut that be l ts pro
' '‘,.'• 1 1 , •. , 19 all work iu hti Hue ini short Uotier•
I . .
• 1 ,
f bos. oic TUE SAME DAT
4 1. . THAT IT Is lIECKITED
Wltu4t,, iitekchnat ind Itrd Flour. Coro' Moil.
ke., always oa hack' 1104 far „male Al
ratnor. 1
. .
I'ATICI7LAII NOTlCE...Penvint lirlap on t •
!r . .:.,t .ide• of the river desiring io.Otrtnit" I ' 6-mil I ;
111 Inr• their te4T7 B 4 o. Pild both 1"1711 When
thy
nug ;mini of ton bin:heti and apwardc
AO i'TI
.1
P. B. 4M B -
( lAKES AND CRACKERS.-.GRE-
X.. 1 V tAli Bend, scotch Sonar, Ofanse, Balana. Low
pn And iiinger Cakes, Was/111440s Jumble* and
l;on. 4iscl/d, and alltigids &Cracker* 04 ,
Nfmnli 4, 'lO. - Ir. Al. IrOCKWI2.IfI3.
..
' -
- -
S. W. AIaVCII4,I), rtitiliaher.
VOLUME XXXII.
= MIMBIONAL CA=
TAMES W(*), /errors= AND
Ocantaaa.toa AT LAW, TOlOlll3l. Pa.
; Y PEET, ATTORNEY AT
LAw, Monads, Iti Jabs 2Z,.'6&
FOYLt ATTORNEY' AT
Law. W . T0 m,14.; Pc, Office with Elhansa
Radtti, south side Yereer's Block: , Aped 14.10
GEORGE D. MONTANYE, AT-
Team AT Ire. lIMIIS-013EINV of Mau and
Plea Elltreets. oppodtai"etedi Drug littme.
N v B. KELLY, DENTIST. OF
• flee over Wickham fa-Iflack% Tewaada,Pa.
May 2d. '70.,
WH. WESTON, DENTIST.-
oatee In Patton's Mock, over Dore'. Drag and
awaited Mom 1 • Jan 1. la.
• P. IiVILLIBTON - ; •
ATTORNEY AT LAW; TOWANDA.
Rooth sfAo of IderecteANow Mac. op stairs
April 11, "10—tf.
B..MoREAN, ATTORNEY
AND COMMELLOR A? Law. Towanda, Pa. W.
ticalar attention paid to tnizinesa in the Orphaiir
Court. 451.
WH. CARNOCHAN, ATTOR
• re: AT LAW anetriet Attorney for Brad
ford CoonlY), Troi. Fn. collections wade and prow*,
ly remitted. • fel?
T &D: C. DEWIT„C, AttOrney.wa
oLato. Towanda. Pa., .basing formed a ao ptra.
nerstdp, tender their 'professional serriers to the
r e bl r ie. Special attention given to NVIMY DEPART
of ths business, at the county seat or 'Asa
where. 'JACOB Wart.
. . D:-CLINTON Pen=
Towssat.., Pa., Doc. 12, 1370. •
TORN N. 'CALM, ITTOIINEY
aIT Law, Towanda. Pt. Particabar attentbat giv
en to Orphans' Court Mildness. Conceiancbig and
Collection... yr Office In Wood's new block, month
of the First Naticinal Dank, np stairs.
Fob. 1, 1871. 1 •
CWARNER, Physician and
wirgem,Lellayarille, Bradford .5,11
calla promptlrattendcal . to. Ocoee first door south
or Lel:Wartlle Muse.
Sept. 15, 1810:Lir
GEORGE' SANDERSON, JR., •
Philadelphia, Attorney -at Oflieo with
Samuel Robb, Esq., 230 South Fourth' street: Thud.
nets in any of the several courts, of Philadelphia
promptly and faithfully attended to. • mar.lsll-3m
(VVERTON KLSBREE,
Arroß
?tree AT Law,lnertenda, Pi., having entered
Into copartnership, offer their preferarisnal services
to the public. Special sittenUon gimp to business
in thtlDrphan'a andßegisters Court& apll4'lo
_ .
OVI : XKOX, X . EISIT
EEr.
. C
MIatCUR & DAVIES, ATTOII-
=As at Law. Towanda, PL. The unde.ridgned
haring airliasted thernrelver tore. tiler In the prtr-Dee
of Law. offer their 'professional serricer to the pubbc.
ULYSSES MERCUR. . W. T. DAVIES.
Marsh S. 187(1.
VA. A:, B. M. PECK'S-LAW
• OFFICE.
Main virrt-t, oprom. , tlo,C,onri 110,1Pe,TOWtavil, 11,
(kl. 27.'70
A A. KEE
4 NEY COUNTY SU
irrEinmESVENT,twanda, 01Tice with
It. M. rect. second door low the Ward House.
-Will be at the °Mori the last Saturday oteach month
and at all other times when not called away on !mai
nom connected with the Bniseritandent7. AU lattors
aorild hereafter lw addressed as above. dee.1.70
TowAN - Da„)rA
BEN. IifO9DY,
ANT) surmos.
Offer' his . profmtlonal itertice9, to lb. peoplo of Wy
alustno and vicinity. Mee nod rroldenee at 11- J.
Llord'o, Church street. Attg.lo.lo,'
-- • -- • _ _ _
JOHN W. MIX, ATTORNET AT
LAW, Towands. Bradford co.. Pa.
Par:Millar attention paid to Collections and Orphans'
Cuttrt briiness. ce—Mercreii Now Block, north
aide l'n1)11c Square
DR. DUSENBERRY, would
now
on
nowee that in compliance with the reqn4/1-o1
his num.:lions friends. he is now preparc,l to swireim
biter Nittens Oxid6.=or Laughing flas,.. for the pain.
less extraction of teeth.
LertaysiHie, May 3. 1/%70.-1 y _ •
DOCTOR .0. LEWIS, (1 1L DU
ate °Rho College of -Thy sicuins and Surgens,"
New Tort city, Class IFII3-4. gives osclustwn attention,
to the practice of his pretension. Offlce and rosidence
en the custern.slopo: of Orwell 11:11, adjoining Henry
t 14.
_
'DR. D. bunt/,t, has
pnrchaaed
G. H. Wood'a rt'orwrty, I , rdwern
rrnem 'Clock and the Elwell Ilomw, he ham
to , zdvd bin office. , Trecth eatracb..l, without pain by
nfte ramr Towanda, Oct. 20. lA7o.—yr..
BOARDING. --A few boarders can
jiArreettre firat-clasp ronn with board. by apply
ing at No .32 Frond Street. Y. E. POST.
WARD HOUSE, TOWANDA, PA:
On Main Street, near thelConA
C. T. Num!. Proprietor.
1)I TING
. IN i\O:43IF,CTIO:3 WITH rink Bkr&ELLY.
Nair the Court Honao.
We are li axed to feed the hungry , at all Unica of
\;
,ii
the day and ovoilroz. OyFtora and Ice Cream in
their seasons. \ .
March 30, 18 . 1 D. '. fiCOTT & ,CO.
EliwEljii HOUSE, °WANDA,
PA.
:fit i wiLso
\Having leased this Hon is now vidy to accommo.
date the travelling puddleNo paw 'taiir enainse will
be spared to give satisfaction to th se who may give
I him a call.
a North Ride of the 'public isp . coot of Het
i enr's new block. \
' _
lIIPPIDIMERFJP:FeI), Cl EEK :HO
uu,TEL.
_ \ -
PETER LANDH - ESS B.
Having purchaatid and thoronghly elated this old
and' Bell -known stand. formerly kept by Sheriff Grif
fin. a%the month of Rimamerfield Crivek, la ready to
give ).zo(1. accommodations and aatisfavtnry treatment
to all who may favor him with a caltil - -
Dec. 2.3. 868-4 f.
A S HOUSE, TOWANDA,
II VI_ E
PA.
C /1. 31.1.1 N AND Pnliwir. ,
.. .
.
-- The rfortw, Harness../..e. of all gorrata of - this
bouse. Ingured \against loss byylre, without any ex
tra charge..
A superior qua 'ty of Old English Bass Ale, • PIF t
re.eivnd. T. It. JORDAN,
Towanda, Jan, 2 /I.- Proprietor
TIRADFOR HOTEL, .
TowANDA.
The tmloteriber barin leased and lately fitted ip
the above ,pt by him agi a saloon and
boarding house, on the south vide of BRIDGE
STREET. next to the rail d, is now - . prepared to
ententaiu the public with g accomadationsob n•a
olonahle charges. No tron le or expcnse will be
spared aeonmustate those calling on him. Rio
bar will be furnished.with ch( re brands of Cigars,
Liquors. Ales, ke.
flood Stabling att. hod. M. HENRY.
Towanda, June I, 5e11...d01. ltday7f2 Proprietor.
I—. • •
A TLANT_IC HOUSE,
SECOND STREET,
LETwErzi 14111Xiit AND DINE STREETS.
TOWANDA, Pu. .
The undersigned baying Atka up this house for
• Rotel and Restaurant, will opun for businasa Nay
lat. lti7l: The public wilt find • vary tleatand
=odious boon. with 'Makes! F.ntartsinniesta,
wther with four of the boat Ritliard Tables in this
section. All are Invited to call and examine for
themselrea. _
ap1.19114f C. W. 80119A4i/L.Y.
It. 3tSttt
NEW PLANING MILL
MATCIIMG. EE-S ' AMI 4 ;O; IiOULDINGS, ke..
•
At the old stand of EL 13. Ipgttam's Woolen Farto
and sawnalll,in -
All EAVI SIX lOU. PLA.N.NG ANV 31.A.TC:11M 0
/
mAcnz•E •
-
letchaege of an erperiented" Mecbattle sad builder,
the public way expects
' GOOD JOB
From the recent enlargement of This water power,
work can be don* at all Newtons of the year and soon
as sent in. , In , eonneetion with tVe rerwmdll we are
' able to furnish bills 01 esarvi lumber to order.
' • STEWART BO WORTH.
11e10.—ly
NOTICE, TO CARPENTERS
The t:RW*I44IIA hats nu 4o Anatol:mots to Is.
aurp Carpeateeo cancni OF TOOLS, catalog
thew oruisszesa ELME MAY DE. All desiring wadi
Inounweeare rcopmithaly invitml to give no a cill.
Cala' & VINCENT,
dec2l?W Ow. Issuance Asta, Tcnrsads. Pa.
ippFMEMItERTHA.T FOX & MISR;
JL.IO CUE aro rebating art kinds of Groceries it
wholosaleprices. The largest stork in town. Goods
first class. Prieto low. , ,E. T. FOX,
Sept 29,10. ,
StrIIAXCE AGENT
Hotels.
CAILI!TO i -YESa'A
CAtortown, May
..IVAN k .
/limas/. Jut.
['ABLE OF THE El
ERIE ftil LaciAD.—Taltlpg
23, 1871.
. . . ..
P. 1 / 1 1 A. W. r
2 - .30 * 9:00 TOWthitok . l ' i :3 1 0 . 1 1: 1 2 1 1 . 3
2:40 8:10 BARCLAY JUNCITON 12:10 ON
3:uu 8:30 ......,8101130E - 11:55 UN
3:33 I
9:03 WILCOIX.., . . 1 11:15 ISM
3:45 3:55 ....NEW ALBANT: :: ~ .11:03 5:15
3: 55
. 1' 9:23 .....,anumt.5......,e 10:55 5:45
1 4:90 9:50 DUSHOYIE / 10:80 510
r. X. I A.. Na t ;/ A. 14, r. 4.
R. Fr _ D
Getsl / Powsine 16E:14.
ittn.2s,'ll
EW ROUTE To PHILADEL
:-_NORTH, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Shortest mid most direct line to Millaistplds,
Vasbingtoa. mad the Swath.
Passapdata this route tabs Petnartvazda k
Eat Vitt itallecad train. paaang Towanda at T:tl
/LK, Mae does connection at Bethistm vitt Et.
Philadetphislrani of North Parra Rattled. and again la
at 11111 P. 71. , It Ems to take Idea
trains atter for the touts or Wad
City pagmensor cars are at tbo'bopot as antral of
• 1 bat
4 t. , 2 all ps a convey pamesisra to the nova. Depots
the city.
LAM Navin Panes
,ItaCtreati DepoVeorber Senn
and American atrenx. PlaOstolptiia, at 7:1111 A.
araietng at Towanda 4.*0 P. Y. woe raaatlig.
Kann's Baggage Egoism 'collects and delivers 140.
gage, office No. 106 Bout 111th aireet, Pbtladelphia.
- •
rassairr Sootwolasumotta.
Froltibtreattaad Arvid and Roble *rests, Plana
&hat* and for br Deny Pastyreight train
to Towanda. and ail plants is Ilisersadiaawa valley
with quick dispatch. ELLUI.CLARILL
°
Ilea. dat. R. P. R. U Frost and Inflow Sta.
Rev. 21,1675 PhDadelptili.
pA. & N.Y. CANAL & R.R. CO.
AILUANOZNISST OF PABBIESOIIt TILUNS,
' To ta4e efiect Moodily, itszr U,
sotrzawasz. I
14.
.STATIONS. 1 Net.
34.
- b r a
45 .....
30 . Waverly 'in 45
R 40 --Athena. 4.,...111 55
9 25' "Towanda ,10 48
1,9 15 .....119Taluaing " 1 9150
10 32 ...1 9 21
11 00 .... Ifeshappin.... 908
11-07 .... Mehoopany....l 900
.11 35 ...TunkhannoCk....l 935
12 55 .... . . Pittston • 7 35
115 ....Wilkes Barre... 710
4 10, ...Manch Omni—
No.l No.
85. 9. 1
r xi.ll_ll
....,.
2431 iISB I
3 30112 40
I 40 12 48
4 20i 120
51G 202
53.1 227
602 257
-6 OA
3 21
4 25
4 4.1
7 15
F 12,
1413
:SU
GEM
IEI
TM
5 35, Allentmrn....... Alf
5 50Ithom
15 .
MEI
cool
as I
30 , 3111 , Tcnratola at 7 10; Athena, 7 54:
it . antic at E3mtra at 910 a. It.
31 k IVi•P Elraira at 5 30: WaYnrly. 0 30; Mb=
iv, anis. at T. , ,% and.: at 7 23 r. at.
,11 45. 9 :1 1, ......Nt 7 W York
MEMO
No
M,
it -a wn dine 41 Whit° llaran. Vp . Trails
at •
I'werigers spa frnm New York and Matadi)!
Oita withuut change "1 rarot.
Down train conno,t4 at Allentown with Tbrentgb
Expre,,e, fpr Itarrisburr,. Pittsburg and tho West.
It. A. PACKER.
Superinteuderit.
TAYLOR'S ELECTRIC pH)!
This Oil has pprroren (tacit! a medicine
in the cure of Bh e rmoatle buneraeipa of =
cptiring an outward applkatien. We defy the medi
cal world to.bring a material better adapted fo the
alleviation of pain and lame/Dees in Man or Beast
than le this medicine. It works upon the same prin
ciple as its nearest kin—Electricity ^ and although,
/Me all of our best medicines, it acititetintes faila:yeit
the cases of failure - are 'cry rare, and are always
complicated ones. It works like maple upon barns.
front•bites.:stltug of bees, and all eftcynal poi/lona.
Larry family should hare it In cases of fresh cuts,
bniiers or sprains. •It will not smartlikemoat med.
irtnes when applied to a new gore. It no quack
preparation. but is etsurpthied of nine of the beit
materials known to stater m audits. ecrtsrpountled'up
pn scientific principles. As a horse medicine it is
taking the lead of anything in the market. Buy it
and try it, If you do • not like it, return it and re.
rice your money back. *or sale by all drUgginte and
lealvre in ineditine,,Priee tat rents per bottle. ' •
11. DISOWNING TAYLOR,
rr;rprietor.
epr. 1, 'l9
I Aid,G ifi.if
MISSES KINGSLEY S: EITON
Have (pened a new
. DItESS MAKING ESTADLISEEM&NT
In the room over Miss Kingsley's MRllnery store,
(one door south of Fox k 'Mercer's), where they are
prepared to (lo all kinds of work in the Dress Mak i
Inq line, at reasonable rates. '
)
FASHION PLAT}
Of th'• latest style roealved as soon za published.
They will also give Instruction In
CUTTING AND kif LING DRESSES.
JMNIEKMOSLEY.
•
Sept: 29.'70. • " LYDIA G. EATON.
MCURS BLANK,
TOWAND.A, .PA.
. (Successor to D. S. Enamel! Co., Bankers.)
Receive.' Depoeita, Loans Money. Makes Bence—
bons, and does a
GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS,
- asmem an Incorporated Bank.
To - persons desiring to send money to ANT PA=
of the Patted States, Canada or Enrepts. this Dank
offers the best facilities and the lowest Wins.
PASSAGE:TICKETS
To and from Noss -Stotts. England, Ireland. Scot
land, or any part of Europe and the Orient, by the
• CELEBRATED INMAN • LINE
- A(. Steamers always on band.
Ittiya and sells (told, Silver, tinned titates bonds
at market rates.
Agent for the sale of Northern Pacific 1 .3-10
Bonds.
M. C. ItIXRCVE. President.
8. VIXCEIT, Baader. mar.lsll
RIIEUM.kTII:33I—IstEURALGIA
s:i(y) WILL BE PAID
1 , , nuy p( I , on pro ili - Ing any Medicine showing half
no ninny hying. permanent cures as Dr. Ferree's
r nil EVIIATi /11:5(EPT. lisecl in
.111 Y. A pleasant Medaine, free from Snjarious
drugs. 'Warranted, under oath. to have permanent.
ly cured 9:: in every 100 patients treated in the past
fa: years. (See testMipuyi. - It is tbo Scientific pm.
ocription <A' 11,1. Jilt P. 31. 13., a graduate of
thc ratty of l'ennoylvanin,NA.. D., `lli3,l,—now
nue of Philadulnina's oldest regular physicians, and
Prof,•asor of Chcmistmand TOxicology,—veno has
rcadc IQeurhia, Clironic and Inftannitory Rheum*.
tic-co the ' , .malty of his entire professional illo—a
%ouch. 1 to: by the asignatures accompanying
honk, and miter b - ottmoulala Of 141107 prami-
Lmt renown...al physicians and clergymen. To pro
to.-t ruGer,r,, , Nl,:nwile quack nestrutna and
of tooncy,as:legal "awned guar''
atating.eaact number of bottles warranted to
cure. ivill be:forvrariled rratte to any sufferer send
ing by lettcr a full description of allicthm. came
failure to cure, amount raid .pmitively refunded.
Aledicine sent anywhere by err:east, collect- on do
livery. Aniletesl invited to writs for Melon; all In
formation and medical ,advios sent by letter gratis,
Address Dr. J. P. FTTLEI2, 29 South Fourth street.'
Philadelphia. Ya. The Remedy Is sold or obtained
by Druggists.
WANTED AbENTS FOR
n-rgra4rotiote,,i -4
Awn flaw Torr. Wanaz . Mum ; °Alma BriartoGuts
Aan Thfl tms or ova Eict.r-Yanr. Maw. Br J. D.
McCabe, Jr. PlreetUnatxste4 aid item=
boort& The most Wang, instractive.and nal
ly eongbt after book lamed for ran. Ensinating as
fiction, authentic as history, .prarScal u .• Pori
Richard," with legume more aerating for popular
purposes. than the profoundest philosophy.
Agents are clearing font $BO to $2OO per month. in
spite of hard times. Sellallsrand wily, and de
-Seers splendidly. Send for Circular. etc., and no.
the extra b.ruis. GEO. MACLEAN. Publisher.
719 Sanwen Street, Philadelphia.
mar. 21'71.3tn
r 7
tp-ATCHEN
This well-bred stock borne mwrre mares the
crypresent MUM, (tom Ap to A. at Me Liv-
'Stable of Kneoarroar h l
liot.owcis. ug Towanda, Pa..
from &fondly noon to flatuolay morning : and at
idieshequin, Pa.. at the. farm of L. 13,Kilbanrwr,
dneng Saturday and Monday forenoon.
-Trants.—s2o by the mama. , Money due at time
of serrier. $3O to Insure one mare, and $5O for two
nairea owned by one permit, Haney doe as re" as
the mare is known to be with foal. Any parson
having a mare Insured, and parting with bet before
the time of foaling. will be held accosittalde for the
Insurance. - Pasture furnished for mares horn sidle.
tame at ssper month. All accidents and moldad at
the owner's risk. . •
l'amOgre.—Pmitcheu was sired by the celebtatkd
trotting istalltbn, deo. M. Patches, be by Ossailas
Clay. be by Henry day, he by Andrew Jackson. be
by Young Heehaw. ice. • The dam of Patches was
Durnek,, grand dam Messenger.
May 16. 11361.7diti
AFULL ASSORTMENT OF
Dim and CLII3IIIIII float at
lamb 10, TOIL WIG &
5 kCc-TONS BEST CAUCIA.
Groom! Mostar, tor sale at Rodman% Mk;
woumettai. seb.rn w. A.
=MI
t. ,•1
=GM
140.1110.
14. 30.
PM PM
..... ....
35,0 45
00 000
51 1 0 SO
90;013
351!0
171 T 00
00,6 121
IS 30
3001 00
23 4 43
15!470
1 ail._
43 1
rr
30
° Q.
735
assWn
Miscollaneatm
itutteb Int*
lairratary seJtutilL .
Of all the months in the year. Jane is among
the pleasantest . Here is an 'lnventory' of the
bestpartet the month: -
, Skim of deepest arare,
Dance of mountain streams,
Glittering in the brightness
Of the noontide beams.
Scent of apple blossoms
?Om all the sir, -
• Cowslips in the meadow,
Violets everywhere ;
Floods of golden sir:whine,
Trilling robes of green,
Gayer than the garments
Of the proudest queen.
Seas of Crimson clover,
Choirs of singing birds, •
- And the blessed charm of
HaPpy children's words ;
Soft melialions whisperings
In the tamed trees,
Joy of tin tale breezes,
Ham of honey been ;
Unrestrained resplendence,
Universal cheer,-
. • Beauty allantbounded
Tells as Jane is here :
. June : of bloom the fairest ;
Jane: of song the rarest, •
Of the changAfal year.
titstelhmttms.
ADDIEB43
p
History, Doctrinv ian e and Polity of the Mora-
Ohrindis
DPliererd in the Presbyterian. Myrrh at Tryn
louring, June 14, 1871,•by
.13ISTIOP E. DE
Ninety-nine years ago, a band of
Christian Indians inhabiting the see-
tion of conjitry where w are assem
bled this evening, took its way to the
Wig., in order
,to settle-in one 'of the
valleys of what is now the State of
Ohio. ,They Wore led by' Moravian
MiSsionari6s who had utplored the
Susquehanna up to Bradford county
preaching the glorionszospel of, the
blessed God, and making the wilder
nesii of Wyabasing to lalossom as the
rose. To-night, for the first time in
the century that has nearly passed
since . that exodus,- the hymns and
prayers of the church of Brethren
have again been heard . in this region,
filling this sanctuary of a sister de
nomination Of christians.
We come to you,cmy friends, as our
forefathers in the fifteenth century
came to the Waldenses, and in ,the
sixteenth to Bohn Calvin, rejoicing in
"one. Lord,' one faith, one baptism,
in one God and Father of all, who is
above all, and through all, and in all."
We come to take cotinstk with you
respecting the Savicrar's &use and
the Saviour's kingdom. We come
that you and we may be stirred np
anew to promote that cause and
fipread that kingdom. Now nothing
will save to make us faithful in- dis
charging this duty more than the re
cital of what God has wrought in the
past through the agency of His rico-
Hence I will proceed to give you a
brief account of the history, polity
and. doctrines of. the church which
we represent. I will do this, first,
because I have been particularly re
quested by your esteemed pastor to
elucidate this subject; and second,
because it involves much which will
clearly show that Christ Himself gov
erns, His chnrch in all its relations;
that~He can accomplish' great results
through the most insufficient instru
mentality; "that He has remember
ed His covenant forever ; the word
which He commanded to a thousand
generations." ,
In anything, therefore, which I may
say that may seem to exalt 3foravian
ism, I beg_rn not to recognize self
adulation, but only' praise to_God.
To Him belongs the glory. Ike - re
cord which we bring is a record of
His grace and truth.
In the heart of Europe there are
two small countries, 'Bohemia and
Moravia, the one a kingdom, the oth
er a margraviato of the Austrian em
pire. ;They are inhabited by the
Czekhs, who form a part of the great
Slavonic race which burst into 'En.
rope from the East, and which no*
inhabits nearly onehalf of that con
tinent. The Czekits were converted
to christianity in the ninth century,
through the labors of Clyrill and Me
thodius, the illustrious apostles of the
Slavonia's. They came frOm the
Greek church, translated the Bible
into the vernacular, and introduced
the Slavic liturgy. Hence, although:
Bohemia and Moravia soon fell un
der the sway of the Popes of Rome,
there grew up in these two countries
a National Church, which from the
earliest times, more or lees, protested,
in various ways, against the nsuipa
tions of the Hierarchy. Such protests
became very earnest in the coarse of
the fourkeuth century.. Preachers
like Conrad Waldhauser and John
Milic, who for authority in refoirrning
the masses and power, in swaying
open air congregations that number
ed thousands of hearers, may be put
by the side of George Whitefield and
John Wesley, and writers like Mat
thias of ham, gave expremien to
truths which deeply excited the re
ligions-, feelings of the people, and
=the way for the Bohemian
ion. John Hose was the
distinguished leader.. It was his im
pose to convert his countrymen and
purify the church, not with carnal
weapons, but with the Word of God,
which is " the sword of the Spirit."
When, however, the council of Con
stance broke the\ royalpledge of safe-'
.ty which be had received, and had
him "burnedalive as an " arch-here
tic," on the 6th of July, 1415, his fol
lowers flew to arms, and inaugurated
the Hussite war, which raged with
fray for fourteen years.,. The Huss
ites were invariably . snoeessfal e de
feating immense armies of the Im
perialists, driving_before them ' with
their iron -pointena il s, the flo wer of
the chivalry of Europe; and spread- ;
ing the terror of their name -far be
yond the confines of their own coun
try. Bat they were divided mow
themselves. The Taboritee formed
one faction, democratic in its origin;
insisting ona general iteforaftion,
and bre=6,W in its optositao - lito
Rome; Abe Calixtines constituted an
cities; aristocratic in its feelings, eon
tending merely for the restoration of
tiny Ito the 'say in . the Lord's SIT-
assuazto instmounir neat ixr_qusirm
'TOWANDA, -BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., JUNE. 29.11871.
per, and Impeding eventually to be
resmited with 'the- :Boman Whelk
Church. ; These two parties the coun
cil of Basle succeeded in arraying
against each other. In the• spring of
1434, .a battle Wllll fo ug ht between
them which resulted in the complete
triumph of the Oalixtinee, who; hav
ing been ioined by the liberal portion
of Tabontee, were now constituted
the Bohemian. , church,' with certain
concessions granted by .the council,
such MI the lord's Supper in both
kinds and the use of the vernacular
in. lie worship.
Yom the midst of this COMMA-
neon those men of God came forth
who formed the"liforavion churCh.
The/ were true followers . of John
Mum, men that had taken no part in
the war; men that tonged - to work
out their own personal, salvation ►nd
to reform the church; men that -re.
cognized thegrowing degenegacy of
the National Establiiainaent, whicin in
most of its doctrines, its
and isspoxially its We, was fast falling
to a level with the Roman Catholics.
At the head,of the Bohemian church
stood Min Rokrum e an illustrious
preacher, inveigling agist the cor
ruptness of the times. Around him
those awakened souls gathered and
.bosought him t 9 begi4a-reformation,
promising to support him whatever
might be the emsequences. But he
refe.socl, afraid of the danget to which
he would expose himself. Then they
began to seek some quiet retreat where
they might worship God in peace,
carry out the principles of Huse, and
encourage one another in the Lord.
. Now it so lhappened that - . George
Podiebrad, the 'Regent of Bohemia,
owned an estate called Litiz, about
ono hundred miles east of Preps,
on the•confines of Siberia. It had
been devastated in the course of the
• .
Hussite wax, vtlis sparsely inhabited,
and brought him but a small revenue.
The little band of inquirers begged
Itokyzan to induce the Regent to al
low theurto settle there. ltokyzan,
who was anxious to get rid of thein,
eagerly consented The Regent,
thinkiug such, a settlement would de
vt.lop the estate antl' increase his in
come,-ns eagtlrly ga: ~: the desiret c l per
mission. Nt - lither of theta imagined
that they were instruments in. God's
hands forleffeetingillis divinepur
-1
pose, an that through, their selfish
motives movement would bo inrin
gurated hich cveuld extend to all
the ends f the earth, and continue
thromgh t many generations.
The assbciates left Prague and built
themselves cottages at Knnwalde, one
of thevillages of the estate. In that
village, in the midst of dense forests,
and in the j ahadow of the giant mcmn
tains, before ever the pilgrim fathers
planted the standard of liberty in our
land, before ever the Anglican Refor
mation freed the Church of England
from the fetters of the Papacy, before
ever Luther kindled the torch ot•
truth at the fire which burns on God's
own . altar, when, with the lexception l
of the Waldenses, all Europa lay in
the darkness of medieval superstition i
and the bonds of Romish idolatry,
-and America was still undiscovered,
414 years ago, in 1457, the church of
the United Brethren was formed.
"Brethren " was the name which its
members adopted, and which has re
maimed to the present day. i •
The principles which this church
enunciated were, in' brief, the follow
ing three'- The Bible is the only
of Christian doctrine; public
worship is to be conducted and a dis
cipline to be carried out in accord
ance with what ,the Scriptures teach
and on the model of the Apostolical
church; the Lord's Supper is to be
received in faith, to be defined in the
language of Scripture, and every hu
man exp . lanition of that language is
to be rejecka• . J
Many awakened persons, from dif
ferent parts of RoheTnis, and Mora
via, began to flock\to Litiz, so that
the Brethren began\to increase rap
idly. During the first tea 'years of
their history, they consgtuted merely
an Association within the National
Church, from which they had not yet
formally separated. Some of its con
verted priests joined their society and
ministered to them in holy things.,
But when this church began s cruel!
parseention, which added not` a few,
to the noble army of martyrs, and'
when the Brethren found it would be
impossible to obtain a linfficioney ot
Calixtine priests, they discussed thel
propriety of severing the last tie whj.ch
united them with the Establishment,
and of instituting a ministrf,of their
own. Thili question. was made one
of special prayer for several years;
and at last in 1464, was decided in
the aff'irmati've by the use of the lot,
in imitation' of the Apostles. Bat
even now they allowed 'three years
more to pass without carrying out
this decision; for they deemed the
institution 'of an independent minis
try to be So momentous a. measure
that it must be' consummated with
the utmost tare and caution. At last
in 1467, a synod numbering seventy
members met at Shots, - a village on
a neighboring estate, in the house of
a peasant named Dachek. The meet
ing was opened with fasting and
f rir and the reading of the Scrip
ar Then the deliberations began,
which resulted in a plan which left
the issue absolutely in, the hands of
the Lord.. ' Nine nien bf high repute
for piety were first tileeted by ballot.
Next twelve. paper lots were rolled
together and put into a vase, nine of
them being blank, and three inscrib
ed with 44, the Bohemian word for
he i.i. Thereupon a fervent prayer
was offered up beseeching God to de
signate of the nine nominees either
one, or two, or three, as His minis
ters; but if thisnhould not be the
time which He had ordained-for such
a censuramation, to cause all the nine
to receive blanks. In this CllBO the
Brethren would have deferrel,further
action to some I future period. Sev
eral members of the synod having
been appointed to conduct the pro
ce4xlings, took their places around a
table, before which stoat the nomi
nees, the rest of the assembly sitting
is a semi-circle behind them, in sor
emn and prayerful oilmen A lad
named Procop was called in, and drew
nine rolls, singly, out of the vue, giv
ing one to each of the nominees, who
advanced to the table and exhibited
their lots. It appeared that, ail the
three iucriled with lest had been
drawn. The first. had been given - to
Mstthisl of Burnside, the second to
Thomas of Preknie, and the third to
Elise of Chrenovio. The whole se-
seanbly instantly lON to its feet, and
every member luisterußd to acknow
ledge these three men es the future
ministers of the church, by pledging
to them the right land of fellowship,
A thanksgiving hymn, composed for
the mum, was joyfully song, after
which followed the Lord's Supper.
The synod neat proceeded to con
eider the ordination of the new mire-
isters. - Who was to perform. this and
in what wisp - After' earnest and
prayerful debberation the following
conOtsions were readied: nut, that
-in the time of the Apostles then had
existed no distinction between a bish-
op and a priest, and that priests or
presbyters ordairmd men to the
- m=y; second, theta would con
segue:My be lawftd- to hare the three,
candidates ordained by the priests
present at the 'synod; thhd, that at
a very early age, however, before the
death of St. John, the office of & blab-
op had grown to be distinct from that
of a priest, and.the right of ordain
ing had been committed exchutively
to bishops; fourth, that thistoga"-
tion, although not of Scriptural au
thority; was a wise <and a good one,
and - ought to be observed, and that
the unmstry of the Brethren ought
to bear such , a character as 'would
compel the Roman Catholics and the
Bohemian church to acknowledge its
validity; fifth, that therefore. the
Brethren ought to remain true both
to the usage of the - Aposballeal church
and to that following the days of the
Apostles and so fulfill . all righteous
nes& Accordingly the candidates
were ordained on the spot by the
prieesta•,there present, with prayer and
the laying on of hands; after which
three of the ordaining priests, Mi
chael Bradacions, and two others,
were sent to a colony of Waldenses,
on the confines of Austria, to secure
the episcopacy.
The history of these Waltlouses was
peculiar. They were isulated from
their brethren . in France and Italy,
but on intimate terms with Rokyzan
and other leaders (A the Bohemian
church. Rokyzan was anxious to at
tach them to his party. Hence, their
ministers being ,all dead, he induced
Bishop Philibert, a delegate of the
Council of Basle, to ordain . two of
their number, Frederick - Nem= and
John \Vlach, as:priests at Prague, on
the 14th of September, 1433. In the
following year, 1434. when the Tibctr
ites had' been defeated by . the Calix
tines, when the utmost confusion pre
vailed throughout Bohemia• in church
and state; when an open feud- had
broken out between the Council at
Basle and the Pope; when, however,
the former did everything in its pow
er to conciliate the Bohemians,—
these two Waldensian priests at the
instance of, and in order to gratify
Rokyzan and his coadjutors, limy
elevated to the episcopacy bTbishops
of the Roman Catholic church. Con
sequently the Brethren cxmlSprocure
the succession from this . colony _of
Waldenses.
Their two surviving bishops, of
whom the senior was namedAtephen
willingly conferred it upon ‘Michael
Bradaciusand his two companion,.
Having returned to Bohemia, anoth
er synod was called, at which they
first rcsrdained Matthias, Thomas
and Elias aapriests, and then conse
crated Elias as bishop. Thereupon
the four bishops with whom were as
sodded several priests, were coisti•
fated a council for the governinent
of the church. This council, how
ever, was subordinate to the synod.
The little society of Brethren,formd
ed in 1457, on the barony of Litiz,
was thus developed into a regular
church, soon known as the Unitas
Pratrum (Unity of the Brethren), with
a valid ministry of its own. It in
creased rapidly, organizing parishes
in-many parts of Bohemia and Mora
via. Bat the adversary, " the accu
ser of the brethren," was not idle.
Exerting that anti-christian power of
which St. John said in his early day,
" and even now it is already in the
world," he made war-with the Saints.
Two more persecutions broke out,
which raged against—the Waldenses
also. The Brethren "had trial of
cruel moekings and scourging, rat,
moreover ..of bonds and imprison
ment" " They wandered in deserts
and in mountains, and in dens and
caves of the earth." They held their ,
public services and their synods at ,
night, in, dense solitudes, around fires, '
under, the starry canopy of heiven.l
They walked,to such gathering places i
in single files, through deep snows,
and. the last man dragging tree
branch to obliterate their footstepti.
They were tortured on the rack and
burned at the stake. Yet the more
Satan raged the more they prospered.
The blood of the mart-ss Was the'
seed of the church: The colony of
Waldenses and their episcopate in
deed became extinct, Bishop Stephen
Isuffering martyrdom at . Vienna; but
the Brethren remained; and when
Martin Luther nailed his these to
the door of the Wittenberg Cathe
dral, on the 31st . , of. October, 1517,
there existed a church of Reformers
before the Reformation, in Bohemia
and Moravia, numbering at least 200,-
000' members; among 'whom were
some of the noblest %Milks of the
realm, counting over 400 parishes,
using a hymn book and \ a catechisM
of its own, proclaiming its doctrines
lin various Confessions Of Faith, em
ploying - two printing-presses, arra'
scatterir,ig the Bible and other reli
gions books far and wide.
• The Brethren made common cause
with the Reformers. They sent depu
ties to those of 'Wittenberg and to
those of Strassburg ; they co
ed with Luther, Melanetho=';'
ars of the one school, and with Cal=
i vin, Capito and Bucer of the other.
And while they were induced by such
intercourse to drop some doctrinal
points' which ,savored of scholastic
theology, and to define essential deo
trines more clearly., they became, at.
the same time, the Lord's instru
ments in op3nox to the minds of
these Mat:loner men the imPortaties
of a seripthral discipline. Calvin, in
partienhir, was nepreaned .with this
idea, and introduced some of the prin
ciples at Geneva which he had learn
ed from the Brethren. Time will not
permit mo to ptusnethis part of their
history an 7 further, although it is full
of interealang' details.
The &wawa War, in which Bo
hernia became involved, keeled on
the focirth persecution of the Unitas
Fratrum in that country,in 1537. The
Illointian Diet, on the contrary, in
which there were influential members
'of the church, refused to sanction auk
decree against the Brethren. In 804
hernia their meetings were teaks,
and at last all team wing onthe roy
al estates were .banished. Bat this
cruel measure, involving as it did the
loss of all thsr:r earthly possessiasto
God again oyerrriktd for the 'Timed
of the church and the gioiy of His
name. The exiles fled to East Pras-
Ma, Pig through Poland on their
way, where they zealously preached
the gospel.Therliefonnatica was
just beginninStliat country; and
the Brethren • Blaronisms andel
the same race ' the Poles, soon
became ita most attire ion* • Geo.
Israel, in - partioder, ower. m'ed sritit
*paddies] faith and p A the
iwatennialas of tkriebnreh t
held
in 15/17,•bi &petite reit*.
sailing a large and flownshing branch
of it in Poland, asked that their par
ishes might be:formally received into
the fellowship of the Unites Frattrtnn.
This was done,jand from that time of
three provinces, the Bobemiati, the
Moravian mad the Polish, sash was
governed by bishops at its °ant, last
aIL represented in a common synod.
The Brethren nowput forth all
their strength.. They labored bide*
fatigibly to effects union among the
Protestants, and in 1570, succeeded
in indw4g, , -those of Poland to adopt
the Go' nsensuP •Sendominensis, whic h,
advancing farther than our Modern
.evangelical alliance, Established prac
tically, although fora short time on
ly, one church for the Brethren, the
Lutherans and the Reformed. They
published hynan books in Bohemian,
German and Polish , founded colleges
and theological seminaries, and
translated, - after a labor of fourteen
years, the entire Bible, from the.orig
inal into Boliethirin, which version is
counted to be the best, ever made
in that language. In 1649, they be-
Came onp of the legally acknowledg
ed churches, of the realm, religieus
liberty having keit proclaimed in
Bohemia, and Moravia. From the
pinnacle of prosperity they were,
however, soon cast down by that
hand - which has, forag erli Ztn smit
ing at the truth. :F d IL, a
bigoted -Romanist, ha • became
king at Bohemia in 1617,_ the Pro
testants refused him allegiance, and
elected Frederick tithe .Palatinate,
as their sovereign. His army 'was
totally defeated near Prague,, in
1620.
And now Ferdinand began wlmt.is
generally knows as the Bohemian
Anti-Reformation. Capuchin friars,
jesnits, and imperial.dragoons were
his agents. Traversing the country
or six years, like a
_band' of fiends,
hey rooted out every vestige of evan-
gelical religion. When their work
was done, Bohemia and 31ofavia lay
chained at the feet of the Hierarchy;
while more than 30,000 of their Pro
lestant families were in exile. Among
these were 'thousands of the Breth-
ren ; those that minified in _their
homes wore forced under tlie yoke of
Rome. Their pastors were banished
or slain ; their churches taken from
them ; and their ecclesiastical organ
ization ceased to exist. For a time
Poland became their refuge and the
town of Lis* their center. •
In 1627, amidst the last acts of the
Anti-Reformation, Amos Comeniuk
the Jeremiah of the Ancient, and the
John the Baptist of the Iteneied
Church of the Brethren, fled front
Moravia. When on the top of the
mountain ridge which constitutes its
frontier, be turned to look for the
last time neon his native land. Over
whelmed with emotion, as he beheld
-its fair fields and rich valleys," and
thought of the thousands whii had
there worshipped God in ; the spirit
and in truth, be fell upon his. been
'and prayed with strong cria' 1 - and
tears, that a seed of the Brethren
might be preserved in that country,
and their church resuscitated 'in the'
Lord's own time. This •preyer was
most wonderfully fulfilled. The rni-'
tas Fratrwm, in the estimation of its
enemies,' was dashed in pieces and
forever destroyed. But these enemies
"imagined a vain thing." He that
sits in the heaven; laughed;'the
Lord had them in derision.
At first the Brethren hoped, that
the Thirty Years War
,would restore
them to their count ry. But when
this came to an end in 1648, Bohe
mia and Moravia were excluded from
the religious liberty agreed upon at
the peace of Westphalia. Eight years
later, to s . war with Sweden, Lima
.was sacked and burned, cuid the '
ony of Brethren which had gathered
there were broken up. Then they
were indeed cast down ; but avail
nor not destroxei. It ; is true, the
`remnant of them in Poland gradual
ly amalgamated with die Reformed
Church ; but a seed remained in
their original mate, - a seed that .pre
served the hope of a future renewal
and trans anted this hope from one'
generation to the nest. Meanwhile,
Amos Csimeldres was earning high
fame es an ethics*, in Sweden,
England, Holland, and wren Araeri
ka, the trustees of whose first Iltniver--
ty at Cambridge, Massachusetts,
endeavored to secure him as the
head of their institution. But he did,
not forget the church of his love.
Filled 'arith prophetic anticipations
of what God would accomplish, he
prepared the. way for its resuseita=
tion, first, by . setting forth its consti
tution and discipline, together With ,
a brief history, which work he left to
posterity to be nsed in due time ;
sad second, by perpetuating the
episcopacy, so that the espy= link
between the Zion of the past and the
Zion of the future Might 'remain in
tact. Hence; froin time to time,.min
istexced the Befernied eftnnmnion
were ammarsted bishops ofthellni
tea Fratmze, in apes contra span,
in hope against hope. In this way
forty-five years rolled round. And
then, in 1707, as Gorge . Jeschke; a
vet aged isstrisich of iferiaria - and
a t of the Breihren, - Ams
ahead to die, he celled his family
around his bed and told them that
the renewal of their church *ma at
hand, and that if it should tab Place
,1100 "Per
in a kerejgn eamietry,lhey should Dot
heaitate to leave ell and flee thither,
.
With this.. pradietion 'mid these ex
hortations,he mold sws
Ten yeari la ter appeared in
gonna, among the, hidden seed of
the Brethren, Christian, David, " the
semint of the Lord." He was a Oa
tivirof that country, a converted Bo
and burned with the &sire
to evangelize his eauitzriten. Thro'
his inatnunentaity a great awalum
inglavut; which resulted in the de
sire `of many of the Brethren to m
ope from the spiritual tyranny nn=
der which - therf were groaning. In
NIA on the occasion of: hie third
*as be brought theinthe joyfal in
telligenoe that thaw lived in Hammy
I. young - nobleman, Count Vinren
dorriwbo wee willing to grunt theM
anaphon as his estate at Berthas
dart.Anoordiagly, on, the night of
the 97t h of Xay; Augluk and Jacob
Nasser; together wieitheir -- Amass,
tea perirlis in all, ea al of thaw
desonadants of Oeurtielesehke, fee ,
wok bow sad Ws" seed
their lam and other plopc F ty, and
fled to BertheladOrf. , en the
llth of 1711116 they to build the
tOwarof Henning.*WWl= David
emblimiig in OM- language -of.
eighty-fourth peohnom he struck his
axe intotheArst tree that .was.
: u Here the sperm* iisihjound
house and the swallow a nest for
herself, Where_. aka may lay her
pang, even thine altars. 0 Lord of
hoists, my King and car God." It
was thelanguage of that. faith to
which all things are possible . and
which was not put to 'shame. Henn
but become therallying placefor the
Brethren ; and although other Chits' -
tians,front the churches of Germany
ioined them, they gave to the colony
its tone and tendency: The ancient
discipline litUided down by Comenbis
was introduced ; the venerable epis
copate presetved with such care, was
received at the handeof DanieLErnat
Jablonski , and Christian Sitkovins,
the last two - survivors of a lino of
se renty bishops, stretching front 1467
to 1735; and the dwell of Bohemian
and Moravian confessors, concealed
frora human- eyes for three genera
tions, renewed its youth like the ea
gles. . , • '
This was .the beginning of a new
epoch in the fasten of the :Unitas
ktitira. develop ent was inan ,
vrated different fro that of former
days and yet not less to the glory of
God. Count Tun r orf, Who had'
identified himself I. the cause of
the. Brethren, resigning his pesition
at the Saxon court, and devoting his
property to their interests, -and who
had, su bsequently, been consecrated
as one of'their bishops, naturally
came their leader, and induced thorn
to carry ant his, favorite idea, which
he had borrowed from Philip Spener,
of " little churches within the
church." Hence, wherever they
came, on the continent of Europe, in
Great Britain, and in America,— for
they soon spread to the two Countries
last named = exclusive settlements
were fonndectin which .religion not
only
controlled spiritual, but social
and industrial interests, and from
which the vices and follies of the
world were banished. In an& settle
ments none but members of the
church could hold. real - estate.. No
community of goods, liowner, exist
-ed among them, as is often supposed.
Such an arrangement was wet m
treduced. Every member retained
the tudiniited control of his own pro
perty. The neleessary, result of this
policy was to keep the church small ;•
rt those mmlwave torns became re
treats where educsAion and. mission- i
ary nal were fostered, where simpli
city .and lowramirldedness bad a
home, where flourished a guileless
spirit and& beantifulßiothertamd.
In the v nature of the tees
there p=ooreded from such centers
influences which Were felt "far and
wide. The Whin,' children of the
old Milton ,never intended
to mend their &vein religions idle
ness. When Blinhut numbered but
601 biluthitartts, the first Min'kmarie'
of the Beneived Clmrcli, Leonard
Debar and David Iritichipimii, went
out to convert the Imre slaves of
the West •Indies,. resolved to sell
themselves Into aertitude if they
should find no other tycy of reaching
this • delpised and Maken people.
This Was the 'beginning of a work
which God wonderfully blessed, and
which has made the Moravians, by
common consent, the standard bear
ers in those armies of the Lord that
are Corerering the heathen world for
Jesus. For • they - have 'carried the
banner of the cross to eight. islands'
of the., West" Indies, to,, Greenland
and Labrador; to Denmark andf3iiri
tuun in South America, to ,the In
dians of North America, to the Mos
quito coast of Central, America, to
the Laplanders and the fiamojicies
of the coast of the Arctic'o to
Calmucks, to Ceylon, 'Mgiers.
.and Persia ; to East Indiesand
cgypt;to Guinea on the 'Neaten
c o ati of Africa, and_to_ the Rotten!
tots and Mars of South Africa;* to
Anstrarm, and to -Thibet in the heart
Of. Asia,' In order to uphold these
minks* about 1 2,335 missionaries in
411, male'and female, have been 'sent
out by the church sk home, while a
large force of native aesiehirits has
been employed besides.
'la addition to this work, the Re
newed Chirch &voted' its strength
to education Through the agency of
hoarding schools, - visited. by the
young of both scree, in large num
hers. Moreover, on the continent of
Europe ithegmin Domeatic Mission
called the Diespra ( ' 1 Peter, 1,1),
having for' ts object the evangeliza
tion of the members of the State
churches,-without raivering their ec
clesiastical connections. Ths alter
prise, too, prospered greatly , extend
ing to various parts at Germany, to
/*Amami,. Friume, Denmark, Nat
ivity, 'Sweden Bugs. At toga
preemt time 100,000 porous
belong to the Ihirqualirmsion.
In our country, -Whither We .Itro
thren awe in Mk but what° Shay
were not perimmently. settled ma
1142, arming theindiiii*
piartf
rem?' ble a - Mamma R ?WU
• • t#th end love, - by
d angers and • and even mar
Amide. It coinrocliot4- . 142038
,the
•
chi ate; -
and' the Moldiest& Ara- Wampanotiga
of New ',York,: extending iota' Con
zecticilt and liftwaschusette,.to mad,
of Pmneybranisi, -.to Western
New York, to Mo, IndianerMichi ti
-
gan and (Ueda,. to the later tribes of ,
the Cherokees' in . Georgie, to • the
Cherokee country and to Names. •
It is ;evident, therefore; that tho'
he m:-.&.r polity of the church
d bit*. way;of its denomination
al &Mk at home, the seal and pow- -
eruastherobuir of the Where were
storqueriched. Whew Ferdinand
at.theend: his Anti•Reforsiation,
surveyed' his kingdom with a 'smile; .
and foursi not a single parish of the -
Brethren left, he little thcnight their
name would be borne by multitudes
of converted heathen tb the' ends of .
the earth or to gostill . further intO
the past,when the executioners who -
burned John - Huss, at tiii. - stake, dc- -
stroyed his garments, by order of
the council, and cast . hia ashes into .
the - rushing waters of the - Rhin - o r -that
his adherents might beie no relic of -
hire, that council, though it claimed
didnot dam that there
Were continents - and islands - of Which •
it knew nothing," whore his memory
would be - revered by his spiritual . -;
seed, and his followers would be a • •
power in Ake Christian clnirchf:
On the • Ist of March, 1857, _the
Unitas Fratrum throughout
world oeletirided the - tier& ociptori
nisi santrenary of its fcrandinO . th
a common. joy. and great praise.''
In earns .year its" constitution - :
was materially 'modified, - the
Stance of the church in A merica, , by.
.10exterid itilodivbiehmet at Henni
hut. The salient points of the pro •
sent constitution ; ari framed - by ,thritt. •
boil , arrithukliovring, : The Unitas
• imagist* of three Prorinctes; . •
the Continental, the British and. the'
American, and of the Foreign klia- a :
Bien flea These Provilatea aro in •
dependant Lein peantmeill anattent, but farm one .
empate. whole es teareres doctrine. diselpiline. '
Ind ow ibretorker i m=a . the. Foreign ie . :.
anticitittlY• hawla Synod Of. its
own which conatitutte the highest" power in , that '
Pewterer. enderhich elects, 'from thee-to, time. a -
Prosiaciallioard to gonna the church be the. Inter
val. %Menthe meetings of the Betted. Ala Board
"empties the *trams with pastors who are mever
chosen - 17 the *vie. Retry. ten years, each Pro,
Wilda Synod. sends the arias needier of delegates
to 'Gamest - Synod. which commonly meets at_ '
nentibet, to Shion7, thatertdch without Interfering'
in the lent eitimegfiriesPraytiseee. discuseesand
establhhes the geared tortectedee which are to ROY-
ern the church. ThieSpeod supervises the Foreign .
Xi lan, and tie new minion lately begun in Bo- .
bends.sat,theancielt arida of the Brethren. At
the close of sessions it elects An executive cone- '
en o f ire Bishops and other ministers, called the
liners Elders' Conference, to - superintend the" Vol.
tea Prstrtuu se a whole, and to act as a Foreign Mk- -
stem Board. until the next Efeneile. The General fru- •
od chemise the:Bishops also; let It dekesios the
power to appoint them...ben tint heelf in session.
to the 'Unity's elders' Conference.' The American
Province has the right of nominating Its Bishops. •
Bishop+, who are. as *general rule. designated by
the lot, even If they have been elected by a - General
Synod. or nominated by s Provincial tnuod..ind
wham is vested exclusively the power to ordain. are -
considered servants of thk entire Unitas Fratruni,
and not merely of one, of Its Provinces. Hynes:
they aerially have a Mat In the General Synod.
They are not, howeren set fiver dioceses, and they
do not govern the church in 'virtue of their
The government. when the Synods are not in net , -
lion. is rather presbyterial. in so far' ea it never i I •
Intrusted to one man, but only to rtimoneibl•• f
Boma or, Committee& - At the same time. honorer.
11Bilicipa er r a general thing, are. sascklatml with 1.111,
governing boards by election. The - President of thfl
Unity's Elders' Conference Is always
the Presidents-of the various PrJvincial Boards have
almost always been the same. When there is 139
Bishop on rush beard it la sawa3ra an exceptional •
case. .Preabyters constitute the next degree in the
inistryf and deacons the third. These latter , err
either IligitilAta. or young Men, just entering tire
ministry -
K~:,~.
The Continental Province still carries out the
peaty of the Church with regarilto exclusive eettle.i
meta. Each of its partakes is a Moravian town, ,
embracing Various. institntiens.„ The British Pro
vince, has four exclusive settlements, but all the reel
of its churches are like those in the American pro.
IMMO. The American Provinos riginqrdshed the ex
clusive polity, by its own ?kee act, twenty.elgbt
years ago, in ISIS, and began - the work of church ex
tension.. Its churches steno longer peenlier in any
particular, but of the same eharm*or, and on rho
same feeding. as those of the other Christian • den,
. - Minations tu.our country, ' Since this change in the •
‘polity of the American Province, it has doubled .ite
membership. The three Provinces together have :i
membership of 26,000 souls. They carry iu all,
forty-eight - boarding schbols, lit which about 2 ,60 0
young persons aro being educated. A number "of
the Foreign Idle/dons which.l have inenhoned
evening. proved' unsincessful,-and had to be aban
doned. .Nevertheless., the present field is large.
comprising Greenland, Labrador. the Indian coun
try of North America, the Mosquito coast, St. Thom-
as, St. John, St. Croix, Jamaica, Antigua, St. Hitt .
Darbadess and Tobago. in the West Indies, Surf
nam and Ilusliland In South America, the Cal,
one and free itatiaria; in South Africa, Australia ana
Tbibet, liftecnklisaiou Provinces in all. In
Province, Mete ere 87 regular stations. 307 pi -cat-b.:
tug places. 313, laborers from 'Euterpe and. ;
male and female, I.ll'f,tative assistants. 1.400 la, i
borers in all. 'l3B sehools,.and about 70,000 cdtivert.
Consequently the entire membershin of the
Frani= is te.day , about 9ii,000, pr; counting th
ir.eiaberoi of the Continental Diaspora, 146,000. • '
Touching the doctrines of the church, I - woul. I -•
say Utat it is the same, tel all - essential particulars.
as that of other evangelical bodies of Christiana, anal
is wet forth in the Easter Morning Litany as Wen a'a
in the Catechirm. .
We believe that the holy isep u rires of the old and
new testament are the only of faith aid Prue. -
lice; we-believe in the Boty Trinity. in the total de- _
pravity of maw in the atonement of Christ, in the
neoesialtybf the new birth. of saving faith, of maw- .
tlfication; we believe in the holy Catholic .church : •
we believe that baptism anifthe Lord's Supper are •
the two sacraments which Jeans Christ, Matltuted
and that they are bihding on , all chriatians;
we rw'-
Heve in infant bapthuni we - believe, finally, that .
whonkba Dont Jesus tlirist will return to Judgment
the right:ems . will live forever with Him In ;heaven. -
bat the wicked willbe punished forever to hell.•
I have now givereyon, my friends, an account of
'the history, polity and doctrine of the church which
t here tirtdght, slut which sent mit
f greet:Onto the country where' you„ dwell,.
I hope as I said In the beginning of, my . Welcome,
that yet may Marti from this narrative to trust m
the Lord Isms Christ In so Tar as-the tonere of int ,
clinch Indvetwal I, copixtrned.. "For lot my right
.hiad doeth vallenUy." I hope that, you and; wc l
tasy.ber encouraged In this stirring ase. each Mins
own sphere. to watch. to stand fast in the faith. to
quit ourselves like men. "And Is many as . walk ••
mecording.testba role, peace'be. on them, and ace-'
Ty. and upon-the IsmelOf God."
Tairrn.—Truth is God's baptism on
the lulls. rad it is lac dew-drops -
silently descending - through a'crowd
of mist and vapor to kis' a thit - petals
of some drooping flower. Then it is
a pool, gathered_in some tiny basin - -
in a fraternal embrace of atoms. Then
it ! lta rill, that goes cutting its chan
nel through the green - Moss, and down .
the sloping hillside, hastening to the
meeting of ,the waters below. Then it
is a stream hrirr*ig .over precipices
and down cascadestof rock; turning
the great wheel of mannfacture,grild
ing the grain and working the. spin
dles and shuttles of man. Then it is a
river, slowly rolling Onward througli,
the mighty channel, upon which great
barges ,rock, and the paddles of the -
steamboat beat. And then—then it'
is the broad sweep of the ocean, on
which is 4borne from, land to 1and,t14.3
products of the industry of the entirc
world. And that's they way truth
comes, and that's the way truth acts.
Pars need to feel the importance
of wilting their homes attractive to
their children, And of_keeping them
as ranch as, pomade, wider a salutary
home influence.. Cheerful fire-sides,
books, pictures, juvenile papers, and
their own parents are better evening,
companions for boys than they usu
ally find in: stores. ana saloons and
shops ; Show meithe boy that loves
to be at- h 0121 6. nights;, that eiehews
eigars,profanity and and trifling
talk,ancl deyotes himself to his bOo' ks,
evincing 'a: determination, 'to , make
every minute of time a profit to hini
self, and I will show you the -boy
that. will - prove a. blessing to the
world. Snch boys may be called
stupid and queer, from those who
pride themselves on being "fast,"
the sobriquet
...of' drones, ,, . yet, such
is the material that men are Made of,
and I will° hazard the opinion that
such boys have" good and faithful
mothers.
Lose whose populatity was
tot excessive in the Westeid town of
having - reflised an irnPortu
n* beggar, th e mewed her appli-
Cithm "Now, my Lord, if ye'd
juit give me one little sixpence, I
a dd treat every friend ye have in
.Ltrr. is a probleie whose sokttioll
can only be OM by the Angel of Death: