Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, June 07, 1875, Image 1

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    Q
irzals ormtwestiott
&irAdrertisln g lp all cases eeiriSire of stibierip.
lions to-the paper. , ,
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per ltne for subsequent insertions. ,
LAVAL NOTICES, same stpe as reading mat . -
ter, TWENTY CENTfIA Lt? a.
ADVERTISEMENTS will be . !lnseited i according
to the following table of rates:,
111
T1me..1.... I lw I 4w l_2m. 1 Sni I Om 1: . :1yr.
i inch 1,1.501 :.001 s.po 1 11.00 110.00 115.00
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3 i nc i te s.. ___
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4 iictiei:77.l
column..
1 itzl--11701-n--7:-.--1-
ADMINISTRATOR'S and Eleetdors Notices,
tt2.00 ; Attditers notices. elto; Business Cards, the
flees, fperyeat9 0.00, additional linea, 0.00 each.
YEARTAdyertisements are entitled to quae.
tette.
TBMS.Mit tuirertisements; malt he paid for
-IN ADVANCE.
ALL Resolutions of 'Associations, Commnnkii.
lions of limited or individual interest, and notices
of Marriages and 'Deaths. exceeding live lines, are
charged TEN CENTS PER LINE. •
JOB PRINTING, 'of every kind, in plain and
fancy coloi, done with neatness and dispatch.
'Handbills, Blanks, Cards, I'aurphlers, Biltheadas
Statements, 6.1%, of every variety and Style, printed
at the shortest: notice. Tur. 11r-I.°r:run once Is
wen supplied with power presses, a ;good assort.
went of new type, and everything in the Printing
line can I* executed in the most artistic manner
and at the lowest rates.' r
TERMS INVAMABLY CASH
Professional and Itaslato Cath.
OVERTON & MEROUR,
ATTOItSEN:'S AT LAW,
TQWANDA PA.
°MCC offer Montan yes Store. Ctsay67s.
1 ItOIiNFIT 31ERCUR.
MITI' & MONTAS;i7E, ATTOR
HENS .1T LAW.—Office, corner of "Main and
Pine St- opposite Dr. Porter's Drug Store.
- w - H. CARNO.CHAIS% ATTOR
- V • NET AT LAW Troy. Pa.. ;Collections
made and promptly remitted. i [te1315,41/tf.
li IV. PATRICK, ATTORNEYEY
I e Law. Office—Mercur's nest dOor
to Exprt”.s Office, Towanda. ra.
. _
TAR. S. M. WOODIIi..T,IIN,
clan and surgeon. (Mee or.i• 0. A. 11 - 11ack's
o4kerS - Idort., •
Ti:rwanda..Nlay - 1. is72iy*.
; -
WOOD & SA.NDEIIBOX
ATTORNEYS AT LAW4I
• ; r.%.
AS. WM .1 0 . Ditay27) .1 O. Fi S AND E RS( ,N
PECK k. STREETF.IIj
LAW oFFicE, TUAVA! • A
_lf A. l' li.• jun 14.713 11. STREET fit.'
-
IN,rtvr &.'s:int-s Drug Stow. TOW:1I14. •
T. .1011 NT:DN. 31. 1). PATTON. 31. 1)
jaul-7:411.
11-41
ATTORNEY AT A \A 4 ,.
April 1. 1573. r.TONVA 1. VA.
OrI:OE W. BRINK Ju§tice, •of
Or the renee and Convey:meet. Also pa,nrance
\ gent. I.e Rays - h.. pa.
• ;
A 1). L. 1101):30N , Diix . r4r.
IT j • , in and after Setif. 21. Dias lief , iiiitl hi the
,1.1..r.mt I,,vc r0..,n,.....,ii 20 11,,0r of I)r. fiat is new
~fliee OIL State :street. ,thtstness'maietteti.;
• srt.i. 1-7•lt I.
.--
AT. - B. KELLY,IDENTisT4-#ollice
I—. ov, j At. I•. Itosentiel.P. , . Towan , ta. Pa.
(211 • 1.1, Sliver. "Robber; and Al
iwwittiu ba,e. Teeth extract. ..I witlhAtt yplu.
"{-7_
. F,ET :&, [).VIES". - . t . L - 1
1
~,, ArroitNEN, AT LAW,,.
_ . N.I. 1 : : It C1:ll • S 81.10 OK
At.1.1-a.,74... . Tow,,,A
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s, A 4 /.. „ .. 5 .X ...,Lt 1y 5_ 1 * ;.4 t 1.1 4,A L w
( iiii , ..(l over Thvtles Sten% Towandn, i Pa. 1
I. AXIIIIEW WILT, WM. MAXWELL. I
t Mayj,,. e,,n,i1101 ilt 4:4;11i1:11‘.1 • I
.. 1
a1a111.75. ,
, .
•
IMcPITERSON. ATTORNVi ANP
• Cont.:sr:Lon AT LAW. TOWartlli J. 1
.11 . 16! In Tracy 84 2.:01,1e's Nrw 111,xil:. cmayl3.l
DR. C. M. STANLY,DENTIST.
Li, i 11..; re111 , , , A1 hi , I Wittal, office 11110 1 rao'V
& 31.... t r$ new nl,,a..over Rent .k. NntronN' stmt:
i, ~,, 1 ,1,1,ity,1 t., do all kind, of ,Eettlal work:
11 , IlaN al.. put 111 a now gas ;Tara! 014. : ;
1 r FO. M ):E E. C. E.. (.'()ITNTY
,giVell
..••••
1 . 1.4 (Ink,
111311:4-75,
1 - 10 1 t s.ILE • () It- 'ItENT.H3Tv
4
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I. FU. FRINN.
"F•qvalvb...l.l.l - ii 1N.17..
AIT 11. T 11().11 I'S(Y.N. A TTOWS" F,Y
. • .vrY NV 111 at 0-nd
r, : 01 0 , M. r:tr.• in Rntford.
()flirt. With Esq.
I.*•Tt..r • '
i.i411144 4 7
TT .1 PA TTON. Agents for
VT \ll"rr Ar. I.lrE INSr#ANcE
. .
S -__ - 111311'.k NY.
411,. ;
N. 3 tirislish .S. l'att..l ,- , 1*.4 t.....8ri.1z , S. ,
Mani! 24-71. . . ,
I
rrow InZAIW.,V,I.).roI'N-1.3-11
.
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Tr oat. 4-brthie I)1.4•4•:1....•• hy ~•%.; IT., 1i4.0., :May 14 .5
_uon-elte , l in - letter. • . rairl-74. '.
"
. VEIZTON k ET,SI;III'..E, ATToi-
NEr .. AT LAW., T 4 4W A !•4 II A. l' 1.. litli'llir eo
leil.•11 int‘t i . 1-1,1tt•to••1•,Itir, offer
the
r
profession:ill
--'- `:A•r, i. 1...0. 1111..0t.1i.e. Soe, lal..ttteol ion gh en to
1.:1914......: in the CO - 1.117er• en 4 Re . : 2:Htei'g roosts,
V,. , iy FA1T 4 i7.... at:. tavrll-7o) ,X. 4 . rt.s.m:E.E.
- _
NI -.‘ Diu, -& t! A.LI FF. •
11.1_
• -\T T 4 /I: , EV , NT 4. NW:
. . • ' T., NS' ‘ , .:T.L PA. .
. • Iff 4.... , -I0 11 - 444/(r. I:10,k. 111-4 •b•'r .0111'1 or the First
1 .„.
4044 ,
14.0•4 , . truei. IT -.0:00,
•, U. .t:?.VIA 011.1.. 'l:e0 -711y_ .4. N - . 1•k1,1} . } .. ..
--- .
11 S-111'S,'SE,LL'S.
(fEN ERA I
1-N . FRANCEA ( ;E . N,C I "
2, `.
ME
TOil \ \\
t-
ATT‘ , I:NEY AT LAW.
( • 031.11 SSP INEIt.
TOWANIr ' A.
•—N..1"6 Spla-re.
• 1874
17C - DEll SIGN ET), A ICIII
- 1:1"I I.DER, '‘Vi....ll , `S 1 , 4 inform
.-t; . 4.1 1 - 4“ , ,,ia11a aTt.i vi. that. In* will
dt;nlin^ Plals., 4, •slgr,W .
And 1 . .)r all mall tf,•r of Intliditeg,i.
't,afr•riat••a.lelo, 1“3- TVA ,
r“lllp.•lltitti.4l.. I !Mc , at 11 , i,•rirft N. V,.
.
. 1 . VI..F/741!.;4;„ ,
linx 511. TWatija. Pa.
T \V. Kl".ctiSlll 7- 111".
1,,T.1 Tr-. LIFE.. I IRK' S. II t'II•EINT
I ' I .1 .V(' R .:1 r E
I , c , a cr•i' Atiti 3 rtalr mil.
Tow t)
TN SUIZ EA G ENCY.
y poming
131.tt4 - 11 I'l,
'UE1,1.1111,1.: AND FIRE TRIED
reirr,,ented
•-• .
f
_
LI I 11. ST N A 'l' lONA L'BANK
OF ToWAN
r NI IT NI
I ATLI'S Fran.'D
P.,1111. offer. 1.CV51".%1.
;r,0,a,'4it.11 of 3
F 1Z_1I;BLA NKINC;I3VSINESS
I'•;TPHE,t.I.!,III) UN I)ErO , lTz. At rt'.1•1:61,:(.
To7. 4 O;I:EI:MENT
.r AI.. I'ittE. , ,IVEN To THE (.01.1.1.crioN or
=1
1
. l'a Olt— v 1.,111n7 to tiEN It MONEY to-any itari of
-...:?w United statt.v, England. 'lreland. Scotland, or
tin• principal cities and I,,ivn , of Enropo; (An here
:pc.,4 .r.• ara: t, for that lill-rp,....
1'.% SS:l.f : 1 , ; TICKETS
Tr.tit is OM
/11:4 1111,..:11W;41% 01111:4111.
I I 'Ol.lE , `II' rG UT (A - El: AT I: F:V111.1C; 'HATES;
higite: -0 , - :;'rice 'mitt- for V. S.. Bon(15,
Gold and Silver
,v,iwyta
• rr,,,e,,,t
iuk.LITTLE 6TORE TOUNiiIutiCOHNEII,"
is the t e t place 111 Towa ut to ht.!' good
ClGillfS - .AM) TOBACCO,
I,lt•Tv r9le P.pritember
mE 131,003, vpposito COITEX. i:101;iro
+, t:IGN or TUI - LXI - 1.1.LX sQuAW
, • :
S. W. AtYORD, Publisher.
VOLUME XXXVI.
J. O.'•F:ROST it SONS
MARKET IN .THE, WORLD
BEST ASSORTMENT OF ANY
OUTSIDE OF NEW A'ORK
CliA IRS,
TABLES,
TOW A.N 1)8. VA
.M FA:CHANT: 4 .
v..\. 13 i,..‘l;};
1 ',5,00is
N. N. -ISETT.
if . I. :'---
j.
J. 0. bolt lb BM
-SPRING OF 1815.
. f Are . , ..
noir reeelv.
lag their usual u en z i t i a •
Tray!of Goode for the g
'and ban on of their
own mike, s fun line of_
the best furniture to
-i t
'be fought In • • '
any
:We hate stock
OVER TWO HUNDRED
. .
•
CJI A .m..13..E S . II II no
From $2B 00 to $300,-making
Largest it'd
:llousq
IVhile l ,,tir agsortment of
,BEADSTEAPS,
V - •
B ell EA tf
,STANDS,
LOUNGES:
Was neVer bat'
A CUM LET Fi AS '(_):I,I4tENT OF.
pc A ilLori stri4,
1T:1 FR C.I4)TET;t
T}111: Y,
.VELVET
(i001):4;'
A LwA YIK sriwK:ou vrtnqrsrrv4ll.:
e411(11:T NOTICE.
f S m arr in toyed of anything in the line nt v_pi
taking. son will T'" the
BEST ASSORTMENT,
_BEST GOODS,.
Mil
LOWEST
or ANY fUTSE U THE Cot NTitir
Sirltemember, we are !telling goods cheap, for
•
OWE Us A CALL.
4. O. FROS'I I 4 su:gs,
Main itreet. -
=
. . . - ... .a.
.
j- o .... f4.F ,:..- ---,
• ' , - ia..;. -- ... ' . ' . '
'''' ' - 1M45411i.
,
I 111Artb
i .
s '
THE BEnNTBEETH OF JIIWS.
GIIANDMOTIVIVS STORY or BVCRESI HILL U.%N.
Tiz, AN AWE SAW ITTRON THZ BILTHY.
'alike stirring Ilvins embers, when: at eighty,
one remembers .
All the aebtnp and the quaking' of "the thaw*
' that tried welt aottleVl
When 11 , talk of Whig and Tory, stain I tell the .
Rebel story, .
'ro you the weeds ate mhos., but to me therm
bottling coals.
1 best beard the muskets' rattle nt the April run.
ming battle; .
Lord Perry's hunted soldiers, I , ran see their red
costa
Rut a deadly chill comes o'er me, as the day looms
up before tue, ,
When a thousand men lay 'bleeding on the slopes of
Drinkers
teas a peaceftd summers morning. when the first
thing gave us warning •
.•
Was the booming of the cannon frnin the river and
the- shame;
sags granihna, “What , s the matter, what
" is nil this noise and clatter?
have those scalping Indian drills come to murder
us once
Poor old soul mq s.itles were *bather, in the
initt:d of all my quaking,
To hear her talk of Indians, when the gnus began
to roar;
She had wen the burning village, aril me slaughter
and the pillage,
When the Mohawks killed her father with their
hidlets thtnergh hhi floor.
Then Isaid, Now, dear old :fanny, don't you fret
and worry any, •
For Pit aeon come back and tell ytwit whether this Is
work or play;,
There can't be tulscblof in It, ao.I won't be gone •
. -
minute"—
For a minute then I ,tatted. I Iran gape the tire
- tang day.
No time for ballets-lacing.- or for looking glass
grimacing:
Down tuy hair went as t hurried, tumbling Wt.
way to my heels;
God forbid your ever knowing, when there's b)nod
around tier flowing,
Ifop the lotmly, helpless daughter of a quiet house
,
. 'hold feels!
In the strret I beard a thumping; and I knew• It
was . the stumping
of the Corporal, our old uelghbol, on that wooden
leg he were, •
With a knot u! wolucii was lucky I
had found Idin,
5 . 4) I followed irttlt (Abet., and the f'urporul
marched before.
They were maklbg for the steeple, the old atildkr
and htspngple:
The pigeons clreletl roeutl us as we climbed the
oreattnic stair.
Jost across the narrow rtrer-=oh:lo ilose It made
me nhivet
stf.st a fortress on the hill-top that but yestentay
was bare
+low our eyes to fled Itt wen we knew who
steed behind 11,
Them :h the ettrthewor* hhi them from ot.,mel the
,robl•nnt walls weir dumb: •
Here 'were Alder, wife, and mother, hooking wild
• wi w m ea.•h (Aber,
itid their 1111crere white with term ah they.sald
THE HIM I: lIAS COME:
Aiowly• w•a+tr+l• not a titohu•l had we
lE=
Mid our !wails wert, almwst splitting with fire can.
&atoning thrill,
'Wiwi a figiart• tall and stalely round thy ra tart
sedator.
It was Prescott, one sine. told 1...• s.—
on the
.E%ery lo•srt grew bigger. wbeu MW
manic gram •
hr banyan buckled round It, staiullug up so
. •. straight and tail;
i.lkt• a-gentleanan of teisnre. who Is strolling out
r"r ppNisure.,
T6rOlig,ll tTir bteriti 'of Abell:. and e . anntrip,tbot be
Nvalke..l arum()
tt eleven the streets were sArnrirslnk, (or the nnt
emits' rntikg weir forming:
At 110 , 111 fu marching onlrr they 1111 : 1 moving to
'• the piers: ' . ...
11. - the Invynnets gleamed Anti giisteneti, as we
, Itrked fur titMnanti listened
To tlnt trampling and the tirnmtheat of -the Wiled
grenadiers. . - • • . ' '
ROCKERS,
At length the neon have slarh•d, with a cheer (It
seemed faint-hearted);
In their scarlet reOntentals, with their knapsacks
their backs,
retitieiting„rippling water. as after a sea
cigit t's slatighter,
Howl the• barges gliding onward, blushed like
blurt along their tracks.
A nil 1114
.o they cro+xsed to the other border. and agatp
theytorniect In order; '.
Ave! the boats came bark for came for
• soldiers, soldiers ' • -
The v tloto seemed eretlautlug to uk troroeu taint
and faxiing,--
Ai laid they're moving. marching, marilking Omni
ty up tho
We can sen the brlght.steri Warming, all along the
lines advancing—
NOW the hind rank threw v,,lleythey have thrown
away their shot;
.•
, For behind their earttoWerk lying, ail the balls
above them flying,
Oily people neetl not biarryt ko they wait atulanewer
not.
Then the if 'orporal, onr otil cripple (he would swell!
• sometimes and Lipple)--a -
Ile had heard the bullets whistle (In the old French
'war) before—
Calls out In north of Jeering, just as it they:all vete
Urarhie
Anil his wooden leg thump* fiercely on the austy
belfry
!'LASH;
1 '-
Koh .1 fire away. ye villains, and earn iir.in*(;cerge's
' •
Dal yell 'waste a ten err perwame . 'betryte a "rebel•'
tong; '
•
ND
Tod may bant , the dirt mid welenme, iherie ax
wale a 2hnhl. hialeihrt trS
feu feet ttrneatii the• grtiviatetie that Ycarve
yidre , 1011:, r . •
In the lunaL of expect: Ohm, W the we and tnplda
tion
, •
tPt the tirea.l approaching monient; . we ate wrib
nigh breathietu all;
Though tile rotten tan; are failing on the rickety
, -heirry ratting.
We are tratrgling up agalthit them, like - the leavee
27,11n.t a wall.
Owl. a gllmir...e (the air Isl.-tearer), they are nearer—
tiearey--neater. - •
{\ - ben a gash —a curling Smoke-wreath—then a
crash—the steeple etakei-r
The deadly truce Is etuksi; the tempest's shroud Is
waded;
Like a morning mist It gathered, like a thunder
cloud It breaks: ,:
- r _..
tr oh : the si g ht citir eyes dise . cwer, as the blue-black
' smoke blown (wet i
tThe reit coats, stretched in: windrows as a twosrer
is - . rakes his Lay; '
ere • a scarlet heap is Iyhtg. there a health:mg
1 erowil is flying
tke a billow that has broken and 1.4 shivered into
i
i
spray. . .
PRICES,
.-ei we cried, "The troops sire rooted I They are
beat: It caret he doubted !
IN be thankril,:.the tight Ismer r-mi! the grim
old soldier's smile I
7 6 1 oil, telt us why rpm Welt so !". (We could
hardly speak, Ire shook sob,
' 4 * 9
they beaten! Are they beaten T Aim they
,eaten?”—"Wait awhge.”
O trembling and the tenor ter too soon we
tc oar error
Tuve bathed, not defeated; we have 'driven
itimt tweiLla vain; I •
Andlteohnans t h at wen scattmed: round the
en; that were tattered, .
T" . 4llte alines, silent fortress turn titer belted
10 , is again.
AU at se ' we mire gaibler,rin the Meta of
• 41311stolot . •
The y the viragos image; yi au boor It
The eaten eostimisd thorn,. tits Ids Ire
aio -l• •
W14"63111411ii
.4400 lid-
PU. notaries' BALLAD
f •
Tolyo.DA,,BwFoßD..oouOt::m.-Timpa 3.40pig;10;,41,)0,5;....„
They are mamma& l atent and edema; we. ran we
each masitee atan
As they dear the baked earth.woutu with the
- • slanting walls no steep,
Have oar soldlem gat taint-hearted. and fn LIOIAD
)ras tukate departed?
Ate they pattle•atrnek and helpless? 'Are they pat
'sled or asleep?
Now i the walla therre almost 'antler ! armee a lot
the roesaaunde I
Not ittreloek Oashe against- them! np the earth.
work they will }}warm!,
Bat the word's kave seater been spoken, when the
onalnoni calm Was broken,
And a bellowing craldt hat, 'etikilled all the I
ven
geance or the sti:srtrt l. I -,
Bo- again, with murdecoos stnaghter, pelted bark.
wards JO the water,' .
Fly Plgot's running heroes and the fell:trued lirartia
• of Rowe; _
And vre shout, "At last they're done for, It's their
barges tltey bare rub for;
They artibeaten, beaten, heater, and the battle's
over now
. . . , .
,A.ud we looked, poor tliuld i sreatu.ren, on the rough
,old soldier's teat#rea,
Our llps atrattno toques ion, but he knew what we
' woukl ask:
" I§ , :‘.)t sure," he said; '.'. keep quiet—once more, I
. ' guess r ibryll trytt—
Here's , datunattou to the eut-thrteds S"—then .he
handed we his Sad',
9
Saying, 94ial, you're tolking shaky; hare a drop of
-old Jamalky;
I'm afraid there'll be i iiir Irtiuld.9 before the Job
• In done:" '
e
St I took one neorehingi nwallow, dreadful taint I
felt-and hollow,
Standing there atom eni
was begun,
AN throng' those Iwws
calm clock dial,
As the hands kept creep
• creeping round to t
When the old.utiut said,
their bagonets Size
It's the death-grip that'
the works once nee
With brazen truinpets b •
them gLiring, • '
The deadly wall heron.
-cattle;'
131111 onward, upward toll
ancoLling—:
Like the rattlesnake's sh
ating druni 1 ,
Over heaps all torn and gt
, •
story,
Row they fnirgrfl above
breaks o7t.r a deck:
Mar drltien, yet Nearer de
retreated, .
With -their powder-horn.
swimmers ftlan a w
It has nil beentohl awl pal
• 1 falnte4,
Awl the wooden-lege el 4
me down the stair.
Awl when l• woke; (rem
evening latup:i were
On the neer a youth wan ly
• 0 , was hare. ,
And I heard thninglt all
Warren hurry bur
TO him here's a soldier 14
•1' and dress Ma' viOvintl .
we knew not 'till the
' ot death and sorrow,
How the starlight found 131
and blotslY ground.
Wier the youth a - m., what
• place from which he e l
Who Lad brought film from
Lim at oar doer,
lie could hot xpealt.' to tell a.
brace fellowx.; •
'As the homespun
flying wittier Wore;
For they :tit thonzlit
And they tetht; "Oh, how tt
"What will his mothe
•rttwot, hi t-z;:ittis Just unekl
has !welt dozing,
lie ralsitly inurinuritl, —Mot
eyes were blue
--s!;Wby, grandma, how
my child, it seta me th
4)1 a Atari not Ilke _this one
lived along:
riti we rame td know, each 01 er, and I nursed htta
_
like a--mother,
Tin at last he stcdid herore no', tall and rospelerrd
and strong.. I
Xudrie - sometimeo a:tilted .ether In the pleasant
svatim4. weather;
--s. PleaSe to tell its what his name was
your own, my:little der—
thell".B hire picture ropics ]tainted; we became s o
' well acquainted
That=-In short, that's why I ' m grandma, and you
children all are here --. •
. .
.. . i
LETTER MI 00L. TORNEY.
THE EVANGELIST N IN LONDON.
. Lo:sn4N . , May 7, 187.).
I ler :Majesty's Royal : Opera lionSe,
1183-market,. is one of .The most capa
cious of the great temples of amuse
ment in London, but in itsiong his
tory. no event ever attracted such
croivds as now swarai c to hear -the,
two . Ameritan evangelists, I). .L.
Moody; and ;Ira D. Sankey. One of
these gentlemen is a native of Law
rence couniyOi r este - Pennsylvania,
well connected with leading politi
cians, and tho - other, long before
he came to Ireland! and Scotland,
was a popular emo t i o nal clergyman
in the Western State. -
Not simply.to gratify a natural de
sire to hear these two r enowned that
acter; but also to, st dy the vast au.
diences ..: they attrae ', 'I . have. twice
visited the. Royal dPere, Mouse, in
Flaymarket,....There Zre- five: tiers in
blues and a lower tlool', or' parquet,
of vfiSt - dimensien4; while the 'deep
and 'sweeping stage, - from which all
the- dramatic Machinery hasfbeen.re
moved, is filled with eluting, a broad
pulpit and a atrial cabinet -organ tee
ing the immense auditorium.- This
stage is called the platform, and, like
the front of the hou s e; is'erovided to
suffocation dining the services, so;
that there .is not a spot of the vest
Opera House-left unoccupied by the
people • and, I 'should think, on the
two allernootis of `my visit there
could not have been less than from
five to eight thousand persons present:
' There.is much discussion as to the
relative advantages conferied upon
what is called -religion by these great
gatherings, and yet there can be no
doubt, judging by the curiosity and
- interest they have awakened, that a
certain positiVe amount of good must
result. I watched very carefully the
faces i and niatinersl of the • people.
they were evident of thes - -ntiddle
'classes, well dresse d and unmistaka
bly sympathetic. Mr. Moody himself
iris the' first figurei recognized, from
his photographs found In nearly 'Alt
the print shops in the quarters inhab
ited by . the 'working people and , . in
the great thoroughfares of trade, but
never in . what are called the shoW,
high-art windows and' never in the
photograph galleries dedicated to
BOYal • and' . "'noble 7 , portratts. _lift..
11"d h fee ig t h e c Ye h vjs ee e t a -bO wthii n the e l 7ni t" nren' ibila e l 7es t , t:. an fiv il
'Square forehead—a, little' after tha
'style of the lamcnte# .g. N. Stanton.
. . Icuaolit&teliik 4 , _4(00,,y.4.4400
1314:rdpiatii. Bank‘tVa*: bbiii.et
1
REGARDLESS or DXNUNPLITION,iROM ANY QUARTER.
•
i. - - 1
at the small- eabin'et
. 6rgaw Taller.
and better looking than his comrade;
with a younger face, a large mustache;
andr,well4haved chin, with ' , Engliiiti
side-whiskers, he resembled' a well
conditioned opera singer.
It was }strange to watch the effect
of the apPearance of these two men,
separated as th ey were instantly from
the Jarge cocourse , of clergymen
arinind
.them and- 'the • dense biek
grinind - Of • ladies and • •gentlemen
crowding the platforni: They were
instantly Chosen out, and their pica
ence imuiediately stilled the 'audit
nee:: The opening feature' was a
hymn given 'out by Mr: Moody,! the
first*erseld which Was:, • - • 1
ori,„ thin% 'of the hoote;over there, , • -
By the side of the rivet of light,- ' , •
" Where •
the mints MI Immortal and kV " ,
Are rol In their gurnentsof white.
Over t ere. over there, over there,
Oh, th rot the home over there. 1 ;.
in which the whole body of the pea
i pie joined, rising, after, the Methodist
fashiOn. In the front .of the fire tiers
.Of these eireling boxes, •which , ..I
should think were at least twice the.
site of the y tiers. of our Academy of
Made, stood the feniales of the_con
gregaticui, each
,with a hyMn-bOoklii
, her hand. 1 Sankey lead c.the great
chorus, though his voice - could ' not
'be hinird, and the regularity and har•
moray of the whole proceeding wa s
:singularly - impressive . After this 'a
innyet, the 4 a short exhorOtion by
an English 'elergyrrian, then 'another
hymn; chorus lead by the peOple, and
then Moody stepped forward; 1 and,
in a Military and :somellnitAint*
tient voice, exclaimed: "Now let . tis
have No. 481" sung by . Sankey alone.
The fi rst stanza, succeeded by roar
other - eribs was as follOws :—! - ' '
There were ninety ant; nine thit safely hay
In the shelter of the told, .
Ha tine waltut on UM Illus'atay,•:._ ,
E (dr at tr the gates al' gold. '". " F ,
Away on the mountains wild suukbare, 1
.Vsiay (row; the tender Stiepbenrs care: '
We kit atithe extreme end of the
immense teninle, on the ,very J last
bench, near the door, and 'so' clear
was Sankey's voice, awl \ so distinct
and sharp-ctit his articulatioi . i, that
every wOrd and syllable and intOna:
tion Could he heard with; singular
sweet4ss. , .It wits not, a cultivated
voice. 1 There Was no affectatioa in
the pronunciation, and there was a
little 'Western twang; but I could
readilyiunderstand how a hymn so
sting and intoned, so metallic' and
ringing, would reach, hearts already
more than half prepared to 'approve,
At the end 'of every Verse he wOuld
pause for nearly a minute, and the
silence intensified , the . deep emotiop
of the mass;
land the he resumed
very low, and rose to the last like
the prolonged note of a cornet: or
bugle. 1 1
ri
The ' werela number of Other 'ex
ercises, but ~.!Aloody , was the chief
charact r.: I l have heard and read
him somewhat ear.ilfully .: One, his
sermon suffices roi all. • It was that
nr.7 l led_...a..few days ago„ when the
ess of Sutherland, Lady Adonetauce
Leveso4 . -Gower, and . the Duke and
Duches4 of St. Albans. .It i: - not ;tn
argnme4 in any sense, and scarcely
a declamation; but rather an exhorta
tion, thn point being that to iMow
Christ We must know him first as our
Saviour; All !through ran -a series of
tp.mbit 7 ,.e.oinparrsous and ,incidents.'
Let . me illustrate his Way of showing
the redeeming pc:4er of the Saviour
by this Passa,ge,: . . .
. . A friend of4Mine told me that one
day as the. was going to 'Dublin be
met a lad whO had : : sot . a sparlOw.,
and the little liird•tried hard to - get
its liberty, but; ii was a captive. My
friend said to the lad; "Why don't You
open pear hand, and let the 'Writ tor
" Oh, faith, then; I won't be after do
ing that! . l'elieen ch a sing hini for
the lase_,' two ior,three years." My
friend then trill tO induce him' t!zi let
it go oninrinelple, and told" / 7 * 4 641
absird itnOuld he to keePii sparrowin a cage,- as, ,iz would :cost- more ''to
keep it alive than it Was worth.i. lint_
no, the boy was hi*, aO:kifotfld; not
consent:; At list ",my - friead bought
the hirdi and the moment he had paid i
the redemption money ,• he ' took they
little bird- in his hand and for, an - : n
stint it scarcely felt thatit•was free,
but , directly ft fluttered' its wings,
chirrnped, and flew uP,;-'...res . ,'it chir
raped a s it went away as if to, say,
"Thank) you. Thank you. for re
deeming; me.", • Xes . „„Christ was, a
reach - fOr Satan. •11.,e : held ' us' with
an iron ilhain,but Christ snapped, it
'aiso i lldef i l and redeemedns with His
own blood, and set :us . free, and the
least thing, we can do,noW is to thank
ItiOl- . I• * 1 _ ~ • _ . .
y mornlug when the ering
( trial, 1 Lad watebell a
'lug, creeping—they were
ewr,
"Tliey'ro forming, with
fur storming:.
a coming—they Will try
Mpg, Ilse flames behind
1‘ in. In elosu array they
lig, IVO dragons fold
11 wanitut the reverber,
try, AA I MI tlie tearful
he breastwork, m 0 a sea
rated, out worn-out men
,• all t7mptleil, like the
i
=ll
vorTioral stuntpol wkth
dreams, attrlightett, the
ightett—
nt; hie Weeding breast
the Slurs, send for
7! •
and he'll come
1011 TOW ,tl4ll Its tale of
stiffened on tp! flivrk
i'
• MC was,
the tattle, and hail left
but '1 was imi• 01' uur
briweol its which the
latm
fu1.,4 him: - and
. 1 dor' • -
Ing, !Ike a child that
h,•r ~aw hir
•re winking r.-411!
IntiuZ
p. Well, he scitiebow
To pp ve h i s opposition to denoul
inationa ism he quOted, the. assertion
of the .rdw :who told hini thilyYester
4ay. that :Ike 'Church' oc,AugaXait
CatlioliciiMid the reit,'were all .dio
!enters, Mut that, he ;Jewish religiOn
was the only catch is ,Chorett.
Thep oil a poor Citholie who
came to him weeping bitterly: because
she was told that she could 'not be
saved unless,She joined a Protestant
church, to which .moody answered,
" sow, icy good lady, don't trouble
yourself± talking about your Church
or any '.other Church; talk about
Christ. Us , Christ said to Peter,
when helasked Him about following
John, l'ollow me.'- You must keep
your eyet- on Christ. You must go
straight km. \Vheit , , was- it -boy . I
used to walk through the snow look
ing acroiS my shoulder to see if I
walked straight,but I always walked
crooked l*hen I_ looked back to ice
how I was, getting on. If you 'keep
looking on Christ you must go
straight !on. , Another thing I used
to do ,wlien I was a boy. - used, to
try to catch my shadow, and try ,to
jump over it, !but I never could man
age it, and one day lett my face the other way t and uoeit'jum, and
still my slzadOei came atter me."
. And so through many minutes and
many columns. ! Meanwhile their
houses grow larger ev,iry day; . their
neilypap4s receive' sub
scribers! i One; of them, the." Christian
ON*, wh i ch4itslir'hut eleven
nuntherei circulated:lo,s6o tepiii
April, and the* h*-Inio . , is; p 46-
ilosioftiii4 **le? 4isrP. 6606 e
•of pvellt,! r t_asquieln4y.„ •
, have : traced att . RS
likatlicfc 001%14 vr . ifl not h e sitate
tOo9.44 l 4rohßtt 4:04144:5.44 3164 '
51.041.1410tti. ;4:5*
4 ng `t**.ultfifftli#3lo-1
which seem 'to follovilud,surround
these `men, no. one , can deny that the
religious excitementsollorrner times,
at least in ,English-spenking coun
tries, have had excellent results.
the general idea that a religious NO
ple, of whatever belief, can never be
a bad people, we ought to ,regard.
this new ministration with,. -many
grains of allowance... There is a fas
cination in the voices of a ova mid:
titude uniting in prayer and Song,:
and those who know Mr:Moody best,
even while' doribtinflila logic, freely
admit that he possesses what is called
a wild, magnetic oratory.'. Many
tellige-at people visit his meeting's
regularly, and. many with whom 'I
have conversed declare. that they
have been greatly impressed: It ill
nothing to say that he has
following among the aristocracy; it
proves nothing that the beautifid
Princess of IWaleti should ILate sat
through one orjais services-nothing,
perhaps, sup a that the sentiment he
has organized tiniong' the people" of
Englund la not one to be despised;
and the refusal orthe loeal Magistrate
the other day to close the Opera
House against them was based rather
in the_ , spirit of de?erence - to this in
creasing poPular enthusiasm thaii up
on a point of law. - When see these
Men supported by those. :1 know to
be learned and lithaiblerhen I no!
tice how- Lilco: are sustained by many
very prominent-. Americans--not a
few of them from= the city _of ,Phila
delphia--andvrhen [watch - the effect
upon thiminds of the great crowds
who hang titian their ' preaching,
think it would be madneas' either 'to
attempt to ridicide or to ignore their
mission.- •
There is apimmense dissenting
element in Great -Britain.' This ele
ment _may be-said to be practically
without places in which' sympatheti•
tally to storithsp. They' recoil from
the conventional forms of the Church
of England;' they refuse .the em•
Winn& the Roman Catholics; they
will have nothing to do with the
seholarlike theism. of - Moneure D.
Conway. - Except St. Paul's,Where
everybody is admitted on undays,
and the noble dissenting tabernacle
of Mr. Spurgeon; and several other
places / if the. people, so to speak; in
Great Britain want t o hear the Word
Of God, they. must choose between
what: are eallqd- . .the, c' cold cerement
els 'Y of the.tEstablished Church .or
the syinbols of the Chttreh of Rome.
Renee, when two men come hither,
especially when they come from
America, which possesses a strange
talismanic influence upon the hearts
of the English masses, preach in vast
halls, and very their -sermons with
exquisite singing and with the over
powering influence of a vast chorus
joining in the religious refrain, is it
wonderful that we are simply repeat
ing the example of George Whitfield
more than a hundred, years ago, or
of his eccentric ancestor Lorenzo
.. :..our - imcr - rne — supernmai e4 Hill:
netie Moffitt?
, [For toe ItEt•tittTEß.3
OLD nws.-NO. I. ..
The near , (gimmick of the Centennial,
a.tO • eall forth a apoetai : interegt in
chtumslaneeli !►nil events *WU trampir-
ed . (hying the, earl i period of _t3te tot-
tion's'imistebee: Of tlitse, sue ancient
and often mutilated copies of the liews
ix.tliem of the Last century as clianCe still
to I►o rprescrved, .afford a sort of phot?-
graph—somo , features of which may be of
interest.
In 11112, Philadelphia was. the seat of
tbq ;Cation:a Obienitneut; George Want-
ihgton being Pruidenti; andlolm Adinna
Viet Pmeident. Two of the leading jonr
pals of the city at that period were . Cog:
pooles Adiertts;32. and renll , o' G
itette tile traiteir:SlatexL-44trtnig in Its
support of • the - Admiustratiou and its
bietigUiti+
At'the period above, mentioned, th3mr
orit, Paine, a printer by pmfeasion, and
orie.of the muJYßettlers of Athena„ N.,
. -
hi the .fittlee orthe ntttdy At?-
:
- - _
iernser, Subsegoently "preserving tt, feir
Mt; of thatiliPet, and ittio or FernOt
.
Genet e . ondet the head of
‘.9'ele!gii!rewm,". that C'sniitfttl ierlO4
of European his(ory, we of course find
Manfitenialpf interest 'anti iniportatice, at
L .
least for the times In which they tsaairttAl.
portion of the &hate ,in the British
house of Coinntoms April 20, is
given, upon the Bill for the Abolitiourd .
the ; 81. 11, •Trnde to the West lodies:nt
Obi time ; the vote on being taken' stood
nays 164—ayes 88. Among the latter, we
see recorded such'Biestrions names of the
.period‘ as Prrr, Fox, Bultsr,
Totter and SamuttLisr;..ten iltinuoVas
also figures in the. same list, while' tot
Tarieton (not altogether of blessed mein
ort,4in cote War of:. Independence:) is Men,
tionettnitiong "gib nays. The sUbjed again
souses up in l'at?, 'when; after a
kruglimieletitient appal fro Mr'; *it*
berforce, the House of Commo s, in
mittee of the Whole,. proceed to . vote iii
favor of the grtultral - aholition of the Slave
Trade : ayeal:l9—noes 85.
Apropos of slivery, we find in the Ad
eertg:ser of July 9,-1791, that "an elegant
oration on thelmoral and political evil ef
holding negroes in slivery, Was delivered
by Dr.. George Bueltananiz at the Court
House :in Baltimore, 'July 4, till, before
a uumerons and iespeetable
Who ,appezit : ed highly pleased with. the
perfortnance. -* Also, a vote of "'lntikis
from the Maryland Society for Prmuetittig
the Abolition of Slavery, is rectodcd, as
given to pr. : Buchanan on the occasion.
For many along year which bas since in
tervened, it t is unnecessary , to say that
such a notice from the pohlie press of•any
4.3Untheru city, would indeed -have proved
a curiosity;
• In 1164,.1Ti11,w0 have a notice of the
aiath of. Rev. John Wesley, whose will is
tdsopubliihed; farthermorti, of the elee
Lion of Benjamin West,as-President Of the
Royal Academy,. in place - of Sir Joshua
Reynolds, recently deceased. •
The abstract-during May; furnish
es intelligence' of great eierthms-l)eini
inide in :Fa4and: and
.Scotland for the
abolition ot the Stave Trade; • conspiracies
fortified 'tie • Ritssian Empire, *filth
threaten rololutionin thit ecran#7;'fiii,
eign pOWodrpiritt i t tbeu annieStaWards
Taris 'hi 'a state
'o,4l4"u4Ony 4 iintl not 'tlair,passi**ltl.
wars of ili!ibitikAticid,
00 7 0* 41 .,: 1 it .. (4 3. 4 q*: 11 ,- 4 4 0 * ,
ion of 6414044
=1
MEI
4 -CA Sensr, ON Kutos.—Kings. surely
stand on slippery &Wes. - . The pric&cur
rent of ilumaxchs in !Emit:lst has'lately_
suffered a rapid fall. . QuOtations as lok,
lows : England's, light;'.Frances,' twig rntkant; the Empire's,' . poisoned; &Se
der:es, assassinated} Vortngal e s; crazy;
Ittussia!il, superannuated ;. 'Dennaarit's,
weak;- Prutaria's; Mad; . , lutt Poland's;
1 . 63. PFY.t", .;- , . 9
' ' : .
To explain so unfortunate a, gumming,
Up; 4. may .'recall to mind that George
III:; Of England, eveni;then had begnn to
slaw indications of .I.•weakettfrig intelleet;
Louis XVI: turd-LIS 4uicen were virtuallk
Flo. mai In their own Capitoit- anti owlet
~ of Peri% Feb. 0, : 1 ;92,.. we find the :
Hawing statement in *wird to this un
fortunate monarch : ' `,' The king looks
very ill; he is more than usually pensive,
adslittle, idceps leis,' takes no exetcise,.
and abstains from - him wonted comforter,.
Burgundy.": .'
Bid there liad bcra i 4 tiine. when the,
aid and countemuice Of the French king
and his court, 1 were Air i frorn . ,being ~',!iti7:
significant "' t o our country in bei,Arrig.-
gle against British aggtession. Iris Meta. I
.1Y aid to America,. tended to the intro= 1
duCtion into France of Itepublican _ideas,
which, degenerating into a_ wild lieetise,
ihia.lly Cost him . his crown and his life. -,. It
was in the August and: September next
following our . dates; , that . the Tuillerieit.
were stormed, 3,000 'political prisonera.
executed Within a couple of days, and itii
Reign of 'Ferrer inaugurated. ` : and oil flier
31st, Of June, 179:1;. the k.iug livielf wait
beheaded. • 1 .
, -
- regards-Leopol+ -Empeior of
Ciei-manY, we find bk..t*se columnithat
lie ;lied suddenly, *sr* I, ,1j'92.• • ";"I:be
piglish papers' say,: by 'poison; 'hot the
great must ham. something extraordinary
to Farther on, - comes the .
statement that' Gustavus fit., kin;., of
Sweden,died March 20 'l)7 - 9 4 . havirerbeen
• "
shot in the thikttre nti titoekholin, 'two
weeksbefore,•by - sAnkerstiont, a Cajitain
of the Guards. . And iu ifay, Nte ‘ fuid that
the,•Queri 1'4 . 3 . rtni,, , a1i h a s . ,beeffine : de-,
ranged from mental apprehension excited
by the dlsturbed condition of European
.5 • • •
:
.• It is gratifying - atthe!satite time to dis
cover that oak friends of the. - Medial iiii3- -
fessiOn were SoMotinies l Wol paid in thOSo;
days, : It is stated that Dr, Willis au
physician, had been 'sent for to pre
scribe for the Queen, and was •to receive
(:),906 lipr his Visit, whether -he aeCom 7
plished a cure or not. 800 n after we
learn that "Di. W. r shortly 'atter his
rival in Portugal, r: dismisad forty: phyla,
clans:* at a clap,' who attended the queet4
and nearly as many fria4, WhO attended
her. If the Doctor is mit! on his guard,
he may have a little physic administered
to hinnielf.'w*
Bat we find tiiist he .not low , after re
tams safely to England; With favorable
tidings of the cottvalesceno of his. Royal
patient. . •
There arc notices of other heads than
merely croivued 'heads; 'the Wearing "of
hair in queues or tails, aral the use of
1 - _
from Bow street, .I.,ondon,t.tif
A CCHIOUti, Cass. geutleinan's
servant; who had .for many 'years taken
particular • pains. to. cultivate his hair,
came 'Yesterday and 'made'l complaint
fore Sir Sampson Wright4ltat a few days
ago . he' had' emPloyed a hair-dresser to'
thin his top, wlio badiprit - ately.eut about •
half the -hair out
"Ile described that his.' hair was about
four feet long, and so thick that..:fevi
could graspitqourid.: - 116 had taken part
,titular 'care .4t it, and its bedirifhadeften
been a prevailing . tecomniehdation in his
favor, in PrPtlllAg 4 111 a; place. Tida,
Bond street hairtilre*r," he said, instead_
of. thinning his' top, 'had fmindirleritlf
thinned. his tail of.au anaeniAt.of hair that.
Could be sold for-three Itall'Crown.s, which
.he had so artfully replaeed with powder,'
that he did Mit di-Scover the cheat, until he
combed his hair out. .
• " Sir Sampson Wright, ant some other,
"gentlemen of the law, 'who Were preient,
after onisideripa and ldnuidating the.viola
latien that had beeli comnilitted, inforined
the Person that they I cotddelo'nothhig 'foe_
bbn., They:quoted severaUpoints of law:
they instanced, that if a roan cuts dowif
growing corn Mid eanies lowayilt is no
felony}; but if a man •stealli gum already
Cut 'down. it is felony;
- therefore, they
eonsideted, as the inan" re
ii haie - Wag' 'int
from his head; autttakelt'ilttiia3'; ' , the *DV'
legal redress he .could oldaip,- would be
by enteting action for 'damages in the
Court : of
Another prevailing-style-Of-those days,
was that of fastcging one's shoes! :with
bnckles; yet we_ find an ext,raCt, from the
London press as folloVrs :
. "It isa mistake to supfsxkl atilt strings.l
ftrr :the ••shireir are, *ri: modern - inverition.lJ
The. -Beaux'..• of • St. : Battloplornew - and
IliideWell Hospital's have rem them tithe
'Out etf Mind; and that they ;mere fitshiOtit
' alde• when Butler, wrote hit littdibraS, is
ptoved by the following' distich,, in his
address to the widow ' • •
.
- ~• 4 3Ltdani, , I do, at Is rtiT anti, , • .
Honor thr shadow of your , shod le.'
•
Another t'Oreig,n extract gives ris this : •
"TAL'E OP A liaytort, -- - "the
Borough (of London); lately
. entertained:'
two hundred friends .in tub. It *as
matte for Mi. 'Minx; • the,' lit evier; obi-:
cuinfetenett - 180 feet,. height 11'; feet con
tents, .10,000 . barrels, and its cost about .
.tl,OOO. On a side•table !the tub,. was
thins • tuncli4bolvl " - on. ra :nigheg;arry
stand,- with wheels:: which contained.27l
. ,
In domestic news, we find the following
items : - -
.
Pun.* twaalti . April 11, I;l92.—The
statuelif Dr. Franklin,
,frOm'-italyi was
list Saturday placed in its ilkhe over the
front door of the. : new Library in: Fifth :
street.•• It is executed orthe finest white'
marble; and is , the - {lift of William Blue
tam, -t.sq., of this
. city, tO the Library
Conipany. '
-; An extract from-the • P.itt.sburg easette,f
May,- 1792, givesUctounti of repent der.
relation`' burning of bitildings,
and (» .. 9kturing -.the inhabitants on the
frtmtiereof Poingylennid, by the Indians.
. ,
The people are 'represented to he' in a
state of general consternation."
"AI . ..BANY, May 24, 1792.—1 t is with
pleasure wecan,-ittforni_eur , readers - that a
load of hemp arrived in this city on Tues
day knit; which - sing raliedi tit tire` south
oud of caynp, Lake, *Mrfla Pennuflen
nia line, and was lioufiht by .water all
the' way from tholes or Scheitectiuly.
This, we i$ tin&,instanee of
any produce raised on that beautiful lake,
being brought,tii Our market" :
Pnii.ADF.i.enta,„ • Ma.Y. 16", .1792. —Ou ,
Friday last, the Governor ;of this State IfAN. in Sat rttment6
laid the cortwr-stinie ; of, the , Piesident's Clyster4 -in everi-( 2.
Peuse. in Ninth street, The following in; '. 1.1
irruption is eit the Itinie ! twelitri"five; : cents so -48
- -. • comer mid • and had a Taw,' fry, stew" ?
. on the loth dOY t VAS, 179 1. • and - fancy . - roaati.t and.. when,
:num State of.Perinsyl axon; of dell.
somas ni gerrsor,": throll4h lie put down a gnat
-
"Putt,AbELotit.A . , April 11;4792.-81r- o - - e - ttstontsh eatetel 4
tplour dytellUtrlteuseg•'Utat - kitchens, niuttleneiditisakiV l . , • it.
iudepeulleutor the.hotPK# 4 ,iand f4geolk Oa" • • '
ti
hies, n•eici DI this - eityi 111n3t year."' 1 11 `'"w 4 i' • 'Jake ••• tel`Y,
• • ' ' 4' • the honk 441°7 composed?.
- Ifutiertlate .e f lttnel` / 7 Q/1" we 6 1 k a ' k elideaA - fmen saki ns—Atilettx
1 inlioliiing - tatittiiit 91414 itentit naestimate. ed .
'golden
.L‘.44tratuthalate-retii*Otipat.a,thed o..Stiquot,
art
l_tenaus inadoitast'year-bynetiif Conga:sad tears and broken hearts,
I ' -
!ff .
4 4 f .-:.' •'q
14 • , .'et , fr.. -1•,1
~
• 1
IMMO
. i. ,
PIE
152 per
*Z;'
• ..
tile aggrpgate imputation
, States lot! - not fall matt
font millio,4l' ." • i'•
Stgllen edit44o4 .920,913
lind; and attyptlng the
of ' fouitafoing - so. denW a 1
tbatof Great WAWA F '
land (163-Ifitiabltanta to'
imittilt :of 110251;645 .to
Amuming‘the present niiun
'3400000, atia that this nail
donbiediaell inictetarn heti
lbowhole,territors will WI
!
thin.l4olediri,(A-.,p. in) .
_ , 41-Igc: 270792.-4 1 6
kentnelcy was finally rati
vention of .Thinville ou thn ;
-last; The_ first Legislatitrd
at , Lexington on the 4th ink
bYt 7E 1 44 41,elyn.ted Goven
" Y EW 'Volts, duly. 290.11
'day; • tapt. BOyd.arriveil ha
my, with 100.0uea and tier
3412)/c Sri - Igor.; which, it 14 sa
goodness to that produced'
- mabia- cane: 1 "We. are frirt
't/i* sqgar.lB;to !.!p.- ecinise4
p,ublic auetidit hi, a 'few flay
is ini Boulit - '4l kittiCient - nut
ehaserfiltill aispear, as pat,rOl
biotic indiistry, of our • brct
liroithee4rl." , : . ':. ' •
2`
-
v.itii-iioEs_ OF, .t Km) Nos
from I Enfield, -- in - . the timier 1
'county, that as two men I've
pond lin ruin* of a moost' l 1
being tinrstY, and 'perceiving •.
had Weil cut 'through the: i
tisli*eu, - he . I.oped doWn
r
being. igu,usedor. a long red,
frupposol he..bint some bait, ,
bold-tin;unap at it; when:the4i
1Y throwing liiA head back,
trout '; whia:. Weighed ' three
four outiees.7' • ' '] : '
“PtimApna.patA, May '30,1 1792-IVe
bear, there, ifi 4rospect of ,the business of
Aielaing the coil: -mines on; th Myer. Le
high, lei . soon taken up se iusly.
meeting of the:Tresident mid umagers of
the Company :established! fo that pur
pose, was held in this 'city Thursday
last, when it was determined I that a oon
vocation'of the stockholders s all be held
at the State lionst-on Month), July ...12,”
• C. C. P.
!!M
. . .
....so.mtani,Nuf Aneur Yo,
Supposing 'your age to ,be•
thereabout, I can figure, yo,
dol.•.:: , 'You hat-e , 246 bOneg
nuticles; your blood we ;
fire pounds; your heart' is 1
in length an&three inches 4 1
ter; it_beati ` severity tinies
We, :4200 fillies' per hOur, l ,
tunes Per diy,Land .. 36,122, '
411
per year. , At each beat ,a 4
two Ounces, Ofibloocl is throi
it, and each day
,_ it receives,
ehargo seven tons of that,
fill' fluid. YoUr "kings inhal
gallons' , per day. • The aggrei
face of air cells of your lui
posing 'them to . be spread {
ceedS 40,000 !. square inehi
weight,,Of }ourbraitis is thre
when_yoU are tainaii 'it j wilt
about .. eight Ounces more l ,
nerves exceed ten thousand
ber. -YOnr skin is composed]
layers;and va - ties from due
one'-eighth of ',an' i,ich in t I ,
The area tif•ytntr skin iEi a
sqUate inches, and
t you arc s 1
.
square inch of your skin3soo sweating tubes or pers
poresieacli of Which may be,
'to ajittle'dmin tile oue-fourt
inch 'king, making: au, .a
length of the•.!entire. surfac'
body, of 201,166 feet, of a ti
for' draining' the body fort'
long: ' I ''' • •
.Wll..ki 18 THE Usk.--Pay n.
tion to Slanders, or gossip in
Keep'straight in your course
their backbitiliga die the
use
negleet.l What is the Use d
awake avnightlbroaling-Ovei
inarks,of. some false friend 0
tltrough, your brain like pit
•nirtp;? What's ,the, use
,Of
over a piece of :gossip that 'hk.
set afloat to your disadvan ;
some l ineddlesotne busybody, 1
more,! time than _character ?
thinga can't. possibly Injure , 4
less indeeclyoirtake notice , o,
and. M cotibating l 'them ki i •
character and standing. If 1
said abbot sod is true, sets ,
right,at once ; if kt,is false, lil
for wilat it wil k fet9h., If-4 I
you 7sould yod go l to the :hiv''
.
stray if ? Weald - notl - a' tl4
come aped lyout ll It is ' • ' : 11
4
say li , tie respeoting,the inju "I
have , lreeeivcd. We ; are- „gi
loser 4 in the .end if, westop, .
,
all . backbitings and Flot f l, N ) , l/
May l i e si by the Way. They i.
noyink it is true, but not d .:.
'so long as Wed° opt . !top to I
elate ,md scold. Our eharac
formed, and sustained-by on
' ' I
and by our Own actions anti pu
and not lby'lotheril Let us I
.bcarsin mind that tcalumniat
, be dsdalty trusted to , time
slow. Ibut, steady justice of
ophiln.7 1
~‘
..Eyt:gY man Ought to strive
lesgons' from *bat he h 6 ati al
TAO' (the 'bee gathering' hO . M
the 11 . 4wrs - ,4ie'should rgatheii
from ALE which the Wed tin . I
And God has ni44e the world
this, is'possible. - One who e
thotightfullY will 'find 'enibt
aivun Mit. • lust as a*l
j
back yntir Image; so all . '
.thin , the elend and tree .
the th*ting atom and the r '
.worli4 give. back a spiritual
and s peak ' to its in partbh
lsun-- . - tj is an emblem of th
'Son f irig,lteonsneis. The: '
i ts the . ) emblet of God's
The - withered. leaf—it is.' an !
of human hopell/en ein has
it. - The dying . year—it . :Ispe'
prenionitor. 'of departing li
ripe harvestit is a waving
teachirnan - that-what-he-a :
shall. he :also reap, and that
yond thought . is the final r
him who sows Seed for the h'
-heaven, - Rer: 'E. if C-irtot. l
. *ii . 1. • :,.
NOTBI 011411 C INTERSA'i'IO(
it
5 ~;.-0-~:
1111
JUNE, 20, 1874.
, ,
I tIA xi" x: 17-21:-43or4)EN , TEXT; P 8410114 ell: I.S.
14E61 2 ,0 QVAUTTLI. SILT .
Upton) this Saul had been.deSignated aK
the Lord's choh* for Israelis King; (see
chs... ix . and 1 ) .1 . The fi rst was only pH
vatedesignaticin to prepare Said for the
public appolidonent . of . which' 'Oar lessen
- speak:, Wordsworth, saYs; anc.=
tiOn of Said bad been only, a priva4 act
the King must ireeeive also a Public init.,'
sion from God, In. tlie eyes. of - all Israel.
,Godubserves the ;saMe rule iseadbig
:forth. his priesbi. Christ was annintedtby
the Holy GluukfrOm his mothe'swroml.,
but he received a public Unction at Jor
dau; Matt. ill:17; Luke 1i122. :St , . Paul
was called by: Christ from hea i en when
he was going In Damascus's; but did
not go forth 'mi . : , an apostle to the Gentile
World, till ho had received a public , mis.
siva at Antioch,-,see Acts xiii.".
In studying t.4is lesson, we may take:
L The gatherhig, at .3 i lizpah; We
cannot tell. bow long, this 4:4urred after
the private desigtation of Saul; but tile
interval tikat*obably:short. - 1. The aged
prophet (We disibt under spechil direction - .
of - OM) called - Hie peoPletogethe.r.r It IS'
not.their eider. 4.111 - pipit:Miss .
is an-impertant that.the r peoPle must as.•
semhle to transact At:• not, -
cry. individual its the inithM, butpude rep
resentatives of all the tinier; and families;
so as to form a - grand assembly .elf the
people; a large; iattuentiA congre.s§ef the
native. Ile called them "unte the LOrd,"
The syndiel of: Ws preserice
was still at Kirjatb-jeltim.. But we have
✓ 1
I=!!
~EL2
of the United
•rially short of
I "The. Uriibul
rare miles of
untry capable
ipopulation as
flee and. Hol
! h mile) it will
py 'its soil.
• r to be only .
ter should he
ty-tive years
'-!uft4tiomi
I
ionstitution oi
by the Con.:
26th, of Apol
_was ,to meet
!game libel-
SUVI•,
froin
R or Oteeo
its equal in
nini the b
ier told , thati
for at
when there
G iber Of ply=
1:15 to the tin-;
liter in the
. ,
here a pr!)plietie hinter the universal rev
elatien and spitiOal worship of 00(1'
JohU ivi2l-24., It is posiible that the al
tar built by sainuel (7:9Y may haV4 still
—We hear
I 3rt of this
. ,
I,een standing, : 4 4 reference may be made
to this as the seat' of God's presenc e; I or
if the Lord'Omill riade known by
trim and Thumpiint, this. may have been
regarded as., a tOIOn of God's presence.
Samuel called'people to 3lispah. Thks
is.the same town in Benjamin with which
we, have already several time's become fa.
miliar. It was 'sbont four and a half
miles ninth-west - Of Jernialem 'and 'cam;
minded a view Orthe eityl It Was at
this , time the special sanctuary of 'Jeho
vah, and the resort, of the nation in times
of dill:jolty and solemn deliberatioM 1
The Lord's Address; vs letl9.
Samuel spake. and yet it was, - ."Thns
saiththe Lord Qkof Israel." He was
merely the moutll-pieit of. Jehovah. The
Lptcl, spake :by inward voice inithe.
prophet's soul, discrimimted clearly.
and unmistakably from his own thoughts.
eroksing a
e of them
bole
1.• by- some
drink,
_but
nose, fish
and ..made
a sadden
drew, out . b.
undis and
RSELF.--t-
a 1
PRO 4 or
uP'to'a
and',
He
.kpea just as,. when the Lard
'Spoke, as whetranylriend addrei:sed
ThelO rd'S words ale severrbut well de
served. He apPeals. to facts. He calls
up the mentory of his mist gliodnesoo
slit* that he was not responsible fur the
change now. to be'.eonsuminated; that ,lhe
waS.still good and:faithful to his covenant,
h4.that they had rejected him, and 4-
pised tilS • anthOlity and mercy. That ilry
they puldiely-teStified by; 'their silent - hut
idadthiwn persl4tenq that they were weary
Of Jehovah's cOntriil; and they were weary
of the th6wracly and wanteri a despotism.
Though the LOrd in wrath determined to
let them have their ;,wn Way, he in merry
.
L twenty
!
L i
e, nejlep,
dinme
iper
1.06,809
.00 times
ttle over
u out. of
and dis
wonderl
Le 2.0300
ate Y
ear
sup-
ut, es
's. The
pounds;
ir.cigh
determined to i:)vetritle , their sin and fiwl , fr
for the _ yrl ituotigm 4' his ()WU bencliceut
olds. "Now iherefinv (since at your rt!
quest I abelleate the regal power) prese*
Your
II 1111111-
3-ourselves ;(or i take your. stand), `before . -
the Lord, by your; tribes and. by yoUr -
thousands," (or tribal „ -
Ili. The Selectioa of their King;
4241,440640**1111164,11-eseffilliett
front of the tribes raisged,in order 'around
the altar (if 'there: *as such) or 'around
the trim. and Thifirunim, of the naba're
of which we know' : nothing. In his hzthd
he held ban -urn, i n which were placid
twelve hits, ono (designating the king)
diffeiing froth the_ others.' The elder of
• •1
each - tribe itiorder came firth; dieW a lei
• •
and returned to his place." The last tribe
drew the, favored..lot. " The.. tribe Of •
Benjamin wasl takeri." Little . Benjamin
is Ailll beloved., The last shall be firs{; -
Gen. Xlix:2 1 . St. ' lPaul regarded it as au
honor to be of the tribe of Benjamin.. It
west good .bh.vd Or. spiritual as well is
• carnarivarfare.. - Saul evidently thourdit
that the choice ought to have been made
from one of the large 4 - tribes,
and probably Judah atidEplutuu thought
sq to But 'hulk is not..symmynaonswith
,
power.. We must remember that the*
was no chance . l in • this matter. God di
.
reeted this mode 'of 'selection, and lien,e
it expressed his We have no reason
• to' kuppoSe in the; present dispensation
that the result ef the lot will reveal Galls
will for our guidance. .We have the spirit ,
of God to teach, and; lead us. The orden•
of drawing Was! (1) for, the tribe; ' (2) fir
I the family or clan; (8) 'for the household; -
I and (4) fort ; thol "The, family
of Matri is not ,elsewhere
The, Presentation of-the King ; VS.'
22,44. Here Was 'a viloiderful'surprisg.
Saul+-the chagan. king Could not bb
." So. little fond was he now of that
p9wer which yet, 'when he was in poiscA
sion of, he could not, without the utmost
indignation, - -think of parting with: ". Llis
able* at the, time of Selection showed
his nindestyand freedom from ambition. •
ii!' 9 :. l l4dulit. there were Many who heaped
tliC, la would fall onthem • 'he alonerseemS.
I to' have avoided it.: "before honor is'.
humility." But he knew -that thn - Lord
had Choseli biin ,alreadir lietras.the
nOinted.King, ;Was not his - fleeing . froth
doW :it this time inful? %eh a judg
merit-Would be too'severe. It is better to
regard it as the i ltimidity'or true' modest
of 'gra responsibilities and dan--._
ger.l_ The , people inquired of the Lord
whether lie had come Up with the 'multi-
.He' disollesftt Olopegh and
Thurnmimy that he was 'hiding lamong
the bigolge iii tide eamp.r7" They . (proba
blY•some of thelprineiphi-meri of the na
-tioto ran and fetelibd. hire thence ;" there .
must have beewgreat anxiety and intereSt
to ,- see -the new.' Sing—to -see. what te
looked like;:. whether, he met their ideal f
a Monarch. They Wore so excited that
they 'ran at Rill speed. A. thrill. .of jay
ran through the multitude ache appeared.
lie overtopped all the men of the nation. •
from .his shoulders niward. He mast have
been about seven f4et high. Broad in Pro
portion, no doubt a match for . even the
giant Philistines. • liven,Samuel semis to
beenamitten with admiration. "See .
ye bint.2!" "There isinnie like tan among
all the peaple."i Hoar exactly God . gave
them, what they Wanted ! Ho isin strength -
and prowess au ideal 'King—a splendid
animal. The peopKare delighted. • Hon
the welkin : '”'Let the King live !I"
As ill to iwe have got the bud of a
King. we desired. •We Want to keep him,
God.- - give him a long life !" • •
Side by side 'before the Lord 'andthe
people' stand - two 'remarkable characters.
' Orono Gilfillan says.: "From his 4 :littie
colt' to his seer's mantle, and ;fretni that
to his - Shrend, fie was altogether .niligne.
Moses had-beside - .him Aaron, a twin Peak,'
triiireilng almost asitrigh. , Joshua had Ca
leb, the son Of Jeplumneh, for. his Com
pankin, if not altegether his equal. 'But
Samna, like; Elijak stood there in' his
;With no rival; no second,., and 'still
more' than even Elijah, he seemed an ein
bixlied oracle of God." Of the other r.
Wm. Smith says. :•- ‘9 To this phYsical ea-
Cellerme, :characteristic of his tribe, he
added to small siuma of .its ungovernable
temper a ;ivy*: vOition and disappoint-
TAMA" • 61 madnesE!i .the Campion
fite-Of despotii,i; i mswe , see in Caxabyses,
Calignlaifandlqulefainfg4el.He was the
creature 'of impulse ;' biten . ;as in
hia!-Iova: forz:Davitiand ,16tiathan ; often
no N , E t ;Mr••iu Ns liatrietic,taullor God,;
barawayaivantim' g the.ltuntrcl of or
. '
of three
IN Heil to
' ickness.
int•l7oo
i bject to
ontains
&dory
likened
h.of,an
!gyegate
of the
ile diteTi
miles
• atten
ongers.
and let
ath of'
i lying
the!re
at runs'
d
fretting
is been
Age by;
rho has
These
on, pn
them,
7 --- 1
them
tat' is
, ourself
t it, go
le sting
i. tO 'de
siiiiind
tom . -to
lee you..
.penally
refute
, , .
fg's ' We
:ire an
'4lrOnSi".-
r I rs ;r t. ; ,
L elveS;
i 'Posog . i .
, ShilayS
is may
1 ad thw
public,
o draiv .
.<
Id see
1 y from
isdoni 1
ght on.
so that
. bserves
ms an
or gives_
1 ,, Aerial
id leaf,
dr oh-ing
caning
The
great
ock it
ternity.
tableat
'lighted
ks as a
•.
The
,cable to
s, that
rich be
mord of
rvest of
lld on a.
yle for
'went.
aln r9ao
he ; got .
pe t
%Ty-
• ihat is
net its
.rs game.
t
xitik
:
, • :.1`
ES=
rati