m at tho Par-{dud ooouiom'lly return: all that: own bodiu und fluh among the ‘ (Otto! their Int rennin. Ind been con. gun! to tho Town of Silence. An inattnoo gum in which I unto member at at old m Pot-ll hull]. mppomd baton 3 who: oi it noun! yam otter his '( Ind olohud hot .- hitown litter. Not f o x mm 030 oompiointo wm undo in : ‘ ' Iooolanjuoti found: oi o oorpoo-bouor Sh- wll Inspected 0! having. with o lugs Ihovol lilo thou kept in tho Towns oi ' - linked 3 mm who. hoviog come to Ion. boon otter bolus hid in the tower. Ion sitting up on the atom slob whomn dead body had boon placed. It won stated " hadnot tho Inn boon kiflod‘motoiieuly . >ni¢ht hove tooled the tower woll, and, ' . . with hi- liio, might have been ‘ » ‘ to his imiiy and kinda. Dllguilo ‘ loll tohovo boon Amount: ptmntion‘ 13 noon: “oom from tho dud." to: o lap-looted superstition ulooiutol their , ~ unonatholiving with unto Iign oi bonding public «innit! or mopidomio. . ' um 91 Vinita you: the dud do not, , thewalie oithe Tower 0! Silence are ' .andtharelore eaeily eeeled, when the themelvee are eituated at eoneiderable eee from the habitatione 0! men, and the eeeape oi any one who might come Illa alter being laid among the dead. old pe ï¬nd a iree eeope tor their tongnee in ‘mation oi etoriee similar to those men- above. We now hear of a cue the m of whieh might be Inï¬eient for Writer of the “eeneationai aehooi " to- ve a chapter oi biood-enrdiinz romance. yean ago Bhepntjee Oahanieebha e well-to-do resident of De- . a village eitnated at e ehort dietanee Gendevi. A iaithinl. obedient wile ' hie honeehoid anal:- and the “ even 0! that; way: †w_al_ enlivened by the .Ilnd gourd mdonoo anon; mo olBompoy.†In_ the Mom-911 towns. 0! two 'gprolnlein eone. In the otthnethe eone were betrothed end end theireirele o! reletione widened. on e vieit to Gendevi on bueineee. eewee etteeked with {ever end died .etteren illneee oi two deye. Hie reletione were preeent et hie deeth- the proper reiigione eeremoniee were .. - (one throng hend hie leet remeine do the runner of Zorioetriene. eon- - - to flower 0! Silence. Hie reletivee v » theirioee and went to their own i Home honre after being leid in the “r ï¬bepnrjee ie eeid to heve recovered ., I cometoee etete. He eew the ewinl ' ,. ' ‘ 00181:th emong thedeed bonee 4' ueeetore. Being e men of reed, - _ , he_ looked through e email hole I“! are I um um I heve been forgiven » "OI! 1mm me ant. eo "any In his heart; .910!“ _o_l mineeep mete me cleaner Ihxlvon, Iflmu on", toll hlm l repented night Ind come. the Halo worc‘ m»- pgvosougtaud. 1-» wining, *md ot mine uh mute both: you lmpnt. '0] gill (0.10» 51ng): I_hOl1_ld comg botweon u- "ï¬ï¬o‘g'ipeh iii Guam.“ mun} ' " 7' fl " ‘3'. shoe 0! deeper blue nun oven“) nu, M tune end absence wene. . little wordâ€"eh. God I 'twel I who aid It; w: . tummy In- In power grown to be 13 use only joelone pun met. bred it, pelted him Iron: me. thu come onto hi: how“ Mod“; tom my a!" the bitter tom no flowing. $0. In new between un. wind: no blowing, u- 00 u: may. 1 n no. “on him than um bloat Dcoember. mu wen author“! thickly in bu «you; lmnouomhun. y» l on annual»: ' 1 3 sun on panned Imprin. ban m “and study to me our. _ , .‘1 ““3 “993“,“? 9'?! "Id.†'9‘â€? 3W kept in the well oi e Tower at Silence, new name villege people peeling et e die- I... Be reieed e or: 0! dietreee,|whieh men neurer to him. Undentendlng “id, they minted him in eeeling the ol the tower. They went their8 we, .ennuived et hie eeoepe from en ewiul Heprneured e disguise end wendered w Village to villeg lege us though purened by toe. By turne he heeemo e beggar, , t. e... queek. Wendering in end limb hee et preeent turned up inBombay Hill diagniee oie heirughee.i. a , e religion: 7 euddiepeueee netlve drug I end noe- . ‘ ,. He bee reeognined. or pretend-to 1‘ - » ,eerteln Pereie reeiding et Meregou. Heine kinehip with them. Hie lemily ,L reletim et Deheg enm heve been - ' oi hie ree ppeereuee in the lend oi , , end ere probe'bly on their my to - the hope of egein greeting one glee tend 'mdeepiy mourned. Truth end eeen in their own doubting weakened n word he spa ’0 mad no as one who 5 ould louver we): to: lovlnc‘l an. loam-l Winn". in reï¬ning to the - ~ to hon buholou tuod who por- Il’ nine to add to the hoppinou (or oflhooppomo m, rather um to the ' ' ‘ Wugroduouvoneu of the Franch- ' 1 m .a».$2“¥.2ï¬â€˜Ã©3‘1m mug,- ‘ a {node of hung. enabling than to Me ' What would stone. in doubtlon duo in ‘ ‘ Oath. potent] â€motions of the only ' - anon which muted I. bonus to“, flpmniu. and mood ambmuu on mom muwulwhonullt. to It that upon uyosr â€do oy; o to". s “noun. «mu bud It, and-wall. “bod no way. of tho all there «thinly u. ' II living In anoo In enginoddvor who tho :lbbon of the Legion 0! Honor. ‘ on him for o deed to donghty u mot ullor ha been «Hod on to Taming I Ihup onno. he now in 0! him o wouon Ind team of house won the line. In I moment he that thus no not Inflolont hjhloh _to pol} up. so. Algoklng to w“. U'U', "I. I‘ll" I lvyvuwu ‘ Ind 001110 the um. word I up I I know that in will be contented I the silence bunk. - (Burn the Bomb†Guano.) math} “:01ng hslt-uptury‘pr morg,_9ld min. in“ pining-'01: 'lnll Ito-um W M the obitulo. out though it: . out of horns. Imuhcd the wagon and “m o! g punched punpngujn. I.» 7 . la n Inbiut u iorthy' the in d I «no u nay mum" of pho- 3 ml: u an. ' P110 I Wllnlnston. Dol., mu- ‘rullllll'lohnn inn-Md a mubm â€Ilium on two homahooo in s 'I'IIE TOWER 0|.“ SILENCE. Oily. word. in Bombs; _q the Lord Williem Beresford. who was deco- reted by the Queen imperson with the Victorle Cross for gullentry et Ulundi, hes now gone beck to resume his duties es eideode-oemp to the Viceroy oi Indie. He is e brother of the Merquis oi Weterford. The Beresiords ere e deshing set. Lord Oherles. distinguished (or the number of persons he hes rescued irom‘ drowning, is commender oi the royel yecht now eppro- prieted to the Prince oi Weles. with whom he is e greet levorite. The mother oi these young men wes sieter to hire. Oevendish-Bentlnck, whose deughter. Led, Sykes, rsoently ettreoted so much notice in New York. Their tether we: e clergymen, end succeeded to the title end estetes when his brother. the renowned preeticel joker, wes killed by e tell from his horse. The present Merquis some )eers ego sloped with e merrled led, considerehly his senior. whom soclet condemned es much : the most to hieme. e merried her. but she did not long survive. end then he merried e ;deughter ol the Duke of Beeuiort. end hes pruned into e reputehle eonntry gentlemen, The Merqnie oi Siigo. whose scents hsve isteiy been ussiied, is shout the lergeet proprietor in point oi ecresge in Northwest- ern Ireland, but e lsrge proportion oi hie eetetee ere bog end morses. end his net receipts ere probsbiy not over $75,000 us year. His eeet, Westport Houee, is close beside e pretty town oi thet neme end hie charming grounds are iree to all comers. The preeent Merquie is en nay-tempered, kindly and most egreeebie men 0! ebout ï¬ity-ï¬ve. who hee been eingnleriy unlucky in merriege. heving lost two charming wives within e year or two oi menisge. He iset yeer msrried e third. In politics he ie a Liberei. Hie iether wee De Quincey'e friend, to whom the letter reiere in his interesting sccount oi e vieit to Ireland in his youth, when he spent eeversi weeke at Weetport. In the event oi the prelent Merquls oi Oinuricerde heving no heir. Lord Biigo succeeds to the encient Eerldom oi thetiik in right oi hie mother. The Bligo iemiiy heve never been ebeenteee. The Dublin Freeman in responsible tor the following: “ It is eteted thet the preeence in London 0! Oorydon, the Fenien informer, hee been discovered in e very curious wey. Some night: ego e society 0'! Friendly Brothers. compoeed ol Iriehmen, were hold- ing their monthly meeting in Red Lion etreet. Holborn, when Oorydon eppeered et the doorwey of the room intoxlceted, end holding e revolver in eech hend. In this posture he ennounced him-ell. end, ebueing the meeting ee treltore end rebele. dered them to touch him. Berione coneeqnencee would heve reeulted but thet the two detectives in con- etent ettendenee on him arrived end got him ewey. Application for e enmmone against him wee relneed. He has dyed hie heir black end hee grown etont. Oorydon receivee £200 a yeer end le conetently drunk. He ie to be eeen generelly et the police etetione or Scot- lend Yerd. end ie eo reckleu in exposing hie lite et night in quertere where it ie thought to be in denser thet the police. who only ettend him on hie own epplicetion, ere eetie- tied he will meet e violent deeth." A correspondent of the Daily Ezprm writes : “ As an instsnea of the distress which at present exists in some psrte oi the Queen's Country. I hsve been told to.dsy by s policemen thst he recently went into the house oi e smell former some three or four miles from the Town at Msryborough to seek the mount of s trifling wsrrsnt for road trespue which wss sgsinet him. It wse sbout he]! put eleven or twelve o'clock in the day, sud the visitor wss much surprised and shocked to ï¬nd the poor msn sud hie (emily. st that lste hour {or the purpose, trying to nuke s misersble breskiset on what he described ss “ Indisn mes] porridge. {or it could not be even eelled stirsbout.†The msn eould but suske out s portion of even the smsll elsim sgsinst him. sud so touched wee the policemen by the evident hsrdehip which he witnessed in the piece thst he said ‘ Never mind,’ sud determined to pay the remainder himself." Ii in “rouge how Irishman get on in all other oountriee [I'D their own. Three Irleh- men were et me some time Governore- Genenl ot Englend’e greeteet dependenciesâ€"the Eur] 0! Mayo 0! Indio. Lord Linger ol Austral“, end Viloonnt Monok o! Oanedoâ€"beeldee othere of emoller colonial. Gwen Dufly and O‘Sheughneeey hove been Premiere in Anetrelie, end now Sir George Grey, Governor-General 0! New Zeelond. congratu- letee lte Leg tel-tare, in hie men-go. upon bowing elected for Spe eker the Hon. George O'Borke. I Gelwey men. “who pone-sods a knowledg so! Perlhmentery low. a oourteey "laid dainty ywhioh could“y noi be found olee I ere.’ Mr. J. D. McMnhon. who recently died in Cork. hu lcit some hcndcomc bequcctc for religious purpom. Ho bequocthcd £2,000 to tho Convent oi the Good Bhophcrd. Bun- duycwell; £1,000 to St. Patrick's Incnnblc Hospital; £1.000 to St. Patrick's Male Orphcncgo; £1,000 to tho Mercy Holpitcl, cud £2,000 to the St. Vinccnt do Poul Society. Thclnttcr Inc may much in nced of lands. He also baqnccthcd £2,000 in cid of a church building in thc City of Limerick. A oonlonnoo o! the clergy of tho Linton] Downy detoxmiuod on tho public meeting in Linton! (or the purpose 0! uppnllng to tho londlordl to reduce the man and ‘0 call upon tho 0100er of the noun“, m Insure the "mm 0! two Home Bub oundlduu. There in ct present reeiding on e term in the pctleh 0! GI yn. It I dletcnce 0! about three milee from Lorne. end convenient to the Bleckhill. en old men, nemed Bendel Weddell. who he well nigh completed hie 105th you. Until within the put three or four seen Weddell enjoyed excellent health. In condrmction of the ctctcmcnt thct the caricnltnrcl clone: in Ireland hcvc learned to drink more too. it may be mentioned thnt the Bond 01 Tudo rctnrnl chow c lcrgo In- crcuc tn the concnmptlon 0! too, ooflco cnd cococ. On the other bond, thc consumption of c plritc and beer bu concldcnbly decreccâ€" cd; pgnlthon hit did not docrcuc. but nthor lncrcued lug cly y, during the {amino yous. 1845,1846 cnd 1847. B". P. J. Murphy. 0. 8. A... o! Waterlord. o! In. Iomotime sullonod in Dublin. and in [10an Bquro. London. In: bun uppolnwd to moon“ Very Rev. Father Dnndoon in Dunguun. he mm going to Rome. ,8". II. 3.081101). o! 801““. ll publish- lng through Mum. Gill. an historical and added uoonm 0! “Th. Pxophoolu 0! 8t. Luluhy." um Sullivan. 0! Bouhlll. Wubflutd. bu [Inn £360 sound: tho omuon o! a pulp“ tn tho Outhouo Church. Timon. IBIS]! COLUMN. Oeteweyo in enjoying hl eeli. At Ieet eeoounte he wee et Oepe To , whither he went by weter. When just out oi eight oi lend he held up hie hende in eetoniehment. but.likeeli levegee. expreued no word oi enrpriee. He bee ieit ofl beer drinking; not from reiormetory reeeone, but beoeuee he ï¬nde ‘ie iikee gin better. He preperee hie eppetito tor beoi by devouring e pot and e hell oi jem. He etioketo hie dignity end exhibite it by keeping the photogrepber weiting eeverel houre. The Imiling ieoe he put on ehowed thet he knew whet e photogreph ought to be. Hie wivee giggled till he epoke to them. end then they Itopped in e wey to prove thet they hed not forgotten the temper thet rn'ed them in Zulnlend. He declined sitting egein. beoenu he eeid he did not went to mete e 1001 of himseli twioe the eeme dey. When eeked to lit with hie wivee he edvieed the photogrepher to out out hie piotnre end put it in the middle oi them. He meeenree elxty inohee eronnd hie weiet.ie very tell, not nngeinly, ood- netnred. eooiebie. etmte ebont with e ieok "tile.†in leernin to write. in enbjeot to unite, end it very igniï¬ed. There is e touch of pethoe shout doing even the simplest thing “ for the lset time." It is not elone kissing the deed thst gives us this etrenge pein. You feel it when you hsve looked your lest time upon some scene you heve lovedâ€"when you stend in some quiet city street where you know you will never stend egein. The ector, pleying his pert tor the lest time; the singer, whose voice is cracked hopelessly. end who eiter this once will never stsnd heiore the see oi upturned isces. disputing the pleudits with the fresher voices end ieirer iorme; the minister who hes preeched hie lset sermonâ€"these eii know the hidden bitterness of the two Words, " never sgein." How they come to us on our hirthdsye ee we grow older. Never egein youngâ€"elweys nesrer end neerer to the very lest. the end which isnniverssl. “the lest thing which shell follow ell lest things. end turn them, let us hope, irom peinstojoys.†We put ewey our boyish toys with an odd hesrtsche; we ere too old to welk eny longer on our stilts. too tell to play merhlee on the sidewslks. Yet there wee e peng when we thought we hsd pleyed with our merry thoughts for the lset time and life’s serious grown-up work was wsiting for us. Now we do not went the lost toys beck; liie hes other end lerger pleythiugs ior us. May it not be these. too. shell seem in the iig ht of some in 03 dsys es the boyish gemes seem to our menhood. and we shell leern thet deeth is but the opening oi the gste into the new lend oi promlee 2 My Japanese room is contiguous to the bath.and sudden splashinge and sluicings. :aud little hissings and eooings. denoting in. ‘tense enjoyment. tell me that some one is engaged in his or her evening ablutions. Ah! end Eve st the fountain ; tor. being joined bya second nymph. and now bye third. great become the splutterings and gurglings. to say nothing of the chatterings and laughing. Evidently three at the waiting maids indulging in their evening tub. alter the labors ot the day. Obi. women. women! Be your country Green- land’s icy mountainsâ€"no. I forgot; they don't wash there. and only undress twice ai yearâ€"or India’s coral strend. or “ride sunny lountains, or Belgravia or‘ Sarato- se; whether sitting, crowned with odorous flowers on moonlit' sands insome lair island of the Southern seas, or taking out your pads and brushing your back heir in the privacy of your luxurious dressing-rooms; wherever two or three 0! ye congregate together. unrestrained by the presence of the harsher sex, the theme of your gossip is ever the same! It is always what he said to you or to her. and what you or she re- plied to him; and here. in e Japanese bath, is the old. old story. Two 0! my nymphs are evidently quizzlng the third about a certain Mr. Onoekichi; and she. by no means averse to the salt impeachment, re. teliates with the names of a Mr. Kin and. Yaszuzo; and then such rippling laughter. end such spleshing 01 water, end such thorough llghtheartedness. that, forgetting my sadly interrupted slumbers. I cannot ï¬ndinrny heart to be churlish enough to sell out end put a stop to the innocent tun. So lie still. end presently the chattering lair ones leave the bath. and peace and quiet again prevail.â€"Au the Year Round. Corn crops ere submerged end hey socks fleeting nesr Grelgne. From Athy to Vicsre- town seercely enything merks the river’s course but the tops 0! trees. At Drnmoonreth eight iemilles bed to leeve their houses end the surrounding country beesme temporerily e leke. At Bellyhoe e second inundetion hes ' reeled the tumors‘ iete. Wexiord end Wick- ; low present simller reports. with some miti‘ ‘getione. At Bellinesioe houses ere occupied where the floors ere pertielly submerged end the rein beets through the broken roots. The low lends ebout Cerrick-on-Bhennon ere e see, three ieet oi water eronnd the hey cooks. There ere ï¬ity to sixty thoueend sores oi oete in the Counties Armegh end Moneghen. eeeh. The promise 0! hell en everege yield is gone. and doubt o! the remeining moiety intensities daily. The next crop in extent is meadow. Ite promise wee lururient. Now it is ell fleeting. Neer Portedown the people seil over their ï¬elds in net-bottomed hosts. try- ing to eeve something. Neer Beliyhsy en suction 0! hey cocks wee edvertised. end on f the dey ot sele nothing of them wee to be seen but their upper helves. which were irregulerly truneeted oonicel islends. A greet rein et Trelee reeently stopped treï¬ic, over- } flowing the river end flooding the streets. Two your ego. e termer in Limerick County pos- sessed oi lend held on e long leese st $7.50 an eere,reiused to sell it. Now he wishes to sell, but the most he hes been oflered is less then one-tenth of whet he eould heve got two yeere ego. A letter irom Wetertord seye thet e horrible end deediy scourge is threetened. Home of the termers ere sinking in the grssp oi creditors. end, no metter whet reduction. it will be en impossibility tor e Very greet meny to pey the lsndlord. Butter, cattle. “id crops will be soeroe enough for the re sers. elmoet elven reeldent in his prince!“ cue». Onm chum. which. tn point 0! “de- meene.†lnhe ï¬ne“ thing in Inlud. He hee are» phyelcel pout. The Bereelorde, elthona h mu poeuulns poliucel influence. do not» uadouflnete in nun politie- u they once did. The preeens heed o! the house he evinced no pounce! ebimy. FOB THE LAST TIME. Bulb! as In the Next Boom. The Cnpllvc Zul- King. Heynee eel hlmeell up for e religioue leader in Tone. even claiming to be e divinity. rent to euth to teke cherge of ell eplrltnel eflelre. He eeld thet he wee phyelcelly invnlnereble, end um it wee lmpoeelble tor anybody or enythlng to hurt him. Hle converte,ol whom there were hundrede, believed hie preteneione end l3 wee eeld thet e bullet ï¬red at hle breeet hed dropped hermleeely In hie leel. But there were ecoflere et Oorelcene. end they rode Heynee on e tell. Hie mirecnloue power lelled him in thle emergency. Ii .11 the books of every kind written egalnet the Bible were lent to the bottom oi the ocean the world would lore nothing oi any importenoe; but it the Bible nnd the booke which it he inspired. end the book: built upon it, expleining, advocating, nym- petbiling with it. were deltroyed. how greet. bow and. how irrepereble e lose it would bel They who believe in the Bible ere endowed with n rejoicing hope. which in never eon. iounded or put to ebune. Ie eny euoh hope worded by anything eiee in thin world 2 To The Roman Catholic! oi Auctnlic no waging on unpopuler and uncucceuini wer- icro egcinlt the public schools. become their prints. by tho tonne oi the law. ore allowed access only to children of Catholic pawn“ in giving religions inltxnction. Their donuncll- tion 0! the Ichooll he: hed little eflect. The congregation wclkcd out of one oi the cethc- drain while the bishop was reading hie inimi- nat on. It is wonderlul to whet en extent the one- tom of hiring ministers prevails st the Went. For exemple, in the Preebytery of Nebreeke City. out of nearly forty ohnrohes only two heve settled pestors. end in the entire Stete there ere herdly more then hell e dozen in the same situation. All the not employ their ministers, so they do their hired hendsy. and consider thet there is no more seeredness in the one oontreot then in my of the others. It we: I lovonte idee of Normen Meoleod'e thet it mlghtbepouible to ley the lonndu tione of e Notional Obrietion Church in Indie that ehonld be neither distinctively Preebytorlon. nor Epieoopel. no: Congrega- tional, nor Methodist. nor Beptiet ; yet one that ehonid comprehend them .1]. Wee Dr. Mulood dreeming shoot the millennium ? I! such a Church were poulbie in Indie. why not in Oonode end in oil the world on well 2 â€"Prubyterian Record. The Mennonites, ea in well known. hold to eioee eommunion. Their reeeone to: :0 doing ere given in their orgen, the Herald of Truth. They believe thet than who commune to- gether should be 0! one mind end one ieith. Their objections to eommuuing with mem- bere 0! other denominetione ere: 1. They uphold wer. 2. They indulge in the pride end ieehion oi the world. 3. They eweer oethe. 4. They belong to secret eoeietiee. 6. They deiend intent heptiem. The Duke of Argyll, in e recent sddress in s Presbyterisn church in Scotlsnd. remsrked thst I movement hsd been set on loot for the greeter liberty of worship in the Pres by- terisn churches. Thirty yesrs sgo he pub- lished .11 book in which he ststed thst. without giving upextempore prsyer. he would like to hsve s s ort liturg yin sddition. He held thst opinion still. ii possible more strongly thsn ever. believing thst the service in Pro: by- terien churches should be improved snd rendered ss ottrsctive ss possible. London Echo: " The leet but one of the twelve epoetlee ie dead. Nearly hell 3 en- tnry ego the Catholic and Apostolic Church reeaeciteted the Order. end on Thundey, the eleventh, the Rev. Nicholee Armstrong, died, leaving only one eolltery enrvlvor. It wee expected in the Oetholie end Apoetolic Church that the eecond edvent would take place before the leet of the- epoetlee wee removed by deeth.†The Chinese ere doing religions min-loner, work in e we, the: moat make Ohrieiiene lee! uncomtoxtebie. The people of the Ghineee province 0! Ynnen no in pert Mohammedan. An imperial decree oflere freedom from texeiion to every Mohemmeden who renounce: hie inith end eweere by (Jon- incine.‘ Beenmnl new idoie ere eleo to be given In rewexde for proeelytee. The English Epinoopnl Bishop oi thoro, Indin. appeal: for aid to build 3 onthodnl It the oopitni o! the British Ptovinoo oi the Punjnnb. Mr. Gilbert Scott hnl delignod n building to coat £30,000. It in expected thnt the Government of Indis will Inbaoribo one- aixth of this amount. Next year will be the jubilee your of the Primitive Methodiet Church in Gen-do, the ï¬rst else! heving been organised in 1830. 0! thoee who loaned the: clue neerly ell hove pueed away. There ere now 8,000 in the membeuhip of the denomination in Oenede. ' The Pulbytorian Bond of Foreign Mloo slow but met with . miuonuno in the loan 0! 850,000 by we tuiluto 0! its Enalioh bankers. It Inn 3190 . dam of 862.000 boulde- this. Rev. Henry Moran 01 Boaton, hu tor- mllly warned Archbishop Williams that prouoution m low will follow it lotteries are pol-mined It a coming Roman Catholic church Mr. Mott 0! at live [0 In any kom heeven thnt we are inclined to tegud the Itoxiee nbont it u leblee; other. live [0 nee: to lt thnt they know them to be all true. ,"All English Ohurohmen heve thoit toible ~Arohdeneon Denilon'e to railway novelu the Blehop 01 Beth and Welle'. tennis; the Bishop o1 Gloucester e, hilliexde. Rev. Thoma B. McLeod, 0! Hudson. N Y.. hn $000le the cull of Dr. Budingtou'o Church. in Clinton "onus. Brooklyn. at n Ialuy of 86,000 3 you. He in a rel-ï¬ve o! the Rev. Nonnln Mohood. Lord Beacon-ï¬eld heard his flat Ohmflm urmon when. I ha 01 We)" you". he we!“ to Euknoy Ohuuh one dny um: the pod Regent Rev. J. Hy.“ Swim. at In " Indopondom" Blptm Church in Brooklyn. “up“ n nonal- nulon tor the But. Bonn“ tendered by none 0! hll udmlting Manda. M 091m». in Ocppldocln. n new miulon church has recently been erected. ltln Ihoï¬ru church ediï¬ce built {or the em: gonad Ohxmaing of this portion 01 Ash Minor. In putcr in Rev. Kotopo Yckohlw. According to en omelel report 160 Turkieh marquee end holy school: were destroyed in Roumelie end Bulgerie during the Bunion oooupetlon 0! there provinoee; end ebont the norm number of mosques end lohoole hive been destroyed elnoe the Bunions Mt. I out! 6001.» high. An Eng 1m: clergy um many commuted lulpldo on tho lugs! 01 ngm by Indian down AMONG THE CHURCHES. Mr. Archibeid Forhee recently delivered hie lecture on the 2qu wer et Manchester, end et ite eioee reed e letter which he hed received threetening him ii he ceet ee- pereione oi cowerdice on Lieut. Oerey. Mr. Forbes. eiter reeding the letter. threw it upon the pletiorm end etemped on it in e menner expreeeive of contempt. Ae he did eo the eudience eppleuded with greet enthueieem. When he wee eble to egein make him- eeii heerd. Mr Forhee edded: " It the euthor oi thie intereeting document will do me the ievor to come into the retiring room, I ehell heve the greeteet poeeible pleeeure in metin hie pereoneiecqueintence.†Mr. Forbee lei empheeie on the word pereonel, the eigniflcence oi which wee may underetood by the eudience end drew iorth leuahter end renewed cheering. Ono" mumâ€"Mr. Llnduy Buuoll. the Surveyor-Genet“. in â€lawn; the but had- ln Grand Valley 3nd Moon Monnuln region- to be surveyed with s View of m bung placed on tho musket. It In aid the Parnell family are notational, hard lmdlotda, and that one 0! the senator's brothera la likely to have none “cable with Me “name. who declare they mean to act upon the honoteble membet‘a advice. Until recently science leiled to dleconr the immediete ceuee oi intermittent lever. mersh fever. meleriel lever, lever end egne. "chills" â€"synonymons terms. It ie believed thet the poison which cenees this dieeese hes et length been discovered. In the present ycer some experlmente hevc been msds et Bome which eppeer to be more iruitlnl then eny hitherto recorded; or, in the words at the report reed to the Acedemy of Bone. “ the investigetion wee rewerded with com. plete success." These experiments were conducted by Signor Tommui, of Rome. end Prol. Klein, 0! Pregne. They together spent some weeks in the Agra Bomeno end suede rcpeetcd exeminetione ol the lower strete of the etmosphcre. oi the roll end of etegnent wetcrs. end succeeded in lsoleting e micro- scopic fungus, specimens of which being pieced under the skin of heelthy dogs caused distinct end regnler peroxyrms of intermittent lever end produced in the spleens of these enitnele thet pccnlier condition which is e recognized pert oi the pathology ol this diseese. In the medieel world this echieve- ment must be regerded es e importent one. To people et lsrge it mey n t seem e greet eflelr to hevc escerteined precisely whet pert ol the elctnente at e poisonous soil it is to which its poisonous neture is due; but it must not be too heetilv judged thet thie knowledge will not-involve en importent ed- vence in the cepecity to flee] with this ob. noxious product of the eerth. Rev. Dr. Rigg. President oi the British Wesleyen Oonierence. hes written e book shout John Wesley's. churchmenship. Dr. Rigg shows the greet founder oi Methodism to here been a ritueiist oi the most extreveo gent type in his eerly ministerial life. Even. when he visited the Btete oi Georgie here- iused to recognise the beptisrn oi my person 1 who hed not been beptized by en Episcopelly ‘ordeined clergymen; he insisted on re- beptizing children who hed been otherwise baptized; he reiu'sed the Lord‘s Supper to one oi the most devoted oi his heerere there beceuse he hed been otherwise beptizsd. He wee en escetic; he tired out the colonists with his three public services (especielly with. the Preyer Book) every dey; he would hep- tize children only by immersion; he even. denied the turiel service to the deed who hed not received whet he considered ortho- dox beptism ; he slept on the ground rether then a bed; he declined ell lood rxcept breed end weter, end went bereiooted. tor the encouragement oi the poor boys of his school. In lect, the greetest rituelists in Englend in the lest century (excepting the Bomen Cetholics) were the little bend of Methodists et Oxford. They received the eucheriet every Bundey; they tested twice every week; they went in e sort of procession to St. Mery's Ohurch emid the leughter of their fellow-students. But in his ieter yeers Wesley tended towerd the other extreme, end. there is no cendid student oi his lite end writings who will not edmit thet. oi ell things in Christendom. excepting Popery iteell, there is nothing thet he would not more positively disown then the exclusiveness end erroge- tions oi modern "High Ohurchn'enship." “ Ohurehmen " should ceese to cleim him. From their own etendpoint he wee utterly unworthy of them, but with e worthiness which Christendom generelly will recognize with increeeing eppleuse till the end oi time. -Ezchange. A now Rom Oothoilo «motor: hoving boon ootohiiohod ot Evonoviiio. lnd.. Biohop Ohotord ordolod tho txonoior oi the 1.600 bodioo iron: tho old ono. Only 600nm voiuntozily romovod by rolotivoo or itiondl. Tho Biohop then omployod men ot tho ohuroh'n oxponoo to oompioto tho job Thou. upon o number of pouono. whou dood woto in tho old cometary, ylroohlieotod to on: diotuxh. onoo oi tho gnvoo. ho Biohop exp ioinod thot tho project woo his hiy dooinbio in vori. ouo won, ond deolorody thot it would bo ouriod out. But o oourt hoo stunted o tome ponry injunction otopping the work. In n utmon the other do, It mum. York-hire. che Biehon o! Manchu“: vehemently condemned eho degroding o! the Church into a mere poliuool weepon. Po|_i¢lol. he aid. on the word wu understood io-day. war a poor. puny quoaiion oi partisan- ship. Ii wan nci tho great idea which ï¬lled Greek atakaman'l ninth in tho daya oi old. The Church. except I0 in- aa it mun dealt. to coo peace and good ordor. and the moral well- being oi the pcoplo. knew no politica and had no poliiica. Individual churchmen might be tor oiihor political party. but the Church itaeli was not tainted wiih political partisan- chip. At yeeterdey'e Conference oi the Evengell- cal Allience et Edinburgh. Rev. Dr. White. N. Y., gave en interesting eceonnt oi whet ie being done in the Southern Btetee emong ireedmen to prepere them tor 0hrietien work. It le expected. he eeid. thet in e iew yeere they will be eble to provide each e enpply o! mieeioneriee ee would do more to 0hrletieniu Airice then could be done by eny Enropeen egency with white men. They hed elreedy eight coilegee end eleven normel end eighteen inltietcry eehooll, with 7.000 emeneipeted elevee in them, renglng from twenty to iorty yeere of ego. They heve eleven rnieeicneriee in the ï¬eld. Rev. '1‘. Leflenr. Preeldent of the Evengelicel Allience oi Oenede, add reeled the Conference on the work now eerried on by Protectent rnleeioneriee ernong French chen Oetholiee there. ' duke: the BIN. II to dam, tho only um hop. the world In. our Ind. MALABIAI. POISON.