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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

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Brooklyn, New York
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Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY EAGLE 0 BROOKLYN, WEDNESDAY, VOL. 41 NO. 97. APRIL 7, 1880. THREE CENTS.

rPT4Tr AimisEarEcYTs. AMUSEMENTS. FIJBNITVKK, Ac. DRV tiOODS, AUCTION SALES. DRY GOODS, dec.

CHANGING. AN ODft For tho Jlnudrodth Anniversary Impugn my I have tired my tongui and worn out po in advocating this prim, noes ity. In tho Und tpokeH ot I hare no substantial interest. The city can buy it from tlie mortgagee, or not, as It pleases. I present it because It would be of great advantage to the public and can in had for low price.

If you and your brother loaders of publlo thought help us to the park, we will get them now If you don't it will bo bad for us ud for tho city. Thomas a. Devva. NEW BOOKS. JREDJiBICK LOESER fc FULTON, TILLARY AND WASHINGTON 8THKKTS 0ooOOo00o 3 LLLL ,0 LL LL LL LL 1.L LL LLL LLLL Ooooooo0 WE WILL OLOSB DURINW TUB NEXT l'KW DAYS THB ooooooooooooooooooooooooo a BALANCE OF OUR FRENCH COSTUMES 000000000000000 000000000000000000000000000 0 AT NI5ARLY HALF PRICE, 00000000000 00 0 oooooooooooo AND RESPECTFULLY INVITE OUK CUSTOMKIIS TO I5XAMINH THE SAMB.

FRRUHUHIK LOITSEH 4 00. A. JJJ OOO If II NN SSB3 000 NN OH II NN NS SO ONN JO OH N8 ONN .1 OH1IUII NNN BSSii ON JO OH SO ON NNN a NN NN JO OH HNNNS HO ON JJJJ 000 NN SSSS 000 oooo ocooooooooooooo ooooooooo JOHNSON BUOTUKRS UNION SQUAUK, NEW YORK, 0 0 0 0 0 0 O'O OOOOOOOOOOOOOO'0'OOOOO SECOND SPaiNlT OPENING OV l' RENOH PATriJRN BONNETS ON WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. 7th and Kth inatant. BEAUTII'UI.

DKSIONS I'ltOM TUVEK. PARIBET, JOSSE, VIROT AND OTHER EMINENT PARISIAN MODISTES. ALSO. NOVKLTIEsTn STRAW GOODS, FRENCH KLOWBRS, FEATHERS, ORNAMENTS. RIBBONS.

SILKS, LAGEsT DRESS TRIMMINGS, KTO. JOHNSON BROTHERS 4 84 EAST I'OUUTBKNTII STRKKT, UNrON MIUARR. NKW YORK. THE TAILOIt. JICOLL, NN It 000 OOO r.

NNN II OOOO NNN II NN II 11 0 0 NN II CCO OOO LLLL LLL TV TTTT A II OOO RRR AA II tt A A II 0 RRR AAA II A A II LLLL OOO XTM COLE, AUCTIONEBK. BY COJ.K MUUl'liY. Uitr Ivilosrooms. S7U Fulton and to 3M Adams t. 'i 111 JI.SDAY.

Aj.ril at mV'cloek. At 102 SOUTH OXFOHD I'lIKNITllltH Rlackwalmit parlor Suit in cnmsnn rep. Pickhanll lied, nosowooo Piano, Loco Otirta'us, alnul llinini; ami rhamber KuTiiituro, Rood Bedding, cancy Chain. Mounct. llniMir li ami Ingrain Oariiots, isblu ami tied Lilian, lining ami Kitchen Goods, etc FltiDAY.

April ft. at WH o'clock. At 413 FULTON LAKGF. SALE OF DIAMONDS, JEWKLRY. IVATU1IKS.

To liy order nt OASPF.RFKI.n Cl.KVK ooimir.f in? a InrKe nasoitment of iiiimondi, liou jinl v.iii.I.ts and other line American mid Swiss V. A ladies' "ts, rings and as ortment of jewelry, lot of imiHical instruments, store tixnir.n. show ease, Inrxe sale, Uoods nmr un exhibition and oataloituud ready. SATURDAY, Aliril ll. 11 o'clock, AT SALKSltOOM.

KKGULAR WKKKI.Y SALIC 01'' IIOBSF.S AND Nev and second hand top buggies pony, pa and doctors' phaetons: bretls, coupes and other vehi vies; several horses, Kood work horso, and top business wagon, single and doubly harness, robes, blankets, whips, Ao. SAME DAY. at 12 o'clock, at Salesroom. KF.OKlVKr.'S SALIC of hook accounts, stock, property and fixtures of the United States Tea Company, HKN11Y JSNKLL. ltocoivor.

B'Y JAiMfTrFcTEAlllE, AUCTION'i KH. AT TIIK KASTHUN DISTRICT KXCHANtiR SALKSHOO MS. No 4i llroadway. K. Ou THURSDAY, April S.

ItWO, At o'clock, noon, Tho property known as 17tf Maujer between Graham ay. nn'. i UwmlH.Mtsi. with sMiy Aiici hawrornt brink 'building aiut tiro choice building Iota adjoining; lots 25xiaflsch. Call lor Ht omcv, irunuwa.

OS. HKOKMAN it (U. April s. ar. A At 71 I' ll t.

wiMMi Myrtl" tv. nd ohnsin sr. liaurtsoim pii'r mil r. and runners, dwarf pmior suits, it mi rjatift. hat stind.

'hH, nial trusses, ci'" i. i t. china and kitrb Miwaic. BY tIOSK.PH HKOKMAN iV KKt.CI.AK WKKK1.Y SALK. FKIDAY.

Ann! i 4 At the Cei.tr.il tviVsriHJin cor. IVan nn. willotiRliby ftn. At A. M.

Counters, show cbsps, rstrnjorators, actus, ima safe, At II A lfiiyo nswrtmnnt of parlor, chamber and lin'ti" roam' tun niu oilwr .4. bolsters mut ir.HuM, cocui'i flttcii w. iroami nitn ltta. At'(l. 31 Miitf.

piantw. mirrors, jiaiut mas, Ac. Ai I. Stoves and kituhenwaro. Spt'fiil rj n't li' Monday next.

Aiuil J'J. SAl OV PHKMISKS, M)S. Mi AND i.7 1 HANKI.1N AV. A Dili AN 11. MUU.KH A StN siil k'U hI auction on Till'lISOAy, April 8.

IJ iduck, (ll Kxclmiifn SiU rtoms. No. Ul Now York, riy order utora of Wiiiinm Staimnora, t) tfltwo th Th two lor i il l.ind X(w 7 TRANKMN AV, OA it si It. )wt A i fii and Pnrlt ov with the two story framt) dwelling hotiLo, about i and ona story eitun. eion occpiud by Mr.

iStainnwirfi as liis rosi di nco; )rt to 'othrr, feet. SA1.K POSlTiVK. For niap.H ami lurther particulars applv the onctiout 'r, No. 7 Finest, New YnrV. nr to 4 OROSBV, atr uuays for p.to utor.

No. Nassaxi Y. COLE, AUCTION EEK," AT THE C0MME1W1AL EXOHANOR, FULTON STRF.KT, gJAWNBKOKER'S SALK. S. F1KUSKI, (Jf neral Kul'on st, will soil un April nt )1 A.

7Vi lots mon'tf and wyimja's clut dieses. silk, alnaoa and woolen xttmnant, tabl. iiiiKi. ijuilts, Bneita, spreads, blankold, uu derwoar, boots Ac. Al oVlooW, r.

i eots. pants, vesta. By order P. FRKKL, Hid it. MdUKtS VILKINsrAUCrriY)KKEK.

KT.KilANi' HorSKUOI.U I' CnMTUUK. hiNK UnoNZKS. fL'Ji'KS AM) MANTKn SETS, OIL PAlNTIXtiS, 11 Xfi A NO llAN(UN(iS, AXMINSTKH. AXP UTliKK CARPKTrf, AT Ai'GTION. K.1I.

CDI.OW A CO. bell on THrKSPAY, AT 11 ()'OIX)CK, AT Xi 118 Mt)X AtllTK STUKKT, AM (lie eViiiint and artisiic of the abo' rasi dunce, ron lstinc oi purlor, dminv r.oii. library and chain bor suite, in rosewood and walnut cemm ami card tab vi, le jant L'tij ro i.ftacritoires.Turkwli chairs, soJuh, )tiMKrs rvv siJJt tnatt'iial, ilfrrinK'H pMior taff. rlfd hair luattn ASt. bolster', pillows, Ac.

HfUse will Ik open for inspection ono day previous ti sale. I'or ermitH apply to otlicua of auction enr. No. Pin H. and 1 1 li.omlway, N.

Y. BARKER A AirCTR)NB13KS7" ASSICNKK'S SAI.K, (IN FlUDAY. Al'UlI. AT 47 AND 4: LIBKKTV faT. At uVL.t k.

SALK OV 1IRSTCLASN WINKS AND l.tJ!'ORS. fniniirisinc l'ip Jloidirk niul Viv.ivo i'linipint iUDOi. Jld Wim r. i Md WhiW S'il and Scn ial 4 mnar n'a mid Domccii'a iSheri i 't Pal, "Brown. aiid truld Port Winis.

imp' f't'd in cum's; also (JlarM1 'init SHy's V. S. O. P. lirundy, (Jiard and ot her Uratidio 1S JT.

i nn later vliitaiffH Kcotch and Irish Whiskya, ir. t. liakr lle. Xi tar. Londuii Doi a Kinit'.

do. lied Holland tiiiiS. Th; abov in bolt in cuaka and rihfiiirs, Madttiras, Hr.indiiiS, Itye Whi kya. By ortlur WILLIAM .1 OMiOllNK, No. Pihu at.

Amifinee, HXRiasr 7JlrrioNREK, will srill TO MOKUOU', at i oVI.uk. at 20 Flat biifili nr. hor ss b'lyit'o, household etc, pofiitivply w.tlio'U re ffva. rpiiOy." AIK'TIONEKU X. Sl TO MOUHOW, hi.

and Third ar, household furnmirf. c. i. Imddiuc lirrit ex prea vfftROn, niar.y p.y.. i' st billiard and ba4at 1.lt table and o'lier goods to ntnu rous to mention; auction aU' of cviTj' description conducted on rMasouablo tunnt.

Salt) at 2 oVIyek. NOTICE IS HEllEiJY" OIVKN TH A'f 1 will by nnMlo auction, at tll Kx change. Nit. ''t Ptilmn "tn it: tin; of ltr York, on tlin tucuf otti day of April, IS a( Iwt tvn noon, tin and intun'Ht wiiiL ti ilarvt K. bid on tho ibirty.iirt, dy of I of.

in rndt'. tll that cerLain p'ft, pit; or Oiiri'til ji iand a.tuatL Iviii.j and buiuxin tli'j City or iro irc.yn. i.i tltn Kin 'fid Sta.t ot Ni Yfik, liftuinltiLl and dt as l. 'lows it wit Ckimmun inn at iwiint un tin iit'' dj ot Park pin: and iri di ut me fi tiut wtwterly trom tho northivcst riy corn of rr ri! ait Vaudt'rbilt av. nne, and n.unini: ii.ti'fl with Vaudt rbiil avfuiif.

ono Imiidit'd and w. tvt thonce we.Uir'y, with I'mfc til sv. n't ii.m thenco sonth' rly. with VandiTi tlt drod and th'rtv ont fwt to Park pfao. nnd if ittuly, alone Purlt place r.evnty ninn fn or placooi common cement frenHid.

Uatt'd March i HtiN'KY C. if. iNil(AMAi'i, As jimiee. Court ht, X. Y.

SFAVIN Li MA tilHaXKS. 1 00 COURT ST. BROOKLYN AGENCY. WesoHtbe Liflht Hunnir. New Home, jnd all tht latest lumroved make of in ichint'a.

Ve repair and keep Xcodk for Finklo Jt Lyon. Dotnoutic. rover Baker, Hioit. Da via, riBCor, Manhhttin, Amt'ricnn. Ceiitfiniial, Singer, Remington, Wdlaon, Nuw Home, Weed, (owe, Florence, Kliliptic, Finptre.

BJpea. COPARTXEKSIBIP NOTICES. TTOTIOE IS HERERY CIVEN THAT THE rlf coi)artiier lately subsisting between HOWELL. DANlKli Y. A XT AN and CIIAHLIW HA KER, oi tfrWUvn, untier tne nnn name oi nun r.i.i., i SAXTAN is by imi'.

ition. The hu itiD horeatt will bf continued by the under. iicned. undur tJia linnnBmeof IIOWKLL i SAXTAN. All the debti ow.iu La thu parmt) jt are to be received by said Unwell A tau.

and all d' mand on tlmid partnership aro to be pr iwiitod them ftr payment. Ddtd April I lH i HO KLL, DAN1KL Y. SAXTAN. KYAX LIMITED rAKraER.SHIP Thib to certify that the under huve formed a limited partn rahip. pursuant to iho laws of tin State.

if Nm tii. 1or tint iniintit' icturc sile ni lioota and At the ity 'if Hrtfiklvn. XV York, itioVr fh firm nnni'i ul M. RYAN, tJi Ta! r.i:e 1 VUHICK ANI tho Cityof New York. The special partner ia J.iMKS UAYANAiil, "1 thi My oi Brmiklyit, NVw York.

Thu amount of specitd rapitJil cmi ril.uttid ia one ind dnl Ian. Tile avid com'i'u 4 Mar. 'H IS, and in to Uruiin Mareb IHSJ. Da.oJ lirooKlyn, New York, March 'J. I MAUIUCK UYAN.GfiiiTal Partner.

mWI Wf fw A KS CA VA SAf.H, Sftiyint XBAVfiL, XKAIVSPOKXATION, 1ROYIlKNi'K UN Tti JN VIA PliOVIDKNCK DIRECT. A SUill'l HE i i.VLY MILKS OF RAIL. FIRST LASS AC. uMMOlLVriUNS ONLY. the favoritp.

lack stkamkrh and usiudk island. iS e.ti.uptcd) at P. fru IVt N. I' ont of 'n si, airi iux in p. ton nt 7 A.

M. Nti iuloriiied re h.n n.v bet Yirl: and Pr iv" dencH. St onm i and li; keta nred at Noa. tt7. 785 aui Ci'J.

Rr. iy. at MefropoliLin and FJtn Avk nuo tiotols. N' and at :3: Wa tt, 1 1 rook Iyn. TickoL uit sold at all prin ipal Hotels and ticket otficea and ehor Kxprt Co.

Freight t.ike.i at lowest raton. D. ft. BAliCOOK. PrealdeuW W.

Fii.Kl.vs Gen. Puss. Ajf' nt. 11 ALL RIVER LINE EOR BOSTON ANU THE EAST. ONE DOLLAR EACH AY.

BETVr KEN NEW YORK. AND ISOhTON. Corrjspnndinff reduction to all other points Kail. ftorfion tickets are jcood only fir continuous passage on teanir vd connootinj; tram, a spocdied thereon. Th iranur.oth pal ace Bteanmrs BRISTOL and PROVI DKA'L'K.

hm ihinv) wj ibe iiin; for I he Benson of Iiwe Yor'; DAILY (Sundays inr.luded), from lior 1M, North River, J'tot of Murray at, at ft P. M. Le ive Bruokl; 4 P. Jersey City, P. via AtiniiK.

Tickets, Btatf rooini, Ac, can bo obtainod ia Xow York ai vfil. 1 1. vtj i Mud Broadway, nn't at nil principal hotels, tr.n and tiekot otticoB, at thu OVFH3K OF THE LINE ON THE PIKR and on board fteamers: Noa. 2 md el iud at Ait iw oOictm, UrcoUlyn and Jonviy City; in Hnaton at No. 3 Old Statu Houao and at OH Colony Depot.

BORDEN LOYELL, Agents, N. Y. GKOROK CONNOR. Ctno. al Ap.

VAOR NORWALK AND II AN 15 B1 daily, ronnocting vtty with Dmb iry I HhMn STEAMER ADELPHI avi wMI' wharf, RifMiklyn. En.t R.r. p. 31. at River, o'clock P.

M. Pancsv KacurioiiTicketa, 5'c. ALBANY 1JOATH PEOPLE'S LINE, iiean RKJilMOND lav l'i, n. i llivur, of ht, wvcry w.m.U 'i I onnietinjr li.iny iSmiday mtirmux mt 'l w.l'i trains st mil IviKt. SiMlnro'iMiji I a.n imd ri tti.

u. ivs W. KVF.KF.'IT. 1'r. J.

link Nnv I SAUATOISA n(l CITY OF THOY Pier 111. (luv. Xo. 411. N' Iti nt.

f.V. exemit Sut'irdiiy. i I'. M. iT 'ITiOV mi A 1,1.

I'dlN IH NORTH statu iii nnnud iit.uii. Htiamfir (mviiia 1, ut All.aiiv. BOAT KOJt CATSK1LL, KTUl A'IvSAN AM) UNTIL FUJITHKK NOTIUh OAII.V, (SUNDAYS KX(J1 AtRP. foot of N. Y.

COiX'EV ISI.A MI. 13KOOKLYN. IiATil AND C'ONKY IS JT LAND RAILROAD Tnina Iwivo ilupul Twonly and Kiftti av.) daily at an 1 A. M. 1 7 P.

it. lUturniiu luivB Conny Ulaud 7:33, 9:10, I2 1DA.M, 2:20, and c.i.vi BUNDAVS On tintm :3. and A. M. 1 I mi P.

it. IavnOon A 12 0. p. JI. fu pleawint trains will run after I i v.

M. KXUUKSION TlOlita'S. CUNTS II) int. (throush). tDoosnotrun Irtland.

alio. A. linn'l Hniin. (PONEY ISLANO P.V IlOKSli (JAUs VIA Jay and Smith ts and Hamili'm sv. Kerry.

in.TO Ldui; 1 1 I I. It). 12 20. 1 1.4'). i i .1 rt r.

4n 7 K'U). I Iiavi, (Jonny Ulundtll, 7,, 10, 10.4'L II. I la VI l.ltn, H. i'i, 4. M), 11.40, 7.20 P.

M. Kxeun tiiiltcW, 15c. yum! trip, from city Hint. I'whiikm slrtn f. rrt dfr to and from Ninth av.

anil Kifteuntli (Jity l.inM. J. S. HOAOLAND. SiiporinUinilmit ONiiY ISLAND AND WKST RRKilt'l'OM HRAOII.

I'ROSPROT PARK AND 00NF.Y ISLAND KAIf.ROAU. AFrKR MONDAY. MAROH I8S0, iwS tJ' ln5 "i11 ti'o Rrooklyn Da THn follows 0 ni1 ia a i. 4 7i 'iV A sssffia JRXCIIIISIONM. ttlTAUIN'S EXCURSIONS.

For Saloon Ntoiirncrs. Tucb. nariti! and GLEN ISLAND, ALPINK. UVDHOK ALDKRNKV PARK, AND IlICiHLAKD PARK GllOVKS Aply at J'k'r 1H N. between Oortlandt and Doj 1 SPUING OPJSNINO RRR IDD KR I EMS.

UUD FFF A BRB BRFl KBB T. AA MR I. ssss KF A A HUH UKR KB I. AAA Tl 11 I. I.

If A A KKB LLLL LLLL S3' FUKN1TURB, OARPKT AND BUDDING WABRROOHfl, 73 AND 73 BOW BUY. KKAR OANAL STBBBT, KKW YORK. ooooooooooooooooo ooooooo 0 0 TUB LARGEST KURN1TURB AND OARPKT ESTABLISHMENT IN TIIK WORLD. oooooooooooo po ooooooaooo IVvinp; just transferred to my trarerooms from tho facto rio ii iminonso afock of nooda, inannfacturod proviou. to tin.

laV; advance in priceN, I am prepared to olTeriny patrons and thft public supurior olaaa of gooda, at loir or nguros thfin th(j ptoseiit cunt ot ni.iiiufautura. Tho ttroatortt caro nnd alrintest nlniion have bon Kiveti Utthair thn aim bciiiK to turn out a reliable dclti at a lownr tiauro Ibmn it could bo procured anywhere aJso Mv htock i.i now anbmitlod to tho public knowing this object has beon obtainod. In pn p.iriiiK tho froorts for tho market, style, durability jinrl clu ajtiiosfi liavn bcon Constantly ko)t in view, and the lxMt wurkmon tniployod and matoriala usod, uudut my own loiisokocporsnnd ntherswill, thernforo, find this ararn opitortitiiy of iurmaliiui; thoir liomea at tiguroa very much below nrront prima. fntondiiiK purchasers ahould immndiatoly avail them boIvi'h of tho undoubted bargains now being oflorod, as such a chmco ia likely to occur nain. havo also just, receivod from tho Custom Houbq r0t) bales of different radea of snocially imported, which I mn nblo to sell at liffures below tlio price of domostio goods, ooooooooooooooooo ooooooooo TIIK SALK IS NOW GOING ON.

OOOOOOQQOOOQOnOOO OOOOOOOOO KV.tt DUD FFP A RRR RRR KKB DDI AA It V.IS KF A A RRIi RRR KB IS DDF AAA It KGB DJ)D A A HICK LLL LLL 73 AND 75 HOWKRY, "nICAR CANAL N. KXTKNDING THKOuTiK TO CHRYSTIE ST. Tako Fdrtvated Railroad to Canal Strait. Aii FACTO 47 (' I AND53 OURYTIKST.N.Y. LUMBKR AND SAW RiTlLS, FORT WAYNR, IND.

WEEKLY AND MONTHLY PAYMENTS FURNtTURK. OA RPKTiS, OlLULOi'll BKDDING, Ac, At JOHN MULLINS (fandfM MYRTLK AV cor. Lawrence st ICailroiiUs. BJKOOKLYN AMNEX. FOR OITY.

PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. LF.AVF. FOOT FULTON STItHHT DAILY. A. St.

111 r. 10:40, II II 1:0. P. M. 1 1 I.I, 3, 4, 1 5 M.

6 OM. 7 till, 7 1U. 8 111, To Full Kivrnd Ruslon lion! M. HotnrniiiK. Kiavo City on of all trains Harr ohiickotl and tiokol Hold foall iio'nlH.

Ankfur Bioolc. yn ticki ls wliou ri'turning i liroi'kivn. V. JANSKN. Spcrintendulit.

Y'ONO ISLAND KAILKOAO. SI'IUNO StmHDULK, TAKINU MAKOII 14. Jjonvo Depot cinier of Atlantio and l'Malbnsh liTOnUQS (Huntui'd Point hvo minuteH latar.) Rabylou, A. 3SJ11, 4 V. M.

Suiiduvs, A. M. 'ar Riir.k.w.y.H:'.ll). 10 A. 4 :30.

5 :30. 7:00 P. 8L fcinulays, A. (i ::10 P. M.

Uocrt.way lioach A. 4 P. M. Sundays 8:35 A. ,11., P.

(lardiin Oily, Oueena and Hemusload. R. A. 1 r. so.

liiin I. M. Wednusdays and Sundrtya only I'lattiusli av, P. M. Krmn I' lathush av.

ilaiiy, oxi pt Sundays, and from Hunter's Point, r.i and Saturdays, at 1 A niitht. Sun dayE. A. 1 Sill. 1 I'.

SI. Hii v.i. UmiiHl. Valley and A.M.. 1 4:311, 3:3:1.

I. Sunduj'H. 8:03 A. P. M.

nnd tia (larbor.H A. P. M. HnntiiKt.ui and Northpnrt.K. 3 A.

i P. M. SundavB. A. P.

M. I.iku'l 1 unit lirmiwtdalc.K A. 3:30. P. AL Port A.

4:3) P. M. Suaday.s.s A. M. Piit A.

4 :30. .1:30 P. M. Sunil ivrt. A.

M. ir, (c iiniiicncinir April '(, 8. D. A. 1:3 P.

'rur W' and Suturdava. PENNSYLVANIA KAILKOAO GREAT TRUNK LINK AND IJXITKD STATIC MAIL ROUTE. ON AND AFTER JANUARY 19, I8S0, Trains ave York, via DesbroaHes and Corttandb Bta. terries, as follows; Fpni lot llarrtb'irB, tho Wost and South, with Pu'buin PalacoCara alt ached, 9 A. V.

M. daily. Fur Wiiliamnport, Ick Hnvnn, and Erie, at P. coomH'iinw tor Titusvillo, Potroloum Centre an. 1 tho Oil RoniotLj.

WillinmRPort aud lAick Haven A A l. Ba'diniove. Washinploii and tho South "iiimlted Wash inpton Express" of Pullman Parlor Cars daily, except Sund iy. A. AL urnvu Wa shinsum 4 P.

M. Roku lavai and 1. 1 and IU P. M. Sunday 10 Kiun for Wiwt Piiiladnlphil, 4 7 9 (10 Lim.

itwl I' 4. 4:10, fl, 0, 7:30, 8 and P. tid I' i nuilil. Suud ty and i A. pi P.

SL. and I2nitfht. Kir.iKrant and eoconq cli'it, 7 P. Eipr. to: PiuhdtJyhia via Oatndcn, 7.

3U A. oxcapt 3oatH nVT' Brooklyn Annor" connect with all through trains at a apoody aud direct tran slortor RttK.kiyn travol. 4 Aci. otif.uod O.ion for renton, 2 and 4 P. M.

Nt vrk lj :0. 7 7 10,11 A.M., 12 1, 1 :10. 2, ((. 4, 4 10. 4:50, 5:10, 5 0:10.

7,7 ski, rt. 11 :30 P.M. Sunday A. r. I Eli7.abeth same yi Newark, oxceptinj tho 7 A.

BL and 8 P.M. train. Rahw.iy same na Newark, excopthitf tho 7: JMiiud A. Al and 8 M. trains.

Sunday A.M., .1 (i mid 7 r. Prrth Afiibmad South Amboy, GandlO fit 1 4 and (i P.M. New it and HA 2, ji. 4. AM, 7 an P.

M. Sunday, i A P. Knat oiip', a.i i 11 A.M. and 4 SW P. M.

KinRftt on and Ftocky A. P. Princeton 11 A 1 7 U'. 1 Ambertv.lle, 7 A. M.

1,4 l'leminjitoD, 7 A. M. and 4 P. M. Phil Jip burs Bttlvidtire.

A. M. and 4 and 3T.il Trenton. JJ rt don town, Burlington and Cnindm, 4 8 Jii.mil 11 A. 4.4:40 M.

Freehold. 7 and 1 1 A. a and 4:4) P. M. Farmmgoale and Kquaii.

7 11 A. M. and 2 P. M. Hinhttown, Pent bit.

ton and Oam'bMi, 4 P. vi: Monmouth Junction. On Tut sd i. Thursdays and A. Trains armo Froin PitUburp.

JXi. 10:10 A. Kl P. Al 7 A. M.

and P. daily, except Mon rJav. From Washington and Baltimore, A. M.t 'A 4 2. Al.

Sunday, A M. From Phda delphia. ll XA), 0.9:40, 10:40, 11 :) A. 4 4 8:30 and 10:10 M. Sunday, 3 50 liV I A.

Tie.ki oiticos, r2ti and 014 Broadway, 1 Aator Houbq and foot of Desbrosaoa and Oourtlaudt Bis; No. 4 Court st. and Brooklyn Annex Dupul. foot of Fulton si, Brooklyn; Noa and 11H Hudson Bt, Hoboken depot, Jersey Vity. Emigrant Tiokut Office, No.

8. Battery nlaco. The Nuw Ytirk Transfnr Company will call for and chuck liacCHite from hotols and residenoe; Offi No. 4 Court FRANK THOMSON, P. FARMER, (ieu; al General PahaouKor Atjwnt.

TIM PHTTiADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. THE OLD ESTABLISHED ROUTE AND SHOUT LINK BBTWBKM NEW YOEK AND PHILADKLPHIA. li through train each way daily depots in Philadelphia; I in Now York. Double Iri'Ck. the at improved enuinnient and the fasted tune conautent with abaoluto a.itety.

ON AND AFTER. JANUARY lf. 1Htd irxi Tumkh leao Now York, via Desbro3se.i and Courtlaudtst ferries, as follows 4 Ml. UX fUUtl limited). 1 ff) A.

1 00 3 4:40. 5:00, 8:30 and 10:00 P. ifi.t ii ht. 5.W. and 10KK) P.

siH 1 nitit. AN ExfiiKSH tiain leaves New York dally, exceot Sunday, at 7:30 A. runninic through via Trenton and Camden. Boats of "Brooklyn Annex" connect with all through trains at Jersey City, afFording a peedy and direct transfer for F.rooklvn travol. ii'i ffifui vitAisa Jeavo Philjin)nbA 1 5 OI A 'l'X J5 and II :00 A.

M. (limited express 1 'HO P. 7:00 nod P. al. )u Sunday, 12:013:20, K.

00. A. 4:0 7:: 'P. M. Leave PlulKdnlphia via Camden 3:50 P.

daily. f.jcPt Sunday. Ticket otlicG, fc1' and 044 Broidway, No. 1 Ahtnr Houbo and foot of IVmbrrmes nnd Corttandt Btn ets; No. 4 Court itntf Itiooklyn Annex depot, foot of Fulton street, BrcKklf.

JVos, 114, I ant) li Jiudwwi street, Hoboken; Jersoy City. KmiK'rant ticket offico, No. 8 Battery VKAN It THtPM nlOMSON. L. P.

FARMER, General Paeui er Agent, General Manauor. CENTRAL RAILROAD OP NEW JER SKY Ferry station in Now York, toot of Liberty at Ferry station in Brooklyn, foot of Knlton st, Jewell's Wharf. (Amiinonoinj: OoloberB, 1871), IBaroNer. York, foot oi Liberty al, as follows: A. M.

For Flomiiir Iiaalon, Bnthle. hem. Bath. Allentown. Mauc'o Chunk, l.maaua.

M.hano, City. Har.atan. vv ilkesbarre. Klmira. Ac Connect at Juno lion with and Wostorn R.

R. 8:15 A. M. I'or High Bridge Branch, Sehooley'a Mountain, BuddV, lik'i anil Lake Ilopatcong, Kaston, Aiionlown, llarrisburg and the Weat, Mancb Chunk, Tamaqua, Wilke. barre, Scr.ir.

ou. Danville, Wiliiainsport, Ac. For Somervills and Floinington. 1 P. M.

For Flomlnxton, Kaaton, Bath, Allontown, Ma Jch Chunk, lama.pia, Mahanoy City, llazleton, Tunk banno' k. Wilkesbrrre, Reading, Columbia, lian. caster. Kphrata. Pottsville, llarrisburg.

Ac. 4. mi P. M. For High Bridge Branch Kclioolay's Mount, ain, Budd'a Iiko and Lako Ilopatcong Kaaton, Belvidera, Allentown nnd Mauch Chunk.

4 :30 P. M. and Flpmington. r. :) P.

M. Daily, for F.aston. Allentown. Mauch Chunk, Klmira, Reading, llarrisburg i nd tho West. ConneuUlit il inction for Lack, and Western R.

R. p. M. For Easton For Kli7.al.etl. 0:15.

0: 'jSPI' 10:30. 10:45, .15,11 .45 A. 12:45. 1 KX), 1 :30, i 34111. 3 30, 3 '4 4 :15, 4:30, 4 :45, 5 Eifl, 5 U( O0j 6 7J0, 7:13, 7:45.

ivj at' A 12. (y) P. M. for Bound Urook and intennediate i.t. ltions: at 5:30 P.

M. forEaston, AllwiU.wu, llarrisburg and.thu West. lot Newark, at 5 0:15. 8 7:1 7:45, 10 AS A. 12 1, 3C, 4,4:30, r'.

II. 12 P. M. lur trains to local tiolnts sUtions. Bontsof t'nu 'Brooklyn and Erie Annex" roako connec 'ens at J' ni Uity btHtion and from Brooklyn and Erie J't pot.

Jersey City, lloats leave Jewell's Wharf, foot ot Fliltonst.V::!!),::). ii 111, 10 ::10, 11 A. 3, 3iln. 1:30.5, 7,8,0, l' M. :Kuiirtay.8 .2 A.

M. 13P. M. VW YORK AND LONG BRANCH 1,01 lor Red mk, 4t' 145 i' ini frm kkyport MaIAWAN SIAIION; to and irom Oroanio and lf At "hL SlIU lmm P1 1" t' So lRKKHOLD AND NUW YOUK UAI TWTEW JKKSRY HOUTHERN RAILWAY, i JC" wt LiimrtT o. R.

U. of N.J. a''' omS Ri r' Bearcat aai 1 P. I'or Toinj Rlvor, VlnalanrL at.tlrmi.i B.ySidoAND I'OR ATLANTIO OITV "'1 4 00 P. I'or Toiita River.

Baxnegat luckitrtooR R. aod PhiUuelolua. KW YORK AND PHILADKLPHIA" NKW LINK. Hnnov uf Mtn.u. 1 OR TRKNTON ANJJ PHILADKLPHIA.

r.i 1. Yr.rlt fium alAliar, It LilKrtj Bt. for Phil.dcluhirt Kor atatiou wmerN.ntll and OreonosK at 7 4.1 0 00 For atition corner Tlilrcl and Bnrk sla, at iiu Dttiintex Pullman cars jttf.ol).d. I'or Trenton, Warren nd Tucker nta, 6:30. no 11:1.

A. I 7:15, Yi P.M. On Sun' A. M. P.

M. tui ning Iraina will learo Phllad.lphia for New York: Station Phila. A Reading Rjilrond. corner Ninth nd Orneno nti. at 30 A.

12:10, 1 40j 7:1.0, 12 P. On Bandv lj From Third and Ilerk. (., 4 :30. 7:45,0:20. II A.M.

1 11:10, 0:311, 11:30 P. At, Ou Sunday at 4 :30 P. M. Denotes Pullman can attached. I'rom Trenton, Warren and Tucker 1 :20 (eicept Mon.

day), 8:20. 10: A. M. 12 2:20, 4:15,6:30, 8:10, P. M.

On Sunday, 1 lj A. M. 0:15 P. M. L'onnection ia mado at Jorae, Oily station to and from Brooklyn and Krio depot.

Jfnmy Oily. 'I'lckelaforfpaleat foot Liberty at, Nos. 23D, 241,401,044, D57 Hroaihvav, New York, and at tlio principal hotels Nos. 2 and 4 Oi.urt at. and Annex olnce, Wharf, Brooklyn.

New York Transfer Uo. Dodd'a Kxproas) will call for and cheek lisgifaf from lioUil or rcnirlnn.jo to deatination. Anplication can bu in ido nt 044 Broadway, 73.1 Sixth av, Now York, and 4 Oonrt ht, Brooklyn. ThcKu offices are In Willi tlm Bull Teleulione Law Tnier r.ipli. 11 P.

BALDWIN, (aoaeral Pasaccser Agent. AVEKLY'S THEATKE. CKOOKLYN. roprlotor and Manager Mr. J.

H. HARRLY. WEDNESDAY MATINEE. I EVERY EVENING. SATURDAY MAT1WEH.

Second grand success of the favorites, SAl.HllUItY'ri.... TROUUADOUJtS TROUBADOURS "Nodo know tbem bul to lore them. None iiamo tnem but to praiao." Grand iroduotion of lliair own laughable musical oitrav. HAaLSB'0rVYen1Sed "'ganiitotion by Mr. N.

THE BROOK THE BROOK THU BROOK 0B'aaSbb1 PI01 01 THE BROOK THE BROOK THE BROOK NEXT WEteK, engagomenti of the Favorite Aotresn, FANNY DAVENPORT, Supported by a superior oompsDy.irt several of herstronsest Plays. ACADEMY OF MUSKX HER MAJKSTY'S OPKRA COMPANY. EXTRA GALA NIGHT Prior to tl)edonrtureof the Companr to Europe. Will be With she following ca'sC: Saou! di NangiJ, Swnor CAMPAMNI: II Conto di Netera, Sicnor DEL II Cnnte di San Bris, Signer GAXA.SSI; Meru, Siraor MONTI; Marcello fiorr BEHRENS; Marnnenta di Valnis, Mile: MARIE MARL MON; Urbano Miw ANNIE LOUISF.OAvRV; and Valen tlna. Madame EMII.fE AJIBRE.

Tlie incidental divnrtissonjmit will benuunorled by Mile. ADELAIDE MONTI and Mile. CAROLINE MONTI aud the Gotps do Ballet. Director of the Music and Conductor. Signer ARDTn.

Prices, parquet ana balcony, i8 ilress circle, tir i fam tl lr.wurL.lt). Al! fat3i ir, ...11 rj, general Mduiission, Seats now on sale at CHAND i si. BKOOKLYN ACADEMY FltKNOil aPHRA. POPULAR POPULAR PRICES. TWO NIGHTS VLY AND SATURDAY afA.TLKK.

'anuvell Appearances of Mr. MAURICK GRAU'S Glfr.AT FRENCH OPERA COMPANY, Incliubm. MLLK. PAOLA MARIE, MI.I.I. LRROUX HOUYARD.

MULE. ANGELBAND M. CAFOUL. THURSDAY EVENING. April Firnl time in fllunv Year.H.

of Oil LA BELLE HKf.F.NE. MLLH. PAOLA MAllIE (Hrat tiino) as HELENF. MLLK. ANGELIi (lirit tiuio) as ORESTES SATURDAY AFTERNOON, April 10.

IIRAhil GALA Producod vtth the following Pbecomcnal Cast: MIGNON PHILINK LAI5RTK Mile. PAOLA MARIR SIHe. LUKOIX HOUVAItD Mile. ANGELH M. JOLARD JUTI5AU" Ann M.

OAPOUL (his original orewion) W1LHELM MEISTBR SATURDAY EVENING, April Hi, FAREWELL NIGHT Fir.t I'n'tluction in Brooklyn of AND MILITARY OPE 'RA; LA PBTIT DUG (Tho Little Duke). MUo. PAOLA MaRIK (first time) as PETIT DUO POPULAR PRICES. POPULAR PRICES. Dress Circle, reserved, 81 Panitietto and Balcony, reserved, i Admission, 81 Family Cirole, OUc.

Boxes to bold II people. 9V2 Saieof (tal comuieiicaj MONDAV, April .1. at tbrj Aofid emynud RULLMAN'S, HI Broailway, N. Y. "BIJJJILEE SIKGKKS, THE ORIGINALS OIM' fSK UNIVERSITY, WillKivea GRAND CONCERT IN HANSON PLACE BAPTIST CHURCH, ON TIUIISDAY KVUNNG.

April a Tickets fit) w.th rea rveil snata. I Jsst side at Ohand ler's. 172 st. Wost fcido at. Perkins', corner of Greene av.

and Cumberland st. KOOKLYN ATHLETIC! CLUB AND THIRTEENTH RliGIMUNT. BURLKSQUK l'OLO. 8A0K RACES. TUGS OF WAR.

GYMNASTICS. HORIZONTAL BARS, SACK HURDLE RACE, Ao. FUN A LIVE AT THIRTEENTH REGIMENT ARMORY. Csrnor FLAT BUSH AV. and HANSON PLACE, THURSDAY EVENING.

April 8. Sports boitin at 8 P. M. Dancing at MUSIC BY DODWORTH'S THIRTEENTH REGIMENT STRING ORCHESTRA. TICKETS FIFTY CUNTS.

Itosorved seals may he Lecured on application to the armorer. 'jvt OB'TfiiFi 'o i.iFa SiT a eM)Y6vtub RELIEF ASSOCIATION. ENTERTAINMENT HY THE INFANT CLASS, 'ooslstiiiu of Tnble'iux, Recitations, In PETER'S P. E. SUNDAY SCHOOL BUILDING, STA TIC STREET, near BOND.

THURSDAY EVENING, April 8, IW), at 7 o'clock. TICKETS CENTS. Should the weather prove stormy, postponed untii next evening, April P. CKAND KKOPENLNU, Jf OF THn HOOKI.YN 1TMK MVSKVM. THIS EVENING at 7 o'clock.

An entire new Company, under new MannRemont. JThree performnuces doily I 8 P. M. rjMlB BROOKLYN TKUST COMPANY, Corner and Clintomts, Brooklyn, N. Y.

This Company is authorized by special charter to nt at receiver, trustee or guardian, eiocutor or administrator. It can act as in the sale or management of r6al fste. coiluct mfcerest or dividenda. ruceivo registry nnd trans ierliooks, or make purchase and sale of Government ani other Becantifts. Religions and enaritable institntionn, and persons unao.

to the lrauaactions of businias, will nud this Company a safe and convenient dupmitnry for money. RIPLUY ROPES, President. CHAS. R. MARVIN.

Vicet'reaidom. BTjlfKRii, Secretary. KLUiJlM GounseL Wm. R. Kenlan, K.

Pierropont, Dnn'lOhaunoey, JohnT. Martin, Henry K. Sheldon, JoslabO. Low, John P. Rolfo, HenrySauaer, Alex.

M. White, Austm Corhin, CI bs. It. Marvin, Alex. MoOuo, Thomas Sullivan.

Ahm. B. Baylu, A. A. Low.

Kdiuund W. Corlinsltiplei Ruues LOANS. LOAN ANY SUM FROM $1,000 ti $. on rortl estate; mndernto charco for soarcil AHji.y to f.AK. attorney and ooun 411 Coillt St.

loan $500; riTio i $nxr lj, tJ0UU. A7. I. A7.IMHI. r2.l) l.

I5.iiiii). nnd on bnud and mortgato, nt tl per out also nr, lYKt to bo divined to suit. Apply to WILLIAM BRIDGE, No. lit WillouglibyHt, nearC.ty Hall. "02,500 TO LOAN, IN WHOLE OK RT, vfn upon bond and mortgage.

Address WILDER, Box 17 EapJe office. SAVI.WS RANKS. JIME SAVINGS HANK OK BROOKLYN. U07 and 309 Fulton St. Brooklyn, Dncomber 17, 1870.

The Trustees of this b.mk have dirocled on the first day of January, interest ut the rate of MVK PUR CENT, per nnniitn for the six months ending Decombor I87U, he carried to tho croditof all depositors entitled thereto, payahlo on and after January l.i, IHKn. All interest, wlien declared, is carried at oni. to tho credit of each do positor on thu books of tho bank, where it stands exactly us a deposit, and is entitled to inturcHt the shuio as a deposit of cash. SEYMOUR HUSTHD. President.

W. HuNTEn. Treasurer. IIkn j. H.

HuNTlNttTON. Secretary. INSUnAMCfc. MONTAUit EIRE INSURANCE CO." OF BROOKLYN. (No.

Court Brooklyn. Olnces No. 120 Brondway, ground floor, Eytiitablc BuildiuKa, N. Y. GASH CAPITAL .8200.000 RESERVE FOR REINSURANCE, UNPAID LOSSItS, P.TO r.2J12:l SET HUKKiS TOTAL .853.720 DIRECTORS: F.

Feniaij, John J. Alfred Hannberg, Jacob Philip. Seymour L. Husted. James Raymond, G.

C. Halsted, Rufiui Rsssoguio, Wm. M. Ingraham. Warren Richmond, David R.

Amott, Ezra Baldwin, Edwin Beers, Ge'i. AV. Bergen, Giiarles O. Bette, Samuel Booth. W.

Burtis. John W. l.ivi. jjetria, i'ijt Kobbins, John Rome, Edmund Titus, Win. M.

Thomas. Goorge A. Thorna, EdwardD. White, J. O.Whitehouse, K.

J. Whitlook, John WiHtam.1 J. W. Oampboil, Steph'n Linington, John L'cmtKtoek, II. F.

Dolnno, Wm. T. Donyse, John II. Dimon. James Knton, David J.

Evans. Abraham Latt. A. LOW, T. A.

Newmr.n, Foster Pcttit, D. B. Powell, John M. Pholns, Wm. Agents for Eastern Difitrlnk.

Alex. OLiiuweil. Joseph D. Willis. AVERY A PENDLETON, Bruadway.

corner Kourthab. Will. KLLSH'OR'fH, PreaidenU Geo. G. TrtASK.

Seoretary. MECHANICS' FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. BROOKLYN, al al50.n00.CKJ Reinsurance 48,708.20 Net surplus 184,244.20 Assets $382.0.12.48 217 Montague st. Mechanics' Building, Brooklyn, and 1(15 Broadway. Ne.v York.

JOHN H. BAKER, President. DANIEL OHAUNCKY, VicProalt. WAt.TKU KICHOLB, Seoretliry. MKnnirr Tuttlk Assistant Secretary.

nLLIAJVlSIiURGHCITY TT FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. 20S and 210 Broadway, cor, Fulton at, Y. Offices Cor. Broadway and First at Br.ioklyu, B. D.

82 450.3 Ui.HJ Reinsurance. Ao. Net surplua Asseis January I' DMUND DiilGGS, President N. W. MKBKnoi.tt, F.

IL W.AY. ABsistunt Secretary. Wm. H. Bnows.

Assistant Secretary. sato.7crt.4t QERMAN AMERICAN INSURANCE CO. No. 40 COURT STREET. CASH CAPITAL RESERVE FOR REINSURANCE, MUT SURPLUS 875,0011.

lt ASSETS January 1, lg. OFJJIERMANN, ProsuSont. JOHN W. MURRAY. Vice PrealdenU JAMES A.

SlLYItY, Secretary. EDWARD MHRR1TT, Managor Brooklyn Departtnonu ffTNA INSURANCE COMPANyT JJPJ HARTr ORD. AGGREGATE AMOUNT OF ASSETS. $7,110,624.43 1UIA1, r.Ar,r vaiian Anu SURPLUS JOINT S7'OUK CAPITAL PAID UP. SURPLUS BEYOND ALL 2,170.388.21 Total $7 1 15 (f'4 42 B.

THORN, AgonViaa Montaguest. I3HENIX INSUKANCE OOMPAMY OF BROOKLYN. Y. JANUARY RESERVE FOR RHINSURANOR S8GP.0II.ra RESERVE FOR ALL UNPAID LOSS CLAIMS 132,087.39 ALL OTHER LIABILITIES CAPITAL STOOK IN UNITED STATUS BONDS 1,000,000.00 NET SURPLUS .121,110.79 CASH ASSETS. JANUARY 1, 18X0 svirc.nourU 'The assets of tho Phenix are larger than thoso of any other Broklyn Company, and it continues to insure again.s loss or damage by ire or against Inland and Ocean Marin.

Losses on the most favorable terms. OFFICES: NOS. 12 AND 14 COURT STREET BROOKLYN, NO. B8 BROADWAY, BROOKLYN, B.D. And in the Oily of Now York, WESTERN UNION BUILDIrlO, Broadway, corner Deyat.

STEPHEN OROWKLL, President. PHILANDER SHAW, Ytoe President and Beoretary. Kuwakd HaslkuoiibT. Soo'r ol Brooklyn Department. Ci.AItyoVA!Nl'a.

a Astonishing i "no "imposition JjL Found at lastl Greatest Clairvoyant! Mrs. FOR8 TBR tells everything; n.tnea of yiaitorst one you will marry luoky numbers causes speedy marriages Bucoeeds wheu all others fail. Satisfaction or no nay. 2T.0., No. 1 05 Thirteenth Bt, near Fourth ay, if.

V. City. IE YOU WANT YOUR FUTURB KNOWN OO TO MADAM STILLWEIX. TRUEST FORTUNE TKLLKR LIVING, NO. 358 FULTON STRKKT, Corner ol Red Hooklaoew MADAME HARVEY, LATE OF EAST Now York, carfb.

consulted hy her many friends anr ihlfu upon all the affaira of lifo at 008 Horkimor slft uearUttcn av, feoGO cent. ond SHgenta not admitted; luoky numbers given. mHECELEBRATBD ORIGINAL MA A dame CLIFFORD, greatest living medical bust, nesa clairvoyant aud Beoress, Examines diseaa. personally nnd by hatr; Rifted with second eight, lolls, without questioning lifo trotu too oradlo to tho gre.ve gives nanies. dates, events; nattstactiuu.

rttarautead, No. liu FlatbusQ near I'ultgaat, I WttOOKLYN PAKK THEATRE. AiMHS RESORT OF THE FOR BIX. NIGHTS AND SATURDAY AFTERNOON; MR. J.

K. MM AIM MMMM 1 MM MM jc.f.h F.B una TTTTT EEIf 11 And his own EllAMATIO COMPANY, in bis New Drama 6 0 3 0 O'O oooonoooooo FRIT 2 IN IRELAND, DdODOao O'O oooooo co oooooooooooo Of, Tho Bell Rlna rafihoRhinsandthBLoveof Sbamrock. The scenery of FRlTZ IN IRRLAND is magnificent, ueir arm frnieinai misic ov air. Thn urn rillWn.iliM plijw, WOLFHRT'S RODSTand COL. his great ai utv.ts ana niu.

HT PRICES AS USUAL. XfifBILEE SINftWRSS JUBILBK 8INGKRJ5 JUBILKB SINGERS' JUBILEH SINGERH JUBILEB SINGERS' AT HANSON PLACE BAPTIST OHtTRC'H, HANSON 1'LAOK DAPflST OHUROH, HANSON PLACE BAPTIST CHURCH, KANSON PLACE BAPTIST CHURCH, TO MOJIROW NItiHT. XtH INST. TO MORROW NIGHT. 8xh INST.

TO MORROW NIGHT, INST. TO MORROW NIGnT, 8XH INST, DON'T FAIL TO HEAR THEM. DONT FAIL TO HEAR THEM. DON'T FAIL TO HEAR THEM, DONT FAIL TO HEAR THEM; Reserved seats .10 cetitt TTefcots at Chandler's and Porkins': BROOKLYN ATHENEUM. THURSDAY EVENING7; April 8.

At o'clock, Dramatic, Pootio and Humorous Readings, by Mr. BURT MEAFOY, Assistod by Madame LASAR. Bopi am; Mr. NAVARRO, Mr. CASWELL, pianists, and the Eclectic Glee Olub.

Admi'shimi cents. No reserved seats. Tickets to he had of Mr. Chandler, 1 72 Montague st. 871IRST BAPTIST CHURCH, 1 In JMHRRKKMSX ST, cor.

aid of Oman fund of new church. WEDNESDAY, April 7, 1880, DRAMATIC READINGS AND COSTUME RE01TA1.S, Mrs. MATT1E 11A1.0H and othors. WEDNESDAY, April 21. 188il, CHARLES ROBERTS, Jjt Reader, nnd dtherfl.

TICICIC'IU for course, CENTS. To ho had at Pylons dnig store. Perkins', Greene ar, Anderson's iiiit.sie store, yo l'u)ton st, and at tlie door. CI EN ERA TC Mi'HI MT WIFE AND ENTIRE TROUPE. AND MANY ENTIHELV NEW FEATURES, AT 421F1I1.T()N A VENIIK 121 DOORS CONST INTLY OPEN I' ltD.M 12 TO 10 ADMISSION TO ALL, ONLY ONE DIME.

WENTY SBVENTH ANN UAL EXHIBITION SOIREE OF irMITC ITIIU uovi llllllttC At their Now Dancing Academy, NOVELTY BUILDING, en Fulton Bt, opp. Flatbueh av, WEDNESDAY EVENING, April 7, 18SU. Tickets (admitting uno). 'Mo. gINGIN' SKEWL AND BRIO A BRAO, TO NIGHT, A Ii SATURDAY MATINEE.

Admission, 2.1c. Reserved Boats. oOo. UNNELL'S MUSEUM. UNABATED SUCCESS.

HEW ATTRACTIONS. LARGER AND BETTER THAN EVEli SEEN BEFORE. LA ON E. ADMISSION. 10 CENTS.

325 WASHINGTON ST. neat door to Post Office. GRAND CONCERT BY MARIE SELIKA. Assisted by the Star Voi alist' of Brooklyn and New York, at tho Bridge st. A.

M. It. Church, on WEDNESDAY, April 7, 188.1. cents. Indorsed by MAX STKA KOSOH.

A1 DELPHI ACADEMY. DRAMATIC READINGS BY MR. W. W. DAVIS, THURSDAY EVENING, April 8, Admission Twenty live cent.4.

SHOW BILLS, PROGRAM MRS, COUPON TICKETS. A large stock of W00D0UTR. auitable for THEATRICAL and MINSTREL TROUPES. COLORED I OSTER WORK. A SPECIALTY.

BROOKLYN EAGLE JOB PRINTING OFFICE. DR. HEBBARD'S LECTURES Are transferred from the CENTRAL CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, To STYLES' HALL, cor. Fulton st. and Bedford av.

WEDNESDAY "kVENINIS, April 7, And Conttnuo Every Evening. ADMISSI(Mt. CENTS. PRIVATE LECTURES, 2.1 CENTS. Dr.

HEBBARD'S ROOMS, 173 HICKS ST. LOT'S IS IHS. OUISIAN A STATE, DRAWS APRIL 13. CAPITALS, $10.00 1, $5,000. TICKETS.

2: HALVES. $1. "LITTLE HAVANA." "LITTLE HAVANA." Decided bit Rnynl Havana Extraordinary, April 13. VtJJia BALLOTS. 722 l'KIZKS.

TICKETS, Olio. Communications relntiu to above can ho loft until 10 P. M. daily, at DAVIS' jewelry store, 183X Fu tin st, or KAY'S shoa htore. 83 Fifth av.

Brooklyn. Our drop boxeB will be fuund convenience. Address or apply to AI ILl.l'.lt 74 Maiden lane, or lllii Chatham st. Now York City. Open evening until 0 o'clock.

INSTKUC'rioi. ESSONS ALL THE YEAR ROUND, JLi day and cvoning, at BROWNE'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, 20 years estublishe.1, 301 Fulton st, opposite John son; vacations optional inaivKlual instruction specialties, handwriting, arithmetic, correspondence special teachers for backward scholars; also, shorthand, telegraphy, typo sotting, Au. a few private dosks for ladies or gentle EM OVAL OF PROFESSOR O. H. CARPENTER'S REPARATORY CLASS FOR PGLYTKI J1INIO INSTITUTE AND ADELPHI ACADEMY, Tn MUSIC HALL, junction of Fulton at, and Flatbilsh av.

Boys. 7 to 15 yoars of ago, $12 to $15 per Quarter (oi 10 ICE CKEAM, EN HAM'S DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DKNIIAM'S DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD 10 CUB AM DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD DDDDD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 280 FULTON STREET. DDDDD DDDDD I DDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDOrDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDD DDI) DD DDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDD LEGAL NOTICES. SUPREME COURT.

KINGS COUNTY John J. Townsend and Willntt llronson, trust, ma nndor the laat will and testament of lanac linuvwm, do CuiiMod, against Patrick Carlin aud John C. Drake. In purauande of a judgment ot thin court, nmdo in thft above entitled action, dated March 2U, 1H80, I will noil at public auction, by Jacob Cole, auctionrer, at tho Cniunmrcia) Kx chango Salesroom, No. 38 Fulton street, in tho City of Brooklyn, on tho Lth day of April.

at 1 o'clock, noon, the following des. rihud lands and premises: All that cortnin lot of land, with tho building thoroon erected, Hituate, lying and 1umk in tho Twelfth Ward of the City of Brooklyn, in tho County of Kinga and titntoof Now York, boundod and described an follows: Beginning on the north westerly aide of Clinton atroet at a point eiity feet northerly from tho corner foniuul hy tho intersect ion of the said northwesterly side ot Clinton streot aud the northerly side of Luqueer atroot; thence running in a northwest erly direction and at right anglos with Clinton street, ao? entyfeet; thence running in a northeasterly direction and parallel with Clinton fltoot, twenty, thence running in a southeasterly direction and at right angles with Clinton street, seventy feotl to said northwestarly aldo of Clinton and thenco in a southwesterly direction and along said northwesterly side of Clinton tstruot, twenty feet, to tne point or placo of beginning, with tho anpurten.mcos; buinjr a portion of the premises conreyod to the said Patrick Carlin by William Griawold by deed datod on or aboat Novom. hero, 1874, Datod March 24, 1880. EDGAR S. SOHIEFFELIN.

Reforeo, James Stxkehan, Plaintlffa' Attorney, 70 Wall st, Now York City. mh24 3wWH (BOUNTY COURT. COUNTY OF KTNGS Stephen L. Vanderveer against John H. Bond, nt al.

A J. 7i. LOTT, plaintifTs attorneys In pursuance of a judgment of this oourt.inado in the above entitled aotton, bearing date the 27th day of March, 1K8 the following dosorihed lands and premises will be sold at public auction, at the Commercial Kxcuauge, nt No. 38i) Fulton street. tho City of Brooklyn, on the let day of May, last), at 12 o'clook, noon, by or under the direction of the undersigned, who wra hy said judgment appoiutcd a roforee for that, purpose, All that certain lot, piece or parcel of 1 nd situate, lying and being in the Twonty tirst Ward of the City of Brooklyn, boundod and described aa follows, to wit: Ittviin.

ning at a on the northerly side of Myrtle avenue, distant four hundred aud forty (4401 feet easterly from the northeasterly corner of Yates and Myrtle avenues; thence running northerly, parallel with YatPS avenue and through the centre of Rnarty wall, one hundred KW) feet; thenco easterly, paralJS with Myrtle avenue, twenty (211) font; thence southerly, parallel with Yates avenue and through the centro of a party wall, one hundred (100) feet to Myrtle avenue, and thonce westorly along Myrtle avenue, twenty (2'0 loot tu tho point or place ol beginning. Together with all and Bingular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances then unto belonging or in anywise appertaining. Dated Brooklyn, April 7, 1880. a7 3wWAB JOHN A. LOTT, Jn Referee.

SPEC! I A NOTICES. GWM. STRONG, MAGNETIC PHYSICIAN, DR. SCOTT'S OLD OFFICE, NO. 123 SOHERMKRHORN STREET.

The poor liberally considered. mHE ADULTERATION OF SOAPS. IMPORTANT CORRESPONDENOa New Yobk, law Dr. A. N.

Bell, Editor of tho Sanitarian: Dear Sik I have for a long timo been reader of tho Sanitarian, and have reoeiveu much valuable information from its pages. It is. I know, extensively read by the thinking portion of the community, who look to it and to what you naveto aay hearing upon the health or the peoplo as the tho highest authority. Hence I take the liborty of inviting your attention to a aubject which I believe is Btrictly within the soopo of sanitary inquiry, as well as of great interest to tho people in ite economic aspects. I refer to soap, in the martufaoture of whioh I am largely engaged, and I conscientiously believe that the aoap of my make Is the best and cheapest, bocauso it is well made and strictly fVfiK, and therefore freo from tho dangers and defects common to a large amount of various.

mages constantly on tho mar And a chief object I have in writing this letter is to elicit from you not only an express.ion.of opinion in regard to tho injurious effects of impure soap, but if possible to expose the frauds foisted upon the public by making tuein easy of detection. Tours, very truly, WILLIAM JOHNSON, Patentee and manufacturer of the Borax Soap, 55 Atlantio avenue, Brooklyn. Y. N. Aa iv further testimony of the purity of tho BORAX SOAP, tho following is from the pen of A.

N. Bell, M. editor of The Sanitarian, and organ of the Medico Legal Society, In tho Jiins numner, 1877, page 281 "In answer to an inquiry vro have roaoivod in regard to JOHNSON'S PATENT BORAX SOAP, we have no hesitation in replyiug that if) Is the befit soap wo hare ever ttflsd, axtd from an examination we have made of it wo are satisfied that It is all that It purport, to be. a pure soap, made of oleari tallow, borax and ammonia. It naa no Irritatinffqual itfes or deatruetivo ingredients, and is therefore alilce excel Ientfor both toilet and laundry.

jRhEAPEBT BOOK STORE WORLD, new and old standard works in every department, of Htoritiir'e. Almost gWon'itway. Catalogue of general literature and fiction free. Immense Inducements to book, olnba and libraries. LKGOAV BROTHERS, 3 Beekuun, st, opposite Post Office, ff.

Y. ISS LEE FULLER, DEALER IN MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. 87 Fultoni at. is fn shirts rlanndered). Wamsutta muslin, four nlv linen bosoms, warranted, at 05 cents.

Evory ono not found tone or not toumv as representee may reiurnou ana tha money te funded. SWILL PAY 100 PER CENT. MORE than any other doaler in the world for left off olothing. dies' suit), from $5 to fiioo ebavls, $3 to $o0; gentlemen', overooate, $3 to $25; suits, S' to 420; coats and rests, S3 to pants, $1 to 8 10, Mrs. 0AM KRON, agent, 85 Sands street.

HAT "CINDERELLA" ACCOM pllshod by moanB merely of lovely foot. Wo oro not surprised that ladioa Bhould nttnoh bo much importano. to an exact, fitting boot. Parties having ory slim or unusually wldo feet will please remember that, at FINCH'S, troublo on that acoro may bo aa wo koep thirteen wtotus, anu in regara to quality, eioganoo oi nt. auraumty, and acouraoy of style, are universally admitted to be tlie neBt anu ouoapest tn tne oily.

t'Toi F1NOH, 016 Fulton. corp.gr oi Quid, no. FHKD, MM MM MMMM MM If MM If ALLEK MOSORLEr. AV A A A AAA KittlSE RRRR IS BR. ww ww I.

It RRRR KB WW WW A A wv VW A VV vv A A LCLLL LLLLL ICUUtf ANI MM MM 00' 8SR 00 RRR MM MMOOS HOOK RL MM OR It I. MM MMOOS OORRL MM 00 BBS RRR KB MMMM SOORRL MM BOOR MM OR BSS 00 KLLLltKH YY 1 245 GRAND STREET, NEAR BOWERY, N. Y. 00 0 0 OOOO OO ooooooooo BARGAINS. ooooooooo o'o'o ooooooo PERCALES and CAMBRICS, beautiful new styles, finest Quality, 1,500 lengths, from 10 to 18 yards, at and 15o.

worth 30c. por yard. 800 REMNANTS TABLE LIKENS, medium to finest quality, at nanr i j.lj.' 'ru. WAMSUTTA MUSLIN, 12J0. BLEACHED SHEETINGS, full width, EXTRA quality, 25c.

por yard. FLANNELS, good quality, COTTON nnd WOOL. 100. better trades riiitinararivelv r. iiuwruruu Hij uuurtxrciu aize, too.

eacn. TOWKIJL lurio size. 10c. eaon. MARSEILLES OIJILTS.

full iz IJILTS. full sir.e. S1.25 each. GOTTA Of? CURTAIN DRAPERY. HtyiTIWI'llAM LACK, 120.

por yard and upward. HOOODODODOOOOOO DRESS GOODS, OOOOOOOOOOOO OOO' Ml the most clestrablo fabrics in nrjirshade and novel ties. satins and bILKb in novolties and all shades and oolont. LADIES' SUITS, Blulf and silk, boautifnl new stylos. 45 eiAKHMKHK and BROCADE COMBINATION SUITS.

$12: worth 320. i.AIAlf VVALK itVl, JAI KKia. at S1.70. S4 to 8H wort twice tho tirice. uuijrriAiv i ana mtisai o.

flw uestaas. Special bargains. oooooo OOOO 00 OOOO 0 0' MOtliNING GOODS. o' OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 50 piece CAS IIMEKE, all wool, 40 inchoR lSc; AI.LT.'IK NEW FABRICS IN BLACK GOODS. 40 ENGLISH CASHMERE, beautiful black.

It 34 inches wide, MUM IK. uud ckafk Cl.u I'HS. 2(lc. and up. LADIES' UNDERWEAR HOSIERY.

GLOVES. WHITE GOODS. UOUtiKUKF.PlSt! DRY OOODS. Ac Cue lot IDIKS' MUSLIN C11EMISK. SKUCCS nruJ DRAWERS at quarter value.

or. oooooooooooo. i oooooo WALLER MOSORLF.Y, 0090000000 0 0000 OOOOOOO 145 GRAND STREET, NKaITbO WKRY. NKWY0H3C RHOLD, CONSTARLE OO. UPHOLSTERY THIS FINEST STOCK OF SPRING NOVELTIES' IN THU CITY OF FURNITURE COVERINGS, DRAPERIES, LACE AND NOTTINGHAM CURTAINS, ANTIQUE AND GUIPURE.

D'ART. BEDSPREADS AND SHAMS, ALSO, HOLLAND AND GOLD BORDERED WINDOW SHADES, ETO. BROADWAY AND NINETEENTH STREET, NEW YORK. itfEUlCAIi. R.

WM. HALL'S BALSAM. HALL'S II A )I II AA 1I1IHH A A I. II 11 AAA It HA A LLLL LLLL BALSAM ron Tin LUNGS, HALL'S I BALSAM I FOlt TDK LUNGS. nALL'S i BALSAM I FOH TIIK sssa BSSS BP.n BBB BBB A AA A A SSS, SSS, MM MM MM AA A A AAA A A LLLL AAA MM 'SS' A At FOR THI LUNGS i jjuaua.

IDR.W. HALL'S BALSAM cures CniiKiimn. HALL'S it ion. Colds. Pnenniiur.a.

Ilronchitis, astli BALSAM Catarrh, Smithes, tnlliienza, Bnuiehial 'OH TUB Dilnculties. llnaraeness, Cnmp, Wtiooiiing LUNGS. Gouh and all diseases of this Hro jllting Organs. ftHootheiand lioalsthu HALL'S of the Lungs, intlumod and poi: by the BALSAM idieasn, and tho nigluawt'at4i nnd 'Olt TUK Itightnt'ssllcroiiithB chest which accompany LUNGS, lit. CONSUMPTION ii not.

an incurable nnlady. It is only necessary to havo the HALL'S Iricht remedy, nnd HALL'S BALAAM will BALSAM icure yuu, even though profesbional aid fails, LUNGS Head the Claxville, Oneida N.Y..) HALL'S duni! 27. BALSAM InthoNVintorrf IftfiH I was attav 'ked with 'Oic TJfK la mroro citigh, which gr.iduaHy wore on 0 LUNGS, 'until my fritinda claimml I was uo'iuk into 0 nnd 8.nno ono HALL'S thcni udvtHed mo to try some ot your BALSAM Dit. WM. HALL'S HALSA.M FOR TIIK 0 for the :LUNG.S, which I did.

anil iv iho usitof two LUNGS, tiortln waa entirely cured of my tough and regained niy health ontiroly. HALL'S BALSAM FOR TIIK LUNGS, ours very reHpocl iiiuy, v. j. P. J.

DUK.SLKK. 1 Indorsed ly tho Press and pnyHiuaus. 'I'aknn hy thuunantis nnd Pucco.sfuf nlwaya. i i una uu u(i': 'it. ny an iirugg'i: SALVE, THE MOST POWERFUL HEALING OINTMENT AND DISINFECTANT EVER DISCOV ERBD.

HENRY'S Carbolic Salvo heals burns. 0 HENRY'S Carbolic Salve cures sores, Carbolic Salve allayR pain. 0 HENRY'S Carbolic Salvo euro. erupt inns, HENRY'S Carbolic Salvo heals pimples, HENRY'S Carbolic Salvo heals brui'cs. ASK FOR HENRY'S AND TAKE NO OTHER, BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS.

WIIVitKOlt WAGONS. INDSOR WAGONS. MADK ONLY BY BRPWSTHK, 0I Twenty fifth N. "The Spirit of tho Times" says, voluntarily: The Windsor Wagons, with vortical steal plates, raado. by J.

B. BRKWSTKR A 145 Kust Twenty lifth st, leave nothing to desire for thu purpose of the road. They combine the maximum of strength with the minimum of weight, aud all spread of tho axlo is obviated. This wagon commands a higher prico than any other mado, and is a luxury which only tnen.of moans can afford, but to them it is a necessity, because they must have the best. The owners of tho fastest roadatora are not content with any Wfigon for spoeding ercoptone of those made by J.

C. BRKWSTKR CO. BANKKIVTCY NOTICES. UNIT OTICE TO CREDITORS IN BANK RUPTCY in THE rISTRIflT COURT OK THU 'NIT MI) STATKS VOR TIIK RASTKRN niSTUIfir Ut NKW iOKK In tho tnatlvr of JOHN ALEXANDER, bankrupt In bankruptcy Kastern District nf Now York, ss. Notice is hereby eiven that a petition has been Hle.1 said court by John Alexander, in said district, duly declared a bankrupt under tho net oi Congress of Mnrch 1R07, and acta amendatory thereof, for discharge ana certificate thereof from all his debt? aud other olaimH provable under said act, and that tho 17th day of April, lHo, at 1 1 o'clock, A.

at the ofliee of A. M. Cunningham. Register in Bankruptcy, at 8ft Montagus street, in the City of Brooklyn, is asftinned for tne hearing of the same, when and where all creditors who have proved their debts, and other persons in interest, may attend and show cause, if any they havo, why tho prayer of t)w said potitiou vhouM not bo granted. Dated at Brooklyn, on the 5th day of April, ltfSO.

B. LINCOLN BENEDICT, Clerk of the U. S. District Court for tho Kastorn District of New York. IN "pursuance ok an order made by tho Hon.

Henry A. Moore, County Judgo of tho Uouaty Court of Kings County, on tho 'J'lli day of February, 1W, notice ii hereby riven to all creditors and persons having olairas against SAMUKL DAVIS, latnly doing bnsiuoss in the City of Brooklyn, County of Kings, that they are required to present their said claims, with tho vouchers therefor, duly verified to the fiuhacribor, the duly appointed assignee of the said Sumunl Davis, for the benefit of his creditor. at the office of Willnrd S. Plad well, attorney at law. No.

Court, atrent, in tho (Jity of Brooklyn, on or before the 5(h day of May, 1880. Dated Brooklyn. February io, 1880. SAMUEL J. CONNELLY, Astfgnoe.

WirxATtn S. Pladwell, Attorney for Assignee. fe'25 OwW IN PURSUANCE OV AN ORDERMADE hy Hon. Henry A. Mo.ro, Judgd of tho County of Kings, on the 17th day of March.

lrtV, notice is hereby given to all the creditors and pnrsoni having claims against GEORGE PARKER and CHARLES K. MORROW, lately doing business in tho City of Brooklyn. Kings County, under the name of Parker Morrow, that they present their said cLtitnti, with tho vouchers therefor, duly verified to the subscriber, the duly appointed assignee of said Parker A Morrow, at his placo of transacting business, No. 17H Dean utroot, in said City of Brooklyn, on or before tho.rith day of Juno, 18i, mhWtiwW CORNELIUS rORROW.saigneo. COItPOaAXflON NOTICES.

jfHSTRUCTlONS IN "STRRKTfi OR I "KJ NANCE Tho Cnnnc.il nf Mir (Ilf.v nf nr.i.il. lyn do ordain as follows Ttmt section articlo (t, chapter a of the Ordinances be amcnrled so tn to mad as follows "Suction U. No parson shall erect or put up in any street, any post, awning post or railing, ur uny cloth or canvas for an aw nine, except lio pouts and awniug poals, which may bo erected or inserto.1, providod tho same be painted ana mo do I od as may be directed from time to timo by the Aitiy 6r. nnd bu placud only next to aud inside of the curbstone; and urovvdod such awning posts shall be at least sevnn fret high abovo the sidewalk, and except cloth or canvas awnings for posts put up aa heroin provided, and eicept cloth and canvas awmnxs projected from any building where the aaiuo shall not nrojocc into tho ht' eet beyond the distance in this article allowed for protection of platforms or steps into such street; or shall pormit such cloth or canvas awning to hnna loosely down over tho nidowalk or shall hang or place in any street any goods, wares or meruliandlKu, or any articlo what cvor. at a gro itor distance than thiHy ai itiohes in front of the house or store occupied by him, or shall raise or hoist, or permit or sutYor to be raised or hoisted, from any street into any building, loft, store or mom, or lower or permit or suffer to be lowered from nny building, loft, store or room, into any street, any cask, bale, bundle, box, crate, or any goods, wares, merchandise, boards, planks, joists, timber or articlo whatever, by meant of nny rope, pulley, tackle or windlass; or shall plant any tree in "any street, except next to and insido of the curb line of so eh struct, under the penalty of twenty Hve dollar lor naoh offnnso." Adopted in Common Council Marcli 22, ItirfO.

Ten dnys had elapgoa on the fUh day of April, 1880, without tlie same being approved or disapproved by tho Mayor D. McNAMARA, City Cleric, Cixy Cleuk's Office, Beooklvn, April 7, ikh(. I do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the onginsi ordinunco ou til in this omce, and of tho whole ot said original. n7 Ht P. McNAMARA, City Clerk.

DEPARTMENT OP FIRE AND BUTLLV INOS Offlce Board of Oommlsalonore, No. Jay street, Brooklyn, April 1880 The following prop(ils Wereptiblkljr opened and arinonnaedtlds day. for furimh. Ing ono four wheel hoao tender, and repairing and painting four hooV and ladder trucks. FUKNISHINU HUSifi i KNlJK.lv, F.

Spawn, or the sum of $675 K. Levf rich, for the sura of 8700. RKP AIRING AND PAINTING TRUCKS. KB. Lovoriob, at $ftit eaohj $3,3 tH G.

H. Jones, at SWlS A. at 80 each, $3t40; Stitos. at 175 each. SUGH Mclaughlin, OSES J.

WAFER, PHILIP F.BRENNXn. CommifsionBrs of the Department of Fre and Buildings, BPAltTMENT OF CITY WORKS Aitrll 3. 1880 The fnllnurintf nrnnna.ln jrcnublicly ouonou and announced, on AnriTfl, 188(1. for fnrnishinK coul for the imbllo ImildlnitB In tlie Eastern and Western DlBtrioU, for the year 1 H80 EASTEIIN DISTRICT. M.

OaHnoy, al S5.5H no'' ton, His. WHSTKRN DISTRICT. II. IC Boons, nt 4.r,n porlton, lbs. Kolseya A IiiiKlilin, at per ton, Tlionias Olynu, at o.i5 per ton, lO lbs.

FREDERICK 8. MASSKY, H. HAKZARD, JACIOII WORTH, Commissioners of City Works. Altoat L. NOHTHUl', Suuictary.

.3 (it of Lipfe: Its Tbue Gesesib. By II. W. Wright. New York (I.

P. Putnam's S6u, 1KI fifth avenue, Kir. Wright, an able and well known Connecticut journalist har entered the scientific field' with a new theory of life, If that can bo called now whfoli 11 old as tb. Bible itself. In fact, be take, bis life theory from tha Old Testament "genesis," In a passage which ha.

caped tho attention or tha biblical eoholar for mors than two thousand years, although tha Septusglnt, which was translated from the original In tha Third Century before Christ, fully vorlfios his interpretation of the text. His formula of life Is taken from tha olovonth verse of th. flrat chapter of Genesis, In th. words, as translated In tho King James version, "whoe. seed Is in Itself upon earth;" that is, whoso germinal principles of life units' not tho natural seeds of plants or trcos, are in themselves (i.

c. each after Its kind) upon tho earth. This is tho interpretation given by tho writer, aud ho conoluslvoly shows that tho Greek word used iu tho Sopttiagint ha. this precise signification tito same meauing, in fact, as was givon it by the Btofcs (then a prevailing Greek school), when referring to Uio ''germinal Jaws of life in matter." In other words, th. writer takes the logical order, and Insists, that the oak preceded tho acrou, as the hen preceded the egg, and that the oarth is obeying tho divine mandate "to bring forth" Just as Implicitly to day as in the beginning; that thousands of oak forests make their appearance from these vital units whoso pine forest bavo bnou cleared away, or prostrated by tornadots, and that Independoutly of acorns or the presence of neighboring trees from whioh ncornt could possibly bar.

been derived and that the same is true of nearly all th alternations of forest growths now wldoly attracting tho attotitloh of the sclentiflo world. He supplements the statement of the Bible Genesis by tho "necessary incidonce of conditions," as formulated by tho scientists, and thereby obtains a lifo formula into which all the phononleual facts of life fit. In their several iucidences and without exception, in all Infusorial, oryptogamlo and mycolngical forms (fungi), as well as In tho vegetable and animal worlds. Thesa germinal principles of life (vital units), in the oase of alt living organisms, aro, he claims, in tho earth, as tho lilblo Gonesis emphatically declares, and that they severally make their appearance each after its kind and distinctively nono other, whenever and wherever th. necessary environing conditions or "incidences" occur.

And he instances a large number of well known physiological facts, gathered from tho highost Bcieutifio sources, as demonstrating the entire acouracy of this lifo theory, or rather that of the Dtble, as oouoealed undor an unmeaning translation, if we exoept the Sep tuagint, which comes down to us with much higher authority than any of the Hebrew manuscripts now extant. In proof of bis theory, ho presents an array of physiological facts, many of them familiar to tho general roador, which would seam to bo entirely conclusive of his position, such as the appearanco of white clover ou our Western prairies, of flro weed in burnt of stramonium In coal pit beds, of samphire and other saline plants hundreds of miles away from our salt marshes, in localities where salt water has been obtainod by boring of mushrooms on chemically balanced of plants wholly unlike the local Bora In soils brought up from below tha last glacial drift, and in hundreds of other instances where tho presence of natural seed. Is ontiroly out of tho question. Many of these facts aro taken from Mr Darwin, Herbert Spencer, Professors stlan, Huxley, Tyndall, Vircbow, Uaockcl and other defiant materialists who accept, In part oriu whole, tha Darwinian theory of evolution. Thl thoory he runs into tho reductio ad absurdum by th.

Inevitable induction of tho Bibio Genesis, as well as tha undoniable propoaiUonsof science. Both of thoao teaoh. as did Plato, that evory living thing la peifeot of Us kind and that whatever is perfect admits of no Darwin ian variations or improvements for tho bettor. For instance, it is utterly impossible for the human mind, as at present constituted, to concolvo of anything more perfect than a rattlesnake a rattlesnake that la, as ono of its kind. Herbert Bpencar must stand as dumb before this undeniable proposition as waa Piato.

when he admitted that there was nothing imperfect tn naturo "Nothing out of plaoe aa in a bad tragedy." If, then, ovorything Is perfect of Its kind, what becomes of tho selection of thB fittest, or of ovolution as treated by tha materialists? "Perfection," says tho author of this work, "admits of no dogroes of comparison." It ia as complete in a rattlesnake, with tho singlo limitation aa to kind, as in a Plato or a John Howard "Av full, as perfect, in vile man that mourns, Aa tho rapt soraph that adores and burns." This is but a specimon of tho vigor and logic or tho book, extending through its entire three hundroi pages. Evolution, differentiation, force correlation, molecular machinery all tho life theories, in fajt, now being spun, spidorlike, from the rocesaoa of the human brain are treated with tho moat msrclloss logic by tho writer of this book, and whatover tho materialists of this country and of Europe may say of it, the public will accord it a high place in scientific iuduction. It brings "tho Genesis scientifically to the front," aa thn publishers say of it, "and throws tho materialistic thooriea of lifo decidedly Into the shade." Wo oongratuiato the editorial fraternity on the fact that one of Its veteran members has desooudod from tho sanctum to give theae scientific fellows a sonnd drubbing. Ho had ovidontly been reviewing their materialistic works in tha interest publiahors long enough, aud now proposes to review them in the lntor ost of a Christian public. Ho takes up their challenge to tho vitalists, aud fearlossly iuBists that the ono sublim.) verity of the universe is that life exi tta that It Is the one comprehensive datum on which all other data, whether objective or subjective, rest, aud whoa ordered by Professor Bastiau, with other vitalists, to take bock seat, ho boldly advauces to the front and becomes tho moat defiant challcuger of materialistic thooriea who has yet appeared tho scieutltlc arena.

The religious public is uudor grout obligation to Mr. Wright for tho timely appearance of his book, and oati best return their gratitude by commending it to universal favor. 8T. ANTHO.VY'S C11UUCU. The Ladles of the Coufrrcrration Opes.

A Fair How it is lie i tig Conducted. The ladies of St. Anthony's Church, on Manhattan avonue, Greenpoint, opened a fair In tho, basement of the odiflco last Saturday evoning for tho benefit of the church, which is heavily burdened with debt. Since Fathor Murphy, who had been In Rock away for many years, assumed pastoral charge six months ago, ho has, In addition to mooting current oxponaos, wiped out 10 of tho debt He expects to be able to reduce the debt, which amounted to fully $175,000 when ho camo to Greonpolnt, to $100,000 tuslda year. He hopes to realize a goodly sum from th.

present enterprise, A temporary flooring wae laid over Uio basomout pewB and the well stocked tables, tho ro Balt of tllo ladies" iudustry, wore spread around to a give tho patrons ample room to move around. A. tho goods are nearly all of considerable value, such as a piauo, silver and china sets, tons of coal, a check for flUO, baby carriages, dolls, clocks, paintings, they will bo disposed by lottery at so much a chance. Attached to oach table is an efficient corpB of young ladioa who, book iu baud, circulate tha patrons and succeed in assuring thorn that they will certainly win the valuables. DuriDg tho closing evenings of tho fair, which will continued for two weeks, the drawiugs will tako place.

The piano, which Is one of Haines uprights, aud the J100 check presented by Mr. Alexander McCullom, are a dollar a chauco. A handsomo.goiil headed catio, upon for competitiou among the four principals of Greenpoint schools Messrs. Hanneford, Davis, Murphy and Millard at ten cents a vote, silver mounted revolver, studded with pearls, opon to Messrs. Malouoy, Newman and Iirennan, at twouty ftve cents a vote, will likely form quite a source of revenue.

The result or the voting each night will be placed opposite their nnmos on tho bulletin board tho following ovening. The pistol and cane are on exhibition. Two very fine models of tho yachts Adeline and ITfl daunted, carved in wood by Mr. J. T.

HernswottbvtU builder, and inclosed in au elaborate frame, are to bo disposed of at twenty five cents a chance, as is a miniature yacht, Julia, made aud presented by Mr. Sonlur. Miss Cougan is very clovorly steering the Julia. A macaw from Brazil, a beautiful and rare bird, measuring two and one half feet from tip to tail, a valued $100, is offered at twenty five cents a chance at tbo school tablo. A rifie range forms au attraction for men.

did a thriving business. It Is in charge of Mr. Johu J. Allan, Dr. Lavelle, 0.

1.arkln and Kobart.All.u. THE TABLES, The Sodality table iB large and is well stockod. yrilu groat variety of goods. Amoug tha more, costjy, articles aro sets of silverware, China eels, a clock, a union. cross, cut in card board and hauujsomely framed, ud largo dolls.

The table Is In charge of Miss Allco.Kano. assisted by the Misses Mary nd Maggie Clara. Valentine, Annie and Maggie Flood, Crook, Hnb) Ketch and Mary Cruddock. A medley of articles aro displayed on. tho uriest'u table so named in honor of Fathers Murphy, Smitb Hogan.

Three large and neatly framed photographs of the clergymen named occupy, a couBpionon. placo, aud small pictures are sold at to much apiece. Rustic crosses Inclosed In glass cases, books, albums, help to make up the stock of tha well filled; table. Miss Susan McKeevor 1. In oharge, assisted by tha Misses Mary Kealy, Nellie McKenna, Julia Fitipatriok, Sarah Fitisimmons, Agnes Carroll; Kate and Mary Ilellly, Mary Roily, Mary Lynch, Hogan, Kelly Maggie The piano belongs to.thta tablo oudisiu charge of the.

Mlssa. Uollte Allen Sarah Lavello, Mrs. Alexander MaColium, wife of a prominent resident of has of her own table. It loaded with costly articles. A $100 ohesk.ajia Ov.

tons coal donated by Mr. McCullom are offered and SO cents chance, A ii of silver, the dresja caBo won by tho Greoapolut Tug of War team, iu Madison Square Garden, Hew Yotk, machine, handsomo, clock, a patasat china tu Mt, a Urge elzod oU nalnltngs and other things aa to be disposed of si flflj and twenty ftva cents a. c'jauco. Mrs. McCullom is assisted by Mrs.

IjuuRi, and th. Misses Annie and Sarah McCullom, Callagher, Annie McFariand, Sophie Blanohard, Hou totto Unllanhei Louise Sulllvau, Delia Many Maxwell. Katie Mervitt and Anule Delauoy. St. Anthony's School, li, charge of the SiBtera of fit Joseph, is represented, by a variety tsblo loaded with books, dolls, a small piauo, china ware, glass vases, castlos, mado uy tho soholars, nd articles of las.

value. A large doll dressed as a bride, but without husband, as Father Murphy facetiously remarked, waa Rouerally admired by th, children. The macaw in this table. Miss Mary, Martlu has oharge, assisted school girls. The same rule applies to describing church fairs as governs the s.ie of goods at auction the besl loft for the last So Is this rase.

It must le concoded that a refreshment department has peculiar attractions, late the evening especially, which the othor tables, no tr4atter how gorgeously decorated, lack. Mrs. Capper Is in charge of tho well supplied department. She assisted by the Misses Fannie Cordelia Smith, Eiiiellne Fltoh, Mlos ParmeufOi and Ml8 lUndsay, iiV john w. OHAnwicir; fliho following graceful ode wae read iatho Academy ofMuBic to day at the Channing celebration by Mr.

Chad wick, and was warmly applauded by th audience. A hundred years ago to dmy I How often in this latter time, In fond memorial apeooh or rhyme, Bos it boeu ours these words to say A handred years to day, wo eald. Since Concord bridge and I ox ing ton Saw tho great struggle well begun And the first heroes lying dead. A hundred years since Bunker Hill Saw tho red coated foomon reel Once and again before the stool Of Presoott'a men, victorious still In their dofoat a hundred years Since Independence boll rang out To all the people round about, Who answered It with deafening Proclaiming, spite the scorncr's acorn, That then and there the womb of time Through sufferance triumphing fcubhtne 1 Another nation had been burn. All mon are equal In their birth," uaug oui tne faieopio rocking bull ltejoice, heaven I Give heed, hell I Here was good news to all tho earth.

And stiti our hearts havo kept tho count Of things that daily brought moro near, Through various hap of hope or fear, The pattern viBioued in the mount. Nor yet tho tale is fully told Of all tho years that brought us pain, And through the as i of again Tire dawning of the ago oi gold. But nought of this has brought uahore. With tho old unying on our itps, What time tho rolling planet dips Into tho spring tide of tho year. Apart from all the dire alarms Of field or flood in that old time.

"With reverent feat our fancies climb To where a mother's circling arms Enraptured hold a babe new born And who was thero to prophesy, Though loving hearts boat strong and high, Of what a day this was tho morn? For In that life but juBt begun The prescient fates a gift had bound Ab dear to man as auy found Within tho courses of the sun A gift of manhood strong and wise, Nor foreign to the lowliest earth Whereon the Word has human birth Howe'er conversant with the skiee, A hundred years ago tc day Since Chauning's individual life From out tho depths of being, rife With spiritual essence, found a way, And welcomo here, and forces kind To gently nurse his growing power With steady help until tho flower Of instinct was a conscious mind. To him tho sea its mossago brought Filling his inind with flacrod awo What time hiH eye enraptured saw Its widest tumult; or he caught From its deep calm some peace of heart To him tho ages brought thoir loro Of books, and living men their Btore Of thought, and ntill the better part Of all his nurture was theeyo Turned inward, seeking in Iho mind Some higher, deeper law to lind Than that which spheres the starry sky. And so the youth to mauhood camo, A being frail with nameless eyes, That seemed to look on Paradise As cloar as dew, as clean as flame. He willed in quiet to abido, Leading his flock through pastures greea And by the waters etili, where lean Tho mystic troos on eithor Bido. But on his Jistouing car there foil Tho jarring discord of tho sects, SUII making with their war of texts The pleasant earth a kind of holt.

He saw the Father's sacred namo Made dim by Calvary' suffering rood; Man devil born a Bpawning flood, Engendering nought but curse aud shame. He saw tho freedom of tho mind Denied, and doubt esteemed a crime The path whereby tha boldest climb To heights which coward.suovor find. He saw the mauhood which to him Was image of the highest God Troddou as If it weie a clod 'Neath Slavery's idol chariot grim. He saw it fouled with various sin, Sfckenfug from iack of air and light, Abjuring glories ititmita To fatten at tho ecnsual bin. He heard and saw his shepherd's rod Withgriaving heart ho broke iu twain; Tho wondering world behold again A prophet of tho living God.

Then aa of old was heard a voice: "HiB way and "Como with mo, All ye that heavy laden be. Take up my burden, aud rejuice." It rang through all the sleepy land In tones bo Bweet and silver cloar Tha waking people seemed to hear The accents of divine command. Tho statesman heard if fn his Tho oppressor in his cursed field, And hearts beyond tho ocoan yiold Allegiance to his truth and grace. Our Father, God; our Brother, Man: On those commandment a twain, ho hung The law and prophets alt; and rung For all the churches' eager ban A hundred changes deep nnd strong; Lot who would hoar him or forbear. The ancient lie bo would uot spare, Tho doubtful right, the vested wrong.

What words were his of purest flame When, straining up from height to height, Ho felt the Presence Infinite And named the Everlasting Name I With him the thought and deed were ono: Man was indeed the Sou of Cod; What, strike a man Break oyery rod Of hate beneath the all seeing sun 1 So greatly born, how dare to trail Our fedtal garlands in tho mire How dare not evermore aspire, To Him who is within the veil In weakness made oach day moro strong, Softly his days went trooping past Till, robed iu beauty, came the laat, And with the sun he went along Not to oblivion'B dreamless Bleep, But, like tho sun, on otuor lauds To shine, where other, busier hands The fields immortal sow and reap. And he is ours I Yes, if we daro, Leaving the letter of his creed, Say to his mighty spirit, Lea4 We follow hard." Yes, if no care la ours for aught but this to know What is God truth, and knowing this To count it titiH our dearest bliss To go with that whero'or it go. Ho shall wo go with hfm so feol That comfort wnich the Spirit of Truth Gives all who with his loving ruth Ate pledged to her for woe or weal. 0 thou whom, though we havo not aeon, We lova Upon our toilsome way Be thy pure spirit as a ray From out that Light which is loo clean Unolcanness to behold shino clear, That to our dimly poeriny oyos All hidden truths, all specious lies, That which they are may straight appear. There is no ending to thy road, No limit to thy fleeting goal, But speeds the ever re atoning soul From truth to truth, from God to God.

Ilia argument against llogRing in the Navy. RaSTKKX district parks. lothe Editor of the. Brooklyn Eaqle: I soo that thero is a bill before the Legislature to authorize the purchase of Mr. Mccormick's small park on North Socoud street, Certainly, Mr.

McCormlck has kept his floral retreat open long enough at his own oxponBe. If it is to be kept open lougor, should be at the expense of the public, which so far it has accommodated for nothing. It has been very' useful flveu tho Sunday School children from the furthest parts of the district roeortiug to it in their processions, having nothing else to resort to. Its usefulness on a small scale indicates, or rather demonstrates, what the Eastern District so imperatively wants what it must have if it is not to stand aloue in the world the scorn of civilization. Two hundred thousand people, and destined to go up toward the millions, novor to have a Hquaro inch of park Show me the man who thinks BUch a thing, and I will show you two legged though he calls himself a taxpayer.

Ho is uot a taxpayer who owns houses. The man who lives in them, pays tho rent for them iB the taxpayer. The Western Dlstrlot, with some $12,000,000 worth of parks, Tho Eastern, without a park at all without a thing overy where necessary to health and recreation Without ono of the most distinguishing marks of civilizationso held in all tlmos and in all couutrics. A thing absolutely noceseary, not to tho convenience ouly, but to tho health of large cities. Well have the parka been termed "the lungs of tho cityi" But up hero wo can show you a city that has, through apathy aud stupidity, contrived to gasp along without any lungB.

Two or three years, or moro, ago tho quostiou of a large park was agitated in the Eastern District. At every meeting opinion came out in favor of small convenient parka in every ward that would be within a uhort step, of the working man and his family. Whoover has boou that mau and that family roasting, crowding out on the front stoop of a sultry eveniug, after a sultry day's toil, whoever has seen the nursory maid with her baby carriage, drawing it along tho crowded sidewalk, haw seen only an indication of our present condition. Two quostlons present themeolvcs Can we will wo do forever without parks That ia the flrat quostiou. Tho socoud question is Will wo gaiu anything by delaying till ground is enormously increased in value, and until blocks of houses will have to be torn down, as they, are now being torn down for auch purposes iu Now York? In overy ward in the Eastern District ground can bo now 6A8lly piocured and with comparative cheapness, except, porbapu, in the Thirteenth and Six teem La wards.

Iu thoBe it may be necessary to pull down houses; in all the othort the same ucceiBlty would soon show itself. The small parkB wo muat have; thajfc oan't be esoapoi from delay will only double and treble and tivefoid their cost, leaving us to stifle in tharxucantJnio, I find that la all that is akod in ooiiuoctiou with Mr, McCormick's park. Tho Impression is abroad that this In aaked for the five lots in bin iuclosuro, with their improvements, which, indeed, coat a great deal of Eorniey. But this is an error. The estimate includes seven or eight good framo houses, that aro to be removed, making the enlargement to contain fourteen or fifteen lotB, and that in a very densely inhabited neighborhood.

I may hero speak of my own property head of Now town Creek, Eighteenth Wardwhich is about to foreclosed on. It has been usod'for six or seven years bacjt aa a bath and a ball ground. It coioprlsos some 400 lota, with a tide water Iron of far mure, than feet. It has beon and for bathing by from. BOO to 800 men and boys In a day, each paying a aniaU ontranco foe.

Soron or olghtfjdKoa lying flat form good Summer ball ground, aud it be easily flooded Into a skating pond tn Winter, TUevicty could net the wholo now, the foreclosure, for perhaps a tenth part of what it would oost in the next generation, aftor It hud fallen tato tho hand of tho millionaire mortgagor. People FUggcflt that I ought not to sneak of my own property, lest my motivo in urging the question of parks may be impugned1, I don't care who impugns or does uot impugn my motives. I am not to withhold uwfui lafQcmMioa lmatw mu may a a to be at and and and Is or lng Kat atr a at bv Is Memorial Services in the CiiurcJi of the Saviour. Sermon by Re Dr. PeabooV, of Cambridge, Mass.

Tho ctlobration of tho conteiinial anulYer sary of She birth of Rev. Drf Channtng began last evening tho Churoh of Our Saviour, Rov. Avory'p. Putnam, pastor, corner at Monroe placa and Pierropont streot. Those memorial services have been' looked forward to with great Interest, and the opening ceremonies wore attended by a large audience, which filled the churoh.

There was a largo 'attendanoo of the clergymen of tho city, among thoao vrho wore present being Rev. Dr. Farley, Rov. Robert Collyor, of tho cuuron or tho Messiah, New York; Rev. Jesse B.

Thomas, of tho First Baptist Church Bev. Honry J. Yan Dyka, D. of tho Clinton atreet' Presbytorian Churoh Rev. John W.

Ohadwick, of the Second Unitarian Chnroh Rov; Thomas R. Slicor, of the Park Congregational Churoh Itev. Dr. J. 0.

Ager, of the wow jorusalom Church Profossor. E. R. Thwing, Rov. Dr.

Sarauol Spear and 'others. Among tho laymen pres ent wore: A. A. Low, JSslan O.Low, II. B.

Claain, J. H. Frothlngham, ox Judge Greenwood, ProfcscorCharlos E. Wost, Hon. Ripley Ropes.

S. V. White. Professor Lolghton, Professor Robert Foeter, C. W.

L. Morrow and many othors. Tho honr for sorvico wob 7:45 o'clock, and at that timo Rev. Dr. Ulttnam, pastor of tho church, entorod tho pulpit accompanied by Rov.

Andrew 9. 1'ea body, D. of Cainbridgo; who was to dallvor the sermon Rov. Dr. Ruf Ellis, of Boston.

ancMlev. Joseph May, D. of The oxcnHses opened with an anthem by tha choir, composed'of a quartet and chorus. Tbo opstilng prayor was made by Rev. Dr.

Ellis, aftor which the choir sang a "TeDeum." Rov. Dr. May then read pcsBogos from the Scripturos, his selections being from tfco Epistle to the liouiD3, 11., and the Epistle to the Obrinthinns, xii. and xili. Tlie choir sang a hymn, and Rev.

Dr. Poabody stopping to tho desk, announced his toxt, which was found it tho H2th Psalm, sixth verse, which reads "Tho righteous shall bo In everlasting THE SEKMON. In his opening remarkR the preacher said No re ligiouB communion in this country can havo presented more goodly array of illustrious unmos than American Uuitur.auisui wheu it commenced its separate career. Among Channlng's seniors were Klriclaud, Ware, Bau croft, Thayor, tho AbbottB, the beet known amoug a 'cluster of faithful, holy men ivliose memory in still suorod and precious, of thoso who wore within a fow" his coevals, it is ouough to specify liuckminster, Nichols, Parker, Throckmorton, Norton, Lowell and others. A few years iator came the younger Ware, tho younger Abbott, Qurnott, Polfrey, Oreouwood, Sparks, Walker all names of reverence Among those Chan niug doubtless had hia poors In learning and uluiucuce, the cure of souls or ndaptatlveuoss to eoiiui upeciilc Christian work, and certainly a sanctity of spirit pure noas of lifo and consecration to the service of God and rmtu.

lie is pre eminent among them, first among equals by tho breadth of his culture, by tho wido range of his influence, by tho copiousness of his writings, and especially by 1x1b foremost place in the defense aud exposition of the faith which hu had in common with them. No religious writer of our age has, at this day, a stronger hold than ho ou cultivated' aud serious minus, not only in our own country, but in Englaud uud ou the Continent of Europo. His influence has gained rather than lost, with the lapse of timo. It is felt even nioroinother denominations tbaniu his own. lie has borno a largo part in shaping tho theology of the church universal, and among thoee who sympathize most forvontly with tho spirit of this anniversary are not a few inonjbers of communion which, in his lifetime, would hare hesitated to include him within tho Christian palo.

To him do we owe it, that were ho witu us now, ho would una nttlo to dissent from in the theology of tho divines who have succcoded his most vehciuont antagonist. In our estimate of his services to tho race, we may take 110 small account of tho bluudod sweetness aud powor of his personal prebuueu and intorcourso, A ItEMINISCENOE. In my early lifo as 11 teacher for a ie'v mouths of ono of his childrou, I was often at his house and sat at his tablo, and onco his guest for a night, had the unspeakable privilege of uniting with him in tho morning eer vico of prayor. In all that I remember of him it was aa if an angol had spoke. That thin, worn countenance, luminous with thought aud glowing with omotlon.

those so'emn, bonignant, piercing, gleaming eyes, which scorned as if they were always turned heavenward, yet as if they looked straight into the soul of him with whom he wan conversing, that slender throad of a voice, trcinbliug like the chorde of an Eolian harp with the breath of tho spirit, with modulations bo dolicato that you might have almost interpreted hlg words, had they boon uttered in an unknown tongue. Oh, I can bee him now, at the interval of well nijh half a ceutury. He epoko only upon great themes hie eonl wns fillod with them, enwrapped iu theiu, and none who listened could go from hiui unmoved. Aa a chrouic invalid for many years ho seldom appeared in public, but in tho quiet of bis Btudy there was daily conference aa to tho interests and ncodH of the church, the country, tho world, not only of tho deep things of God, but of the questions of tho day National politics, slavery, pauperism, plans of usefulness, drilts ot public opinion ud ft eling, impending, dangors, movements of political parlios. Hut with him the distinction botween things Hccular and sacred was obliterated.

The balance of tho eanctuary was never out of hia hand. His only state policy was loyalty to God. Ilia only measure of public cuiiuuui mu rum ui eiuruui rifjui. no minister, uo Christian, would fail to be euligbtonod, strengthened, gladdened by intercoiirn9 with him. And who can say how many men in public aud busy lifo, drew from him their profouudeat uunnoof responsibility and anty, were by him inspired with uoblo purpose, oud energizod for unselfish, faithful service of their conn try and their raco.

The political influence of hia writings cannot be ve re titi muted. Uo had the prophet 'a foresooing vision, and often wrote in advanco what afterward brjeamo history, and history that has oven been developing itself to this day. His letter on the annexation of Texas, ouly needs the change of tense to be inscrihad among the country's annals. An early residence of tho South made him foromost among tho anti slavery men of tho North, aud hia voice was laat heard iu public in that sacred cause. The flume standard of eternal right, the same Rolema sense of divine things, shaped bis political opinions and influence, aud gave character to what iu other bands might havo been mere literature, but in hia could ho ouly a wider bcalo of notes on tho name koy.

Thus his eeisaya on Milton and Napoleon are aa intensely and scarcely less religious than Mb sermons. Ilia solo purpose in them was, ou the ono hand, top.aeein their true light the trials that constitute the glory of humanity us emancipated, empowered and ennobled by Christ, nud on the other hand to exhibit the intrinsic "littleness and baseness of what is vulgarly accounted great, if it be great for self and not for man, to destroy and not to save and b.ess. AS A mEACjIElt, Dr. Channing flrat attracted attention by. his subdnod and chastened seriousness.

His early sermons woro emotional rather than thoughtful, meditative rather than hortatory, as of ono who stood on the mound and within tho vail, and whose cry wob "Come up hither." This characteristic belonged equally to hia entire life as preacher. But more and more prof und. and vigorous thought blended with the spirit of devotion. His manner in tho pulpit bore a close rcsomblanu to that of hia conversation. His gosturos were few, Bim pJe, spontaneous.

His voice was thin, and ecemod feeble, yot it was clear, sonorous and penetrating, and while tho3o near him no more than heard him well, his enunciation was so distinct nud his eiuphaHis no great and strong, that in the breathlefis fltllluoas which he commanded hia remotest hearem can seldom have lost a word, It, woe the charm of his oratory, that it was in no sense oratory. Thero was none of the self consciouBuesB almost inovitauto in a public speaker, but tho simple consciousness, ''I have a message from God, and my aoul is straitened to deliver it." His written stylo owes its winning beauty, tho speaker thought, to tlie same cause. Ho nover tried to write well, aud therefore being the man be was, could not but write pre eminently well. In speaking ot the influences which have been at work upon the theology of the ago, the sjeaker said that the Unitarian denomination, in common with others, yot not more than others, has btfin largely aiToctod from two widely diU'erout sources of influence, one of which was opened toward thu close of Chanuing's life aud tho other not till recontly. Of theso sources the first 1b Gorman philosophy nud theology.

When Channing entered upon his work tho German language had not even a place iu tho curriculum ot Harvard College, And it was not until long after that Its influence began to be felt. Tbo consoquenco of thu new departure iu this direction was a bo called transcoudeutal philosophy (which had no exclusive title to that uaino unless It were because It transcended all understanding), with a rationalistfc ln torpretjillun of Scripture In this movement Dr. Channing neither led nor tullowod, nothing was more abhnrruut to hia character a philonopliy which should repudiate or auporscdo faith. Transcendentalism, after a brief ascendency, forsook a climate uovor congenial to it, yot it loft a trail of akepticlBm, and this spirit of the air has boon succeeded by tho earth demon of self styled PHYSICAL SCIENCE, which is not science, but in part natural hiBtory, in parr hypothesis. Fat what it.

is I hold it in reverent regard. Hut the phyiciat is not, therefore, a philosopher or a theologian. Because hekuows alt about bugs and trees, ho is not therefore, to be oracular about the soul and God. Be can bo ho can trace orderly processes in. nature, ho ls not authorized to dethrone tho Creator, whether by denying His being or by representing Him as tho helploss slave of an automatic universe.

Kqually little right has he to propound a tori all otic theories of mind, thought and soul, with reference to which, it is admitted, he hafl not yet made a siugic discovery. Those coutlencoff. which are extraneous to our country, cannot, without the gross, est injustice, be ascribed to tho fathora of America Unitarian lain, nor to tho religious syBtom of which the. were the expositors and defenders. They belong to their respoctive times.

One of these has ceased to flow the otuor is already ebbing, and has passed the flood tide. Dr. Channlng's influoncewas moat emphatic and in tense In behalf of tho light of freo inquiry, a right universally admitted now, but in his early days almost as universally called in quest op. He was first and chief of all a Christian. He dissented from received creeds, hoc aim he interpreted thu words of Christ and those who best knew the mind of Christ, in a sense adverse to their teachings.

He wub a Christian in the inmost depths of hit? heart, honoring JesitH as the Incarnate Word of God, uttering Hia name with tender reverence, coining ithia highest blessedness tofoUow Him ou earth and to bo with Uim in Heaven. Ho received Christ's own testimony, concerning himself, Tho Father is greater than but in his faith Jesus held a filace second only'to God. For the greater part of his Lfo ho maintained the doctrino commonly, though not with perfect accuracy, called Ariau, according to wnich Jesus had His Boparato being before all worlds. I flad no proof in bis writings that he over renounced, thij belief, though toward latter end of his life there is reason to tldnk, not that he lapsed Into humauitarlanism. but that he rose to the conception of Christ as evert moro intimately ono with God as representing all of tho dlvlno that oould bo made human, and that ho would have fouud no reason to object on dogmatic grounds to that spurious reading yot truly apostolic idea, "God manifest in the flesh," a faith which, it would be hard to discriminate from.

that of many professed Trinitarians of our day, some of whom lament tho term "Trinity" over found currency in the chucchea. After speaking of the theological teuets of channlng's dtvy, which the speaker denominated a mild form of Calvinism, and of tho controversial disputes and discussions In whioh Channing was concerned, he Bald This centennial anniversary, marks a signal change In our theological world, I ws In New York and took part la tho services held in honor of Channing, a few. days after his death. The occasion was exclusively donomlnatlonal one. Wo of hia faith were deeply' naoved and felt that tha greatest among ua.

had fallen, out thorn was no outside sympathy. Wo did not expect that any. but ourselvoa ahould own tho bereavement aa being a monumental oiforing, Now there aro thoso of: every name who unite to do him raver en ce. Ho la no longer rogardod as the leader of a sect but aa a high prient ox uoa, a ciose tonowor 01 unrisi, a cnampion 01 me oik grossed and enslaved, a Wend of the poor, a lovor of is race. are the titles on which ire claim for Mm an honored memory in .11 Christian tliia the only record, for which.

1 lvould havo cared. To what la tula to bo ascribed Not to the growth of Unitarian Ism, not to the tliulluisUcd teal, the enfeebled piety or tuo want of loyalty of otuor bodteB of Christiana, but to an enhanced appreciation of character aa compared with oroeil. As 1300k through the record of Channlng's lifo for some oua central thought, I'find it In his loyalty to Christ. It was tho words of Josus which ho nskod to Dave road to him while under the shadow of death, and while they yot lingered on his oar ho foil asleep. The preacher spoke at souo further lonnth upon big tlionio, and tho sorvlc.

olosod with chanting the Lotfi'a Prayer hy the ohoir, tho'sInglDc; of tlie hymn oh, God, the Darknss. Roll Away," and the bouetlotlon, whioh was pconouuood by Dr. reabody. a 020 broadway, and; 130 to 151 bowery, n. sprino and summer styles, diagonals, worsteds, english tweeds and cassimkr.rs made to order in the most fashionable manner.

PANTS TO ORDER, SUITS TO ORDER, 14 TO 810. to $40. SPRING OVERCOATS, from $15. 4S2 FULTON STREET, BROOKLYN. A1US1AN FLOWER CO.

ppp ppp A AA A A AAA A A RRR RRR A AA A A AAA A A NN NN NNN NN NN 8SS8 FPTL FF It OOO WWW RICH RRR 000 OOO' OWWWWK OO MB 11BK I) WW WW OO LLL 000 KEUR II UCO OOO OI'TBR TUB MOST RKOHERCHK STYLES IN BONNICTfc? AND HATS. FLORAL GARNITURES' FOR WEDDINd, BALL AND EVENING COSTUMES, "TKOPIOAL LEAF PLANTS AND BOUCJUETS," iOU JARDINIERES, VASES AND BASKETS. FLORAL IlOItSHMHOKS AND ORNAMENTS." OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS. THE PARISIAN FLOWER 28 EAST FOURTEENTH STREET, Four doors west of Univerrfity place, N. x.

I. Proprietor, 9 Run do Olery. Parw. N. II.

Tllo "Artificial VUnrxr Ouido," vfith beautifully illustrated catalogue, mailed free upon TRAVEL, TKANSPOBTAIieK, SlCU.llHll.pN. Ac. A NCHOR LINE. UNITED STATES MAIL RTHAMETJS. NEW YORK AND GLASliOW, From Pier 20 Nort River.

New York. 15, t) A.M. Devonia April 24, 3 P. M. April 17.

11 A. M. I Bolivia Mny 1, 11 A. M. 'l heso ptennipre do nut carry cattle, etteep or piga.

Cabins, $00 to $so. Kxouraion ticketa at reduced ratea. Second Cabin. $40. Steorage, $26.

TO GLASGOW. LIVERPOOL OR DERRY. NEW YORK TO LONDON DIRECT. From Pier 40, North River, foot of CharleH st, N. Y.

Utopia. April 7. 3 P. M. I California April 14.

A. M. Cabins, and $05, accordin to accommodation. Cabin excursion tickets at reduced raton. Drafts isaned for any amount at current rates.

HENDERSON BROTHERS, Agents. 7 Bowling Greon, N. or K.J. SNOW. 08 and 70 Court at.

Brooklyn. IMPERIAL GERMAN MAIL NORTtt GERMAN LLOYD STEAMSHIP LINE. BETWEEN NEW YORK, SOUTHAMPTON AND BREMEN. Company's PIE1I, foot SECOND ST. HOBOKEN.

MOSUL Saturday, April 10 DONAU Saturday, April 17 GENERAL tVKUDKK Wednesday A ril 21 RHEIN Huturdoy, April 24 Ra(ca of passage from Now to Southampton, Havro Bremen First Cabin 8100 Second Cabin 00 Steerage 3J Return ticketa at. roduccd rates. Prepaid stcerago cor tiucau at Stecrano tickets to all points in tho South 1.1 Knglaud, 0. fc ur freicht or posjago apply to OF.LRICHS 4 2 Bow ling Green, N. Y.

J. LEURENKRAUSS. 377 Fulton it. Agent fur Brooklyn. (pUNARD LINE.

VlIE CUNARD STBAMSHir COMPART. LrMITKDl between New York and Liverpool, calling at Cork Harbor. FROM PIER 40 nVR. NEW YORK: HECLA Wednesday, March 2,, 3 :00 P. M.

ABYSSINIA Wodnesday, March 31, :30 A.M. SUVTHIA Wednesday, r.l SaflP. M. PAUTHIA Wdnsdy. inril 14.

A. M. Ana every following WKDNRSDAX from New York, Nosteorage. px8gA0Bs tS 480 "nd ,0 "8M Tickets to Paris $10, Sold, additional. Return tickets)) favorable erms.

Steerage at vory low rato. titeeraca tickets from Liver ptoIaudQueonetownandall other parts of Europe, at low tt rates. Through hills of lading nlvrn for Helfast, (ilnsgonr, Havre, Antwerp and other ports on the Continent and for Mediter. rarjoan ports. For freight and imply at the Com liany'aoffloe.

No. 4 Howling (intn, N. Y. CHAS. G.

FEANKLYN. Agent. Jor Passage 'Tickets trow or for Knroiio, Drafts at lowest rateaana lurcner uirornmtion. apply l. H.

liKftUKJCK Dun, ioj Atlantic avenno. near Clinton street, boloacufc MTHIYE STARLINB. Ti TO OUEENSTOWN AND LIVRTlPOOT (iERMANIO SATURDAY. April 1 4: 0 P. M.

EA1TIO THUHHDAY. ATM'' FROM PIER FIFTY TWO. NORTH RIVKft. Cabin passage, $80 and 100; excursion tickets, 0145, stoorage, 28. N.

B. The steamers of this line do not carry cattle, sheep vrmga. For ua or paasarti tickets from or to tho old country, or drafts payable on demaud evorywhere in England, Iroland, Scot land, Sweden and Norway, at lowoBt rates, apply to V. BRIDGE, Montague st, agent for Brooklyn, andJI AU JOHN A. ULJ 1 1 i Ail i.tiAtraT.

rr ill iti iuouiii fill. It. J. COR'ITB. 37 BROADlVAY, N.

Y. GUION LINE UNITED STATiSS MAIL STEAMERS, from Pier No, 38, North River, foot of King nt, for UUKENSTOWN nnd LIVERPOOL, on TUESDAY, as follows: NEVADA March SO. at 8 A. M. WISCONSIN April 13, at 7:30 A.

il Cabin passage, i0, $K0 and too. Intermediate, is 10. Steerage at low rates, payable in currency. WILLIAMS 4 GUION, 2,1 Broadway, New York, Or to JNO. 0.

HENDERSON, SOJJourt at. corner of Kerason. Vr ATIONAL LINE OK STEAMSHIPS BE LM TW1SUN NKW YORK. LIVERPOOL. QUEENS.

TOWN AND LONDON DIRECT, sailing weokly from Pier 80, North River, New York. Among the largest steamships creasing the Atlantic, Cabin ratos, $50 to $70 excursion, $100 to $120; steerage, $2t; prepaid stecrago tickets, S2'l, "being $2 lowerflnan most other linoe." Offices, GO and 73 Broadway, N.wT.'rk. F. W. J.

HURST. Manager. Agent, at Brooklyn, 'JOHN O. HENDERSON: Wll lianubnrgh, POBLANP A SUMNER. NMAN LlNEROYAIi MAIL STEAMERS.

fOR OUEENSTOWN AND LIVERPOOL. CITY OTa HRttLrN. ii fiiihir las. Anril 3. at 12 P.

If. CITY OF MONTREAIl. Aorll 8.at3:(0 P.M. f'MV I. ,11.

1 1 i w. I JB XV1UI CITY OF OHIi CITY OF BKUSSKrA.11inro.Auril28.at 10:00 A.M. KTtlTv. 1 CABIN ffiQO. ftftO itlnA allirf mnA TIAtjnM tlpkataonfaTOK.

able terxua, ratea. i. Drafts at lowoat JOHN G. DALE, A. too.

rllt DORLAKD, LAD.wjltoodg,, and. Fourth at, Brooklyn, K. D. Ijt J. SNOW, JVJ AN707d COURT STREET.

I) A 1 TP. Tt f. a A'r LOWftS' AND FSl WM. LIVI RATK8. tOM I nTtfnnTflnir.Tjnv 'i'lUrklfl'b TO QUEENSTO VBttPOOL, BELFAST.

xPlAWOS, rtlUBlU, c. IIANOS AND ORGANS. CHEAPER THAN EVER, KITHKR FOR BALE OR FOR RENT. Large lot of soilod music, works of thebojt eoinpoien, ik tc, and 10c per cony. F.

H. OH ANDLKR. 172 Montague Bt. riHE MASON HAMLIN ORGAN 1. Union Hnuare, N.

Offer the largest axortmunt of best and cheapest cabinet or parlor tho world, at 4H oaoh and upward also for iiiinrturly or inontlily paymeule, per month anl upward. ttiMR.SjwrAilay, April 22. at 3 P. JSSKM' Thursdi y.Aprll 2S.at 10:00 A..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963