Tri-Weekly Telegraph (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 141, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1866 Page: 4 of 10
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m.
■m
§ri-*t'effcl<i l^trjraph
oiwawT "
. ** g
fSif jjfcWiry W, ">m*C
ftMtor wl
TfMr-M««. Lowfcm U in town,
j yfll oblige by cal pg on the editor.
A ehrUtipn
air aditor or jwblUW df a
flheedh journal,—to one of tibe mo«t
—hwtrlr m«b witk which any'country
«i%e bleat. Journalism having be-
, nothing to more important, as
(■ the. ltfflkert}js«brirtin#
♦hwn that it should be
mui«> the influence of
une-
—uat vappott
l moral*, and that it phoult} be
>6t the flisMniinatioa of
am#** •entimeuts and virtues, i
Ml. detnpting fiftttthe
ue, which is very high
drarch press, we feel impelled to de
■-« . . • ..*A.f. a-fet - *. liis
MIMVUflMgnMi
r is, not so
hwaafcdfth'e times
a specially eocle-
, whioh we already
a christian secular press
jtt^jcfreamt a christian
christian civili-
'sgi
christian prin-
ht^Fwidespread
These remarks have been caused by
-AJMttee fat ffe 8*1*4 JWfc,-of the
death of Mr. Gerard iiallcck, the vet-
«m> editor ef tho Journal qf Com
mttce. Mr. Halleck was bora at
PlainfieM, Massachusetts, March 18,
lather, the RerHMatfe*
i a poor«oosrtary minister,
of only |«)0 per
a fiuaUy «f ofcil-
(of his four sons
could not be
epoch of high
that sum. It
however, that
r, wh« remained pas-
tat t
is now re-entering it at the close of
the war. He built a church ia New
Haven, in a destitute part of the city
Which is now one of the most flourish
Ing ehuMhes In that place. Hi* dona-
tions to this otyaet alone have been
considerably over $90,000. He i
protean in Kbers&ty, making fieat
numbers of people happy, by seatter-
isg freely those luge means which
honest labor, under the bleaslntf of
God, had^ven Jbfls). ,b
Another reteam Christian journal-
ist, Francis GUL Kaq.,uf the Com-
mercial Advertiser, very similar in his.,
general course and oharaetw to Mr!
Halloek, and for more than a quarter
of a century his oo-laborer, still sur-
vives, in great pain, patiently await-
ing the; great and solemn change.
The New-Yort correspondent cf the
Picayune sttys that be has, for a long
period borne the pain of dissolution,
in the form ^ofia cancer upon a most
tendn and haraMng part of his body.
He wastes gradually, " dying daily,"
yet his skies are bright, and the old
man—more beautiful now than ever—
would really hail it a* a joy to depart
and join the chorus of that better
land! Everywhere in journalism is
Francis Hall known, and his whole
record as journalistic without a stain.
In the Methodist Church he has long
been a substantial pillar, and deep
indeed is the sorrow of that church,
as it feels that he is about to depart,
m was only afew days since that five
Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal
Church called upon him inhis sick
room in a body, an honor rarely, if
ever before recorded. He calmly
waits for the
W«urr wk# U sf life to cwa Utrfr nation.
and when . that hour arrives, there
will be Witnessed a death as sereae
* <^wtartoasrs^r
-' Mb' • <—
profession for several years. In 182:J
he exhibited at the Academy, in Lon-
don, his Castle of St. Augelo, Coli-
seum and St. Peters. Soon afterwards
he began to paint those well known
costume groups, illustrative of Italian
life, for which the neighborhood of
Borne afforded such abundant mate-
rials; such, for example, as "An Al-
bauese girl leading a blind woman to
mass;" •'Pilgrims arriving in sight of
Rome;" "A brigand's wife defending
her wounded husbaud;" "A Conta-
dina and family retaining from a
festa." "Prisoners of banditti," etc.
church
forty
. Vtr
P
I jfci.1
K
jwaars, had a farm whioh he cultivated,
Mi which added to his small income;
■ taught a school, which,
been very romunera-
*>,>■ 'A.*■?' • ' 1 / ''a* "
Gerard worked on the form
year, when he pre-
^ asven ma^hs for
jnu College, where one
his brothers was already. He soon
took a high stand, especially in lan-
fnagsui and graduated in 1819, with
the highest thonors, one of
a poem, in 1881 he so-
under Professor Stu
opened a private
where he gare lea
eminent clerr
German, which
with
that there was a
ly paper in Boston,
with a capital
was borrowed for him
, he established the
Telegraph in 1824. It was so
successful within^ year that the pro
the Boston Observer pro-
to iiim that the two papers
W*. Two ye«r later he paid his
half of the Becorder for 7JJ00, ami
purchased One-half of the New York
Observer^ <rf WhMh he assumed the
responsible editorships and eontiouod
It tul 1828, when he formed a partner-
ship with hts friend Hale in the man-
the Journal of Commerce,
■ ii II ii M1 . g,i . .*1 - „ 11 n £* I. mi
jecn started a year oeiorc,
ted wH&fcat once took Mgb ninlras
an influential and enterprising jour-
nal. The new owners of the paper
bought and equipped a small swill
echoener, which they named the Jmr-
and sent to cruise
et-ships and
fThis
We are always rejoiced when any
'new evidence is produced that human
genius, when devoted to literature, to
art, or to religion, or to all three com-
bined, which is the highest unity of
the most cultivated life, is sufficiently
appreciated to enable its possessor to
eqjoy the comforts of this life, and tho
honors and rewards of the country
whose history he, illustrates end en-
nobles. The whole tendency of things
is in the contrary direction, and al-
wayshasbeen. Christ simply illustrat-
ed tho profound earthliness and brutal-
m
fcilS
i n
elUgenon.
" any size in
I the sole manage-
and con-
he safif fhat a prophet had less honor
in hi* own country than anywhere
else, and whe* he accused the race
from which he sprang, of always kitt-
ing their prophets and stoning those
who were sent from God to enlighten,
refine, and elevate them to the under-
standing and enjoyment of the truth.
And the opposition to the "prophets"'
is just as real in human nature nowas
in the days of Christ, although less
demonstrative in the mass, and weak-
ened by a small circle in each country
who have become converted to the
prophetic side, and who illustrate the
gradual triumph of the truth.
Every great and earnest genius be-
longs to the prophetic school, and al-
though not specially and miraculously
sent, is really sent of God for tho il-
Inmination and happiness of man-
kind; * Sonie of them hot wholly
"fulfill their course," some make mis-
takes, some have infirmities,—just as
did the prophets and apostles of old;
—but as tike rolls on, and the spirit
of Christianity "leavens the lump"
of human society, it is cheering
to witness that genius is becoming
more and more consecrated to God, to
trutlu -ond to the eternal principles of
human happiness.
We'have been induced to meditate
as abovj by $e announcement of the
very recent death of Sir Charles Locke
Eastlako, the great English painter,
President of the Royal Academy, and
the " successor in that distinguished
chair of Sir Benjamin West, Sir,Josh-
ua Reynolds, Sir Martin Shee, and
other great English artists. As Are-
ward. of his gonins, and of the honor
which that genius had done for his
<^mntry, be was elected to ttat pon-
ton; sndrwa® also-knighted by-Queen
Victoria. He attained his skill by la-
The mysterious and TBlmtterable
agony of Christ in the garden of
Gethsemane has ever been pondered
with grateful awe by Christians. It
has been the theme, of much poetical
and theological speculation, and gen-
erally thought to be unfathomable iu
some of its meanings, It « so, in the
sense in which the experiences of an
Infinite Mind always are, but not so
in its relation to us. Occasionally
some reflecting person has drawn at-
tention to the fact, which indeed is
patent enough, and yet not generally
realized, that it was not the mere fear
of physical death which oppressed
the Saviour with such infinite sorrow.
Thousands of human neings have met
death In more terribly forms than ho
did, and yet with no such agony He
was indeed infinitely stronger to meet
Buch a death than any mere man could
be, since the divine part of this God-
man might have braced and sustained
the shrinking flesh, and made it as
unsusceptible to pain, for the moment,
as seemed to be the case in some of
the early martyrs. 'No. his crucifixion
was not tho one tremendous climac-
teric event of Christ's oarthly life,
the fountain-act of all future good to
us mortals, the pivot upon which our
eternal destinies were made to hang.
It was merely the necessary and fit-
ting end to his redemptive work, not
its main and prominent feature.
To explain ourselves. God camo
down to get nearer to us, to clear
away obstructions and pour in upon
us stronger currents of nis spirit, bis
more direct and powerful influences.
And since he does nothing arbitrari-
ly, and everything by law, system,
and order, it was necessary that he
should descend from the invisible
and unapproachable heights of his
being (where indeed he existed neith-
er formless, nor as a floating essence,/
for are we not made in his imag<
from our souls' centre to our bodief
outline? to our place of life, and into
a material body like ours. With thet
b >dy he assumed the warped, diseas-
ed, crippled, evil human nature be-
longing to it and accomplished his
great inearnation.
To touch us now, to flood us with
the light and strength, the faith and
the holy desires, ^which our course of
pvil had greatly lessened or wholly
cut oft", he set about regenerating the
human nature he had assumed, to
make it a crystal medium for his ope-
ration upon us. This was his life-
work, this his scheme of redemption.
It was one long, terrible, bloody, tri-
umphant struggle. He met aud con-
quered every temptation, endowed as
each was with the strength and gripe
of centuries of growth and
indulgence. He never faltered,
never trembled, never succumb-
ed, though indeed he some-
times had need of the angels to com-
fort him. Aud so the tragedy went
on. and the sublime conflict, upon
which eternal issues hung, deepened
and darkened, aud grew more deadly,
luutil iu the final, critical hour, it made
- -him sweat blood- But he draiued tho
bitter cup; ho laid low the last ene-
my. .You, man or woman, who have
wrestled with some tiger sin, and
weak and gasping, havo barely con-
quered at the last,—think what was
his fight, and his victory, who wres-
tled with Holland tho World and con-
quered one and all! The struggle
was infinite, and infinite the result.
Here is our Model, our only pattern.
It is perfect, which we shall never be;
it is complete, to which we can only
mako approximations forever.
*
*
i ita readers
Hal-
k Be sub-
voted!
. j*ng«v«,real 4statC0wner
ven-but he had.
borious study, and devoted a portion
of his artistic power to the illustra-
tion of religious subjects. Among
.are "The Raising of the
'and Ish
dren,"
,„.JI J -
Y'M, eaflta ^ Bdlero-
phon arrived at Plymouth, (the place,
of Kastloke'l birth and early rest
Otlle Chii-
"Christ
nni
WWIM W
If yearn nf
also a jast
.. never wfeiwHt
young a
which' he
tlnso
alongside the
portrait
Hi
r suffering cf
ing
■ • «1. .... n.
tmpevennce
f in founding thft
p -
ritiwoniilwwwttte lttl^ travel,
ha Graces, made the tour,of SWly,
i And now through that pcrfect union
ofthe human and the divine, which
the one God has consummated,through
tfrqt, trpmendous and overwhelming,
display of infinite love for his way-
ward, fallen, obdurate, mined# chil-
dren, see how Heaven opens! how
tile angels come down! and how who-
ev«sr wfllTmounts thither"? With no
easy triumph, most eertainly^rith,no
sole trusting to the righteoumiess of
(toother, with no self-careleSsness, but
with haM and bitter work, yet sweet-
«ned wiftal^an^yourseir "knowing it
God who woriteth in yon."
Everj- age has had its coat, and ev-
ety age will-hare,- so long « -Tn*tt
And Error continue their struggle hot
the mastery of this world,. In the
early and undisciplined ages, before
mental strategy was understood, Er-
ror opposed* truth flwo to fece, upon
the ftcrits of the ^snes.between th^ip;
hat very" sobp UoowSng, convinced,
• y a series of disastrous deteata, that
success was unattainable iu this « a),
she adopted strategy instead of open
field fightiug, and never since has
fought a single pitched battle. The
most effective department of the
grand strategy of Error is the adop-
tion of "cant"—an affectation of truth,
more sanctimonious iu appearance
than Truth herself, with utterance
louder than the 'j still small voice" of
Truth, and with more of the machin-
ery of worldly-wise works than
the "kingdom which comethnot with
observation," can allow itself to adopt
—being more attractive to the "natu-
ral man" tli^n that intrinsic excel-
lence and beauty of the Truth of God,
whioh must be sought with earnest-
ness and humility in order to be
found.
The cant of pharisaism was the
great curse of religion in the days
when our Savior lived upon the earth.
And it is, and always has been, a
strange thing to the thoughtful reader
of the evangelical hbtory, that most
divines, almost since the apostolic
day, while elaborately treating tho
other grand representative points of
Christ's history, have paid so little at-
tention to one of tho grandest things
he ever did,—namely, tho early, con-
stant. and life-long war which he
waged upon pharisaism; with its cant
ed creeds of dead formulas, its unsig-
nificant and lifeless usages, its utter
lack of all comprehension of the broad,
earnest, and philosophical principles of
faith and ethics, and its consequently
utter littleness, selfishness, and bigo
try of character and practice.
And there is another strange thing,
which is especially characteristic of
the popular religion of the present
time;—namety, that most advocates
of Christianity emphasize the things
which Christ did not emphasize, and
do not emphasize the things which he
did emphasize; that they devote their
oppositional strength to things which
he did not prohibit, but regulated;
and that they do not oppose, but sub-
mit to, are governed by, and support,
things against which he thundered
from the mount, the temple, and all
the paths of his life, and which divine
denunciation was the immediate cause
of his arrest and crucifixion.
To illustrate our meaning, we hesi-
tate not to declare our belief, that any
christian leader of the present day,
belonging to any one of the churches
of the puritanic tendency, would be
seriously damaged in reputation, if
not excommunicated, who should dare
to imitate Christ in his associations,
his sayings, hi* doings, and especially
in his denunciation of pharisaism.
Christ Was not so much apprehen-
sive of infidelity as a permanent and
invincible barrier to the progress of
his truth, as he was of that affectation
and cant of religion which would ren-
der the Church lifeless for good, and
powerful for evil, and, in the end,
productive of an infidelity proceeding
from the inside and not from the out-
side of his nominal fold.
And this is the great danger of
Christianity at the present day. The
pharisaism and the cant of the mid-
dle of the nineteenth century is just
as wide-spread, as fixed, as blind, as
selfish, as bigotted and unrelenting,
as in the days of Christ. But there
is no Clirist to denounce it, and to risk
his life and all in opposition to it.
And if there were, we fear there
would be few disciples to "leave all
and follow " him.
One of the most inveterate and
rampant of [the forms of the cant of
the present day, is the cant of "free-
dom,"—an affectation, coarae. crude,
and destructive, of a glorious reality,
which is now more mystified, wo far
Us the popular mind isconcerned,thau
ever before. The great horror of this
cant is, restraint upou the human ac-
tion, so far as government and law are
concerned. Whereas, it is yet ex-
ceedingly uncertain how far personal
liberty can he enjoyed in harmony
with tho existence of stable govern-
ment, sound administration of law,
and good social order.
But there is a slavery yet existing
which is infinitely worse than any
which ha* been removed, and which
prevent* a freedom which is real, glo-
rious and absolutely necessary to
healthful,and mature growth of human
character and christian civilization.
The slavery to which we allude is the
tyranny of dead religious forms,usages
and opinions,and the freedom of which.
We- Speak is freedom of religious
thonght; freedom to think and speak,
honestly, originally, and thorougly,
upon all the grand subjects"of human
destiny, as connected with the chris-
tian religion, without fear of the
anathemas of the various ecclesiasti-
cal vaticans which assume to inherit,
by tradition, more of the wisdom of
God than any man can attatii by thF
prayerful thought of life-time.
But there are cheering indications
that a revolution is in progress which
will Upeak this "yoke which neither
VU ItAI* Ani> fulKuru mam kMa ,a lu.or "
to his *ru<lents, told tljfiu to regard i
the Confession of Faith in its origin ,
and principles as the manifesto of a
great religious party, anil all stu h con-
fessions as simply historical monu-
ments marking the tides of religious
thought, and which cannot be under-
stood except in connection with the
genius and character of the time and
of the men who framed them.
The popular ecclesiastical notion
(says Dr. Tulloch) of creeds anil con-
fessions as in some sense absolute ex-
pressions of Christian truth—credcnda
to be adopted very much as we accept
the statements of Scripture itself—is
a notion iu the face ot all theological
science, which every theological stu-
dent, deserving the name, has long
since abandoned. Those creeds and
confessions are neither more nor less
than the intellectual labors of great
and good men, assembled, for tho most
part, in Synods or councils, all of
which " may err, and many have
erred." They are stamped with the
infirmities no less than with the noble-
ness of the men who made them.
They are their best thoughts about
Christian truth as they saw it in their
time; intrinsically they arc nothing
more, aud any claim of infallibility
for them is the worst of all kinds ot
Popery—that Popery which degrades
the Christian reason, while it fails to
nourish the Christian imagination.
Many signs warn us that we must
no longer repose in a mere blind tra-
ditionalism, under the impression that
our fathers have settled the sum of
Christian knowledge for m. and left
us only to follow iu their steps. Dr.
Tulloch's own profound conviction is
that religious thought iu Scotland, no
less than in England, has already en-
tered upon a movement, which is des-
tined to remould dogmatic belief
more largely than any previous move-
ment in the history of the Church ;
and that it is well nigh impossible that
the old relations of his church to the
Westminster Confession can continue.
And he very forcibly observes that it
is an utter misconception of tho na-
ture of belief, and pi the growth of
Christian thought in all ages, to repro-
bate new tendencies of speculation
and of culture arising within nation-
al churches.
>1 tltUIKI>.--A'
1 I, i.„ .,„i. hy K v. Mr. B
* tKTT, (i tUv tou. lo Mr
St. Paul's Episcopal Church, at Sa-
vannah, was destroyed by fire on the
26th nit.—The Jews are raising funds
to rebuild tho Temple at Jerusalem,
permission to do so having been ob-
tained from the Turkish Government.
—A religious daily paper is about to
be established in Philadelphia.-Thero
are not churches enough in Yorkshire,
England, and yet 186 new ones have,
been built within the last twenty-^
seven years.—Bishop Potter, of New
■ h"t Mr. ThkodorI
A I) R LI A LabuhuK,
Louie. MU-<j>iri.
Another in"«nbi'r of " Hood's Oi l Bri*n l« " h**
'orcfd (?) to S'.rri'uder—b *auty b io* the conqueror
For th ir *cn«roun douceur w* return our aiurero
th ink*, and hop# the h- pp> pal* W,JI to enjoy
the bK tutings vf matrimony.
BUSINESS NOTICES.
,rw Mr. A 8 'Vrijjht, lnte with tt,„
firm of E. F E«in? |it C".. B-fnhmn, ha*
f.vmed n ropurtii'T-hip wi'h the well known
tUm of Cooke & Newm ". and the tirm
will <lo a receiving forwfJniii; and cumuiiv
*ion biminess at G i an I lir-uh ,m
Thexe jreiillemfii r« «n<) favortib'y /
hsiown tlir'Miffhout a IfST portion ot the '
State, ami have mi esUbHshed repn'atioj
anenerifetui liusines* iff" and will mrictl
attend to the intereOa |f their p troiin.
We commend theif fl> tho favorata
cnnntderaiioue of ouf friends uud read.'it
everywherM.
r*Si - The Round Ts''e h:is jnven ppof
of an honest d'mpoufi"" to critieiHe md
discus* mutter# filnting to Hnci«y,
literature, art. unfl pvtic* i" nn independ-
ent wnv, free from O8 sbaeklea ot «ect or
oarty To our mtf' 'a"te. there is a
pmitivo c^arm in dash or flan w i;h
which the kniuhta ofTho Round T ■ hie ru«h
upon venerable and as*ai> their
front and ttnnk and roar It' Kometimea
they blunder in a charge, that onlj
proves the p-ruiner?" their knighthood
and demonstrates fMr valor.
[t iinqiiestiflOablv ihe ablest, and
typographically, th most inviting' literarj
journal that baa sppearod on this conti-
nent.
I'ff" See card of Benftj; Langdon it Co.,
commission merchants. Million, who adver-
tise a lot of very desirable goods in to-
day^ paper.
"£&- Mr. Mavpn, of Va„ and Ashford, ot
Te*a.- , have commenced business at N'ava-
sota as cotton factors and grocers, and
eommifgion merchants.
Their card il in this issue.
B®,PreacWn.' at the Baptist Church
this day «t " o'clock, by iC v. J. E.
r'^rnes, and «' 1 i'clock, by iOlder W. T.
Bush ofth1: Wfisiian Cnureh
m- AttWion is c:i 11<hI to iho advcvlisi'-
ment of Dr.Eliott's excellent medicines in
to-day's piper. These medicines have
long been the necessities of many a
household i' Texas, and where they are
kniwn, alwiys take the pi ice of the nos-
trums of Northern quacks They have
stood the lest of twenty year*experience in
Texas. TVy «r« Compounded from the
receipe ot physicians of the best stand ng
and mo tmccessful practice, and are enti-
tled to poblic confidence.
notice of Goodrich'* readers, etc.
Those jlindard school books aro becoming
too well known 'o require ex tented com-
ment.
call attention to th" card of N.
W. Bud. whp has opened a commission office
inthifti'y Mr. Bush is well known to
the butoeas community, as for many years
tho idfor partner of the firm of Hush &
WiWd of Hempstead, aud enjoys the
higfcot reputation for business qualites.
Weffmmetid him to the liberal patronage
ofth public.
MARINE.
FOR BOSTON!
I -
Merchants' Regular Line!
The Rplendid clipper whooncr
M. & E. Henderson,
m.'
PRICE, Master,
Bas room for one thousand bales cotton. For rate*.
App'y to
PEEL & DUMBLK. A^nta.
Houston or Gnlv«'.*ton.
I Cash advances made on Cotton, H'ool, or Hides,
York* 111 rccont BCnilOD WAS very Iconsiynod tJtrouah us to J. K. .Manning:, Agent of
_t o line, State street, Boh ton.
severe upon operatic singing in tUe
churches of that city.—A Congrega-
tional of 27 members has jtut beea
formed in New Orleans, with Rev. Sir,
Eustia, of Connecticut, for pro ton port
pastor.
Catholic Father Girst in Cleveland,
Ohio, was lately injured hy an astjailt
from an unknown person.—Theodore
Tilton gets $4,000 a year for cditfng
the Independent.—Rev. John 8eys,
for many years of the Liberian, M. E.
Church, has returned to Nashville,
and become pastor of a colored Con-
gregation.—On the 30th of Marchnext,
the Baptists of North Alabama will
meet, at Moulton, to form " A North
Ala. Convention.-'—Bishop Gregg,
while traveling on the Mississippi,lost
a trunk containing a valuable manu-
script and medal likeness, for which
he offers $200 reward.—Bishop Polk's
Church of the Arraiuiclatioirfh New
Orleans is revived and proapering.—
Rev. Mr. Fisher, a Baptist clergyman,
was recently violently assaalted and
injured in Louisville.—The Southern
Baltimore Conference willhold its an-
nual session at Alexandria, Va., Feb-
ruary 7 th. M
The Rev. Robt. 8. FuHerton, of the
Presbyterian Board, iliedat Dehra, in
India, on the 4th day of October last.—
There are 14,871 membcs of Evan-
gelican churches in Cfcstonati.—In a
Methodist church at Hfieo, Mo., the
services consist solmjVof reading,
praying and singingjp rnin'istor not
Houston, Jan. 27, I860.
jsn281w
BARK ' LAVINIA,'
For Liverpool.
The A 1 Fasl Sailiit^ Atncr-
lean hark, will leave for the above port with dispatch-
For freight and further p-irMcnh r« npolv to
S. E. LOHii cV CO.,
Ifoust on,
or 0. R. /il OHES,
Jani'Gdtwlwr <ral\
For It on ton
PIERCE & BACON'S LINE
Tin; AS /-AST-fAlLlXO ^riiuout-r
AR3IE BURS LEY,
D, N. Kei.mjv, Master.
llavinjr the ffrostor p«>! tii>n of hercar«o «'n;r:i^pd and
*oin r on board, r. il! havt-. di.jp:it'i: ns i«1 •« \F« r
freight of balance of eav^o. Rpply t<
W. H. Mi;il()LS A. CO.. Anents.
Doceinber 29.18GS. 1''r
; For M^ircrfHtoI.
Tin
preaching because
political oath.—
Catholics are prepi
the freedmen
nessee, has w
of the Pope's re
Free Masons a
ties. — Bishop
southward, to I
of the Church
I not take the
imoro Roman
> work among
ler, of Ten-
tter in defence
Jll against tlie
r secret socie-
on has come
sr the interests
Orleans.
we nor oar lathers were able to bear.
Principal Tulloch, of 8t, Andrew's
University, Scotland, iu a late wldress
Hie beiltl t If
agony of Chri
represents the
of the scltoolj
WhrrtriK mHr|
ge)ical view,
jority «if <1
trnthfnl, ptl
BuUall car
whicli are
are welco
GRAPH
Bfrribution on the
his paper, simply
[ of tli*' writer, and
jrhich he belong*.
IWthotlii-T. ot ennr-'
veil by the ma-
to be the most
and comforting,
■eligious utterances.
Irectly controversial,
the SrxiiAY Telu-
SPEARtNC,
ti'lll havo fiiimediiitc dispntcli forth#
*hovo port. For tnlaiw of frei«li -80« ap-
ply to
T. It. M.'MAItAN .t OIUiKltT.
^AlTMTOSjJan^Sl. 1M0. .ltwtf A'"'"1
For t,u t i jirtol
"r "jAMEi? S'OHI.KV.
fjnv. n, Ikfis,
NEW IINE OF PACKET8
BKTWRKK
GALVESTON AND LIVERPOOL 1
THB "I,ONE HTAIV LINK
Of Puckots Is now under wny.
The pioneer packet
Oapt. Charles Kennard, l«n
Liverpool for (Jalvehton
the 7th ulU and Is now look-
ed for. She will be followed
by another fine, first class ve«-
All tho tufMMs will be put In this line that busi-
ness may require. As this line is to be ft permanent
ono, shippers are requested to jrive it their support.
arranu ment* can Iw made to fill orders for ftii
dr**criptfonw of tnMrehandis«>.
W. WOOD. Airent,
No. It Fenwick Street, LiverpooL
H'. U. HORLEY 4. CO., Aokkth,
_ 3ftn 1, Oslveston. Texas. dtv lm
For JVtic Irork.
THE SUPERIOR fa t aitln« BRIO
J. F. HOLBROOK,
Btto-wn, Mulrr.
H*rln< a lartrc portion of h r c«r*o awl nut.
(rotnit on 'b.'aril. will liav > ^ulct, (t|«p tch a* abo«-
Forrri'littit or pomm* apply, apply to
T. H. McMAWan a. (HI. « T
(iil.vr.nroN, Jan.0, IBM. dA.t.wtf* Ajft-nta.
M
BRAZILIAN PRBBLK
CT Hpectacles. to strengthen nn l improve the aiifht
of oW and r<Hius, by «lay or nhrht. «rtfh ease and com-
fort to ♦Ji eye. without th - di-trpaMiur results of fre-
^uonl^hahire*. Th^ae eeiebi-nted trlasnea are too w<
knort-ti tlirou«ht ut the 81.nth Ut apeak of their su,
nority owr all othere, DouNe and alnrle telescqj
\>( imitii'ii.'* po er and field. CatalocueH aeut
•i nolnf'iur atr.wp.
SRMMON8, Ocullrt-OptIcian. ,
Wj Bro«,iwp.y, under Lafarre Bouse,
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Cushing, E. H. Tri-Weekly Telegraph (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 141, Ed. 1 Monday, January 29, 1866, newspaper, January 29, 1866; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth236290/m1/4/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.