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Show Domx-tic Life. Rev. Mr. An: delivered his third azd closing lecture last evening to the largest audience of the conre. In his treatment ef thi. cf the kindred topics wLi:h Lave o.?oupied the attention ui' Hit L-cturer during his stay in the city, the pervading pervad-ing sen.ic:e-nt was that unseiishnc-ss, respect, reverence and uclerne5s are not only essential to happiness in socie- ty and in domestic life, but are in fact : the hallowed avenues through which .alone true souls come together and . affiliate in every relation of iifo. With the exercise of these, he believed thai domestic life might be made to exi-t among us in rare perfection, and that with the manifestation of sincerity in the home, and heroism in the little things of fife, the fire-ide could be rendered as rich in beauty and poetical association, as the heaven to which mankind aspire. "B;ar ye one another's an-other's burdens" and live "in honor preferring one another," were the lessons les-sons taught, and these were enforced with a wealth of rhetoric, and an aptness apt-ness of brilliant illustration, seldom surpassed on the lyceum platform. Mr. Ames closed by thanking the audience for their attention, acd the press for it3 friendly remembrances; and remarked that his three days in Salt Lake had been exceedingly satisfactory' satis-factory' and agreeable to him. |