s3.amazonaws.comVol+15+(1858-59... · VOL. XV.-NO. 7. Qrl)t ~itbbllt~ Recorbtr, I PUBLISIIED WEEKLY...

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--- -- VOL. XV.-NO. 7. Qrl)t Recorbtr, I PUBLISIIED WEEKLY By the Seventh-dny 'Bnptist Society, At No. 100 N"".au Strut, Nero York. P£RJIS-S2 00 per yew! payable In MYanee. Sub- I:nptions not paid till the close of the yeOl', will be lilble to on additional chOl'ge of 50 cents. Tnt Sabbalh Recorder is devoted to the exposition and vindication,of the views and movements of the Seventh- Saptlst Denomination. It promote vital and vigorous benevolent action, at the same ;i:. th.t it urges obedience to the commandments of GOO ,lid the faith of Jesus. Its columns are open to me ,drooacy of all reformatory measures which seem liiply to improve the condition of society, diffuse borrledge, reclaim the inebriate, and enfranchise the fe!l.1red, In its Literary and Intelligence Depar'\. mento, care is !aken to furnish matter adapted to the ",nt5 of every clll8S of readers. As aRe- Fdons anti Family Newspaper, it is intended that 'the ',ic,,;dlf shall rank among the best. , tiT'puyments received will be acknowledged in the as, to indicate the time to which they reach. -;;it' No paper discontinued until all arrearages are escept at the aiscretion of the Committee. lU.TES OJ..' .A.l)VERTISING. For a S<J,uare of 16 lines or less--one insertion, $ 75 , ,. each subsequent insertion, 50 " "six months, 6 00 ., ." one year 10 00 for each additional square iwo-thirds tbe above rates. and remittances, should (post paid,) to the Editor. of tlu. Sabbath R"",der, No, 100 NIlJ8au-st., Neur.YQrk, For tho Sabbath Recorder. The Withered Wreath. BY IDA. FAIRFIELD. A little grave-its fresh green soda, Arrayed with nicest care, But burial stone or slab was none To tell.who slumbered there. A withered wreath of blossoms pale, In faded beauty lay Above the tiny hands which late, Had tossed each flower in play, There was no need of marble pile, To tell the mournful t"le, I Some mother's idol borne to rest, , Within death'. shadowy vale. A pearl from love's rich-jeweled zone nod slipped its silver string- A song-bird gone to sunnier climes, To try its unfledged wing. What radiant beauty must have slept Upon that brow so f'lir, When the frail wrellth was lain aside, An angel crown to wear. But oh! with it, fond eyes beheld, Life's rainbow hue depart, Affection knowS no stronger tide Than swells a mother's heart. 11.,,11 mourning ones soon gathered ronnd, His little uarrow bed, And tears of bitterest ngony 01' wild rebellion shed. No wonder that the lava flow Has withered every limf, The heart's most fragrant blossoms die, Sered by one mighty grief. But mourner lift thy sorrowing gaze, A spirit wing Is ncar, Thy cherub carols in yon Skies, And canst thou wish him here? lIere, where the clouds of woe and care Might dim that glorious brow, Where sin and crime too soon might etain . That soul so spotless now I Oh I no, in yonder realms of light, With eye of faith behold, The lost lamb thou hast mourned so much, Safe in tho Saviour's fold. Remove the withered wreath and plant Spring's soft and, fragrant flowers, Thy bud will burst to fadeless bloom, In heaven's immortal bowers. lndeptnrlenCll, July, 1858. For the Sabbath Recorder, following beautiful lines accompanied by a bo- qUet ot rose-buds, were presented to liS a few nights lince, by our litlle Eudocia, C. J. WELLS. To A. O. and C. J. Wells, ox THE DEATH OF LITTLE H.l.TTIE. You had a littlo daughter once, And brrght blue eyes had she, A very wise and winning look, , A dear she was to me. But with the passing faU she-came. She came the fairest of them aU,- She came 1I merry little thing, And won the hearts of all. But in this world, alas, She was not long to stay, For with the gloom of fall she came, And with the flowers she passed away. To you II short time lent Was your sweet daughter dear, God soon recalled the gift he And left you weeping here. : But though thns early cnlled to dit To leave this world of care, We trust that she Is placed on high, A glorious crown to wear. EunOCIA HILIB. . is a truth easily granted in generlll, that It IS all alike to Omnipotence, what the instru- lIIents arc by which it works; and yet it is not !o easy to apply it to '11 'particular cas,':, when G e nrc but few and fcetle, then so bclit,ve that i od ouly save us, out save by us, Ih Instance of faith, whicb, wherever js, n obtain II good report. Let this strength. the weuk and hearten the heartless; let it be with God for tlie enforcing of our pe- Ions, and with ourselves for the silence of our It is notking with God to help, wheth- ft Wllh many, OT with them that hallt 110 pow- ,-2 xiv. 11. [Beecher. !S Sinners think by jnstifying themselves, to o being judged of the Lora; whereas, the Tn Y Way to do 'that, is, by judgi1lg ouTlel1101. . bey that boast of their religion, may be 'suspected of partiality and hypocrisy "'It. . . J : " t ,i> NEW YORK, FIFTH-DAY, JVLY 22, 1858. Correspondence. crease of tbe body unto the edifying of itself I flowed down in streams of beneficence to our to-day, is atill pointing us hc.pefnHy to been common all. Hopkinton, R. L, June 5, 1858. in love, so that it may grow np into Him in I world. Hence when He ascended upon high, ture. It is this, "More 'Beyond!' th; same fountain-been fed b1 tha ELD. S S. GRfsWOLD: all things who is the head, even Christ. He gave somotapostles, some prophets, some Lest man should be satisfied .with too, and have daily milt arounlf' Q,' Respected listened to This body then is the church over which pastors, some miracles, some attainments, God has implanted a sacred to and ':'ii,.;rl .... read by YOII, before the Se 7 entb·day Baptist Christ, gniding, directing, and healers, h,elps, 'some government, some perfection in his natnre. Our perfect ideal band is to be dissolved, and, as Eastern Association, at its late session in this controling, while in it He resides, enlightening, tongues, some interpretatiou of tongnes, some lies beyond and liS we advance it each. other the parting hand, it UlI[8 Bev-, tolvn, and being desirous of the opportunity of qnickening, and actuating. . I evangelist, of the saints,jOT cedes. Ever learbing, 'ever advancing, ering honsehold -ties.. Many, of us may never, col,sidering the positions therein taken more Into this body (the church) enters the tke 'WOTk if 'nUtTY, for the edifying of stilI nnsatisfied. Thirsting greet each , closely than we found onrselves able· to do world by ''repentance Goa; iiJdfaith to- the body - we all come in the spirit presses eagerlyc on for higher us the tI.", '. from having heard. it read only, we hereby reo wards our Lord Jesns ChriSti" hence by regen· unity of the f)1ith, and the knowledge of the and each drop drank from tlie great cup we a.nd face to , qnest a copy of the same, together with the eration or spiritual birth men are born into Son of God, into a perfect man, unto the our Father holds out to his children only face behold Him who bas', rellected glory , resolution appointing you to write and read the kingdom of God, and: are thus translated measnre of the stature of the fulness of Christ. us more eager, more thirsty. Tlfe through the' medium of his workS.', .. ' There said Essay for publication in the SABBATH RE- from the kingdom of darkness into that of Here we have the ministrations of the Gos- fant fondly clings to his devoted mother, our visions shall not be limited by a clouded CORDER, if this request for publication be grant- God's dear Son, and thus they become mem- pel enumerated, and they are many. But now her are centred all his conceptions of horizon. will be a field for attainmellt, ed by said paper. bers of His (Christ's) body, HIS flesh and the of the Gospel" are made man race. :s:e kuows no world but the whose heigbt and depth nO,human mind can Signed-Thos. M. Clarke, Wm. L. Clarke, His bones, viz., His Church which is His body. to centre mostly in one man, and to snpport home which snpplies his every contemplate, and eternity shall not be too vast, Joseph Potter, B. F. Prosser, John Stanton, See Eph. ii. 30. this one man, this ordained minister to every sooner does his tottering feet bear him to nnfold and pursue it-there may we meet Wm. Potter, Jr., W m. Potter, Sen., G. W. Now as God is love, and as he that loveth so-called local church is supposed to be sup- threshold where he bebolds the outer -farewell. Brown, Clarke Greenman, John S. Champlin, is born of God, and as he thllt is born of God porting the "ministrations- of the Gospe!." her sunny skies, flowery meadows, and To yon, kind teachers, we wonld speak a Peleg Clarke, David Langworthy, Alfred is a child of God, and as such children are Hence the support of one regularly ordained fields, then he forth his little parting word; but oh I how poor are words Clarke. heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ Jesus, ministerin every local church in every village, and longs to leave the shadowy preciucts when the heart is too full for utterance. We Greenmanville, Conn., July 12, 1858. does it not follow that love to God aud love (be they ever so many,) and the support of home. As years increase his powers, miss one who commenced tile 'the labors df this DEAR BRETBREN,- peculiar circnmstances to mon is the scriptural qualification for mem- the ministrations of the Gospel may be very lies forth, thinking to reach the limits year with you, having changed mortal for im- in which I am placed, relative to the Essay to bership in the chnrch. 'l'hus the Lord adds different thinis. ideal world, bnt as he nears the wbllrllibe.1 mortality, she is enjoying the swcet fruition of which you r,efcl;, have delayed an answer to unto the church such liS are saved. 3. The responsibility of the church to sup- had thought the land and towering her labors in those bright worlds to which faith your letter in order that I might avail myself If the position taken be correct relative to port the ministrations of the Gospe!. meet the sky, behoid I there lies beyond a pointed in her dying hour. As we bid farewell of suitable advice. It will he remembered what the church is, a local church must be that If, as has been shown, the ministrations of more beautiful and bright than that on to you, our feelings are similar to those which ·that the Associatipn, by a major vote, decided portion of the church residing in a particular the Gospel all those agencies and in- he stands. we, experienced fonr years ago, when our pa- not to print the ElRsay in the RECORDER, be· locality. Such were the local church of Cor of the chnrch or body of Christ This same principle is also illustrated in rents took us by the hand and bid us God- cause (it was argued) a vote to print would inth, of Ephesus, of Laodicea, etc. 'l'hose through which He acts, and seeks to effectuate mature years and in every persnit in life. speed. For your care, your unceasing toil in be Oil enlhlrsement, by the Association, of the letters missive from Jesus Christ to the seven His purposes of benevolence to a sinful world, Naturalist, going forth under the broad our behalf, we would attempt no recompense of views taken by the Essay. For it was main· churches of Asia, were sent to local churches. we unhesitatingly and uuqnalifiedly affirm it to of heaven, beholds the impress of a D words, we know that all you reqnire is that we tained that the doctrine of the EssllY WIlS "re- 8:nch I understand to be the scriptnral idea of be the mosL solemn duty of the church freely, hand in even the tiny mountain moss, th may go and do likewise for others, yet in igno. volutionary"-that its first and sccoiid heads the church and of a local church. AS such cheerfully, and mnnificently to support such WIshed beneath his feet. He wonders rILnce. This we will do, and· whatever land may were irrelevant to the subject matter of the God joined them together, and it becomes us ministration,q For it is only by a liberal sup· wisdom, bnt stops not here-his longing callus, your example wiil still be remembered_ EssaYi and lastly, as an eqnivalent or indemni- to see that what God joins, no man sunders. port of these ministrations of the Gospel, thllt seeks for clearer glimpses of the Truly, your lives are fraught with 'cconiinued ficatiou ngninst expense of time and paller, a th h I. ttl' h th d' I N' h d' k ts of' self.' but l'n 'he w=rld beyond each But it may be asked, "In what light are e c urcu c:!n expec ever 0 nccomp IS e ISP aye III atnre s great au lwor . ac -u, , monied remuncfIltion was proposed. Under the so-called local churches of the present day design of her mission. sees in tbe superficiDI structure upon labor of love shall be'a ·gem in the diadems of such circumst[lllces, it has been II serions ques- d h J th t l'tt your glory and thousands whom you have to be viewed?" I In the light of so Whatever then of prayer, whatever of ex- walb an in t e starry 108tS a 'g I er '. ' tion in my mind IlS to the propriety of assent- many organized bodies of a portion of a scrip- hortatiou, wbatever of preaching, whatever of bis head-but finds not a place in this great taught the way of life "shall rise and call yC!ll ing to your very kind request either as it regards II I h h F h h I' h h' h t f If.d . I h t f of 1·llvestl·.,"att·on to stop and exclaim, en blessed." tura Dca c urc, in w at ot er Ig t wors IP, w a ever a se - ema, w a ever 0 my own self-respect, or' the decision of the can they be viewed; because as has been love or benevolence, whatever of a holy life, The poet sings of his native land, her We leave you now, but add your blessing as' Association', for althOUO'oh it was Buo"gested f\ 1 d s f I' II sbown, a true scriptural local church would whatever oflabor, whatever of money, is de- Iy murmuring watel's, owery va es au we ay a ewe . after the vote was declared that the Associa. _-"-"-_____ _ include the whole portion of the church resident manded for Ithe support of the ministrations of ing ,monutains, but yet the song is tion might have reqnested its printing ns con- there. the Gospel, must be given, whether to the there lies beyond a note he has I:.ot toucJred, taining my views, and not those of the ASSO- , I d t _ . That any number of Christians>bave a right diaconal, for the poor,. to the pastor, prEsbyter, again he strikes the yre, an ye agalD .On every hand we hear religious teachers as. ciation. Yet as no motion was made to tbat , fi db fi . 1 Not Jnstified by Faith Alone. to organize into a body, for the purpose of or bishop, ror his watch care, or to the evan- tion lies beyond. snring the people that man is justi e y mtr. effect, I presume even that courtesy was con- l that f I'th I'S II 'h"t the gospel requires more efficiently or de. finitely carryin.," out one gelist for his preaching. In short, whatever It is also illustrated in the ,,"reat a 01lf; a a., a , sidered as not best. I need not inform you ill otder to secure mitire reconciliation to God. that feelings most painfnl were caused in my or more specific parts of Christiauity, is pro· labor or service the church demands of any of which is being made in the arts and this assurance, we generally have mind, whether justly or otherwise, I leave for bably true. Thus any portion of the resident her members, which hinder them from an equal One mental attainment cannot stltisfy diverso mystical speculation on the natnre o.f Christians in a plltCc have probably a Gospel prosecution of their own secnlar concerns with longing t,ature, but each progressive stepi" hut faith, the different kinds of faith; the true and yon to judge. Suffice it to say, that I deeply r I h . d." 'th h- h right to organize a missionary, temperance, the other members, the church is to render to opens the way for another still greater. _New a sei t e so. vlOg an noV'savlDg .al ,w Ie , regret the undue warmth of feeling and expl'es- peace, or anti.slavery society, especially if all such a just remuneration, so that there be beanties are continually unfolding altogether, leave -the hearers totally in the dark sion into which I was betrayed, and'I feci it 11 F to what it is to believe, or whether they really other acknowledged Christians resic.ing there, an eqnality, Ilnd all equally burdened. in the scientific world, and as the vision if ,£n- do bell'eve or not. Such I-S the effect of 'hl's privilege here to offer an apology to the ASSO- oppose the discussing of those subjects in the But whether it is the duty of the church to larged, new views continually present "!lom- mode of instruction, that it is usually more dif- ciation for it. For although I did theD, und 1 church. The same right have Sabbath-keep· support one man an4 his family in each secta- selves, and beyond the visible and certain ficult to lead the hearer to believe that he doe, do still, fed that it WI1S not without some I h' II b I' ers, Immersionists, etc., to organize to carry rinn org""nizat:on in every village, town, or still lies the mysterious. We can- be{ieve, t tan to 1m actua y to . e leve provocation; yet it WIlS my rlnty as a Chris· out their views <>f ecripture trnth more efficient- city, may be a qnestion. For if the view of not forheal' here to insert .that oft-repeateKl'e. in Ohrist. He does believe firmly that Christ tillll not to have resented. I trust I may ever , and the gospel are Divine, he dare not believe Iy. But neither would accord with both "the church" and a "local church," in this mark of the immortal Newton. He I" I that IJe II"S the rl'ght I.' I'nd of 'or hl's be willing to acknowledge my errori and I '[ ,}!o II the scriptural idea of a local church, as given essay, be scriptural, will it not be found dim- know not wbat I may appear to the world; put teachers have left the impression upon his mind desire ever to treat all men, especially my ',' above It to e oncl'le modern ecclesl'astl'clll arrange to myself I seem only to have been like a 1 ,Doy that faith is some &upernatural, strange, tran. brethren, with urhanity and Christian cour- . cu r c - I W 'th h . t I'd A d playing on the sea-shore and divertin o " m 1 self scendental exercise of mind, which strains it tes_v, even thouo"h I may not be so treated. 2. hat are the ministrations of the ments, WI sne SCrip ura 1 eas. n may 1 k' d f' - d I' 'II' k . I in now aud then finding smoother up to a In 0 inspIre e evatlOn, or I um\na- The above seemed necessary, by way of Gospel? it not be as ed whether these sectarllln ecc e3i- I tion; and the natnral common.sense confidence I l 'h .. t t' f th G It' I d asticisms, do not involve '.on expenditure of prettier shells than ordiuary, while the whl'ch he has I'n the gospel, havI'ng nothl'ng I'n exp anation and apology. In compliance, e miniS ra Ions 0 e ospe mus IDC u e tn therefore, with your reqnest, and with the that whole system of human agencies or means meuns, and money, not jnstified by the ocean of trnth lies all nnexplored before, e." it of the of conrse must be deati- economy of Apostolic order? ' And yet 'these attainments which seemed ot;,so tute of the essential quality,of truefaith. We advice of others, I have concluded to forward and instrmiJentalities, by which the chnrch is II t to hI' were amon" the gre It''st are nellrly every day meeting those who de. f th E II" h t l' h h d t' f Ifill th b' t Perhaps it may be offered in J'ustification of sm. a ac.coun m, ".ij a copy 0 e' lor pn) IcatlOn in teo accomp IS er es my, or u e 0 d r h b fi f sire salvation; are willing and anxious to take SABBATH RECORDER, should it be considered of her mission, this apparent unnecessary expense, that the dlscover.les ever e or t e ene. t 0 Christ as the Saviour and KiHg, but find no not prejudicial to the interest of the church- As the body is the instrnment or agent by present divisions and subdivisions of the chnrell Yet belDg conscIOus of somethIng stili" peace because they 40 think that they have the ministrations of the Gospel-the SABBATH and through which the soul acts and effectn- demand it. That they abate somewhat of yond superior to hdadefineld ;Ilcdq right ; kind of l faith. 'l'he. o.rigihn offithid s ;_ blame in the case ought to be admitted. Still looked upon what ne a rea y att!llnep' I culty ID near y every case, IS ID t e re ne RECORDER-the Seventh·day Baptist del1omina- ates; so is the church which is the body of h NIt' h' h hav been r sort d to • r I am impressed that the vast expense of sec. bnt shells upon the sca·s ore. ewton specu II IOns w IC e e e , ,0 tion-divine truth-God, or the Bible. And Christ, the instrument or agent by or through h h '1 d tho defense and support of the dogma of I wish here to ndd that any critical examina- which Christ as the sonl acts or effectuates to tarianism is contrary to the economy of Gos- one the w 0 ave. tOi ed an "J nstification by Faith alone." It is found to tion of the positions of the Essay, will be fulfill his intentions and purposes. pel order, or a just support of the ministra- nnsatlsfied the be false in experience, as it is to the tions of the Gospel,' and also it seems to me' left to us a prIceless legacy.wmch sta. nds Divine word; and in order to defend it, SOJlle courteously received, or any explanations As cvery part of the human body hils a h h f th . I I d' " t' t f 'th b ' that the church may be chargeable with wast. basis fort e rese.arc es 0 .IS Bpecm pea mgs In respec 0, III ecome given. For function to perform, so has every part of the ing her goods in this respect, especial. we not apply thiS progressive prinCIple necessary. If the truth was plainly preached, "Truth crushed to earth will rise again, church, or body of Christ, its proper functions . h' man is not justified by.faith alone, but by The eternal years of God are hers, r H A Iy if she 'refuses inquiry as to how the evil can Institution whose anniversary we t IS 1l""lllfH- and works, it would be easy to point out, to perlorm. ence the postle cautions each ? ' th While error writhes beneath her chains, be remedied. brate Bnt a lew years ago.e the steps to a good hope, so that every man And dies amid her worshipers." and all the members of Christ's body, how pines waved proudly upon this hill.side. could understand. Faith is dead withont Y . h b d f Ch" b th the ithe e Iter e t' t f, Ilow It is evident that the primitive assemblies of OUl'S, In t e on s 0 a f1Stlan ro er- y ern g ec or ov - sIma e any e disappeared and he first corner stone wa:s'Ul).ul works, as James tells ns, and it is qnite in vain hood for the truth, to T. M. Clarke and member. Each and all of the several labors Christians depended more upon the mutual for an nnpretendi structure. to confuse the mind with theories of the differ- th SSG and nses of each and all of the several mem- edification of each other than upon the modern 'II . _ ence between that faith which does not work, o ers. . . RISWOLD. f d' d .. t th th h then, we have seen, it gradua y rISmg "nd the fal-th whl'ch does work. It is bel'S of Christ's body (the chnrch) go to make way 0 an or ame mmlS eri us ose w 0 'f 'ts te' h d nol''''',a. U ,_ A E the fostermg care 0 I ac ers an tain that thous.ands of persons believe tbe gos- n sBay; th " 'n' ttl' of th Go 1" Th were the better qualified for public teaching, ' up e ml 18 ra ons e spe . e We have seen numbers go forth yearly to pel without the shadow of a doubt, and yet do Read by S. S. GRISWOLD, before the Ea8tern Associa Apostolic, the Diaconal, the prophetic, the would naturally become more conspicuons., 1 t d tion, convened in Hopkinton, R. 1., May 20, 1858' form with willing their allotted not obey, and arc consequent y no The following is the resolution appointing the pastoral, the bishopric, the linguistic speaker I think it was far from the design of Christ until even the dark corners of the earth Now what they require is not anew 'Jrind of Essayist and the 'subject of the Essay, was passed d - t t th t' t . I to institute a clerical order, or a salaried min- . faith, but ob,edience. And it, only by the Association at its session in New MOl'ket, an lD erpre er, auma urgls or mlrae e- felt its benign influence. Bnt keepmg counsel to tell them that" If they had the trne May 21, 1857. Sec Minutes for 1857, page IS, at worker, the healer of sick, the helps, and down istry, except that whatever of time or money . h th 'vc"t f the acte we E Wit e progressl spm 0 0 , faith thcy would obey." Faith is not a propel- the tOPi BaD/veil, That S. S. Griswold read an ssay t th 10 t g'lfts of tile S l'r'lt wer all a part was required of one or more of the members, d' on the responsibility of tbe church to support the 0 ewes p , e forward to the time not far lstant, ling power, and is not necessarily obedient. , ministrations of the Gospel. of the ministrations of the Gospel, in Apostolic was to be equalized among them all. It was influence shall have increllsed, yea, an The will, the free will, is the propelling power; I shall inquire times. Now is it not evident that there is a then and is now doubtless the duty of local fold. but faith is not a volition of will, bnt a convic- 1. What is the church? wide departnre from those primitive churches, churches to send forth and pay the living Beloved c1assmates-To.day we go tion of the understanding; hence a man may 2. What are the ministrations of the Gos- in the estimation of the" ministrations of the preacher rather than appropriate all such have true faith not obey, as many do. It and our influence is to be added for is neither good philosophy, nor good theology, pel? Gospel?" preaching at home. While pastors will be woe to that which i8 already acting nor good practise, to teach that faith and obe. 3. What is the responsibility of the church The Diaconal, once a most laborious office needed, still I fully believe such missionaries world, but as we go let us not fold dience are one and tHe same thing. the to snpport the ministration of the Gospel? in taking care of the poor, is now almost limit- sent forth by local churches wonld be a return our ncedemic honors aud.sit onrselves inspired word often makes faith stand for all 1. What is the church? ed to carrying aronnd the" elements" of the to apostolic practice. Such a ministry ought down to rest as if OUl: work was already the conditions of justification, we allow. So it r It b th ht b th .. I h h to be amply ' also employs the word repentance and obedi. may e oug y Bome at any InquIry Lord's Supper; while near y all t e ot er pleted, but remembering, resnlts still lie oe)1,qnu ence; bnt this by no means proves that faith concerning What is the church? is irrelevant, named ministrations are now merged into that I conclude then by saying that the church to which past acquirements afford DO pal'lI'utli. and repentance and obedience are identicaI.- as it intimates tbat the question has not yet of a preaching ministrYi so that a clerical is nnder the most solemn responsihility to sup- Let us go on, "still achieving," still pnrs4iltg Paul, preached repentance towards God and become a finality. Bnt, that tho qnestion at order has come to be the sine qua port the .. ministrations of. the Gospel," the great enterprise which we have so faith-in the Lord Jesns Christ, as two distinct the day, is not such a fixity ought non, (the indispensable condition,) almost of whether such ministrations be cleric or laic. I b Wb I t .. t. acts, worthy of two ,distinct names. Faith cious y egnn. erever our 0 5 may may exist withont works, and works may oc- to preclude inquiry, may be evident from the all chnrch order. Hence churches' deprive whether fortune smiles or frowns there cur withonffaith i and neitber_oCthem is of sav- fllct that the popular sentiment seems to mili- themselves of commemorating their StWionr's Valedictory Essay, remain an unceaaing stream of joy flowing " ing value without the other. ,.' 'j' 1 tate mnch against that unity prayed for by death, and Christians of water baptism, be- Read by Miss ANN E. WELLS, at the Anniversary the great fountain-head, an urifailillg Spr;,nlZ, It is true that Paul speaks of Jesus Christ, in John xvii., also us taught by cause it is now supposed tbat none bnt an of Alfred Academy, held June 30, 1858. N atnn shall find a voice in hoI' thousaud withont tho deeds of the law, but never hlDts Paul, in 1 Cor. xii., also in Epb. iv. From "ordained minister" can rightfully administer HORE BEYOND. ons forms to to thesonl of her God. that any are jnstified with,ont ,0f'thE! ' gospel. The law signifies, the these teachings it is plain that all wlio have those ordinances. But the!'e is altogether a It is no new occasion which has convened us while we recommend permanent and tion that had ceased to possess savmg recdved spiritual baptism, are members of Ilick of scripturlll evidence that anything like to·day-but one more added to those which reaching aspirations 'for the future, let ns' . the gospel had superceded it, was giv. tbat body, (the chnrch,) of which Christ is the a self-perpetuating clerical order existed in have passed with each swiftly gliding year- snffer the golden moments of the' ,to en' "for the obedience of fa,ith." pc coUl1\6 DO , head. 'those primitive assemblies of Christians. For one more birth-day festival or' onr honored in- pass ,ecordlel8 into the shadowy realms deeds 'w.e can perform are !; h h ft - No man by good' works, can atone for BIni _ • This body of Christ then, is the c urc a er when they came together, one had a psalm, stitutlOn-one more band is about to leave past, while the spidt rHels amid brigbt Christ i; our sacrifice. But It is quite' umjec. " ",,- which we are inquiring, Now as it takes all another a hymn, a third an exhortation, an- these halls for the active duties of life after beautifnl visio.ns of thefuture. Let us notiex. assary to confonnd expiatoryac,ts whicb-Paul ' , the parts to make the whole, and as tbe whole other a doctrine, another a tongue, another four years of literary toil, and as I'\'e come to the const!l-nt and abiding now. toritne condemns, ,with acts. of obedience, which he,. ; must include all the parts, it follows, that the an interpretation of tongues. .. For the mani- pay our last trihute of good-will and affection more brillillJlt but fickle and unilertermipll(11 commands. Faith and '" i church, or body of Christ, must include all its festation of the Spirit was given to every man to each other, and our beloved institution, we then. But rather forgetting the things curing causes qf ftardon, but o( ,re.., j ,1i membersi so that tbe whole body, fitly joined to profit withal." (See 1 Cor. :tiL; Eph_ iv.) come not bOllBting of we have already are passed, press fQtward towards a higher Jceiving tAhe tbtbie. by, ': .. re d (' ) Th - nilS In 8 sense 1t air. " ',. together and compacted by that which every Such were the "ministrations of the Gospel," learne .or we are bnt beginners. e same holier goal. . spenks of faith and works. And in :,,', ' joint supplieth according to the effectual work- 'tbrough'which the divine benevolence of the principle which'has actuated us ever since we For the few past 'year,s the ,trial$ Paul and ing iu the measure of every part, 'mdketh in· great head of the church, (which is His body,) took the first step in our literary course, nntil hopes and aspiratIons' of' the student's life ry to salvatIOn. It IS a radIcal and essential ' . ' • 1 , i I I " \. , (-

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Page 1: s3.amazonaws.comVol+15+(1858-59... · VOL. XV.-NO. 7. Qrl)t ~itbbllt~ Recorbtr, I PUBLISIIED WEEKLY By the Seventh-dny 'Bnptist Pn~lisbing Society, At No. 100 N"".au Strut, Nero York.

-----VOL. XV.-NO. 7.

Qrl)t ~itbbllt~ Recorbtr, I

PUBLISIIED WEEKLY By the Seventh-dny 'Bnptist Pn~lisbing Society,

At No. 100 N"".au Strut, Nero York. P£RJIS-S2 00 per yew! payable In MYanee. Sub­

I:nptions not paid till the close of the yeOl', will be lilble to on additional chOl'ge of 50 cents.

Tnt Sabbalh Recorder is devoted to the exposition and vindication,of the views and movements of the Seventh­

Saptlst Denomination. It ail!'s~to promote vital ~ety and vigorous benevolent action, at the same ;i:. th.t it urges obedience to the commandments of GOO ,lid the faith of Jesus. Its columns are open to me ,drooacy of all reformatory measures which seem liiply to improve the condition of society, diffuse borrledge, reclaim the inebriate, and enfranchise the fe!l.1red, In its Literary and Intelligence Depar'\. mento, care is !aken to furnish matter adapted to the ",nt5 ~D[l t,~stes of every clll8S of readers. As aRe­Fdons anti Family Newspaper, it is intended that 'the

',ic,,;dlf shall rank among the best. , tiT'puyments received will be acknowledged in the p~r;o as, to indicate the time to which they reach.

-;;it' No paper discontinued until all arrearages are ~id, escept at the aiscretion of the Committee.

lU.TES OJ..' .A.l)VERTISING.

For a S<J,uare of 16 lines or less--one insertion, $ 75 , ,. each subsequent insertion, 50 " "six months, 6 00 ., ." one year 10 00

for each additional square iwo-thirds tbe above rates. ~Communieations,orders. and remittances, should

~'directNl (post paid,) to the Editor. of tlu. Sabbath R"",der, No, 100 NIlJ8au-st., Neur.YQrk,

For tho Sabbath Recorder. The Withered Wreath.

BY IDA. FAIRFIELD.

A little grave-its fresh green soda, Arrayed with nicest care,

But burial stone or slab was none To tell.who slumbered there.

A withered wreath of blossoms pale, In faded beauty lay

Above the tiny hands which late, Had tossed each flower in play,

There was no need of marble pile, To tell the mournful t"le,

I Some mother's idol borne to rest, , Within death'. shadowy vale. A pearl from love's rich-jeweled zone

nod slipped its silver string-A song-bird gone to sunnier climes,

To try its unfledged wing.

What radiant beauty must have slept Upon that brow so f'lir,

When the frail wrellth was lain aside, An angel crown to wear.

But oh! with it, fond eyes beheld, Life's rainbow hue depart,

Affection knowS no stronger tide Than swells a mother's heart.

11.,,11 mourning ones soon gathered ronnd, His little uarrow bed,

And tears of bitterest ngony 01' wild rebellion shed.

No wonder that the lava flow Has withered every limf,

The heart's most fragrant blossoms die, Sered by one mighty grief.

But mourner lift thy sorrowing gaze, A spirit wing Is ncar,

Thy cherub carols in yon Skies, And canst thou wish him here?

lIere, where the clouds of woe and care Might dim that glorious brow,

Where sin and crime too soon might etain . That soul so spotless now I

Oh I no, in yonder realms of light, With eye of faith behold,

The lost lamb thou hast mourned so much, Safe in tho Saviour's fold.

Remove the withered wreath and plant Spring's soft and, fragrant flowers,

Thy bud will burst to fadeless bloom, In heaven's immortal bowers.

lndeptnrlenCll, July, 1858.

For the Sabbath Recorder, ~hc following beautiful lines accompanied by a bo­

qUet ot rose-buds, were presented to liS a few nights lince, by our litlle fri~nd Eudocia, C. J. WELLS.

To A. O. and C. J. Wells, ox THE DEATH OF LITTLE H.l.TTIE.

You had a littlo daughter once, And brrght blue eyes had she, A very wise and winning look,

, A dear she was to me.

But with the passing faU she-came. She came the fairest of them aU,­She came 1I merry little thing, And won the hearts of all.

But in this world, alas, She was not long to stay, For with the gloom of fall she came, And with the flowers she passed away.

To you II short time lent Was your sweet daughter dear, God soon recalled the gift he ~nt, And left you weeping here. :

But though thns early cnlled to dit To leave this world of care, We trust that she Is placed on high, A glorious crown to wear.

EunOCIA HILIB. ~~~~

. ~t is a truth easily granted in generlll, that It IS all alike to Omnipotence, what the instru­lIIents arc by which it works; and yet it is not !o easy to apply it to '11 'particular cas,':, when Ge nrc but few and fcetle, then so bclit,ve that i od e~nnot ouly save us, out save by us, :~bis Ih a!~ Instance of faith, whicb, wherever i~ js,

n obtain II good report. Let this strength. :~ the weuk and hearten the heartless; let it be t't~nded with God for tlie enforcing of our pe­~t Ions, and with ourselves for the silence of our ~Qrs: It is notking with God to help, wheth­ft Wllh many, OT with them that hallt 110 pow-,-2 Ch~. xiv. 11. [Beecher.

!S Sinners think by jnstifying themselves, to o ~ape being judged of the Lora; whereas, the Tn Y Way to do 'that, is, by judgi1lg ouTlel1101. . bey that boast mo~t of their religion, may l~s:ly be 'suspected of partiality and hypocrisy "'It. .

. -~--~-

J : "

J~" t

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NEW YORK, FIFTH-DAY, JVLY 22, 1858.

Correspondence. crease of tbe body unto the edifying of itself I flowed down in streams of beneficence to our to-day, is atill pointing us hc.pefnHy to been common ~ ~s all.

Hopkinton, R. L, June 5, 1858. in love, so that it may grow np into Him in I world. Hence when He ascended upon high, ture. It is this, "More 'Beyond!' th; same fountain-been fed b1 tha 8ameb!l.t~~;,'-: ELD. S S. GRfsWOLD: all things who is the head, even Christ. He gave somotapostles, some prophets, some Lest man should be satisfied .with too, and have daily milt arounlf' Q,' co'milnd[I'ItI.~rJ

Respected ~iT-Having listened to ~ssay This body then is the church over which pastors, so~ehers, some miracles, some attainments, God has implanted a sacred to s~ience and ,reW8io~ ':'ii,.;rl .... :.tll,i~ read by YOII, before the Se7entb·day Baptist IPI~esildes.Jesus Christ, gniding, directing, and healers, so~e' h,elps, 'some government, some perfection in his natnre. Our perfect ideal band is to be dissolved, and, as Eastern Association, at its late session in this controling, while in it He resides, enlightening, tongues, some interpretatiou of tongnes, some lies beyond and liS we advance it each. other the parting hand, it Re~lms UlI[8 Bev-, tolvn, and being desirous of the opportunity of qnickening, and actuating. . I evangelist, fOI:Jfj~pertecting of the saints,jOT cedes. Ever learbing, 'ever advancing, ering honsehold -ties.. Many, of us may never, col,sidering the positions therein taken more Into this body (the church) enters the tke 'WOTk if 'nUtTY, for the edifying of stilI nnsatisfied. Thirsting a~d greet each o~lier il.gain~p~'~~,B~o~'or~lme;·:' , closely than we found onrselves able· to do world by ''repentance ~warQ Goa; iiJdfaith to- the body - • ~- ti.~I, we all come in the spirit presses eagerlyc on for higher btI.tle~ us teme~ber the Ob~.ii.ht.icip~t,~ tI.", '.

from having heard. it read only, we hereby reo wards our Lord Jesns ChriSti" hence by regen· unity of the f)1ith, and the knowledge of the and each drop drank from tlie great cup b~yDnd-there we may~me\lt a.nd face to , qnest a copy of the same, together with the eration or spiritual birth men are born into Son of God, into a perfect man, unto the our Father holds out to his children only face behold Him who bas', rellected ~is glory , resolution appointing you to write and read the kingdom of God, and: are thus translated measnre of the stature of the fulness of Christ. us more eager, more thirsty. Tlfe through the' medium of his workS.', .. ' There said Essay for publication in the SABBATH RE- from the kingdom of darkness into that of Here we have the ministrations of the Gos- fant fondly clings to his devoted mother, our visions shall not be limited by a clouded CORDER, if this request for publication be grant- God's dear Son, and thus they become mem- pel enumerated, and they are many. But now her are centred all his conceptions of horizon. T~ere will be a field for attainmellt, ed by said paper. bers of His (Christ's) body, HIS flesh and the "mini~rations of the Gospel" are made man race. :s:e kuows no world but the whose heigbt and depth nO,human mind can

Signed-Thos. M. Clarke, Wm. L. Clarke, His bones, viz., His Church which is His body. to centre mostly in one man, and to snpport home which snpplies his every contemplate, and eternity shall not be too vast, Joseph Potter, B. F. Prosser, John Stanton, See Eph. ii. 30. this one man, this ordained minister to every sooner does his tottering feet bear him to nnfold and pursue it-there may we meet Wm. Potter, Jr., W m. Potter, Sen., G. W. Now as God is love, and as he that loveth so-called local church is supposed to be sup- threshold where he bebolds the outer -farewell. Brown, Clarke Greenman, John S. Champlin, is born of God, and as he thllt is born of God porting the "ministrations- of the Gospe!." her sunny skies, flowery meadows, and To yon, kind teachers, we wonld speak a Peleg Clarke, David Langworthy, Alfred is a child of God, and as such children are Hence the support of one regularly ordained fields, then he ~tretches forth his little parting word; but oh I how poor are words Clarke. heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ Jesus, ministerin every local church in every village, and longs to leave the shadowy preciucts when the heart is too full for utterance. We

Greenmanville, Conn., July 12, 1858. does it not follow that love to God aud love (be they ever so many,) and the support of home. As years increase his powers, miss one who commenced tile 'the labors df this DEAR BRETBREN,-Th~ peculiar circnmstances to mon is the scriptural qualification for mem- the ministrations of the Gospel may be very lies forth, thinking to reach the limits year with you, having changed mortal for im-

in which I am placed, relative to the Essay to bership in the chnrch. 'l'hus the Lord adds different thinis. ideal world, bnt as he nears the plac~ wbllrllibe.1 mortality, she is enjoying the swcet fruition of which you r,efcl;, have delayed an answer to unto the church such liS are saved. 3. The responsibility of the church to sup- had thought the land and towering her labors in those bright worlds to which faith your letter in order that I might avail myself If the position taken be correct relative to port the ministrations of the Gospe!. meet the sky, behoid I there lies beyond a pointed in her dying hour. As we bid farewell of suitable advice. It will he remembered what the church is, a local church must be that If, as has been shown, the ministrations of more beautiful and bright than that on to you, our feelings are similar to those which ·that the Associatipn, by a major vote, decided portion of the church residing in a particular the Gospel i~clude all those agencies and in- he stands. we, experienced fonr years ago, when our pa-not to print the ElRsay in the RECORDER, be· locality. Such were the local church of Cor stl'umenta\iti~s of the chnrch or body of Christ This same principle is also illustrated in rents took us by the hand and bid us God-cause (it was argued) a vote to print would inth, of Ephesus, of Laodicea, etc. 'l'hose through which He acts, and seeks to effectuate mature years and in every persnit in life. speed. For your care, your unceasing toil in be Oil enlhlrsement, by the Association, of the letters missive from Jesus Christ to the seven His purposes of benevolence to a sinful world, Naturalist, going forth under the broad our behalf, we would attempt no recompense of views taken by the Essay. For it was main· churches of Asia, were sent to local churches. we unhesitatingly and uuqnalifiedly affirm it to of heaven, beholds the impress of a D words, we know that all you reqnire is that we tained that the doctrine of the EssllY WIlS "re- 8:nch I understand to be the scriptnral idea of be the mosL solemn duty of the church freely, hand in even the tiny mountain moss, th may go and do likewise for others, yet in igno. volutionary"-that its first and sccoiid heads the church and of a local church. AS such cheerfully, and mnnificently to support such WIshed beneath his feet. He wonders rILnce. This we will do, and· whatever land may were irrelevant to the subject matter of the God joined them together, and it becomes us ministration,q For it is only by a liberal sup· wisdom, bnt stops not here-his longing callus, your example wiil still be remembered_ EssaYi and lastly, as an eqnivalent or indemni- to see that what God joins, no man sunders. port of these ministrations of the Gospel, thllt seeks for clearer glimpses of the Truly, your lives are fraught with 'cconiinued ficatiou ngninst expense of time and paller, a th h I. ttl' h th d' I d· N' h d' k ts of' self.' ~enl'al but l'n 'he w=rld beyond each But it may be asked, "In what light are e c urcu c:!n expec ever 0 nccomp IS e ISP aye III atnre s great au lwor . ac -u, "~ , monied remuncfIltion was proposed. Under the so-called local churches of the present day design of her mission. sees in tbe superficiDI structure upon labor of love shall be'a ·gem in the diadems of such circumst[lllces, it has been II serions ques- d h J th t l'tt your glory and thousands whom you have to be viewed?" I an~wer, In the light of so Whatever then of prayer, whatever of ex- walb an in t e starry 108tS a 'g I er '. ' tion in my mind IlS to the propriety of assent- many organized bodies of a portion of a scrip- hortatiou, wbatever of preaching, whatever of bis head-but finds not a place in this great taught the way of life "shall rise and call yC!ll ing to your very kind request either as it regards II I h h F h h I' h h' h t f If.d . I h t f of 1·llvestl·.,"att·on to stop and exclaim, en blessed." tura Dca c urc, ~r in w at ot er Ig t wors IP, w a ever a se - ema, w a ever 0

my own self-respect, or' the decision of the can they be viewed; because as has been love or benevolence, whatever of a holy life, The poet sings of his native land, her We leave you now, but add your blessing as' Association', for althOUO'oh it was Buo"gested f\ 1 d s f I' II

sbown, a true scriptural local church would whatever oflabor, whatever of money, is de- Iy murmuring watel's, owery va es au we ay a ewe . after the vote was declared that the Associa. _-"-"-_____ _ include the whole portion of the church resident manded for Ithe support of the ministrations of ing ,monutains, but yet the song is

tion might have reqnested its printing ns con- there. the Gospel, must be given, whether to the there lies beyond a note he has I:.ot toucJred, taining my views, and not those of the ASSO- , I d t _ .

That any number of Christians>bave a right diaconal, for the poor,. to the pastor, prEsbyter, again he strikes the yre, an ye agalD .On every hand we hear religious teachers as. ciation. Yet as no motion was made to tbat , fi db fi . 1

Not Jnstified by Faith Alone.

to organize into a body, for the purpose of or bishop, ror his watch care, or to the evan- tion lies beyond. snring the people that man is justi e y mtr. effect, I presume even that courtesy was con- l that f I'th I'S II 'h"t the gospel requires more efficiently or de. finitely carryin.," out one gelist for his preaching. In short, whatever It is also illustrated in the ,,"reat nro"'ri>s~ a 01lf; a a., a , sidered as not best. I need not inform you ill otder to secure mitire reconciliation to God. that feelings most painfnl were caused in my or more specific parts of Christiauity, is pro· labor or service the church demands of any of which is being made in the arts and sci!~~&~s. Acc~mpauyin~ this assurance, we generally have mind, whether justly or otherwise, I leave for bably true. Thus any portion of the resident her members, which hinder them from an equal One mental attainment cannot stltisfy diverso mystical speculation on the natnre o.f

Christians in a plltCc have probably a Gospel prosecution of their own secnlar concerns with longing t,ature, but each progressive stepi" hut faith, the different kinds of faith; the true and yon to judge. Suffice it to say, that I deeply r I h . d." ~ 'th h- h right to organize a missionary, temperance, the other members, the church is to render to opens the way for another still greater. _New a sei t e so. vlOg an noV'savlDg .al ,w Ie ,

regret the undue warmth of feeling and expl'es- peace, or anti.slavery society, especially if all such a just remuneration, so that there be beanties are continually unfolding th'ems~ll'es altogether, leave -the hearers totally in the dark sion into which I was betrayed, and'I feci it 11 F ~s to what it is to believe, or whether they really

other acknowledged Christians resic.ing there, an eqnality, Ilnd all equally burdened. in the scientific world, and as the vision if ,£n- do bell'eve or not. Such I-S the effect of 'hl's privilege here to offer an apology to the ASSO- L~'. oppose the discussing of those subjects in the But whether it is the duty of the church to larged, new views continually present "!lom- mode of instruction, that it is usually more dif-ciation for it. For although I did theD, und 1

church. The same right have Sabbath-keep· support one man an4 his family in each secta- selves, and beyond the visible and certain t,~~re ficult to lead the hearer to believe that he doe, do still, fed that it WI1S not without some I h' II b I' ers, Immersionists, etc., to organize to carry rinn org""nizat:on in every village, town, or still lies the invisibl~nd mysterious. We can- be{ieve, t tan to ~ause 1m actua y to . e leve

provocation; yet it WIlS my rlnty as a Chris· out their views <>f ecripture trnth more efficient- city, may be a qnestion. For if the view of not forheal' here to insert .that oft-repeateKl'e. in Ohrist. He does believe firmly that Christ tillll not to have resented. I trust I may ever , and the gospel are Divine, he dare not believe

Iy. But neither of~hese would accord with both "the church" and a "local church," in this mark of the immortal Newton. He says~ I" I that IJe II"S the rl'ght I.' I'nd of ~aitb, 'or hl's be willing to acknowledge my errori and I '[ ~ ,}!o II

the scriptural idea of a local church, as given essay, be scriptural, will it not be found dim- know not wbat I may appear to the world; put teachers have left the impression upon his mind desire ever to treat all men, especially my ',' above It to e oncl'le modern ecclesl'astl'clll arrange to myself I seem only to have been like a1,Doy that faith is some &upernatural, strange, tran. brethren, with urhanity and Christian cour- . cu r c - I

W 'th h . t I'd A d playing on the sea-shore and divertino" m1self scendental exercise of mind, which strains it tes_v, even thouo"h I may not be so treated. 2. hat are the ministrations of the ments, WI sne SCrip ura 1 eas. n may 1 k' d f' - d I' 'II' k . I in now aud then finding smoother pebble~And up to a In 0 inspIre e evatlOn, or I um\na-The above seemed necessary, by way of Gospel? it not be as ed whether these sectarllln ecc e3i- I tion; and the natnral common.sense confidence

I l 'h .. t t' f th G It' I d asticisms, do not involve '.on expenditure of prettier shells than ordiuary, while the ~at whl'ch he has I'n the gospel, havI'ng nothl'ng I'n exp anation and apology. In compliance, e miniS ra Ions 0 e ospe mus IDC u e tn therefore, with your reqnest, and with the that whole system of human agencies or means ti~e, meuns, and money, not jnstified by the ocean of trnth lies all nnexplored before, e." it of the marven~us, of conrse must be deati-

economy of Apostolic order? ' And yet 'these attainments which seemed ot;,so tute of the essential quality,of truefaith. We advice of others, I have concluded to forward and instrmiJentalities, by which the chnrch is II t to hI' were amon" the gre It''st are nellrly every day meeting those who de.

f th E • II" h t l' h h d t' f Ifill th b' t Perhaps it may be offered in J'ustification of sm. a ac.coun m, ".ij ~ a copy 0 e' S~\ly lor pn) IcatlOn in teo accomp IS er es my, or u e 0 ~ec d r h b fi f sire salvation; are willing and anxious to take SABBATH RECORDER, should it be considered of her mission, this apparent unnecessary expense, that the dlscover.les ever ~a e or t e ene. t 0 s~le?ce. Christ as the Saviour and KiHg, but find no not prejudicial to the interest of the church- As the body is the instrnment or agent by present divisions and subdivisions of the chnrell Yet belDg conscIOus of somethIng stili" peace because they 40 no~ think that they have the ministrations of the Gospel-the SABBATH and through which the soul acts and effectn- demand it. That they abate somewhat of yond superior to ~ny hdadefineld ;Ilcdq td~ffie right ; kind of

l faith. 'l'he. o.rigihn offithids ;_

blame in the case ought to be admitted. Still looked upon what ne a rea y att!llnep' I culty ID near y every case, IS ID t e re ne RECORDER-the Seventh·day Baptist del1omina- ates; so is the church which is the body of h NIt' h' h hav been r sort d to • r I am impressed that the vast expense of sec. bnt shells upon the sca·s ore. ewton specu II IOns w IC e e e , ,0 tion-divine truth-God, or the Bible. And Christ, the instrument or agent by or through h h '1 d tho defense and support of the dogma of

I wish here to ndd that any critical examina- which Christ as the sonl acts or effectuates to tarianism is contrary to the economy of Gos- one o~ the t~onsands w 0 ave. tOi ed an "J nstification by Faith alone." It is found to tion of the positions of the Essay, will be fulfill his intentions and purposes. pel order, or a just support of the ministra- nnsatlsfied Wlt~ the ~esult ofth~l~ be false in experience, as it is ~ontrl1ry to the

tions of the Gospel,' and also it seems to me' left to us a prIceless legacy.wmch sta. nds Divine word; and in order to defend it, SOJlle courteously received, or any explanations As cvery part of the human body hils a h h f th . I I d' " t' t f 'th b ' that the church may be chargeable with wast. basis fort e rese.arc es 0 .IS gen~r8~lOn. Bpecm pea mgs In respec 0, III ecome

given. For function to perform, so has every part of the ing her ~1aster's goods in this respect, especial. we not apply thiS progressive prinCIple necessary. If the truth was plainly preached, "Truth crushed to earth will rise again, church, or body of Christ, its proper functions . h' man is not justified by.faith alone, but by

The eternal years of God are hers, r H A Iy if she 'refuses inquiry as to how the evil can Institution whose anniversary we t IS 1l""lllfH- and works, it would be easy to point out, to perlorm. ence the postle cautions each ? ' th 1II10Ul~~~lD While error writhes beneath her chains, be remedied. brate Bnt a lew years ago.e the steps to a good hope, so that every man

And dies amid her worshipers." and all the members of Christ's body, how pines waved proudly upon this hill.side. could understand. Faith is dead withont Y . h b d f Ch" b th the ithe e Iter e t' t f, Ilow It is evident that the primitive assemblies of ~

OUl'S, In t e on s 0 a f1Stlan ro er- y ern g ec or ov - sIma e any e disappeared and he first corner stone wa:s'Ul).ul works, as James tells ns, and it is qnite in vain hood for the truth, to T. M. Clarke and member. Each and all of the several labors Christians depended more upon the mutual for an nnpretendi g~dncational structure. to confuse the mind with theories of the differ-th SSG and nses of each and all of the several mem- edification of each other than upon the modern 'II . _ ence between that faith which does not work,

o ers. . . RISWOLD. f d' d .. t th th h then, we have seen, it gradua y rISmg "nd the fal-th whl'ch does work. It is very'ce~ bel'S of Christ's body (the chnrch) go to make way 0 an or ame mmlS eri us ose w 0 • 'f 'ts te' h d nol''''',a. U ,_

A E the fostermg care 0 I ac ers an tain that thous.ands of persons believe tbe gos-n sBay; th " 'n' ttl' of th Go 1" Th were the better qualified for public teaching, ' up e ml 18 ra ons e spe . e We have seen numbers go forth yearly to pel without the shadow of a doubt, and yet do Read by S. S. GRISWOLD, before the Ea8tern Associa Apostolic, the Diaconal, the prophetic, the would naturally become more conspicuons., 1 t d

tion, convened in Hopkinton, R. 1., May 20, 1858' form with willing hea~'ls their allotted IIte-tli!S~:8. not obey, and arc consequent y no sa~e.-The following is the resolution appointing the pastoral, the bishopric, the linguistic speaker I think it was far from the design of Christ until even the dark corners of the earth Now what they require is not anew 'Jrind of Essayist and the 'subject of the Essay, was passed d - t t th t' t . I to institute a clerical order, or a salaried min- . faith, but ob,edience. And it, only dar~ens by the Association at its session in New MOl'ket, an lD erpre er, auma urgls or mlrae e- felt its benign influence. Bnt keepmg counsel to tell them that" If they had the trne May 21, 1857. Sec Minutes for 1857, page IS, at worker, the healer of sick, the helps, and down istry, except that whatever of time or money . h th 'vc"t f the acte we

E Wit e progressl spm 0 0 , faith thcy would obey." Faith is not a propel-the tOPi BaD/veil, That S. S. Griswold read an ssay t th 10 t g'lfts of tile S l'r'lt wer all a part was required of one or more of the members, d' on the responsibility of tbe church to support the 0 ewes p , e forward to the time not far lstant, ling power, and is not necessarily obedient. , ministrations of the Gospel. of the ministrations of the Gospel, in Apostolic was to be equalized among them all. It was influence shall have increllsed, yea, an uU'J¥'~:U The will, the free will, is the propelling power; I shall inquire times. Now is it not evident that there is a then and is now doubtless the duty of local fold. but faith is not a volition of will, bnt a convic-1. What is the church? wide departnre from those primitive churches, churches to send forth and pay the living Beloved c1assmates-To.day we go tion of the understanding; hence a man may 2. What are the ministrations of the Gos- in the estimation of the" ministrations of the preacher rather than appropriate all such have true faith an~ not obey, as many do. It

and our influence is to be added for is neither good philosophy, nor good theology, pel? Gospel?" preaching at home. While pastors will be woe to that which i8 already acting nor good practise, to teach that faith and obe.

3. What is the responsibility of the church The Diaconal, once a most laborious office needed, still I fully believe such missionaries world, but as we go let us not fold dience are one and tHe same thing. T~at the to snpport the ministration of the Gospel? in taking care of the poor, is now almost limit- sent forth by local churches wonld be a return our ncedemic honors aud.sit onrselves "~',"'J inspired word often makes faith stand for all

1. What is the church? ed to carrying aronnd the" elements" of the to apostolic practice. Such a ministry ought down to rest as if OUl: work was already the conditions of justification, we allow. So it r It b th ht b th .. I h h to be amply s~pported. ' also employs the word repentance and obedi. may e oug y Bome at any InquIry Lord's Supper; while near y all t e ot er pleted, but remembering, resnlts still lie oe)1,qnu ence; bnt this by no means proves that faith

concerning What is the church? is irrelevant, named ministrations are now merged into that I conclude then by saying that the church to which past acquirements afford DO pal'lI'utli. and repentance and obedience are identicaI.-as it intimates tbat the question has not yet of a preaching ministrYi so that a clerical is nnder the most solemn responsihility to sup- Let us go on, "still achieving," still pnrs4iltg Paul, preached repentance towards God and become a finality. Bnt, that tho qnestion at order has come to be cOBside~ed the sine qua port the .. ministrations of. the Gospel," the great enterprise which we have so faith-in the Lord Jesns Christ, as two distinct the pres~nt day, is not such a fixity a~ ought non, (the indispensable condition,) almost of whether such ministrations be cleric or laic. I b Wb I t hp.~in. .. t. acts, worthy of two ,distinct names. Faith

cious y egnn. erever our 0 5 may may exist withont works, and works may oc-to preclude inquiry, may be evident from the all chnrch order. Hence churches' deprive whether fortune smiles or frowns there cur withonffaith i and neitber_oCthem is of sav-fllct that the popular sentiment seems to mili- themselves of commemorating their StWionr's Valedictory Essay, remain an unceaaing stream of joy flowing " ing value without the other. • ,.' 'j' 1

tate mnch against that unity prayed for by death, and Christians of water baptism, be- Read by Miss ANN E. WELLS, at the Anniversary the great fountain-head, an urifailillg Spr;,nlZ, It is true that Paul speaks of be!~g J~stl~ed Jesus Christ, in John xvii., also us taught by cause it is now supposed tbat none bnt an of Alfred Academy, held June 30, 1858. N atnn shall find a voice in hoI' thousaud withont tho deeds of the law, but never hlDts Paul, in 1 Cor. xii., also in Epb. iv. From "ordained minister" can rightfully administer HORE BEYOND. ons forms to spe~k to thesonl of her God. that any are jnstified with,ont thed~ed~ ,0f'thE!

' gospel. The law signifies, the MOS,~IC dl~pen8~, these teachings it is plain that all wlio have those ordinances. But the!'e is altogether a It is no new occasion which has convened us while we recommend permanent and tion that had ceased to possess savmg j~uthorl-recdved spiritual baptism, are members of Ilick of scripturlll evidence that anything like to·day-but one more added to those which reaching aspirations 'for the future, let ns' . the gospel had superceded it, ~nd was giv. tbat body, (the chnrch,) of which Christ is the a self-perpetuating clerical order existed in have passed with each swiftly gliding year- snffer the golden moments of the' ,to en' "for the obedience of fa,ith." pc coUl1\6 DO , head. 'those primitive assemblies of Christians. For one more birth-day festival or' onr honored in- pass ,ecordlel8 into the shadowy realms deeds 'Wbic~ 'w.e can perform are expi~ti>r;Y:':7J !;

h h ft - No man by good' works, can atone for BIni _ • This body of Christ then, is the c urc a er when they came together, one had a psalm, stitutlOn-one more band is about to leave past, while the spidt rHels amid brigbt Christ i; our sacrifice. But It is quite' umjec. " ",,-which we are inquiring, Now as it takes all another a hymn, a third an exhortation, an- these halls for the active duties of life after beautifnl visio.ns of thefuture. Let us notiex. assary to confonnd expiatoryac,ts whicb-Paul ' , the parts to make the whole, and as tbe whole other a doctrine, another a tongue, another four years of literary toil, and as I'\'e come to cha~ge the const!l-nt and abiding now. toritne condemns, ,with acts. of obedience, which he,. ; must include all the parts, it follows, that the an interpretation of tongues. .. For the mani- pay our last trihute of good-will and affection more brillillJlt but fickle and unilertermipll(11 commands. Faith and obedi~nce'~re not"p~9:' '" i

church, or body of Christ, must include all its festation of the Spirit was given to every man to each other, and our beloved institution, we then. But rather forgetting the things curing causes qf ftardon, but conil'tio~ o( ,re.., j ,1i membersi so that tbe whole body, fitly joined to profit withal." (See 1 Cor. :tiL; Eph_ iv.) come not bOllBting of ~bat we have already are passed, press fQtward towards a higher Jceiving tAhe dbe~te ~ ~f tbtbie. aton~mellht ~o,Jde by, ': .. re

d (' ) Th - esn~. nilS In 8 sense 1t air. ~m88 " ',. together and compacted by that which every Such were the "ministrations of the Gospel," learne .or we are bnt beginners. e same holier goal. . spenks of faith and works. And in 't1ie,ii~m'e :,,', ' joint supplieth according to the effectual work- 'tbrough'which the divine benevolence of the principle which'has actuated us ever since we For the few past 'year,s the ,trial$ ~ense Paul ~akes fa~th and ~bedienceneces8a- .~~:;:ql ing iu the measure of every part, 'mdketh in· great head of the church, (which is His body,) took the first step in our literary course, nntil hopes and aspiratIons' of' the student's life ry to salvatIOn. It IS a radIcal and essential '

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doctrme of the gospel, that no man can be say. ed except on conditIOn of faith and obedience; and thiS truth should be sounded 10 the ears of men nntd every man IS made to see that faltb of any kmd Will not save hIm withont o[)ed,­II7Ice ThiS doctrIne is apostolic and must not be abandoned for the doctrlD}ls of men or re­fined speCUlations which are contrary to 'ChrIst

[M:orwng Star

The Act of Faith. -A. man lies on his bed in tbe tent, Buffering from a fiery serpeut's bIte. Friends tell him that God has command~d Moses to make a serpent of brass, an,d set it upou a pole, and It shall CQme to pass that whoever IS bItten If he WIll look upon the brazen serpent, he' shall hve They prepare to remove the bed to the tent-door, that the dymg man may cast hiS eye to the appointed symbol and be saved

One of the friends, however, IllterpOi:leB He has not seen the brazen serpent. Indeed, he would not hft his eyes to be more satisfied than he is that such a way of being cured IS preposterous There 1S no pOSSible connectIOn, he says, between a brazeu serpent and the bite of a flYIDg serpent; between lookmg at some­thing upon a pole, and the cnre of an envenom ed wound Can the Sight of brass cool the fevered blood? The very look at the Image of a. serpent wonld awaken fresh pam No JudiCIOUS Levlte would try to raIse the appari­tIOn of a monster for the cure of one who had been wounded by that monster. The whole appointment, therefore, IS "figurative," II meta­phorICal;" there is no pole, no brazen serpeut yonder; but the meamng of God's command to Moses III thiS' The Infiuite Father Wishes to have hIS sufi'ermg children meditate upon the mfllCtlOn whICh he has felt compelled to send upon them, by means of venomous ser­pents, for their salutary chastisement They must get a clear, vlVld sense of their transgres­slOn, their conception of their RIO must be as real and deep as the Sight of a slnnmg brass Im­age of a flymg serpent wonld be Impressive By the "pole," It is mtimated that we must keep the subject of our sm II lIfted np" before our minds nutII we are thoroughly pemtent

And now, while the cured and grateful patIents in the encampments come, one after another, to the tent door, beckon to thiS friend of the dymg man, and beseech him Just to ,urn the bed so that he may look and be saved, the transcendentahst rephes that,]I! Moses himself should tell him to do so, he has too much con­fidence in the wisdom aud goodness of the Infinite Father to beheve that He could ap­pomt such a means of cure • Lut let us hear the Son of God: II And as

Moses lIfted up the serIJent m the Wilderness, even so must the Son of Man he hfted up, that whosoever believeth 10 HIm should not perish, but have eternal life For God so loved the world that he gll-ve hiS only begotten Son, that whosoever belI~veth 10 him should not perish, bnt have everlastlOg hfe." If we may have the same confideuce ID language that relates to tGe concerns of our souls for eterDlty, which we do not heSitate to repose In the apparently smcere and honest words of a phYSICIan, or III

the mstrnctions received from our superIOrs m bllsmess or 10 command, we cannot be at a loss to understand these words of the SavIOur The look which the wounded Israelites gave at the appomted sign was an act of faIth It was not for them to know why that method of cure rather than any other was appomted; With ImplICit faith they cast their eyes upon it, and were thereby healed It IS easy to see that the brazen serpent, remmding them of their pUDlshment, would test their wllhngness to receIVe a cure from the hands of HIm whom they had offended; and the more obVIOusly gratuitons the cure was made to appear by the appolDtment of I!< slgu whIch had no necessary

• connection With medlcme, so much tbe more would it reqmre humIlity and submiSSion, as well as faith, to comply With thiS appomted method of being healed [Dr. Adams

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.' THE SABBATH RECORDER, JULY 22,1858. / .~~~==~==~~~~==~======~~~~'~~~~==F===~======~~

.::;t h -h",'" WO;;'~k'~ ,Imw' d .. " '''~''hm,";. ,,;- - ........ on. hgh .... d, th,,·, hM'" '''m''', "d Ibm eo, - --8'nh ntp rrurut't. the territory of Abys~IDIa Two deputIes were vlCtIons of dv.ty strengthened, as thby hstened (j]jnmnmttiratintt1i. The Seventh·day Baptist Ceutral AssoCla- to the pres!' ntatlOn of trnth i

l forthWith sent to the admiral, entreatmg him W t Th d I tlOn held Its twenty third Anmversary In es e e egates from 'Ister ARSod;atlOns by

New York, J'01122 1858. to accelerate hiS course. They found the fleet Edmeston, NY., .Jnne lOth, 11th and 13th. theIr earl' est and hearty Co,op(latl()11 With us The BIble In the Pubhc Schools. ==='-===-=c ~= --~.==-=- moored III the port of Mas<owah, nnd at their addcd g' eatly to the Interest f th A T The busmess of thll SeSSIOn, appears to have' 0 e " caslOn 0 the 'Editors of the Sabbath Recorder _ EDITEn B~ A aOMMrn~E OF THE BOARD request, a body of four hnrl(Ired soldiers nndCl The sermons exhIbited a. grent "'arIety of Th

--~-- the comma.nd of Christopher de Gama was been done in 0. very qUIet way theme S snd was !lstened to With malked atten- e qnestlOn of retallllll the BI In the Ch h By the report of their CommIttee on the tlOn. The Gospel truth presenteil oli the oCC'- pubhc schools, and If so, how fa nain wh"t The AbYSSlDlan nrc. ordered to marl'h to the aSsistance of the em- ~.

State of Religion, the churches are 10 a state slOn we hope may Epring up and /jt'~r frll1t to manner It shall be used IS pr CIDg coruddera. The followmg remarks npon the persecutIOns peror In the month of July, 1541, de Gama of UOlon wlthID themselves, find WIth each the glory of God. ! ble agItatIOn and eXCItement at the' pre

and confliCts of the Cbristians of AbYSSInia, landed hl~ troops at Arteeko, WIth the IIlten other, and brotherly love IS cherIshed. There was not a large attend~nce, the tIme. The mtercst In the questIon IS 8ent nre gathered pr10cinally from a translatIOn tlOn of JOlnln!!' tbe EthlOpIau troops, if pOSSIble D th 8 th C II I' weather bemg very unfavorable It lamed fined to the CIty of New Yor" It not can· ~ G G urmg e esslOn e ,0 owmg leso utlOns every day durm,,1r the session Thll brethren .... IS It hroad from the French, by Rev S D CI Lrk. before the "lIa prInce range shonld attack ere possed and gel eral u t L I h h

w " . had made arrangemen ts for the accommodatio'n I q us IOu m W lIC t e readers of It was not until the early p<,rt of the them But de Gama never rellched the POInt 1 ResolV.fd, Tbat the extensIVe reVIVals of of the congregatIon by erectmg a tent by the tbe RECORDER undonbtedly take a deep Inter

slx:teenth century that the Abyssm19.11 Church, 01 rendezvous He lost Ins hfe m a skIrmish relIgIOn WIth WhlCll the churches of this coun- h)use of worship Refreshments for all were est We therefore offer them the [OllOwin which had sunk IOtO almost total forgetflllne~R With the Gallas, aud hiS lIttle band was almost try have been blessed durmg the past year, are prepared near by. remarks npon the repurt and resolUtions ~ amidst the morBI dBrkuess that \ was ~pread entirely !l1'stlOyed A few, however, headed occasIOns of devout gratItude, and should en· We felt that the meetmg passen off very the American Geneml COlnmlttee 0' th 0

b B d I th d d courage the people of God to expect, and to pleasantly, and much good was done in the" I e BUb-over the intellectuAl world durmg the midille y ermn e~ mal e Clr e.cape, an JOIne labor for stili greater maDifestatlOns of DIVIne name of Christ At the close m~ny Said ]ect of the Bible III the Pubhc Schools ages, again emerged from obSCUrity, and feebly the EthlOfll!t1l army 800n after, the umted power and grace "What a good meetmg w( have ha1" ' City of New York, May 14, 1858" ' shone above the horizon. Certam travelers forces met the Gallas in battle, th~y rushed 2 Resolved, Thflt whIle thIS ASSOCiation May the Lord give hIS people wI~om, and Before commentmg npon these we Will make whom John II of Portugal had sent out to upon their lanks, and perpetrated a fe» 11 feels an unabated IDterest m the Foreign MIS- bmd their hearts toge~her ID all them efforts to some general reflectIOns upon the schools and Africa 'or the purpose of exploring unknown slaughter, carrymg everywhere before thun slOns of our deuommatlOnal MISSIOnary SOCiety, advance the R~deem"r s cause L )( 0 the course we wOllld lIke to see pursued

U .' G we feel a growlDg Interest lU missionary labors , countries, heard 'or the first time of a ChriS- defeat and death The prmce range was th d t t t t d W d h h h I' among e es I u e 10 onr own coun ry, an Alfred Unlversity and Alfred Academy. e regar t em t en as among t e nobleftt

tl!ln Cbnrch planted at an early p~rh)d ID the slam, tbe wm w IS termmateil, and the Em would espeCially direct the attention of the Ex- _ f' , and best IDStltutlOUS \11 til! world-open ~nd mountains Of Abysslllla, whICh had coura"'eoue peror 01 AbY'"IIlIi1 wile Ie est ~bJlshed upon hiS ecntlve Board of the Missionary SocIety to the We bave received 0. catalogne of Alfred f t II h f

F> d fi Id d h W ree 0 a as t ey are, 0 every nation, tongue I d Ih f th S The throne large au mVlllOg e sprea out at t e est. Ulllverslt_v and AHred Academy d y reslste e arms 0 e aracens 3 Resolved, That we sympathize With the an klDdred-IO every rehglOu~ name nnd

news wag soon brought to the court The Urged hy Bel mud " the Portuguese made scattered Sabbath keeperA ID the bounds of The aUnlversary of thiS InstitutIOn was held profeSSIOn and to those of no profeSSion They klDg determlDed to ascertalD more definitely the most extravagant claIms for the ~ervlCes thiS ASSOCIatIOn, who are destitute of the reg- June 30 We Judge from the catalogue that are and WIll he If rightly mauaged the grent the actual state of the newly discovered peo they had rendered the EtluopIans In the reo ulal preachIng of the Gospel, and that we en tbe InstltutlOll IS III a prosperous conaltlOn conservators of tho mornls, pellce, safety, pros PIe, dispatched an embasssy to AbysslDla for cent strugrrle. They demanded nothmg less courage them to keep up meetID.!S 10 theIr re- The students ID the ~ several de~artments t d h f th h I

" ~ hb I d d J d I " per Y an appme,s 0 e woe comlilUmtlr h Af b t .. t tl h t t" a d th t spcctlve nmg or 100 s, all p e ge ourse ves count up to two hundred and Sixt -e'x cntle- J t at purpose. ter many a or Ive euor S, Ian t v con verA lOll 0 ue emperor n a to aid them to the extent of onr ablhty y., g They are or Hhollid be founded upou tile model one Pedro Cavliham at length, 111 1490, sue of Ius suhJects to the doctrlOes of the Ronnsh 4 Resoh'ed, That thIS ASSOCIatIOn stIli -men, and two hundred and twelve ladles, mak- and SpIrIt of onr polItical conAtltutlons, whIch ceeded lD penetratmg die vaileys of that church, tOJcther With the surrender of one- cherishes the EducatIOnal mterests of onr de. 109 an agglegate of fonr hundred and seventy- ackllOwledges IJO preferences or exdu~IODS lemarkable country, and on hiS return nutold third of hiS domllllolis to their nndl-turbed nommatlOn, and deems them of vital 1m- eIght. I whatever npon the score of religIOn. Jolm ed to the kmg the treasures of his resear. b possessIOn ClaudiUS boldly rejected their portance aud mdlspellsable to the snccess of The course of mstructlOn 10 this Institntion Adams, as PreSident of the Ulllted State~, 111

HIS appearance In Abyssmia awakened a hvely rIdiculous pretenslOlIs Tbey m tUin b mghtlly ou~.ca~!:~lved, Thllt the Rurcess which hilS embrac~s every department of literature taught sured the Dey of Algiers that thiS was not (m 1Oterest, and the Emperor Alexander, who threatened hlln ;VIth excommunlCfltlOn, but thus far flttended Qur effortR m the establIsh 10 the best academies and colleges 10 thiS a legal sense) 0. ChrIstIan country The can was pleased With the mlSSlOn of the stranger, thiS did not Ilt all dhconcert or terrify him ment and endownPllt of the Alfred Umverslty, conntry, affordmg every desirable advantage to stltutlOn and laws gIVe no preference whatever resolved to send deputlQs to the court 01 Por- He opr Illy declared thl1L B~rmlldes had no should stImulate us to continued and faithful ladles and gentlem£n for obtammg a uoefnl to a ChrIstIan over a Pagan, a Jew, a Mllhom tngal, when death put fin end to the project leJltlmate anthorlty ID the (onntry, anll that lahor, and to confidence 10 the care and provl- and fimshed educatIou. r t D t N tl All

d f G iI h h b d tl bl iI e an, a els or a 0 IlDlgarIan lire equal I rd d th P h If b t pnce 0 0, w 0 as so II nn au y esse W t t th t tb Ii' d f d Lebna Dangel sncceed d .Alexander, and Ie reg-II e e ope Im"e as a ere IC us e rns a e rlen s 0 e ncatl efore the laws, all are equally eligible to gO'l',erned Ethiopia nnder the guardIanship of He Went farth. r To eVlUce hiS firm +ttach 6 Resolved, That we dreply sympathize among our people WIll come forward manfully office While: these have been the terms Rod hIS mother, the Empress Helena HparHlg 01 m(nt to the ancient chlllch of EthlOpla.hesent WIth trostees of our UllIversltv m the loss re- 10 !lId of the Trustees, ID erecting a bmldmg forms of our IDstltutlOns, they have m usage the extensive conquests thed'ortugnese were deputIes to Alexandrl t, solICltmg an orthodox cent y sllstaIned hv fire, and phflge ourselves to lD the place of the one recently bUrIted down, and practICe,conformed themselves mamly totha making ou the coast of India, he thought If Abnna Meantime, he cast Bermudes mto bpar onr share of the bnrd. n necessary to re whICh shall amply prOVide for the increasmg d C 1 f n

PaIr the lo~s, and elHthlc that institutIOn to I sentiments an ,ee mgs 0 t e ~reat majorIty would he ~or the benefit of hIS kingdom to prison, where he reullllled until he found means ponnlantyof thlS lIterary establlsh-"Ilt and I' meet the mcrrnslll~ Ilemand Which the pnblic " """ , There are many diVISIOns and sub,dlvlsIOns

enter into some terms of agreement With the of secretly esc 'pIng, and took sanctuary on are makmg upon It wblCh Will be honorable to Its patrons: upon moral and relIgIons qoestlOns In our conn court of Lisbon Emaouel, who then wore the shores of the Red Sea, lD the provlDee of 7 Resolved, Th It !Il~ ASSOCiatIOn urges We sbould lIke to present to onr reiders the try These have been malDly harmoDized ID

the crOWD of Portugal, beiIevmg that an aliI Tigre upon the attentIOn of th( churches the Impor· particulars of the late interestlDg antllversary b b d d I b I tance of contlOner! ami I ncreased efforts ID the I ,practIce y purSU\Dg a roa an I era polley, ance WIth Abyss10la might prove a. source of While these things were transplrmg In tbe of the ustltutlon bnt for want of proper kid th I . ht f II department of Sahbath 8cltools, and that as a ' • ac nowe glDg e equa rig s 0 a -lDtlll'-

advantage to himself, lIstened to hiS proposals East, IgnatIUS Loyala was busy lD foundlOg menns of Incren_lIIg Int~rest, we recommend the data, we must omit It fermg Just as LIttle as pOSSible With the fceJm.s A compact was accordlUgly agreed upon m tbe order of JeSUits, and when 1Oformed of the careful perusal of the essay read before the and prejudICes of the mlDority We are the 1509 d h f th E h f "" E h dAtIOn t t t se b Eld J We have recelved a letter from iNorman ' an at t e request 0 empress un appy Issue 0 aullirs 10 t IOpla, propose ssocla a I, pre,Cfl sSlOn y as d mhahltants of a common country equally III H I d d h Sum mel beIl Spencer, of Belvere, Mich., designe for the e ena, who eSlre to Improve t e £ondltlOn to the pope to undertake 10 persoo, a reDmon t t d h C d I

8 Re!Olved, SuhstantIally.as follows That R h h eres elDer sa,ety au pro'perlty, fill( tray of her RnbJects, the kmg sent Into AbysslDla of the AbysslDian and Romlsh churches But It IS the sense of thiS AssocllltlOn that It IS ad- SABBATH ECORDER, requestmg t e cTarltable ehng forward to a common destllly By com S allearned men S well as artists A th . h t h' notice of the friends of George W D'!>vIS, re-ever , a e pope, WIS mg 0 reserve 1m ,or more 1m- vI~able to contullIe to send deleu:ates to sister H mon consent we meet together as equals at the ch el of friendly communicatIon was now t t t d I d th I H A t 0 d tl t tl f h sldl"'" at Ohve, MlCh, who was repreiented to ann por ao opera IOns, ec IDe e proposa, e S<OCI[\ I ns an Ja Ie expenses 0 suc -" polls, ID our Courts 0f JustICe, and In all the opened; and It resulted in a series of embaSSIes however, commissIOned thirteen mISSIOnarIeS, gd:~r!r:~e:xpb:ns~:I~ ~~oem A:~~~~~~I~:I,b~~I~~: :~; ~::~ ~od::~~u: ~r:dl:~t~lO Wre:cwhouOr~ rh!lelmomto' different departments of the Government,and In whICh were dispatched from time to time from from the newly orgaDlzed society of J esu ts, to ! 11 th d" t fi t' f bu C

speCial object of paying delegates • a e lueren ramI ca IOns 0 SIMss an the respective powers The most remarkable commence 10 hiS stead the work of conversIOn afford him relIef I h k 9 Resolved, That the members of thiS As- 1 we not meet toget er 10 a md and lIberal SpIrIt

was that of the EthlDpllln Zaga zaba, who Before their departure for their field of opera· socmtlOn feel a deep and lIvely \Dterest 10 the upon the pi>ttform of ollr pubhc schools? those d L b 1527 H f th b N B R RELIGIOUS DESTITUTION OF NEW EN(tLAND-arrive at IS on 10 e was empower tlOn, oue 0 elr num er, unes aret\O, a welfare of De nyter InstItute, the only Aca· noble lIlstltutlOns, so necessary to the salety

ed by the court of Abysslma to sign a confes- Portllguese, was appomted patriarch of the demlc InstItutIOn wlthm onr bounds which can The CongregatIOnal General ASSOCIatIOn of h h d Id Properly be conSidered denommatlOnal, and Massachusetts, willch lately beld It" "nnu"1 and prosperity of all partIes and sllch an sion of faith, suc as, m IS JU gment, won country, and two others, Andrew OViedo, and "\ Q ~ h I I W

b h I d M that we express to the Trustees of that Instltu· meeting, "ppolnted a committee to con'I'der the ODor all( gory to our cou~try here there promote the mterests, ot tempora an splr· elIlllor Carneiro, were nommated to the ~ 8 b W k d B f tlOn our deSIre for Its permauency and efficICn- rehglOus cOlulition of New Eng-land This IS a Will, t cre IS a way Ith jnst and lIberal Itual, of the two 109 oms nt a ter exam- office of bishop These tbree, With ten others, cy, and our WillIngness to aId them as necessa- ~. views and good IntentIOns, there would be hut

d t I tb • d t I I d t d fi t t G committee 10 their Report stated that .the zeal mmg meal e lun amen a prIDClp es an were 0 procee, rs 0 oa, and remmn ry when a feaSible plan of dOlOg so shall be I little difficulty. If tbe friends of free scbools usages of the Roman hierarchy, he had some there, and prepare for the du'lCs of thClr presentee. to us And that we urge upon those of Massachnsetts lD fnrmshmg mlUlsters for Id

wahlD the bounds of the ASSOCiatIOn, who are the West had well nigh left New Engl~nd des- wou comblDe their efforts, and elect fo~ scrnples in rellard to the propriety of subscrlb- futnre destmatlOn; whIle three of their num- b I ill Ii d 1 bid d lookmg abont for means of educatIon, to con· titute They say: I BC 00 0 cers, air an I em mm e men, 109 hiS name to such an mstrument, ID behalf ber, Oprestes, RodrIguez, and Freyere, shopld d h d ffi d b tb S h I h th 1 d -fi d nrfi SI er tea vantages 0 ere y at c 00, "In onr zeal for the West we mnst~lnot for, w 0 were e rea an genu~ne nen S f!J ree of the Abyssmmn Church But woe to him go before, and If posslhle, open the way for and to p"tronlze the same W hen they can con h 1 thO k tl Id b d t;.

Q - get home EmigratIOn was mentlOne as one Be 00 s, we lo ley wou e RO con ue for IIstemng to the vOIce of conscience I It their admi.slOD lDtO the AbyssInmn territory slstently do so of the chIef canses 1O prodllclOg thiS d~tenora ed as that there would be but little ground of fireQ a tram which eventnally exploded 1O his These pIOneers of the miSSIOn amved at the 10 Resolved, That It IS the sense of this tlOn In some places sectanumsm h d also d t" ti d th bI I t

ASSOCiatIOn, that the Rille of dISCiplIne laId Issa Is.ac on, an e grum 109 comp aID S lOhulDan massacrc Imperial court lo 1555 Their appearance was down III the 18th chapter of M ltt 15th, 16th crept In, and 1O others rBllroads had ehanged woulQ speedIly dIC away.

During the absence of Zaga.zaha, the fierce not at all agreeable to the relgmng monarch, d h I 1.1 d h Id b the centres of trade, whereby some Churches an 17t verses, IS app Icau e, an s on e had been shorn of their strength Wh~e every We serIOusly doubt the Icgahty or the pro tribes of Mohammedan GalIn., who were set e~peclally when apprized that there were sev- acted npon In all cases of o"'ense by one Indl B

~" U' - effort had been made to convey thel Gospel prlety of any compulsory readlOg of the Ible tIed on the confines of the country, arose in eral more of theIr conntrymen then reSiding ID VIdual agaInst another, and that 1O ollr oplOlOn b d d k t h db th h G ~ bl It would be wise to follow tbat rule as fllr as a roa, Ilr spo s a een ga ermg lit ome on the part of either teachers or pupils ID our THERE IS BUT ONE BOOK -When "The arms, aud made an Irrnption into the Abys- oa, awaltlOg a avora e opportumty of en In the four northern New England1 States bl h I If h I I f h S'"'-

h d Th h Practicable lo all cases of pnbhc offense, where f pu IC SC 00 s t ere IS any aw 0 t (Jo l.<lJl" Wizard of the North," SIr Walter Scott, came synian territory They were lOflnenced to this terlDg IS omllllons e.y, owever, com- there were now over 2,000,000 habitnal neg. to r clIne 0 h'- d II of th d k th btl I the offendmg member IS acceAslble to the mem- lecters of t'-e snnctunry, while 1,300,0~0 have requirlllg It, It is contrary to the whole letter e np n 1. ylOg pi ow, 1O one ose step by learuing the Empress' mtention of ne- mence \vOl IIIg elr englOes, u to Itt e b f h h h b h h I n G ,.

IIlCId moments that frequently IDtervened amid gotultmg an alliance With the monarch of effect All the sophistry and arguments they t:l~ko t~e~e c a~~c dase~t ;h:;e ~~:er~ffe::!' b: no more to do With the InstitutIOns of \ eGos. and Spirit 01 unr mstltutlOns, coutrary to reason hIS dlstresBmg mental paroxysms, when he was pel than the heathen. In Massachnset~s there and common sense. We should have no ob. I< gentle as an infant," he reqllested to be plac· Portugal The Mohammcdan PrInce Mil.- could deVIse to convlOce hIS royal hlgbness, been publIc, and the offender beyond the reach were two hundred aud filty to three Hundred JectlOns ourselves, to BIble relldmg, If It was ed once again in hiS hbrary, so that from Its homet Grange, after havmg been rem'~orced that the pope was Christ's vicegerant on earth, of the members of the church; III whIch It de· thousand who seldom If ever come wl'hID the I I I d

volves upon the church as a body to clear Itself ' " 1 not objected to by ot Jers. t IS natura, an wlOdow he might look dowu upon the gently by snccors furlllshed by the kiug of Adel, and that there was no salvatIOn out of the sound of the Gospel. The State, thelli ought flowmg Tweed .As hiS mind calmed gently went "orth to buttle. Victory deCIded In hI'S pale of the Romlsh Church, did not narrow from partlcblpancy In gUIlt, to take up, and Ill- to b~ searched out It was the deCided p' pm IOn not so unreasonable, that some parents should down he requested his son·in·law to read to l' ~ th d' t b h vestlgate t e case; and If after a faIr and can- of the CommIttee that more attentlOn)shonld prefer that their chlldnu should he taughtreli" him. II From what book shall I read 7" he favor He put to route tbe EthIOpians, and e IS ance etween t e emperor and the did IOvestlgatlOn, the offender IS found to be be given to feeble churches at home. Churches glOus trnths, only by those iu whom they have asked. II Can you ask?" said the great en- ravaged several provmce.. The emperor was mi,sIODafles, nor ID the least shake him from ~:~:I~I~I :l~: ~~I:i~; o~h~~ll!':s~~pIIY to Withdraw should be planted and raised up. In destltnte full confidence, as SUItable persons for rehglous chanter, "THERE IS BUT ONE" As he listened forced to fly to the recesses of the mountams the POSltIOD, that an assembly of the church locahties much was to be done EVdry lOch teachers It is undeSIrable that the Bible to the gentle stralDs of the Redeemer, as re- while his trmmphant foe was dev3statID In~ should take IDto conSideratIOn and dCClde npon The folIowmg article bas been forwarded to 01 the SOIl of Massachutetts was sacredhn des . corded 10 the fourteenth chapter of St John's. . . g these and SimIlar questIOns; aud that, while Uo by Bro L M C, WIth a request to append tmy and no portIOn should be left nUCj1ltlvat. should be a matter of wranglmg and conten. Gospel, his lang' uage was, "Ifieel aa if I were country, and slaughtering hiS subJects ed II' ! tlOn 10 ollr pOlitIcal contests It WIll not be

here on earth, 'scene of darkness and delu'lOn It 10 our notICe of the meetlll.:l' of the AssoCla 1 yet to [)e myaelf again" What a thrIllIng At thiS fearful crISIS of hiS affairs, the em-' , condUCive to tbe welfare of llither the schools, scene, and what a beantiful groupmg for a peror dIspatched one Bermudes, a Portuguese as It 18, 110 mdlVldual priest had authorIty to tlon THE SANDWICH ISLANDS -The sucpess of of the church or of the State We would pI·cture. HI's own productions were scattered make alterat,ons In the church. He "Iso as ThiS meeting of the Central ASSOCiation was Ch t th I ds n~t m '

• belongmg to bls train, to the courts of Rome rls Ian mlSSIOns ID ese IS an agal. an· bave no ohJections to the Bible being used as around him, the tomes of human Wisdom and Bored them that It was m vain to expect that an InterestlDg and profitable season The I I th I t f h h h science were piled m the shelves before him; and Lisbon, to soliCit ald. But prevIOUS to the people of EthIOpia were bound to the Committees to pre pal e buslUess presented bu. Ifo d obstac es-not e eas 0 w IC" b ave a class book by pupils where the parents or but yet his J'udgment and declarll,tl'on was at hiS leaVIng the country, the Abuna uomlOated slDess suffiCient to occupy all the busmess hours come from the bad Influences generate,.. ya guardIRns do not ob'ect. The right of selee.

' religion of their fathers by tIeS whIch could " an hour when the paiuted mask of earth was him to the office of biShop, and deSignated him of the ASSOCiatIOn. By the report of the Ex· corrupt ciVIlIzation-IS one of the most note tlOU of class books ~AParents or by pupIls, to fallmg off, "There " but O1le bookl" Gay as a sDltable person to succeed him In the pa' be so eaSily or so summarily severed He ecutlve Board It seems that the ASsOCIatIOn IS worthy examples of the power of the Gospel a reasonable extent as been and IS permItted trifler in the assembly room, and thouJhtIess tben dIsmissed them and left to VISit a distant trymg to snpply, to a good extent, those d t A of the A ri ' devourer of romance and fictiou, remember that trlarchIal chll,lr Bermurles arrived 10 Rome provlDce churches willch are not favored With a settled 10 mo ern Imes ll11sslOnary me . m schools Without l"tnrblDg csseutmlly the' a Similar hour IS coming np iu your history, 1538, and was kmdly receIVed by the pope, mlDlster, With tho preached Gospel The report can Board writes to the July number pf the routme or order of the school ThiS right of when you will need that" one book," and r

that who consecrated hIm patriarch of Ethiopia, The prinCipal JesDlt, Rodriguez, who had ou the state of relIJlon exhibited but a small Herald from South Kona, where he hils the chOIce WftR permitted nnder cert-am limits, In

alone, to console and comfort you. Taite It and sent Lim to the KIDg of Portllgal, With beeD lahormg With the emperor, finding himself IDcrease In numhers durm~ the past year, yet pastoral care of SIX churches, embracmg ID all the school whICh the WrIter of thiS attended m now as your guide and compamon, and It' Will his commendatIOns But although the kIDg compl.ctely fOiled III hIS efforts, aud scarcely by the commUnlcatlOlls from the different over eleven hundred members WhIle sp ritual a nmghbormg State some thirty-thr~e or thirty. t'l- be a I'mp unto your feet aud a II'ght unto k h t t d k f h h churches, we beheve they are laborlRg for the th d th tJ of surroundln<7 diss 14o".. , foresaw that an alliance with the Emperor of nowlDg w a 0 0 too re Ilge 10 t e ouse apa y an e grow I 0 Ipa- five years since Several pupils read from the Yonr hath. [Watchman and Evangehst. f Ith P great doctrmes of the Gospel, and are prayIDg did M P

WARNING TO THE INTEMPERATE -Charles Lamb tells his sad experience, as a wlrDlng to young men, in the followlllg manner:

t' Ethiopia wOllld faCIlItate hiS ambltlOlIs deSigns 0 a wea y ortugllese, and wrote a short for the qlllckeDlng lIlfillencesof the Holy SpirIt tlOn aud vice are ep ore, r arTlS Ivrltes New Testament, yet we never heard any com. of spreadmg hiS conquests, and thorefore pro- treatise on the ChrIStian rehgion This, With Some of tbe chnrches have been blessed With of external prospenty thus: 'plamt of any sacrehglOus familiarity or of tbe

"'I.'he waters have gone over me. But ont of the black depths, could I be heard, I would cry out to all those who have set a foot in the perilous flood Could the youth, to whom the flavor of the first wIDe IS delIcIOUS as the openlug scenes of hfe, or the entering upon some newly discovered paradise, look IOtO my desolatIOn and be mllde to understand what a dreary thing It is When he shall feel himself gomg down a precipICe With open eyes aDd passive will; to see hIS destructIOn, and have no power to stop It, and yet feel It all the way emanatIDg from himself; to see all godliness emptied out of hIm, and yet not able to forget a time it was otherwise; to bear about the pletous spectacle of hiS own rUID; could he see my fevered eye, feverish with the last night's drinking, and feverishly 100kIDg for to-Dlght's repetition of the folly; could he but feel the body of the death of which I cry hourly with feebler outcry to btl delIvered, it were enough to make him dash the sparkling beverage to the earth, m all the pnde of its mantling temptation"

-----:--"'c---LUTHElUNs.-The Lutherans have over 1100

ministers laboring in nearly every State lo the Uniou. and at least 2000 churches. They bQve also nearly a dozen colleges, and as many theological semiuarle8, together with female seminaries and IIrCademles ill various parte.

mising the most deSIrable consequences to dIfficulty, he translated mto the Ethiopian Ian the reVIval inflllence The first Church m The chllrch at Kealia number 280. DurlDg lOfr1Ogement on the religIOUS rights or feelings himself; he coold not readIly persnade himself guage, and presented It to the emperor on hiS Brookfield has enJoycd a precIOus seasou dur the last two years they have bUIlt a very!gbod, of any- one

ret r Iro h t B t th d t IDg the past wmter Nearly a hundred have substantIal stone meetlOg house The work Th f h B'bl h to take part ID the war whIch that prmce was 11 Il m IS our. u IS expe len suc· wlthm h, r bounds followed thclr SavIOur ID on thiS house has all been done by mem~~rs of ere was no fOi mal readlDg 0 tel e y then carrying on against the Gullas He did ceeded no better than those he had preVIOusly the orilmflllce of baptism slDce last October the chnrch and their chIldren, and It haS' been the teacher at the ope,Dlng of the school, or lit not, however, entirely quench the hopes of the tfled; on the contrary, it seemed to \Derease After qUite a lengthy dlscnsslon, It was de- an lOterestmg Sight, which we have oftef\ WIt any other time, yet there seemed to be no up envoy, bnt whIle he temporIzed, he flattered the estrangement and deepen the aversIOn C1ded to contmue the practice of sendIDg dele- nessed-pastor and people, old and J!oung, prehenSIOn that religIon or lOoral~ would be him WIth the prospect of sendmg blm aid from whICh the monarch already felt to the newly- gates to slster ASSOCIatIOns Bro. C M, male and female, all coilectmg materials, bUIld- undermmded or su1ftl jury The substantial

d LeWIS -;vas appomted a ddegate to the Eastern, 109 the walls and h Iplll' forward the house of ' his ASiatic domiDlons Bermudes beheved the arrIve envoys and Bro J as Snmmerbell to the Western and the Lordi We haw \ four houses oC wor- yeomanry of thBt ru Ii, embracmg among delUSIOn, and With the expectatIOn of obtain- Rodriguez seeing that hiS labors 10 the North-Western ASSOCiatIOn. elup, capable of seatmg from 500 to '1,000 their numbers rather ill ie perhaps thau the ing a few hundred soldIers at Goa, he Immedl- service of the miSSIOn at the Imperial court Our hearts were cheered bv the remarks in persous each, alllmtlt (and Rome of theo:j near- average proportIOn in t111~ country of pIOUS and ately proceeded to Asia, where he arrived In were now bronght to a close, returned to the the adoptIOn of the report on EducatIOn DIS Iy completed) WIthin the last five yellrs. : 'l'hey Chr18tlan people would have been qUite aston 1539. But he was destmed to exaerience the sea coast, With the view of findmg the reSidue cusslOn of resolutIOns was made the speCIal are very plalD;-no gIldmgs of gOld; no orna- ished shoul£l dOl' one h tVe pronounced their's

t' f h d t kIf B order for SIXth day, at 1 o'clock Remarks Oil ment f t d I b t th !ll t d • bItter disappointment of seelllg hIS antlcipa- 0 IS cOqlpany, an a 109 COUDse 0 el'- the resolutIOn embodymg sentIments of thanks. so 8 allle g ass; u ey are ce.!I,en e a "gnile~~ 8chool" The" English reader"

modes who had alwoys regBrded h If by the \lDlted tug aud toll aud prayers of onr h h th ter t· dd I bl ted TI K f Port I' ~ Imse as t G d f th I . d d I I b k t f e WrI Ions su en y as Ie lOgO uga gIVIng 0 0 or e precIOus reVIva enJoye poor people. I all oL ler c a~s 00 S, ou 0 W IC proved himself treacherouR; not having com- the legal patrIarch of EthIOpia. On conslllta· durmg the past wlOter, were hstened to WIth , of thiS, lealDed to rend, contamed selectIOns

d d h t t G to b rk ~or tlOn, they concluded to return to Goa and great Interest L I f D d man e IS FOOp~ a oa em a .' , REVIVAL OF LOV';li1-A letter from tM dele from the Scriptures, from toe Paa ms 0 aVI, Aby' d to th ment suspend all further operatIOns, tIll, 10 the revo- Durmg the diSCUSSion of these resolutions, N WI Y k from the rroverb~ of Solomoo, from tbe Nell' B8mla aecor 109 e encourage I t' f ff t the mlsslon'ry spirit seemed to be Illfllsed Into gate of the General ASSOCIatIOn of e I or held-.... t to B d hit I t u Ion 0 a airs, an oppor uDlty should Occur ~ bl CI

"VU ermu es w I e a liB collr . fI bl' the heart of the congre~atlOn Many wept as to the General ConventIOn of Vermont, (quot Testament, among which was that no e spe -While these events were transpiring Dan- more avora e to their designs, and whICh they reVIewed the conditIOn of those wHhout ed in the Ohronicle,) says: "The aCYlval men offorellM;o!oquenc, aDd Cbrlstlanconrtesy,

gal, the Ethiopian emperor died, aud bis son would warrant their retnrn Into the country the bleSSIngs of the Gospel. Mauy resolved wlthm our bounds appears to be not sQ much St. Paul's defense before Agrlppa There were ClaudIUS ascended the throne Bot it seems With a remforcemcnt of Jesuit misSIonaries to put their hands anew to tbe work of carry a reVival of zeal as It IS of love. A luve for selectiolls from Pope, Fenelon and Pascal of the that the embassy of Bermndes to Lisbon was To be contmned 109 forward our educatIOnal mterests,whlle our Christ and hiS chllroh, and the souls of; men, Roman Cathollo Cburcb; from Dr Johnson,

t t I ~ I I h tl fte h' 8 S oblIgatlOlIs to God and our fellow men were d tel Dr. Watts, John Milton, AdISOII, 'lkenslde no en Ire y unsllccesslU, .or s or y a r 18 EARCH THE CRIPTURES -As a club of mfi. so ably spread out before UB appears to be the pre omlOau .ee 109, accom- .Ii.

la~ding at Goa, the report was heard and dels In Massachusetts were recently studymg The resolution referrIDg to chnrch dlsclphne panied by a subdued heart and deep e~tlons and Cowper of tbe Church of England, and of qUIckly spread to the Imperial court, that a the Blhle to ascertain what it said on the snb- fonnded upon the passage, "If thy Brother tre~; lD "iew of the goodness of God towar~s onr the Protestant dissenters 'l'here were seleo' Portuguese fleet was seen crnising npon the ject of baptism, SIX or seveu were led to faith pass agaIDst thee, go and tell h!m hIS fault, falleu race. This (eellDg appears tQ be aU- tions from Bacon, Shakspellfe, Hume aud Red Sea, aud that they had been sent to check In the word of God and I'n Christ, and are now was deferred tIll Flrst;.day, at 2 0 clock: I ervadmg. Wherever the rl\vival is felt. there Frankhn, represent1Og, we might say, the

.All that heard the remarks upon these reso· p. • • " h the progress of the Mohammedan Gallas, who rejoicing In the Saviollr, lutions felt that theIr understandlDgs were ell yon may dIScern the~e character18bcs 1 world's people, and Deistical Philosop era,

I

Page 3: s3.amazonaws.comVol+15+(1858-59... · VOL. XV.-NO. 7. Qrl)t ~itbbllt~ Recorbtr, I PUBLISIIED WEEKLY By the Seventh-dny 'Bnptist Pn~lisbing Society, At No. 100 N"".au Strut, Nero York.

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THE SABBATH RECORDER, JULY 22,1858. -~-========~~~~~~~~~~~~=--T,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~_~~:~===

We write from memory, and cannot recall make It a credit to our denomlllatlOn, but have ~tttttal ~nftlltgttttt' . New Orleans, badly IOJnred, ChRrles B mett Charles a Scotch scb,ool-teILch'cr, AI A R R I AGE S W I not the po·n t d W I b d r serl \W Cleveland OhIO thigh broken, Adam Way findmg 1118 health IIIJsrned by the h':lnlGUEid all the nllmes, and It IS not nece,stlry e ave ~tr 0 0 so e a or nn e '"

b B nghampton shghly lI1Jurpd, William Horton of the school room, has IDvented nn !JUK"IIUI g ven enough 'or our pllrpose-enoagh to how OilS em arrassments We are asked to carry L Q N 62 W II 1 I' Forelgn News owen, neens COOllty, offi "0 I lam mode of veuhlntlOn It IS entire y slm

In Berl n July 10th hy Rev A W Coon, Mr WI[ PLACE and MISS SUSAN P DANFORTH Also m the same place same tIme and by the same Mr A MOON and M,ss E HORTON all of Poestenkill f

that 1\ liberal COl cilmtory spmt prcvlllied Tbe ou a denomlllatlOnal school, bnt no more III street New York badly InJurrd J W Beels IS I Bsed on the fact that If two til of nn ,e/ 001 was a model of peace and harmouy debtedncss mnst accrue BgBmst the property, ForeIgn neWd to the 3d mst, bas been re Boston slightly lDJnred, L F Howell M ad eqaal length be admitted IOtO a room the 'foe Del~hborhooll waR not pO'se'sed of , and the denominatIon farls to give ns the selved A very destructive fire had occnrred Hill Pa slightly InJnred, R P 'lurD( r and air Will enter the shortest nnd the WRfIl

h I t I I t h h t t h to be III the London Docks dOllig damage to the ex two chIldren, slightly mlured, S D Wapell, aIr be expelled throu!!"f the 101 gest Mr \\ at DEATHS gr ISplllg am I tlOns po I ICU pre a e w 0 WIS necessary support, ye eac ers are d L C " ~

d h tent of £150,000. The Queen had paid a an oOlsa O1nta Iowa, slightly JDJnr~d, Mrs son's appl cat 1\ IIYOIds the unplea-allt lind e I by gettmg up a qnarrel, to destroy the paId, beSides mCldental expenses, an t e VISIt to the Great Enstern, and Imd witnessed R B Crosby and child Ooloma Steub II co dangerous draughts created by most mildes of In Hopkinton R I Jnne 26th SA.RAH ANN CLAIIIO!I

eldest daughter of Thorn .. M and Anna Clarke aged 14 years 6 months and 3 days schools Nor did It possess a tflbe of restless property mnst be preserved by necessary some of the wonderful explOits of Mr Rllrey N Y 01 ghtly IDJured MISS Wenmall Mrs ventilatIOn

nnd hll Igry warrl pohltclans who were de repairs Now pathetiC speeches and affectlllg the horse tamer [homas four chIldren and nnrse Brooklyn F IS I h Th b II 11 th H f C slightly In;'ured, P R Paddock MISS "'"st or severa un la,ys past meetmgs h~"e been oro IS of mil Ig mto office on the waves of 11 remarks made 10 our ASSOCIatIOns or e sew ere, e I a owmg e oase 0 om mons to" J>u h Id tIl t ·n J b I

' 4 d t J h ddt d d 111"n and Voloma Bilfrey, mutes III ch"rcre of e 11 some OCIII Jl In "ew ersey 1. 8 nn

Although death 18 the commQn Jot of all and to publish a lengthy obItnary of each as they die would be burdensome and yet It may be due to the cause of relIgIOn occaSIOnally to record ItS tnnmphs The de parture of Sarah to the Spmt world WBB such a com plete VictOry over all fear of death 'BIleb a JOYous ex pectancy and antepastal foretaste of glory and beavcn as IS seldomg witnessed even In tbe death of aged saints

d b h If r h B "I f b h If D R tIt t tad a ml ews, a passe 0 a secon r~a mg rn u .• " h I f cilinerous elU·a e 10 e a 0 tel" e 0 III e a 01 e uver us I u e sa enomma the House of Lords by 26 majority Prof Isaac L Post of the Deaf and Dnmb m rOlls OlY ° SpliltualL~ts Aoclalists and free wi ch fllrlCe nnmbers of them most likely know tlOnal scbool, Will not pay ItS CUlTent expeuses, A private meetrng of the shareholder. of Asylum New York together WIth the Wife lovers WIth a vIew to emlgratlDg to one ?f the ~ I Clre but little We will now SIIY 11 few and are only valuable 118 they mdnce frIends the IlhnOis Central Railroad had been h Id ID ani chIld of Mr Pect all of whom are sl\O'ht Islands rn the Sonth PaCific ocean Too most

b t th d I 'd t t t W L d d d I k Iy InJnred, John Arnot of "'Imlra sllghtly"ln promrnent charllcterl among them IS II. man \Vords I ou e report an reso utlOns men to come lor war 0 I S snppor e see our on on, an a commlttre appomte to 0 I £j d T 1 ' I M h 1[1 t th lr f h Jnred, C C Mllrray H"rrlsbur!!: slIghtly I I name y er, 10rmer y a .L et odlst m nlster t 0 e I at the commencement of thIS artICle peoille patroDizlDg the schools of our relIgIons ID 0 e auaus 0 t e company ~ ~ ond now t I I th th fIt t

was Sarah s earnest of the COmIng IDhentance a mere whim or fancy or II. dl!!gust or dll!rehsh of tbls pre~ent lif~ Few eDJoyed the beautiful scenery of earth more than she Few enjoyed or had more reason to enJoy the sOCIety of tnends than she She lIved and was beloved by all espeCially by her parents grandparents aunts "rother and a BlBter It was.l1o disrehsh of th,s life that made her so awnous to enwr upon the future It w.. Chnst m the soul the hope 01 glory Aye hope seems too feeble to e1)l1ess her feehnga. Sarab s hope became almost fruitIOn hope seemed swallowed up m actual attamment

Th r f I h Jured, ..., W Gill of Miller 0 Port Falrfiel' ~ connec ec ~I e ree ove lOR I U f f I d h h t h d b e trans ormatIOn 0 sal 109 SIpS IlItO"" Q" J B I 0 ThiS IS vel V I1r rom w mt WI) coul ave WIS JPI onen s, ID t elr Imme late VIClDlty, ecanse steamers was actively gomg on III France county, 01110 shghtl} IUJured, Rev Edmond tlOn at er In 1110 Meetmgs have also been ed We would much prj ferred receIVIng them It IS cheaper and more convelllent I do not CommefClal affaIrs had Improvea at Lyons B Palmer, No 18 Poplar street Boston held ID thIS CIty I (not exactly liS It IS) from a meetrng ot the qnestlon theIr right to do thiS but I do ask and MarseIlles sl ghtly IDJnred, W W FarnlallJ Port Jer Late advlces from Utah, gml the conditIons ffiends of free schools I!Istead of their comlDg ImmuDity fiOm reqDlrements which look Irke The SpaDl~h ministry bad reRlgned, and a VI~ slIghtly IOJured, P P Snmmers LICkmg agreed npon hy the Mormons and the aC!ll'edlt frOID one of tbo sta[dlDg political org\nlzatlOns the reqlJlrements of Pharaoh of Israel's chIld lIew cablBet formed With Gen 0 Donnell at Its county N J, shghtlv mJurnl 1\ Hogart ed agents of toe Untted States wh eh are III

bead as mlDlster of rorelgn affaIrs and war shghtly IDJured, - Hass of the firm of Eml ~lIbstance thRt the troops shall eutuSale Lake ofth rhv a body of stereotypell office hnnt ren thllt they make brick WIthout the neces Much angry feehng had been exhIbited III Hass & Cll No 50 Broad strm t New York eli} WIthout 0pposlUlOn, uncondItional obedl ers WIth It variety of other objects beSIdes "y mOl.terlals being furDished them reference to the course of Englanrl on the slave slightly IDJnrcd, A Bl.kel and Mrs Chfford ence be paId to the laws Ilnd all past olfens~s the wel~\fe of free schools With a Vilflety of SILAS S CLARK trade questIOn of Buffa.lo NY, sll~htly Illlured, B S HIll forgiven All tbe houses III thp. CIty hal! been rol tl8al anttgomsms and a nmosltlcs to carry DeRuyter Ji_id_y_ll_l_BO_B_____ From lndlll we learn that SIr Hngh Ross Chautauque (ounty N C slightly IDJured, M closed agam~t strangers With the exception of

I tb th ht f h h h had captured Calpee and a large amonnt of Conkhn Tacksonville, III shghtly IDJured, G that of Governor CnmmlDgs il~,( IVlt I em e welg 0 w Ie as n For the Sabbath Recorder S I W d t k I I h I gnnR and ammnnltlOn and several elephal ts v van 00 s oc county, owa ~ Ig t Y 11

ten leney to draw down tho free schools The NatIve DepraVlty SIr Cohn Campbell had drIVen the rebel, Jured _ Rnsh PetersbUlg, Steuben connty The late Abraham Miller of Philadelphia, !P fit of the report aud resolntlOns IS not good back from ShahJehaudpore and captured Mo N Y shghtly lDJllred H SmIth _ slightly left chafltable beqnests amonntmg to $26500 It ! n t hberal and conCIliatory conceding the The dISCUSSIOns of thIS most Important snb hundee Oude WIIS still ID a state of rebellion IllJured The PennsylvaOla ln~tltutlOn for the DellE and equal fights of all On the contralY 110 lS full Ject, must be nseful to every SlUcere enqUIrer The rebels were approachmg Lucknow bnt fhe mqnest on the hodles of the passengers ~luOmObO relcelvAes $d 6000 , f tFhe BAlmd ~n5s0t()ltutllon

It was so lIell gamsoned and derendRd that no who were kIlled by the recent aCCIdent on the" ,t Ie CI1 emy 0 rne rts" ,t Ie of Itolerance and dogmatic ttsSnmptlOlls and whIle It renders some more bl nd alarm W\S felt for Its safety Ellf R ulroad resulted lD a verdict from the Pennsvlv 11II1l ColoUlzatlOn Society $1,000 and wII he hkely to do the schools mnch more FrIend L C R m hIS last RI!:CORDER of Nothmg of speCIal mterest from Chwa Jury cxo eratwg the railroad company from SIxteen other lDstltutlOns have legaCIes rapglOg harm than good III the long run fhe Amen Jnly 8 has condp.mned bls system 10 thiS B h all blame 10 CaURllllr the aCCIdeut from $500 to $2000 each I y an arrival at Boston,mtelligence from t e ~ eau pnrty are, we have little donht nearly UR theSIS, ' VIZ AtlantIC telegr Iph tIeet has been received up The meu of a travelmg circus attempt"d to nnrnous III favor of free schools We wolld Mans natnre -lOce the fall of Adam aod to the 27th nit by whICh It appears that two DISTRESSING ACCIDENT-We lelrn from Ihe carry off from Newport R I an orphan gIrl respectfnlly sug6'est to them that they act lD conseqnence of It IS umversally and totally unsuccessful attempts hRd been made to lay Hamilton Madison County Repubhcan tbat one of fourteen who had become fa.cmated WIth

d d ' the cable the second Ilttempt hllvmg been of the most paIDful occurences whIch It h IS been theIr WIld mode or hfe But she was re cued w th cnntlon and prudeuce To remember that (prave h d Itt hid ItS d f by tile sheriff of CraIl~ton who "rrested "ue of made on the 26th W en after Ily ng upwar sour 0 0 c romc e OCClll re IlS atnr >1y a ~ ~ ., onr free IDstltutlOns and free schools were If thiS 1R trne my remlrks lire false If of forty mile, of It, the commUnicatIOn sudden ternoon lD the delth by drownlDg of Mr C the men rn the rlOg and compelled hIm tb diS fOil ded not m a Sptrl~ of dogmatism and lOtol talse the wli Ie of hIS long pIece IS false The Iy ceased Another attempt wonld be made E I Dudley a member of the Sophomore cover the place where the child was secr~terl eraDCl but III a spmt of concessIOn compromise expression excludes the Idea of any "plrltual on the retnrn of Agamemmon and ValorJons CIa's 1Il the Umver'lty and Teacher of SpIn We ltnrn by a prtvate letter from ~ew Or BI d hhelllhty They can only be pre.erved by hght III 10 III Darkness total and umversal, The mnchlnery on board the Niagara had Ish ID the Female Seminary leans th It tile y How iever IS prevailing m thnt chemhmg the same spmt In conclUSIOn we IS IllS natnre untIl converted worked well Dnd Cyrus W Fteld who com The facts connected WIth thIS sud len be c ty to some extent Along the Gulf shore of wOlld R[\Y that churches stand much more se mumc1tfd the Illtelligence here stated thought rellvemeut are these MI Justus V VlUtO Lo IlSlana too there IS some of It The Bvard

We WIll look at thiS III tile light of ScrIp the attempt to lay the cal Ie woulrl yet be ot of the Illte DI VlDton 10 sSlOnary to Bur t H 1 h r N Y k t k cnrely where tIllS free lind hberal system of ture d h I h I f 0 ea t 0 ew or are a 109' proca I

crowne WIt sllcces~ t lOug t lC stormJ og mah, and of the same class, stalted wlth the tlOnary measures to prevent Its belDg bronght thmgs pl!Ilvllils than Whl re they are attemptel'! In Job It IS sa d there IS a RPlflt ID man gy and unsettled w ather had mater ally IDter deceased on a bathlOg excnrslOn to Madison mto the City to be uplwld by a system ofilltolemnce and exell and the mSPlratlOn 0 toe Almighty giveth fered WIth tbe arm ngeme. ts marle to eonsnm RpservOir and reached the pOJOt late n toe at A banker at Peorlll, IlhnOls, has absconded

f h h d I d d mllt~ the great enterprISe ternoOIl Atter sWlmmlDg about som tllne, s veness 0 state c urc es an by ecial prov s him un erstan lUg , I f h b h d I I Ie IVlDg the hank With whIch he was connected ' t ley swam rom t e Ollt they a lilt I t lem Ions nr I formalitIes In Rome where the Pope Is thIS msp ratIOn of God all darkness? Califorma News to the Island where they left there cloth a a 10'er to the Ilmonnt of $25000 Hfj was and pllesthood have had undlspnted sway for Solomon says, [be Splflt of man IS the candle distance of fifteen or sIxteen rods MI Vmton formerly It reSident of Rochester NY, to hundreds of years, and have pursued a system of the Lord Doe, the candle of the Lord Bj the arrrval of the St Ir of tbe W cst at theo said he would sWIm back for the boat to whICh hiS w fe aud three children have retnrn or mtolerance exclUSiveness and force the give no hght? In the New Testllment It IS thiS port on Wednes lay from A.penwall we whICh the deceased remarked that he wonld ed m destItute CIrcumstances HIS besettlDg Pope and prIesthood can only be mamtamed III said In HIm [ChrIst] was hfe anu the hre have news from Ctlliforll1a 01 egon Central accompany him when they swam off tOJrthcr SIU was gambling

AmerIca New Grenada toe South PaCific and When they had proceeded nearly two th\f(l~ of A r G F N b tt f th t ~elr places by an army of foreu!'n bayonets, Was tbe ligbt of men Is thIS all darkness? son 0 eorge es I ,0 IS CI Y ~ Anotralia the way the deceased complained of bemg d 15 bId t .< '-r while III the Umted States where tl e lar:rest A Th th t I ht th t I ht th Th h W b h $1 0 713 V I b b I k age w I e en eavorrng 0 rescue .... r , gaIn IS IS e rue Ig a Ig e e Star of t e est rong t 4 1 tIred and mton to d lin to e c m-strl Frnnklm, who h HI fallen overboard ,It Ie fish

religIons liberty prevails With the utmost hber every mall that cometh mto the world Is the m treasnre slowly and rest hIS arms on hIS sloulders He m a pond at St mford Co In on Tucsd 1J ty of the press and of speech and of dISCUSSion, true light of ChrIst all darkness? I might fhe local news from Culrfol mil IS unl TIpor did so and swam WIth the asslstllllce of Mr rrerllr,on last was drowned, as was IIlso Mr s permItted, tmvelers 81\y that there IS no qnote many more of the same kmd which tant V three or four rods lind when wlthm about

The reports from the Frazer rrver m nes con a rod of tlie boat S Iddtnly he clasped hiS Rrms COli try m the world wbere churches arc better ,how that, uv the gra( e of God all men have tmned to be most favorable A great I llml er II 0 IUd Mr V exclalmmg 'Oh v;mt!' wnen supported and attended than m the UUlted a talent to Improve showmg that L C R's of emigrants were gomg fr lm all the nort ern they botb went down After smkmg to a co 1

States of AmerlCs theSIS IS a mtstllken one, and, of course, all and southern mlmng countIes of Cahfornlll to slderable depth Mr V feeh Ig the arms whIch We shall probahly advert to thiS subject that IS drawn from It IS wrong Frazer fiver The conseqnence was a general plDlOned hiS own to lose thetr hold III a mcas

d t k t f tt k b As he has suppo'ed that my notIOn of unl depreSSIOn of busmess IU the IUterlOr and a ure made a VIOlent effort to 'dIsengage hImself og~m an a e some no Ice 0 an a ac y a flse In the rates of labor and succeeded by Sllpp11lg tbe deceased s arms d stmgUlshed Prelate, npon our free schools as versal atonem~nt mak s me an Umversalrst It The town of MarIposa was destroyed by fire over hIS shonlders After comlDg lip and tak o demoralizlDg system, and a cause of cnme, IS presumed that he demes that Christ tasted on the 4th of June The total loss was estl Ilg a breath he dove for hIm bnt saw nothmg 1180 of certam ward pohtlClIlns, who are nnder death for every man mated to be $200 000 of Mr Dudley After two or three more such t\ concern of mmd about the BIble IU the Then It follows that myriads of men come Twelve Japanese had been rescued from a dives to the depth of 25 or 30 feet the last

IDtO the world elhglble to endless woe Without JDI k at sea by the ship Carrlbean rind tnk 1\ tllne becom ng so exhausted that hllod spirted Ol.ny act ot their own and Without allY remedy wto SaD FranCISCo ThllY had becn flout ug from hlij uostrils, he deSisted and called for as

free schools

from such a doom! The Lord PIty our blind abont on the oceuu m a rudderless hulk for slstance ness S B over five months Word bemg brought to the VIllage a large

A FRIEND OF OONSE:RVATINE PROGRES$

DeRuyter InstItute Rindoo AbomlDations

To the Editors of the Sabbath Recorder _ In the RECORDER of July 8 I find an artIcle "A MIssIOnary" wrttes to the London

Ttmfs ' There are thousands of my country n referencQ to DeRuyter Institute Is It sup men who hear of gbat murders, and other hor posed that DeRuyter and It~ vlcml~y has no rors of India but few realize them Let me fr e Ids of DeRnyter lIIstJtute? It has many Just gIve them an Idea of the reality At pre that Ilre and always have been anxIous that sent I am resldlDg nellr Hooghly, not far from t h 1.1 d ' r te Calcutta, and scenes like the followlDg con

S ou saccee 10 a mllnner commensu 1\ stantly occnr nnder onr wlDdows For exam w th ItS cost and Its accommodatIOns for pIe, abont mldOlght we hear tbe nOise of a slndents As to fflends ID DeRuyter IhduClDg numher of natives I gOlDg down to the river, pIeR lit stockholders to sell their mterest to there IS a panse, tben a slIght mlltterlOg and DeRuyter vlllllge for a U mon DistrIct School sometimes you may catch the sonnd of some

one as If choklDg, It IS truly a hnman belDg a ) Rouse the facts are these The frIends of man who IS havrng hIS mouth crammed With

EducatIOn rn thl~ place seelDg that we have a mnd aud dIrty water by , hiS frrends' Hnrree hu Idmg that cal~ ,IIud should accommodate a boll hnrree boll' they urge hIm to repeat and large nnmber to be· edncated-that the last when he appears dead they push hiS body mto term of om school, With which expIred Prof tbe stream then slDgrng some bowd song J ' fi.. d they depart Soon the tide washes the body ones term of laboI.closed With 'ijteen stu enta ashore, and then we hear the dogs Ilnd Jackals

-deemed It aPllatent that the school WIlS do qnarrelling over their horrid meal as they tear Dg much less 'hsu It ought to do They tbO' corpse hmb from limb In the mormng a therefore, 118 frlOnds of Education, and treat few vultures are SlttlDg around the spot and mg us With dne resp~ct, propose to pay stock nothmg remalDS bnt a few bones to attest one holders of DeRnyter InstItute the amount It mnrder out of hundreds, perhaps thonsands

committed every Olght on the course of thIS would cost to erect a SUItable bUlldmg for a dreadfnl merl Wltllln one eIghth of a mile I Umon Free SChOlll, and they acceded to onr have counted the remalDS of SIX humau bodies, Important request that a school should be kept and It IS saId that, wbell property IS III qllestloD, only five days III the week, omlttmg Saturday It IS not always a SICk mall who IS thus treated

Every oue knows that the bodies of men and Sunday, and that the school shall have an women and children pass constantly to and fro BcademlCal department ID conformity With the m the fiver, and all thiS goes on under the Unton Free School LIlW of 1853 whICh aca shade of our mISSIOn chllrch and schools where demlClll department berng estabhshed enJoys one or two persons are speudmg thelr hves to all the Immun tIes and prIVIleges now enjoyed rescue a few of the millions who are engaged by the Academies of thIS State As to the ID these abomlllatlOus Yet It IS a fact that

every dIscouragement has hItherto been thrown a SCltlOll that the acceptance of the propOSItIOn ID tbe way of those who, pnttmg Il8lde ques Wo lId be a sacrIfice to odr deuomlDatlOn of tlOns 01 sect, etc, are laborlDg at least to something like ten or twelve tbous md dollars, moralize the brute creatIOn around them nolY If creeds afe not to be taught III a LIter About a week SlOce, the churrockpoorJah ary InStitutIon, what are we to be deprived was celebrnted here I SIlW a man, With

hooks thrnst throngh hiS flesh, whIrled ronnd of that we now enJoy, save thtl mell calhng It and round more than one hnndred trmes some B denomlDatlonal school, whICh(]oes not flatter twenty feet 10 the air, \II } presence of tbou me lit ali, IIl1les; It has a much htter denom siluds of men, women and Ildren, while other natlOnlll sUl1port 1 As to efforts to sell the devotees, almost naked lin smeared over wltb board 109 honse, I know nothlOlI' for as I un dIrt and ashes, were s ttlng 10 II. group below,

" and a third was smeared WIth a colored earth derstand the matter, It IS not, or at least carrylDg a bottle 10 hIS hllnd, the persoDlfica should not be IDcluded 10 the property to be tlOn of debauchery, and all thIS amidst tbe Bold As to our property belllg gIven to our nOIse of tom toms and barbarons mnslc, whlcb rehglous opponents, I have only to say, that I made the beantllul landscape appear peopled have snpposed DeRuyter In~tltute to be a ItS It were, With a batch of devils from hell

Hnndreds of bad women frlllged the whole 118 LIterary InstltntlOll whIch we now own, but sembly, and all thIS uot ten miles ftom Calcut n tbe nnIrkely event of the prop ded arrange ta, and under the eyes of our Chrlstran Gov meot we are to receive some pecnDlary remn ernment DeratIOn for an Investment whlCu at pre-ent IS "There are IDnnmerable abommatlOns too

Id filthy to be meutlOned the worsblp of the LlDg Yle 109 no satIsfactory results and lire stIll everywhere, and the' one great fact that the

The news of Col Steptoe s defeat IS confirm number of the CItIzens repaIred to the Reser ed He lost five killed and fourteen wonnded vOIr and dlagged for the body nearly all mgbt At the last dates be was at fort Walla Walla and contlUued their searcb SnndllY wlthont waltmg for relDforcements There has been success fnrther troubles III the vIClmty of Port Oxford On Monday abont I pm, the body was The Indltlns had attacked a tralU of packed brought to the SUI face by Mr P H Burch mules belongmg to the U mted States takmg ard who hooked IUtO Ins shoulder With a spcar, fonrteen of the mules and klllrng one packer 10 a depth of 30 or 40 feet of water On the other hand fonrteen Indlllns had been The smgular manner of Mr D's slOkrng and killed while trymg to escape when on the road rel"xmg hIS grasp on Mr Vmton led to a post to a reservatIOn mortem examlDatlon under the dIre. tlon of Dr

Brigadier General Clark and staff had gone HavenQ m the presence of Drs LeWIS Beards to the seat of war III Washmgto I Tefrltory ley and Hunt The examlDatlOn resulted m Some two hn dred troops hud arrIVed at San the nearly unaDimous COllvlCtlOn tbat bls death Franc sco on the 13th of June destmed to the was can sed by pulmonary appoplexy or sudden Ecene of tbe Indian dlfficultlCs congestIOn of the lungs as It WilS clear be nev

SHOCKING ACCIDENT ON THE NEW YORK AND ERIE RAILROAD-S1X Peraona Inrtantly hUed and a large number wounded -An aCCIdent of a v£ry serIOus character oecurred on the N Y and Ene Railroad on Thursday n ght about 9 o'clock to the tmlD which left J er,ey City at 5 1 2 P M There were Ilbo It one hundred and fifty persons on the traID wblch conSisted of a locomotIve five passenger cars and two baggage crate, On approachmg a place call ed ShID Hollow ~IX mllrs thiS Side of port JervIs at whlc h POlllt tl e road IS straIght, With a steep embankment some forty feet III depth on 0 Ie Side tbe locomottve strock a broken rail whICh It Jumped c lrrywg Itself and three passenger cars over s If Iy but the wheel of the fourth car went off and sa~k III the ground draggmg the last car off the IlDe entirely rhe cars dragged along abont twe Ity five rods gradually when the COllpl! g broke 01 d they were preclpltatrd In a Rlant n d recti g down the embankment which IS llearlv thirty feet In height and very steep II e last car 10 the tralD only rolled ovel once, and II e truck fell directly through .crushmg It mto atoms There were about forty passel gerb III each car who were scattered Ilmongst the r II us The fonrth car rolled Ollce, and lol.reu on pIs of stones crushlDg m the SHreS find tearmg .ome of the seats away After the acc deut a number of men were collected to clear the rulUs away and It was foulld that the rear cllr had suffered mo-t The IDJlIr d were removed to the em bankmen t , and as qUIckly as pOSSIble removed to Port JervIs where they all aITlved at about mldmgbt ::lome thirty SIX of the Injured peo pIe were taken to Foster Fowler's House, the remamder Rome ten or twelve to the Delll ware House Five persons were taken out dead, and another dIed whilst he was bemg re moved The followmg IS we beheve, a correct bst of the killed and IDJ ured

er struggled or moved after smkmg below the tbe surface Mr Dudley was from Delevan, W \SconSID, and has been connected With the U DIversity three vears, and has durrng hiS reSIdence here endeared himself to all by hIS klDd and ge Itlemanly deportment and stadlOus habits

SUMMARY

FIVe young women were dlOwned on Friday eveumg at the foot of eIghty Sixth st , North rlyer The nnhappy girls were IDmates of the House of Mercy lD that vIClmty and had gone to tbe river to enJoy a bath From the state ment of the matron and the bystanders It would appear that one of the gIrls Ellen Smith felt herself smkmg and cfled for help, ..that when the others weut to her assIstance they were 1m mediately dragged nnder the water and d d not agam rIse

The partial subSidence of the waters of the western fivers beglDs to reveal the extent of the damages whICh the great floods of the spring have effec ed The AmerIcan bottom be low Alton presents an nnwonted appearallce 'Ihe brIdges were wrecks the plank roads wash ed away, and the embankments gone Acres and acres of crops are destroyed peach trees rnlDed wood floated away corn Ilnd potatoes mnndated to death The water IS IlOW falling very fast, and some of tbe farmers are plantmg agalD

One of the New York Jndges has granted an IUJunctlOn against the postmaster of thIS CIty, prohlbltlDg hIm from sendmg to the dead letter office at WashlDgton and plohlbltlng him and illS clerks from openmg and readmg cer tam letters m hiS OlliCR The assumed rIght on the part of post-office or other offiCIals to ID

terrere WIth mtegrlty of the mallg ought to be dcfimtely settled one way or the other It must not be said that the ends sought to be at tamed sanctifies the means H the sacredness of the mall system may be VIolated m one 10

stllnce aud for one purpose It WIll not be long before It will deemed proper to do so ID others, and all safety and security 'rIll be lost forever

Dr 0 D Wilcox committed sn Cld Ilit El mlrt N Y 01 Friday la~t Crlmmal pro ceedmgs were about to be commenced ag;JJnst him on account of m llpractlce-a man wbose leg he had amputated havmg died-and appre hendlng an unfavorablc result he pmsoned hlmT self

CharIeR Latcha aQ ed mneteen, one of the free lovers at Berlm, OhIO commItted sQlClde lately and It letlM" whICh he wrote a few mo ments before hIS death has appeared filled;: With the most blasphemous sentiments He (lIed cursmg marTIabe rehgIOn all 1 God

It IS estImated that there are 4 506 000 boroes m the Umted States tbe value of 'thlCh at $75 per head would be $337,500 000 or more than tl ree times the whole cottOQ and woolen IUunllfllcturlDg capital of the country

Orra SmIth Jr of Benmngton Vt ba Jllst draWl from hIS enr a pIece of cotton t pllt ID five years ago to exclude water, ancl tho hearmg by that ear 1& perf( cUy reRtorcd lifter complete Bu'penslOn for the entire five yertrs

General QlIltman a mllJor general III the re gullr army dIed at hiS reSIdence near Na~lwz MISS on Saturday Gen Qmtman WIlS born lD RhlDebeck New York on the 1st oFSep tember 1799

The women of Vrnalhaven Me the lIqnm S ID a conple of rum shops Tbey met WIth some resIStance m one several had the'lr dres.es torn bnt theyac"coln. phshJld their object

In repairing the old chnrch at Conn, recently an Iud an to[Datla\li'K found between the plaster and bODlrdin!!'. hoaRe IS abont 100 years old and IS paired for the Baptist sOCiety

Elisha D Green who was lately acqUItted III Arkllusas for the mllrder of Sides WaS shot dead a few days smce by person ullknowll wltbm a few feet of WhIteSides fell

• Aaron BaldWin Ol.nd fU adopted da-ugbl(et H B Macy aged 12 yellrs were dr.)wIDlln the MOrriS Ollnal at Boonton N J urday evemng of last week whIle bntbll~gl

Mrs Clara Brooks was lDstantly hghtlllng 10 Bedford, Westchester Y on the 9th lOSt, whde stllndmg lD tbel\lollr of her dwelhng durmg a thunder storm

Ex Presldent FIllmore bas been RufFf',rinl.! some time from mtIammatlOn of the eVllB--folre· gOlDg readlllg IIlmost entirely

LETTERS

Anna S DaViB R Stillman C J wold SIlas S Clarke E Forsythe A W "r(lwn_.~IClll­man Coon Henry Spurlmg Delntns DaVIS Joseph Goodncb E A. Green Martha E. Y~~~:l~~fI: J Clarke J Whitford L M Cottrell Geo S.

RECEIPTS JIlii':"AlI payments for publications of tile S~:~~~~

acknowledged from week to week m the Persons sending mouey the receipt of whIch duly acknowledged shonld give us early the OIDlSSlOn

FOR THE SABBATH RECORDER M n Maryatt Shabona B Grove $2 00 to vol Auna S DaVIS PhIladelphia 2 00 15 Thoa. S Alberti Plamfield N J 2 00 15 DaVid ~rke Brookfield 2 00 15 Jared B Crandall 2 00 15 John Maxson South Brookfield 2 00 15 Lonn BurdIck 2 00 15 E S Clarke Alfred 2 00 14

Her SICk and dyIng chamber seemed radIant With heaven-serene and cheerful Gloom and sorrow were unwelcome m her presence Seemg her lbends weep­lUg around her weep said she not for me, ' but you lOlly "eep tor yourselves, for Jesus wept at the grave of Lazarus The mor,pmg of the day prevlOns to her death was most lovely and beautIful and While beholdlUg and enJoymg It she saId ThJs IS a beautl ful morDlllg and It would be pleasant to spend the day m heaven but If I stay on earth 1 WIll make It pleasant here '

On that day she requested her father to Bend for me as she had felt II strong de81re to see me before she died It bemg Borne 14 miles dIstant I dId not BIT/VO nnhl nellr sunset But had she beea In health ber greetmg could not have been more cheerful We then enjoyed a pleasant oOnversatlOn IIbout heaven and Its inhabItants and she seemed almost impallent to be there for she fnlly beheved tbat death wonld be bnt the ,mmedioJ.e entrance 'pon the JOYs of heaven

During the evenmg she said 0 my Godl Pity tbls poor body and let me die to Dlght yes to-mght If It please thee I replIed Sarah t think you are al most home Do you thmk saId she I shall die to mght? I told her I thought she wonld Oh good good sbe exclauned About mldmght she Bald 10 ble;-"you was mistaken last evemng you tbought I shonld die to mght ~

And she d d hve until morumg which was the Sab. bath when at 9 0 clook she left the earthly house of her tabernacle and entered mto that bUilding of God that house not made With hands eternal In the heav cn" -exchanged the natural body lor tbe Spintual, mortahty for Immortality corruptIOn for mcorruption -earth for beaven Aged men and mlDlsters who VISited Sarah learned leMons of patience and hope and felt how trtumphaut would be the death SCene of this YOllthf'ul samt May her mantle fall on those who sur Vlve

At Sarah s reqneRt I addressed the large concourse of people who assembled to sympathize flth tbe be­rcaved at her funeral Theme Immortality

s a. G

In Walworth W1S June 9th DA.VID COON aged 73 years Bro Coon professed rehglOn m early lIfe be­came a member of the Hopkinton Church ID 1806 and some years afterward removed his standmg to the 2d Brookfield Chnrch and for the last few years has rlr Sided m Walworth whence he was summoned away to JO n the church tr umphant whose names are wntten m heavell The disease of whICh he died was lmgenng and pamtul and for some weeks prevIOus to hiS death he could not speak above a wblsper, yej; he bore It With patIence and reSignatIOn, and though he lel~ an assurance that to depart and be WIth ChTlBt was • far better>than to remam m'the-body yet he was Wll hllg to walt God s hme and m such II frame of mmd he qmetly fell nto the sleep of deatb

On June 22d Dea ALFRED MAXSON of w:;:jA0rth W,a. passed over Jordan to enter mto the C n of heavenly rest of which he h .. been for many years rllJoy ng transportmg Views from PIsga's lotty top Tbe disease whIch hberated hiS tflumpbant soul and tumbled down h,s old mud walled cottage was schyr ous affectIOn of the stomach which w .. pamful and lingermg In 1~gres8 and reduced him to a mete skeleton while lie was yet able to walk about, bbt through all his bodily Buffermg hlB splrtt unlfurmly trlUn phed over the fear of death For a long time he felt an assurance that hIS work :was done and his dlr parture was at hand He lacked bnt a few days of 73 years when he lay down m the arms of Jesus and feU qUietly asleep hke in mlant m Its mother s bqsom The wrtter of this bnef notice IS not sutlimently an­quamted WIth the hfe of Dea Maxson prevlOns to hiS emlgratmg to Wlsconsm to gIve a correct blOgraphl cal sketch of his lIfe bnt hope some one who IS com petent Will do so My acquamtance WIth him lD thiS cou try has been BIlch as to establish a conVIctIon that Ill! was It man ofstrong faith and ever ready to stand and ever dld lD the most emphatIC manner stand up for Jesus In thIS demise not only a dlSCoUBolate WIdow and 11- large family of children and frIeods are '" bereaved but tbe Chu 'Ch of God and tbe Whole neIgh borhood are shrouded m mouroIng aB was eVInced on the 94th when a very numerous congregatIOn of the church and Cit zens generally WIth overt!oWIng tears came together to mmgle their sympathIes and pay their last sad respects to the piOUS dead

The funeral discourse waB gIven by BId Coon of MIlton from 2 TIm IV 7 8 I have fought a good figbt I have fimshed my course I have kept the truth Henceforth there IS laid up for me acrown of rlghwous­ness whICh tbe Lord the righteous Jndge sh~ll gIve me at that day, and not tome only but unto all them also that love hIS appeanng

In Independence N Y June 21Bt of the Infiam matlOn of the spme LIVONIA. the adopted daughter of Ruel and Sarah HalDllton ID the fifth year of her age

In Independence N Y June 28th from compli cated dlseaBeB after a long and painful trllll SARAH A danghter 01 John C and Martha BasBett aged 19 yearB and 8 months Sarah gave her heart to Christ when Bhe was fourteen years old and uDlted'wlth the Seventh.ctay Baptist Church m Independence of whIch she was a member wben she waB called to Jom the church lD heaven She endured her ufthctlOns like 11 Christian and when she felt that sbe must be cut down so early m life she qUietly gave up her'planA, prospects and hopes for lile gently loosemng the-eord of affectIOn from lather mother brothers and BIslel'll of whom she had eleven aDd of one wbo was to have been dearer to her than all others beSides who travel ed several hundred mIles to see ber but aIT/ved a few hourB after she had been put mto her earthly house decorated by rosy garlands Woven by friendly hands. She dIed n peace J 11:

In Greenmanfille Ct Jnne 24th at the reSIdence of Mr Welcome LeWIS Widow IsABELLA. PO'ITER, of PrOVIdence R I aged 63 years. Sister Potter was a member of the Power Btreet Methodist Church In PrOVIdence and died m hope of a blessed immortality Her funeral was attended at Hopkinton Sermon on the occasIOn by BId Joshua Clarke S 8 G

In Potter HIll R I July lOth of scarlatlDa GEORGE Bon of Wm and Martba S Potter aged 1 y,ar and 9 months

AltrtAI Hi~h1lll1d Wilter Cure. T HIS estahlishment, for the cure of Chrome DJa.

eases 1B condllcted by H P BVRllIOE, M. D IlDd Miss M BRYANT

The faCIlitIes In this Cure" for the succeBllful treat­ment of Diseases of the Liver Spme Nerves I'emale D,seases Bronchilis InCIpient Consumption &c.j are not excell~d ID any estRblishment. Patients Will have the benefit of skillful Homeopathic prescrIptlon&-an advantage found in but few' Water.()urea.' :EsJ1l!clal attention WIll be given to diseases commonly cilled urgical cam BIlch as ffip D_s White SwellingB, Cancers (ID therr early stages,) lind Cane8-ll.lld Neora-8I8 of bone

Connected WIth tbe establishment Is a Dental Shop, where all calls m that profel!8!on will be attended to

Address, H P BURDICK~. Alfred Allegany 00 ,1'1 Y

to be mntuRI owners WIth other friends of Idolatry of Bengal IS merely the dedicatIOn of Education That the matter 01 ElIStern stock vIce The Romans, With all theIr corrnptlons, holders offarrng to sell may be correctly nnder bUIlt temples to Pax and Vlrtus, but the HID Blood, 1 would Bay tbat we have received DO doo dCltles are merely deVils Surely these are a~8Wel whatever trom Eastern stockholders crimes which on~ht to be put down by any eXee t f ' Government, aud whIch should be snppressed

prom oue firm purely as berng hostile to the fundamental Thllt thIS InstitutIOn, as a denomrnatlOnal prlllCiples of authority lD any state"

&chool hll8 done mnch good, cannot be donbt- Th b d f d M t h L rklu ed I The 0 y a a man name ar 1 a ,

ts rostees, t e managers of the school, supposed to have been murdered, was fonnd a

Ktlled-Henry Wood Wellsboro', Pa, G W Robmson, New York CIty, J G Scbutz, supposed to be from Buffalo, a son fonr years old of Mr and Mrs Brown, of 'IlOga Valley, Mrs Adam Ray (colored) from Bmghamton, one of Mr Tnrner's chIldren only Dine months old The reSidence of the family IS No 399 Nmth avenne New York

Wounded -WIlham Rose No 283 Third street New York slightly IDJured, J Weigh land, Toronto slightly IDlored, D N Selley, of the firm of Messrs Seeley Watkms, Sher man & Co, Elmll'a, New York, slightly IDJured, Nathamel H Barnes, of Sparta, slightly IDJnred, F Bedell, N J, slightly InJnred, Mr and Mrs Brown, of TIOga coun ty, badly IDJured, LewIS Lay an~ wife, late of

A. ' NatIOnal Dress Reform ConventIOn" was held a week or two ago III Cortlandvdle, New York, 150 were present, all of whom Jomed ID denooncmg "the fetters whlcb a ,em' ba,barou, CIVIlizatIOn, and a ,emlh.ea.th.en ChrtSttaUity have Imposed npon woman m the present mode of dress," and nnaUlmously re solved that as hllmamty IS a uOIt, and the rIghts of each are homogeneons, 80 aU unnatural and conventIOnal dlstmctlOQS of sex, or color, or dress, are nmversal wrongs"

D E Maxson Alfred CenWr 2 00 14 Z R Maxson Little Genesee 2 00 15 Joel Crandall 2 00 14 Matt S EnmB • 2 00 14 Milford D Hall 2 00 14 Ja.cob D Maxson Montra, 0 S 00 15 Samnel Llppmcott 4 00 15 Eld S Babcock; Pratt 0 ~ 00 15 J uda SImons East W l!son 2 00 14 James Barnhart Milton WIB. 2 00 16 Horace Champlin 4 00 III Abram Allen ~ 00 14 Phebe Stillman 2 00 15

Central Railroad of New lerl~. CONNECTING at Itew HaDlpton Wl,ih the DelJl,.

ware, Lackawnnna and Western RaIlroad, to 52 Scranton Great Bend the North and West aud 1IIt 52 Easton wltb the Leblgh Valley Rallro\ld ~ Mau" 26 Chnnk -Sl1MHE1t ARRANGEMEh'TS commencmg Apr'il 52 28 1858 Leave New York for EroSIOn ana Inter-52 mediate places from PIer No. 2 North River, at 7 SO q~ A. M 12 M and 3.00 PM, for Somerville, at ... SO 52 P M Tbe above trBllls connect at i ~lIz.beth with 52 trains on the New Je~ Railroad, wbleh leave New 52 York from the foot of Courtland :Feet, at 7 SO aDd 6 12 II and 400 and .5 Pi oX }!._

have tbe "f!lt' to act to a lImited extent to few dlLYs smce on the Schenectady turnpike -= ELIPIIALET LYON, JOHN 0 STERNS, SUperD!lendent

Page 4: s3.amazonaws.comVol+15+(1858-59... · VOL. XV.-NO. 7. Qrl)t ~itbbllt~ Recorbtr, I PUBLISIIED WEEKLY By the Seventh-dny 'Bnptist Pn~lisbing Society, At No. 100 N"".au Strut, Nero York.

THE SABBATH RECORDER, JULY 22, 1858.

3llilinllnntnu5. serene and thoughtfnl as If she had been com slonary went and fonnd them 10 a new and I Interesting RoJiiij.,nJrew DIS forted by some good fl end handsomely fnrmshed home happier than any "n~"''';, •• by th~ Pope

Mary Bell and I were still and senous all con pIe ID their honey moon Thlij end of four -11 F the afternoon Once or tWice I saw her beau years' desperate drnnkenness and va!mbondlsm A letter from Mr Bryant the poet dated

y ~ Lesson tlful blue eyes loolnng at me wistfully over her was a sight worth somethmg to see! Bome May 21st says I have one or two k th t t th ngs to say of Rome whICh may fnrDlsh mat Abby Fonderson-yes that WIIS the name spellmg book bnt we neW a I was wrong The Faculty of Speaking 10 Public ter for a short letter

of my first schoolmlstresa Slie was one of the to whisper and for the world would not have Rome has Its rICh coUectIons of anCle,nt art stiff st lilcest and most thoroughly pnm old d sobeyed the 10 stress then The followmg remarks of the Londou Times m the VatICan but there IS still rICher mnseum mnids that ever took care of otber people s At last the clnsses were aU heard The on thiS subject deserve the seriOUS attentIOn of n the earth below The spade can scarcely children She tauO'ht In a little red school mistress looked we thought sadly around at every manager of 0. school or college 10 the be thrust 10 the ground Without turmng up house 10 Shrub Oak about half a mile at the I ttle benches arose laid her hand on the U mted States some work of art or strlkmg npou some monn the back of Fall s HIli I hke to be partIcn h gh backed chair and sank slowly to her We should only take up needless time If we meut of the olden t me Most of the fine lar m the geoglaphy though I had never knees The chddren stood np as usual I were to attempt an enumerat on of the splen statutes n the publ c galler es t ave I beheve opened an atlas 10 my I fa when MISS Pnnder looked. at Mary Bell, she was trembl ng a lit d d example and emphatIC admomtIons 10 favor been discovered 10 dlgO'lOg to lav the founda Bon received me mto her alphabet class tie the color came and went on her face My of early constant var ous and systematic tlOnS of bmldmgs anod who can tell what

heart beat qOlck I felt a glow on my cheek t th f b d II d I see her now sitting ~o very upright 10 her somethm soft and fervent st mng at my heart ram Dg n e case 0 every 0 y ca e npon master p ece of Greek sculpture are yet con

high backed chmr-solemnly OpenlOg the blue We bothgrose hand 10 hand walked throngh to speak 10 publ c The early statntes and cealed under that thICk layer of rubb sh wh ch paper covers of our primers and calhng me by the scholars up to that high backed chair and usages of our Umversltles bear Wit e s to the overl es the aDC ent level of the City-what name I see the sl arp po nted SClosors lifted knelt softly down by the mistress She gave paramonnt Importance of the faculty In the es representat ons of from the cham at her B de I hear tha rap a little start opened her eyes and lOstantly t mat ons of our forefathers The old scholara The fair hu:naml es of old religIOn rap of her thimble agalDst the lenther covers they filled With tears her I ps trembled and of Oxford disputed the r way from term to are Qwaltmg the honr when they shall be re­of that new spell ng book yes I feel myself then came a burst of thanksglVlug to God for term from one degree to another Till the stored to dayh"ht aud the admlrat on of the dropplUg that bashful I ttle courtesy and hav10g answered her prayer She laid I er Res~~r~t on we bel eve we are Ju~tilie~~n world-prostrate J uplters nymphs With their bluslung ll\ der those solemn grey eyes a8 she hand first upon one head then upon the other ng a no sermon was ever rea 10 e plaCid featnres and taper hmbs Imbedded 10

po nts down the long row of Roman capitals She called down blessmgs upon us she poured ve s ty pnlp t and even elsewhere a mannscrlpt the mould and merry fanns that have smil~d and tells me to read I remember It all she was as great a confes IOn of weakness as a h h d k f th

forth her whole soul eloquently as sbe bad t db k Id b tb d Y t th se for a t ousand years 10 tear ness 0 e had on a brown cotton dress her hair was done under the hemlock boughs prlO e 00 wou e In ese ays e ~ d I ported plmnly lind done np IU a French tw st I have heard burn ng prayers SlUce but were ages 1D whICh the U Divers t es had a far grT':e present government of Rome IS turn ng behlOd there was a good deal of grey 1D 'that ever one that entered the depths of my mem stronger hold on the nat on than they no v ts attentIOn to the cxcavat on of tllOse spots black ha r and around her prim month any ~ry I ke that have They were not beh nd ours n sol J yof wh ch promise most As I was passlDg the qualllty of flne wrlDkles but her vo ce was low The next day Mary Bell and I followed the scholarsh p 1U depth of ph losophy and strength other day 1D a street lead nO' towards the and sweet she was st ff bnt not cross and the mistress down to the mdl stream for we felt of convict on rhe art of speaklOg d d uot Colosseum 1II compauy with" an Amer cun little g rls loved her 1D a deg ee though she fJ'mlty till she knew all But she pers sted that d lnte learmng and weaken v gor of m nd but art st resldm<T I ere J e SOld po ntlDg to certam d d give them long stretches of hemm ng and God himself led us to the bank No matter m Dlstered to them Scholars then uot only anCient columns the lower part of whICh stood over seomR to sew held their own bnt went forth and taught a d leep In the carth The Pope wa ts to d g though Dan Ha nes appeared to have done It d h Id

My first schoolmistress came from some W eked IUstruments were ofteu used to work peyua~ed an\governe t he ~o~ k about these columns but the spot IS leased nelghborlOg to I n She was neither Epi copa out good God had answered her prayer and n t sage owever w c roo s no com a d he cannot If It ~ ere but the possess on han nor Presb) ter an but wore the n cest I ttle t was enough She only hoped we wonld not parlson With any age that we t before t t H of those who own the fee be m ght tnke t but Methodist bonnet made of stiver grey sat l! be ashamed of havlDg knelt by onr lonely a plaID fact whICh co. ot be d sp ted that be co not IUterfere w th a lease At the foot w thont a bow or bit of lace-a Quaker bonnet school m stress ne ther at our U mvers tICS nor at our publ c fo those fi Ie old colu nns he "auld probably cnt short Then she had a da nty s Ik shawl Asbamedl For the first t me 10 onr lives schoois nor ID any other places !lnd systems of 6. rl~ ometh ng worth hiS trouble t t d I k d I d edncatIon In vogue amongst us IS any attempt rl s ass on for excavat 0 hoo been rortu n e I e a ove B w ng nnd a ways carr C we threw our arms around Abby Pnnderson 5 d h h f k WI P ~" .' h h dk I f ' Id d h h lOa e to teac teart 0 spea ng lat m y t fi d I h I I k t S er nn erc It .0 e w en s e went to neck nnd kissed her Poor soul I she hardly ately gra lee sew ere you 00 II Ir

be adduped 1O the way of except on IS utterly rn II G II M f the E f R prayer meetIDg knew how to take those Withered I ps had IDconSlderable Up to tbe age of tl ree and n I nmll

C tS dUPfoo nvthrons 0t 0fmSet 1.he school hOljse stood upon the banks of!l. been so long unused to k sses that they began t t t btl you WI see race r m near e ga e 0

small stream wh ch turned a m II Just above to tremble as 0 us touched them We were twen y It IS ma ter yet 0 e ascer aIDe John toward Monte Cava beyond tl e Albnd whether the ntended clergyman can read a TT. It was so oversbadowed by you g hemlocks very yo mg and could not comprehend why th B hI t ht t b d lake an anc ent ro d bear ng the name of .ta that you 0 Id 0 I h t ', f t" ver e nee as I aug a e rea L If I k f t th C c u [y enr uC S ng Dg 0 ue she h d her face between those stIff hands an I whether the IltendIDg barrister can make a atma you 00 or on e ampagno.

wnters as they stole by the w dows Some vel t so p teously legal statement attemp~ to conVlDce Without you w II find It covered With grass and cattle forty feet of meadow lav between the W ndows ------,------ dlS I1USt or to persunde w thout mak ng h m grazing over It On the hne of th slur pd nnd the bank a d a nohle penr tlee full of The Returned Prodigal If'" d 10 He m t th t b bl street and not far from lie c ty wllls ~ork "'olden fru t flung Its sh do tb h I se r ICU us ay a a age cae I d h h P b k th !;. a w over e se 00 to do many th ngs seldom reqmred He may men emp Dye y t e ope a e rca ng e house as we got our lessons 'Ihose great bell F ve years and a balf ago a young mamed be deep ID Greek and Roman aat qu t eB and green turf aud tr I h ng t e f! onnd to a con pears were cruelly tllntal z ng as they grew mo 1 n t e c ty of Brooklyn d s Ipated n be able to construe and even scan any chorus Sldledr lie dcptli

f RT oy have In d badre

tl se~eral

and r pened 11m d the greeu I aves! b t wi en temperate and reckless deserted h s family n so masses 0 oma m lory a e .0 he may wr te Greek and Latm verses ID a d t f CI h h b I I they clime rnsh I g down from the bougl s a I tl e d flicult es wh ch h s misconduct had h 11 ons 0 an anc e t lTlS an c urc a as

fell I tl e grass d rectly under no so plnmp brought upon h mself and them and shipped dozen metres I e may be a good nat ematlclan I I tt d th I many and eve compose a tolerablc essay He may ca over II c II e e s a re n e so

and mellow It was too mucl for I uman n lturel as a sa lor Three years he roamed abroad have these and many other accomphshments lOb arble columhn h w th Cor dnthtlanficap talsr

atuhl But MISS Punderson "as S fl t sl e read the and th n returned perhaps With somethmg of ases 0 w s carv" e <Ture 0 e

wh eli nay ever be called mto practice once -" golden rule every day and kneel ng at hel a prod "al s longing to seek h s home Bnt It h I I ~ t th d t f cross m I cat g l eyond a quest ou tl e purpose h gh backed cba r prayed d I ge tly D gilt and was 10 mOle lils deserted Wife had been n a woe Ie excep u e pro uc Ion 0 f tbe bu d nO' But the most remarkalle of

wr ttcn sermons or m some correspondence of 01 d " t I fit morn ng while we stood m I ly urou d I tuken lion e With her cli Id en by her own t ose Iscover es are wo paces 0 sepu r nnusual grav ty What ho ~ever everv man deed her control WIIR so ped ct thllt we hard mother a d mto that mot er s louse there n ust do m one way or another what IS the conslstmg of vanlted rooms m the eartl to

Iy ventured to look at the pears wI e tl ey I'IIS uo entiance for him :Never agam should f II I I wh ch you descend by sta reuses of sto e The fell the Idea of touching them neler entered he look upon her daughter s face 1O thiS world common g ft 0 a c asses a I profess ons all earth I ad fallen mto the e trances and closed our head f her po er could prevent t H s ) oungest ages from nfancy what IS tbe first and fOie them but had Dot filled tho space Withm so

n most difference between man ano brute and t'ut one th I g t oubled ns very much Just ch Id born after h s desert on he had never betweeu one mau and anot! cr s left to chllnce

h tl at

d tl e st~ccodmedllll 0 s, antd t l I nt ngs oV

t er

as ~he fru t grew r pest l\I1 s PI nderso bega seen aud f possllJle he should Dever seo her I tit C b I ell were ,0 ID In as perlCC 0 p eserva on to tnke I CI d nDer I !Isket and cross uto the Mort fied and desperate he plunged ID 0 w t lout any ass sS ance w lah ever lrom ISlc °bo s fiS when they came from the band of the art st I}le~dow at the back of the school I ollse where hiS hah tual foil es w th redoubled reckless or un vers t eSf omt men ave natura y et In one of these tombs whICh cons ,ted of a she would d snppear do" n the hemlock bank nc s He had one fr e d a brother who clung ter organs dO artlc I at on somdotarle

k 10 bethtter s gle vaulted chao ber With a p Ire wh te sur

nnd stay somet mes durmg the ent re hour at to h m By tbat brother sad and IDBoence soch ety lin more among 7010 a ebrs an face I found an art ,t percbed upoa a I "h noon h tabl hed II t I M tl ot ers some are more soc a some egm to tit fli t"l

e "as es s n II sma sore n yr e talk 0. yeo.r or two before oti er nnd have that seat over wo uge s O[ e tCO ns copy !,I; e One dny I wns started at my lessons by a Avenne al d nduced to give h s atteut on to Sll rlted nnd 'auc fol figure of men an:r a

start upon them some prefer oe ety to study I ~t" th b I th h del splend d pear that calle rush ng from the top bus uess St II ntoxlCat on was the cbeml ed f dl I d h nils m s ucco WI wee urc e c ng most boughs of the tree nnd rolled down to charm by wI eh h s uomeless and hopele s ex rom mbere enesbs some are cNaf y se ze dWlt was studded TI e other tomb 18 lalger al d W rd tl m II t D H h I t W S b U I d aw So h d k d I an a:n t on to e orators lture an c r tl e round and cons sts of tn, 0 u e s reams an a nes w 0 wns s ence n g e ay e ran al y cumstances IOterfero 10 many ways and make deePlter

d IOh b g tl th "h

s tt ng on tl e second class bench close bes de nnd desperately k h d h vo.u e c am erB commun ca ng w eae me wlnspered from bel nd h s .pe~1 ng book S x months passed when tI e city miss onary one man a spea er anot er a mute, an at ers "h a nst the wall' 01 wblCh stood marble

• all shades between these extre106B bat edue.. er ag h" Ii h h I f that the 10 stress would be after at pear from wi om these factg are der ved was prov t th d h th t d th th s .rcophag rough Wit gures 10 g re e b d t II I d h th b th ' d on ID ese ays as no 109 0 0 WI e 0 h Iff tl th a out noon t me en m y e to opproac e fO er re,erre It A h Ib Il h t dIn t e cm ng 0 ono 0 0 room- among e

Mary Bell a httle f(lrl 10 mv class looked to In h s own store ou the subject of reI g on resu sc 00 oy IS a s me ec IOlDg stucco medall on were arabesques 10 v v d suddenly up and nodded her head We had Sat! fied probably With I Sown cond t on he conJugat:ng I par~ ng ctonSil u g scann ngtall color and landscapes 10 fresco wh ch show a found It all out that was why the m stress only sought to engage tl e miss onary s I BUfi gratmLmat Icad an dcr bca t exerct sess redcI rng far more advauced stnge Qfth s branch of the art

h b k S ' d f th rtf h t h d b rs a n oggere a OU gem Ive an p 3l h h h h b r d t P crossed t e an every noon be was .on eoce or e re,orma Ion 0 s wre c e fO t t tl t t b d tt d L tad than anyt ng w c as ee .oun a ompe I of pears and wanted them all to herself- ther Into th sour fneud M- heartily en es len I mns e a mea 10 n They are paInted 10 what seemed to me a greedy old thlI>_1 We began to feel very entered and very soon had the sat sfactlOn of Greek speeches and poetry The U Divers ties kl d of neutral tmt Here are trees With

U merely complete thiS course of tra Ding But n angry and ill nsed not one of UB would have securmg h s s gnature to the pledge of total tl e habit of m nd Imparted by all these exer gnarled braucbes and fol age drawn w th a thought It Wbat r gl t had she to the penrs? abst [ence He watched over h m constantly C[ses IS rather adverse to method faCility and free and graceful tonch and rbu Idlngs r s g They did not belong to h I modi than to us aud exerted an unremltt ng nfluence to pre elegance of expressIOn than conductive to these among the trees and figures 0 peop e engaged In fact Mary Bell s fatl er who owned the serve him from dlscouragemeut and relapse qnaht es It often I elps to make men heSitate In rural employment and all IS given With a mill and lived 10 the great honse With po nted 'I he loss of h s w fe and children to whom boggle and stammer be at a loss for a word deCided and skillful aer al perspect ve the gables Just m s gl t was the only person wlio though unfaithful he had ever rem!llned ten or g ve two or three words IDstead of one con obJects becomlDg less d st net &nd sharp ID out had a cia m on that tree or ItS fl,lIt derly attached preyed upon hiS mmd He trad ct themselves explaIn repeat and fo.II hne as they are s lpposed to recede from the

When the recess came we were upon the entreated the m sSlOnary to IDtercede for him IOtO every vice of utterance The quest OD as eye Ten years he[ co sa d tho art st who watch Just as usual the mIstress took her and attempt to brmg about a recoued atlOn Lord Stanhope very properly says does not accomflun ed us on thiS excurs on you may dlOner basket and gettIng over the fel ce went He was exhorted to be pat nt and prove the refer only to publ c speak ng rhe tongue IS see all these fignres engraved and pnblished 10

towards the hemlock bank Once she stooped s ncenty of h s repentance by perseverance 10 contmually called mto service and IS alwo.ys a book Here at Rome we never do anythmg as If to tie her shoe a course of rect tude which would most proba hable to fadure for W\Ll)t of a proper tralDIDg ID a hurry

See see' wb spered Dan who was on Ins bly In the end conduct to the object npon The result IS lamentable and otten ulsagree It 18 not unl kely that the admlBBlon of the knees peep ng through the ra I fence SI e. w h ch h s heart was set Nor was the subject ble The first edncatlOn that the country can air Will cause the stucco to peel from maklUg oeheve to t e her shoe but she s oIlly of rei g on lost s ght of Every argument was give offers DO security whatever that a man these vaults or at least w 11 canse the paint plckmg np a pear Let s Jump ov~r and see nsed to br ng hiS mind Into the hght of ts ob- shall not offend and dlsgnst when he should mgs to fade I thIDk said onr fflend the the mean old th ng eat It I Dan cl mbed the I gat ons to God and of Its [mmortalmterests please and Inform Enter church after chnrch artist that the landscapes are less dlstmct fence aB he spoke and we followed a I ttle He was mduced to attend d vme worsh p 10 tbe metropolis or elsewhere and you shall than they were ten days s nce In the mean frightened bnt resolute to find out the truth steadily aud to d scard all profane clJmpany hear the pravers read by a machme and the time all Rome IS talk ng of thiS discovery It

Dan went before tread ng very softly and and Irregular practICes sermou read by 0. drone The supphcat ons IS the great top c of the t me N nmbers of lookmg everywhere 10 the grass Ooce he The m sSlOnary VIS ted hiS w fe and Imform are solemn wlthont bemg serIOus the exhorto. people are constantly paSS1D1I; out of Rome to stooped made a dart at a torf of clover aod ed her of her husband s hopeful reformat on tlOns have onlv that graVity that conduces to VISit the excavatIOns on the Via Lattna As np ngam I caught a gl mpse of somethm~ Her mother vehemently res sted any attompt sleep The one IS a p ous form and the other we approached the city the other day by the yellow 10 the hal d he "as push ng With cons d to br ng about a renewed Interest In him or to an nnpleasant necess ty It IS not onr present magn ficent paved road called the New App an erable hnrry and trouble IOta Ii s pocket that pave the way for h s restoratIOn The dan"lJ'h Way we wondered why all Rome should be

Purpose and certo.IDly IS DO Wish of ours to swelled out enol mOllsly after But Dun looked ter was perhafci fess Implacably disposed yet r h lOtO the Campagna so many people enlarge upon defects which are the staple of ns mg straighforward IDto the hemlocks and began was unprepare ';'to entertalD any hope of hiS I h did we meet walk10g and so many carr ages

to wh sUe whICh frightened us half out of our safe recovery from v ce or )f safely com mitt ng a most every conversation 10 respectable ouses rattling out of the gate of San GlOvanOl Wits and we threatened to rnn I nck aga n un herself and her ch Idren aga n to hiS charge between the hours of one aDd two on Sunday When at length we VIS ted the excavat ons less he stopped Had the mtervlew been fully reported to b m afternoon N or IS th s state of th ngs confined th s was all ex pIa ned Tbere was qn te a

t68 merimn Dlnnunl of the Seventh day Bnpttsn.: AMERICAN SABBATH TRACT!iiO(JIETi CONTAINING an HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE DE

publishes the follOWIng TractB which"'e NOMIN!.T ON and REASO S FOR mHAB Z G THE at Its DepOSitory No 100 NIUIfUU "'red DAY OF THE SABBATH New York Publ shed by

No l-ReaBons for IDtrOdUC1OI~g~;t~hre~~;,,~~ GEORGE B UTTER Price bound n mu lin 25 c s Foqrth Commandment to the c' Th s I ttle work meets With much favor aud Sat. Christian public 23 pp. 2 Moral tllllll d 1 t The foll tural Observance of the Sabbath ~~2t~;t'N~~t~;;~'[ ng awe Clrcu a on ow ng extracts ty for the Change of the Day of the will serve'ilS sampleB of letters which the publ he B

4 The Sabbath and Lord s Day a da ly rece v ng servance III the ChriBt an Church 52 pp Rev JOSEPH BELCHER D D author of the H story tian Caveat 4 pp 6 Reasons of Relig OUB DenommalionB n the Un ted ~tnte! holy III each week the b ogr;l.pher of W lliam Carey ed tor of the Com the FIl'8t.day 4 pp 7 ~~!~:~~,~~ 1 t W 1m f ilr seuting the mam pomtB III the'Sa'bbath n pee or 0 An oW Fuller Roberl RaJ] &c D alogu,e between II Minister of the ~~~1!8~b under date of Philadelph a June 1st saya batanan CounterfeIt Com 8 pp 8 Tliank you for your Man al It s an cxc 1 a tro,!ersy the True Issue) 4 pp 9 Iy ntereBt ng I ttle volum and more 1 kely to x e;d mandment False;Expos t on 4 your VleWB aB a Seventh day Bap Bt than RDy g Em\>raced and Observed 16 1'1" \~ h~~~;r::gl:r~:tb;;1 elBe I know As a Rand Book or re~ renee t D and GIlrman) 11 ReligIouB' valuable So far as my 1 nowledge goes I have Leg:Islat ve Enactments!., 16 X'P scarcely been able to detect an error

Sabbath 8 pp 13 The B ble I Bhall be glad to see your propos d History of you Delaymg Obedience 4 pp 15 An sect on of the Denom nat on You I ave mueh b 8

Restorat on of the B ble Sabbath 10 an mtereslmg which has DOt been told ether n he j[~ Bapl BtB from the Seventh-day Baptist monal or III Mrs Dav s H Btory In my Popu ar fereuce 40 pp H story of the Baptists 10 Amer cn nea ly ready 10

The Soc ety has alBa pubbshed the presB there are two or three facts wh ch f I should to which attention s mVlted be out first may pOSSIbly serve you May suee 8 a~

A Defence of the Sabbath 10 reply tend all your laborB of gbteousness Fourth Commandment By A letter frolll" Eld JAMES R IRISIl daled Alfred pr nted n Londou n 1724 N Y May 21st BayB 10 1802 now republished n a I h h I f th S h ave ece ved t e lJIanua 0 e even day

The Royal Law Contended for By BaptIstB It a a beaut full ttle book and seems well First pnnted n London n 1658 64 pp adap ed til ans ver ts deB gn' • I ha I t us a

VindicatIOn of the 11m Sabbath J des deraium and adapted to do a good vork-I u t late MiBslOnary of the Reformed an extens ve work May t go every where a meg. 64 PP sage of Truth an ar 0 trom the bo v of The 11 h Y

Also II penodieal sheet quarto The (Jop es of the Manual v I be sent by mal pas cator Pnce $1 per hundred pa d on rece pt of the p ce F ve cop as be

The senes of fifteen put n a. many Public L b ar es n the name 0 Rny Stennet s Royal Law pc 80n sending one dollar to that purpose Ie s ton s Vmdicat on of the True and lem lane s directed 0 GEO B U''TE N ) o. •

w 11 be at the publ sher s I sk 1D a bound volnme The Manual may a so be had throu"h the bocksel

The tractB of the above Ber eB Will be lers or from the folIo ng persous thoBe WIsh ng them for distnbul on or 0 St lIman Westerly R I A W Coon BIn N y of 1500 pages for $1 Persons J Clarke Potter H 1 It I ChUB Potle Adams N \ them forwarded by ma I or otberw se B F Chester Hopk nion A M West L onarus address w th a rem ttnnce to H H R I N Y Agenlof the Ammcan Sablmth '!'raet C N Chester Rockv lle L 111 Cottrell West Ed NlUsau 8t ed New York RIm s on :N )'

THE SABBATH SCHOOL VISITOR Pu1Jhshed lJIontMy

TER!.lS PER ANNUli-INVAlUABLY IN

One copy ADVANCE

F ve cop eB to one address Twelve cop es to oue addresB Twenty cop e to one addres" Twentye "ht cop es to one address Forty cop es to one address

([I)c <!Iarol

:0 25 1 00 2 00 3 00 4 00 (i 00

A Collmwn of ongtnal and. Imed MUSIC anil' Hymns for Ik us, of Sabbath Schoo!. SocUlI Rd g OIl..! M< ei ng and Fam I es Com}' kd InJ Lucms CRAND~ 128 pp oct PT1.ce 35 cents per copy TilE GAROL IS de gned pr ac pally for Sabbath

Schools and conta nS,Mus c ~ymns ted to all ordinary occas ons and to such spec al ons aB the B ekness of teacherB funeralB anmve &c A number of pecos BU table to soc I and pql.l c worship together WIth a few temperance songs ar!, ~ncluded m the book It conla ns 93 tUDeB and 150 hymns. p- OrderB and rem ttances for the nbow shou d be

addressed to the .Ed1toT3 of the Sabbath Recorder No 100 NIU8au. ed :heurYor"

Lo~nl Agents for the Sabbath Reander NEW YORK

Adams-Charles Potter Alfred-Charles D Langworthy Hiram Il Burdick Alfred C'entre-B W M llard

Brookfidd--R St Ilman Cer.. Geo S Crandall Akron-Samuel Ilunt I Berl n-Joh!\ Whitford

CYarence-Rouse Babcock DeRuylo-U G St llman Sto1£ BT1.dge--J oha Parmelee Genessee-W P LaogwQi thy I GlJWanda D. G Burdick Dounsjkld-W Green I Indep~ R y~~~?~~: Leonardsville-A M West ;C Poland-Abel Sillman Pelmburg-H Clarke Presron-J C MaxBon SackttJ. s Da bar E Frink &att--J B Clarke Watson-D South Hroolqidd-lIerman A Hull

South Otsd c- - 11~ES~!:~~~~ Verona-Albert B~j~:!~n. W .. t Genesee-E. t E CONNECTICUT

.Dl''I!~!J~~~S GrIswold U New Landan-P ISLAND

M 1J19.1r1tC,·

Mar/1;clToUgh--D:.vid Clawson .Dlat1cet--li. V Dunham

natn}!eUl--IBBac S Dunn. Shilo"'-~f;a.ac West

PE!iNSlrLVJu.'IJl.~'Or088ingv;llef--Eienj,a.mift:. Stelle

S S Gnswold Greenman J B W Hs DeRuy r NY v He CI Luke Green & Sou'" A U~d.

P L Berry New London J C Gree Ind I uu n Ct E; R Cia k N I N 1:

J Bn Icy Pia nfield N J ~amucl W I1s G n 8 W B G lie te Sh loh N J V C Whi fo Xl ~ 1 n 8

June 10 18D8 t

Dan grew cross at thiS und went back n M- thlOkH he would have made way w th to the church Hnndreds of excellent gentle throng lbout tbe prmCipal tomb where a man h gli dndgeon try ng to cover h s pocket w th h mself m hiS desperat on either by dIrect men aspire to Parlament and get 10 or not 10 uo form stood at the entrance ndm tt ng oue hand Mary Bell and I wonld have gone sn c de or by 0. final plunge I to vice On the w th the same ult mllte III snccess The mo only a certalO nnmber of VIS tors at a t me WISCONSIN back too I thmk but at that moment we contrary he sa d nothlOg of the mother's 1m ment they try to sgeak all their feelmgs IU order that they m ght not be 10 each Albion-P C Burdick and T F West C!;R~~~;t .. heard a vo ce from tl e hemlock bank plac ble resolve but presented to him the most ::o~ghts fact: aftd PlltrhPoses eldthelr crowtd t~ others' way A few strangers were amoog 17uL::3:BInG!J:~hsw 6 D. ~alroIil~~~tR~iLN:i~R!~~:~~~:

Come come wi spered Mary Bell let s hopeful aspect of hiS w fe s feel ngs and enconr 4j ongue or y a oge er an eave I u them but the greater number were Romans of Dlu:a-Z Campbell I lJ see If she has really got It aged him to persevere and raise h mself to a terly bankrupt of words Those who can speak different classes-partly men of sl gr.t blu sh ILLINOIS

We crept forward very softly and looked POSItion which woald command her respect and do not often brlOg credit on the g ft Indeed compleXion who callie In carr ages accompa Fa1'mtngton-D Saunders. I &!aha:mpt:on--.i" over IOtO tlie stream It I ad a dry pebbly confidence-urgmg that whatever the result 10 tbls conntry there IS noth ng whlcb IS so of n ed by well dressed ladles-and persons of an shore broken w tb a few moss covered stones thiS would be bnt hiS duty and that far more ten the subject of a sneer as f1nency of speech humbler cond tlOn wi 0 came on foot the women ali In deep suadow for the hemlocks overhung mportant lOterests than hiS happmess here It bas become an atrectat on With mauy that sometImes brmg ng w th them their Infants-the spot I ke a tent Upon one of tI ese stones hnng hiS pers stance m the paths 01 virtue they cannot express themselves and they find creatnres asleep on their mothers sat our sci oolm stress s Dg ng Her vOice was The deSire to Win baCK h s Wife and hiS excuses enough ahke 10 the shortcommgs and There was a great deal of aUlmat soft and clear and Jomed n With the murmnrs ch Idren wrooght upon him With growmg excoses of others A large part of the WIS and eager diSCUSSion nnder the stncco

PUBLlSIlED WEEKLY

By the lIeventh dny BaptIst Soelety, of the stream solen n an I sweet energy He was not only temperate bnt dom the exper ence and the actnal power of and arabesqnes for ID Rome art IS one

1.he old mil d snng her I ttle hymn and keenly attentive to bnslOess frugal and steady the conntry IS unrepresent d m ParlIament the few snbJects on which people are allow At No 100 NIU8aU SIred New

1ERMS-$2 00 per year payable 10 adiranl:e, ca~t ng a t mid glance up and down to be HIS busmess Increased m hiS hands and 10 a tbrongh the taciturmty or defective expreBBlon ed to speak freely r b of our pnblic men while as" natural con~e ______ ---'_..:..-. su e t at she was n solitude knelt dowu by short time doubled then trebled and eventual quence many who have little else than a

scr pt ons not pa d t II the close of liable to [lD additlonal charge of 50

thll mossy stone wh ch had been her seat and Iy a new and a larger establ shment was fitted command of words obtam an IDfineDce belronli1.f" began to pray up and occupied Tbese thmgs began to tell their Just worth

HUlIILITY -It IS out of a broken heart that truly holy affectIOns do flow ChTlSt an

affectIOns are hke Mary s prec ous OlDtment that she poured on Chmt s head that filled the house With a sweet odor That was pour ed ont of an alabaster box so gracious affec

fI!i!I!" Paymentsrece!ved will be aek:n01fleilgeliin paper so as to mdlcate the tune to

The mistress was alone w th her God she One day the m ss onary fonnd him unnsnally _---'...:.-_____ _ hnd only very s mple language [n wItch to tel1 cheerful and on Bskmg what the matter was THE LIFE OF UTAH OFFICIALS -The Tn him l1er wants bllt Its earnestness brought the was IOformed that h s w fe had passed by- bllne correspondent says - I have seen the tears IDtO our eyes though on the other Side Press on was Governor of the territory walk ng gravely np

Poor 80Ull she had been grlevlllg'all ~he time the answer and before long she Will get OVer thp road toward hll tent carrylOg a piece of that no one of the scholars ever kner~ her on thiS Side So she did Only a few weeks stove funnel under each arm, I have seen the slds at prayer SI e besought Qod With sucl later ho told h s guardmn angel With great Chief JustICe cuttlOg the turf for a chimney meek carr estness to touch our hearts and brmg JOy that she had paBBed close by the door and pnnchmg oxen which were drawlDg logs to U8 hUmbly to h s feet kneelmg us she d d Nether spoke but said he !looked tbrpugh bDlldJus 'Cabin the Secretary of State split­only for a blessmg or 10 thlWl.kfulness She the wmdow and saw her and she look¢ III< titig wood and the UOIted States Attorney told Him as If he had been her only father through the Window and saw me The r~n and Marshal plasterlDg the wall of their hnt bow good and bright aod precIous we were Cllio.tlon now progressed and developed rapldfy 'WIth mud Yesterday I saw one U mted States laektng nothmg but hIS holy grace She so They attended the same chnrch and ~vent~hll! Commlss oner str pped to the buff and r1dlDg on humbled herself Qnd pleaded for us that Mary recogmzed each other 10 the street TWo horseback piloting a wagO\! thronO'h a ford Bell and I crept awny from the bank crymg years of trllll have pllBBed across the Sonth Platte which he h~d dlBCOV loftly, Bnd Ilshamed to look each other 10 tho Three weeks ago the mlBBlonary met him ered by wadlOg wh Ie the other CommISSioner face With a lady leanlOg on hiS arm whom he had havlUg accomplIShed the passage sat upon a

Dan Da nes WIIS Sitt ng 10 tbe crook of the seen before Wby whom have you got corn sack on the OPpOSite bank mendmg a rent fence eating somethmg very greedily, bu~ we here? Will the abrupt greetmg My wlfel m hiS pantaloons These pictures may con .volded blm, aDd went IOtO the school house excllllmed tbe happy bridegroom My Wife Vloce you that elVll officers at least \U connec qUIte heart broken at our Own ltaughtmess and children I We are hVl\lg at snch a nnm tlOO With the Utah expedition, Bre not SlDIl-After & little, the mistress came 10, 100klDg ber, and wdl you come Bnd see usl The mlS cures

p6" No paper discontinued until all "ri''''''L''~. paid except lit the discretIOn of the COI~I~ee."

...-CommumcatlODB orders a~:~e,:r!tP,C~~%~ I be directed post pllld to the EdU(ff8 of crtrder No 100 Nauau .tred New York

tlOns flow out of a broken heart GraCions P1~Ii!i\ICALS. LIABILITIES OF TIlOSE WHO TAKE affectIOns are also hke those of Mary Magda The law declares that any person to lene who also poured precIous olDtment on icalls sel).t IS respollSlble for payment Christ ont of an alabaster broken hox an th.e paper or makes use of It even if no nted thereWith the feet of Jesns when she ./!ubSCrIbed lPr 1t or hag ordered It stol~pel~{ b d h d th th h t d 10 such a case 18 not to take tbe paper a was e em WI er ears an WIped or person to whom the paper 18 sent but them With the hair of her head All graCions publisher that he does not Wish It affectIOns that are a sweet odor to Christ and If papers are sent to a post olllee ~ore that fill the soul of a Christian With an heav other place of depoSit and are not enly sweetness and fragrancy are broken heart son to whom th y are sent the ~ I Th d tavern keeper &co s respollSlble the

eU. ove e es res of the salDts however he relnrns the papers, or gives Dotiep to earnest are humble des res their hope 18 that they are lymg dead lD the olllee hnmble and the r JOY even when It IS unspeak able and full of glory IS an hnmble broken RATES OF ADVERTISING hearted JOY and leaves the ChrIStllln more For a i!auare 'If 16 lines or less--one i~:~~~,. 76

, each sllbsequent i 50 poor lU sp rlt and more like a little child and SIX mont!is; 6 00 more dISposed to ~ universal lowliness of be one year 10 00 baVior [Edwards on the AJrectIoDS For each IIdditionali!q1lll.l"ll two-thirds the

CELEDIUTED

FAMILY SEWING!lIAVHINES 18 SUMMER STREET. BOSTON.

490 BROADWAY. NEW YOJll{.

-- '1. tt d to be 1M THESE Machines are now Justly 811m ~ II DeW best In use for fam Iy sew ng rna ng even If

strong and elashc at tch wblch Will NOT np every fourth st ch be cut

A liberal discount made to clergymen CIrCulars sent on application by letter MII.16 1858