Ohr ,'\turrirau rcsbpirnau New Series, Vol. V, No. 4. $3 00 By Mail. $8 50 By Carrier. 1 50cts Additional a ft er three Months. I Puritan, rtztrghtiatt. THURSDAY, JANUARY:2,3, 1868. RE PRINCETON ,REVIEW ON RE-ENION. The current -number of the Princeton ,Re iew has an article on Re-union, understood 4.be from the pen of the editor, Dr. Hodge. t is a docunient• of some importance, and the whole, shows progress in the right irection. . The offensive language-of ..the tide of, July is not repeatodpand all :ntional insult in that languageis disa owed. The` importance"' and 'strength of lie re-union movement in both branChea, is ecognized, and ih the latter:part of the ar ele it is fully .admitted: that , the positions .ken by represehtative tneh in the New school body, particularly by Dr. Srnith,,in is admirable pamphlet on Re-union, and by ho delegates of the New School branch on ho floor of ,the late Philadelphia 'Conven ion, are all that the a Old School ever de ., ended, or have any right to demand. "It ould seem, therefore," says the writer, that in the good ProVidence of God, the onvention , has enabled us to understand ach other On this ibaportant point ' (sub cription to the Confession.) Yet the article, as a Whole is puzzling and nsatisfactory. The reader will see this from brief analysis. It consists of two parts; rst and chiefly; it is oecupied with an elab ,crate argument to prove that the New School body, is or until very recently was,,.:a "liberal" body, in a' bad'Oi heretical spnse, and in distinction ~, f rom= the OM SWOP/ which is described as strict; the -New School admitting of "a' latitadefin matters of 'doe tri no, to whictt the Old SMlool'on 0061,101AM tious grounds cannot : consent! To this ,ai•- gumont, which constantly wavers- ben the present and the_LvAstrilear past, a full pro ~r psi* is deroted..Tlien, secondly, comes the brief l'ou.:l3agelra - Pt, ae we 4igt it it, describing the changed posture of ffuirs since the article on Re.union of last ctober by Dr. Smith, and the doings of the hiladelphia Convention. Twenty pages, hat is, to prove that the New School, in lading Prof. , Stith 'himself, were until uite lately, chargeahle with a ditngerous beralism, and that all Dr. Hodge had ev_er ritten against their orthodoxy, was based pon indubitable facts; and four 'pages to ecord the astonishing and sudden trans'fot7- . ation by which the New . SchoOl ai&reti- ered .every way, acceptable to the ven to Princeton. • •t - - We confess we cauritit possibly enter into joy with which our cotemporary, ;the r oangelist, welooniea this article. Oar sym ,, titles are rather with • ttie -Presbyter`, the ld School organ,aoDincinnati, which, with no regard to proportion, spends more than if of its four,columneditofial in refutifig Po ions deemed tirrofieous, attdin vindicating p New S chOnl front:the asperston.s of the first rt of Dr. _l:lodge's article. ' The :Presbyter , übtless feels; that a practised thinker and n trovershatstoike I;yr. , .11bage;vithild not borate an argument ikrehp twee mor I pages, without - .some purpose more sig i cant tban to see it all demolished in the ncluding three or:Foitr 'pages , of. his issue. the judgment of that paper, doubtleas as our ovAi; liheral-minded"`men 'of 'both anches in the Chureh,mustnct be thrown, their guard lowatds the bearings of the mor part' of the artiole, by the brief and ctical admiisions at the doge., , „ How stands the case as-presented by the icle ? • Justin this way .:-Up to .the wid e of last Octobar;the New•School,'aecor4- g to the' 'Remether, held to such liberalf sins of subscriptio n , that 'the uld not consistently fraternize with them terms of ‘equslity. He says: "We have therto differed. We have so differed' as to :hder re-uniol On any terms satisfactory the conscience of both pa f rtiesimpossible:'" r. Hodge frequently. uses the present tenee describing this *hiedifferesee.. ctfithe , • aracteristic 'dittere4cet i fSetyfeen , the Old t . d Now School' that' the ope is strict, d the other liberal," &c. p. 60 :Vence the 0 °eh of dangerous liberalism .eztended up the very period Otimed, if no later! Prc sely at that perio'd, aubli:repreaetit4econs ere made throakh f the tamphlit of Prof. • mith, and the action, or .the Xemr,Sgbool °legates in the Convention, as to demon trate that an important change had:,taken Taco. The admissiOns..of the New Selioot jobukWeir on doctrinal points, were ,all that: the Old School 'ever demanded or had aright to de mand. The attitude of the, New School delegates in, the Convention, says Dr, Hedge, "has enabled ns :to understand each other on the important, matter" of.subscription.. , a word, pr. Tlodge l holds out his hands, in the brief conclusion of. the article, to those whom he has been showing.in,the.preceding part, to have beeniuttOy unfit toi 7 r e c eg pi : . tion, up .to 'a date , not ninety days gone ; V. Surely„,a smile of incredulity maybe par- doned , at such* extraordinary attenupt tq combine palpable contradictions: Lusk Julyi, DE. Hodge asserted :thstt .the : ,Xew . ,05 . 0,954 Church ado,P l 94;khe P94ekisi.P l ) of Faith-as containing es i sentkal„ doctrines of,Ghris tianity aUd,,ingthipg . 4e not, oply seems to har kelievedth ; at .eFtraorclipary declarationtbepihat the,artitcle„before proof t 4 5 4 ,h 9 stilthelieves thakha,was,then su.bstaptially:right„ There i is not, a v,rord in his apology on page 57. of the, present number, implying : tilat, he .was,in ,error r ,in July. , What then, are we to infer? 1,12 That po sition has, br:tiodge,iett AliCsuhje - et:?:' Man testly, ,he ,is 7 in this awkward dilemma. Either he is right or Wrong in his acconnt of the hereticalthe, Now School. bhUrCh .' up to 'inceit Clete. If he is right, then there has occurred a change in the sentinients and ,modeS of- thought ,of the NeWse4c6l Church of 'an' Unparalleled and marvelOusly rapid 'llar4ter.. t Zn about the apnea 'Of fifteen: da,i4;o,i; WhOle hOdy hitherto only"lanp t ug up4n tbe verge of" orthedolftiSs heenLtranateireAl 'to the safest and suresthiding places of Caliinism. In, explicable, illoecit, iarraculens hs Such a change would hu t stilb it, ia : lesaa miracle than that. Princeton EAQulst believe in its eurretrec - or - Ts - p4iCsitilli,ty. hftve never heard thatf , 4oife-lastditfdil'iiii) doctrine of purgatory in the Princeton system. Surely there is a loud, call, for it now. hire -17 the. New S l ch6,6friiirU t itebeen spend ing 'foil:night ,in some spiritual, unseen Purgatory, and has come out, all, nncon- Scious of the procesi3 ? clean and pure enough for'Udmission to thCheaven of Princeton oithodoxy. .1 . . The other horn of the. dilemmas that Dr. „ . . Hodge was., wrong ,in ,the ,assertion..of the kpretical liberalism „oi, the New - School; and,tbat no such ohange, he imagines has ogeFF,O, or was ist,spessary. : 9 i tbe,orthoOoxy of : filft: New 'School. body. And, if, wrong, thisonly . ; compatible with Chris titan b2n,or, i ie,,that he was : ignorant of the facts . ~The immured Princeton professor, with al ,his lore, his!ncumen, his great-srasEt of . th eo logic 1 tr nth s,„tat bit parqally, ! lpformedef:the condition of the churches to-day and' took up , and chtrished and caloatad, : itha most errone ous and unfair.-estimate of thelboliers of his breflirenl. Charity; 'we` say, inclines -tp hike ;tibia view of the :ea It is a pitiable spectacle ,gvlaiih'i& .ought before us,by this lanip and i aportseepenti artiele; i the spectacle of a loading.nianin :the Old School Church; spending about the entire periOti of hie prii:oL fesiiipbal ignorance . of iti6 true of a:ii r odY of men jybbinhp, eing.as;heretioal,triroughA@,w4pte career.; and now only o - pailing,.his- eyes ..to the fact as hts'career Is about to: clOse..' And yet any ottidf i3atipOttibtr . vieuld'OPViiiak•4'theijaa: • c . , tolciv4 2t rest~usf~ her4'en din g with 4 gnotati;frOM i -the,,edi: - Wrist a The. Pr'esbyter; the . old, , School ;or . gany'pfl-Cintinnatil,'alreaily 'referred.' to.-•- I .Tt is - ailollevie; - ' 1 1:01416 'we:rehiee - Very pinchto record thQse,lset paragraphs, we cannot fOoear to Sat f Oat..the - 44 . 344‘ce was 'ffintlie pail; of the Old BaboOo,O pot, of PebOOl: - . ,amendm ent :;i4F4fs . vio,an advance. •He : and. every; editor School, Dr.: Hatfield aod 'inOy othiirlironiinent Men,' with many Church ou s~ithd PlappA t tlieruielOes on theOa; platforni i montlis before, a nd they and erected' :it there. 1 24luilqtkep. at Philadelphia ' - 31;tag the, Alltng from . ,inaeTeies,_ as from awls at :I)4nfftfidtis, and the opening ot r inany,' bOarts, as. ,when Lydia i Sat Under Paii , l'eprenehing, TheSFOrit ,O,od touched %Ole , The gun. of righteessness Tose allOri, psvilth, healing in his wings:” Spiritr'of Union Se - math= eel.ebratiid hie, silver 'wedding. Frotn,a4,,intseBtiog axtiGle in, the Evange, list we copy4hevfollowiog paragraph with amoral. , Wltltit a riiernory' of ivreilty-five*yeara since that PHILA.DELPHIA, THURSPZY, JANUARY 23, 1868. wigter's morning, when the, gdploister and his Wife, leaving the house of I fa ther (thd Venerable Dr.'Alleh of Noithanipton, f -- Vit President of Bow- Il doin Bollege) i made their w' nits trip in ,ii sleigh, in i which tey drove over t e l jes to, Springfield, and thence'proceeded th his' parish ih _Amesbury; kfass.; , where:lie itaA settled brilitrsalatyl ()Hive huri , dred- dollars 1a year! , hero ink a_ *son, for Ambi tious young ministers, , who , are, not content unless they 'nail stepliiimediattly‘iitto a littgeliariiih • and a big salary, In that modest home this young min ister,, who was already known, in,Ei,pne of the first scholars of New England,'anseethiee very iiiiiipy Ye ; rob ars,. A she wh. wail 'dins ' fiii..lbel: a 'l'rofesticir in Athherst College, where • hs, allied five yeal.a, and then ~was called, to„ his prcse I..woi}ition ip th e ,Union Theological'Seiriiiiiiir of this ofty, — whinie e' has been flow for seventehir yea .-IDo .1 -1.4 n 1... -i .! PANLPRESItYTER fet3denorNob(i s Pke'sbytikr do we in - atle ' . 0;1111 0 411 r iliiehticin ( Wort delibeia tionsokrhe TFauell ALSSEMBLYi-t 8110 be attetnEttAd,,;..in, yr Presbyterian body, over raiglit'b'edeinditistrata, certedlbrits'iVider use 7 care: of inteivAtiitbonamo part ,of, the r globe. The , ifeecling,:wavinth with, which theintercha 1 ~ 9 : f 4 delegains ,be t Ween die'Ektish and n ericaii chureines was effected last spring ; •eii 'A Vint WU) the Spilit in whieli , euehl '-ccihnferenbe "would be held.,. We,believe.if ;would , abdornplifih a vast, amount of . goßdinAn4rging, ; 4:F views id ,weffing away differenr,n and .in giying lieiounder hitlgnient _upon ;IV „points in *each we differ. Sheh - tilitiAri n as Piesby feriant chapeli oil' the -ediftinent i - for- travel lers; add the. partition ~ of thal.foreligit field for, ; pffeqtivo: missinpary,, 4,14 4 : A1p,.,.„ might profitabli t come unclnr•tlee notice , of such a council. ' -We believe t itifi *orltl' would' be batkit 'foie the useemblakkand' delibetatkins crfati bAd&i: of men , ,ed able,.eolniluential: - add so pious as,,these-, roiprosemtaliv.goiNv9Alci be.. „ w - .„, ~ , i ~r . , , ,„ , No'actecin'of 'the kind- , contemplates was taken by the -o-srlitl mei, but we ind in a serieso#Dßrticiesmito -/th i sloiggs ,- of the A. ... .... . , qi . :A A NN I SU 4 SOKAW CIOf g r , ' ' 0.94-Ffiectili i ttet , ~,, Review P - )?r• lic,c9s>l4' gOgq9 °f Prez C, i 'r i l r i th 9 -F'`V-.i"lloA:ttilud.,,--IY,itk-,-;:qif, s" great r end in ,view pr liicticoh says 7,', ; '„‘l44,ps suppose , that it could be. arranged that4,y e w-pi!„EsiTrEßlA.bi coNFEßlNcE§hould be hel T in Edidburgh, the city of KnOx in d Clitilinks! n T itiiiiP befieVe" that"' i thivould liefttive most imposing council that, has—met for, ages ;I and it would exhibit a unity in dp?trine, and worship, in spirit and in action„, such as could be displayed by no other branch' of t'hiiiit's Chdreh in . 'the wdrlct" " 'RefOititig to' tho happy effect` which' Mich a confermice Would be peculiiii•ly fitted to exercise' on theebthiches of the, bontinent, he says' it' ;, 4 A's the s Eva,ngelical Allian?e is .. pieven te&bil'iti'citA-stitiiii'dh 1101111ritell&ring With ecclesiastical arrangements, it is- LoliVideii;V that a ebmbined Presbyterian: organiztaion could ,d,0.f0-g-ktiellWforraed Chiirelesi which are IrßllaleiPaplivliat , li Plii9 ( ll-4llifFicq could not undertake." ' Ali E ilticiittiN t , • 'I / .. (iAl l P.:Vif t Y'§ e,Vel lg L '.449 l2ll M 9f3 tkc l Aoard , covering the year c oditigAngust,. 4 - #3 . recently Aee . 4 ; pobliehed,„ :These TflP9r4- I renl:o l Ptcl,e B ;t9a4e4 a )2 4eMPEO ,bonT orqd• - illstTgnlS4. l4 4tY olp•chqs in the iwork,ef Foreign' Missions, always appeal: strongly,AQ the..„„regaida , ..apii int,r9Ptrqf Ft h g fri,c4 l l of the_ R9dc?Tnqr- The,Apane,fer!thelast, ygar, while , presenting nothing of an extraordinary character, gives :,iLoat,igrat,ifying r eigna of , progrel 3 ,§i,h? 3 9,verY department, of miesion..worlg.' The Jong an,d disastrous dearth of, laborers is, .sensibly 1iay . 91 4 although still yery, t . owing: The net s adilition to the workingforee irt.the field during ,the yea,F, ; 72..13 !twenty-A.411r . ; itwepty ; two; more native pastors ha,ve,,been, settled, and :the for,cosof , natite, labor,ers ,has incr_eas. ed from 815, to 928., Eleven new roc , E , 4aye beep, organiied ;, and inakty,tadditions ,t ( ?, Self - 09,PP9,,FtiPg churches. are ev.erywhere, es= pecially in Turkey, and th,e spirit of .Qh.ris tian, 4.'beralityls,makirtg marked advances. In conta,lhutiorl tg,,thq:APaB ll l7., Massachu setts- .of course ,takcat he lead :, her doKiations aodlegacies ($142,232) CODOitutingsme-third of the, total received from these sournee. New York , comes , next :with a little, over one hundred, thousand, Connecticut la third with $52,391 ; whiTe Pennsylvania follows, being. fourth . Jong° intervallo, contributing about, twenty,thousand doilars. Ohio, Ver mont, New Hampshire, and Illinois are close behind, with amount,a-ranging from sixteen to twelve thousand dollars a , piece. IIgSENIILY *lllo,o4kiid'ili 06i4ek ono . 'the 'f . 4slfthWiiik .101 e'' , oo vet= 'libtr 7 01 1 9014.1J1 0 t illci t unity,,,of the the .whole ' world, r!Sln6iiishitieeon: ne42i and , TOi• the tozha all every The papers read at the annual meeting were not only prepared with . the usual care, but they struck-closer to the heart, of the Church and had :unusually high .practical ,The paper of Foreign Clary on the Necessities of thePoreign field., is based upnn some of the broadest and most iiippor taq generalizations which- : havoryet beep , drawn fr9m Forejgn work, and, at -the same time-furnishes :1113 w it 2 h estimites'and • work , still;- I. plans. of- the amount Of work stilt required oktbe*lne9l . urphes evangelizlpg the: heathen world, which must be moit t'' J. 2.. ing 9_ take a business vie of die matter. geeretary Trelit's paper on the elaimq,o Chia,has been everywhere reqog ; . 4,4242: J , T Fasterly rendering of the call - of Providence* upon the A4nerican ~Church of ,petria• moll I. 1i ; to-day. -, 21112 "Id • We l belkeve that:the preponderating influ- Jil • L. 0. . r 4 • ence of anunecclesiastical • ;. " Z 7,1. 1 ." afm. ) 1111,44,! , Councils tile,neglect Of aproper Chin!oh-teeling, and .; 4.1 .24.2 of thorough churchh-Organization through- w 1 J • , - • 0 - • out the foreign fields, and ,so, to . a serious 3 - 4)feet - in the ielf-preserving ~pOwer of the . • 4 , ( loosely . ,orgthilaed 'chinches 'and missions. We believe that Presbyterianism haii been (.! wll 1 ~ positively, edo not say lintentionally, but 42 positively. discouraged' bY. the Board on the fields of its labors. • Put inspite of this, we ,I.ll,e„ , „honor,,belioye in and pray for the VCoard, as for more tban half a century the nobleetAnd most successful of the Mission ary, i enterprisesdf . our country, arid worthy of the sympathy and support, which, in the absence of any o.rgapization of our own, our Asselnbly enjoins upon the Churches to give it, , „ • , . - • I' ) Vdl ,+• -.!' ' GIANT ,illlOO AND. CONGRESS. .iffheseltbreciiw`oeds ImielbeCometillisniati iozduritig *the Past; week. They -cannot be piemknoed without a glOWlicif enthiphasni initheLheartilsilorY true( the czailitxtrt T'iGintsral thsadeMtabogentlrlairal andiin tfie kionftdent :expecta: tiort viva ..in':Giorgia and Allithama;7 the Paotorions - performances of .Handock in iliodisianitialid Texas, , has elec: trifled friend - 4nd. fOuLby dealing upon rebel leao4lms- siichttlims alsitorsuake remeMber that he was the":,hero of the great , victory of Gettysburg. What the radical - General Pope: hesitated, to, do with the .obstriMtive officials-of Georgia- to theo:very end of his adinidistrationi f that: the cObservative Han-1 ecrek*hastened .to :dia,.beifore, he Was fairly WILTM , ini 1141 plae e.* The bold =star; d =taken , by Ccingrees in;r eint= stating' Mr. Stanton, and the •=p4i(npt Nand hearty foyalty 9f Gen eral;Grant iirsecolidiag theis-actiOn 'in do in cleari ,hinleel &offal] tlatJ the reactionary- policy •of theri"White) Hoilse,rhai&iscattered,rms by Magiii•tha..olotids that/ lOwered over•the pa= litiic al horizon.:4 Last - Neekdr.4tt :Washington; is surely to be compared to Antietam' after the rprotraetedin (1 , diaastrons campalgns.of MeClellani and Popa. in Virginia,. ..-The• tide oftiVictoryriaturnedi•andi the triuniphmhich rebel readers.were pont dentlY expecting;tis Virreistecit;fionn their grasP.l , So utter ii; disdomfittire •Mr.410.11i113011, thfit the ":0111y resource deft him -le - falsehood; = rlt :will. not avail. , Mr. Stanton holdriand hold,_ his poeition.inithe•War office; and. Gtneral -Grant stands higheri4nAhe eyes of the loyal :people; for thefbatred and slander. of Mr. Johnson and= his • 'W c itsliingtonr. organ. Congress I goes.. calmly, and 'yet Vigorously, forward, -and-by Its •Jegislation, on. the nSu preme Court and ‘ita, mew Reconstruction Act sectires;beyond reasonable, doubt the restoration of.rthe, f-Un ion: • upon the basis of justice] equality, and -loyalty.. Our Wash ingt onl'euriespondent Saya: The skies are made brighter bythe unity and courage of Congress; by the. good news that Georgia, Alabama, North.,Carolina and scion ratify their Consti tutions, and by, trite firm stand • taken by Gene: Grant and. Meade. The confidence in the ability of Congress to deal with the financial question seems to have increased. The boldn'ess and resoliition of the last week is both • the index:" and the >generator • of strength." • . ELMIRA FEMALE CoLLEGE—The Twelfth Annual. Catalogue:of this first class iostitu iion.,is on our table, axl,contains the names of 133 stndents attendance„ Recog nized. hy State authority as, a college, it has recently repeivid or has at its command in Genesee Evangelist, No. 1131. the State . Treasury the sum of $25.000 to be expended in improvements. Its building is unusually commodious .and elegant, its grounds ample, the whole method of tuition is elevatrl, yet combining; needful instruc tion in the lighter brunches of household employment, while the best religious lab:t wee cop trol theceiitire maiiagement. With» out, being.,sectariau.thocollege is controlled by , the SYncd•of : Geneva of oar branch of the cbxtroh. .: The. eeoldiiaistical' court-Tor the Arial of Rev. Stephen Hi Tyng i Jr.,, for preaching the gospel, iti a4lethedistiehtirek- . ill New 'Brunsivick, con venelionitheLlOth ihst4; in =the basement of St. Stephen's ethirchi N;1:1 The mile wasedi au rne d for Want kif-iiltiietssesi- , -; 7 oolitiland Parker; Esq., of Newai , k,:ejuitgeo-Fullerton, and Stephen H. Tyng, Sen., were present as counsel for the de feridant. The jury - of Ave, selected by Bishop Potter; are: all "High• Church," and aethey have dndotibtedlyzalreadypnade , up their; minds in re , gard; both toithelactEandtmerits'of the case, the decicibn might as Well, be: announced without wasting.farther dine, kg., in going through' the were formsof otrial.Vis•ThePrOtestant Church, man of:last week,; commenting on "this very:im portant trial," says L. • Meabwhile the.- Evan:. gelierd - interest-:-in the -Episcopal Church is strehgtliening in its attitidw-todehing the great issue of Gospel liberty. It is high - time: that we should accept the expanding ideas of the tithes in which, ye Ave; and give, wings and not fetters to. She glorious gospel of Jesus.. The Rev. Dr: Muhl ; enberg preached- on Sunday - night in Rev. Mr. Aeecher,W.Church, (observe, the Protestant q..grOmoap, Aces not s'y "Mseting Howie," nor use any other ynchuzekivexpressionr) . For such an pet, the Rev: Dr .;Johns was tried by the Bishop. of ; „Maryland,.. Is ..the ; narrow.; ohurchmanship that arraigns Rev. Mr. Tyng, prepared to pro: serve its consistency, and proceed _against Dr. Miihleuber:g Also 7"' ln the ; meant ime the Low chur*eii are a ffil ia t ing, m ore a n d more closely = with the ," sects." During the Week of rrayer. their .. .'vaces were often hoard preying fe'r the in eieme of the one. church. Rev. Dr. Muhlenberg took the leadingpart in a meeting for a.benevo lent purposee r last Sunday evening, in Dr., Adams' THE- folloWing par f" ?i f ; agrliph w .we clip from the iteport to Congress of Cohiniissioner 'David Wells, of the Internal iteirebue'liaireati, affords a sad view Of 'Oa e condition and _prospect .of things in our cOuntry, in regard to public virtue. , The 'Comirddsioner Says . ... ..k .._,. .. va,rions available sources of Internal Re4.erine that'of ranki first in im iiortance, Th'estten3o,-boii@ver", thwi far to'collect anylegitimate revenue fftim this source has, as is well-knopn, , pinved . a most lamentable failure, and for the follOwnig'ohOiong" reastins:---First, 'The tax hais been placed'at sycli a ittie• as to constitute in itself,so / great a_ temptation ,to ,fraud, that average human nature, as it exists in the United States, is not table' to resist it'-' And-Secondly, The system quderhich tbesifficers haveibeen selected to col lect the tax and supeinrise the manufacture has not, thus far, recognized honesty, intelligence, and busi ness capacity, ,as the-first, conlY,"lind essential quali fications for appointment." Ifere,.; we have first, ant:official account of so terrible a. greed- for: diAtilled spirits, that, besides importations, it.supports a domestic manufacture op such a inagnificent scale, that it ranks first in-importance among the availabje sources, of Internal. Revenue. We are next informed that the united dishon esty of .distillers, from whom.- we might have expected it, and of Revenue officers, of whom better things Nere,supposed . predica ble,, has proved , an overmatch for all the efficiency of the central government. As things are going, on, it will not be long be fore_the question of the truth of the doe trineof total, depravity, will be pretty sat isfactorily.settled. may add that there is not much, ab,atement - from this view of things, in the folloyvipg sentences from the same.report "As a source of internal revenue tobacco ranks next in importance to-distilled spirits. The collec tion of a legitimate revenue from tobacco is, how ever,.environed with even more difficulties than is experienced in the. case of distilled spirits; while thefrands perpetrated in the manufacture of tobacco are, in the opinion of the Commi,ssiOne?, compara tivelygreater." • Distilled spirits first, and tobacco second, as sources of revenue, with little; to , choose between them as incentives to dishonesty ! Such things the first and second reliance of our government' for fiscal support! Well, we are not exactly Second AdventistB, bu we confess it does look as though events were thiCkening for something. 1 Ministers $2.50 H. Miss. $2.00 Address:-1334 Chestnut Street. .TYNG% :TRIAL