r, t. s i i COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. llfififi L. TATE, Editor. "TO HOLT) AND TltlM THE TOUCH OF TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER TIIK DARKENED EARTH." S2 00 PER ANNUM. rf.- VOL. 14--N0. 29. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA-, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1860. VOL. 2, Cultttnliin JentorrntJ IflrCBUIItRP Mint BiTCBDAY MORtlNU, OT I LEVI li. TATK, m ni.00Ms.Euno, Columbia county, pa. I office I Jn tki n't Britk HvthUitr, pppoittt the V.trhnnprt bv ilda vtht Court Jfoutt. Democratic Head for(fr," j TERMS OF SUnSCUlI'TIO.V, I $1 OH In a-Untice, for one C"py( fr nix month. "5 In adtanre, fur mie ropy, dim- )ear. $ 0J If nut paid w itliin tho firt three nimiih, S CI If not paid within thu Ilrt six months. 9 5U Ifnnt n' nilliln the r. tt"7 No Liiibrrlplinri taki'ti fur !fn than ait uvmihit, and no paper iliicontiimed until nil nrrcitrnyes nliull li.iu bocu paid.. ?y Ordinary ApvrRTtKMriT Inserted, nml Job ork Tucuted, at the established prices. (El)oicc JJoctru. THE TIDES. tt WILLIAM ttl.t PS HRViKT. TM'rno'on'ip. at hot full, and, riding hlijh, Flood i thealin fit till with light, TWaira that hover in the ummer fky Are all adeep touight. i I Thericomco no voice fnmi the great woodland rounJ, That niumiuri'il all th j djy ; Ht-nealh the bndov nf their boughs, the ground, U uut mure ttlll than they. Cut ver li;a tu and moan, the reitlem Deep; Ilia railing tnh'H I hrar, Afar I we tlic glimmering billow s leap; I ieu theru break! ng near. Each ware spring upward, climbing toward thefair, 1'uro light th.it pIu mt high Pprlnga' eagerly, and faintly ninkito wln-ru The mother water Iij. Upward again it fvclH; the moonbunmi ehow, Ajaln.it glitnmi'rjug creel; AgalnUfeelatho fatal w eight below, Anil links, but nut tu rst, Aga Infantl yet npaln ; until iho perp ' flccalUhl bruml of wavea; And with a fiiIIlii moan, nfcashud, they creip link, ti Iili inner oivtii.j . ' Brief rcrpitc 1 they f halt nub from thnt rereas U'ith nuiac uml tiiinnlt noon, And fling thcniirl wc, uiili unuailins flrea, Up luward thu plat id tnoun. ''V- Oh, rcatlCM Pea, thnt in Hi) prUim vtta llonttruguti' an. I complain ; Thrntfltlw fluw teiiturii-H )vartiiiig lu Ui neur To that fair orb tin am. Thtf glorioud Koiirrci'f litfht and licit m'nt warm Tli) biTiom with In plow, And tin tliosu niuiintni waca a imbkr form And frjer hl- bertuv. Then only miy they l.-ac Up wnMs nf brine In which tln-y wUter hwrc. Anil rUwabrnt'tlir lulln of earth, and rhiuu Jiittrener splurt) iHisccIlancons. A'HUSIJAND AND FATHEIS. A young man ami liU wifo wore prepa red tu attcml u C'lni-tmii.s party at tho liouso of a frieiul i-onio miles distant. " Henry, my doar liu-liaml, don't drink toj mucli at tho party to-day; you ill proniiso uic, won't you?" said .--lio, putting her hand upon his brow, and raising her ryes to his iaee with a pleading glance. " No, Millie, I will not; you may trust we.'' - - And 'he wrapped his infant hoy in a soft blanket as they proceeded. The horses were soon prancing over tho turf, and pleasant conversation beguiled tho way. " Now don't forget your promise," whis pered the young wife, as she passed uji tha fctcps.' ,V Poor thing 1 the was the wife of a man who loved lo look upon the wino when it was Ted. Uut his love for his wife and babe, whom they both idolized, kept him back, and it was net often that he joined in the baccha nalian revelries. Tho party passed oft pleasantly, the time for departing drew near, and tho wife de fended from the uppor chamber to join her husband. A pang shot through the trusting heart as sho met him, for ho was intoxicated ho had broken his promijo. Silently they rodo homcward,savewhcn the drunken man would break into Biiateh ca of eong, or unmeaning laughter. Hut the wife rodo on, with a grieved heart. " Oivo mo tho babo, Millio, I can't trust you with him," said ho, as they approached a dark and somewhat swollen btroani which thoy hadto ford. After some hcsistatlon sho resigned her first-born, her darling, closely wrapped in the great blanket, to his arms. Over the dark waters tho noble steeds safely boro thein, and when they reached the bauk tho nothcr,askcd for the child. With, much care and tcudsrncss ho laid the buudlo in her arms, but when eho clasped if to her bosom no child was thero ! It bod slipped from the blanket, and tho drunken father knew it not I A wild shriek from the mother aroused him, and he turned just in t'uno to sco tho little rosy fnco rise one moment above tho dark waves, then iuk, forever. What a spectacle 1 the idol of his heart gone gone forever ! and that, too, by his own intemperance. Tho anguUh of the wothor and the remorse of tho father, nro better imagined than described. DEAD YET LIV1NO. The cedar is motuseful when dead. It is the most productive when its place knows it no more. Thero is no timber like it. I'irm in tho grain, and capable of the finest polish, tho tooth of no imcct will touch it. Diffusing a perpetual fragrance through the chambers which it ceils tho worm will not corrode tho book which it protects, nor tho moth corrupt the garment which it guards all but immortal itself, it transfuses its amaranthine qualities to the objects around it. Every Christian is use ful in his life, hut tho godly cedars are tho most useful afterward. Luther is dead, but the Itcformatiou lives. Cuhiu is dead but his vindication of God's free and sov ereign grace will never die. Know, Mel ville and Henderson are dead, hut Scot land still retains n Sabbath and a Chris tian peasantry, a Dible in every house,and a school in every pari-li. llunyan is dead but his bright spirit still wakes tho earth in its "l'ilgrim's Progress." Uaxtcr is dead, but souls nro still quickened by the ''Saint's Host." Oowper is dead, but tho "go'den apples'' are still as fresh as when newly gathered in tho "silver baket" of the Oliuy Hymns. Elliot is dead, but the missionary enterprise is joung. Henry Martyn is dead, but who can count the ap ostolic spirit who phocnixlil;c,havo started from his funeral pile ? Howard is dead, but modern philanthropy is only commen cing its career. Iluikcs is dead, but the Sabbath Schools go on. Wilbcrforco is dead, but thu negrowill find for agos a protector in his memory. Jiev. James Hamilton. - - TESTS OF CHA11AOTE11. A groat many admirable actions aro overlooked by us,because they arc so littlo and so common. Take, for instance, the mother who has broken slumber ; if any at all, with tho nursing babe, whoso wauts must not bo disregarded ; sho would fain sleep awhilo when tho breakfast hour conies, but patiently and uncomplainingly sho takes her timely scat at the table. 'I hough exhausted and weary, she serves nil with a refreshing cup of eoflcc or tea before sho sips it herself, and often the cup is handed back lo he r to bo rcfdled before she has time to tato her own. Do you hear her complain this weary mother that her breakfast is cold before sho has time to eat it ? And this is not for one, but every morning, perhaps, through tho year ! Do you call this a small thing? Try it ami sec. Oh ! how does women shame us by her forbearance and fortitude in what are wrongfully called little things! Ah ! it is those little things which arc tlio tests of character, it is by these "little,'' self dcniuls, borne with such sclf-forgotten gentleness, that the humblest home is made beautiful to tho eyes of angel1-, though we fail to sco it, alas ! till the chair is vacant and the hand which kept in orderly motion all this domestic machinery is powerless and cold. What is Conscience? "The very last page Thcotloro Parker's buisy fiingers ever wrote, tells tho child's story, 'that which,' lie says, 'no eont in my life has made so deep an impression on me. A little boy in petticoats, in my fourth year my father sent mu from tho field home. A spotted tortoiso, in shallow water, at the foot of a lhodora, caught his sight, and ho lifted his btiek to ttiiko it, when a Voice, said 'it is wrong.' I stood with uplifted j,tick, in wonder at tho now emotion, til rhodora and tortoise vanished from my sight. I hastened home, and asked my mother what it was that told mo it was wrong. Wiping a toar with her apron, and taking mo in her arms, she said : 'Some men call it conscience ; but I pre fer to call it the voice of God in tho soul of man. If you listen to it and obey it, then it will speak clearer and clearer, and always guido you rights. Dut if you turn n doaf ear or disobey, then it will fade out littlo by little., aud leave you in tho dark without a guide.'1 ll'eniltlt IViilijjs. Ba3" A man who has treated you with attention, but now with indifference, la bors under a conviction of havinu previ ously mistaken your character, or is now agrceablo with misconstruing your con duct tho first bhows a mortifying want of disocrnmcnt ; tho latter a pitiable want of generosity. JDST What is lovo, Kalo ?'' said a young man to his bright particular, tho other night. " Lovo, .TopI, well I declare I dout unless it is getting married and kissing little babies." .loci ('.tinted HUMANITY IN NEW ENGLAND. No portion of the people of our country nro more ready to criticise and to censuro the faults, negligcucies and improprieties of those of other parts of the Union, than aro the citizens of tho Eastern States. They claim a greater progress in civiliza tion, a more refined humanity, aud a higher appreciation of right and justice, than they aro willing to accord to the residents of j other sections of tho country. Their as sumptions of superiority render them prop er subjects for criticism, aud as they have shown a disposition to judge the people of other States by their institutions, customs and notions ef humanity and Christianity, they should bo tho last to complain if their own shortcomings bo exhibited to their own eyes. Krom a cotcmporary wo cut tho follow ing item : "Justick with a Vkncieanck. There is a person in the Massachusetts State Prison under a sentence of fourteen j ears' imprisonment for petty larceny, and anoth er for ten years lor the same offence. These fearful sentences were inflicted by courts to appease local excitement 1 In the same prison is a man sentenced for eighteen months for bigamy, in successively marrying and deserting tour respectable young women, uudcr no extenuating cir cumstances. They seem experimcu'ing in Massachusetts in u strange way." And from tho accounts of tho recent awful calamity at Lawrence, we take this incident. Describing the condition of some of the persons taken from the ruins of the fallen mill, the report says : " Margaret Hamilton, nged fourteen years. This was her first day's work in Pembcrton Mills. She commenced work in the spooling room. A devoted mother attended her, and when asked what inju ries her daughter had received, 'her arm is broken and her head is broken, aud oh, my God 1 (aud here the poor woman burst into a flood of tears,) my poor darling is all broken. The unl'or uuatc girl died to day. The name of her mother is Mrs. Mary Ann llamiltion. The daughter was tho main support of the mother and four younger children. Mrs. Hamilton has lived in Lawrence since August last." From this it appears that a girl fourteen years of age, just at the time of life when she should have been receiving an educa tion which would havo fitted her to be use ful and agreeable in society this young creature was, by the neglect of the people of Massachusetts, compelled to furnish the main suppoit of a family of five persons, besides herself. Of course, a mother, who would take proper care of four younger children, could cam but li'tlc for their subsb-tance ; and the scant earnings of this poor f.ictory girl had to be taxed for tho lood, clothing, and comforts of her littlo sisters. Could anything more forcibly illustrate the hollowuess of that canting philanthropy which shuits its eyes to thu condition of poor families and helpless children strug gling for BiibM-tance, and yet looks abroad to find cruelty and inhumanity to rebnke, and which raises its voice in pious horror at Iho iniquity of tho people of other States, and refu-es affiliation with them hecauso thoy do not hesitate to uu the stimulus of tho lash to compel the labor of indolent negro slaves ? Should those who aro such uncompro mising advocates of true principles, who are ready to enter into a desperate strife for rights and universal freedom, forget j the teachings of humanity and Christianity ? j Can anything moro strongly show tho cold hearted callousness of a community than such neglect of persons willing to be useful I as is exhibited in the case of Margaret' Hamilton ? Tho sudden catastrophe which has crushed out the life of this poor but devoted gill, has but revealed one of many sad cases which do not get into tho news-' papers, aud consequently aro unnoticed. I The laws of all our States acknowledge that it is the duty of a Commonwealth to provido for paupers and criminals ; but thoo very States which have accumulated most wealth from the industry of the peo ple, and whose leading citizens are most loud in praise of their refinement, intelli gence and philanthropy, utterly refuse to acknowledge that they aro in duty bound to do anything for tho industrious and use ful. While vice, crime, and degradation aro regarded as proper recipients of public charity or generosity, unobtrusive virtuo is left to strugg'e with heartless avarice, and the cold indiffercuco of tho prosperous and wealthy, for tho most meagre subsis tancc. How applicable to such inhuman disrc gai d of the condition of the destitute and unforiunate, on tho part of those who mako an ostentatious di-play of their own liber ality and justice, while they censuro tho faults of others, is that rebuko of the Sa Aiour of mankind, which tells hypocrits to pluck the beam from their own ryes, before they strive to see a nioto in their brother's eye. To indici a punishment of ten or of four tcon years imprisonment upon persons found guilty of petty larceny, is an evi dence of the high valuo which Massachu setts sets upon the sccutity of property; and to impose but tho comparatively mild sentence of eighteen months incarceration upon a wretch who had brought misery upon four virtuous women, shows that in that State there is but little regard for good morals or the peace of families. At tho present time our country is con vulsed from ccntro to circumference, be cause of tho difference of opinion which men profess lo hold with regard to tho propriety and justice of negro slavery ; and no, part of tho Union is more bitter in its denunciations of that institution than New Euglaud ; and yet no Southern slavehold er imposes upon a girl of fourteen years the burthen of supporting a family, nor docs ho leave a family of slaves to suffer from neglect, because such a girl is unable lo cam their support. If slavery bo so groat a wrong as the Abolitionists of tho Eastern States repre sent it lo bo, tho wrong is manifestly in its inhumanity, and the cases we have present ed hero prove beyond question that there is inhumanity enough in New England to engage the attention of their ardent phi lanthropists for some timo to come') and if avarice is the root of the inhumanity, which in tho South exhibits itself in dri ving indolent slaves to their work, or sell ing them for money ; and in the North in the heartless neglect which places poor females and children in such circumstances that they arc forced to" vice, crinio and degradation, it is certain that avarice is the groat foo of humanity and Christianity, and as this fiend pervades the whole Uni on, aud destroys tho happiuess of vast por tions of the people, tha proper course for true philanthropy to pursue, is to restrain tho demou in its own locality. Let New England exhibit a genuine humanity to wards her own people, and other parts of the Union will be ashamed to refuse to follow her example. Actions do better than professions. The story of Margaret Hamilton may furnish a theme for some of tho eloquent tongues or pens of New Eng land, and they may find scope for the most withering rebukes of tho inhumanity which leaves such girls to toil in obscurity and despair, for tho support of littlo brothers and sisters. rtilarlelpftia Dully Anvs. QUAKER'S LETTER TO A WATCH MAKER. I herewith send thoo my pocket clock, which greatly standcth in need of thy lricnilly correction. J he last time lie was at thy friendly school, ho w.n in no way reformed, nor in the least benefitted there by ; for I porccivo by tho tindcx of his mind that ho is a liar 1 that his motions aro wavering and irregular ; that his pulse is somewhat slow, which betokeneth not an even temper ; and at other times he wax eth sluggish, notwithstanding I do fre quently urgo him, when he should bo on his duty as thou knowest his usual uamo denoteth, I find him blnmbcring, or as the vanity of human reason praiscth, I "catch him napping.'' Examine him therefore, I beseech thco thoroughly, that thou may ct, being acquainted with his inward frame and disposition, draw him from' the error of his way, and show him wherein lie should go. It grieves me to think,nnd when I poudcr thereon, I am verily of opinion that his body is foul, and that the whole mass is corrupt. Cleanse him, therefore I beseech thco, with thy charm ing physic, from all pollution, that ho may vibrato andjcirculato according lo tho truth. I will place him a few days undor thy caro and pay for his hoard what thou requirest. I entreat thcejfriend John, demean thyelf on this occasion with judgement, according to tho gift which is in thee, and prove thy self a workman. Aud when thou layest thy correcting hand upon him, lot it be without passion, lest thou should drivo him to destruction. Do thou regulate his mo tion for a time to come, by tho motion of light that rulcth tho day ; and when thou findest him converted from flw error of his ways, and more conformablo to tho above mentioned rules, then do thou send him home, with the just bill of charges drawn out in the true spirit of moderation, and it shall bo sent to thee the root of all evil. 865" " Porter" asked an old lady of a rail-way porter, " when docs tho nine o'clock train leavo ? " Sixty minutes past eight o'clock, mum,"' was Miko's prompt and prcciso reply. Cr " Short calls aro best," as the fly paid when he lit on a hot etovc. Thirteenth Delegated Conference. METHODTST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. TWENTY rinST DAY. The conference met at the usual hour, Bishop linker in the chair. T. 0. Murphy, of Philadelphia, obtain ed the floor, and said : Mr. President : Compared with many of these venerable men boforc mo, I am , . ...i. T 1 !.. mu a young man , ,x,.-,uu cd worthy bv mv conference a place among , ' ' 3 , , . , . " ber delegates, and thero is n degree of re- , ..... ... .i- sponsibil.ty devolved upon mo upon this and upon all other question, that are to come before this conference, nuil to meet tbi, responsibly ,n part I havo risen to ( auuressjou. The report commences sir,by presenting a question, and it is one of the greatest that has ever been presented to the consid- cration of the Methodist public. That question i, What shall be done for tho cx tiipation of the evil of slavery ? It is no' a new question. Rut what is its import? Whatever else it may mean, we conceive that it looks toward the diminution of the aUnul iimouiit of 'slavery anl a mitigation ofilsivils. Though our legislation and administration can bear legally only upon ourselves and our members, yet it bca rs upon them only in view of accomplishing this object. Rut it is desirous to act through them, upon the community, by creating a corresponding public sentiment and preparing the slave for his liberty 1 W'U "ot "How of interference on the part whenever in tho providence of God it sh all of t'''r !'stor 't33) "3 you have been be provided. lately in Virginia. Will tho people of This is tho view of our fathcrsiml the very ' fSew K"Sla nd permit the people of Virgin view sustained by tho report under consid-, i:1 to iai' wIiat they must do? Or will the cration. If wo return to the report we l'coplc of Virginia permit tho people of shall find evidences of this fact. The re- j 'cw England to say what they must do ? port says : If, then, there be a jealousy respecting "For seventy-six years the question at stilto T'Sli Il0W mucu "oro will there be the head of our present chapter on slavery i " jealousy in regard to those Churches has remained substantially what it now is : ' wll violate their civil obligations , and cs 'What shall he done for the extirpation of the evil of slavery?' During all this pa- riod, and more, there has no day interven cd in which our Church has not testified against slavery as a great evil, and one whoso extirpation is to bo sought by all lawful and Christian means. Nor has our acknowledged antislavory po-ition been unprouuctive ol cooil lruits. There is no i power in the truth,whcn faithfully uttered to influenco tbo conscience of mankind. Tho testimony which our Church has borne has done much toward the fornrition of a correct public opiuion. Under its influence many thousands of slaves havo been set free and many thousands, who otherwise would have been slave holders,, have refrained ; and many thousands more, who aro still holding slaves aro doing so with conscience ill at case. Rut for this testimony a num ber of tho Western States, now free, would ' nrnbnblv In-ilnv lin hlnvn stntr-u " L j .v .- , Rut it is claimed that advanced action is necessary, and the majorityjpropo.se such action. Tho argument, sir, in favcr of tho report may be syllogistically stated thus : I Tho action of our Church in reference ! to slavery has resulted in good, but tho measure now proposed will result in great i er good ; therefore tho mcasuro ought to be adopted. Now, sir, wc very cheerfully conceive the major premise ; but wc object to the minor premise for these reasons : First. It would bring us in direct an tagonism to the State. This view of Iho subject caused some misgivings in the minds of the majority. Thoy refer to it in theso words : "To tho charge that wc arc violating the laws of the land a brief answer mustsufiicc. If we choose to keep as free as wo can from the evils of slavery, how do we thus violate the laws of the land ? Do the laws of the land require the members of tho M. E. Church to hold slaves I How do we then violate the laws by declining to hold them ? Mut we practice every ovil which tho laws permit lest we be charged with violating them ?" Now, sir, here is a false issue raised and presented to our notice. It is not a fair and clear statomcnt of the facts invol ved in tho case. During the past number of years there has been no little agitation on this question in the North, and its re flex influence has been felt iu tho South, And thoy have bcon compelled to enact laws more and moro stringent, whilo in some of tho states manumission has bceomo a legal impossibility ; and that is the case in somo of the border conferences. If thero is any onc hero who doubts tho fact, I have in my pocket a printed extract of the laws there that will establish tho fart. Now if our Church requires manumission of the slaves, and if these laws forbid emancipation, then wo submit the question if this General Conference is not aBked to array the Church against the State, whero can wo look for protection in what sho may regard her dearest rights in other re spects ? Is tho general Conference pre pared to take this attitude before tho world! Is she prepared to take the position of di rect resistance to tho civil power ? If she docs, I submit tho question. Where will she find an example for this ? She will not find it nmong tho Protest ant Churches of America. She will not Cml i i tl,e Kew Testament. Tho groat , , . ... , founder of our religion never arrayed lum , , . . f'c" gint the civil institutions of the coun- d q( . t(j ... , , n rt- i- ? re is nuthorizcd to Sarray licr. self against tho civil power, then all the denominations are. If she is nuthorizcd to arrny icr,0f against onc ,nw hat b,l0 ,)ccm, 0bnoxious, then sho may against CTCry law. I ask. sir.what will bo the re- suit of this? It does not require much foresight to sec that '-the sword of Cnwar will be mightier that the crook of the shep herd ?" Rut if it be ever proper for an cclcsias- tical organization to array itself against tlio State, it is clear ills only to be done by that portion of the Church which is in the States respectively concerned. "No inter- ferenco from abroad," is the doctrine of America ; and what is true of tho general government is trueof the state governments They are jealous of their rights. They penally when it is done by tuoso living be )'01"1 tlie territory concerned, and iu spite ; of tho remonstrances of thosj residing with in the territory ? Where will the result of this bo found ? What will be the effect of it upon the states respectively ? This was not tho action of our fathers. They regarded the laws of tho country; and what was i unon tho M,bieet of slaverv w nnlvl ! t,onc ul'" tbo '"bj' f slavery was only to allect tncni bo taf as was consistent with tho laws of the btato. This has been left for this General Conference, in the year of grace 1801), to propose to do ? And what is moro astonishing than all this, thu Golden Rule is quote 1 as author ity for this arraying of the Church against the stato ! Now docs the Golden Rule requiru us to place ourselves in contact with tho civil power ? Either the apost jj,' les understood it, or they did not. they did, they must have been governed by it under all circumstauccs. If thtij did not, who of us can understand it ? If they did understand it as requiring them to array themselves against thu civil laws of the couutry, they must have proclaimed tho doctrine. They were surrounded with slavery in its most hideous aud revolting forms. Paul could not go to Athens without passing by where slaves were! bought and sold, and one of tho first acts of his ministry at Corinth was to heal a slave ; yet they never denounced slavery perse, i hey denounced tbo slave-trade, or, as it is called in our version, " man stealing," but never denounced it as a civil or political relation. Thoy sought to control it by the principles of tho Golden Rule. They exhorted masters and slaves to the performance of their reciprocal duties, but they never interfered with it as an institution of society. If this be true, it follows that they did not under stand the Golden Rule as the editor of Zion's Herald and other brethren of the majority understand it. Christianity acts directly upon this rela tion of master and slave by destroying the inward relation. The master and slave when they are convortjd becomo brethren in Christ Jesus ; but it does not follow that tho outward relation is changed. That relation is determined by the laws of tho land and public sentiment. The slavo can bo freed only in process of, and in conformity with, tho civil laws. It is impossible for the master to elevate his slave to a social equality with himself in tho face of tho law and public sentiment surrounding him. Tho influence of the Gospel acts upon society by giving a tone to society; and tho only reason why it has not been dono more rapidly is the courso of unprincipled demagogues and other agitators who havo incensed the peopta by tho course they have pursued. Rut I object to tbo report and resolu- I tion under consideration for another rca- son ; not only because it places our peo ple in tho position of rebels to the state, but also because of tho uncharitable as sumption that all slaveholders are sinners. He was awaio brethren would deny that. They will claim it only applies to those who hold slaves for purposes of gain. Rut how can wo understand that? Will it not bo necessary for all who aro expo sed to this presumption to purge them selves of it or bo expelled from tho Church I Now will it be likely to havo that effect upon them ? I know they have been de nounced, and by thoso too who havo eaten of their bread and been supported by their means. I kuow there havo been false representations ruado of them. For moro than a century and a half my family havo resided in what is now known as a frco state, aud not onc of them has been conncoted with slavery. Two years ago Rishop Ames put me on a district within tho bounds of slave territory. Since then I havo had abundant opportunitiej to know their condition, and I solemnly dc clare that I never saw more distinct marks of vital Christianity than among that peo ple. They havo been doing what our brethren from abroad had nover done. Thoy have come between tho trader and his uctim again and ngain. They havo done moro for tho amelioration of the con dition of the slaves, even though they number but about fifty thousand, than the one million of Methodists living in th non-slavcholding states. But what effect will this havo upon that portion of our membership in that territory who aro n t slaveholders? Will thoy consent that th.- imputation bo cast upon their brethren ' In all this legislation, I submit the qucs tion, Will it tend to the extirpation of tho evil of slavery ? Rut I object to it on account of the slave himself. His condition cannot bo improved if he be manumitted there. And he cannot bo manumitted thero. If hii master would give him his froe papers to-day and tell him to go, ho would bo iablo to bo apprehended to-morrow and sold again into slavery. Ho objected to it because it withholds from them what thoso brethren regard as tho Gospel of Christ. There aro thousands of slaves 'uv,f ' V , - WrU 01 me' And lf tllC,e solutions pass it will bo that go weekly to hear the word of life. impossible to go among them and present to them, according to the teachings of this document, the word of life. I could not consent to do it, or they to hold Church fellowship with me. Now if this be the argument, and tho minor proposition ho not tenable, will our brethren consent to placo us in a position antagonistic to tho stato? It is an hour of deep and serious interest, and I earnestly call upon you. brethren, to be careful what you do upon mis euujcci. A SritANaf Stouy. In a villago near Newark,England,in an old thitched house, which has been occupied by the 6amo fauii ly for nearly three hundred years, thero lives an old man who has nearly completed his 80th year. A person who had. occa bion to visit hiin tho other day, was not a little surprised on hearing the old gentle man, in course of conversation, express his belief that he wa3 not only going to Heav en, but had been thero oneo sineo bis first introduction into this world. From the account he gives of the matter, it appears that when he was about 1 1 years of age, ho was in an apparently lifeless state which ho called a trance-for the space of nine days, and it was during that lime, ho thinks, he was permitted lo behold the glories of Heaven. His parents fully be lioved him to bo dead ; tho passing bell was wrung ; his coffin ordered and made ; and on the third day his friends asicm' bled for tho purposo of following him to tho grave. The clergyman of tho parish went in to look at the supposed corpso bo fore the coffin lid was screwed on, and finding it to be warm, ho at once expressed the opinion that tho child was not dead, and after ordering the postponement of tho funeral, sent his servant on horseback for a doctor, who, on arriving at tho house, confirmed the assertion of tho minister, and instructed tho boy's mother to moisten tho boy's lips with wine and water twice a day. Sho did so, and on tho seventh day ho showed signs of lifo by moving ; on the eighth day lie could hear tho conversation of persons in the room ; and on tho ninth day he was able to open his eyes and riso from the supposed bed of death. Sinco that time his health has been delicate, but ho has continued to occupy the grazing land adjoining his cottago, and has kept cows after the manner of his forefathers. fcai" It is by tho mistakes of wen that we learn, and not by their weaknesses. 1 A