u u M - "..'"' '"' ' ' " "" ""' " -"Tt ' ' IMI MMII I'll II II " I .gwMM I -- - - " ? - -- 1 ''gSMjjaMMMiaMM .. "-"j , '. , .'. ," . ,l.X: , .'f,5;.':,:..; ."V-: A' ., :T" V. r'X ;'.'.;. ; : '' ;''.'.' ; fues wixd,-as; AMimc am to the coke; : "- -""'' : ' ;;y ; ; .'"', i - . . . "..,' ".. - .r--3 ' '. 1 JJ i n i ' '. ' ' .' . " ' ' , ' ' 1 ' 1 ' " - ' - . , n. ; . , '. ii i ! ' 'V - . ii ' ' " -i ' " ' " ' ' ' ' " i '" - ' ' i ' 3 1 h -1 BY II". UUCIffill: SVOOPE, GEE AHFIELD; WEDNESDAY, OCT. 24, 185:: VOL. 2.A'0. 13.-TOTAL;.'65: .v t. . - A DOLLAR OR TWO. ' J '. TTIili cautions steps n we tread our way thrcuh This Intricate world as o'her folks do. t May we atiH oa our journey, be able to Tiew - Tlse benevolent face of a dollar or two; ' ' ' For an exeelleat tuiEj ' ' : ' r i Is a dollar or twe; ' ' ' ' t " ' 1 - friend iotrn ' ' - i- .: Asa doilar orUo;. . ' : ' Through country or town . ., . . j t As we paas up or down -;;;; ..: ' , Xo passport so good ., . - , . As a dollar or two. "Would you read yourself out ff the bachelor's crew. And the Land of a gentiedivinity sae You must always be ready the handsome to do Although it would Cost you adollar'or two.- - Love's arrows aro tipped ' ' ' With a dollwortwo; .- : . And affection la gamed , l!v a dollar o two; The best tiil von can fhect. In ad vancing vout suit, -' . ' Is the elcnent chink. ' ' ' -' ' ' , Jt a dollar or two. ' ' ' ' Wonldyou wish your existence with froth to iicbili?, And enroll in the rankac-f the sanctified few, - ' '' To enjoy a good num and a well cushioned pew, : You most freely come down with adollaror two. - . ii.-Tio gospel i preached ,.- . . . . ; ; Tor a dollar or two, . And salvation is reached . . ..t. , By a dollar or two; . , r ".'' You may sin at sometimes, ' ', Dut the worst of nil crimesi '" ! ' ' ' '- Is to fnd yocrielf short . Of a dollar or two." ; . s.: '- i- ' ' From the Christian1 Union: J .' ... POPERY AND PRAVITT. ' In oiir .Jiily number, We'gave a brief article oa popery, and. Pauperism, which attracted some attention, and was transferred to the col umns of ionic of the prints bollv secular and religious. The subject is a. sore one. for tht? Jesuitical cauists of Home. When compell ed to admit the too palpable fact of the pover ty of Fapist as compared with Protestant pop ulations, they ..gloss it ovorr by paying with anctiraonioiis airs.tliat '-the Gospo ia preach ed to the poor, and among them .finds-its sin cerest and moat exemplary disciples." i This Is tru3. But it is not to their piir'pos'.'uniess they'c'an show that it is the intent and lea'doti cyof the Gospt-I to make men poar, keepthem poor, and render them poorer and poorer to thjj .Very, brink of starvation. So far from this, It, can be morally, demonstrated, that true re ITion, as an enlightner of the mind and a re- llner of the heart, promotes intejlienee.' vir- tue, industry, and health; and therefore Las a natural and necessary tendency towards tem poral comfort and prosperity. I-'ioiance is neither the mother of devotion iivr f thrift. ' As to devotion', the '.'ignorant .oship thy know not what; and as to thrift, it Is truly said by Solomon, "JIuch food is in the tillage of the jotHf f-buV Uu re. is that which is destroyed for want of judgment.? Not igno rance, but the knowledge of the true God and of his revialed wilijis the parent of piety But Konu'.i devotion is the direct source (f popu lir .ign ;raiice, lyiultinj n much sq-.alid and beggarly pauperism, and in general pi aval ion of tmr.i!s- Iivin herelofvr briefly discuss ed the former of thesj re.-ulti, we goo:i to tlie consideration of.,the lattt-r. , ' The Mt aad . iasolyable" difficulty .10 tl wjv of tbe Popish causist isr fut the povf y which'- prevails "araid " his co-religionists ' and ijvI!a 'most where Ids Church is moit preva lent, is. tic, a virtue". jyv:rlyt , tf.e p.r.voriy which is often made honerable aud .venerable by exalted piety 'and 1 the rich treasures of grace divine. .'. Oa the c-ntraryVit Is "that style of poverty which js made sordid by 1 iziness, by uathnft, and br dirt ; and . is allied to- bru tish sensuality, to viceand moral pi o.1gcy. Let us De understood.' .iWeay not th it'there are no upright ricb men ameng Uomauists; nor do ire say that there' are no virtuous poor among them . ' We ftsj! v"conce3e that there are ual . pases, of. Uie .ono c.asa or the many indicidu. othsr. But what W! say is,that,nscomparea witir TrotesttTit ppubtions, there is a vast prepon- dcrauce of low'.vice Wl 'critt2c.:-or every grade; chargeable to the whole, body of HominUtsC; ; In pursuing our remarks, we sha'd fii-r,t Ktate- the fads in the case, and then trace this state of facta to its origin and cause in Popery itself ' 83 a system of retigionand morals." As to Iheacs, we shuil abide' by a rule ear ly learned and long practised by us, namely, , to be iurt of tiem.!;They will b-j drawn from responsible ail J reliable documents. ' " 1 ' ,u The .mpst conclusive mode of treating this branch of -the subject would be, t6 institute'a rivs of comparisons; as,-for. i ostance,b:t ween the republics of! Southerh America and the United States of North America ;r or between the Papal cantons of Switzerland and the Pro testant cantons, all being under the same civil government or between Popish Ireland and'. Protestant Scotland, both of these also being ; under the same civil government; or even be tween those counties of .Ireland .itself ; where the Papacy- prevails,; and those in winch theJ Reformed religion predominates;' or the com parison might be made , between1 r Popish Aus tria and Protestant Prussia, lying side by .side; or between -Romish Belgium ami Protestant Holland, also next door neighbors., , But this would require a view so extensive as to take up a tolnme in its diseription,'and is altogeth er too wide a' scop for the space we pan spare. Whoso wishes to survey all. this ground will find It laid fully open to him in a most valua ble work by Ret.' Nspoleon Romssel, of Paris entitled. "CathoHc J and Protestant Nations Compared in, their Three-fold, Relations' to "Wealth; Kaoweldre, and Morality; w translated into'.'EngHah,, rimd recently re-vrirtted in -this perfe:t.iCJaKtr'on his iil j.'Ct. We would also tvTyr (o'Pr.'.Diirs 'Tre.l iml's Miseries) ajid to Mr. JVylie's treatise on i-Thc Papacy.".. - But her we mtust pd a shorter wiy to ww,' contenting ourselves 'with a bri f bnta conclu sive array of fac's .bearing upon the" question. IuEngl ind the . Popidativn is twenty--ine niill ions: Of th'ese',les than a quarter of a million were Romanists when ?Le 1 ist census was t.ikon .' By Parliamentary "returns obtained and print ed by .the, zealous PopelHig Lucas in his Tb let," ths wholj numlr i.f prisoners in the jails of England on the 2jth of September, .1332," was 22,822.". As to G62 of 'these,' the 're-1 ligjous beiief was not known. Of the rest. 2,-.30-wero wh;;t are Cilled Roman Catholics. That ?s to'jujy the i Utter,' ' thoV bnt one eighty fourlii part of the. 'opuhUjoa,' .furnished a sev enth -part of 'the .criminals,: r tirtlce times as many as they would have done; hid the morals of the i.Romafiis't part of the popul ition been as as'goid as thosi of .'the Protestant; part." In Ireland, in tnj year It 21. in the six Protestant counties of the North"' Antrim,1 Down, Lon donderry, Tyrone, rVrrn'ahah, . and Annah, with :a jiojxid.ition of 1,700.000, the -number convicted of crimes was 2u38;.or 8G lets than were convicted in the' single and thoroughly Popish county of Tipperary. ' with a popula tion less, than onerfourth as numerous. ; ,. , : By the last census of the United States,.the whole population was returned at almost twen: millions, (19,981.317.) Of" these, 2 .210.823' were foreign-born, -The number of.cr min Js in confinement at that time whs about 27,lOO, of whom more than half, or 11,00.1. were for eigners.'. Tlenci, the l itter furnished about .'cm timet as many ; criminala as, they -would have done, if the "standard of morality hal lwn as bigli among them as it was aniiing the n itivi-s. By, the. prison statistics of the four cities of N. Yorkj Albany, Buffalo, and Brooklyn, in 1833 if was found,' that ont of 5.2"6 criminals.' 4005 were. foreigners, and of these last 2,000 were of Irish birth. A very striking case is afforded by the returns made 1-sst year by the city Mar shal of Jersey Cjty, who states the whole num ber who have been committed to the city pri son from the beginning was 4,100: of whom on ly szveniy-jice were natives. Of the rest, 3,5 H) were from Ireland.' the other foreigners being but i2o. The'Taster of the Almshouse in the same city reported that last year. 212 were ad mitted ; of whom but irtlce were Natives. 2 Scotch. .1 German. 4 English'; and 221 Irish ! ! Of nearly 500 families of out door poor reliev ed, o:!y six were American. Thtjshnt for the foreign population, the city might almost dis pense with the almshouse and prison both." Now the, religions connections of all this population are not given. But as the whole numheriof .Romanist in this country, accord ing to-' their own t-t itemetits, s.y three millions d-os 'V.ot 'very greatly exceed the number of fvivigners here,-an 1 as it is known that the vast iH 'jurity of immigrant who land on our shores is Popish, especially of thos-i from Irj lan.l.' the inference '" is irresi -table as to the vaitly 'inferior uioral.ity, of the Romanists. ; But our labor in this iuquiry is greatly. less ened by the investig itions of ilieRw, II. S'-y-nionr. This gentit-m in was a 'clergyman of the Chui-ch rf Englandl Stumbling into Pi:s.'yim that croxs-road to Ko:ue," be went over to that "seat of Satan." Visiting Rome itself where lie,, in.' his sincerity and ex iltei fVrv'or,' expected to find the very air fragiu. -lit with the oder of sanctity, he found the. atmosphere redolent of fcorrivption,' heavy and dirk f5th J the foul steiicius of Papal pollution.'; Shock ed and Tastouished, he reviewed his religious, convictions, and, as the result, went penitent ly ba'-k"to the Chrch he had forsaken'; Moved by. what be ii l 'i;!t of the effect of this, practi cal argument upon .his own min J, he busied himself in collecting. -the. ainhuritic criniiii.il statistics of 'Various E'nropean countries, con fining himself to "oflencis against the Sixth and Seventh Comm indmeuts,' or:i 'dlfentes against life ,and' chafeflty, ;l Fronj. ah able re view of. this .pamphlet in. the Bulwark," we. give the following condensed summary : " 1. As to Mm-der, From fables laid Irefore Parliameit, and. published by, order of the House, ia 182, it appears that the total num Iter of committal for murder ' in England and Wales,' for the ten years ending 1852, was 718. vhieb: gives an average of less ' than 72 for each year not.rotR;to each million of the popul itionl ; ' ' ' ' 'i ' : ' (:: " Again, from a return laid on the table of the House of Commons, it appears that from July, 1836, to April, 1839, the total nu.miter of com mittals for murder in Ireland was 61-3--being a yearly ' average tf ,235; or" thirty-three mur ders' to'cach million! f And it is a remarkable fact, that. within the lastien years,' juat .since' the relative proportions of. the, Protestant and Popish populations of Ireland hafe beg in to change in favor of the former, Ireland's moral condition has teen ttiTrg-Tfo-mocft bttter that, according to another return laidTjefore' Parlia ment in 1 1851 the annual average of committals for murder in the previous seven years was on ly 130, or about rim etem to each million 1 t AgaiA, from (he last returns laid before the Kingor Beigim.by thellinister of J ustice,'and published : in 1852, r it appears that the yearly average of mn'rders iri that conntry is 8L which gives eighteen murdci's to the rfnllion,; or four ami a half, times more t nan in Xingianu, ,-j 'Again, from the 'Complt gentralde Vadmin I titration tfld 5iccriminU Fr,1851. pr;sented' hy coinman.l t the Emperor by the-, Minister of Justice, ami printed . in Jb iJ. ana also Irom the "Sim'isc.Kt tuor il -le l-i '.Frsuce'" by LGierry himself a memlH-r of the Chi.rch of Rome, which has been -approved anl adopt ed by the Royal Ac idomy of Sciences in' Par is, we find that the annual avi-rjge of commits t ds for murder in France is about luS9, which' gives thirty oxn murders to each million or . serf ami 'h 'If fines' wo-'e than in lrs;!antIJ' ' Again, the criminal statistic-of .Austria are most carefuHy kept by an, "Imperial Commis- j sfon for Statistics." - From the latest of these, f published I ist year, in two volumes.' and 'cij-' j titled "D p Scfl'.is ''V d 's Oes eir. i -' is !ie7i Kuis-' era a i.','! we'find that the; yearly avera.ie . of j mardorsin Aiistrit. one of the most intensely Popish countries in 5 Europe,' is 1325 being i tiiirtv six '.'miirdcrs to'each miilioh, or nine j times more than in England. i Farther, the Kovcrniental returns of crimes j in Etvirii. which are also regularly published! and the latest of which are entitled i'Beiiruge zur Stalis'ik dc Koingreichet i tyern, ron Air nnua, ' Mu'urSm. 1)3," shows that the yearly avenge of mimlers in . that country is 311, which, when compired with the amount of the population, that by the census of 1849 was 4, 520.751. gives about 'sixty-fight murders to each rn illtoti'! ! of seventeen' times more than in England. r ,-: ..,- ,.-. :-.' It appears tl at tlicre are no oflirial orgover mcn.'al n'tt.rns from Sjnin or Portugal; there fore Mr. Seymour, whose figures ire drawn ex clusively from such sources, is obliged to pass them by. But in orrler to give some proxi mate id? i of the state of crime in that jKTiin ula, he quotes! iup issing, a French auihority who states that inStain the murder and at-, tempts at -murder amount, on the yearly, aver age, lu about 250 to' each million of the i pop ulation!'' " '." ''' '.."."' And'now as to tha Italian States. ; The first of these is Sardinia, which is at present sodis tinguishedx above all the rest for its progress in fie. institutions. And it appears by the returns of enma given l'rom tlm police in Al lien, and cited by him in Mittvi niaier, that in that kingdom the yearly average of" 'mnrders is l(!l. So that the "moment we'coUie to a Popish c iintry in"which the struggles of the people have Komewhat relaxed the Pupal yoke, the trprtion of murders instantly drops d .wn to TWKNTvin the million. Tbe m xt Ital- i tn priivince is the two Lonr a ili ;s,Wr ere'the j per cent. In other words, in one of the most Pope is still supreme- and accordingly tlu jiro- j fnpisli capitals iu Europe," we ' see bastardy portion of crim- instantly arises again; for by steadily increasing for twenty one years, un file relnrys of M it term iier.- the ve rly aver ige j til more than onk half. f tba births aie ille of murders i the Lomb irliea' is 225. or about j gitiiuate! ! ! Does the reader exclaim: Can F'ihty-fivs to each million of ihe population! j tnis have any j.rall,.l iu the civilized world t Next irTorbr is biqrot m! Tiisaty. in which, xes, it has. a parallel aye, and is tar outdone accord! n2 t'th'.Kime anthoHty'' the' returns ! in another European capital and that- is tb of all crimes for the nine years ending 1S38, 1 loly Ci.y ofJiutne. We have, found that'the sivu 84 murders on the- yearly average, ma- j Pope and his Cardiuals have taken good care king fifty Mi Rnf-.ns to each'million. or fieelre j fo publish no ciirainal returns of their coun "nd t half times' morejhan in- England! In j try. But from the Italiati Mati-stics collected Sicily ngrn, the returns for "several ''years as. by Miltern.aier, 4t-tppeaFs-hat- the yearly given in Mitt lmaii-r in ,ke the annual. avenge 1 average of tou'udlings exposed iu: the city id of murders 174. which gives alout ninf.ty to j .Rome is 3160, while the annual average of its each million, or '"'-, o 'and a 'half V mutt births is '4373 '.f!. This i a "city . containing, mor than in Ensia'n-L' , "',''..'.'.'..'. -, .' exclusive of priests,. monks, and nuus, r about ; An 1 now to the Papal t.tes. ; jjie Pin- lJ,O0 souls. Aiid it is stated in Dr. Bow tiflcl arovrnnt.? niturallv onxion to in- ; string's-' Report, that. 73 per, cent of these shrmid in d irk n ess the dre ulfr.l st ite of the wretc'ae'l, jViutidliiigs die pn, tlie Roman found-C'-nntiy. hive taken case to publish no 'official ling estaUlislnnvnts. One may well question returns of Cime. But. happily for our snl j ct. ', ifS'lom and Gomorrah exceeded this. ' And from the sfaiitical 'nformafion which Pr. Row- yHthis is the Ci y of the : Church, containing ring procured, some time since. W. orler of a pope, m any. Cardinals. 29 . bishops, 12So the British'.e'overjnment, for,' commercial pnr-r priests, 2.fe2 monks,: iiuus, besides num pos?s. and .which hist3h printed by or Ur of "bvrs of ecclesiastical pupils ! ! ' Nearly tiiree Part'i mnt: the nnnnil aver ig? of mnr Jrs in' .fourths, or aiiour s;;vErv-TUKEK per cent" ot the Papal States can 1h safely reckom-d tJ 33',? which, as the population is only ' 2.9 W.11I ,', gives'. about ox? ni'snSEn and thittteFX .! o legitimate, turtlis is oa!y f.ol'k per cent! ! ! - each' million of th'f popalition. or tr'y-eir : Mr. Seymour, having" thus contrasted the limes ni.or' than fn ' Enjri ind!' Bnf 'ft seems moral results of ProtesUiiisui ( ii.ud Popery . iu tint Po'pry owns a more fearful Acd l im , the great. ca-j,iluis vf,u.r.pe, -proceeds toexhi thn this." For in the neighboring kingdom of: lt a similar contrast- between Jew ol the prin ciples, which is, if possible, more' Pojfsh' cipal cities of Protestant England, and as ma than tlie Papal States' themselves, and in which.' ny ol Popish', Aastria--, and shows lljat in the in .'1848, the' Pope took refuge when flying , former the average of births out of wedlock' is front his own snl j-cts, the criminal . calender- six in every' hundred,1 Which is sad enough to of One? year; 'as givin in'Mitfernitier--and that tell ; while in the latter, it. U for.y-fwo, '.or se the year 1832. long before file scenes of the veh "times us .bad as in the English towns, tMr. 1 ist revolution contains 't.he.'.'awful number of. Seymour then, institutes similar "comparisons 104 ? murders;, which, as the population was, between oth r countrtes,' with the like disad then little over 5,000,000, makes oss nixBiFD; vantage-ius results as to' the immorality of the asi s'Vf sty rora-murders tuthe million; cr' Rounsli religio. lists. ; Bat Wi;aro disposod, to fnr ri-:hree an t a hal' times more than in her-: shorten ; tUce jat:iful details,: wbieli oiily et:c England ''While in the whole of ItJktJr, show too plainly how well Rome nas earned where the Church of Rome' Is snjrrenie, aad her apocalyptic title : ' Babylon dh (-re it? the where neither, Bible nor hejetic is , tolerated, j Moruica ofuahlots, ., aud atom iuul ions ot'.ihe we gather tronf the same authorities that the eart , f "r I;:;; - : ; 1-tu- '., yearly average xifmurders is 1W8! : We ask : - Having exhausted the space wecan allot t Dr. Wiseman if he.'cari find any thing'to equal the subject in the present number of this' tuag t;ds jkmong the! Mohawks, the ; Chiirokees, or . wtwe, .we close our facts as to Popery aud the Calfres; and this i the land in which there I pravity, omitting a mass of others we had in are iiwards'of 12(),000 priests' and monks ifnd ( tended to bring in.l Where the' proofs are so' nuns! 'AmVyel'there' are still ' foutici Popish ', conclusive a needless accumulation of tb.'m is priests and newspaper-editors who. have the . worse . thaii guperduous. Here, we rest tins ignorince,-or the audacity, or both,-to raise branch of the subjact reserving for ano.hr the question of the comparative m' rality 'of occasioh the presentation' of the causes of the Protestant and Popish conntries ! , . ' ' V, .'. ',', degraded s ate of morals in Popedom,' These v. in vT.T h : -: (,:.. , ' ;.. ,,3 4 we. think, can be set in a clear light, and dis WhoVs not striifek, with horror -at this com-- tinctly traced tolhe mural theology of the false p.ratlVe disregard of hnman iifotol-ds'whicV Church of Rome.';i l-'.'h-t,.i-l:i:i. are', and ever have been, nnder Popish (each- j 7,y,'y t ; ..i ; ? -i 7 1 ing and control i;-Popery. is as she was in the ; ; .K7""SIy dear,'?;aaid an , affectionate spouse diys when slie wielded against the Reformers"' td her husband," "ta Ihot-yoQr 'only trei the potent wcapon8rof the torch and the"8wordJ' 6nre?,,': ! yf' ' l: i- , .,4"-,' ?'",''',!.'' as if they were diseased limbs, for '.which,' no, n?medy was left but the knife 4nd cautery her own jwtrtraiture in 'blood, though nw it ia imMs me niooa or her own h ipless cMI tren We .proceed with the secon 1 br in h of Mr. Seymour's investig ition, availing ourselves of thesinic Condons ition of h,s statements:' t l2. Auto Jreicheso'' the Serenh Cotnml vi en?. Mr'.' Sex'moiir tikes fiist a few i f the great capitals, commencing with Lonlon.;The Registrar General's returns'to Pailiiment. of the number of births in Engl tnd and Wales for 18V2, gives 78 .300 for the London division, which contains a popnlaticiu of 2 302 ,235. "Of this numler; 75.097 were )-gitimate, ' and 3303 illegitimate, ' which 'shows, that only four.' per cent of'the births in that great metroplis of tl world are illegitimate; and the' returns for the previous year give the same proportion. ( t 'Now, in Paris, twehfy years ; ago according to M. Gii'eiTy. in the S.'ct.'s'ique' Morale the proportion of illegitimate to legitimate ''births was 1 tol 77-100;' and tlie Prefect's returns for 1850, published by the lhtreiu d.:s tonkin Us give the tot ii number of birthsin Paris' for that year as 2'.).62Sof which 19.!2l were le gitimate 97U7 were iU.gitiniatti. ,: In 'other words, in the c ipital "of France', twenty yenrs iigo, 35 per cent, or more than one' third of the native population werj b'isiarJsf 1 ' ' Turning nxt 'to' Belgium," the constant bo ast of Popery : The government returns for 1850, give the total number of births in Bars-sfi-'s at 528? of which 'the legitimate were 3148, and the '.'illegitimate ' 1833,' making ; the illegitimate ttirths about 33 pef Cent ; or near ly i i third of the whole ! 'Yet, even this de- J p!orable state of things is better than the con dition of Popish Mrsicn, the capitd of Bava ria. By the r-turns for the year 1851; the to tal fcumlw-r of births in that city was 3 10 1, and of t(; ose 17G2 were legitimate, and 17C2 illegit imate! In other words, forty-eight per cent, or niear one half "of the population are illegiti mate ! ' :" ' " ' ; - - ' ' " "-' " Turning next to Ties if a, we find from the statistical table prepared by the imperial commission,-and publiattod therein 1852, that the total number of births in that city in 1849 was 19 211, of Which 8,881 were legitimate, 'and 10.8d0, or considerably ovkr one half, were illegitimate: and from the same tables, it ap jears that the average yearly proportion of illegitimate to legitimate was, from 1830 to 183. 44 icr cent; and from 180' to T147, 48 percent; and from 1848 to 1851, fifty-use all the ch. Urea bora iU Rome, are foundUngs,, while in.l'roteisanL 'Loiidou the. number of .jl- : fc"Oh yes," was the cool reply, and Jwould willingly lay it np in heaven." i j: : ) . V ..Fvthlnl Prvsch-'n. f.;.:,-, ..Rev. W, Hi Milhnrn. t illustrate the pecn liT , fsithfnlne'ss efssorne of tl-e. early Ken tucky clergy, mil in a pulpil ; lecture:. i? . :An incident related by Ewell.White,iurn sc'f a roan of note, will illnstrate this. It hap pened at one time th it a meeti.ng.wis apoint c 1 in. in oil Simon Kenton's county. , A preacher nimed James Asley, fantiliarly. call ed "Jemmy Axley, by bus fncnls,. an 1 very popul ir, v.as expected. , Bnt when be came be brought .another with him.jWho spoke first.r-. This disappointed the people, and there, was, a j gooit de:il 01 noise and confusion, and great inattention on th part of the audience. It is customary when two ministers sre present, for lofh to ad Iress the meeting ; if one drives a . nail of truth, the. other, ci nches it. - When, Axley rose, "all was 'still, and everybody was disposed to listen. -, 'My frie.nds said he, lookin.; round -"with . a kfpn ibs5rvant. glance, 'it js perhis a pain ful, but always a necf-ssary duty of your min ister to reprove sin. whrver. found,.,-and be assured I shall not shrink from it n t!iis oc casion.. Now,' said he, 'that sandy headed man, standing by the door, that w?nt put while the brother was spak ing. staid as ling as ho wished.' got. his boots covered with mud, cjme in and made such a noise cleaning them as to disturb everybody, and prevent their bearing scarcely a word; that man think I mean him; and well he might think 90, f-r P wss a dis grace to Kentucky to say he wns raised here, and had no more manners. Now, my friend, I advise you to go home, and learn bow to lo bave when you come to the house. of prayer. Bui I dtin'! rns'-B) him ! ; That little' girl about the middle of the floor, with flowers inside her bonnet! that was gilling, and laughingand chatting, all the time tl.c brother was speaking, thinks I mean her. And she ought. I am sorry for her pa rents. who have raised a" girl to fifteen, with out learning to behave modestly and properly, and they are to be pitied. ' Little? , girl, before you evmie again. learn to be quiet and ri-verend in the bonse'of God, and respectful to the min isters tie has sent. But I do not mean her. " 'And now that man on the bench, toward the corner, that's looking up as blight and wide awake as if be bad never been asleep in bis life, and never .expected to be, but who was nodding and bowing all thro' the preach ing and snoring so as to disturb all around him, thinks I' mean him. And indced he well may. My friend, the house of God is not in tended for a sleeping-room. .' When Von wan! to take a 11 ip, go home and go to lied and take it regularly: hnt'yourome here for an other purpose.. But I don't mean him.' "And thus he went on. fixing bis d rk pierc ing eye on each offender, singling him out in such a manner that be could not be mistaken till he had nearly gone through with all who had nude any distnrbanceending each re proval with, But I don't mean h ml' or -her. White., meanwhile., was sitting on a b-nch in front of Axley, enjoying the fun a azinglv laughing,' rlibbing his hands, chewing more lustily, and spitting more vigorously; than be fore,' as each new '.offender was brought, until the aisle bef. re him was a puddle." "Now slid Axley, drawing", himself up. and with a severe look. I calculate you want to know who I mean'. I mean pointing di rectly to White, I mean that n isty, dirty, filthy'. tobiccV.'chewer..y Look; at the filthy brown puddle before him ; a toad wouldn't hojrin it., and to think of the1 sisters', dresses havinir to o through' ''it ' - ' White was thun lerstriick'.1 ITe never ag'ia was known to chew tobacco in maeting:" r Woman vs Oxes. A certain clergyanan once' addressing his audience 'in the s.tutherii part of New Jersey, had occasion to qnote Luke XIV1, 10 2 : 1 iJA certain man ui ide a great supper, ,aud "bade niauy, ond sent bis servant at supper time,-to say to them that were hidden. Come, for ail things are now rea dy. T Audthey all with one cWsynf began to make excuse. The first said unto him, I have Inuight a piece 'of ground and must needs go and see it ; I pray thee have me ex6ued And another, siil I have bought, five yoke of oxeri and I go to prove them ; I pray thee h vu me' excused." And another said; I have married a wif.' ; and jherefore.l c in.iof come. "Now, (said the vener iMe- clergym iii,J you .see the man that bought the, land merely, wished .to ba i-xcnaed; the man that lmnght the-ftVe yoke of oxen merely wisln-d ' to' be excused ; but the man that tnarrled, "the wife said posi tively ''(ereore (fM-that, reason) cimU come. , So you see. my hearers that, a woman can draw a man furtber( from God thanyire yoke of oxen .'" '" ," . .' .. , 'Tub Reading B.-.ioks r Basylos Accor ding to thi Leeds (English1) Idircury, Colonel Rawlina;n has just discovered among the ru ins of ancient B tbylon an extensive library not, indeed, ' printed n paper;- but impressed on baked bricks-conUining 'to my and volu minous treatises on astronomy raatheraaiies, et hno'ogy , and seveFal other roost Important branches of Rnowledge-"rThese7trealises coa tain facts and arguments, which, n his, opin ion Vl(Iluvofni , sniall .effect .0 the study of th'e sciences to wjiich they, relate-an4 indeed,' on lmos( every brapeb of iearningand, which throw great light upon. Bjblical history 'and trrsfti tfd t Mfrwf T&-?z ,s :". .7, lMird?rod by Bl-ndar, t , -ILW iieiirJtlia.La fi rhUJV-RivlK, ldy with 1 irge family, of young, jntelligent and interesting daugbtera- wen-to reside, In Xeuia, Ohio. r IIt repnt iiion and jth.it: of her family, veTi cntirely-.witl-.out blen.ish, .wbea -some cowardly slanderer raised injurious .to, ort cnceriug them, which, although dL-j believed by cvatj-4lU minded person, wert extensiv-iy circulated thnrngh the town. The poor 1 idy was so overwhelmed by these ' tnai' lign-ant slanders, as 'Well as ly some incendia-1 ryattenipfs on the premises she occupied, that ' she took sick and died without liodilr ailment,n a victim .to. ajvjle slan ler,wLieh has, thus killed, a most amUl.lo and virtuous 1 idy, .aad . deprived a large and interestingfamily of their j only" eartldy protector. , Of all despicable . characters the tlanderer and scandal-mongerj is the most despicable. The .circulator of 'a vile ktorj- -abont -defenceless womiin is" no le'ss guilty than the originator, and neither are bet-1 ter than the cold-blooded murderer for it no worse to pierce 'this victim to the heart with a digger,than to stab her reputation,wonnding the soul iften fatally, as in the instance above citvd. Thei slanderei " ought to "be despjsed aad shunned as a, deadh- jestilencc, by every right minded maa and woman.. Tue slanders, are hatched by that infamous and common , practice of too rainy in ever)' community :of' prying into and' meddling with' their peigh-( btrs afiairs, always to the'neglect of their back-, biting, underhand mode of making themselves familiar with other's affairs, these if news- seekers would only go to each person and thos get their information direct, it wonld save ' themselves much trouble, and the intelligence ' would lie quite as truthful and reliable. Then' -if they would keep'the infoimaiion" to' them-' selves and use it only for their own personal " improvenientwj are quite sure things would progress as rapidiy and harmoniously a 'they ' do now. Reader profit ' by this suggestion, ' a id while you strictly mind your own business,' never seek to know anything of your neigh- lors that ynu tire ashamed to ask him. about ' and which it can do you no good to know. s,- . i ; THE TRUE WOMAN; - The trne woman, for whose ambition a hus- bind's love and her children's adoration aro sufijeicntwho applies her military instincts to the decipline of her house-hold, and whose legislative faculties exercise themselves -In making laws for her nursery; whose intellect has S.d enough for her in communion' with her husband; aud whose heart asks no. Other honors than bis love and admiration; a woman who d ie? not think If a weakness to attend to tier toilet, and who does not disdain to bebeaii-' ufal; who believes in tlu virtue of glossy hair, and well fitting gowns, and eschews rents 'and -ravelled edges, slipshod shoesend audacious m iKenps; a woman who spcafca low and does out speak much; who' is - patient and gentle," intellect", t! and industrious; who loves mora' th in she' reasons, and yet doc1 not loVs blind-' ly; who never scolds, and rarely argues, but' who adjust with a smile; a Woman who is the wite we have all dreamed of once in our lives,' and who is th. mother we still worship in the" backward distance of tbe past; such a woman' . as this, docs more for human nature and. more for woman's c mse than all the captains,. dar; risters. judges and members of Psrliamentput together God-gjven aud God-blessed as sh, . ii'.DiJceks. . , ; t.rn ') ;cv--i-T.:'d ..The Bloom of Aoe. A good woman never grows oi l- ..Years may pass orer her bead, but if virtue and benevolence dweil'in her heaTt,-1 sheas cheerful as when' the spring of life 'first opened to her view When we look trjroiv'a goo-d wom.in we never think of ber age; ssho' bulks as charming as when the rose of 'yout&l first bloomed iqion her cheek." -That rs hai' mt.dader. yetj it -will n-e- finle. I' In' her neighbnrhood she is the friend and benefactoK Wiio does not rsiect and love the woman who has passed Im days In"aCts of krndncs and mercy I : We TepeatJ sncli ' ih'an' Visnnot grovy old. - She will alway$ be fresh-and buoy ;uat in s; ir its and active .- in humble deeds or .uercjl en l.iVne-o enca. If. the young lady I desires-to retain the 'beauty .-.and bloom ; of 1 yo:ith. let her not yield to the sway of fasnioa aud folly, Iff ber love truth and virtue t and tor tile close of life she will retain those feelings; which now make life appear a garden of sweets7. ever fresh and ever new.--.-- : ': ' ' Stof that Boy StojTthat boy! r A cigar is in his meiitha Swagger in' hiS walk impu- dei.ee in his face, care-for-nothiugness in his manner. "Judging from his' demeanor lie Is ' older thin his father? wiser than bis teacher,'5 more. honored than the Mayor "of th towB, i.igher than the President. ,Stop hunjhe js, going too fast. lie don't see himself as pth- , ers see biro.. ITedon know bis speed. ..Stop T hitn ere tobacco shatters his nerves, ere pride ruins his cha-acter, ere the loafer masters h3 iU4n ; ere good, ambition and . manly . strength, give way to low pursuits and brutish .aits StPf ad iach. boys ! , jTh7-r Jeoo, - tbo, sham of. theixfamlUestho diraco ; of rtiear .-. townsi tuesAd-and solemn Selves :,.'! t r j ol l- "T (ITjA meronant ot H'Oeriain iMiyvi"""! died r suddenly i Jefi.in his dek a lHt.,frT4ttej. ono., of, bis: corrorKBtsc-: lis sgscionji: 1 clerk, asoijof ri, seeing It:90ejarycJ". eond the letter, wrote it tho bottona-M. y, l.rx: I if 1 . $ l! J) if I: ir ; I C if n I a, n