Presbyterian banner & advocate. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1855-1860, May 29, 1858, Image 1

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    PRESBYTERIAN BANNER & ADV I CATE.
Presbyterian Danner. Vol , YIN Poe 36.
Presbyterian Aldweeete. Vol. lig 11 0. 81.1
'AVID iIeICEWIrt, Editor and Proprietor.
Int. titik-IN ADVANCE.
original Vottrg.
Doubts—Deliverance
High on a tempest-troubled sea
My doubting soul was wildly tossed ;
Each wave so &roe, it seemed to me,
One billow more, and all was lost !
Black clouds were gathered in the sky ;
Scarce' shed the sun one beam of light ; •
It seemed, so deep the gloom on high,
One shadow more, and 't would . be night!
Long days, upon that raging sea •
My soul was driven to and fro ;
Above, no gleam of hope for me,. •
And naught but storm and death below...
But Into I one ray bursts on my .eight! „
Another- 7 fioods upon me break
The clouds rolled back; FAITH, Child of Light,
Cleaving the gloom, thus, abiding, spake
Why, trembling soul, this doubt and fear?
What though Wick clouds are hovering o'er
The sun still shines as warm and clear
Behind those clouds, as o'er before. •
What though wild waves are warring round?'•• •
God soothes the sea, and stills the storm ; ,
Trust thou in God; in hope abound, •
Repose, in pesoe,.on Jesus' arm."
FAITH seized the helm ; my spirit bark
• Leaped gladly o'er the darkling sea ;
The sky above no longer dark,
My happy soul from doubt set free.
And now, my vessel heavenward bent,
This trusty helmsman guides my , lray ;
And beams of graoe from heavenward sent.
Dame my path with constant (lag:
Steubenville, Ohio.
For the Presbyterian Benner and Advocate.
Thoughts of Comfort
YOB: CaltlB7lA.N PILGRIMS WHO ARE OFTEN
WITHIN THE WALLS OF "DOUBTING
CASTLE." •
Number 4.
Do you fear the SWORD ? "The angerof
the Lord enoampeth around about then' that
fear him, and delivereth them." Trust ye
in the Lord forever, for in the Lord jeho-
Nati is everlasting strength. .We may ham
to endure oppression and suffer wrong :fipm
wicked men, but there is a day coming when
all these- grievances shall be settled: if
God be for us, who can be against us. In
the hour of danger, the heavenly host, are
about us, to defend and deliver us. And
what can separate us from Christ; shall
tribulation, or distress, or famine, or naked
ness, or peril, or sword? "Nay," says the
Apostle, "Nay, in all these things we are
more than conquerors."
Yonder, in heaven, standing at this, very
hour before the throne is a great multitude
of. redeemed. ones, who: once suffered, and
wept, and prayed ' . upon the, earth:.
These thilongh , teryttridTe thilin ,
Thesefrom greatr aitlietion qame;, •
Now before the throne of God,
, . .
Sealed with•hisi Almighty DaMe.
Clad in raiment pure and white,2 ,
Victor palms in every band; , •
Throngli'tileir dear Redeerner's migli .
More than conquerors they stand.m
Now they,are out of "Doubting'• Cutler
and-in the light of heaven s , and see that all'
things have worked together for their ever- -
lasting good.
And what think ye of these' things?
'Have you faith to believe these proinises ?,
Are you at last to be classed among the
fearful an/ unbelieving." - , •
Oh, employ living, active faith;, thie,will
'unbar the gates of "Doubting
..peatie."•
Come out with joy, and aa 'you com e, behold
the armor which your great Captain' has
provided for you; here it is, stand sma r m . ,
waive it: - .
••c: - ••(.5..; ".ft: •
Gird" your lonia with ' this girdle of truth,
put on this breinit-plate of righteousneas, •
land on your feet the preparation of the GOB
.ipel of peace; and here, above all,, take the
t helmet of' ea.ivation, aod- the 7 sword of the
_Spirit, and forget not to pray ritigan,, with
all prayer and supplication, and watching
thereunto with all perseverance.
And now, are you clothed with this whole
armor of. God? Then. be strong. in :the
Lord and in the ,power of his might. Fight
it good fight, finish your course, keep the.
filth, and in •heaven is there not laid np for
thee a Nom or RIORTEOUBNESS, which'
the-Lord shall give unto thee. And as we
march, along, we:will sing :
"Joyfully, joyfully onward we move,
Bound to the laud of bright spirits above ;
Angeliosltorieters , sing as,we Comer.
Joyfully, joyfully haste to your home , !
Soon, with.our pilgrimage ended below,
llome to the land of bright spirits we go;
Pilgrims and strangere no more shall we roam,
Joyfully, joyfully resting at home "
'Nor the Presbyterbin Banner sad Advocate.
Revival in Parnassus Church. .
itrX. DAVID MCKINYEY—Dear
We wish to state to the religions riblic,
through your valuable paper, what the Lord:
has done for us, ~our., destitute condition,
as a Church and people, in providing us
with a pastor, and in the very incipiency of
his •pastoral labors, making tie heart, as
well as the hearts of 'the people of his
charge, greatly to rejoice in adding quite a
respectable number of persons to the church.
Having heretofore had but the half of a
pastor's time with us at Parnassus church,
and said pastor having left us, we not having'
any place to connect with, and wishing'still
to have the regular ministrations of the Gas
pe] continued with us, called a meeting to .
devise, same plan of action, and at that
ineeting r(4iolved to make an 'effort to ob
taiu a pastor for fall time. We imme
diately went to work, and with the. Wes
sing of God accompanying, us, succeeded
in making up a salary which we thought
would justify us in making
.oqt a call,
for the labori of 'Mr. Daniel W. Toln
send, a licentiate of the Presbytery. of
Blairsville; be having ; just completed
his course at the Western Theological
S,minary. We proceeded to have said
call moderated, and presented; and it has
been accepted. Mr. Tawniend not yet
being ordained, the Rev. k' William
Taylor, of Tarentum, was invited to hold
our Communion for us, at which, ,nineteen
persona vire received, thirteen;.64 whom
were eta iligriinittiob, and six on certificate.
We wonlifsiafe, -for the encouragemiint of
others, that,when our former pastoiliett
every thing looked dark and discouragflogr
yet we believe God had a blessing in store
for us, and to his great and glorious name
be all the praise. We would state that no
new " machinery" was put in operation, in
in order to accomplish the end we sought.
A prayer-tneeting was established, and
it was well attended. Also, .our inept
ings in church were blessed with attentive
Audiences, we having Otroggh the Winter
had a number of students preaching for us,
whose services have been blessed, we fondly•
hope. . ' 13. ,
tf
rim our Lona= Correspondent
,
The Politi cal Situation—The Indian
, - QuestiOn--!The
Oaths Bill—Sir F. Th'esiget.' and Lord Stratford
on the jewish,Queation T -Beligious Annincrearies
—Spurgeon and Glithrie—Two Murderers--7'ha
Bible and ProtettaniisraTontrasted teith Popery, ,
_ in the .Condemned Cell--Haunts. , of Infamy in
London—The Social Evil, and Female Missiona
ries—Shelley and his Writings—Dickens and his
Readings--The Maynooth Question and Parlia
ment—China and the Four PoFere 7 Barly Mar
riages--Why Decreasing ' •
1858.
The POLITICAL SITUATION of the 'Gov
ernment ie' Still , One griiat 'Uncertainty.
In 'fact the -country is .without is Govern
ment, in c .thp i constittitienal sense of the
term. `A."277,2nOrtiy only supporta the' Gov
erninent; grid fiance the fatter is obliged, in
order td retain office, •)rield.in matters
when there is pressure:- Thus the Govern
mentlndia Bißhes been abandoned, although
Disraeli took oeolisien .pass ; on, it a ; warin
eulegium, Which brought' up Lord 'Paltrier
ston, who laid that ' it' reminded 'him'of an
Irish wake, - andthe , Celtic 'lament' over the
corpse of a dear friend, "Och hone,why did
.you die ?" Resolutions on which an India
Bill is to be based, are to be moved. Lord
3: Russellauggested this course. 'Rut then,
while acting tosierd - the ministry as their
dictator, and as " A Russell. to the Rescue," .
(as Mr,,,Ponch represents him in one of his
graphic, illustrations, with n grappling-hook
drawing np the droirii4 Disraeli ) ) Liiid
JOhn, notivithstanding, does not seem likely
'to agree to those resolutions tabled by the
.Government. Palmerston's, • is: still
nave, and I dare.say is kept ,ready,for a col-
Web ) it is ,hoped, may overthroy the
Parby fiabinep.
r The Ditha'Bill iliio*preseni another
Thl§ Commons have ropeatedlypiased
Bill'for - the admission of Jews into Par
.lhunent. , also, has the eon
etitnency of _the . ..ok of London' ilented
Baron Rothschild is. one of their repreienta
tives. The oath - 4 3 (na Air:tired' the
words, • 44 upon the true faith of. os - Chris
tian;" This hers the door of ,the Legisla
ture against the Jews, although it is a his
torical fact that the oath was trained against
the claims of the Pope, as a foreign poten
tate, and that by it the Jews were never in
tended' to be excluded. • The House of,
Peers, it was half expected,. Would relax
their
Mr.
to, the especially •
as Mr. Disraeli, the leading man in the new
Cabinet, has always voted in its fever. 'But
when the question , three:daYe iiiii;)came on
for , debate. in the Lords, the new,-Lord Chan
cellor,. (late. Sir . F. ,Th esiger,. of the House
of Commons,) true .to his conscientious pen
viotions, and in a speeiiii;
, *cif great' abilit,i;
moved the rejection of n'elinse which would
I have -admitted members of . .tbe .• Hebrew
H. 0.111 .1
family into the Legislature. . Lord Lynd
hurst replied to his speech in like,* acute
and striking way, and 'ford Stratford de
liecieliffe took a siniilai position, saying that
when in Turkey he Wad urging toleration on
the Turkish. Government, he always felt that
the,exclusiou.of :the Jews from ; the Legis.
Isture
. England, was a reproach on the
gronnd of oivil and'religious liberty.
Thitiiiiniellai argued that Cliiistianity
is pirt'lifid 'parcel of the law cif 'the'land ;
and )forther told the , ;Lords' that if the
bQuae. was to yield to, pressure , from ;; the
gods of Commons, aga inst, its s convietions,
iVironld be debased into a mere registration
'office. The result was that the '" un!Chris-
tianizing l ' of the Legislature; aeitis termed
by •Shaftebury; Chelmsford, Marlborough, -
and• :other „earnest: Churchmen, was ,oriee
more practically *greeter:4, by "jute
jority. .The Times is very ingry,iindurges
the-Co'niniiins to . Maio this alestinilnes
tion, and force on through it a resignation
of the Cabinet. It is.. a,questkon, however,
which involves many other considerations
besides these of mere party politics. The
theory. °fie' Chtiroh"Establishment is largely
:mixed up,with it.,' It is a groats travestie,
surely, on the..Anglialt.:,Churoh, system ,,, that
while the,, yw, ,forhtils . Romitniets
~tQ.
buy
Churchlivinge; and' to *exercise 'patronage
over them, Jews do actually present alergy
mon,to betiefiees in their,gift. , F
Chriatiari men are diVided on t,?n,.. point.
The example , of the Vnited'States . is'quoted
by the 'Timei, as also the - fact that 'Parlia
ment has sanctioned 'Constitutions . for our
own Colonies, by which Jews are admitted;
and oases -:were .quoted, the of
parties in , the Legislatures rif ,Cape -
Australia, respectively, of this Jewishper
suasion. .
• •
The MAY MEETINGS are about to begin.
In fact the series known as such 'always
commence toward the end of April. , - The
Baptist. Missionary Society. had Ate manual
sermon preached two days ago,, hy,,,,
Spur'eon, at the Surrey litualt . ,lsaV and
this morning D octor
, Gntlirie , now ice
fAssed' among the' 'fret t iTeitisfiers
not the first,) of the day, lidvoottee—the
cause of the:Wesleyan Conferenoe'Xission,
at the chapel in City„ Road, where, john
and Charles. Wesley ministered in 0141811
times.
GREAT Carat* j httn i .),e2fil.reeentlY Per
petrated. and the landlatio &ten defiled with
'blood. In one case; atilt 'Portsmouth
killed, by a kind of air kiir4itirlby fulmina
ting mercury, his own brother.'.2Au. another,
a husband, in a fit of joalousy,„,,killed,his
wife. Two other murders, Al, foreigners,
arrested the painful attention of the nation
In the One. ease, a German committedia rob
bery in London, was followed by a : detective
officer to Hamburg, and arrested. ,Return
ing on board ship, he inflicted on the police
officer a fatal wound. In the other case, a
young Sardinian came to London, intending
to emigrate to the United States. Fie was
licentious in his habits. He found his
money almost exhausted, and formed a foul
reiolve, with the view of recruiting his re
'sonnies.: London vice _latterly has become
more ''daring in West 'Ea "'quarters,' by a
number , of Frennh women, who have
.obtrutlaajthernselves in,;Regent , Str,ent,.and
in the neighborhood of Leicester ~Square.
S.L.C.
=1
"ONE THING IS NEEDFUL:" "ONE THING HAVE I • ESIRED OF THE LORD:" "THIS ONE THING I DO."
PUBLICATION OFFICE, GAZETTE BUILDING, FIFTH' STREET, ABOVE SMITHFIELD, PITTSBURGH, PA.
FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, MAY 29, 185 S.
These vile creatures have haunts, we cannot
call them homes, where they have male
" bullies," and companions. This young
Sardinian made up his mind to murder dhe
of these women, and for this purpose se
leoted from amongst a number on the streets,
one who appeared to have a large supply of
costly chains and jewelry. Daring • the
night, he 'liaised her, throat whilnshe slept, ,
strangled her, and made hie eseape e carrying
aisay,ibiS.Pfundir.L ' ' He: repaired tho
man; .h9te1..,w4r,.0,1
took away irisJuggage and havnig sold. the
spoil and paid X.,4opdskigi iiihnev, be wen p
on board a ship bolint.for. New-To t ykt . s eem s
; iugly.securo. .. The mind. kad droppeillinin
to Qtavesend but die. offioprs of jqtice
were upon the, murderer's tyack,,and he i was
by .the nails of miserable victim, . and
with part , ) ok,:lbi3, priiperty to*: d :,
the trial,. the heeper.of, ft,behsinss; &MI:OP*
of theatime 'class, gave Bich uvidenee,as to
,throw-a.bideous .light.on,ithearbautata.o44o;
famy in theinktropolis, eo ae to startle and
horrify. tha Puhlio. e l; t. is i hopod that thtoil
thus. seireitledr-may
The great «social evil," too, is about to -bs
assaulted by moral - Mau; additional tetholma
' already iwiexiSteilief.: 3AE Siliitt:TT is being
inatitutedi....ata
about to deal with their 'fallen siAke7 l • and
g'l4, ifila4,o 4 l4ion
;•Witliqgneas tc4grfe.eta.,4-
4 .110, did :so, in. da e,days,of„ his i flesh, And ; such
as these •still may, enter ..the kingdomlfe be?;
fore". , the proud. Pharisee: - te%
Bti 'ltatift` tiro • Protestaritism•' • Were,
011 ;with Abe ,German ur
derers. Both wereexecuted.... The former
was a nominal Protestant, but practicaßran
'infidel." Netrertheless, the ''pure" Word Alhf
Clod, plied'nith earnest
tiin . , his nonne4nps,.,irld
heart, and with unusual tokens .of:thegenu-
Aimpenitence, and • the -living faith 4af- a Inew
'ariiiiture he met '_death with atiaoidintry
lialliess'indSOurage. "
.4 1 4 3 .1 1 . 1 d9,1, 1 4 ? At
-histreligiou.; One , ofthe Sheriffs of, the pity
placed a Bible and Prayer-Book in his cell,
tandcbroughtianiatalian ..Christistwgentleman
toconversehint ahopt his soul. But
'olabiell*Ner 'Worthy son,'' and 'a cry of
proselytism was iaiiled, most nnj The
Cardifialdispatehat,o4lie man's cell, first
Prioyt; and then, at, his requests-a
second.,. T t he poor, wretch, however,-,contin•
ue'd e fake" etatninentelill'Apost . the
faint•`Mein:me? (he'd - ' acknOWlidged — hia
crime, olunglo:lhe'pri'ests hiefriterolia
sore, (the men-who , had• put away the Scrip;
ArL. oB fr9 l3l - kiP4l) al:ljel4 ; terror.
Stich is a Oiliarke of f ßouie, Her, opiatei!
will pot away" aVikll4 Whereas true Chris
dimity, coating in -power even to a ninideier,
leaves'hinn truly " filitived " for be
cause he haereceived:absolution frole Him,
whose sole, prerogative it. in: to, .forgiye l sins,
still II - as:Te
9/2e pn , ties,. oycn,to (c nn„er
take the ' most des perate' citiles."
SuNAZY, 4 . 11 4 11) , HIS. WRITINGS, have re
°Clap cooks . promineutly , before the public,
two nor works. -The ,one is by _a, Mr.
Trelawney, his " Recollections Of Byron
and 'Shetley," and the other is by Charles S.
'Middletori2on " Shelley andititsWritings." '
Tic is impossible -to read morks like these
withont,a fueliug,of Tre-
11a+a~ney,.rr the intimate , associate of Byron,
slialtiveile tliemorbid Pride, tind the Aelf
ishrisas, thit strange b e ing,
wlifeatiftai - ldrvartedi4iiale Win falleri
an
get i. As , to.Shelley, , the interest in his char
aotsr and, a7itime .. was recently much en
lanced' in , that 1D travi3ling in Hampshire
I found , mrelf nies.lieetedly, driving past
blith•place, Hour after, when
.tlirorigh' the 'old Cathedral of
,Ohrist 4buireit, _standing before; his .ceno
tapli....Tlim „Mirth-place is, an ancient Hall,
,
or Manor liorms *ths,residence of an old' .
English faui1,,,,41 . p, pc, ~a. , , r ecent period,
godlcas gayet y litid Jetilty !nem, to ; acme
iearnea - pefform
ii n d ( 1 ) n tor. 1 ,
the purpose.' - A 'brother Shellejii.(ne*.
growing old,) the proprietor;,lnuclord .of the<
mapail, rout. From Akbp_gispllese r home,
phoney wept to Igtos, the nceto lettisi the Uniiiiidek,heies
eapell'eJ 'The
:daring infidelitY of liupoeinsis well kno‘;n,
.and)yet;in Christ is a marble moau
.inent .kt his memory.; It it apiece:of soulp
sme,,beautifol...,lt ishite m inarble. It
''pieiiente the itis/Y of 'iho.ditswou7d Peet, as
digivi t faith ` - troi4;:lh'C' * Mediierianean,
Which 'his 'hair:di:meat in sterm, and
he And , . others' iperiehed. - There is:an 'in-
Atiptiop, . on . a, slab,
.dirrn..frorn his ,own
writings, but . thewe not,one. word expres
sive of faith' 'rind The .
Byron 4 w s ed iejeottid by thePean
and Chapter of Weitudiaker Abbey. That.
of Shelley,, from, local familyinflnenoe, is:i
Q 1 Pro! 1 • • As, ..isr;generallY I,kgrli)
Bron,and'hil friondconkumel the ,ty t ' dy
on a funeral by re . The scene thus de-
ECM
' ' - Frankiiiderilie andrivine, and 'shah:ether things as
could be procured, to giveto.the - tieresholly a more
,classical charmiter„w ere ,throwu , upon, t the pyre,
and' the whole
,weie, soon clieloped in, flame, pro-„
&tieing altogether; scene of extraordinary beauty. ,
There was the hurnittg,pyre,, with ; a, small group
of Mends standing.hy in unspoken sorrow. There
was one - great poet vititelinlig, W'ere, the' fiery
spirit .of another. passing awtty:On , its own proper
element; and there was ,the One
_beloved friend,.
for whom Shelley had done so much, 'WhOse silent
:anguish'almost unnerleit him for theiad specta
cle be was called upon to.witness. ,
" As soon as the flames ' could 'be extinguished,.
. •
Mr. Trelawney, with indefatigable zeal; proceed
ed to gather ,up the remains in,order,to bear thein
to Mrs. Shelley, and he.atlingtlititoemlliefiiiii her,
his hands scorched and•blistered,With7lOshiall;
containing the .burnt ashes of the poet:,
A . curious Opincidence happened in compalin
'with tbis ceremenY. ''."
..) , Thert the fiamen were extinguished, and: they
proceeded to
. gather up the poet's ashes, it was
found that . eiery 'pare of him - was consitmed'ei
cept his heart, which was untouched.
Let Skepticism deck oat, its victims as it
, ,
may, not their i'sst eg" . ghastly,'
at the beet ? , i
i":irtte, slangs,
measure, that 'Men dio; lives Etter
.them," yet I de not `belhiit' that the irrititiO
of either Byron or Shelley everoise thit ma-
Alga as t ioftitepoe .over . young, MOS MOW, that
Ahoy did:tweety. or. .th,irty„yeaxlL l ; I he
&Panic' S 4 i/ 6 " 1 !)'. is not • l!kely, trust,, to
'gc;me bite fashion again. 3. ,
• - ,
'" RneDilien •= lOK.ENS, of his
1401 1 / 2 . 4 'Ole ii'CriOkSt i oce
is Tb Oiiiitieti," and ""Phi'
!ChtitiMit norw eioiting -greati!
attention biro.7:.44kniet4 YiaelPrOaellt; as,
one of a great gathering assembled to listen
to the reading of the "Cricket on the
Hearth." It was a scene of much interest.
Probably two thousand persons were assem
bled, at St. Martin's Hall. Mr. Dickens
stood on a platform, at a small table. His
figure, as fully revealed by a gaslight over
head, is slight and elegant. His full mous
apd beard over tin chin, give him
something of a foreign aspect. He, has a t ,
'fine eye—the hue of ruddy health
!ger! on
. his cheek, and his hair still retains,
its hrown polor.
10% readia,g, it was
was -marked by .peouliar,.,,
l
± 6l OO/1-44:41'
iataavaturai ikaorhia own family Oirola.l I Thiwm.
sefibtltty of votoe;'the eat eeetve eye, and
"t t ASt{ ll 4 ... v. d t e *A i %
°or topto , ..e emotions .
:gfi;„ 1 1,5t. t .00, 0 4; At, WAtift.l.Y.
Hthetypoturribie , gra; the read is face was
I ,11401bastanko r ogy o:llipitoti;jliu s aiikiiitalit 4-
1 1 101 ea tifiga t 04 ti S ian d . q*O4C.iffadd. l4 o.ol -1
,mahlagermillaikt:
was .rather onatof , defeat than unsound t eac h
. •g',3li4: .
whijOh*.pknt,.ilitttect xith.'',#o,:peraote 7of
17iteantaiiinif
it*, tiOn
I.iod ,, adiamottaiont of. our natu r al *taw and
. • "
. .
1r
::;•TheAYNOOTH , `QIIBSTION came ; before i. -
the''Aikettile Oronnions,oneie inoti;liiii r tivefi•
tke motion • of
'040, 1 170 4 .4 1 4; 7,
the . , grant, was, rejected a4inippiity„lof
no
tittY 7 fiVe.;. ,Tbe . Tories . .beingn7ai.ot will i!
dietnrb t4ekk:positi'on
Many would` hive don,: for
Aka eaa n re. . 'Mho puii,Wl,4 if a t em di n
are equally unsoand.on tbe . 11#:cation. " The
Times says, "it is. not a gnesiten of con.
'lle. ll o o 9,;,,b l 4.° o n.iPtginit* l ! AV 4o. PdiOlt „
is wiakedly petted , and pampered , still:
IN .013;01A.; decided progross ,seenis i biang
made toward an early settlernedt , of , differ.
enoes. Yob had been degrided;bi the Em. s .
Poro?', and: funoto: l !,!ft;4P9inte,a - .. 4
man of arronlightened and liberal character.
doinan6 `of the ,COMiiiisiOna6;Of
the forK.PCrrers, Ameripa; Ertgland;yr . kkite,
and Anoka,' had been successfully deli vered
in:*44i3;:lit l oßt ; ehufotil
London,. two d ays distant,iii• - tbeintenor.,)
Thise were!,tO;bi,:fOilr.zard
eds.A.once, to Pekin. A 404ft:10)01g,
Amid *lth Curiosity, marielthe.receptiOn,
in the greit city above mentiiiiielVdt the !,
French and English officers: alleVds , ilibpe
and pray that " a great „
will ere long be - opened, `nop;:fotrii . ,r 00:. i.
pierce, but. Christianity. I , ' , e ver
EARLY MAIRILIAGEIt au . ,growing out or
fisiiion here,
,and it is avedathst"therlxr:
house-keepinisiimiatelitiiiiikoMeits;;;
of 1r0t...0g 'women - . being! t.no'lligtf„44 , sif, w o- . P.
isi the oaitnse....,7lleat iirhat
Blackwood says: ' • ." '
One of the great social evils of age , -
'sated to be the relucbmce,of our young Men tO.:
early marriages. They won't marry now, we are t '
,told, as they nsed to do, and'ciught to dO ori'.£3(Xl
a year. Depend upon it, in many :an d many a:
case it is not the odd hundred or two 'Vint is•
,Wanting -it's the'attiection. We have'llset that .
joyous and familiar-intercourse between:neigh-
bore' families, where young people's' individuali-,
dire had space and , dpportunity to deielop, Ahem
selves, and heart met heart. Our modish Cupid
has overstrung his bow—his 'arrows don't. hit
holm. Young ladies hideaway the key of„their:
hearts so 'carefully that nobody thinks it ,worth
looking for. Who is to choose "the one'"'out 'of'
bery of proper_behaved damali `like, a row of
hollyhocks, differing only in height; and shape,
and color l They all look:alike4dkiss alike, talk
&dice, WA and , for,imf'thing that
appears to the'eontrarY, think:alike and feel alike.
Why, rah aolfoioe brae
' .
slot eflidiberate. jziten-'
-14A:Ahe
nerve.to
vonterempon it.T.,,tioetroadentliey calcu
late the probableoblitehete bakers'. bill before
tfie'italre",isnokii Dtail„tigicy,that
'I like's oinictal4old bird, not tele caught
with chaff.. .1' take , airthe expouent'oclwhat my
own feelingsiroUld..beifl Were young, „and ,open
as , ' once was to the conviction of bright eyea my
nephew,•Taolc liawthcirne, not long home from •
the'Oriines;',lii,feet one, independent, hafry, as a
Ski terrier, brave as a lion, (clasps for Alma and,
Balaklava;) gentle as a greyhound, • and I 'should
impressible, deoidedly.' Missed
,most," said he, in his openlhearted, .Unabashed
eimplioity; "was the sight'ofla .woman's
Whereupon T spoke I wonder,' jack; you don't ,
marry ;, it w ould
, make you a happier man than : .
living half your' days in the , smoking room of the
Why not pick up a lliaa:o l 4,,
aia . set up, the family name again at the old.ma
' nor. 2" " Wel), Ss. would," said Jack, interjebt
iiveli,betWeen the Friffs.dt.hiis i etagy,„?*X9o there
taretno,girlis now—they're an all-yoing ladies;
astoleme marrying a young lady r
#:ltskTi Po -01..V.48,10011047.
*tab'. fr '!".•:.3.3 if: '1.52,1 0 1.1E1E • • •
•
The General Aspembl7 . o
• DAV-111Soladmiei
.~liwf:tbftAl J.
The General Assembly openbd•wij4ieg7eorebytae:Slodor
ator. " 7.44::•: ;
. .
The :Minutes of the preeedlogodey. weetetereit.una ep ! ,,
proired._zo
The Judloial Committie reportedDi die OM Of the sinir,
tir.,Thatcher, of the Synod of Al . .c,
Re!. Mr. TZary, (for the . broth's, ,
agement of this case, wlio was:AcCpropistO APlaiiilAd• at
! lapel!, end said that the only. sitilo:n kieire:eeright fur;ls to
define the status of Mr. 'Thatcher. t •
Rev Dr. Bailey replied. •
7bending the dlecturelon the hone. for. the ordever. the 47
1;
and it was pealed over without Tulips;egt9on.
Walter Lowris, Searetery the, Board,iik.koyejga,
.Mons, then prefented the Alpinist Itepereof Unit *anti.
FORRIGN MISSION& . • • • .
•
11931.13110:18 ON THI AHItIIAUEzPOIT. !'?
Itesoisld, That we are called , upon , s a Church,' •
the supreme Judicatory ,thereof, to return . our (spec al
,thanksgiving to God for the favor which he .hite.shoWn
in this department .of the labor, ,which his providence Mid
grace have committed to our hande—is t hat, in,the midst of,,
: en,nnparalieled monetary disaster, the receipts pf,otir Far-.
elfin' Board hive been largerithrin in , any former 'year,.and
this. without agency beyond the, regular ectione,of Abe, ;
inferior judicitories of the Church, and ,the epontaneous
olleringe ~.cf the people. ?d. In, that, while, his hand has •
been laid heavily upon us in the melancholY death of our ; .
beloved brethren in India, the same hand has been strached ; ',
out for the deliverance of the great body of our missionaries
and their familiee--and, Bd.' In that the laintaiy effect upon,
the people at large, of.the death of those who,have, fallen
victims to Mahommeden and.. Pagan cruelties,,in awakening, ,
the Church to deeper humiliation and more .earner prayer .
for Zion's increase, has so aignally, illustrated a, proverb of.
primitive timea,.that " the blood of themartyre, is the seed
,of the Church." ,
Resolved, That While we are encouraged by the eonthated
liberality of the people in .their contributions to Foreign . ..
Marione, we feel called upon to admonish the churcees to
make greater sacrifiem in this regard; in view of thelinpol",
tact considerations presented in the Annual Report of the .1
Boardpvia.:. Ist. That they-may repair the great
Mined in' the destruction of the bliakm property- in
amounting in the "aggregate to $1 . 60,000, only .$25,000 of
which have been refunded by an asseesnamt of the' British
'government upon the city of , lodlana, tinder' , circumstances
however, which do not apply to any alter care, and that the
Board may promptly enter, tomes their own language,'"t he '
'new fields for missionary enterprise In portions of the earth_
heretofore inecoessible," and .that' they may impair. "the
prospective. enlargement of the missionary area in those:
which have heretofore been but partially occupied;"
therefore, it le earnestly recommended to all inferiorlydice-
torle44o. takeaochsystionas shall brit* fbrth ler this cause -
the uniteCtlystematio, and generous charities of „the ehoreh.
until all the tither. shall tie broight into the storehouse, and
every member of Cheat's- body shall faithfully exemplify
that grace of the Spirit exhibited' in free will offerings to
Resolved ; ;That we highly. approve .of the .aotion, of the
Poard in giving .the Rffevn. Missionary, gratuitous drools
tion in 4 ell our Sabbath• Schools' which make Celltribuidenear
1 the Board, and that, alLokurch Sessionethe. and-,theya 'are •
hereby recommended to aid fixate workothatathe Children."
of the entire Church may early become interested in the
Foreign Nisei mary cause, and be trained in the duties of an
active Christian charity. '
Resolred, , That the great loss of property eustained by
our Board in the Sepoy revolt is no discouragement to our
future work in India, and that it Is the manifest duty of the
Church at once to repair these desolations, and with this
view, while as 'a general rule we should rely upon regular
ant rteady rather than special contributions to all oar
Wards, the General Assembly, under the peculiar clrenme.
stances of the present case; should eat-needy urge upon the
churches, and in particular upon individuals whom Clod'
has bleesed with -wealth, contributions to s special fund"
which the Board is endeavoring to retie for this purpose,
now amounting to over $11,000: which contributions, how.'
ever, should in no case interfere with the regular collections '
for the ordinary and progressive operationo of the talssion2'
, .
~
'Reseleid,lThat the report of the Board be. a pp rov ed,, and,
referred to the Executive Committee on pliblication. • . ''
per an Aiiistin'Oto . f iiihriCispart . ein oirtiOnitiiage.] .'
Mr: Leiria then spoke ibrsavilimr, and; gave a detailed •
•and moat, lucid secount of the opwatiOne of. the Board during,.
,the past year. Rarely ina li* time can. t have :been the:
gotnifortuno of tbet audiencii to listen to such a. narrative
of martyrdom, endto;sueltexamjsles .of lertitisidemortby of
the earliei days of the Christian Church; aeweriritinstratett-4
inAlos.dpatb;o onotiregthdottoonyerts se iseelLaa 01141 m ri.
call • nep i epailWoh
PP i litififfigeliftg, the hn-
m°l*lnF; or P,ThnP 1 408,.:‘ 44 . 8 Pb?"t . -oPaPKili? ll ,lf 1 4 16 ''' .
I.oltted• .., • .•' . „:, , -'. ', 4 ', - „
~,,
a 'said' In the Winthydne"Yeaie, ditriiiiiitith ami He.
ports have been inthiciitted - ,tve.hairOznedis'ilid discovery that..
_missionary work isjiesew stationary, ,If • it 4100840 advance. :,
'it always goes. backward. • Thet work consists, of three; die- •
thrthntharmoniousffiranchee : ,let. Preaching the Wcird •
•
as soon es the. language. is. sufficiently mastered, to.. enable
miadonar les •to be underet vd. • 24.• Translating .and, print
. 14 the-Bible. * 3.l.•The education of the -young natives in
boarding schools,for the Specific .objeut.Of raisins up a.native‘ -
agency,. To erIPPIY,India alone:would require one hundred,
thousand ministers, and. China • would ',need . not less-than
' -three iindred- thousand., . They never can he „Obtained in s . I,
Aoierice; and. these necessities can only.be supplied - by the:
countries ' themsel see. ,He spoke: et. the. terrible ; financial- •
straight° to which . the Board ,has • been. reduced to meet..
• damaeds of the holiest character. • , A,. nativemlesionery in
nfrieie . 1 .11 Whiteman:all ant his,golor,l' ready and meet ad-, .
mleably, fitted for the,work—tt took.tho.Board three. weeks •
1 toinake up for hiai support -the andbmensable: . Bumof $600. ,
. Mr., hiattoon-,-. in-Siam, ,the.!finest • Blaine...scholar- in : the
,World, has. completed.tho.transiation -of the Serlptures, of.
tracte r and ;of achool. booker :: If. We, sent him. no printing- ;s
,piess orlother means. to print; what usetto:esuciffilinselttl ,-
, Yet'alljhe.Boarticonld Am was .to; send :him , the 1 prontiesiply
relying on:--they know not what reesourCeto.meet. the, prom- a:
lee-, Such expeuseis are.eften ;cefiled: at ,as • needing jusffll-1-
,intion.,, Preaching is thought to be,the great and parainountl I
work of the missionary; but is not the,ustsof the:Bible ands ,
, thodiseemination. ofs religions knowledge.a process .of, de-; , .
cysringthe will of choffito, men? '... And-!e preaching orally •••
• anything morelJiver.. toipreach requires traveling, which I
in all those countries is expensive...l'M/W*llre no inns; the
people dare mot receive you into,their bonne., -nor .give you •
;foal...They dare ,not -give you drink. -The glass that :has
been polluted by your lips mast be broken, and only- metal 7
.cesissele can, in , ny. way, ever tie made fi t to , be used. again.- •
Missionaries mustgo,asin .apostollo times, by•two and: two..•
They :mu* teke • with, them tents, ,provisions, and. all else -.
•
,they. need tomaintain life ,‘. and- these, require . a• team, and , '
„xe expensiv.ein.such countries._ In Clain& andin Siam they •
• can avail themselves of the camele, batthertare thousands - •
I oflocelitiee which these do .not penetrate; end there they •
ninetteaveionloot. ... They can no where title . Without' addl.
, - I:. ,These,detalin of.expenditure rater mostfy.sto small. innds ;
but there are so many-of them that they exhaust thetrese- -
*nry,l t despite . ,any :supplies -hitherto poured. Into . it. The •
' contributions of churches. since the disuse of, agents to-col- •
lect money for missions tress their, have slowly but steadily :
increased ::linVit Wastion &fill fact that nine hundred and -
.19rty ; cth prchis t .with, four bandr.ed and :thirty-soven . minis- - •
tees, and sixteen, .thonsand..ene. hundred , and ,twentycight
• centui an kali te„have;•during one.whole year, not contributed
one cent. Were every member of I oannhurch to contribute
Jusitja cputajnonth,- our receipts mouldlave been increased -
by 85,000 er $6,000. Were they.„to -contribute one cent a
tweak; it•wenltlprodnee a fund of $20,000 • - . .
.-.V.E. xi.; the contributions ,of Presbyterian churches, for ••
Avery; Perlaosei: the; amoont actnehy. given to the Foreign '
Missions . amounts to barely four per cent.. . . ,
He spoke of incidents . of recent martyrdom in India. A -
nntivo missionary Heal° the mouth of a cannon, and cat to -
, niedeateith'sWorili'aft* the gun had twice missed` fire. A
'mother andter 'Witt. liiff: to 'ffie . and remain two days 'nn
linrieiE, at laitliinglitte W - itreim 'kV men of the lowest
caste. The •ipinker'e 'enin -son was mentioned in this eon.
nexion,. in the *amplest wOrds ' th at ' could describe his,
- :dineitiing,,WhilOnainacled, in a*Chtnese sea; but it electri- '
• ifed'thliAssenibly,.ainothitig but' genttitib' feelings' can do,
and the entire house Melted into floods iiiiriMattibleteare. '
• He bild'of the personallefelinese•Of fiffir . laffieti 'who were *
victlina; of forte Men who've not iriidelled - by 'the • •
greatness
petite 'excellence cif ' any font. brothent In this . Assembly.
When taken tbey-thier away aliWeeperi;;Offerleg no reale
'tineer; ' Mi.' MOLaiii,' an Indian 'planter, offered il1ta0,000: for'
'their -minion, and ruled' -all 'Other' pessible means to save
'them; bittihe cry
,win,-. we•waint not money, 'btit blood P , ..
finebaud 'did' Wife WeretieirarmtO eriii,essid-thiryisig their • ..
influitiOney. were marched to - the lilacs of ;butchery, betchery, and
feceired the crosiii-Of . stiartyrdffixi. 'lint We'tieed not grieve. -
•lii•tlieltanibitien - these tliffigsthre 'deseribed like 'a' hiakey •
Maritlisiii•Xpredienv,rand” we - are'nuinied 'by the weed of .
Him who pertain; such things, that "the wrath - Of 'Mast •
Shall - Prilie , tan; ind• . - the - remainder.' thereof 'he . .trill re-'
strain." '"Rd by nearer nor' liy *might, hist . loi tny'ffearit, l
with this Hord." • •-• '
On a motion, to adopt th e Beport,ltillffliSiiOdilTbe ,
Church ii ess entially a nilestonary Orgiffilsidien; 'llile its''
.chlineter f te`gOßlto all theiroild 'and preich . ,,thiettohlissi to"
every eteittire.; It is the - Bret inethictorik'neW-biwri, soul •
'to gather in citheeioithi; ' What motion lith tha'heifsilth of ' •
thnbody„ end iiirmAse Of the tainitles is - to 'the well-being • -
Of the intellect; missione era to the well-tieing Of the Church. ,i
.3leoattlay!'s wonder at the sadden amid tied songsietien of , '
the ReferuittiOn, would never .hava • bean' ietnrded* in, his
'history tail ha understood churali history us. he did' tier:flier. • '
,
.TheChnichioet hermhietobary spirit:'' • •
w
•.„, He looked On Mich ingffinmen ..in ' Ifte at it the man, ,ho ..'•
takes ale life lintiii• hand, andigdea'forth to: the . eruLV• of,, the
'arth'tO carry Gotiriel of Christ. 'He hoped this , Assam- -,
m
sly ma be hereafter distingiiishiorfer the missionary char- •
'aister•tif its present Meeting, beyifficr all that' Itive!p rec• • Wed:"
it:' "The . best bestowe d wealth is that ' . gifen . tis . this''',o • ause.
Itirne his deliberate conclusion that the highest ablovition .°..
'attainable bye mortal !tin the Goinef . ministry.' 'Ho, know''
the martyr Lowrie in the Theological Seguillary,juid he
ceffildrnor brit leek with reference' on, that ' &thee here'
, amoog,ita, whose Bowls now a glorified 'Xiint:'
," ', .'.
'kir: Painter • spokein'torme - of' ever - n. 11.4 isi: grititade of ;•
'OAS Of the missionaries Whole' murder liakbeewiefiniiid; to, ',
Be Oiled to himtie nurture, training, educatiOn'idiff hive of 0 .!
iniiiiiimil ',Haled alw a y s brought 'thir donne 'of lifte,l4ons ! , I
the moot Prominently of any, herons his Olicireti," our ivory
Mindber of it freely itiiii to this cerise:' 'Oritjahliikibtlitand't
: prohibited her Rowell means of giving, yip feehiiiinalth, - •
1144;libiiiedif ninthighe,,th earns means`i rllifieriusiii ,and 1 --
:phieied it irbiireit iris found 'Mid seemed - to - ,4ifitailOns , id- i
.mettliteiellia . wldow'ernite, ' Hrithonglit - it . eas'entlid to -4
'b . * n'Aliii heart *skin on'thiisaidid set: , 'Villein the "Heart is
stored it iilittle we . alien )xitelkons'imii* PrinriPle.' He . '"
**tied that to' member site liasiiijthlreg tollaY riothieuli- ' "
*jent
,calculated to send tie ho.oil Withnew &innate en for this ;"
'cause, Will withhold it. •-- • • ' - -•• • • . - • • ...I
: Br. Palmer. moved that th e Ref. 50. Hay, n nilielonary i'"
recently arrived - from . India; - be requested' to gife an to-"
• count of the dietbrbancesin • , . . ~.• . , . .
• A recites was tbecitisheri.• . ..- :' -, ' ',-• ' • -1 ,
' 'On raining the sasakit, r,jitly-otenpied .the; mt.,.
- tent:ion of, ,the AI esemlilly with, ik;••thsttllng-narretivauf the L.:
revolution, whioh. lint:notlittnnlnteirest-from . the re-.,
flection th at, In 'Many of 'the
.. lerribleimenes,l he bad
been a personal aniferer.•,,,, 0 „1.,..,,, ~ ~.1., :••., - ~ , . ,
. He „said. British indialamispeeed is.popnWon of notiese,
than one'hundied indiksne.,:it I. not homogentionsin rue,. ~
dengnage, nor, religion.• f The l greater part , are Idolatrous '
:Eiindoos,occiipying the . ffastere,Northern ' , and Central p0n.,.,.
Lions. -Nearly all , the rest Me Mohammed ans::Three
~.;
hun
dred years sgothe Jeenitifiref.eatablisheil their missions in„
the extreme P.outhersi • pirts, whence they, spread land
;extended into other parte, momming the dress ,and habits of„
the people, and prompting : their religion under : the,. forins.
of ..Hindooism The Perin a/length mused ia . rigid exam-.
lination to, be MOO intii,tbe conditnn of IndolCatholicism„..
which
es resulted in
, repeated Bulls-and. edicts, condemning R....,
- ~ ..After.theni thine . Schwartz and his followers, . until the .'
Presbyterian ~church, . established ,fie missions, in -,- the ".
-North-Western provinces along ,V3e, Oangee, ,up. to the. Pun- .
:.jattli, end. whin that . Was annexed :to. the, British; empire, •
' : they were Peeteot 4 4 )7:tfe?t.iloyeel*Stsist,is e.•,,• , ..1•••••`'
The distinction of caste meets thetigi*owy.tiver 'where,
and , In, recognised ,by: the• British .1 31 1fereuteut.... "lbw high-. ..
.caste • Elindooe Claim their - designt firozatbe• train . of :Brah- . .....,
tria,,beingttomeelvsse but divided:portions of himonidafter . ;,,
death they strati return into ham, lthecups of water retern:l„.
ied into its,originelreeereo_tr-;—... Is V: •• I •-.‘ .i•-, s Ilex i _
..,
_•ris
,i • He : gave an &Coolant oftheite.eulter.", - policy. ef th ellilliffnlik
:Government in. organialog armies. ofmative. tsmakelladegt4
oeille.:liffethel esSeteseo .58 to, kayo each ainbeelkiffieto tbs. : ,
other, and lifoliammedsine against them all. PrisViceialyites;,.
; the arrival of tbe . British, the . Ifol*mniedans . ruled the,, ; .
,country, ;• they destroyed the: temples,suppressed' the .pree.,
4toe of many religions rltatkandsubdted the people. - • ~....
"ninitithis iningled,popnlittioni th e..misehmaryienterpriee.. o
-,,iniceeeded In a most.remarkable.ntanner. , ,They established, .".
illehoolS,' , tranelated the Bible, tracts,-and other .ritligiOna, , ;
-hooks; said Were greatlynrcapered-inAheirwork...: . - ... • ~.,
„The. speaker" had heard, du ring hie .voyage to thiseOuntry,.
that the,itlisidenary effort In ; India has Proved a i total !fail .. ~:
tee., The same was, asserted as to .the Sandwich Islands.,
apt fbeilaatafetitents are hased,on inset icient data, andpro
"iced from• prisons hoeille to ' ndestinery. enterprises. The
, missions; y work bad stamped its infinenro upon ail-Eastern •
itjth.. But. a few years since,thoinands .annually bowed be- , !
-tbre,thei carefJugginient,rthd. Ti human life was created out !
,bernatb itupondetoris wheads.,owthe :temple of.the _idol
. hinearlydesernsd,.and tionsan sacrifice no longerpropitiates
ita.dieinity..h/ot long. einers, through all ladle,. widows
,were burn 4 upon , the-funeral pile, and . government - itself
.dared, not, interfere.. ~Now the custom. is.diented.. Infanti-
ride prevailed as,pert of the religion of the inhabitants; and
..tist.,Oroonitlea. et sbe,Gangeefe4cenect on-human Ewan.- Now
narents exhibit the natural affection:that-marks civilized
life, and cherish the offspring they,-once were taught to de- • .
etroy. It was the power of minden intluence.in .India
which eradieet.ed.theee horrid ; custom s, , ai -intlitence• which ' '
wee brought to bear upon julinchristiau governm enti eine.
; gelling the jtoVerfitira/,,contreiryto the remonstrances
of His COmpany, to cruiffi out w ith ire n b and the superslition ",'
grown strong through centuries. •
Better than this, wa•-sitio - finits of Christianization, in In
~.41.4- , such as theeolll,Our Ora country. ,!AahOraftiMe.sinCe a
Pagan prince from the Punianb visited England;-•waelprx "
. seated with a flib.le,.and became a chrietlan ; • and at Futteh- ' •
,gorli helms, given ; ,liberally of hic .weelth. to , support th e ,
Mission, tenni. --• A nother.,lndian, : a •Brahmin;-a. Pundit,
.learned in all Oriental ~egjente, a man of rank andlionois, .
.purchased a,Bible, and in .th e selfenificieney of. his learning, •
answered. it.. It • was, lbellad by his oast.% and : believed by
tote m
himself to a deMplitionuf the Wok- :But he reviewed limo .
Bible to revise his criticism, and Woe converted.,.... ...:• .
.i_• This man has now no higher ambitionthan- to go into the
' highways, end preach Christ to the . owest 'orders.::: He is '
,willing . to •
• facrifice hie : costs, his honors, his .weslth, to."
,spread the ffossini. Lifers you such men.beret-llnt thicla.,...;
not a singular case. Similar examples are found in every;,,
batsisisalter,hitnpet - ,,her c ..theted-side.,of 4.ying men; witio;,.
bat a little while beffire bait worshipped stones and reptiles '
—degraded, Morally and soclally,helow.onr conception , and"
had seen theih,'eripperted by the how of tbe_Hoeped. meet
death with composure, wilkingthro4kiti *l° 6 inY-,Ortals"
ito . a . glorions 'imnsortalityl l Di. twer - -iweed.lolgner proof that'
: linlaskmary lobar - has 9.6ooropliehed minahliandiar ' ' , ',
'• "But the militonirteeMak' , ivith IlleM the ` kitting:pines, ','
the arts and the sciences of the old world,ah 'WO, at 'Street' '
laird of igneratte;iiienlefeertain - classeirw d'aisjOaci no
i
I priailegeliliitlintridne Leine* aOsiiiiiiied • iliraiiirreini 11
MMO
87,410,4,, or et gie OZoe, SLSO per Yuri tsg E pa os p Ec i va.
Ilelifered in the City, 1:75 " " •
.
and write: Misaion• Scheeleer& scattered thrOisghent the
whole flileen hundred miles of territory occupied by 'your•
Church. Five - hundred &riffle were in the schools' of Alla.
hither]: and these yonn'g men,. convicted of the errors of ,
Paganism, go forth, not Hinderer; !et - not Christians; but
prepared, when the Spirit of trod combs down upon the land,
to be convertrxiih each numbeni ae tioniiitonish the 'Chris-
Min world.' '' " ' • i " ' .: r.
• The missionary who'h -:. aseeen an' h nth d;tlieoiisd'oflb,
highest Milne; drinking,. eli'" the eiriteis "of,
,tridlitOrtalltyilk t
water of the Getsges In which they hid bittbial tlrelifeet,
and then, under the tranfornolog intittencrteciftbirta t uttf. bee
seen these mine men direeted of their sirPerelltierrin pod ale-,
'rated to the Chriertian standard, has the strengest Proof of
the' tin th'Of the' bible, and - of the enemas of the , missionary
work. ' ' - , • .- , . ..
' - The speaker then detailed, at length. the illeicaltlM with
which the misilonarbra have to'ocintend to Iridier.'indirstiV
. ..any"' interesting - iliustrations of the. - ,Bishuilniimil argn:,..
itleutts,;and the manner in which were'Firfdtali'llern -
Irre.nol in India four hnith•ed - ErangrillMi. Preielitirs,isnd.
gatibii maul* au:o' h•giiiii; and he felt that;, e' [l4 fie'
•
not firi , aut, t. o:4-iille* the'irhble;Mradilre 'will itife dp Idol -
' he titibaked thin alinded.telhe dbittaters of Vial `microns= ' .
treat Allahribari. It was not atilretinvolvectinthe revolt,"
' hick.bo*Menceitabovit it; among this poiiulaikte . ' 'web'
`iiiiinirMoNiiiiiniderar" - The'finit"evirhinde'
c !:' • • 4 t***P wi t ikit o ..
c 04., ..
.- . . w Ama n" longing to the refitment of Befosll
litigohid: lit tide plate, ran across the parole gielend, shout!
1 ,..! "Religion '! irdigiois I • kiii`tire English I"' The Whole_
wan dlibentliid: The milt ' day anbther inglment,
4
iiii Porrad v tolire reliable, was 'found tit contain four hundred'
1 162
*en • who were concerned in the iiiiiilt; Arid they 'Were like.
wise disbanded.' Ationt the nano Mine: at liplht, liie'Cons•
:I S e tteinpted to enforce the nee of the cm cartridges,
' ' " litthAillow; their nett wee eserillge, to` the Emir,
'a i ttliteiNd;ditiol were an altitibriiinittlonqd the'ld
,o•
..bit
;' Tlieseriirlildges rife neiek need at alli 'Amt.,'
lifirts,Wdl meeiktridger4;irbibli Were catered; were Ordensid for
'li ti Lir l ati regiment' of high:cairte'snen; 'who - refused, and.
their arms. They Were - tried, 'eta 'elirhty•of the.
111 rere sentenced to ten veers ' hard labor on• the
'',' 'liFtlitiiiveee a narrative of the teirroietO *hi - eh the
M
arleirWere exposed, nearX fort'whicketlief 'dared not.
'enthilbi fiat' or exciting thershapleirin of'the natives. For:
many nights they expeptad every, moment . to be murdered..
eylnlieredthe tdrt at - limit'on' the 'l6th .of:Strne, at half.
#1.0t'9 .. P.'1l - The fort wile - filled With native troops ,' as **ell
tie s urrounded by them, intl.their 'pilrcipal hope wan to
la:event the . solit i tre.er th A Twenty ell thbusand'. etands of
!firma. '"They mined the magitine, determined to'destroy•
themselves and" the ' arta: - x ey were remised in this fort'
ltrilete..daye, with' the tiiii•morrieter at 120 0 , and 'Many
dropped don dead with apoplexy .. The Blithe ;got bold of
champagne, and ririnskrinneirs siren pompomd all the soldiery, ..
This emenglhe , midst .warlike 'soldiery in tlie World,' where
I.lie limit spark o4gtitleve"exeltid lezettetS*_teeeteete.' In
air his lira he tier's''' . Witlieged at agony of despair "at ,
cramped itself onlin tag4i. "For lung nights IheY"eipeCted.
every instant to be lintrtlO rei l: n andlitele only prayer Was fort
the' light'Of the Mr:riding, 'Siiertor came at last le the term;' 'Of fifty EnroPean trbopa. Trie,,goirrril yiih.btaie, human s
ti
and wise. ' e fOreease i that prietitenae', meet Imiiiediately,
fall upon' them, and hi Or,dilt•ed'all nontoinbatanta to' Oat..
cotta. On board a little 'steels!, trigj'..theyehirtiel:On that
voyage of eight hundred Maori; and carried "ier 'eritirdifocus.
'amount of treasure. Two days lifter - theylieft, ' ebb Brat
%mike out,'Xiiii of those wham we lifthislihid nearlyill *Serer
leireprawaY: Providence carried we raw•ii iKlipßii; Orcure.,
wislitri,iarid thus Saved MO lives, , ti -
__,`" •
He spoke' of tire wonderful friititrMepf tlfehettivii - Ilirris-,1
flans. They' 'were' planed .1n the :ettkki to '4le bilidahes«
They' were told that they weak bein4itl letiii 'theiFearsr,
theft., riCrses,'ttielr ctiine, and their, SKI: ,t)s4 aid ilitt,d'enyr ,
°briar,: . All this; too,';while' theY i kriew.not that i EurbOetantr'
Oftrietian remained in all the land,: iiii,‘ DM one' f them re ,
noduced his faith, 'or denied the Lord•thek ' Wright 'hhn I t
whilii many Europeans did, and even derided 'these petite:um-2
tlierris feels for net:yelding. 'Here ls,procif:Cietlfsßdrit 'of
Chitin. to whiche can point evermore ' Tile to 'ile..
harder' still' a beMutilated: It le iterrirrie t iifierrellty, L i and
multitudes preserved their lives by pronooncirettlL'iretdig,
"There keneged hut Otre;and Mohames arida his prophet."
... The revolt almost, exelnalvely, confine:l to the . ,xertions.
:where ideliairilme'dirideili
. Preialls, ..
It le , riot .iiinong .the.
'common, lower treetb,OrderlY;aiiiidedir. It te. ttithedlitidoos .
we Meet Corittiluis'Co mirk threGirispel:; The Stint Iredfi Gm?:
iiituntint is utterly deitroled. *94l2tiechi4tem etip Eireh-i
'Wiliam will. never rise agate . ' Tha' set ,Iriiiii Ortinpany,
'connived, at idolatry', and contribut' .to its support: lint
;our glorions work will now go on Vetter, tium ever ; before.
, the ko;i. air. Edwards, and Mr. Mitchell alscsspoka, , and
the report was unanimously adopted. . ' ~ . ••, c r•tor. , c• • ' ...,
• THE AmEtxtistiklijitleilooilTY. •
The second order of the day was tbeeptatieri u, aud Da.
Breckinridgo 'eked leave toosiad the following,M p inute :
By a vote of the Oenerid•Aseembly of 1857, an Overture tit
that body, which le printed in its .1111unnea,,pp.,S6, 311,•rxdat_
ing to the American Bible Sooletyht new. standardtEnglisW
Bible, and to, the beet tuethedist preserving, In its igtegrity4
the common version of the •English .Bible. was specialty se:
j ferred to, the consideration efthe presentSleneral Assembly.
Duriugthe year which bas interyouelkithe attention oritlte
Christian public haebeen directed to ibis hi:worts:et subje4,„
In e. , very,,,tionsual degree,: and, eo,far: Assembly
~ the IneAuasof Judging, Wig IPPainnt..t:ltet the •friabStirin ch P
Church throughout the country le decidedly opposed to .the'
of oonduct.,in4helprenaisier Pineal by the • inta.. .t e Pi a ;•
• mittee on; Versions, of _ that . Society ; and tbeleirctuatien;
by that Eirolety or their new standard, iingibth t iii It 'id
&matter of great sitisfaction to this .oeneral Assinibly‘that
the Directors of the Apuerican Bible Society have resolved:to
: cease publishing the aforesaid new .Standerd 'Bible : and to
resume the publication and circulation of the Standaid,
:English .Bibleiu exclusive : twe.bythe:Soclety,berbre_the trite
work of, collation, and , change, • commercedl about ithe,Year
4847: We . also! cordially appitleftef,the ; further action pr:
the Beard of Directors, so far. es, it secures .• more vigilan
.oversight,ln future, of the,work,or Its Committee on•Yer ! ,
alone, and,prevent anthiture change, either:oS
' thei=4:
-Its accessories without the careful consideration and
orderiottbe Doard of Direchwe-,: •••• .f j
{%,,With•regard to any change whateveroelther buthe .tert
..of the Ettgliablversion, of the ,Biblo commonly:called; Ali&
Jamoil yoraion,or accessories text,: as: they
Irremcommonlyirinted Atltheformation..of Ake .Americia
Bible Society, we do not admit that tbe,said:Sktiety has any .
. power:or euthorityto maketompalteratiottrin saklacoeeso-, .
ries onsaid text, except snob:air appertain-Mit printer,: and ,
not to an editor: ,-By, the. text ,of.dling, Jawed: version we
do•vact, mean a copy corrupted•hyerrors.and yeneutholiei,
:changes, no:matter:where thatooPP maxhivebeen•printed,,
• nor how those errors may have ow:erred; nor,who may. have.
ventured to make those changee.:i.But Ne.mean a true text •
in :English, produced land publiabed,aften the, laborarof the
,ttanelatore : appointed by Bing James:the Sizst, of England,
which; for nearly Awe...mute ries ;and , a ham:Leen
. standard Bible of people - SPeakinEthe• sEnash daI: I IMP..
and. wb leh the Presbyterian:Church nalhe . United stet.' nr.
• America is resolved to , preserve, , lncititintegrity and pority k
and to Use and arc:Plate: : i
it -41 •
aliongswittEthe greater portion•of the Christian public n ;
tilio•country, We.have conaded-to.the Americarisßible;Etocie;
ty the great, ork of circulating thelllnglish fieripteres intbe
.version in common.use; end while,we deeply regret th e seri
,
one error into which itoras:letrayedOts :recent action ln, .
the premises, demands a cordial response from all the earn
eat supporters of the great work Its which is et:gigged. In
discharger, therefore, of our duty, as the .General-assimby'of
oxixbranch of the:Mardi of the Lord JesdliChrlat,-to which
-he has committed: ls most blessed r Wordryor.the. g utda t ice
•and•salvation of-men,weliale made this deliverance: • Andi •
open the terme.herein set forthowe.reiterstel our-approval;
of the principles uponwillehthaantericathllible Fociety was.
founded, our,detare, to: co•operate wittrourbrethren ot all
V-htistian .denototnationsi efforts to %relish :the
. whole world , with the Word. °Plod, end' our earned reskia.. - ,
mexidation• to our.people to:give liberally:to'the support iof
this good cause.i.: ,••
s. Abe Minute was:unanimettelradoptedii:
seeslon was.olosed.lwithleipar:-. I i u
0y,•101,1;a4,1 . .•,,,i . :th • pf , alol.
Ebtrdrild- , .4
. .•Tiatt_ee4,444lt
, '. 72 /0 4 , 13 497 yv i rptA withiPrammt i tt.
tt , 4
sarybui. . ;14W ap
proved.„•. •..J . :. • - •
oit 'll4 • ••
tore ki.e...1,,A0m the .Presiltory of. WhitewatesACinibint the;
silepernsieu of. krialehi,re4tion,to eCtaleistnewhoAssaaisA
been so icing,iiider that Presbytery is it reAnireileinilighet a
rPlorl'odadre'retaY.o.Pie?ltbft•*fil eillerer*.e;:o4;t.3
• Oveiture 1tc!,.9 wee placed on the
.
rePort from the Firienelitloe,oisidoo,Tiresespief
• •••?li T. ,
— norruvi r lso , fftri. rw I "e•
144' tiOA L. P.0 41 1 Wa s
.ara gOi lilo
d VAC: : :‘4 4 l69k 4 P li gK il i* o lo Conliattiot
three bibs appotiqq,, fiy,sp,.44B-i*bry , of'
unitoNgszP9t.
• - Bit rt Tau relepty of the commweloaacios
et the .14 f ... . ; Dr Precitinrihge
. 14 .*P15 1 . 11 F . ,5% .. .. 6 41 1 41tF1 0 4.414,.. 1 441 *me
• skim • .I._ 1 r:
Dr. Bretkibrialii! , 4o/e.‘t wee ,
t tttttttttttt
with.milqkixi ;Only eptoe, of the
leidirigieUidderitions, were urged. . ,•'.
et thek,few. haee ; fought
throcigli ‘ the war which hegin in 1831. „While he would not ,
vintlicateeviscyline and word uttered : either by himself 'oro,
by others during this long, coldest,, jet he ,hari l nOttiing 40
retriatortto apologia) for, and he thanked thanked Ar the nouns”
which.this koserribli biutAiervec). and for, tba neasts,.ll
,
nhowa.t.9nt.4 oll, 4B.Ong Uka.leelotrunr.
. ,and ruiried,by er*oneaus•ieunseis,he entertained ifir„lltem
no feeling but sorrow ; thei.haretASOldhegain . .t , ow.stok
the , we/ 11. 1 44.1 1 tinbessOd.g*O6.he 44. 1 4 1 143%rrd0ked with ,
them. .lle haepelpin,thenther. dee, ise !le tuella!, and,con,
feral/ma inininepal,ind had done esikomjeoevietion, end
had cheeen that-Linie and ,
that hittrinweesonight•not
• ,
be misconceived. ...50 F... t- -41.0 -an
Church ••• •
The . Presbyterian Chch neodepet be any,.
union. Ifer_ greet neeesity, hist et,Bl,lltmidepc,„, t, hemp„
,
g , His objeetion'tounieni cw,ooseppesato, r a co , - t afer., , .
once, was founded not in &like of ' t,
,PrinCiple—that it is right beet - for e th
homogeneous to Hie apart 'HottiWX•euponKtitie bleelyet.
been urged, are neediOrto'jyatilktweelbep, Oil tie' oe,
thotAseemply isnY
by chrtitianuherify• - • • ' o•
T al' he proposals made to.iliy:' not faiyinaliwri 'of
anything which it - le Wiwi for' us swept: "There)' offered,
ne good baslefrit'Umfitinie, or I rethpieiniso, anion
that shall ad vance: the kingdom Or Christ, or the' General
Aerembly. The 'History Of all aimilar etticOrp; hes but:
'nerved to dinner:lett : Ste" their' uselessness. X doubted' the ,
wisdOin'Of the .
niapn the con ale present :
'century .with the" Cefigregitlonat 'Obitiihes ef,liivr, Eng
' land. 1887,"the 'General Assembly lelemnit erlired,
that, the
. nnion was The good reptiang from it
`Wee !mit, amount cam the
. .. .
wrong: • „
is net the we' , Of add'itirooldencefripyggiertfe.uvop,
any incongruous element.. • A refitting to,
some w i d ow , fp neet ii eitrimed ou 04 they
militated igainst these concluidone.
„Bat,' Vt. Moderator
•of all 'the antheritiiii' that may onetililuot ;Ma,:
know of none tip's 'OCUId her' less weqr,lit pip thaWt,a,
CillOteilyag... It . Much our honikla uty.Welteji,
those Who are not likehraiiiied with üb,ste it,Dr'4o utitOWltit,
thoee who are. Are this b ody and Unit •
to be united t 'lltote'sny men in kii'ainiaCiencit litilteig that.
'they should be ,one t "It is dein) M atOiiidgnpiot, Ica the.
r t g at of clod, thet'tbeie is way for Owe!) ;two lhoes to
cornetegether ao'ne to' strengthen Clack Othee s eetds"
• The 'peek,' r' himself drew, sEttsi iktossw f c ti cut • off :
Vie illiee Western' we* `Tbr nl hbi that of
the 'Weitern Reserve." objeeted . roit ad too , erbitrorl
and ebropt- !tog 1404 1 „ ow in"-,
ehdie nimby il . xpyi9,l4'olHic 4 en: wheqe,Ter:
laity hall be lfilinindek l ac t' aeriocal.
kn0.i.000. 1 . 11,14 "`d bo idiVife i kilaMtplik 1 , 10-P9dY ,
Who are 000,p •,,# r or s epta?
thc; totoltri t * Salk; goo . y,
be bales tefte or , the!"ltai4 4 SO
'Vitn'UesSti , , add
Philadelphia, 111 South Tool Street. below Chestnut
are beat epart. !The speaker Oro-eight -he poluniseed the aver
ago intount of morefoonrege, but he ,contlesed_ " to a nai
:oral terror of abuse with snob .diell011: as pipet, lampblack,
, and-iiveet'oll," noterithstunding be might be: did to be the
beel'etamed man in the Church. Theenewipapen , tell re,
andw&learn from other sources. that ;the' bodyinederred to
is divided itself on the very notate:on whirthstheY differ
With Us ; . end of:quite' who have todemzoolit, Naive! in seek
ing a conference, nine out of tan thought the devise were
: , imperfectoand I agree with. nine. ~
The important point of my remarks is this' them II no
disrespect ,lot w r onger'. ,re.but ogres with a minority
of that Irk telt, When we are acting in matters re
' fethiglb he g rily, of (iiid,'Cw high and' t /'good will among
'., reini,yrie,shetad act just SE 'Wide in' worldly 'and en,rind be
gelded bilbiti'dlotatesof 'ebmnibi . sense end Oedema.
The great defection,of 1888 was none of our 'brit. We
' .4.t riff.thilice Ely node alreedy spoken of, but the great
to oar body " one lithe ra an ren lion.
Werigth'dregr'ibtiordis, and We'lla Willing' Oi adielt that
they . „ggppowid, they. were in the line , of dutj';'that they
acted 'with principle itifd with' a vlew'to- the' &riot Ood.
They ti dit'inefOrp thenelbfinals, Sind erongtitto Wring
' freak * A 110,41'105 'we co -old net greet. Yet our door has
Mad iniCh iill',Viii . while, It le new, opee. Again and
agehrhave *erelierated thkdielanition' of 'M387 . ; Ow Anse
-1 `ty yait li:tve' tie iltiltiiii ; A*.
__W e d s = &that loop-be 1 1 .* • -1. r* - !' 7
obitiot.t.toyescolagtaotiogiby - 4Loatese to their
~..soutidnemi. ,li. cannot be helped. To omit it would Merit
alskylittid 1.4 schism, ant te ortilt . ft II not to be Oiceight of.
112 why ' ' not Alio questi on' illit lithe Modevator of
, ate y ebo ld come to he vcrrerliest IPrethrtery,
', this
e ekarrilned: TliduSh' thej ink, jbluSh to dO the
duty toward such n one as Mtn, Whitt tY,"linif Mutt be
done. We ask thitiriteOPid Pro etibmit to nothing but what
tirade:mist houbred-member amongat.usdaputt, mrtnett to, In
a 011111f11011: with the molt jowly, k litimatastiop mil* be had in
open Court, or theymikaajimigeisiblei, treaty.
.1 tor The hear: baying iunrired,forlthe order of the der', that
se Older.wwt, onmotiou ruspended, and Dr- Brerkinridge was
hatelesteddo proceed...: ....,.; Aie s .
or
~,,,,ai "Id k m , bado,winat, er • whirl:the tholight eta
itbodied &true illtpra96loo9 m atter- AB ter OS he was a
- sledge, the l propoeitions pa ed by them, deem, the res
. ',mom whythey seek this', reeve , add they make their
.terms a ,sint . qua :non.
.. hat is right ; but he did not be
-1 here in the truth of, thciproposltione. On the terms pro
l poem, in' would• notltreetlaith his own father or his own
:-:brother.;? The. , New . School ePresbyteriana have quer
m
relied among themselven--tin.very.event which he pre
r: dieted treaty Jyeers ago. ~ Otttliets body, into ten thousand
pieces, and it wan hie deliberate conviction that every Judi
.• retinal piece of him wotild,proteut. The world has periodi
, ..otal tan ts OP Mll4l/048.. .Tbe religious ;world iii not, exempt
,/'from the charge, and he. supposed' we, ourselves, may be a
.;little mad. , ot this /kind of moral epidemic,. is „the sboll-
Mortism,whioh;of latches raged in the North, and the,fan et
iciern of other placed, prodricing ,liCente of bib and abeurd
•- ity Which have'aatonished all can., and prudent map. But
rshetter. thoughts are:beginning to prevail. The conviction
:: which bac al rave waged this /operably, is gelning ground,
theVeninisters, in their sacred roper-4y as ministers,. have
nothing to.ito with - matterei•parA from do-eutees of salvo-
Mont c Cordining,themeelvereanthat,, their peace flows on
; ward:Mks a,river. Why, tinem ithould, they, without mo
tive, tweak ,op Oil mezioe, andTbringjn.elesnenta of dieturb
atm? To tie of the Booth, and the weaker,diedstron, it
. w ont& be ' , madness to,enter into ; any such , treaties. The
s:greet,pretsure nnonins,.front without, to noton,sobjpobt of
. ,doctrine. f In our character of a Much, the world can look
.to Am tor nothing.but wbae.strictlyibelongs- to the way of
salvation. We of the,Sonth.. do not , want idavery,, breught
.np. ,We do not,want.M. discuss it blessed now, nor at any
'other time or place. . The question, of. spbetripOon we set
. dleditwenty. , years ago, at Meanest of schism. , The question
~./ of Choral fp° wee ice foregone question—onr very axle Lance
~:depends upon msinteining olfr position upon it. The,ques
• tiomof - ther black MOR•and their relation of servitude, was
..I eettle&eliventy • years since, and reitenthei in &multitude
, cot ways, and with many but harmoniously; and
We should not re open it.
....., , ,We are toldAltat.onAhese quisiaons there is &division im
that other body; but whatrpoisible ~ signillsation,gien, that
circumstaque,heye.for
, ue, any more than a similar division
in the' Ilietlibdiets teeny' other -:ClitOoh. ' , 't have no hatred
wrowerd.them; I wisketheutgoodiand onlygood. :, I' - should
kinberely grieve to isotherm wronged, -and .1 should rejoice
i .at iwitneetingAluntlprosperity. and. happiness.,: Whatever
r . dieted' visions, , _ they are none of. us, and ourduty remains
I. where'. it did. before. We are, to. treat their parte es we
drooled .'theilbwhole,' having: no new duty. to ,priform, as
growing out of their sebiam. Our door Li ever °pato them
when they are like-minded with us.: .... . - _ :
_-
Dr. hreekinririgetbanmaCtbe liberate to Wakil be had
referred, as follows:
' uff.n.' the Matter' of ilii pfiikiitfir 'tallith; Wt ilitb'eeneral
'',Arsiteinbly, - oti behalf elite United Brricsi - of the' 'ffeabyte
trio:Chursti. lately -. 'inittiled in - ' the State of Tennessee,
'ouitoki_POrtktil'of those MeWitehool Pre s byterians melding
it eiseWtfortiii'llobthirrit SWIM' Who haiivetided from that
"dinenibiatleti WV ha Ober:The fletiertil; iiMeltribly of - 1857,
' 'this' Asian' ibly Mikes tire following !reroute,*
, ''' •ii Y:reittio-iigh 'the Omealtiere onto oh, tiod' - bY, the - ny nod of
-'4.iiii `UMW PMsbyterian'Cleureh have net Mearatintdited to
this General desenitilytidiciflhilef retphietihrelt that body
iw undergt ( "4ltetkafgr.ad9Ptietififwlfelle of their MB pe
miller views, and of the cattily:ins, rin . e , gua non of the
n CetifeWee intsillidNitas .A.4.**. 'L - rooth.i4._,, the
'''''eolitieitts Of those mm . , iiheifigYin IlleotOtiMern'to 7 MIS As
' ilembil.''irti"aie' ...- iit'ditivity tio.',not.:,lietit' we - were
„ ignorant of
„ them .And Au the Indgmatitrot , (hie As
' eltatSfiAtia* ofil6loTiltipeis"db not *Nerd Whiling et Conibr
' three": tiporW6leti thls'AMiiiillifiablirlii see Unit 'there is
any,pr.. ! .grat,ofricveneing - itie 'ohne.* of Clittlitifkinidoin
in itenereitVethade orthe PresbYttiiiiri Ohnitiii in the Uni
ted States, or tbosemf the ITiritellfiyitod of the Presbyterian
-Ohs in melliritit:. "
•'' "2, 'Viii 'o4ltYtitrian k4ira v ti v iiii "(lintel: States of
''''AnterleAliiiiisawayiiiiiinveili, ilfairkleind'in'OlitistUrn love,
`' ilk chtinitietif aide beareiOnd 'private' person if of all de
er'nomieitionWritiiiklifir afipllestfoir Cr Canaan ftito her rom
'
. reunion. upn the single coodition that they eirelike
'red Witte w olf . bet' 'At this - iii.. MO ple' 'previtatt - is ma de in
'Lei exilitliit Acts' anti OriiiiinOSS for 'theremption 'id all
"inch' intri,ber 'nitniiirirdon, On teems and . by methods' pre
' 'diary Wiinvilleirt;,enirirtiene it is pantile, iiniitiold' with
." ttibie prorldedin regard to her own' children retired in her
'...:*o)iiii'boeom.• Miming that it was in a -. Volliiii*j'iliston
`" *con' the'frivibileibin Ohltrith - that 'the' preserit'iiillidril tics
,otthe Thilted'Elynod Of 0W14 , 614000' bad 'Oteir , origin,
''. if& tthit' the doer, bee olikaiilisitidpoi for the orderly re.
tiltii of ,iiich Oflhose irlicilott'ui,lis loft like nittided with
''vi;it asnliardlY tie'aireijOilte4 thit We de dine• 110-Loificiel
,confereeoe based oeliiitrie which apileek',te rus tolniedve a
'''' co-Udreiniation Of obitielveit and a /entitle/strait Of the rich
lord ;peatiller toioi of God: upon no, in 'the' red , Mitten,
''ltiblehlifd tollittigimmitee from our pitdrett;taidotyleara
,51( :321ridziOsioma g Attie ioeierfwaikarirtis r m.
''FilliatilidY, th li' 'Y'AsseMbif liki 'doe- see in' that
eireg'corinenfthing W eh hie IntheitO reentnid (Min It,
1 ,iiiyeattiorYieliktencelpe' the - rtivityttit,iie ' Oftrifith Milake
any no - vein:oi whitener, either/ ;gitthilti'"VlDW - oe u nion or
afloat' oriveloeiti hiteitio r arse thin noiriirie ti, *HIV idihor of
,theyarte tnto which i that body , s now ifirldellV '"Ttie 'sub
12,j1irota iipith *tab thitib'ole New ScharbedY'dflitied from
1it 1 0.3
'' molt the period ar their' eineirition' from' usdliki }' th i ef. act.
'''' - aptiii-tibich 'the 'tko Vii IYtinsel:Mr jp , ortioil'Or thief . 7
, have xeceiitCY'leiaraled' ficlm' eiiii ' other, ' ire ' ''' one
iiiiiiiiirhich l we, as'er'dlinranination, - aiiiit'peotsi;"e with
regard to the whole, we .171 no ozeashn Willie - tee thenroder
81VitsiOnletrteeelt..j4h21.9r' (3"114'ol; tenter
into
- • '• - THE DIMHHOIII33OII.
' . '.
h, ( ' '
litr. Pqb ,e Georets, o *teed the, flocT but dm hour
,turilngairt . yesi for, the or - der ,Of the ,day; a motion for the
reuept.lun of , Dr:cluunjoeta, theDidegra. to of the . t.Ralbriesd
froteattntDutch Church of North Artierica,'!, Piro&
~..fr..9lumobers said, in embetance;‘ln oGerlog, sale ta
...Dow of the Chureh,L repress*, .? ; ant conforming with I
Digo honanial oustoto; taut oaths present ocpwrion it is Air
„more s therku,inere form. : We deeply,e - yiegatbitefa all that
~ /Me* 4d geil, Tour.(kTe Me, autJuge, "nit your sorrows
our sorrows. ' Thu_ anOsmities which •bar• , befallen your
~Inielionsi,altitottt equalijarith logreelyee. A Meterwhose
..,. litattillutchlraafdeektito4'hatuJ Dlalaninla rail trained in
1 .1 qur sawn AutchAt t urrbb,ge wire r:Wl for a motored to the
;peculiar name— egirmed Protestant Dutch Dhurch of
, Nor,h,Ataterista; and aseigned;ttre parte:miler eiguilicielice of
, : eseb,,uorti._ ,That gitmrch, !ma two foreigo,usimirma, of
: iTiAckbe.gavg nutty, interiting statistics. pus pf the in f e .
~,soone is,condgeted solely. "'Olive brothere, born of the same
, ...,,,perentign .A. 'apron pleathed by Dr. lairlogston, about the
close of,Ae rerplutk4 cermet the 4onventioa of a, little
iteselettr , wild *WWI a-niallYnalt ~ On. of the
~,fruitsrof•tale tab:daisy was, the eonrereionur 0 . zueg, Dr.
)Sooddervilibti with 4 1 f 1 04. dedicated itimeatio tt* life
; Of Si e miselonary.,,lskthe diataat field ,of,thdr i jutnira, they
set gotta day oc.nreyer,f,K the couvuatoa c of their chit
:Arts i an d. tiro otthosa chUdren; in an elm tagsger,Torele
.4 ,ol ratittftdo While ateciLD o l , ,igr A r. iteiTieThiff, _ i.are,riow of
,;line kW oilivO brothers , who oc.P.T•t4idathwiolfar7 ll 4 d-
I Tllk•HlPaklor , lul.d•htlifiu , , PeiPaliarkl hAPPY.t O hpthe . Del.-
gate to tootApJern 10r be was bcgra spd Mo f niedth I e
Church, and made ixt tal.; U
hi. fret Profesidon of faith. He
spoke with great feeling of the extraordinary outpouring of
4 •Ab w 'Rdri B Pirit,lirour laud: during' tkrOldit Itar, and
stated that •it' Win diPthe old NottirDathb Cliordb fa New
York, which owing to its position itillie•grAtt blares. ren
e9erirotithti citf.viri ( beaMdeletWedrii i the 'Naha de worship
for Canaille'. Doretlili church Fa Nienkly , Prayermsaiting on
' I IWediteedirentliestiblitehiarlbt, boellieH r meristo tuiht aside
:ofor'airleritr.;'Tibillitereetincieleett naafi beesiesiiidelly
!trot:yore ntaetinktrtbetiuother ralterci was o,eadel, leeeteven
aogibird'rotura l in i ttkrefaine braildinga ROOnatt , Weteltkerwile
.Itorietialtl baler hitildbilce, and Ihtriteeixt 'llls th e
asatj and liPother oitlear: - Theils' arenta# thighn.Wfit N ew
Weir thrirltioh, , i Katie”' fusoratimg , by s tlntir ci riitiot eir
. , ediiitiHrenisiii out - of the tOinnittnteita , olf tr , Binh, H.
1 ulosiog*ithl" fervent pr.Yeribr'petind a
, final `rinforr iti tresisn. . • 1, .. A '.. 1,-, . .
,at Dr' tkcittkaplied : 4 RAierend eo d Dririt. o f
• . thei Goner"! Allaguitaly, I cordially girtioutilisiltglit heed
of fellowialtP; and bid yorifibd speed:. lire , think bad that
, helhai brought rig to ri s, ha being Wilglifigity. We thank
' (had lotoyour lattori,"CO'r thar'adrintaidnent 'of true piety in
ouriend; and ibr yOrai Snisebrierriliterprises. We thank
, yon Ibr theleynapathr of to 're i doltikhd rii , Church. ' ours is
algo - a . 'Prbtaletant -. ittforntad lihitreh, though lee hays no
, efitimlo Met duarable'dhilinitlon , otitutah Pletbreced. But
, we aft delaildarite Ofittiettliitieeiwite, the'Sootob'Preebyts
ritra,,aadrtife ltrigliell *Unties;lf You,gd back to the
' 'h°u 9o "Of 124 nnid• - *Q - lidaj Witti holy pride; point to'John
-, Hnoraied - tO Clalvii: , A lt' -•
T isloto" ficialamybalcharlal^ Ircirl alWie from fhb great city
p, of theiNortfa , th , trilidtStarAdrie in the great eltrat Dail forth;
hot sir, we know no North, no Booth, ho" Ain, i nti'lrest;
- we iire4fetlilialtelitbYtiieteil'oe bounds. t We' rato*Def th e
- • cialinsCornil tribl.."'nud. aiolore hO l Ofir tommtra' filligioua
~ aherityrragqctrug;rhe 'WO er
•tritglOhamit'il ai
yeltelched
aorta. oni k utigetit; Merl ittrac et irttare egret' or ught
rygt,- ) 6E,tom r oi vileamigigi bd rimed of tail, Laing
^; rtimiUki A gerit,to thbVidltig,''y ire ire
_a pebtilf.' We
'l,rtieetilteriftile tireireedhligliligt*mthe, OM
.. and the
Yorn)lritein "deitt;tlWarihrtlhaßt• •'' lid our
2 . 14
•
.......,661.1J,1,,... 0 r ...i.m.
.., . ii.2:101 the
' , ltioepelOf POsci . - ' '' , :„ ...m ...„ .t.. ,..'" -;.......:,
, , , .a..1,t .... , lik a nri z iel • ocp . 'N.:) .
;: Xr:RotkV.9ll.2PggenttglittlatildigkillCOS the . ColaMittee
' olis rged with,th. i tePort.of.4lo:3oll44ltEdUCation, together
' with retelotiette , 5 ', ~ 110 .4 . J , _ _
liresSlT4 V,l4urotteselatTe,JlMllllU, end W . J. nog. "ever
: ally ayohe oga, Dopog torgekol4.otoatton to the wants of
~Liu.,_UA„.__g.and. agigeeltatlffilig,o • dispoordartlte th,,
owite!uilef , g t tthibltirallealimfieg men to tli• work , Of the
Fkor+41:1 1 1 11 4a„ •", r,,,P0: , : , .t 6 ; ; s -,.. , ; , , „
, Pgit: CarOPHOPIH, rMttlg OM mamedatent ,M,thertueotrittou•
.FeeLerdadir b Y teeh raithee. rn•hile • the hut eturid o y of
veureaM. a deg glelfr, for the, children at home, as
rlf-a l thaAllaPPnit lhetniatthe Seminar/ea anCeultejran
idr, Dorris offered." salmi itOterfar. Siekillmeedrograi.urben
Ar.,Or a took tht tiOor. ;and Presente*siatierusattladrring
i: ~lie said, a mightier end nuebler as IhainA*o ever
j e t ioappl.nori, ielda.rdrittlan our, land; ~, I ttuita, is *Nays
an outward prewegioq ior=ermilecogicttllgitele wide
Amer tbe'brasp .. A ~; .PrAil
f.... 0p beldrenthmekklitihurings
' , /akilq i litt • ' Iltiio old
°testa- l artn was gc '. 7l,e--fr trritMl:e3l4
WHOLE NO. 1496
=IEEE