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. # ryBi!® few, A. »«rtMl, Bt«» jCID^traW -•• -fit I.I_ - n iiii I nti«— r»n «>•! m t scciiv iji* koT i. mw <!i« to tt ta itmri tmi mt W»a Hf t ;vgf WiiujHI iticM. -SnJTsAa. ^Mt^V'hicttln mMI totaaad. rttj-h^^^ •»-(wri tB»»«r U a i s ; ^ aM M* rer and Aj^e, eEy=s«te of.% cSmmtti ks&b ia Oe W tiM pinoBir:^ m i m «f «iM»»ifim atmH^ MKh tixmurf J. e i y e , w. KAinu I a. aoan^B. m u n w T I FiASHVILLE, TENN SATURDAY, 1859. ' mm is iaW <i»- M r a iHiiti'sMfiM^oai ste-nmiBli I jsto tin bba^ IVisBL t pm-«a nn tfci T—• ^ tetiiv Titr unr hyrBran ti^f tan sea asl; tium tizw, ^t xljo hE Bas<l tis-tirssnrltteWte !l.?eB, Qt* iidM^ • ti* Stfh •mt ^t''flits t«(«rgt5BE»B|»ifBl««_ ; larrma roBrranatw flf- ^ IMLI iM dfeV ifilMnMii' VBSSMM^Bfl tB Thc'jio-ttim ; nscial trgm'" . Brniikm*: Liriutit tJs* biatid. ft««rf>c.-v _ llB^iDB. initet-alMit r-iiT», wrilihit . thif uirnsj* fiis sar I nmrlt'^taitr tkmlairiiiisaoL I md Isrve tend* •TFiTAAa Agne Goxe, I ttaSm (D [inHB an»!i 3 ftcBateq«ara> l i A t e knta toe famjkt laafgaam j^jaytfe al^nRgil Cirim inaiTi:^ aW ««ljr a . . _ e liSiiB iiiiB aiB:. iwai btm t& aii dwe ? tafajtcd fcr«t»lM» >i«ii nri ^ Hoot , ^ . . •^t'li'tiiiutirfi til?" WHS* fTii^nH flj^^Sfr eruouaiTii ImbrannBpt..-" " ikacf Stttttovaii BB n brnnc tioa Is a Apiif eauii—atteiiiffrfrfiinti itiaa iiy wfctJ-wjJifc- umwli safittesizS jaotfesinHmif I te bktte it ift dhn^a ZKZRiszn vr J . C . A Y E B & CO. LO^KLL, KASS. r O n Dou^a^ rat Bociu. Cherry Pectoral _ ''Kt&s!ram fctefnt^tMflil IlkKxtt aid Lacs DMgiaiKi.1iatt it »-mc< rfatE» ta momt tiMmea orSBi , Tfnm iniirn ^^ ifs mStrit . rit mioBlicBwJiBlikHit tite^aiM^lUk I n . i S ransES V I hwuiw m i i f e CUSUIAJJUB; fa -rBK-Rcn we 1 Fna-Xuzmcz; ' I nts «ar T HfcuiMaaiT : -not Ctx> >a Ospcnssz; Tin « Foe; Staaacmx I ZH8 CrsB «* JhaMBUs^ ftarum CCD or SoBwcEar ScsMciflCK C a n u m v : . A -no. Cm SHsnusaat; F.in Thmrrmt, ey TOT fimt: L TBM Cra* nr t r m . CuanAEHi laalimaxcz : -Cizs or Tsnss. T«r«c«» ja»- Bxsax: F<aL WaoB: Fat zasCinai or Cogt; Sam. A-lbssoL. Pnii Fnm. - j g Cnt» rtr XgnttLgn.; Ffttt: PlJUVlUMi tH* £tUMB» > mmm-iimmi. ^ thnCdwaM , jJ-iMiwrir. aad h i ^ V^tij fansc tikarss?^ (OBls JK B o : 3ia« 3(i«l axUamtf tbn 1BC pcraitt tbe imtiat <C ^ , frtfth* V*" ^ a^itsniSaita. «s»i" Ifas t m 73S fitf tiT-si^iss^Rf vitSi < aHy ji^Tnmr jBBCt «u- Ha t Rr JBitiiryihoidd S<B« i t ^ accfcraie V hiliMfi <iAikMSi CUBJCD^ raS PEN Aia> SCISSORS. •n'mnaumrs. j a r I iif » / t h e t o t a ^ d o B d Ibr tem s d l w Baiof; And ths dc*dB«t p l ^ tlMt p m n Bona bkanm Biq^ 1M twUig t Tha Dkat <vna'Ud dMdm telt, Mcjrtmba Wfkt U a m : AoaU o n Bb m daaatt MB. Thara inwatl paaea fafcwwm! . sa* aigki HaA ara loof h»«a IB Aad a!cr iti aJoaar pan aaa Xka aara** briglit daaecn&g. mat tlKiB^ tka Motd Bnki of I m Hot km M Mtth b* ilTCB I jra Joftramtaml Tn •ii TTm Hinntli thar ibO ka Bakad is kmani —A nrttar aiiniDc tteMif "ladtora-iB tha iVa- i^Mia aja •( tha KriMkt of ksp- "PaiBtthmtovbat Ux.'Wmiif ^ aamwre niUcBflstkaiatjecttf taftBtdaautiaB. "K la- aka<B(tea9a)a»|«Dtj«f orifiaal ihk, ttei tW •mpniwr^jMMof hipthai aiilin. tathaotdt- rwar.tbryeuDotlMmadadaMibkkavMhad rkrbapte- - A i ^ k a Hjar^bikaardl. —, I ti mi Mkar laam lif iwlailui 1 tha (tan^oriato h nwm.' ttaa ty bantia^ (1 Ooctateal Ttada, pp. aM-XO.)" Tba am nad of llallnflBi, tha am wa •tilaafaaiiidBiia. AaanpoptafcaxpoaitfaB «r tka daalfB a( baptioa eo^ not ba gbaa tbaa tha abawtwliatad taat <Mai*jptJ t r K i of t>» Jbdofirtbodr. Batltaran tUatbiThaTaaottte aoiBa<« to adaU tba v i m of thetr fMmder, and dalm tha imbfflty at inlksta to eatn b e a m wtlb- outhabaptbaaldte. Mraata^ — T n M a s a o r a A n s a SOT AGsoczBovCoa MUJHW. BrLorieF1rK&D.D^)lwxB.^ Joha r n » a » ttOBtfc tUa doemaaat h i M v oar doas eoBoaidaa ftboda ia Swite, (aidf ot^ (aoaj va ahadd tUak tha DaeHr, m hm aaaan* dan, badUtaaanpiaeaarBadaooa.'—JRuiata* • a an Boi ^ t a iaeon^ibla a*«r ban jat, baoea, vawmldHb to leo tbe 'OVxtacV "iTiii i i i iil WbavaibacoodeaBBghtoteBlAaeeprf Tbn aneartaiaUBdaeraanavbaB "bit,-iatpnnv aad anabcaL VUfevaamBokamiaafbaiocaania laAnaeato acriptsal rnmmniWi. yak «a will aot dantodiiEcviatba vaooaUa Ifmafi tm va iMk at it M booora MB ^ GioMtiaM. Bra. Davaaa nfaa to tka NaAiiUa a S • ^ a a tha " i M fwatin wUA m m fiU^taindWlkti^e&m.'' Bntkna all hmktekad vith cmt W o A M f o n b S i g g or m l to tbkt £ilmltT. ^ Da«MB with B i m b«t Mt ugaaUa ^ luMd t]» oQztam aad s k ^ » v^atoeoM. npaat Oa a« Dr. D. kaa ^toi tfcajL Tfca trat Baptiat otank in NaAirina km paaad aaataaoa of axehrioB ut eertaia M i b e n . Kotiritbtudiitf , " aona exaeDant bntbran " easBder tkM m!^ «aot ezalBdad (L a. not rigktfaDj «^tid«d)aad therefim dat tk«j ai^ botk «imatena8dprmi«iB«aAeri,«BtitIedto aO 'Hi prMegta ef r^gBlar «li«eh membm." f^kaHja: "OaOaeOarkaadthcraia la»» naber" "wko Oiak diffanBtiy" da&a "afMnaatkaaabnthnaeaa mw noogBiaa ^ ez(Mad BBtil I t ratond, mthont O* Aaukmm^ tfa Am^ trgOMic frim^,.'* nntter. n a t w Wli>»abip txlaBili not aaly BBdAair ooapaay. Imt to ^wfco^TBMIoi^p far ^ Ha iBya, mnSy aod pconparitr of tbe Kethi&t Xpteapal Ckareh, in oar jadacBBnt, dcpanda apa> aalaiaiiDBC tha Kadplte aa k ii, ao to ai tha af rwahiMp is tba Cbareb b imotfed. Kaka aora ttribcesi is tbairritaTaetireoaU not be ani- 'nn^«a *rad ;zdeBlna abrteseot wa do Bat da- —— W — — j r I • • mmjm^ iitmmhnwi&at *utmM, cm Boa^A neogmiua ig iht ciitr^HuiMii$ admMHum. TkuitOtUitdimcg, md Ou intnt- -tomBfl." [Myitaliaa.] ThiatfaniBW- - brBt-Mallair. LatBaBowIm&attkapneSeal working the BBtter. At tlia CdBaboa CoaTeatioa, a •mAor TidBBteered to go aa esm^oBdoBt to VbaC tintei&c to be ran, k imiiaaij limii • a m * e m i t 7 o f a n made CiUa IbriAzitfasa. —'Osr f t e d i badbcr bfatbiaaBav and laiUivelFipaarir aaOlad eoiratiy, vbidivaabat paitiiUr tapped vith tbe BMsa of gnee. Tite calla far tauaUifag ware nua»'iiiua, laiajiiii and •mUt^pnadi eaparHBBUly. to oeet tbaaa daaaadi tie GoBoal AmiatiaB of Middle T. u d North Alalwaa. Objeetioa vaa made; bat the difisal^ wbii^ tbreateBcd tira lateg- rity of the CoareBtiaa waa araded bj the pre- TJenes of a qiirit of ooBoiliatioB; jet BO prin- was abaadooed or ooapomiMd en eitha- -onr lutea bad to initiata a iratam of ftfaiRaiter. Andwgy ariai^gbeaB—aalaakmij, ptwtiag aad i^aiiHn< d o n t e an orar tfca TaOcr of tbe Ma^aalpiS. Thar Wwh w m ewaed. and w m Klrticand. As te flddwideBedtteitin- waa eaiarfed—oew Pm^teriea aad cir- caita were fbraaed, ntd tbe Hr«l of the cbnrck t a M sp ^Ma and derotod mao toepente b tbca. a r i in tbia war te harden of ZiOB bnwbeaDeoBr ataoOjr mending "—Cm i tifmuhut ^ Sammtr af tma. Heat ebeerfiiSr do we admit that tbe Caabedaad P»ri9teriana bare doDe goad and moefa (ood. bat tbar ban dcoa baza—Ucr ba.T* pmBBad to "giw Wttli' to fimrilw diS^mt fron tboae a«iaulBBil by Oa "Btad of Siw t t e r e ^ of wbii^ tber qxak. T b ^ ban pretended to reftra tba ecsaaiatko af 3abn CalTin, b doctime w&hoat aay m y a a t o U -(Aance ef pcdBr- Tbe pcwmptinn aodiarinBe "JTow, Iwaottbia <|iiettiaoaettled be&ral die. -riat Aalor ttepablie lifiit or not wbnwaeaS a ™ C»n$*e!BeBt Sow. if w* a n riabt. wo *eeld itaad to ft, asd eaU t l m Caapbemtea; If waiboald^ait itat onea.'— It ia weSkaowB :bat Oda aset, wbid bad aa cri^ wttb AtezaaderCaapbd, bate tba name of their " aato,- rta^pBed to ftea aa nBejonfcta, and bave the eflrantesyto asBip AeoaBM of "CSkru- tim' Oa^uneaia, in oar Jadfacot,theooly paper n a a e b r w U d to daricnatoOeB. Oeir ^ aaSardoetdaaB had tbair liaawith Cnapbdl, aad aha«ld bear, oat of bBDorto tbe author, the aaaae of S%»Mat OtrimaSmUm Om WarU, li one that waa prodseed in riaBos ahouthne bandredTaan bseBtUed - - • - - " J—WMIT itmmamt mm- In Jam OrMi,'aad ia neither wiittea aor pifated. Tbe iettias an cat oat of feana, aad b d n iater- l a a ^ wiAbi» paper, a^rba read aaearty a tbe itfcil- .taKHw-kMaki.-^. banUMtk. » In I6M, EoMphaa IL of teai^^^end te & U.OOO daeata. aeaiir tnflO000 daeata (or d d a a ) at tUa day.—K ba=«niTg 1ST n s c u J -WabaM beaB aaaaawfcat aaaaed of late at a l o f o o a ^ t b e o i o ^ acaiaat the Kafiaka TB^ T^apaBdaotiaeaar !aboria eriti• J the exstSrataad dahmtoworki ciicntothe waMitT«tiaatotSaabythaIIIbi.raiao. Tbaae -eoott tba oilieiBa of a^olarL Old nrtawna in balb of Xatope raad aad adaireb"— "etoabics ibeoiogiana'* an not aAoiats, aatiMxeibr. V e a l m i l B d asteiaiaad- BitiDctbe pndsetiaBa ef adnba, wUIa leitoa- eaitodwnlUathealofiaaa "atratdKoad iadab- onto atllrtwH,- Wm wcQ r w a b e r that wbeB WB la—ad to cnajoftUthe Greek arb (an, we ttB^teoBodf aaai^ eqaaltoavPraftaaac; Bat we>aidai«en-B>Mfe Alikafttoaarbettat af the "enaUat iMociaa.- "Tba eaaplate racoeaa of the Ammtr wiS be- eoaa a Szaa bet otUy vban •* tbe people ha«a a abd to work" far aad, in work^ br it, ra- aaabarjoB mwaddaclor tbeipnad of aamel p r i s ! ^ br tba caaaa of HiiAaia. br Uacattoo, " the aarefcaly eBtahBAii*tke«*bieUia EbeaanC 'LocaaTe- tbat if ke t of oar PrTtrminatVa.** a b m b taa tbe pes af the t i the Bto. Wood the aaaa dtcdfled, itbatbabnow paiaBiaK, the ^ tke ' ' floathwO "bs 'ea ^Mto w e ^ ' aad Uapapar wai,e»baft beandiiileabTkata/tobciKa- •Tat WB take Ibe Hbarly of mpeetbay aagreat- iB«toaB,tbttIke laaaddahoa^aed^daTte- «*»««.' faeaaBeatM wfthbC^iaab. t b e b e t t ^ Dr. fcuaaauu, tteftUetalibil parTortteSaaaB- ba, aajs Oat tbe Iibh pepba-ban apeater katnrefaasiDKaaataarti^tkaB aftracaad ataaOac.- TbarefbaSr JKaaffiaap laewani "Onat- jBghraaiaaiiiii thattbbbtne, wweaaidarlta aatter eC eeecntabtbo latkar tkiB ef Rona^— lalrabBi fnr iinailiabaik. Ikii fcmiilale Tlnla ttaarthepMeipca afthaebB^b theaatbraf ilKtii IB ni. baa ba» waaHaad aa a MtaB ef ape^ ber. Aad b * ear aiaiilir. that, Irian aaAb the , aCatbaBe abeaUiteldcr atb _ vsaawaj; aBaBahwmMt- tt anaad «he lahb of Ike o a d M £ort.>> rbbi iH, HbenL W>wiiiderwbaa <bb*bnad* Mi. So-Hpftr- CeUKCH m u m L Cttenmrtaaaaa haTe Ud latdy to aaeh dk> HiiwBfwltateaMhrathnB eaU the a I win aay. at dm OBt- H*,thstXaiBkth«tata.MMr»mis atterlT l u ^ i ^ i ^ BKOioa ton^ wU^^ aUeoaaiBtiiMj^iB an tUBga. We a a j aawaawjOBtajv^'aeovt it H««niA Jena Ghriak ia the oolt xno, the oalj mt- ci^ B«t«Bdar Jeeaa Oriat, I set obIt «4m<,bmt*Aat*iHtheiedepeBde8eT of tlw akwdNa; and I p n m e , thia !• an that brethraa gOMnUy aaaa vhaa ther apeak of ehvnh aometga^. Sr. DawaoB ia aa artiele oa " Editorial Tro«]>Iea»iBtheSoBair«.te» fooe. Dr Manaiy haa ia Aa m m mmt. aaMrtiooedthe Tiawaof Dr. D. fkeaa ^ m B M apeeBlBtiTeaaitkeen&al,b«ta(B of aMjdiBte, pnotieBl battiag. We oaa aot ^thaaaaai^ Wear*eoaapdledtoeoa^ te; veaneeaqtdledtotahBpQaWaii. Aa the q i a ^ ia teaed wpoa at, Bra Bditor.kt aaleokatUaabeeoiaaa^^ aadi 11 won.iw IS unMMm. t > liSEn u xn so ornSnhs. I >. Dawaoa'a pcaitioB, eadonad - — — • w aMB iiiaa^iiiaa wea CorreepaBdeato bowerer were appoiated the Baptiat Qmreatioa of Cbmkee 6ew- gta. Bone of theai atteaded aad werereedr. Dr. DaytoB aad at least one other of the ao-eaOed exehtd^ aMaboa of the Kaahrille Chsrd were alao reeeired, aad tktkr mtmitr- sk^ tB tk» SpriagStrmt Cktartk was spteial- ly neegmumL H o e thea ia a boify wkid npraeeoti the firarteea thoaaaad Baptisb of Cherokee Gemga " i d e a t i f ^ theaadrea with the exehded." The m m prioctple rUA weald refiue correapoadeaee with the TeaoeaMo Aaoewiiaa wiU abo eat off att eor- oadaaoe with the Cherokee CoBTeotiaa; Bio. D&wna'a dietaa, esd<»ed by B». Mallarr. fiabida gay ramyni«oia of tbe m b - bosofthUbod^. I wiU barely refer to one oth« faet. At the Cathbert acetiag. Bra Lot Watiea {maided, aad J. B. waa preaeat, aad waa aot aerely reesgBiaad. bat wdeomedwitha^aaa^weleoate. Lot War- rea thea haa ideatiied hiasdf with J. R. Graves; aad he aad Bro. HiOlarr are both meabOT of U» Albany clinrch. WiU brother MaUaty atteapt to foree the dictom which he has eadoraed} Or wiU he ptaetieaUy ig- BOTe it. These &eta ^ w that the qaeatioa aeeta aa at oar owa door, aad Oat weoaa aroid aad ^ore it BO haiger. As "theoaly reaedy" for Ae erils whieh tireatea as. Dr. Dawsoa propoeea "artitcm t» firxt prbuifitt.'^ I axree to the propon- tioa. WhatthaadotheSrctaBdgreatpnBei- ptea of CharA iadepeadeaoe rnjaireT Do theyleqairaanother darchea to recognise, R^eet, aad aabait to the deemoa of Oe Na^TiHe (Aareh ia axeta£ag these aeiabera, tahaOar Uud AeMm is rigid » wrtmgt With dae defereaoe to brethrea Sawaoa aad MaUory, I thiak diffsraay. Stripped of all it* persMalitiea qtaatioe k raply thk, ewern partiealar, l o ^ rinble ehanhby ib aot Uad aU other partieaiar, kieal, TaiUe diar^r IfcOfWaareboaadby the deeta- MaoftheKa^TiUaChan^; oderwiaewean A chard ia aot boaad to reoetTa a aenber lata l b fdlow^ip, beeaaw aaother ehareh has w reeamd hia. UaBaQy iadead eae dtareb teeeiTea a aeaBber oa a letter eertifyiog hia feOowihip ia aaother d n r ^ bat thia ia a ant- tu-of eoartaiT aad not of i ^ t : the ehardi is aot bMad to reeatre hia, aad IhaTokoowa ^areh to rejeet a a d aa U|difiaat. Neither a a dareh b o a ^ to r e e m aa a -liaister oae whoaa aaother oharehao reeeiTea. It d e t ^ far itadf whether Uwm ao rceare hia or iwt, aad I hara kaowa Bora thaa me iaataaoa whan oharohaa hara lefued to re- eare Agaia, a efaareh ia aot boaad to rejeet a aemb» who hai beea rejeetad by aaother ehareh. I f a a a a npliea to oae ohareh fur aeabeidip m cxpeneaee aad a rejeetod be- eaaae hia ozperieBoa iom aot aatafy theat, ke aay aercrtheleaa be rceaiTad by a a o ^ oa the Tarr aaM c^eriaaea. Kdody win deay tUa Vpoa tkartxj sataepr^pl^ oae who haa bow ezdaded by oae dareh aay ho »- eeiradbj aaother. Tha iaataaeaa iaatrivea show ^ a a i t h e r ia reottriw aor rejeotiag aaaberaeaaaaeloealdardl^ an oS kMalafcar«L Ik haa b e n aigaed OU a Bajoci^ maat gaTerB,KBddiatita&dMenaot be oaUed riaaetian. Bat ia te eaaea above referred there aijht be aaaaaity ia laoani^ er eetiag a wiaaber ia oae ehard, aad atffi * c ehardwaaU aot ba boaad by ita ae> Sraa aaaaiauty ia enor or wnag doaldaot ba ranted. I t eertaialy ia ao aew doetfxaa aaMBg Bi^tisb^ that a aajori^, bowerer aaaD. whid adharea to ^ geepal, ii to ha leqMMtea rather Oaa a aajority wUeh hflUa to omr aad nalatea the hwa rf Qkn*. Ifitia adaittedthat aaraBfdMMaHof eae •imrehia aot bia&v on an others (fte idola vmm rar iiaun aaeiaut l ItiaaoaiteajtaieaBeattha oTa&teraliareh. bat r ^ Hthe TiBaehaida. 4ght;,kiBea9 of Oa Had- Tiafiaatad Oa gioaad of taahav that « i* a a « W «a HaMiy th^ ryalua,, I a» aot atyrad tagawithbaalfaaa Di aad M. ia d e ^ a g aoB^aOowdhip withthaaa iriie idiatifr tte^ atbca witk Brou Graraa aad Dajtsa. I a « hapnrtakBBV^thaaaopaMHhsfa beaa actediqM-ia a t e oara atihaot jr-*—^ K Y. City, n ^ m a ataaal im I ehareh eify. A nttle irritatiaa waa pradaeed, A e ^ b r f y rf Bkptiala atorad oa, aadia. tarbedby^difiealty. Aetapoa the mbo p t a a ^ ^ i a renid t» the Naahraia diSealfy It w>n bo ahatav witUa the a<y of th; B o e k ; ^ ^ oat throagh aeraatarratioa. liTca B o i % aUoaat diawa fnaa abraad. A g ^ deal haa beea said abMt the aetioa af the Caaoaad Asaoeiatioa ia dxndag a a a t . ter toadiag ^ iadepeadeaoe of t U d s n h e a . If Aaaoaiatweaeriet at an, they aaat hare rofdeeidiag trira a n ita owa aaembmL - a aa iaaUeaable ti|^t of erery tatm body, whea two eeeietiea preent theia- aelvaa daiaiog iMabardip aader the aaae title, the Aaooiatioo ia eoapsUed to dedde If then is aaythiog wrong ia thiiv it b i. wroag that ezista ia the Twy aatan of Aaao- and eaa be got rid of oBly by abol- r thea alt<«etlier. Aad Bra. Dawaoa -.i aeea to be veering aroand to this poiat. The right ia qaeedoa waa exercbed by the Qeoti^ Aaaooiatioo ia 1822 iriiea the atinori- ly of ^ Winiaaa'Creek ehard waa reoaired aa theftr«weftarefc aad the aajority dedared to be ao dbnrh, iaf « <fiiortM (Sea Heroee^ HiaUny of Geoigia Aasoeiatiai page 80 81.) I eaa aot hdp thiaUag that anah, if aot aU, of ^ eUmor aboat the Ooaeord Aseodatioa rkdatiag ehareh inde- Maiaaoe ia owiw to the &et ttat their deeia- joa ia adTerae to the opnioaa aad wiahea of theae i ^ e o a a i d v tiraTea & Oo., extdaded bera. The baU haa gored their ox. I aa ooaSmed ia tUa t^iaioa by witaeaa- iag the aaaner ia whid brethrea reeeiTO the action of the SoaOen Baptiat Coareation. Then ia carreat a veiy eoatmoo ayiag that the a B. 0. iatoided to ^aon the Neville diiEeal^. Yet, ia erery way ia whidi it was poerible for that Conrento to reeogaiae the exiateneeof Oat diSealty, t h ^ & reeog- aiae it; aad recogaiss it to saatm Howell aad diaoaateoaace Otarea. Dr. Howell waa eleeted PresideBt for the rerj porpoee of mis- taiaiag hia. That deetion aad his sabae- It electioo aa Preaideiit of the BiUe Board hia eeeleaiaatioal poaition. He oal poaitic damauaaa-triaaph; aadaado hit fneads aad Gfaves' eaemiea. On tbe other bad, eTny.Oiag was diMie that eoald be done to show that Grarea was ooaaidered aa ezdadod member. Why was he not ^pointed to prewihr Wasitnotbeeaaaeoft^NashTille diffiealty f Now while the opponeato of Graree aad friends of HoweU claim the action of the S. B. 0 . aa eoadeatoing the former and aaa- taiaiag the latter, I adnnit that the C<mTen- ti<m did withia i b sphen jart what the Aao- ciatioa did w i ^ i b sphere If the Const!- t a ^ of the CoBTeatioa had made Buaitrshy M a BaptiU ckMtxk a qnaUficttion of mem- ber^p ia the CoBTontion, the membeni woald hare beea oompdled to decide whether 6 . was aa exdaded maa or aot. If theiefMe a de- oiauB of this kind is a Tiolatioo of ehareh in- depeodenee, we mast IM fiuewdl to aU oar Aasociationa and OonTationa, aad reeogaiae DO other organisation thaa the New Testa- mmt ehareli. We may perhaps be cimp^ed to eonader this qneatioi. Ia ttese remarka I hare diseassed ] m e i plea, aot personalitiea. I hare allnded only to £teb which a n weU kaowa aad indispat- able. I hare diseassed a qneatioa which is lH«nght to oar doors, aot aa a cpeeolatire bat as a praetioal qaeatioa—a qoeMioa w h i d we most meet aad dedde each for hiaadC. The conchinoo to which priodplea leads toe, I am willing to stand by. That eoocla- doa is that I cannot declare B<w-feIlow8hip with the brethren of the Cherokee ConreatiM, or the Cathbert m » aeetiBg, or aay othen who hare identified thenudres with Grarea aad Dayton. If for thia I a a to be non-fel- lowship^ by bnthrea Diwaoa aad ttallary, I shall bear ia sorrow the loss of their fellow- ship; bat I (hall bear it. fro BB eosmrsv ] Upee of tints they came to the eoadadon that the diOueat ahadea of the Paalm Smgiiw Chardtaa doald bo iarited and hdp to carry «i the Unioa Meetings. So the Beformed, Aa- aoctato Befotmed, aad others of the Paalm Singers wen p r e ^ to ooae in ander the banner of the Uoioa morement. ^le latter along inth the former met one day to arrange exererdses, awetings, &c, and among the rest the qaeation of p a r o d y eaoM ap. The Paalm Stasm woald hare nothing to w with the Unioa Meetiags anlesa the others woald dng psahas alwe to the entira exdasiau of hymns. This msed a alight raffle in the onion waters, whid had aU along glided ao mooth- ly. Sooie of the hymn singing p^oa w«e wiUinc to divide, others wen wUli^ to sing ail paaJas for Ao sake of anirai, and othen wen not, ao they aigaed the matter over and crer, bat the p a ^ singen wen reeolnte, thw ooatmded that the hyian singers eoald ooa- seieatiooily dng paaL^ while they eoald not siag hymBs withoat vioUting their coosdoiee. Bat this woald not do, a leadiag Preabyteriaa preader waa aot willing eraa to d t r ^ the •ii^gii^betwaeatha hymaaaad psalms.— The B^tiat preaohar aaid bat Uttle aboat the matter. Oae of them raaarked that if the TRASSUnOX OV «BAPTIZO.» I hare not seeii Coaant*a nriston of the goe- pd of Mathew, bat I leara from ezAaaget that he a a d ^ the following reasMis for trans- lating iapHxa, immtnt. They a n to me pafectly satia&ctory reasons, If any man, ^ t i f t w Pcdibapdst, thinks he can invali- date them let him try it. P. " L This word expresses a partiealar act, vis: immtrsion, in a floid or aay yielding sal)K staaee. "IL The word had ae otiier m e a i ^ ; it expresses thia act alone, dther literally, or in a metai^Mirieal sense, throngh the whde period of ib oae in Greek literatare. " I I L I b grammatical coastrTietion with oUio' words, aad the eireaastaaees eonneeted with i b Bjo, aeeord entirdy with this mean- ing, and exdade every other. "IT. Ia the age of Christ and his Apoetles, aa ia aU periods of the laagoage, it was in eom- moa ase toexinesa the aiost fw3iar acta and oeearrBBcea of every day lifo; as, for cxua- )la, imaerdag aa axe ia water, to harden it; mmerdng the fnger ia oil, or ia blood to be- smear it; a ship s a b m o ^ in the waves; roeks immersed in the tide; aad, (metaphori- cally), immersed ia eare^ ia amow, ia igoor- aaoe. ia poverty, ia debt, ia stapor and sleep, eta "T. Then was aotUag sacred ia the word itael^ or ia'the act wluch it ex{aeseed. The idea of aaeredaeas bdonged soldy to the r^ tioa in wUdi the act waa performed. " Y L la none of theae reepeeb does the word baptue, aa aaed by En^ish writers, ecv- raapoad with the original Greek word. For, " 1. It doea aotexpreaa aay lae ddhitoact <* 2. It is iMver nsed to express aay aet of duly life. x 3. Oa the eoatrary, it expreaies oaly a n - l^lioas aet; aad that aot of ^ private iadi- vidaal, bat aa erdfaiastical rite, aa ordiaaaoe of the Ohareh. "4. Hecce, thia word has beoomeaaeeelesi- astieal symbd, rapreieatiBg ia itadf aU the idaaa oomndrndM ia initiatioa into the Chxiatiaa Oareh. "5. Aad heace, alao, it haa aeqaired a eer^ taiaayatieal seaae: irith whidt ia aaeoeiated ia iBaay aaiads; aad evoa ia laige ooatmaai- tiea, the idea of OB iaherat virtan ia the rite itadf. "YIL Theaaeefthiafiadgaword, of ia- dalaito aeaaiag aad parportiaBog^iA, tends ta perpetaatattat &tal errar, of attadii« a ayatiaal aaaae aad efieaey to tho rite aigaified by i t ^ "Ym. Iteaaeemthepari^ofGhtia&a- i^, t ^ ita ritas doaU be e^eaaad ia teraa ao dear aad explidt, aa to gawd agaiast aaeh ef thdr t m auMiag aad iateat. "IS. nereaderiagbengiveaiaaeeaaaary, to dow Oa tzaa ngadieaaea aad parport of the nhriatiaa rite, aad the obligadoutoiriiieh itbiadathoaaidoraedvait. <*X This raaderiag ia alao aeaaaaary to cocreot airf fdl andoataadiag of tta N«« TaataaiaBt, relatiBg to the Chnatiaa fifo; a . g : B e a . T i , 8 a B d 4 ; OdoiB. u., 12, io., 1; GaL iE, 27. - X L l a raadattag the Greek word im- I fiiilow the exaapU of the leadiag d e f r o a t h o GredE, tha laagaagea of CoatiaeatBl Barop^ aad abo of the eritieal TeraioDa aaada fw the aae of Aa leaned. "XIL The aamalMaaef OiaraadMiag » jtHtad by the rcfoiraaeab and paetiee of tha O n z d ia aU agaa tiU withia a eoa^aza- tftalr raeaat t n a "ZITL Ita aacraataaaiiB'^ atbated 'The lera h aeiee*ead, tiaailatiagfte NevTertaaaaatiato Oa Eagiah, when (ho ChristiaRrite b aet iateadad. F x exsa- pie, by Dr. Oaapbdl (Priad]^ af Maiiaahal CaUc*e, Aberdeea), T n a d a t ^ af the Gaa- pda. Matt. zz.,2S, aad Mad z., S8: "Gaa ye . . aaderm aa iaaaniea, lika tiiat whid I aaat aategor* "XIY. Thb b aot a aedariaa readeriM £ » that eaaaot ba eaUed aeetarba, i d i e T pravad, OB tadiapatahia phiMwieal eridoaaa, to be the trae raadaciag af God% ward. aa« whid haa beea atliui i aaaad by the farasr praetioeofthaidela Cbibtiaa Ghar^ aad a admitted to U aa by aahdan of aU oaa- aaaiona. "XY. A d a ^ reqaired of every bdi«v«r, at hia eatraaoe oa tha Chriatiaa l i ^ aad i^aia- ly e^reaaed in the diviae word, doald be aad* eqaaUy dear ia every version of it. If it eaa ba proved en philologioal evideaea tbtt tbe writer haa not givaa Oo traa aeaai tibb word he win be ready to adopt aay verdoa, that ahaU be dowa to be the reetoae." eor- Twtk. AS «innov •unra. I aetica ia aoan of the aambera of the Jim- aasaa aome pretty hard thrasb at d o aakaaotianaofaome fldka, an <d whid an very good. Uaioa b oaly ia the Baat»-4t b ibly earned oat, aad I have fooad by experieaoe that thoae who a n the loadeat ia eiytng aaioa a n the BMet iateaae aeetariaaa. There waa aa amasiBg examde of aaioa aiaoag the Pedoea hen laat wiater; let me give it to yoaaadyoarreaden: The revival spirit waa v«y largely difoaed throaghoat all the de- aoBuaatiooa of Pittdargh aad AUeg^y CUy, aad. like the other atiea, the (ood pej- ok of aU the Chordea, iadadiag Methodiat, Preabytarian, low Chard EpiaoopaL La- theriaa aad Biptut came to the ooadania that treat good asi^t be done by holding Ua- ioa Meetiaga, whid waa aeeokiagly doae, and all aeoaed to progreea fiaely, and oo doabt good waa aeeomplided. WeU after a short pedm KBging preaeher woald go aader the water with hiat he woald dag peabaa, (thb was add oaly ia jetty. So after mad wisdom being wasted en both aides, the padm dngera wen oompdled to withdraw from the " Uaioa Meeting," after having bom iavited to joia ia the "Uoim Meeting." Nowaome, if not the maj<»ty, of theae same pedoea (who woald not stag p n l m with thoee who eo^d not coadeatioBdy dog any- thing dae while they eoald), think the doM commonion aad exdadveaeas of the Baptisb awfal, and almost ded criwodile tean over the same, hddiog ap their hands in holy hw- rorl Many of the Presbyterians cried thame, in jnstiee to them be it saiH, yet at the same time it dows what anioa loving profead<»s amoaat to if the pedoea caa have their owa way. Why then it b anioa, tmion, no excladveaees; bat whoi it oomes to the smaU matters of UDging hymns or psalms, why then they can- not even aing aad pray togetho', to say aoth- ing aboat eommanion. "Oar new Chanh, in the 9th ward of thb dty, u progressing lindy. We began last month with twenty-two memben and now nnmber over forty. Some a n joiaing every oumth. Brother W. B. Bolton, formerly of the Methodiat Proteataat C h a r ^ b oar pas- tor, he b a good workmaa. Bat I have traas- gre»ed oa year pateiee too for already. H. a L. Ibrtk. XIMMM. Bi*t).t. A2n> T B X XAXUtlAOK Thb b the title of a book w U d has reeent- eome forth from the " Soath Westen Pob- ishing Hoase," and from the pea of oar ee- ed brother. Elder J. M. D. Gates. Thb an interesting book on an iatereatbg sab- ject. The sabjeet b doabtless interesting, as most persoas who a n not married expect to be, and I tUnk aU who wiU take the {ains to read d o bookwiD find the sabjeet treated in an intoostiog aad inatractive manner. In peraaing thb volnme I waa most fordbly strad with two of the topes treated by tbe "ithor; vis. *• Unscriptard Marriages," sad Tbe datiea parenb to duldrea." It b plainly dowa to my wad that bdievera doald only be aaited ia aarriage to bdievera. Aad iqwa the pnper traiaing of dtBdrea then b doabtieea aome moat v d a d l e thooghla ladeed I thiak theaa topiea are handled inth auateriy hand, ia the duuaoteristie pl^ aad forctbla a^le of tha aattor. Up<a the whole I eaa bat reeoaaaead the boo]^ for I thiak it fills a vaoaoa that haa erated ia the litcntan of the day. J. J. Maana. MS TEXASjCOlRBSPOJIffilCE. As I a a reedving fieqaaat inqairiea d o a t Tom, I wid to to tafhra a y fardhrea oa d e aatter, aboat whid they inqoire. thiowh the edaaaa of the most exedlott Tmiussm Statist. L Theae who w i d to ruse oottoa apoa larM acale a n iaviled to atop ia d o eooatiea of Bed Biver aad LaaMr. I'heee coaatiea pradaee com, wheat, oab aad barley, aad dea vegetdka veryTwelL Thoae who pre- rddag cotton can do a fine badness ia theae eoanUea. FarsMra make ia tiiese coaa- tiarfroa$200to|300perhaBd. YeryamaU aegroea caa do a great deal oa a eottm form. Ttaae ooiattaea m w eora and wheat fiody, aadiadastriotisfonaeracan do weU apoa a aaaU oaptaL They an aot troabled by grase- hoppers, aor vidted by seven droaghta. 2. Thoae who a n tnlliag to iaveat a large aaoont of ea^tal, ia Btaaa&etaring oottoa doths, eoald certainly increase thdr ca|ntal veryfiiat. At Parb they eoald pardtasei eottoa at the hoiae priee. AU oottoa docha lardased hen by eowamers, a n bnaght from few Oikaaa aad d o Nord, fjr i d i d d^ an omnpeUed to pay the fre^t for carrying oat 0^ aad briopng iato .the coantry. Then b a o establishment of the kudiaaU thb see- tioaofcoaa^. Ndtherbthen any Paper Mill, whid b greatly needed, nor aay Cotton Yam Faetory. I thiak Patb the best plaoe ia Nord Eartera Texas for d o above mea- tiooed eatabliduaenta. It b a weU watered plaoe aad a healthy dtaatioa. 3. Thoee who to invest their money ia laad, by addreansg B. & & B. Maxev, or J. - D. Wr%ht, out get aay informatioB th<T want, provided they wiU eadoae astamp- ed envdope. Tab b reqaired ia bttsiaen traaaaetioiis. 4. H e d d b good in Lamar coonty. Frait raidng woald be vdaaUe here. It u Hiree. yoa mast get <m do sandy land to soeeeed wdL I have 'aeea applea seU ia Parb for ity-five o n b per dosea. 5. We expect to have a Ttdlroad to Paib ia thrro years. 6. Thoee widiag to raise wheat, can do ao by aettling in Gnyson, Faimin, Lamar and Be3 Biver ooantiea. 7. Thoee who prefer r d s s g stock, on apeo- (tlation, a n re£aM to the ooonties West of Grayson. 8 Let me a y , bnthren, that yoa who have made of me a eertaia enqairy, that if yoa eome to or near Paris, dat yoa eaa have Chareh pririlegee. We have ahoose of wordip whid we expeet to oecapy by the 1st of May. It win be 40 by 70, with 20 feet from floor to edling. It wiU be an ornament to the place. We have aa intelligeat, pioos. and growing membership. We lave a lovdy band of bnth- rea aad sisters. The writer b thdr pastor. 9. A brother wishing to invert ^ 0 0 0 i hooka aught do weUto udress me. 10. Letters of a basinees natan doald be aooompanied irid a stamped orvdopo. I hope bnthrea wiU remember this, as I am not get- ting rich, and am striving to get a Uttle money to pay a few brethren to whom I have beenin- debt^ ever since I left sdool at Marfrees- boro. WiLuxa B. Gain We never read that Jodaa'a hand weary wid wielding the aword, bat M< hand waa weary wid hddiag d o rod. The mon ^ritad do daty, the aion apt we an to tin of i t We eoald ataad aad pread aU day; bat we eoald aot pny aU day. We eoald go ford to aad the d d aU day, bat we eoald aot ba ia oar doaeb aU day one half ao eanly. To ipend a night with God ia pra; woald be for a m diSealt thaa to spea« aight w i d laan ia preaddng. OhI take care, taka eare. Chard of Chriat, that thoa dost aot eeaae dy fnjml—Sjmryeom. It woald be prenaiptioa for aay aaa to d i a b to tha top of tha m n of a d a r d , aad ataad ^ o a h b head. "Wdl. hat he m h t ooae dowa safe if ho wen skilled ia it" Tea, bat it b ptcaaa^taoaa. I woald no Bam thiak of aabaeribiag a forthiag to aaaa'a aa- it in a balloea, thaa I woald to a poor wretd eattbg Ua owa throat I woaUao a o n thiak of staa£ng aad gadag at aay aaaa ^ rabhblifobV^tSa^peril, thaa I woald of payiag a aaa to dow hb kaias oat tUakandthttMiif not anden, anaar> deroaa. nera ia aodde ia aeaV rbkiog p^yj^ theaaadvea ia that way ; aad if thara bo ' tharbkorthebody.kovaadaaraiatha ofaaaawhopabha owa aoaliajoo- hethiakB ha haaatraagd to ptersat ba baiag raiaed aad daatroyod. Sr, yoar aia b a aia of pra- aaapdon; it b a great aad grbvaaa oaa; U a eM of d a aaalar pieasa «f iaipiij. who^ anthafr boy aairiaaa ' bird that poar. Than an Sfoka^mny thdrhara M n a i ^ y peap, rrava.Chiistlaa BAPnSTB USCHAaiTABLE. The charge b frequently brtmght against d e Baptist denomiaatioa that they a n nar- raw-minded and ancharitable. Thb charge is ba*ed apoa their refosal to eommose with Pe- do-baptist dardies, or to admit dem to deir feDnwship. Not to retort thb charge iq)on cor aeea«rs, i d o formerly vinted as wid stripes, imprison- ments, and the like, instead of dmple charges of andaritdleness, let as investigate the red gronods of thb charge. Then b a radical ^fference between Bap- tists and aU other denominations in thdr oon- eeptioa of what oonstitatee a ChristiaB doreb We hold that d e chord b composed of bap- tised believers. Hen an two elemats—the baptism and d e foid Pedo-baptista d o first, bat do aot reqinn d o latter, have an anomdmu proceeding called eoafinna- tion, which in soaM way b intmded as a com- pletion o f d e baptismd rite, an assamption of the duties and privil^es of d e baptized be- Uever, whid h a d ^ d dormant for years; bat d b rito b only a ooafesdim ofthe New Testa- ment doctrine that the exercise of foith b an itial prereqaidte to d o r d memberdip The Pedo-baptisb daim that d e dnrch is eompoaed of beUevers and deir diildren bap- tind in infoney. The Baptist idea b that d e d a r d b composed of doee who volimtarily de badge of disdpledip, upon a pro- ion of their foitL The Baptist dnrch u das a spiritaal chard. Pedo-^ptistdardea are, ao to speak, phydcd d t t r ^ s . Baptist chardes an b a ^ apon foid ia (Sirist Pedo- baptiat chordea an based apon d b in the second instaqee, bat upon birth or baptisnn in the first We a n not questioning the views of Pedo-baptista; we a n defidag the differ- ence between dem and tis. A g u n : d o tendency of Pedo-baptist d u r d - m b towards a lodog of the d o r d ia the world. IndadtDg, by the rite of baptism, an- regenento peraoo^ eonfasaedly so, ia thdr dareh, they reader iadistinct ^ line of de- markation betweea the d a r d and d e worid. Baptisiag all, d o d a r d indadea all, and memberdip beoomea no test of Christianity, or even of morality. The diatinetiva Ceatares of a Christian d a r d a n aad featarea eqaaUy distinctive of a hereditary d t t r d take thdr plaoe- The Baptist dareh, by confeas- iag ib aeaberdip to bdbvera, (i»t rmder- iag idigion aad fiud hereditary, by indading the children of believers,) perprtaates a ^irit- ad dardi. Hoe agun oar views a n radi- oaQy diffoent Pedo-baptisb holds that the rite of baptism bearattid oaly in i t o s ^ t , and not easentid in i b mode. The B ^ t b t d o r d holds that the mode b a p ^ and the real dgnificant^- p c d part of the rite. If the rito at aU be ea- sentiai to drard aemberahip, the mode b eqaaUy saamtTsl. Jaataathe Lt^'a Si wa reqain the tjmeal iUastration of ken body and a M blood of Christ, ao in bap- t i a d o we reqoira a ^|»eal iUastntaon of oar dead to sin, aad oar leaaireeticn to aewneaa Hfe; Bites aad oereaoaies antypical. u d coneeqaently physaeaL ^e Tenaailitade cflsstitatea the tjpe, aad tiie ^ b iUasbated iatherite. Ifthe^calnatanoftheritr b loat, d o rite itadf loaea i b vdae, and deg«n- eratea into daageroaa foraasBaa. B n b s b hold that therites of the d a r d , aa t;pea of ^tritaal daises and aanifeata&ins cf s|mt- t ^ fediags, aast retaia their typied darae- tar, or low their plaoe ia the fiamda (^qiirit- ad dardo. Pedo4aptbt dardea deay the ^ e d daiaebr af the ritea-^or ia allMtinc a latitade of the phyd^ tyi^ tiny aaat al- low a ootraspoadiav latitade ia the ding tj- pified,whidlhcT£>Bot. Tli^ therefon fdl bad apen d e apoitaal daraeter of d e type, whid aalEiea i a typbalaeaa, and readoa it aot a didaw, bat a aabalaaeo—aot a type, batafeaHty. Maay i m y thaaa eondaaioBa, batadasUthepceaaiaea; batwahavano tiae at preaeat to expaad oar aigaaent farder. Agaia; Baptist dardea hdd that the or- £aaaea ef the LordVi S a p w b a r i t a af the andnotarito efChrbtiaaa. Itbde not of belbvaa^ bat of balievaa aa- ia a dard ouad^. It b aot the oanMByof aniaCvidaal, bat tha eenaaany of doehard. Wado not adMt aU Oxis- tbaa ta da aonanabn; wa adadk ahard hut* aa iafiridMl rit^ bat the rite ofaaotgaaisod body. Pedo- baptist dardea foraoly acted i t ^ thb principle. Thi^ adaitted B<ae bat butisad (aa dey eaUed thea) aeabata to the tabU. L&tleriy they hava ahardoaed thb ineonss- teccy.andnowqdtegeaerdlyiavito aU who eaU thmsdvea Christiana. Hen they are eondstaat If they adadt aU to baptisBi, de imtiatory rite, they ahoaid, and do, admit the initiated to d o r%hb aad privileges (tf d e initiated. And still farther, if f u d u not re- qaired as a prereqmsite to baptisa and dard memberdip a d t t o eaa it be to admiason to d e eommanion. whid b ia itadf aa exorea- non of fdth. Hen b the nductio ad aisur- dmm. Thecmly way to avoid d b horn of the dilemma, u to deny the typied dgsification of the rites of the ehareh. aad reader dem redi- ties. The doctrine (oot practise ia aU cases of d e Epiaco^ d a r d takes tiie graaed fair- ly and fqoanly whea it demee the ty|ncd na- tnn of l^tism. and makea it a nving ordi- nanoe. AU Pedi)b^ptist^ to be eondstent, maat take the aame ajronnd. Baptists, hddisg & s e views aa ^ d p l e a , refaae toooamnae,asadard.widdo9e lAo a n nabaptized, with doss who a n withoat the dareh, aa we asderstand the nature o f d e chanh. An weaodaritdle for domg eai- sistently what Pedo-baptiste do insHidstendy f W i d our views o f d e d a r d aad ite rites oaa we f^owahip ia the rites of d e d u n h doae who, if oar views an correct, havero r^ht to partid{nte ia doee ritesr Ii feality to prin bigotry? Is holding to d e t n t h . as wi ve it, aocharitaUeT Is ataadiag for d e i o t ^ t y of Christ's d a r d oa the earth, row-mbdednas? It is not diirity to enrrea- der oar T»inapl« to d e ketpioK rfoar adgh- bors,and inaUteralsessebeaUthingsto aU Oar viewa of trath have beea eiUed rami minded, bat d o outgrowd of narrow-sunded' Bess, nenecatioo, has never proceeded from as Oar Ptfdo-b^tist friends, who ddm a large charity, have e a d aad d l beat gailty of thb act of nairow-mindednsEs. "By d m fruits yeshaUknowdem " S. E. C. f M th. Tlritala Baftlit. TBAT atOOTKD ^CKSTIOa. The question, as to how mud authority (s power U vested in the majority of a chord of JTecai Christ, b one which has been oonade nbly agitated of late, and one to whid very diffiretit answers hare been g^ven. Smse contend that her power b limited by the constitution, or Word of God, and that de CIO rule only when ahe rulca according to that Word. Others eontend that d e power of the ma ority u unlimited, and from her deeSaon dere isnoapped. Her acts an not even to bo edled in qa^on. If d e dould aet impru- dently or uajustly, it must be borne imtil the day final retribnti(ni, when aU her "wood, hay and stabble" wiU Im btuned. No doabt maay of onr readers a n ready, upon the first presentation of s s d a doctrine, to say: No such Bomid dogmas a n hdd by Baptists. Bat stay yoar sentenee, reader, and look, with OS, into de existing state of Baptiat sen- timent a little. Liok fim at the mioutes of d e Godot As- sociation 1857, page 6th, we 'JlrsT eee (because it b d e first time we reoolf^ ever to have seen it e:^ressed that Batista T acknowledged such a priaojp'.e,) and we read, "The principle universaUy acknowled^ amoc? Bipast durobes is, that maj >rities mast rule." By the way, we would just a d d e Goden if d e "adnowled^adthatuciversd piindple' in the ease of Waller, or in the ease of Har- ris. in ead of whid cases the minority was reodved by her as a regular Baptist d u r d . See Semple's EUstory of the Yirginia Bipttsts. We state from maoory.) But, does th-3 Gosbea sat ford the dostrine, in the q<iotation mvle fr^m her minutes, that it b the right of d e mijjrity of a ebnreh to rale indepsndentof every other oousideration or oonditioa, save dat of thdr bdog the ma ; ority t Attain let as look in the 5oud-nVs/- fem Baptist, of d e 1st of Sept., and in replj to a list of queries presented by J. Wood, tie editor gives the fallowing answer:—^"Questioa 3 J. If a church *expds a mtmber *aBlawfaIly,' d e n a law in d e Bible whid makes it hb du^ to submit to her dedai<ai, without an ap- ped or remedy P An«. "Then b no legislation apon query 3 1 The New Testament laws wen enacted apis the prssamptioB dat the jMtj and intdligence of the choices woald be a o ^ they would ez- dude ineligible c&ndcrs laxfrnUy, hence no pnviaon b made for the ease of oar querist What, den, b d e 'nclawfolly' ezpdled mem- ber to do T We woald adviia hia to quietly submit, ai hb best remedy, and rdy tipon hb God to have justice doae him, in Hb own time and-in Hb owa way," "To every Baptbt chardi, the-^smber must be to if as •an hea- then man a i ^ publican,* wbeder exdaded lawfoUy-or naKwiidly, tiU d * removes the baad of expaldan.' 'Bat canaot aaother ehurd, eq^utiy independeat, reston himT' ' Not withoat breakioe the fellowd^ of d o ehurehes of Christ, whid d e great la^ of Love forbids." Tons we see, the Bonrid dogma, that a aa- jOri^ of a chtud haa »nliinit»««i power over lb members, b held by soom wearicg dename of Baptist Couia Borne be mora like hersdf dan thb doetrtite b like her T la not aU her perseeu- tug power vested is thb doctrine, and in thb akmT Bat when woald thb doctrise lead to look for d e Baptist d u r d f If d b B^tiit dootria'', dan we mast losik for the Baptist d o r d aaoagst tiiose who hold i t Then waa once a Baptist ehard ia the dty f t Bome, amajori^ of that body mlHhad the hseaies of what b aow edled the Bomid d o r d ; that msjori^ acendiig to the doc- trine ia question mast hava bsen d e Baptbt dordi, d e rest must hare been a heretiod foctioa. That msjori^ ptinetple has beea ' ia d e preaat day, aad aow fiads in the Bomaa Cathdb ehaid, ys- 17 we aara adartatad de easa ia ItadriHa. we hava aot doae as iatentiooany, aai afflaeoaewinoorrectns. ^^ If aay doBia hadtate to credit d e hbtGii. edatateaenb above, for the trad af whid ^ eaaaot vaad. of e o m ; yet the p r i a a ^ holds good, aad li^ aay saataaea, d e a t i a S r of a dtard have imKbed beretied aentiuab aad a £ v i « m has ooearred on aeooant of i t that laajfvity, aecordiag to the p r i a ^ l a S questioa, b the B^tist chard, wa oan aat into what enormia of dodriae at of criaw it laay have ran, and du siinority b a discrdoly faetiaa, it maUers not how orthodox it may ha ia doei^e aad ia praedee. We thiok the do^rine that mximrUmm nKsrnd(,aBd dat froa their deddoa then «itoiy)ji«I.iB,tonythB least, perfectly ah- sard. It aiats a blow at the very root of r». ligiooa l i h ^ y . We rather bdieve that the doetrine aad practiae of every d u r d aad every anaistar of t h e p » ^ b pabiie pn>pa^; aad itbtha pnvilfge of every ladividad to eritidse •'ttnn a«d e^aee what they eoacdveto ba anjai; Ye^ it b d e rfa^ of every d a r d , aad arerr christiaa, so for as it liw ia hb powar U aud b aot the eaae, why do dardies ea a » - amnion occasiims extend the invitatioa to members of darchca of like foitit aad ard«r Why not extend the invitatiaa to aaeaiban of s a d aa aekaowled«e the right of the ausritr to rale? If thb b tka airdiad pni>a«b it Baptbt d u r d action it seeas to as that avesr other prindple or qualificatiaa b ahaorhed ia it For if it be "aoknowledged that aajai- ties must rale," there auut also aeeeoarily he iaplied, at h ^ a tderatioo, if aot aa an- I»ovd of ddr action, iriatever dat actm may be, whether in point of futii or pnetiee. Henoe, d e neceadty oaly to extend the iavi- tation to the mEmbars of aad ^ aeknowlod^ that majorities aast rak. And again, in Asaedations whenee d a aa- oesd^ of artida of foith and tha rcqatriag of durchea applying for adausdon to sw- acribe to those artidea7 Why not aaka tha eondition of their adaiidoB Bim{dy that they "ackaowledged that msjaritiw mast rale," f i being right on thb pnint they an neeeaaiily BO mi erery other. Theae quisstioBs we dder simply ridicdons; but we regard thea as in p^oet keepiag with tha l o c h i a questioa, and logieaUy dedadUe dterefros. It b perfectly dear that these priadplaa oT ution, m the part of Chnrdes aad Aaoda- Uons, a n oppo^ to the agaamptiaa that thar adcnowle^ that majarities aast rala." BFUSQXOS'S GKKB. Themany: whata doaaand thoBghb riaa araunddeaetwo words! The milliaB-paopIed dty, de i^puloos town, the wido^praad coimtry, t ! ^ ids, kingdnnii, essiorta, eoati- nents, d e worid, aU aeem to inae fiird Ska armies from the haadred-gated Thdea, at tha mention of that word, ^ Tia many." Hm we s e e d e toiling peasant aad hb lordly squin, d e artesian and theprinedy aasehaat, the ca artier aad the king, the yoang, the oU, d e learned and the atiiarned, aU ga^tad snthin the compaa of a wtad. let aU iho deeds of hereay aad darktra, lawfol iaddj lt€x ctWBd. finds andaaybe rdneedby ibUoody J 1- 1 ' Dtsne deeds back to i b ittetpieney. it now aeek aad find a plaee ia the hosBca aad hearts of theae, aad be caiesae^ as me cf the most iapsrtaat doctriaes whid waa given by Christ to hb d a r d , by d o s e whose Uood it has beea wont to f f ^ ever maee it haa beea able to badlo d o swoid r la thb the Baptbt d a r d f We aeaa a the Booan Catholic, in l A i d thb piindple ' in aUibper^ea^ the Bap&t ehard? yaa. rerily! If d a docttiaa Oat asjoritica must rale is Baptiat doctrine, then wa aaat find do Baptist chard ia tha Beaaa Caddie. Again, if d e maj<wity b tha d a r d , when an wa to find the Fmt d a r d ia NadviDe Weanderatud,dnoe ibStatoiganmtioa, that dere have beea three dlnsTuus. lathe fiat divuiott the l a j a r ^ iaba>ed aadweaftoC, the adacaity raaaiaed a a d w n reoegaised aa the First ehard; d a nabs iaerMsed,aad a f t s w a r d a a d a a a wentdfwidthe Oaapbt^tea, thenaori^ stiU remaiaed aad wen neegaisad aa the Flrat ehareh. Thqr agda iaanaaed, aad hava Hcda split, aad a aajarity hava gone aff widi StderHowdL Now the mMada a, i r i t i s the d a r d ia thb iaataaae f If weantorea^imsa da as^^aada dard.itw«dd aeea that thalSntdard iaNaakviDa haa o t m a t a i fraaadMedy foetioB, aad that ef S a third grade. Caa wo avaid tha osoda&aT It azmara to wa ta ba iaantoUau Whawinha^a^aaailitr If little things have dene great as try to da great things ala>. Yoa not. ye atoms, bat that yoar dratbybaabliaa. Try and make it so by foitii; and the bast el yoa OUT be mighty throagh the atrcngd of Gad. Oil for graoe to trust God, and then no tdling what j e can do. Wonaa, ye a n nothing, but ye have eatea princes; worna, ya an nothing, bat ye have devoared the nets of cedaris and Idd dem levd and de card; worme, je are nothing, bat ye have piled raeka in the deep, deep aea, aad reckrd na- ries; worm^ have eaten thraagh d e k ^ of the proudiwt ship that ever sailed the oeeaa. If ye have dime thb yonsdvea, what eaaaot we do f yoar streegd lies in yoar aoatha; car Btrened lies in curs too. WewiUaseoar moaths in prayer, aad in eonstast adoratiaa, and we shall ooTiqaer yet, for Godbwidai^ aad victory b Bare. Doubt d e Eternal, distrast the Oampoteatf O trdtoroos fear! dinkest doa that d e ara whid piled the heaveni, aad Enstaias the pQ- Ian of the earth, daU ever be palsedr ShaU the brow whid eternd ages have rdled over withoat Fcathing it, at last be fiirrawed by d d acef What! diaU the E^ermd foil theef Godb too wisetoerr, toogoodtobaaakind; lave off doubting hiia, aad b q ^ to trab hiira, for in so ddog, taoa wiH put a erowa oa fcb head, bnt in dotting hia tLm dart traa- |de hb erawn beneath thj feet. Keep prayer gdog; da aot a^Ieet yaar ayer-meetisgs. Christasa Evans givea aa good idea aboat prayer. He ays, "Pnyer the rope ia the bdby ; we paU it, and It risga the beU ap ia harea." Aad ao it it. Uiad yoa bep that bdl gdsfr PallitwdL Come ap ts pnyer-oeetiBg. Keep en paiSBg it; and thon^ the beU b ao h^h that yaa cannot hear it ria^ d^iend i^ea it. it aas ha hoard in the tower of baavca, and a riadag bdin-e the thraoc of God, who will giva^M answer of peace aceordiBg to yoar foith. May yoar Mth be large aad p l i ^ a l , and ao wiE yoar answer be I BKBCHXH1 u r x TMUUiiTS. If oae d o d d aend me froa abroad a riah]y> carved aad pedous statute, aad the eardeaa drayman who troped it tht> sidewalk bo- fora my door doald give it s a d a blow that of the beards of d e hoc ahoaU ha wrfadedo^ IdoaU be frightaacdkrtda hart had peaeiratad foriher, aad woaaiad E within. Bat ii^ takn^ i f d e i airinliig boards, and the swathiM bands of atataw or e»ttim,the statate doaU ooaa oatfotraal adaraed, I doaU aat aiad tha box, tat doald east it eajjlady iato the street Now, every aaa haa eoasaittad to U a a M a t ^ molded by the ddart ;Botaf C a ^ or Yeaas, or Ayda, ar J^itar, er AaolKlirttheiBBageef God;Badhe who a ody si^dtoB for oataad diB& ate ia strniq; to protart aardy d e body froa ia- yxriea and revenea, b Irtiisg iha rtaiate ga raUiag a w ^ iad tha gatter, wbik ha a pbadig ap the fiapaaab aad laaiatiag tha saia « thabaz. arsSB Oae a ^ h t aa wdl atteaipt to^edato aadeaatirany de oaatiBgatt forsi of d a tialdiagbib ^ ^ s a ia the li1adnsiiii|w m to look thraagh tha taba ef tta frUan aai faretdl i b paiaen. Whea I waa ia d e galleriarar OxfM, I aawaaaayoTde d e ^ of Baafcad aai Ki- chadAagdo. I kdadapeaTdaaaidraa. craaoe, aad took 19 s a d of tSaa a a l waa pernttod ts toad aa oae aiaaU taka I takai. ItaeaastoaadaaikaHha aae aeaicr tha gjteat aaatanthaadair I pactaiaa eodd hava dona, beeaaaa dorda I aaw d e a d a i ^ til nrssbsaa d a y w t w i a t beta. t i ^ wm tl« irat aa&at paato af dabh tpiratioa. CoaU I hava^htaa^ daa iaaa « i d a e , h a v j i d I doald ta>a baaa.l haar eavied for their poaMMl Jtov, d m a n (aea aad free to ai^. the dadgaa al a g w^ tk— lq;baiil or IBr ckad A i ^ God. af a d a a d a lablart nadariTtatafodla hmtator. is afcaldii* Md paaMov every hoar tha abirt vaifaaaa idatana-art kaaiiad n m f^O^hA K^ia asd d8«Mrra«I da «rd,aal g^irii^ far aa ia Ika

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rwar.tbryeuDotlMmadadaMibkkavMhad r k r b a p t e - — -A i ^ k a Hjar^bikaardl.

— , I ti mi Mkar laam lif iwlailui 1 tha ( tan^or ia to h nwm.' ttaa ty b a n t i a ^ (1 Ooctateal Ttada, pp. aM-XO.)"

Tba a m nad of llallnflBi, tha a m wa •tilaafaaiiidBiia. AaanpoptafcaxpoaitfaB «r tka daalfB a( baptioa e o ^ not ba gbaa tbaa tha abawtwliatad taat <Mai*jptJ t r K i of t>» Jbdofirtbodr. Batltaran tUatbiThaTaaottte aoiBa<« to adaU tba v i m of thetr fMmder, and dalm tha imbfflty at inlksta to eatn beam wtlb-outhabaptbaaldte. M r a a t a ^

—TnMasaoraAnsa SOT AGsoczBovCoa MUJHW. BrLorieF1rK&D.D^)lwxB.^ Joha

r n » a » ttOBtfc tUa doemaaat h i M v oar doas eoBoaidaa ftboda ia Swite, (aidf ot (aoaj va ahadd tUak tha DaeHr, m hm aaaan* dan, badUtaaanpiaeaarBadaooa.'—JRuiata*

• a an Boi t a iaeon^ibla a*«r ban jat, baoea, vawmldHb to leo tbe 'OVxtacV "iTiii i i i iil WbavaibacoodeaBBghtoteBlAaeeprf Tbn aneartaiaUBdaeraanavbaB "bit,-iatpnnv aad anabcaL VUfevaamBokamiaafbaiocaania laAnaeato acriptsal rnmmniWi. yak «a will aot dantodiiEcviatba vaooaUa Ifmafi tm va

iMk at it M booora MB ^ GioMtiaM. Bra. Davaaa n faa to tka NaAiiUa a S

• ^ a a tha " i M f w a t i n wUA m m fiU^taindWlkti^e&m.'' Bntkna all

hmktekad vith c m t W o A M f o n b S i g g or m l to tbkt £ilmltT.

^ Da«MB with B i m b«t Mt ugaaUa ^ luMd t]» oQztam aad s k ^ » v ^ a t o e o M .

npaat Oa a« Dr. D. kaa ^ t o i tfcajL Tfca t rat Baptiat o tank in NaAirina km paaad aaataaoa of axehrioB

ut eertaia M i b e n . Kotiritbtudiitf , " aona exaeDant bntbran " easBder tkM

m ! ^ «aot ezalBdad (L a. not rigktfaDj «^tid«d)aad therefim dat tk«j ai^ botk «imatena8dprmi«iB«aAeri,«BtitIedto aO 'Hi prMegta ef r^gBlar «li«eh membm."

f ^ k a H j a : "OaOaeOarkaadthcraia la»» n a b e r " "wko Oiak diffanBtiy" da&a "afMnaatkaaabnthnaeaa m w

noogBiaa ^ ez(Mad BBtil I t ratond, mthont O* Aaukmm^ t f a Am^ trgOMic frim^,.'* nntter. n a t w Wli>»abip txlaBili not aaly

BBdAair ooapaay. Imt to ^ w f c o ^ T B M I o i ^ p far ^ Ha iBya,

mnSy aod pconparitr of tbe Kethi&t Xpteapal Ckareh, in oar jadacBBnt, dcpanda apa> aalaiaiiDBC tha Kadplte aa k ii, ao to ai tha af rwahiMp is tba Cbareb b imotfed. Kaka aora ttribcesi is tbair ritaTaetir eoaU not be ani-'nn^«a*rad ;zdeBlna abrteseot wa do Bat da-

— — W — — j r I • • m m j m ^

iitmmhnwi&at *utmM, c m B o a ^ A neogmiua ig iht ciitr^HuiMii$ admMHum.

TkuitOtUitdimcg, md Ou intnt-- t o m B f l . " [Myitaliaa.]

T h i a t f a n i B W - -brBt-Mallair.

LatBaBowIm&attkapneSeal working the BBtter. At tlia CdBaboa CoaTeatioa, a •mAor TidBBteered to go aa esm^oBdoBt to

VbaC tintei&c to be ran, k imiiaaij limii •am*emit7of a n made CiUa IbriAzitfasa.

—'Osr f t e d i badbcr bfatbiaaBav and laiUivelFipaarir aaOlad eoiratiy, vbidivaabat paitiiUr tapped vith tbe BMsa of gnee. Tite calla far tauaUifag ware nua»'iiiua, laiajiiii and •mUt^pnadi eaparHBBUly. to oeet tbaaa daaaadi

tie GoBoal AmiatiaB of Middle T. u d North Alalwaa. Objeetioa vaa made; bat the difisal^ wbii^ tbreateBcd tira lateg-rity of the CoareBtiaa waa araded b j the pre-TJenes of a qiirit of ooBoiliatioB; j e t BO prin-

was abaadooed or ooapomiMd en eitha-

-onr lu tea bad to initiata a iratam of ftfaiRaiter. Andwgy ariai^gbeaB—aalaakmij, ptwtiag aad i aiiHn< d o n t e an orar tfca TaOcr of tbe Ma^aalpiS. Thar Wwh w m ewaed. and w m

Klrticand. As te flddwideBedtteitin-waa eaiarfed—oew Pm^teriea aad cir-

caita were fbraaed, ntd tbe Hr«l of the cbnrck t a M sp ^Ma and derotod mao toepente b tbca. a r i in tbia war te harden of ZiOB bnwbeaDeoBr ataoOjr mending "—Cm i tifmuhut ^ Sammtr af tma.

Heat ebeerfiiSr do we admit that tbe Caabedaad P»ri9teriana bare doDe goad and moefa (ood. bat tbar ban dcoa baza—Ucr ba.T* pmBBad to "giw Wttli' to fimrilw diS^mt fron tboae a«iaulBBil by Oa "Btad of Siw t t e r e ^ of wbii^ tber qxak. T b ^ ban pretended to reftra tba ecsaaiatko af 3abn CalTin, b doctime w&hoat aay m y a a t o U -(Aance ef pcdBr- Tbe pcwmptinn aodiarinBe

"JTow, Iwaottbia <|iiettiaoaettled be&ral die. -riat A a l o r ttepablie lifiit or not wbnwaeaS a ™ C»n$*e!BeBt Sow. if w* an riabt. wo *eeld itaad to ft, asd eaU t l m Caapbemtea; If

waiboald^ait itat onea.'—

It ia weSkaowB :bat Oda aset, wbid bad aa cr i^ wttb AtezaaderCaapbd, bate tba name of their " a a t o , - r t a ^ p B e d to ftea aa nBejonfcta, and bave the eflrantesyto asBip AeoaBM of "CSkru-t i m ' Oa^unea ia , in oar Jadfacot,theooly paper naaebrwUd to daricnatoOeB. Oeir ^ aaSardoetdaaB had tbair liaawith Cnapbdl, aad aha«ld bear, oat of bBDorto tbe author, the aaaae of

S%»Mat OtrimaSmUm Om WarU, li one that waa prodseed in riaBos ahouthne bandredTaan

bseBtUed - - • - -" — J—WMIT itmmamt mm-In Jam OrMi,'aad ia neither wiittea aor pifated. Tbe iettias an cat oat of feana, aad b d n iater-l a a ^ wiAbi» paper, a ^ r b a read aaearty a tbe

itfcil-

.taKHw-kMaki.- . banUMtk. »

In I6M, EoMphaa IL of teai^^^end te & U.OOO daeata. aeaiir

tn flO 000 daeata (or d d a a ) at tUa day.—K

ba=«niTg 1ST n s c u J

-WabaM beaB aaaaawfcat aaaaed of late at a l o f o o a ^ t b e o i o ^ acaiaat the Kafiaka T B ^ T^apaBdaotiaeaar !aboria eriti• J the exstSrataad dahmtoworki ciicn to the

waMitT«tiaatotSaabythaIIIbi.raiao. Tbaae -eoott tba oilieiBa of a^olarL Old nrtawna in

balb of Xatope raad aad adaireb"—

"etoabics ibeoiogiana'* an not aAoiats, aatiMxeibr. V e a l m i l B d asteiaiaad-

BitiDctbe pndsetiaBa ef adnba, wUIa leitoa-eaitodwnlUathealofiaaa "atratdKoad iadab-onto atllrtwH,- Wm wcQ r w a b e r that wbeB WB la—ad to cnajoftUthe Greek a r b (an, we ttB^teoBodf aaai^ eqaaltoavPraftaaac; Bat we>aidai«en-B>Mfe Alikaft toaarbettat af the "enaUat iMoc iaa . -

"Tba eaaplate racoeaa of the Ammtr wiS be-eoaa a Szaa bet otUy vban •* tbe people ha«a a a b d to work" far aad, in work^ b r it, ra-aaabarjoB mwaddaclor tbeipnad of aamel p r i s ! ^ b r tba caaaa of HiiAaia. b r Uacattoo,

" the aarefcaly eBtahBAii*tke«*bieUia

EbeaanC 'LocaaTe-

tbat if ke

t of oar PrTtrminatVa.** a b m b taa tbe pes af the t i the

Bto. Wood the aaaa dtcdfled,

itbatbabnow paiaBiaK, the ^ tke ' ' floathwO "bs 'ea ^ M t o w e ^ ' aad Uapapar

wai ,e»baf t beandi i i leabTkata / tobciKa-

•Tat WB take Ibe Hbarly of mpeetbay aagreat-iB«toaB,tbttIke laaaddahoa^aed^daTte-«*»««.' faeaaBeatM wfthbC^iaab. t b e b e t t ^

Dr. fcuaaauu, tteftUetalibil parTortteSaaaB-ba , aajs Oat tbe Iibh pepba-ban apeater katnrefaasiDKaaataarti^tkaB aftracaad ataaOac.- TbarefbaSr JKaaffiaap laewani "Onat-jBghraaiaaiiiii thattbbbtne, wweaaidarlta aatter eC eeecntabtbo latkar tkiB ef Rona^— lalrabBi fnr iinailiabaik. Ikii fcmiilale Tlnla ttaarthepMeipca a f t h a e b B ^ b theaatbraf ilKtii IB ni. baa ba» waaHaad aa a MtaB ef ape^ ber. Aad b * ear aiaiilir. that, Irian aaAb the

, aCatbaBe abeaUiteldcr atb

_ v s a a w a j ; aBaBahwmMt-tt anaad «he lahb of Ike o a d M £ort.>> r b b i iH, HbenL W>wiiiderwbaa < b b * b n a d * M i . S o - H p f t r -

CeUKCH m u m L

Cttenmrtaaaaa haTe Ud latdy to aaeh dk> HiiwBfwltateaMhrathnB eaU the a

I win aay. at dm OBt-H*,thstXaiBkth«tata.MMr»mis atterlT l u ^ i ^ i ^ BKOioa ton^ w U ^ ^ aUeoaa iBt i iMj^iB an tUBga. We a a j a a w a a w j O B t a j v ^ ' a e o v t it H««n iA Jena Ghriak ia the oo l t xno, the oalj mt-c i ^ B«t«Bdar Jeeaa Oriat, I set obIt «4m<,bmt*Aat*iHtheiedepeBde8eT of tlw akwdNa; and I p n m e , thia !• an that brethraa gOMnUy aaaa vhaa ther apeak of ehvnh aometga^.

Sr. DawaoB ia aa artiele oa " Editorial Tro«]>Iea»iBtheSoBair«.te»

fooe. Dr Manaiy haa ia Aa m m mmt. aaMrtiooedthe Tiawaof Dr. D. fkeaa ^ m B M apeeBlBtiTeaaitkeen&al,b«ta(B of aMjdiBte, pnotieBl battiag. We oaa aot ^ t h a a a a a i ^ Wear*eoaapdledtoeoa^ te; veaneeaqtdledtotahBpQaWaii. Aa the q i a ^ ia teaed wpoa at, Bra Bditor.kt a a l e o k a t U a a b e e o i a a a ^ ^

aadi

11 won.iw IS unMMm. t > l iSEn u x n s o o r n S n h s . I

>. Dawaoa'a pcaitioB, eadonad

- — — • w aMB iiiaa iiiaa wea CorreepaBdeato bowerer were appoiated

the Baptiat Qmreatioa of Cbmkee 6ew-gta. Bone of theai atteaded aad werereedr.

Dr. DaytoB aad at least one other of the ao-eaOed exehtd^ aMaboa of the Kaahrille Chsrd were alao reeeired, aad tktkr mtmitr-sk^ tB tk» SpriagStrmt Cktartk was spteial-ly neegmumL H o e thea ia a boify wkid npraeeoti the firarteea thoaaaad Baptisb of Cherokee Gemga " i d e a t i f ^ theaadrea with the exehded." The m m prioctple rUA weald refiue correapoadeaee with the

TeaoeaMo Aaoewiiaa wiU abo eat off att eor-oadaaoe with the Cherokee CoBTeotiaa; Bio. D&wna'a dietaa, esd<»ed by B » .

Mallarr. fiabida gay ramyni«oia of tbe m b -bosofthUbod^. I wiU barely refer to one oth« faet. At the Cathbert acetiag. Bra Lot Watiea {maided, aad J . B. waa preaeat, aad waa aot aerely reesgBiaad. bat wdeomedwitha^aaa^weleoate. Lot War-rea thea haa ideatiied hiasdf with J. R. Graves; aad he aad Bro. HiOlarr are both meabOT of U» Albany clinrch. WiU brother MaUaty atteapt to foree the dictom which he has eadoraed} Or wiU he ptaetieaUy ig-BOTe it.

These &eta ^ w that the qaeatioa aeeta aa at oar owa door, aad Oat weoaa aroid aad ^ o r e it BO haiger.

As "theoaly reaedy" for Ae erils whieh tireatea as. Dr. Dawsoa propoeea "artitcm t» firxt prbuifitt.'^ I axree to the propon-tioa. WhatthaadotheSrctaBdgreatpnBei-ptea of CharA iadepeadeaoe rnjaireT Do theyleqairaanother darchea to recognise, R^eet, aad aabait to the deemoa of Oe Na^TiHe (Aareh ia axeta£ag these aeiabera, tahaOar Uud AeMm is rigid » wrtmgt With dae defereaoe to brethrea Sawaoa aad MaUory, I thiak diffsraay. Stripped of all it* persMalitiea qtaatioe k raply thk, ewern partiealar, l o ^ rinble ehanhby i b aot Uad aU other partieaiar, kieal, TaiUe d i a r ^ r IfcOfWaareboaadby the deeta-MaoftheKa^TiUaChan^; oderwiaewean

A chard ia aot boaad to reoetTa a aenber lata lb fdlow^ip, beeaaw aaother ehareh has w reeamd hia. UaBaQy iadead eae dtareb teeeiTea a aeaBber oa a letter eertifyiog hia feOowihip ia aaother d n r ^ bat thia ia a ant-tu-of eoartaiT aad not of i ^ t : the ehardi is aot bMad to reeatre hia, aad IhaTokoowa

^areh to rejeet aad aa U|difiaat. Neither a a dareh b o a ^ to r e e m aa a

-liaister oae whoaa aaother oharehao reeeiTea. It d e t ^ far itadf whether Uwm ao rceare hia or iwt, aad I hara kaowa Bora thaa me iaataaoa whan oharohaa hara lefued to re-eare

Agaia, a efaareh ia aot boaad to rejeet a aemb» who hai beea rejeetad by aaother ehareh. I f a a a a npliea to oae ohareh fur aeabeidip m cxpeneaee aad a rejeetod be-eaaae hia ozperieBoa iom aot aatafy theat, ke aay aercrtheleaa be rceaiTad by a a o ^ oa the Tarr aaM c^eriaaea. Kdody win deay tUa Vpoa tkartxj sataepr^pl^ oae who haa bow ezdaded by oae dareh aay ho » -eeiradbj aaother. Tha iaataaeaa iaatrivea show ^ a a i t h e r ia reottriw aor rejeotiag a a a b e r a e a a a a e l o e a l d a r d l ^ a n o S kMalafcar«L

Ik haa b e n aigaed OU a Bajoci^ maat gaTerB,KBddiatita&dMenaot be oaUed

riaaetian. Bat ia te eaaea above referred there aijht be aaaaaity ia laoani^ er

eetiag a wiaaber ia oae ehard, aad atffi * c ehardwaaU aot ba boaad by ita ae>

Sraa aaaaiauty ia enor or wnag doaldaot ba r a n t e d . I t eertaialy ia ao aew doetfxaa aaMBg Bi^tisb^ that a aajori^, bowerer aaaD. whid adharea to ^ geepal, ii to ha leqMMtea rather Oaa a aajority wUeh hflUa to o m r aad nalatea the hwa rf Qkn*.

I f i t ia adaittedthat aaraBfdMMaHof eae •imrehia aot b ia&v on an others (fte idola

vmm rar iiaun aaeiaut l ItiaaoaiteajtaieaBeattha

oTa&teraliareh. bat r ^ H t h e

TiBaehaida. 4ght;,kiBea9

of Oa Had-Tiafiaatad Oa gioaad of taahav that « i* a a « W «a

HaMiy t h ^ ryalua,, I a » aot a t y r a d tagawithbaalfaaa Di aad M. ia d e ^ a g aoB^aOowdhip withthaaa iriie idiatifr tte^ atbca witk Brou Graraa aad Dajtsa. I a « hapnrtakBBV^thaaaopaMHhsfa beaa actediqM-ia a t e oara atihaot jr-*—^

K Y. City, n ^ m a ataaal i m I ehareh

eify. A nttle irritatiaa waa pradaeed, A e ^ b r f y rf Bkptiala atorad oa, aadia. tarbedby^difiealty. Aetapoa the mbo p t a a ^ ^ i a renid t» the Naahraia diSealfy

It w>n bo ahatav witUa the a<y of th; B o e k ; ^ ^ oat throagh aeraatarratioa. liTca B o i % aUoaat diawa fnaa abraad.

A g ^ deal haa beea said abMt the aetioa af the Caaoaad Asaoeiatioa ia dxndag a a a t . ter toadiag ^ iadepeadeaoe of tUdsnhea . If Aaaoaiatweaeriet at an, they aaat hare

rofdeeidiag trira a n ita owa aaembmL - a aa iaaUeaable ti|^t of erery

tatm body, whea two eeeietiea preent theia-aelvaa daiaiog iMabardip aader the aaae title, the Aaooiatioo ia eoapsUed to dedde If then is aaythiog wrong ia thiiv it b i. wroag that ezista ia the Twy aatan of Aaao-

and eaa be got rid of oBly by abol-r thea alt<«etlier. Aad Bra. Dawaoa

- . i aeea to be veering aroand to this poiat. The right ia qaeedoa waa exercbed by the Qeoti^ Aaaooiatioo ia 1822 iriiea the atinori-ly of ^ Winiaaa'Creek ehard waa reoaired aa the ftr«w eftarefc aad the aajority dedared to be ao dbnrh, iaf « <fiiortM (Sea Heroee^ HiaUny of Geoigia Aasoeiatiai page 80 81.) I eaa aot hdp thiaUag that anah, if aot aU, of ^ eUmor aboat the Ooaeord Aseodatioa rkdatiag ehareh inde-Maiaaoe ia owiw to the &et ttat their deeia-

joa ia adTerae to the opnioaa aad wiahea of theae i ^ e o a a i d v tiraTea & Oo., extdaded bera. The baU haa gored their ox.

I a a ooaSmed ia tUa t^iaioa by witaeaa-iag the aaaner ia whid brethrea reeeiTO the action of the SoaOen Baptiat Coareation. Then ia carreat a veiy eoatmoo ayiag that the a B. 0 . iatoided to ^ a o n the N e v i l l e diiEeal^. Yet, ia erery way ia whidi it was poerible for that Conrento to reeogaiae the exiateneeof Oat diSealty, t h ^ & reeog-aiae i t ; aad recogaiss it to saatm Howell aad diaoaateoaace Otarea. Dr. Howell waa eleeted PresideBt for the rerj porpoee of mis-taiaiag hia. That deetion aad his sabae-

It electioo aa Preaideiit of the BiUe Board hia eeeleaiaatioal poaition. He oal poaitic

damauaaa-triaaph; aadaado hit fneads aad Gfaves' eaemiea. On tbe other bad, eTny.Oiag was diMie that eoald be done to show that Grarea was ooaaidered aa ezdadod member. Why was he not ^pointed to prewihr Wasitnotbeeaaaeoft^NashTille diffiealty f Now while the opponeato of Graree aad friends of HoweU claim the action of the S. B. 0 . aa eoadeatoing the former and aaa-taiaiag the latter, I adnnit that the C<mTen-ti<m did withia i b sphen jart what the Aao-ciatioa did w i ^ i b sphere If the Const!-t a ^ of the CoBTeatioa had made Buaitrshy M a BaptiU ckMtxk a qnaUficttion of mem-ber^p ia the CoBTontion, the membeni woald hare beea oompdled to decide whether 6 . was aa exdaded maa or aot. If theiefMe a de-oiauB of this kind is a Tiolatioo of ehareh in-depeodenee, we mast IM fiuewdl to aU oar Aasociationa and OonTationa, aad reeogaiae DO other organisation thaa the New Testa-mmt ehareli. We may perhaps be cimp^ed to eonader this qneatioi.

Ia ttese remarka I hare diseassed ] m e i plea, aot personalitiea. I hare allnded only to £teb which a n weU kaowa aad indispat-able. I hare diseassed a qneatioa which is lH«nght to oar doors, aot aa a cpeeolatire bat as a praetioal qaeatioa—a qoeMioa whid we most meet aad dedde each for hiaadC.

The conchinoo to which priodplea leads toe, I am willing to stand by. That eoocla-doa is that I cannot declare B<w-feIlow8hip with the brethren of the Cherokee ConreatiM, or the Cathbert m » aeetiBg, or aay othen who hare identified thenudres with Grarea aad Dayton. If for thia I a a to be non-fel-lowship^ by bnthrea Diwaoa aad ttallary, I shall bear ia sorrow the loss of their fellow-ship; bat I (hall bear it.

fro BB eosmrsv ]

Upee of tints they came to the eoadadon that the diOueat ahadea of the Paalm Smgiiw Chardtaa doald bo iarited and hdp to carry «i the Unioa Meetings. So the Beformed, Aa-aoctato Befotmed, aad others of the Paalm Singers wen p r e ^ to ooae in ander the banner of the Uoioa morement. ^ le latter along inth the former met one day to arrange exererdses, awetings, &c, and among the rest the qaeation of p a r o d y eaoM ap. The Paalm Stasm woald hare nothing to w with the Unioa Meetiags anlesa the others woald dng psahas alwe to the entira exdasiau of hymns. This msed a alight raffle in the onion waters, whid had aU along glided ao mooth-ly. Sooie of the hymn singing p^oa w«e wiUinc to divide, others wen wUli^ to sing ail paaJas for Ao sake of anirai, and othen wen not, ao they aigaed the matter over and crer, bat the p a ^ singen wen reeolnte, thw ooatmded that the hyian singers eoald ooa-seieatiooily dng paaL^ while they eoald not siag hymBs withoat vioUting their coosdoiee. Bat this woald not do, a leadiag Preabyteriaa preader waa aot willing eraa to d t r ^ the •ii^gii^betwaeatha hymaaaad psalms.— The B^tiat preaohar aaid bat Uttle aboat the matter. Oae of them raaarked that if the

TRASSUnOX OV «BAPTIZO.» I hare not seeii Coaant*a nriston of the goe-

pd of Mathew, bat I leara from ezAaaget that he a a d ^ the following reasMis for trans-lating iapHxa, immtnt. They an to me pafectly satia&ctory reasons, If any man, ^ t i f t w Pcdibapdst, thinks he can invali-date them let him try it. P.

" L This word expresses a partiealar act, vis: immtrsion, in a floid or aay yielding sal)K staaee.

"IL The word had ae otiier m e a i ^ ; it expresses thia act alone, dther literally, or in a metai Mirieal sense, throngh the whde period of i b oae in Greek literatare.

"IIL I b grammatical coastrTietion with oUio' words, aad the eireaastaaees eonneeted with i b Bjo, aeeord entirdy with this mean-ing, and exdade every other.

"IT. Ia the age of Christ and his Apoetles, aa ia aU periods of the laagoage, it was in eom-moa ase toexinesa the aiost fw3iar acta and oeearrBBcea of every day lifo; as, for cxua-)la, imaerdag aa axe ia water, to harden it; mmerdng the fnger ia oil, or ia blood to be-

smear it; a ship s a b m o ^ in the waves; roeks immersed in the tide; aad, (metaphori-cally), immersed ia eare^ ia amow, ia igoor-aaoe. ia poverty, ia debt, ia stapor and sleep, eta

"T. Then was aotUag sacred ia the word itael^ or ia'the act wluch it ex{aeseed. The idea of aaeredaeas bdonged soldy to the r ^ tioa in wUdi the act waa performed.

" Y L la none of theae reepeeb does the word baptue, aa aaed by En^ish writers, ecv-raapoad with the original Greek word. For,

" 1. It doea aotexpreaa aay lae ddhitoact <* 2. It is iMver nsed to express aay

aet of duly life. x 3. Oa the eoatrary, it expreaies oaly a n -

l^lioas aet; aad that aot of ^ private iadi-vidaal, bat aa erdfaiastical rite, aa ordiaaaoe of the Ohareh.

"4. Hecce, thia word has beoomeaaeeelesi-astieal symbd, rapreieatiBg ia itadf aU the idaaa oomndrndM ia initiatioa into the Chxiatiaa Oareh.

"5. Aad heace, alao, it haa aeqaired a eer taiaayatieal seaae: irith whidt ia aaeoeiated ia iBaay aaiads; aad evoa ia laige ooatmaai-tiea, the idea of OB iaherat virtan ia the rite itadf.

"YIL Theaaeefthiafiadgaword, of ia-dalaito aeaaiag aad parportiaBog^iA, tends ta perpetaatattat &tal errar, of attadii« a ayatiaal aaaae aad efieaey to tho rite aigaified by i t ^

" Y m . Iteaaeemthepari^ofGhtia&a-i^ , t ^ ita ritas doaU be e^eaaad ia teraa ao dear aad explidt, aa to gawd agaiast aaeh

ef thdr t m auMiag aad iateat. "IS. nereaderiagbengiveaiaaeeaaaary,

to dow Oa tzaa ngadieaaea aad parport of the nhriatiaa rite, aad the obligadoutoiriiieh itbiadathoaaidoraedvait.

<*X This raaderiag ia alao aeaaaaary to cocreot airf f d l andoataadiag of tta N«« TaataaiaBt, relatiBg to the Chnatiaa fifo; a . g : B e a . T i , 8 a B d 4 ; OdoiB. u., 12, io., 1; GaL iE, 27.

- X L la raadattag the Greek word im-I fiiilow the exaapU of the leadiag

defroatho GredE, tha laagaagea of CoatiaeatBl Barop^ aad abo of the eritieal TeraioDa aaada f w the aae of Aa leaned.

"XIL The aamalMaaef OiaraadMiag » jtHtad by the rcfoiraaeab and paetiee of

tha O n z d ia aU agaa tiU withia a eoa^aza-tftalr raeaat t n a

"ZITL Ita aacraataaaiiB'^ atbated

'The l era h aeiee*ead, tiaailatiagfte

NevTertaaaaatiato Oa Eagiah, when (ho ChristiaRrite b aet iateadad. F x exsa-pie, by Dr. Oaapbdl (Priad]^ af Maiiaahal CaUc*e, Aberdeea), T n a d a t ^ af the Gaa-pda. Matt. zz.,2S, aad Mad z., S8: "Gaa ye . . aaderm aa iaaaniea, lika tiiat whid I aaat aategor*

"XIY. Thb b aot a aedariaa readeriM £ » that eaaaot ba eaUed aeetarba, i d i e T pravad, OB tadiapatahia phiMwieal eridoaaa, to be the trae raadaciag af God% ward. aa« whid haa beea atliui i aaaad by the farasr praetioeofthaidela Cbibtiaa Ghar^ aad a admitted to U aa by aahdan of aU oaa-aaaiona.

"XY. A da^ reqaired of every bdi«v«r, at hia eatraaoe oa tha Chriatiaa l i ^ aad i^aia-ly e^reaaed in the diviae word, doald be aad* eqaaUy dear ia every version of it. If it eaa ba proved en philologioal evideaea tbtt tbe writer haa not givaa Oo traa aeaai tibb word he win be ready to adopt aay verdoa, that ahaU be dowa to be the reetoae."

eor-

Twtk. AS «innov • u n r a .

I aetica ia aoan of the aambera of the Jim-aasaa aome pretty hard thrasb at d o aakaaotianaofaome fldka, an <d whid an very good. Uaioa b oaly ia the Baat»-4t b

ibly earned oat, aad I have fooad by experieaoe that thoae who a n the loadeat ia eiytng aaioa a n the BMet iateaae aeetariaaa. There waa aa amasiBg examde of aaioa aiaoag the Pedoea hen laat wiater; let me give it to yoaaadyoarreaden: The revival spirit waa v«y largely difoaed throaghoat all the de-aoBuaatiooa of Pittdargh aad A U e g ^ y CUy, aad. like the other atiea, the (ood pej-ok of aU the Chordea, iadadiag Methodiat, Preabytarian, low Chard EpiaoopaL La-theriaa aad Biptut came to the ooadania that treat good asi^t be done by holding Ua-ioa Meetiaga, whid waa aeeokiagly doae, and all aeoaed to progreea fiaely, and oo doabt good waa aeeomplided. WeU after a short

pedm KBging preaeher woald go aader the water with hiat he woald dag peabaa, (thb was add oaly ia jetty. So after mad wisdom being wasted en both aides, the padm dngera wen oompdled to withdraw from the " Uaioa Meeting," after having bom iavited to joia ia the "Uoim Meeting."

Nowaome, if not the maj<»ty, of theae same pedoea (who woald not stag p n l m with thoee who eo^d not coadeatioBdy dog any-thing dae while they eoald), think the doM commonion aad exdadveaeas of the Baptisb awfal, and almost ded criwodile tean over the same, hddiog ap their hands in holy hw-rorl Many of the Presbyterians cried thame, in jnstiee to them be it saiH, yet at the same time it dows what anioa loving profead<»s amoaat to if the pedoea caa have their owa way. Why then it b anioa, tmion, no excladveaees; bat whoi it oomes to the smaU matters of UDging hymns or psalms, why then they can-not even aing aad pray togetho', to say aoth-ing aboat eommanion.

"Oar new Chanh, in the 9th ward of thb dty, u progressing lindy. We began last month with twenty-two memben and now nnmber over forty. Some a n joiaing every oumth. Brother W. B. Bolton, formerly of the Methodiat Proteataat Char^ b oar pas-tor, he b a good workmaa. Bat I have traas-gre»ed oa year pateiee too for already.

H. a L. Ibrtk. XIMMM. Bi*t).t.

A2n> TBX XAXUtlAOK Thb b the title of a book w U d has reeent-eome forth from the " Soath Westen Pob-

ishing Hoase," and from the pea of oar ee-ed brother. Elder J. M. D. Gates. Thb

an interesting book on an iatereatbg sab-ject. The sabjeet b doabtless interesting, as most persoas who a n not married expect to be, and I tUnk aU who wiU take the {ains to read d o bookwiD find the sabjeet treated in an intoostiog aad inatractive manner.

In peraaing thb volnme I waa most fordbly strad with two of the topes treated by tbe "ithor; vis. *• Unscriptard Marriages," sad

Tbe datiea parenb to duldrea." It b plainly dowa to my wad that bdievera doald only be aaited ia aarriage to bdievera. Aad iqwa the pnper traiaing of dtBdrea then b doabtieea aome moat vdadle thooghla ladeed I thiak theaa topiea are handled inth

auateriy hand, ia the duuaoteristie p l ^ aad forctbla a^le of tha aattor. Up<a the whole I eaa bat reeoaaaead the boo]^ for I thiak it fills a vaoaoa that haa erated ia the litcntan of the day. J . J. Maana.

M S TEXASjCOlRBSPOJIffi lCE.

As I a a reedving fieqaaat inqairiea doa t Tom, I wid to to tafhra a y fardhrea oa d e aatter, aboat whid they inqoire. thiowh the edaaaa of the most exedlott Tmiussm Statist.

L Theae who wid to ruse oottoa apoa larM acale a n iaviled to atop ia d o eooatiea of Bed Biver aad LaaMr. I'heee coaatiea pradaee com, wheat, oab aad barley, aad

dea vegetdka veryTwelL Thoae who pre-rddag cotton can do a fine badness ia

theae eoanUea. FarsMra make ia tiiese coaa-tiarfroa$200to|300perhaBd. YeryamaU aegroea caa do a great deal oa a eottm form. Ttaae ooiattaea m w eora and wheat fiody, aadiadastriotisfonaeracan do weU apoa a aaaU oaptaL They a n aot troabled by grase-hoppers, aor vidted by seven droaghta.

2. Thoae who a n tnlliag to iaveat a large aaoont of ea^tal, ia Btaaa&etaring oottoa doths, eoald certainly increase thdr ca|ntal veryfiiat. At Parb they eoald pardtasei eottoa at the hoiae priee. AU oottoa docha lardased hen by eowamers, a n bnaght from few Oikaaa aad d o Nord, fjr i d i d d ^

a n omnpeUed to pay the fre^t for carrying oat 0^ aad briopng iato .the coantry. Then b a o establishment of the kudiaaU thb see-tioaofcoaa^. Ndtherbthen any Paper Mill, whid b greatly needed, nor aay Cotton Yam Faetory. I thiak Patb the best plaoe ia Nord Eartera Texas for d o above mea-tiooed eatabliduaenta. It b a weU watered plaoe aad a healthy dtaatioa.

3. Thoee who to invest their money ia laad, by addreansg B. & & B. Maxev, or J. - D. Wr%ht, out get aay informatioB th<T want, provided they wiU eadoae astamp-ed envdope. Tab b reqaired ia bttsiaen traaaaetioiis.

4. H e d d b good in Lamar coonty. Frait raidng woald be vdaaUe here. It u Hiree. yoa mast get <m do sandy land to soeeeed wdL I have 'aeea applea seU ia Parb for

ity-five o n b per dosea. 5. We expect to have a Ttdlroad to Paib

ia thrro years. 6. Thoee widiag to raise wheat, can do ao

by aettling in Gnyson, Faimin, Lamar and Be3 Biver ooantiea.

7. Thoee who prefer rdssg stock, on apeo-(tlation, a n re£aM to the ooonties West of Grayson.

8 Let me a y , bnthren, that yoa who have made of me a eertaia enqairy, that if yoa eome to or near Paris, dat yoa eaa have Chareh pririlegee. We have ahoose of wordip whid we expeet to oecapy by the 1st of May. It win be 40 by 70, with 20 feet from floor to edling. It wiU be an ornament to the place. We have aa intelligeat, pioos. and growing membership. We lave a lovdy band of bnth-rea aad sisters. The writer b thdr pastor.

9. A brother wishing to invert ^ 0 0 0 i hooka aught do weUto udress me.

10. Letters of a basinees natan doald be aooompanied irid a stamped orvdopo. I hope bnthrea wiU remember this, as I am not get-ting rich, and am striving to get a Uttle money to pay a few brethren to whom I have beenin-debt^ ever since I left sdool at Marfrees-boro. WiLuxa B. G a i n

We never read that Jodaa'a hand weary wid wielding the aword, bat M< hand waa weary wid hddiag d o rod. The mon ^ r i t a d d o daty, the aion apt we a n to tin of i t We eoald ataad aad pread aU day; bat we eoald aot pny aU day. We eoald go ford to aad the d d aU day, bat we eoald aot ba ia oar doaeb aU day one half ao eanly. To ipend a night with God ia pra; woald be for a m diSealt thaa to spea« aight w id laan ia preaddng. OhI take care, taka eare. Chard of Chriat, that thoa dost aot eeaae d y fnjml—Sjmryeom.

It woald be prenaiptioa for aay aaa to d iab to tha top of tha m n of a d a r d , aad ataad ^ o a hb head. "Wdl. hat he m h t ooae dowa safe if ho wen skilled ia i t" Tea, bat it b ptcaaa^taoaa. I woald no Bam thiak of aabaeribiag a forthiag to aaaa'a aa-

it in a balloea, thaa I woald to a poor wretd eattbg Ua owa throat I woaUao a o n thiak of staa£ng aad gadag at aay aaaa ^ rabhblifobV^tSa^peril, thaa I woald of payiag a aaa to dow hb kaias oat

tUakandthttMiif not a n d e n , anaar> deroaa. n e r a ia aodde ia aeaV rbkiog

p ^ y j ^

theaaadvea ia that way ; aad if thara bo ' tharbkorthebody.kovaadaaraiatha

o f a a a a w h o p a b h a owa aoaliajoo-hethiakB ha haaatraagd

to ptersat ba baiag raiaed aad daatroyod. Sr, yoar aia b a aia of pra-aaapdon; it b a great aad grbvaaa oaa; U a eM of d a aaalar pieasa «f ia ipi i j .

who anthafr boy aairiaaa

' bird that poar.

Than a n S f o k a ^ m n y thdrhara

M n a i ^ y peap,

rrava.Chiistlaa BAPnSTB USCHAaiTABLE.

The charge b frequently brtmght against d e Baptist denomiaatioa that they a n nar-raw-minded and ancharitable. Thb charge is ba*ed apoa their refosal to eommose with Pe-do-baptist dardies, or to admit dem to deir feDnwship.

Not to retort thb charge iq)on cor aeea«rs, ido formerly vinted as wid stripes, imprison-ments, and the like, instead of dmple charges of andaritdleness, let as investigate the red gronods of thb charge.

Then b a radical ^fference between Bap-tists and aU other denominations in thdr oon-eeptioa of what oonstitatee a ChristiaB doreb We hold that d e chord b composed of bap-tised believers. Hen a n two elemats—the baptism and d e foid Pedo-baptista d o first, bat do aot reqinn d o latter, have an anomdmu proceeding called eoafinna-tion, which in soaM way b intmded as a com-pletion o f d e baptismd rite, an assamption of the duties and privil^es of d e baptized be-Uever, whid h a d ^ d dormant for years; bat d b rito b only a ooafesdim of the New Testa-ment doctrine that the exercise of foith b an

itial prereqaidte to d o r d memberdip The Pedo-baptisb daim that d e dnrch is eompoaed of beUevers and deir diildren bap-tind in infoney. The Baptist idea b that d e d a r d b composed of doee who volimtarily

d e badge of disdpledip, upon a pro-ion of their foitL The Baptist dnrch u

das a spiritaal chard. Pedo-^ptistdardea are, ao to speak, phydcd d t t r ^ s . Baptist chardes a n b a ^ apon foid ia (Sirist Pedo-baptiat chordea a n based apon d b in the second instaqee, bat upon birth or baptisnn in the first We a n not questioning the views of Pedo-baptista; we a n defidag the differ-ence between dem and tis.

Agun: d o tendency of Pedo-baptist d u r d -m b towards a lodog of the d o r d ia the world. IndadtDg, by the rite of baptism, an-regenento peraoo^ eonfasaedly so, ia thdr dareh, they reader iadistinct ^ line of de-markation betweea the d a r d and d e worid. Baptisiag all, d o d a r d indadea all, and memberdip beoomea no test of Christianity, or even of morality. The diatinetiva Ceatares of a Christian d a r d a n aad featarea eqaaUy distinctive of a hereditary d t t rd take thdr plaoe- The Baptist dareh, by confeas-iag i b aeaberdip to bdbvera, (i»t rmder-iag idigion aad fiud hereditary, by indading the children of believers,) perprtaates a ^irit-a d dardi. Hoe agun oar views a n radi-oaQy diffoent

Pedo-baptisb holds that the rite of baptism bearattid oaly in i t o s ^ t , and not easentid in i b mode. The B^tbt d o r d holds that the mode b a p ^ and the real dgnificant^-p c d part of the rite. If the rito at aU be ea-sentiai to drard aemberahip, the mode b eqaaUy saamtTsl. Jaataathe Lt^'a Si wa reqain the tjmeal iUastration of ken body and a M blood of Christ, ao in bap-t i a d o we reqoira a ^|»eal iUastntaon of oar dead to sin, aad oar leaaireeticn to aewneaa

Hfe; Bites aad oereaoaies antypical. u d coneeqaently physaeaL ^ e Tenaailitade cflsstitatea the tjpe, aad tiie ^ b iUasbated iatherite. I f the^ca lnatanof ther i t r b loat, d o rite itadf loaea i b vdae, and deg«n-eratea into daageroaa foraasBaa. B n b s b hold that therites of the d a r d , aa t;pea of ^tritaal da i se s and aanifeata&ins cf s|mt-t ^ fediags, aast retaia their typied darae-tar, or low their plaoe ia the fiamda (^qiirit-a d d a r d o . Pedo4aptbt dardea deay the ^ e d daiaebr af the ritea-^or ia allMtinc a latitade of the p h y d ^ ty i^ tiny aaat al-low a ootraspoadiav latitade ia the ding tj-pified,whidlhcT£>Bot. Tl i^ therefon fdl bad apen d e apoitaal daraeter of d e type, whid aalEiea i a typbalaeaa, and readoa it aot a didaw, bat a aabalaaeo—aot a type, batafeaHty. Maay i m y thaaa eondaaioBa, batadasUthepceaaiaea; batwahavano tiae at preaeat to expaad oar aigaaent farder.

Agaia; Baptist dardea hdd that the or-£aaaea ef the LordVi S a p w bar i ta af the

andnotarito efChrbtiaaa. I t b d e not of belbvaa^ bat of balievaa aa-

ia a d a r d o u a d ^ . It b aot the oanMByof aniaCvidaal, bat tha eenaaany of doehard . Wado not adMt aU Oxis-tbaa ta d a aonanabn; wa adadk ahard

hut* aa iafiridMl

rit^ bat the rite ofaaotgaaisod body. Pedo-baptist dardea foraoly acted i t ^ thb principle. Thi^ adaitted B<ae bat butisad (aa dey eaUed thea) aeabata to the tabU. L&tleriy they hava ahardoaed thb ineonss-teccy.andnowqdtegeaerdlyiavito aU who eaU thmsdvea Christiana. Hen they are eondstaat If they adadt aU to baptisBi, d e imtiatory rite, they ahoaid, and do, admit the initiated to d o r%hb aad privileges (tf d e initiated. And still farther, if f u d u not re-qaired as a prereqmsite to baptisa and d a r d memberdip a d t t o eaa it be to admiason to d e eommanion. whid b ia itadf aa exorea-non of fdth. Hen b the nductio ad aisur-dmm. Thecmly way to avoid d b horn of the dilemma, u to deny the typied dgsification of the rites of the ehareh. aad reader dem redi-ties. The doctrine (oot practise ia aU cases of d e Epiaco^ d a r d takes tiie graaed fair-ly and fqoanly whea it demee the ty|ncd na-tnn of l^tism. and makea it a nving ordi-nanoe. AU Pedi)b^ptist^ to be eondstent, maat take the aame ajronnd.

Baptists, hddisg & s e views aa ^ d p l e a , refaae toooamnae,asadard.widdo9e lAo a n nabaptized, with doss who a n withoat the dareh, aa we asderstand the nature o fde chanh. A n weaodaritdle for domg eai-sistently what Pedo-baptiste do insHidstendy f Wid our views o f d e d a r d aad ite rites oaa we f^owahip ia the rites of d e d u n h doae who, if oar views an correct, havero r^ht to partid{nte ia doee ritesr Ii feality to prin

bigotry? Is holding to d e t n t h . as wi ve it, aocharitaUeT Is ataadiag for d e

i o t ^ t y of Christ's d a r d oa the earth, row-mbdednas? It is not diirity to enrrea-der oar T»inapl« to d e ketpioK rfoar adgh-bors,and inaUteralsessebeaUthingsto aU

Oar viewa of trath have beea eiUed rami minded, bat d o outgrowd of narrow-sunded' Bess, nenecatioo, has never proceeded from as Oar Ptfdo-b^tist friends, who ddm a large charity, have ead aad d l beat gailty of thb act of nairow-mindednsEs. "By d m fruits yeshaUknowdem " S. E . C.

f M th. Tlritala Baftlit. TBAT atOOTKD ^CKSTIOa.

The question, as to how mud authority (s power U vested in the majority of a chord of JTecai Christ, b one which has been oonade nbly agitated of late, and one to whid very diffiretit answers hare been g^ven.

Smse contend that her power b limited by the constitution, or Word of God, and that d e CIO rule only when ahe rulca according to that Word.

Others eontend that d e power of the ma ority u unlimited, and from her deeSaon dere

isnoapped. Her acts an not even to bo edled in qa^on. If d e dould aet impru-dently or uajustly, it must be borne imtil the day final retribnti(ni, when aU her "wood, hay and stabble" wiU Im btuned.

No doabt maay of onr readers a n ready, upon the first presentation of s s d a doctrine, to say: No such Bomid dogmas a n hdd by Baptists.

Bat stay yoar sentenee, reader, and look, with OS, into d e existing state of Baptiat sen-timent a little.

Liok fim at the mioutes of d e Godot As-sociation 1857, page 6th, we 'JlrsT eee (because it b d e first time we reoolf^ ever to have seen it e:^ressed that Batista T acknowledged such a priaojp'.e,) and we read, "The principle universaUy acknowled^ amoc? Bipast durobes is, that maj >rities mast rule."

By the way, we would just a d d e Goden if d e "adnowled^adthatuciversd piindple' in the ease of Waller, or in the ease of Har-ris. in ead of whid cases the minority was reodved by her as a regular Baptist d u r d . See Semple's EUstory of the Yirginia Bipttsts. We state from maoory.)

But, does th-3 Gosbea sat ford the dostrine, in the q<iotation mvle fr^m her minutes, that it b the right of d e mijjrity of a ebnreh to rale indepsndentof every other oousideration or oonditioa, save dat of thdr bdog the ma ; ority t Attain let as look in the 5oud-nVs/-fem Baptist, of d e 1st of Sept., and in replj to a list of queries presented by J. Wood, t ie editor gives the fallowing answer:—^"Questioa 3 J. If a church *expds a mtmber *aBlawfaIly,'

d e n a law in d e Bible whid makes it hb du^ to submit to her dedai<ai, without an ap-ped or remedy P

An«. "Then b no legislation apon query 3 1 The New Testament laws wen enacted apis the prssamptioB dat the jMtj and intdligence of the choices woald be a o ^ they would ez-dude ineligible c&ndcrs laxfrnUy, hence no pnviaon b made for the ease of oar querist What, den, b d e 'nclawfolly' ezpdled mem-ber to do T We woald adviia hia to quietly submit, ai hb best remedy, and rdy tipon hb God to have justice doae him, in Hb own time and-in Hb owa way," "To every Baptbt chardi, the-^smber must be to if as •an hea-then man a i ^ publican,* wbeder exdaded lawfoUy-or naKwiidly, tiU d * removes the baad of expaldan.' 'Bat canaot aaother ehurd, eq^utiy independeat, reston himT' ' Not withoat breakioe the fellowd^ of d o ehurehes of Christ, whid d e great la^ of Love forbids."

Tons we see, the Bonrid dogma, that a aa-jOri^ of a chtud haa »nliinit»««i power over lb members, b held by soom wearicg dename of Baptist

Couia Borne be mora like hersdf dan thb doetrtite b like her T la not aU her perseeu-tug power vested is thb doctrine, and in thb akmT Bat when woald thb doctrise lead

to look for d e Baptist d u r d f If d b B^tiit dootria'', dan we mast losik for the

Baptist d o r d aaoagst tiiose who hold i t Then waa once a Baptist ehard ia the dty f t Bome, amajori^ of that body mlHhad the hseaies of what b aow edled the Bomid d o r d ; that msjori^ acendiig to the doc-trine ia question mast hava bsen d e Baptbt dordi, d e rest must hare been a heretiod foctioa. That msjori^ ptinetple has beea

' ia d e preaat day, aad aow fiads in the Bomaa Cathdb ehaid, y s -

17 we aara adartatad d e easa ia ItadriHa. we hava aot doae as iatentiooany, aai afflaeoaewinoorrectns. ^ ^

If aay doBia hadtate to credit d e hbtGii. edatateaenb above, for the trad af whid ^ eaaaot vaad. of e o m ; yet the p r i a a ^ holds good, aad li aay saataaea, d e a t i a S r of a dtard have imKbed beretied aentiuab aad a £v i«m has ooearred on aeooant of i t that laajfvity, aecordiag to the p r i a ^ l a S questioa, b the B^tist chard, wa oan aat into what enormia of dodriae at of criaw it laay have ran, and du siinority b a discrdoly faetiaa, it maUers not how orthodox it may ha ia doei^e aad ia praedee.

We thiok the do^rine that mximrUmm nKsrnd(,aBd dat froa their deddoa then «itoiy)ji«I.iB,tonythB least, perfectly ah-sard. It aiats a blow at the very root of r». ligiooa l ih^y.

We rather bdieve that the doetrine aad practiae of every d u r d aad every anaistar of t h e p » ^ b pabiie pn>pa^; aad i tbtha pnvilfge of every ladividad to eritidse •'ttnn a«d e^aee what they eoacdveto ba anjai; Ye^ it b d e rfa^ of every d a r d , aad arerr christiaa, so for as it liw ia hb powar U aud b aot the eaae, why do dardies ea a » -amnion occasiims extend the invitatioa to members of darchca of like foitit aad ard«r Why not extend the invitatiaa to aaeaiban of sad aa aekaowled«e the right of the ausritr to rale? If thb b tka airdiad pni>a«b it Baptbt d u r d action it seeas to as that avesr other prindple or qualificatiaa b ahaorhed ia i t For if it be "aoknowledged that aajai-ties must rale," there auut also aeeeoarily he iaplied, at h ^ a tderatioo, if aot aa an-I»ovd of d d r action, iriatever dat actm may be, whether in point of futii or pnetiee. Henoe, d e neceadty oaly to extend the iavi-tation to the mEmbars of aad ^ aeknowlod^ that majorities aast rak.

And again, in Asaedations whenee d a aa-oesd^ of artida of foith and tha rcqatriag of durchea applying for adausdon to sw-acribe to those artidea7 Why not aaka tha eondition of their adaiidoB Bim{dy that they "ackaowledged that msjaritiw mast rale," f i being right on thb pnint they a n neeeaaiily BO mi erery other. Theae quisstioBs we a » dder simply ridicdons; but we regard thea as in p^oet keepiag with tha l o c h i a questioa, and logieaUy dedadUe dterefros.

It b perfectly dear that these priadplaa oT ution, m the part of Chnrdes aad Aaoda-Uons, an oppo^ to the agaamptiaa that thar

adcnowle^ that majarities aast rala."

BFUSQXOS'S GKKB. Themany: whata doaaand thoBghb riaa

araunddeaetwo words! The milliaB-paopIed dty, d e i^puloos town, the wido^praad coimtry, t !^ ids, kingdnnii, essiorta, eoati-nents, d e worid, aU aeem to inae fiird Ska armies from the haadred-gated Thdea, at tha mention of that word, ^ Tia many." H m we seede toiling peasant aad hb lordly squin, d e artesian and theprinedy aasehaat, the ca artier aad the king, the yoang, the oU, d e learned and the atiiarned, aU ga^tad snthin the compaa of a wtad.

let

aU iho deeds of hereay aad darktra, lawfol iaddj lt€x ctWBd. finds

andaaybe rdneedby ibUoody J 1- 1 ' Dtsne deeds back to i b ittetpieney. it now aeek aad find a plaee ia the hosBca aad hearts of theae, aad be caiesae^ as me cf the most iapsrtaat doctriaes whid waa given by Christ to hb d a r d , by dose whose Uood it has beea wont to f f ^ ever maee it haa beea able to badlo d o swoid r

la thb the Baptbt d a r d f We aeaa a the Booan Catholic, in l A i d thb piindple

' in a U i b p e r ^ e a ^ the Bap&t ehard? yaa. rerily! If d a docttiaa Oat asjoritica must rale is Baptiat doctrine, then wa aaat find d o Baptist chard ia tha Beaaa Caddie.

Again, if d e maj<wity b tha d a r d , when a n wa to find the Fmt d a r d ia NadviDe Weanderatud,dnoe ibStatoiganmtioa, that dere have beea three dlnsTuus. la the fiat divuiott the l a j a r ^ iaba>ed aadweaftoC, the adacaity raaaiaed aadwn reoegaised aa the First ehard; d a n a b s iaerMsed,aad a f t s w a r d a a d a aa wentdfwidthe Oaapbt^tea, thenaor i^ stiU remaiaed aad wen neegaisad aa the Flrat ehareh. Thqr agda iaanaaed, aad hava Hcda split, aad a aajarity hava gone aff widi StderHowdL Now the mMada a, i r i t i s the d a r d ia thb iaataaae f

If weantorea^imsa d a a s ^ ^ a a d a d a r d . i t w « d d aeea that t h a l S n t d a r d iaNaakviDa haa o tmata i fraaadMedy foetioB, aad that ef S a third grade. Caa wo avaid tha osoda&aT It azmara to wa ta ba iaantoUau W h a w i n h a ^ a ^ a a a i l i t r

If little things have dene great as try to da great things ala>. Yoa not. ye atoms, bat that yoar dratbybaabliaa. Try and make it so by foitii; and the bast el yoa OUT be mighty throagh the atrcngd of Gad. Oil for graoe to trust God, and then • no tdling what j e can do. Wonaa, ye a n nothing, but ye have eatea princes; worna, ya an nothing, bat ye have devoared the nets of cedaris and Idd dem levd and d e card; worme, je are nothing, bat ye have piled raeka in the deep, deep aea, aad reckrd na-ries; worm^ have eaten thraagh d e k ^ of the proudiwt ship that ever sailed the oeeaa. If ye have dime thb yonsdvea, what eaaaot we do f yoar streegd lies in yoar aoatha; car Btrened lies in curs too. WewiUaseoar moaths in prayer, aad in eonstast adoratiaa, and we shall ooTiqaer yet, for Godbwidai^ aad victory b Bare.

Doubt d e Eternal, distrast the Oampoteatf O trdtoroos fear! dinkest doa that d e ara whid piled the heaveni, aad Enstaias the pQ-Ian of the earth, daU ever be palsedr ShaU the brow whid eternd ages have rdled over withoat Fcathing it, at last be fiirrawed by dd acef What! diaU the E^ermd foil theef Godb too wisetoerr, toogoodtobaaakind; lave off doubting hiia, aad b q ^ to trab hiira, for in so ddog, taoa wiH put a erowa oa fcb head, bnt in dotting hia tLm dart traa-|de hb erawn beneath thj feet.

Keep prayer gdog; da aot a^Ieet yaar ayer-meetisgs. Christasa Evans givea aa good idea aboat prayer. He ays, "Pnyer the rope ia the bdby ; we paU it, and It

risga the beU ap ia harea." Aad ao it it. Uiad yoa b e p that bdl gdsfr Pall itwdL Come ap ts pnyer-oeetiBg. Keep en paiSBg it; and thon^ the beU b ao h^h that yaa cannot hear it ria^ d^iend i^ea it. it aas ha hoard in the tower of baavca, and a riadag bdin-e the thraoc of God, who will giva^M answer of peace aceordiBg to yoar foith. May yoar Mth be large aad p l i ^ a l , and ao wiE yoar answer be I

BKBCHXH1 u r x TMUUiiTS. If oae d o d d aend me froa abroad a riah]y>

carved aad pedous statute, aad the eardeaa drayman who troped it tht> sidewalk bo-fora my door doald give it s a d a blow that

of the beards of d e hoc ahoaU ha wrfadedo^ I d o a U be frightaacdkrtda hart had peaeiratad foriher, aad woaaiad E within. Bat ii takn^ i f d e i airinliig boards, and the swathiM bands of atataw or e»ttim,the statate d o a U ooaa oatfotraal adaraed, I doaU aat aiad tha box, tat doald east it eajjlady iato the street

Now, every aaa haa eoasaittad to U a a M a t ^ molded by the ddart ;Botaf C a ^ or Yeaas, or A y d a , ar J^itar, er AaolKlirttheiBBageef God;Badhe who a ody si^dtoB for oataad d i B & a t e ia strniq; to protart aardy d e body froa ia-yxriea and revenea, b Irtiisg iha rtaiate ga raUiag aw^ iad tha gatter, wbik ha a pbadig ap the fiapaaab aad laaiatiag tha saia « thabaz.

a r s S B

Oae a^ht aa wdl atteaipt to^edato aadeaatirany d e oaatiBgatt forsi of d a tialdiagbib ^ ^ s a ia the li1adnsiiii|w m to look thraagh tha taba ef tta frUan aai faretdl i b paiaen.

Whea I waa ia d e galleriarar OxfM, I aawaaaayoTde d e ^ of Baafcad aai Ki-chadAagdo. I kdadapeaTdaaaidraa. craaoe, aad took 19 s a d of tSaa a a l waa pernttod ts toad aa oae aiaaU taka I takai. I taeaas toaadaaikaHha aae aeaicr tha gjteat aaatanthaadair I pactaiaa eodd hava dona, beeaaaa dorda I aaw d e a d a i ^ til nrssbsaa day w t w i a t beta. t i ^ wm tl« irat aa&at paato af d a b h tpiratioa. CoaU I hava^htaa^ d a a i a a a « i d a e , h a v j i d I doald ta>a baaa.l haar eavied for their p o a M M l Jtov, d m a n (aea aad free to ai . the dadgaa al a g w ^ tk— lq;baiil or IBr ckad A i ^ God. af a d a a da lablart n a d a r i T t a t a f o d l a hmtator. is afcaldii* Md paaMov every hoar tha abirt vaifaaaa idatana-art kaaiiad n m f ^ O ^ h A K ^ i a asd d8«Mrra«I d a « r d , a a l g^irii^ far aa ia Ika

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T H E B A P T I S T .

SASHTimt , SATXTRDAT, C E C . 3, i m

mAUOgnSBsXIh-ftealtmal tkto

•sua «• •iaw M i m t t e c i ^ «• Micato alMB iT I

I tk* i n f K Batt «B ajr

KktkcynlMriMaCtiM MKiUIkiBaa tmniat. ••r ttetMlac*. Iw I M . * : * - ! : ! ] ! ! . !

B : I Q K l t r V t l M K S i S .

a. i i » • I W w i t J t i t i i H M 1. B a V M K M a»« dw litatk tf Sa< tk* ki a * ii 11 III til «f»i«a».

MkiWU»CkBA alClzk* taaMfuir «rM>tBnBr (a*t mtfUmmtamt a

i aa I ti «t Cktbo.

wafdetC t w i v t t n r t a Bwkia Chitet, u i ai^

•mtneeelerfc.eeestwrt* B M ( t a u l : T : 10M. t : t t«* l> - l : lTa iLt :V -« : Ai«eS:4V-tt: I b t u n - . * -

ne-Ierftfiii,||iL"He|iiiimn lel i w iiMieilti i »• Mil iille>eiliini il«e»>ir»Cteifc«f CkcM. et aeiL

i>Mii> • i n H j j M H e e t t e f

4-l( fhLS: & OeLI

<&srit]r «l l iel i pni* Um ooMtnutun flu t n t j O d a g t

A t e & e t t v i l l m t e e m T ^ g p I a i a . I s qpaiktBg>toiirG«Bet)a AModittioB ktSlid-brrflfe,>dr O e B c o c f i n i j Fwai of Uskft l 7 i i i T « n % , I itetad Okfc O a ia^allBe&ta had Bot been p a e t u l t j paU, tkmt abtmt $2,000 v m d m — g o ^ ImAbraa •QOk6iiSNi loir* got tkm BdMoi^tioas, &c. B o o g i a the

IB wUdi b n t h m T»}lor, FruMia,Bjadi^ &«., cobMribed m A drei doQui to Oto Benefidaiy Fond i a 1855, I a a t e i U y t lHu^t of kratber T*jlor u d Fzands (tb«B Bevkdoa Agent) u d n -faiad to Qitm b ; b u m i a i lhotntiaa of tbe fiMt t b u good bretlmn eaa forget to paj ia-stallMita <n •^er^t ions , tiiosgb fodi iab-M i ^ t i c a i • ! • g i n a v i l b tba b««t intaations. Oar T r a a a m bad told me tint tbeoe brtih-n a u d a u B j etben w e n i a t m a r s , utd be tluaki I BMstiaaed otbers »t tbe dine referred to. I will not w j pontiTelj. Z bare (iatid

Ivby it «M natani for aw ta tUnk of Brodier Taylw and F i a a m I t aeema tbatBiotba Tajlot's xafnataot Mud aotbiag of Brotber Frauaa. Of eosrsa not, for tbe objeet was Bot to u e i t a Bro. F. against B e ; bat it was probablf eonaidered adriable, oo mm» ae-eooatB, to alwuate a aeentaty of tbe Fweign IGai iaa Board tnm me as (ne of tbe editors of tbe T«i«imrw BtpiitL Upon iriuit evil ioMi bare we fiJIea t I, in tbe abnplieitj of mj beart, taoagbt ererj ataa I saw at Sbdby-

aa kaoraUe gentleman. Said infittn-sat baa not told tbe trath ia saying tbat Bio. l ^ f l u ' s '^laiae was mr^mT out" It was not timgfid oitt. And I bere say tbat wbile notb-tng was &rtber firom m j n tea&n tbaa to speak disreepeetfUIy or dii^iangingly of Bio. TWjIor, i f any anprrjadieed brotba wbo beard Be, tbin]cs I so ^kiIk , I a a ready to do wbat-erer a rnnitisTi geatfenan sboidd da

It is doe Bro. Taylor to say Oat be ezplaiaa ray satisSMiotily wby bis iaiAallmettts bare not been panetsaDy pud. I bave written Brotba T. a pirate letter, bat I make tbis

in

-dmetkei dmnk^tami^m*^

i>*<•»•!» in team liinelleM sei nr. m tirtit " . ^ l ^ a * *»-••• »««a»el fcc leliitae.

I - i a i a e n M aleiitn. tet >iei lelnirtMliiOyeSetHeealCSMri^

*• l a m heeiotteMectttr ta a keei • tBeyeIia.eM-la ivet cfiooIUr.an

Sk a< amjacT. or

• the eat ee S t t U e e r i f l t l n

It T ^ l e l e e f n t l

•r

• «( eekanh «ie •( eefae

I. W1

k MB MfMA aar MM* ledtam Mi Htm eely » KetthttetaetefOMt.

kertete itiifcm .«<

a » . & a a t a p d b -M»«ai yea gava wtSee had paid. H

yan^ taiai |aira i f tUr ia-^ "" vbat

pabtieadoB tbat all ^ worid may knov tbat I £ d aatiatead to do bira A e sligbtest in-jostxee, and would sot bara mentioned bis name had I known a misduef-maker was present r,

m u c c a n o x K x w n . so. n.

Many pro&ased duistiaas do not aet £rom prineple in g i v ^ . Tbe qnestiao, "How ntBcb owest tlum to my LordT" tbey bare mver settled on ibeir knees, in dteir ekeets. Xo certain ealeolatioos eaa be made on tbem. Out beserolent aoeietiea know not what to ex-pect from tbem. It is to be &aied that these »tafen>ents are ap(dicaUe to fonr-fifths of the

of tite S o a ^ Indeed, it is rery doabtfol whether as many as one-fifyi aanage tbeir pn^MT^ with a sacred reprd to the ^o iy of God. Be thss as it may, tbe state ai tSoBgi aaioag ear dinrdies b saeh aa to nsidaritpropCTtopeaent, fiirtiwir eoaside-ratioa, some on peeaniary beneficence^

Tbis win be attempted in this senes of artides. Beneficence is daim^ good—benertdenee is

xiskiHg ttdl , and there is maeh more of tbe latter ^lan the former. I t is macbeaserto w i ^ wen than to do well As money is prom-iaent among the means by which good b acoont-pli' hfid, the term b « i e £ ^ e e b now goieraliy

ha i n e q n i J % pMaa^WBttibatiooa; finr ewtrjaaa i«»-<iaired to as Oe Loid has i»wpend U b . The &et that IKaotf^ waa diieeted Paal to^arga thexiehto do good, to be riebia good vorio, ready to distiilmts, wiDing to MBBanieate, proves (hat tb«7 are aadec ob-ligation to do more tbaa the poor, and more than thoae wbo possess only a oompeteBey. God sarely does aot reqalre pbyneal impoan-bilities. He doea ao^ tber^or^ make i t ia-sambent oa those who bare Mily a Boderata pottiaa of thia vodd's goods to do as Baeb for hu eaasa aa wealth}; nor does he d ^ a n d of tb« poor as ma<& as of Uiosa who b a v e ^ meaaa of a oomfortable nbnstenee. Madt b repaired iritera madi b given, and where lit-tle b p w a Uttk b required. Tbwa is, ia tbe adaunistratMm of the drriaa goTenaaeat, 80 deriaJion foan tbb prieiple; for tbe awral Uw itself, wlule it demanda tot the Creator the lore of the cteatnre, adjasta the reqpiatioe to the capacity of the agent. "Thoa sbalt loTo the Lord thy God with all thy strangth." Whether there be mnch or little strength b immaterial to tbe argament It b all to be consecrated to tbe Ioto and serriee of God. And the regalation wbidt reqaires as to give oar property to the cause of Christ b «»ly aa amplificatioa of tbe moral law which reqnires as to give oarsdrea to the Lord. It it b tree that dirittians tbonadTea bdong to God, it b eqoally trae that their property b bia. It woald be absurd to argae that altboagh tbey axe Ae Lord's what they aeqaire by their exertiosa b aot bb; for they reeeiTe from him tbe ability to Bake their aeqaiaiticiaa. r.

XASHTIXJJB X A v r m n s ASAIX. I Tentured last week to sngMst to Bro, Ptn-

dletoQ that it was aboot time the XashviUo difB-cnlty, sod eTerything conneetBd with it, wa« be* hig exdiDied &om oar Temmsee pefcr, and that

in the first place, it was r i^tfor the Editors to say so much in Tiztdicstioa of their own character, it is high time now to leave s(»neth^ £>r God to do, wbo hath said " vengeaace is mine, I will re-par." P e r h ^ brother P. thinks that he is the instrument to he used in the execution oC that Tengeance; ifso it is a conseientioas dnty with hinC and I have nothing more to » t . I prerarae, to eTcrr candid mind that has takm an; interest in the ^ a i r , it is erideot who is in the right, and if thoe be some who are not satisfied there is a pamphlet fael^ the pnbHc containirg all the &cts pro and foa; thej can read and digest satis-&etorT to themselTes. so now for the fata re let OS hafe the columns of the Tewtata BaptitttneA from a matter that has pained the denomination until its heart bleeds. 1 know brother P. yoa are ready to saj to me, "well, sister, th«e are man J things which you do not onderstand and w h i ^ if yoo knew, you coeld iTCHs© me for dip-ping my pen in this unpleasant afiairereiy week." Xo matter if all yet behind the curtain is worse than that upon the stage, there is nothing, in my humble can justify the continuance of it

now in osr paper. I t is true that Pacl wac some-timer eloqaent in his own defence, bat a greater than Paul hath said, "when you are reriled re-

1 0

t w m r n dettwJkntlMr a. JMvae-ar theaalistmanaa J i f f an roar gadaHaptltHa<tf>-ban. M o d a aadSislBatBdaaiaaar Bmdttw fapor to them ao taw aa the laattm appeait Ood a a y Btaaatlwa to ttaa Oonrkatioa oC raa*

1

ased to doiote doiag good by means of p e ^ niaiy coatzibations. Systematic botefieenee Im^ies the adaption of some regalar plan of doii^ good. It requires methodical arrange-ment in oppoatios to fitfnl impnlss. I t in-Tolves a eonrsa of action prompted by deeply-seated prtndple ia nrntradistinetion frtan oe-eafional acts eCdted by the efierrescesee of feding. It aecazes periodical donations to the eaase of God. It may be eonsidaed a stream which fiow3, cot always in large Tolame, bat aith eeasless constancy into the treasary of the Lord- Those who are benefieent accord-icg to ^ t e m wait not f(» appeals to be made to duB by the Agents of bcMrolent sodeties, bat, as aa Apostle expreses it, are ready of themsiilTai. They know f y i well that their cUigatioBs are not affected by the presence or absence of Agents. The qnestion of daty is aot, in tbair jadgeBent, a qaestion dependent SB saeh cottsderatians; and henoe, their eon-tribatiocs are aot extorted by mgcat tolieita-tioa, bat a n p n n whether ^plied for or not. Tbey ar« syatematiaally benefieent—they aet i s panaance of a plan.

I t shoald be remeabend, however, that t h m b a diSerenea betweot sfsUmaHe doaa-

oa to the oaase of banevolenee and dona-tions jmparftoiial* to tba ability of coatrtba-ton. A man may east bb offerings into tbe Lord^ tieagnry with tha atmost regaiarity and y«t those o&rings B a y bear no adeqaata pr^ortioa to bb peeaaiary resoareea. He B a y avail biBself of tha advantagaa of sya-toa, and at the same tinta deptiva biaself of those advantages whidi rcsalt £cqb doaatioas MRMipondiBg with tha Beans at bb oom-Band. Ghriaiiaaa, whila they ptaii^iee qrate-Batie beneftsatae, sboald &itbfiil]y adjart their expeaditarsa in tha eaasa of God to their in-eoB*. Tbdr aUl i^ b the Beasara of their obi^atun. Tbe Apostta Paal establish-as thb doatrine. I t b worthy of rraark* too, that ba does it in aa argaBent oa tbe sab-jaet of paeaaiary liberality. H b laagaaga is, **For if tboa b* firrt a willing aiad, it b ao-asplad aaoor^ng to tbat a aiaa bath, aad aot aeeoi^agtotbatba batbaot." I tbevident tnm tba apostle^ rsMoniag Oat irilliag » B d , " o r a leadinesa to pve, b indispensa-Ua to an aeceptabla offoing to the Lord. Wboa there b a wilUag lUttd tbe offering b aeasptad, prwidad it oom^oBda with what« aiaa bath. Ndther tb» largeness nor tbe •Ballneea of tba offoing intoferea in tta least witk it! M M f t M ^ Tbe ]aige eiatribatiai • f a n ^ B a a b aao^ted, aad tba ssaall aen-tribatioaof apooTBaa b likawisa aaecptad. Over tbe t n t m j of tha Lord it b writtai ia ^ o n r i ^ eapitals, "Accoisixs to tbax a mas u r n . " paraUa of tha taknfs m y be n f t n e d to ia illaatraiioa of thb seatiBient. Tlta aarvaat wboraoKved ftva taleats waa bdd Kspdonblafiff the advaatagaras asaoff iva takata. Bawkoxaadved two wasexpaetod toaBpbyoBlTte eafital v i t b lA id t fewas fianiaiMd, wldla be wbo taaaivad c m waare. quired to improve ooe, aad wavM, bad b« doaa wo, bava beard tbe aalopaa, "WeD doM good aad fikkh&l sezvaat.'' Tbayppo-batsBB wi& wbiiA the Savier ^aka of the poor widow who threw two mites into the tmaaiykillastxativa tba bum piiad W b a t a ^ b a o r i e r d E e s i H ; ; - T a t i ^ l M i y

«id«v batk ia Oaa an i&agr wb» bave eaat ^ Oa ry." n e a B e a a t w a a aot greater. H«r two

itMBaie aa ina^r i faa i aoMMBit ia ttadfaooaidend. Maaj tbat w e n

•t iaaradu Bat ia inpoi i i iB tobwalal-i ^ a b a B a d e a B o n l A a n t 4 a B a l l

La i tb«pearae^ter«zaBf lB . S i e p n ^ a l ^ ia Oat O a n M««r b a beea,

a a d ^ t i b m a a m be peciart ecpaQty i i t i B v o e U I y p n ^ v i ^ ef tke B e a b m et

l y e i m k . I f tbaa than b« m e y ^ m j ^

vile iiot again, and again, ha{^y are ye when men shall revile yoa and persecute yon and shall say all manner ^ e r i l agMistyou. Wsely,rormysake; r ^ i c e ye and be exceeding glad, lor great'is your reward in heaTcn." I f your sufioin^ then be for Christ b y the whole matter at his feet and let time and the provideoco of God bring all things right. Now, my dear toother, although I knew that with the '^andent is wisdom and with the aged is understanding" I hope jron will not think me presumptuous in writing what I have, remembering that we are members of one body, and that thocjgh you may be a mighty arm of strength while I am but as the little finger, still you cannot a y you hare no need of me, and I onsot feel tbat what yoa do or say does no^ efiect me; for if one member so&rs the whole body suSers.

:—The foregcusg does credit to the head and especially to the heart of the sister to whom I re£ared so fikvorable two or three weeb since. I frankly admit it b very dlSealt to decide how mndi ongfet to bo pnblished about the Howeil party ia Nashville. I can-not thisk it wonid be right to say nothing. Shonld we adopt thb coarse, no one can tell what reckless aoertions wonld soon upear in Elder Howell's organ. The matter b bad enongh now. For exam^e, in said organ of November 12th the diaiges against Elder A C. Dayton, on aecoant of which the Howell party withdrew its fellowship (?) from Elder D., are pnblished. This, it b tine, had been done before, bat the election of Elder D. as Moderator of the Giwiral Association, excited tome kind of feeling sgusst him, whieh has called fjrth uother effort to disgrace him. The fonrth eharg2, or rather the first part of it, as pnblished, b as follows:

"A. C. Daybyn i i grt^fy o / sin of rt-fusa^ to ktar th» dittrch; in that ho has per-tinadonsly renstcd the cntratties and exhor> tations of brethren who wen appointed to labor with him, &o."

Theeommittce appointed to labor with Bro Dayton ewwisted of O.K. Winston, A Ntkon, and J. B . Briggs. Any one from reading the above extraot, woold infer that thb cammittee want to see Bntiter D., aye, and went to sec him freqaeatly; for if he pertiaadoady rests-ted thdr entreaties and exhortations, I soppoae they entreated and exhorted him mon than oaoot Did yoa labor with Bra Dayton, Dr. C. K. "Winston T Did you cntnat him, Mr. NelsoaT Did you exhort him, Mr. Briggaf 1 know that Bro. Dayton's bodily affliction euae oa him not a'great while after the Gea-eral Asaodation at Lebanon, aad that it ean-tinned for Booths. I have been credibly in formed that no member of the CoBmittee called to see Bro. Dayton—tbat no member of Elder Eovell's party opened bb month to Brother D. aboat tba charges, and behold the party publish to the world that Elder D. b guilty of the sin of reAuing to bear the chardi in t b ^ he has pertinadoasly rassted tha en-treatiea and exhortations of bnthrea who wen appdnted to labor with Mm.

Oagbtnot such perversions of truth to be exposed i Is falsehood to be anrabaked be-ea»e Elder Howell's satellites a n guilty o f i t t

Tbe above charge (I have neither time nor dispontion to exandne others} bean tbe aiark of blsehood oa its &e& Ik a^suBes (hat Elder D. refosed to bear tbe churdh ia reast-i i^ the oitatestiea those appdnted to laber wi& him. The thne laanben the Gob-aiittee w e n tbe ehareb, wan tbey T Indeed! I tboi^bt after two w three bretiirea labored with a brother without saeoesa, tbey w e n to tdl it to the d a n A , and I had suppoaed their telliag it to the d ianh woald show that thoi-sdvea wen aot tbe ebareh. But a aew order of thingi baa beea iatrodaeed at Nadtnlle, aad I have dutved By views from abook bdd iala«Tepate,ISM^,bya great auay Nash villbM. I leave to say that by Na^vill-iaM I s e a a d t i a u 9t NadiviQe.

I iateaded to write oaly a few liaea ut re-p l y t o B y b d e v e d nater, and bdtold I l tave written Baay, p v i a g abo aa i l lastta&a gf ^ i t n s g e j & R g a i d ef tbe t n t b exnplif ied i a t i e E o w d l par^ . I f I have beea B b o -teaed eoaeeraiag Broi Dayton, be wil l set Batten i ^ t <b b n ratani frtaa M b ^ ^ p i I w d d a e t ^ i f I k a e v it, de iajaalaee to tbe SKKtraaeoroaseMBy Ibaveeaeai tk . P .

P . S . l i e ve^partyaalsBg Bra. D q t e g n % of rriiniag to beer tiM c&arc^ia nfti i-aKtobear.tbreaBeBwba a a v a caBadtoaee bia , (r) ia the party, «biak . ia i t p j j t o ^ H a r i ^ A w ^ kttCT, iaaaaatca tiBt J . K Gnma ia attsBptii^ to establiak » sort rf P m ^ l t s n a ^ aaieag Baptists!

LBTTBB >0. XXVm. S O T O S r A C X B A P T i a T B . - « O R S A P T I I R B .

I ^ T E R T inqidibg mind is anjjOQS Vo knowhow it JOi iiaa come to paaa, Oat so impotlaat an interest •s a « ^ a r i W . !a the wais airinrt Hand

in Ba lack of defeoee, abonld, as to ila meoibenblp, bamHeeisoto-btofaa down aad soaUeted; and wAo tave done It, and kcm 1

VehaverlnwatheOatkeBBS, In aU I M r vnfana fatBtt^wbether orifiaal atoek, ornattaaaldmRdwa, o r C b v i ^ ttf SnflaBd, ia partkolar. ar CahriaHi PraabyteikiUim. or Ceka^ Methodism. aH of irtiieh derive lMr«(«aaisatian inim popetr -^ve ftom Uw fink pniod of t M r Jbrmatian. waged a e n d w a r a g d ^ tkeklDcdam. Tbe Bavior ajts, « I t snfftetd Ttdeoee" in his time, bat»the galea ef bea ihan not prevail asaiast It." How tu, aad bow n y n a i a r i r t i m have bean bcfuiied, M a i e * «nd eataa«ied in tboaa mntoff anies, or in mdaSQ wJOk " tlie fates of b d , " H is not BeoaMiy DOW t* abo w. It wooIdbeadiiBealttaalc. TboaMnds, nedoebt onawaiea, have givca tbdr inilBeoee in that din-e-tioobeeaose tbey •• knew aot wiMt titer did." U only remaips to show what Bi^iaiti ttenrim ha v» dfloo, aedar«A>u; towaida leastering it to-the winds. In tnch a war, those who are anxioaa to keep in ftvor with all paitiea—to belHend eqvs Ily the and the r ^ ; to be jo/l in their f e ^ iga and doagtfmud towards the pcnecnton of Cht'Jtl'a kingdom; and vritotake aMwMin^enirw, aad are cooaenatiTe wtth ita iHeoda and its taaaie»—act a Bost shaaeftil, and ^ogiacehl, and tdasph parv And the se/I—the imigkfmtt Baptirts, nome of Vh«n, are the most determined in that coarse, aad tbecefore the moat wieked and rontfrnpUbla of an. He that is not with ate, ears Christ, is against

The coward, tbe traitor. Ihohypocritkal ftuecd, tbe deeaiTCr witii tUse pretencee—the man wb o in hMjt ia with tlie eoeoiea, bat in pretence with oScm wan itrweer, aad with mora eflbct, on H m r tide, tlian open enemies. Tet ha ia like Joda ^ a member in the kingdom, and pretends to be its (rieod. He ia the moat de^cahla of aU n. In one place when the chaieh ezcammooicaled sa ch a member, tbe worid's peoi^ all assembled and n ted miaolmoasly at once thia tbey would not reatv« Itim; and that it was aa iosalt aad impoaitiao fin the to torn sadt a f a n c i e r over amoog them.

Tlieie are dilBgrent dugmia of liad intmtiops aatoog dongUtcea. Some diead the finger of sccra from the Pedoes more than tbe displeasure of Ogd. Some ate toieiaUy wril-aManiog, bet ate corards. Some are ignorant. Some hare aiade the tradition of peat-great-giandfialien, of a foRDCT eeotoiy, their ni2* ^ /oatt , histead or the Bible; and a n too cooeeited to investigate any fiutber than to know what tbe geoealogy has tanghtthedewxndanta from eeneraflon to geoeratiaa. And some have a giwU anxiety to keep in with aU parties, becanse their woridlynf«ru< leads them to do ao. One, in Christ's time, was a diseipU—not openly—bnt " stcrttly fat fear of the Jews."

Of trmdiUooary or genealogical Baptists—who make the views of Bafrtist progenitors of the last ceotary—trained and moolded quite too much ai they wae by Pedobaptist Infloancs— rml» of faitk, I know more than one Baptat minis-ter wbo is anxious to have all imwitned penons te-Tiitd to the Lord'a supper. Ko matto' whether their immcTsian was nsed to tie t&rm to tbe Episcopal church, o a CampbeSite, to a Prabyterian, to a Coogiegational, to a Methodist, or to a tree-wffl Bap-Ostchurch. " If they have only been uMwrMii, in-Htethem to the Lord's supper withnt,"ishisteael>-ingi to his church and cocgrfgalioo. When be preadieson the Idngdom of Cttrist, he caBs the Bap-tist church an* irmek of it, and Pedob^xist dinrchestheoa«r6raiwA«f ofiL He prays puUidj for iXu branch of the kingiVi -and fjr ihe ctkrr (Pedobaptist) brandiea of the kingdom in the pSace. To pray for them ia right. Bnt to tdl Qod they are branches of lus kingdom, is to teu a lie to God to his &ce in prayer. Ha is vety food of talking aboni a sinner bong born im Hu kiMfdom when Srst eoo-\eeled. Thia phrase IcvoItbs (we ftbehoods.

1. That tbe loogdom (L e., the New Testam^ot kiogdom) is such as to compi^end aU coovms witlmnt any baptism. This b one fotoehood. This b the lerdling principle of aU Pedobaptists.

2. That converrioo akoe make ereiy sinner a member of that kingdom. This is anwher £Us< hoed. Becanse hafUrm, as wtfl aa caoiaslcp, is necessary for membership in that kii<^om, acctird lag to the W o r d a n d as ent is tmr allowed of Ood to be a member of the IdEgdam UIl he has beee both converted and baptized. This miciatrr stands high-er Ulan a middliog place with the Baptist denomlna-tioo. He is ve«y anxious to be popular with the Pe-dobaptists; and they aH entertain a very high es te«m for him, and coosidw him a?nos( owr cf (AnV otpit KitwUnr. I know seTeral such donghfice Bap-tist ministers who teach in tho same way.

I know of at aeast one editor aad proprietor of a Baptist weekly paper, whose riews a few years ags were predsdiy the same, and I presume they are not changed. I know of at least one Prcfesaor in one of our Baptist The<Uogical Seminaries, a teacher of youag men for the ministry, who in my hearing moie than once, has said p a l ^ y , " Organtiatioa ia 3ar lee* important than many other things."

TThU if VicUuia'a sabjeett in Sagland were more ttan half of them, organind on four or fire new coDstitntions, aad under as many new goTemments —a part only stni adhering to tbe rightfal gorem neot 1 It wonld be treason BOtoreTaIt,asallkcow. IThal if a pnbtio man, associating with tlte adhe-ring, tightfm claa, and a public teacher of statn men, thould publicly pitwiaim," Orgisixstioa !s far leas important than many other things 1" This is vtrtmlly saying, " snch revolts are ot small imporU tuce,*'—" recti(iFing the organizatioDS Is of small importance, compart with other things." He would at once be arrested and tr i^ , convicted and cocdrnm edasan aoctsaoty, an accompiioe bi the treison, and as cooaervaUTe of it. What Ifa minister of th<> gospd should pnblicly teach the people of SnglaLd, In tbe nppoaed case, that these reroltiDg, treasona-ble aod ceworganixattaos, »U of them, are the true kingdom of Oreat Britain, consisting of so many branehea,aBd shonH t«*ch the peoplethuall b well; aad ptay for the equal saccesa of those in the tireasooable state, as of thoae adhniag to the tne govmmeot, and should teach that the oath of alle-gianee is jost as good whether used to tie petaoos to the tree or to the tieoaeeahle erganisatioos. aad should paMidy teach titem that if tbey haT» only had tbe/bna of thU oath adminbteied, those in the tresMO are entitled to the saaM privileges as those who have never reTohed—and that" orgxaiiation b not half aa imponantas some other thlaga,"

ThbProtnsorboasUaloBg tow of Baptist pro-greitoTS. Be is ass/ I towards others isr lb» sake of hta own popalarttr.

Sucii men make doaghftee Baptist chaichee— doaghfkca readeia ef Baptist papets, and aann&e-tnie dosgUkce Baptist arinistats.

But yoo ask me, what hml does it dot laaswer, it b a departure in evety ease from the Kew Teeta-mentnilea. Itiaopenfeg the flood-gatta of error It is vittaally taaiiiig down the kingdom. U i r sa£^c!ioidngaBtbetKasoeabledivMona that exbt. It b perpetaa&igthem. It btmnteg traitor against tte real Ucgdom, and btdMing up its rivals. I t b a fMwrMtsM, a so/I, a i i tgkfiKf omne towards ( k m b . Such B^aistt woeld (if all were such) loOD turn the world into Pedobap^ e m o , and in-to popeiy agiJn, aad extiipato theWngdoBu These tnthe "salt thathaslost Sasaheees," and " b tbenceftcth good for nothing ba^ to be troddtn down

jIs rash a eoaiseaatdatsaA revolts in Betand. wooH break down that Megdca^ airii b d H aptnaaoa.so sodi a eomse amidst the rwroltt we seeagalBia Christ'a Ungdom would vety aooa an-

(hat if an wen to puisne mandbaSdaptreasaa. I t b ear woold-be pnpalar

aad oar wbo paxsee this couna. A JBaptist edttor aatataksa to isake a by his

p i ^ sad fortUa eadtoaallMrapattiyaadtooake Us paper peeoBar ia eaoa^ thlag* to secaie bb pKtr. ^coeatant eflhrta a p a i ^ b i n ^ a i e d to aetwldthtaa. laaMareaseBhaadnkaadoaghfitee cootaa win beat aeeBrehbcai.^AI(&b-4iBaB. Be

? wpoa to the klBiid«»i. eonaatvaUve towards those In sad aaHiUs ether Bapfists aa Ilur aa poitftde

lltekbown:doQgfa<hee eeese. A B^ttlst poiltiidaa aeu Ua faaaxt on beiae popiK

Tsr with all. bolder lor tUs, be tUnJabaiaaat .SMtoftvorPadebaptbtaaaaodiasBapasla. £a order to secan Us end, be leeas a little atnogsr to-waida them than towarda Ba^tirta. He doBghikee icflneoee on aH who uoimut tobeauald-edbyhim. They become beacheroaa to tbe king-dom of Christ.

In an party organixatioos ameog BspHsts, Ibere b great danger that the party be BMolded into the same dbectieo. I f the priadplea of the party cola-dde with the principles of the ktegdom, it b nnnec-

U the principles AJgr ttm Oat kJagdom, they are wtoDg. Inbetheases tbepaityia nnnee-essary, and In tbe tetter case it doea great iqjery. To iUastiato this: In I«3S-8 almost sU the Baptista iaAmertca wen agreed in giving a Ctithfid aadcz-aetvenien of Qods Orcek Testaaseat to an tbe Heatbee. This aeoorda with tbe exact ptiaeiplca of tbe kingdom, and waa therefore righL

Bnt a saaU paity, coostsling saostly of traditiee' aiy or genealogieal BapUsta who make the tiaf-tion lati nsagea of th<4r own BapUat progenitoca their rule ef fiiitk, were for makjng a Peddb^itist vHrion tbe standard from which to ttanabte into Heathen Iangaage& Tbis agreed better with the prindplee of ttadlUooaiy Baptista,'asd the prisdples of PedobapUsta—and with the lattR-waa mon pop-olar. But the principles did not agree with the principles of the kingdom, and therefbre wen wrong.

SoalaoaboDtlSSSor '53, the largest poctiooof Baptiste thtough the A. and P. B. Society, wen In favor of giving to the dxty miHinns of people who speak the'Bnglish language, an exact £ng1bh trans-lation of God's Gre^ Testament. Thb was right, aad accorded with tbe principles of tbe kbgdoai. Bnt a number of DJ>.'a, and would-be popalar (with the Fedoes> took a square position against it, aad in ttvcr of perpetaating a Pedobaptirt nvaon, prqiared nnder the ansj ees of King Jamea for the interests of a natienal Pedobaptist dmrch. Tbey oqpuuxed a large patty on their principles, aad withstood tbe right coarse. Thb waa centniyto tlie prtedples of the kingdom, and thstfora was wrocg. It excited a moatpowerfol, recreant doogb-tace infiuence. Thb b eoougb to abow the evib of party organisations among BapUsta.

(vo aa cosnann.]

EDITOHIAJj VABTETIES. QosaT.—Bra. Giavea: If a member b evrinded

from the Baptist dinrch, as he consdectionsly be-lieves, without a Just and proper canse for said ex-cloiioc, aad makes a^licatioo to a sister diarch for admi»ion, has or has not tiie church applied to right to can npon and recnie from the exdndicg d'lnrch a copy of aU the minntes pertaining to said exdiuionorexcommanicaticml I ask thb far the purpose of having some light thrown upon a case in our midst.

Ajts.—It would be the right of that Bro., under the circnmstanees, to apply to another ehureh for admisdou; and it woald be tbe d n ^ of that diurdi to entertain bb petition, and apply for all tb« facts; and if she b sat-isfied from tbem tha:it he bad been wrongfully thrust out of the ehn rch, to urge that churdi to grant a re-hearing—ealling in asastanee, if s^t»g prejudices prevailed against him. If the church refuses a rehearing, titen any ehureh satisfied of h b innocenoe would have the perfect right to give him membetahip; nor would she be aetin^ difoourteously in d<dng 80. Tbis poation b unquestionable, and the nsage entirely Baptistie. Each chnrcb b in-dependent of every other ohtir^, and may re-ceive in and exclude from her membeiBhlp whom sA* please; but if she violates the laws of Christ in co doing, other churches ean and Ehould disfellorirship her.

A s Impokiaxt Fact.—A Bro., writing FRRAN Texas, gives us the foUoirin^ that shonld be known:

"Brother Graves: I will here rdsto a ctrcum »t«nce that occuired early ia 1857. I had read the Irofl Wheel, and then read Brown low's reply. While readisi; it, and his abase of you, I was anziOBS to know vour with the Baptists in and about Xashvills, from some person tbat I knew welL I bad and embraced the opportunity. I had a broth-eriahw, from Minisslppi, that attended the Uedi-rsl Lectnres in Xashville, in the winters of I8S6 and I8G7. Be VIS, and is, a Baptist. We kivt op a correspoadecce wl»il»> be waa at Nashrille; and while readim Brownlow, I wrote to him on that sub-ject, asd brrr is th4i amount of bb reply: Be said • Ptnf. Winston, of tbe Medical Ctdlege—a deactm of the First Ctinrch at SashriUc—when he came to my room I interroeated him on that subject, and he

U W 8 I l U O i I K F Q E L a AnnDSD-t ioBDB l a b k naxKiM.

H 5 H H H H — — a s — — a a s - ^ B l o i m a K B Z i A F m n ^ s . d e p a r t m z i t

A- C. DATTOZr, JCztxTOB-

Baoxaa Zotioas:—PerbapaK wOl not te amba if I ^ j a a aa itam or two, whieb Bay be ktecrt-lag. L a * sonmac^VB had ameting rt Oenfre] C i ^ C k a e A , w b i i k n t qaftelntereating andln-strmdveL Aanmher jslnedthe «*urchby experi-

AnoJdUdy, la tela&igher experience, de-ssaaded immeitiao, aad bt a tone whieh thriUed tfcroi^ a bipi. a She s^-r^** was. aprialM in my Infoncy—i liavettied tobe s^isfied with it, bat I cannot, and no one else wm be, U t b ^ win read ibe Book; and I ask to be received amoog you, if yon think me worthy." With foel logs of giatitade to the j^ver of a3 good, ahe m

eleomed as cne of <mr number. When coming up oat of tbe water,"'sibe exdaimed—"I know

BOW that I have oberad my Saviour." Thb little vine la peospeiing. VoOodbeaBtbe^ory. Trn9i b m l ^ j and win prevaiL I waa at our Aanda-Uoo, a a d i thank God that, aa a body, we a n get-ting to be trae BUSe B^tists. I WiB g i n the Methodist Editor of your dty a ant t»crai&t If ear tbe same place, ayounglady trfmy acquaintance, a Methodic bdng qprinUed In ker infancy, became troubled aboat it, and would not besaUsSed anUl die waa immersed. A meeting waa h(dd«D by a dis-tant cireait.rideT. and be immened ber. We an know that thdr d i s d p ^ holds forth that pooriog aad sprinkEng a n right. Kow, we ask, with hrothedy kindneaa, which one srinther repn-diatot K e n br and hp. Had quito a good little meeting at IJbaty Ghnnblast mooth; theeimidi was revived—thne.w four convenioBS, and four joined by letter. Brother H. a Irfdlar, a worthy yoong prndieiv with myad^ canied on the meetr Ingfoordays, when brother Lacy, from a distance, came in and randend OS much asditanoe. H e b a sUancb B^ttist. We can truly say "the L s d bath done great things for ns,'* The surroimdSne cfcard -ea have, mon flc less, beea Mewed.

XLTemao,Uo.,SOT. 10,'oSl J .H.£tx ia .

Mnwaa. EDtnxB>-Por sental years the many fHecds of Bnrther Graves have s vidt from U a . Thoasands have just been grailSed. Talent-ed midden ban passed throa^ these SUtes, and crowded boases awaBed them; bat much larger oocgregatea wen assemUed to hear Bro. Graves than were ever bnoght to^etha in t h » States be-fore. He attended tteJudaoQAsaodaticD, a power-ful and inflnmtial body. Many went to bear j r. and ! u a safe in sayizg that eadi Baptist waa in-structed; and, as proof Of this, numben came to Csaden to bear h i a again.

At Cuaden he pnadied foor days. The large boose of the PresbytesiaBa was « - """I, aad each n i ^ It waa filled. Heie he recetied every demoo-•tntioa that hb friends were nameroas. Long w j Bra. Giavea reaeaaber Camdee. Almost aH the boaaes wne opeoed to him, aid he weold have maineda mdatb had he accepted of evsypresdng iBTitatioa to dinewith bbfriatds. Hae he b i ^ tbed Hba Sate S., for some time a Udhodist,

a U U Z B SCHOOI. BOOKS A S S C B I U U n F K I K S D .

6 v brethrre will please iwuwabei that we ai» only the depodiory agenu for the Southern &bt«ih School Vi^aa, bad are noaasUaoriziid by the BoeiA to send out ruber ibe books or the paper, -miibom thencney. TSjey ftereSw^ we uust, pot diiptessed w ^ ns. If ordns for diher, not acatas-panid with ctcd:; a n not axsisded to.

CBATES. UABE3 & CO. tf Depositoiy Agena.

Many ezdaimed. What a beaala&l scene!—agnat favMito amoog the 3.000 inbahitanta, a ftiOfal & &

^Ting p m f of herplety-^xnr, from dnty, Hinging ber denominafiBcai rriatjooa.

When tbe time caaie for Bray Graves to leave, many second a pnedse that heweidd again vidt Camden. I am witness, and we win daim next year that viat. He next preadied in Usboo, aad many wbobeardhfaa in Camden were at hb appeiz ones more. At Eldorado, a crowded boose awaited, and, as hi Camden, be retdted large oectribntaaos for the Bpdng Street Chnrch. Here was a seme— showing how much traih anncTS thoae wi» bold te-nadondy to their opinions, withoat dnly rrsmining their bdiet A Vethsdbtmi^^risteEnpted him, but a prominent dtizes told him, " Thb b a free

"«0» SiTTS XCI.TI, SJU> SATIS TOTL,"

SECULAR s a s h t i u ^ , bat

TBfBTEiTcnog OP s jsRTAirrs . We eiU atiestion to tha fjliowing snggv.

tiocs cn tiib sabject, which ^ra take fewn tbe Minutes of the Albamarle Asaxaitiaa, Ta. There b a fsarfal sin restiag cn the W^f our brethren in Teaneasoe in r ^ a r d to tlni'^ Batter. Scarcely any proviaoa has been Blade for the teaclung this class cf csr population. Many of sur bretiirea s s s s s^a- ' aQy to feel more intenst ia the salvatiia of

<iald that Bid. Graves ftoeJ at fair a$ any (i. e., under as good ciiaiacter) onty wtU U* Pidc€t, aa^ ibtusht they had a right to hate him. fbr thev had 3u man abletooomuece with liim.* So,yoacsn rest satUfied'that Graves stands fair.

Prof. Winston said thi- t it was true many Baptists protested against hb wuiiuirr of wrtting, bet kt tkovfU \t could net gtt ahaf cUerwiM."

Now, it is known to all that we b a n in-curred no guilt, in the eyes of thb community, sinoc 1857, nor ia the eyes of any Baptut hert or tlsnektrt—unless we are guilty of grossly immoral and unohristian conduct in that we possessing divine power, did exert it, and forced Eld. Howell into oolliaen with A. C. Dayton; unless we a n guilty of l ibd in expressing our opinion of the public speeebea, and acts, and attacks of sundry men; and also in l o w i n g onr rcadm t> see the estimv tion ia which a goodly number of prominent minbtcn in the South looked upoa cnoh aeta and Bteasure;;—unlc« it shoald be aeeoanted as an ncohristian act in us to expose the an-soundness of J . 6 . Tostin; also, of that book put before the publio aa a B^t i s t book, en-titled "John the Baptist," and tbe ituh leanings and infiuence of W. W. Everts, late of Louisiville, and the grosa injastiee of (ho Howell party in the Bible Board towards Eld. Dayton. We aay, unless these aeta cf iUthfulness to the denonunation be accoaated immoral, then we stand as aataiated bafon the world to-day as we did when Prot Win-ston made hb aUtement tothatstndent P n f WinsUw, t o ^ y , will not take apoa himself to give the studdits that eonv«e in Naabville this winter a ^ ^ r e n t statement, nor will any Ban in Nashville who baa any re^peet for truth or for bimsclfl

A BSCTABlAir I B A 8TATK U H I V Z B S I T T . Tbe chargea made in the StK^totu JTtrali against

Dr. McGoSey, of the Bute Omnnity of Virginia, has at leogth called fottii aa ofBdal reply. Oar naden may ivtBeaber tbat a stndent ^ a r ^ him with using the foUoving largusge in the tecton-room:

am coQTioced. young gectleiaeo, that varicas defKBainatiooa of Christiana hare existed fimn the HiM—ever nnee the days of toe Apoatlea. I am cnovinoed that spriekliBR waa and aa a atadaof

I am not kaa convinced that in the time of tha Apoatlea,pcHiriBe waa used, yea, asd doping, and waaUcg, aad twenty other laodea. And, gen-tlemen, he ia a bigot who saya thoe b «Bly «ae Bradeofbaptism.»

Dr.UcGaflqr,ia anote evarbb eiwadpiatare, dbddma a proedyting aad a large naaber of stadeots, aad aoma o( tbe professors, teiti^ to their belief in hb cathoHdty. aad unwifflsgnees to give «f-fneestoany wte dil&r frcm Ubil Tha AtwU, ia an atOe artide of foot ar I n cotansa, i ^ a t a

The n d point at imeisaafaBple occv Didbe, ocdid heaot, use the langaageac cribedtoldml Thbfoct,neither heaor UaSe&c-denasametodeoy. If beaaed It, ae aaaaatef

caiasmonlgrlda latmt.aDa tbayatanfortbe party, tbaa Sot the Hatdoaaef Christ. Tbey be-eeM t^eneptlMr i m d U n a s a a d toghtesia retaean to that U n i t e . I k e pivec, ia aMay

ftdscdatsi. Be a Baptist Bertbealbaa a vedal wedtiy t*ee-

Mtnavoiditc aa efltaeeaf hb Pedobaptistcaa-lOBen, HeTM^aadgadwOybeooBes t i m A -

evid<aee ta Ua «ivcw eaa pamato the aedariaabB at hb pabBe teaddag.—»a«*aws ami St^lmtar.

Baptttta eaa see ^ iaioflMe offim exerted i n State Gdkgea aad aoibdattacunatianl sehoda, over tiiw dtildien.

ProL M e G a l E ? baa been g a i l ^ t^aadt daet as to deserve dimiawal from U s eioiir. l % e Traateea see fit to kaep h i B then tonpeat eadtterBtbeinsaltapenBaptiatiL Oafy e o n w tt to Baptiste, let t h n a i a a d ^ o * taet iaB,Md ^ aow to tiior own G e S i ^ Eat^SowtberaBtate already kaa c ^ ' a m ^ F b m d a aad Arkaaaas, aad ^ k t t a r w S l wtm ^ T C TlHsn i f t o d B Mad aad j f l s e m tbe p a t n a ^ of the daaoiuiiatiaii.

countiy—they were in a BapUst house, and that Bra. Graves had beea invited there by the B^itists of Eldorado, and he would cot have him icter-nq)ted."

At Homer, in Looiaaaa, the large house was filled mostly with ladies, and, for more than three bonis, gentlemen stood, soon fotgetiang ihdr positian, so interested were they in bearing BrcUia Graves an-foid those scriptural truths, which difCinguith Bap-tista fiom other denooiiaatSaaa.

At l i t . bbanon, where the Saptbts have tiieir Umvenity, Pit^esaocs and students Bstesed with great pleason to the able adncate of Baptist views. Hen be foimd many who previously had an un£i-vonble stand point, from whicb to form tbesr opin-ion. Having heard Bro. Graves—caaveaed with him—the interview baa proved vety adnatageoas for Bro. Graves.

At tGndec, the Concort Han was fined. B « e h b friends were vciy numeroas pititous to thbvbit. n e pastor of the bdng from TeBScssee, the community had an opportunity of becoming weB acqudated with the high podtion Bro. Graves holds in bis own Bute; but lie gained many mtne frieads. At FiHmcre, many of hb betirers at Minden wen with him. HblsstvidtinLoiddaaawasinaBeve-poct, and tbe lat;^ hoaae was packed; large num-bers conM not get ia. Here he fbscd a ni^ted diurcb; all are bb friecds. In eadi place be re-ceived fiberal snbscriptiocs for bidldiag tbe Baptist Chcrch in SashriUe. All a n icvit-d to read the beantiful and very expmsivB noUce of Bro. Gavrs by the editor of the Camden Jevrwoi.

Shreveport, t v , Nov. 2,1S59. A. L. H. Bbotbxk Gaavas:—There has been, within tbe

last year, a very great religkns exdtcBient in this part ot tbe State. The Landmark prindples are ddng their perfect wmk, ttotwithstacdiBg the vira-knl attacks efPedohaptbta. TheUood-faoandsof the pat seem to b a n been let loose, aad Borne, drunken with the blood of saints, seema toban risen up de-^Ute our free institutions, oyisg with a loodvdoe, "etud^r Him, cradfy Him!" The war a y of Prtabyletianiam—ia fttct, aQ tbe ttau—b beard thrOBgitoot oar moontaln goigea and besutiAil vd-ley, aad from bill top to hiU top we bear the fimd-Uke vdceof bloody penecaUoos, and I blash to say that a few who profess to be BaptisU are ciyicg "peaceI peace!" and thus a n jofaiis|! in with Satan and Borne to pemcnte thaiaeek aad lowly fonoweta of oar b l e e ^ Bedeemer.

Ithaabeeamy pririlegeto atteed three m i n i meettogs tUs lan, coodncted by J- P- Keflrnvw and Wm.Bu9: At these meftlngs I witnessed the bap. Usm of about seven^Sve happy cocverts. The le-vivd iaterest has been greater than I enr witnessed befbn ia this county. May tbe Locd cectinue hb wwk of grace in the hearts of hb people ustn the Elect shan have beta gathered from ths four quar. ten of tbe earth. L . H . C .

St. Cldr'a Bottom, Va., Kov. 12,1853.

Daaa Bxznzaa:—1 suppose yoa would like to hear from thb quarter. Bn. Vandiren, of 3mA-acnviQe, informed me, a fowdayapast, tbat he had haptiaed ia to charge thbyear:33. Ihave baptiaed 7S la my ^arge, and araoagit tbem ahoat S3 Meibodbta—(Be Udbodbt pna^er, B. a Lackey, aad mrfwoapecta good for «oa er two men Ifetted-istpreadian thb year. The B a p ^ canse wSh us b onward aad upward. I b a n cneatitnted chmdi this taS Oat wm eeabraee 25 er 30 memben when we g^aH eat, a migofity o{ whom wen Hi tbodblatbe first ef this year. T U s d m n H s a O k ed Proridesce, and fa 10 mile* east of Talladega Town—cQoaUtoted by mysdf aod Sid. Beckham, of Oddrin*. We caostftated a new AisodalioD Bdhlebcaa Cbarch, (wlten my memberddp b) can ed Oe BdBng S p t l ^ AnodaSco, cat the S2d of last month. Elden present—Jotdm WaBams, E. Martin, Wm. a WBt, aad J. a Beveriy, aad abo the writer. The writer was dectedModoator, aad B n . Lewb Pylea, Oerk. LaodaMaism ptettib, but we ban a few Poxea ben called Baptiata. Dearbntb-Tm,&ax not, for Ood and I»-aoas of tbeBap&ta tf this eooz^ a n with yoa. X have procared a fow sobscnben to the TntMtnm Bsqriist.

Ftatenanyyaars,&e., ILGaaaarx. Hev. fin, ISS9.—Cahm Baptist Charck thb day

raodved,by v^edcaceaod baptbm, KathuddQ. Saaaa, temedr a MetboffistBUee of tba Gcogie. gattaoal Metbadbts a auttes kssd of Hethadbt that baa thtowa eS aboat baU of tbe i ^ r H r r d yoke. 11.0.

Baa. OaBaiB>-neasep«hB* tba icaaft ef SM etneiad BscOiga I s(nl,saaattne ago, to tha pa.

pe^bat banaeea BolhlngpBhaahe* • y e t . At Cha dkaidi at PMaped^, WQmb eoBsar, itew b a n besalSb^llaaH: Meant Ogvet,HaMieemtr. aoj 5ewH«p^BaShstlktdeoaatj. H. At iraBsJeaHa,

eaaatr. M pnAesai tiSk to' CbiU. aad « •pdsei. iMpaatarertbethRo fiiataH

UoMd d m t e a , aid BreL BatreCt of tbe last. CaaacstOo^lhBak A.J.Baanaai . p r - - 1 i r - - ' —

ftn,wat raedndby aa, ftMpobBM^ botwa deaBtaewreBMibw. We aNay^ i^ati;^ y t i * ?

BgwafteBfteMd.' a ]

aegiyies of Africa, than in t i a t c f ttwcwn servants in tirdr own hoasdoldi Whatbto be do2c ? A good bri>t2« not loa® sioae tol i me that his ehureh c j n H not havs preadieg to the adalt blacks os aciTuat of the diswdtriy behavior inta wliclt tbey were certm to fall i f pemsitted to asst by ihsmiclves. Should they thsa not b^ asseinhled i a ihelr imildbood and early yoath, aad iaarajSei, n=>t Berely ia the t r u t i i of Hat ia t i e of gtmd behavirr ap-in the Iiord a day:

The eolorod people deserve the spaehl attoa. tion of t'se whites, fcr the fjliowing reasona: •

l?t. They are car streanis, We may re. verse the saying of t i e Apos^ , sad ask. If thej annister ta ffi? ia eamal things, shoald wt not seek to sspp=f tiitir jpiritaal cesesitiest

2d. They are flomparatively Th«y eanajt rea i They are, therefore, alm?s en-tirely depcnilc:}! on or^ instrncion £« what they know of the way of salvation.

Si . Thqfan furiff.V* They a n aa a pea-|de, both by naton aad arcumstaBoes, at ean highly apipredative and pesuliariy impresAb.

We prasced to spenfj sereral meam tor rea^ticg the and hearts of the eolaiel people.

1st. Suitable provincm ahouM be made fa their accommodation in meeting hnses. S a y dould be mged and encouraged to attosd i l l the Sabbath meetings. They shcnld be £§. tinctly and frequently assured that the preacb-ing b addressed to them equaOy with tha whitec,and pastars dionld see that, s i a malts of fact, this be so. T h ^ shoald oideavor t> say much that is ^^ ' ^ated to interest the csd-oreu people, and Assld o&ea look at them while preaching. Finally, masten should g i n due &eiUtyfor the aittadance of thmr servmnts at meeticg, and shoald urge t h ^ attendaaefe

2d. Special meetings shsnld be held forlba eolorttd peo;.3e, at whim they iboald be aa- J cotmged to ting trd pray, aad the ^eri^tam should be read aad expUioed to them, valuable auxiliary ia snch msstiDgs is W i ^ ley's Cateehsm, whidi must be taught naBy. • These m*t inp may be eonlnctcd by lay nma- • bers, bnt shodd be visted pastcis as t^m as paa^le.

3L Sabbtth Sdioals for eslored diildtn % are always^ valuable, asd in many cases entire.^^ ly practicable. And ia thdr favor may ha'S urged, besides the usual arguments for the ii- 'i stmetion of the yonng, the &et wril knoaa t» % all ocnvETsant with the subject, that the yealk ^ of ^ e colored race have, to a peculiar frtmt, v'. a susceptibility aad a capadty whic& fciakt ^ them in late years. ^

4th. And, finally, Christian masten asd their white ijuiulies ahould instruct the blavea '' - -ef their housdiidd. At least every Sabbatl^ tbe whale colored faauly should ^ required )• , ? attend family worship. On those oeeason^ Suniliar, practical and di)ctriEal truths EbcmU ^ be briefly, earnestly iEcnleated, a^d questiflaB aEd asswers might be used to advantage. Oa Sabbath, when then is no mc-etirg in the -neighborhood, an bear might be appro^aiata^ spent in a moeticg house, tome suitable i bung read by a member of the hsMj .

•5"

A c r

At a meeting of the "Lion Eiver Aisoaa ticm,'' j s i t closed at Gater«ville, the f b l l s ^ -Beport on Sibbath Sdiools was unaniaoB!^ addoptcd; ^ :

a £ F O B T OK B A S B A T H SCHOOLS. * ' Toar Committee appointed to r^ort (a tbi

above sabject, d e ^ y r ^ t that Use Fahjeat of Sabbath Seho<4 operations has not resovdl that attention ^ c j i it deserves, asd whiek wa« 80 urgentiy reooomatded at the last Beat-ing of your body, fA«r* Hta hmff a Be^tSL Sabbali Sckool ta tit bounds tki AttaeiOi ftoa.

We would a g w recommend that astive a«l cSdent stepd be taken to proenn B^itist bath Sdtool books, and establish Sabbal^ Sehosls at every church, aad ja every a e ^ A bothood, whieb books eaa. ba procured at tliF^ South-Western PohUshing Hcnse, at Na i^ rille, Tenn. And we also h i ^ y reeomaMd to every family the CSUfdrm'x Jfrititd, a Sab» bath School paper, published at tbe aaae pJaea,

JOBS (Xaaacea, Ckairmaji.

PKXCK BK CPOX XSKAKI.. fiS There b a gneral paotina tor peMe. Ii worn ia

ianumetaUe bosoms. ThbtendsBc; togood b Ihaa^ heaven. It shoaW not be grieved aad cki«M. t C -should be noorished with aactrd can. Suae goadV'^ heeisnings ban been made; the vantage g r a o a t s

shwiMnet be wrevt^ out of etch others hands * hasty and tnooosidenre BMVsares. I wnM my bmble exptatolatiaos with yonr own, andha-S • seech ' our deer breth.-ea not to arm meaaaier'S • whidi, i f insistird on, msst divide oar chuRaea.*^ To thSsBodcsbta gnat mtdUtate of our bntkm & l i e ready to say. Amen. God bbaa voa. Peacaba -'^' upoclsiad. C . U a u o m . /

In a letter to the S C S i f t i A ^ ^ F f While our Brother M. is givii^sach heallk-

fid advioe. will be advise ot i iss aot ta aek- i aowkdge b r e t t o , outraged by tiie actiea «f £ the doDtinant sajority in tbe d t j u Banben-t T o f a B a p t i ^ Chnrch, or to fellowiJt^ thac^ ~ wbo see St to do ao? Does he sot tee tbe entaUe resalt of ^ pdicy T I t b with 1 ^^ and a half scon of other bntitrmi ia Soath wbo have hitherto aapported tba ^ Beasarea eomplaiaed of aad reaistod by say wheiiier the denowiicatioa shall bave peaeil WDoi. Teaaaisee and North AlabeaB,ia «K] yoyiag paaae, aad oar d a r t ^ Uened an oa^oaring of Ueaosd aadJmw » HtbatGeorgia aad Soatk A l a b a M l are diataifaedf Wbo a n the bmb that arti jagptattagtba^arabes and aigiag

Bast i n e v i t ^ dmde the I Mark tbaaa that eaase divwoBs aBaag ja^^^

aBdareidtbeB.

A ecBwpmdwit btm Kka aiwaty, U t , !

P. S.—Xha Bapdsta abaat hi dowa ca the.Biiae Sesety aa BaskiiBr, aad w a

abihato to &a aappoct wUle under its pm j M ^ m a n a r n . X , B . « ,

Wadid wiAtkat tba Bibia Board take n A a p e i d t e dtat tbe gMMnDywdd iMd jaatifiaUa ia i t ; iKtit lMaandeitKlf apaitiaaaaCiiT, its e a t i n U a a a M , a t l M w a a d abnad,

B , a a d i t aria of e a « m be Mtaiaa tii pMitiee is sadeesteod b y A w i t i past eocae aad i tnaawatBaBagBa. G .

i i s no peace in prepantiaR far the I progresn]^ A l m d y four ^ boats have 1 Prczrdi treaties have 1 port, as wen as tbe | ant to the poUic, as i a n nkcl j to rEmais st] theCKsoB w i lie attentioD. Ad^ that prepaiuwns tion continne with j « u s thax S,ODO men ^ partatre durin; the This, of coune, is a i rmnon that England i upon a milita-x ba-is; tktt the rren4 and ; ibr a isDm£nt differed 1 of the joint erpeditioa l plete accDni. aad that 1 of their co-opetatimi i hdn^ t ie caw we sredenne tu the larger than any that 1 and equd to anr i it. wi ( appear ia tiie Pi garri to the Zurich dt* oa^ rdiable us is, that a rediistiaB< ported t» hiVI tx-m i by Traace to Austria. S r G. C. Lewis thus i fereiiu. w the I j jrd 42oet: •'No propositioa J rm the sol^eA, but i witii a donaad 6«r In limiasiT oimStiaL^ identified heradf mitt J sideof libetCT. Tnel an the inqira-tant inn Ei^isnd: on the Moncn t by dideBL Gen. Insuf| are reported dead.] COT, irho hsve ISmen <

I la/ j stm noWv I>Tnaslies. It \t i m reply to Xapriom^ mented in our iait, t < ^ I list Cantors to tbe ] resUBatiot: of tlie promise not to give an i » long as tiiere a no i other power. It may 1 adopt the leedecjiip Eaiuauuc!. GarilBldi j pay but s % i : t attntiaal od iieads. *ntirHrr j that tbe wpary oT To edtotho P t i m n r c dinia, and r j » Empenr i the ItoBtaxr, had with tbejirrgect. Ob i dined the regency and •ecepted. Itisnot,) but the ogBwadt of the ( dedde the dertiaies of fiwii firftiwffi ezfaorts patienoe.

Our miu! tiiatwm fmn and meaere. In bst, i s reported the Bdtan 1 -to grant the lii-TfTM^ gf J •jKKt of a mntiny aauns I Ale»;was,isi wai jB-oceed, eves and that t i s y arenowi tolaci can&rmatioB.

late mtringaice it •ef R u n s and the Pnnoel determiced not to treatiB!. <>f 1815, anr to < land is exdaded. From) to us, tiiat littler whSdi m n r f a ^ ereryl -•tstetir temr, w!th an i imparerisbinc tite pabiie that, «3e kmg. the pi>» Fiaace a nsismce, and I are also intinned that a ! cMstrating at Japan, ^ir I tnmUe it feared from the] fans by the Japanese.

Some inieresttng itj of the stoamer IsoLai stsaiNS'WW farafam to 1 the ear^e WW saved, bdng. plundered by the woe w e d and j c s l « and thtrtr steengel i w a i and Bmiearbas, -aevoL When the vend I waa runzni^ eight wnther, bat dightly Houndiiw, euppoeed sha--tHien the vnsd ctmck I aad she filled instantlr vdves to prevent an i «hree boats, wisan, with a 4 broke ainidsVii|n, aad f ing in, sunk two liC the ' neers and .srvoal at including two wmnen boat 3Dder the aommaai I was blown oS* tliirty i Tnand oT Itnxith oflfoer Sa The boat in diaigc oC I adrift, M t a ^ a n d is sa contaidag tidrry-three 1 laitdt'd aafldy, after l oD die b ^ aea: twenty-i tbe 'bilies han bees :

T h e o v a d ^ mdl sand paases^efa arrUed Panama aad tha Korth j fWFTioia to tbe I

b i s ojcntioa 1C31 •deeo, on the Bsttnfidd t Viaa]ia.SaOBBlaaeBd,i We abs team that i hundred aad ibr^-dgiit I of gold was Jqwailed at | amoag w U d thon wa river dwT. Totd WK iS,6aci,ooa f w i that aocooau frin Wa niinet csodnaed far •mOBStt of o n r«adted^ •stayed tiKOoastadc^'iiiBiii • c n e i B t b e w < ^ w « 3 g n t d e d o f b a i i t i i l . tnoa. TbeGraadi~ {bfiJIBng BrodenA. j 00ft- ' " I

F n n ObMla&fm,:] ahat all m aow evntii^ rwmon i tDtitem; thej b a n ' gesame attadt wren Tikdy touuaaiaei n a | paay of Babwaaid, wha* pnbsa toban t a n w^StSi i

(Meaaa vaJeaoii^ commanded at Prerioostn ^ '

week, i b n thedefeat cumol I t ianiartaAtbat J a Gonraaaeat PaEiiniiisia«

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l i r f , s t i n n o b l y t e a s t i t h e r e in s t a t i ng of t h e DynBt i ea . I t i s a s s e r t e d t h a t T k t o c E n u n a a n e l . in r ep ly to Xapa ieon ' s l e t t e r , o a v h i c h w e eont-m e s t e d in m r las t , teOs h i m h e c a n n o t a d h e r e in t he CaneresB t o t h e poEcy of F n i i c e t o n c h j n j t h e i w o a a t i o n o f t h e deposed dynas t ies , b e t i « wiH prmnise n o t t o g i r e a n m a e d a i d t o C e o t i a l I t a l y » a s t h e r e is n o m i f i t v y i n t e r r o i t i o n b y a n r o t h e r power . I t n a y b e t h a t ( A n t r a l I t i t y wiU • A p t t h e leadership a nob l e r t h a n T l c t o r E a n n a n n e ! . G a r i h a i a is a t m e p a t r i o t , » h o w i n p a y h o t ^ g b t a t t e s t k o t o t h e d c t s m of c r o v n -e d heads , i l n o t h e r i n ipo r t an t i t e a i t m t a I t a l y , b

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a n d t h e E n p e r c r of t h e F r m c h , t h r o n g t h e J f e a t a r , had ezpresaed t h e i r f s a d s & c t i o n • i t h t h e p i q e c t . O n t h i s account C a i ^ n a n o d e -c S a e d t h e t e s e o c y and Cheval ier B o o o a n n p ^ n i e accepted. I t i s n o t , t h e n , t h e r a f c a r f t h e people, h o t t h e n i i i M r f t o f t h e K i n g a n d E m p e r o r t h a t dec ide t h e des t in ies of t h e sons c f I t a f i a . T h e Cm^Satimai e x h o r t s t h e n t o modera t iaD and pa t i ence .

O o r informat ion from Spa in is t w t n n t e f i i h l e « n d n a a g r e . I n A c t , t h e o n l y i t e m s are , t h a t i t •a r e p o t t e d t b e S a l t a n has empoare ted h i s b r o t W t o g i a a t t h e demands o f Spain , and t h a t t h e p o r t o f . a m a t i n y a n o n ? t h e S p s ^ so i^eTs a t AIeggetas,i»BncCTi«rawd. T h e r e p o r t t h a t Spain w m proceed, e v e n t h o o ^ t b e S u l t a n accedes,

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Some iatereatZag itesxs, c o n e o n i n g t h e v r e « ^ of t b e s t e a m e r i s d i a e h a r e been l e c B T t d . T h e s t e a m e r w a s b r n k e n t o pieces a n d fit t i e of t h e a r g e w a s saved. T h e passengers complam of b e i a g pfamdered b y t h e inhab i t an t s . T b e mai ls were s a r e d a a d fiirwardad. T h e I n d i a s h a d e ^ t e a b b a a d t b t r t y s t e e r a g e passeogers , m o s t l y G«r-• a a a u d H a a g a t i a a s , a ^ a n e w of s e r e n t y -ae«en. W h e n t h e l e s s i a s t r a i t t h e sea k d g e she waa luuui i ig e%:ht k n o t s a i boor , w i t h S n e w e a O e r , h o t s ^ t l y h s a y . T h e cap ta in , b y soaa i£ng , s i ^ p o s e d ' s h e w a s off S a b i e " I s l a n d -W h e n t h e r e s s r i s t r a c k t h e b o t t o m w a s t o r n off; a a d she flQed i n s t a ^ y . T h e eng inee r opened t h e x a l n s t o p r e v e n t a a explor ion . H e t h e n towered t h r e e boa ts , w h e n , w i t h a s a d d e n c rash j t h e r e a s e l b r o k e a w i d i h ^ a B d t h e s t e e t j g e p a a s e n g e g n a b -i a g in , s a n k t w o t t t h e boa t s , d r o w s i n g t h e eogi-a e e i s a n d se re ra l <ai t h e c r e w a n d pas se i^e i s , i n d o f n g t w o w o m e n a a d t w o ch ik i ren . One b o a t o n d a - t h e nmnnianil o f secood officer S m i t h , • a a b f c w a off t h i r t y mi les . T b e b o a t o n d e r eom-m a a d rf b o r t h olBcer S m i t h , r e a d i e d t h e shore . T b e b e a t m d m r g e of t h i r d idScer Biggan, b r o k e s d t i f t , ! e a i a D g , a n d » s « p p a a e d tobekst. A b c a t nn-Aiiniag th i r ty - . th ree ladies, a r i t b t b e i r bnsfaands> b a a e d s a f t f y j a f t e r U a s i i ^ a b o o t Si r b o o r s on t b e sear t w e n t y s e i m a r e dead . X d e e o f t h e I a £ e a h a r e been rcoofveted.

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is in upe i a t i uu ISS mUes e a s t o f S s a F t a n --ctsoo, o o t h e B a t t e r S r U i r w t e , and w o a H reach ^ n a s f i s , 3 S 0 a u I e e a s t , O B t h e first o T J a a u a r y . W e a l so l e s r a t h a t d a r i n g O c t o b e r a nn i f i ao t h r e e loxDiircd (iboossod ^oBszs iFo^tk of gold w a s depos i t ed a t t h e m i n t i o r ooiasge, SBtoBS n l u t h t h e r e w a s c o n a d e r a b l e o f F r a z i e r m e r d a s t . T o t a l s inptneDt o f gcrfd i n O c t o b e r w 9 B y 3 , 6 3 Q / n a F o r t h e r e S s b i f i ^ o f t h e r e p o r t A r t aecoua ta from W a d » e T s B e y g o l d a a d s i l r e r mines wmt i i iued f s n a h l e ; t h a t a n o t h e r l a i g e a m o a n t o f o r e r c a c ^ S m F t a a c a c o , w U d i a s s a ^ ftootSS^OGOtaSG/nOpertoBHaad t b a t t h e C t a B t o i ^ <nsB i s r ega rded aa t h e richeEt silTec a s a a t b e w a r U , w e c a a a o t v o o d . T b e r e i s a ^ e i t d e a l o T b a m b a g A o o t g o l d n n n m g o p e r a -t ioHL T b e C h t a a d J s r y b a d m £ e t o d J n ^ T e r r y ftr ki l&ns K o d e r i c k . S s bai l was find a t S K L -

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to ftafly b s i e k > i « a f c a am b e ^ t b a B w o f c . ^ Hmrfjttd baa aoi yimmimmil tat Saato A a a a . ffii a t i a m e f t b a e a a t e e t i s c t m f i n M d . T b a M o b O a A p a b b i s a o t c o n l n a i d . M i n M waa a t Q a s r s t a r o w a t d d a g t h e l i b e n l a r m y , w h k b w a a p n a o i ^ t o w a r d i t b a capi toL OOwa U d e p t a n d O i l a n a . J b m t b a r a j p a f i O o n a g a i a r t V e t a C r u k t b m t a a a d , t n o p a a r a t b c t * . T h e r e h a s b a e a a a e t a r a p l a OA t b a X e ^ e a & o Q M t , I n w b i d i a « w n l w n w i r t i w«Bt « i b « « .

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F m I r v i a g t o n , X . T . , t b e aad i a t r iSgenoe b a t r e a d i e d a s t b a t W a s b u c c t o x I m r i x , t b e t a l e n t e d B i s t a ( i a a , i s n o m o r e . H e fied a t U s re r idsooe OB M o n d a y las t , SoTCtober t b e S M u A a o t b e r g r e a t m a n ha s b O e a .

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p a p e r of t h e S t a t e s . " I ffid n o t whid> o f t b e toalBMsst. X o B s e e m to b a n t h o w b t t b e r e m a r k m o r e appBcahle to t b e J f a s e a j e r , a » } p o b f i ^ a e c o e t f a U y ; b o t l m o s t s a y t h a t T O O h a v e a i l e a a t o a a i M a k i v fiir I o ios t ce r t a in ly m e a n t t h e r t a M M s A q i e M t , w h i c h has , if I s m M mis taken , s a h E c r i b a a i n e v e r r S t a t e i n t h e r m o a . "

T n e w h o l e m a t t e r i s b a r d f y w o r t h y o f f u r t h e r c o n m e n t a o r w o o M w e r e f e r to i t sga in w e r e n o t t o e x p h i a a fewmatters o f s f i g b t i ^ r t a a c e . T h e J f e a s T e r o l sec t s t o B n c M m e e s k i ^ a s w d l a s o n r o w n , a s n o t e x a e d y i a accordance w i t h W h a t r f y . W d l h e m a y b e r ^ h t . W h a t w e de -s i red t a k n o w w a s t h e - [ iiiiiij o f BiOw M i l k r s

l a n g a ^ s a d t b a t mean ing w e b a r e n e w r e c e t r e d W e d o n o t k n i t o f o a r fist, t f a o o ^ H is t h e tepe^ o f s a y B a p t i s t p a p e r i a t b e w o r U ; w e o t d y w s ^ to s b o w t b a t fen 100 to 2 0 0 0 p a p e n in n e s r f y e r e i y S t a t e in t h e S o o t h looked r e r y m o d i l ike p s O T i n g o o n t h e o p a p e r of t h e S t a t e s . " T h e h ^ o l d t a i n a t t h e aoss* o f o u r p ^ e r is r a t h e r l a i ^ h a b t e . A n psf>en m a s t h a r e a name, « b a t w h a t is i n a n a m e l " T h e Teamtaa Bajitut h n m U y d s i m s pa t ronage a n o v e r t b e S o o t b a a d i t is recoTing i t fibetany. I t is o a r prmcipla t h e people k>T» and n o t o a r name. I t wi l l b e so also w i t h t h e J U e n c B ^ . I t s aoaie w i n n o t h r i p i t a w h i t .

• & X O T R X B V O T X . W e q o o t e t h e CrfkHring frotn t h e B a p h t t O a m -

j w a o f w h i ) ^ E l d e r W a l k e r i s E d i t o r : • " 2 - B r a . L o t W i n e a t h e a in t rodaced a reso ia -

t i o i wh ich v i r t a ^ separa ted d i e B e t h d A s s o d -a 6 o a . a s t o Fore ign Vjsiskias, from t h e Boards of t h e S o a t h e m Bap t i s t C o o r e n t k i o . A f t e r a ( & -cosRua ef ooe d a y a a d a haU; b y t h e a b k s t t a l e n t o f t h e b o d y o a b o t h sides, t h e q a e s t i a a w » re&t^ r e d b a d t t o t h e C h a r c t e s , a q a i e t a s t o t h e s a b -

3 . B r o . W a r r e n a e z t b r o a g h t forward a reso-! a t M B . t h e o l y e c t o f w h k i w a s to d t sappro re of t h e e lect ion of D r . HoweU a s P r e s i d e n t of t h e S : -a t t iem Bap t i s t Cooren t ioa , s a d coilateTsIly. t o c e m n u e t h e F a s t B s p t i s t C h a r d i £>r h e r m e t h o d of p r o c e d a r e i a t h e G r a v e d t r iaL F o r t h e p u r pose o f a l l o w i n g t h e m o v e r a n o p p o r t a m t y of de-Tel>ping h i s views, ( t h o a g b aacoos t i t a t i ona l and who l ly o a t of o r de r , ) t b e r e s o l a t i o a was e n t e r -ta ined for diseassioo b y a azaaH m q o c i t y of vo tes a n d Bro . W s r r e s ocvupied o n e h o v a a d a half w i t h a speech o o h i s resolataon. X o ofM replied. X o min i s t e r felt a t B b o t y , a s a m e m b e r o f a n As-w o a t i o n , t o t a k e p a r t in p r o c e e ^ n g s t h a t in t e r -fered w i t h t l w ac t s o f a n i adepeaden t C h a r c h . W h e n b r o t h e r W a r r e n h a d g o t t e n t h r n o g h , his r e so ta t ioa w a s laid apon t h e t ab le , b r a s t a u S n c vo te of 4 3 t o 3 6 . " • • • • • •

l a s t a t i n g t h e above feets, ice vroold n o t desire to m a k e t h e impresaioa t h a t t h e Graves n ten of t h e Assoeiat ioa a r e i n a m ino r i t y , b a t t h e &ets D O imSca te t h a t a o a j o r i t y is" i a fevor of o a r j n s n t m i s a o a plans, a a d SFpsMd t o Assnriat ionsl in ter ference w i t h t h e (Marches."

AU t h i s i n a l o c a f i ^ w h e r e H e n d e i w o , Daw^ son a a d W a l k e r h a v e been labor ing w i t h inde&ti -gable xeal t o p r t j n d i c e t h e b r e t h r e n a g v n s t B r o t h e r G r a v e s ' . ! ! W e a r e t r u l y as tounded , t h a t w i t h t h e m i g h t y infiaenoe o f th ia immaca l a t e t t io , t h e v o t e eoodemBatoiy ,—enwtmwitor j r r e -m e n b e i ^ - o f t h e act ion o f t h e S o a t h e m Bap t i s t CcHiTentkn, w a s h u d on t b e t a b l e b y a v o t e of r o a r r T o a x E t o n u a r r - s t x ! ! A b a r e m a j o r i t y of «R»> o a t o f 7 9 vo t ing w a s b o n d w i l l i ^ t o l ay t h e r o t e of B r o . W a r r e n o o t h e t a U e . B a t no t e t h e las t d a n s e o f t h e q a o t a t i t m . T b e i n e n d s of B r a . Graves a r e as( t a a s n a a r t i y . T h e f o e n d s o f t h e B i f a l e a n d Bigitut ptiaaplea a r e n o t in t h e minor i ty , a n d so k n g a s t h e y a r e i a t h e ma jo r i t y ,

l ong w i n t h e f r iends o f Bro , Graves b e i a t h e n a y o r i t y .

X H S O B J U r o I U k . U a B X E B . We d i rec t e a p e d a l a t t e n t i a t t o t h e foOowingcan-

m a n i c a i i c a : Ba& KiKToaa:—I want to s tate bow Basse fa

woAisK in these pa i ta . A Baptist s S s t s was a t a Methodist a a e t i s g . The preacher s o t a p a a excite . i m i , a n d was f ^ i e g a roand takioK the t x o ^ bv t h e hand H e cams to th is s i s t e r ; she drew b a c k SEd weald ao t give h e r hand . T h e p n a d i e r stepoed b s c k aad s t i d , "Brethren, t he Devil b i n toe h o i M . » "Bin Mill tti him "TT is tmnr r f jnii i l i ial is a ~ I t

~ t he Vcthodiata a a d , a a d o a e of t h e a present-t o t h e C^^aad J w ^ of Oef l je coos ty , Ala.,

W B B f c r l f c a e i e t i g e e f • M a a t B q ^ - k tte i M t M U n s

" A b w t h w h a s eaOsd o c a tS ra tkn a t h a fed, t h a t t h e t y i a a a i i i l l i f l i K c x t s a M t e e a o i t s a i r t a j a « a e a r a e e s a i s a t « t o » . a a ( p a e a t a ( W . W e W toaaHuatba n * w s * l * * i K t b a t e a r feltaato

IntnMcntV W e a t ^ deaira to b e eosr teoas to aO a s B , a a d

toatiten. W e extoaded edttarial eaBr> taiy to t b a new edi tor h t b e fcOowieg l a n c B a i e :

" V * itoeeTCiT hops Bro . Caiaoa win e x U b t t a e r e Rapae t te t h e o i ^ t e B a and aeUona U s b t r t h n B tt BdlBiaatB. t h a n toe • O i a i W a s f B n t t n a -^ a p to iMs tiaws have d e a e t k a wrk iac . I I Bra . Carsoa s o acts, w e wfll ex tend a t aU t i s t a A d s t i u oBoxtca; to U a u "

l B « « r cpbdon BiowCanoB kaa a o t w a e t e d , a a A a m ^ t h e ez t i ac ta w e h a v e Made f t a m h b paper . 8 a k o c aa b e i a d a l c a i a s a e h ^ U a l U tbrasta a t t he Bsoisr B t t o r o t t k i s paper , w e c a a e x t e o d tohia toa ooBi ta t r of e o a a a a n poUteaess, b a t no th inc

G E N E R A L l i S W S

— A fisbaarat a m a r t f M . p n p t h t s r e f a s a w h e t s ^ w f ^ s a ^ w a s a k e o t t a d q M T M a o a e t — _ _

s e t a t i e e B a r a a a d a t t e i t t t i e ! ! ^ ^ fee^ltosa h s a d k a d * * , two e f w w f S s s jKaiam, a n d w « h t h e o ther t « a she s s e a n d ttbt^wbfcbwarembst b a a v r ftoa t h a « e i « U a f tetania: a l s o ^ t w o f c e s S s H s a i a w s q a i l a a d

t h e l a t a i a j t e r dieaa, ^ w U i A h a d t e a a a t o l m f t a a « S b b p s n o i ^

t h e b e a s a . n t M A a l a a c t t a e t o B B p a c k W .

— A w r l u r b t h e S a v a o a h S ^ s H m b . s p e a U s f of t h e la te b a n d a g e f c o i M a i ^ h e a s t a b T ^ o p a i ^ Oa.. a t t r ibo tsd to a e t t o lae«dlBr iea .a la tea ^ R f e a n a a l s t U e . B baa keen r e p i a a a t a i t ha t t w e a t M e v s a ware d a t t n v c d . whetaaa only t h r e e

been b o a t d n i a c t h e season.

• O M i ' t H J U W n e w . A Msthodi i t exehance d e a v i e i y asse r ta : " I f hoopa k e e p p e n e n s away ftea t h e aBar ,

eBher a a r a a m e r s e r Uboreis , t h e h o a b e r of saids a v a d k K k e l y t o b a l e a ; k n e e we infer t t e t b o o p a keep soota o a t e< toe Unc^ loa .*

This "mamr" t h s a fe t h e p laee a l wU<^ t h e peo-p le a r e a d m U e d in to (be k i n g d c a of M e t h o d l s a . Tha t b t he cen t r e e f A o a t i s g a n d ap i ea r , a a d to U d i e p e e p l e a t o s i fepai r , o r , they vrin a o t get in to t he kingdom. W e s a ^ o s e H e t h o d f e t ladiea win t a k e t h e U n t

X K . S K K C S B O X A O O R U S F O S D X S T .

I T a a e e b y t h e l a s t V c f a f a a a a d i t« tM<sr .pab-Sshed a t Bcstoe, Uas s^ t ha t Mr. ^MSgMm is en-gaged b y t h e pahBshers of t ha t p a p e r to eoa t r ibote fertaighlly t a i ts e d n s s a s . The edltota of this ^ h A e d j o a n a l t h a s speak of t h e eosMteoeBt :

T h e f s B s t a e n t o f S p o ^ e a a s s a K e g d a r Oot^ m p i i l w i t , acoorf f iag to t h e t e t a s i a which he . in t h e aheve, expresses h i a s t l f , i s a fcatare o t advasce in t h e fine ef w h U we pcopoae^ w h i d t we have been a t s p e d s l p o h s s t o r ea lke i b e f i m m g t h a t a a a y not aow readers of th i s j oon ia l vriB be i adaced b v t h ^ amoDg other d e n e n s i of totecest, t o becoose s a c h . "

W e a r e not a f i t t l e a a x i o e a t o read t h e s r i y t a a t ooDferibatioos ef this grea t p i e a ^ h e r - t U s q a a i n t a u t a o r w h o speaks of t h e " b r e a d and b a t t « 0 3 d of t h e A i r n h d a i a ; " w h s does " c o t want t e go t o h e a r e n . an less he win know h i s f a the r and a o t h e r t h e r e ; " who descmds , occasioBsllj '—we a r e in f o n a e d — t o obscenity to t h e palp t t . t o p r o r o k e i aagh l h a a h i s aadienee . His cont t iba t laas m o f increase t h e d r e a h t f e n of t he r s f t b a o s amd JU-;Es«>rv—indeed, we hope they may, for it is wor thy , b e t contr ibaUoM from i u own ab le editors, we a re cooCdeot,. w c a U be m o d i m o t e soceptaUe to i u lead-eta. T ime wiU show.

b o a t d v i i a g t h e season. — Ob W s d a a d a y B»tf>t kwt . t h e —

C a p e Faster . fraiChaiiatea. a C , . t e H e ; r i o ^ F s a r . w h h t h e a A o o a S

Q w a Oibha, «f Kew Bedlb id . S o A waa t h e feroa of toe e s O r i a a t h a t t f ta a d m a a a r i a a e d t a M r b ^ t e ^ a a d a a k . n a e q M B - A s ^ T ^

h e a r t . a « e b ^ d n m s e d . . T h e crew, six i a m a s h e r , were

token OB beard t h e Mwion, and ^ t t v e d in X e w T a t k yesterday. A a e e d a g of toe pasaaB-p n am bea rd t h e H a r i e a w a h s U e B . a a d ^ ^

• ^ ' k e o O e s r a t t h e r t s s l w a e e r i w a s i S S ^ ^ U s a e ^ n e e , f K t a w e m f a n r i s h e d b y l f c . J . M. F H o v a i d . of Ihia d ^ , who waa a passenger in t he I l a i i oa . *

— t h e EngBsb p r a s seem to b e extremely anxtoea to d n w t h e Cal ted S t a t a fato a w a r wtth CUna. ^ U v n p o o i K a a a y a t ha t t h e tesalt p o t

fe r » d a aasoshsSt M the a i a m ^ of the EagBsh a a d F r s a d i a t Fe iba .

T B K I X n D K I . > S D A C S H T K B . We p n b S s h an the fearth page of t hU issoe a

d a p t e r o f t h e n s w w o t k f n i m t h e pen or Bco. Say-ton, for w h i d t oa r brethren have been so long and aiixioBsly t o c U s g . We give this chapter so tha t o e r friends m a y have a foretaste of the t r e a t tha t is in s tore for theai . For o a r own p u t , we a r e highly del ighted with the work so f ^ a s we have seen t h e sdvaace sheets . We hope to be ab le to SH o r d e n b y t he first of J a a n a r y . B e pat ient bre thren.

the

a a d got a t n e b tB agains t h e ^ s a d now she is to h e t r ied i n t ha t e o o n t y t e ia ter rapt ian . I t w a s d a o e this J o n T . V u n a .

Here , then , w e have s a B b o l n t i a n ef K e t h o & m s B i U glory. W e seppose t U s p d e s t " got t he

p o w e r , ' o r " got h s p p y , " and dared to preaame a p m toeaiaienee,whiIs1a]>oting,as h e s q p e a e d , a n d e r

l i k s exd ieasea t . B e foaal, bolrevet , h e was n o t a l together s o n o a s d e d byshoot iBC brethren—tbat there waa ooe f t m m U who poaesaed h e r ra t t fwsl

i . a a d r e f i m to a b s t t h e s o l e a m a a e f c a c y o f S o d a a d U a i r i i g k B b y l a k i a g toe h a n d of t h e l e a d e r e f t h e - s a a e t i S s d r a w . - O a r eonwipaadaBt

F r e v i n a t o t i M D o U a d a , w i t h 5 ,000 ; a par t ioB o f I C r a m c a ' a tzBopa, b a i t e d B

p v i n g Mil aiwwt t i m e t o i n i i f i m e . T h e defea t caaaed g r a s t n j e e o a s a t t h e c ^ H a L

: & i B « 9 a ( t B d t o a t J o a c t s i t f i n d K a m t c a r a B r g a ' i ' i i i i s ' i i t a a iisiiii iTiita a r s M i t f i t u l i i i l h s i .

m * v i « G s m i i ' s ' s ' i r ' tt b n ^ c t a d t b a f t I t w a s - l a a d B D t O ^ s l U a i r i m w J i f l H i l i a

. W e d n h a r a t b a t I C a M e r ^ • • a a u i m a t t T c r ^ C h m a t t b a S l a t ^ M t a a

s i T a d t e n o p i y r r i a s e d h e r h s n d to thep r i e sL A sad pieee of i n f i s c R t f e n before a Xethodis t p r i ' s t s a d i a t h e ^ k i s l o f « tfetoedU " a p r a a r . " ! ! B a t she n d n e d h v k s a d , a a d a n r M r k t h e impadeaee o f t h o e f e r i a l - p o p f a ^ a y . - He . s l e p p t o g h a e k , a a d n o doab t l ook i sg ever t h e sorgiag a a a w i t h m l a -^ fee&gs a f indigas»9B, h ^ y k o r r s r and fear, > r r l s laif d . • t h e P e r i l la fa ftsHoase!" HoitiBile, to b e s « w , a a d a a f i d e a t to c a n ferth I f e t h o a s t ex -e o a t i e c a apoa t he tMBsh X a g d t e e who dared to In tar rapt t h e sacred a d o a f i s a a of toe D o ^ - a o t e f heasaa . T h e lady, a UtOi taeaaaed, B » d o a b t , in-tonaedthearrcgaateeseoahtoatlt w a " v m a t hia b a s i n r a . ' ' T U a k y e a toeae noble, gallaa*, liMiaTi II w n i nf TTrskT wffl titkntTT snrh tndTnii t j to t h e f r prieathood b y * b e i p l f a / e s a f e l vetOy. O n e a f t h e a o a t l a p s t t a B t o f t h a « B t i a g e d d rags h e r b r t * B t h e S r a a d J a i y , a a d aeearea—dod e i J r k a e w a h e w t h e S a f i s c a f a t T a e U a t ^ i a a t b e r t e B U e n ^ t i a g B M I T H O D m T a e e t t n e ! ! ! Of a H a m e d f e g i w e e v a a t t m d e d . p e t t f c a l a r e t t s t a . wealwaTB tkooght a J T r t s d f r f aseetfag toeaseat fflBodttodtaa^ B a t a a l a ftdXbiBtthBabaea i a i e t r ap tod b y a l a n e / s s s A , a a d toe s n a g e d hacea d o g g e d I s r tojadgsssat.

Wes fese ld f ikB to k a a w wkBt eanstftotoa, to t h e e y a o f t h e Grand J a t y e f C o f c e e o o t y , Ais . , s a

g a a s n f a M a t h e f f l s t a i s H ^ B m t O j U U q e s B t . tor w U B B t fbeas B M e l h a d M

a e e t i ^ j ; ia a JUtaBSk U ft b e toe r e f l M l to j s f a w i th t h e p d a t w h S e csv ias iy s x d t e d , t h e a

d i s i e f o d l ^ t f s a f e a i M a a e a o f O i s k s r a o t e . V D I

B m . B b r t t o C s t s U t aa w » h a o a a a a a toeto ^ (ha

W e wan t tosa fer e a r « a > special b e

v a i y i e

o c x t • M l a a t toeast y w r e a r - l a e i k O s f c a i " t U s w a a k . I t d B p a y y a a fer toa tcoaihto

I f y a l B a M T > V * f « b B W > ^ t o B B d t o t t . s e n d a t b a I « B b B p r a a ^ f e t > . « B t 4 i d t o y « . k y B | i i q .

M A J O R ka e . K A s n u x . I n o o r last we re fened , briefly, to the sodden de-

mise of c a r m o d i beloved towosmio, B . O. Eastman. S e c i x Edi tor of t he r a m & A s u r i ^ Xossorc coov i sdng evidence of t he high as t i aa t ioo i s which he w u held by t h e d t i n n s of SsshvOfe coold be given, than a g laacs a t t he i a m e o s e c a o o o o n e of people who followed his reaakis to the " silent d t j

t h e dead . " Oa t h e d a y preceding has fanecal. Editors s n d Pebf isheia . t he T n x g r a p U c a l

Uoioa, Masons, and d t i a e n s h e i d meetings to ex-press their deep sympathy with t b e beraaved femily, a a d their h igh appcedat ioa of t he deceased. The fonetal s e r v i e n were cocdscted a t t b e Fi rs t Bsptist Chnrd i b y Drs. Howell and Sdioo . T h s procession was made o p as follows:

F n e Mssoos, Hearse, Editors and B e p o t e r s of Pmimm & . I s u r t c o a , F s i i i l y Carriages, Editors and PabSsheia, Typographical CUon, bearing a craped Bsmier, K c o i b n s of t b e Lrg i iU ta re , Cit lseas oo Foot ,andCit isensinCaiTiageaL The procesrioo ex-tended nea i ly half a udle.

B can t ra ly b e said of t h e deceased, k t wiB U H e vraa wholly devoted to the i n t o e s t s of

Ms adopted State, a n d . e ^ e d a C y of XsshviUe. H e eogaged in aU the ande i tak icgs of his vocatioa wi th h is whole hcsr t , and while others wearied, he never i h s n n e d to discharge his most a r d a o s s d a t i e a . BatA

a o r i z i f o r a u d e a , e o d a ( a e d b y t k e « a p 4 p W t . Al-t h o a ^ a stranger tons pecaooaily, ye t we m o a m his deeeese, as the loss of ooe of Tennessee's most e f f ic iea t ia«L

D E A T H O F J O a S W Z S S E U & We regret to s s n o o c o e this week t b e death of oa r

worthy brother in t he L * i i , J o b s W s s a a u s , for some t ime p u t foresum of the Press Boom of the Methodist PabUihin^ Hoaset H a died en T a a d s y morning last. It b snppas>4 with disease of the hear t . He ret ired to rest in U s nsos l s t a t e of heal th

Monday evening. His wife arose in t he a a r s i n g a t tend to neceasaiy dosaestic a r r aogeasenu ; and

having prepared the m o m i a g repast , wes t to h!a bed-room to awake h im, b a t be t i ep t t he sleep of death . I t was evident he died w a h o n t a s t raggle . Bro. W a n n A S was a member of i t e Spring street B i ^ t Chnrch, and m a c h beloved by its members . He leaves a wif» and fonr ^ i l d i e n . W e expec t to g i v a f B i t h e r p a r t i e a l a n i n t h s o M t a i r j - " depart-ment in o a r nex t issae.

A TOW B A ^ T t S T P A P E B . E n r r o a s o r T k s x e s s c e B A r n s r . — D s o r B m i -

n a . " I a m n o w located in t h i s place f o r t b e p o r -poee o f p o b i i s h i n p a paper t o b e called Tlu Bap-tut OwTopomieat. T h e t i t l e of t h e p s p e r is indi-ca t ive of w h a t i t is in tended t o b e — a m e d i a m of correspondence for all t hose good b r e t h r e n wix> have b e « i t o o l ong s h a t o a t f n n n t h e co lamns of ( U t h e r t o ) t h e o n l y Bap t i s t p s p e r in t h e S t s t e . I wi l l send y o u t h e papa- , a a d y o n can b e t t e r j u d g e of i t s p r e t en t i oa s from t h e lace of i t , t h a n a n y t h i n g I m i g h t s a y of i t . P lease send t h e B i ^ tat t o t h i s o t B ^ and r e q a e s t a l l m y correspon-d e n t s t o address me, also a t t h i s office

W K . C. B c c x . Msr i<a , A l a , X o r . 2 1 , 1 S 5 9 . W e a r e s o r e t h a t Crora o a r h e a r t w e wish Bro .

B a t ^ a b o n d a n t saccess. S a c h a pape r h a k n g

been needed in A labama t o aDow b r e t h r e n cahnn-n ia t ed to defend themselves . W h e n Bro . B ^ sends a s a copy of t h e Cornxp<mda^ w e shall t a k e p leasare in n c t k i i ^ i t a s i t deserves.

! f . W . t X J t t i U t I A B A P T I S T . Another a e r B a p t i s t paper , bear ing t b e above

name , h a s fooad i t s w a y to o o r ofBca. I t w a s r e -solved a t t h e l a s t m e e t i n g of t h e X . W . T i ig in ia Bap t i s t Acaxsa t i ao t o m a k e a n o t h e r e S b r t t o s n s -t a i a a w c c i U y j o a m a L T h b paper ha s been o i % -ina ted in v i e w of t h a t reso la t ion . I t is E d i t e d b y E l d e r S . B . P a r i n t o n a a d pabUshed a t Giaf^ t on , T a y l o r O o o s t y , a t 8 2 . 0 0 p e r annooL W i t h a E t t l e impfuveasen t i n mechanica] e x e c a t i o n t h e shee t vrin kxdt v r d L V o r e o f o t h e r m a t t e r s a t h e p a p e r progresses s n d de re lopee i t s d C

—A aew ftet eonaected wSh t h e sanded eotton a S d r . k a j a s t t a t a e d a p , w h k k m a t s r b B y aSecto the p lea ef ieaoeence p a t h i OB bd ia l f of the phatcTs. l ( r ^ J . J . W a n r a y . a c o t t o a bndDer of Mobile, peb-B s b e a t o t h e Tr lboae . of toat d t y , eer t t lcs tea and

« a pa i t i ea l s r lot c f cBe handred •Safeasentsr a a d ntoety h d a c f c a t t s a , p a r ^ a K d b y him to Mo-bile, a s c e n t for t he I n n g Meadew l e i f e , c f Man-A e a t e r , S a g b a d , a a d forwarded di rec t to t h e adlfa.

• j y h e f a g opened a a d e x » a d a e d a e r e , p r e » e d to h e a a d p a t s d ; w h e n o s , O e k o a c ^ a a i i h s . ^ wUcfe they were porebaaed, were freeef s a a d B y t i U a B p a n s k B t h e a O I o w a e n t B s i a i B e d B h w of X S S S L 4 d . I k s a f f l o w a e r s s e a t weed tothefeagent whn. t l keeapee , a a d e a r e d s s e v t b e a p a n t h e feema Ibr t h e eSfcreaee, a a d were b y t h s a retoaed. b b

t a a d a a d t h a t t h e a a d e a t t a a w a , to t k b s o U b y s a a p f e a vAfek were free of saad .

SQ t h a t t he s t a t eass t i e f t he wrttor h U h e C h a r i a t o n

faapadfleouKSL A a d i t b ^ a i t o d e a r t h a t t t e a s a d b e real eva , w U c k feeaa a caod soa rce ef

& b t o b a . _ , b e a a d S k a a j toa real feote b e taaesd ea t , a t h a t a a i i j a r t k e a a y k e done ta a a y a n e .

- A e a n s p a B d a t a f t h e B a t s OBtBagSBskiw J^POB. n d e r d a t e e f A s ^ a s t S ^

b r a : Mf l s t e f toebrgeaeret— — S a i a ^ U U e d - a r a n a b e e t « h ( n : « a d B p a ( t i a n a < a a ^ a r i g B e i f e r t h * Amodeaaa to b a i l d a p w . a a d a b a

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P « ^ s o Mowr i ty dW not compel Uw thef t . H e pa id U s flia a a d depat led .

— The B i e t m c n d J W f o s n r haa had prss in ted to i i . S u ' ^ ^ P ' T ' J ? ' ' " k l n g t o n eoonty, Tirgtoia , wh ld i b shaped B k e a h n a a n bead, ^ b S ^ Mrsog r a e m b b n e e to - e l d M b t B n w a . " T h a t paper s a y a : " t h e f s e e thereoa b a icasarkaUe feaWe^rtth <Tca.B(iaBsa noas, a o a t o a a d flowiag b e i ^ r t n i ^ m u k e d . W e a r e a s s a r e d b y t h e sender t h u B a t a r e akioe ( a fTn^lal fa h e r Ikndee waa t he ea]^ a i t b t t ha t desianed t U s a p p l e . '

— A student to t he C n i v e t d ^ of T i r g i n b , wr i t f ee fita tha t institotkia, says tha t n o " 7 < ^ s i i f t k s r a S f p b e e of

t he aa tho r of t h e Beeiarstkm of I n d e p e n d m e ' r e -T h e v b U o r s tohbtomh,

l ^ ^ p i d B g off f iagisents , h a v e completdy demol-ished It. and by p i e c e a e d carried it away. A n o n , e o a t h g t aaSe pedestal , g iea t ly d a d g o i e d , akme rematoa to m a r k U s g t a se .

— Oar pedpto a r e so unt ir ing to Ihe l r i to bos lBea t ha t t h e case of P a h a e r h a u g U snd l a t d y we hear b a t Bttie said fa regard to t h e mat ter . Tbat individaal b not aow to t he d t y , we nnderstaad, havtog lef t du t f ag t h e flmt p a r t of the week for t he — — ^ I r r f a a r t i .

— W s e m m e r w e a e n t j a a e d the d r c o m A m e e of a Oermao widow to t h e th i id district mai ry inE h e r ^ h a A a n d . A a o n t h o r t w o a f t e r w a i d ; ^ poWshed t ha t the b d y was aga fa a a d e a widow b y t h e d e a t h o f h e r h a s f a a a d t y y e a a w f o v i r . W e h a v e

t h a t she b a wifo. having taken he r ^ l a w f a l basbsnd fa due C » a few daya ago. W e f o r t e a r repeating t he j okes to w U d i t U s a e d -A f g has gtven rise. The p e o p l e a i a a n d l o ^ e n t h e s ixth basbsnd u a d a d maa s a t e beforn t b e s u a -B M r b o v e r . a n d a y t he wedding shoold have been prevented b y t he poHoa. Some the b d y ' k Oer-man friends a y she b o r i e l two huri iaads b e t a e l e a v i e g t h e e l d e o a B t i y . I f this b e t r a e t h e p r e e e n t hu»bs:r t b he r e i g h t h . - A t t « , (Ala.) B m d i L

— The fiaems of homan suffering a r e a varied u ^ a r e nasseroas, and thoogh msnkfad h a s e n -d a r r t physical pahi fa every conceivable phase, w6 d w b t if a a exsc t p a r s U d to the fd lowfag can any-where bo found on r e c o r d : I nane ighbor incv iBace . tatafewmileafrom t U s d t y . B v a « old three s c w e y e a n , who for soaM t i n e e a s t has been

^ w s s ' ^ S - i e d l S u toe«s ,w tad i has sinee esafeied h a to tabbed. About a week ago t he tower par t of U s body began te grow cold, a a d t h o a c h every m e s a r w i . o i m -ployed to impar t to U s Bmto an ar t i l ldal beat , t h e c h i U e r a d a a n y s s o e s d e d t o t h e n « k ( ) o f t h e s t a a a d i , rt^ U stopped. Biaee t ha t t ime, t he aK>er par -tioo of U s body, i n d a d i n g U s arms, seesto t T t e taming u p with a racing fever, while t he lower por-tion b a Bomb u cold can m a k e it , and u c U m o g u a n i c e b e r e t o t h e t o a c h . AB tba t one extremity h s a k s t t o w a i m t h h a s been m o i e than gafaed te t h e ^ . E f e t y efldtt to m t o r e to the body a n eqaiHtomm of heat has e s t i R l y s a d thonch BO has t aken plaoe fa t he anlbr tunate m s n ^ cooditloo for some d i ^ pest, a n of U s recovery ha s been abaadoned . The a o s t ringnbr p a r t of t ^ s t o i y - i ^ f a w e l l s a t h e n t i e a l e d - b t h e l t e t t h a t t b e s a S n r , while h e expeciences n o m o a t a r a l secsa tkos from the abnormal condition of t he upper p a n of h b body. beBevea t he tower portion to to fa

H b constant a y to t h o a around b b bedside is, t o do sootelUng to qaeccfa tbe fUmee

crisping the f b s h a a d seething t he Mood in totowwUmbi To a priest who was caUed fa to shrive him b e said the re waa n o hope—that half U s b o d y w a s aLrady to h d l ! And stiU h e fives. U s hear t and bra fa o a O n and U s pu l se beat inx b i sh s M w ^ white through the lower p a r t l J W l w i y . which b a cold and dead u death can m a k e it, be is s u S w i n s aU the t o r t n n e of t he damned .—fVana-nati .Dfmirtr. „ — J U > cTqiper ship Cncowah, which arrived a t Ssn F t a n d a c o on t he S5th a l t , lh)ia New Tork . re-ports that , oo t he 9ih of Angnst , when about flfty-flve miles off Cape Bocn, s h e f d l fawithanumber of l e e b e r ^ the largest of w U d i was aboot e i ah t Bi les k e g and th tee handled feet U g h . T U s h a g e b e n t m n s s have been soeae two thousand fee t deeo m the water.

— T U s wooderftil means of transooitatiaD, w b ^ was noticed a t soase length fa t he I s o m e r of Octo-h » r 2 1 , h « s arrived fa t U s State fa c h a i s e of Mr . J o h n A. Eeed, of Hew T o ^ t h e builder. I l l ssasufkctared te the order of M s j v Joseph B . Brown, of t h b State , to be ased to t iaaraott inK goods and stores a e r o a t h e Westeca wiUemess . I t win travel s o y cammoa ro sd a t tbe l a t e of eight or tea miles an hoar , and m o ^ u p a n ascent of a tboassnd feet to t h e mile cosily. T h e ' H n g o n " con-rista of a l e c n c n t i v e and its a t t adunents , and two

aadmsss ively4>Ult c a r t a , e a c h twenty i t e t m b n g t h , a o tha t , when a n to«etaer . they form a t r a t o some sixty fee t loog. The engine b about f t e t y horse-power; t he car ts wffl b e a r n p s n d ca r ry a weight of t w e n ^ t o o a s a c h ; t he wet«i« of t h e oxti ie machineiy b n n r ^ twenty bxa .—St . Pml f i m r r r .

- T U T O b a p r o b a b i H ^ toat t h e s l aee a e r v i o a between he re s n d HashvHk) wiU be renamed d a t i n g t he present i reek, a a d t h a t t h e l u i b wiU b e t ians-f e n e d to t he old route, instead of being b r o n g h t u a t present b y la l l ioad. l U s change, we u n d e n t s n d is t h e reeolt of a m l sunden t and in s between t he EdgeBeld R s i h o a d Coeipaiiy s o d the s t aee oontrai t -orst—ClerfaeaSr Jffmomtmm.

— A BriUsh ofBeer, wriHng from Teberaa. F e e d s , to the L w d o n I V w s . r e s s a r k s : " A Cathartfa FUL m u a f s e t a r e d b y "an American C b e i ^ ' ( D a . J . a A r a a , of Lowell. M a a . , } ha s ca red t h e Shah of a L iv t r Complaiat t ha t threalened h b lii& Tbis simple fact, n n i g h t be expected, renders theAmer i . csns immensely p o p a b r b ^ w i d t e w e E a j ^ a r e ovis laoked. D o a b t b a o a r own ochda ia made t he di jcoverieawibchha e a p l « 5 a , a a d thus f t b toeveiy-t h i c g : we d o t h e labor^then t b e m o o ^ A m e r i c a n p a t t h d r a u r k o n i t and t a k e t h s reward. Doctor

a M c h w B l d o a b c h a b e w i f c t e d to Urn e n a cold n a f f box, e r d i a a o n d U t e d a a a d , wUle n o ^ nasse even of Davy, ClBidosaa o r B r a a e - t h e n a t ^ b y w M d . h s . U n a , b k n o w n . - - i r « r ^ Smadmg Pmptr.

— I h e P r e r i d e a t b f toe to expressfog t h e onfaion t h a t n o t i e a ^ w b k V e x i e a fa to b e expected. t r a r r s p e c U ^ o B S a t e wboDy a a a a t h o r i a i . M r M c l a a e w t a t a e d far i i t s i s n i l m i aa ly . A m s a b e r o ^ B ^ l e g a t b a a t Mei ioo. he re y a -l r r d a y , a a d d e s c r i b t a c t h e cnndit iaa erf t U n g s a •hockfag a t t he capital, there b d c g s o safety for Ufe o r property.

The pkyiicasns a t tending Senator D o a s l a a have f o r m a l ^ stated to writing t h a t U s a s e e s e b g e a t fatbestoBUMk,toRBeve I h e a s e N a I t o a t h e « » -ftabtisl i i e i sasn i i l i ly af a s8^y c e a t a a c t f a a vrUck s o a e o f h b i n & c r e e t friends p c e a ^ T s e M t o r DoagUa fa improving, a a d t h e e r i B l _ ^ ~ past , t h e o ^ ca re b sUD r e < i a i r e d . ^ ^ t Doustas b c a d a a O y eonvafescfag. Both h a v e ^ " ' ^ ^ danger .

a t I i s p e n , M I d d g a a . w h e h a i tothefe>pare» terfeftkObaa t h e L y a n Medtoaiea ' I v a n .

— D a t f a B l b e t a wedESsessiati of theConfeeeneeef ZarisB, t h e e x p a B A a r a a f t k e ^ e a i p o t e a l t a r i e a t a d t h r i r aaitas. a t the Hotel Baae r , a a o t t e d to above

—The aobto hear ted I ^ F o m k B a h a s a r e a s B t s d t h e s t e a a e r A s to O^ i l a f a M X » a l o c ^ h e M a t o ga l -b a t a n d s B c e a s f U e o a a a a d e r . M a r e w a i d ferlA

s k a M i t ^ vrhs b n e w fa Par is , b w r k t o g a of tattea t a a S a h i B paper , to whtoh h e »

to t he I r i sh r f i l l s Tiy t h a t F r s a o s wig s o m W a t w a r vritk S m ^ b a d to t h e Medbs r r aaesa . a a d t h a t t h e n w f f l h e t h e t f a n e t o t o d a o s t h e B ^ o o r S a a o . b a n t o t o v a d f t b c h a d . IDtohs laaggea la tha tSSt tOW

a s i t a f t a a B w t t y Bigr to DBhBB, a a d ftM t h s a e r , U B a p s l s a i i f e s a e I t , a e r a a to U T o p o o I .

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McncAK M c a x u t e l a i n r c . — X t o a ricfe a a d j poor, bend a a d free, a a o o t e a , grades a a d eaoff lasns I ef Efe, we bea r t h e assse meed e f p t a i a swaided t h b w o B d e r t o l a i t i d e . B o r a a r e k a a i e d , p a t o f i e - | » , . k a ( i i l r v e d , E v a a v e d , va teshie a a i a s b a B d e B a e f i d , | S ^ 2 { aad natold 3 b aaaaaged b y t k b g iea t m e S c t o e i B M ^ K X e

w U d i B s a r p r i ^ t o t k e j o d g m s i d o f man . What|£55j f t a a i l y d o a n o t r e - i a i i e a s t s a d a r d t l n b s e n t t W h o ! ever heard of t he s a a e e O e c t s p r o d a c e d b y s a y e l h s { a n 0 1 a i t i d s t F o r C s t o B i B b e s , Sptatos, B k s M t e , I S t r ^ e d Horses ,dee . , f t haa n o e q o ^ TI ibb i i

I h e g e n i d u e M a s t . 4 L i d . e n t b s d d A C X I O W U D Q M X R O F P A n D D R S . ^ aQ r e ^ a c t a h l e D m g g i s b and l ove iy Men to every I town, p a r b h a n d h i a l s t t t o o o ^ i o a t S o r t o a a d |

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M l a v T J s M u W b n M l t e . W a ^ t b £ ( » * . J » 8 a m i a . f C . l b a x t M B a Ayi J t t e i Mcr. U J V a u ^ S B k . I T a ^ n OM.

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g » M — a g — t M r l t e w t w v f M t a t t e tin i i i l a teltacMkriaa: B J T u ^ a U a « . B 4 J l K H < A U J * > . BLVRteBlS

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Bii 1 H i i > « « y . • • • » HWeeyel B a M H e , (Be»lti«» - I « T w i t e e . - - - 1 « m r t l j r f t t e B l l | l I - x a C f c B r ^ i n w j . < B r i > i l » > - | W BI«*r r a r a*B«(MaMin(»AcVgM) - l a AadMtHMoy.OaOla) I t s

V M M a a ( a a i ^ a t e W l a > a r . - t e a Balacr*r t teBlk l»- f ie iw1al .aaa») . 1«« Blalaiy at lM«tlM.cn>ta) . . a H f c f r af B MaTiaai^tHa. O n latl I B ne ta<ia lHMaiT*raBt i fcaaKai«Mta . . I H

C s s n a s n t u u s . 0 ' * a a w 1 j 'ala. u « 0 - « a m > - I A n i T l M l a S . - IS tS O a t e M - k - k a t f o K d t t - I t a O ' l^a iM-a- ta l f can. aulqsa . - a a •te«aMUt .KBck t a t o a a t J a h a A m M O 111 »a«aa «« B | ia t laaa»t»ml i tHaa , I JS •vraamaa af tha Ajaaalj>«a> S a

Q u s c a L gtaafc i m m m ff Uiil A gaao) t a Idtte-Katllak. (Oiaaka A l l ^ n ) SM etaak PnpMOlaM aai Caaa at Xooa . - a » awaOoMotdiMa «a Bag T^itawwrf. t t t O—ifaOtaailM IHaiWaT.<Cl»A) I K

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I ]r. ilMnaf to a erkr- I t WW «a mmtmS at |kt. Tka JteKaa^ e a a n t to a i t w t tha fate. U h a M HfM^ . MM. aad left aa a w af aeeont. "Tntj^mma, CKUiaVasT

a r v i w e w f i w S B w n m a ^ f n s n . V a adSaai i t h . m f af t t e » J a r t » a I l i l t

aaAHalrT BM^ClBt f i n 111 i I BiaeaB aa ttU l awd . I t tiitt te aat •

l t e S S a k « a a a d a a a k i i U , * a w l E i a d L Wa l eMKimtei :

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Ue»-Sa. Ba^Tatfc.

TSE BAPTIST ALMANAC FOB 1S60 I m B O W a a a l i r I t i» . t i lM M a k t t e t t»vateaM.ta |

I a | i i a i i i n . t Imrm. a s i i « o la a >aa»nf»T aa js iaK. a»*t«*WTtkba«.teeaBtalaB I T w e B l y DtWertmi^ J r t t e h ^ ^ w t t A Tmm I

, a CriaaJar aat Ailiiiaiijliai Caicalana I ataatat ta Sba tmOn aaastn .

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l iataf Baa:>>I P.i<a4te>]a. UM af Bap-w Odbfaa aa t 1 OaateaM Baaara • ( aar Ba

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I HaMMl otter vataaMa later» rtkaatxcaata. * e i ^ * E e - » a M l y e a O . S l I

Oaw'aCoa - l a t ^ i a a a t . [Oaikl Ttigd-taUdlaear, (Bart A Oatera]

D e n o m i n m t i a i u l Ea taa tBa ta iTa f Bsfttam. u VOatatariafaairwteEa. - l a CioaaaaBaftlaat . i m • t a a i t a a l a f t l a B . - • - U l t e a M a t e M - t . n i . 1 . - . • TkajtedaBraaat.Tcl.S, - I M enatImWteal . [ST«>M] - - l »

. Ut tU Ii«aWteal.(etavaa] - • - « fiiacaCiaMa, [XiB. racS] - I IS Caiaptentea X>aalaa4. (JaiwI 1CS Baaiavaf J«ar(Lali4] - - t t> f i t i l i e t l H aat O i ^ t e n i t a IwMtalan. - 4> CaaeM!iaaa< faSateytitta. [BaitaMa) • I t a i K t m faiBliataa af Xaa. [Oraafartl - IB e<iSan.tkaBBrt]aU,(Batec] SI B a f t m a s t r n t a a a a a , (WaDarAOnteie IC TfcieaBMeiasWayl a e a B i * e * . traaOataaJ t )

1 i i j i i i " i i - a r iln i [ t iH ta i l w T l a - a BMa aaJ t n t f t n at Ofm Caiawailna. {OectertI U Aa0j4Laafa>tkB«K.iraa<Iataa] . M Ii^aataaca af Canact »al laf. • - . u Iter(*aBtel<iao(B^«l>ta.[Ia«ar] - - IS r iacMaaf BattlnPHaa^lia.{CaTt)a) - 1 t i • a f r t ea f l i a tAaMabina tBaUi loaaLte t ; . ai

Maaaal. a

Baetia«M.itjTa- - - - - - 1 s t Batt tr tBaaaalaaaee.lHatan] 1.S) CaaeiaaTlsvaf CkilatUaBB|«lM,t3ii(tal I t I t lKa .a .a rTi la l iLzTMX I t S BapUatLOcarr, - - - - » «

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Tbeo log icB] . Crataa'aCiaiw «ini'i. i t j Balteli Aaalatj. - l i t ralarttaa rnaaat . I t ] Wa>>aara]l<atalKIaaaflij, ] Caiaeaaa FwHaiaa, . . . . { i t T t eS raa tOamMlaa . • - - 1 » TteOnstTaaakac. • • - I 1> C t e h t b a U t s I B ea tBana la t i aXata iaaa t l aCte la t . - I «

CBr«f t t e f i i aa tKla t . HatmaaraatBlyaanba. tBa^I l i t TMabla-kBart^ B a n a w . - - I M Blaaaa«mtMi. tnaat t l ix«J l a laanaf >l,ar.ttTa Larcaaca. (bac«l . I a 0<%taaattaa;>ntlMatl teBIHa.rSaaaara] I t J Ctefatlaa faoKtena [ t e a t i r t ] . l a C a ^ a a t B a t i a a f Ckztat,(l«4] I B • M I K « < m T . a . - l i t P M a - t ^ a f H a a a f tehratlaa,ia*aeei I W T<iaa«rteaCh>nk.C1S|>lar] . J { t M B a a a d a < t e O i a a t e , a s , [ W a K a | ^ l e t T te If 11 nil. [La.*] i M f t a t r a r V e r t ^ t m e A } - . B -BatamivMis.r&aadl l - • - -a ttaaaaa la Piaiatte. pfiaaA] - ST m i l l iTf t iBi iMi T'TITM t r ^ i r t m ) I B n a M B a | y U a t i « . [ T a t I a a ) I B f r i i l i n l l l i i i l a f l t eHaavaa i»>aaa ta t i aa . i t t

Ja»aa. tlaJBca] s ai . - . t>

• t C a i a c a f l l a a a a a l , [Mtaa ] . I t a lanrWIae. . . .

AXEWILLUSTBATED CATALOGUE I «r aa the Bieto aaS TpaeSi af ti* Aiwliaa B a j d *

PaKlsatioa SoeiKj, vitk f c t M a b a i M . haa j w : teaa to >aM.aa<l«iIl te b r a w M ta aav a t e u m aaaa a a e a ^

J A M S A MdCroO<.lapaal t=.T Heat . n S ^ t W AtA a tmt . ftelalMffela.

B ^ S a c a a ,

TOCXG KKAPEB FOR I860.— a - l a a . o t d d < t e « t t M P a e « l . t e a > 4 t r t t e A j » I I lL i

t a a t y Ma ii . I Oaanal,

iMlmn,

Bl 'HIMlfFl .

laaSthteKtka UMt i t a raa iS a a k o i i O a ^ l i a a ^ a t a cbeaiulaa at a n r Oaa BaadrMlla

: B A P T m BABBATB BCOOOI. I t la m a c t t e Sacat i f K t a a i af aa iDaatialad n K arcr I

t a t tepc^Ub 17 IS m c s u n s T - u v s u a s m I

OolS WalK.

BaOaL Black B t w .

a a a t r l j a a x . !

m » - a L W A T S n ABTABCZ I aa l M i tkaa 'nf t r ea I r n r . aa4 laai t t ea Oa. a I Oaa Baa tn4 aa l a y n n l . S ~ •• -

B - r a a t a c a yra-faii la n f : a a a ) f U a . . e i Oa aB padtaeaa at rctMa paeaia aat aaaarSa, am teff 1

i t e t e X a t b feaiaU. T t e i d l a a t a c k a l I af i ada f f a t t t e paaaga la Hil l teaVil i :

S C E ] ^ MaectTdaa «I iO. raataca B eta, t : SS vac raai. I s a a . - » i I t - « i s

4 0 - V- 4 S B . - l < 4 - t M w - 4 a s . - i a > s a

, a - - s t s , - 2 » - s s i ia» - - SOB. - x » - i i a

Wa « i3 a a t iiaeitKa esffaa. &«a a( e t e ^ la aar atlTM. I AUCU A DfCKBBSOS.

lOa .

U t e t j .

Bartk GtaaS Was fa ik . BMkEalac . —. I I "l . mi^a I — , KattaBbai^

BOBTBCABtUBA

eaaSjCaak. gOCTHCSBnlJBt

BAPTIST SAB-I ^ y f t a l w a i M a 1

Xk l

BOOKS FOB BATH BCBOOtS, JastfaMk

I t a t Pa>dle«tlsa C a d ^ , SB Anh I i l a a a a a l ^ B o o k a f UAb 9 S | ^ ISaa. f A I laaniae taLrni . J S S - ISao. -I BaJyaa t te rOiaa lM. ISO == I l aa . -I Laia to BaiaiiM. 3 S - U a a . -IToaaeTtelar . U S - I S m . -

• tkatteatUa. M S ' ISaa. -raa ratteb 3 - l»a».

Caakataf Jaaala. M S * I t a s . -TteTkaaVaadSai. X> - Vma. -

IKmrSaJai. M S - I S m . • A3 t teateraaiateaasua&v ICaaliataS a ^ t e x ^ Ttey I

I wU te tanmiat &aa af rcatafa afoa tta i — f H i af t t e |

-Liaa. ta P m a aad aaadjr laatr. a n a teaatUal

BOOKS FOB THE HOLIDAYS. r awdAaaard toaay ifT fcaaaf aaaTiai oa rXavB- l nuad Catalocaa af Baaka aad F r w .

A a r r teok aT«7 aaak n a r ttiS. JAXXa A CICKKK90X.

HiHrflitT Aja

T ODISIAXA BAPTIST BOOK HOUSE, I ffcra»aaart. Ia .-AIlt teaatT>a' l iM rf feaiaa, aa i t e A |

t Caopaar: B ^ a B M t e g a a a n O f . f A|Mt te f i a a Sl^Hi» a.«itteni B q t b t Baltov. i

ChCdrae-a Priaat. C M t i a a BaaeaaiCT. A ( n t b r aw Sa-tteca Ba«tlH eatte!h BAaat ITalaa. aoate e a t t r eal l al caialaiaa FOoe. riaaa aat CaSar ]

K a a l a . a i a a « d B a a t e t v a d a . A U X A T . aoTtS-tf

( t e C

Ctew sad t<ta aaaaKk ta tte l a t e af I b n n .

S a a t h v S * .

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T o o n t r M i n i s t e r * ! L l b n u r y .

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f i l t e r iaHaai^l ' ta . -Xav.&azneBa».Zaai t i iaaa.aUa.

Xaaaaf W t a a M a a T i ^ i g i , ach aa I te ( j a a ^ w a at t t e Be* 1

Laaaaf Piailrt l i r j w t i K ->MT%aMl|laii -B « a a t a t a » II I iw lit, • - '

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A a B i t e t a a t X l a a a i U k t e t a a a l .

II Waaa

r t e t e a t a d j w

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I aaaka. ttt aat aaM t a a a a a f aaid t« | t l a I t l t B a . B i n i f n l r t t , l a w i

S T B I C T t T I N C w t z w c n i s ] W o c k t . t n a L ^ B J a t l

WACCUrX. i x u n B K u m B . A , P M U a t . 1 Tte

l a r T s f k m a a c r a

r t k a B a a ^ B s r . a a f m a W k a a a l O a a * , ! * . . . ] >, a r O t e B o r U f c t e l t e Oaaany. Sto rf ate n a af BdMtlaa, f r n t m 1 < P r l a . a . f r t e ^ l

tm A B . B A I M a t 1

R D U i ^ O y j ^ — A L A D Y O F S O M E

a t e a

A f l t e r f l

« B t m i . B A B n A o e i , J . W . T O I < S O N i t C O . ,

p H I L O S O P H T o r S S L I O I O & - . B Y i „ . , „ - . a r , - - ' -m p i A F t c t w a u i G t a u B M X e r e i a i l & S T i f c i . ^

S g S & y t t e r ' ^ * ^ * * * ^ ^ ^ ' - " ' ' * ' ^ * ^ I - - - , « i t e t a . B t e B a a r i S r f j t e t e U t » i j i l m i g ^ y I ^ B O B H J t A l A . ^ Z S a r f e t e a e a . '

Page 4: media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.commedia2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/tbarchive/1859/TB_1859... · 2012-11-08 · llB^iDB. initet-alMi r-iiT»t, wri lihit . thi uirnsjf * fiis sar I

•'•if

I N F I D E L ' S D A U G H T E R .

ouraot XT. •r. (Sajtoft kid 1MM abaat £nim lose,

liantna t]»good tam vl Xr. UtWiipmu^ t m m ^ }» bitearf to « a n i lann front^ ova Sn t&a ««Biiafid

a^taf Kfior t ^ oesvcmtiait nlaied hk tte luk and v!ul« Dr. Tktskwdl «w jc( viikt^oB. £r«i»a«!«mf uiaiattaiidiliMh

wBierstiMsi vitk Mr> Lrr^sttw, itt re> gu« to kis tnra pstsoati czpoioM of gattt Godi, ia ^ nnaviBic ot laJ ftiteie, I f tkc fUMst of (iw H^j l pb: B«t tb: haat of tiift sew e<HiTm wu too fidi «t bk

to tolk Icsg of Uauc^ viOoQt mtt%-iwtotor. "X^poor -ritttvill iMMaM effaz* Ob,t&mt ^ e m M iwOQB-vinttdti I teva beesL I i i i^ Mr. CUjtoA,

jm waM taks nawMMn to leiia aissd, w escebe xsd ctete-

bhM of tke B^ irgewstBt fat t]w iBipn-tioB s ^ sxetasarj Ustsioiecai cf

B£Ua. m o i I aaesiit to nMcnwitH W, my o«n aiisd is bzlf by eaUmto of l&e puu wliiafc I ban tolmt, ia, axia t^ai >be oold oever bdierc. Asd I m3c«t Tbiakvell's argvuests !t»e Ictf xaSsBocQ opjii Im mnidy vh^ dxe Tcaten-Iwn ksv, m fimser years, be «3«d to joia

ma m mabsg €hd> bol; book tb« oIk jaetof esr Is it not vo&JszM tbat God di BsteotiBA eS? Snrsly bis ways ate Mt VSkm oar mya."

eaa da soa^isf better £>r josr daogbtwtKaa toieasoawitS beriabcr itaSs dr Kzidl,'' rq^ei tbe pastor. "It set on ar oausts, bui God i S^rit tbat dtasged ytmr beait, s> as to isake ^ yaar aaod of tbs otraticm of tse gaspel, and wlMi abo M i &A bo- ae^ of it, sh« viU. IiiByo«,beKadT tobeai-TOwm. Tketratb ^ tiM goipd is BttenJed £ir nwurs. It bu oa ebama asi Boappropiatesan to vbo da 8ot Uiat t ^ an Banos. Wbstva uooi WMfc t« &r Xia liTisgetus i» to pray fe bar. Oor God basn prayer; H« bss knrd it Ut yira. Wa iriQ pr»y; we villtf-fe oor paiiiioas, Oat God win, IB bis own ttao and hsa ««a way, kad ber iato tbe tnib.

" Bet, moan tims, aa va kaov tbat God •afaswcof isaaaSiaadaabeoaaTSieeBssof tb« tntb tbnnigb tbo nataral epesat m of oor om laaaan, «e maat iM eot no ndtai^

Minn to pma tbe argonmta iag tbo tnitb-folaea of tiw teaebiags rf God'a word vpos hef luod, rosoaVnn^ boworer, aX ve eaa

I bst Gtds beapw ibe traib up against • of a bart vkieb wiiisot opm to itt-

osir* a nn^o eestsMO, andviddtiB now aore doaelj baraedfroB tbe reryapprcbesiaoa tbat wo ar« eeeknir aa

o Bo yoc UubSE, tbea, it will b« best to say MtbiB^aorotoWopontbosiibjoet? I eaa wot •ttSoro to look opea my eiiud as tbo use. mj of ay Satior."

" It is tbat SavOT a£ee tbat eaa make ysar bis Criaad. I would first pray, asd tbea

watdb te it oeaaaioB to ipeak; and jmy Car wisdoaa aa to speak, aa tbat God laay bicbcart, aobe did tbo bMit of Lj£a. sbo ittmirt to Oo tbis^ wbieb were spokeo by PkoL WO are Tery fedpkn in co^ eaoes ao tliMa, cnept aa wo itoerre be^ £t«m iboTo.'*

-Sk ZUi&weil ecmiag ia a&eat tiaaa, ibm tbras kaiit down sm tbe young pasto, wiso bi oad his yoara ia tbo wkdoai wbiob God bad b t a poiirwi oat bb beait is CKTSOii i&tEafp for tbo saivaaon of tbe darter (f tbat oMtber, wbo, auay yean ago, bad prayed fi>r ber aftVora bnbc. Wbot Wbad fiaiabedi Or. Tbiakw^ rotuwd bL> tbaata to God for tbe grmt ebasgo wbieb Hb SpiTit bad wro^bt ia bnasel aai bis no bad oneo viitod to rrrila iua same and vilify bis word. Ha aliodod to t2ie sad Icao' eae£ wbisb tbo example of tbeir formtr & T « I

aad ibetr evil ooamsatioa mast excited apmj tbo tender atiad of tbo lovely cbiid, aow KTOvitijr up womaabood; that if God sboatd kave tbeir hearts to break whb !WI0W, a view of tbe awfol Etct tbat ^ wa<« y bad Oos txa^t to r«jeet Qod? wrri, aad iliMytii bsi law, Mta«2d eJBti&ao to da aa tbey bad taa»bt. He weald still be jut andaietsual; bat,yet,bocatioat<rd tbat God, fi2r bia owm amt aams's aka, sod for tbe sake of bia* w^ ttrt for B8, wa weio Hocers, wonM opra b«r heart to tbo li^t appt ea-HOB & tntb, and make bci a new eroatsie ia Ckmt Jesas.

Tbo &tber of tbe attompted tbea bim-stlf to pt^ almd, b«t bo ooald only artint latitat iatervabH ''My oBildl my poor dear

!o!it l Ia«t! merer I aieroy} Ob, my dear what h«vo \ done ? Hare I do asroytf beo fiirever! fime;! Ij tbero ao bntwT SJievflT and ever!I Sarely madness wu a my boart.'* latermoed with taoh ia* ouheniut ox tressoBS we?o safe, and groaas. and

wueh sectsed as tbooe i tbey woold ea«e heart of t&a onoo proad l&Sdeltn borst.

Tbo door was elossd, aad Siss Liviagstoo, who was passiog tbroort tbe bail, beartag ber

voioo in sodt streaafal toscs, paased to IMib.

At say otber tiaie wool-i bare nc&ed iB,tbrawabecsrif Bpaabisaaek,aadbes;agbt iiiss Mi; to bo so grieved for ber. Bat tbe

of tito Ivt few days bad separated ber ftom tbe bes« Ao bved Best, either is Heuvea ar«ar£. Never daazf.ter kad loved moi« tKtely a &tbcr ibaa shit loved bersi— Bat it was tbo baagbty amtooiat; it was Ed-ward Iffriagstoa, mpn^maa ef tbe wmid, opoB wheat sbo dated with saob lavisb a&e-tioa. Sbo BO bmger saw ber &tii«r ia tbe hamUo ebristiaBOsa BBii idma^ yi^dn^ hm optaioB to utbers,

spoofiw h i a ^ ia prsyor aaA Om xeadiar of Bibio. S&a ooold baldly beltevo tbat it was aot aS tbe eSeet of some bsBparary icssaity. The pres* eoew rf Dr. Tbinkvell aad Mr. Clayton was B0 lottrer igreeAle; it bad beeaaw atmest of-fensive to ber. Tbo fvrj meBtioa of God or relqj^, Aa dootated, made ber aervoas ; aad whatever pleanro her £atber Bi^^i^d ia esc-vom&HS tooa saah aBbjoot sbo detonmced »> tttw no briber part in tiHE&

Sbo was Sony to her fttber^ distieas, bat lAo woBld not go in, sor £dsbo amka ber ^ peataaae till at dinner sia took ber accaateai od^Hoattbotab]&

Her &tbet gaoota knew Ettle rf tbo exact ooa£&B of bernfed, and tfceir heaxtswsr» Ml oTtiko fohjeetwhieh hadoee^ed &eir iboogbta fiir several day< aad her &tber ttoBsbt tba woald ho a opfpottnaitv far Ms. Ckytaa to pbeohe&ro her a brief KsaatMif of the varu» aigamotita whidi had hem ulfed over among tbesn at ffeeat tiiaa%andhy sMjA&ononfsiy trafltfalness of ti* TBhto.- ia all iia parts, angbt he sJdlo-so SoanT and bgieally OBtohlisfcad.

By war of iatmdoetag tbo oasrasatiim bo saS: " Themis one pmt, Mr. C&ytoa,wydi doeoootycteeaqmtoekartoBe. Toaaad mf feioid, doetoi bavo shown vesy eon-iiwRvd^ tbofc WW have bettor groaads £k be-lieniiV tha iuiwy whi^ makoaapactof tbo ritairtaiw TsBtanieftt, ftaat wo bavwferho-fissi^ slmoot any otber hutoij Oat ew waa wiftteo. If Iboiievfthat bktoty Imasthe. lis** thai oertaia pstooBS called pnphot aad taa^m, aadapoMos dahaed to hs teacher) am .&am Said, aad peovad ti^ daim by do> iaKiBdwutoaaosM^Bot have bees done by Mfpowalni^tof Qot U i s ^ laader-sttti thai tha lahsfms of Adm dootrinea wiieh a o M ^ tbo dastBom oC (%xntiaBity, •IB to isimd nuxad ^ with other

Ik tho ipntra w wia**! wards of the* a::d apostfas. , .are

^ tbatBook odifj BiU^ wtkisCwm a«thi3-sMkot or writ.

tn ^BKS thdr rniim aaOmnijr An tit^ ink aone parts ths sB*isliti of wiMh.ilsil irMmkaowB?

an the tia» bosB nKdiw

tr thsBi

tttf --Mb* t W ^

oae£«ieat»Mot i t f i ^ . n d iavHigstoit wittaat ep^om watsat lostthatho.elaiatf thsMdptBrai toWin-spind, does m* not ape* Om toolisBaBy of miraefaaabB*. That ia bat «b* of tho/omt ptUan spoB whidb ovr iaal ooBdama wac madotonst If yvawill^oMthoUadMsa togohM^airt noaUtho aigcMBtfiwa t ^ very hegxaniag, yon will see titoi wo i ^ t bkan it to a sort of toaplo. Tbo great IOBB-iatioB stoM i r a whidh aU the h i M ^ nsts,

I firrt kid dowB hy eatahbUu tte ptopo-HtioBihataen isa God. [Soopoges 38— 91.] Tbea this w« hid axMither nek hy provisg from what woooaU kan from Baton of ebaraetar of tUsGod, asd the Baton sad oeafitioa of maa, that it was poaablo God to give, aad maa to neon, ud to know t!iatho:W jfr^roda rovdatida frtaa God. Bee dieter vi] ** Wo tbea l i^ down aaotbor rook,hy prov-

ing froB tbo naton of God, aa seen in bis wads, aad from tbe rteettdiita of maa, aad tboinstiaetiTeexpoeta&Batf maa that it was, to taj tbe very least, exoee ngly probable tbat God wooLd make saeb a revelatioa aa would make kaowa to man bis er^n, his d«-tka, and his de tioT. Tbas sbowisg &at a revdaoea, and the leqaisito nteans of nthea-Beating it, »o Eur £raai sadi mdooked f?r aad wooderM events, tbat tbey eoald not bo bdieved open aay testimony, however eoa-dvive asd abandaat, were Jast what wo bad every reas.n to hope for, aad expect, asd, therefore, may bo beEered apon any iwA tes-timoay aa is eompetoit to estaWiidi aay otber iapottant hictoiieal &ct;

aMoad divkioa'tUrt^ wiiftea hy th* • aadiB tetUid'ho says Aonan

toGbd aadpnospto fivthoregBliOiM ' afhamaam'^

Bat does thiiitaaihertaf of J i w f ^ ^ load to m anbetiag ia the S a ^

undoes not. Brtit doeeoerasfwa to thoBWB Mriwof thoaaeioBtohriitina; Ho ooaato it* hooka to Moese, viat Oeaesis, Kx-odas, Lovdieas, Naahsn, aad Doa t «~ j ; ihirtooB to the pnrphots, vii: Jodiaa, mdadiog Bath, Sama^ Ghzoualao, K i ^ IsaiabrJewmiah, iaetodipg I-aoatotioas, EaekieL Daakl. ^ twdv* mlBor pnpheta, Job, Eaa with Nehoadah aad Esther.

" Tbo thiiddivisiaa,oaIIedtbo Psalms, tained the Palms, Pnnths, EedesiaM, aad tbo 8«mg of SoIoBMm. ^ . .

"Tbaawohavo oatak^of tbo hoofaia the wriftws of tbo oarfy tAristian fill^ eocTeBpoB perfboUy with thopreoeat Ho-bwwBibfc. « And, mom than this, both Jews Ono-tiaas have, ia all ages sineo the duistiaB era, beea aoeastoraed to a ioal to these hooka aa the Jewitb soriptareo, vAidi tbo Jews had loagit^edasof diviaoaathority; aorwaa then in early ages any qaestioB msed ooa-eerniag this pmat.

'< I think, tberdixe, wo auy tako it as patov-ed, tbat these boob, tbas named aad dasmfed by tbo Jews, wen thooo, whi A, in the timo of Carist, wen oalled 'O* s«r»><iir«,' as a wbck, ud otheniffi d<«gBated u '^om aad tbo ets,* acd

seeded TKSTIMOSY bo a sim^ bisurieal that sa^ a revek-tiim, w somethias daiming to hosadn had beat reoetved, and tbat it iras aatbeatieated by proper voaehers, ia tbe powCT or the wis-

broaght it, lowing tbat ^ y apake not of tbemsdvesL,siBeetbey daim-ed to be the messeagera of God, aad ake saeb words aad perfbfmod ssdi acts to prove it, as (h^ eoald not have spoken or petfixmed if God -himsdf had BOt epAea ia them aad workad by tbeai. It was aot aeedfnl for oor porpoGO to ekim tbat this iisfery was Mjptm?;

was eaoagb tbat it was ereditabk and true. "Wo now had tbo ttstimoay of historr aad

tbo TESTIMONY OF MIRACLE to o-tablish the &ot tbat too trafhings of Moses, aad Josbaa, aad several of tho pc ihets ia the Old Testaatent, anditf Christ aad tbo apostles ia tba New, HMO £reotly from God; aad in Oese an eoctoined the sabataneo of all the reBgw of tbe Jews aad the C&iisiiaBs. Two pillm bad beea set ap.

"Batwed^notstt^tha*. Weraisedas-other sillar. whi A wo may call THE TESTI-MONY OF PROPHECY; by diowiag ^ as no power bat God's ooald potfbcm a mm-do, so DO wisdom hat bis ooald atter a pro^ cct; and, siaee tlttn wen some of those mo ckiaed to be aiesaaigers from God, who did cot work miracles, wa may leeogoise them by the falfilmeat of their predteiaooa. Yoa have BOt had time to exaauDo all the pnphodes and tbeir foI&UaMst When eoate to do so yoa will Sad a larM portion «f the word is stained by this pffiar.

"Bat this is not alL Then an eertaia doetrioes wbieb it was ja$t as imposablo that die men who preseated them, oald have oon-enred and i ^ o koown in tho manner is whi^ tbey pabliabed them, aa tbat tbey ihoald bavQ atte^ tbe propbcdcs, or performed tbe mirages. And as those doemneo. tho« b wbea Mmpleted, form a beaadfal, and perfect, sad barmcfiioos systraa, ail pai^ of wbidt agree witb er^'otber; yet, as tbey were B»do known iituo by little, (aad the chain which tboy eompo roaa tbroogb tbe whole Book, aad bmiu it all together,) wo find in tbea aa wbtoh shows tbat it is ail tbs work of tbo wee aatbor, asd tbat aathor 14 divine. This is ear fonrtb vUar, which wr nay same THE TESTIMOW^OF THE DOCTRINES.

Not vpon aay cae of these, bat apoa all, joiBtly, do we rest oar fisal eondasica tbat the KUo is a revelation from Ged."

'ThoLaw andthoPnph-Psalma,' aad wen tho same

whidt BOW oMstitBto whatve eall tho Old Testament. Aad it follows that if Christ, or aay iaspired apostle, disds^ ro-eogvsed them aa of divine aa-thority, or as iaspired by God, we mist reoeivo them aa taoh, Bp<» tho tostimoay of in^iinr tioa itself."

« CMainly,'* said Mr. Liv-»ThatisseIf-«videat

. and tbo apostles t^ko by divino aatbority, by tbe aurades wroi^t, and if tbey speaking thas apt to aay oth« wridags, aa of eqoal aathority with thdr owa words. w» mastaidaut that they had saeh aathority. Bat when u tbk testi-oMay of (Arist aadhis >osaesto tho ia^ra-tioa of tho Old TestanMBtf"

"Itksoattamdall along tbioogh tho Now Testament. Christ aad tho apostka woo oon-staady aooastomed to appeal to too Jowi^ soriptareo, aad reasoa frtxn thoa as too diviae kw; and agau aad agaia diatiaotly do they reeosnitt its ia^intioa of God.

"'Soareb tbe seriptaxes,* said Jeoas to the Jewa, <for ia them yo tbkik yo bavo etoaal life; and thoy an they whidt testify of mo.*

" 'Yo do err, aot kaowii tho •oriptarea.* " 'Had yo boliovod Mtms yo woald bavo

befieved oa me, he wrote of mo.' " RefisRing to tho book of Psalms, ho says

How eoald Dmtid ta SpirU,^ that is by tho Spirit or by insmratioit, ' oall Um Lord.'

•"Ihiak not I am oomo to dcstny tho km or iJttprep3UU; lam not come to deatny hat tofalfia>

" 'These an tbe w«rds wbieb I spake aato yoa while I was yet present with yoa, tiat aU tkimga must ht fmlfilM whidt an writtea in tho low of JToms, m Profia^ and in the Psalaa coaoeniiDg mo.* Hen u a distinot

''Bat evea with aB fear of yoor pillars, it eeems to mo that yoa have kikd to sostaia tbo pto ositioB toat tho hktory, which was yo«r startiag point, is aa m^ iM UHorj.— Yoa have p n ^ that it k a emdihlo history, and t it is a trao history, aad admittiiig it to be sadi, yoa have, by il, proved that a lev-datioa was reedved, aadtoat it was dBfy,aad traly aatbeatieated. Yoa hava^ved by it that ecTtaia ipo ieeies wen ddtvend, and, by di«t u j oti^ Ustmes, that some of thaoe on^edea ba eheea falfiHed; asd yoa have das oved bv thk history, that the prophets wheatterodAemwanthemeeeagErsof God. Sow, m so far as tho kagaagocf thoBihkss tho k gaago ot thooo who wro^t tbo min-des, and attored tho prophedes, yoa have proved tbat it was'from Ood. And,ina8&r as those doetiiaea, yea spoakof, m ^ a ^ of asy other pwtkBs. wo mast a d ^ toat they tooanfrmhim. Bat. v ^ t f then ho seme books or Maaiea, Bko the book of Job, or of Jssbas, Judgw or Esther, tho sathors of which an not known; how an tb^ to h« identi&d as any part of this ievekii(»r>

- Jast ia tUs way," replied the pastw.— Wc first tad a maemager of God, ahoat

wiM diviao miaaiaB then eaa ho no roaa for doaht; aad tbea no if h* ta the teadui^ whxdi ho gives, doei not reeog^ tbe others as havisg e aal aaiOcrity withhimsdl Thai «a olriaia tiM auseiion of Jesas himsrtf, aot mtly to tbe bcdcs of Mooes, hat to aU too hotAatf Ao Old Tistsmoat, BOW osmmoaly reodvtdby traagc&eal ehristiansa UTPw* «f too word of wtd.

•It is a wdl estohlidtedhktoneal M i ^ t d« Jews, Vefen too timoftf C&xkt, had a od-ketioa of writtan whid thoy nguded ac tho

Ta thato they wen aoeastamed to wsal aa tho highes* aaihirity Bi mattm of >aBpam,T7Shey won £vidtd iio-to thrat dopartwatik odM h; them Law' a * I S b o Perns' Propbetn a^^ttogitVr <THX SdOXfllKES.'

at4lM Int ohHrtiaaa, hat frtMa than 1h* hktozkB of too Jowo. Jo

tofte waato ia th* fini divim tho fv. hMkaafHwHLiriNiFatatoBlu la th*

reot nitiaa of ea^ oao of too three divisioBa, and must, t erefcre, indade all too baoka ia each.

" This setUes the divino aathority of the Old Testament ceripta^ by tbe ree< ition of it by Christ himself, in Us official teaebisgs.

" It is also reoogaixed by the apostlca.— Panl reminds Timotoy tbat 'from a ehild he bad ksowa the Soly Strtptttrta.* And then adds * ali scripturt is nvea by iaspiration of God, asd is profitably dcotrieo, for nproof, for correction ia ri^teoasiMBS* &o. These scriptares which Tistotby bad beea toagbt «>» Ais tkildiood eoald be no others than toe Old Tcnaatcst. for toe New bad not then been writtta. Bat when be says ' all seriptan b given by inspiration,' be may indada bis owa epistles, and the gosods, aad, indeed, all tbat porti<» of the New Testament which had been writt«i when tUs seooad epistio to Timothy was wri:»n, aad which be utimates was at, or near the dose of bu life. For in it ho says ' I am DOW rcad to be o&red, aad tbo time of my departon is at band.*

" In toe to the Hebnws also, Paal begiaa by a. dutinat roo^mdon of the ket that toe toiags ia toe Old Testameat wen spoken by God himself; ' God who at saadry

times and in divers manners, spake in tinte past anto toe kthers, by toe prophets, hato ia these last days spoken aato ns by bia Soa.' A passage qaoted from tbe Psalms u pre-tsced by 'whetefore as toe Holy Ghost saith,' &e.

"Peter also deekres t^t * the propheoy in old time came aot oy the will cf maa, bat holy mca of God spake as toey wen moved of the Holy Ghost.' Ia another pkee ho

of too ' Spirit of CSirist which was in toem, and wbieb certified befonband too laf-feriogs of Christ, and to^ glo-ry tbat gboald follow.'

"Tbe testimcay of Christ himself, to the divine aathori-ty of too Law, too Prophets, and tbo Psalms, or to toe scriptarea, as a whole, kd l we need," said Doctor Think-weE " The testimony k plain and explicit; asd iJl tbat yoa need to have done, was to show that by tbo ' Seriptares,* aad by too • Law,' ' Prophet*,* and 'Psdms,' be meant toe same thing that wo understand by the Old Testament, as we now have it in the original He-brew.

" Then is one evideaoo toat tlu k so, whidi k veiy oon-dasive, and wludt yott not

mention. It u that aomo three handred yoan befon Christ, toe soriptura id i too Jews ngarded as of divino aathority, wot* traaa-kted into Greek, aad wen qaeted ia toe Greek by Christ and hk aportles, aad tbk tranaktion ix of th* smu books wlUA now eoMHha* oar Stbnte BOU."

"Weli," said Mr. LivkgstoB, " I admit thatthksettkathodaimof tho aeveral books, whidt wen recorded by tho Jews ra their eat-alogae of Holy Seriptares, bat I do not see th« yoa have yet amdo aay proof that the writers of the New Testameat wen iasjnred, e x ^ toooe who estaUided toeir owa inspi rataoB by thdr prophedea <w mindes."

" I have BOt yet attempted to do ao; bat it will be no difioalt task. Wo have oaly to show toat these books of whieh too Nw Tes-tameat k oomposed, woe writtea by men who ekimed to be inspi^ and mved tbk daim by doing sach thugs, orsaytog sad things as toey eoald not have done, or said withoat the direot agenoy of the Dd^; *or if aay wen written by others, tbat thdr writtaga wen re-—;nised and saaodoBed by gooo one who had

t testimony for hk owa inspntioo. ' The same ralo by which we wen able to

deddo ooaeerskg too Old Testaaieat, will gaids as hen

"Let as jast see what part of too New Too-taaioBt waa writtoa hj mea, who had too di> mt testimony of CuM hiasd^ to their in-spiimtiOB. Eariy ia hk aiiaistry Christ ohoao twdn Bien to b« wito him, aad to be witoosf* es, after hkdoath, of aU too th i ^ wUoltho toonld do aad toaeh. These he ealkd apoa-tka. And to them, bofen he ho gave a positive promiso that deatoaad re-Ktswtioa, they shaald hav* th* giddaaa* ot too Holy Spirit of Godto eaerv* th«B froai all emr: < Bat whoa the Orasfbrter k aaa oven the Spirit of tr«b, whiA pnoeeioth frcmto«9atocr,HEifaaitei^erBK; aad yosbaU bear taesiu hooaasa y*havw boai with BM Crmb tho W^B i^ t when He, too 8 a ^ ^ t ^ k oom^ H* wai jfmU, all *Bat Oka Oomfortor.iAkh k tha Holy Ghort, whoa tho Father wgi Madia my nam; HodmUtaaeh

toyannw ab iwkatMvr-kIhav*Maaatoyoa.'*

•• W* aag , ante*. taka U te oortaa ar m thi iMtiaiii] if TThnirt himn"/*^* -*••*' •ear waa writt««f hkMyi^ o t io ianh

h* givoa them far tok anrsH patsoK, ila thMato gtvaaa kseinialatowBt

of thothMOoaoeraiaghimaall "TtolnH oovar to* gospel by lbtth«w,

aad by John, tho StiOlm of John, of Peter, of J»ea, aad Jado, aad thaBevoktion mado to Joha.

W*hav« thea the Eprtkaof Paal; bat thaao an v«Mhod for by both minaka a^

tfiitmod aad attend byUaMtf. t h a ^ parpoaoof ihowkg h k i ^ ^

m tho aatoonty of hk teaehiags, with ^ other noatka. Thk ooven aU exoept the go^lnUA, and toat of Lake, wito tho A*t»«f theaao^ hyLaka.

» Tkao writi^ Lak* and Ma^ ao far aslkaow, wemnot attaotedhy aaymirado petfixmed by their aatoon; and, aot beiag ' Msflss' thoyhadaottho^reanssitf ki&l-libkgaidaBoe. Bat, yet, if thoy wennoi^ aiaod by aiqr •• b ^ iasfned, toaa pcovas their iaepiratiea at eeaolMvdy as aaiiaelo ooald hav* done it, « i f to<7 an kaowa to have been reeogBiaed by any <«e of these aportlos,aa beiag strutfytrsu, thea we have tbe eaaotom of an iaspbed apoatfe,to their k&niUe trath, aa maoh aa tho^ toon who wroto them had besa iaspirod, or, if wo bavo tho testimony of aiqr«tk«r MqwwdaMM, or kaowa to be a ^ b y miradea or prophe , to thdr va&iliag trathfidBaas, the eame tUng kestahlhdied.

"The only qoestioa is, ham wo saeb testi-Btoayf And first ia rcffttdto Mark. The

ly rf SOea^ eodefflatieal ; hk goiqvd was written at

the dldatiMt of PtUr, who waa an imqpired apostle, aad k the first ar^ea it waa often calkdUego^of Peter. Itkakoprovod by andeat hktoiy, that boto it aad toat of Lake, wen writtea and neetved by the ehnrehea aa of diviae aatomity, befon tbe deato of tho s ostk John, toat to^ wen boto examiaed by him, aad eRproeoi,- aad that h* afterwaida wrote hk g e ^ to sai ly whahadleea omitted by Matthew, Mark, aad Lake. It k fhrtha eeea that Paal, aear toe end of hk life, speaks of Markaeagood mia-ister of Je*M Christ, whoa he says to Timo-toy. kthe seooad Epkd^ 'tab Mark and

him wito thee for ho k profitabk aato a>o fiw toe miaiatry.' n k ho eoald aot have doBo if Mark had pakaoi apoa tho ardtea a kke gospd, or if he had laoarporated iato hk woid aay thiag wh^ was aot tzae.

" Tbea, it apotan from early history, that at a very eariy toy, eettda writings wen re-ceived aM nea ia the ardwe aa iBei»nd,ia toe days whoa aet oaly iome of toe aportles,

other iaspired mea wen Eviag. Cato-of theae writxaga wen voyeaitly made,

dof M ^ k iadaded k toe ear-eatak gasa, which hav* beea im-

aad it doee bo4 appear that aay oao, iaspind or aaini ired, ever oalled ia qaestion ite mi^mtion, regarding Mark aa tho ameaa-easkof Polor, lAo waa msidrod, even if Mark had not bees.

"Then k regard to Lake. He waa tho oompaaion of Paal, aa Mark was of Peter.— It k toe BBited toatimaay of toeaadento that he wrote hk goepd, ai he had the koto from Paal acd too other ^oetlp, wito whom he waa acqaratod; Paal mwtioaa him as hk be-loved oompaaioa. aad hk GOSPEL and ACTS wen both roodved, aa by divko an-toori^, k toe first oharohes, aad hav* a pkee ia all the earliest catalognos. They an eoa-staatly reforrod to and qaoted by the eartiest writen aa a part of tho word of God, giveB for toe iastraotioa of tbe diarches. Now it k evideat that toey eoald aot have be«t toas reodved in toe life time of toe apoetles, with-oat their kaowlodgo aad consent; yet, toe

of Lake waa pablished aad mrealated [e Ptitr, Pmd, aad Jokm wen yet alive,

and thirty years befon too deato of John.— It appears, toerefore, that wo have toe testi-mony of iasmrad bmb to tho inrpirmtiQn, or, at least, to toe anfailiag tmtoialneas of toe«e three books, and to the reet wo have toe testi-mony of Christ lumself, or of mirades and prophecy."

" I bad tooagbt," said Mr. Livkgstoa, " toat too varioaa bMks of toe New Testament aen r^arded as insured or anins|ttred, eanon-ioid or otherwise, in aoeordaaoe with toe do-eree of ewtak ehar^ ooaaeib, ia wUdi a majority votkg to approve, saade them bkdkg OB toe bardies, and a laajority dinpproving, made toem of no valae."

"TbMO writings," re]diod toe pastor, "if they wen inspired, needed

BO oottnol to attest their iaspiratim or to auko toem bindkg n^ OB aU maiJdad. Tbey auist be reodved, if it eaa be showa toat toey wen attest^ by mir»>

aad iiilaltn,wa aaiataTAdhav* thek > i t ia Oa k b toa* heaedkw^ Sn aad hneteM^mUeh k> tka aaeoad deadu*"

-SxaMOMv" exabMmadMka neakiarifftoaitat toeleoii, "didlaadenteadyva taaaytoak m M M w n v t ^ ^ theerwhoeanetnnBov an tha ahaarditiw lAiA mTfatliar aadlhr. ThiakweU base, aa often, pouted o«t to bm, antoho dassed irith l i ^aad mmfaete, and. Bka tho, (« 1m eaatinto tUelaka of i n r

«It k ea wtitteft w ^ Boo^ Mka Jjtrii^

tokepkee aattli a n d g ^ ahaUhe

"Wheakthkto «When tho dead, _ .

ndsedfrota thdrgr ud ahaU ataadbe-fon God IB jadgM t. BattoeBihkteaehee that the diaraoter nd eonseqaeat doom of eaA <»o k fixed at death. From toat tamo tiUthoreaarreotioB, they an hdd Bka otimi-aak k prisoa, wutiag t i ^ £aal eeateaoo aad its exoeatka."

"That, sir, k aa awf al ease." " IMy it k ; and It pny God, my dear

friend, H may never bo: roara." "IdoBotiiketobetk-aahleeome,Mr. Cky-

bst if yon eaa tako tho time, I will be if yoa will ahewma toeee teaohii^ k

_ Bookitadl I am t(d d my mother loved that Book, aad widkodthat Itooald stadyaad beBavo k it. I have read aoaMthi of it, aad waa gmatiy iBterettod, iiad tUak 1 ooald kave kved it, bat if it ntUy teadtoi sadi bonihk things aa tbeee,aBd others, which I have heard yea mtiaute bcfoae, I slhallkik it; I shall «&ior it, aad hate yoa for tea^

it" Ihe arose from the tobk as aha J n , her

eyes flaihiw and her baads lifted k n tter for-getfalneae of all, bat toe hotr(» iriiidt toe fdt that toe God a^om had been aeeaa-tmned to regard as all goodaem oonlil evea be suppoeed o )able of kffiotii^ saA a terrific peaal as everkstiag aod aaattoabk wooj apoBtoo eitsatnree which hkowa haadshad made oapabk of eternal eajoyment.

"Bo eafan. Mist LivingUaa," replitd the pastw. aad a tear stood k hk eye aa he fidt too traaoidoas responsibility that ntoment. " Wo have done oar dianer; eoic.e iato the ] jorkr aad let «s talk thk ntatter cnr ia t]y fidl exermae of aU oar kealttes.**

bat

thkgoopd lieatof &eeei

ORBINAnOKS k RESOLUTIONS

On toe second SatardaykNovembo', 1859, too Baptisto of La Gtaago being in church capadty, aasembled. Tbe fiidlawkg preambk aad reeolatkaa wen offered by Bn. J. E Cnwder, whieh wen aaanimonsly adopted:

I lost atealoaa aad good

dee, by propheoy, or by Christ, or an kspired apo^o. Wo appeal to toe witoess of the father aad to oataloraa of coancik oaly, to show that toey kad thk testimony of too k-spind apostles, dace it toas appcan toat toey wen reodved aa insured, wUk tho apostles wen i^e, and thk we kaow ooald not have bent witooat their i probation.

" Then wen otoer so-called go »els, written at aa early day ; aad otoer so-oalied apostolie epbtks, bat they w«rs met reodved by the dtardies, aad it does aot appear that toey bad toe sanotKm of tho apostles. None of them ^pean k toe catakgae of inspired or caaon-icd booka which wen mado k too first ages, aad whidt c(»Te>ond wito toe books k too New Testameat as we have them to-day.— SoBto of toem wen qaoted by tho ktoos, and one or two read kthe dnr^es, bat not as kofy aer phmt, bat only as good works of an-iaspired men. The ebardtea had reoo^sed the aatonity of tbe woika represented k tok eatalogoe, Itaig bdwo we kave aay record of aay coaa^ reedvka or adoptkg it."

"And BOW I t ^ ' exdmmed Mr. Livkg-ston, "bow beaatifoDy yon ban eompleted too droait of yoar reasoakg. Yoa first proved that Moeee and the Prophets, Christ aad the Apaetka, wen iaraired teaebos, seat from God, even admitting toat the Bibk u an aaia ired book, bat only a tm hatorieal re-eotd; ite&ek toboreomvtdlike tooaeof any otoer histoiT, apoa tho orodibility of the foots aad trathfULm of tho witosesss . Ba^ now, havkg estaUkhed toe djviae inspiration of fhsss men, yon ban proved i f thm that tho history whid roMrds the evidcsoe of thdria-spiratioB, k itaelf iaifired."

" And BOW itfoUowi btm aU toia," rwamed the pastor, "that if aay dootriao, however above oor hnaa leaaon, k tangbt k thk book, weantoreeeinitaatootratoof God. If any dn: u enjoined wito reasra, witooat reason, or sgaiast reason, that daty k to be implidtly perlinmed. If aay feet k made known, towevcr aakdked for, ot wonderfal, u k to be bdkved at o i ^ aad wito no farther qMs^ thea k safisieBt to am if it k really

err. It k every day baqr k iwa Uandm. Reuon ntay an tbinga ooaoersing iriiicfa

she eaa^va no saffideat tkk npon whidt to bate her ooBoksina. Bat God, qMaUag k hk Wori, caanot be mistakea, and will BOt decdve ns. If he has ooadetoeaded to make

daty aad ear fatan dettmy, we kqain BO fitrtber. Bat it ii k part, at

least, to thk Toy parpom that thk revdatioB has been given. Itb^ka by tfafhing bow •taafoUintomt; goes w to (hew how m may be reatModto hdkeasaad gOed,aBd doaea witoadtaeriptioaef toe gkriMs h«nao whidi k prepared for tooee wh* anept the offnred salvati^ aad the foarfid doom of thoea who will not be redeemed. Then an torn to whom he tays: 'nete shall go away kto ev-

ibr the devU aad hk~ai^' aadol&etato whnaah* tays, Cqsae, y* b b ^ of my Fi^er, inherit too

the remove by i brotoer, L. M. Itoberta.

Tbxutobx, Asscked; That we to* aarviv-ing members oi the Baptist Char^ of La G m ^ (of wbieb he was a member,) do ly and skoerdy deplo re hk deato, by whii the Baptist ehardt has - -Btember.

.fissofrnd, Tbat we nikgk oar sym and foelkgs wito toooo of hk auay 1 aad that wo o&r to >ik bereaved wifo aad fomily oar heart fdt aitd deepest patoy k thk thdr aad afflietioa.

Btaohtd, Tbat a copy of toe prooeediaKS of thk iBoetiag be seat to toem; aiso, that prooeediags be pablitoed k the TVinussas tist, wito the reqoest that too Rtdtmoad Bt-K toas HtraU wm please copy.

By order of toe diareb. Satarday befon the seooad Lord's day ia November, 1S53.

F.M.-L. L^xsaca, Ch. Clk.

. FauxAx, Mod.

rLKAR CRKKK CBTSCSI. In aceordanos with a reqaest of Clear Creek

(^oroh, Lafayette ooanty, Mbs., A. H. Booto, J. J. Sledge, J. J. Sawyer, J. F. Moor, aad J. Check, convened as a Pre£byt«7 to ordak bnthren T. R. Williams and R. G. Hewlett, which they did k toe followkg order:

First, Organiiid by &pp<wting J. J. Sli aodmtor, aad J. F. Moor, Seoretary. 2i Tho eaadidatea wen presented by J. B. Hol-eombe aad J. McCallongb, (deacons of toe Chanh.) 3d. The oandidates rekted their ebristiaa experittoe aad call to toe ministry, wbieb wen declared satis&ctory by toe Pres-bytery and cbaroh. 4to. Examiaation of toe candidates by J. F. !9oor. 5Ut. Ordina-tion sermon by A. H. Booto, from 2 Cor. iv : 5, '-For we preadi not oarsdves, bat (%rist Jestts tbe Lord: and oarsdves yoar servaats for Jasns sake." Bro. Booto's i seourso was rtry kterestkg and instrneting. 6dt. The ordkatioB pnyer by J. (%nek. 7th. Layiag oa of hands by toe fVesbytery. 8tb. A very solonn diarge, whieh. was listened to wito marked attention, was toes given by J. J. Sledge. 9th. Tbe right hand of fellowtoip waa extended to toem by toe Presbytery and Cbarch. LOTO. Benedktion by R. G. Hew-lett

Reqaested to be pablidied k toe Tnuussi* B^tist. J. J. Slbwb, Mod.

J. F. Mooa, See.

BlBTOS»8 cajCEK CHTKCH. On toe fifto sd>bato k October, 1S59, toe

fdloiring ministers met as a Presbytery wito toe Barton's Creek Chareh, WHson oo pify, Tesces8ee,to ordak, to the wwk o& too gos-pd miidstry, Bro. Elijah J. T. Fie&, Elders John PhOlips, J. W. Johnaim, Wm. Barton, and P. Mdvk.

Tbe Services wen oandacted k toe foDow-ing order:

1st. Elder Phillips was appokted Modera-tor, aad Elder J. W. Johnson, Clerk.

^ The ordination smnoa wu pmehed dt Eld. Phillips.

3d. Tho oandidato rekted hk Christian e ^ rieaoe aad call to toe ministry.

4th. Tha candidate was examiaed by the Presbytery oa doctrinal vkws, whidi wen en-

of too Bible, by Elder

of toeworid.' oTteaam

dtanbamypaook, aad God hiwaslf dmll he their God; aad e«4 than wipe away a!l toan fkooi thdr oyat, aad them shall be ao men dtato,BdthsKKmraoreniag; adtherihall then be aay man pak, ftartik former thkjp an MMd away.* Aad «f othen 'Bat tSa foar^ tha waiaTtswrs, aad the aWakaMe, aadmardarmk aMtmon •iat«t.aad sor-

tirdy satis&etory. 5th. Prnseatatioa

Mdvia. 6th. Charge by Elder J. W. Johnsoa. 7th. Ordanung prayer by Elder WiQiam

Barton. Sth. Benedioto>u by tho eandidate. Bnrther Fields k a yoneg man (rf de^ pk^

and mach promise. J. W. JoHxsor, Ckrk.

OBITUARIES.

ISM UMiUll.

BMSOTASk

JOHN Y O R K k O X ffAYg^jtmiO-yTO JTHEIB BOOK-

ffitbiml. ^

XEZICUr XOSXAHB UIIKEIX *

-— ^^^ - • I. I ^^'iiff I II Till I n

«k»-tc

J . W . WILSON, AUR-OT AMMMM OMM, O A Y .

CTOTBS, TDTWASE AKD OASTDSTGe, ^ ummcm

W n s ^ Ina OookxBg Stma.

<MiB<r BM^tl k a^ ballw, vSh a Ti»—»«t»awii I I III 111

aSUt

j&shSfc H*a Hi a*, e tt,

E W m , p e n d m t o n & c o ^ VUnKr i>«]m Jm

DRUGS, CHEMICALS, PEBFUMEST, Tobacco, Cigar^ Snn^ Ona

PaintE, 4c. S*. a I n Btek,

ART 6 A L L K R T , ooana oouasa axb usna anxaa.

na tBgn^ MdaiM ypea aad AmlgptTpet. T ^ WOULD RESPECTFULLY CALL

y Iro Mr •litniliMiMi. Il

nuLLXST nx TO TKB UR nxB noTosajkFB.

tblmaa^i

''•—•11/ wiiiijiK Op»,iiiiiinM»iaM;<M«»«f. Villta Kit thatMUoCw

GABTWEIGHT & BBO., GROCERS,

GoBUBkaifla and rorwardkig XsRdiaBta,

ALL Kome or coxistrt psodtrx.

ka.o.'BsM. tuaMm.um. j.B.u>«ia W O O D &. L O W ,

coTToir rimss i i d c o u k s o n MERCHANTS,

Ma. Xitcm St. XKW oauuxa. K. a.-r»rtte»tM «a* UUatiea ysM t> tka nte a(

O t t o a . t » g f flimattoa. mOj. uiaaOut'*

eaa a. ukxisixb. JOS. woeaosB.

Q A R R A D I N E & M O G R I D G E , VOKWiJISIXe AK»

COWaSSION HEBCHAHTS. Hoe. SI an smoBT. u ASA » *uL»Mi siuxn.

suroauASs. anasa mat

tiaa. AUwOninatw thaR«taa:y»a Trtea. UWalOMh actum Bad* Prodaaa •

•aflT-tt

J . W . T O L S O N ,

G«naral OomnkeioB Xereitaxit, mBnaLUA.

A. KSXLTOS, ha* Balaam

r. 5. jcnz. A. aATCKXT.

OHELTON, JONES, & CO, COTTON O «a« I»aiiin r««>i«a.»aSri l raaiinlrtai Tfantaal

P . W. HA2^Y i CO. Dealers m TIN rLATK. BLOCK TBI. OOTFXX. SEXXT IBOX.UIB

Rf^ Wba. Ina aat Tta XMat MtBbK*'Tbu >c4 Xateia HAXBLXIXXD IXOS lUBTUS.»ABIOB CFUXBS.

— -aa ad ria-Kt&'aWar

Sa-tt.!.-^ I'.w.a. oo.

B Y S T A T E A U T H O R I T Y . CMee FIrst-CUss iBssr.iBee,

m i s i f e c o p m . HARTFORD, COn.

1NCORPORATED IN 181&—CHARTER X raiyrtaaL <M aayital tllWaSSS. ataaiaU aa< aals-

te t^m aC 1 ts » nan. rtiau<lala>«aa>tp21aa. BMnaaaa uta

JOSXFEXA . Alts:.

P R A X C I S C O , MODKItKm or FASBIOB*.

HATS, CAPS, AlffD T.artn^p FUSS, KXSK3U0 SQCjLSX.KAaHVIIXZ.TXSX.

ILf OLESKIN HATS—SPRING flB^ •^S^ISSiL VnactolatRteaa kk Saa*. M B ^ Sfiiic ftTlaafia^ WalwWa Hiti ttt.fc«. Thaia vka wM a aaat aad iiiMtiit la!. aad nataa.a.PaM>aaia«ia.B«JrTlg Tiraiiai7 ^ ~ Tfattfat Jjii nf imt WTi ml iT Jiaiia >al ^ Xeakai aad

TONES' HOTEL—CORNER OF THE V SQlIAaX.BXAX THX WIBB BXISGX.

X. P. « K. JoaXB. Iloiaialm.

•adiBaAaat BOa«KS.CATn«.

vilM: -Ttattkakma —11 I I I IMUm II iiallfm 111 ' •m •raab.ikal ateo tm v r .w M • T * hnaaaHteCvraScaak. Tai

_ 43Bamia> 1

aSsoattaaertaa. b b. nfid

fAJL]

J.B.6aATaB.W.L S-O-BoffinajLVJ

t ta axoar* ^ 5 S S • ^ ^

Tlaatlrtnt t> <» jJaato ^ j, aUxbrtSn aba n> bvav Ha'aiH awT tol abaaMltt., "

MTCm^ TK. T. »» Of j y ^

Iteiawcatiia ccra of ttto a ' -rwT mraTi i brt a

tkrtmrsri tarre

~ oCmhatoEsatE* CHAiiJcr?-:STOA5TjasacAi.8<aoot:i

ITEE armd - ' n1 A.-£ .. ascso.tr Wa c-VEClaCass*?.aad 1 v Q c x — nr Cxaur.p.w'w tiu.F ailjaf «aU S id wa tn^ '-

enni. ir«cn< -trite udeat mtS. tS. crw a : afSUr Ota^S

wn ESnaJtoirt. tka aartaaata litlaK*-• stsDM aiaCEra caBkaakaaB "

JtoSr «( = J »..aoal Caa»t or aiT

Tt rrtam I •Ad6 bn i

la tamaj arisl< TbKckKKit T&ei ^Oatimmli ftst^ petaCsr Ion 1

Bnl7asab.7,ti:r]

ImcMiWiriA^ Ts sMj ^ ^ as 1

peeB-fyed,! ABanmrnr^i • Sfaraafidi Bcbioe—aCnsbj

AaSaesasfih FiiJ M l CtSnoii

Ttar. u* <aan-aii T b! Ik ahm i: I. Ozi KMik or ztxcaz.

jamHant amtmt. Ikaaakad^am a«a«* af aaaaiaqeiaa. TW Ci w aaa i mitefcfflcC.

rasint aat ka aa aid ar Sat 1 iSaU ldKaf " . . - -

takasMt. t.1

ikaM TaCIl

Waitid s^nar^l

Alt, ImuuiB titat Ivavtferimcq'i

iU lu i eadr tlkP ' Wn. • wntwl

TkMMsetaiai la aUaun vdHO.

Ttooa f' iniawt i

Asd fiib wke ( With Baadlfegt I

And calwd fvn J "ba.baiiUcEii'i

AXihtScp! fc n^I Un aaar a IcartH

'WhtnOiU tltni Ax>a lUekiiramt]

Of Ar aviw' luif'i

TO T H E A F F U C T S S WOB.IU- V T^R. J. A NASH. (AUTHOR OFIEi

S0CT<nna VAXII.T VBTEICtAH,) aka hm mmrn.-paaa w vaaaa. dmat te >M SltaM f ^

kl>:».. ts anak;* Usaiiifta ka aaa» la laT il SW Tnmii ir] Im p i •waaarlj 1ai ilwd lilMiaaTT la Saaali*K.aC -vkarr ka m II i it fcr * « •• <• bMsSM -I'll aaihittr BaET caaaarffVaearta BaaU. .aia,miM '

^ y ^ s t i s a

•rUwWaitl Bsiftito was Mi«l Bndwr A. J. iruiar,!

wa-k or tM y*«nc*>laiBt.^ •it tf. •Uch.ar I UcloUsIntM bui/J ni»-a te Bbdoni. f vmSiraLlm ii«H i

tiaaa aS tba dli aa^. Eab,nfasad

ta katnaladtT kJ arm . kirn, aad

«Ra aa ka piaaiktT eaa aSsca. Ba naata (uaaaalUlr So* Wa, CkTi Masl

aad an "

feV. "Ssarolgcet toi

ftsthhoatK^'

itiri

•i- Blanibelaaaan'aaai aJl fnam.' airi amatiae. yreeT*BlW.aad

ZbwiDnalta aarvanar tka Crltad Sla>aa.aa AaMti arevF d.£an.n-dKiaa>>«SetoattscE7racf aavafCSSi IHardna. T'- r—rrr nilTIi lai In iliiaM • im alT asj' aaaar >a*Ra4 «a (a laX a( kls can. Bakuk»3n6orSSeaM. tkateaa ka—adM*.**:

aamwa Far tk» aMaaraadatJaa af aaaaCT ha-affl aMfc Wlanrtat aarSSota:

Xnaecniiii ma y cnnrtcarai

Wa.t!!» aai«.>e;»St-i».«, ct •s«al» CaaaCT.W laa< toewm -wr aaRka faKi. iWaaa. Bt. talw -naa af latc;:*: aad nraECr. mmi aa axaail<»a< aat (al|>kTiblaa; S. K 6njjljuil>ri«atet.

B. «OT. El 111 IT' a. a a. vkulSW isd L W. SCASKtUWSB. C i A. iAissmft.fa^aMtt **» «a-w a w aavmmi. aa. m

Fa m i l y m e d i c i n e s — o f a i s r la' mAntaaaatatakaraCkorMaMaa. t i*

aMaaa»lltmS*af<BaVlr«xar«tallaaaaffa5traa tka tlS W BIKXe VAVILT rLaXT.nOS XBnCrcXS. akt ar dnaa d>S«i«t n ke (ocad aaa vk^ la anCaaU. • IMaamt:; Apm«.dartkFr

lifilaa laaalra aatl.?r i&irtwi aartiM. tlia: nanfad kr aw abflrrTav ar dKi cT ika aaaazr*. ad at Tkiia. aaktUaaa .aa* Baa, panarr I THX M-ASHl. or EXALTS a ^ ,

tk-! aTB»saa<a( £i«aBi.«<uaakatcka( tk* zaisi8ttakaabaiT»d. Sa hsilT Ilitaaia kavnkwtb: aadaitktLtkaaaekark at aylT tke prrpat !i ca* »f !il*a»-e I ixtar at CJa toak la aclT Sc. vkWk ka taaarputaf tkacocatijafacneaifXaf tfeata

xn cEjcrxsaxae rAXirr xzBnsxxa. Tka e^abat Cvr- ;:.'! iLuduli-k

Trrriaa Oa:>>a'<mi. Coatnika rCaXxaieca-

irray raaaaaii.-

met Ana Bacaadr-

itadanurfmwdatj

ipot I» vny ffl^iwdL* Zt»ake«M-ztnBi

«aer»Beki:»T. U i>l

sawafanr Co l» ae-intea.

thyweBMbe a^s S»msw!Bbe< csaBaSmerc, aa^ fart aha, ic«er la si^ I

"ArpweaAtbr:! rftt V^aril*'*. JIaiaBpiz&l Bial •anbufaic.aK i drfj taae, WBIMWH Um; taaevKiicl ' ^iIocniT. Tor " abaU BOW *lu> ixK I

Oil j iu DfliiiaB a: ts tb» I sairag, be jUUias, > the Ihn {Teat 4>ft« ; be ULeracord tketf < ifiM. G^ lioiai griote tae SpSiii hf asacf da .

Tfe ar^ of God i H wB ic BBy ianK 1 cvaistaM maa.tte j mrtUBxiitatni tmm r^iiim peeted. Bet cess wttkdiKndiB. n I

C.i.a Mo^sala Baaltk Wfaa Karaa! of Saal-.k_ = vm Uteilal&lBia

Eana mt GtJKrcrBnfi niu wm as7 aart ml tLa eaestiy, an.kaal aiaaaaa. ca tka OkaDalar raa sxaltb or axkbicax wans axb

—In sa floEss-T da a< i jaa aaSFTaa Back froB d] BartaOatraaBlBtkairsiadataM. aa aalillj Bai! aklidTTrdi.aiilai-m XHC CSIU>«Ba> rU A'CSAb

eaaaaaarfakaibsa<a.-l Ite m Ctiaa aitk rra- f — i -f i akatm alt. . . , , MtaaH r m m CATBOUCCX im hnJlbBLaVaaaklT tenaiailUB, •.«> •• tlaa. t'tuBB dra. vkSn Udcc acd aCkK t>aat«rt»acr»aaa.a»»»Paa»k«Mainllii liiaal 'matliaaa. triaa $I W par kotlw. al £aa katlte ka Waknr AfotavkaaaStkaaa »die»« la aB Aa *

aasaa«r Ftalaa.«tkn acfcaat tka 8 -ark ar Wa rardiaBbmaad&aa! .tftkaa vdli auH -n -aiil Ttiat aia ¥1T af bi dl iTia at ntaB aSia aad ,a7 tka Mckt a( lia aa; aiaaaakaM ar aOnSS tkat Bar ka rnn n d. Alitkaaancrflnalr adSirttas. latkaawaasf-.kair

aaTa T«kratdtan<aai!k< Tk Cig .taaa CMaau* ka*a aaaaida aCaaa ataM - •(SiaUaaaakBaailS

neweikaf OeibJ <<ana. Itiacai7«»1 fiiaa. casncusbl cffxa an pBt i prodaas exiSBSKs i M^tMCaaitba^j SDc> c aeme. Tfaa Srsaia nf 1

tlau «B I }«F(jMnsac. VHtiti

«at Mnr in oSswi ! AdataloAtr 1

Vsabta, itoi. at alwat airm tTTaatadaaaariarBaattatkiaa ^ P ^ ^ , -

BaI-.kalrGaciadaaa.wl«r tanacd. innbiaX ikaBBBi. a: ir, nmacataa af tka faad nOaea ar tka itea Ikat tka! Baaidaa ua eand m ttewaMafi

fcasaa-tkaCkanau-af Ika CaaidalBaarkafS Sat(MBtaCk>afarBd!aaaBaaFtIaI.nb Ba^ 'T1 - *-- n- -Il TkTiiiMi rikiTMnmiBiBiiii I rataRtes. Caa. »L Ba^ aT tka r^^' U raaa<iJa ra3>.Kn.Bc.Ha*ac:te, . »M» •! a»L aad La-jaa. r> i il ili n i. a aaa IhK&aBiaa. la aO pma a( as Blatd. "koaa tkcB,aia m. I» ynaaMitrtnrBatH

;aa daaiatac IkaK, nlta ta WACXXSZTB »

the^baaflte j. .

londaa at Hmairt. i Whsia asatattkrl

aad Wand. «• Ttae % waa

Died, at UsnsidcBce la Wiacherter, Teen, K« tbaa B. UattiD, ia tka SStb reaza of Ua ac«.

Tbe deccocd was br birth a Sootb CanOidaa, bateaitpatedto tUsState ialSlft. Wasraerived and bapUaed ii^ the Baptist CbarA of Wiacheslar

ialSSO; was afterwards ordaiaeda deacsa of the

Bto. UattiB trair Bved the Bfe of a doisUaa, aad — - N - 1 T —RT* IR*-'—r TGRTN in iMniiisb il wMh kirn, etpeeUUv Ma fhaiitj. As a cHimi, he was UgUr «i«eem«d, whether encased ia the dsiiea of the iMtthaat or those itf the Vsidrtiaie—he kad tho coaMeaco of aU. He loved ssaeh Ua Bibia, aodaeeSBeato hsmtheaMst iaii»dk eeMeaeo b lU^oa^aad doctiioes, ahoot wbk&hodeBcbt-cd to oooTccsa. Aad wUle life was dowiy hebg wasted awajr br tkat dbe diwass, ConmmpOm— vAMi bad tar TcaisaSieted him~bestin fcailMa)r. rat calalr. iMued apoa the chtiMlaa star aaa HK

hrteth. WUe osrchaich Msthakssef itetanaiber. tha beeeaved «Ub aoamthe

kas of a M t aAetknala bBAaad.tha UldreB the KM OR a LASD aad fttthftt

Tbe na of fife baa set, BO Mwo to bat Bko tha maaSat atar.Hs losHatheiplmdcw of beaviik. lydar. Pasna.

(HMd o( Titth pkasoeofT.]

'J'HEHOWE SEWING MACHINES^

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