4
.. 142 , 344"7 9i a t - j , , , , ", EDITED By GEORGE B. VTTER. . , , ' . " "j "THE SEVENTH DAY IS THE SABBATH OF THE LORD THY . gOD:'; , . . . VOL. I. . , . NEW-YORK, FIFTH DAY, JANUARY 30, 18'45. " " 3. It is proven that there was no of the Fur the Recorder. THOUGHTS ON THE PERPETUITY OF THE SABBATH. Sabbath law or time by the Holy Spirit, because the Apostles and primitive Christians, both Jews and Gentiles, uniformly kept the Sabbath accord- ing to the The instances mentioned above blies convened for pUblic shown by the fact that at A,ntioch it was not a church act, but the spontaneous benevolent in. dividuals, each man, to his llbiJity, send. ,ing his gift by the llands of Barnabas arid Saul. .o\t Corinth and throughout all Achaia, everyone was to lay by himself, against.the time the A pos. tle should visit them to receive their gifts j no pub. lic treasury or colJection is named. 2 Cor. 16: 1 to 4. I , 1'1 ' , save his coutUtV;-iLiirl suoh men and such deeds \fe.must have When oocasiol'. calls "'-r pon:,lbringl , h B · II) faU. I 1 em.· ut all mell are to be useful ill this 1 FOUIlTEEN. No :Apostolic Authority for a Change of the SabA bath Time. were not occasional conformities with the Jewish customs for the sake of preaching the Gospel to Jews, as is sometimes aHedged; but the result of a constant obedience to the divine law. Let us take the Apostle's course at Corinth for an exam. pie., Acts 18: 2 to 4, says, that while in that city, for his own support and to save the cause from unjust llspersions, he labored with Aquila and Priscilla' at tent mak'ing j' but every Sabbath day, he preached to Jews and Greeks; and verse 1 J, says, he continued there a year and six months 1 This was from the middle of the year 53 to the dose of 54. It could not have been an accommo. way-;-any more than all rs are to rUsh ,crSIShEtII,a foot. us in angry floods. We to more 1 limited spheres. We are cultivate gentle is the forfeit:' Wlien" ; fUn :! So long as I was an observer of the firs.t day for a Sabbath, I relied !!luch upon apostolic example as authority for that that the apostles ,were accustomed to assemble on that with the primitive for common worshIp, and to celebrate the Lord's Supper. . This, I be lieve is the common support of all ob3ervers of the charities of life. We are ·benefit those around. , us-though like the gentle IS unfurled 'at Bag_ , P little attention, and may ing It anoounc!ng J ',.return. !, 2. They were not, at Corinth, expected to choose the receiver of these gifts the Apostle himself ere on eart • horizon, it . f f L , b d h Horn, spip ,is.' /: S h . , a w, ave 0 III \ellsest." e, motlo. n, Over , ,', uc senlIments as the,se" cannot be too much the Wh' U" d . d , 0 are l ret 'r:ninIPil that I I, a mIre, nor such truths deeply imbedded in ship 1 Is ititnu· father, husband, child"who have i Came, verse 3. the heart of the .church. one are sb humble. already four years '1, Am 1, in few I' that Ihey may not be useti And they who hours, to ' faithful in little are as ca lI.v note. d and richly to 'my' J. J. bo , . first day, who plead holy for prac. tice. No reasoning upon the subject appears to me more now; for if we except the enter t"e "ar r rewarded, Ihey A trusted with much. with Ihe I tMt the one , . I ..... many THE PERILS OF THE SEA. meetinO' of the teri disciples on the .first evening after th: resurrection Christ-recorded Luke 24: 36 to 43, when tHey met to take their evening repast, and Jesus met with them-then" is only the single passage"Acts l 20: 7, that speaks of an as, sembly on the first day of the week. But the ob. of the Sllbbath was as follows: Down to the time of :reter's visiQn at Joppa, 10, in which he was instructeq that GQq had removed the'distinction between things clean and unclean, the (liscipfes had preached the word of the Lord to none but Jew8 only, Acts 11: 19, i. e. to Jews tlnd proselytes to Judaism, Acts 2: lO-such as the Eunuch of Ethiopia, Acts 8: 27. So far were they from teaching or supposing that the Sabbath law was annulled, or changed, that down to this they not been taught that the laws wliich made it an offence for a Jew to wlth a 'Gentile were abolished I This was one of the "all things" which the Holy ill John J 4: 26, was to teach them. So that to this lime they baq etrictly r!lgard13t1lhfl of Wit only in where they might have beep afraid of the Jewish a)lthpfities, if they had disra. j also in Antioch, the capi. tal of Syria; and,the island of Cyprus j and at Phenice, in tqe qn!form Ijcll, for serl!n years the resurr/lctJpn, il1g to the common If then fhe Sab. lJu!4 la\f qn fl4anged, it must have !Jeen the after thaI time. 3. They were not even standing weekly eoUee. tions; for the Apostle says, " that there be no gath. erings when I come," 2 Cor, 16: 2 j and the Cor. inthians informed Paul that they had prepared their gili a year before he came to receive it, 2 Cor. 9: dation to Jewish prejudices, for when the unbeliev· 2 to 5. It was a special effort for a special occa. ing Jews opposed and blasphemed, he removed his Slon. meetings to the house of Justus, a Roman name, and many of the Corinthians believed and were baptized, verses 7 and 8. When Paul left Cor. inth, he went to Jerusalem j from thence to Antioch; after which he visited the churches all over the country of Galatia and Phrygia j. and from thence coming to :E;phesus, he abode there two years; to- wards the close of which time, he wrote the first Epistle to the Corinthians, (see chap. 16: 8.) In that Epistle, he four times affirms that the things which he had taught them, he had taught alike in all other churches of the saints. (See 2 Cor. 4: 17 ; lent y antlCIpatmg. III gra ve 1 speck, just "isible in' the dim dis. is i with tidings joy No one can have visited among the faini. to some and of unutterable Woe til others. lies of seamen, without a very vivid im. A ship rPHlrn'>n not long ago 'from i61' Pacific, Addre •• before the N. Y. Mar'inel'.1Family Industrial Society. By REV:. JOHN S. ABBOTT. may be askeQ, if the apQstles nol preach the aQfo,gatiqn Qr chl\qge of any MosaIC why ·were Jews so with thfl!ll1 To I reply: they prea(!hed JeS!1s Christ, the and l\1ediatgr of God's people-see, ACIli 2: 10 SbconseqlJelJljy, tbis !lWay tP!l Aarpnjc priesthoad Ilnd the law pf sacripcf$ j and it waf Ihis that made tbe high'prieljt and all that Were of his kindred, so angry with Jesus of Naz. areth, John 18: 19-with his ap\lst!es, Acts 4: 6; for they preached the' remission of sins in his name, without the appointed sacrifices of the Mo, law i ye,a, farther, that by faith in hii nallle men were austilled from all lIin.-,-a blessing whiah the Mosaic law of sacriilces could never in,. , . par! to the worshipers .thereof. Compare Acts 13: 39 with Beb. 9: 13 and 14, 'This was sllre- ly enough to exasperate the high·priest and all that were of his kindred! These facts considered to. gethel·, tHat the Messiah nor the Floly Spirit had taught the apostles that q,ll the 4. I see no probability that they were all moni- ed contributions. They were for poor saints, and might cOllsist in part of c10thing l or even other necessaries; for we finel the good women of those times so employed in good works, making gar. ments for the poor. Acts 9: 36 to 39. And this is the more probable, as in every instance men. tioned these gifts Wffe sent by the hands of special messengers. pression of the to which they arc announcing 'one lady that her hfrslJand lIad exposed. During a recent of two years been taken at sea, and could not prosecute upon the Island of I was continually his voyage. had therefore been left upon aD witnessing scenes which d excile the deepest island Ivith natives, white Il)e ship sensibilities 1)f any heart. were not less n about .six !Dqnlhs the ,ship was than a huudred ladies in , Whose island, .and tak'e 'the off, husbands were mates of ce II month we Iii then be alive. And 'the' wife observed the concert of pray for seamen, Which PfO'Ultl'n' hear no tidings' from him 'again, WIIS habitually attended five to seven in less t ,year. Wife 'and I mother,! make hundred persons. And in congregation this case own. Think of ,yo.ur }Ius¥nd; there would be hardly one i Who had not look upon babes; and W'onld some near relative on the •. be your were you to pass the long twelve 7: 17j 14: 13; 16: I.) If, then, the Apostle and the church at Corinth kept the Sabbath for a year and six months, all bther of the were taught to do so likewise. On the whole, there is nothing ill apostolic au. thority or example, on which a consistent'Bihle Christian can hang a first day Sabbath. \ All the stated weekly seasons for worship, as men. tioned in the New Testament, were held on the seventh rlay weekly Sabbath-the day which the Jews then kept-the sam e which Jews, and" they who keep the commandments of God and the faith It has often ,been my months YH' a '. this weep with Ihe widow and the [ may t' returned td the island, ness of Iheir anguish, as the and found the ian stored to ,hoallh. ,He husband and father had been resumed the ,and returned, hOllle, ,afier But a few months ago, r was a four years' cc, l\iith die treasures land of Nantucket to New of the'deep. few weeks after his' return, in boat. Olle of my parishion the name of t Son and'I1 01 y Ghost, ' he 4. There is but one instance mentioned of an being held by the Apostle of the Gpn. tiles upon the first day of tlie week-Acts 20: '7. This at 'l'roas wa$ an evening meeting, an4' qntjl At this stage of they were interrupted, by Eutychus being with fallillg !lU\ of the ,window, and being laken up dead, for Paul WeQt qown and restorl3d him 1 Ihll of bread and llnd his friends continued the intervi!3\¥, !laling anq \lntij break of 4 a YI wnlln rilql pn foot to ta!<e ship at Assos. The reader Win plealle o,bserve, that the day in tqe text, is in italies 1 indicating that it is not in tqe origiqal Hi then, Luke as all 'other sacred writers do, this meeting was immediately after the close of the Sabbath, so that Paul and his COmpany who saileq (rpOl hiw, treated the first day as a common working day; fOr as Soon as it was light Palll went on foot from Troas to Assos; from whence they immediately sailed on a considerable voyage. This appears the plainer from the fact that it was a farewell, a parting meeting i-they expected to see Paul no more. See Acts 20: 25. Farlher, that this was not considered sacred time is manifest, Sopater pi aer13a j and of the Thessalonianli, Aristarahus and Secundus j and Gaius of Derbe; and Timothy of Lystra j Tyahi. cus and Trophimus of Asia j and Luke the historian; Paul's companions in travel, Acts 20: 4, of Jesus," now keep. S, D. A CONVERTED ISRAELITE, The follOwing circumstances connected with the conversion of II Jew to Christianity, were stat. ed by Rev. Mr. Tucker at a meeling fur the pur. pose of forming a B.aplist Sooiety to promote Christianity among the Jews. They appea.red first in the Christian W I\ tch mal1. " He is a native of Breslau, lind hi$ parents are persons of well!th lind influenoe in the Jewish community. SOlJ1e years ago he left his home for E,ngland, and after remaining there for some time, he sailed for America, and neglected to in. form his parents. His father came to England in search of him, but was informed that he had sail_ ed for and the laller having heard that a vessel had heen lost about that time, gave him up had just bid adieu to his publicly himself to thE\ service of his children, as lovely a family Maker. And the narrative 01' ex. New England, and Was on his perience, 'he with peculiar! il1terest to the mand of a ship, "on a voyage weary, months . alld of he Pass. 'round Cape Horn. The tear ed among· the of that 'unc,vilized island, and his lip trembled with But he is now rocked on ;dlel billowli of, 10 the weary months and years must elapse might>.' (leep" upon .. the expanse ere he could again enter home. A fe\t of the Pacific. his in weeks ago his family received intelligence' the hour of his Bnd ed ,th.t God his death. In the midst of the they had hi eyes were swf 'ruing in tears, struck a whale. The 'animal in his hIS VOIce through e olion, and he endeavor to escape, shattered't boat in fr;gments. not utter word ?f,adiJ' as bowed A portion of the line to which harpoon was hiS 'head , ' 'j,'., attached, became entangled the person of to anoth r wife that her the captain, and as the whale down with hus leg beneath a hogshead lightning speed, 'into that sea, was oil. ' ,The Was sevei'al weeks' sail from carried to a dp.pth from whkh body never can port.. The of the upon arise till at the archangel's the sea surgeon, who could shllll give up the dead that are I in it. But who: tale the limb: immediately Bteered .fof';,the can tell the pangs which must' the heart of nearest port. as the ship rolled in the :va&t the \Vifl'l and the mother, as, , feeble health surges of the ocean, week after this and limited resources, she her orphan poor1sufferer, far wife'or sister or daughter. children to her bosom. There multitudes of groane,d with in his cheerless berth. ',The such families to be found every' r in this city. wa$ dropped ,in a And to such families the visitors' of this Sociefy boat,;iWas' He came on call go with words of consolation bringing his with him. The'limb A few months ago, a sea n and his wife was amputated. was too late.' "The came to this city. And hel'e and tears sufferer died that . . they separated. He embarked there, Tidings were brb,u!!'IJt,to another, that her .hus. to take charge of a Whale ship for a -long .three band, with,a left the in, PUl"f!uit years' 'cruise in the Pacific. And she, with a of II. whale. plunged inlo' the heavy heart, returned to her solitllry home, there animal, and railroad speed, he rushed to await the lapse of month's and: years, till her through the deep, them: beyond sight of' husband should recross the WavE'S' to his family. the ship. The of the' night came on and The hushand arrived safely at and in they did not The .. wil)ds rose and roared ! letters full or affection informed his wife, that he over the Guns sailed from Ihern in his usual· heal'h, and with en. t!Hough couraging prospects.: the lost boat. , The'r09m• A few more weeks passed awayj and the tidings or'darkn,e.s and came that he was dead. Three days' from land ' pouring rain,-and he suddenly sickened and died, his body was eyes ,were '8tralDea ,laws of Moses weTe Ilbrogate<l at the death of '((hrist, but t/tat certain laws and institutions which had been imjoined for a time had now received their accomplishment' and ,passed away by the coming of those more glorious which they had been the shadows. Their design, Iilte the ministry of John the Baptist, was ed, and the substance which they prefigured being pqm e , now the faith and regard which had once been given to them. sailed from Troas to Assos, while Paul staid at T.'oas and held,a parting meeting with his former friends. 4114 made these ar. rangements, minding himself to go on fout to As. the distance being much less by land than by sea: .. This was the occasion of his leaving his cloak, and books, and parchments, with Car. pus; which several afterward he directed Timothy to b'ring with him, when h! was about to visit the Apostle at Rome, Timothy being then at Ephesus. See 2 Tim. 4: 13. for 19 S t. Sa strong was the affection of his mother for him, that she was taken sick in consequence of the supposed loss of her.son, and has coniinue.d in a .eble state of health ever since. Upon hiS conversion to Christianity he immediately wrole home, and has since received from that mother a 10nO' and affectionate reply.' It seems Ihat she sick in bed, sinking' under her affliction, and Iler mother's !teart yearning over her poor 108t boy. At length, a leiter arrives. Upon being told it is from her son, she faints and continues insensible for some time. In the mean time a grown up daughter reads it, and is alarmed and thunder. struck with the news that her brother had re- nounced the religion of his fathers and become a Christian. The sisler is so overwhelmed with fer. ror and alarm, that she Can scarce maintain her compQsure, supposing that the dreadful intelli. gence will at once bring down the gra.y hairs of her mother with sorrow to the grave. At length the mother revives; and with the greatest compos. ure says she is now ready to hear the letter from consigned to a watery grave. Anti the weeping tempest.ljlshed,.ttet,p;j' widow now sits in her darkened clharnber, refus. could be obtained. ing to be comforted. ' There are many such wi· and dows in this great cily. They unknown. and then her· long-lost boy. The daughter proceeds, but fearful of the consequences, in the prese?t. weak state of her mother, omits portIOn glVtng an aCC'lunt of his conversion. The watchful eye of the mother fixed upon the countenllnce of the daughter, the omission, and says-'I My daughter, you have not read the of that letier . do not deceive me; let me hear It all; I am ndw calm and composed; r have heard trom my son an'd he is yet alive, and I am prepareCl for any thing." The daughter read ,the, ,-"hole, but instead of that fearful emotion she antICIpated They are friendless. Tfiey are in ipoverty. And I tidings with aching heads and aching they are longing for the repose of the gra\'e. i But the VIsit- ors of this Society, with the heard. of sympathy an,d the hand of help, can present the only f us inquire, then, did the Holy Spirit, lit thi. or /lny other subsequent time, annul or change the " .' Sabbath law 1 ;rhat the question of changing. or aimulling laws was entertained, yea, thoroughly at that time j and that the apostles did not pretend to dispense with qny law wpich had been of dirine appointment, without first obtaining the milid of the floly Spirit respec.tirig it by direct revelation j is proven by Acts 11: 1 10 ] 7, and Acts 15: 1 to 31. Was then the ·Sabbath among the former institl\tions abrogated or changed by the Holy Spirit? . ' 1. 'l'hat it was not, I argue from the absence of or -changing precept or instruction contaIned lD the sacred Scriptures. i. From the fact that hi four cities of the Gen. tiles, where the apostles preached the Gospel to as much as Jews, We ar,e '6xpressly told that ihey assemblild and worshiped on the Sabbath ' , Lastly, it is plain that this was a social meeting between Paul and his affectionate (rij3nds, and nar. rated chiefly to ?hoW the'miracul.ous restoration of Eutychus from the dead by Paul embracing him. If it had been the celebration oflhe Lord'sSupper, would Paul's eight companions mentioned above, have left before the meeting closed Would Paul and his friends have eating Imq talll;. ing even to break. of jay. This meeting at Troas 011 the first day of the week, when consid. ered in all its circumstances, is no better example for the sanctificatioh of the first day, than the meet. ing of Jesus with his disciples when seven of them were at the a of Tiberias is for sanctify. ing that day. , , the dreadful intelligence, the mother continued calm and silent to the closfl and a little after, and then what think you was her remark 1 Wiping the ;ear that started from her eye, she said- " Well, I a7n not surprised. I have thought ever since he was a boy that he would one day bnrst , . I" the bonds that bO!tnd hzm . 5. There is no evidence that the church collec- which Paul directed shol,lld be made at Cor- inlh, throughout Galatia and Macedonia, Barnes in his practical which are full The mother immediall!ly revived, and to her son a beautiful and affectionate letter in' He- brew, which, said,Mr. T., I have, seen, and heard translated and from it, [ have no dOUbt, 'that for fears tha( mother has been a believer in Jesus as tJie Messiah "but secretly for fear of the Jews." , " . remaining solace which earlh can Not long ago, a young man leftl' his. youtl,ful. , wife, and I think, t\Yo little ctJildrenb to take com. get ,our. dUly, .If w:e to go to ODe mand of a whale ship. It was his voyage as and the weepil)g: 8u1Fe.rer, master. Having a mind of great native delicacy we can bring you our and sensitiveness, his anxiety was 'extreme that our prayers. You not want, and, whOSe he might gratify his friends and satisfy his owners homes are blest that earth can afford., it by a successful voyage. Devoting !himself with is in your power.l!r.E!8tl\b, to, alleviate these' scene. unwearied fidelity.and heroism to hi$ arduous en. of human suffering, 'thus to draw dowp.' upon terprise, he was rapidly filling his $hip, with oil, you the blessings of GOd 'of tbe widow aDd when one night he was driven upon. hiddell reef, the fatherless. N. in'thfl Pacific Ocean; and in a few hpurJ:l his ship, with all its contents, was scattered in fragments over the Ivaves. He, with the crew; escaped to an island, in the boats. And they stood, upon a beach of an uncivilized penniless, and all prospects utterly But the disappointment and the, were too ;man,sald great for his sensitive spirit to endure; The blow spared the body, but demolished the mind. As he . ,thought of going home, to his loved family, with It .. ' not a dollar to minister to their comfort; and of done IS ill the synagogues of the Jews. At Antioch in Fisidia, Ilrs! in the synagogue to Jews and Gen: Iile proselytes, and Ih.e, Sabba,th by special re- to the Gentiles nearly t)le Whole city car;ne to 'hear them, Acts 13: 14 to 44. At Philippi, a chief city of Macedon ia, Acts 16: 13. ·At ,Thessalonica, likewise ':l cily of Macedonia, Acts 17: 2. A'nd 'at Corinth in Greece. These last three b,eirl g' !her e could in any instance in a public assembly, can· of truth a'nd beauty; says that it is the little rivu. vened for worship; I)nd consequently ,they can let that glides through the meadow, and that runs afford no evidence of. a regular observance of the along.day and. night by the farmhouse, that is'use. first day of the ,as a religious day. These ful, rather than the swollen flood, or the noisy . h' He then desCribes the majesty church al .I\ntlO!! in Symi j C,IL J\J.. fi of Niagara; but one J. ,.lagara IS enough or were voluntary contributions, which each disciple' a coutinent--or a world; whtle the same world determined to make for the benefit of poor saints needs thousands and tens of thousands of silvery who dwelt in .Judea j and were, occasioned by the fountains and gentlv.tlowing rivulets, that shall afflictions they in ,a lime of famine ,water, a'nd meadow, and garden, and having the Owners attribute the loss of the ship his want. of skill, the 'thOught was'morll than c(Juld, hear, and with! reason entirely n"'nrr'"J>,n he is, perhaps, at this hour, wandering .. about the islands of the Pacific, a melancholy. lunatic, living the charity .of the But who can'descrlbe thtl angUish whIch DOW, the bosom of'his wife. It- was a refined' and 'noble mind that. wai thus wrecked. ,It was an affection- persecution, Acts 11: 29. 'fhey were afterw:ard that shall flow on every day and night w d d h" gentle and quiet bea uty. So we admire e to t e churchEts of Galatia, ,an4, deeds of and wish and' by Peter men were like him. Wet revere the names arid aS,by Paul and'Ba'rnabl,ls,.GaI 2: )0. 0 illustrious W'" honor the Who will < 1., they wore tIlken in .p,ubJ)c tbr,ow hiinsel.r, tbe .-, ba DO fear or , ,i ., . ' aie husband and fond father that was thus lost far !ll(Jre deatl). is a cup of woeof no ordmary bitterness. indeed trile, that I'there is sorrow 011 the And they who-in such a city all this'a're seatchinM ,out cues of grier,· and ministering 'B6llace enooul'agement and, sup. I cast: p<ii"t from I!yery has a' sym.p". Or a 'mite to.contribute,. , '., "'1:' '.!"'; j j! ,1. fJ :.t it " :;). .. " , I , , [ II I

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Page 1: I , Fur the Recorder. ~i~ant,:):!

.. 142 ,

344"7 9i a 9~

• t -

j , ,

, , ",

EDITED By GEORGE B. VTTER. . ~ ,

, ' . " "j

"THE SEVENTH DAY IS THE SABBATH OF THE LORD THY . gOD:'; , . . . VOL. I. . , .

NEW-YORK, FIFTH DAY, JANUARY 30, 18'45. " "

3. It is proven that there was no ch~nge of the

Fur the Recorder.

THOUGHTS ON THE PERPETUITY OF THE SABBATH.

Sabbath law or time by the Holy Spirit, because the Apostles and primitive Christians, both Jews and Gentiles, uniformly kept the Sabbath accord­ing to the I~w. The instances mentioned above

blies convened for pUblic shown by the fact that at A,ntioch it was not a church act, but the spontaneous Contri~ution,of benevolent in. dividuals, each man, accor~ing to his llbiJity, send. ,ing his gift by the llands of Barnabas arid Saul. .o\t Corinth and throughout all Achaia, everyone was to lay by himself, against.the time the A pos. tle should visit them to receive their gifts j no pub. lic treasury or colJection is named. 2 Cor. 16: 1 to 4.

I , 1'1 ' , save his coutUtV;-iLiirl suoh men and such :~

deeds \fe.must have When oocasiol'. calls "'-r pon:,lbringl , h B

· II) ~i~ant,:):!<;j'~n'''l'IA faU. I 1 em.· ut all mell are to be useful ill this 1

NU~IBER FOUIlTEEN.

No :Apostolic Authority for a Change of the SabA bath Time.

were not occasional conformities with the Jewish customs for the sake of preaching the Gospel to Jews, as is sometimes aHedged; but the result of a constant obedience to the divine law. Let us take the Apostle's course at Corinth for an exam. pie., Acts 18: 2 to 4, says, that while in that city, for his own support and to save the cause from unjust llspersions, he labored with Aquila and Priscilla' at tent mak'ing j' but every Sabbath day, he preached to Jews and Greeks; and verse 1 J, says, he continued there a year and six months 1 This was from the middle of the year 53 to the dose of 54. It could not have been an accommo.

way-;-any more than all rs are to rUsh ~y ,crSIShEtII,a foot. • us in angry floods. We to h~ It~eful ~n more 1

limited spheres. We are cultivate th~ gentle is the forfeit:' Wlien" ; fUn • :! So long as I was an observer of the firs.t day for

a Sabbath, I relied !!luch upon apostolic example as authority for that p~actice, beIievin~ that the apostles ,were accustomed to assemble on that d~y with the primitive churche~, for common worshIp, and to celebrate the Lord's Supper. . This, I be lieve is the common support of all ob3ervers of the

charities of life. We are ·benefit those around. , us-though like the gentle IS unfurled 'at l~e;heB~ 0i:<th~ Bag_ , P little attention, and may ing It anoounc!ng J 'I~~~ ',.return. !,

2. They were not, at Corinth, expected to choose the receiver of these gifts u~til the Apostle himself

ere on eart • horizon, it . f f L , b d h Horn, spip ,is.' ~~e.n,-,!i~"',!~.dc;listant /: S h

. , a w, ave 0 III \ellsest." e, motlo. n, Over , ,', uc senlIments as the,se" cannot be too much the Wh' U" d

. d , 0 are l ret 'r:ninIPil that I I, a mIre, nor such truths deeply imbedded in ship 1 Is ititnu· father, husband, child"who have i ~

Came, verse 3. ~ the heart of the .church. one are sb humble. already four years '1, Am 1, in ~ few I' that Ihey may not be useti And they who ar~ hours, to ' t<l.ct~~them faithful in little are as ca lI.v note. d and richly to 'my' J. J. bo , .

first day, who plead holy Scnptur~ for t~at prac. tice. No reasoning upon the subject appears to me more i~concIlIsive now; for if we except the

enter t"e "ar r rewarded, a~ Ihey w~" A trusted with much. with Ihe I tMt the

lo~ed one , . I ..... many THE PERILS OF THE SEA.

meetinO' of the teri disciples on the .first evening after th: resurrection ~f Christ-recorded Luke 24: 36 to 43, when tHey met to take their evening repast, and Jesus met with them-then" is only the single passage"Actsl 20: 7, that speaks of an as, sembly on the first day of the week. But the ob. ~ervance of the Sllbbath was as follows: Down to the time of :reter's visiQn at Joppa, ACI~ 10, in which he was instructeq that GQq had removed the'distinction between things clean and unclean, the (liscipfes had preached the word of the Lord to none but Jew8 only, Acts 11: 19, i. e. to Jews tlnd proselytes to Judaism, Acts 2: lO-such as the Eunuch of Ethiopia, Acts 8: 27. So far were they from teaching or supposing that the Sabbath law was annulled, or changed, that down to this ti~e they ~ad not ~lV\ln been taught that the laws wliich made it an offence for a Jew to e~t wlth a 'Gentile were abolished I This was one of the "all things" which the Holy ~pirit! promi~ed ill John J 4: 26, was to teach them. So that to this lime they baq etrictly r!lgard13t1lhfl law~ of Mo~es, Wit only in Jude~, where they might have beep afraid of the Jewish a)lthpfities, if they had disra. g'~rqed i~e S~bbath j b~t also in Antioch, the capi. tal of Syria; and,the island of Cyprus j and at Phenice, in tqe i~laq'4'qf Cre.te-pla~r distan~ rTf~m Jq4e~-~!l!lr p4r84~~ ~he s~ll'!e qn!form prac~ Ijcll, for serl!n years aft~r the resurr/lctJpn, accor~. il1g to the common c4rqnql~oy. If then fhe Sab. lJu!4 la\f \fl\~ IfqQli~heq qn fl4anged, it must have !Jeen ~y the ~oly~piri~ after thaI time.

3. They were not even standing weekly eoUee. tions; for the Apostle says, " that there be no gath. erings when I come," 2 Cor, 16: 2 j and the Cor. inthians informed Paul that they had prepared their gili a year before he came to receive it, 2 Cor. 9:

dation to Jewish prejudices, for when the unbeliev· 2 to 5. It was a special effort for a special occa. ing Jews opposed and blasphemed, he removed his Slon. meetings to the house of Justus, a Roman name, and many of the Corinthians believed and were baptized, verses 7 and 8. When Paul left Cor. inth, he went to Jerusalem j from thence to Antioch; after which he visited the churches all over the country of Galatia and Phrygia j. and from thence coming to :E;phesus, he abode there two years; to­wards the close of which time, he wrote the first Epistle to the Corinthians, (see chap. 16: 8.) In that Epistle, he four times affirms that the things which he had taught them, he had taught alike in all other churches of the saints. (See 2 Cor. 4: 17 ;

lent y antlCIpatmg. III gra ve 1 speck, just "isible in' the dim dis.

is i with tidings ~f inexpr~ible joy No one can have visited among the faini. to some and of unutterable Woe til others. lies of seamen, without a very vivid im. A ship rPHlrn'>n not long ago 'from i61' Pacific,

Addre •• before the N. Y. Mar'inel'.1Family Industrial Society. By REV:. JOHN S. ABBOTT.

~t may be askeQ, if the apQstles di~ nol preach the aQfo,gatiqn Qr chl\qge of any MosaIC law~, why ·were ~he Jews so e~asperat~d' with thfl!ll1 To ~his I reply: they prea(!hed JeS!1s Christ, the ~uler and l\1ediatgr of God's people-see, ACIli 2: 2~ 10 SbconseqlJelJljy, tbis IlIIl~t ~p !lWay tP!l Aarpnjc priesthoad Ilnd the law pf sacripcf$ j and it waf Ihis that made tbe high'prieljt and all that Were of his kindred, so angry with Jesus of Naz. areth, John 18: 19-with his ap\lst!es, Acts 4: 6; for they preached the' remission of sins in his name, without the appointed sacrifices of the Mo, ~aic law i ye,a, farther, that by faith in hii nallle men were austilled from all lIin.-,-a blessing whiah the Mosaic law of sacriilces could never in,.

, . par! to the worshipers .thereof. Compare Acts 13: 39 with Beb. 9: 13 and 14, 'This was sllre­ly enough to exasperate the high·priest and all that were of his kindred! These facts considered to. gethel·, ~~O'f pl~inlYI tHat n~it4er the Messiah nor the Floly Spirit had taught the apostles that q,ll the

4. I see no probability that they were all moni­ed contributions. They were for poor saints, and might cOllsist in part of c10thingl or even other necessaries; for we finel the good women of those times so employed in good works, making gar. ments for the poor. Acts 9: 36 to 39. And this is the more probable, as in every instance men. tioned these gifts Wffe sent by the hands of special messengers.

pression of the peculi~r to which they arc announcing 'one lady that her hfrslJand lIad exposed. During a recent of two years been taken at sea, and could not prosecute upon the Island of N~ntu I was continually his voyage. had therefore been left upon aD witnessing scenes which d excile the deepest island Ivith natives, white Il)e ship '~fOCeeded sensibilities 1)f any heart. were not less n about .six !Dqnlhs the ,ship was than a huudred ladies in , Whose island, .and tak'e 'the ~ulie'rer off, husbands were mates of ce II month we ~h",'i' Iii then be alive. And 'the' wife observed the concert of pray for seamen, Which PfO'Ultl'n' hear no tidings' from him 'again, WIIS habitually attended five to seven in less t ,year. Wife 'and I mother,! make hundred persons. And in congregation this case own. Think of ,yo.ur }Ius¥nd; there would be hardly one i Who had not look upon babes; and conceiv~ ~,hat W'onld some near relative on the •. be your were you to pass the long twelve

7: 17j 14: 13; 16: I.) If, then, the Apostle and the church at Corinth kept the Sabbath for a year and six months, all bther churc~!ls of the ~aints were taught to do so likewise.

On the whole, there is nothing ill apostolic au. thority or example, on which a consistent'Bihle Christian can hang a first day Sabbath. \ All the stated weekly seasons for publi~ worship, as men. tioned in the New Testament, were held on the seventh rlay weekly Sabbath-the day which the Jews then kept-the sam e which Jews, and" they who keep the commandments of God and the faith

It has often ,been my months YH' a '. this dreadfu~ su~pense. weep with Ihe widow and the [ may t' returned td the island, ness of Iheir anguish, as the and found the ian stored to ,hoallh. ,He husband and father had been resumed the ,and returned, hOllle, ,afier But a few months ago, r was a four years' cc, euriche~ l\iith die treasures land of Nantucket to New of the'deep. few weeks after his' return, in boat. Olle of my parishion the name of t Son and'I101y Ghost, ' he

4. There is but one instance mentioned of an ase~mbly being held by the Apostle of the Gpn. tiles upon the first day of tlie week-Acts 20: '7. This m~eting at 'l'roas wa$ an evening meeting, an4' ~o,l'\lin\lea qntjl m.i~night. At this stage of t~e ~eeLing they were interrupted, by Eutychus being overco~e with ~Ieep, fallillg !lU\ of the ,window, and being laken up dead, for Paul WeQt qown and restorl3d him 1 Afl~r lhi~ Ihll brea~i!lg of bread tQQ~ place~ and .I?~ul llnd his friends continued the intervi!3\¥, !laling anq talk~ng- \lntij break of 4aYI wnlln rilql ~~l'ar.led pn foot to ta!<e ship at Assos. The reader Win plealle o,bserve, that the WDf(~ day in tqe text, is in italies1 indicating that it is not in tqe origiqal ~rl'e4, Hi then, Luke r13c~(lnflq tim~ as all 'other sacred writers do, this meeting was immediately after the close of the Sabbath, so that Paul and his COmpany who saileq (rpOl A~~D~ wil~ hiw, treated the first day as a common working day; fOr as Soon as it was light Palll went on foot from Troas to Assos; from whence they immediately sailed on a considerable voyage. This appears the plainer from the fact that it was a farewell, a parting meeting i-they expected to see Paul no more. See Acts 20: 25. Farlher, that this was not considered sacred time is manifest, becau~e Sopater pi aer13a j and of the Thessalonianli, A ristarahus and Secundus j and Gaius of Derbe; and Timothy of Lystra j Tyahi. cus and Trophimus of Asia j and Luke the historian; Paul's companions in travel, Acts 20: 4,

of Jesus," now keep. S, D.

A CONVERTED ISRAELITE, The follOwing circumstances connected with

the conversion of II Jew to Christianity, were stat. ed by Rev. Mr. Tucker at a meeling fur the pur. pose of forming a B.aplist Sooiety to promote Christianity among the Jews. They appea.red first in the Christian W I\tchmal1.

" He is a native of Breslau, lind hi$ parents are persons of well!th lind influenoe in the Jewish community. SOlJ1e years ago he left his home for E,ngland, and after remaining there for some time, he sailed for America, and neglected to in. form his parents. His father came to England in search of him, but was informed that he had sail_ ed for home~ and the laller having heard that a vessel had heen lost about that time, gave him up

had just bid adieu to his publicly himself to thE\ service of his children, as lovely a family Maker. And the narrative 01' ~is 1"~!igious ex. New England, and Was on his perience, 'he with peculiar! il1terest to the mand of a ship, "on a voyage weary, months . alld of s~rrow, he Pass.

'round Cape Horn. The tear ed among· the of that 'unc,vilized island, and his lip trembled with But he is now rocked on ;dlel billowli of, th~ 10 the weary months and years must elapse might>.' (leep" upon .. the I~road expanse ere he could again enter hi~ home. A fe\t of the Pacific. Illas~ ,~ok. his ha~~, in weeks ago his family received intelligence' the hour of his Bnd pr~ ed ,th.t God his death. In the midst of the they had ~ight ~Iess hi eyes were swf 'ruing in tears, struck a whale. The 'animal in his hIS VOIce through e olion, and he endeavor to escape, shattered't boat in fr;gments. c?~d not utter word ?f,adiJ' ~ as ~be bowed A portion of the line to which harpoon was hiS 'head , ' 'j,'., attached, became entangled the person of to anoth r wife that her the captain, and as the whale down with hus leg beneath a hogshead lightning speed, 'into that sea, h~ was oil. ' ,The Was sevei'al weeks' sail from carried to a dp.pth from whkh body never can an~ port.. The of the ~idrerer' depen~edl' upon arise till at the archangel's the sea thelq~ettIng.to surgeon, who could a~pu. shllll give up the dead that are I in it. But who: tale the limb: immediately Bteered .fof';,the can tell the pangs which must' the heart of nearest port. as the ship rolled in the :va&t the \Vifl'l and the mother, as, , feeble health surges of the ocean, week after we~k; this and limited resources, she her orphan poor1sufferer, far wife'or sister or daughter. children to her bosom. There multitudes of groane,d with in his cheerless berth. ',The such families to be found every' r in this city. mplJ:en~ ~he wa$ dropped ,in t~e ~arbor, a And to such families the visitors' of this Sociefy boat,;iWas' He came on board~ call go with words of consolation bringing his with him. The'limb

A few months ago, a sea n and his wife was amputated. was too late.' "The came to this city. And hel'e and tears sufferer died that

. . they separated. He embarked 'G~rmany, there, Tidings were brb,u!!'IJt,to another, that her .hus. to take charge of a Whale ship for a -long .three band, with,a left the ~hip in, PUl"f!uit years' 'cruise in the Pacific. And she, with a of II. whale. ~as plunged inlo' the heavy heart, returned to her solitllry home, there animal, and railroad speed, he rushed to await the lapse of month's and: years, till her through the deep, them: beyond sight of' husband should recross the WavE'S' to his family. the ship. The of the' night came on and The hushand arrived safely at H~mburg, and in they did not The .. wil)ds rose and roared !

letters full or affection informed his wife, that he over the Guns we~e,fired, ~liahts sailed from Ihern in his usual· heal'h, and with en. t!Hough t~e di!lm~llho~rI: couraging prospects.: the lost boat. , The'r09m •

A few more weeks passed awayj and the tidings or'darkn,e.s and tem~ts, came that he was dead. Three days' from land ' pouring rain,-and foa,~jng he suddenly sickened and died, an~ his body was eyes ,were '8tralDea

,laws of Moses weTe Ilbrogate<l at the death of '((hrist, but t/tat certain laws and institutions which had been imjoined for a time had now received their accomplishment' and ,passed away by the coming of those more glorious thing~f which they had been the shadows. Their design, Iilte the ministry of John the Baptist, was ac~omplish. ed, and the substance which they prefigured being pqme, now re~Hir!l<l the faith and regard which had once been given to them.

sailed from Troas to Assos, while Paul staid at T.'oas and held,a parting meeting with his former friends. 4114 ra~\ him~elf ~ad made these ar. rangements, minding himself to go on fout to As.

the distance being much less by land than by sea: .. This was the occasion of his leaving his cloak, and books, and parchments, with Car. pus; which several yea~s afterward he directed Timothy to b'ring with him, when h! was about to visit the Apostle at Rome, Timothy being then at Ephesus. See 2 Tim. 4: 13. ~

for 19St. Sa strong was the affection of his mother for him, that she was taken sick in consequence of the supposed loss of her .son, and has coniinue.d in a .eble state of health ever since. Upon hiS conversion to Christianity he immediately wrole home, and has since received from that mother a 10nO' and affectionate reply.' It seems Ihat she wa~ sick in bed, sinking' under her affliction, and Iler mother's !teart yearning over her poor 108t boy. At length, a leiter arrives. Upon being told it is from her son, she faints and continues insensible for some time. In the mean time a grown up daughter reads it, and is alarmed and thunder. struck with the news that her brother had re­nounced the religion of his fathers and become a Christian. The sisler is so overwhelmed with fer. ror and alarm, that she Can scarce maintain her compQsure, supposing that the dreadful intelli. gence will at once bring down the gra.y hairs of her mother with sorrow to the grave. At length the mother revives; and with the greatest compos. ure says she is now ready to hear the letter from

consigned to a watery grave. Anti the weeping tempest.ljlshed,.ttet,p;j' widow now sits in her darkened clharnber, refus. could be obtained. ing to be comforted. ' There are many such wi· and nights'I"tlIi1J~ql~~I~siV~jt!d dows in this great cily. They ~re unknown. and then her· long-lost boy. The daughter proceeds, but

fearful of the consequences, in the prese?t. weak state of her mother, omits ~hat portIOn glVtng an aCC'lunt of his conversion. The watchful eye of the mother fixed upon the countenllnce of the daughter, n~tices the omission, and says-'I My daughter, you have not read the whol~ of that letier . do not deceive me; let me hear It all; I am ndw calm and composed; r have heard trom my son an'd he is yet alive, and I am prepareCl for any thing." The daughter [h~1l read ,the, ,-"hole, but instead of that fearful emotion she antICIpated

They are friendless. Tfiey are in ipoverty. And I tidings with aching heads and aching he~rts, they are longing for the repose of the gra\'e. i But the VIsit­ors of this Society, with the heard. of sympathy an,d the hand of help, can present I~em the only

f •

~et us inquire, then, did the Holy Spirit, lit thi. or /lny other subsequent time, annul or change the

" .' Sabbath law 1 ;rhat the question of changing. or aimulling laws was entertained, yea, thoroughly di~cqsseq, at that time j and that the apostles did not pretend to dispense with qny law wpich had been of dirine appointment, without first obtaining the milid of the floly Spirit respec.tirig it by direct revelation j is proven by Acts 11: 1 10 ] 7, and Acts 15: 1 to 31. Was then the ·Sabbath among the former institl\tions abrogated or changed by the Holy Spirit? .

' 1. 'l'hat it was not, I argue from the absence of ,a~y'r.epea~illg or -changing precept or instruction contaIned lD the sacred Scriptures.

i. From the fact that hi four cities of the Gen. tiles, where the apostles preached the Gospel to Gentile~ as much as Jews, We ar,e '6xpressly told that ihey assemblild and worshiped on the Sabbath

' ,

Lastly, it is plain that this was a social meeting between Paul and his affectionate (rij3nds, and nar. rated chiefly to ?hoW the'miracul.ous restoration of Eutychus from the dead by Paul embracing him. If it had been the celebration oflhe Lord'sSupper, would Paul's eight companions mentioned above, have left before the meeting closed ~ Would Paul and his friends have ~ontinued eating Imq talll;. ing even to break. of jay. This meeting at Troas 011 the first day of the week, when consid. ered in all its circumstances, is no better example for the sanctificatioh of the first day, than the meet. ing of Jesus with his disciples when seven of them were fi~hing at the a of Tiberias is for sanctify. ing that day. , ,

the dreadful intelligence, the mother continued calm and silent to the closfl and a little after, and then what think you was her remark 1 Wiping the ;ear that started from her eye, she said­" Well, I a7n not surprised. I have thought ever since he was a boy that he would one day bnrst

, . I" the bonds that bO!tnd hzm .

5. There is no evidence that the church collec-

ti~ns which Paul directed shol,lld be made at Cor- ti~EFULNESS. inlh, a~d throughout Galatia and Macedonia, w~re Barnes in his practical ~ermons, which are full

The mother immediall!ly revived, and ~rote to her son a beautiful and affectionate letter in' He­brew, which, said,Mr. T., I have, seen, and heard translated and from it, [ have no dOUbt, 'that for fears tha( mother has been a believer in Jesus as tJie Messiah "but secretly for fear of the Jews." , " .

remaining solace which earlh can ~fford. ~ Not long ago, a young man leftl' his. youtl,ful. ,

wife, and I think, t\Yo little ctJildrenb to take com. get ,our. dUly, .If w:e to go to ODe mand of a whale ship. It was his ~rst voyage as 'desolat~d ~~r.ne" and -J".~ the weepil)g: 8u1Fe.rer, master. Having a mind of great native delicacy we can bring you nOI:IJJ~.!!: our sympathy,,~nd and sensitiveness, his anxiety was 'extreme that our prayers. You not want, and, whOSe he might gratify his friends and satisfy his owners homes are blest that earth can afford., it by a successful voyage. Devoting !himself with is in your power.l!r.E!8tl\b, to, alleviate these' scene. unwearied fidelity.and heroism to hi$ arduous en. of human suffering, 'thus to draw dowp.' upon terprise, he was rapidly filling his $hip, with oil, you the blessings of GOd 'of tbe widow aDd when one night he was driven upon. hiddell reef, the fatherless. N. EV\L,iigeli~~:~ in'thfl Pacific Ocean; and in a few hpurJ:l his ship, with all its contents, was scattered in fragments over the Ivaves. He, with the crew; escaped to an island, in the boats. And ther~ they stood, upon a beach of an uncivilized islan~. penniless, and all thei~ prospects utterly blight~d. But the accusm~ disappointment and the, mortifica~ion were too ;man,sald great for his sensitive spirit to endure; The blow spared the body, but demolished the mind. As he . ,thought of going home, to his loved family, with It .. ' not a dollar to minister to their comfort; and of done IS

~nd ill the synagogues of the Jews. At Antioch in Fisidia, Ilrs! in the synagogue to Jews and Gen: Iile proselytes, and Ih.e, ~,ext Sabba,th by special re­qu~st to the Gentiles J!ar!icldar1y~ ~hen nearly t)le Whole city car;ne togeth~r to 'hear them, Acts 13: 14 to 44. At Philippi, a chief city of Macedon ia, Acts 16: 13. ·At ,Thessalonica, likewise ':l cily of Macedonia, Acts 17: 2. A'nd 'at Corinth in Greece. These last three b,eirlg' :E6rcip~an ci~i~s, !here could

in any instance I&~e~ in a public assembly, can· of truth a'nd beauty; says that it is the little rivu. vened for worship; I)nd consequently ,they can let that glides through the meadow, and that runs afford no evidence of. a regular observance of the along.day and. night by the farmhouse, that is'use. first day of the ~eek ,as a religious day. These ful, rather than the swollen flood, or the noisy

. h' He then desCribes the majesty church contrib~tions ~ega!l al .I\ntlO!! in Symi j C,IL Lilri~U~, J\J.. fi of Niagara; but one J. ,.lagara IS enough or were voluntary contributions, which each disciple' a coutinent--or a world; whtle the same world

determined to make for the benefit of poor saints needs thousands and tens of thousands of silvery who dwelt in .Judea j and were, occasioned by the fountains and gentlv.tlowing rivulets, that shall afflictions they ~ndured in ,a lime of famine i~nd ,water, ev~ry,farm, a'nd meadow, and garden, and

having the Owners attribute the loss of the ship his want. of skill, the 'thOught was'morll than c(Juld, hear, and with! reason entirely n"'nrr'"J>,n

he is, perhaps, at this hour, wandering .. about the islands of the Pacific, a melancholy. lunatic, living up~1I the charity .of the .nati~es. But who can'descrlbe thtl angUish whIch DOW, rend~ the bosom of'his wife. It- was a refined' and 'noble mind that. wai thus wrecked. ,It was an affection-

persecution, Acts 11: 29. 'fhey were afterw:ard that shall flow on every day and night w d d h" gentle and quiet bea uty. So we admire e.1t~1l e to t e churchEts of Galatia, Ac~aja, ,an4, deeds of Howard's'benevolellc~; and wish

,Mace~onia, and' wer~ illc*lcate~ by JIUI).~s, Peter men were like him. Wet revere the names arid {oh~; aS,by Paul and'Ba'rnabl,ls,.GaI 2: )0. 0 illustrious mal"iyr~. W'" honor the ma~ Who will

< 1., ~~at they wore JlO~ tIlken in .p,ubJ)c a~~ene tbr,ow hiinsel.r, i~ tbe ,,';r~ini~ent de~~!y bre~~,' .-,

ba DO fear or ~on~t,rtUnt,<?(~ell\'i~1l1"ws. , ,i .,

. '

aie husband and fond father that was thus lost th4~.Burial ~alam~ty; far !ll(Jre deplor~blE\ t~a~' deatl). is a cup of woeof no ordmary bitterness. indeed trile, that I'there is sorrow 011 the And they who-in such a city all this'a're seatchinM ,out ~uch cues of grier,· and ministering 'B6llace sucb,amictioDs".de~rve enooul'agement and, sup. I cast: p<ii"t from I!yery on~. ",~o has a' b~art ,~o. sym.p". fl9.m,thEiil~reeJdI8 ~b~Ze, Or a 'mite to.contribute,. , '., "'1:' '.!"'; l'i'~U9~,~I~I!j"'~ j j! ,1. fJ :.t it " :;). .. " I".~ •

,

I , ,

[

II I

Page 2: I , Fur the Recorder. ~i~ant,:):!

, \..

126 THE SABBATI;I RECORDER,

thought, they actually become more Gelrmelnie.th!1D they were at home. Practical piety, family devo­tion, s~cial' religious meetings, and active efforts for the eterqal benefit of men' by means of benevo· ~ent institutibns, are not ooly neglected, but often associated with fanaticism and new measures. Here; then, is a 'field' to be 'cultivated-a field

Ihe vision, so as to be recorded in the first case, Sabbath, but an day. , If our 1 ri.ends of the why was not the pllrticular day named in the Lord's Day Convention accept, in hteral s~n~e,

are to learn, 'a letter me8:I;H.~ochran, that th.e 2d Church

e~jbying a sea~~n of refresliing'l S; S. , Jias assisted th~ Pastor in a

Mosaic'account oftn'e origin of JewisftSab· second ~ bath; if they really believe it, as Jews do; to be

May we not conclude, then, that the"day allud. a commemoration of the rest of the ,after the \\ 'f" ~. I

ed to by the Revelator, related to the circumstaii. iabor of creating the world, 'and such, !lot a tial features of the lordly vision which he de. J~}Vis.~ i:~remony, but of and"J,I~r·

NEW YORK, JAN. 30, 1845. series 9-f me,eting~ 'Ybich continuedr iwo weeks and result,ed; in lnJ).Sh,,;gdod. Seventeenl pers~lls ha.e beim baptized, and seven who had formerly been baptized have been added to the church. Two • thirds of the whole number are head. of familiel.

scribes, and not to a particular day of the week ;' ,,_C •• _cl oblio-ation-why do they observe It 1 do they not obey a· for whic

11 THAT FAITBFUL:,AND WISE STEWABD." '- ~ ,

· The doctrin~'tharevery min is a steward or God in the u~ of what he possesses, is one of the mQat practical and eS'Iential doctrine. of the Bible. Yet, practi~aI, and essential as it is, there is scarce­

-1, any doctrin& more constllltly,-overiooked. In the anxious strife for weal. tq, ~n~ th" care,M ba}.

• which,-from its peculiar relation to the American churches, calls loudly for their contemplation cand

for to appropriate the terms of revelation to they profess so profound a. reverence Why do festival days of the church without a divin~ war. they neglect, altoge~her, the observance of this

effort. - rant is, to ,say the least of it, darkQess rather than Sabbath, an~ substitute for it another day, " , • ,! ,-' - , .. .'. - f G d' ft . th A DAY OF FASTJNGAND PItAYER,-The Execu· tiaht, :obscurity rather than clear vision of the memoratlve, not 0 0 s rest It ~r creatlng e . ' ' , •

l:> I I world, but of Christ's 1 Above all, tive Committee of the American Iind'Foreign Anti. tluth. t· ooks much like wresting the SCI'ip' why are they guilty of the, say delib~rate· Slavery Society have recom.mended ,that Friday, tu~·to:oUl' own 3:!e9lrtiction, wben we' make void Iy the fraud-of attenl . off . u ·the d ' F b b bs d' -Ifl .. a" remarkable fact, that at the, present

POPERY AND PROTESTANTISM.

anCing of plans and ProsR8Cts, men lose sight of time popery is rapidly gaining ground in·many .tlimr pe' 'PSOnal dependenc~ upon the Creator and PI'Jlt~t~n~ countries, while protestantism is ~pread·

the. 7th ,,~y. ~L ~e. r!l!m: .. !!,e!~.".tl. 0 _ ,ery'e as a a holy law or God by ou,r traditions-annul .the ignorant, this .sunday, anf.,oinlted bVinotlOdY'·lImows," '1' d . fi . day of fasting, huml Il!tion an. prayer, ID re erenee Sabbath-and call a day not divinely appointed, Iv-ho, as being the very JAWI!1n I:j:aoulam

,,-~. obligationOto,him:,,·-This'is'·not unfrequently"tlil ing with egual rapidity in papal countries. 'In CAse even with those who, in their belter'llII>- Engl!lnd and the United States, within five yea1s .ments, acknowledge that worldly property is i~, past, the numbers and influence of the Romish :plY. means t.9 an end-the glory of God; tb~t Church have increased beyond any precedent in to regard it in an{other light is gross idolatry; the history of that church. In France, on the

the" LORD'S DAY." LUTHER. and observed by God ~ to the propos,eil .:o\lulexatioi):ol Texas. 'l'hey bave ., Ecclesiastical history has occasjon to make been prompted to this course by a conviction thaI

frequent mention of piQUS jrauds-'fra'ttds commit- annexation is hostile to the morals, libetty, and ted and justified as being for the benefifQfreligion. happiness of th~ d nit~d States; that it is designed

• EITRAC'l' FROM A LETTER.

" 'c and that to refuse to use it for this noble purpose other hand, as well as in many of the smaller . is -flagrant sin. The language of Scripture.is European States, a great revolution is going on

lufficiently explicit on this point. It assures us, among the papists, by which h'undreds have been " thanhe worship of God apd Mammon cannot ex- led to renounce popery and ~dopt the protestant

" lit tog~ther •. 'There m~si b\:no rivalry here in faith. This may account for the recent efforts

[A friend in New York has handed us II letter of one of his correspondents, from which 'we Inake the following extract. It is exceedingty gratifyiug and encouraging to know, that our came is regarded with such feelings by those who are scattered throughout the country. Who tbat believes in the pOWer of prayer CWI despond while such facts are before him 1]

of the early Christian fathers'-lIs(you wel! know, Sir-are but too obnoxious to this charge. to extend the Blave' system; that this system 3\' Some of them appear to have regar-ded lying·and ready calls for the just judgment of a,n offended forgery as .ery meritorious means of propagating God; and that duly requires us, in such circum· and defendino- tlie faith., The ROmish church stances, to invoke the aid of a gracious God against makes free us~ of these aids " and olu Sabbatarian the devices of wicked men. ' zealots of the Protestant sects, d] it0t shrink from ' tbe employment of the same mea s~ " • .

,', -: our affections. It is only by making the love of 011 the part or Rome to put a stop to tIre circl). " ' 'gain, and the pursuit of those avocations in which lation' of Bibles and good books. These facts,

:..;;, itjs, found, subservien~ to the higher and lIohler taken together, certainly indicate that preparation :.purposes of our being, that we are safe from a is now making for a g.eat conflict yet to take

, ' :groveling selfishness unworthy of the' Christian. place between the two systems-a conflict in The influence of, pursuing the ordinary ayoca- which the religion of God's word simply will be

. tions of; life with simple reference to advanoing 'arrayed against that of man's invention-the reli. the in~erests of religion, would ,be most happy. gion of the heart against that of form. Who is An individual acting from such a motive, would prepared for such a conflict 1 lind his labors doubly attractive, and would per. -------.

, form them with double pleasure-a pleasure ever " THE LORD'S DAY." inoreasing, as his means of conferring benefits in- • I was in the opiriton the Lord'. day."-Re •. 1: 10.

creased, and his OIvn nature was developed. His " Lord's Day" is used by many as the distinct-'influence upon thos~ wilh whom he might oome ive title of the first day of the week, and with as in cO'ltacl, to modify their selfish views, and direct much assurance of its correctness as if they were their attention to religious considerations, would informed somewhere in the Scriptures that the ex­!Je' powerful. N~r would it end here j ~is exam· pres~ion was actually intended for that day of' tbe

1 ple'w~uld certainly awaken in others holding the week by the Apostle John. The Scriptures, how· . ',l 'same profession with himself, A sense of obligation ever, no where intimate such an intention on the ~ : 'to gO and dp likewise. It is not possible for any part of the inspired writer, much less justify a

. individual, however humble, to pursue such a breach of the fourth commandment by such an course lconsistently and perseveringly, without expression. We have the traditions of men only

, ~a"ing an impression useful and lasting. The as our rule of filith, when we assume that" Lord's example of Jesus Christ, the Man of Sorrows, may day" is synonymous with Sunday.

• , The fast-day was a delightful season to mr, I trust the Lord of the Sabbath put strength in me that day to ple:d 'with Him. After pondering my duty, and praying over it, [determined to rep~ir to the' Baptist meeting house, with a bundle of the Address to the Baptists under my arm, and make another effort to arouse attention to the subject. It so happened, that there was a very crowded con­gregation, brought out to hear a New Year's dis­course, it being "the first Sabbatl~ in the new year," as the preacher called it not le~s than a doz· en or twenty times in the course of the sermon. At the close of the service I seized the opportunity to state to the assembly, that about six tho~sand Christians, in different parts of the United States, weTe that day humbling themselves before God with fasting and prayer. After a few words en· treating them to give attention to the subject, I \.Jld them I was prepared to distribute the Address,

~

" The first set of resolutions proposed to and BAfTJST LIT/UlATmtE.-A. Society has recently passed by the Con venlion over \ pieh you presid. beenl formed in :J:.ondon, tIle object of. which is to ed, could not have been more art~llly drawn, had .ecurei a republication of the writings of old'and a deputation of Jesuits assisted in~heir concoction. celebrated Baptist autbors, ',fhe meeting for the The first of the set has been alrei;.dy quoted. In the second and ~hiTd, it is silentb\ assumed, that purpose was held in the Library of the j.\1ission the Sunday observed by Christians, is the "~nnp.~ Hou~e, Moorgate streeet, at which Dr. Steene \ Sabbath mentioned in the first res()\ution. In thl! took the chair, Mr. Underhill read a . statement fourth resolution, the phrase 'Lord's day' 'is slily and interesting remarks were made by S;lV~ substituted j in the fifth, nothing is spohn of but l' fI . lB' .. W the 'Christian Sabbath!' This is a piece of in- era, ID uentlll aphst mmlstets. e are glad genious effrontery, equal to that of the metaphysi- to see that the subject is attracting so much aiten· cian, who carefully removed, one by one, the tion. It is due alike to the old authors themselv,el, threads of his silk stockings, substituting worsted and to the cause with which they wer/) i«lentifled, instead, and after every particle of silk was ~)lle, and nothing but worsted remained, still persisted in decla~ing, that his stockings were silk! Ollr Protestant doctors may as well giV'e over ridicul­ing the Catholic miracle of transpbstantiation j­for if they, by the mere arts of rbetoric, are able to substitute, for a day of God's appointment, com· memorative of his rest, a different pay, commemo· rative of quite a different matter why neM we think it strange if, by similar artsJ Catholic priests can transform mere bread and wiqe into real flesh

• CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS.

In the SENATE, much of the early par~ of last, week was spent in executive sessions. A bill was passed on Wednesday, graDting Joshua, Sbaw

I $25,000 for his improvemen1.S in ·percussion eaps j

another bill was pas~ed establishing the Smith· sonian Illstitute. A Message from the President was laid before the Senate, containing aJ abstract of the l'reaty witJ! ·China, and recommen'ding the establishment of a consular or other commerc'ial agency in that country. On Thursday the Senate adjourned over until Monday, . ~ell encourage such p~rsons in. their work. He If the misapplioation of the title "Lord's day"

, went abo!Jt doing good; and in this respect was a were objectionable on no other ground than that patter,;! for all his followers. They ought to feel of sustaining the observance of a festival in the that th!l propetty placed in their hands is designed church, it mi/!ht be allowed to remain in the ~al­to give tbem thfl means of promoting his cause ance, to exhibit the lightness of the arguments of and hecomi'ng like him. The history of good men onf adversaries, when weighed against the ex·

.in al\ ages, shows very clearly, that those who press Word of God in relation to the Sabbath. ~ave done much to advance the interests or rell. But it may be more extensively disastrous, inas· g~.n, have been to a great extent under the con. much as the wresting of any Scripture from the lrolling influence, of this feeling. support of its appropriate theme, tends to obscure " We "question whether there has ever been a lime the'truth which that Scripture was hilended to le­i when !lie enforcement of the doctrine of man's veal to our minds. The phrase in questioll. does I :81~wardllhip waii more ioudly called for than at not establish the supposed change of the Sabbath ,preseqt. In nearly every department of Cbristian a\ of divjne appointment, and is therefore of no ,enterprise, the field of labor is widening, and the real value to that argument, while It may, by

, ,appeal, for help is heard. Many have entered the misconstruction, obscure the whole subject, if not . '~e~d,:and are laboring 'Yith great self.denial. entirely destroy the sense of an important prophe­

Otfters have t~eir eyes turned towards it, and cy of the Spirit of God. It is nof supposed by WQuld gladly put in the sickle if assured of the this, that the seventh day will be more clearly countenan-ce and support of those wh\! ought to be sustained by denying the applicatio~ or the terms their fast friends. But alas, how few of those who to the first day; it would be supererogatory for

'. possess tlie means, or are in circumstances to ac- this purpose; it is not 'needed, even were it appli· , quire them, tfeel their obligation to be co.workers cable to no other question. by cOlJseorating their substance to the Lord. How The phrase in the original, Ey )(Up1ClXn ~""'pl1.,

, many allow their whole time and tbought to be tran~late~"?n the Lord's day," in our Engli~b engrossed in acquiring riches which are so used verSIOn, slgmfies more accurately the lordly day,

"as to become a snart'l rather than a blessing. ·not as a name for a weekly day, but to designate 'Those who possess 'little are often discouraged by a revealed day-a spiritual day-a day of great the gqurse of those who possess much; while and special revelation of the Lord by the Spirit,

, those 10 whom much is given are often envil!d by that things migllt ·be made known to John. A lord· "t1i<,lse who possess less.' In such a state of things, ly dat, because the Lord Jesus in a solemn man· ,tile spirit of piety is destrQJed and duty left un. ner admitted him by the Spir~t into his glorious , dqna. ' The !July remedy for this evil, we believe, presence, and showed him things that must sbortly ill in theJaithrul preaching of the doctrine of man's come to pass. "I was in the Spirit on the lordly slewardship. Let it be well understood, that whe- day, and heard behind me a great voice, as of a ther We have little or much, what we have is en- trumpet, saying, I am Alpha and Omega," &c.;

· irusted to us as stewards; that large posses5ions, "and I turned to see the voice that spake with while they increase our ability to do good, equally me; and being turned, I saw seven golden candle· increase our' accountability; that our property, sticks; and in \he midst of the seven candlesticks,

" time "and talents are 'but means to an end' and one like unto the Son of Man, clothed with a gar. f .. , ,

iliat hereafter a strict ~ccount must be given of ment down to th~ foot, and girl about the paps .the.manner in which we have used what was com. with a golden girdle. His head and his hairs mhted to our keeping '-and if we mistake iIot were white like wool, as white as snow i and his

! " ,

, tne . remembran~e of these facts would greatly eyes were as a flame of fire; and his feet like un· modify the present aspect of thing"" and lead to a to fine brass, as if they burned in a furnace; ~d more 'entire consecration to the work of extending his voice as· the sound of many waters. And '~e the kndwl!\dge of the truth. had in his right hand seven stars; Hud out of his

~ • mouth went a sharp two.edged sword; and his THE GERMANS, countenance was as the sun shineth in his

, The 'A/ne~icah Messenger contains 80me inter- strength." It will be noticed from this des~rip. . e~tin'g s~fenients respecting the extent and import. tion, that the Lord was the special object of the

once of the German emigrant interest in this,coun- vision; and that to be il) the Spirit, was to be carried by the Spirit into- the presence of the Lord

try. From 1,500,000 to 2,000,000 Germans have , already' established themselves among us, and en. whose face shone even as the sun in his strength; .tered into the varipus relations of society. They 80 that insteRd of being Sunday, it was' a day to are the lD.ndholde~s of some of the finest districts him which needed not the light of the sun; for the

)n the country, and control the wealth of several Lord himself was the light of it. Into that day . influential States. Their number is rapidly in. was the revelator ushered by the Spirit.

· c'reasjng. A movement 'is 'said to be on foot, in a This sense is confirmed by other passages in '~Dgle German principality, for the et:Ugration to the' book of Revelation. In, chap. 4, verses 1,2, ::~~il!,~ou,'!try of 250,000 of its populD.li~n. II! view it is said, "After this I looked, and behold a door -,~f,8,lfch,faC19, the question 1:lecQmes an important was opened ·in heaven-and i111mediately 1 was in J. pne, a8 to what is their character, and what are the the Spirit." A:nd chap. 17: 3, "So he carried

The people pressed forward at onct', and every copy I had was eaged y taken. I believe I could have distributed thrice the number, if I had had them. God only knows what the result will be. His blessing on the effort has been earnestly sought, and I trust the labor wil! not be in vain. Yet 1 have nothing else to trust in than the simple prom­ise of God, that his word shall ~ot return to him void.

and blood 1 I

H It is but fair to sa y, that there lwere a few hon· est men in the Convention, unwill ng to give coun· tenance to this gross fraud. They attempted to substitute in the resolutions, the phrase 'Lord's day,' in place of the word 'Sabbath,' whenever it The HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES was {)ccupieq occurred, and so to modify the resolutions as to almost e1\c1usively in discussing the different make them consistent with this change of phrase- schemes for annexing Texas to the United States.

"I firmly believe we are exerting a more im# ology, Th€se attempts encountered at the hands portant influence at thili time, tban any other body of your Convention, the most indecent opposition. ,On Tuesday a resolution was passed, that Ihe de· of Christians, in proportion to our numbers, We Hisses even were employed to put them down. bate should terminate on Saturdav. This set in are laying a foundation for great results, to be An overwhelming majority. sustained the pious motion ali those who had. spe;ches to make. c'

.~ • ft d d I h th h' fraud, and passed the resolutIOn unaltered. They Among the speakers on Friday .were Gen. Drom· mam est m a er. ays; an . ope. ose W o~e thought, I must conclude, that, hdwever the more have embarked In the enterpTise Will, not be dls- intelligent lind better infonll~~ might see through goole, MI'. Barnard,. and John Quincy Adams. couraged. The promise, 'in due season we shall the fal~ehood, and ge.spise it, yet 11he multit~des Mr. Adams spoke lor an hour in answer to some reap, if we faint not,' ought not for one moment to th? unmforme~, particularly ~o~en .and children, ,charges of' a persop",~ phar~cter Ilg~inst hi~self, be out of mind. There is no doubt an under· mIght be kept m t~e dark a httle ,whde longe~! by and in oppasitiol) to ~nneltatiqn. Qn 'Saturd,y tll~

. . the solemn resolutIOns of so venerable and pions '11' f I H d d h current at work, WhICh ~v\l! break ?ut ~efore lon~, an assembly! It may,. however, be doubted, as ga enes 0 t 1e ousP-wtJre orow e wit speeta. and bear down every thmg before It. If y~ wIll one of the movers !>f the proposed amendments tors, among whom. were many Foreign Ministers not believe, surely ye shall not be established: justl¥ ob~er~e8 in his pu)JJi~~~d letter, whether the and other distinguished men. The debate was;, The Recorder and the Tract Operation I consider indecent haste and viulen,ce wi~h whiFh the truth animated, and continued until two' o'clock, at our most important engines of power. If we can was scouted out of your Convention, may not rath- which hour tellers were Q,pppinted to tal[llthellnal lustain other enterprises, well; but let All others er teTndh~o defeat t~e o~elcts.hofditS clall.. votes. Sevel'al prQPo~ed amend~en;s were iost; . h th th h Id""1 " ,~ )8 same pIOUS la se 00, am gneved to and the vote was at len1lgth til ken upon the mal'n go; rat er an ese s ou lal. Ii d I' I' • d' th Add t th C n , 8 aga n repea,e, In fie ress 0 eon· . f d .

• vention, to which your name is, appendlld. Re- questlOll 0 a optlllg the Resolution ~s reported by PIOUS FRAUDS-THE BALTIMORE CONVENTION. commending the observance of the-Christian Bab- the cOIl]lT)ittee. r~ stolld, yeas J20; Nays ~8. ~ In the Boston L~berator for January 24, we bath, that Address says-I It is allaw of God, coe· the Resolution pas~ed by a majority (If 22. Il'~e

find an article more than five columns 10', head- val with the creation. It is one Qf the selected few. House then adjourned uotil Mond!lY, it b~ing pas\ ed, "A PLEA. FOR 'SUNDAY FREEDOM', in a Letter of the tep. commllndment~, that brief but com pre· 40'plooll, .

hensive expression of his will.' : I papnpt but be-to John Quincy Adams, President of the late Balti· lieve, Sir, tbat your name was appended to this The followlnz is a copy of the Joint Resolution more Lord's Day Convention j by One of the statement without your knowledge j ,and I put it declaring the terms on which Congress will adl1)it New Generation." 'l'he author of the article, we to you, whether, consistently with the duty you Texas into the Union as a State:-are told in an editorial notice, "is widely known owe to the community, yOll can allow that respect· R l db' S d U ' ' !lble, venerated name, to be thus used as an endorse. es~ ve y tne enate an n.ousc of Repre. in literary and phil!lnthropic circles." His de. ment to a gross piece of.deception. At all events, 8wtatn'es of the United States of America, in Con· sign is, to show up some of the inl20nsistencies of I am certain that you will not ~'l'nture publicly gress as,sembled, That Congress dpth COnsent that the modern advocates for a stricter observanoe of to deny, tba~ the corner-stone of \he Convention's the territory. properly included within, and right· Sunday, and then to give his o\Vn opinion as to the doctrine, that o which forms their Ilr~t re~olution, fully be~onglng to tne republic of'rexlls, may be

and that upon which their Address is built, is no- erected Into !l new Stllte, to bo'called the ~tate of Proper manner of observin rr that duy. To many - Texas with a republl'''an fiol'm f t t ,., thing better than a piece of melfe moonshine-a' ... 0 govern men , 0 things contained in the article we cannot 8lJ,bscribe, figment invented perhaps by ignqrance, but upheld be ~dopted by th~ people or said republic; by de· believing, as we do, that the Sunday Freedom lind propagated by fraud. The Christian Sabbath pulles 111 conventlOn assembled, with the consept which they advocate would be freedom from whole. is NOT the Jewish Sabbath." , .. • \If the existing government, in order that the same

some restral'nt rather than from~what they call " N b h ' f II may be admitted as olle of the States of this Union. ow, y t e common (lonsen~ 0 a Protest·, SIlC. 2 . .And be it !lJ,rther ruolved, That the cruel and oppressive despotism. To mllny other ant sects-and this is their great rioint of difference foregoing oonsent of Congress is given upon the things, we do subscribe most heartily, as our read. with the Papists-no tradition, w~ether as respects following ~ollditions, and with tbe following guar.

11 k f h h h ~ 'd doctrine or observance, has any liindin"o- authority. antees, to l"I't '. . ers we now rom w at we ave eretolore sal N h' . b" I d • ot lng,s m~ID~, as.re igiouR oetrine or dutr, First-Said State to be,formed, subject to the upon the subject. Weigh the -following extracts, except tliat which IS laid down a~.d command.ed III adjustment bX this govern1J1ent of all que~tionB of and then say if we have not dOlle justly in charg. the N~w Testament. But th~re ils n.ot a Single boundary that may arise with other governmentll j

ing much of the neglect of Sunday upon the un· Iyord In the !l"ew Testament, thaUascTlb~s anI par· and the constitution tbereof, with the proper evi. candid and unjustifiable course of the avowed t1~ular san~tlty to the Sunday. there IS. n?, the ,dence of' its adoption by the people of said republic

shghtest hillt of any comman.d to. ~observe It 10. any of Texa~, shall be transmitted to the President of friends of that day:- h I b t t!h h way-~.uc ess!o 0 serve ~ WI; t ~t weansome the United States, to be laid before Congress for

"Our S!lbbatarian * friends in the Convention­and such, too, is their practice out of it-took, in the first instance, very high ground. They know well the force of !lrrogant assur.lption to overawe weak minds. Their very first Resolution 'grate­fully recognizes the wisdom and goodness of Jeho­vah in the appointment of the Sabbath, in tlLe sanc­tion 10hich he ga1!e it by his own example, in his command to men to remember it and keep it holy, and in the blessings which it has been the means of conferring upon those who have kept it, accord­ing to his will, in all ages of the world.'

" This resolution expresses a great deal, and as· sumes and implies a great deal more. It contains, in the first place, an express endorsement of the Mosaic account of the creation of the world,and of the institution of the Jewish 'Sabbath, as being lite. rally and historically true. It assUl{les and implies, that the Jewish Sabbath and Christian Sunday are the same thing j and'that whatever was the origin and obligation of <me, is also the origin and obliga­tion of the other." ~ * * * *

superstItIOn and Idle austenty practiced by' the its final action on or before the first day of Janu· J th ' S bb th" *,. '" ' . ews on elr a a . i ary, one thousand eIght hundred and forty·six.

, 1 , • i Second~aid State, when. admitted into the THE LABORER~ AND THE HAR'p'EsT.-The Rev. Union, after cedinjp'o the United States aJl'pubJic

Mr. Winslow, missionary at Mariras, mentions six. edifices, forlifications, barracks, ports' and har. '1 ~ors, navy and navy-yards, docks, magazines,

teen missionaries who have been removed by death arms, armaments, and all other property and from Madras and parts of India: westward from means pertaining to the p~blic defence belpnging that poin~six of whom were from Amerian and t? said rel)u~lic of 'fe~9,8, spall r~tain all.th~ PliU' . ten from Europe. Less than onb half that num- he funds, debts, taxes, and dues or every kind ber of laborer8 have bQj:!n added! to the missions hicn may belong to, or be due and owing said

"'~'UUl"U j and'shall also retain all the vacant and during the same period, notwithsfanding the call unappropriated lands lying within its limits, to be for missionary labor was never s? urgent, and the applied to the payment of the debts a.nd liabilities encouragement nevelJso great, a~ at present. of the said republic of Texl!!-; and the residue of

• i such lands, alier discharging said debts and iii' CHIEF RABBJ"OF ENGLAND,-The electi~n, which bilities, to be disposed of as sai~ State may direct;

. ' but in nn event are, said debts and liabilities to be· we mentIOned some weeks ago, Ihas taken place, come a charge upon the governrqent of tli,ll Uni-and resulted in the choice of Dq. Adler as ted States. • , 'I

Rabbi of the Jews in Englan!l. He had 121 Third-New States, of convenient size, not ex· ' .otes. Of his rivals, the Rev.! Dr. Hirschfield, ceeding four in number in addition to s!l~d $tate h d 13 d R R' bh' IH' h 2 h'l of Texas, and having sufficient population, may

a votes, an ev. a ~l I Irsc ; w I e hereafter, by the consent of said Stale, be formeif

!

'dnflu~nces under which it is developing 1 Many me away in the Spirit into the wilderness, and I J of the~ come from those regions where tlie Church saw a wfl!B...,!ln sit upon a scarlet:colo~eQ beast." 'is1connbcted With tne State, and where the practi- Also, chap. 21: ~O, "And he carried me away c~l infid~lity ofthe 'priesthood or the neology' of 'in the spirit to a great an4 high mountain, aDd tpe ~earll~d has led Iheln to despise a spiritual sbowed me that grea.t city, the ho1y, Jerusalem,

'faIth:: ,when they reach this country" they often coming down out of heaven from God." iI.eeP~e tbe':pr,ey of "speculators and'8harpers, 'to, Now,' if to be in the spirit on the Lord:s day, \IuCh an;'e.lteilis to:render diem jealous and flU!' 'nas to be 1n ihe spirit' on the tirst day ,of the

, :~~cious ~f" erlliJ' t'~ing A:meridan~ ~he ,co~~e<- .we.e~, on what d~y of the week was lohn h~ .the ~uenc~ Ill, that, they 'generllIIy leek, C;0!DmunrtIt18 ,Spmt at the commencement of the second ¥IS1OOj

~llt~k)ng.t~~~r<!;n,lq~gueandagreeiD~wit,hth.em (ohap, 4,). for h, waS',",AFT£R THIS/' ; :Will, anr 'j,p ~~J"i9W,1 ~ef il80 that instead or,~m,algamat1Dg one lay, It was the ne~t ,Su~day 1 !f 11 pa~ur,a) _h our population, and adopting' otl~iti&l~ of day or. the week WIS neoeaSariIy connected with

"Grdnt, howe., for the purpose of the argu. ment, that the aceount given by Moses of the ori­gin of the Jewish Sabbath is literally and histori­cally cort:ect. This concession, so far from aiding the Sa\)batarians, only involves them in impious inconsistency. Everybody, who has the slightest tincture of historical or th~ological knowledge, 'knpw~ that the Christian Sunday is not the ,Jewish . . " "The term Sabbalariat: is here used for tho8~ who ad· l'ocaw t)ie obsernnce of Sunday 4. til' Sabbath. It wal 80 used to 10p1!1 1I;t~nt in tye .first d,isc~8iC\J,ls of ~e sub­ject tw.o. ~~dred a~d J,ifty; f~an ag ... ; hut that ollllfi; of I"ll'llOlla, ;Wl1re !,J?o~ C()JP~l/pJy eaUed !!.e", folfbbll.ill.riaM, in eIi.tlnction frOm thOle who oblervelj. the .8v8n1:/1 day,

thre!l synagogues, having seven, votes, dedi ned to out of the territory thereof, whicli shall 'be entftled give their suffrages at all. I to adl)'Jission undet the provisions, of the' {federal

constitution. And such ~!ates ~s !l!f1Y be (ormed out of that portion of said territory lying ~out~ of thirty.six degrees thirty minuf~s' north latitud.6, commonly known as the Missou~r comp'romi~ I'

line, shall be adf!1itled into lhe.' Union, with orl I without slavery"as the1Jeople of each State ask ... ing admission may' desire. . And in ~' uch State or States a's snail be" form'ed 'out of laid terJitorf north of said MissOuri comprdinise' iDe, sllverri

NEW TREATY WITH ·CHTNA.l.Th'o treaty ~on· c1uded with China, Fhrough ,t~e. ag€'iH:y of Mr. C'~shi1)g, has been r~tified by our government, and is spoken of as ~ery ~ati~factory. It e,stabl~shes perfect equality betw~en China and the United States, ana contains m'any provisions n~t in, the English treaty. 'oMr.· Cushing' has sec~red; the rredi~ of being a .ucc~ful n~gotiator. .' "

or involuntary servitude, (exCept for, criml,l sh~ , be rohibited.· ' ,., .. , ' I r ", ' . J and "'1'1 tb.o on111:\1' B";~tU,,rj'fJ'! , . '

. "

Page 3: I , Fur the Recorder. ~i~ant,:):!

reeently ft()[\\, hlf!R is to

old and

""""w", for the

FRANcE,-The French Ministry is said to s,tand ETIQUETTE ON TIlE Sr'AF:ULD,_A letter from on a less secure foundation than formerly, It Presburg, of September 23, in the Gazette des

G· M" Id Tribunaux, say,': "{'he murderers of 1M. de DO'rr refuses to be hberaltep

was expected that the llIzot" Inlstry wou . d U

have to go out, IUld that Mr. Guizot himself would Keznet, one ofihedeputies of the Diet of hO,nfJ , by the Legislature of nlluue ""'- 1\,f I have J'ust baen tried and executed. One of them I P:lnClpal. condition was that

be replaced by Count 'Uo e. , th . Th, "''' ",,~, Cambria "~,h'd Bo.,,, on M. VHI,ma'". 'h, M""'" .f Mh, f"",,,. WM Co."", '·,myi. 'h, .,,"" of ." dre ... ed. gu." to '~i .. govel'mj~ellt

Plid.y I" •• b"".'". L""p"" p."' .. 'f .b. 4.h lion. b .. b,,, .flli",d'wi.h i"~.i.y; h;, "'to". "d .b, "h", .h"'",k", ",mol !{o""", who Tb""", H: 'PI ... ,,,. ,min", m"". '"',. Sh, b" •• h. ~O P"' .... " .m.", "h'm· boo f"m whi,h' i, d"b".I.. 00' .nly .id,d in th, '"im" hat ,n.,,,,,,d, ",b"'d Of th, N"hnlI" 'enlnesl~ee. died sudden-

SABBATir REC ORDEn.. <it1ttttll.J1ttdligt1tu.

-~ ~' .. " *--,...-FOREIGN NEWS, , . ,

C, & s, Slater (!:-!Jl~doll;).siiii\p.'el Davison, James Ro. gers, S8nforii.p. -Stillman, Lester T, ,Rogel'l, john P. Livcrmor<; James approve tbe plall mnch, )'R, T. Gr'.en". 'u~::::~~:' tOiUL.;ID:~g~ worthy. '''' ,

Postmli!'~rs at De ~U,~ter, New ~eb~ndI)8pring8. . " ,-II,. ., ' C The King' opened the Chambers on the 26th his accomplice of ~II ~he articles of value which in that cilY, of appoplexy Q'n.,i:Su,naalyafternoon, are Mr. Lea vilt and Mr. Oakley, the Illinois om- ~ were in M, de ,Keznets apartment at Presburg. 12th inst, He had bee~ dai'S pre-December. J

missioners.' Her freight list is said to be very Tornyi avowed his guilt, ancl a<:knowledged that vions under high mental caused by A letter from Piedmont of Ihe 16th December, h" ". large, amoWlting to 250 Ions-largo< .h." '''' h, " •• h, body'" pi,,,,,. Tb, ~""".f.h, ''''''''on" .. mmd" Crimin,]

slates that a great qua~' y of snow at that date h T . h Jd \:~ d h C f D 'd brought by a I.~at of the II'ne be~ore. The news ~ II h court was~ t at omyl s ou UI:l quartere, is ourt 0 aVI son. uo, It covered the vall eyof t e Po. At Turin it Ie to led b h h h I h f

" Th C d ~'h f' bo y urnl, and teas es t rown to t e wind' The Toronto Mutual Insurance Company pre-is not 0 remarkable iuterest. e olton tra e, depth of three feet, a (J so great a welg to It cov- d h K h Id d d

• b h 0 Ii d I fI ered the rool's of the houses that men were employ- an t at owaez S ou be ecapitate, The s~nted each fireman of that city with a New Year's whioh w" m,h" ot • P""' W '" t, '" "'" p"""''' 'p""I,d, bot .h. Kiog ",pfi,m,d 'h, .,ft oC ,w'''fe dollars, as a token of appreciation of h d

. d d . I d f' ed to shoyel it off., fears 'being entertaine,d of th,e f d h h ' T .' . h h' I a Irevlve ,l1n a parlla a vance 0 prICes ~as A sentence a eat, c angmg ornyl's pums ment t eIr va uab e services during the past year, wood work giving way., At AlexandTIa, SlI,. 'I b h d' Th ' d

realized. - h IOtO sImp e e ea mg. e sentence was came A Steam Planing Mill and Sash and Blind Fac-

- ' RECE1PTB." :: We~terly, R,. "r.,;,.,oaniet Ll;lrlrin~::Wm:E.' Mu.on N .. I

tban W: Pbillips;' George Wilcox t2'eatli; Wm. Wq_ toll, LUcinda ,BJirljer, laaac CraJj'daU,' ;Ephraim GaYiu, Joseph H,' Potter, Daniel S8tf.iIdeTB, Remy '81l1111den Eaoch Vose, Maxson JolibilOn; Josiiih, Witter, Alfred. BS; ven'l each: Eden Blake 18: :-.-..e .

De Ruyter-Barton G. Stillman '2; Caleb W, Chnrch,

and some other parIs of PIedmont, t e snow was , , d b k' h k I ' The weather continues verv severe in England nearly foudeet deep, and when t,he last aC,counts mto executIOn two ays ac ,10 t e mar et p ace, tory WIl.S burnt in Danvers, (Mass,) on ThurSday

, • I . R and a strange incident added to the terrible inter- last. Insured for 1lIo2000., • and France. On the ornamenta waters In e- lefl every thing foreboded a most severe WInter. f h Th . d d d K <il'

' P k h' ~ t t th . h est 0 t e scene, e J)J gment or ere Owaez There was a -good deal of excl'tement at PI'ttS-"""' '. " ., '" .'" "om wo 0 ... m." F,~ ,HE Em.-Th, ",,,I .. d m,ll """d to, h, fifflt ""oted; bot .bi, Tomy' p,,'~"" h .hi.k. M'm .h ••• wo .ho_"d "'''''"' "". '".'" 2d. bri"gi" •• d,'''' from Bomb,y '0 Do, . .g.;not in ,b, "ro"""""m., decl.nng .h.t .. b. bo,g ~~ Wolnool'

y, M"'", by th, .ft',," of.

skating upon it at one time. In France the cold 2, and from China to October 12. was of noble blood, he Was entitled to die first. Virginian, aided by a collecting Constlable, to ""' "' im'''' thot • .mio 01 m."haadi", whl.h Th, di"ot·b ... " '" ,h. S,otb ... : M.h"". H. ,~im "'ing "j".ed. b, f,n '" !{ow"", .. d "'Ore. nm.w'y,la... Tb. (oo ",n",) .W"" lell Rouen in the night, haVing be hen obhligedl!o ro .. "y '''to "ill goi". on, .. d h,d ~o~d ... d .. ",ed to p,ll him f"m .h, blook •. K, ... , """~'dt~ '~'~h,but the keep~r of the jail wouhld stop at Meulan to discharge some c ests: t e oi m serious character. The British had taken another sent him back with a -violent blow on the chest,' not a mIt er WIt out a regular commitment; e 'h, h"" 01 th, wh"l, b .. ,m"",,", to"th" . h' f" hi thon tookh" "'rore " Ex-AId"m,", who "ro>

Lorenzo Burdick, Harvey P. Marble fl ellch.' New !.ebruion Springs-;-Wm, R Ma,xson '2, Plainfleld, N. J,-Drak~ RandOlph $'1. Waterford, Ct,-:"Datid RogeJ.. 2d, Jonathan K. Ropn,

George Stillman $2 each; Green Ragen, Ricbard Jerome, Ephraim Brooks $1 each, ',~

Independence_Briggs B. Li~ermore $1. Soutb Brancb-Calvin ,Wheeler $1.

. h 'he . h . h' h ·..f .h, f".. ooo"p',d by th, ,,,'" ,.ea". bat .h, .. d Totoy, "',"0 • , ,ot", g"tog OW r", '" to do on, ,bt", io th, m,"". 10 .h, m~ WII ~ water m t e pipe w IC communlCa es garrison effected their escape, ('.olonel 0. utram blow, when the executioner's men seized him and I from the tender to Ihe, machine, The consequence h I" I ~ h bound hl"ll so tl'ght as to prevent hi's makl'og any time, a crowd was co Iected, who took means to aid 'h II having retired from tepa 111ca agp,ncy, IS SUc_ th I t Th ff' r t w ... hXl .h. t~'" w" oblt .. d to "m'm' ,,,. '~". CoI .. ,1 0"0, h'" boa" "pto"d by 'h, .","... Tb.,. w,,, b.th "reo"d io " f,w mi.- "'" 0 '~.po. , wom,. got, to .," y. "ight. A 'imll ... d,l.y ,","<red on 'h, p,,;, '""'g,"" "hll,?" hi. '''y to Kh.,.",,~. ond "re, ,ft". Thi, "0,,","' 'mbi.i" of To,"yi to M,. "'on"d W. "'''I f""""y ftom H",.

.. d 0,1" .. mil ~1' ",d,d oft' to • hdl f,,, .• h,,. b, "" .nll d,. h", hi, ".im .fbi"h '''''''01 to i" '''h .i".m. C"d, Co .... boat ,w'"'Y.firelenrs of age, an in-M,. C,lh,,"', ,,,ltfu", ,"""",", .h, ,""",. "'""' bot 're",d "lth ~p,," "'""'. ",ll. to m,"d '" """'on" Coponh"on doatrio .... d highly ~'''m. m"re"m",,". ""

""" 'f T"M. "d "p",.lly • h. d"p",h· to M,. G"",, L""m" m A''',,,._A pi.. b" in 18i 6, .hon "m, m.. w're "nre",'" to dre.h ,,"don"y "'''' "" .""'oI.y ""k, .boot fi" mil" Kl'ng, have excited much feelin~; in Eo,,

17

1and. b 'd V' d' d 'h h for exciting their fellow'prisoners to revolt., three from Milwaukie: by a friend, with whom he was . een proJecte at lenna, an receIve Wit muc The latter is sharply condemned In the London interest by the booksellers at Berlin, Leipsic, of the number had been beheaded, but the fourth re_/UunlJn:!;.

' ,.,,~. F .. ""o". S'""g.,d •• ond "",,, p""'".1 G"m" f."d to pi", hi, hMd '" .h, hi"', .atb, .to""d I. ~ .. id ,ba, ,h .. , .re ,won,y p"",",.1" ."" ,i. - Th, "mrui"..,(.~ I" .h, .110\""", .. , m .. • to,,",. f" th, ,,"bH.bm,nt " Phll.d"phi ••• f • • h" .h, P'~on MOt, him bod ba ... ]'w, "d Z worth i •• h, ''"''g'" ",,,,Iy.fi,..miill.,, .1 'g,moo,,' ,h"i"bl, be, """ &,., i" I ,,'ood, <,ond ".".1 d.pot, r" 'h,. U .",d S."" of ,"", b, b,iog 0 Cb,,,",,n. oo.id obj", to h"ing .lla... Wha. on imm .. "'Y oC good ,boo, ,oopl. had been appointed under the new act-five Calh- America, of German literature, ou behalf of the his blood lIlingJed with that of a Jew. After could do ifthllY chose.

01;" ."d fi" p,,,,,,,,,. Of 'h, C"hoH .... h~ I .. di"g pnbl',h,~ 01 Go,m,"y, Th,m '" '" "m, p.d.y, .h, m.g ... ", gm""d bi, 'bi"ti,", Bomilto" (i",!!; .h, """ .f • h, Camm".

• .' I - t ~ j

bVORMJ.TIOllf_We have been askell, Whetber two dol lars will be reCelved in payment'for the Recorder for one ~ year, after six montbs of the time has plWed 1 We wUh to be as lenient as POB8ible in tbis matter, elPecially to those individuals Whose payments haveb~n delayed from a,real difficnlty in obtaining the money. "We would' not knoWingly increase the burden npon one sl)ch perioD. Hence We have determined to extend tbe time for three months longer, and to receive twu dolliirs for tbe year, U! paid at any. time previous to tbe end of the third quarter, or about the first of April. We hope, before that time, to receive payment from nearly all of oar I!I!bscribel'l. Money can be relnitted t/lrough Post Masters with perfect _ety, anJ without a:x:pense, Of th'1 hundreds ofletteruent u. witllin six months past, we are not aware' of baving LS.t ' . but one; nor.are we aware ofa Bingle inlbmce in which a postmaster has refused to forward money, nllll1ll1 of new sub"scribers, or cbange ofaddress, when respectfnlly uked to do so, ' ,to p"'"'' h f .h, bmh Cb."h; ,,,d M,. O·C,,· .h, U"""" Sto.,., it " "Id. "''''y fi" mtlHo", "d .h, moo h"i"g ol, ... d th, hI"k or th, hI.od ,i.1 B .. k. Alb"y, " • d,r .. h" i" .h, ,"m

.. II hi, pobli" Y d"I."d hi, "".m, "_'i,f,,· of G"m", ... d " ""bI',hm,m .hrongh wh"b ".,11" b, ooold, pl.... hi, bowl down t"",- .f ''',445. _.

. • ioa " .hd, ."'" P"" co of. h • • m". • hoy "" f.llow 'h, oom" of H"", Y pn b H,,,i,, q 0 illy, .. d "" d .. woo Ith "oo I .. ,," By 'he • ",,,I of 'h, b'ig V '~'''i",. ., I"," Th." h.d "' .. -"oth" "Hg'''' i",","".ioa ";'om,." P'''"'' th, w"k, .h,y m.y d,,'''' Tho StL. Cmmm• '" "'" S"",.~ Th. ",. .h" 'h, f"" 'l"" ""i'g" i St. J.go '0 '"

,. S";""''''' ... ~,d by. ""Iot'oo of 0", 'f To "pply .hi, "on'. ,"d 'P'" '",w .. d """. ,,"",b R'p,bli .. n tok" "to". gro"d i" Ia." ""mi", ".," .moog Ib, '''ppi"g. Th",

@'> We have lately had several requesta for back nUIII­berli from the beginning of tbe volume, and have forwak_ ed them accordingly. Fifty sets more can be fW'llilhed if, application be made SOOIl.

I 1

• h, 100,1 ,,,,.,m,",, " ,",,,at th, ",,, .. 000 of ,ire m"k", ." ,h. obj,," ,I ,hi, ptO"...d .,,' .f .b, "hi""" 'f'ilk i" 'h, S.nth. Th"di", .,,,, """"n "U ,r B'iO'h n'd 'Wo F"noh voot h " J ex, ",. • h h mk, '". '" L~ .. "'. "d oint i". "Y' .h" •• ll • h .. i, •• at,d '0 gi" ,h I. b .. ioe" , .. ,I, .h., h, d I"", 'h, P ,',,' jol ". rt .f. h ," f" "'m"h,,,,, .. d to '" "'y m,mld.bI, ... "h" T"h"h. who """!ly .!t,mp',d ,h. ""."i •• on imp,,,,, 'lth' S'Plh, in 'h. ""bli,hm'nl in "'''' by f,,,,-.b.y 'O!, "at' 1 able to obtain "" "" '" m,d ""," pnt' i" i.. I. w" '" p. ot,,..f 'h, )"", of P ""'n. ."' """ "d" • h, ,", ... p." ., m '" 0 I"" rl" " of 'go .. i" f" ""',ta"", in """", "'''' .f 'h, "" toit y of '''_

g>"The Minutes of the General Conference ha,. beell forwarded to tbose wbo h~ve requested them. Other. will be supplied on application.

p"",d. h""",; '''0 'f th, I"d, .. "'" kill,d. a.h "h .• tth, IO",,,, 018, .. d". .b, potoh .... f .h"'lk "h" pmdo .. d. 0", 'f mo". : "d .th,,, ,"ok "fligh', S'ro"g m''''m .. " ... pl."", "m"k,d, only. f." d.y, """. TI" "mnba, of b"", i" .h, Uni.ed .,,",. i, .""",, .h. J""It. "'" 'n proW'" I" """I ,I F>OM O,,,,,.-S.m, "gh.,," m',,'h, 'g' ••• bot h, .oold <oi" '" ,mlim"'" ""mb" ,f "'" 1,'00.000. Whil, i" E"gl .. d .h.,. ." 849.147, the C~f)IOl!s, and great agitation on the subject I government was formed in Oregon, by the white coons; his difficulty was to have it skilfully reel- not half the quantity in proportiop to the popula_ p ,,,,,I,;]. . '''.,,~, "mil" to 'h" of. h, T" ri to 'y 0 fl.w,. ,d, ond • h" to fi ,d "p"dy m "It" f" ito "I,. .i". :

,

~. L

~ Our thanks are dne to Eld. DolNll:L B.t.BCOCI[ for the good work he has begun1 in Allegany Co. We hope his CirCulU81ances will allow bim to continue it.

e JS op 0 xeter as IOun 1l1lse A Slim of money was raised to establish a priut_ f T Th B

' h fEn " d h' If Such difficulties should not deter them for 1\ mo- In Ll'ncolnshl're, one J'llry I'S sal:d to have liound obliged to yil'ld to public opillion on the BlIr-, /li'" h M h d' " t I' t ment rom its prh~duhclhion. hey are not half adS a man charged with stealing pigeons, "guilty of

. p]l" '''''''". H""w,d iat h, progre~ of ]", mg' w".. , , " 0 ,& m'~",oo .. y '~'"". gre .. " 'h"." " """oo-,,,.,, ~""i .. ~ """"la'gi',,." "d .oo.h". " .• "ilty, bot 00' """'""'"1' ,,', h, ." hj''', th" h, did "ot • h ink • h, W ,Ii'm, ",. Th, m .. "" I, f" • hI' offi" """ '0 • h, i"",", i"" .f W hi",y •• ro"". ,i". mnoh. .. ,

q FOR SALE-A BARGAIN.

T HE well-known premises, o~e late JOK.l.TB.t.1I R. DUNHAM, deceased, situate in the, towDJbip of

Piscalaway, County of Middlesex, . J" about Olle 'quar­ter of a mile from the New Market J5epot on the Elizabeth • town and Spmerville Railroad, withiu about two houra' ride of'tbe city of New York, ~be CRra making tbr~ tripa each way daily-including 12 acresl)f excellent land, with

it very important whether a clergyman preayhed were forwarded from New York last week. Silk reels of approved qualltYbcla~ be purcrhaks;ldl ,.A Liverpool paper says that Wm, Towns, a hi, '.,.,00, ;" 'h, ""pH" " .b, gOW". b., i",;,._ New, from O"goo h" bo .. ""i,", '0 ,h, f". f,w doll ...... d • re.,,", • "'gre, 0 " .,ld,,, '0 .h, "at F",I1 .. ", no< ill I"d' •• h .. ,d '" 'h, ."mp"oo .hi,fly "'" .. " 'b, I"ty .~... 2d of A" ""- i" ."" en,", "" b""""d .Im", i, '" P"P'_ ooof"'''d th" It ""' h, "h, '"b.d oot th, averse to ,It, '! g ration of a single crop. Georgia and SouthwCaro, brains of a game-keeper in 'E~sex, about nine

1'1" L"",oo Tim ... ""'ot,, .h, " •• bI',hm .. ' "Th. L'gi,I""" 'f Oreg"" .dl""'''' • f,w It ... hoold take 'nro'''l!'m,", fmm .h,i, .". Y"'" og .... d th" • mnn ""m,d C""'" wh, "fd, pi, moti, "," '""' "'. w onn G "" B "'.i" · .. d ,. Y' '" f", • h. '01 of J • I y. h "'0 g p"",d ,," .. I ,h b, ro. T '" "'~" .10",. '" "43. p",. "" " .. " ted a" th, m" 01". ."' '" .~"'.

a, good Apple Orchard aud ot~er fruit trees. On ~e pr .. 1IIlSes is a large aud couvement DWELLING f.qfJIlE, two stories bigh, with seveu rooIll!l oUlbe lint flooro; IlIo

' ttl One of' thel'r acts I'S duced from 20,000 to 25,000 pounds of cocoons, Ro, me,' ar!!uing at great length that they can do some Impor an aws. , , A k' Alt h tl

~ A h h II k II . a against 1,231 in 1840, A fine manufactory in '" pOQr wor -man lD on, as recen y come no harm, and that they are due to the rights and,' ny person w 0 s a rna e, se , or gIve way , 'f l'. t f ~ 1 500000 b th

d ", h T' f 0 S th that State, under I lie superintendence of an expe. mto possessIOn a a .or une e ""', lye

wishes of the Q~en's Roman Catholic subiects, ar ent Spirits In t e errHory ~ rego~, ou d h f h' b h 1 I t I ,.' d t D a

J C b' R' h II r Ii' d $100 rienced monufa"tu(er from London. is said to have eal 0 IS rot er, w 10 a e Yule a emerar. Burgess, the nk rohber, who was arrested at of olum la Iver, s a lor elt an pay " .... C h

Boston, some time ago, under the Ashburton treaty, .or eac an every suc I 0 ence. e t'egls- , I h

a large TAN-YARD, with Ii sn1ficient IIUmber oT 'vat.;: a Sboemaker and Currying Shop, and Bark HOllie; " lIarn, and other necessary out-building.. AdjoinWg th& premises is a small Dwelling House IIIId G~n. :J erma • reasonable. i

l'. h d I ffi 'Th T ' produc~d splendid specimens of siltin. Kentucky, Some Yankees have gone to husan, on t e I ' II d h 'L 'I II' Committ e' Cndiana, Ohio, are 1111 more or less ehga"rred in the Coast 1201) miles north of CantoIl~ to estab ish t e

w~s convicted on the 19th of December, and sen- ature IS ca e t e egIs a ve e ,

" d 't f' rsons elected bv the peonle culture. Ohio alone prcduces cocoons enough to ., ice business," and supply the great Chinese cit-ie.noed'IQ transportation for I, if.,e, " an consls s 0 mne pe ',? ' , '

' . "Th, tt!lI"" pf th, P"goa r,,, ""yeo."" 'mploy ro .... "'y 200 , .. I,." ,~ wi.h .h. lo,",y. A '~d oil m""y" .I~ I, D,. W.lff h,d ,,,' "d " Toh"'", ;" P,,,i.. .f .h", Go.""" .• ,II,d .h. E""ott,. Commit. '" ~ .. hl~h,d .. C'''on. Th, C"n~, bo",.re

A further description of, the property may be luId bl calling at the premIse., or on eithur at the snlHil:n'lier.. Executors. RANDOLPH DUNHAM, rrainfi.t'd.

DA YID DUNN, New Market. "NewMarket, N, J" Jan. 20, 1845.

n hi

's way to En"land I C I Boys IJ<f SPAIN,-I asked a boy whether he or sal'd to be unc"lnmonly ol'ly. Q '" tee, a Supreme J, udge, and'a Legis ative ounci, h' , d h h S . v

IS parents IVere IIcquatnte wIt t e crrpture, It i, "id .hot .h. K,", of P,,,,,'" h .. m.d, 'P Th, I • ., ." .h, "m, ... hm, g,,,,n'"g .h, 'r". ..d '''' ".d It; h. did not. bow,"", "'m to An """, boidl'g ft"'h in f"at .f W''"''". eon-hi, mi"d to f.lfil .h. ool,m" pMm;", m.d, hy "to,y ,flow.. ""d.,,,,,"d m,. 1 m"~,,, o""~" ,hot .h, boy d,d,d 'h" ,_" Ob, my h""", d'p"d 'pon It. O~ f •• h" ... d b",ow • ",""itott .. "PO" h" '"~ " ~'"" .b, ",i,,1 i, Ore"", of .h, R... M ,. wo. fifl,," Y"'" .1 ... , 11<" b, w"' ,. mony... O"""g b"",. good "if,." .. 1 bog yoo, p'"

1"". , G .. y, 00,", 'mpon .. ",.o"" "'" "'" g'''g 'P'''''''y i"'lUgea ••• "" bad "m' '"wl,dg' doo." "pHed ooo.orb;' f.m.l. ,"dt."" ". bod

TRACTS iELUING TO THB 8!BBATI. Tbe SABB.I. TH TRACT SOCU:TY . publiMb dt~ foliowin,

S"BBA TH TlU~TS, at 15 pages for olle Oent. No. I-All Apology for introducing the Sabbath of the

Fourth Commandment to the cODllideratioD ol-the Christian Public, 28 pages i Price .ingl" 3 ct..

The British Government is said to have in con- on at the Metho,dist missionl of w"ici/ he is super_ of the Latin language i nevertheless, he knew husband does."

t,m,loti" .oo.h" Me ... "pol'ttoa fo< .h, d'" in""d,,,. Th. I"dt" "h"", h" "''" ""0"'"' ". 'h, ."'~"" "'" by ",m, ... d I hu." "'" P. D. Di, '''''nred bot pottOon on .b, """y of. Non'-\V ... P"'·g,. ",d .nd 'h, h"lld,,,, ',rely """p"d by i. h" d"b.. 'om whot 1 "''''''I"mly ''''',,,d •• h".. '"~"" of. H"pi'" r", .b, 1""" .. d f" Idi""

M, .. ~,re". 'h, ~"d" p.",,, ''Y. "ill "", "'0; aold " <1<, M",ojinl Ep"""p" ChotCh. I, ... 'w, .• hinl, of hi. """""ymea '" " 'hat im- ,. 'h, N,w J""y Log';I"." '"' .h, 23d inatant. ~ ",I .. d fu" h, V"ired Stot" ,.,1 Y ,. • h' Bp "og. ,"" r """ ,,,d. fu, • Ii"" '¥ '"' Uto U 'to. Th, p" •• m po'"' 00 w;"" h.. him "II. A It'" doo" I. will b, pti n"d. . '

No. 2-The Moral Nature and Scriptural OblHll'V&l1Ce of tbe Sabbath Defended. 52 plfges; price Ii cli.

No. 3-1Autbority for the Change of the Day of'the Sah bath, 28 pages; price 3 cte. I ,

No, 4-The Babbathand Lord's Day-X Hiltory of their observance in the Chri.tian Church. 52 pa,,, ;

TheAoti.Ca .. L .. , L"",, h .. "romm",", m"","" h .. 01" ".,,,d w"h ,to m,lJ, h"d. of of ,ill .. , '""' •• lth, h""h"I.h, "",., i" th. D,. Job"""" .. """"'" by &.".11, o""~'" It. • Y'" m 01 'gi" ttoa f" .h, """, bot .h, .. nl '. ..d no" I y.1l ita pro",,, y , ,hI.h .h, fi.1 d, w h,re .h, y I. bOt. " ,h, "."' fun at,;n by.",. 1 rom hi, ",Ii '" Y"" h, b,d i ow. nil y reo opeal"g I", "'''''hOt .. f",,,bI",,h""i,w,. ".tt,,,, ,boagh. ot good ptio~. th, '.y,id" wh"ath,y ''',,,'''i, "ttl •• lb." 001,,,, to ",,,I I" "''''''''on " and to this end the

rree trade candl'date, Dartmouth, havI'ng lost .. The lay missionaries were about· to be dis- . d th I w I s f th ch'lldren of

" ""n... "" "'" 0 , "'''"n"", • "n""", w,.bon! fi""od,, ,,, . • h. ,I""on by. m.jori,y ,f """. 'rhl",. m"",d. bot woold re~in," lb. rolooy .. '"~ P,", •• I .bon! tb, Sotipto", ,'" illbi, •• h, Old '". to m,k, 't .. "gnifi" .. ond '"".," .. it w"' .. " ga' .. d by .h." op""non", "" "mply m- ."... Th, no'ony i, i, • m~1 """''''''g .. d N,w T""~"I ,"d '" on '"' tn.,,"", h." '" bhl. pow". Hi, "" .. "d 'kill I" ","""".

.. i .. " ",,"di"'" Th, ,to,. Of'''' giV'ng prom'" of" th,y '"OW" w,,,' wo, .Ii"di"g to, "no"ld reo ."'"', ""dooh"dly to be attributed 10 this habit. abulldant halves!." t,' I th h on all other The Bank of England has called in all the £1.- __ --: ___ -'---~ urn me a ra IOna anslVer, oug

• matters their replies were sensible enough. A Scotch laird, who not only refused to sell a 000 no,,,. f" .h, '"P''' of "",,lIt'g !hot, ""I. Lm ,on. M,,,,no,~ T", Oh"),,,," CO",i" • , ,ita f" " "'''" f.t .h, Fre, Ch",.b, bn! bo.gh. en fro I'll the bankin!!' house of Messrs. Roael's & FORGIVENESS. Itt t p t Ihe'r bel'ng secured "or ~ L of the 18th ins!., contains the fallowing statements, up arge rac s 0 reven I " 00, This eXIJerimem, it is lInderstood, has been h ffi d poo widow much more for fu g

iven by Mr, Trl'pler, a passen!!'er who arrived at At Lambeth street police.office, Richard Har- t at purpose, 0 ere a r , 8Upcess I. The £100Q nates are principally ~ h h' her premises than they were worlh. "My laIrd, h ld b th b k 1 b

't' d"d Ch J h d b r vey, a coal,w,hipper, was charged wit aVIng ffi eye an ers...",.rare y y pnva e In IVI u- ar eston t e ay elore;- I she exclaimed, "ye surprise me by 0 ering me J committed a most violent and brutal assau t on ... M,. T. ,,~ V,,, c". rot H"... oolb. 2d L.w,,"", Sooll,y, ,""b" ~I .• bipp"' .. P' b. '" mao"" my littl, mon". on' If 1 ,h"ld .... I""NO.-o·C" .. II.pp"" '0 b, ",ki"g • in". in th, BriO,h m.il """,,, D" whi,h ".,,1 Ii, hoo", by ''''''"g him on th, fno, "ltb. '''" 'II ,hoold '" m.M. 'i'bMlad

yL

; ~udtI dbinna kl,efln Httl. 01." qo'". "d h .. m""""",d 'h, "h'm" ,,,,h,d 1Ia,,", .. th, 7.h in... A. th, "'t ,,- po' in ",h. m"",, .hot h, .. mpl''''Y broke I ... 11. 1"'0"' .. k, It. Y ." • '" (, •• • hi,h. '" hi, .. I"", ftOm P""o. b, d", .. ", .. 'n" "'nto A .. "" .. Sao Marti" do S"mol"- hi, n", •• b, eod .f whi,h dtOpp,d on. 'h, floo,. iog bOt .y .. " b, .... ) ga" It" m, ... d" my him"" ""I "d to ~")' .h""gh_.h. P'~'"'' " .hoot fon, I .... ," Ctom Poobl., wi.h • r"", Th, fno, of "mpl., .... p~,",ed • f",h'fol 'p. "'i,d ."'" it '''.11 g~" A",w .h,roh f" .", II" """oty. ..d 'h, im,"ehm,", ... d .h, ~". or',boot 6,000 man, m .. "y mon""d on h,,~ tak - P""''', P." ,f .h, o<ga" th. l"'" full ow h,ld wo",hI, 01 hot ."',, ~ now g.ing 'P on .h, pre-.,,. to E"., .. d. A .... d ""p" .. 1 "cl,m,m. .. ftom .h, i,bohita".. Go •• Pm;]", homg m i" ht, h .. d. m..... ,

it ;, "" .. lik.ly •• ro "lB •• 'l"" him. H, b" d"", p.".i. wi,b '" "my ,f9,000 "''', bot m.- 1'h, pro"'m'" inl"m,d ,h. mogi""" 'hot b. A VON""" B."".-At th, A .. i"",'Y "tired to D"'Y

o",, ,"d hi. ,,,,,II .d,'''' '0 ",,,,,,ing .. d ."iding • ".fli,'"., m"'" Of d'd not .i.h to p~ th, ,bo~g •• " th, pMM.",' _tin. of tho Am,,',," illhl, So""y, .. lid dt.

.b, poopl, w.,....." K~p .p 'h, ro"L" Th, ,,- ",Ii,y, .. San .. A .. ', Co,"" w,,, d,"y d~,"!" w"" h .. d-,,,kmg m .. , "ub • I~'g, f.m.ly. ""' f",m Naw Hoinp,hlm •• f .'" "'"hyre"", hortalion was apparently needed. ina- on account of desertions from hIS ranks, whIle Mr. Norton-What, not wish to pUnIsh him after denominati9n, called Father Robbins, held in his

pric~6cta. ,i

No, 5-1\ CbristianCaveat to tbe Old land New Sabhata­rians.-[LJontaining lome .tirring eXl.rlcti from

- an old author who wrote 1lDder iliat title.] "pa-ges; 1 ct. ,

No. 6.-Twenty Reasons for keeping holy, in each 'w.eek the Seventh Day instead of the I'irlt Day. ' ,4 pa; ges; 1 ct. ,

No. 7.-Tbirty'liix Plain Questiolll, presenting the mala point& in the controversy; A DialogUe betweeaa. Minister of the Gospel and a Sabbatarian. CQlUi- " terfeit (Join. ' , ':_

- . AN A.DDRESS 'ro THE BAPTISTS OF)lUII:. UNITED 1.l1'ATES, from the Seventh.: da,T lfaptilt

General Conference; wherein is .hbwn thqe!petuaLob1.. ligation upon Jew and Gentile to observe God'. HoiI' Sabbath, 118 INSTITUTEn IN P AlUDUlC apoll tbM Ih~UTH. or last day of each week> and the lubilequent .al).ii.tu. tiOIl of the 'IRST day is shown to be incoDSlJltent with the institutlon, and subversive of the Bibl" as 'a perfec~ l'Ill. ot faith. ' I • Published at tbis office for the Conference, and ll!r MI • also by Leavitt, Trow &: Co" 194 Broadway; .Mark ,H. Newman, 199 Broadway, and E. Walker_&: Co. ~14 Fill to';lstreet, ~ per 10.0,) and at the boobtOl'ei Ke~e,:.lll pnce 6 cent&. I "

I

LOCAL AG~NT8 FOR fIE I]WO~,BL: , N" •• i'''''''"d,". hin opp~ilion to ,b, .h.ri ... 0;". P. "'" ",'dly '''I"i''". ","o •• b. 'h" ''''g' "" .. I., Th' P"""'"to~N~.y.n' b"d .h, idanti", B'bI, "I"" which .b. mom"'"

bl, """'" btl]. b"k", .. h, w" by • '''g' Tb. ci'Y Of M"i" bod ba .. w,Ii fo"ified, .. d "",bip. I d,,', w.,. to bort b,m; h, b" "'y ofth, ~,,' Can8"" .nd P,,,id .. 1 W "hi""", """" .ftb, Rom •• Ca.h.li, ",i,,,hood •• ",,,. ""y ,m"o,i" 10k .. " P"""''' "",Ion ,,- koooired oW. ,m.1l btl of .h, ond .f my n ... , w," 'WOtn I,to tt!lI ..... d .oo'';'''ng .h. "'_ '"'at.h" '~''''''',dt"'Pl!'''''''''' th, ""mm'''''o· ",Il Th"qoed,,,, bod b"" op",d, .. d th, w bi.h 1 h,,, '" my h .. d, .. d iI wlli m .. d '" .f.1l 'hm, old wortbl" ""re" on iln ". ....

Adame-Charle. Potter .. A GGreen

Alfred-Jame. R Irisb, •. Alaxlon <ireen

"~,",'odm, '''' ... b-h"h,1" ."" a", hI,h,p of m.l, wh<h "<ron"", th, "'y filled wi.h wn"" . Tb ... , xnId M,. Robht .. , .oro B,bk "m~nd 'h, R,m ... CotboH, Cb~roh. wbo '~P'''' 'h, ond th,,, w"' • fore, of "'m, 30,000 "m,d .it" !tmTh, '0 •• '"'''' .. Id 'h, p_'"'" "ino,d • ,h ... , B'bI, """, .. d God hI" .. d ... p"'p",d 'ffi,,; to 'P'" of. "001,, .'"" 0 f .h", b to th ,eo. ". ""' prop .. '" to d.f", I.. "'Y Oh ""i.. ,~,it, .. d told tb. P'~"''' " ,hoi, ,. bo,,; "d ond" 'h", i"n 'hoi" """ "y "mbl'" ot M'''h ... d" .h. Bigh. R ... D,. K .. - A, V". C,,~ ,t.., COrtifiM"'" WO!' i" p~ m.k, blm "~oomp""'i ... Th, p""" .• bon. ~ P"""''''''' ,God g""1 ",," .. id h" th"

"dy, ".h" eny R,men Cotholi., I.y """i .. " g, ..... n·1 'h, ,iii,,", W,,' "mi.g; Th, ore,m" Iy .. to,,,d '010 'h, ,ffi .. , .. d .• h, ~.g""." , .. runy ""n h." ,",h "I,,, ond ""'h tI~, I l~::~~nl~~~~:~,~~~:~~t~;~~~~k~. Ibk"g • pl."" .h, rommi .. ,,,, to ""Y '"to M,",,, .... ,,, V." 0"" • .bon ""''d b.co~ .b, "k,d whnt 'h. P"""" b.d go"" h.~ . Th, 0;" .. ,,,'" f,.,d. F""". W""'. 0' u"., d.., t, IDurb.m'iU;Il-,JO.ejlb~ ,ff .... ~1, "'~q .• nt, d",,,,, .ho h,,,y "'"'''' D .. , h,"n~to C.mp, .. hy rOt ''''''P'. '" to,. "',. pro .. "." ,,'d ,,".hiog. bot h' ~old ".y hto w,,- Ph'''''.'''''." ,., 2d ""mL To"",,,, k". b~ ,f .~, Oh. '" h. ,"d 'h, '"d'"" ... ""'''' of .b. "'.- moo. W'" .1" "'po",d Cmm Al ""do "d Tin- n... f" .h, I", of "m,. ..d .hot ."' • II !bot w~. ''''" ""'''''' , •• " ... ,," ... Id ." • good ." hot

p'''fl ... , .. ,." .... ,pl... . ",n'"d. M,. N 0"",,-0 no, 1 "no" ",'m" d,";. r" "eh w, "'~ "''' "d 'h", who k"" him w,tI A decree had been issued by the Mexican COIl- that' tl18 case is too serious. The Prosecutor- ask for no long eulogy on 008 whom they so IGved and el-

The whole capital of $800,000 required for the So~ther~ Rail way, froDLDlIblin to Cork, was sub. Mcrtbed In three days, and subscribed entirely in

" Samuel KU8S8ill, Berlin~obn Wh,itfnr~

Ireland.

SCOTLAND,-Professor Knight, of Marischal Col­lege, Aberdeen, died last week from the effects of ~ severe cold caught While engaged in observing the late lunar eclipse.

ft is" snid, that Lord Jeffery has subscrioed ~ r ?OO to the college of the Free Church, 'of which he IS no! a member.

d I 's A t 't d an outlaw , d teemed, But tbose who knew blm b'est, wII) mourn not gress ec arlOg anta na a ral or an " Please your worslll'p, he ha,s a large family, an d ' i h

" , h 'th h t only tbat they bave loot a frlen " but that a' rut man ond '" o"''"<''Y' 0 m.y m,ot w, 'm, if yon wHi f"g1 .. him. I .h.I1 ,I"p .I1 th, b~t. w,d. To '" ,.'" ., ... od, •• " ." •• lb. w. _ ,tI "k. hi. lif,. Moo"", b.d .1" b,," ruloptoi to re,. A •• b. "m,,, .. li,i"",," of th, ""mpl.". _ hl~ w,""" •• _,. Ib, ,',,' ..... ~, .. ,,_, prevent nis escape, by guarding the different sea- ant, the pri~oner was then discharged, heart, and the willi,ng band hke bis, and wben /lucb an one 1,J"eonardniIJII-_ VI'm ports and other outlets, and it is believed that he • is taken from our !Ide, we bave (ew words of I comfort fot must eventually be captur~d I A person named , THE FARMER, eacll other, 'rhal be i. m'i'!l~ned for. and that he WIll not be d

'd I' h' f S t rorgotten is bi& best eulogr. and that be dId well his work I'New.)Orl,,-j~blll Arollano, an in iVI ua In t e mterest 0 an a It does one's heart good to ~ee a merry l'ound- our best ~o,ace.-.A" S. Standard. " Anal' with additional confidential correspondence, faced farmer. So independent, and yet ~o free f!otn ' had been taken, and it was Supposed he would be vanity anel pride, So rich, and yet so mdustnous ,

executed, ';-,So patient and persevering in his calling, and Xet ~~I&o. Mr, TripIer states that the whole country is in So kind: social, obliging, T~ere are ,a thousand .W~, •• h:;n&treet Baptist Meeting, in London, on

a state of the utmost conftlsion-robberies of trav- noble traits about his 'character. He IS ge~erally :r~LI~'~A'M~N:i ~~:c:!~p;:e!fhth~a~ . '~h, Rev. Thorn" !on y. mi"i.", .f D~.... '''to mi. rommiuod d.ily, .. d h. bim"U ~"' hoopitohl .......... nd ariok wi.b bim, .nd b,. w'~" S~)bal~h"..xellPUlLg Church, to Miss HARRIOT ~LA.TJ:a, I .1:'

Lcotl.:.o.Lulte P/B'ibt~ickJ

" .h·',,,my .fC.;tb.",. di,d in ,'" m"" .h,,, 'w'" "'ippod .f .bot"" ...... I .. bl, .,,,' b,m, " •• m .. k on '''. ond ...... " ". of ~ .. Y".b ~h~~~~; Blater, tbe former pastor of'thlit, " Mooday, th, 2d ,I, " th, pa,ri.mh., ."" .f in h,. pMg'''' 'htO.gh Moxioo, hot wl.h.ot .. y d"b]' oomp,,"d int'''''I'' "mo \ know woI-, ~""N" M ,. Jolly w"' ,h'old", pM"h" i.~,'l" "y boi". oft'"", to hi, pot n. 1. i, th, Y"'" .,leom,. Ho will d. ISO • ki"<\n,,, 1",.",,_. N. Y .• 00 tlt, '01 ""'. by """ _, to Soo., .. d. b .. ing "'" op",01 of 'i"!.fi.. opon,"" of Mt. 'If, f""" wbot b, "'d. I"m, ,bot witho,. ''IP~~''; • t,Otf, by w.y 01 ",?mpo ... - >,beoo'. 10ft. GM~' D. Ro.Do",. " "'" . L",,,. '''' "0.""". H. _i,," hi, , • .,1"" to th. now "","m". ",n ho" noh, ,f ""'"1'" .,,-h" not" ,ritb ''''! body. l{, .. ,.'m" P._ ......... M,. J,a, M. >_" to M,. ~1Z4,t .~, I,,,. "d """h.d tog.",ly tilf wi.hi" • f,w ,,,,, .. tly, 'P""'d. '0 tho 'n."" 'on ,,;1'\"0, ~._ .Ily mo,. bon" ... d ",""""~ dioP""'l to ,.,..,g. "'k"f hi, d"lh. ""b .11 .h, ,igo' .nd "1,,,- 'h, m,m .. , '"~ b, !"I". t~ .. '\ *."~ ~"'.,11'" d"" i,o .100. •• 4 nnjlatbnn~ "'''!''og, th .. m",y '" ' .. "h 0_ •. Y., 00 ~"t1"on •.• hy Ba,. """fbi .... ,y.rr ... · Wh,atlj,. 4i'''lpti!l'' in g,"t ~h'~'f!M" ·,4 ,,,,t,, '''I"an' .... It, .\ 1 "'tlld "''\'. '1\, t<i''''''''''''' tta ~ '"'po...... :::::,~~!:;:i~~ "';::!"'. Ct.. '!' .~. ~h'''''h ,f '¥otl .. d '<!,\k "'j', .h, ,"",,,hi, th. !fund. of .h, M,,,,.... ~ u,. ~t\>elI ~~"".tlW _ tba oiifio, of ~,",,,,, add" ... " ·I~ .. , to lJ>. Obnlm,,., on 'ho. ".m'" .... ~ •• tlio lotd Of n".... ~ D 8

ubject, which :w.~ lac~DdwIJdged to bC ~be of the The D,au,phlO ~treet T~eal~:, ',l'!ew O'~DIIII m .hi. hom8!J un and grey-;-gentlemen I-~Qgh ,~ •

~h~~t~~~~fle~n'~~~~b~"tbe~~~~~.~~~:~!.a~f~J'~~l~~~O~P~~~'~n~b~U!t:~~I:~:re:m:e:':~~~::n'.~~~:h~:A~t~~~'~~~~~~P~~~~~'H~O~~~'~~~n~'~R~'~Lt'~D~~~':l[~:'~:l~:'~~~i~iii~~J " 1 h h' ..A b 6' te da 101'" <;! {O,II,,,,,u:~:O.JO!l •• o,,.1( ,. oat56f~' . ~.'~. ~~:."l~ "1""·H;~II'" 1O .• b. ~ ..... r""'r \.1 "l0"'~1 ',,!;_ ""1<, ilho plnuoo. . , .

- ... .

~ , ,

, ,-

, ' I ,

! 'j

Page 4: I , Fur the Recorder. ~i~ant,:):!

1

Sti9ttlht1t'OUS, .. it ~RARLKS SPaAaUK

tt'llilofi of the 1!1ontto!Y words WIth aei!!, it ihllll ba meted to yoll Bgam.~ LOVE 18 a sUbjett *hlch bas endreen open 10 dlscu •• on

BIltltuiti this wlJnlmg to her 8ax t from .ezebel who atnong.t penD '8 of!ll cla.ses aod of everv vatlel y of mmd wu 11Ie .hattteand destrucuon of her house 8lld famIly I and character yel artfr all there are few ~ubJect. wh ch

turn to one who 'Was an omament to her sex-to greater d fBcullles espec a\ly 10 a female wr ter I Vlr:to{IOS Shunamlte whose ~pll! liisfury nresen.ts I, bej!IU bv d,sml.stng a larg. p~rI on I)f whal IS commonlv In a of VIew every Way excellent called by Ihat name a. whoUy unwonhy of my aile t on I

TlI~~IS~:!~;~~~!bf.l~~~~~~~¥~~alfni:Uk~, south of Almo'llu, Allegaltir W C KEf<YON as Prtl1clJpal; SON as Preceptre I

anti!

Oah Norlhern 32 @ 3f Do Southern 26 @ 27

HEMP

Wd ate aU bere Father Motber SIBter Brother

pIe it mean that which ortgtnates m roere fancy without reference In the 2d book of KUlg8 4th chapter and 8t verse we th~ moral excellence of the obJect, at d If my yo ng

read thus- And It fell on a day that Ehsha passed to readers Imamne Lhat out of Ihe remalnlUg part tbey .1 all be

Teachers Classes will be exelCIsed In teachmg under the ImmedIate supervtslOl of theIr respective I IStIllctors comblwng every faclbty of a Normal School WIthout Its nsual dIsadvantages WIthin tlte past year more thau one hnndrt!d and fifty students of the InStitutIOn ha~ e been employed as teaobers In thIS and the adJilcent couutles­a number much larger than from auy other InstItUtion In

BARK Ruool. ton 170 a 180 QHcrCltron tOt 24 60a21i 00 Mahin. UO a 1426

BEESWAX. Amer de" rol PO a 1I1O

111 ~ho hold each other dear, \ ~ ~ ilhalr II filled-we re all at home $Iilghtletno cilld Itran,... come

where W88 a grellt woman and she '<ionstrallled .. · \I d I· ""U<to,t:uu"s't bread And SO It was that as ofien as he pass- able to ehclt much amusemenl I fear they WI he sap Cuba wline Ib - " 48 Do walerrot 120 a 110

American yellow 2i a 30 aIDES ed h ~.~ Wh pomteil for I am one of Ihose thaI thmk tbat Ihe mopt by he tum tn tIther to eat bre"" at a P'C tenoos aCI of a woman 8 whole I fe s to love

ture of generDu kindness to a poor llervant of GOd IS here h Id b exhIbIted I But ~ot aatiBfied with :what .he had done ,Wbat, Ihenj I would ask )s love Ihat It 8 ou be I e the State

BOTTLES B Ii &. RloG,pd,lb 11 • 12 Brlslol porler gr 8 50a!! 0\) Calclltta o.~ 65 a 76 Wmes l' 00,,8110 ~ HOPS It a Dot otien: thnw 1l'O\lIIcl.;.

and !Ike thl! mother of onr rac_ on hQsJlltable thoughts cause of some of Ihe doep •• 1 reah Ie. tn our expenence and QQr Old ramUtar he8lta we re foand :a .... , ~e!I the lPeeting and the apot For ClllCe be every c;ar:t! forgot I

Intent she saId to her husband BehOld now t per of 00 much of our mermnenl and folly 1

cem~ that tIilii 19 II holy man of Gdd wJrlch Easseth by us The reasoll why 10 mallY persona acl fooh.hly and con

Students arA prepared for entenng any clasa m College Ample advantages are alsoiecured to those pursumgMod ern Lan![\lI\ges and the Fme Arts The IDstitutlon IS !tbe rally en~owed and suppl ed wltb a cbOIce and valuaole 1 brary and apparatus 8uffiClenily extenSive to Illustrate every department of Natul'lll Phil, sophy and Chemistry It has also well selected cabmets of Geolog cal Mmera10 glcal and ConchologlCal speCInlens

BRISTLES Flrlt 101t ~~ lb ,. II i .. Petersb g lsl.ort 1 Ollal ~O RORNs

CANDLES Or 'Iillndreil K 20 a 8 ~5 I'M putle peace ~ ~power AlMlNd aifectton rule dw;hoor

Let us make a1tttle 1:halnber I pray' thee sequenll, laythetnselve. opet 10 rIdicule under lhe mfluence set foi' b'm there II bed and a of love I bellne to ongmate n the gr.nd popular mIstake Mould tallow Ib 9 II 12 90w: 1 00 II 2 00

Sperm east and clt,28 a 29 IRON We re all~U bere ,-::-:,,'~V.::""' candlestick and It shall be when or dl8ml!8mg thiS 8ubJcct from our .enous readmg and con

Do Patel ~ - ,,38 Pit Enr &Sc 31 \lOa __

Were tlot all here' Some are away-,.the !read onea dear, Wlio thiOnged WIth ua Its anclImt hearth Alid pve the hour to gt,Uleleu IJIlrth Fate, WIth a stem relentlesa hat;ld Looked In and thlDned our little band Some hke a nIght llaah plll8ed aw,y And lOme sank lingenng day by day The qUIet grave yard-llOme he there-­And ernel ocean has h18l1hare--

JE:~:~~~;~ shall tum 10 hither Doubtless lersallOr. and lel'Vmg II to the unccremomou. treatment of 0t:~~I:djrr;a~t,:~!~ trUsted In hiS admIrable hght novell, and low Jeols by whIch unnalursl 8ystero of .1 pelrmi.88i()ilitn CIil'1'Y ber plillasnphy tb",t which 10 m reahty the essence or woman •

HoW' dIfferent doea lIell If and lhe h ghe .. and hnlrest among ber c.pabll t e. p;';,rii~ti~~g her husband to bSltowed for the putpo.e of teachmg U8 how much our

I he plan of IDstrucUon alms at the development of the moral mtellectualand phySIcal powers of students so as to reuder them thorough accnrate and pracucalschola1'8

COAL Do Arner 30 501% 31110 Llv pool chal 900 al0 25 Bar do rolled 8000a __ Newca811e 7 liO a 8 50 Db Ru .. PSI 92 OOa 97 50 Anlh 2000 lb. " 75 a 5 75 Do do new do - -II 75110

COFFEE Do Swed~1 76 OOa so , 0 Israel sllrnng 1& capable or domg fo the good of pthers has become up berrovalcollBOrt to treachery and blood I of .Iy PUfPOS8 and f Ivolo • calculatIOn

Ana it feU on a day that he came thither, r!I1d he turn very expro.slon-' fall ng III love has done an m

Leotures 011 ChemLqU-y accompamed by a full course of exper ments Will commence WIth the second week of the full term aud contJDne dally to Its close Durmg the faU and wlDter terms datly lecturel! Will be gnen Ii

School Teachl~\g Lectures on N,tlral PhIlosophy As tronomy and PhYSIology llnstrateil by cxpenments wIll be given each term of the year

Java !I a 10 Do En,g COtn 62 SOa 65 116 Su matra 61 a 7 Do do refined 80 OOa - _

ed 1010 tbe cbamber and lay there AI d he iald to GEl" calculable amount of mIschIef by co veymg an Idea Ih.t It hszl hIS servant Call this Shunamlte and when pe had \I a Ib ng wh ch cannol be reg .ted and wh ch mu.t be

Iier shl' stood before blm And he smd unto hun, gIVen way to elt! er with or WIthout reaBon Persons are

Lallu ra 7 a 7'~ Slieet E &. AlIllb 5ia 61 C ba lI!a 7~ Hoop do eWI 6 OOq 5110

Were not all hel"e I·S~la"Y'«n'upw unto her .Behold thou haat been carefnl for us sa d to have fallen m loye prrclsely sa Ihey would he sa d WIth all thIS care-what I. to be done for tbee? Wo Iidst to have fallen lilt" a fever or an ague fit and Ibe warst of tholl, be spoken for to the klllg, or to tbe captain of the thiS mode of express on I~ Ih.1 amongst young people t has host 1 Elisha eVIdently thought tbat her oare had not led II) a general y .Idlng op of the beart 10 tbe first mpre. beell qUIte dISInterested but that bemg an ambitIOUS S\On a. If It pos.essed of laeU no I o"'er of ros sal ce woml!1l sha had taken thIS method of obtamIng more It 18 frpm general nolluns such as Ihese that tbe dea wealth or rank or distmcUon How then must he have and Ihe name of love bave became vulgar ;ed and degraded 1 been stnIck w th her s mple but memorable reply- I and n connect on w Ib Ih. degradat on a Bood of eVil I .s dwell amonO' my own people uttered probably m a tone poured upon that Eden of woma s hfe where the vlItues of

Braz I 6~a 7A LEAD I St Domlnl/o 5ia 51 P g 100 lb. 331\@ 3190

Wit ra fUlt all here Even they-the dead-tho dead so dear Fond m.,mory to het duty true

TUITION per telm of fifteen weeks from $350 to $5 Board per week 10 pnvate famdles $1 The entue ex pellse of the aCRdelIIIC y ear mclud~ng tUltlOll board wash ng I ght " d fuel need not exceea $60 No extr,

COT10N Bar 111 4ra> ~i New Orleans 5 a9! heet ",@ \-Alabama 5ta I J EATHER ~Sole 1

Bnn~ back their faded forms to VIew How life like through the mist of years Each well remembered face appeara

U pial d good and fine 8~a ~ Oak Ib 19 @ 2( DOMESTICS \- Hemlock IIgbt I"~@ l5 charges Illcurred SA :\fUEL RUSSEL

PreSIdent of the Board of Trustees Sh rtmgs brown i 5 a 6~ M ddle ]6 liD -Do do k 6 a 7 Heavy 13~@ l4! Do blrached 7 a 9 Damsged 12t@ 13& Do S I do 7 a 11 LIIMBEJt

We _ them as 10 times long PllSt

BANK NOTE. LIST From eachl to each kind look. are CBst We hear tlIelf words theIr smiles behold They re rQUnd U8 81 they were of old-

of lorrowfurreproacb as slla /BIt how entirely her kInd her domestic characler arc exercised ne .. had been m snnderstood by ll.il obJect Convmced Wbat Ihen 1 would ask aga n 8 love In \3 hIghest by her noble reply thai wealth or grande/Jrconld not add hoheal characler 1 It IS wo nan. all-htrwealtb her puwer to her happmess but still anxIOUS to repay hIS obbgatJOn. very be ng Man let hI n love as he n av has ever an EIt.ha says to hIS servant What then ts to be don" for eXlslence d sttnct from that of hiS affectluns He has her 1 GehszI /I answer shows that he nghtly ~ppreclated hiS worldly mlere.ts h. I ubI c characler h a amb I on h s the character of the Shunamlte and as worldly tempta compet t on WIth other m~lI~ bUI wo nan centres allm tl at

Corrected Weekly Sbeet ngs b wn 4 4 7 a 9 Boar~s N R l. 3000 1Q)35 UO Do do 54. 10 a 12~ [M fd Do bleacbed 44. 7" 12 Do Albany pl~ce 7 'ill 17 We are all he"e

,

CURRENT MONEY

We are all here Father Mother Stater Brother

[B U. of all the Bonks in the se.eral ta es nc1~ded In th. Table of Current M ney (except t1 ose spec fied In the Table of Uncerta n and Broken Ba ks) gon.rally pass n ~rdmary bll' nesa though charged by the Brakers n th s c ty wllb the dlscobnt affixe<l to tqelD 1

Do do 54 12 a 15 Plu k Gal t!Z000@25f10 Cal coes Ilue 7 a 12 [p ne M ft S

You that I love, WIth love so dear This mlly not lonjr of us be 88ld­Soon mllat we Jom the gathered dead And by the hearth we now Sit round Some other Circle will 'be found

tIons could not lure tit s wise and virtuous woman from the one feehng al d Do (ancy 6 a 14 Scanll ng p ne 14 OO@1600

Plad. -a- Do oak 30 liD 36

Oh I then that wiadom may we know Which Yield. a life of peace below So 10 the world to follow thm Milreach repeat 10 words of blISS

We re all-all here

SCRIPTURE CH!R!CTERS

B here m whIch ProVIdence had placed her he Imagmed In that SHE live. or else she has no life that the heart whICh was dAaf to the call of ambItion In woman s love • mmgl-d Ihe ruaty depencence of a mIght eagerly !taten to the vOIce of the affectioDs and he child for she ever looks I 10 lIIan as her ptolector and her lays to the prophet Venly she has no duld TbJ8 In gUIde wllh Ihe franknes. Ihe .0c.1 feel nil and Ihe Ion that ll.Q'e and country wa~ regarded as the greatest earthly h f d! hit d

-p ~ b h b th derneBs of a slsler- for 18 101 man er lie t e so IC u e aftIictlOn and was und nbl,edly felt to e suc y e the anxiety the careful ~alch nil of the molher- for woull Sbunamltfl and accord ngly wb.en the prophet assures she nol suffer 10 preservo h m from harm 1 Such s 10 e III her tbat In due tIme she shall embra.ce I/o 8QIl she IS unable II t to bellBve that snch a favor could be voncbsJlie.d b~' the a noble mlDd and espeCially m Its rst commenc~men

I i I! whel' It IS almosl nvar ably elevaled and pure ruol ng ond Most HIgh to one so nnworthy and ellc a ms m OIl'I.l!.eSi d)s/Illerested Indeed the woman who could 10 ngle low

.pmt Nay my lord thou man of God do not he unw ,ewe 1104 e~lfish calculat 0 s With her first attachment thy handmaid h would scarcely ba wo thy of Ihe name

d sc d BC

NJw England ! Monongabela Bank 2~ St 4.lbans Vt I York Bank I~ Hou8a on c R R Ct par " Y'If" ng Bank 2~

N,w York Dlilaware ~ I~ J C ty&mo.tR verbk. par Maryland t 10 I! a her Sofety Fur d ; Cumberlal d Bank 2 Do Red Backl! ~ MlUeral Bank ~ N~w JerseVI i Sall$bJlry Bank 8

Small notes W ~.LN J i D st Oolum\} a I 1 N Hope Del Br <Igc 1 Vlrgibla 1

Pennsylvania ! to Ii N W Bank of Va !! BuVthe pred chon was I1lllplred by HIm ID whom s e So far 'rom th 3 being t~h "ase ,vlth wOlilan n general I

THE CONTRAST trwrted and 10 dne tIme was graciously fnlfilled for we " .. " ,. ,. There II not \U the Old Testament & more odIOUS ehB behold her at length m the Joyful and tender capaCity of behe,e If we could look m 0 Ihe heart of a young g rl when

rtlCter drawn by the pen of 1Osp,ration than tbat of Jeze mother How that affectIOnate hear! must hav .. thrilled .he firsl beginS to love "e sheuld find the I ellleat Ie"em bel, the wife of. the weak and WIcked Ahab £rom the With rapture as she gazed on her darlIng boy aud beheld blance to w hat ~oetry ha. descnbfd as the stale of our first time ~her lirit ap:r.earance on tlie stage of actIon to that m hIm not only the pride and 80U!.<:e of ber decbrung pare ts when In Para hse which th 8 hfe eYer presents All of her mDerable eath evety thm/pn her h story 18 10 years but the speCial gIft of God and the token of hIS ap 18 then covered with al ~Imo.phcre of beauty and I1ght or perfect~p\Ug WIth the cold blooded oruelty IlDd deprav probatIOn of her character and sen ICes If ~ passlDg cloud sa I. aero,s I) e azure .ky reBecl ng , ltl of her heart There are no relentmg:s no womanly But alas how evanescent IS human hal p ness Hardly Iran3J1ory sha.dow on the scene bela - It IJI b~t 10 be swepl ftieliiig alilmng.out throullh the darknesa of cnme to 80ft has she tasted the deep JOY of a mother s heart hurdly away \:Iy the next balmv gal. "I ch lea, •• the pICture 1110re en the horror and detestlrtton With winch such a character has she learued to call the .pulled bloomIng boy m lovelv for th .. momentary I tcrrup Ion of Is sullness and

Rehef noles 3 North Carol ua Ii Carh.le Bank I if Soulb Carol na I~ Chambersburg Bank I~ Georg a IA frankl n of Wash on 2 1'lanters~k Savan h 3 Geltv.burg Hank 1 ~ OhIO ~ Harr sburg Ba»K: U Indtana LeWI<lon Bank II Stale Bk ~branches 2 Lancaster tI:o Da k I~ Kcntucky J II 1 ebanon Bank I~ '1 en essee 3: MI trs Bank 2 Cal ada 3 to 4

muat be regarded whom her hopes wCle centered hel own when he was repose Awost he~ first pubhc act seems to have been tbe mur torn from her In a moment and she was agam wr Ite Bul that wh ch COl Bututai tlje elsenllal charm of a firsl

~J ddielowl Ihnl> Ii M ch gall 3

.. derIJf11lC'propheta of the Lord But for thIS horrlbls chlldle •• We are told 1\1 the samed record that sbe Wei t attachmenl 18 liS perfeel <I s ntereslPdll1l8jJ She who enter lerift)e lIome excuae may be found m the fact that aa a up and hud tba dead body 01 ber child on the bed of tl e la ns tbls senllment In lis profou dest character I,es no b'eatben the bigoted attachment of the Queen to her man of God and shut the door and went out It woull longer for heroelf I nil Mr a.p rat ons I er hopes her Mame-Calals 10 Lafa}etle - Porllal U own religIon and her Jealousy of the claull8 of the true Beem from tl '" act that even m the first agon es of be energies lD.1I b~r noble dann!! her confidence her el thu ca tile Ii 5t (Jrolx \\ rstbrook 3 Goa, IDlpt haTe made It seem to her a mentorlOua act to reavement faIth was m full exerCIse and that sbe felt that staSID her (ortltude her own ex olel ce S absorbed by Ihe Balh Cast ne C I zens franJrfurl Georg a Lumber Co _p hlllltll'VlllIta from the earth The page or hIStory He who gave aud had taken away could Ul hl,!l own good Interests of another For heraelf and lD ber own character Globe Hal owell & Augusta Ke nebec, DidIO\\, Oxford

'til tilled mill SImIlar matances of cruelty perpetrated un nlensure restore Havlllg deposlte(l the premousremams alone she I. al the same t me retu ng meek and bumble Passamaquoddv Saco St IIwater Caoal Wash ngto Ca ,aer tilt! gtIJB8 of religIOns zeal by those who venly tnQugbt in this hallowed chamber .he set olf "n an Important aod cor tent 10 be neglecled by the whole world desp sed for Waterv lie WIll hrop WISC~sS~t Damar scotta Agrlcultu theY' were domg Goa service 10 theIr deeds of blood Ac- lOtere~Ung errand to see the man of God and inform h m gotten or conteml cd SU to that one be ng 0 Iy sbe may ai-broken ~oMiDgly 'We fuid lezebel boldly threatemng the life of of thb sad e'ent whIch had occurred He saw her COlD> 01111 be JII n all New Hampsh Tf-Concord 6 Elijah IWho m pursuance of his commISSIon 119 a mesaen mg whllo "rar off and sendmg Gehazl to her mqulred- At dis tbls a loye to be I gbtly spoken of or harshly dealt H lI.borough Wolfsborougl.-broken ~r f'roiIi God, had .lain four bnndred of the false pro- Is It well wllh dlee 1 r. t well WIth thy hllShand 1 wllb1 Oh no but It ha. many a rougb blsat to encounter Vermo t-lJenmnglon 90 Wmdsor-jlIeta She openly avows herself the protectress Ilnd Is It well wIth tbe child 1 At thIS question an ordInary yet and many an Ins droos enemy to cope wltl before It can Agr cultural Com lIerc al E~.ex Green ~our tall' Jet IITl!ll8er ofBul and h18 lymg prophe~ and would nn ChnsUBn would have been overwhelmed nnd amid burst. be .t~mped wnh Ihe seal of fa thfulncs. and unlll the ferson Bankrng Co Phe u-b oken dw~luwe made good her threata had not ElIJah es- mg sobs and slgbs the storv of gnef would have heen who can I~h the ideal from the tr/l.e 1 ¥aSSllcpuselts-Commonweallh 85 M ddlesex Ii New 'ilItiMld Fnr hialife iirat to Beerlll'-eba, "and then mto tho poured mto the propbet sear Bnt th 8 excellent womnn ID thInk I~ # from the JOery purlly and dlsln bury port 7/J Norfolk ,~~ ;l,;ri\d\mle~ this chlld l,ke bebever only ~nBWef8 It aM IJJtll When her own mottves that wo nan In cases of Berkshire Chelsea J').sex of Slllem farm & Mech

8OfV1ll1 u open enmlty, and wll1le we sbrink from the she came near to Elrsha she sald to hun 10 her agony otroni II .omcttm.s templed Ip tr~nagre~s Ibe S Adams Farm of Belchertown farm of ~PBlpn fam 'fIDdlotive and heartless cruelty of the woman we can at Did I deSIre e. Bon ormy lord 1 Did I not say do not law. of elllJuette by whlrh her co duct even In atrolr. of of Sand.tone ;Fran~1 n fullon Grey Lock Hamp.hlfl>. leut- partIy understana somethmg of the motIves by deceI,e me 1 On hearmg thIS he mstantly underotands Ihe hearl 10 sO WIsely relitr cted But let nOI the young 1,11":1:1", Lafayette Mendon Nahant Or ental Phelllx 01

2 ,he was aotttated Butm the nenaet of her hfl' th"',DI,ttrre of her grief and would ha,e sent h s servaut .,lhuSI.at bol ••• herself ).91 ped In du ng Ih. .haleoer H.olbury Sutton W I)nl. milt Wiscassct-aD plilcally deSCrIbed tn the 21st chapter of 1st KlDgs ln8 staff eVIdently 8upposmg that the chtld IIl1ght may be the nature of ber own se I menl. The re<trlclJons broken

mSlA Vll1ble bnt the most calcutatmg and fiend like thus be restored to Me But the bereaved mother would of society may probably appear to her both hBr.h and un Rhode Iall1nd-Pa./:oag It I 10 ~gllcH'IQral II) Pro v treachery'~ When Ahab, ;actuated by Borilid avance accept of no substitute and refused to laa,e the prophet callcd for but I mu.t repOb! society hUf(ood rca.ons for dence Co Ii COV!!~ thl! VJDeyard of hI. unolfendmg neIghbor and Bub till he consented to accompany her back • the rules It lays down for Ihe regulatIOn of {ernale conduct Burrv lie Eagle uf Newporl Farm Exchange Farm & j~t the ~~ rephed Impelled bY'feehrlgs both natural I will not detaIl the CIrcumstances of that wondrous re she never to forget Ihat po nts of et quette ought Moch Frankl I Prov dence SCltuate-broketl "'~ ~Ildltable to himl The Lon! forbId It me that I storaUon to life When It was complete and the delighted to be ob.med by those who have pnnc pic for ( onnecllcut-Br dgeport Exchange 1\..soc Dndgeporl _auld IP.ve the l11hentance of my fathers unto thee Bnt mother was called to receIve her son f8lsedfrom the dead Ih. Ihole who haye ot BeAldes which men who Ma.nufaeturtng Co Commercial of Tolland Derby Esgle :Abab, accnstomed to have hIS own way In aU thlnge and she took hIm up and went out-went out m 8.1ence She know ths world ~II \IIuch beller than women are close oh broken lik8 the d .. ~tlC tyrant he waR took this laudable refusal was speechless from tl e excess of feeling too deep and servers olllhese po nts I).n,d /lolh ng can le.sen theIr confi New York C. y-CI nton 1 Wash ngton 1 IO'mueh talieart thet he lay down ou hIS bed turned sacredfor utterance She bowed herself to the ground 10 dence In you more effectuallv Ib,n to tiel! you unscrupuloos Agency & Exch Chartered CJly Trust & Bal k ng Co away hia face and would eat no bread And what does grateful though mute adoration and departed to vent 111 or lax e,en n lour beha'flOur lo tbelJ;! I.I,ldlv lIu~I'y H Exchange Frankl n Frankl n Manufacturmg Co Lumber Je.ebelm:thiJ.caa81 Alas for degraded human nature I solitude berteuderness her JOY and her thanksgJVIng therefore your lover perceives thaI you are r.gardleS$ of II e As.oclatlon Ma hailan Assoc Marble Ma nufactu!pg Co _wid ofargomg WIth Abab on the nnreliiOllableness of But the favor of the Lorcitowards the Shunamlte was lDJur.cuons of your parenls or guard ans even for hiS Mech E;~ch Co Mafth.uan Bank ng Co N Y r·~ go 011 WIIhel-wtead ofremmdlDg hIm of the vnst extent not yet to cease Durmg a periOd of famme she was sent tbough poss,bly he may feel gratified atlbe mOlDent yetI IS & Dom E~ch Co N Y Loan Co N Y Bal kt g C6 o~hu poP8mons and the comraratlve poverty of Nabotb by the spectal prOVIdence of God mto tlle land of the oplOlon8 of your pnncIples Will evenlually be lowered whtle NYC ty North Rll(er Banklpg Co U S Exch Co-alle .. y. to hlDl In the unfeelingseUiJhne.s of conscIous Phlltstme8 for seveu years and upon her return found hiS Irust ID your fa tlt~ Iness w II be equally lessened broken power! I 'Do.t thou now govern the kingdom of IsraeH her house al d land had passed from her into other In speak Ilg of the e luencs. the deptb and Ihe d swter New York SW--Alleghanv Co 52 &. 3Q Amenca • I or ill oilier worda May not a gflltify to the full As an unknown petitioner she came to the IHn~ es edne.s of wo, an s love I would not for a momont be Buffalu 26 B nllhsmlon 23 & 28 Callaraugus Co 17 &. alllijJ wishes, however • She then adds, for Justice Just at the time that Geh= was talk ng With d I h d h t 25 Oommerce of Buffalo 26 Commerc al of Buffalo 25

"'b' ........ ', eat brelUl and for I will the kl'"g of all the great events of the prophet s hfe And supl osed to class un er t Ie sams ea I at precocIous en I f 0 35 CI C C !lriee t1ie 'fIDeytiid .Gerud: sBld My lord 0 kmg I thiS IS the woman and to fall to love wb ell ~ome young lad es encourage ~mF~~~claof 0 Sen:;:g~o 28 i'~~~ t9 3: ~neLy~n.303~

• L-b whOle Imbecility and~~~~~dl~;~~~E~~I18 her son To Iched w,th the strange comcldence and under the Idea of Ite being an amiable weakness Never IS A1W f L!_ 1 ~ tbe character of a woman more despIcable th~n when sbe Merch Exch of Buff 21 &; 37 Mech of Bult 39 MIllers

_."IIIlt.O IllII he seems to penetrated w th admualton of the cbaractel of the Shn k Y of Clvde 8 Olean 15 & ~8 Oswego 15 Phen x of Buff ":'I_.ta .l- allfdance of hiS namlte the kmg commanded the Immediate restoration of .toops to I lead her wea ness as a mer t et .0tIIB co 0 fJ k 1\T Y f B a' 75 S I 70 & 52 -' ""!i/ ",... ~ I h b II t f I It I~ ImpOSSible for 2g .. tate an If. 0 Uu, t awrence lJlibleea Sbe 8i:cordm-ly wrote all her estate together WIth payment of all arre81'11 from pan t al t ey are nalura y so gra e u n k f B If' U f B ff BDd sealed them WIth &18 seal saYIng; the day she left the land until that Ume Ibem to res sl tbe nlluence IIf ku dnass and thus Ihey fall '&~~;~::ta 3~ We!ern aN V ~7f'i:I:~IIt:~0~ 0 u 21 U d..at Naboth on hIgh \among the I can only glance at one or two POInts of contrast m the n love perbap. wllh a worthle~8 man perhaps w th two h hI)' fi ~

I b h h b k dl treated [Where t ere are two price. 10 t IS sl t,,~ rat 18 .or him be pUblicI: accrued before hves oflhese remarkable women thongh mUch mlgntpro- men al once simp y ecause I ey ave e.n n Y SecunlY notes and Ih. second fpr aeal ESlate and Stoc~ 'iIlS,1l fUt alie Impreued the filably be saId upon the subject and their luJ.m are no! capable of reslstmg: k ndness rlty nOles,l I ,I lMili.t<tli&t lO,"e greatwlckednesa No warmnOR nor threatenlOgs of DIVIne vengeance not Wo lId that such puen e suppl ant. for Ihe char ty Ihey III C ty of Buffalo CI nlo ManofactullDg Co Columb a 'l'lhldi, nmeu ioleiimly explllted w.ould brmg down even theIr fuYiilment m the appallmg death of her hus- deserve could be made 10 understand how many a carreet Commerce of Byff Etch of PoughkeepSie Urecne Co tlDejit'dgm8nta on tlie City Then on ~e appoInted day band WIth Its attendant CIrcumstances had power to and prudent woman woul4 haye goOI! mconce vably farther Hudson Mecb & Traders OneIda Co Pla~tsburg 'wash Nab01IrmUit be seIZed and men of Belial ' snbornell brIng convlotlOll orrepentaIlce to the unbehevmg beart of than them ID gralilude and generous feehng had not right mgtiln & Warren Buffalo-broken I iD~iliatlie 'had blasphemed God lI,1Jd tI!e king - the proud Jez~bel but the faith of the Shunamlt& re- prmclple been made the slay of her conduct, and the arbller New Jersey-Franklin Hoboken BanklD~ Co Jersey 1'lie:pfbtwuBiifully laid and lucceed~d only too we'1l JflalDed firm 1D the severest tnals because sbe trusted 1D of all her actions Love whicb ames oUI of mere weaknes~ City Man faclurers Mecb of Paterson Monmouth Mor cma1'ic:t8cl~n pel'Jured testimony like Bome sulferel'll of israel s God The one exerted all her mfluenoe aa a IS as eastly filed upon one object as llno~her and conse rls Canal ~ Bankll g Co fum & Mech of New Brul S

ClurO,vn ume. themnocent Naboth was sentepced to "lie ~oman and a Qneen to draw her husband and)ubJects quently 18 at all lIme8 transferrable tbat wblch IS governed Wick New BrunswlC~ N J Manufactormg & BanklDg ..roiUIdtAJ death, and hlB property confiicated and th,ua and the polluted atmosphere m whlcli she moved oy pr nc pIe how much has \I to suffer yet bow nobly does Co N J Proteclton &; Lombarl! Salem & P htladelphla IliWwvtited VIneyard became the.preyof Ahab to the growth of every thmg pure lovely or of It survIVe all tlill f Manufaclur ng Co State Bank of '}lrentDn Wl1shmgton

Btlc the wrath of the Lora was mdled ;BgBInat 'lte gull ~ood report The other on tbe contrary leads the way I have Bald that woman s love al least all whlcb deserves Bankmf( Co -broken "tJIIt, and'tetnbfu was tile meaaage sent th~m by the In every !l0od word and work and by the calm content Ihat name '8 almost Olveroally exalted and noble In ItS com Penll.yl'Dama-Berk. Co 75 Far & Drovers of mouth of Thua IBlth the Lord In the pltlcll and WIDnlDg sweetnesa of ner character seems to have mencement but that sl]H It wanlS Ita highest attrtbute Wavr esburg 6 Gtrard 20 Lumberman s 90 Susquehanna

\~1~Sta;~~~~~:~ blood of Nabotlr. shall dOEI lfck diffuaed peace and JOY all around her Jezebel becatIle untIl iI. falthfulnesB bas been eSlabhshed by temptation and 50 U S Bank 3S WeBt Branch 15 and of Je~ebel IUO lIpake the every day more OdIOUS m the SIght of God and man Bnd Irtal Let no woman therefore boast of her cl)nslancY Agricultural '\lIeghany Beaver Cllv Centre Exch .h8ll eat :Tezeliel by the wall of filially closed her career unpltleo unlamented byadeath unlll she bas b8l'n pUt to the leot In speak g of fa th ul Bank & Savu gs Ins Far n &: Mach N Salem do

none to her 10 aWfnl that Imagmation could never have conceIved oe.s I am far from sopposmg It to denote merely the te a Greel castle do Pittsburg Farm & Macb Sa~ ngs Inst il'A''',,'''fthe It 18 8a d c Iy of adh~rlDg to an engagement It IS easy to be true to Harmony JI at Huntmgton JUniata Lancaster Co Ioall

• WHO 18 1. GENTLEMAN'

an engallement wh Ie false 10 the md v dual With whom It IS CO Man al Labor Maf)eUlI &. So~,!,_ Tud ng ( 0 Morch of contraete(\ My meanmg refers to faithfulness of heart and Palla Moch P IlIsburg ])I Salem .!iprtherl , Norlhampton thl. has many tr als 11\ Ihe common tolercourse of 80C ety N Western Penn Say ngs Pelln Agncul &. Manufac ID the lIaUeryand attentions of men and ID Ihe fickleness of Ph la Loan Co do Manufac Co do Sav ngs Tnst POLS

female fanc), dam Manufae Co S Iverl akc SJuthlVark Savings South To have loved fa tMully Ihen I. 10 have loved with wark Savmgs Southern Loan Co l;iwatar. TaylorSVIlle

smglcn"ss of heart a d sameness of purpose through all Del Bndge Co Towanda Umon Bk of Penn Washington the temptatIons wh cb s~c ety present. and u~er all the Weslmureland Wdkesbarre Bridge Co Youghogany- brQ assaults of va tty both from wllhm and wlthotlt:\ It IS so ken pleasant to be admlred and 80 soothing to be lovedythat tbe Dtlaware-J !urel Willnmgton Loan Co -broken grand tnal of female constancy Is not In alId one more con- Maryland-Balttn ore & Oh 0 R R Co 20 Franklm 10 quest to her trtumphs where It IS eVidently In her power 10 Carol me City Cohen CommerCial of Bait do of Mil do so and therefore her only protectIOn 10 10 restra n the hngton Connacheal!ue Elkton, Ftrm & MIllers Havre de first war der ng thoughllhat might even le .. d berfa cv utray Grace Maryland PlaDlors Bank of St George s Co Som The Ideas whIch commonly float Ihrough the mmd~f woman erset & Worcester acd branches Susquehanna Bridge Co

so rapid and so ,"dlstlnCllv defined tbat wben tbe door Susquobanna-broken to luch thoughts tbey pour In like a torrent Then DOl/riel of Columbia-Alexandria Frankhn MccliaDlcs

WIll allse sOme new percepllon of defiCiency JU the ob Merchat Is Bank of Columbia Ce Iral-broken Jeet of her love or soma addltlon,1 ImpreSSion of hiS unkmd Georgta-Central 20 Central R R & Banktng Co 20 ne.8 or neglect w It Ii comparisons lietween hIm and olhers Augusta Bridge Co Belfast MmIDg Co Chattahooohle and regret that be h •• not_oole quality whIch Ihey possess R R & Bankmg Co Columbus Dallen and brancbe • sadness under a conVictIOn of her future deslmy pmmg for F u Bank of OIlattahoochl~ Ha,(,kmsville Macon Merch sympatby under II at sadness and laolly the com mel ce de Elanttrs , Monrue R R de Banking Co Ocmulgee, Phe ment of some ot~er mllmacy which at first she h .. no Idea nrx Planter. & Mach Western-woken

S r pes f.st colors - a - T mber oak <u ft 25@ 37 Satmels 45 a 75 Do Ga yel plUe 35ra 40 Checks 4 4 8 a ]2 Sh I gles c'j Mil OO@14 UU Cotton) am 5 13 15 a 16 ,Staves w 0 l liO OOlQ)53 00

Do 14]9 - a 20 I' pe M S Dp 20 23 21 a 22 Do do bbl 28 00ra30 00 DRI as AND DYES jP.o r osk hhd 21i OO@2600

Aloe liJ 8 a II H+adlng w 0 4000@45 0 Alum S~a 4 Hoops 25 00@30 UP Arrowrool J3erm 3p a ali I fltPf..A(S5~~ llnf!lstpl ~ ftprspl 2'1Z a New Drlealls gall 21@ !lorn 16 a l~kSI'Crolz 30@~1 Oal11rhor ref 62~d 66 lTrm.dad puba 2Si<i>29 Cream of Tartar Hia 144 Havana "'M~t ~;ftB ~5@2fi Cochmeal 1 40 a 160 1 N;\.ILS Coppera> 14a Ii Cut 4d" 40d 4i@ 14 Flor Chamomile 16 a 1. I (3d 10 and 2.1 ~c mle) G nscog 30 a 33 1" rought 6d ,,20d 1 @ 12& Gum Myrh J2ia Iii IHorseshoci No 7s9 I e ~9 Gum Shellac a a 16 NAV AI STORES pp ~ppa) I"P,lted 35 (l 42 Tar bbl 143 @ 1 fO

Do A robac f~ a il6 1"1 cit I l~@ 1 26 Jalap 60 a 65 )t1l,ln ti~a~ ~O, Madder 12 ~ III TurptW top,flfHO @2U Magi cSla calc 51i IiiJ 60 ISptrllS Turp gall 32 'ill :i4 pll (:aslpr ~all ll(l @ pn S Ot! AAI. 1 70 ~ OlIVe 11~11 113 (ji! 16 011 Pepi erm t L n.eed AI"Fr 73 @J 75

Ib 3 00 fiV 3 5~ Whalp 35 @ fI OpIUm Turkey 3 00 IiiJ 3 50 Spertn fall 9/1 @ -Rhubarb E I 35 @ 65 Do w n er gli @ (17 Sal ~er I U8 ~alfiJ fJWVISIONS Sarsop ,II. Hon 26 fiV 30 Beef me •• I hI ~ 611 @J ~ pp Snakeroot Va 15 fiV 16 Do prime "50!iiJ f, hp Sel18 E r 7~@]0 Potk meaa bbllO 00 I/i!/025 SI gar Load 10 fiV 13 Do prlIDe 7 85 <li /3ul ~Utl ne oz 3 50 fiV 4 00 BuLtet I t me 16 @ 1~ Tarlar C Ac d Ib 118 (iiJ 4p IIp order 10 ~ood9. I/i) I" Verd gr s 21 fiV 22 Hog" lal~ Ii! p ~ YI~ 01 bile 8 IiiJ 8 Cbeese Am Ib 1\.. B!

PVEWOODS Hams smole~ 11< a 7 J3ra~llIel 0 1011850 1iiJ20 00 ~AGS Camwoou lUi 00 1ii75 00 Leghorn F osl c /Cuba 26 00 r.il28/l0 Trte~le po Tamp co 18 00 fiV19 00 RIPE

Logwoud Cpv 2700 1iiJ28 00 lOP Ib~ 215 a a ~fi fEATHERS SEEPS

Foreign Ih I~ fiV 24~ P over Ib '1 a 8 Amerlcal J, ve 27 I(iJ III 'fll'llotby V bu lp 00 all PO

fISH Flu rpugh liSP ap~ pp Dry Cod cwt 2 46 fiV 2 ~2 po clel\,D Dry scal" t ~5 tj» 1 liD ~TEEJ. Pickled Cod, G~rJ1l~n II> 10} ~ 13

bbl II 50 Iji) 3 '15 EnglIsh boop J, IS "Ia P cklrd Balmon Tr "sle I~ bpx~s 6,"

tc 1~ 50 @ AmerIcan 1\ • ,lSoIolled Salmon SIlrmg lila i

9 IiiJ 10 SUGARS St Crulxlb

12 50 IiiJ 12 75 New Orlear s 11 5(1 Iji) ~2!11i Cpba muocovado

No 3 bbl 6 50 fiV 6 75 Porto RICO Sbad CI hfbl 687 $! 6 Op lIav~na wIllIe Ducksp I do 7 00 @ IS 00 Do Brown Mass do @ Loaf

7ja B 4 (> ~ 6 a 6 .,. a 7! ~l" I! Ill,. BI

11 ,. III Her ng pick dS 50 IiiJ 42" SALT

Do seele box 50 IiiJ Turks 101 bu.h !:4a Do No I 30 IiiJ LIverpool ground Do No 2 20 IiiJ Do do !8ck 1 10

a

FLAX Do do line 1 31i 8 IiiJ 11 SOAP

Am~flc~n 8 IiiJ 8~ N York brown Ib 3~ a 7 fRJJI!l' pa'l1le ~£ a P4

Ra SOlS Sun csk 7 62@7 75 SfICE13 Do bu ch box 2 SO@2 25 CasSia Ib nJa 17.

Currar Ip Zante Ib I(l; aj Cloves 26 ~ 27 C tron Genoa 151iiJ 16 Gmger race 61a 6' Almonds soft sh II 151iiJ 16 NutmegB No I I 10 a

Du shelled \ 17@ I7! Pepper Sumatra 11 Fig. So vrna 91iiJ 1 J PImento JamAIca 14 Prun.s Bordeaux 81iiJ 14 TALLOW

FLOUR AND MEAL Amerlcau 6! II 7i Genesee 4 68 IiiJ 475 TEAS Troy 4 62 IiiJ " 611 Imperial Ih OhiO via Canal5 00 @ 5 25 GUf powder MIChlgil 4 62 a 4 68 HyftoU PhJ!.del,hla 4. 31 (l VpunlllIy,pn Bait more 4 50 fjJj H)'lIon .km R chm d c mllls5 68 IiiJ 575 Soucbong Brandy ... u e 475 IiiJ TIN Rye Oour 3 37 IiiJ :I 12i Block S Am lb a Indian Meal 250 @ 2 68 I Do E IndIa 16 a 17

Do per hi d 11 87 fjJj 12 1'10 n plate. i X box 9 00 " GRA.rN WOOL

Wheat" & NY 90 @lpp Am 811 fleece Ib 42 a 43 Do Soulb !lew po Pll rollllno 37 II 91

Rre Norlhern 66 @ pulled ,upcrnne 36 a 31 Com N & Jersey 50 f(i;::i0 No l 34 I' 20

SoutHern 48 @ 4'i No ~ \15 fl 2p Barley N R @

~~t .9nbbntl) Bt(orbtt, IS PUBLISHED WEEKL1 AT

NO.9 SPRlJVE S~BEET,NEWYOR"

TERMS

of converttng mto love OhiO -Com n Bank of Lake ErIe 35 Far Bank of Can /Such IS \he manner JD ",hleh In thousands of IDslances ton 50 Hamilton 3D, Lancaster 25, Mtaml En Co 50,

the falthfulnels of woman 8 love has been destroyed and Urbana Banking Ca ISO destroyed rar more effectually than If assailed by an open Butler Co Cmclllnau CircleVille new Cleveland Exch a d apparently mOfe formidable foe And what It wreck has Bank & SavIDge Inst do Salem ~Far & Mecb of Cmcl\I followeil t for when a woman lose4 her IDtegnly and self natl Galhorol s German Ba Ik of Woo~ter GranVille AI

~:~~Ii~~f~l~~~~j:;l~: r ... pect shit '" mdeed pllJable and lfegraiIed While ber ex n Socletv llamllton Co HamIlton & RosmUe Manufa\: o falthfulneas rllmlllos unshaken It I' trile slie I'nay and Co Jetferson KIrtland Safety Soc Lebanon &. MlalDl. Co.

bably "'III hue much to suffar bot let ber parlton tn Mansfield Mal hsttan Mech Savings Insl Much &; 'J)a Me be whal It may she will walk througb Ihe world with a ders Monroe FilII. Manufac Co Ohm R It Co Orphan firm anll uprlgbt step for even when ~olttary she 18 not Inst Owl Creek Platt & Co s Stark Co Orphan 1nl\ degraded II may be called a coli! phtloaoph' 10 speak Sleubenvllle lTnton Excb W8sbmgtop West UOIon 'Ntist .aucll con.olatJon bam\!, avatlable under Ihe suffermg ern Reserve Fdrm Banlung Co Zallesvllle Canal & 'Man artlel ".om unkmdne .. , and de'Brtton but who would ufae Co -3l1Jken Tltber be Ille 0 e to bear ,nJury _hair tlie one to m61ct It! Vtrgt1\Za~'VtrgJDla Saline Welteru Bank of Va lna the very tcl orbelrlng It meekly and reverenlly &8 from nongahela Farmers Co -broken tbe haild.lIf~.Ii .. i"p!lrlf1m~ arid .olemmlmg effect upon Indaana-all except State Blnk and braucbes-hrohll the loliril :wilteD 'tho! falthlm ud \hjj lickl. never Mach,&,alt-Mtcbljlan «< llftnrh 8\1 Ilpirl'JlCf