7
| T T H i i HOUSE, -l>le S l o e l c . ' T ^ . iu.ij ^ UNIVERSITY irfraesbQTO, Tana. * FACtlLTTr- jl. "5 ii-2 T'-iaiir " - C" " " ' i i * ' " * fee Witiaai j s y y i - ? - i tftnrclr,. Mdj^ Mf w i s : r i? '•»««»«. <a S S to i iirraoBTOnt, «p7He»HB« idnnt» «— Kwa-ii: Icf-nuuitia. Bt*T -.f ttn- r»>nftT I'WEIWITY, TEXAS. ^ K t a n u L o u l»—rill«t li iti ^ ft'-fiAKB L«rtt.Tfii.- Kr wflih^SSI n^T, » ftrii ^ »«l«i>««i to R a ^ rrwifMo*. tis.ra , amBtli in K r r i a c . BCELBHDjr^B X U P n E E t i c l O B J U H fjrCHT PTTBUSHED. •. nir r-rwft «£ sr. wtM pjf^ LWAi't h tT»- ifTuttrir-1 tic!^^ .1 jl-. .nm .A^iit^, ^RUtl-. . i ird . u. I't-Wirt.iT " . Nnt • f l ^ J onmi.: -K.prj.:. .•^•virt " la»r-r"f ITai-r, Htel^imar.iMoks.30-' |nw l-Sia^wUS ao ^uiu ua " » tB-t ,rj> 1*, -t-ing. cBr itcwtriai " t Rnnr' ~.mimaiiik >. Bnja rj, JClatoi. W •• f ai. _„.iCmfe-i -B) u SniSICAL EiaSITHLV TO, . 'nJIi ..ia* <•! etfac i t rh:!ca SvvIIarie: TC^ u ,c I ti ra. . B'.jrtte in *?t<*t tma V •wmtfArOirta,;; HaruMm V »i»4«auw- ^tavut. IB n. lia jr Uis^, au I «ui. _-D»ak4. ^ V*. •^IW;, J..,-." .Wiflt-r 1 St ;-jtt»rii».. I Bar.-rH- «ltl»«fcUc.-IU " ^nket.ar'-f .'••rtt'Soi'- ocOar.M .Ciakri. M ' l ^fcvki?. ,Si c-tMtM Ur t-i'! HhiiUUt, or tin <-r(5jnn StdP Paha«TT«rttT jr. I.. FETBH«, :ERSO.\ METHOD >R REED ORGANS. LUri» Ci hrcliua uf (.lux^ i^rgjui Mimr aa ! T. H. JIj^IUm-*-.. 4 attmnni af lifn**, f-m h»T». fr^ff'-irM s r1v*»inll «*- .ft I d «ntj mtwit iraiA cumat bil-.W her -« J. - luiratr ui !>t ^tsXtuitfMM. >Lj>, R i v e r of Life. Uh*^ Trrno'tni^o t*? - 'frfri[3r'»Hco of tixto lUmt^ftc:itniL Book* wtddl I tx-r I tii k »« anu^* |Tt »i I r-1 ^Ht iiT-Jf.t rscjj. i tr H^biil pnc CP st^. loRGAN AT aOM£, l»r t l t ^ f i i t>TTr-iiif», S - - 5 0 . ?nt«-ie l a t t m c t o r f t r R r e d Or»m«« far P.aiioftrMt. rjr Vlolla. i. i t'. infar liMi^i, wQiei r3A5 H-BIXSQiriCa, 7Tl ar »<l«tiijr tarJu l i a x * aSAL.T CMtictgo. THHEE BOOK B A P T I S T S . I.. «BlI « Cr-mpfrt* h.iile Mr i;' . r-r til- o-«ip 'fi' fls' a » Uniout «»u aifcr I to bi» witSuW* sr a» t as 1 3 f r f. 1. c H-ij.-^- [ ' c t f r n T n r i o y . •«• rf«'.-» g.ri»»-4»i.il P - »» J^l rr. f. D^ p—OT!' 1 K i a i US' H I P r i » a . v m j lEsl n-'itlui*. Thi. t-Mlipp |w;i;ii!i I- Ui f Ewti'aJTr I Wii ujuM S piwa I t -CTBemamfjWf I canil-nii*Bir <c,iiit«f.uo« tituB «n- r^ittna I •rcaiirctie*, Uit»»- l««>k% «"U wtfh whBTi yoa talxM", wt* _ n-.» UMT't jna^ e—ap-TTa -B ra .aeanaK .•r^iiK to Ua 'hormsit emaTM««)t. u J » in the Iuia(t> nf th. mMrt' t a<<.l«. H r M Hnrii: B»ik«. m<l whrt- ^ »y B>ni«-*r>, itarinn. ciarafc^ «n4 S w IfBr—lii^J »t p«£ili«i.trt' pnM. Git»iiH»"* — Wnnti^d- L ifij; c^- 111 aJi-rr* G£tK B. STETEHS * CO^ CtarfuMtt. . WANTEB'^JK^ilv ; •r VaisUr \ jrnm». with BitU* DteooBMT. h-r-f i«r»t Litr^fTir.. Fact. ' mduotmt. taimmt Pmtriagto.gag t mni ii^mtiptm ein^ma m*. j- [ BIHUI 4S1) PmiSHTO IMS*- ngattiMan—st^Wi*'^-, .i ISfire Cure far Caterrh. • r a rrtJ«ri««r«rte»d to KWlSrM hplfe* tai. t r •KlHiajJJ^ joiM "m.' 'KmomA^.,^ - - a^tawg^ifcinwi—--..jit EaY F O R •'•Bete CMtHdiP, THE BAPTIST. j;B.aKA-rKS, t I , , *au«r.lo-CliI«li B B S i n ^ OiteMd A^mUfli* D3irt>«'l. /.jecgATSa.*,^: : : : ; .... atjCwrier. EUITOKIJU. GOBPSr Ed- 3t p. toWKEY. Ripley, lliis. E i . 6EQ. W. GaiFFIJt, G«Ii«i«. Teaa. E i . J. IL VOOD; Bttrawflle, Gat, COXTRXBtPrORS : " EXd-T. T.EITOS; KMtTenMwet. , £<1. G. JOaSSOA'. Teiuawn'. EM. J. T. COBX£T. Otanf^ XU. L. H.8T0SX. ilMbama. E i J. J. D. BZSTBOE, AI»iaia». EU. J. F.LBKKS, AUbwa. W aMfaMM oawj, CT fci« Stteet. ItapkU. teaa. I v . : Stand ye In tho ways, and see M d aakfar the old paths, which are the good ways, and walk therein, and ye s h ^ find n e t ft>r yoor sotUa-VwwiiBA. O l d S e r i e s — Y o L XXX. MEMPHIS, TEM., SATURDAY, JULY 19. 1873. New Series—YoL YI.. No. 44. A FOBS OT SOlj!!n> WOSBS. naSerlpcuva. L Hie0ki»iidKwrT«rtKn«it8 »remwrit- UHi by meo divinely iaaptrad, and eoatiun «k« ftaD aad final rer«Imtioa of wffl to man. To seek ftnx^ "apiriti" toprrfcto Uxe unreTealed thinj^ ia in the Bi^t'of God Mt&eiiaofrebellibn snd iritcIiGnfL Xhe Hew Testament is the perfect rnla of &tth and practice for C&rafiuiai I Tim. IB. !«. « L H ; UL 14. Lok* xxW ti f«tta XiT. io. TiO. ao. 2. There ia only one God, Belf^eiistent, in- fiaite in everr natural and morai excellence. HehaareTcalediiinuelfuthe Father, and the Son (or the WordX and the Holy ©hoet, tiie same m rwpeot to Diyine esaence, what- mr dwtinrtion there may be in some re- tpeeU, .[•.xlT.Xl. a J«r. Z. life Sx. to. U. Be«». tL 4; xiail. 4. Pb. xxxTi. 5. J«ha t. 1, 13. Bom. u . 6. i n^iU.11. B.T.LJ. Obfea xjT.ai;rT.M. AcaT.3. «. ULU. l(aM.X(Tm. 19. Til* Fall. X Man was created holy} bat, by wilful diaobedience, f«jl firozn that state; became BOEally defiled, and begat all hk children in his likeness; henoe, by nature, there k in •BBO-hoUnev; hat i*e aze aU.iaelined to Mil; and, all are chOdrea of wrath, jn^ly exposed to death, and other misOTiesj t-ampo- rai, spiritual and emrnal. On. L S, SI; a. M, Wrm. 1, (. Ecdu. »it. S. Sa«.T.I2. Spb. 0.1. iMk. XTta. 19^ UK B<w. Tfl. O. Ur. rtil. W. I M s L t. Koai. »». lalTmtira. " I. ctujmfi^ iOifsnj^ ko^^&l^ lUta of gniit and ceademnation, is throagh ricarioua snlBMg;of Christ, the JDirine Son ^ of God, who inSnicnloo^y took ripoii' him our flesh, and Whean; Sodhath setTorthto be a propitiatmn thn»|^ faith ih his blood; hafing " to lored the wodd that he gaVe his j OQ^ b^otten S ob, that whosoerer belieTeth' ia him shoiiVI sot perish, bet have ererlast- taC h f e " i ' . M b L U . Lnk»i.M,afc Acta I t. I t Sma. m. JakmmU, : z . ".Vl}. . -- A j U I who traly beiiere and o b ^ tte w e r e d o s r a in Qirist "befera the L «f the world" by him iriio sees tteend&omthe begtnninf; and in conse- qwnee, not of their ewn merit bat of 6od>. "Fear Sot, for I am With BT UBS. B6XT MOEOAS.' " Fear not, llwBgh Sniows radiTy dssh, "Ani bcisterous winds ineressel Ibattgh thuAders roll with des&ning crash, Aad bghtniags send their blinding iash: In Jesns thers is peaw. Fear not amid affliction a fire, When ^ h l y joys dsereast; Thoflg* tlme-"bem comforts all expire, Ihy SaTior only draws the nlgh«r, A&I with !um there is pMce. Oh! Uin the sehing heart would cling To some fond earthly bliss, And twine aioond that cherished thing, Forgetful of the hea-reB-tanght wing, That upward soars f«r peace. Bat strong is love when bom of grief. When Sorrows f u t increase; And thus that Christ may be the Chief. He takes away all earth's relief, And so is all my pease. And if th« presence of his love Seem for a ifhile to cease, Still thank his name who reigns abo>n. That he has tanght tby>eart to pro re WithoBt him ia n> peace. And when his roloe shall bid thee higher. And giTS thy soul's release, . Then shah thoajoli^on waitiag choir, .4nd joyful strike the golden wire, For Jescs* —B-jptiii Uuiaru Ibeliere mtk. ^ 4. u. irM. iflc^'Jste m. i s: r. ii, ti. - l f. JsBM L U John r»t». EpS. n. loi. Tlia P n i ix-rati«& oC Batata. S. yoihing can separate true benerers m m (He lore of God; but they will be " kept by lie power of God through faith unto •uratkm." the sure and final oroof of th«r heinf trae belieTers consisting in thecon- ttauaBce of their attachment and obedience toChmt till the close of-life. I Fat. !. T. Jatm X. XT. 29; Tiii. JU Ool. 1. 3 , 2J ••k-ia-H. lC»X=siT.U. IMa^lX Xl»« C b v c b . T. A Church of Christ is an organlzid "rocstion of persona renewed by ihe Holy ^ f t j baptiaed upon a confession of nnioa jra Chrat, and corenanting to witness the fcthand keep the commandments of their price H ^ Tc hia church alone Christ haa committed tL-e preserration of his Mspei in its parity, aad the promulgation of it to all men by niaiatera bearing its com- sisa^cn. Tiu-ii Eph. i. 2» Tba OrdiauecB. a. The ordinances of a Christian church iTB Baptism and the Lord's Supper. Baptism d the iiamersian of professed beHevers in Christ, not in order to the nmitaaa of sins, but to declare their death tossd freedom from m; and is a prerequisite to the preaching af the gospel, church membership and com- emnion at the Lord's table. These ordi- naces belong to t ^ church, and should mly admiiuBtered by her officers to those «*t deems ouaHfied to recd^re them. Articipation in the Lord's supper should be canned to i2iememb«diip of each local •httrcoj pr to those memoes of other Anrcheasp^cally invited by it—their &th ttd walk being avouched as correct. the supps. ho more th'*Ti baptisia, may be adsiinatered by ministers te^ose whom they deem qn^ified. ««tt. 1£1. «, B ; xxTiiU 19. ao; xjyl. Vt, I Cc^. Ja. Acta tIH.U, ar. B<ar -.i. 1. U. 0>\. 11. 13. I m . tii; » . Act* u. sr. 9. The first day of the ifoekk be observed •s the Lcrd's day, or Chrirtian Sabbattj. loha I I . M, :«. 1 Cor- iTfc-l, V-Aeu zz. T. Err l-CJt . J . ^ Tb« Raawneetln oOIu HJcbtcsva, in There will b«: a resurrection of the lighteoos dead prior'to QS^ advent of Christ, who, with the,Jbin|f s a i ^ wffl be changed ia a moment, ^ d r o u a ^ u^ tn meet the I«rd in the eir, to appear with.: him at hk eoning and jndgrfwnt Ind ^onuihment of the persecutii^natiena. ^ ' OMt.zuia.>. IS. z ^ xw. s. R<S.LS,12. Jod^iT.S^ iac.XT. S1,SS. T ^ WII—jjlsm rr ^ At the comlB|p>ffihrist he-irill judge >od destroy t h e T i a ^ s tint haite peraecn- tsd hk people,^^:^hBaaelf alC dominion « rale, and, stttij&npfil the thsone of hk uoer, Dsrid, jgi Jstliirfli iii as~Xing and niat, win nde with ISb saint* over all tttiou for one I h o m n d years, c »•«. UTsl ^utx. xxt^JB, 4«. lur. ««.1,T. It.tCT.-I^S: Ixitf.!^?. Pa. Itr LakaLSL I>ts.t.t. i<Mii3, ajCliv^u. rvciux. lat'ta-n. lUtt. Bx.BjxxT.M. &xiWta.t:;' - Tk« HaavlM vC tk« ^ ifiwini oat of Mfm vxtii tt flte^Md Ui taberaade •OltaBitk tWifc'®^ WHO ABCTUE PKIAirrt'E B-IPTI-HTS- THC XUSIOS-ABT 9K ASTI. XIKSIOXAJtT? (JESfija:. rettiw op avsihcat mrnsrs We have found that, more than two hund red years ago, on American shor^ there were a few churcbesof the "sect everywhere spoken against^' They were generally, in that day, called .Anabaptists. To be an An- abapUst in ^at early period was to be hated. But with a eourage worthyof themen—yea, more, worthy of the cause for which they ple^—did Clarke, and Hohnes, and Knollys, and Roger Williams (for he rendered the Baptists efficient aid) reskt the usurpations and t^e tyranny of the Cangrsgationaluts in New England; and Lewis Craig, John Waller, James Chiles, and many others of the pioneer Baptists the encroachments, persecutions, and nmcriptural demands of the Episcopalians of Virginia. These wit- nesses for Christ and his truth endured fines and imprisonsaents i they were whipped like dogs and criminals, and, in some cases, banished from their home?, and made to traverse wild regions uninhabited, except by ferocious animah and wild men; all for the kisgdom of heaven's sake. Thus d-d our fathers labor, and toil, and suffer, that they might plant Baptlstprinciple^ upon the now r:chly adorned and highly cultivated shores of the American continent "In the name of the Lord did they set up their banners," and deep down into the virgin £oil of th« wild man's home did they plant their flig stafi; around which they and their descend- ents have successively rallied for more than two centuries. Upon that banner is written in prominent letters the words " Soul Free- dom." And many a hard fought battle for the principle contained in its motto has that old flag witnessed. "All men," s^d those Baptist fathers, " have an inalienable right to worship God according to the dic- tates of their own consciences." The recog' nitioa of thk prindple they kept steadily in view; and to st^ated, they depended not on tke " strong arm of the secular powers," but they went abjut with the Bible in their hands, and iu p r ^ p U on their tcngue^ and, by these, they cotu|nered. The SUte church party finally gave way. They were compelled to reeogniie the principle of " liberty ofconsciencek" The State churches resorted to force and soercion. They com- Coagresa ?hall make no law establishing articles cf faith, or a mode of worship, or prohibiting the free e.iercise of religion, or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to aaseaafele, and to petition to the government for a redress of grievances" (Backus' Ch. ITist, p 206.) For many 7ear3 did the battle for re I'lgiou* freedom rags Tt began in New Eq- g'and with Ciarke and Holmes, and W;! liams about IG j.j or TC, and ended with the adoption of the above aciesdment to the constitution of the fnited Slates, which was secured by tlie memorti! address of the Virginia BaptisU to Tre^Ldent Washinstoc, m ITSa We have seen something o' the history of these pioneer Baptieta when their chufchea were only little infant concaunities cfbap- tized believers. We hare heard the war- whoop of the native red man while he was preparing to t'aughter these missionary emigrants, or, failing :a this, to drive thom from his natire land. Eut these savages failed in their cruel purposes. God had a purpose both ia bricging our fathers to, and in keeping them in these then westtrn wilds, the dwelling place of wild beasts and Indians. For many locg years BaptUt Churches were " few ard far between."'^ After toiling for a whole cectary, or about IT40. the God of Israel began to pour out his Spirit upon thea-f They now began to see the fruit of their labors and sufferings—con verts and churches tegan to*nultiply, aad, from a few scores, iz a few jears, they grew into hundreds of churches. And as God en- larged their borders, and gave them strength and op2»orti:2itj-, they sent ministers with the blessed gotpel to the dejiitate, and a'.so to feeble churches ; and fhus they exhibited in part the same spirit that brought them to these western shores. •^e have seen hqw th-<7 formed Auocia- tional confederacies, asd Ly thus combining their strength the; were enabled to send the gospel—'J:e great evangeLzicg agency— into stiil more remote regions, and thus was tie ''kingdom of God extPcJed, and the pelled U e Baptists to pay taza to support their misters- The Baptists never wete knowp to attempt coera^k,^ "^ey have always iwd mool weapopa- They extended wilh.the persecatagchnrc&te of the Ameri- can colomes that milraten e t ^ t to he n ^ ported by t h e f r ^ e w i n - b O ^ ^ thw members, and that no chnn^ or'sect had tte Eilht-to demand'ofiths! loembers of That t ^ qu^tion nOglitte Si^settled, beliaviia i^oaxrie^^mMiriig^ wm not well s e c j ^ in the Federal ^titntiM, SUt^ on the anbjM^wlMjMnt^ tb«ef ttiaUtm laglt^i^ii*neeltfiiaal^tiiem '^wm tlWnthpBi! Wftw uJy aadc^aho^' fjnt^^^ fy^jjnl hmif tobflieTethey will t p t e aoiiipartenef• fi^ywt 206 . ) ^/ts^mSJ^mS^d dM% ocja^aiMte^'KSfi, aBaaaodaittt wM ^ridk I ^ W ' S b c l ^ ^ n la f&e^DW- "borders of our ^ on eala-'ged. Aad to soon as these P.-iniiii-e of the Baptist faith were permanently established in America, the Lord opened to them fields of labor ia foreign lands, and they at once went in to pooseas tLec: fc- hio who said ^'Go, teach all natioss.' Hitherto, persecution had driven mjjsioa- arles '"ron couatry to country, and thus was the kingdom of God extended, but non- had the Captain of oar ealvatioa broaght our | Baptiat fdihers into aland, larga and free, had made th^m a hcsi thereic, and bad given them strength and made them a pow- er, so that they, without such compulsion, being in the eojoysent of the largest free dom in religious worship, were and are enabled to do a great amount of labor for the conveisioa of the world. Not only did the old Philadelphia Association and its sister comtaunities—the Charleston Astocia- tion, of South Carolina, &nd the Sandy Creek and the Kehukee. cf l^'c-rth Carolina and the Ketocton and General Asso- ciations. of Virginia, a:id the Warren Association, of Rho-de Island, with aU the ether early Baptist Associational Con- federacies of the United States—contribute money for the support of, and send out mis- sionaries to preach the gospel at home and abroad, but their descendants, the Baptists of the 19th century, are fostering the same great enterprises. The Baptist deaomlna- tton of the United States, at this time, num- bers one and a half millions, and contribute to the purposes of Kome and Foreign Evan- geitahtion not less, evidently, than three millions of dollars—this includes pastoral sDpport-.«n3l I think, perhaps, the sum k much larger. Weha^e seen, too, that the early Ameri- can Baptkts were friends of education, and soon after the great revival of 1740, when they recwTed much strength, they focnded schools topcomote''hemaB learning," as well •itherio^l education," They likeiriae eseeuiagedhr ewery l&odaUe means the re- ligious edacation of children. u They paid special attention to the cultira- tion of c spirit of benevolence, and contrib- uted of their substance to the.jSapport^ tbetriminktry. They formed mketooary societies to aid rthe 4re«t work of evsngetisa- iion. £ JlB e m i f r a ^ n .and cifilkation i»d- raoce^iVISBtiwd and southward, these, pio- neer:rfi9iti««;£«pt^,iTith (heir^ibie»iB one h a ^ ^ I t U i z n i i e a iq. the othar, took •tiieir pcu^oof in those movii^ column and—through the hunticg-grouniis r ^ m a i e ^ ^ t D C ^ with, them, *;id a e ^ h t IwHl^ea ^ofJKwatuf^t, planted in a w S t M s a ^ sionary and Eible Societies. The IdeaofBap- tlfits opposing the publication and circula- tion of the Eoly Bible sounds strange indeed. Tru.>, this has been a doctrine of the Roin.^ CithoUc Church for yearj. But bow groundless is the claim of the oppoeers of missions to Piimitive principles, while there are many men now living who recol- iMt the time when they separated theiOselves frcm the great body of the E-iptlst denomi nation—only about forty years ago—and "took the name of Old Schc-ol BapdiU," as much as to say " we have the principles of the Primitive Baptists." These same p^ple, the so-called, selfstyled Did School Baptists, have at times clai^^ed to be Missionary Bap tlsU, alleging that they were only opposed to the manner of doing the work adopted by the denomlnatioa. Of such we ask, where are ycur missions, conducted and fostered upon any plan ? Antimissionary k the right name for those who call themselves Old School Baptists, for, in point of fact, they oppose all evangellcil eCforts—at least, It Is 60 with the masses of them. They do not tirge einneis to repent They do not exhort sinners, saying, "ercept ye repeat, ye shall all likewise perish." Let all the facts brought to view in theee articles be considered, and, maaifestly, the Autimission Baptists cannot claim, with the least degree of truth and Justice, identity with the first churches and Associations of America. We new clcsi; the review of the argument on American Baptists. We daim that it has been clearly demonstrated that the Primi- ^ve Baptists of the 19ih century are those who are pnge-ed in fostering missions, who are known as Missionary Baptists, and that' these are the true and legitimate descend- ants of the first churches and AEsociations in America. But tbe.AsUmission baptists claim that they, have soiue kind of historical and vital cojoaection with the old Particular Baptkts o/Eogland, and the ancient Waldenses. They shall have all the benefit to be derived from such claim, after an investigation of the princi- ples of thos« ancient Baptkts—the defend- ers of a pure faith in the middle and dail: ages. The ae-it^number will show the connec- tion between the American and She English and Welsh Baptists. £rO BL COXTl.NDtD j R S. Dbxoan Wright City, Missouri, 1873, D eie Bao Graves--^iTy brief letter to yoar piper, written a month ago to-day, was so Icng in reaching the public that it Cdls far short of giving the present results of the good work of-grace in Chattanooga. A week ago I received x brief letter from Bro. Eaton, which he informed me that 70 aci cessions had then been made to the church, and other* were expected to join. Of these, 8=2 had been received by letter, and one 6r two by restoration. The rest were received by profession and baptism. It k a blessed work, and to God be all the glory. , 1 go to Gadsden. Ala., next week, God will- ing, to hold a meeting there Let me ask an interest in your own prayers, and those of your numerous readers, that my ^ing to Gadsden may be hke the coming of Titus to the ancient church. W-hen 1 shall have finished my work in Gadsden, I am pledged to asskt Bro. Bussey in a meeting at Hants- ville, Bro. Van Hoose, in Pjlaski, and Bro. Bond in Brownsville The order in which these meeCngs will be held must depend upon circumstances. Should serious sick- ness prevail atone of these places at one time, and not at another, the appa'intmenta will be so arranged as to sait: the people if possible. " O Lord, revive thy work •" Wishiag you sticcess in your hi fold work, as editor and agent, I remain as ever, yoars, very fraternally. Thos. C. T easdale. KnoxvtUe, Tens, July 7, 1873. ii Co. . 11 IM.I IB .w. ^ OBlmno si m j w 7 ISO OS W M i m m m [t\> dsTots W t eo^dma t* the eaiu« of Mii«ioa»— Foftlgn. ladUa, DobmHc aad B«m*, C SUtt«. WhUc we ihaU writo aaU Miset proper matter, larits the frieadt of UiMisos and the SecnUriM vf Bovdi to cm- tribnts abort articlst calcalMeJ to nii* It tntemtUs;.} HatcUe A-^sociaUon. Cha.nge of t b e P lace of Mestisg.—This body will meet with the church in Coving- ton, Tenn. (^njtead of Ripley), on Saturday before the tirst Lord's day in August next, owing to the fact that the Memphis and Paducah railroad will not be completed to the latter place in time to convey the dele gates (as was contemplated when the ap- pointment was made). Ripley church, to meet the wisnes of a large number of breth- ren, has reluctantly yielded her claim for the present, desiring that the next succeed- ing meeting be held with her Covington Church, by a unanimoui! vote invites the Association to meet wfth it A cordkl invitation is extended to alL Ample provisions will ba made, and a committee in waiting to receive and assign visitors homes during their stoy. The Memphis and Paducah railroad will be completed from Memphk to Covington before that time Eld. 8. Laodrum k to preach the introduc- tory sermon. Eld, G. A. Lofton, alternate J. E, Graves, Moderator. Josera il. Borpm, Clerk of Association. -w Mr hoz^irea jmn ^ j^iagdoii of inobedienee toUap^Buaai^ ahs^ wiae perrerae spiritiapii ww the a«ds ofjSa- eocdiuaoai them. These saeeperrerse ipir- it>—Antimiasinn Bsptiifc orpoart Mjs- Berival in Chattaooega For nearly six weeka our meetings have been in progress. Dr. Teasdale was with as nearly four weeks, and preached with great power. Hk being obliged to leave u» did not serve to abate the inter^t Every night there have be«n new inquirers. Bad weathMdidin no way hinder the work; some of our best meeting ware on rainy niahta. i told the brethren that God con- victed sinners, andhealsosent the rain, and we n ^ not be afraid that he would inter- fere with hk own werk. The only thing to fear in a protracted meeting k coldness and want of faith on the part, of the brethren. Cayiyaam ia not ^ only place where the Lord:iaik to "do ' ^ a y mishty.,works, be- cause of t h e c h o l m ssarehas,B9t atc|^edjthe meeting, t t o i ^ ira miu^rop our congiegatioDBinany that haveifled,ftq4henwuoUin».'' piere hare, soja^:.been mora^tluui, eighty. omTeraions ^ep^rt^ aadl am^aatkfied .the^ are nma* harf of o t i m ; whose nanm iI t i M ( J j ^ ^ W s Uptised fifty-three, and have quite a nnmbas tp. i i ^ t'za on Sunday. .Two hareJieen restored rTha-^work J ^ : h ^ g ^ v ^ l f j ' ^ Xori ha^ done gB^ tti^ , w k « r e o C , i r * ^ rffi^L^ Letter from Bomp. ' The thunderbjlt which fell the other day near the Cha-aber of Deputies is interpreted at the Vatican as aa evident proof of thei divic'e veageanc-i oa the discassioa of t h e rtligious corporations, which continues to take place, notwithstauding the safferingai of the Pontiff. O.htrs remark that a thun derbolt fell oa the church of St. Peter, behind the Pope's chair, just as he was read- ing the decree cf iafallibility. Then the clerical aud infalllblist press hastened to publish to all parU of the'world that U was Lhe new law givea by God on the Sinai of the Vatican, amiditlightnings and thui^ers. To be logicil they ought to maintain, also, that the new bill for the supervision of the religious oiders ha% had its Sinai. The legs of the Pope are swollen, the face, back and chest have bees so thia, the cheeks so pale, the suppuratioa of the feet so ccatiaual, the digestive organs ia so ua- satisfactory a cocditioa, that it is impossible tc say how, unless a miracle happen, the augu&t patient cm be cured of a cocaplaiat so general, obstinate and complicatsd- The question now is not to restore what is incur- able, but to prolong as mu:h as posatble an existence perhaps more necessary _,to united Italy than to the church. 1 find in the luxlic^ Seici, a daily paper published in this city, thf following lengthy but iateresting article oa R^me and the Jesuits The writer says . " Tae article cn ' Consci''nc3 aad the Va- tican,' ia a cumber of the Merceribwrg recalls one of the most striking features of the book, viz . the charges it makes tigaicst the JesuiU They who have wttch^ Dr. DoUiager'g course for some years back, have been struck with the change in hk attitude,toward both Protestantism and the Papacy In this book it is very clearly marked, aad it aho^s itself ia the deep in- dignation which he feels toward this society which has captured the Pope " When we take into account the position and eminent learning of Dr. Dolliagcr, hk life-long coaoectioo with the Romish Church, hk intimate acqaaintanoe with hktery, and bk evident candor, we cannot but feel that these lectures make up one of the heaviest indictments ever made against the Jesuits. And thk «ew k emphasized by the cocsid eration tlAtlheleetarer's desire k to make as litUeas^tsibleof the diffarenoes between the varioi^ranches of^the church; H.e:k hopeful; Uicalmost believes that.ani^jc»p be effected, but never with the.^iuts--Vfehe old, well-proTod, aad implacable e n v i e s of eoclesiastical onion,. the men to jW^m-jmy voicti which is not ananooaditunva-sortan- der, is an ^wmina^n.'ii 2»j»r jaljikdeharge the megre pactkan> rhetoric claima WhfchliWote. hiaipqint,,^^ dq» cooise,. e n ^ intq%:detu^i pf.^ t h ^ . o f f t f w O i U ^ ; thak.. tflpEa to ^ wofk WW .•tl^jrorkcflfrfoBwaBd.k fthflir jHP^lPPaiariB^ law Of liMir ud TUt ^m «itknw9iB^d Mrid^itrslntii atom ooaMwaad shaUa«a flood breaks in and waAes it aSrey.'br tiilB worm-eaten edifice ftais to piefees in their handb. The Oriental proverb Ebonfc-ihe Turks may be applied to them; " Where the Turk seta hii-foot grass never grows." "ThM folTows a brief outline of thur workm Pttfe^ua^, Japaa, JTorlh Amcri'ei, Abyssinia, the L ^ ^ t , the Greek 7alanai, Persia,-the Crimea," aad Egypt, and he says,- ' '"Above aUhsa the Society of Jesos da- voted its best services to its native homa of Spain. Themselves children of the Spanish race, and inheritors of ihe Span'iih character for sixty yeira, they dkplayed their Spanish feeling throughout Europe; ifaey labbred for the spread Kid oonralidatioa of the nniTanal manaiehy of Spain. -Tfae rss^t was lhe bankruptcyv-and depopulatioa ot that once powerful kingdom, i^d its lo&s of one session after another, so that Ly the end of the seventeenth century, tb cite the lan- guage of a Spanish writer, it had becoae'Mi inanimate corpse, the bkeleton of a fdack WeH might a Spanish diplomatbt in £oaa say, at the lime of the Euppreseion of Uje order, " The JesuiU are_lhe_ wormwood t W gnaws cu oar bowelj." ' " '"They it was who brought' op Ihi Ger- man nation the Thirty Slearb" Wax and lU results, and to them Calh^lkGsrmai^-owes the decli^ of Itstghoel^aBd its c ^ c q u u t backwardness in culthiUoa.flod iu Ion* in- t^JectuaL steraityc r ; , " I h e r destroyed GeftnWErii|4j«* (tod it ^Bubut last iretribniioatkMMi iU re-eslaWkhment they Bfaooid U rendeMfl powerlett). They hare matJe AurtHa iftiat it hfcr been,^'destroyed Biheaia; sech«ai English hattrf'toward Cathblfei^f i^Sifi t h e S w ^ u h ' ^ k - f o ^ S n e s e revofudojpaiidTO. whelmr ;aey b e i a ' ^ ^ i S l l i y ; (0 -rt^ifc- U l ) have ^wri^ht tfams^a' ^nd^ irfai Is, 6a some Doiange:;. Qcxv^jis ^iiwny ^pf ^tha Jgpes t h e i i ^ v ^ i ^ t i o . E M e ' j o s i ; ^ ten^^d with the MEu |§ow, ojC historical oondemw them for Wi^nif^ .cbUia^, foolbhoess, »pd crime. And tsJ^ wh*^ this development of cbaraoteriAt^ ^ otttcome of the spfrit iwbkh iii the Bomkh hiEcarchy for Uie^j:iUMlreda,»f years. The spirit which pitts^ iha:ohaifih first, most reach this resuitUf it ^ carri^ out There k in this history erideBC^ iftf truth of at least partof CWerid^'saphoriMi, ' He who begins by lovicg'ChriftiBtitty better than trath, will proceed by IcTing hu olfe sect or church better than Christianify,-raiH end in loving himself better th.in r.ll' iBfl It k evident, even from these lartnres, tha^ now Romanism is Jesiritkm; and the festal effect of Jesuit control upon the church on which it has fastened, rem reds us cf that dreadful Ecetc IT. the twanty fifth cants^of the where Donati tracs'ormed infe a hideous monster, ee"r?s oa BronellFEChi: 'Thk horrible r^tile Upon the other's limbs entwibedhk own. Then they stuck close, aa ifof heated waxs^ Tl:ey had been made, and isterciixed their color, Iv. - Nor one other £Hn.cd cow wLt,t it was' "Ss thk hideous cre^on'of a faaatio'a brain has fastened oa that which, claimed to be the bcdy of Christ, and now he who ro^a Rome sees JesuitiEm; he who sees the Jes- uits coee Borne." The Vceedelig f'erita, crgaa of the JeBnila, under the beadingo] Protestant Projiaganda, says. "Other small Proter^tant books, most ele- gaatly bound, are every day giren away ia the public streets. In the Via Aleisaniriaa a person was dkpensiog to the pasBers-by a tract having the title-r ^Kot bappyf - wht not?' inviting at the eame Time every to go to the frotstaint meetingi, and l ^ r the preachiPg of theifrorrf. -We'csil th^ tention of^e^aithTdl to ihe bcpk with ttie above title, 'wtA^'we ixate' oil our table before JIB, and ^^'p'qt to point otil others wheh^er mayari^. All ^ose. receive e d ^ "books wHl do weU t o , undertake, after'^spea^i^ of "thlMi, tothrpw t h ^ jnto thp fi^, po.^ajt^r how ^egaoily haveelAci^aijt miUee of evangerntion, that »ea:i»sed<iiip#ilSeg ifeasw mm Within the ti|»iBi( jmitii^ ' c recently •ia R«ae,]Caf P I II !i f' ^ -I "r I r. I l 11 4 if •ik 11

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Page 1: THE BAPTIST.media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/tbarchive/1873/TB_1873_Jul_1… · |T THi HOUSEi , -l>le Sloelc ' . • T^ iu.ij ^ . UNIVERSITY irfraesbQTO, Tana * . FACtlLTTr-jl. "5

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:ERSO.\ METHOD >R REED ORGANS.

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THE BAPTIST. j ; B . a K A - r K S , t I , , *au«r . lo -Cl i I« l i

B B S i n ^ OiteMd A^mUfli* D3irt>«'l. / . j e cgATSa .* , ^ : : : : ; . . . . atjCwrier.

EUITOKIJU. G O B P S r Ed- 3t p . toWKEY. Ripley, lliis. E i . 6EQ. W. GaiFFIJt, G«Ii«i«. Teaa. E i . J . IL VOOD; Bttrawflle, Gat,

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W aMfaMM oawj, CT fci« Stteet. ItapkU. teaa.

I

v . :

S t a n d y e In t h o w a y s , a n d s e e M d a a k f a r t h e o l d p a t h s , w h i c h a r e t h e g o o d w a y s , a n d w a l k t h e r e i n , a n d y e s h ^ find n e t ft>r y o o r sotUa-VwwiiBA.

Old S e r i e s — Y o L X X X . M E M P H I S , T E M . , S A T U R D A Y , J U L Y 1 9 . 1 8 7 3 . N e w S e r i e s — Y o L Y I . . N o . 4 4 .

A F O B S OT SOlj!!n> WOSBS. n a S e r l p c u v a .

L H i e 0 k i » i i d K w r T « r t K n « i t 8 »remwrit-UHi by m e o divinely iaaptrad, and eoatiun «k« ftaD a a d final rer«Imtioa of wffl to man. To seek ftnx^ " a p i r i t i " t o p r r f c t o Uxe unreTealed th in j^ ia in the B i ^ t ' o f God M t & e i i a o f r e b e l l i b n s n d iritcIiGnfL Xhe Hew Testament is t h e perfect rnla of &tth and practice for C&rafiuiai

I Tim. IB. !«. « L H ; UL 14. Lok* xxW ti f«tta XiT. io. TiO. ao.

2. There ia only one God, Belf^eiistent, in-fiaite in everr na tu ra l and mora i excellence. H e h a a r e T c a l e d i i i n u e l f u t h e Father , and the Son (or t h e WordX and the Holy ©hoet, tiie same m rwpeot to Diyine esaence, what-m r dwtinrtion there may be i n some re-tpeeU,

.[•.xlT.Xl. a J«r. Z. life Sx. to. U. Be«». tL 4; xiail. 4. Pb. xxxTi. 5. J«ha t. 1, 13. Bom. u . 6. i n^iU.11. B.T.LJ. Obfea xjT.ai;rT.M. AcaT.3. «. ULU. l(aM.X(Tm. 19.

Til* F a l l . X Man was created holy} bat , by wilful

diaobedience, f«jl firozn t h a t s ta te ; became BOEally defiled, a n d begat al l h k children in h is likeness; henoe, by nature, the re k i n •BBO-hoUnev; h a t i*e aze aU. iael ined t o Mi l ; and, al l a re chOdrea of wrath, j n ^ l y exposed to death, and other misOTiesj t-ampo-rai, spiritual and emrnal.

On. L S , SI; a. M, W r m . 1, (. Ecdu. »it. S . Sa«.T.I2. Spb. 0.1. iMk. XTta. 19 UK B<w. Tfl. O. Ur. rtil. W. I M s L t . Koai. »».

l a lTmt i ra . " I. c t u j m f i ^ i O i f s n j ^ k o ^ ^ & l ^

lUta of gniit and ceademnation, is throagh ricarioua sn lBMg;of Christ, t h e JDirine Son of God, who inSnicnloo^y took ripoii' h i m our flesh, a n d Whean; S o d h a t h s e t T o r t h t o be a propitiatmn t h n » | ^ faith ih h i s blood; haf ing "

t o l o r ed t h e w o d d t h a t h e gaVe his j OQ^ b ^ o t t e n Sob, t ha t whosoerer belieTeth' i a h im shoiiVI s o t perish, b e t have ererlast-taC h f e " • i ' .

M b L U . Lnk»i.M,afc Acta It. I t Sma. m. • JakmmU, : z . ".Vl}. . --

A j U I who t r a ly beiiere and o b ^ t t e were d o s r a i n Qir is t "be fe ra t h e

L «f t h e wor ld" by him iriio sees tteend&omthe begtnninf ; and in conse-qwnee, not of t he i r ewn m e r i t b a t of 6od>.

" F e a r So t , for I am Wi th BT UBS. B6XT MOEOAS.' "

Fear not, llwBgh Sniows radiTy dssh, " A n i bcisterous winds ineressel

Ibattgh thuAders roll with des&ning crash, Aad bghtniags send their blinding i a s h :

In Jesns thers is peaw. Fear not amid affliction a fire,

When ^ h l y joys dsereast; Thoflg* tlme-"bem comforts all expire, I h y SaTior only draws the nlgh«r,

A&I with !um there is pMce.

Oh! Uin the sehing heart would cling To some fond earthly bliss,

And twine aioond that cherished thing, Forgetful of the hea-reB-tanght wing,

That upward soars f«r peace.

Bat strong is love when bom of grief. When Sorrows f u t increase;

And thus that Christ may be the Chief. He takes away all earth's relief,

And so is all my pease.

And if th« presence of his love Seem for a ifhile to cease,

Still thank his name who reigns abo>n. That he has tanght tby>eart to pro re

WithoBt him ia n> peace.

And when his roloe shall bid thee higher. And giTS thy soul's release, .

Then shah t h o a j o l i ^ o n waitiag choir, .4nd joyful strike the golden wire,

For Jescs* —B-jptiii Uuiaru

Ibel iere mtk. 4. u. irM. iflc^'Jste m. i s: r. ii, ti. - l

f. • JsBM L U John r»t». EpS. n. loi. Tlia P n i ix-rati«& oC Batata.

S. yo ih ing can separate t rue benerers m m (He lore of God; but they will be " kep t by l i e power of God through faith un to •uratkm." the sure and final oroof of t h « r heinf t rae belieTers consisting in t h e c o n -ttauaBce of their a t t achment and obedience t oChmt till t h e close of-life.

I Fat. !. T. Jatm X. XT. 29; Tiii. JU Ool. 1. 3 , 2J ••k-ia-H. lC»X=siT.U. I M a ^ l X

Xl»« C b v c b . T. A Church of Christ is an organlzid

"rocst ion of persona renewed by i h e Holy ^ f t j baptiaed upon a confession of nnioa j r a Chrat , and corenanting to witness the fcthand keep t h e commandments of their p r i c e H ^ Tc hia church alone Christ haa committed tL-e preserration of his Mspei in its parity, a a d the promulgation of it to all men by nia ia tera bearing its com-sisa^cn.

Tiu-ii Eph. i. 2» Tba O r d i a u e c B .

a. The ordinances of a Christian church iTB Baptism and the Lord's Supper. Baptism d the iiamersian of professed beHevers in Christ, no t in order to t h e n m i t a a a of sins, but to declare their death t o s s d freedom from m ; and is a prerequisite to t h e preaching af the gospel, church membership and com-emnion at the Lord's table. These ordi-n a c e s belong to t ^ church, and should mly admiiuBtered by her officers to those «*t deems ouaHfied to recd^re them.

Articipation in t h e Lord's supper should be c a n n e d to i 2 i e m e m b « d i i p of each local •httrcoj p r to those m e m o e s of other A n r c h e a s p ^ c a l l y invited by it—their & t h ttd walk being avouched as correct.

t h e s u p p s . h o more th'*Ti baptisia, may be adsi inatered by ministers t e ^ o s e whom they deem qn^if ied.

««tt. 1£1. «, B ; xxTiiU 19. ao; xjyl. Vt, I Cc . Ja. Acta tIH.U, ar. B<ar -.i. 1. U. 0>\. 11. 13.

I m . tii; » . Act* u. sr.

9. The first day of t h e i f o e k k be observed •s the Lcrd's day, or Chrirtian Sabbattj.

loha I I . M, :«. 1 Cor- iTfc-l, V-Aeu zz. T. Err l-CJt . J . ^

Tb« R a a w n e e t l n o O I u HJcbtcsva, i n There will b« : a resurrection of t h e

lighteoos dead pr ior ' to QS^ advent of Christ, who, with t h e , J b i n | f s a i ^ wffl be changed ia a moment, ^ d r o u a ^ u ^ t n meet t h e I«rd in the eir, to appear with.: h im a t h k eoning and jndgrfwnt I n d ^onuihment of the persecut i i^nat iena. ^ '

OMt.zuia.>. IS. z ^ xw. s. R<S.LS,12. Jod^iT.S^ iac.XT. S1,SS.

T ^ W I I — j j l s m rr ^ At the comlB|p>ffihrist he-iri l l judge

>od destroy t h e T i a ^ s tint haite peraecn-tsd hk p e o p l e , ^ ^ : ^ h B a a e l f alC dominion « rale, and, s t t t i j&npf i l t he thsone of h k u o e r , Dsrid, jgi Jstliirfli iii a s~Xing and n i a t , win n d e with ISb saint* over all tttiou for one I h o m n d years, c

»•«. UTsl ^utx. xxt^JB, 4«. lur . ««.1,T. It.tCT.-I^S: Ixitf.!^?. Pa. Itr LakaLSL I>ts.t.t. i<Mii3, a j C l i v ^ u . rvc iux .

lat'ta-n. lUtt. Bx.BjxxT.M. &xiWta. t : ; ' -

Tk« HaavlM vC tk«

• ^ i f i w i n i o a t of M f m vxtii tt flte^Md U i t a b e r a a d e • O l t a B i t k t W i f c ' ® ^

WHO A B C T U E P K I A i r r t ' E B-IPTI-HTS-T H C XUSIOS-ABT 9 K A S T I .

XIKSIOXAJtT?

(JESfija:. r e t t iw op avsihcat m r n s r s W e have found that , more than two hund

red years ago, on American s h o r ^ there were a few churcbesof the "sect everywhere spoken against^' They were generally, in tha t day, called .Anabaptists. To be an An-abapUst in ^ a t early period was to be hated. But with a eourage worthyof themen—yea, more, worthy of t h e cause for which they p l e ^ — d i d Clarke, and Hohnes, and Knollys, and Roger Will iams (for he rendered the Baptists efficient aid) r e sk t the usurpations and t ^e tyranny of the Cangrsgationaluts in New England; and Lewis Craig, J o h n Waller, J a m e s Chiles, and many others of the pioneer Baptists the encroachments, persecutions, and nmcriptura l demands of the Episcopalians of Virginia. These wit-nesses for Christ and his t ru th endured fines and imprisonsaents i they were whipped l ike dogs and criminals, and, in some cases, banished from their home?, and made to traverse wild regions uninhabited, except by ferocious a n i m a h and wild m e n ; all for the k i sgdom of heaven's sake. Thus d-d our fa thers labor, and toil, and suffer, that they might plant Baptlstprinciple^ upon the now r:chly adorned and highly cultivated shores of the American con t inen t " I n the name of the Lord did they set u p their banners," and deep down into the virgin £oil of th« wild man's home did they plant their flig stafi; around which they and their descend-ents have successively rallied for more than two centuries. Upon tha t banner is written in prominent letters the words " Soul Free-dom." And many a hard fought batt le for the principle contained in its motto has tha t old flag witnessed. "All men," s ^ d those Baptist fathers, " have an inalienable right to worship God according to the dic-tates of their own consciences." T h e recog' ni t ioa of t h k p r indp le they kep t steadily in view; a n d to s t^a ted , they depended not on tke " strong a rm of the secular powers," b u t they went a b j u t with the Bible in their hands, a n d i u p r ^ p U on their tcngue^ and, by these, they cotu|nered. The SUte church party finally gave way. They were compelled to reeogniie the principle of " liberty ofconsciencek" The State churches resorted to force a n d soercion. They com-

Coagresa ?hall make no law establishing articles cf faith, or a mode of worship, or prohibiting the free e.iercise of religion, or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to aaseaafele, and to petition to the government for a redress of gr ievances" (Backus' Ch. ITist, p 206.)

For many 7ear3 did the batt le for re I'lgiou* freedom rags Tt began in New Eq-g'and with Ciarke and Holmes, and W;! liams about IG j.j or TC, and ended with the adoption of the above ac ie sdment to the constitution of the f n i t e d Slates, which was secured by tlie memort i ! address of the Virginia BaptisU to Tre^Ldent Washins toc , m ITSa

W e have seen something o ' the history of these pioneer Baptieta when their chufchea were only little infant concaunities c f b a p -tized believers. We h a r e heard the war-whoop of the native red man while he was preparing to t ' aughte r these missionary emigrants, or, failing :a this, to drive thom from his na t i re land. Eut these savages failed in their cruel purposes. God had a purpose both ia bricging our fathers to, and in keeping them in these then west t rn wilds, the dwelling place of wild beasts and Indians. For many locg years BaptUt Churches were " few a r d far between."'^

After toiling for a whole cectary, or about IT40. the God of Israel began to pour out his Spirit upon thea-f They now began to see the fruit of their labors and sufferings—con verts and churches t egan to*nultiply, aad, f rom a few scores, iz a few jears , they grew into hundreds of churches. And as God en-larged their borders, and gave them strength and op2»orti:2itj-, they sent ministers with the blessed gotpel to the dej i i ta te , and a'.so to feeble churches ; and fhus they exhibi ted in par t the same spirit tha t brought them to these western shores.

•^e h a v e seen hqw th-<7 formed Auocia-tional confederacies, asd Ly thus combining their strength t h e ; were enabled to send the gospel—'J:e great evangeLzicg agency— into stiil more remote regions, and thus was t i e ' ' k ingdom of God extPcJed, a n d the

pelled U e Baptists t o pay t a z a t o support their m i s t e r s - The Baptists never wete knowp to a t t empt c o e r a ^ k , ^ " ^ e y have always i w d m o o l weapopa- They e x t e n d e d wilh. the pe r seca t agchnrc&te of t h e Ameri-can colomes tha t m i l r a t e n e t ^ t to he n ^ ported by the fr^e w i n - b O ^ ^ t h w members , a n d tha t n o c h n n ^ or 'sect had tte E i l h t - t o d e m a n d ' o f i t h s ! loembers of

Tha t t ^ q u ^ t i o n nOgl i t t e S i ^ s e t t l e d , bel iavi ia i ^ o a x r i e ^ ^ m M i r i i g ^ w m not well s e c j ^ in the Federal ^ t i t n t i M ,

S U t ^ on the a n b j M ^ w l M j M n t ^ t b « e f ttiaUtm l a g l t ^ i ^ i i * n e e l t f i i a a l ^ t i i e m

'^wm

t lWnthpBi! W f t w u J y a a d c ^ a h o ^ '

f j n t ^ ^ ^ f y ^ j j n l h m i f t o b f l i e T e t h e y will t p t e a o i i i p a r t e n e f • f i ^ y w t

206.) /ts^mSJ^mS^d d M % o c j a ^ a i M t e ^ ' K S f i , a B a a a o d a i t t t wM ^r idk I ^ W ' S b c l ^ ^ n l a f & e ^ D W -

"borders of our ^ on eala-'ged. Aad t o soon as these P.-iniiii-e of the Baptist faith were permanently established in America, the Lord opened to them fields of labor i a foreign lands, and they a t once went in to pooseas tLec: fc- h i o who said ^'Go, teach all natioss. '

Hitherto, persecution had driven mjjsioa-arles '"ron couatry to country, and thus was the kingdom of God e x t e n d e d , but non-had the Captain of oar ealvatioa broaght our | Baptiat fdihers into a l a n d , larga and free, had made th^m a hcsi thereic, and bad given them strength and made them a pow-er, so that they, without such compulsion, being in the e o j o y s e n t of the largest f ree dom in religious worship, were and are enabled to do a great amount of labor for the conveisioa of the world. Not only did the old Philadelphia Association and its sister comtaunities—the Charleston Astocia-tion, of South Carolina, &nd the Sandy Creek and the Kehukee. cf l^'c-rth Carolina and t h e Ketocton and General Asso-ciations. of Virginia, a:id the Warren Association, of Rho-de Island, with aU the e ther early Baptist Associational Con-federacies of the United States—contribute money for the support of, and send ou t mis-sionaries to preach the gospel at home a n d abroad, but the i r descendants, t he Baptists of the 19th century, are fostering t h e same great enterprises. The Baptist deaomlna-tton of t h e Uni ted States, a t this time, num-bers one and a half millions, and contr ibute to t h e purposes of Kome and Foreign Evan-geitahtion n o t less, evidently, than th ree millions of dollars—this includes pastoral sDpport-.«n3l I think, perhaps, the sum k much larger.

W e h a ^ e seen, too, tha t the early Ameri-can Baptk t s were fr iends of education, and soon a f t e r the great revival of 1740, when they recwTed much strength, they focnded schools topcomote ' ' hemaB learning," as well

• i t h e r i o ^ l education," They likeiriae e s e e u i a g e d h r ewery l&odaUe means t h e re-ligious edacation of children. u They paid special a t tent ion to the cultira-t ion of c spiri t of benevolence, and contrib-uted of their substance to t h e . j S a p p o r t ^ t be t r im ink t ry . They formed mketooary societies to aid rthe 4re«t work of evsngetisa-iion. £ JlB e m i f r a ^ n .and c i f i lka t ion i»d-raoce^iVISBtiwd a n d southward, these, pio-n e e r : r f i 9 i t i « « ; £ « p t ^ , i T i t h (he i r ^ ib i e» iB one h a ^ ^ I t U i z n i i e a iq. t h e othar, took •tiieir p c u ^ o o f i n those m o v i i ^ c o l u m n and—through the hunticg-grouniis r ^ m a i e ^ ^ t D C ^ with, them, *;id a e ^ h t

I w H l ^ e a ^ o f J K w a t u f ^ t ,

planted in a w S t M s a ^

sionary and Eible Societies. The IdeaofBap-tlfits opposing t h e publication and circula-tion of the Eoly Bible sounds strange indeed. Tru.>, this has been a doctrine of the Roin .^ CithoUc Church for yearj. But bow groundless is the claim of the oppoeers of missions to Piimitive principles, while there are many men now living who recol-iMt the time when they separated theiOselves f rcm the great body of the E-iptlst denomi nation—only about forty years ago—and " took the name of Old Schc-ol BapdiU," as much as to say " we have the principles of t h e Primitive Baptists." These same p ^ p l e , the so-called, selfs tyled Did School Baptists, have a t times clai^^ed to be Missionary Bap tlsU, alleging t h a t they were only opposed to the manner of doing the work adopted by the denomlnatioa. Of such we ask, where are ycur missions, conducted and fostered upon any plan ? Antimissionary k the right name for those who call themselves Old School Baptists, for, in point of fact, they oppose all evangellcil eCforts—at least, It Is 60 with the masses of them. They do not tirge einneis to r e p e n t They do not exhor t sinners, saying, " e r c e p t ye repeat, ye shall all likewise perish."

Let all the facts brought to view in theee articles be considered, and, maaifestly, the Autimission Baptists cannot claim, with the least degree of t ru th and Justice, identity with the first churches and Associations of America.

W e new clcsi; the review of the argument on American Baptists. We d a i m that it has been clearly demonstrated tha t the Primi-^ve Baptists of the 19ih century are those who are pnge-ed in fostering missions, who are known as Missionary Baptists, and that' these are the t rue and legitimate descend-an t s of the first churches and AEsociations in America.

But tbe.AsUmission baptists claim that they, have soiue k ind of historical and vital cojoaection with the old Particular Baptkts o/Eogland, and the ancient Waldenses. They shall have all the benefit to be derived from such claim, after an investigation of the princi-ples of thos« ancient Baptkts—the defend-ers of a pure faith in the middle and dai l : ages.

The ae-it^number will show the connec-tion between the American and She English and Welsh Baptists.

£rO BL COXTl.NDtD j R S. Dbxoan

Wright City, Missouri, 1873,

D e i e Bao Graves--^iTy brief letter to yoar piper , written a month ago to-day, was so Icng in reaching the public that it Cdls far short of giving the present results of the good work o f - g r a c e in Chattanooga. A week ago I received x brief letter from Bro. Eaton, which he informed me tha t 70 aci cessions had then been made to the church, and other* were expected to join. Of these, 8=2 had been received by letter, and one 6r two by restoration. The res t were received by profession and baptism. I t k a blessed work, and to God be all t he glory. ,

1 go to Gadsden. Ala., next week, God will-ing, to hold a meeting t he r e Let me ask an interest in your own prayers, and those of your numerous readers, that my ^ i n g to Gadsden may be h k e the coming of Titus to the ancient church. W-hen 1 shall have finished my work in Gadsden, I am pledged to asskt Bro. Bussey in a meeting at Hants-ville, Bro. Van Hoose, in Pj laski , and Bro. Bond in Brownsville The order in which these meeCngs will be held must depend upon circumstances. Should serious sick-ness prevail a t o n e of these places at one time, and not a t another, the appa'intmenta will be so arranged as to sait: t he people if possible. " O Lord, revive thy work • " Wishiag you sticcess in your hi fold work, as editor and agent, I remain as ever, yoars, very fraternally. Thos. C. Teasdale.

KnoxvtUe, T e n s , July 7, 1873.

ii Co. . 11 IM.I IB .w. ^ OBlmno si m j w 7

ISO OS W M

i m m m

[t\> dsTots Wt eo dma t* the eaiu« of Mii«ioa»— Foftlgn. ladUa, DobmHc aad B«m*, C SUtt«. WhUc we ihaU writo aaU Miset proper matter, larits the frieadt of UiMisos and the SecnUriM vf Bovdi to cm-tribnts abort articlst calcalMeJ to n i i* It tntemtUs;.}

HatcUe A-^sociaUon. Cha.nge of t b e P l ace of Mestisg.—This

body will meet with the church in Coving-ton, Tenn. (^njtead of Ripley), on Saturday before the tirst Lord's day in August next, owing to the fact tha t the Memphis and Paducah railroad will not be completed to the lat ter place in time to convey the dele gates (as was contemplated when t h e ap-pointment was made). Ripley church, to meet the wisnes of a large number of breth-ren, has reluctantly yielded her claim for the present, desiring tha t the nex t succeed-ing meeting be held with h e r

Covington Church, by a unanimoui! vote invites the Association to meet wfth i t A co rdk l invitation is ex tended to alL Ample provisions will ba made, and a committee i n waiting to receive and assign visitors homes dur ing their stoy. The Memphis and Paducah railroad will be completed from Memphk to Covington before tha t t i m e Eld. 8. Laodrum k to preach the introduc-tory sermon. Eld, G. A. Lofton, a l t e rna te

J . E, Graves, Moderator. Josera i l . Borpm, Clerk of Association.

-w

M r hoz^irea jmn ^ j^iagdoii of

inobed ienee t o U a p ^ B u a a i ^ a h s ^ wiae perrerae sp i r i t iap i i w w t h e a « d s ofjSa-e o c d i u a o a i them. These s a e e p e r r e r s e ipir-i t > — A n t i m i a s i n n Bsptiifc o r p o a r t Mjs-

Ber iva l in Chattaooega For nearly six weeka our meetings have

been in progress. Dr. Teasdale was with as nearly four weeks, and preached with great power. H k being obliged to leave u» did not serve to aba te the i n t e r ^ t Every night there have be«n new inquirers. Bad w e a t h M d i d i n n o way h inder t h e work; some of our best m e e t i n g ware on rainy niahta. i told the b re th ren t h a t God con-victed sinners, a n d h e a l s o s e n t t h e rain, and we n ^ not be afraid t h a t he would inter-fere with h k own werk. T h e only thing to fear in a protracted meeting k coldness and want of faith o n the pa r t , of the brethren. C a y i y a a m ia not ^ only place where the Lord: ia ik t o " d o ' ^ a y mishty.,works, be-cause of the c h o l m ssarehas ,B9t a t c | ^ e d j t h e meeting, t t o i ^ ira m i u ^ r o p our congiegatioDBinany tha t have i f l ed , f tq4henwuoUin» . ' ' p i e r e hare , so ja^ : .been mora^t luui , eighty. omTeraions ^ e p ^ r t ^ a a d l am^aatkf ied . t h e ^ a re nma* harf of o t i m ; whose n a n m iI

t i M ( J j ^ ^ W s Upt i sed fifty-three, and have quite a nnmbas tp. i i ^ t'za on Sunday. . T w o h a r e J i e e n restored

rTha-^work J ^ : h ^ g ^ v ^ l f j ' ^ X o r i h a ^ done g B ^ tti^ , w k « r e o C , i r * ^ rffi^L^

Let te r f rom Bomp. ' The thunderb j l t which fell the other day

near the Cha-aber of Deputies is in terpreted at the Vatican as a a evident proof of thei divic'e veageanc-i oa the discassioa of t h e rtligious corporations, which continues to take place, notwithstauding the safferingai of the Pontiff. O.ht rs remark that a thun derbolt fell oa the church of St. Peter, behind the Pope's chair, jus t as he was read-ing the decree cf iafallibility. Then the clerical aud infalllblist press hastened to publish to all parU of the'world tha t U was Lhe new law givea by God on the Sinai of the Vatican, amidit l ightnings and thui^ers . To be logicil they ought to maintain, also, that the new bill for the supervision of the religious oiders ha% had its Sinai.

The legs of the Pope are swollen, the face, back and chest have bees so thia, the cheeks so pale, the suppuratioa of the feet so ccatiaual, the digestive organs ia so ua-satisfactory a cocditioa, tha t it is impossible tc say how, unless a miracle happen, the augu&t patient c m be cured of a cocaplaiat so general, obstinate and complicatsd- The question now is not to restore what is incur-able, but to prolong as mu :h as posatble an existence perhaps more necessary _,to united Italy than to the church.

1 find in the luxlic^ Seici, a daily paper published in this city, thf following lengthy but iaterest ing article oa R^me and the Jesuits The writer says .

" Tae article cn ' Consci''nc3 a a d the Va-tican,' ia a cumber of the Merceribwrg recalls one of t h e most s t r iking features of the book, viz . the charges it makes tigaicst the J e s u i U They who have w t t c h ^ Dr. DoUiager'g course for some years back, have been s t ruck with the change in h k atti tude,toward both Protestantism and the Papacy In this book i t is very clearly marked, a a d it aho^s itself i a the deep in-dignation which h e feels toward this society which has captured the Pope

" When we take into account the position and eminent learning of Dr. Dolliagcr, h k life-long coaoectioo with the Romish Church, h k int imate acqaaintanoe with hk te ry , and b k evident candor, we cannot but feel that these lectures make up one of the heaviest indictments ever made against t h e Jesuits. And t h k « e w k emphasized by the cocsid eration t l A t l h e l e e t a r e r ' s desire k to make as l i t U e a s ^ t s i b l e o f the diffarenoes between the v a r i o i ^ r a n c h e s of^the c h u r c h ; H.e:k hopeful; Uicalmost believes t h a t . a n i ^ j c » p be effected, but never with the .^ iu t s - -Vfehe old, well-proTod, a a d implacable e n v i e s of eoclesiastical on ion , . the men to jW^m- jmy voict i which i s not ananooadi tunva-sor tan-

der , is a n ^ w m i n a ^ n . ' i i 2»j»r ja l j ikdeharge the megre pactkan> rhetoric claima WhfchliWote. h i a i p q i n t , , ^ ^ dq» cooise,. e n ^ i n t q % : d e t u ^ i p f . ^ t h ^ . o f f t f w O i U ^ ; t hak . . tflpEa to ^ wofk WW . • t l ^ j r o r k c f l f r f o B w a B d . k

fthflir

j H P ^ l P P a i a r i B ^ l a w Of l iMir u d

TUt ^ m « i t k n w 9 i B ^ d M r i d ^ i t r s l n t i i a t o m ooaMwaad shaUa«a

flood breaks in and waAes it aSrey.'br tiilB worm-eaten edifice ftais to piefees in the i r handb. The Oriental proverb Ebonfc-ihe Turks may be applied to them; " Where the Turk seta hi i - foot grass never grows." •

" T h M folTows a brief outline of t h u r w o r k m Pttfe^ua^, Japaa, JTorlh Amcri'ei, Abyssinia, the L ^ ^ t , the Greek 7alanai , Persia,-the Crimea," aad Egypt, and h e says,-' ' "Above aUhsa the Society of Jesos da-voted its best services to its native homa of Spain. Themselves children of the Spanish race, and inheritors of ihe Span'iih character for sixty yeira, they dkplayed their Spanish feeling throughout Europe; ifaey labbred for the spread Kid oonralidatioa of the nniTanal manaiehy of Spain. -Tfae r s s ^ t was l h e bankruptcyv-and depopulatioa o t t h a t once powerful kingdom, i ^ d its lo&s of one session after another, so that Ly the end of the seventeenth century, tb cite the lan-guage of a Spanish writer, it had becoae'Mi inanimate corpse, t h e bkeleton of a fdack WeH might a Spanish diplomatbt in £ o a a say, a t the lime of the Euppreseion of Uje order, " The JesuiU are_lhe_ wormwood t W gnaws cu oar bowelj." ' "

' " T h e y i t was who brought' op I h i Ger-man nation the Thirty Slearb" Wax and lU results, and to them Calh^lkGsrmai^-owes the d e c l i ^ of I ts tghoel^aBd its c ^ c q u u t backwardness in cu l th iUoa . f lod i u Ion* in-t^JectuaL steraityc r ; ,

" I h e r destroyed G e f t n W E r i i | 4 j « * ( t o d i t ^ B u b u t l a s t i r e t r i b n i i o a t k M M i iU re-eslaWkhment they Bfaooid U rendeMfl powerlett). They h a r e matJe AurtHa iftiat it hfcr been,^'destroyed B i h e a i a ; sech«ai Engl ish h a t t r f ' t o w a r d Cathblfei^f i ^ S i f i the S w ^ u h ' ^ k - f o ^ S n e s e

revofudojpai idTO. w h e l m r ; a e y b e i a ' ^ ^ i S l l i y ; (0 -rt^ifc- U l ) have ^ w r i ^ h t tfams^a' ^ n d ^ i r f a i Is, 6a some Doiange:;. Q c x v ^ j i s ^iiwny ^pf ^tha J g p e s t h e i i ^ v ^ i ^ t i o . E M e ' j o s i ; ^ t e n ^ ^ d with the M E u |§ow, ojC historical oondemw them for W i ^ n i f ^ . c b U i a ^ , foolbhoess, »pd crime. A n d t s J ^ w h * ^ this development of c b a r a o t e r i A t ^ ^ otttcome of the spfrit iwbkh iii t h e Bomkh hiEcarchy for Uie^j:iUMlreda,»f years. T h e spirit which pitts^ iha:ohaif ih first, most reach this resuitUf it ^ c a r r i ^ o u t There k in this history erideBC^ iftf t ru th of at least partof CWerid^ 'saphoriMi, ' He who begins by lovicg'ChriftiBtitty better than t ra th , will proceed by IcTing h u o l f e sect or church better than Christianify,-raiH end in loving himself better th.in r.ll ' i B f l It k evident, even from these lartnres, tha^ now Romanism is Jesir i tkm; and the f e s t a l effect of Jesuit control upon the church on which it has fastened, rem reds us cf that dreadful Ecetc IT. the twanty fifth cants^of the where Donati t racs 'ormed i n f e a hideous monster, ee"r?s oa BronellFEChi:

' T h k horrible r ^ t i l e Upon the other's limbs e n t w i b e d h k own. Then they stuck close, aa i fof heated waxs^ Tl:ey had been made, and is terc i ixed their

color, Iv. -Nor one other £Hn.cd cow wLt,t i t was ' " S s t h k hideous c r e ^ o n ' o f a faaatio'a

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w a s h t h e i r f a c e s i n t h e p e a r l i n g w a t e r s . S o

l i k e u s i n y o u t h , i s t h i s f u s s y , h a s t y , d a n c i n g ,

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n e t t k « p r o p b a e i e a a n d d e d a r a t i o a B o f C b i i a t

: Z I i d a « b t o e b a r o k a r . . . f a l s e , t i u s m p k i i ^ g

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i b t s a v i o r s a n d p r e s e r r O T o f t h e c h u r c h .

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ttasthta, n o r a r e a n y p r i v i l e g e d c o a p a n i e ?

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t k ^ b a p t t o l B i d a n o f i d a l r e l a t i o n " to a

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e l a l s t r y , a n n o Q a n d v o i d .

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V f l ^ U fai v l o l a t i o t t o f t h e l a w o f C 3 i r i a t . T i e

o f t h e o r d a r t o b e o b t l e r r e d H t b e

y r b b l M f i M ' r f a n y o t h e r o t d e r .

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t b n m a e e o f b t o l a w s .

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ti^eiAm tepti^ d i 3 o r d u l y f ^ u r c h .

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o r i t o - . a i w d « j t l s W l d k e ^ n o

y o n h e l p i n g t o g e t h e r b y p r a v e r for u » . "

T h e a . 1 . 2 : " B r e t h r e n , p r a y f o r u s , t h a t

t h e w o r d o f t h e L o r d m a y h a v e f r e e c o u r s e

a n d b e g l o r i f i e d ; a n d t h a t w e m a y b e d ^

l i v e r e d f r o m u n r e a s o n a b l e a n d w i c k e d m e n . "

E p h . v L 1 9 , ' 2 0 . " P r a y f o r m e f h a U t t e r a n ^ e

m a y b e g i v e n m e , t h a t T m a y o p e n m y

m o u t h b o l d l y , t o m a k e k n o w n t b e m y s t e r y

o t t h e g o s p e l ; t i ^ t I m a y s p e a k b o l d l y a s

t o u g h t t o s p e a k . " ' C o l i v . 3 , 4 : " P r a y i n g

f o r u a , t h a t G o d w o u l d o p e n u n t o u s ft

d o o r o f u t t e r a n c e t o s p e a k t h e m y s t e r y o f

C h r i s t , f o r w b i c h 1 a m a l s o i n b o n d s ; t h a t 1

m a y m a k e i t m a n i f e s t , a s I o u g h t t o s p e a k . "

- 4 . Tb give them svpporL 2 C h r O n . x l x i 4

" H e z s k i a h c o m a s a n d e d t h e p e o p l e t o g i v e

t h e p o r t i o n o f t h e P r i e s U a n d L e v l t e s t h a t

t h e y m i g h t b e e n c b u r a g c d i n t h e l a w o f t h e

L o r d . " M a t t x W : " J e s n s s a i d . T h e v r o r k -

m ^ i s w o r t h y o f h i s m e a t . ' * 1 C o r . I r . 1 1

P i u l s a i d , " I f w e h a t e s o w n u n t o y o a s p i r -

i t u a l t h i n g s , is i t a g r e a t t h i n g i f v e r e a p

y o u r c ? j n a l t h i n g s ? - V e r s e s 1 3 . 1 4 ; " D o

y e n o t k n o w t h a t I f c e y w h i c h w a i t i - t t h e

a l t a r s r e p a r t a k e r s w i t h t h e a l t a r ? E v . ^ n

s o h £ t h G 6 d b r d a i n e d t h r . t t h e y w h i c h

p r e a : h t h e g o s p e l s h o d l d l i v e o f t h e g n s p t - l "

G a L v L 6 C ^ e w V e r s i o n ) : " l i e t h i m t h a t i s

t a u g h t i n t h e w t j r d s h a r e w i t h h i m t h a t

l e a c h e s i n a l l g o o d t h i n g s . " P h i l i v . 1 6 , 1 7 ;

^ Y e s e n t o n c e a n d a g ^ - n t o m y n p c < ? M i t y

K o t b e c a u s e 1 d e s i r e ft g i f t , b u t 1 d e s i r e

f r u i t t h a t m a y a b o u n d t o y o n r a c c o u n t . "

5. Tkreais for despising tTicrrt and not herrkcn-

zi>g ia theirinstmcticfJ. M a t t x : 1 1 , 1 4 : " I n t o

w h a t s o e v e r c i t y t « e n t e r , a n d t h e y r e c e i v e

y o u n o t , e h a k e t h e d a s t o S y o u r f e e t . " V e r s e

1 5 ; " I t s h a l l b e m o r e t o l e r a b l e f o r S o d o m

a n d G o m o r r a h , i n t b e d » y o f j u d g m e n t ,

t h a n for t h a t c i t y " ' L u k e x I G : " H e t h a t

d e s p i s e t h ' y « a , d e s p i s e t h m e . ' 2 T i m . i V 3 ,

4 : " T h e t i m e w i l l c o m e w h e n t h e y w i l l n o t

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O h r i ? t h a v i n g t h e S I

s f i c e r s , a n d o r d i n a n c

M l e m , a n d i n d e p e n i i i

e d g i n g n o l a w g i v e r ;

a u t s i o g i o n o l a w h e

R o a i - T ; 1 O o r . i ! fi|

A c U i i 4 1 . 4 2 .

6 , t h s " L o r d ' s

o o B i a s D o r a t i v e o r

b y a C t t u r c h o r C b r i s t |

t f a c i t j ) , n o t a s a J

p e r s o n a l f e e H a g « f

M o t h e r , a s P e d o b a p t !

» n l y t s s h o w f o r t h (

i g a l n ; a n d b e i n g a

d c a l a l l y , a s y m b o l o f I

l e q o e a t l y , o n l y t b o

i n t h i s o r d i a a n c o '

t l o e . T h e i c e i n b e r

t h e s a m e f a l t b a n d i

« u a i o a o f a n o t l ^ i

a a d n a t b y r v i J i . t o t

b e u i g m a d e t h e |

w c r e J fliast, I . l a v s

d i s c i p H n e t h o s e w h o

j l r e s i b e r i g h t

- 6 . C h r i s ' . i a n B a p l i J

b e i i e v t r i u w a t e r b y ^

I n t h s n a m t o C i b *

t h e b u r i a l a n d

fcsBijn o f a i e a t h l o |

B o n s e c r a t i a n t o h i i |

t h e r e r a r t , c a n a n s i

f e s s i t n o f b a p t i s m i

s c o e p t "

1 6 a n d i x v i U : 1 7 ; J

A c t s v i i i ^ t e t b e <

« a U . i i i . 2 f i . 2 7 .

B u r y i n g i n w a t « ^

e & l y a c t i i m ; s i n c c I

t h e o n l y " l i k t i i t i » 1

i n t i t s w o r l d , fcriti

t l M I 9 - |

1 r r i e a n d

w i t h h o m a n d e v

h u l e t 3 i , t b e j

2. TaMitiM Uws

• f b a p t i s m , e t a . ) i

i n *U eatet r e ^ n i r s |

or examfUt.

3 . T o d i v i d e

C h r i s t i n t o I

tew f a r C b r i a t i s '

p o i n t s w e m a y i

{ K s e t a o b e y o n e <

q - a i r e m e n t s o r t o I

i n t b e g u i l t o f v i «

4 . E v e r y p o s i t i i

l a I b e c b a r p h , n ^ j

p l o d , i a pctUutlyf

,r etie thint u Ik* I

k U h u m a n

. a c t b a p t i w i , _

p r a c t i c e d f o r T e H |

i c r a l w a r r a n t c a a |

M n f i i L

5 . C h r i s t g a v e

a u t h o r i t y U t r a f i t

i s a t i o n e f b i s i

« r c h a n g e b i s l a t

a n o t h e r . T o

i e i T M i c t o j r — t o i

6. P^ciiiles

cmwpromited.

mrnmi C M

Page 3: THE BAPTIST.media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/tbarchive/1873/TB_1873_Jul_1… · |T THi HOUSEi , -l>le Sloelc ' . • T^ iu.ij ^ . UNIVERSITY irfraesbQTO, Tana * . FACtlLTTr-jl. "5

If^Sitlhts e a l ^ ^ to act •r . Wt «Bni. t»goa »«ctM a p a t

— Qosfleta tk* • r . W» (a«»BtTl«£L jflB an

fyn tSa y«m l&i. «por ta . iK |BMna amaag t&efco i^S rflku

ar ckiURn mmj s Toie-• fier xaqt a n so mga^ v ^ ,

I Bp«a ta hat U, iny^i J t »aT otheT joiat sUiek «aaiMa7 i s t tn or trsMfer jtrar t ioAUii s^a My otbtr iteak. It m „

l ^ s a dividend oT t»«atV to I t Mnoanj . Tils jou wiIlM«iT. IwiM • y« r , ia the pnbEeatioai • yott c a BM, g i , , a , ,

•oM for jma hy tit* draciitar; tnierMt ia oMh- Tha frandwi' J fociely la, tHal it maies e u r r irstriljBlar lb t ie extent of h i

• " T i e wtu rtceiTB teapttSSTt (Le,

or Marobj Bii.eertiilea.te will M l»t «f ia tiw imhli-, b* wiU: latti-c*. t*e ttaa^ I Ua eaiiUa^i«sa, tm im iel«s|«' ^

ha CM tail iS k* tiottnct 1

LSfii at l*aa«, ;ailU ^ a ^ a a Ha o n , t h n t a ^ ' o h ta wniK ^ ^

l O N S l l t t l t l O S . '' j HAMX.

I name af Utia Society ihall he the risT ?iraucATiox Bocirrr."

OBJaCT.''--Sfr eijwrtf «f thi» Baeiety aiail i t UMigtf aat T^^oB liy srekas^f I u d Calf&tage.

I t S M B S B S H T V . • SOS «f '«m%*ribea'iia4)

^Utota one a member or •toeii f , ma4 eatitla hisi t s » wrtif lnte

; ft Tots, peannaQy ww by proxy).in of all the oiBcen of tiia a e o i ^ .

^•vidaA that bq ob* ikktl be . . ^ s e a t j f a ^ baUot more thaa$IOeO, kon t h u tzcept by ipadju Foi the Bowd of Mansgmt ' II la

' Tka« OMh alaeUMMn a U t la I dia Airidanl o p n Us itMki^i. u a o a l aaat isgi sf tlw flintiilj, •took ihaU he triaiteehla ika BMitty m iks atoek ia

unicBBa. ha Ofioan of this Boaiety ihalibe M yiaa-Fx«at4<ata, Corr^aadias

~ing Baeratary, Treaasrv; aul I M a a a i ^ wJio vhill ha elected as-

~ wlui (^etkar ikaii eonati-^af

iBOiJgD CT TtfiTJtsgaiu Basef of l f iuuc«» at own meatiiiga; elaei lie

J u d Blmtaiy L appdiBt aa Kflte u d . piABiiiitlaiur; fitaadSK and

litleea; a&o, {<3 A'cestd aod CdU J any Taeaihiy whieb a s y moot ta f, or ba tk* ofice e< ttereepeaaiag ! l^aaaorar; eaaei iU own By>-3M#*;

ytr Thay oaafexa t»tkia CaaMbo-tha dntias of tka Camapaadlitk ae i fB tMT^ pabliaatiaBi at tka Uak Dtpaaitotta; aatim fesan l

tba iBtaraats sftii tnaae t t lM ' tke Bbcdatr aaraa meakas akaC

Iftaaamia, wkadtalLraodra&iBiactf ' for tka tea gnaato tka Soeatyn

•i-.t •naAsavMR. 1

Tka Ixautnar shall giTa kenda ta ant aa the Board auy aypaial:

^ iha dkaattoa of tha Boudi u d I aa BflBozt ta tka Society,

x x x n a e o . L The Society ahall meet aBa,Ti»ay, at I aadplaea aa tia Board of Ma&aftn

Bl. ^ a i a l maetfags of tka Had by tka Prsideat er Cotraajoa^

y, npon appllcalton of t h e j a a r f «

cuj TO naMBHSSHIP- ±3V QWIV^. B. Ho Ofieer, Maaaw, Agaat « pf the Seeioty §haU be elifpWe ta om^ h t e ia the elaotioa of tSe Board « ra. eicept he be a member ia good r ia same.reptiar E^tiat Chasti, aaJiw

•EAXtozra or x n s c o s s n n r n o ^ f , la. AlleraUoaaof this Co^taiioaraS-1 a BTSTKma AnanatMeeting, f» "^fS ' fby two-thirda of the Baariof S!aB»|^ \wMii at the Aaanal Meatiar ty « •8f»

iurls ef the membeiir present.

r r r r ' - i n s FOB 18T3-

nct-rraisLaH:. L QriSa, lean. I MUla, H. C. iLawrey. Miaa. LBlakewaod, Ls. liiBk,Taxu.

J. J. D. B«nfc«i AM. J.B4.Wood,€a. —

^ S ^ S . Ciaig. ^

SttrtUtey-^.V'^m' : •OAJtB Of MASAOwaa.

Young. Miaa^ Joa. iL Banun, »

Loftan, Teaa- Dn Eobwt KaU^ a C ^ T . ^ J. I B

. KllarO, Ttna, Jo ta B J ^ T e M . ,

• Hoai E. P^Xacado, Tenn., ^

loAley. Ark- W. E J ^ n , Ttiita. ^ TCSfaraai c ^ ^ r M r ^ J B. OraTea, Preaiiaat,

BL Ot^ t Traaaaretv

I 'IKCW

'1

I w r 2 I

- 5 d . .

I. One I«rd, aaa FaiBiraBe laaeraion, Epk. l h a t a a

bitk ia tkvtariaJttdfMvraefiMaf t k a t ^ Lord- 8e»®6!iii.%iT M t ' C d l iit 12; I Cor. XT-. 29i ' l falar ifl: 21. J

1. Tka OraoV of Gi:^ tka only . e»iffld*tifaof j Bopa aad la i tk ^ OkrUt, tka only ned i tw af Iaati&.atioa. •• f. • .

a. Tka W«d of Gad the lnBtn^aan^ aad *ke t f i r l i of Qod Ike Ag« i ia tke wttaewUoa of' -.1 t.: • --adnlta

4. Each TiajbirChnxeh 'of Chriii ia a company af icriptar.1^ iamptsed b.^Ttra oaly, (aot.ot, beUereraaaAthair m * - ^ « oa prokatio.,) aaaociatadby Toluataiy aora, aaat lo obey and execntfr all oennaaadmenta of (Anst haring tke same or^isa t icn , doctriaaa, oSeera, and ordiaancea of the Qmrsk at Jera-•alemi, ami indepeadeat of all others, ackaowl-edgist no lawgiTar ia Zioa bat Christ, aadaob^ aiitliag ta a* law he haa not enaoted. Bead Roai ir 7} 1 Cor. i ! 3; Bph.:: 1: CoL i: 1-5: AelaU:«.42. ' -" '5. the -lord-a Supper" ia a positiTO and

aooiasnoratiTe ordiaanca to>e otse^^ed^oaly ky»CttaiA«rfCkxi«tM«ek {thatia,la c h w k .apacUy), not aa alaat of driUiaa/Hlomtkv peraonal feaKag af one oocaBunicant to'waoed

T H E B - A J r a i S T - I ^ J T J I . Y 1 9 , 1 8 T 8 .

ih» i tVtidm V g Maa t« tatf trtl-latk* pro&aai»<. t>f „ gio* Oati^uo.

BavtM. AKtteMcMiitti^MmtaaM

bMb i l iWM Uim^&dBiXk of ^ U r t y

ilie i W a t copjr f f f ' T m ^ -Tiav aoaUiniBa the a»tid«!waa deairedaMi

another, aa Pedobaptists erroneously teaeh, but enlj to iiow foitt Cknart tm ke cokes igaini and beuig a Ch»ch act, U becomes, inci-daal»Uyr »^ahoX«f CSbtreiriiilijniiy; coa-ieqcaaiiy, only tkoaa ekurekea » a participata la tkia ordiaanca tkat agree la faith a»d prae-dee. Tha ttemker of One ehnrch (though of the game faitk aad order) can cane to the coa-•nn i i a if anotW only by an Ki of oourte.y. and not by Ti^kt,Iax aaqkehnrckU ia Jependint, being «ade tke gaarfiaa of tha panty, at the » c « d f t a a t , U la»eated. with tke aatkority ta discipline thoaewkoM relationahip ordinarUy girea b e r i ik t « 6. Ckriatiaa Baptism is the imnersion of a

fcaUerw ia watat by.ft a ^ ^ . a d ^ t » U r , la tka nama af ika ia rtprsasKtuHon af tha biirial and raaurection of Christ, and pra-. fisasiaa of a death to ain, anion wiCi Chriat, aad aonaecraliaa ta kia aerTice. Out moda only, tkertfara, can answer tkia design, and tke pro-feansn. of b^tiam cannot be made by eUldrtn, axoapt " At cKUrw of Goi ly FdiX." Matt, u : IS ftad xxriH: ITfMarkxxi : 16; JokniU: 2,3; Acu Tlfit t* tkaoiose; 4,6; CoL tt:12;

'"Boryiagia waUr of oae dead to sin Is tke tnly ftcUoa; since tke burial of a d«ad man ia tka only "likeaeaa" .^r repraaaatatioa of death ia tka itoiii,liHtiB called lAilikanesa of death, f ixptfiTAaT *aniC!x»i«.

t . rae mUe, and tke RSU alone, unalloyea witk haman dericea or tradition, is, and ern kaa been, tkeTali^oa of Bapt^ta.

i i 'afiim Iftwa (aa baptism, and the aubjeeU af baptian^ etc.) ara not left to be m/irrtd, bat la «a eowa require patitm aad plain comaiaada, tretaa^la.

i Ta ditida tka poaitifa r*inirameaU of Chriat iato maitial* a a i ni».^u*iitiaU,iM to decide haw te Ckriat ia to be obeyed, and ia what poinu wa B»y aafely disobey him. But to re-Cisa to obey oaa af tke leaat of kU positiTe ra-,airaaenU oe to Uaah others eo, InTolrea one ta the guilt of Tiolating a l l

4. ETary positiTe law, ordiwiaco, or practice io the ckaroh, not expratly eommatdtd or exam-pled, is ftrUidai, mce tU ipee{/ieation tfttu thMS U tiipnk&iton qfettry otitr. Tkoaa

all kumaa laTWtloM aad traditiena, aa ia-.*nt b a p t t e , apriakling, pouring, ete^ now practiced for reHgieus ritea, for wHckao aerip-taral warraat eaa be found, and are, Vitrt/bre, tiafuL

5. Chriat g«Te no ttea, aociety or ckurck the aulkority U iraJU witk the ordinaaee or orgma-isatioaaf kia Ckarckar Kingdom, aa to make ar ekange kia lawai anS aubatllnte one tking far anotker. Tb anrrendcr wkat k a ^ esubttshed, i« irteeitrj-:^ akange tkem, trectoTu

«. Priociplea «»a aeiiker be eonttJ'id aot ^oin^rariuail. laroKTAaT rAora,

D t i W«atiB» BiptiJit' a-o DiAB Bra I w * from»*ri«ua

situtcea l l u l .^ jpy ftnd'Boon« k n ab«»tmti'Bd«rt«»k® «» n ^ y . ^ U e M d good: .Baptblaaeema*-moat d.fficttit t«ak—

«atakliilimetlt''of < a dtnominaUonftl pa|»er" t h e r e i y ^orpoae, tke ateps a l r ^ y taken, viUlcaTe no .ratioaftl .inait to doubt that these brethren, are poaaeased of moral courage almost tmanrpaased. Whh the re-peated f^Iorea of . papers'in this and other older S t f t ^ blaaoned pn tlje pagea of hia-tory, it seems atraage thftt men can aUU be foond ready to Tentnre out on the roogh seaa'to court the sort of dea t ^Uon which they hate seen orenrhelm their friends. So we give the brethren credit for at least » lofty heroism. Bat we must aay that, ia oM'htmble jirfi^.ment;ttedeiitw of wisdom oOJed into requiaitton by U»|a enterprise hardly equals the beroiam displayed.

1 ahsU apeak frankly. We do not need the-paper. T H E BARNAR is our organ, and has many frienda m the Stale Of this t&ere can be no doubf It already has a wide (urculation in the . Sute, and ita col atanii are open to aH who desire to write. What more could we with ? U certainly ia not d^*»ble ' to set up another "organ." Sbme._T know, .are, not pleased with THB BAWIOT. . The decUration qf aome extreme Tiew8,tke rejection, of an artieie aent for publicatfon, or the aappo»ed negleet of some little business matter by Bro. OrftTes, has sufficed to stir up'^tbe heart of a brother here and there. ThU Is to be expected. And the new paper will meet with just such diScalties. Where, then, is the necessity for ft new organ? The Convention hw adopted T H E B A M A aa iu organ. Is it beat that another paper should appeal to it now, in the period of ita development, and thus divide its .atrength and cripple its growth? think npt Let ua go on, at

1. A.a teiolan, cnlietcai Uxteofrapkert, of an? aoie, «wnt««l^4eela« tkat tfcaprw^y (tkat ii, tm) and Uadimg aignlfieation of •BapUso," ia ta d p or wmerie, wkUe lome af tka Taiy beat «hoUra of any age. kfnatkft t . l t hu m . c ^ ^u^ma^.—iUMOl aad Seott,Oanon, Aathett,4w.

i Standard hiitariaai mm^Mulg agru that ffimiutt and ttpm^tk baptim waaadaiaiateT^ by tka wimtrriM </ «* wattr, ia Ika aaae of tkeTriaity.-{Slewart, Bobiaaon a ^ Wall. 3. Sitartf all ttmdard eoaaaata-

tors'adaut tkat tke Bikla daea not fkraiak one fltbi tuii—fif /or, mermmfiU'^h^thaftiim^ •ad tkarc ii Uautaoat ^ g r m e a t aidmi^a-Maim ywwi an wkat gronada or^for what parpaaait^ t» ha ftdaiaiatand... .

4.5AII itahiardfciateriaaasBaainonaly afirm tkat tka tntnmml af tka apaatoUe c&uMk« «fta doueraft'e, Qkkl is, raatad ta Ika

^ p l e 0c a a i B k t ^ B j tUOucJuareku 'm^ poUaarvuNifM, - JUI -"Ultoaa Mcitiua kftTiag filfiflitiir aad ctmml ae wisictrtSai fiTaraaeaia, (Oaib, la tktkasdaaflkealsigy o r a f ^ aaa iaaAoa,) • » airffwyterU aad Brit-npaitfcua tytaaaiaa wkick no C k r i ^ c a a

coutrtaiftaei, aoeleam H ta " y t a S i i ^ i i ^ aksirek^ or IkelrpriiMkeitiia oMc&l aiaHttiw • f t t a g o ^ a : ® ^ ' Keaaf ia ty , ' a i ia»i ied«^pr4i<^«ffar . iag ' f tea tkoavaf O r i t t h m d i m , UnStg affvmttK^tU, ifAififri, errfffi la the Watery oaa juatly k c A T f t l N M •fcii^'^ar tkmtk V CbU; a r « < « (kt d M ^ CMC, Ck •mapllBaSterf l i* iiB»«hiHg aae aquat ta aaaia'tlkv^'T-T I.' r=ri>i. ' .• '

least, unta the meeting of the convention and then discuss the matter thoroughly Committed aa we are to THE BArtisr, I do BOt aee how we can act otherwise and keep oar p l i g b ^ preseive oar sacred honor. -c

But gran^ng that we need the paper, can the s u t e support it? VTe think not. The older States, with th^ee or four times our number, have scarcely been able to do thia. A l t h o u g h we know that Arkansas BaptisU are more Ub<^, m a genirsl thing, than BaptiaU in the older States, still we can hardly beUeve that they are equal to this great enterprise. It w o u l d be far easier to e n d o w a female college at LUUe Kock, and the Allege would contribute a thousaad times as much to the cause as a feeble paper. We do aot need a sickly, strungling paper, when we have a strong and b*tltby one; and r am persuaded that our l i e fk r tn win not support i t And though tuaay of our Bap-tists may be too modest to say as much, our good brethren will learn the truth too late fbr their financial good. I know the proa-pectus triea to stare off thia thought, and genUy intimates that there is plenty of money on hand to wUblish the paper, and whether supported or not, it will not go down as other papers have in the S a t e Thia is about the kind of promise that every prospectus bears on its face. But the enthusiasm in a fruitless enterprise which costs thouaancU of doUara soon coola down.

Bat could the paper be supported, I must sftf frankly that Breth. Espy and Boone are not the men to conduct the enterprae. Unfortunately for Bro. Eipy, he has written too much, fie has had aomething to say in almost every issue of THX BAPTIST. He i* not in sympathy with Arkf nsas Baptists, or their great enterprises. He haa opposed our coUege; he has crippled our educa-tional work; and last of all he atrikeaat the Convention iUelf, and publishea to the world that it is composed of and managed by rings. Such a man is not Ukely to aecure at once the sympathy of our ps jpla Of Bra Boone mach lesa ia known, and we know nothing of him that would lead ua to aappoae thai he is not in harmony with the great Baptist famUy in tho State, except ihe iMt jhut he now proposes to ftssociate him-aelf with "John Smith, of Arkanaas," ia thia great work. We are thoroughly satia fied that no oae can make a success of such ft pH>er in the Stftto at thia time, much leu tha brethren who proi>oae to undertake it.

But I most be permitted to a&y in concla sion, that the brethren have a right to try the experiment, and every Baptiat in the s u t e has a perfect right to aubacribe for the paper. BaptiaU are free ftqd independent, ftnd if our friends chooae to publiah and the frienda to support we ahaU cease to protest, and oompoM oaraelf as best we can, to read woftderfhl dreams,'and even "more wonder fol J<»hn Smith irticlefc Friend S-p must be permitted to apread himselt He cannot b ^ " idl«" &e b t t ftltnoal filled our ^ g e in Tta"BAiTOT lately, "bo t ' t to doaa not gtre him enough roem. He i i q ^ t e i s liard to

TMt aoittaipiBg thea»tida a i k ^ tor.' r Tery promptly famlaked «cL Lei-a 'huiiber o b r i o * ^ , ftra(^ ;;jo4ge; .ifyoo. the notitoipidatioB, witk which al iwaitwli tiU Saturday for the appearance of the pap**; I carefully glanced over the paper to aee the answer, bat lo? none^wka tber t ! I t had all ended in wind and, smoke. ^ They hav« concluded "not to Bot i^j^" W)>ytbia effort on the part of the Pedo« to keep the people in the dark as to ih*' utter a b i e ^ of all scriptural authority fo^ japrtok|in^ (christening) infanta to save them^ I pav.e asked ag^in and again for scriptural evi-dence on thia subject, but in vain. They wUl not furnuh it because they cannot , I aak not for both precept and exapaple, but only one or the other, if the precept ia fur-n i a h e d , I will infer it was obeyed without an example. If the example ia f u n d e d , 1 wUl infer the precept was given without ita being pointed out I am open to convic-tion. Let some Pedo fumUh the book, chapter and verae. if they will do «©, I feel safe in promUing that T H E BAPTIST wUl pub-lish it to the world. If they cannot do so, why will Pedoes continue humbugging the world with the innovations of purely human invention ?

But light u ipreading, 1 know more than one Methodist family who wiU not have their chUdren sprinkled (christened). 1 heard one Methodist circuit rider compWn from the pulpit that he had baptized (sprinkled) but one chUd during the year, and urged his members to bring their chUt dren to baptism (sprinkling).

Said I to his principal claaa leader, " Why did not you h a v e your children sprinkled? "

" They are too large," said he. No," Biud I, " that u not the reason.

Light U apreading and the people are learn-ing better. They will no longer obey their teachers."

•• Yes," said he, "this U an age of progress, and I suppose religion is progreiwive aa well as other thing*."

"Miataken again," said 1; "religion lanot progressive. It remains unchangably the stme as it was eaUblUhed by ChrUt and the aoostlea."

The people are honest. They are only deceived by t a k e r s , caUcbisma and dia-. cipltnes.

When we can get them to "search the Scriptures," and rely on them alone, they wUl learn the truth and abandon. aprinkUng and christening. To the study of the BiWe we invite them always, and ask them to judge our teaching by that—whether the things we teach are ao <» not " Though we or an angel from heaven preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto jou, let him be accursed." (GaL 1 8 )

Not IJDg since, while presohing m the Baptist church at this place on a kindred aubject, I held up to the cpngreg^on the Bible from which my youngest aister uaed to read as proof of the closing of the Bible to the worid by the Romtoi CathoUcs. I gave an account of this once before in THE BAPTIST. I will briefly relate it again. ThU Bible fell into the hands of her oldest son. He united with the Catholica and had no further use for the Bible. He told me " he could not understand it if he read it; he was compelled to get a priest to explain i t

This is false The people can underatand it if thev will only atudy i t But do not the P e d ^ as effectively close the Bible to their people when they furnish them cate-chisms and diaciplinea instead? 1 think

AtflM»)diMie or o o H M i ^ t^^a^txiiM thft^Otta^of <or^anai,<itbi» ohahsh 'fa 'co^er-enee>netkoir!s»d ow «» opur •orreapdadeBce idth4MlMl^nktM- witti arvlcv to kasbaeom iD^fMtDr^tb ia d»urch.WTk»maBakDiabip ia aimdliiWDd tiMy bave beta^ and MUl-are, oittying k 'Wvjn btfoden in Siting ^p: their hoitse of worahip v y«t 4hey «eem -to t i * *r«M 'Aat their vaacwas, iwd«r Qcri,

pleaae in the way of pikp«». ««. he U with namea. Hia' mnat have k p a ^ of his own. He therefon itopt Ta Bamw. • Bat If be drops papers ka hadropk th« d i lbnf t t n«mes <mt whiflii herwittw, h» win sooK drop the Waunt B^t tu . Aad wa f«tf I k wiU Ii* deker of ths Wuten BapliM t k a h* is " Jobn Snith." ' W.'IK' M A ^ t o .

c Letter A M F s m s t — Eotroa BARIST:—Sid. W. X. Let's pieo*

ftboat the" i ^ 'sBxiety of tkA .Boduai CWhdks s t i Epiwopeliaas i a l U s | ^ a o e i o luTO ft ride fadbat ehristwed bafim U died, u d t l M N f i i f i b i lort, fil ikh appoaitd^iii

chijais and diacipl they do.

After so long a digression I return to the sick infant The Roman Catholics and Episcopalians try to make the impression that Eld. Lea's published version waa not true. Learning this, I took the paper, and without letting Mrs. C. know my object, read it to her. Turning to a lady present, she said, "That is true—every word true."

She aUo told me the Catholic priest apent the night with a neighbor of hers. She ftaked the next d i j what he had to say. " Why," said the one addressed, " h e prayed in some language I did not underaUnd. I suppose it was Latin. He had an awful heap to aay in hia prayer about a woman named Mary. I asked a Catholic friend what wsman waa it the priest was talking about so much in his prayer?" "Why," •aid he, "Mary, the mother of God." Yes, he was praying to the Virgin Mary I not to Qod. How much longer can auch stuff be palmed off on the world?

But the leaven of truth ia permeaUag thb people. They are talking, reading and reflecting, and thia createa dissatisfaction with human innovations, and many I pre-dict will be " buried with J esos in baptism."

Eld. Lea, armed with " th« sword of the Spirit, which is the word of tenth,"' has cqtftde himself felt in this community, and has built this church from aboot a aeore to i^boat one handled in fourteen mont ]^ The Baptists are maatera of the sitoation here, and challenge all of their opposers to ft atudy of the word of God for a " thus sftith ^ e Lord," or u vzftmple for all they do aad teach.' I gather this much ftom hinta I t is the intaation of tiie Roman OUholios and t b ^ dan^t«r—tL»£piseo[»> lisas—not to notice Bid. Lea's statenwot or meet lUm in' diactmion, either in the press ov palpit; fiat to stab bis repotetipn from UMpalpi tandin tbo prttata obele.^ W«n, Bi^tist pKMhsn a n QMd to thia I t < is bereditarr. ^ Tldr ^ o l i ^ SIMW* the

depends <M their h^ng.4t^gooda&«lftfflaieot piatoW'^Bueh s mao' wottid flnd«ao»p>e seop* here for the exercise of ftU his powers, and, altkoagk he could not e x | ^ much peouniary reward at'present, yet i fw^had a good' yottng' man, eather single o r «rith a SffiftU fsaaily/ as his necessities :the hope h that the ohurcb would also grow and be aW* to meet these necearitiea. - T k e Methodists have largely the ascendency in C ^ d e n , yet the Preabytetians end Sptsco-{Mdiftns have flourishing congregationa, and very eflloient young • men- for ministers: I think the Baptists are quite as strong u either <rf the last mentioned congregationa What young minister, trusting in Qod for success, is waUng to t a l a charge of this poalT Brethren, lay this matter to your hearts, and say, who will come? I have before said thftt a more noble set of breth-ren it was never my privilege to labor with than those at Camden. Who is wiUlng to make the aacrifice to come to t h w assist-anoe? Write me at Creswell, Ark. •

Bra May field and mjaelf reached pRiKcrroT

on the ^Ist of June, and after enjoying the lospitalities of our esteemed brother and aiater. Dr. H. P. Thomas and wife, on the morning of the 22d we met a very'lood congregation ftt the ehur^,~ to whom Bro. tf.'preached a thrilliitg sermon from the text, "Chrut is aU and in alL" Weh»d •errices agwn at night with a aOU Urger congregaUon. I trust good wiU be the reault Bro.' Yates, for aeveral years the pastor of this church, has recently beeome so afflMsted that he has had to give up preadhing to the church. ThU b quite a calamity both to Bra Yates and the church; to both we tender our condolence. Bra TftylOr, a UcenUate of thU church, w preaching to it Oooaaionally, aUo doing* quite an amount of other domestic mission work. From thU point, in answer to a telegram from Bro. Keep, Bra MayBeld went to LitUe Kock, while 1 turned to

EQISBl-RIi toSUan appointment there. Thu church u situated in the " hot bed " of anniMation-Uts. It wUi be remembered thftt th'is U the place at which we had a discussion with one of their champions last faU. Since that time Bro. T. J. Craig, the pastor, has poured a continuous fire into their broken column^ and to d*y one scarcely dares to show his head. Though our appointment at thU place was in the week, yet we had a good congregation, and a pleasant tneeting. Success to our cause at Bdinburg.

OUB DISTEICT MEETISC met at Enoa Church on the 27 th. There were present, Elds. Moran, Hyatt, Cr&ig, Gardner, Griffin, Vick, 0»Ten and myaelf, beaidea.a large assembly of other brethren. Several essays on imporUnt sutyecls were read, diacussed s» d adopted. A great degree of unity of aeutiment and brotherly love characteriied the meeting. The congrega-tion was large and orderly. Provision waa served on the ground both days. Brethren Cndg, Gardner, Moran and Hyatt preached during the meeting with great acceptance. The last named brother preached twice, and though I have been with him constantly for ten years, and have often been delighted with hU sermons, yet the two he preached at thU meeting, Ia my judgment, far surpassed ftny I ever heard him deliver before. Though Bra Hyatt U somewhat advanced in years he u compftraUvely a young preacher, and haa promise of a bright future before him. The next meeting will be held with the church as Selma, Drew county, Ark. The subject of theorganixation of

laE hiw AgseciATios was consideri-d The churches having re-ported in favor of Sftid organization, we ftgreed to meet atFriendship Church, Jeffer-son county, on Saturday ftt 10 o'clock A before the 3d Sunday in September next; Eld J. T. Griffia to preftoh the introductory aermon, end Eld. J- R. Vick, ftlternate. Let fttt the churches send their delegates just aa they have been accuatomed to send to other Associations. J. B. SKABCT.

maUer, it is no offended. AwLI m^ntkaa.&eee; k* I did in ft private interview with thu brother on the siA>jWt^tbft*; the tiew lie took of ftnd my motive in writing i t-did-me the gravest ii^'ustice.t 'Sd i «akatt tobe manly, geotlemanly-^and Ci»riati«a4ike,^j^aHiciy ftnd voluntarily, as J( did priiftteli; in,th^ interview above mentioned, to having had in my "mind'a^yft" h e a r t r b ^ j ot«Uewkereithe ease to; whifilL be r e f e f ^ in oar ooaversation,: and which was tba ftUeged cftuse :of the trouble between:;^ when rl wrote the leUer compUined. 6t This-I aay frankly, aqm^rely, fre^_ftnd with "a conscience void ofoS«aae tpwud- Cofi, and men." I take the following to be self-evident tratha:

jPtoP' . So to ^ e Southern Bap.|igk:.?iiWication Society wwa^diie kat J fwi f iy r |Md ia te(Ht»^wisk tbf l im^lM^ ^ time tftkMp tbsir.ootfls, ibftfc wofa^v*: MUl them to thexfaUoansc bretteeiu^to.wbDa they oaa p a y - a m M t o f e j ^ A ^ o * ^ tr-XtaMe breihipa.wt4«>bJiip ... their funds t^ B a ^ K . t b ^ ^ l ^ promptly raturn oertif ici^- . ' ' .. .

Ihrx IT Morr imCi^ate^Hincst f -^FL]^ notes tiiken in l«Tl,»«tid alfr daA: J*aimrr> < C JbPea^tttO^fA^ Thnmi—1,

Wood, Z gaith.$5y. Magr

1. Every man has the most perfect'right to interpret what he speaks or writes.

2. IntenUon entera ao. essentially into what men say and do, that moral tiupi,tade or crime, in its absence, cannot be affirmed-

o. A disclaimer, coming from one. whose, words or actions have been construed as offensive, is, therefore, and must be with genUemen and CkrUtians,Uie end of all con-troversy. £ > £

4. The right of explanation should be granted to every one before his motives a^e impugned, or hu octiooa misjudged. -

ThU much I fMl it my boonden d u t j Jp eay for the saiufaction of the aggrieved brother, ftnd in the aame channel through which the CO mcouoicalioa giving the o f f a i ^ came to light He will underaUnd thu ftrtide, and the motives that pcompted it, when heseeai t

- Hoping that this will b i received in the spirit in which it is written, and give entire aatUfactjon to all concerned, I am frater-oally. JftEN- SviEr of Arkansas.

Itr-m f^-om Arkaasas. a—p. J

At the instance of Eld R J. Coleman, tha

lf6tes half due Jaanuy. n r i i Sl^iECkaK l « 7 t r S v H Alien, lESt'TotftJj^aWt ffbase^ we have sent to F. BtwiWRiwbo t - t e p U a s ^ ^ i n

J^csjiX.WAaaKx-Bid &Bt 6 ^ n e r , C'BueilngSufi^

"Tbesewft have senUo Eld. Saskeny. Tt nq FBi5aB».--SkL A^ S l ^ i Mt ^Jh

Iktnn, These ire n^ve srat to..Bre: x a ^ who fo'Hrard as'he has heretolbrer ' ' ' "

$100: U J BArry,$50; W i i B a a j f : $50; J R G W N Adams. $100; .BMiowi f , ,

$50 $50; H Byers, S50: F t fimitb Church, - L S950. Bra BucUei: " "

lige tu ^ t i l , S9M. Bra feucklev will forwatd.from

r?ally oblij Fu Smitb, and gr?a! brethren.

iuid the

DEWrrT.-iin the fSDowing amonnts t re due at DeWitt, awi we'bave nrwarded tlte notes to W. U. Hftllibart(mrE«q> wiw wiB. please receive and foiwardjr - ' -

Eld J TMa.-»hftU, 55pi W I f C h w y j ^ ^ i , Jas A Gibs6n,'$50; John B Heifnok C ^ k -ett'a B l u ^ $50; Richard «atable,Cli«a»tW»' Bltiff, 550i Tota1,^50.' '*t Ufc's- Tr s j - : ofn

VAk Bum—Simeon WUt^ S o t ^ t J ^ o ^ ' Britton, $50; J B H a i . ^ i O S-HgUsm. $50; W D Gamer, $140-,J ICHoaaffey.SSO; Daniel Jouea. S5Q; W L Tmjutt, SSa Totaii $t50. TTilleitber of l ^ 'tellTii e -iHiA m e r e s t we shall send

DASOAKELUE.—;TbB notcs sent to Eld. W. .Ctft'^

Rogwa, McGnire, $30; R & Son, S-iO; A M JoneB..r«50i. Church Na 1, $50; Bid W W Crai Total, $400. K

CHiBLEsTos.—D H

with the church a*. KL PASO,

White county. The immediaw cause of

pastor, we spent last Saturday and Sabbath 1 ^ u ^ ^ ^ S S t " A ^ e n S L : $50. Totkl, $250. Who vM-ooUaotc t b a » for us7 T-v"*^

The following can send drafte taf-ysi; Orleans, directly to us, through the dMrebntt^ they dekt with, who wiUb'blige iber^'iu^^i:

T J Craig,$100; A d ' f i T A Heard, $lOOi M i ^ . ^ by Eid JL«ria,550iiS r ^ ^ , ,, Eld John Aaron, $50; T H Bobarion^ J J»dm Boberson, $50; . V : " •

• • * " U

this visit was to deliver, in connntion with the pastor, some discourses on the aubject of baptUm, which were intended as a reply to a a»iee on the aame tubject from Rev. Mr. Mackey, a Methodist preacher, of.Searcy. ^ . Bra Coleman occupied three hours ftnd G r o ^ k u r c h , * b ^ " i ' 6 half on Saturday, in reviewinghU iiscouraea o,«aBwood Gkuid».-l^Hr"--

ner, vW; w w rewir.— ,

G }L Farmer, f50; T VT read from the standing column in Tats Rir-

a MethodUt minUter m the congregation ^ ^ ^ l^tphell, 550; V . S who flatly denied that Mr. Wesley bad ever Young, §50; t H RpVujfon, 5W; Pla i to t^ written such sentiments, or, if so, be had VaUey Chi^b , ; P r o j ^ C ^ ^ r r v e r . e e n nor heard te'u of t h e m before . | » 0 ; U ' s CreA C h ^ W j / ^ S ^ I $50: Cane Creek Ckurbh, $53; T A M B A S H

aUy,$50; SAKeene.S30; GorinibX^taw^ by B p p e ^ n & Hill. $50; & U f i ^ t t a i ^ i .

Springs Cnurch. 5>0i . P j e j ^ t rr t Springs Cnurch, I G r o f e ^ ^ b , $50, by W A I C t c h ^ ; ff i

ThU was, no doubt trna "Where ignorance U bliw,. 'Tis folly to be wise.'

Let me give ft fei*- examples of j "Aoen,' ^ i u n a v leesness of Mr. Mackey s statements aa to gs; j H Howard, 25; J R«tobey, 25; ScO plain malUrs of fact Quoting Bx. xiL 22, gaokingbam. 25; W B J o ^ . * L i v . 6, T. 3: Klag, " - 3 3 . b e affirmed that was in the original of these pas- Xotat. &,. . . ^ . tages. The original proper would be the i t will be far batter for the b r e t M e s V Hebrew, but as b zptlsc ii a Greek word, i pay these notw thU uprinf tbaa aex t

statements I pronounced false, and - • t ticnedthe capacity of the man who made j them to teach the people on the subject ClrcnliUag a ReUgloai F f ^ t baptism. Thus he made the impression ^ a good reiigioas piper makes CkosUana that sprinkle and pour are translations of ^ ^ ^ i^^^nig^nv the word iapfii'in the common version. Was " -he deceived by some MethodUt author whom he had read ? Not once U hsprao thus L-ans-late<l in the version of King James. To

the be«t possible construction upon

:JK

put

2 It makes th#m r a w useful 3 It aecurf s better pay for the pastor 4. I t secures better twbhers for the win

dav school. •• - • ' 5 It s e c u r e s better atteniaoee at.'Cis

U) R belter u n d w U R ^ ^ the Scriptures. . " . " ' '

7 It increases inlerejt in Ibi s p t e t w ^ the ffoeiMfl. - ' j t r .c i tp ' ian

these sUlemecU will reflect very dUcredita-bly upon the Pcbol-xrship of the gentleman who made them The cause of sprinkling. ^ ^ - . »Bd T>oj'injr. perhaos. Is not in a very healthy 8. I t helps to fetde-eaaey dtfBSalM yx• " n d U i o S u t El Pa3o JuU now. They J 1 of faUlr imported a man into the town to discus, ' ^ t o ' ^ T S ^ S T e r r o r . -this qi-stioa. Certainly th?y kae-K thatl 11. I t places we^poM in fte-bftpa^ w h e r e R J. Colemiu presides there wonH] to d e f e * ^ - ' ' . . .rp«

't

bean opportunity for business.

Of

w o t aiV^MMMT tf W Tke h o a i a f ^

Witt strike thoa |b i ik cuaeC

n*

Explaaatory Letter from John Snith of Ar-kansas to tke Brethren of Arkansas.

Under the influence o f » certain spell, I wfts induced to write some letters, intended to be racy, to my cotlsin, John Smith, of Virginia—a writer in the Btliffieut IlercU--for the purpose, inftinly, of ^ t i n g a little more spice aad variety to our deparUnent of the paper. I did not suppose everybody would appreciate the spirit and style in which they were written. ThU anticipfttion IS Terified in criUcUms which brethrwi have >een pleased to offer in the paper. If they

bad known that for the esibelUshments we had drawn on the imagination very largdy, their atrictures, ^ rhaps , would have bwn wiVUiWd. The exUtince of'ringt, the snp-pUntihg «Jf ministers, in a i d oat oJ Arkfta-•fti, and otbiw things, weiappose to be qnes-tioiis of fact, in j«lfcti6a to wbfcii We xrdgbt be Induced to a h ^ forth the light tbiat is bi us tHe gratification of otir bretbreii who m so iw'ch hi the dark If it abould erer bfefcomk newjBsary. We" eamesfly b o w ^ r , that too snctf necessity wiU eter be

» " • . Bol c t those letters, ubfortrtnately

i ^ - r u m ^ f i t i t a i t i i * ^ liHtflTed'ino ift

brotker of my ovm i M o M m . w U ^ l ^ t i av i ' a iO^ed piMMBk M d fHeadfy.xaift-t i b f l i . T p ^

SundaT.SchMl Co«Ten«on of the Celnnbia As.icciatloa. ^

Convened at Magnolia, Ark.,'Saturday beforetbe fifth Sunday in June, 1873.

Was called to order by the President, Alexander Byrne. S^retaries being absent, Breth. Archer and Siinmoss Wire chosen SecreUriei, pro Jfw.

Seven churches w w r.-pres«nted by fourteen d e l e g a t e s , wfth atTefl^Saperitf tendents of Buadi^-achooJs; an. aggregate of thirtysix teachers, and two hundred aad forty-nine enrolled pdpiU- ' ' _

Books used.—The Bible and TAtamenl, Kind Vordt, and laternational Unifbnr Lessons. ' '

Proferamme for t ex t Coavehtibn ? ' -To meet with Columbia Aiiwdatloa

12. It affords ft.channel of ( between, b r e t h r e n . •

13. U g i v ^ t b e MW„fr0B 14 It brings out t i i s i a i s ^ o f l

inotion and makes i t jupfU w a m i 15. ItthrowJightoj^B^obsour^qO

of practical inieresC . _ ' "" , 16. It pres light on tAwttre p i l l i g ^

the Bible. ' ' - ^ - f 17. I t cultivates a tast&fo^MdtM. - jH 18. It makes the ckiMre»aBaam!tateUr

g0Qt M. rj^ec tttfr^t rftn^fi) uci 't I t makes better nare«ts»»wAJ r - "

<2a I t tttakerbat^ebtttaaia. ' 21. I t kwrfteAS ^fteWM tbertlsatinn

of KOblS.- ' SM ^ '-JJM aa l t g i r e sg r t e^ t r f i i o t i ' n f cWs 23. It gives the more imMrtMil' •irtW***

new. of g e n ^ „ Now Uiere Wffirfc ttn^trfpl^

time wtU. W c i a ^ p m ^ ^ ^ .

decide if yea ^ d r ^ ^ ^ s " w fci f

i

i I

i

I f L

h

. 1

Mars HiU, Friday before the secofad Sunday t b « : a | l l M n > ' Inl l t«to. inOctobernext - ^ .. .

B d . C. P. Sweeny reqrieated to write ^ preaent an essay on "The great objecta of aee>sd»titbjitekl • smes . i i f tFMl i r j f r i ^ t ^ Sunday ichooW

Eld. C. 0 . WUe on - The best method of promoting Sundky-school work In country h e t e t r t b a f t n t M ^ t e ^ e m

Eld. J . G.Kendall on •'Scnpttti»ft"ttlhdfiiyMltle«»ek! ^.rfi ft>r Sunday-eeboob.*'- •

DeaeottH. B. Afohtodn iaeCbodsef i n k i n g Sunday sdi0(^ ectf -\< - - Atk i sxh i i J ^ . - P r w l . • j

•R: B. Amcan. Setfyi^ ^ ^^^ '

3 f i

I i i

5;-- .vHav'f ^d.'

OolOE is t i e t j i ^ of a » e e - f t is

.iWtiV. be^j y j t j irrti^rtsB a •* 1

.azTzafaiC-'' r

Page 4: THE BAPTIST.media2.sbhla.org.s3.amazonaws.com/tbarchive/1873/TB_1873_Jul_1… · |T THi HOUSEi , -l>le Sloelc ' . • T^ iu.ij ^ . UNIVERSITY irfraesbQTO, Tana * . FACtlLTTr-jl. "5

i t

I I •h i

r I I

©J

w f t i t Ufiut i l l I c ^ - W f l w n - b not and

d i ? " tkert li no ttw fiir a ; BUT If 10, l»w;

i ^ t f u , tow arJWJfc? « i ^ t J utfuw t" iMaMwand ^ baptiia.

^(tpMfg', ^ ^ te &at OBly dtttrsetiTe of priaiipto of CbistUatty—

-but It efectnally p»ti ii oat «f tfct ptwtr of a u spritJdad ia u M i t t t* ob«7 d b ^ ooiUMair to ilM imMwedt tBiiuiw Oa enieeenmte n d BOB^toIioma latt tbo f ^ loda^eil t&at ipHal^ U H A L I OBIIU R C U I E D U OHUTKMH—WOIAI-b i c i A t o l k e i ' M a l a i l tfceybeUerothey wm« n g n e n t W ^ B .

- • Ba^lOIA- ' % I t C^Tirtt'n bi^ttai %pcnnialiatj—L e., • ^ t l npoB pftroUa, aa w u oizeameisiCB, or %kt adniaii tanl to thuit ohildnn ?

datj^of

If ft pariatal da^ ,HI* tiieeeeiiioB, U e*B B t f t r t t f |« d a ^ oC th« c ^ Oiotigit ita par-iat» weilBreliet i s aa t r i i aad inDuit bip-t ioi that e&enu^r dMtroTtbelieTcn' baptiam ftaUaaaztk. BoiiiB kthapexacui da t j of a p d A a a ^ d i a T ^ it ia not a parmtal daiy.

S m a j I B CBSEDS. V Ci0aaH.—" IT a n van aSiaS sajt Oat bap-

t l m !a ^ oaaaaJlal p lalTatioa; let hiiB be a> It. bMiSim, set oalj a n mt riaa n -

•lttea.bat S w e o B i a h m e n l o f ^ iagra-^ r ^ M r t o a t ofSad. Bap&sa opeai to M t e r ^ ^ n On <if &eav«n, wliieh b«-fan, tkniq^ lia, w a r A T r t . " — 3 V f « « ,

panoB coctnned ia re-f i t f n i ttfBBairar flia« i p i ^ E f .

a •'WtollByoarBamaf' A. " H. at H."

% " Wio caWTMLiBla " ^ tiWT f i m r — i a baptism: Tbcteis I vaa te^^^Ttf C k z ^ ibm 0liUd:0f God, IniBhaiitarof t h a k i ^ o a a f kaaTexi."—

. BMk CUctUiM. Er—Whalaxe t^b«Be£i8«erteuve

Tll lM"—• w l ^ t i e t o t a f theae iathe -waamg away

ozidsal aia tlio applleaUoB • cf Ft taafh"

into Oiaeltfmai, laiT aaiiiiwiiinj^Tn mwli aambett^of ChxiaV

a T d ac^Uia oatwaid baptiam ia a. mrasa a f ^ f t a f m i ^ , ' a n legea-

• a iShala an i aB ly of aaifiaal ^ tbe& tkvBnpnvaM4e4iaet<bMtiaB;BeeiBg ia tkmtMmij wurtktJ aaspat ta aaifed ,«nleaa

wJLmi lansri^ tmftUMkS^IhciTmal

cPBinmBiax3.^-8«a CeafeasioBS Fmih, WJiat fc m Sutmumir'* .••sxJM"'-

''VA laanaieBtis c-hal]r ordiBaBoa ioadta-t i Ckxist; wkefeiB, b j rtgita, Ckzia% of tha ^ew 'co'maBt' •ya n j M B t e ^ smUi aad V T ^ ^ beliws.' '

^ S a n m t ^ 144.—'BnpUm is aaacza-s t t f a^ i&a Vtw Testxi^t , ordaiaed by Jeaos dfciiitfi^^ OBly tv t&e' foIcBiB aduBls^a of tepu^'hai^i^ iata . t^ Tisslbla e i n r ^ i ^ .

StjaOt Ik SigB and ttdt-^thf Kte-aiat-U'i^ctf; of hia ttgrafiiaf taAi Clntf; 'of

W fH«i«i»; of ^ ^ ' ^ wifiisb sacrameatTa.liy Cbiist'ao-wa appciat-MBt, t» b« cantianed oatilUm

• ead, cf ttoft*' > I k « i # ^ < r f l9apttaBi,(pLliS> U Bot lied A ^ B o a a a i of ttain wkexein it ia ads^na-

t S ^ f y e f , Botwitbstaadlng, the; rifht a » ef ordiaaaee, tlie grsct promised, is not only tfned^batrra^y eiUiiirfaiid eoj^errei by the holy^^st ; s a d (whether of age or infantB,)-aa'I^Kneabelangeth aata, aecordins to the Muadl of GQd!# owa will, in hia appointed

• I k a fiMi(i,Caarch, wliich is alaa CathoUe, aoBSistsof aO those that profess the true re-Ug^ea, UsttiUr miA their eiiUrar; aad is the •imadea of the Lord Jeans Christ, the hosSe and; f i i s i ^ ^ t3od, oat of aAieh there is BO or&iary ppmWilgal mdfalimt' .. , _ .

C m n u z x . — The belief ol one faet, {i 't^ that te<Efiath*MesaahJ iaaU thatiareqai-liM^ .aa fiir aa faii]i goca^ to aalTatim. The balM of thia OB* fasX aad. anhsuaaioB to ane iaatitntiaB [ixusenioa. ialo the name of tha Xriai^J ezptessiTa.'.of i^ la aU that is nqn&ed of BcaTea ta ijbuaaii

/ ' "H l ^ r i r T T i ; V j i H i p i

- •'intilnJilniM-Mi- ~

PBE« J iHIR».

ioa }ato the

Krary IB^ petaoa is a disdplepazdened re-gnwtfttcd iB.%faUeat aeaaa of thrword, the •9BBBi - ha kai l e ^ r e a -OA oae &et, aBi tiraFteiifa* l ^ i aiom mntloaed iasti-

^ Bapttai' Cl^fdttai^an i^ l clrarclea af CbciiiitheB^CaiBsbemte ja l^tezs are on-taftiaed ani without auAori^ to bapthe.

Kow, Cei^eOltaalBistatadeay ihatBapUit ChBiBkc»«K*cttsaekBrshea af Christ Tisible, ai that tha af their bapUsmiaScriptsraL Aey ar^ tharaftnb aHj BribaiUaed. an* naor^ Uaad. Bat a i f f in iAa^ 'pBat that .Baptist a i n k a H« ^ t¥B«..«inii^ea af ,€hriat; JaapbeHitaa thea Aaaifaatly m sehianatiea, karviac ^ a B ^ a u a a w ^ ^

j. -.i J vj' Ss^'Onr Oira. Hie ^b^t 'oP the za'aa of tlwworrd is tb*t

he ia hia that be belongs to DQ-'O^ Xhe gio^ of tb^tTbriatiaii is t ' b« » not W o w n ; that lttitel0Bg¥tb fcaolhw. ! "Tie aliip d(rte#ted 'tipon tnid'TOeMr, tha a p ^ of every wfed a i d #aT#, wHfrao batod to guide and no sail to impel, with BO harbor to make, driTCng hither and drivetl tbither ^ e tbe foam on the deep, ia a fit emblem of the maa'that'beloBfs to no cne^ihe tinntr left to Kimttlf. f Bat the Christian is not his own. -" ' h' Hit ttful u not ftti wn. It has teen bought with a price, eves the precious biood of Cairist. He that died for it will preeerte H TXBto tbe day of bia coming ^ ^

2. Sttitkfy is not kis twn. He'has no tight to abuse it or defile it by lust or diun'ken ceas, for it ia tbe temple of tbe Holy Spirit, and Christ wili take care of the body M well aa of the eooL He will redeem it from tbe foul embtace and power of the grave. He ^ill redeem and glori^ it as welias tbeEOuL lir«r' will he suffer it to be maimed and marred here more than will work for the good of the sotil. The very members of our bodies are predous to Christ ! Our lives are net wr <nn. W« bave no H ^ t to lire to ourselves, nor to wast©^ our lires on trifling cares. "We should Hrete bim who died for us. I t is a consolation to know that our lives are in his ban A Death in no form can extinguish it until be wills and bids. We are as safe on the sea aa on the land, in the storm as in the calm, in the midst of the pestilence as in the midst of health, in war as in p«ce. Blessed fact! we belong to One who controls life and death and all that can affect u?.

4. Ottr vijtaen:c is ^ ci£r stcn. We are re-spoiuible Tor i t We have no right to do anything to lessen i t We have no right to use it against the cause of Christ It is & precious talent intrusted to as, to increase by nnng it for the Master, and not to bide in the earth. And then tbe sweet thought Uiat i t ia precious to Christ, and no enemies, opai or covert, can destroy i t They may assaft, but cannot permanently injure. The Master will take care of it and brine it forth from every trial but the more bright He haa promised that cU things shall work to-gether for good to them that love bim. What ft comforting thought is fiiis to those who are pmeented, like David, by tome Saol, through envy orr jeslaasy. No useful Christian bat has his enemies. I t is & fear-ful tMbg to be the enemy of a good man. Can we believe that a child of God was ever the enemy of a child of God ? TT; have na example in the Bible.

Our diildren and friends are nc; mir cvki. They are given to us for a season for gra-cious purposes, not always to bring unalloyed pleasure^ for alaal .horw often they bring deepes t^e f instead of joy; bow often long years of painful, weary watching and ixars-ing over their beds of sickness, but always cares and anxieties for their welfare. The Giver knows the-varied experiences we need to cultivate our graces and make as better Ciuisti&ns. We should enjoy cur children and our friends while they are with us, and ^ all in oar power to make them hsippy hkther than expect oui happiness from them; but we should not regard theza as our ovrn, but be ready to give them back to therathei idxjve whenever he sees fit to call for them, Without murmuring and repining. Witli Job we should say, '"the Lord gave, the Lord hath, taken awa^ blessed be the a a s e of the I^rd."

Our profsrty is nci car c^aa. S?ery child of God has Just as much as the Father seed is best for him to have, whether ten, five or one; bat these are intrusted (not given) to 113 as stewards, to use, not principally for oimrfves, but for him. While wa are not only allowed but lequired to make ourselves and our families comfortable with the Lord's goods, we have .no right to hoard up treas ures for our heirs rather Jhan to give them to the extession of the Master's cause. While it is our duty^to be diligent in busi nass, it is equally to to "seive the Lord with our aubatance." We were " created in Christ Jeaus," not to get rich and amass eaULea or enjoy ourselves in this world, but "junto good worlu" _^From the history of the man of U t we learn that we only accu aolate property by God's bleaaing, and that

Uleaa

M. PotBdezter, of eieaa to all

immmaii

•M ^ i i p S ^ ^ U i l i r i e S e i v e the

>ado» a doctria^.

br christian w - - A . ala, d«ela«a witk Tcf-

JotjaUA nfanaaa-kaa ehorcheti, t ^ i i

fkrM or •iii MBrtad »7-th«

It af •aondtrai^BatiaB eaa> • fiiiJw.^

H-MIuwi fa —y wayTthaia aaaa^tmrij'«|roift"f%iBa

* i«i^aPkSotl«a, aa to

wSaiMtn.

wiUtoot h» permiU, neither fire nor storm caa;deatroy it; and may ire not conclude that if we bear our lossea with the proper spirit, God will restore it- to u&many fold 1

With what gratitude should these consid erationa fiU^the Christian heartl Thank God we are not our own, but that we belong to One who k able lo take care of us, who will give us^ail we need, and just what is beat for «a t» have^and who can and doea cause all things to work together for oitf good. What ft,blessed thing to be a Chris

How happy every child of ' Who ^ o w s his sins f o r ^ v e n l \ . V

« How carefol should we be cf our p e i ^ a l influence, since it is the only thlng^jre .owi, aj^e^God^wi^ except our aumey. -

' How diUgent and fa i thM akould wj^be i n huaervio^ af>4nBe p u j ^ andxne i^ r ad influMceito «t|tead ^ c a ^ p a e a r t ^ . . ^

I i f ^ o^ i ^ ^ y g e f , t ^ t we may hftve hia amile ftnd a o o n ^

fc Tfa^i^m ftadjTimft TfawV jrill lie.aent to

yea send North.

^ WestTcuKMM XiirisiBrial lastitvtv. ^ ; Xk« at' ita recent c ^ t i n g t ^e«U<kt]}» foUowiog ^ j«etaandi«otorera for the iniliai ooone fl(ll«i]^tia..dc*i8n9d<:t{H beftpofAkr seztfek of leciutea Dpoa Theo^gyi; EooleiiaataBamictory aad Ghoxckk PoUty^ot the of miniaten of FiCSt. Ten-neas)M» :and ekewhere, >who h^re .'BOt U» ftd vaiMlftge o^ theologioal instriiQtio«,«n<j| for tbe^nQM thoroagb indootrinatiioa pf.ofti membarahip. iTh»« brethren selected .will lay the convention and the denominfttion of WeatJeiweBsee ander peculiar obligationa ifi tbey»wiU! consent to deliver b^or» tbe InatHote » written lecture upon tlie. subjeQt de^gnftted. The design ia to publiah these leeturea in a volume or a seri<>a of volumea. The design in originating, this Institute ia to gel up ft series of leeturea that shall not only be profitable to tboee who may Bee fit;;.lo ftttead. upon themt but that shall.be worthy of being published in a series of volnmes {qt the benefit of the rising ministry of.:the Weat and the reading portion of our v Mit meabersbip ..d '

141 J .,6C»JBcT3A.NDiJ:CItIKtRa. 1. The 1 Dspiration of the Soriptures—£i«L

S. Landrum, D. Dv Memphis, Tenn. •2. Tbe Trinity^rrProf. S. Biker, D.. D.,

Ruaaallville, Ky. : ' 3. TbePeraonof Curist—EUl. T li. Jones, i) R,i?ashvilIeiTeon.

4. The lliraclea of Christ—Eld. (iriflio. D. D, Mdan, Tenn. i

5. The Atonement—Eld. C. Manly, D. D, President UnioC I'mverdity, Murlreettboio, Tenn.

6. The Ministry of the t^pirit—Eld. (i. A. Li9ft0f>, Memphis, Tenn. ' TbezWeat Tennesaee Convention meeU with tke« Bsptist Gbarcb at Bronnsville, Tens., on Friday before the first Sabbath in November next, and the Institute will meet for organization on the Thursday night befwe, when the first lecture will be deliv-ered. _ Every Baptist-minister in West Ten neseee .is most earnestly invited and urged to be pretex t and aid in tbe organisation and avail hiiaieL'' of the advantage of the Instiiuia J. Jl. GRXTSS, ) ,

MAT. H11.1.SMAS. ; C o m . • W . P . B O X D . j

" J^slsslppi rn l rers l t j ' . It was oii? pleasure to attend the Com

mencemeat, and were more than pleased with the nanifested character of the insti tution, and the literary attainments of the graduating" class. Indisposition while there and since our'return prevents tbe extended notice we designed. We refer our readers to Bra Lowrey's editorial in last issue • There is but one university in the South the superior of this—that of Virgiaia; but if this continues to improve for a few years more, as it has since tbe war, it will not suffer in comparison. It has an excellent Chancellor in Dr. Waddell, and an able Faculty, acd tbe grade of Echolarship high. It has been charged that, it being under the control of a Eadical Slate Oovernment, its Board and Faculty will soon be filled with bitter Kadicals, and iu doors perhaps soon be opened to al! colors; but there are no in-dicatioiis of it aa yet, bat otherwise, ^^ar confrere. Eld. Lowre/, has been this year ap-pointed Trastee, and the vacancy in the rtwulty filled by the flection of Eld, John-son, a Baptist minister of Dinville, Va, a true Southern ra&n ; and we were honored with the election to preach tbe Comnjence-ment Sarrnon. We believe that the Tras ,le« desire to make i t a first cla?s university, and wevn!l do all in our power ta Rs«?«<t thes: in so laudable iin ent'rprisp;

Heetirylns Mistakes, ol f Tract Society " operations in IS71,

two or three d?d not receive their tracts. In some instance? money may not have reached usf and in sorae tracts were lost in malls. We risk i l l money vhen sent as lee order, 6uf never hockr sent by maiL The following appear still ucadjusted, and we have not the data now to decide whether money or tracts were lost, and so send again. Willing to err on virtue's side:

He.vrt C0SSEUC3, Walnut Grove, A!a, '11. D. BOVD, Alabama. $— -S. T. CABB, Speaisville, L i—If you wUl

state, tbe amount paid us u d vhei, your account shall be rectified.

DEBOKAB H S R O , Yazoo Co, Miss.—Yonr tracts were duly cent by mail from tSfe office '

R J . BATTI.B, Laatsville, Texas, $1 . "LEE SEWTO:F, Weatherford, Texas., § 2 5 0 ,

to be sent in Doctrinal Tracts. Have you received your premiums? How does your account stand at this date 7 Write. ^ c H. W. STAcxHoxas, Miss.—We find a letter

from you about tracts not received, but it gives no data by which to correct • Write folly; tell: when and how much sent, a i ^ for what, and we will tight i t

Queries. En, BAPTIST:—Piease give in Tejt BArrisr

the Gr^ek word for " atonement," and the definition of the word as u s ^ by the G r ^ ^ < ' M. L.

There is but one word^used in the^Greek Scriptures that is ^txanslat^ "atonemrat," and, that is l^cdhzet, wl^ch primarily ^ meaasi^exchange; also,' 1. ^ e i profits ftrising £r<im' exchanging m b n ^ T ^ . To p]|»ngB f^ooa enmity ^faiendshiprrecon-^ ^ t i o n . It^is f ^ thie j e r b io toao^wp

t o © v e / o jthan'ge" on? fj^xa

epmity to mecdsblpL to reeoneife. . • • ' • t* Vi ".'-' JL recOT^a a.

mediaiar. Christ, u our" Great ^ f ^ l j

cgm:.

t haco lmehd ia^ aiui^aiatva th»commim-io^ tbf t e^tfoda, thosQ whom it inyitfss, it cannot, with »are|yj to'iU'elf; >nd ainii^ not,'embrace Ift tBa^Wt Idwablp' th'os«'!«iirbo disordert/,® whetUer in pr»eUee 6r in creedjtLjIhia we UQdfn-atftiid.to be.tbe rale adoptied £ap tist j a r . no exceptipna S o ' t t ^ a y ^ b e n d ffie rffle !n fiJefiial cftstfi, wbiW VoldiBg f t an t b e kame. I>>yaltj*% it ^ i in loaryudgment . "essential aKke to'duty. apd^^safety.—4S(Jwiir<i . j • r.i V-. -—-I — ^ t J ^ H S S B V . W A S N BCECBER preached »..VA»ver-tal^^fermon at bis Brooklyn tCnurph, Sun-day, He,concluded by saying t l a t h^ re-f u s e utterly to Urorsbip a'God of vengeance or»(xod.Df power;'UiB would notworship'» dsfiUtd devil, but J»is God was a God of good neM, aGaU, of love, a paternal Gad, wtio if he chastiMd did so for the good o?" men, and n5t ' fbrthe sake of punisbmect. "

The above is astaiement mtdo ia. a New Ydrk paper. We shoald thttik the sensa-tionalist ha» about mn his cotirse as a Cnris-tian pretender. He thus bad*^ as well ae-knowledge the truthfulness' of the to called scandals of the past We have never k nown a minister who held fbe faith of evangelical Christians, and then" turned Universalist, who had not previously been living in sin, and who did not afterward indulge his lusts more and more. "Gatng t o heaven any way—all right for tbe lion and bis prey '

I s I t F e t t ; Quite a fueling exists among S^onthem

Baptists to furni-sb means to provide com-fortable houses (or our devoted missionaries who are spetd ng their lives among tbe la-dians, in order to pt<eaob to them the gospel ofCbrist Thi», to oar blind, is praiseworthy, and we wish we had more means to add to the little we have given for this object But is it ri /U—is it 6est that the titles to such property fhould be msde to the Southern Domestic Mission and Sunday Sohool Board, or to any other Board V A great principle is involved in this question which we do not pro-pose to discuss at this writing. We may at some futnre time. B'Jt we say now that, no doubt, nine- entbG of tbe money given for Buckner's house (ICQ othert) was intended excltisively for him aad family in fee simple, and would not have been given to build houses to be owned by tbe Board. For one, we do not think it best fo? the canse, that Execftive Boards eboald be great property owner?. I t may do for Methodist Confer-e::ces to own tlie property of the denominft-tion, bnt we protest, as a Baptist, against anything that look? that way in our o{>era-tiooF Bro Backaer s.c>i others have earned and ought to have comfortable houses, and when the people are willing to provide them they should be given them in fee simple. What says the Baptist press f w

Preachers Who Kiss the ttirLi. - Bro. Price, of tbe Hoisten (Tenn.) Meti-

odisU has an editorial on Ministerial I 'ru-dence,.' in which the following occurs:

" esley was & good judge of human na-ture as well as affina moralist, when he ad-vised his preachers lo 'cocver?e sparingly with women.' How this prudent adrice •itands in contrast with the deportment of some gallant girl k'ssicg preachers of modem times, whospeny more tnne in romping and gabbing with fast ladies than in visiting the 'fatherless and widow in thtir sfiliction,' and in taking bced to the fbck over which the Holy Ghpgt tsii taade them overseers."

While the kisiin^ ctuestioa is before the people, we glvd another aiippicg from a populajr secular I'arhaps, it the prac-tice c^yinol be frcwn^i doivn lior put down by,occasional church ciAli, it n;ay be retired :o nicrow limiu by wrllirg uj This will pa.t &ojaunj i/ctiple cn the lookout that but few uucis'.eri w .tbe nerve to face t lx criticism whit'-^juoH conduct inspires. 3al these b.^td bjx rtieii Aill n->t tbank cs, at present, for ictrufing upou ti-eir rights, nor for calllcg r. ! th-ir InJiscre tiacs. But. as we Jo 'n^t for ihack», ! we hope to be s.l..le to b«s,r ih<;ir scowls, | especially wben we "tt. ibai iiit-. "c.iuse of •Icsiia will be honored v,-

E H S . ' ^ f W ' i S i t i n g , f f o m ^ D J t o n to the CArutittaiarf^aays: .iti 1 •^Apainfs*y,-God l l e s s tbe M f x ; and may Memphia<and AUtatft ataad tide by side' i t f the detelopment ibd perfrbtioa of « ptire Baptist 'litentore^Mo'bdldijsje^ no o'bi' nobWSohthem' '^i&dahl: id l e^ ing <mt oar Southern mind. Let ns oot sell ont body, soul, eh'aitai«,B6aird»^b6bks,Conven-tioDfc pftperataad -(dlto anybody, for love, ppjVilMily or.mojvey^ I pray for the Ba^ t isfZ on in every qUu-ter of the globe, but heaVeh forbid tbalt our Southern BapUats should!ever kecome soaervile as tOjaarnaav der all effort »nd enterpriM; ..ftsd to be isUtedfor and manipulated in everythint; denominational. as we are in politics, com-trierce.' airicnlture,' and In evei^thing else in'which oar Nortlifm masters •rnle na with a rod of iron. L<a us know no North, no South in our aifiliaticn as brethren upon proper principes; but let ns maintain our independence in the development of oar mind, literature and denominational enter-prifces. The Southern .people *re too much dinposed tp have somebody at a distance to do Ul their Oiinking, acting, giving, and to carry on their" enterprises. This will never do for the Baptists of the South who, as a body, are the largest, the purest and the ablest iu the woild, so.fiu*. Even our poor benighted colored brethren, of whom so niTucb i* said to our disparagement number 400 < VJ—nearly ' tqoal to our Northern brethren, white and blatk. We are not so bad nor benighted, at least as Bantists. Let us hold up our head, and be up and doing.''

ruBLicATiox^The SouUiern Presbyterian Committee of Publication, during the past' year, obtained a charter from the "Virjtinia Lfgislarure, purchased a building in Rich-mond, costing $45.UOO, issued twenty new books, received 163.299 25, acd closed the year with assets amounting to MI.QOOL We cannot resist the conviction, that, in this regard,* Southern Baptists, ss a denomina-tion, have shown themseivM less wise than their Presbyterian neighbors. Time will prove whether we are mistaken in this im presaion, and we await the verdict with BO miBgiving —Dr. Sharer in Georpia Index.

Tee above is the matured conviction of Bro. Shaver There are some who think it unwise for Southern Baptists to buy a house and publish their own books, acd they seek to make the impression that nothing bat loss can be real'i«d from our taaking our own books. It is with such arguments (T) as these they s ^ k to deter those who are wiiiing, from aiding the enterprise.

D'-SSATIEFACTTOS—Several of the Methodist churches, in Xorthern c>tie», have refused, lately, to receive tbe ministers sent them by the Bishops. Are these things foretokens of a change in the usage of that denomination with regard to the appointment of pastors—a usage wtiich led .John Foster, from a feeling that it wan arbritrary and unreasonable to say that " Methodists are the Chinese of the Christian tribts"—Georgia Index.

They are becoming dissatisfied with the office of Bishop as a lifetime estate, and pro-pose to elect superintendents every four years, 'f thpy are really needed. Greater changes await Americaji JMethoiism. It is now in a transition state.

TUE Jesuits are in trouble ia South Imer-ica. In one section they strove te control the schools, ia another the press, and in a third ceruin secret orders. In each they were be&ten, acd we would not be surprised to hear of their expulsion from several South American countries. In Brazil, where the estublbhed roligioa is the Roman Catholic, they are in scch disfavor that their speedy banishment is predicted.

AS6JCIAT:CSAL CXXVASSERS-—We wish to engage aa active and efisient brother in each Association in the South to canvass for the Kew Soiithern Psalmist, Hymn and Tune Book, Little Ser^h, in 7 ckaracter nate^ and other books that wili cell &st Name the Assocliiion desired, and send for circu-lar.

• I i .ifcttj^ SaaCMOTf^ B t f ^ j t

Snnday-Schools. The report oa the organizUion cf the

Sunday Soheol Board, presented by Rev. O. F. Gregory, recommending that the 3u&day-school should be a real and recognized de-partment of the church, a-sociat:cn, etc., was adopted, but^'afterjrard referred back for striking Out certain portions of already printed matter which bad been incorporated in it. .'M!- ' zv-

Oar attention h&s been called to the above item connected with the proceedings of the late Southern Baptist Convention. The recommendation is, that tbe Sundsy-schoc^ shoald be a real and rcco^zed d^artmaU vf the ehu.Tck, etc. This hni conveyed the idea to soma minds that all the childreiL and un-converted members cf the Snnday schodl shoald be recognized as members of the church. This, we tnppose, ia very far from the sentiment of. the Convantion. I t was intended simply that Sunday-schools shoald be a department of * bor by the ohmchea, associations, ete. I f the other constmction be correct, then, as Baptists, we coold admit Bone tattae Sunday-school exoeptthose who are m m b e n ot the ehurch. That Snnday< aidioola ahoidd^be under the;control and anperviaion of the chorchea, i s certainly aafer to thechurchestbantheoppoaite.. w. e. - _. I' I I. -zM

• ' Coiweneements. T Since out rliHt writing, Georgians have been i n a atir jegardiag our ^Higfa School andCoUegftcommencementa. Azrangthesa figore the Soatbera Eemalia {College^ JA-gnnge^ Oa.; Femde . CoUBg^. MadiMm; Sonthweatera Female ^OoUBie^ GnUibett; Spalding fiam^ GoOege, near Mbnt^uma} Mmvoe >FetiiaIs ^Odii ga .' Fdiaytk^.^- attw too tcdiooa. to> iacntioK >tk«|e Jot

Oar-yeopte anepdetat? m i n e ^ educate their dangbtera. B u t ^

^ • i t J p t l f ^ f t n e M u a ^ ?

the Faculty

The flsOTTS oa ycnr p::per Indicate when your time is out. Fxplanatlett t Look on the right haad of the piqrer, ander the bead-ing, and see Vol. Ko. oO. _ Wbea y«ar figores agree with these figures, yoar tisie

! U out. For example* If year fignr» are C, oO, joa may know that joar time will be oat Y«l. G, So. iO.,

As IjtrasTOR-—E'd. J. R Hunt has been excludtd from the choxcb at Beech Grove, Lincoln couaty, TeBnessce^ for immoral con-duct l ie has left a helpless wife and chil-dren. The fsct£ are on tie at this office. Let Baptist churches everywhere L eware of him. -

••THB Board of Trustees of the East fT,fnn. Baptist College conferred the d ^ r e e ofD- D.upon Rtv. Wm. T. Ruseell, of Laffty-ette, Ga, and ako upon Rev. J. B. Eimbrough, of Riceville,Tenn, at its recent commencmeni exercises in Jun&" They certainly did not need it, deserving as they are. - CoBREcnos —Bro. Noffiinger's tcconnt of his work in raising the $100,000 endowment for Union ITniversity, insteiid of ^ more than $1200," it shoald have bwir "more than $12,000."' Quite a difference.

C. A. "WoRLET.Nif Maple Springs, Texas, Is not the "Worley of Alabama, who was exposed in;thia p i ^ r f6r slanders, etc. We hope he is no kin tb Km. • .^''i' c; - f . ' -e . WHO IS IT 7-^3me generous brother sends

u3i5 f r g n i S l ^ a n . X « * w , to secure t e r r i ^ ai an a g e n t ^ r a y s o n cotinty—but does not i g n bis name.^ Will he write ? ^ $ l . Q 9 - H T e i l o a U i s . - l f e viU seod <«nifi BftfitlsVj t o u y Bewarrenewiagsnbscribw

W v e e t with the d o r « k i a Covington on Sfttiuda*,Ui(>»,.tii®TvJijitaI«rd»,daf i a Asgt^ i l i ros iaoX '^Peltg^tea- snd viailon, on arriring, will; find the committee of «>-raogeauinl* in wsdtiag at theBaptiatChBteli north oC /ttecpiAlic square. A:oa«diaI in-vitation is extended to alL-

John

MihII Oi

W# have brvthrea

•ignits. oommisaioacd

ailitwL* fea lAth&tdoes.

_ , tbe follcwinc-

e r n E a p t i s t r ^ S l l t i S ^ " ^ ^ ^ -HA Jnc Branch, for Louisi^Ta Eld. L. M S;one, f i r AUbams m V ^ M ^ ^ f b r A r k : ^ . ^ Eld. .f. H. Croach, for East Tennesge. - i ^ d J. M Phillip, for Middle Wew«h to procure the mvice,

^ rge tM, brother f ^ . t ^ of the r e o s J Southern States for the balance of t i ^ T ^

, ^ PnblicaUon Ssclely. " « I t must nc^ fail - If any one thinks'or

one moment that the ^ociety wiH f^^ him read the following afad know thsi there are enocgh more just like Bro White to take stock until a half million is taken - md suppose there should not another tr'ather' take a share, ther» aie .isters e rou^ t^^ endow It msgniBcenily. All shouldtemem'^^ ber great enterprises are not consunv mated m a year. It requires years to lay their foundations deep and strong, m d other years to rear the superstructare. Mushrooms grow up in a night, but "forty

Temple in buildmg.^ For two years all tieVork done on the bridge at St Louis was doiie ont of sight, wid, sMDy drawbadts,- and there wl» ft powerful clan of woald-be-thonght.wi» men who declared that it was already ft U i ure, and those who had invested, or who were foolish enough to invest would lo5« their money; that the'plans ot the arcL-tect were impracticaole, and that it was too' big a thing; and if built, would never pay a dividend. And thus, whUe thqr wotOd not, lift a finger to further so graad a work.they^ did their best to defeat it by ^strojing the' confidence of others in it and in~the archi-tect. Bat that brave man labored on, midst distrust of even his profess^ friends, and' the opposition of his enemi«L:«ther of the work itself; and wken we saw the woikiut month the ^ers proudly stood twenty feet above the face of Uia^eam, and thus the proud^t piece ofclvil engineering upon tie continent standi to-day as a splendid moaa- ment to the skiH.'futh^and courage of thf.t architect, and th^maaifest inflae&ce of Ont work will be to double the populatioa of.£t Louia iii . J . _

We know that unless .we fail to .raise t i e requisite Mjital, this,Soci^Y cannot fail, and we do know stsScient tho^ands of Baptists in the South sxe saying."/:WOJ! nor —shall not fail T' We are made aware thtt there are many who csll themselves Bspt tists whoare doing all they can to the enterprise in every imagjnsble way, s i ^ especially by creating distrust in the a r ^ tect; but we have no time to notice these matters now; some few shall recuve pro^r attention when the endowmmta^impleM. Suppose nothing yet can be seen ot what has been done in two yean past, will any cue say that nothing has been dene, if it is announced next January or March that $200,000 has been secured ia good Botes, and a bouse worth $100,000—five eSglifs paid for ? Will these covert raemies of flie denomination say that it is a failure when they ree in^six months^ thereafter.the eft-chinery in motion in that splendtdhoBse, and books being multiplied, and a fine book* store basily employed; and tbe very borders of the Great West visited "by fresh pablica-tions from this Society It will be'eaymtet in full to witness their mordficaJidn, and revenge quite bitter enotig!i topdint to snch in after years and say, You not only did rot help, but you opposed the enterprise We only ask the friends who have b « n tttda distrustful, wait just twelve mcnlhi Hoa this -kh of July, acd if joa do not tee the solid masonry appearing a ^ v e the water:', then say there is an evid^ce of fail or & More never has been acooaplished in la short ft time and under the circumstance. But we only took up cur pen to preface (ha little note of Bra White, of Georgia. H c s i t is; worthftthousanddoUarBtotheSodety:

BKO. GKAVBS:— By your permission, 1 wiil take one more shan in the Publishing House. I t must not. fail—U will notiail; for surely theliOrd has given the'Baptists i mind to work, and may the Lord bless Ibe enterprise to his own glory ,ud to the good of millions yet unborn. G. W^ WBIV&

Hickory <jrove, • Crawford county, Ga, June 19, 1 ST J. .i- . :

Sew S«tes in July. W.-Tetin.—F B'i.ffingtv $5Qr .Jno^ J-

W i n g o , ^ ; J HrHilUman, &>; BT Hills-man, 50; J P Fuqua, 50; Pobt M Hurt, 50; MrsMEBlank^h ip iOO; W ^ Hale, 50; R B Jamea, 50; Jho P Jamer, 50; Dr M D L Jordan, 50; R Webb, 60; Z G Jackson, 50; E A C^rflina, 60:-Thos N Guganns, Ala, 6ti, Mrs Laura W Ulmer, SiC.^0; ElamChnrch, Gft.,50. .iJ -

Bro. Byers, of Texas, sends us the fol-lowing notes;: T R Johnson, Tex, 50; G 8 Mallory. Tex., 50;"CN.-Brooks, Tex., 5-3; Robt M-«yatt i Tex^ 5ft; A- G Guwt, Tex, 50; W Q W WJute, Q/l, 5QiWm J Hix» Ark., 50; Dr M LJHeniii Mi», 50; Mrs L E Ctristiaa, Blv.. 50; W;TJ Tucker, Miss., 50; Wm Qrares J f t i ^ , IEBS:, 50 (paid);-8 H XeliiBnaeD, 1GSIL',>S0; H Vftuhn, M t SfaerfeB.«Ala., GO; SB3eI l , Ark.,50; Wm Elliott, Ask.. 50; J>. W. JFaqaa, T e n n , 5 a ^

G U E S V O L E SnmccTs.—Geo B Eaga;, J «Sligh, 50; E A-Bany, S0;"¥!B Woodsoff, 50; P Hawkins, 50; B Aawlerson, Jr , 5<rf W M B Berry, 50; MEBal l , 50; 8 T FcSar, 50i 6 W H«rmoL50;T,GJBooka,50r£ W FeepkB,50; LG W h i t e h ( ^ ^ i , S H Har-

' jw t - i aac - ^ Thia ia a ^ o ^ a t a i i ^ f i ^ , ^ ^ We h ^ be ftbk to r ^ r t an . n v i u ^ of $6000 ^

aad we must, to r e ^ the amqani m a in yesjCg sWi^^^^pa £11 the

U t t U y t ^ . week and J t i ^ «is t<r.iBakeJt

•>BML H. SowaMS' oertificslttetstock back, to saireBLtiiedeadrlBtterflff igis^ Bra W. W. Niala, both of Teiafcf^anil*^ -tirrTTi'sTiulTaiati •ueT " ^wdsaanf £

mkmiAim yjmrn' • I n t i i i ' a . m i i i y i i l l W

i - W i aaaWaii Five aonfas Itor $1,001

dropped. BMKwatonce.

E a ^ ^ A l M .

m^A.1' ..smsBaloittDct i caoidd br i.dilrMui l<. tliriLul'

• V Iwnt«.-AB j&t&T for j •ret to B"- Grmra, M Hrmftn. | tcT mouaj far tb« aatU H < TUI b* rMpouibU for all Unu ] i

MissiiOiippi Let] E. D. MiiXEB, Holly Sp

not get, tose« you at t. xfo cot comply with your re IS aU mpagrd fer munths tl

P. A. IIavi*, Edwards'! Eld. L Ball, at Friar's letter to bim.

il. G, Hrii.sos, Mobile, alt. received. Macy thq ospretsions.

II. K W CniLDKa-s, XJ for your invitation audi l.ut other engagements for]

Snmrna WE have received fro:

r . j t . c l e , composed of iand s essays on " L a Falls from virtue among grave subject, asd worth] -vkink the extreme views I of our friend are sc actual occurrences, of the gospel are impi them even hypocrites, is cne of the twelve chosen ! eiTth was a devil Wo iban oae in twelre- of iay is a devil, end thi r timber are as unguarde iicatea Hence we decli) ill exaggerated view, suspicion, rather than crime.

Wt Lave enjoyed the .ng the commenc roHlotoc Baptist Female dosed the 10th inst .Ifcr the able management I has taken its place in t^J h,3d is rapidly growing i" j are acquainted with i'. ic attendance during i Li'l it is supposed tLe tlder&bly increased i.r-ji:t asiiiuiiicn c ' the clasn\- ws and the two ct are;l« we -teres'.

THE Sunday-Schocl LO .liEsissippi and Eist Loo teresslng meetirg at 1 )ijl alt Their next tc^tin^ llagcolia, Miss., tbte summary of their reporti ber of Sunday schools,

enrolled, 1200; aver -.s Interesting account t may be expected next we

StTtaAL articles in t sj penred in last isE::e. some important engsg -^Vnm before making up were unavoidably preven^ ret car mail in time for f lelav of these articles cod

'i : postcffice at Ripl^ r:ade b money order c! Jig to send us money re l i e t.Crtoffice st thii cheat- iind 8i.fpwsy tc«« -iian by atil fa '•^ritg

i l -- no: t u r in ' .OJ -O-^ef ' I'ieaie rtau t | eor^e B Eager ia ^cotl

i.i-ecial attention lo tb c:i[ headed ts t.^cs-'. A r r jTEEU in CcLirut

oUows "Tif mere I-re I si-ers the moie I cpj.re| u i i the more 1 ; foae other Just such paj

A r&EKaEB wasted t ! vacancy i^ocBstesedl

CL7 disiiBgalthfcd yoanj ^aeon Carrespondenceij ?ii-:Er CHURCH CLESE, 0

A Strange Assij Tile RcSg 'ais Ilcrild of j

i-ics the following: If any one • takes the

~uiit of Baptikt' a5xirs7 t^ fault At groat expense

and aceur^-reporte ( Baptists in every pfLrt of ' sDzcetimes employ two JH

ha a fewin^ l a i d f i ^ '

this Issue an excellent i E ^ p p i Baptiat StaJ« Cm^ one of our most gifted • Ae Herald is more r ead j j any ether E ^ t i s t _ ^ ito report of the. ^ould be thebest"

Two things in Ihis pa lit, that " t he f l sn t i i i s j uppi than any eiher ibat hence "itiawpp of the Convention shoo lo the Sfaiafient ih«r j 'ead inMissiaaipjpi than PSfter, wewpfxae Ihei

llfi CSAIUtf j ^ d whidi »o other I

The infim^tlf^n _ SeraldiM ao maoh beitw (

f i t h i t B e "p r in i i " Dgs, fiOing^-- ^

grtyi3y' eontadde with over eight columns :

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• i t ^ - i a c T T O the Vtt i l PerwMr - m i L«Mg®r

- s i : 2—is owdt by K ^ n ; " a—is Bsed by Miaiaters ? -

I t i i ^ r r w wSfa W l ^ t r

W t o e W does' ff^wisTy m n i s w e i o t i t d net JM. SfaMttTB i i t iwrbeloi r riifr d p of bipe, Md > r r a ^ tSe«baEoa«,oWr t«Bdrm»re», and

^ i s ^ iniai»Ur«

j i ^ r ^ l t l i M d o u k o w UMeod, t a l . R-G&AVTS,

, - . J ^ 3 » J l s l a SkwH. MmtMb, k O -3 j e K E C E y r TESTI1R>5IAL'?

- - ^ a i s ia to c e r t i l j r t t a t moKths ^ i«Te been « f a = e t ^ o o a i i i ^ t K m and

- — A e - l a b o r s of i s day were over, T mach ffc-. Jgoed from taUSig. But^af te r t aTiag worn l ann iag ' s Lang and Body Brace ab«w%^thirtj

V i ^ s T ' T have been <onsideraWy reliered. _ Conadpalion Eaj- '^Wn to g o ^ diges--1: tioB, b s ^ w i t e to a n d 1 can ta lk ^ l a t » » a e B fcwgw i^rtod of t kn« wafeoat

Material fatigue. I would not part-with my ^ W t t o lor t e n ' t i m t t f t h e e o r t , ffl could not y t i y r ^ t h e r . J . ^ HowtLi, P f i n e ^

BeynoldaonMatefesti tutes Gates Co, K C.

^ ^ B a a . CaJTEs'.—^ rtceiredmy ^ c a on the' l a i of AprU, and h a r e worn i l taost of the i m e Bnce. I find t t ' t o be the re ry thing. A W d m y H 1 th i r ty ie

and to lee tiie di l igence, the n t ^ M a y I \ t 6 i B t w e l r e a i f e s w t o o o t it. t f o i ^ d tha t

:fr e6n!d r ide th i r ty m B e a ' m o r e t han tWelTe- i t&oA% I alM find

• tha t I can ipeafc flrltii i y e a f d e a l mow'ea i s with i t flian w i a o u t i t ' " J !> jiVesos- T

. , : • it*!. • ' T l i V y i t i n t h e H i a t o g e t t " .

•nil tue day wsi H t m ^ i ^ e t ^ Aad then, a t Its elo». • '

Ua fcWwltbtirbawia toaetber, , .j; He l o o c M 'J

i u d Uirirliit breath

bridal p i r t ^ e y W e f e i . Theuowen,mjtttlc»ltoad,-: l i . T ^ leMls to tbe beautiful c l t f j > : , Vhioes BwlWer ana Sti^w , r t f t aps . In that laixacle country

They wlU glTe her last - Ancl the^ l lo i r^ofn \TmM«r «prttiS-Hme

SbaU hiossoia In t!»apir»'».txacli. ? Oae ilraaiht o f H V l n g waters

tJhaUjwtuw Wn JjMjUiofld's IMil!*?.' And ct«rnftl yews aliaU jop.easi: n; • TUe love^that ..y... i »:i • ButtUe Ibey left behluv!

The wriatles and sirf tr 'ha.'r-MaUft «:rcred to By th»> kL«?s '

XUe aos«l ImKlatpd there— W«'!l h l ^ awayfc» the m<-:iilovr.

When the MiaiB lo* ui Ux »r«*»i, Where the mooabeams o a n o t nn J Ihcni

Xtir Uift trtud rtlsturt) their ivst. But we'll let uo tell-tilo

yflCi its ase and daV*, O'-r the two who ara o A ao loaswr

i u their K,ither> houieJUi tho htnis

m as

Th? char:''.'

ilf.

OF KKLir.IOl i

M t Holly, Arfej l ^ y

My Brace vnirisxlnA i4~dae t i ne , and ^ ^ p o r e d an exiiiyjllt '" I haTe'Tiow used i t ' '^thre^-^eek*, p t i t tch i t^gj ' ta

^eel a i i i a i ^ ttiat^it'l^ n o t been too. highly recomuftnded. I f t j to lceU w a e --Tritafc is i^aired b y . ft iiro&ehial Kffectioa

-«3 w!riar at tacked me whe? a b w r t ^ e l t e V e * * - • so t ha t I cannot i p ^ oT a ! ^ long «t

lama witbont becoming noaiOTf bu t t a m TP a p p f to re»*i3a tlnrt tins a g r e a t ^ Tellerod

oae of the Brace. =" - , » " r , ••c " r^JiATe great r o u o n to hope tha t il shaU

j R w e a w t r n d e r fill ^ ! iy»ca l aid duraag m j " -^^assa tc t i a l careCTj'wiiich Is now jus t begun.

^ - - - L. W. COLSVAH Ccttaa Plant , A r t , H a y 19,1?T3.

"ajMB»wort tBaanin^i Lung Brace s o a e » d say tha t n t s r e reeeired • sosce

-~-*eael! t ftwa i^ bo th^m ridmg and pseach-fcnt T a i l too t u goce. for- l t to do m e

^ ' j i i a e k g o o i . My qmatitntimnTitgane, a n d i t _ : a M a a t m a k e m » a B e « r ; IltelMTe i t has par " ^ ^ ' M S f n E e r e d me of t !w pilfer,'of wVIch I

b e ^ t S T c t ^ Ti^ t j ^ j r x e ^ . , ' i i a : / i i i j s n t ^ R J t L s A .

TSe#»aho» Pari ih, L * ; May K-.. 1?T3

Frtmk Ji-iwards, a youug uiart ied man, en-^oyed as a macliinist in aa llagUsh man-uiactory, .was couverted,__His conrersioa WHS deep heart .and l i f e - T h e s c l i p ^ vraa.complete, and from' beings n o t o j i a u ^ ^ ^ ^ tUouglitleas, ho be<ame a pipyerii lor cheer-ful gravity and eerious d<jp9'rtiiienL. ' Very delightful the ^ t experience of"that vouRg inari. " A gooJ 'workman, he enjoyed constaiit e ^ t e y m e n t , with wiges suScient ' to procure fLe ccmiforts" of life. Ho h a d a fhrif tv witijrij'^o w aS led to Jesus by• his oi»'n influence-' '- '^heir' c o t t ^ t ras the l-.oaro Of p ra re r . '^iteligion, health and costentnierit dweft vrith ' theiat probably t h c r i was not another Rome in England more pleasant ' t f e n ^Irtf bf- t l i i s vonng, p««is inecbaiiic; '

Bat pietv ia not en effectual ehield to d fend from t ronbl fe . I t i appor ta - f i lo r ious l r SBoportathesnffercr—bat his path to heaven is appointed to lead through " much tr iba-tetioit" A s i n onr natnie, thefitorm-cloud gathers i n the horison; wiiile thEsan shines with, splendor iii the i i « v e n * so i n th&

. kingdom-«i gtace, while the child o t 'God prejoicea in ease and prosperity, ^ a a c e n d a tli2 summit of Pisgah, he may re«t ^ u r e d | ha t events are in preparation, which may, terl h im do'^ft ^o the ;vale of Bacarrto the ^ l ace of w i p i n g and. lainent»tipn.T

wa^ t h t ^ with F r ^ Edwards a ^ hia L i ^ p p j timiOj-,, i n tljifi midsLof prosperity, i ^ y e i ^ y i ^ k e d izj..^ t h e i r ' c o t t a ^ door»

, poverty sat d a v r c j ^ their table. Let trace the of tlieir troubie. , ?

One day the maclaneiy ol the m a n u W toiy 'brote l anfi its operaUons were'stopped. AH h ' a n ^ wore set to i ' e j ru r^g it with the utmost haste. The weef ^faS'closing, and the- work v a s unflnished: On Saturday TOorifais, the OTcrBeerr entered and-said to -tbft m w , " Y o u must-wor 'kaTIdaTto-mor

D a i a B s a G u v i s i — I nM^ived my Brace about tiie 10th of April, and af ter the proper

—' ' i a ius tmendh 'H. fii. tolieraBly though fitting is not fiffly M t l ^ i f e ^ ^ ^ ^ ^

•ao-.'

ih9 fitting is not fiSIy fc^y^to be able"^."cert i fy tSa_t I liave

' " • f r r e d m u c h w e ^ f t n g j C j l f i n d enablea m e ' t o , i p ^ w » c h m w e e j s ^

t J i S ^ X . ^ j e u . i l B ^ At iP»vv keep his .command-

row.' Frank icatintty rvmbmbered the fourth

eommandiaent . ' H e reaolred to keep b w s a s e he felt tha t hi« doty to God re-qnired hlm,">ander all circumstances, to refrain" f rom labor on the Sabbath day OSbring an inward prayer to God, he re-

ispectfnlly addressed thfe overseer: "Sir , to-Tcorrow is Sunday."

I kn9W it, bu tour mill must be repaired. " Will you ezcusie ine, air, from working

on the Sabbath ? P.-unk, 1 can't excuse any one. The

company xtill gvve i o n double wages, and you pu:rt •>vor!i."

" I aia sorry, rd.-, i i j t 1 cuacot work to-m>m3w."

"Wj iy avt, Vi". nii'V.i-di. you know our iie'cS33i;iii, i n ' r.e offer you a fair rema-n e r i i i o a ? "

" Sir, I t win b e a sin a j ^ n s t God, and no necessity is strbiig e n o u g ^ u o price high enough," '•no ia offend my Maker any more.J

" I am n o t uere to argue the morality of tKe queetiotii Frank j you mus t either worh

: t d ^ r r o w , x>r be di^pcharged.'^-?1-cannothe8itaj^;«ir , a moment ; , ! have

Coft what e a r ^ y

a i ^ worn when i ^ a n t a a a i s t u t

I c a n and dp.

»tftlj

n m d ^ ^ u d I

s jents ." r —. . : -fc i ^ T b ^ ' i i r . ^ J i ' a r ^ i t you will step into

i C t t e idi<»{-lf6oo- t^e c o u a t i a g ^ m , I wiU pay ypu what the ,T ^ m m i m d - l f t o all you, and ypu w i a tJ^n^eave

i; J.

t h e E P ^ faSS^f^ald he - to. d e n j l l i^hn-

S V a ^ z ' i u ^ l i n p 6 n ' G b d , W ' ^ t l i e ^ up j 5 u a ' f o ^ . entered Iho cottntiife-fTOm.

'^ i :^ i 'o7er8eer was e ^ i f i e l y tlttwilllng to -— j j^ 'Wi t l l F r ^ i , f o r h e ^ a s a p e f r i o r ^ r k -

— ' -"^ r -fi^-- WKii^r ih tWn niaqiiyi buf ' h i s f a ^ E ; « i m e ifo '^is t i ^ ^ j te tements of a n o t f i ^ w i t t r e ^ ^ t o t h e . .^aU' i t^ i nn " f t E ^ ^ a c ^ r o d ^ e ; ^ ' ' -

" " ' ifbeT:

b f a j ' "-B^' a ^ m T h k ia to certifv tiuil^ i te-B i i G^lttTD:.—"yiA >• to certiff t l ia i t l le-oBni " B M i a ^ s ^ ^ X n n j r t o a B i ^ y l>t«cfc"

. v . , W t ^ i ^ p i i a y jm toiabor on the B M a & ^ ^ v

i J q ^ it%wwil • I b f f W a W l h l p t c w ' r & t t ' i x i v M i ^ r u ^ W K J v t l i W ^ l f ^ - n o k i M g i i ^ ^ i Jriik ^ Sundays, if. l hiwe to

i i a M * for S t « t imet Otm v ^ . . n^a at l i a ^ i a w l u f T i l

SabbaUi. They wanted me to work to-mor-row, and because I refused, they discbttrged

t Marv waaWilentJ ^ hiie looked do^btfuWas if no tqn i t eau i e t h t t her husband was ngh t . He r W t h was not ao .strong as Frank's , ao r was Itarcharactec so decided. I n her heart she thought, as thousands of fearful d i sa -pjes w w l d , onder s i m i l e circumstanees, that her husband, had gone too f a r ; but a l thopghshe laidoiothing, Fx^nk^ead her thougUte, ^ d grieved oyer her want of faith.

Sweetlwas ,tJi8 hqur .gf faq;iily pn i j e r to Frank cv'ening; sweeper sU^ secret d e w t i p a of the closet, p d he never closed hia eyes vs;itirinore heavenly calm-ness of spint . tlidA wl;en sleep on that ^ . ,

f:^•:!ow:lS5' •work I'-Oii^lit F r a n k s i.. .srverei- f-st All his friends

hfrn , evvi: soii:;o l i ember s of his ch-iTTli sacd they thought he had 'gono Wvond IHp strict reqmre'.iien{ of his duty. " I t wa-s well," tliey said; " t o keep the Sab-bath ; hot then! a man like Frank Edw-ai^ Ought to look to the wants of his family, and r u t strain at a gnat, and i>erhap« be compelled to so to the wcrk-house."

This was dastardly language forChristians; but there are alwaj-s too many of tiiis class of irresolute, sight-walking dio^nplos. Frank me t t h e m on all aides, and found h i i ^ H without sympathy- A tew noble, enlight-ened Christians, ho» ever, admired and en-couraged h i l t , Frank held to his purpose with the spirit w ortliy ol a uiartyr.

The cloud zTt-K darker. Throy^h the in-fluence of his iormer cmplpyers, who were vexe.1 because he left them, the other cor-porations refused to emiuoy him. VTinter came on witl; its frosts and storms. His little stock of .'.avingsgrr.duany disappeared, •ovprty e tare l them in the fare; Frank 's

watch, Slary's silver spoons, their hest far-nitarc, -went to the auction shop. They had to ItaW t::eir pleasant cv^ttage, and one littl(!r garret 1 eld t M little ntflicted family,, and -^maiMof their cottage-fur-niturc.

Did Fnink Lis devotion to G<>d ? Ko! he rejoice*' » » o b e y e d God, he said, a n d Ood would ta'.ie care of him. Light would break out of darkness; all would be \-3Bli. Ho spoke iiis unyielding faitli; his fixed heart do.'.bted not. The blacker the cioud. the more i>icri.-ing grew tl.« eye oi i m u i Jmphiag iaitii. With his Mary: tli« casoi.was ditferenU i i e r faith was weali, aiidj presiing. her babes to her bosom, she often wept, and bent before the sweep-ing ^ o r m .

T h e wialcr. luisdf^ .I'^ay, i ' raak was Still in .the fiery turu.u-e, re., .L^ing. however, amidst ' the flames. irleads o f f ^ e d hi]?i the means of emigratlag to the t 'nUed States. Here was .i ligl'.t gleam. He re-oiced ill it, s,nd prepared to quit a place

which refuse:1 Idin bread b- cauic he feared God.

r.elic.M l.iiiiVthat uiaifyr-r.iochanio, on board th^ e m f ^ n t ship. wliite safls catch t h e favoring breeze, and •frith a soul full t>f hope, FrAnk looted towarvl this west-e m •world. A short, pleasant passage, brought them to one of our Atlantic cities.

He re he soon found tha t his faith had not been misplaced. T h e first week of his arrival saw h im not merely employed, but fillingthe station of foreman in the establishment ' of some extensive machinists.

Prosperity now smiled on Frank, and Mary once more rejoiced in the possession o{ home comforta. They lived in a style far be t tw and inoce comfortable than when in their English cottage. " M a r y , " Frank wonld often ask, pointing to their charming little parlor, " i a i t no t best to obey God ? "

Mary coold only reply to this question with smiles and tears; for everything around them said, " Blessed is tha t m a n that mak-e th the Lord his t rus t and respecteth not the proud; surely he shaU not be moved forever."

But Frank 's tr.als were cot ove.-. A similar claim for Sabbath labor was made upon him in his new wtuation. An engine for a railroad or steamboat Wl-s broken, and mu: t be repaired. " Y o u -will keep your tncTi employed through to morrow, Mr. Ed-wards; that the engine may be finished on Monday morning,"' s'lid the chief over seei.

«• I cannot do it, sir . I cannot break the Lord's day; I 'will work until midnight on Saturday, and then begin tUrectly after mid-n i ^ t on Monday m o r r i a g ; God's holy t ima l will oot touch." < »

Tha t won' t do, M r . Edwards ;.you must work your mon through the ffal>bath, or the

•pwnera will dlsmiffiyou." " I t e it so^" replied F r a a ^ " I crossed

tl ie Atlantic because I would not •tvork on tlie . S ^ b a t h ; I mill not do it .here."

Monday came, the iTork was unfinished. Frank expected his d l s c h a ^ . While at work, a gsnUeman inquired of h i m : wish you to ' gO with m e to , to take

» as an aniuons nSd^iSSTngThoi a s ^ o ^hsveh ind fed the mat te r w i th sach appw^ en t ease ,and composure, could j o a me where w o u l d the queen be f I J e U to be during the hiving process? Whe the r

' t he first par t or last par t of the,swarm, they ipay enter the hives

S I M M O N S ' the swarm should be equally .d iv id^ ^ t h *

J ' ind d n c e ' h i a cimrersim»; had^feeen ' W i ^ r t i i a n i r t t l ie employtaent of

t f i rccfepknir . H e t he re f<^ i r f d r f e ^ hinor han«Ung h i m h is

betterreoonMdofJpxHr reeoIdCetir Bem«mber , works*scarce, wte p i77oa lB# i - ' vages , attd i t i8 n o t v o 0 m we

out finding the.,queen, w h i ^ must evi. ly b e i n o A ^ o l t h e h i v e s , how would they w t ? T h e hive having the queen would ^ r h a p s appear reconciled. I>o t h i t t he other half of the swarm, having n o qu4en, would content i t se l f long enough in lh6 other hive to convince yon of its want, so that von could furnish a queen from V 0 u r n u c l e u s ? - S . T. R., PhUadelphia.

A swarm weighing 6 lbs. 2 oz. would be composed of 30,000 bees, and if ah carlV swarm could be divided into three, tha t would, in any ordinarily good honey season, do wt;11. To one who has never tried it, the task of finding one particular bee among so many seems like " hunUng a needle in a liay stack," but she is so dis-tinct in form, size, and movements from the others Uiat. when you once become accustomed to her appearance, she is easily iound. At first you may overlook her, bu t , after finding two or three and getting their appearance impressed on the eye, it will be easy to see her whenever slie exposes her-self. By getting a good picture of a queen, and studving her appeaiance, you may have less difficulty; sUll, you will not get from a picture her i>eculiar stately move-ments which distinguish her even more than her form from the worker bee.

ir<T Place ill Ut. Sumnii—Tlie »iueen occu-pies no particular place in the swarm, and is as apt to bo in one place as another, among the last as •vrith the first that enter the hives. The queen has nothing to do j •with the movements of the swarm! They frequently issue without he r accompanying them, and cluster. In swarming she does not lead them, as many suppose, and sel-dom comes out before half of the workers are on the win.?. I have known her to be among the w r y last to leave the liivu. I have known her to run out on tlie alighting board several t imes before flying, as if un-willing to follow the swarm, she does not select the place for clustering. 1 have seen her alight on the cluster after nearly al! of the bees had settled.

To C<itch Her at ahi Uauf Ltt II.u.— When your bees are swarming place your-self before the entrance hole, and if it l>e a large one close it so that not more tlian l « o or three bees can come out tngetlier. Watch for her and catch her with your fingers .-is she comes o u t She will geuerilly give you plenty of time, sometimes running out and in sevenil timos. Tliis is particularly the j case with a spcMid swann. She will not sting yon ; c;itch her round the l>ody where it is hard, for yon might in jure her by fiqaeeziftg the abdomen. Put her in a cagp or under glass tumbler to keep her until TO« wish to releasie her with her part of the iT^arm. The parent hive should be re-m o v a l away a short disteinee, and the caged queen placed ia a box in its staini, or the beei, missing the queen, will re turn to their old home. «ietyourotl ierque<-nsand divide the bees as directed.

Ho{C to Catch Her n fler Clufteriiuj.—Should | on fail to ^pcure her as they swarm ou; . ,

secure theih in a swarming-box or basket, j spread a sheet on a levt l surface, and pour j them down in the middle of it. They will; spread in every direction like water. Keep

sliarp look out, and you will l>e able to see her. Pbice your cage before her, and let her run into it.

.lno</i?r n-jv.—Take a wide plank, five .>r six feet long, or longer, and lay it down with one end a foot higher than the other. On the highest end set a box, or empty hive or cap, with the lower end a little elevated. Dip out a few bees and empty them near it, and let them start in and begin to hum-Then empty others a little fur ther off, until you have tliem distributed along the whole length of the plank. They will all go up toward the box, and she may he easily seen as she passes up.

If you divide the swarm before finding the queen, the queenlesa part would soon become restless, and if not taken off some distance, would join the part having the queen ; or, failing to find her , would return to the parent hive, without waiting for you to get them another queen, unless you had ler to give to them on the first indication of

uneasiness.—/>. L. Adair iv. LouiVt i'.V UVtW^ ! ^Wic MQer.

IPTfO® W * tf the 8amt»« tatUrf».f'ShSS'

« S. BOTIUB, SAitar . BampU. , T taa .

TEEMS Pia Ajrsccx. PATxan la ADTAJC,.

REGULATOR (^nbt »f or mure. ct.

K.EQ ctl CloU of b-n or ion. auU of IvB cr more,

Speclnim eoptM mwi f ^ on tJ-pf-CTUit '

Tkr o»»r TORTT TEABS tMi

P U R E L Y V E G E T A B L E

LiT»r JSwJieine hM praTHi to be tLe GKEAT USFAILIKG SPKCIflC

f»tLiTMCompl»lat»n4iU jalnral offtpring—Dyn»r«l», Constl|>atlon, J»ond!M, ,Bilio»n »»t««k»; Sick Hrsdacha. CoHe, DepriMToB of Splritt, Soar ' s tmuh, He»Ttbmn«, Chlllt Md FeT»r. etc.. •»<•.

AlUr y««r« of cuiifiil «»t>trii»f»t», to me«l • e««t u d arc^t <leinac-l, w- now troilac* fr .m oar origia&l Qenniue Po*Jer«

T H E P R E P A R E D .

» Lipoid form of SIMMONS" LIT*B RIGCLAT«K. «>nt«iBing »!1 it! wood' ful T»'aib'.e propertlM, £o<l offer it in

O N E D O L L A R B O T T L E S . Th« PowdCT* (priw u before), fl.OO p,T p»ek»g*. S*nt by BkU 1""

••-CACnwS 1-M Buy no Pow4er» cr PWABEB SIJI»O!«»' LITSS N«R-

LiTOB nnlM* l» our engraTfd ^ n r p n . with Tr»dr aimrk, Staap md Slr>»«»f* an«>">kMi. otbor U gratitae.

J H.Z£H.Kf*00_ •M»ri.u. »n4 Philidilphi..

S O L D B Y A L X . D R U G O I S T S . X T«-Ti-*«

"B«o. Bor»nitr-Kt«.n Wots* bu bwE-nrit™.— Khuol rF(nUrl.« icr tpontbu ar iv , »n4 m w, wuh A ti..t ifc»« M. TiSSar, onr toMpr»M jar utaf^rt os. vr, rcttlT*!' d . .«r..h.g wilhoyt It l l •xt»pt Too* Botk.. and rcc»«„n»u, > cu-ii teas mSi it. »3t». And t ^c it. b.»n„fm

" JoortbOf,., 8*l!a, C». K (f. ' C. a lEWIg" "•W» ak« Etso Wokn. m ^ ^

»1U k. Ibr p»p.-r »t.d •lBd7 th* Ina-jB. Sad auvrn to t:.r™nt»«.

« ... " J » h e s a QomHs •• On»yTlUis "r^an.. April 10, isra." ^ ^ 1*1 Bniuliir.KliMiU wn4 ta th«Lr BclacripUiBL

D R . M ^ L A N E ' S

Celebrated American

W o r m S p e c i f i c ,

V E R M I F U G E .

^ . q r e r ^ f n o t Chyisaan, • V j ^ a p p r e f ^ t e the noUe J i e ro j im ^ ^

humble c^pttaas, the

charge of iny ertaliliiihment; will you go? " I donH know," repUed Frank. " I f , as

I expect, my present employers d isx iss me, I if tiiey do not, I have no wish ' to leare ." i s • <

" This ia settled. They intend to dismiss yoot and I know the reason; I honor you for and wish you t o enter my estahlish-menV" ,• v

Here again oiu mecl^aiuc u w the h a n d of God^ Ilift decision had again brpnght him into trial, a r^-God ' had co.me to his aid. . Toe'i-ew situation for which he ,had j u ^ engagf I was wortL m'ach moire than the .^iif iiB was to leave.., God had kept hia prouiiiie.

REMEDY FOR INGR0\V1N(; NAILF. k correspondent of the British Medical Journal writes: " About tw e n t j years ago I applied a bit of compressed sponge to afford temporary relief, and was delighted to find that it effected a radical cure. I make the Sponge as solid as leather, by w^ettlng and then -winding string T e r r tightly round it a n d drying it thoroughly. Off tliis I cut a siaall pyramidal piece, loss than a gndn of rice; this I insert beneath the naiU and se cure it by strips of adhesive plaster, appUed lon^tadinal ly , to avoid compression. The sponge soon becomes moist a n d swollen, kMping t h e nai l f rom the irritated flesh. Any granoWioaa should previoiMly.be de-stroyed v i t h j t tOQg nitric acid. ?, .have a d o p t ^ . t h i a . p U o npon many occauons, w d have never found i t to faiL"

SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. ,

Th e countcnancc iJ pale and Ictdcn-colored, wi th occasional flushes, or a

circumscribcd spot on one or both checks; the eyes become dul l ; the pupils dilstc; an ^ azure semicircle runs along the lower eye-l id ; the nose is irritated, swells, and some-times bleeds; a swcllhig of the upper l ip ; occasioBsl headache, tvith humming or throbbing of the cars; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; b rwth very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the s t o M c h , at othe.'s, entirely | o n e ; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasional nausea and vomit-ing; violent pains throughout the abdo-m e n ; bowels irregular, at t imw costive; stools s l imv; not unfrequently tinged with blood; belly swollen and hard ; urine nir-b id ; respiration occasionally difficult, and accomptmed by hiccough; cougb some-times dry and convulsive; uneasy and dis-nirbcd sleep, with grinding of the tee th ; temper variable,bat generally irritable.&c.

Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist,

D R . M ' L A N E ' S V E R M I F U G E W i l l cer tainly efiect a curc .

T h e universal success which has at-tended the administ.-ation of this prepa-ration has been such as to warrant BS in pledging ourselves to the public to

R E T U R N T H E M O N E Y in every instance where it should prove ineffectual: "provid ing the symptoms at-tending the sickness of the child or adult should warrant the supposition of worms being the cause." In all cases the Medi-cine to be given IN STRICT ACCOIDANCE

WITH THE DiaECTIOSS.

W e pledge ourselves to the public, that

D r . M ' L a n e ' s V e r m i f u g e

D O E S N O T C O N T A I N M E R C U R Y in any form; and that it is an innocent preparation, xtt cefthie efiiing the sSgbt-

est iajxry u the rwt ttndk

Address all orders F L E M I N G B R O S . , PITTSBURGH. PA. P S DeaJen and Physicians onkriaf 6001 than Fiemiag Bret.. wOdo wdl to wnt« iheirorfen te-

^ n S ^ a r w . , ^ To^WBhMtOfive ^ o f tfc \jnited St«t«. ooe box thrre-ctnt pottaje fourteen three<ent stamps. AD orders from Canada most be accompaoUd by twenty eeois exua-

^ F o r sale by Dtugs>^.«»d Country Sardceq^ SSaenJly.

A-T!-32--rtl-.'vV.eownTin

S O A P ! S p A P J SOAP!

SOAP AT A IIALK CKBT PKB. POCHDl

Wa. ia »II f«aiilir» 1, t":i» tjSM. ><rt.« tiie»aa(s BC« trlnl uot '•(••II pstifQca Bsttnni ibraak. miM an torn, an4 the tTitlaatiiij: nU> c? tbr tbr board oat tbe poor t;B;p-r uf tLt tf pAoplo. t h'.w diKtrriM^ b«» «f oatjsj j tmp that sin naSy the VB.k'dcy a tanlltojla c»ap»nK>B to th« t,irib> dndiriiig and abctacncsSHti to b« fona fbto^h. I wUl forfrtt on- tlirtuaad drUan if the MsBBUila Dew Soap b!7I it'I>T ou nf !!:> {igDaw-;ac putiCB'ut: •• .1. It c»o. Biado ffc: ^ oa»-»«ii

poand, , If c. • »»• m.3- in a nt!.« n t i j

5. It win u>-t et Tvt i&»etK.>t librir.«th!tj t^ casbrnidof w otker map !t..th«sarkit. rj.

1 On» p' ood WiU JO f-rUi r th»s * U pounds o' an; other

a. i .Alti t ^ ^ ' td t'O .? w'tkosl w aaiattnn.

6. Obs •i^! 4.. Si T*-!--ol ordinary

T A perfrct d trrK»at," aM dm »w»j: witt'lh* rity of a waahl.ia-d. thr v-^rixlja^ nibtisz.

8. It can br i-r na.»d ani ..-'..i »t » T-rj li-f prjil jj tk« arU»r, B'DdtadMt:n d'tk »v»rr ctLiyica;*iii oftbcmaikrt. 1.. ;

Searly eTw.r Kwp tii*t i« ta»ap ,»::»iat or chtmicaU. 1 ^i' nonntaSn ^imp nritb^r. acU i- -r. bi

Bruaxb • >t>'d I ' >».'' 'U auncaHtalaaBlsfi flamllj an e h i w . - l ^ r ta..*: .afl pot-poM. Ita ai«-.n a. tsr- • i' Jiror. »-•»• li».tiT:5 t:: tk, lady »r th.- c:>i -i. '.ui u. '»•. 1« t. T.,-It, Tls iniTTwIirtti- ^i . tal c-.3titrr.rtcn, and ar&ln rw»cb of rr t>

I o.!! Ihr r^pe "i.'>. "'.. cU Ir l.d.'s: Bot).i«{. Ki'-'H- Irrt citrrmcjf ••> «1!!»«, and 1 forw ard i r r-tinj o-»;i t>»<o{k«i refrrreoM fr.'m fb.« « r — t . - • Sirr-touD4 Ib r."!!.. --r.xiu . r ^ a «i^otifi m-n, «.- t-> tl- ^ t b - . l i K O T . rf.

Addn.'% \Ui.i.%!lDA.!BS5W9 IM S»a.:U [ .-urt.. Piiiia Vijdua, r^

TMT-rP-r ' Tht King .'f Panda;-MJboo! fiyii.

" P X T R B D I A ' i l O l f f p s ; " By jB«»a K. Martmy ; aaiiatdt ty Bm t. E-S.

P. r. Bliaa. J. S. K WIiraad»hMt »f ottr popnUr wrih^of 8nnday.«!«>i>l a»«t- ^

Ko aurb p-OBino t^f kiie« w thf blrtwi d aiwiiUr »«.k.. u»»r 1«>.<*« f-p!'. Wr m t b ikt^ mntlw. «t«.l tiie<«a«Bd w inaf»a»i*eai«r. ^rtc, in .Vi. t. .inicl-; j-r iirt-n; >=r haa Jt»d. , , r. 8. Ea.UKAulJ> « i r , 0.

.S-ni f-rr t., a.Idr.« f rKr^n j cboict ••Bai.:. contiuuiBSlull "l TBlaakie to all i>.u.ici.M. ^ Bi'-A'^i^S305s, rsWiixJa.

I

I

$ 7 5 t o $ 2 5 0 p e r . month^

MtOVIO CoMMOS sEWSl M-tCUlNK. Thi. -ili a r i tch^t ^ tnck,,BUt. tord. KB-!, br^l iT.o.t .oprriar m»an.-r. ft.c- t ^ J ^ HOT for any m-rn'r.- th.i ttor» k-anicn" f " " —w ,r.,rh -an I- rrr. .n -t - -S-rnllr.) or^rt witaoot le-ruf It WJI™ Biiaaiou rr. n. a h rb t».5 ajncBat tMtM^ P, r> . --S' * •

n

ACKSTiii W A S I E D vf.RsrKt'AV tiM.F-aoras WITS TBi

Great Preachers. It., —..

I>r ..1 -[ r--' -I

«- u. ' il>. • I O'P^ ' cir. uUr. ,

ar, dwt, -. -n ' . J i 1 V - . t..-. . «. nt. •nlfW',

r . Bi

W rite (or . PMcr- .'.^i te J . H. JOHB<«>'»

r W E C T M J t o e ^ ^ S ^

•rmvKssttS'

l-i.niu. 1-i-iU.-to r~: ,s-r-triK •r.r —1.: l y kij.-.. < ' ' - V...i».-««r-r<-e

•fist t^ f. dr.*;

A a s N x s w A i r m ^ ^

A-Ti-n-TO-ti

CATCHING T H E Q ^ E E X BEE.

TWB,SW^—TO C^tch ^

g «HS m v e THI H i y a — " W C A ^ QSB

For ^ v i ! S n g ^ i a t u h d B 1 w i ^ ^ j o j ^ ^ a n ^

Tf a i ^ a l i T ^ ' f e ' V h t h e i t f e i t l l t h o n ^ fi^ln'-a ^ ttick ^ of? t h e ISty, iny

bered the ptWaSse ofGoSf. and ^ l i 'TBf l ra iy f iba8e,-he n i d to

^ ' " B b i i m g o i i ' ^ f t i i a k l - m M ^ h t d ' m i ^ m n ^ - i n ^ t ^ IrelgMag M M d t O t f tafc ' i r f l l h e w A a ^ ttirt Tetf I H b a . « - i f l i l A ^ t W t t w o i » * e n s t a ^ tti^^y*efo««liditi6ed1'^ : " «iH*latetfi a n d ^ ^ h t iKWitor «fce hewb-

^ B v - t a m ^ I t e y t t - G o i - w i B i j f o v i d e ! 5 JteMi tMfc tot •liaingttha^^ittWiMi coold be l e lMheJ*bp*ecwise i i r c a l d not break t h e earily doae, a s l^rMUy lobk; npon tha t p o i

^ ^ T J B S I N SHEEP.—For o r e U n ^ cases of diarrhea in sheep, change the food tod ^TO the'iiheep all they will eat of a 'nuxiifre of eiiual parts "df Glauber salts (sulphi te of soda) and common ttdtl This may a p ^ enf ly increase the difficulty at fli8t,1Snt'#ill 'usually eflteM a cure. W h e r e th^re are only •one or two sheep afTecfed, and it ife pnAa-bly caused by weaknesiij flva^^K pin t of f i ^ milk m a d e into a p o i ^ g e "irith a table-•poonfulioi wheat Hoar oneo » day. I I thto does ncf^ efBect arenre^ g i w two ounces of j i ya t*« i . o r SpBopipMilCs jmdf-se dropa. xA lywIiyMTn, and .in ftve-hOUI* sh t e ^ aftOTC il tosii of:i«i|d«i^n|L I l t h e « b w i » w y w ^ g i l * hsH ft , p in t of w a n a . ^ e wUh * U t ^ j f t o f e t o t K M ^ m r ^ ^ • I ' t

Willson's Carbolated Cod-Liver Oil la B apeci^c and radical c t : n for

C O I f f S u M P T 1 0 N

A t d SorofnlouB Diseases . B i w ^ r n V r t ^ aamt.. v W i l l W " CarbalBted C o i - U w

OU." It com. in large wr^g-.ha|>..o bo"!'., baring tli«lnTfnt»r »U-n»tB«B, B»d it totd by tae b« t dtos-

Pr«pftr«d by J. U- W I i a . S O S , 83 Jobn St^ S«w T o r k .

WHOLKSALE WXSTKSN DKP0I8.. . , HVRItBCT * E O S a ^ t , . a a d , 4 e R.-rer

Blr»ct, Clkleas». . f-iy<}^ • ' - • • ••

HICHAAMOX * CO., St. I.4BU, ao , , - . A-Tl-44-TlI-»J('t-*-«-»m • ...

; " • taAwrowrD* ' for life—Thfe m a a -who m i M e a happily.'

jSf JE7 X . X r .

$6 TO $16 P£ife>PAY Uir Akrati winu tk* AiaiiieBa ^ • t l l ^ ' B w ^ ^ <Mk>r «s*«t»w. SMd «& Ibr • MMW» - SnrtW

fbr th* KavWty aiaaa Cattsr, raMtor le aBy M M i9

•a tfTCvtat

IBC UvB Bad m tkoaasBd Bthar tklBga. MO. #tai Stnay. ' Aky af tt* abm •

I t i T t t M

par dow«. AAlnM AtlBM.6*.

SSSS^J^S^SSSTSSIS

«-Ti.iS TH so

FBEE! »«itly bcnad C««»a*tos Bh*k ^ ^ B H i g and ipecjal f^ltire. than m V O ^ j S ^ • 01 FLT. YOB 6DTSBTB««^ 2

oatxaWpM *»or. fit.* te P ^ ^ f ^ S J i ^ S i d ^ S i i r Pictorial BUrta' . r ^ j g ^

A n e r i e w FMBUX W b U A.Ti.M »il 5S 179 W«rt roBrtk.SW

A Sura Cure for

(fto Bvtaa ladiaa warn <»<

VI.

r) car. far i BO n r s i

mlUaa '*

m m

c o s s r r r r T i o s o r j

Tie ci- r-Ji of Clirirt, gtitnUon < diTine, m allwiae m 1 perfect ia ii ininre U bnt it iawp ^ d a o '0 i a t ^ e r e i VapKj b*ga!». ^ e r r i usained new powers; Be new rales laid dowa; received, t ie nnpod^v will was ixalied, Qi CkMge followed cJ^upe, and 11 leagih iJie Man ol on hia throne.—Oalatian iaiiBV.l-lST aThwfalo ii. 17, IB; ReTelaf^ona

The qnt'BUCn. thcrcfi importance; What c ' to hu ckvTthr^f It ia •i tws cn this subject differ in tbrir cntrFU ehurthcs. The peinta o •jHim, aod their reaaone lliows; ^ ,

L The Baptist c tu rc t nU that BU chnrch trttd perscTsj. 'Whrn iinaelr to the diacip Mcliaei to receive hintj I »o'.. that hewa» adi-ciplJ ascertainrd this, fr»m ] •ewii the lord iti ihe w« Doldly Bt baraaicos," t to be "with them, eomi^ Jerusalem."—Acu ix. t»eTB, also, of the first 1 gamii.—Rominsi. "i 1 Eianfl 1. L

But in Pidobaptiat art membeis irho are n l a the Episcopal a n i laecta, and some cf t h» | who have §tceded fi received 10 /itQ ffiwrta iheir con^teraion; and I tioaal PedohaptUtB Teqj acfsre recairing pereo J » M l mcmberEhip, ihe | and unconverted pe ^ ineiabeTS of inferior 1 fonfeasion of Faith, w | IpegbyteriauB, and of 1 'b thia subject, aaya «i r r thevuitat ranafceri.j ^}me Independents f r y many of them

^ooBverted, when ionie ieirree, with tJwJ bt WardUw and Dr. t

Baptist charcheB, o ^ members taoae only v"^ Lt thejT coBTeiaion; •iUier iafaniB or the 1 Tifible sonnectjon wit AoUiL 47 . 1 Cor.liL

IL Baptist cliurchJ regard it aa C h r i s t ^

to mein"bersl-' The New Tcstamecl if btpUaed beUeTtrs-J rn the dny of Pentec«B| Bfyou," lu l ' .uey "i .t6-4J ; see a l " , s-thurtbes ar^ in tb W ' JicrcJirB <.f God,' i*! .ad bis spostluu—3 Tj

But in doing I'D Lamxhes; from tha ...sm; from the Pedol anathar rite for the in S o a all open tanntEui or Pedobaptiata, wbo tieiug baptiaed at am •jje iposiles Md t r a bdieTera ahculd b«l receiTed to t3cmber»h| has giTCB to hia chui eet teide his laws; Bt cew ones; fcutwusen' t J thififft tciaUjftrr"' s iTi i : : 20,): an-I i f ]

".twg, "16 o t < r / Acts T - 2":

IIL Baptist chare will thai Ul cbcrch 1 nmbr r t ; Lhti l-oce J either again H ther" knowledge. God ia r worstiT' Lira saurt (John • - thea lefe. fttuh riT. 25 ; litHU. I vi. trlvrt unto 11s ihl L'eid. — I j Ptrvice, Itf J r.i;-,'. hf —2 Ccr VJ- ty^ l ie Lor 1. at.J ilea ti God.—2 Cor. |

Bu: 1.1 :9 ctivipuLt.o.. u«-<ihv tiiSi liii.J to (if Ise!-, iiritf ..ie?. 1 V which u-icilj it is t^ntl'-r . .T.i-i-iJ cnout > ly Urih.

I ? . Bi f -M --uH requires eeinber. rj-e Fjiikrnj ilcnets Icriuiu? piu

ie deTtted w •^nag are to Ve icaj Jte nnnily warned eriad, the "^eak anj 14); thofS *rbo n • ko weep, iympat oareaied, xiiiled.-(rodly the gospel ia 1 Bfclonians i-M; anl GaUtians 10. U all ihe loembcrs of iJUt the dttid mtaliti cannot, nor c i2 thH haptist church'*. iB. the atntttr.

"V. Baptist chnr wiiL that «fas.t i".*! be ffiit^ LTiZi r'L- ' i j

making a coilfciioB saiem, the apustie to the chnrche" ofl the first dey t f the I by him in aiore, aa] —1 Cor. a i i . 1, i .

Hub ifijasetisa f»ei7 church »«" aaables him. Jkl

first a wiltins a> t ^ a n a a i miad ia n e e S ^ to] God. Church m« gtM/' of lick « of Christ.—2 Ct»r u A t h n i c i i t f ia BUU abura Oor. Till. 4.

aU liia< autiiuifromtiui l i i •irorld."-Ji t koena ly wht l talis, an i aad pfibU.i^ t h e i ^ i ' M t i i taDkhiasvl^', t f ipther. . I W 1 g a a t n t r f e o a i

•with wkneaaT v U B d i a i r t i i B and bs t v a ^ n o t t h a ?

the aiga of Ckr t iu dinrch to t t a J A a i c x b u i

• tlia

n M S o r k i d q ^ i s ' t " — 1 Pe

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t 5 t o 5 2 5 0 p e r . m o n t f i ,

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a c v s t h wAX tmo

f r e a t P r e a c h e r s .

I,. * .,<1 •! J 1

UH. . . - .ir-iv u

- fiv t . : f l i > a « s * , • t t L. Bla, !»*•_

L t « l o r , J . E u a o M a i * « o ® '

^ - M r n r n o B s f n r r w n ® ^

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Tt} g OT Tart T « r t > S f a - q p a g r A - - ^

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IM]aa »

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• f H H r

j a t . 1 perfect i a i f f pTtff. TO riUrS'^ft

Tht

ftitatioo

•Uwise

i « a w u M * p r e ^ n w w w g M v t o a a

^ ^ M m s 'o h i t T h a i

P r n M d e g W ,

a n o a e d new ^ w t n ; new rites »e re infrodueed,

Btw rules l » i d do»tm.{ t h e i M e « n T e r t « d . w e »

leeeiTed, Uw iragodry were orda ined; man • wUl w M « » l » e d . .Q<J«i s wiU le f t M i o n e .

M « *vinmnhra.

Al £ . ( tl T h « editor a f K i n d W«»d« , wko »U l i e

wux — -c.--- S o » < ? . T . e ! w i l w t t i e W k t , » a 4 i « n i p p * i e d to

CkMge foUo-ed c ^ ^ g t ! . c o n ! fc^ . goW M d g t , b u .x .B i i ned tke l i t t l e S e r . , i , and At l e »« th tlie M»a ot e m was Srmiy » e » w , . ^ b i , on Mm t h w n - - Q a U t i a n ! ! 1 Connth- [ ®f I t :

The l i t t l e Seraph, a a e w 8?i>g And t une book,

i p seTea eh«Tmeterjnote«j-:<|or ehurehes And

oa Ida t l i r o a e . - Q » U t i a n « . . . . - . . , , i a a s T . l - U r 2The»iAlot>i«nsi i . 3.-1, 2T iBc thy a . 17, 18 ; Rerelat-'oni x i i i . , , ,

T h i anesUon. therefore, i , . of t t e greAtest

I t i n e o n « q « a e e o f their

oa this subject t h . t B j p a s t eharches

l a T r i a ike i r e<4rtitatioa ^ r o a other

J' . iJLOtATes, fedMtjfTHK

BiPffsT." ' f h i a ' •B«fcctl«a>'if t t t « # l s 1

j us t out. S ing le copy, i n «loth, 50 cents; i n

^ ^ c l T h V w U i V o B which they differ from j b o a r d ^ by the 30 cents. We ha re stea

^ m , mad their reMoas fer so differing, are as ! ^ ^^py. and commend U h igh ly . I t has about

j i tews: p , . , . . I 200 chci^e tones in it, and not a single one tha t I

^ M l " ^ : ^^ " "

tried ptrsoM. Whca Sau l "Msayed to j o i n ; ^ • c h o r e ^ tried p t r t — -

l imself to the disciples' ' a t Jerusalem, they

iMi iaed t« receiTehim. beeaase they "belte»e.J

*ot that he wASA iU^ ip l e . ' h was aot UU t t ' v

ascKta i a f i i this, f r » n henr iaR that he f . t

-Mca the Lord i a t h o w a y . " a n d had " p r e « » ' I

ooldly a t Batasscas," t h a t they permuted t- .a

JO b« " w i t h them, coming i a a n d golag oi. at

Jsrusalem."—Acta ix. A l l the a-

beis, also, of the first church are addre««p •vs

— R n m ^ a s L 7 ; " 1 Connth iAna L 2 ; Li.ne-

HABS i . L

B u t i a P«dobapt lr t o i a r e h w maay pfrsons

M t members -who Ar« aot r eee i vedu eon^: ^rted.

l a the Episfiupal a a d Preebyte i laa esta>.(iBh

meats, a ad •aaw o f the bodies fenaed by those

who haTB seceded frem' them," per* ns are

received to fvU toMmatiiaft -withcut b t uce of

ihe i r eoaters ioa ; and though the Cu».grega-

uoaa l Pedobaptists Tetjaire proof of eouTersioa

aefore reseiTing persons to the Lord's table, a a d

te ftiU membership, t i e y a io i t l y regard ia fkats

a ad uncoBTerted penoas , whea baptised, as

members of infer ior de*re«. The "Westmlafter

Voafessioa Fa i th , which speaks the Tievs of

Cwbyter iAas , a n d of m a a y CoagregaUoaal ists

•fc this sabject, says that tJU ekOdrm q f m t n b t r t

jrt themmtcn memben. U r n nithi% t i e t h u r t h .

jome ladepeadeats differ f t om this Tiew, b u t

w r j maay of them recaxd both i a f a n U Aad the

—( iaTerted , whea bapUsed, AS connected, i a

Miae J e i t r * , wiU» Chr iat . (See

Dr. WArdUw Aad Dr . CAOipbelL)

Bapt is t ehartjhee, oa U e ccntrary , receive as

members Uoae oa ly ir l io g ive credible eTideaci

of their eoa fe r s i aa ; t l i eydo a ^ ackaowledge

either i a & a t a or the aacoaTerteu as hav iag any

^ b l e eonoectiaa w i th the tbnrch of Christ .—

Aota iL 47 ; 1 Cor. i i i . 16. IT-

I L Bapt is t c larches .'«:r'ct:y so cal led)

regard i t as Christ 's w i l . ha t AU b e U e x w

receiTed to membership a' I bejErrt b a p t i s ^ .

T i e New TestAmeat clinr? • coasiaUd whblly

t f bapUsed believers. I • r said to belieTers

oa the day of Penteeest, - oapUiedevery one

ef TOO," an J I hey "we r t oupt i ied . "—Acta i i .

38- i l : see a lM, s- So Uiat the Baptist

jhurcbes ar<s i a tbt^ res; ret, " fo l lowers a f the

i c r c h e s c f God, •• t ' ^ t foanded oy Christ

^ d hia apostles.—! Ti'<- :L 14.

B u t i n do i ag so they differ from, a l l other

t isirches: from tho Qu ikera , who reject bap-

^am^ from the Pedobapusu , who sabeutnte

AAOthor r i te for the immersion of belieTers, a a d

Horn a n epea cfflamuaioaista, whether B a p t i s u

or PedobapUata, who adm i t persons without,

beiag bapUsed a t a U ; iastead of r e q a i n ay , m

the apoiUes and first eharches did. that aU

belieTers ahculd be baptiaed before being

-eceiTedto membership and communion. Christ

k u giTen to hia charches a o dixpensinff power to

set » d e h i s U w s ; ao U j u h d v e power to make

BBW ones; but was en jUned on them to "obserTe

c J tkmgt whaUnner" he haa.cosimiBded (Ma i t .

sxT i i i ; 20 ) ; a a J , i f ever tempted to neglect

h J laws, " to ol.ev Ood r a t h ' r than m f a —

w | ! r i

1 —

i ii^d i ta i^d^i

-school.., " a e bo^k

me

That the loTers of the ' Sweetest Carols eTer

s a n g " may see wh^t can be fonrid in this col-

lection, we present the

I N D E X OF F IRST L I S E S .

I

Alaa, a a d d id my SsTior bleed. 1

.\U h a i l the power of Jesus' natr.e. |

AU the week we Vpead^ ^ ^

Amaz i a g graee,' bow eweet the s o a t j j

A a I c ^ e J ? I a n l w n ill be.

A n d eaapt thou, s i pner^s l i gh i ; , -.

Aak j ie w h a t i j w t i th in gs I k n o w i ~ !

Aalecp i a |

Aa on tbe •roas ' the gaTio* ^ a g . .

Awaked by 'S j toJ^ f awftti-ii^fad. j

A w » ^ a iy sioa^ ti l j oy f u l U ^ ^

B e h r i d W a a r a n g e r a t t h A d o o r ; , .

B e ^ a d ^ l ^ l i f e e f hopea^ and fearsJ!'^^ j

B low y e l h e tnmrpet; b l ^ i

Broad is the road tha t leads to death. |

Brothers, clasp hands, the moments are flyinp. j

B u r s L j e emerald gates A n d b r i n g . ^

Can you Stan"? for God ? j

Ch i ldren of toe h f a r e n l y K i t : ; .

Come, ch i ldren , let us sweetly sing. I

Come, let us aaew, onr joKrney rurtue .

Come, let us l i f t our joyfu l eyes.

Come, let us s ing of Jesus. |

Come, schoolmates, ilo a t t weary. ^ ^

Come t h o u fou i a of 'erery.Wessing.

Come thou long expccted Jesus.

Come to Jesus.

Came, ye sinners, poor and aretcLeJ .

Dare to do f ight .

Depth of mercy, can there be

D id Chr is t o'er sinners weep.

Ear ly my God wiihout delay.

Fade, fade, each earthly jcy.

Fad ing st i l l fad ing , the last ^ a m is sh ic ing .

Farewel l , farewell to a l l below.

Father, 1 stretch my han'-s to thee.

Father, whate'er cf earthly bliss.

From every stormy w ind that b'cws.

From Greenland's icy mounta ins

From whence doth this un i on arise.

QiTe, give, cheerfully giTe.

G lory to thee, my God.

God is the refag« of his saints.

God moves i n a mysterious w»y .

Grace, 't is a charming S3und.

Great God of n i t igns , now to thee

Hal le lu jah I who sfsall part-

O.yes, the Lord IOT d chi ldren.

Pass me not , 0 geatle. SaTior.

P i l g r iB j for-Ae n u » t l e « f s ia^

Pleasarlt is ihe Sabbath bell.

Praise G . d from whom a l l blessings flow.

!ftctnrB, 0 wanderer to thy home.

Ro :ked i a the cradle of ihe deep.

Bock o f ages oleft for mp.

Safely through another week.

SalTatioa, ch the joyfu l sound.

SaTior, Uke a shepher l lead a-.

Bay, brothers, wi l l you meet us.

Sha l l we gather at I he river.

Shal l we s ing i n heaven forevtr.

Shout aga in the glad hoeanaa.

Shout the t id ings of e a U i t i o a

S ing to the Lord a new made goag.

Softly fades the tw i l i gh t ray.

Sow in the morn thy seed.

Sweet hour of prayer, sweet t o u r of prsyer

Sweet land of rest for thee I 9 gb.

Sweet must it be to dwel l stcure.

Tell me the old, old s or}-.

The chariot of mercy l j speeaiag its way.

The cross, the cros.i, the hlaodsKined cross.

The day is past and gone.

The lambs of ihe uj-per fold

The morn ing i igbt is b r r a t i og .

There s a lund that is fairer th>u< d>.y

There is a founta in filld with b l o o l

There is a srresm whose gentle How.

There is a t ime we 'inow ao t " h e a .

There isl ifV f^r a look at the cruci3r<l One.

There is co name so sweet oa i-aTth.

Thus fa- the Lord has led me on

Thy church, oh God, shall rest stcure.

Tie rel igion tVa- can g!»e

To-day the S i » i o r cill-*.

To dfr to others as I wouid , !

To as a chi ld of Hope is born

Tr iumphant 7.ion l i t l thy head.

Watc l im in , tell us of the n ight .

Weare coci o f bl. sseJ S iv io r

We are wa i i i ug by tlie liVer.

Weeping wil l not save me.

We go the w.iy tha t leads t^ God.

We have come rr jo lc icg cii this hap ryd r t y .

Wetfcboie, de l igh t fa l morn i ' "

We 11 try t . be l ike Jesus.

We're travel ing h one t» heaven.

Wha t is this that 8t»a's upon my f rame?

Wha t means thif ipager, anxiow? throng ?

When he cometh, whea he comelh.

When I survey the wondrsas cross

Whec saints gather a n> i i i i ii»ee,duar Savior.

When shal l we meet aga in .

Whea s t r iv ing wi th the host of sin.

Whea we hear the iv^s-e r i ng i ng .

Who ahUl s ing if not the chOdreu-

Why are we al l so h ippy.:

W h y do we mourn depart iag friends.

W i l l you batt le for the r ight .

W i t h the eyes of fai th on the h i l l o f the Lord.

Work for the n ight is coming.

Ye val iant soldiers of the cross.

Zion stands with hi l ls turrouaded.

IT:; pages. Pr.oe, ma i l , prepaid, .00 cents ;

$4.50 per doien. L ibera l cosimission to can-

vassers. An agent wanted in every Associa-

tion i n the South for this and the Hymn Book,

and Hymn and Tune Cook

-rn?

m s i j f i A S c r r . f ' / "

S o n t t e n i L i f e l U m i m t i Q Q

SS ! l i l S S T R E F ? . ^ l K a P i l M l l l i

A s s e t s . $ 1 . 5 3 4 , 4 8 3 . 9 7 . A n i m f t l I w t t t o e ,

; $ u o o « . 6 o o . " .

!rhe L e a i i n g l i j f t Oompswy o^: d i a Sou t i u . ^

B(VVttP o r P 'n 'rr^niy^

T 4. Jj»l»o»i j«<o!» wvCi'tr •

B. A P»Tt«. i- B»«. M*y C. Ar. rrmi^^r. r . K. DrVi. " W,'U.'Si»rfjr, V . . • > « » • W.C. ntc- K. O.- " Cka/J. B.esnlt.n M. WrWrt.

P. a .TMnn tn l . x ;

T H E B I B L E D O C n i i m B : ;

T H E M I D D L E L I F E ,

AS o p p o s i j j ,

S w e d e n b o r s r i a n i e m a n d - S p i r i r i t i a m .

B y S . -R. G - R A - V E H . isiTva TBI a i H U I .

Er.»-. E^y . of Aikaaiait, oowArtWrQ to «4Tisr«Ti^ii IWIIara to»«r|t» 1 l i a a a ; oM tbo book kn4 to b« paM tack in the bonk* wbcu paUbhod. I ail pot tb ' lYHik imm-4late> vo-pm* wtaatwMty^iar oih»ni rT.poBd. Tbrte »iU W »t> <l»I«.v io thU. a> It if

'?bOtMi*MC. ' . . . I . .. i .

M K D T n ^ L .

. . . . . .

P f ^ - i r U l . ,

A. KBLSxJi . AMOS Tk O f i i l l '1 . .

EFJS. XU.I~.~t r r ^ _ . „ . . S « r t t a t J .

CUA'S. ; V

r . i TiaVis....,..^. — tro OI«J.

T A B I. S OF C p S T B.K T S.. , CHASTEk i . , ' •

IMrornciico. Tbr Iietiro to taio* tb»'HmJlWoni « ' tb- Lifr, raiTfr^al, RmmmmMx amt JJoanaeiMf

Tb'-jr run nnl.T Iwn-^J irom the Bible .4T1 th« m Ntcramry lot oa tu Kau<t can brJirktBfld tr Ii

- f R i C T E a U . Spirits bt com^ ^

r - ' e H . i i ¥ E R i i i

i l r . <.ir,t-> CC tn H»a»iHi!wb»a H>-y DK »•" D«. Sinno" H<-il »h. II ilioy . . „ (

ATLANTA DEPART?!t.ENTt AT )- iNTX , ,GA , i l . th^r-tolr a R ' . . ^ ' J of til- trrm, oonj.wit. tbe.tteikc norteratod

Q-t. JOHN B.COE.-'OS.^--,,.. ,, Tew-ting. oi tt>. CTQla.c Eitr., .ud Kmrtae .A. E. C O W ITT : M.Titerfw,«c.

A.MOBWS.....-..:. 5 " l- r fn . CHAPTER T . . A M'sTELI. r AV. a o t ! . v x r ;. ...FUi, i; m. Ip t » . r n c n r><»orrrction ctfr-I>«««'—1>»Tt»ch

' . Tit^ • ..f th« I'Irt T«-an)fr.t. Tbo Ovtiaaot af Circn^••

_ . , , r t • ••"••U. 1 be C.uvrnatt with'••Tid. PicierB Vfiaiftloai

I t s ^Bccess Assiired. I t s E c o n y n ^ c h a f i e r v i . •

parsed . ' I t s Sec:irity Uafiiiestidiied. i :i„.T..rh i.^.or tuoSrw

—rr • j c n A P T E S v n . , Folici*-, of y J..-<t:1et''<>a Ut Uii- Atl^ntalV-'[ TB» MiJJl.-Lifi* • Sbe. I. Ilil'-f, hf-' o-il i u. ih» li'n

patroont. » d p«Mi t lijf. o .-r lDteruir.ii.tt _ . AUKNT4 WAVraU.—Actrre, fmotont-•«>•« reliaM-i . CUAPTEB VIU

T-5-tf iAT.Sec'y- >1 , ; c..oii.t. .i. Dr. A.iam i;i..tk. LuadrM^r.

Ge:i.A.H COLQUITT. •y.Pre^'t. A i I " t » .Ga . CHAPTItt IX

Q A K o w s A L I F E

t»l> HKMVVrlH TWN.V.

P r i n i - i p a l O I B c e -Vo.

T A R O U N A

1. i ! .

l (U tLDt . ' « « '

."an tl.» S|iir1t» of Ciood M.;n r»t=rt. to Conii»nnic»«e will, thr Ltihi:? Ibr U>bau<«i» tTtb* HidJic Lift-.

\ Wt can »» ud M- .wn :.-* to out Frietwfc—X^atsrst, «1C-

I CHAPTEiX . ' , .

t • r»o th». of Wicked S l ^ Tefarft frrto -'H.di'j. u .Ci'Oimcii.rati' Kitii, at SWlMltbr Uvicgf

CHAPTER s i . .

It W.!? rmt yoa aotUac, U wfll t a t o ^ B * —

yon t:s bank, ta (xaalno aad v e i ^ UHt^bSMiscwa-

trattaiadJocMaferyeemlwea^. _

Dr. R r . Haeklai. of Mo^ow. Tkxal, wrl t i i : » « « .

Dromeocle. j K l I ' m r Boi^bh Teaale Btteea'ealee-

to ST caitoiaei*, u A ptoaaatate n p u g j ^ a r

f i n ibor» •atifftetloa for Ik* cnro of Fu t ie lMMi iM

th..B an J medleto* I i J l i ; " j

TroMkr.a'S.ltiyaa.-atrAK.SBiA rT&. ' l

• " IH.. f . P. Dsaa<o«i»{-I01«>* kMbMji u i a f f ^ M

kealtfc, and after iuia( lt«r bottlH ol yoer^Ka^A J ^

B .V B'tUrs, sb* tt botirr that th* hM i M a W l

ItHtboBMlwMdertlgamoAciaaehBt

, Tnm ae . Joha V, Btoek, flreeaikBTr La. .

'tSr. i : p . Dro»tw:to:-lwri»»tnU<oriB yoa pf tta

i n ^ t relitf sty wlW earperieatod fhiia ottitottle of

BOMttreca is

J . ^

rt»nt.H^Grace,JUw»'«Hni,TBa.

Pr J. T. Dro«fcOlt:-To8r EagtlA tomUe Bitfiiii

are prrEoralss woadm la tkl« part of Uio caaatrv,

aro deatiocd. to boiapnand j iu . " _ , •

Frota l i ezas to k Son, An 'tlj>,

> . DrciRtofcl* >.^irttr »ni iWi ^noale 1

are very popolar hero, Va'kMv Jk oa I

Ukf plcasareia M W W n i i n . ^ -

rrom J . B. Robrnet, Sd Tei. ~

- M j w.fJ ha« br<-n aCictnl wlth-a librolift T m i ^

Ootopiaint for-a iriibeT t l j e an . AIi«r.4uiac t i ' lm

bcttlM of ToarEaU^'k Feiaala Bjtteri. .It t c M J t t a a

perfect ch.ra. « - o Sh" i« how ont; o t h w T a ^

art- waitfng it t aese wItHa rraekT te^

Itetmom." ' ' ; «•! " i c i :•<•

.rremaix. C, P . C a l ^ , U O e i m , X»*. ^ ,

• rir J P. Dro'inrcclo My wife Kai obuiu^''

i»l!?f fimin the oie W a »w.kosB« «r-En»Iiih I 'eath

ptn<T.ih«n many-Poetora aad TarloBii mffiuino. t a r

A R E ' t O U A S K E P n C ^

»(t-.-r»'«J;nj tbeaV^Te, wbicb are ofclj a f»w ax t r a *

from a,* Baay? Enfllth F««B«''e IDttert * * seU by

I>n*=i'«« »»• P«r bottla.1 \r™.a'« Jfedleatt**-

«iwr. 2."> ctnta. Mailed on rvce'.pl AddnM.

D r : J . P . B R 0 M G 0 O 1 . I : , • Tii-H ' •

O n J r ,

J ' f + v ^ t / ' U f . ;

A i t c t t . J » n * l * t . kXIU, . - t*<S6.4ft« a . I n n t m i I n e o m e . (OTeri - - - BOO.OOrf W

MDna l Uivirtenrt . I . I "TO. 40

ObJ(ct1»n»con«|deiVd. ^aoWapp^'aT^tc BOd warn^-I Mom Bcd El jah (pBwcd,ta tbo Tkrr« A|>aslea.: Th» Paint! tqoii I to tb» ADfe;i. .TLfir Angeli-^t. «., Be-. lUT.r*'—do a lwa« . BehOW -tt. r*tb.r ia Hea»M

D O C T O R J A I « l i 4 f l Y ,

i r-

\1. J . W i r t 5 , F int l T T rETTTT. SecvtiJ Vice, TTjJ.'I'feal vr r c o y L P

J H EL'Vi'NriXi ' iV 0«nrr-.1

Ootts^i lux: Pi i 'Wc'ai ip:

ti. vv . A V K . V T . -

St«-pb»n> Pjinjt Prayer. Punl'e I ^a ra t i cc^ Aboent frt-ia the PWient with the Lord. Tho»ertaraMon

1 uf tho AdkcI to Joba:.**. laat Ui; >bd o 1 tUe ProphfH," ete. ' j CHAPTXH XIT. j ' m-Iasion. Tlie Arjument Apfii-.ii Sf>i»r.i«a.

A P P B ^ O T J r X . A . -. The partica'art of a ",ti»a«« " with C. H ft>»»er 5

|!<.^^' York. aod aa E j to«o« o fh i i Frttenttona a» . I SlrdlnmofEpintu—•hownMl>"Ma*aiVMamJ»er, aeiie ' 1. ClaitTojast. Tte Tyinc Hanlfeatatiooi at the Darno. |j».TM and otbtr fplrit.MaaSowafcHo "TriAi"—Sl.H(tt>t-.4-Uand Performancra. Articles from the SoeaUr Pa^r t

f aekBow). dsiac the Ixpoanre-to be-Sktiaftetory aad Cs-ia. I pifte. PiTcodnnamy amOTic^be .^fioieiH*. I AnEiegeeiaofl Peteriii. 19—SpIritiinPrSion. . I Pairi—Sinple copv. b j mall, 7? TboM who w

! forward flu thU mocth, to an'it iurcr*otrpii|;it,Ibal t V — K V ^ i ? i : . y . ' riHreive 20 copire by expma ; larpar 'lioiiiititaa al i '

' ' ratf. .- -i

Fl,r!^erIT•ofTH»ra»»e^ ha»-rrffi, t • t.i St. l.onl», arcr.ant of gr»»»iy iaotraar^-pa r.fca»a,«»M»

Tirw oftbeaoperior aiTanlagu h».i inr comr-—*-c^toawilh th» ooaotrj, a J i d f « t b < - s T And fr&m hfa — i 3 : --I • i • i

B a p t i s t P a b l i s h i n g l l o a s ^

n L Baptist charcflfs reg»ra i t as Christ s- Hark , my ssul. it is the Lord,

wi l l that a l l church members shoald be»-/aa2Jry f hocs ind harps and voicts.

oembtTi: that none shou l l be maJa members,

either AgA i n t the ir wi l l , cr withoat their

k a e w l e d ^ Qcd is the Spir i t , and those who

wotatiT' h i n must do so i a tp>r;i, i n trut\—

(Joka 24 ) ; their serrice n s s t - b e that cf j

lo-fe, f a i t i a n d obedieace.—1 Cor. l i l i . 1. Rem. |

xiT. 23; Rom. xv i . t f i . Hhey must •'•yitld ihc^- j

K i r a unto Go-i as those who are sl lve from the 1

dead. •—r.otn. v. . It i ^very p ^ n cf their

lerrice. the-7 n u i t ha-re 6rst a w i l l i ng mind ' 9 CrT t H ' tuuit Sr» i give themselves to ' „ . . ,

a i d t C e n ^ . the - W h . by the wi l l " c - j .1 f, i :K-ar the Mfssc-6od.—2 Cor. v i i i 5.

S a t this Silu-'^Jt-J^ m.-mltrahii' is to ther, a.™paJ#;o/.aaedby many n tional e^-ablt^ament.-.^ a n d to the fines, isprlscnsi-.-et, " f worse peaal-' tie* t y wh-ca tsfcilier<hip !.fi3 been enforced; i t is eiinallT crtt'-^el lo tli'e i n s . i i i o n cf ur.-ru-

i-y - - ^ i i i t a , t j n rffibtr^hi; :

IjSiTJft- ] I V Bart is t iisu-ci.e'! a ^ i c t ^ i n that C h i i r t '

• - Chu tch] reqoires 'iclj> ffcft'e.'y l u nh . r . Chutch

laMibers are spuken of ii. Scripture i s " l i v e l y

t 'oaes," forming part of - a spir i tua l house,

• tieh. is de le ted to God.—1 Peter i i . o. The,

»euag are to be ios-Jucted, (Ephesians v i . 4) ; ^

i s M T u l y wArneJ , the feeble-minded com-;

Br t « i , l i e weak aupporteO, (1 Tlic^auloaians t .

i 41 i tlwse who rejoica rejoiced w i t h ; those

wko weep, i ympa t h i i e d w i t h : those who are

^ A T e ^ ' T ^ ^ - J a m e s L ^ 7 . To the na-

•odlT the gospel ia to be made knowa. (1 Thes-

sAloaians L S ) ; and good done to a l l l a e a . -

GAlAtiaaa vL 10. l a some par t of these labort

aU tho members of Ba?Ust churches can engage

Ba t tba i n s i mtal i tr t t f vrorldb e s tAh i a hma t i

caaaat , nor c i a the i n f a n t meabftt of a ny Pedo-

baptist chorch-s. They can have n>pa : t ncr loi

A the matter . ^ ^

V . Bapt ist chnrches believe it f be C lm i t ' S

wi lL that what 13 spent i n Hi* ser t i i e shouIJ

be g i s n na ih j tf?! , and t U l Mcry c.'.tirc*

mtmier, who is able, s h j a l J thua give. When

B u k i a g a colleetioa f r the poor f i i i n ' s at Jero-

BAlem, the apostle says: " As I have givelrorder

to the ehorches of Galat: . i , even 9>-Alo ye ; upon

the first day of the .we<k let t ^ one cj ytm lay

by h im i a store, as God ha th prosj erecl h im. "

_ 1 C « . * t L 1 , 2 .

la joBot ioa ahows that i t ia.ltie da ty of

oTcrr d t a rch a i e sbe r to eentribnte as 6cd

• M b W i i B t . Aa i i the ApoBtiB t ay i , " I f i i e t t

b« ftrtt ft aiiw/, i t ia t c e t p i t i Acecodiafl

w a hAtfc;" show ing tfctt a wHUag

is aaedft i l to i i a k o aa iA a i d aceeptaUa .to

Sod . " C t e e h members to " a b o o a d i a th is

s f r ick u d l iberal g iT. i»r to^tfce ^ e

S a n s L - S Cor . t a i . 1-15. l a l a aUeAa-

nai Ouia " A pay mea ts by a»

im B t ^ s s h a d e s , 8 « wi t a " g m " » t AK .—I

B s i ^ r e f s r d i t sa C h r i s f i

wffl t t e a B U s ehord ies A o o M b« s ^ c r s k M i

» i fT " « w q e U M a d e m t ^ ' ^ X a M s a o t e f

t i i wor id . "—J<4b XT. 1ft. TSWftfSB of

v k s k A T S bee» l»pa««4 . ( i t t fcr t i : owa

d « t s i , a a a ptof tsa los a f ftia, m K m • rea l

i h M i a l l a r e s U B m s A o v

i r t i k B H i a l t W h * l i w tf HJMii s f a n

ftBi b s

i a C O m :

i^mrt^ fr l a r n t "

i r ^ U i M s

tks G h r i l t a i a l g h i a d i B M a i t i A t i o B i a t *

H a r k , the gospel news is sounding.

Hark , the voice of love and inercy.

i i a i tc we now with eager feet.

Il.ave j c u pain, or care, or sorrow.

HeaTtc l r bote?, heavenly home.

Here at thy i tlSS, i ncarna te God.

ITow cf:, aUs , this wretched heart.

How Bw,?et the n i . ce of J cs tu "oands.

nstelcss the hcur j .

I asi con i lo ; t " tlie crt-

I am -rait ing by the t i v l t .

I lay r^y s:as on Jc^^us.

I !..ve t t e vo luae I tby

1 love to hear the stoty.

1 love ra sterr! .awhile a-way.

i lave t j t f ! i >:ory.

•1

O O T T O y r A C T O R S . F O R W A H D U r p

. . • • ' . i i .- . i *

C O M M I S S I O N M E R C H A N T S ,

Xo . 38 P e r d l d o St . , (Factara' Row), !». O r l e a a s .

A G R A N D G O L D M E D A L ! aiu award»d i.: t .. Fairof 18T1 to

C o l e m a n s C o r n a n d W h e a t M i l l l

i I love to tbin'ii t f h-aTea.

X }-

a o CD

U! X h-

u .

O

9 <

I 'm a j,ilgri:i!, and 1 m * s'.ras.f'^r.

I n the C i n i s t i i n s t ame in glorv.

I n t h e r i f t e i rock I atn rest ing.

I lhit>k whea l r e ad ' t h a t sweet f i r r ; cf

I t is finish d, finish'd now.

I I is not death to die.

1 want to be l i t e Jesus.

I was a wander ing eheep.

I w o c U not l ive A lway i | , j .

JesHS came, J t sus caaie.

Jesus I c^me, I came to-night.

Jesus, I love tby charming n ime .

J t sus , keep me t i tar the cross.

Jesus loves me, th is 1 know.

Jesus. SAvior, pilot m t

Jesus l i e water cf l ife wi i : give.

J cy to thp world, the L^rd is con;e.

Eno 'v each ether bitssed comfort.

Long ago, whea l i t t le «hil<lrea.

Lord God, t he f i o ' i ^ Ghost , v .

L j r i , I t ea r of showers cf blessing.

Lord, I perish, sa^e, I cried.

Majest ic sweetness sits enthroeed.

M a r y to the Savior s tomb.

Mercy, 0 thou. Son of DsTid .

M ine the cross and th ine the glcry.

i l a s t Jesus bear the cross alone.

My country, 'tis of thee.

My heavenly home is br igh t and fair.

M y hope is bu i l t on no th ing lese.

I M y 8Bull>« 0^ i U i i l * ^ - } '

• H j f i t o a l JMp^ ' t t acds !

Nearer, my God, to thee.

Na t ^X

N o t h i n g b a t ISATCS. -

"•Oh, eoald i pMk . t he s u t t U c M werth .

L O i i V 7 0 " D J- • . - ' - r — - e —

' G O O B T V T ? ^ & R O G E R S V f '

• • J Wick '- , 'm.mi i . ; ! , : : s i ; 'A Tti-VBata-

W t j Ar.y of the publicauor.s of the Ib te Seeti-

F . T l t ^ b , ' ! western Pub l i sh ing Compaay, or the B ib le aad

V a p o l e o D H i l l , Publ icat ion Society, or :of a n y 3e.pt i8t P u V

Ushers i n the Un i ted States, furnished oa Cavor-

able terms. Send for descript iTewtalcgtje.

S O U T H E R N P S A L M S S T ,

J e f f c m ' c "

J . T . I M t n ,

W . L . V a c o c ,

W . H . H u c t ,

W m . .Tovnr r ,

B . K . K l l e n ,

N . S . K n . c . . .

K.

V XV. S m i t h ,

-T r . F i i p r .

V H f'^hiiTohs

iS

P r e - e m i Q e n U y S t t c o e s s f u l P r a e t i e i

in rompany^t* T.t^er, Dr ' l l . W: J i t t i r y . a»«iS« ciiBUnned and pattocaa*, be t^od aoA warraated in tayiiie (hat

C a n c e r e a n b e C i ^ e d !

Tba'-.i.Tfi:.taM»Vntd'>m fartii!^r.« ikS aid paiaUb •.pwiVt for ttaf corr ot .bH d t . ^ t . i * ' ^ M j

E X T E R N A ! / -

I« r.r>nncttd.l Wf^ llEjrn-'TVS. icate i-eery Trtti.e .(-tbe c c i i l i s. »ia.»»- irsa t s •yitf m. I alao tr»at isccess cll..,

M a H t r n a n t a n d O k r o n i o • ^

^ ^ . S k i a D i e e a s f l ^

S c r o f t i l a , raes, ,

F i s t t i l a , a n d

D i ' s e a r ^ ^ n o c i U k r ' '

• . i i- - t i o F e z i u t e .

Ey caircev vary aeawJJa: tn i • dlwau-, tot ia all ca««« rraaouable. ^ . .ulara a a d j j g m •_i«i.»nrDHIied oB applxatioa. A -••-•nlSMeMHiC

JTi . O . J A K O A B . M - D . - "

7C70UratflTa>i. 9m,.

Muni f-r . i .

A PiTilfU.; fi>tt.» i^fei. i. Oti t y Jrv Ofji-n'. pa'aM. in w k tr thnw' Who pi.fi» tkeh

?mioi(M In tatij au l ctrdi.«i -l tt:r Lot» ol tUnto wk» oaid tbrir cr'-ff.iwnj.. t^ r-irt t.ute. . , , . . . - ^

rarioa* fcnaa t-'fc »b»bi»o«». »»« raeptetfaDj o j ^ pnbiic patrvma**. i . • t . "

W I T t K y c o x v E M e H E E y E S B f f l r e art tM aaoM b o M t t n l ' 6*

( C B K T O M ^ p a ever p b i e « « l a mAy O r n n . J t i t p m i m m i ^ a lAiri wf ^ naU Pe«ga-

t t e H y iws i cea rva* X t ' F E O V ^ j l a A u

^nosT CTLomnra •nrd bOOCi S n i t -B IK IB , w M l A f U i k

\ new edition in press, i n which w*d be

found, in place of the old inde*, ope ef.lArgs,

bold type, and also many xew aa i . f aTcr i t e

hymns , t ak ing the place cf, 'ot l»*^ w\ich, wepe

wan t i n g if i merit . I t contalas 'a collection, l a

the way of a supflemea'^ Cf choica BtinaAJ-"

school songs In tL i«xew' td i l io2; t ,be i r faage-

meat and number ing biire no*! 'cf^rrrjpted

azntxsccs, tt ruaa-aa...

flL.

„ Port Boy al, .i—iTBatniS

i.Ttaa.

Dr. TSorBeet...— Dr. McCaUonb: Dr.J . K.McDoi _ Dr PiUiiiTd I - - •— lj»«lMtn®« i Hpo. John O. Braefoid, ei-5I«yot Spri8*W4 J Dr. IHIliar* .

M S.DUr_ - — > t l^ ab. V Tl V^iMtfi .v.... Loot®. MlMCWr

Pr. O. Smith... ^ LaG.anp..

•i-J-vfi-lii . • <•• - rf

r i A x o s - K s S ^ S y j ^ : -1. ikehi^KO W A T E R S * , «< «*-

t r i « » . i y l o w

O c t a r e O r s t - c U a a . n A X A S , 5 » " « 5 l S [ " J 2 S :

diqaoM elasa m a k ^ .

cowtl

a m SoeittM, taign.ete. A f t w a t i m i T A • J i s s a ^ IVTKD.

T H E B E S T M I L L I N U S E .

Fir.. -

AUF.STS WA^JLIV -

a U B S C R I F T I O N ' B I B L E S -

We bavp gotten u f Afld e^er e c A ; f fbe t c »* t

Q t t a r l o r i t i u U i j B i b l e s erar cfTeted for

a i l e in the S j u :h . This l i i b t e

pnt up in eight different ^ j t lw , : Bs t t i i n 'mg a

short J l h i s f r a t e t l H i M o r t f ui i l « d i f f t t e *

e t i t b o o h s of the n.hie ; also a n J U a s i r a t e d

T r o u o u n c i i t g DU U & i n t t i f .»t.d . C e t K

c o r d n n c r , i. pt iher wyth .all the t u l u a l l e

tables usu i l ly found i n the, hcsi e i i i i t t e . "W*

wan t an nj '^nt in every county i t , l i e Sfc-aih to

sell these B i b l e s , an l g i u r a i t e e lb.fta U give

entire sa i isfasuoa i n every parUcslar.- O.ai

terms wi l l be as Iiherr.l as a cy ctaer t o a s ^

S r n i ^ f a r circular C^ji

V r i . itr N 'Y

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SIMPuICITT. r>CKABILITT AND EFFICIESCT.

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, s t . cbf^^tTft,Kowgriyf-Li

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B O O K E Y E B E y j ^ l ^ N ^ R Y .

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G W ILERRICK, KERDSTRA'L STBI*!

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K L W I L L I A M S , L O T E S D E P O T ,

CALEB GORE , BANNER ,

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D , J F E I ^ , LOFE 'A D E P O T , ^ .

N M WATKIIFF, M O R T O N ,

W ARMSTRONG, S^DTILLO.

CALEB G J R E , B A N N E R ,

J .R MELTON , COFFEEYUJE,^ ^

F C HUC'ITKTJ, M A R O N ,

J J A N D R E W S , G N A T O W N ,

W L W A L K E R , MAGNOLIA ,

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V T A A E IT LEARES HERE E R E I ? WIEEK.

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W K L Y . IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FAR AS TO SUPPLY

L U K I I A M B « A . S A Y ® GIVEN Y O A CREDIT FOR

J ^ . 7 3 C E N U A N D SET yout FIGURES NP.

J>. JAJIESOI , A R K . — S A I S E THE 1 0 0 N E W

JUBSCRIBERS A N D W E WILL VISIT THE C O L U M B I A

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I E 7 I M B I & K T O I , T E N A , A N INFORMED THAT IT

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? . B . M C G I U T I I . — Y O O R P . 0 . ORDER RE

D S R E D A N D ATTENDED T A

3 . C . T A L L E T . — Y O U R E M U E Y WAS RECEIVED.

J O G T A WILL BE SENT SOON.

T A - J ^ C O L K M X Y . — M R S . PETTEE M U S T WRITE

% I S X E W Y O R K TO I K M O R A T TO H A V E HER

CHANGED, . L; ,; _

W E T B K DOES A L I A P U I C B J IVE ? W I E A W E

J A M W E CAN S E A D ' T H E ^ U G A Z I N E S H E ORDERED

LETTER OF N O D A T E OR POSTOFFIC&

I E M O T S H , COMETRRILLE, M I S S . — Y O N

FRONT SPRING FOR YOUR BRACE ONLY BY

I I L I S E A P R M G A N D P A D TOGETHER. TS

I I L B L F C - W I L E I S O X — Y O U R $ 2 RECEITED.T

G W ALBRITTON, S N O W HILL,

J O H N LAURENCE , CEDAR BLUFF,

J O H N S F O R D , M A R I O N ,

J A M E S L S I M P E Y , L IAMER ,

J O A C D E R S O A , W E T U M P K A ,

J Z M C E L T O Y , C U B A ,

W M M O R T O N , E N O N , '

E L D W C DAVISON , NOTATULGA,

W V EIELL.CARROLTON, '

BAILEY BRUCE, B R A N D O N ' S SLATIO

J L E D I A S , S E ! M A ,

I R E S K E W , GEORGIANS,

A LEVITT, CDEELASNA ,

. 'AS L WILLIAMS , LINEVILLE,

W M F E A A N E , C A M D E N , R

J O H N W I L L I A M , WILLISTOA,

W £ M A C K , S T M A T T H E W S ,

E I D W M G M A C K , O N U I G E B U R G ,

E L D , 1 S CROXTON, PLEASANT HILL,

S A M ' L L E I K E W , A N D E R S O N ,

M M C K S M I T H , HERRINGSVILLE, C ,

G M C A M P B E L L , ELBERTON; " GEORGIA,

S N J W A L D R O P , FOREST STATION, "

ROBERT F L E M M I N G , THOMAARILLE,

H GLAGNER, R O M E ^ ; -

W F D U N C A N , . O ^ O U K W ^ . . . "

J O H N G M C < J J F , Q U I T M M J ; . ; " «

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E L D . J M > O O D , B A R A E « T I L L E , ¥

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' T E N N E S S E E — I T O F M GEANI^ J N MITCHELL,

' J IITU J

S W A A ^ W

C I A A A ^ ^ J J F T

I B O ^ S O D R B H A A N V P D A C

J S T W J S W I I E ^ ^ L B

A G R A M I A A R , M A X T O Y D , ~ S T E P H E N W I G G I N S ,

J B D G E O L ^ N P R E E . D M L O R E , W W BLOUNT,

i M A a t f y , E X KILPATRICK, 3 H C O L E M A N , D

X J ^ K G O S .

W J G A H A M A — G W ALBRITTON, J O H N S MEARS ,

M T E A E Y , H 0 GOLIGHTLY, J W H E R R I N S , J

S M J ^ T T , J A S W H I T E , J N O S FORD , B T JONES.

^ V C J P A L A ^ W H C Z ION , J IRST TAYLOR, D R L

ITEADERSON .

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SONTH C A R O L I N A — S A M L E IKET» .

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T E S T I S — R M CARRIEI LI A U Y T E , J & M A S

J HARREL, J G L O N G , PASCHAL

P B C H A I D W , W K R E E S E ,

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M U P C H U R C H , B E D ' , . . -

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M I K A R D , WEATHERFORD.

JOEIAH L E A K E , LANCASTER,; «

E I D A FITAGERALD, L O N E O I K , -

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W F M BATY, COIIRTIIE;.

E L D J B SFTATBN, E D O M .

B S A L M D N D R , M T ^ O R I A B ; ^

M I S S ' T A N N I E L JUSTICE, ISEARCY.

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P P R O B E R U O N , ( F M T O N ,

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J B KEBESON , AUGUSTA , K A C ,

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J M - T H O M A S , Y U B A CITY, " -1

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LIST, AS W E TAYEVBT THE SPACE T D C O M P L E T E IT

IA THIS. T H E ABOVE ONLY COMPRISES A M O U N T S

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IST, LITTLE S E R A P H A N D X N L F I U .

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BOOTS AND S B O M ARE ALWI^RS TIIS '^CLIFISPEST —

AND CAN BE FOOND AT THE VERV POPULAR HOUSE OF

A . G . PEONLS, 2 9 2 ^ A I N STREIEI.

W E ARE UNDER M A N Y OBLIGATIOAS TO MESSRS.

BOWELL & CO . , OF N E W YORK, FOR A COPY OF THE

" A M E R I C A A NEWSPAPER DIRECTORY," FOR 1873.

.\ND W E UNBESITSTINGLYPROAOMICE IT ACOAJPLETC

SUCCESS -A SPLEODID THING.

L A T I N

12MO. FOIL CLOTH, ST. .1 NRHOUIU MT'-W OF L»LIN I N TLIO TIIBM OF TH« L>«R». BY PROF. W»!TER BL«LR, OF H»IAR-DRA V'SIDNEY) (JULHFTR, VIRTIDU ^

T H E LIBERAL EDUCALITIA OF W O M E N .

T H E D K M . \ N D A N O T H C M S X H A D . 290 P?., 12IIN.. TULL CLOTH, 51.50.

A MRIM OF P»TWR» BJFE»IA»NT TLILAK«« ON UU« «OBJ-CT. COLLATED MNIL «LIT*J BY PROF^SMR ORTOA, \ W»»R COLLRGE, N. Y .

EDUCATION A B R O A D .

(TO PRE«».) I

T^P, SAP^TLDTONDRAT SCHOOL*, UUENKTICCT.

T H E T R U E SNCRESS IN LIFE.

FULL CIOTH, SI.I...

F.T YOUIIJ P- '. L- BJT K«J P<KIAI R.

ITEMEMLIER M E .

IIIMO., FALL ELOTH. S'. R L

AII IT I». K NNWCCMMAAICANTS. DY IU7 P.«1BHT

T H E M O U T H OF G O L D .

FALL CLOTB, GILTIHIGCA. S:.

A ICRLRI OF DNMATLC •KETCHV OF THE »N<L XTISTS NF CHR>>O«LOID. WUNDERFULLJ CL RER LA COA=^PT[(«A AND D CTIUD. BY EDWIA JOBNWN. 1

R E S P O X S I F E W O R S F I N ' . '

LUOIO., TALL CLOTH, 60 C»NT« ; PAPER, C«AU.

AOARGAMRAT FUR AUR P<>NGR»;ATI}CUL I S I PRFTB} LERINA C;>UII;HM. BY W . I. BODLUGTON, D. D.

S O X T H O U R S O F C N I L D H O O D .

I;:IIIO., FALL CLUTH, 7J CECTI. STAR.TI.

.V B R I E F I I L S T O R Y O F L E X . I S .

IJAJO., HALF RO«N, M V U - ! SI V.

.V TEXT BOOK FOR 8< HO*L>I AS FINELY ILLSSTRIIF*;, AND ACOADITII>( IN INT«RMTLA« FICTT. UY U. W . C. SAII<T, AUITIN, TEXAS. CUMUHRD BY

C A M E O N HIA PALE H

M O N S ; A N D LOT IT W U DEATH I FOR DUST

THOU ART,4UTD U N T O D U U SBALT THOU RETURN

S H E W A S I S F L » W I D O W FEBRNARY 2 5 , 1 8 5 7 , A N D

THEN REAPED THE FRAITA OF A CRUEL WAR, A N D

VISITED, STEP B Y STEP, WITH TEN THOUSAND

TROUBLES, E V E N TILL THE D A Y OF HER DEATH, UNTIL

SHE FFIA I O A D E TO LIT DOWN,^ 'AS ITF^WERE, IN

SACKCLOTH A N D ASHES.

< W M T I A H E W A S FIRST TAKEN, I^HE PRAYED

M U C H TO SEE HER CHI 'DREN^ O N E M O R E T I M E ,

A N D S P O K E OF HER RCFRETS'TO B E BURIED IN

A R K A N S A S , A N D LEFT THIS M E S S A G E : FOR HER

LOVED SONS TO PREPARE TO M E E T HER IN THE

K I A G D O M . BEFORE SHE D IED , SHE CALLED O N

HER FILENDS TO SING THAT BEAUTIFUL OLD H Y M N ,

" L E A D M E TO THE ROCK THAT IA HIGHER THAN I . "

T H E N BEING INTERROGATED BY H E I SON IN LAW

IF SHE W A N T E D TO GET WELL, I-HE SAIRF, " N O . "

S B E SAID S H E H A D M O R E TIES IU HEAVEN THAN

O N EARTH—^THE SILVER CORD W » UAIOOSED , THE AN AWO JHEN«.ION OF " SLJONLJ ATAIRFRAAI TM KUNC»T«3

GOLDEN BOWL B R E K E A . A U D L B . « H E . L S O F LIFE C'TTO^JB'

THAT RUN »<« 'A-IT WAS DROWN^-D IN DEATH. O N

A COLD A T D H-DUTIFUL SABBATH E V E M N / , AT 3

O'CLOCK, J O B S LIEDEEMER, TBAI STILL HVETH,

A N D THAT SHALL STAND AT THE LATTER D A Y U P O N

THE EARTB, WAS WITH HER TO CROSS HER OVER

J O R D A N ' S STORMY WAVES O N THE SUN BRIGHT

S & O R ^ OF THE HEAVENLY C A N A A N , TO M E E T A

LOVED H U S B A N D IA THE_ SPIRIT L A N D — T O PRAISE

H I M FOREVER FROM W H O M ALL BLESSINGS FLOW,

T H A N K G O D , W & E R E SORROW A N D TROUBLE NEVER

CAN C O M E . S B E LEAVES T W O SONS A N D FOUR

DAUGHTERS TO M O U R N THEIR LOSS. CHILDREN, SHE

CANNOT C O M E TO Y O U ; SHE WILL NEVER BE SEEN

O N EARTH AGAIN. Y O U TVILL NEVER HEAR HER

FOOT TREAD O N THE DOORSTEP , OR HER SWEET,

D.OTHERLY VOICE A R C U A D THE HEARTH-STONE A N Y

M O R E — N T V E R , NO , NEVER. B A T LA THE IAN

GUAGE OF THE PSALMUL , Y O U C « N GO TO HER.

M A Y THAT G O D THAT DELIVERED P D U L A A I SILAS

FW^M PRISON LEAD Y O U ALL SAFE INTO THAT MAN-

SION DOT M A D E WITH H A N D * , W H E R E BROTHERS

A N D SISTERS, MOTHERS A O D FATHERS WILL PART

N O MORE .

, L^ERMIT THE WRITER TO S P E % K O C J W O R D TO

A U N T HARRIET. Y O U , W H O CRADLED M E W H E N

AN INFANT, D A N D L E D M E IN YOUR L-TP A TBOU

S A N D TIMES OVER, A N D W A L K E D M E A R O U A D

WITH YOUR MERRY SOAG*, IA Y O U T H A A D PROS-

PERITY, I TRUST TO BE ABLE T^ M E E T YOUR BRIGHT

UPIRIT O A THE S U N N Y SHORES OF ETERAAL DELIV-

ERANCE. FAREWELL J . 1! W .

"f r

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4>!M 0

A ^ G ^ D E N M E S ;

and I K I

. O N L Y E H ^ A T T H B H O I ^ ^ T ? " "

^ T O L N R L ^ T R E E T . M A R B L E B L O O J ' '

CH>-APRR AT IT! WORTH TBAS A KLW«YI BWD BOTRD FOR TH« B

OR SRTICIOMCHI T Q U A L I T T 0

^ PLICA T H U L« TB» O'DMT 1 IF BOOTS AN-D S H O X S

Great Ee'dMon!

A . ! » . B A R X K i it C O . ,

SRW TORK AAJ CHICAGO

JOHN C. 8 M E R I CO.-S GEMUTNE

C O I D - L I V E I A O I L .

TA I O> LY C»RT«IB REM'^Y FOR CONANCIPTION. OO DM> WITH MEDICINET THAT O3KR ONLY TRUPORARY BAT IT 0B<-« PROCNR* THLA •PECIFLE. ONR BRAND OF COD-LI i'EB

OIL I« ADMLTIAD BY TH» BEAT PHY^ICLAAA IA THE LAND TO BE INPARLOR TO ANY OIB»R. WO BEIAIF TH« ONLY PARTIM NIAKINR »AP»»EIAL BNAIOMA OF M^NAFV-T'IN-.J TH** A TK-LP. SOLD »Y DRRIFSLIA «.RY«H^RF. JOU.N" C. C O , CHTLADRLPHTA, P<-NA VI-TI.III.N

O L S . ^ T H E

RFIF-P^IM-

B E A D I X G 9 F . I T T £ B .

1 H I S IS NO APOLOGY FOR WHISKY DRINKINJR; IT

IS A MEDICIAE THAT CANNOT BE USED TO INTOXICATE,

IT PRODUEEE \ TONIC EFFECT, AS WELL AS SICTS AS A

CATBARTLE. IN FACT, S I M M O N S ' LIVER REGULATOR

IS'PRONOUBCED AN UAEICECTICNABLE MEJIEINT.

TI-44

M R S . W B L T O O M V I I S J R U P . — T H E EREAT

SOOTHING REMEDY. PRICE OATY 2 5 CENTS. GIVES

REST TO THE MOTHER AND HEALTH TO THE CHILD. SOLD

BY DRUGGISTS. A-T^4-VI . 4 6

O R . O E N I T ' * B O O L A N D P L A N T F I L L O .

M i l d y e t t h o r o u g h — a o n a u s e a o r g r i p i n g — e n -t i r e l y vege tab le—great liver r e m e d v . P n c e

• S S R ^ H T T ^ M T Y - D M G J B U . - V-IL-VI^3

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B E S T A N D O L D E S T F A M I L J B L E D L -

CNNER^RSAAFORD'S LIVER LBVLGORATOR--DK|IIRELJ

T ^ T A H L E TWTHARTIO A A D TONIE—FAR DYSPEPSIA.

CONATIPATIOB, DEBIUTY, AICK HEADACHE, BIUOUS

ATTIWKSJ AI^^ALL DERANGEMENTS OF LIVER, ATOIAACH

AND BAWDA.> A S K YOUR D M G G I S T FAR IT. B E W A R E

OM»I I |AAIN» .- f , ; P-VI-28-EOW-VII-29

T L T E L F H L E F W H O W A I ARRESTED FOR ROBBING

PARSONS' (TARE IN THIS TOWN, W A S FOUND TO HAVE

A ^ U U T I T X ' O F A T K B ' S H A I B V I O O A IN HISPOS-

S E S ^ N . TTHEN ASKED W H Y HE W I S H E D TO STEAL

THAT ARTICLE,, H E ANSWERED THAT HE •< WANTED TO

RASTERO HIS HAIR, FOR IT W A S HARD TO BE A

THIEF AND-BALD TOO. " IF THAT ISVENTIEN OTTHE

GREAT CH«« IST CONLD RESTORE A FADED CHARACTER

A^' WELL AS IT DOES THEIR NATURAL BEAUTY TO<VALD

A N D GRAY HEADS, ITWOULD SURELY BE, AS THEY SAY

IT N O W : I ; , IRULJ INVALUABLE.—LEWISTON ( M E )

JOURNSF. VI-43-46'

F O R T H E C O U N T R Y !

F O R T H E S E A - S H O R E :

(') OIC** COH^TIOA* OF MAIT^.

" G E M S O F S T K A C S S , "

CUR.TAISIUJ ALL STRAAW BEAT WALTI..*, CALOPA, Q « . MAROTIIM, HE. ABONT'JO.ONOAOLD. PRTC*, FJ S

" O K G L ! * A T H O M E . "

JAST UNI. NRW ROLLRCTLAN OF OR»R 2IV> OF THI» M3>-T J : -ULAR UF DAY, ARR»NITD FOR UFSD I/R .I-.-, FT PRIC-, T.! .11.

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" W R E A T H O F G E M S , "

CTOIRT CJN, BALLIILF, »TP PRLR , $I.F-(I.

" P I A X O F O R T E G E M S ' N *

CONTATALNG THE B«LT PUNOFORT* SINAIC. PRICE, THE AVOTE BRAKA »R» NNIFONA IA ATYL? »AD BLADIA:;, ni.

P»««-« B»ING UF FULL AHIN-T MNAIC A-I». THFYWII. I FOAAJ INTALAAB'V FOR TB»ARA ABOR<* OR COUNTRY R^*-* RONTAININIC L.RI;HI PLRAAISI,; RAT!.«-, B-I.-.2 CA -

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*RI, AND FOR A BLOOD PARIAER, TRY

B A C L I N & D A N D E L I O N

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SURE CURE

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FOR ALL TORMA OF

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ITTT(>RA>ITT«BT A N D REMITTENT FO-RER. ARE FOANIT IO KREAA.!

V C W E R T O M L C . ^ IT CONTAINT I»O P«*TONOAA TARA-IDIENT AND CSRAA AGNE BY tamalimt <B« AJUE PMTOA IA THE B L O O D , ANDR]RETINETT FROM THE TRAUTA B « OF RUIA BOTLLC:

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TH* FL I 'NIS? WDRKA ARE IN PRWIANDW. : : z ^ . S-. TWRFA THE LOTH AND ISTHOF \K"R»:IIT. .

ORDERS IA TILE ORDER THEY ARE IW^I*.,] T H E CLUATER, BY S. W . MARTIN, T , K , T . . « LA ) J

2L.FLTI.IMAN. > BOOK FORSINGINGDAIN**, CHEIRR AND THE HOMF URCLE. PRICE, « : . SI 1.6O P«RDEZ-N. A •TNGL'? AAIAPLE COPY WIU B« J 'JUAI-PAID. FORSI.SS. I.

SCDFCWLCK** P E R F E C T ^ B E T H O D A FOR F-RA--ACCERDIOB. GERAIAA AACORDIEA, AND GIRAJ LA > NA. PRIAA, 75 EACH.

SEDGWIELI<A C O M P L E T E M E T B O D A FVR TY- F-NCA ACCORDLOA, O W N A N ACCORDION, AND G«RM.\A < •A . PRICE. SI SO EACH. «H>-LYHONBD

P A N L L A E , OR TLIE B « U E O R S « R « T A N . A PARLOR O P W F C ^ H . P. SAAK*. PRLC, XHIS B-ACTIFUL UTILE O ^ R T I N « INTENDED FBR AMATECN. AWLETI* CU AND SLHL A LEAF-F.'TT WANT. PSBUIBED BY

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IT IS A GOOD RNLE TO TRY ALL THINGS, AND HOJD FKST !O WHAT HAS BEEN APPR^RED, ANSWERS THE PARPOEE FOR WMCH U IS MADR. THU ISTLAIMED FOR "PRATRS O N. ANI LA AD-MITTED BY PRII- ICAL PIARTERA W»O HARE TRI'-.L IT.

ORJERA FOR GLUA, 'ROM I" T. S > SAW., COM CAACS ATS-W F'FK FA-TORY AND CONTL-TE AKJ CF BABDS, ETC.,NROMPTLTLIN-<L. ' '

OINS REPAIRED >>Y AAK:L|FIIL RIOT. ART^-EX

O. W . T K R K M S A R R . AG»NTFER RNTNIEL PRATT CISD CORMRAAT.

TI.H.«IL-5 KO. LUCUARTAIREET, *>-IAPH'«. T»NN.

A C I E 3 M I X ^ X X T H O i O H

' $ 1 5 C L R F E W I R ^ . ^

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A-TI-M-TFL.«

VAARTK SI., OKIABAA, A,

WNAMTINTNLT. • IRFH-NSRAAAD

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RKIOA .MAKLECM^SIANTA .TS .WPERDEA« . EAESFKEI

MAAOAPY MAILED FOR 30 C^BTA. SPSETAAEA PAOA FTOA^-

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I L L S -ST ILEE I ' , M E 3 I ? A L S .

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T A ^ J Y LNSUR<~< IV-MR ^ R F M R A O D K L ^ ^ ^ N I

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