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is no half w5y But Per- ,not ,w-;make ,myself so familiar _-- p'hUo$opher'Qn this point. l'UNISmo:Nl' OF TiE WlCKED-Nil. 8. make.the penalty of trausgression to - sist in death .. is to involve the government M1Lf o ., Wis., Nov. 6, 1858. inextricable diffieulties and positive contradic- ,"ue"tJ,1I DEaR 13ROTHER"S.- , tioil.' Let me state the doctrine I 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate :EpI,tle of Paul to the Corinthians, and proved, on the :Atori.ement," page 13:" lIU\te to my satisfaction, tha,t the "dead are alty of the Jaw of God 'Personal sin is llllsed .. " An incorrnptibl6j thing death. Both Testaments mall: as being exposed to for personal sin. But IS perpetual in its being. Thep. none l a. all original aitt, none dtin t'nllinf' tiuIlireiIcv;:atm..'li,iI-iv',1' resurrectcS'1l "die any more." 'the Sav- a resurrection. to"B seemecf lOur's testimo y fully justifies what Paul present \leath, then, accord- hjs.,Qwn hair would erect I do not e so much to strengthen to Mr. St'Whenson, is-not for "personal sin," at thel!' awfulnpss It was as a "for original sin." "None can die for lake burning with fire and brimstone. varIety Luke 29: 27-" Then came to him person:l'Il siu wlthout a resurrection to a second man interrupted him j for- all felt and certain of the Saddm:ees, (whicl,l deny that Is this really so 7 Let us tum to 2 from the sOlemnity Of his manner, there is any resurrection,) I10nd they asked 25 : 4, .. But he slew not his overwhelming impressiou there was IIpon Master, Moses wrote unto us, If a mILn's but did as it is written in the law ill the book and though thel!' astomshment deepened ther die, having a wife, and he die without where the Lord commanded, saying, angry and awful gloom, benestlf' the UUIUU children, that his brother shoUld tllke.his wife, The father shall not die for the children, ueither glare of his address, yet they sat, spell.-o'ouna. shall the children die for the father, BUT EVERY listening, and gazing at him i and alid raise up seed unto his brother." Then they MAN SIULL DIE FOR IDS OWl! SINS All the dif- scended from the table. a profound go Qn to'"R¥ th..:t.__ - 1..a, 1I,'v- tliere seems to betbetween the "Atolle- reigned in the whole circle, and not one tl,,,. ___ successivel;y, last men anii' the Bible," {and their (\tlthors, of concerniug the wager was uttered. all the woman died thexefore, in the re- course,) is, one says, that they do 1l0t "dialfor instantly WIthdrew from the company ,ullcction, whose wife of the seven is she? for personal sin," and the other says they uttermg a word j and it is needless to say. h d h t iii" N k th die for their own sin." Compare Deut. 24: returned to that society. Bnt after a season OfI·forbM,r fil!rthllr se,en a er.o dWt e. b' ow, mhar e ques- 16; 2 Kings 14 : 6; Jer. 31: 30 ; Ezek. 18: the deepest distress and condlCt,';he paBSed tion i It was raISe 0 0 to t e resUl'l'ection 20. For whom did the antedilnvian world die, the fnlllight of the gospel, and' at length ,ijJ . of the dead in general, and not in relation to -the Sodomites, Ananias and Sapphira, and came a most 8uccessful preacher of its j£1{LCe!' I thlS slOgle case. The Saviour then..goes on to Judas? 0, "for Adam's sin," says Mr. S. I answer'the question. In verse 34th, U 4nd But, after all, supposing that a !'fl't, or all of I them did die "for their own sill.i,' then, when Jesus, answering, Jlaid unto them, The children are they to die for Adam's sin? Not the second 1'0 the Edlto .. 01 the Sabbath Rec.ol'der·- of this world marry, aud are given in marriage; death, for the wicked die that I, for their own From time to tiwtl, for several years past, but they that are counted )Vorthy to obtain sins." This wonld :make such liS die here politIcal aloticles ha>;e appeared in the Recurdt tnat world, and the reslll'l'ection from the dead, their sins to die twice, while another portion both editorml and from ne ither marry nor are g:"len in mam·age·, die but once. Those who die twice for their S h "-'-.1'."..--,.' .. . Iild d' Ad h DC artICles have always been on the Side neither can they die .any more " for they are own sms, wo not Ie lor am's; if t ey then they would die three times. This to the democratic party und its nnnlrli.J equal uuto the angels, lind are the children of be a Iiitle too Much death for even anni- The ohject of this God, being the children of the resurrection!' hilationists. We only read of "the' 8econd mform the readers of the &wrder, tl h may be objected here, that those who. are- death j" but here is the thitb, or else a a number of the Seventh·day Baptists qot to "die any more" are Christians or ra. never die for Adsm's sins. This is not all always have been, attached to tIle . ""d f h' some have been raised from the dead a1rpanv "' appointed to attend the 'Phil,,"'1 inrrected SSlllts, IS ,,0 t dem' that and are ilead again; this ill twice. party, and to show the improprietieS of some Convention, including an interview tltey are to be as e ange s, an are the the judgment It shall be found that some of these anti democratic productions. delegates from Maine, during the "children of God." 1. This would make the persons. died for whose sins shall 0 Fall River to New York on the , ne writer, under the caption, "Is answer limited, applymg only to saints j while they die? Once they have dled for .Adam's These convel'\latlOns had reference the question was general, and inclnded \Ill. 2. s!ns; Ilod once .ror their. own.i now for whose Iicanism Christianity?" labors hllrd and the selection of their Presidential candidate; This would render the answer good for nothing. sms wlll they thud time? Why, for effectually to show that the recent organization and each delegate that the writer heard nohody's, haVIng dIed for both Adam's and of a factIOn agamst the democratic party, is a his views, declared that Seward and McLean The brothers alluded to, or a part of their own; consequently 'these sinnel'S would Christian organization. In the Recorbr of wlJ1Ild be THEm first and second choice, them, mIght have been bad men. Then the be immortal, and hve forever. For the law 12th of JlIne, "S. S. G." gives a negative usually Sumuer and Banks were named as answer would have been inapprooriate. But only reqnires that "all shall die for original third and fourth choice; but the conclusion as to their bemg lIke angels Christ did not sin j" and "both Testaments teach that the answer to the question His position is the each was, invariably, that neither of the , . h II d j I . " H . di d extreme 6r Abolitionism, Rud has a parallel ld 'bl bIt d or r . mean to say that they were like an els in all sa. Ie or aVlllg e con pvoSI y e e ec e , n ecelve many, . '. . g tWICe, there IS no law reqUlrmg the thIrd death, only in the former productions of "D. E. }[,'1 of the electoral votes, in the North- respecta. ThlS lS not true of samts. They not even in the creed of an annihilationist. If But before we discuss this questIOn, let us on account of thet' ltnown views on ho\;"ever resemble angels farther than the re- those who have been raised from the dead have question; and they generally gave examine into the propriety or improprJety of h (j BUlrecte,d wicked. '!'he thought seems to be dled two ice,. and there is no .law. to inflict death t eir opinioD, in conclusion, that 01. Fre- th th d t th th ill I 1 the assumption of the nome of Re7lubllcan tiy b th d'd te ' J t f simply this, thllt respect to marrying they e Jr Ime, en wIve on perpetua - r:.< m1(.st e e can I a , on accOUI\ 0 are like angels' ailgels do not marry' the re- Iy, whe!her they are n?t. If they the of the democratic party. Soon availability, IlS he alone would secure the votes I. . ' were samts, they have dIed tWIce-Just as after the adopt jon ot'-tte OonstitutlOll of the of the Republicans, Abolitionists, aud surrected do. not, marry; they as thJl. sinner Onr opponents would United States, the people became divided into Nothings, and draw largely from the hke angels III thIS respect. They are III so hardly be willmg to be responsible for such a two guat national political parties. One cratic pa,rty, as helhad always been attll.Ch1e<l.lltnl much "equal unto the angels." 3. But how result; and yet it seems to :me that such con- desired a powerful national' gOlrerllIDElnt, to that party. nnflels 1-hy heooming tb"e diso'po!CQ 41es '(01' • • T3 .' .! nere III tOlS present world, he cannot mds of emhracmg religIOn? No; III l)emg raIsed for Adam's sins. But let me quote the law- speeches, and subsequent from the dead. The text does not say that Deut. 24, 16-" The fathet shall be put ed that their party contained only they !Lre " childten of G:od in any such light; to death for the childrenj neither shall toe chil- pOWers a strict constrnction of 1st. Maine-law-iam. 2d. and we are fully gUiU'q,Jd such a view, dren be put to death for the father; EVERY mn, or tke non-extension of 'la-eery. "Notlililg!' for Christ tells plainly in what sense we are lrAN SlLI;LL BE TO HIS ?:VN SINS" the United States-Constitution, leaving greater within the last six or eight months, the "But I prefer to pay yon,'t said " hild f G d" W d hil"'- That thIS apphes to thlS life, IS pOSltlvely cer· powers with the States, as independent Repub- division of their principles was regarded by ride. has been a favor and a help to e 0 O. e are ma e w:en, See 2 Chton. 25: 3, 4,.:-" Now it came hcs, or SoYereignities, and WIth the people. them.as being of much more i)nportance, and I still refused; but he still inSISted In the lIght of the text, not by converSIOn, and to puSS'that when the kingdom was established Rence their name Democrats or Republicans. received much more attention from that faction At length t said, "If I name my thus spirithal children, but by the resurrection, to him, that he slew his servants thst bad kill- The improprietIes of the assnmptlOn by the than the second division. In many of the won't pay it!' Y1 he would; he and the i' cbildren of God" in that light. 1 ed. the king his. fathe; .. But. he s!ew uot anti-democratic party, of the subsequent names States, they suchceeded in thing I wOdul ask. "Will Here we have the Saviour's authority that the children, bnt dId as It 18 wrItten m the law, III (If the voters t at our coun ry wou e ost to: beat me own , , . .' '.' book of Moses, where the Lord commaud- of Federal Republicans, National Republicans, nuless they should elect legislatol's and gover- " Certainly." ral,eel ar not to die agaiii. We mIght strengtli- saYing The father shall not die for the chil- Whigs, etc., will be passed over III our present nors that would establish the Maine law. They "Well, if you will pay me en this interpretation bi other facts, but thesye nor the chUdren for the father, but every commnnication. At this time we will inquire succeeded at the polls, and enacted such laws, me down, 1 will name my price for are sufficient until they are invalidated. When shall die SINS," we jnto the present position of p!lJ'ties ,. pre1l118illg aud the experiment has been a failure, as pre- price is, that you take the that IS done we are prepared to bring to our yon the and we have gIven yon dieted by the democratic party; and aUhough I",;""n you, and act upon it to the , f 'ts . t' T Bist h that the democratic party retHirrs its orIginal ,carried the State of New York last year "Rut I'd rather settle it now." Illd corresoondihg passages. 0 1 .app ca lon. 0 re s!lc ,.- I tu reSISt "Moses,'f and to subject prinCiples, and that the term Republican, as- tlie year previous under that issue, electing "Well, l'd rathe): you would." 2 When man is represented as vel:y severe )'ebt1ke of J annas and by our opponents, is a misnomer. Clarke, probably the only man they coqld " Then. tell me how much it is." reference . 'be )IllIy to tliiS 2 'l'im. 3 : "Ever leadnng, and misnamed RepUblicans, during our last have elected, against Gov. Seymour, they "t hare told you. You promised that prenotfs) t.<1' to come to the lmowledge- of the presidentIal canvass, stated tDat tbe only issue dare not this year nominate Gov. Clarke for agreed not to ,qeat lll,e down. mortal occurSJBlX times, and 10 eaen plnce- Now: as ;rannas and Jembres withstood re-election, as that would have opened the peet yda to pay the price I have ISltsapplicatlOI\. 2 ChronleleaUE 1:1:, "Let so do' these also resist the truth' men wasfretdomor,lavery-that and probably have resnlted in with these words 1 off. We Ina.l·b,iI not mortal man. prevail against thee." Job 4 : minds reprobate concernmg the in electing Colonel Fremont, slavery of their tickets in this State, both the dark, strangers as we met. I 17, mortal man be more just than faith" do not 'want to be severe but I do I'restrict()d to the limits of the Missouri Compro- and Gubernatorial The demo- tell whether he was white or black, G?d 7". Roni. 6: U, "Let not 'sin therefore waut sl1ch men as are described in the text or excluded from all the Territories j but party, this year, in the selection of a asked his name or abode, lest he "fl UWU m yl1ttt bodies." Rolh. 8:: .'lee w!fat they are doing, and I pray God Mr, Buchanan' should be elected, slavery didate for the Presidency, wisely mine. S " , arno :yonr bOIites by'hls open their ayes. Y. H'ULL. people a man: of matnre age, It happened about three weeks pl1lt. 1 Cor. Hi:, 53, "'£.his 1II0rtaL must be extellded over all our territories, moral and political character, of rsre edu- woman who washed at my pat ?n immortality!' 2 Cor. 4: 11, "That rn sCoFPElt C'OlI'vD.TtIl. jnto the now Free States; aud many, cational attainments, of great diplomatic skill, my wife I was on the the bfe of might be made manifest in Ch . h'" riki formerly voted the democratic ticket, lVere and experience in the halls of legislation. Such to. M-- your In all these passages, the Dr.. eever es a at ng prevailed upon to believe that if a selection commended itself to the favorable t9 to attend a DleEjtin.g, b.ody onlylS saId to be "mortal!' It is a very in the life of Mr. Thrope :- consideration of the '\lise, intelligent, sober- her. to BIglllficant fact, that the spirit is no where said be elected, slavery would certaihly minded, and considerate pbrtion of the electors went; and desctin1lion to be mortal, or to be raised from the established in the State of New York within 'hronghout the Union. The opposition reqnir- horse and said was satiisfie,d--toltt :,rhis body, from its very is mortaI,(and year. The miscalled RepUblIcans ed a nomination of a different character, and ,was all she wanted to know. called so, in distinction from the resur. and declared that was" Slav- had it. They needed II candidate that MY,wife now: asked her to reeted aDd immortal body. , ery or Freedom," and havlllg been defeated create some enthnsiaSllL.:: .... one wnos'e' er- she did in this mauner. We have a Very relll,arksble passage ill one th lis th Id t tl I' if movements would draw after him the Aunt Desire, .she said, worked author!! quoted on tlilii questiofi e po, eJ, cou no JUS y comp IJ,lIl young, adventurous, and inconsiderat;e.... ;..:one in Norwich that day and evenfnlil', of namelYJ "Mr. slavery sbould be extended; for it is whose former limited experience in publica.ft'a.irs time after dark, the 80n of the wOlnan!for 1Ji bls work entitleil ":A.tonl!ment," but really conceded, that the majority should rule, and a portion of his for: she worked came in looking very 1l0ilrnclW!t. a work C\II tlie' question of man's m'ortaliiy. that representatives should obey the will of mer on account of what he and sat down jp, a corner, without M.viinO' Be seetiis to'bave'written wbat he knew 011 the their constituents. But the trnth is, the issue had one who would receive nearly: word for about half an hour. His " Atonement" in' a b'rief spu.ce, and then, with- before the people was not "freedom or 8lavery." all tbe the party lie had formerly op- length asked him if he was sick. out lllterlng"his' title, 118 destrnction." posed, by promise of a political change in was not; Itnd she ask'ed'hini what On page i!Y.he sayli: "What was his (man's) Snch statement.was a false assomption by ow:: hlWselC - TItey selected s candidate with all matter. For som'e time she got no nattre, and intellectu8.l.1y 7 opponents, to deceive the unwary, and increase these (to them) desirahle qnalifications. And finally he: out with it, and said, " W liS he mortal, Uhmortal, or was he neithel' 7 the popular vote in tl1e Northern States; " t4ey Weltt it blindly." body's been t!J.lking to me." AIt,. HE WAS' NEITHER." ana true issue W8,!l, "Shall the electors in the tem., • In the Recorder of the 20th N' ovember are "What abont 1" eag\e-eyed must such a torias decide for themselves, or shall. quotatiohs from the 11liIepe1lileJnt, from which .. About religion." neither mortal nor we make the following brief extracts. " What did he 1" all tbat is decide, whether slavery shall be excluded from the reSult iII New York and tbe The man repeated " established in the territories?" WIth the 'they,p.ol"'"',nO,.I",f propriety, the democratschosli to leave a. coalition with tbe ... nnw·Phlll'!l ... of the case with the electors remarks: " Nor is cn.,ra"ter· of these votes is no numbers. The ,,, .•. -' IJ belt of and ·v., ...... "

Transcript of m~~~~en~~~~ nnflels ~h~~~~ … › sabbathrecorderscan › SR+Vol+13... · 2017-07-07 · 1 closed...

Page 1: m~~~~en~~~~ nnflels ~h~~~~ … › sabbathrecorderscan › SR+Vol+13... · 2017-07-07 · 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate

is no half w5y tietW~ii:r'8ucltJstates. But Per- ,'ilf!t\lA_F~i[' I,,?u~ht ,not ,w-;make ,myself so familiar

_-- tw~ ~~iIJ p'hUo$opher'Qn this point. ~E l'UNISmo:Nl' OF TiE WlCKED-Nil. 8. make.the penalty of trausgression to

- sist in death .. is to involve the government M1Lfo., Wis., Nov. 6, 1858. inextricable diffieulties and positive contradic- ,"ue"tJ,1I

DEaR 13ROTHER"S.- , tioil.' Let me state the doctrine I op~lose 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate

:EpI,tle of Paul to the Corinthians, and proved, on the :Atori.ement," page 13:" R~n­lIU\te to my satisfaction, tha,t the "dead are alty of the Jaw of God fo~ 'Personal sin is llllsed lU~orruptilile .. " An incorrnptibl6j thing death. Both Testaments re~ellt mall: as

being exposed to for personal sin. But IS perpetual in its being. Thep. none o~ l ina'lnucl~ a. all original aitt, none dtin t'nllinf' tiuIlireiIcv;:atm..'li,iI-iv',1' resurrectcS'1l "die any more." 'the Sav- a resurrection. to"B seemecf lOur's testimo y fully justifies what Paul ~~ys. present \leath, then, accord- hjs.,Qwn hair would erect I do not e so much to strengthen a~ ~olglve to Mr. St'Whenson, is-not for "personal sin," at thel!' awfulnpss It was as a bla~ltoln.

"for original sin." "None can die for lake burning with fire and brimstone. Ye~ varIety Luke 29: 27-" Then came to him person:l'Il siu wlthout a resurrection to a second man interrupted him j for- all felt and certain of the Saddm:ees, (whicl,l deny that Is this really so 7 Let us tum to 2 from the sOlemnity Of his manner, there is any resurrection,) I10nd they asked 25 : 4, .. But he slew not his overwhelming impressiou there was IIpon Master, Moses wrote unto us, If a mILn's but did as it is written in the law ill the book and though thel!' astomshment deepened ther die, having a wife, and he die without where the Lord commanded, saying, angry and awful gloom, benestlf' the UUIUU

children, that his brother shoUld tllke.his wife, The father shall not die for the children, ueither glare of his address, yet they sat, spell.-o'ouna. shall the children die for the father, BUT EVERY listening, and gazing at him i and

alid raise up seed unto his brother." Then they MAN SIULL DIE FOR IDS OWl! SINS All the dif- scended from the table. a profound go Qn to'"R¥ th..:t.__ - 1..a, a~""'D 1I,'v- tliere seems to betbetween the "Atolle- reigned in the whole circle, and not one tl,,,. ___ ~~'husbands successivel;y, J!~d last men anii' the Bible," {and their (\tlthors, of concerniug the wager was uttered. TbI~i>t'.1 all the woman died al~o; thexefore, in the re- course,) is, one says, that they do 1l0t "dialfor instantly WIthdrew from the company ,ullcction, whose wife of the seven is she? for personal sin," and the other says they uttermg a word j and it is needless to say.

h d h t iii" N k th die for their own sin." Compare Deut. 24: returned to that society. Bnt after a season OfI·forbM,r fil!rthllr se,en a er.o dWt e. b' ow, mhar e ques- 16; 2 Kings 14 : 6; Jer. 31: 30 ; Ezek. 18: the deepest distress and condlCt,';he paBSed ~t.rl tion i It was raISe 0 0 ~ect to t e resUl'l'ection 20. For whom did the antedilnvian world die, the fnlllight of the gospel, and' at length ,ijJ

. of the dead in general, and not in relation to -the Sodomites, Ananias and Sapphira, and came a most 8uccessful preacher of its j£1{LCe!' I thlS slOgle case. The Saviour then..goes on to Judas? 0, "for Adam's sin," says Mr. S. I answer'the question. In verse 34th, U 4nd But, after all, supposing that a !'fl't, or all of PO~CAL. I

them did die "for their own sill.i,' then, when Jesus, answering, Jlaid unto them, The children are they to die for Adam's sin? Not the second 1'0 the Edlto .. 01 the Sabbath Rec.ol'der·-

of this world marry, aud are given in marriage; death, for the wicked die that I, for their own From time to tiwtl, for several years past, but they that are counted )Vorthy to obtain sins." This wonld :make such liS die here fo~ politIcal aloticles ha>;e appeared in the Recurdt tnat world, and the reslll'l'ection from the dead, their sins to die twice, while another portion both editorml and from cOITes~poiaden~!II.i't;:,;~\· neither marry nor are g:"len in mam·age·, die but once. Those who die twice for their S h "-'-.1'."..--,.' .. • . Iild d' ~ Ad h DC artICles have always been on the Side neither can they die .any more " for they are own sms, wo not Ie lor am's; if t ey

then they would die three times. This to the democratic party und its nnnlrli.J

equal uuto the angels, lind are the children of be a Iiitle too Much death for even anni- The ohject of this communicaLtti:~o:~n_~i~S~~ ;;j;~;~~~~i~~~~i~~~~~~~~;~;~~}~1~~~. God, being the children of the resurrection!' hilationists. We only read of "the' 8econd mform the readers of the &wrder, tl h may be objected here, that those who. are- death j" but here is the thitb, or else a p~h a number of the Seventh·day Baptists

qot to "die any more" are Christians or ra. never die for Adsm's sins. This is not all always have been, attached to tIle '''e[~:rat~~!~~~i~~8;~~::!: . ""d f h' some have been raised from the dead a1rpanv "' appointed to attend the 'Phil,,"'1 inrrected SSlllts, bect~uSe,~t IS B~I ,,0 t dem' that and are ilead again; this ill twice. party, and to show the improprietieS of some Convention, including an interview tltey are to be as e ange s, an are the the judgment It shall be found that some of these anti democratic productions. delegates from Maine, during the passa~e "children of God." 1. This would make the persons. died sinner~, for whose sins shall 0 Fall River to New York on the ~etropo-, ne writer, under the caption, "Is ~ answer limited, applymg only to saints j while they die? Once they have dled for .Adam's These convel'\latlOns nlway~ had reference the question was general, and inclnded \Ill. 2. s!ns; Ilod once .ror their. own.i now for whose Iicanism Christianity?" labors hllrd and lU~;t'fn the selection of their Presidential candidate; This would render the answer good for nothing. sms wlll they ~le t~e thud time? Why, for effectually to show that the recent organization and each delegate that the writer heard expre~s

nohody's, haVIng dIed for both Adam's and of a factIOn agamst the democratic party, is a his views, declared that Seward and McLean The sev~n brothers alluded to, or a part of their own; consequently 'these sinnel'S would Christian organization. In the Recorbr of wlJ1Ild be THEm first and second choice, them, mIght have been bad men. Then the be immortal, and hve forever. For the law 12th of JlIne, "S. S. G." gives a negative usually Sumuer and Banks were named as answer would have been inapprooriate. But only reqnires that "all shall die for original third and fourth choice; but the conclusion as to their bemg lIke angels Christ did not sin j" and "both Testaments teach that the answer to the question His position is the each was, invariably, that neither of the

, . h II d j I . " H . di d extreme 6r Abolitionism, Rud has a parallel ld ~ 'bl bIt d or r . mean to say that they were like an els in all sm~lers sa. Ie or person~ ~m. aVlllg e con pvoSI y e e ec e , n ecelve many, . '. . g tWICe, there IS no law reqUlrmg the thIrd death, only in the former productions of "D. E. }[,'1 of the electoral votes, e~ in the North-

respecta. ThlS lS not true of samts. They not even in the creed of an annihilationist. If But before we discuss this questIOn, let us on account of thet' ltnown views on ho\;"ever resemble angels farther than the re- those who have been raised from the dead have question; and they generally gave • examine into the propriety or improprJety of h (j BUlrecte,d wicked. '!'he thought seems to be dled two ice,. and there is no .law. to inflict death t eir opinioD, in conclusion, that 01. Fre-

"'r~ th th d t th th ill I 1 the assumption of the nome of Re7lubllcan tiy b th d'd te ' J t f simply this, thllt ~ respect to marrying they e Jr Ime, en ~y wIve on perpetua - r:.< m1(.st e e can I a , on accOUI\ 0 are like angels' ailgels do not marry' the re- Iy, whe!her they are sl~ners ~r n?t. If they the opponent~ of the democratic party. Soon availability, IlS he alone would secure the votes

I. . ' were samts, they have dIed tWIce-Just as m~ny after the adopt jon ot'-tte OonstitutlOll of the of the Republicans, Abolitionists, aud surrected do. not, marry; they ai'e~he~efore as thJl. sinner Onr opponents would United States, the people became divided into Nothings, and draw largely from the hke angels III thIS respect. They are III so hardly be willmg to be responsible for such a two guat national political parties. One cratic pa,rty, as helhad always been attll.Ch1e<l.lltnl much "equal unto the angels." 3. But how result; and yet it seems to :me that such con- desired a powerful national' gOlrerllIDElnt, to that party.

m~~~"~en~~~~ ~h~~~~ 11~~~~~~t~~~~y~e~ar~S~~~~~i~ll~jliliiil~~~~~~~~~~~~ nnflels 1-hy heooming tb"e diso'po!CQ ~od p(;,l!li.ath~ JY~er!l;_Q,ne 41es '(01' ,\'.'i!~"Il'¥'I,';;';: • • T3 .' .! nere III tOlS present world, he cannot mds of

emhracmg religIOn? No; ~ut III l)emg raIsed for Adam's sins. But let me quote the law- speeches, and subsequent from the dead. The text does not say that Deut. 24, 16-" The fathet shall n~ be put ed that their party contained only they !Lre " childten of G:od ,~ in any such light; to death for the childrenj neither shall toe chil- pOWers a strict constrnction of ~ents: 1st. Maine-law-iam. 2d. Abolil!icn~' and we are fully gUiU'q,Jd 4~st such a view, dren be put to death for the father; EVERY mn, or tke non-extension of 'la-eery. "Notlililg!' for Christ tells plainly in what sense we are lrAN SlLI;LL BE ~UT TO DE~TH .FO~ HIS ?:VN SINS" the United States-Constitution, leaving greater within the last six or eight months, the "But I prefer to pay yon,'t said " hild f G d" W d hil"'- That thIS apphes to thlS life, IS pOSltlvely cer· powers with the States, as independent Repub- division of their principles was regarded by ride. has been a favor and a help to e r~n 0 O. e are ma e ~ w:en, See 2 Chton. 25: 3, 4,.:-" Now it came hcs, or SoYereignities, and WIth the people. them.as being of much more i)nportance, and I still refused; but he still inSISted

In the lIght of the text, not by converSIOn, and to puSS'that when the kingdom was established Rence their name Democrats or Republicans. received much more attention from that faction At length t said, "If I name my thus spirithal children, but by the resurrection, to him, that he slew his servants thst bad kill- The improprietIes of the assnmptlOn by the than the second division. In many of the won't pay it!' Y1 he would; he and the i' cbildren of God" in that light.1 ed. the king his. fathe; .. But. he s!ew uot the~r anti-democratic party, of the subsequent names States, they suchceeded in COntvincingladmbajolrit~ thing I wOdul ask. "Will Here we have the Saviour's authority that the children, bnt dId as It 18 wrItten m the law, III (If the voters t at our coun ry wou e ost to: beat me own f'~ ,

~ , . .' '.' book of Moses, where the Lord commaud- of Federal Republicans, National Republicans, nuless they should elect legislatol's and gover- " Certainly." ral,eel ar not to die agaiii. We mIght strengtli- saYing The father shall not die for the chil- Whigs, etc., will be passed over III our present nors that would establish the Maine law. They "Well, if you will pay me wlt,no[~'t en this interpretation bi other facts, but thesye nor the chUdren for the father, but every commnnication. At this time we will inquire succeeded at the polls, and enacted such laws, me down, 1 will name my price for are sufficient until they are invalidated. When shall die ~§OWN SINS," ~ere we jnto the present position of p!lJ'ties ,. pre1l118illg aud the experiment has been a failure, as pre- price is, that you take the that IS done we are prepared to bring to our yon the and we have gIven yon dieted by the democratic party; and aUhough I",;""n you, and act upon it to the

, f 'ts . t' T Bist h that the democratic party retHirrs its orIginal ,carried the State of New York last year "Rut I'd rather settle it now." Illd corresoondihg passages. 0 1 .app ca lon. 0 re s!lc

,.- I tu reSISt "Moses,'f and to subject prinCiples, and that the term Republican, as- tlie year previous under that issue, electing "Well, l'd rathe): you would." 2 When man is represented as vel:y severe )'ebt1ke of J annas and by our opponents, is a misnomer. Clarke, probably the only man they coqld " Then. tell me how much it is."

reference . ca~ 'be h~d )IllIy to tliiS 2 'l'im. 3 : ~-9, "Ever leadnng, and misnamed RepUblicans, during our last have elected, against Gov. Seymour, ~et they "t hare told you. You promised that prenotfs) t.<1' t~e reBri.ti!~Ction.'I) to come to the lmowledge- of the presidentIal canvass, stated tDat tbe only issue dare not this year nominate Gov. Clarke for agreed not to ,qeat lll,e down. mortal occurSJBlX times, and 10 eaen plnce- Now: as ;rannas and Jembres withstood re-election, as that would have opened the peet yda to pay the price I have ISltsapplicatlOI\. 2 ChronleleaUE 1:1:, "Let so do' these also resist the truth' men wasfretdomor,lavery-that iftheysncceededllll~inle.la;wissue, and probably have resnlted in with these words 1 ~OTe off. We Ina.l·b,iI

not mortal man. prevail against thee." Job 4 : minds reprobate concernmg the in electing Colonel Fremont, slavery of their tickets in this State, both the dark, strangers as we met. I 17, "Sha~ mortal man be more just than faith" do not 'want to be severe but I do I'restrict()d to the limits of the Missouri Compro- and Gubernatorial The demo- tell whether he was white or black, G?d 7". Roni. 6: U, "Let not 'sin therefore waut sl1ch men as are described in the text or excluded from all the Territories j but party, this year, in the selection of a asked his name or abode, lest he "flUWU

I;~: m yl1ttt ~ortal bodies." Rolh. 8:: 1~, .'lee w!fat they are doing, and I pray God Mr, Buchanan' should be elected, slavery didate for the Presidency, wisely mine.

S" , ~ arno ,\mck~ :yonr tn!lrt~l bOIites by'hls open their ayes. Y. H'ULL. people a man: of matnre age, It happened about three weeks pl1lt. 1 Cor. Hi:, 53, "'£.his 1II0rtaL must be extellded over all our territories, moral and political character, of rsre edu- woman who washed at my

pat ?n immortality!' 2 Cor. 4: 11, "That rn sCoFPElt C'OlI'vD.TtIl. jnto the now Free States; aud many, cational attainments, of great diplomatic skill, my wife I was on the the bfe of J~sns might be made manifest in Ch . h'" riki formerly voted the democratic ticket, lVere and experience in the halls of legislation. Such to. M-- rl~m~m11:,e~~,d your mor~1 ne~b!' In all these passages, the Dr.. eever furm~ es a at ng prevailed upon to believe that if a selection commended itself to the favorable t9 to attend a DleEjtin.g, b.ody onlylS saId to be "mortal!' It is a very in the life of Mr. Thrope :- consideration of the '\lise, intelligent, sober- her. to BIglllficant fact, that the spirit is no where said be elected, slavery would certaihly minded, and considerate pbrtion of the electors went; and htivini~ desctin1lion to be mortal, or to be raised from the d~d. established in the State of New York within 'hronghout the Union. The opposition reqnir- horse and said was satiisfie,d--toltt :,rhis body, from its very patu~\l, is mortaI,(and year. The miscalled RepUblIcans ed a nomination of a different character, and ,was all she wanted to know. h~nce called so, in distinction from the resur. and declared that theis~ue was" Slav- had it. They needed II candidate that MY,wife now: asked her to reeted aDd immortal body. , ery or Freedom," and havlllg been defeated create some enthnsiaSllL.::....one wnos'e' er- she did in this mauner.

We have a Very relll,arksble passage ill one th lis th Id t tl I' if movements would draw after him the Aunt Desire, .she said, worked ~1 ~nr author!! slr'e~dy quoted on tlilii questiofi e po, eJ, cou no JUS y comp IJ,lIl young, adventurous, and inconsiderat;e....;..:one in Norwich that day and evenfnlil', of earth11lmo~tality! namelYJ "Mr. Ste~heu'sod, slavery sbould be extended; for it is whose former limited experience in publica.ft'a.irs time after dark, the 80n of the wOlnan!for

1Ji bls work entitleil ":A.tonl!ment," but really conceded, that the majority should rule, and a portion of his for: she worked came in looking very 1l0ilrnclW!t. a work C\II tlie' question of man's m'ortaliiy. that representatives should obey the will of mer on account of what he and sat down jp, a corner, without M.viinO'

Be seetiis to'bave'written wbat he knew 011 the their constituents. But the trnth is, the issue had one who would receive nearly: word for about half an hour. His " Atonement" in' a b'rief spu.ce, and then, with- before the people was not "freedom or 8lavery." all tbe the party lie had formerly op- length asked him if he was sick. out lllterlng"his' title, "~ves 118 destrnction." posed, by promise of a political change in was not; Itnd she ask'ed'hini what On page i!Y.he sayli: "What was his (man's) Snch statement.was a false assomption by ow:: hlWselC - TItey selected s candidate with all matter. For som'e time she got no nattre, moraIlY~}lhysically; and intellectu8.l.1y 7 opponents, to deceive the unwary, and increase these (to them) desirahle qnalifications. And finally he: out with it, and said, " W liS he mortal, Uhmortal, or was he neithel' 7 the popular vote in tl1e Northern States; T~ " t4ey Weltt it blindly." body's been t!J.lking to me." AIt,. HE WAS' NEITHER." ana true issue W8,!l, "Shall the electors in the tem., • In the Recorder of the 20th N' ovember are "What abont 1" eag\e-eyed must such a torias decide for themselves, or shall. quotatiohs from the 11liIepe1lileJnt, from which .. About religion." neither mortal nor we make the following brief extracts. " What did he ~ay 1" all tbat is decide, whether slavery shall be excluded from the reSult iII New York and tbe The man repeated

" established in the territories?" WIth the <s.tII~s ~hat 'they,p.ol"'"',nO,.I",f He~reild.l!~~ate,st. propriety, the democratschosli to leave a. coalition with tbe ... nnw·Phlll'!l ... .cjrejl.:~I~,.

de~:isi(1U of the case with the electors remarks: " Nor is cn.,ra"ter· of these votes is no

:5:!;~~~i~~~!:: numbers. The ,,, .•. -' IJ 'Dr'~~ belt of

:::~~r~~~~·~~~.ttt!,.""" intel~n~ and :yi~~\lJ)U ·v., ...... "

Page 2: m~~~~en~~~~ nnflels ~h~~~~ … › sabbathrecorderscan › SR+Vol+13... · 2017-07-07 · 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate

.118 THE, SABBATH ~EOORDER, AN. }, ]857. rest, no pause, and will not be till the end But I am aware that it is about the same a~' members of our Confer~uce for a number of tion, distracting the masses the people, who think all other cometh, when he shall have delivered up the .. hopeless case, to suggest any thing of this years past. That might have been (though Itt' t d I'~'U"'" k I h uta " no Ime, or a tas e, stu ~ sufficiently hellism takes, the lead in this part

• 1, 1867 ingdom to God, even the Father. His. con· sort. t as become so pop r, as well us do not know that it was) nrged as a reason to save themselves from misled sucb ley, and next them stand the ====='''=YDr=k,=l::lID=uary====. 21 === Itiuued Intercession for ns in Heaven is as common, for brethren to adopt, practice, their-petition should have been granted means. For there is no of byterians. If you ask whaCtUmlb~rliand

1Cdil .. o-GEO~ 8. UTTER II; THOMAS B. BROWN (T ••••• ) much part and parcel of our redemption, as an~ propagate doctrines which ar: known to and that they should not have been fanlted fo; whose members are not to be deceived assign for th1s fact, I have only OaculoalU:dltorial Coatrlbuton: thing which he did on earth,. He has cease co~trary to the views of. ~nomination of ' slaves, as they are no mor~: and p&88i. by the elaborate and arguments of the original settlers of this of 0

~A~E:A~t~i~~: I / ~~'~'uA[1~so!" from the 6Uffering .part of hIS. work ouly; ,a\1 W~IC~ they are members, (and, 1~ man~ caseB, bly 1m, involved in that practice than when persons'whom thefhave accustom~d to and a portion of the more recent regon, MlcIG~~~~NOALL. I ~E'l> H~~~~~LER, the rest goes on stIli. There IS, therefore, no mmutm,) that to talk of theIr paymg received by the Conference. But whether look to as teachers, or communicationa from, Missouri i and Missouri~ I

W.C, WWffOltDw.c. XEHYO~.8.GRlSWOLD, rtst in the work of Redemption for ,Christians deference ~o the bO,dY, whic? t~e ~zajI181tioned ened in receiving them at first, or in not dis- spread before them in which they from Kentucky and other Slave Brllilb Corre.pond.a~AME8 A.BEGG, to commemorate. ., and well'D1~h o~sc) ete doctrlDe lndlc~ted above tillctly informing them, by a special commission, understand to .express the of the Society thodism, is puny, and hardly

, , If we do not err very much In our Judgment, would reqUire, LS only to mnke one s self the of the resolution to wllich, we had come not to whl'ch they belong. ........ ' L. CRANDALL. a feeble existence. The regular IHatlti./o ''-AI> POUBTH or HEBRRWS. the rest of God the Father, into .which Christ song and sport of his. despisers. Onr.covenant to fellowship slaveholders, it is very strange • (C ncluded &0 h I ,ew, and seem in a fair way to ti...,DO"I.

" 0 mlutweek.) has entered as our Fore-runuer, 18 not a fact vows, and t e publIc y'4eclnred sentIments of that they were admitted when there were so OREGOR other kind of Baptists, known 1ii~~~8,th ve~e of"ihis chapter it is said, which admits of being commemorated. It is the body, in Association and Conference, many brethren present who should have known MOUNT 1D4, shell Baptists, seem more vil!:orolus.

If -Yil[&u had gifltn them rut, then loollld rather a place of enjoyment, than a fact to be obligate us :0 recognize the wrong of Sla"ery, that it must result in evil. It should he re- P. O. ~=~o~6b~.~5J: ~} mostly made up of Missouri malt~ll1. ; M tlot afterward lla1le 8poken of another day." celebra~ed; iu whillh respect it differs from the o.r Srcret Societies, of I?ancil1g, or other varie· membered, that the intercourse between t" To the Editors of lb. Sabb.th In politics, Oregon is Democra,~ic".an'iir

An~ SUch is the unfairness of some, that they rest whICh God observed at the close of crea· ties of amusement j yet persons among us, not Virginia churches and the cburches of our de- Having been requested H. w'. Maxson, Buchanan'is elected President m~k~ ~his " other aay" to be nothing more nor tio~, for that was afact c~pable?f being hel~ in o.nly claim th~ right to justify, b.ut a~so to p~c. nomination at large, has always been very of Sackett's Harbor, N. and otherS, read· doubtedlr become a slave St~teVrl~I!'On less than a new Sabbath, or the" Lord's Day" remembrance by a commemorative celebration. tICe, these thlDgs; and when dissatisfaction is limited. This is particularly true of the East- ers of the Sabbath to furnish infor· ,the dominant party, aided by 'of the Ohristiari Dispensation., However, siuce ~he entrance of Ohrist into th~t pla~e of rest is ~~pressed at their conrse, complai~ of being ern Association. They have bnt a very,few mation relative to Oregon , I propose I apprehend that the present lSoJjtbetn the Apostle is particular to declare his own mdeed afact, though the rest Itself IS not j but U1Jured. It may be perfectly notoTtoUl, by U; times represented themselves in any way at our to comply, with your I hthroUgbh the against..L31avery j but if meaning, we Beed look no further. The ex- as such entrance implies no cessation from his articles of faith to which we have subscribed, public meetings, And since they came into medinm of your paper. ave een a h th ti I h 0

pressidn "another day" in the 8th verse, is redeeming work, but is rather for the purpose or (if) we have no snch articles) by the common the Connection, a very great change has taken resident of Oregon, I reud in Eastern ~a:~sne:dq:~s on, ave no parallel with II a certain day" in the 7th verse, of carrying it ou, so it is not to be commemorat- course of teaching and practice of our OrOOt, place. in the views held among ljS on the sub- papers numerous epistles from Oregon and .. t ~ d mJ.

h· h ~ t th II t d " f D'd . ed by a Sabbath that we hold t th S . t If" R f I Washington Territories, t f' ds' mg ou ree om. oLUe party w LC re.ers 0 e ,()O ay 0 aVi j as It. 0 e crlp ura ness 0, estrict- 0 savery. Now, when the qnestion of 0 rl,en ID tent, and if applied will do fh'"n\,.I.

k is said, II Ttrday, if ye iDill llcar hi' voice." There is one more thoug1lt which we wish to ed Communion," the eternal punishment of the admitting those chnrches into the Eastern As. the S~ates, and have been at tlie con- ful certainty. • No~ it seems superflu<]us to say, that to-day offer, before we dismis\ the subject. The verse fiually impenitent, and the resurrection of the sociation came np, it was substantially another flicting representations But on second I come now 't th I' t inuirrOltatilon

denotes the present day-~he time nQw present; nnder consideration is introduced by the Apos. bodies of the righteous; still, members, minis, thing from what it was when they applied years thought, I find no in explaining the " ,.0 , ~. as for every body knows that this is its meaning. tie, evidently, for the sake of explaining some tel's, and to a certain extent churches, deny ago f;1' membership in on1' Conference. At phenomenon, without the of willful false- occurs ~o my IIJlDd : What the chancel Nay,every body knows that it never hasauy other thought or sentiment which he had already these points, and openly assert and publish the thnt time men generaHy were nnderstood to hood on the part of the Some per- for m:~~g '; settl.e~llnt.r" h' is ,no gOY.

meaniug. What David meaut, therefore, was, laid down; the particle "for" being the word contrury. And if some find themselves oblig' admit that Slavery was wrong, but urg' ed tbeir sons experience sensations uneasiness on find- l~rnme t .an remammg 10 t 18 and I b~ h h d d I· . th 1 ~ h d f' d leve no 10 any other part oCthe But

t at t e day, age, or era thEm present, was the by which a-reason is introduced of something e to ee IDe to walk with them for such peculiar circumstances in palliation of tbeir IDg emse ves so ,ar orne an flen s, I ' b ' t' 'd h . k h' land can be bought of at tin""'~

time when it behoved,the Israelites to hear the before advanced. The ninth verse states this reaches of covenant pledges, they are treated connection with it. But now the ri"'ohteonsness or, as some,lmes sal, ome,slc , en t etr d II ' '. "' • . l' tl' d' t ' o!~ar~s~p~e~r~ac~rie:;t~:~i-~~~' voice of God, comm'l.nding them to enter into proposition: "Tltere remaineth ther-yore a as if they had invented an occasion of conten- of the thing is widely asserted, on the one al'rlva III liS IS ant j hence Ilrc inCDp"': '

the heavenly rest-a rest which they had Bot rest to t!te people of God." Then follows the tion, from their instinctive and inborn love Qf hand, lind on the other, its essential sinfulness ?lc?f d"ppreciating the " Others 8:em qniry, a t d

. d' ' I' IDsplre with emotions nnknown to them' ., en ere upo!! 10 any ay, age, or era past. And verse in question: "FoT he that it entered intD quarre lDg and strife. is affirmed. Then it asked permission to exist j . i though ~ is no'vi,.iIi:_COils~Qulmce

h. D and iu their ecstacies In extra.vagant

as t IS was avid's meaning, itwas also Paul's. his rest, he also hath ceased jirom his 0'- U d h' t f h t now it assumes to II snbdne" and exterminate . remote, location, s,u,b;ect to some inlCOIlver,i.n,,~ d

. I ~.. n er suc clrcnms ancep, 0 w a avail CIIII , assertions. The truth hes b tween ' I An we wil not impute to Sunday·keepers the works, a8 God did from M8." Now we admit it be to say the denomination has settled tbls, all that opposes its unlimitcd control. Then it them. e yet these diffiCulties !lrc fast disl~pp'ear.inl!': folly ~f supposing, that the exhortation of this that the entrance of Christ into the holy place, that, or the other question, and that brethren only proposed to enslavc negroes j now it asserts its natural resources are

\ text IS, opportunely and seasonably, aildress~d after having offered sacrifice for our s:ns, pre- have 110 right, or that they ougltt not, to use that all nre, and must be, slaves, who submit I have resided on Ida four ye~rs, but being de'~loped. In hcnlthy cliDuate. to men only ou the first day of the week, They, sents a very good reason why heaven is the the deno3Pinational paper to spread their dis, to the decree of the Almighty, which sayp, am able to give no outSide the of soil its adaptation to uniivel:!Ull will ~now that it may be addressed to them at sure inheritance of the people of God; indeed, organizing sentiments, without first giving their "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat Willamett~ Valley,. by hearsa~, I will and h~sbandry, mineral wealth all times, on any and l!IJery day of the week; they could have no hope of heaven on auy other brethren au opportunity to disabuse their minds bread, till thou return unto the ground." Such t~crefore give as precise account of this por- reservoirs' of valnable ' I

and that its full im~~rt is expressed in the ground. Bnt we apprehend, that the verse is on those points? I confess, it seems to me has come to be the doctrine of the pro·slavery tlon of Oregon asmy small sheet will permit, and hydraulic power and auJ:acel~~ ~ords, •• Behold, NOW IS the accepted time, NOW iqtroduced, not as showing 'the ground on most just to say so. But it appears to me party or portion of our fellow citizens mainly, ~erhaps will pOin,t out the differences' betwee~ short, all that c~nstitlltes natlnrH.1 IS the day of ~alvati~n.II Furthermore, it is which heaven is made certain to believers, but qnite as clearly too late to hope that any at- or at least in great numbers. If the Sevcnth- It and other portIons of Oregon that have come wealth and comfort vct:g~1Il But"US

not another day besid~s the seventh day, that rather as shOWing why it is called a reat, and tention will be paid to snch a claim, till there day Baptist chnrches of Virginia justify slave- to my knowledge. This Valley ... is !lCmmed in " Respectfully sub~tted the verse 'under conSideration speaks of, but why, therefore, it is held in rtltTV" tl'll tOI'ls are h I b ry, as the qnestion now stands, and as it exists by tbe Coast range of Mountains on the West < " th d b d h ~ s a I e:ln entire reconstruction (at least proc"- the Casc~des on the East;, the Calapoid on th~ THE 'BACT 11411l1li'

auo er ay esi es t at in which Joshna had over. If so, making the verse refer to Christ tically) of our discipline, nnd every man is held in their own Stat e, they must arrange them- , . th Is I' South, and the Colnmbia river on the North. I given e rae Ites possession of the earthly destroys the relevancy of the Apostle's argn- (great or small) to the fulfillment of hi3 on the side of the modern version of its n consequence of serious iu~isp\llsi~ilJln, Oanaan. ment j and the only construction wLich makes nant obligations. Thm, and not till then, Is this Ihoug11t to be unjust? Why The North, or lower part of the Valley, is some domestic preparations, I

But, as if the chllpter must, at all events, be the argument at all relevant, and throughout thel'\l be rest or peace for the chnrches of Do not their laws enslave white men and tbic.k~y set ~Vith ~r timbe;.;, w~th s?me small able to commence my labors aSI Agent .made to say something in favor of Snnday. consistent, is that which refers the verse to tbe It is this repee.ted, continued, open, and nnte- women? Tell me, ye wise ones, if a man or a pra~r~es an I openm:B .. b ~ e .mlddle'd t~e at an earlier day j but, "the] Lord will" I keepiug, another twist is given to it. "1,'he belit¥ver. T. iI. B. strained'violaijon of good fllith, that stnltifies woman is black because he or she has the blood prames are arger, t e tLm er IS m1X,ed, an t e iuteud hereafter to give th .' m tenth verse, it is contended, refers directly to • all the moral energie; and power of the of a black mother in his or her veins, is not the table ?r elevat~d land: partly destitute of ests that clnster around the e In •

Christ, who having ~eased from the great work THE SLAVERY D~~~:X~ THE SAlIBATK ('hurches. It is this deliberate and unfeeling Same person white because he or she has the fir or pille; and tn the upper or southern por- We are not unmindful of of Reqemption by offering himself on the cross contempt of the consciences of brethren, that blood of a white father in his or her veins? Is tion, the proportion of prflirie land is greater, world is our field of labor j

a sacrifice for sins, entered into his rest when . It is jnst as i: sh~nld be, . in some re~pects; puts an end to nIl co-operation, aud confidence, not white blood equal to blaek? Is not the and hard timber, such as! oak, nsh, and maple, of ~ single laborer, at this momellt engaged in he aros fi th d d Th' ~ In some others, It eVIdently IS not. It IS open diS male eqllal to the female? You canuot deny more prevalent. Both tqe Cascade and Coast its occupancy. Of those h 1i I

e rom e ea . e 10 erence attempt- t II h . h t t" t . 't I an ove. nch things make mauy hearts de· M t' t" HI 'bl . . w 0 ormer y weill ed, to be deduced fr.om this is, that us his en- 0 a w 0 WIS 0 par IClpa e 10 I ~ suppose, spair of any remedy for these evils. Such arc it. It follows, then, that when the laws of Vir· oun aIDs con. aID lDex ,austl e quantltLes ~f forth, scattering precions seed, and in ~ance into rest took place on the first day of from wh~t I have see~ j alld by thl~ means we the tendencies of non.attention to covenant ginia enslave a child which has a black mother fir and cedar .tlmber, anq every where acceSSl' many instances returning the week so that day IS' thencerorw d th are getting a correct Idea of the Views which I' d .. and [I. white 'ather, they enslave a wh,'te as well ble, when theu' treasures shall be needed. The some have gone to their re~rll.rl~.

, .' ar e h d're 're . . • c aLms an cOnscientious scruples, to sap tqe " , I Christian Sabbath' J'ust as God' t f tel erent and dl ermg parties entertam on • as a black. And ns by those laws the child soil is extremely fertile livery where, equaling go no more to the work. su-on~~.

, s res rom h b' t Th' . . . h Id b T ,oundations of society, and resolve all com· h f .. ~ the work of Creation on the seventh day of the .t e su ~.ec . IS IS Jest as It s ou e. here follows the condition of the mother and not of t. at 0 Illinois or Wis~onsin. Grass grows ed by these discournmng st'lll

r. t t t th 'f ,pacts effe,ctu,aHy into their original uuorganized ' h h' ..... week bad previ08sIy to Christ's resurrection I~ no .alrer way 0 ge , a e merits 0 a. man s parts, long before the form of the organized the father, and though she be nine.tenths white, t rong out the year, in ~ciellt qn~ntities for we are resolved to II pray Lord of the made that day the Sabbath. But this "'vI'ew Views, than to [I.. How him to st.ate them himself, and the father full.blooded, that child is doom, stock. Wheat always ,*akes a crop from 15 harvest, that he would-send mor"la~"r·

d th h Th I body crumbles and disappears; jest as a COrpse b; ~ 'lI' l6ems to take for grauted, that the rest which ~: r :;. exa~In~ t demo d.LS coudrse . essenS will often retain its shape long after the quali. ed to slavery, it is in proof that slavery in, Vir. to 60 .ushels per acre, d can. be sowed any ers into the harvest." I ,~ the-individual If he" spokeu of in the text en- e

t Ita. Llty 0d mlsun. erstabn ,mg an

h mlSrepre- ginia has no real regard or respect to color or month 10 the year. Po, toes Y.leld from 1.00 Although our tract operations are eondnctai

t t • ties it possessed in life have been absorbed by t 600 b hid uI ~ ~ tered into, was peculiarly M.6 own rest., even sernra Ihon, .an so.me.lmesbo Via ehs t e.necesslty blood. Those who support such laws cannot ,0 us e s per acre, l,accor.lDg to c tlV8- on a small scale, and, scantil snpported, yet

t t t t hi h Its mother earth, and it is ready to fall into tOt bid h I as the rest which God eutered into at the close 0 ~r er mves .lga LOn, ec~u.te e t ng s OW8 shapeless dust as soon asfexposed to the vital clear themselves from the charge of complicity Ion. ~ s, r~e, ~r ey,' an . I? ~ o:t near y whoever caref?lly peruses it history cnnnot of creatiou was peculiarly his own. But if we for I~sedlf. 0br, If extended argument be still air Such to a sad extent it is to be with those who assert the righteousness of en- every thlDg raised 10 th~ MiSSISSIppI Valley, fail to rliscoyer'the wonderful lessing attend· m' tak t't' G d' t th t' f, d t reqUIre, we ave the data to proceed upon,' , , ' , slaving meI;l indiscrimillllotely, both wh,ite and do~s e9ually ~ell he, ~e, e~cept I~diau corn, for ing those efforts to promote th Sabbath cause.

In18tb e hno , 1 "ISh ~"" 8 ,res ad~ re he~re o. I hope the 'iiberal course her~ofore pursu~ is the condition 0$ many of th~ churcp~s ,,\ ~ whlcli odr clunllte suDi tl h t d . e prase e t"t:Ot IS entere Into IS rest," . . ,wy., •• denominations of these times. "lllack, us may best sni~:their' . IS clen y ~ an The question arises, Why has, the interest io

the pronouu ki8 refers back to the 5th verse With correspondents Will be mamtalDed l~ ., • the Eastern Association, in sL~k~y. W ~ alwnys a ma~ket . m the the tract cause declined? Why does it now If Ch 't th' f' . h . d' 'd .' future. Some persons are so charitable that It may be rephed, that disaffected and dIS' churches to their fellowship must mlUlDg p.ortlOns of and CaliforDla j but langnish?' Why are not vhUDg men MW

rls , ere ore, IS t e ID IVI ual deslgnat- h '11 b' h h' h Id ' 'appointed persons whose interests or pride ' prod I . f h' . I I J( d h t d t' t th t h' hIt ey WI not eheve t at ot ers 0 andprac- , responsible, Now, since the subJect had tklU .. u:e IS ow, 10, 0 ~vmg poor "running'to and fro,' that knbwledge may be ~ 'I eh~n ere no bID ~ a w IC was pecu - tice certain things till they make a confession have been discommoded, bave always been • ti lit fi h W I Iar Y IS own rest, ut IDtO God's. ' . ' f h matured, how was it possible that the Eastern aCL les o~ reac IDg heat ranges increa~ed~' The answer is ' "Because the

" .. . of the fact. It is well on. that account that all wont to expatiate on the corruptIons 0 t ose Association could admit any church into it 75 cent~ to one per bus~el at home. people haTe ceased to pray tot its success," ThIS. belDg 'so, the mqutry then, arises, should be allowed to speak for themselves, if BSSOciations from which their own follies or while any doubt remained whether such churc~ Our :ount~y 18 now well With first-rate Yes, friends, is not this the cJuse? We 'Offer

What ~ to be unders!ood by God s rest.? they are inclined to. I have no reason to be- have separated them. It 1'8 so. And anoth~r did, or did not, justify such laws, and act upon fl2urmg mtlls, .and I I can safely say, that our petitions for th(\ conversio~ of sinners, IlDd Two thmgs ~re thus deslgn~ted. The first. IS lieve that the cause of trnth aud righteonsness thing is clJualiu well known, uamely, that when such principles? I do not blame the Virginia Oregon f10)tr IS not to any in ~he prosperity of the churcH ilor the cnnse of

tbat ~est which he entered lDto ~t the close of ever did, or ever will, gain any thing by that corrupt bodies can make no other re~ly ~ th~ Ch h Ii . h' t . t th b d the world. ,.. I d ' creatIOn, on the seventh day-, the Sabbath kind of' guardianship over its interests which charges proved against them, they IDvartahly du~cf tehs or WIS IDg .0 cdom:tbm 0 e t 0 t~ j The climate of is the theme of all mlSSlt,onls ID g:nera: an , ~on l Iy, for ours In

(Rest) of the Lord thy God" (Exod 20 10) 'h . t t' dR' t I' an 1 cy were receive WI apparen so. IS, , • • par ICU ar j .or uDlversal hberty j for the sup-. .... . : . requires that gainsayers mnst be refllSed all use t e one JUs men lOne. omams s exp am faction by a large majority of those present, travelers. But I that many things 10 pression of intemperancb and Ju its attendaot

If thiS was the rest lOto whl@ Christ ente~ed opportunity to say what they wish to. But in the defection of Martin Lnther from their COUl' as is apparent they were, I do not "and,' er if relation to it are by people in evils j for tlie comfort of th~ poor " for ~nr when he cease,d fr.om. the work of RedemptIOn matters of snch grave and great importance as munion on tbat principle. Several prominent the States. For th h h h C

th t h h tid t t b . h b they felt disappointed and injured when 'they , ey ear t a.t t e daily bread, and exemption from povertv ,' yet

- e res. w. Ie I sour U! a 0 serve as the question whetber slavery, as it exists in ministers in our deno. minatlOn ave een charg. Columbia river is d t k ~ I J

th Oh t S bb th btl h h b h came to be taken in hand as they have been. ove,r, au a e It.,lo.r how many daily, weekly, or even monthly,p!lj,

e riB tan a a - e I, .sO.j we w 10 this country especially, is right or wrong, it is ed with t e same t IDg, Y t e. societies t.hey gra,nted that a hard b ~ h I t d d th t th th til f b h b d S But no man, who uuderstood the v,iews and IS on us j ut It IS "Loril, bless the tract efforts, nd let thySllD~

ave a ways con en e a IS 18 e ~ue but reasonable that those who enter the list e t w eu t ey em race our VLews. 0, If a not so, That river flows d Sabbath .for Christians, as well a.s for all as writers sho:ld put tbeir names to their ar. man le,aves small prospects for great ones, he feelings which prevniled in this Associat~on, ~ e.epcanyon tified Sabbath 'soon be called a delight,tbeboil

h II d t th I Aid h could doubt as to the consequences of receiving in the Cascade range, while 1ts sleepy of the Lord ~ honorable T" Yes brethren 01

'ot ers, WI nO,t emur 0 e cone nSlon. Ii ticles. I allmit that the article of Eli S. Blli- does It for t e love of the world; and if he t 1" 'I ' 'f h' d f .. . '1 h I those churches, or reasonably calculate on any \Va ers are congea IDg lCe, the Willame. tte sisters in Christ, without co-operation i; tb~ I t IS metho 0 arrIVIng at It SpO! s t e ong ley (see Recorder Dec. 11 ) contains a sug. turns his bllck on good prospects, and his face V II . I . t'. d f

tabl' h d ot'o th t Ch . t os fil tb " t d t 11 h h d'l B thing essentially differeut from what has grown a ey IS llxurlll mg m ver. ure 0 sprlDg. work, the,Divine Spirit will not I be poured ali. es IS e n I naris r e rom e gestion or presents a subject of importance owar s none a a, e as a eVI. ot. . . T' I d' hiT d ad th fi t d

.. f th k th ._ .' , , h kG dill . . .·t . d' out of It and what (of the saUle natnre) IS wlce on y, urmg t e wID,ters list past, lind ~e shall labor in vain. ';terefore, be PSl', e on e rs a] 0 e wee, e responsl relatIve to these matters among us as a people. t an 0, t lere IS a Splll lU man, aD ,I h tl d b fi b

b'l' l' t t d yet to come The wrong was and the wonder' as Ie groun een rom view ut a few ticulat, and remember the trac cause I'n VOUlj' I Ity ICS no a our oor. It seems but 'l'faumablll when a number of inspiration of the Almighty giveth him nnder. . . . '. I Th h /h' d' G" ' . II M fbi' 18 that they were admitted. If theIr repre· honrs at a time by aud ~be ground sel- supplicatio~s, to the throne of iace, '

H e ot ~~ ~ngL es~gu:t1 as od's .rest, LS pers~us (few Cir many) have adopted certain standmg. . e~ ~ ten .ave t c ear ~nter~al a:ntative had been frankly told that it was dom freezes to the depth a~ IDch. In tem- Do not consider your duty one when yUl eaven. e (W at clunen Zion; he sentiments, and agreed to fellowship each other, comprehenSiOn 0 t e merIts 0 men an meas· . bl d' h . 't p'erature our climate is uniform.' have oftiered your pet'l'ti"on lior sr,cce'ss., Lend a

" "d . il' 'ji0llfk' h b" TJ,.. d' h' . praCtlCa e to a mit t em m 0 any new or at tllrt It II a ita/wn. !t8U my aud walk together as brethren on the condition ures, an lU t eLr own consciences .. 1"11 h b Id . , Of tbe seasons I must I have been some- helpl'ng han' dm' dl· ... m·lnat·mg t e truth relatl'Di • A 'ill d II fi 1 d ' re' more IDtlmate re atlOn, tl t ey s ou entirely ""'" B~~~ F~~EVE(Rp" It~e21D'l" l~e) , .~TT.'L ~a~e he- that they hold such views, aud practice in con- those whom they a ect to despise. rid themselves of slavery, it would have left what disappointed. The are thonght to the Sabba~h. Speak killdl~to thy neighbor "rea d. s. OJ : OJ, ':to 'lttl IS t e farmity therewith that they shonld refrain from I admire that intrepidity of spirit therefore Ch . t' f< II h' .. b t to be dwindling away. fact, we hay; had AiU whick God dt8ir~tk to dwell in; yea, the openly assailing ~nd repudiating those 1Iiew.r which has prompted some earnest' aud 'more hns tabll e o.llvls Ip ~emtahlUmg k? ween no dry season this year, our rainy !easons coucerning the obligation to- liey ,the fourth L d ill Ii ll' 'tfi "(P 68 16) . and t 6-11 t an WI survive e wor mgs commandment. Do not excbse yourself by

(W W we tn I orever. S.:. and practices, till after they have informed brethren to hazard their repntation in some th k' d h t' 't Id are mostly very pleasant. Our harde, s.t storms °aYI'ng," He knows all abou' 'lit "-" It w""",' Th' M t Z· th" h I h'll" h' h' .. . . .. e conrse ~a en. An w a IS worse, I won o. III '"

18 oun Lon- e 0 y 1 upon w IC those ID covenant relatIon With them of the spects by expressmg theIr conVictIOns on some h d th • . t' d th d . in winter are nothing in , With thos!l of no, ule." Carry I'n thy ha ld a trac.Jand Ohrist h K· . t (P 2 6) , h ' ave spare e .aSSOCIR lon, an e enoml' D ll-

It e /~g d:s se, (~ : -IS. t e change which ~as takeu place in their opinions, points where they differed from the body they nation, a sad depreciation of their stock of on the Atlantic coast. nunde~ gusts ap- place it before him. Oall his ~ttention to t'8e , ~~ : :ce ~ 0 h s le~, .a. 66: 1,) \Uto and thus afford them all opportnnity to show belonged to. But I cannot approve· the un, concord, which I1I,US before none too great. proach from the never pass the importance of being right on t~is gre~t subject.

w Ie as amen t e r of ~IS strength, (Ps. the erroneousness of the new sentiments, or ac- timely and unadvised manu~r in which it has . . mountain range. We see flashes of Then continue to ask God to bless and sanctify , . 132: 8,) eve~ Jesus, who had the Law in his quaint themselves with their truth and impart. been done in a number of instances. If the It may be smd, ~hat ~he w?nder that those lightning over the but the storm the truth to his beart' and doubts hub it

heart, as the tables of the Law were contained ance. I think it is alike due to the churches denomination to which a man belongs will not «:hurch~s were rece.lved, IS obVIated ?y ~he fact reaches neither side of mountain. In sum- will be so bleSsed and Y

in the Ark that Moses made. Compare (Ps. and brethren, the ca~se in which we are en. give him a fair hearing, when he, in their As- that .~he last seSSLOn of the AssoclRtlOn was mer the weather is but not excessively Give u~ your c~unsel in .0: 8, and Heb. 10: 7.) ',The earthly Mount gaged, and ourselves, that such a course should sociatious or Conferences, attempts to get his held m the extrem~ southern pa.rt of ~ew Jer- hot j the sky is clear, the only wind felt is means ~o lusure ~uccess ; Zion, where Jerusalem stood, was called his be taken. Indeed, it is a violation of good faith views before them, I say, lie is justifiable in using sey, where the alltJ.sl~very sentlllle~t 18 not at from the north, which ~ot exceed ,the :::;S~;::8asa ~~l~~seUni;te fulrless rest, simply aud solely becanse it was typical to omit stich a conrse, or lome mode of action snch means~ may be fairly in his reach to the same degree t~at Lt ~a~ reached 10 the.ot?er lightest zephyr. All of stock are raISed where tracts would II avail of the true plact{f his rest in Heaven. And b which the same end can be reached. The make hims understood, especially if a dis, parts. of the territory which UI~t .A.ssoCl~tlOn iu great nbut.dauce. I know of no place be so far remote as not to::.di$cover th A k h· h Id th t bl ft' 11 y. •.. '. t d t . d' h' t d' OCCUPIes. I agree that that fact may 10 at' h h 't ' to e r w Ie e a es 0 s one, IS ca ' covenant by which we put ourselves uuder the pOSltLon 1S am.es e 0 preJu ICe IS s an mg '.' can compe e Wit, in the line of renc I 111 season ed the Ark of his strength . I b 't . . N b t ki I d t ge of the incomplete d ~'I explam the resnlt of the vote on that fruit Tre 'th r I'dl' Will all of our friends con, sidje~ Ulems:elv.es , simp y ecause I watchcare of our brethren, reqUIres It. ot yang p. van a e e· , b h .. b d 1 . es grow Wl t lLdP, hty, cially invited to become more :,terelsw!J w. typical of Him, in whom, and by whom, that they are to dictate to us whether we ~t of/his views whi~h has been had. The questIon jut. w en It. IS remem e~ , ~ bear every year. is comp.u e t a.t good ~il.Use. ,r. ,., . tI

aud through whom, is displayed his almighty shall believe this or that, or that we have re' same would be true if, without de8ign, he is only. o~e man IU t~e s~sslon vote? agalust t~~ Marion and Clackamas will sell thiS Communications should be to 11.11, power in the government of the nniverse and linqnished the right of abandoning error and likely to be injured by a partial development admISSion,. there I~ still somet~ng abont ~ e in San Fraucisco or quite 200,- Baker, General Agent; New the redemption of his elect. 'bracin truth' b'ut because-we na1lf: no right of his views. But let a man first fairly make matter ~hICh requl~es a ~retty mlDute acquamt- OOD dollars worth of and pears. Great Jersey, ~ntil further no~i~. H. Baza.

. em , g.' ., ? h tr t t t h . b fo h thrb ance With connectlDg ctrcnm~tauces fully to tt t" . t, 7 We conceive, then, that the argumeut at- to force them lUto fellowship wLth doctrlDes t e euor 0 ge a eo. e re e ws . 'a eu Lqn IS now paId to and in Jan.ll 185.,_"--'-;..._ ....... + tempted to be deduced from this text for a and practices which they hav~ told ns they himself ou the dernier resor. ' _ __ the a~alr. . , ... .t1y!- five years ffPlll this this part of Oregon DONATION VISITs.-The nA',nIA of Milton, !'iIange of the Sabbatb', is a failure. For unless cannot admit, and which we have agreed not I do not wish to be supposed to I conclnde by saying, when ~'l1ren will will be better snpplied j:hoice fruit jhan Wis. recently gave a visit to Eld

. we greatly misunderstand it, it proceeds on the to propagate while in their connection, If a brother ought to parade every vnriation 01' to write and vote in conformity to any portion of the Wild frnit is abun- V ~um Hull the &fails of were abon~ UBUmption that Ohrist, after finishing the work member finds himself under the necessity of opinion which he finds to exist between him which legitimately devolve ppon dant in the vicinity of lands, IlDd straw· $160. On the 2'th of Dec. donation visi~,

"or ltedemption, entered into a rest wbich was adopting views which he knows are iu contra' and his coadjntors before their public gather- them, from the covenant they have entered berries flourish all over country, . was given to Eld. W. O. of MiltoD, Peculi~ly his ,own j whereas, nothiug of the vention of those to whi~h he subscribed, by the ings; I speak of those differeuces which are into, the economy of onr. plan ,will appear to , One inquires ahout prospectively. the resntt of which we have kind is predicated. All that the text teacbes, connections into which he, volu,ntarily entered, seen to be subversive of the principles set forth much better adVantage. ' And if, when that is I am not a little puzzled an answer j but I

, (if It'refen to Christ at all,) is that he entered let him mak~ that fact known to tho~e concern· in their covenant, or set up by the done, they find the liberties, allowed them ~n will give my own which is the best BOARD MIETINGS-ClUNGI " iilto God's rest, there to be rewarded for his ed aud have an honorable adjustment of the aud practices for which the body is noted tbat plan to be too contracted to meet their I can do. I think that if we were place of meeting pC th~ EXlccal;ive.·

, I\i#erinp, in receiving II a name which fa above m~tter, either by a reconciliation of views, or-& distiuguished. enlarged and liberal views, let them take 1J. to t~e ~te.n~ and our Benevolent Scleieties has chaill~!dfi'om' ,fir, name." The fact is, that Jesns Christ termination of the relations affected thereby. The 'Virgi,nia Churches; whose admission into regular and orderly course to rid themselves of see Qnt litt!" New Market to Plajllfjeld, ID hll character ot Mediator aud Redeemer, h8~ For what are those relations worth, whim men the EaStern Asao.cmtion, last" May, laid the such shackles; but' not proceen to overleap all betweell parts of the world, by tefe~nc_, tQ $.~' ;adlier~i~ir:I~ij~;)~ .'CidId from hill work. From the time he come to lose all f\li~h in eaCh other's sound· foundation for tbe ,OOU.t.rof~jly that has barriers; and remove all bouildaries, by liS to ·the religion j' blli'a. c;olumn. They ~l,~ hel!UR,:J~ol!rth'~l! ~~ iUo the ~rtleDt, therll,hu been no n\l8B7 ~~g,~ ip tllll}l~~tdw.l,8~~pose,~VII ing ro~h ~th'theirinstrnme1lts of fa~ as ,',';, _or: ~n~)~~.;~' ,; ~861!' 1";:' . I "

" I

Page 3: m~~~~en~~~~ nnflels ~h~~~~ … › sabbathrecorderscan › SR+Vol+13... · 2017-07-07 · 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate

ret

THE SABBATH RECORDER, JAN. I, 1857.

:=::= @'rmrnl ~nttl1igtnrr. first came Trees or seeds can be plaDted too. After reacbmg a POlDt equl dlstsnt from Kanss8 from the 15th of Marcb to llie lst of! both lermlOl, the. cables Will be 10IDed togeth­May er and sunk The vessels WIll then parI

New York 29, 1886.

SECOND DAY DEO ..

We have lIews from Europe a week later

tban prevIously pubhsbed by U8, bemg to Dec 13th

The emIgration to Kaosal wll1, of COUI8e, compllllL the one proceedmg to the Imh 10 future be self.sUlltamed but the NatIOnal coast, .ad the other to the Amencsn, pa,fIng Commlltee wIll arrange wllh tbe RaIlroad out the cable 09 they go along The wbole Compartes and hotd keepers for a comrnuta work of laymg the wIre can be done In a lion of fare, so that persons wh I may wtah to week or two weeks at the outside

..f,lu-Poto '7 75 Pearls B 00 Flour IJlld Mtal-Floor 6 25 a 6

good State, 6 ~ a 6 80 r'r tor com non to extra OhlO, 7 35 a aee Rye Flour 3 50 B 5 25 tor Oorn Meal 3 25 a 3 37 for Jersey

common t, 6 75 a 7 00 extra Gene

In the :;ENATil, a long debate took place on

II e House bIll provldlllg for a steam revenue

culter for New York, which paned, Ifter

bel 'g amended by strlkmg alit so mllcb of the

bIll as de~lgnated tlIal the cutter ahall be

B allonet! at the Port of New York Mr;

Brown (M ss ) made a speech In vlndlcatton

of the South and charging on the RepublI­cans, n tWllhstandmg then dtsavowal, an \D­

Tile steamshIp Amertca whICh left Liver pool on the 6th Dec. encoontered II furIOUS storm When off Cape Clear whIch swept her decks alld so disabled her lhat she had to be

and soperS Ie

back to Ltverpool. where she arrived on 1JI0rnmg of the 10th The Canada waa

itnlne~ lately got ready to take out the passen gers and malls of the AmerIca, and left Liver

on the 12th of December

go by publtc conveyance may find It for thelf __ , __ _ adVllntage to commUUlcal1l wnh the COqJmlt S U 11 11 A R Y lee at Chicago The great po lOt 18 to start

Oral .. -Wheat 1 59 8 1 60 for I 42 for Oh CdgD Spr ng, 1 78 for dIan Rye 90. Darley 1 10 a I 1 30 8 1 45 Corn 6B a 69c for W'"8t • .rn Oals 46 8 48c for Slate, 49 a 50c ror W"st.,rn.

f leotlon to mterfere WIth the Instltuttons

tbat section

A dISpatch (rom Bordeaox announc~s the arrIval at that port of a vessel havmg un board the captain and fifleen 0 her pel sons who were wrllcked In Ihe III fated steamship Lyonnals N () names or ott er particulars ale gIven A sobsc IpUon has heell opelled 10 London for the w dows and dnlJren of those who panshed [Latel IDtlOlhgellce does not confirm. thiS dlspalCb, and thel tJ IS reason to fear It 18 erroneous)

early Don't delay, for vour chances w1I1 gr W less every week after navigation open8

• California Jl'ewt.

Mr E K Collins has petlllOnea Conll'ress 10 buy the "Ieamsblps belongmg to bls Ocean Mad hne, and relIeve hIm from hIS contract 8S be c&Wn(jt 8/tlld to carry Ihe mads In such larg" ud costly ships as the Baluc, Atlanl1c

The steamer 111m /IS arnved at New York 8nd A'I1.Ioac, fonhe prIce orlgmally slJpulat Dec 281h, WIlh over a mil Iron and a half 10 ed, ti) .. hlch he IS to return on aud atier Ihe gold and the C"llforma m~lls of Dec 5 h expIration of SIX months fr m the lime Ihe

Postmaster General by order of C mgre~s The news of Buchaual s elecllon, which h last Summe gave him 1I0llce that IS .extra

was earned by the steamer Sltlrla Nevada pay would nOl be contmued Mr Cullins a was received With Jubilation by Ihe Demo- memonal recapitulates the facts wtth regard cratie party and Since I S ann uncement there to the OfYttn and hl!tory of hiS Ime-.-bow he has bePII a general lull In poht cal affalrs was "ie4 to bUild much larger shIps than he

Pro~,,,oll,-rork 16 50 8 17 00 ror new me.. Beef 9 00 n 10 00 10 50 a 12 25 ror old and new cOlmllfy 12~ a 12!c Butter 16 a 20c for Slatl> Cbeeoe 9~ B lOAc

Hay-90c. a 1 00 per 100 lbs T allJ It-Il;c

LETTERS Wm P Longmate T H WIlcox

West Andrew Babcock IF C F Gret'll (r ght,l A M West Clarke W 0 Keuyon S A Ohampl A Elh. A W Coon H B C1"rke J C W E Maxson Isaac West DaVid P L Berry L E t5 pencer W C Wlllit(ord 13,b AnnUal R1Iit )

In the HOUSE, the Rev Daniel Waldo was

ra electe~ Chaplam A bill wa~ passed for paymg 'lfiln Scoll under tbe LIeutenant

General lresolutlon the amount to which

Auurn~~JGeneral Cushing said he Will enll­tIed HI gives htm t22,000 10 addltlon to $10 000 ~heady received, lind plaee. hIm on

the samkl!rootmg wllh Washlngt<ln, prOVIded

The shtp Adrtattc, Coombps from LIver pool to New York, Was wrecked on tbe 8 b Inll, near D~llgarvon Three men were drowned \

by II~ law of 1798 There 'had been a successIOn of Bevere gales

The total vote of Ihe State for PreSIdent WjlB \>ngtnally contemplated or IllS contract requtr RECEIPTS

107377 of which Buchau311 had 51925, Ftll" ed, 10 ord~to beat the time of the Bnll"h WAil r.Byment& fDrpUblleatiOn.gof8tl~h:e:~~!:!:~~~~~i'~E:!5! m re 35113 ar d Fremont 20339 gIVIng a hn11lnd thUB compel the British Grvernment ~~:y~h:r:';cl;l~f;he~hl,'ho:d pluralllY of Fillmure and Fremont over to corne tnto a falf arrangement with ours for gl ...... early nOUce ot tbe omissio •. Buchauan of 3527 the dIVISIOn nfthe Ocean MatI busmess, and FOR '!'BE SABBATH RE'COllD,'B

Tbe mtnlllg pr spects for the season are the mutual diffUSIOn and delivery of letters Jobn Darrow New London, Ct $2 00 13 rt.?t2 represented 88 excellent Great Improve- conveyed acrusl the ocean by each other's L Browntng Montv,lIe Ct 2 00 13 52

THtRD DAY nEC 23 the Bnttsh Channel wllh numel )UA Th S~TI debated, WIthout corning to IC8~SUlllti4B8 In the Channel

a Y cf\ncl SlIln, the bIll for the settlement of Tbe sleamer Troublldor, hound to Dubllll Ihe cla\~8 ftna Officers III the Revolul1on W88 caught III a gale short f fuel sud to keep

I J '{ H Spencer, Suffield Ot 2 00 13 5~ mellls are In progl ebs, IItVO vmg a arge ex ete81t8blps respeCllvely C H Mauon Mystic Ilrldge Ct 2 00 14 ~9 Pendaure of mUlley and Jabor l J R Obamplln Westerly R I 2 00 14 26

e Lockport Cuurler learns that a young • Several deatbs have laken place ID conse- la named Sophia Defoe, who was attending ~.~yO;::!eI:~ Potier Hill R I ~ ~~ g ~~

quencll of exposure to seve e frosts and snows sch~l at Tonawanda, commltled SUICide by As. Ayars Sbllob N J 5 00 10 27

The ~0~5E passed Ihe Indian Pension and up the fires had been obliged to burn up 150 the West Oint Academy bIlls pigs IU the furnaces

In the mountainous regions hangtlog. Her parents formerly re~lded at Busan'\ Bonham 4 00 14 52 P d b h I d t L N Geo B Dav15 2 00 13 5l Ulrl Bore I roat as preval e 0 an e~IMolI, In lagara coullty, but now ID 13 5

f'OUItTHDAY DEC 24, Dr LIVIngston the celehrated African The SENATE was not In seUlon, havllIg ad- traveler, has reached MarseIlles on hiS way

Journed over to Sixth day homewBtd 1n Iho Yo"",,', IIf' O .. Ulp'Uoll,

.h~(J"""'""ttee of Ways aud M Many ShIPP1h&CRIlURluQa arereporlod from

MedllerraneslI

S d h Seeley Tomlinson 2 00 alarming extent about oooma, an as MIchigan Deceased, about ten days since, AbelS Tomhnson 2 00 13 52 proved fatal to children In numerous families wen\ ~ T nawanda to attend school, and ber Enocb J DaVIS 2 00 13 52

l' st Office, Mall Sleamer, and Approprtatlon bills Mr Phelps, the Barne Committee, repor ed, with alDeudmeots, the S~nate bIll relating to foreign cOInage, and Ihe cOtna~e of new cenr pIeces Mr Phelps eXJ>I.med that bls object waB to WIthdraw fr m CIrculation all depreClaled foreIgn COlD,

rucelvmg SpaDl8h Q.uarter Elghlh and SIX leen h d liar PIeCeS, at twenty, ten and five cell B Mr RIce delegate from MlDnesota lhtloduced a bill authorlzmg the people of that Terlltory [0 furm a constltutton and Sate G vernment preparatory to admiSSIOn I t the UnIOn on a ~ otmg with the orlglllal

An unsuccessful attempt was made on the of December to aesassma(e the KlIlg of

The Rev Dr Ver Mllbr lost by IhlS dlse'l.se SUIC41lll1I attributed to grlef at bewg separ John Br gbt 2 00 13 52 four daughters whll were aged from four to aled ;,tiIom her relallves Just before she IM,llacbi Bonbam 2 00 1

133

55~ '" •• _l. ..

I Josepb H Fogg" 2 00 < e even years we"t,\O\, tpcnmmlt the cnme she complamed Ebas Avars 2 00 13 52

The R~v Dr Bushnell has BIgnr6ed hIS of ~g bomeslck Thomao EWing 2 00 13 5" 111 b Pdf th Jesse Barrett 2 00 13 5" WI "ngoess to accppt t e resl ency 0 e TIle JackSon MI8SlBslpplau Dec 2d, says, Cbarleo DIckason ' 2 00 ]3 52

Cahform3 Collpge a coli pIe of runaway negroes were dl8cover Cbarle. Welt 2 00 13 M At loe I ecer t efec I n, two w men were ed b1':iveral young men whtle out hunting In :\Ira J EIII. Scbenectady 2 00 ]3 52

electtd 10 fill (Dices to Placer County-ooe the \if ds, hetween the town of Bovlen and Lee Buoh San~edi.ld 2 00 13 26 D A Babcock Scott 2 00 13 52

as J us Ice • f tl e Peace and Ihe uther as Bi'g Bilek ltlver The «lamp, though well Paul Clarke 2 00 13 52 COl stable Each receIved une '0 e In he st ekeel with 11rovlslOns, cooklOg uteusils &c, lou Clarke 1 00 13"6 precn CI and thel e \\las no 0PP sUlUn hap~1fd to be tenaotless at the lime IIf diS Dan I Babcock ' 1 00 12 52

England has made a formal de"larat on of war aglllnBt PerSia, whICh f vent occurred at Calcutta on the lst of November Large forces had been dIspatched by sea and 181 d to proaecule the wa' and In a comparatively short ttme we may hear that Auglo Saxon clVlhzal10n has laken annher long stlldll III

thp Eaat WIth tbe usual consequences of cuI ODlzatJon and commerce

The Chlllamen In MunpoRa County have coveryJ The hunters however, soon encoup- i ~ g:::: Independence r ;~ g 5

very generally adopted the American style tered tlvo of tbe runaways, whom they solin James Allen Alfred Cenler 2 00 ]3

States AdJourned ttll Sixth day Jf drsss chew tobacco al d drink b andy lind succeeded In capturing Henry P Bounders 2 00 13 I b Geo uhampl n ' 1 00 13 5" ager eer T~e Pltts6eld Eagle of Dec 19th says A Jabe.b Brown Leonardsv.lle 2" 00 ]3 52

The Superv1SOls of Marrposa Coonty have few ween slOce, two chtldren of one 01 our LllclDda Rogers I) 00 13 52 aBsesBe,1 Ihe F, emont grant at 81,000 000 phY'ICI'In8 Were attacked with the scarlauna A W Orandall UnadIlla Fork. 2" 00 13 52

srxl'H D,A Y DEC. 2G.

III the SENATE un motton of Mr. Thomp s f New JUTsey, a motion was adopted calling on the Secretary of the Tressllry to reI 01 t whether more effiCient means canllot b~ dovised for the preservatton of the hves of Beamen aod pllssengels wrecked 011 the CIlBSts of New Jersey ar d Long Island, and also wI et her rehef should not be granted to the ramllIe! of persons who I<'Be Ihelr bves 10

elld~avorlng t 1 resc e lr dlvtduals from ship wltlck Adjourned till TIJIrd day !

The taxes ou It are 817000 a1JdiiJi'U'> theIr .llnell!! ha.l for pets a couple ['bm ...... BurdIck DeRuyter 2 00 14 6 ""5 Wm P Longmate Pendleton Z 00 13 52

Several perHons wh. have deserled from of ptjlns. Both the kittens HuhseqUJnlly SCI .. n Watson 2 10 13" 50

Walker lit Nicaragua and come here, repre had all tbe symptoms of scarlattna, ~ne u 1\01 Whllioru Brookfield 4 00 13 The papers announce the artlval at Purts sent Ihe pi Y"lc81 hald.h,ps and dangers en them dymg, the otber narr Iwly escapmg S D OIa ke 2 00 113

4 ~ b d DaVId Olarke 2 00 moulh, England, ou Ihe 12th Dec, 01 the dured by hlB army 8S beIng very gnevons A canary Ir , whose cage hung ID the room C T Champl n N Ie 2 00 13 Arcllc discovery ship Resolute 80 generous The .ltual1ull f Walk~r IS descnbed as also died with all the symptoms of tbe same Ezra erandall 2 00 13 Iy tendered by our governmenl 10 Ihat of bemg hazard os 10 the extreme The storiES dIsease MroNWlhlll pi 1 00 13 Greal Bntatn as a token of Iho sltlcere 81 d )f hIS OIg8n, Ihe Nlc81aguense ere 8JIU to Undel the head of ' Emlgranls for Nlca WILLIAM l\I lLU'l;il!;ms. Treasurer

The HOUHE passed several private bills and the Senate bIll provldlllg fur the cumpulsory prepayme tof pmlage ou all traoSlellt prmted malte AdJourned III Third day

friendly feeltogs eXIstmg between the two bo alt ll:ether umeh ble, being written solely ragua the St LOUIS Republican of Dec 20th, COl:lntrles The ReslJlute was recel\ed Wllh a at Walkel's dlc all on al d t> lurtl er h,s pohcy Ra~s Col Tttul, of Kalls"s notonety, with • royal salute" an honor seltl( In rendered 10 without al y regard 10 trutl. The repelted near 01 e hun Ired men, left yesterday on the anl' vessel Great preparations were made accoul IS f b.s glorIOUS vlctortes" whICh steambo)~t Mana Deunmg for New Orleans at Porlsmouth 10 receIve Ihe officers of the have appeared \0 tbat paper, were garbled It t8 expected that largtl accessIOns WIll be Reoolute In a manlJ~r wOllhy of the Bnllsh ami f.also statements The vlctollea have there made to the company prtur to Its de nation and wolthyof the gIlt they brougbt been ID realtty defeals Re enf.>rcements of partur: for NIcaragua

f k ti B k k a h mdred men at a time leave here when Tbe captain 0 a large Jun 10m ang 0 N Accounls from Rhodes state Ihat the Itght h d Ih N I Ch H Ihe Icaragua steamer saIls whIch I~ once a The casa of Dred Scott, which haa Jl1st as communicate to e ort I lila er montb ntl1g struck thd ImmeOSA store of gunpowder

rile Dred Scott Cue

heen argued at length before the Supreme aId, the f,,\lowlng note on the disasters occa which W811 placed ID the vaults belongmg to C IUrt at Washmgton, Involves pnnclples of sioned by a typhoon he encnuntered on the The Ocean Telegraph the AlJ~ent Kmghts, destroymg the whole g eat pol tical as woll as le~al Importance 121h of August on approachlllg the Chusan TurkIsh quatters so completely that only As the facls may not be In Ihe mll ds of all Islands from the soulb ' We ~lTmed one of From lb. N ..... York lIenld. three chi dt en were saved One thousand our readers we copy the followmg cltlar a,ileet of twenty two Junks, bound 10 VllllOUS As the ucean telegraph hne IS now almost persone are saId to have perished Bta ement of the case from a WashlOgton ports from Shanghae to Tiel tsmg On the a fixed fact a few detaIls as to Us worktr g )

t I~ h d f tb th d bl fi The B e8m~blp KnoUI Ie, belongtng to the letter - we It ay 0 1'1 moon e Wlll ew urt arrangements may not c )me amiss There L I fi h - h d dd I h Nllw York aud Savannah Ine, was corn JiJr Emers lU, of the U S army, took ous y rom t Il DllTt we~t an su en y C op- are sllll mallY pe pie so unlhlllklug ae to 10- d d b fi h h f D dud f m th S th S v teen ves pletely estroye y re ~n t e mg t 0 ec with him trom Mtssourl a slave named Dred pe ro n ro e ou e en qUITe what IS Ibe practleal U~II of a telegraph au, irtrlllli -.lock m New ¥mk C;he we

Seo t as II body aerv .... t, to a mtltl.,'J poet eels SOlID foundeted.- and tba :remlHnJtag five ~crOSB tlie AtTant!c rerry, and others, of a b d b ( d t d W I I t b th bUIlt a out two yeaFs ago. an cost a out Rock Island In the State of IllinOIS After were Ism as e e a 80 os a our practical turn of mind, ask how much Will It

remsullng there Iwo years, he removed to double rudders About one Ihousand men cost ftJr messages $200000

Fort Snellmg, wblch post IS north of the hne pertshed 10 that storm In consequpnce of In the first place, the revolutton 10 the The Grand Jury 10 Boston have presented of36Q 30 At this last post, a slave woman, aS81l1tance hberally afforded by" steamer we neWBpaver world Will he something astound the court room ofthe Untted States Dlstnct broughllhere by Major Tallafero, and owned were saved from drownmg and starvtng tn~ \Vhen Parhament IS tn seSSion, New Conrt ID tbat city as a nUisance, Slid as' enl1re b h d D d S t d th Iy unbecommg the dlgnuv of the U rIIted States Y 1m, was marrIe to re co t, an ey Yurk papers Will be able t 1 p"nt Ihe ha~ two children one of whom was born at EmJrration to Xansu next day as much of the proceedtngs of the III the exercise of the JudiCial powers confer-tbls post al d another after the parttea had Pro£ Edward Danlel~, of the Nat onal Bnu h Senators as m9Y be Inieresllllg to the red by Cungress" -7

retumed to MBSOUrl Neuher of these American pubhc Parhament usually gela The Indlanapohs JOUrnal~a: s. that there slaves were ever mantimltted by their owners, Kansas Committee, at Chicago, has Issued a up at two 0 clock 10 the mOTllmg', but as the were 6000 appllcanls for th st 'fmesseu BUI under tbe ConsUtollon of I1hnols, Slave- elrcular, under date of Dec 1, 1850 from difference ID Itme IS about five hours ID our lI;er to ~arry the eltlctoral v e of Iud lana to ry IS prohibIted, and Dred SCOtL could have which we copy the follOWing - favor we shall receive the domgs oftbe sages Washmgtoll and Ihat there were apphcants asserted 1118 right to fl eedom 10 that State of Westmu ster at aboat ten or eleven 0 clock from every township III the State but two Tbe Jther post where Scott and hlB Wife Most of the lands of Eastern Kansas, local. In tIle evening New York Hme-several

b 100 I f h "I R The bark Tasso went ashore at Barn ega I reSided was 10 a territory from whIch SlaYery ed Wtl 1D ml es 0 teL' 19soun Iver, hours be"ore adjournment The transactions d I d d tb I dla s v tt" N J during the late stOI m and Will prove I~ excluded by the Missuurl act of 1820 an not IDC u e men n re el a ons, III stocks the closwg price m consol8 the II b b h k t cI tbe ext a total 1018 Four of her crew, and two per Sc Itt Dnd hts WIfe were sold by theIr WI e roug t mto mar e urmg n s ate of the cotton markel, Will be seot from 8 Ins from the shore, were drowned m rescu

OWl ers to S~nfold, aga1D8t wbom the sutt was three months These lands are among the London and LIverpool every day at three brought for tbelr fl eedom SCOlt clatml'd very finest m the West, Ihey are abulldantly 0 clock In the afternoon, and Will be received IlIg Ihose on board that havmg been volunlanly C8rtled by hiS supplied with water, coal, stone sand, clay here before noon formmg the baSIS of Wall The slup New York went ashore lit Squan owner mIn a free State, and havlDg' been fiJr brick limber, and covered with a SOIl of Rtreet "perallOns for thai day-m other words, N J, on the gOtb Dec She had on board there domlcJled, he was upon hI. ,"oluntary nnsurpassed (entllty They are well adapted the dOings (f the Lond m Exchange will be a large Dumber of Imh ImmIgrants, most return With hIS master to MissourI a free to wheat, cow oats, hemp, glass, aod ~vely known III Wall street before 'Cbange hours wbom were s~ved Tbree or four, bllwever, man there, m virtue of hIS temporary resl variety of frUits that grow 10 the latJIude of here and Will be pubhshed In the papers of died lire • .xposure. dence In a free territory Tbe same claIm Vlrgmla and NOlthern OhiO They laId out the same evomng hefure they are laId before Twelve of the superb capitals whtch were was made In behaU of hiS Wife The MIS- the most templlng IndU~emeltB both to the Ihe Brlttsh publtc Transactions on the to surmount the great colnmns 10 the rotunda SOUT! Court deCided adversely to the claIm, seltler and the captlalisl N )t one qua ter of PaTls Bourse Will btl aent In Ihe same man rf the new Custom House In New Orleans, on lna around that the temporary reSIdence the pree State men will havewthe mone

hy ner I I h

" hId II t COitlDg as 000 each, were ost recent y In I e In a Free State dtd not make them free In ready to enter t elr an s I not II What Will a message cost t IS a very 1m eteamshlp Ollphant the State (f MIssourI, unlll's their owners fnends of free Kansas, who have loose cap pori ant queslJon The British government, had Blglllfied by some act an IDtentlon to 1t~1 !1rawlIIg a moderale per cent 1ijast, let a gu~rant€emg the cuml any patrol a~e to the mal umlt them by takIng them mto free terrI pori IOn oftt go to Kansas to loan or II vest 10 amount of sevenly thousand dollars per tory-which did not appear 10 be the fact 10 the purcbase of lands 1 It IS c1eady demon annum has fixed Ihe maXimum late of fjlur t~la case Drad Scott appeal. to the United strable that the most profilable IDveAlmen S shIlhngs slerlltlg per wo<d • r olle dollar of Siales Supreme Court" can be made there of any Weatern TerrltOfY federal money ThIS Will be dlVI.led be

"' now open for settlement tween the stallous as ~)II '''Sl From. London SUDDEN DEATH-The New Orleans Ploay- It IS of pnme 1mportance that the Sprlllg to Cork,slxpence sterltng, acr03~ Ihe ocean

'M gIves the followmg al)'ectlng partlcnlara emlgrallon should be large and of good ma IWO shllhngs and sixpence. fnm Newfound tne death of the Hon J 0 Larue, on the 16th terlal, and that It should start early, so as 10 land to New Ynrk OUIl shilling The thnu l\~v - I!et a hold upon the SOIl III ordel 10 make sand little messages practical or romanllc

Judge Larue was a native of New Jersey erop. A word now to emIgrants Pero~"s bullytng or heggmg pa hetlc or amUSing but had resided ill New Orleans for over twenty alnne, or wtth small famthes, who value t elr "avage or aff.ctlOllate aliltouncing arrival or years He was a pr10ter by trade and at one tIme shoultl g) to St Luuls and take a bOllt depallul e. IlIne.s or health wealth ur paver t me edttor of a New Orleans Jour~al He sub up the Tlver-fare first class 812, second ty. whlcb ale consta tly fly og from one end ieqnt~tly studied law, became a most emment class 81i, trip occupymg flom funr to SI~ of the countlY to the other, makl g the bll­memter of the LOUISIana bar, and held for days Large famlltes who have leums WI teTles leap III UDison With the pulsallons of Borne tIme the office of Jodge of the First Dllr find a cheap al J comfurtable route through thousalHls f hearts Will be sent at the same Ir ct Court New Orleans The manner of hiS Iowa or MI.80Urt accurdmg to Ihelr startlllg rate A Hlspalc~hlCh CQsts torty cents death was ~wfnlly sudden HIS wife had been pomt Persons lntendlDg to go nexi Spring fr rn llo>ton t New Y rk Will cost ten dol

A dIspatch dated Richmond, Va, Friday, Dec 12, 1856 says. Last Dlllht a stream of water broke loose 10 the Midlothian coalplt, drowlJlng 81X while and seven negro men

A dl$patch dated ChIcago, Monday Dec 22 181i6, says The Ladles' Semmary at Ow enstllwn, OIne mIles nonh nf thiS city was burned on Ssturday evening Loes 810,000

By wly of NewOrleans, we have newsflOm Vera Cruz to lhe 91h mBt On the 6 h the revolutloOlsts In Puebla succumbed to the gov­ernment forces

Aboot 150 reCfU(\S for Walker's army m NICaragua sailed from New York on Chnst mas day. In the steamer Tennessee

An lDJunettoD has been Issued against the Bank of Hallowell, Mame

tndlsposed and he remained home to keep her ahoold he maklHg their preparatlJlIs now lars fr"m LonJon to New York company' He lay on n low sofa gutte well Tbey should take no heavy altillleSI horses Our readers are alrllady aware that the IILlRRI1!D.

nod'tllu:ol\Il\lonly dheerful She re~hned along c~t le~l:n~a~to~: ~::;~~ll:he:;:r ~(a~~ ~~nD:s route bas been survey U at the expense of M~nJSt;t~:~~o;~'r g:Ro~t~r~& ~e: toO ~tSI~:~:~ the floor lennlng on hlllshonlder. hIS armahoutst 0 or~~d ' They should carry a good SUI ply 01 the UnIted StateR, Bnd that all the reports F PaTTI", or Wakefield R. I her-tbe chIld on the sofa, plnymg With 1 PI h d bedding and all conventences sgree 8S 10 the praCtICablllly of laylug the In Mtlton, W 0, tlec 13 11156, by Elld V Hol1 fMher Suddenly the little girl asked abruptly, cut el b h ly ;ransported TI e mosl cable lip n the great ocean plateau The Mr Lvcll1' H O&R,\,HWAITI of MllIon,lo Mlu HAN

Papa what makes yoor eyes roll so 1" and Ihat can 8 c tl:rall IS what people are most new cable IS two thuds smallef'than that "'\1 S J';:~IUNI of New Market N J With II convulslvo stretch, he Batd to hili wife, Important uem d and yoong trefls whlcb was lost last Slmmer, alld It Will Qn In Lltr\lIeld HIII,dale O. Mlch on the 17tb

M N d I kIlo omH VIZ see B, h 'F December, 1856 by EIJer Woodward, Mr NATHAN I Y durlmg I am dylOg" ot un\l6e to t e y 'h h 1 T k doubledly worl! lllUC beller .... Ieutenanl M B Dunn rormerlyofBruokfield,N Y toMI"

Spasms of t1ln~ss she answered .. Don't dear- It will do to pay frelg ton 8 JC BIIIC es a e Berryman who soundpd Ihe whole roote MARY M Asan of Litchfield dOli t frIghten ~e so" "I t~1l yoo," replied yo or time and make out a lIst pf every tree states that the hghtest Instruments were found In Almond, N Y Dec 23 by Eld N V Holl Mr he With gleat empltaalB, OIl RlU dYlDg,!' ~hfl and shrub, fnllt beaf\ng, useful Of orn8~et;tal, to reach the bottom WIth the greatest cer JOHN G T£"HV~II of New lImolwlck N ~ , 10 MI.I started to get l'estbrattveB I he Bald, '''No, 110" tbllt Will grow In that mIld climate an I len tllnty and as 10 the safety of the WIre, the Ku .. A OAnER of Almond N l She rushed to the WIndow, calling for servanti, procure email roolll, pack them IU a httlef saw bottom !If Ihe sea IS beheved to be as qUIet = , .. ,

A doctor 1 a doctor I" and tormng 8aw hili dUIt, alld keep them from the frost I dyuud and peaceful as an IOfant's slumbers The DIED. f rb h I • hed H I Y arry two hun re , In We.letl, R I 011 tbe 7th ° Dec 0 ronc I. laee distorted and liis handa clene IS tltart ear y ou can c route IS Maury's gl eat cm;le \ll1e, and 18 far CODJumptlou Mr CURK HIICOX aged 69 ,eara, only words we~ "No nollet me die in peace I" root8ralls or gr8pe~VI es 10 an ordtnary north of the 10\<3,hty wbere all the Ice acct- Brother HIICOX wal from bll,ootb a member of the \\hen hIS face ;ecov~ a BllllllOg expreBS\OO, c:arpel bag, and some Ind nelghbol WIll den's have taken place, and the greatest Senulh day Bepti.t Churcb an~ bor<l8n exelJlplary b,s hmbs reloged and he breathed but two or gladly gIVe 'OU a place 0 set them uql "nltl I I h d Ii tb Obnotiau cb.racter and elJ.lre .. ed ID h .Iaslllekne,! tbr e t ...., Th hri ks of hls Wlfe and ,/ou .. et ~ ~Ialm Tb out Osage orange and depth IS a 1tI e over two t °lul san a om~t .trdltg '~tb and conlidence In Him on whom he bad

e Imes agatn. e s e • iI d h f The Bnl!sh government WI surVIlY an~ be,lierecl

Rogers' Dotel and Dlnlllg ~UIIUUII". KEPT ON THE EUItOP

No "Fulton •• I, New Nca~ Fulton Ferry

&;i'" RoolDllo lei by Iho dsy or week.

OLARKE ROOEIUl l LMe of HENRY ZOLLVIR S

• Saver)'s 1emperunce II AIID

TELEGRAPH D1NING "'4L<VVH

KEl'T ON THE EUROPEAN MEALS AT ALL 1l0URS oil'

Quurlerly M!eltng THE Quarterly Meet'ng eompooed

of DeRuyter Scott Llllcklaen T.,ixlcm. and Prestun WIll a,semble wltb he on Slxtb day helore tbe firstllabLa b (2J ) a' one 0 clock I' M Intr d expecteU by Eld T FIBber ot DeK'''t~'~

Uy order uf the ComDllttee E

Wnter Cure

DR UTTER of tb. Mouotam 1 lamfield N J bas removed

No 34 E.ot TWelrlb st New YOlk ample accommudaUoDB are prOVided bQ~rder. Corre8pond~1ll! wlll please 8O[1.r08S \Ugly ooul AprIl 10lb wI en tI e

Glen Will (Provloence

Central Illlilrolld of New 'er ••.• ~

CONNEOTING at New ware L ckaW8nna

Scranton Great Bend the Easton with the Leblgh Valley ~~"~~~~:~(:i~'~ Obunk-FALL ARRANGEMENT tober 7 18.6 Leave Now York lor med.ate places, rrom PIer No 2 A M and 3 30 P M for ~nme:rvilllpi 10 30 A. M, ond 3 30 and 5 00 tralDI ~ nnect at Ellzabetb wltb Jeraey Rarlroad leaVIng New Yo k landt .treet at 7 30 and 9 A M 3

Leave PlaInfield for New York at 7 M and 1 52 and 5 30 P M

JOHN I:iTERNS SOI'~ri!ntend"nt.

Book for Every AND ODe or the VPTy best and

MODERN DOME~TIC ME ever pnbh.hed ID tbe Unrted Ihoald be In every borne to consult gency The book alloded to 10

KE'TH IM~AY'. (II D POPULAR CYOLOPEDIA OF

TlO MEDICINIil A book of over 850 large oclavo boond In leather

11 conts,m, every receDt imorolvelmelnl knowledge With a platn aC(lOQUI common ule

N Y

Tu put It wllblU the reach or every been indnced to offer It I\t tbe oupl~·eelleD.ted

of TWO DOLLARS AND FIFTY .n1>"T;r "nd lend It to any part or tbe United (eJ;Cellt

Cal fomla) free o[ eJpence The work whIch we bere prllleD! beheve Will command tbe re.pect all wbo mayavall tbemlelve. of

forllllatiOil wh eh It conllilnl child alarmed the house In4 t~e lIelghbol'~oop, Jocus( lee ,an c olce valletles 0 gram, sound the whole route III .(\prtl next. Xu In Obm'l .... WII Dr!c 4th, of croop H'UT ~ut a~ ejforts a~ re8l1f1CltatiQD tailed from potatoes, gruueed, &e ~d Ka1J888, arum ~ oly two vessels WIIII€ave the Eoghsh cout ronl~ I0Il of A~ aDd INhel Coll!ro.el aged , rUllness Or Me to tnrnid death ~h. mterval WII all Dew couDlne~, every y rll&rel~ ~ at h I ble-a mIle of wbu:h weIgh. I ,.,1 1II0llih, lIId "" d*1'

o SH,EPA,RD & CO 152 Fulto9

for Ille by book.ellen

acaroely in min'" j th.y did not brlD, these tblOgS when they 1911 tie ca N B -lJberal torml made

PhlIlljll, Snmpson & Com pnny's or New Work.,

Ferdmand and Isabel/a, 3 vols Co quest oj Me:uco 3 vols Co 'luest of i e u _ ,ols llllp 11 _ ,ols

Mllcttlaues t vol -- I NEW.JUVENILE BOOKS.

The m08t umque charmtng and eleganllYjPrlllted Book. lor Ch Idren ever ull.red to tbe pull c

loIR CRANCUS ILLUS1I1ATED STORIES Kobliolto::o a titquel to The Lasl of the Hugger ~ muSo." By IJ 1I.lol'ber leurse Cr., \h \Vnb

forty exqu alte Un.lral uus ou wood by tbe author ;::Lbrge 8vu $1 (0

1b~ Last of tbe Huggermuggers a GJahtlStory, , cr •• cd a prufuu a se s.tlOn In all tl e mulls of the I tl e pc pIe '{ ue en ra C~ of Llltle Jackel" to tbe gla t. uuu e h • relu e " III tl e gaul 8 buot b k e'c"pe I ow Ihe. DC .,ake Kuubul azo 01111 h s return trom Ie woodedu Islund IUl/lllU a gaud llcture lor Ihe

wllHl 01 Yum g Awe lea to cuntemplbte '1 he 81 II or I." here gl,ell an accuunt 01 IL SecUl d VISIt to tho Is anu tl e cmeer 01 tue .1 oen .ker .her t/ e g aut I <leu h, 'DcluLl g a JUu ney aUlong the gl omes~ II • gbt uf I e great Mer K l b ut U (.Ihe 8traDJ:;e nnd lailcllJUt In@ ad'~llu es 11" 6t y .. n cle ~uler a "nil It on La preuecessor tl e p ctures 11 ore tll merJu8 and

ske ched Willi IIlre'l.!j linn more gracetul pendU Auewedtonol I.

Th e Last oj Ihe Huggermug/Je.. UDiform with Kob _bollazu La ge uvo iH 00 J

COUSIN FANNIE::; JUVENILE nOOKS Red Beard 8 StorIeS for Cliidrell 1 ransl. ed from

tll. Geru au by Ouusm ~ aUu e I I The Illust allUna fur th s book are oj tl e mo t I ovel

and lak ug kl d J I ey are III In HallOD of Ib OIlhou flie. (r l' C U t"S cut out by ie 6110CB, III wI c( our an c •• to. purIm Is bav~ 01" I been pI eserveli 1 he f cutes ure ] UmeJOllS sp r ted, und I:fiecbv"b The Slortes ale WOl hy of Ihelf elegant dre.. I.atge 8vo 'Ii) cents

Bnght Puture. oJ;oCklld Life Translaled IrolmtllHl Germau l>y Cuu In hIe lllu,troteu WlI:,\ DlgO!,. liU/sbed colored engra, wgs A collechun of excellent slones, pre.ented

and artraCl/ve s yle lhe p cture. ale !lite 8vo 7iJ cents

New edltlODs of Ecery Beg •• ,ng II Easy for

&. d'!l 1 ra !i ntcu frow p G~rUlI:lD F aUlle Lorgo Quu. td WI t. .Iegar tly cotu'fea ograph c plale" a"d 01

Au ty, WonderJul. Stone. Translated u an by Cuu.ru ~ .nDte Wltb sp n!l!d liill~gra~,bic It U!itra ons 8va 7iJ ce 18

A NEW WORK BY TilE AUTilOR OF

DaISY or the Fatry Spectacl" By VIolet Square 18mo lflustraled

cenl, GIlt, 75 cenls ThIS story 0 marked by tbe same love

tbe same attract vene .. ot .t} Ie, and the and pore spm! that made liS predecessor Worth .01 Weallh and oll er Slone ••

Angle A cullect on of stones of a dec dedly retllgtt/UI

dencya"llollof terest Wllh I6mu Musl n 50 cent. G,lt 75 cento

VALUABLE CONTRIBUTION TO AMERrCAN LI~~~1'I[]RI~~ Bwg,apk.eal Euay, By H T 'l'u,ck,ormair.1

volume Bvo These essays conta n oncc nct biograpbies

cal Fstlmates of W .. ,h "glon, Cheslerfield Frank hn Campbell tbe 01 nton Blsbop nerlt Audubon

DeFoe the autbor of BI~:~t~h~:~~i~j~:~~~:~!~l!~~~::!f, Dellt persons About. the subJects sud embrace tbe m st dl8111lgu ~I eu our annal. Borne 01 the art cleo E gland and were ravorably nat ced in .Ier Rt~le'IJ Londoll L'IeraTY Ga::ctle tl ~m .were publ .hed In the }II .. Iii. A~I,fri,ca. ~!f1D and have beell rece red wllh Un(JOIiID1.>nj.v •• , lhr agnJut I e countly. ahd (Jlhers were pressly for 1110 work

Tb s 18 not n w ,k prepared ror Bny teonnrl""." pose ~I c ulan 8 Ihe elementa ora lohrl !eib'~;i:!~ popular Iy, Bud WIll lake 1 a "Ia~e ID all IIi and lO tbe pelmanent Iteratnre or the COCII1t1:r,

W,II be I ubi shed lU December

A NEW WORK BY DR lliTCHCOCK, Tlir; fj;t;V'LV'UIl!T, Rei g'OW!

dresseund lSelrwl,iJ.,onISDecial Edward H,tcl Cock D berst Cullege ) BOlhor of etc, elc In one ~ olu'lI",12mo '1 he repulal on ur Dr Hllcl cock ao a ,,-.r--'

lonnd learn ng and var ed rnltnre, .1

nent teadl'" 01 rehololl .. ,llseeUle fW"ll~~r'=.;~i~I~~ .. all lIl,tanl and favorable con.loprallOn 81 e always bused UpOII substaOl alloundaIlO~",,1' style H f re,ble and per.v'cu.oa.. DOL oury t add a .y .nl ~y 01 u au bor IQ ~i,'.'" L .... " .. ~ ~n bolh • de. nl tl e Allal t c .he I .. pre'lo\1' work.1D tim counlrY nnd wrll we come al y new producllOn trom

W til be pub .. lied 11\ Doten ber .lUST rVBLISUEI;>, AND NOW OFFERED-TO '11lIE'I'RA1fl1!,;' Dr Kon., Arcllc ExplorallD>l'

J, An F~ankl.n dur ng the yea ..

BOlDg a I erSOI al .ei~"~8:1I~d~t~~~ta,ie,~~~; c,unt or h. ImpoNllIIt D tb.e,lI"tI"Hlriri'! Ad ventorel oJ hll

Page 4: m~~~~en~~~~ nnflels ~h~~~~ … › sabbathrecorderscan › SR+Vol+13... · 2017-07-07 · 1 closed my last article by introducing the the la.nguage of cilie of its advocates, "Ste,phEm-I"}jate

r

'1tf1~d'l'"bllutt&nttll. I felt that It was a last chance 1 tbrew my ,JI, AlU. "''''"-U self on my back, so as to le9sen as muoh as

! pOSSible my weIght, and placed tbe nape bf PariB!an BankrUptcy my neck agamst the Tim of the edge of t e

ti P I r Ice, and then With cautlon slowly bent my Tbe followmg IDmdent rom arman I,e I d I h b II f my moccasIned

F fi eg, an pacing tea 0 Illustrates tne fondness of r~chmen or \foot agaInst tbe sledge I pressed steadily makmg a brtlltant ImpreSSIon - I a~aInst tbe runner I stenmg to the half.yleld

.. A gentleman wTltmg from Parts states 109 cruncb ofthe Ice benea~b 11 d b h that M Place the French Banker ~ho fe Presently I felt my bea pi owe IYd l e cenlly failed f~r the Immense amo~nt of SIX Ice and tb~t my Net fur Jumpel1 w:s ~~e:~g teen million francs, gave on the evemng of up Ihe su~act ex~ came ml a dO d ush' the grand cata~trdphe, a splended dmnel to thed

y Iwere allr y o~ d ne mOt~e eCI e l fe' which were IDvlted all Ihe celebrmBs of a aln hWdaStb aunc fle up'dn e Ifce'uan Sdaby

d h B I th reac e e ICe- oe, 811 WaS ne olle certam gra e upon t e ourse, toget er WI Hans wllh ff! htful I We saved a)] the an equal number ofladles The feast was of g zea

pOlDful There seemed nut onjy neglect, bUI absolute forgetfulnen and contempt of the departed The stones which ptlde and atrec Uon had once erected over the graves were broken dvwlI and scattered lD *ndl!icnmmate COnfusion, and the dust of tbe tblDb trampled most trreverently under foot 180011 left the crowd of porters and d IIlkeye, and vetled women and suHen Turks, mixed up With men I f mallY naUons and stood alolle Oil the Iilll Side lookmg down upon tbe Golden HOI n and the Turkish slilps of war there Iylllg at anchnr and across to Stamboul, on which the shades of evenmg were falllDg

• The Demand for OIl

th t h h k d h t probably dogs, hut the sledge, kayack, tent, guns e mas ree erc e 10 -t e co> ti Th N Y k J I f C """'

being not less than twent five dollal9 a head, snow shoes and every tbIDg be81des, was Ie t e ew or ourna 0 orn",erce com d th b f the host were the behInd The thermometer at eight degrees ments upon the constantly InCreaSI!)g demand

: e r uoyan\ sp~r~ts ~lOn When the en will keep them frozen taRt tn the sledge ull for manufactufmg and otber purposes and th~~ae8mo wgea~earta It: :e:grht, a magmficent des we cM,:,ome and cut them out" which alWayS exceeds tbe supply from the

" h -7"" ocean Notwlthstandm the nnmber of ves Bert was placed upon the table, havlDg m t e· 1 center a vase of stiver gilt, which II'! Place Constantmople sels has been constant y O'll the Increase tbe Ordered the waller 10 pass round to the ladles, The supply derived from theIr voyages has grad

followmg descl1ptlon of the city of ually fallen from 207,348 bill rels III 1841, to SIt contalDed a few nuts for their espeCial crackIDg Ever;y lady then plunged her ConstantInople, as It presents Itself to the 184015 10 1855, and pllces havfladvar ced 10

band witbm the vase, and drew forth what traveler on a cursory VIew, IS frum a carre proportion to the scarCity rhe fal111 g ofFm h b d h h f .'" C sperm 011 IS from 159 304 In 1~41, to 72 649 In

ever c ance estowe lD t e S ape 0 some spondent of the New York Journal Q/ om 1855 "But even had Ihere been no dlmmu rare Jewel, the cheapest of whIch could not meTce'-bave been less than sIxty dollars, wblle some Uon In [he quantity of 011 procured from tI e of them were of great pnce After thIS de Gonstant~llople Nov 26, 1855-1 have whalt' the Increased damal d for the nqulre hghtful ceremooy, the generous host took bls been In Constantmople a week, and can say ments f railways, fuctones, etc wfuld ex· leave, amid the reiterated applauses of bls that all my antlctpatlons of nove] and strange ceed the source of supply It has been estt guests The next day hiS house was SIlent slghls ale not equal to the reality It IS, In matpd that a yeally consumpuun uf 100,000 I&Jld deserted, and It defalcauon of sIxteen deed a wonderful cIty Its natural advar ta gallons of 011 lakes place on every 500 miles mllhons was announced before the trtbunal ges are unsurpassed probably In the world 01 the 25 000 miles of railway construc ed in of commerce ".. Its scenery IS nch 10 every beauty, and Its the Unlled States The Immel se amo lOt

AIl Arotio Adventure

whether by frost or any other means, all hope of flowers may be abaudoned Roses {If the latter deschp lon, that are not perfectly HardYj

therefore, hal/e ~ome klDd of proteclloo long and slrong growers, Ibelr oranchas

must be laid down and covered With ellher branches I f evergreens or straw earthed up TYlDg to a stake and sheathlDg With straw, WIll do verv well for some ktnf!s The small er V"Tlelles may be put 111 to frames If I laId rtllii~I fifi.V;fjt'A. In by the heels" that 18 laid down With mere Iy enough of mould to separate them, a frame Will nold a great number, and they Will be tn

good condmon ID the spTlng F )r a small garden, it IS best to select those that are per fectly bardy, or ~och~the Hybrid Perpetu als that are not lDJur by haVing the top shoots destroyed W en you have proper faclllttes for wlnterll g I e more tender kinds, they Will amply repay for all the trouble be-stowed upon them [OhIO Falmer .

lIIammoth Tree

It IS sa](l tbat M )nmouth County coulams wlthllllts limits the largest and oldelt tree 111 N Jersey Tblslevlathan of the forest I" III At lantlC townshIp, and ~tands I" an open oll the p'lemlses of the Rev M9. Schenck It towers op to a lofty belght and ~ome of 119 branches aT"! as la ge as the trunk f a g< od SIzed II ee The trunk 10 very tall and strait The distance from the ground to the first hmb IS about forty eight feet One foot ft om the hase It measures mne and /I half feet diameter and twenly elgbt feet 10

ence Five feet from tt. base It measures rulabagas are also packmg them m dirt. and uther roots ana 'n'h';'i,Q

Kane's Arctic Expedl~lol) abounds In ad. ventures hke tbe follQWUl~, whIch makes one shIver to reali -r 1 le and an Esqul1naux

people present the most CUTIOUS medley, of machmery In use 10 every manufacturing town Tur ks, Armemans Greeks, Jews, and Euro or city requires a vast quanuty 10 addlU JO

peans, of almost every I aUou, filhng the streelS and there are IDnumerabJe mln( r purposes with every vanety of costume and of language, for whIch Oil IS IndIspensable

eight feet 10 dIameter and twenty fOUl 10 C\l

cumference Some tdea of tis magnJlude may be formed from the fact that four boar ds

ItS trunk would be BuffiCient to mcl se one Sid" of a bUlldmg twenty five feet cqpare -01 Iilxteen boards would mclpse Ihe wnule bUlldmg Only th10k of it-sIxteen hoards from the trunk of one tree suffiCient tOloclose a c lmfortable dwelhng house ThiS tree has been VIsited by p"r8uns from all sections of the coulltry, and IS hterally c vered With 10

8C II tl 11 S It was ~ rm r1y klown 8S the

as mOIst as IS needed

vantage and Ifsondy i~~~h~~~:P~~J!~i~.~~~~~~~~~~~:E~~t~~~ mucb Ih" bener 'j-:

hunter take a t- Is -

and I fFermg to 8 traveler hke myself the most Vanous expedumts have been resorted to mtereRtmg spectacles that are found among to supply the defiCiency Oil bas he en man men But to beglo WIth the begmmng ufactured from rosm, cotton sQed, and other

The approach to the c\ y by the Sea of substances with much success, and the e.x ., I started With Hans Bnd live dogs, all we Marmora 18 grand b"yoDlI descnp lUn That tsnslve prne fore~ts of thft country have been

could mU8ter from 0Ui' disabled pack, and our first Vle\\ mIght be as pertect as pnsslble, laid under contrroUtion Not les9 than eight reached the ' Pmnacly Berg,' m a smgle the noble hearted Capl Long, of tbe steamet factorres have been put 10 operatton 10 the hour's run But where was tbe watet 1 whele Saran,c delayed hIS ve,sel durm!; Ihe latter Umted Stat s wnhm a brief perIOd fi,r the were the seal 1 The floes had closed, and the bours of tbe mght so that when we came on manufacture of 011 from room, and one has cruslied Ice was all that told of our Intended deck ID the early morn1Og lhe more proml be n es!abhshed m LIVerpool Eng, wh1ch buntmg ground nent objects In !!he clly were Just begmnmg durmg 1855 produced over 100000 barrels

AscendlDg a berg, however, we could see to to appear tn tbe dIstance As our frigate of 011 the north and west the dark cloud stratus, moved on through the \\aves 8parkhng In the BituminOus coal has been fouad to YIeld whIch betokens water It rau through < ur first rays of the morDlng the great confused an excellent uti which Improved Ichemlcal old hattIe ground, tbe • Bergy Belt '-tbe laby ma~s of habltatJor s gradually unfolded 1Iself, processes may yet rer der to the best for rmth of our wandermg after the frozen party separatmg IOtO thlee different cllles-Stam raIlroads and machinery of last wmter I had not been I vel It smce, boul Scutall and Pera The seven hills on tabhshments have cOinUililDce~rhl(1ti·e and the {eebng It gave me was any thing but whICh Consta mopl" IS bUllt, were soon States for the manufacture JOYous clearly defil ed and tbe mmarets and domes duct, and thougl some of ~~~~~~!!.~I

pluw hr e tree' dbrlvllrg tbls 118m" from the fact thaI some years ag u plow hne exactly embraced Its clfcumlerence [Ntlwalk Mer

A Brief History of China

Chma 18 the most fJ pul JUS and anCient em plre I1J the w rid, 1l Is 1390 mIles long and 1 030 Wide P pu lat n fr om 300 000 000 to 360 000 000 I he capItal IS Pekm, WI h 1,100 000 It hablta t~, text N ankm, 1 000000 !HId GIllIton 1 000 000 C Ilia produces tea, 50000000 lb. ,f which ore annually export

HORSES' country to spend a few of mme [drove a very n!\11.<)slo.mle a good one-but was hiS coat It was m r than II, horse s smooth Ing he cbuld get' w My frIend who IS a fanCier, made me try Il;iviilg carruts every day to eat wI/; that he would have a three weeks-and he time my horse hail 8 beli~tiifu I coat, and all from eating dally He tells me It IS ~Dl'!lII1I[)[e, s:~:e~,:~~,d~~~':g~~.Ptlot~~:~:~:d~:~~:}tl~;\ mote v.!tal piety and

same llme Ibat It urges manto 01 God and the I.,tb of

In a couple of hours we emerged upon a of a hundred mo~ques were st~ndlrJg before tn operation, with promise plam, unlimited to the eye, and smooth as a us W ule ovp.r all ghttered the yellow c~s cess 11 Is not probable that ·.dJ"fl,aliiMl,le bllha{d table Feathers of young froslmg cent, the symbol of the Moslem's fa1th, and pertles of coal 011 have yet ielid'ed

Ir m Caot II the unly rlace which fur elgners are allowed" VISIl SIlk c !ton, nce, gold, 8 Iver and all the ntcessarJes of hfe, are found 111 Cblila The ar ts and mallufactures In many bl suches are III hIgh perfectIon but slatlOuuy as Improvements are now prohl btted The Government 18 a Jespotlc mOllar chy Revl'nue, $200000000, army 800000 men The rehgtonls SimIlar to Budhtsm the cblef god bOling Foh The Chll ese IDculcate the morality of ConfucIUS, theIr great phl"OSO pber, who Was born 550 B C Tbe great wall and canal of Chn a are among the mlgh uest works ever achieved by man T·,e for elgn cummerce of Cltlna amounts to $35 000 000 or 40 000 000 annually, the wbole of wblCh IS transacted with appomted agents called

Elias Needham has a lot of upland vers railroad, clmtal !lcre Upon tbls, som

n"iivP".:ol WblCb ... om lIkely open to the I~~J~~~;~!~~~O:~! r~8~lIi~!b;~~i~~t~~ dJifooe knowl~dse re<"8I1m

gave a plush hke nap to ItS surface, and to. of tbat ruthless pow r wb1ch crushed Ollt blgbest developmeut The enormous and ward the hOrlson dark columns of frost ChflSllar Ity fr m ailibe Easlern lands and rapidly lDcreasmg consumpl1on of 011 by luco smoke pOinted clearly to the (open water sllll SitS eJ throned here In the midst of twsel motives and other mllcbtnery greatlyenhanc ThIS lee was firm enough, our exponence and gaudy spier dor, Hurrounded by Ignorance, tng Its costs exert a puwerful 11 Buence 10

satisfied us that It was not a very recent SIUp dllY sensuallly, decrepitude, and death the prosecutlOlI of chemIcal InvesUgatwn In

freeZing We pushed on without he.natlon But nothl! g I f thIS decay or rUlD was VISible thIS dlrectlon a

cheertng ourselves with the expectatIon 01 to the eye The whole scene was one of 111 Banking around FruIt Trees. commg every mmUle to the seals We paBs tense and wonderful beauty ed a second ICe grnwth, 11 was not so strong as I had seen Ihe Bay of N "pIes and Ihe har We are pleased to see that so many pub .the one we had JUjlt come over but ~1I11 safe b rs of Smyrua and Spezzla and Ihe most hshers of papers are now recummendmg th..l for a party lIke ours On we lVe'lt, at a beautiful hal burs on our own AmerIcan practICe whICh we have advocated fOI some ~)f\sker gallop, maybe for another mile, when coast, but as the BOBFhorus opened lis wa· years past to guard fruit trees from mtc" tn Hans sang oul, at the top of hIS vOIce • Pu lers b.fure us, and. we passed Seragho POlDt wlDter sey I puseymut! seal seal I' Al the s8me a' d 10. ked up tbe Golden Horn over the One mmute a Iree WIll be tIme euough to InstaDt the dogs boullded forward, and, as green I Ills of Scutan, and far up the Bospho- be spenllD protecting olchards tIJlough thb I looked up, I saw crowds of grey nets\k, the rus hned wnh palaces, and around upon the wlOter from the ravages of field !nICe rough or 11Ispld seal of the whalers disport almOEl mnumerable vessels of war of com Any common laborer on a farm 15 compe log In an open sea of water merce and of plea sure, crowdmg the waters, tent to tbe task of bankmg around fL~lIt Irees

I had hardly welcomed the spectacle wben I was obliged to confeBs tbat I had never wit If they were mulched last sprlDg, llie mu I saw that we had passed upon a new belt of nessed such a combulBl1on of natural beauties IIJg ntled not be removed Take Ii spade Ice that was obVIOusly unsafe To the T1ghl or Much a Ilcture of magmficent arufimal bury 11, and cuntmue on nIl the b~nk around and left and front, was one great expense of spiel dar It looked liS If tbe comm61ce of each tree IS made ten 01 twelve IUches h1gh snow flowered Ice The nearest sohd floe the world was centered here The British ThIS wtll drive the mice away to Beek was a mere lump, whlc~ stood hke an Island French aDd American Hags were flylOg on better quarteTS, unle8& your treeil'tlifppen to 10 th~ whIte level To turn was lmposslb e, every Side and there was an actIVIty and an 8tand Ilear an old wall where mlce'do con we had to keep up our galt We urged on ener gy m all the movements, that IndIcated gregate In such a case the bank should be the dogs with whip anil vOice the Ice rollmg Vlgl rous hfe m Ibe great center of the war Id much hIgher ltke leather beneath the sledge runners, It A hule closer exammauon, however, dlsclos Tbls bl1'!Ikl1Jg sel ves another purpose 1TI was more than a mIle to the lump of so,ld ed the (act that war End nOL commerce, had addmon to h mIce guard-It keeps tbe trea

hong merchants" Foreigners are allowed to live at certam statIOns Or II Faclones" be I,w Canton The chIef trade IS wah Eng land Tbe first Amencan Hblp reached Cbl na In 1784, now the annual average ofUmted ::;tates shIps VISIting Canton IS tblrty two The revenue derIved flom f,mllgn commelce by tbe Emperor vanes from $4000000 to ~ 000 000 Accordmg to Mr DUDn the opIum smuggled Into ChlDa, to the 1DJu ry of the people amounted to $20 000 000 an nually fOf several years past, much of whIch IS paid III speCie whIch finds us way to !Jon .Ion Tile Cblnese language has nearly 40, 000 characters or letters [BIcknell's Report

-Ice Fear gave to the poor beasis their ut fttled these waterB wnh IDllumerable ships upright, and saves the cost of stakes aud the most speed, and our vOices were soon hushed and that It IS by the mIghty -pressure of For IDJury which withes are lIkely to mfllct when Scarlatma. to stlence; elgn Powers upon the 11 sthUlJons and defen th" tree IS !led to them A member of the Massachusetts Medical

The suspense, unreheved by action or ce& of Turkey that they are prevented from The bank should be leveled m the Sprlog effi rt was Intolerable We knew that there faIling to pIeces yet not so as to make a d1sh for water to stand ::OoCiety sends to tbe TraMCNpt the follo\\ 109 was no remedy but to reach tbe fioe, and that We I~t go our ancbor opposite the new m around tbe tree No kInd of tree should remedy for thta much dreaded and now pr"va

he let out cranberry D1llffi,S. ed them With great pICked 97 bushels of exjcellient winch he sold fur four beSides these there were damaged berries lar d he p~cked I".,,.t .... n' whICh he sold tilr making the gross inl~oD~e.i an acre, four hundred

Peter Nassau a ~lll{\,.,.t1 dent of Woodstock, Vt, traordlOary age of 126 the oldest hvmg man I hIstory has been traced Esq , town clerk of WopilslO,ck, pears he was born two IDgton, was 46 years tbe Declaration of IncleUIBnd before tbe second war broke out he had passed o! hfe-three score yeal

jcoDlsid,arat:ion of the for carrying

10 the GerlDlJo offered to execute

the commls nAr.;",Eint: up6n It, and

mELDu.~e.f" the sewerage out of the

Thames WIt)

6verythmg depended upon our <logs and our palace of tbe Sullan and as soon as we ob Aland m water fur a alOgIa mlllute after a lent dIsease - The congregatJoII dogs alone A momeut's cht:ck would plunge tamed pratique a few of UB were landed by sh, wer IS over [Mass Ploughmall • Notbmg h,~s than a deBlre t) save hfe bytenan churcb nI,oiiis1rill""lvel~ec:()n.~iolllrably tbe whole concern lOtO a rapId hde way No one of tho boats of the Sa"anac, not far from urges me 10 address a few words to the pub- startled, a few evemngs presence of m10d or resource bodily or men the cust m house of Galata ThiS IS the Whitewaah for Out-llllildlItgs. hc up lD thiS terrlhle dlseRRe Last week Rev Mr Newman, the ollflto[ tal. could avail us The seals-for we were prinCIpal place of bUBlIless of the Frank mel' For unplaned surfaces, common 11Ille wllte tbere were no less than 25 aealbs by Scarla descendlDg from tl e near enough to see theIr expressIve fac€s- chants and lOr dceed the centelr oflmost of thhe wash apphed early lD the summer, wheu the tina 11 Ihls CIty While the epldcmlc IS so discourse a[1(1 were looking at us with that strange CUrluSlty codmmferche GO nnBHtantlllod

P e I t IS on t IJ wood IS dry and the pores open, answers a prevalent and fatal It seenls very had cor sen ted tu whIch 8eems to be their characterlsllC ex Sl eo I e old I enB orn, Irect y °fiPposlte to good purpose and matellally operates 10 pre- Lhat allent! 11 sh uld be called to the plophy whom he was immEldllltel, pres810n We must have passed some filty SEambboulhurGo d yzantlum, whas rst occud vBntlDg decay But whItewash may he ren lacnc VI lues of Belladonna That these have Iy bands of wedlock of them breast high out of water mockmg pred y t e enoese 10 the Ib3t cenhtUlY an f dered more pelmanem, I eedlllg less been so h lie kllOWll and ckn Jwledged, us by theIr self. complacency ~ has ever emced, we belIe~e,v een t e selal t Of apphcatlons If sulphate of ZIOC (WhItB must thmk IS oW1Og to Its havlOg been fir st New York State,

ThiS desperate race against fate could oot com~erce an tbe resl ell.ge pnnClpa y 0 and common salt are added The f. 110 brought forward as a speCific by Hahneman, votes polled at the late l'Iresidelltialeiec'\IQI1.1 last The lolhng of the tough salt water Ice Franks The land flses abruptly Immedl~e parltcular dIrections for makl1lg tlR~lmtl"alna'l the father of Homreopathy It bewg thu810 lk 595,180 votes, whIle tetrllied our dogs aod when wllhm fifty paces ly bephmd Galata aDdd ttTlhs on these helg Is for colorlDgl to any de81rable shade are gIVen ed upon wllh dIstrust from Its ern necUon wllh haVing together 68 elec~Iral of Ihe fioe, they paused The left hand that era IS situate e name means slm i M h tJ 695973 These State

n Dowmng's • Cuunlry Hou_es "- thIS sY8tem any emHlent p ySlclan~ <lOW M"r.,l\."rl .. ,.~,y •• runner went through, our leader, • Tood ply beyond and jf course, In thIS conneclton, Take a clean barrel that Will hold water ever woo entIrely rPJ6cI Homreopathy, Arkansas, Alabama lamlck.' followed, and 10 one second Ihe signtfies beyond Galata d In Pera: a;e the Put lOto It haIC a bushel of qUlckhJDe, and pubhsh{'d Ihel opmlons In ItS lavor and 'h.,;-~,-Ilana. MISSISSIppI Nurt:~hJa~I(~~\:' entire left of the sledge was submerged My best hntels It IS tbe resl Cenhce of ~~orelgn slack It by puurlDg over It bOlhng wa~er lillf. eXists an am lUDt cl eVidence abundantly New Hampsblre and first thought was to liberate the dogs I ambassadors d There affire drullIah" u urcbeAs ficlent to cover It four or five \Dches deep ficlent to establish Its efficacy Mr Asa Whitney, the le!lned forward to cut poor Toad's traces here alaod an a post 01 ce a;~ ba \ eater f and stJrrlDg It uutll slacked When quite .. Moreover tbe rem ,dy IS cheap, safe, and great PaCIfic Railroad Bud the next mtoute was sWimming m a httle long an fil~o;par~~lvE? we UI t ~treet 0 slacked dl8s jIve It m water, add two pounds compar811vely hormless Nothmg more I. engaged m the milk busl c rcle of pasty Ice and water along Side htm sthores'h te wdl t thuropean gtOOt s, ruthns of sulphate ofzlDc, at d one of commou salt, reqUlSlIe than a tumbler of water He hvea a few mtills ou,

a08, dear, good fellow, drew near to help t roug I, an a e presen Ime e h h b h d f h d r fi dro s of Belladon' I n ture cows, and supplIes W~Silip.gtc~o b k French and Enghsh are so numerous m w dlC hmahY e : adt any 101 t e thrug~h18ts, .our or ve p da I c ..

e utterIng piteous expressions 10 ro en d h I an w Ie In a Jew ays WI cause e W Ite obtamable, If n I, about tw, grllms of the milk He looks hke a ngllsh, but I ordeled him to throw htmseU t~e d stree:~ ~~ otels as a most to over wasb to hllrden on the wood work Add suf extract perfectly dIssolved Of thiS an adu talks hkeastatesinaln--eI!peiCia.lly

n bls belly, wnh bls hands and legs extelJd~d, 8 ~w t °d erB d t t th I d fiment water to brIng It to the consIstency may t8k, a tea sp )oDful a chIld half or a quar Railroad QuElst'ion. nd to make for the Island by coggmg him. e oun gO'd por ersk a he abn Ikng thICk whitewash ter as much accordlDV to age, repeating the elf forward wllh hIS Jack kUlfe In the Galata, whdodlashe °hur Htrun ISdto Bt elr ac s, To make the above wash of a yellow dose evelY lour or five days whlie the epl A new arucleno"f"",.fQ".h" ... tl

meantIme-a mere \Dstar t-I was flcundenng and precOe e us to t e oteh e yZance, ID color, add 3 Ibs yellow ochre demlc I, In the neIghborhood, or every day seed has been ",bout wltli)lledge, dogs 11.1 d hnes, lD confused Pera ur ws.y was throug narrow streets F r. I dd 4 Ib b 1 there be al y knowlI exposure to It The lea s It Ii purely Velll"et:~ole"

so steep and ragged as to be Impassable for 1 d or awdn codo1r Iba I bl 8 k um er, same properttes 8S the puddle around me Id dOlan re ,all amp ac quanllty taken sh uld be less If It 8hould

I succeeded In cutting poor Toad's hiles, camages dhnfielld d wlthh quadlDt °d WOIO enf For grey or stone color add 4 Ibs raw cause dilated pupIls Irrasclblh y allli disturb IS dark, for the reason and letting hIm scramble to the Ice-for tbe houBes, an e Wit mu an peop e 0 b d 2 Ib I bl k d I I t k t h h th dIrtiest porllon of the

W ~ d h I k urn "'r, an slimp ac e seep t 1S a mls a e 0 suppuse t at IS d poor fellow was drowmng me with hiS pltel us strangGe costume~ fiIl"~ ou~ E ou~ ~te erc The color may be put on with a common uee ef Belladonna WIll always pi event Scar cents per POUD caresses-and made my way fur the sledge, bmYena_meramrlay"o'faltlhem"lfir WmHthenC~rllsmegaenatn&od whllewash brush, and wlll be found much latina It only modifies It, as a general rule, ExtenSive In.,nllr.rinr..l but I ti und tbat It would 1I0t buoy me, and d bl h h b d d I B ffi b Id

Snme of them fi esh from Its fields of stnfe more ura e t an common w ltewas ~IJ estroys 1IS ma Ignancy ut sn e ectu UI mg a that 1 had no resource but to try tbe ctrcum· ally does It do thiS that In not less than 200 rtver 10 be called ference of the ~ole Around tlils I paddled and blood But I had elms to see Constant! Roaes m Wmter or 300 caBes of apparent exposure to the III of cash realized from the fallhfully, the miserable Ice always YI~ldmg Hople, and as Boon as our rooms were secur fectlon where 1 have gIven seasonably of the 8100000 A large wben my hopea1of a lodgment were greatest ed, I hurrted out In the streets, andovander All roses wlll grow and flower well out Belladonna, I have never known one fatal gaged 1fI COl structmg a mlo,j"'A

Durmg thiS process I enlarged my Circle uf ed alone O'ler the belghts f Pera I had doors, ID the summer months, but many can case to occur' numerous other heavy impi',,,vllm,ents. operations, to a very uncomfortable diameter, 8cal cely left the h tel, before I fuund myself Dot wlthSland the severuy )f onr Winters • apd was beglDl)lng to fllel weaker after every III a Turkish cemel$)ry. ThiS was not by de- Sume are only lOJured 10 their upper b aoch THB NeGRO AND THE NEEDLB -It IS not A bhnd hand-organtst elFort Hans, meBnwhtle, had reached the Sign. n my part, ()ut from necessity Tbe es a8 the HybrId Perpetuale, whIle otbers generally known, that m the early progress went about the strt'ets of firm Ice, and was on hlB knee~, like II good open space In front of Ihe hOlel has been a hke the Tea and China roses are In general the needle manufacture we are mdebled pale lIttle UaLI2f1lllr. MoraVIan, praymg mcoherelltly In Englbh grave yal d, old broken gravestones standmg entirely destroyed Some of the CJ!Wa va the negro Th. earhes! record of needle estate 10 Wales and Esqulmaux, at every fresh crushmg ID up hem and there on every Side as I picked neUes are, however, exceptions to IhlS rule l!laKI~Ig 10 England, 18 In the year 1545, In hon dollars A of the Ice, he would ejaculate • God I' and my way among them to the paved road where Roses caD eaSIly be diVIded InlO two CISISSEIS,·, of Henry VIII, and It IS supposed Roches!er IS now ·e(]ll8e:ed! when I re commenced my paddhtlg, he re I saw crowds 01 people passing I mmgled for garden culture-tbe fil8~ mchrdmg useful branch of Ind'ustry \Vas Intro-[nllceIBsa:ry paperd commenced hl8 praye1's with the crowd, and sQon penelved that the Ihat bear their fl Iwers on fhe wood of tbe by a Moor from SpaID The hlstortan In a recent sketch ofhl8

I was nearly gone My kmfe haa been lost gravestones and cy press trees covered Ihe ~llrrent year Of thIS class are an tbe ever Stc,we lell~ us that needles were 80ld In Ihat Mr BreckenrIdge cOlilmlenl~ed 10 cutting out the dogs Bnd a sp3re one entire Side of the hdl, and thai the publIc J;,loommg varIeties The kllllDg of the pre Ch nSlde and other busy streets in London and parentless He began tas ... u, '-hleh 1 carned III my lrowsere pocket, was ~treets wound through them In evory dlfec- cedmg year's wood, does not llI1Ure the lD the reign of Queen Marj and were at hid '''rou~rJj .. Th bid d h II J comm IIlBC oo,an " 10 envelOped ID Ihe wet skins that I could lIon. e c I ren were runnlUg an II 00 bloommg of thIS class, 111 many cases, acts time made by a Spanzih Negr.o, who re- study he entered not reach It lowed my extrlcallon at last 109 among the tomb, j aDd there was ID the ss a 80rt of natural that IS more be to discover the secret of hiS cour8e with \be avarls of to a newly.broken team dog, who was stili mutilated stoncs, tbe unprotected gra.ves, and nefiClal than sl!lcood ~IBs8 aU"UV.lJl)' states that tbe art fait to the Sledge, and m struggling, carried the careless crowd, a sense of desolatIon 84ch always produce lost at the n _ne or the runners c\1()ck agawBt tbe edge of Bsl bad nllver bef,lre witnessed A~~myrn" ~lpeoed durmg the p~elefl~!j}Ul a:fter\O~ar,J8 reVIVed by a l:I-ermlln. tlie Ilm:\e All my prevIous attempts to use all my romance In reiallon to tbe beauty of famIly belong all the ,!;Ie: ,ledge ILl B bridge had failed, for It broke Turkish cemeterIes bad been effettually de. fuw Ojb\lr~ like We F,1'IIitiervariBtiies .. abrougb, to ahe much greatl!r 1nJury of the ICif •• troyed; But now the scene was aQ8019le1l ~ ,,~od, of tbe prec8chilg year IS detltr~(j8(I;iNl!ejliil' .t1i~l,e",cl;of

J f. "

ch 8e tbe en.taved In Litera,,, DepartmenlO care 18 tak.en to .".,"iol"~,," •• , to the wallt. and t .. te8 of a Rehglou.and Famtly New'pBf,er,iil the Recorder .halt rank among

I

iQe Sabbatl).-l'hQool r·Ul5Uor,

T • .-- per a":~' .. ~-Jn.,,.,"ja~I' Ona copy •• , ••••..•• Fin cop1e8 to ODe addrelJlL Twelve caple. to ODe addres8 1'WeDty coplea to one addres! T .. enty-elgbl coplea to Onol" .Q'Q,e'''~u'f ••. Fort cop es to OD~ address

.~"rui1UVtlU from time churches

lecoDd and thIrd of the Me.1 ri.~-.heing forlheyear81852-3-4-may be lad \ Duna for the Bub.crlption pryce and tbJ ca,t of blUd,ng 1