fertilizers - Amazon Web Services
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fertilizers - Amazon Web Services
i " • r- B A P T I S T A N D B B M i B O T O B . S E P T . 29,1892. DO YOU USE FERTILIZERS Sunday - School EDUCATIOITAL. Periodicals RICHMOND (H)LLEUE RICHMOND, VA. PERIODICALS AND PRICES. The np«l KOIIHLON I M I C I I I * S^pWniiM-r Wd. iin.l i-iinliiiui.-ii iiinu iDonlliH Kip«'nm H iwr wwioii ot u r«Hlil«iiil Hluai iii. Why, Certainly. umlirui lni! riitruniH- f< oi(. uilll<m, iM.iiril. (ut l lur«s. iii» li««- '-J'' IlKlilH uiid wunliliiK, ulMiiil Wi»> «« it ii"ii Do you take me for rooldPlit -liidi'iil. iilHiul »»«hO Tiiltluii In Uw THEBROADUSCATECHISM. HiIhkjI, II lH>Iti ilunHin Wo mki'ii. fJU, l( «i<l) i>n«. »Ui TIh' wh. iiio i» liiBlmrtlon finlirnw H lIu'. lKtil iHdopenaciil Sihuuli. ol l^Uu. «lreeU. Mwlrrn l^iilfUiMfe*. Kiiitlli<li. MutlioiiittllCB. niy»l.», the Siiiulay st li""i». ami Ui llu' iixnle » lii l«' ChrmlNtry. uiid lMillo«<pl>y. und the I'rul.B IN GETTING YOUR S U N D A Y - S C H O O L SUPPLIES •loniil St'hoiil iif I^W I'nivtiiUiii In »1imi iimdr lor nyMtciimllc liiHlrui-lloii In Ibc Arl ol K» preiwlou /Th® dilferwioe between s progree Thi' courm * ol Inntructlon In the Ainiduinl. 'jflre, Baooeflstul f a m e r ' a n d one who Schools Ifttd lo tim l>e|fr.c» ul l«ttili€>li.r tcrprliitw ol Bclonir. Ilarhflor of Artit. und Muitlrr of /taeveilaatingly dropping back, and INSTRUCTIONS FOR ORDERING. Arts. Ill 111" Hcbool. to Uic lliKrmi i.l ' getUng farther and farther behind, la llft:;bcloro( Lkw Tho loiatltin ol ibe ^.'«llegl^ In tbi' flly <>( that the one fertiliae and oultitat^i. ItU-hnioml, iflvrn U unnurpuwwl udvunlatrew In HAIMS'^:^^ U O A U D . NA^HV...... beoUhfulncHB. and In opportunlll^o ol Improve tnd the other expeota hie crop to take rooiil Inttddllloulo thoB«! aflordixl l.y Ihr < ol J. M. FKOST, CorrMpondlnic Secretary. can of itaelf, and grow without any Ifiro ll»oll Kor (Tuli»lo|furi{iipply altbc boolMtormol Uheffort on hie part to make it grow. 1850. ^ J O H N R A M A G E & S O N . ^ 1 8 9 2 . clly.ora.ldr.Hi. B. PURYEAR, Otler B SuiMjrtor Stock ol (JbalrmuD 6l the l-ltcuiif FOSSIL? Boots, Shoes and Slippers, JUST SO IT IS Bags and Umbrellas. VaoderbiltIjnlvemty. ID Ev en « line of Business.Trunks, Travelling 3 0 5 North College S t r e e t . NAHIIVII.1.K. Cr-Mal. onlen. prompUT .nd ««full. Oiled It is not enough that you have eomething to eell that the people want. U they never find cut t h ^ you have got it you will get left. Your enUrpriaing competitor with the longer pole will take the persimmone—every time. The Best Universal tV-»l.u..on IU.-r.« 'TEZT SESSION OPENS SEPT. 21st. Pull crtMluate ax well •• under Kraduai« cournea. Ten fcllow.hlpi. for collet graduatr. Soven douartmenu- Aca»len>lc, Knulnw-rliiii HIbllcal. I'harmacenllcal. UcnUl. cat KUIIT equlppwl laboratortea nod muiieumn WllJi. WILUAMS. Secratary NATIONAL BAPTIS1 SUNDAY-SCHOOL HELPS.-1892. o^ 8 on M O R B . A T F O L L O W I N G F M O I A P M O U A N T I I I . aiarii CMBAPaeT-aawo fon eAM^Las. NATIONAL BAPTIST LEHWIN L K . V K * . N A I I O S A L D A M S T Picrrae L E S M K CA»D. 11 SO Oc) NTTIOSAL N J I M A T TBACIIKKN A T I O N A L lUrri*! T MIM » " V . ignarterly «) lyiiarlrrl.r i N A rio?<AL L L A M A T A D V A W C B D . (Uaarterly IHO Sr»i>*v Sciioiii lUmar NATIONAL nArrwT IicTEJiiimDiATk. (Isaaed the Ut and Uih ol cai h m..nili. H.) moarterly 2c) TH.^ ar. .be mo., r^Ilabl. S-d.T-School li.'ip. now publUhed for N o r t h «d South. Eaat and W«t. SAMPLES FREE. TtkMSCASlI IN Fertilizer CLuee NATIONAL BAPTIST PUBLISHING B. RAY. President. HOTUNS INSTITUTE "^CUAH. 1-COCKK.Halllsa, »• UBERTY i m u a E t r a CO tnL l-OvfA Address all order, to C. H. RAY. 800 y Judicious King's Commercial College, S. E. Cor. Fifth and Market. Entrance Fifth St.. Louisville. Ky Advertising. Altorti. the beat fadlltle.torthorough '„';»'»!;'«' IMU and DOOK-KJCKFIWO poaitloiu. It has pot fi«ah life into many a •tragglingenterpriae, and made many a poor man rich. Baptigt and Reflector •EHD IN Y O U B ORDERS. • A i h r i i r r AND REriaECToiif it s In thrw> montha. mowrsw^ ^ru^ i-rlnellMil. «th VKAIi •f^Dt nth lllKhColliKtati-Standard Alw t-«mSiVrc"al tourw. Bepamte 1'r. panitor, iiu-am bi-al. KxiK'niw" "W. C»t»l<)«ui', d yi. Furniture, Mattresses, Etc V I ^ r E ^ N N I^I-E^. S A B M . V» NOBTUI SOUTH! BAST I WB8T1 TAKE THE N., C. & St. L. Ry., 2 214 North College Street. H I ' U K S I O E N T . I F YOU ABE GOING DEALERS IN A S RTOANOKKCOM.KOK A D D W ^ H E «r t e l e p h o n e i006. Carson and Newman College.-Co-Educational. Two elegant through tndns daily in each direction. Q ^ ROADWAY E^UIFIIENT 8EUVICK THE UEHT. Buffet, Parlor, and Sleeping Cars, Model Day CoaohoB, With Lavatory and Smoldng Rooms. Aug.TO,1 8 ^ in the New BuilAng. Eight teachers Luxury, Comfort, Convenience Com207 in attMdanof Isst year. ' Good bined. aooommodaiiods for young la^es. RO ai Ifathods of instruoUon modem. The Ineitwrlanood Trwrelcr Noniwl OHrtliods* qMMsUilty. • Meo- K s M d S S r a s r ^ TQBOVOO OAU, tOW aATSS AMD gOIO« oluslv* of morio Md ut, fitnn llOt to m o , TIttw'oww* of atttdy. Osll onorsddivH!VIMI. Tat «»talogttt or otlMr Infovouition, • d d n i s B> A* Hend<n(ilon, Bmi«- taiy. or J* Uonderaom Clu rman of the Fsoultj. IBMW' -.mv. iwwmMJi. ' Worn Croekf Teiin. ' i I TT"na |.H.KNT.Oa HAURY & WHORLEY, in the list of papers in which your adrertiaement appears. That is,prorided you handle straight, olMn, honest goods. The B. & R. tries to protect N its readers against frauds, and wants only clean money. O U R are very iMsonable. Our advertising spaoe limited. Erery ad. is displayed to the best advantage, and oonstan and vigilant supervision exercised to guard against errors. BUCOCM - BitT mm. 1310 OUvc Street, 8t, 1 ^ 8 , Mo. That haa jet been diaoorered is It iB an easy thing to go wrong, but you will make no mistake if you include the T K ! » N . . f ' , t THE BAPTIST, Established 1846. THE BAPTIST REFLECTOR, Established 1871. Consolidated August 14,1880. «-1-Jth i n Publliitaed every Thurnday > V O L . 4. l^o-sr* N A S H V I L L E , TENNESSEE, OCTOllEIl «, I8«a. j Entered at the po«Vofflc« atNMb 1 Title,T«nD.,»aaecond-eluilttsU«r NO. 9. But," I replied, " God has forty-fourth chapter of Isaiah, which God." for the uHtrahip of the holy chains." The ItaUan word ruUu used in this passages she bad never seen till, in expressly forbidden not only the worconnection means nothing less than the providence of God, an evangeli- ship of images, but the bowing down worship, and is just the word we are cal friend gave her a Bible. Till before them, and even the making of using every day to express this idea. then it had never occurred to her them, and having them about us in What then shall we call thisT If it is that the use of images in religious our churchee." " But how can it be not e(|uivalent to the idolatry so se worship was contrary to God's will. wrong when I find it helps me, and verely condemned in God's word, Once convinced, she acted on her con- makes my prayers more realT" To then I know not what name to give it. viction, and a complete change in my sorrow I found that further conIIT JOUN II. EAUKIt, D.D. But, in spite of such irrefutable doctrine and life was the happy re- versation on the subject promised to be disagreeable, and not at all conAHT Buuinier I bappeoed to lie in proof to the contrary, let us even sup- sult. vincing, for it was evident that she Images have proved a curse to the pose, as some will tell you, that the ft little mountain town on a ^reat people use the image as a means of Catholic church, materializing the uxu guided by Iter own feeling* and festival oc(>aaion, the anniveraary of bringing more vividly before their worship, and leading thousands into not by God'a tmrd, a course which the patron Haiut. The image was minds that which the image repre- base idolatry. Could these images cannot be too strongly condemned. Oh! how subtle ace the tempUtions adorned with flhioing rolK»« and floHh-sents. In most cases theee are be removed entirely and gathered of the evil one. How easily he can ing jewels, a crown on its head, and images of saints, and hence the ser- into some groat museum as objects flatter and mielead menl The Saof curiosity, or better still condemned a rosary in its hand. Thus arrayed it viiw simply rises to what might be vior said: "The hour cometh, and to the fate of the brazen serpent, the wan placed upon a kind of bier and called a higher form of idolatry, viz.: now is, when the true worshippers good effects would appear at once, carried with great pomp through the Saint-worship. The Lord is a jealshall worahip the Father in spirit and town and some distance beyond to a ous God, unwilling that anything and the truly sincere would become in truth; for the Father seeketh such small chapel, the people following in stand between us and him, and when far more spiritual in their worship. The to worship him: God is a spirit, and crowds and very many kneeling by such is the case he calls it idolatry words of the Savior to the Samaritan they that worship him, must worship the roadside waiting to cat«h a bless- and severely condemns it. Dare we woman, "Ye worship ye know»not him in spirit and in truth." what," are they not equally applicaing as the image was carried by them. do lessT ble to thousands of Catholics who in When will Roman Catholics underAs the procession passed us, a young Apart from this, however, all who their worship are so bound to forms stand this truth and be petsuaded of Roman who was standing near me, bow down before images of any kind, and placet "Dost thou wish to pray its importanoef When will thqr with an impatient and even troubled whatever be their motive, are disoin a temple?" says Augustine, "Pray learn to turn away from those who look on hie faoe, deliberately turned beying a solemn command of€k)d, n thyself; but first become a temple teach for doctrines the commandhis back upon the whole affair, and who declared amid thunderings and of God." This is a lesson that Bo- ments of men, thus making the comwhen questioned by one of his com- lightnings which made Mount Sinai man Catholics need specially to learn. mandments of God of none effectT panions, with an unmistakable ring quake, " Thou shalt not make unto Without an effort and the constant Here in lUly the people t m often of indignation in his voice be replied: thee any graven image, or any like- study of God's word, the worship of better than the priests, and much " I am sick and tired of this nonsense ness of anything that is in heaven almost any one would become more or more open to the inQoeooe of the and heathenism." These words ei- above, or that is in the earth beneath ess materialized. Who has not some- goepeL Were the priests and higher press the feelings of hundreds and or that is in the water under the times been tempted to suppoje that Catholic digniUries what Uiey ought thousands of Italians with reference the earth: Thou ahalt not bow dotm a material object would help his de- to be, images could soon be removed I to this and a good many other things thyMlf to them, nor serve them; for votionsT Who has not sometimes from the churches and image wmship connected with Romanism in Italy. the Lord thy God am a jealous God, longed for an audible voice from the become a thing of the past. Buthow Unless the people attribute some visiting the iniquity of the fa- Unseen Onet But such temptations slender is the hope of such a reform special virtue to the image itself, why thers upon the children unto should be earnestly resisted, for the when a Pope Uke Leo XIU. wiU give all this ado about imagesT And then the third and fourth generation Lord has told us that we must walk the sanction of his example to this why is it that of several images of the of them that hate me; and shewing by faith and not by sight. When practice, and will even allow himself same saint,one is greatly preferred to mercy unto thousands of them that his disciples were mourning over his to be photographed on his knees bethe other, some being abandoned to love me and keep my command- departure from them the Savior sur- fore an image, an act in direct violathe dust and silence of a little side ments." Alas, alas, what an endless prised them no little by saying: tion of the express command of Ckidl chapel, while others are visited by succession of woee has come upon «Nevertheless I tell you the truth: Rlchmead (Ta.) Oellese. multitudes of people, many of whom mankind through persistent and stub- It is expedient for you that I go V' I ' come long distances for the express bom disobedience of this one com- away." And when Thomas would Richmond College opened Septemmand! Surely God is wiser than purpose of prostrating themselves be not believe till he had seen, the Lord ber 22nd under very enoouraging cirfore the image, just as any heathen man, and he had sufficient reasons rebuked him and pronounced a blesscumstances. One hundred and-two befor* his Idol. Who can witness when he forbade the making of im- ing upon all who believe without seestudents matriculated tha fint day. such scenes unmoved, and all the ages, and bowing down before them< ing, who walk by faith and not by The number is steadily i n e r ^ n g , more because it is c a l l e d Christianity, Experience proves that the use sight. and it will not be long before'It of images in religious worship ends by and believed to bo such by these de A short time ago, in conversation reaches 200. The majority'of the luded devotees, though not by many producing exactly the opposite rewith a cultivated English lady, I was students are here for the first time. of the priests who encourage them in Rultsof those intended. But here, endeavoring to persuade her that it The Young Men's Christian AMOclaas in the Garden of Eden, the father itt was inconsistent and wrong in her to tion of the oollege tendered S r e o ^ If thet« be no such thing as image o f l i e s has called in question the ve go into Oatholio churches and bow tion to the new students, which was worship in the Catholic Church why racity of God himself, »nd has suc- before their altars and images to one of the most enjoyable faaturss of do' wo find such expressions as the ceeded in blinding the minds of the piay. I tried,to make her feel, that the opening. The students are again following:in "this Whose sacred imago is gieat mass of mankind, including as an English woman and Frotestwat In harness, although tbey'h*ve not venerated churcht" "Whenmillions of those who call themselves ' •ve/the worship of one sacred Image Christians. MulUtudes of Roman her example,would be bad. I Mked buckM It on tightly yet. P osas«d, wjal for another very soon CaUioUos do not know thst the sec- her why she did not pray at borne in B. J . WlLIilROBAK, J«. ' ' ' ' ! •» , .Ji-.; mantfestM Itself. And oh," exclaims ond commandment was ever given, bar owA quiet, prlvikt* room. To my J,.the author of, the above words, " I n theauthorlUesof the church being nirpriis •he*dMlated..thiit she pi«- —Let as many aa poaalbjla of f those ImagtnaUon suppress Uiesa'plsoes o Tsry careful to keep it out Ol ^ favMd to pnqr beftn* so •Itw or an who ars to the Stata^ Convsnpnyor, thess refugw of religious en- CstechUm, and other books-likijlr to Imago. But/' I tion^wW maata i t KookvIU* n « t - hw thusiMm, and tell me if it would not fall into the hands of the peopta.f A you Jastlfyyouisslf la thlst laiit not .Wadnaaday, maka it a point, to go a u e u i tho dsath of sll public »ud woman InPistola told m day Miiltor And attMd tba Fastoia' sponiMWUS devoUon." Then that osnverslon was due toith* do not tWnk ao," aba wapondid, ".for Qc^ilrottoo on Tilsaday. Sioli.'S undisguiasd expression prominently of Uis second oomiii«idiMnfr^;llid iXi^Dg wila propoaMl wiU do good. dbiliot wonhip tha imagi, set Idrth In • ohurah in Rome, "Alms it 4 V us', I t O M A N I H M IN I T A L Y . I m a g e s and I m a g e Worship. A Y O U D V Itoman at s Villsge I'rocewtion. Why This Ado Aliont INIACM—HI^DIIIcant KxprenNlouH- Uod'H OplDlon —A Woman of I'luUils—An Knifllsb Lad)'. l<co XIII. L .'iliE i * • ' i ^ ••f I B A P T I S T A N D R B T L B O T O B , OCT. 0, 18»a. B A P T I S T A N D B B F L B C T O H , O C T . «, 18»2. were ready to relegate Moses to the same order. It involves saving faith in Acts ii. JW, if baptism there has realm of fools or of idiots. in Christ following repentance Pot«r any relation to the remission of sins, Well, the class that thus pitied said: " Repent un<l »>e baptised every at all, It is with ref«ron<»J to, not on the stupidity of Moses is not quite one of you in the name of JfimH account of, or for. Act* II. !»»—(No. 1). gone yet. Itapreanntativos of it are Finally, this view is in perfwt acChrist lor the remission of sins," etc. found in well nigh every community. IIV OKO. A. I.O>T<)N, D.U. The phrase. " in the name of ,Jenu» coni with the greot current teachings They stand off aud pity the young Chriiit," involves the idea of saving of the New Tiwtamont upon the docI am (foiiiK to dimniBH thm text iu faith iu Christ following the com- trine of Biilvatlon by grace -justillca- man or young woman who, leaving tbfl light of the Kreat revival on tbe mauil to " repent." This is the mean tion by faith. " lieing justified by the pleasures of the world, consecrate d a j o f PenttK-oati anil 1 waul to show ing of the (jre«*k which reads thus: his bloo<l," Hays Paul, "weHhalllH« a warm young heart and an active, that it is in |>erfM-t rouforiMity with " MrlauovHalf, kai haptinihvtn he saveil from wrath by liim."-Roin. v. thoughtful brain to the service of the Hpiritiial theory of the New Tes- kanl»K hnnmn rpi to omnimti .h-HU l». "Therefore, being juRti(l»Hl by Christ. "Wo have no objection," tainent ao held by Baptiiila. I am ChrtKloii," etc. The true reodering faith," ho says again, " we have iwiice they say, "to n young man or young going to show, at the Rame time, that is this: " Repent and be baptised with God through our Lonl Josus woman joining the church. But, it is abiiolutely devoid of a single rit- every one of you, trusting iu, or rest- Christ."—Rom. v. I. The ground of then, to leave the fountains of worldualistii* element, as held by the " bap ing upou. the name of Jesus Christ pardon, remission, justification, is th« ly pleasure, to <]uit the dance, the tinmal remisiiion " theory. Moreover, for the rtMuission of sins " " > ii> aphbloo<lof Christ; the medium through theater and the card party is sheer in another article I am going to dem- miu haiuaition." /•-'/•i with the da which we reach these blessings of sal nonsense. It is the outcome of a Pharisaic spirit. It is religious ascet onstrate that the "gift of the Holy live, here, implies trust in, or resting vat ion iH faith, involving re))entanco. i(Msm. Take religion and the worltl Spirit " has nothing to do with regen- upon, as a basis; and hence >711 ti>" By griu'o are ye saved through too—religion on one shoulder and the eration, nor wa.<i it even beatoweti ni <>»i(>»i(i/i Jfnu Chrintim means that faith; and that not of yourselves: it world on the other." And that is baptism, but always either after or the name of Jesus Christ, that is, is the gift of Got!; not of imrku lost just the spot whore that sort of r»»before baptism, in the days of the Jesus Christ himself, is the basis up any iiian should Iroast." —Khp. ii. H. ligion is found, and where it sits. It apostles, and was solely characteris- on which faith rest* the soul for re In any mirnm sense justification by is on the ulumUter—A shoulder religtic of that day. mission of sins, or salvation. See works of any kind is impossible, ac- ion. It has never touched the heart. First, notice that the pe«iple, under Robinson's N. T. Greek Lexicon on iHjrtling to Paul. According to James, th® preaching of Peter on the day of epi to oiiomatt, as usetl in Acta ii. ."W, in the demonstrative sense, we are Now. Moses would have said—prob Pentecoet, were convicted of their sin also Matt, xviii. 4 and other places. justified by works.—Jas. ii. 24. Hence ably did say - t o these carpingcTitics: of unbelief towards Christ, so much Also Thayer's Greek Lexicon on epi in the eonse of proof, or demonstra " I can't stay with you and go with so that they cried oui: " Brethren, with the dative ak useil in A<'ts ii. 3S. tion, or declaration of the fact of sal these Israelites, too. I must choose. what shall we d o t " This was the vation, we are justified by confession, To do both is impossible." Bute<|ually According to this construction both baptism or gooil works, which follow is it impossible for any one to-<lay to work of the Holy Spirit, promis«<l in John xvi. H 11; and accomplished un- repentance and baptism depend upon faith, and which result from regener- love the pleasures of sin and those of religion at the same time. This is der the preaching of Peter who, iu an- faith in Christ repentance l>efore ate life and grace iu the soul. not Pharisaism. It is not old-fogy ism; other sense, was filled with the Holy and baptism after faith in Christ; and Truly does the Apostle Paul (Roin. the declaration of (ioii'ii mtrd, Spir'.t, the comforter who was prom- remission of sins is specially the end iii. 2r> 28) conclude this whole argu i7 ised for the purpose, John vii. 3!); or object of faith in the Lord Jesus meut: " Being justified freely by his '• Ye cannot serve God and mammon;" xiv. 16-26; XV. 26. This conviction Christ. A repentance that does not grace through the reilemption that is it is the emphatic utterance of Him led to a godly sorrow for their sin,, look to faith in Christ, or which does in Christ Jeeus: whom God hath set who is the source and Lonl of truth. under a belief of the truth as Peter "ot worthless; forth to be a propitiation through If any man love the world, thv love preached it. They cried out in their and it is ailmitted by all that bap faith in hm ItUxni to declare his right- of the Father is not in him," is the anguish and their agony, as inquirers tism must follow faith aud is depend- eousness for the remission of sins that Holy Spirits declaration by one of the and mourners, seeking to know the ent upon it for administration. " He are past," * * * "Therefore we inspired penmen. We may talk all way of life more perfectly, since Pe- that believeth and is baptised shall conclude that a man is justified by we will, in the modem slip-shod ter had only preached Jesus tbe ful be saved."- Mark xvi. 16. There can faith without the deeds of the law." fashion, of the imiiomibility of totting 611ment of Old Testament prophecy be no baptism until faith comes be- "Therefore," he says again (Rom. iv. old Iwad* on young alumldera. That mthout telling these people what to fore it; and if repentance and faith li'i), " it is of faith, that it might be is very cheap and flimsy talk. The do, under the plan of salvation by are the means of pardon and justifi- by grace," etc. Lot any man read religion of Christ does not contemgrace. Here, so far, was a belief of cation (Acts iii. 19; Rom. v. 1), then liom. iii., iv., v., vi., together, and he plate attempting such impossible the truth, a conviction for sin, and a baptism, in Acta ii. 38, is and must be cannot escape the conclusion of Paul's physical feat. It has, indeed, comgodly sorrow that cried out mourn- merely symbolical and declarative of solid and i>onnected argument that paratively little to do with the head. the fatrt, as in Acts xii. 16, Rom. vi. the blood, or the righteousness, of Its throne is in the heart. While it fully and inquiringly, what to do. Notice secondly, that Peter told , f> Acta ii. 38 is in perfect line Christ is the sole ground of remission, puts no new or young head on the them to "repent." RepenUnce here 1 the Scripturea which teach or justification; that faith alone unites shoulders, it does take out the old, is exactly in the order of things. It I salvation by grace and justification the soul to Christ and reaches the the Htony heart, and gives a new heart heart of fltuth. It bends and follows godly sorrow; "for godly through faith alone in the Lonl Jeeus blood; and that baptism is the " like moulds the old will into perfect conChristrepentance logically precednejm," or symlwl, which externally desorrow worketh repentance to salvaformity to Christ's will. It is not a ing and baptism folbwing Taith and clares the fact. tion not to be repenl«d of."—2 Cor. reconfttruction of eharaeler—it is a rii 10. Repentance is the firat saving justification. regeneration of life—n renewal of exercise of the mind toward an ofit is impossible for baptism and Momw« Cboirc. spirit Christianity il not simply confended Ood; and though preceded blood both to wash away sin in the There were a great many, no doilbt, structive. It is more. Infidelity and by 8 belief of the truth, by conviction mme serine. Ananias said to Saul: irreligion are destructive. Christianity and godly sorrow for sin, it always "Arise and l>e baptised, and wash in the circle of Moses' acquaintance, in both </Mtructive and constructive. prMwdeii saving faith or trust in away thy sina."—Acts xxii. 16. John who said: Well, Moses may bo a very It destroys the old man; it unplants Christ. Thia is the order Paul estab- nays: "The bloo<l of Jesus Christ hia well-meaning man, but he is a sheer the germinal seeds of tbe new, then lishes—Acts XX. 21—when he says: Son cleanseth us from all sin."—1 simpleton. "A bird in the hand is develops the life. It builds not down"Tefltifying both to the Jews and John i. 7. The blood of Christ was worth two in the bush." Why, here ward. It builds on the Rock and also the Greeks, repentance toward shed for the remission of sins.—Matt, is the crown, glittering with the jew from the Rock toward tbe skies. It God and faith toward our Lord Jesus xxvi. 26. John preached " the bap- els of the East, within his grasp destroys not the wills, tbe loves and Christ." So Jeeus preached (Mark tism of repentance for the remission Here is the throne of the Pharaohs, tbe ambitions of our natures, but L 15:) " Tbe time is fulfilled, and the of sins."-Luke iii. 3. Now, in both proud as any on which man over sat, controls them, directs them by sukingdom of God is at hand; repent theee sets of Scripture, it is declared that invited him to honor and to pernatural, by spiritual power. It ye and believe the gospel." Neither that two different things do the same power. Hero was the wealth of a cleanses the fountain and thus makes conviction, nor godly aorrow alone thing at the same time. Blood and magnificent kingdom that he could the stream pure. It does not tack oonatituta repentance. They only water both wash away sin—blood and have brought to his foot. Here wore the new cloth of extemallsm to the work repentance; and repentance is water both remit sin. It is logically the splendors of royalty, the glitter jrment" of the old nature—the tHat change of mind and purpose, absurd to say that both blood and of the court and the homage of a na- whole garment is new. It does not tiAnr wina" put 41IA the "new wine" nf of the kingdom from BID to God, which puta tbe water do the same thing in the same tion all at bis command, for be was M..* beart in a suitable state to accept sense at the same time. Therefore, the son of Pharaoh's daughter, heir Into the "old bottles" of an unrenewed nature. It furnishes new bottles into Christ, by trusting him as a RecTeem- we must conclude that blood and to the throne of Egypt; yet he re- which the "new wine" is poured. er. So John the Baptist, Cbriat, and water do the same thing in different jects it all. Strange man I And with And that is Just what Jesus means tb« disciples preached everywhere: senses. Blood actually cleanses us a shrug of tbe shoulders they said: when he says: " Except a man | » "Repent yi, for tbe kingdom of from sin; water symboUcally cleanses "Very good this man Moses may be; bom of water and of the spirit he heaven is at hand "—always involving us from sin. Water figuratively de- but he is very peculiar. Why does cannot see the kingdom of God. tb9 heart iscleansed, then grace the dootrioe of faith in the Lord Je- claree what blood Uterally doee. Wa- he not accept of the throne, with the First, implanted—the inner temple swept m s Christ as the end of salvation. ter-clnanslng Is the sign of the blood- wealth and honor that it brings, and of its Idols, then Christ enthroneil So John tbe Baptist preached a re- cleansing, Uiethibg slgoified. Wher- hold on to bis religion too, if he must within. But just at the threshhold I pentance which Involred a faith in ever baptism has any relation to the do that wayt But the idea of having pause, for I see the editor frown, and Jesos Christ that was to come.—Acts remission of sins, therefore, It must a conscience that wiU get in hla way f feel sure he is about to say "Stop." be with rt^tnnoe to, not for, or, on ao- when Buoh honor, wealth and earthly Bo for the presentJ.IC.stra. BtraRHOLDKR. dount qft the remiaiioii of aina. Bo glory are involxedr And thus'.they Elizabethtown* Ky. Bo Aota U. 88 must con form (o the ^ ^ I IVTrAu, '^Ji: * 3 the preitise period when Itoman Christ and his apostles did the same Scriptural order, in their denominaCatholic corruption began. They crept thing. We follow in thy footsteps. tional work, as the logic of their posiin very slyly one by one, and often And besides, as we iook over the his- tion demandsT Are there not tendengrew out of natural, if not praise- tory of the church we find that where- cies to distrust and abandon the worthy impulses, but with this came over and whenever Baptistfl hove primitive church and its polity TAre The llaptlNlH nuti thp lilltlf. the widespread ruin which the Romish failed of doing this, the most serious we not taken up too much with mere I'l'lir follnwlliu l u l i l r i - H M \v:iH i l i > l i \ i - r i i l l i y Hieranthy has brought u|X>ii the evils have come to the cause of God. toiiii>orary exp^ionts without caring III' A K. IlK-kliiNoii, filhoi ••r II human family. II was all wrapped AN II.UJIiTIIATION FBOM TUB OOHIIKN. much whether they conform to Scripli)r|ii||H IllTllill." Ill I III' ('KIlllMlllilll ture principle and proceptT While IIH'l-llllff tlf lIlK I IlitlllUl AHNIII'ill up in the false theory with which it Of the truth of what I am naying, llnii. IimIiI III I'liiiiily I.Imi- llii|>tiHl Htarteil, that the church hail the right this old Goshen Assoiuation, whoso our theory, thot baptism and churchChiircli. I'liillioi iif ('iMiiily. N'li'^liiia | to change aud modify the onlinnnc4M momlwrship are only for the regenCentennial we are now celebrating, erated, is all right, is not our practice •.KATKNINtt Till! I.IHI-. and teachings of the word of God. offords many illustrations. We stand I do not say that all goo<l |>eople And what lietter thing can we now to-day upon the very soil over which of hurrying mossoH of those who afwill in the coming ngns, leave their hope from Pedobaptist denominations the Craigs and Wallet and Wobl)er terwards prove to not bo regenerated, ras|MN'tive denominations and come except as wa inIIuence themf If they and many more were hurried to through the forms of church memberto us and wear the Baptist name. have a right to sulwtitute sprinkling gloomy dungeons, and in almost every ship, all wrongT Every such addition That may never ojme to pass, but a for baptism, and infants for penitent instance the men who were foremost rem the world lowers the standard thing almost as desirable will, I doubt believers, and hierarchies for the New in those diabolical persecutions were of piety just as the placing of a block not, take place. Whatever is Scrip- Testament form of church govern- the " I'arinh parmna." Often when of ice in this room would lower the tural iu our Umchings will, in Gotl's ment, they have the right to make the hearts of the sheriffs, and other temperature. When loadetl down with gooil time, lie appropriated by others other sweeping changes until the civil ollicers were moved with pity at unconverted material there is nothing and Iw iniwrporatod into their sys- blessed lK)ok itself is swopt away. the beautiful martyr spirit with which for a Baptist Church to do but to die, tems. Something like this has been When once you iMtgin to deviate from those old Baptist preachers went to and the sooner it dies the better. going on for generations, and the the strict teachings of the inspired jail and lingered there half starved, Others may and do grow without good work has by no means ceased. word, who can tell what the end will the Parish preachers would bo clamor- spiritual power. Their ecclesiastical Doctrines for which, in by gone ages, 1)0 T How often even good people de- ing yet for other and severer punish- machinery is so elaborate and so well Baptists endured stri|>e8 and im ceive themselves or are deceived by ment, and whyT Vou know why. It adjusted that it will run about as prinonment and death have become others with such detilarations as those: was because for long years Podobap well without vital godliness as with the possession of the Christian world. " It does not matter so you are sin- tism had enjoyed undisputed sway in it That is, so far as a p p ^ n t growth They are not only held by others now, cere," or that one thing is more evi- all the counties covered by this Go- and worldly influence are concorned. but believed so firmly that the bare dent than something else—or that shen Association, and it had worked Rome and State churches everywhere suggestion that there over was a time the strict observance of a Scriptural out the same results here that it has are proving the same thing as are when they did not hold to those truths command is not essential to salvation wrought everywhere else under the other sects which have virtually set is repelled with more or less of feel- and the like. And yet who would ap- same conditions. Almost the entire aside the Bible. Again, are Baptists who owe their ing. This proccss will go on in the ply the same kind of reasoning to population had been brought into the (wming yearn, until the happy day other thingsT We know well enough church-brought in without the least existence to the Bible and who are shall dawn, when there will bo no that sincerity in the man who takes regard to what the Bible teaches shorn of their power when it loses its Baptist jietfulior views, since such the wrong medicine does not save about such great matters. The church authority, any more reverent in their views will belong equally to all God's him from its effects, and no loving and the world had come to be one, interpretation of the sacred Word dear people. child will be found obeying his and New Testament religion had than others, or any more earnest in studying its truths and in imparting parents simply from the fear of being disappeared from the land. And yet there may be then as now them in the home and in the school, disinherited. many denominational names. It is Then it was that Ood sent these and to all over whom their influence not the name Baptist for which we brove Baptists, who rejoiced ro suffer reachesT Lewis Craig, and others of A UOPEFCL INDICATION. are contending (that name, you know, One of the most encouraging indi- with their Lord, Much of the good vour old Goshen Baptist brethren, was given us by our enemies), but for [;aUons of the progress of Baptist prin- that our Pedobaptist brethren are now were once arrested by the Sheriff of the things for which that name stands, ciples is to be found in the fact that doing is duo largely to the faithfu' Spotsylvania County, and when they and if others accept our doctrines we our adversaries substantially concede and persistent protest which we make came before the court the Prosecuting will not quarrel \vith them as to the almost all that we claim, only they to the evils inherent in their respect- Attorney said: " Moy it please your think that we err in holding too firm- ive systems. We hold them back from worahip, these men cannot meet a name. In politics, if a man votes as you ly to the strict letter of God's word, the logical results of their teachings. man upon the road, but they must do, you do not care very much whether and that we make it too much a mat- We keep their errors from running to ram a text of Scripture down his he wears your party name or not. It ter of conscience to follow it literally seed, and thus save them from the throat." That's the way tbe men who is the vote you want. The influence and fully. Dr. Lyman Beecher wrote untold calamities which always and laid the foundations of this Associahe may exert over others with whom, to his son, Ekiward, whose conscience everywhere follow where such views tion felt about tbe Bible. But I fear for the time being, he is associated, seemed to have been a little troubled are not thus antagonized. If to day that not many of their descendants may be more potential than if ho were as to baptism, saying: " I have reason Baptists were to abandon the field lay themselves liable to tbe charge to come right over and weor the name to believe that through excm of con- and give up the struggle, in a gen- brought against Lewis Craig and his of the party with which he casts his science many a man has been worried eration or two Pedobaptists would colaborers. have brought into the churob every vote. He may do the l»etter " mis till he became a Baptist." Are Baptists more than others exchild in the land, and onoe in, there Some time since a tired Baptist sionary work," as the politicians somepressing in their Kves the principles times designate'such services, by preacher went off on a steamlmat they would remain, and soon the of tbe Bible? Are they more loyal lingering nominally at leant with his seeking rest and refreshment for body church and the State would be as friends of righteousness, or sturdier and mind. He met among the pas- much one here, in America, as they foes of evilT Do the sweet bumaniUes old associates. And thus, while Baptists would of sengers an old Pedobaptist friend who are to-day in other lands where Bap- and charities of religion, of-Bible ret;ourse greatly prefer that all who was constantly worrying the tired tist principles are unknown—as much ligion, flourish more among Baptists take their doctrine should also take preacher by attempts to draw him one as they were when tbe pioneers than elsewheref their name, and stand shoulder to into discussing the baptismal ques- of this Association, sentenced to close As Baptists grow in numbers, in shoulder with them, bearing the heat tion, but presently the Baptist turned confinement, passed through the wealth, in social power, are they not and burden of the day, still they must upon him and with no little emphasis streets of Fredericksburg on their iu greater danger of forgetting the look with profound gratitude upon asked: " If this very moment it were way to jail singing: secret of their strength t Alas for us the great and ever growing multi- revealed to you from heaven that you "Itronil Is the niml that limdH tn <U>ntli, that so often our children turn away tudes, in other communions, who could never enter there without Scrip- Anil tlioUHniiils wiilk t<)B«lhw llimo; from the old faith, carrying all the really are Baptists In everything ex ture baptism, what would you doT" But wlwhrni hIiows a iiarniw pnlh, treasures won for them by their Bapcept the name. They believe as wo The Pedobaptist brother paused a Willi lioru and tlicfe a trnvulur." tist fathers to others, where they may A FEW INQUIRIBll. do as to immersion being the only moment and then replied: " I would be used with the most telling effect A few inquiries suggested by tbe against us. With the increase of culBible baptism. They reject as we do beg the captain to haul in the boat infant baytism, and hold as we do that you might immerse me here and subject in hand, may fitly close this ture and wealth, it we are wise, we that no one has a right to the or- now." Of course that carried the whole address. shall strive more than ever for the Are Baptists doing their pari; in humble zeal and quenchless fervor dinances unless he comes as a penitent point and made furiJier discussion of believer, and they are holding too, the subject unnecessary. There are printing and circulating the BlbleT and abundant labors which characterwith more or loss tenacity other things mulUtudes like him in PedcbapUit Fraely we have received, freely we ixed our Baptist fathers. which the world calls " Baptist pecul- denominations who cannot rid them- should give. The Bible has done MID or wisa LaAOcas, iarities," as it once c o u n t y us heretici •elvea of the oonvlcUon that the b»]»- everything for the Baptists, and yet If what hM been'olaimed In this tiim of the BapUita ii the bapUim of It n M y b e a queition whether others, a d d f w ht true, the BapUsta ought to and aohismatica forourpwuUarvtewB who beliavci in oourts and ooundls h* the most wide-awake, pushing, enoil to raUgioua liberty. M. vBaptlitiatud for'the ordluinoM imd atandiurdidf oneeortandanother, tM^ritlngpMplo ln'Ue^ world. W« «BJK»T AMD monOB. i ia they w m d^Uvwad, and attiii^ tt> ilotig iHth^ th« , 8ori|iturea, ought to prepare foi'the'^gMt multlW h l t e ^ g o o ^ y i o M 'ron^ thMii tio mow Importance te ta o o t t t H p i ^ tta In giving tbe gMpd tttdM that at« sure to flow into our theoiy, . A M d w l y i t t t t a W a f c t o , > ^ 'SippiamilSiwittlQUri^^ flowiittii » w » t h » i y i u h M h f m 11 weUidd tlift no dtt» OUR PULPIT. CONTRIBUTIONS. & ' " » B A P T I S T A N D B E V I i B O T O B , O C T . 6, 1892. very amin aftar we arrived and was Tuesday's exorcises in next week'B .liHCUHsecl by Bro. Kelly, and the »"endH did not forget my temporal agent for the Homo followe«l with a ,vant«. but me a KOo<» rem.u.er ' " ' C n e a s e e has twelve hero already, talk and collection of fSS.lH). - fttlou for my laborH. beaides Bro. Barrett, who was from On Sunday morning the subject of In couelusion, 1 want to say- that. Tennessee last year, but registera From Davlun. the Sunday-achoola was diMuaaetl by Dayton is one of the moat important from Kentucky this session. several s|H»akers. Thia was followed Our meeting at this place closed Belds to the Baptista in Teqnessee. Bro. Metlaris and Bro. Burns are by, a sermon and iHjllectiou tor State last uight. There were fifteen or There are some f..fA)0 people living in the newest aciiuisitions to our raiika. Missions amounting to |8.8r>. more profeaaions and thirteen or Dayton, while there are not more VV. (). c . Ileturuing at night to McMlnnville, fourteen aciwaaions; to the churfti. than rrfX) or tiOO |)eople belonging to ltockwu«Ml. 1 preached and took a colletaion for with more to follow. The visible re- the different churches. A great numthe Orphanage amounting to $l».tM). sult was not what we deairett, but the ber of the unconvertetl people must JuHt ihree years ago ih.^ nu'iuber Lord will bleaa and othen. will yet be reached by the Baptists if reachwl Hbip of the church in this lowu uum From this platw I hurried on to South believe in Christ through his preached at all. Dur State Board will be well bered no m o r e than thirty live. These |»ittsburg and worshipped with Bro. wonl. The other results of the meet paid for the money Hjjent here. Let womhippeil in a little chapel with a Oupton and his fieople two nights. The interest in the congregation was ing were great and satisfying. The ftll the Baptists of Teuuei-Hi-e pray seating capacity of about one hun rather remarkable, there being no church was as greatly revived as 1 for Pastor Brewer in his work at Day dred and fifty, owned by the Uoaue special effort made to produce re ever saw. They had grown cold and I ton ^ M^:l.*«l^• Iron Company. They had preaching vival. still there were aonie fourteen indifTerent and 1 found Pastor Brew Dayton, Teiin.. Sept. i i u d . but once a mouth, Sunday-school in a s k i n g prayer the first evening and er mourning over this state of affairs the afternoon and no prayer-meeting about twenty on the last evening, with Nfoiluary Note*. when I went to Dayton, and when 1 at all. It was considered by some alleft he was fejoicmg over the absence one conveniion. October Ist opem»d another session most a disgrace to attend their «er of this lukewarmness. The moet.ng The " Home " was rememberetl with , vices, much more so to be one of their did not only revive the church, but of the Seminary. We are here, already o f:i".00 contribution. The outlook dia noi oniy ^ I^ ^ ^ hu„dre<l strong, and nn-ruits ; bumber. Under ,ider Ihe Ihe blessing blessing of oi God brethren and sisters of other denomi (or our people is good everywhere 1 brethren and ^ ^he number with each incoming affairs and this feeling h a , E gone. T . T . TI.««.M.N. uationsprofeaaed that t^ej had matricu « ..^ly among unprejudiced and great benefita from the meeun^^^^^^^ " e d at the close of the first day than people, have gloriously W I'. T. R. t'onrentlon. meeting made a profound .^rreaponding time of last passed away. The Eleventh Annual Convention We are now in the most commodi ous and beautiful churt^h building of the W . C. T. I ., will be held iu town. Preaching every Sunday. at Edgefield Baptist Church, corner of A fine S u n d a y s^-hool and glorious I'ifth and Fatherland Streets. O t o b e r had a hard Ume from the ^ n m n ^ . d j l l at^he Walnut Str.«t Church, prayer-meetingH. A church member- 11th. I2th and VMh. Bhip of one hundred and four, includ Mrs. M. M. Snell of Columbus. ,ng a larger per cent, of the leading Miss., will be present during the oon citizens than any other church in the venUon. and will give Bible readings town. This advancement is mainly each day and an address October 12lb io the higheat esteem U,ve and ^ ' g ^ ^ r r e a d the Seminary Articles due to the work of the State Mission at 7::«) p. m. epect by the people of tfarorthodoxy of which even Board, and our people are showing Mrs. Lide Merriwethwer of Mem .. * III. their appreciation by doing their ut phis, who has been State president moat to assist that Board in ita work. for eight years, will preside. Mrs. We have just closed what is said by Merriwether is weU known through many to be one of the moat success out this State for her ardent and en tul series of meetings ever held in thusiastic work for prohibition. She this community. There were twenty will give her annual address on »».« six professions and thirty one addi l l t h , a t 7 : : » P - m.. and on the night tions; twenty-seven by baptism, one of the l.Uh one of her famous lec nigni,aiiu ^^^^ ^ ^^ viaiting brethren. At Walnut by enrollment, two by restoration and tures. _ tog aU available space was filled witn one by letter. Four of those received The Woman's (Christian Temper Street, Dr. H. H. Harris, of Richmond. chairB and the gallery also was filled, by baptism were from the Methodista. ance Union, or the White R i b ^ n while many stood up and jet others President of the Foreign Mission The church was greatly revived and movement, as it is familiarly called, Board, read a paper on " T h e Uesulti. could not find standing room and strengthened. The Sunday school and has steadily broadened until it now congregations are large and enthusi- includes every thing that women may astic. Financial obligations are l ^ do, with hands united and f a c ^ " P churches. 2. Salvation of at least a ing met with credit to our people and lifted for the imprint of the Spinl. more persona by Bro. Brewer. It was million souls, with a great change .atisfaction to the pastor. At this rate The temperance movement is now so an impreaaive scene. A remarkable of sentiment toward Chriatianity. 3. of development. Rockwood Church closely allied with all reform, that we incident occurred at the close of the Translation of the Scriptures into 160 will, within the course of another cannot work for one without co operbaptUm. It was this: Just as Bro. languages. 4. L a y i n g the foundation year, be nearly or quite self-support- ating with all. Brewer was starting out of the baping, and join hands with her aisters for future work. We meet once a fear in convention tiatary a man roae up in the congre At the cloae of Dr: Harris' addreaa in helping to spread the goapel. Un- to recount the progreaa of our work gaUon and aUrted toward the pool, ' Dr F. M. Ellis, of Baltimore, preached to Him who alone la worthy be all the and the bleaslnga which God has puahing people aside that stood in J- D. Wincikiteb. a strong aermon on "The Moral Baaia praise. showered upon hi- hand-maidens hi* way, and said: "Say, Mister, I of Miasiona." This meeting waa prewhom he haa choaen to work in this, want that baptism!" And so Bro. Union AMoclatlon NotM. atded over by the venerable Dr. Ryhia appointed way, and to plan for Brewer inatructed me to take hia oonland,and Dr. Eaton delivered the adthe future. W e aeek to be fel ow Reaching McMinn?ille I found Bro. feaaion, which I did, and the church dreaa of welcome. workera with the L a m b that waa alaln. A. D. PhillipB ready with cheerful received him aa a candidate for bapI n the afternoon Dr. B. H . H a m a , of greeting, notwithatendlng the fact and we call upon every woman to join tiam and I led him down into the Georgia, diacuaaed the condition of that hla health ia very poor. Heaeema ua in this work, for the coming of the pool, where Bro. Brewer buried him the heathen without the goapel. At quite hopeful of hia field of labor, klngdonl of our Lord in the cuatoms with Chriat in baptism. He waa a night Bro. Powell, Mexico, spoke of but thlnka ho la near the end of hia of all aoclety of all the worid. Catholic and did not come to church " Papal Fields." Bro. Cova, of Cuba, pilgrimage. A large attendance la hoped for at expecUng to be baptlaed, but the who waa to have aiwkon ahw, ia dethe convention and the public la cor Brethren Faulkner and Crain joined acene made auch an Impreaaion upon tained at quarantine. dlally invited. me for the Aaaoclation meeting at him that he felt constrained to follow By order of the East Naahvllle On Sunday at 4 :®) a large audi- Laurel Creek Church. W e found the bla Lord In thla command. He had ence attended the dedication of the body organized and at work, with Woman'a Chriatian Temperance Un bern Iniereated about bla aoul'a aal Mas. J . W . S w t L . , Pres. Kentucky Baptist Orphans' Home. Bro. Cunningham ID the Moderator's on. vation during the meeting and ^ Mns. J . D. AttEN, Cor. Sec. Dr. J . B. Marvin, Preaident of the chair and Bro. W . B. Garner Clerk. trusted In Chriat for aalvatlon. Hla Board, presided, and Dni. Warder, The order of bualneea waa well arexperience waa a touching one, while - T h e new Executive Board of the Dargan and Broadus, of LouiavlUe, ranged and the report* were generally hla baptlam made a pfofound ImOcoee Aaaoclation is called t« meet and Dr. Spauldlng, of Atlanta, took very good. The dlacuaalon of theaub preaaloa upon the people. It w w part In theexerclaea. W e listened and jecte waa good, IndloaUng progrew with Corinth Church, near McDonald the beat aermon on baptlam that 1 ^^ thought conatantly of our own Infant Thla body of Baptlata ia in the midat Station, on the E. T., V. & NEWS NOTES. CORRESPONDENCL I i I 1 t'; •Ter he^rd. S o m e w h o h a d Jong b w n utiafled with aprinkllng or pouring wera oonttnoed that their baptlam (!) Orphana' Home. Bro. rowftU WM with ua at break- faat Sunday morning aud talked on a call to the Foreign Mlaalon work. ^ I m a d e nuiny BcquBlnUnoea at D a y We hate no claiwea to-day (Montoo, M d I truat aa many frlenda. I h e day) on account of the Centennial people t w « t « l m® royaUy. I mMUnga. Bro.W.J.McGlothln wlU their unbounded with giMt d«ltghi. The bwthwn w>d give Boma account of Monday and wwapurioua. i » • m of anti-miaalon and separate organlzatlona, but with the apirlt evinced by Ruoh .men aa Moore, Parker, White, Kelly, Smith, Bella, Cunningham, Garner andothew, we may expect a forward movement.' The Orphaoa^ Hom« report came Friday before the fifth Sabbath In October. Let all the membew take M due notice and govern ^ oordingly. A jpermanent organiationia to bo effected. . i B. F. BAaTi.M. St. EUno, Tenn. . ' j J NASMVILLIS. Pastor W . C. Golden baptisecl two. Received one for baptism aud one by letter. Had 207 in Sunday-school. During last week he aided iu a fine meeting at Now Bethel. Pastor Ellis had a good day. The Centennial collection was IIH.'IH. He continues the meeting this week. Dr. Lofton had the IwHit dity in the history of his church; ;«»r> in Sundaym^hool. Centennial «!olliHaioii fl70. |{o(!eiv«Ml one by lottor and one for baptism. Pastor Strother had very large cou gregations and good interest. Dr. .1. M. Frost preached at the First Church. Hacl good congregations. Dr. Smith baptisecl one \Vo<l uesdny uight and had a tender meet Bro. Anderson reported a fine meetr iug at Millington. lieing Centennial Day, he took a mission collection amounting to S30. The meeting at Frayser's is doing finely. There have been a number of additions and the interest is great. Pastor Anderson is much encouraged at the outlook of this new church. 6 are being saved andruahing right Into the Baptist churchea. The point of the n e ^ l e of the aeaman'a compasa never reata, but quivere and ahakea till it restM right against the North pole. So It aeema that the converta never rest until they get into the BapR . C . BBOWN. Rankin's De|X)t, Tenn., Sept. 2i>th. tist Church. So be it. I labored laat week with Bro. McNatt at Mulberry, 1 commenced a meeting with the Lincoln Co. This ia a atrong church church at Bethel the third Saturday in a fine section of country. There in August, and on Sunday evening are four or five mombera in thla church Bro. S. F. Paine came into the meet- worth $12fi,000. They are doing well, ing and we continued until the next but can do better. With the wealth and F"riday week, during which time there in lluence they have they muat take wqj;o nineteen professions, thirteen that country for Christ. We had the accessions to the church by baptism, best meeting here they have had for one by letter and three by experience. years. There were twelve conversions One of those baptised was a Presby- and eleven additions up to the time I terian and one a Methodist. The left, and the meeting goea on. I church was much revived and encour- shall ever hold this church In high aged in the work of the Lord, for esteem. 1 am now at Antloch. Our which I feel to thank God. This year protracted meeting commenced toI have baptised twenty-six happy day. We have had large congregaconverts into this church. I have tions and three additions by experiserved the church as pastor for thir- ence and baptism. W e are expecting teen years in succession, and last Sat- a great meeting. G. A. OOLE. urday the church called me indefiMilton, Tenn. nitely to serve them until one or the JackMD Items. other of us is dissatisfied. church for ten years, ao you see what a mountain boy can do when asaiated by the Lord. This was Bro. Joseph Manning's old church, where he preached for years. We now numl>er about 200. To God be all the praise. ClIATTANIHMlA. First Church. - Pastor preoche<l morning and night. Two by letter, two baptisecl and three profedsions. Second.- Preaching by'.the pastor. Regular communion, the church well represented. ()ne by let.t«r. Central -1. W. Bruner of Sweet water preached in Ihe morn ing and Bro. Chaiincey presch«*l at night. R4>gular comiiiiinion services. llill ('ity ProtrB<'ted services com niencecl. The iiidic«tionH jioint to a «oo<l meeting. Pastor Bartles is doI'astor W. Y Quisenlierry rejiort* a ing the preaching. One joined by gracious meeting at Gaclsden, Ala. statement. He had pattked houses. The morn East Chattanooga. - This church un iug service was given to the t-<»nten iler the ieaclership of their pastor, S. nial. ColWtion IRIOHI. There were :J. Blair, is in fine condition. They AH) in the Sunday-school the larg I are still gathering from a most gloriest in the history of the chun-h. The ous meeting, ending in, todnte. twen meetings continue this week. ty additions, thirteen of them rePastor C. S. Gardner had a goo<l, jceived by baptism, the balance by <|uiet day. letter. There yet remains a deep Pastor Van Ness reports fine morn- interest upon the part of the church ing wugregation and Centennial at and i>oople. The ()coe« Association night. Collection alwut fTiO. has just closed, holding its meeting Pastor Price report* a good day at with this church, and was nobly en Mill Creek. Collection foi" Centen- tertained by the churcli and people. nial fund about f<>r»; ministerial wluSt. Elmo.—J. H. Brjant preached cation. f 10. Chihlren's Day and the at night. No services in the morning, l>onl's Supper. but Sunday school, which is flourishing MEMI'MIM. J. W. H. COKEB. The First Church celebrated the Centennial of Modem Miaaionaon the — Mv meeting at Linwood Church 2nd inst. The speakers were Paator was a very pleasant one. The rainy Tribble, Prea. Savage and Prof. Irby. weather greatly interfered with the The house waa'full, the audience atservices. The meeting was one of tentive,and it appreciated the occasion the sweetest I have been in this fall. by a voluntary gift of f 160 to the Several conversions, and seven addi- Centennial Fund. The church ia alive tions by experience and baptism, to mission work, reorganizing the with others to follow. This makes forc« on this line; so is the Sunday106 I have baptised since the first of sch(X)l, and will do much more for August. Bro. Gilliam was with me. each Missionary Board than ever. and endeared himself to my people. One joined by letter and one waa bapI never had a more congenial and tised at the last prayer meeting. Central Church.-Sunday morning - Collections for Stale Missions for lovable brother with me than Bro. G. The Second Church bad regular the Sunday school held Centennial the week ending Oct. 1. 1W»2. ri:>;»2i. services; reported good congregationa, Bro. A. P. Moore was present and Exercises. They bad a large «-rowd full Sunday-school and good ser— I saw in your paper of Septem- rendered valuable service. I believe and very pleasant exercises. Dr. O mons. Pastor Weggener has been the church at Linwood is in o better \V. Johnson of Collierville preached l>er 22nd a conundrum, as follows: doing too much outaide work and it ia condition for work than at any time in the morning, and at night the If.Ci Baptist preachers baptise 2,222 in since I have been their pastor. The telling on him, but he hopea to be church held a prayer meeting service. {» hours, how long would it take for prospects for some valuable additions himself after a few daya reat and reRowan. GOCMI services all through 12 Baptist preachers to liaptise .H.0007 are in sight. May the Lord grant it. cuperation. It'would take them «• hours,4 minutes the week. The University receivea new pupila 1 am now at home by the liedside of and 32 seconds. J T LI CAIK). every day. The profeaaora are unuaTrinity.—On account of Bro. Plara sick wife. Jons T. OAKLET. Atoka, Tenn ually buay. The pupila have no Idle ly's sickness there was no preaching O n Saturday before the second hours and when they take exercise it - An inteiesting meeting was held Sunday. but the church held prayer Sunday in September I commenced is done by rule of order. Our new at Kelley's Creek Church, Lincoln meeting. All earnestly hope for the my meeting at Mt. Lebanon Church. Prof. Farrar gives entire satiafaction County, beginning the second Sunspeedy recovery of the much Iwloved Marshall County, Tenn., of which I and is rapidly becoming a favorite day in August, in which Pastor F. M. pastor. He was much Ijetter Monclay MADUON. Yeager was assisted by Rev. Jos. am pastor. The Lord greatly bleaaed among the pupila. morning. us. His power was made known in First. Sunday was a grand day P. Rutledge of Texas. The meeting Big llatrhle. the awakening of the church and the with the Firnt Church. U had been lasted ten days. There were thirtyconversion of seventeen souls. TwenBrethren of the Big Hatohle:—Our set apart for the celebration of the seven additions altogether, twentyty-three were received for baptism State Mission Board ia behind and ia Mlaaion Centennial. The Sunday- eight by baptism. and J had the pleasure of burying all in great need of our help. There ia school rooma and main auditorium — 1 have just closed a meeting of of them in the watery grave in Duck prwably not a churoh in the Aaaociwere beautifully decorate«l. Supt. R. ten days at Dodson'a G a p church. River Sunday, the ninth day of the atlbn that might not have given more G. Craig, with his energy and tact, than it did to this noble cauae, while God has greatly bleaaecl us. Twelve meeting, in the presence of a large quito a number are not recorded as had the Sunday school full of enthusouls were saved. There were eight assembly who had come together to having given anything The State siasm in a beautiful service. The conaddltiona, all by experienoe and bap^ witness the acene. Among the num- Mission Tntoreat will auffer unleaa our tribution waa found to be f 100. At tlsm. One of them had l>ecn a Prea- ber there were two Campbellltea and churehea over the Stata come up to the morning aervice of the church the relief of the Board. Let ua do byterian for aeveral years, and waa 74 two Methodlata. Bro. L . B. Jarmon our part in lifting the debt of this Deacon R. B. Pegram made timely yeiira old when baptlaed. One waa a asaiated me in the meeting and did Board. I auggeat that each churoh remarka on " T h e Occasion we CeleMethodist and one a Cumberland some good work, and the brethren In the Association take up a collecbrate." The pastor preachecl a ser Preabyterian. Bro. Joa. P. Rutledge made him feel good when he left for tion for Stata Miaalons the aetoad mon on " G o d ' s Love, God'a Work in of Texas waa with me all of the Ume home by remembering him for h n Sunday in October. Let us not heaitato for fear we will not get much. the World, and Mlaaiona." The brethand did moat of the preaching, which Ukbora. Our congregationa were large One dollar will do one dbllar'a worth ren then lalaed an Ebenezer Centenwaa well done, and through It God and the behavior good, ao far aa I of good and will 6e bleeaed of the nial Offering of about WOO. At night aavwl ainneni. To Hla name be AU know, and we'truat much good waa Lord. Our church will take an exttn a maaa meeting waa held. Very apdone for the Maater at that place. collection to help out the Stata MisGko. W . SMOUIAIT. sion cause. Some otheri,! think, will propriate addieaaea were made on thefflory. ^ ^ May th» Lord bleaa the church at be wtiling to do the aiime thing. Let different aubjecta by - O u r meeUngwith the Clay O i ^ k M t Lebanon iu the aalvaUon of many all of the churchea that poaaiblv ioui Hatchett, Joe. T o w n ^ n d and F . Baptiat Church, Occk* Oount/. TMia.» R^la/'^ l think mote will be added at take an extra eolation or a Swift, and auoOieroffaring^wa. Uiaibext meeting the first Sunday in one afad send i a ^ e mcHiey of about 160. ^Tha day waa • . iSeld StuidAr. VuiUit OwMi ^ A young i ^ b oloMd to-dar.^ U lMt«d thrm woeka her 10th, Outt iflDay be ti ttber.»Ood bl«M th« B i r ^ ism the Blata OOAVONTION. •ndnaulUfd inflfty-al*.conwnrfwui. TiOili* HcwHtaoM.iK V t i t g n t i f y i n g i f ; The mtaUng waa oonduoW by mijf ItiraiotbR. pMtor, Be*. M. M, Buokner, a a i M i % Holt. Fifty haf^ beeii •-The Lofd ii certainly uaiu^^ httptlMd and Mc^lvid Into the church means io the end purpoM*d m t i ' w d thai® . » o t h « . to follow. ^ wheraiAthttMiU SoorM ot Bookoer h u btfift prHoWng f w 0 % ..fpvy t, mi- Harrisburg. Tenn. B A I T I S T A N D BBFLBOTOB. O C T . 0. BAPTIST 1892. BAPTISTANDBEFLECTOB all ages have lookeil upon bondage ^M^vhiK I'lb'ht ttf All 'I'bat Are In tho ll0UH4%" and alavory as revolting, but there were many also who did not think it " 1 have regarded incom|)otont and wrong, or who were too callous or avcareless servants as so luany bottles MISSION D I R E C T O R Y . arioiouB to care; so our land boi^amo of medicine sent for my good," said filled with these people. 8TATK MISSIONS. a Christian housekoeper, "and withSince their introduction among us it out doubt, they have done much to|U». J. II. ANOKUSON. MlMlonary has been a grave <|uestion with the All coraniunl»>iitlim»<lf»(iHHHl for hhii ihould wards disciplining my naturally imtH< m-hlmm-il to liliii "i Nii»h» lllo. God fearing men of the l'nite«l States W M. Wooi>rt>c». TrpmunT. ««•"<« "i""^ patient and exacting disposition." for Hlntr. Hoinr and I'ori'Igii MImIohi In bliii OS to what could bo done for their •1 NKfhvllle. Tcnii Said another, " 1 was in great troumoral and spiritual improvement, for FttKKIxN MISSIONS ble, husband sick, several little ones we must not forgot that they camo to KIT H A T«'pr»ii 1» l>.. CHrnwiiomlliiK neeiliug constant attention, my own our forefathers without a kuowle»lgo I..n.. M. u.nh,H.-,..nn health poor—I asketl the lx)rd to Vlc« l'rMl<li.iil iif llH" Kiirvlun ll.mrrl for Ootl and Christianity, tlopravod and mmil mo a goo<l servant. In a few Ti-nmwc. to whiiiii nil lii<iulrlii for liiforbarbarous. niatlon iiiav Im- iul.lr.>i»»«xl minuttw n girl applied for a situation. During the long yearn of slavery IIOMK MISSIONS. I knew her and ilislikoil hor. The K.. 1 T T,r„....... I. u .(Wr,„.ondu.K tb^}' may u.il.ri.He lh..ir passipOT. tbej much was tlono for thoui by Chris thought came to me though, 'Tor K.";'"? r ' n * . " . " " KnoivHl.-. T^nn Vu.- n>»J Iho r«.UH t.. lluMr .ippetlU>« | tian masters and inistroMion whose haps she is the answer t^) my prayer.' Pr.-.l.1i ii'l of Ibi. IIOIII.. Uoiinl tor T.-iiii.-mkm-. a n d all w i l l l w well in the end. for the! own hearts, warm with the love of 1 took lior, l>ure with her faults, she lo whom nil Inlonimtioti or lii.iiilrlrf uIm.uI l'o|H. is ple<lg«l to absolve them Oo<l, wont out with a strong desire work III lh<' SIBU' nmv Im' ml<lr« ii»«l learntHl to lM<ar with mine, and she Wl.Ht religion oould letter suit car j that these, hisi-reatures, should know proviHl an untold blessing to me aii<l v MINISTKUI.M. KIHTATION millv miml^Hl men and womou, and the blessings of the gos|K»l of ClirlNt. mine, until called from my home to runit* lor l oiinif mm 11.1.-m u> l h<- f W II » . . r » U > n h o i i l . l I . , - o i I . . <• M Suva^. . I ,. what dweptioii more fatal' It i« true The writer well remembt^rs a Sabbath Ihe heavenly. If there was ever an K«r%^mnKm^,.l. r,«.^H^«m him N.^ that infidelit) ha.s sUin its thou«aiuK afternoon sceue. vividly impresmMl iuHtance of salvation by gratv, thiN <'<iiW<- 10 J 1 II 11V M..«<i> ("r^-ii , . ,, , !_;..!«.. iiw...^. •iiuiii liur ••liililiHli iiiiiui. when the Her but IJoinanism has slain it« ten thous ujM.n her i-hll.liHh mind, when the «er waywani, negUn-UKi girl, nia<lo a now T*'nii auds The Holy Catholic Church vantu from a large plantation came creature in ("hrist Je»us, was one." has not only I w u the mother of mur j up to the uiBHter H hou8«» while he Woman'* Mlulonary I'nion Still another tUiristian woman, dereil hosts of CtOilV saints, but she with o|)en Uible instructwl them, as cc!mi*i. o'lmnTii* r«>M Tr.wsiKHsiK* charged with neglect of her house Mrs O A Ixiflon. I'rr-Mi nl. «" S<.uil. Huie has also l>eeu tho mother of abomina ' was hin custom. hold by some who sought to excuse mcr Hir<"*'i ^ From its organization our Home Mls« S K S ShankUnrt Cornxpomllns S<icrr tions. the wiue of whose wrath has themselves for Ijeing "at ease in Zi rrtarr »nd Trranurrr .N V nt Mreel, stupified millions U|KJU millions of our I Iloard was instructed by the South VidhTllle. Tenr on," rather than give her thieving fellows, nn.l nent and is sending them ern Baptist Convention lo use all dil housemaid into the hands of the |k> this moment to the bottomless pit. j igence in its efforts to give to these Itomanisini. lice, knelt l>eside tho oiTender, and Where llomanism has lx«en under | |>eople a knowletlge of the truth that gave hor case to Him whose judgI I. ^ . . nr KR«,r'H no restraints from other religious alone can make one free. That it It IS to h o p ^ that Dr^ Kager « ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^ ^^^^^^ ' ment is unerring. The |K>or, tempted [Hoii , for the first time, perhaps, weekly ,luen.-e nnimermptedly. what a spe.- shown by the fac-t that it. mismona I clearly c-ompreheiuling right from Ri:rL.CTo« J ^ fa^ ihepeopleT Dur-1 ries sent among them re,K,rte<l many will l,e widely read and that t h e y ^ l ^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^ ^ ^^^^ ^ ^ ^^^^ , work ' wrong, confcwsed, Hia<le rmtitution, do m m j toward J i ^ . ^ / i have been requested many of the«e, and that of many of the In-it and remainml in her pim-e, trustetl as pie at home as to the ^ J ™ ^ ^^ ^^ and | Baptist preachers of our land, there •»)efore. and ever faithful to that trust. MISSIONS. !i •H 111 I t'l BaptiHl priucipiBB have doue for the world, but who cau tell whot Uanunish priiu-iples bavo done to undo this world T Atheiaiu says there ia no God. AKuoslu-isni saye, If there b a Ootl ho i-auuot bo known. Ilut lloniBuiHiu Hays, Moat assuredly there is n Owl aiul ho may be known through Jtisiis Christ, who came to tho world and reiloenind it and then returned to the father, leaving the I'opo his aole representative, to whom he delivered all earthly |)ower. Only deify the I'ope and itt> faithful lo tho Holy Cftlliolic Cburch. an<l men and women may away with all self deiHal; of Romanism ' States we find .t cloth« ^ of light and f o r c i n g ^ a U e ^ . a i j tell them all about the ,«ople. but I ! were at the close of the war hundre<ls invariably preeerve.1 mlence. | of thousands of Baptists throughout ^ ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ ^ ^ ^ ^^^^ s. k. s. s. Nashville. Tenn. Ontrnnlal. j , ^ave been ashamed to speak. What came to our an.-«.tors uncivilized a«<l ^^ • ^ has so eat«n into their barbarous Freedom found most of "(Jotl sent not his Son into the most thorough cleans-! them with some k n o w M g e of God s world, lo condemn the world; but , ing the blood of Jesus Christ can Word, while m a n , of them were hap- that the world through him might |je saveil." John ;I;I7. Hero God l»e h it o„t. What insensibility to py Christian, trying to do his will. gan to execute his missionary enterr W. T h ! ^ Sher rLli^ the truth and its claim upon them! Many felt that when freedom came tne umc, relig ^ .. ,. . . the very ranss ranks 01 of lunov thee® other ^ __ _ _ _ to them that our responsibility was prise for tho salvation of sinners. ious lK>dies where there is not sympa- A few days ago a Catholic pnest was lifted, but not so thought our Homo "Herein is love, not that we loved thy with Catholicism, there is gener mterv.ewed: ' Do yon t^lieve that Board. Today its interest in this Ootl, but that he loved us, and sent ally the utmost indifference and un « f-'l-e^ « Do you race is more alive and its efforts more his Son to be the propitiation for our concern towards it. ' Wheve that the gospe is truet I do. at^tive than ever liefore. The Board sins." 1 John 4.10. "There was a man Far too many have made the griev , V\hy do you not embrace the gos is awake to their needs and longs to sent from G o d whose name was ous mistake of judging Romanism pelt My p r ^ n t portion gives me arouse the individual Christians of John." John 1 .-tt. This John was a outside of the United States by the, my living. If I should embrace the our land to the fact that at our very Baptist. Here God's missionary enstandanl to which it has there ««t- go"P«; I ^ould lose my living, terprise took on its Baptist character. tained In fact, it has Ijeen found | " the clothing could l>e taken from door are those who need and want 'These twelve Jesus sent forth." religious leaching. It is not necesnecessary by our Mission Board, and 1 floraanism so that it could be seen just as it is, it would present a mien sary (or us to take a step to find this Matt. 10:r>. This mission was to the others to urge repeatedly the claims a little I m hideous and revolting branch of work for God and human- Jews. "The Lord appointed other of Catholic countrif^as really worthy than that of the devil who gave it its ity. In our own homos we can aid •oventy also, an<l sent them two and fields of mission endeavor. And even them by example and instruction; it two." Luke 10:1. The enlarged com power. to-day, such doubt rwts in the minds is our duty and Qod's command to us mission in Matt. 28:19 says "go." W h y shall not the people know it, of many. Before leaving for Brazil to teach all nations, and we should The church at Antioch sent BarnaI met more than one who gave me to not an it seems, but as it isT. not fail to remember, pray for and bas and Saul. Acts iJl:I-.'}. These W. K. Entzminoer. understand that if they should ever help the colored people of the South. were all Baptists. The eighteenth Bahia, Brazil. become missionaries, China or some Shall we feel an interest in the salva- centennial of Baptist Missions is alsuch field where the people were real The Colered I'eeple. tion of all other races, and shut our ready past. But one hundred years heathen—without the gospel -should eyes to the great needs of this one in ago there was a great revival of misMore than two hundred years ago be the field of their labors. our very midstt Well might the sionary work. This year is the cenSurely the time has come in all its a vessel landed rn the James River in Master say to us as to his disciples of tennial, the hundredth year of that fulness for the world to know that Virginia. The people who watched old, "Lift u p your eyes and look on revival. Let us boom the revival this Romanism is (fte monster evil of this it as it steamed up the harbor did the fields; for they are white already centennial of the revival. The Hardearth. This will appear exaggerated not think it different from other vesto banrost." W e have but to lift up shells are saying this is only tho only to those who do not know (bat sels they had seen •, yet it contained our eyes to soo the grand result that bundredlb year of Baptist missions, He who can justly proportion evil such cargo as has never been landed will come from earnest work in this but this is a mistake. has paused longer in His revelation on American soil. On this Dutch Man T. H. I'ETTIT. vast fleld of lalrar. Let us prajr that of War were twenty human beings to us to denounce unsparingly Ibis Arlington, Ky. God will give us Ohriqtian grace lo who were brought there by men blasphemous invention of the devil tbsn H e baa to denounce any otber greedy for gain, to be bought and bo willing to expend ouraelvea for —The last annual report of our evil at all. When it is remeniliere<l sold. Other countries bad been buy- even the poorest of bis creatures, Home Board takes tho strongest what is said in the fiible against Ko- ing these poor captives, and our an- looking to him for wisdom and guid- ground in favor of increased work maoiim, It will not appear strange ceslors said, W h y not wef So they ance, and for the blessing he never among the negroes, and urges that that the Catholic Churob for all these did, that day, in August, 1020, buy fails lo bestow u|ion all work done in there should be appointed (or each Mrs. H . G . Barnrs. y e a n bas used everj precaution to these twenty souls for Ibe piir|K)so of bis name. Stale an able man to devote bimseK Atlanta, 0 « . holding them as slaves. Tbere wore suppress its circulation and to blot to (he inslruotlon of their mtulsters. out its existentw, fur no one wauls many protests from all over the land —Find a man wbo has no hope In laid bare bis own atrouity and shauie. against Ibis bartering for human God, and you ilod one whose soul is —The only. iViug tli«t •ouls; for the right-thinking men of make people unselilsb iM love. . ' •tanrlng to doatb. Our Dr. DlukinKU bas told us wbat upon our ^.ilelees ^ ^ ^ tuuon worthy to t^ke ^ ^ oUier i ^ t rehgious „ m IS the «iy. It IS 'tH- ^ A14D B E V I i B O T O B , OGT. 6, 1892. Iter. I>r. Nmllh and tho First Baptist work wherever he goes, are bis highest commendation. God has surely Church. given you a man after bis own heart, J. B. 0EAVE8, LL.D., - Bpooial Editor Tho resignation of Rev. Dr. Smith who will as surely go to you in the MKHPUIH. TKNN. as pastor of tho First Baptist Church fullness of the blessing of the gospel of Nashville, presented on Sunday of Christ. You will find him worthy Miiutlajr school Hoard. morning, September'iTtlh,was referred in every way of your utmost confito a committee of five, who were in- dence. As a leader and counsellor in Wo havu made a now contratd for atructod to report at the regular the administration o( church affairs printing our Sunday school Literaprayer meeting on Wednesday night. you will find him discrml, courteous, ture for IK'.l.'l. The prices, which are The occaaion brought out so large aggressive, eiBcient; and as a preachmuch reduced by virtue of increase an attendance that it was found nec- er of the gospel, sound, strong and in circulation, taku effuct with the essary to have ushers to seat the peo- spiritual, an able minister of the New issue of the fourth (|uarter of this ple. Dr. J. M. Frost, as chairman of Testament. We regret that he leaves year, by which we will save several the committee, presented tho report us, but we rejoice that he goes to you, hundrtnl dollars. We have no cliarges in the form of two letters, one ad- and congratulate you that he is to be to pay for room rent, fuel, light, or dressetl to the retiring pastor and youcpastor. May God bleas the union, |>orlor's care all this Imiug allowed one to tho church in St. Louis whose making it stronger, more joyous and us, notwithstanding the low pritwa call he accepts. Following ore tho more useful as the years come and go. made for printing. Your brethren in Christ, letters: We are trying to <^nduct the busi!(• V w II 1. Smith II l> The Fibst Baptiht Chubcu. ness entrusted to us by the Southern Dear I'liittur.—The resignation of God helping us, the literature shall Baptist Conveiitiou in a business like The reading of tho letters was folhe eminenlly worthy of the place your pastorship of this church, as teuway, such as will win aiitl maintain which is being so liberally given it in dereil by you on last Sunday morn- lowed by appropriate remarks by a the coulitlonce of our |MV)ple. our Sunday Hchot)ls, and shall be for ing, has been accepted iu at-cordnnce number of the brethren-and the The Board has decidtnl to oximukI the furtherance of the cause of Christ. with your wishes and re<]uest. committee's report was adopted by a during this ('onvention year the sum Our conslaul, c.arvful and most watch i Its acceptani^e on our part was sim rising and unanimous vote. At the reof three thousand dollars in the in ful aim is to make the work of the I ply submission to the inevitable as set iiuest of tho Editor, who was present, terest of Sunday school mir.Hioiis In Suntlay si-hool Board, as l)t. J. B. lorth in that paper. The earnest wish it was ordered that a copy of the proappropriating thiH amount, the more Uambrell was kind enough to say for of the church was, and is, that the ceedings be furnished for publication ueedy districts must of course l>e lirst us, "constructive rather than destruc- relation w u l d have remained un- in the Baitist and Reflectob. L. considered, and yet it seems lo us tive." The need for building is so broken. only fair that «a«-h SlaUt should have great iu almost every direction, and In answer to our c.all you came to —The fifth Sunday meeting of Eastr some recognition. The Board there at almost every point, as to call for US neaily three years ago, and your anallee Association will meet with fore decides, for tho piesent at least, the centering of the united energies service as pastor has been marked by Good Hope Church, Meigs County, upon a kind of do-blo jwlicy, name of our people. Our Sunday-schools noble fidelity to the trusts committed on Friday, Oct. 28th, at 10 a. m. ly.to return to each Stale a per centum should bo missionary iHxlies in the to your care. From the first you won Subject o( the introductory sermon: u|)on tho basis of its cash patronage, noblest sense. Here we should aim, our confidence and aflection, and Should the mourner's bench be disand then to make such further ap- not only to discover the missionary have not only retained them, but have pensed with? Rev. J . R. Lawrence; propriation, as we may be able, to the himself, who shall carry the glad tid- constantly grown stronger in them. alternate. Rev. C. Townsend. more uee<ly fields. In pursuance of ings of salvation to the remotest We have rejoiced in your preaching 1. Are the claims of Baptists to this |K)licy, ten per i-ent. of our cash Itounds of the earth, but also to grow as being strong, sound, spiritual, as apostolic succession valid? Rev. J . re<«ipls for May, June and July, tho the conviction, the missionary sense in every way liefitting a servant of C. Denton and Rev. N. B. Golorth. first <|uarler of the Convention year, of duty, which shall transform our tho Lord Jesus Christ and a minister 2. What are the scriptural qualifihao iMMtn appropiated, each State re- home churches into a base of sup- of the New Testamont. It has been cations (or church membershipt J . ceiving its pro rata. In adtlition to plies suclr as is worthy of the noble our instruction, our comfort, our r . Parker, L. C. Hale, Rev. J . N. Mctho one thousand «lollars given in work and i-ommensurat« with our ob strength from week to week, leading Clanahan, Rev. J. S. Harwood, and this way. we have also appropriated us Sunday after Sunday into richer, Rev. J . A. Womac. ligations. one hun«lrod ilollars to l-'lorida, ami For doing Ihis Go<l has surely wider fields. 3. In observing the Lord's Supper, live hundroil dollarn lo Texas. In We have noted with delight and why do not Baptists extend the inviopened to us a great iloor, and has thiH matter we are acting in conjunc thioA'U upon our work the light of church pride your walk, not only in tation to all Christianst Rev. J . C. lion with the existing StaU» organi/.a his approving smile. There are dif- the pulpit, but in the administration Townsend, Rev. C. Denton, Rev. J . tions as re<|uired by the instruction ficulties here as well as in every other of tho afiairs of the church and also A. Womac, C. G. Samuel and J . T. of theConvention. While neither the undertaking; but in this, as in all else, in social and private life, as the walk Masner. amount sent to any one State, nor the Missionary and Sunday-school mass difliculties call not for abandonment, of a man of God, seeking not his own aggregate sum of these amounts, is praise, but tho advancement of the meeting at 9 a. m. on Sunday mornbut discretion, patience and prayer, large, yet it shows what may be done, interests of tho cause, the good of ing. Basket dinner on the ground and inilicotes, in part at least, the with mutual confidence and helpful- individual members and the glory of each day. B r e t o n , come out and line along which we can diret-t our ness. our common Lord and Master. Your hear the discussions. I n these last With reference to the policy which future policy. We are also giving pastorate among us has made its days o( the gospel dispensation the away a large amount of Sun<lay- tho Board has adopted in making its nuirk upon tho church for good, and spirit o( anti-Christ is spreading, and si'hool literature this, however, only first appropriations, or with reference its influence must abide, and will it behooves all the true Israel lo be to any other part of its work, we to mi»nion itchooln, as rocommondetl surely bo felt in the future history of (ailh(ul. C. G. Samuel, Ch'm. by the proper authorities in their re- would glatlly re«>oive auggostionp the church. This is true not only of which any of the brethren feel inclined to make, whether it be to ap- our church but of the denominational siiectivo States. interests and enterprises of this city. The Sundoy-school lioanl, as a prove or disapprove. part of tho Convention machinery, is For the most part, these sugges- In going from us you will carry our a business which is not only self tions, we modestly venture to say, hearts' best affections. In going into maintaining from tho first, as shown will do the greatest good if they can your new field you will carry with by its reiwrt at the last session of tho be sent directy to tho Board, and not you our earnest prayer that God will continue his blessing with you, cloth Convention, but may be easily matlo communicated through the papers. Wo dosire to adopt the plan which ing you always with the mantle of his an infiuential factor in the interest VBBY BKIN AND BCAM' DIHRABB, power and crowning you with the whotbcr torturtiiR. dUnRur ng. httmUtstlM, of our denominational enterprises, is the best under the circumstances, UcbliiR. tiurnlDK. I>Iofldlns..«cttlr. cru«ted. plmglory of his smile. Yours in the Beand this can bo liest determined in helping all our work and hindering to Uio inodt dliitrt'»nln« oowmM. sna «vonr loved. humor of the blood, whether "twple. Mrojunone. Its fiower to do good increases tho wistlom which comes from a mulTub Fiiwt Baiti.st Chkboh. with the patronage it receives; and titude of counsel. We earnestly deevery order for Sunday-school sup- sire to bo in touch with our brethren, NAsnviLLB, Tenn., Sept. 28,1892. plies becomes a direct contribution to and have them (eel the utmost free- To tboTlilnl DaptUtChureb. 8t. Ixiuls. Mu. U MA Kismil.V • a HW unw iiiuum IMrl missiona and- lo the advaYicement of dom in dealing with us in regard to Dtsar BrtHiren:'-Rav. W . B. L . thoL any matter which we m i ^ have in Smith, !>/]>.» having raoelved a call bill I* iitroD« IsnmiMlv, liul lru«. ThoMand. all the interests of the Convention. As lo the literature, we are aiming bond pertaining to the i n t e n i t of oax to iMQOme your pastor, has felt it his •uml their wondorlul, untsUtuB and inoompsr. •blsnfflcMy. „..«.„,,,„» uu.. all the while (or its improvement. Mjwler'a cause, and we umiuo Uidm duty to aooept, and so hoe aevered that any aumtMiioo ^ W e are making the perlodloate robhie paibnal relation with ua. slonarj In Ibe broadest sewe. The make wUl be reoelred to the M n d o i i ^ e feel aoieljr the loaa which thla quatterilM oootein m M o n a i y le*otia •ptrit, and willbegtvw the m ^ eraUfl. H « haa been with ua gld^Bttoation. . relaUngeepediWy to th* Iwudyr three yeaia, and know hta ilijUiig iitte the Board will gram itorth. and lora him ^aa a paator and fleldiolthtOonrentMWi. „ poiw the j r ^ go on, m dth I M A e r and devouttiiian o f O o d . H a • i n t o d l n o l i t ! eherglM along Uie needa no tJommaadaUon front l i n e W aoo^Jtibl-and B .V • • ' : «li IfllOOT. - i a o w n (!liar«oter,hla M m l ^ m o n t l i l j r ^ .ions, under tho onergetic manageniont of Mias Alice Armstrong, for tho Woman's Miasionary Union. Tho VoniHinlion Teacher, a monthly in the series for teachers and families, is growing rapidly in |>opular favor. Its exposition of tho lessons for IK'J!) will bo made by J . C. Hiden, D. D., Gordon B. Moore, D. D., E. C. Dargan, D. D., and Henry McDonald D. D.—each taking throe months in the order named. Besides this, we will have twelve articles from B. H. Carroll, D. D.; twelve from Wni. E. Hatcher, D. D.; twelve from F. M. Ellis, D. D.; several from John A Broadus, D. D., and twelve missionary articles following the Mission Card by twelve different writers, with other articles from time to time, and the Boolt Review department a s|tecialty. Oiticur^ E . BAPTIST A N D BBFLBOTOB, BAPTIST A N D OCT. C, 189SJ. gothor lent a kind of inspiration differeiitinti'B tlie Cliristian from h a d c o m j i i o r e d t h o m a n d h a d p l o c o d a n i r o n y o k e u p o n t h o i r n o c k s and onthuuiasm to tho occasion. the worhl. i Many were the roferencos to theso T l u ' iiOw roiniiiaiiilinciit g i v o n w h i c h t h o y c o u l d n o t t h r o w off. facts in the prayers and the talks by ChriBt to lt»v« onu a n o t l i e r wbh T h e y hot«Ml t h e S a m a r i t a n s , l i v i n g Nashville. Tenn.. Oot. 6. 1892. not o n l y new as op|)OBtHl t o t h o tou in t h e i r o w n c o u n t r y a n d p a r t l y before the lM)dy. The Association is comjMJsed of some nine or tiui old coimnnudnii'utB, b u t it w a s a l s o k i n s m e n a c c o r d i n g U) t h e l l e s h , b u t churches from tho Duck Rivor AsEditor. lu'W to t h o worUl. I t foil uiKHi a w h o h a d m a r r i e d w i t h t h o h e a t h e n EDOAB E. FOLK, sociation and about an eijual num0. L. HAILEY, - - Aaaooiato Editor. w o r l d whtTo hatrt>«l a n d viMineanoo d u r i n g t h e A s s y r i a n c a p t i v i t y a n d ber fornjerly connected with the Busineu Manager. roiKi"'<l Hupreuio. H o m e w a s a t t h e r e f o r e w e r e monnrelB, renega«loB B. B. FOLK. Liberty Association in Alabama. tl a'- tiine till' iloininatini,' jjowor of a n d traiU)rB t o t h e i r raco a n d religion. T h o y haU'd t h o T u b l i - It mot with the Oak Hill Church, A. n. Cabaniss, Field Eilitors and tin- world, i n f l u d i n « t h o r e m o t e Lincoln County, near Fayettevillo, Gonoral Ag«nit«. J. H. Oriuk, l o r n o r c-alh-.l I'nh-Htino. Th«< Uo- c a n s , w h o w e r e a p p o i n t e d by U<mio on Friday, So|)tember HOth, an<l i n a n s Bcnrioly know t h o m o a n i n g t o c o l l e c t t h o t a x e s imjWBwd ii|H>n adjonrntnl .Sunday, Ocmbor 2nd. OKKK'K t'uiii. l're» I'uh llouaeof t h o woril lovo. T h o y h a d n o n e t h e u i , an«l w o r o o f t e n unjuBt a n d T h o There was a good attendance of f<ir t h o i r wivoH. F o r a m a n m a r - e x c e s s i v e in t h o i r oxactionB. urBucuiiTK'n PKH ANwrii IK *I>V*NI B R a b b i h a t w l th«' p r i e s t , t h e IMiari- doh>gaU>H and a large atUMidanco W (I) riago wii« n fiiiHiicial t i a n s a o t i o n , SInglr t,'«py of people, oBpocially ii|K»n Satur1 75 In (Mub» ot Ion ur mure 1 w | f o r a niaidon t h o h>ngo«l-fo: m o a n s Bo« t h e S a d d u c o o , a n d b o t h of t hom MlntsUTx day and Sunday. Rev. F. M. Voa! of oBi apo f r o m t h o narrow limitB t h e c o m m o n |M<«)ple. T h o law saiil, ^or preached an oariiest and pra« of tlio i m r s o r y . " T h o y allow t h o n i - Tlu>u Hhalt lovo t h y n e i g h b o r aB PLEASE NOTICE. t h o i r tical in(rod»cU>ry sornion. The Boiv«>H lo l)o d i v o n o d , " naitl .luvo- t h y s e l f , b u t t h o y t h o u g h t following othcorB woro oloctod: .1. I All »ubi.crllxT« arr pr«-»uni.'tl lu Iw ix riiia iial, "l)of<ir«' t h o n u p t i a l ^,'arlandB n o i g h l w r con hi uioaii o n l y a .low o e n i until wr r r c r l v c dciIci- lo the l o i i i m r v II. Kurnain. ModoraU>r, II. Mc1 T b e i . i x i oil ) o u r « n Y"" •h;-'' jmy,, f u d . s l . " Krionils .>.\rhango»l o r a proBolyto, Hn<l t h e y a d d w l to »our ^ub.crtplU.n i ip'r.'.. NoiIk- llmt. unO hah- .Nalt, AsBiBtaiit Moderator. L. M. when your linn' lo "ui •••ml y " " ' "'m-wal wivoB. M a t r i m o n i a l f u h ' l i t y was " l o v o t h y n o i g h l M i r " "iukI without wattlnit t o hear from u» Hum iiirinii" Of c o n r s e t h i s Slu>(Tner, Clerk; William Morgan, BAPTISTANDREFLEGTOR S If you wlxh I> c h a n f of po»t offlcr »iiar.-»« klwkvii Slvr tlir p o h l o t n c f from which a» »t ll ikii t h e oost-omcf to which T"U "'i*'' «»>.• cti»nitr in»«lr. Alw.yi. irlv» In full, und plainly » r i i t r n CTpry n » m r and |ia»t ofBr» you write tth<iiii 4 M a h f All chrckn. m o n r y order* etc pay abi* t o the Uaftist a»d R c r L E c r i - B K AddrcM »11 iPttrrs on buslne"" »nd»ll c o r rennondence. t o « e t h c r w i t h all mon«^i. Intended forthfiwper.tothf IIAPTMT aki. i t i r i E.TnH f o r ^ f pmper t o t h f IIaptmt ner«on»l com SMhvinc. Tenn A d d r f w only per«on»l munlrmtlonn to t h e editor* IndlTlJually « can »«'nd r r c r l p t * If dc»!rrd T h e label on your poper will aervo aa a r«:elpl- however If t h a t Is not changed In t w o wrekn afK-r your •Ubscriplign h»» been aent. drop u» a c»r< a b o u t It 7 T h e addrenn of Pr J R liravei. th Malr. rtr««l. Memphl» Tenn T h a t of R e r O L Halley t»«l& N o r t h f o u r t h A i e n u e . K n o i r l l l e . Tenn. a AdTertlnlnir r a t f i liberal, and wtll t>» fur nlshed on applicstloo M m a d o n unbjjH-t of r i d i c u l o . T h o y h a l no lovo f o r t h o i r c h i l ilron. C h i l d r e n woro i-onsideroil only n b u n i o n . I n f a n t i t iilo w a s n o t l e g a r d o i l tiB a c r i m e . T h e f a t h e r h a l a b s o l u t e iKiwer o v e r h i s c h i l d I to r e a r , to kill, o r t o a b a n d o n i t P l a t o a m i A r i s t o t l e a p p r o v e i l of p a r e n t s a b a n d o n i n g weak an<l sickly c h i l d r e n . W h m - v e r picke<l u p a c h i l d w h o ha<l In'en dosertiNl c o u l d treat it as a bIbvo. N o r h a d t h e y love for slavon. T h e y h a d t h o m in Bbuu<lance. THE DISTlSai ISHISa MARK O n e r i c h R o m a n l e f t f o u r thouBE v e r y o r g a n i z a t i o n h a s i t s jie- a n d . B u t a s l a v e waB n o t recaliar mark. T h e M a s o n s h a v e ! gartletl a s a m a n . H e w a s n o t a signs, pass wonls, grips, etc.. by person, but a thing. He had no which they may l>e known the rights. He could not demand jusworld over. So with Odd Fellows, tice. H e could not hohl property. Knight Templars, eU\ The Ku Whatever he had Ixdonged to his Klnx Klan was calleil the Invisi- master. His testimony was inadble Empire. But they could make missible in a court of justice. If themselvea very visible to each his deposition was needed he was other as well hb to other people suVjject«Hl to torture. He was exsometimes. And so with all oth- posed to every whim of his owner. er organizations. And now, has He was scourged, torturetl, cruciChristianity any one mark which fied, thrown as food to the fishes, differentiates it from othor relig- according to caprice. Neither did ions? Yes. That nmrk is lorf. they have a love for mankind. A This is the bupreme test, the shili- stranger an<l an enemy were synboleth of a ("hriiitian, the touch- onymous. The only safety of instone of his charncter, the 0|)cn dividuals and communities was Sesame to hin heart. "A now com- their capacity for self-defense. mandment give I unt<» you, that Every one not a Roman was a barye lovo one another," saitl Christ barian. " Man is a wolf to a man This is sometimes called the l l t b whom he does not know " was the Commandment But it is not. f t saying of Plautua. Holf was the is the sum of all the rest Love, center around which e\'orything as Paul put it, is the fulfillment of revolved- All beggars were to be the law, Lovo is the expression, driven o u t No one should take tho characteriBtic of the Christian an interest in the poor when they man, the distinguishing mark of wore sick. If the constitution of Christianity. The condition of in- a lalK>ring man could not withheriting eternal life, as laid down stand sickness, the physician was by Christ, is: "Thou shalt love the to abandon him without scruple; Lord thy Go<l with all thy heart, ho was good for nothing except to and with all thy soul, and with all be experimented on. Of benevothy strength, and with all thy mind, lence, chority, lovo for thoir fellow and thy neighlmr as thyself." Paul man as sucli, Uiey know nothing. declares t h a t of the thi^eo Christian The Roman world was a world grttces- faith, Iiojmj and love—love without lovo. Ho also was tho is the greatest. Indeed, no one Jewish world now a world without can be a ChriBtinn, we IwHove, who love. T h e Havior was a Jew and Witli thom does not l o w , and the more ho lived among J e w a the old hatreil of all nations but loves tho lietter ChriBliau ho is. thoir own had only deepened with There should be a love Tor Ood, a lovn for his neighbors, a love for their misfortunes. Now they lived •oulri, a love for his enemies, n love in an ntmosphere of hate. They for evety one. l i i i i h b love which hated the«e h»tighty IVomans who (-s^W i s h o u l d b e bo. I)i«l not Mobob say, " Eyo for eye, tooth for tooth, hand f o r h a m l , fcK)t f o r fiH>t, b u r n i n g f o r b u r n i n g , w o u n d f o r w o u n d , Blri|)r f o r s t r i p e ? " I n t h e f a c e of all thifl, in Buch a n a g e of h a t r t n l , a n d in t h o p r e s e n c e of an a u t l i o n c e of t h e bitt^-rest h a t e r s t h o w o r l d e v e r saw. J e s u s throws out the c o m m a n d m e n t Budilen, s t a r t l i n g , l i k e t h e c r a c k of a w h i p o r t h o c l a p of t h u n d e r in a c l o u d l e s s s k y " L o v e y o u r enemies, and pray for them that p e r s e c u t e y o u ; a n d l a t e r : " A new c o m m a n d m e n t I give unto you, T h a t ye love one a n o t h e r ; as I h a v e l o v e d y o u , t h a t yo a l s o love one another." TroaBuror. Caj)t. B u r n a m , to t h o regret of ovory ono, including himBolf, waB callo<l away on buBinesB after the iirMt day, and as Hro. McNutt was pastor of tho church, the duty of presiding fell on Rev. I'. M. Yoagor most of tho time. Among tho visittirs was Rev. .1. I'. Rutle<lgo of Texas, Rev. Savell of Florida and J R. Florida of Nashville. The diHcuBBions generally woro lively, oHpocially thoBo on Temperance, I'iducation, Homo ami Foreign Missions and Sundayschools.— H m (loo. W. Sherman preaclnnl a tine go8|>el sermon Friday night and made himself generally useful. He always has something to say when he rises to sfx-ak. It was a revelation to t h e world, He is ono of our coming young a new e r a f o r m a n . T h e n i g h t of men. Bro. Joa P. Rutledge of h a t e b e g a n t o roll b a c k a n d t h e Texan preached an old-fashioneil d a y of love t o d a w n . T h e d i v i d Baptist sermon Satunlay morning i n g wall of n a t i o n a l i t y w a s t h r o w n which greatly pleasetl the brethd o w n a n d u n i v e r s a l love, w i t h o u t ren. He has done a gootl wo^lt in d i s t i n c t i o n of race, m e r i t o r r a n k , Tennessee this summer, holding w a s t o l)egin s w a y o v e r t h e e a r t h . meetingH. Wo wish he <ould That commandment, new Ui the inducetl to stay with us. -Bro. Saworld then, is new to it now. The vell is a recent graduatt* of Howworld has never yet learnetl i t It anl Colh»ge, Ala., and expects to is constructed uj)ou tho idea of go to the Seminary this fall. H e self-interest, which is but a milder is a son-in-law of that staunch Bapterm for hatrinl of others. The tist, Bro. J . E. Cambron, of Flintlaw of Christ,to bear one another's ville. His siMJOch on Temperance burdens, does not yet prevoil over was fresh and striking.—Rov. R. tho earth, and will not till the milB. Freeman only spent half a day lennium. B u t all the more is this in the meeting, but long enough new commandment binding upon to got in a |)ointe<l speech on the the followers of Jesus, and all tho subject of Temiwranco. Wo woro more should thoy illustrate it to sorry ho could' not stay longer.— tho world. Tho distinguishing Hro, B. McNtttt, postor of the mark of Christianity should at tho church, is ono of the cleverest men same time bo the distinguishing and best preachers wo have in tho mark of every Chrislian — lovo. Statt). H e has b<*on colled to the Have you that mark? church ot Fayettevillo for half of his time, and it is presumed ho ASSOTHE WILLIAM CAllEY will o c c e p t - ' l l e v , H. H. Blair of CIATION. Flintville soomod to hove somo This is the youngest born of all difllculty in stifiking to tho subour Tennessee Associations-the ject, but he was evidently on the boby. But it was b o m under very right side ot tho <inestion.—-Rev. favorable circumstances. The year 0. Kincaid did not hove much to of its birth suggested its name, its soy and that was brief. H e is an nomo suggested that it's time of oornest,'pious brother. We should mooting be so arranged as to in- bo glad to see him employed for clude tiie 2nd of October, the one all of his time. W e know him hundretUli anniversary of the for- when he was in school iu Murfreesmation of t h e first modern mission- boro severol years ago ancf have ary society under t h e influence of esteemed him highly ever Wn». Oarey, and those two facts to- T h e n e x t m o o t i n g of t h o AHSociation will bo hold with Ktdley's C r e e k C h u r c b WtMlnesday b e f o r e t h e first S u n d a y in O c t o l i e r , The T e u n o s s o e c h u r c h e s w h i c h were in t h o A l a b a m a A s s o c i a t i o n , a n d w h i c h l o f t it t o j o i n t h e W i n . C-aloy, a r e t a k i n g h o l d of «>ur Statti work w i t h i n U i r e s t T i i e y a r e good c h u r c h e s an<l will b e h o l p f i i l to us. O u r h o m e was w i t h Uro. W. F. C o l o of O a k H i l l , a n d U) liini a n d his h o s p i t a b l e f a m i l y wo a i o ind o b t e . l f o r m a n y kiiidnoHBos. The Ahwm to a g n i . o f u l a c t on Sunday T l i a t di.y, you BaiTLBOTOB, OOT. 6 , liB92. iMfore he is fully restored lo health. in the ohuroh, in the oity and In the Many hearts will pray for his early State, and their regret at his departand complete recovery. He Is on® of ure. After this service he clowd his the most valuable men we have In the ministry in Nashville by baptising one. The brethren of the First Church State. ore cast down but not despairing at —A friAid of ours in Texas wrote the loss of their pastor. They have un the other day that he met Sam invited Dr. McDonald, of Athmta, to Jones out there recently, and In the hold a meeting with them, beginning course of conversotlon he asked Mr. Oct. 17th, and hope for>iuch good to JoneB if he ever read newspaper crlti- result from it. Neither we nor they I'KUHUNAI. ^i»%UA("rK;AI.. ciBniB upon himself, and if he bad know as yet whom they will call as — Do not forget tho S t a t e C-onven- ever read ours upon him. Yes," re- pastor. There ore some of the finest tiou at Knoxvillo uext week. Make plied Mr. Jones, "and thot felbw and noblest people in the old First u p your mind to ko, and f/o. Bized me up just alwut right." We Church to be found anywhere in the - G o ye to Kuo*ville iioit week to j arc g l a d to have th« e n d o r s e m e n t of South and they deserve and demand ' attend the S t a t e Convention, and if b o good an a u t h o r i t y Upon our criti one of our best men as pastor. on the next morning. Somo of tho brethren will go on Monday so as to bo at tho Pastors' Conforonco «.n Tuesday. Others will go Tuesday. As to the Hchetlule returning from. Knoxville, that can bo det«5riuined and announced at the (Convention. b o r , w a s th^' Hc. ..n.l of ( ) c t o b o r , tlio o n o hiin<lrodlli amiivorBary of tinf o r m a t i o n of t h o firnt i n o d o n i M i s s i o i i a r y S o c i e t y i m d c r tho iiilluonco of t h o i r iiamo Hak.-. Win. Carey At tlio lirHt m o o t i n g of t h a t S o c i o t y O c t o b e r 2, IT'.ri. ti.o Hinount (.f was c o n t r i b u t o d t Bon.l t h e uoBpol t o t h o iH-alli. n. Aft4T p r e a < h i n g , b y ro.iiioMt, « Cont o n n i a l Borinon, we r e m i n d e d t h . loiiiiiiii m. b r r t h r e n of th.-so factB, anrl Biigg e s t e d t h a t it w o u l d bo a jwetic t h i n g f o r t h e W n i . C a r o y AHStx ial i o n h o l d i n g i j s lirst st^ssion O c t |'h«»2 t o c t . n t r i b u t o t h e Biime l l for Foreign Missions. In a B h o r t w h i l e a b o u t »<7() was raised, W e proiKiBO-l. t h o u g h , t h a t o n l y ,,o less, n o m o r e s h o u l d bo f o r F o r e i g n Missi.mH an.l t h o Bont f o r I ' Mj^ionB balance b e given to S t a t e ^ « D o n ' t you a g r e e w i t h u s vou caouol yo'THelf, Mend a m.b ciNmB of laht summer. —The following letter from Dr. J . -liaptintu (H lUHtwy, by Kev. W. R. Graves, though private, will, we -litut^ lleinenilxT thai — the ratoH to the ' I'. • . Harvey, D.D.• P-u b l i s h e d by » t h e are sure, be read with much interest Coiivention an- one full fare going p^ptiBt Book Concern of Louisville, by his thousands of friends. It was t . I • 1 f • D ^UiM oroa a und one third fare returning, upon Ky. Price, five cents. T h i s was a written in his own handwriting—the sermon preached in t h e W a l n u t Street first time we had seen it in some the certificate plan. If you cannot go lo Knox ville C h u r c h at Louisville J u l y 8 , 1 8 9 2 , a n d months. The writing, however,showed yourBiilf next week, dear Baptist lay- requeHted for publication. It shows evidences of a feeble ond trembling inau, will you not Hoe to it t h a t your the ancient origin of t h e Baptista, and hand, very different from the stong paHtor doeH? But go yournelf if you dew ribes their BufTorings for oon- hand which used to guide the pen. Hcience sake d u r i n g t h e s e centuries. May Ood bless him and grant the decan. No Baptist can read it without a feel- sire of bis heart, and then grant that Let UM have a large delegation at ing of pride t h a t he belongs to so no- his last doys may be made smooth Kiioiville uext week. T h e good brethble a d«»nomi nation of people. with the presence of that Savior whom ^^^ ^^e expecting a large num—Bro. W m . G r a n t writeB u s t h a t he has served so long: j j ^ ^ ^ p d will bo d i s a p p o i n t e d if they Memi-iiis. T e n s . . .Scpt.2«. 1802. Uro. E. E. Folk—I am extremely feclilo, can Bcarcolydirwlmy i>eD. I Intend u> go U. tho Sanitarium at Battle Creek, Mich., iM> »<>on as 1 get rtrenglh enough to travel. 1 am growing weaker every month. Tell my friends about the Sanitarium It is luy only hope of Injing licnptitt«Hl If I am improved somewhat I shall go to Wostcrn Texas—the Pan Handio louiitry—Ihenw l« California. and everybody in Hall's seemed to I cannot c-onsont to sit in niy chair till I be Baptists, at least during the Asso- dii'. 1 am as willing to die as Job was. I look upon death as a delightful change, ciation—except the weather. the happiest hour In the christian's whole —On our return from the Wm. Ca- life. Why tall it tho passing through a rey Association, we had the pleasure dark, cold river! 1 am liabletodropoff of preaching in Fayetteville Sunday any hour I have but one desire for night to a good congregation. The wlilch to live. 1. e.. to write out my Hvo band of Baptists there is not large, I'hair Talks on Salvation, if it Is God's will. For this 1 pray. Can you? God but it is brave. They are rejoicing in has HO abundantly blessed their delivery. the completion of their new house of Yours very truly. tlu,. h e late meeting of the Friendship j o „ot come. - — _ H a v e you Bent your n a m e to J o h n Association was t h e 9th a n n u a l McCoy, Knoxville, Tenn., a n d a«ked I mon and not t h e 7th, m we s t ^ . to be assigned a home d u r i n g t h e H e ah«, asks us t o say t h a t a cordml welcome was extended the Associam e e t i n g of tho Stat« C o n v e n t i o n ! If tion by the citizens of Hall's in ^ n uot do so at ouce. eral, and not simply by the Baptists. - We are utterly o v e r c r o w d ^ with •B we were misled into saying by the uewB matter, HU. h aH reports of Abbo ' ciatiouB, meetings, eU-. W e are glad fact, we suppose, that so far as our ,hem, b u t some of observation went nearly everything j was a g r a c e f u l act f o r t h e » m. C a r o y A s s o c i a t i o n t o d o on O c t to wail awhile before are doing t h e best we 1H«)2? A f t e r t h i s w a s d o n e t h e ^gpublish on page i : U h e orb r e t h r e n f e l t goo<l a m i w e r e pre-1 ^^^ ^^ businosB for t h e m e e t i n g of t h e p a r e d to g i v e e a c h o t h e r t h e " g h t ^^^^.^^^j^j^ Knoxville next week, h a n d of f e l l o w s h i p at p a r t i n g , | ^^ y^u ^oe, it makea an interesting w h i c h was .lone a m i . l mii< h f e t d - j program. Do you think you can afford to miss all the good t h i n g s it of'ferst sciiepl lk oy rha INS. — I-'rom different p a r t s of the S t a t e F o r t h e b e n e f i t of t h o s e w h o a r . there have come to un m a n y express. iroing t o K n o x v i l l . ' f r o m W e s t a n d ! io^g ^f regiot at Dr Smith'B leaving M i d d l e T e n n e s B c e we p u b l i s h t h e ' Nashville. Some Beem disposed to f o l l o w i n g s c h e d u l e of t h e r u n n i n g | reproach ub for letting him leave W e f iM^tween N a s h v i l l e a n d can only say we could not help . t If of tralUB o e i w t . i i _..1J wnnn. we could he would not have gone. Knoxville; —The new Chicago University be; Ik III worship which is quite a little gem, J. U. Graves. and also in the fact that all the indebt—A despateh from Mexico, dated edness upon it has been about met. September 26th, says; " Mrs. Carmen They have called a most excellent Romero Bublo de Dioz, wife of the man as pastor and it is hoped that he President of Mexico, made another will accept and move his family there. religious pilgrimage t o ^ y to the We enjoyed spending a while in the shrine of Our Lady of Ouadolupe for hospitable home of Capt. J. H. Bur- the purpose of Invoking the aid of the nam. l.,.ino N»|«1|*I11'' . patron saint of Mexico against the gan its work last week with 300 stuArrlM- nlClmltuii->ovr>i fi :li >| III uv.- ChaUan.H.^ —In tho letter sent by the First threatened invasion of cholera. She 10 i m p III dentn in the simplest manner possi*rrlvi tti Kmi'vl'ln <: ai |i.n) I.I.I4VI' NliHlUllI'' ble, without any form or ceremony of Baptist Church of Nashville to the was occomponied by obout one hunII ;«i p ni Arrlvi- nl Cliatl'Hi'X'i''' III '^i p III any kind, as if it had been in exis- Third Church at St. Louis, which we dred of the most prominent la|,„„vv (•Imlt"!""'!''' I Ml II in Arrive itl K i m * * " ' ' ' tence for twenty years. It is expected publish on page 7, referring to Dr. dies of this city, and the procession tl la p III b.-ttv.' ArriveNimlivlll'' lit CliaHun""!"' thot there will Iw 1,000 students pres- Smith's removal, occur the words: to the Villa de Guadalupe was very A:ljll>llli " We regret that he leaves us, but we imposing. The services at the Col. Il l : i i It III Arrlvi-ttl Kiioxvlll.' ent within two weeks. rejoice thot he goes to you, and con- legiate Church affected Mrs. Diaz to —Bro. S. C. Evins, the veteran minSovorol things no«l to bo said gratulate vou that he is to be your tears os the prayers for protection by way of information: (1) 1 you ister of the Duck River Association, pastor." Leaving out half a dozen ascended to the Virgin." And thi$ J\Bh, you can leave Nashville at and his wife celebrateti thoir golden words, the printer mode it nnA : " We was in a Christian (t) land. Could 8:80 p. m., take o sleeper at ChaU we<ldiDg on Tuesday of last week. regret that he goes to you," and the there be greater superstition even in tanoogaotl0-.'20p.m., and remain We regretted that we^were unoble to form went to press with the error un- Chinat " Our Lady of Gaudalupe " be present. May God bless him ond corrected. Fortunately, while the on it at Knoxvillo nnti morning is a mythical person whom tradition grant him many more yeors of wed- irass was running the mistake was says appeared to a peasant at Ouad/o^ Or you can loove Nashville ot ded bliss and ot life ou earth. dlsooverad and corrected, but not olupe several hundred yev* «go> l a O p. m.. «t«y Bt a hotel iu Chat—We expect to have a fine tinw in soon enough "to prevent its appear who has been adopted as the " patron tanooga all ni«bt ond arrive in KnoxviUe next'week, what with the anoe inaoonsidenble part of theedi- saint of Mexico." Notlee also that the Knoxville ot 10:30 o. m. the n j t Pastois' Conferenoe and t b e ^ ^ " prayers for protection " ascended lo dov ( 8 ) Ot you con loove Nosh- nial mesUag Mid all of t n t ^ ^ the " Virgin "—not Christ. No wont u e ^ l l •ervioes were vilL 0 »:0r. p. m.. take 0 sleeper. work, %nd if you onlVednesdaynightot last week der they affected Mm. Dlst to leani. Btay on it at O h a t t a n o c ^ j m t U j o t t ^ U m i i i a good a ^ y o BapShe ought to have wept her eyes out tist in l ^ n e s s e e oaii «ff0i4 to mlMi •iilie Flnt »iplli(^ OhMMh upon the at iuoh blasphemy on the part of her moniing. ^^We it; and iipeopljr no Bnptist pwtor. T of to St. Deoplo. " Should missionaries be sent I'J V I | i III I M l II. Ill reach K n o x v i l l e ^ are inclined to thiiA m r »nni b r e t h r t n can t h e n deoiae toSwYlUe W t h e . l ^ J P ^ J ^ ' S ^ . better, U b Louis. Dr. Wv R Jfliili p M i ^ . Pr. i d O ^ U o i i o n i r i o s I " Let the above leiul i l l jfeO^ »nei»«f..«iit the wife of the Prssident p i ^ 7 of tbg|iiia«i «ii4# number of of the Bepulilte ttiittlfeelssuoh superbtethwn s p i i I w l i ? ^ Ihrir j o n i a i ^ - At htft »t'eouuts,he ^iw| for ate letter, that Bro. ii must be a o i M U ^ y e t 7 •4 " •• 10 BAPTIST A U D B B F L B T O B , OCT. 0, cruel—it is wicketl—for us by our thoughtlessnttss and selfishuesH to warp and distort those souls so as to unfit them for happiness and the bat AN ANNnKIII-:!! ritAVKII ties of life liefore they are ohi enough . Kl to even think or talk for thomselves. I itHk ill iii>' iiiKi-iiiiiK |iru>oi "Fortlic tiirliul(>iil triiiililc uithin iiic And this we can do, and often do <lo, Ih iiHin* tliun in,v lifiiri < aii Im-iii by the way we dross anil treat them Aroiiiui tliiint In 8trifu niiil (llNoird. the first five or six years of their lives. Ami lliuBtoriiiH iliiii «li> not •'•'amAnd till) whirl of tlu< wnrlil Ik mi iii)< Cannot mothers of older children tes ThcMi mil.v niiiMt (?ivt< nil' |M-af«' " tify to thisT Hut back to our little Delicate, (gentle-natured women 1 IlIHMlttI llll< olll. <>l<l l(iM)<. boys. 1 come to talk of them as does who have i-luu(f to the support of a Aiul liHiktil lit II liiiK*' "f I'taliii" our story. What kind of men are wo I'llllhi* wliitrv xcii I'f my Iroiilili' strong, manly nature, have been \Vtl.'< StlllHltlllNl llV it.l Nlllllilll'l'<':illllgoing to make of theiiiT T h e tramp throuf^h tlio |K)werof (heirf^reat love, Kiir tlif wnnU thatliaxI'tii'l|H-<l-ii iimiiv and dude alMiuud i>i the land au<l Ami lh»> ii(ii'H h:iM' M-fiin-)! iimn- ilrai nble to pruy to lie the one who shall l>e there is a great crying Hui«d for Sti'iiK'il iK'W ill tliflr |H>\vi'r III I'liiiifort left. They have with their dear Ak they linxi^ht inr iiiv « >«iil nf rln-i i stalwart mm to save uur couutry. ones 1I080 to the bortler land, and Men with strength of mind and Inxly l.ikf iiiiif>ii of Biilciiiii Hiii);iii(; (hell, ttlotvly returning;, though their 'rh«v>«' wnriU i-aiiic iliiH II I" nilauil who are masters of both. .1/<-n, The one who is fitted to survive the ntreaming eyes i-uuld uot help them • Tl»' l,4>nl If olow toaii);i-i'. wheie are tkeyt Mothers, what are greatest loss in life must |m)ss(«s8 to disoern (he path, they have sub Ami of iiHTi-y tliii'h ^MiiTiilloM |iraini'tli initt«Hl theiiiMuiviui to a loading Ije spiritual vision a faith that in al we lioing to meet this uoimIT Our IIIh Work of lout! ii'iKinn yond theiiiwlves, hove been willmg [ outrunning sight; always listen couutry apiieals to us, yes, it is to I'hi' l^iril ii|ili<>l<l< lli :ill llial l:il Ainl niiM'tli tin- Ihihi-.! iIiikii to follow, one H(«p a( n tini.«, niid b.. i'"K curtained tvays, to catch, if UN she is crying uiul shall we, can |ioMsible, some moiwage from the un we, stop our ears with tvux and Kraduiilly have luiiie out of the dark That iiaM' iin' •in iiuili I I kiifw thai lln- I..111I « :i« mi);Ii ; nes.s to take ii|i life's work, and to seen; always trying to look beyond go uu playing dolls with our babiesT All lliat »a« iiiakiii^' mm -••ti\ find ill olMHluim-e that blessed |ieace the ai^tual, holding the senstw iu Have you iio»nr neeu the boy of live Woiilil Ih-IIit l>y :iM.I l.\ that i-ttu iu<\»<r b«> ^'siutHl eicept abeyance, that spirit may receive the or SIX as he walks our striHtts with I hiwi liut to »ait ill |iaiiiMi. i' AikI kifp at my |-atln-i . »i.li influence of spirit. Like I'aul, such velvet kiKte pants and jacket, silk through Melf Hurreutler AikI iioihiiit; noiilil rcallv liiirl im must sometimes sett and hear that stoi-kingH and bucklml slipiMtrs, big Wliati-MT inisjht Ix-tiilf ! When ft lotluf,' heart becouu^s will MariaiiiK- h ;tniiii;;li;iMi iiig to survive the loss of its darling. which it is not lawful to uttttr, but lace collar and long golden curls u which is as real to the higher nature veritable Little L<ird Fauntleroy It has taken <i long step onward to as the most practical thing possible. what a lieautiful picture! And every The Use Who Is U f l . wttidH this pemt", ami through its And this living in the unseen, and mother of a four year-old imagines iu very willingness becomes fittetl to bt« KT MART R. IIALDniN. subjecting one's self to its influences, her own vain heart t4iat she can make the one who shall be left alone has nothing in rammon with that her l>oy in time Uwk just like thot. To the two who have lived for years 1 ^ surviving the loss vulgar spiritualism, or that transcen and she pro<-ee<is to do so in spite of in the cloae relationship of husband " " possess ; Cental spiritism, both of which ener scant purse and straight hair. Are and wife, there must come separately ^^e germs of greatness, and means the j vate and degrade the character, but we not doing sot Oo walk our streets Lofik and frequently, after the feet pass in rather that spirituality that is a and parks where children go. great crisis of ! about you and see the laughable im to the path that leads on towards life « sign and seal of the Eternal. itations on every hand. Is this the setting eun, the pang of the thought. I p a r a s i t e s , that have been After a time, one who is thus led will "One of us must be left." "" of another. find the desires, purposes, and ho|>ea stuff mm are made of I T h e little Especially does the foreboding steal of their own. all deferring to this unseen influence, follow has already learned that he upon the consciousness of the one and no courage to meet the diiliculties until gradually mom than half Of the must l(x>k lieautiful above all things who is forced, through the failing and trials of life. individuality will be transferred to and at tvhatever t»«t, and that he is health of the other, to fear a near sep- In contrast to these, there are gentle, the "over there," whither the love<l an object of admiration and must be aration. Where soul is knit to soul delicate souls, that seem to live only one has gone; and it will Ite very admired. That he must not go where this fear becomes an agony; and it in the purfiose of their dear onus; easy at the end, when the summons there is danger of his skin being muat l)e borne alone, for love would ivomeu who, while their loved hus comes, to breok the last of earth's tanned or his Iteautiful hauds getting spare its object pain, and, while shar bands \yere with them, seemed en tien, and follow on to reunion and hurt or in any way marrcHi; that he is ing its joys, keepe to itself the sor tirely de|iendeul upon them, who, home. .S. .S. Tiim-H. his mother's darling, her pet, her own rows. If the experience of one who when the awful shoi-k is over, rouse " baby," and she means to keep hini begins to feel the shadow of loss over eatrh dormant <|uality and energy to so. Is this the way you would start the heart, the loss of the husband meet the new condition. They had, out to mould a man, and are these who baa been the pride, stay and lov- like a part of a machine, been in such the materiah) you would choose to er, the loss of the wife who has been harmony with the motive-power that start out with T Ah, mothers, what are Un. 0. L. HAILET. Editor. helper, comforter and sweetheart, on their own especial value in the move- No. 81& N Pourib Areoue. KnoxrlUp. T«!nn lo we doing t Na|ioleon was once asked wbom all comiDUnlcattoaii tor thta dcp»rtiDont through all the struggles and changes ment had been overlooked. Such oi&T b« ftddrrflnod what he considered ttie greatest need of life, could be pictured, who could ones have been known through love of France. He answered, "Mnlhertt." and through loyalty and that insight look upon itT I-OMT-OFFICE. Yes, mothers, not grown up children. that is possible only to the moat Moihern, and it is the greatest need of " H e will not separate us; we have KiiiK out. yi- Im-11.4. been ao happy together," whisfwred womanly refinement, to be able to our own America to-day. Where are Tlio iicwH to Id I. 'I'liiK in the iflrwl (4-iiti*iiiiiul Vi'ur Charlotte Broute tober agonized hus- take up the broken thread of anoththeyT Lovingly. A i nt N o i i a . band, aa he bent over her trying to er's life-work and go on, to astoninh Dear l''rieii(ta . —While the children bold the brave, gentle spirit in the observeis, and to accomplish things "llahy." have gone to 8(;hool and are too busy they never could hove dreamed jkmvery faoo of death. Ue did part the with their books to do much writing If there hadn't been Iteggy and two, as many timen knitted lives have sible l>efore the trial. or working, I waotjto give you o little Psyche and I'nt, 1 wouldn't hate been parted, io spite of their deep love. " B u t what must one possess to be story I clipped some time ago, that minded. I always loved Ix^ys from " I cannot be leftt If we must Im fitted for surviviugT"a tear-dimmedwe motbers may read and think over the time I was tied into my first parted, 1 pray that I may go fimt," eyed, fearful, lonely creature full of and talk about. Its title is " Baby." pinafore till the day I married Rex baa been the language of many a the sense of her Iohs, who is Just beAnd the question it should help us to Thayer. Then, of course, when Rox cliDging spirit in the first years be- ginning to listen to the call that echdecide is. How we shall dress our declared be wouldn't have it—that bo fore discipline bad strengthened the oes along the ways of endeavor wbischildren, espedally our little boys. 1 wanted to be the comiKwite whole of •oul, and ere love bad reached the pers. There must lie courage, of have beard men say that if there is a masculine existenoe for me—I devole<l traDsmutation-point; and, afterwards, course, but not ueceasarily of the particle of vanity in a woman's heart myself to bis way of thinking. That the spirit baa yielded itself to the sort that some regard as a kind of init will crop out in tbe dressing of ber is, till Reggy came. babies. It is our pleasure, as well as I did love Reggy, And Rex said 1 privilege, to make tbe little darlings might—that was really only natural; look just as sweet and beautiful as we but that, if I would name him Regican. And, ob, la it not a temptation nald, I must, at any rate, find another • to every mother, to losesigbt of health diminutive than Itox for bim. He, and what is really beat for tbe child my wedded lord, would not consent iu onler to make it a walking fasbioD to lose an iota of bis identity with me, plate of all her pel wblma as to what even if it were bia own son who was is cuteat and aweeteat for the dressthe bric^and. ing of tbe little " t o U f " J u a t as though But I settled it bwiulifully, as you they were no maDj dolls made for our see. If I adored Reggy, I worshipped amusement. But, motbera, our cbilR e x ; and oo evei^tbing was obliged dreh are not dolls, thejr b a r e immortal to go smoothly. aouls for our faabloning. And it is Used in MilUcmi o f H o m e s — 4 0 Y e a r s t ^ Standard, It wos.wbeo m j next baby came THE HOME. Iruor, higor moaiiiu{; of love, autl HolfIhIiuiwh (fiveH way to aolf-Bavriiiuo, uud the Lflarl wliiH|M<rH, " I f one of U8 luiist t;o, let it uot b« uiyiielf, that loneliueHH, Horrow uuii paiu limy be uaved my dear one, and that hi his liutt f^reat hour of uoeti 1 may be close to him to Hmooth, by every loving winistratiou posaibht, his path into the unknown." domitable will power, that gives in to neither cirfumstanoo uor authority. It is, on the contrary, a willing ness to b«» le<l by rrovidence; to ac i-ept his wisdom and guidance; to wait for orders; and, above all, to be willing to wait patiently for that hour when the release shall be signoil and the spirit become free to follow out and on in the way the soul of the loved one passoil. Without this will ingness described, gentle, clinging souls couhl never find it |K>HHible to truly survive the loss of their heart'h darling. With it they inny lead he roic liven; for the divine leadership, »vheu fully trusted, never denies vie tory at last. YOUNG SOUTH. D»PRICE$ BAPTIST 18JI2. A N D EKFIiEOTOB, u 1892, were riveted and all my attention into the household that I felt sorry baby grow to l)o a year old, and then for surely the problem grew ponder- chained. What Tendered me utterly ous; and while I hated to give iu,it was iLat I had obeyed Rex so loyally, und two, before our irate relatives settled speechless, aud made me cling to Rex ceased to have that ardent aiTw;tiuu down to anything like acquiescence quite evident that petticoats and Ba- to be sura it was not indeed a dream and he a myth, was my Baby's awful for boys which was so prominent a iu pormitting us to manage our own by would soon be ludicrously inconhead. gruous. S o I stitched and planned, characteristic of my earlier years. 1 institutions. No blue ribbon adorned bim now, Iu the blue toggery ho was arrayed, and built imfiosBiblo castles, aud al- and not a curl—one might almost sav fell a distinct thrill of disappointways came back to the starting point not a hair—appeared on that tiny litment when they told mo that this and his yellow curls, parted in the and helpless indecision. tle ridiculous scalp. Ruthless scismiddle, hung with a pretty girlish mite was a boy, and was atiia7«d to sors bad snipped and slashed all bis It was quite late when my millinregularity from underneath the narfind how completely a love for fem pretty golden ringlets. There was ininity had taken |>ossessiou of my row blue snood. His white frocks ery and mending wore completed, and not a tress one could have held to. wore coveroil with llouniies of em I hastened to dreas for seven o'clock Here was a patch of bare skin, there heart. a meagre bit of stubble, but nowhere Hut 1 named him Cyrus, for my broidery, and sashes with long fringed dinner before Rex should arrive. I a hair a half-inch in length. father, and called him I ' s y c h e - i n u eiuls adorned his afternoon costume. was just clasping a little moonstone 1 stumbled into tbe room, caught And the deor little i>oko bonnet he heart at my throat, when I heard spirit of reveuge. him in my arms, and fled through anAnd then I'at came' K«* wi|KMl wore when ho was three, with baby roars of laughter from the library, other door with him. The boys startiiwiiy uiy tears, and said it was u blue ribbons lio<l iu a I k > w at his and cries of "Mammee, mammee, do ed in gleeful pursuit, but I heard Rex stop them. Hhanie;but what a sturdy little rsNciil chill, niwie him quite as sweet and come down I". "No, Iwys," be said very positively, pretty OS any giti iu the laud. I recollect a<-^'urately just how near "leave him to mamma. Get ready at he was, to Ije sure, and what u v«»ry When he got to bs live, though, it the pin was to the clasp, and exatdly on«!e, all of you, for dinner." beautiful piuli his toes wore liml I wttH |>u/./lin|,'. Cleiiriy, he ought lo whi<-h hairpin was put in too loosely; "Baby," I groaned, when I had put uoticutlT And we would ••oil liim him down in my room and locked tbe bit (loiiiiiiig kiltH very soon. But 1 for I felt a premonition that some I'litrii-k for uncle rut, ami 1 shoiilii door, "O, Baby, why did you do this i-nll him Patricia, niiil do Iniii up in piirteil his hair iu the middle of his thing remarkable was atx>ut to occur, to mammar" And I put out my arms I head, anil tied ba<-li his curls with and 1 Htoo«l hesitating a moment be- to take him on my knee. blue ribbuuH iiidiwd 1 should ' ' pitlit blue riltlioiiH, nii<l bought him fore I responded. But he motionM me sternly away, And 1 thought, if l(«x «uul<l U-ar and stood before me with bis head ' iii'W Mashes galore. Ilex had just come in from the rain, it, why, 1 could, Uk). So I riilli.Ml 1.. ' Uex lookiHl on with uucoiicoole«l and when 1 reached the stairs was thrown b<ick iu a^ueer little way itex the hitualioii. has when I sometimes displease bim, amuHiMiieiit I I " thought it a very standing in the library doorway and said: "Mamma, you did it to me! U»ll o u happy iiui'l'J lilll" ..v.— h<-iii»- Jjimt I , 1 I • Wu hml latighiag so heartily that the tears You named me Baby, and that is a a bit of tt house iu the uii.lM of a j .Milertaining farce, ami was clearly »i rolled down his cheeks. Within, I girl!" oh tbe unutterable disdain in patch of garden, where hone, K„. k terested to see how long I could keep could hear Psyche, Reggy and Pat that w o r d : - " a n d I am a boy; and I won't be named Baby any more! 1 climbeil up the lattices, and tulqih 1 il The boys all thought it a huge scjuealing like a regiment of young will have a name of my own, like my bloomed all the way from the gate lo joke on "poor little Baby, as they demons. | the door when the spring came. <losignat.Kl him. and, through a hearty But above all, shrill, excited, and | not speak for a moment. I Ilex was a lawyer, with a fair amount f>'o«.l humor, co o|wrated in defiant, came Baby's tont«, declaim- c o n t e m p l a t e bis bare little head. of income, and my happiness was lo assisting me to dec.,.ve myself. iluby had not been sent to school, ing against some "mean old Ixwbiest" " W e will call you Archibald," I make the uiiwst of houitw |)ossible ou but now lK>gau to have daily lessons "Poor little B a b y " ' I thought, as I said, then, as I lead bim away to the the generous household allowance he Washington. with me, and on sunshiny afternoons hastened down. They are teasing nursery.—ATo/e Field's s«it aside each mouth for me. So life OCMTENMUL BCILDINO FUWD. played with the rector's little girls him about something. 1 will stop was suuny, and we were two happy Enid Freeman, f6.00; Roy Crawnext door. Somehow, Baby never them at once." people, prouil of our three robust ford, Knoxville, Tenn., $5.00; Mrs. A. plnye<l with the boys at all. He had "Yes," screamed Baby, the words Montague, Tennessee, $2.00; Maggie boys, and we had quite forgotten our shy, sweet maiiners, which endeard coming in such a fury as 1 never heard Fetzer, Tennessee, $5.00; Fortie L o v ^ sorrow that Psyche and Potricia were hiiu to mothers' heorts, and he was from him before, "you're all mean old lace, $1; Katie Ford, $2; Annie Bell uot more appropriate uanies for tbe i|uite iu demautl at little girU' c.andy- boobiee: And Tommy Taylor said Swan, $1; Eve May Crawford, $ 1 ; dear little lads, when au incident o<' pulls and soap-bubble parties. ev'ry boy ev'rywhere laughed at Josie Tolley, $ 1 ; Central Avenue Baptist Sunday-school class, Mempfais, curred. It was when he was five that 1 at^ me-e,"—here a quaver crept into his Tenn., $5; May Blankingsbip, $1; The " incident " was—baby. tired him one afternoon io a pale blue voice "laughed all the time at me-e, Winnie Bradsbaw, $1: Annie, Troy, 1 had somehow always thought of cashmere frock, with full gathered becuz my mother made me a silly Birdie and Mamie Holland, $1; C a m e Baby as a girl: It had never entereil skirt und a bit of a yoke, and secured gi-r-l—and I hadn't even any name. and Mabel Fuller, $2; Sallie Feathermy mind at all alxjut any other pos hi« curls at the nape of his neck with And Tommy called me 'Babesy;' and ston, $1; Gaither Gravson, $1; M a M Askew, Burt Cunningham, $4; sibility. Sammy said; 'Ood it like to take my Josie Janeway, ^ Esther Wingo, With all my experience, too! I don't I a big satin bow of the same hue. finger and go ac'oss the '00m T' So 1 $5.13; Spurgeon Wingo, $ 1 ; Emma Ho kissed me gootlby, and started wonder you think I was stupid so daintily down ths walk for a soap- went up in Dolly's room, and we got But 1 crocrhed " her " diminutive bubble tiff at a neighbor's house, that her scissors and cut them all off!" Bocques in palest of blues, and " her " I had reached the door before B a and Herbert Young, $ 6 ; Mattie I stood in the window watching him crib-blanket blue with daisies starred by finished his harangue. I did not Wtndes, $1; Jessie Smith, $1; Lucy out of sight. over it. In short, the daintiest of interrupt or reprove the boys for their Tucker, $1: Sarah Curtiss Deupree, Psyche came in and joined me. azure opjwintment awaited " h e r " "Now, isn't it funny," I mused continued mirth. Rex put his arm $1; fimma L e e Deupree. $1: W i l l i ^ coming. Kingdom, $ 1 ; Lucile Powell, $ 1 ; M n . aloud, "that wo can make such a per- around me, for I looked a little faint, Edenton and Sunday-acbool olaas, Ileggv was fcftirteen then, and went fect girl of him! You'd think he but he never stopped laughing for a Jackson, Tenn., $5; Fannie Bpwland daily to the Boston Latin school, and $1; Dr. Jno. B.Carrin,$5jCaUie Leak, wquld romp and tear about, and want moment. Psyche was twelve and I'at over seven; My beautiful Baby! Could any of S2; Grace and Helen Tinsler, $1; pockets in both sides of his skirts to so, you see, my sorrow at having to " . Martin, "" "n, $ 1 ; Mamie Love Lojett, you have seen him! Such a fantas- Harry L stuff his fists in, and, at any rate, be tic sight as met my bewildered gaze! $1; WiU Roberts, Is,$l5 $ 1 ; Elira Fairfie F a i ^ l f. array them in boyish attire and my a boisterous creature. But he is as WiUie Mason, $ls $ 1 ; Johnnie The boys were huddled together $ 225^6;; Willie lionderous sighs as one by one they fl^; gentle as any little maid, and he nev- on the sofa, bending forward to lis- Mason, $1; Myrtle stepped into nickerbockers, were not Garfield Boyd, $1; L u U H o ^ n s , $1; er torments the poor beasts as you ten, and Baby bad the floor. too vivid in my memory. But it all Dudley Shannon, $1.87; Robert ShanHe stood in tbe centre of the room, young reprobates did. Don't you recame bock to me—when 1 became acone foot thrust forward and used in non, $1.16: Alice Henderson, $1; member when Pat put the three- vehement emphasis at frequent inter- Frank DeCouroy, Jr.. $ 1 ; Martta quainted with baby. Grandsteff, $6.00; Birdie Carter, $1.00; " Ilex, " 1 asked eogerly, " is she days old kittens into a tub of w f t vals. His clear, white skin was flushed Jesse S. Carrutb, $ 1 ; Ketba Odlawav, a vivid crimson, and ho gesticulated soap to see how they would swimt pretty!" $1; Kitie BeU Forrest, $1; Willie B o ^ And every dog in the village knew wildly with two very muddy—paws. erts, $1; Addle Deadrick, $15 Woman's On tbe floor beside bim lay a much It was the only time 1 ever knew Ileggy's tin cans." bedraggled sash, which must have Harmony Mlssionaiy Society, Eurebim to bo quite heartless, but he He's a sort of a little idiot, isn't b e t " )een trailed through every puddle in katon, Tenn., $B; Mawraret Tridgen, $5;Mrs.W. R. Lasater,$5;May HamUgrinned to a breadth that alarmed , . , murmured Psycho, stroking the fun- town. ton, $1; Mr. A. M o n t a g e , $B; Minnie me for his beauty, and said in a voic« ny bit of fuzz on his upper lip conBut it was not upon these details, Patton, $1; Mrs. Fannie Dozier, $1. startUng as they were, that my eyes overladen with mirth: " Dearest, she s templatively. a boy!" "My Baby an Idiot I" I indignantly 1 gasped forth that I did not be exclaimed. He's much tbe cleverest lieve him; and the nurse said: " For ot8Uofyou,Mr.Cyru8Tbayer. Some Highest Of all In LotTening Power.—U. S. Gor't Report, Aug. 17,1889. shame, Mr. Thayer." But, by tbe way, day he'll wake up to the trlok W o my heart was gliding tdown towarf playing on bim, and teach tw the footboard. I knew that Rox had t b e p a t b of tbe pracUoal-jokw. been candid-brutelly so. narrow to a undomtoitebV^ m I t was then I vowetl 1 would not ' name baby. And Re« »««««« g r i o M ^ andliiiliuddiiig n t t i i i i M ^ we had done our duty i n o u l l i n g ^ « aod brodMkl«d i d mr own torn and names from Webster's U n a b r l d g ^ . n ^ ^ k ^ l k i d M t , where • n u t * glp«j and bo sympathl^td i f t M dfoWon.^ j j n w I i M i ^ tofoiriPiM wltli rib^ No one beltewd t b i l w l i l t o n ^ teondioMbii^^^ •Ta'id I tokeeplolUndgitrfb^jrM^ B u t taki w r . P"^ — ^ very iMriona tliouffhta \b»k ftltariiooav ;y1 1 OCT. 6, ^PUBE^^ m ^t^n w <' ta B A P T I S T la BECENT ETKMTH. —It is said Oeorgetowu Colloge, Kentucky, opened with 270 students. —William Jewel College, Liberty, Mo., of which Dr. J. P. Oreeneis now president, opened with '200 students. A N D B S F L E T O B , has made a muniflcent gift for the establishment, in that city, of a Presbyterian Orphauago. Ho ofTen his elegant residence and grounds, worth $100,000, aud proposes to pay all taxes for ten years and give 12,1)00 a year for the maintenance of the orphans. O C T . «, B A P T I S T 1892. teacher in Belton Female College, and his two other daughtera enter school in the same institution, while his son, Ernest, and wife go to Japan as missionaries uuder the Foreign Mission Board. Mrs. Walne is one of the noblest and most lovable women, and their daughtera are said to be jewels of the first water,—beautiful, accomplished, talented, refined, pious. Er neet, it will be remembered, married Miss Claudia McCann, the accomplisheil teacher in Boscobel College, last June. Scrofula is, in the main, a disease of early life. Home knowledge is all astruy about it. You cannot tell whether your child has it or not; your doctor will know. W e do not prescribe. W«! are chemists. W e make tinremedy, Scott's I'lmul.sioii « f cod-liver oil. Your iloiior —The College HiU Baptist Church, -Uev. A. B. Miller, D.D., for the Lynchburg, Va., are loud in praise of their new pastor, Rev. George E. Tru- past eight years pastor in Little Rock, Ark., where TiOO new membera were ett. received and a iiue house |)uilt under —It is said the First Baptist Church hia miulHtry, hoi* accepted a call to must tell you when to iis»' ii. of New Orleans are expecting Rev. J. the First Baptist Church at Bouham, F. Purser, of Troy, Ala., to become Twxos, which is cue of the best places A book on CAKi' M I i \ i v — Wo are having a great mooting at their pastor. in the Slate, aud thai is said to be Antioch. There have >)een Hftooii tells what scrofula is. Ii'ijii —Dr. J. L. M. Curry has returneil ! one of the best ohurchoa to be found i»n versions and sixteen additions, we send it ? I-'m . from Europe and is now visiting his anywhere. and the meetiug continues. More aro brother-in-law, Rev. J. K. Connelly,in S<»iTT A Dowwr. ( >t.-,ni.i-. I I f s....it. ... \ . • — Momolu Mas8a(|uoi has been a to join. Good interest last night. Nrw Yorh. North Carolina. Antioch is doing a groat work. She Voiir <lniEK>«l Wpp,.... I student of Central Teiiuessee College, eli—aU druu**** i' —A successful meeting recently Nashville, for several yearn. He is a has given ftiO for missions this year. eloeed at Sugar Valley. Ga., in which native African, of the country adjoin- Bro. Santiorn was with me till Satur fifty were added to the church by ei , ing Liberia, and his father was king ilay. He did some first class preach KaHtanallrc AitiuM-latloii. perience and baptism ' of the \'ey nation. He has just re- ing and we wore nil pleased. I will report the result of the meeting. —The Albany, Ga , Baptist Church I ceived uotieo that his father is dead, This bo<ly met with Friendship O. A. OitLK. has increased ti>e salary of their pas ' and that be hax suct^eded to the Churi'h, Polk County, on Thursday. Milton, Tenn tor. Rev. Dr. Carroll, as a demurrer to throne. He is twenty years of age September Utlh, to hold its twenty and a behever in Christianity. -Just following the Slate Conven- second HOHsion. The writer, with Rev his going to Eufaula, Ala. tion at Knoxville October 12th to I. W. Bruner, left the early morning —The great Pan-Presbyt<«rian Coun—Rev. Wm. Shelton, Jr., pastor of IHth, on Tuesday, October IHth, comes train at Charleston, whore we were the First Baptist Church, Dalton, Ga., cil, which is the fifth of the Reformed the placing of the comer stone in the met by that gonial brother, W. L. Mc has been aiding in a meeting at Reaves Churches of the Piesbyterian order, magnificent new building at Sweet- Knighl.to whom we were indebted for Station, in which thirty-two were bap- opened its Sessions in Toronto, Can water Seminary. It is proposed to ob- breakfast and conveyance to the pla(« ada, September 1st. Its sessions are tized. serve Columbus day also on the same of meeting, some eight or nine miles quadrennial, the last having been —Bro. Jas. V. Iddins reports a glo- held in London in 1888. The rumors of day. The Masons and Knights of distant. When we arrived. Rev. J. A. rious meeting at Knob Creek Baptist ' cholera and quarantine restrictions Pythias are invited to take part in the Womac WHS preaching the sermon in Church, Tennessee, with some thirty diminished the attendance from the ceremonies. The orators of the daj troductory to the work of the Assoprofessions, and as many additions to South and West in the United States, are men of note and ability. It will ciation. At its close an intermisnion the church. and from Europe. Though smaller be a treat to hear them. The whole of one hour was given to partake of —Dr. Candler of the M. E. Church, 1 in numlMrs, the council was a large State Convention are invited and oth a repast which the sistern spread out, South, preached in Albany, Ga., on ' and vigorous Ixxly of some 300 dele- er people too. Come. I^t me em- and amidst greetings and pleasant September 17th, about the recent i gates. The total number of adherents phasize the fact, that never before did conversation it was enjoyed by all. pugilistic craze, and the evils of what I to the Presbyterian churches of the Tennessee Baptists have so great inAfter dinnor the liody was called I world is supposed to be alx>ut 20,000,- terests to como before the Con von to order by Itev. M. C. Higdon. the is called society. 000. tion, interests that should l)e very former Moderator, with Clerk J. R. —The increase of the Baptists in dear to the heart of every Baptist of Lawrence at the table. Both were the United States, in twenty years, A correspondent of the Christian the State. Come, my brother, from re-elocto<l and the usual routine of has been from 1,489,000 to 3,27U,00I). Herald says Grace Baptist Church, East, West and Middle Tennessee, Associational work was carried out. In 1872 the total amount of property Philadelphia, has sittings for r>,000 and endowments belonging to Baptist E ^ h sitting is rented from 75 cont« and look to these interests. It is the Several new churchos were received. J. Some of the churches reported revivals colleges and Theological Seminaries, to 121)0. The income from the rents Lord's work. Sweetwater, Tenn. and a good degree of prosperity. This wa s$3,467,000; in 1892 it is Sr>9,000, is about 122,000. The Sumlay collec Association has al>out seventeen or 000. tions vary from flnO to $175 each — I had the great pleasure of asdaineil ministers, with |)erhaps as week. The pastor's salary is 110,000; sisting Pastor C. A. Barnee in a meet —Mrs. J. M. Mansfield, of Liberty, many licentiates, also a numl)er of acthe assistant pastor's S.'),!)00. The aning with his Pleasant View churt^h, in Oregon, lost four of her dear children tive lay brothron, prominent among nual expenses of the church are about Montgomery County, Tenn , begin of diphtheria in one week,ending Sept. whom are Col. C. G. Samuel, W. L. 6th. She says: "Oh, what a lonely f.'}4,000. Connected with the church ning the fint Sunday in September. McKnight, and others. plaoe home is now! Mattie and the is a college that had 2,100 day pupils The Lord graciously revived his peoThe session was harmonious; the last year, besides a large number in ple, powerfully awakened sinnen and baby snail that are left!" Let Chris discussion of subjects sometimes takthe night school. All this work has mercifully converted a number of tian mothers remember her in their ing a wide range. There was preachmoumen. We endeavored to preach the oversight of Rev. Russell H. Conprayers. well, the pastor. Prayer-meetings are the old gospel, the atonement, vicari- ing at night and at II o'clock each —There are thirteen Baptist Church- often attended by LfiOO and 2,000 ous suffering and substitutional work day. Among the ministers occupyes ID 8 t Louis, Mo., where there were people. Baptisms are frequent. of Christ. God honored his wonl, ing the stand were Manery, Barrow, the Spirit was present to bless, Chris Hall, Bruner, and othen. Report on only seven three yean ago. In the last six yean their contributions to —Prof. Patrick S. Gilmore, the cel- tians rejoiced, prayed and worked. State Missions was read by C. G. the city missions have amounted to ebrated musical director and leader The intelligence of twenty-three pen Samuel; on Home Missions, by J. T. 1270,000, and in seven yean the gain of the famous Gilmore Band, died in itent believers submitting to Christ Barrow, and on Foreign Missions, by of membenhip in the St. Louis Asso- St. Louis, Mo., Saturday, September filled our hearts with gladness and C. Denton. The suiijects were disciation has been 1,600. the 24th, of heart disease, in his six- set the joy-belltfof heaven ringing. cussed by the several writers and ty-third year. He led his band of Bro. Barnes baptised eighteen happy othen. —The Brownsville, Tenn., States- 100 instrumental musicians the day converts in Cumberland River and Rev. I. W. Bruner presented the reDemocrat of September 80tb, says: before, in seeming good health. He five more stand approved for baptism. port on Iteligious Literature, and in a " During the absence of Rev. and Mn. had just been notified of his appoint- The whole community WM aroused, speech commended especlallr our Trotter, the memben of his church ment as leader of musio at the the church greatly strengthened, the State organ, the BAPTIST AMH UBRLEVseizedtheopportunity tofillhis larder, World's Fair, and was publicly com- putor's heart made to rejoice and Ton. The subject of Temperance rehis coal and wood house, and, in many plimented by the Missouri World's Christ's name exalted. To God be ceived attention. Thereporton Eduways, to add to theoonvenienoe,oom Fair Lady Managen in recognition all the glory. Bro. Barnes, their con- cation proposed a high school in the fort and happiness of him and his of his being now the champion musi- secrated and oelf-denying pastor, is bounds of the Association and a veir general discussion onsue<l. SweetMUmablewife." cian of the world. Ho bad Just doing a wonderful'work in that part water Seminary receive<l favorable atof the State in awakeni^ an interest —Rev. R. B. Mahoney, raoent pas- reached the pinnacle of the world's in church building. His eiTorta at tention. The next session will be held with tor at Colombia, has Just closed an renown, when summoned to stand be- Erin have been veiy successful, and the churoh at Coghill, Thursday beIntwMtlng mMting at Waco, Ky., fore the Judge of all the earth. if any one wishes to send Bro. Itemes fore the third Sunday in September, 1808. The twentv-second session was one of bis former chsrgM. Then a —Rer. T. J . Wsine, of Mississippi, contribution for his house at Erin both pleasant and profitable. were fire additions and the ohuroh J. T. BABBOW. locates permanently in T « X M . His it will rejoice the heart of a noble and WM g i M t ^ ravlTed. The mambera Swootwater, Tenn. departure is a great loss to the form- self-sacrffioinff servant of Qod, and felt that it WM • "«eaulDe rarJval." will aid great^ in building up that Wa should liln to have Bro. Mahoney er State in which he bM done so kingtlora wh<ou oonsists in "rightmuch faithful work for the Master. His eousness and peaoe and Joy in the back In TeoneasM, bMuttful and aooompliahed daughter, Holy Ghost." J . H, BvRKrrr Stqi InmiQ, of Atlant*, OT,, MiM AdR, hiu bnn el«oted AubUTOi Ii;/. By reference to page .38 of the State Convention Minutes of 18UI, it will be Meen that the underaigned committee was appointed to prepare ail oiiuEn Of iiuHiNesH and name such chairmen as we thought proper to prepare before hand the reports for their committees. That committee, with the e* ception of Dr. Willingham, met at Jackaon, Tenn., during the Centen niai meeting, on March Wth, and IVIBDICATBO authorized the following report: OBUEB or BUMINICMS. • IHXIIIIIOII IH'IlIll' iifKl irlctiuno Wednesday, Oct. 12, 1W»2, Knox i.iilliiiiif tiir llio cure of ville, Tenn. 11 Tlir<i«i.A Viilw ami N cktliIriMililo iilcaMint, McW 9KK)to 9:.'«)-Devotional exercises. iiii! ii|.|.lliiitloii woni lit IIOIIIK It* woiiiienul > MIKIII work Willie thnpattuiitilccpa. »:JU)to lO::i()-()rganization. to 12<)0-Subject not an What does It cure? Who is it for? signed. Children Quinsy AtTEBNOON. Adults Diphthcri.i Old Folks 2:80 to 3<»-Appointment of comTonsilitis Throat Catarrh Ministers inittees. Singers Hoarseness 3:00 to 4 <X) - Ministerial education, Actors Loss of Voicc R. J. Willingham, Chairman. Lawyers Goitre or {Throat Bandage. O C T . 6, 18»2, One hour left for Woman's Missionary Union. NiaiiT. 7::K) to 7:45-Jouinal and miscellaneous business. 7:45 to 8 :ir>-Obituaries. 8: U>—Temperance. Preaching in various churches on Sunday. W . G. INMAN, Unlike ttie Duldi Proeess No Alkalies Otherdiemlcals • M OMD ID ItM propsrrtloa of W.BAKEBACO.'S fastCoGoa jj.wfsfssjr.sfsa wkle* U mMmtMv W . M . WOODCOCK, pmr* mnd MIMM*. O. L. HAILEV, CARTER H E L H JONES, R. J. WILUNOIIAM, F . R . BOSTON, Committee. The Markets. The following are the market prices ot the articles mentioned, with the latest corrections: OOOMTBT PBODDOE. Beeswax, 22c per lb. Broomcom. straight Red Tipped,SJ per lb; long, good quality, tuoi 8«14fcfOfft« tftrjuUf, W. BAE3{R ft CO., Doroherter, HMmiLLt. TtMK. Tb* MMt PrKticid IwUtnUoa ol lU Kind latlwWofM. Butter, choice 8@15 perB). Write tor Cotalogne oontainlnc nuna* Country bacon (from wa^n), clear of newly 1,000 popilA from U BUtaa, aiao sides, 9^91 per lb; shoulders, 7(^7} J ooDtolning many valoable imlnU OMtnl hamB,10gll: jowl., 8c; lard, 64@7i / t o Hookk«»per« and BodnM* M w - M n t choice, 'fr«H.onappUcatlon. Addrcaa Feathers, prime, 44c per lb muR. w .J B N X I N O a , I NIUIIT. Swelled Ncck vjwvivv. Auctioneers ed, 25@35. Naebvtlle. Toim. Enlarged TOHBIIB Public Speakers 7 <)0-Annual sermon, 0. A. Lofton. Tallow, 6c. . ^ ^ Travelers Cro'jp Ginsing, clear strings, dry, <2.00 TIIDBSDAT, O c t . LARN. MOBNINU. and You. A | Ik CLOTHES Made New. Snonng 2.10 per &. v l i l F Wc clean or dye the most dellRi.i,l m*l) on r.-<-.-l|.l of Our ly.M«. 8»tl«f»«H^'IOto 9 Devotional exercises. Peanuto, 2i@3c per lb. II.,>1 ,r>mriinl«.l i . m.mp tor (rr, t - o o ^ Chickens, [email protected] per doz; hens cau- (fhatie or fabric No ripping re, n ' TIIH TH11..1IT AI.I. ITK All-HtllTIl AddrlM 600 to 9-.30-Joumal and miscella quired. Kepair to order. Write for 2.50 @8.00 per doz. THl PHYSICIANS' REMEDY CO. Bo. 73. ClnclnMll, 0.neous business. Elggs, I2t<! per doz. tomm. We pay exprcssage both ways t« 9:30 to 1200-State Missions, J. H. Inrfi potatoes (new crop) $I.40@ any p«»int In the U. 8. MCEWEW STEAM $1.60 per bbl. Anderson, Chairman. DVE WOKKS AND CLEANING ESTABUSHDried peaches, halves, 2} cents per »IF,NT. Na.shvlllc, Tenn. AFTERNOON. 0); dried apples, 8J©4 per lb; dned Name thlH advertisement. 2:30 to 300—Denominational liter- blackberries. So per lb. ature and colporlage, J. M. Senter, Applea, northsn, [email protected]. Chairman. SEEDS. 800 to 400-Sunday-Bt!hools, J. M. Prime Timothy, [email protected] per bu; >11 maltaa. iMkaa. VA. Ito I'Voet, Chairman. Bed Top, 53@55; Blue Grass, S2.00@ Unpi^Judkied• ad»LC« ^TCB on aU NKIHT. 250; Orchard Grass, fl.26<[tl.85; Clo7 JK) -Centennial mass meeting on ver, [email protected]; Millet, $1; Hungari cblDM » l d OD mootli^ p j i y i M ^ ^ M y ^ j g ^ Home Missions, when the report an. $1.00 to^&iL niwtratedOatalotpiMFMe. BIDES. STTPinrBXTES m a m T E B S . i(nBrMMlmv,K^Tofk. «« «<««)• (it. Odeaco. will l)e submitted and the selection Green salted, 8Jc per lb; dry flint, nUr cnmd. of the speakers will be under direct Cucwrs Pan 6@7c per B); dry salted, 5@7c per lb. No Knife, DO Adds, no eaustte and paisleaa). ion of the Vice President for the Ily three appUeatloni of Oar OMMOT C M * . WOOL. State. • m u we most falthfuUjrfuarant®*. Onrehaffca Choice unwashed, I9@20o per ft; are low, oonsiderlllff MrrtcM to be i w d m d . FKIDAT, OCT. 1 4 T U - M O B N I K O . coarse, I7@I8c per tb; burry,16@17c •W for the r«inedr with fnU dlreetlosa for self H30to 9 OQ Devotional exercises. per lb; chTice, 'tub washedi 29@80c treatment, and If cancer doea not eo«e out b j the roota after three appUcatlona, I wUl refnnd 900 to 9a0-Journal and miacel per 0); dingy, 26@28c per lb. your money. Money required In advance with OOTTOII. Itev. I»r llnwtliorim'ii Kiporlrnn* With laneous business. order. Write descrtbin« eaneer. (lormetoitr. JKO. B. BABBU. 9:30 to 1000-Nominations, plaoe Ordinary, 5) per lb; good o ^ n ^ . Box OS. Bataw. Ate. I am fri'.. frnm c»lttrrh I IWIIPVC Ihol I couldand preacher. 6; strict ordinary, 6i; low middling, Rct a ciTllllcut.i to thin iffcotfrnm any «)mi)p ; strict low nuddhng, 6J; middbw tpni phyalolnn I tiuvo UHod no mcdlclnc with 1000 to 12^0-Denominational ed 62 —It may be a surprise to some, but 7i; strict middling, Tg; good midIn thn Ittut Kin luontha i icopt KInir ii itoyul ucation, G. M. Savage. ~ ing, 7}. Market quiet. it is a fact, that the workmen u e now tJcmii lur.' My health l* Ix-ttcr than It hait lurcn In thlry yimra. 1 am In poHHCBUlon of In It is expected that all our Baptist on the fourth stoiy of the new buildLive STOOX. formation which warrmnta mn In nayln^ that schools shall be representwl in short I S J 2 5 ; ing of Sweetwater Semlnuy- K Is th<- rrllof I havo oiinTlmcod from the UBC of speeches. Cattle, extra shif utch- expected to have the roof on by the 9; best tb<' mCHllcIni-1* not more corUin and radloil 11.!» to 12 00-Southern Baptist good shippers, 2.7{: than that which It huH lirouiJhl to linndn-dn of ers, 2.75&§.25; common buC^ers, 1.76 last of October. Brethren, let us go Theological Seminary. poraonn In Owrifln and otht-r HUitca down from the ConTentlon on the I (i-cl It to M l > uiy duly to Hay. alao. that tlir AFTEBNOON. 18th ot October and enjoy the gmnd efliTlii of thin romiHty uiKin my wife hav l.c'ii 2 0 0 lbs. average, [email protected]; 100 l b s . rvi-n m<ir.> alRnal and wonderful. 8h.- hai. bcon 2u'»-No session of theConvention. educathmal rally; let us see thU ttlmont nil Invalid from ni'rvouii hcadaclir, ni'UIt is suggested that the Woman's >ieoe of Baptist property. J . H. B. rulKla and rhoumatlum In a period of thirty Missionary Union hold their session lambs, 8 . & @ 4 J O O ; good Umbs, AOO y,.ara ahc ban acarcoly had a day « rirmptlon - I came here last week under the from puln. Hhe ha. tioon unlnu Oi-rmrHiPr ot this hour. NIODT. alHiut two month*. A more compli-tc trana auspices of the American Baptist LEAF TOBAOOO. formation I have n.-vor wltnoaiiod. Kv.-ry nymp Common 7™. Home Mission Society to organime torn of dlBoaae hwi dlaappturwl. Bh« apiH'ara 7:80-Centennial mass meetingchuroh and build • house of wonUp. to bo twrnty yrara youn*«r. and la a > happyForeign Missions, under dlreoUon o" and playful ita a b«althy child. W« hav« p<-r TOmm^^f, 4 . ' l S ^ . ( R e d l u m ieal Have made a temporary organizatioo the Vice-President for theStat«. Buadrdmanyof our frlcnda to tuk« 6.2507.00; good leaf, 7.^08.00. with twelve present. The orgmiialolne. and ihi' le«tlmony of oil of thi-m IB that It SATOBUAT, OCT. 15TN-MoBNiNfl. W M M A T , tion vill be composed of from twelre IB a grimt rimiody J » llAwrntmio. SJWto 900-Devotional exercises. I'ttBtor first llapllat Church. to fifteen Rood men and woiben. I No. 2,oftr AUnnta, Os. 900 to 9:30—Journal and mlsoel bu.,fiomiw«on. hare giwt hope* ot •uoosM. l U s I e Com, laneous business. Otti, „ (tOllll*«80D. one of the coming towna of Montua. 9:00 to 9:45-Report of Treasuwr JAMES T. CAMP. Good buiineat opportonltiee am open and PInano® Committee. _ P Hbotana la.a good field f « 9:4Bto 1000-DelegiUi to SouUijBipUati: My paatoiato at lOMOula A N D BINDER. em Baptist OonTenUonMd Anwrtoiii ,gamDt«M iK Wli aiBooei^ BapUat BduoaUon B o s M f . ^ ^ ^ 801 K o f t h oiwrrjr itr««». jMlgp»n,Mont«»,B«pt n t h . lOsOOtoUjOO^WoBiM'i Work^W. TYPEWRITERS. Bookand Job Printer Job Prmtliw of •Ttrjr aewripUon. Work BrrtolMM and priow rwMWMWO. -HaU'li Hair BenttW oooUliii t ^ •Dd tnlnliUriai S S f l ^ • dwtoryJ M fiiUjr ouMiitMUdttiinatM.^T. T. Thon|^ i^^MlwatMr iia "joM M r mil* fiomKnoKVllk^wlintliiiii Jnii de- BROWM'8 I R O N B I T T E B S tend tlw m m o a i m at tha pladng o(tlM<kNnaKi44M IftthttMwbolUI-, iiigofBmaiin^llia^^ Wrii, curing 3 «(rr:.. , V.;,: fcV E B F I I E C T O B , The Kuoxville Convention. Have you a Pittsburgh, Rochester, Duplex, or a Student Lamp? D o they work .satisfactorily? D o your Lamp Cliimneyg break? You get the wrong sort! The uioiiT ones arc the " P K A R L G I . A S S , " made by Geo. A . Macbeth & Co., Pittsburgh, makers of the celebrated " Pcarl-toj)" lamp chimney, whicli have given universal sutisfuction Asthmal K). A J N D m . ^ - ' ^ BAPTIST A N D B B F L K O T O B OCT, B A P T I S T J L N D E B F L B O T O B , OCT. 0,1892. 14 OBITUARY. L O N C LIFE NoTirs—Obltuarr notloc* nu» eiovwIInK 300 wonli will Ih< liifvrtod rnw of cliariK), tiut uiie oviil will Ih< chamii] foruMh •iicvotxiliiv wiinl •11(1 itiimUl lie iiald In oil vbiiov. OounI tlie wont* •iitl yiiu will kmi« )>xaotljr wtial Ihu vharict' will lio. Ih |)088llil« (inly w l i f i i t l i o UIiuhI Ih I>ur«t itiiil vii^iiroiiH. To oxiu'l iHTofiilik a m i oilier iiitiHotii* fruiit tlu* clrculiition, till' Hiipfrlor iiuHlidiic la A V K H ' H SarsaiHirillii. I t ImparlH |)criiiaii('iit Hlrfiit;tli ami ftlU-iuiiey to t'v«r.v orK»ii of tlio IxmIv. IloHtonw t l o n t o piTfecl l u ' a l l l i a m i Htn-iiuth M i h m a n n . — I t hoM pleaHwl O o t I iu h i s ill Unite wiiuloiii t o c a l l t o livr hoBvoiily h o m o Si(it«r L u c y A n i i i a M u r o i a u n , w h o d i M l o u t h e iUh d a y o f A p r i l , IW»2, at her h o m e in C o a l Oreeli, T o u n . H e r u i a i i i e n D a m e n-afi L u c y A u u i s CulTiiiaii. S h e waH b o r u uoar W h i t e f l b u r g , H s m b l e D C o u n t y , T o u u . , o u t h e 2(llh of J a D u a r r , I S 6 L a n d was u n i t e d in m a r r i a g e to Ou(»tave M u r m a u n o u t h e l i U h of O c t o ber, ISS7. Adorue<l w i t h a l l Christ i a n virtuos. dhe wan t h e loved w i f e a n d m o t h e r in her h a p p y h o m e . Hor husband a n d ttvo Hmall children m o u r n her loss, w h i l e d a i l y blessinf; her m e m o r y . W h e n but a small girl. Sister A n n i s profotuted rolif^ion a m i Results from Using AVEH'8 S a r s a p a r l l l u . M a r y SthuiKTt, K a n « i i 8 < ' i t y , Ki»., w r i t e s : " 1 nin r..iivliii<»l that after liiivliii: lii'i'ii »lrk II u'liolf yi'ur (rum llv<>r <'»iiitilnliil, Ayrr'n SurHUpirlllu »:>vi>il my flit'. Till' Ih-aI iiliyHliTiiiiK lifltiu uiiutilii l«i lu'lii iiu', mill huvliiK trlfil tlirw " I I h t prtiiiriclnry iiii-illriiu-H wKlioiil l«v'iii'llt. I ut la^t look AyiT'n 8arsa|Mirtllu. Tinri-"iilt Willi n ri>iii|ilrt«' run-. Sliu-i- lli'-n 1 liuve rrroiiiuii-litlcil tlila iiii-iln liii- lo uthors, iiuU always with mn-ciT'K " AVER'S Sarsaparilla |-n'p«rr.l I>r J .C A ) .r Ji Cu.. U.wi 11. Cures Others, will cure you Elr<-trapol8«. Col. James Haiiiltos, Pbe.sidkvt OF TUE Bank of Leiunox. Lebanon Tens., A u g . 31.—Messrs. DuBois & W e b b . Oentlemen—Havi n g been g r e a t l y l>enefited b y t h e use of t h e E l e c t r o p o i s e , I desire t o bear t e a t i m o n ; t o its g r e a t v a l u e . I was sufTering f r o m a t h r o a t t r o u b l e of a very severe character a n d of l o n g s t a n d i n g ; also from ^ n e r a l debilit o f m y timole c o n s t i t u t i o n . I was vised by m y d a u g h t e r , M r s . D r . M i l l e r , t o use t h e E l e c t r o p o i s e , a n d a f t e r app l y i n g it a c c o r d i n g t o d i r e c t i o n s for t w o or t h r e e m o n t h s , I h a v e derived very great benefit f r o m it. M y disease of t h r o a t h a s been p e a t l y mitigated,indeed almost wholy c u r ^ , and m y greneral h e a l t h s o m u c h i m p r o v e d t h a t I feel m y s e l f a well m a n , a n d m y f r i e n d s c o n g r a t u l a t e m e o n m y ren e w a l of y o u t h . Jajiek Hamilton. Jo i n e d the Baptist church of W h i t e * urg, being baptized by HIder T h o m a s G i l b e r t ; ever s i n c e she liv<Hi i t h e life of a t r u e C h r i s t i a n , b e c o m i u in w o r d a n d e x a m p l e a b l e d s i n g a r o u n d her, u n t i l t h e Loni said, ' " Well done thou good a n d faithful I s e r v a n t , couie t o t h y e t e r n a l r e w a r d . " I T h e f u n e r a l w a s h e l d at W h i t e s l i u r g . Itev. T h o s . G i l b e r t , he w h o h a d baptized her, p r e a c h i n g c o n s o l a t i o n i n her f u n e r a l s e r m o n f r o m t h e t«<st: " T o d i e is g a i n . " P h i l . i. 21. Sister Annis was buried by the side of her f a t h e r a n d m o t h e r in t h e f a m i l y lot in B e n d C r e e k C e m e t e r y . H e r soul livee i n t h e prettence of o u r h e a v e n l y Father, m e e t i n g there well m a n y , w h o m s h e loved w h i l e i n t h e ileeh a m o n g s t us. T h e r e a r o u n d t h e g r e a t w h i t e t h o o e o f G o d m a y w e all m e e t Sister A n n i s a ^ n never t o p a r t , liv i n g w i t h her t h e perfect l i f e in G o d i n e t e r n i t y . T h e n , w h e n i n t h e imm e a s u i a b l e j o y , w h i c h s h a l l fill u s , we ask of her, " A n n U , h o w l o n g w i l l this lastT" S h e w i l l answer with t h e ; g l o r i f i e d , r a d i a n t face o f t h e s a i n t , " F o r e v e r a n d e v e r ; a n d blesae<l is t h e L o r d , t h e father of m y soul, a n d t h e L a m b on t h e t h r o n e a n d t h e H o l y Ghost; halleluja, alleluja!" iC AssoclaUonal Meetlngii. Dtspcpsia a>d Catarbu—A' Card From Col. D. L. Scblett. CI'Bca Chattanoooa. Tesn., S e p t . 23 1892. — M e s s r s D u B o i s & W e b b , C i t y : Gentlemen : I b o u g h t a n Electropoise from y o u J u l y 4. w h i c h 1 u s e d i n aooorda n c e w i t h i n s t r u c t i o n s , a n d for t h e first t i m e i n m a n r years. I feel perfectly healthy. I b a d suffered greatly from dyspepsia a n d catarrhal troubles a n d a i m from a complication of t r o u b l e s c a u s e d f r o m la g r i p p e , a n d w a s so exceesirelr n e r v o u s a n d brok e n d o w n g e n e r a l l y , t h a t I h a d desp a i r e d of relief f r o m m e d i c i n e s . In a few d a y s a f t e r b e m n o i n g t r e a t m e n t I a t e a d l i y i m p r o v e a , a n d h a v e continu e d t o d o BO, all o f w h i c h 1 a t t r i b u t e t o t h e Electropoise. I would not be w i t h o u t it. T o u n r e a p e c t f u l l y . D . L . SirBLcrr, A d d r e m D u B o i s Si W e b b , I t o o m s 5 4 , 5 6 a n d 5B C o l e B u i l d i n g , N a s h v i l l e , Tenn. ran DvnPEPsiA, IndlRCKtlon, anil monia<-li dbimleni. Uke IHU!* n i T T K I i a . AMtlealnnkMull.tl perlxMlle. UeniilDehu trade mark •iid croHod red llocaou wrafipcr. OOTOBEB AS.SOrlATIONS. WOOLWINE » SCHOOL. SIX MILES F R O M NASHVILLE. TENN. (iiirn alcohol O n till-< >vri'liiii<l Miiiiiniy Itiklln iiy Prepares for Collegfe. Fits for Business. S. S. W O O L W I N E . Principal. Thi- l'rllu't|r.»ll»aii I'Mii; Hill.-.' iHili I-.HII lln'.il lliiil II-. »..«> 1 an* liHiiullj rLmMcil till rni.l.-M ,,1 Illll'lll'I'l ullil «l|ll.KI.. i- "I lll.lll-lll iH lIif (.Tl.tllK-.! l.«t'llll'l llliri I) IMTUIIH.- llllulllllll'llll. U|l|H-l|r I.I Im uIk.iiI 111' "IIIIH- in nil. r III. |.;ir. Ill ii.T til. Ii-ui li. r •inllliiirll) Iruriii. 111.- ••iiimlillllUi. .,1 III.' ..liiit.'iil iilul I. nil il'>— III' »li»l' III I " I' 1" l4iii>» li"« niiilill) UK Hi'll UK Unit iiiikIiI} I""" mliiKiii'. I ' l " liiiili'" 111' l""l>< r Il|i|illi-;illi'li MaliJ il l.rlitlil l«iv lui.'» lli.T. lj Im-i-uim t.l u » III »liu li ti. I- .1 III' i.jM I ikii.l III llif Mrli.M.U wIhti- i-l.l.tnllliMltiiii iiiiihI Ih' .-n fiirrfil. Ili'-r." ran Im- ii" r. iii. 'M Tli' •IiIIii"-mI -lii'I'-Ill iiiai -hiii'l al III. lii-a.l .<1 Ills i-Iukm. II Ih irui-, I'lil ollal 111-'ifU li 11' "!- I" I" I" I ill-II Ill'-' la"" ali'l all'.i».-.l (r. i- «.-ii|i<- ali.l i,'lti-ii (trt-ali I -llmiilU!. lliaii 111" i la»» an..r.l» lilnalillll> aii'l lilM w llllU|.'li*-t«i* I" wt.rL Km < iiluli'Kiii- ii'liln-."-'. i Mir 'ii.l.-ui..r i . 1.. ailtHiii'' lli'- -lu'l'-iil iii-ixrilliiu in S. 8. W O O L W I N E , Principal. .Illt\ 4.i:i I N ANIIVII.I.K. TKNNKHHKI-:. The Baptist and Reflector Book House H "Cliristian O O K S DtK-trim-s, " ( t r i u c T r u i u f t i i , " F»>nl " Tli«< C h i l l i o f t h e I N S T O O K : J . M . IViiillct«ni $1 50 60 1 25 75 75 I 50 {{jirrftt " T l i o L i t t i . ' I l a p t i s t , iI. M . M a r t i n "liaptiBt rHiiiplilftH, A. N. Ariinlil "StTmoiiB and A i K l n t w H . J . A. Umnilim " S m i t l i H l i i l i U ' l)i«-tioiiiiry " C o n i p l i ' t v W o r k s o f .I<>»cpliu8 "Thr«H> U c a a o n s W h y I A m a H n p t i s t , J . M . 1 50 2 00 I'finlh-toii " H,»'nry D r u m n i o m l h AddrrtwcH*' " L i f e o f W i l l i a m C a r e y , J o w ' p h li«*lch«"r " M a u y Thiii>;» for M a n j r I ' c o p j c , A . W . L a t n a r " T h e S t o r y o f t h e D a p t i a t a , Co€>k ' Pilj^rim's Progrwja, B u n y a u ' l i n p t i s t L a y m a n B.Hik, W . W . E v e r t a ' T h e P a s t o r , U . Hnr\ey ' Paat^ir's Hnnd-lMH,k, W . W . E " D e i i o i n i i i a t i o n a l S^-nnons, J . I I . Orav««» 50 50 1 25 75 50 00 70 90 75«-. and 1 " Exixwition of the Parabl»«, J . R . Gravi's " O l d L a n d m a r k i s m , J . II. G r a v e s " l u t e n - o m m u n i o n , J . I I . Oravt-s " M i d d l e Lifo, J . I l . O r a v » « " Mell's Parliamentary Practice " C o m m e n t a r y o n Jt>hii, A l v a i i H o v e y " C t J m m e n t a r y on Acta, H o r a t i o B. U a c k e t " C o m m e n t a r y on Matthew, J o h n A. liroadua " Cliun-h M a n u a l , by J . M. Pendleton 75 25 75 75 75 75 25 CO 25 50 Etc., Etc., Etc. Ant Otheii Bookh FcnNiHiiED a t Pdblihheii'h Piiiceh. TRACTS: Fare Exfunioas to Texas and Arkaatas. T h e Naabville, C h a t U n o o g a & St. L o u i s R a i l w i ^ , t h e o l d eHtabliRhed line t o t h e Weat, will m i l excuraion ticketsto Arkansas a n d Texas, A u g u s t aoth, S e p t e m b e r 2 7 t b a n d O c t o b e r 25th, g O M to return within thirty d a y s , a t o n e loweet l i m i t e d f a r e f o r t h e r o u n d t r i p . U a u a l s t o p o v e r privil e | ^ allowed on g o i n g trip W e s t of Mississippi River. Remember the d a t e a a n d b e s u r e t o c a l l for j o u r ticket over t h e " G r e a t McKenzie Route," N. 0 . & St. L. Railway. This ia t h e o n l y l i n e r u n n i n g P a l a c e D a j A roiil'a Krranil. now many there arn who Ko on tbpm An c h e o r a p a i n anywiiere (ram too lo hnad •tarta ths aufferor at once for rvllof, too ofton without knowlDg what la annileO, tiut Hlmpljr to trjrioioo blffbaoundlng rcinody advortiRed In p*p«ra or on reno««. Iu nearly all oaiioH of Ulaorderod Stomach, Mvoror llowela,(romwhlaii prooMd moat of the palna « « have, • few doaet of Hart's Blood and Liver PllUi will oorreet the f o r a l l ArkaniHw a n d T e x a n . F o r furdifflenltjr and they tliould alwaya bo kept at t h e r i n f o r m a t i o n a n d . rate*, w r i t e t o W . W . K n o x J i o k e t a g s n t , U n i o n D»hand. )t; A . H . JRoblnion, ticket agents a x w e l l Houm, N i w h ^ l l * , Tbdd. O IP I I - J M , Nashville, Toun. The Teacher's Bible. F I N K IX)!liM>N K I > I T I O ! i i - ( K V K K It KI*0TT1NW00I»K*M). The Illble wo are offering l i tb« beat liook ror Its prico now on the market. It Dicaniirra MInchea. I* printed In clear n«w tyiic. ha* pagu apil vhaptcr hcadliiRH and mandnal rororrnorH Alsatian Levant Binding, Divinity Circuit, Leather-lined, Silk sewn, Round Corner, Redunder-gold edge. Tho aupplcmentarjr" Alda " bound In the voliimo maiiethreo hundrod cloecly printpil paRPK They oiimprtae Concordance, Dictionary, Indeiea. Ma|i«. (inoRraphy, lllatxiry, uaoful tnblna anil mui'b other valuable lorormatlon. The lowrat net prlie o( the InniIi la r i v a itoMwinM. Toevery one aondlng an order with the price, wo will Rive a yoara aubaerlptton to the IUpriar Ami Rsri.«OTOa. The iMper may bo aent to the purchaser, or to any other prrty whorj ho may doatinato. llooh and paper poataxo froo. Addreaa. BArriirr and RicrLKOTOit, N a i h T l U e , T e n n . Vor Over M f l r Vaara. i r t r p h l M M l Uie W t i b k y l l A b l t a . MRS. W I N H t O W ' B BOOTHIKO B Y R U P has Tbeir eiiai*, M m U and curt. Thla la Iba title he«d used for ahlldrea tsethlng. I t soothea th« ror weak or InHamcd* cytM or Kranalated lldg ( t f a ^ u a b l t aad Intsrvstlnf ^ k . j u a t jrab[tailed, Of i n m venr provaleutdlaeaMS. Sent ehUd, BortBU ths iuais, aUaira all pain, oure I t M f o r i i h a r t t l M o o l / . AdroH wind eollo, and Is ths beat n m e d y for Dlaroil. 0. W . PAMum It 00., rkiaa. Twaatynv* e e a u a tatUe, Bold by doc* not bam or hurt wbaa a p ^ M , by mall ajeM n t . Cherry, B i Nuihvllie, HNN a. mam m m m.. miitol, tim. « va. d r v n t s u Uuvuitboiit tks world. "''OUR OLD RELIABLE EYE WATER to iiitilto WDI.TR'H Ai mi; lIl.AriilNO. Ali'oliul IH ijihhI fur U'lillicr; It li|;iMi<l III! till-IlKlll. Alilllliil idtllf rliii'l iii^trixliciitol ('-iiln);!!!', riiiriilu Wiiti-r, um'. |i:iv Itiiiii tliu UL'II known fiit'u wimhc!). Wo tliliiU tlii-i'O Ih iiiilliiiii; tiMi awtly tu um. Ill u gou<l Iculliui iircDcrvulkvo. Aculo Blacktni; retails a t 20c. Tue Bahtibth and tub Bidlb. jC'iiiitlniivil Iriim puKe ranks. j W e s h a l l nood l a r g e r buildiugB, a n d m o r e of church them. Wo • h a l l n e o d ten d o l l a r s for d e n o m i n a l i o n a l s c h o o l s a n d collegea w h e r e w e DOW h a v e ten cents. A n d o u r miaaion work a t h o m e a n d a b r o a d s h o u l d enormously extended. be T o d o t h i s we niul nt that prlrc ecllii rcndlljr. Many > l <-< i|ilu nro HO uiriiiituiiifd to buying a drraxiiiK <ir liliii-kiii^' nt Ch'. nnil 10<<. a Imttlo tliiit tlii'jr innimt unilcniliinil tliiit n blackiiiltran l i o c l i u n p ot '20n. Wcwiint to meet llii-m with rtioa|ini'«* if wo ran, and to ac* i'iini[iliHli IhU wc ullur a reward of m u s t h a v e G o d - g i v e n leaders. N o peo- $10,000 of t h e B i b l e is n o t likely t o c o m e d o w u fur a reripe wliu li will cnatilo u» to miiko VVoi.KK » Ai ME Ili-ACKINO at Buch a price thatn retuili r mil profitably acll it at 10c. ft bottle. . \Vc hoM tliis offer onen until J a n . Itt, 1893. t h e n w a i l for t h e m t o d i e t h a t we m a y W O L F F ft n A W D O I . P n . rhllKlslphta- responsibility needed to b r i n g a l m u t p l e need leaders afl t h e B a p t i n t s d o . Never sinoe C h r i s t iiHcende<l t o heaven h a s a n y B a p t i s t c a u s e f a i l e d of g r e a t p r o s p e r i t y w h ' c h was in c h a r g e of wine a n d e u e r g o t i c leaders. But the O o d a n d work m i r a c l e s for t h e B a p t i s t s . I f wo p u t t h e w r o n g m e n in t-harge of o u r c h u r c h e s a n d Hchools a n d colleges a n d Boards and papers, and All t h e i r places w i t h m e n better united t o load in s u c h m a t t e r s . I f we are t o o c o w a r d l y l o a s s u m e o u r s h a r e of desired changes and the modifications, t h e n t h e r e c a n b e n o B a p t i s t progress. .Thesmanoat P f l l I n t h o T V o r m . rs Provided the great Organs ) or t h o body a m not »rr«p«nibly ad. tbeni are few dtimuM that raiTTrMiy ! l i n y Liver Pills! _ win not cnr... Ky tlirlr •ctlon t h e A l . l t r r , tlioHplMin.lbn Heart and t t i a l ^ Ulili>oy.ar» ImiiiBht IntolmmiomoM^ ^ • r t l i i n . amllirattri. »lfor of mind and . T h e r e is a m a n for every p o s i t i o n , a Ood-made man. When he and the p l a c e m e e t , t h e victory is assured. N o l o n g e r t h e n can t h e r e b e a n y q u e s t i o n as to m e n a n d m e a n s for c a r r y i n g o n o O O O © © QOOi NEWHWHM $25 Favorite Singer nificently t h a n the Baptists have a sure e n o u g h people hold back if they leader, a n d more no stubbornly t h a n t h e y if t h e y lack f a i t h in t h o s e F i n a l l y , i n t h i s C e n t e n n i a l year o f F o r e i g n Missions, as we t e l l over a n d over t h e story of C a r e y LOW ARM, $20.00 Drop leaf, fancy cover, two large drawers, nifltel ring*, and a full K t of Attachment!, eiiiial lo any Sinpcr Machine tolil from $ 4 0 to $60 by Canrasteri A Jria) m your home before paynent is a»kfd. Iluy direct from the Manufacnren and lave agentu'profit* liciidcs getting :erUficate» of warrantee for five years. Send or teitimoniaii to Co-operatlva Stwlog l a e h l i a Co., 2 0 1 8 . Iltb S t . . P b l l a . . P * . OVUTB r A V r B E f O B T . ' S S THE GRIGINRL w<-<> I'nteiit Kiarop oil mcli WaM. l*iiU<nliil KfU SI. IKWI. TAKE NO OTHER. R E M E M B E R THE CORSET W I T V T E K . I ^ I ^ O W E R S ^ .. . M^.. 1•• Mmii. wui irnil l>T m«ll. p™itPBM. (he rollowlnit l»»l«-f«iit Bolbii wblcb (lay bapotladrf OmJ l»r 51'llJPbU^lm In "our w l X ^ ' o V S ^ i e d In 111. r.rd.nlur 1 Balb Beraiida Enter uiy,lh*fraail«t winter 8i>wer,*aonMaa wUia,awMtaMsM.I1 Bulb B i ^ Koman Bmnan uyaoaw. Byadath. •>«»>• U a n amral myim ipikd v. of btaoUful wUte blwaoau. i i f frafnat I Bulk 0 . . H HyadaUi. pn>d.eM ^ i k . . rf U,. a ^ b i y t l f d b t o I Bulb rrttua. vtrr frafiaat, huft whit* and ydlaw U«mmm, U waaiitfal ffalUaa. I Balk Tall^ »«« Vaa Tbot, btautlful latcaM aearMt Mowaa ««T aaily. I Bulb AUlma Heap.. U<«« ctaitwi of Bww-whlla UoaooBU, t ^ UooMr. OUat 8aowdro^ ( i n t . drooptaf.wsirwy*————* wasy-w^ »1 Botb mtUQ ViMUh amfwurwft r^^ M «ty. IBiiIbBema,eirayiofdoepsky-bla.bleaeon»efiriatbaa^N 1 Bolb Spaalfh Iiii. a lowly Bower of nrioui oaion aad a infkw a l M M . 1 BttlbOtorv of tho Baow, loaf aftaya of laifa, Ufht-ktaoiawwa with white •• *1« ^ r a t ^ l r l ^ l of of rilE aJtrriJoWEU wlih two rli-if.nj Unr. «lorri All .joiwfor^ r.r* liiilb. (worth J»oe«l.i .r« Krand b l i x to i mommI e r wlUi . V ; you * •"fSTSI oniT Iu Inlrodara tlitm. 0»t your n«lgbl«ri maH wo «lli tna* oi laooo mmmcwbi >» luMJorcallore KM Willi eKniou .. tlM. Dlr««tlui>»»orcaltoreK:ntwUbeMlilot. .. ALao TH« r o t L O w m o "t^LSSfl^^®* ..fSa • S l u t BerwaAa Frowla*. »il«o« ! • MIzoJ Tali»*t<l<>a>>le ordnfle B5« »«r««AI.«l«»,»K>rt»,lBrl«llB»ABi»ta«-.. IS HIirA PsrrwtTaU** 6 rtaaM«rACa<tl.<lifforcatoorU. 0 MImA Hraflatk*. double or (Insle t h e work. N o p e o p l e f o l l o w m o r e mag- w h o u n d e r t a k e t o lead t h e m . 1 00 E n o n — W i l l e t t e , W e d n e s d a y , October 5 t h . " T h e P l a i n Eii^IihIi o f B a p t i s m a n d t h e Ix>ril'« S u p p » « r , S . E. J c m e e , 10c D o v e r F u r n a c e — C r o c k e t t ' s C r e e k " W h a t ia i t t o E a t a n d D r i n k U n w o r t h i l y , J . U . G r a v e s 10c C h u r c h , S t e w a r t C o u n t y , F'riday, Oc- " S h o u l d W o m e n S[»eak i n M i x e d P u b l i c A e s e n i b l i e B , J . A . B r o a c l u e , 1 0 c tober 7th. " P r t i a e h i n y a n d S c h o l a r a h i p , A . T. KolMTtaon 10c Sevier— Wear's Valley C h u r c h - Hahveht B e l l s , Nos. 1 , 2 a n d 3 c o m b i n ^ i l , e i t h e r B h a j x t l o r r o u n d n o t « « , When t p<»r d o z . $ 7 . 5 0 o r 7 5 c f o r B i n ^ l a c o i j y . llarv-eHt B e l l s , w^ohIb o n l y , New River—New River, Scott p a p « ' r c o v e r , N o a 1, 2 a n d 3 c o n i b t n e d , $ L 5 0 p e r «lo7.. io r 15c |)er C o u n t y , o n C i n c i n n a t i S o u t h e r n railc o p y ., H u aa rr vv e a t im-iib, UellB, w o r dn a o n li y , liK>ani K > a n l li i o u n d ., Nob. n o a . i, 1, 2 z ia n d 3 c o u i road, T h u r s d a y , O c t o b e r 13th. b i n e < l , i 2 p«'r d o z . o r 2 0 c p e r c ^ y . Weakley C o u n t j — O l e a a o n , on the W. E. Penn 26c each N. & C . railroad, F r i d a y October 23rd " T h a t B e a u t i f u l D r e a m , State Convention— First B a p t i s t " I t IB o n l y a D n - a m , W . E . P o n n 25c each C h u r c h , K n o x v i l l e , W e d n e s d a y , Octo- T h e C h o r t : h I l o l l a n d R e c o r d B o c x , w i t h 2 0 c h u r c h l e t t e r s , p o s t p a i d , ber I 2 t l u Addn-sa B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O f i BOOKHOU8E, Hair WeuseAlcohol 16 1892. GENUINE WAISTS auk maiie owlv dy thb JACKSON CORSET CO.. Jacksoo, Mich. a n d R i c e , let u s b e a r and in D H. BALDWIN & CO., Judson mind 617 C h u r c h that tlwy a n d m a n y m o r e of t h e b r i g h t e s t lights among our Baptist Bible Tenn., worthies were w o n t o o u r f a i t h b y t h e B i b l e . The Street, Nashville, Manufacturer* and Dcalero In High Grade has m a d e more Baptista t h a n a l l o t h e r b o o k s ever p r i n t e d . As I = » I A N O S A N U O K O A N S . INSTNL MENTS SOLD ON FAVOUANLE TERMS. Call on u« orwrlte for/enn» and prlcea. certain as we b u i l d u p o n " t h e impregn a b l e ro(!k," so certain s h a l l t h e doct r i n e of o u r s w i n in the great fight. W e need only to be f a i t h f u l to our g r e a t t r u s t t o secure f u l l a n d c o m p l e t e triumph THE for T H E B A P T I S T S AND BIBLE. <1100 Keward i l O t l . The roaclera of tbl» paper will lie nh ^<•<1 to learn that there Is at leaat one dreadnl illneaiia thul Hclenct- haa been able to euro in all It* Bta«m. and thai l« Catarrh. H a i r . Catarrh ^ r e r< the only l>oaltlve cure known lo the m«|>l<»' fnitornliy. Catarrh twlna a cooKtllutlonal dU ' eaHe, requlrcH euHe, » i-onalltutlonal treatment llull'a Catarrh Cure I* taken Internally, aetlne directly upon tho lilooU ami mucaw* iiurfa«ii of the nyeteib^^ thereby deHlroylng the foundotlon «l th.i dlHcaa.', and kIvIuk the liatlont "trirngth li» liulWlnn up the eonatltutlon ami aiwUtlnK nature In iloliiB IU work. The proprictora have Ml much faith In lt« curative pciwern thai they offer One Hundred Uollam for any caiw that It fttllH tu cure. Hend for lint of u^tlmonlnln. „ A.ldre«a. F" J CHKNKY A CO.. Tolwlo, O BUSINESS DIRECTORy. The Constantly Growing Demand FOR THE CELEBRATED BEHR BROS.' PIAKOS Enables Us to Keep in Stock A Handsonne Assortment. H. D O R M A N & C O N A S H V I I - L - E : . T B ^ N N . A r t Inatmetlon. iiny ore .. meat pepniar artlcliaior Ui» kinil now nn tbn iiiiirkot You Kliiiiild Jiare oiik of lliein. BE SURE and GET the RIGHT THING I f yaar dealer fcaan't thrm wrilo 10 aa. CANVASSERS WANTED. ' l O N E DOLLAR oolora. paatel and erayon work. Portraiture a meetrioal W o r k I W. Hrultl * Oo.,BloctrtclanR. Mabufaetur J w* and denlor* In eleetrloal InitrumenUi and auppllea for hoteta, ' M ^ ' e a j i i " " ' realdonoea Wf^UntonBt. (BaUbllabed |4T» rhatoimhloStoek, neo. 0. Dury. « 8 Union at " oameraii dry platea. blue print |)ap«et,aar« «ounu..tc. To taiow other people's minds drop us a eard: ^ read what they sayo eome in and ex.ianoSo „ M" T^R • 'TFJFS' 'VSF• R .I^ASS ,1 ( Immiii t; ( H 11 •. 1 .'II I ; \ I- M-- i II ^ M N < . •' 11 I M1 Every Hour ^ l o ^ tB t h e B a p t i s t a n i l ftefloctor. Nashyllle. m B A P T I S T A N D B B F L B O T O B . OCT. 0,1892. 16 Sunday - School Periodicals DO YOU USE RTILIZERS? Wljy, Certainly. Do you take me for A FOSSIL? 1-^OLJWri-l PERIODICALS AND I A. I^' l bCIx' Assets, - $1,080,713.37 Net Surplus, - 1,100,574.00 W. M. WOODCOCK. Nashville, Tenn. PRICES. Ill fliilis fur olio v«'urtwhttn(i»n<>"'H ('oiMriilioii Ti-ui-Ik-i .'rttil... Km-I Uc>ril», Agout fur wookly. 50.-t«. .Soiiif-Iiioiithly, a.Vts. M..iiihlv. i""-!- Cliil.U '.'•'^" i'' I.--""!! lllll '-'l. ilcl!. U<iill«'l!>. lOflH I'KU UL'AUTKII eiuli U' f..ll.>\»« (^imrl. ilii luturiiKHlhitt'. SJcIm; I'lhimry, 'JJcln. n . liiic riir.!- M- Uil.lf I'i' Glenns Falls Insurance Go I'lliii iiiicn, ni/.i! 28xiH hii'iioH, 91.an. Of NEW YOIIK. THE BROADUS CATECHISM. A t'tit«'«-lii»iii of ilibic T«!iiHiIuk I>>- it«"V .loliii A hroiKlii.. I» D ji|..l IMMIOHHL I n s u r e s ' C h u r c t i e s l)> tlif .Suiuln.VM'lnH»l IIKIIIII iiiuler llii- I.iiln nf llii' .SI.IIIIIITII Uiii>li>.l ( ..IN .IIL 1..11 and School Houses I'rii i* fM'tit |H'r I'opv rilliKli' or III t|UIllltlll<!» riii. «ill I.- III.- l.-ii.lili(J< air. hi llir Siiinliiy-!ti'liooI«. iiiul III Ihi- luiliKi rlrric iiguiuHt luHH by Fire, Lightning, or Tonindoos iiuywhore in the State. IN G E T T I N G Y O U R S U N D A Y - S C H O O L SUPPLIES The difference between B progras- Fmiii the Siiii>liiy-«<-lii>ol lloaiil of llii< .Koiil hern lli>|iliH< ('iiii«<-iilii>ii. lM•>i<ll•^ iiiiikliiK a illivfl I-oiitrlliiilioii to il.t 'rrciimiry. voii i>iil your KI IHMII in INUI liiiiiil 1 <• <>|>(MII sive, Buooeasful farmer and one who tloii Willi llu- {'oinciillou. iiiui irnln llif I'fiililivii in nil llic uri-sii nii«»i'iiiiiiy ••n n B F R E H C H PIANO &OBGAH CO.. is eTerlaatingly dropping back, and tiTiirUe.* •irauMT«Tivu IN rai luiiit I N S T R U C T I O N S F O H O R D E R I N G . getting farther and farther behind, is FiaDOs&Onaiis (irtliTs ilclinitf (iiM-yioir IIHIIH' I'I>»I<>|I1.-.> IIIHI Malf S:iiii|ilr» <ir Tim that the one fertilizes and cultivates, MMl M:iki'your wllfll ri'OUI'.fl.Hl |)oN'T »KM> sl A Ml'* »<>l I'.^N AXllllMf .MllkiuH \vf>iti.r). and the other expects his crop to take oriliTo puyiili to HAlTlsr si NliAY .st ||(M)l, IIOAKO Na^lmll.'. IVnii •Mafk<lar»ra' FrIrM J. M. NIUST, CornnponiliiiK N«>rretiiry. i«re of itself, and grow without any i effort on his part to make it grow. 1850. JUST SO IT IS M JOHN R A M A G E & SON. ^ 1892. Boots, Shoes and Slippers, InEvenLineorBiimsii. Trunks, Travelling Bags and Umbrellas. 305 North College Street. iilloi. I1«1T|«T >M Itt rir T il Mali orJiT' |.n.iiii)ily mul .urt fully tlllrd NATIONAL m Universal Trained Nurse BAPTISi B Y S T U D Y AT ^riivi.i. of IN CLUBS OP 8 on MORI. *T POLLOWINO PRICIS Pan OOAnTtR: oiarii CMBAPaar-siNO fob aAMPtas. • !• 1 I J A M S T PICTME LB&SUH CA>I>. NATIUNAL llArrini L R S I U . * LKAVKH. Ocl I't.) V ^R.LL^L*L UAPTIHT TEACHEH. NATI'.NAI IIM'TKT I'MIM [yuanrrlT 6c) <-ioN«L lUrrMT ADV«KC>I>. yujrtr) I T 2* Qu^rtrrXy Ji»c) N 4T10NAI. HAPTIST IKTBAHEDIATK. L^oarterlj 2c] (lunnJ thf Ul and 1.'I|1 ul t-J. li n. .nu. HkAi nf H O M C . AStt utGtHNf . ilt .'a University. NANII«°ll.i.K. TKMN. NEXT SZSSION OPZNS SZFT. 2l6t. Full rraduatp a« «rll aa undrr irnuliiatr rouracB T>-D fcllowiiblpii (or colloKe snMluatRa H..v<.0 ArwlRmlc. Knf1fi«fr1n«. il.e most FPliable Saadar-Schoul lie.p* now pobti«h«l li>r Dairti'i •iun.lj* ii.- i-. IlllilUal,ilriiarlnnmiii Uis I'harnwcrntlral. Ileoutl. MmII cal KUHT rqiilpiMNi Uhurulurica itnd muneunt:. • ..Id S.,uib. Ea»i and We.i. SAMPLES rKEC. TKKMStAsil VVII,.s WILMAM.S. SvrraMrT i Fertilizer! NATIONAL BAPTIST PUBLISHING CO.. That hafl yet been disoovered in • YOU CAN accoMC A SUNDAY-SCHOOL HELPS.-1892. The Best PAYMENTS. Buyara will And It to thair laUraat to rorr«apt>n<l with na bafor* parchaalng. OiaTRiauTiNo otrora rr Lovii. MO. MAtavtut. Txaa • I C«r IMkaOllvelU. f«Mt««> •asBtrtt. MIMPIU, Tins. •IBMHSaAM, ALA •«1 Mala It. ttll rkir« Am LITTll lOOl, ASS . II* Mala H tJfIrr u Si|NTU»r St«»4 k t»f It ia not enough that you have something to sell that the people want. If they never find out that you have got it yoa will get left. Your enterprising competitor with the longer pole will take the persimmons—every time. CASHIRTIME li. RAY, President. Address all orders to C. H. RAV. Soc y 1310 O l i v e Street, St. I ^ u i s , Mo. ' Judicious ' letal Advertising. Tipped.I UBUTY •UMOW, KY. ^Vill U i'Dt ThroDsh. EVERREAOY 0RES5 STAY LMOTIIW * 1 HMOS. ;i«.j.iijnraa BEST DRESS S T A Y I F YOU ARE GOING NORTH! SOUTHI EAST I WEST I King's Commercial College, Baptist and Reflector 'm I •OK. MUk i CM I. * M t £ t r •ETCIt BCADY" ea Back •f EM* It has pat fresh life into many a On the Market ftruggling •nterpriBe, and made many AcMtdgedlhe MM* with Oolta Perch* on both of itMl and wimintwl wslcr^pnmf. All other (Ur* MO a poor man rich. mada dlSerantlj and will ni«t. Beware of InltatUaa. Take ouno bat the "E»er Bea^y. lUnufaetand bftbe YP8ILANTI DRBS* iTAY MFO. CO., Ypsllantl. IWIotU It is an easy thing to go wrong, but rOB MALE BT AI.I. dOBBEBM AStO BETAU.EB*. 8PRCIAL I MnnEL DKK88 STRRL <X>. T« Orsnd St.. New Tort you will make no mistake if you in- OKFOTS. f :»llf»WN a MICr/NBK. &31> Harkot Htreel. 8aa Fraodaoa clude the COLLEaE LSo'fSSt. TAKE THE Ry., S. E. Cor. Fifth and Market, Entrance Fifth St., Loulsvlllo, Ky. N . , C. & S t . L . in the liat of papers in which your ad- Altorda the bem f»cllUliK for IhorouRh, practical tmlnliiir In HIIOIITIIANI». TVI'K.WHITTwo elemnt through trains O IWUanU IIOOK-KKKI'INU Succe«M In llir«' inontlw. 'r<'rm« inmh rHHv I'UIIIIh aHulnU-t) lc> vartisement appears. That is,provided poRltloiu JIIIIN 1.. KINii. rrlnelpni. daily in each direction, you handle straight, clean, honest KOADWAV E<tUll'MENT goods. The B. it R. tries to protect H A U R Y & W H O R L E Y , HEKVIC'K THE DEHT. its readers against frauds, and wants only clean money. Buffet, Parlor, and Sleeping D E A L E R S IN Cars, 2 are vary reasonable. Our advertising •pM* limited. Everj ad. is displayed to ih* bMk adfantag*, and ccmsUnt iinS rapsrrMoa oiercised to g ^ ' I g r i M t mm.': ^ iTOpt Furniture, Mattresses, Etc. 214 N o r t h College Street, OBDEBS. f i t Ant) nerLECToii, vr^iv/fes tri NMhtiii»,iWii! • • - '.•JI ' « r t e l e p h o n e 1000. t - Model Day Coaches. W i t h Lavatory a n d S m o k i n g Rooms. Luxury, Comfort, Convenience Combined. Tbe Inupertenooa Tmirvler nc«d not RO •mlMi row obniwM are iK-cwMwry, and iueli ai •r* UDAVoldAbIa ara mado In Union Uepola. THIODOB 0AM, LOW KATM AND OOIOK Tim. OaII on or AddreM: _ A. II. BOIIINRON, TIehnt Agt, Muw«ll II'M. W W. KNOX.Tifliiat AK«nt,^nlon DwU W r.. UAnCkV. General |'AMwn«er Agnnk J.W. THOMAS, Ueneral ManMIw. MAIUnlXB. VntN. THE BAPTIST. Established 1846. THE BAPTIST REFLECTOR. Established 1871. Consolidated August 14, 1889. T p T - u t W PublUbed everj Tburaday > VOL. i n NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, OCTOBER I. J Enured at the posvofflc* atNaata I Title,TeDO.,aiiaecoDd-clM(matter l ^ o - v * N O . JO. 13, 1 8 9 2 . Look I One hundred and fifty milea pistols out, eager to secure such a rare I saw, nestled close to the side of a we ran on murder intent: storm-swept rock, a bunch of blue to the south ia Pike's I'eak, easil souvenir, but he quietly backed off, dropped 1 5 seen with the naked eye, while beyon forget-me-nots. Marvelling at their IIT REV. II. E. TRUBX. into a crevice, and the wind whistled beauty I stooped to pluck them, and that like a faint shadow, is the n m through our clothes and whiskers. of The Spanish Peaks, and, on thia thougnt To the true mountaineer, Long's side. Gray's Peak, the Leadville How he got there, what he lives on ufluwiTIH iHtrii to UluKb uiiM-on, Peak in an object of intereitt. It in "AndMuiiy wuitu. IM nw<t«iiii.nH un Ihc ili-Morl ulr." Range, with the Mount of the Holy and how he will ever get down, I canBoventy-flve miles north of Denver, Cross; the Elk, Rabbit Ear and Medi- not answer. the higheat point in northern Colorado, BeautifulflowersI The delicacies of cine Ranges to the west. Middle Park To watch a sunrise from thia point and itH ascent is more diilicult than your tints, the intoxicating fragrance with Grand River winding through is an exquisite jov. The first hint of that of any other in the range. It has of your breath, the bleak loneliness of it. Mummy Mountain, and far to the dawn is a purple flush that tingea been calleil the " American Matter- your home make me hope to see Him north, the Laramie Range. To the the entire horizon, the west as wellas horn." One side is actually inaccess- who sent you hore. east, beyond the foothills, the plains the east. To be here in a thunder On we go, jumping from rock to stretch out as far as the eye can reach storm is an experience never to be ible, while the " route " is a toilsome way, picked out along dangerous rock, the danger of which would be Uke a world of sand. 'Towns, lakes, forgotten and hardly enjoyable. The chasms, up precipitous sides, arouiid great but for a stout pair of rubber streams, fields, grow less distinct as subtile fluid is everywhere. The soled shoes that cling to the sleek one lifts his eyes, until all fade into knuckles snap and crack, the hair narrow iMlges. The view of this mighty pile from Bides. Here is a sound of water, but the grey haze and earth joinx sky, the stands on end and prickling sensadifferent points of the compass is ex- no wdter in sight. I could but kneel seam of which one strains the eye to tions are felt all over the bodj. cewlingly interosting, but we will not down and with hand to ear and head see. But At noon we left the higheat point mountaina; — the magnificent „ have time to go around, as we must to rock, listen to the sweetest music how like crystallized billows they are! out feet ever trod, like Paul in start early from the mountain inn to ever made, murmuring gently, now What a tremendous weight the Pa- " Kathrina," led by a Lamb, who made s^ft and low, now strong and full, make the trip in the day. cific Ocean must have had to wrinkle with ua his one-hundredth trip to this The starting point is the home of but with a mellowneaa that steals a thousand-feet layer of solid granite place. Mr. Lamb, a Methodist circuit rider, one's soul away. I know there is a into such ridges as these! Looking The descent was as toilsome as the whose son now attends to the wants place with a harmony where mortality at them through a small field ^lasa I climb; but none of us will rwret the of travellem while he preaches to a may be forgot and where shame and am awed and tremble at their beauty. weariness of that night, the blistered few scattered inhabitants of the moun sorrow do not impose. heels and nosee (for the aun doea At last "the keyhole" is reached The glass, aomehow, fringes the snow blister), the womout shoee and the tains from houw to house. fields with all the colors of the specAt 6 o'clock in the morning we are and we empty one of our bottles and trum, and throws all out in bold re- hunger, as long a« a trace of the imrest. This well-named opening in an ready to sUrt. There are four in our lief against the blue background, al- preasions received there linger in the party besides the guide—Herbert E. almost perpendicular wall is the only though strange to say any point at memory. K»il-y. Will Maybam, H. W, Howe, approach to the Peak from thia side. the horizon seems higher than the Majeetic mountain' The altitude and myaeU. Tboro are throe homes And the wind whistlea through it with observer, even the plains out there of thy bold front, the pure air that for the five of us. Two will walk while terrific force. Not being provided two miles below me. It is said that kisses thy cold brow, the magnificent three ride. Yonder is the Peak, seven with an over-coat, and growing in- if, on the highest mountain, a gun is proportions of thy turrets, towers and and a half miles away an<i 6,000 feet tolerably chilly, I started on to an ex- aimed at the horizon, and a small ball foundations, the outatretch of plain, above us. It seems incredible that perience, thinking to be the first to is dropped into the muzzle, instead lake, river, valley, billow of hills, the elevation is so great, but with a reach the summit. Following the of dropping out, it will run back crests of mountains that ahine with determination lo nee " the other side zigzag trail, I left the party behind into the breach. holy beauty under the play of that of the mountain," like the bear, we and lost my way. Clambering over bright moonlight, have kindled in me But look around, beneath. The set out with stout hearts and Ion. jagged rocks I found myself on the tower on Long's Peak exposes an un a reverence for Hia work that no book strides, a lunch and two bottles o narrow ledge of an almost perpen- broken front of l^iOO feet as smooth could do. Manitou water to drink. The keen dicular face of granite, with 600 feet as the side of the Bunker Hill monuThe last time I saw the Peak it was air and anticipation gave such swift- ab3ve me and 1,000 below. Sud- ment, and the whole precipice has the moat beautiful from a distance of newi to our feet that the horses were denly the way ceased. I had faced been estimated at .%000 feet of altitude. twenty milea away. It had been rainsoon far behind, but shortness of the cliff with scarcely room to turn See the valleys, moraines, winding ing all day. In the evening juat bebreath directly leaves the footmen be around. At this point the atone on streams and rolling hills clothed in fore sunset all the clouds cleared which one foot was resting gave way hind and makes the caudal a >ines like carpet. Yonder is a lake— away except one black one that moved of the horses a welcome he^over and rolled, or fell, waking the echoes. t looks like ink—and another just ba- slowly toward the Peak, which atood the diflicultiee. The guide ridea a 'Twas far out of sight when it stopped. low it. A email thread of silver Is just bleak and frowning and bare to meet colt, who, like an amateur wheelman, With considerable trepidation and perceptible at the brim of the lower the atorm. For one half the mountain thinks the way to climb a hill is to do fear, clinging to a friendly niche, I one, out ia aoon loat in the carpet of was hidden in darkneaa; tiien it it as quickly us poeflible. He freta turned, retraced my ateps, catching )n. Almoat Almost directly under us ia a emerged and lo, it was white with en. and fumea, looks back, proposing to up with the tardy party who had juat eI as placid as the face of a sleep- snow; the aun looked out from behind vanished around the shoulder of the give it up, then surges on until he ing child. A stone from the hand a cloud, threw a farewell kiss at thia Trough. not reach it nor a ball from a veiled beauty and dodged out of "TheTrough" Is about one mile doea pistol; our guide aaya a 4H Winchester, sight in the weet. In the morning long, and has an angle of about 30 on a calm day, will touch this end of the snow was gone; the night-wind d e g i ^ out of the perpendicular. It it. The lake ia a quarter of a mile out had torn the garment away and left a field of snow at tho foot of a barren, is Uke the gutter where roofa that run from us and 2,300 feet below. The the awful form, that atanda 14,171 at right angle* Join. Laborioua waa Paaka cloae at hand are in an ar- feet above the aea, naked, nigged, toilsome ascent. On our left runs a brook like Ten- the climbing! The top ia like the rangement wild, butatrikinglybeau- grand, not beautiful. uttar—with the Uful. nyson'a—on to the sea—more noisy oomb Gallatin, Tenn. ^ sr part of tbe nwf gone. From than the waters that came down other The northern precipioe is worn and point one could toaa a atone. — far oreaaed and aeamed with apreat oracka; —We take the following from a at Lodore, more musical than the lyre thiaI PW.— vate letter. The facta are worth of Orpheua or the Pipes of Pan, more enough out to atrike 2,000 feet below. layera are loosened from the oliffa and beautiful than the watera of the My aenaea awam; but the idea of a hang, poiaed. ready to topple down. publishing, we think. It ia certainly Fouutain of Trevi, dodging and dan- strong man fainting saved me from a One auoh ia in tho ahape of a oolumn a fine showing the Paria Church makea. What oUier church can equal cing through the Bcented pine and awoon. •bout GOO feet long. Unoonacioualy, The way from here to within EOO I found myaeU ^wiahing to puahit ita reoordf—ED.] apnioe. . . , Wliilo Walnut Htrcot Chui^'li, I^oiiisWe follow the trail, which ia now yarda of the top ia broad and flMr> OTTT.^- hardly peraeptible, on the hard, un- The laat atretoh, over anow. all but i^Ono of the Ipafty m w aeaalck, vllln, laMl yrar, paid \l» pastor tS.OO to inRnilwr, this church |Hi1d mo 911.50 yielding atonea. Each stepgivaa wider atraightup. iaexoeedingly daogeroua. which la fraquontly the case, and tho U) tho moiiitior, and while Walnut Btroet Onoe a Iii4y fell hero and atwrtod to aoope to the vision. The peaka that ImI year paid for all purptMos lewi than yeateiday looked as high aa the Peak tb« bottom. Tho young man sttand- turned oway when any of ua would t!iO iMr inomlMr. this church pal«I for go noir tho brioW 1 aeem to have aunk into the earth, ing har throw himaaK on tho tolUng all purpoMOS «80. llesldcs, this church while on above ua the maaalra moun- b o ^ i ^ n d fortunately both itopiMd. iTIio top la » b a n granitefloor,obn- has as largo a per cent, of n«»>*nwldont t i ^ o g BDOut flvo MTOo. Atone oorM 10:80 tho luaamlt waa m u M . and iiaupor momhora as almost any city Ulnliftalta head into the al^. How KMocn WiMiiM. Bpeot•^Uke ia that'peaki w s a t ^ n o Tho wind blMTliko^s h o t ^ f c w ^ Mir l i Long'i w w u ^ t ^ irflo of ohurt'h. oddilLook stottndl .MyMtd/ Did •toMi^AfteaQ feet hlatu^toira to- Rtrls, Tonn^i f oloaar. snd only s.glMos g M m br trtirteti. Nenwo, d i U ^ aaauHM aa that mlln hsyi bMO doM BfOMM ffOffi nioh • h o i ^ —Kowayeoa the g r ^ ooaao of O ^ OMM, eM^no ^ b o i ^ s p ^ t alraady. Wliswl tow luwi t h s ^ tinuh when onoe It h i t jDoitM n u t ua, Lindt Did O W t o r n muk onthiaUUiof Julyl Toitopmslui and vmnllBon treall tlM o u bofequUed. AU ws o u do la to irtfWtkUogddiitt^tto' UuM wen tiMt w« we»^oi;lh« tot watoh thtfiMw fotm u i d u o U p i o f onaahtm. .^Mt^LM^' i l jrott t i W At BoiiUif BltW t h r m n a MS tto ilMt, w d laoiudi upon ' tstiintd iiid W m i t e ^ ^ • " " ' uound we - W ttojaWM*^ doiibti CllinhInK lAinfr*i) I'eak. [ K i A N AINUWA I M I D I FLMA.IIC FLIM O M