Our Pulpit. - Amazon Web Services
Transcription
Our Pulpit. - Amazon Web Services
il i: JM X' Uuyge Stand y e in the w a y s , a ^ see and a ^ fiwtlu) old paths, vrbidh I »<» tho g«»d W W . ^ralk thawla, and Bhan Jtod r ^ -ymmimk Entered at Ui« Port Oflloa ot XempUih THul, •• Seoood Oas Old S e r i ^ Y o l . X X X T I I . M B M P H ] ^ T E S H . N O T E M B E R 13, iSSO. Sew SerieSr-YoL C m L S o . 28. truth. Whatnu^eeacwMdsdidJeBusnttfiTWhar contextaays, " Whoaoevereommltteth aiB Is the he stood before Pilate: " T o U i l s e n d was I bom, servant < r f r i n , * * * X f t h e a o o shaU make j o a T^erelsooiajrttaaod for this cause came I into the worid. that 1 free,y8a)Mdlbeln«lmlaBd." dictios when it is said tJut " the troth siMll make should bear witness onto the tmth. £ v n y one D I S C I P L i S INDEED. " that is of the tmth heareth my voice." T%e yoo tim," and " t h e S o n shiOl make yqa A 8HOBT SEB5IOS. BY J. M. PKSBLEIOX. system ot religion which he established la, by way for the Son, in eecvtibg aidritnal emanripattoa, " Then «»ld J»»o« to Uiom J»»» wbo tieUeved on him. It of eminence, " the tiiiUi." So we must icipid It m a t o n e o f tLetrath. The tmth Is tlw aMana continae In my wotJ,! hen arejre my dliitlptMindeed; and of Uberattoi beeanse it Is the ineaM «f K s m t a ye atiaU biov.Uke trutU, and Ihe inilli «bail make yon not only in accepting it, but in coatiniiliig In I t tkn. Whai a blessed thing is fireedom fkoia lha Paul and^Barnabas "confirmed the souls of the tree."-J<An vJVu W. St HINGS oflen «.*m to be what they aie not. disdples, exhorting them to continoe In the ftith." bondage oTidA! There bnoilawiyKidi^graflrtiL (6). T o ooctinoe in the experience of its power. as this, and w<di may dellvenuKS team It be Hence we aay that appeatancts afe deceptive. This power Is connected with the belief referred daase^ ainong the (6). ftee from the coodemaatioii of U » law. The travt^er in an Eastern d ^ r t can testify cm to. I t a f f ^ t a t h e h w t . ItstlnaptheemotioDal this ^ i n t . He thinka he sees before him an oasia, nature. I t enaUes one to say, " X know whom I » Th«B is tber^OTB now no condanaaaoB to ttata a fertll spot dothed In attractive greeiJ, and have bdieved, aod am persuaded that he is able to that are In Christ JesoB." Jbigr am acoBttofl in watered wItH refreshing springs. Expectiog soon keep that which I Iiave committed to him against the Bdoved and dothed in his r ^ t s o G m n . to quench hfa thlist, he quickens his step, t>al, that day." I t i n d o d e s s o n c t l f i c a t i o n b y o r i n ^ Those who aze under thejaw are nader Us onse. alas! he finds that he has been the snfaji^t of an tmth; fcffJesns prayed, " Sanctify them through l i t e wrath of God abides on them, aome axe optical illusion. thy tmth; thy wOTd ts truth." There is nosano- •o iM^teh aa to a e ^ salvation by the wtxta or tta Not only do tilings, but men, appear to be what tification without an experience of the power of Uw, and to aU sudi I may aay,— <• u.. tiiat ntf nroa ttae te, The tmth does not Sose Its power they are not. Some appear to be scholara and are Christ's Ai>d(aUaB!tBc^aal«atli9i ttan ; nut. Others seem to l>e patriotic, while theirs Is a ov«' ua while we contittae la it. loofc to thaflamaallial ItniM t m . love of self, and not of country. 1 wish I could And atotBlc, m l tntoblo. umL Omv*!!. (e). To continue in the practice of it. This p ^ t Bat rn retln twaaaUi Uw «nM, say that all who appear to be Christ's disciples are coinddea with J(din xiv. 21: " He t h ^ hath iny J«ni,at U>r daar int ru a*. bis in truth, but who can say this? What says commMndments, and keepeth them, he tt is that Wblla tba k M IkMioneaitewa. th« text? Does it not refer to disclHe*inJeed, loveth me." T^jcontinuefaitbepiacUceofChrist'a naoUaa andred.•>wll impiying that there are those who are not genuine words is to obey his precepts. He attaches g r ^ Y e a , " pans me by " because it was baUwd kt th« ... .. » _ a* WW. • - disciples? My, »iaOIFt>™ theme, then, will be.— UEDKKD. importaoee to this, tot he "Whosoever blood ot the Sal^B^ oiT tlMSeaaytDRof ra^w^^^^ tbsm. I b ^ l e ^ ' i s him W iMt e o B & n ^ The ^nfii Our Pulpit. T vmy-^b^; flfetfinye my Yr^-r-: - t-^i J s i ^ l y , iii in sjppptaip^ only. Bty first inquiry win r W h a t i s i » •«*> bk DEEot 1 answer 1. Jo bdieee in hint.' Jeans said to those Jews who briieved on him, etc. Faith was esgeutlal to disdpleefaip when Christ was on earth. Much more Is It necessary now, when our knowledge of bim cannot be derived from sight. We must emenber that the gwpel calls on ns to believe, and the words of Jesus, In John xvii. 2D, imply that he wlU be the object ot faith in all ages. He there says, " Neither pray I for the^ alone, but for them also who shall believe on me thipugh their word." DIscipJo and t e t h e r are corrt laUve terms. The dlsdi^e must believe In the great Teacher in such a sense aato tove confidence In him, the confidence inspiring glad acceptance of theleseons he teaches. This la important, so far as It goes, but it presents only a partial view of filth. ThelcBsonsof the "teacher are connected with salvaUoD, and where there Is salvaUon there must be a Sivlor. Christ Is a Savior as well <« a Teacher—a Priest as w d l as a Prophet As Priest he must ofiter 8»crifice. He oflfered himself, and in so doing violated all the priestly analogies of the ages: for never before were priest and victim Identified. The essence of faith Is a reception of Chrtet in his saorliJdal character; for It is in this character that he saves. "WiU«mt sdiedding ol blood is no r^lsslon,^ and wlth<»l remission no t l ^ h o i B e r « ^ it f ^ f o i F t t M idttzKled <n eoDSdencctl Who caa (ilU, In f p z a rock." Thelipoa^teJrames, caiaag «pkal attan. amoDg men, bow mtictt aa awakeari daaer Oon £6 tiie pcacticai elmnoit In CSirisaanity.atys, sufiCT from the r^ooadKS ot ^ooacteaee? But •• But be ye doers oi the word, and not hearers Jesussays, "Coine onto me, aU ye that labor aad only, decdvlngyoor own s d ^ * * Oontinnlngto are heavy ladea, and I w l U give yon rert.** Hfcb do what Oirist reqtdres U to continue In his word- i « t is not only deUveraiKS from Uw c m e f r f U w Thas does It appear that those are disdples ind«ed law, bat It is K k M e and repose from the MaBk< who believe In Christ, and contlnw In his word. tioas o f cweciisioe. The tmth aa i t Is ia Jeaaa II. T h e PBiynJDQSs op s c c a BwaMiBS. W e padfieBtheconsdenceai^BtUlsttadaawii. Thm may well supper that their privileges are many, troth makes free. but I name only the two mentioned In the text:— (<i> n e e from fear as to the lOtnreL W e n a d 1. IhtsfknoK the truth. They have a conadonsneaa that tnev " have not]liiUqwed conningly- lnHeb.U.14,15,asliaaoira: " F o n a n u a i t h e B a s devlsed b U e s . " They b a v e w d i a knowledge of the children are partakers ot fleAaad.Uood, he hlntseif Ukewias took part of the w a t ! that the tmth as preserves from fatal m o t . lliegr are also tltro(q;h deUh he might destroy Urn ttut had the referred to in 1 Jirfin IL » , " B u t ye haye aa unction IScom the Holy One, and y e know aU power of death, that ia, the DetU: aad d d l w things." Those who have Uifa. ai.<dnting from them who through fear of death were all their the Holy 8{drit are far mow eiliietaally p r e w v e d Ufiitlme subjeei to buid^ge." llioae wiw a n no* fnmi harmfhl m o r than are those who i d y dilefly Chrlafs dladptei Indeed may well ftatr death and OD the InteUeetaal evidenees In soppoet o» the eternity. They have nothing to hopa lot. Bat the jsystemofgospdtralh. WbenbetacodaxymakeB troth in Jesos frees fh>m fear. H o w r K o b n m a a eiCToachments among the profased taSlowers of phnoaophy ex^aisa, but ChxisOaa philosophy Christ, It Is ever fimad tliat those f a l s t most does. M we team frwn 1 Oar- x v . f i 6 , « ; manfhlly who are most diaUngnkhed for expcsl* sting <rfdeath ia sin; andthe^reagthofiialllttaa be to God who giveth cafha mmtal irfety. The reasop Is. they know the law. ^ t troth, as Jesus says in the t e x t It cannot be said Tictoiy t h i ^ h our Loid Jews CbriBt'' W b m (A them tliai they merdy hear the tmth aad the gnat of ^ is cancded by the atooli«bknd«il theorijeoMfflemtog it, giving an iatdleetnalaiBait the cross, and its poUation is m n o r a i bgr the to it, but that they taow I t Tmly Uteapredoos sanctifying 8fijrit, dealh has ao sting, and liaath p r i v i l m to have this knowledge—to know the traaanits the diaeiDbodled spirit of the b e B c m to «alvaUon. " Believe on the I/)ni Christ and t m t h a s l t i s l n J a s a s . Not as It is fat i ^ i i l o s ( ^ . penidh> How gkwriooB is the M a t e to thasrialsl thou Shalt be saved." Faith Is as Indbpeosible nota9iti8inMasese«a>,bataB U is l a Its rda- W d l may t h ^ w>jlee, for ttw troth has nada todlsd^eshlpastosalvaUon. tlcms to Jesm and his c ^ This la t t e exeeOeciey them free frtMnCeaiofOiefatare. % l o «m«m«r in hu word. The faith o! which rf knowkdgs. The words of JewM in the tart MTTMaHCT. J havespoken must show itself genuine by prompt1. I t l a a g r e a t t h I i « t o b e diMii4« Indued. full of ^ I f i c i B c e and ftdlof predousnm: " A n d Irif a cOTtlnuance In Christ's word. We see, 2. Aroaronsodi disdpke? ' therellMe, thft disclpleship is nrt a temp®;^. ye Shan know the tralh." 8. If so, njoice and be exceediai^y ftod. i. The trriOimahathtm fret. I t is n o t geaerai but h pwmanent thing. To beT.eve f ^ a while, troth that does this; it Is act troth In adence, bat ^ the "Stony ground hearers" did, fa n ^ w f f i «Ient But what Is il to continue In Christ's the tmth Ca»rls| came to reveaL Xliii Is the troth He that hath pUy apoa the poor Iwiditth onto the L u d : aad that whidi ht tath givte wiH thatmalKBfiree. Free in what w^peds? 't® ^c^Ataoe ia the beUef of I t ^ e r e m i ^ (a)! the slavery erf sin. Jeom in the be pay him again. te an nn4Istari)ed, permanent impre^on of » 355 354: T l d K J3A.PT18T. seal cf m a i t j i s , t h e pmrity of eariy Ghristianp, t h e teaciters" and " t o t h e relief of poor f o l k s . " s k U a n d courage of t t e most renowned warriors, (Robinson's Ecdesiaatical Researches, p. 519). obtained for E n g l a n d t h e free constitation she now T h i n k of an anti-Hiseion Baptuta c e a ^ n g to enjoys." » T h e r d i g i o a , " ^says D e Tocquoviile, brand preacheis who d o not go awarfare a t their EOFBCT Ubestty is perftrt obedieaee t o perfect which d e d a r e s t h a t all a r e equal in t h e sight of own charges, as money h u n t e r s . " and then agreelaw in t b e traltil o f g n T e r n m e n t . Aa m a n Ib God, wHI not r e f t s e to a t t o t w i e d g e that all ing to tithe his com to support his preachers a n d fins ID pn)portion aa b s Mbdoe the animal natore, dtiaenr a r e equal in t h e eye t h e law. R e g i o n t h e poorl Orchard saya of these churches, they Um> beUaine ptmiaos, and renders perfect ctbedience is tne companioa of liberty In all its battles and in wero'consequently (becaa% of t h d r life), of a to t h e hiicfc<«r law uf r e u n a a n d ctmaefeoce, so all its conflicts; t h e cradle of iniimcy and the mia<ionary cast, which proved an extensive ble«natlqaa are free in proportion as they e s s e tofaeid divine source of all ita d a i m a . " E v e n Abbe d e bt ing to succeeding caituries." (Orchard, vol. i. p. u w ^ e r a e a a i i B a b , a n d unite in d v i l compact as Uennais, one of t h e rrofonndest thinkeis of the 338). H e truly s a y s : This view oidy will account meo. T b e g r a w t h o f a n a n is a lair Uloi. latlan post century, though rejecting t h e Bible,qieatcs of for t h d r numbers in this a n d other empires a n d of Uue rising deretopment of guvornnMnt^ t h e anthor of Christianity a s the Great fiepublican k i n g d o m s through t h e reign of the m a n of s i n , " A child is a t first haniiy more than a n animal, of. tiie age. I h e s e testimootols show t h a t the idem ibid. H e says they " had been successful in it to a e r a a u r e uf li»Unc!, biindiy following ita foundation of civil government rests on t h e same bringing of all d a a s w over to t h d r views and animal i m p u t a n . Alter a little it becomes a eternal prinriplts as t h e divine government. c o m m u n i t y , " ( I d e m , p. WO). ( By the way some Gtefttiini of imitatloa, an reaaon and imaginatioa They aliow that perfect moral freedom comes of of our soft Baptists do not b d i e v e in potting forth •bmin lo d a w n . S e z t it b»A£i«tttiuwar p i ^ b i t l o n perfect-obedience to perfect m(»al l a w ; and that efforts to convert other religious professors to the —Uw p a r a t t lajpa down nciptlive p r e c c j ^ T h e such moral freonea a r e t h e only statesmen who true church). But t h e deadness and decreasing «aild must nut d o WFODg ^ it does not k n o w bow have right conceptions M d v i l government. T h e y nature of antl-ML<Mion Baptist") prove t h e m not u i d a r i g l i t . JLater i t i t m u n e B a c r a i t n r e o r p a a i t i T e show t h a t t h e only free government is seif- the true Baptists. ptmpto; it not only eeaaes to do evil, bat learns govenmient. T h e fact Is, men must be ruled by to do WfU; it is reBtrainnJ Irom wrong, a n d o m Dr. W . R . Williams says of t h e Baptists, of a moial power or despotic power. "ChristianjitnOned to do rigtit. t i i e next step la to do rigtit i t y , " says Montesquiea, " is a stranger to despotic liitle earlier time, " A m i d t h e sufferers under from prfneiple, a n d not friim t h e low plane ol power." Our conc^>tion of civU liberty in this ^ v a , wiien t h e Netherlands was so drenched m l e s a n d legal requirement)*, imt trom t h e loftier c o u n b y is above t h a t of a n y othex dvillaed nation, with h u m a n gore, multitudes were of our fkith n i o t i r a i of moi&l considentioos, l e a ^ n i a i n g t h e and immeasoEably suporior to t h e highest concep- (long before Methodism, Piesbyterianism, C t o p ilu^ that U b better to d o right t h a n wrong. tion of antiquity. Neither t h e Greeks nor t h e beiiism, or the anti-Mission Baptists were thought B a t t h e m a n of marc principle is not entirely Romans could have understood our theory of of.—Writer), and they had their share, in tiiat D n » _ ennwrirocr! reatqdns h i m . H e is more or individual xights. W i t h t h e m t h e citizen was land, in early versions of t h e Scriptures for t h e l a a m n d e r the caoBciotti domination of moral l a w . m a d e lor t h e S U t e — w i t h us t h e State is for t h e general use of t h e f a i t h f u l . " Anti-Mission Baptists Winai be rises from t h e domain of conscience Into d t i a e n . Aristotle was t h e profoundest of ail n e v » m a d e a n y versions of t h e Scriptures, can't theroalm of al&clion, a n d obeys m t s a l law not a n d s n t writers upon t h e s d e n c e of government, malce them, a n d never will. T h e y only reap bccaoae he ought, bnt beumae h e delighta to foUUI but how £ir was h e b d o w t h e idea of self- these fruits of those they are pleased to term iis leqoirementB, then 'a h e selfitoTemed a n d free. govenummt. I n all antiquity t h o e w ^ not a " m o n e y h u n t e r s , " (See Lecturcson Baptist HisUbediesce is antomatic, spontaneoos. These a r e free State, if yon except t h e Jewish BepuMic, and tory, p . I j q , b y WUIiams). the yarioos atepn that haul (rom non-government that very exception proves our propteition, that Goadby gives t h e following advice of t h e to a e U ^ v e m m e n t . perfect d v i i liberty cbmcs <a i>erfect obedience to Somerset Assodation of English Baptists, of 1G55: I n a rimHar manner uations a r e led npwaid perfect d v i l laws. Tlte % b l e recognizes and " W^e desire you to follow after enlargement of through the rfaing grades of legialatlon, untU they mainbdns t h e only p r i n d p l e on which it is pos- heart, both in contributipns towards poor and are capable of self go^umment. sible for a nation to enjoy d v i l liberty. A nation other church uses, a n d in t h e maintenance ol P i n t , and iowrst, are the brutal n c e s , the purely of infidds is not a free nation. " H e is t h e free- t h e m w h o dispense t h e woitl unto you.-that I savage state; men h m t togetoer In t r i b e s ; t h e man w h o m truth makes free, and all are staves such dispensers m a y give themaelAres whoUy to stronger .siMai abova tha weafct», a n d g o v o n a by beaSde." Uta w o r k . " (Ooadby's B y - P a t n in Baptist Hisb r a t e fitrce. Might makes right, one animal overThere Is no l l b ^ y without monUity, and no tory, p. 184.) T h e Midland AssocUUoA of ISS2, comes another, llusy a r c -a law onto t h e n w e l v « . morality witboat t h e Bible. Bighteoosness alone of Englteh Baptists, says the churches a r e to help This s u a e can hanliy be dignified with t h e term exaiteth a nation, righteoasnesa al<Hie is political each other " in giving a n d receiving also, In case g o n n u n e n t — U l s s i m p i y n o t a n a r c h y . On a more freedom. If you wish to upset monarchs, restrain of poverty and want of a n y particular church, as «ai«ii<icd scal^ it to^^M monarchy. your passions; dethrone t h e despotism of l u s t ; p l a i n l y ^ t h appear in t h e approved a n d doe O n imperial wiU dominatra aU^ o t h m r f h e r e is acting of the diurches of t h e Gentiles towards t h e no real liberty, though there m a y be perfect cnltivati> t h e God-like faculties of t h e soul. Good church at Jersalem." ( R o m . x v . 26). I n a joint g o v o n m e n t comas of good citizens. Y e must be obedience to i m p o f e c t l a w . bom again, is applicable to nations as well as carrying on o f a n y part of t h e work of the Lord, Pkixt comes a limited monarchy. Iiiberty begins m e n . as Is commanded to the churches, as they shall hi dawn. T h e monaich has not all powo', t h e W e t h i n k that we have shown t h a t perfed have opportunity to Join therein, to t h e glory of people have rights. Then com«a a constitnUonal lilNxty is perfect obedience t o perfect law In t h e God. (2 Cor. vUl. 19-21.) By Paths, p. 1S6. This m o n a r c h y — p n i p l e d i c t a t e w h a t k i n d o f monarchs realm of nature, m i n d , morals, spirit, thv church, Assodation so continued, (idem, p. 190.) I n iaS2 sludl rule t h e m . Tlie k i n g is a autqeet of Uw In a society, a n d government. the County Assodation of England recommended limited sense. " that the contribution for t h e poor be made Lgr montiily subscription.". (Idem, p. 191.) I n mS9 liiat, a n d highest, comes constitutional governthe E n g l b h Baptists arranged for the establishment, slmpte a n d pure, A democracy; self, ment of a Baptist fhnd. I t was agreed that it government, the most p « f e e t administrative Under Uib tMauI w* shaU pabliah tne bnA bintarloU nuUier should " be originated'ss a free will offering, to be ordinance k n o w n : t h e ideal of all government, Uiat n a nUier ttom mil ioa»<«.wbleb wrdrrm rcUJOile wt to ibMr own hls- collected with all convenient speed; and that this h u m a n o r d i v i n e . . T h e whole e o n o n i y of moral Oi>rp«>til8i£oal<!l>sb«tln'lnlbnn«ii lat7. and lUU* t>T Ut4li>, In thU wmy,««Irape lo do tu We fund should be kept up by annual collections in govomment, in aU its rcdempUve wtpects, is t o nqwaK nUa«bi« eooUlbotUMu (torn all. each church, weekly monthly, or quarterly, MudmHI Km^Uat IIIaMrles. lead m a n up to aheolute selt-govemmept, to Oniianl^ HMary at Aadrat Bkpaiita tlJO according to their own convenience. T h e fund hoUnes, which la moral freedom, in which UrelunllHIstacTorKncliahBaptMa - IJO Har-kBsptMSiMeenilaa 2JJO was to be devoted to the following purposes: aecewity a n d liberty ate one a n d t h e some. S o i n Url(lnaiid Hftnrtffil Saeamdaa of BapUnU First, to help t h e weaker churches in the mainteaU human enacbnents, in all social compacts, the goal should be a d f - s o v e m m e n t . This comes of W H I C H ^ T H E . O L D B A P T I S T C H U R C H ? nance of t h d r ministers, tliat they might give theoMdves wholly to preaching the g o s p d ; sec^ ' the T w u n a n d intfdiigence to m a k e perfect faiwi, BY KI.D. W.A. JARREIX. ondly, to send m i n i s t e r that are ordained, or at and t h e disposillon to r e r d e r perfect 'jbedlence. leaiit solemnly called to preach, both in t h e city T h a t nation Is best fitted to govern other nations which b a t governs itself I t te t h e ideal repohUc V. HAVIXO PROVED THAT THK n A m S T CUURCtI a n d rountiy, where t h e gospel hath or hath not been preached, and to visit the churches ; • FBOM THE FIRST TO aJXTKESTK CKSTCRV It is k l n f of naUons by d i v i n e right. N o higher WAS A lliaSIOXiLBV BAPTtSTT [CBtTRCH. mcomium can be pronounced upon a nation than • • • thirdly, to assLst those I WilX !tOW PBOCKEO TO SHOW IT t h e fiKt that it governs Itself; A n d since " a d members that shall be fiwnd in a n y of t h e churches HAS BKXX THE SAME SINCE iurt govcmmente derive their "power fhwn t h e tliat are disposed to study, have an inviting gift, THE 81XTEKSTII CENcomient of the governed," It follows t h a t all Its a n d a r e s o u n d in fundamentals, in attaining to the , TCRY. > ti^eetB are k l n ^ and aU its U n g s a r e s a i i j e ^ knowledge and understanding of the languages Thero is p n f e c t liherty when there is perfect ^ F course t h e church did not continue (Uthful of Latin, G r e d t and H e b r e w . " (By-Paths, p. obedieaee to perfect Iaws> B a t t h e fbsr of God is " tQI t h e d x t e e n t h century, a n d then fall a w a y 303, 201.) This general AssociaUon held it t h e " T h e g a t e s " d u t y of each church to {provide a comfortable not only the bq[inidng of wisdom, it is t h e into apostMy or anti-misdonism. ioundatlon of free govnmmflait. E v e n H u m e , o f h d l shall not prevail against t £ i e c h u r c h . " maintenance for t h e minister, according to its a b i l i t y . " ( I d e m , p. SM.) I t d c d d e d t h a t a n y with i t e m g predQectlons fat absalote monarchy, ( M a t L x i v . 18.) I n 1689 Or. BobertSome, a n e n e m y of t h e Bap- c h u r d i member w h o " will not communicate to and with a hatred to tL» Bible equally notorious, admitted " that the p r e d o a s spark of Ubearty b a d tJsts, writes against t h e m , a n d , in doing so, fights t h e necessary expenses of the church whereof t h e y t h e church are members, acrording to'their a b i l i t y , " "should been kindlfcd and was pteserved by t h e P u r i t a n s t h o u for believing t h i ^ '^eachecs ahme, and that B was to t h b sect t t e English owe should be soppc^ted b y a l m s . " (Orchard v(d. II be duly a d m o n i s h e d ; and, if no reformation apt h e whole beedom of tJuir oonstltnUon." Ijord p . S 3 i ) . B o b i n a o n ^ these Baptists believedln pears, t h e c h u r d i ought to withdraw from t h e m . " Brougham also mja that " t h e Puritaos, w i t h t h e t i t h i n g ** to be applied lo the suj^tort of their ( E p h . v . 3 ; Matt. x x v . 1 2 ; I J o h n , iU. 7) T h e lilHEBaTr, CUaEWSNCE, L A W . A - i - FBCVr. D-D^ SAJi JOBK, CAU P Historical Department. i n f o r m t h e d u i r c h e s in t h e general doty, accordisg t h ^ bdtevod in raising noibiMgr toseod todotUots l d a c e s ; t l d r J . that they bdieved in t a M o g m o a f l y to t h e Scripturas. • • * * fourth, that they believad i n rmidng n i a t e v w y crnqpng^Olon choose a n d a p p M n t a forcoUegw; p e n o n to collect o r gather a t his, her, o r t h d r m « n ^ to aeod young m « i to coflege, called of G o l discfetioo,sach monies as shall be given for t b e use to preach. A n y one c m easily see who a r e t h e Old Bapafoieaald, o n c e a month, ocas often aa c o o v o i i e n t ; w d l aa fhwn t h e Bible. a n d t h a t saeh. treasurer o r treasurers, by a n d with tists, from histrtiy I must here say, tliat were it not for enllghtHit h e consent of t h e aforesaid Assodation,or churches dhtinct, shall apply t h e di^KHal of said monies ing awl quickening oar own peot4e I would not forencooraging a n d sapportlng a g o s p d ministry; t a k e t h e time to write these a r t i d e i Lat us p m y (cs aforeaaid, a n d to n o otber oses whatsoever, a n d God to" give t h e Increase." t h a t t h e a d d cdlecttons shall not hinder or prevent raising a stock to be brought to t h e General T H E P A S S O V E R A N D T H E LORD'S A a n m b l y , for t h e messengers a n d t r a v d i n g minSUPPEtt. Of this assembly in 1692, Goadby s a y s : " T h e isters." (Idena, p, 228, 229). A M gbid Bro. Graves is willing to go Uie assembly showed great a n x i d y at>out t h e fund, T b e records of t h e Broadmead church (this bottom of IbfahUbject. T h e " l o n g a n d s e v w e for keeping t h e ministers that are poor, a n d for c h u r d i wus founded in 1640.) ( ( l a m p ' s Baptist HTist h e education of those brethren t h a t m a y be tory, p. «15), conUin s e v o a l instances of t h e Attention" w h i d i he has given to t h e s a t j e c t , approved to learn t h e knowledge of those tongues l i b e n d d i s p o d t l o n o f t h e members towards o n e of oiUtles his views to great weight, a n d hin w h e r d n t h e Scriptures are written, churches were t h d r ministers. I n view of M r . Hardcaatle's l ^ i l i a r i t y with t h e sul^eet quaUSes him to meet objeeiioas to his coodusions. H e wUI not ©yect. u ^ e d for t h e better keeping | u p t h e fund, to m a k e settlement among t h e m in 1671. each m e m b e r was therefore, to t h e most critical examiaatlaos his s e n t o n e b y o n e l n t o a separate room where a n t h d r collections q u a r t e r l y . " ( I d e m , p- 209. opinions. H e w h o has so long taught independ• Reporting t h e meeting of t h e London Assoda- d d a a n d brother were, to state in writing w h t t ence of thought by precept And notably by tion, of 1701, Goadby says: " A fltth subject they woold .&edy o f b r a n d promise. Of those example, would not have his younger i w e t h n s referred to t h e maintainance of ministers. During w h o s n b e c r i ^ to t h e pastor's maintenance, say take bis ipt dixU for anjrthlRg. • t h e t t m e of persecution under t h e Stuarts, m a n y t h e recocds, " there was to »» observed t h e grace l a m sorry i M t e d m y point so d u m a l l y t h a t ministers had foUowed some secuLu calling, a n d of God in some. One aged brother n a m e d H e n r y Bro. G. has again failed to see it. I did n o t rdEw had not recdved a n y income from the chmches. Pierch, a very m e a n a n d poor m a n to appearance a t all to t h e case of two smaU lamUiei uniting to . in person a n d habit, a n d by proSasBloa or trade, bot T h e m e n who followed t h e m often found t h e partake of t h e pawoverr. M y a n d e n t a B d l i « o ! people unable, perhaps also, unwilling to furnish a Journeyman a n d shoemaker, t h a t lived u p tn a t h a t matter is that where a fiunily was loo small what t h e first (General Assembly calls In the codrtoft; yet his heart was so enlarged by t h e Ix)rd, to consume a himb, i t was divided with another, confession a 'comfortoble s u p p l y . ' Either, there- t n a t he would subscribe a n d d i d p a y not less t h a n but e a d i family ate i t s ^ w a t d y . ( E x . xIL 4N fore, with a view of shaming t h e churches into a twenty shillings per a n n u m , (an E n ^ l s h sliiUing Nor d o I know of a n y case " w h e r e a fardgn is abont twenty-four ccnta of our carraiijy). more gciierous treatment of t h d r m i u i s t e t s ; or in fcmily" was called i n . " If such could be shown, Another case Is t h a t of M a i p u a t W e t o b , t h a t had o r d a t o supplement t h e narrow and Inadequate a n d t h e feet had any beating on this questioa. It i n a i m e they received, t h e foUowing reaoluUon t w o children to maintain t h a t Uved very mean, would go to prove that two diurches m i g h t unite was a d o p t e d : ' T n a t it be recommended to t h e that took great care-to carry t h e world about to to t h e cdebraUon of t h e I^mTs supper. But thid several associate churches represented in this U v e t h e r d n honestly towards all, a n d labored is foreign to t h e question a t issue. assembly, that each church do m a k e a n annual very hard so to do. She.also aubscribed a n d did T h e case to which I teterred was t h a t of a collection for t h e relief ot such ministers In a n d pay forty shilUngsper year. T h e records add, about London,; d w d l l n g within t h e biUn of mor after giving these fiicts—whldi examples a n d single J e w . sojoummg with a Jewish family a t tha t a l i t y . a s have but a small allowance from t h e provoke, if not shaate. m a n y o t h e r s . " ( I d e m , p. Ume of the Passover, and f'W t h e time b d n g churches to which they b d o n g . ' * * fflS). S u d i e x a m ^ o f o u r eariy churches ought focmlog a part of tbe tamily, a n d partaking w ^ T S l t b e m o r t h e f c M t . U was t h e appUcation o l t h t a • • • T b e aevcmth Buttiect toatte o a t chordieB n p - ^ K a l l d o l n g a s w d l a s t h e BroadmewJ C h u n ^ t b e y fteture of t h e Pawover thmt i wMMd him to related to t h e education of ministers. A f u n d for would h a v e m o i e preaching. exphdn. tbisspecial purpose was deemed 'highly useful,' I n t h e records ot this same church we read, I a m perfectly familiar with t h e prindple of in order to t h e better fit for t h e ministry, those concerning t h e death of one of ita deaconesses: w h o a r e b l e s s e d with promtelng g i f t s ; a n d a l » " S h e l e f t * good Savor behind h e r ; did much Uw tovrfted by Bro. Graves, but to apply it to the for turulshing others, who have not t i m e to attjdn good with hear l i t U e . " " S h e Ubored hard In her a s e in hand is to assume t h e v e i y thtog that is questioned, viz., that Oirist forbade a vidtlng to t b e knowledge of t h e tomrues a ^ way of disUUing waters, a small trade, a n d gave parts of useful lewruing, with such English books oonstanUy while she Uved forty shillings a year brother to become a p e r t of the local c h u r d i for the as m a y be thought ynore proper for their aasiat- for t h e pastor, a n d ieftfifty pounds (about 9230 00) purpose of cdebraUng t h e S a p p « . I t is not a n c ^ d improvements.' Each d i u r c h was r ^ to t b e use of t h e c o n g r e g a t i o n . " ( I d e m , p. 250). Enough to show t h a t "Christ gave It to t h e ommended for ihU purpose, dther^ to rn^e W e need m w e such m e m b e r s to-day, to give whiie c h u r c h s as a church" ordinance, a n d totended collections or to offer subscriptions." (By-Paths, they Uve, a n d h a v e property wiUed to our c o U ^ them to observe it as such." This can settle nothing as to what cwistitoUs t h e diurch a t t h e p. 216). a n d missionary societies. t i m e of cdebraUog. Certainly t m A c h m d i has T h e Somerset Confession s a y s : " A minister I n 1657, t h e Quakers, like our anU-missicn t h e r i g h t t o r e c d v e members b y affiUatioo U they laboring in t h e word and doctrine, tos power to friends b d i e v e a n d cry, would I n t m u p t Baptist possetB t t i necessary qualificaUMis; H i l s right ^ x e a livdihood from their brethren, whose praachras' sermons by crying out against t b « n was tenfened by t b e Master, and any rfldrlctteo duty it Is to provide a comfortable subsistrace for for b d n g supported, calUng t h e m " h l r d i n g B a n d aprm this right must be to exprase terms. To S m It t h e ? be able, to w h o m for p r i s t ' s ^ ^ d e c d v « s . " ( I d e m , p . 2 5 2 ) . Quakers were then quote a w d l - k n o w n principle of law, w h a t e v w to t t a t they may be able to support t h e weak, to t h e o i e m l e s of Baptists, a n d anU-n^Bionists have to derogation of an acknowledged ritihl m u r t b e labor and work with t h d r o»-n hands. ( I d e m , p. since been b o m a n d taken u p t h d r cry against strictly construed. N o iimltaeon of a right can be e x t s j d e d beyond t h e literal terms in whirfi tt 227). Baptists, calling t h d r preachers " hirellngs,m6tiey " TheOmfession of the first particular Baptist hunters, decdvera, beggars." B u t t h e U conveyed. Bights cannot be limited b y meru , _ _ oeneral Assembly does very precisely m a r k out d I d n o t h a v e t h e f l i c e t o c a U t h e m a d v e s t h e " 0 1 d implication. If duircbes ate forbidden to r e c d v e members f b e X u ^ t h e d m r d . e s in r d a t i o n to t h d r Baptists.'* !«JnWer8- ' T h e work of t h e pastors L d n g c o n Goadby s a y s : " T h e r e a r e not m a n y Indicatlona temporarily for the purpose of p a t t i d p a t i n g to t h e s t ^ to a t t e n d , t h e service of ^ r i s t I ^ in t h e middle of t h e seventeeth century t h a t Bap- Lord's aupper, t h e producUon of such not .only to give t h e m all d u e r e s p ^ tists h a d a n y great need t o spur t h e flagj^ gen- hibltion wiU settH the controversy on this s u l ^ B u t g a « B r o . G » v w : " T h e theory to consider b n u i ] ^ communicate unto them In aU good e r o d t y of t h e churah m e m b e r s . " He says: tWnes to t h d r abUity, so t ^ m ^ " W e a l t h y members of Baptist churdies left t h e membMs of other and distant churches as tove a comfortable supply, without W n g ^ l e g a d e s t o r d l g i o n . " ( I d e m , p. 308,8090 M y virtually Jototog, lor t t e time being, t h e churdi invittng by rimply a c c e p i b « the tovitatloo, S e . 1 in woridly a l W « ; and Ood open t h e hearts of some dear brethren r e e l - « J 3 y the totent of tbe law, if Ita T w e r d s l n g hospitrJIty toward o t ^ ; as this to ing these artldes to d o tbo same. totwtw to cooflue the cdebraUon of t h e S ^ ^ i V ^ y t h e taw of nature, and by exprew I n 1675, t h e English Baptists organlzedasooety S ^ < S L o r d . J e « i S w b o hath ordained that Of put on f o o t , movement tor t h e education of to t h e 6ofW /Wf membMs of t h e local c h ^ TWs b equivalent to saying that U Christ did H t I ^ ^ t h a r w « ^ t h e gospd shall l i v e ol t h e gos- yoTOg m e n Ibr t h e ministry,^^hleh has Historical Vindica- inestimable b l a r i n g to our churche*. ( E v a n s totend vlsiUi* brethren to partake, then they ought not to d o so. B a t t h a t t o t e n t t o t t a ^ f^n hi S n g r 08. I n 1701 t h e churd««i of Early English Baptists, vol. 2. p. « 0 ) thtog to be proven; and t h e fault oC B i o . a ' h Another sucn « n a or move »« " I V t ^ e ^ t ^ rewMlngistiiat be asBumesthfatotent as proven, to s ^ h a t t h e ? were " i u a s i n k i n g a n ^ a n ^ of w t t e h is now WS.765.75 to gold. (Cramp s Bapa n d t h e n i«ocoeds to draw h i t eoudirtona. tog^tion,'' tist H l s t a r y . n. 483,4S1.) But B r T o - ' s reasoning ratoes t h e q a « t k » m t h e niatter with some of our churches n o w ) , ' T O Nothing is U H « d e ^ » h o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ to what a r e &WW/We members, a n d 1 a m aot a m * « . J e ^ a n t of making p r o v i s o tor but a faltacy lurks under t t e amWguoos of irfrv as the Scriptures enjoined, and I r t S T ^ " money h u n t e ^ " t h r t ^ thto term. By'6ona;6fc members b e ^ ^ t l S o n h e p r i S l U ^ ^ e o t ^ l h ^ - j ; ; " ^ ttiat, b d i e v e d to raising m o Q V those who, on appUcaUon, by a formal vote ol tliB i ^ b l y , therefore, advised : F ^ t t a t atW port t h d r pastors wholly w e d o ; secoBd.thal i S f S S S persons be diosen and appointed to General Assembly of General Baf^isteCeight years a h e t this (1697) suggested another method meeting this k i n d ot remtesness: " I t is t h e agreement a n d advice of this assembly t h a t t h e <ifi|iw>n«, or such as a r e deacons, in every congregation, in receiving t h e churches' odiection, d o t a k e noUce of t h e particular recdpts, « a m d y , from whom a n d w h a t ; a n d if t h t y observe a n y m e m b e n to be short therein, t o advise and admonish t h e m to Ubertie; a n d if not t o acquaint t h e diUTchffl themsetves with that, so t h a t t h ^ m a y be an oiuality In t h e performance of t h a t great d u t y . " (By-Paths,p.205). 1 i 357 m e n t , ^ « « * « the honor a n d giwry ruling over t h b earth. ^r'. n ^ h l c h lS»»e b««otua Who beUew " A n d th'' kitigdom ajad dominion, and t ^ creatBeasU the kingdon. wtOer {not a v w j » J K a ^ sh»a » g i v e o tu t M P ^ o " ^ t o o f ^ Miist H i g t . ban H U>U lufc-rt<aiv* locatea t U It aa earth rwlewue . the ^ U - ^ l n g k i n g d o m , and all dj-minioa- rfwJl laoKOase U emphatte and imeqalvooa). 856 T o Invite p o s o n ? , w h o are not members uf that ina quoad hoe, ja^t for an hour or lese, anil then, r i i r r ' * , « « » » i n e a i b e n i to no indeHnlte to do but one t h i n g ? a n d w h e n that one t h i n g particular churrh In w h i c h tb« t«bia is ^^hoaapk menaa " i n Rood t*lU»." WHS done, forever dL«mis8ed withc^it n«»tice or paitake would tie to conlMvene i U inteot and t o •El^xuod £uUi relatoi to both the «p£iU«»nt anu cummedation f v l u a t e the a y m b ilLun, a n d it w . m i a be l o eai and UMi dutfdiu 'rte»ppn«aM»tiniiat Intend to hecome W e readUy agree with B r o . P . that a church * M.i U fn rCMHKlVCk d r i n k " u n w o r t h i l y , " for w e m b e r s of other A member, a n d the church must int^^od to receive churches to awsppt an invitation frooi even a has a right to receive as m a n y nicmi-ew ihto her him In the «a»se of » visiting brother w U i aoceptH chorch to do wrong. W e fin<l no i^W; touching fellowship as she m a y sea fit, for one tuatih or tha laT-tnUoa to pttrtidpate, w h y mny orA the w h a i a J e w w h lamily was to do in case c f a single uetk or hour, but b y w h a t b»w can she receive ehnich, ta good Uith, invito him t o ^ i l e with her J e w , v t i l t i n g the family when the Paaeovrt w a - without appllcailon, tuamination, or coiumendafijf the pidpttte «x|»r«ied, and w h y may w>t h«t celebrated. W e 8uppo<se if i«s was legally a mem- tlon of a n y church, and a b o v e all without an In faith, -accept tlie InyitAtion? I t 1-4 tlie ber of t h e f i m i l y h e c o u i d participtite with the unaniiiutw, vote on each caae to obtain the f e l l o w intent that givew the lutHa J d e chamtler. I f it Is family, if he was not a member acc-Mdlnje to J e w - ship of the membership o f the church ? the lnl»«t or tJe vWtwr to tecoine a member ish U w he could not. B u t w i t h that matter oil hue, and of l b s eharch t.> rt c 4 v e him aa BOOK NOTICE. Chrfatinna "have nothing to doL T h e l a w aucfa, and the i a l e o t ol both that the rriatS.>n w e "BIOUBABHICAI.8KErrCHE8 OFTENSEifiiKE BAPeewsaMSouaazithe objuui t< ucvoiapiixhed, w h y governini the L o r d ' s supper i i «;i*afed of all TIST MIK1STKB8, " BY J06KPH H. BOBI JI, doubtfoineiM. T h a t It was g i v e n to be observed m a y not the irinsncti'io be ai* bona fde in the OF DYKE8BURG, TESJi. ( ^ ' X case? In one a w the membendilp ia to s u i c t l y aa a church ordinance—to be spread teilhin a n d to b e under the sole coaUol of a particular ^HIS book contains the blographlea ot about caatiaiie for a limitiid Ume and fur s dtfinite . three hundred faithful laborers In the vine^trjSwe, ta the othvr for a n indefinite time, Bnd_ chorch, and to be partakpn of only b y the m e m for ail tiie parp<js«ii wilhin the scope •rf member- btra of that chorch—and not by them In common vard of the Master, some of w h o m h a v e gone to with the members of a hundred or a dozen the " rest that remaineth to the people of G o d , " Graves ejcpriases a wUh t» * e my views churchca^uhoulJ they perchance b e present. Prcjf. while m a n y m o r e are still waiting a n d watching e a the «yml»iii!n of thr " o s « l o a f , " and its bear- Curtis shows that Irom Ita v e r y »yn»ool»a«n, to be o n the wall3 of Zion. T h i s book will prove of i n g upon the «iae?tC<.D. I beHeve-with Bro. irijserved righUy.U must he observed by the m e m - Inten.-^ interest to the whole Baptist brotherhood, Q r a v a , that the one Jtaf—«iir o r t o » — ^ m b o l i z e s b o s of a particalar church o n l y , and therefore, i t and particularly to the Irlends and kindred of the the: (iflpuiie u n i t y of t h e chondi. B a t I, do not b a ehurch oniinance. (See m y (.»rth-comin« Re- Kood and gifted men whose lives are chronicled d f a c o w the difflealty here that he does. T h e one ply to J . M . P . ) T h a t Christ appt^int^ it t o be, i n i t a pARes. I t wOll g i v e a clear Insight Into the k k f is ttutaaiutcic atom of matter, but a n u m b a and w h i l e on earth obierved it « a church ordl- character and works of our miulstry lu this Coin' of fjm^iai- atuiua united by the law of affinity. S o Tiance, and Uiat for ages it wsss timidly observed monweolth, from the Ume of the noble and self ' the u n i t y of the eborch a ttie union, in a single b y all churches as a churv-h ordinance as he de- sacriflclng preacher down to the present d a y . It body, of the imme Itind of persons, held ^ e t h e r fines the phrase—i. e., b y the menibew of each contains 6 » pages. Bound in sheep, r2 50; in by Uie bond uf feiioWsUp. T h e inUuduction of particular church, as s a c h - e o c A meiaber parHci- d o t h , t i 00. Address Rogers & Co., publishers, am a t a m of uolanvened fltior into tlie l u m p of pcik^ oaly in the church ofichirh be wca a member. 315 Main street. Memphis, T e n n . Liberal disdtmch v o ^ i d not brettk tiie unity. I t would I t Is g r a t i f y i n g that, however^muc-h c r liUIe, Bapcnnot to Agents. nautily ineurporata ititeif with tiiereat, and become t l ^ of this a g e differ abuisl mutters g r o w i n g out of the obeervance ol tite Supper, we are all agreed a part of the whole m a w . So the brUher visiting, OBITUARIES. and admiUed a member at the time of partaking t h a t i t i s a fAnrcA ordinance, and if w e will only Ubltuarlm kud BedolaUOM of (nmrclu!^ U oW sutMcrtben fat that parp<JHC, wouid i * c o m e aa much a part agree t o nccept Prof. Curtis':'dcfiniUon of churdi Mveo lines gnUa; all oTer^nd of all non-<mb«:riber»,lS e«uu w ee w l l be bound and pares! of the whote aa a n y oUier member, opfinance,' onanance. w w im UUUU.. to agti e tliat the per IWE of ENUT worts. Ci-hmu»tMcora|«NY the mauuand au the unity would r t m a i n the same, the n r c k n t i u t e r - c o m m u u i o n Of B a p t i s t c h u r c h e s is U r i p t tor It to r « e i v e . t t . n U o n . S p t ! S . S l ainfuU und s h L l d at once be Died, on the 23d of A u g u s t , In the t r l u m ^ . « ol iinioD of eoneurdant bretivreu. Im I ^^ J^JJ^^ ^^ ^J,^ residence oi his son, T . L . I Oo not tbtnic It tuUows tliat tiiey wouid be S ^ u c h ' f o x the pobsihle lealure of the Paasovar j T e r r y , in M l l a n o , M U a m county, T e ^ , of heart eniitled tu W e . Tliey kre members for a apecifie findUis^, E l d . Josepn T e r r y , In the 8»xty-«even<h m t thair m e m i i e » h i p ia litaltf:d to ttiat a U ^ S l t o b y B r o . ^ t o n , - t h o u g h h e e u u l d excepUun to th» U w of U»e Passover tlint year of his aae. Deceased w a s born In Pendleton parpoae. * B r a . O r a v e i aaka me lu soggest an ordtiJy w a y allowed a visiting J e w , not a member of the dfatrict, 8. C . , M a r c h 12th, 1814. M o v e d w i t h his of diamiaiing thtne^uaotfAocmembers, i a n a w e r & m i l y , to partake, he flndi boith the late and the parents to Georgia, w h e r e h e grew to manhoo.1, Uiat It rwjoinsi no format dla-niaBlon. B e i n g ^fmbolim ot the L ^ ' s supper forbids a visitor, and w a s married to Miss L a v i n a W a l k e r , December Sth, 1839, l i v i n g happily together until his ^ ^ i H t m i Ste a apeciflc purpose, when that porpoae not a member, to unite in its celebration. death. Prolessed religion a n d joined the Baptist A s to the tneory, first 3uggs3r<ted, w o brfleve, laatiained t h ^ membershipexpirea by limit^itioa. I f m y friend Jones i« elected to congteas fur a b y ProL Curtis, to contravene the observance ol church and was lecensed to preach the gospel. In term of t w o yearn, lU the end of that l i m e he the ^ p p e r i n ftwy ca-^ as a ckurch ordinance, which h e took great delight. In IMO. In 1869 he vmam to b« * member of cungresH, w i t ^ o t a a r viz.: to tmderstand our invitations to all visiting m o v e d from W h l t f i d d county, G a . , to Brazos formal a r t ot that bod^jiiaDiiaHfljrfinnrSo in the brethren present to commune w i t h us as a tacit county, T e x a s , w h e r e he remained until about a m a t O u m n a m a S m l ^ the t i m e being, and 1 bivitatiou for them to unite with our church for seven m o n t h s before bis death. A t this time, the time being, and their acceptance of such in- b e i n g old, children g r o w n , married and scattered, ^ ^ a a e no disorder In the tranaactioo. There are oUiec painta in the a i U c i e l a m r e vitations a tacit and bonafideunion with us, w e h e concluded to m a k e his home w i t h his son, in Milano, T e x a s , and visit, a t least lor a Ume, v l e w l n c I w m l d like toofitice, but m y article hai . « y this. 1. N o church, that w e e v e r heard of, has ever b y church act endorsed a n d accepted a m o n g h i s chUdren, w h o are l i v i n g in several , alrauly attained nn uudue length. ^ this theory. 2. W e do not think tl»at a n y .church coanUes i n T e x a s . D u r i n g his visits h e met Wantwi. A r k . , Oct. JS, Ism). ' ^ ^ (iver considered itself aa acting upon it w h e n It m a n y old Georgia friends, some of w h o m owned B K a u u u M . — I t w e h a v e e n c o o r a ^ indejien- invited the members of other churches to Its com- h i m as t h e means, under God, of t h e i r conversion. dent examinatioa b y precept and e x a m p l e w e munion. 3. W e do not think tlwt there is a T r u l y , h e has not labored In v a i n . B u t the hftve w j t l l v w l in vain. T h e trouble w i t h oar Baptist church on the contlnent,if I be matter was Father said, " I t s enough, come home to the paaple,aB with worid at large, la they d c not think discmsed • before — • It, w.-)uUl consent — to receive into mansloni of G o d , the home of Christ and his peofur thetnaeives. W e deaite to aee t l i b ordinance Its fellowship, even for one boor,-and much leas i pj^^ ple, w h e r e afHIctions, sorrow?, anxieties, parUngs parungs of the Ltmi'a suppcx thoruoghly diacaued, a n d its to.commune w i t h it, off Baptliitii of other churches, I g g j j e a t h , uever shall come, and all tears shall laws and symbols' untveraally undeiBtood; then I r r a p e c U v e of their Chilatlan character, w h o ^ p e d from thine eyes, and thou shalt l i v e fora n d w ^ until t h t s will tixk wldeipread a n d g r o w - m i g h t perchance be present in the cengregation e v e r . " A n d , so huid»nd, father, a n d brother, i n g IruitUctude be padfled and the tidal w a v e of o n a communion S a b l n t h . Would the T h i r d Joseph Tterry is gone, and w e are sad, but relying pqpoiBT i B f j a d l c s excited agidnut a» b y our ene- church, of S t Louis, rcceive B r . B o y d ' Into its on the prom'lses of G o d , w e are not comfortle», fellowship for an hour, or can it consistently In- for If w e are fkithful unto death, our klni*. mtei wiU roll back and sink it its native sea. Y o u are "Entirely correct In s a y i n g that each v i t e h i m to Its table from which it would expel h e a v e n l y F a t h e r wlU c J l us home, and w e will meet all our loved ones gone before. H e leaven fiimily, as such, p«rto.ik of Uw Piwchal fi«9t alone, h i m if a m e m b e r ? T h e p r o p o ^ qvoad hoc plan his a g e d companion and d n e children, and inany will n<^ begin to w K k , say our old deacons, and und it thft fomUy was too small the Iamb w a s m e X t o mOTrn his l o « . B u t Uke_hlm In Uie since It has never been 8dopted,or likely to be, b y v i T w u T ^ to s a ^ T h y w i l l b e adopted,or b y divided w i t h another fiuuUy w h i c h partook of it the servants of G o d , one b y one, are alooe, a» a lamily. Thie foUure, w e are agreed, a n y church, w e might as wpU put a purenthesla 1 ^ ^ | gathering home. ^^^^ sandy^cSKhSwh. w a s one strong point of the t y p e w h i c h Is fiilfilled a ^ t It, or b y CK^h cfaarch,a!i a particular chorch, wAparUof sion of the communion <iuesUcn. Bro. Paxt<!in Milano, M i l a m county, T e x a s . «Mr«/,eating " one l o a f " to symbolize lf> o n e n m does not answer our quesUon, h a v e not such temMIKISTERIJO. LADIES' AID »OCIKT\ . —ilB »coganic u n i t y . " M a n y thoughtful Baptists porary members the right to vote on the recepWe wbow namai »r» lieT«nnto «o«jicrtt>ed"g)v«U>eiium» ^ l o n C t i m convlnwHl of the tti»crlptttndn«BB of Uoa of members, or t h e election, or salary of a (iMOOitlwilbaal communion b y the t e a c a i n g s o f pastor, ahotild such bnslnem cotne up before the wmexedtoourtuone. tor tte P " " ! " " o ^ f t l ^ T ~ n i l t o l a t m *tniniis t JtOaim or MoiiiT Cwek. l a obtrtnlnt d i u r c h , as It often does w h e n gathered for a com- a»t»ioR»ath«dn<wtloii Us Ij^jpu. to enable them to prMcU the r>^>«>' munion occasion ?. I f bom fid»~\xi reality—withTh<M to be t«ton»'i by them i r h « »ble t« the mlnBSchanI FuUer b b j s . " A a the Fttdraver w a s out f n m d or decopUon—members, t h e y would cer- Utertkl BoMd of the State, to bo reappllrt to the a i M a o r e ami far ewih Cunliy only, to the Supper is tainly h a v e the right to 'rot^, and if not members oC other yctinc men. fiuaiiy t w f m ^ tiX t h e members of thai j w t i e l a r m m U n l a Yarbn>i«h, HoUow Bock, Tknn., JIJJ. MIjw of that church, then accopllng to Bro. P . they Tarbnmih a]»ieo<Uthe toUowlnc ll»t: J. T. B»jnofc^75 fixm^bneMektAtbOleittpftad. This Is so plain bare n o right t o commune. ' . A. P a ^ S D ; E. A. K e a l t t . » ; 3. O. MarUn.Sfc .'UaTUJ K e a " to m t mliuto, h e u t a , coiBclences, that there Where in G o d ' s word do w e find members Jdn- nedr.Vk n e w a n y dfaensslus about I t . " I THon A aAJorea J S ^ S ^ ' -!•». S ' * S i r BAar r^fAToivas »« DBPIJITBB IMCAtnwoFTgaTanTll. K ^ rerlly: 1. r««TV«d In h.-aYen.- It ia w b « « l i e «a bk yw" l^Ta;:^ » J o h n heani tbe song of the salnt^i (n jt.yfii! ^ UcipaUon of this event. - A t K l they«ang a new - n s , worthy t o t a k e Uh- book atid to '"ti^Ll.n.tbalib.Ciui-Uanbop. t h o e * ^ : 'or th(Hi h.«t reedrtam^ us to God by thy b l o o d o i i o f f-W • eI rJ y k i n a r . ^m*'^ l . . J i . « u J |, u e , « n u ^ blOUUOUiVl RnalMeaaOMMt * » l i e e w ^ e t i w t , Me—FWa, a l a u ancho. f . tU. pie and a-tl..u ; tmd lundj^^ ^ wulch -DieT^tU tnt.^ that wi'Jila U» A * ^ and p r i w t ; at.si trt thall rcsm an the flortA*" DlK«iniC«i»MM laci»lea*rBa|itleta. sutU. Mod etamp or postalP reani. N o t In heaven, f w . If •*>, over w h o m ? In aU ^ ,U« Meth nut ' ^ " T ^ i T n ^ l . . ^ this w o uud«h»und our brwlher to agree wUh os, and pracUce. The Bible, ^ .. »»th of i w f t WKl but thinks no where ar« w e o t v M u a g ^ to look to .11 hiunan tiadlUoa In matter*mtatehUHt -- - doctrine ot w ^ being d W i n j g ^ h Me J _^ . S S t S u S S Udoctrine t i l a d s our flaal" Inheriieuce." I t fatheradaiinied nomlnaUon-a lor which we ai caSlwl eamoatlj earth that the redeemu-l a r e to enjoy foi«v«r. ^ ^ ^ f t w l U t J i . wo are to Wand tor the ordlnancw " A n d I saw a new hiatven aud a m-W the first h e t v e n And ion and former condlUon of i t ] ^ andUierewasnomorese^ A ^ I holy city, n e * Jrrusatem, ^ « i n w 1 coming down ffuui G»id out of h w w , Cbarek rwHty. bride adorned ^ ^ " ^ h t j ^ u »»ptl»t. b-lleve that a ChrtoUan church ta a l o c i couS ^ S l h w d a great voice out of heb yen W i n g , you«. Yoar.l..loveo;tti^»«'4i. J. M. Pait.U«Brtlrfd t h T t a l ^ t i a c i . . Ttiacaloo^Ki Ala. TOW~hcha.t,hcur«tcommitted the ' ^ J j ^ : tXl^^lTlOS. aihlSVnd .S^ordloa^^^ TUe uiu«-aby our broUier estrelaad »are by a o(«i o h u ^ . ,11 eecle- huaVfH U> be lahsrUiU Uy t a p m x - M u ^ death, n«lthtr sorro*", SStll Ui.it€ be a n y mnn: f - f n i ^ J ^ ^ 'i:^I^^fmSiZ^ «»»cip»''« « lilerully lr»n.4»u->J Uiings are p4«ed a w « y . A i « l he Jtottaniakix F . U W •t HUt^rieta BapUata. be that and Father ol our Lord i h i ^ S r o n e S d , BeUold 1 make h11 i b l ^ m w . u. W.aRAJi^«Jl>. nB a^BAKKY' - ...I,* n>>Tk boolt'-lte^pw and order gerk F ^ a t ^ with BapUat chorehw. | an luhetUUUtv /T. 1 ^ ir ^ ^ wi<«m I am ri ' .. ... a^it I "will his U.K1 a a d t-s »haU ue m y ^ t the f ^ f o l ^ ^ tmbciieri.>9, and t b e ahom^^M^^^ ^ ^ r d o f t r s . and wtionjmoni.'er», ai»d «or- w ^ t to tlw lake wnich b a r u w . l ..i;h fir® & T u u e , which ta td.. '» ^ f - t h ^ ® irf ihoTwsholl bo uo mort* fur~e: Out Ihe Utrvoe w G X ^ t h e t a n i b sU.U iu ^ ^ ^ f t l ^ d THB F I N A L ABODE OF T H E UEDEDMED. is, d ; e s this pi«sago teach t,IuiH w r v e h i m ; nnd they shall see his f ^ , ^ T N a recent l ^ u c w e «irer«l this for five ^bo^ i years to any one w h o would find u prom..^ to ^^^ iuheriLtace promlnxl to the be no n i g h t ^ e r e - , h" ! oriUii-x light of Uie s u n ; t i the l U ^ t ^ g i ^ a n y re I emed by Christ, of an Inh.rituucc lu ^^^^^ , ^ soa.othing S ll;ht; and l/xy rr^i forrrtr and ever. hcitven." , p i i . u U i a s e v t n thiii which li t h e - e n d ol . W e d i d t h i s i o r a p u r , « . i c - t h e hiformation oM ^ „ their bop^N ^ irt w turn" to OOP n in w h l . A t ^ our readers. T h e unusual Uu,.r«.ion thiit at ^ .. i., prvat-rved ol the rigiitd m t ^ o f o r « v e r l e a v e this earth to tak« up our ^ ^ ^ ^ ot this w o r l d - i n b e r i U n c e a u d ulliuwle I4. v eaus'areaei forth:— ^ „ ^ •ten»lBl>ode •• t n t o o a v c n " — w h e r e T T h e ' . . • Pa. x x x v U . — " Pwc evU doeia ahJOl be cut « 2 ^ ' u o - " b e y o a d the s t a r s , " " b e y o m t t t - M ^ ^ ^ T ^ ^ ^ p t J r f the e a r t h j but t i . « e t ^ t wait uponthfe .MntheeterttaldweUlog^o^.^^^ I n t W e that i o t d Uwy bh.-ai Innerit th-- e a r t h . " N o rijihteoas man ha> ever inberited this earth Inheriifd by the saints, or that for a d a y . A b r a h a m , w bt» war* u»*de with Ohrist the saints, bat that an b f l r of this world and aU thldgs, died, m did « o i a e t b i n K « m MrabIe lo an i o h e r i l a n w Ik pre- ail h b seed, without I n h m U o g ouc t.X}t of U. The " (n rist'^ kl.^."l im. " V f o . 0 s^rv.-d in ht aveu tor hi. If thepUuv called b f a v e n Ickcd lyjttftss i It, aud triumph over aua hale and i-Hlldht»Ki hnvo hc;»nU«nii-:u«l m Is the inhwiUuw;. t h f n I. UtMven pre.-t r v ^ l in pensecule Uiw ri«iit«>tt.s bat ho It is u ^ always have con^Uiitly of " n r ht-avpu? tube: — W e think tiio. c^wtcxV «»d all pi« a g « lu the " " For yvt a Utile while and Uie widced rf^not .reTuiaiic U. ibU, clearly i w h u to salvnUoa, b t : [i. uiwn tills m r t h ] yrti. thou tdwU d ^ A'l.l o- o t— l..rj hU and U a ^ l a r hoii« hltfU up In heivea. " with i u iiUendiat g i u r k s , iiiheritanw w n u v c « « d c r nh^Ui inh^t tht ; airf T b e q U i i i t l o u l s , a r e wo warrantcxl b y t h o woni. here allu'lcd to, l a the same cpanection,—and is S o t b e : b u t shall dt-light i h e t i w l v i a In the ubundaoce (A .,f Uod to to b«lieve b«lieve nn-l an-l to of Uod to teach teach thst thst the the fiual fiual dwelldwell- ^^ ^^^ explaiirlory V - P a « t«lH thi«n they " ,„»£ place of the ^ l o t i la the present d w e l l i n g ^y the p o w « of « o d for a salvaU.m pre- peaoe." Christ ivjieitL'* lUis 1 pjhiiae: Dlaco ot the most h l g h O c l - t h e Heavens of Heav- ^ ^ ^^ revc^u-l i a tde l.«t t i m o . " Is i t not " Ble&ed arc i h e m- t k for incy rhatl imhrril the preserved b y ens D o not the Scriptures. ««d and n e w , (j^^t is not left to prasetvwl d i v i n e « i r t h . " MiitL p r o m i s e the l e k v m e d by Chrfat (hat they shalU ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ j ^ c r v ^ lor as by a R v t o m l n g to tire P.-ia^oi •• o r BDCU ~ inherit [nherit specific p l t « as — — — " rFor sacfc as nrc are bles*<l of hitn isjiall Inherit a sp«;»uv1 ' J 1 l»ow pt . h-Jir?," a n d thertirtb.and ihpy t h a t c u r s e d . r f t o l m s h ^ be rat dwelling p l a c e - a plnce e^pvciall)' prep:ir«i lor ^ .pjiea Chri»tlWi ^ru «.tul iob.« o(t"_ri. e.. out of It ] ^ T h e riRhte.^ s h ^ I n b f ^ t h e m - l h e l r he.Hven ? , __ Lrbi^t ibey l a h w i t must b3 t h t l r ' ' i n h t a r i U n c e . tthe h e lana a an b n da dtceU a v x u thaw i n a r w rarrtrr," —u"t Uie ~ It this be so, ought not our t«»chlng« to coutorm Wocanga«hi-:r ^^e can gat M r Paul's rat U e i o f what w e an> t o in- seed o t the wicked shall be di«troyed Icut off,"J to those of Uevelallon, and not according to our ^ ^^^^^ tTtaiie^ ^ , • iile^ Turning Imck to R e v . x x l L 14-15, w e see this fulflUed:" B l e v e d are tbpy that do hfa commandmeato, l ^ t ^ho L o n l bath said uinm t h l . . u b - 1 to • m c b . i. 14). & that Uicy m a y h a v e right to the t r w of lUJ^ a ^ bk Union. , m a y enter In Uirough the ^ t e s the ^ "That bavins j u - t i i ^ by ^ ' ^ ^ ^ ^ ' p t e ? ^ ' b w . J . M . P h U l l p s , P « t o r at A l a . , s h o u l d b e m < « l e b e i M 8 e » r d l n g the bspe o f e t e r without, [not «>nly the earloRwrw a tbe e ^ , tmt without the new heavens and new eurth a i m ; sends us the following c.»mmunlcatlou. which nalllfij.^'(I'ii-«»• ^ " - e r s e S, chapter x x l ] , " a r e H t ' e ^ j a A wHllnierost our readers. H i s p a ^ is worthy cerers. and wboremongtrs, and m u r d m u t a James ro era to i t in these, term-n : — K r ^ and w b o J o e v « loveth and makirth a S r l d u s consldemUon, and w e think the strong" D:d not Gotl ehoosrt the p « r of t ^ w « i d w lie." est oue Uiat wlH be produced : Then, aud not uaUl Uian wiU bo falftUodth* . oue Uiat w i u i — — _ _ , prayer (ho SJivior taught his dlwrfttei to larays— O a r Father w h o art In faeavat, liaUowtd i » the heavens, T h y name, I f t * kingdom comic, "Riy wUl t>e dona on «irtA iw It Is In heavTO." , thee the l ^ ^ W i n not esirth them be as tejaveupiuad from all <i»e above « r j w e warnuUfd In beUfiviog t h a t them w i t h a r . « ^ this redeemaS earUi is to be l b ? fl&al h o n f e a a d ^ , plwos U k e a p o t t c f s v c w i . " { ^ . H - 8 , ^ . ww^ T h e saints shall share w i i h C n r i s t the sovera- heaven of tbe redeemed? iffion^iWArf to be receded in the tost Unu, •i Mi-. wV. . - , • 3 & B own litttie d a n ^ t e r was ill, bat if abe •offidentty D r . James, of tiie Judamia Univenity, reports recovered Air h i m to leave boaoe, he would be the outlook fur that institutioo enoonraging. Onr anaUe to attend oar State OonvortioB, as i n higiily esteemed Sister Gtdikby is connected with ahoukl visit his mother at that tinte in Teonenuea. thisachooL She has many I M e n ^ in the State. W e prav that the L o r d may qpara h i m the loss of Tiie Buckner College, in tbe northwest part of another child M> woo, if it eao be biB holy will. the State, is said not to be dead, but deeping. W e met oar esteemed B r a C. W . of Rev. M . p . Eariy goes from -Dardandle to Hope,iastaataiday. with hiB good wife, «R rome Lonoke as pastor. for MontloeUo. H e expected to leave Bister a i t is probable that our Bro. Rtwvee, of Ruasdlthere,-and«ecompany ustotheOcmventicu. But ville, wia go to H d ^ as pastor. hefiOiatooome. H e waa i n good health and atill Hamburg, Aahiy county, at which our correshopeAti. pondent, Rev. A . J . f^wcett, resides, is the Rev. J . U. H . Wharton, of 13iree Cteeks, banner office for THB BAFTIST In the State. writes: " I intend to labor esonesUy to extend the drcnUtion of T K B BAFrrar In the foor charches W H I C H IS R I G H T ? to which I am pceaehlng." Thank yoo, Bro. Wharton. We expected as much of yoo, and hope "O- two eontndleUinr aHnUona, IT one be tnia Uis oUier that oUrer paatora triU do likewise. A good affirm, in our discoadon with tbe Miuittippi E o r r o K O * HEBAIJ) : — T b e i&^CK&r, of religioas paper, extensively read by the member^ ' * Rteord, that the position advocated by that thte State, tSp Muitrippt Meeord, and £itfieal ship, makes pastoral wcrk light and pleatsaot. paper—I. e., that baptism doa not Introduce into i&Kanfar, of North Quutina, pmistinir as i h ^ 'Bro. W . F . Owen, of Union oounty, is a young in BfaataUni; the lepurt of th(> Ounmittee oa Desa local diuren—was not the faith oT the old BaptttatioB p i e s ^ i i d ax the last aisBkin of the B i g licentiate minister of pcomise, and we leant that tists, tHit a new bfaize, on a by-path. W e said that Aaaodatlun, aim the cjntrihuiiona of that he WiU likely attend the Omtennial imdihitfi bpd^ to benevoiait nbTects, I appeal to tbe mag- soon. We hope all saeh deaervliig young men D r . Dagg sustained our assertion, that it was a namity yon have lately macifestra towards on to new theory among Baptists. T h e Mi**i$rippi will lie looked up and put in some one of our good to faMatme in eoimiinit the mUmpreaiilofia " Hecord, if we can understand it, denies our asserto datiicht in making. T h e comuiiuee'a schools in the State. tion. N o w let D r . Dagg decide who correctly jvport ia.thfa: ^Beuember, t o d a y t h m a r e / i m " S i n c e I hut wrote yon I have had thejgleaaare repreeaits him : — him*vd wan milt» In Uui limits ol our A^aodatlqa entirely dnrtitnte, and where Baptists are of receiving several' more membeza into m y " T h e opinion has been h d d , almost as a theologmiSaown." A s t r t p o f tt>rritaiy ten miles by chnrcheci. W e recoitiy had five additions to the ical axiom, tliat baptism ia the door into the tw«Hity. wnohl make two handiM square miles, diureh at Spring Hill, O d n m U a county. Others church." muAkhUmantm diureike*-nat" B y whom has it been sii held ? will joi^i soon. I also baptixed one last meeting at ti/mm wffL'f," as reported tor the iie/iseta-," where B y Baptists, furmeriy called Anabaptists. men, women and<Aiidren ure periafaing for the N e w Hope, which church is abo la a flourishing O u i you refer us to any authority ? bMtft ofiilti!" There ia a xiigbt dilTere&ee i n c o o d i t i w i . " — i / , M. Wharbm. W e rejoice in T h e Baptists of 1130 declared that by baptism these ifporlfl The Big Hatchie AiModation last Bro. Wharton's suocees, and pray t^at the pleasare yeareDntriliatedat,and erat o p t o tbtoseadon of the Lord may continue to p r o s ^ in bis they were received into the h(4y congregation of fiffFiic^KnHinians «233, besides w l » t w a » a « n t God's people. by iodividaals and cbordwa directly to Richmond hands. advocate, therefore, that baptiiuu does not — n o incandderabie amuoct—tiu» F l a t chnrcli, W i t h a sad heart we record the death of Rev. X . Stemphia, sent by me ISO to the CtMiven- F . Boone, who died at the residcsoe of Dr. Moon, initiate into a local church is, according to Dr. tiun for i a H a y eontributiim. For AamnDagg and the BaptisU of 1120, a bUze on a newdatimai and Stath Midsiona the B i g Hatchie in Wiiite county, on the 28d of Octoba, ItiSO. rwimibated 1987JSO, bwidds what_was sent to Bro. Boone was for seventeen years the beloved cut road—a by-path—and not a mark on the old Xazim', and nautveil to raise «2,ua> tbe-insaing and soooeasftd pastor at Searcy. He' had a com- path our father's trod. which ttfii be given to tt£b State fortaide a u n t i y home near the d t y , and WK Will Bro. G . allow bis readers to see tbli corBoetd. The Big Hateiiie, during its oCMionraiaed doing well spiritoally and finandaUy; but he rection? t l ,S00 in ORth and good piatgCB^te- tlie Uaiversity, and betweai tlOO and taxi tar the Minhtpriat nnwiady invested his living in the iCeiCern BapBoard af Jaeinun; and last, though not least, onl^ titt, and was soon broken up. For the last five or W A S T H E B A P r i S M O F J O H N C H l l I S C I A N elKvni out of sixtynne chnrthei reported without six years he has wandered from place to place, BAPTISM? cifondiy school. trying to do all the good he cjuid. Bat now he H £ committee on subjects saw fit to aaelgn to Tbe ertiturs of the Ila-^ld a m say that ail oar me tbe above question as a suitable subject atfuugat Anrcbea In tbelowna and d t k s , within ia gone, leaving, as we leant, m helpless fomlly. the Uxnita of the Awoeftitino, have ia* toUy H e was a good man. upon which to write an essay. I shall led c m t w a i ^ p e r etint.oft]ieirfittaonai as weUannnWe w o e nnwiell daring the wbole time of the strained to answer this question aiBrmativdy, miKieal atns«tb during the jMSt two years firom tbeeflWitsof tberyeUow fever. Tbe JOttiM^i^ Convention, and therefore not able to write its notwitbutanding I have Just read a lengthy and ibeiortfNieerlinxlyaBysthiB is the Asociatioa of proceedings in o r d a . B u t we wiU write tome wdl>written tr^tiaefrom the pen of thecelebrale<l whttfa the editor of T a x BAPrurris a member notai on the Oouvention and its worit when we Bobert Hail, taking the other side of the question. amlliodefator! ThaLhonor is indeed ours, and W e write this on the train, and it Hall, in common with Pedobaptists of the predeut in the drcumBtunccs we tlilnk we luve abcodant get home running. Tbe session was, taking It ail in all, a day, denies that John's wiis Cbridtian baptism, renona to be proud id so noble a Iwdy. J . b . GBA.V£S. very pleasant one. Ite. Graves, of .China, gave a not, however, for the same purpose. The object As we copied into Uia Oerald some statements z « t t o ^ e foreign MisBion work, and 176.80 were of the former was to avoid the connection between in reyudto the AJHudaUons in whose behalf D r . ndscd in cash, and 165 in pledges. There was a baptism and the Lord's supper, and the object of Cbravaqpeaka we deem it approiutiate to pnbUah mass-meeting held In tiie interest of Home Mis- the latter is to avoid, the force of the act performed llw above.—JS(I». MenUd. dons, and »i03.81 raised for .the w w k , t81.65 of by John in baptising " in the river of Jordan " which waa cash. Theedocattoiial report Ttferred and at *'Euon, near Ballm, beciuse there was SUMMARY. 4 to the schoob at Judsonia, Arkadelphia and mnch water there." I t is dmied by no one who J. B.a. Warren. These schools recdved equal and Idnd re^ecfai the Sarred Scriptures, that . John had a iMtice. I n connection with them, ministerial miasKMi of great importance; that b & ^ m sent by The dltitticl meetin;; batd at Woodlawn, Drew edneation was encouraged. T h e report on poblK God to do the w t « k he pwformed. But to admit county, embearing the Sftn Sdbbath in October, cations recommended T a x BAPTUST first, then the that his baptism was Oiristian baptiun is what waa, notwithatfadlng the indemeni^ of the Btf/edof. E v e n i n g showed that THE EIFTORR open-communion Baptists and Pedobaptiste are weather, a good meeting. From aume cjioae Bro. has the hearts of the people. But that most not willing to do. I have read their arguments, QritBo, the pMdtt>r at WoutiUwa. fidled to get tangible was the list of aubecribera we g o t T h e « a d found a thread of sophirtry extending ail the then?, fesays were read by Pteth- Fazton, new publieatitm interest at Little B o i ^ was dls- way through them. Hatley, B ^ e r , Thompaon, and ooiaeif. These But in this essay, having affirmed John's bapctased about a day and a half, of wliich we will rrpoifs dieted pieuaant and, we hope, profiUhle l^ve our Impresdons In tmr notes. T h e s o i ^ tism to be qhristian baptism, I shall at once diM^aasion. T h e novei feature of the meeting waa fiiatnre of the Convention was ddightful. Dr. proceed to assign some reasons w h y : — tliat the church iNung directly oo the main road, 2. From the meaning of the word I base an Rogera, of Texas, waa with us, and made a good and a show passing as many, p a h a p s as four Webster defines Christhm as an impresnion. A r k a n s u Baptists would receive argument tiBooB daring U w meeting, at the cry, ** I h e show him with open arms. The same is true of Bro. adjective, " perbiiiting to Christ or his leiigion." is eoming," or " T h e el^thaat is pasring," the Reeves, of XeaneBae& Both these brethren N o w I ask, will any one have tbe hardihood to iMaineaa of tlie meeting waa intermpted and the preached excdlent aerihoBS, and we have a plnce aay that the bapUsm of J o h n did not pertain to Goagngiitl&n dbposwd. T h e show was'two <»' for them In the State. T b e entertainment was Christ or his rdiglon? I f hot, then they most three honn in passing, and thus we were somegood, of w h l d i weshared t n O y with Bro. Bock admit that John's baptism was Christian baptism. what annoyed by i t Finatiy thedephvitpaased and fiunily. T h e next meeting'goes to Little B u t , byrcukidty'was allayed, a&d Ute boaiiieaa of tiMi Rock. 2. I f some should be foond who are so redtlos tiMM«ting waa allended to with promptness. T b « as to deny that Jtdin's baptiBm pertained to Cbrtat noxtmeetiac wiU be held with Ebeneara church, Rev. O . M . Lncaa informs UB. that he has rejBntney county, five miles west of Warren. W e cently held an ihtereatiBg meeting with his or his rdiglon. we have but to bpen the Inspired a gond liitt of sniMcribeta. T h e rdlgiooB chuieh at Pnatott There were some seven or Record and r ^ from Hidadtl 111. 1 : "Behtdd I send m y measengsr, and he BhaU prepare tbe way t i f ^ HitfffMMith mnv, very interestinx. e i ^ t ooavenloos and three baptfams, two of before me." T h a t this referred to J i ^ see l i a t t 'jBitr. A - J . Fawcett wrltea that there iSire been w b ^ were tiw sons of Bro. Lncaa. W e rejofee iL 10. Jesns said of J^An, " Fbr'thla is he of se^Bst deatia i n K a m l w g recently, and thai his with^him. * whom it ia wilttai, Behtid I send m y meswngK SOAKSfi TO T H K BElilGIOUd HABAfJ). T T T X t i i k s t i i i s occHiioa to Uwiik tbe lURgiom V / n m J A , ia iMiuU of tlie 6.000 BapUsts of I t e B ^ EEateiiie A w e l U i a a . Ibrtiie pabiie«tioa of ttejfftlRie below. CRmictioK the mistateuients of tbe Ba^Bid JBn^kdar, IBuiMrit^ Heaaed, and A K S m r JhBOfv^.erN^Mtlli Outritiw, vbooeediton for U i m i i i o e U { 4 p « t l u v o « t t e i n p t ^ t o p r ^ a d l c e tha AoMicfaUiua in ttM esUnuUoa ul t f a ^ teadeo t y miMBiiHMentiiig ita report oo dwUtatioo, imd wast Ut te icthe way of bawygfasieer-'We s j r it witb flomiw, tiuKieb they-bave been azain HRsd acain c n c m ^ y infunned, they have not corrrciBd thdiz misimpraadon. Thanks to | the B a v M k r ita kindneas in pabUithL-^ a statement of fwfta. If Uieafiiceuientiuoed latpen v U copy, ft « { Q in a mearaie expiate the wnxig they i u y e doait tiut Aaneiatioa T bdbre thy fece, which shall prepare thy way before thee." Waa not John the barbingw of JaNis? For what did he come? make ready a people prepared for the Lord." A n d to manifest Jesus unto larad. H o w did he prepare a pet^le for the Lord? B y preaching " Repent ye, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand," and saying, " Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make h l i paths stra^ht," and baptixing in the Jordan such as confessed their bins or brought forth fruit meet for repentance. H o w did John manifest Jasus4o larad? H e s a y ^ " A n d 1 knew him not. l«ut that he should be manifeat unto Jtimd, therefore am I come iiaptixing in water." Dues not this show beyond tho shadow of a doubt that John's baptism patained to Chrbthuiity, since the very material of which the first Christhm church was estabU^bwl wasprepureil in connection with John'a baptism ? , This ought to be considered bufficieut, but would mentioa, as a colUtenU aigument, that when the disdplea met in Jerusalem to oidaln an apostle to take the place of Judas, P e t « was particular to mention one " b ^ i n n i n g from the baptism of J o h n . " But finally, Christ received John's baptism himsdf. Now if the acts of Christ are Christian acts—and who wUI deny i t ? — a s Christ received John's buptiiim, it was therefore Christhm baptism. B 5 0 paper on the " Heaven of tte Saints • W e w U i the attrition of our roMden and nioiBtea especU U y called to this s u b ^ Do nottheSeriptaras sppdOcaily inf«mn as the plaea weara tofloally inherit and dweU in forever ? J i ^ t J S ^ Christ aad the apottles, aeeardlng • n w d i z v t o tbe foiceof thai wodL haBttmLWhU « > M t o t l y moaaa piunge. a n d a S » i ^ « to X BBVKAnf fMlnMCMl ikC* ^WA m ai • i • ™ T H E WATCHMAN-BOarON. m a i S o l d paper Moently let off a furicwattlcie against -old Landmarktsm, w h l d i it frankly confessea it knows nothing aboat, save contary to that order w W S l ^ to a p w t t t o by report, and it would aeem that it has never teaching them i S d ^ studied so as be ::impiesBed with the prinJ ^ o u M v of S m p t j ^ we are not t r o i d ^ ciple that makes Beptists dose comm'nalonlsta. our biM>tbm. I t sulBoeB oa th£& « e ate laboal W e send oar Bro. Smith a copy of " O l d Land- a^she tMchw u to whom Jtmw Cfcrist marki^m—What is it ? " and request h i m to read ^ t h y « » . " Y ^ rProtestant Pedobai Wereodve^t in the samr way yon what Drs. Hodge, Stuart, Robinson, and other ot distingalahedPedobaptistssay they ondentand — ^ »—LZ: are• no mora •HIV trouUed mmujmt on on mxSni act the exchange of pulpits mean. A n d then will he oax baptism than you w e with yxmn." f b a t k what » u n ^ u ^ t j U 3WI have t h e a ^ reiid what ProL Curtis and other emineatsdialaa M ^ » W j o u t having the same foandatioofe*ltEUMHrfaUowtlwcommand with rigor, or m say t h e " e i ( a r < o f " ( 1 0 o r . x . 17}aymboUx38,and see if his views of Scriptural ocHnmanion will not hy do ^ utBsure with two m m m n o r be somewhat modified. Bro. Pendleton thoB aounoMtain atepsiath® ticw the W'ofcAsiaii'a attack la the SOigiotu Herald Our carrespvodent thinks that thia p w e e A X VKOENBBOCS C B A B G E . may, to mnch advanbige, be studied ia conaeeT h e ff^cAsion, of Boston, charges Luidmark- tion with Dean Stanley's artkie, latdy puhlisheii ers la t w d d n g " that we must treat all Christhms by IB. H e says: ""Hie Bishop riddin the Dean^ not Baptists as heathen men and pidtlicans." What is tbe basis of this charge? I t is. of and shows that there is no evnaitftcat^iew cf b a ^ coarse, tbe fitct that Landmark Baptinta do not tism, e x c ( ^ the Oitholic or tbe B n p i ^ " I t wilt beheve in the recognition of Pedcbaptlst pnachetB I n condttjion I wouia say, U it could be shown aa Kospd ministers. But dcHs tids fuct rrauire beobsenn^thatStaale)- « n d Bouak, with two that the baptism ot any other diflers eMBentiaily t h a t " A U Christians not Baptists" shall be treated hundred years of shaip dispute upon thIeqn«tioB from that of John the Baptist, auch Uiptism ccnJd " M hmthen men ami pablioans ? " Let us aee: lyfaig between them, are stUI pniectiy of one not be Christian baptism, dbce John's baptism is T h e editor of the Wiaehman believealn aadpnuNmind upon one evential puhtt, name^, that ti^ regular communion at the L o r d ^ table, "bapUxe,'' in the insaitniioo of the ordlnanoe, the modd Christian baptism. Respectruily, which implies the priority of baptism (bdievees immersion) and diurch membersidp to a oom- means " to plunge," and that tliey who ate "bapJ . B. SEABCV. memontion of the death of Christ to tbe « holy tixed as Infants are so withoat twtiuuwy of sapper." N o uob«ptiz»d person c^in, with the Scripture." N r f t h « of these men w o a U hate WANTED. consent or tbe editor of the Weaekmah, approach been willing to wreck ids reputation as a achoiar tbe diurch A C O P Y of the crcdeotiaiH of a Baptist minister the Ubie of the Lord in he Is a member. What upon a denial of either of thew two vH»l ptopodgiven by any Bai>ti8t cbnrch authorizing said in whieh multitudes he keeps away, believing all the whUe tions. It would be. in their \itrw, a crime against minister to baptize wbumwever he ma> deem that they are L^risthins! D o e s h e l n t ^ d to be good ieamine to say that to b^pUas m w n s « a y qualified, witliout reforrins the matter to a ioc^ undeutood as treating these " nhriaHana not thing eiae but to immene, or to daim that u a y church. BaptisM as beanhen men and publicans V I sup- upon "teatimuny of S<Tiptim>" be admhiistemi po»3n(tt; and if he will teU why his conise doM to any but a beUever. G) fur, the two OMB we WAMVJ). not involve such treatment, he will at the same A form of niiiiislerial credentiais given iu any time show ttiat be makes an imgenerous ciiaige have named are bouod fiitptliita; yon may aay church manual authorizing tbe bearer to adminii»- against Landmarken. Every complaint he makes " Hfcrd-rfiell BapUsta.'tee baptlMu any more than the Lord's supper of Landmark Baptists can be retorted on him on But now, wlto has autboriaei]^ this chaage^ In J * " ? " ' ? ' s u p p e r . H e is without the {.reeence ana MDCUOO of a both particulars as to thlK rite^ widdy prevatent church. Ahrongbout the Christian wortdT B O B I ^ u ^ There is an imprendon ahnxtJ tbatt h intuister b the Ouirdk, wiwnliMt ot cmuM the Baman Uiifiuid, i-a. authorised to admlDhter the ordinances, rudeeharcJj; Stanley says, the q»lrit of the i||>e. T h k pendent (rfalucaicburcb, by virtue of his o»di OLD LANDMARK ISM." second answer, we are penqzaded, will c** etfcifr nation. W e wish to see such a commiaaion if it FHOM R K V . W. W . AJLTTUXKM^ T^TTI PJBORKSSOK dear-aeelDg and right-minded PtedubautlabL&j^ has ever been g^'cn by church or couoril. sdvta. IS Use spirit of the age may change this, O F T H A > L O G V I S BCTHIA. T O U J K E , K V . , it may change anythinit. In fact, to wlmlt A N D AUTHOR OF " F U V R H THE iNilEBlTANCE-WUEli^ Stanley's theory is to abandon, wholly. aU ivfartVMJIl NlDN," ETC., enoa to theScripture, or to divine anthority far E ^ E O arp the niteic, for they shall inherit •T T l l A N K you for a copy of your " O l d Land- any mattw the earth. " (Christ.) N o saint has ever diurdi observance whatsoevw MM! markism ; " and, while I diaaent 1 from some uf is equivalent to blowing from the New TVsiauwBt yot iiiherlteil the .i»rth. und we will send this i>apcr llvo ymrs to nny one wlu> will find a prt>m your collateral views, I fully agree with you on ise to any on« redeemrd by Chri.>'t of » n inheri- the main qufglions. Under existing circumstancesevery word that bi«ts in the dirKtlun of t h i n n instituted. A n d if yon do this v i t h iitiMlfflMr, THN«-E in heaven."—TJUK BAPrisr, October I regard "pulpit affiliatton" as uuscripturaland of why not with doctrines? I n a word, thla Is d m . evil tendency. While the mere act ot inviting a Please see 11'eter I. 4, and st* if 1 am estltied man bdieved to be c o n v ^ e d and d i v i n d y called, plyraUonaiijan. H tbe l-edohaiKlst t3iurdi«i and to the paper for five years, and rarrj- forward m y aiinisten think pK.pcr, with a view to evade conto preach tbe gospd in a pulpit or any w b ^ dee, numbers for tbe tinae specified. Truly, dasiona which "tbe n»timo«y of Scripture" m ^ - not be an endorsement ol hii> orthodoxy Ihomaston, « a . S . SHERMAN. iMves on them, to concede the very fuadaneBtal sUIl it b generally so rc^faide^ We IWiOCipte of the by th«.y wort do were familihf with that passage when we F o r Baptlk nainistere. tnercfcre, to affiliate s M b a t l s a l L Bap<b<t. n>o«t o e r t a f c l ^ i t t S ^ made the abo^t> oOks. with the CampbeiUle and PtnlobaiiUst minlsteB t"®'*® ^ ^ « authOTiJy fur SPeter aisurtt. ts.-! that our inheritunee is jvrterved is a virtual endotscment ot their errors, and prac .K in queHU^m, which B ^ u e t in the heawns for as, but this no more neceesariiy Ucally bids them God .speed. Besides it d o « no ^g l y »c h a " nit^ snfficw us tbiaiswethat are baptized iraidies that we are to inherit the heavens and good, and gives them a public advantage on the t e « : t o l o whom Jems Oabi. w l d , ^ l S n i w i S Uwdltliere'forever, than the statement that m y communion qumtion. T h ^ r tel! their peopie that ^"favirt^thepoBitioBofallpJde. M j ^ i ^ "dthough thejjue veqr gingeriiy ia their A^thispreBervedlfor me in the vaults of the we will invite them to work f w us, but refuse to *ay. of Btati^ I t Th«gr oaohrte between thS national bank, implies that I am deeUued to let them eat with as. when they know that this is kindofautihoifiy ^^ _and that of the BcrtfAme.— — no»> 'fiSeort to ftod tad d w d i i n t h e vaults of that bank forever. I f m y not the true ground of our charrh communion newing the eflieort - every no»- and then theato w ^ t in the latter, aad wfaeK O n inheritence, or the title of it, was intrusted to any For t h ^ and many reaaws I amapdhave long some sort of warrant human bdng beneath the sua, or preserved on been a Landmark Baptist. — a kind cf bllad earth, there would be no hopes for m y ever enantoumi^ f« t ^ l . i W f t f e ^ teS^ Rus3dlvine, K y i . O c t IS, 18S0. Joying i t M y titles to m y earthly paeesuions are of Botoanlam. tte Bishop tl Umax, "do yoo m e m ^ pres»ved in tlie archives of the court house, bat, CATHOLIC OR B A P T I S T — T H E T R U E t ^ two measnrw?" Bore shoaldthatbe destroyed and all evidmce disapISSUE. pear from earth that I owned anything, wiiat U R valued friend and corre8i>(Hident, " W . would be m y condition? But, touching the W . E . , J r . , " sends m trom Providence a plaee, " t h e righteous," tbe "saints," the passage which he finds in one of the PtaUmd L U . " meek " a r e to dwell in, and to i n h o i t forever, ters of Bo»aet, the &moiB Kshop<tf Meau:^ hi cannot be d ^ t e d . H e w a iheir p S ^ J i f e ^ ' a t i a o a l l s t s . now to S e R o M ^ S : wliTtbe reader pause and read the Psaims, the seventeenth century, one of the c h l ^ Roman-: ^ t o t h e Rwbleh boilds itadf cm s S d H Z r ^ and the Beatitudes of Christ, and the hist chapter ist anthorities in matters of controvcnty f — Gutdoi tan stand. W e e a t l r ^ a m ^ ^ ^ ofRevdations. ttoSV?? ^ W e do not inform ouradves wbetber we were wiwsportent, t l a t "that •Will not aouM brother prepare an articte ftarthl plaaged in iirater, according to the e a m p i e of w «»e Qdbolfc o r l t e ^ B O yiT 8 6 TkiM 0 B A P I 1»T. ebaiebat Abantoaoliaadaaea wlw tbtns in eaUvng Bto. spirit of p r o ^ r ^ manifested in the untnioioa^ M. V.SoOldnaBr m pwtor ior aU bia Uma.——Btol w;~F. W « cjcpeet t u K p i y t u M r . B o x r o v s a i t i e l ' B i n iranMrlc«aptilylnsBro.J. W . HarrliViehaicba* vblle be wish of 4hat body for a paper published in the l a a n j f I in U»e week of bnUdtnt a new ebaKh^hoiue atState. t a c ( K o t o i t iiceurt&r. PiaanuuHlU. ^ Elder J. W.Upaay, of Uerauuklovn, la The i>pei-ches made upon Ihis guhject—and they Wfl neeiTed tbe Pnimitiee I^akicaif, Bru. thinfctnt of tWnmtB^ to hla lOTely bcane at Uotdwater, and were many and often—clearly indlcited thestrong Buines, but did not UitnJc Uie guine wucUt the lalOns ebatia ot etantcbcB near by now daiixlBc hlaiMsrrlsea. wish to bHabreast with the Baptists of other 8tat»s. rhiwg W e aboafci pteitf the Uoabcidged Mo man tlTlnc baa bapUxed eo many at the muaben o( ihts Alrtariott aa Bro. and w» aball glTe him a htarty It was felt—anil rightly, too, that the 60,0«W StMdoita «dItl<Hk of Oaiivn's cumpletu Goncur- veieomie If beratama."—e£ XiMg, at Jtteard. BaptLota of Arkansas should and c >uld have a d u o e to Yuong'tf CuneucUiuice. 'Die " T w o TeaaaaaM.—'TbeGbBTeatloa Mffmon wall preached by pstper of their own, and it was intimated that it VT&aoBei'' will be itefenfter dbcnased. XaL Blllaman, or Traoton. An able soapel aennon. ' was a reproach to them that they did not alnady Bev. R . A . VtnuiUe, {Astiir-cOtct of the Hist tnniailttogVial,and calcala^ed U> do moeb cood. BiUamaalaan old oud bow,bat poaiewM mneb of the Ticorhave such a paper. efaoRfa, ajtzived in tlie eity htot we^Jc, bat oa ac- ofbiayoaCb. F v many yean UeatlSed with tbe BopUato Brethren of the State, I Sivy siuecesw to the enter oooiit of MTOm iiMlii*pu«itioa.vBS ouable tofiOfail of Tannaana, be la weU known and honored and loTed by aU prise, and there can l)e no possible donbt of nacce^, cBaiaeaat paopla.'—ilU ia ReOelimt m n U . — Tba BapOil fnipit lastSkbiKiUi. H e b npidly reeoTniog, Ihoiiaa, pabltabed at KuoxTtlle, proiiaaaa to iane an UtO'.- imle^ a wroni? start is made. huverer, and it ia hoped wfll be able to preach - txated the llr»t of each month, the lllnatralt^n to i The second indication of pr.j^rosw was tliB to monoar. Tbe pru^pectii of the Old Fijut are eoi:aeitaf tbeportaltofaODia prominent mlnhiter or layman, wltb a iburt tilocnpbleal'(keteb: ^Many of tbe appointincnt of an KJucational liiKini ti> promote itdgte&isK, mwl the membera are greatly eccour* the interests of Baptist schoc^s in Ark.tnsiis This Mgmi to hope for giand'^Miitd in the near itrrtotatn and vUltata to tbe late v«aT«nUoa wen srcatly dlatppolatcd In not haTlng an opportonlty of hearing a isagrandatep. I do not know th it this has ever fiiiuie. *ermaain>mDr.J.B.U>»Tea.af Tax Barnsr. Bn>.0. bai b(«a done befurc, bat it is important lliat it should many admlren In TenneaaBe.**—ftfijrffaf JBeacun. W e copy the ftiUowiof;fruoithe HdleBa,(Ark.> Una bnadrad doll«ra mon m needed Ui completr, <o aa to be oe done now. reaaai,-«£id. K . A . V e n a b K who hassoae- oecnpled, the paoanaca at B .eetwaler. U la an abaolntt: Oaoof the most vitil interests ofthe BiptkUof eeptahly occupied the pulpit of the Baptist ehorch newilly U a p«Mar 1» retained at that point. In view ol thiaSUte, or any other, w edueation, aud it does far t i l e put ten macttu, has his paaiorate tba Importance of compteunc the work at ODce. anu CBaoleseem that every State shi>uld seek to educate its raatoT Grace to have a borne. On. Jno. !>. Anderaon, ttt aooefit a o Q fiRioi the First Baptibt chnrch of aeeretary of our StaSe Xlaalaa Buaid, caila lor iiS as a me-wlU own. rtietdea of the Biptwt.youth of Arkantfas MemiAia, Tenn. While in our city. Eld. Venstde oObtios Iram twenty ebardualn Kiddie and EaU Tenueaise.bavini; to go out <>f the Stnte ior an education is to aM^fftfim to this niauer. anU made many frieida by h k qoiet, aaefotrnsve Wa baTa npeaiedly bqpe tba ni riamry nnrnber of ehorebea wUI reapood at oacesay the least sad. manner, deep, earnest pi<ity, achoiariy attain- by aaadlai blm tba uoney. Ber. J. X. Waters, chair- H o w many young men have been I<j8t to thedeOMnti, and luteal preaehiiig. The sevoiog of man of tba JUaMMlal Belief Board, rapocta t^US received nominsti^ -n bec.iU'« they could not reach another hiaamneetina wiUt the chandi herecreatesa void (Or mlBdMrlal reilaC. This food oasht to be l^uxely State to receive au edm-ation which would have lAcreaaad, and alonee. t bat cuuxut be ewiSy ttUtiii; and we enajfiatatate devi4i.p d their c,ip,icity, we know not; but we ~ the Fiirtdiareb lu Memphia in » caring the pasto- atewteeSyr.—lae Broadway ehnreh.IjoulaviUe, uurowly m^intioned by brethren in their eacap«ddaatJBeUoBby]ln(intheS»--bBU. TbeflnwsaiU^ do know,a-i ral s««sce of «o able a preacher. Eld. VenaUe roTenatlalbaelaBkraom.lntbe rear ol the cbnreh. The spei-ches, of suiue u.-rt.'rul men who were sous of I w w tOKlay fur bin near a d d of labor, and earria prompt anlnU ot tbe aieaten aaved the boUdlnx. Dr. BiU' Arkun-tiU, but uru lost to the State by iM^iui; cum with Jiiffi tne beat wiihtM of <11, the loNitsnin- rowlriiUbnry waadamacBd to some extent by waler. Total pelled tckseek on educitiun away frjiu borne, antl kwaaootsao. tally eovared by inaorance. ^"Bro. Thoa. duited." Uaaidiraash. ofSbeiby eonnty. wUl remove with bis Etmtlythus becoiuB iilieuatwl from their mother Stale. to Leeabmg, Fla., an the 81h Init.. leaTlns bla mmi Thomaa It must not be understot^ti that the existence of JUCWS j r m a tmb mrxTst. oa hia £uaa, near Sbelbyrllle. Bro. U. and tamlly wUl be some three i>r four ^niwiisK B><pti><t iuatitutions Immlmlmmmn -SUer Wtn. Bend, abated, hw bwni «p> •natly m h f d la their chotch and commantty, tb«y being pataM ntHlnwnr la wotfc aooiic tite eolwcd people, br nady Ok B T ^ good work. Already Bro. H. la aratngiag towithin the S u t ; was iguore-l, but it was felt that UuiaMslUalaB BoanL Ha wlU labor M a ol Um OuaebUa bnlld op thj caow la hla aew Dome."—R'atera iimnicr. these, though .ind promi-iiug, d i u H not meet liw in* I.in>lsUiut AMoelatioa.kttt«nwent Hnian, — — A meellac ckMed at Tieuton, Todd coanty, oa tbe Siathe great 4leinaii J-j oi" the day oBatttboled wnuatMac over Ul0 to SUts -ml Vanlga nil.. wUa resBlia aa ihllows : Nineteen adultiona by baptlim One feature of the -support of colieses within the iuMt three by lutter. 'The chuicb at Balvfea, Sfcn^r -Zha SmUir etOiU of Xtrrrer )iiitr<mit7 recentlycosaty, has eoj lytd a jood meeting. Fastor Fetlie n a State th.tt Ls iuoc>t iiuporbtnt,, is this : that the • ewta. ot rmnkfort. Fourteen wMI- exk)tenci< of those liistitutiou-t of learning inspire I tlart twnltnUno wtth «n Aiua«U4 Barometer. ^ amlatedby Bar.J.lt. »• Dr. Brosda* attended the meeUnf Tba Babobntlt AaraeiaUos.at IH life imn'i iii tn Tbouuiaton,tlona."— the iBtematloOia Sunday-school Commluee, at C^icaun tne mitids and hearts of tbe youth iieartheiu with iBanc!inUad a mnTanutit la tlte lUnelion oferKtlnc a mmnmanl tmx Uie tf*fm nt Orr. Jacob 8. Elac.tonarrirmod-the Onu pan of. hut week. The middle ot the week ibanda craving fur kmfwied^je that i»ihtrwiie would him reianttng to tbe I .dlana Baptist State UWTenlltui, at never l>e .felt,'tha-i making the every existe'ucc of mtoraf Bia Aurtatlon. Seymoor. He took part in the CUnventloa, made a sUrrlng I—"W«a»ii>tiMmliIaiar>inei3i» nvlnl of laeb oa Higher Edue^Uoa' at the meeting ds rriday the •n.hix)! it<?lf the i-reator of the demand for it. nUBtantunal.Bawuia-i>T«. Foar bare pmliBewd *lta In night, letzLmed to LnutavUle about IS o'do^ the «ame olicht, Suuiethiii^ was saiil u^M>ut cunxoUdating ttiese CbrlK.aBctav«sir-tUbat)U>in.aiul«tlUttM caod iinnrcitMa aad^waa at. bs^post In the Semtaary SanuU^ uiomlng. scvenil schools, and waking one larv;ti one. This, am.'-C. JE a w — B a m m U Gtva. Eer. L. JL Berry besraHipintntMlby Uia Buant ac Um S«»tal Aaraeiatlon bnklag as (reah and spcaklns aa Ttgotoa»ly as If...chad upo!i th»i principle Ju.st mentioned, wou{d defeat XMdocJUacfawaxy Semtaiy or tba ttWEUacy aoatb of tlia spent the whole time qaietly at home. Um la a worker. onts ^reat ei:d acc.>io{>tijheil in tho^w separate -OlWSlkjU. inwmma la- labocHw aa mla-Dr. Stirrows will lentitra at Dr. Weaver's c.-nrch to-ulght. jaOer. schiwlrf, for tliey are centers, aud within a nuiius laMoMK^ Bm St. nswMUaAMDeladaa.br aoldeet, •Brigne."'-C. of inaii>-miles tiiey extrl jw j;reat an iiHluecce to tWrauttaNir.' — v . A, Bmby tna taken ebaisn of U » T H E ST.\TE CONVENTION. linbuo the youth »vilh as'il for learniirjastheone ahonibat Oailrana, anUI airaBceio'niu a n eompleud Ibr D K O . S E A R C Y : - ! d r s l r e t o g i v e y o u w h a t I cousolitl.-tte*! iu^titutioa o«uld, and thus the cfFtit Urn Id ao to Braatl. Ve »Ub hlja and bla ezcallcBt wUa a m plea!wd t o t e r m , " A n e w m e m b e t ' n i m - wo"ld Ihs dimini-sheil. T.ius the body se<?ot«d tu moeMala Uudr aeld, bat w« hope that ereryth^nx will •oubalB nMdlnnaftirthem to antarapan their Uftvoric." pression o f Uie late sesHioa of t h e Arknasas Baptist think, ai'l <ii>p »-»>«<l iUp ciiin >tiilitl6n. -nuiltilifcralU. S(<ana.J.B.Bnaa«n*0> kara girca State C o n v e n t i o n . " Bat lije:«ii^4iMtii>ti whicrt seeiuotl to takeholil U i N knrania the acaeUon of a naw BdpUnt chnich la Bnn of the mind'i of itli, thouijh nothing definite was W i t h t h e ^ e f a l tenor of t h e b u ^ n c M o f t h e bam. "-Wa an ilad to aaa that oar Bio. A. H. Jaekmn aad oar ,Ia»lii>«m brauina an bent oo irandlDc a hnow b o d y , y o u r conespondent was welt pleased; a s p i r i t done, w<« U n ' ^i<t itli< r ><<ni')0l ^hnuld ha «se*«taSltlBttiwn of Jauluaora '—Tma Bagtbt. of t k i v o t i o n t o the Master's w o r k aa Identified w i h l U h c t l . Car<aH»a -The Stata CbnTantloa miMtii oa Uia t h e i n t e r e s t of B r p t b t a o f t h e State prcvalUid, a n d Another valuable HOj:g>H'itin ws* in;ide In refnuibiat,ataaiakbaii>. •'t UUnk 1 am laAt tn aaylns a l l aeemcd t o e n j o y t h e seaBioq. erence toetl'icitUm : that »tt|wshoulil be takeii to Uwl Zfam In Sortb CarQlloa baa oerw hart a year of B u t there was a particular leature o f (he 'spirit CtcUUate the «!duc»tton of our girl^. Penial«> gmlir pmapertlar tbaa ibia. and that ibere la prr>bably nn Mat*. lEortb or Hoalb. In whieb tba Bnptlaui an grawlnt o f the b a s i u a s of t h e C o n v e n t i o n t h a t especially Vacation is of infinite importanc - to thi^ Stale ninnL a«idty.''-r. U , Fnuumo, to OapOm. g i a t t & e d a n encouraged me, w h i c h I desire i o and and all otherf. J t was well »a!ii thai " we Than la an liiinia»» of awlanla at Waka ronst CoUtsa orer laat yaar-, md atOI lariet' aeceaMona an eoalUmtly azpactcd.TOtiee: T h e p r e d o m i n a n t s e o t j n i e n t w h i c h a p ijever r i « higher than our m ithers, " a m i th'> way ^^Satr. Dm. HKclwU atld botbam etoaed a t^Iendld f e a r e d t o pexrade a l l , waa progrtu. T h e reatrainta to receive the hi>;h mor.d and intulirctual tlevirlop meettnc wUb the ebsreh at Sandy Bun oa Sunday evenlBK o f t h e n a r r o w l i m i t s , c o m p a r a t i v e l y apeLtking, t o ment of th« next generation was to eduotte our IwL. yei>iina miacmatltlad tn Ui»ehorcb by bapctam.** —than . Eldar B. Boant, of lobnana oooacy, illM w h i c h t h e e n e r g i f s i d t h e d e n o m l o a t i u n wnct con- gir;rt, tiie luuthors of tuturo generations. And aaUMmiiali.,a«adaUt7.(woyaanL Bo bad beau aetlTely fined, w c m felt, a n d the d b p o e i t i o n wa^t t o enlarge again, our bt>y< are rising up arouiid us—wo •imni il In tba otiaMiT'^ aian Uian thirty yean. t h e m . T h i s disposixlon t u a n i f e i t * ^ itdt^U i n the greatly unie tht necwsity of edui-atint; them f..r f M i l W ~ We learn tbat Dr. Xnqcoa baptlard alx can. f o l l o w i n i ; respects:— the ministry, should wo not at the game time |.re dIdateB at bla laK m:etm« M irU«mTli|e..m«ktDC aboat twaMym** aAmVina 'to tltat ebanb within tba laiit Stw 1. I n t h e prospective paper enterprise ».h t i i d pare our girtatiiat th >y might befltcompanioiK w—ka.*^—/>!!> r Her B. H. OnunptOM baa ntlfntd tbe before t M « Convention, w h i d i body manifeste*! a in thiH, as well as fuher rf>sj>ects. See to it, bretli aue el the aborsb at QneBTll.a. — • Bcv. J. i Blampa. deepcsithasia-stic interest i n its euccesjs, s h o w i n g reti, that the girls ^re nut ignored in ihociiuHtder lataaf U»l*vUIaL Ky,wli»liiia been afpolntad aa a mti. —, •laBarr of tha Rata Board: Ibr tha KiaBia Hboata AMoelatlnn,t h a t i t s t m c k t h e k e y - n o t r o f t h e wisheii d f t h e &tiun of eduv-atiun. Tbe la tcaratat at TMoliy. Jfnian eeiraty."--Uiieeaia Btptil. Baptiatd o f t h e State aa represented then-. 3. Your correspoudeiit noticed further a luaiked ——"Bar. W . E. UojiL iba Ttry abtodb'lna who oeeaptad d i s c n ^ o n w l i l c h occupied considerable o f the t i m e tba BOlplt of tba Fraabytsrian cissslt at tUa placa dnrin« o f t h e aeaaion, a n d w h i c h cannot be said t o h a v e int«?ation, not only to devise, but to carry ont. The reports of the various committees embodieil tba HaMiata garrtaaa of tha Ubetty AptlMt Aamriatlnn. haa baaaealladlatlUKAaisaaf PivrUanee ebareb, and. wa a n been n n p r o f l t a b l y spent, d i d n o t dLscover one provisions, nnt only for the prosecution of the Inaraed. wtU aaoapt lha eaU. We aontralnlata tha mem- oposing voice t o the object o f t h e e n t o p r i s e . Good, work In hand, but also looked to the actoal exebenUa at that «l»iRh la balii««o (brtniut* In tb^atfeesolid, &r-9eein{ bretbrea doabted ita success apin cution of th«*« plans. At flist sight this might Una.'-^aJlnittrXanan'. Bar. J. E. Xortoa haa n«triad the basis as set forth in the artides of incorpora- appear ridiculous, but when the minutee of the the earn of Iba ahonb at Sotaaolga. •IliliWl^gl "Mblmlppt moat import' tan ec twelve tion in the coIuiDnj of the pr<Hpect03 copy ol the proceeilings of diffi dent bodies over the country an«-abaa mtn. foruiaflia vima Is oar hlstecyvpartwpifc paper, bat, as above ^ d , they with others were are examined, and the vast number of reports w« bamtaun am: mooer tbaa men."—Bapnt Aeani ftiUy and heartily in sympathy with the object embo lying plmns and reaolutions which are never CaiMaa lacpatlaM W at auilt, tba - pbwaa " and « nwnay WiU aaaan Bm'<daM man. We tejolae wUb oar Uladadppt' It b not the provlnca of this conimimicaUon to put to practical use, hnt are forgotten, are considbntluaa la &«tr Mcwna la tha XaMai^ «aaaaL,—The diacow this sahiect« bat aln^ply to notice the ttod, it does not seem ao rid Icoloos. BKEVraES. It is important to idan and resolve, but it is ex- leave t h a i c o a n t y . H e l e a t b o e secretly w h i l e t ^ tp imise twmiifhint fcir w . Will aat all oar under b t m d t o appear ttefbre t h e court o f t h a t idlovpastaKsdSwiDiiefa; IfaUwfflhdpaiittlA. which does the work. There weie other suggestive features of this body c o a n t y , t o answer a charge o f " swearing a fid» v e viU aooa be «pUeved of oar bardeo, and the which struck me as encouraging, but these are the b o o d " t o g e t l i c « i 9 e to be m a r r i b d . T h a K e b « charts here win Rjoiee and. above aQ, Ood vlU made hia w a y i n t o Sanflowtar c o n n l y , w h o e he be glcHifled. W h o WiU be tbe fiiBt tozevoQd? moat important. I consider it as a most profitable session, and in became acquainted w i t h S d . J . E . W a t t s , ot the Send to tbe writer, or to J . 8. Mnqtaa, S A n a , J . F . Gjurrcr. the future of the denomination of this ^ate doubt- said c o a n t y . W h i l e a t t e n d i n g » m e e t i n g coo- Ark. leM many of the solid grand institutions of the d a c t e d b y B r o . W a t t s , he p r o i e « e d t o have been time will appear as the results of the meeting of c ( » v e t t e d £ n > m M e t h o d i c to B a p t i s t views. H e THE EVANGKUBT. i m m e d i a t e l y m a d e ^ i ^ i c a t i o n for m < ^ b e r s h i p thb Convention. BV BSV. I- raUAl-S DOBBk. I thank God, that the hearts of the Baptists of I n t h e d i a r c h , a n d w«s r e c a v e d b y baptl-im. H e T H A V E often laiMoted tbe defiBBta of Oie Beiiptlus State are enlarging and their views broad- t o l d t b e brethren t h a t be f e l t i t his d u t y t o prercb; tare. iSspa many poinla a n M t aatooebBd. ening, and feel mysdf proud to be identified with a n d t h e c h n r c h d i d pass a v o t e l i c e n d n g h i m t o how maay qaeiSk»a nnanBWCRd! Hiow maBy them in this most aupicious period in their exist- preach. B u t before a n y certificate o f license h a d persons are jast named, and w e ate left to gneu been g i v « i , n n m e t o a s e v i l l e p o r u a t i o u t h i m h a d at all the facta rdating to tbem! ence. ' ; W . W . TtSKEK. reached t h e c o m m n n l t y . a n d he l e f t . A l t e r tbia Pine Bluff, Nov. 10. ISStL Take the case (tfPbinp, tbe ev^o^telist. I want t h e c h n r c h r e v a k e d her action grantingr t h e toknowmotaaboathim. W b a t w hknidaof license. , • S E M I N A R Y JOTTINGS A N D O T H E R oeatinga woricofsuce? Did be. far fixample, THINGS. ' M r . Gritoaley has t w o l i v i n g w i v & , w h o n a k i e when be w m aboat to v U t a d|y, aead belone a r B A P n S T : — a s l am under promise i n Copiah c o a n t y , a n d t h e y are b o t h respecUUe hatwi B fev thoasMid b a n d t ^ to be drealated to write occasionally, I will do so briefly. ladies, l>at he ia n o w l i v i n g w i t h a w o i c a i L w h o firom door to door, btatlng that,— The present se»ion is one of unusual prosperity. ^ is n o t l a w f u l l y hia w i f e . H e a n d the w o m a n " T B e eminent levtvaliat, Bev. Ftdlip, is aboot W e have in attendance between eighty end w i t h w h o m he is n o w l i v i n g were atraegly suatobeghia wotk^tf^^gtMe In this dly. H « baa ninety students,—eight from Tennessee. This, p l d o n e d of h a v i n g m n r d e r e d a i ± i i l d (tf theirs, preached with g i ^ w o e v in aU of oar tarccte I believe, is the target representation our State and, aAer M r . G r i m a l e y fled, one M r . Wataon, t h e catiea; tboasandsbavebeen tamed anatds has had In tha Seminary at any timi<. fitther o f one of Grimsley'a wives, had t h e b o d y of togetin. TbetoUowingare«iew extmrta fepm Prof. Kidd has been giving lectures on elocu- t h e c h i l d t a k e n n p ; h a d a n inquest h e l d o v e r I t , letters f r o m places w h e r e b e baa l a b o m f c " tion for the past month. His instruction and a n d the j u r y were o f t h e o p m i o a t h a t i t came t o " T h i s dlstingniatted servant ot the Lord bia drill are most helpful to the students. His method i U death b y its father a n d m o t h e r . conducted a revival amffl!* as, ptoadiiiit every is free from icannerism, his art free from art. A l l o f these f-tcts t a k e n i n t o account I t h i n k are All matters of delivery, expresi-iou, and action, sufficient to establish fcr M r . G r i m !• y a character night, and^evatal times a day.forthree veeka. A he refers to n&ture and common sense; nature the unsuitable tor th(i B a p t i s t m i n i s t r y . Last s p r i n g hundred bave beea bapOttd, of vriHim we bopi t h a t at least a p o r t i c o w i l l a t l c k . " jitinciple, common sense the rule M r . G . m o v e d i n t o Cliicot c o a n t y . A r k . , a n d Last Monday was the day of prayer for mfc^ stogped i n a te.'Uoa o f c o u n t r y k n o w n as B a y o u 'Our toother, PhUIp, tbe ovaageltat, basoouaions. The Bist day of every month is the occa- Masonhills. H e t o l d t h e people t h a t he was a ducted awork of grace in so efllectnal a mauier sion of the meeting of the missionary society for m i n i s t e r , a n d offered t o preach for t h e m . B u t he that we sh».U not want another tor a g r e e t w ^ e-says, address, and concert of prayer on behalf o n l y h e l d f o r t h once o r t w i c e , u n t i l I saw 8t>me W e cordially commead him to other i ^ rrmole of missionaries and missions. Baptists f r o m t h a t section a n d t o l d theta t h a t M r . Many of the brethren are consbtntiy doing G. was not a m i n i s t e r , a n d t o l d t h e m o f his bad fields." work at the niisiJoa stations in the city, others character. HO soon f o u n d t h a t he was e z p g ^ . " N o t h i n g can be m o r e masterly t h a n the are preaching toj:hurchea outside of the city. So and at ouce b««an t o t r y t o get out farther west. d i i n e r y o f l h i s e l o q o e n t a n d able d i v i n e . ¥ n « you m.ty say to brtthren dissiring to come to the I undeti»tand t h a t he is soon t o be ofi, and, nnlea» there i s n ' t a p a r t l d e erf inlereat, be can work Seminary, that they c in get work to do, he is carefully watched, he w i l l disgrace i h e t h i n g s so as to bave tbe a n x i o a s l K s t a t a l l , a n d CUUnrHEB .\ND PASTORS. Baptist name. I o n l y w r i t e t h i s t h a t such m a y y o u w o u l d t h i n k there waa a treu>«d<RM w w * The First church, Chattanooga, is to be on- n o t be the case. going o n - " gratulatetl ui>on its go<^ fortune in securing the .Mr. G r i m s l e y Lj about 48 or 50 years of age, of services ol Dr. Montgomery as piLstor. I w o u l d l i k e v e r y m u c h to aee one of tbe bandm e d i u m h e i g h t , weighs ahout^lGO pounds, has From all reiMirts, the First church. Memphis, glaxloK t ^ e k eyris, seems t t e t l ^ o f m a n n e r , bUla w i t h w h i c h P h i U p pndiiced hia w o r k - Oo has doubtless done a good thing in calling Bro. seems nnusaally a n d is a fine t«ik«d(. and y o u suppose there is a n y Vikrtihood of OrVenablR. w e l l calculated t o deceive Uie Jpcopie. I n order m a n n discovering a n y o l t h e m ? U w o o l d he The brethren at Oattatln liavo tbt>ir,eye upon t h a t the church m a y be pnttected, y o a w i l l w o r t h i t s w e i g h t I n gold. Bro. Kinuald, I have heard. Now, let other pas- Insert D o y o a imagine that Philip, thla* t h i s I n T h e B a r n s r , and a - k the tt»rlc!?s churches do likewise, and that will be an 7 « m j BaptM to coppy the .saiue. FratenuUlj- aflcr he w e n t i n t o a s t m u g e ^ a c e . " b M i n w i t h " augur of good, prosperity will come to Zion. yours, etc., •A- L ® ^ the newspapers, to imprca* o n t h e m t b e impact* SATU B1>A V-M EhTt XG —A N EX PL A NATION, ance of his being weU reported? W h a t a p i t j r lU ferring to " an incident" which I gave to the t h a t theaacred historian d k l n d t g i v e as f a t e S E L M A CUUitCH. readers of T u e Baptist some time ago, to the N T u k Baptist of O ;t. 9, Bro. Searcy makes accounts o r P h i l i p ' s • ' r f l a t l o n s to t b e p « s i V O h , etfect that wiuie churches hail entered Into solemn Hu appeal to the d e n o m i n a t i o n t o assi»t as at w h a t w o t t l d l n o t g l v e f a r a file o f t b e " G e r i r i m covenant with tbe Lor<l to Bive him " one Satur t h U place i n r e l i e v i n g o u r church indebtedneaB- Gospel G o n g , " puhUshed i n Samaria aboat U e clay for three S.»bb tths " and that a brother ex Bro Si-arcy is f u l l y conversant w i t h a l l the facta time rf PhUIp's tabon. pressed to nue his "ct^uifc'ectioiis conviction" I n connection w i t h oar situaUon here, a n d w e feel A n d t h e n anotbec t h i n g . D o y o a suppose t h n e that " tbe Imtd spoileil his crop of hiiy," b««au<'e grateful to h i m for thus a s k i n g o u r b i e t h r e n a n d f r a s a h a p p y h a r m o n y between P h H i p s i t d t h e he stayed at home (»n a " Satur-lay meeting-day " sisters t o come to our relief; I have a l w a y s l o ^ pastor, b y w h i d i e a d i was to M o w for t k f l to sow his millet seed,-said brother being thereb d i e v e t l t h a t i l our friends abroad could reaUse other? D o y o n t h i n k t h a t t h e p a s t a made a& by rtfonnwi. our wue hltusUon hero, t h e y certainly w o u l d opening for PhOip, and t h e n t h a t P h l U p , to t n m , Uro. Pettit tjuriei: " W h e n Uld the Lord a-^sfeft us m o t e r e a d i l y . G o d o n l y k n o w a t h e t o l l w r o t e t o t h e various n e i ^ p e i H o f w h a t a w w make that Itargain with Bn>. Burnett, or the a n d sacrifice, as w e l l as t h e prayers a n d tears, t h a t d a f u l roan t b e pastor w i i ? . , ^ ^ brrther that aow^tl initiet on church Saturday I have bestowed u p o n t h i s b a r d field o f labor, D o yoasnppose that Philip p»««i»ed the same and lost his hay ? " l a m encouraeed. The way a m i d s t opposiUon o l every k i n d , to t r y to establish sermons t h a t be made t w e n t y y e a n ago o r i O M e . s'de remark, dropped in passing, was a sad truth, t h e cause o f m y Master. F o r years i t has s e e n i M or d o y o a Imagine t h a t P h B l p n o w a n d t ^ e B . M y and Is F-earing trutt. Bro, Pettit said just what I t h a t a l l was v a i n a n d hope ess, a n d w e w o u l d lose once i n ten years or so, made a n e w i O T o n ? wante«l him to say. His views are Iq perfect tte- our house a t l a s t ; b u t blessed be t h e n a m e of t h e A n d w h a t coarse d p y o a t h i n k P h i l i p p a n a e d cord with my own, and I can assure him that I L o r d , t h e d a r k cloud w h i c h has h u n g o v e r as eo a b o a t gathering u p the oOarings o f t h e p e o p l e a t WHS nev** a party to snch a contract, never was l o n g n o w has a silver l i n i n g , a n d . w i t h the t h e e n d o f t b e w w k ctf graee? m-Hor of more than one church at a time, and do a s s b t a n c B o f o a r f r i e n d s a b m a d , w e can a n d w O i A n d then, another roost i n t e n s t i n g j w t o t , d o not now think U best for a husband to have four save o u r house, a n d y e t see a strong c h u r c h here, yoa have a n idea t h a t F l i i U p p o t aoaw o o e i i a i i c e wives or a pastor four churches. This ia dwirable standing ont as a great beacon l i g h t i n t h i s part o f toGodandinhis spirit, or d U be e z p m t b a t only when necessary; neccasary only in peculiar t h e L o r d ' s v i n e y a r d . W U l n o t e v e t y B a p t i s t , e v e i y t b l n g w a s t o b e d o a e b y roaaipolating e n d cases. J e h u J . Birasirr. a n d m o r e e s p e d ^ i n A r k a n s a s , w h o reads thfa wirepaUIngt Waveriey Hotel, Louisville, K y . send us something t o assist as i n p a y i n g o a t o u r Ob, haw roany t h i s c s 1 d o w a n l t o k i ^ r a l church-house? RemembCT, dear brethren a n d W h a t a idty that t b e y a r o left oat, M d t t a t the A N IMPOSTER.EXPOSED. sisters, t h a t t h e Master says, " I n a s m u c h «8 y e | > R O . SEARCY:—Tioere is abroad in your State h a v e done i t a n t o one o f t h e ieaat o f these, ray Bcooants are ao lueagec I—Jfitffcrtat JtuidlML " one, R . J . Grlmsley, who profeeaes to bo a b r e t h r r a , y e have done I t u n t o m e . " F o r t h e t a k e Some good Cbristiaa men and womea live In regular Baptist ministo'; but who is reaUy not a of t h e cause o f Christ, w h o m y o n p r o f i w to love, bondage to tbe Cear that In t b ^ Int mommts Baptist minister at all, but a very bad and danger d o n o t n ^ l e c t t h i s m a t t e r , b u t d e t e r m i n e a t once tbeirtjOthwillUter. NowsodipenoBatwcl^to ous man. The said Griniiuey resided for some t o d o s o m ^ b i n g . S t o . CBlIaban, ot H o p e , « > d k a o v that they have ootblBCtodo with tlKlrJast years previous to 1873 in Ooplah eonnty, Miss. aome o t h « p a s t o n have promised t o eaU t h e But about tttat time be became ao much involved atfentkm of t h e i r oongregatloia t o t h i s s o t j s c t i and moments, or witbaaytUiw talrOBd the datiSB «f Vn dovmtle and legal troalde* that be bad to ecute D T H K B A H ' J U H I . i " I t doea not appear, aHogetber, incredible, that Romanes tella the storjr of a d<^ in Scotland, who, in aoms mmanaUj viae, ape4ike animal aboald bare going to church with bis master, had to swim a chanthbo^t «if imitatiiq; the growl of a beaat af prejr, so ^ a mile wide. If tie tide wasflowinghe ran north • U M hr ** DVCUC JtJUUai.'to wboBi aa I ule aa to indicate the nature of the expected danger. And a mile; if ebbing, south jm equal distance, always thi8Voa]dba*ebeenafintstepi& the formation of a landingat a point near the church. Shall we not be very kind to animala whom God has made with so ueamm. rmm a b j u l b a u c -scaoui. juas TO h x b language."—Ibid. p. 55. much intelligence? raisso. KIQHT L I F E OF YOUNG MFN. nEASOOUUT:Jot think iMnr! lU noiM at aU; A B E night ofien deatrora a whole Ule. The leaking n o w ANIMALS PLAY. AlUr aU we turn liaani oC por kaa kr a * I W . " of the night keepe the day forever empty. Night Tba 3r«w-Lk|tita at Belsnea now, nuka tt aolte eloar, C M A i X bir^ chase each other about la plsy ; but ia ain'a barrat time. More'sin is is commitud in one XliatUiailiMttbaauwMraaridoniiis.nir daar! perhaps the conduct of the crane and the ti'umnight than in all the daya of the week. Tbis is more nva aajra^oar psBaeban wUl now luna to ctuBja peter is most extraordinary. The latter stands on one emphathlcally tme of the city than of the cotintry. t>a MU aCltatr vtnoa; aad iakaaaavnagB: leg, hops aroond in the most excentric manner, and For Um woiitt baa. attansUi,gnnnt am wlM (o baUaT* The street lampa, like a field of aoldiera, with torch in throws somersaults. The Americans call it Uie mad IHaOht Wacnai1ia<ar7(tf Adam ant Era! band, stretch a n y in long lines on either sidewalk, bird, on account oi these singularities. Water birds, tfea gay>«olored transparandes are ablaxe with attracJBa Ks. Darwin, oueiaatTalx (howa. such ss ducks and geese, dive after each other, and Ikat Man waa not: mad* tn tUa pcoaant talr ibape; tiona; the saloona and billard halls are brillianily U clear the surface of the water with outstretched necks d i h n i sot CtaaMlia vcDfOa aai>pOM— laminated; mnaie aends forth its enchantment; the and flapping wing, throwing abundant spray abroad. ant m * br ttoBlto Xookar or A pe! • gay company begins to gather to the haunts at^ji Deer often engage in sham battles, or trial ol jstrengtb, n a Tto madatt* MonksTr i » eaoM not esplala: booses of pleaaore; the gambling bells are aflame by twisting their horns together and poahing for the Antao unratadtftacply.'JIowKalo! I moat bcK, vithpaUrel splendor; the theatres are wide open; Xliat loa wlU.aot upon rowtoUrnsaia— mastery. AU animals pretending violence in their Ita*! Toa kaov lis e<iaa (ortb Oom ttiB pitmdlTa a n • ^ the milla of diatmction are grinding beaitb, honor, play stop short of exercising it; the dog takes the bappineaa, and hope oat of the thoaaanda of Uvea. Bui viuU liuU, eMa aamir aim r or buir vac haictiad ? greatest precaution not to injure by bis bite; and tlie The dty tinder the gaalight ia not the same as nnder Xa amra UUMi tblB ycMir iMBia oimiBa oan ooaedTe; ourang-otttang, in wrestling with his keeper, pretends or Om* tba Bnt inraai, Uka qnUt-woiicriFaa pstslud God'a annlicbt. The aUnremenU and petiIs,pitfaUs of to throw him, and makes 'eints of biting him. Some trtttaU«liat>«orafc,kUnnutabtobaUam> t n i ^ a x e a hundred-fold deeper and darker and more animals carry out in their play the semblance of Tkatali ratbar! I'm aoia aow Utat paapla Bnf* own. deatraetiTes. Night life in oar citics is a dark problem, catching their prey. Young cats, for instance, leep Ttet ooiilck ant •aanl7-<|BUaftaaftooitowatnavboae depth and abyam and wbirlpot^ make lu after every smaU and moving object, even to the leaves And Ua tkUMT aut Ua ; wkr aa joa 8o ilown, s ^ bai^ with horror. All night long tean are faU> Pnr wban. taU BM wban. thla BOW pnecM bcBlnaf strewed by the autumn wind. They crouch and stfeal ing, blood streaming. forward ready for the spring the body quivering and Umoatbaglaaiimawluta! for doat too aoppoaa. Tonng men, tell me where yon spend yoar evenings, If Xantava wan Slvao to torn talo Man; the tail vibrating with emotion, they bound on the Wa ikaald, iQilwanMa, Adl tn with tba oaato of tboK, and I wiU write oat the chart of your character, and moving leaf, and again spring forward to another. Who wan uaa to ihla Uw ottludr klndnd f finid deatiny, with blanks to sign your nameb- It Benger saw young cougars and jaguars playing with •eems to me an appropriate text would be, *' Watch- round substances, lik» kittens. Birds of the magpie U woaU ba too Ruutj'^pan Monkar. put Xaa; man, what of tto nJgh:T" fohceman pacing the kind are the analogaee of monkeys, fuU of mischief, niaana (WiliscndatUxoff totbaoUiarr Till, whataa tba mimnH ofMonka^a bi«aa beat, what «>f the night 7 What are the young men of play and mimicry. There is a story o( a tame magpie Untwa inlu tba leoshlng Mli or bar braUu-r! the dty doing at night t Where do they spend their that waa seen buaily employed in a garden gathering Fsrtiaiia, ton, m » not lot f»(ma«jr« ita elaar— ereoiogsT Who are their asscciatesT What are pebbles with much solemnit; and a studied air, buryBow ate eonld 11 iw, tbat the oune men, their hahiU? Where do they go in, and what Ume inx tneiii iii a hole made to receive a post. After «bad< iauHhr » tmtata and manlr appw. do yoa see them come out? PuHceman, would the dropping each atone it cried "Cur-ack!" triumphant. And lb« bast,Jabber off InbUfoakcja again T night life of young men commend them to tlie con- ly, and set off for another. On examining the spot, a Bttt UD% awfiur Jca( tbliikafu.dmrl rarjoct aa iram'r* tblnklac laatn dlrliia. fit^ee of their employers? Would it be to their poor load was found in the hole, which the magpie ABd bow loirelr liM U*4a of jonr klndnd appw— oedttT was atonin'g tor his amnsemenL To and as old Apa at tba boat of tbo Una! Make a record of the nights of one week. Put in Ba&fk aasa, tban^ ooa tbipK Uut eaat ba azplaUwd: the mominc paper the names of all young men, their K I N D WORlJrf. babita and bannts, that are .on the streetjor sitifnl ODaniaaittntt to aolTe wbleb no labon araU; T<m eant (OHa wbu It h T AJar aU tber bave galnad, pleaatire. Woald there not be shame and confusion 7 I ^ I N D words do not i^Jbt much. Tliey nt-vei blister Tbiii oinstTatiaaceoimtoflUii^.aaag hlatall; t Some would not dare to go to their places of businna, the tonguti or lips. AuJ »e bavn nevtr benrd Ua tbf a; la Uudr aaiber. UuU cant be ramoTad; some would retnm home at night; some wotild leave Xbadmln tbalraUTar (bat m a t porsa away ; of any mental trunble arising (rum their |i»>. « the city; some would conublt suicide. Remember, ill tba taat or tbalrftiur,UUU cam ba dlapnnd ; Tbonghthey do not <-oat much, yet tliey accoiuplisli yoong men, that in (he retina of tb*alI>ae«ingKye U* tbam amw JWtfnatttaa moeh aa tbar ma* ! tliere ia nothing hid but sbaU be revealed on the laM much ;— Aad tbaa, loo, I itona, umu loo mock ix rw^alred. Wban wu'wi not to hall»Ta fcn.t .ij.inu.yt.. tbalnia^ <f*.n^HapUat Weekly. 1. They.help un>-*:i u« 11 ({oo-l nsluru and will. Soft v b s a a a r Uaati; at tba ant waa aoqalfad, words SL^ften our / wu ooul. ADjirv n-onl* are (.icl to ImuBiatf^ theflameof wratli, and mik<s it bL-z; lu 't« tl3rii.-ly. W i ] £ I £ £ 18 \OUR liANTEUN ? f pMbr to baOara, aa I bara atwajr* baoa laogbl, 2. Kind words mike other people good imtiircil. YOITNG Harry waa sent out on an erraad one evenTBal Utar<i«e waa t^** gnetan Bin, onto man ; Cold words freesj people, and hut wonld iriiu*le thriii, AMI awbM bat MBi&i at the «omIeal ttai>a«bt. * ing in early winter. Alter pving him bis mesaand Utter words ui»ke tliem wmthfu'. XhUAD Apa.anwMantally, biloat iba (Um. i age, bis mother said, " Be sure you take the bntem There is sncb a nisli of a I kiiiiiii ul monU iii our if tbaic an lb* Baw>lJsht« of 8eienea, mr daar, with you, Hany." days that it set nia dr»iral>:e to liivt- kiml wonls a Va'ad ballw boUoB to tba old flubiUDCdCkead: »Bother the bmtem!" answervd the boy gruffly chance among thnu. Thi-re ore ruin wonli", and iror tba blbla, altfao'. not In aU thln«a. <talta elw. SuU abowa Ba that and tba IkTlor we need: sad diarespectfnlly; and be'vtaHed, muttering to him- hasty words and nnfty wonis, nini profane words, And Ita amnathtin to know, tbo' not wboUy diTlne, ad^ "What do I want with a lantern? IgtiessI and boisterous uvnls natl wsrlire wnnU nati^ k iplictt wttttln na, tbat aatnaftotnabove ; know the way w ^ enougii." Kind words alifu prittlu.: - their iiw 11 iiii;ige on iik'ii's r art tiwfcaa^ 'mid tba itbaatiwof aartb, to teellna V « y aoon Barry, in croesing the street, stumbled souls, and they qui.»l auit comfort be i.oirer. H ey like * JBitw en. tbe b jeoea ot infla^ l.ore 1 Into a h<de which had been made by a recent rain. shame him out ol bia sour, luoruiie, uiikind feeliiigii. —n* Cbmunt By thia ftU he knocked the fi«b from off bu siiin We bav4 not yet iMrguii to use kind words in each "'Maa ia dtucentitd |toRi k W17 <iaadnifed. lor- bone and coverai bia clothing with mud. On liis abundance as tliey ought to be u«ed. nvhed » ^ kiul poistod e a ^ probaby arbmkl w ^ back he foigot the fence runniug along the edge ia tto habito, and an i'nhkbifaHU of the Old world."— oftberarine. Aa be groped along the bank went A PRESIDENT'tJ GO(JI> [rtarwm'a CoKioit oI J I ^ XppletonVEd^ ToL,iL sprawUag to the bottom ol the ravine. With much I ADVICE. JTl " la a MriM of fbr'ma' gnidutlnf ioMiinbly. ado alter many brniM he got into the road once f n U E Indianapolis Journal publishes a letter (rom Inm Mmci Apaliia carearan'to Uaii ta liefiowexiata, •Wfe: but when hefinallyreached hia mother's door, President Harrison to his young grandaon. then ete-ttid, m i p. "Tlw i i r l r Ape-Bke pro- he looked more like a scarecrow than a Uving boy. la school. He says genikin vt tnwi."—Ibid, Vol ete, " l i a n The lantern would have waed him all this. Was "Although learning is a great advantage, there is akrna baa became « bijpoA."—I4td; ToC L 135. not tie a fboUab fellow not to tske it? Bat what shall something still belter; tbat is to be good.. I had much • It ia eridcnt, tbktai&a Eats had not profited I 7 be laid oi thow boya and i^rla who know the Bible to rather that you should want learning and be a good Imr rcMiin)(. For haa aof Hogb Miller pat into the be the only lamp whidi can guide their feet «tfely man, than to have all the learniug in the world and nMmth of lb» Ijtaiaitdtiaa'philowjphef.lbis^i^ through tba patba of Ufe to the home in Iteaven, and beabailman. iienairtdedaratiHi—WbenUutt ^teb iiu« opena, jetrefnaetoctrry it? Are they not ^11 more IboU " Yoa must, therefore, never do a bad act Kever tba •MMRatioiia of tte man atop, liTaiI,4iiad aid ««re i A ? Aw they not likely to snffer even more than the teU a falsehood even i< it be to shidd yonrselL It 13im,ai9iuiah»i attd(daos;«d M i gnat, bqy? Too know they are.—[Good Words. you do anything that ia wrong, do not heeitato to con>v PMt gnat great grandlatbar, tbu aea pen; hia great f w it at once. I will cease to lov« yoa if I bear that FMt IMat craadtatbar, tba jamae]; bia gnat great you are in the habit of telling fibs." MICE. KtaadbtbM. tba barrioib bia great giandfatber, tbe YkB. II£2fD£BSON confirmd the story told by an troc,hiagguidikdUr,tfa(tporp<te,andbiaiatber, tka ^ ledandic traTster of six or more mice taking a BeUerer, if you and the world are ui»6n good terms,, monkey."—rowprinia of tbe Creator, p. piece of dried mad, placing berries upon it and usiae it may be wdl to inq^re. If you ate not come down t " S o vkpbwkiati, aa far aa I am aware, baa been it aa a raft to crosa a atzeam. They range themselves from your eminence, do yon live godljp In Christ giren of tbs Jom the tail, by certain Apm, and aroond the edge, their beada in the middle, and thrii Jcaua? tails ia the abteam to s e m as radden. I ^ y cart; I " In til* aKw liuumar, • • tbeflenaeof bnnger and poUtMB or ^ati on land bjr one lying down and boId> ^ is an eacprearion of opposition to God, a turning tba piunueolaatiar'were. »» doobt. &m aoqaiied ihg tba egg between his- fore paw* while bis comof the bock upon hkn, a treating him with contempt. in order to induce aniiMla to eUL"—IKd, p. n . paniana draw him aJbii»b7 the ews. Hr.GeoigaJ. B o w n f u l ! T b e Y o u t i g TJBLlfi S o u t l i areiiivala»- JM. i/iwiiJ—1 asn BannlBs^jD^M P r o - thaseuaof lidkiML and kavamawitk bieT W . a Lawbsbcb, M J ) . a h a m . taM^ tSoa; with it, I ca> Ctewfixdvnte, Miai. naak'tMi hoBia a day wiOoBt aihaitalapsed Oi^ans. ticm w hoaiMaaai I aow vaa it a d j Ukaelatf of av whan naakiiMu and Ana ptaaanamy taekorlaa In my ajbwCa^ v d o a i S d i i ^ l k T i i e a l a n a q ^ I d o I uk« thk aaatbod ol adUag yoar ^ t M t t o to edafantod L a i f n o t b c ^ ttat^ UM wotiM erer ba The following eertlficftte from Gov. Biaca, wU(^ 1 have sold fer the fa3 attctod wil^ AsiSC o c . ^ a c waaksess Porta-, who has tbocoogfaly tsstrd di^taea yean^ tlart I a a / ataka it a of I b a l a d e U a a , £ o 2 d h a w a a r i t the merits of oar Improvea Bnoe^ aoca I«ka, Waa, Har Oi 1>R> benefit to my paper ^ auUag it a fiui mOtaM^ U m . and 0 1 ^ t ^ ^ t Sid. J. B. Otavas Hasr 1 k m eMshould be tmd by all saSiaen. H e mMatotatralytlMi^ wBh the p a i t i A B n s s ^ t e (laatat )JMS. ito TOO. if iM^ altogether, owea hia anllad nan yoa, aad B la l e i i a a i ^ *« a*^ jM trraroTagpod wtea^aadofa I wtt Itcleir yo« mr rsasoDii te to the Brace, Notice warta 1» wlUehtoeKweasBWr aall|*L S b 000^^ Itilioaldba wNatheaays:— Braaaloidma k r ^ W rwnnkiBui ewa nunenfing tKfa InialuaMa artida to paJt. haa aainMrtad Hjt ywraajrip wwB ha IX lainialiar and pdhUc Mm« tLm djAtean yean ago, X gj^hsaapMaaoflfca " g ^ Igt aia. aaRr*ha«Baqa w d o* • aaeiUlve thoiqadily bnunn down la Toiea Ha tiaa nayw^]^^ axoewVajxaadiiiif; I e^oU ^eak hmjonthiu into «ldaga, and I 7 avety s>r t . B . CHrmwea—DcmrSIr: ^ a little Willie withotTt KetOnj; hoim; old MM to aqrist Urn to support the • HSMI Use Brftce a r a t tiy y« mj throat waa gtnaaUy HMe, aai eaaQr aeir d a r l m g Bay l a t o e f u a n u a * ! a>>a*«ewie;Axk. U otd^Den yeitfiy i m treated, and ita tooa beoaaa iMMtTj and "mSb^ State. I t -vnu • r r v r y g r w U " n m a o n o r u t » i i « m Btaed for weak baokt with h a ^ ; aoon «liadn«oot%h sat u , that a«>rrlce t o mie, a a A I re«l Tory invyft^Kia tatWaotlOD. incMMsd, unto at the eloae of a ku« w e U aatlaSed t l u i t t r i lukd c4Ma- bw\DrnttgmjMj g^wnft I aavaasa&wtaaaa ana Boar aaa B17 v i t o fidled eatirelT, itnd«> I do BO^ daim that the A>ly aad • i r a c e d Ita « • • m week. M U i l e r tha of a ckronio^laimitt LmnrBratt Will euro e v e n dbease t l u t aay voice w o u l d met kawe S t e p M ^ ia b d r to; bot it w m ra- keem cOlected a t a l l . T h o ftrat soon nil >I«a«aaooily tbieateiied u t l i ^ I was now i l e d wlinn It doea not A ^ core, aU t i m e I aaed It I addreaacd a rotnpaUed to daaiit 6om preaching, and, thatgreatazmy of iUa and aches that Imrge c r o w d o r p e o p l e l a t k o vhlok Om Brnca naa atvaw me cmalMliC II jws^le, OTeroome those diflicaltJea, aoon b i ^ down the best oonsti- o p e n alr^ a a d I l O a a d tkaU aay ha jdlbDetB^ and nconct the kat txeasaie,—the tutloQs, which are caused by pro- toiiuo w a a very m a c k atreagttX.B.S,KDBnB. ndoe, that t* a miidater or Uwyet is kqmu of tke mvtda wMch nq^port emed, a a d a t t k e d o a o o f a t w o oion valoabla than gold or jewels,— Uke Mernal on/ant. This is the only k o a r ' a aiMMsck I w a a Oreo Orow or ba dleni fonmr. I aK>Ued to 0 » medianlcal contrivance e v n db- nay a a a a l f t e l i a g o f wearlueaa Boat eadnent phyriclana, and was bat oovesed that apUfla the abdomoa a a d e x k a a a t l o u . Bttle helped: m n t ^ •zdskm of an rather than oompieaBea it, aa all Tery ftoaiwetnuiij dontptad^UT^ the; coald do nothing tmaHGBdo. JAS. D . P O R T E B . bttt adTfaa leali and tUs I waa oomTtiis la what it does, as IhotBands IO»T. peOed to toka. What caused and con* who have teed it iue ] * ' taavaU10d0|«tamaasaa ^ Onned that eonataat irriUUon and teaHiy: I t sapped the btwW'^ ooagh, thaj oould ax* men, stonaach, inngB and CWartan. lllm.JaBaarrt,aR. plain nor pievent Proridenoe threw tbowire, pKventa laadtode, hoaxaeAOBOBBIA BTJ tba reaiedy In .mr -iraj. Mr wife was neaa, (rfleat hernia, consompoon, and - w ^ s r s a s A - ' HaTfam live&tbe Bemeie* Braosa tali ndfering mm ptiwpsas ntei:^ and the that terriblii diaeaae,—dv^epda. trial, I ^ s e r ^ y bear my testimony to I t incteaaes the breathing car ao'ty, m i m o t a t the t l r e ^ add pnoica oi ita w a a . I can pedbnn mf labor with ear I oiedldae In the UniTeiatr af KadtTiUa and thereby gives s t m t ^ to the I S r S & e 6fh'pet eent ease aed aooriort than b o ^ . l>i. Winston, waa her diTildaa, and he h A ^ i I w o ^ i m t bs witlwut it fai tavmtmMewtwskMUUaarwi. I -mm I t ezsptmds and enlarges the iungs. pnaoibed i n bar this Bca«e. twice ito price. T. C. SnxKn. which speedily teliewd She ooa* and thus rendera breatning fT«e and Sanday-at&iol Brang^llst asy, and t h e i ^ y promotm di^ jntion. plaiMd ot a "diagging down;?, and i.Janta,Ga. I t ndieves duoniccostlvckr.wand no langnaga ocmM better axpress my ChsMie piles when all; other oiesiM a&ve and avedally aftai pieadiing. 1. Ksamd SM OTOU Ba«r _ It ooennad to a»e if it waa good far one t^TT. W. uau aoma Una la rdieves alt jteea of case of " d r a n ^ down," why not far aad . . . fema^'a disease anoiher. WlUiont ounaulUng any one, MWS tk can l u d t , becat»e, pknleialT w •ttMvIa* 1 MOCBiad una large aaougfafaraiyself o. A- u a r r o H . » . » , and pat it on, the finttimedoobtlaa like a bibkM nmb, It need!; mechaniPastor Thun Baptist C3iareta. at. l/Tola. ItwasaTer worn by a man for sndi a cal suppni: [ueii aBArK.—II tu <>M ar ikc It mlevea ^lea and ptoitgmu am, the irmaon, and tha resalt Mrr mr ataa«r. T X ay UwiSM*^,^ CMar Ear. na. the low»r boweU) from and ritaOan of my throat aoon UUatMB IM Ita m u aanwla* tiHmm whs IHMV the ^ •imday • w • — t I t . ^ Sk ! « . I t l9<belnit «Kd tnMe and .aatin tuttar CtolBBaa Bcroatacr. M m . not done eonid artlealat^ which I wJUwwwl The Brw* I iwetved from TOO I am w d l p f e a M ^ ^ t F ^ Brim. It fortwetremoBths, and Terrtoonloomfind ii of RHSit beneflt to me, I was is the W y wpportar that I harestwn Bmced to preach agdn. "niat Brace I and by tboee having stoopinz fhool- afhild it witf not what It was reeMtt- or t ^ Jn ray f xtewdve pnetiw that wore neatly t w eatlagitswoiide to liiy d m and backing cousrlw, the mrc mrndf«I to be; but 1 wa» induced by I can rdy upon wtthout any apMso^ prectirs(»8 of consamption. And my physician to get one. Shortly aaceorevUftumitaose.- I shall hereone, beeanaa I ' t l w a ^ I aitide that waa inventad for the use of many a stid^rar has b«>n cnred of afterward, the churoh that I was a after intmdisoe it into my pnotite, «peia and liriT complaint who member nf called me to serve them tNoaka only. Privatel/, toa few » been oonsidsFed in tiie last statire as p w ^ r ; and 1 stwjited on the conbiends who wme aaflniag aa I sa: of consomptioo. dition Uiat they iihoaM get me a t expfadned tha ass ot .the Braea, fioottonla^Ua. Brace. 1 ^-as wstirely bVoken down m m tWPKOTKD BMACK. throng me they obtdMd it, andwere m c s o r Baacaa telieredaalwaa. luowmadekncnnilhe The (HiginallBtaee, made only few bom over speaUni;. I coukJ sot The price ol this B i m b d m the speak longer than flftnn nunntes «aMrWerofthfrBnwe to* reatore, strength ladies, was ton weak for the sterner warwsat9D,aiid tS6 wfaeo Sled by en and pnseerr* the votee tfl' ^mulc sex. I remedied it by an important t n i became very boarae; bat, with themeffiodptafcartop. , speakera, Sad then eommenoed oBmng it improvement, as the foUowiiig will the Brace on, 1 can apeak with p ^ fectea.se otte boar: *od, after speak- •QM iateBt having expirea I nave aa a p n ^ U B to minlsten far subsenb-. •how:— aEcmcdOie maqnbetme tiT M M of I.** aU TKMs BMiML ing, I do not Jieel that nnr' an. tiie Improved Braeea B|nn andi tenm atmyshwmdithatldid I b e caase oC hoaiiamew, sure throala t h a t l w ftmiUt tliem»tltefelk)w3> TUatocortfCr Muu ttw aBdmtnHiri theBtace. I canaiurtb»(theBnoe l a r y n i ^ and SnaOjf b r u K ^ ^ In ouhlie iogpciHeB:— to all-that Is daimed for I t : aad I iw—j—Ji -ti ^t^^xfttiptoinsof "diagm ^ t t r S T u . Simvaa. woahl adTise aU iS^kOT w h o j s d , _ . e»li«aitio«» after, fathme « n d hi«dtmie after speaking , aM weaknaHs of the b a ^ and S r a l l means to get Uion a Bcaoe, .iwd tiemia. it the tUffhl rtbefore they have to ^ s p e a k ^ , » of IM abdoptfnal muiete, I had to do. I woold not be witSoot S a S u J B l t t a t t l W M wMe* dOom the botodt to a M t T * ^ m o ^ p v t y In this d i y otthe itforanyconBld«a«<^ biotm ill marked Mioi* • ottr the fotith a ^ my unim>ved w a ^ onOt^flman. Uo. • XtATD TTTX. a a d d t e e v o y ( M o! US' Mm. Kow all know^4at bjSi. can alwv • (Written. ocHD' the l i a i m of the stoBMch a n eonaeeted mimtMi'ficomme. IhavegiventheBnMea fair trisL I ' ^ a a e B i w ^ i a r tan with these of Uie throat and aihet find U au that Is dalaMal far it. I :MIAUI. laa Toeal omub, and iriiea tin stomadi woBld not take tlOOfofthe right to w tlie testimony of dnki a stmniag la b r o i ^ to-bear I t I hope that an my mlaideriag npoB the throat; and apeoUngOTtalk- hondieda i^eiiatnent physldana and tsearea vriB procure csie. smgfloas of the Ki ing will irritate it and prodoce hoaiaeJ.AKBTTOua. • few Sciathan neas, and if eoatlhtka^ sore throi^ and FnHoii.Hisi..mfl. who are known or may n e brte Dr. Btane, the great mirI can pieadi ^ aad n i ^ far two my Bxaoe o n and not be aa »T8S, and getm of Kew Orleans. proDoonoed it m o n t h s the pe(fiBcti<m of medutaicai ioToi- boaim as I woold ia one wedc withoot UjriEyr « d £ as iti tioD w the poipoae intended: L it: ereiy minister, stmiw « wask, '•din' • the apUlUng tte bowels and re tkouldbave one. A. Eouth. V ' peiaonal axperiauce o( of air eaMea of pniMpm of tiie introloa Depot. EaatTsBBssaee. y a u C ^ O w ^ o d e z p o - (ernal ufgBBS. ^ Itaa^t^iisjmJmtfflsr I pteHnbed one ot yam Braces to >f mine last U L She aa b(»ib aBBBBBt oat a a j ^ ^ _ itot t d ^ m e ftaodX joTito Iw ntatBBd. W « a n d «at i t o Ifaheooddiiot^H BaeebymaB. mnekiBdv H.IX HaypwrUlflb X*^ A p d l U^ i s n . n, I ham lallT «sea«Nna>.« tat wofs^ ^ tlM B m M wfaldi I'hhve or^ and am Uiamd w m ona idiMi. poty^Md-aaaaiattdjt V«mFRia*,itBs. To a n S n f f w e n firam . 8 6 4 . T M K J b t A A ^ g ^ l d T . T h r e e I h o o m n d J e m h a v e left B w m u m h i fiv A n m l a i b y w a y o f Bzmusi* T h e O i i n M e m p t i e Is a b o u t t o (soastiuct m t e i e i m p h l i n e b e t w e e n Rh«mJifa mid Pektn^ w h i c h will b e eanaOBted w i t h • t h e A m o i c u i a n d E m n u M t n cabteB. IKpfatiMtda,scar!et fever a n d s m a l l pqx a n aUnady becomtng pieratent I n i ^ r a a l o f t h e burgar eiUea. 8 k n Ftoeadeao a s d ! j n t t d m r * a e o n t o b e ap«EfBy7affllctad. T h e teport w h i c h t c u I k b ua tdentapb t h e ioM of t h e Ajn • t e a s e r J e m B ^ t e , n a t oat by Mr. J u n e i Gflcdon B e n n e t t , o t t h e K e w Y o r k m r a & i , ia n o t c r e d i t e d b y t h a t paper. M a l a r i a ki p i a y i n c faaToc i n M a a m c h t n r t t s . I t b a a s t a c k e d places w h e r e a a m o f tever a n d a c n e a n d of ranoitteBt fever w a s n e v a t k n o w n twiliiii, a n d i n j n i n e tnaTanffw scarcel y a w t a h a h t t a n t hma e s c a p e d . T h e ttcgt&Tebeenlevereiyvisited. A t Leading Cook Stoves m a d e a t o(tr f a i r s . T b o o s a n d s breeding stallions are never broken i n h a r D O S , a n d if ao, a r e n e v e r t a o g h t to handle themarives propedy with a h e a v y l o a d . A s p i r i t e d iMine o a t of t b e h a m e e s d o e s n o t a l w a y s m e a n o n e t h a t w i U s t a n d t h e tent of b a r d w o r k . B r e e d e r s of d r a f t - b o c s e s v e r y m a k e titeir seiecUuns e n U n ^ b y right, a n d n o t f r o m r e s u l t s of t n a l s of strength a n d endurance. I t is our bdief, that much uoreMregs iiMukl be p u t on t h e action of t h e a n i m a l w h t a a t w o r k ; a n d m y syst e m o t t e s t i n g t h e b u r a e i n t h e hitfnens, w i t h a h m v y l o a d , will load t o a n improvement i n draft borwe. Am4Sriem^Jtnv:uaHr(UiMi/or JVitv 1 C H A B T E R E A B L Y OAKS, B R E A K F A H T , A n d CHAMPION. . Ut:N-ERAL AOESTS, H.WErTER&CO., ot H t e p o o n d OlTJCtn," U>> » » raTttaUxtnc inENPHi.H, rr.JSTS. a«-t)cnd tor Catalogue and Pla&aafromtiaton^OO. Theeeln tmmenU are lolly gnajaatacd Ibr alx yaan. Bcoldea they ara ihlpped on teat tilal. Mo mooiqr w h e r e t h e r e w e r e 186 w o z k m e n , 185 (wiiUied nntU they an examined at jonr b a d a i n i e . T h a caoae of t h e o o t b r e a k own tome and ibond Jost aa repRaanted. h « n o t b e e n a a e e r t a b i e d , t h o o g h eX' An endlea Tartety ol Kew SVylti are now porta h a v e b e m l o o k i n g Ibr i t fix being tinned lot tha hoUdayieaaon. Read a o n u week3. Mr. BaaUy<a new adTartlaement. and aend to raUc WMhlngtoa, S. tor hla lateat Ulattrated rauiGS. The moat wonderfnl and marreloas i Catalogne, Joat lamed, with a braotual ateelIn eaaea wheie peiaona aze tick and pinlag T h e forelen emtMandois h a v e plate engraTlng, lentfreeto aU who apply awayfroma cuodltion of mlaarableoeia tkat signed a odleetive n o t e to t h e F o r t e no on* knowa what alia them, (piufltable d e n a r a d i n g t h e e z e c o t i o n of t h e BCaOTAI. paUenta Ibr docUai), la obtained by ^ a Ota rial e C t h e B a s a i a a OoliBiei C o a i e n A ol Bop BlUen. Ther begin to core Iram the Mr V B Thayer, the popoUr and fnterprlaThe iwome t h e X j o n d o n guiidb i s In flnt doae and keep It np anUI peiftet liealt hglewrler, haa removed hUatoek ol goods to eBtiin8tad at<S.OQO,OOOa y e a r . T h i s laraatored. Whoever U afflletad In thla waySo IB lUlaitreet,(oId Bamnm aland), where Mun flUthAiDy a p p l i e d w o o l d a e t t l e neep not soOer, when they can set Bop helaOttedapln the moat tastetal manner. S,000 Jmnitfgnurta c r a u i b t t a b l y e a c h Bitten- Sea " Ttnthn " and Proverha " In Be baa opened ap in hla new itand with one of theflnntataeka oT watehea, cloeka and r , either i n this coontiy or in Ansanother cot^n. Una Jevelry to beftmndIn any dty In the Soath, aad he Invlles thoae whoeontemplale B o k b , N o v e m b e r 10.—The A t a w a , euOmxMit porehaatng to give him a call and aea for for N o v . 1 . t h e o r g a n o f t h e vatlcaiL pnblisl thcmaelTea that ^.^aat baigalna areoObred. a n a r U d e fiivnable t o t h e I i M i la XrTbayerlaa mano'ietntlnx Jeweller,and Leapffi, I n w h f e l i U a B y s : **Inoane anaxeuntaapeclala den promptly, and at n a rvtelid of Belleata aeqnenee of t i n i m n p p o r t a b l y s t a t e remarkably cheap la ea* While be keepa a Waiaecli 8al> Kidney and UTerCaie U Ida (tall UiM of gooda Ol tlw beet qcaUty and of t h e I r i s h p e a e a n t q r . p e c ^ m n s t tcmadr that will eon tha many dlaouca latatt and moat artlatle deelgna, if jaa wiah • h a k e of t a e i r o p | H « B l o a . T h e c r i m e s peentiar la woman. Heailaeliaa, naonlfi* a nything ^ In itoek. He will have It made « M w ^ i t l w i l J g J ^ a n d a r e n o t a t t r i b - dlimdeied noma, waaknaat, mouol ahoeks, IbryoaatahortteoUce. Hl8ot>Jaetlato give n d ktndiad albttOBisaraailtetiialJjr ramoTCd aatwIbctioB to hla eoatDmen, and be gaaianreTdrm i n d i i p e n a a ^ ^ o t h e r w i a e br tta ae.-ne JUVr^ Jragatbie. t M ta do thla Imth In quality ot ggoda and Iieiand wiO compelled to chooae terrlbia HoMliwhea KMkenMMl low prloea, Bemunber the place, 285 Vain IhaTaaaffliiadftama kidnay dUBraitr tor between anarehyanrt starvation." by o b a t r a e t M < a e e r e t l o n a . and to w b l e h l a d l a a auaet. c«M Banaam stand), appoatte Oonit ta* pact ten yaan, accompanied wltb'nerTOLa a u . Riyateteaacaitama bat MaponuT aia ai^ceiatiy •abfeet, ean alwaya ba reiteTed,aqoare. faOaf. bat altar oUn* tbm and ona-luklf t w o bottlaa ot Wanur^ eate KUner and Urar aod their rwarrence prieWnted. by the naaof I W t e n d r e d On*, mj namoa apanaa wira antlralT^ T a s b a b t ^ E r r w n c K a t T B k l t u b Arc A M E B I C A I V a t A a r V A I . O F P A R nlland. My a«e ta rraia. I naommaod aiBXT. l i a h e x t a r t x i w . thla gnat ramedy to aU (nOtolnc from PBOCL'BABUi AT ALL UBCQ BTORtB. Slmpllettr, eleamees, and eonelaeneea of nansooa trtmblca. M B S . MA R V R K E S E . style, witboot any aaerlflee oi (UlltieM, aad Kaaton. Pa. a t i u i t of t h e n o r t h B k e v H a s h . — T w o t u m b l e r e o f within the brieftst apace, are Indlspeuable e r n O t a n g e m e a t o send laborers t o ^ Boycott. L o r d E m e a f a g e n t , loc wlHiDi.tfae local peasantry teftond to w o r k . 'ChegoTe n m e n t w i l l p r o t e c t a m o d n t a t t i fence of I r b o r t r a , b a t retktaas t o p e r m i t anything approaching a n armed ^ mattaUoo, w h ^ wooM e a t a i i a ^ p c o v Q k e a coUIaian. T h e r e P ^ i s c n x i K t U ^ afternoon that the c h a a n e t a q o a d r o o n la t o b e p r e p a r e d t o tond a . b d g ^ o f troops a t Q a w a s t o w n ifaniered to d o s o . l l M l ^ a p a r t s M a mtm Tmrtm V l a v y a n l . T h e great increase in g r a p e culture is e n c n o r a g i s g . Q i l i f b m l a h a s t h o u sands ofaorea in vineyard, and nearly all t h e E u r o p e a n .yaiietieB of i ^ p e a arefprodoced in thegreatast perfection and abundanm. Extensive v i n e y u d s h a v e been planted i n t h e O h i o a n d M b s o o r i V a l l e y a a n d i n fitvored localItiesihtlienerttaeBBtetn^es. N e w varieties iiave been - oririnated a n d widely dbtributed, that are hardy e n o o u to m a t u r e In every State i n a a u B « t i i , t t c a a ba t h e U n i o o . O u r l a r g e c i t i e s a n d m a n y «ttr»a »piiiWy •Wlitiiinj' -wtttoat writ of o u r v i l l a g e s a k m g t h e l i n e s of nUoB. a r O M piiWITiw a t tli* i j m m raCzo d i a r e fidrly s u p p l i e d w i t h good •ntaiaf Horn thm mm ordaMte pai(>tlTiiL g r a p e s i n t h e i r season a t r e a s o n a b l e atmoMwi £lk«r "BAgaUMr d a w not m ^ y prices. I t h a s b e e n d e m o n s t r a t e d t h a t ralkTa tlu mamr. tat tOketi • pnOMaadte v e r y l i u m e r a n d v i l l a g e r in t h e l a n d ran. U t o a t m o imw< l a w — m n / fcraimut c a n h a v e a n a b u n d a n t s u p p l y of t h i s ttM a t » raMRUaJBr qvlBttMSBd caioAtri. d d i c i o u s f r u i t for f o u r raontbs i n t h e UHt ta« rntomam a n tralr y e a r , for t h e t r o u b l e o f p l a n t i n g a n d c a r i n g lor afewv i n e s . O u r h o r t i c u l wu&tw^m* I k m o r t ^ i ^ auBUr jrwtr B f a s i M v tnriiita h a v e d o n e t h e p i o n e e r w o r k of hybridizing, and onginating new air ilMa ailcatOTI n a n dtooadU to n p M a t i *iiyttar»adWriiiiai'iiiiJlh»CMll«, v a r i e t i n i t h a t s t a n d t h e t e s t o f soU r a f t e a a d A m ^ ' t a t e l l , « « a o d i ^ aba. a n t f c O m a t e i n a l l t h e S t a t e s . A n d O t l i f o m l a Is t h e o n l y S t a t e w h e n t asva 'iJTaa Itp 'nsiiaatT 'Ijittitoifci^ a n ^ o t t M r l b t c a r a l b a c t a i a i l . t ' | l i i ' it to m r t h e g r a p e m a y b e s a i d , t o b e f a i r l y " d . The great m a a s t ^ our anjauaoid. Itiaafi yoa aaqiU vlali In a ling p o p u b i U o n d o n o t e n j o y t h i s a a u l r - n a M w a m y i i a i a a a a y a a v l a b . Varir l u x u r y , a n d m u U i t u d e a a l i t u e reirair, K, K g c B A s n c a . m o t e ftom m a r k e t t o w n s a r e o n l y Ctnibn Mr.Oa.ai:qtiainted w i t h o u r w i l d v a r i e U e s . T h e g r a p e o u g h t to b e a s widely disn u c T a o t e an semlnaled aa t h e apple, and there A h a n e a h d a l < l b e a t hfai b«Bt w h e n ia n o g o o d r e a s o n w h y i t s h o u l d n o t i a t h e h a r n e * ; I t i s t h m Uiat h e b e . T h e larjge v i n e y a r d s c a n s n p p ^ U i w t h e g i e a t e r p a r t of h i s w o r f t > n d o o r d ^ p o i ) a l i d i o n , j 9 c i t t o s u n i l y t h e | t ia of s a m e imjpcfftaace t h a t t r i a l s agricuRmnil d M z i c t a , g r a p e s z m M b e t h e h a z s c a s Be a i * ^ f r t q a e a t l y g t o w a a t h o o M . T h i s « u b e d o n e , a t tba itaaoa A Ha^lo Organa tbe exaaoedlnarr dlsMnetl^ ^awar^^tbOT « 11 Seewa J » > a a i l M » Taat aCCBt whlea ia now at1aetl=c aoeh wide attahiJao. Otii. ••TtaaUM on Camponod OsmnfHBtfraa. On.8tarl»7aFalcn,It£t Glnnl atraat, Phllartelphia. Fa. a o a m a l l cost, t h a t n o m a n w h o o w n s a h o m e w i t h a half a c t e o f l a n d h a s a n y ^ x d o g y f o r d e p r i v i n g h i s fiunily of g r a p e s . A n ( d g h t h of a n a c r e i n V v iinneaa wwill i U s u .p p. l y a fomlly a n d l e a v e a surplasB t o sril h o t w a t e r , a l a r g e .epoonfol of b u t t e r , t b r e e t a b l e s p o o n s f u l of g r a t e d c h e e s e , a n d t h e s a m e o f fine b r e a d e m m h e ; t h e n season hlgiily w i t h c a y e n n e pepper, a d d i n g three t u m U e r s of cofrf beef, m i n c e d . I t should b e stirred well together, and strved m s o o n aa h o t . In a Parliamentary mannal <tealgn«l for popoter use. All these ara eomblmd tn a Jodlcloaa IttUa TOlniee by Mr. Oeocge T Fiah. entlUed an AaierieaB J g a a i m l s r rarltaoaeatavy Law. A* to alse. It Is an taiaU ihat It may be carried lBt!.e|ueket wtthoatlneoarenlanee. and as to stauraent. It Is so dear and precise, and iUdaasUes. UoosaraaoDataral and anggcaUTe, that by Itt aid a tyrs m ly oaaUy become bmlUar It KaUBCBt r h y a l c l M a Bay. wllh Fariiamentary nsage. the mles that Coldca% Uebig-a iMfoU Extraet 'or Baaf la tegolate It, and their practical appantlon. partlenlartyasetalia dlptatbtiTla. acaa. ma-WBIIa Mr. Flshti mannal Is adapted to nae In larial, trphold aiVK*. dabUilir. aad erary targe pt^mlmi saeembTleaJtlspeenilarlyinlte^ daprandng dlataaa. Wa hara unaenbad ft with aztwilant anemi. j. H. LeaUe, M. D^ to Uie needa or debating or collag^ Metlca. O.P.Copp,SI.IX; «. B.Parai»a. M.D., all ol aad ol the goremtng bodies of tacorporated eompanlco. By a caiefDI paroaia oftttb« 8(.L<»ils O W.JooeaACQ., Agents. aoTlee may ba anablad to master the genenl w a i n ' s CM-Uirer 0 «rnrnmUae.- prinelplaa whldi Ila at thatoandattonor or penona wbo iMTa been natoRd Parliamentary law-.and thns be prepared Ibr from cooflmed CDnrampUon by the oea < 5ztraardlaary emergenclea. aa well ari Ibr the e enmat and ordinary oeeaalona of a daUbetaHra body. Price in eloth, [0 centa. tn leather tnaki. VfiX Addrem BAPTIST BOOK TiMODd-Urar BOCSE, Jtamphla. Tenn. binatloa robbed ot ita nnpiaaaant ta«a.aitd SSSiSS.'^'SJS • reatooata pi^pto. eoMlyte natBia wttli Joat taa aia. aMunre^aMtokealaadnatofa tbadki- Canvassers maka from a a t e m p e r week a«annggoo6afcrB.«l. « I B W r r * C « l . . BBitiayatreet,NewTo*.aend»realalo«w andtcnna. sUlMztvU. AX O a i . T V A C G H T E R ccRXD OF c o B s m p n o a r . Whan ^eiub m itaoarlyexpeetad, an rem. mum havingtellM.and Sr. B. Jamea was esperimeacinc with the many hesba « Cw- ^ ^ aeddentalty made a preparation dilld of C V M a o s ^ R X e b l M k n o w I s thla doontiy aad cnloytBCthe beat of health. 9 a h M p r a v « d can ba to tba werid that O s — m h i — <>0 Voalttvaly aad perauAeBlIy cixred. ^Tbe Daetoraowgrtea t h H t t e e l ^ f r e e , only lactwo'CiaeiihtaaBpatopar a s W m a . This V%atmp Barb alao n u m al«litHnraata, aaaaraat the Beatiy'bOeaaaa.wUlit Itatt Beta of Baate, atooMHiu aad wUI break m f t t A e o H a p In U aiqia. Stool, Book, a a d Maite, a n a o * tvwty«aMar h a m Addnaa CSADDOCK * e ^ ^ t o t S l L y e w and BisaUMI g X K J m » M a straat, PhOidaliMa. a a u a * iMr aa t.-O. aod to tLpan t t « - a M o | i a ^ i ^ . xiU»«l Editorial NoticeSe A J ^ r i s T . Ba«Ualt Mi« A s a a r i c a a laa^leasewta. c S T J f T r s s s u ? ^ ; : ^ ^ ^ ! ^ ! T h e EnglLeh m a n u f a c t u r e r m a k e s his impleineats heavy, without much • i M t r s m v l a c r e g a r d t o 8in>n2th n e e d e d . Their f o r k - s w h f t h e r for s p a d i n g , o r b a y , m n i l t M i l l K t l M l STTLB. o r m a n u r e fork^, a r e m u c h t o o h e a v y , a o d a r e m m t u i i w i e l d l y , ati c o m p a r e d with the neatly shapnl, lightly bulU, a u d easily b a w l l e d A m e r i c a n forki C A B I N E T OBGASS. T h « Engliah plow is usually t h r e e ConusMUvaly law ninsteiaoa, e<ea. have t i m w a s h e a v y aa o u r s , t w i c e a s l o n g , keotMaTirtariwia tirnpfovameata In reed j j j j i t l T ^ - a i f c i S ' i B . l l l I B I ^ ^ a n d m u c h l e » easily b a n d i e d . T h e l^ruments and ar*tellyawwot the exnow attained In the n ^rtyUjin c r a d l e s t h e y u « In c u t U n g t h e i r g r a i n orUeBOe the mannaMtnre at which Uie * • w o u l d n o t i>e UMd b y o n e of o u r Bamltn tJrgaa Oo-aiaqattaaarlvaled. Theae S a m t ^ ^ be Jod^ by the «maU reapers, a n ' t m w i t h m a n y o l their ^ they giaaUy excel. It h e a v y f a r m l i u p l e m e n t a . — A m ^ w o M so lamlr sold, whlsh f ^ J Jfj^ ihiah have Agrumlbir^ T h a T o r t a r a mT Mmmrmiglm. M IBLOOI^ MASOIif & HAMLIN F A V O B I T E , Tlxae an batax aUtlsmted, and ta a lance mmbcr of «jmhi wtuJty nsmored, c^r the B n u v k t a o r C M Air la tkeatakle. H o t s e s a r e q u i t e s e n s i t i v e t o chilling drauRhta uf a i r blowing uf them, a i u eqiedally upon t b b e a d s ; h e n c e , i n t h e c o n a t m c t i o n of stabiea t h i s s h o u l d b e b o r n e !n m i n d . M a n y a t a U e s h a v e t h e h o r s e s fiice a n alley a l o n s t h e sides of which are dooia, o r a large space i s left m t i r e l y o p e n ; i n s u c h caaes, w i i e n e v e r t l K rear statde door a n d t h e one leading o u t of t h e allOT a t e o p e n , t h e hcoses stand in a chuling d r a o ^ h t . f r o m w h i c h t h e y c a n n o t eaafe. Horses, l i k e m a n y people, can stand m u c h w i n d i n a n o p o i fidd, b u t w i l l c a t c h c d d while in a d r a u g h t only a short time. W i t h proper ventilation, the doucs of t h e stable s h o u l d b e k e p t d o s e d i n cold w e a t h e r , t h a t n o d r a u g h t s m a y o c c c r . — A m e r i c a n Ag- 366 ^ r s s . - X ' n r a i i i l-KUUUtrHWrtO VW AWU DYSPEPSIA. /mm/c. 1880 BEAXm iiOUDAY a remedy mvide 01 snch aommon,simple r u n THlKrEEX YEABS, being tba only planto aa Hops, Bnehn, Mandrake, Mande- highest awarda to any Amertcw orx^ at ona. It I I osa 01 theae which led I w . llon,ete., should make ao many and snch : iuun LOST W marvalooa and wonderful cnrea as Hop Bitwhfch Irt thedWln. ten da,bat when old and young,richand gulsbed Otio XAawasncA. Berlin, t o ^ poor, Pactor and Doctor, Lawyer aad EditorClara , I hem - the most excellent ol Iratpautastuy to having been enrcd by tham,yaa most bdleve and try them yooiaalt and mentaoenrantnraa^the puyer." Taaopou doubt no longer. Hee other colnmn. THOXAS tamies that musIclaDs genwatly rank theae organs very high,fcrabova ^ otoors, tn wliJcb opit iun be hlmoeif luly B a r o e b a e k KUUaa. eoacun. O l b Brt-lftjondth»m so snperior s to draw from bim tbe drclaraUon that Fifty o r a hundred years ago the a •*Tnelrflueqaallty oftone I* In contraat with s a d d l e w a s q u i t e s u r e t o b e found i n that of other m d otsaos." Tbe dlsUngulrfied enor. I t a l o tiiMi^Axtin. m a note to the t h e f a n n e r ' s b a m . aa o n e of t h e n e c t mar ntaetnrata, aa he was atHmt leaving tnU e4Sttry a r t l d e a of t h e f a r m — b u t n o w coontry leeently, wrote:" Having bad opU i-t t o o m u c h p u t o n e s i d e lor t b e portunity to obwrve aod uae yonr oiguia, h a r u m s a n d b u g g y . A t thfa s e ^ n of t h e y e a r w h e n t h e r o a d s a r e b ^ , t h e saddle should be more generally u s e d , o n t h e g r o u n d of b o t h e c o n o m y and comfort. B o y s , a o d g I r U too, s h o u l d l e a r n t h e a r t of h o r s e b a c k r i d i n g ; as far as powible eyeiy farm er should h a v e a horse suited to t h e iiaddle. Araoalisc Ila Beadero. BUnfY Tney cxeeUaUslmUarlacuameulaat which have any knowledge. Uut yon have b»iur praotormy opinion of tbem than evrn this exprcaalon,lu the met that I haveJnat par cbaard one to Uke with me to IlalT." Hon dreda of similar oplntona tp«m dtUugnliAed muslelans have aixun>rlat<4 In Ute band* of tbe manaiactnreiK. A lecent bwnttfal InvenUun which tbr Maaon a Bamlln Oi. an now Introdnrinir, gieatly improvM tbe ker acUon ot nstmmenta,lightening the touch, beretotofe difficult when many stops were o»p>1. rar. s^ half, and stUI mon Impravltig tt In other An alarm o{ Ore at midnight is a starUlng thing, but not holl ao atarUlng to many who " i S ^ l S E I l D R . \ W 1 X U ROOM SfYl-KS of tbe Mason 4c Hamltu Urgaaiiare inmhbvd bear It aa wouVl be the sodden kcowMge In CMea Bisek Walnut, MAoaany. A « h and of thflr own-dangetoua physical condition. KbODlsed. plain to vet>- el-gani. some with Thousands of thousands are hurrying toiheU Dlpe stnnjoR. jaVarn" VTKVM tii«3r a w OBeMsalsr tMSMMoeot J S S i B F A W i r Adth e a a o r e a U o n lt«.pr«eesateiiomw» DAHmr. SliTlutdteaa iuroada ot d l a e e a i a n d the *°TbaMaaon * HamlinCto.alw mannlhetm meansor cure. It U tba mlasion ol B. B WamerAOo. wiOi their Bate Kidney ai^ Liver Caio, to arauae men to a eeoae ot Sh^ F«»R ^ e t y if aniaU organ from *U npj*!! "f danger and than ewe them.—JbiiVMk-'iPl'*^ which ara of very hlgbeat exrelleaee. Oi*an« Tha CSileago TimtJ saya: Wainar* Sate an famiahed mr monthly or quarterly paymenta,SSandapWBnta DHBISTMAS PRESENTS, Kidney and Uver Care la highly endonod by Illastrated t>laK«ae. W pp., «t<^ mlniateia, jadasa. physldana, sotgeoBii. by prices and clrcnlarx containing mocb uaeful •nan of Ilteimry andseholarly distlnotton, and [nlbrmatlon, sent free. li f t i i s frw iOc. k m Weeapedally Invite all penons taking any by ludlvldnala la all tha walks at Ufe. i n t l ^ T S w h Biat.en. w visit our warerooms and examine these organs It is alwaya a pleasure to exhibit them. MoLAffiXB C a k b . — O n e t e a c u p f u l PvKtet Albuma. Infbta, S styka. lASOI i U l l U mk\ of molasees, o n e e g g , w e t ^ p o ^ f n l bouilns fiom IS to » photngraphs, tanging I of s o d a , o n e s w e r t m i l k , o n e M IM Tiomont street. BO'*TOK: 46 But Uth In'prlee trom SOe.to tl each, aeeosdlng to to e n o u g h flour number of phacagnpha. shortenin WabMh aveniM. uHICaU A. xlil S 3S ;ht c o n d s t e n c y . m a k e of Mmall Octavo Albnma, tS«S}<i Inches. 12 styloi holding from »» to « pbotocrapM, Thla U the month when those troubled ranging In price fromffic.to tl-to aacb. SCwith a cough should go for a twanty-Rve voiding to number of photographs. cent botUaof Dr. BuUls Coagh Syrup and ba W e also have larger styles at any price decuiedatonoa. sued.-ttenl. post paid, on receipt OI price. KrarsrefW Hyaasm. (Words only). A We can aend Albnms by mall, post-paid, to coilectlon of 110 of the best and sweetest ot our "old time "hymns. This book has been TOlt all In prices. compiled to meet a want long telt In oar Send the amoant you wish tn paytoraa coantryaiuTebas,and the prayer and aoeUJ Album, and we vriU guarantee s a t t o ^ . meetlngaatthachoRhes n dtl.a and towirs Adireas. J AS. •AKAITT. B.VPT1BT BOOK HOrsE. Memphis, tor a small aad cheap Hymn Book cccUfnapproved aad moat popular T h e L m v s m d B o d y B r a c e . lag tbe T H B B B A C B B T MAII~—To enable us hymna, both old and new. Prloe, In paper TUB CHVRCB to aend tha Braoa by aall.wa havahada oovem le eta per copy.» per doa; In aezlble deseripUva olraQlar prtatad, glvlac luU c i o t h , I 5 e M . « L a p e r d o a e n . Sent by mail on dirastlaDalbrpattlacoaatid wearing: alao receipt of price. Photograph Albums Headaohe M A »ai». lemBpt.B^atet^iiF , i lnMlllllill a* ^ S f A S T a S s i r E g g g ^ ^ all a t l t r ; !5r£*r!5SrS2i!5ef. Msttua m m m u c m . ta*e» SbaeMbe aaewsa. HYMN BOOKS. Arrmtr. r t W O S M M n . * . xlU«»aow p i r a M ® Order Department. Roll & Record Book. how to pat Mgetber, aa we hava »taka I t BUA.SK BOOK, with printed Aitlclea of apart-wbon aentby maU to avoid braaklng Tha eaapvl a i y » a»a Twmo Book Faith, B a i l o s o f Deoorum, etc., suitable lor ^ l ^ m e a a i , thoae who Uva at a ditfanea ByliOwnraDoane. A choice eollectloo ol Baptbt chuRhea. OiplonsOidextornamsa front an Bxpraas Offlea.«aa bare tham a»f Bymna and Masie,oId and new,fcrnseIn ofmambeis-sbowlngalaiJanea any metnto their PDatofflea. A eiienlar will be seal pnyeMueetlng, familyrfrdeand chntch bOTV standing; Isow and wben reertved; to anyone aadlng na voatal eaid. aerrlce. It contains 456 Hymna familiar tn bow and wben dlsml»awi-ln sepaiateeolaU Christians, and » thoroughly classiaed umns; akie colnma lor moaricv OonUlna TsatlaawiyfartkaBMy T h e very beat Uttattrahava baaa aelUngthat thapastoror leader will Iw able to per. nort paper In back wlBelent to rewrd them la Inereaaed numbon fbr man than cajve a l m o s t at a glansa the dnater of hymm Mmntea of each chnrch meetingtortwelve twenty yean 1-*, and \rhan oise la used la aftom which to make hUeeleetlon. Inhand-y«ra, allowing oneftiUpagetorMlauteaof oeiciibarttood. and Uie r a n i u ara mada •oma clotk Modlng and Mack stamp, red aa.^ meeiteg. which seldom tvqmre mora odgo, price SB caper copy, la all qtianUUeat . iian one-tosnh of a p ^ known, laiga numbesa boy them. «ne, heavy VTVapVtOoartlMtimimi "IhavabeaB Five eanta extra wben ocdetcd by mall paper, aeenrately ruled, and ts Ihe nwat 0 0 0 B A P n B T BOOK K O C a E . nalnx tha Btaeaaiaoa July, Itre, and And ttAddrea vealeotand OKfBl Becora Book ever oHjeed • e n p k l a . ^tmm. totheehurchaa. Oartca who hava uasd OiSs anitlataoommandadtaba. Itonwltlalnvaloabia. and enrery mlnlattr iboald procoa booktoriwsortingtha Mlnutta and boauieaa uansaettoB* U tlM4r ehmcbea pronouaca P r e s i d i n g T e a c h e r W a n t e d TsUaaaaiy oTa iMrycr. t h a m pwfcet in eveo-particular. The bindJaaaarvl.mt.torpromlnant Female Oat- ingtsaoperb. PHea, by mail, peat-paid,farMulnr A book, a* above M i a , Mo. » " Addiaas, BAr»nr*BOOKMO««K. sraeeood street. reeat. Falaanae, AndaissaOB. - I i W A S S S H : i u a z e T! ro^lwiniLMBtaa. xUIUxlviS ^ ^ aitiu B66 I ' I f f ii8 n u . - T H E T h e TNI wiAt w i O H C D I C A I . Nashville L a ^ - ^ o f H e a l t A W ABaiBX T h e o i ^ i m a usMii A . " D V I S E B If i i M U Practice ol h a n d I S ' o w D i s e a s e , i l e d l d n e , for F a m i l y R " B a p t i s t U s e . e a d the a i m non-pnife«ton»l reader. ai»»«ui« • • A R I T KIT. G. A. Xskknelmc mi n t a M E E K L P R I C E T H E Y A P Art locatad on »nd omittothl* Une, «nd taa tM raudnH lxidk|Usi>tai>17 via VsKciul*rortlelwu mod luthor iB OtTMtlon «iM>ll ID J A M B I aP«ED,Tleta» A a m l , S T JIalitXrKt, Ur pejot oae«,taiMlonUlttSU, I l r a p W . . C, F . ATSIORE, H . G . C H ^ I G & C O . , Reliable F a r m Implement O N L Y . B O O K ^ n d S E E D D e a l e r s , 361 Main Street, a E o n o M E M P H I S , E j C u i - t a i n s , A.U i i t c r (o • r r r i i E i . i . . H o r n i a x * (IK LUGEST v BIST AS^OCTED O i l STOCK U h e l T E H N . l The Baptist Book H o c b s U tbe lole »t«»» for roniiMee and Jll»l«»JpplAgenU wanted, to w h o m UDenl dtoeonnu wUl b » given. Addreia. B A P T I S T BOOI& H O U S E , X c m p b l a , Tcnii. m m P E A CITT AT m i Vwtrmo S i m d a y - S e h o o l B o o k s & S M Ptfty T a t a M U k v u T * Wbote BamlMrpamlaUliQ»7«Hi>- XariilapaiMr eUee, eloUl bwdu WUB. A . U-UtTtoo) V<dib L nad t i , Urtm q » n n n Book. if. m. W a a m t M e r a p M s 3 0 8 , - M A I N - - - BASE - b j t h e O F R e v . 1.0XD0X, C h a s . T e i m e s s e e . xUl 1 H . S p n r g e o n , UMsU-a aotad tor iaaaltliftilima and ordcTlf m r i t r . M F U > W K B : 1 . D O , r t w W . n l . Maiid lhraaiala«»b A U O a m , F ^ A j c n t i W a s t e d far t h . PIftnrfl 1Mb, BUCiiEYE B E L L f O a M O a y M b i>< VIM-(ItenM ...d Ti. Ibi ClMnkA tvuS riM. WKEK. H 1.0. B < 3 <«ad<>. Caei « M I O U X t » *k TWT. O a TBSa * Atmoi 8 Xii d ZIU « . ^ P C O WkDDira C i m DIAm (Rnreeaaar ta F . H . C U m K E * TEKX. Fine L L E G h E , B r r T E S E ^ , nwPB, m n a n ; , MA' M n x u a x , hspUcts. Watches, NCTMIAIT l U la N E W Greek N o . M E M P H I S Jewelry| 3 9 0 M a i n Street, , T E N N E S S E E . zUUS - BEST GOOBS FOR LEAST MONEY! liEUBBIE ht. 1 ^ M a j prcaeat hla w w k ao that aaeh r M d » ^ y Tndge for hlmaalf whetiMr the - that* -- ' 'Utatally l u m i i y Itwnahiiurt aio a» ar> wotd* mnged la the eoaamsa v e n U s H W a z p m a the R e * TMCamant the exact m e a a M wHtcn.II.I 1n n •g il i ^•• t o M. .... u S ^ m doaSjM be d l O u i M a of M i a t e j S ^ O r a e k aefaolata.batbavlBgaBbmittad It M wveral * « c x ^ a a t M a . theia vodlct I M been ao geaeiaay . S T S a w i r t ^ « e have had no healtauoB la |ii iiiailagltto tba S S S a a C C h i M l a a U y a a t a ^ h t la tkeliaw n S t . . M e BROS., m M I L L I N E R Y , p _h i s F A N C Y , T e i i n . G O O D S , I V . AtX» rdaaeetot ot theBtole,< Ithalri ig In theorlglaal. V^AOoueordaaea to D M flooka eallad tha ' ^ f ^ ' ^ U ^ l a appended anariglaallUicr the Aalber. A Kmr WIslwOwreiyto tneStoaSevBae. In^tteoaqdelsanBtthaB ever braa regarded aalBtMaaarahloaapartar to any other work ef t M k l a d . M E N ' S BAFTIBT B O O K B O m K S T e w Y o r k S T O V E P I P E S ^ I ^ i ' i c e s ! MBBTEimfTAIB. jtmmim WArrmm i>r iw MMt •<iiiliiiatftiei..Mr t/mtmm LEUBKIE BROTHERS, 259 MAIN ST. XlU 1 8 9 r it- D. W . ^ w o r d Engll^ T M l a l a l M i i a ^ Kmphatle VentoB baaed on UwIateMtnearr franalatloa. on the B c « U n ; i of « n l n « » I'ritlea, and « a the T a r t o a r B M l n a of tb» Ubcary): tagethar with IinatiaUT am K x p t a Z ^ o n ^ ^ I f o M . and a ec^dooa 8aleetJooof Befcrenoea; to the whole of which la added a valaabla Alpbabeoeal I n d o . By Ben) mlaWtlaoa. O a e w l , ztraaaeblndlag,gs. Bant m*. Pne., M ; extra by flmpoatoa leeaptofpctoa. ThlsTataaoiewortta amr eompleto. The dlllmnt reoderlnga of t w h m p a a a a ^ la m e Mew Teatament are thetoanrtatiwiaon ilTtata aiaat of toe aaenof OiMaOaaa Imt* V ^ b a U t ap. WIUmmS elalmlns ahnlala- i G O O D S , BaglUli, B ^ l o t t . B t A L T ABDKB C B C P g l M. A. B y w h U h . I. Any vataa la the BOIs a u y & BOYS' CLOTHING, CARPETS, aiNTITLEDTHS E m p h a t i c !l taut -Mm One Vol.Royal Seo^c This la the g n s l i M and eaUnadltloa at I'TBdaa^grealwwk-theoaly WIS — h i i < w g t h * katarea whSeh tirmea klmaeraad the PnbUc,lbr«aotatkaa a haadred, y a ^ have E a t l a w t m Ckecrftally B a n U a k c ^ . T E S T A M E N T , u d iirUIRI&U H i n n i l U . ADaeeoaatnf Jewlikt aaoalaaiUiMraUvearmany perUooa a( tke lie. D R Y T H E Cpnoordauee TOTHS ORA Outfits, liiaks, Complete CO.) S T A T I O N E R Y Cata^ns, CRUBEN'S — A S D — Are ample, and onr Pricca reasonable. Prieac— t A l W S K T * B B R S T . ttaprlelori, Btoa Mciuitata, Tippah ODaals. MUa. MbB R J. S. W I I . K I N S , E X G E A X D . The Saint and Ma Savior. I vol. ISmo— 1 SO FlntHertea. With an Introdnrtlon and Uteanlngi A m o n g the BtMava*. iTol. JOtrteh of h UJ^, by R e * E L.*»«oo«>. U ^ bereted bowda» » D D . Wllh a Sue a««VpUte portrait. I vt>).I3B>e.eloUi « » - » 'JcAn Plonghmanl T M k a ; cr. flaln Advice fbr Plain reople. I voL l«mo M Brmnd^SaiiBi. ContaTaliBS a new atoelplata portrmlU »n«r«T«l erprtaaly tor "r»it L . IB. lUatr. JrJ pSt' Feathenfor Arrowa. i T o L m n o . 1 UtHm tba » » Typca and Kmtilema. Being a OoUeeuoa of Hermoaa preached on Snnday and Part tl., tB. Maalr. Jr-) P " Tidrd Bsrlaa. IVnlalnlr* a »teel-pUt» anCimTtagof Snnwy Moslc H » U . LonTbniaday mnlngaattheXetropoUtan don. ensrand expreMdy tot the TOlnme 1 50 Txbemacle. I vol. H m o , cloUl Cblld^liMaUaB Baok. PatlL, (B. Manly 1 36 yoortta Beflea, Containing » Hcrroota. Jr.) p«r iliiMii (IJK. Leetorea to m y Stndeata. A Selection I2mo. cloth » » t.tOld'k Hn—nnn Book, Part U.. ( a Manlj from Addreaaea deltTered tn the Stnrilth »»ri». tttiwlraled with a Bne Jr4pwilMD.IU>. denu or the P M o r ^ OoUeca. MetropolM M l pUIe. KprrtMitlng tha K«v C H MuiaKr-wtwal C i M Bnoka, per dot^ 75 e u itan Tabemaela. by the preatdent. Ber Xpnrjeon preaeaUig In Surrey Mtwlc ttanday-aeiiMi Prlman. H put*, with C H Srnrgeoo. 1 vol. K m o I » UaJLl »«>l tamo-— ' ® SBTur, r m duaao. tuo. Oimmentlag and Commentarlea. LeeStxthaeHen. lUmrtralwl wlUiaflue»tvel BUM and anlTlduta. par U M , fUm. tareaaddreaaad to the Stadenti ol the pUteof MriSpaiyeuo^ f Tabemaele. Any of il>aalm«~b(iaka w n t hr naU- P « t Paatnrii Ootlege. tageUnr with a I M ol t Kmo. cloui» SO paid,aa neatpt at prtea. Artilrw tha t>-«t Btblleal CtunmenlarlFB and I M Bevvnth Srrtra. t *»I, e m o , cloth Kxpo«. Uoti>. T h U TOIaaMataoeoattlaa 1 90 TBiK u r r a r r b m k • • m w . nghth 8ert«a. 1 toL ttmo. eloth .. »«parseon1 Leetnra on "Ereeatrlc I 30 aiBthSeriw. I t«»I. ISmo, ckith I-reaeheni;'' alio a eonaplete U«t ot. aU Itaratng by ilomlngr or, DaUy Riad of ftporgmn^ Setmoaa pnbUahed In 1 • L V B H O V a T A M Ivga. 1 Toi. ISiaa thin roantry, with the Heriptnie taxto c i ^ n g by Evening; or, R<adln«!> at naed. I vol. I2ma t KvenildB. I voL » » The Matehleea Mystery and other SwF £ M A L £ C 0 1 X E 6 E moo*: with iDdena of Scrlptare Tazta. (tennona of the Rev C II 9paig«>n. af Loodoa. I virf. O m a . < k>»h_ 1 50 aadnnbleeUtoiheHTOlfcoftheAmEd 1 8« R K B U W . B s n c c m s TUIKfil. sent. po:t-paU.,orre.;.pt of p n « . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ - O n r Faclllllea Car PrlntlaK m A N U A B D P B M CO. Maridlaii. J ^ ^ ChiUM CaiiUiliiii ta Btarna ( M n A . C. Onrvwi aakh.Vam. tllllf riHillllliB 111! BtUa DaeUtna (Ur. J. r.BtyaOpar liiiii.Wa*a. telMttOi»Qnigljy Bbufc { U H- ataack) . of the best qnallty made, and w e are detmnined to snar* no pains to pleam thoae who fkvor as with their ordwa. I T H A V r a O BTOOP T H E J E S T O r BWB S e r m o n s H |Hply Scriptures; All ot which la done In the most nUaltetory manner. KICOl S T R E E T , - . Cakdb, O r R S O . S . (M - Mnslc. with nse ol Instrament, per . twl - Special Vocal Lnsona . 4«ni - Painting, notiuctaiUng material • - l>rawing - Uerman and French, each • IC . .UMi Board, oard. Including washing, fuel and lights, lighta, Paymeota to be one h*lt in ailvance (or each half sesaion of x w a O T Far CatalogneK addrenc the Pre Ident, or P r o l ^ . W . JuhnrtM y d ^ T . Msqiff. XU7 ^ H A T D E N M A R C H , Ptea^ Board of Trasteea. book l A S H i i P T U u i s . Our Publishing House h»* recently been snpplied with Hear T y p e a , Ftxtarea, etr., of the lateat ani> mi»t upproved Siylea. taelDdlni; the aa-* Script tyi-a Still T I c l o r l o B t — F o u r Tear* .Ua •iM—'na* T r c M e « Brerj *®mr. LOW k P U B L I S H E R S , SIESIPHIS, C l o t h s . Til Y S a . SIS M a l a fitreet, ; co.^ H I A n n .1 — tJ birth of yeaterday. to the pTogreiiive demands of the timei. Every I The teachlag In thia Oollrge la ttiMaeiM In proawttng the hitter edaeatloa. I Kyatemortnutraetlonshaaldb —" _ o>fthoazhUand f t h o i ^ U a n d wh«ch, wh«ch,whUeUexeliaa whtle U exeliea I A H D t a H M o f tta Stcni»3t. B o v d ^ and by ttt ability to increaae the power wlthlt pore Jljom with It that that p a n BMiral" coltare ty" I B J o o l lifcr X i d a m and U t t a a n Orthe mil ilod-to eneaded ac'entifle - research, shall J hich alone the true digniuyaadwriu brtagof hnnianlty b Inairad. lean*. H e n u u i a u g , BiiitijIijawiMi, n a n k nartr T«sm qiJalala sod JBrkkaaeeeB L The Mary Sharp h»a<03d Arm amid the dewlatkinot war and the penoenttoac ofcai and jealoaay. and this lonx r w w l of lalthfnl and (neceaattil toU (hoaid be a gaaranteetor1 liiwo n M i ^ lU eontlnaaoe In the ftitarr. J w m to iMdd for a o a M tiMj ax* Rogers Sc Co. JOB PRINTERS, P R I C E : In »xtJ» CloUJ B t o d U * ^ 8 W e T l t t e ^ Embj^dlnBUcltBndOoJd ^ I n F u U leather Jr , FiMoanr A s o b X a B P t ^ ^ It c a a t a i n t l i e Latea* Telecra k e t a e p a r t * aaHl baeal Meara, » m * a t thia r r i r e It la i k e Ckeapeat Weekly Paper PaMlaked la tke B a a i k . .KlccaaUr tOMl mad U l u t n U A SOLD B Y SUBSCRIPTION M InDTea>t«lnanrrdbyan«u.andlnexpen«lTenntf)>tm: Bookaand' lery can be par_ ,j lor bdp.orforai^tlilasbBiiBnoiqjiidchawd at KashvUle prtces.and no oomUnatloBa are IMmed with mlUlners and merchaaa I fooa focad la. tiksa. by which any teacher U to make anything on monlea spent by popUa. A i k roar ^ S n u n t for B f V B b t m and= Madeata t t k U Callcca lire* book)!, a n d ^ tha flbm l a i i m ;hent the land are living 11t1i_ wltcaaeea of tha thoroogh , Ijrm.datT. T i k a aoottiK. Orenpylng poaitl<»ui of honor thronghaot heart,and work done here In educating mind andI heart, and are a n by that edaeauoa made m a d eM ' a l n g i to I I T b a H o p C o u i ^ C a r t anf P a i a R a K a f h thouaanda o Soothem Homea" and to the eammantUca In which they Ilea. tkaCkM^Ht.SMrattaad" ^ taataar aib tactwoBn. or the InatitaUon were never better; reqneattftir catalogneB and I n M n s ^ m o m l i * < UnoaUy, not only from the Soothem Staiei. bat ftom aome sorth of the CHtlo Btves. , FarsaUby'W.S.irnkanoaL * Oo„ K t u Of edncaUcm U high, but the teaching and exautple are amh that eran the aiaggUh and I phM, Tbna. IndlOWrent soon b«com« Interested, and atady la a poamve pleaaara. iity Yon can iiend money to thU office, when ARTEl. o r C H K A P K B M . " yoh rt-mlt for T H X RjUTtar, and w e will take Oooictetiof Ur. Z. C.Urave«, Oiat and only PreBident,aasiited by a fnU,ablc and experieoeed corpa of Ptolnaon. pleaanre In handing It to'tha pnldlahers. H e itMisi sycit'i mm i ****** : — JCBOUEBS. J W J O S t l C K TuiUon In CoUegUte Department per month.. »«Bl - Intermediate - - JIIU5S. 1JS60. E S T A B L I S H E D , . i s e a . . ^ B67 i J A J r ^ ' X ' X B T . - T k e rtaaala V a l v o a l t r mt tke Baatk.I Wlachester. FraaliUa C*. • Teaaeasee.) UPON " T H E C U M B E R L A N D PLATEAC," A loleatlon nnssrpaawl for Tarietr a ^ toeaaljr of aeaaery. and e a t l r ^ exanpt b o u all malarloua and e i ^ e m l c diaeaaea. T k a X e t M a ar lastntetlM. Practice Ttwgim* « L Yrarlr F O R or tattcxantiirlhcaidccteootniiirikMd. r ^ i i H i i i i i m i i H thianai* Inva Moapbtt ftom L a » D.p««t. """id of ai L S U B S C R I P T I O N or aoKTS C A « o u » A . M O SautkcasI, OStes U M t n n U l n c poBUe itoattls <UUT : B la t h e W Baptist F a i t h a n d ta««A»MCa E 1 D o c t r i n e s , " ^BBPTiar uixiSTKtta T^DiemxcTirs zPOTsra or n H B S B . y TO « N , A yilLt. A H D P t A J J T B S . t B E O S T H « H n u m . ' M c K e i m e t B ^ t e L TO H HIJUUES, 14-StopOrgaiis XU>»«t Itealer l a WATC.HES, CLOCKS, Jewelry, Silver and Plated Ware. 1U> StalB Is made fnrai a 8imp!e Tropleai Leaf of I yalae,.ai>d la « r M I I l i E ao) all the diaeaaea that eause palaa In ili» er part of the body-Air Torpid Uver— IMcadachea—Janndlee —IHsslneM, Gravel, |llalana,and all ditllenlilca of the Kidney*, lUvrr and Urinaiy Orgau*. For reatale EBbieaaca, Monthly MenstmstloBS. and dar> I lag Pregnaaey.it iiaa no eiioal. It rsator the organa that Mate the biood, and hence the best m a a « P « r t B e r . It hi the only known remedy that cnrca Brlghf* IHseaan. FwDlabetaa, oae Waraer-a Bal^ aiaketea y\< Care. fbr Sale by Dmggtata and all Dealers ¥ * iMtUe. liargast M U l e In the marIt. H. H. W A R X E R CO., Reclimter, H. T. •ale by W N Wilkeraon « U o , Monphla, - Address Wftaana a Oo. SUIUZIVU Trai. n pan A4n.t> u M l UH xrrMwnl itatk' aaaninrardaaetitoa UtaL Catahme 1 ^ n a a , aaalel F. B M ^ . ^ W i ^ s g t ^ | ISxill»< « J. — - MTMRH UUIDSMHOMES IN s o o T H v m T Farming for Profit JbvMBi*. m m nnsooRi. • ILB-fcraalc • - -• .fii Xlttima AURS W A m i f s r j s s ^ ^ s s ^ i xlUlSSeow ID » muiataa. It wtU alao knitagraau vartaty | I O E N T 8 W A S T E D {or the Beat, ^ K s ^ ol taaer-wnk a r whlak tlMfa a aiwaya a I * set arlUnn Pictorial Books and Blbha. ready Market. Bend Mreircalaraod u m t o | Prtoea rtdooid a per cant. VaUonal ftb- t h e T w w k e r lAiftttaw a a a k t e a O a _ « • I xtuaa llshlBCOB.i Philadelphia, ra. sUIMSr zWUBi I; jttii e u<o'c« ^ ith 368 ItbMbcMtte. UMTIMVC-w RrChuFuib ^ — . . — preputpK tills MXtwvor «ofk,toDof MUw nub:lAatprt simple ]>•««>« uut nmu brezpre-abutiuKwhU* no» nntoUfled iw* dinl«Mda« to more esUaied minis) staall be InteUlslMe to cnildrea m&d niudoeatea •dnltm wlU»ootlurU»ere«pa«i»Uo«^ CtTT »VT o r Bieuv. Br mm Usue o r Y o ^ lUulenM or UMO^ i g f f S ^ S nf Oi. caty fuw tny to '|>aCM.Ki«ts. aaCTwant o r THK wwfc El^lbook:. In jSS^&rvmmvm o r BamnsfBeeQiulncaBM)^ Sabar- r ^ S i . ttotcMi IM i & S m a . JBiUttMUr. OWOiBnii«iy. ggSaSSaotSiptm*-, u a l S s ^ s j f e r s s i S B e " la TBK w^iiS—t ITnttT. A.JCP«».yi« M la Baptist Book House, x n iccMi« i t . M « « » w « , OR* ffu^w"* auMTOUCAl. lUbud siqrwiMra, soAttI MESMrawn te^aTcar. Th«re are &rMtaondredaA t ^ v o r k UaLniwt ludUpen^lf. Umar omeCSirtHtlan: It m«y beoometraonu.By <3u1»Ub» A Compen^m ty. PrteeOJO. eendleion, IXU. TBK CM m e n BXCOBU-BOOK U • ntaS boSi wlS^ntSj ArtlclBi ot ttSf S ^ o w a a , roitaWe tor Bi«?U»t SSrJrf coBUmU mad iWe-oota. to^oni IndexJOrnuaMOl jtOTb^sTnne paper. accnrmuilT nil^, toeort-^ «»et oBbred » the ^SS^wbo h«Te niKd tblaBookfarTwcordlug J^^SiTsiJo volumes ewsh Jl-TS. S^lnntea and bnalnoa UanM^ons p . ^atn JDrttfcrw, aterk, ^J"*® lliBlr chnreheB prooooce them perlKt In S dU S r ' S S a ^ ^ ^ a - f - S f MKl 11 V_ — I XjRMlsMn^ — SSJKdiasMd loSTpMOon and •rke Daacc vf By WUlliun Unmi? Ahoek .iStU unldue. In plain. g ^ o l a r Who M^SSijSTliw. in « "SiifSi; KOXAaUiX. MBOUnm LECrCBES. s o b j ^ : Uenlu» ^Ortr'Si in S i Sph w and Mlasloo of Woman: a^SLonry. mpa«c». Oeta. ^ itiil not onsmate wtw Price, in cloth, aAnaM tnio m a u i buy It. Price, IM eu. S f v ^rV^JwtSly hand, the enrtaln 1» I MtofT. Br'Edv^ loMwdotttHwaJ i s — MUteal Tklaca r IWoCUnJmeT'DD. I torau mrMMjiee^ I mimsA CBSMk. itr-Be'*. W.IX t£H bSSS: ~~liTiii an— — — -« a Outlno. " i f ^ . ^ in paper Setti IBlolott • i • iMM Tbe hero martyrJucWh.!® et the I iKhoot con ^ mrnmrn CKtwU* ehsRii Da«a.«ati>. . — end can M n. bouwl in one TolomB. 1 u d Tone BoiA Ib^e FMa«»t.UMtt they «r» t y , .- — - » — a n n llASlBKHilflnBMI i ^ ^ i ^ ^ ^ a n a t o r each child. ThlatodeFlan.<i fiermoniiby W ' — ftir S ^ l S r ^ S S ^ S S the old „.r«]»it unted paptr. Pttey. la W. Wytbfc Urao,.Unl^ pap». m W . ! - « " « » y e a r * aeo. lt»amlne doth. SSwfcwSuSrbM*. Price lntk>ui,»l.ai». pit Sbetore tioth,Vlsl Vlsl Thia Thialalanot notaahoc* hoc*i,.of akeleton yo« ma»m s s a bkhim« ^ M ^ l i t a laay yoonK mlntttln, bat a book iTwiSlI* Cbereh »tb* Adeliww in the preparationol i rum BBWjiArro* »TMS BOOK. SSSS^toiSd POUPUCAL. mona. OL makodkilnto B S £ ^ Blaci»PhyfBeeiealaatieal Ulatory. Sd^Sloii!: Mew book reTtwd edlUon. U^ type, whitfh I ^MHAM i kA n All •Icned M a comptete o(M referWM on aU" ^ n i ' M j tSTiJacfof JJhira-w Wih ^ISdM ao^etfU. Kdlted by J. Mewum S ^ ^ m S u in mSt. The armxement SwB. -lUnSratal by wood-cuta, mape,aiMl JS^JSbSS. h^JTiot been lnl«rap»ed. f ^ ^ n s i on copper and Meei. U» pa(i<e. gg!5BirtTairBJttlv3maf BapUalaant Mg^'SS. WJO Fiamraan^— Jjg BABMOirr ABD EXPO«mOB o r The LoniV '^PP^u^tSXii Ma(Oeeo,^t. OVBLOBOHSBBATrBOMlKCT. Jto Ballon. W cW.; Klnal Ptmbw D. D. Back. One oftue beat booka pabUahed aneeof the tSalnta-Se eta. • I m u m B BKBAra U tin aonn on a eat^eet that ahoald Intoreat every •tk. D ^ t . - on itakTOatMtlvyooriwnday-echool. ll Chrtrtlan,—the comlns or Chrtat a«aln to «?:pe«e«,fcua. ^m Weatlrir. Thiaextant. Isoaeof No i^e SSyySy^aSSKM&oola. Thedoe^ theearth. 8eud Ibceatalocne. A. d dr«ea aU tmlers ta the JSSAaZrSaDtiwBainKM. laeioUia ^ ^ ^ BAmirr aeoii hocmk. Maeaitkta.T«~i»< s ^ S "pss'^rsarjfroi ^nwuirtMU.'B mxtmuTS^ rt^ oeoKliy tte r ^ m of wrlteia. Dr. w rtim VAon m. u n o B . ^ BBnil BTMBWr IB* tuUMMmlalned is the nrloaa Hymn MMiSiMookrSSSwBeclal and Prtvate „n-n w>«h •nwf ri JakaatUt bbA Oua»MntM laa* J'SS^SlnmMJiiftea. Wafi«. Ifalter, Wi^^iiuSS^and oihera. A tjImI^ sooth iirr^ifli'Slii'aiilnn'ln^ fr? tao&naS ataoald be (aaomily reed. U I Bednctlon where one doien or •iMt -etllPnit aay MafUee at aooaaUue, Soth, SKI MS*. * eta. 'SSe^ordewdatonea. Ke* MCMvMUaM. By I> B Ba^ A •cBJion. g s a s s t ' K s s a ^ rnvmmmm mmm Asm^ arna^J. n Ttiilinr 1» i l u t t . t U l a e M L ^^SUSSStey, ulf'fe'ejuJifff B — I I j a l TTitlf Trt-r iDtlMlmFeBMeat. ByftiMlaTtMiaaraa(Trai&. DOCIBIXAI. AS® KXEOEnCAIr«Ilert WOTka. la three ar»? oeta« Sateied at the Poet OOee tj MeoiphB. Vau, aa Seoond Oaa MT^Br ^nwwr T ^ ^ . TJiU roawtto (i. B. itotTOt mand yBln the WBy«. and •BOBndB^tetbaotdpaihB, which a i B t h o i y ^ KI«*SV« nai«r>»-rint. and, TOI. tli. I Old S e r i e s - T o l . X X X V I L Absoiutsiy P a r s . Mad*fttHBOrape Creem Tartar. S toSeoMea bm* ol whom are petplaieil navitAMBM. mparauuo make* ncli ttgkt, fltey breada, or laxnnoaa paa^. bookb roB ocB rmwBEX. ROTAt. BAKUiO Pawsca Oo., Kew Ti TkoBtsrr artBe MMe-From Oeac^ ziUliztv tarnxmixtoc them Prlee In doUt, <l.S». t o ^ S S S , told in Btmpie lju>giar> *» 2 l e w S e r i e 8 - Y o L m L SQ. g4. away," the man of ids, o«e lonovatiim God and into his heavenly family. Thns the after aaQtliec,aa I have idwwn in the b«ixmiiig. you have one Ijord, onefitith,one bapUaou such aa the creating otardddiduK<atdiBal> and The ehnn^ of Christ is a visible body, with popes. Tbaaediipiitaiiet uaarpad the auttiOTUy himastheHead. It has a within and a withont — perpetuity of t h e chubch. toit HiswiUisthelaw.andtherelaBoaiveBl, of the tnw cfanrcfa. Yoo tod It with a dioinct BY K«V.ft.1m 8AS1>0KD, HHKlBYVIUJIt, TKSS. and by the aathority of Itis chotch bis niinisten history of 1900 ywrs. It out he tzaesad in all • nchaiefa:aadthecatesoriiaUshBUiiotpraTaUasalnit e t than art Peter, and span thn loek I wUI boUdlUmy preach the goapd and administer tiie oxdiiuanoes. nuMoM whim it hat ever had a fuothold. Iti Among the 666 dlffBtent societies that now exist, histoiy isnotsodefiailB,btttmoredefiaB!; as we —Matt. xTl. U. can we kientUy-tlie.charchof(auristr So when ascend back in tlie dark aces, it beanawn more P yn note the riae, and progieas and trinmpheni duly qoaUfled, we may bec^e a memtia of it by dim, BBdfinaUydiflappwrn. The hliti|ify of the nuuch of the ehnrch of Chiist from its orgaujbcaGhorA of Bome and thatch the charch of Christ rqpentance, &ith and immeraton. Uoa b; >««"», through Jades, Samaria and Cesaiea, are opposite In character in every aecHQ, asd and tluoaghoot the Soman empin>, it w^oold All admit that Christ organized .hb chnrdi in this we are cstabled to draw a dear and a dtatinft thedaysof theap^eo. TUeUa fact that none •eem that it would aoon extend over the whole Aa we ascend the atroam of tli&e till w« woild. Bat the inan of ain in an embryo state will caU in question. From this data we can Use. arrive B^lhin five hundred yeua of Chrkl and tho tenon with the force of demonatcation. And a l i e ^ existed. We have it by the words of inapostlea, mostof its hiitoty ttOtf away—only a Bpizati(m that the time Tfoaid come when the tere I will lay down this proposition: That any tcaoe bate and there—and the iftorch of Qiritit peoj^e would not endoie aoand teaching, and body, or organization, or society, whose history looms up In grandeur. woaid tarn away fcom Christ and his word and does not reach back to the organlxation of the fthoreh, and torn to fab!es,and gather to thcm-church of Christ and the aposiles, is not and Among the nations where the Gttholic diurch •dvea teachers with itdiSng ears, IOVOT of them- canitot be a part or a parcel of the church of Christ. has iMd an existence, hiatoiy is reidete with it« •^vcs, proud boa8teEB,and despbOT of aU that We have shown that Christ constituted his own deeds of blood, peraecotfans, arrogance, Us puUtwere good. Soon these prindpies gatherednfotce, church, and that the macks of tbe hands of man ical intztgOBi and blasphemomi pretendone. In •ind tnmbeta^ and popaianty with the aaawes. or men are not to be found upoa iU Any sodt^ 606 yean alter Cbrtat K saamned Jorm, with the And Boaatte x t e n d itself to a state, and he who organised by man or a srt of men, without the pope as Its head of the dinrch, clslmlng to be the peeked over it was called an archbishop; and command or authority of Oirist, is none of hlA vic^went of Peter, and that he held the keys, aoon it was extoided to a nation, and he who Xow iet the BiUe and histwv be our guides: and that hiu decrees.are the rales of the churc^. pteqlded over this was called s cardinaL Very B e t o the time of Joec^h Smith, Jr., the Mormon an4 that the pope is InAdUfde, a ^ tliiis heaeat they nsarped the power of the church of ptoph^ there was not a Mormon on earth. You forth hia bulls and edkt8,and lay* his i m j ^ haada upon the ordlnanoea of the chnrcB and Cairist, and attempted to destroy the sorvereign trace it back to him, and you rewsh its origin, and changed InuneDOon to vdnkling, and proctaljBed thereitends. In 1623-ayou have the origin of power of the troe chnrch, and 8W€«>t away every pri^ptethat was sacred and dear to the tov^ A.Ckmpbdl'sBect. He made war on creeds and that except a man be ta^tiasd h n w ^ a o t h* I truth. soon ther a m t " * " Our Pulpit. I ^ S l n d ^ c o o n c a o r ^ n c e . n total it* idenUty, Pwhytadanaaet ttp oo the Comberiaad only In toe prophetic history we have in toe _ ilirt in tlio year we have Sg^^M ^ r y ^ i o ^ B«k of toat ^ t e h l ^ -^"ai' Bible. W foU-lMMaffa pope •• tlw tmlvMaal -"•T'^— lwiid, — and ChrM and hIa church and word were set aside by knows notoing of toon, and tols year toe Pan- Now, accMPding to the p r < ^ t i o n l ^ ^ n . Piesbytaian AMembi/ refused to KW^snixe toem th^; here laalink out, and achaam that no hWorUn Now the question arises that I propwe to d ^ ' " l ^ i b ^ I I o w churcU history: In toe year of has ever been ^ to apan. ^s wo tave i ^ a a ca8B.vix.: The perpetuity or amUnuaUon of the 1784 John Wesley called togetoer a numto of to the true datea of otoers, aa church of Christ. H « the church of C h ^ co^ persons to read toe Bible, to pray for a topu Wesley, etc., BO we find the CatooUa diurch c«i n l ^ l k c e d back to Chriiit and the a p o s t ^ tinoMi from the Ume that he said, "Thou art ^ of grace, etc., Oey belonging to toe C h ^ Peter and upon this rock I wiU build my of England. They were called socteUes, and he Now, let tt be noted toat toe diurdi of ^ r i a l chnnji," or has the gates of heU prevailed, and had no Idea of Itever being colled a church. Kiere does nU derive Ita anUiority tr.dM»^ the light of the world gone out? I f h l a c h ^ ereeda or oonl^ona, nor any one a ^ under Is not a Methodist society known la all toe history has existed fham that Ume tUi now, we have them, or deriving toeir antoority ^ t ^ church snccessioa ; if this is not so, »»»<« tove of toe past before toe days of John Wesley. So it S S Bdminister toe ordinances of toe ^ rf fkils to reach back to Christ and toe aposUea by S ! Ibr we have shown toat a ^ ttU of t t e a hnikm aucceaaon, and the gates of heU h a ^ trlainpbed, and aU are lost. The ^ t commit ^ e t t e s formed by men have dlrccUi or 1 ^ sion. the oidinaMeB, the church, and all are lost J o h J ^ v i n , a monk in toe CatooUc church In B«ne; h«.ce they « e ^ But remind you. the church is aaldto be the light U>e ytax 1541, giverisetotoePresbyterian eodety. ever have bean, to a t o l n ^ te of the world and aalt of the earth. NowlfchurA In toe history of all toe past ages toereta a S ^ h l a diurch. ta t r a c e of it to be found before Qdvin'sdayi That aucceBsion la loet, then there was a Ume wten ^ body did not exist before hIa blrto, and they (to and his law alonetoeoalllneBofttodiarchnfChria^ la toe ^^^ lhave given light of toe world went out, and toe church of toe S S ^ i t . So we see it. witoaU of Us boasted God, which was toe pillar and ground rf .ndlfc.p^^i'ri"* dWInct^ B ^ ^ piety, lacks I M lt y^^ .^ n r y \ J ^ , i t ^ . tf aU toeseare lOBt, aiid what Christ aaid Is learning and informed by history connoted wtth Borne or any othe^hidi I have not tree: and If you assume this podUon you King En^and, divMced himself ™ p r o v e d by historytoa toflealccodnMo^ ^ S t o an ImpSto, and « « « tove wife and orpwi»d toe Episcopalian society in aU toe dark ages of peraeaiUon where TO MBvaUed. I tolnk the Bible does affirm toat toe i S a n d bal^oftoisdatetoerelsnotiacein t hIn fcSLilhat c S a ^ m M l ^ t o Is true, and toat God has had a peopte liirtory«rfit—aUlsriteit. .u. thePopeaent thflPoDeaent larto forth hia hla Bcidkn acWIen wuu Bwt»u aim vMhle <dtnreh in existence sincetoedays (A Christ m toe year of 1525, MarUn Lutoer. c a l ^ e ^ ^ r ^ t o e m from till the present time. great Beformer, organlxed toe L u t ^ aodety, t o e n ^ a o f ainaidupootto toW^ Now let It be distinctly underatood that Christ STback of Mm and before hIa day we cannot ^tag to be God, and making war ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " U ^ ^ rock I wUl buUd my traceallneofliUtheranfam. .choich." All ac»®etoatthis means Christ J o t Just here I wish to stale, in plain w ^ t ^ prindpka toat ltktoecharchofGod.God-s^l^g. the chnrch of Christ never was connects wito Borne, as many^seen to b e U ^ ^ r i r a u d , steeped In e a r m p t ^ f n a d e ^ ^ t d w e l l a In the diurch, and toe H o l y ^ M t the Omrch S i 3 a In m toen we have toe «a.urch of God, neltoer do we trace it torough f o m e i j a ^ S l a n d ^ h t o o d o f a a i n t . . dioidi of Christ, but toe ChrisUan diurch, n e w . Odholic chnrch is everywhere understood in toe S ^ c h u r e h r f Christ we have Christ before toe Bibletobethe Antl-C3»rist. ehORh, and blood befbre water. In order to to a laie Chnrch of Eome is nnlfta any we have not Pedohaptiat, ^ ^ J ™ ^ member ct Christie church, f a a must be born traced. » cannot be dated to any one m ^ as ttalu. yon must be In a state of JasUficat^ airf Lutoer, or CUvln. but styled "toegreat apostaey. ^eeptaneewito him, yoo must be reconcUed to S S f t t d putung todeato, and burnlagathe SSSl POWDER 3IEMPHI8, T E N S . . SOYEMBER 80, i m