University of South Carolina Libraries
J ^ji> V^ i ri ' J | :^H ^ ^ y y' ' j!" ** HI. ^ ^ ',-C^j^>^Jr^S (,i i)( I ( )!) 1 > 1 v I i , " i^?/ }. >?'' *SSj,-i ''j&^r^?''*'iifj&fjjl 1^'*i\!^ >T^ Svjlftetjjrie eupugh'.-tor"j ^ ^MK^in;to^l)riiV'r6f-tl'.L-ir literarvHlienevolencefitid. "" Jerusalem-is wnx-;J in:'^tef tfc'rvi n? for.n'esii ly-'lialf a'cetftiK ; j "Spon ^ Southern'" SSfuVesa in the' c iVape V^hJj3ra^.?nqu3?y6luntary^trU>ute;\\'hiclr be .w; -'hedtLat tFies^o^3ii?c; 1^1x1 s may i Let us,:' .-,v.^e^gw^>e ffiAsupjum:. 0 have ijeen.;i;(< lotig And CO i^ccti Li '" X < !^i' :wV(?re8Unot to.^oii-j\\?erctiui^e,'."liu't^t.^r less-] hmniii ' 8Jad- Black Sea."* ^Cninc. BWV? vj1 -'1;.'*"> * -Wi&r- * ' - ' ^ i,v>m^tVo jdea of in are mile8*of they - -0 ^. b Eragle has 'T^%^,^?^?^R-tl'0a^f3fe'wgtaCCT8' pgjgffifcnine.leet-1n neigm ;ftwnue on- me- uuiwi ^eoP;lhe,dq6r..lik'eivise'^'in af>i ic* h e,- s t ruT <ls ,th e 'bektifj'c.fi^ure'.of Peace; 'i lic-nr;iiden~ i^iiri--pie fir)vvTrig ''garb, {\vitTitfufc^oVket:?,)"^ ia^repn?-' sen tec! in the hbtyt>f sweetly extending "the olive'branch todferVarlike neighbor,~\vhx> does tfoVseem dispdsw to accept of if, foiyaccord ing'tb the handjjopks, wjifd eyes are'.iovf&ing Avftli angef. and^is wholbVattitude Indicates h roused and cxcifcj|d- temper J^Ifb*view *bf- the in?p'o-sing;,'overfore; and^the determined -manner in. which './the mail-chid warrior .holds diis sword m-'roadin?s for con)bat, wV"'afevleft no ;b*thercdncTusion^ thaii that''His ifeaf{"is: hard ;and coftf^Tffe:ffiarbletfl-\vmen ne is cniseuea ifor'the :tfdVifiir&tion of inankiiid. ^pn"*t^^tft^abufment of the grand'steps isHhegrqupVo'ftylie " Discovery of/America," consisting-of. two .marble' figures," like3*7 the hfatues to which' we have just alluded-, by: Persico: " A knocirjoieed fndian mnicten/mbt ent cumheiedi'with^)u( kram shirtsy.im$.:indecent:;ly-iiude, is7'represented looking'up -to a -figurp ^intended fo^Od^Siinibus, holding inhis outstretched right harid-^otcarrying on-his'back/ -like j/Atlas?tile globe! The gro ape "is in ten (fed to be enibiemiitro^flL/A-lhe' triumplrtjf' science and -perseverance,"i^W?' discovery of-'a new worlds i --On tlie-norih'e/n abutment of the same grand ^teps'is " the.:Rescue,1'-, by the lamented Greeiinoiigh; our"o\vn- country mnn.r--This occupied itfchp a rt ist-eigh t- y*ea rs, - besides a,- delay ofrfpu r |yyen'rs.'pccasioned.l>y his not being uble in .all that time-to obtain a. block, of Serra.vezza marj'ble suitable Ibr' the purpose., ,A conflict-lbe.I'tween-tp.-hunter ;md a-savage are the more prominent.figures, while the wife of the'funnier, seated on.p rock, holds in. her arms an in/ant, . smijing, unconscious "of the ganger to which th^snijill Avhitpfamily were" mena.ccd by (lie man with-'the'tomahawk.---The hunter's do^qmytly'ltfi'd silently watches the contest, .instead of.assisting hjs-master in-the "work of death. -.But, as it is evident- the-.pale face nl'ready has the advantage of the "red/a proffer 'dKCcanirte-services would 1 be cowardly "miclifr such circumstances. ._?>: tliausame ai'list (-G^naiigli)-i's tlie_statud of Wtjaliihgmij.f lie devoted_sever/il yi'ars in Italy toJts execution... It stands in the. east square of. the capital.- A .foreign writer lias ^said^pf it, " nothing, can be more human, and at the same time more trodlike than this statue of Washington. It is a sort of domestic 'Jupiter." But however much gentlemen of classic taste-may laud the Roman apparelled fig tire and the convalescent attitude of the lymphatic subject, the'-'common sense patriotic masses prefer the: Father of his Country in " the modern costume,'' as lie himself did; when'consult ^ed-by,-Jefferson, before Houilon comm'ehced the statue of 'Washington, a cast' from which is now displayed, intlie rotundo of the capitol. The great unin'coiulein'ned u a servile adherence to the garb .of-antiquity'" in that con (lectio 11. No republican, we fancy, carcs-iibqut -regarding him as a sort ot domestic Jupiter." Crawford, in Rome, is now-engaged ou the grand work ordered by the United States gov^rnmentr.J It is.to be'of statuary marble, and ipjaee.d at the eastern extremity of the. capitol extension. The group will be thoroughly rc.puLlicajn,',emblematic of our country's history. Washington Sentinel. ^ - ; 2, "r 1 :? ,-r. ,. J v'"" ' -*V. 'x ' ' ' . %. Gen.^Washington ano tub. Hehbew'S.? We givc-belpw stjine extracts.'from-it correspondence which took place; in "August, 1790, .between tfie lle^ew congregation at Newport, ^Rhode Island, mid -I^fesidfint Washington. Af ^e'r an allusion to the-days of "difficulty and danger thiV>tfgh^\vjij.ek the great chief had pass"ed;'theaddress continues: i Denrireti' heretofore been of the invaluable r.igtytf of, free citizens, we now, '(with a deep;sen^^^ra.ti.tude,:ta the Almigh ty L^sposer or aii^e ven t^)$b?fpAltt a; govern nient erected by (-Re' srAi'le'propl?/a government whT^'to^^otiy.'gives no sanction, to porsecutiqYi'*ri<3Laili;tst;u?but generous:ly affording to all Iibprtyyaj^'^f^ienceyaod immunities of citizenship?ticemmg every one, of whatever- nation, tongrtfivor hmguage,; eq.uai "parts of the grea^^yejciiinenjuil jna'clun vThisso.'ainpie. and -eplertsiy/eV-Federal Union, >whole base'is'philaniilitjpVy iiiiUtual'confidence land public virtue,- we^nnjbt''buVSckriowledge to lie. the work of Jhe^Gjjn'who ^rule^ tanta of .t^e.in Forkji the blds'sij^^^aiw! and religious liberty which w e ehj^wtter an equal and behigh ad inintstratiStaBBPresire to Bend up our tharms to the Ahclej^Tof Days, the great preof. men, beseeching him that the Angel oar forefathers through the wilfdetfggdnfo the promised land, may graciously through all the'difficulties and ^[pjfera. of this mortal life. And when like HBrnia, foil of days and full of honors, you ptr^ gathered to your lathers, may you be ad mitted into tbe heavenly paradise, to partake tof the water of life and the tree of immortality." To which President Washington after acknowledging the cordiality of the welcome given him by all classes of citizens, says : The citizens of the United Spates of Amei|. ca have a right to npplaud",themselves for hay-"' ing given to mankind exqmpjoa or an enlarged and liberal policy?a policy ,worthy of infifa tibn. All possess a like liberty of conscience -; : ' influence lsfelf.not on 1 y Innt^vef\-/ section of rtliis'country; but .in remote -part,s .of, .the. earth vei y;h'c:s1avei;yiquest'.oir has been rhade;th^t0'f2b-^^ j-cl .'virulent disciisaionr;ftnd.as a .couseqafi?uge_Aof- iref actioiKhostileAt6 <the.Southr: The-"New Y'prki "del fieruiuleniiiius ua.i..?v~ speech topthe Senatefof. thev.UnitecP States, lo\ ypbTieV-bfvtlie divjjjioiisjin so. many, of the Pip:, pli ; testant*/churches North and ."South; as thcr wi "snapping of so many chords" \vhich had, serv- jtu ed to bind the two sections of. the Union jto- cer petlier. ^-Methodists,. Baptists,Tand .Presbyt'e- .ter 'rians, 't.heh three -great reljgious'.sects, .of the dis coiintiiyjjn point ot' numbers, have ignored*the" t'.K diyin'ely-taught principles of brotherly., love,', rap and been, to rir.asu iide r, in* sectipna 1 .division on im ylhjd question/. lf-tlie disciples of the."Master" ch and 11 ead;of. the church?the% followers*of the _de "meek a (id "lowly Ji'-sus,". whonauglifd'orbear- is ance, .kindness and . tendernessTtcHjie faults of ce brethjien,v!tje .unable to stand the,rack of this tei .tr\ iiiTgIquestion ?Jf.fanatical prejudice is strong ; ; enough'-to-break-the bonds.of-christiaii commu-- th nioaaud to .array saiutsV-against each other, in eej ho s tile -'war fare?is the re .'.hot reason .to tremble c<i . for the strength of those.pare]yfmatefial:'boi)dsv .tq of iconimercial, ; social and, political .interest eri \yhiclf unjte .the.two sections?.- - .'to. V As :ffaithful'.chronicler of events,.we point rid to this dtcfrdh-of the Board > other mile, stone passed; itftlye/jouiticyVwhi.ch. "pi< , .fanaticism' is making to t.hej goajl of disunion.' Vie - Politiciatjs-and .clergymen in the f ee.Slates are" riti vieing'with each other in pushing' ihtyjcountfy \\li .ofn to tfietyerge of this untried apd utikfibwiy jrjbYss." In the Northern pulpitsythe gospel is *1?' nd;longer preached, but abolitjonisnvand we a}" ' are credibly informed that some congregations dc 'ni-fi^j?rtii?ll ,j dhurlinjr ?niff vf-.oSrfioil sectdiife. ,'9t: J - " O t i r O*. Y on the.ground-that tlie abolitioir.-jiianin uaoacip.y pp 'olizcs^He' s'.icrcd desk, and Hlicy ai6 making its new.- churches' for- the express'purposVbf hear-1- an ing ihe gospel preached. " - iM 'i'liej-irecise.point on .which the action of the Board of Missions turned,- w as' a proposition Lbli ^continue its missionary- efforts. anioiig the Chbct'aw -Indians. These ^Indians are slaved qe holders, and the gi ound'ofdfTehcerto the'"Chi fs-' 8G tinn. Board" is that'they biive taken sonie mea- ce s jrc-s to protect their property against abolition m ?.'missionaries. The board has thus.renoiinced 'the doctrine" of "pbhco and good will to men/7 .? - ami JplnwtjtrTTtre?hT5"wt^yhtctTVsedition and.la. naticisni have raised'td excn'e^iritnfu-nmt-jrni1- tfi, ousy; and finally a rupture between the Nortl r,n and the South. To the Southern man there i3 As in all this madness one consideration of genu f,>| ine comfort and consolation. fVhe issue of this tea - Union question is with the Norlln"' The evfl : which- threat ens' the integrity aud-pcace of flip nx country is there. It is for the North to settle f.i(J ; it according to the estimate which it chooses go to put upon a: blood bought Union, in coin par* |h> ison with a ..miserable abstraction, as senseless ph and impracticable in its aims .{is it is reckless |Jp nf the 'ini"fir?s}s mid snfptv nf-its own race in the- Kr means used toTen'oh them. "If fanaticism sue; Sy seeds; the. llniopj goes. to pieces. If the Con- an , ctiluiion triumphs. the Union is sale." ad vlt.'is not the Fire Eaters now that.arc plot) Clj ting against the Union, f In that quarter there u'n is jmbrokeii .silciice. They await the issue W( /which four years ugor.they foresaw sootier or at late^was.-tojje precipitated on the country.?j ne When the-lime for defence conies, they will bel Cn found thie' to the cause with which theirsym-f mi t patljie's are entwined; and they are not without/ tic hope', tliat in a .cause so sacred as that of de- is i feu-ce.against an.unprovoked ar.d.unnatural ag- Ve gressidnfthc people of the slave States, forged w< j ting ami Jturving all otherk'diflTciences, will-be; Cft] j foiind with oiie.heartfand mind and with locked' en j shields, ready to meet- tlid deadly.onslaught of js j an enemy waving-theflaming sword in the falsi- \\ fied name of the-"higher 'law" of God; - ou -1 , - ' Mobile Register. ^ t 4.. . : ~ I' do " Mn. Clavton's'L^ttek.?1The Philadelphia cj.| Inquirer contains a-letter from the Hon,. John M. Clayton, of Delaware, .addressed to/D. ;R. King; ensq., iirwliicji'iireydeclares tliat he n'evev was. is. hot now, au'djuever shall be, a candi- . . dajo.l,on't Hc-P'resideiijiy, preferring a seat in (lu . the United Stages .Senate to. any other..office tie yiidertthe governnfenf. lie then proceeds'to 4 1 condemn th(y.provision. iuv thc^J^ebraska Bill conferring the'Yigli'lrpf suffragei'oiv'aliens, aud "'I the proposed homestead'bill, allowing foreigjfrjhfeii ers tin cgrjit j"sharo of the public" domain ou"ffie jr*e ^mederips with'native aiuLnaturnlized citizens. |i&,J *He^dcc1;tres "tjh'atioqg^tnriilizntinn Jaw# are a" \ tive, or our almshouses tb? '^ma hot how be filled with paupers," and r'd rafttlfet alleges that "our country has become 0,1 Botany Bay, into which Europe annually dis- nn charges her criminals of every description."'? cei Hq further says: tal "i have no prejudices against the honest for- r?* eigner, who comes here to seek an asylum from s'^ the tyranny of rulers abroad. All my sympa- t0 thies are with them, and when they become. an naturalized I will defend them, as American n)i citizens, in all their rights,as fully as those born he, on the soil. I would inculcate and practice ha religious toleration in its broadest sense, but I Pa would see to it that no men of any sect, whose ex creed teaches them to deny religious toleration to me and my countrymen, should ever hold office here, or power of any kind to persecute ne us for our religious opinions. No man who ac- an knowledges allegiance to any foreign potentate sei or power, or who holds himself under obliga- fit lions to obey the edicts of any s'uch potentate Vpr power, shall be by my vote placed in any ftd post or office under the American Government, am I would defend the rights,of men of all reli- JPo gkpis to the full extent to which those rights 'mi are guarantied by the American Constitution, to ; Vfci r'" ^ lr^'dehis/o^Mi ^ J dq\v nv a getit?ral^ufe^' tdlhp \y fa r_.fi)'he igit? ? gKhd.care. i rat&lie permitted.^'t61 hold office "to-'wliich'? ?re,?vvi 11 C-nOt.irecesanrijy bo exceptions; hut' h is j i) d grn'en t,_atr\a t i vb >A me ri.cfliv citizen n-'. r equal circurrHtiUices-of qualifications and"i uit, isjietterve'ntitled to the HoborsJriH officestbe "tiou n t r j*i tlian^ai foreigue tyrW het her ^ n a t u ^ : - lUrsiiiia. COi- spme^mpnths^quite aiy earnest contro^j-lias bepmgoiiig on in the^OW^Dohiinion, dtive to the' power pf the Courifyv(jourts to"-, 'dap ;ill'4ip|jircatiop^'vfor license ?6;retail/ar-; j|ls_pirits. The Virginia* law is ve ry" * 'slit i ilrtrf Wit'of North 'Carolina,; and reads "as ffi:,.If the conrt be of opinion that the^ap''' fciit:is sober and of good character, and If probably keep 'njiouse orderly, psei'ul, and ;h-as the law-requires, it "may grant such f- . ije,"'<Sic. -The anti-license, men have coiV ltfed that the -ivord iriaij.conveyed"the tulleSt(jretionary power :upon the courts,' while' rjrbpponaritsv .have insisted that where the' i (jJicantfrcnrneVivithm the provisions-of .the, f, by showing'that He*" is'sober and of good aracter,-- nnd will probably Jteep a;bbuse~ or-, ilv, useful, tffia^siliSlna sr'thtrTifW&liq31 resf' - it ppmpdlsofy Upon the dqurt" to'grant the li-; (Be?in other words, the one party have'eon'-' jtle'd/that it ineansjiWiudh thing. ' fThia''question is now. settled, on the part 'of !J(jquct of Appeals, in' favorJof. the' anti-liise"party, to their utmost satisfaction: This"' drtra ft^v days ago,^decided .'that'tho county iirtVa'r&yestpd' witlv full,.discretionary p6\v?to gjranUoftrefuse',!ic<Mise for'the sale of inMating liquors by persons, keeping.ordina^ie frieuds'of tclriperance will not fail to aHfc "by thfs decisibh^ in - all the" counties:? lirty-seven counties-npw refuse :.licensej\and_" tstboped'the"yv hole; I40 counties of the State. tlJfcom'e to-the same decision. Fpou. this subject,.the Clarksville (Va.) Got' i Plnnt'says : This'much vexed question ~is. last definitely and decisively settled, by "the.; >urt of. Appeals,"'the highest tribunal- in our .? /? ftnnlnrinif tlitt ttm (li\ii.niiii\(lniirt Ima lhe. iccr to grant or rcfiTie /icense,-according to discretion, and it is the only triburtal having th6rity;oyer. that subject. This is a full and jst be a final settlement of-ithe question.?> e hope hereafter there Will beno mote squabing or bad feeling about it. {K7~ The'Sorts in.Virginia rir? represented to in' a most prosperous condition, having 10,2 members. The Grand Division has ac-. pied the degrees, and permits the Subordi-te Divisions to receive them or reject them. Spirit of the Age. - '?>?' < A Mistake..?W6 clip' the 'following from 0 cneraw GilZSttC^OnQ Snjr tu uurxt'lonrtpory that he is mistaken when he says the Press isociation of this State fixed rates of charges advertising. Nothing of the sort was atnpted. Tiie Value of a Plrdoe.? It will be re nil bored that some year or so ago a conven >11 of the press of the State was called tother, at Columbia, to consult upon matters rlaihing to the fraternity. We were not Lisent, (and we do not regret it-now,) but ard, among many other important matters nught before the convention that a regular stem of. advertising was adopted, which each d every press represented was pledged to here to. ' How lias that pledge been redeem? Ilow-many papers in the State have a iform rate for advertising.? Now, we know ; have no right to object to any one working any price'they please.'"It is not our busi* ss. ~Bi >\ve do Icel that wo are justified in tnp.laiir.ing of the marked difference made by my between their professions.and their praciv If ?75 per'columh 'for a weekly paper, as' low as its proprietor's "can afford to ad-, rlise-jtlieir neighbor's goods and wares for, 5 wduld like to know how'these same papers ii advertise patent nostrums for the Northi quacks at from 825 to ?35 per year? It. a mystery we have never been able to solve; ill some of-our contemporaries explain* it for. r benefit? When they do so, we will follow. ;ir "example, and make our neighbors pay uble what we charge those who have no ims upon our sympathy or cliarity. ' -Clieraxo Gozetlc. EsauESTKiANis^r.?As horseback riding is ite fhshiouable-ainong yoUng.ladies and genmen, we copy tlit)"following :in relation, to rery important and. hitherto undecided point, in the j$e\v York' Spfnt. of the^Times, the jhe.st^ authority on siich' suhjecjs, which oves, we think, pretty concjusively, that the the l ight side, he must use d can do so to very little purpose. Inst'im5 3 have occurred where the lady's horse has ;etr flight on the instant, and the rider was >cued by the gentlemen being on the left le and taken her from the frightened animal his own. If the lady wishes to converse, d her escort is at her right hand, she ist turn her head half round to make herslf ard. Again, the escort being at the left nd, her dress is protected from the vehicles ssing, and if it becomes disarranged,is not posed to public view." * : ;r . Nothing to Eat.?The Picaj'une says there ver was, perhaps, such a hard time .to ,get y thing to eat in New Orleans as the proit. There is literal^ nothing in the market to be eaten. The meats are poor and scarce, [gs are out of the question,, and opmniand, ih four to six bits a dozen. Beef, mutton d poultry are of the poorest, possible kind, tiffiipo are Rbllinrr at fotir for ft' dime. The. in who would bring a few thousand barrels the city just now would make afprtune. 1 &??> V^WiSW-y' sMs Sal* leading ;was V&ypsffixlar>vith-th^fst/fcUicrs/^f^h'e; Jj toIolife'sj-;atidifrnisljied* nli);add;tidiial .'intn'etu$ : t > -1he' efForts niude'ibr. thei ^^auia^oji^bjr itij^; ;.t ovs a i 18: sii ccesso'rs, v i 1) fluencing^ttiis k>Wiich benevolence tiiid-humanity (lou-n^o the pre'sent | era-. - Biit^lthDugh.'il^-.has* ;bveny-?''rr'iHtlur "tuitj* 1 favorite theme 'of discussiounvitlrd^lnea,'a'ncjj 4 jahllanthropists.duriiig/tUS entire peup<L" (^y>3 370 years,)'at leSsV.dpwn to:Bbudinoi,s '.'Star* 1 iii^the AVes't,"'' and Javia-'discpurse before the J ^ew'.YoHi ljistoricrtlj Society^in 1819, Uthjnk". J the queetion'.of their origin itjfas.turjVbiii; beingj < Stttisfaotorily: solved now as ever. ' - - It-is-<noti~pr.bpQsed?t6' enter.into this djacus-,.] sion at this tiine,;far less'to/revive die opinion?1 of ..those.''w ho- liav_ef:stak.ed> their. ;l0arnhig kbd; a judgment on the topic, bufcmerely to c.ontriffifl uteya^suggestion-j-especting^pnint oQiistoric, t interest; whighi Vi/ the-'assuhiedr affinities^ j tweomlbe Jew.and indian.races, is equallvtouK i .plicable to the one as to thp other of these ^ maVked branches of-the HumarfVfamily.BiBfr J (?1 Commentators on prophetical events. Lave. Jf manifested a' disposition to'hasten oiijj^rs-.it ;t were, prFdictions'whibh iire-bfien-obscurely anoL -I symbolically staled," whilc dhey ^generally- com- (t curred'in fi.xing ? definite- valueHotthe icadiiTg^ J sacrea types, ann. symoojs.?? uue-qi iHuam i undispiited-of these 'interpretations relates' to; r that feature in the proplietrcahchroiiolpgy which a makes 'the -biblical rperiod of 'one day corres^ ] pond with'one year of pur-system. Jn the 9th'- t Daniel,:13,- 14,it is predicted-thai: from thelak- .( ing away of the "daily sacrifice,"' during, which , t y hepeople of God shall-be t'troddefrunder./oot," i fill'their recall and- the "cleaning*of tlfe'saucr, i tuary," which is apprehended to signify a pe- 1 riod oTC'spirrtcai and ; moral'enlightenment On-. < the true charactefoflhe Messiah1,-two thousand! .t and three iiundred ilays-sliall intervene'. v-This'; j ,seems to- be plain language.- Tifcitus informs' ; us^fitft the conquest of J udeii^wa's finished .by - < the'^ptiire of- Jeiusal'enT,Sunder Titus,-A. D; -| r70i~^Haviiig carried, the city after a long and' "j bloody siegej-duf-jng which he was'once driveni j out of it, he finally succeeded jn-taking its.daSt. f stronghold, the temple, on the 10th day of ,Au-( -1 gust,''wheur?pot. by.desigii, but.caprice, itjeemdi ?a Roman "soldier seVfire- to.Mt-byi ;i^bucfim^| arrow, by - which it was reduced 'to ashes and_ .-j ruins. Thus "ended the "daily sacrificc.-y^lliirtH was the secdnd temple?the templ.e in .whicji: ^ Christ personally had taught. It .was never '! rebuilt, though once^atteirvpted' bj^li|M^ M On.tho-assumption. that-the.prediction ip Daniel refers to theirs/ takingof.the daily sa-{^ orifice by tlfeTjuming of the temple under No-* 4 buchndnezzar, 588 before Christ, the prediction^ i expired in 1G42, the.beginning of the preaching. * of John Eliot, of apostolic^memory, to the . American Indians.-,,Tf the:eecond perjjod-of tak*-h ing away th.edai.Iy sacrifice be ;meant by ^he^ burning of .the weewef. temple by. Titus, then the- fi prediction, is. unexhaustedKrah'd wilbnot expire v till A. Di. 2370.7 To"!wlia?extent k'uman is to r concur with dtMneinfluenceiiv this grei). mo rah event, those can best,judge who have,devoted- * most attention and.exhibited most wisdom in> fe discussing the subject. I design ohly.to^make use of the .facts to observe that- if.it.is.suj)'pos|d- jj ttiA onirWil.il nnft. .niAP'll rlo n fl 11 ACQ 7"! f-:.hp? rt-J 1 of the Jews- or Indians is-rtoaberoadersensible- ?j by this call to repentance, .either nationally, or. individually, the iinportanec and vitality of the; -J call at this time may be well judged of. Shall,, I men wait tilljt be proved.that tjhe ludiaus are * descendants of the Jews before efforts are made-^ to. reclaim themi v?hall (he Indian priests and * pow-wows have' hundreds of years'* further scope to practice; demonology,^magic, and: witchcraft, before their errors are, exposed? at l:\st they are .not'proyed^to Jie descendant^ Jj of the Jews, or even to have philologicaiaffinl^}.; ties with them, on \\;hqm:^vij^th^blmne^oF/jn^ | preaching the GospeUto them 'rest??. If .they have the, Jewish blood-, in their veins, even in I t?inof. dilnfpd nnniit'itv. Jiei?nrdin.<r to/the^afjiL-i ...w ...w. "1?~~j.' y o **~;i r -4U(i finities of races, tlic^fauit, willdje stiJLinore pu&ri K gc.ntly ours. Eliot's voice has now-been.heardj j affirmativelyon this question'212 years..;'.;B/ai-- * nard repeated.this, ca^yai, .exactly from its f5rst"utterance^fthf?eljfv}?M^^3fP#*ti iii everyview are the aborjgitijes;jiot rno^par^a ticularly oiir,yfn eiglibors'^tlian'rtVe^olairous, . race, of the 0 It.they. w an t. br<&duo.r4iunge r and, thijst of : ten for any la^f^m?;le^^)l>odig-. C(>m-; ; fort, t h ey.a re ,ce,r tjiijyj^noa r=- |o out4 Shall we, -like,. Ui&uLeyi.tef suffer thenvto, ,be ? wounded, or'leave. theinVl.0/the trust thaUA'&oodl > Samaritans" faonv tffei.f Joreigti/lands... will- " com ,pg 3IIU 19 tl'oub^u' w,#w *u a 4>wq'^w immediately upon the bettothal, exchange plain. ' gold rings, gUrii ire won, cver afierwaniigMjl death parts'lffem. ^in^pman wearat here on, f th^ t h a ^ lei yes i'