University of South Carolina Libraries
1 ■ r . . s * - :v THE LUTHERAN VISITOR, COLUMBIA, S. C„ WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1869. \t ilisiloc. COLUMBIA, S. C. Wednesday, September 1,1869. KDITJDK8: Rsv. A. R. RUDE, Columbia, 8. C. Rbv. J. I. Miller, Staunton, Va. “ImUgSsm tints unity, in non-essentials liberty, in all thing* charity." TEEMS : $2.id for one year... 1.50 for Jz aientHs... 1.00 for three months. ......51 numbers, 20 , ...A* “ t3T Alt coinraunications must bo written correctly and .legibly, ami accompanied with the names of tho writers, which, however, mey bo withheld from the public. Correspondents'niusl not expect declined communications to be re turned. EW Wo request our subscribers to make remittances to us only in registered letters, or Ir. the form of poet office money orders or bank (ffiecks. All such remittances are at our risk. We can not talir (Ac rink when money ,(■' sent in unrtyutend tellers. Formerly tltero msy have been some ground (nr tho remark, that "tlie only effect of registra tion is -only to make ti*o letter more liable to be. stolen." But under tlte new law, which went into operation last June, we think registered letters are perfectly safe; and wo know from almost daily experience that others are not. Noticito Postmastehs.—Postmasters through nut the country wilt save trouble by obeying the laws in regard to newspapers, eta When a paper remains dead in the office for four consecutive weeks, it is the duty of the postmaster or his • deputy to send the publisher of the paper a written , notice of the tact—stating, if possible. the reason why the paper is not taken. The returning to . tlte publisher of a paper marked “not taken,’ "refused," or "uncalled for,’’ is not a legs! i notice, Premiums. We will give to any one who semis ns two Subseriliers ami #5, one -copy of “ Distinct!re Doctrine*.'" We will give for four Stibscriliei’s anti #10, a copy of u Life anti Deeds if Luther." We will give for five Subsorilters and.# 12.50, a copy of “ LutketAs Ser wons, VoL I.; or if preferred, a copy of “Dr. Sit**' Eeclesia Sacra." We will give for ten Subscribers mid #25, a copy of “The Book of Concord." The name* and the money must accompany each other. As regards premiums due for VoL I., the former publishers are resjtou- sibie. For the premiums for VoL-1L, we are. A. IL RUDE, J. L MILLER. Our German paper wants 6 new subscribers for 0 montits. From tehom t Each English jiastor from Hartwiek to Kansas, can obtain them. Hotc much tcill it cost t 75 cents only. How not to get them. Announce it from the pulpit and let it rest there, llote to get them. Ap- point au energetic member of the congregation to canvass thoroughly, or else do it yourself. When f This week. WhyT The Kirchenfrainit must be sustained, and its circulation increased to 2,500. Will you help in tiiis matter? Send the name, or names, immediately, to the Editor of the Lutheran Kirekenfreund, Rich mond, Indiana.—Lutheran Observer. The above practical iiaragraph commends itself to every mind as the way to kill or build up a proper. Many ministers labor under the erroneous idea that to circulate a church paper in their charge, it is necessary that the editor, or an agent, visit his people. Bnt we speak that we know, when we say this is by no means essential. Our experience, from the day we entered upon the ministerial work to the present, confirms our convic tions that the pastor himself can do the work more thoroughly and sue-; cessfully than editor or agent. And that yon may have some idea of the truth of what we say, pardon us for briefly giving yon a little of our exjierience. It was a firm conviction that bad laid hold of our mintl when we entered the ministry, that the cburcli paper was a great auxiliary to our success. We therefore set to work to introduce the Lutheran Obserrcr, tlrcn tlm organ of our Church, into all the families of our charge not receiving it. As a result, we more than doubled its circulation in a short time. We were pursuing the same course in our second field of labor till the war, and the warlike attitude of the Obsercer against tint South compiled ns to cease our efforts to increase its circulation. Then, not as a military, but. ecclesi astical necessity, the Southern Ijtt- theran was issued in Charleston, and a call was made for patronage. In its first number it was estimated that if one-eighth of the actual mem- •bership of the Lutheran Church in the South would support that paper, it would succeed. W/B took the first number into the pulpit and presented its claims, and then, by a systematic visiting through our entire charge, secured one-fourth of our membership as snbsribers. When the Evangelical Lutheran ap peared, we introduced it into every family in our Church actually able to take##. Such, bHfefly, is a history of our work and success in this department of church, enterprise. And what we did, can be done by every pastor who has the affection ami Confidence of his people to an extent tie justify him to remain with them. It only requires a like courae to be followed by like results. And now that, at reducetl rates, we have started out into a new year of existence for the Lutheran Visitor, will not its friends, not only among the ministry, but uniong the laity also, exert themselves to extend ita firm hit ion, and thus both insure its per manency and enlarge its sphere of influence t Get subscribers for six months or twelve,, as you may find it beat, but see that subscribers are secured. Could we leave our fields of labor and travel through the length und breadth of the Church as editors, we know that we could soon swell our list of patrons to quite a resi>eetablc num ber. But this, as pastors, we can no more do than can any other pastor, nor is it, as we have seen, necessary. Only let the pastors and friends of the pais?’ at large take hold of the mutter with a seal com mensurate to its importance, and the work will go on. But do not wait; now is the time to act. Get p-rsons to sultserilte, so ns to Itegin with the new volume. When you read this, do not sigh, and say, “Well, some time, when 1 eau make it convenient, I will see what I can do," hut arise and go to work, und you will relieve us Of all anxiety, ami have {lie ap probation of your own conscience. Let erery subscriber determine to do all lie or she can to send us one netr subscriber, and we will have a number that will put the success of the piper beyond the ]>ossibility of failure. And this is entirely practi cable. Some may lie unable to send ns one new name, bnt many others can send us from one to ttcenty, by suitable exertion. As editors, we lalwr hard to give you a muuir in every way worthy of the Church. How fur we succeed is not for ns to say. One thing we ret* say, that according to the ability God liatli given us, we are lalniriiig to give the Church a paper of which siie need not be ashamed, ami which will be iui efficient co-worker with pastors in building up Christ's king- dom in their midst. Will you not then gladly come to onr help, ami render efficient service in the tray of securing new jmtron age ! We ho|te to lie able to repirt a large list of new sultserilters imme diately. Shall we In- disappointed ! Send on unities ami money to Rev. A. IL Rude, Columbia, H. C. We hope every charge will follow this example. There are three things that we wo«M like every charge to have, nay we will say foor: I. A parsonage. 2. Liberality. 3. A good pastor, k His Kfr insured. The Hfc insurance might porhap* be so arranged, that in cnee of re moval it could be transferred to the successor. lhte the Lutheran and Visitor : “Several articles by u majority iff lUg members of the Potomac Conference.” Rev. write* u* that we would hove au avalanche of manniM-ript; liut the harvest is pisw-d, ami the sum mer drawing near Its close, and still no avalam-hc. We have even called, but ’tis like railing a spirit from the vasty deep j they will not, they do not come. The iM-settiug sin of our brethren is to jnis* resolution*, and for milto Nt mly then James 1: xxiii; 24. ■ ■ New Publications. Dr. Martin Lutiikk'h Housk Poh TIL; or Hermous for the Sundays ami principal Festivals of the Church year. Translated from the German. Yol. I. Columbus, O. Nebulize ami Gas*miiun, I HOD. The translator* and the |Hibli*her* j cm-e. principle. • • • • On what bn*i» then doe* hi* conception of virtue and morality rent ? Apparently on the gratification of the higher feel-; ing* of our imturc, and on the ‘•tandunl of aoeiety.’ That i*’ we must aoy, very weak amt uarruw ground fiir a moralist to take hi* Htaml upm—We agree with the Reviewer. “The higher feelings" of our depraved nature! “Tlte stand uni of aoeiety,” which is conventional, eomi|it, and semnial. The ltftilc is the uuly standard of virtue ami 1 morality. Tlu- Decalogue teaches the whole duty of man. 3. Visitor ; Jacquniout * latter*. 4. Khakspwr mu Glowuries.—We really think that ministers of the gospel might , rim I U-tter and uion- pnititubh- work - to do, tliuii to write glossaries and uote* to Hhaks|teare. If it is right Sliaks|s-are, to *|n-ikI mind, atrengtii, learning, and years in order to understand Itiiu; ran it he wnuigfor sinners alio are neither Reverend* nor FeUuwsj ami Tutors of Trinity College to art amt to sec him acted t A John : Bull'* Alpine Guide.—How far off is a inau from lieaveu when lie ascend tsl •the lopmost |Miint of Mt. Blanc f IL Mrs. Hetnerille in Molecular Nci- j We n*a»l it, ami exclaimed: : impossible to draw out all the fer in the candidate any grave, moral of tatty with one crop, but If you wish theological defect, he may legally to do so a* nearly as you can, use refuse induction; but the usual un Peruvian guano and highly txmeen certainty of British law hangs around tinted, stimulating manures. If you take care that you return to the soil a* much a* yoMlfeaw out, or a little more, there »ill We no exhaustion ; but if you keep on drawing without this right, and it is, therefore, rarely' exercised. Church Reform.—In England tho Evangelical branch of the Estab- linhed Church have started a “Church making equivalent de|*t*it*. of course Reform Assts’iation,” with tbe special you will run out the land as truly a* object of revising the Book of Com- you would y«mr balance at the bank, uion Trayer by the exeishsi of those We believe in getting as big crop as passages which assert tlie doctrine fsther confessor, and of your neighbor f I* t i, us j you propose to enter foe king Heaven f Tlte nun* vent nr excuse their conduct, but the would not hear them.- 'BiUiic* exclaimed, ‘away out of my me “The father confessor. Pi an old priest, who was present, < to observe that the ecclesiastical authorities were aware of this dal, whereupin the bisho]> denied hi* assertion, and at*once suspended the IMsisibk-, but iu keeping the soil good, too." Every word of tin* alsive is true. The result of the exclusive use of guano and other highly con centrated manure*, without either ! of sacramental grace, aiul which lligb-cliurcbmen conKhlcr of funda mental iui|K>rtancc. Baptist.—A com**i*mdent of the Him muter and Chronicle give* an grass or other lasting ameliorator* or ; mxxHUlt of the divisions ill sentiment- of the English Baptists, from which i~l«-ml*d the also tlm *q tlie soil, must Is- sterility. Thk American Farmer. August, lWitl. Baltimore. An excellent nuinls-r. It has, however, one great ilrawliack .this month. Tin- Table of I’olltelits is so. long, we are afraid to publish it; it would take lip too much NpHee. Mend for it to No. 4 Mouth Street, Haiti more. it ap|H-ars that there are four dis tinct class.-s. First, tlie union churches, com’ posed of Baptists uml P.-do-Baptists miffed in the same congregation. Such churelics employ » Baptist prioress, who is defended from „„ old honorable Polish noble family. Tlie bishop ordered nun Barhum Ubryk to be brought into a >4esn <**11, ami there to lxw d reused ( |,„j niimed, which tile lady sup ols-yed vety reluetimtly. When I unhappy nun was led as-ay, she asked anxiously whether she wtrahi lie bnmglit hock to her grave, and when asked why she had been im- prisoned, she answeretl: ‘I have broken the vow of chastity, hut’ punting with a fearfully wild W. Ecclesiastical. THE OLD W0BLD. pastor when the iinuiersionists arc! , . r U. the majority,and rire versa. Hud, ! ,U "’ and “ ^“ Jt to the a |N.stor declared, at the late m«-t I «»’ angel* She ing in IsMukMi, that this plan would i M - v dreiarcd that Itar^rs finally heal all divisions, for Iu- had already immersed one hundred l’cdo Baptist tneuilN-rs of his clinl-ch. are alike dem-rv ing the thanks of all . how wondrous, Im»w vmiwhih, Iio* evangelical Christiana for having mtluite are the works of G.sl! 7. (ndaecd tiiis work «f the great The Ring aud the Book.—Only Reformer in an English dress. It poetry. H. Freeman's Uist.a-y of the supplies a want long felt. We ht-ar | Norman (\>m|ne*t. 9. Foster's life now the sturdy, the gift .si, the faith of laitidor. 10. Tlie Marriage laiw ful servant of Gisl himself d.-elaim of the Emiare. This immls-r is ing in his own simple, plain, and fon-i | vabtalde. ble language, the truth a* it Is iu X HK AMERICAN MKKSKNtIKR.— tlisl. Tlie tniiislatiou is admirably ^ a NlaMitlily News|st|s-r, |Hib tlm Ann-iuali Trnet the |si|s*r 1 N’t ter atlairtiii t« sisters, lady Ubryk was kept in doae eonf siutt* 1H4M by order of the pliyi Baptist incutmrs of bis bt*aUTC ^ W JUMOUBd IRUrf. Ou John Htuivau’* .l.unh was alwava ;j ottl.e in.,*,rtai.ee .dtlmaMe, a iiiihsi ( burrh ; and, at this tinm, Attorney 43eaeral has taken the the 1'clo Baptists are in th<- major in ,un ' 1 Th ‘* fry, ami have a jws.or, who Imp.ires “Ulu-.l-ople know* no botafa. | It ; the infant children. is sLtrtl that the bishop intends to Another class ate tin- <>,«*« M.-uJ j 1 ** " [ Is-rsliip Baptist churches, when- ,a-r ^ S.M.H an- aduiitpsl to memlmrahip ot ,m **• t,,at thr done; it reads stmsttbly, uml n-n n^i ders truthfully uml fuithfnlly into Englisli the German of tlm origtmil. ,| M . j u ,en-sts «.f pra. ti.wl Fur private devotional readings ^. tv h| WH|) it a>M|1(| )h . l|im mm | M i « P5 l? r “Usi. | tie t v eult, if not im|Mwsil.te to find. Its articles are short, iMtf dee;dy inter itiug, and |>ractical. Terms |»t single ettpy, per annum, 25 et*., or fiv e copies for tste dollar. Pul.lisitctl by tlte Anteriean Tna-t S.«-iety, ami i to In- had bv semltag on the name work is well printetl on gmsl |w|n r, a| „, X ,, w Vutk or Ibtlti more. on rainy Sundays, for spiritual in struetiou uml comfort at any time or for reading by an Elder in til absence of the miutster, we know <•( no better lNN.k. Every laitliernn ought to have it; and alt sho are not Iaitheruiis should have it. Tlm ENGLAND. Kpiseopat Churches and So it It for Sale, and knocked down to the High mt Bidder.—Tlte tail idol. Telegraph say s: The |Hirvliaw sy stem is enwoven— shall we beautifully nay like a goldMi thread?—with mauy Itritisii iiistlra lions. For tlm toy at luxury of sen immersed tf they wiah, as it is said ing hi* soxereign, ensign, lmiitenant. two-tkirda of them do. To this class cu|>taiii, ma>>ror betit.-iisut c.4om l, U-hsig mu h pastors as Dr. Istmlels,! an English g.-nth-mun ul«o bus to Dr. Brimk, Baptiste N.n-1, |wy certain sums, regulatml by tlm Browu, &<-. Horae Guards, uml au um-eliain sum Tlie thiril class arc Opeu Com ruled by tin- state of tlm commission iiiuui<*i, with restricted mcmls iship. ! market, where *»<>nUare sold to the like that of Mr. S;mrgeou, who holds • ran *° abnrnd. amt highest bidder, amt “Take, then, tlie that adult immersion is the iu<lis)mn- sabre,” is her Majesty's spirit stirring sable requisite for eliureh meiiilN-r la Baptist rhmvh on a simple Imsis ,iHU ,,f tke uu " in rv “ jnl »** broken vow may have been the etScet of lmr madness. A Vienna correspondent of oi|c of the Is.ndou journals furnisbes the Stowell following in regard to the tn#Mtt that followed tlie n-leas*- of tlie jiob Barbara Ubryk: • ’ “ Tlte knowledge of the aflair be- Liberality. Tlie congregations of Rev. J. Haw kina’charge, Newberry Co., 8. t\, have made him a present of a life |s>liev ill an Insiiranee Companv for $2,000. We had a notion to print this item with capital letters, for it is aiming ns Lutlmrairifehin unexampled evi dence of tlm m-ll-deserved apprecia tion of tlie lulMirs of a faithful minis ter. Not that we have not many devoted pastors, who are instant in season and out of season, who having devoted years and ex|s-mled tlmir means in the preparation for tlm ministry, are now hilsiring faithfully afid self-denyingly for the welfare of souls, bnt we lmve not many congre gations who' love, ami who think enough of their iniuistcr to induce them to snppirt him liberally*, to say nothing of making provisions for his wife and children after he is gone. Yet it is one of the trials of tlm inister, to feel that his strength is departing, that his days are hut few, and that when 1m gts-s to his rest, he must leav e the wife, w ho has endured, toiled, prayed anti labored with him, who cheered ami comforted him often when his heart was heavy and Ins spirit cast down, and the childn Gtxl ^ave liim 7 without any iucami of supi>ort. Tmo, the I<onl ban prom ised to provide, nor does lie fail, but how doe* He ilo it ? By raising tip helpers! He is the husband of the widow, the father of the fatherless ; and He puts it iu the hearts of His stewards to administer unto them. But though we know and believe this, wc know too that ministers often suffer from anxiety for their beloved. Tis natural; it is human ; it is a feeling implanted within us, and it is the duty of every Christian man to provide—especially for those of his own house. “If any provide not, he hath denied the faith, und is worse than au infidel.” 1 Tim. v: 8. How cheering, lioxv relieving to the minister to have the assurance that his family will not be loft en tirely dependent. What a load it removes from his heart. It renews bis strength, it inspires new life in his ministrations; it enlarges his affections tor those who show by deed how’ well they love him. Brother Hawkins’ p-ople have done well. They already have the reward in tlie blessed consciousness of not having forgotten, nor neglected him who labors among them in word and in doctrine, and the Lord has still greater reward in store for them. We need not say : May the Isxrd bless them f We say authoritatively; Bless them, 0 Lord, anil sanctify tbm wholly! neatly bouud, aud furnished witli an admirable |N.rtrait of Luther. Price: Mingle copy, #1-50; with pwtage, #1.75. To assist in tlie distribution of this valuable volume of aertnous, we wilt rweive order* for it. Life and Deeds of Dr. Martin Luther. By Rev. Herman Ki»k. Translated from tin- German liy Rev. Prof. M. l*>y. Second Edi The New Euleith’ Mauazixk, for August, is not a whit hehimt, in interest apd value, any of it* pnileivasor*. It i* Btnr combined j with th»’ Isiml We lsive; n nmiitldx piiiilisinsl for sometime at t'harlotte. North < 'andinn, by the able uml s|Hrite»l editor, Gen. I>. II. Hitt, j abuse nmtinnatm- with tlie Maga rim- in its new fonu is a sufficient tion. J A. Hrlmlar, Cohmdsis, Knarau t (V that H witl hr trar in its O ilo, *pirit iiimI to tlw* South. We are ghul to sis- that this little Tl.r article on .sir Southern <’olteg.-s work has reached u m-coml edition, b one of <b-n> i^errwt. a< this time. It deserve* it We Imp- to see .me n Hotfrliern mind. Tln-re is or more copies of it in every Bumlay in t | liM nnmtlil.x a happf'H-tiding .ff Mi-IkniI which "e visit. It lias ui (he entertaining' iuhI iustmetive, rt-mly tN-eu n.ai.ssl in tin- Lntheran w | lU - h niilk „ j, a UlMt „ r traitor. Price. Hingte <’oji\, <*• ets.; Imth the ywxng amt old. We Ih>|h' witli I«-stage, lift eta. We will will, a* it deserve* to do, take t>H- receive onlers for tiiis also. plate of Ilarja-r on every <s-ntn- The numsmvE IKn-triskh of table ia tlm floMth. publlshe-l at M the Different Vmnux 4’o.x LningtoNi Ht., Baltimore, Msrvtaml. ... ,, „ ,, ,, , The MrertiER * Mamazine, (*.r Word of God. By G. Grain-!. ... ,, „ .... , . , / ’ August, i* more than usually inter D. 1>. Translated fr.Mii the Get ‘ . ... „ ... ... .. .eating amt lustnu-tive. The follow- man by Rev. D. A. Martens Columbus, Ohio, URig. Not long ago we bad during a conversation with a Lutheran minis ter or«-MMi<m to refer to this work, of which we have had a German address to the Irnyer w ho has most money in his |mrw. Then we all ktiow that there ia a tariff fur seats in the House of t'otutnons; some IsmHighs “rale high,” other* are “firm," while |Nin-linsalde. • • • I jut of all kinils of British |Hirebas>* none inns, neeui so strange to a foreign idim-rver as the sate of advowsoiis in the Englisli t'hun-h. rVutunc* lmve ehi|*«s| simv tlie Apisth-* wen- m-.it forth to imuch. ami tin-early ideal of the <'liristiau priest amt missionaries haw tss-n ofren travestasl, manetitm-s terrildy. some time* <s«irm-ly, by wn-ktsl or Worldly wen. Neveritn-h-ss, in all rliuretie* the old stamlanl is avowed. People do still tssisiih-r that a minister of *bi|>, Imt that att ( liristiau Is-lievers nuiy Is- invited to the (shiiIiiuiihhi. TIh- fourth Hr**, are Strict f.mi- nniuiisi It.iptists, who exclude the ituiiiituenssl IsMli from the Isa-d's talde aud from nietnlN-rahip. Tlie “hard sliells" all Is-haig to this class, and a nsisideralde ii.iiulN-r of others; but tliey are . undeixtood to Is- a minority of tlie deiMinititati.Mt. The op-u inenitN-rship men, such ns l-’tn dels amt Brock, are cviih-utly tlie leaden, of the Englisli Ilupt is!*. Often Communion.—On a late Sun day, l*n»f. Park, of Ambiver, tiring iu tlie Rev. Mr. Sjmrgcoii’a eongn-- giitiou. the fact Invhuk- known to sensation tlinaigtiout the town. On Friday morning, Im* dnsls of jssiple bail assi-udiled iidfore the eonveiit, smashed all tlie kiu- dows, ami crying ‘Away with the nuns T had already broken into the in terior. w hen a body of soldier* arrived | in time to protect them. On S;tt unlay the same thing was rep-ated, in ifiite <sf a<{jurari«msof the istjs-r*lo lb,- pie to w ait calmly. By the eveifing, two detachitients of soldiers laid |era «-:i!ted out—for the mob, which had swelled to -i.tSMI ]H*oplc, after doing what inure mischief it could to thj- GarmHite nentri, went off to attack that of tlie Jesuits ami that of; the Franciscans. It was a critical hour for the whole monastic onlers iff rcligioti is a man that Itolils himself mlministnfri.m iff the Is.nl’s Sups-r. , <Y*cow. Tlie Jesuit rei-tor via* m- tlufr drrgyam, wm» insisted nism ... . .. . , J... ,. ,. .... , , < snltisl. many Jesuits wounded with Ins takilo? luirt with lion in tin- ' . . .. stones, and every |kuu- of glass in tlie ing is its list of articles : The Marietta Maternal Asms-ialum; Early <’onversion ; All Angel's Visit; Men tal and Moral Qualities Transuiissa 1>U* fn un Parents to Chili Iren; A Dn-ntn of Heaven; Fault Finding; copy for several year*. “ Why.” cx s,..,. Mothers; Non Confo.mity ; lb claimed he, -an- sueli work* ll0 * Parents; Extract from a Iss-tun-on translated in English t It is »!>•’ I'ommon Sense; tattle Brownie; very thing wo want." We agnssl Hints to Ministers; Talking to lattlc perfectly, ami are, tl.erfore, gla.l to Kl ,, k „ ; t,,.. |»^„ e Mother and her leant from one <ff our German ex f-hUdren; Marx's Prayer; A NolJe clmngi-s that it is to lie had in an Itov . Woman's Education. Manv English dress. No minister'* library <>f aUlV(> art i,4es an- of rare ex can aflortl to In- without it. It give* . im | tom-hing iN-nutv. Ihih the distinctive doctrine*, together ludnsl nusithlv at $1-50 ;ier annnm. witli their refutation from tlie lai Ad(1 iVKs The Mother's Magazine, No. tIiituii stand point, of the Bomish, ihM-kman Htreel. New York. Greek, Reformed, iiielnding tln- Kpisi-opul, Presbyterian and Free AMKRII’AN ACIRII l l.Tt R1RT. Atl- {'hurelies; Aniieiiians, Hneiniaiis. llfist, 18t®. New York. Unitarian, Menonites, Baptist, Qua Instructive, entertaining, and a ker, Swedentxwgiaii, Inmigite, Mor safe and reliable advhKr. We give inon, Hoffnianite, Moravian and two item* which an* worth many United CbarchN. It is a complete years sul»*.riptioii to tla- wise: armory of offensive and defensive ’Quack doctors, Imwcver, stilt find weapms stored up iu most excellent plenty of fools to eore of some real order for Evangelical Christians. imaginary dlrcarc, and all we can I’riei-: Mingle copy, according to HJ >.' for sueli is, Ih-wiio reads the binding, 25 or :«» ets; with pistage, Agriculturist and tlien employs an 33 or 38 eta. Orders may also be advertising ‘Doctor,’ rends it to sent its for tiiis. very tittle purpose. AH slioukl re The Westminster Review, .Inly, memWthat every? owe calling him 1809. Ix-onnnl Scott, New York. ‘lbs-tor,’ and warranting cures. Contents: or presenting certificates, is a quack, ami has no professional standing whatever with his brother doctors, or eimimissiiMieil by Ibvine authority to invarli the Gosp-I and administer the rites of the Christian Clinreh. Fins- to face with tiiis stilt pvtent ls-bef, we liave the extraordinary fact that tin- sm-resl right is ojs-nly offenst fi«r sale; that the greatest puldu an amt siuner in IIm- City of Loodna may I my tla- next right of presintati'Hi to a living, ami may exi-reisr tin- piwer of appHntment. His UHMM-y may have tsen miuh- in any of the vile ways within tin- wide iNMimlury of imr hsme, elastic law ; Imt tin- gold dm-* not smell, ami he introducing him to the congregation as liis “vciMTaldc and ls-hivcd friend.” Tiiis w as more lumorable to Mr. S;mr- geon tlian tlie standing claim to him as a regular itaptist is to those in this ton*fry, w Im. w hilt- tliey pulilbh his sermons weekly, and plume them- selves deiioiiiiuatioiiidly upm the great lame, woiilil nisessarily treat monastic house was broken to pieces. For tliesi- manifestations of their imlignatkm, an immense numls-r of psiple have ts-en arrested, bnt a large p-titiou lias lieen sent up to the Town Connefl to remove tlie Jesuit* and Carmelites out of Cracow. “Far into .Sunday morning, the tlis- turlaui.x-s were still going on. Later .. , ,, , , , , in the day, the I-adv Stip-rior and them as they do Howanl Maleomle . ~T . . , . . ,, ... , f . her assistant were taken under a etllMX y, it t I.J military csnirt to be kejrf ui want, Craminond 11 M lx ’ vrsTRI \ " hi onler to ap;ieaae the ;>eopk‘. 18ol The C-acow Concent ^ sti11 I wtro1 tht “ of a Sun after a lengthy Coutim meat./ purchases tin- right of plaeing at one —Tlie latest Euritp-aii ]ni|s‘rs eoutain of GinI's altars any creature of his w hat app-ars to Is* rather loose dr own—p-rliais. some clerical compm tails of tlie recent release of the nnn ion of his festive hour*, p-rliaps some at Cracow*, in Polish Austria, iu coq-j silly or innately Vieions relative of iicctum with which, it will beremem-j j the house. Bat, independently of ls-red, there were tuinnJts and exeit- tliis fnspiently dejdorable result, tlie ing demonstrations, as lately reputed op-n sale is surely aimsig tlie grossest in flhe Atlantic cable (Uapatchca. scandals of «*nr day. From tlu-*e repirts it is learned that arrested, tried convicted, and iinpns Tlie a net u.neer endeavors to show the name of the nun was Barbara oned for “uttering doctrines subver- off the multifari,sis “Httraetions” of CUryk, and the extraordinary state- s ‘ vt * °f lmblie order. The minister tlie living, and those “attractions” incut is made that idle had Is-t-u public worship lias notified the are the very n-vrns* of such as would incarcerated twenty-<Hie years, tho’ J governors of tlie proviiK-es, that Is* siippassl to inftm-uec a /.calous or the sec hi lit* Imply- also that she is | 'I hell priests are* COllfilUHl by l belt* j a religious man. We are told that Vnfettered Austria.—Hie govern- inent of Austria seems determined to maintain its indep'iuleuee of the' pipal domination, and to enforce the laws which platv priests ami laymen on an ri|iial footing. Bishop Linz, a prominent ecclesiastic, having dared to resist these -godtess laws,” a» tlie court of Rome styles theju, has been 1. Indian {tailway Reform. 2. ' ply this to the “Emperor's Balm," the “King’s Panacea," the “Qneen’s Kn- " ami all the rest of the Tlie Four Ancient Books of Wales. P, . i-b, -a’cs*.i. Patentees, and the public. 5. Mr. Mills’Analysis of the Mind. 0 Pros-,. , titntion in Relation to the National I 0 .' 1111 "*- ,, . ,,, - . lugh-titlcrt nostrums. “ The larger Health. Contemporary Literature. * J the crop* yon take from the land, the The Edinburo Review, .Inly, 1 *4410. quicker it will run out. If you have Ismnard Scott, New York. Con- a credit at the bank for $10,000 and tents: ; want to use the money now, wilt you 1. The unpublished works of Guic draw- it out a few hundred dollars at ciardini. 2. Is-cky’s History of Kn- »time t No. You make a check l'op-un Morals.—A calm and can- for the whole amount at once, and did review, doing full justice to the use the money. The soil is a bank work, without either approving of you have a credit there which con it* faults. “Mr. I^eky rejects the sista of all the immediately available law of utility as an unerring test of plant-food in it, without reference to morality. He does not adopt the whether it was formed there or yon dogmatic theory based on a religious pnt it in. A crop is a check. It is the souls to In- waved are few, that the “duties nre light,” that the “so ciety" aud even the “hunting" is good. Hie “rectory anti vicarage of West- borough, with that of Dry Dodding- tuo,” wen- tints praised at an auction mart on Tuesday last ; Imt the biddings were slack. Intending purchasers were told that one hun dred pounds sterling a year would |tay a curate to discharge tlie duties, leaving six hundred piunds a year of surplus for the rector; while the present reetor was seventy-three, and therefore must soon die; still the bidders pinned, and the “property* wns withdrawn. Hiese shameful scenes are not rare ; they occur in the metropJis at least once a week, and the “religious," nr |ierhai>s we ought to say the clerical journals, abound with the latest reports from the market of souls. The origin of this gross evil is explainable enough, and the theory in not half so bail as the practice itself. Strictly speaking, the auc tioneer does not sell tlie right to minister at the altar in a particular parish ; he simply sells the “right to the next presentation ; that is, the purchaser may “present" to the bishop an ordnined clergyman of the Uluirelt of England for induction into the living. If the bishop discovers infrane. AU the reports appear with l,iHl *'T )s - t!l <‘ <*»&>!»«*» are only valid more or less coloring. A Vienna 80 far as tl '<' condemned priest vol- pap-r furnishes the following ac count “On Hiesday, the 20th nit., au uutarily submits to them. MISCELLANEOUS! Resisting Ecclesiastical Interference. nuns, one of the order, named Barba ra Ubryk, had been forcibly kept in close confinement in n dark cell for twenty- one years. Hie vice-president of tlie Criminal Court, Ritter Von Antonie- wicz, immediately laid this informal tion before a judge of enquiry, w-lin, in company with the public prosecu tor, repaired t6 the Bishop Von Gal- ecki, w ith the request to iiermit them to enter the convent, which was granted. A judge visited the con vent and found in a cell a half-naked, half-insane woman, who, at the utv accustomed view of light, the outer world, and human beings, folded her hands and inqilored : ‘I am hungry, have pity on me; give me meat (Jteisck) and I shall be obedient.’ There wus very little in the cell The judge instantly ordered the uuu Bishop Galeeki. The bishop was deeply moved, and, turning to the assembled nuns, he vehemently re preached them for their inhumanity. ‘Is tiiis,’ he said, ‘what you call love to be clothed, anti went himself fdU entertainment, exerting themselveS to make it as agreeable as possible- When they sat down to the table, the oldest missionary was called in to qsk a blessing, which he did, find iu Chinese, and then on English- I anonymous letter, in a woman’s hand- —Bavaria, which has lieen one of writing, reached the Criminal Court the most submissive countries iu at Cracow, to the effect that in the Etirop* to the Pope, and whose convent of the Carmelite liare-footed prime minister is brother to one of the Romish cardinals,-- lias invited the Catholic governments of Europe to a conference, for the sake iff organizing resistance to the en croachments on the rights of secular governments, which it is exps’tcd will In- Decreed liy the coming (Ecu menical council called by Pop Pius. Several of tlte governments appear disposed to join; others prefer to decide as to their action after the council has issued its decrees. Changing Sentiment.—The Chinese authorities have evidently become alarmed at the exsitement against Christian missionaries, and are seek ing to make amends for the indigni ties and outrages inflicted upon them. Tlte- officers in charge of foreign affairs at Foochow invited all the missionaries there to a ptblie /* fide con tent of'tlie „f the pRI’- inferred firm thought min' m,-ro*>* Hie A had general o«n< to whom th Extended- rite* of b " well as del- Rea veil- A* Bide** p-rorofR:'"' an uneNp* t. a l#4islt«* tic the Russo <! has pre**-r" the Great. »M*t*r n<"-K give number ttrty ditfieult for their sul vision i* to tenaiMN’ of to In giv* and distriln ulation and pipmlation. Firmly r new queen have heart i cejrted th« has resisted . to •edoo- l give her sat Hiey Slice* i* anion fin I« fit. sent to la* of a new prejiaratii however, into the the, tribnte eign iu a* ; k; nal owners ings. inline Tlm pries i - and eveft. aug«‘r of l*i pipal relig rejdying. * treaty that you," slid ! Kot IF" MtUMlwieb I patremuge i formed < contrary to ffiinKionaty into the ineiiilH’rsli \ a letter t- diRcontinn desiring a scut them, pirt. N An fuiiio Norwegiai added lsn; the LuSir! den ahum have conn them are L that sixty at once in of these s -The fou Fort AVay in estabbs] which is t< sick of e\ tty’. A sii pwrehast<i northern p diate step suitable. In Rev. L. Iffoved in euteru{H: English J Chambers P The lit Tlieologie; Monday. Great M burg will pitalities < Hie Ann sioneis t. meet in OetolN-f; . seiublics.. willWn ; KHh of N The U Renefioen bh report $685,000 of the Be year. Tli nnmlier i in the Mi Detluctiuj uUowale iind for s poor to f and omitt India, the eommunii average <> year for i Tuite six to meet tk Bourils.' - <>f tin foreign '2 Missions $43,000 i Church -1 abled M FreetlRu. r'- r I : ;\'-