The New York Herald Newspaper, May 9, 1845, Page 7

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twenty: Anniversary of the American Large as is always the attendance at the anniver >of this important Society, an increased au- 1 thoes of former years, attended the annual yesterday. This took place at 100’clock, i ‘Cabernacle,which became entirely fall rol msnates previous to the time of com- coe n@. Ina short time after the business began, the platform and every commodious ments of men groping in the dark; whereas, ones of * foi more ute and benighted in foreign coun- in the fierce cry of their oppressors. This it should ruggle; be—for it is infinitely more desirable to be the dispensers male Moral Reform Society. by all the circumstances of . red volume peed enlighten the dark |, more | tries. rm cong Sys 1 7 ~ im, mercies, than the executioners of his ; : our capitalists, and tell him that t! i f wealth The Rev. Mr. Bevopr neat addressed the | @ rep arenand. Mr, Winenta of Canada, follorced: io} 20 cs taos present tothem: Chiistionite te ieee encg | ‘Ehie society suet on Wednesday evening to cele- | ‘ndicates the pansssign. ‘of.-virtue and’ intelligence, ppeatinng, pnikgropaped the follow resolution, viz : at Popery, Catholicity, popi influ in Montre- | and incomparable loveliness—refer them to their own pro- | brate the anniversary of the eleventh year of their | @md_ that "poverty the badg and a jar eof vice of the State, as well | al, @ai the Virgin and went on to say¥— } s—lay before them the overwhelmi: roofs. that ¢ 2 ignorance, and will thi ou ty the Church are promoted by a free and wide ‘ircula-| If’ the. Bible. was” g ety dsc, Wf wero. glo: | Memon hay elreuly come, and that he tea made that fexistence. A large number of amiable, pious look- he dont elie it. or he. know tion of the Scriptures among all classes. rious thing. Thi ject in which I feel a groat deal | atonement for sin which is contemplated in their sacri- | ing ladies and enerable, vworthy men were in at- | Pauperism is one’ of our » i In commenting on this revolution, the gentleman ob-| of interest. It deserves the attention of e: ‘h- | fices. Let us show them in our whole deportment, the The 7 wi icate i served that there wore two propositions involved in it, | minded man. But I must conclude. I feel | am in. the | power of tl:e Gospel upon our hearts, and like the Good | tendance. ‘Thé meeting was opened with prayer by | ments of industry,and then he will work out a gre and one of which, viz.:that the interests of the State were | midst of Anglo-Saxondom. 1 belleve all that ts. great, | Bamaritan, pour oll and wine into thelr wounded-bosoms. | the Rev. N. Bangs, D.D. After the singing of an | tion. There are some who cry education—edueation; best promoted by a free diffusion of the Bible, though not | good and glorious is in that book ; and I cannot better | Heving done these things, let us await with prayerful, | 4). 4 isa mocking cry. A man cannot carry his spiritual exist perhaps 40 universal y received as the latter clause of | express the aspirations of my own, heart, than in the lan. | yet confident affance’ in the Word of God, the long de: | °de, composed for the occasion by the choir, the | ence slong With iis material; We eannot educate while he eo) “q+g he A i / i ir spi wurrection | tre : ad—l ch it appe: il long s 4 Die as the first. That it was Pababelih ck ee wat | sueho ooctethe Yesetenet (eeres ap da.tho post. of Ae and glorious result of their spiritual re ion | treasurer’s report was read—by which it appeared | has to toil loi ys and nights for a bare subsistence. 2. tao i i 5 cnaiaie eat “shi F The spirit of God moving among men, is creating a spirit , use, became inconveniently thronged, to say, was notorious. Why, he had heard it as-| «Come, thom, and to th. "An anthem was then sung by the choir, after | ‘M ciety was in a flourishing condition. of brotherly Kindnese. We see'it in the variouetumatver iy \vorable position of the reporter’s table, | serted in the legislative halls of this State, that if the Bi SE Ey aeltar prea tr ot fra which the Rev. Mr. Latty, Domestic Secretary of | The amount of cash received for the finaneial saries and conventions which meet this week in our city, jui@ed a \(svas on the platform, in the rear of the | ble was introduced there, so might the works of Tom y ¢ earth, + ae tehows tle- | , Yea" ending April 30th, 1845, was........ 06 | all having, according to the light they possess, the promo- 'y ‘ «| Paine be also introduced to’ advocate any partion a ‘Thou who alone art worthy. the Society, read letters from the following gen le- | Amount expended for pablishing, editore and Sow of tae’ hell Bolae oftheir iellow won nee, Chane peakers, rendered what was said frequently inaudi-| cipic, ‘Those who doubt the impostenselot the sireaie, een med men: Dr, Pitman, Dr. J, P. Durbin of Carlisle, |“ lecturers’ salary, Kc.,was....;...++++++ 6325 01 | then proceeded to state that he went with the association. ble. ___ | tion of the Bible to the State, do uot discriminate between | Anniversary of the American Society for Me~| Rev. Willis Lord of Philadelphia, Dr. Skinner, a ———— | heart’ and hand, in the distribution of the public lands The services began in the usual form with sing- ne, pible and ecclesiastical authority, and think the Bible| Morating the Condition of the Jews—Ad- ta piper fen ag tan —_ se Leaving a balance on hand of............- $495 06 among the people, and gave his views of what « town- 1 os led sol ri ; il i A 3 is i 4 udev and ading the eras, bythe Rev | lat iler heheh Peel iNet | dren of” Le aeliedoler rata ie Setar 'e Roca and iether |The annul ror of the Boar of Managers was| Hp oul ef ih tesa shld acted an : ; p dy t pas : their object. In the first place, every th at the reporters? table, owing aswell to the low voice | ROUld dictate to both, “He felt embarrassed at speaking This society celebrated its anniversary last even- | not being able, from a variety of circumstances to attend | now read by Captain Eaton, of which we give an| shoul bem conten, that is t0 ay, balong to the tows, before those wh ; in| the anniversary. : ds, di in which he addressed the assembly as to the bad | he disliked talking ME eters emia ie eased ing, May 8th, at the Reformed Dutch Church, in | “Mr Line tien read an abstract of the annual report of | @bstract. i ae iat beraeed eset atte tonsiies of position of the table. i F th advocating the distribution of the Bible freely | Broome street. ‘The exercises of the evening were ie Society, by which it appeared that the Society for The labors of the past year have been attended | crops, &¢, and who should oceupy them. The products coodings afi nosiety,alladed tn feeling terme to | meres that” ha’ ate: PrPustons, were, #9, _ at; | commenced with an appropriate prayer by Dr. Mo- | NeRtncds "nat iney have sow e mictonsy perma | Witt increased prosperity and encouragement ; | of the conimon Industry to be divided, and given to sec the lamented demise of the Rev. Dr. nor, and | He would ask, what is the first. interest of the | Carty of Goshen. ently stationed in Baltimore, whose labors have been | and the Board would ascribe praise to God, to | [f ence, ke. &e. All to have an equal chance of John Pintard, L.L. D., both of whom had acted in | State, to which we always look, when doubt ordanger| Dr, Muutepover then delivered ina very impres- | 2>undantly blessed ; and that they have invited a dis- | whom alone it belongs. The Board has not as | obtaining a sound moral and intellectual educa- the capacity of Secretaries of the Society. Seventy threaten or assail us? it not our civil liberty, whieh, Ty Unpres- | tinguished gentleman, well known in Europe and this siive manner, Howit i i ‘ roe Bap straitened in their efforts. 0; tion, Every man to have a right to claim and his new auailitey sosteties have bern. altted: ihe maior, next to the salvation of our souls,was most hi ly prized, jive the following address, which was lis- | country for his labors of love, to assist the Society in its | heretofore been forts. Once the | Claim granied to the position in society which he fy ol whish ave ena enpiatine ctoen hulied and was it not that we suost zealously gu in de- | tened to with deep interest by the congregation. ot to bring the children of Israel into the fold of | press scarce noticed the society, only to vilify; now cosarves, and for which he is fitted—the township to : inty soci 3 fence of w PS Christ. + sasie fancy sey hey seventy-five new life directors and members had | first Slemexitin clvil life was thet ener sind aan cae aE opi i et The Rev. Mr. Dr Wirt then moved, that the abstract | Many secular and religious journals exert an exten. | thing is eo menkeet pat the suesten 7 fs ships—in short, to be th hs But th estion been added also. In the course of the year, there | individual rights, which were so dear. Next to civil| _Presuming that a summary view of Modera Judaism | be accepted and printed. Itis important, he said, that in- | sive influence in behalf of purity. The Advocate of arises; "what. shell wer do Reve nowt Bice” Ohewdiu have been issued 429,092 bibles and testaments from | liberty followed’ the command of “Do unto others as | Will not be Cpl te ‘on this occasion, I venture to | formation be circulated among the community, in order | )foral Reform has been sustained as usual—has had | then promised his allegiance to the Industrial Co 8 the denpitory nt including the pinted atthe exc] 2g nuit don 5 Ande Mba alr we re | Rowe Uo oth, os nd nwo |r eat eet, wean | anaverape ciunton olwometwevehouand copie | he mel, Dat ued, « Neon Conga wo ° ‘ A rethren, which was anot ing pro- ss it. Juda: i Y de; ‘ by not suffice ; w it tate, County and Towns! Pipe oon the in ne the nee mecedngs and tectionand suppert of the community, ‘The Bible was derives its name from Judah. which on the separation of | only in this country but in Europe, is public attention be- | Per number. | Seventy-three thousand Nine case cacti, tn tes: Ae ‘ of the So- 1 Industrial Councils, in addition, wh i trade the emblem of civil liberty, Logisiators and. Judges | the tribes, included that of Benjamin, and after the capti- | ing directed to the condition of the Jewish people. ‘The | have been published during the year. should be fully and faithfully represented. He edvised making an ¢ since the beginning have studied it most deeply, and also the Executi . | vity of Babylon, was indiscriminately applied to the | Scottish and English Churchos have done much to pro- | of the “ Walks of Usefuiness” have beon published. | the trades to organize, and combine their influence, and ciety’s abort: ft (013,352 copies of the word. These | er, and in ite pogerthey had learnt and practised Bdclity whole house of lurael—they were also called Hebrews, | mote the advancement of the Saviour’s kingdom among | The Board regard it aa highly important to the ele- | also have such an arrangement a1 to know the position books have gone into every State and territory of the | without compromise, and justice tempered with mercy. | from Heber one of the progenitors of Abraham. The | the descendants of Israel ;and he rejoiced to say, that in | vation of female character that the energies of woman | which every man, woman and child connected with the Union and Canada, Texas, West India Islands, | He would refer them back to Greece, whioh presented | Tise of this people must be dated from the call of God to | a political point of view, their condition was much | should be fully developed, and think that thousands | trades, occupied. He proceeded to suggest » plan fora Mexico, Brazil, Buenos Ayres and Greece. Fifteen | the finest model in the history of the world of a govern. | the Father of the faithful. It was not however, till the | improved. In Turk lestine, and other countries, | of the sex might be saved, if some of the avenues of | labor exchange, and advised a system of mutual hundred modern Greek new testaments, and ment, and which had prospered for a while. Atleast it | Siving of the law at Sinai, that that formal dispensation | they are gradually assuming a position which will re- | business now closed to them, suchasclerkships in re- | ance and life insurance, which were received very fa- worth ofother books have be d to th =n had in it the elements fof prosperity, which, if they had | Ws committed to his posterity, which was thereafter to | lieve them from the persecutions to which they hi tail dust ee hee d to th O vorably by the audience. Mr. Channing then said, that worth of fave been granted to the Bap- | heen rightly cemented, would have gone on increasing. | distinguish them from all other nations of the earth.— | been subjected ; and he believed the time was not far dis. | ttl dry goods stores, &c., be opened tothem. Overa | there had been, in most of the movements, too tist mission there. A new bourgeoise bible, a new | Had her oracles been’ the sure Passing by their ancient history, which is recorded in the | tant when the prophecies will be fulfilled, in the restora. | thousand dollars haye been received from book sales, | much of the bitter poison from the tooth of the old’ ser- tl record of the word of ing by poiso: French and a i ape Testament have been. pub- | God, instead of the worthless aspirations of their juggling | Old Testament, and in the writings of Josephus, I will | tion of the Jews to the fone land, where they will | and a balance remains in the treasury. Early inthe | pent. All this must be eradicated, for it did no good ; hshed, and a Bible in raised letters for the blind is | idols, she would have been preserved free, but the want | only observe, that from the destruction of Jerusalem by | worship in the beautiful Church which they shall build | summer the city authorities were petitioned to place | jt was a truth that every one would recogni: ‘fi going to press, to which the Massachusetts Bible | ofit proved her overthrow. There was another period he | Titus inthe year 70, they haye been without acommon | to the true Messiah. matrons in the city prison and on Blackwell’s Island, | man ever benefitted his brother without reaping his re- Society es penta oc Ava hundred dollars, and would reler tone illustrative of the immense ower of Speers ena sora pr ov prophet, ar any Ose Gee Rev. Dr. Jonxs then submitted the following reso- | which Raley oy na agreat improvement in the i wand jacd the reverse was equally Pe ayer ae pirit Geor: uglass, Esa. ; | the Bible to the State at e, viz.: during what have | mon leader, or p i rrible pre ar’ ‘ mates has taken place in consequence. The it should actuate the members of the association in Pegree Pouglase, aq. of Long Jsland, 1a like sum.| boon called the dark agesjand where ip tho ifatory of tne | tions concerning them in Deut. 7,28, have for ages been | Mtesolved, ‘That the word and the Providence of God Tmlesionary hes: heck COntinaset atte front dhe ne. | theirs movement, should be thet of anivereal brotherhood blind 1 upply world could they find a period so fraught with tyranny, | literallyand fearfully fulfilled. Hence the language of Bos- | eoncur to enforce the claims of Israel on the tenderest , that fifteem batunrdned’and ft ng. | 8nd love, or sonship to Almighty God. (Great applause.) 16 blind! ati aiiaae eypenaes being in five quarto | 9s these dark ages. ‘Their situation was to be attributed have ye done, O ungrateful men,” exclaims | sympathies of the Church, and especially calls for the } Port it appears that titeen hundred an biog ves | "Mr. Tras then suggested that Mr. Owen, who was volumes and printe jon on one side. entirely t6 thelr want of knowledge of the Bible, as was in every pounter, and under rary Benes, renewed and united efforts of American christians in ee and ae visited—eleven susan eight hun- | present, be invited to address the Convention. He said Seventeen agents have been employed by the so- | prove: ods. Why, then, has God who | this great and good cause. red and eighty-nine papers—also, seventy-seven | that the Reformers, and the Fourierites, and others, had L agen ut by the immediate action and spread of ii j- | still ye serve not strange ‘ \ ety, of which nine have been in that capacity for gence consequent. on the Reformation and the. “foe: chosa you forgotten you ! Where are his’ ancient mer | He said. in’ support of the resolution that the thousand two hundred and fifty-six pages of tracts | been represented, and their doctrines to some extent ex 1e whole, and eight for part of the year. The | trines promulgated by Luther, which he had learnt | cies? What crine—what atrocity more heinous than | time had come when the sympathy of the American | distributed. plained, and he thought it was but fair that they should resent number is fourteen, and are only sent where | from his Bible, No sooner did the people receive | idolatry, has brought on you a punishment that even | people was deeply enlisted in behalf of the op-| ‘The Rev. Mr. J. Prttimone, from Oneida county, said: | now have a chance. aeie services are indispensible. ‘The ier S. H.| the word of God than they decane’ free and | Your repeated idolatries did not bring upon you? Ye | pressed children of Israel. He then went on f | ‘That eminont divine and faithful servant of God, Row | Mn. Evans stated that he would very gladly listen to Calhoun has closed his agency in the Levant and | tained their civil liberty asa privilege, We ourselyos | are silent! Ye see not what makes your God so inexora- | enquire into the best means of carrying out the objects | land Hill, said, that three ingredients constituted a good | Mr. Owen, but Mr. Collins, of Skeneatelas, who was pre- started eninhraneieaee eet ff Leb, ‘Dan fre a monument of the power of the Bible to promote | able! Then recollect the words of your Fathers—'‘Let | of the society. He believed that the best means was ech—that it should be pithy, sweet, and short—and | sent, had been invited to address the meetit iF he varied f ry on Mount ‘eoanon. . During | tiberty. Our pilgrim fathers had they not been possersed | his blood be on us and on our children, we will have no | the simple preaching of Christ, and him crucified— | that as he often failed in ihe two former, he was careful | | Mr. Brisnanx remarked in reply to the age of the period of the labors of this bacoieinan in, those | of this treasure, would never have come out here and | other king than Cesar.’ Beitso. The Messiah shall not | He had found this in the course of his ministerial | to observe the latter. I shall imitate his exam He | Mr. Timms, that he was no Fourierite; he repudiated the countries where the word of God was first given— | reared our temple of liberty. He would refe | be your king—continue slaves of Casar—slaves of the | experience the most effectual method of converting | then offered a resolution, asking the co-operation of all | name, he was an advocate of universal unity, and came @ y: refer to two oc: y! : A ing y 60,000 Bibles and Testaments have been circulated. | currences, viz: our own revolution in 1776, and that which | 80Vereigns of the earth, ’till the church shall be filled | souls to God, and he had no doubt, that with the divine | “friends of moral purity,” and expressed thanks and gra- | to the convention as a man, earnestly desirous of advan- ‘The total receipts from all sources are $166,652 ; | followed in France, at alater period. Our revolution of 76 | With the Gentiles—then only shall Israel be saved.”— | blessing, it would produce the same result with the Jew | titude to God for the success of the Society. The report | cing the cause of humanity, and not as the representa- being an increase of $12,212 over the preceding | originated in ples taught from the Bible. Our | Whilst we reverence the hecies which predict these | as with the Gentile. There was a simple energy in the | assures us that the cause ining in the public favor— | tive and exponent of any particular doctrine or princi- year. All this has been expended. Fae debt leaders Rardied. that book and‘it ve them confidence in | calamitous events, and mtly adore in their fulfilment | story of the babe of Bethlehem, and in the doctrine of | much of the opposition against us, we believe in c! ty, | ple. veer. ROwnee > BAE.S. GeO, 0 ing out into battle, and God .| the inscrutible Providence of God, yet it is but due to | grace through faith, which would enforce conviction — | has been owing to a misconception of our plans. fe $11,000 for d other liabili has bi going 5 ad manifested his pre: y Ei J Pt Pl sf ‘or papers and other liabilities has been cen- | gence with the leaders of our hosts, by conducting them | them to state, that they have suffered more at the hands of | He also believed that the publication of judiciously se- | that the press has become more favorable. We have | man, and he would have used the word Phalanxarian,only tracted. eter the Paine items of expenditure | to victory. ‘The Bible to us in tha truggle was like the inte rapacity and false zeal, than for any | lected tracts by the Society, would be a powerful means, | been held up by the press as subjects of malediction; but | he did’nt suppose he would be understood. «@s one, of $13,792 87 for publishing the Scriptures | ark of the covenant. Contrast our struggle with that of | crimes by committed against the welfare of society. | with the blessing of God, in bringing the descendants of | the Lord has answered our prayer, and its fulfilment now | Mr. Cou.ixs was then called for by the meeting, and in abroad—in France, Turkey, Switzerland, Syria, | the French in their revolution; they took what they call- | A confession of faith was drawn up by Maimonides, one | Israel to acknowledge the Saviour all sufficient— | comes as t odour to us, The ministry are becom- | the course of his remarks, which were general in their Persia, Northern India, and the Sandwich Islands. | cdthe Book of Reason for their guide, in lieu of the | of their most distinguished Rabbies, in the 11th century, | Now, he said, was the accepted time, and now | ing more enlisted in the cause, and here we find ground | nature,and related but seldom to the business of the The Rev. Dr. Buack of Pennsylvania, rose to| Bible, and it led them blinded by its influence, to a point | in thirteen articles. The twelfth of these articles is ex-| was the day of salvation—throughout the whole | for encouragement. The civil law is also beginning to | Convention—said that he had beena christian, and had to . offer the first resolution, which reads : where victory was in their grasp, but then it involved | pressed in the words prion ag gn baleen pease pad Aint aug ge clearly ascertained fact, that the mind | take h ; and we will not cease petitioning while | thisjday many of the rejudices of the christians about esolved, That the ott ‘an abstract of which| both them and their victims in one common ruin, Go| perfect faith that the Messiah is yet to come, and al-| of the Jows is being more and more directed to | our hands have power to write our signatures. But the | him, but it w i r Hasna a abroad wherever it has gone, whethor it be the Sand- | though he retard his coming, yet I will wait for him till | the subject—the sympathies of all denominations are cn- | resolution requests the nid of the Pulpit—and, oh, what e | of Jesus of has now been read, be adopted. 5 wich islands or tho shores of Africa, wherever it may be, | he come.” The modern Israelite cannot consistently | listed—the best men of the churches in England, in It is not enough for us to le He observed that God had provided means by | there you may be sure freedom has been extended. ‘This | with his creed explain that mother promise—“the seed of | Europe, are preaching and praying for the speedy Tixms said he did’nt want to or offence to any now his intention to follow the precepts areth. He had read a number of books-— ese devoted fe- | (applause)—and had made some calculations which re- sulted au follows :-—If the public lands were distributed ted—it is with d mortificati which sinners are to be saved; had revealed how | is a time when we hear much of the importance of educa: | the woman shall bruise the serpent’s head,” nor that pro- | conversion of the Jowish people, and the time was Ta- not done our duty. | among families of Ave persons inthe United States, it God can be just and the justifier of those who be- | tion, and how many efforts are making to educate people, | Phecy of Jacob, which predicts the departure of the pidly approaching when been 34 and Queens will be nurs- . Mr. Bancs (groaned audibly)—God forgive us. would give each family a snug farm of 247 acres. Ho lieve in him, Under the auspices of the society | but ver, we must also rightly direct it, | Scepire and law-giver from Judah, and fixes the time of | ing fathers and mothers in the kingdom of God. It was | Mr. Perrine e give the n f ¢ I must believe that the apathy of many | said he knew men of g1 this news had been conveyed to distant lands ; the | nd we need the Ba le to educate the head. ‘He under. | that departure—nor the symbolical signification of | said by some that the Jewish mind was judicially blinded, | of our clergymen is owing to their Inisconeantion, flere thropie men, who are willing to spend, and be spent in * stood that within the last five days two thousand five | the pascal lamb—nor the tratisfer of guilt from a | and it was not right to interfere with the decrees of Pro- | a lady fainted, and was carried out.) I could wish that | this great work—this he said was common ground where jorie bees me aD neers had pea as great light, hundred emigrants had land hore tre foreign lands—| #inner, to a victim substituted in his place, the | vidence. The same arguments might have been raised | the Pulpit wero found earnestly ele in the prosecu- | all philanthropists could meet. He said the principles of Jeath: life we sang eae The Bitlok OW OF | he would ask how were these people prepared, coming | shedding and sprinkling of its blood, and the burning | when Paul felt such deep anxiety for his Jewish breth: | tion of this great cause. Let us be warned by the past, | the association would rapidly spread; in his town he death, life is sprung up. The. Bible is of God, and | here as they did, freeh from the ‘prejudives of despotism, | ofits flesh upon the altar. Nor that minute prediction | ren, and when, on the day of Penticost, 3000 were brought | and endeavor to gain the approbation of our Savior. Go | could obtain ina fortnight: 100° votes, and in one. month hearts—wealthy and philan- the time is coming when it will travel to the utmost | how, he would usk, wore they tobe fitted t vl ; | of the rejection and suff death and resurrection of | toa knowledge of the truth. The resolution was the | to Blackwell's Island. It was my privilege to stand there | they would hold the balance of power. The spirit of the ends of the earth; and when the whole of the East | to the community instead writdheding tor ty the: Bible's be,| the Son of God found in tho 63rd of Isaiah. Nor that | put by the Rev. Dr. Milledoler, and carried. to-day amid the wrecks of humanity, and the larger por. agate pellet foe pittuey Ropar: truth end festioa’ fa and of the West will feel its influence and be blessed | ing‘distributed among them. We hear much said, now-a- | ¢qually wonderful prediction in 12th Daniel. Nor that | The Rey. Dr. McCarry then offered the following ro, | tion hi en carried there in consequence of the very | the motto—even the politicians think they must be good with its perusal. days, about the er of foreign interfe: , but if that | prophecy of Hagai, relating to the superior glory of the | solution:— 3 ._, | Vico st which we contend. And when! told them | men now, and he has heard clergymen talk about virtue. The Rov, Mr. Suruvon, one of the Society Agents, | Was ever accomplished, ela must bear the blame. | Second Temple, Nor can they consistently with that | Resolved, That the conversion of tho Jews is the chief | that the Lamb of God died to savo the chief of sinners, Oh; the world was getting on realy; and every county seconded the resolution. One point in the report was of | God has given the w m into their hand; if the Bible | CTeed, even account for their own singular, most bittor, | means appointed of God, of consummating the conver- | the tear of sorrow would steal down their cheeks. My | doing much to advance the cause of the regeneration of ramount importance, and thet waa the efforts making | falls, Protestantism will fall; but all machinations of fo- | 824 yong protracted sufferings since the crucifixion of | sion of the world. _ g friends, strive to create an interest in the subject of vir-| the masse: ; Inthe West to promote the circulation of the Biblowang | reign power will be useless. We have the weapons, we | the Lord of Glory. Having! lost the key of knowledge After some forcible remarks by Dr. McCarty, in sup- | tue, Mr. Owr: icwae! ring, then took the to their brethren in the West, that all their thoughts and | trust we have the heart to use them; we believe we have | Of their own Scriptures, and denied the divinity of Christ arg of the resolution, a strange divine arose to speak, | Rey. Mr. Van Loox, of Poughkeepsic—The law of| stand.—lHe said he didn’t }: about the c struggles should be directed to sustaining of religion | the ability and we doubt not of success. The Bible is the | 204 his atoncment, they cannot consistently explain the | but was requested by’ the President togive way to Dr. | love isthe soul of every true reform. ‘The moral reform | views of this axsor'alisi, 1: » 1 to him, h by tho: propagation of Bible Societies. Yet there was | substratum of all institutions, social, domestic, literary or | Scriptures which ‘refer to them, nor answer the great | Herschel from London, who had been invited to address | enterprise is the application of this law to the rizuts of | to be this—that «!l v some ground for saying that this was not done. There | religious. In its moral effects it operates on the commu- | (uestion how a sinner condemned by the law, if God | the eater Mr. Lilly then read, as the credential of | God, and the crime and suffering of man as involved in | who have some want 0 was yet a groat lack of th Holy Scriptures in the West ;| nit, and saves men from immorality. He would not detain | Be holy, just, and true, noes ‘by justified at his Dr. Herschel, a letter addressed to him by 60 converted | the i lond wart some, ene those » nd been accustomed, in m practical light, , iolation of the 7th commandment. ‘The greatness of | froin the age of 10, to in one county alone, containing forty thousand inhabi: | them in showing sueh a manifest truth as that prosperity | read tribunal. Pressed b; 8s, especially of | Jews in London, who spoke of the Doctor inthe most ele- | thecrime, and the extent of the sorrow and shaine and | and he hardly thought thi jou a lensible one. Its foun- tants, he knew it to be a fact, that there were one hun. | depended on virtue. ‘That book is our moral defonce, | Isaiah, describing the humiliation and subsequent triumph | vated terms. F A suffering contemplated by this enterprize, is the measure | dation was sand, au. th: ing would fall. He believ- dred ‘protestant parishes where, during the past year of while we are consistent in advocating its principles, | of the Son of God, some suppose there will be two Mes-| Dr. Hexscuet then arose and said, that as it was Inte, | of its greatness. 1 had a dream, which was not alla| ed 25 years ago, that 0: no mau mode the land, no man the preaching of the word of God, only one sermon has | God will prosper us. siahs. The one they look for is tobe not a divine person | he would detain them for only ® few moments. ‘This | dream—e dark and malignant spirit was suffered to spread | could give a just title to it. There was no great difference been preached in favor of the Bible cause, a1 o The Rey. J. Srauuptna, of New York, then moved the | in our nature, making satisfaction for sin, but a temporal | was a work which would prove not only a blessing to’| its wings over this city, and children forgot their parents, | between Socialists, Fourierites, &c.—they all had one dollad contributed—whilst in that county no lecwunh ace following resolution : Resolved, That while furnishing | princo~an illustrious warrior, who shall subdue his and | Jews, but to all nations, tongues, and Kindreds in the | and parents spurned their children, and all social order | common object in view, the melioration of the condition hundred familes were without a Bible, and many who | the blessed Bible to all the destitute on land, we must | their enemics, and reinstate them in their own beloved | world. There were some, however, who raised objec | was destroyed. I asked what does this mean—what is | of the oppressed of all classes. (Cheers.) could not read them. He had been engaged in the work for | not forget the destitute on the sea,” and followed with | land. ‘The time and place of his appearance they declare | tions to it; it was his desire briefly to answer them. | this spirit—this spirit is licentiousness, Unrestrained, it] Mr. Evans then seid—Mr. Owen seems to think that years, and so onerous was the burthen,that he was almost | some eloquent remarks, and many interesting anecdotes | 20t- They believe that the lost Ten Tribes will then be | The first objection raised is that of judicial blind- | would produce this effect. Let us pray God that this | we are building upon a sandy foundation, and can do no crushed by the various duties devolving upon him in that | in its support. No one appreciates more than I do, he | Teeovered and re-annexed to those of Judah and Benja- | ness. To answer that, he would cite one fact, | foul spirit may be restrained. It is easy to sce the con- | good. relation. "He wished to acknowledge his gratitude on | said, the necessity of supplying the wants of the desti- | ™in—Jerusalem rebuilt—Palestine blest with incompar-| eleven years before the destruction of Jerusalem, | nection between vices. See that young man ashe filches| | Mr. Owen.—O, I beg your pardon; I don’t think behalf ofhis brethren in the valley of the Mississippi, and | tute heathen, and of the great valley of the west. I have | able fertility—their ancient rites restored with the spirit | there was not a single Gentile convert, while thousands | from the money drawer of his employer—watch him as | I want the society te go on, for I think it of great ui of the West in general, for the aid lent them b; This ‘So. | travelled in that region, and know by personal ohserva- | of prophecy—and all nations turned from their idols to | upon thousands ot Jews believed the Gospél. 2d. The | he pursues his way through the streets—and as he nears} Mr. Evans then mado some further remarks, when the ciety, and he knew that that example of liberality would | tion the extreme ignorance and Raatbation of a large | the worship of the living God. A complete system of | great moral depravity of the Jews—that I most emphati- | the places where he should turn to the home where love | Convention, on motion, adjourned sine die. not be lost, for already they had begun to raise means and | majority of the inhabitants of that country, on those mat. | Pure Judaism is found in the Old Testament, and espe- | cally deny. J have travelled far and wide, and have seen | and purity dwell, he turns through dark avenues until he pels casein they could go on, and notwithstanding the efloris of the | ters which pertain to their salvation, and the great ne. | cially in the Pentetuch. Motes, the acknowledged ~“thor | every phate of Jewish society, and I here assert as an un- | comes to the house of her whose way leads down to hell. | Learsative Summany—Iw tHe SENATr: Home Missionary Society to preach the word, there was | cessity which exists of something being speedily and|f that work, is universally allowed to be the most | deniable fact, that the Jews as a body of people are more | Nearly all the crimes committed are closely allied with | strance was presented from the much to be done. He had labored in the missionary field | energetically done ; yet, at the same time, we must not | ancient historian ; and it is a remarkable fact that almost | moral than any of the nations of Christendom. IN Ne the crime of licentiousness. Let me entreat you to per- | Company, against the bill requiring them to fence their ond knew that to face the foes of religion without being | forget the destitute on the sea-—the men who keop their | tWo-thirds of the world believe him to have been | applause.) Dr. Johns then rose to explain, and said that | severe in your work till it is nccomplished, and the earth | road. Mr. Denniston reported against the several peti- armed with the word of God, was like the act of hosts | nightly watch on the heaving waters—who brave the | Divinely inspired. | Besides the written, the Jows | he wished to have his remarks understood as having re- | no longer polluted by infamy and crime. tions for the reduction or discrimination in canal tolls ; who should march to the field against the enemy without | storms and perils of the deep—who carry the Bible and | have also an oral law, communicated, say they, by | ference toa too prevalent idea, and that so far from cn | Rev. Mr. Dowitx—I think it time ladies connected | which, on motion if Mr. Hard, was lnid on the table arms or ammunition. The word of God is the only am-| the missionary to other lands—who, as the agents of | God to Moses—by him to Aaron, Eleazar, and Joshua— | tertaining such an idea himself, he was constantly | with a Moral Reform Society should be at home. I will] Mr. Talcott, in reporting complete a bill to renew the munition for the Wost. Argument might do at the East | commerce, have made many of our merchants like the | @nd by them to the seventy elders. ‘That oral law, | engaged in rebutting it.. 3d; Disappointment in the | not, therefore, make @ speech. I am rather of the opinion | charter of the New Hartford Manufacturing Association, perhaps—argument such as a philosophic mind and clear | Medici merchant princes, and who hold, as it were, the | handed down by tradition to the Christian era,| Jewish converts, He would only | say to. this, | you would prefer having me say Amen to what has been | introduced a new proposition in relation to the liability intellect could produce—but in the West, God’s word | keys of the deep. Such men we must not forget. When | W28 at the close of the seoond or peeizsing of the| that the same ebjection would app! Fa ie, eae said already, than to hear me make a speech. I can | ofthe stockholders and officers, which was laid on the alone is fit to accomplish what was so happily alluded to | the sabre was raised to strike our gallant Decatur, it | third century, committed to writing by Rabbi Judah, | converts, and that the greatest | difficulty | and | heartily say, Amen. table and ordered printed. The Senate then proceeded to last night by a venerable friend—the evangelization of | wasa sailor who interposed, and whose head recoived | Hakkodesh or the Holy, President of the Sanhedrim eee bung Book in the way of Rocnreret er re ¢ | Parsioent—Amen. the thied -weadtion the people. “Ho knew one township of six miles square, | the blow intended to destroy his commander's life—he | % Tiberias. to this dey with exception of | coldness, penensend seene tone where the preacher had been laboring for seven years, | periled his life for another ; him, and such men, we must | the sect of th Somiaiiored a of uel autharity.|'maraled & deeply interesting Soocexs, Of £5 dAventure in | composed by and did so all the time without a copy of the Bible ; | not forget ; and yet, this is put one of many instances of with the Hol (abe end engl Si CARL Mine ect ai ne Lag ie in acl he creel and when asked what he did for a text, he said he | a sailor's generosity and heroism, on record. The sailor, | Written is called Mishna, or repetition. Their Gemaras, | are true to their professio c y- :.—A remon- ong Island Railroad , q : ig of bills for one hour. Among those c—I will close with a verse which was | passed, was that in relation to Thirty-third street, in the Sandwich Islander, and I recommend it to | city of New York ; to repeal the several act in relation mest attention, and hope you will not forget it | to the state Hospital, in the city of New York, (transfer- Ye ring the appropriation of $8,000 to the Colored Home ;) took it from the New Testiment, unless he could re- | though he has a rough exterior, has a soul like our own, | Which are two in number, are expositions of the| | The doxology was then sung, and after the benedic- Go on, go on, go on, go on, to prohibit the throwing of offensive aubstances into the member one from the Old, How could the word | capable of infinite pain and pleasure. It becomes us,| Mishna, and are so called as containing the whole | tion, which was pronounced by Dr. Johns, the congrega- Go on, go on, go on, Croton aqueduct. The bill to incorporate the Prison of God be preached in such circumstances? The ad-| then, not to neglect him, but to discharge the duty which | traditionary doctrine of their law. Their Talmuds | tion retired. ffs ita cncdra dt os Go on, go on, go on, go on, Association, in the city of New York, was lost for the versary of souls was abroad turning these things | God has imposed upon us, and rich Will be our yeward, | are the Mishna connected with one or other of these | _ ‘The following are the names of the officers for the en- Go on, go on, go on. want of a Constitutional vote—ayes 17, noes 12. The bill to account. Agrent deal of the preaching in the West | You must not suppose that sailor's are indifferent to} Gemaras; and their Beg ae are translations of all suing year was lost, on account ofthe people not being able to go| theso things. Oh, no ! “Only put the Bible in their hands ie, EES aye ret eee ner macs Tike Cates; | Exeeicant_hey. Pune Miitxnpaxs, 0, D,, ad eleven an ieee eater eee Pemeionioa | seubllta Oh the Aitegeres sae Ceteiestipes rect resctie, $20, ie 1 if hi ive the trath;'and ‘ili | made particularly for the uneducated part of the nation | Vice-Presidents. Sey Pomme SE eres Tans Wer mivina caticae inecement home and read the Scriptures. For the sum of they have hearts open to receive the truth, and they w: y a se 7. ” G d National form Con * was also passed. e hour having expired, the special! granted to the cause of Ohio, for which they had not yet | prize it beyond the treasures of Ormus'and of Ina. A | after captivity. They still have liturgies, contain- | | Foreign Secretary—Rev. John Proudfit, D. D., of New Prak acee ms es epee anni is wee aires = wis4s ann Oahrvertiiks Rainy Sl made any acknowledgment, he thanked them, and ven- | ship bound to New Orleans was overtaken by a tempest, rd the prescribed forms of their synagogue worship— | Brunswick. ae Sreaxers: Gopwin—Cuannino—BrisBane— taken up—Mr. Wright in the chair, and debated between tured a prayer that they would not remove their assist- tnd after combatting for some time with the storm, went | Strictly observe their Sabbaths—prohibit intermarriage | Domestic Secretary—Rev. John Lillie. id John: Bockee, Lott, Sherman, , during the The afternoon was spent in Execu- i i i Owen, &c. ance ; for-whatever was done for the West, was done in| ashore onthe rocky coast of England. The wind soon | With other nations—cireumcise on the 8th day—and re-| Recording Recretary—Alexander M. Burrill. ? the cause of society as well as religion, and pledge that | abated, and they were cnabled, by fixing a spar from the | deem their first born. Their males at the age of thir.) Treasurer—Thomas B n future the East had no fear of their iron hand. Before | ship to the rocks, to reach the shore; the men were weak | teen, pass through a ceremony somewhat similar to con- taking his seat, he begged to state they wished at the | from excessive labor, and it was as much as they could do | “mation, being then declared sons of the precept, and sing, and 20 Directors. Tuirv Day, May 7th. | tive sesssion, The Committee met at 2 P. M., pursuant to ad-| 1% tH House, leave was asked by Mr. Young, to lay , c 4 : ; - on the table a resolution of enquiry into the expedienc: West 30,000 more Bibles ; they wanted in Ohio 600,000 | to crawl along the spar to the shore. One of them had a| from that time wear Philacteries in prayer, and cover | American Home Misslonary Soclety—Nine= | journment, Mr. Rycxaay inthe chair. After some | of pro Taw for the repair and superintendence more Testaments, in order to give each reader one. | bundle tied around his waist; he was asked on reaching | themselves with a veil in their synagogues. The mo- teenth Anniversary. discussion, the call of the Convention was with- | of the contract, in the manner of contracts When he heard them talk of enemies and obstacles, that | the shore what itwas, “O,” said he, “I have been | 4¢™ sects found amongst them, are the Samaritan, who night the assemblage in the Ta- mighty Babel, Rome, of which they heard so mucky talk | wrecked a number of times, but thanks be to God I have | continue to inhabit thelr native land, are the only sect SE ee eee ees ele ¢ jets in their city, rae rat one of the latoane they had to ov always managed to save is am afraid they are wet.” eas, ‘Rolding their primitive teneta Rabbimiets ane sae great as has been = banal saa Mr. Gopwin then moved a resolution calling a | Pose flea hte Says wy pose on the field of struggle. The devil is not yet dead | The bundle contained a bible and prayer book and hymn , 3 ion during t " 3 it wast . ; ceived. Mr. M. Brooks called up’ his motion to #1 In'the West: he is as mach alive and rampant ce in. the | book. An old sailor went into.a store one day, and aaked { OF Talmudists, inheriting the ancient spirit of the Phari- | 810" i ci Bind geon ® hese Ralialooged 9 ration of | Convention, and recommended Albany as the place | the soth rule for the purpose of admitting a motion to days of the Apostle Paul, who said he went about like a] forachart. “What kind? said the clerk. “I want aj sees; and the Rairites, who reject all tradition that is | the 19th anniversary of the American Home Mis- | of meeting. A Committee was appointed to corres- | consider the Rochester Bank Bill. The rule was # roaring lion, seeking whom he might devour. The | chart to guide me to heaven,”was the reply ‘now do you | Unsustained by Scripture. On account of their scaiter-| sionary Society, whose efforts to evangelize the | pond with all Associations of Progress, to induce | pended, the yote reconsidered, and the bill passed—aye: iy ith all their Bichops, and ‘Cardinals, and subordi- | understand me? I have lost the chart by which I have | 4 situation, it is extremely difficult, if not bi a le, | West have be ied, ith h d % OH A 2, noes 7. During the morning session, Mr. Harris made , were not half, were nothi comparison to the | steered, and I want another.” Put the Bible into the | t0 obtain an accurate knowledge of their number. In-| West have been carried on with much energy and | delegates to attend. Adjourned to 74 o'clock in the | another effort to suspend the third reading of bills in other foes which were to be vanquished. Human nature | bands ofthe sailor, and it will prove to him the moans of | dependent of the ten tribes, they are believed to exceed | success, according to the Report. The choir was | evening, when they met and were addressed by the | order to enable him to move to a select committee, to re- made by the P. O, department for carrying the mails—the drawn. Tito companiocs sautreacs fon GANT. ‘dit could not be re- was there—Satan was there. there was a strong ne-| salvation. The word of God does not always need to be | 3 been preserved | ¢. : _ fe < fag port complete the bridge bill ; but after some opposition Cessity for a union of all the friends of Jesus Christ inthe | explained by @ minister to convert the sinner; many a | i! fire of persecution and suffering, suflicient, reason | full of singers; the platform crowded with clergy- | Rev. W. H. Channing, in an carnest and eloquent | from Mr_Van Schoonheven, the House, by ayes ds, noes spreading of his word. ei ‘ sailor, while reading his Bible in his lonely watch, has pone ay ee ae es ae, oe and “sete ‘a, | MEM and the large area of the body of the house was | manner. | 53, refured to suspend. ae Vee could noes Rev. Mr. i he i <t s at powerful argument in fa- : ; | : . Re. tolisras: DE WHT roped the cond resslation | boon sek constense By the ower af We wpe | verofeut hal religion even nthe view ffrbolent | eTammed with eager listeners Mr. Cuawsine adverted to the present degraded | RI reading stile tal many eal ont vate i Resolved, That exporience has shown tho feasibility, | Not long ago, a son of the ocean wandered into the Sai- | Yerstries. Lord Chesterfield, in a beautiful discourse on} ‘The services commenced with a voluntary on the | condition of the working classes. He considered it | were disposed of. The afternoon was spent on bills re- as well as practical importance, of united effort among | lor’s Home in Cherry street. In the evoning, the sailors | the evidences of Christianity, observed that there was | organ, after which a devout prayer was offered up | indicative of a radical defect in the order of things, | !#ting to the city of New York.—.tibany .2rgus. Chiistians of different names in circulating the Sacred | assembled, as was customary, for family worship. Capt. | One which he thought to be invincible, and not to be got suitable to the occasion. : a ange ——__—_—_—_ bei es a Ty a Richardson read from the inh cha ter of Bzekiel-—" The we by See roi bs tele San chin Kemi ‘The Treasurer’s report was read by the Treasur- | Here, said he, in this land where'we boast of free in- Court Calendar—This Day. in support of the resolution, Dr. B. observed, that he | sou! that sinneth, it s] ie. is attention was arrest- re E = Jorni Df ich ‘i itutions— i i vi 5 took ‘the place, of the Hey. Mr. Todd, of Mase. who | ed,and he began to inquire what is soul, and how will | Jones” Life of Bishop Horne, p. 982. All Jows, say the | Of Jasper Corning, 1osq., from which it appears that | stitutions—of our democratic principles we are the | | Cemmtox Pi.ras—Nos- 56, 09, 17, 22, 29, 30, 56, 60, could not attend. Thoye _was w perfect cheistian union | it die? He conversed with the Captain till midnight upon | aultors of the Universal Histor), fee! the dignity of their | err April, 1S{4;, the rece de ing | Vetiest slaves. Even the poor slavé of the South, |” Cineorr Coonr—Nos. 31, 39, 40, 41, 43, 48, 46, 47, 49. in heaven, Where were gathered all the redeemed from | the subject, and in a short time he wes happy in believ- | Origin, recollect their former pre-eminence with con. | the 15t Fo io” raking: rant at the die down-trodden and degraded as he is, is better off Ai Neer ea hae among men of tribes, kindredy, nations, tongues, and | ing on the deep. A sailor lay in the forecastle dying; | #cious elevation of charactor, and bear with indignation | year were $121,946 23, making the sum at the dis- | than we of the North. Mr. Channing then went on SSS SS * yeople-from the different forms of religious association | the officers, and his comrades were gathered around him oe reaper gh gto og tips er ered posal of picts mth Se Your just heh al to say, that he considered it the pvilege and the Amusements. ‘ ast ; 6 i und ecclesiastical organization, dwelling in pure it | to hear his last words; he held his Bible with trembling otal liabilities amounted to $130,! duty of man, with all his energy of usefulness to ac- | Exmuorian Surenanxes at Panuo’s.—Last night ond-eternal life, and serving their div! ! an ond unelekned, * isathand. Whilst they suppose they will ever con- i / id; | (ut e 4 ¢ holiness, They had pasegal throug! + gh ES ha see tariiaoua etka trun of Goa ely joer Re tinue in their present views, Christians are looking for- Ke ee itubod ci oottea tion ireuretainores quire wealth—that is to acquire what is ited ood confirmed the opinion the public has upon all occa- they had gone out from the different departments of | led me to repentance—to discharge my duty, and now | Ward with confidence to their conversion. Most Chris- | +°g51 449 fo meet which there is only the sum. of | 22¢useful; and that, as he accumulates wealth, he is | 1 of the competency of Germon, Stan- Isracl, anf there they were gathered not into tents, but | this Deloved Book. poluis, me to Hleaves, and reveals fs | tian divines believe that they will, at no distant peried, | 5¥ong70 in the treasury. ‘The ineresee of receipts | "eaithy, morally and physically. In the increase. of | on, ce. to sustain the reputation they into the temple not made with hands, eternal in the | glories to my soul.” I trust when the qu reinhabit their own land. Dr. Priestly has announce hi he bere paged OM ‘Ds ¢ | Wealth is the increase of health. As aman obtains | have ‘acquired, and justly acquired, and to-night they heavens. But, the elements of christian ‘union perfected | will meet with a sailor's response — their restoration in 1850, and Taber on the Prophecies, | for this, over the previous year, is $20, of | wealth he also improves his mind. The man who | presenta bill, which ‘is a “caution,” to all not to neglect works—who chisels and drives the plane—who,stand- | earty @ ! r in heaven, are the elements. of christian character here | question was then put by the Chair, and carried, supposes that Daniel’s grand period of “time, times and | which over $13,000 were donations, and over $6000 , present foliage and flowers, but inter- | lowing thirty years will be occupied in the restoration | to enable them to carry on, as during last year, with | 1S 0VeT the blazing forge, wields the mighty hammer - on earth ; it developes the character of the possessor,| Dr. McCanry, of Goshen,then addressed the meeting—I | * half” or 1260 years, will expire in 1866; that the fol-| bequests. This sum supplied the $12,000 necessaries and shines more and more unto the perfect day. Israel | will not, he cf ; . fi * ats ing f - that moulds the implements of human industry—| New York Bowery Amphitheatre Compan: may have troubles and perplexities, in travelling onward | esting facts. I believe that where man is found, there the | ° Judah, and other forty-five years in that of Isracl ;| 9 surplus of $8000 towards enlarging its operations 4 mi . 2m : pas’ = 4 through tho wilderness; but where ‘could. they find so | Bible should be alec, forit ts Pecilinnly adapted to the after which, i, e. in 1941, will commence the reign of the | ‘4 abasrabe. tia eport of the eaiuitive Comolt® comes 12 contact with hard facts—solid, substantial, | the Brooklya Garden Friday and Saturday, May thand 10th, much security as moving on with the Bible before them | wants of man—the creature of God—it will lead him up } Millennium, when Palestine will again be occupied by the | (0 Was read by the Rev. Milton Ba r, one of the | ¢Veriasting facts; and he learns to understand them > d es ing to the Ladies and Geuth f Brook as their only rule of faith, the spring of hope and conso- | to the living waters, where sorrow never enters, and the | Jews.—(See Faber on Prophecies, vol. 2, p. 256, 261, —to learn the laws of cause and effect ; and just as | that he has effected aurengagement wich the celebrated MAW : that he has effected an eny lation, acknowledging that word as a basis of salvation; | weary are at rest. Wherever lost and ruined man is | 201) In, contemplating the present state of this | Secretaries. eis adem gi fs yonle, the | he accumulates wealth, does he unfold and develope | MONKEY, HERVIO NANO, who will make his second it was sufliciently intelligible to all without note or] found, the word of God is to be carried. It is inaccor-| Wonderful people, we shall easily perceive that] couraging, and the openin, for the efforts of the | hi, higher nature. Man, from the perception that “arance °F Friday Evenin y gard go throweh with his wacunat comment, or the additions of man. If there were any | dance with the genius of the Bible that the heralds of | the ve very strong claims upon our interest in their | society had augmented. Nine hundred and forty- | he ig increasing matter, awakenshis social faculties ; jed Act of omepeaekip wi ugh tips ere the greatest astonis| christians who did not adhere to that Bible—the law and| the cross carry it to evory human habitation, and thus | Wellare, ‘They are the descendants of the Father of the | three ministers were employed in the work during | and as he strikes, lifts, and digs, he calls out his} a the testimony, it is becouse the truth is not in them.| fulfill its doxign. What is the duty imposed upon chris. | faithful. Among their ancestors are found some of the ; the present year, of whic are additions, within | cial affections’ As he develores we ith They had sometimes heard of fainilies, long separated, | tians? It iste send the Biblo to the benighted, that they | "blest characters that ever lived. I cannot forget that | the same period. The field of their labor oxtends over t este Gimmitey ler foals athering around the family hearth, and recollecting | who live in darkness may be brought to know and love | Salvation is of the Jews. That “to them pertain the | twenty-three States and territories of the Union, and | !so a strong sense of dignity: he feels that he 18 | sorday’s Herald, the attention of the public was called to the that they ‘were all born from one common father and mo- | the only living and true God. We may as well talk of | *doption, and the glory, and the covenants, and the giving | Canada and Texas also, and the aggregate number of | Come into the world for some end and purpose, ac- | Opthalmic Dispensary of Dr. Wheeler, at No. 29 Greenwich ther. That was the family gathering of the christian de-| stopping the course of the sun tirbagh the heavens, as | of tho law; and the service of God, and the promises; | congregations is 1,285. ‘Thirty-six missionaries more are | Cording to the will of God; and as he accumulates, greet, where more cures of et supposed ICURABLE, cases) nominations, who, when abroad hold different positions, | to speak of limiting christian enterprise. ‘The character | Whose are the Fathers, and of whom as concerning the | Cmifoyed this year than last, The exemplary manner in | laboring and producing, so is he free, good, and fit | have been effected aw yee ra, ae wy Say eye but who,when collected together were united in the good | of the truth of God is progressive—the sun of righteous. | “esh Christ came, who is over all, God blessed forever.”) which the missionaries had performed their duties, de- | for eternity. Ph this city there are men, women, and | work of their master. Mr. De Witt ended his discourse | noss will roll on till all nations are brought to know one | —See Romans ix. 4, 5. A Jew moreover is a an. served the warmest support and sympathy of the | children, who have no chance of getting wealth—no ina handsome eulogy of the life and character of the late | Lord and one master. There are an| istical principles pee derived from the same omnipotent ggwer, he has| Notice to Persons from the Country.—In yes= r aos und | churches; their industry, their endurance of privation, | chance of being happy. If they do produce, they see it | f Rev. Dr. Milnor, in the work; truth and error are continually warring; the | his life dependent on the same bountiful Prov! ce with | their devotion and adherence to sound princip! flying away from them—the drones of society take from The Rev. J. W. Coox, of Bristol, seconded the resolu-| powers of darkness are striving to turn us aside from | ™Y own. He breathes the air! breathe, and tro: is the | mentioned favorably, and testimony borne to the fruits | them the result of their labor—they have neither honor tion, which, he observed, contemplates the feasibility and'| pursuing the course which the son of God has command. | earth 1 tread; is endowed with like intellect, andaubject | which are produced by their ministry, |The extension of | nor profit. They know that they labored and toiled ; importance of Christian union. How could that remain a | ed; yet bolieve mo, we will more than maintain our own, | t© like passions of joy and sorrow, hope and fears 88) Sunday school instruction in the missionary churches | and when they seek the products of their industry, it question requiring an answer? With the Word of God | It is our happy privilege to realize that it is far more | #¥ch, he is my brother; he is my neighbor also, andas| had been promoted; the number of Jupile’ amounts to | eludes their grasp, vanis ing like & dream aw was sont forth a spirit of inspiration that would make it| blessed to give than to receive, and that from our labors, | ch, [am charged to love him as myself. If an hun | 69,900, and the cause of temperance had been so well fos- | society is constituted, working men are but w the source of health and salvation to the distant dwellers | and the labors of those we send, the desert and solitary gered, to give him meat; if a thirst, drink; if sick, woun- | tered, that 107,000 persons were pledged to abstinence H , in the hands of others. a othe ear deere, cannot he union in auch a place will be glad, and the wilderness blossom like «| fei, ar opprosed, to,relieye him; if'a wanderer from | principles throughout their congregations. is perhaps one-third part of the inhabitants of our Rarer, wiven he embark Ta the etttocecy cf these, reteat dt: cause, there cannot be union any where. Accordingly But let me select one field of Iabor, which is many | 40d, to use my best efforts to restore him; not by rebuke | " Rey Josnrn 8. Crarx, of Boston, proposed the, firs bio to live without labor. They conceive renee ee tia iba orties tr teacs oft cepoetion aad there is perfect unanimity. Tmeannot to say that there and miles from here, as the subject of a few re-| ad scorn; not by the terrors of an inquisition—robbing | resolution. « That the report now read be adopted.” He y of man lies in not producing wealth. This is | tuperation, from the wnorent ancl Presale are not points on which digering Christians may unite ; T cannot reach it with my hand, but I can with | him of his property—breakiug his bones upon arack—0r | had watched the society from its begining, and read all | a most mistaken idea, as deleterious inits effects on them- | either surprised or digconeetted at the cond for the most daermined and rigid adherence to matters of | my heart, which yearns towards it, for there my best be- | burning his flesh with fire; but by my reasoning, my in-| jts annual reports, each of which were more interesting | selves, as it is injurious on you, When labor is made mo- viduals, whose names it is u conscientious belief is quite compatible with Christian | loved son isa missionary, and 1 would esteem it a high | treaties, and my tears with him, and with God for him. | than the preceding, and the present as a testimonial of | notonous, as it is under the present system, the mindis led | cause of truth, immortal truth, i unity of purpose, My motto is, the minimum of differ. | privilege to be permitted to lay my gray haire there. | In ee Isee alsoa conservator of the scriptures of | Christiantbenevolence was more go than all. I told them | off from a knowledge of cause and effect—a man who is ulucers are ii the ence, and the maximum of concord—to be catholic in fa-| We call ourselves a great people, and we are, but Ghina | the Old Testament, and a living witness of their truth. | of an increase of 20,000 over last year, but better still of | thus prevented from §developing mind, is robbed. ies tite on Bt i vor ofthe good, and Protestant against every error of | has more than 300 millions of inhabitans, while we have | He has faithfully watched over, and effectually guarded | ay increase of 36 in the Ministers of the Gospel, preach- | Whena man is bound down ty ‘excessive labor, hi YAY: (be eeeted by man. No human institution can be without defect, butas | only twenty. The province of Kean Shu alono contains | that priceless treasure. He holds up the Old Testament, | ing salvation. Mr. C. continued at length to describe the M little belongs to the Amorican Biblo Society as any other. | thirty-ceven millions eight hundred thousand people | *"4 tells me whence he has received, and why he guards | oxcellent efforts of the ministry inthe West, and made This speaker also closed his address by some remarks on | Can the mind of man imagine a more magnificent field | it. | Whilst I behold*him in that attitude, and fix my eye Card.—Professor Rodgers begs fall, to tender hia moet cordiel Unakate the eles of New You for the attention with which immense audiences haye listened ry fo. mention. the Gingpben while the Room of the Soci ro . cial feelings are destroyed, and he pours his sweat sul- | tamyio" Min Gia shidven, Sliss Martin lenly upon an ungrateful soil; and, as Is fore, | experiments will be the most iuterestiue < a striking contrast betweon what the society found it, and | seeing the disappearance of the products of one’s indus- | feasor Rodgers is determine? ©: try, is the vory tantalization of human life ; to be an in- | trovertible. Dr, Milnor, during the delivery of which several of the | of labor than this? It is emphatically true that they | "Pon the work of which he speaks, | see lines of fiving | what it is no and The Rev. Jos ere much affected, 5 fire stream from its glowin converging, and con- are without God in the world; the lower classes 8} fe death rging, a 4 P. Tuomrsox, of New York, followed | strument infthe hands of others, is the deprivation of ha " The Rev. A Massachusetts, proposed the | are degraded beyond the vilest in our own Jand—their Hontihathy Fe Ns Person, and resurrection of | in support of the following resolution : “ Resolved, That | piness. ‘ney thing cone? Every thi Piedone, Trut , | Changes of Weat aud Catehing Cold— J resolution, as follo “Resolved, ‘That while | moral degradation and social depravity are absolutely | MWe Hon.Of Ho. If this peopl ly beli¢ve, | the influence which the Protestant Missionary exerts over | justice, and humanity, are now marshalling their forees | When, from sudden chv vs , ee, the perspiration be- tions of #0 profound as to tax] beyond conception I saw a short time ago, in the So- faith meee areeger e ing up the | the organization and general welfare of society in the | to conquer feudalism. Inthe first ace, the democracy | comes cheeked,, those idesenpe by the skin energies of the highest intellect, it is matter of| ciety’s rooms, a beloved brother, a missionary from Chi- eh Rs traduce; and if their return to) West, entitles him to the confidence and support of not | which fills Europe and America, is the assurance for man | Will be gt ha pt pom adner opel ude” that other and larger ‘portions. are. as| na, anda {oun Chinese he had brought with him from oer ess of emancipation to the Gentile | only the Christian but the patriot” A very Long address | 0 Ue what he is. ‘This is. the spitit of democracy —-the eee “Terlscs pares of ee bole aE a easily comprohended by the ordinary houschold cir- | that country. T went with him to the Museum, where | World, we cannot but fecl.a most lively interest in their | fo} /owed, of the genuine anti-Popery, proscriptive charac- | spirit of reform, which is every Where working out the c it symp roms, are sure to folloy Vegetable Pills are a most delightful medi- rying off a cold; becaus: shey expel from the system all morbid and corrupt humors, (the cause of every kind - ease, easy and natural amanner, that the body is pn cle.” He observed, that whatever imperfection existed | there were's Tt iene | cause. Although the restoration of this people, as a peo- . : ‘ ‘ fother means of doing” good, there was none in the Bi: | to show mo his fathers gone we feted oe te ule, will, we apprehend, be so rapid os apron ine | Stet, Suargeun cern, he, game of Oy te |e Te et salons: He taguaeonanied tr sitcur: | ci he ble cause, In other undertakings, they might plant, and | image, and said that was it. I then asked. him to show | {escription, that a nation shall be born as inaday, and,| {Ying the whole continent under their tyranni. | stances--he oftentimen drinks in from hic eulvest ye the treo would wither, they might sow without reap | me his own Rod, "Ho said, ‘I have set cheat) yy nen | although we are unable to fix the precise time, oF to de- | cal rule, were enlarged upon in very strong language, | the lessons of evil—he has beon deprived of ol Ee rey ings Dut the word of God. would prosper and abide for-| yet.” What an illustration of the condition of the people ! | tal the peculiar circumstances of their glorious change, | nq that’ creed designated as degrading, corrupt: | ignorance and crime are his companion ial ia aufferings an if by magic. “Four or fveof said Indian over. ‘The reason thoy felt such a joy in coming to- | And yot Ihave heard it sald, "Whe held fetter ca | Yet. we do. know, that the apostles ware charged to] ing, and inimical to’ civil and social liberty ; its | iis no wonder that he falle'e ‘vietim to. the temptations | vegetable Fille, taken every nghton going to bed, will n ashore gether at the American Bible Society celebrations, was, | cannot answer the demand.” re preent (oe gospel to every creature, begining at Jerusa- | <igr¢ymen inferior in morals and in education to those of | which beset his path. And from the fact, that crime late. | ‘me ‘amove the mont violent case oF colts Aad Tt Mage opematon that they came to Fender homage to pure truth. “They | | ‘The lev, gentleman, aflor taking a cursory glance at | !e hat froin the dayof Pentecost many sone of lara] have | ty Kyangelical sects; and as the students of Den’s The- | ly has been directed more to property than. person, may | had humors, that disease in any form. wil be completely impor: ight a8 well praise the sun, a8 the Bible. ‘The speaker| the uncivilized state of China, Aftica, and the wrent | beeH added to the church and to the Lord—that the signs | Sloe. demoralized in mind, and be that property is neither rightly produced: wor Y coutinned to adress the assemblage on the Bible, show-| field that was open in these parts of the univers for | Of the times both in Britain and on the Continent are | 918?) hs shared; In siting le. i ances | | Heivarr of Counterfeits.—'The public are eautioned ing that it was God's best gift to man; that it was ossen-| the introduction of the Soriptures—the improving condi. | {vorable—-that growing disposition is manifested in Ith that a pe ear rien will apart, Sofia gar and jmproved {dian | A val Is. thing that should | be se AY the Confessional. rightly 5 of weal tial to a proper notion of God, who never could be| tionof Now Zealand, through the influence .| many places of removing their civil ilities, “ eae known properly through his works, He doprecated the Paly’paaned 8 high eulogy cn ihe Aiseriean ppl and in voriows other ways of doing #0 that | aad weatthy, Wreihag cummed to tees Ch AR am ony Mba ot geting the right medigiee, is At pareyvese | views of those who magnify the importance of the atidy | Aftor which he proposed the following resolution : instead of relaxing in our efforts, we are ce! called | Buftal n Beecher, of Lang Seminary, | Take for instance a man nurtured in poverty, and he | ali\cesrs be particular to ask for WRIGHT'S Pdian Vegetable of the latter, to attach too much force to human discov-| Resolved, That whilo furnishing the Bible to our desti- | @ more vigorous exertions jn their behalf. It is matter | Ohio, the p 10, ory and investigation, which, after all, were the move | tute countrymen on the Jand andon the sea, wo must not | COugratulation that our country has never joined | touet al ‘nations. and the Rw fi ee psp oy epemerse| ssvemelsie, anh he sovee Sill ; . B.—Beware of all Sugar-coated counterfeit Pille

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