nn PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY A COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS FOR THE METHODIST EPIS COPAL CHURCH, SOUTH. RUFUS T. HEFLIN, Editor. VOL. IVNO. 5. RALEIGH, THURSDAY ,r.F EBRUARY 3, 1859. 0 I.l S T ORIGINAL zr For the X. C. Christian Advocate. j hope SO. If Slich be the case, what hin- Tlieolojrit :l Polities. ! ers us frm having a great and glorious revival of religion, this year, throughout I propose to say a few things hearing on all the circuits and stations in the North the condition and prospects of the Mctho- Carolina Conference ? dist Church in North Carolina. I shall j W hindering causes threaten, let us rise quote without usinr the marts, think with- ! above every opposition, and labor as out caring who differs, and state principles j preachers and people for universal holiness without asViug who may approve. Every j throughout the church of God. effort or enterprise, requiring the united tno circuit is not as the preacher de ability and effort of any considerable nuiu- j s'ires, let him labor to make it such. If ) er of persons, in order to success, must' j tne preacher is not as the people desire, u.... .. M,tu i.W v -ih.K"'xl -I ? tiiTn t.a'4.; hold of h:. Jiands sm? bold pie; and this fundamental when develop- j them up, r.uile he labors to preach to them ed and applied, must coincide with the I tue Gospel. conditions of the age and nation. If this Thus, by striving to build up the waste leading principle is of such a character, j places and to lead the lame, the broken in that it cannot be applied but to one gene- ! lloart becomes healed and the weak is made ration, the close of that generation will j strong ; so that the Church will rise tri eud the utility of the action in question, umphant over every opposition, and make Symbolic Mythology was the central idea of the old Egyptian civilization; applied to the land of the Nile, it resulted in the pyramids, the catacombs, obelisks and popular degradation of that Empire. The same principle transported to Greece, was there applied to expressions of the beauti- j ful ; but having produced one generation of j poets, orators, sculptors and philosophers, j it fell and carried the people with it. All j history will attest that whatever is lasting, j must be capable of a development suitable j l" auu luu auu " creed, systein or philosophy, when fairly construed on its own character, is incapable of these two conditions, lime and country, that creed or system will be temporary. Methodism in doctrine and discipline, is a Theological system, purporting to be a Bible interpretation of faith and practice, suitable for all classes of society in a Sov reign Southern State. Now, if this sys tem is what it professes to be, it will, when developed, applied and obeyed, produce good citizens in every sense, good mem bers of social life, and good christians; and if in any of these there is a failure, there is either defect in the Methodist formula, or an incorrect develomnent as to a aye and country. If it be said, the creed an 11 r'J.' uli- 1,10 j reply is, that when a people voluntarily j embrace a coTsst'tiition .Jo- gicai. ana tuen negiect u, sucn iwaia- , tion however good in itself, is not adapted I to that people. Order is essential to a State, but the adoption of a republican . - 1 . constitution by Mexico, would not produce j , .. f. , , x, ff'jod citizenship, unless tne peoiile are i 1 1 l suited to that development of the political j formula. It also sometimes happens that a State continues to exist under a well re ceived political polity. The existence be ing really artificial and sustained only by positive furce. This likewise proves a constitution deffeieut in adaptation. In the Methodist polity, salvation by faith, and an itinerancy, seem to be the fundamental ideas ; all the other principles being neces sary conditions for the application of the fundamentals, or collaterals entirely oc cordant with the primaries Xow these leading principles in the hands of Mr. Wesley, were capable of founding quite a number of problems. He might have said, given salvation by faith, itinerancy and the British noblemen, to make them christians? Or he might have substituted "Gentlemen,'' or " Yeomanry," or "Poor laborers." Actually, the problem was, "faith, itineracy, masses;" the sought was " Christians," the the thing to be saved was "how shall thc application be made ?" This problem in the hands of the great Methodist Statesman was quickly solved; no man ever saw the essentials of a ques tion more clearly, or applied the appropri ate means more wisely. lie wanted zeal ous preachers full of the Holy Ghost (no special necessity for learning or polite ac complishments) ; places appropriate to hear in the open air (stands); houses to preach iu (meetiiig-hou.seffj; some men to pray in public, admonish, advise, in the absence of the preacher (class-leaders) ; men to care for the poor, look after the stands and meeting-houses, and obtain what any were willing to give the preacher -(stewards). This was about the development of the for mula requisite at the time ; a greater would have been inapplicable ; a less in efficient. Now I think the Methodist poli ty is capable of a development suitable to all ages and nations, (lay delegation being repugnant to the original constitution, can never come into the development, ) but Mr. Wesley extended it only to suit his times ; hence many of the sayings and doings of that great man, were antiquated even be fore their author passed away. Steaia is the same everywhere, but the intensity, amount and applying machinery appropri ate, will vary with the locality and inten tion. EPW011TII. For the N. C. Christian Advocate. Preachers and People. 'x preachers, we hope, have all reach ed their -r'sointedtteM 0f labor with hearts warm with zc. f0r the u...j, (if q0(j Are the preacheil satisfied v-4j.0;r homes ? We hope so. Are the pco- pie satisfied with their preacher ? We rapid steps toward the haven of eternal blessedness. Brethren, let us go to work. T. For the N. C. Christian Advocate. Exegesis. " And the hey of the lions'! of David will I lay itmil his shoulder : so he thallopen and none shall shut ; and he shall shut and none shall open." Isaiah, xxn. 22. The whole of this chapter is a prophecy, : airainst Jerusalem in -eneral &c. v,14,and j tWlfter agaillst Shebna in particular, as j the representative of the whole people. It : is predicted that he will be cast from his j place and Eiiakim substituted, that upon ! Eiiakim shall be bestowed the symbols of i power, authority, and office. In the verse ' immediately preceeding we are told that 1 the official robe and girdle are to be be ; stowed upon Eiiakim. In this verse, that j the key of the house is to be laid upon his shoulder. The key has been a symbol of ! office and authority in almost all ages ; and amongst almost all people, j The door among the Hebrews were val- ves, suspended on wooden pivots which I were inserted in sockets in the door-posts. The lock was a wooden slide, so attached to the door that by means of one or two str;nrs passin thro-h the door , V 1 , -.11 til whore it was ,0 fa.stened auioll tlie tefcth or catdl as not to be drawn back, Thc onc coming m who wished to unlockf i i i , . . ., , , had a wooden key, sufficiently larsre. and ? j i 1 1 tt ,i , 'T, , crooked like a sr h ie. He thurst the kev , . e.x . , , , tliroucru tlie orifice ottfie dotir. or tcv-hnlo i.-ai" ,i .mi. A , - , -, lifted up the slide so as to extricate it from the catchets, and taking hold of the other string drew it back, and thus entered." Johns Bib. Arch. The keys of the rich were of metal. Under the Hebrew mon archy the key was given to the steward or chamhlain, as the badge of Ids of fice. The size and weight of the earlier keys would necessarily lead to that mode of bearing them which would be easiest, and the form, that of a sickle, enabled the bearer to to carry it on his shoulder. Al though this was the case in earliest times it is not necessary to suppose that in the days of Eiiakim, the steward of the house hold literally bore such a key. The fig ure of the key may or may not have been embroidered on the robe, across the shoul der, as symbolical. But even that is an unnecessary supposition. It is to be no ticed that the word translated 'shoulder,' signifies the whole upper burden bearing part of the back. The interpretation here seems to be that the administration of the government is represented by a burden, and that burden is a key, so that the ideas of responsibility and power are conveyed at once. In Matt, xvi, 19, Christ applies the same form of expression to Peter, implying that to the Apostles, ho gave authority and upon them he laid the responsibility of administering the affairs of the Church. In Kev. in 7, Christ is spoken of as "he that hath the key of David, he that openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man open eth." For the N. C. Christian Advocate. Memorials or Methodism. Buo. IIeflix : Near the close of the session in Newborn, something was said and done privately in regard to a Metho dist Historical Society. It is presumed that the committee on Education, who promised and were expected to report on it, were so pressed for time that they could not give it attention. I have no doubt that it will be instituted at the next ses sion But there are few subjects on which delay is more unreasonable or may prove more unfortunate. Several sister Conferences have seen the necessity of immediate effort and have promptly organized those societies. Tne importance of the matter is by no means less in our own State than in those which have .set us the example. The history of the introduction and promotion of Metho dism in North Carolina is full of thrilling interest. There are scenes in our tnoun ain coves and eastern plains notable for moral conflict and heroic endurance with no mark of remembrance no name in his tory. We, the descendants of those pio neer fathers, walk unconsciously over places hallowed by the prayers, the toils, the sacrifices and sufferings which were theirs when they sowed the harvest we are reaping. My attention was drawn more directly to this matter by the interesting lecture of Prof. Shipp before the Historical Society of the S. C. Conference at its late session. i His investigation was confined to that j portion of oor State which has been or is now iu the bi unris of the S. C. Conference. I hope it wid be published, for it is a per formance of great interest, merit and his toric value. Similar compilations of facts, incidents, &c., covering our entire territo ry would be invaluable. Any onc reading the simple, yet eloquent details will feel and confess their power. If we take hold of them, they electrify us. We need an acquaintance with those bold, true pilgrim fathers, to cure us of our backslidings in courage and devotion. The misfortune of our delay will be con fessed, when memory calls up the la mented dead, who could have told us what we now shall never learn on earth. To meet as far as possible the object de sired, I propose that each of the preachers interest himself to gather all the informa tion about early Methodism that he can, from the older members and persons in his charge. Let him then keep it till Confer ence, or send it to the Advocate. Each one will thus do a great service and re ceive at the same time an abundant re ward. I would also urge upon those who know the facts of our church history in their scc- j tions and feel an interest in the subject, to write detailed sketches and hand them to their pastors or scud them to the Advocate. You cannot have more entertaining and valuable contributions. Very truly yours, A. W. 31. Chapel Hill, N. C. SELECTIONS. From the Home Journal. Tale of tlie South. I1Y A SOUTHERN MAN. THE MAKTVU MINISTERS. It was summer in the South. Tlie rays of an almost vertical sun kindled the air into the torrid glow of the tropics. Long, hot days, short, sultry nights, frequent showers and easterly winds, were ominous harbingers of disease and deatli in localities most exposed to their influence. Men of medical lore, guided by science and oft repeated experience, saw, in the conjunc tion of these causes, the sure forerunner of the most fell destroyer of southern lati tudes, and predicted the advent of yellow fever, of malignant type and deadly pow er, in its accustomed haunts. Speedily was the prophecy fulfilled. The black vomito descended simultaneously upon several cities in the South, and raged with a fatality and fierceness almost unparallel ed in the history of the disease. The liv ing fleeing to distant places for safety, or cowering with fear at home the constant spectators of thc death of friends and re lations, and in hourly expectation of a fatal assault by the disease themselves ; the dying, abandoned ofttimes by all save the physician and the nurse ; the dead, too numerous for orderly sepulture, hurried off, uncofEned and unattended by funeral train or dirge, to hasty burial in common graves ; the hearse ever on the street, ac companied by the call of the driver for patronage at the houses of the wealthy ; the significant crape upon numberless doors ; silence in the thoroughfares of trade, busi ness deserted, slu.ps and all houses of traffic closed ; gloom, desertion, and dread everywhere these concomitants of the epidemic, seen always, in some degree, where it prevails, appeared now with a frequency and universality that appalled all hearts, and made the year 1853 memo rable among all the years of yellow fever visitation at the South. Over one fair city of the South, in par ticular, the wing of the destroying ansel brooded with the fierceness of the avenger that smote the first-born of the land of Pharaoh. There the pestilence literally wasted at noonday, and walked in dark ness. Medical skill availed neither to ar rest the spread of the disease, nor to cure the infected. All who could, left the city. Thousands, however, remained, through the compulsion of business or the strin gency of controling circumstances. Into the ranks of these the epidemic spread with but little discrimination between the accli mated and the unacclimated portions. -Young and old, male and female, bond and free, went down together in the wild mael strom of the pestilence. Soon, in almost every house there were vacant seats at the hearth-stone, and wailings for the unre turning dead. In some instances whole I families perished ; childj-en wept for par ,.onts ruoiirned for children. Few lL Lk3, Jjttl ViiKU i were the footfalls, save iose of the physi hcard upon the evelry and mirth roan of the sick, cian and the hearseman streets. The sounds of were supplanted by the i .. . " , v. the wail of the bereaved, rnd the prayer of the minister as he consojl d - the dying, or closed the rayless eyes,''id the mute lips of the dead, . The beahtiful city of the G ulf stood, like Niobe old, speechless in her woe. Her busia departed, and hundreds of her sons and -laughters passed away to be seen no moit-po-i her streets or'u the h.CJiuilor&'-d'! 1 ' Mournful, indeed, and sadleLing almost to tears, would be the record which should attempt to chronicle even a tithe of the touching incidents and pathetic details of the pestilence. Tlie presence of an epide mic, in dense coniQiunities, always brings out, in bold relief ind in vivid contrast, the noblest and the meanest traits, the bright est and the darkest features, of humanity. In this smitten citj of the South, as is the case everywhere in the midst of such a visitation, appeared ministering angels and incarnate fieuds die parsimony of hopeful avarice, and the prodigality of blank de spair the beastly revel of insensate vice, in its accustomed haunts, and the low voice of supplication and prayer in pulpit and closet ; in a word, all the contrasts which human passion and human character call forth to pain or to gladden the moral vision of the beholder. The clergy of the various religious de nominations, true to their high office, re mained in the city, and dispensed the min istries and consolation of religion to all who needed or asked their aid. To the accli mated, the mission, beautiful and holy as it is, was comparatively free from peril. They wore charmed lives, but are entitled, nevertheless, to the full credit of duty no bly performed under the most appalling circumstances, inviting to its abandonment. But the unacclimated, who remained, con fronted by the almost assured certainty of death who visited the dying and perform ed thc burial service for the dead, only to contract the infection and die themselves deserve the meed of praise for a courage higher than that oft the battlefield, and their deaths vV'-ioral f -sublimity the martyrdoms ot otu. The ministrations of both classes, how ever, furnish a striking illustration of the elevating and sustaining power of the relig ious sentiment. The courage which braves the perils of battle delineated so often in the poet's lay and the orator's eulogium, as the highest exhibition of human bravery sinks almost into cowardice when compar ed with the moral heroism inspired by re ligion, and exhibited by its ministers in their labors of love amid the horrors of pestilence. The soldier, fired by the con tagious courage of numbers, and dulled to insensibility by thc rigor of military disci pline, the brutalizing effects of his pro fession, or the madness of real or simulat ed passion, encounters the dangers of war's direst spectacle with mute indifference, and little recks, in the fulness of his pride and strength, whether he survive or perish in the conflict. But he who wars with pesti lence, battles with an invisible foe. He has nothing but his own sense of duty, and his high trust in God, to sustain him. The hot blood which fires the courage and inspires the deeds of the soldier, is not his to animate and sustain him, for his foe floats viewless on the wings of the air, and enters the citadel of life through the in spirations which impart health and nour ishment to its vital currents. Pestilence is not a brave enemy that storms by open violence the fortress of existence, but an insidious coward that steals, silent and in visible, upon its victim. It conducts a siege in which no quarter is given, no terms offered to the vanquished, and the flag of capitulation which floats over its close is the sable prtni55-Af thc hearse, or the mournful draperies of the dead. Who will say that the courage which grapples with a foe like this, is not of nobler mould than that of the heroes of battle and of song ? Around are the dying and the dead the one needing prayers, and the other sepulture. Universal panic prevails among the living. Business has ceased. The pulpits are silent, for the worshippers dread the effect of contact in masses. On every countenance is gloom, and in every heart is sadness. The wail of the bereaved, the groans of the dying, the blasphemy of the impious and the prayers of the pious, go up in blended chorus from the smitten city below to the unpitying heavens above. In the midst of the scene of desolation and despair, the ministers of religion move and act. The living are admonished, the dying consoled, the bereaved comforted, and the burial service pronounced over the dead. With a mission and labors like these, no human vocation can be fitly com pared, and the courage which impels to the one, and sustains unid the perils of the other, is the noblest tlat man exhibits, and the highest that Hea-en bestows. . Three examples of this martyr heroism inspired by religion, occurred during the memorable epidemic, of 1853, in the ill fated city of the South to which reference is intended in the preceding remarks. A brief allusion to each must close this tale. The epidemic has reached its maximum of malignity and fatality. In a room fitted up with all the appliances of a scholar's study, upon a low bed or cot, a young man lies, smitten with the prevailing fever. He is apparently not more than tweny two or three years of age. The person is tall and slender, the forehead ample, and the eyes, until dimmed by illness, b amed -il il 4-.-..1 j .p 1 . 1 . wi-.c lu-tr'if ot a ,Kjno, vrenciyi .- in telligent spirit. He has passed through the last great agony of his disease, r nd the glazing eye and fluttering pulse tell that hLs end draws rapidly " nigh. Beside him sits his spiritual adviser. The physician has made his last visit, saw the fatal sym ptom of invitable death, and left him for more hopeful patients. The faithful nurse is with him still. The deep hush in the room, broken only by the low breathing of the invalid, betokens the chamber of ap proaching death. As the sublime transfi guration from mortal to immortal goes on, let us step softly into the room, and inquire who and what the meek sufferer is. He was born beneath the bright skies and amid the balmy airs of a salubrious southern clime. Surrounded by the pleas ant sights and sounds of a ruraljhome, he grew up, in loving communion with nature and books, and congenial associates, into genial, hopeful and not very robust man hood. His heart was the home of every noble emotion, and his head a fountain of beautiful thought. He was 'blessed alike in his moral aptitudes and his intellectual capabilities. He was, in fact, a man of talents, and became, by assiduous culture, as learned as he was gifted and pure. The bias of his faculties led him natural ly into the pulpit. Blessed with a head and heart which qualified him for its du ties, he entered upon his holy office with zeal and the promise of a lengthened ca reer of usefulness. By the allotment of the ecclesiastical authority to which he was subject, he was stationed the first year of his ministry, in the Gulf city of the South. There he labored "'. faithfully, successfully and most acceptably to his church, for several months. Y hen tne storm of the epidemic came down upon the devoted city, friends abroad and counsellors at home advised him to quit his charge and retire, for a season, to a place of safety. He prayerfully considered, but conscientiously rejected, their advice. He was at the post of duty. Providence had environed him with peril, and could, if best for himself and others, deliver him in the very midst of thc pestilence. Thus comforted by his faith, and sus tained by the consciousness that he was en gaged in the performance of what he be lieved to be his dmy-, he devoted himself, night and day, to the labors and perils of his sacred calling. He preached to the well, he visited the sick, praj-ed for the dy ing, and read the burial service of his church at the grave of the dead. Univer sally popular, and admired by all for the heroism of his spirit and conduct, ho was incessantly summoned, hither and thither, into all parts of thc city. He went wher ever called, and did good deeds and utter ed good words wherever he went. But in the midst of his labors and use fulness, he contracted the disease himself, and lies now in his study, rapidly succum bing to its power. He utters no complaint. Audible prayer and snatches of spiritual songs burst occasionally, in feeble accents, from his lips. He is far from kindred and early friends. No voice or presence of parent, or brother, or sister, soothes his departing spirit. And yet all is well with him. He goes down into the shadow of the dark valley, but not fearfully, or alone. The silver cord of life is gently loosened, oymphonies from choral bands, """Unheard by ears of flesh, fill the chamber. A sweet smile passes over the face of the sufferer, and the first of the martyr ministers is at rest. In the same city, and during the same epidemic, another scene invites the recor ding pen of the chronicler. A beautiful woman, young and sorrowful, bends over the couch of a dying man, and wipes the gathering dews of death from his brow. He, too, is gifted in mind and noble in heart. Though small in stature, he has the marked forehead and beaming eye that belong to the sons of genius. His early advantages have been great. No oppor tunity which wealth could command, or the solicitude of fond parents could devise, to develop him into robust manhood of mind and heart, has been wanting. As all his aptitudes, both moral and intellec tual, wTcre favorable, the result responded fully to the exertions and care expended in his behalf. He ripened into manhood, rich in the graces of the heart, and aboun ding in all the accomplishments of the mind. Possessed of a brilliant imagina tion, a ready and graceful elocution, and a scholarship high and rare for his age, he stepped forth into the arena of life, prepar- ed to contend for its noblest prizes, and with every prospect of abundant success. Educated at a military school, he was ori ginally destined for the profession of arms. But a work of grace in his heart, co-operating with an overmastering conviction that it was his duty to labor for the promo tion of the spiritual interests of his fellow men, impelled him to the ministrations of the pulpit as his calling for life. He had labored assiduously and successfully in thc ministry for several years, when the year of the pestilence found him stationed in the smitten city of the Gulf. Unacclimated, J and p liablf ?t anv moment to .ntract the disease, tne nusDanu oi a lovely woman, and the father of several small children, has life was deemed too valuable to them and to the world to be perilled amid the epidemic, and he was importunately urged to flee from the city. But his sense of duty forbid the flight. His high courage and unwavering trust in the wisdom and goodness of Providence, resigned him even to the martyrdom of untimely death, if that, indeed, were the ordination of his lot. He felt, it is true, as a father, and loved devotedly as a husband ; but a sense of ob ligation higher than any that human affec tion can impose, bade him remain at his post, and he heeded what he deemed its divine admonition. In the midst of incessant ministries at the bedside and at the grave, he fell sick of the pestilence himself, and lay down to die. As he had borne hiinsolf meekly in his high office, and kept his record clear, he was ready and, if such were the will of Heaven, not unwilling to depart. Sur rounded by wife, children and friends, sus tained by an unfaltering faith, and bowing in peace to the inevitable summons, he passed unmurmuringly to the dreamless rest of mortality, and thc second of the martyr ministers was numbered with the dead. One instance more, and the mournful recital ends. When the epidemic was at its height, and the gloom over the city had deepened almost to the blackness of de spair, a mildlooking, middle-aged man, with kindling eye and glowing counte nance, might have heed seen, passing from house to house, and from street to street, bearing the messages and the consolations of r'eiigiuii, and the lieeued aid of a" nurs ing hand, into the dreariest haunts of the pestilence. He fears not, for he knows that good angels tent round about all who tread in the path of duty. Thc alert and vigorous intellect, the generous heart, the high culture of letters, eloquence, exalted piety and burning zeal in all the offices of his holy vocation all these are his, and, with deliberate choice, he lays them all as a sacrifice upon the altar of duty. On the field of his benignant labors he is smitten by the shaft of the pestilence, and goes down, amid the tears and unavailing pray ers of all who knew him, to the silent em brace of the tomb. In onc of the cemeteries of the city of Mobile, there arc three graves of nearly equal age. Side by side their little hil locks rise, a triple brotherhood, in that multitudinous city of the dead. In these lie the mortal remains of three Methodist preachers. As in lives, labors and martyr dom, they were united, so in their sepul ture they have not been divided. A chaste monument, erected by the joint contribu tions of the church and of the citizens of Mobile, bears, inscribed upon its marble pillars, thc names of Hughes, Starr and Powell the three martyr ministers of our tale. Life's fitful fever over, they sleep well together in the covert, where neither the breath of the pestilence nor the waill of its victims can come. Peace be to their ashes, and green evermore, in the sunny land of their birth, be the memory of their virtues, their Christian lives, and their heroic deaths. J. W. T. "PVirmor .Tnnfs w.nsi nni mornin Khan- I ding near the wayside, in a small field connected with his farm, which, to the passer-by, had all the appearance of great barreness, when Parson Anderson, coming up on horse back, exchanged salutions with the farmer. " Busy, I see, with your farming opera tions, this bright morning," said the par son. " Not very busy at this moment," said Mr. Jones; " I am bothered to know what to do with this patch of ground, which has never brought me a dollar." "Yes, I see," replied Mr. Anderson, "it does not look very promising, but the good seed that has been sown there, must, I suppose sooner or later, come up." ' ' Good seed sown there ! why, no seed has been sown that I know offer five years past, and as it did not come up at the usu al time, when it was sown, it would be a strange thing to expect it to appear now. We farmers do not look for crops five years after date," said Mr. Jones, laughing. "Ah ! I see," said the parson, " I am rather ignorant about these matters ; but I was told that you had a field in which, you say, good seed was planted ten years ago, $1.50 a year, in advance. and yet the neighbors say you are yet look ing for the harvest, although as yet there is no appearance of ' blade, ear, or full corn in the car.' " " You were told? Mr. Anderson; and pray who told you that I was euch a fool as that? When I plant, I expect growth the first season, and, if it fails then, I plant again. Who ever heard of good need growing, after it had been lying ten years dead in the ground ?" "Well, I must confess," and Mr. An derson, ' what you say appears reasonable ; 'ut as good Elder Thomas told me, I 1 f . T .11 i!. It IT, n.tol.f i i flOUrOU 1 'VOUlU men mm ii. ' nni.w ? : J had "dome other meaning. It73t perhaps you can, find it out. Good inor nmg, sir ; I must go ou my way." Farmer Jones stood pondering for a good while, when a thought flashed across his mind which he fouud very difficult to get rid of. The truth was, that, ten years be fore, Farmer Jones professed to le convert ed, and had joined the Church. From that time until thc time of the akvc interview, none had been able to sec in him the growth of the good seed. He had, indeed, lecn pretty regular in attending church, al though he confessed that sitting still in his pew always made him feel drowsy, tu that he did not very well know what thc min ister was talking about. It was observed, too, that Mr. Jones seldom had nnychango about him, when collections were made up for religious purposes, and although rrry mil tu do in the world, his contribution for the minister's supjxirt was very small. He could never see the good of prayer meetings and Sundaj'-schcxds, and mission.", and such like things. He considered money spent in subscribing fr a religious newspaper was so much thrown away. If he observed family worship, no one ever found it out; and, if he prayed at all, he must have done it very secretly. No one had heard him instructing his pons and daughters, or urging ujhiii them the im portance of attending to the concerns of their souls. They were accordingly grow ins ui) withtout the fear of God. Indeed, his was a very irreligious family, not one particle better than if their father had never joined thc Church. He was, how ever, a very active man, and could go about anything in which he was interested, v.'ih u rifiht good will, and a t.trorghau . He believed the Scriptures, at least so far as this, that he knew "that the hand of the diligent maketh rich," and he was every year becoming richer, because he worked for it. lie never looked for a crop w here he had not sown seed, and he was not the fool to wait ten years for a harvest! While now he stood on his barren patch, th words of Parson Anderson worried him, and one thought followed another ho quickly and painfully, that he could not avoid thc conclusion that his own irreligi ous and unproductive life was thc thing alluded to by thc parson. lie did not sleep easy that night. He began to view things in another light, and the result was, as we hear, that good seed was then sown in his heart, which was watered by tho dews of heaven, and it sprouted at once, and Farmer Jones became a new man, and his family a very different family. "Webster's Courting. Daniel Webster married thc woman ho loved, and the twenty years which he liv ed with her brought hira to the meridian of his greatness. An anecdote is current on this subject, which is not recorded in the books. Mr. Webster was becoming intimate with Miss Graco Fletcher, when a skein of silk, which he held for ber to wind, was getting into a knot, Mr. Web ster assisted in unravelling tho snarl then looking up to Miss Grace, ho 6aid. " We have untied a knot, don't you think we could tie one V Grace was a little em barrassed, said not a word, but in the courso of a i( w minutes she tied a knot in apiece x faa1iJTs3itT to' MrTt. ot tape anu piece of tape, the thread of his domestic joys, was found after tho death of Mr. Webster, preserved as one of his most pre cious relics. Results of thc Sepoy Rebellion. The Kev. Mr. Hcrron, to tho Banner of the Covenant, enumerates tho following favorable results : 1. The East India Company has been cast down, which, professing to rule on the principle of non-interference with tho re ligion of the natives, ignored Christianity, and encouraged idolatry and casto. 2. Mohamedanism has been humbled, tli6 bitterest enemy of Christ. 3. The public mind has been turned in favor of missions. 4. The sincerity of native Christians Las been severely but triumphantly proved. From these manifest results he infers " that the things that have happened onto us have turned out to the furtherance of the Gospel." Mikabeau calls Paris a city of high life, pleasure, and amusement, where half thc people die broken-hearted. f O