the nomas collection NORTE 1T A A-DVOCA TE. JXl PUBLISHKD WEEKLY 13Y A. COMIITTEE OF IITISTIRS FOR THE IFHIODIST EPISCOPAL CHTJ 1ICM-I, SOUT H-RUFi'S HEFLIX, Editor. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, AUG. 7, I860. terms: VOL. V.- -NO. 21). TWO DOLLARS A YEAR, IX ADVANCE. Business Xofioc. The North Cakhmxa Christian Anvocatk, an orjrauof the General Con tiToiiw. ami or l"u North Carolina Cout'ereiiei of the Mi-tiio'list l-!'s-vopal Churrh. -south, is i.ublishid iu Kalt-igh. eu rj Tuesd-iy iKorniii;;- SrscKlVns: year, in alvance. Ai. japers are .liM-ontintu-.l at the expiration of the time paid for. Subscriber? will In-runiii.lf I of s f.,- r...wL an 1 resitefltilly ro- quested in renew .-ai.ieiiptieii, isu .un i "''traveHn ,.rea,her, arc At; ! oi.-.ii accounts are kept with iiietu. u;u coa.htiou ! oi' prompt settlements at Cotii'ereiiee. A..TEBTiK j-P"!:";,; 'u"- ' first msertiou, sd. rMcin,iifJ""ll'-"llus'-"luui , o-, ,..,.. ! Busiaess Carls oft! lines orl.-?. per an. o on x r.ur of ' 2 lines or ics-. ).er ituuum, ill 00 ". !ii-e,iuii!s for a.ivert:sr.: are ;lue at taetllilis of the first insertion. t wh-n pros tnted. r , i -T- O i v I. V i V 1J ihiE jUXl.-TKY AS A PR01 'ESSIOX. Dear Pro. Heflin : I believe that voungujeu, though positively ctdlnl by the Spirit, are sometimes prevented irom en tering the miuistry by the opposition of friends I furtherbelieve that this oppose tion is rhe consequence of those friends' beinir ignorant of the nature of the cleri cal proia-sion. The following thoughts are presented for the benefit of those friendly advisers with the hope that their views way lie changed and their influence re versed. Again, many friends of young ministers have such incorrect notions of their profession that they are out of reach of the gKd influence that they might oth erwise enjoy. For the benefit of these also, these hasty sentences are designed. Let us looked at the ministry as a voea- 1 ! tiou both urr sc and in contrast with other learned professions. Consider it in rela tion to those motives which generally direct or control one in the election ol a calling for life. One of the first requisites, m any business is " sum :h imj to do." I his is ot considerable weight with all who are worthy of a place in any respectable sphere and I am not writing for those who are not thus worthy. If the young votary use all proper endeavors and after much waiting aad wishing still find " nothing to do" he becomes disheartened, he is offended in his proud heart, his good name is scandalized, he is pitied by some, despised by others fir his littleness; he is a tenant of the lonely halls of obscurity a "floundered" hero of uuh mored ambition. Now a minis ter's life is free from this difficulty, free eveu from the risk of it. It is always abounding iu present duties. It is forever sounding with the grand arid thrilling ap peal. "Come and help! tor the harvest truly is plenteous but the laborers are few." From every heart and home, on every hill, in every vaiicy, are heard the soft, plain tive and enchanting supplications of the immortal breaking npon the soul with j the strange eloquence of life and death of; misery and glory. There is no time when j he may iut find a duty bearing on it. the j iuvK.-nj: words : "A'yr is the uciptfl t;ir" j He cnu ahvavs ;id "somethiiiir to 'o." j His soul is full of holy zcai and desire fir his friends if he offer up those desire in , 'raver he is workiiiir in his vocation. Jlis tonio'-e is on tire with - words that burn'' if he sM.:ik them to his eopipanion he is j working in his vocation. II is pen often ! rdiiiost ijuivers. "liKe a tiling or iiie -LiiiiiiLT to the ey of ids eager soul to st arkie with thoughts fresh from Heaven if he cviVf he is workinir in his vocation. At home or abro; brt iad. m social life or in the Tett coi)'TeL':tt!on. m trratetui recreation ,t or in more active toils, he is all the while throusrh all the changes in the sphere of actual prosecution of his calling in a ." - tiro! sense. If he be ever uselessly idle it- is not for the want of , irilf f . but of j jiriit' t'pff and jo'tt. All this holds good j from the beginning of his ministry. How ... 1 r r. I . l ' :s it witli other protessions: late trie lawyers lor au illustration. Of course we all respect the law and I mean no unjust ! reflection by this contrast. JJut tell me. . c t.MIU'.l wiMMiij'pils 111 lilts III J10H.-1H.- j al ambition . how much idleness and tad ure are caused by crowding young men into vour darling, idol cause '. Go to our oiirt-rooins. and count the clientlessmem- I bcrs of the bar. You will count a great many heads smooth heads and rough heads, small heads and large heads, empty heads and full heads but most of all young and old dind-loud. They do now, aud have long done much to secure busi ness, but thev don't succeed. They look-plea-ing,then dignified. they hxik wise, then Wonderful, they speak wisdom, then flat tery, they do all they can to get ''some thing P do" and still they sit in the very arena with " tied hands " like "Bookfnl of l.!r,ek-!iacls iirnnrantly read. With loads of learned lumber iu th, ir head." Just the other dav I met a young limb of the law brawny and stalwart itsal Kentuckian. able to make "big splinters" fly from 1 cavy timber, and he frankly said to me: '-Sir, I confess to anybody that I am just looking for business." There he is. able to do as much as Caesar without enough business to occupy ":a little boy in arifch,'wi 'Uoistr nninrnihrigT-ry.'-1- r aiii willing to grant that this is not always so in a very great degree, but it is somewhat so in nearly every case, and yet every young man thinks he'll be an exception and his "stuck up" aristocratical connec tions often think s too. I'd rather be a drayman than a drone. The like is true of other professions. What a quantity of medicine spoils for the want of patients to take it. What a lazy, frivolous. it. reit -a ;t7v h-ii-olou,: imsMti. lying, newspaper life is led by professional j politicians very frequently: From election I to election if they are not candidates or are not elected, they have to acknowledge the exhaustion of their professional privileges by seckingother employment. If they go tooflice, over half are worse than dead-heads there no matter whether that office be State or National. In legislative halls there is as much do-nothingness as can be found in the same numbers anywhere. I conclude then that the first motive is better met in the ministry than any other profession. I desire to present the relation to other motives soon if I can find lei sure. A. W. 31. LlTTLETOX.'X. C. RIDGEWAT LETTERS X0. 9. PUBLIC HIGH-WAYS. Though the subject of this letter may seem, at first thought, puerile and unim portant, I am convinced it is one, in which the couifort of every community is to no little extent involved. The man who lives in a city, and whose traveling is con fined to railroads and steamboats, may be an unappreciative reader; but there are others, and by far the larger number, who are in a very differed condition. The public high-ways iu the United States are inferior to any other part of the civilized world. ot only such countries as Eugland, France, Ac, but even Sweden arid Norway, notwithstanding the disad vantages under which tliev have to labor. j,.ve roads superior to ours. In the I nited States, and especially in North Carolina there seems to be complete indifference to tJu, suujuct was a s; with the Phari- sees, that they were careful about small at- . . . . . lairs, but neglected the weightier matters ot t),e jaw t ,s a sm wltu us at tnls (jay i and in this country, that while we are in- i terested in, and attentive to great matters, i we are very neg lectful of small ones. We ! move heaven and earth to build railroads. I ut jiaj. no i-jluj ot- attention to county i ! - 1., fll,., tii.o.'.iiniifA ia tlj'it-. Ill-nil' nt" ' I 111 V 1 1 U I UI.IJI v.. 1 -I taiuu ....... . " - tuciu are amioai tuipassuDie. iiieu 01 a j ditch on both sides, the rain is permitted j to wash a gully in the middle. Instead of good substantial bridges, we nave notes or fence rails laid on cross pieces of like material- Instead of intelligible linger boards at the forks and crosses, we have nothing. There are many miles of road almost im passable in summer, and quite so iu winter, which, with a little work might be made good. 1 consider the laws of the State with regard to public high-ways almost obsolete. A few bushes cut clcwn and mud holes tilled up on Saturday before court is sufficient for all hijol purposes. I commenced this letter, however, with the purpose, not so much of complaining at the indifference shown to the condition of the roads, as something else which 1 will now mention. Every man who lives near a railroad, and can save a lew vards j of fencing and i'eet of ground by the opera- t tion. petitions the court and has granted him the ritfht to cliautre the road and run it immediately on the side of the railroad. This is wrong. The Jives of the commun ity are endangered and the property sub jected to injury, and all. to save a dew vards of fencing. It is a degree of selfish ness which ouht not to be tolerated. It is criminal in magistrates to grant permis sion for such changes to be made. At the pre-eut rate of progress in this direction, a very few years will suffice to have the public and railroads, running parallel wherever it is at all practicable. THE NH.ESMTY foK CuLPORTAGE. This necessity is to be seen and felt from the following figures gathered from the recent annual report of the American Tract Society : The 040 Colporteurs the past vear made 020.052 family visits, in which they found 43,478 families desti tute of all religious books; 28.740 fami lies without the Bible; 00.704 families habitually n'g!ecting church; 47.502 lio man Catholic families were visited with much success; .)20.0U!J evangelical vol- TMiit'S were .srcittord. m;;nily ami;i tlit more destitute. This work was done in States and territories. Ninety-four Colporteurs labored among the (.Hermans. Suedes. Norwegians. Danes. Hollanders. . Welch. French and Indians. 1 he Socle- ! tv is j uMishinir g s; cl truth iu 120 i iu ! guages an t dialects. In addition to ex- ' pending 70.0 !(. 20 in supplying our ; j home wants, the Society gave S12.000 to ' ! supply .Missionaries of different denomi i nations in distant heathen lands with ! printed gospel truth in their native lan- ' I oitages. "A single tract was the genu of' a whole mission in India." says Hev. Dr. Scudder. bUGOF.STlVE facts. j'rom care ireful investigation by min-' jtnvs :mil others it, has been nscer- tai j tha tvt.n in Xew England, where th(,y are s( tlljL.k!v s(.tte(1 alu chUrch ad- Ullages so numerous, that not more man . i . i lie-half of the people ever attend the ; churches, not above one-third with any j regularity, and only one-fourth constantly, j If this be true of them, how great the j neglect and destitution must be in the j newer and more sparsely settled States and : I territories . A minister m a prominent town in our State, having charge of a church numbering about 200 members, recently told me that one-third of the members habitually neglected public wor ship. A careful investigation or two prominent country churches in the same , county, shows still greater neglect, nei ther of which have united religious inter- I est enough to get up and carry on a Sab bath school, the importance of which they admit. They content themselves, gener- ally, with going to church once or twice a ; j month for publicly worshiping God an hoar or two each Sabbath, then much ; of those and the other Sabbaths are spent by them, their children and servants in visiting for feasting and amusement. A LETTER. .A Pwster.wj-jthijf county where there is scarcely ever any preaching, the bottle is the common com panion. If I had time to have appoint ments to preach among them they would not come out to hear me, or any educated minister. But by a pious, prudent col porteur to make kind family visits among them, and wisely distribute the gospel books and tracts published by the Ameri can Tract Society, they can and will be , cached successfully, as it is carried on in t,le sP'rit of h""ble prayer and faith in Christ, who also 'went about doing good.' I have distributed all the tracts you sent me. aud I am sure they will do much good. I take great pleasure in visiting the poor, and leaving a good tract to con tinue talking to them of Jesus after I am gone. I hope you will send me many more to scatter, for next to the ministry 1 love this work, which is such a strong ;help' to the ministry. I will raise a lil eral proportion in my churches to support a colporteur in this county, as I believe it to be the only means that can reach the masses at their homes who will not come to church." THOUGHTS TOR CHRISTIAN PATRIOTS. From reliable statistics, there are from eight to ten millions of souls in this our christian land, who are not reach ed by the ordinary means of grace. Ev ery christian and every patriot should be moved to prompt action in reaching this one-third of our entire population with light and truth, that both mind and heart may be projicrly taught, for sin aud igno rance are the .sure and deadly enemies to the safety, success and happiness of stale, nation and soul. Let each one labor un ceasing to build up aud make strong our two sure pillars as a nation religion and intelligence. 3Iothers who are properly taught these will teach them to their chil dren, and the children who properly learn aud receive these now will be the reliable christians, patriots, and officers iu church and State in the succeeding generation. - llighteousness exalteth a nation." The father, the mother, the child, make the nation; therefore, we must teach them this '-righteousness" as the only sure foundation for temporal and spiritual ac tion iu wnatevcr we do, and this must be taught them, not only at the church and on the Sabbath, but at their homes, the homes of rich and poor, through the week, and it must be taught, and ielt, and practiced every day, aud every week, and c-verysmmiL, ar.d ove:y ysaf, v I.i.'o if. is God's will that we be a nation; aud thus ar.tihj. wc will be a ftvppy. chris- timi notion. An Ex-Governor of our State uttered a wise sentiment when he said, " that if we educate our children iu the sciences alone, and not in the Bible, thirl cannot le. (rutted," llanicl Webster said '-that nothing could be more promo tive of the union of our country than the circulation of religious evangelical publi cations." UOW COLPOKTAOE HELPS. To help do this important work in the family, we see the adaptation of colpor tage by which we are now carrying gos pel truth to more than 2l.U00 families or over lOO.OoO souls in this our State an nually. As God has raised up this active system to help meet the increasing wants of this rapid age. it is proper that the friends of the American Tract Society should know it greatly needs funds to car ry on its benevolent work. During the first quarter of the present year, ending June 1st. the grants to the poor and needy have been 0.028, and the expenditure for coiportage has been upwards of 318,000. Calls for gospel truth for per ishing souls are coining to us from every quarter. These truths are being read and God is daily owning them as His instru ments in the salvation of souls. I saw a lady a few days ago who was hopefully converted by the Spirit's blessing upon the tract -To the AiHicted." I trust soon to hear from friends, and receive their donations to this work, all of which are acknowledged in the "American Mes senger." The salary of a colporteur is 810.' ; Life Director Soil ; Life Member 820 ; and every dollar will print 1.500 pages. REV. PR. R. FULLER. As the Key. Dr. Kichard Fuller of Baltimore, said in his recent address at our anniversary "If we deserve to be American citizens, this Society will en gage our warmest interest because it is su perior to all sectional feeling, because it recognizes no North, no South, no Last, no West; but is, in its entire character, in all its objects, wholly American, em bracing with the same tender solicitude everv portion of the land. It is the cause of Him in whose hands are the resources of the universe. Let us but have faith." Yours truly. W. J. W. CilOWDEIL Gen. Ag't. Am. Tr. Soc. Baleigh. August. 1-N) !. THE DROUGHT. Mr. Editoii: For several weeks past the drought has been the subject of fre qiteut conversations with many and reflec ted upon, without doubt, by all. That rain was much needeu, spe tking after the manner of men. w as not only acknowledged by ad. but looked for, longed for, and praved for. Tongues, comparatively mute in general, become fluent irpon the subject of the needed blessing-rain. When ra;n was made the subject of prayer, lips utilised lo responses were heard to respond the heart seemed to praj-. Temporally speak ing, rain was the :one thing needful.' Kain. the farmers wanted merchants, de pendent on the farmers, wanted rain me chanics standing in the same relation to farmers, wanted rain. The pleasure taking public desired rain, for it would make traveling more pleasant. Farmers crops were dying their gardens burui g up merchants and mechanics began to look long faced, pleasure seekers were almost in censed at having to fulfil a command made to another, " Dust shalt thou eat." Time, however, rolled on, and many were the predictions that were made and many the signs pointed out that had, in more rainy weather, proved good. Before this drought there was a spiritual one which still con tinues, widening in extent, killing in its nature, affecting the good seed of the king dom and the harvest of the world. But few have any thing to say of this drought one was a physical necessity, the other a moral one the one touching and affect ing an infinitesimal of time the other the far off future and forever the one per taining to what is mortal. the other touching in its claims and consequences u..ii iirvu m .sjjtii.u.n atiu eternal. vi lio prays for a rain of righteousness, or la ments that pure religion is on the wane ? not burning up, but freezing out. How few make this a subject of serious conver sation yet who with even a grain of moral sense am! a moment of reflection hut fee's we need "showers of blessing." What is the prediction in this direction? What the signs? Ministers of Jesus, men of God. and ye Deborahs and Annas look around you, what a withering moral drought pre vails,! "It is time to seek the Lord till he come and rain, righteousness upon you." This is the great need of the church now. But we seek the Lord by prayer. This is the means to collect the spiritual vapors, form them into clouds of mercy that shall break forth, in torrents of refreshing bless ings upon the moral wastes around, and make spiritual nature revive. Prayer, prayer by preachers and people powerful prayer. Heart felt prayer. Importunate prayer prayer to God, in the name of Christ and in the Holy Ghost then the Lord will come and ram righteousness upon us. Amen. C. Raleigh, Jidy 24, 18G0. THE DEACON'S GUESS. A certain divine who was more eminent in his day for the brilliancy of his imagina tion than the force of his logic, was preach ing on the "ministry of angels," and in the peroration he suddenly observed i4I hear a whisper!" The change of tone started the deacon, who sat below, from a drowsy mood, and springing to his feet, he spake " I guess it's the boys in the gal lery !" S E LECTIONS, KEY. V. 310MA1I0X VS. REV. P. CARTWRIUJ1T. llev. W. McMahon, ot the Memphis Conference, has written some recollections of early life and manhood, which recol- j lections appear in the Memphis Christian Advocate. In a lately puplished number, he alludes to the Eev. P. Cartwright. and his opposition to the late II. B- Bascom, whom 3IcMahon thinks Cartwright and others attempted to eruwh for no good ! cause, and after this allusion he adds: 1 have seen, in a late paper, that this same Peter Cartwright has lately been speaking very disparagingly of me in New York, iu one of his public lectures in that place, where he lays the scene at Nash- ville, and puts words into the mouth of vjeneiai ejacKsou anu uuyseii, mat j. aui very certain neither of us ever thought or spoke. The fact is, at the Conference to which he alludes, I felt it my duty to charge hiin, before that body, with un ministerial conduct, specified in Uoing vular language in ptivate lamilies. in low flung and fool-born jesting, and other im prudences, by which he lowered the min isterial character. To this course I was advised by Thomas L. Douglass, 1 think, Bishop McKendree, and many of the most pious aud aged ministers in the Con ference. For this and my friendship to Bascom, Cartwright has never forgiven me; hence he tells the people of New l'ork, that at Nashville he found a local preacher, by the name of MeMahon, who was more of a time server and cringer than a christian; that he presided over an aristocratic congiegatiou, flattered their vices ; and that, being called on to preach, McMahon pulled his coat and told him to be careful; that General Jackson was in the house ; that he answered, in a loud voice, "Who cares for General Jackson?" that God would as soon damn him as any Guinea nigger; and that General Jackson met him on the street the next clay, and told him he was a man after his own heart; that that fellow. McMahon, had been to his room, to make an apology for him, and he had liked to have kicked him out of the Jiousc. I do not recollect to have seen so many falsehoods grouped to gether in so small a compass as in the foregoing statement of this reekless man. L. t's see how a plain, unvarnished tale will put him down. 1 was Presiding El der of the Nashville District at the time I he finds me a time-serving, bringing local preacher. Henry B. Bascom dM myself, i with some other preachers, were holding a j tirotraeteu meeting at Nashvihe. on the Saturday aiiu Sunday preceding the ton- , fere nee. Cartwright came in on Sunday night. I think, and I asked him to preach. There was a very large congregation ; and, seeing General Jackson iu the house, I said to Cartwright that he would have General Jackson for one of his hearers that night; he made some rude remark, perhaps, '-Who cares for General Jack son?" but none heard it except those who were iu the pulpit. Now this is every word of truth that I find in this wonder ful story about Peter Cartwrignt and Gen eral Jackson, that is going the rounds in the papers. 1 do not believe he ever spoke to General Jackson in his life. ' And as for the General's cursing and threatening to kick me, there never w-as a more unqualified falsehood uttered by man. I never had a more honest and sin cere friend on earth than General Jack son. But I hope, after ail, that the news papers have misrepresented this poor old man. arid that he is not uttering and pub lishing deliberate falsehoods, that scores and hundreds of living witnesses can re fute. But here I will leave him to his God and his own conscience for the pres ent; for I feel certain that, whatever he may be now, he has been a useful man in the church in former years. I have known him for fifty-two years, and hope and pray to God that he may be saved. THE RICH AND THE POOR. The rich man's son inherits lands, I And piles of brick, and stone, and gold, j And ho inherits soft white hands, And tender flesh that fnars the cold, j Xor dares to wear a garment old: A heritage. iseeais to me, One scarce would wish to hold in fee. The rich man's son inherits cares The bank may break, the factory burn, A breath may burst his bubble shares ; And .soft w hite hands could hardly earn A living that would serve his turn ; A heritage, it seems to me. One scarce would wish to hold in fee. What doth the poor man's son inherit ? Stout muscles and a sinewey heart, A hardy frame, a hardier spirit ; King of two hands he does his part In every useful toil and art: A heritage, it seems to me, A king might wish to hold iu fee. What doth the poor man's son inhrrit ? A patience learn'd of being poor. Courage, if sorrow comes to bear it, A fellow-feeling that is sure To make tii3 outcast bless his door A heritage, it seems to me, A king might wish to hold iu fee. Oh, rich man's son! there is a toil That with all others level stands, Large charity doth never soil, But only whiten soft white hands ; This is the best crop from thy lands A heritage, it seems to me, Worth being rich to bold in fee. Oh, poor man's son! scorn not thy state, There is worse weariness than thine In merely being rich and great; Toil only gives the soul to shine, And makes rest fragant and benign A heritage, it seems to me, Worth being poor to hold in fee. Both heirs to some six feet of sod, Are equal in the earth at last, Both, children of the same dear God, Prove tide to your heirship vast, By records of a well filled past A heritage, it seems to me, Well worth a life to hold in fee. It is as difficult to preserve fame, as was at first to acquire it. HAVEI.OCK'S RELIGIOUS IMPRESSIONS. The religious impressions induced by his mother's early instructions, and dee ened in the Charter-house cloister, in which he and his piously-disposed schoolmates assembled for devotional exercises, had been weakened during eight years of mili tary life in England. The influence of the new associations into which he was thrown had tended to deaden his spiritual feel ings, and religion had lost much of its power on his mind aud his spirits. He never yielded to the temptations which surrounded him. He was not only strictiy moral in his conduct, but eminently pure lu his principles. lie was too highminded to give countenance to those who scoffed at religion and ridiculed its consistent pro fessors; but his religion, bereft of vitality beeause of a formal routine of duty, from which the warmth ot holy anecticn was . tircly absent At one time he appears to have been led by the recklesness of speculation to the verge of L mtarianisni, and began to admit doubts of the divinity of the Saviour. But he was not satisfied with himself; he felt a longing for some substantial foundatian on which to rest his religious views and hopes some solid prin ciples to regulate his conduct and animate his soul ; and it was during his voyage to India that he happily found the object of his search. Through the instrumentality of a fellow-passenger, he was drawn to more ear nest perusal of the Holy Scriptures, and led to an exclusive and quicken reliance on the merits of the atonement. This hap py change, which brought his soul under the omnipotent influence of divine truth and love, and diffused joy and peace through his mind, is thus described by himself: It was while the writer was sailing across the wide Atlantic towards Bengal, that the spirit of God came to him with its offer of peace and mandate of love, which, though for some time resisted, at length prevailed. Then was wrought that great change iu his soul which has been productive of unspeakable advantage to him in time ; and he trusts has secured him happiness in eternity. The Gtr,i--ml Kjdd, in which he was embarked, con veyed to India Major Side, destined there after to defend Jellalabad; but she also carried out a humble, unpretending man, James Gardner, then a lieuteuant in the loth Foot, now a retired captain, engaged in home missionary work and other objects of Christian benevolence at Bath. This excellent person was most, influential in leading llavelock lo make public avowal by his works, of Christianity in earnest." Lieutenant, now Col. Gardner, on dis covering the state of Ilavclock's mind. entered into religious conversation with him, and endeavored to lead his thought .i inquiries into a right channel. Have- iocs norroweu, in me nrst instance, the lilo of Henry Martyn, and read it with great interest. He then perused Scott's Force of Truth," diligently comparing the extracts from the Scriptures with the text and context. Thus did Lieutenant Gardner become his evangelical instructor, resolving his doubts as they aro.-e, and leading him gradually to embrace Christian truth in all its breadth with simplicity and a flection. Before, the voyage terminated, llavelock had added to the qualities of the man and the soldier the noble spirit of the Christ tiau; and thus w;:s he accoutred for that career of usefulness and eminence which has endeared him to his fellow-countrymen. Vital religion became the anima ting principle of 'j11 his actions, and a pa ramount feeling of his duty to God recti fied and invigorated the sense of his duty towards man. M m. of Sir IT. Iluvdodc. t il i. i GOOD NEWS IROM GREECE. The Bev. Dr. King writes from Athens: The bishop that purchased of me last year 400 Testaments, for distribution in his diocese, has applied to Mr. Kalopothakes for 500 more. Two or three days ago, he sent to inquire at what time 1 could see him, as he wished to call on me. I ap pointed the day aud hour, but when the time came his heart failed him, and I was asked to have an interview with him at the house of 3Ir. Kalopothakes. At first, I felt inclined to say, that if he was afraid to call on me I would not call on him. I went, however, and had a long conversa tion with him on the subject of religion. During the conversation, and almost at the commencement of it. he said it was well-known and acknowledged by all, that those of my denomination are the most up right and moral people in the world; that here (in Greece) they have a form of re ligion that has little or no influence on the heart or the life of those who profess it. I told him that if he would put the Yv'ord of God into the hands of the priests under him, and enjoin on them to read and study it attentively, and to go about and read it to the people, instructing them to walk ac i cording to the Word, he would be a good' j shepherd. This, he gave me to under I stand, he endeavored to do. On the whole. 1 was very glad I went to see him. The priest, or deacon, who was with him. nod ded assent to all I said, and seemed very much interested in the conversation. TALKING. The Agriculturist, alluding to certain chatter-boxes, saj-s: I don't believe what some folks say, that little girls should be seen and nut heard. I wouldn't have them dumb for anything; but I want them to kn w how to talk, and when to be silent. I wish I could invent something to put in people's mouths, like what I saw fastened on to a water-pipe the other day. They call it a filter. The wa ter was quite muddy, but when it passed through the. filter, it came out as clear as crystal. O ! if we could only strain out all the naiighty passionate, careless, silly, nonsensical and unkind words from con versation, what a pleasure it would be to listen! I'm afraid some people would not have much to say. and I'm sure the filter would want cleansing. THE BIBLE. Out of the Bible have come all pure moralities. From it have sprung all sweet charities. It has been the motive power of regeneration and reformation to millions of men. It has comforted the humble, con soled the mourning, sustained the suffer ing, and given trust and triumph to the dying. The wise old man has fallen asleep with it folded to his breast,' The simple cottager has used it for his dying pillow; and even the innocent child has breathed his last happy sigh with finger between its promise-freighted leaves. THE BIBLE AND THE FIRST CONGRESS. As early as the beginning of the last century, laws existed in some of the colon ies requiring every family to be furnished with a Bible. This supply continued to be kept up by individual exertion until the meeting of the first Congress in 1777, one year after the Declaration of Independence. In the early formation of our government, those who looked upon the experiment with jealous eyes anticipated a speedy dis solution, from the fact that it made no pro vision for the establishment of religion. Although the legislative power-of our country is prohibited from making laws prescribing and enforcing the observance of any particular faith or form of worship, yet it is equally powerless in prohibiting the free exercise thereof; while, at the same time, it extends its protecting aegis over the rights of conscience. The govern ment has never been unmindful of the interests oY religion, but' has hum tL-i be' giuuing adhered to aud carried out the language of Washington, that '"religion and morality are indispensable supports of po litical existence and prosperity." The Congress of 1777 answered a mem orial on the subject of Bible distribution iu this country, by appointing a committee to devise as to the printing an edition of thirty thousand Bibles. The population of the country then was only about three mil lions, aud all the Bibles in the entire world at that period did not exceed four millions. Thus it will be seen that its cir culation in this and all other countries at that time was exceedingly limited. The report of the committee appointed by Congress forms one of the brightest epochs in the history of our country, and sheds a clear and steady light over every subsequent eventful period. The public recognition of God in that act was of in finitely greater importance in giving sta bility to the times, and securing the per manency of our institutions, than all the imposing and formidable array of legal en actments ever made for the establishment of religion. . The committee finding it difficult to pro cure the necessary material, such as paper and types, recommended Congress "the use of the Bible being so universal. and its importance so great to direct the Com mittee on Commerce to import, at the ex pense of Congress, twenty thousand Eng lish Bibles from Holland, Scotland, or else where, into the different ports of the States ot the Lilian. lhe report was adopted, and the importation ordered. In 1781, when from the existence of the war no English Bible could be imported, and no opinion could be formed how long the obstruction might continue, the subjec of printing the Bible was again presented to Congress, and it was, on motion, refer red to a committee of three. The committee, after giving the subject a careful investigation, recommended to Congress an edi ion printed by llobert Aitken, of Philadelphia; whereupon it was "AVWW, That the United States, in Congress assembled, highly approve the pious ami laudable undertaking yf Mr. Aitken, as subservient to the interests of religion; and being satisfied of the care and accuracy of the execution of the work. recommend this edition to the inhabitants of the United States." How interesting is such a history of the early circulation of the Bible in this coun try! What moral sublimity in the fact, as it stands iinperishably recorded and filed in the national archives! Who. in view of this fact, will call in question the assertion that this is a BiLlc nation? Who will charge the government with indifference to religion when the first Congress of the States assumed all the rights and perform ed all the duties of a Bible society long before such an institution had ail exis tence? liihle X'-f.iVy Rfxord. 51 Y or EST. I have a wondrous guest, Who speeds my feet, who movi'S my hands. Who .strengthens, comforts, guides, com mauds, Whose presence gives me ivst. He dwells within my soul ; He swept away the guilt and gloom, He garnished fair the empty room, And now pervades the wliola. For aye by day and night, He keeps the portal, suffers naught Defile the temple I:e has bought, And tilled with joy and light. Once 'twas a cavern dim ; The home of evil thoughts, desires, Enkindled hy infernal lires, Without one thought of Him. Regenerate by his grace, Still 'tis a ait.-ager tun at best, For heaven's King to make his rest, And sho-.v his glorious face. Yet, K.tviur. ne'er depart From (his poor eanhly cottage home, Pntil the Cntin.-r bid me come, Yv'hisp'riitg within my heart. " I sh;i?,o llipso cottage walls; Fear not : at mv t-nmmand they bow ; My heavenly mansions open now," As this poor dwelling falls. sr.li: ONE MUST PRAY. The social life of heathen nations is penetrated through and through by their religion, and the commonest duties in the family, in busines-.? and in travel, are iden tified wttii religious observances. It were well if christian nations were equally scrupulous. We give an illustration from the S'. V Timrx : A man of learning and talent, but an unbeliever, was traveling in Manilla on a scientific expedition, lie was escorted by a native of rank, and, as they were about to start, the native, with the refined po liteness w hich characterizes the Orientals, requested the white stranger to pray to his God. This was probably the only thing he could have been asked to do without being able to comply; and on his declining, the native said, "Well some God must be prayed to, so you will excuse me if I pray to mine." " Full many a shaft at random sent, Finds mark the archer never meant." So it was in this case. The unbeliever was rebuked by a heathen, and the man of science who had gone there in quest of natural curiosities, returned, having found the " pearl of great price." Ilia next visit is to le as a missionary to preach Christ. , THE UNKNOWN A liliKlGINES OF CENTRAL EI HOPE. A i:io.-t remarkable and interesting dis covery has been made, wiiiiin a few mouths near the margins of several lakes iu Swit zerland and France, of the remains of a people of an unknown racr, and of some period previous to history. The first dis coveries were made in 154. near Concise, in the Canton tie Yaud. Traces of an cient habitations, of a somewhat similar kind, have been observed in Ireland. In txca various made on a railroad line, on the margin of a lake, implements and weapons of stone, and vessels of earthen ware, were found, with fragments of planks, piles, bones of animals, birds and fi. lies, which attracted the attention of scientific men, and led to a careful inspec tion of the works as they proceeded. Ex plorations were afterwards made on the borders of several other lakes in Switzer land und Fcuneo. pud irj pioro than a hun dred places attended with similar discov eries; and many of the collections of an tiquaries and antiquarian societies, are supplied with hundreds of specimens of such curious remains, with we'd authenti cated accounts of the lucidities, positions and circumstances in which they were dis covered. We shall content ourselves with a very brief notice of the most important results to w hich the learned have arrived from their careful observations and deduc tions made on the spot, at the time, and under the most favorable advantages. The subject has excited so much interest, that many fictitious relics have beeu made, and palmed oft" as genuine ; but compe tent judges have beeu able to secuto the genuine, and to detect and expose the im postures. We derive the following facts from au article on the subject in the Paris li'rrue ArdKiolo'iq'ti, conducted by "Les Principaux Arch;c!ogiics l'rancais et Et raiigers," written by Frederic Troyon. The people w hose remains have been thus unexpectedly and accidentally dis covered, occupied small buildings of wood, constructed upon platform, built from the shores of lakes, and extending a consider able distance from the margin. The re mains of the piles or posts which support ed the platforms, and of the planks of which the platforms and hou.-es o huts were constructed, are so lar preserved, and in such positions, as to prove that this custom existed. These have been kept from decay by being covered with the sediment of the lake, aud by the water above it; and thus also have beeu pre served the handles and appendages of many of the stone implements found among or near them, as well as the bones of various animals, which served the peo ple fir food aud certain objects of other kinds, as earthen vessels, ornaments, itc. Some of the animals have never been known iu that part of Europe, from the earliest times of which we have any his tory; and the people must have be a in habitants anterior to the Gauls and Celt., because they were ignorant of metals. From the discovery of a few articles of iron among the most recent remains, it has been conjectured that those people were conquered, and, perhaps, extermina ted by the Celts. It will be easily seen that these discov eries must throw new interest on some of the ancient relics of our country, as well as "finally others, ; different parts of the world. We find tiuineroti-i remains of wrought stone in our soil, but the impor tant part of the implements are entirely wanting, because made of perishable ma terials. Every arrow and sp.-ar-hcad once had its shaft, anil every axe-head, hoe, hammer, ite., its handle, which, if entire, might have enabled us to form more defi nite ideas of its use. Besides, any people who would take the pains to shape stones into so many forms as we find, probably would employ shells, wood, and bones for many other purposes; so that we have to regret that only a very small share of the implements, utensils, tools, and ornaments of our American aborigines can have come down to our time, and that most of those we find are destitute of some important part. Their habitations, the remains of the animals on which they fed, except the shells of oysters and clams, have all been destroyed by time. But perhaps some discovery may yet be made, in some part of our country, resembling those iu the Swiss lakes, which may in part supply facts wanting to the archaeologist. Such are the resemblances between some of those stone relies and certain kinds found in the United States, that interesting light is thrown on several of the latter, by the descriptions and drawings in the publica tion before-mentioned. The World. Til K GKOWLERY. While speaking of the arrangements of his house, a gentleman of our acquaintance said that on the first floor there were the dining-room, the sitting-room, and the growlery. We never before had heard of such an institution, but it instantly occur red to us that here was a bright and pro ductive idea. A growlery! Why, we all ol us nave the thing, the potent entity ; and would it itot be well to segregate it from the common uses of the domicil, and endow it, so to speak, as a peculiar instil -u-tion of its own? Why should it be mixed up with everything, jarring on the domes tic svmiihoiiy. and setting the tune to something other than a minor key? Why not withdraw it to a special room, and clear kitchen, dining-room, sitting-room, parlor, nursery, library, bed-chamber, attic, cellar, and closet, of its un welcome presence? We foresee the growlery, therefore, rapidly growing in favor. It will be the confes sional of the house a thingthe Protestants have always ached to have, and sadly needed. Only it will be a sort of sclf-con-fessioiial. and self-exainiiiarory and self explosive private closet. It will be the fun room of the house, too; for give grumb ling one turn more of the handle, and it makes it drollery right off. To the grow lery, then, with the whole race of grumb lers, croakers, scolders, worriers, forcbod-. crs. Let them do penance, there, and swallow their medicine, the necessary dt'iijrt -ill-run, and infelicities, and contre temps of life, without agitating the whole household with their wry faces and un comfortable remarks. To the growlery with crying children, and sour youths, and scowling maidens, and pettish tempers, and cross dispositions, and the whole brood of the miniature family devils! Put them together, and perhaps they would look so unhandsome, that they would shame one another into good manners. But au even better plan was to send the whole tribe of growls, grumbles, croaks, spites, and bites, a-bulging, and burn so strong and fragrant tile of good-will and Christian love iu i tin home sanctuary, that the whole dismal pany would take to their heels. ( 'iri- tiuu Inquirer. A BIBLE-READER IX JIEXHU ' .!i agent of the American Bible Socio rives the following very interesting s respecting a reader of the Bible in xi co : think I have found one true christian in LUexico. lie is a .Mexican, cignty y rs obi. He is very poor, and teaches a little scl hud in the suburbs of Matamoras for a suil port. While distributing Bibles, I called accidentally at his jacol, or house, unii offered to sell him a Bible. He said he 1: had one already, and (showed it to inc. ked if he read it. He answered, " It tod's book why should I not read it?'' then showed me a New Testament, ich he had obtained in New Orleans, is H4 w irs ago. It was printed ly the Alucri- Bible Society in lifli), and its appear i testified that it has been long and 11 used. Between the leaves, marking favorite texts and passages, were pieces of coin husks or shucks. It is very connuou w th th th h the Mexicans to have corn shucks in '.r pockets or hats, of hu h to make r cigarritos; but this old man used in lbr a double purpose. My old friend or so 1 came to regard him in a little vl i!e seemed to prize his old book as a 1 il of great price. I thought he looked ul hi u it with reverence ami delight, and dim eyes sparkled as he spoke of its bl ssetl truths and precious promises. I a d him if he prayed to the saints? He "No." If he worshipped the Virgin? sa J'o; he-worshipped God only the Holy Tifuity, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." Iti ok up the testament, and turned to tho d chapter of the gospel according t' John, and read the dialogue between blessed Master and the Jewish ruler. tl St out I iien asked lorn what lie thought ot I lie lie Lv birth or regeneration. lie said lie he lit ed it was necessary to be born again. in th order to enter the kingdom ul'God. lie ri tola me of his own deep repentance an I sorrow of heart, and how at last lie fo nd pardon, and peace, and joy, through faith in Christ. I cannot tell you how it cheered my nt to find even one true christian in xico. May not the Bibles which 1 mil nJv circulating bring more to the kuowl- ed Le of the truth as it is in Jesus? God gr tut it! May the old school teacher s mil si no so brightly, as it declines, that otli- er may see the true path that leads up to evk Hasting lights ! THE VOICE CE THE IK'EAN. Was it the sound of the distant surf that s iii mine cars, or the low moan of tin) . i . i i i tnecze, as it crept through tin; neighbor- iL' wood? O, that hoarse voice of ocean, never silent since time first began where it not been uttered? There is slilhic-s lid the calm of the arid and rainlcs 1 - stji t, where no spring rises, and no strcam- 1 flow; tind the long caravan plies it ary march amid the blinding glare f sand, ami the red, unshaded rays of e fierce sun. But once ami again, mid t again, has the roar of the ocean Ik'cii kcre. It is his sands that the wind hc.ipt ; ami it is the skeleton remains of hi ssals shells ami fish, ami the stony coral that the rocks underneath inclose Tliere is silence on the tall mountain f'-uk, th its glittering mantle ol snow, ttl.cre u panting lungs labor to inhale the ihiil .ik air where no insect murmurs and bird flic, and whero the aye wanders it multitudinous lull-tops that lie l.ir bJnealh, and vast dark fords that sweep to the distant horizon, and along long billow valleys where the great rivers bc gili. And vet once anil again, anu yet a- in, has the roar of the ocean been there. T te clligies ol' bis more ancient denizens w ; find sculptured, on the crags, where tl ey jut I rum beneath the ice into the mists-wreuth ; and his later beaches, stage buy on I stage, terrace the descending slo esj. Where has the irrcate destroxt-r not btjoii the devoiirer of continents the b !ue foaming dragon, whose vocation is So c; t up the land? His he fiocs have nlil.e fi .-rowed the flat-steppes of Siberia, and tie rocky flanks of Schchallian ; an i his ii Humilities and fish lie imbedded in i-rct stones of the pyramids, hewn in the timet o 'the Pharoahs, and in rocky folds of b. haiion, still untouched by the tool. So h ng as ocean exists, there must be disin' tt ration, dilapidation, change; and should tl e time ever arrive when the elevatory agencies, motionless and chill, shall sleep within their profound depths, to awaken ii more and should the sea still continue ti impel its currents, and to roll its waves -every continent and island would at length disappear, and again, as of old, vhen the fountains of t lie great deep were 'oken up,' 'A sliorelvKM oct'ttu tumMu round the glolir. ,'as it with reference to this principle, so recently recognized, that we are expressly Id in the Apocalypse respecting the rcn- olyated earth, iu which the state of things si i all be fixed and eternal, that 'there shall lie no more sea ?' or are we to regard th relation asthe inert' hieroglyphic nicturod shajte ot some analogous moral qrutur ' Iteasoning Ironi what we know and from what else remains to us mi irth without a sea-would be an earth wil li nt ram, without vegetation, without lile 4-a dead and doleful planet of waste rllaces, such as the telescope reveals to us the moon. And yet the ocean doc ein peculiarly a creature of time d all ic great agents of vicissitudes und chrrigc. the most intliientinr and untiring; and lo I... t't.1 in. ... al state in wnicu mere snail tie no vicissi tudes and no change in which the earth- lakes shall not heave from beneath, nor ic mountains wear down, and the con tinents melt away it seems inevitably ossary that there should be 1 no more 1. llil'lli Miller. WW f ! SUNDAY MORNING BELLS. From the near city comes the clung of bell ; their liiiiniriMj jarring diverse touM com. bine In one faint misty harmony, as fine As one Mjft note yon wiiAer robin swells. What if to Thee in thine Intiiiilr These multiform and many color d crf-Hj Seem but the robe man wraps as maimer's weeds Round the one living truth Thou givest him i inre i What if these varied forms that worship prove. Being heart-worship, reach thy perfect car IStitas a inonoionc, complete ami clear. Of which the music is t'irough Chist's iioiae, Love ? Forever rising in sublime increase To "Glory iu the Ilighe-jt on cartb, peace V' I a ! V M .Kssafer---