Devoted to the Discovery and Application of Trutli.

1. DAVIS A CO., .TWO DOLLARS, NEW YORK, WEEK ENDI •" NOVEMBER 29, 1862 [WHOLE NO. 145 VOL. 3, No. 41.] 274 Canal St. I per Year. t

personally with the facts vUch it professes hope in God is based. It is not really so : the were required to believe it. And these 48,000 TO WRITERS AND READERS. Theological Investigation. to describe; and, further, that the so-called Light of God's Love did not shine less truly females must have represented 48.000 men, all ar \ letter X on the margin opposite this notice Is Mosaic narrative, by whomsoever written, on pious minds when Enoch ' waiked with of whom, in that case, we must also believe to made to indicate to the aubwrlber that his.ub.orlp- " Fair Truth ! for thee alone we seek ! and though imparting to us. as I fully be- God' of old, though there was then no Bible in have been killed, their property pillaged, their tl ,n .,11 toon expire, ami that he Is InviWd promptly Friend to the wise, supporter to the weak, lieve it doe3, revelations of the divine will and existence, than it does now. And it is, per- castles demolished, and towns destroyed, by to renew It. to Insure the uninterrupted "ailing ol From thee we learn whate'er is wise and just, character, cannot be regarded as historically the paper, and save extra labor at tins office Helic- Creeds to reject, professions to distrust, haps, God's will that we shall be taught in j 12,000 Israelites, who, in addition, must have Forms to despise, pretensions to deride, als ill! in all cases be dated and receipted (or from t^ue. this our day, among other precious lessons, I carried off 100,000 captives (more than eight And, following thee, to follow naught beside." the expiring number. iVe Trust that the Interest ot " Let it be observed that I am not here not to build up our faith upon a book, though \ persons to each man.) and driven before them no person will expire with his subscription. speaking of a number of petty variations and it be the Bible itself, but to realize more truly 1.000 head of cattle (more than sixty-seven ee- \" jn-official letters and unbuainess correspond contradictions, such as, on closer examination, the blessedness of knowing that he himself, enoe (which the writer, design for only the editor • The Foundation of the Bible for each man.) and all without the loss of a perusal! should be superscribed private or contt- are found to exist throughout the books, but the living God, our Father and Friend, is single man! How i3 it possible to quote the denrnih ^ ^ tarnestly laboring to pulverize allsecta- Examined. which may be in many cases sufficiently ex- nearer and closer to us than any book can be Bible as in any way condemning slavery, when ,„ creeds and to fraternize the spiritual afeetton, of plained by alleging our ignorance of all the —that his voice within the heart may be we read here, v.. 40. of ; Jehovah's tribute of mankind. Will ItOM worft with us ' .... . , DR. COLENSO'S WORK ON THE PENTA- circumstances of lhe case, or by supposing heard continually by the obedient child that slaves, thirty-two persons' V AS" The Editor will be accessible to his friends and some misplacement, or los^; cr corruption of the public only on each Saturday, at the publica.on TEUCH. listens for it, and lhat shall be our teacher and i CRITICISING THE SCRIPTURE. Office, a few doors east of Broadway. the original manuscript, or by suggesting that guide in the path of duty, which is the path of THE MOSAIC RECORD UNINSPIRED. a later writer has inserted his own gloss here life, when all other helpers—even the words " In view of this change (in the manner of «" The real name of each contributor thus he im- and there, or even whole passages, which may of the best of books—may fail us." applying criticism to the letter of Scripture,) parted to the Editor ; though, of course. It will be with "The Pentateuch and Book of Joshua Criti- contain facts or expressions at variance with which, f believe, is near at hand, and in order held from the public, If desired. A series of arithmetical calculations is cally Examined, by tlie Right Rev. John Wil- the true Mosaic books, and throwing an un- troduced, to show that the history of the chil- ^ ch"dren'8 Jaith liam Colenso, D. D., Bishop of Natal," is the merited suspicion upon them. However per- dren of Israel in the Mosaic narrative must experience when they find as full title ofthe book just published in England plexing such contradictions are, when found Mbisperitxgs to Correspondents I have been written at* later period than the ; lon?< ,lh"tK he( Blb e which has created a greater excitement among in a book which is believed to be divinely in- era of Moses, and that Moses himself could ! Toll regarded as infallibly true in the theologians than even the famous " Essays fallible, yet a humble and pious faith will glad- "TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN." j have had no hand in its preparation. 1 < common history, as we value their and Reviews." Dr. Colenso puts forth a new ly welcome the aid of a friendly criticism, to i Without taking ground for or against the IT^!™/^ ?e sacfrKed.^ok-let us L. M.. ADRIAN.—We can send " Healing of the heresy, not only denying the divine inspiration relieve it in this way of its doubts. I can truly 'theory announced in the Doctor's work, we ^^ if °nce to know that they are not ofthe Pentateuch, but roundly asserting that say that I would do so heartily myself. Nor Nations," postpaid, for §2. append a few additional passages to indicate . A^T?" of the Holy One .the statemeu s made in the Mosaic record are are the difficulties to which I am now refer- the points which are made in the course of his ; "b,ncb b™tbes. brou2b !ts ^ in respect W. R. P., FLUSHING.—Amount is received and not historically true. ring of the same kind as those which arise ! iu-a-ument y cb matters lls these, which the wri- Dr. Colenso is not a priest only, but a mis- from considering the accounts of the creation account satisfactorily balanced. Thanks for the j ° | ters wrote as men, with the sam'e iiability to sionary bishop. He is a good Hebrew schol- and the deluge, (though these of themselves seeds. Another season we hope to see your gar- A QUESTION OF NUMBERS. error frora any cause as other men, and where ar, and a man of high iutellectual attainments, are very formidable,) or the stupendous char- dens. ! ci ix- .1 .1 they must be judged as men, as all other wri- with a taste for exact reasoning. Some four- acter of certain miracles, as that of the sun " We cannot have recourse to the ordinary ,„,.: u„ > „ • , i ' V • "JOSEPH," N. Y—When your friend declared teen years ago he wrote an elementary treat- and moon standing still, cr the waters of the supposition that there may he som.ethin'g™2 beTto^r"*,

that lie " was too full for utterance," you should ise on Algebra, which has gone through sev- river Jordan standing in heaps as solid walls, wrong ,n the Hebrew numerals. Thts Sug- sii!n of God,s Spirit, speaking l0 them ?n he not forget that it was just after his dinner at the eral editions; and lie has since published a while the stream, we must suppose, was still pest,on will not avail here, however ,1 might Btbl in lbat of ^uVthMr 0gwn hearl8 a|one running—or the ass speaking with human be applied in other cases to reduce to witbtn ca„ b'e the jud f h, h 8 e St. Nicholas. book of Arithmetic, which is now widely ac- cepted in schools as the best of its kind extant. voice—or the miracles wrought by the ma- the hounds of probability the extravagant simple child can j.dge as wellas-oftcn, alas! A. G. G., ZANESVII.LE.—We cannot supply all As Bishop of Natal, (says tbe London i&ram- gicians of Egypt, such as the conversion of a statements ofHebrew wnters-such as th,,,.,,, bc/er than_tlia Jtbe 8eU,wiUed , i]os°. Jo. x,t 6, where we are told tint the Gllead- ; , criti , ,„„ which feats , the back numbers. The early numbers of 1862 ??ie?-,) he has, devoting himself with the most rod into u snake, and the letter being endowed practical zeal to his duty, studied the Zulu h life. They are ites under Jephthan slew of Cheir brethren, the {>,„ , •.„ ' x^, £ ,, • ,, V , are wanting. Bound volumes can always be pro- , even, as are tongue, and published a Zulu Grammar and i - •, (1)A,,A .i , • , ' .. the witness tor God within them, to which cured. One year in each volume. Price, by ex- raised when we regar ial nature of a Dictionary, before proceeding by the aid of Lphrannites, 42,0110 men ; or that to Jn. in, alone, under God himself, whose voiw it otters press, vast number of con ,and commands, 1 enjam V bC 8 natives to translate the Scriptures. He has n ' I, ;,OA J "V - 1° ,b i " i» "» Ms inner being, each man is ascribed directly t< especially the laeiltes 40 M0 men, v. 21, 2.,. and then the i ]lltimate, re8p„„sible_to tbe reason and con- J.M. EL, SCHENECTADY.—Better sell the vol- translated into Zulu the whole of the New Tes- multiplied ceretnonif laid down in israel ies kill ot the Benjamttes 431000 v. 35. icience Let' „ Md tbem look for „ in ,hat tament and several parts ofthe Old, including ume and order the one desired. " Marriage aud the Levitical law. jnot such, even, 44, all these being men ol valor' lha drew withi ,be Bible wL- h „ , f . the Books of Genesis and Exodus ; but while- Parentage " sells for §1, postage 18 cts. " Com- as must be started most pious thesword'-or that,,, 1 S.v^lO where tbe and g00d, bolv and loving, faithM and engaged upon that work, under interrogation mon Seuse " is still procurable. Thanks for the miuds, when such jliese are read, Pht tsltnes slew of Israel 30.000 loom,en or r„ whu.| sp;,ks-from Ood'slpiritdirectly from his native helpers, lie was brought, he X : vhere the -names. professedly coming Jj !Y and blessed Zln "', ' ; , PMlisttnes had ,„ thkr spirits,thoogh clothed with the ootwari says, face to face with old difficulties, that in 80,000 war-char,ots or in US..: 18, where, form of aFla or *rabl or b or „arra. One, the Father audi _ - Jtealtjr ' of all England might be felt, but tolerated. DavidI slew ot the Syrians 40 000 horsemen tive_in tbat which thev will feel and know "INQUIRER," SYRACUSE, N. Y.—"What origi- mankind: 'If tli£ n»>. ± Hebrew ser- nated tbi- plan of beginning the year on the 1st of In announcing the startling conclusions at . or in 2 Oh. xxviii : ,, 8, where Pekah lung ol in thcraselvcs t0 be righteous aud excellent, vant] have givi e have January?'' ANS. : The English altered the time whjCh he has arrived. Dr. Colenso dwells upon Israel slew o Judah in one day 120,000 sons , bowerer th perversely choose the base borne him son3 of^J^'&^/jJi ind her of beginning the year from the 25tli of December his early doubts and shows how the questions children shall be hi go out " and earned »w«v ,,ipt.,vc 200,00" and Mil-iu tb(t which mates the living man to 1st of January, when William the Conqueror of a barbarian puzzled him. He says : E free by himself'—Eiodusxii: 4—the wife and • women, sons, and daughters,' or ,. 2 CI, , g ;,„.„ •„ thestr6ng,b 0f8u=0c0n- was crowned, iu order to mark the most remarka- "Engrossed with parochial and other work children in such a ease Being placed unden the xm : 8, where Abgah's force coasted of 400 -: victio wWtb 110 arRanlent8 ?ollld briDg n0 ble period in their history. in England, I did what, probably, many other protection of such otherfWords as these : ' If a 000, and Jeroboam s of 800,000 and Judah d of church o? council enforce, sajing, clergymen have done under similar circum- man smite his servant, or his maid, with a f "I'Ct "i, ffite - Scripture words are uttered, stances—I contented myself with silencing, by there fell down slain of Israel 500.000 chosen R.N.F., OF DELAWARE, says: "The sermon rod, and he die under his hand, he shall be swers to the voice of truth within : " These menus of the specious explanatons which are men !'—it being remembered that at the battle from'the Rev. 0. B. Frothiugham, in your issue surely punished. Nol wilh stand ing, if he con- words are God's—not the flesh, the outward of Waterloo there were killed of the Allies, malt the mere ]ett but tfa- inwflrd CQre No. 141. was a very excellent one. The ' Church' given in most commentaries, tbe ordinary Ob- tinue „ d or tw be sbJ „01 pll„i8bed jectionluctiAnsc againsofToinat thflue. historicatic onr-ti l character nrof .... r .' ..... British Germans Hanoverians Brunsw.ckers, and meanine of them-for thev are snirit. thev has misconceived the' world,' aud the world the for he is his money.'—Exodus xxi: 20, 21 and meaning of them—for they are spirit, they the early portions of the Old Testament, and men of Nassau, Belgians, and Prussians, alto- are life.'" Church long enough. The petition of the Lord " I shall never forget the revulsion of feel- | gether 4,172 men.' (bison's His. of Europe, settled down into a willing acquiescence in ing with which a very intelligent Christian Jesus ' I pray not that thou shouldst take them . . - j xix, p. 372.) ' ' ,, .. ,)ini, ohiiiiiHqt Icem the general truth of the narrative,, whatever native, with whose help I was translating For the Herald of Progress. out of the world, but that thou shouldst Keep Ai(fi*tU. minUt o,.„ 1>on„ oHn„t narti I " But as regards the Pentateuch, not only is difficulties might still hang about particular these words into the Zulu tongue, first heard them from the evil,' ia a very perfect expression of the number ' 600,000 on foot, besides women The Necessity of Christianity. parts of it. In short, the doctrinal and devo- them as words said to be uttered by the same their true relation." I and children,' given distinctly in Ex. xii: 37. tional portions of the Bible were what were great and gracious Being whom 1 was teach- LETTERS FROM A MINISTER TO A. J. DAVIS, needed most in parochial duty. And, if a ing him to trust in and adore. His whole at the time of their leaving Egypt, but we passage of the Old Testament formed at an}' have it recorded again, thrice over, in differ- [From the Evening 1'ost.) soul revolted against the notion that the great ON THE DIVINE INCARNATION. time the subject of a sermon, it was easy to and blessed God, the merciful Father of all ent forms, in Ex. xxxviii, 25-28, at the begin- general M.ITGHEL. draw from it practical lessons of daily life, mankind, would speak of a servant or maid as ning of the forty years' wanderings, when the NUMBER THREE. without examining closely into the historical number of all that ' went to be numbered " Hung be the heavens with black." mere 'money,' and allow a horrible crime to truth of the narrative. It is true there were go unpunished, because the victim of the bru- from twenty years old and upward,' is reck- DEAR SIR : In the preceding letters I adopt- one or two stories which presented great diffi- His mighty life was burned away tal usage had survived a few hours. My own oned at 603,550 ; and this is repeated again in ed the method of reasoning from below up- culties, too prominent not to be noticed, and By Carolina's fiery sun ; heart and conscience at the time fully sympa- N. i: 46 ; and it is modified once morc. al the wards—commencing with the dissevered and which were brought every now and tbeu be- The pestilence that walks by day thized with his. But I then clung to the no- end of the wanderings, to 601,730, N. xxvi, 51. fragmentary man as he appears, dimly but fore us iu the Lessons of the Church, such e. g. tion that the main substance of the narrative Besides which, on each occasion of number- Smote him before his course seemed run. in^,'each^separate tribe is\mmbered,"andThe I well-defined, in the animal, vegetable, and as the account ofthe creation and the deluge. was historically true. And I relieved his dif- But, on the whole, 1 found so much of divine sum of the separate results make up the mineral kingdoms; and stepping easily to the The constellations of the sky, ficulty and my own for thc present by telling light and life in these and other parts of the whole. 1 complete man as he is upon the earths, the The Pleiades, the Southern Cross, him that I supposed that such words as these sacred book, so much wherewith to feed my were written down by Moses, and believed by Looked sadly down to see him die, " Thus this number is woven, as a kind of j complex, end, and archetype of these king- own soul and the souls of others, that 1 was bim to have been divinely given to him, be- To see a nation weep his loss. thread, into the whole story of the Exodus, Loms> including all their substances, forms, content to take all th'-s for granted, as being cause the thought of them arose in his heart, true in the main, however wonderful, and as and cannot be taken .out without tearing the I ftnd ufe j, „ieir ,mssjons and laws, within " Send him to us," the stars might cry— a8 he conceived, by tbe inspiration of God, being at least capable, in an extreme case, ol whole fabric to pieces. It affects directly the • ' complete earthly man the " You do not feel his worth below ; and that hence to all such laws lie prefixed some sufficient explanation. account ot the construction of the labernacle, -- , , Your petty great men do not try the formula, 'Jehovah said unto Moses,' with- out it being on lhat account necessary for us Ex. xxxviii : 25-28. and, therefore, also the transition to the spiritual was both easy and The measure of his mind to know. "Here, however, as 1 have said, amidst my to suppose that they were actually spoken by reality of the institutions, whether of the natural; from the spiritual to the celestial work in this land, 1 have been brought face to " Send him to us. This is his place, the Almighty. This was, however, a very priesthood or of sacrifice, connected wilh it. (or, if preferred, some other nomenclature ' face with the very questions which I then pu And the multiplied impossibilities introduced mfty be adopted, provided it conveys the truth Not 'mid your puny jealousies ; great strain upon the cord which bound me to by. While translating the story of the flood, by this number alone, independent of all other o( lhe human ascending,) was equally neces- You sacrificed him iu your race the ordinary belief in the historical veracity of I have had a simple-minded but intelligent n: the Pentateuch ; and since then that cord has considerations, are enough to t row . iscredit: confessed our own logical ina- Of envies, strifes, and policies. tive—one with the docility of a child, but the snapped in twain altogether. upon he historical character of the whole nar- / ' ,, , • reasoning power of mature age—look up and *' His eyes could pierce out vast expanse, n|tjve „ | bihty to stop short ot the Divine Man himself, ask,' Is all that true? Do you really believe His ear could hear our morning songs, as the Great Originator, Archetype, and Iu- that all this happened thus? that all the " But I wish to repeat here most distinctly UNINSPIRED CHARACTER OF TIIE PENTATEUCH. His mind, amid our mystic dance, that my reason for no longer receiving the clnder, of all benealh him. beasts, and birds, and creeping things upon the And as he has by these reasonings abso- Before entering upon another phase of my Could follow all our myriad throngs. earth, large and small, from hot countries and Pentateuch an historically true is nol that I lutely convinced himself of the uninspired subject, I would again call attention to this find insuperable difficulties with regard to the cold, came thus by pairs, and entered into the character of tbe Pentateuch, he now can " Send him to us! no martyr's soul, miracles, or supernatural revelations of Al- ascending and descending Humanity, which ark wilh Noah ? And did Noah gather food write: alone constitutes the cl^ain of life universal. No hero slain iu righteous wars, for them all, for the beasts and birds of prey- mighty God, recorded in it, but solely that 1 " But how thankful we must be that we are No raptured saiut could e'er control as well as the rest?' My heart answered, in cannot, as a true man, consent any longer to I would beg that it be deeply reflected upon— no longer obliged to believe, as a matter of A holier welcome from the stars." the words of the prophet, ' Shall a man speak shut my eyes to the absolute, palpable self- that it be viewed from both standpoiuts—from fact, of vital consequence to our eternal hope, lies in the name ot the Lord?'—Zech. xiii: 3. contradictions of the narrative." above and from below. Take him, ye stars! take him on high, the story related in N. xxxi, where we are told I dared not do 60. My own knowledge o: But what, he says, if he should by his argu- To your vast realms of boundless space. 12,000 Israelites slew all the males of the Standing below, we see, as the very ground- some branches of science, of geology in par- ment shake belief in the Pentateuch? He re- Midianites, took captive all the females and work and basis of creation, a shadowy form of But once he turned from you to try ticular, had much increased since I left Eng- plies : children, seized all iheir cattle and flocks His uame ou martial scrolls to trace. land ; and I now know for certain, on geolog man. We see it passing by imperceptible "Our belief in the living God remains as (72.000 oxen, 61,000 asses, 675,000 sheep,) and ical grounds, a fact of which 1 had only had gradations steadily upward, upward, through sure as ever, though not the Pentateuch only, all their goods, and burnt all their cities, and That once was when his country's call misgivings before, viz. : lhat a universal del- all kingdoms, through all substances, through Said danger to her flag was nigh, I but the whole Bible, were removed. It is all their goodly castles, without the loss of uge, such as tho Bible manifestly speaks of, all forms; struggling bravely against all op- written on our hearts by God's own finger, ns a single man; and then, by command of And then her banner's stars dimmed all could not possibly have taken place in the surely ns by the hand of the apostle in the Moses, butchered in cold blood all the women position; never wavering in its advance; The radiant lights which gemmed the sky. way described in the Book of Genesis, not to Bible, that ' God is, and is a rewarder of them and children, 'except all the women-children never resting, until it has defined itself per- mention other difficulties which the story that diligently seek him.' It is written there who have nut known a man by lying with him.' fectly in the complete physical man. But Take him, loved orbs ! His country's life, contains." Freedom for all—for these he wars; also, as plainly as in the Bible, that 4 God is These last the Israelites were ' to keep for now, although it never indicates a change of nol mocked'—that ' whatsoever a man sow- themselves.' They amounted, we are told, to For these he welcomed bloody strife, THE PURPORT OF TNE WORK. form in the least degree, yet it commences to 6th, that shall lie also reap'—and thai 4 he that 32,000, v. 35, mostly, we must suppose, under And followed in thc wake of Mars! unfold powers and beauties from thc old ono The results of lhe doctor's investigations are soweth to the flesh, shall of the flesh reap cor- the age of sixteen or eighteen. We may f ,irly in unlimited measure. The spiritual human succinctly staled in the following passage : reckon that there were as many more under Perfect politeness may not be expected from ruption.' » " The result of my inquiry is this, that I the age of forty, and half as many more above chaos of the persons of mediocre minds, though they may " But there will be others of a different emerges from the comparative have arrived at the conviction—as painful lo 8tamp, meek, lowly, loving souls—who are forty, making altogether 80,000 females, of . . or be well-meaning, kind, and even refined. Peo- natural, and without an effort speaks a repre- myself at first, as il may be to my reuder, whom, according to the slory, Moses ordered walking daily wilh God, and have been taught sentative language the nniversa speech of ple are not likely to be interested where they though painful now no longer under the clear to consider a belief in the historical voracity 48,000 to be killed, beside (say) 20,000 young souls; thinks thoughts that nothing but a do not comprehend, and it is not possible to be shining of the light of truth—that the Penta- of the story ol the Exodus an essential part of boys. The tragedy of Oawnporo, where 300 representative will contain for very vastness ; polite and attentive where we are not inter- teuch. as a whole, cannot possibly have been their religion, upon which, indeed, as were butchered, would sink into nothing com- pared with such a massacre, if, indeed, we and himself out perpetually in a grand ested. wrillen by Mose6, or by any one acquainted | to them, the whole fabric of their faith aud lives 2 [VCT. 20, JM2 ng for her children because they were not," threatens some for not doing justly tbat they system of representatives, that accompany him so quietly, that they feel no mot.on, and so the till she took the Mandrake cordial, "and God Sight and Insight. should no,longer receive the Word by lot— wherever he goes, and are wholly subject to1ey—e accept—— s the appearanc— e uncorrected, naRs hearkened to her." But not so sad for Micah the valid truth. Tho men in the city are not For the Herald of Progress " Therefore thou shalt have none that shall the intense sphere of life exhaling from him. weeping in the wake of the army who had so easily deceived. cast a cord by lot in the congregation of the Drawing nearer to God as be is, he begins to Ancient Glimpses of the Spi- taken his Lord as the " way wherein to go," There are two modes of correcting tbis freak Lord." This " cast of a cord by lot " is equiv- exhibit tbe divine beauty of his image more as for Psaltiel, weeping for his stolen wife of our spiritual optics: one is to commence rit Land. I alent to the divination by " lines," as when fully, and appears a miniature creator, exha- as clutched by David, the" man after God's where creation and its divine order commence; the Lord inclines to David, and he says, " The ling little Paradises from the life of bis own NUMBER FIFTY-TWO. own heart." to trace this order down to ultimates and back lines are fallen unto me;" and Luke informs spirit. We follow the form upward, upward Micah may have roared you as loudly as us that it was the priest's office by lot to burn again to the supreme. We will then see life (Continued from HERALD NO. 187.) still, through all its transfigurations, until it the bellowing bulls of Basham, or as loudly as and its human form in their descending mani- incense in the temple of the Lord. It was terminates, legitimately enough, we find, in recorded in the Book of Jasher, of Judab, that festation, instead of the »ascending. We wit- We have seen that the initiation to the Mys- the divination by lot that thc Lord manifested the Apocalyptic visions of Daniel and of when he " shrieked," on one occasion, " all ness the same order precisely, but it is no teries of the " rod of God " which Moses car- to supply the place of Judas, when " tbe lot John. tbe women of Egypt miscarried;" yet there longer inverted in our vision ; we commence ried in his hand, was permitted to slide in the fell upon Mathias," and Barsabus was per- The human form that we have followed so remained sufficiency of holy Stones in Jewry where it commences, proceed as it proceeds, more' open vision of the reforming puppets mitted to slide. assiduously becomes at last the divine; the through which Micah could seek the Lord, and end where it ends, and return as it returns. whose radicalism laid the ax to the root of In all these divinations of the Bible, where- body "like the veryl," so pure its substance; thence find the rock of his salvation. The We behold as 11 tbe first" of all things a Di- the " grounded staff," which budded,bloomed, in we behold the Word of the Lord, we must the face "as tho appearance of lightning" Lord that manifested by the Teraphim in Mi- vine Humanity, infilled with infinite life and and bore almonds under the engineering of bear in mind that there was no difference in with the intensity of its love; the Infinite Wis- cah's house, had directed the filibusters" unto wisdom, and exhaling from itself, with divine Aaron and the Lord. The Lord, by the medi- the mode of the manifestation of the Word as dom lighting up the " eyes as lamps of fire ;" a people that were quiet and secure, and they ardor, this life, this wisdom, and this form, and um Ezekiel, as by Isaiah and Jeremiah, de- compared with that of tbe conSe-outers, or of the arms and feet themselves^ glowing with clares the " rod of God," as per Jacob, Moses, smote them with the edge of the sword, and the glow of Goodness self-personified; and the filling the universe therewith from its highest the people at large, or of rival nations or sects, burnt the city with fire." Micah may well and Gideon, " after the manner of Egypt," to who, as heretics, would necessarily be de- multitudinous wisdom of all mankind uttering I to its lowest spheres. We see this Divine dry his tear8 for the loss of such a God, who " have been a Staff of reed to the house of nounced as diviners, sorcerers, and idolators. Humanity everywhere reproducing itself, and itself in the sound of its voice: "I am smites innocent people with the sword and Israel," though it was " the portion of Jacob, though all were intent in finding and using tbe so fulfilling the law, that "like begets like." Alpha and Omega, the Beginning and the burns their cities with fire. the rod of inheritance, and the Staff of accom- Lord. Ending, saith tbe LORD, WHO IS, and WHO war, We behold this one majestic form casting its plishment." We see the same in our day, as in Roman- When the way of the Hebrew Lord was by and WHO ts to come, THE ALMIGHTY." shadow upon all the universe, and causing physical manifestations, whether by Urim every great and every little thing to be a mir- We haye seen how Hosea let fly at tbe di- ism, Protestantism, and throughout all the To such divine perfection does the human Tliuramim, Teraphim, or like the ruder Stone of ror thereof. We behold this one Infinite Wis- vining Staff as a way of tbe Lord. But Zech- variety of sects. It is fortunate in our day form attain, as it is followed upward by tbe dom pouring its benign illumination into all ariah appears to have divined by it for the that we have found modern keys quite fitting j Bethel, the Medium was called " God's house," ever-opening sight of man. Yea, and univer- minds, crowding every mental cranny with its purpose of getting at the word of tbe Lord— to the ancient locks ; for the many phases of! so too these fillibusters unto Laisb, " all the sal man attests its truth, so far as his affirma- rays, and filling to overflowing even the " And I took my Staff, even Beauty, and cut it modern Spiritualism certainly do cover all the • time that the house of God was in Shiloh," tive experience goes—negative experience meaner receptacles it has formed. We behold asunder that I might break my covenant Biblical ground, all its supposed miracles in went " before the Lord as the way wherein proves nothing. this Infinite Divine Love pouring its energetic which I had made with all the people. And signs and wonders, all its trance and inspira- ye go." Open tbe interior sight of any living man, life—;jor love is life—into all hearts, and im it was broken in that day; and so the poor of tional burdens of the Lord, and finds the Among the ancients there was also divina- and he is at once in the spirit-world, gazing the flock that waited upon me, knew that it upon spirit substance, and surrounded by spi- pregnating all substances with its qualities boundaries ofthe mundane and transmundane tion by the Word—"a written or spoken was the word of the Lord." The prophet also ritual human forms. Open his sight still more ; and powers. And of this inward truth and worlds so closely akin that it is often difficult formula of word3, supposed to be capable of had another Staff named " Bands." By this, interiorly, and he enters a still sublimer re- , 'aw, the outward forms of all things are the to say where ends the one or where begins the producing magical effects." Solomon was sup- too, the Lord manifested, and doubtless " tbe gion, where tbe human is spiritually more per- j necessary confirmation. For whence have we other. posed to have been greatly gifted in this wise- poor of tho flock knew it was the word of the feet, almost beyond comparison ; but still he , our forms but from the love and wisdom that From the high seraph reaching down to But in this, as in the other modes of ancient Lord." may' not worship; they are but brethren— dwell in us, animate us, and create us rao- embrace the flesh-imprisoned soul, to bear it divination, we cannot undertake to give the mentarily ? And whence have this love and Of Rhabdomancy, or divination by the :l rod upward to the better life, to those less exalted utmost scope of the Word. Enough if we these angel-men; and the language of each wisdom their tendency to this form but from of God," the authors of the " Occult Sciences" in the scale of being, who find the Lord close have so gauged the foundation with square, one to the awed and trembling neophyte is: cite Thophylact as saying : " They set up two by the "lines " of tbe " prestidigitateur," there rule, plummet, and level, that each one can go " See thou do it not; I am of thy fellow-ser- their mighty original ? Staffs, and having whispered some verses and yet remains an interlinked causation with in- vants, the prophets, and of them who keep the Overshadowed by such a presence continual- forward with the structure, and rear the Word incantations the Staffs fell by the operations definable boundaries ; nor can it ever be said, sayings of this book. Worship GOD." But ly, drinking in with our inmost hearts the pure in line with them of old time. We must leave of demons. Then they considered which way Lo, here is the Lord ! lo, there is the Lord ! now we cannot rest here. Eternal order for- tide of love as it outflows from him, filled with the task of the more occult minutiae of the each of tbem fell, forward or backward, to the when all manifestations of the spirit mark only bids it. One more degree of the soul's deep- the illumination that saith, " I am the light of Word with the etymologists. It may be they right hand or left hand, and agreeably gave the degrees on the same scale of eternal cau- ening vision is to be opened ; the inmost is to the world," and so by all its indwelling pow- can trace the oneness of the Terapin with responses, having made use of the fall of their sation, taking the various hues from medium- be unlocked ; and lo ! there is but ONE BEING ers made human in body and in soul and in all the Teraphim. If so, then has modern Yan- Staffs for their signs." Thus the two Staffs istic surroundings, according to the status of visible, before whose divinely human majesty things pertaining thereto, what can we do but keedom been making soup of one of the He- of Zechariali, Beauty and Band, whose respon- humanity. the overpowered spirit falls as one dead ; the cast our crowns at His feet, and cry to the •brew Gods, and Agassiz has proved his ses " the poor of his flock knew to be the Word soul is brought consciously into tbe very Divine Humanity," Thou art worthy, 0 Lord, The authors—Smedley, Taylor, Thompson wondrous ability in making mince-meat of the of the Lord." presence of Him who alone can say : " I AM to receive glory, and honor, and power; for and Rich—iu the " Occult Sciences," say that same. Mr. Dunlap, of the "Vestiges," and of THE FIRST AND TIIE LAST." thou hast created all things, and for thy plea- SORTILEGE, or divination by lot, was also a " The TERAPHIM mentioned in the story of the "Mysteries," might be able to dis- way of the Lord in old Jewry as among the In lower spheres the human hath compan- sure they are and were created." Jacob and Rachel are understood to have cover that God's house in the Teraphim was Gentiles—" Aaron shall cast lots upon the two ions, but in this, it stands alone; yet "not The other mode of correcting our tendency been used as oracles or means of divination. equivalent to a domiciliary visit within the goats; one lot for the Lord and the other for alone," for the eternal divinity of the " Father to invert tbe order of things is by considering * * * Spencer in his ' De Legibus " hard shells " of trusteedom ; as the Roman- the scapegoat." So, too, the land which the is with" it. Just as we firmly believe and tbat life, like water, cannot rise above the lev- Hebrceorum ' maintains that these oracles were ist eats hi3 God in a mystery which is no more Israelites fillibustered from their neighbors know that men, in all ages and of all climes, el of its source, and that, therefore, the higher essentially the same as the ' Urim ' of the Mo- difficult to swallow than Jonah's whale, which was apportioned by the divination of casting by the opening of the interior sight, have been permanently includes in itself the lower in all saic ritual. * * * This view is Protestants do swallow and numerous other lots, which, according to the Word unto Mo- brought into tbe society of the inhabitants of things. Thus man includes all the kingdoms confirmed by the allusion in Hosea, iii: 4, whales, with the Trinity, as well as the Catho- ses, " This is the land, which ye shall inherit the spiritual world—some reporting what they of Nature ; the spirit includes the essence, the where it is impossible tbe word Teraphim can lic, why may not an alderman eat the Terra- by lot." In the lottery " the Lord's portion is see from one condition, some what they see purer substance of man, and so of Nature, too; mean idols ; compare with this Judges xviii: phim God in the mystery of Terapin soup, his people, JacoM the l^t of his inheritance," from another, some truly, some falsely, ac- and the Divine Man includes them all in infi- 17-18. Whether it resemble the Urim in con- transubstantiated from calf's head ? Ac- including the Btffliel and',the Staff which car- cording to their own true or false condition, nite perfection. struction or not, the Teraphims were in all cording to Hosea, the deprivation of Israel was ried the patriart® over Ihe Jordan, as per af- yet all agreeing to one great testimony which to be without Teraphim. So too would an al- The origin of that most hideous and power- fidavit, probability a means of obtaining divine re- grasps both false and true—-just so firmly do ful fallacy—the 11 Development Theory"— sponses." derman consider it to be equally a deprivation we believe, and just as truly do we know, that Joshua also divided tlie spoils by the lottery to be without Terapin, and might patheti- which has seized upon some of the best scientific As the symbol and its manifestation were the opening of the inmost sight will bring all of the Lord—the divination by casting lots ; cally exclaim with Micah, " Ye have taken minds ot tbe present day, lies in this optical alike called the Lord or God, so were the men, in all ages, or would, or could do so, and whenAuhau i • ;-gh't. to poach upon thc away my God, and what have I more ? " delusion of the spirit, of which we have spo- Urim, Thummim and Teraphim alike idolized into thc presence of the Inmost Divine Hu- Lord begetting ••• s >{ ^edge of gold ancl ken. And the origin of the repulsive shudder or worshiped; for in such images more or less There was divination by " Verses from the manity, and demonstrate the Inmost Life, the a goodljp B.••(>-.k ,, =aent," he "sinned with which our human nature meets that ape- by all the earlier people, GoiJ, in part, was Word among Christians, especially from tbe Divine Man, to them all. And all would fall against tlie X.Oiv "Gij^art Israel," who came like semblance of the truth is found in the dim supposed to live, move, and bave his being in Gospel of St. John, and from the Koran prostrate at his divine feet lo worship him, through the "lol'; in thousand of brick, or perception that man has of the real order of like manner as the images of the Virgin, Jesus, among tbe Mahommedans. Such are the and hear no command to " do it not /" rather " stones,'^o the discomfiture of 'Achan. creation as having man at the head and a Di the Saints, &c. are consecrated to be as God, amulets or charms called grigris by the Afri- It appears that Achaip' had not been initiated I know, also, that the divine appearance vine Man as its center and soul. can priests ; " probably on the same wise as into the mysteries of " the lot," nor had in part, by the less advanced minds of the would vary, necessarily, according to tbe state From what has been said it will be seen that the scapulary is worn by the Catholics. visions in his head as to how the Lord should present day ; not so much as Media a3 essen- of the seers; bnt in essentials their testimony the animal kingdom resembles man merely manifest by the mysteries of the little joker; tially Gods, ever so deemed by the undeveloped " The name given to them by the negroes is is uniform, and they return with no truth on because tbe human form is the universal form, therefore, oh Achan, " the Lord sball trouble mind as transubstantial God in the wafer, and Saphy, perhaps from the Arabic Safi, pure, their tongues but one—tbe divine Humanity. and nothing can be created that will not par- thee this day." the mysterious habitation of God in the rod of select, excellent." A mighty amulet of the This is the affirmative testimony throughout, take of it, and the highest things will partake Moses. Thus Laban to Jacob: " Wherefore Christians was the Agnus Dei or lamb of and we believe it because it harmonizes with of it most. The animal kingdom resembles So, too, the children of Israel " asked coun- hast thou stolen my Gods ? " These were the God. More anciently the Egyptians, He- all order, and receives, nought but confirma- man, not because be has grown from it, but cil of God " by lot as to who should go up to Teraphims by whom the Lord manifested, brews, and adjacent nations had their many tion in all spheres. And again we say, nega- because he was its model; and in the great fight against Gibeah. So did tbe children do as when Leah said, " Surely the Lord hath talismans or amulets, sometimes symbolizing tive testimony proves nothing whatever. A preparation that was made for his coming, all according to the Word by lot. Tbe lottery looked upon my affliction. * » * And God, and sometimes God himself as "tho man whose spirit-eye has never opened from its th ings were made like him—in other words, was drawn in the ark where

ihem perish." Besides tli6 divining Stones, with the stones, and the magnetic or galvanic with Richard, whose disposition was natural- though it might be more the result of thought- It seemed like a drawn battle between two op- Urim, Thummim, and Teraphim among the He- rings of our own day would appear to mani- ly more timid and less frank and open, it was lessness than evil design, it was but a word posing forces, and for some time it was doubt- fast developing a spirit of artfulness and de- and a blow with him, and most generally the brews, there were others in the regions round fest thc presence of the Lord, so analogous to ful as to whether life or death would win him. ception. blow came first. He was subject to sudden But at last the former triumphed. Robert about. The Anachitis " was used in divination, the ancient divinations. Our authors say that Wilh tbe happy versatility of his age, bursts of passion, which, for the time being, slowly unclosed his eyes and fixed them upon to call up spirits from water; another Stone " tho signet-ring of Solomon is one of the Robert had forgotten all about the occurrence seemed to deprive him of every feeling of hu- his father, wh<^ was bending anxiously over called Synochitis, obliges them to remain while most famous in antiquity. It had the mystic of the morning, and was enjoying a game of manity and justice. him. But, oh, the darkness ofthe grave could they were interrogated. Leonardus describes word Schemham-phorasch engraven upon it, romps with his baby si3ter, vvho was crowing Some one lias called anger "a voluntary not have been so terrible as the sudden suspi- the Aiiancithidus as a ' a necromantic Stone and it gave him the command of spirits, and and clapping her hands in high glee, when it madness." And, in fact, it differs little from- cion that was forced upon him. That vacant was suddenly recalled to his mind by the a paroxysm of maniacal violence, with the ex- whose virtue is to call up evil spirits and procured for bim the wonderful Shamir, which look and unmeaning smile told that the light heavy sound of approaching footsteps. ception that it is voluntary and of brief dura- of reason bad fled forever! ghosts.' * * The Chirsoletus, if bound enabled bim to build the temple," &c., &c. tion. But, ah, brief as it is, it has often blighled, round with gold and carried in the left hand, A moment later the door was thrown vio- In mystical relations with all these ways of lently open, and Mr. Carter stalked in, looking during its blind frenzy, the happiness of a life- "The mind had passed away, drives away night-hags and preserves from finding the Lord, there were also the sun, the very personification of wrath. time ! And who could call its wing from out the sky melancholy, illusions and witches. Its virtue moon, and stars, pavilioned in thick clouds of " Wife," he exclaimed, " who has been iu Mr. Carter was aware of this failing, and is greater if a hole be made in it and the hairs Actuated by the hope of his ultimate e darkness, yet embosomed in thc light, whose the garden, trampling over those beds ? " often^afler the fury of his passion had abated, of an ass be passed through." Robert's heart gave a great leap; for he felt ashamed and self-condemned. But if it covery, Mr. Carter carried his son from plav wings were the blue ether, and whose voice knew Irom bis father's look and tone that he- was directed toward his children, he generally to place, and from one eminent physician t was in the zephyr and in the whirlwind— " Crystal prevails against unpleasant dreams, was very angry. But with a moral heroism consoled himself by giving them some unusual another. But without avail; his head had re dissolves enchantments, and is a medium for whose signs were as the movement of the worthy of far different treatment, he mustered indulgence, often ns unwise ns the violence- ceived some internal injury which rendered his case a hopeless one. magical visions. Being bruised with honey it heavens; and the horoscopist was the prophet courage to say: whose memory it was designed to efface. For some months he spent most of his time fills the breasts with milk. Leonardus ap- to divine by them, and to show them syn- " It was I, father. I was playing ball He was fond of all bis children, but Robert was more the object of his pride than either of with Robert, whose mental condition was such pears to have indulged in a little spite against chronous with the manifestations of Thummim "•It was you, was it?" interrupted Mr. the others. He was so handsome and intelli- as to require incessant care and watchfulness, this beautiful mineral. ' The principal use of and Teraphim, Trance and Holy Ghost; hence Carter, walking across the room. How dared gent, and had such a frank, engaging manner, and often, as he looked upon him, and con- crystal,' he says,' is for making cups rather Solomon was as wise in astrological divina- you disobey me ? Haven't I told you not to that even the hearts of strangers were drawn trasted him with what he once was, his agony than anything else it is good for.' " Probably tion as in engineering spirits by the ineffable stir your foot into the garden ? " toward him, and his father cherished many of mind was almost insupportable. At these times his friends would urge upon him the ne- it was this kind of cup that Joseph divined name Jah, or Schemham-phorasch. Hence, " Yes, sir ; but I forgot all about it." a fond hope of his eminence and usefulness in cessity of a separation, almost fearing for his with in Egypt, and to which David alludes too, Solomon, fully initiated to the top of" Ja- "Then take that, and that, to strengthen after life. Yet, thoughtless and impulsive, his reason. But to all their entreaties he woul® when he finds the Lord in his cup as an in- cob's Ladder," would be understood to-day your memory ! " retorted the angry man, deal- very frankness and scorn of deception caused shake his head sadly, saying' "It is my pun- heritance, thus sealing him as a " man after ing him a blow on each side of his head. him to suffer the most frequently from by the fully developed mystical and astronom- ishment! " '• And now march directly to your room! his father's violent temper. The alternate

The books were selected according to our best, h remained erne to prevail, but he was of opinion that thinks he can effectually check the Lnion judgment, and we present them, hoping that • per cent, wuue ns vu y more dashing " impulse" in tbe army would j army at Fredericksburg. Now is the time lor yet who have failed to trace the existence of they may prove a valuable addition to that li- unchanged. be attended with greater Union victories. The the gunboat expedition to make itselt felt lhe most intensely interesting phenomena of brary which was always open to every eager On and after the first of December we shall Richmond is defended by two ram3 of great the age—a development that promises to rival Secretary was exceedingly delighted with the student, and do much to cheer the leisure advance one cent in the retail price of the power in the James River, and the rams are in importance the most prominent events of hours of him who has lived for humanity. remark, and replied that no army in thc civil- enthusiastic or braver! protected by Fort Darling and a new line of history, are galvanized by—what? Why, by Signed: Edward Gilbert, John Strowbridge, HERALD, fixing it at five cents per copy. This ized world was more 1 no means equal in proportion to (liftn ourg^ and ^ had received assurances defenses nearer the city. Richmond will be Luzerne A. Owen, Franklin Miller, Asher B. increase is by a counterfeit! Two weeks' existence of the Evans, David Trowbridge. the greater cost, but we hope, by an increased ,hat tbe present campaign would develop tbe j hard t0 take J,lst now genuine they failed to know. Yet not two THE VOICE OF SELF-CONCEIT. days elapse after the imitation is attempted The same individual justified himself f°r: ejj-ort on the part of our readers, to be able to reai strength and fearUssness of our volun- before they are on tbe scent! What a com- taking up the study of the law by the follow- furnish QUr paper permanently at this rale, teers. Five out of; seven in the Cabinet feel The preposterous self-importance of the mentary upon the mission of the New York ing considerations : " I have had the matter more hopeful and confident since the retire- American people has received humiliating under consideration for more than a year, and lessons since the war commenced. We have dailies! What an evidence of the capital de- justify myself in this way : 1st. We ought to The President's Proclamation. mentofMcCieiia# ' K counted our vast resources and paraded our tective qualities of New York reporters ! Let MORE DEFBATS FOR OUR TROOPS. live for humanity, ourselves included among jn the November Atlantic, Mr. Emerson said national strength; but the rebels, although Superintendent Kennedy make a note of this. Tbe weAtberi.ar.iV r ourjjenerals, will now ,.'...... , ,, , Within two days tbe J olio wing stereo- the number. Now, what is tbe cause of hu- of Mr. Lincoln's Proclamation of the 22d - jA, . . limited in every essential, have repelled us It was well to delay the steam-1 preside over f#v-. providence, how- 1 cr ed our manity? Down-trodden and oppressed, even September more than tbe 'PP' advance from the first. Our typed sensation item is adopted, approved, and ever, does not res'- i.e party more m.01? 1 , self-conceit has been the lurking evil in all published by most of the dailies : in this free country—this glorious land of ers at tbe wharves, until this edict could be other. The rebW^re religious, and . ... f , liberty—even here man tyrannizes over man put on board. It will be an insurance to the Rritual encouragement. I,,nationaALIONALl °PoperationsERATIONS;. WvN« e PprideRIDEDd ourselveourselvess Ult THTHEE MT8TERMTSTFRTT OoF » SPIRITUASPIBITTALI PHOTOGRAPHI Y therefore receive moi and subjects him to involuntary bondage. The ship as it goes plunging through the sea with > • thev do not feel us lc,ule meu' 0n mak,n6 1"1S "a whlte man s SOLVED.—Certain magnates skilled in Spirit- from their spirit frieni culprit is hanged for crimes committed while glad tidings to all people. Happy are tbe ?> ^ ; war " We scorned the idea that negroes were ualism have recently started a new - sensa- voung who find the pestilence cleansed out of assured of God's particular favor Itiswrit- ^ ^ , , Qn our side of the struggle, tionlion.' ' in tbe shape of photographs of persons acting according to the dictates of his own l the earth, leaving open to them an honest ten in fate that the army ot Liberty will urn- Nq , ^ ^ ^ down ^ rebellion who have ' shuffled off the moital coil,' repre- development. The day-laborer drags out a career. Happy the old, who see Nature puri- mutely be victorious, only after it has been t|ie wme time leave the blacks to aid "nting them as they appear now to their rep- weary life in unrequited toil, and dies a char- lied before tbey depart. Do not let the d, ine I duly chastened by suffering and the country stupendous. From Presi- £'"Z^lof £i£se ity subject, whilst the unproducing speculator , I 1 .1 i . i- .„ ,k; . „,m.i.i until vnn humbled bv unexpected and unnecessary de- ^^, .^ ' . „ ...... c. "pston maae a puture oi tnm>e!.. and ov n luxuriates upon the products of his extorted die : hold them back to this world, until you humbled by unexpected and unnecessary dent down to tbe meanest official, this sell- developing ihe plate he discovered a shadow labor. The philosopher, it is true, unravels' have charged their ear and heart with this feats. The northern people have not yet real- conceit was popular. Another conviction has outline of his wile. Many other pictures have truths. ; message to other spiritual societies, announc- l,h® jL^!® the mysteries of Nature, discovers ne at last dawned upon the minds of tbe people, ^en produced, some representing husbands, Speculation and prosperity will go before hu- others daughters, who have in each case been and thus enlarges the golden network by ing the amelioration of our planet. We are not now too proud to accept the ne- miliation and despair. Looking ahead, how- dead some years. It is said. alto. That thc which man catches bold on the infinite; yet •• • Iucertainties now crown themselves assured, groes. ever, the sun of Freedom is rising over all. operator cannot take more than fi\t pictures And peace proclaims olives of endless age.' humanity must be humanized, or the broils THE VICINITY OF NEW ORLEANS. day without becoming exhausted* in the and turmoils of conflicting individuals, com- "Meantime that ill-fated, much-injured I OPENING THE PRISON DOORS. Some weeks ago I telegraphed to your HER- effort. munities, and stales, will tear out the enam- race, which the Proclamation respects, will The recent order releasing from imprison ALD the designs of rebels in and about New "A. H. Turner, photographer for the house eled border of that network and leave mankind lose somewhat of the dejection sculptured for m(,Dt those who had violated the laws of good Urieftns. The plans were delaved by unfa'vor- of Appleton A Co.. bas shown us several in darkness. 2d, Reformers of the present ages in their bronzed countenance, uttered in ,overnment) is mcreiy a sign of what will • abie reports from the rebel Commissioner in F^ures preening tbe same effects, which day are generally men of superficial attain- when secession nd3 theGuif ments, and advance principles wholly unfound- naturally benevolent, joyous, docile industri- \^Governmen t ^.wiU be compelled to open.™.? its visited" bv Frenc- h steamers o f war -»merel ^t^^ztttl^ ....^o.v-haustedv v.by. the vuuiueffort, uubntt woulnuuiud iin aalnl probaprooa- o n ci wiinsp. vp.rv miserv SDrantr from their , ... ,, ... j„.ir. . .. „ ., . : ed either in Nature or custom. The public 0U3 a0d whose very misery sprang trom tnetr, „ thousand> „f stupendous criminals U0 . j X'^

mind is only distorted by such sentiments, and ous, and whose j hich in a more | nhe ,eade„ of lhe rebellion wtll have to be | „„d the rebels feel strong in (heir ability to . phitofraphJ may e see.- at there is at present great need of scientific, moral age ^^ not only defend their in,le- ^^ with high political stations, their| eIec,,te long-cherished plans ngatost New Or- Appleton,,^...o^i,

practical reform jurists. I will not say that pendence. but will give them a rank among crime3 all freejy pardoned, their defections j leans and oen. Butler. Happily, however. j.-.r I :» '•'""> «nV nmnnfri ^^ paper, the adds the information I shall ever make one. but simply make it an and abominations forgotten, and everybody tjjey w||i not succeed in reaching the city, World, excuse for taking up the profession." that the other pictures (the genuine.) u may Lectures to Women. invited to dinner on tbe return of the prodigal An attack upon it is nearly impossible. But May he who holds and tries to carry out The negroes will also be- forfriven" for (jen. Butler cannot be too cautious nor too be seen at Andrew Jackson Davis's concern in

such Eentiments succeed in life. Mr. Gilbert We are glad to learn that Mrs. Eliza W. • having been born, and "abolitionists" par-1 rapjd in preparing his loyal blacks for military Canal street." is not a Spiritualist in the ordinary sense of Farnha'arnharma i.s. soon to giv„ e free lectures to wo-. doned j..or. tlxeir ferocious crimes. Factious; serviceservice.. Mark the position of the M respectable"

the term, in one of his letters to me tbe fol- men on the Laws of Health and Human De- wjil be excused on moral principle, and "moral dailies of New York—including, we are sorry IRREVERENCE AND INSUBORDINATION. lowing fine passage occurs : "When the dawn- velopment. at the Cooper Institute. The first principle " will be attributed to factions. The to say. the Tribune and Evening Post, trom The American mind, like tbe aboriginal in> ing light of thc millennial morn shall burst lecture will be given in tbe large music room 1 war for tbe Union will be entombed in forget- which papers we had reason to expect greater with cheering significance upon this world of habitants of this continent, are deficient in on the fourth floor, Wednesday, Dec. 3, 1802. | fu]ne88. integrity. By the publication of this para- darkness and error, it will be something far at 2 P. M. Those of our readers wbo can reverence for individuals. This trait in the JEALOUSY OF EUROPEAN MONARCHS. graph a paper beepmes party to a fraud, the different from the ethereal radiance of which Northern army, especially among officers, is a possibly avail themselves of Mrs. Farnham's defender of a counterfeit, and advertiser of a poets dream as emanating from the coronals It is idle conceit in Americans to suppose great obstacle to our military success. In course may be assured they will be well re- counterfeiting establishment, just as clearly as of 'blest spirits.' The glad tidings of salva- that the social, commercial, and political pros- lhe kingdom of Jeff. Davis the case is differ- paid. if Messrs. Appleton & Co. had issued imita- tion must reach us from some other parts than perity of this court try is a source of unrest to I cnt Insubordination is not tolerated in his s tion postal currency and the city press had the dusky confines oT the spirit land. The ele- A Question Answered. the monarchs of Europe. They have no faith Confederacy. Military organization and dis- ments of our redemption are within us. Every in the permanency of a political system which cipline, and a marked reverence for appointed j l'eCOmmended the stuff to the public—the is- t,.n „„.„„ , The Principia gives the following in answer suers resorting to the scheme as an ad- is controlled by ballot- tricksters and profes- leaders, are prominent features In the Confed- thing in Nature, rom the life-giving orb of t0 the que3tion-" How are the slaves to know vertising dodge to extend their legitimate sional demagogues. .Monarchs all believe that erate army and navy. The South is military gh Sk eS XTt2 o^ U I'" : -Xs oW * Proclamation/" the fabric of ballot-box government is destined and vindictive; the North is individualized business. Ml in* swee? odor Tn S U'°r"; ^^ ; "A citizen of Kentucky, writing from Mc soon to crumble into nothingness. This ex- and indifferent. The South is clannish; the Let it be distinctly understood that, so far tilling s«eet odor in the morning sun,' an- Cor,-,8 slalion, Indiana, to a Iriend in this plains their disposition tt> look with consid- North is full of " persons." The first is I from objecting to the production of these imi- nounces the all-embracing fact that the Cre-! city, says: 4 I have recently bcen to Helena, united; the latter is separated. The South taUons> we have from the first invited them, ator is wise, powerful, and merciful. Will the | Ark.; 1 found a slave, twenty miles below erable favor upon the effort of the rebels. spirits lead us to an appreciation of the works Memphis, who could repeat the President's France is anxious to open the ball of "Media-1 makes slaves of all; the North gives freedom 'P °Ur first Article uPon the subject we dis- tinctly said: of the Creator? Nature informs us that the ' Proclamation nine days alter it was issued.'" tion " through some other power. It is fortu- and personal independence. Similar results to those mentioned above cultivation of our own God-given faculties — nate for lhe North that Napoleon has been so i can perhaps be produced by any skilMul pho- can alone insure such an object. To the phi- THE ATLANTIC for December needs but one completely " blocked " in his military invasion i Spiritual Photography. tographer. by introducing forms" during a por- losopher everything appears beautiful. In the recommendation—a reference to "My Hunt of Mexico. To the Editors of thc Evening Post : tion of tho time a plate is exposed, or reflecting vegetable world, he sees, in every form of after ' the Captain,'" an intensely interesting END OF THE FIRST THREE MONTH'S CAMPAIGN. Vnnr nriicln rtf vnc .«r.t :„ o • aa im*ge upon the sensitive surface in the vegetable life, from the towering oak to the sketch, by Oliver Wendell Holmes. It alone President Lincoln's first call for seventy-five | iIiial Photopranbv nroflstn IT't^ Spi' 'iark room- We trust scientific and truth- most abject bit of moss, the same sublime is worth the price of tbe magazine. itual i l otograph) professes to solve themvs- lovinsr thousand troops to put down a combination tery, and announces" that Appleton'sVruVt can SSlPh,°,t0gfrAph/rS ^ «Per.i4men1t- tbat? |f combination of material constituents and elec- — too powerful to bc suppressed by ordinary do the same thing, wherever there is a photo- ' ™ *CCld*nt' W -eUl,er e?,st' trie forces. There is to me no small source of MR. MASON JONES, an eloquent Irish Orator, methods, was ridiculed by the rebels, because I graph o'f t'he dead'person. " " F"Ul°" ^ri^,?^' ,0r lh® n,eans nmdf¥use of b-v comfort in the reflection that my weak spirit, is addressing large houses in this city. His they had measured their strength and knew That is not the Systery of this thing But j "X ^vSK^l^t when divested of' this mortal coil' will take bold d,fen80 of lbe principIe8 of freedom, and our weakness. It is remembered that the ter-1 u ,s to take a picture containing a likeness discovered. of a person who is dead, and of whom there 1 mination ot tbat three months' campaign was r:?b°r M^rren^ ,T"-ion £ tJn is 110 photograph or likeness in existence ! mi.;. • ; ,, • "Whil»» UI.eB wm e havuHve thmee fulleslunesit confidencconnuencet in the and investigating the action and nature of subjoctid him to the abuse of the New York a Bull Run. This happened more than four- (in nifri^iK the Boston operator professes truth of 'the circumstantial account thaHioit secret influence byv which remote matemate- Herald, am} attempts at riots at his lectures, teen months ago, and th* rebel power is still I to dojVnd the questTon is, Is that so? above, the very interesting and even startling rial existences are bound together. ^ ^ j The better class of citizens will sustain him unsubdued. In no country are men more loyal1 J. W. EDMONDS. j character of the alleged phenomena, and the I in his noble utterances. No. 145.3

intense desire that will be largely felt for its ing resolutions, which were unanimously same time put our religion under the surveil- Sodom of theology—just far enough to insist down and endeavored to collect myself re- truth, lends us to withhold for the present adopted : lance of the Pope ? Let us advance backward upon the divine right of reason to temper solving to think over it and study about it anything like entire credence, and to invite the Whereas, Tt is notorious that sundry acts of in solid column, and be done with it. Let us faith, took fright at its own freedom, looked The negative having dried, I varnished it strictest investigation it is possible for incre- intolerance have been publicly manitested to- roll thc century back ; let us bury it by torch- back, like the Patriarch's wife, and became a and placed it on the shelf, desiring Mr. Mum- dulity to institute." ler to be careful of it. I then prepared to ad- wards Dr. Pease by so-called "Spiritualists," light in the pit of the middle ages and set a monument. R. T. H. journ, telling Mr. M. that I would come back The burden of our criticism lies just here. and, whereas, it seems due both to our own j Homan candle at the bead and foot of it. the next day and tell him what I thought of it. There is a palpable want of honest endeavor self-respect and the moral sense of the com- According t0 populRt. theology, human liberty He desired me to sit down a moment, which I to arrive at the truth. The u investigation " munity to protest against such doctrines as is a dream ; Nature is a quagmire ; equality of Spirit Photographs. did, and we soon entered into conversation on and "experiment" we challenged have not been those of anti-war, anti-government, and free- love, which, whether so designed or not, ap- rights is " equality of duty to obey the will of chemistry, photographic operations. &c. Find- attempted. A simple counterfeit is produced, NEW AND STRONG TESTIMONY. pear to us adapted to destroy good fellow- God" as by a priest interpreted. Religion ing his knowledge of both very limited, I ven- bearing no likeness to the thing counterfeited, tured to explain to him various things concern- ships and unsettle the very foundations of means Liturgy; worship is an evening enter- which is palmed off upon the public as a " so- The following circumstantial letter from Mr. ing each, at which he seemed extremely pleased, society, therefore, tainment, presided over by a gentleman in a expressing very great desire that"I should lution of the mystery," and presenting the Resolved, That we hereby congratulate Dr. Wm. Guay, an experienced photographer, re- black gown. Its incense is best sent up to come back again and help him along, which T same effects" as the genuine; while it is Pease upon this proof of his faithfulness in cently from New Orleans, and one in whose God through the throat of an organ and the promised to do. He expressed the hope that inculcating the healthy, conservative, and truly statements we place the utmost confidence, assorted that Mr. Turner " would in all proba- with my help he could succeed in bringing out reformatory ideas of a God, faith, retribution, lips of an opera singer. furnishes indubitable proof of at least one bility be able to produce the departed spirit better and clearer pictures. I left, promising responsibility, &c., which, without any form of This is what Dr. Bellows meant by his point of the claim for the Boston pictures, of any one whose photograph may be in ex- to see him the next day. sectarianism, have constantly formed the " Broad Church." This is what Dr. Osgood viz.: that a second form does appear on the nega- istence." This, by the way, as set forth in basis of his lecturing in this vicinity. You need not ask me what I thought means by his "Vespers" and his indorsement tive without a visible object to produce it: a note to the Post from Judge Edmonds, is not Resolved, Tbat the efforts and arguments of how I felt while there or on going of Scotch Presbyterianism. And the Chris- home. I cannot even now tell. Sufiice the thing claimed, which is to produce a pic- Dr. Pease in behalf ofthe war, in this time of BOSTON, NOV. 16. 1852. tian Inquirer if it would be true to its title, it to say I resolved to think it over rea- ture where no likeness exists. our country's greatest danger, are worthy of MESSRS. A. J. DAVIS & Co., GENTS : Accord- true to the age, had better look tbe fact in the sonably, and to try it again. I will here special remembrance and commendation. ing to promise, Thursday, Nov. 13th, I paid a But to state our points definitely. mention that during the whole of the opera- Resolved, That we hereby tender to Dr. face at once. To a man who can«see straight visit to Mr. Mumler at Mrs. Stuart's Photo- tion, that is, from the time I took hold of the 1st. Any artist—indeed, any person with Pease our hearty thanks for the pleasure and ahead, the purpose of these gentlemen is graphic Gallery, No. 258 Washington Street, glass until I placed it on the shelf. Mr. M. eyes—can readily discover a radical differ- profit derived from his lectures, which in this scarcely vailed. Their efforts for the last few ' I there found a large number of people, which stood by me seemingly perfectly calm and ence in the pictures. The very points pecu- vicinity have been characterized by a manner years as ill become the great idea which took > caused me to fear that it was not altogether speechless, remarking only when nearly done, at once firm, uncompromising, and respectful. 'the name of Unitarianism as docs the term,! J'10. .time lo ™£e knowf. ^ business. On liarly distinguishing the genuine are singu- that he doubted very much when I "began, BENJ. ELLIS, Chairman. .. . .,1,1 u . i ' looking around the reception-room, my atten- larly wanting in the imitations, which do not whether he would succeed in bringing out the H. CADY. Secretary. Democracy, the party that has polluted it, ; Uon w*g attracted to a frame containing about spirit form. sufficiently resemble the genuine to be worthy A. H. Manly, F. R. Cadv, Alvah Cady, J. A.: Let the Christian Inquirer see to it. It dozen of the so-called spirit photographs, of comparison. Yet even the Evening Post, Cornell, M. C. Manly, J. S. Linderman, need waste no space in apologetic patronage j Making my way through the crowd to the The next day I went again, and found a usually so careful in all statements, avers that Committee. ofthe HERALD OF PROGRESS nnd the Spiritu- j frame, I sought to give the pictures a close large crowd in waiting. Found he had not been able to print any from my regative, on they " present the same effects." examination, believing tbat was all I could ' alists ; its two pet apostles seem to have lost account of the rain, and previous promises. expect that day. Let us ask one question right here. Had Brief Items. tlie Power t0 sayft manly thing. Just now Finding him busy, I left. At length, seeing a lady behind the counter the writer—no, we will not say the writer of when the world so much needs men, they are To-day I went again, and to make this day's at leisure, I inquired if I could see Mr. Mum- the paragraph, for that bears the unmistaka- ROBERT DALE OWEN has written a letter to ; onl anxions to be priest3. « Religio-Chem- detail short, we went to work, he allowing ler. She replied that I could not, as he was Secretary Chase on the Cost and Conditions . .,, . , . r „,- ,r -r ,, me to do just as I pleased. I then desired ble trade-mark of Messrs. Appleton & Co.— too exhausted to make any more pictures that of Lasting Peace." It presents a masterly ar-11C1" 'n Pla,n 8h' ' ^ that the spirit form of my father should ap- had thw.^.e editor who- indorse_—d th— e statement o-- f . 1priesuy priestly OJJUC-office. iT however, myself my astonishment, painting of the child, acknowledged it a like- by far the strongest testimony yet adduced. iliit the «M«t of the ".VtoM^ -in endeavor • and endeavoring to-appear perfectly sangfroid. , . . :.v,..ncss," that lie . has looked wide of-the that the gist ot the 4MP!|pP*" endeavor Mr Mumler asked if { would nol like t0 t ness. Two artists also examined the photo- graph with the painting, through magnifying One word in conclusion, especially for the two inl it WM desir8(1 th„t he sllonld , s0 for ihe "flesh-pots of an Jfrntanan priest- a sitting- r accepted on condition tbat I be glasses, &c., and they both pronounced it a papers we have named | ^ ,n fac(_ as lQ (be iWm of a hood—" Liberal Christianity?' with a priest j allowed to see the whole of the manipulation true likeness." The course pursued by the New York pa. cas, Ms „ serious drawback as you at the head of it!—it would be well to show i and examine the process a3 I felt disposed. pers in this matter, betokens either the most know l0 lhe convc„,en,e of ,oo]lin 8traight that any honest fault-finding,' with the opera-j To this he most cordially consented, and We have since heard from Boston that Mr. culpable carelessness as to what averments furrard. 0nr Brother of that kindly condc- j tions of the physical laws, or with natural moreover, said he: " Inasmuch as you under- Guay is superintending improvements in the stand the photographic business, you can do they make, or a most deplorable and rotten scendinff ghoet gaw evervthi 5ut the objec; phenomena, conies from sheer ignorance, or operating-room of Mrs. Stuart, whereby it is all tbe manipulation yourself." I then, ot moral code. Thei press a champiochampi n of fraud! „,„„„,, m, . . ,, „ mental laziness. When, for example, tbe hoped better pictures will be secured. This placed directly before him. This induces me course, made up my mind that no spiritual defenders of a counterfeit! What sincere and to make a second effort. I would not have science of electricity was unknown and its form could come on the negative unless I will necessitate some delay, after which we candid person could respect a sheet so slow to him ,ead his readers against a shadoWj and atm0spheric manifestati on was assumed prett..y nearl. y could make up my mind how it shall look for other and more distinct proofs offer a word, not of credence, but to invite knQW by „,lti,orjty 0f Scripture that indicate God's displeasure, there was some j did come, or how it was made if deceptively of this blessed reality. investigation .respecting a development more whe„ „ blind man leads those who don't see. il I ground of apology lor the doctrine of evil in P« Information has come to U3 also, through a startling than the invention of Ihe magnetic „,ere be a ditch at au handv. both the leader Nature, because of the profound ignorance of Well, then be passed me into tbe workshop, private channel, of another artist who is com- telegraph-a development which appeals with anJ „le ,e(1 I closely examining everything around, and pelled against his will to take spirit pictures. are sure to find the bottom of it. j Nature. But will tbat apology answer for to- trying to detect some kind of double com- peculiar and irresistible power to every human J™ ~ 'poin^aVthe'injai'rrr 1 day The spirit forms come uninvited, and will not bined arrangements, but seeing nothing more being not utterly dead to the love ot friends: . repre8ents iti lllllt ., physical science " is all- Not for the Christian Inquirer,, not for its llian ordinary partitions, and thin and simple away at his bidding. At present the opera-

a press at tbe same time so ready tb trifle embr.u.inir tbe ,)0jnt i8 the absurdity of Fairfield correspondent. He knows full well background. He desired me to select my tor is unwilling to have bis name or location

with all these interests, to shock human con- ' • - . ~i—n,,mwii,»t known, or to follow the business. This is, we maintaining that lt physical science" can that, for example, he is indebted to the vol- j glftss out of a large number that stood on the fidence, and stagger faith, by becoming par- ghQW a s(ate of things in flat contradiction to I canic fiction of Nature, which he impeaches, Table, or work bench. I picked one up from trust, but a temporary timidity. Not even the lot, examined it, rubbed it, threw my ties to a counterfeit not in commerce, whatthe Inquircr calls " spiritual science." for the very granite which composes bis tem- the bonds of a sectarian church should for a breath on it, and finding it to be nothing more whereby men lose mere dollars or dimes, but a. ,ts t.Fairfield Correspondent" commits pre- pie for what is called worship ; for the gold moment confine so glorious a truth. C. M. P. than a piece of ordinary glass, to all appear- counterfeit in the sphere of the affections, in | cisely that folly. His mourning over a mud- j which constitutes his salary. He knows that ance new. FINAL AND CONCLUSIVE. the highest and holiest realm—a cheat where hole-is ft dir;ct impeachment"of the divine I scientific research is in constant conversion of He insisted on my going through tbe opera-

to deceive is to mock the tenderest sentiments vvisdorp in tbe creation of a bull-frog. As he ' what was once supposed to be the evils and tion of coating, silvering, doubt. The picture of my wile is very faint, to his rural retreat next summer, he take hands. What tbe world needs, and must ever Mr. Mumler by it, and the young man off in circulation so contemptible a cheat. How long the corner, having previously made sure that but sufficiently out, however, for me to recog- him tbe said first leaf of the Protestant Bible, need, is teachers. It has nearly outgrown its there was nobody else about beside us three. nize the features, as far as I can tell by looking will it be before tbe same "enterprising house" priests. Once there was hope from Unitari- with a view to a prayerful comparison of its at tbe negative, which is semi positive any will seek to engage an artist-medium, for the The focus being adjusted, I resolve and hope statements with tbe doctrine of his review of ans. Thoughtful men, who mourned tbat the way. purpose of producing pictures destined—if that the picture of my departed wife may come " Religio-Chemici." To pick flaws in Nature, truths of Jesus had been swamped in the dead on the negative standing in front and by me. Since that time, Mr. Mnmler having resolved successfully made—to be a thousand-fold having first conceded that God made it, is an sea of scholastic jargon, tbat religion had The cloth being removed, 1 fancied feeling to make some alterations and improvements more in demand than tbe now almost univer- outrage upon logical decency. The divinily dwindled to a ceremony and worship had be- rather queer during the operation. The sit- in his working and sitting department, has sal carte de visiles ? And bow long will it be been unable to make any negatives. He will doctor wbo does it is either bullied by bis come mere wind, rejoiced in the early promise ting over, I immediately passed to the camera- box, took out the plate-holder, and passed off be ready to resume on Monday next. 1 have before a genuine spirit picture will be permit- liver or by bis ambition. He has a weak of Unitarianism that reason was about to be to the dark room, followed by Mr. Mumler. I paid him a visit every day since my last letter, ted to be made where counterfeiting i3 so head, or a poor digestion. wedded to faith; tbat science natural and must here mention that while I was preparing and had much conversation wilh him. I can- readily and unscrupulously entered upon ? science spiritual were soon to appear in their That the effete systems of European The- the glass and going through the operation, I not detect a single syllabic that goes to prove C. M. P. true relation of sisterhood; that thc night- ology should blurt such nonsense in the face pretty nearly made up my mind that nothing any fraud. He expresses a desire that I should mare of medieval creeds which had pressed be with him all the time, so that I may see of the nineteenth century may not be sur- but my own picture would come on; and even upon the bosom of the race for some twenty when about to develop the same I little be- how the work is done, having great confidence For the Herald of Progress. prising ; but that a disciple of our American generations was about to depart forever. lieved 1 should get anything more. Having in ray skill as a photographer. The Public Teaching of Dr. R. D. Channing should publicly put himself ou that thrown on the developing solution, I closely It is impossible for Mr. Mumler to have pro- side of tbe fence is more than a hint that he is Tlie hope has not been realized* at their Pease. watched what was coming. Well, then, to my cured anv pictures of my wife or father, lhe quite willing to sell Boston to Rome, provided hands. Tne scepter has departed from that At a meeting held at Manchester, Boone utmost, almost trembling astonishment, there 1 likeness of my father is clear and perfect; that ot he can get certain of its "solid ones" to back Judah, " and the lawgiver from between his was seeing twopictuees come out / County, 111., September 21st, 1S62, the under- my wife is not. I shall try again, however, the transfer. Why not? feet." 1 ts apostles stand before the century signed committee was appointed to draft reso- I clasped the glass tightly, you may rest as- and hope to send you proofs in my next. proclaiming the barren unity of God, denying sured. Having got through, 1 washed it off, I have seen several letters from parties who lutions expressive of the views of the meeting The Unitarian Church having, some years the while the unity of his works and ways. and put it into the fixing solution, watching it have gone through as I have and received respecting tbe public teaching of Dr. R. D. I*since , successfully taken the initiatory step As a doctrine, Unitarianism has retrograded ; closely all the while. When done I took it satisfaction, certifying the.r ^^ ^tect Pease Benjamin Ellis, Esq., having been back ward, why pause on that sublime march ? out, and there I stood and precisely what I had de- anv possible deception. I will send you tho as a sect, it does not increase. Why should called' to the chair; which committee, at a The Democrats are kindly disposed to put our sired. You may better conceive ray feelings names and address of some of these persons, it? How can it? It stepped boldly out ofthe than I can even now explain to you. Not subsequent meeting, October 20th, A. II. Cady { American politics under the keeping of Jeff, that you may inquire of them for yoursel ves. mist and fog of scholasticim—the ancient knowing what to think or believe, I dropped Your friend, UUAY. acting as Secretary, reported the follow- Davis—why should not the Unitarians at the 6

and was a devoted and successful member of 1 people, and as fortune was equal on both sidesi He could have nothing'against him. There Nearer and nearer came our pursuer. Once could not be a better or braver man. He was the wind freshened, and we seemed to gain a Progressive Literature. the learned profession. Mr. Smythe was a there was no objection on their part to Ilie nobility itself; but I was my father's pet and slight advantage, but it soon fell off again, and man esteemed in tbe community as an honor- match—even as a mercantile speculation— pride, and he was ambitious. 1 think nothing the brig crept nearer and nearer. Few slept, "All things are engaged in writing their history- a thing ever uppermost in the minds of the old able and talented lawyer, and " none named less than a lord would then have satisfied him By the full morning light there lay the The air is full of sounds; the sky of tokens ; the ground him but to praise." A few months later he fathers. for a son-in-law. handsome brig, full over our taffrail, bounding is all memoranda and signatures; and every object formally proposed to the parents of Fanny for The nature of Ellen was soft and refined. along with a bone in her mouth. My brave covered with hints, which speak to the intelligent." "Captain Walter came and told me, with „v the hand of their daughter, and all Mr. Mar- She was the most gentle creature I ever met some bitterness, the result of his interview 1 husband walked the deck in sore trouble, He For thc Herald of Progress. shall could learn of Mr. Smythe, and his own with. She had been petted and caressed by with my father. I knew that he was poor, but had made tbe best possible preparations for impressions of his character and amiable dis- her parents ever since ber birth, and she I knew that this was the only reasonable ob defense' r , thc cre" w were ready t0 obey his or- Miscellaneous Writings. ders, but tbe case was hopeless. position, were so favorable that lie and Mrs. seemed to me like a lovely shrinking plant jection that could be made to bim, and I laid my hand in his—a strong, manly hand—strong " As the light increased, I watched the Marshall gave their consent for him to offer his which the first cold blast would wither. Had BY J. LEANDER STARR. and true, and said : ^ brig closely through the glass, trying to ascer- hand to their daughter. she fallen to the lot of such a man as Charles "; Be patient: I am yours, and I will tain the character of our pursuer. A flag of When he proposed the alliance to Fanny, Smythe, she would have been happy; but, never be any one's but yours while this world stars and stripes went up to her mast-hfcad, alas ! Mr. Jones, albeit a good sort of a man stands.' and the smoke of a cannon curled up from her THE ANALOGY BETWEEN A WO31 AN there was no mawkish, theatrical start, no " He went away upon a long voyage, and a deck. It was tlie first signal. The commander affectation of surprise. She bad noticed tbe in his way, had, at heart, a debased estimate AND A FLOWER. very important one, for my father liked him as i of the brig was in the field of my glass, and my favorable impression which had been created of female character in general; was a noisy, a captain of his ship, and knew well that lie worst fears were dispelled. This title will, no doubt, strike my readers in his esteem, and did not hesitate to avow it conceited politician; eschewed all distinctions could trust him to the last drop of his blood to "' Look !' said I to my husband, giving him of rank in society ; talked of every other man as very romantic and poetic. But I trust tbat to him, in a manner at once frank and at the protect ship and cargo. thegluss; ' that man is not a pirate.' in tbe progress of this paper I will be able to same time perfectly consistent with true with a malignant sneer; had immense ideas of " When he came home next time I had re- " I could not be mistaken. He was a fine- show that it is not inaptly chosen, and that its maiden modesty. She went farther. She ac- his own intellect, and the importance of his flected much, and determined upon what 1 looking man of thirty-five or forty, in an un- consideration develops much of every-day knowledged her attachment to him, and their wealth, and was quite satisfied in knowing he ought to do. I did not wait for him to come dress naval uniform. His bearing was manly, and see me. I did not wait for him to ask me proso life, and that mere fancy has little to do betrothal thus took place with the fullest as- was a good merchant, and looked up to " on and his face, when I got a look at it, was to do anything. I knew that he could not clear and open. My captain took the glass and with the subject I have selected as the second sent of her own parents and those of Mr. 'change." He married because it was the while he was my father's captain. So I went gave an anxious look. of my new series. Smythe, who were then living, and who were fashion to do so, and because he would like to to the ship and said : " ' I believe you are right, my darling,' said estimable people, and held in high respect. show off his wife's beauty and high order of Beauty, delicacy, frailty, are attributes of "' Captain Walter, will you leave this all to he. ' The man is no pirate. Then it is war, the flower—and they are those of woman. In On the day after this felicitous betrothal, all education at watering-places in summer, and me, to do as I think right?' and we shall soon be his prisoners. It is a the one case, as in the other, care, attention, these persons, so deeply 'intere ' sste d in the in the Fifth Avenue circles in winter; and he " He only held me to his big heart a mo- bard case, but there is no help for it.' ment, but he looked a thousand yeses out of persistent kindness, and shelter, guard and event, together with a younger brother and I chose Ellen not for any love he had for her, "' Do not be cast down, my brave captain,' but because she was " respectable," and her fa- his handsome, loving eyes. said I ; ' father has more ships, and he can protect their native loveliness; while neglect, j sister 0f Mr. Smythe, dined at the house of the "The day his ship was to sail on her next deduct this one from my portion.' exposure, and coarse treatment, first destroy j father of the destined bridegroom ; and it was ther rich. voyage 1 sent my trunks on board tbe ship. " Just then another shot from tbe long gun On ber part, Ellen was wholly inexperi- the lovely hues, dry up the life-giving capil- ; a happy reunion— Then I found my captain and said : came alongside, and showed that we were laris by which they are sustained, and then enced. She had seen but little of Mr. Jones " 1 Come with me and redeem your promise, A feast of reason and a flow of soul." within point-blank range. Tbe order was they wither and die. before her marriage, and yielded rather to the and I will keep mine.' given to take in sail, and we waited for the As I am not writing their history, but only " We went to a church, a license was ready, As the leaves of flowers are said to absorb representations and wishes of her parents than brig to come up. As she came on, dashing a limited sketch, let me pass over the inter- and we were married. The ship was ready to gallantly through the waves, my captain took all noxious qualities of the air, and breathe to any predilection of her own to become the sail, and I knew that my father was on board his trumpet and bailed her. The hail was forth a purer atmosphere, so it seems to me vetting few mouths and announce their plain wife of this man. to give bis last directions and see her off. I courteously responded to. It was a Yankee that pure, delicate-minded woman, draws from unostentatious, but most happy marrtage ; and He in no way appreciated the delicacy and went on board with ' my husband, and my , , , ..A,,, l^nnntr ontornn nnrtn nop nAW fliitiAC OQ privateer demanding our surrender. now Fanny entered upon her new duties as refinement of his gentle wife. Indeed the father was not surprised, for I had often us all sordid and angry passions, and breathes "' Oh for a tier of guns, and half a chance the wife of a man she both loved aud respect- sailed out with him and returned in the pilot- honey moon was scarce ended when he even at him !' exclaimed my captain; but the dis- forth peace and philanthropy. She steals boat. ed. reproached her for her refinement, which he parity of force was too overwhelming. upon our affections like a summer wind, She was determined to illustrate the picture of designated as 11 airs," and vehemently de- " When the ship had got a good offing, and In answer to the question, he gave the name breathing softly over slepping valleys. the pilot was ready to take us back, my father a " wife " so beautifully drawn by the gifted clared that he would not permit any such of our good ship and his own. There is something in the native organiza- said his last words to the captain, and shook " Then I, who was watching the deck of the pen of Washington Irving : " nonsense." His coarseness soon became tion of woman which is peculiarly delicate hitnls, wishing him a good voyage. enemy through the glass, though we were now apparent in many nameless ways, so that her and sensitive, in both her physical and mental "As the vine, which has long twined its " • Come, darling,' said he to me, "say good- so near, saw a strange movement. Tbe cap- delicacy was shocked; but in answer to her construction. Woman, viewed in her normal graceful foliage about the oak, and been lifted by to Captain Walter, for we must go now.' tain of the brig suddenly put up his glass,which modest and winning entreaties, he only mocked " ' Dear father,' said I, 4 forgive your darling; he had turned on my husband. Then he ap- condition, is timid and shrinking. She looks by it into sunshine, will, when the hardy plant is rifted by the thunderbolt, cling round it her and redoubled his coarseness. Alas I cannot go with you now. I must sail peared to give some order to his lieutenant, to the sterner and more robust sex with faith who was proparing to board us, and soon with its caressing tendrils and bind up its alas ! when with such a woman, so refined, so this voyage with MY HOSBAND, Captain Wal- and confideucc—as the ivy entwines itself terl' sprang into the boat himself, and came on shattered boughs, so it is beautifully ordered delicate, so intelligent, who entered on life's around the stately oak, at once its constituent " He looked from one to the other to see if! board of us. by Providence that woman, who is the de- pathway as his wife, with at least a deep re- and its ornament. this were jest or earnest. j "He was received with a not very cheerful pendent and ornament of man in his happier spect and an earnest desire to do all in her Every florist is living in sight of the works "'Father dear,' said I, 'you could never ] politeness, but his manner, as he stepped upon hours, should be his stay and solace when power for his happiness, and to make his home of a divine Artist; and how much would his haivv e found me so good a husband. So I our deck, justified the opinion I had formed of smitten with sudden calamity, winding herself cheerful, he could have had so blissful an ex- existence be elevated could he see the glory took htm this morning, and made him marry him. He raised his hat to me with a graceful into the rugged recesses of his nature, tender- istence! Why then should he, with coarse- which shines forth in their forms, hues, pro- me, and here is the certificate that I am his bow, and my husband invited him to enter ly supporting the drooping head, and binding ness of manner and language, with constant wife.' our cabin, which he did with every courtesy. portions, and moral expression. And every up the broken heart." reiterations of the " authority of a husband," " Poor father! He turned very pale, but he Wine and other refreshments were brought out pure-minded observer of woman has forced on Mr Smythe had been early influenced by the with mockery ofa delicacy he should respect loved me, and there was no help. He held me in plenty, and the stranger told us of the out- his mind an elevated sense of the beauty, puri- j virtuous example ofa beloved mother; by the and admire, crush that beautiful flower, ban- | in his arms and kissed me, while his tears break of the war with America, and also of ty, and moral grandeur of her descendants, j modesty and refinement of a cherished sis- ran over my cliceks. At -last he held out other events which were news to us at that ish its hues, and render sterile its stem. who bloomed in Eden as tbe fairest flower of ter. His innate dignity and love of purity | his hand to my brave captain iu token of time. j forgiveness. He went home alone in the pilot- " Were we prisoners ? Was this our captor, God's creation. forbade his mingling wilh " women of the How could she be happy amid all the appli- j boat. qniety conversing with us, and courteously The blissful bower of EVE is thus described world," wbo made a mockery of virtue— j ances of wealth, with the great hope of her | " The shores of England faded from our drink'ng to our prosperity? He looked at me ever assailing it under the charge of prudery— by the.magic pen of Milton : life prostrated ? « Nothing can compensate for sight, and we were on the open sea. We had attentively when my eyes were turned away, and he entered upon his new career, as a mar- fair winds and foul, stiff gales and gentle ' and I thought I saw a strange smile upon his "The roof the wrecked hopes of domestic life ! ried man, deeply impressed with the invalua- Of thickest covert was inwoven shade breezes, and I became a sailor. We crossed j face. Laurel and myrtle, and what higher grew ble worth of the beautiful flower he had "It is not mnch the world can give, the line, doubled the Cape of Good Hope, and '" My husband opened a locker, and taking Of firm aud fragrant leaf: 011 either side plucked, from its parent stem, and resolved With all art; sailed 011 weeks and weeks througouglhi 1th e Indian out the ship's papers, laid them on the table Acanthus, and each odorous, bushy, shrub, that he would do all in his power to protect And gold a • ''his1 are not the things seas to Batavia, and then to Canton. When with a heavy heart; but he would not show it, Fenced up the verdant wall; each beauteous To ^ our cargo was completed we sailed homeward and said, with an air of assumed cheer- .the delicacy of the beauteous rose which was flower, But oh I if <,.. who cluster round again. fulness : now his own. How sweet and refined was all Iris, all hues, roses and jessamine, The altar and tl.e hearth, " One day, as we were reaching our north " ' It is the fortune of war. My ship is your Reared high their flourished heads between, and Have gentle words and loving smiles, their intercourse! He paid homage to her ern latitudes, my captain came hastily into the prize, captain, and since I must surrender her, wrought How beautiWl is earth ! " delicacy ar.d sensitiveness, by rendering to her. cabin to get his spy-glass, and I followed him I am glad it is to a gentleman. Where do you Mosaic; underfoot the violet, Crocus, and hyacinth, with rich inlay in all his intercourse, the homage of refined To his scoffs and habitual coarseness, Mr. on deck. There was a vessel in sight bearing propose to send us ?' down directly for us. She had changed her " The stranger moved into the light, brushed 'Broidered the ground, more colored than with and delicate attention. As respect was the Jones now added neglect, almost amounting stone course since we first saw her, and it was evi- back thc curls of his dark hair, and, turning to basis on which his affection was founded, he to scorn. Scarce an evening did he now Of costliest emblem." dent she meant to come near us. my husband, said: had no fear that their mutual love would spend in her society. The atmosphere of his " My captain took a long look at her. •'' Is it possible, Captain Walter, that you I will endeavor more to fully illustrate my grow cold by lapsing years. He knew that home was too pure and refined for his de- "' Well ?' said I, standing at his elbow, and do not know me? Have you forgotten a man views by sketching, as completely as the brief she was, in her heart, meaning to be right, bauched taste, and when—so rarely—he pass- taking the glass from his hand. whose life you saved, and who owes you so space I am allowed will permit, the carcer of and that if any little outbreak of impatience ed an evening with her, he was usually "'You have good eyes, darling,' said he, much ?' "My husband looked earnestly at him a two women of equal charms, education, and should arise 011 her part, it was more an error intemperate, stupid, and surly. He seemed ' see what you cavi make of her.' " I adjusted the glass to my eye and looked moment, then grasped his hand, and said : position in society, one of whom was through of the head than the heart, and he passed over not to notice that this once lovely flower was intently "' Hardy! Frank Hardy! is it really you ?' life, happily, cared for with all the tenderness such in unobservant silence. He remembered, now of" faded hue." The rich color of health "' It is an armed vessel,' said I. ' I see " ' Yes, old fellow,' said he, 'it is really me,' too, that he was not himself perfect, and must ofa delicate flower, and her beauty of person and happiness, no longer nourished with care, ports and a large gun amidships.' with a better memory than you have, who and mind long outlived her youth and was demand from his wife the same modicum of in- hud been succeeded by the " sickly hues " of a "' You are quite correct—as usual,' said my saved my life at the risk of your own. Aud transmitted to ber daughter. The other was dulgence which he exercised towards her. wasting decline, and the once happy, cheerful captain. this is your wife ? I congratulate you—I con- 1 gratulate you both with all my heart. Madam, early assailed by coldness and neglect, and There was no strife of mastery; no assump- smile no longer illuminated her countenance. But she does not look like a man-of- war,' said I,' and I do«ot think she is Eng- he took me off a wreck, where every man but long before she had reached tbe prime of life tion of authority on his part. The principle Two years had now passed since this ill-fated lish.' me had perished. Thank God, I can show all her personal charms had vanished, the of" bear and forbear," was happily illustrated marriage, and at the close of autumn—it was "'No more is she,' said he. 'Either war that I am not ungrateful! I shall appoint "joy of life" was fled forever from her ex-: in their lives. Thus, in calm contentment and on the 16th, a bleak day in November—Mr. has been declared, and she is a privateer, or you prize-master, and you shall take your istence, and she went early to her grave—a uninvaded bliss their lives flowed on, and in Jones was summoned to the death-bed of his she is a cursed pirate,' ship, please God, into her own harbor !' withered flower. the meantime a beautiful little flowret, in once beautiful wife—now a withered flower. "I was never a coward. I held the glass '•' Butfcan you do this safely, Frank ?' asked Fanny Marshall was the only daughter of a the shape of a daughter, was added to their steadily in my hands, and watched the brig as my captain. "And thus I think of one who in "' Safely !' His lip curled. ' I would like respectable clergyman at , in the State circle. she bore down with all sail set, and it was Iler youthful beauty died ; evident tbat she was a good sailer. There had to see the danger I would not confront for of New York. She had been educated with all The uniform display on the part of Mr. The fair meek blossom that grew up been talk of war before we left England, but you, old fellow ! If 1 were a naval officer, it the devotion of a father and mother's care and Smythe and his wife of au amiable temper, And faded by my side. my father did not believe in it. I shuddered would be a different matter, but a privateer In the cold moist earth we laid her, sound judgment. She had never been allowed the happy smile with which he always entered at the idea of its being a pirate. has some discretion. My prettv brig is my When the forest cast the leaf, to enter a boarding-school, where usually a into her presence, after the day's absence, own. The war is an ugly business, but you And we wept that one so lovely " ' Whatever she may be,' said my captain, know me of old—we are " enemies in war, in girl gains but a showy and superficial educa- which his professional duties demanded, and Should have 11 life so brief. ' she has no business with us. I shall give her tion, and when " finished " is more an actress the winning kiss which she greeted him with, Yet not unmeet it was that one a try, at all events.' peace, friends"—all but 3-011, old fellow—I am in the great drama of human life than a sound- were silent evidences of their perfect bliss and Like that young friend of ours, So we tacked ship, and stood off in the con- your friend always, as you know.' minded, sensible woman. Her elementary ed- mutual confidence. Thus this lovely flower So gentle and so beautiful, trary direction from that in which we had been And how will your crew stand the loss of Should perish with the flowers." their share of prize-money ?' asked my cap- ucation was taught her chiefly by masters bloomed in Nature's garden, and yearly ex- sailing. The stranger had tacked also before [W. C. BRYANT. we were well on our course. In half an hour tain. whom Dr. Marshall employed to give her panded into new and richer beauties. The she had gained perceptibly. "' They are pretty likely to stand what I lessons at his house at stated hours, evidences were silent, but they were not un- "' She can beat us on a wind,' said my cap- require them 10,' said the Yankee, proudly. always in the presence of her mother, while observed. Little Clara—their sweet rose- An English Woman's Story. tain, looking very serious. ' There is nothing 'But I can make it all right for them. Prizes that more essential education—too much, bud—even from infancy, noticed this ceaseless " My father was a merchant and owned many for us but to show the cleanest pair of heels \se are not very scarce articles. Here, give nie alas! neglected, especially in the children bliss of both her parents, and her highest de- ships. lie sent them to the West Indies, the can.' the papers! Who is your owner?' of persons who pride themselves on being sire was to emulate the loveliness of that East Indies, and sometimes to China. I loved "Round we went to our best point of sail- " • My father,' said I. leaders in the world of fashion—the education matchless flower from which she had derived the sea and the ships. My father used to allow ing; out went the studding sails, the cargo '••'All right, madam,' said he, bowing; 'I of rnannei-3 and principles, to direct which her existence, nnd from such examples of love- me to go on board with him when tbey were was shifted to give our ship the best possible wish to make you a small present.' trim, the sails were wet; but it was soon appa- '•'If you wish to do me a favor,' said I, really good and judicious parents are ever the liness and purity her character was formed, about to sail or bad come in from long voy- ages. I sometimes took such little presents rent that, after all we had done, the brig was ' make your present to my husband.' best, as well as the most faithful guides—was and she grew up to be the counterpart of her on board as sailors like, and they said I would gaining on us—slowly, indeed, but certainly " He smiled, as he looked from one to the afforded by the constant instruction of her pa- idolized mother. give them a lucky voyage. They did not for- gaining. other, and seemed to understand the state of rents, as well by their advice as by their ex- get me, and brought me many a nice present "; A stern chase is a long chase, Calista, the case in an instant. ample. She was lovely inform and face, and This home was the home of contentment and from beyond the seas. darling, said my captain, cheerily ; but I could " " You are quite right, madam,' said he ; 'it as lovely in her character. Intelligent ob- happiness. It was, too, the home of beauty: " One day we visited a new ship, and found see that he was not at all satisfied with the shall be as you desire.' servant, and attentive to all the moral and for as in the summer-garden and the winter a new captain, whom I had never seen before. aspect of affairs. "Then he indorsed the ship's manifest with social duties of life, she grew up, the pride and green-house, the florist's care preserves the I thought him very handsome, but young for You know that I am not a coward,' said tbe fact of her capture, and made over ship hope of her fond parents. hues and fragrance of the loveliest flowers un- such a trust; but 1 found that lie was good I; ' tell me just how it is.' and cargo to Captain Walter. It was not a der bis care, so in this happy mansion the and honorable. He had been in the royal navy. "'I know your soul is bigger than your legal document, ol course, but it had its weight body, my darling,' said he. ' This rascally with tuy father. When Fanny had attained the age of twenty same attentions preserved the beauty and the A great misfortune to his family had made it necessary for him to leave the service and brig gains 011 11s. If we can have foul weather " Our captor look his leave with such stores the Rev. Dr. Marshall received a call as pastor charm of the matured rose and its offspring, accept the higher pay of a merchantman. to-night, we may change our course and lose as we could get him to accept. His boat's to one of the most flourishing congregations in the beautiful rose-bud. After one or two voyages wc became ac- sight of her. 1 see no other hope. We are crew looked at them wonderingly as they were New York, which he accepted ; and some few- But now my pen must, reluctantly, trace the quainted, and he came to love me better than not strong enough to fight her.' passed over the side to them, and even still months after they were settled in their new brief career of another flower, born as beauti- all the world. "'There are muskets and pistols in the more wonderingly at the manner iu which parsonage, and had received the visits of the ful as the rose I have just sketched, and of one " But my father did not love him so well as cabin' said I, ' and we have two canuons on their captain took his leave of us. deck.' principal members of the congregation—many who entered upon life with all the moral, so- another person did—at least, he did not wish " In a week more we were safe in an Eng- me to love him. It was only in the intervals " ' Well enough to frighten savages or beat lish harbor and on English ground. The war of whom were wealthy—it was observable cial and domestic advantages which were of long voyages that I saw him, and when the off the Malay pirates; but that brig is well lasted two or three years, and many prizes tbat Miss Marshall's graceful and winning possessed by Fanny Marshall. armed, and must bavo plenty of men, by the manners, (wholly unaffected and free from time for his ^arrival drew near, and the ship, were taken on both sides, and some hard bat- Ellen Morris was first cousin to Fanny. She for mo so richly freighted, was due, I spent way they handle her. If she is a privateer.we tles fought by land and sea, but I never heard coquetry,) had attracted the marked attentions, was the daughter of an affluent merchant of many hours in the observatory 011 the top of must surrender. If a pirate, we must tight. lhat any ship ever escaped as we did." and more than ordinary admiration, of Mr. New York, and had always resided in that city, j our house, sweeping the line of the horizon Her "Long Tom will make oveu-wood of us, Smythe, a gentleman of thirty, a lawyer by At the early age of sixteen she was married with a long spv-glass, and watching for the but we must take our chance.' profession, and rich from tho wealth he had to Mr. Jones, of the rich firm of Jones k Co., I little signal-flag that I alone knew of, and that "We held on, praying for night, and storm, To LIVE with true economy is to live wisely. inherited. of the same city. There had long been an in-1 would tell me HE was coming. and darkness. The full moon rode high in The man who lives otherwise has 110 prudent " One day this brave, good captain, who had tho heavens, and silvered the waves through regard for his own happiness. But there is no timacy between the fathers of the two young 1 He was a man of accomplished manners; won my heart, asked my father for my hand. which our good ship plowed gallantly.— worse folly tlian lalse economy. Sa. 115.]

[SIXTH EDITION NOW READY.] A Practical Guide to Health nnd Vigor. Miscellaneous. Of Writers and Speakers. Travelers' Guide. A Book for every Household. THE NEW GYMNASTICS SKETCHES FROM N A T U It JJ, " Our Philosphy is affirmative, and readily accepts | RAILROAD LINES. THE FOR FOR MY JUVENILE FRIENDS. of testimony of negative facts, as every shadow points MEN, WOMEN, AND CHILDREN. By FRANCEB BROWN. Price, in plain cloth, 37 cts. to tho sun No man need be deceived. . . , . ERIK RAILWAY.—Leave Pavonia Ferry, foot of HARBINGER OF HEALTH. With a translation of PROP. KLOSS'S " Dumb-Bell half gilt, 50 cts. ; full gilt, 63 cts. For sale at thl'a When a man speaks the truth in the spirit of truth, CONTAINING Chambers street. 0 A. M., Mail for Elmira ; 7 A. M., Instructor," and PROP. SCHREBER'B " Pangymnas- office, and by MRS. n. F. M. BROWN, 288 Superior his eye is as clear as the heavens." Express for Buffalo ; 12:15 1'. M., Accommodation ; 5 tikon." Street, Cleveland, Ohio. P. 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It is a plain, simple guide to health, with no quack- I a great variety of easy, simple, and invigoratingexer- cess. This preparation will be found much superior er. will speak on reform, attend funerals, kc. Ad- FOR ALBANY. err, no humbug, no universal panacea. I cises, all of which may be practiced in their own to the best Java Coffee, both in taste and flavor, to dress Hillsdale, Mich. Steamers New World and Isaac Newton, foot of ho e> say nothing of its great medicinal benefits. Cortlandt street, daily at 6 P. M. Sent by Mail for One Dollar. » -, v Put up in half-pound and pound tin-foil packages Mrs. E. A. Kingsbury will speak in Somers, Merchants' Line—Rip Van Winkle—Monday, Wed- Published and for sale at the office of the HERALD OF . ^TWITHSTANDMG the great expense attendant upon the preparation of the " New Gymnastics," by reason and pound canisters, and in boxes of twelve pounds Coun., the first four Sundays in November ; in Prov- nesday and Friday, foot of Robinson street, 6 P. M. PROGKESS, 274 Canal Street, New York. of the 300 illustrations contained in it, the publishers idenco, R. I., during December. D£y Boat—Armenia—Monday, Wednesday and Fri- each. Retailed at 25 cents per pound. Four hundred and twenty-eight pages, 12mo, good offer it at the low price of ONE DOLLAR. They do this day, foot of Harrison street"; 7 A. M. Every variety of Japanese and Chinese Fancy aud paper, an wel "bound. Price only ONE DOLLAR! A in the belief that the work will be an important Herman Snow, formerly Unitarian minister, will Day Boat—Daniel Drew—Tuesday, Thursday and Staple Goods. liberal discount to the trade. address Spiritualists and friends of Progress not too Saturday, Jay street pier and 30th street, 7 A. M. means for the restoration and preservation of health ROWLAND JOHNSON, remote from his residence, Rockford, 111. FOR ALBANY AND TROY. Single copies mailed free on receipt of price. Eight- wherever its teachings are followed, and in the hope Commission Merchant and Broker, Steamer Francis Skiddy—Tuesday. Thursday and een cents additional required, if sent to California that it may thus find the universal circulation due its Box 2,427, P. O., 54 Beaver Street, New Ycrk. William Bailey Potter, M. D., will lecture on Sunday. Hendrik Hudson—Mondav. Wednesday and and Oregon. Box 1.039, P. O., 119 Market Street. Philadelphia. Scientific Spiritualism in New York and New Eng- Friday, 6 P.M., Pier No. 15 North River, foot of Lib- Address A. J. DAVIS & CO.. Publishers, Sent postpaid to any address on receipt of $1 00. land. Address care of C. S. Hoag, Medina, N. Y. erty street, below Cortlandt. 274 Canal St., N. Y. Address A. J. DAVIS & CO., 274 Canal St., N. Y. C. H. WATERMAN & CO., Mrs. A. F. Patterson, (formerly A. F. Pease,) For New Haven—Steamer Continental leaves daily GENERAL PRODUCE & COMMISSION will respond to calls to lecture. Residence, Spring- at 3:15 P. M., from Peck slip, East River. . JUST PUBLISHED. Medical Cards. field, 111. For Hartford—City of Hartford and Granite State— MERCHANTS, ' Peck slip daily at 4 P. M. First American Edition, from the English 118 and 120 South Water St., Chicago, in. .IE HI EL W. STEWART, Healing Medium, o. Baylor speaks every other Sunday at For Bridgeport-Steamer Bridgeport-Pier No. 26 Stereotype PIntes. * Agencies of Flour, Wool, "or other commodities, Stockton, Me., and for other engagements may be ad- j £ast ^jver j-j m, for all Diseases to which the human family is subject. dressed at Stockton or Bradford, Me. j ' ' 50 Delevan Street, Rochester, N. Y. solicited from Eastern Houses. THE PRINCIPLES OF NATURE, REFERENCES. Rev. J. D. Lawyer will attend to any invita- j STRANGERS' HER MR. AND MRS. DOR3IA"N, Clairvoyant Phy A. J. Davis, New York City. tions to deliver six or more lectures ou Doctrinal -\R C\TTY T~)TTR FFLTOI? V \ sicians, Newark, N. J. Mrs. C. E DORMAN may Christianity, directed to Coxsackie, N. Y. * AAA XVX-LV^Vv A WAV X Durand Brothers k Powers, Chicago, 111. DIVINE REVELATIONS, be C0n8ultc'1 d^y-on reasonable terms, at her resi- SPIRITUAL MEETINGS. " I dence, 8 New street, near Broad, opposite the Park. PRODUCTS OF TIIE FAR3I. E. Whipple is lecturing on Geology and genera! LAMARTINE HALL, cor. 29th St. and 8th av. Sundav, AXD Address for fall and winter, Kalamazoo, , A small number of patients will be accommodated 10J£ A. M. Conference every Wednesday 7J$ P. M. A VOICE TO MANKIND. with board, on reasonable terms. M. & C. H. RYERSON, MRS. JANES, Traveling Healing and Medical PUBLIC MEDIUMS. BY AND THROUGH Clairvoyant, 46 East Sixteenth St., New York. Con- Shipping and Commission Merchants, Mrs. S. E. Warner is engaged to lecture two Mrs w Hayden, 66 West 14th St., west corner Sundays in each month in Berlin, and Omro, Wis. ANDREW JACKSON DAVIS. sumption and Female Diseases cured. Hours from 9 Respectfully invite the patronage of the Farmers and 6th avenue. Will answer calls to go elsewhere the remainder of to 12 A. M , and 2 to 5 P. M. Shippers of Farm Products to the New York Market, The Publisher takes pleasure in announcing the the time. Post Office address, box 14, Berlin, Wis. J. B. Conklin, 599 Broadway. 9 A. M. to 10 P. M. and will employ their best business talent and indus- Mrs. M. L. Van Haughton, Test and Medical, 54 appearance of an edition of NATURE'S DIVINE REVELA- DR. C. IiOBBINS, Charlestown, Mass., the try in selling whatever may be consigned to thorn, I Great Jones St. All hours. TIONS—the earliest and most comprehensive volume of discoverer of new remedies for making prompt remittances. The undersigned will Miss Emma Hardinge will lecture in Phila- M E c M , 59y Broadway. Office hours 9 to 12, the author—issued in a style the work merits. delphia during November. Address care of Bela 0 ' J EPILEPTIC FITS AND ST. VITUS' DANCE, also give attention to the purchase of Foreign and Printed on good paper, andsomely bound, with a Marsh, 14 Bromfleld Street. Boston, Mass., from ^ to 5, and 7 to 9. has treated over seven hundred cases successfully. Domestic Fruits and Groceries, for parties residing whence letters will be forwarded. Mrs. H. S. Seymour, Psychometrist and Impressional FAMILY RECORD attached. See recommendations of President Cummings, Middle- out of the city. Address j Medium, 21 West 13th St., between 5th and 6th One large volume, octavo. SMLpages. Price only town, Conn., in Zion's Herald for March. Attention M. k C. H. RYERSON. "Hi** Mtvthn T, Rnclrwitli trannp «npaki>i- avs- Hours from 9 to 2 and 6 to 8. Circles every ' $2. Sent postpaid on the receipt 6f the price, 182 Washington Street, corner of Dey, N. Y. will lectureTn Somera*Co nifDec.21 and28;Tst£ ; Thursday evening. To California and Oregon, ifc^r.ts additional for * c"11*'1 to «evere ca«e of James Kimball, Jr., ford, Conn., Jan 4 and 11. Will answer calls to lec-j Mrs. Sarah E. Wilcox, Test & Healing, 17 McDougal St. j extra postage. All orders tht- • 7 to 9 F. >1. ment. By Henry G. Atkinson and Harriet Marti- Station D, New York City. 11 ; at Providence, R. I., during February. Address Dr. John Scott, 407 4th St. neau. $1 00 ; postage, 12 cents. in paper binding, 50 cents; in muslin, 75 cents. as above. ; Dr. N. Palmer, 83 Amity street. Address DR. C. H. CLEAVELAND, Cincinnati, O. J. H. TRENOR'S De Holbach's System of Nature, or Laws of the Moral . Mrs. P. A. Ferguson Tower, 152 East 33d Street. This work is approved by the Sanitary Commission, and Physical World. $1 25 ; postage, 23 cents. and highly commended by all. For sale at this office. PRIVATE DANCING ACADEMIES Mrs. 31. J. Wilcoxson will labor in Central and ! J. E. F. Clark (Eclectic) 84 West 26th St. Half-Hours with celebrated Free-Thinkers, 75 cents; Southern New Jersey and Pennsylvania during the j Mrs. M. C. Scott, 99 East28th Street, near 3d Av. postage, 12 cents. Postage 10 cents. ARE NOW OPEN. fall and winter. Friends in Monmouth, Burlington, Dr L wheeler, 175 W. Bleecker St. 83* to 11 A. M. and Camden Counties, N. J., please address till far- " " Infidel's Text-Book. By Robert Cooper. 62 cents; 65 West Thirty-fourili Street, New York, Wednesdays 1 to 5 and 7 to 9, P. M. DR. R. T. HALLOCK, ther notice in care of Dr. A. C. Stiles, Hammonton, postage, 10. Mrs. Alma D. Giddings. 238 Greene St. and Saturdays. Atlantic Co., N. J. Paine's Age of Reason, pocket edition. 37 cents; ; Eclectic and Homeopathic Physician, Dr. A. C. Cornell, Medical Clairvoyant and Electro- 90 South Eighth Street. Brooklyn, E. D., Mondays postage 7. Magnetic Physician, 21 West Thirteenth St. 79 East Fifteenth Street, New York. and Thursdays. Dr. James Cooper, of Bellefontaine, O., will Paine's Examination of the Prophecies, pocket edi- i Magnetism and Electricity used when indicated Classes in the city or country attended to. speak at Chesterfield, Ohio, November 29 and 30 ; Mrs. Hamblin, 159 Forsyth St., one door from Riv- tion. 25 cents ; postage, 6. These elegant rooms to let for Soirees. Send for Anderson, December 1 ; Mechanlcsburg, 2 and 3 : ingtqn. 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. Evening. 7 to 9. and Clairvoyant examinations, either personal oi by Vale's Life of Thomas Paine. 75 cents ; postage, 16. Cadiz, -l and 5; Greensboro, 6 and 7. Subscriptions Mrs. M. Towne, 138 Sauds_ Street, Brooklyn, i letter, made when desired. circular. taken for the HERALD OP PROGRESS, aud books for sale. Mrs L Mosc.k.y Ward (Eclectic) No. 157 Adams St. Rights of Man. By Thomas Paine. 50 cents ; po. 16. Kneeland's Review of the Evidences of Christianity. j cor. Concord, Brooklyn, 50 cents; postage, 10. New and Useful Inventions. j Dr. W. Reynoldson, Paterson, N. J. Educational. History of Moses, Aaron, and Joshua. 50 cents AGENTS FOR THE HERALD OF PRO postage 10. 3IEDICAL CLAIRVOYANTS. LEWIS'S NORMAL INSTITUTE GRESS. Classified Biblical Extracts. 20 cents : postage, 5. Ornamental_Iron Work, | Mrs. W. R. Hayden, 66 West 14th St, west corner GBNIRAL AGENT.—SINCLAIR TOUSEY. 121 Nassau St. | Taylor's Diegesis; being a Discovery of the Origin, FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION, Oth avenue. WROUGHT, CAST, AND WIRE. New York, is our regularly constituted Agent, and Rise, and Early Progress of Christianity. $1 ; Mrs. Mary A. Fish, 212 East Twentieth Street. will supply news dealers in all parts of the country postage, 22 cents. 20 Essex St., Boston, Mass. Mrs. James Bradley, Medical Clairvoyant and Physi- (INCORPORATED IN THE YEAR 1861.) Pntented Who Railing, suitable for Banks, with the HERALD OF PROGRESS on favorable terms. A. J. DAVIS & CO., 274 Canal St., N. Y. cian, 108 Greene Street. Insurance Companies, Ships, Steamboats, and Offices BOSTON, MASS.—BELA MARSH, 14 Bromfleld street, This Institution is the pioneer in a new profession, Mrs. Gookin, Medical Clairvoyant and Magnetic Me- generally. Boaton, will fill all orders for this paper, or books on Ladies and gentlemen of enterprise and ludu-. try will dium, 142 E. 30th Street. TWELVE MESSAGES Patented Wire Guards, adapted to Doors, oar list. fiud in this field health, usefulness, and large profit. Mrs. Sawyer, Clairvoyant and Medical Medium, 84 PROM THE SPIRIT OF Windows, Horse Stalls, and Heater Pipes. Coal CLEVELAND, O.—Mrs. H. F. M. BROWN, 288 Superior Three eminent medical men teach in the departments High St., Brooklyn. Screens of superior quality. street, is duly authorized to act as our agent in Ohio JOHN aUINCY ADAMS, of Anatomy, Physiology, and Hygiene. Prof. LEO. Mrs. C. E. Dorman, No. 11 (old No. 8) New Street, NAIID has charge of Elocution. Dr. Dio LEWIS of Farm nnd LawnTences, Tree Guards, Flower and the West. THROUGH JOSEPH D. STILES, MEDIUM. TO Newark, N. J. Practical Gymnastics and the Movement Cure. The Trainers, Stands, Baskets, kc. Fountains, Yasee, PHILADELPHIA.—SAMUEL BARRY, southwest corner o JOSIAH BRIGIIAM, OF QUINCY. course continues ten weeks. Tickets $75. Matricu- and Pedestals. Fourth and Chestnut streets. CONTENTS.—Message 1.—The Fact and Mode of lation $5. Diploma $10. These prices are reduced 25 Patented Composite Railing—combination of LONDON, ENG.—The HERALD OF PROGRESS and Books BOOKS, Spirit Telegraphing. 2.—His Last of Earth and First per ceut. to ladies. Two courses during the year—the wrought and cast iron—the most substantial and In our list may be ordered through the house oi of Heaveu. 3.—The Reconciliation. 4.—Addresses DEISTICAL AND ATHEISTICAL, first beginning on the 2d of January and the second H. BAILLIERE, 219 Regent street, London. and Scenes in the Spheres. 5.—Spiritualism. 6.—Tem- ornamental made; desirable for Cottage Fences, on the 5th of July. Verandas, and Balconies, especially for LOCAL AGENTS. Such as are not to be found at the fashionable book- ple of Peace and Good Will. 7.—Napoleon. 8.—Home stores, may be obtained at the office of the of the Just Made Perfect. 9.—Washington. 10—Peter For a full circular, address Dr. Dio LEWIS, BOX 12, CEMETERY INCLOSURES. Akron, Ohio, J. Jennings. BOSTON INVESTIGATOR, 103 Court St., Boston, j Whitney. 11.—Closing Scene of the Reception Meet- Boston, Mass. Gateways, Iron Piers, Horse Posts, Mangers, and Appleton, Wis., J. E. Harriman. Among the assortment is Voltaire's Philosophical : ing. 12.—Sphere of Prejudice and Error. Auburn. N. Y., G. W. Hyatt. Lamp-posts. Cast Iron Lintels, Sills, Doorways, Col- Dictionary ; Paine's Political and Theological WrI- j This volume is embellished with fac-simile engra- "Dr. Lewis has solved the problem. He has Bellefontaine, O., James Cooper, M. D umns, Capitols, and Store Fronts. tings ; De Holbach's System of Nature, Good Sense, I vings of the -hand-writing of John Quincy Adams, marked out the way. Many eminent teache Buffalo, N. Y., T. S. Hawkes. and Letters to Eugena ; Frances Wright's Epicui us ; ' Abigail Adams, George Washington, Alexander Ilam- I ursuingitwith the roost excellent results."—D. Ii. IIA- Clarkston, Mich., N. W. Clark. IKON FURNITURE. Abner Kneeland's Review of The Evidences of Chris- j ilton, Richard Ilenry Lee, Stephen Hopkins, Thomas QAR, President ofthe American Institute of Instruction. Columbus, Wis., F. G. Randall. Bedsteads, Cradles, Cribs, and Lounges. Settees tianity ; Hlttell'B Evidences against Christianity; j Jefferson, Samuel Adams, Lavater, Melancthon. Co- " I am now satisfied that Dr. Lewis has found the Fond du Lac, Wis., N. II. Jorgensen. Chairs, Hat Stands, Towel Racks, Table Stands. Store The Infidel's Text Book; Ethan Allen's Oracle ofjlumbus, Cromwell, Jackson, and others, written true scientific process for physical development. It Fort Madison, Iowa, George W. Douglass. and Piano Stools. Reason ; Rev. Robert Taylor's Diegesis, showing the j through the hand of the medium. was my privilege to welcome Dr. Lewis at his very Glen's Falls. N. Y„ E. W. Knight. ALL KINDS OF Origin, Evidences, and Early History of Christianity ; It i» a large octavo volume, of 496 pages, printed in first arrival here, and everything since then has only Mattresses, Pillows, Bolsters, and Palliasses. low a City, Hugh Smith. besides numerous Tracts on various subjects. large, clear type, ou stout paper, and substantially confirmed my confidence in his ability to superintend Kalamazoo, Mich., G. D. Sessions. the work."—REV. DR. KIBB;, at the first Commencement Illustrated Catalogues mailed on receipt of four Specimen copies of the INVESTIGATOR sent gratia on bound. It is, perhaps, the lost elaborate work Mod- Lowell, Mass., Benjamin Blood. three cent postage-stamps, em Spiritualism has called out. of th(C Institute. North Collins. Erie Co., Walter Wood. receipt of an order with stamp to pay the postage. " I rejoice, Mr. President, that the Normal Institute HUTCHINSON k WICKERSHAM, Norwich, Chenango Co., N. Y., G L Rider. Price, cloth, $1 50; full gilt, $2. Postage, 35 for Physical Education has been established iu Boston. 259 Canal Street, near Broadway, New York, Oregon City, Oregon, F. S. Holland Evidences of Modern Spiritualism. cents. Address A. J. DAVIS & CO., I rejoice that it lias at its head a gentleman so admi- General Agents for New York Wire Railing Company Pepin, Wis., John Sterling. Being a Debate held at Decatur, Mich., between 274 Canal St.. New York. rably qualified to give it eminent success. I believe Ripon, Wis., Mrs. Eliza Barnes. A. B. Whiting and Rev. Joseph Jones. Price 40 cts. that no individual has ever, in this country, given Borne, N. Y., 3. & J D. Moyer. Brown's Water Furnace Company. the subject of Physical Education such an impulse as San Bernardino, Cal., D. N. Smith. THE GROUND OF MY FAITH. has Dr. Lewis. He deserves the credit of it. (Ap- Manufacturers of Brown's Patent San Francisco, Cal., Mrs. M. Munson Webber. pY A STUDENT. plause.) Siloam, Madison Co., N. Y., Geo. W. Ellinwood. Religion and Morality. A large four page tract for distribution by friend? HOT WATER FURNACE "I trust, ladies and gentlemen, that this is the St. Louis, Mo., A. Miltenb^rger. A Criticism on the Jewish Jehovah, Patriarchs, Pro- of free inquiry. By the author of " A Peep into the commencement of a new era, and that the system For warming and ventilating Dwellings, School and Springfield, N. H., T. S. Vose. phets, early Church Fathers, Popes, modern Church Sacred Canon." taught by I)r. Lewis will be universally Introduced in- Bank Buildings, Hospitals, Stores, Green-houses, Gra Stratford, Conn , Mrs. M. J. Wilcoxsen. Leaders, &c. Published for the author. For sale at this office. to our schools."—Extract from a Speech delivered at perlea, eto. , Waukegan, 111., W. Jilson. The above work contains historical information that Price one dollar per hundred, postage free. Fifty thc Second Commencement of''Lewis's Normal Insti- Also, steam apparatus constructed for warming Ho- Waukesha, Wis., L. Branch Lyman. cannot be found elsewhere in the English language. copies, 50 cts. For less than fifty copies, 2 cts. each. tute," by J. D. PHILBRIOK, Esq , Superintendent of the tels, Factories, &c. Waverly, Bremer Co., IOWA Eliza S. Bates. Price 30 cents. For sale by A. J. DAVIS k CO., 274 On receipt of one dollar, with a list of fifty names, Public Schools of Boston. 274 Canal Street, New York, West Walworth, N. Y.. Hicks Halstead. Canal Street, New York. we will mail a copy to each address furnished. THE HERALD OF PROGRESS. 8 tNOV. 29, 1862.

ASTRONOMY. THE ENCHANTER. ANOTHER NEW BOOK Angels Universal, Physical Culture for Women. A course of Lectures on Astronomy will be given nt A new Collection of Glees, Quartets, Trios, Duets, JUST PUBLISHED. God-Life in Scientific Laws, Mrs. HALLOCK S School. No. 79 East Fifteenth street, Chants, and Ballads, by V. C. Taylor, author of vari- | TUB NEW GYMNASTICS. Hand-Writing, Character in the, by H. WUITALL, commencing on Saturday evening ous musical works. Designed for the Home Circle, Haunted Houses, The Cause of, next, at o'clock. Terms for tho course, $5, the Ballad Vocalist, and to subserve all the uses of For those who enjoy thc poetry of motion J music in enhancing the amenities of life. Hnnd-Oommunication« including u movable planisphere. answers we conld suggest it positive treat iu directing : Price 50 cents. Postage 12 ccnts. For sale at the History versus the Mosaic Account, them to witness nn hour's performance of the BOARD WANTED office of the HERALD OF PROGRESS. TO Heart, What is the9 new gymnastics, adapted lo the old and young In Ne' York, for a lady and two children. Will Hell. The Probable Extinction of, of either set. The Boston Gymnasium has How to Live in this World require a room and bedroom. Will furnish her own ; SHORT-HAND. Ever-Recurring Questions sent forth a graduate, Mrs. Z. R. Plumb, who How to become an Author' rooms. Address R. C. II., 254 Carleton Avenue. A sheet containing List of the best w rks on Pho- thoroughly understands her art, and, along How to Get Practical Knowledge Brooklyn. nography, Terms for Instruction, Recommendations with considerable poetry of action, she gives of Phonography, kc., will be sent upon application. Is the Universe Overflowing? ' us a wholesome quantity of prose, c ommon IIYU1ENIC HOUSE, 170 Bleecker Street, New FROM THE PEOPLE. Inspiration, The Light of Address ANDREW J. GRAHAM, sense, and a most emphatic way of putting her York. Families accommodated with, board. Tlie 274 Canal St., New York. Interior Light of Shakspeare foot down. . , house is newly fitted up and furnished. Every room Inspiration and Revelation ' The apparatus employed—as poles, rings, admits sunlight. Larger varieties of bread, fruit, and Individuality of Character,' and light dumb-bells—aro brought into use grain preparations, and less of highly-seasoned food, (A Sequel to the Penetralia.) Illustrations of Spirit-Attraction gradually as tiie pupil advances in proficiency. will form the distinctive feature of our table. For Our Book List. terms, &c., send for a eircular. Transient board, $1 Intervention ofa Celestial Personage Kverv movement is accompanied by good niu- 44-6* Kind and Gentle Manners, sic. 'Doctors and divines, some of the sagest per day. PROGRESSIVE PUBLICATIONS. Knowledge or Faith, Which Highest ? our eitv knows, have witnessed the few ex- | Looking to God for Everything, hibitions Mrs. Plumb has made, and are now ; The Publishers of the HERALD OF PROGRESS keep SUPERSTITION DISSECTED. ANDREW JACKSON DAVIS. Love to Man, Origin of the Idea of, forming classes which comprise their whole Pre scries of investigating letters between a I constantly on hand, at their office, No. 274 Canal St., I Liberty, Humanity, Hypocrisy & Hate families. Schools also are beginning to take thinker and his Deacon Brother-in-law, comprising a New York, the latest and best Progressive Works, Law ofSpirit-Gravitation, hold of the idea, and so good and simple an variety of brief and familiar Rationalistic Discourses comprising all the standard publications on Spiritu- art must obtain favor with all classes. It Law of True Mating, on a number of thc most prominent Texts and Inci- Several years ago the author of this volume wrote would occupy too much space to describe in alism, Progressive Philosophy, and Reform. Light from the World of Causes, dents of Holy Writ, designed to invite scrutiny and as follows: detail the rapidly changing postures, but they They are also able to supply on short notice, at Labor a Savior of the World, remove indifference, and to insure greater depth of are as attractive and far less deleterious than publishers' prices, all late publications, standard and Each man is capable of rendering high service to Mind, Reason, Spirit, Soul. thought and research into the value and reliability of nanity; but whether humanity gets it from him, stage dances. In private parlors, lately, com- miscellaneous works of all descriptions. Materialism of Chemical Science, Scriptural evidence. or the reverse, will ever remain for the world to de- panies have met to test tho agreeableness of cide Now here am I, acting faithfully in ac- Mysteries of Memory, CONTENTS.—Nativity of Jesus Christ; The Geneal- Orders from the readers of the HERALD OF PRO- the exercises, and certainly the exhibition was cordance with my personality and its boundaries. If Mathematical Problems, Solution of, ogy ; The Temptation; Angels; The Lord's Prayer; GRESS are solicited, not only for our own books, and you know how to use me, as my nature prescribes, a paying one to lookers on, as it must Moral, but not Religious. 1 shall yield you a permanent benefit. But if. in your Casting Out Devils ; Feeding the Multitudes ; Lazarus works especially devoted to Spiritualism and Reform, have been infinitely so to participants. The ignoranca of yourself, (and therefore of me.) you do Man's Progress toward Deity, raised from the Dead ; Devil and Hell ; Catholic En- feeblest invalid may commence with the light- but for progressive publications of every character. not put me to the best service, you will soon feel the Manuscripts, Sacred, The New, croachments and Corruptions ; Tlie Puritans ; Tom penalty." er and simpier movements, and gradually de- All such orders will be promptly attended to. Motive-Power of the Sects, ' Paine ; The Sabbath; and a large variety of other velop a strength of muscle which no amount subjects of a deeply interesting character, for the con Agents purchasing our own books for sale will be During the period which has since elapsed, a mul- Man and the Earth, Progress of, of ordinary exercise would accomplish. One sidcration of people of reflective minds. supplied with works from other publishers at the low- titude of questions have been propounded to him, I Man's Three-fold Character, who could introduce these light gymnastics Tho work is printed on fine paper, large 12mo, est possible rates. embracing points of peculiar interest and value con- AMajor and Minor Principles, among tbe indolent daughters of ease and library size, handsomely and durably bound in em- Method of Spirit Culture, luxury, and induce them to admire what here- The following list comprises a portion of those nected with the Spiritual Philosophy and Practical bossed covers, and contains 465 pages. Marriage, A Child's Question on, tofore tbey deemed vulgar, (as stout legs and books we deem among the most valuable in the seve- Reform. Price $1, which includes postage. Sold by S. E. Marriage, An Uncongenial, arms, and rosy cheeks.) may well deserve the ral departments to which they belong : From this list of several hundred Interrogatories, Lent, Agent, No. 142 Grand Street, New York. Or- Married, Truly and Eternally, title of a representative woman of the age. ders from a distance should mention the town, county, those of the most permanent interest and highest val- Marriage Ceremony, Value of the, The dresses worn are well calculated to give and State. Works on the Harmonial Philosophy. ue have been carefully selected, and the result is the Monogamic Marriage, Divine Law of, perfect play to the limbs. Some of the ladies Also for sale at this office. present volume, comprising well-considered and in- Missionaries in the Summer-Land, merely assume their last summer bathing- Natural Principles and Deductions, dresses, and look eminently pretty and grace- BY ANDREW JACKSON DAVIS. telligent Replies to more than ful in them.—N. Y. Daily Times. ELEC TRI CITY. Nature, No Accidents in, lhe Principles Of Nature: Her Divine Revelations 200 IMPORTANT QUESTIONS. Nature and Nature's God, Wonderful Discoveries and Wonderful and a Voice to Mankind. 1 vol. 8vo, 800 pages. Nature of True Repentance, The, "ANSWERS TO EVER-RECURRING QUESTIONS" may $2, postpaid. National Thunder and Lightning Results. therefore be accepted as at least a partial, and up to Friends of Progress. THE GREAT HARMONIA : Being a Philosophi- Objectivity and Subjectivity, this time the fullest possible statement, of the use In announcing to the public a discovery so inti- cal Revelation of the Natural. Spiritual, and Celes- Optimism, ' The Friends of Progress will hold their next mately connected with the well being of our race, it tial Universe. In five distinct volumes, 12mo, as the world has made of the author—the service de- Organized and Associative Effort quarterly meeting at Union Hall, Lockport, may be deemed proper to make a few prefatory re- follows: manded of him. Origin of the Male and Female, ' N. Y., on the first Saturday and Sunday in marks to prepare the mind of the reader for the VOL. I.—THE PHYSICIAN Postpaid, $1. It is believed by the Publishers that the friends of Origin and Causes of Civilization reception of evidences and facts too incredible for Plants and Trees, Growth of, December, and once in three months there- VOL. II.—THE TEACHER. Postpaid, $1. Progressive Ideas will find this work one of the most belief. Physical Organs and Spirit Life, after. Speakers who are -passing this way VOL. III.—THE SEEK. Postpaid, $1. comprehensive and useful volumes they have issued. It is well known that the scientific world has been VOL. IV.—THE REFORMER. Postpaid, $1. Providential Interpositions, can make arrangements for attending any of It invites the perusal not only of those vitally in- startled at different periods by important truths VOL. V.-THE THINKER. Postpaid, $1. Pantheism, Is it a Natural Belief? these meetings by addressing terested in the topics discussed, but of all persons brought to their notice by innovators, and it is further To California or Oregon, 20 cents additional. Promiscuous Conjugal Relations, known that each discovery in its turn has been ruth- H. 0. GREGORY, The Penetralia: Being Harmonial Answers to Im- capable of putting a question. That it will largely Prophecies in tbe Book of Daniel, lessly assailed, and, in fact, the more important the Chairman of Com. of Arrangements. portant Questions. $1, postpaid. serve to awaken inquiry and develop thought on the Passion and Individuality After Death discovery, flie more numerous and inveterate have , _, . , , . _ part of the general reader, is their sincere conviction. Punishment, Nature and Purpose of been the «p,losers. These facts borne in mind .tumid The History and Philosophy of Evil. With sus- Parental Obligations and Duties, ' 11 , f. ..!.,. .i I gestions for more Ennobling Institutions and Sys- The wide range of subjects embraced can be inferred linpress every honest inquirer after truth that the cry f , „, 4. ,.. ,. ,,. . 0„ , Pride of Intellect, , , . a a terns of Education. Cloth, 50 cents; paper, 30; post- from the following table of Contents. An examina- Apotheosis. of humbug is not argument, and to arrive at facts Polygamy. A Divine Law Against, ai tion of the book itself will reveal the clearness of and form correct conclusions, investigation is the only • P ' . , , „„ - Reproduction in the Spirit-Land, '•Death is but a kind and welcome servant, who un- , . ., . r ,, , , , The Harmonial Man or, Thoughts for the Age. style and vigor of method characterizing the Replies. Religious Councils Uncertain. locks with noiseless hand life's flower-encircled door unerring guide. As to the nature of the wonderful | Paper, 3,„0 cents, postpaid„„.,„! , Religion of Nature, The, to show us those we love." and mysterious agent, Electricity, but little I Tho Philosophy of Special Providences. A Vision. known till tlie experiments of Paper, 15 cents, postpaid, Religious Temples, Universality of, DR. FRANKLIN, Religion and Reason, Departed : From Boston, on Tuesday, the Answers to Ever-Recurring Questions from the TABLE OFCONTENTS. ,„,. . , . . , c n , i which proved its identity with that evolved by the in- People. A sequel to the " Penetralia." 420 pages, Right Eye and Right Hand, 18th inst., of typhus fever, GERTRUDE, only geQuit; of man (rom friclion, decompo8itiono/metalS) Rights of Races, 12mo, cloth. jJutf published.) $1, postpaid. Animals in the Spirit World, daughter and child of Mrs. Lucy Is. Colman, of &c. The proofof this identity lifted the vail ofobscu- Rules for a Free Convention, Accidental Death and Suicide. Rochester, N. 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