Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB
[ocr errors]

have not sustained a loss of one-third their usual incomes, while the parish priests do not receive one-sixth of their ordinary dues. I would therefore respectfully submit that the former, who are comparative ly well off, not have come any conclusion on the subject of the

presbytery; but it is certain that such a step will be taken, should any change in the aspect of the legislature seem to demand it. A committee of the Glasgow presbytery is appointed, with instructions to present a requisition to this effect to the moderator of Synod, whenever they deem

definite they had conferred with the the time for action to have arrived. (T

pension

wished

latter, and ascertained their feelings. To entitle themselves to that privilege they ought-each in his respective diocese-to have led their clergy; and if they men who can hardly purchase the necessaries of life should reject the endowment, their lordships should have been prepared to have borne their part. They should have assembled their elergy, and have addressed them in something like the following terms: We are of opinion that the pension will be attended with the most ruinous results; the clergy

THE NEW IRISH COLLEGES. **

THE game of diplomacy which Dr Murray and Dr M'Hale, Romish archbishops of Dublin and of Tuam, were carrying on at Rome, respecting the New Irish Colleges, has been settled by their supreme pontiff in favour of the latter. By a rescript, dated October 11, 1848, the Pope denounces the scheme of the British government for the instruction of the youth of Ireland in secular learning, and intimates that the of a Catholic university" is the

66

ought, we think, to make every sacrifice, measure which Rome will countenance

rather than accept the government bribe; we ourselves will bear our part, and hence forward be content to receive-in dispen sation fees and clerical duesa sum pro portioned to the present receipts of the elergy. In that case they would only receive one-sixth of what they now enjoy Then, indeed, they would have given some proof of their sincerity and disposition to abide the consequences of their resolutions."

With these impoverished priests around them, we should not wonder to find the bishops recalling the declaration which, with so much mock generosity, they have issued. It would cost them little effort to find a back-door for escape. They might find, or profess to find, the terms of the offer not so degrading as they had supposed. They who can get men to disown the evi dence of their senses, might surely hope to invent some juggle by which to allay the vast discontent" which they apprehend this endowment would create. Besides, they discover from the Tuam priest that there is vast discontent, which the measure it is supposed, would help to remove. And even if they failed to find a feasible excuse, they could grant to themselves a dispensation to break their pledge for the good of the church. In short, there is every reason why we should not trust them in this mat→ ter. So the country seems to think for every where the scheme is discussed as a thing which only the voice of an indignant? nation can now hinder from being carried into effect. The Scottish Anti-State Church Society have held at Edinburgh am enthus siastic and effective meeting on the question manifesting wakefulness and readi ness for future action should circumstances require The proposal for calling a meet ing of the United Presbyterian Synod is deferred for the present by the Glasgown

for ameliorating the condition of Ireland by means of education. It is to be remembered that in the plea which has thus issued, Dr Murray was acting for the British government, and the blustering primate of Tuam for the anti-Saxon party of the Irish priesthood. Between the two parties there is little to choose; and it is well that British statesmen, who could not conduct the government of this empire, without submitting the plans of their cabinet to the review of a foreign priest, should be taught by defeat the folly of their policy. We acquit them of all intention to promote Popery. We believe that they desired to outwit the Papists of Ireland, who had engaged in agitation and rebellion for the purpose of advancing Popery to the supremacy of that country: and that they sought to defeat the priests by their own weapons, directed to the religious sentiment of the people, or their superstititous veneration for papal authority. The steps they had taken for gaining over the Pope seemed to promise well; but Lord Clarendon, even though backed by an archbishop of the Romish church, has proved no match for M'Hale; and the go-" vernment of Great Britain, crouching before Pius IX., has been spurned from his foot! The effect of the Pope's rescript is anticipated in the following terms by the Roman Catholic Tablet of the 28th Oct.:

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

I

has gone forth to the ends of the earth, and will The Holy See has now spoken. Its word never be recalled! All Catholics must bow to it, and render it obedience. If any sons of the Church, nominal or real, wished to gainsay what has now been written, it would be impossible for them to do so; and we hope and are most anxious to be persuaded that few none, even entertain a thought that would dishonour them for ever. No cleric! can henceforward take a part in these colleges; so that there can be no ecclesiastical president or vice. president in Galway. No layman of high character

can meddle with them-so that Cork is equally safe. Even the shadow of Catholic authority and protection therefore is wanting, and they must now stand on their true basis-that of un-Catholic or anti-Catholic establishments, sinks of indifference and error'-but man-traps or soul-traps no longer. If Catholic students attend their halls,supposing halls ever to have a bodily existence,they must attend avowedly because either their parents or themselves are careless of eternal ruin. Against such danger, no bishop and no pope can effectually provide. But at all events, a yellow flag has been hoisted over these receptacles and propagators of contagion. The mark of the beast is upon them, and the brand of infamy has burnt down to their very bones."

There is some excuse for the tone of insolent mockery with which the Tablet crows over the perplexed and baffled government; but the writer, in the madness of his triumph, has unguardedly exposed to view some of the towering projects of Irish Jesuit ambition. The friends of liberty and truth have reason to thank him for the candid truculency of the following:

"Calm your perturbations, ye excellent individuals, and submit with decent dignity to the inevitable. It is even so. It must be so. It will be so yet more and more. You are only at the beginning of your perplexity. The Pope will speak more loudly than ever, and, what is more, he will be listened to. He will turn over your musty Acts of Parliament with finger and thumb, serutinizing them with a most irreverent audacity; examining those which concern him, and when he has found these, rejecting some and tolerating others, with as much freedom as you use when you handle oranges in a shop, selecting the soft and sweet, and contemptuously rejecting the sour and rotten. And then, oh dreadful thought!-he will insist upon being obeyed. The very statues at Exeter all must erect themselves in horror at the bare thought of such a thing. What! the bill was read three times in each House of Parliament-it was twice passed-engrossed on parchment--garnished with a waxen appendage by way of seal; and had over it pronounced, by royal lips, the mysterious words and creative fiat, La Reine le veut."' The Queen wills it; her lords will it; her commons will it What does it want to complete the perfect fustian of the law? Nothing of solemnity-nothing of force-which the imperial sceptre of this kingdom could give, is wanting to it. But, truly, it may want the sanction of religion. The Pope disdainfully snuffs at it: an Italian priest will have none of it: it trenches upon his rights, or rather upon his duties; it violates the integrity of those interests which he is set to guard; and therefore Commons, Lords, Queen, wax, parchment and all, avail it very little. You may call it law, if you please; you may note it on your roll; you may print it in the yearly volume of your statutes. But before long you will have to repeal or alter it, in order to procure the sanction of a foreign potentate, without which it has not in the end, the value of a tenpenny nail."

Such language would really lead one to question whether any Roman Catholic deserves to be called a subject of Queen Victoria, or can be a loyal citizen of any nation upon earth. The man who refuses to obey a law of his country, till a foreign potentate has had leisure to look over it, and is pleased to accord it his sanction, is manifestly an alien in the land where he resides. In the present instance, however, we had need to speak cautiously. The

men who referred the act, anent the new Irish Colleges, to the review and decision of the Pope, are the rulers of the British empire. The following passages occur in a latter dated March last, addressed by the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland to the Romish archbishop of Dublin. That the letter is marked "private," is one reason why it has not sooner been made public, and why the people of Great Britain should be specially watchful, and not over-trustful of the public proceedings of the government, in relation to Romanism and its priesthood.

"My dear Lord, Your Grace had the goodness to promise me that you would convey to Rome, for the consideration of the Pope, the amended statutes of the Queen's Colleges in Ireland, as the British Government has no official organ of communication with the Holy See.

"I was happy of having the opportunity to consult your Grace before any alteration was made, because, as a Catholic Prelate, you well know what guarantees and provisions were requisite for insuring religious instruction to the Catholic youths who might frequent those Colleges, and I was anxious that such securities should be given with the most entire good faith, and in a manner perfectly satisfactory to the Irish prelates, who, like yourself desire to see the true interests of morality and the CATHOLIC RELIGION PROMOTED INSTITUTIONS.

BY THESE

"The whole of the statutes are at your disposal now, or at any future period that your Grace or any other Bishop may wish to see them; but as they are very voluminous, and relate entirely to the course of instruction and the duties of the different officers of the colleges, I propose at present only to trouble you with the religious portion of them.

"Accordingly, I herewith send all that part of the statutes which affect, as to religious points, both professors and students, as well as an extraet from the Report of the Board with reference to religious instruction.

"The list of visitors is not yet settled, but I can have no hesitation in stating that it will include the Catholic Archbishop of the province, and Bishop of the diocese in which the college is situated; and that, moreover, in the council, professorships, and other posts of each college, the Catholic religion would be fully and appropriately represented; for these colleges are instituted for the education of the middle classes, and the Government would fail in its object of training up the youth of Ireland to be good men and loyal subjects, if their religious instruction and moral conduct were not duly provided for, and guarded by every precaution that the most anxious solicitude can devise.

"As I entertain a profound veneration for the character of the Pope, and implicitly rely upon his upright judgment, it is with pleasure that I now ask your Grace to submit these statutes to the consideration of His Holiness, believing, as I do, that they may be advantageously compared with those of any other similar institution in Europe."

What will now become of the new colleges after all the money laid out upon them, and the government appointments made in connexion with them, we presume not to say. Meanwhile the buildings at Cork, Belfast, and Galway are still proceeding; and it is not impossible that some new turn in the politics of the nation, or some more abject crouching on the part of British rulers, may induce the priests and their chief to allow the youth of Ireland, instead of spending their time learn

ing the pike exercise, to come and be taught chemistry and agriculture at the public expense.

AUSTRIA AND PRUSSIA.

THE revolt in Austria has been put down, and Vienna is again in possession of the emperor's troops. The citizens, as a body seem to have yielded to the conviction, which every year's experience is deepening in the mind of nations, that a state of uncertainty and apprehension, no matter what degree of political justice may attend it, is worse for the present happiness of a community than is a system of tyranny firmly exercised, and whose operation creates, by whatever charm, confidence in existing rule. It would be rash to suppose that the empire of Austria has got quit of its troubles; or, overgrown and ill-assorted as it is, has become in any degree better consolidated by its re-conquest of Vienna. The people have got ideas of liberty, and the emperor and his court ideas of monarchical government, which cannot work together. For the present, the revolutionary wave has been so far in advance of the general tide, that it may be some time ere the ground left dry by its subsidence shall be covered; again and longer before the tide have permanently attained the level of a free and popular constitution. But undoubtedly there is a steady progress toward this point, and we cannot doubt that it will ultimately be reached. In no branch of human action is the maxim of more importance than in efforts for constitutional and social reform-Festina lente. Take time, if you would save time.

The King of Prussia, with all his reputation for philosophy and talent, has proved himself scarcely more adequate for the work of government, in these trying times, than the imbecile monarch of Austria. He has plainly lost confidence in himself and the patriotism he used to profess; and in his confusion is stickling, with all the jealousy of a pedant, for the little formalities of an effete divine-right monarchy. At the time we write, he has his capital of Berlin in a state of siege.

highest importance to their being carried into effect. On the 31st October a meeting was held in London, in furtherance of the plans adopted at Brussels. At this meeting two addresses were read-one to the governments, another to the people-deprecating the appeal to arms, and ably arguing the cause of reason and humanity, justice and religion, against the belligerent system. The address to governments we could have wished to quote entire, but are forced to leave out all save the four resolutions which form the basis of the document:

1. That, in the judgment of this Congress, an appeal to arms, for the purpose of deciding disputes among nations, is a custom condemned alike by religion, reason, justice, humanity, and the best interests of the people; and that, therefore, it considers it to be the duty of the civilized world to adopt measures calculated to effect its entire abolition.

2. That it is of the highest importance to urge on the several governments of Europe and America the necessity of introducing a clause into all international treaties, providing for the settlement of all disputes by arbitration in an amicable manner, and according to the rules of justice and equity, special arbitrators, or a supreme international court, to be invested with power to decide in cases of necessity, as a last resort.

3. That the speedy convocation of a Congress of nations, composed of duly appointed representatives, for the purpose of framing a well-digested and authoritative international code, is of the greatest importance; inasmuch as the organization of such a body, and the unanimous adoption of such a code, would be an effectual means of promoting universal peace.

4. That this Congress respectfully calls the attention of civilized governments to the necessity of a general and simultaneous disarmament, as a means whereby they may greatly diminish the financial burdens which press upon them, remove a fertile cause of irritation and inquietude, inspire mutual confidence, and promote the interchange of good offices; which, while they advance the interests of each state in particular, contribute largely to the maintenance of general peace, and to the lasting prosperity of nations.

Whatever opinion he holds as to certain extreme results of what are called peace principles, every true follower of the Prince of Peace will hail with joy such a movement as this. There is blessing in making the attempt, even if it be attended with less success than we trust and pray that it will be. "Blessed are the peace-makers, for they shall be called the children f God."

THE CONGRESS OF PEACE.

A SERIES of meetings was held at Brussels in September last, attended by representatives from France, Holland, Belgium, England, and the United States of America, to deliberate on plans for promoting peace ctween the nations of the carth. Various measures were adopted, with the view of bringing the pacific designs of the Congress before the mind of governments, and other parties whose co-operation is of

THE CONGREGATIONAL UNION AND REGIUM

DONUM.

IF Parliament shall continue to vote from time to time the money expended in the English Regium Donum, it is to be hoped that they shall soon find it difficult to discover persons willing to take the grant. The Congregational Union, at its meeting in October last, has cleared out, as far as its powers will, from all participation in the

business, by adopting unanimously the fol- paper on the subject was read by the Rev.

lowing resolutions de 742) c'uitexM

"That we adhere to the opinions already repeatedly declared by the Congregational body, repudiating Regium Donum as a means of aiding the support of the Christian ministry.

That, while earnestly entreating the brethren of the Union, and especially those who are distributors of the Regiama Donum, to consider in how

W. Swan. The churches were charged to consider their great mission as not yet aca complished their testimony must not be withdrawn until the e institutions of Christ for which they contended were generally honoured. Amid much to encourage, it was still trues that there was needed a re This was the Tobject

painful a position the reception of this grant places ival of vital services bas

the Congregational body, and what use is made of it by those who would promote the endowment of other sects, this assembly would express a hope, that refusal to appropriate the grant would lead to the adoption of a sounder principle in administering to the relief of necessitous brethren.s

"That a communication be opened by the Committee of this Union with the brethren who are distributors of the Regium Domum, for the purpose of assuring them that the Congregational body will always be ready to assist their suffering brethren in the ministry; and that the Congregational hody he urged to petition the Legislature on the subject. Poro" e noah H

Dr Pye Smith is the brother aimed at in last two resolutions. His cerespectable name, lent to the system, rin consequence of his acting as one of the has been a

of the Jubilee

sorted action reliance on their principles the zealous support of the denominational institutions the more wise and effective use of the press—the active organization of a their churches their works of usefulness Sabbath-school instruction-Christian instruction agency the surrender of time, convenience, and the resources for these ends Gran -and the cultivation of prayer, were earnestly urged. The duty of increased association, and of maintaining as his sionary spirit, was also commented, on and enforced. 483 guuoY Ɑ;381 blsiW

[ocr errors]

After a breakfast meeting on Thursday morning, the Rev. Dr Al Or Alexander on the

distributors off Congrega-forenoon of the same day, preached to a

stumbling-block in
tionalists moving against it, a and has helped e
to countenance the Premier in his haughty In the

tions. We trust Dr. Smith wir position

[ocr errors]

crown

in Albany Street chapel. of his s discourse he de

and unreasoning treatment of their objec-escribed to his brethren, in the following terms, the peculiar mission of the congregational churches; thegreat problems which it was their professed aim, their culiar polity, to solve,―viz. To reconcile

as Dr Cox did, when placed a by ord the Baptist Union, yield to the request of distri

his brethren, and have

pe

butorship. Thus we albethe purity of christian fellowships with its

a small one, in the e assault against British state-churchism; and thus will the final conquest be brought so much negro #8919 gidai 4974 the nearer, vidange lagons) ¿dann) sepł noiteonbi bor/ hits dowel) SUTA 40% JUBILEE OF SCOTTISH CONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES. Microff om I

HALF a century having elapsed since the Cas introduction of the congregational system into Scotland, various services were held in Edinburgh during the last week of October, commemorative of that event. A seremony on Sabbath evening, by the Rev. Dr Wardlaw, opened the proceedings on the occasion. This was followed by meetings for prayer and thanksgiving on Monday and Tuesday evenings, when addresses were delivered, bearing on practical duties involved in the privilege of church member

catholicity; to combine thể independence
of each church with the unity of the deno-
mination; to secure the liberty of each in-

dividual without infringing on due order
a'rstaged
and rule, de 17 dol no

The Jubilee services were appropriately concluded by a public meeting/sheld in Argyle Square chapel on Thursday evening. The chairman, Mr Kinniburgh, gave a sketch of the Kistory of Independency in Scotland The Rev. Mr Knowles sketched the religious condition of Scotland at the time when Congregationalism was introduced into it. Dr Wardlaw delivered an address on purity of communione Professor Thomson spoke on the importance of a ministry adapted to the age,

T

.87

The meetings appear to have excited much interest among the friends of the and cannot fail to stimulate

ship. On the following day the ministers dece them in every good work.

and brethren held a conference, for friendly and confidential conversations on the hisand the special duties, of the congregational bo

tory,esent consum body. A

[ocr errors]

an

An authorized report of the proceedings is
to be given to the public, under the direc-
tion of a committee. no 80
alle on:8) 29210ziɑ trodd a'yal

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

Printed by THOMAS MURRAY, of No. 2 Arniston Place, and WILLIAM GIBE, gif No. 12 Queen Street, at the Printing Office of MURRAY and GIBB, North-East Thistle Street Lane, ane, and Published by WILLIAM OLIPHANT, of No. 21 Buccleuch Place at his Shop, OCCA No. 7 South Bridge, Edinburgh, on the 26th November 1848ioni

se

[ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors]
[merged small][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors]

vaЯ ads vd bnat enw tɔsidua sắt no 15qsq
or begrado stow żadɔuda sdT .ogw? W
Abstinence (Personal) Society, Address by bien33

163,

Adherica, Remarkable Discovery in Norty, 353, 151
American Slavery
Annuity Tax, agitation against line 75381, 432
Anti State Church Controversy in Scotland, 240
Austria, Revolution infam bimA .be 527,569
Beth Shemesh, Destruction of the Men of 2313
Bible, The Natural Science of the lett∙le 201
Bishop of Exeter and Mr

349

Bishops, Opposition to Nors, 29944, 91, 142, 189

Botanical Theology, mg di 6, 255, 437,539
British Banner, Thesmaro nob sdt to meqq£95
Caffre War, Termination of the orem sifj 191
CALLS J. Ballantyne, 186; P. Bannatyne,
~ 525; J. Baxter, 525, 565; T. Bowman, 56679
A. Cross, 139, 281, A Dalrymple, 186;fo
-OIM Dickle, 41, 139; (R. D. Duncan, 379; and
-nН. Dunlop, 235J. Edmond, 425; J. Fal-
ab coner, 284; J. Gibson, 89; P. Hannah, 565;
J. Inglis, 284; J. Kidd, 186; D. M'Intosh,
18421, W. Meikle, 329ŢA. Millar, 566; JUER ---
bo8B9 Miller, 424; R. Mitchell, 525, 566 J. Bit290
-21 Munro, 41; J. Paterson, 3795 J. Robertsono-z

J.

Swan,

139; J. Smith, 379;

[ocr errors]

bride whyte, 379, 424, Aoiz
.b991otag

Wield, 186; D. Young, 284.
Canada, Meeting of Synod of

441

Tot ed: vlevomixenu gaitqobe yd sasniend

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

Merle

467

Martin's (Sarah) Life,
D'Aubigne's Recollections; 109; Missions T
Mary Record, 82.29rqma0 sit id harshab qihe
North British Review,
Olive, Vine, and Palm, 500; Northwood 173
Pearl of Days,
gus, slidy JT 415
Remarks on Church Disciplinego178; to
Rhind's Six Days of Creation, 321; Rorota
bertson's Scottish Church Book, 129;micq
Robinson's Harmony, 77, amorisgorgnol add
Sabbath Tracts, 371; Sceptical Doubtsi vd di
Examined, 559; Scheme of Mutual As- 19:30
sistance, 129; Smith's Token, 81; Solenn Jef
Protest, 127; Spring's Bible not of Manorods
323; Sturrock on Secret Religion, 414 pur
Sunday School Magazine, 226; Syming T
ton's Souls under the Altar, 557, 16 antim
Thomson on the Sabbath, 520; Tod's Distinei
courses, 28; Tract Society's Monthly 9800
Series, 82kalean of vinn ni eyewis iliw ybod
Whitefield's Life, 417 Williams Catholicland
to 53 Theology, 322; Willison's Afflicted Man,cno?!
417; Wilson's Clerical Almanac Bla srit
hoi Wylie's Scenes from the Bible, 78, q
Young Man's Aid to Improvement, 82,
Young's Remains, 413, 9d I is 53mis
Dale (Rev. J. B.) on American Slavery, 190q89456
Divinity Hall, Opening of the

[ocr errors][ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small]

9 Catacombs the World, third 19 425 9 Deaconship, Questions regarding theronpano302

Children of

and Children of Light, 289

& Cholera in Great Britaing162, 97, 10 0010528uncan (Rey. Dr. H),
Christ Preaching from the Fishing, Boat, [word 499 h Eadie (Rev. Dr), on
combs,
331
Church of Scotland, General Assembly of
Church (The) Christ's Body

1

[ocr errors][subsumed][subsumed]

Emersonid of top of Monato 59,113
Colonial Sketches, ond aid of bodi̟ma99 -Endowment of Popery, Agitation against 506, 527,

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

- tions of igonob oved ba‚ngrdiord⚫aid
57los of guiloq sil
1385119 Evangelical Alliance,
ily, endT..
Fathers and Founders of the United Pics found
909110180126, 266
terian Church,

93 Continent. The said ofvusiloniso
-on Alexander on Isaiah, 11371 Anti-State to
-ni do Church Tracts, 372; Arthur's Mission
19b70 to Mysore, 411.

[ocr errors]

Bagster's Chronological Atlas, 79; Barnes ib
on Job, 518; Blackie on University Res
letiform 519; British Quarterly Review,
ni blo 321, 561; Brodie's Discourses, 5140
gains Brown on First Peter, 365; Brown's

Popular Natural History, 79, Burn's A
B 9V8 Canada, 474000 7 domusdo 9T
ni Chalmers Posthumous Works, 27, 322;
bodots Cheyer's Wanderings, 78; Church Sta.
ed to be to gon
tionery, 466; Congregational Calendar,
euoigiler odt
-01 Dewar on the Holy Spirit, 80; Dick on the
na borActs, 78% Dick's Philosophy of Religion,
-20101478.
Eadie's Lectures on the Bible, 2226 ps
10 99 Eadie's Cruden, 466, Edmeston's Infant
Breathings, 31; Edwards on the Sabbath,

417; Ellis' Prevention, Fathers and

[blocks in formation]

399

SIOй bath 416; Juvenile Missionary Men

zine, 82.

287
47

Financial Difficulties of the Goverinflent, ione190
France, Voluntaryism in pae) Inat ed:
Free Bible Press Company,
Free Church, General Assembly of1979 011332
Free Church and National Education, 446, 502
French Protestant Martyrs, a 10.6109, 293
French Revolution) • 186, 235, 288, 379
188, 236
9. Germany, Reform in
Giffen (Rey. J. S.), Memoir of 1997
GLEANER, THE 76, 167, 221,316, 363, 410, 459
Haldane (James A.), Strictures on Pamphlet by 401
- Hampden (The) Controversy,b ded44694, 142
Health in the Country, State of commod 395, 479
Hewley's (Lady) Charity,

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

S 40; Tinnevelly, 521; Western Afitien, 181.
399 Kennedy's Jewish Exile, 323; Kidston's to Interpretation of Scripture, Hints on the
goda ishod Serifion, 30; King on Lord's Sup-TAHчInvasion (Anticipated) of Great Britain, I

per, 225; Kinniburgh's Memoirs of
Silvia, 128; Kitto's Journal, 5171970 dos
Law's Brief Statement, 321.
M'Crindell's Convent, 222; M'Kenzie's Re-
mains, 555; Manual of Baptist Deno-
mination, 82; Martin's Cares of Youth,

Ireland, Remedial Measures

219

93

429

odireland, State of 945, 237, 333,381, 428, 477, 526

Irish Colleges, The New

567

Irish Priest, Income of an

430

Irish Roman Catholic Church, Memorial on
the Endowment of the

421

« AnteriorContinuar »