864 THE Haman CHRONICLE NEWSPAPER. [NOVEMBER 15, 1856. 
jtself within the bounds prescribed by the constitution, but t ise the New Testament, but this had also ceased, and now, | style; and the last four works illustrate the ext travaga vagant 
it would trench upon the prerogatives of the Crown, upon the sne peA was ne. Aeman for the Scriptures in me: vulgar tongue, manner of his la eat period. The pieres marked | thus * are of 
privileges of the House of Lords, and upon the authority of the | that an effort had been made by the A Armenians to induce the | large dimensions, and are am gore paa orks. 
executive Government. It was thought at that period that thee | Holy Synod to print an authori ed version of the Bible in the ae ia: pik Do 
ad been so great an infusion of the democratic element, into the | vernacular, which might be read | Pin all the chnrches. Another THEIR Con- 
House of Commons that i not restrict itself within the | advance had bee de in circulating the publications of the press. | sriruents.—A large petig ey tie Pron of South- 
ts prescribed by d onstitution. Now ho they were | ‘The postal arrangements were now much m e complete than for- | wark was held on ae to teen from their members. 
told that the Hous ommons had fallen into a state of ineffi- | merly, and the benefit of this had been felt greatly by the religious | Mp, A Jlatt and Sir ier, an Arat of th 4 
ciency ; Ley he thought he c oa pret appeal to the course | press v pire, on which there was no restriction a eth Pas! d eir 
pursued at House of late a Sufficient answer to the | whatever. e press had, therefore, become of mighty power in | conduct in Fa ament Gurin th 
accusation. “The ouse of om mons had not merely to take a | Turkey, and was doing a hundredfold more work than it did 1g | Pellatt.in his speech said he had had tt pa ir 
ponn share in the legislation aof arg ntry, but during the | years ago, The demand of the people for Christian books ad | passing three bills—one the law of crossed checks, 
t two or three years, when @ grea ar had occupied the | gone beyond their present power to meet It. It was clear that fi lating thi f 
attention of the whole community, it had been the duty of the | this agency might be extended indefinitely ; and so greatly felt | O06 Tor regu ating the registration of ma em and one 
of mons to superintend the conduct of that war, and | was this, that only the day before yesterday a gentleman in for abolishing the exemptions in the Smoke Bill. The 
— thereby been | corer saa are Lape emer” ee amea Aan — ted 1007. for its hes set fgg aoo events of the session showed that ihe Trish Church was 
islative reforms appily, however, a en e was hap O say, WAS vancing in Turkey. s *. 
eluded, an the House of Commons would be enabled to devote | would bardty seem credible if he were to contrast the cate of | shaking to its fi tion, and that the day was not far 
ao entire attention to those reforms whic h Were demanded by the | education 20 years ago with the present period. The samen distant when it would cease to exist 5 ont there could 
ce of the peop a had one excellent fundamental Sag E one ap see no doubt bigs the rab as of volun at ani a = 
was a church there also was a school, ho ools were | }j 
ADDRESS to THE Lare LorD Maror—The follow ing en fruitless, it is true, but still they formed one element by iai day gainin Tn 
hold on ibe publie mind. Sir Charles "Napier i in his 
address was presented to Alderman Salomons on his | means of which the country wa: a slowly but surely regene- 
i from 0) Ma h Th h now no 
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so, and since the establishmen i tof the mission, no less than too tant questions of the session, and then proceeded to 
missionary schools had been founded, Ie was glad to say that 
they also had a free church there. At present there were 31 make the following remarks on the campaigns in the 
a the ey were increasing. yh Baltie a d the Crimea :— 
three elements of Protestantism now introduced into | “As to re war in the Baltic, it had not been well conducted. 
Turkey—a free press, free schools, and free churches—and | It was known a year before the first campaign that we were 
cipal bankers 
the “governor, ey governor, and directors of the 
Bank o of England, ¢ and the | chairman an d vice-chairman 
the sas 
“TO THE RIGHT HON. “DAVID A A, LORD MAYOR OF 
a pang 
Vi 
dea lig grity. Thi 0 e 3 i 
events. You commenced your term of Ollice at a pe en | reliable integrity of the » Protestant ‘Armenians had produced a | policy of economy w Wihio ad been insisted on by Parliament for 
hts oe the | deep impression on the s of the Turks. The fact that they | years. In 1 , when we were engaged in the Syrian war, the 
restoration o Eur pis fia h 
i beara 4 to g it y TAr don his Majesty the King of Sar- 
dinia, one of the ANa a ett allied with England, who 
Aaa aouny — ived in the Gui pidha oe pape inundation 
r thanks are of pas a 
unity of showing how deeply the Pati taal ae ple feel for | pro blem was how to Christianise Turkey, he believed the way to | straightforward si rapes ay word of it trne, *thoogh it could nat 
rity r Fre bor solve it o spread the truth among tl è Armenians. | be race that he, hag ‘was unused to debating, could make 
bu 
i m i i > asure, Since the lusion o! 
godai ake somewhat peculiar position, eats ety in office | each Protestant Armenian, in fact, mona become a missionary | had been to Cronstadt, to satisfy himself whether he had done 
anded general aprobe tom and that you leave the he Turk. angelis i and they wrong in not at ing it. i 
dk P ehair ling the high respect and e: osteen of all your | evangelise Turkey. After giving some arig 4 details, show- | stronger even, he confessed, han he had believed them 
- fellow: ing the progress of the mission and the success which had | when he was there with the fleet. In fact they were perfectiy 
THe NRE NAGE QUESTI 10N.—A deputation from Erith | attended its efforts, he concluded by making an appeal to the | and entirely impregnable. The Sioa Duke Constantine had 
-consisting of Sir Culling Eardley, Bart., Captain | meeting to suppor ort the Turkish Mission Aid Society. | panta him an interview, and had shown him all his plans of 
Wheatley, lord of the manor, and several other Colonel Sir Henry wlinson moved a resolution wel- a z 
gentlemen, had an oe eee _ B. Hall on D i 
Friday for the purpose ing against the 
inage scheme of the Metrop lita: = "Dear of Works 
sere the southern outfall at a omen near Erith 
ioie Joi have been nearly 1000 guns bearing on your fleet; 
these was not bgt i oes your Targo ships, the channel was 
narrow, and it was so thickly filled with i nfernal machine 
be ships going i 
ng 
nians, and the sympathy of the meeting with h 
and tbat a| Having resided in tbe country many ‘pr Han gaa fully | k j 
paiar amount of valuable property at i which is | tes'ify to the valuable exertions made by amlin and the | yoy had come out I don’t know what the pine Aegan might 
yearly increasing in buildings and poem would be EA Layee and the great advan ips tery i have been. ‘Ah; said the Grand: Duke, ‘If I had had screws 
seriously damaged by the scheme, that thi re of the | sible to evangelise the Turks through a direct mission, it being shoul Le ta , 
shipping moored. o ff Beith would 1 er, ea cand: th t A k to profess es so badly manned untilit was too late? And, I think, 
th 
who totally ignored t! ul accused them of beini p at; but arer 
Matila oom t ts, e oe sgt g disciplined men are no better = fortifications without soldiers. 
ttanti pissioparies fiec the Catholics were fixe 
; z People are fond of talking about the British navy being uncon- 
missionaries. He denied entirely that the Protestant ission- Ps epe ” 
* re as mad be heen tia ted b y a Catholic querable ; but the British navy is men, not ships.” The prone 
3 
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mischief. On 
ta! d, consisting of Mr, Masters 
itb, M.P., the ae rt clerk, aid other gentle- 
men, had an interview wi ir B. Hall on tbe ae 
subject. On Wednesday, at ris meeting of the Board o 
ed 
r itten a secon m i 
exertions ‘of four ipo its SE hen, Mo o to hes, | ceived an answer from the noble lord, it would only be right a 
Works, a letter was read from Sir B, Hall min a e he subje 
n he 
5 e nt press, paie = la o wud 
iterary and polemical controversies printed in Syriac. In| 5f having his conduct investigated. He had d anded an inves- 
reference to the political question of Protestantism in Turkey, | tigation, and if parr raaa did nat artik it would go far 
he rejoiced that in this instance politics and religion went | 4, prove that they were afraid that something w ‘would come out 
> é 4 prs ent “ st which would prejudice tbem in dei opinion. 
their vitality, The two religions with which those aia) “Bie Ben n Thursday morning 
we nght into contact at present were the Greek and the a trial took pla ce f the A rere at bell for ae P siglek 
contrary to the iE rit of the statute. Sir B. Hall, howe | vere bronght 
ject of Roman Catholic forms of Christianity. Now, it must never be whose name it ap 
ever, oilers to © 
any amended plans which they May have o propose, 
and to cubmit to the Government any claims which they 
may prefer to a contribution of public mon ey for the 
g s, N fa 
n 
to the spread ol ussian influence, and the spread of 
Catholicism was identical with the spread of French influence ; 
and therefore that by supporting “i onni Farsa in Turkey they | which is said to be a fine specimen of iron 
a pap ich would a the of 
extensive plan than the: feel justifier undertakin R French i j G t 7 
the Saat de visepayers of ihe met ag lis, gat Kiayi very loth to fits itself up with its Government art Mr. George Hopper, of Hough le- g 
T M oe £ SEPT À would be especially reluctant with respect to Turkey. But urham. The part of the clapper which strikes the 
URKISH Missions.— public meeting Of the | although it had itself, as was well known, no ambitious projects | bell is a monster spheroid of solid iron, the 
Turkish fends in mid i. Society, the object of which is to = th respec to Turkey, it had garann meee n preventing diameter of which is 24 inches—the total weight of the 
7 issi. i e ambitious ther , and thus far wo t ryn 
faise fan e fu aid of existing evangelical missions in the mat mi r sapere gers Protestantism in tha to gue being 16 ewt T oni chow an 
The Hon. Arthur Kinnaird, ari took the chair and | hometan religion was fast dying out, and in another century he | My, Ta nod herria eia an h ó t, as 
stated that the iepene ew the | believed the bulk of the inhabitants would consist of the three i pe L ` ge TEED ? tly verified by 
meeting was to take leave of a Rev. De. Hamlin, for denominations of Chris he had named; and he did say that tested by the tuning forks and su sequently di 
on ie $ e the fi relations of European Pow aide Turkey would, a Turle on the y organ, was that the sound i$ 
years a missionary to a hi it es to him, particularly as regarded England, depend E natural, e what it was intended to be ; and that 
to Constantinople. He a letter fi ry greatly upon which class of Chi risi ims was predominant in Je k fect piece of 
F. Williams, in which he expressed his regret that he the ‘Turkish empire. the bell ie i is without flaw or heer a 2 igh- 
not personally state to the Meeting his experience | Dr. Blackwood seconded the resolution, which was | €°S ing. excited at in ie - 
of 16 years in the various localities of the efforts of carried unanimo: wiy, The Hon. and Rev. Baptist Noa . papa and the am = gees mee ae 
American missionaries, adding that he hoped ere long | then moved oo tion recognising the dev oted e cnis 7 ean rever’ seiko arae 
to testify in that hall to all the advantages gained to | tions of the Ame: missionaries, and Sayre om a a sia Carik mentary pause 
istianity, as well as to bun anity, by the unceasing | the Mirt of the Christian population of England in Sokari or St. James’s Park 10 Beroravia.-— 
and j dicion merican missionari | those exertions; which w seconde d by the Rev. Dr. eR permitted to pass through the 
both in Turkey an agna ne: ; i 
so zealous in the crag and so ager of the sympathy | THE pe URNER COLLECTION. k es following 20 pictures se eno piar rian x r> from Pimlico and 
aa support of the British ena The Rev. Dr. | by Tarner were exhibited on Monday for the fir at ir time 4 = 4 Pe aif of 1s. in the hire of a cab 
Hamlin then proceeded to meeting :+— at aaan h House, and excited great interest : AE om, pared wi ne paa erence of by Piccadilly, to soy 
Poy nage sre ha fact ot hv would n mists D Biers wo eee omilla e Study at Milbank a sna 466, View in t! wathing of saving of time. E 
before them some of the results that had attended the efforts of ta #476, n bipera (1805); 4 153, reenwich Hospital ta (1800); THe Cavett Patace—The subjers ae death, 
“the American z mission, There were certain general topics con- | 485, Abingdon, Berkshire (about 1810); 489, Cottage Destroyed musical celebration of the cen centenary sane oo s mse 
nected cause commanded their attention as of prime an Avalanche (about 1812); 496, Bligh Sand, near Sheerness | jn 1859, has poe oceupied considera! “oat 
ite meal one of which was the instrumentality of the press —Fishingboats trawling (1815); *499, The Decline of the Sie The Ti order ioni te the capabilities es of 
or this p 
in the missionary work. Eighteen years ago, when he first visited | ginian Evo 1817), one of his imitations of Claude; *: he been con- 
s influence of the Press as agency Bay of E AE Ait, View of Orvieto (1830); *516, Bear Palace urpose, arrangements have and the 
neutralised of the patriarchs, which | Harold’s Pilgrimage—Italy 832); #518, Apollo and Daphne | guded sched the Sacred Harmonic Society yen 
mightier and the anathemas of (1B57) > "BRI, Phryna going tm the = Babe ect as Verne (1838) + ë the Crystal Palace Company for un 
Armenian, and were all launched “ Fighting Temersire tugged to her last Berth (1839) ; Sn the central transept a preliminary 
bo peiareh a Cottage would 2 ake 23, Agr grippina Germanicus (1829): | ing, in May next, in tral 
m „A with the Ashes of 9); | ing, in > 4 j 
the Christian press. |527, Venice—the ja Bridge of Sighs (1840); 531, The Burial A Grind Handel Festival or Congress with an orchestra 
i B0). : 
i ie DE books wan now Sn Wilkie (1842); 535, The “Sun of Venice” aE to 88 3 
s ealing werkt 3 > of 2300 performers . Copes 
idea" Feros at the the patriarchs used 10 EE i Dira toes from 800 to O35 Sap are in hile Tue MURDER IN ” PARLIAMENT Srreer.—Mr. 7 
