We publish, by request, the following Speech of the Rev. Canon Srowxi.i., delivered at the Anniversary Meeting of the Society for promo‘ ting Christianity among the Jeios.—ln. ll. Gaz. “ But there is another mighty change of sentiment going on in the Jewish mind ; there is a change in their feelings towards those who profess the name of Christ. They used to re- gard us with abhorrence, and with no compla- cency-—they used to consider us foes, and not friends—the used to blame us as men taught to worshipi ols-—but the now know that the service of the Church ot England is as free from idolatry as ever was the Temple of Jeru- salem. (llear.) There is a further revulsion of sentiment oing on in the minds of the Jews which is still more big with promise. They are beginning to look upon Jesus of Naxaret without rejudice—-almost with feelings of reve- rence and he e. [will give you one single fact in illustrtion 0 this remark. One of the missions- ries states that in Turkey a Turk was pouring blasphemy on the name of the lord, when a young Jew rebuked him for his blasphemy. “ What,” said the Turk to e Jew, “ the hereditary foe and enemy of Jesus becoming his advocate! What wondrous times we live in !” Hear, hour.) We do, indeed, live in wondrous times. ilow marvellous is the posit- ion of the city to which my Resolution refers ! Jerusalem ! There is beauty in the name, era is music in the sound, there is sentiment in the varied cadence of the word. Jerusalem I It stands associated with all that is dear to us -—all that is blessed to mankind—all that is rich in grace—all that is illustrious in past history—all that is great in future anticipation. Jerusalem! 'l.‘he man‘s heart which does not beat at the sound, and whose heart-strin do not vibrate at the sweet echo, has little cart and feelin . I can hardly mention Jerusalem without eeling a glow of enthusiasm, and intensit of interest (Loud a plause.) We are col! by some writer that t e ploughshare of Rome had buried the fond fliucies of the return of the Jews and the restoration of the Jews amid the ruins of Jerusalem. We aces t his prophecy, and sa , “Prophet, go on and learn the result. " hat does God himself say! “ I will 0 nyour graves, and bring on up from the den .” Although we are in Society for rebuilding Jerusalem or restoring the Jews to Jerusalem, the Jewish Society, as a matter of sentiment and sympathy, does look to Jeru- salem, and the restoration of Jerusalem and the res :or.itiun of the Jews for the consummation of prophecy on earth, and the glorious triumph of the Church of God. (Hear hour.) In it not an indication in harmony with this view of prophecy that at this wondrous juncture-at the sat settlement of the national relations of urope, the holy land of Jerusalem has been given up to no foreign Power. (Hear, hear.) The French have not t the Holy Land. They had no right to do so. The Russians have not got the Holy Land. ‘they had no right to do so. The Mohammedan power cannot said to have the Holy Land. They have opened it toall nations and to all peo le,and es cially to the people to whom it beliings. W y is it that there is a country without a people,a peo- ple without a country all over the world? Be- cause the country is waiting for the people, and the people are waiting for the country. (lIear.) And the God that has reserved the pee Is for the land and the land for the people willbring the people and the land together in his own time and in his own wuy,and already the uncon- verted Jew and the converted Jew have their hearts turnin to Jerusalem. (Hear, hear.) There has late y been formed a Society of con- verted Israelites, Christian Israelites, for the purpose oi colonizing the Holy Land-—-or rather of forming an a ricultural Association to pur- chase land in slestine for cultivation, and roviding an establishment for convertin the sraelites in the Holy Land. What an ute- resting fact! It is a little thing, but it isa good thing. What does it mean. That when a man ceases to be an unbelieving Jew he does not cease to be an lsraelite—that when a man becomes a son after the Spirit he does not cease to be a son after the flesh. see here a con- verted brother, and I would appeal to him, and say, Are you less national because you cease to be an uubelieverl Are you not a patriot us much as ever? Are you not proud that you can trace our pedigree up to Abraham, and Isaac, an Jac ! (Hear, hear-) Sure I am that my converted Jewish brethren are looking forward to the restoration of their own land- the] are looking to see Jerusalem shaking her- sel from the dust nnd utting on her beautifu gnrments—they are loo ing to Jerusalem being a name and a place in the earth. I should be ashamed of them if they did not do so. As an Englishman, if England were conquered and London were in ruins and desolation, I should like to see London rise from her ruins and En- lnnd rise from the dust. Much more may the Jew be proud if he feels an interest in the glo- rious destin of his own glorious land and his own beauti ul cit city the bri hteet on the earth, although t is now in w sand wos- d a country the most fertile and fair on whidi the sun of heaven shines. Oh, my II.»\SZAi€I)’S G.—\Z Christian friends, lend a hel ing hand to the Agriculturalsociety of.lerusa eni. (Applause.) Get a little garden there—have some property ‘in that holy land, so that when bye and bye we to Jerusalem to wcrsliip—fer it will be the spiritual metropolis of the world—you may say, I have a little plot of ground. I care not where a man's dust sleeps. if it sleeps in the hope ofa glorious resurrcc'.ion—if there is any spot on earth that I like more than another where I should like my ashes to rest it would be under the shadow of Jerusalem, nigh to the sepulchre whence arose the first hope of Chris- tians—Iie who in his resurrection raised all his ople to glory and to God. (Loud applause.) do not want to enlarge more on the restora- tion ol the Jews to Jerusalem, but there is one point on which I think it important to speak- and that is, while believing Christians depre- cote those views of ‘ which would convert siui le history into allegory and explain by me- te ysical subtlety the great facts in our faith — et them take care that they do not indiscrctly and unwarrantably give countenance to the practice they deprecate. Ido not hesitate to say, there is an immense amount of turn rin and trifling with the word of prophecy in spi- ritualising what is literal, and taking from Israel what belongs to Israel as a nation. There are two great currents of prophecy that we may trace through the channels of inspira- E'l"l‘l:.', JUNE 18. A SLAVE PURCHASED IN PLYMOUTH CHURCH, BROOKLYN. At the conclusion of the sermon on sunda mornin , the Rev. Henr Ward Beeoher,un- ncunce to his congregutibn that he was about to perform an action of a most extraordinary nature. which he would preface by readings portion of the l2tli chapter of Matthew. He accordingly read the 10th. 11th and l2th verses of that chapter, after which he proceeded to give a sketch of the later histor of a slave girl, Sarah b name, an ii eel in whose be- half he had lately received. She was, he said, the daughter of a Southern planter, acknow- ledged _by himself as his own ofl'sprin , and reared in his own family until his other an b- ters growing up had treated her so cruelly that she attempted to escape. She was captured and taken back to her paternal master, who made immediate preparations to sell her to the Extreme South, refusing to dispose of her to any one who would remit her to remain in the neighborhood. 5 any persons in the vicin- ity, knowing her to be a most faithful, eflicient, and therefore valuable piece of property, were anxious to purchase her, but her owner utterly refused to sell to them, his oh’ her removed to so great a istanoe that her near relation to the others of his children could occasion them no further mortilication. She III OI‘ tion,—the first is the rephecy concerning the spiritual ople of G ,- the other, that in which we fin God giving a s cial land to a s cial people. We have no rig t to apply pro- p ecies that belong to them, as a nation, tog ourselves as the Gentile Church. We have no right to monopolise all the blessings and give them a mono ly of the surses—to take all the threatenin s iterally, and the promises spiri- wron to the Jew, and the Gentile Churchman who oes so, too, must sanction the miserable heresy of later times—the tam ring with od’s Word, and saying that which is ti ura- tive in fact, and that is mere allegory which is the simple declaratory statement of the Spirit of . (Hear, hear.) The Rev. Gentleman then earnestly exhorted all Christians to a watchful observance of the attempts now making to desscrate the Sabbath, and in that respect to Coutinentslise England, to unite heart and hand for the purpose of counteract- ing the attempts of those who would cripple liberty of conscience, and prevent the free cir- culation of the Bible, and not - rs with any who would not befriend the lost sheep ofthe house of Israel. He took it to be one of the best si s for this country that she still remain Israel's friend and be trusted that in the day of God's 'udgment, lie would say, “Spare that people, or they remembered my brethren after the flesh.” A striking conlirmntion of Scripture.- One of_ the most interesting of the monu- ments of ancient Rome is the triumphal arch erected to commemorate the con- quest of Jerusalem bv Titus, who after the destruction of the temple made a tri- umphal march to Rome, bringing with him ii long train of captive Jews and the spoils, among which were the sacred ves- sels of the temple. This procession is represented in the sculptures on the beau- iiful arch, which thus furnish an illusirat-‘ tnally. T e Gentile in this respect has done a 5‘ ta tinued his remarks. was, accordingly, sold to a Southern man who held her at $1, 00—but who finally consented to part with her for $1,200. A slaveholder in Washington, pitying the girl, bought her for the latter sum—inimediately, however, setting on foot a subscription to enable her freedom, he himselfcoutrib other man, also a slaveholder, $700 were finally obtained. ‘* id r. echer. “I re if we could do anythin the rest of the money,” [would promise nothin her here. .fi° fl W her to purchase uting $100, an- gave $100. and At thisjunction,” ceivcd a letter asking “ toward making up to which I replied. that g unless we could see The reverend ntleman here stepped from his desk, and wi an encouraging " Come up, Sarah,” he led upon the plntlorm a young, in- telligeut-looking mulatto girl, whom he pre- sented to the crowded audience as the slave- girl in question. She is apparently old, probably three pleasin seated about twenty-three years -quarters white, of very grind modcstappearance. Mr. Beecher er in a chair by his side, while he con- She was here, he said, on her parole of honor. She had promised to go back, and she must return, "either with or with- out the ilve hundred dollars which were yet By this time there was. hurdl the whole immense 3,000 people. y a dr eye in congregation o nearl Men wept, and women sobbed any attempt at concealment. All seemed to be a Christian minister, a tremhlin woman begged from a Christian people, money to save herself from a life of slavery and com- pulsory prostitution. One gentleman here rose and announced that the money should be forthcoming to make her free, and that if necessary, he would be person- ally respcnsible for the entire amount. This announcement was received with heart and g, shrinking ion ofihe Bible nowhere else to be found, these being the only rcpresentnlions that exist of the sacred vessels,the table of the shew-breed, the golden candlestick with its seven branches, and the silver trumpets used by the Priests to proclaim the year of Jubilee. The Roman Senate and people, little thought when erecting this monument to. n deified emperor, that they were erecling a monument to the trueGod long continued applause, the audience being no longer able to restrain their feelings, and Mr. Beecher expressing his up roval of the jubilant demonstration. Sarah. t e slave girl, had, up to this time, preserved a tolerable composure, but when the certainty was declared that she should notgo back to a life of Slavery, she buried her face in her handkerchief and we t aloud. As the collectors passed nrnong t c audience, the plates were actually heaped up with the tokens of substantial syrnpnthy, one lady even took the jewelry from her person an cast it into the plate. The amount collected on h. ul H m in the verification of prophecy and divine history. A recent traveller says, not one of the Jews of Rome, of whom there are about 6000, will even at this day pass under the arch of 'I‘itus,sllhough it spans one ofthe thoroughfares of the city ;they shun it as a memorial of the subjugation, of their nation which has never yet been retrieved, and regard it with aversion. the spot was $784, which, besides completing the sum necessary for the purchase of Sarah, will also rescue her child, is boy of four years, who is now in bondn The scene was one of the most remarkable and exciting evcr enacted in this country be- M On, Dsin!—'I‘he modest woman who gave the" withering look” to Captain "31 Jonathan, because he talked of his vessel 14 hugging the shore, has again had her M 0 owner can have the 0fJnssi:s Psaxs, Esq., Ch B the store Intel and have opened it under the above tii vantages, for lusts. variety cannot be surpassed b . America, from the in ourselves to carry on this “P these,Ihis Ointment. when ruhbbed on the skin, is carried to any organ or inward part. Diseases of —not 'h.mM-uedly’ bu‘ openly’ and “tho” i’n‘wnrd complaints, that cannot be reached by other touched to the very heart. The like scene has mu" solely on the use of this wonderful Ointment, of wounds. ling, stiliiiess or contraction of the joints, even of 20 years‘ standing. )6 cents. Thus, between the Mint and the anufacturers of Silver Ware, who also ay a sensibilities shocked by the naked con- '1 being stripped she retired to her room for a season of meditation. A lazy follow up North spells Tennes- IGO IQ A. C. 9 v - dition of the trees. While they were ‘b°'° h'°'"'°"°d pi°°°' "° 1°“ times among the shoemakers becau shoe is IoI‘d OI. gh premium for those coins. very few of the in circulation. A wag says there is no danger of hard so every for the mar- before it is ready 2-“, res throng prices: -—nt ls POUND. N Hillsborough Street, on w.¢ d 3' May. a small Parcel contniriing nr.n.oii‘e’ ; it: “"50 by Ipplying at the Store arloiieiown. “ALBION .{6:7s'.ii-;»T””“ S'l‘llEETLY it COUCHMAN EG respactfull to inform the inhabitants of Char- lottetown nu its vicinit , that they have taken y occupied by Kill. NEIL RANKIN, le with a agniticent and H081‘ EXTEEIPIVB STOCK DRY GOODS or nvnnr nxscriirriorr. This sioek having been purchased with great ad- . qusliiy, and clies noes, ythnt of _any llo_us_e ii the land. It would be ' the most extensive houses in isulest article in Haberdash- y, to those of the more costly character in Dresses, Silks, Shawls, Iantlss, to- In making this announcement, we trust the public ill encourage us in this undertaking, and we pledge _ business in a spirit of libe- liiy, and continue to otfs hich will, we have no doubt. be appreciated. STRI-IETLY 81. COUCHIIAN. Charlottetown, May, I7, II“. C r to purchasers ndventsges _._j.__. A mirfiffifious ii'r”in7&?i5ir'T . .l_ff.*%1. HOLLOWAY’S OINTME TO THE GRAND EXTERNAL REMEDY. By the aid ofa microscope, we see niillicns oflittle enings on the surface of our bodies. 'I‘hroug_h necessary to make her a tree woman. A col- ihs Kidne s, disorders of the Liver, ulfestions or the lection would be taken up, and the result lle-rhlnflvamalion ofllle l-Ilnsa. Asthinu. Coughs would show their verdict and Colds. are by its means eflhciually cured. Ever housewife known, that salt passes freely through bone or meat of any thickness. This healing Ointment for more rendily_ penetrates through any bone or fleshy rt of the living body, curing the most dangerous Sever beeili vdritnessed in the world. In a IRYSIPILAS, RHEUMATISII AND hristian an , on the Christian Sabbath, in the pulpit ofa Christian church, by the lips of SCORE”-"C "UMouRs° No remedy has ever done so much for the cure of diseases of the skin,whstsver form they may assume, as this Ointment. Scurvy. Sore Heads, Sorofnln, or _Erysipelss, cannot long withstand its influence. 'l‘lIe venier has travelled over many parts of the globe. visiting the principal hospitals, dispensing this Oint- ment. giving sdvice as to its application, and has thus been the means of restoring countless numbers (0 health. soiui i.scs,sosi: snsssrs, WOUNDS &. ULCER8. Some of the most scientific surgeons now rely when iving to cope with the worst crises ufsores, wounds, core, glandular swellings, and tumours. Professor ollowny has dispatched to the East, large ship- ents of this Ointment, to be used in the worst cases It will cure any ulcer, glandular swel- PILES AND ristunas. These and other similar distressing complaints can be elfccvuiilly cured, ifihe Ointment be well rubbed over the parts affected, and by otherwise following the printed directions around each pot. Both the Ointment and Pill: should be used in s following raun- forc in. religious congregation; and the instan- 3“ L, ,, c.,,¢,,-. go,°_"", , t"“'°°“' ‘ma "mu ”t"f“°l°".7 P°°“”l‘“'.Y 7°‘ Bad Bresasts Contracted and Still Skindiee::e.s sponse to the plea for liberty, shows that the Burns oints can Anti-Slavery sentiment is ready, when occasion Bunion. Elsphantinsis Sore- ends requires, to indicate its sincerity by arguments Bits of Mes ni- Firiulns 8org-m'Pp|¢g more tangible and substantial than more words. toes and and our son Corns “—j'-——- Flies Glandular swellings Tumour. Wm-r nsconss or rin Sii.vn.—Pure Silver Coco-bay umbngo coin can now be sold at the U. S. int ver Chiego-foot i s Wounds ivantagcously. Five-franc ieces are wort Chilblnins Rheumatism Y“... I cents ; Mexican Dollars, coined before 1853, Cl"Pl’°‘l l'"‘d' 5°""' Sold at the establishment of Profeusr HOLLOWAY. Strand, (near table bout the lvilinsd World, at the following Id; Is Id; and be each Pot. There is a considerable saving by taking the ofptienls N. B.—Dlrsctlons tor the guidance every disorder are eflsed to each Pet.