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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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for many more than could be immediately supplied . May the good seed , which has been thus sown , bear an abundant harvest !
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States . One of the Baltimore papers gives a full description of this superb edifice , of which some idea may be formed from the following- representation of the pulpit : — u pulpit is in imitation of the antique rostrum £ it rests upon a double square base , the first of verd antique marble of
Connecticut , —the secoud of white Italian marble ; the latter is decorated on its front with a bronze ornament , from the antique . 'fhe bf dy of the pulpit , which is semicircular , is made of bird ' s-eye marble . It is ascended by eig-ht steps on each side ,
inclosed by a balustrade of an imposingstyle , the base of which is of veid antique marble . On the landing -places on each side , are to be armed chairs in the Grecian style , ornamented with bronze , for the accommodation of visiting ministers .
** TheOrg-an is described as representing a Colos&ial antique lvre the large pipes imitating- the string's : two Egyptian co * lurnns inclose the whole , the pipes forming their shafts . "
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America an As ?) lum . It must needs happen that a country tvliicb , like the United States , opeas its doorrs to ail new comers , siiould be infested witli the refuse of the population of 'Europe . Nor is it Wonderful , this being" the case , that the Americans should be
suspicions of foreigners , and should receive emigrants with coldness . The recollection df this fact should also check Europeans , Who , by their cast-off members , contribute to vitiate the American character , in their hasty reproaches of the morals and manners of the whole people of the United States . Some estimates that we have seen of the
oitigens of the American Republic , would , we sincerely believe , he flagrantly unjust applied to the inhabitants , generally , of New South Wales . We are led to these remarks , by observing in the American newspapers accounts of two persons of notorious character , lately ejected from
England . One is the notorious Frey ^ the Jew convert and preacher , who , we a re ashamed to * ay , seems to have been preaching * i » N « f ^ York and other places , with unbounded popularity . Why did not bis u evangelical" associates in this Country put their brethren in America on their guard ? The otjier is the West-of-JEng * land
girl , who , assuming' the character of art Indian Princess who had beeu shipwrecked off the coast , and taking the name of CarabboQ ) practised such an adroit imposture , two or three years ag-o , upon the gentry of Bristol and Bath . The following- advertisements relating- to this lady , appear in succession in The Democratic Presf , of Philadelphia , September 24 , 1817 :- * -
u A full length Portrait of Miss Carabboo will be published this day , at two o ' clock , at Mr . Charles ' s Book Store , No . 32 , South Third Street . " Sept . 24—c ! 3 t . " cc Card . —Miss Curabboo returns her
most grateful thanks to the ladies a . nd gentlemen who did'lier the honour of attending t ^ e Concert , given for her benefit last night , ami begs to inform them , that the second a ' ncl last Concert , which was fixed for Thursday , tiie 25 t 1 i ! iistaiit is postponed to a later period , of which due notice will be giVcn . " * Sept . 24 , 18 i 7 . —It . "
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New Unitarian Chapel , Baltimore . [ Extracted from a N < ew York Paper ? Oct . 2 , 18 * 8 . J A lar ^ Unitarian , or first Independent Church , lately greeted i ^ Baltitn ore , iwi «| er the ^ upeiintp ^ daiice of the celebrated ^ tlebiteet Go « tefr # y * . wiW compare ^ it is sffud , with any public building- in the United
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724 Intelligence . —America an Asylum .
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Clerical Resignation . A clergyman in the county of Essex has lately resigned two valuable livings into the hands of the diocesan , the Bishop of London ; alleging , that he could not conscientiously hold them any longer , dissenting * from many articles contained in
the Liturgy of the Church of England . The Bishop , knowing * how much the circumstances of the clergyman would be reduced by the loss of his livings , in the handsomest and most friendly manner , before be would accept the resignations , endeavoured to remove his scruples , and to prevail upon him to retain his livings , but without effect . —Sun .
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The Unitarian Society has in the press , " The Bampton Lecturer Reproved : being a Reply to the calumnious Charges of the Rev . C A . Moysey , D . D . &c , in his late JBainpton Lectures , against the Unitarians ,
and especially against the Editors of the Improved Version . In Letters to a Friend . To which will be annexed , A Letter , in Reply to the Charges of the Very Reverend Dean Magee , in Vol . II . fart 2 , of his 1 Dissertations on Atonement and Sacrifice . 1 By Thomas Bklsham . " ^ mmhmmm ^ x
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Mr , Hone purposes to elucidate his forthcoming * Enlarged Report of his Three Trials , by an abundance of additions , from materials of singular interest and rarity .
with nnmeioijs coloured and other en-£ ravings and portraits , and variow » yao fimiles , which will render it a * acceptable to tbe curious collector , as to | he general reader . The work is in forwtftrdj&e ^ and will ^« printed jft royo | oct ^ voj by aufch scription .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 2, 1818, page 724, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2482/page/60/
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