GEES EE . EVANGELIST. 77 -Whole N 6. 741. ' otitg. Selected for the American Presbyterian, I TRUST IN THEE. As feeble as the bruised reed, Infirm to will and do, Oft working out the ungrateful deed 'Twere better to eschew: Bow were the sinking soul displayed Could it not orrto thee, ' , Father, what time I am afraid Then will I trust in thee." When hope is faint, and faith is weak, And hare the - spirit And I a strong assortlice seek That thou art grapious still, I rest upon thy promiee-word, To thine oin heart I flog 1$ Father, what time I am afraid, Then will I trust in thee." When mortal ; paleness marks my cheek, And dimness veils my eye, - And hoping Only in thy grace, lls uukOWn to'.(110; If entering bn that vale of shade, No sun nor star I see, „ Father, what time I am afraid, Then trust in Thee." For.the Americas' :Presbyterian. • INFLUENCE. 'Par in the distant years some deed of beauty, Bath struck the key-note of a bold refrain, And many a noble act and high-souled duty. Led on the lofty strain. lay in the distant years some thought onme ; learning, Along the hist'ry of this world's great life And quivering down from heart to heart its beaming With glory still is rife. • Oh blest the power such deeds of heavenly meetness To pour adown the track of Coming days And blest the thoughts that Ml in living sweetness Upon lire's common ways. And glad the gathering, when our time is ended, Of all the influence that one life bath oast; The monis that through such earnest words have tended Upward to heaven.at last. 4tovotsiontbinet. THE CIVIL WAR IN SYRIA. The following letters from Rev. W. A. Ben ton, and his wife, Mrs. L. G. Benton, Mission aries of the American Board, at Mk Lebanon, in the very heart of the present disturbances, have Jut' been received by• Mr. George W. Mears, the Corresponding Searetary of Western Church, S. S. Missionary. Society, and promptly placed in our hands for publication. They will be found equal in interest to anything as yet published, en the painful subjeci. Mrs. Benton holds the pen of a ready wiiter : Shatndun, Mt. Lebanon, lane 6, 1860. DEAR BROTREE. IN OnßisT:—The existing ►ostilities between the brazes and. Christians of Mount Lebanon, commenced on Tuesday of last week.at Bait Miri and several other points, almost simultaneously in the Metn district, at the north of our Station. It was fearfully sublime, and in expreastbly 'painful befoxa,mernino- se' , lteheld so r►any - villages * hmilets, and isolated houses in flames; and, to hear the reports of their , guns, and the *ild-voices of the assailants re-echoing around, us at the midnight hour. In the course of forty eight hours/about one IWndred different places were reduced' to ashes, and the sad work of war and conflagration is still raging upon the moun. Monday, June 11..—.-After I had written the above, having been called to go down to Beirut, I suggested to Mrs. Benton to write an account of the war, to 'accompany this letter. Her cote lannication is enclosed. It is a painful circum stance to state that a great misunderstanding has arisen between the Pasha of Beirut, and all the consuls ihere, on thesquestien of his duty and office at once to interfere and terminate this mu tual animosity and carnage of •the contending , parties. This he declines to do, and the consuls have of course reported the fact to their respective governments It is said that Hasbeiyeh and Basbeiyeh are taken, plundered and burned, with a lose,of 61)0. killed to the Christians. I hope this reporUblhot true. The Christians at Beirut, Dataao4, Alep ,portuud !Premien are inner etriPltnd danger. The duilfraggi W filbriatians in the Druze vil lages,are still burning. Last night Aindara, two hours at the east, was set on fire. The Christiana are gathering at Zahleh, and at the north of us, in considerable force, 20 or 80 thousands or more. The Druzes are gathering at and from the south, and Hoarse. And what the state and issues of the existing hostilities will be, it is impossible to tell. Our comfort and confidence is the blessed will of Providence. • Our position here istitical and providential. Our Consul at Beirut has warned us, as in duty bound, that he can no longer protect us on the mountain, and has suggested Ant we had better come down. A strong order has issued from the Pasha to the Governor that we should be guarded and not molested, or annoyed in the least, by the contending parties. Pe do not apprehend any personal danger, and Mir presence at such a time, is felt to be a great protection and comfort to all the people of Bhamdun, especially to all these who love the gospel at this station.' It is said, in deed, that our presence has saved the village. And it is not our duty at present to leave, as we think. The Convention of all the Ambassadors except the Turkish, at Bt. Petersburgh, to consider the contemplated policy of Russia, concerning the con dition of the Christians in the Turkish Empire; the state of Minis in this mountain, and in so many other places of the Empire, indicate the pos sibility o f a o uta ge, which, whatever it may be, the Lord will direoCor overrule for the advance 4neaLt .pie substautiaLinteresto of His eternal intelem.s 1 we know that " Jes it 4 410 411;4; . !011 ___ h * sun Doth hli sothreselieiourneys run." We know that . His kingdom is „near at hand, and the people or government that does not.serve Him, must perish from under beam . • The new translation of the referencb and pocket Testaments in Arabic, is just completed; and is now in the hands of the binders. The issue is 5000 and 8000 copies respectively. But, the state of Syria now puts a stop to all our schools, and most of our missionary operations, in this •part of the mountain. While the awful judgments of the Lord are prevailing, our prayer is, that the people and ourselves also may learn righteousness, and know and fear His 'name. Lebanon is without a government, noniinally. It is divided into two districts, by the Damascus road. The northern division has a Christian, and the southern division a Druze Governor ami Coun cil of twelve judges. But these two divisions, apart from these authorities, are in, actual hostili ties. And the Pasha does not come with his army to separate their'. It is- our place to know that the Lord reigns. Excuse these hasty sketches of_tlie. prevailing anarchy around.- Pray for your missionaries., 'Mad for Mount Lebanon; and believe um j ,Ever yours in Christian love, WILLIAM A. BENTON. DEAR, CHRISTIAN Iltrztrps :—We take up our pen to give you some faint description of the awful visitation which„„ as. come upon this:Tour,. guilty huff; The old inimosities,feuds and hates'-be tween the Druzes and Chriatians have now broken_ out in. a most fearful war, sending horror, blood shed and devastation over this beautiful, this goodly Lebanon. , On Tuesday, May 28th, the hostilities com menced; a battle was fought On the White. Back mountain, about four hours from here, between a party of Zahlehans and Drnzes. There was a se vere loss on both sides; the high priest of the Druses was killed: That same awful night, the fires of the tionibatants were lighted' at Beitmiri, and all the little villages around that place, and in, the Metn district . at the No'ith; we counted ten, and soon after twelve Tillages burning at once, and sending up the most fearful flames to heaien. No eye, slept that night; we expected every moment that: we might be attacked. The dreadfaLnightwore away, the morning dawned, and cur mountain heights were enveloped in a denseclond of black pine smoke. We sat. down ia the=study-for morning -devotions, and the cry of "the Drums - are upon us," rang in. our ears. - Mr. Dotal* rushed out, and was met by hundrede of women and children running to our house for safety. Be-asked where they were; some said one thing and some another, and he walked -up through the village to meet -the dreaded foe, and' if possible mediate between them. He looked all 'round and saw no one, or any appearance of dan ger. The accidental discharge of a gun, and the screams of the women had -caused a false alarni. Mr. Benton now felt it was ,his duty to take' the direction of affairs. He divided the men of the village into companies, and stationed them at dif ferent points to watch, telling them if they saw any one approach to give himmotiee, and he would meet the foe first of all. We raised the Ameri can flag over our house, and told all, that in case of -an attack upon the 'village, the women were to come to our house and the men stand their ground. We then sent word to Sheikh Yusif, the Druze governor of this village, and told him of our posi tion, a-ad. - Week pleasure Adaptirova of all; and advised the peopleofilhatudtm - and Bhuttum to Oring their valuables to our house, and took his most solemn oath that he could and would protect Bhaindun; said that Mr. 13enton was his own bro ther, called him Sheikh Benton Abel el Melik— the name of his house: , it is wonderful the Lord; hasgiven us the 'hearts and. corifidence of these wild Druies. Beveral times during that never-to-be-forgotten day, the poor panie-strieken people were about to flee and start for Beirut, and but for us they would have gone, and they would have been slaughtered on the road, as the war vrasT,raging All the way, and the. neighboring Druze wawa vould have eon* and plundered and burned our village. Towards night a Kowass from the Amerieun Consul at Beirut arrived to inquire after us; they thought Bhamdun was.burned and knew not whet had become of. us. Also Sheikh Nebhan, the brother of Sheikh Yusif, arrived, and he is here still. We do not feel du/ttan are by- auy weans out of daigsl, , ,kut . t . here are many indications that ,Blitiedim outai l liAtiA fearful stow.. We suppose that more than a hintdrekrilluges have been burned, and, to the -horror of ailvtko foreign residents in Syria, it is plain the Turkislialktho rides are favoring the Druze side, and themselal helping on the butchery of the Christians. Near Sidon, there has been a massacre of the Christians, and but for the appearance of the Eng lish war steamer, which threatened to destroy. the city, we fear the Muslems would have arisen and slaughtered the whole Christian population. Nearly all day yesterday we heard the guns of the contending parties. A severe battle was fought at the 'Met; at the north of us, and we hear that the Drum loss is, great in killed and Werinded. Such is our position that we hear the Wine side of the .queation. Bhamdun stands neutral, and under the Drum protection, being one of their principal stations; the commander of their force is here. Rastnaia, a large Christian village nearlere, which had taken up arms against the Druzes, one hundred and sixty of her young men being gone to the war, was forced to surren der; day before yesterday, they gave up their arms and their crop of silk, the cocoons being in their houses, upon condition that they should be pro tected. After the whole contract Ives complete, the fired upon the people, and Completely plundered the whole village. While this awful scene was going on, Mr. Portalas, a French gentle man who hula factory near that place, rode int? the midst, and told'Al"the villagers to follow him,. and he took them all to his'actory. „ ,Some of‘the women had nothing on save their under-clothes. He is still feeding them •at his own house. All the gentlemen of the factories , in this part of Le banon have actettiViabliS part in protecting the worneriAdVildren in their factories. ''O' ow dreadful to think of thousands of houses now laid in ashes, and 'their poor owners wander ing in the hot sun with no houses, and we fear nothing tu eat; save the green-wheat and mulber ries which now cover this mounkain. A party of Drums, whom the Christians liad burned, out, were passing through Bhamdun, and put up here for the night; they slept on the ground, , and the kind people here carried them some food. One poor, little sick boy cried, fg Carry me to our house, mother;" the poor mother, with tears, replied, "Our house is in ashes, my son." t • A number of infants left behind by the poor, fleeing jiotbers, have been picked up, we' learn, and are taken cars of by'the Druze Sheikhs. One Bluundun. woman, living: in one of the villages which was destroyed, had three little children; her Mount Lebanon, Bhamdun. June Bth, 1860. -ftIRIOELPWA,' :,.r . ftt,i‘,.!llA'ir . - i1,:',....ifULY . :20,' 4800. husband was in the battle, and she caught up two and ran, lead i ng her babe in the cradle; a Druze was seen to take the cradle out of the house and then set it on fire; we know not what has become of the poor babe. The Druzes, are hear, are pre- paring to attack Shasbeiah; 'they will make terri ble, havers there if•they.conquer. The, Christiana at fear the Moslems • , . will rise upon them and kill them without mercy; indeed no place:feels safe but Beirut and that on Account of the ships of war in the harbor, is safe. We have long been fearing and dreading these awful days. If there had been a grain, of energy in the government, all this might have been easily prevented. We do hope and pray that the Chris tian world will call the Turkish government to an account for this, and no longer propup e and patch up suet; a rotten administration. , There, has:, bein atwit& seena t at Dier el but all is quiet there now. Ido not-inow the particulars enough to describe it; you will doubtless see reports of that place. Things - look threatening again between the Russians and the Sultan. Is it not near the time when the . - Pope and the false. Prophet 'will go down ? Zahleh is full of people; all the villagers in this part of , the mountain have fled:there., It is said that they, have from seven to eight thousand armed men. The Drums, we hope, will not venture to attack that • place. We :have been hoping every day td see the Turkish troops come up into the mountain and put a stop to these terrible conflicts, but the Pasha appears to take side with the Druzes, and seen ;the - Work go'on. The Lord will, out of all' this, bring his own glory, and we trust the Christians will repent, and the Drnzes also will yet learn righteou.sness. Our friends in Zahlehnre increasing; we had hoped to visit that . .place again, but now all such labors are stopped' till the war ceases. The Romish Bishops and priests have had much influence in getting up this war, by exciting the Christians against the Drums. The Bishop's mansion at Beit Miri is burned, and all the con vents in this vicinity. Oh may they never again be rebuilt -to snbserve the kingdom of Satan. We are looking for letters from our friendt i in Phila delphia. 'We ask your continued Verest and prayers for us and.the poor, dark patple of this upper district of the goodly mountain. Your affectionate sister in Christ, L. G. BENToN. INFLUENCE OF THE APOSTLE PAUL. The following striking passage is extraefid from -that admirable little work entitled, "Saint Paul: Five Discourses. By Adolph Monad. Translated from the French, by Rev. J. H. Myers, D. D." It sets forth in an impressive manner .something of the influence of the great Apostle in moulding the heart and life ofsubsequent generations: "I asked just now, Without:-Saint Pauli • world, how much wont the worldtoss ask now, without Saint Paul in the Bee; and how much would your soul be a loser ? _Drop out of your New Testament the hundred pages at the top of which you read the'nanae of Paul—surely, I shall not go so farls triefErm that there no longer remains in -your Bible that which can save you. Nothing but Jesus Christ alone is necessary for our salvation; and in order to know Jesus Christ, so little is required: a word from his mouth, a word, from one of His disciples, a w6plinthe Old Testament,--what do I say?--a bare name, and • that name ,spoken in an obscure promise; with stammering i tongue, to the ear of the first man, a long time before anything was written—before a Bible was known in the world. But a little bread and water suificea to keep us alive; and yet we gather with thanksgiving , both that substantial food which God gives - us in the flesh of animals, and those delicious fruits which he hangs upon the trees to• refresh our parched pilate, and that blood of the grape which he commands the vine to pro duce abundantly to " rejoice,the heart of , marij We could, also save our souls without Saint Paul in the Bible. Yes; but of what _solid food, of what delightful refreshments, of what healthful virtue 'should wrbedeprived,'by lasing those-bin dred pages ! Where could you have learnt so well to know thaWiew and yet simple method of justi fication by faith without works, if Saint Paul had not written the first four chapters of his *sae to the Romans ? Where the inestimable, supreme, and incomparable worth of .charity before God and before - men, if-SaintPaul had not written that . dear and precious thirteenth chapter , in his first epistle to-the Corinthians ? Where'the Christian &eq.-of domestic life, and the plane of Jesus Christ.between the husband and the wife, between parents and children, between masters and servants, pan' had not written the fifth chapter of his 'epistle . to the Ephesians ? Where the potent efricacyach one of the helps which God puts within ourlreach for the holy warfare, if Saint Paul bad noihminted - the they of the soldier of Jesus Christ irike•Bixth chapter of .the same epistle? Where ambition conceded to Chris tian holinelkif Saint Paul had not written the last I chapter of burtfirli epistle to the Thessalonians? Where the law holding us in bondage to sin, without Romans 7 ? Where the rejection of the Jews having become the calling of the Gentiles, without Romans 11 ? Where the germ of real strength, Without 2d Corinthians 12 ? Where the deep meaning •of Moses, without Galatians 4 ? ' Where the relation of faith to works, without Ephesians 2 ? Where all .that remains, without all that remains ? If you are. not the most • un gniteful of men, or the most unbelieving, rise up IA confess, that among all the mortals that have passed beneath the vault of heaven, there is not ono to whom you t owe more than to him—to whom you owe so mite as to Saint Paul. "This is tru pecting ourselves. But extend your view a e farther,--on the right, on the left, blare ybu, behind' you. See these hundred pagestivinslated into two hundred languages, forcing theuranie testimony—l•do.noto say from the Eng 'lishman, the German, the Italian, the Spaniard, the Greek, the Russian—but from the inhabitant, of Asia, even in the depths of Siberia ; but from the inhabitant of America, even amid the icy fields of 'Labrador; but from the inhabitant of Africa, even on the desert plains of Bassooto; but from every. Christian heart that lives among the millions of baptized persons who cover the earth; nay, more, extorting it even from those who are Christians but in name, if they only possess, netwithatanding, their want' of faith, intelligence'enough to compre hend that in sowing those, principles of eternal life, .to which alone 1 have just called yout atten tion, Saint Paul has sowed broadcast in the world all the, germs Of culture, of education, of justice, of liberty, of civilization. And then, after under standing the -contemporary epoch, trace back the path of centuries, and measure, if, yon can, the part which Saint Paul. has had in all the good which has been accomplished in, the Christian world;—the part which he had in the religions awakening of our days, he who has been always consulted first in all the religious awakenings among the nations, that are the olfitring of the entiles;—. the . part which he had in the Reformation, he having awakened, in the libiary of Erfurt, that Luther,who was soon to waken the church.;-the partivhich he had in the faithfulnesaof The Vau- 17 ; I I 4 doffs and the poor peep of Lyons, he having given his name to that nett n of the Eastern Church, of •which they appear ~ be descendants;—the part which he had in the loiters of Columban, Boniface, Patrick, Cyril, and Methodius, and of all the mis sionaries of Europe for they had only to follow his example and to e . out his work;—the part which he had in t conversion and development, of the Fathers of !e church, he having been the friend of Barnett old Clement of Rome, the favorite master of ithinasius and. Chrysastom,— until you reach th4etglemn moment in which his head falls at the gate; ofßome,—that moment which would have ereged• so vast a void in hu manity,-if the, lettersOf our apostle—his fourteen short letters, eagerly sought for and scattered far and near—had not come in immediately to com plete the great influence, of his living word-by the yet greater influence of thia written word. But, if you desire to forget`iibthing!'you should follow him also into the obtio*Sagteon advance of whicit we are walkititg;.leu:lfijust" endeavor to appreciate the salatarikiltidlide,' -gttming every day in dept and iti cxt* *oh js z yet reserved for him among &tee generations, Oak uritilthe entire fulfilment of the. prophecies whieh he rote himself, And till the return of him whiim .hal loved, so mneh, and longed for so arlently Alit the-obligation of the world to Saint Patill-ttitat which it has owed, that which it shall owe to him,—pious pastors, zealous missionaries, emineni; Christians, useful books, charitable foundationiiexamples of faith, of cha rity, of purity ) of holir —who shall estimate it? —who shall attempt yen to estimate it? it be longs to the entire hfitaa,n family to rise up, and , g , its to confess that, am factors which it deli to proclaim from : age to en 'ell the names of its bene factors is not one which it proclaims with so much agreement, gratitude, and Jove, as the-name of the .apostle Paul." THE FRENCH :ROMANISTS. OF , , CH AGO. -- - According to the i Bowing account in the Bostolt Recorder, not I of. Father Chiniquy's Ir tio people are, satisfied wit Abe ecclesiastical affilia tion into which he i :"`..ente,red; .. Nuirihers of . Sll, them are open to evanif' 3 uences other sources. . ' 's The collision between Father Chiniquy and the Romish Bishop, in, whf the new movement be gan, originated in Chicago, though the most con siderable part of the wprir.-is now at, St. Ann's and at Kankakee. But: Perhaps no part of the field is more importantAn the view of its being susceptible of cultivatioi. There is in Chicago a population of about telithousand who use the French language, inchffling Canttiot Fritneh, ii, Swiss, and others. An i ,- . these are vii wally one people, with common n "'anal sympathies. And this whole field is free Or Protestant cultivation. The past collisions with .the Irish bishop have wholly disaffected them and repelled them from, the Romish hierarchy. There is not now a single Romish priest among them. And the more in telligent, and the leading minds among them say that they will attend ,Protestaiit worship as soon as .a church can be proinred for them. When Father Chiniquy contended with the bishop, one hundred and twenty-fivetamilies openly espoused his cause, apd now fiftyfiimilies are decided and i ffuto intelligent Prottitops. ''Between forty and fifty persona liatie bee,it , .. ti . ?, convOivitauno . : them siticelist January 41, ' ',‘ ', ;N - When Father Chiniquy connected himself with the Presbyterians, the act was premature, so far as these people at Chicago were concerned. They knew little of Presbyterians, or ,of any ether Protestant sect, and so knew - not what was in volved in the transfer. They were- afraid lest it should be a change from one popery to another. Hence there was a revulsion against Presbyte rianism, though not a break with Father Chiniqny —who still takes aninterest in ihent, andin melt ters in general has theiNconfidence. They are under the more partici:di& care of Rev. Mr. Beau bien, a young minister of French Canadian origin, and a recent graduate ofilangor Seminary. They have . chosen to adopt an independent fibrin of church government, and so for the present to have organic connections with no sect. We do not un derstandthat their organization has taken a very, specific form. But ;their preacher is decidedly evangelical. They meet for Sabbath worship in a school-house a part of the day,- and a part of it in Dr. Rice's church. Their Sabbath-School is un der the care of Dr. Rogue,- a dentist, who, speaks French with ease, and who in generally an effect ive helper in the work; ' ;The ladies regularly sus lain a - female.prayer-meelitig. But they do not enjoy the whole labor of their minister. Besides that he is snow abroad for - the purpose of ,collecting aid to build a meeting house, much of his time ii needed to be spent in. the other Canadian settlements—for he is a very important helper of Father Chiniquy in St. Ann's - and Kankakee. And then the settlement at Ottawa,fitnestill others, standin similar relations to,-that in Chicagc.in regardto Presbyterianism:— preferring to be independent. And these, espe cially, look to him for guidance. These in Ottawa are made up in part of the descendants of the famous Oberlin. What is needed in Cbieago is a hem of wdr ship. For : this, they,nre seeking to raise, $2,000 abroad, and expect to raise the rest among them selves. Our Congregational brethren in Chicago endorse their application to the Christian public. J3ut they are not in a condition to give them glitqh material likirl-alfertia7e so Vanyinfant enterprises on their hands, and time soexpensive infants, that their utmost resources: t are in mg:nisi tion. We think that there are few calls for , aid to new institutions . at the West,' nu:de:deserving to be-heard thaw t.l r= . . , __A ItEIitAINS 'OF OffAN- IN CA . V 4 FLINT "lINTVIS-.` ' ' - Attention has lately been attracted to the inte resting discoveries of human bones in the snuill. caves with those of extinct animals; but it is important that hasty conclusions should mot be drawn respect ing the contemporaneousness of maa With those animals: and Sir Charles Lyell has already noticed the very pertinent fact that the human skulls are of the Caucasian variety, belonging, therefore, to one of those races which now inhabit Europe, like the woman whose body wa‘4lo4t!d with a coin of Caransius, in the Paviland cave. The conclusion that because theirbon ere deposited in the I s .musteame cave, men and 'exti et animals . must have lived at the same period, as, unnecessary ,as it dan one who is unreasonable; an hoe observed 'the process by which caverns and fissures in some parts of the world are :fill' d with red-cave earth ( similar to that which mabe found in many of i our own limestone forma ons, will cease to feel surprised at tint mixture of : bones of extinct mam malia with those of man. ' - 'lt is evident that - if theie hones of animals had been first enclosed in th‘llaithAdtieli-‘formed -a .superficial :coating of anyliniestone rock, anA hu man remains had happen in after ages to be buried in the same earth, he bursting of a lake, or some other accident, ght have brought upon it' a body of water which, sinking into" anddisin tegrating the substance. f that earth, (for the effect, has not been tha of a constant flows of water wearing by attritio the edges of rolled sub stances,) would shift it fr units original position, and by depositing the b pes of animals and of men irregularly in some cave would give them the appearance of having been t ontemporaneorts. They may bescontemporaneous ie the cuse, but not so as to the period when;both were on the surface of this earth • and the same remark appliei to 'flints and other objects cut in. 11141'16nd "by.men. - - In the bare limeitone mountains of Egypt are many examples of caves filled with :red - earth, whicb i -exposed to view by the fall of the cliffs, afford good illustrations of the manner in which the earth, once, on the surface, has been washed, and is still sinkininto those caves, even in a country so little visited by...rains; and it is till§ red earth which tinges the stalagmitie deposits so generally found within, them. It is true those eaves" (like .many of our own) captain neither the bones of extinct animals nor of men—the Egyp tians not having had the habit, common in Euilipe, of living, or burying bodies, on heights—but the process of 'the gradual washing of the red earth from the surface into the caves is the same, and I have often seen the residue on the fissures above them left there by a recent storm. Again, the fact of flint knives and chippings, in France, being fotind iminediately on the' chalk -rock, is.-'exactly what we might expect. These were, originally an 4theourface,, and, haying been :first washed off that surface, were necessarily de- limited in the, lowest position upon the rock; and the fossil remains, above which.. they had been, placed hy man, were then carried down,lind depa sited over the flints, some few of these whickhad heen left behind becoming mixed with them. But any length of time may have elapsed between the original enclosurrof the bone§ in the earth, and the placing of the flints on its then unmoved surface; and they only became coeval as' to the period , when they were both deposited in their present position. I offer no theory; I j nage merely from analogous facts, which any one can witness; and the conclu aims to be obtained from them are, that the ani mals-are of a primitive age long antecedent to the creation of man, and that the human bones found with them are of a comparatively recent period. GAILDNEIt WILKINSON. Athenteum. THE SPRFAD Or PROTESTANTISM IN TURKEY. " Fifty years ago, it would not have been safe, re apprehend; for a Christian missionary from any foreign country to go into. Turkey for the, purpose of spreading his religious opinions. The old fires of MahonitriedanfanittioiSni had still a,good deal (f life in them, and requited only to be stirred a little to* cause thim to burst forth with something of their pristine Vigor. Even less than forty-years ego, when our excellent American missionaries first went to * that, country, they did, not deem it prudent to speak to a Turk, or any other believer in the Koran, on thasubject of Christianity, be cause they knew that conversion Would-immedi ately be followed with death. At that time death was the penalty for apostacy from the religion of the Arabian impostor. Our, missionaries pursued a wiser course. Insteicrof approaching the Turks, they turned their attention to the nominal Chris tians in the Turkish empire. Time has shown that this was the true course. Although they met with much Opposition from the hierarchies of the several ==oriental churches at the outset, and for a long time, yet they have lived to see their labors crowned with with great success. Among the mil lions of the adherents ,of a greatly corrupted Chris tianity in the East, they found a wide and impor tact field for their evangelical and evangelistic (if we may - so speak)' efforts. There are six branches of what, may be called the'Orientk Church, viz.: The Greek, Armenian, Nestorian, Syrian, , Coptie, ArktkAbrakiima.— rkke i ck,„in,- delef, the earlier American missionaries had little tir nothing to do. It is only of late that anything has been attempted for the Christian Copts in Egypt. As to the Abyssinians, the missionaries who have labored among them have been Germans or German Swiss-- _ln addition to the six Eastern Churches, or bran - Cies of the Eastern Ohio* we must add the Roman Catholics, or members of the Latin Church,,if,we would include all the tian bodies or Churches in the TUrkish Empire. With them, our. American missionaries have had but little to do. We may remark, in passing, that - if there be 37;000,000 of people in the Ottoman or Turkish Empire as there probably are we may safely say that 17,000 , 000 are nominal Christians. Of these about 10,000,000 are in Turkey in Europe, and 7,000,100 in Asia arid Africa. Of these 17,000,000 ot Christians, it is estimated by the Russian Go vernment, which is likely to know as well as any one, that 12,000,000 belong to the Greek Church. The remaining 5,000,000 belong to the Armenian, Nestorian, Syrian, Coptic, Abyssinian and Roman Catholic churches. Of these the Armenians are the most numerous and next to the members of the Greek communion have the most influence in the Turkish capital and some of the other pfinci pal cities. It is amono. the Armenian Christians that our missionaries have had the greatest success. More than fifty Protestant congregations and churches have been gathered from among these people in Turkey in Europe and Asia Minor. There has been, much success also among the Nestorians, who live in the eastern- portion of the Turkish empire and on the western side of the Persian kingdom. Nor has success been entirely wanting in regard to their efforts to spread the pure gospel among the followers of the Greek church and the Syrian. All these seven churches (includieg the Romanists) in the east, have hierarchies which they boast are connected with the Apostles (some with one and some with another) by an uninterrupted Succes sion; and have about equally departed from the primitive and true Gospel. The- history of modern missions does not -con tain a more interesting chapter than _thatwhich relates to the labors of the Armenian missionaries in Turkey. The confidence of the Ottoman go vernment, his been won, and the door has been opened in all directions for their labors. Recently „they_have hake-broken krekind, p4tion of the Empire - tea Valley of the;Diknaik,l' mainly 'as yet-in the Provence of - Bulgaria. In this new mission, our Methodist brethren' are taking part, having sent two or three excellent ministers, and are proposing to increase their number. .It is an extremely interesting fact, that through the efforts of England, (by her late.eicellent am bassador, Sir Stratford de Redeliffe,) and other Christian powers, not only has; toleration been se cured by acts of the government,. but even reli gious liberty for all. It will require time and a better government than thee:of the weak Abdul Medjid, the present Sultafito make-the •laws re spected in the distant parts of the empire; but they are, enforced in and.near,Constantinople. And it is cheering to learn that thousands of copies of -the Sacred Scriptures* e now sold every year at that city to Turks, who Manifest a spirit of inquiry that is now in "the Miliommedan world. And if we were asked to otile any one thing as the most remarkable among 'the "signs of the times," we should without hesitation say: It is to see a. con verts/ Turk openly preaching the Gospel in the Turkish capital; But the Turkisligovernment is weak and almost powerless. Theo oat flagrant abuses are constantly perpetrated in :the' distant provinces—as, for in stance, in Syria_ at this inoment, where a most deadly:internecine war is going on in Mount Le banon. Turkey has completely failed to do what she promised it the treaty of Paris, in April, 185 Q, namely, thaqlie_would protect the "Christian po r pulation" their rights, civil' and religious. It is on this ageount that Prince Gortschakoff has recently cald7ttie attention of the great powers that werepTrt ies to the treaty just referred to, to the wrong And indignities which the Christians of Turkey arcenduring, in a document of singular moderation era, force. -No action has yet been taken by thtfireat pOwers—not even in the way of inquiry kit& the facts of the case, nor willthere be until it it seen what the Turkish government will do; for it has promised to institute inpiry, and correct the evils complained of. For this pur pose the Vizier is now making a tour of investi gation in the Northern provinces of European Turkey. Whatever may come from these efforts on the part of the Sultan, nothing is more certain than that the Great Powers of Europe will not'let this matter rest. The Turkish Government must and will be re pired to protect all the " Christian population" in their religious as well as their civarights. But what is to become of Turkey? We know not. We are, 'nevertheless. ' oonfident that nothing but the diffusion of the Gospel, both among the down trodden and superstitious Christi ins, and among the Turks themselves can save that Empire •from utter dissolution. Should the Turkish government go down, we much fear that Russia would further aggrandize herself by greatly'extending her boundary south ward; Austria may get a portion, and France will be likely to receive Syria and Egypt. , But whilst the Ottoman empire endures, and the door remains - open to the gospel, how impor tant is it that everythino , should be done that can be, to disseminate widely the word of God among all classes. It is the reading and the hearing of the gospel that can save men; and it is only by the influence of true . Christianity that such nations as the Turks can be civilized and"saved from de struction. ORDINATION OF THE HINDOO A Boston correspondent of the Press & Pribune, of Chicaf,o, who is by no means unfriendly to Uni tarianism, writes as follows in respect to the Brah min convert, who has been, for two years, paraded before the - Churches and public assemblies of that denomination in this country. • " Gangooly, the young Hindoo, who has been in this country two yeara for education, was ordained in Bev. Edward E. Hale's church, Sabbath the 10th. He has since sailed forlltigland on his way to India. I thibk he is a failure. He is very shrewd, cunning even, but wholly untrained-and unregenerate: He was "baptized'Philip, but has never taken the, name: Jugut Cbunder (moon of the world) he prefers to. write himself. A. Brah min does not lose caste until he recognizes baptism by using his baptismal name, so that Jugut can return with his $1,500 and his two years of ovation to the enibra"ce of his old faith Übe chooses. My own decided opinion is that he will do this, for he never had strength of character sufficient to resist much trial, and the little which he bad has not been helped by his two years of egotism and flattery. Grave divines have tolerated in him things for which 4. boy of twelve would be flogged, and have seriously Ordained him to the work of a missionary. The shoals of sentimental young ladies whom he has drawn .after Ain have alone been enough to Spoil a stronger character. at * * His last hours in Boston were spent in going from one to another of the infatuated damsels who have been at various times engaged.to marry him. Oingooly publicly stated that he-has_read but eleven books since coming to America. He. has .. been allowed to travel about - the country to be petted and flattered and spoiled by the curious; lie injudicious and the sentimental. On the same plan he is allowed to exhibit in England on his . ! ..y Lack - --Wir,tintyljunge. in •n -tions from his ,publie announcement that in two or three years we may expect to see, J. C. G., in this country again. And still more from his pro gramme, which is to take a house apart from the deveted missionary who sent him out here, and set up as a high-caste missionary. And strange to say, his impertinent and godless notion of his position, and his gross ingratitude, are winked at by many though even these more than fear that be will turn , up in India'as a Brahmin lecturer on American saints and Solomons rather than a teach er of Christianity. It is not his fault that he is a heathen. It is a great mistake to treat him as more than a Christian, because be is a heathen. He should have had the strictest discipline of study and. private life, both that he might be trained for a wcirk, and that he need not.look back to. America as a place of pleasure only, and hanker for it. He has not been trained. He has been indulged in the most dangerous-of pleasures, that of popular applause and flattery, and he will speedily become homesick for the applause of a curious and unwise sentiment." THE ERA OF PRAYER. It must be manifest to every careful observer of what is passing in the religious world, that it is entering what may be called a new phase, if we may so speak. It is -entering on what may with propriety be called AN. ERA OF PRAYER. It is well nigh three years since the institution of the daily prayer meetings took place—that of Fulton street being, we believe, the first. There must have been a great preparation in the minds of Christians throughout the world for the esta blishment of such meetings; else it is not possible to account for the readiness with which the pro positiOn 'to hold. them was received, not only in this country, but in every part of- Christendom where there is any spiritual fife in the churches. And where it has not been deemed best to „hold literally a daily prayer meeting, in very many cases these meetings have been very greatly in creased in number and frequency, so, that we can not doubt that there has been a far larger amount of earnest, united prayer on the part of true Chris tiana,than in any former period of the history of the church, at least iremodern times. 'We were very much struck with the fact re perted at the late meeting of the synod of the Waldenses, that during the last winter no less than -forty.'-four prayer-meetings-were maintained iu,their valleys. There was one in each village, and in chief hamlet even. And every one who has ever visited the mountain abodes of these poor people, must know, far better than others, how very different it must have been during some por tions of the winter, to go any considerable distance from their villages and hamlets, on account of the roads, or paths rather, being rendered almost im passable by 'the 'snow. Ten years ago it would have been• impossible to hold such meetings, on account of the low staikof religious feeling and interest among that pear e. Not that there were no Christians of zeal and prayer among them, but because the number was small. And at the meeting of the synod to which we have just re ferred, 'it was interesting to see that the duty of earnest, continued, united prayer was the subject which was most dwelt on and enforced by Dr. BEVEL and the other able and devout men in that body: How very encouraging is this fact! ' Meetings for daily prayer have been established in Many of the cities of Great Britain and Ireland, as well as in our own, and have been maintained for months, and in some instances, for more than two years, without much fluctuation or flagging. We attended .the Sansom street noon-day prayer meeting a few days` ago,, when in Philadelphia, and` wire delighted , to s'ee= it so` vrelnittended. Our Fulton street daily prayer meeting is well attended—remarkably. so, considering that this is the season when many of our_citizens betake .them selves to the country. In many cases, special prayer meetings are held once a week, in central places; which possess great interest. This is so in Paris, and many- other places on the continent, as well as in the-British Isles and our country. In no place; however, have these meetings been more interesting than at the mission stations throughout the world. In the large cities- of India, where there , are Cluistian missionaries; English, American, or Orertnan, and &considera ble English population connected with the military VOL. IV.—NO. 48.—Whole No. 213. The World HIAN or civil service, these meetings have been well attended and eminently useful. Probably in no place in the eastern hemisphere have they been more so than in Calcutta. In Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, the Cape of Good Hope, in Liheria, and in the West India islands, these meetings have sprung up, and in many places have been well sustained. About a year ago a few missionaries, mostly if not exclusively Americans, in the upper part of India, resolved to set apart the second week in. January as a season of special prayer, and invited Christians of: this country, and of other lands also, 'to join with them an the observance of this period: The proposition was joyfully accepted, and in Europe, in this country, in Australia, and other distant lands, as well as in India, the ap pointed week was observed as a season for special prayer by many thousands. In Calcutta, so interesting were the daily meetings for prayer, that it was determined to extend them into a second'week. ' - - We are pleased to she that the General Assem blies of the Presbyterian church, the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, and other ecclesiastical bodies, have recommended that the second week of January next be observed in the same way. We have no doubt that it will be so observed very extensively throughout the Christian world. In conducting these meetings it has been found essential to observe a few rules.-1. They must be short. 2. The prayers should be short, direct, and simple. 3. Brief and pertinent remarks should be interspersed. 4. The hymns sung should be truly devotional, and not long. 6. No remarks on controverted or sectarian subjects, or subjects foreign to the object of the meeting, should be allowed. 6. Those who preside should be men of prudence and experience, and all rash and injudicious expressions in exhortation and prayer should bei discouriged. We have said that an Bra of Prayer has com menced; may we not hope that an era of, great success for the gospel is at hand, or rather is now opening on the world ? May we not believe that in answer to the prayers of God's people, all the nations of the earth will speedily be opened to the Gospel? Do we not now see the barriers that a few years hindered the spread of the sacred scrip tures and the preaching of the - goapel, giving way in several directions? Look at Italy for instance, where the door is wonderfully opening for the dis tribution of the Bible in states, in which, a few years ago, men and women were imprisoned for reading the word of God, in their own houses to their friends and neighbors! See how China and Japan. are 'opening to Christianity, at the command of Him who knows how to make even the wrath of man to praise him." Certainly a brighter day is coming for Christianity and humanity. NO PAY NO PRP,AOR An attempt has been made to disparage Mr. Lincoln because he received pay for a public lec ture given in this city, instead of tavelling from Chicago and back and lecturing et his own cost. Mr. Greeley having been called out upon the sub ject, states with characteristiakollexy-that-herims— tried both ways, and-is7ititiell ed that to lecture for ...pay-isrnitieli more comfortable than to bear ones own expenses for the sake of enlightening or benefiting other people. Mr. Greeley is quite in the ri ht of it. There is a lesson here for churches. DS?•l3.'i `i I r; rl 0 ! erßeriiooo churches for which not even their expenses arc proffered them. It sttikes us that the rule of equity and propriety here is very simple, and ought always to be observed. SOME ONE MUST PRAY. A man of learning and talent; but an unbelie ver, was travelling in Manilla on a scientific expe dition. He was escorted by a native, and, as they were about to start, the native, with the refined politeness which characterizes the Orientals, re quested the white stranger to pray to his God. This was probably the only thing he could have been asked to do without being able to comply; and on his declining, the native said, "Well, some GO' must be prayed to, so you will excuse me if I pray to-mine." "Full many a shaft at random sent, Finds mark the archer never meant." So it was in this ease. The unbeliever was re buked by s heathen, and the man of science who had-gone there in quest of natural curiosities, re turned, having found the "pearl of great price!' His next visit is to: be as a missionary to preach Christ. SUDDEN DEATH. On - e of our eithanges wonders why the Episco pal Litany should include a petition against "sud den death." The explanation is not difficult. That petition is a relic of the times when " sacra mental theology" had usurped the place of evan gelical ; when priestly absolution and extreme unction were the orthodox .preacriptiens for a peaceful and safe death; or, earlier still, when nothing was thought worthy of more frequent mention than "the care of the Church to distri bute the encharist to all dying persons that were capable of receiving it." Was not sudden death properly an object of dread r if it had power to step between the soul "ready to perish,"and the sacraments which were necessary to its salvation —or at least to its assurance of salvation? Was it not meet that the Church' should seek to avert so fearful a doom from her members, by the daily supplications of the Litany? And now, when the reason of the prayer has passed away, is it not well to perplex devotion by the prayer without the reason, just to exemplify the advantages of "liturgical worship?" Religions Herald. SIR CHARLES NAPIER'S ESTIMATE OF MILITARY GLORY. Nineteen long letters from Lord Ellenborough ! He has made me Governor of &bide, with ad ditional pay; and he has ordered the captured guns to be cast into a triumphal column, with our name. I wish .he would let me go back to my wife, and girls, it would be more to me than pay, glory and honors. This is glory! is it? Yes. Nine princes have surrendered their swords to me on the field of battle, and their kingdoms have been conquered by me, and attached to my own country. Well, all the glory that can be desired is. mine, and I care so little for it, that, the moment I can, all shall be resigned, to live quietly with my wife and girls; no honor or riches repays me for absence from them. Otherwise this sort of life is no life to me ; is agreeable, only as it may enable me to do good to these poor people. Oh! if I can do any good thing to serve them where so'much blood has been abed in accursed , war, I shall be happy. May I never see another shot fired! Horrid, horrid war! Yet, how it wins upon and hardens one when in command. No young man can resist the tempta tions, I defy him; but thirty and sixty are diffeK ent.—The Life and Opinions of General Sir Charles Jas. Napier. "HE WENT AWAY • SORROwmuL." The sorrow experienced was connected with going away from Christ. No one was ever made sorrowful by coming to Christ. Sooner shall the traveller, whose eyes have rested for days on the barren, burning sands of the desert, be made sor rowful by reaching the oasis with its refreshing waters, its green herbage, its oleanders and olives; sooner shall he who has been long an exile in foreign lands, be made sorrowful by approaching his native shores, and by crossing the threshold of his home to find all. his heart-treasure safe, than a guilty, wandering, outcast, condemned sinner shall be made sorrowful by coming to Christ. N. Y. Independent.