194 Antevican thtoillievian mitt vat:gelid. THURSDAY. AIIGIUST a, 1860. JOHN W. MEARS, EDITOR, ASSOCIATED WITH ALBERT BARNES GEORGE DUFFIELD, 38. THOMAS BRAINERD, I JOHN JENKINS, HENRY LARUE% THOMAS J. SHEPHERD, THE DEATH OF INFANTS. Now, while the scythe of the harvester is pass ing swiftly among the standing crops and level ling them to the earth, the keener, surer scythe of the great reaper, Death, goes to and fro among the ranks of men. But it is not only the mature that he gathers into his great garner; at this season especially, it is the tender, the frail,---snch as are Just putting forth the green ness and freshness of infant life, that feel the keen edge of his devouring knife. How many little graves are opened at this season of the year 1 and what treasures of the household are swallowed up in their narrow but dreadful gulfs I How many bright eyes, the light of the family circle, grow dim I How many voices tuneful with infant laughter are hushed! How many patter ing little feet are silenced What interesting growth and expansion of body and mind are in terrupted! What vivid hopes and darling plans of parents are crushed in the bud I Have you never beheld the fond mother bending, watching over the cradle of the little one, and seen how, after a period of agonizing suspense, she re linquished one hope after another of its reco very, as if it were the yielding up of her own life? Have you seen her, ere the spark of life had quite gone out, draw the unconscious suf ferer to its once familiar resting place, and fold it in one last embrace of mingled affection and despair ? The cold, busy world, engaged with cares and griefs, which it considers of more im portance, passes, with more than its usual indif ference, the funeral of an infant, and indeed we must confess that men have sorer ills to endure than this; but there is an exquisite tenderness in our grief for the loss of an infant that, we think, is experienced in no other affliction. The image of infantile helplessness, and tenderness, and comparative innocence that is inwoven with our recollections, and that associates itself with the thousand mementoes of the lost one, imparts a peculiar poignancy to our sorrows and sum mons forth a freer flood of tears. The heart of the fond parent, wrung with an guish at the loss, at first troubles itself to ima gine why God should have bestowed the gift only; as It would seem, to twine itself around his innermost being, and then should tear it away, leaving him only the wasted, inanimate body to bury, with new pangs, from his sight. Repeated bereavements upon the same house hold, stir up deeper questionings and tempt to re bellious thought against the mysterious workings and permittings of the All-wise and All-good. But need we know all before we will be com forted? Must the leaves of God's book be let down to the gaze of sorrow-blinded, short sighted mortals before they will dry up their tears or weep submissively ? Shall we not get comfort in. trust? And in the deeper mystery, shall we not be the more comforter because we can trust the more ? There is much, very much to comfort us in the death of an infant. The lamb is ,gathered safely into the fold of the Good Shepherd. No anxious doubts for its future well-being now mingle with the hopes and plans of the parents. No suspicion of hypocrisy, no dread of self-de ception.need detract from the certainty of these hopes. Whatever may be said of the grown-up ones, those that were called away early are safe. There is no doubt of the covenant holding good in their case. We are inclined to the fond ima gination that God saw it was necessary to take them away, in order to keep them within the merciful provisions of the covenant. He took them because he had set his heart upon them, because they must not be lost. They are spared the severe and perilous training of the world. No graves shall ever yawn at their feet to receive the choicest treasures of their affec tions. Grief shall not cloud their brows. Sin shall not reign over them. They shall not grow up to know themselves chained to the body of this death. No remorse, no strivings with the Holy Ghost, no controversy with God, no biding a guilty conscience in refuges of lies, no agony of conviction shall mark their experience. By no tardy progress interrupted with numerous backslidings shall they grow in grace. By no broken meditations where worldly thoughts and selfish plans distract the mind, do they imper fectly commune with God. But near to God, knowing as they are known and seeing face to face, under the disciplining power, not of faith and hope, but of love alone, without a struggle from a reluctant, imperfectly regenerated na ture, with the steps of angels they advance along the eternal pathway of progress in knowledge and holiness. Weep not, stricken mother, bereaved father, fond brothers and sisters ! There is a rare ele ment of comfort in your sorrow. So fortunate are these early gathered fruits of the great har vester, that you may well wish to share - the lot they enjoy, and to say, as David did, with glad expectation: "I shall go to him, but he shall not return to me." THE MASSACRES IN SYRIA. From our own columns, as well as from the daily papers, our readers have been made ac quainted with the leading facts in the horrid war of extermination now going on between two parties and races in Syria. The Druzes, on the one hand, are a sort of heretical Mohammedans, while the Maronites are nominal Roman Ca tholics. There is little choice between them, we imagine, as to doctrine or practice. Twenty years ago they were engaged in a similar war fare, from which . the so-called Christians came off with decided advantage. They were, no doubt, quite es violent and unrelenting then as the Druzes are now. The Zahleans, who de feated the Druzes at that time, have been very overbearing and Insulting ever since. It was to forestall a general attack, expected by the Druzes, that they rose so suddenly upon the Christians. Mr. Lansing, a missionary of the United Presbyterian Church at Alexandria, says: "Zable contains about 10,000 inhabitants, and if the Druzes take it there will doubtless be an awful carnage there, and almost any one who knows the Zahleans will be constrained to say, Amen. I Wed, when in Syria, to be able, al most infallibly, to distinguish a Zablean from the people of the other villages after a five mi nutes' conversation, and that simply by his boastful and inflated manner of talking; and when on their favorite topic, of their victory over the Druzes, it was awful to hear with what a gusto they would dwell upon, and embellish the heart-rending details. The day of retribu tion for them has probably come, and as they have for a long time been in a state of rebellion against the Turkish government, it is not likely that they will receive much aid from that quar ter, even if the Turks were otherwise disposed, and able to render it." Zahle has fallen, together with Hasbeiya and Damascus, with fearful slaughter. These are inland towns. Beirut, which is a seaport, and, which is protected by the navies of France, England and Russia, has also been threatened by the Moslem fanatics, whose thirst for blood in Syria as in India seems insatiable. Bham dun, upon Mt. Lebanon, the residence, gas our readers will remember, of Rev. Wm. A. Benton and lady, whose interesting letters we laid be fore them last week, bas not been attacked, if we may judge from the silence observed in re gard to it in the reports from the scene of con flict. Mr. Benton expressed his determination to remain, and the decisive and authoritative measures which be took, and which the people were glad to have him take, in all probability reassured the inhabitants, and warded off the threatened blow. Yet, in the midst of such in discriminate slaughter and outrage, and with a foe emboldened and maddened by past triumphs and excesses, we cannot but feel anxious at least for the safety of the mission, if not for the persevering and fearless servants of God who have determined to stand by it. The latest in telligence will be found in another part of the paper. But besides these horrors in Asiatic Turkey, we are shocked to hear of even greater excesses, of crimes against humanity and the Christian religion, committed apparently in cooler blood and with less semblance of excuse, in the Euro pean provinces of the empire. We are informed of these occurrences through certain letters in a Brussels paper, Le Nord, purporting to come from Bosnia and Bulgaria, the scene of the al leged outrages. We noticed these letters in the New York Observer of a fortnight ago, but the recital was so cold and bald, and so isolated from other evidence, that we hesitated to yield to them our credence, and ventured to suspect that the political bias of the Belgian journal might be a ground for exaggerating, if not for inventing, such stories. The following is a brief view of their contents: "The statqpnent of the first is a mournful re cord of wholesale murder of the peasantry in various places, and of the seizure of defenceless women and children, and of brutal treatment towards them, such as was only equalled in the Sepoy rebellion in India. The second relates the imprisonment, principally in the north, of Bosnia, of the priests and others of the more influential men, who were treated with great se verity, some of whom died in a few days after their imprisonment. No doubt was entertained that they were poisoned by order of the Turks. Statistics are given of imprisonment in different places, amounting in all to more than 3000 per sons. 'Every morning,' it is stated, 'the. Turks take from the prisons numbers of corpses of men killed by the stroke of an axe, and cast them into the streams like carrion.' Christians wan dering at large, who have been pillaged, are re fused by the Turks the most trifling means of subsistence, and are obliged to support them selves by eating,the bark of trees; children wan der in companies through the country begging bread; many dead bodies of these helpless wan derers are found along the road sides who have perished from hunger and fatigue; others are seized, carried away, and declared Mussulmans; those making opposition are scourged, and made to endure all sorts of disgrace and torture, from which numbers die. Such are some of these sickening details. "But Austria, too, perfectly in character with the minions of the Romish beast, comes in for her share in these merciless cruelties. As the Bosnian Christians fly,—as they do in great numbers into Austria for refuge,—those of the Greek Church are received and supplied with food, only on the express condition that they renounce their faith and become Roman Ca tholics A number of these unhappy fugi tives, rejecting these conditions, attempted to flee from Austria into Servia, but were seized by Austrian soldiers and imprisoned—escaping persecution in Turkey only to find it with less severity, if any, in Austria." THE MARTYRS OF THE MUTINY. No one will take up this little volume, issued by our Publication Committee, without finishing it. Its thrilling narratives of the trials and tri umphs of Christian courage in Christian men and women amid the horrors of the great Indian re bellion, rivet the attention and stir the heart. We endorse the estimate put upon it by Dr. Henry M. Scudder, who says, 'writing from Paris to a friend—"l could not find time to open your book till I got on board the steamship Illinois. I read it with the deepest interest. If it attains a circu lation equal to its merits, all your wishes in re gard to it will-be fulfilled." The rebellion of the Sepoys or Native army of British India, with all its awful , deeds of cruelty and blood, has furnished as a compensation a most precious page of history for the church, worthy of a place alongside of that which records the faith and patience of primitive witnesses for the truth.. After a few words of introductory matter by Dr. Jenkins, of Calvary Church, formerly himself a missionary in India, the book opens with a very clear and comprehensive statement of the moral condition of India sixty years ago, and the happy changes which have taken place since that time under the combined influence of British ascend ency and missionary effort. After these important preliminary facts, the book proceeds to narrate how at different points of the outbreak heathenism rose against the church, and how the church stood up in the spirit and power of its Head against its wicked and perse cuting_enemies. The church triumphed. Every form of torture, almost, was tried to lead the native Christians to abjure their faith in Christ. British, American, and Hindoo Christians, bore the one testimony for their religion, and sealed it with their blood. Weak and timid women, educated amid the luxuries and refinements of the highest circles of society, armed with the power of faith, calmly met death for the name of Jesus. It thrills the soul to read of the heroic courage and firmness of the native converts, neglecting every tempting proposal by which they might purchase life. One of these native Christians stated of himself, that while on his way to prison, with his family ? guarded by fierce Mussulmans with drawn swords, "I raised my heart in praise and adoration to the' Lord Jesus Christ for having given us grace to stand firm in the trying hour when our lives were disposed of, and to overcome all the temptations which the Judges could hold forth. I thanked my blessed Lord for counting us worthy to suffer for his name sake." This is a book not of reasonings, or theories, or Aintriran Ttrollgitriait , aita 6tittott 6vangtliot, abstract doctrines about Christianity, but a book of facts,—facts showing what the Christian re ligion is, and what it can do for the soul in the moat trying hour—facts not of Christianity in the first century, not of Christianity nineteen hundred years old, when some would say it is effete—facts not of the days of our ancestors, but of our own days—facts which show that the martyr spirit still exists, and that there is still in the church faith and love to Christ that is prepared, if called for, to suffer and die for his name. Do any doubt the reality of genuine conversions among the heathen ? Do any suspect that flindoos embrace the gospel only from interested motives— for the sake of some temporal gain? Let such read of natives offering their lives sooner thin deny their faith, and their doubts and suspicions must pass away. Christianity has already attained in India a power over some minds stronger than life. Mark, too, the transforming efficiency of the gospel as brought to light in this rebellion. These meek, humble, patient, suffering Christians of India—who are they? They are of the same nature, the same stock, once of the same religion, and the same spirit with their now fiendish and blood-thirsty tormentors. But the gospel has changed the lion into the lamb—the lover of cruelty into a love: of mercy. And what the gospel has done in these and for these, it can do for all the souls of India of all castes. _ This little book is an antidote to all discourage ment in the work of missions. No Christian can read the blessed experiences and testimonies of the native martyrs of the mutiny without feeling that this glowing exhibition of Christianity given in the rebellion more than-compensates for all the expenditure of toil, wealth and self-sacrifice, be stowed in the work of Indian missions. DISCUSSION ON THE RELIGIOUS PRESS. At the late annual meeting of the General As sociation of Massachusetts, one of the questions discussed by previous appointment was: "Is there any thing to be desired, and if so, what, in the conducting of our Religious Press?" A wide field of remark was opened,• and a great variety of opi nions was expressed. Almost every one seemed to feel himself competent to give advice, and seemed to think the thing could be better done than it was done. Rev. Dr. Todd introduced the discussion by quoting the remark of an ex-go vernor, that "the New York Observer had fallen from grace and that the Independent had never been born again." Whether Dr. Todd endoried this sentiment, or bow it was received in the As sociation, does not appear in the published ac counts. "Various defects in conducting religious jour nals were specified. One brother did not like to have so many personalities. Another wanted less quack medicines advertised, One said that minis ters were to blame for our not having better papers. They sent articles to the press not fit to be pub lished, and they were inserted. One reader wants a paper mostly devoted to anti-slavery, another to temperance, another to fighting narcotics, &c. "After various suggestions were made for the benefit of editors, they were permitted to make confessions, and spoke in their own defence. One said that he had long ago found out that it was impossible to make a, paper to suit every class of readers. He had tried to follow the path of truth and duty, and let popularity take care• of itself. A paper must have a character as well as, individuals. A paper may have Afaults as well as individuals. No minister in this house, if his character were analyzed, would be found faultless. No publication is faultless. To err is human. If a periodical on the whole does good, it has a claim on all good people to sustain it. "Another editor said that a paper should be made to suit one man and that one should be the editor. He said further, that he should have made a worse paper than he has, if he bad published all the communications that ministers have sent to him. To keep from making a worse paper than he has, he has burnt up their communications. The dis cussion took such a turn that editors and minis ters were both very kindly rebuked. The dis cussion closed very pleasantly." In regard to the advertising of patent medicines and the like, the Boston Congregationalist makes some very pertinent suggestions, which we recom mend to the consideration of such of our readers as are disposed to complain : "Advertisements—of patent medicines, and 'Spalding's Prepared'—came ityalso, for censure. For our part, we wish that the religious com munity were willing—as they certainly are able— to pay for their religious papers, prices that would enable them to be published without loss, if ad vertisements were excluded, and their space occu pied with other matter. But the time is not yet come for such a movement. Two dollars a year, is the utmost that the great majority of men are willing to pay for such a paper as we publish, and the class to which it belongs. If now, we were to relinquish the $2,000, or $3,000, per annum, which we receive for advertising, our paper, which is now self.supporting and remunerative, would not pay expenses. Whenever our subscribers be come sufficiently anxious to see advertisements banished from our columns, and their place filled with reading matter, to pay us $3,00 a year, in advance, for the same sized sheet which they now receive, (with the advertisements,) for $2,00, we shall be happy to accommodate them. Mean while, we mean to be careful as to the quality of those inserted. -And—with deference .to the bro ther railing the objection—we submit that the advertisement to which be refers, while of course, exaggerated and foolish, is less morally dangerous than certain editorial matter, which we almost weekly find in some of our religious exchanges." "CONGRATULATIONS WANTED." Oar Old School contemporary at Charleston, the Southern Presbyterian, is very much exer cised at our late article in regard to the Ro chester Assembly with the above heading. It asks indignantly and incredulously, who sought either the priyers or the congratulations of the New School, as we assert. It is very sure such a request did not proceed from the Southern Presbyterian. And would it have been any the worse for you if it had, neighbor? Is it indeed an offence for an "Old School" paper to seek the prayers of the "New School" or of "good men generally," in - behalf of their As sembly before it meets, or to expect their con gratulations upon its adjournment? If so, then we must decline giving to our Charleston con temporary the desired informition.!` We may not betray the Old School organ which was so injudicious as to follow what, in our view, was but the prompting of the simplest and most natural of Christian feelings in suggesting that we and good men - generally should join in prayer for the coming General Assembly.. If we had imputed to the Old. School the feelings here manifested--that capability of despising and repelling our prayers and our sympathy in which the Southern Presbyterian here boasts itself, we - are sure, we would have been charged with a gross want of charity towards our bre thren. However, we are Pleased to find this feeling not shared in byOtheri of the Old School press. The list Preakter ;of Cincinnati thus responds to the sir,ticl4ritgrtestion, from which it quotes at some 1610: We peruse with , mach pleasure, an editorial under the head " Cd4rfatulations Wanted," published in the last number of the American Presbyterian, of IthiliAlphia, the organ ortbe New School Presbyte4ns of the city of Bro therly Love, and the re 'on round about. From 13 this article we extract following paragraphs, which give a fair state ut of the action of 1860 and which we are glad' o. see. RELATIONS OF -""' E PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH TO THE " AK OF HOME MIS SIONS. REPORT OF THE ASSELY'S COMMISSION. r ,ectirrnrust. The 3d section of theteport is highly important as exhibiting the princii•les on which the Ame rican Horne MissionarylSociety was constituted. These principles by theft import and by the man ner in which they were loriginally acted upon, so ..-? - • evidently leave loorn.. fiii distinct denominational action on the part of , t,lt 4 w-operating, bodies, that , 1 41 -.' there must have beerr a dieal change in the ma nagement, of the secie ' efore, such action could have been regarded aC i ati offence. The report I says : ti It is not a denominaticipal Society. It is neither Presbyterian nor Congiegational nor Dutch Re formed, nor yet a union two or more denomina tions, as such, under mutual compact. 'lt is t purely a voluntary Soci) i y. It binds nobody ex cept, those who agree ': 'be bound by it, and it binds them only so far ' -they have agreed so to be bound. In respect, the amount of their con tributions to its treasuriit binds them, not to the extent of their ability, kt t only to the extent of their free will under t e guidance of their own t i l convictions and discreti ' . On the other hand, the Society itse l f is au ct to the control of no man or body of men out , 11 f its.elf. This Assembly has no control over it, flave any of the eccle siastical bodies of New gland or elsewhere. It ‘ is bound only by its conStitution and its own en gagements with others. /(Still it would not be just to say, that it is free to.'' nOre the denominational peculiarities of those are connected with it. Immediately on its orga ration, it invited the lco operation of. Christians, "nd bodies of Christians, of especially three dello ,nortions, and with them entered into certain - ob ' Wens, on condition of their assisting in its wo " z t 1. In the first place ,: " ( Society pledged itself not to interfere with anyrof their denominational preferences or their denotitinational work. It has been thought, and confililentlY affirmed by some, that the denominations th'imselves mutually agreed to sink their denominational character in a kind of common neutrality, aril abandon all care or pro 'vision for their own ;denominational interests, trusting to the impartiality of the Society. . But nothing of the kind is teke found on record any where. On the contrarr7there is abundant, proof that members of these , denominations deprecated such a result, and the Sifiety, to quell their fears, sacredly assured them thit no such results should be attempted. `,.. We have already rife4ed , to the principles es tablished as fundamentik -by the New England brethren before the Society assumed its new or ganization. One of theseivas, " that existing local Societies were not to be superseded except by their own desire, and not to be impeded in their opera tions." This principle is,reßeated again and again , in the early publications* Abe' Society, and de ' dared to be fundamenta, . • t Report; -p. 47.) r Now ; it so happens. th '.arriong these local So-- cieties, so °died, and!, p essly enumerated- as such in the same report, (p. 60,) is the Board of Missions of the General Assembly of the Presby terian Church. 'This wasistrictly a denominational organ, and had been in existence, as we have shown before, for many years. If, therefore, there be any thing which may justly be regarded as fun damental among the principles of the Society, it, is that such denominationfal organs, as the Assem bly's Board of Missions, were not to be superseded except by their own desire, and not to be impeded in their operations. ., -1 , The. second principle of" the society alluded to in the report is, "that contributions to its funds were to be purely . uoluntap." "Here are no pretensions to authority," says the first Report, " but-thasystem under which it is our privilege to serve the cause of 'missions, is one which, like that of the Gospel, does not com pel but invites to duty." "Two Synods," adds the Secretary, ".embracing the whole southern and central part of the State of Ohio, and a portion of Indiana, have chosen to commit the management of.missionary business to their Presbyteries, wbo„4011 of course exercise -their unrestrained choice i co-operating both with the A. IL M. S., andthe. As.sembly's Board. This is doubtless as it Mould be, and is on the whole the best arrangement that can be made in this State for the peace and prosperity of the Home Missionary cause." In theflome hassionary for April,lBBo, (p. 199,) the action of the Chillicothe Presbytery, in orga 0 - nizina. their Committee of Missions, is recorded with a cordial approval. "The above Committee," writes its Corresponding Secretary, "`consisting of four ministers and two elders, is trusted with the manaaement of the Missionary business within the bounds of the Presbytery,.and is direoted to open a correspondence with they Board of Missions of the General Assembly,ankthe A. 11. M. Society, and, as far as practicable, co-operate with both.. You will see then that our plan is to co-operate with our brethren in the Erst, both the Home and the Assembly's Board, or 'rather get-them to'help us first to furnish our own I)estitute with the bread of life, and 'then unite w4h you in giving it to others." These and otherpases tbat might be re ferred to show the working, and illustrate the principles of the Society as understood by its ori ginal founder& The largqt ,liberly was allowed, not only to individuals a , i o aWnirehes, but to eccle siastical bodies, whether_akiliaries or not, to co operate with the Society j4t, as far as they saw fit, and exercise their own diseantion in co-operating with, or contributing to, l another organization acting side by side with the Society, on strictly denominational principles. The Commission can not find the shadow of evidence that any compact, agreement, or understanding existed between the denominations represented in the A. H. M. S., or between the Society and e4her of the denomina tions, requiring the latter to carry on missionary work only through the Society. On the contrary, the largest liberty to all phrsons was among" the most fundamental principles. The third principle referred to, is that governing the relations of the society Wits auxiliaries. These auxiliaries are rather smaller voluntary societies, operating in a limited sphere, or they are Presby- - teries and Synods which, through some organ, as a Committee of Missions, have sought the relation of auxiliary to the Parent Society. By the stipulations it was required, that the auxiliary should "pay over.to the Treasurer of the A. H. M. S. the whole .autOunt of its annual in come from time to time, dedpeting incidental ex penses; that " all its missionaries should act under a commission from the parent Society;" that "no missionaries or agents shouid he appointed by it out of its own specified bounts;" and that it should be "governed in its appropriations by the general principles which govern the appropriations of the Parent Society." On the other hand, it was stipu lated on the part of the parent Society, "to allow the auxiliary the right to appoint arid pay mission aries within its own limits to any amount, not ex ceeding the above-named income," and for this purpose s " having, reported itp.income to the parent Society," to retain so much of it as shall be need ful to fulfil its engageinents. Shorild more be needed, further appropriations were to be made by the parent Society on its own responsibility, acting always, however, under the advice and recommen dation of the Directors of the auxiliary. To secure the utmost independence on the part of the aux iliary in controlling its own operations, it was also stipulated that, " a sufficient number of blank commissions should be furnished to it by the Ex ecutive Committee of the Parent Society, signed by the Chairman and Corresponding Secretary of the same, which should be filled and countersigned by the proper officers, and issued on the responsi bility of the auxiliary." The object of these sti pulations is manifest, viz.: to give the auxiliary, whether a Society, a Synod, or a Presbytery, the entire control of all missionary operations on its own field. Your Commission cannotbetter express it than in the words of the Society itself : ".By these stipulations, each auxiliary is left to the in dependent and unembarrassed exercise of all its rights in the business of appropriating its own funds to the relief of the needy within its limits, while it secures to itself the additional advantage of directing other appropriations made by the parent Society within the same.bounds." It should be observed, that the principles and engagements contained in these extracts have never been altered or abrogated by any action or law either of the Society or its Executive Committee. Ina recent correspondence of that Committee with the. Commission of the , Assembly, they declare as follows: " The auxiliary system adopted by the Committee was announced to the public in the. Appendix to the Second Report in 1828, under the title, 'Terms of connection and stipulation,' and was published with each 'Report for several successive years." An outline of this system was published again with the nineteenth Report in 1845, and os been -piiblished with every subse , quent Report to the present time." Itis to these' documents, thus endorsed by the Executive. Com mittee, that your. Commission has referred in the above statements respecting that system; and from these it appears that, according to the fundamental principles of the Society, it is the right of any of your Presbyteries or Synods, by placing themselves in an auxiliary relation to the Society, and govern ing themselves "by its general principles," to have the entire control of the operations of the Parent Society within their several bounds, the provision above referred to only excepted. The fourth principle relates to the selection and authentication of missionaries and agents. It was a fundamental principle in both cases, that they should bear testinionial4 of approbation and acceptableness from the ecclesiastical bodies within whose bounds they were to exercise their functions. On this point, as was very natural, jealousies arose at a very early day. To set them at rest, the Executive Committee .(see Home Mis sionary, May, 1880) employs the following lan guage: "It has pained us to know that some of our brethren, in distant sections of the Presby terianl body, have been induced to believe that it was our design to, trample on the right exercise of ecolesiaadeal authority, and impose upon the churches unacceptable men. Nothing can be more unfounded. We hive ever regarded it due to the Christian public to know, and have therefore con stantly affirmed, that the simple object of this Society is to aid feeble congregations in the sup port of a preached Gospel, and to send the Gospel to the destitute by-ministers approved by the eccle siastical bodies within whose bounds they labor." In the fourth Report, referring to similar jea lousies, they say again: "On the field covered by each of the denomieations, it (that is, the Society) acts in entire subserviency to their rules of doctrine, discipline, and intercourse with each other, by re quiring every missionary to bear credentials ac ceptable to the .Presbytery, Clam's, or Association, in whose bounds he is appointed to labor." Again, in the third Report, pp. 64, 5, " the Committee," they say, "appoint - none except on due evidence of such approval, and withdraw them when that evi dence ceases to be satisfactory. It can plant no missionary in stations yielded to the supervision of an auxiliary Society, Presbytery or Synod, without the, apprebation of the same, and,-whetr a mission - ary or agent shall cease to be approved by the Auxiliary, the parent Society will be bound to re call him or withdraw his support." it is by a comparison of the recent policy of the society towards several of our Presbyteries and churches with these constitutional principles, that. we learn where the blame of fickleness and un faithfulness chiefly rests. Here is the true meri dian by which the position of the Society and the co-operative bodies must be calculated, and from which all departures must be reckoned. WHO ARE THE DRITZESI It is difficult to gather from the information at hand, much about, these peculiar people, who are now attracting the attention of the civilized world by their ferocious plundering, burning and butch ering the so-called Christians of the „Lebanon dis trict of Syria. They have always been quiet-and reserved about their peculiar doctrines, and do not attempt to promulgate them, but they are a fero cious and warlike people, evincing a deadly hatred toward- the Papal t Christians, or lilaronites, re siding among them. It must not be forgotten that prior to these dis turbances, there were but about one hundred Pro testant native Christians in all our Mission Churches hi Syria. Now most of these are mur dered. It is the Papal Christians, the Maronites, principally whom the Druzes have been slaying. The Drums number .one hundred thousand, and the Maronites one hundred and eighty thou sand, the whole population of Syria being about twelve hundred and fifty thousand. The remain der of the inhabitants are divided between Moham medans and members of the Greek Church. The Marmite Christians who have been so free ly murdered, are Arabs, of an ignorant, semi-hea thenish, degraded class, believing in the Virgin Mary, and strongly papal in their worship and doctrine; but they do not hold the Pope of Rome as their head. They are image-worshippers, and hence the great pretended hatred of the Druzes, who, being in many respects like the Mahomme dans, hold all image worship in ,perfect abhorrence. The regularlqahommedans, it wilLbe observed, have joined the „Druzes in many of their reuse- The Maronites and Druzes inhabit the Lebanon district of Syria, extending from Tyre, on the Mediterranean coast, up as far north as Tripoli, and eastward into the country, across Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, a distance of fifty to one hundred miles. It is in this district exclusively that the la bors of the American Board in Syria have been concentrated during the past nineteen. years. Prior to 1841, Jerusalem and the country adja cent was under the care of our missionaries, but that region has been abandoned to other societies, and our mission force has been located in the most northern field. For the past forty years the Board has kept up a vigorous mission in Syria. Internal troubles, not unlike the present, although never, before, so sanguinary, have materially impeded missionary operations. In 1828, the missionaries were driven out of the country by political troubles, and re mained away for two years. In 1841 again, simi lar troubles interfered sorely with the progress of the Gospel, when, atter a lapse of nine years, the country was taken from under Egyptian rule, and by the aid -of the European powers, placed again under the Turkish government. In 1845, the Maronites and Druzes kept up a civil 7ar,,the latter ; as now, being the successful party. Again, for, five years prior to 1858, the unsettled state of the country hindered missionary prodiess very Severely. Beyiut has been, from the start, the head-qnar tem of the mission. It is a large seaport town, and the most important place by far in Syria. Its location is very central for the mission, about half way between Tyre and Tripoli, and it is to this place that the missionaries, and the refugees that have followed them, have been collecting. on leaving the coast, the land rises as you proceed, and continues to rise until, the summits - of Lebanon are reached—forming, with the slopes beyond, and those of the Anti-Lebanon, the Lebanon District. All the mission stations lie between the sea and the first ridge, except two, Aleppo and Hasbeiyeh. Much of the country is rich; the inhabitants, though mostly poor, are industrious and bard-work ing, making their living by the cultivation of the vine and the olive. Silk is also largely cultivated in some districts, the mulberry growing luxuri antly throughout Lebanon. We gather from letters received from Rev. W. A. Benton, who has been a missionary. in Mount Lebanon for the past twelve years; and has labored exclusively amongst the Maronites and Drums, the following : " The Druzes are said to have taken their name and origin from a man called Darnly, who lived about 850 years ago. This man was of Persian origin, and came to Egypt and preached in the Mohammedan Mosque, the Di vinity of Hakim, the reigning Caliph. ' "A tumult arose among the people, Darnzy escaped and came to Syria and there preached the same doctrine. The Caliph was assassi nated a few years after, through the instrumen tality of his sister; to save her own life. Ham zet, whom the Druzes surnamed the Director, posted on the door of the mosque that the' Ca liph bad concealed himself for the trial of the faith of his followers. After the end of a thou sand years the Druzes expect the re-appearance of the said Caliph. in manifestation of his Di vinity—that is within 150 years of the present time. "The Druzes in their doctrines, teach that all the souls in the world were created in the be ginning,—a fixed number which can never be increased or diminished; that the soli], when a person dies, passes into another body, ever transmigrating from one body 'to another through successive generations. Of course they deny the resurrection of the dead, a com ing judgment, and the immutable awards 'of eternity. Their religious system is Heathen ism, more or less 'combined with Judaism, Christianity and Mohammedanism, and they are strongly attached to the sentiments and practices of their ancestors. "God has given us their confidence , so far that they give us their children to educate (Mr. Benton's schools number 1,000 children,) and sometimes come to' our religious worship, and always make us welcome in their villages and dwellings. "Some of them offer their children for Chris tian baptism. God is -able to change their hearts and make them valuable helpers in the promotion of Christ's eternal kingdom• upon this goodly Lebanon." The above, together with other evidences we have of the popularity of Mr. Benton amongst the Druze population, gives the possible reason for the exemption of his mission in Bhamdnn from the horrors which have overitelnaed , the lathers and leads us to hope that itmay remain . thus forturate. • TICE DIGEST MESSRS. EDITORS :---The committee appointed to prepare a Digest of the Acts of the General Assembly of the. Presbyterian - Church, are ready to transfer it to the Presbyterian Publication Committee. It will make a volume of about 500 large octavo pages, and• will form, a com plete history, arranged under several heads of all the Acts and Testimonies of our General As sembly, including those of the original Synod, which, previous to the formation of the- Assem 7 bly, was the highest judicatory of the Presbyte rian Church in the United States. It.will be systemiticflly arranged- and fully indexed, and, well printet and bound. In every General Assembly, and very fre quently in Synods, Presbyteries, and. Sessions, the want of this volume is seen. We have now no method of learning the decisions which have been made on various.important .points other than by searching , the mass of minutes of the successive Assemblies, and of these a All set can rarely be had. The Publication Committee are anxious to issue the Digest, but the work will be costly, and little sold outside of the ministry and elder ship of our - Own body. .Hence they wish to know, before entering upon it, how great will be the probable demand. They knoW that it should be in possession of each minister and church session, and that it will be desired by all. But they do not know how many persons will feel at liberty to avail themselves of this;op portunity of securing. it. They hope that at least each session will take a single copy. If this is done it can be immediately published. The price of the Digest will be $3.00. To those subecilbing, it. will, be sent, on its ,publi cation, with postage , pre-paid by us,' for $2.75. Should a sufficient number of copies be sub scribed for, the work will be taken in hand im mediately. The Committee can judge of the . demand for, the work by the responses made, and so regulate their cpurse. The .address of subscribers can be sent to Yours, &c., Joax W. DULL ES, Secretary Presbyterian Publication Conk REV CORTLANB VAN ItENSELAER. This distinguished divine and excellent man, late Secretary of the Board of Eat:Cation in the O. S. branch of the Church, deceased after a lingering illness, at Burlington, N. J., the place of his residence, on Wednesday, 'the 25th of July. A SCHOOL BIBLE DESTROYED BY A SCHOOL DIRECTOR IN . PENNA. EXCITING WENN AT JrAlkrEgm, LE i v i attn COUNTY, PA. From the Hazelton correspondence of the. Pittston Gazette we extract:the following: Great indignation was excited among some of the inhabitants of Jeanesville last week by Mr. Carey, one of the School Directors, entering the school-room of 'Miss Torbert. Without' speaking to the lady, walked to her desk, opened it and searched among the books.: Not finding what he was in,search of, he asked Alias Tor bert if she had a Bible in the room. - The Bible was lying on the desk. Miss . Torbert took it up. Mr. Carey came to her and took the book out of her hand. She then called for Mr. Stokes, who came in and asked Mr. Carey , to step into the hail. with him, as .:he : 'wished to talk with him. Mr. Carey promised him he would do no violence nor be insulting; then. they returned to the room. • Mr. Carey, walking into the niid- Ale of the room, , .said, as he opened the Bible : "Miss Torbert, do 'you see this?" then tore the Bible in ,pieees,-throwing the leaves on the floor, and stamping on them , in a great rage. Misa Torbert requested Mr. Stokes to order him to leave the room, or she would be obliged to leave it. Mu. CARrit.",..What's that?" :Mtge Tiittikit — ir. --- /v 1 wish you to leave the room." • . At _this he !.shook . his fist in great rage, say- Ong : "111 take you by,the shoulders and put you out of the school-house I I have more right than you. I'll teach you that you shan't read the Bible in school." Are such men fit to be Directors of our Pub lic Schools? What kind of impression may we suppose this scene' Made -upon" the minds of time children? for it occurred on Monday afternoon during school-honrs. Howevef, - the gentleman was arrested and brought before the. justice of the peace in this place, who held him to bail to answer the charges against him at -the next Court. He was very indifferent at first about giving bail, but an hour's reflection-in the' lock up changed his mind. EDITOR'S TABLE. - - -- R OO D , _ MEMORIALS Or . THOMAS O ealitted, ar ranged, and edited by his daighter, with a - preface and notes by his son. - Illustrated With conies from his own sketches, hi 2 volumet. Boston ;- Ticknor & Fields, mncpcLx.. 2 Vols. ldmo. pp. xvol. 310 ; vii. 327. This beautiful edition of the American publish ers is printed froth early sheets i furnished them by the "Children of Thomas Mini." Of course, these memorials are entertaining, opening as they do to inspection the personal history of a character so marked and so, interesting. They. are the oft repeated story of pinched, suffering and oVertasked genius. The souseye, rather inelegantly: Almost my fathefi last words were: "Lord—say,, arise, take up thy cross and, follow me." A woodcut is-given of the monument to flood which was raised by Universal subseriptions, among which were such donations as the - following :-- " sums from I,fancheater,Yreston, Bidde ford, and:Bristol, frout a few.poor needle-women, from seven dressmakers; from twelve poor men." For sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co. PERIODICALS AND AMPHLETE RECEIVED. THE CHRISTIAN'S REST - AND REWARD. A discourse memorial Win 'C ... - : - Conner, Esq., preached in the -Second Presbyterian - Church, New Albany, March 25th, 1860,, the first Sab bath after his death, -by John-G; Atterbury, Pas tor. New AlbanY Norman, Morrison & Matthews, printers 1860. - This is a, fitting memorial of one of. the found ers and ruling nlders of the *l:Church of New Albany, and who, has been intimately and actively connected with every movement to promote- its prosperity. - - THE UNITED PRESBYTERIAN QUARTERLY RE VIEW. Edited . byDavidlt. Kerr, associated' ith Drs. S. T. PreSely, J. Rodgers, and A. D.: Clark. July 1860. Pittsburg,' Pa., Publication; office, No. 76 Third st. ; •;' This is the 3d number of a Review which, we judge, is successfully aiming 'to realize the happy mean between an exclusively scholastic and a merely popular character.' The yellow coaxers in deed, are, suggestive of the Atlantic Blackwood &' Harper;' but this may be designed to counterbalance the rather pentrus character of a portion of the contents.' ' ' Art. I."'The Bible and Polities, by Rev J.'13,„ Johnson A ,vigorous'of Dr. , Sebten t anomalous views, emelt snoi nientary on the 4ospel of *n, by Rev: James' Patterson, D. D. Dr. Tholnek'sis the commentary referred' to. The writer is aware of the dis tinguished services 'of the commentator to Evan gelical. religion in Germany, hut ventures to dis sent from his positions in regard to the date of the Gospel and the disparagement of the style' Of the Evangelist's' Greek. Very little is said . ' of the'commentary itself. "Art. 111. The Atone ment of Christ, by ReV. William Davidson, D. I). An eloquent article, indicating the possible rela tions Of the atonement to 'other orders of heings besides ' man y Art IV. The` 'Genealogy of the Savionr, by Rev. J." C. Steele. Art. V. Serpent Fascination, by Prof.' . David Christy. In this - brief' but curious article the common idea that birds and other' animals are drawn into the ser pent's )avii - bythe'reptile's mySteriens power 'of fascination, questioned, `and the' observations of the Writer himsel, - brotight in to - discriditit. Art. VI. The RiVal 'Dictionaries, by Rev Gedrge C. Arnold.' An excellent and valuable comparison'` of the merits of Webster and Worceiter: 'The orthography' of Webster is 'preferred save in a few instances. The orthoepy' of Worcester on the contrary is considered the best. ' In etym ology also, the preference is given "tolVoreester, hut Webster's definitions' are "distinguished by greater clearneas, Precision; 'discritn,ination, ex haustiveness." Prof. Goodrieles`'SYnonymes in Webster uare much more Satisfactory than those scatteredthrough WOrdester's Dictionary!' EDINI2I3,ROH liiinazlNE. No. CXXXVII. American edition, Vol. L., No. I. July, 1860 New York, Leonard Sqott & Co. For sale by W.. 13; Zieber, Contents The Secret Hi l ltory of the Russian Campaign of 1812; Sir ,Robert Wilson; Capt. Speke's Adventures in Somali Land Part 111. Poptry;, The Royal Academy and other exhibi tions; Ilprtnan Sinclair ;:an Alttebiography, Part IV. An Election in France; Errings; The Re form Bill and the Tory Party • TEE ATI' ANTIC MONeELT, devoted to Lite rature, Art„lpid Politics. August, 1860. Boston, Ticknor &, Philadi., A. Winch, and Peter son & B. Victor and Jacqueline is a 8 tit of the French Reformation, handled by one whn'tpo u s to be in thorough sympathy with 'Evangelical religion. The Review of Darwin continued in this number without fully endorsing his vimits of the trans .mutation of species, yet basAke ,air of wishing them to be trim. • • J. B. Lippincott &: Co. have in press and expect to publish on 'about the 25th of July, OCCASIONAL PnwanoTions, Political, Diploma tic, and Misepllaneons, including, among others, a glance itthe Court and Government of Louis Philippe =arid zthe-Prench Revolution of 1848, while - the - author resided as Envoy Extraordi nary and Minister Pleiaipotentiary from the lJnited Stater, at. Paris. the late Richard Rush. Edited by his executors. In one Vol -Bvo. of over 500 pages. Printed from Dew type on fine paper, with a finely engraved like' uess of the distinguished author. Also, as soon, as 'prakicable, Rzcouzertoic s, Historical, Political, Biographical and Social, of. Charles J. Ingersoll, extending from Genet' s ' arrival, In 1792, - to the , purchase of Louisiana, in -1803.' From'' , the advanced sheets we judge that the' book'will not be lacking in interest; but thestyle is-involved and hard. As in the closing. part of the sentence, "Pastoral inff 6- ence is greater - here than there, and toleration legalized much , more practical , "The British brutish multitude of the poor." Aug. 2,