202 auteviinto I'vtobgterian ~, t utott enutgellizt TIIVELINDAY I ATIGIJST 10, 1860. JOHN W. MEARS, EDITOR. ASSOCIATZD WMII ALBERT BARNES GEORGE DUFFIELD, JR THOMAS BRAINERD, 1 JOHN JENKINS, HENRY DARLING, THOMAS J. SHEPHERD, THE AGE OF VIOLENCE. Oar age seems to be not more remarkable for great religious movements, than for the mani festation of an extraordinary and criminal spirit of violence's among those who are not reached by these movements. Time was when records of violence and crime were confined to a specific type of journals, of bad standing in the profes sion. Now any journal which undertakes to give the current news, becomes of necessity, to a large extent, a criminal calendar and a police gazette. Few matters of intelligence demand so frequent mention as these. Type-setters mast see imaginary weapons of death flourish among , their columns, and the pressman's ink must seem inoarnadined with the bloody recital which it communicates to the white page. Since the peace of Europe was broken by the French Revolution in 1848, the ears of the Chris tian world have been unceasingly assailed with the noise of war and the equipping and assem bling of armaments on a scale of grandeur and destructiveness such as bad never before been beheld. The mutiny in India presented a spec tacle of malice, rage and brutality scarcely pa ralleled in the history of man. One would have thought that to originate one such an outburst of hideous and dreadful .rage in a generation, would have been enough for the arch-fiend him self; but the massacre now occurring in Syria reminds us of the "lower deep still opening in the lowest," giving us fresh glimpses of the un fathomable malice of the prince of all evil. Our age is proved to be one of violence by the extreme popularity of pugilistic exhibitions. Two men go through a rigid scientific 'course of training; one of them crosses the Atlantic; they, meet and use their fists with all the violence and skill they can command on each other's naked bodies, persevering till loss of blood, blindness and contusions cause them to desist. This is bad and brutish enough: but it is dis covered to be a feature of the age we live in, by the universal attention and breathless inte rest it attracts, _by the anxiety of leading jour nals promptly to parade the details of the de grading encounter in column after column of fine type, by the connivance of all authorities at the breaking of the peace, by the countenance given to the transaction by the presence of per sons of the highest standing in society, not ex cluding ministers of the gospel, (if report is to be credited,) and by the subservience of literature in an organ as respectable as Blackwood's Maga zine to the pitiful purpose of embalming the memory of a prize-fight in a poem 1 The spec tacle of wild and enthusiastic eagerness exhi bited by the news-seeking multitude of our great cities when it, was announced that intelligence of the details and the result of this savage en counter was at hand, was a scandal to our civi lization. It proved a deep-seated sympathy in the multitude with the violent spirit of the prize ring. Other exhibitions of the same spirit, running downwards through the whole moral scale till the lowest depths of criminality are reached, may be witnessed, or read of, every day. The dis graceful scenes sure to be enacted on the floor of Congress at every session; the overawing, bullying, browbeating spirit exhibited; the car rying of deadly weapons, the facility with which challenges to mortal combat are elicited, and the general reign of brute force sought to be established in that place, where, of all others, the only legitimate weapons of warfare are high argument and manly, earnest debate ; these are unmistakable tokens of the era of violence upon which we have fallen. The indifference into which the country was lapsing over oft-repeated tales of Congressional broils, was at one time roused by the astonishing information that one, born and reared to square his notions of honor by the duellist's code, had refused to engage in a duel because the challenged party had chosen weapons too barbarous for that gentlemanly method of settling a quarrel! We forbear to do more than allude to the fear ful record of bloody and murderous violence, which it has become part of the every day business of our secular journals to unfold, and in the wake of which, our police force, our grand j uries, our judges, our laws and an outraged and alarmed public sen timent painfully and ineffectually strive to follow. We cannot particularize upon the hundred mur ders of Cincinnati, which Rev. Mr. Storrs has had the patience to keep tally of, or upon the forty or fifty murders in New York city never traced to their origin, which the Tribune, from a hasty re view of the past four or five years can enumerate; and we will only mention the prevalent disposition of men who conceive themselves to have been injured, to take the law into their own hands and to administer the penalty which the first burst of unreasoning passion suggests. We had father bestow a few reflections upon the probable causes of the prevalent tendency to throw off restraint and give full play to the violent passions of our depraved nature. 1. A false morality or philosophy has found its way into the minds of men. From the philosophic elevation of Pantheism, it has percolated through all the strata of society; the faisca and 'dreadful doctrine is that man may safely act out his own na ture; that he cannot but do so; that depravity is a fiction of priestoraft; that whatever a man does naturally, it is well for him to do. Pantheism con founds virtue and vice, holiness and sin, the Crea tor and the creature, it calls light darkness, and darkness light, puts bitter for sweet, and sweet for hitter. And while it may not obliterate conscience or destroy morality in its teachers, yet when its subtle influences flow down through the less re flective classes of society, they let loose the fiercest and most violent passions of men. 2. A second cause is the lowering of views of law and penalty, the loose and partial execution of penalties,and the deterioration in the charac ter of our judiciary, which, with many noble ex ceptions, prevail to an alarming extent. Crime is not promptly and suitably punished. Corruption taints the air of the court-room and the jury-box. Violent men are in secret and abominable league with the ministers of justice. Political intrigue, -which has already elevated .the judiciary and ex ecutive to power, can readily be brought to bear upon them ; is obverting the ends of justice, in lightening the sentence or procuring the early par don of the offender. And when all these fail, then popular sympathy, resting, in part, upon those false and destructive views of human nature al ready referred to, is invoked, and pity for the criminal is stimulated until it swallows up all pity for his victim, all regard for the honor of the law and all sense of public safety. 8. We ascribe some of the growth of this spirit to the power of example now so much greater than formerly. The very same means which, at this day, diffuse with such rapidity, the light of the Christian's example, are used to hold up to public gaze the deeds of darkness. Crimes and criminals are made spectacles of. In hanging a pirate, al much care is taken to ensure publicity, and as great facilities are offered for spectators as in ex hibiting the Great Eastern. And while we do not find fault with a secular journal for keeping pace with the rapid movements of crime in its columns, we do denounce that greediness to make . capital of crime by a nauseous exhibition of de tails, and by all sorts of reportorial varnish and clap-trap in the description, to sharpen the curi osity and feed the baser appetites of the reader. It is a new crime thus to photograph crime, and spread it by hundreds of thousands of copies over the land. It is a gross perversion of the noble en gines of modern progress, the telegraph and the press, for which God will hold the authors to a fearful account. Not only will Ainsworth have to answer for the many Jack Shepherds which his exciting tale has made, but those, too, who by the flourish and pomp with which they herald ac tual crimes, kindle in the minds already prone to crime, a monstrous ambition to win for themselves these laurels of the Satanic press by bolder deeds of wickedness. We are of opinion, that among the crowds who floated on New Yolk bay, and amid that strangely., brilliant scene, beheld the death struggle in which the deeply dyed soul of the pirate, Hicks, fled to its lest account, or who read the de tailed and graphic reports of that scene of the pirate's career and last fearful deed of blood, as reported in most of the papers, there were some who forgot the heinousness of the deed and the dread nature of the punishment in the eclat with which it was surrounded, and who, near despera tion in crime previously, are now determined to beepme equally notorious and equally guilty. 4. There is an antagonism to holiness in our unrenewed nature which exhibits strange and per verse phenomena. The corrupt heart is generally beheld in a-state of growing indifference towards the law and the example of goodness alike. But it often exhibits the description pictured in the 7th of Romans—when the commandment comes, 'sin revives. The example of purity and meekness ex asperates it. The nearness and effective working of the Holy Spirit rouses it to defiance. When presented with the Saviour, it says: "Not this man, but Barabbas." The rage of Mohammedan, Bud hist, and Druze against the Christian, is the bit terness of heathen depravity rising against the victorious excellence of the. Gospel. A revival of unprecedented power, extensiveness and healthful ness overspreads the Christian world; for a time wickedness stops her mouth; an astonished world waits while her Lord passes by. Is it surprising that a fresh and more violent outburst of wicked ness should follow from those who resisted - these unusual influences? Our readers well know that this is in accordance with analogy and with Scrip ture alike. The great increase of habits of intemperance might be mentioned as another explanation of the evil we are contemplating, but this part of the subject deserves separate consideration. THE PRESBYTERIAN QUARTERLY RE- VIEW. The number for July, delayed in order to a complete presentation of matters connected with the late General Assembly, is °Lour table. The size of the type is reduced so as to admit a greater amount of matter, and yet not so much as to in terfere with entire comfort and ease in the perusal. The literature of the General Assembly occupies a large place in its pages. Not only does the re view gain in importance by this 1 , 3 . jeans to every minister and layman interested in the history of the Church, but the opportunity thus afforded for these debates, acts, lectures and sermons, and this portraiture and characterization of the Assemblies to pass into the domain of literature, is by no means of small moment. Awe. I—Ante-Revolutionary History of Epis copary,—is the address delivered by Rev. Samuel M. Hopkins, D. D., before the General Assembly, May 21,1860, by request of the Presbyterian His torical Society. The theme, which, ever since its announcement, has struck us as somewhat Out of the line of topics which would naturally present themselves to the mind of a speaker under such a commission, appears to have been suggested by certain extraordinary and unfounded claims set up for early Episcopacy in the colonies, at the lust meeting of the Alumni of the General Theological Seminary of the P. E. Church in New York. On that occasion it was claimed that "the sons of the Church who brought her principles here in this western land," were "at first a- small, down-trod den band of humble men, scarcely daring to ask for, or to expect, equal rights and equal justice among men of an opposite faith - nd worship," and that "the rise and progress of this branch of the Church in America, cannot but command the ad miration of Christendom." •To show up and effec tually explode all these swollen pretensions, to contrast the actual pride, bigotry and' intolerance of early churchmen with this picture of voluntary humility, and to demonstrate the utterly unwor thy character of the men and means employed to establish and to legitimate Episcopacy in these co lonies, the lecturer has brought to bear a great store of materials from the early history of our country, keen wit, overwhelming satire, and an easy polished and forcible style. Argument there needs to be none. A few well-aimed thrusts suf fice to pierce and destroy the swollen claims set up by the Alumni. It seems that the Episcopa lians of America had no greater difficulties to en counter than those offered by their own brethren in England, who possessed the coveted gift of apostolic succession, and who yielded it to their American fellow-Churchmen with the greatest re luctance. Dr. Seabury's "pursuit of the aposto lkal succession under difficulties" is most humor ously described. Many of the readers of the Re view becoming acquainted with Dr. S. for the first time, will be edified to learn that the said Dr.sis tanked by the Church poet, Rev. A. C. Coxe,D. D., as above Columbus, the discoverer of America, by reason of services rendered in the above pursuit! That noble Genoese, He crossed the seas; And found the body o'er far waters roll— Seabury infused the soul! ART. IL—Rulfsia. This is a traveller's view of that vast and increasingly important empire, which in the present number reaches only to the Intrican ptointerian and Cventott 6vangtliot, capital itself with the approaches thereto. It will be found to convey a mass of information upon the outward appearance and social and business life of the capital, not easily accessible; and the lively picturing of an acute obserTer and affluent writer will command general attention. Awr. 111. Vincent Ferrara. This is one of those sketches of celebrated characters in the Church Catholic who felt the evangelical impulses of the Reformation - before that event actually came to pass, which have formed one of the most valuable features of the review. These are no mere dry outlines, but fresh and living memorials of true men, which cannot be contetnplatedt without a thrill of admiration and an imitative impulse on the part of the Christian reader. We hope no one will omit the perusal of this description of the apostolic career of the Whitefield of the middle ages. • ART. IV. The General Assembly of 1860, be ing the usual lucid and comprehensive view of the acts, debates and spirit of that body. ART. V. Dr. Bushnell 's Sermons. We believe the reviewer states the general opinion among Evangelical men in regard to these sermons. Though still somewhat defective, they reveal a drifting of that erratic and brilliant mind more decidedly towards the truth. The simplicity, close , application and general tone of piety ascribed to' them by the reviewer, are undoubtedly theirs, while a strained manner sometimes, an occasional over statement of the truth, and a preference for singular texts and skis issues, rather than the plain pre sentation of the Gospel, are unquestionably among their defecta. We have ever regarded Dr. Bushnell as a really original and independent thinker, very decidedly astray some dozen or more years ago on the relations of Christ's work to the law, and on one or two other topics, with a style of remark able freshness, with bold and startling turns of thought, sometimes strained, but never common place or dull, and sometimes rich and melodious as a master of composition. Aitr. VI. The Position , and Mission of our Church. Since the Sermon of Mr. Barnes before the Assembly at Washington, "Our Position," no Moderator's sermon has attracted so much atten tion as the recent one of Dr. Patterson here indi cated. It was considered so fair and able an ex position of the animus of our Church by a very large number'of the Commissioners, that they de cided not only to request its publication in the Review, but to provide for the issuing of a large number of extra copies. We shall not enter here upon a criticism of the discourse, any further than to notice its calm, philosophical tone, and the wisdom of its positions and recommendations. ART. VII. Doctrinal Preaching. This brief and earnest plea for doctrinal as contrasted with popular and sensational preaching, though last and least, is perhaps equal in importance to any in the present number of the Review. There is a ring of the genuine metal.id it. It will do good. Literary and Theological Intelligence and Notices of New Books complete the Review. The Editor deals vigorous blows at the Arminian and Unita.- Tian works which have accumulated upon his table. SUGGESTIVE STATISTICS. - The following is the net loss and gain of our Synods in communicants for the past year:- arsons. 1859. 1880. Net Net "Increase. •Decr'easse. Albany, 8,639 8,561 78 Utica, . 6.986 , 6,990 4 Geneva, 9,617 9,307 310 Onondaga, .7,823 8,017 194 Susquehanna, , 4,001 4,204. - 203 Genesee, 13,121 12,602 ' 519 N.Y. & W.Jersey2s,743 25,940 197 Pennsylvania, 11,161 12,962 1,801 W. Penna., 2,936 3,083 147 Michigan, 8,334 8,354 20 • West. Reserve, 6,580 6,637 57 - - Ohio, 4,726 4,855 - 129 Cincinnati; 2,973 3.064 91 Indiana, 3,432 3,350 82 Wabash, . 2,631 - 2,700 69 Illinois, 4,111 4.298 187 Peoria, 4;372 4,723 351 . /. Wisconsin, 1,384 1,524 140 10w5,2,003 2,047 44 Minnesota, .500 558 5B Alta California, 378 381 3 Missouri, 2,290 776 - 1,514 Virginia, 4,294 4,249 137,990 134,933 3,695 6,752 Presbytery of Dist. of Columbia, / from both sides. j 1,496 1,496 2,199 5,256 Net decrease owing to slavery, 4,267 " . - 44 other causes, 989 Net gain irrespective'of slavery, CONTRIBUTIONS. Caine. 1850. 1860. Increase. General Assembly, $5,104,15 $5,244,47 $140,32 Domestic Missions, 91,402.88 98,029,95 6,627,07 Foreign Missions, 67,796,42 '80,338,29 12,541,87 Education, 65,707,68 72,226,19 6,518,51 Publication, 41,667,21 50,944,94 9,277,73 $271,678,34 $306,703,84 35,105,50 The contributions for congregational purposes, as building churches, support of ministers, church expenses, Svc , are not reported. Per centage of contributions to benevolent causes per church member in 1859, $1.96 In 1860 2.27 Increase, • 31 . The typographical error by which our contribu tions to Domestic Missions were made 470,000 less than the report, ($28,029.95 instead of 198,029.95) is travelling around the country, and becoming interwoven with calculations and com parisons to the great disparagement of our denomi nation in this particular. Will statistic-hunters, and editors who know by experience the affliction of ill-read proofs take notice? ' We may add that the gain IM membership of the Synod of Pennsylvania during the last four years, irrespective of the additiiin of the District Presbytery,' has been 1838, (or nearly 20 per cent ,) a rate of increase, which, if shared in by the whole church; would" haVe made our entire membership at the present time about 150,000, above all losses suffered from slavery. A greater rate of increase is shown in the Synod of Michigan, whose gains since 1856 are 1812, or nearly 26 per cent. The Synod of New York and New Jersey, has gained 2532, or 11 per cent. The Synod of Peoria, has gained 911, or 23 per cent. The Synod of Wisconsin, 636, or nearly 75 per cent. since 1857, when iewas formed. The Synod of lowa, 872, or nearly 75 per cent. NORTE BROAD STREET ORTIROH. We are happy to learn that alivlegal difficul ties in the way of a complete title :to the lot se lected for this church, on the so"-east corner of Broad and Green Streets, •bay,e at length been removed, and the payment niiCessary to a transfer of the title to the trustees of the church bas been made. ATLANTIC CITY: Tbe Rev. Albert Barnes will :'preach at' the Presbyterian 'Chnrah on Sunday next ; 19th ins EDITORIAL OODDESpoNDENOE. Sault st. Marie, July 20th, 1860. THE NORTH STAR STEAMER,—A SENSATION TO BEGIN WI 'H. Thanks to the good steajr "NOrth Star," the swiftest, steamer on.j,b..e.:Lakes, and to her model captain, Captain Sheet, of'Civeland, we have been brought thus far, safely andiexpeditiously on our journey. The next time w ' visit the Lake coun i try, commend us and our fends to the same boat and the same captain. We want no better. We have been in vessels where the intricacies of the channel, or the difficulties getting in or out of the harbor, were left entire] to the mate or pilot; but not so on board the ' C N h Star." There the vessel is the body, but the captain is the soul! What he says as to the parts he will make, the time he will remain there,hou may rely on most implicitly, and make yourtarrangements accord ingly. osi sic maps! . The voyage from Detrca ?. has -been more than usually full of incidents. list as the weary crew had filled the 'hold, and mpleted their heavy cargo of flour, potatoes, hi% and a great variety of machinery for the "uppexi country;" and when the order had already beei given to cast off, the gangway plank, two men wknseenikinning down the avenue, one of thenk wib an enormous cudgel z e, ,manifesting in his hand, shouting,`,g ' ' her!" "stop'her!" and for some • cause or . er, a-suffi- A cient amount of exciteinen .with the' thermometer over 90 degrees, to thro'w bun into an , apoplexy. " The villain, 0, the billy, murdering villain," he, exclaimed, as soon as h got aboard, "to run off with my daughter—onl'seventeen years of age, and for whom I paid sl2oo~hri bring her out from the old country ! 0, the rillain ! he's murdered three wives already, the laltt of them .died in the poor house, and now the lusty villain, he must have my daughter too! tit I'll have his heart's e. blood! I will! I. heard it first in the stage, and I've run fifteen miles to ' tch the boat before he got her off from me end*, and I'll, follow him forty thousand miles, everlipile of it, but yvhat he shall not rob me of my. dnighterl 'Come along, constable, we've got him now." Now be it understood, gentle reader, that on the subject of marriage, we haVt some peculiar notiohs of our own, Morally and religiously, it has long been a matter of conscience! with us, never tomer ry any one unless they are s 'pientified by some mu turd acquaintance; and especially on the part of the lady, unless we are well assured of the consent of her parents. Most emphatically do we deny be fore God and man, the rin la of any .minister for the paltry fee of five or to dollars, to assume a responsibility, the extent ef,which, from the very circumstances of the case= fit u i itterly mpossible for him to comprehend. let any man take this thing into serious eonside tion, and reason in re ference to the daughters of iSthers, as he would, in reference to his own, and ie are persuaded he will come to only one conclusion. , . Of course, therefore, a priori, all our sympathies were with the injured father. We thought it no thing more than the grctorit &Served, when in the forward cabin surrounded ;by the entire ship's com pany, he received from the old man one of the most awful objurgations .ti , e ever listened to in all our lives; just such a onn,aa Labatt would have given Jacob, probably, if t i r the Lord had' notpre vented him. Such an almost demoniacal exhibi tion of anger, malice, revenge, and a tongue set on fire of hell, Shakspeare,! rfiast - have witnessed and have had in his eye, What; he irote the Merchant of Venice! Meanwhile,:,thongh his brows knit, _ and his lips quivered; 'an his cheeks grew deadly pale, the haughty bridegroom "said never a word." He was perfectly willing io "lake it," if he could only keep the old man t.way from his daughter. Encouraged by his silenee, and supposing it to be an indication of fear; or '` I S tacit confession that lie was destitute of the requie . documents in the pre mises, the dapper little c`nstable next undertook to perforin his part of the l tragedy. But now the groom found his tongue, and that to some purpose. "There is my certificate:` we were married last night in Detroit. Instead of 17, my wife is 24 years old, and at full linertjito marry who she pleases." The constable read the certificate, and evidently was some what nonplussed. "But her father says she is only seventeen, &e." By this time it was the groom's turn q lift the safety valve and let off a little of the extra pressure, and we must confess in the intelligent appreciation of his rights, he showed himself a,truef. AtieriCan: No wonder with such men the Iti4ent of self-government is by no means a difficult one. "Shut up, Mr. Star, I was born. under `the Stars and Stripes, and I am not fool enough t 0. .! be ignorant of my own rights. There's the certificate, which is a receipt in full for your danghter, or if not, I'll soon pay you the balance." Once more the .constable re joined, but only to receive a final and most effectual quietus. 44 Shut up, I say, Mr. Constable, you've made as much noise bithis matter as amen ought to make who has no businessl in it—where's Your warrant? You havn't got any, you know you. havn't. Besides, even if you had, I am now in her Majesty's dominions, and entirely, beyond your jurisdiction!" . / From this point, the tide of sympathy, which in the, first instance watt •with the old father, now began to turn, evidently enough; in favor of the bridegroom, and the mud was desirous of hearing his story. " He's a bli i rd old man that, and' when . he's fired up with liqub r will do anything. Some . , weeks ago, he drove' e for nie, and, to get into Detroit two hours.soe! ' k than he ought to do, in order to have a spreeehS overdrove the team and foundered them, so that I was obliged to dismiss him. That's one of the reasons he is so angry with me. Another is beettaselinterfered to protect c ' his daughter against ) him. A short- time since, from. being a Catholui; he turned a ranting Metho dist—and now he haa turned back again, a worse papist than even." , Our sympathy with the old man was gradually oozing out at our finger ends, and after a fellow passenger bad caughS him in his state-room pour ing out two-thirds of a tumbler of whiiky, and drinking it down raw, we began to come to the conclusion that the daughter was better without her father than with ,him. _ During the night watching his opportunity, he gave the bridegroom a blow that almost felled him to the floor; and the next morning, he and his companion, the consta ble, after their useless journey, and leaving Ahe re mainder of the 40,000 ,miles still unfinished, took their departure from the Boat at Port Larnia. (The last we saw - of the bridegroom, he was seated very contentedly ona hub pile of topper, at Onto nagon, and as thighs' . gif now-a-days in the political world, it is quite possible ere another lustrum, we may hear him addressed in the House of Repre sentatives at Washington, as the " Gentleman from Lake Superior.") The incident, of course, had its due effect on all the passengers, especially the female portion of them, and the bride once more becoming visible after the departure of her father, was durino the remainder of the trip, the observed-of all observer& To point , the moral of this story, we leave to each of our'readers, as may suit them best. SINCLAIR RIPER; SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS, OR FLATS AND RAFTS "Sinclair River." When a boy at college we first read of it in " Wacousta," or " the Prophecy." Those who have been similarly unfortunate in the geographical impress ons received from that emi nently veracious history, will remember the terri fic descent down the iiver—between the interlacitig branches of the giant elms! as thickly filled with hostile;lndians, as an occasional fern leaf with mos quitoes! " Wacousta," we fear, must henceforth go on the same shelf with " Woodstock," "Abbot's Napoleon," &a. We did not take any very accurate measurement of the river; but as nearly as we could make it out, the elms must have been "giant " ones indeed, and the "interlacing branches," each of them at least half a mile long! Such trees would be well worthy, of a visit from the Autocrat of the Breakfast-table, whose love of trees, in which we most cordially sympathize,, is perhaps the best thing about him. "Lake Sinclair!" Wbo has not heard of its " Flats," and the unavailing motions and speeches of " potent, grave, and' reverend senators," in re lation thereto ? Ah ! there is a hug: raft of pines and hemlock logs, right in the middle of the chan nel. 'ban we -pass it? very doubtful. Already we are, at the extreme verge - or the" liannel, any we must take our cheice between running aground or breaking into the raft. The bell rings, the en gine stops—there we - ate—smack ! chairs broken, wheels foul-into the raft and aground too! and a most delightful state of things generally, both among the crew of the raft and of the boat! The spirit of the proverb about " cursing the king in our bed-chamber," is for the time being, entirely forgotten, and whatever may have been the pre vitas opinion of passengers about the constitution ality of improving rivers and harbors, there was but one opinion now. The man who split rails, it is supposed, would take better care of the logs. LANE. GEORGE, FURTHER OBSTRUCTIONS, AND A MORAL The Flats of St. Clair finally passed, after some two hours' delay, we are next obliged to encounter the still more difficult fiats and channel of Lake. G-eorge. This time it is our fortune not, to meet a raft, but a, squall, and a pretty severe one too. It was a critical , moment, and one that called for no ordinary seamanship ! A narrow; zig-zag, chan nel, requiring as sharp turns as it was possible for the vessel to make—the wind blowing such a gale, that only the ponderous captain was able to keep his footing without holding on by a,rope or spar; the 'quick and incessant orders to thelour breath less men at the wheel; the wheel one moment wound up with all the power of foot and hand, to the full tension of the rope—the,nezt, whirling round so swiftly that you could no longer distin guish the spokes—that was a sight, which to see, was to admire—which once seen, was never to be forgotten The channel passed--the. squall over --it seemed to us as if we had known the captain half .a life time. Wisdom was needed at the helm as well as power, and certainly the lesson was not lost upon us in reference to the further voyage of life. What if we sometimes do get on the *'flats?' : ' What if the squall, strikes us in the most narrow and intricate part of the channel? "Our Father's at the helm,"—he knoweth the way that we take —hnd confiding in him, we may find that repose which our own little helplessness should _forever prevent from finding in ourselves'. RASPBERRY JAM.-A TOUCH OF NATURE MARES THE WHOLE WORLD KIN. • The clear waters of the far famed Huron, and its fifty thousand Islands left behind, we are now in St. Mary's river, at Charchville, the great depot of Raspberry Jam, of which no' less than fifteen tons Were last year shipped to Michigan, Ohio, and other sweet-toothed states in the great North West! Here we first caught sight of an Indian canoe, _ Like a yellow leaf of autumn, Like e yellow water lily, paddled by a squaw and her daughter, and coming down the river with prodigious velocity, in order to avoid the tempest, which a few moments after beat upon us with great violence. "It rains easy here," is the common - proverb, and sure enough, no sooner is there a cloud' in the sky, than (town comes the shower, before you begin to think it 'possible. It was curious - to witness the predica ment of certain of our company, who, instead of taking the experience of others, chose rather to reason from analogy. If analogy does not prove anything elsewhere it certainly did not prove anything here, except the folly of those who put confidence in it. Another thing we saw at Church vine besides the canoe and the factory of Rasp berry Jam. The gentlemanly proprietor was on board the boat with us—and as we came in sight of the beautiful residence which he has erected—. a little hand was put forth from the front door, and the waving of a white handkerchief gave the delightful signal to the s affectionate father and husband: All's well ! Who can blame us, if for a moment we could not see very distinctly in that direction, and walking without any particular reason, to the other side of the boat, found our selves gazing very intently somewhere in the di rection of old Pennsylvania? We thoughtof that exquisitly beautiful sonnet of Wordsworth on King Canute, which if any of our readers who have had the patience to follow us through this epistle, have never read—they will please turn to it and read it now. 4 G. D. JR. A RESPONSE FROM NEW ENGLAND. In your paper of the sth ult., I noticed, with much interest, an article headed, "New England." Being .a New England man, in every. sense, so far as birth, training, attainments, and residence are connected, I read the article, in question, with no common interest, and the more for knowing the writer. It may be as well for me to say here, that I am an old man, being years the onward side of seventy. Myrecollections will go back more than half a century in the history of the New England. Churches, with a limited knowledge of Presßyte ibm Churches. But to return to the article in question. It must be acknowledged on all sides that the writer has reviewed the history of N. S. Presbyterian, end Congregational Churches, and their present antagonistieal position with great calmness and brotherly kindness. If it were not so, it would be unlike the author, and 'tend more to divide than unite, which is the object of the writer. I well remember what were the feelings of the N. Eng land Churches when the assault. was first made, in. the General Assembly, upon the great Benevo lent Institutions of the country, such as. the American Board, Home Missions, &c. was delegate to the Assembly from Massachusetts, and on the committee of " Bills and. Overtures," in that body ) at the time the pamphlet agalnst .the above named Societies, was introduced. I then saw the zeal of "Juvenile Putriarch.s," and I well remember a remark of the venerable Dr. Miller, who had repeatedly attempted' to speak, , but sprigs of Divinity stepped in before him— when one of these sprightly ones propose,d to give place to Dr. Miller, the venerable man replied, "No, no, Moderator, 1 am not so full of matter as to be uncomfortable." Would that this rebuke had been sufficient to secure a place for age_and experience to utter their voice. But the history of the last thirty years has shown that old men are too conservative, they are behind the times. The fears on this subject, expressed in your columns, by the writer, under 'the head of New England, are founded in truth. One only needs to attend' a meeting' of any deliberative body, from a Dis triet Association, up to an anniversary of the Am. Board even, to see that our yeung men are "so fall of matter as to be uncomfortable." ,lt may be said that these remarks come: from, an old man, who is made envious by the ease and;grace, with which young men speak; and their agency in di recting the affairs of the Chutilt, It ,is so— But-I tremble for the ark &GA, when -, I see so many inexperienced hands put forth to, steady, it. What an aged minister once said, to a church in a divided state is now true,• on a large scale. After .looking into the state of things, the venerable' an --ealid-to - thediaratted - chUrch; “ - Youlti.v.a:s0 4 - 41 " - team altogether wrong, the steers are where old oxen should be." The ,hint proved salutary. Fifty years ago the state of,things was very differ ent. Sere , I may remark, in this growing evil, we find a leading reason, why old men, are so un=. willing to have a colleague. Many aged , men, to my certain knowledge, are laboring beyond their strength, because the present attitude of •young men creates a fear that to have. one associated in the pastorate would jeopardize their own peace, and that of the: Church. ' I will say, nothing about What is said under the bead of "New England," about an undue attach ment of the New School Presbyterians to their denominational distinctions. Of this the writer in question has, more ample means of judging. But I may say, I ought to say, that since the di vision in the Presbyterian Church, my duties have taken me into mostly every portion of our -country, and introduced me to every denomination, conse quently I know that twenty years ago, if -the thought of separation, on the part of Congrega, tionalists and Presbyterians had been suggested, in any of the great Benevolent movemenM of the day, either of these great, divisions of the American Church would have said, as Ruth did to Naomi, "Entreat me not to leave thee, Stc." The union was close, strong, and unshaken. There, is one thing alluded to by the writer in question which deserves more than a passing notice. I refer to what is said about an increased attachment to congregationalism, and a diminished love for the distinguishing doctrines, once so pro- - minent in every orthodox pulpit in New Eng land. Would that 'I could say to the- Presbyte rian brother, you are laboring under a mistake on the subject. But alas, all he so cautiously and kindly says on this subject, is true. Divine Sovereignty, Decrees, Election, Total Depravity, Perseverance ,of the Saints, and kind red truths, so clearly set forth in the glorious re vivals in the days of Peter, Edwards, Hopkins, West, and others, are introduced and plainly dis cussed in but few pulpits. I say this with sor row, but truth compels me to speak. There are some to be found s in almost every, Church, tailed:: Orthodox, who see encl .- deplore the change, in the present sfyle of preaching in f New England. As a deacon in one of the large elnuches in New England said to me not long since,' so it is, "our. Children will not know the great doetrines of the Gospel by name." The text is too often a caption to an essay, rather than ,the foundation of a ser- • The declaration which Nehendah did not 'be . . lieve,"We seek your God, e is; now ye do," isow be lieved, when made by such a one, totally opposed to the Say-brook platform. A mistaken notion of being liberal and charitable,-has taken the, great portion of youthful - divines captive. The effect has been to generalize the preaching of the pre sent day, till an Arminian would - seldom be Offend ed by what he would hear in what are, denondia ted Orthodox. pulpits. As there 'must be some thing to keep the visibility of Congregationalism before the world, having laid aside the fundamen tal principles taught by our fathers, the forth. of church government must be' magnified:. A poor substitute for what once gave New England Churches such a wide influence in the Christian world. - - • , After all; many who are so zealous for Cativo gationalism, have tolerated female speaking and praying in public meetings, yea more, they have invited and encouraged it, and added a loud amen when even a weak sister had done what Paul forbids. In this way many a minister has helped sectarians,' and introduced into his own Church the seeds of discord. God grant the funeral sermon'of which the writer, in the American Presbyterian, speaks, may never be preached. That beloved brother may be ' assured that there is a large number in New Eng land who deplore feelings shown in the meeting of the Ainerican Board in Philadelphia, together with every word and act tending-to sever New England Presbyterians and Congregationalists in the work of Foreign or Domestic Missions. was the woman whose the living child- was , not, who said "divide it." Heaven, grant that no "Female Divine," or " Juvenile Patriarchs," may ever divide those who are, strong united, but weak divided. SiCIPERANNUAITBD. ANNALS OF THE POOR. "WORSE OFF THAN A SERVANT."' Sothe eighteen or twenty years ago a fair intel ligent young woman, the daughter of a lieutenant in the English army stationed in India, married a young and rising army-ottcer in that plea. She was happy. Heaven seemed to be shedding - its gilded rays upon her pathway, and the journey of life was as a May-day, all joy and gladness. She lived in ease and Insury,having her'two ser vants attendinAo her wants. Her father, wearied with his foreign serviceand perhaps looking - for-: ward to a grave among his aneestors, Sailed for ahome;" leaving his daughter and her new con nections behind; but sickness seized upon the husband's constitution, and he too was compelled" to leave the scenes of his rising fortune again to 'look upon his native hills. They arrived in Ireland =the husbandswife; and daughter; the first, to hid a resting" pliee among the dead; the others to 'enter upon the busy cares of this world, and be east about upon its waves. To maintain herself and infant daugh ter she became the travellitig companion and as sistant of an English lady, and for five years she travelled through -the West- Indies and England comfortable and happy, and at the end of that time'when this - connection ceased, our sister, :for in truth she had united herself with Jesus, found herself a resident of this city. Feeling her warm heart glow with kind feelings towards every one around her she little thought of the realities of life, and when her hand was again sought in wedlock she married, as she thought, an honest and industrious weaver.— (Weaving at that time paid much better than at present.) ' - Let us look in upon her home now; yonder in that second storywwwin that obscure street sits a mother, plying her needle from early morning until late at night;, she , gays, "Once I bad two servants to wait uptin,lna,Tbut,now I am worse off than a servant ;" and as we look about her room and see the indications there apparent, we know that indeed she has trot veryjow down in this world; though she is poor, yeti she is respectable and clean. Once she was a delicstte lady; .novr, she is a strong-minded woman supporting- herself and three little children, assisted only in the matter of board received from her eldest daughter, who herself works in the factory." Think, dear reader, for yourself, hew - could you - provide for the wants of yourself and four children upon- such scanty earnings? When she gets two dollars and fifty cents per week, including 'her daughter's board, slug_ nolo thinks herself Erich— -J.,4decr-paytiig-herrent, what can -she have left to feed and clothe so many?—little indeed; though a member, still she . never attends her church, not for want of a desire, but because she would there be marked for her poverty. Who will go to this sister and give the sympathy of a Christiiin? N. B ,We are happy to acknowledge the re ceipt of a Family Sewing Machine from L M. Singer & Co., of New York, thiS,,thotigh loaned to ns for so long,a timees our mission lasts,Tve con sider ours. We will , be glad to receive any assistance you may render, through , a -note ad dressed to "Annals' of the P00r,..1334 Chestnut Street." Oar Mission is located No. 1210 .Shippen St. Call in and see us. - , B. EDITOR'S TABLE. . . HOW TO LIVE Saving, and Wanting, or, Domestic Economy illustr4ed; by tbe Life' _of Two Families of (.apposite Character, Habit, and Practices, in a Flea sant Tale of Real Life; ,including the Story of a Dime a Day. By - Solon liebineen i . - New yorli. Fowler & Wells, pObliahers. limo: pg. 543. This book will be found valuable in all families as tending to cultivate'prinCiples of wholesome economy, but particularly so to families'a limited meanly or those in which `the domestic education of the female head has been neglected, sealed! is too often the case. The story bars sufficient in terest to - relieve the economical lesson a dryness, and we have met with:ndthing,in i leoking'thrpugh it, to hinder_ a- erdict of unmingled approval. PAMPHLETS AND. RBTIEWS. THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL. RE VIEW AND CHURCH REOFLStiIi. VOL VIL, No. 111 July, 1860. New York: H. Bier. No. 11. Bible House, Astor Place. Philadelphia:` J. Rana. ton, Evangelical Book etore, No.: 1224 Chentuut.St. A:rt I. Theories of the - Aloneslent. IL Cleri cal.Aducation. 111 Phz:istian Union. IV. The New - Discussion of the Trinity. V. Our Domes tic Missioxts. VI The New Missionary Society. YlkSontesTorary Literature.. Miscellaneous, comprising Foreign, Domestic, and General Intel ' ligenco aryl New Publications. THE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN. 'Edited-by Thos. SQebiiti Isittebtirgbi, _ . OA.SSEL'S POPULAR NATITRAL BISTORY. Part . Parr 16 cents. - Louden and Nair' Tor*. Cassell, ''Fetter & Park:Bidding* 87:Pnik-Row, New We count thirty pages of letteepress and over seventy_wood - cuts of bats, vampires, hedge hogs, besides a large lithography , executed in the beat style of the art, and tut:lollll6d`riot only to artinse . the reader; but tofUrnish: aid to the scien tific in.:fairer. 'The wonder the work can be furnished at the price named. TRACTS MIND :BY lEEE PUBLICATION COM MITTEEI,I' • • . No,B. Little Sins; or, What People CalrStich. These are Sins of thought; vain words; a hasty temper;'-want'of strict trcith;`iieneorilusnels; habit of grumbling; busy idleness. - No. 9'. Shall I Dance? By Rev. Joseph P. Tuttle. *-Besides the ScriPture argumerit,:there 'are grouped to gether the emphatic ofiltdoeof - eminent evangeli cal clergy Men, Emmons, Barries,'Bifiardinan, against the practice. ' No. 10. The Poor Black smith made Rich; or, Godlinetia Profitable. One of Rev. Richard inimitable narratives. No. 11 Simplicity in Worship By=Rev 'John Caird, SECOND SERIES. No. 1.. Why Should I Pray? By Rev. E. E. Adams. Thieis smallenongli to enclose.in a note. It . consists of-brief answers to frequent objections and excuses urged ,by those who restrain prayer; as " goddoes not care for me," "I dare not pray," "I have ,no time." THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW FOR. JULY. Re published by L. Scott & Co., 64 Hold Street, New York Price $3 per annum. For *sale by-W. B. Zie bar & Co ,= Philadelphia. - - CoNTEstrs.—:-I. Strikes: their Tendencies'and Remedies. The Mill on the - Floss. 111 Raw linson's Bampton Lectures for 1859. IV. The Post Office 'Monopoly. V. Ary &heifer. VI. The Irish Education Question. VII. Germany: its Strength and Weakness. , thoughts in Aid of Faith. IX. Grievances oflaingaiian Catholics. X. The French Pim. Contemporary Lite- OUR. MUSICAL FRIEND,.MONTELY. No. 83. Price 16 cents. CQNTE,NTB.-7-yall4tions on a German Melody; La Coquette Waltz, the Shady Lane; Song by Glover; No Price can Fate Bestow; Ballad by Balls. Goed Morrow New song, by F. Mori, --1 2 pages of`music. Tar. WORKS or FRiNCTS. BACON. The first 'volume , of the new edition of Bacon's Works, an -nqunced to be published "July 1, will not be issued till September. The• publishers, Messrs. Brown S; Taggard, have received-4 letter from the English editor, Mr. Spedding, whoinng so interested him self as to inform them that if they will delay the issue till Septeraber, he will l furnish them certain notes and correetionsi Whicirwill greatly add to the value of, their'edition. ;Having received this kind offer from Mr-4Pedditt the publishers think that it is due ;to- their inrgelist of subseribers to delay theAssuei amid-thus ;give; the. American edition a further superiority over the English. Aug. 16,