LETTER FROM INDIA, My Dear Brother Meabs: —We have just had a little specimen of British Hin doo Royalty. Since the people in this kingdom rebelled, and were re-subjugated by the British in 1844, our young king, “"'SSt'uan'j'has beeh kept under a kind of 'kutelagei : dnd allowed to exercise no power. You will remember, ibet in the.great Sepoy Rebellioiv.of 1851, this was the one; place, biTthe{limitS; of the; Bombay Presb dency, notorious for a violent.; qutbreak cUSirnot: jofiiin } the s i^bfelfion;. and as a> kjnd ofeevvardi for his ; ..fidelrty,.they .promished to rpstqrghim to power. ~r . . The fulfilment, of this promise has been- long,delayed. Last yeardt was.given out that • the Go vernor Sahib was coming frpm Bombay,to -honor the occasion:; the delay was for his convenience, At length, however, the day was fixed—the 18th of this month. ... A day or . two .before the- event, a Go vqmment. order, was issued to: the 44,000 people ofKolapoor to glean iup their , s houses, . As ,we;pass.ed along : the streets , th.eieyening of theilTthi-it wasmot a little amusing to see all the old women and sortie of the young ones, engaged in house cleaning V operation; It consisted in wash ing the mild nwalls.i.next, to? the narrow 1 Btree ts,; with tf, fresh mixture of mud add coW-.’jduhg*; landiitheh i iomamenting'them ‘ withi littlp-dots and Stripes :of white, red, apd; yqUott’.. The white,-paint was simply 1 lime . whitewash, and rthe’samfi, with the addition iof a. little coloring powder, served for the more gaudy decorations.< The Work was done iin theundfit indifferent and 1 ■slovenly; manner, merely sufficient to. obey the; order ;l airidyet-I iwas assured* by one high; iH authority, that the amounts of lime MseduraSsed itst price to four times its or dinaryvalue. i v-t " :i: ' The day. was not wanting in military' dißplayybut no;Govemor Sahib ’ came ; evens.the political 1 agent wasabßent; and represe'itOd' by Major Anderson, his as - dlwaysto be discomfited' : 'They have shrunk;from the Enfields of the pale faces, and,, have, .been met .hand to hand by .our "Ist, 6th, 20tbPunjab Infantry’and 1 4th Gloorkhas, by all of which corps the ehemy'has' been overthrown.' And each Regiment boasts one'or more 1 standards taken in fair, and desperate, hgbt. . But ,our Gfflpral is.only anxious for them to comeon msm£" Never: has hS caught hill nien So vious expeditions, and now they mll found him like'>autumn leaves. - The:#egimerit most distinguished in camp> is beyond all doubt.the. fit Punjab Infan try-prider Ma jor Keyes, .unfortunately, wounded, ,ancl. the Punjab low. Two better officers are’iffilf to be found. Our casualties amotuft to ►SIS, in cluding-three European offieer&Jdllfed and 1 five wounded, lost’ at least 500 killed and ljsoo„Whined.” Of the Pandiqs t slain in. the conflict ; he a,dds).* “Neither. English nor,Tutsan will bury them, so their bodies area thrown down the khuds to rot!” * Another correspondent says:j “Their country will probablybe annexed; : but whettbdrderttibes'acfe as thesei-Brans-lit-’ dus Itapparees haye been actingjatthbre is no other course but tobring-tEfeih imder' the watch and police conttol of Gurowri' officers. The punishment of-aiibexa'tioii has; in this case, become necessary.' If such a course be followed, it wilj’have a mobt excellent effect on the -otKjlr hill tribes.” Query:—Were these tribes Strdhgfenbugh to invade British India with sbo.OOO men, anddemand the half, of it as theit/inheri taace, would these British ofjfcgrgcry out “ peace on any terms, ,f and the demand to prevent the horrors ofwar and bloodshed ? ' * ANOTHER- PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Ground was broken, on the first of. this month for laying the foundation 'dfr a new church' in this city Of Kolapobr. ’ We have 252 costly idol’ temples hbre but no Christian Church or chapel; and having labored under this difficulty tWo full years, we feel that’ we must havb'one place in which to worship the true God. We have not half the means necessary for building it, and may have to stop midway in the work, but we have begun it, tvusj> ing in Him for whose service We build it. We would apply for a loan to the Com mittee of your $lOO,OOO “ Church Erection Fund,” but fear we could not famish satis factory'securities. But if you hitve any committees or individuals who* mu-willing to “ lend to the Lord,” and repay it, we will thank God bn ■'their'behalf. And let us share your prayers, that we may be enabled to build uphere a spiritual church, with polished, living’stones re flecting the image and glory of Him who redeemed them. In the service of the Gos pel. Yours sincerely, ’■ R. G. Wilder. P. S. Our Viceroy, Lsrd Elgin, is dangerously 1 ill, not expected to recover. Kolapoor, India, November 25(h, 1863. . BT KEY. DANIEJj MARCH. ; - iv: Thee Paim Tree. Ps; 32 :12. The righteous shall ■ flourish :like the Palm: Tree. • The Palm, as seen by travelers in the lands of the Bible, arrests attention in the; distance by its tall, straight, column-like trunk, and its surmounting crown of luxuriant and. graceful lts dean feathery branches, beautiful* as'the. plumes of the bird of Paradise, never'frail in thd dust, never interlace with the. branches of I other trees,- never become; entangled with | creeping, vines, are never defaced with moss or mildew, never: mingle with the .rank- and noxious vegetation of the marsh or stagnant pool,, though it bagks in the same, sunshine, and derives support from the fame soil. , Apart from all the trees of the wood, the Palm stands , alone, tall, pure, ever stretching, heaven-ward with its yearly growth, ever welcoming the sun, yet not weeping like the willow in darkness; flexible and bending before the storm, yet again when the storm is past, rearing aloft its graceful form as bright and beautiful as ever in the blaze of the broad Boon, and the fading light of the SACRED SYMBOLS. golden eve. So stands thuPalm as seen by the pilgrim who follows the track of the wandering tribes, or surveys the land where they found their promised rest. And the righteous man, the servant of God, lives apart in a pure and- divine separation from the world. Faithful found? -among the faithless, he keeps his loyalty and his love, while the passions the'ifiiiltitdde sweir and roar around him, : outrageous as a sea. Ifhehends before the Btorm, it is ohly to ;risei ; With mew strength and ‘ beauty.; to his wanted stature .when.vthe btempest |has lexpended its fury,; and the 'darkness'ofj the; iBSe istands -as ; a td 'mariners onva ;*ockyjc