414 Contoponiturt. GEORGE WHITEPIELD AND HIS OPEN ' AIR MEETINGS. BY EDWARD PAYSON HAMMOND No. II It would require a small volume to give anything like a connected account of the career of Rev. George Whitefield as an open air preacher. In our last we only had time to glance at his first efforts in two or three localities. It may prove interesting to those who have turned their attention to this important subject of open air preaching to the masses, still farther tofollow this valiant champion of the `Cross in his bold attacks upon the kingdom of Satan. In August, 1739, soon after` White field's successful attempts at open air preaching in England, hd sailed on his second voyage for America, and in nine weeks landed at Ahiladelphia,. He was immediately *inyited to preach in the churches, to which all denominatiOns flocked, as in England. d3ut the crowds were so great that he was obliged to speak from the gallery. of the court house in Market street, to an audience estimated at !It! six ;thousand and wards." The clergymen and , church wardens invited him to their houses. In the memoirs of Mrs. Hannah ° Hodge, published in 1809, , the writer says : "The effects produced in Phila .delpnia at this time by. Mr.. Wbitefield were truly astonishing. Members of almost all religious denominations, and many who had no connection with any denomination, were brought to inquire, with the utmost earnestness, what they should do to be saved. Such was the anxiety of the multitude for spiritual instruction that there was public wor ship regularly twice a day for a year." Surely this was no spasmodic movement. In speaking of his preaching in Phila delphia, Dr. Franklin say's : " He had a loud and. clear voice, and articulated his words so perfectly that he might be heard and understood to, a great distance; especially as his audi tors' observed the most profound silence. He preached one evening front the top of the court-house steps, which are in the middle of Market street, and on , the west side of Second street, whieh'brosses it at right angles. Both streets were filled with his hearers to a considerable distance. I computed that he might well be heard by more than thirty thou= sand people. .. . (f The multitudes of all sects and de nominations that attended his. sermons were enormous; and it was a matter of speculation with me to observe the in fluence of his oratory on his hearers, and how much they admired and respect= ed him, notwithstanding - his common abuse of them, by assuring them that they were, naturally, half beasts and half devils. It was wonderful, to see the change soon made in the manners of our inhabitants. FrOm being thought • less and indifferent about, religion, it seemed as if all the world was growing religious; so that one .could not walk through the town in an evening with out hearing psalms sung in different families in every street." A constant attendant on his ministry at this time says, " His hearers were never weary; every eye was fixed on his expressive countenance; every ear was charmed with his melodious'voice ; every heart captivated with the beauty and propriety of his address. His ser mons In open air lasted about ,one and a,..half hours." Watson, in his "Annals of Philadel phia," speaking of Whitefield's first visit to that city, tells us that he preached to a crowd of fifteen thousand persons on Society hill, and adds, "About the same time he so far succeeded to repress the usual public amusements, that the danc ing-school was discontinued, and the ball and concert rooms were shut up, as inconsistent with the requisitions of the gospel. No less than fourteen sermons were preached on Society hill in the copen air in one week, during the session of the Presbyterian Church; and the gazette of the day, in noticing , the fact, says, ' The change to religion here is altogether surprising, through the infl.u ence of White old ; no books sell - but religious, and such is the general. con versation.'" Dr. Belcher in his Life cif Whitefickl says, " At Chester, fiticen miles .from' Philadelphia, he preached to about seven thoupapd people. At White Clay Creek, he preached to ,eight thousand people,, -three thousand of whom; it is said:, were on horseback." An, old gentleman assured Watson, the annalist, that on one occasion the words, "And he taught thee; saying," as pronounced by. Whitefield on Society hill, were hesid at Gloucester point, a distatice by Water of two miles. In reference to his - first,:visit to Phila delphia, Whitefield thus Writes.: -" have scarcely preached among them, but I have seen a stirring among the dry bones. Go where I will, I find peo ple with great gladness receive me into their houses. Sometimes I think I am speaking to stocks and stones; but be fore I have done, the power of the Lord comes over Them, and I find Ihave been ploughing up some fallow ground, in a place where these, has been a great fam ine of the word of God. But as God's word increases, so will the rage and op position of the devil. Scoffers seem to tie at a stand what to say. They mut ter in coffee-houses, give a curse, drink a barrel of punch, and then cry out against me for not preaching more mo rality. God has enlarged. my heart to, pray. Tears trickle down my fac.e, and I am in great agony; but the Lord is pleased to set his seal to what he ena bles me to deliver. Amid cries and groans in the congregation, God gives me much freedom of speech. Many people and many ministers weep. My own soul is much carried out. I preach ed to a vast assembly of sinners • nearly twelve thousand were collected; and I had not spoken long, below I perceived numbers melting; as I proceeded, the power increased, and thousands cried oat ; never before did I see so glorious a sight. Oh, what strong crying and tears were poured forth after the dear Lord Jesus! Some fainted; and when they had gotten a little strength, they would hear andlaint again. Never was my soul filled with greater power. Oh, what thoughts and, words did, : God= put into my heart. As great, if not greater commotion was in the heartS of the peo ple. Look where I would, most were drowned in tears." . • After a, short stay, in the city of Brotherly Love, Whitefield was invited by Mr. Mob,la . .to New . York. The Church Establishment inn — that City was under the control of a commissary ap; pointed liy*theiThsliP OlLoadon. At an interview Whitefield had a few days after his arrival; he says : was re ceived by Mr. V. (the commissary) full of tiliger and.resentnient'; , and 'he del nied me the use of the pulpits in New York." This step .sent him into .11e fields, and he prqaehed at once to two thousand who c6llected to hear him. His friends made application for thek use of the Town.. Hall ? but this was re fused; so he Ptt;ached from a winilow, whilst, the people stood listening in the street below. Of this visit to New York,.and of;his first serrailin, a writer for c‘prinse , s Christian 'History" says : " I fear curiosity Was the Motive that led me and many others into that as:- sembly When I came there,l saw' a great number of people, consisting of Christians of all denominations, some %TOWS, and a few, I believe, of noreligion at all. When Sir. Whitefield came to the place designated, which was a little eminence on th'e'Side of a hill, he stood still and beckoned with his hand, and disposed the multitude.upon the descent, before, and on -each side of him. He then prayed most excellently, in the same manner, I suppose, that the first minis tors of, the Christian church prdyed. The assembly soon.appeared to he„dil vided into - two companies, the one of which were collected round the minister, and Were very serious add attentive; the last had placed , themselves in the skirts of the assembly, and spent most of their time in giggling; scoffing; talk. ing, and laughing. Towards the last prayer the. whole assembly, appeared. more united, and all became hushed and still; a solemn aw,e and reverence ap peared 'in the facesnf moat, A • mighty energy ',attending the word. •L. heArd and felt something astonishing and Bur prisingghut I confess.' was .not at that time fully „rid of my -scruples. I went to heitr him in ate - evening, at the rres byterian church., ;where he ei•pounded to above two thousand people within and without doors. I never in my life saw so attentive' an Audience. "All he said was demonstration, life and„ po w er. The peopre's eyes and ears hung on his lips. r They greedily devoured every word. I came home astonished. Every scruple vanished; I never saw nor heard the like ' • and 'I said within myself; 'Surely God is with this man, of a truth.' When Mr. Whitefield returned to Philadelphia, notwithstanding the great blessing which ) attended his -previous visit, he was forbidden to preach in'the city. One of the first persons he met in the street was the official commissary, who soon informed Arhitefield that be could_ no longer permit ,the use of the Philadelphia pulpit.. - - "`Thanks be to God !" he 'eXclaimed, " the fields are open." Be went 4ac _ cordingly and preached on the Society hill six thousimd `hearers, and in the evening also, t 'when - npwards of eight thousind were collected. Oil , the -fol lowing Sunday egain, at the same place, he had a'congregation, he says, Of about ten thousandin the morning, and about fifteen thousand in the evening. Thus we see that while' some in authority strove to drive him from the city, "the common people heard him gladly," and multitudes no doubt in heaven will rejoice that this servant of God was led to preach in the open air. I am well aware that those familiar with Whitefield's remarkable career will find nothing new in theSe sketches. But there was such. a constant outpour ing of the Holy Spirit in connection with his labors wherever he "lifted up" the Lord Jesus, that one would almost as soon tire of reading the "Acts of the Apostles" as of the labors of Whitefield. Some time since I chanced to meet with a volume of " Whitefield's journal," published a hundred years . Eigo. I often found the tears trickling. ,dowil my cheeks as Iread and re-read its precious contents. Dr. Griffin used to thank God for the " luxury of a broken heart." Accounts of such melting, pentecostal scenes as those in Which , Whitefield -lived, if prayerfully:read, can but have a tendency to soften our hearts and to make us long for such mighty outpour ings of the Holy Spirit in these days of worldliness. No man despises praise, who has - not ost all claim to it. PHILADELPHIA., ,' THE THREE EXILI2-JOHN, CICERO, NAPOLION. It might have been expected that, at such an age (95), in sit,h solitude, among the bold cliffs and lorply peaks, wittithe solemn roar of the nit breaking against the barrier of rock A and the terrible storms mocking his idesolation, John would have yielded tO the shock of ex ile and sorrow, and lk•oken his gentle heart in lamentation and despair ! ' The great Cicero, who bad ruled theßoman Foruin for zears, whose\ eloquence changed even the purpose of Cmar, and to wh m the Senate ga the name of his country" ecanse he saved c, Ro e from a terrible nspira y —in the ; i vrt, ime of life, stren honed yr memoriesglory and the etnicions ess of duiy, c soled by mul.titades he honored hii and loved his fame and even when .t e Grecian cities era ated _one another in bestowing on him. ivill 7 , ties and honors, spent his brief exile in bitter lamentations. , Like a beileaved lover he cast a longing and li 'eriig thought toward Italy, and beh ed, as Plutarch tells us, " with a littl ess Of f spirit altogether incorhistent . WI his reputation, and with the oppo unities he hld - enjoyed_, of cultivation from let-, tern and philosophy." ./, 'There was another 6.1.1,1 e on another lone ocean-rock—thern i a 6fdestiny;who, after the glory` of Mar o and Auster: liter of Sena and . Eak uhl; after the. conquest of Egypt and aly, of Germa ny and. Spain ; j aiter had dictated., el l terms to European cou s, and Ailed:the World with the terror o his name, was borne by the ship of a °stile nation, on whose generosity he h d cast-himself; to tlia - jack of St. Hel a, w:here, by a k , i ;, succession of petty a,nn nces, his life , was', embittered and sh 9 e ed. 4e,l%ad protested in vain agains t is cruel Cles-: tiny, and when it ,presse , a him. as a , realityhe had not the'p losophy 'nor the fortitude to bear it. e broke, often , into passionate complain !at the indig nity; felt most keenly hi's degradation; his absence - frocti .1 - c*l lii e anti Ilia son; rg. frb the light, of Vrance• iidifrom all "\ l, human sympathy.. .A.ltho gh fiftyyea,ts had . not yet been nupber d in his life, he sank beneath the weig t of his mis fortunes, and died, possib a. , believer, -- but .with " France""th armYr", and "JoSephine"--on his lips, asif his spirit grieved for the glory of the ast, though . 1 it caught no light from the 'atm.°. :-liiitliere is John the belo*ed ^ dititeiPle, severed in his old age from! his wonted, associations, from friends andicenes of labor: from -t.h A Illon•. 1 e--322K1--renclered holy by his prayers •; from the, young men Who bore him •fror place to place and watched over hita as over an endeared fathei, sent to a solitary isle, bare and bl ak, and 42,wave washed and shaken by s rms, with no companion who could ree 11 the past to his heart, and review Niith him the events in which their cocoon interests were blended and their ,energies i ,em ployed, and,yet with all, e disadvan tages of age, in`' whichonl becomes a child again, and needs a h don which * AC lean, a heart to Offer, it tencier and patient sympathies—that gOod old man, that banished man, - withput a 'Tome, without wife or child, without the fel . lowship of old friends, on thedran rock, in the lonely cave r fed, .wek.rw not by what - miracle, shelgred we know not by what human poweil: guarded at . night in his lonely rest, e know not by what other' hind than hat of God, that banished old Christian tands there trihis• sblitude, - his white 1 cks r caressed by the wind, his eyes 1 oking into heaven, and his ears open t the cedes . - tial voiees, a sublimer Man han Cicer? or Napoleon! The loye which so long -filled his heart, the lessons be learned when walking by the side And leaning onthe breast of teens, the n'earness. of his soul to God and heaven, the pos -session of a - life Which the edit Roman orator and Corsican conqueror, did not know, lifted him from dependance on man and earth! In the absence , • f places to which he had been accustoms of the beings who once ministered t his, - , comfort, and or the scenes which' had hallowed his earlier days, his piety .._ ~,... changed the bleak rock into a Paradise, its eaves Were God's temples, and the waves that beat around, it sang anthems to him soft and sweet' as the mother's songs ,that lulled his, infant heart to repose. . The Lord's day dawned over that With a' divine light; and 'as he looked' off on the sparkling sea dotted - with historic islands, and bordered by the glorious Grecian land,"he thought of the land of the blessed; his so j ul•went up to the ascended :Ohriit; 'lie 'Wag in the spirit of devotion and praise, happy without any of the wealth, or pleasure, or splendor, or luxuries, or comforts for which we labor, and struggle, and sin. In that devout and holy poStare, the solitary exile heard behind him a great voice of a trumpet saying,'‘ ,I am Alpha and Omega, the first and thelaStp and THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1864. By Tar. E. ;lAA'S, D. D turning to ascertain the meaning of the voice, he had' a vision of his Lord; not as when he leaned on him at the supper, but in glory and grandeur, clothed with majesty; his head and his hairs were white as wool, and his eyes as a flame of fire ; his feet like unto fine brass as if they burned * in a furnace; and his voice like the Bound of many waters, and he had in his right hand seven stars, and out of his mouth went a sharp two edged sword, and his countenance was as the sun. Shineth in his strength. Well' might he, at such a sight fall down As dead I. little did he anticipate such a, revelation of his Lord, nor would he have known him but for'tbe words " Fear not, I am he that liveth and was dead?' RELIGIOUS OONDITION AND. PROS 7 ' .PEOP OF NEXIOO. Tee. years -ago, the 'order of Jesuits was restored in Mexico and the natives for i time seemed disposed to hug.those more galling chains which other parts of Centlit and - South America were posed to throw off. But at' a later 'period, her people arose in their might, broke the .power of the church, which had beenotronger than the 'state, eon; _fitiOated the church 'property, expelled the bishops and, proclaimed religious liberty. This. work, if commenced be. 'Lire, was consummated.by Juarez, after Congress hail eieirated him to:the presi (fancy in 1861. "Two acts of his afforded'an ostensible reason for the invasion of Mexico. One was the suspension of payMent of_ all claims against the 'State for two years. The other was a refusal to pay a claim of fifteen millions .(15,000,000) which' Jecker, a Swift banker, brotight against the Mexican government_: While Mira mus was in possessionof the city of Mexico, claiming to be president, he :borrowed seven hundred'and fifty thou sand dollars of this banker,: then doing business in. Mexico. 'Upon the basis 'of this loan Jecker founded the . :above claim, and . when Juarez refused pap ment locker found means to intersect. the French minister: in the matter. Soon after,' . ierker *as, oiainied as ' a French citizerc''and - that government -tOok up his claims. Such, as we have intimated, was the 'ostensible reason for 'the invasion' of Mexico, but every one is well satisfied that so far as relates to the French it was something more. Their real.pur pose was, from- the beginning, to found a monarchy there which would be sub servient to the, -interests 'of ' France. The nominal effort to elevate the Latin bretoo- might -hawiren-- a,pi.Yeagre Thei Empress, who was. highly .offended at Napoleon's treatment of the Pope. Should that invasion eventually-cease, leaving Juarez in power, Mexico would present an inviting missionary field. Many of the people are liberal in their views, and among those who are the most so is Juarez himself. One who"has long resided in Mexico and is personally_ acquainted with him, says that he would gladly welcome and "protect Protestant missionaries; and'that he is disposed to provide, at his own expense, in the city . of Mexico, a place for Protestants to worship. But Whatever may be' the 'results of thisinvasion, we see for, that; distracted < country a dawn of hope. Metrust it is.one of those glim.merings, that portend the corning day. Indeed there We' anuniber:of favorable indica tions as to the moral improvement - cif that , country. As early as 1850 or 1851, the atten-. tion of the Anierican and Foreign - Christian Union was called to the im portance of a mission for the Mexicans in the valley of the Rio Grande, and a converted Spanish Monk, who had lahored for that society elsewhere,' was sent to Brownsville, Texas, where a large number of them lived. Remain ing on this side of the line that divides Ws from Mexico he enjoyed American protection, though laboring almos_t_as much for .h.er people as - if, he had been within her territory. ..He had a school during the week and on the Sabbath, when he also read the Scriptures among the people and exhorted them in the Spanish language. Exchanging that field for another, his labors there were assumed by a noble self-denying . 'female, through whose instrumentality the missionary work of.the. Christian Union for Mexico is mainly carried on. Brownsville has quite a Mexican population, and _there this lady opened a'school for girbi about the year 1855 or 1856. Her object'was to counteract the influence of a convent located'there, and to promote evangeli cal. religion while furnishing the means_ for a thorough education. And her labors, like those of her predecessor, were mainly for the Mexican part• of the population. Her school was so much better than that connected with the convent, even in the estimation of the. Papists, that several early withdtew their daughters from the latter for the purpose of sending them to the foriner, 'with - the till - understanding that the teacher would give them as much Biblical instruction as she pleased. They risked all harm from that quarter in order to avail themselves of the su perior advantages of the school. • While'engaged in teaching, the prin cipal and her associates embraced every opportunity.' to • distribute Bibles, and tracts among the people, by whom they and their books , and tracts were kindly received. Though this seminary soon met with opposition, it has steadily gained in the confidence of 'the people. The American and Poreign Christian Union early employed this ieacher to instruct indigent Mexican girls, of good promise, at the: expense'of the society. Their ''object *as to qualify them for usefulness in their various spheres of life,'and in due time to send them into various parts of the country to do good, as they were able. A Sabbath school ,was; early started' alSo, - which was at . ,tended by adults, as well as by children, andthus an opening was made for the • • truth, very quietly , but effectually,_te teach the hearts - of many Mexicans in a way that •they were 'not disposed to resist. Many of those of whom the pro veyb say; "the priests have them soul and body," Would attend these schools though they could not be induced to `attend a Protestant chiirch. At one time : the tii4c,liei says the Mexican girls which have •in my school have nearly all come from. the convent. Again she says;" Ifully believe that the truth is penetrating the hearts of .many in Mexico,: and will eventually develops 'itself in their salvation." She specifies some interesting cases. When Cortittas and his outlaws at tempted to deltroy Brownsville, in 1860, our teacher` passed over to Mexim for . better protection than the Stripes and Stars Could for 'the time- give, but re turned to her favorite post as the dan ger passed away, and continued her labois till near the outbreak of the pre sent war: She had then educated two hundred young lad'es in a thorough Christian. manner. As they have re turned to their homes or gone to other parts of their native land, they . have taken their Biblesalong with them and Much good is not onlydone already but the way is preparing for greater good to be done in time to come. "Other instrumentalities" are co :operating for the moral improvement of that country, through which thousands • of Bibles and Other religious publica tions have been, scattered, within the last ten year, An "Evangelization Society" has been "formed at Monterey, IT English, Scotch _and American resi dents for t diffusion" of the truth. And even the Emperor "Napoleon has i expressed the wish that religious free doca be allowed there' as well as in France." The fruit of these various efforts for thd benefit ofMexico already appears in such a Way as to give pro mise, ere long, of- an abundant harvest A Jesuit, who was receiving an annual salary of $25,000, came into possession of a Bible. He read it, saw the truth and gives every evidence' of having embraced it that can be asked.. He _ -submitted to the loss of salary,property, friends, influence and even to the inflic tion of torture .for the truth's sake. 'This-' Man eays 'that he knows of one hundred and, fifty priests whe desire to; renounce popery -.and would db it but fgr the fear of starvation. Some have (kie it and axe wandering in disguise. ,-TThirty ,miles east of Monterey a good work has been accomplished by - the Mexioan Evangelization Society. Fifteen persons 'hope they have come to a miring knowledge of the truth." They would gladly be formed. into a church. • A Bi6ld Class_ is held two evenings each week. "In another three tion a settool of thirty scholars,is taught by members of a Scotch family, where ,considerable inte)rest is manifested in religious truth." , • Thus f whether the French invasion is permanent or transient, God has been pleased;to give us a door of entrance to the heart of the Mexican people. The influence which is exerted upon them is silent but effective, like showers of rain that water the earth. The light im parted is spreading and the -Mexicans are opening their eyes to behold it and to see the source whence their calami ties flow. The number of enlightened men in Mexico is increasing and, as means are furnished, very much more , can be done bothalong.her borderwand within her bounds. As those who 'are educated go to their homes at the end of their coarse, or go as teachers into any other part of the , country, well trained in the principles'of our holy re ligion as well as in • the . rudiments: of science, they take their Bibles with them and = will become, we have reas,pn •to think i , healthful centres of moral in fluence whence trutli •will go out more' or less upon the wide wastes' around them and they will shine "as lights in the world." And to whom shoild liteiico look for thattrao:fal aid arid instruction that she very mach needs, if not to us ? For reasons that will be readily understood, we can aid her more easily and more effectually than any other nation. A n d we owe it to ourselves, we owe it to to them to do for them what we can. LETTER PROM INDIA. Sympathy in our Struggle—The Great . Cyclone —lOO,OOO Lives Destroyed, " He shall blow upon them and they shall wither, and the whirlwind shall take them away as stubble." Isa. al : 24: DEAR BB°. MEAxs :—We have been looking from India upon the terrible slaughter caused by your civil war with mingled and varied feelings. Some of us note the deep depravity and demo niac rage of the South in provoking and beginning such a bloody strife, and thank God fOr the pure patriotism which prompts the true-hearted men and wo men of 'the North to lay such costly offerings on the altar of liberty and hu manity. Others, and the great majority I fear lift up their hands in a kind of holy horror at the fearful sacrifice of life, taking no proper account of the immense interests at stake, and blaming the very men who thus freely pour out their treasures and life-blood in the holiest of human struggles. In the meantime God is teaching us that there are calamities more destruc tive than war, and that wealth and human lives are by no means the most costly treasures in His estimation, for He sweeps them away with the "besoni of destruction," while the great princi• plea of righteousness and truth remain eternal. You have heard of our India cyclones. We have had them before—but none, within the memory of the present gen eration, so fearfuify destrucfive as the One which smote Calcutta, the capital of British India, on the sth inst. For three weeks our papers have been bur thened with the details 'of this fearful calamity, aixi yet each 'mail brings new tales of 'suffering. The port of Calcutta was crowded with more than 200 ships and steamers. More than one hundred of these are reported to have been de stroyed, and generally with all on board. The force with which the cyclone struck -the city may be inferred from the fact that 410 houses strongly built of mason work were destroyed, and 1604 'dam aged; while of the smaller and weaker houses 40,410 were destroyed and 4,578 damaged. More than 1000 persons per ished by the'falling of houses alone. Bat the most sweeping destruction occurred between Calcutta and the sea. Over much of this region the ocean seems to have resumed temporary do minion—huge waves 30 feet high, roll ing over plantations, islands and vil lages, and sweeping every thing in their Course. An eye-witness describing some lo calities writes : " The Sunderbunds are swept. bare of every living thing and every habitation. The river and the land were strewed with dead bodies of men, Cattle, and even snakes. Diamond Harbor, we found entirely destroyed, and the river so fall of dead bodies of all kinds as to impede the progress of the steamer." A police officer having made his way, With immense difficulty, fro& Diamond` Harbor to Calcutta, by land, reports that he counted over 5000 corpses visible on; his route. A large number of laborers on the island of Saugor-5000 on one single estate—are supposed to have perished. All at tempts to estimate the loss cf life can as yet only approximate the truth. The first attempt made the estimate 10,000; bat this - quickly rose to 30,000; and now the details at hand increase this cstimate to 100,000 human beings swept ijrto eternity almost instantly by this terrific cyclone. Surely << The Lord hath his way in the whirlwind and in ihe storm;" and what reason have we in our human weakness to bow sub missively to His divine sovereignty, still heeding the lesson to do with our might what We would do for Christ and the salvation of souls. The terrible calamity is eliciting warm sympathy for the surviving suf ferers.A public meeting has been i Called n the Town Hall of Bombay to devise means of relief, and already our wealthy capitalists have subscribed over two lacs of rupees. Immense for tunes. have been made in Bombay dur ing the progress of your civil war, and it is well that some of this wealth be disbursed to the needy suffering. ' Odr latest telegrams tell us of the capture of Atlanta and the Mobile Forts, for which we devoutly thank God and take courage. Thanks to Sherman, Grant and Farragut, our European friends no longer taunt us with " The North has produced no Generals." God grant to our brave y Generals and soldiers a rich reward.' for all tileir toil and sufferings, in the best of all lands saved to liberty and humanity: Our British India forces are gathering to chastise the Bootanese on our northeastern lion ,tier. The necessaries . of life are at fiim . me prmes, and we are seriously threat ened with the failure of the crops and still greater suffering. Oar mission work goes on as usual, our chapel is in a forward state, though some eight thousand rupees and three months active labor are needful to com plete it. In the service of the gospel, Yours sincerely, B. G:WiteErt. KOLAPOOR, INDIA, Oct . 25, 1864. • • . „P. S. Your paper of Sept, let cam° Oct. 16th, one week in advance of all direct American news.