C.i)rtrqmtbinris. FROM OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT. (CONCLUDED.) LospoN April sth. 1865 The time for our annual gatherings draws near. They now usually begin in April and extend to June. Prepara tory meetings of all auxiliary. Societies are being held all over the kingdom. In our Presbyterian Churches, too, the note of preparation for the coming Synods and Assemblies is heard on every side. The Synod of the English Presbyterian Church meets this year at Liverpool, on the Ilth of April. It is reported that the Rev. Robert Lundie, of Birkenhead, is to be Moderator. Mr. Lundie is com paratively a young man. He was set tled in Birkenhead, near Liverpool, about fourteen years ago, as his first charge. He is a sound, pious, devoted, hard working young minister, and the appoint ment, I should suppose, will meet with the general approval of the Church, which is more than can be said of many of the recent appointments. The Eng lish Presbyterian Church has this year been making good progress. We have raised a large sum for the payment of all the debts on all our churcheS, and also with a view to future extension on a larger scale than hitherto attempted. But I hope to be able to write you more fully on these and kindred topics by and by. It is believed that Dr. Begg, of Edin burgh, is to be chosen Moderator of the Free Church Assembly this year. This too, is an appointment which will '-be received with very general acquiescence. Dr. Begg is one of our most popular ministers. He did a good stroke of work in fighting the disruption contro versy. It was from his lips that I, when a youth, heard for the first time the principles on which the Free Church is now established, stated and enforced. Since that meeting, I have seen no rea son to change the resolution then taken. Dr. Guthrie also spoke at the same meeting. Since then, I have had both these honored men, occasionally as guests in my house, and that memorable meeting, and its speeches, has been often enough referred to. Dr. Begg was on his way to the south of. France a few weeks ago, to recruit his health, prepara tory to the arduous duties of the Chair. On his way south to I - guidon,. the-Wheel of the railway carriagiOn which he was, suddenly broke, the carriage top pled over on the side, and was dragged so for more than a mile. Fortunately, the engine driver looked, behind„ and saw the state of matters and stopped the train, or the consequlences wbnld have been fatal. Dr. Begg escaped with a few bruises, and a nasty cut above the knee, which will keep him in his bed a few days longer. I called on him this morning, and spent the fore noon with' him. He lies at the Great Northern Hotel, at the King's Cross ter minus of the Great Northern Railway, here in London. He is quite well, and only suffers from the cut, which is heal ing rapidly. I was rejoiced to see that great massive head with so few traces of old age, and to think that one of onr soundest men, both in doctrine and in the principles of our grand old Pres byterian polity, bids so fair to see many years of strength and of usefulness. In my next letter, it is probable I may have something to say on the great questions now before us, the question of Union, and that other, of " Innovations," which is likely to be discussed soon. A question before Parliament excites considerable attention at - present. It is proposed to greatly modify and alter the oath at present taken by the Popish members of Parliament, as settled by what is called "The Catholic Emanci pation Act." The oath, it Appears, galls honorable members of that persuasion. It binds them, among other things, not to attack the Established Church of this country and of Ireland. They do attack it with all the virulence possible, and the oath stands slightly in their way. So they mean. to- thrust the oath to one side. And I have no doubt they will accomplish f tleir desire. They will get all they ask'-in this country, bit, by bit, and little' by little.• As constantly and as,.surelY as thee-incoming tide are they ristai g and flowing on. Even when they seEttn to lose ground and recede, it is simply a gathering of impetus by which they rise to a point yet further on and up. The abrogation of the peculiar oath is their latest demand. So soon as that is conceded, they have another. I at - tended last night a very large and in fluential meeting held in the West End of London, to discuss this question. The meeting took place in a very curi ous place. The present Dnke of Wel lington is a very peculiar man. Rebuilt large and-costly stables, not, far from his father's dwelling - house at Hyde Park corner. Attached to Mese stables and forming part of them, indeed, - is a very large and lofty riding -school. It is elegantly fitted up and furnished, but as a riding-school, and is. used by his grace, I believe, for exercise taking in wet or wintry weather. It is lighted by three large gas lustres from the roof, containing thirty burners each. There, in a build ing whose- area would have held from ten to fifteen thousand, , was' gathered about two thousand people, presided over by J. C. Colquhoun, Esq., an old mem ber of Parliament, a Scotchman, and a man of sterling_ Protestant - principle. The meeting was addressed by Sir William Verne; M. P., the Marquis of WQstmeath, the Earl of Cavan, and last, not least, by the Rev. Hobart Seymour, of Bath. This 'latter ' gentleman is known as the author of several able works on modern Romanism, and he knows the papacy and its workings better than most of our modern divines. He spoke on the subject of convents and nunneries, for more than a hour, and made a , most withering expose of the whole system. The Earl of Cavan, who also spoke, is a nobleman of the real sort. He is an evangelical Chris tian of the truest, gentlest, and most genuine type. Wherever he goes, what ever he does, Christ is wits him, first and last, beginning and ending. I know him well, and have often been with him at little meetings where I have heard him preach Christ, and him cruci fied, with all fervor, and also with all power. lam glad to say he does not stand alone in the upper walks of life. Many of the nobility now profess and preach Christ with all simplicity and all, earnestness. God hasten the day when all shall know Him, from the very least even to the very greatest. Amen. PRESBYTERY OF MONTROSE, The stated meeting of the Presbytery of Montrose was held en the 11th and 12th inst., at Dunmore, Pa. This is 4me of the villages which have sprung up in the valley of the Lackawanna since the opening of the coal beds which have attracted thither a numerous and diver sified population. For several`ears, Rev. T. R. Townsend has occupied Dun more as a field of labor, doing his work patiently and successfully. The Presbytefy consists of thirty min isters, and has under its care thirty-three churches, covering a large territory. , The churches are mostly in a prosperous condition, though quite a number of them are feeble. Within the year past, most of them have shared in the tokens of the Holy Spirit's presence„ The work of grace at Honesdale , has been 011130 great power and happy results.. Some Sabbaths ago, nearly.:fifty united with the church on profession of their faith. Carbondale has also been blest with an interesting season of-refreshing. • It has been our sad office to make re cord of the decease of Rev. Edwin E. Merriam, who was ordained and installed pastor of the congregation 'in Salem ,last summer. - He brought, to hisw.e.rk: a mind well stored with discriminttinc , and comprehensive knowledge of the system of Divine truth. He had gained largely the esteem and confidence of the people' from whom his Master has called him to so early a departure. The eongregratiori" at Montrose had been left vacant through the failing health of Rev. H. A. Riley, after his long and successful pastorate, com mencing in 1839. Within the year they have been furnished with a pastor, by the installation of Rev. Jacob G. Miller. Rev. Oliver Crane has been in stalled pastor of the congregation at Car bondale, made vacant by the death of that eminently devoted servant of Christ, Rev. Thomas S. Ward. We were also called to dissolve the pastoral - relations which, since 1833, had existed between Rev. James B. McCreary and the con gregation at Great Bend. He had re linquished his charge by reason of ill health. As is customary with us, much of the forenoon of Wednesday waS'deVoted to reports of the state of the churches. The season is always interesting and profita ble. In the afternoon the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was administered. Rev. Dr. Hickok, of the Luzerne Presby tery, (0. S.)1111141 pastor of the church in Scranton, participated in the administra tion. Beyond question, our communion was as cordial and as truly Christian, as if we were members of bodies ecclesi astically united. On Wednesday evening .a sermon was preached by Rev. Oliver Crane from Rev. xix. 6. The text and topics were suggested by the recent wonderful suc cess which God has given to our na tional armies in their efforts to suppress the rebellion, We then knew only pa tricitiC joy and• gratitude. Sorroiv had not filled our hearts Ohe hour of the nation's, great bereavement had not come. April - 19, 1865. A. M. Resolutions on the state of the country, adopt ed by the Presbytery of Montrose, April 12, 1565. WHFAEAS, It has pleased Almighty God, the Lord of Hosts, to give to the armies of the United States recent great and decisive victories over the armed hosts of rebellion and recognizing our obligations to acknow ledge the overruling providence of God in these events ; it is therefore Resolved, That with devout thanksgiving to the Sovereign disposer of all events, we hail the recent victories, and the fall n 1 the capital of the ,rebellion, as the- harbinger of Peace based upon the eternal principles of justice and right, and that shall speedily re store all 'our territory to the rightful authority of the Government, and that shall be equally a blessing to the North and the South. Resolved, That while we .accord to the no ble defenders of our country, both offiqrs and . soldiers, the honor that is due them,. and the sincere gratitude of our hearts-for the suffer ing and toland privations they have so nobly endured, yet we deeply feel that as a nation, we should acknowledge God as having given us the victory. • _,Resolved, That in view of the terrible de solations that this war has made, in the fear ful sacrifice ot -human life, we tender to the sorrowing and bereaved households and hearts of our country, our sincere sympathy in their bereavements, and feel our obligations to do what we can in the several communi ties where God has cast our lot, that no fa mily of our fallen heroes, in the service of *their country, shall be left to suffer in loneli ness and poverty, without our substantial aid and comfort in their afflictions. Resolved, That we view with adoring grati tude to God, his hand in guiding us as a na tion during the years of this fearful struggle, and that infinite wisdom, that has made the wrath of man to praise Him, in causing a war commenced for the purpose of extending and perpetuating the curse of human bondage, to work out its own final overthrow ; and we re- THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1865: cognize the. obligation resting upon the churches of our land to meet the spiritual wants of the millions so soon to be released from bondage, by furnishing them the means adapted to raise them in the scale of being, as well as to furnish them with a living Gos pel. Resolved, Tha•kin the peace which we be lieve so near at hand, we hear the voice of the Master calling the churches of our land to renewed consecration to His service—to increased zeal and devotion on the part Of ministers, elders, and naemlers in cultivating the new fields that shall 'be opened to the• in fluences of the Gospel; and in' every p s ossible way to extend the glorious kingdom 'of the Prince of Peace. The following resolutions relative to the death of Rev. Edwin E. Merriam,,; were adopted by the Presbytery of Mon trose, April 12 1865. • WHEREAS, It has pleased our Renr"ialy Father, to remove from his - earthly I ,ors Rev. Edwin E: Merriam, who at the eof his death was pastor of . the congre in in Salem, and a member' of this Pie- a. terri therefore Resolved, That we regard our dep BOA ther's youth, his natural and aei • &kit' his devotion to his chosen woo. 441':" meek, and humble spirit, as yen great promise of usefulness in „,cfracla2! Christ on earth, and A pausing I , ‘' urn s early .departure. Resolved, That we recogf • die iviib er. eignty of God in this aillico %-- mit to Him who doe all , „s well a s ResoWed, That we rejo;Oki,, and : 'e ' timony to the power of tlieoo s l 3 - c at, in the life of our brother‘tis . ° 11; to God; and in his death, se wele° entrance to joys of a higher spher se in God's upper kingdolo. Resolved, 'That we deeply sYn"l z the church who have lost a helot- , am fill pastor; and with all `thoc ho the loss of a dear and valued! -nd a th#O: 4 Resolved, That we regard s dea second among our number, W . ri in a jre especially his removal at • ontsel ministerial course, as a 1,, admo greater fidelity in our Ma- -r's cans CHURCH ERECTIV , AND go “ ASSEVLY. I. • ' ''l -r, :?.. N ., EDITOR, Or AMBO x - OAN REs)4 :.-•' !: -- • The subject of church ereip' , l s been. increasing4iin interest foie ;.il .a4r:4. years. It "wgl doubtless, con*, ! Pe the next Asseiably for careful,ool - But even, in this caslo,o - few of our church Ja, niber i fs ministers will know the ' . ded ‘• Probably not one in a tho . iad or members ever read the "pl ,j...pf eli erection, and not one in our ministers. Believi ject should be as clea, possible, we propose 1 thoughts for the considi Church. The " plan for the p management of the Fund" was " adopted Assembly of 1854." feeling on the part of Ai is deficient. Various been Made as to its ch; ing became so strong ii delphia, that a special there "appointed to in( changes are desirable, and to report at the This special report wa sented to the Assembl: at Dayton. This vat Standing Committee on whO reported to that A Minutes) as rollows feel it to be greatly de: mation respecting muo matter in this special r to the churches, and re, report of the special obit. ferred to the Trustees oih directions to publish and with such additi may deem useful." The Trustees hay the special report tions" at the close. .a careful perusal o that there is a wide as expressed in the the " additions." They agree—repot this: (1) That the signed to be perm, there is now no real nature of the plan. differ materially as and (2) character of There are two dis,, questions pertaining. ;,,kk.„ this plan:— ~,:q,-;", f i ll : t . I. Has the Asseini4. ar o change the plan ? and - 106, 11. Is it expedient? _:;t- - f' •,.' These questions . m --bc by themselves, or con ()- for if the Assembly h expediency is at an en question is decided ;. f expediency that is not. I. What then in re' There are here throe tions to the idea of sueh, h tsn there is a legal, semi . a( , and thirdly, a moral. — )ge e ' 4:1 1 ( Assembly . not to chiaiKkih v of the Fund and the,i*Art,; . Either of these wouleitat .v of a change, howeiriAhrpi.; seem. 1. By legal obie l to n, it imposed by the "liiWrof the especial statut . :nor: York," wherein it dei ce said Fund shall be liOid for the purposes afoAittit st feeble congregal of worship, in ( adopted by the In quoting ti the statute, the says :—" The Assembly of 18; adopted, which gislature of New porate, the Trust the Fuld in vir, REF. EDWIN E. NERRIAD granted by this statute ; and hence they. cannot depart from the provi statute without working a forfeiture of the Fund itself. It will be seen that the sions of the Fund must be held and administered' 'in conformity with the provisions of the plan adopted by the said General Assem bly.' the plan itself, as the Tfustees have attempted to show, the element of permanency is a fixed and i r revocable feature, admitting of no = alteration or amendment. - Upon this feature of the plan the statute besto,ws: a 'legal' and un changing the argument, This is the argu to • • bestows una ch reo a nv n te g , i a n tnh g da F e li w ty tio P ie„ ukt. g at obligation " an uncuanging Permanency asthe fixed and i rr ob„Die feature of the plan." The h i gh c iasiveness of this reasoning tor , h e r assertion) may easily be seen: 46„,r the act of incorporation does not 1 3 , 7 e in any way to any "permanency" Fund. (2) It simply says that ;,',re Fund " shall be held for the purposes, and in conformity with the provisions of the plan adopted' by the said General Assembly." Now if:-this as is affirmed by the author of the additions, refers merely to the Assembly of 1854, and the plan then adopted—if, by " said General Assembly," is not meant the continued existence of that body, then no alteration r c i ' t s , - or amendment could ever be made, for r l at d it would " work a forfeiture of the Fund , s ze itself." (3) But that "said General As irc"e sembly" does not mean merely th&Sitting h of 1854 is evident ; for the charter af -BN' firms that the man ment of theF und 4; at age lih om "shall be vested in individuals, who 44. rrid ). shall be elected, at such time as the said IA General Assembly' shall appoint." , „ ..d rt would seem frivolous to mention ;kis this,were it not for the fact that the as o)f sertion of "legal" obligation is put forth as beyond any doubt, and in such a way as to mislead those who have not seen the " Act of incorporation." This Act does explicitly place the whole manage-. merit of the. Fund, and alterations of the plan, by amendmentiP under the control of the General Assembly of the United States, and this Assembly has , just as much "legal" right, therefore, to change the nature of its "Permanency," as to change any other feature of the plan.. If the provisions of the plan itself im pose a constitutional obligation not to change its permanency; then this " doc trine" and "great idea of 'permanency" is "tied," but not by any legal enact ment of the State, - since that is modified by the plan itself This leads •us to the constitutional right, or the obligation of permanency, affirmed to be inherent'in'the provisions of the plan itself. Thiii we will consider next week. April 19, 186'6. THE INFATUATION OF CRIME. BY , REV.._ DAM:EL BAMER, MD The great crime which has startled the world, and covered a whole nation with the drapery of mourning, wasiong premeditated, thoroughly .planned, and, executed with perfect success. And yet, even judging from his own point of view, what has the assassin accom plished for himself or for the guilty cau.le which he desired to serve ? Has he shaken tbe, stability of the Government ? Not in the least. Has he conferred dignity and respect upon the waning power of rebellion ? On the contrary, he has only covered it with contempt and detestation in the eyes of all man kind. Has he strengthened the hands of those who have toiled four long years and fought a thousand battles' for the destruction of this nation ? He hlts taken from them the last remnant of en couragement to sustain a desperate and galley cause. Has he " avenged' the South ?" The South itself already con fesses that he has slain their best friend. Has he made it easier for the disobe dient to secure pardon and protection from the country they have betrayed and wasted ? .He has only armed the sword of vengeance with fiercer, light nings than ever flamed upon the guilty before. Suppose that he had escaped detection, and that for years he is at large, reaping what profit he can from his crime, then still what has he _rained ? Has he secured for himself such a notoriety as can give satisfaction to a depraved and ambitious mind ? Alas unhappy man, the greatness of 'the guilty fame which he has acquired, is the mountain of torture under which his soul must writhe and groan in - ceaseless agony. He has kindled the fires of hell in his own bosom, and the breath of wicked applause will only supply them with fuel and keep them burning. In whatever, deep darkness he hides him self, wherever he flies, oia land or sea, strange fears shall take hold of him; in every face he will see a look that pierces him as with a sword; in every voice he will suspect the disclosure of his crime_; in the deepest solitude remorse will whisper the words of the first murderer, " every one that findeth me shall slay me." Whether arrested or not, from this time forth, he is a fugitive and an outcast for whom the earth has no home, the human heart has no sympathy, and the laws of nations no protection. Henceforth there is no man in all the world whom he will dare trust, there is tg in which he will feel himself To his disturbed and guilty ion, the crowded street will sh the foot-falls of the overtaking .s of justice. The wilderness lan with horror through all its ).nd winds and strains against ialment of his crime. The tem ill gather, and the waves will their voices, and the deep will for the destruction or the vessel , t ! which bears him to other lands. Ail the continents and islands of the earth will stretch out their rocky promontories in threatening, and forbid him to pollute their shores with his unblest feet. tude can no longer be solitude to him, but peopled with furies. A vulture shall devour his heart; and there shall be none from whom he can ask sympathy or help. Millions of eyes will be watch ing for the terrible secret which he car ries in his tortured bosom. The walls of his bed-chamber will catch the whisper of his dreams. The empty air, and the yielding waves, and the Solid earth will keep the traces of his flight. Thus, to his guilty conscience, it will seem that the whole creation has con spired against him;- and though he should never be overtaken by human justice, the time may come when, in his despair, he will choose death rather than life,_or pray for madness as a blessing. Such earthly reward would the assassin have secured for hiniself Upon' the sup position that he had been as successful in eluding pursuit as he was in commit ting his crime. Such are the inevitable consequences of successful crime, sooner or later, to a greater or less degree, in any, case. Though, retribution may long delay; it is sure to come. Though the ministers of vengeance may linger in the Pursuit, they are certain to overtake. Long and triumphantly as wickedness has reigned in this world, the justice of God has never slept for a moment. The human heart was never made to keep the terri ble secret of guilt, and it must come forth or torture and devour the heart in which it is kept. The human conscience was never made to be at peace with sin, and it never will . be at, peace with it, though it may seem to slumber and keep silence for a time.. God'made the world and the universe for the habitation of righteousness, and he has appointed all the ordinances of eternal law - , and all the elements of resistless power, to sus tain righteousness and punish iniquity. Every act of disobedience to God is an act of self-torture and self-destruction. A man might as well attempt to over turn the movitains or push the earth out of its orbit with' his single hand, as hope to secure, happiness or peace of mind in opposition to the: claims of duty which ' God appoints. This one great crime which surpasses all: others with its ap palling atrocity, is only a more extraordi nary illustration of the utter madness and folly of forsaking the service anti the protection of the holy, the mighty, and the merciful God. Sin, in all its forms, is a mistake, a terrible and fatal mistake. The pleasures of sin are only such as delight while they destroy. To do wrong in any respect, in any, degree, is always to suffer loss, loss of peace, loss of happiness, loss of Capacities for good, loss of the great end and purpose of life, and if persisted in, it will ensure the greatest loss the universe ever de plores, the loss of the soul. Whit is life ever worth to one who commits any great crime profit or for revenge ? He cuts himself off from the oc cupations of men, from the delights of hu man society, from the protection of hu man law, from the approbation of public opinion, and he kindles ,a fire in his own bosom " which unconsumed is still consuming." What is life worth to him? And what will existence_be worth to the soul who, by persistent transgres sion, arrays against himself all the laws' of duty and happiness, which God has made for the _peace and welfare of the universe ? What rest, what home, what hiding-place will there be for him who has rebelled against the throne 'and government of the -supreme soVereign, and never sought reconciliation through repentance and faith in the offered terms of mercy ? What shall become of those who all their lifelong, have refused to accept the_greatest sacrifice that the in finite God could make for their forgive - ness and salvation ? .1 ar. THE ASSASSINATION AND THE, AS SASSINS. - R.xv. Mss --Dear Sir : The following article has already appeared in . • one of our highly resimctable dailies, but, from want of space probably, was some what curtailed. Will you be ,kind enough to print it in extenso in your esteemed columns, if space can be spared ? "The foul and bloody act is done ; The most arch deed of piteous massacre That this (or any other) land was ever guilty of." A deed contemplated long-' ago--a deed, the incitements to which have been wan tonly indulged in, both' in the secret and public cabals of the conspirators, from Richmond to the furthest confines of Texas, during all the past four years,— *bile more detailed and positive utter ances in the same - vein, varying from the subtlest inuendoes up, or down, to direct offers of 'money, have teemed in Southern newspapers during the same period, as a reward to any murderer who might be found capable and ready to undertake the bloody work. At length these in citements, coupled with the eoolest de liberation; and the most ingeniously de vised plans, and all energized by`infernll malice, have accomplished, too success 4 fully, their fell purpose. The deed is done! We are now, it is ardently hOped, to hear no more of the late new -vamped, but stale and squeamish, drivel about "erring brothers," which long ago be came a stench in the nostrils of all who scout the idea of a brotherhood" like that of Cain • for it is coming to be be lieved that lenity to a score or so of polished but blood-thirsty barbarians, were savage cruelty to thousands of their innocent victims, who limp or creep in maimed or shattered ruin around us; and still more, perhaps, to other thou saunds, who, in the event of their escape from justice:, would hereafter surely suffer at their ruthless hands. It is also now asked, on all sides, if criminals 'of the blackest type that ever cursed the world, not their miserable instruments merely, are to go unpunished, to stalk abroad with brazen front and defiant swagger, what ARE the crimes which, in our future, shall be deemed punishable ? What be , comes of all'sense of justice in the eyes of men, and of that universal shrinking from overt acts of violence, even among the depraved, generally accounted, so vi tally essential to the safety, nay, to the • very existence of civilized communities ? In another direction the query also arises, if crime may be estimated by the extent of its range, the number of its Victims, and the deliberate iniquity_ of its malice aforethought, where, inthe_ records of all history, is to be found a parallel to that of the conspirators-'and direct agents in this gigantic villany we call rebellion? and what, indeed, should' be the measure of their retribution ? They have Made treason, with all its blasting accompaniments perfidy, incendiarisrn, and assassination in every revoltingform —familiar as "household words" over the entire length and breadth of - two continents. They have swept the seas with the torch of conflagration and, ruin, and their hecatombs of slaughtered hu man beings, what arithmeticians Shall enumerate ? The shocking spectacle of our maimed, mutilated, and starved fellow-citizens, chiefly of the flower of our youth, who miserably survive as mere wrecks, the havoc of rebel shells ; rifles, and torpe does, and the starvation of rebel stock ades and foul dens they call prisons, plead trumpet-tongued around us ; while other uncounted thousands, in a." still, small," but yet more terrible - voice, call from their weltering graves for justice ai our hands " against the deep damna tion of their taking off." • Signally hideous, indeed, is the guilt of these monsters, and no less signal should be the doom pronounced upon them. May their_ fate, meted out by stern, but " even-handed justice," be so conspicuous, so striking, to all future time, as shall deter, nay, appal, all em-.Y bryo villains from a like career. On this principle, and in this spirit,'" re-adjust ment" will succed, and will give confi dence to mankind in a tranquil after-time, and, among ourselves especially,. will make union and peace doubly welcome and dear, by ensuring their permanence. NOTE.--Frau one who has been called to participate personally in the great agonies which have so long ravaged our homes, can apology for the above senti ments be needed ? If so, after the fate of the late illustrious victim of insurrec tionary barbatity, the writer may say, in extenuation of this paragraph, that it wai, not Jong since, his happiness to have been for months domiciliated be neath the roof of that great and good' man, was a partaker of his gentle hospi tality, knew well .*kis frank, sincere na ture, goodness of &art, and noble prin ciples, was a surprised observer of the immense pressure of his public cares, 'and the absolute marvel of 'his cheerful endurance of incessant toil for the.good Of the 'entire American people. As may be supposed, the result - of all this was to create an ardent attachment to the possessor of such exalted virtues. Who ; in like circumstances, could fail of being shocked at the announcement of his martyrdom by the hand of an as sassin, or aroused to irrepressible feelings opabhorrence toward those who instiga ted the devilish deeil ? E. D. M. HOME MISSIONS. On applications received from the churches they serve, the following minis ters were commissioned by the Presbyterian Committee of Hoine MiSsions, at their last regular meeting. Twelve of whom were under commission last year:-- Rev. Samuel Ward, Unity, Illinois J. W. Marcussohn, - Lockport, N. Y. " J. Woodruff, Penfield, New York. " John MeMasters, Pittsfield, Pa. A. D. Chapman, Brooklyn and Mal com, lowa. " W. H. Bird, Sandoval and vicinity, Illinois. " S. H. Ashman, Rural, Wisconsin. George F. Davies, Mount Pleasant, Illinoii3. John H. Beckwith, Evans Mills, New York. " Chauncey Francisco, Hopewell, N. Y. Jhfin Lyle. Utica, New York. " J. A. Grilles, Saginaw and Carrollton, Michigan. " James Gordon, Oakland and Otisville, lowa. " John L. Chapman, Irvins. and Mays ville, Kansas. " Courtney Smith, Portland, N. Y. MUSIC AND_MARTIN LUTHER. Charlotte Elizabeth says: "A taste for music and its high gratifications, must cer tainly elevate the mind. I do firmly be lieve that the man whose bosom yields no response to the concord of sweet sounds, falls short of the standard to which man should aspire as an intellectual being; and though Satan does tearfully pervert this so lace of the mind to most vile purposes, still I heartily agree with Martin Luther, that in the abstract the devil hates music.' " WO34All.—We are told that woman was the last to leave Paradise. Adam crossed its threshold first. No wonder that some trace of Eden, lingers in her nature yet; 'although like vein of gold in the quartz, , ,, we must sometimes crush the rock before we find it. All do not wear their good qualities upon the surface.—J. Frederick &ma.