THE AIRERICAN PRESBYTERIAN GENESEE EVAGELIST. *Religions and Familymicwspaper IN THE INTEREST OF THE Constitutional Presbyterian Churet. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY, AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE 1334 Chestnut Street, (2d story) Philadelphia. Rev. John W. Mears, Editor and Publisher. Rev. B. B. Hotchitin, Editor of News and Fan4ly Departments. Rev. C. P. Bush, Corresponding Editor, Rochester, N. Y. gmtritau, Irrolsttrian. THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1866 CONTENTS OF INSIDE PAGES. SECOND PAGE—THE FAMILY CIRCLE: • Flowers—Tho Old Nan Entertained—Grandma has only Moved to Heaven—The French Boy—Musn't Always take People at Their Word—Nearness of Death—The Family Circle. For the Little Folks: Familiar Talks with the Children. R e ligi ou s Intelligence: Presbyterian—Cm:we/0, tional—Foreign — Miscellaneous—ltems. , THIRD PAGE—GENERAL ASSEMBLY. SIXTH PAGE—CORRESPONDENCE: Jottings from a Parish Journal—To My Friend Andrew—Letters on Reconstruction—Report of the Permanent Committee on Home Missions, read in the General Assembly. Miscellaneous: Dr. Beecher in a Hurry—Oar Country's New Peril—The Oratorio of " the Messiah" One Hundred Years Ago—President Lincoln's Pre sentiment of his Death, SEVENTH PAGE—RURAL ECONOMY: Weeds in Gardens—lron Dish-Cloth, Iron Clothes- Lines—Horses at Pasture—To Hive a Swam of Bees —Remedy for Scratches. Ministerial Record, Monthly. GENERAL ASSEMBLY, BROOKLYN, SATURDAY, May 27. The character of the General Assembly as representing our Churches, has been-fur ther illustrated by the action unanimously taken against the admission of disloyal ministers to our judicatories without ample proof of repentance and refOrmation. This action recognizes treason as a crime, as much so as any in the catalogue, and as such, disqualifying those guilty of it for any position in the church, no less than in the State. The large audience gathered in the church, in anticipation of a discus sion on this subject, were disappointed. The talking talent of the Assembly had not been developed as yet, and besides, there was really entire unanimity in the - body, and the lack of any call for argument or persuasion to be addressed to any member. We are all agreed that our church shall be no resting place for disloyal traitors flying from the tumbling ruins of "Con federate" churches, no ark for such birds of night to find rest for the soles of their feet. They have made their bed, let them lie in it. The Minute was adopted with the most hearty unanimity. The policy of universal suffrage was also (recommended by the Assembly,in two, papers with almost as decisive --anifeity. Two cr_t.i..--- 7 -wcwalipeeches wereinad• brethren little known in the church, in deprecation of immediate• action, but the final vote, promptly taken, was without a *ssenting voice. The Assembly which ecognized so freely the right 'of colored men to an equal position in'its chief coun cil, could not consistently hesitate to take a firm stand for the bestowment upon them and their race of a lower and les&respon sible privilege. If, by prompt action, as a church, on this great question, we can con tribute to an 'early solution, and• help to save the country from a long arid painful agitation, we may not withhold our voice and influence, and thus repeat one of the very worst errors of the past. On Wednesday, on the presentation of the Report on Home Missions, we had a sudden development of the 4reat amount of speaking 'talent, with which the Modera tor declared the Lord had seen fit to endow the Assembly. The greatness of the sub ject, the wide, 'unparalleled, truly marvel lous'ffeld opened for the church on the Pacific slope, in the territories, the gold and silver fields, among the conquered population of the South, the Freedmen and the Germans, was indeed worthy of the broadest and most solemn deliberation. Much of the speaking turned upon the great and pressing, and immediate need of men. Systems of training, modes of preach ing, the unemployed talent in the church, underwent thorough review, especially at the hands of Rev. Joseph Patch, from In diana, who treated these topics in a most • -;nal, racy, and instructive manner, as oe seen from the sketch of his remarks. ' speeches were made. Some dissatis m was manifested that the freedmen not made the objects of more specific ion by the Committee. Messrs. and Thompson, our colored dele made two of the best speeches that et been heard on the floor; their aim , .0 show the importance and feasibility le efforts for Presbyterianizing their especially by our own branch of the ' .h. We confess to our fears that the In of the , Assembly thus far, will be , below the demands of this part of eld. But the action of a Special Com e on the subject is yet, at the time of writing, to be heard. SPECIAL MEETINGS ,ring the evenings, voluntary meetings ,e members have been held, some of of great interest. The ruling elders two meetings for consultation and Jr, which were of a general character seemed to have done more to create nourish Christian sympathy, and stim- atuvritan 7*rtsbpetttiati. New Series, Vol. 11, No. 22 . ulate to action the piety of tht brethren, than to accomplish any definite objeet. As such they did good and were enjoyed by the laymen attending them. A meeting in be half of the American Board Ntras held on Monday evening, one in behalf of thz Amer ican and Foreign Christian Union on Wed nesday evening, addressed by Henry Mar tyn Scudder, . D.D., pastor-elect of .Howard St. Church, San Francisco; the Assembly's Communion was celebrated Thursday eve ning, and was an occasion of tender inte rest and refreshing; Friday evening a tem perance meeting was held and addressed by Dr. Chickering, at which, unfortunately, a difference of sentiment as to the moral bearings of the use of intoxicating liquors was developed, though we are not sure that real or great diversities of opinion existed. On Thursday,. as we have mentioned in another place, the Assembly accepted the kind invitation of a Committee of Arrange ments of Rev. G. S. Robinson's church, in Brooklyn, of whlph Mr. R. was chairman, to take an excursion around the city and down the bay. The trip was one of unal loyed pleasure. The weather was delight ful, the water smooth, the brethren- in the best of spirits, and in that hearty sociable mood, which only a body of men so thorough ly agreed, so bent on great objects, and so free from suspicion of each Alters piety; ortho doxy,and purity of motive can feel or man ifest. Happy Assembly ! Far distant be the day when .small jealousies, rankling en vy and ecclesiastical ambition'shall separate thy well-marshalled hosts into rival sections, break up the genial flow of Christian sym pathy and rive the delicate but powerful tie of confidence which now conveys the electric consciousness of brotherhood from heart to heart throughout the whole Church: THE MODERATOR There is but one opinion about our pre siding officer ; he is universally reckoned among the best we have ever had. He has distinguished himself, not for a stern and pompous gravity, but for graceful ease: courtesy, geniality, promptness in the dis patch of business and for diffusing a cheer ful atmosphere over the Assembly, without ietrae. a.„ 4 ...—.4...-et is responses to delegates have been uniformly .brief and happy. His term of office will long be remembered as one peculiarly combining the agreeable with the efficient. CONCLUSION OF PROCEEDINGS On Friday aft t woon, Dr. Harper, first representative of the United Presbyterian Church to our Assembly, was heard with much interest. The Church Erection Fund was further debated and • the subject intrusted to a Special Committee; to report on Monday morning. A report on the Religious Weekly Press was adopted. On Saturday morning, a full - and ably written document'was brought in by the Committee on the State of the Country, Dr. Fisher, Chairman ; also a report rec ommending the extension of the right of suffrage to people of color, by the Commit tee on Bills and Overtures. Both of which were unanimously Adopted. A report ou trial and suspension fora contumacy was de bated. Adjourned. ' MONDAY.—The report of the Special Committe4 on Church Erection requiring an examination by legal gentlemen of the precise limitations of the charter, was adopt ed. Later in the day, the Permanent Com mittee was instructed to take immediate measures for raising a supplementary fund for gratuitous distribution to needy churches. The report on trial for contumacy was re ferred to a committee to report next As sembly. The Narrative was read and adopted, This is a very full paper and shows a' most gratifying and extraordinary degree of tem poral and spiritual prosperity during the year. On' Monday afternoon, after appopriate resolutions and addresses, in which both the New York and Philadelphia doctors Adams and the Moderator participated, the Assem bly was solemnly dissolved. CIIEURCH DEDICATION.—The edifice re recently erected for the use of our con gregation in Vineland, N. J., will be dedicated for its sacred use on Tuesday next, (6th inst.,) at 111 o'clock, A. M. Rev. Dr. E. E. Adams will preach the sermon. The church is a pleasant edi fice, situated in the midst of an interest ing comunity, and there is promise that it will be a point of much importance to the interests of our denomination in -Lower New Jersey. Vineland is a new town on the Cape May Railroad, about two hours' ride below this city. Friends attending from Philadelphia can leave at 9 o'clock, A. M., and return, leaving Vineland at 6 o'clock, P: M. We are informed by the pastor, Rev. S. Loomis, that the people of Vineland will have in PHILADELPHIA; THURSDAY„ JUNE 1, 1865. good readiness an entertainment for their friends froth above—of what quality may be judged when it is remembered that we_ are in the midst of the strawberry season,, SERMONS AND ADDRESSES ON. THE _ _ DEATH. OF MR. LINCOLN. - [The following summary of views ex pressed in the.pulpit, will be found appro priate to the day as designated by the Chief Executive for humiliation and prayer upon our great national calamity.] We have received and are continuing to receive printed copies of sermons and ad dresses upon the death of Mr. Lincoln, many of which are deeply impressive and written with decided ability; all of them are interesting _as memorials of an event* unprecedented in our - national history. We early published from the manuscript the discourse of Rev. Mr. Fowler, of Auburn which we then regarded as remarkably comprehensive, analytical and thorough, and as exhibiting some of the very highest qualities demanded by the occasion. After examing a dozen other productions, we see no occasion to change our opinion of Mr. Fowler's diseourse. . A venerable, lady who bears names linked imperishably -with the literature, the theology, and the practical piety of the land, writes of , this discourse as follows : " God bless you for the sermon, which I have just read in the AMERICAN PRESBY TERIAN. I have been so sad since the death orour beloied Lineoln, whose memo: ry lingers_ in my lonely old heart, like,the perfume• of sweet faded flowers, .and it really refused to be comforted: EYery' thing I had read did not come up to, rvinark of my_ respect and love for our beloved Father Abraham' . . The tegtll like, and as I read on, every tendril of i my heart vibrated in unison with the words, and I said with satisfaction, Eureka! I have found it.' - Among the sermons Since then sent to our office, we would reckon that of Dr. Duffield's, of, Detroit, as the most intense, as revealing a noble soul stirred to its very de the and • J u dzwiee .ii i ..„o....-ArevtiV" ing some of the important truths illustrated by the dreadful . event. Dr. Duffield lives in a State ' which has tried, and we believe is yet trying, the - experi ment of doing without capital punishment. Speaking of the duty of a good government to restrain and punish "the horrible malig nity of human corruption," he says : Law has lost its 'sacredness. Fanaticism has been substituted for religion. In the North, a spuriousrighteous ktiifghteous humanita rianism, claiming to wiser and more bene' volent than the God of the Bible, has sym , pathized with the perpetrators of evil, in the indulgence of a mawkish and murderous charity, so-called, denouncing capital "punish ment, destroying the sanctions of law, and undermining the authority of government, until the idea of liberty has become identical with that of licentiousness. Property and life are sacrificed with impunity; and t low estimate is made of human virtue and per sonal security. Our officers of justice have extensively become the patrons and promo ters of crime ; and the functions of authority are sought to be discharged by the veriest traitors to the peace and welfare of society. In the South, the monster iniquity of slavery, with all crimes and abominations, interwoven into codes of law, had blinded the popular mind; and, besotted the popular conscience, - until, with fanatical madness,- its advocates and abettors had claimed ,the sanction of 're ligion, and believed themselves to be. the possessors of a purer Christianity, and much more consistent and devoted asserters of the inspiration and authority of the sacred Scrip tures. After enumerating the astounding crimes committed by the ,leaders of the rebellion, he says During the four years of the rebellion, facts have accumulated, showing that there was no deed of desperate, malignant crime, that could be perpetrated, which found not its instruments, and was not stimulated by the promise of reward from men in. high Once and influence, connected with the sup porters of the Confederate Government. And the young men of the South have exten sively been trained, and incited, to deeds of enthusiastic desperation, as though it were glorious and martyr-like to sacrifice them selves by deeds of infamous daring and crimi nality. 'The assassination7 . of the President was but the 'culmination of this system of diabolical enterprise, steadily, persistently, and Satanically pursued, notwithstanding frequent failures. i.ieldom, if ever, have such developments of corruption been made in the history .of any people, as have been, in the - rise and progress of the rebellion, that has caused the sacrifice of nearly half _a mil- lion lives of our brave and noble citizen sot= diers. Away with all apologists for the chivalry, and honor, and Christianity of the Southern conspirators, and their religion, who have not hesitated, but gloried, in the use of such methods of revenge for warfare I Perhaps just this, and nothing short of it, was needed to bring the ,public mind to a just and proper estimate of human life, and de mand the restoration of the death penalty to the place a God of justice and mercy has as signed it in the administration of govern ment. In conclusion, he says : How jealous has God beefi for us I He has overturned every human idol, one after ano ther, which we have set up among our Gene rals, and glorified for triumph ; and when He was prepared to lead us to victory, gave • us men of valor, wisdom, humility, and patri- otic zeal, to exalt their country's honor above selfish ambitiorrand fame, and give the glory or our success to whom it ,is due. In the death of President Lincoln, He has pursued the same plan of Hisracious providence toward us. We might have put him in the place of God; and forgotten whose right hand bath gotten us the victory. In an instant He removed him from us, without one op portunity of uttering a final adieu. We look to his life for the proofs of his acceptance with'God, and cherish gratefully his own story of the consecration of himself to God. Would that. he had fallen elsewhere than at the very gate of hell—in the 'theatre, to which through persuasion, he so reluctantly went. But, thus a stain. has been put upon that so falsely called school of virtue. How awful and severe the rebuke, which God has administered to the nation, for, - pampering such demoralizing-places of resort_! The blood of Abraham • Lincoln can never be effaced from the stage. God grant that it may prove the brand of infamy consigning the theatre, which even'Solon and the old moral. Greeks abhorred, to the disgrace it merits, and the - abhcitrpnce of this nation. In contrast with this flaming utterance of prophet-like indignation, from a heart as fresh as if it was bikt one-third of the age of its venerable possessor, we place the - 1 feeble and vapid utterances of one who, if he ever had any heart for 4ffe,ring human ity, seems to have lost it, as-soon as practi cal measures.forlimiting the power of the slave masters of thti South had been adop ted by the people. 1 We have nothing 'so l weak, so lacking in any specific adapte.driess . to the load, 'simple ecessities2f the hour, ~ on all the pile of ad resses and sermons on our table, as the d' course published - for tr. Rice by some injudicious friends. The only points onWhich,he seems in any wise aroused are the " cons&vittigm" of Mr. Lin- . coin, (" He would, if`he coUld, hive accom plished what Soineof At'S - have long labored to accomplish for the country and the slaves —gradual emancipation and Colonization,") arid Mr. ,Lincoln s saying with regard to Dr. MePheeter's case in St. Louis, "The State must not undertake to run the churches." Men in these times are quite as well under stood by what they de not), say as by what they do. Both a discourse and aniddress come from the . true-hearted pastor of he Constitutional church, Baltimore, Rev. ' . Dunning. The I ".addrpse" delivered on/ the 19th, dwells upon the noble traits of the martyr Presi dent's character. We quote a few senten ces : Born 'and - reol.ed utu,slave State, yet his clear"moral perceptions a • brought him to that memorable Conclusion and declaration, "if slavery be not wrong, nothing is wrong;" a declaration strikingly in harmony with that of Thomas Jefferson, that " the Almighty has nu attribute that can take the side of the skveNlder." Closely allied wi a his conscientiousness, and growing out of i , was his unshaken trust in God. I. shall ne • r forget the solemn and tearful earnestness *th which he responded to the Synod of Pen a ylvania when in its ses sion in Washington, a the autumn of 1863, he said in answer to an address which had been made to him, ' Gentlemen, if God-be ioith us we shall main ain this Government if not we shall fail;" a d this'was uttered with that deep solemnity , nd peculiarity of man ner which produce the conviction that he solemnity firmly believed tha, •od was with the nation and would' bring it rough all its great trials. The "discourse refers more especially to the_ ut awf deed i elf : and its' very title reveals the animu s of the speaker : "The Nameless Crime''" A few sentences from this :, Now, the inter!, of the crime revel perpetrator was the forbearance He openly profe known to be, an, whose protectio tion he was bas and abuse for its though thus kn was spared and the misplaced f against which 1 at which he ail freedom and lif ernment, in ti t: r continued be.•n forfeited. ent of both President. TI II) enter of him ca,t show 'the arid its desert fact reveals it. r • malignity and enormity s itself in "the - fact that its Iving at the time only on 1 I d leniency of the President. Fed to be, he was publicly • nemy of the government he enjoyed, whose protec !enough to continue to eloy ttempte'd destruction ! Yet, n as a declared enemy, he i rotected from judgment by bearance of that government lifted his assassin hand, and ed this deadly blow ! His as a declared enemy of go . hour of its great struggle istence and authority, had He was permitted the enjoy too great leniency of the leniency he outraged by the gat showed it 1 If anything eons enormity of this crime, a dciuble damnation, this not observed, my friends, providence is here presenting er to this whole nation? "As in his heart, so is as." He 's deed, who "in his heart" And have yc how God in a test of char a man thinket who approves rejoices in it, who does not f revolt at it, is' assassin. He nity, the with proper stimuld again to the h If you hear a deed, 'never tr night with hi nor your chai safe with him. Dr. Darlin is very calm, which he thi Mr. Lincoln thinks, will must say tha with a great cause is neve den and violf [ palliates or excuses it ; he 1 d his whole nature abhor and mself, shall I add herself, an • , she only needs the opportu , awal of restraints by God, the Lon and - hardihood, to strike 1 rt of our present President. man palliate or excuse that ,t yourself alone or in a dark Neither- your reputation, er, nor your life would be !.. discourse "Grief and. Duty" nd very sorrowful for a loss, s we may feel for a long-time. services as a pacifier, he e greatly missed ; and we he opinion set forth by some !• al of confidence, that a good seriously injured by the sad t removal of its representative strike us as self-evident. man, does n The - cause ,f liberty and Union was not G - enesee Evangelist, No. 993. indeed ruined in Holland when William Prince -of. Orange fell by the assassin's pistol; but according to Motley, it received such a check, that the limits of the Union were never so extended as would have pro bably been the case, had that wise prince been spared a few years long% And the fall of Gustavus Adolphus was, we think, in the estimate of good judges, an almost irreparable disaster to Protestantism on the continent of Europe. In this case, however, we are inclined to differ from Dr. Darling; for we regard Mr. Lincoln as having, in all probability, fully accomplished his work, while the new and sterner processes required in settling with the vanquished le*ders of the rebellion, and in impressing on our people and on the world the great lessons of justice sug gested'by the honr;have been handed over to more decided , men. We quote two sentences : *Among all the men educated under the in fluence, and in the midst of northern society, I do not believe that you could - find an indi vidual who would deliberately, and day by day plan, and finally execute, so fiendish an act as that of Mr. Lincoln's assassination. Depra vity does indeed ripen, even with us, fear fully, but to attain so gigantic a growth as this, it must have its roots in a more congenial soil. The most terrible, and as it seems to me, wicked event of centuries, nothing but bug familiarity and close contact- with the whole'system of oppression, a.; it has- existed at the south for years, and with _the spirit that it, engenders, could ever have made it. possible. In Rev. F.- - L. Robbins' sermon we like the 'following amdno• other discriMinating remarks upon Mr.. Lincoln's standing in-the affections and estimate of the pebple:— . It is remarkable to 'notcie how personal is the feeling we have, and how greviously the late President is mourned, as if indeed. e re'the real father of all the people. Never was a man carried to his grave amid such universal and. profound grief. Why is this so? . . The people loved him:because he was a man of blameless life ; of - an eleva ted, transparent, firm character, and of an affectionate, benign disposition. Mr. Lincoln was not highly prominent for intellectual abilities. He had not the grand imperial mind of a Webster, nor the subtle, metaphysical, intense intellect of a Calhoun, nor the splendid and ready powers and elo quence of a Fox or a Chatham ;.-Juid yet his intellectual abilities were adequate to every occasion : indeed, they were such as seem to have admirably fitted him for the work which he has so ably accomplished. Where others with higher range and more profound faculties might have failed, doubt -less would have failed, he has succeeded, his matchless sagacity, and pru 761fiin—o-ri. sense; and native shrewd- ..ence, an ness. His thoughts were - his own ; they were fresh and original, and were clothed with a quaintness, a directness, a simplicity of style peculiar to himself. - We are thankful to him for preserving the record of the declaration made by Mr. Lincoln, " to an eminent clergyman of New York," upon issuing the Emancipation Proc lamation : "I did not think the people had been edUcated up to it, yet I thought it was 9.2,91 a, and I did it." But, we think a Protestant preacher had better have omit ted the wish, (we_ might almost call it prayer,) for " the eternal repose" of the "illuminated spirit" of Mr. Lincoln, "above the skies." Rev. M. C. Sutphen, of the Spring Garden (0. S.) Church, among other points, 'enlarges upon the evidences of the piety of Mr. Lincoln, though pronouncing no decisive judgment on this trait, in he President. Mr. S. puts the best possible construction on, his unfortynate presence at the theatre, saying : While my heart bleeds most at the thought that he should have received the fatal blow within the walls of a theatre, yet when I re member that he was drawn- thither -reluc tantly, and from his characteristic kindly desire to mitigate the disappointment of the crowd collected in promise of the presence of the absent Lieutenant-General, I find it not impossible to think of him among the blood bought throng of martyrs—himself a martyr in one of the holiest causes that ever de manded the sacrifice of human life. Mr. Sutphen asks a number of signifi cant questions like the following:— Is it not possible that the overflowing love of our late President would have made con cessions to rebels, calculated to imperil the peace and safety of the nation and to tarnish the fair fame with which he will now descend to posterity; ? Rev. Wm. Sterling , of Williamsport, Pa., speaks throughout of the man, the princi ples at stake, and the spirit of the crime, after our own heart. We can follow him paragraph by paragraph, with a hearty amen I How to make extracts; where we would like to copy the whole, we scarcely know. Take the following : And this is the man that has fallen from his-highplace by a murderer's hand !. praying President—a President who daily held intercourse with heaven—a President who sought guidance and grace for himself and blessing on the land at the foot of the throne ;—a President who loved Jesus, who was kind and considerate to the poorest and lowest that came into his presence, or sought his aid ;—a., President who was so full of mercy and forgiveness towards his enemies, so pure a patriot, so worthy of the place to which God in his providence had elevated him ;—this is the man that the bullet of the assassin has reached, an 4 over whose un timely and violent end the. Nation mourns to-day I TERM Per annum, in advance: By Mail, $ 3. By Carrier, 53 50. Fifty cents additional, after three months. Clubs.—Ten or More papers, sent to one address. payable strictly in advance and in one remittance: By Mail, $2 50 per annum. By Carriers. $3 per annum. Ministers and 'Ministers , Widows, $2 in ad vance. Home Missionaries, $l5O inadvance. Fifty cents additional after three months. Remittances by mail are at our risk. Postage.—Five cents quarterly, in advance, paid qy subscribers at the office of delivery. _ Advertisements.-12X *cents per line for this first, and 10 cents for the second insertion. One square (one month) $3 00 . two months 5 50 three " ~.... 750 1 six " 2 00 "one year 18 CO • The following discount on long advertisements, in serted for three months and upwards. is allowed:— Over 20 lines. 10 per cent off; over 50 lines, 20 per cent.; over 100 lines, 3334 per cent. off. The crime which has been committed in the murder of such a man, occupying such a position, is one of unparalleled atrocity. I know nothing that surpasses it, save only the murder of the Son of God. It is to stand out before the universe while time shall last as the blackest deed which man ever com mitted against his fellow-man. It is a deep disgrace that such a deed could be perpetrated in out land. France has had her Infernal Machine, and her frequent at tempts at the lives of ker sovereigns, and her Reign of Terror; and we have felt that these deeds were to be accounted for by the infi delity that prevails. But in this land of the pious Pilgrims, the land_of Washington ;—in this land of Bibles and of the Sabbath and the Sanctuary,—this land of Christian civili zation, it was thought that such an event could not take place. That such a murder should blacken the annals of our country fills us with shame as well as with grief and horror. But this infamy belongs not to our whole country, but to the rebellion and its animating soul,. Slavery ; of whose cruel and barbarous spirit this act of murder is one of the natural fruits. And now, myhearers, how are we to look upon the leaders in such a work as this? Are we to regard with indulgent lenity the men who, tlurough four years 'of bloody war, have striven to rend in pieces the bond of our Union, pull down the Temple of Liberty, and convulse the country in ruin? No, no, No! Their crime is like that which cast the angels out of heaven. No words of man can express_ itsenormity. No punishment which man can inflict is commensurate with the crime. And superOled to , this, look at the per jury of men in office at the beginning of the war, holding places of honor, and trust, and emolument under the Government ; look at the robbery, the treason they have committed, the blood they have, shed on the battle-field, and the sufferings of our prisoners who fell into their hands: Can you read the testimony of these prisoners; can you lock upon these shattered wrecks, of men with their sunken eyes, and hard and shriveled and ashy skins, and wasted forms ; can you behold these starved and fleshless, - yet living skeletons; can you hear them tell the pitiful story of their fearful wrongs and sufferings, and not feel your blood grow hot like fire in your veins? Can you read or- hear their tale of woe, and not feel every nerve in your body quiver with agony and_ indignation? If you can, your temperament is cooler than mine. And shall they authors of these miseries go unpunished? Forbid it justice I Forbid it, every right,. and true, and patriotic, and Christian principle ! Who can withold assent from stitin whole some sentiments, so nobly and forcibly • expressed ? We present, as worthy of consideration, the followng suggestion from Rev. Mr. Aik man's discourse : I look at it and am not able to say why it was. Is it suggested that it is for punish ment—because we have not acknowledged God? Ido not think it. I belieie that my country is to-day the most God-fearing na tion on this earth. Four years of sorrow and trouble have taught and chastened the na tional heart so that God is seen everywhere and His hand is acknowledged in every pass ing event; men once may have denied His minute Providence; they see it now. In all our recent success the victory has not been ascribed to men or armaments but to God, so that on the bells of the horses, on the door posts of the places of amusement, has been written "Glory to God above." .I.t is said that this bereavement comes upon us because we were trusting too much in man. Once we did, but we , were scourged out of that years ago, so that we relied on no man, but as a people were lookint up to God. The speaker believed that the nation had been struggling toward the right. No, he could. find nothing here which could adequately ex plain this bereavement. Rev. Oliver Crane, of - Carbondale, Rev. T. B. McFalls, of Washington, and Rev. Wm. C. Wisner, D.D., of Lockport, also delivered earnest and patriotic addresses, which we would be pleased to notice more fully. But space forbids us to pursue further ,the pleasant employment. We - cannot, however, forbear referring to the sermon of our friend and recent co-presby ter, Rev. Isaac Riley, now of Pottsville, Pa. It strikes us as one of the most fin ished, able, searching, 'and eloquent of all we have examined. It bears fewer of the marks of haste than almost any. There is a chaste and classic beauty in its language and structure, while it breaths the lofty fervor of true patriotism and indignant hatred of wrong. A single paragraph from this address will fitly close these selee ; Lions and remarks : The traveler who wanders through the streets of Rome, comes up to the church of St. Peter, and looks and scarce believes his eyes, when he recalls all the magnificence which des cription and expectation had clothed it with ; for he sees the dome he had conceived p grand scarce rising above the pediment, which does not at all impress him with loftiness and grandeur. But he draws near. He changes his place. He learns to measure the height. He enters, and gazes, the dome rises and swells' more and more magnificent, and his faith is awakened. But it is only when he goes upon the oampagna or stands on some distant hill, and high over all the puny works. of lesser men sees the grand dome rising lord of the city, that he gains true views and some conception of its vastness and sublime beauty, that he reallyknows what he has seen. Snell' is our experience. They who have drawn nearest and looked up most steadily to the height of the pure grand character of him who is gone have learned best what he was. But it is he who looking over the valley of time from the elevation of years to come, or from the level plain of a calm judgment which can be reached only in a distance,— only he can tell us the greatness of him who m the loftiness of a pure nobility shall stand forever side by side with that other grand and precious name of our history. A COLORED ELDER of the Ref. Pres:' Church in Alexandria, was in attendance as a member of the late General Synod-.