gatfritan grotiOtriait.* I'HUROAN, APRIL 5, 1856 CONTENTS OF INSIDE PAGES. SECOND PAGE—FAMILY CIRCLE: The Angel's, Portion—By Their Fruits ye Shall Know Them—Help One Another—Here and There —A Day on the Lake—Jim and the Compass-box— Heroes—Fruit-bearing—Worhays Beauty. THIRD PAGE—EDITOR'S TABLE: Woman in the French Revolution—lndian Affairs— Periodicals and Pamphlets. MISCELLANEOUS: A Shot at the Decanter—Anti quity of the Waldensian - hurch. SIXTH PAGE—CORRESPONDENCE: Our London Letter—The Radical Seale out among East Tennesseeans—Kev. Dr. Seiss on the Apnea- Ivpse—TheJew vs. The Greek; or, The Units of the Race—Patient in Tribulation. MISCELLANEOUS: God's Plan in Geography — The Pyramids—True Feeling,. SEVENTH PAGE—RURAL ECONO3 I Y : Labor—Medicinal Plants—Jersey or Alderney Co.w —Row to Cook a Beef-Stenk—Selecting a Ca w — WherAn Sow GYP,UILE Del•th and Distance of Drains—Onions s o d Poultry. t`CIENTIFIC: Icebergs and the Arctic Regions. Mts...st,t,Akaous: -Seven-thirty at Par.' THIRTEENTH WEEK OF' PRAYER, Wednesday, Union Methodist Church, Fourth Street below Arch; Thursday, West Arch Street, corner of Eighteenth anal Arch; Friday, Alexander, corner of Nine teenth and'areen; Saturday, West Spruce Street, corner of Seventeenth and Spruce. PRESIDENT'S PROCLOAIATINN. A proclamation declaring the rebellion to be at an end has been issued by the President, dated April 2d. It reiterates his policy of recognizing • the lately Rebel States as entirely restored to the Union, and quotes resolutions of Congress passed in 1861 as in accordance with that policy. It is quite •as much a proclamation to Con gress as to the South, and will be welcomed only by Rebels and Rebel sympathizers, with a few conservative Union men North and South. TAB DEDICATORY SERV *ES in Ken derton Presbyterian Church will take place on Thursday, to-day, at 32 o'clooclE P. M. ; sermon by Rev. Dr, Shepherd. Preabhing in the evening at 7 o'clock, by Rev. Dr. March. `THE NEW Eivurr Booxs.—The New and Old School publication agencies have each recently issued a book of hymns and tunes for social meetings. Ours bears the title of " The Sobial Hymn and Tune Book," and that of the Old, School, " The Hymnal." The for mer has already attained a large circu lation, the fourth edition—making ten thousand in all—having just been issue - a, and, what is better, has met with almost universal approbation from those who are using it. The reception of the latter has not been so favorable. Criticisms have been numerous and severe. The last number of the Presbyter says : " We are not surprised to find that corres pondents of all our papers are ventilating The Hymnal, and causing the compound odors of its defects to be diffused throughout the whole Church. When it first appeared, it was com mended in all the papers except the Presby ter. Several correspondents of the other papers also spoke in the highest terms of praise. For a Week or two we really appre hended, that the book would be received without question or resistance; but the posture of its popularity is now such that we have no fear. A. writer, over the signature Musicus,' in the Presbyterian Banner, of Pittsburgh, is publishing a series of articles in opposition to the book, which will make an impression. He gives some of the objec tions which were presented in our articles, and suggests others of equal weight." TEE FORMAL' EXCOMMUNICATION OF Du. COLENSO took place on Sunday, the sth of January, at the Cathedral of Ma ritzburg, at the early - service, when the Dean read out the sentence asifollows : "In the name of our Lord J4sus Christ: We, Robert, by Divine permission Mettc politan of the Church in the Province of Capetown, in accordance with the decision of the Bishops of the Province, in Synod assembled, do hereby, it being our office arid our grief to do so, by the authority of Christ committed unto us, pads upon John William Colenso, D.D., the sentence of the greater excommunication, thereby separating him from the Communion of the Church of Christ so long as he shall obstinately and impeni tently persist in his heresy, and claim to ex ercise the office of a Bishop within the Province of Capetown. And we do hereby make known to the faithful in Christ, that, being thus excluded from all Communion with the Church, he is, according to our Lord's command, and in conformity with the provisions of the xxxiii. of the Articles of Religion, ' to be taken.of the whole multi tude of the faithful, as a heathen man and publican.' (Matt. 'l7, 18.) " Given under our hand and seal, this six teenth day of December, in the year of our Lord one thousand'eight 'hundred and sixty five. --" R. CAPETOWN." Dr. Colenso has found a new ei>adju-, tor in his unauthorized ministrations at the Cathedral, in the person of the Rev. Mr. Nisbet, a military chaplain attached to the forces in Natal. We understand that Mr. Nisbet's conduct will be brought under the notice of the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Chaplain-General.--L Church Ti es. EVENGELICAL ALLIANCE. -A commit tee has been organized in New York, to prepare a report of the state of religion in this county to be presented at the meeting of the Evangelical Annie(' which is to be held next fall in Holland. The committee consists of one prominent clergyman from each of the following denominations : Presbyterian Old and New School, Congregationalist, Lathe ran, German Reformed, Reformed Dutch, Baptist, Episcopal and Methodist. P . rof. H. B. Smith, who represents our denom ination, is Chairman of the Committee,, add has been charged with the . impor tant duty of prepariog the report. ,Tbere is just now material for one of the most interesting.papers of the kind which the Christian annals have ever produced, and the labor of its preparation is in good hands. We trust that it will not only secure the atteation of the Chris tian world abroad, but will contain cer tain facts and conclusions therefrom, suggestive of the , mutual bearing of church and 'State, which they cannot consider too early or too thoughtfully. THE PRESBYTERIAN MONTHLY. The Presbyterian Church has acknow ledged and assumed the responsibility of acting in its organic capacity to spread,the Gospel throughout the world, and has adopted a system of operations by which her interest shall be developed, and her polity shall be brought into full activity for missionary purposes. To awaken the concern of the ministers, the sessions, and the churches—to guide and invigorate their efforts, to unfold the facts and motives bearing on the work, and to freshen and augment their zeal— the General Assembly has directed its several Permanent Committees to pub lish a neat Magazine, in such a form and ,at such ,a price that it-may attain a wide circulation without interfering with the movements of the religious press at large. Such a periodical, with the above title, was commenced with the present year, containing twenty-four pages eaeh number, at the low price of one dollar per year, or fifty cents where as many as ten copies are sent to one address in any church. It is well edited for the purpose de signed, and is handsomely printed. It is commended as being well calculated to be most useful and cheering to minis ters in preparing for the• Mthly Con cert, in awakening and guiding the mis sionary activity in the-churches, and in encouraging a hearty and intelligent loyalty to the interests of our entire body. The subscription list is encourag ing, but needs great enlargement. We wish it to be ,placed in every family throughout the Church. As agents having in charge the publication of this Magazine, we desire thus to make an earnest appeal to all our ministers and sessions to take immediate measures for its introduction throughout. our congre gations. - May not its purposes be ex plained and commended from ourpulpits? Whatever is done should be done quickly. SubscriptiOns should be forwarded to the Presbyterian House, No. 1334 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia; or to the Presby terian Rooms, No. 150 Nassau Street, New York. T. A. MILLS, Gen. Sec. for Education. IC. KENDALL, • Gen. Sec. for Home Missions. J. W. DULLER, , Sec. for Publication. J. W. BENEDICT, Sec. of Church Erection Trustees. W. S. GRIFFITH, Sec. of Com. on Foreign Missions. CHARLES BROWN, Sec. of Corn. on Ministerial Relief. A TANGLE.—The Free Christian Commonwealth, Louisville, paper in the Old School connection, representing the extremest wing of that disunion and pro slavery element, of which there is just enough left to be sorely annoying to that Church, speaks of its coming Gene ral Assembly as a six-sided one, classi fying the parties as follows `--4 , 1. The non-political orthodox party represented by the • Declaration and Testimony and similar protests. 2. The semi-political conservative party of principle typified in Dr. Hodge. 3. The Gallio-conserva r Give, or party of no principle, typified in the recent lusus ecelesice. L at Chicago. 4. Tee Radical excision Tarty of Dr. Breckinridge. 5. The. Radical Anti- New School party of Pittsburgh. 6. The Radical New School party of Cin cinnati, with the accesion to it, probably, of the Presbyterian's remnant of a clique.' " The Presbyter, commenting on the above classification, reduces the parties, so far as relates to the questions betwen the Commonwealth men and the loyal portion of the Church, to three— the first, as above stated ; ,the second and third of the above substtintially one, making the second ; and the third, (pro bably the majority,) those who will stand implicitly by the action of the last year. It holds the question of union with she New School, as a separate one, and, wholly out of place in the above classifi cation. In relation to this point, it says:— _ "In our own church there are some who will oppose all efforts toward •reunion: but they are mostly those who are opposed to the present status of the Assembly, ` and • will most probably not remain With us; or, if they do, tEeir influence is not likely to be widely felt. And inthe "other branch" there are those who will strenuously oppose the movement, but they will, at length. yield to the general voice of the Church. Let our prayers go up to God that this re-union may be speedily consummated, and let all proper efforts be put forth wisely to this end." IT IS REV. GEORGE GILEILI t AN, not James, who is in danger of discipline on account-of heretical views on the Sab bath, in the U. P. Church of Scotland. Rev. JAMES is the author of the work on the Sabbath so extensively circulated in this country. He is an older brother of George, and . a very different man. So says Rev. John Kidd, of Joliet, 111., speaking from personal acquaintance. THE REVIVAL has reached Rochester. A large accession was received by the Brick Chuich, Rev. Dr. Shaw's, last Sabbath. Particulars next week. LErrsas, from E. Tenneiie and from Augusta, Ga.,..wi1l appear in our next. THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 5. 1866. As I predicted in my last letter, the great Civil Righis bill, framed to " secure all persons in their rights, and to fur nish the means of their vindication," has been defeated, at least so far as the refusal of the President to sign it can secure its defeat. While a vetcywas not unexpected, there were some hopes that it would not be so ex.ceptionless and sweeping in its terms, as the one :which reached the Senate on Tuesday. It is generally conceded that the veto message of the Civil Rights bill is far inferior in point of argument as well as dignity to that of the Freedmen's Bureau bill. The President, as you *ill observe, does not hesitate to appeal to the passions and prejudices known to be entertained by, the ignorant and the baser sort gen erally against the unfortunate ~negro. As in the veto of the Freedman's Bureau bill, many of his statements are wide of the mark, and not a few of them desti tute of the semblance of truth. He evidently views the whole matter as' a Southern man, and as a quondam slave holder. When Senator Trumbull, the author of the bill, comes to review and reply to the veto message, it will be amazing how fall it will be found of sophisms, and even •of grossly false statements. It will be remembered that Senator Trumbull's reply to the veto of the Freedmen's Bureau bill placed that document in its true light before the people, and exposed most thoroughly the superficial and fearfully lame argument of the President against it The second veto 'is even more vulnerable. It shows that the Execiitivehas- turned his back upon all th'e great principles contained in the platform which he so eagerly em braced in 1864. In doing so, he has, of course, satisfied the Rebels, avl made himself and his policy acceptable to the Copperheads. With them he o doubt expects to actin future. As might be expected, last Tuesday was an exciting day in the Senate. Ina° mediately after the morning hour, the case of John P. Stockton, the self. elected Senator from New Jersey, was up for consideration. His case excited much interest, and at an early hour the Senate galleries were crowded in every part. The popular anxiety, however, was con centrated On the anticipated veto mes sage of the Civil Rights billy which it was expected would reaeh the Senate on that day. Of late years, Presidential vetoes have been few and far between, and although they are coming thick and fast now, thelpeople have.not become so thoroughly accustomed to them as to make the occasion of their deliverance to Congress a matter of ordinary mo ment. Besides, strange as it may seem, the capital of the nation contains more of •the spirit of secession auilttlislbyalty than perhaps any other city in the Union, if we except Charleston,, South Caro lina. This is nothing more than the old leaven of slavery which permeated the entire mass of society, and :wrought its anti-American and anti-Republican influ ences into all the forms of public, social, and private life. This spirit was less prevalent here, as elsewhere, immedi ately after the closing of the rebellion. But it has received`a fresh impetus from the conduct of Andrew. Johnson, and under the reviving ,influences of his policy it stalks forth as boldly as when James Buchanan was President, and John B. Floyd Secretaiy of War. A A habitue of the Senate on an, occasion like last Tuesday; as he mins his practiced eye along the galleries, 'can 'Point out those would-be-Secessiortiits, male- and female by the hundreds. They scarcely ever make their appearance there except when it is'expected that some blow is'to be"fittruck at universal liberty. The President's private secretary made his appeal:B4e - qter two o'clock. Mr. Stockton was trying to " kill time" by reading to unwilling hear ers a thirty-two *page pamphlet setting forth the argument for his right to his seat as a Senator from New Jersey. At five o'clock the Secretary of the Senate commenced reading the' veto message. It soon became apparent that the worst fears of those who expected a sweeping veto were fulfilled. The President, set ting at defiance the wishes and prayers of the loyal millions of the country, and holding in utter contempt' the combined wisdom of more. than twu-thirds of both houses of Congress, bad written "veto" upon every section of he bill. But for an unfortunate dreams auce, the absence of Senators Grimes and Kirkwood, of lowa, the bill would have peen put upon its passage immediately after.the reading of the veto, and carried by a two-thirds vote over the President's objections. I am not without hope that even yet such a desirable result will be reached. It is scarcely possible that the veto will come up for consideration before Wednesday. It would have been before the Senate last Wednesday but for: the lamentable circumstance of the death of the Hon. Solomon Foote,Wetted States Senator from Vermont. Several of our friends, who will vote for the bill as against the the veto, accompanied the remains of the deceased Senator to their last resting place in their own Green .Mountain home. They will not buable to reach here be fore Wednesday next, which ,accounts for the postponement of the consideration' of the bill to that day. Senator Trum bull will deliver a speech in reply to the President's veto message, after which the question will be pushed to a vote. The popular indignation at this last exhibition of the President's policy as reflected in that 'mirror of public senti ment, the press, is even m ore emphatic OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. WASHINGTON, D. C., March 31, 1866 and unmistakable than the response which followed the veto of the Freed men's Bureau bill. Not a few Republi can journals which were disposed to jus-_ tify that act, or to apologise for the President's incipient perfidy, are open and avowed in their disapproval of this new veto. If Congress shall be able, to pass it notwithstanding his objections,— and there is a prospect that it will,—it will teach him a lesson which he cannot learn too soon, that he is merely the ser vant of the people, and not their auto crat. J. M. CITY CHURCHES. NORTH BROAD St—Nineteen persons were received last Sabbath ;- nine on profession. Several others are indulg ing a hope and indications are spiritu ally encouraging. The pastor leaves for New Hampshire in ten or twelve days. RANATUNIC—EIeven persons were received on profession last Sabbath. Much interest prevails. There are many is quirers. . SERMONS APPROPRIATE to Easter were preached by Rev. A. Barnes and by Rev. W. Calkins in their rekaective pul pits last Sabbath. - The First Church was well'attended. The congregations generally show a decided improvement. Mr. Calkins' sermon on Skeptical Ob jections to the Resurrection was able, lucid, and timely. It would make a valuable and seasonable tract. REVIVALS. CARLISLE, PAr - -Rev."Dr. Wing writes: " There has been a very interesting work of grace among my people during the last few weeks, in which there have been not less than fifty persons who have expressed a hope that their he'arts have been given to Christ, and their sins have been pardoned. Twenty-four united with the church in their commu nion the second S'abbath in this month. Services were held during the weeks im mediately before and after communion ; in which I had the assistance in preach ing of Rev. Wm. E. Moore, of West Chester. The week after, services have been held in the Second Presbyterian Church (Old School,) are now in pro gress, with very successful results. In all the churches of our borough, not less than one hundred and sixty have ex pressed a hope in Christ during the last tWo months, Abodt twenty young men in the college, under the care of the Methodists, have united with the' church in connection with it." ADDISON, N. Y.—A revival is reported from the church in this place, under the labors of Rev. D. F. Jud`scrn. Mr. J. was formerly pastor of this church, and has just returned, after three, years ab sence, to the same field. TROY, KANSAS.—This place is about sixteen miles west of St. Joseph, Mo. Our church there is under the care of Rev. F.'E. Sheldon, who' writes to the Presbytery,Reporter On the second\ Sabbath of the year, our church was dedicated. A series of meetings was at once commenced, and is still continued. The number of hopeful conversions is now about one hundred ; sixty of whom have been received to the church. Here, where• two years ago there was no church-going bell, no libuse of worship, no professor of religion, no voice of prayer, we have now all these. Here, on this beautiful prairie, stands the first Presbyterian• church ever dedicated to the worship of. God in this State. A VETERAN GONE.—We find in our exchanges a notice of the death of Rev. Ova P. Hoyt,.D.D., a brother who, for nearly a quarter of a century, has been deeply identified with the general in- terests of our Church within the bounds of the Synod of Michigan. He died recently, (the precise date is not before us,) in Kalamazoo, Michigan. His age is not stated ; we suppose it to have been • about sixtylve. Dr. Hoyt, be possessing good pastoral qualifica tions, was, from his early ministerial lire, distinguished as a counsellor and helper of brethren and churches outside of his specific field ; and the regions around his pastorates, first in,Potsdam, in Northern New York; and afterwards in Kalamazoo, bear many traces of his sagacity, his peace-making wisdom, and his power for infusing energy and hope where discouragement had before reigned. His heart was warm, his address\ fervent, his manners bland, his mental powers strong, and his good sense always reliable. We notice his decease with more than ordinary regret. A FIELD.—To young ministers look ing anxiously for a field, and who would know the kind of work that is work, we commend the following extract from a letter of Rev. John M. Brown, of War saw, Mo., to the Presbytery Reporter. ts The work on this wide field is too great for us. These desolations cannot be restored unless we have help. We are straining every nerve—traveling in a'l kinds of weather, and over all kinds of roads, for long distances—preaching on the Sabbath, visiting and talking all the week, faring sometimes like John the Baptist in the wilderness, or worse, .1t on h w arid yet we fall far behind the needs of our field. We want one good man im me . diately, and shall want more very soon. My circuit (just marked over and en_ ' lmastragleeesda ,) measures o m ou e nn a cd s e u ; irnae and fdo m ut o rh r iw e s thanemekust be traveled two hundred sometime once not by This is too much labor for frail mortality, railroad, twou weeks—and, or in a buggy, and, this this cold, storming winter weather. Then, we cannot half finish our work. About all we' can do is too say good morning,' to a church, and then good bye.' These hnrried visits, as you well know, are not the way to build up 'Pres byterian churches. I believe our labors will largely be lost unless we have help. Can you not send on a man immediately ? If you can, I will give up Warsaw, and move further South and West." In a subsequent letter, (February 21,) to the same paper, Mr. Brown states that the Church in Warsaw, which for a while took up ihe fortunes of the " United Synod," has resolved to return to our connection, and is showing fresh signs of life. He also states that he recently organized a small church in Clinton, Henry County, a town of about six hundred inhabitants, without any - house of worship, and no other church organi zation. The church was gathered under the labors of Mr. De la Vergne, a licen tiate. He adds:—" On my last trip South, I received Mount Zion Church back to our connection. We have there forty-five members. There is much good material in that church. They have been urging me to settle with them. I have consented, and expect to move my family within its bounds in March, and preach to them one-fourth of the time." NEWARK, N. J., PRESBYTERIAN CITY Missions.—The enterprises of our New ark brethren generally answer to the im port of the term. An example is fur nished in their Presbyterian City Mission Society, of which Rev. Di. Stearns is President, and Rev. Dr. J. Few Sniith, Vice-President, with a very good sprinkling of free-working laymen in the board. Their- annual meeting has re- Cently been held. The last year's work has told well, and they now laancii out upon a scale which will demand an ex penditure of - $5OOO, and they mean to raise it. MINISTERIAL MOVEMENTS.—Rev. J. G. Kanouse, a zealous Northwestern pioneer, has finally so far, yielded to the wear of labor, as to give .up the active duties of the ministry, and has taken up his residence at Sun Prairib, Wis.--- Rev. J. N. Crittenden, formerly of Bel mont, N. Y., has commenced pastoral labor under a cordial call from the church in Keolcuk, lowa. REV: C. FRANZIISCO has removed from Hopewell, .Ontario County, to Branch port, Yates County, N. Y. Ettigins katAtigtuu., PRESBYTERIAN. Revivals. The Church in Washington, Pa., the seat of one of the departments of Washington`and Jefferson College, received, on the 11th ult., twenty-nine persons on pro fession. Twelve of the number were students in the college.—The Church in Warsaw, N. Y., has been greatly refreshed, and has received an important accession to !its mem bership. Other churches in the same village have been blessed.—Prospect Church, in the Peoria Presbytery, has received a gracious visitation. On last Sabbath twenty-two per sons sat down for the first time at the Lord's Supper, as the fruits of a series of meetings held some weeks ago.—A great awakening has taken place in the United Presbyterian churches in Pittsburgh and Allegheny, Pa. Meetings are held every night, and the as semblages are very large.—At a late com munion, eighteen persons were added to the Church of Abingdon, near this city.—The last number of The Presbyterian has the ac count of a revival in Silver Spring Church, Pa., in 'connection awith the Presbytery of Carlisle. Already a goodly number have con secrated themselves' to God and his people, and are waiting to be admitted to church fellowship. .Besides, the community for miles round has been roused up on the subject of religion.—The same paper says that the Church in Columbia, Pa. ' has been enjoying a quiet but precious work of grace. For sev eral weeks the work has gone on with no un due excitement, but with an interest such as so solemn and weighty matters demand. On the 25th ult., thirty-four were admitted to the Church dh profession of their faith, and solemnly engaged to be the Lord'i.—Forty six have been received into the communion of the Church at Tipton, Ind., on profession of faith. Of these,twenty were baptized.— In the Church at alden, Illinois, there are sixty inquirers, many of whom are indulging •a hope of having been born again.—Three Sabbaths since there were added- thirty-one persons to the First. Church in Camden, N. J. ; to the West Spruce Street Church (Dr. Breed's), of Philadelphia, nineteen ,• and to the Central tresbyterian Church (Dr. Reed's), of Philadelplia, thirty—all on examination. —ln the church at Parkersburg, West Virginia, there are over thirty inquirers, most of whom have professed conversion to God. A young men's prayer-meeting, and also a female prayer-meeting, have been established, and both are well attended. Twenty-seven have been received.on examination to the Church of Fairmount, West Virginia, and a revival is in progress at Morgantown, West Va.-- The Christian Instructor, LU. P.) of this city, says;—" In our last we announced that over forty persons had made application for mem . bership in the Third United Presbyterian Church of this city. We' are now able to state that the number admitted was fifty— nearly all of them on the profession of •their faith, and thirty-seven of them from the Sabbath-school.' =Oar Presbyterian ex changes mention many other places where're vivals have been or are now going forward— among 'them Fredericksburg, Va. ; Council Bluffs, Iowa; Deersville, 0.; Round Hill, McKeesport and Allen Grove, Pa. ; Bethel, Indiana. Stuart Robinson at Large.—The New York Evangelist of last week. says :—" Rev. Dr. Stuart Robinson preached in this city on Sunday last, morning and evening, in the Fifth Avenue Opera House. We gather from a notice of his .mornin,g's discourse that he has been invited here by a number of friends who wish to establish religious worship `for the masses in the city without reference to any sectional influences.' About one hundred .and fifty persons were present to hear the opening sermon. Vacation Work.—Rev. Drs. Hodge, Mac donald, and others, of Princeton, have issued an appeal to students in theology, to spend the long summer vacation in missionary labor in the pines and on the sea-coast in New JerseYa field Which, -in several, localities, has proved unusually responsive to spiritual effort. They also solicit the co-operation of pastors, Sabbath- s chools,.and, other Christian friends, for the funds needed to sustain such laborers. The estimated, requisite amount for each varies from $l2O to $l5O for three months. Abington, Pa.—This old Bucks County Church, of Scotch-Irish origin, has had in general a thrifty career. The first edifice Was built in 1714. It was rebuilt in 1793, and en. larged in 1833. •It is now to be taken down, and a new one erected on the old site, amid the graves where sleep former pastors, elders, And generations of ancestors, who there wor shipped. Farewell services of an interesting character 'were held in the old building last Sabbatlf A New Church, bearing the name of the Woodland Presbyterian . Cluireh, West Phila delphia, was organized by a committee of the Presbytery of Philadelphia on the evening of Friday, 2.3 d ult.Tw eity-five persons pre sented certificates of dismission from other churches; and their names were enrolled. Of these, three gentlemen were elected ruling elders in the church—Mr. S. R. Mason, Mr. William Montgomery, and Mr. M. A. Wurts. The church has purchased a lot on Pine street, west of Forty-first, on which they have erected a very neat and comfortable chapel. designed for - the temporary use of the con gregation, proposing hereafter to erect a church edifice on the same lot.—Preshyterifin. Congregational. Andover Theological Seminary has at present seventy-nine students attached to the regular class, and fifteen resi dent licentiates.—The New England Col leges, under Congregational patronage, are just now greatly blessed. About thirty o f the students of Amherst have expressed a hope in, Christ. The religious interest in Yale and Williams, as at Dartmouth, is very considerable. At Yale, union prayer -meet ings are just now held every evening in the College. They are not only crowded, but a deep, earnest feeling prevails among those who have not known what it is to trust in Christ.—Rev. Dr. A. L. Stone is at last in' possession of the Pacific Congregationalists.' He arrived in San Francisco 'on the 6th ult., and was warmly welcomed by his new par ishioners.—The "First Congregational Church of New Orleans" has been recently organized. Aided by the Congregational Union, it has purchased and renovated the edifice formerly known as the Second Presby terian Church.—Rev. B. G. Relyea, of Westport, Conn., reporis a precious season of revival in his church since the year begun. with froth sixty to seventy hopeful conver tions.—Rev. Ray Palmer, D.D., the highly esteemed Albany pastor, has been invited to take the post of Corresponding Secretary to the American Congregational Union, the headquarters of which are to be located in New York.—ln the Congregational, as in other denominations, there is no observable abatement in the revival interest. Reformed Church.—The IL It. Church of Helderberg, N. Y., Rev. William P. Davis, pastor, has been blessed with the presence of God's reviving spirit. Seine forty persons, most of whom are heads of families, have pro fessed their faith in the. Lord Jesus Christ. —The old Market Street Church in New York, a time honored edifice has been sold for a house of worship for mariners. The congregation will take leave of it on the last Sabbath in the present month. Anew loca tion will be made, butit is not vet fixed upon. —Revivals are reported from Niskayuna, Lisha's . Hill, and Geneva, N. Y.—The Christian Intelligencer, under the heading of "Gone, Sold and Closed," records that the Consistory of the Forty-sixth Street Reform ed Dutch Church, in New York, " disap pointed in their hopes of receiving brotherly aid, baffled in their labors, and worn out by a burden which they could no longer carry," have sold their edifice to the Episcopalians. This is a case of total extinguishment. Baptist.—The statistical account of the recent unusual spiritual prosperity of the First Baptist Church in this city, (Rev. Dr. Jeffery's), is as follows:—Received by expe rience, '6. by letter, 11 ; by restoration, 1; by baptism, 184; total, 202. This number includes 60 Sabbath-school scholars, 12 of whom were from mission schools. On Sab bath, the2sth ult., the Church as a thank offering for this great blessing, swept off its remaing debt of sosoo.—The last National Baptist, has accounts of 62 baptisms in eleven churches in this city, on the previous Sab bath.—Rev. George Sleeper, pastor of the Baptist Church, in Vincent, Chester County, Pa.; died of apoplexy, on -the 19th ult.— The Baptist interest is reported as on the ad vance at seval points in California. Particu lar mention of improvement in Napa. Stock ton, Petaluma, and Brooklyn. —Rev. Hi ram Hamlin, is meeting with success at Boise City, Idaho. He holds Divine ervice in the court house, with increasing congregations, and increasing attendance at prayer-meetings. Methodist —Several revivals in connection ,with the M. E. Church, are reported from the Pacific Coast. Among the points men tioned, are Salem. Oregon; and Dalla, Cal. —The Methodist learns, from intelligence recently received from Charleston, S. C. that the M. E. Mission Churches in that city are in.a flourishing condition. One hundred .and seventy-three conversioushave been recorded at the Spring street Church. Mucji interest is manifested for our good old Methodism. Less than half a dozen white persons have thus far joined. The membership is quite large, however.—The question of reunion begins to be seriously agitated in different "branches" Of the. Methodist churches. At a session of the N. Y. Preachers' Meeting, (M. E.) Rev. Dr. Curry and Rev. S. D. Brown, the delegation appointed to convey `our Christian salutations to' the Protestant Methodist Conference recently assembled in this-city,' reported having met with a very cordial reception, and that old asperities were "worn out. " —Revival items continue nu merous in the Methodist papers. Episcopal.—A Fifth Episcopal Church has been organized in San Francisco. It, is to have free sittings, and depend upon volun tary contributions for its. necessary income. --Ascension Church in New York, the former parish of Assistant Bishopßedell, of Ohio, is about to erect a church in Gambier, Ohio, the seat of the Diocesan College and Theological Seminary ; for the use of the parish and the institution. It is intended by the donors as a token of remembrance of their former rector.—The arrival of the Pennsylvania Bishop Stevens in London, in improved health, is announced.—Bishop Vail of Kansas, officiating for the absent Bishop Stevens, confirmed from the Ist to 23d of March, 183 persons in Philadelphia par ishee. The l*gest number confirmed in any one church—that of the Atonement—was 32. =TheEtoiscopal Church has made itself notorious for foraging upon other denomina tions for its ministerial supply. We noticed only a week or two since, the re ordination, by Bishop Eastburn, of Massachusetts, of two Congregational ministers.. The last Episcopal Recorder chronicles a like act of supereroga tion by the Bishop of Maryland, of which "Mr. J. W. Brown,"—so says the Recorder —was the subject. Miseellaneons.—The* Central N. Y. cor respondent of the Evangelist says :—" Tem perance and Religion walk hand. in hand in this region. Revivals as to one or both have been experienced in Western Oneida, Verona, Vernon, Lenox, Utica, Ilion, Mohawk, &c.'