gfli g inu,s gniftligtntt. PRESBYTERIAN. The Convention.—The Presbyter of last week has the names of twelve more ministers and twenty-four laymen, mostly Western men, endorsing Dr. Breckenridge 's call for an ante-Assembly convention at St. Louis. Rev. Dr. Eagleton, of Murfreesboro, Tenn., formerly of our Church, and one of those making the United Synod schism, has recently deceased. He was a member of the Nashville Presbytery, which, not long since, transferred itself to the 0. S. Assem bly North, but more recently, by a strong rally of the •rebel element, returned to its Southern connection. Prosßoots of the "Declaration and Tes timony' Men.—The Presbyter says that the dominant party in the Louisville Presbytery expect netting from the 0. S. Assembly to remove their alleged grievances, but they ex pect to gain something from the middle party, provided the Assembly adheres to its action. The middle party desire modifications and explanations, so as to retain in our Church some who they fear will go South, if the As sembly refuses to disturb its action. The party, of which Dr. R. J. Breckenridge is a leader, are willing to lose all.that wish to go on account of opposition to the acts of the Assembly. Wf see that the Louisville Presbytery has appointed as Commissioners the notorious Stuart Robinson, recently and for sufficient cause a fugitive from the country,. and his colleague, Rev'. Dr. S. R. Wilson, together with Ruling Elders Hon. C.A. Wickliffe and Mark Hardin. These appointments bode no quiet to the Assembly, but they are ipso facto a defiance which will help to seal the doom of the Declaration and Testimony, and hasten that very desirable result, the sloughing off of its supporters to their own place. On the other hand, we notice that the Cin cinnati Presbytery does itself the real honor of sendin Rev. Dr. Monfort, Rev. W. W. Colmery,Judge Matthews, and Mr. A. E. Chamberlain, all trten of pure record and well committed to the right. Rev. James G. Hamner, D.D., of Balti more, has withdrawn from the Presbytery of Baltimore and the Northern Church, for the purpose of connecting himself with the Church in the Southern States. Brooklyn, N. Y.—The Ainslie Street Church, (Rev. J. McDougall, Jr., pastor,) has been blessed during the winter months with a visitation of the Spirit. About thirty have been added to the Church, and a con siderable number more are expected to come forward at the next communion. The Frank lin Avenue Church, of which the Rev. Wil liam A. Ferguson is pastor, has been blessed with a gracious outpouring of the Spirit. Thirty-three persons united with the Church last Sabbath, twenty-five on profession ; fif teen of the number on profession were males— making in all, during the past year, an ac cession by profession of forty-three persons. Dr. Leybustn Coming North.—We see ii Ltated that Dr. Leyburn, former editor of The Presbyterian, who, on the outbreak of the war, left the North to take part in the fortunes of the rebellion, and has since been something of a magnate in the Southern Church, is now called to the Independent Church in Baltimore, formerly Dr. Duncan's, and will probably come on. It is not stated whether he expects to bring the Church into connection with the Southern Assembly, and thus inaugurate its threatened iffresaion Northward. If so, it will be another illustra tion of the power of pro-slaveryism over all consistency; that Church having for a generation past taken for its distinctive principle, a disdain of Presbyterial authority. Reformed Presbyterians in Tennessee. —The Rev. David Herron, who has been on a missionary tour to Tennessee, in order to look after the remnants of the Old Covenanter churches in that State, administered the Lord's Supper to a small congregation in Lin coln county. Of this, ho says : "To me the occasion was a solemn and interesting one. I felt it a privilege and an honor to administer the sacrament to that little congregation that had kept up its organization more than fifty years without a pastor, and had, during that long period, borne a faithful testimony against slavery in the midst of slaveholders. Its building is nearly a ruin. Roof, and walls, and floor, and doors, and windows, all need repairs. This state of things was not the re sult of carelessness, but of a conviction that the growing hate of slavery would soon drive them all elsewhere for homes and a sanctuary. Its members were few. They were the mere remnant of what they had once, been." Mr. Herron, in the report of his visit to Tennes see, says : "No one can travel long in the South without learning that the rebels' hatred of our Government is as great as, if not greater than, it ever was." Hymns in the Free Church of Scotland. —By the close vote of 25 to 20 the Presby tery of Edinburgh agreed to a motion sub mitted by Dr. Candlish, and supported by Dr. Guthrie, Sir H. Monorieff, • Rev. Wm. Arnot and others, to overture the General Assembly to sanction the use of hymns in worship. The overture was to the effect that, as there prevailed among many of the minis isters and members of the Church a desire to have hymns introduced, it was expedient that that desire should be met in a regular way, and that the Assembly should allow a number of hymns, not exceeding twenty-five, to be used. The Act against Innovations in forms of worship passed by the, Established Church Assembly last year 2 is much agitated among the Presbyteries this spring. Half a dozen or more of them have overtured for its uncondi tional repeal. One has overtured against the repeal, another against repeal but for " such explanations as shall guard against misrepre sentation." —The Established Presbytery of Linlithgow has under consideration an over ture pointing to the teach in4s of Principal Tul looh and Dr. Lee in the Universities.—The Free Gaelic congregation at Saltcoats have re cently been summarily dispossessed of the place of worship in which they have worship ped for thirty years, by the Established Presby tery of the bounds, in consequence of which the congregation are obliged to take steps to erect a new edifice for themselves.---The contributions of the United Presb. Church during_the year have been: to Foreign Mis sions Fund, £24,342 19s. 4d.; Home, £8639 158. 9d. ; Manse, £5504 3s. 2d. ; London Church Extension Fund, £lO5l 17s. 6d. ; Church Extension, £628 7s. 2d. Revivals.—Besides those elsewhere no ticed, we find in our exchanges accounts of revivals in Chili, 111. Spring Hills, Ohio; the Old Paxton Church in the Lebanon Valley, near Harrisburg; East Liberty, Pa. ; Bridge water, Pa. ; Dunlap's Creek, Pa,,; Bethel, Pa.; Mt. Pleasant, Pa. ; and Unity, Pa. CongregationaL —The libraryry has secured, by purchases . ther of the late Prof. Neidner, the successor of Neander in the chair of Ecclesiastical History. It numbers about 4000 volumes, and is regarded as very valuable.—An Independent Metho dist Churdh in New York has recently b een publicly recognized as a Congregational church, Bev. Dr Thompson, Beecher and Buddingibn partic s. ipating in the exercises. —The conversions at Fitchburg, Mass., are now estimated at nearly three hundred, and quite as many persons in Melrose are classed as inquirers and converts. —A Second Congregational Church has been organized in Detroit, and Rev. S. M. Freeland installed as its pastor. The First Church is now twenty-one years old, and has—so says the Congregation alist—grown to be the largest of all the Protestant congregations in that city. The new enterprise goes out from it as a colony. —Rev. David G-reene,pastor in Westboro, Mass., and formerly one of the Secretaries of the American Board, died a few days since from injuries received from the blasting of a rock. He was in the 70th year of his age, and has preserved an unblemished repute through his long service in the church.— A new Congregational Church has been organized in Greenfield on Long Island. Also the " Church of the Pilgrims," in 48th Street, New" York. We thought the name of the latter was the designation of Dr. Cheever's church. Has that finally give out? Baptist—Revivals.—The Examiner and Chronicle has informotionof about 2850 eon versions in the single issue of April 19th. At Petersburg, Va., a minister laboring among the blacks, says :—" More than five hundred persons have given evidence of a change of heart. The schools have shared largely in this manifestation of grace."A corres pondent in Michigan writes : ,7 Your weekly chronicle of revival news brings to mind the scenes of 1858. It is doubtful if, in the rural towns, the work at that time equalled the revival of the present year. It is estimated that from a thousand to fifteen hundred bap tisms have occurred in this. State since the first of January. "—Another says :—" At Mount Holly, the most remarkable work I have witnessed is now in progress. Of one hundred converts, more than half are males. In one family, both parents and eight chil dren have been converted within six weeks. Fifteen husbands of wives who have been praying from two to twenty-four years for unconverted husbands, have joined their joy ful companions in the service of God." "A friend informs us that the Baptist Church in Erie, under the pastoral care of Rev. W. F. Bainbridge, has had an accession of one hundred and forty-three by baptism within a few weeks. and that seventy of the number baptized are young men. This powerful work of grace is yet in successful progress." —ln Newark, N. J., the number of bap tisms to April 15th, is stated to be four hun dred.—A country church, after eighteen years of discouragement reports over three hundred requesting prayers, and many con versions.—ln this city, more than one hun dred were baptized week before last.—A correspondent in a country charge, writes : " When I came among this people last fall, I found them heavily in debt. They had just paid $4OOO toward repairing their house of worship, but there still remained an incurn brance of $4300. There was soon a spirit manifested to sacrifice unto the Lord; and the offerings were laid upon the altar until the whole indebtednesg was cancelled. This was no sooner done than the Lord bean to to refresh us with spiritual blessings.' '- The Tennessee Baptist, published in Nash ville, was among the first of the South ern papers which were obliged to give way to the necessities of the war. It has re cently appeared, a fair and good-sized sheet, under the new name of The Baptist Witness. —A correspondent of the National Baptist, writing from Boston, and speaking of the state of things in that city and region, says:—" God is all around us—the Holy Spirit is in the air. Speak to whatever, unconverted person you will, andyou will find the Holy Spirit is before you. We hope to welcome the Anniversary Meetings in May,, in the midst of thanksgivings for signal blessings.yet to be bestowed:"—The Ame rican Baptist Missionary :Union has just closed its fiscal year ' with a receipt account of $175,354 32,and a balance in the treasury of l $1,869 76. Home Missions have recieved 4 $155,000, which also puts the treasury in good condition. The Calvary Church, Phila delphia, received on .the Bth instant twenty one new members, making an addition of fifty-two since the first of February. Nine were baptizd on the 15th instant, in the Berean Church, West Philadelphia. —A letter from Dr. Dean, of the Siam Mission, dated January 1, 1866, contain&the afflictive intelligence of the death of Mr. Chilcott, which occurred December 30, 1865, after an illness of three weeks. His disease was fphoid fever.—Rev. E. W. Mundy, of th . p rst Baptist Church, Syracuse, has avowed a sort of Swedenborgianism and left his charge. • Episcopal—Bishop Clarkson, of the Northwest, is about to organize an extensive scheme of ministerial and episcopal visitation, whereby religious seed may be sown in the hearts of every emigrant train passing still further on toward the setting sun. To this end, he wakes an earnest appeal to , his East ern brethren.—Florida was, even before the war, the feeblest of the Southern Dio ceses. !The Bishop of that Diocese had a comfortable private fortune, which has all been lost. A correspondent of -thti Episco palian, who has visited Tallahassee, speak ing of the venerable Bishop, who is also a parish minister, and of very small and slight figure, besides being of advanced years and not of robust health, says, that he found him ringing, with his own feeble hands, the bell of his parish church, tolcall the people to the week-day service.—On Sunday evening, April 15th, a service was held in St. Mark's Church, New York, the Rev. Alexander Vinton, D. D. , rector, in behalf of the Germans. Dr. Vinton kindly loaned his church for the purpose; but took no part himself and was not present. The service was in German, and was conducted chiefly by the Rev. Dr. Schaff. It was arcomplete success. The music being thoronghly. German, was, of course, fine. Dr. Vinton by .this act throws the weight of his example in favor of loaning our churches for other than Episcopal services. Episcopalian. Methodist —The Secretary of the Home Missionary department of the M. E. Church South has recently reported that the war has scattered and paralyzed all the missions, and to-day they are but wrecks. The Secretary, however, took a hopeful view of the future, and recommended earnest effort upon the part of the Conference to resuscitate and rebuild their waste places- He had the as surance of the Govet nment Agent of. Indian Affairs at Washington that the Government would aid the Church in regtining and carry ing out the plan of missionary effort proposed among the Indians. Rev. Dr. Durbin, the veteran Secretary of the Mission Board of the M. E. Chtirch is about to make the tour of its missions in Central and Northern Europe, and will perhaps extend his visit to the missions in Bulgarta.-=—Rev. Thomas H. Pearne, presiding elder of the Knoxville district, Tennessee annonuces a very gracious revival in the M_ E. Church, Knoxville, re sulting thus far in 120 additions to the Church, and stating that on his district .1600 have professed conversion. • German Reformed—The Synod of the Ger man Reformed Church in the United States has, for some time past, been corresponding with Germany, with the view of obtaining some suitable successor to Dr. P. S c h a ff, for the German Professorship in their Theologi ca l Seminary, in Mercersburg. A t a .apeeitti meeting of the Synod, held in this city on the 12th instant, a Committee of inquiry pre- THE AM•ERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1866. sented several names recommended from Germany, but for want of better acquaint ances, declined nominating any of the per sons named, and fell back upon a divine now in the country, Rev. John Lichtenstein of Cincinnati. The well-known desire of the Synod was fer the recall of Dr. Schaff to the Professorship, but it was stated by the Com mittee that they had been able to obtain from him no assurance of his acceptance, however unanimous the call of the Synod might be. Still the Synod 'declined coming to a vote on the nomination by the Committee, and ap pointed a new Committee to confer with Dr. Schaff and report at the next annual meet ing. Moravian.—The statistics of the Churches and Home Missions of The Northerni4civince of the -Moravian Church in America for the year 1865, as published in The Moravian, give a total of twenty- five churches and seven teen Home Missions, located in twelve States, extending from Minnesota to Maryland. Pennsylvania has the largest number. The total number of communicants is 4854; in crease during the year, 144; members of con gregations, communicants, ,and children in cluded, 8307 ; Sabbath-school scholars, 4142 ; teachers, 356.—An effort is in progress for the erection of buildings for the permanent establishment of the Freedmen's Mission at Holly. Springs, Miss.—Forty-two persons were recently added to the Church in Beth- ehem, Pa Unitarian.—Unitarian service has been established in Vineland, N. J:, a town made up principally of New Englanders.. On the sth inst., Rev. Mr. Putnam, of Brooklyn, N. Y., preached at the dedication of a Hall, of which the correspondent of the Christian Re gister Says, that Mr. Brick is the proprietor. He adds;—" I feel a renewed 'assurance that at the next annual meeting of the National Unitarian Conference we shall be able to re port a strong and prosperous Unitarian So ciety from this beautiful, New-England-like town " Miscellaneous. We have many accounts of revivals which come properly underno de nominational heading, the clergy and people of the different denominations participating in the public meetings, and sharing in the fruits. Indeed, these union efforts. may be set down as a very marked feature in the general revival now going forward. We have heretofore mentioned many places in which revivals of this type have been or are.new in Danville, Among the more recent, we notice Danville, N. Y.; Oneonta, N. Y.; Logan, O.; Crestline, O.; alesburg, Ill.—We find it , our San Francisco exchanges accounts of re vivals enjoyed by different denominations in many places on, the Pacific coast.—The Evangelist says that the Presbyterian, Bap , tist, and Methodist churches of Orange, N. J., are enjoying unusual tokens of the pres 'ence and power of the Holy. Spirit. A daily morning prayer-meeting has been held for five weeks in the First Presbyterian Church, the interest of which lontinues unabated. , •In all the churches named there are extra evening services, which are largely attended. —S. W. 8., writes to the same paper that for some weeks a number of the churches in Utica, New York, "have been enjoying special manifestations of the Divine presence, .through the diffusion of the• Holy Spirit upon their members. It is-believed that we may safely include in this remark all or nearly all, the ehurches- among us that are of a truly Evangelical character, not excepting the German Lutheran, of which there are two, and some.four or five Welch ehurehes,-Con giegational, Methodist, and Baptist, ell maid taming' their religious services in their own vernacular tongues." —A correspondent writes to The Presbyterian, that there has been considerable religious interest in all the churches - in Columbus, Ohio, for some time past, and that it appears to increase rather than diminish.—The religious interest is increasing in New Haven and Hartford. The origin of the revival is reported as fol lows :—" A young man accosted some, gentle men, as they were going to their business, with inquiries about the concerns of his soul. .He was distressed and said: . 'The minister is, dead; there is no one to go to; no one to talk with; I do not know what to do.' Others in the city were found to be-in the same state, and two of the pastors were in duced to appoipt a prayer-meeting in a lec ture-room.. That place became too small, and one of the largest churches was opened for a morning meeting. Then an evening meeting was required by the clerks and others who could not attend in the morning, and another large church was filled at night. The mothers then begged for their ohihlren, and Dr. Bacon and Dr. Ludlow appeinted t weeting for them in the lecture-room, but were obliged to open the church before the hour for commencing, and hundreds of chil dren attend those meetings." --- On Sabbath evening; the 15th instant a meeting for the promotion of Christian Union was held in the Church, in Brooklyn, of which Dr. Rockwell is pa,tor. The building was entirely filled with an attentive, intelligent, and interested con gregation. The Rev. Jonas King, D:D., of Athens, Greece, presided, and delivered an addtess, in whicli be regarded love as the one power which must and would bind together different portions of the Evangelical Church. Rev. Dr. Bells then spoke at length upon the importance . of adopting at this juncture,prac tical measures, for educing and combining the feelings and convictions of Christian be lievers, so that the great idea of this associa tion might be made operative in all places where --it receives a v elcome. Rev. Dr. Waterbury addressed the meeting with much earnestness, and then o:fered the following resolution, which was ad.ipted : " Resolved, That the Clerical Union'be re quested, if agreeable to their wishes, to, call a Meeting of clerical and lay delegates from the various evangelical churches in the city to consider the feasibility of establishing a Brooklyn Church Union." FOREIGN. H. B. H. Consul in`Rome writes that the permission granted by the former Governor of Rome (for Englishmen to bring one Eng lish Bible and one Italian, provided that the owner's name is distinctly written in the title page) has been lately confirmed by the new Governor, Mgre. Randi.—The Rev. John !Keble, author of " The Christian Year, died on the 30th ult. at Boufttemouth. The deceased, whose well-known poetry secured for him a world-wide celebrity, attained the age of seventy-seven. His church at Hurs ley has been entirely rebuilt in a most costly manner out of the profits of "The Christian Year,-"—On Sunday week, says a late Eng lish paper, the Rev. W. J. Jay, M.A., min ister of the East India Chapel, Poplar, took leaVe of the congregation on his presentation to the Rectory of Elveden, near Thetford,, Norfolk, by the Maharajah Dhuleep Singh. The patronage of this benefice the Maharajah obtained when purchasing large estates in Norfolk, and it is an interesting fact that he, has now presented it to the missionary cler gyman who converted him many years ago in ndia.—lt is reported in Paris that the members of the French Protestant Consistory r rth a m t e have decided tu resign in a body if the Min ister of Education should refuse to sanction mentions with re the th e dismissal of the Rev. Martin Paschoud. The Pope's Lottery soheme.—A letter fo e in t , 111) tihnerethebetbatsg 0 available assets wherewith to pay the heavy liabilities entail ed on the apostolic exchequer by the number of lucky . ckets drawn at the last lottery, ap plication was made to the Mont de Piete, but there being a vacuity in its coffers, the finds of the Propaganda College have been pressed into the service. It is fair to add; that the treasurer would not pay a single dollar out of that sacred depository for such a purpose without a positive rescript signed by , the Sovereign. The Coleus() Affair.—lt is stated that Dr. Gray's bishop who is to succeed Dr. Co lenso in his spiritual jurisdiction, with the title of Bishop of Maritzburg, will be the Yen. Hugh Hyndman Jones, Archdeacon of Demerara, in the diocese of Guiana. This statement, however, is not to be received with implicit credence. HOME MISSIONS. This committee of Philadelphia Third Pres bytery on Home Missions,' beg leave to offer the following report:— The Church of God never possessed more wealth and talent, never had opened before it a larger or more hopeful field of action, than at this day. Our own branch of the Church is preeminently blessed with power and opportu nity to redeem waste places, and to extend the conquests of the Gospel. We only need the zeal, the consideration, and the high view of Christian duty requisite for an unparalleled advancement of our doctines, and our denom inational influence, •and more than this, for the conversion of souls to Christ, and the multiplying of churches for his glory. Open ings in Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and Tennessee, and in many other portions of the South and West, offer peculiar and urgent motives to the heart and to the Church, wherein glows•the fervor of missionary love. And now, it we would contribute to the social happiness of these States ; if we would encourage the loyal and the good in their trials, in their patriotic, humane, and Christian ser vices; if we would enlighten the ignorant and win the hostile ;„ if we would fill the mind of our whole nation with sentiments of love and brotherhood, stimulate the debased and sin ful to moral endeafor, and inspire the mil lions with honey, purity, and religion, we may do it now ; if we would help the poor to erect sanctuaries and gather schools,, give consola tion to those who struggle for social ele vation, bless the eyes and hearts of thou sands with the sight of •a messenger of. God, and with the offers of happiness and salvation, we may, we must do it now • if we would keep on the wave of the vancing population, to control its force and direct its march; if we would consecrate to the interests of education and of religion the Western mountains and fertile plains of our vast Western territory; if we would scatter the seeds of national and moral life, so that they shall spring up at the close of this century in the history of ,one hundred millions of intelli gent and happy people, we must do it now. And the Church will be wanting in duty, will be criminal in thesight of heaven, if all this desired good is not accomplished by her Wealth and action. If the apostles of our Lord had turned back from the great work to which they were sent in their day, even when the whole world opposed itself—its govern ments, its philsophers, and its religion to their , feeble arms, we would lament now over their inefficiency and sin. Had Knox, or Huss, or Luther hesitated, in their days, to consecrate themselves to'the dangerous and difficult work of extending'the Gospel, history had not given them such high places. Shame then be to us, if we enter not with ardor and resolution and -faithinto the vineyard of the Lord. We must 'help to bring, the =towns and eities'of lftff whole country under the sway of the Gospel. We must endeavor with all constancy to spread over our territory—more vast and populous than any ancient kingdom—the blessed light of the cross. We must labor for for the consecration of our national enter prise, mind, wealth, and life, to the King of kings. A nobler work this than Greece accomplished by her arts, or Rome by her laws. Nothing but the Gospel will save this great people, and we may give it the Gospel now if wp W e are happy to report a very large in crease on . the amount contributed to Home Missions by our Presbytery last year. ; - The report for 18651 presents only $3317 40 for -this object, whereas the present year brings offerings amounting to over $7OOO. Let this increase go on, in its two-fold ratio fro& year to year. Let each Presbytery in our church contribute an equal amount annu ally, and not many years will pass away be fore the whole land shall be overspread with the monuments of Christian culture and hap . .pmess. K E...A.DA*s, Chairman.' THE POPULAR AND RELIGIOUS SEN TIMENT OF THE NORTH to,'s g : $ Axe) Fri e, t:Wil 2.00:1004:44411-,11WO And here let us say, that on no point is the loyal sentimentot the country deeper, or more unanimous, than on the duty of protecting the Freedmen in their newly-acquired liberty, and, in all their rights as citizens of the United States. The veto of the Freedmen's Bureau Bill was not the occasion of so much surprise and grief because the 'people had set their heart upon that particular measure; they were quite' willing to believe that, it might have defects; and they did not ques tion the President's right to return it to the Senate with his objections. What excited their strong feeling of regret and disappoint ment was the. impression made by the tone and reasoning of the veto message, and by the manner in which it was greeted and in terpreted by the enemies of emancipation North and South, that the negro 'was going to be abandoned by the President and hand ed over, before long, to the unchecked con trol of his former masters: - This may have been altogether a wrong impression; but it was a real one; nor do we see how any can did person can read the speech of Senator Trumbull in review of the veto message, without admitting that it was quite a natural impression. And if there is one thing more than any 'other that the people, who saved the Union, at, the cost of so much toil, and blood, and agony, and with so many solemn vows and prayers to Heaven, have made up their.mind to resist to the utmost, it is a vio lation of the pledge made by Abraham Lin coln, in their name, to the 4,000,000 of ne groes, when he proclaimed them, henceforth and forever, American freemen. Language can scarcelydo justice to the depth and in tensity of their feelings on'this subject. Es pecially is this true of the free Christian Churches of the North. They look with mi -1 feigned horror upon every suggestion to violate this pledge; and they believe it were better for any man in the land, no matter how high he stands, or what his past' services, that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea, than that the should do, or consent to be the instrument of doing, such a thing ! Montesquieu, in his " Considerations on the Grandeur of the Romans," says : " There cannot be a more cruel tyranny than that p r acticed under the shadow of laws and with the color of justice, when men go to work to drown the wretched on thevery plank. on which t h e y were saved." Myriads of the faithful Christian people of the North have resolved, upon their knees, to do their part in preventing such a Heaven defying crime, and a catastrophe so shame ful and ruinous to the nation. They have resolved that by no connivance, or inaction of theirs, shall this land of the Pilgrims and or Washington be cursed and deified by a vast Pariah class of immortal beings, for whom the Son of God died upon the cross, and whose despised nature He is still wearing in glory everlasting ! They mean to stand up for exact, equal and gospel-like justice to the negro ; such justice as the New Testament or our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ enjoins, and the Declaration of Independence declares to be all men's birthright. They mean, also, to stand up for their public servants, who demand and do such justice to the negro. And the loyal churches of the North form a large army and wield a good deal of political influence—to say nothing now of their influ ence with the .ffigh and Mighty Ruler of the Universe. There are the Congregationalists, worthy heirs of the ancestral principles and Puritan Churches of Neiy England. They now stretch across the Continent; and the spirit of Plymouth Rock, of Bunker Hill, and '76, accompanies them wherever they go. There are the Methodists; the tearless and hard-working , pioneer wing of this sacra mental host ; '—stationed not only all along the frontiers, but in force in every city and village of the land. They were only ten years old when the Declaration of Independ ence was made ; only twenty-one when the Constitution of the United States was formed ; they are just a hundred years old now; but they are a million strong ; and if they were a thousand years.old, they could not be better champions of Christian justice and freedom. Then there are the Baptists. also potential in numbers, and character, and zeal ; full, too, of the same lofty and generous spirit. The names, which represent their principles and history to the world, such names as John Bunyan, Roger Williams, Robert -Hall, and Franpis Wayland, are symbols of whatever is most earnest, exalted, and faithful, in devo tion to the n'ghts and liberty of each indi vidual man, whatever his condition or the color of his skin. Then there is our own branch of the renowned Presbyterian pha lanx, with a spotless record, and marching on, elbow touching elbow, in the path of na de on righteousness and ' universal liberty. Nor are the sturdy footsteps of " the other branch" lagging far behind.. Justice is a word always dear to true Presbyterians ; and when they have turned their backs upon lib erty, they have grievously wronged their own time-honored principles. We,need not stop to define the position of our Dutch Reformed brethren; the Church that looks back to glo rious old Hollaneas her mother, is not likely to give a divided allegiance to an righteous cause. If, after the late triennial convention at Philadelphia, we cannot speak so ef the Episcopal Church,. yet what elopent and powerfdl advocates of National justice and humanity , to the negro, are found in her ranks I .Nor let it be forgotten what a patri otic and fervent prayer the whole Church, bishops, priests, deapons, and laity, offer up every Sabbath day in behalf of the National Senate and Representatives in Congress as sembled; beseeching Almighty God that He would be "pleased to direct and prosper all their consultations, to the advancement of His glory, the good of His Church, the safety, honor and welfare of His people ; that all things may be so ordered and settled by their endeavors upon the best and surest founda tions, that peace and 'happiness, truth and justice, religion and piety, may be established among us for all generations." What friend of Congress, or of National security, honor and justice, cannot, with all his heart, say AMA to that prayer ! No denomination in the country has bees more faithful to the claims ot4he negro, or laid costlier sacrifices upon ,the altar of social justice, than the Unitarians.; - as....indoed,. was to be expected of the disciri'les of the illistribuf Clanrung. As to the connection of Friends, they have been, for generations, a living, witness-bear ing,epistle of impartial humanity, known and read of all men., The other Protestant bodies are all, so far as we know, on the same side ; some of them most effectually. Of the po sition of the Roniish Church we need say nothing. That, too, is well understood. The religious sentiment of the North, as repre sented by the Protestant Churches,, is, then, we repeat it, overwhelmingly in favor of equal and exact justice to all men, without distinction of color • nor will it be satisfied with anything less. Rev. Dr. Prentiss in the Am. Pres. and 2heo. Review. tmium. sifir These premiums are designed for the persons procuring new subscribers ; tbe sub scribers must be such in the strictest sense, and must pay regular rates, as named, strictly in advance. CASH PREMIUMS. For one subscriber, 76 cents ; for four or more, at one time, $1 25 each; for a .club of ten new names, $7 60 ; each single addition to the club, 60 cents. OT H.ER PREMIUMS. '. All orders for these premiums must en close a postage stamp. HOURS AT. HOME OT GUTHRIE'S SUNDAY MAGAZINE, (to those not already taking them), for one new name and $3 50. LANog's COMMENTARY, postage free, for Two new names and $7. SMITH'S CONDENSED BIBLE DICTIONARY, post age free, for Three new names and $9 75- SMITH'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY, 8 vols., postage free for Twelve new names and $37 50. Huss AND ms TIMES, postage free, for Four new names and $l2. M A R.11.1.,1,,Gf1T:' SIITTON—HOLDEN. 2 4n the Brick Church, New York, on the 10th instant, by Rev. Gardiner Spring, D.D., Rev. J. FORD SUTTON, Pastor of the Western Presbyterian Church, in this city, and KATE J., daughter of the late Horace Holden, of New York City. HIGGINS—ENOS.—On the 18th instant, by the Rev. J. G. Butler, D.D., at the Walnut Street Presby terian Church, PAUL L. HIGGINS to CLARA C. ENOS. daughter of D. C. Enos, Esq., nll of this city. PENN OCK—)HARDCASTLE—On the 19th of Aptil, in West Philadelphia, by the Rev. Charles Brown, Mr. HOMER PENNOCK to Miss ANNIE HARD CASTLE. third daughter of Mr. Thomas M. Hard castle, all of New York City. ALLEN—WEBER.—At the Presbyterian Church, in Mineral Point, Wisconsin, on the 18th of April, by Rev. E B. Miner, Gen. THOMAS S. ALLEN, Secre tary of the State of Wisconsin, and Miss NATALIE WEBER, both of Mineral Point. timid SJitiu.o. Orir The Next Conference of the Chris tian Union Association will be held in .the Presbyterian Church,,Penn Square, Rev." Dr. Crowell's, on Sunday. pril 29th, at 4 o'clock P. M. Roy. Chas. P. Rrauth . D.D., will deliver an address. (Other clergymen will participate. Commencement at Auburn Theolo gical Seminary.—The following is the order o exercises during Commencement week: Addrees before the fthe- Monday, May 7, 2 P. M.. Examination begins, and continues till Wednesday evening. to T ri n osi esd is a o y oi e e r y n , i b n y g h Mova.r9. James Douglas. Pulaski, New York. Wednesday evening, May 9, Sermon before the. Alumni. by Bev. G. P. Folsom. Geneseo. Thursday, May 10, 9 A. M., Meeting of the Board of Commissioners and of the Trustees. 7P. M.. Com mence:m(oli Exerebun • Friday, May 11, 9 A.M., Meeting of the Western . Education Society, in the Chapel. kriniat PERRY DAVIS' VEGETABLE PAIN IC. II.LF. R. We ask the attention of the trade and the public to his long tested and unrivalled . FAMILY MEDICINE It has been favorably known ter more than twent7 years, during which time we have received thousands of testimonials. showing this Medicine to be an almost never-failing remedy for diseases caused by or atten dant upon Sudden Colds, Coughs. Fever and Ague,. Headache, Bilious Fever, Pain's in the Side. Back and Loins, as well as in the Joints and. Limbs ; Neu ralgic and Rheumatic Pain, in any part of the Sri tern, Toothache and Paine in the Head and Face. Asa Blood Purifier and Tonic for the Stomach. it seldom fails to cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Liver Complaint, Acid Stomach, Heartburn, Kidney Com plaints, Sick Headache. Piles, Asthma or Phthisie '- Ringworms, Boils, Felons, Whitlows, Old Sorer, Swelled Joints, and General Debility of the System. It is also a prompt and sure Remedy for Cramp and Pain in the Stomach, Painters' Colic, Diarrhoea, Dys entery, Summer Complaint. Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Scalds, Burns, Spraiu , , B. vises, Vrost Bites. Chilblains, as well as the Stings of Insects Scorpions. Centipedes, and the Bites of Poisonous In sects and Venomous Reptiles, 1- Directions accompany each bottle. It has been tested in every variety of climate, and. by almost every nation known to Americans. It is the almost constant companion and inestimable friend of the missionary and the traveler—on sea and land -and no one should travel on our lakes or rivers• without it. Sold by dealers everywhere. Price. 25 Ms., 50 Ms, and Si per bottle. PERU DAVIS & SON. MANUFACTURERS AND PROPRIETORS, 10393 t Pr' vi.lence, R. I. CHEVALIER'S LIFE 10K THE HAIR- Will restore Gray Hair i•• it, ..ri, final color. strengthen and promote the growta ••• the w-akest hair; stop its falling out; keep the he..d clean, cool, and healthy: can be used freely; contains nothing in jurious; is unparalleled as a Hair Dressing; and is recommended and used by our best Physicians. I assure yon. Ladies and Gentlemen, it is all you re quire for the Hair. Sold by all Druggists, and at my Office, N 0.1123 Broadway, N. Y. 1034-eow4t - SARAH A. CHEVALIER, Al. D The Rev. George Rood and Lady, Of Princeton. N. T.—Experienced educators--receive into their family Six Misses to educate with their own. Terms moderate, with a good and safe home.. Reference College Faculty. Send for a circular. THE GREAT NEW ENGLAND REMEDY! Da. J. W. POLAND'S ~PHITE PINE COMPOUND Is now offered to the afflicted throughout the coun try, after having been proved by the test of eleven years, in the New England States, where its merits have become as well known as the tree from which, in part, it derives its Arturo. THE WHITE PINE COMPOUND CURES Sore Throat, Colds, Coughs, Diptheria, Bron chitis,Spitting of Blood, and Pulmonary Affctions generally. It is a remarka ble Remedy for Kidney and other complaints. Give it a trial if you would learn the value of a goo,' and tried Medicine. It is pleasant, safe, and sure. Sold by Druggists and Dealers in Medicine gene rally. GEO. W. SWE'TT, Propietor. Boston, Massachusetts. A COUGIII, COLD, OR SORE THROAT, REQUIRES IMMEDIATE ATTENTION AND SHOULD El CHEMED.. IT ALLOWED TO CONTINUE. Irritation of the Lungs. a Permanont Throat Affection, or an Incurable Lung Disease IS OFTEN THE RESIILT. BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES *HAVING A DIRROP ISTI.ORRON OR THE PARTS, GM MM. DLLTII For Bronehitis, Asthma, Catarrah, Cock stamptlve and Throat Diseases, TROCHES ARE HERD WITH ALWAYS GOOD SUOCESEL SINGERS AND IPIIIILIO SPEAKERS will find Trodula useful in clearing the voice when taken before Singing or Speaking, and relieving the throat after an unusual exertion of the vocal organs; The Trochee are recommended and prescribed by Physicians. and have had testimonials from eminent men throughout the' country. Being an article of true merit, and having proved their efficacy by a test of many years. each year finds them in new localities in various parts of the. world, and the Troches are universally pronounced better than other articles. - OBTAIN' only " Thwarts's BRONCHUS. Titoongs." and do not take any of the Worth/are imitations that may be offered. Sold everywhere in the United Mates, and in For eign Countries. at 35 cents per box. A LADY WISHES TO TEACH. in a Private /I, Family. Address G j .: c \,. : 1 „. \ ( • o N---______---' The Gospel Treasury.. ble Harmony of the FongEvan- genets. making an almost in,• valuable reference book rfor Superintendents and Teachers. 86 5 Pages. Price $2 50. Postage 24 cents. J. C. 'HARI:UM:FES & CO.. Publishers of the SUN— DAY-SCHOOL TIMES, and dealers in Sabbath— School Books and Periodicals. 148 South FOURTH Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 1040-St ECONOMY TO ATTEND TO IT EARLY. CEDAR CAMPHOR effectually prevents injury to Clothes, &c.. from MOTHS, and cheaply enough ifyou attend to it NOW. Every druggist has C. C. HARRIS & CHAPMAN. Boston. KOLAPOOR CHURCH. • Copiee from the s ORIGINAL .PHOTOGRAPH OF TER FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CRGitOll OF 1c..01.,.,&P'00134 For sale at this Office, for the benefit of the Miss/On. Price $1..25, postage prepaid. 1038 KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE That there is a MINT OF MONEY in the sale of POWER'S PATENT PERPETUAL BROOI It is light, tasty, and elegant, and totally unlike all others that we have seen. There is no preceptible difference in weight between this and a common broom, and it is the only Patent Broom in which the amount of corn can be varied at pleasure, making a light or thick and heavy broom. The Bream is already a Saceimsi_ And somebody in every county will want the chance to make from $2OOO to $5OOO in the neat few months. One purchaser writes: "In ten days I have sold 300. averaging one to a /amity." Then why sit still, whistling the tune "I've nothing to do ?" A small investment, backed by a little energy and tact, will fill your pockets with 611111MOULCITS. State and County Bights for sale. Bend stamp Alt circular. J. N. WJECIDIAMAT, 786 ARCH Street (near Riahtli), Rev. D. G. MALLERY. Beverly,•N. J. Avers complete and tarok's- Philadelphia. Pa«