Tin, AMERICAN IifiESBITERIAN ASll GENESEE EVANGELIST. ♦Heli a ioneand Family Newspaper. IN THE INTEREST OP THE Constitutional Presbyterian Church. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY., AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 Ohestomt Stmt. (2d story,) Philadelphia. Nov. John W. Moors, Editor,, and Publisher. amtritait Vrtollgttriait. THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1866. THE SPIRIT OF UNION WELCOMED. It is a joyful day, indeed, for the Church and for the world, when such, movements for union take place between different and long estranged branches of Zion, as have just been witnessed in the two Assemblies at St. Louis. Whatever first opened the way for them, they are hearty, sincere, and grand manifestations of Christian love. The world, which cannot appreciate the re-, fined distinctions which kept denominations apart, feels instantly the force, the beauty, the Christian fitness of such acts. Men understand the laying aside of prejudices; the cessation of a thirty years' war of theo logical opinions; the forgetting, on a great scale, of wrongs and injuries done on a great scale; the return of an era of mag nanimous forbearance toward mutual faults, and toleration of minor diversities of opin ion. They acknowledge in a moment the reality and the power of the Christian re ligion, when they see it drawing together vast bodies of intelligent, conscientious, high-minded men and .women, already inde pendent and powerful apart, and with a generation of provocation and estrangement lying between them. Union is a sacred word. It embodies the essential practical tendency of the Gos pel. It is hallowed by the Saviour's inter-.: cessory prayer, by apostolic repetita3 by the example, the, whole spirit, ands the dying words especially of the beloved apostle John. It is thelieaceful goal after storm and struggle. Ii is the crown and consummation of human achievement. It is the sweetest note in the harp of the old dispensation, as it is the key-note of the songs of the new. Discords, strifes, and divisions are the works of the devil and belong to his kingdom of passion, of dark ness, and of sin. Union in the State has been a talisman of subliine power. To as sail it, has been to call up from the peace ful and happy homes of a Christian nation a host of two millions of stern, unyielding warriors. Rather than lose it, 300,000 brave and noble youth have given up their lives, and three thousand millions of money have been sacrificed. Its significance thrills our blood. It is as truly an element of the American atmosphere, as oxygen is of the air we breathe. Union is not less essential or less precious in the Church of Christ. It is the expression of a far holier, far deeper sentiment, reaching out beyond national boundaries and distinctions of race, giving and receiving the band of fellow ship with Christian brethren all around the globe. Union is a name dreaded by heretics, in fidels, secessionists, papists, and the devil. Can these only create and perpetuate di visions among the friends of truth, their work is half done. Christians are more serious hinderances to the triumphs of the Gospel in their divisions and jealousies, often, than either of these, its known and de clared enemies. And God sometimes allows serious calamities to befall or to threaten the Church, in order to open the eyes of Christians to the value of union, and to draw them more closely together. So, under James I. of Englarid, all ranks, all parties, all Protestant sects arrayed themselves against the Popish designs of the king. Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Independents, Baptists forgot their long feuds and remembered only their common Protestantism and their common danger. It was a short glimpse of 'the golden age between two iron ages of controversy and division. So with our brethren of the other branch. The apostacy of nearly one third of their number into pro•slavery and secession, and their obstinate persistence in impenitence, has given the loyal remainder pause; has aroused them from their dream of self-sufficiency; has softened their hearts, and given play to the lovelier traits of the Christian character. A taste of misfortune has made them sensible of the excellence, the comfort, the necessity of a closer union of those that think alike in the Church of Christ. However the movement may issue, it is an omen of uncommon good to the cause of Christ, and of confusion to its foes. It is the signal for the end of unholy an tagonisms and costly rivalries between these two branches of His church. Henceforth, there is to be a utilizing of force once lost to the common cause. Henceforth, the enemy will not be able to play off Ephraim against Judah, or Judah against Ephraim• But they shall fly upon [or against] the shoulders of the Philistines toward the West, they shall spoil them of the East together. The shall lay their hand upon Edom (the South) and Moab (Southeast) and the children of Ammon shall obey them. .. . .. . _.. . .. ,_.......,... t an , it: a 0 L l in '. - -- . ,41 , New Series, Vol. 111, No. 23. We cannot refuse . to regard this surren der of prejudice, this blending together so. freely of hearts long estranged, this con spicubiis and honorable illustration of the Christian spirit and vindication of the Christian name, as a' fruit of the great re vival, with which God is so signally bless ing the American churches. The- precious sanctifying influences which have 'been vouchsafed to a thousand separate localities in both branches of the Presbyterian Church, found in those friendly gatherings, those Courteous and affectionate inter changes of deputations, that joint Eucharist and those union resolvings, their focal point. There, in that Queen City of the West, was the grand practical proof of the reality and value of the revival of 1866. Yes, and we may boldly, view it as a pledge of further epiritual blessings. We may draw fresh courage for future effort, and carry with us the momentum: which such a speaking, public, unimpeachable evidence of the blessed harmonizing influ ences of religion will give. Surely, the times are ripening, the last problems of Christianity are drawing toward- their so lution. The Church is dressing its ranks and massing its columns for the last great battles with its foes. Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, 0 most Mighty, with thy glory and-thy.majesty, and in thy majesty ride" prdsperously be cause of truth andmeeliness and righteous ness; and thy right hand shall teach thee r 'terrible tbings. DR. BOARDMAN'S SPEECH. It is impossible for us to avoid noticing, and treating in some measure as it deserves, the speech of Dr. Boardman in St. Louis. As the defence, by a Presbyterian divine of Philadelphia, of the notorious Stuart Robinson and his rebel associates of the Presbytery of Louisville; as an attempt to retain, for a Dingle moment, under the wing of the Presbyterian Church, mdn so notorious for complicity with the worst forms of the rebellion, and to mitigate the. indignation, which the feeblest spark of honest loyalty to church and State must excite at their audacious assumption of in nocence and equal rights with the loyal and true,—this speech is palpably deserv ing of the severest censure. As a last and most able attempt to hinder the whole Presbyterian Church from finally clearing itself,of the virus of pro-slavery and seces sion, and from taking its due place among the foremost influences and guides of civil ization in America, it will be historical, though we do not envy its author the sort of fame it will bring. Dr. Boardman is reported to have some what ostentatiously declared 'his loyalty. We quote from the opening part of the speech a declaration to this effect, which may owe its singularity of expression to imperfect reporting; but which is coupled with such a dark and ungenerous. fling at the' true men now engaged in the work of reconstruction, as , could only come -from a heart utterly barren of sympathy with them. Here is the paragraph : Slavery is dead and , rebellion is dead, thank God! and secession is dead, thank God! ' Take that, brethren, you who have repeated a thousand times over peradven ture, or heard it repeated, that I have more sympathy than you have with secession and rebellion. But I am not here, though, to speak of myself. No man, thank God! has more loyalty than I have. No man rejoices more sincerely than I do that this war is over, that the authority of the' Federal Gov ernment is re-established, and that there is some prospect, however 'obscure and remote, yet still in the dim distance, that this whole blessed Uniohis likely once more to be re-es tablished under our glorious Constitution. We have no idea of questioning a loyal ty which seems so satisfactory tJ the gen: tleman himself, especially as the clue to its value is given in the concluding words of the declaration. The great body of the Presbyterian Church is prepared to estimate it at its true worth. It meant, before the war, giving up everything to the South; it meant during the war: cold neutrality, carping criticism of the Govern ment's methods without a warm word for the Government's object, lofty reticence upon a theme for which hundreds of thou sands were pouring out their life's blood, or gloomy vaticinations of the profoundest ruin to the country; after the war, it means taking back the South without eon ditions, allowing them to defy authority and cherish all their moral and p o li t i ca l heresies, and yet to recognize then, as equal in rights and privileges with th e loyal and the true. Dr. Boardman is most sensitive and a u _ ions about the Constitutional rights of the Louisville Presbytery, and about the revo lutionary policy proposed by the majority. He says ~ The resolution which I have just read was prepare d en tirely-on _ my own motion under the profound eonTidion, Mr. Mo derator , PHILADEIii'MA; THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1866. that, as a General Assembly, we have placed ourselves not' merely in a most undesirable positibn, buf in a most perilous position. I think we are in a false position. I need not say that the danger' of legislating in'times of great public excitement is very great and im minent. I need not revert to that illustra tion of it that meets us so perpetually, and to which the sessions of the last hour have presented a series of illustrations: And again I have intimated, at: least, that I have no sympathy with' the views that have been at tributed to Some of these Louisville brethren ; but, sir, T have some sympathy;, trust, with righteousness and truth and justice, and Christian charity ; I 'have some 'Sympathy with the, rights of any man who, bears the form of a man, and Who carries an immortal spirit in his .bosom, and I Will not sit here willingly, Pwill riot`sit here qui4tly, and see any than oppressed, tboiigh he be the bitter est secessionist in the land., If he is to be arraigned, and Condemned and beheaded, it shall be done in so, far as my voice and my humble influence can accomplish anything— it shall be done under the constitution and laws of the Church. We live, sir, under a govern ment of law. We -are-not at liberty to take counsel of our feelings or ,our passions. We are not at liberty to go for our law precedents to public, judicial or legislative assemblies. We are not at liberty to open our bosoms to all the gales of human -passion that may meet and concentrate here. No, sir, we are bound by that Book, and if it were not my deliberate conviction that thereachings of that Book had been infringed' upon, I would not trouble you witinheletnarks that I am now making. Once mire, after quoting the resolution appointing the committee of inquiry, he exclain,ed : Well, sir„ since the world began, since the institutions of Justinian were organized and established, was it ever heard that a set of men were put upon trial under an indictment like that? What better right have you or I here to• day than they to a seat upon this floor? You deprive me, in wresting that right from me, of all opportunity of explanation—of all opportunity of self-defence, when I am about to be cast out of the Church of- my fathers— the Church upon whose bosom I pillowed my head, and upon whose bosom I hope to rest in my dying hours; and if there is a tear to be shed by anybody on my humble grave, I hope it may come from that honored mother. Sir, this Church is dear to me, and all its rights are dear to me, and in striking down these brethren they have struck at me and struck at you, sir, and every man on this floor, and every convenient method of defence. And, sir, rely upon'hit, it is not the mode of procedure which- is recognized in the house of God ; it is not the method of dealing with the highest' and most sacred rights of Chris- Bari `ttierrand eirristian ministers, winch is prescribed in that Constitution; it is an utter invasion of all those rights. You not only find no precedent for it in the history of the Church, and no precedent for it in the history of Christian jurisprudence, I take it. I tell you, sir, you are traversing here one of the fundamental principles—l will not say of jurisprudence, but of American liberty, and of all liberty. We cannot afford to have- the action of the Presbyterian• Church cited as a venerable precedent, as giving sanction to these foul and oppressive measures. lam delighted to see that one member—l suppose the good brother was one of the two hundred who voted against the poor minority of fifty —I am glad to see this discussion has sent one of these two hundred brethren to the Book of Discipline. In this impassioned and eloquent strain, the Doctor went on, pleading for liberty toward liberty-hating secessionims, and la boring to throw, the proteotion of the Con atitution around men whose very presence was desio o ned as a defiance of the plainest laws and highest authority of the Church. Every one who reads these sentences will be irresistibly recalled to the scenes of '37 and '3B; when a very different class of men pleaded in vain ,the same Constitutional 3 principles,, and when Dr. Boardman com mitted his reputation, as a Christian man and, a minister, to the unconstitutional and revolutionary party which accomplished their overthrott. Where then was his anxiety for the Constitution; where then his zeal for legal rights; where then his fears for the consequences of high-handed and arbitrary acts ? Ah I Dr. Boardman, is it only for rebels- and proslavery. men and secessionists that Chucch constitu tions are made?. Is it only the rights of such men to a home in the dear old Church of their fathers, to a resting _place on its bosom when they die, and to its sympa thetic tears upon their hnmble graves, that you feel urged to defend, with all the ardor of your nature and all your gifts of oratory ? Is it for Stuart Robinson and ex- Governor Wickliffe that you deem it neces sary to deny your own record of twenty nine years as an Old School partisan, and, in their name, plead the Constitutional rights of Presbyterians, as innocently as if you had never been a party to their viola tion, on a grand gcale, and against myriads of the best and truest men in the land ? When the Third Presbytery of Philadel phia in 1837 . was, by the direct act of the Assembly, dissolved, without hearing o r opportunity of protest, when its ministers —men like Albert Barnes, Thomas Brain erd, James Patterson, and others—were left without ecclesiastical, connections, and directed to apply to some Presbytery, as candidates for 'admission, was it this sa me Dr. Boardman, then a member of that P resbytery, who urged on such action of the Gene r al A s sembly, and, bat in h an d , hastened t o Bee k c Onnentionmith the body. which' had perpetrated what he now pro fesses to deem a great ecclesiastical outrage? We are no bound to answer Dr. Board man's COnstitutiorial argument in defence of these arch-sympathizers with rebellion, or to vindicate the methods taken by the bold and loyal men who have such a trium phant majority in the other assembly. We rejoice at their unalterable purpose to purge their body of these odious elements. We are sorry that they should find it necessary to appeal to the `exseinding acts and to legal and judicial opinions based upon those acts, as a justification of their pro ceedings Any attempt to exalt those acts , into precedents must diminish the prospect for reutdep n with ourselves We regard the Louisville Presbytery and their representatives, Robinson and Wickliffe, as notorious sympathizers with, and .abettors of, the crime of rebellion. The word of God, the Constitution of th . e Church,'and the specific acts of that Assembly, contem plate rebellion as a crime; as much so as duelling or polygamy. Had the, Louisville Presbytery issued r a denlaration in defence Tarty of duellists or polygamists, and sent to the Assembly a duellist or a Mor mon as a representative, its conduct would no more have demanded summary treat ment than it does now. To pause and refine on Constitutional formalities, and seek precedents, at such a time, is a mark of the most deplorable moral weakness, and is hardly to be distinguished from sympa thy with the crime itself. But Dr. Boardman has very low and inadequate views of the crime of rebellion. He chides and chafes at the purpose of the loyal men •in the Church to brand it as a crime. Not only is he anxious to throw around' rebels the defences of the Constitu tion, but he pleads for them the law of love ! The honest indignation which good men all over the land feel for , the mon strous, murderous, and unpardonable viola tions of our supreme law, he dares to call unchristian. He dares to pervert the Christian doctrine of forgiveness and for bearance, to the very overthrew ef justice itself. He slanders his btethren, by putt theii deep "morit oonvictiOns; Based — upon such Scriptures as the Thirteenth Chapter of Romans, below even the loose and de moralizing attitude of mere politicians toward crime. In the view of Dr. Board man, their indifference is more commend able and more Christian, than the pure and conscientious spirit of the Northern Churches toward the great crime of the day. Of a conversation he had held with a prominent man in St. Louis, whose loyalty is, of course, undoubted, since Dr. Board man endor'ses it, he reports as follows: He said , to me, What is the reason : that the soldiers—the men who did the fighting—not the holiday soldiers, but the men who did the fighting—are ready to exercise forbearance and forgiveness and peace, while the ministers seem to be in favor of war? Sir, said I, you have - propounded a problem to me which -I cannot solve. I know the fact, for I have had personal experience of it. ' Referring to the sentiment applied to Great Britain RI the Declaration of lode pendence—" In war enemies, in peace friends"—he accuses the loyal ministry of holding to ethics inferior to thlse of Thomas Jefferson, and .sophistically cries out: Shall they who not only profess to sit at the feet of the meek and lowly Saviour; shall they whose professed voice and whose hered itary function it is to preach the Gospel of peace, to.preach forgiveness and forbearance, and universal charity ; shall we set our hands to the atrocious doctrine that any class or condition of men in any land shall be regard ed by us enemies not only in war, but even in peace? God forbid ! God forbid ! Were we gave it. Our troubles were nothing more t han a state of, war bet Ween equals; . and too conquered South is to be treated as a great nation, which whom , simply the fortunes of war have gone con , trary. She is to be treated as France treated Austria after the battle of Solferino. Lord John Russell was perfectly right in promptly conceding belligerent rights to the rebels. In short, Dr. Boardman's logic, if logic it is, is that of secession. Or, if he did not mean it - to be understood as logic, but only as a rhetorical point, ; if he does not mean to excuse rebellion, but only to shield rebels, then is this position as antagonistic to sound morals as the other would be to national life and unity. Dr. Boardman is declaiming against the moral Sense, sgainst the cleirest moral convictions of they Presbyterian bodies of the. North. His appeal in behalf of the authors and abettors of this utterly gratuitous and unjus tifiable pro-slavery rebellion, is equally in behalf of all criminals. His outcry against s everity is an outcry against the sacredness o f law itself. His plea for mercy is the rose water sentimental plea,which overthrows the very idea of justice, and in which are hid den the direst' elements of cruelty. His a ttempt to tax the ministry of his Church Genesee Evangelist, No. 1046_ with a violation of the principles of Chris tianity in excluding impenitent traitors and rebels from the Church, is an attempt to enlist the pure Gospel of Christ on the side of license and of crime. The following action has been taken by the Board of Trustees of Old Pine Street Church, in view of the death of Captain Wilmer Whilldin The first meeting of the series will be held to-day in Calvary Churoh, Locust above Fifteenth street, Rev. Walcott Cal kins pastor. The daily noon prayer-meeting, as here tofore, at 1210 Chestnut street, third story. A DELAY MUM TO BE BJSGB.ETTED,took , place in our issue of last week. It re sulted from a serious brbak in the machinery of the press, and hindered us fully thirty-six hours beyond our usual c If it is an outrage, such as warms the blood and kindles all the powers of the speaker, to insist upon punishment in their case, then, we submit the very idea of punishment and •of sanctions to law is an outrage. Then, restraint must be laid upon every judge who is about to pronounce a severe sentence ; then prison, doors must be lifted from their hinges; then the gal lows must be taken down; then the Al mighty himself must be _called to account for dooming the incorrigible to an eternal hell, and must be summoned in the name of mercy, to fling wide open the triple gates of the pit, and to span the great gulf with a broad pathway to the pearly threshold of heaven. Such sentiments as those above quoted have been heard, too, from the pulpit of the speaker in this 'city, and have already' been charncterized anmewhat as they deserve in this paper. We take this opportunity to declare Once more our con viction that they are dangerous and demor alizing in a high degree, and that their legitimate issue is the denial of the doctrine, of everlasting punishment. , Thus much, for truth's sake, we have felt should be said of this most remarkable. discourse. It is one of the landmarks of the great revolution taking place in the other branch of the Church. 'Us a pow erful, a masterly struggle, but it is for a doomed, a dying cause. Al ! if such mighty appeals had come during the war from the pulpit of the Tenth Church, in behalf of assailed and insulted law and im perilled national life, as were eagerly volun teered in St. Louis by its occupant, in behalf of two of the most odious arch sympathizers with rebellion in the whole Union, how loyal hearth would have glowed at the brave words, and how deeply en shrined in the memories of a grateful peo ple would have been their author ! But that sublime opportunity is forever gone. . 0 eon sag:trifles( to gain- the art plause of a handful of Missouri secession ists, and the commendation of a Richmond journal, the organ of an apostate • Chris tianity, which, in spite of a brie?, galvan ized revival, is doomed to disappear from the earth. The following is the congratulatory echo which comes promptly from Richmond : On Monday, 21st, Rev. Dr. Boardman made a speech against the right to exclude those members, in the course of which he characterized Dr. Thomas' speech as it de served. We have concluded to publish this speech entire. Of course there are some things in it , with which we do not sympathise ; but in its main point it is a noble defence of what is right, and a protest against outrage ous wrong. It will give our readers a clear idea of the condition in which this "preitin inary proceedure" is likely to place the Church. All honor to the man who his thus stood manfully up for truth. • THE LATE CAPT. WHILLDIN. Whereas, in the mysterious providence of Almighty God, it has pleased him to remove our late President, Capt. Wilmer Whilldin,-by death; therefore, . Resolved, That this Board of Trustees, in the death of our late President, has sus tained an irreparable loss. One so endeared to us by his genial bearing and ready charity; whose presence always contributed to our enjoyment; whose heart and purse were always open to every just claim, and whose long presence in this body has en deared him as a brother, cannot be separ ated' _from us without deep and painful emotions. Resolved, secondly, That this Board of Trustees will, to-morrow, attend his funeral in a body, to testify our respect for our late President and our sympathy with his family in their terrible loss. S. T. ELDRIDGE, Secretary. PECLUDELPHIA, May 25, 1866. THE UNION PRAYER-MEETING. The twenty-first week of the daily.after noon prayer-meetings closed on Saturday . last, when it was determined to change the arrangement to a weekly union meeting, to be held on THURSDAY AFTERNOONS at five . o'clock. "I"Fs.ribleil• Per nurtutu„ Ln advance; ity marl. $5. By Corriere. 83 50. Finy cestß additional, after three months. Clubs.—Te n or more papers, sent to one address. payable strictly In advance and in one remittance By Mail, $250 per annitin. By Carriers. $3 per annum. Ministers and Dilnisters' Widows, $2 50 in advance. Home Minalonorlea, $2 00 in advance. Fifty cents additional after three months. Remittances by mail are at our risk. Poe e.—Five cents quarterly, in advance, Paid by subscribers at the office of delivery. Advertimements,-1234 cents per line for the first. and 10 cents for the second insertion. One square (one month) 00 two mon ths 50 three 7 50 six 12 00 one year 18 00 The following discount on long advertisements for three months and upwards, is allowed:— Over X lines, 10 per cent off; evor 50 lines, X pa tient; over 100 lines. 3354 per cent. CARMEL CHURCH. The Chapel, corner of Broad and oxford streets, was dedicated to the purposes of Divine worship, on Thurs day evening of last week. The build ing was crowded to its utmost capacity, many remaining ou the outside The services were under the direction of Dr. Brainerd. The singing was by the choir of Calvary - Chuch, led by J. C. B. Stanbridge. The Scriptures were read by Rev. John W. Mears, and the dedi catory prayer offered by Rev. Dr. March Rev. W. Calkins read a statement pre pared by Mr. J. S. Cummings, giving a history of the under.aking, and an nounced that the name " CAMEL" had been agreed upon as the name of the Church. That gives a list of four charchea, in our connection, in this city, called after the eminences of the Bible— Calvary, Tabor, Olivet, and Carmel. ' The lot has a front on Broad street of 100 feet, extending through to Cadbury avenue 239 feet. The Chapel building is 42 , feetjront by 80 feet in depth, of cat brown 'stone, in Norman style, and was contracted for at the cost of $17,800. It has accommodations for five hundred and twenty persons. Six hundred could be seated by occupying the aisles. The Church lot has a front on Broad street of 100 feet, extending in depth to the 'Chapel on Oxford street 120 feet, leav ing more than 60 feet on Oxford street, with a depth of 100 feet, that can be either disposed of in aid of the Building Fund, Or used for a parsonage. Addresses of the most interesting and stirring character were made by Rev. Mr. Barnes, Dr. Brainerd and Dr. S. G. Spees. The benediction was pro nounced by Rev. John MeLeod. There can scarcely. be imagined any thing more neat and tasteful, or more appropriate to its present and prospect ive uses, than this chapel. It contains an audience-room, a library fitted up for a thousand volumes, each volume to have a small compartment for itself, an infant school-room, and a commodious gallery. Interior and exterior are alike attractive and satisfactory. All praise is due to the wise and large-hearted men, Messrs. Baldwin and Whilldin, who lave, thus far, been its only patrons. On Sabbath, notwithstanding the in clemency of the day, all the services were fully attended. Rev. Dr. Brainerd preached in the morning; Rev. John McLeod preached at night. The Sab bath-school was organized in the after noon, out of the two schools formerly held in Wagner Institute and in the Hall on Montgomery Avenue, the latter being the Branch School of North Broad Street Church. The Superintendent, Mr. John S. Cummings, presided, and presented a brief history of the two schools thus consolidated. Brief and stirring addresses were delivered by Benedict D. Stewart, Esq., Messrs. Mar tin, White, Walton, and Moore. The opening- prayer and brief address was made by Rev. Hugh Elder. The attend ance, notwithstanding the very inclem ent weather, was large, not less than 400 children being present. The entire services gave promise of future growth and prosperity. A delegation consisting of Messrs. Camp and Rowe, from the North Broad Street Sabbath-school were present, and tendered their salutations and good wishes. Under such favorable auspices is an other of the enterprises of our branch in Church Extension in our city inaugur ated, making the NINTH of the sort in the last twenty months. FANCY FAIR AND STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL The people of East Whiteland Church will hold a fair and festival, under canvas, on Wednesday and Thursday of next week, the 13th and 14th insts. Opening services will be held at 10 A. M. on Wednesday, when Rev. Dr. Brainerd will be present and officiate. Excursion tickets to Garrett's Siding by the Pennsylvania R. R., 8 o'clock A. M. line, for 95 cents; return in the afternoon. Proceeds for the benefit of the East Whiteland Church. A CALL.—Rev. Dr. Fisher, President of Hamilton College, has received a call to the Westminster Church, of Utica, which, we understand he has under con sideration, and will most likely accept. The doctor has done a very great and important work for Hamilton College ; but we have known for some time that he would not be unwilling to return, when a suitable door should open, to the pastoral work, for which also he has peculiar qualifications. Ray: HALSEY DIINNING,,paigtOr of the Constitutional Presbyteranebareh, Bal timore, has returned konChMf'Yoyage to the West Indies, much, 41(eii•ed,. and re vived, and hopeful of the best results from his trip. He has resumed his pas toral duties in part. W jign with many friends in the prayer thatiAla recovery may be permanent. ••