fil AiLhICA3i iiiILSBITERIAN AND GENESEE EVANGELIST. AK. lipriousand Family Newspaper, IN THE INTEREST OF THE Constitutional Presbyterian Church. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 Chestnut Street. (2d story.) Philadelphia. tiny. John W. Mears. Editor and Publisher. gtztritait trotrgttriait. THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1866 TWENTY MONTHS OF CHURCH EX- TENSION IN PHILADELPHIA. On the first Sabbath in October, the third day of the month, in 1864, the North Broad Street Church was dedicated to the servioe of Almighty God, From that date commenced a series of dedications, in con nection with our branch of the Church, whioh it will be interesting to group to gether and view as a whole, and in some of their more important relations. The dedication of North Broad Street Church was followed, October 17th, by the organisation of WHARTON ST. CHURCH, which, however, was already in possession of the building, dedicated the preceding May. On the 15th. of December occurred the dedication of TABOR Church, on the corner of Eighteenth and Christian streets. After a pause of over ten months, by no means a period of inaction, the OLIVET Church, corner of Twenty-second and Mt. Vernon, was dedicated October 29, 1865. Next came BRAINERD MISSION CHAPEL in Greenwich street, below the Navy Yard, dedicated January 14th of the present year.. KENDERTON Church, on Tioga street, was dedicated April-sth. The SOUTHWESTREtN Church, corner of Twentieth and Fitzarater streets, was dedi cated May 17th. And finally, Oxford Street, CARMEL; CHAPEL, corner of Broad and Oxford Bra, was dedicated May 31st. Presented in a tabular form, these addi tions to our Church property would show as follows, the valuation being for.the most part exclusive of the ground : Acaommodatione. 900 500 Name. N. Broad St., Wharton St., Tabor, . Olivet, Kenderton, Brainerd gissioni Southwestern, Oarmel, In two years, therefore, our denomina tion has completed eight new places of worship, some of them quite costly; all of them tasteful and creditable; it has added to its church accommodations over five thousand sittings, being an increase of more than forty per cent. on its previous accom modations; at a cost, exclusive of the ground, of two hundred and fourteen thou sand dollars, of which two hundred thou sand are paid and clear. (1.) Note, first, the judicious location of these buildings. They nearly, girdle the city. Brainerd Mission is in the south east ; Wharton Street in the south; Tabor and the Southwestern .churches, in the southwest ; while Olivet, Kenderton, Car mel, and North Broad Street open their doors to the great wave of population that is rolling, with increasing volume, to the north and , northwest. The extreme weir.- ern and northeastern sections of the city are alone wanting in this catalogue, but they are receiving attention, and only a few months will go by before, by leave.of Pro vidence, the break in the latter section will be partly filled by the•oompletion of the chapel in Frankford. There is no field, as most of our readers are aware, in the east ern or business portion of the'city. ••_ These enterprises are thus seen to be judiciously distributed with a view to the present and prospective, wants of the peo pie (2.) They meet with a practical response from the people.' Excellent congregations, [almost without exception, 'worship within their walls, froin Sabbath to Sabbath, who am the Gospel without assistance, save one or two most recent . instances. Not nly do they retain our own yeople remov * g to these neighborhoods, but new, mate s • is brought in. Revivals and, constant essions characterize some of them, be ond the experience of any of, our older 1 arches. (3.) It is an economies' use of money. I ver five thousand persons have been pro ided with sittings in the most diverse rtions of a great city, at a cost of little ~o re than two hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of the ground,) or at an average f forty dollars each, and that during the .crest times for building ever known. insidering the number and the substan al and ornamental character, of the build ,gs, and the fact that, in four instances, :attire and other rooms are included, this cheap indeed. But when we consider at every church, -judiciously planted, is itself a fountain of beneficence; that it gathers up, from hundreds of hidden sources, the wealth that is to flow for gen erations into the coffers of the Church and of all good causes; when we think that, to found a self-sustaining, prosperous church in a needy community, is to do, at a stroke, di rectly or indirectly, almost everything which the whole body, in all its various departments, is aiming to do, then we are sure, money could not have been better or more economi cally invested for the cause of Christ, than have these two hundred thousand dollars, appropriated for churches and chapels these past two years in Philadelphia. (4.) Note, again, the relations of this progress to the growth of the population. The problem of Church Extension is as simple as it isiserious. It is to keep pace with the rapid increase of the population; and to make amends for past negligence in this respect. Now, the increase of church accommodations gained by our de nomination, in these eight buildings, is about forty per cent., or twenty per cent. per annum on the entire capacity of the churches previously in its possession. The rate of growth of our city cannot be accu rately ascertained. During the decade be fore the war, it averaged six and one-half per cent. per annum. If it should prove to be five per cent. during the present de cade, doubtless the expectations of the most sanguine would be met. That would give us, at this time, a population of 730,- 000, or an increase of 28,000 per annum, and of 56,000 during the period now under consideration. It this calculation is ac cepted, as we think it may be with safety, then, by the blessing of God and the libe rality of our people, especially of Messrs. Baldwin and Whilldin, we have multiplied our former sittings at a rate fully four times as rapid as the growth of the population of the city. (5.) The zeal of our denomination inthis department of labor will compare favorably with that of any or all the other leading evangelical denoininations of our city. After diligent search, the following are the statistics of church building in other de nominations for the seine period, whiah_-we have been able - to - gatlier (a) The Baptists have completed the Fifth Church, at the corner of Broad and Spring Garden streets, at a cost of $70,000, with accommodations for 1000. This is the former Sansom Street Church, whose commodious building in that locality has been sold and alienated from church pur poses; making the actual gain of sittings to the denomination scarcely more than 400. They have also built Bethel Chapel, in Front below Christian, at a cost of $15,- 000; seats 600 persons. (b) The, Methodists have built the Spring Garden Street Church, corner of Twentieth, at a cost of $40,000(?),. ac commodating 1000 persons; also the hand some marble chapel, corner of Broad and Arch, at a post of $38,000, exclusive- of ground, accommodating 350 persons. (c) The Lutherans have enlarged St. Mark's Church, at a cost of $68,000; in creasing its capacity say 200 sittings ; they have built a German church in Fifteenth near Poplar street, worth say $25,000, and accommodating perhaps 700; and a chapel at Fortieth and Arch streets, costing $6OOO, exclusive of the ground, and accommodat ing 300 people. (d) The other branch of the Presbyte rian Church have built a frame chapel in West Philadelphia, and have acquired pos session of Bethany Chapel, at South and Twentieth streets. New acooemodations, 300; value of property, exclusive of the ground, $3OOO. The smaller bodies of the Presbyterian Church have done nothing in this period, (e) The Episcopalians have come nearly to a pause in that extraordinary career of Churob. Erection in this city, which, a few years ago, made them the wonder of all the other religions denominatiOns. Epiphany and St. Luke's churches have each put up a chapel within this period. (f) The Congregationalists have put up a chapel, Corner of Eighteenth and Green , streets, at . a oost, we believe, of $lB,OOO, with seats for .400 persons. Value. $6O 000 20,000 800 , 25 000 850:- 38,000 600 15,000 450 - - 10;000 500 20,000 500 20,000 5100 $214,000 2rel piaitoan+ New Series, Vol. 111, No. 29. Tbese statements may be summarized as follows : New Sckool denomination—Eight build: ings, with 5100 sittings, at a cost of $214,- 000. Lutherans--Two new buildings and one enlargement, 1200 additional sittings, cost sloo,ooo'. Baptists—Two new buildings, of which one is , substituted for an older structure; 1000 s . itiqgs, cost $8 5 ,000. M e thodists—Two new buildingq, 1850 sittinwoost $BO,OOO. ra 0. 8: Presbyterians — One luilding, 300 sittings; $3000: ' - .?1 14)tri PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1866. Episcopalians—Two chapels, say 600 sittings, cost say $6OOO. Congregationalists—One chapel, 400 sit tings, cost $lB,OOO. If these statements are correct, the other denominations have erected ten buildings for purposes of worship, with aggregate ac commodations for 4850 people, at a cost of $292,000. The work of our own, deno mination would, therefore, appear to be greater than that of all the others oombined, and.done at a cheaper rate. We rejoice to be able to say that, in the !apt two years, ten thousand new sittings have been provided for the accommodation of worshippers in our city, and , that the creditable amount of half a million . of money has been applied to this object by the various Evangelical denominations. THE LUTHERAN CHURCH SCHISM: At the late meeting of the General Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in the United States, the long rising, divisive &d -ing culminated in an organic division, the large Pennsylvania Synod leaving the General Synod and becoming an indepen dent body, and probably the nucleus of a new organisation upon a national scale. The division, as we understand the matter, grows out of a High and Low Church Lutheranism, the former more ritualistic and sacramental in its type, and tenacions of an intense construction of the Augsburg Confession, and the latter, more in accord ance with what is generally termed the evangelical view of conversion and religious experience, as, distinguished from mere sacramentalsrace. The immediate occasion of the schism was the reception, two years ago, of the Franckean Synod into the General synod. The Franokean Synod is a NeW York State body, which had hitherto, through 'the . opposition of the High Churchmen, been kept aloof, because of its looseness on the subject of the Lutheran standards, particu larly the Augsburg Confession. At.' that meeting, the Evangelicals, who are 'lately in the majority, met the crisis, and opened thedoor to the long-waiting applicant: The delegates from the Pennsylvania Synod protested, left the house, and re turning home, laid the matter before their constituency. Their report resulted in the immediate establishment of a theological seminary in this city, under the auspices of the Pennsylvania Synod, that at Gettysbnrg, being under the influence of the majority. With two rival seminaries, cach naturally intent upon' teaching most earnestly the doctrines in which it most differs from the other, the dissension would have but one result—it must widen. And so, after two years of, growing alienation, there has oc curred •another of those disasters to ;the general cause of Christianity, the organic division of an important branch of the dhristian Church. The 'Pennsylvania Synod and the'East Pennsylvania Synod occupy, to a consider able extent, the same territory. The latter is in sympathy with the General Synod. The former is represented in this city by Drs. Krauth, Seiss and others, while among the clergy of the latter are Drs. flutter and Stork. In the country, we believe, the largest portion of the German speaking churches are with the old Synod, while the more Americanized portion aide with the General Synod The views of the latter are defended in the Lutheran Obser ver, published in Baltimore. The Lutheran, of this ciby, is the organ of the PenneyDia, nia Synod. Both papers are conducted with high ability, and, outside ot th,eir de nominational controversy, exert a wholesome Christian influence. SUPPORT OF IDOLATRY BY A CBES TIAN GOVERNMENT. Those who have settled down in the comfortable supposition that British sup port has been withdrawn from idolatry in India, are referred to Mr. Wilder's obser vations on our correspondence page. It is there shown that immenSe sums are sys tematically expende% by the Government in the repair of idol temples and the sup port of the priests; that while in other important respects'• the wishes and the policy of the natives are arbitrarily over ruled, in this they afe'slavishly respected; that while temporal decay is not averted from their ancient seats of authority, their false and tottering religion is assiduously propped and reinforced by financial aid; that British seal for idolatry even outruns that of the natives;' and that On wholo effect of this , policy, without, adding...real strength to British authority there,As to seriously oripple.4the.efferts, of Christian missionariaa for the.,overtarow id.olatry Mr. Wilder says that, '"in. the single col ;s 1, to leotorate of Poona, some twenty temples were built and repaired by Government in a year, to one school-house ;" and expresses his opinion that the intelligent class of Hindus " would heartily rejoice, to-day, to see every idol grant in India transformed into a grant in aid for the cause of educa- Christian people in England, of every shade of belief, would, we think, be pre pared to join with these enlightened Hin dus in agitating for such a chan4e, in the use of this now sadly-misappropriated money from the exchequer, of a Christian nation. evk !LONDON , LETTER. MT DEAR SIR :-I fear you will think that I deserve a scolding; but Ido not. I have been' from home ; and writing "Ameri can letters" is not convenient under 'such circumstances. I have been at the General Assembly of the Free Church at Edinburgh, and I have been at the Assembly of the Irish Presbyterian Church at Belfast. Sines I have returned; t the exigencies of my own proper work have demanded all my . time. I thought your readers would like to have a few of my impressions as to these two As semblies, and so I waited till I could find the opportunity of a quiet forenoqn, which a pouring rain at last gives me now. THE FREE OHUROH ASSEMBLY It is ten years since I have seen the Free Church General Assembly. It then met in the Music -Hall in George street. But I saw it at the disruption in the immortal old Hall at Tanfield ; and I saw it at Inverness, in the far North, and in Glasgoiv. But -ten years have made a great Change. In regard to the place of meeting; the change is wholly for the better. Nothing need be—could be—finer than the new Assembly Hall. It is a perfect model of such a building. It is what may be called—by permission`of the mathematicians —a square oblong. The floor of the house is elegantly seated for about, four hundred members. That part of the house is in the centre of the building, and you descend to it on all sides. In the middle is the clerk's table and the chair of the Moderator;, behind him is the Moderator's gallery, which is filled „ith possessors of season tickets; to his right a gallery for ministers and elders not members; on his front are a series of galle ries for probationers and students, and for the public ; and to his left is a large gallery for the public also ; but each of these gal leries is different in the price of the ticket which gives access to it. The admission is wholly by paid tickets ; and I believe as large a sum. is raised by this means as pays the whole of the Assembly's expenses. Mr. Wil son, of Dundee, as I told• you before, was Moderator ; and in look, tone, and manner, admirably discharged all its duties. The Hall holds between two thousand and two thousand five hundred when quite full, and it was choke full on all occasions terest. The chief topics of general concern were, Ist, The sustenation fund; 2d, the question of union ; 3d, the novel question in the Free Church of a Hymn Book; and 4th Foreign Missions. A fifth an l a sixth might be found in (1) the case of a Mr. Robinson, a compositor, in Glasgow, who had been refused baptism for his children on the ground of his working regularly at his trade—the setting up of a Glasgow paper—on the Sabbath. The case was appealed from the Presbytery to the Synod, and the Assembly, where it wasfinally settled in favor of the decision of the Session. And (2) the appearance of Mr. Spurgeon, of London, who, after having preached for Dr. Candlish on the previous Sabbath, addressed the Assembly on the following week by re quest. The house of meeting looked positively grand on some of these occasions. The noble dimensions and elegant architectural arrange ment of the building when at evening it was brilliantly illuminated by sunlights in the root_ the vast crowds of people, the very elite of Scottish society—the historical names of the men flitting to and fro about you—the 'grave, reverend heads of many able divines ;. and above all, the historic links ever binding 'you to a busypast, made the scene as exci ting as can well be imagined:---especially to a red-hot Presbyterian like " our own corres pondent." On the sustenation fund the speech was by Dr. Dnff. He took the real high grental— " Do your duty and' the people will do theirs; visit, watch, look after your own schools,' tend the young, study, preach, exhort ; do it all in season and out of season, and thebless ing will surely come ; God will open heart's, and the open heart will be as surely followed by the open house, the open hand, and the open purse." Such was -the substance of a noble address, and it was listened to by a crowded house with subdued attention. I may add that "the equal dividend" this year exceeds that.of last by a small sum, and that this year no minister of the Free Church will receive a less stipend than from .f. 140 to £l5O. In almost every: ease this is exclusive of a comfortable' manse. addition, each , minister receives whatever sum the., congre gation can afford to give.. The question of union seemed toome to a d va nce. There Was a singularly, able, blear, aad)=. statesmanlike 'address, delivered by t c zoi r „ :** - Genesee Evangelist, No. 1052. LONDON, June, 1866. Dr. Robert Buchanan, of Glasgow, on that topic, which could not fail of producing good results. A motion was made to stay further proceedings, but it was lost by an overwhelm ing majority. If union between the Free Church, the United Presbyterian, the Re formed Presbyterian, and English Presbyte rian Churches do not take place, it will not be the fault of the vastly preponderating ma jority of the Free Church: An episode in this debate proved the most marked feature of the whole Assembly. There is a small, a very small party growing up in the Free Church, of an "enlarged, liberal and free thought" style. They are a sort of Free Church Broad Church men. Most of them are young, and think themselves very learned and clever. This very small section are op posed to union, on the professed ground that they would thereby destroy their historical unity. They say, "We are the Church of Scotland—we never yielded and never mean to. yield up that claim. If we join these other churches, oar historical unity is gone; we can no longer hope for the reconstruction , of the Historical Scottish Church—Scottish Presbyterianism would forever, by that act, be deprived of the very possibility of a reonstruction. Do you not see ;" say they, " the -Establishment is in straits ; they want us to join them again:; they ale im proving in tone and policy—so wait a bit —be still ; don't join with these dissenters —by-and-by we will get back to the Estab lished Church on good, conscientious grounds, then we can take in these men, if not with us, at least after us; and then Scottish Presby tery will again be one—the joy and the glory of the whole earth." kii:WMantii4:o*Aoviattivzi:sides.T.o:4D . JAVA:4:l These sentiments have been uttered and argued by a small and by no means influen tial band of - men in both Presbyteries and Synods ; and in the Assembly they fonnd utterance, by Dr. Blaikie, among others. In the evening, toward the close 'of the debate, and just before the vote was taken, a young ish man, Mr. Frazer by name, one of the Ed-' ingburgh ministers, stood , up, and in.explain ing what Dr. Blaikie had said, look 'Occasion to utter such sentiments as those indicated:; and in .concluding his speech—a very - unwise one—he said " that he, and some of those who thought with him, were beginning to be, of opinion that the old blue banner was being held with rather a feeble grasp by some of the fathers, to whom they had heen accustomed to look up." This brought Dr. Candlish to- his feet in a moment ; and in a speech of a little more than half an hour "the old man eloquent" utterly demolished not only Mr. Frazer's argument, but Mr. Fraser himself. Dr. Candlish , is getting old, lam sorry to say. For years no subject has called forth all his powers of debate. He shines, without a rival, in a reply to an argument. Here was the occasion—and the man. Out he came in all his strength, fervor, force. I have been at many of the exciting debates before the disruption, and I have heard some of the ablest and most telling speeches Candlish ever made,; 'butil never heard him excel the effort of that evening in extinguishing Mr. Frazer. Everybody seemed to think that it was strength and power wasted ; that it was breaking a fly on a wheel; that it was more' than the occasion called for, and that Mr. Fraser was not a " foeman worthy of his steel;" bat all were thankful of the opportu nity of seeing, and of hearing, once more, those rare powers, that wonderful torrent of eloquent speech that pours forth as the jet projected from a fire engine, without a break and without a stop. It was positively elec trie. He swayed the vast audience to and fro as if they had been swept by a mighty wind ; and at' last the outburst of entlitisi-, astic cheers became positively overpowering.' For fully five minutes after he had done,. the cheers broke out again and again, as if irre— pressible. Poor Mr. Frazer! He will not meddle with "the blue flag" for many a day to come, if I mistake not. Another of the great features of the As sembly was the speech of Mr. Spurgeen: He was lirought on after the Report on Home Missions, and spoke to that subject. I mud say, was greatly disappointed with his speech. It was not worthy of the man nor of the occasion and 'audience. It was that style of things we are a,coustomed to heal- 'at • "tea meetings." 'lt was ic tissue of Stories, jokes, anecdotes, strung together with'hardly a visible line`or even link of connection. Bac it took, and that admirably, With the popnlar part or the audienee. • observed, hoWever, that the older men; who began at first to ilaugh with him, - -were more thin once rather inclino to'laugh at him: Mind, though •11 . say-these things, I am not to be understood US depreciating Mr. 'Spurgeon; far from it; I hold him in the very, highest respect , and esteem ; and I believe he preaches fully aid faithfully and fearlessly the grand old Evan gel, with much power and stomas. Let , me add that Dr. Candlish, in introducing him to the house, spoke of the sermon which be had preached to his people on the Sabbath day in the most glowing terms, calling it, a very model sermon to/both saint and sinner, and wishing he himself could preach with such a power. Mr. Spurgeon, lam told by . those who saw it, put down his head and wiped tears,from.hiaeyes. Be sure, thin huh, fact speaks volumes in, his favor. . The Hymn questi3n. caused great excite ment, too, in then AssemblY. You know, .1 suppose,,thatithe , Scotch ,peopla stick to. the Pealmkwiththe.grip of .deatiLL ThieFiefs TERMS. aII,IIIIA, In anvil/mei g 3. Ry Carrier, *$ *t• Aim cents additional, after three months. (lobs.—Te n or more papers, sent to one address. p yable strictly in advance and in one remittance B ail,s.? 50 per annum. By Cartier& $.l net , Annnist. 11 inisicrs and Ministers' Widows.= /Zia 63 'ranee. Home Missionaries, $2OO in advance. Fifty cents additional after three months. Remittances by mail are at our risk. Postage.—Five cents quarterly, in advance, paid by subscribers at the office of delivery. Advertisements.-12% Gents per line tor the first, andlo cents for the second insertion. One square (one month) • alt two 5 9/ MP three • 7 six i 2 N oear-- I'd following ne discou y nt on long edvWt4;;;ltsts.in sorted for _ th- . - red:- area months an d UPW/Ird-411 ailOWet , Over lines , 10 per aeon off; 0vor• lines, 20 Po* oent.: over 100 lines. 33% per cent. daily characteristic of the Highlands, and of the older and more staid people. The hymn book is popular rather with a few of the ministers than with the people. At ali vents, the question was discussed with keen interest. The subject came up in the forts of an overture from the Presbytery of Edin burgh, moved by Dr. Candlish there and in the Assembly, to the effect that our existing Psalmody should be supplemented by the addition of twenty-five well known and gene rally approved hymns. After long debating. the motion that carried was, to remit the matter to a committee to bring a report up to the next Assembly. So that next year the whole subject will be discussed anew. The only other subject of surpassing inter est before the Assembly was that of Foreign Missions, and that was remarkable chiefly far the speech of Dr. Duff. The reverend doo tor is very feeble. He now looks old. Him beard, which he wears in full, is white as the drifted snow. He spoke nearly four hours, to an audience who listened with unflagging interest. In the middle of his address he got quite exhausted and had to retire; the Assembly singing Psalms till he returned. It was the old, world-famous orator ; bat there was all the difference between the speech of that evening and the speeches by the same man to which I have listened, that there is between the sun at noon and the same sun just before he dips into the ooean. There was the same purity, the same light, the same heat, but all tempered and toned down; yet the same bright glory. Like hie Master, he was full of grace and truth. THE MUSH ASSEMBLY. I have left myself little room for the Irish Assembly. It met this year at Belfast, in the church of my dear old friend, Mr. Mao naughton, once of Paisley, in Scotland. I had never seen that Assembly before, and to me the difference between, that and the one I had just left was marked and striking. The Irish Assembly is less orderly. There are more speeches, benzins° more speakers. It is no uncommon thing in the Irish Assembly to hear two or three or fourspeaking at once. The place was inconveniently crowded. The Irish Assembly is not representative. Each minister and an elder for each congregation has a right to a seat and a speech and a vote. Yet, on the whole, the proceedings were dignified, and a vast amount of real, honest, hearty work was got through. Dr. Wilson, of Liinerick, was chosen to the chair, for the second time in suooession. I have seen firmer hands at the bridle rein than the Doctor's, yet he,gave general satisfaction to his breth ren. Their great subject of debate was the Education question, a +magnum mare into which I could not enter without a larger space than either you or. your readers would care to give me. THE OONTINANT. So war is raging in the continent of Europe out* more. Each post and each hour brings in fresh news of fresh complications. It is begun; God knows, and be alone, where and when and how it will end. The prayer is earnest and universal among us that we may be kept out of it. Add to this that our min istry is in difficulties; that the Government cannot be carried on by the present Cabient; that we do not clearly see whether their sue cessors will be in a plight much more prefer able to those who have gone out; and if you include our commercial and monetary panic with the prospect of but an indifferent har vest, you will see that we are living in critical times. Bat the earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof, the world and they that dwell therein. I am, air, yours truly, THE DEFEAT OF THE AUSTRIANS. Since the time of the first Napoleon, no great European army has suffered se sudden and overwhelming a defeat, as the Ananias& in the late movements in Northern Bohemia. Solferino and 'Magenta were drawn battles in comparison *with Givechin and Ludowa. Prussia by the marvellous rapidity of her movements; by the wisdom of her strategy, and by the vastness and superior quality of her armaments, has not only, in two weeks, put herself at the head of Germany, but ham shown herself capable of holding her own against any power in Europe. We think she will feel 'strong enough 'to dictate her own terms of settlement without' submitting to Prance as an umpire; and we think France will see the.wiadmi of conceding, to a power which has shown itself so , formidable, this very ;natural right of the conqueror. We are very sure that' neither Italy nor Prwals will submit ito see Venetia become a Frew& province, or one in the settlement of cr: id Prsnoe can claim any rights above their own. A pretty spectacle it- word be indeed for France, -who has stood idle, to gather the fruits of 'such bloody and expensive conflieta, while the victors sheathed their swords and went home as they came. ~Doubtless, the Al:atilt will be that Italy will secure Venice, and Pruatia, with enlarged territorial limits, will be at the head of a re constructed Germany. Proteetaniam will be the gainer both in the north and south of Burope. FRMEDMICZesaIREAIIr BILL. -- CollgreeBlllllll again deserved well of the country. .The continuing the,Freedmen".s •Bureau, returned with the veto , by, President. Johnson oa Mon— dap, was on_goeday enacted. into- a law trir. mQFP thaw trio-thirds' vote of both Ikauseec. iLA PRILADELPHOS 'vvi!