IRE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN AND GEN ESEE EVANGELIST. Religious and Family Newspaper, Ix TEI MUMS? OP TEN 00rigtitatiOnal Presbyterian Church. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY, AT THE PRESBYTERIAN HOUSE, 1334 Chestnut Street. (2d stil7.) ri * jle!lelPhirt• Bor. John W. *ears. Editor and Fublisher. gmtritan TELIIRSDiiY, NOVEMBER 22, 186 BARI:MINIM AGAIN. The infinite, variety . in the natural world, the classes, orders, families,• tribes, genera and species of living things, with theit fired and well-marked distinctions l present a formidable difficulty in the way of the theory which teaclOa the gradual develop- went of the whole vast ,and multiform sys tem from inorganic, characterless germs. Believers iw this theory have what they re gard as a talisman, or a olne'to guide , 'the'm through this labyrinth, which they gill , aNaturallSeleation:" Granting the great_ law of Nature, that like'begate like, Dar, win and his" followers tha, anithala. t e nd to vary *Op' their ,anoestor,s,runder varying influenope, and =that the ,00natant c hanges which, from the remotest. ages, have been taking place in their mirrouna- ings, are sufficient to 'account for the .varie ties in all natural , objects. '," • No such transmutations as the tlaeory de mands being obseriable in the present age, it is claimed that our range of observation is too limited to test it, and that ) the vast, inconceivable ages, supposed to be indieat, ed by geology, are needed to give scope to the workings of this -. , agency of." Natural Selection," and, in fact, constitute the theatre of its infinitesimal operations. What, then, says geology on this - " Selection" theory of the otigin , of species ? Without doubt, geology testifies to ineon ceivably long periods of tiMei„ perhaps quite long enough for all the exigenciei . of the Darwinian hypothesis. Yet, even at this point, an objection might, be raised some what in this shape : The, wearing away of old rocks and deposition of materials for new, the upheaval of mountain-chains and of coast-lines, the lives of animals and even of races, the processes and epochs, which are marked in . the succession of geological phenomena, and which' make such great demands nn nur,ideaa of time, are, to azime: appreciable extent, within reach, of our powers of caloulation. Something of the sort we have seen and do see going on around us. A partial standard of compari son and of calculation we have actually in hand. Niagara Falls, for example, is gradu ally wearing away the cliff over which it tumbles, at a rate which allows us to make some approximate calculation of the length of time in which it has been working its way back from Queenstown to its present site. Sir Charles Lyell names 35,000 years. The coast of part of Sweden is rising at a rate, it- is supposed, somewhat less than Tur feet' in a century. Rivers are forming deltas; currents of the ocean are washing away shores and altering coast lines ; here are rates of action of geological forces within our reach. But there actu ally is no appreciable movement, and has been none, of this process of transmutation from one species into another, since man began to observe and record his 'observa- Lions. in books, pictures or sculptures, or 4inoe animals of any kind began to leave accessible-memorials of their e x istence upon the earth's surface. The several' housand years, which have gone by, actually dog not amount to a single unit iil the calculation. Hence, it may be doubted whether even the vast geological ages furnish sufficient time for the accomplishment of the inconceiva bly slow processes of development .contem plated by the Darwinian theory. But grant these philosophers all the in conceivable ages they ask—expand the al ready vast geologidal periods to meet their demands ; and it by no means follows that their system has clear possession of the ground. It would need not only time, but steady, uninterrupted opportunity, to carry :its work through all the infinitesimal steps , of the process to completion. ,Darwinian ism admitting of no creation of the distinct girders of living thinga, cannot, of 'course, allow their destruction. The career of development, once started, cannot Bur -dye any of the great geological catas trophes, which, at different dines, appear to have swept away all existing forms and types of life upon the earth's. ,an t rfacl- . -after each such catastrophe, new•germs , %would be required, and a new career...of gradual, slow-paced development would: wave to be commenced. Says Dana, in his Vandbook of Geology, page 251: "No species of animal survived • from the beginning 61 life on the globe to the present time, nor even through a singleorle' of the several geological ages; and but, few live on from the beginning of any one`of th e many periods to its close, or from one period to another." The catastrophes which closed the Car boniferous and the Reptilian periods ap pear, according to this careful inquirer, b i L _,,.._.. . I 111VU tan ri°s I *3 New Seiies, Vol. 111, No. 47. , ' to hale "been 'utfi - versal, sweeping away all existing Min's of life, unleis possibly some ) ,:apec . 'ie's were an exception. Thus all 'the' leVeloprnents and transmutations then going on, were arrested in their pain fUlly. slow, .process, and, a new beginning must have.been made with the: opening of , the sUbsequent eras. And yet what do we see, at the .opening, for instance, of the age following, that represented by the coal measures ? Not radii ients4 forms strug gling again for the advanced position'they had slowly , `suddenly lost; but entirely new speciei of 'the 'old genera and !families, , and , Mitirely rieir orders aiid fami- auimakilattiiiiitof , alfthity for those 4 of`th( -1'64331#-144 afl 'seemingly as seetirti possession - or 'their speoito oharae teri; if 0100 altApe.d them by by the long and ` ` 11!,41 . c1it irociegiti op transmutation andLidevelOpineot 7 wmagined by „ 'AB Par .winieris. Word we See a new ,creation launched : upon ; the Aorld,'„entirely, inde pendent of andrAisconnected Srom the one : which- had just: teen swept.. away. And this., process of destruction and ie commencement is; in fact, so' frequent, as alincist to constitute a 'law of the natural history of living 'things.' The hypothesis of Darwin - dannot stand before it for a "Life " says Dana, "has been • reintroduced where it had been exterrni nated,.as, if the system were not , at the mercy of temporary catastrophes, but owed its continued restoration and progress to a power that was independent of all causes of desolation, and could even use destilatiOn.as a means of progress!' This is not the power of - development, but .of moment creation. The Darwinians, it is. true, claim thai we, have not discovered all that geology has to reveal; that the seeming breaks and chasms• in the succession of animal life may be merely intervals in the records, which subseqUent`discoveries' . wiil supply.; and that thuS, by degrees, the whole series of fedi, now so broken and imperfect, will be spread before the eye, and will corrobo rate their theory, ,as it now seems to 4- pose it. At any rate, then-we might poet pone the ' serious consideration of the theory, for the present. Geological science now understood is certainly most adverse to its pretensions. Certainly Darwinians have no right to appeal to it for confirma tion of any of their positions. Species are not seen passing into each' other, in any of the indefinitely long periods of geology, any more then in the period under man's observation. The boundary lines of species, tribes, families, &0., were :just as distinct • then as they ap pear to be now. The Post-tertiary Masto don . and Elephant of North, America, do not pLss into one another, or into other earlier species, or the apes into the species of man; or, any mollusks, or any articu lates, through a series of stages into fishes; or any sea-weeds into ferns or the earliest land-plants, &c. = And once more : geology gives the negative to this whole theory of ;level opnient, by a , clarions and somewhat exceptional fact, the powerful . presen tation of which, in` its, bearing on this theory, won for the remarkable and lamented Huai MILLER, .a great' part of his reputation among the scientific de- fender's=, of divine. truth. It' is just' the reverse of what would follOW fronrihe ope ration of a law of development • 'a new group of animals appearing at once in the highest, most elaborate Species of the group—that which, by the Darwinian hypothesis, should be the, last—subsequent groups being.simpler and less advanced in forms and organization. The first known fishes are :the highly developed ganoids and sharks:, - The first of land-plants are the ferns; the slightly oiganized mosses come afterwards. Hugh Miller found in the Silurian or old Red Sandstone a re markable specimen of a mail-clad fish. Its remains were then, as far back as 1838, and still are, among the very oldest ,of verte brate-..•animals known-to geologists. They are of the 'first• and 'most ancient knOwn family of fishes. More than "a quarter ben tury of 'most active `geblogical inquiry hai failed to, disPossesg them of that positibn, and yet these priniitive fishes were so highly organized as almost to reach the reptiles. Their ,length, as shown by van ouslspopimens, was from eight to twenty three. ,feet. "Instead of taking . their plitees,”says-..the, Oromarty Stone-mason, " agreeably to , :the demandsuf the devel opment hypothesis, among" the sprats, 'sticklebacks and" ininnows of their class, they ",took their'pliCe among its huge bask ing-giarks, gigantic sturgeons and billky swordfishcs.." • Development philosophers, writing in 1837, might, have said, as they say to-dayp. "so much: of the dim remote past is.nno PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1866. attainable only by inference and deduc tion," that " the argument is decisive for neither side." But Hugh Miller's discov ery, in 1838, of the Asterolepis of Strom negs, called Pterichthys Miller?: by AgaSsiz, brought to, light a new period of the re mote past, furnishing the strongest argu ment that could be desired against the theory it was expected to sustain. And the Darwinians of our daymayfind their patient waiting for fresh evidence from tlie domain of geology, terminate in just as great a disappbintment as that of 1338, must have been. In fact', the order of fishes, commencing with the, mail-clad ; Pteriehthys, shop through its whole histoiy, down' to the pre sent geological period, a course mxactly the opposite,to that indicated by the develop.' merit tbeery. St 4 by step, ,their meta' , hers: -undergo' displacement";and loss ,and distortion ; 'so that 'an ingenious theorist, according to'lli."lltiller, could get up is unexceptionable a theory of degradation as' of development. The truth is, God's work of mation, as.a whole, has been one of progress from lower to higher ; hut as it on- purpose to forestall such absurd de duotions as these of Oken, Owen, Lamarck and Darwin, and as if to mark' more clear ly each era of creative force, " the slope of- the inclined plane," in parts, "is laid in the reverse way, and instead of rising towards the - level of the succeeding class, inclines downward." THE SUNDAY LAW , IN. THE COURT. With a tenacity worthy of . better cause, the. Union Passenger Railway Com pany has determined to test, before the Court in bane, the decision of Judge' Strong, which so completely overwhelmed them a few weeks ago. They seem deter mined, if possible, to secure immunity for themselves and others who may unite with them, in 'the violation of the Sunday law of the State. They are utterly re lordlewof the : irreparable darnagp 71klok, they would thus inflict upon some Ofthe oldest churches in our city. They are quite— indifferent whether pulpits, from which the Gospel has been proclaimed, for nearly a century, shall be virtually silenced; they are ready to become the wens of loosening and lowering the divinely-appointed barriers to vice in a great city ; and with vehement purpose to defeat the religious men and to override the religious sentiment of the, city, and above all in the short-sighted expectation of making money more rapidly, they are determined to remove all obstacles in the way of running their cars on Sunday. Thus fir, they have signally failed. Last Winter, - therwere Wee . defeated'il'Har risburg. Here, they were met by a de cision from the Supreme Bench, melt as, we pray God, the disturbers of the-founda tions of,public order may ever' meet from this exalted, seat. Whether-in appealing to the fiillibench they will fare any better, we have no better means 'of knowingthan our readers.' We think they Will be defeated,, as before. Nevertheless 'we - must follow them by our excellent counsel and re-argue our case, in-order tolecure the results we desire. unanimous, pr :even a majority decision from the court in bane„ in this case,`*ould be a viduable 'addition to the precedents .already accumulated on the law 'for the proteationpf ",the Pea'oe of the Sabbath." Let prayer ascend for a continuance of the Divine guidance,. which, seems to have been vouchsafed, in all the previous history of this case. A decision from the Court ire bane af firming the opinion of Judge Strong, will no doubt be followed by a new appeal from the Railway Company to *the, Legislature, either for a repeal of the law, or for a sub mission of, it to a popular vote of our cid-, zens. ' In either C ease, we trust that the vigilance of the: , friends of thes Sabbath and of good morals inithe interior distrietfi of the. State, will once more secure the defeat of the sehethe. It is Worth remarking' here, that the anti-SundaY movement by no Mona Meets the approval or countenance ".ofall 4 the 4 . leading, passenger companies in 'the city: A large stockholder *ens the i ablest of these companies, informed ,us „‘ that ; -so: far from desiring opportunity ito run sevin. days in :the week,: his .?bortipany would sooner be , re,stribted to five 'days. rOne day in seven is sea to' be barelY suffiCient for the needed rest of the hories and men. And no 'aid Whateier, in carrying out the proposed scheMA 'of Sunday;fravel,could be expected from that great pompany. Union Passenger Company must, therefore, foot .a considerable kill of expenses, if this .struggle, including the making and break ing of contracts, the feeing of. lawyers, printing, etc., to say nothing of the chance of large expenditures at Harris burg, is carried much further. Whether proposals , for a first ,mortgage loan of $lOO,OOO, at ,90, lately advertised by this company in our city papers, has any bearing upOn the financial aspect -of the struggle; we cannot tell. ANNIVERSARY' OF THEN. M. Cs A. OF The anniversary exercises of this institu tion, held in the Academy of Music' . on last Thursday evening, were of; 'a 'highly en auratg:.cheracter. The large audience Ptive.neet'in: i oe2if tlie c hea4y i rain,'ShOwed the deep interest taken its operations. The services were well ,planned and effectively carried .The addresses .f of theßresi dent, Peter B. Simons, Esq.,-of Rey. Dr. Clarke, of Albany, Bishop Simpson, and Mr. Moody, President of the Young. Men's `Christian ''Association of 'Chicago, were admirable, Dr. 'Clarke's address being ip preciative of what has been accomplished ; Bishop Simpson taking large views of the work yet to be done, and Mr. Moody press ing home, in the most powerful manner, the duty of the boldest, personal efforts for the rescue of young men, - and the evangel ization of the neglectful classes of society. The statement = read by the Secretary, Rev. Win. B. Culliss, showed marked and cheering developments in the recent history of the Association. A very great expan siohas been gi'Ven to the .efforts of the , Asseciation to furnish attractions to the young,men of the city,, liable, to be drawn into folly_aud dissipation. A programme of entertaining exercises for every evening in the week, embracing vocal music, free lessons in elocution, German, French, ereek. and Latin, a - course of free leotures on scientific sUbjects, lyceum debates, reli gious services, etc., has just been put in operation,'which has met a most enthusias tic response from hundreds of young men who_ crowd the rooms and present their names for membership.. The Library has ,been revised, and entered ; and the reading- 'room is mply supplied with periodicals. Recent subScriptioifs have liquidated the entire indebtedness upon the Association, and in every respect the. Association holds a most favorable attitude •for enlarged use fulness. As in Chicago, New York, Albany and Washington, so here there is need of a large, commodious and attractive building to put the specific effort for the reclamation of young ,nien on a par with those.which are ainaed at their destruction. The Associa tion, by its recent demonstrations of vitality and vigor, seems determined to prove itself worthy of the liberal co-operation of the friends , of order and sound morals in our city, in their building enterprise. ''Accom lodations for four 'or five hundred ring men might be deemed sufficient for a 'lan do-nothing organization, but when committees and sub-conmditees of live Christian men, by their wise and energetic efforts, are crowding.theSe halls, night, after with those who , otherwise would b a p running the : gauntlet , of a thousand tempta tions, the question -comes up for sour citi zena, Whether means of usefulness approaCh ing the vast exigencies of a city-full of young men, should not speedily be, put into -their hands. gor our part, we most earnestly hope that the career of the, Association will be onward, and upward. It need have no con lid:with specific church action, but may largely contribute to the success of every other Christian enterprise. MINISTERIAL SUPPORT AMONG THE ENGLISH BAPTISTS. At the Sbision of the Baptist Union of Great Britain W and Ireland, held in 'Octo ,ber, the inevitable question of ministerial support was introduced. In the discussion which arose, •Mr. Spurgeon took a part. Ile said ' His church comprised 3500 members, but by meeting his elders" and deacons, and supervising their work, he was enabled to maintain a completepastoral hupervision over the whole. Mr. Spurgeon deprecated any cant 'or scineamishness as' to ministers mot claiming their due reward. The laborer was worthy of his. hire,,and a -minister who could earn a large income "by devoting "him= Self to . triae or professional pursuits, had.a right to have this fact recognised inthe consideration of his salary. Tie himself had an,offer once of a partnership id a mercantile concern, with £3OOO a,year, and perhaps, might erp this, he have made his fortune and retired, had he acPepte'd the arrangement. The Weekly Review 7 commenting; upon Mr. Spurgeon's remarks, takes occasion to urge the plan of payingthe ministry trout of a common, fund. It says:— Mr. Spurgeon, we• are assured, has too much ot,ia statesman's brain not tufeel that 'the, perfect independence and perfect self respect of ministers can never be counted upon until their salaries are- paid, either in Genesee Evangelist, No. 1070. whole or part, from a common fund. We have no hesitation in adding that the noble ness of giving, when payment is made into a common fund, is enhanced as surely as the dignity of the minister is considered. It is a larger and higher idea ,to give in order to support the ministration of the Gospel over a country, than to give a certain amount to an individual minister for preaching to your self. In one word, the principle of a Sus centation Fund, as proclaimed and insisted upon by the grand practical genius of Chal mers, is the best of all principles on which to arrange the financial operations of .Christian churches. The Free. Church has .the best paid, ministry, And the most independent ministry, and, on the whote, the beet' edu catdd and most refinect-ministiY, of any Non conformist Church in Desistence. The Free' Church owes that' ministry, under God, to :the Su.stentation Fund. We give these suggestions as throwing light upon a subject which our •churohes in America must meet, either individu ally or •in a dendminational capticity, or suffer irreparable injury. LETTER FROM IL JESSUP, BEIRrr, SYRIA,- Oct. 13, 1866 EDITOR. AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN : The American colonists 'from' Maine have landed at Jaffa, the ancient Joppa. On landing, they numbered one hundred and fifty-six souls, and the same day .a new oomer made their number one hundred and fifty-seven. They have come to await the appearance of the Messiah, to till the soil and become permanent residents. They believe that they belong to the tribe of Ephraim, and are coming to the Holy Land in fulfilment of prophecy. There is a numerous sect in England who believe that the Anglo-Saxon race are the lost ten tribes, and this American colony, under the direction of Mr. Adams, believe the same, : only in a more restricted sense. I under- stand, from a gentleman who has seen their manifestoes, that they are- very exclusive, refusing to commune with outsiders, and believing something similar to. Baptismal regeneration. They came in a ship chartered for the purpose, bringing all their own houses, fur niture _and implements, having , purchased a . small tract of land outside of Jaffa on the Jerusalem road,before their arrival, through the American Vice-Consul. We who have resided here for many years, and know something of the East and the jealousy of the Turkish government with regard to all foreigners, apprehended disturbance and , opposition on the arrival of so large a colony to locate permanently on the soil of Palestine. But thus far, nothing has occurred. Three months since, Mr. Noel T. Moore, British Consul in Jerusalem, hearing of the prospective arrival of a large American colony of fifty•six families at Jaffa, went to the Pasha of Jerusalem and told him that a colony of religious persons was en route for Jaffa from America, having no political design, only desiring peace and protection, and that if he suffered ,theut to be harmed, he:and his government would be reproached as barbarians by the whole civilized world, whereas if, oil the other hand, he gave them protection' and - :issistancej it would redohnd greatly to his credit personally, and to the honor of the Sultan. The Pasha took the idea at once, sent orders to Jaffa to have all aid given them, and the result has been that the Jaffaitesi have 're:- ceived them with open arms. How hp* this 'will last, no one can tell.. For the honor of the American name, it is to bp hoped that the colonists will demean them selves honorably and peaceably, and not al low their religious self-complacency .to Make them overbearing in their intercourse with their neighbors and the local Turkish authorities The great plain of Sharon, which' lies east and south of Jaffa, is roamed over by the Bedawin Arabs, and a few years since an American family, named. Dixon,was attacked 'by them, their house near Jaffa was entered, and some members of the family brutally - murdered. The TUrks do not profess to be responsible for the outrages of . ,the Bedawin, and this new American. colony, should any difficulty arise with the government, will no doubt soon: find the open country unsafe for them. Therels no use in reasoning .with• t,,he colonists. , Men who- have' a :Diiine fulfil prophecy, cannot be expected to heed the advice of mere uninspired Gentiles. It is astonishing to 'what extremes` of exclu siveness and intolerance men will go who believe that the old, wall :of Partition be tween Jew and Gentile is rebuilt, and that they are on the Jewish side. The Alaine‘,Ephraimites must suppose, themselves in Aremost ,favorable circum stances possible:riow'fbr the revival' of the Judaistic theocracy: When the apostle taught us that " they -are not all Israel which -are of Israel," .and " there. is ne di f ference between the - Jew and the. Greek," T.10.11.111r€1, Per annum, in advance: By Mail,By Carrier, 83 50 - Fitly cents additional, after three months. elsiba.—Ten or more Papers sent to one address. payable strictly in advance and in oneremittance. Bs2 50 ner annum: By Carrier. $3 per annum • Mt ors and lirinisters' Widows, $2 5 0 in advance. * Home' - Missionaries, $2 00 in advance. Remittances by mail are at oar risk. b Pest aire.—Five the cents quof arterly, in advance. Pak" scribers at office delivery. Advertisements. 12% cents per line for the first, and 10 cents for the second insertion. One square (ten lines) one month $3 00 two months 5 5 three months. six mond& . . one The following dis y count on long advertisements 8 inoo- serted for three months and upwards, is allowed: — Over 20 lines, 10 per cent. off; over 50 lines, 20 per cent.; over 100 lines. 333 per cent. he certainly did not mean that there is a dTerence. When he says " there is neither Jew nor Greek . . . for ye are all one in Christ Jesus," he does not mean that the time will come when there will lie Jew and Greek, and all except lineal blood descendants of the Jews be in a subordi nate position in His glorious and glorified Church. But he does say that " they which are of faith, the same are the chil dren of Abraham!' Yet there am some who belfeve that the temple of,Jernsalem is to be rebuilt with its altar and sacrifices, and that the Jews are again to ben distinct people. In the light of the New Testalkent, ideas 'seetn'ehinieriCal.. "'There is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor unthrournoision, Sarbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; 'butChrist , and in all." 1 t is not strange tliatA jeii who rejects Christ and believes that the Messiah has never came, should'have such Materialistic fan cies; but that a Christian believer with his Bible , iri his hand arid his eyes open should thus make void the Gospel, is passing strange. There must be some "vail upon their heart," or they could not so learn Christ ' We have learned with sincere sorrow of the death of two of your noblest Christian citizens, Dr. Brainerd and Mr. M. W. Bald win. The beautiful edifice of the Beirut Female Seminary owes not a little to the mun,ificerice of the latter. Truly, his works do follow him. The slight acquaintance I had with Di. Brainerd led me to respect and love hink. May others inherit their spirit and follOW in their footsteps. The Church of Christ-has too few of such men. H. H. J. CHURCH' ERECTION. A CARD. It is very desirable that congregations making application for aid from the Church Erection Fund, should furnish as wide a iango of ,facts as, possible respecting the churches to be aided. So long as there •were simply loans and very limited and prescribed- donations. to be made, only a general knowledge of the field was indis pensable. But now, when the amounts called' for are widely various, and the work of distinction is rendered correspondingly more difficu l lt and responsible, too wide a scope of information cannot be given. Whatever concerns the character of the house, the number of the congregation and of the Sabbath-school, the . population of the place, the supply of the means of grace by other denominations, the prospective inorease of the population to be reached and the promise of general influence upon the surrounding country, will be of service to the Con4ittee. Tltiitse,congreg,itions whose applications afready been made, are desired. to im part any, additional information which may suggest itself. And itis.furthermore requested that all such applicants (who would have been re sponded to ere this, had it been possible) will _Wait as patiently as may be till after the ;December collection in the churches, as the kvailable resources of the Committee are now too low.for,an adequate response. ,F. F. ELLThrwoon, Cor. Secretary. POPERY' ON ITS OWN GBOUND.—The Governor ofSeville, in Spain, is endeavor ing to carry out a decree by which heavy fines are levied on all who say anything irreverent of the Virgin, or of sacred things ; cir;:of Catholic dognrs. English visitorg"-iiTte especially ann'Oyed by this legislation. Some of the expressions which are prohibited are those with which Englishmen are proverbially liberal. One day an Englishman passes the host and omits to kneel—he is fined. HO passes a chnich or a cross and keeps onLhie het—arfine. Already, it is stated, one Englighman refused obedience, and. calling liih fists to his aid, freed himself alikedrom the policeman, the fine and the -lockup. A Prussian, the other day, thiniini of the laurels of his 'king, was guilty' of disobedience, and claimed his nationality as alPrussian as a defence ; biit this seems , to have been bad policy, for the fine - in=his case was doubled. These facts are communicated by a 'Seville correspondent of the Paris :Temps. , 'AFFILIATED DENOMINATIONS.—In East liitxingtbn;" gass., the Unitarian and Universaliat Societies have united under one pistol., and under the arrangement enjoying, as says The 'Aegister, the -Unitarian 'organ, a high degree of pros perity." In 'Newark, N., J., the 'quiver sahsts Waie obtained a-new pastor, key. Gibbs. The Ambassador; the Uni versalist Paper, says , that since his set tidnent, the Unitarians of that city haild abaribned their purpose of organ izing a eeParate society, and attached therimelies to the ministry of fr. Gibbs.