gfisallaitMus. A .SCOTTISH PROFESSOR ON THE AME RICAN CHURCH AND NATION. Addvers delivered bg Jicv. Prof. JMcOosh , LL.D., D.D., before, the Evangelical Alli ance in ’Bath, England , Oct. ! Bth. It will enable my hearers the better to understand the account which I have to render of my small services in behalf of the Evangelical Alliance, to begin with a very brief narrative of my tour in the United States. I landed at New York on May 13th. Staying only two days in that city, I took a connected series of railway tickets for St. Louis, some fifteen hundred miles away. I passed up the banks of the Hudson, a river not at all like the Rhine, but quite equal to it in beauty, and on through the State of New York, with its apple trees in full blossom, to Niagara. The great Falls, when first seen at a dis tance, are disappointing—they look dumpy; but as you go above them, and follow the magnificent river hurrying down these terrible rapids with such determination to its fall, and go below them and realize their mysterious gloom and the irresistible plunge of waters, you are soon made to feel that they have a grandeur and sublimity far transcending your highest anticipations; and the feeling of awe is not lessened when tile sun shines out, and calls forth a pecu liar beauty in the rich cerulean hue of the central waters, and the gem-like sparkling of the spray. From Niagara, I passed through a portion of Canada, and saw our colonial settlers at all stages of advance ment, from their first operations in entering the virgin forest and cutting down trees to build a log cabin, onward to their realizing a reward of their toil in well-cultivated ihdds, comfortable dwellings, and thriving villages. Passing into the Federal States at Detroit, pleasantly situated on Lake St. Clair, I had an enjoyable day in moving on among the oak openings of Michigan. A day was profitably spent at Chicago, a town which , had no existence thirty two. years ago, but which now, by its numerous railway centres and the shipping on its broad lake, by its grain elevators and its two hundred thousand busy people, is an all-important commercial link between East and West; and shows by its embryo Uni versity full of promise, and its two theolo gical colleges, and its fine upper schools, that it reckons education an essential ele ment of a nation’s greatness. Onward, next, through Illinois, across a fertile plain of hundreds of miles, lately unbroken prairie, but now partially cultivated and yielding exuberant grain, to the great Mis ' sissippi and St. Louis—a place old' for an American city, and with a history, but far more remarkable for its present growing 'commercial prosperity than for its antiqui ty. Here I spent ten days; preached by special request before the General Assem blies of the two great Presbyterian Chur ches, the Old School and the New School; took part in joint meetings for prayer and for sacramental communion by the two bodies, who now cultivate the most delight ful feeling of amity toward each other; and was assured that the American chur ches were most anxious to cultivate a closer relationship with the British churches. I now took tickets by rail and boat one thousand miles (it gives oiie an idea of the distances to be travelled in that country) to St. Paul’s and St. Anthony’s, far up the Mississippi. It is a most delightful feeling which one experiences in floating for days on the placid bosom of the Father of Waters, found lovely wooded islands, or bold promontories, which seem as if they would bar all progress, and showing open ings only as we put trust in them and ad vance ; and ever between heights they call bluffs, rising three, four, or five hundred feet, with jagged ledgd'covered with fresh green grass, or more frequently by dense forest, at times coming to the edge of the river, and at times receding miles away, giving us glimpses of glens of singular beauty, or letting in the dark wafers of rivers famed in Indian story. In coming down the stream, I struck off into lowa, one hundred and fifty miles west of the great river ; and there I revelled, in unbro ken prairies, with their ocean of green verdure, relieved by numberless wild flowers; and visited a Scotch colony on the outskirts of civilization, and making the rich land yield a liberal return ; and a wigwam encampment of red Indians, as wild in their forests as their forefathers were when the white man entered their country. I now turned my steps eastward, and lingered for a time in the great cities of Cincinnati and Pittsburgh; and saw evi dences of the underground wealth of the country in oils and coal and metals; and of the determination of the people to make their schools and colleges, their churches and benevolent institutions, keep pace with their. growing population and wealth. Crossing the Allegheny range, which looks bold after one has been bo long in the flat Western oountry, I go t a glimpse of the rich and well-cultivated farms of Pennsyl vania, and passed o,n to New York, to aid in forming an American organization of the Evangelical Alliance Being assured that this work was in the way of completion, I paid a visit to the famous University and Theological Semi nary at Princton, and . then passed on through Maryland to Washington, the no ble marble Capitol of which ever greets the approaching traveler, and raises expecta tions which are not realized by the city itself, which, however, is, in this respect, a. type of the country—that is, it is yet unfilled up. Here I had the honor of being introduced to not a few publio men of eminence, and here, and in the adjoin ing district of Virginia, I began my visits to colored schools and churches. Leaving the capital, I passed down the Potomao, crossed the RappahaDpock, and the terrible wilderness” of thiek forest trees and brushwood through which Grant pushed his way, hearing thrilling tales of the fear ful war by those who had taken part in it, and of the labors ot the Christian Commis «ion and the chaplains in administering the' instructions and the consolations of religion to the soldiers in the camps and tattle fields. Virginia is yet, as it has ever been in many parts of it, an unbroken waste, showing that it is not by slave labor that the capacities of a country are to be called 1 forth. Richmond, notwithstanding all the ’ sad scenes through which it has passed, i still smiles upon us from its lovely heights ; : its fine villas stood embosomed among mag nolia and tulip trees in full blossom ; and I . saw such indications of industry in restor ing her business streets which had been ; burnt, as to convince me that her career in i the future will be far more prosperous than 1 it has been in the past. Here I busied myself in seeking out black congregations, and in examining black schools. 1 could : have wished to go farther South, and had many temptations to do so in the proffered hospitalities of the people, but it was now past midsummer, and an unusually hot sea son, and I contented myself with floating down the James river, with the scenes of : terrible conflicts both sides, to Norfolk, whence I turned up the Chesapeake Bay to the beautiful city of Baltimore. Here, as in Richmond, I met with those who had been strong secessionists, and I pressed , upon them the necessity of educating the colored population. On the 4th of July, I was fortunately in that model of street regularity —the flourishing city of Philadel phia ; and I saw there the remainders of the regiments of Pennsylvania, with the orphans of soldiers whofliad been killed in the war, marching in procession, and de positing their flags with the Governor of the State—flags mostly torn and tattered to fragments—l saw one that had been with the regiment it belonged to in foTty-two battles and sixty-one skirmishes. IS now hastened northward, to visit some of the famous schools and colleges of New York and New England ere they closed for the year, and spent live or six weeks pleas antly and profitably in this work, not for getting, as opportunity presented, to take a view of the agriculture and manufactures of the country. I believe I was in most, if not all, the New England States. I visited colleges or theological seminaries at New Haven (Yale), and Amherst, and Boston (Harvard), and Hanover (Dartmouth), and Bangor, and Andover, and Williamstown, and attended an influential meeting of .re gents, presidents and professors of the State of New York, at Albany. Meanwhile, i had delightful rambles among the gran deurs of the White Mountains, and the rich beauties of the Green Mountains, and of Berkshire Having now been fourteen weeks in the. country, constantly traveling, I thought it time to set my face homeward. I calculate that I have traversed altogether between thirteen and fourteen thousand miles by sea and by land. In this exten sive tour, 1 have not only beheld boundless forests, and extended prairies, and magnifi cent rivers, I have seen much of the peo ple iu their places of business, in their farms, and in their workshops, in their church and collegiate meetings, and in their Congress, as they and as they lived in their homes, which were everywhere thrown open to me. I have received kindness which I will never for get while I have a memory; I met for a week, a day or an hour, with numbers of interesting people, and formed-friendships which, I trust, will last through life, and be renewed in eternity. I noticed, as I passed through the coun try, that there was not a single tree pre cisely the same in the Old World and in the New. I saw abundance of oaks in America; they were not the same as our English oaks, but they were brother oaks. I saw numerous birches in the States; they were not identical with our birches, but they were sister birches. It is much the same with the people of that country, with the Churches of that country; they > are not just the same as the people of this country, as the jOhurches of this country, but still they are very like them. I felt, as I went along, how important it would be to make them know each other better. I was sure that if they did so, they would love each other more. I therefore labored, as God gave me opportunity, to show that the two countries should acknowledge each , other as brothers, being, in fact, of com mon fatherhood; and that the Churches ! should acknowledge each other as sisters,' ? being daughters of one mother, that Jeru . salem which is the mother of us all. 1 was not a deputy from any public body. I traveled for my own relaxation and in struction. But I had a sort of commission from ministers of the Free Church of Scot land to speak words of Christian affection to the Presbyterian Evangelical Churches. I may have to report elsewhere the gra cious manuer in which these were received. I carried with me a letter from the British Branch of the Evangelical Alliance, in structing me to promote the cause of Chris tian union. I have now to report the re sult of my voluntary mission. When I arrived in the country, I found that arrangements had been made to form an American Branch of the Evangelical Alliance. A meeting had been held in New York on January 31st, chiefly to ap-' .point a oommittee to prepare a report “On the state of Religion in the Uuited States,” but it was there proposed to form an American Branch of the Alliance. A Committee was selected to issue a circular, and ascertain, as far as possible, the opin ion of the Evangelical churches on this matter. Many favorable replies having been received, a meeting was called on- May 11th, and a considerable number of in fluential ministers of all Evangelical de nominations being present, it was moved and carried, that an American Branch of the Evangelical Alliance be formed on the doctrinal basis of 1846, and a Committee representing different branches of the Church of Christ was appointed to form a plan of organization. This being the state of things, it was my pleasant duty to help on this project, and to labor to bring the American Organization into thorough correspondence with the British. On the 14th of June; I addressed, by special request, an influential meeting of ministers and elders, called by ciroular, in New York, and at the close, I received a hearty vote of thanks, and a pledge was given to favor the efforts now made to organize an American Branch. I had the privilege of attending several of the meetings of the organizing Com mittee. One or two difficulties of a prac tical nature'oast up ; but on She part of every one there was a single desire to gain the end, and the obstacles, thanks to Him who holds in his hands the hearts of all men, were happily removed. It has now been reported to. me that a United States Organization of the Evangelical Alliance has been virtually formed. A very influ ential committee, including distinguished ministers and members of the various Evangelical churches, has been appointed. A constitution; embracing the doctrinal basis of 1846, has been adopted. I had the pleasure yesterday of laying that con stitution before the council of the British Organization, where it was received with the utmost satisfaction. The British and American branches are thus in circum stances to enter at once upon correspond ence and co operation. We are now, then, to understand that there is an American Organization of the Evangelical Alliance established, with New York, as the largest city in the Union, for its headquarters, but with ramifications all over the country, and embracing members of all Evangelical churches. I regard this as one of the most important events that have occurred in the whole history of the -Evangelical Alliance. Hitherto we have had no branch in the United States in ac tual and continued operation. Always, when there was an attempt made to bring the Christians of the two countries into formal union, that most offensive of all subjects—slavery—cast up, and the parties drew off in anger as in sorrow. But now, by the good providence of God, and by the energy and sufferings of the Amercan people, following the leadings vouchsafed to them, that reproach has been wiped away for ever. I found, wherever I went, that the love toward British Christians, which had been so long restrained and dammed up, was ready to flow forth in a stream, broad and deep as that of their great rivers. I anticipate, always with the blessing from on high, the greatest acces sion of good from this confluence of two. powers that had been divided, from tjiis Combination of American and British prayers, and wisdom, and activity; and I reckon it one of the highest honors and most distinguished privileges of my life, that I had a small share in consummating this happy marriage union, and that I em now in circumstances to proclaim it to the British public. It is all good that, should have branches on the Continent «f Europe; we may, by our wealth, our coun sels and our prayers, do much to encourage those who are contending for the faith in the midst of Rationalism and Popery. But in the American Organization we have received an immense accession of strength to ourselves. I would say that; under God,.our power for good-has been doubled by this adherence, not of ,a country, but of a continent. I tell our excellent secreta ries that they have some cause for jealousy; for -if the Americans take up the cause as they ought —that is, with their accustomed determination and unrivalled power of organization—there is a possi bility of their outstripping the English Branch in activity and in influence. I see great purposes to be served by thus uniting formally Christians on the 1 , opposite side of the Atlantic. First, it is! a public manifestation on a grander scale! than has ever been displayed before of thej oneness of Christians. It combines be lievers in prayers for common objects, and if we may look for prayer to be answered wherever two or three may agree touching,' what they should ask, much more may we expect the largest blessings when two con tinents are petitioning for common objects. Americans will report to us what they are doing in their own vast country and in other countries; and we will report to them what we are doing at home, and what is being done on the Continent of Europe, in India, and in other regions in which we have Christian agencies ; and as iron sharpeneth iron, so may the churches be stimulated by mutual inter-, course. As we meet together, misunder standings will be and not only Christian churches, but the countries in which they have a footing will be brejught into closer union. In the conferences held,, measures will be suggested for combining the scattered energies of Christendom all over the world, especially in the mission fields at home and abroad, among Jews and Gentiles. All the practical ends which the | Evangelical Alliance has tept steadily in' view, such as the suppression of bitterness and personal insinuation in controversy, the protection of the persecuted, aid the better observance of the Lord’s- Day, and the ■ contest with Romanism on the one hand, and Rationalism on the other, will be more effectually promoted when the New World combines with the Old, when tjhe one brings its fresh energy and the other its old experience to the accomplishmeiit of a common purpose. I believe that whin the union is thoroughly accomplished, we might have a new sfffrit and a new lire put into our Annual and Trjpnnial Cinfer ences. I have often thought that at these conferences, keeping all that we at present have, we might have a far wider range of subjects discussed by. able men whose thoughts have run in special lines; or whose labors had been expended in par ticular walks of usefulness. We might take an example in this re spect from the British Association for the) Promotion of Science, and the Congress foi| the Promotion of Social Science, and have' sectional meetings in the forenoons for the reading of thoughtful papers by our higher class of Christian thinkers. I do not pro pose to discuss theological or denomination al differences; these may be taken up more expediently elsewhere and otherwise. But within the bounds embraced in our Catho lic creed there are a huudred topics which might be introduced by competent men, and have light thrown upon them by the re marks of Christians from various countries. To refer to only three of these topics’: What should be done in this country and in America to oppose the systematic at tempt of the Romish hierarchy to get our Governments to place money at their dis posal to enable them to teaoh their tenets from morning to night, in schools and col leges supported by the State ? This, as we know in Ireland, is a momentous subject, which must force itself more and more on public notice as it becomes fully known that, as the Society of Jesus threw back the advancing Reformation by taking up the education of the young, so now it- is the Roman policy to have all education mnder Ultramontane control. Again, great good might arise from a consultations as to what should be done with the degraded populations in our great cities. I think we may frankly acknowledge that all the efforts which have hitherto been made in such cities as London, Liverpool and Glas gow, have not yet reached the core of the evil, they may have prevented its increase, but they have as yet let in no stream to clear away the accumulated impurity of ages. Surely there was an important era inaugurated by an American citizen, when Mr. Peabody devoted so large a sum to the elevation of our working classes, by provid ing suitable dwellings for them in the capi tal of our oountry. It appears to me that the Lord Provost and the merchants of Glasgow are also proceeding in the right path, when they are buying up those de graded dwellings in which it would be im possible, without a miracle, to train a young generation to virtue, and purposing to erect streets from which temptations to vice will be banished. Now we in this country might warn our American brethren that the evils that have been gendered in our country will also spring up in their great cities, unless they take efficient steps to prevent it. And I believe that they might help us in finding an outlet for our lapsed population, at least for the children of that population. I found that in some of their great cities, as in Cincinnati and New .York they bad a most effective way of dealing with the ohild?fen begging or running idle in their streets and getting beyond parental control. By means of a State or municipal act giving authority to a charitable society, they move these children to the Western States, where there are people willing to receive them and to train them in a Chris- tian manner, in the certainty of being re munerated by the labor which they thereby secure. Another subject would and should be discussed at these conferences. What should the two countries do in the way of elevating, of educating and training to indos-, try the foreign raises that have come under their protection in the providence of God ? What are they to do in the way of exalting the colored race in their Southern States, and what aye. we to do in Jamaica, and in the Gape Colony, and in New Zealand and Hindostan ? If we had deliberated on these topics in time, perhapsjwe might have been saved that terrible outbreak in Jamaica and these distressing trials. Now, these, and such like, are the most impor tant questions that can be discussed in meetings of Christian philanthropists. They ‘are acknowledged to be difficult of solution; but I should expect that much light might be thrown upon them by the thoughts of Christians being specially directed toward them, and by learning the results of the experiences and experiments of Christian philanthropists in various countries. Being certain that what had been so well begun in New Ybrk would'in due time be perfected and publicly proclaimed, I sought, wherever I went in my extensive tour, to press the duty and importance of the two countries, and of Christians in the two countries cultivating a closer friend ship and more intimate communion. I' showed them that there were stronger bonds to unite Britons and North Ameri cans than those which joined any other two nations on the face of the earth. We are substantially of the same rase; of a somewhat mixed descent, but the main element 'in both is the Anglo-Saxon, with its love of independence, its industry and its enterprise. We resemble each other in having a noble history in the past, in being able to point to a glorious company of pa triots and of martyrs who acted and suffer ed for their country’s good. We are alike in having liberty such as I believe no other nations enjoy—liberty of thought and liber ty of action.. We are more than alike, we (are one, in our language and literature, reading the same works, of history, and of ' poetry, and of religion, and thus drinking in the same spirit at the fountains of knowledge. Above all, we are one in being a Christian people, with the Word of God open to all, with numberless churches and . schools, and a quiet Sabbath on which to read and meditate, and worship the God of our fathers and of theirs. I ventured to speak a parable to them. An Old Eng lander and a New Englander were fiercely, contending with each- other. Not far from them were a mother and daughter scolding and tearing each other. “ How wicked!” said the two men, as they stopped their quarrel for a moment to separate the combatants. A bystander came up to them, and quietly remarked, “Are not you two equally.wicked ? Are you,” he said to the one, “ ashamed of the men and women who came in the weather-beaten Mayflower, and have left an impress of their oftn no ble character upon your country in all suc ceeding ages, communicating a spirit to your nation in its Childhood which, thank God, it has retained in its manhood ? Sure ly you do not forget that these men and women came from England,-[bringing with them the best characteristics of their coun try, to leave them as a legacy to you ? Are you,” he said to the other, “ ashamed of your own flesh and blood —of your own sons and daughters—led by the love of en terprise, or driven by poverty or ill usage at home,® to other shores, where they bear your very features, and carry with them your excellencies—alas! also, your defects; but favoring industry, and liberty, and education, and religion, as you had done before them?” I acknowledged that in the relations of the two countries there had been at times sources of irritation. I allow ed that the mother had been not a little vexed at the time because the daughter, falling in love with a prepossessing gentle man called Mr. Independence, had made a sort of runaway marriage many years ago. I admitted, moreover, that the mother, thinking herself a perfect model of a house keeper, and believing tbat, in order to sup port her dignity,, it was necessary to keep up a large number of upper-servants, waß not very well pleased because her daughter chQOses to regulate ber establishment after a somewhat different manner. But I affirmed confidently that, despite these and other points of difference, the mother and the daughter did love each other—though not very willing at'times to admit it—did love each other sincerely and strongly in the depths of their hearts. (To be Continued .) AGENTS WANTED. For the Gold Medal Sewing Machine, in every City and County in the Union. The least com** .plicated two-thread machine in the world. Address A. F. JOHNSON k CO., 334 Washington strett, Bos ton, Mass. ifeto lulilicatiims. s_.£l ""VO BEAUTIFUL BOOKS BOYS AND GIRLS. LUSTRATIONS IN OIL COLORS. Jesus on Earth. Little Red Cloak. Miss Muff and Little Hungry. Ram Krishna-Punt; The Boy of Bengal. 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U069-3m PHILIP LAWRENCE, PROFESSOR OF ELOCUTION, No. 40 South Seventeenth Street. STAMMERING CURED. TESTIMONIAL From the late Bishop of Pennsylvania. ■Mr. Lawrence's system seems tome free from some •grievous faults whioli have marked the teaching of many Elocutionists, and to have some excellencies of 'a high order. ALONZO POTTER, WANTED. $27.60 PER DAY. AGENTS E< WANTED, ladies and gentlemen in every County in the United States, to sell the Ink Powders of the American Ink Company. Thfc powder sells for forty cents per package, and will make ink enough to fill fifty bottles of the size usually retailed at ten cents per bottle. A smart agent can sell a gross of it a day, and clear $27.60. The ink can be made from the powder in three minutes in common boiling water. It is a perfect black ink, the best in the world. It flows easily, does not corrode- the pen a particle, .never gums up, is not injured by freezing, and its color will last forever. 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An Ink Powder will be sent by mail to any address, free of charge, on receipt of forty cents. Address, writing your name, town, county and State distinctly} AMERICAN INK COMPANY. Manchester, N. H. THOMAS W. LANE, Clerk for the Company and Special Agent. THOMPSON BLACK & SON, BBOAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS, DEALERS IN FINE TEAS, AND EVERY .VARIETY OF CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES. Goods delivered in any part of the City, or packed securely for the Country LoaG, PLAIN AND F ANCY Jdß PRINTER SANSOM STREET HALL. Fine Work-Original Styles. Dtejrairt Sailors. This is a personal in vitation to the reader to examine our new styles of Fixe Clothing, Cas simer Suits for $l6, and Black Suits for $22. Fi ner Suits, all prices up to 575. Waxamaker & Browx, Oak Hall, Southeast corner of Sixth and Market Sts. fjljfltograpfit. WENDEHOTH, TAYLOfI & SHOWN 1 ! FINE ART GALLERY, 912 and 914 STREET. PHILADELPHIA. 1019-ly AGENCY, 353 BROADWAY, NEW YORK ATELIER PHOTOGRAPHIC A. J. DE MORAT. S. 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A complete assortment, constantly on hand, is offered at fair terms to the trade at their Wholesale Salesroom, 34 JOHN STREET, New York. The Pencils are to be had at all principal Station ers and Notion Dealers. 1076-6 m i 4S- Ask for the American Lead Pencil. | JAMES MOORE, COAL DEALER. Eagle Vein, Shamokin and other Coals, From the most approved Mines, constantly kept on hand. YARD, 747 SOUTH BROAD STREET. Orders left at 91S PINE STREET, or N. W. CORNER of TENTH AND WHARTON STREETS, promptly attended to. STEAM Dyeing and Scouring Establishment. Mrs. E. W. SMITH, No. 28 N. Filth St-, below Arch, Phlla. Ladies’ Dresses, Cloaks, Shawls, Ribbons, Ac., dyed in any color, and finished equal to new. Gentlemen's Coats, Pants and Vests cleaned, dyed and repaired. 963-lv
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