CDtroptot4tur. FROM OUR TRAVELLING CORRESPONDENT IN THE WEST. CHICAGO, DEC. 9, 1867. DEAR EDITOR :—The most salient point of religious interest in this city at present, is the Young Men's Christian Association. It is an attempt to apply Chicago business principles to Christian work in that city; and it is undeniably doing a vast amount of good. Farwell Hall is the new Headquarters, and is situated in a cen tral location On the South' Side. I went to it to hunt up the Association, but without success. I was asked by other seekers in the great lahyrinth of offices, which filled the front of. the buildingl where it was, but none of us could see it. Per haps the unfinishtsd . state of"the, building ac counts for the want of sufficient sign:3 over the rooms, but if the Y.,31. C. A. of Chicago are to be given to,, hospitality, then they must, be as easily found as , their brethren in'Pittsburgh, Cin cinnati, and St." Louis, and not another their parlors and reading-roonisUnder Traet repositories, &c. At a Meeting held in ilie.Cettienaiy Metho dist church, I heard a good deal about their work, especially: in' procuring employment for the'friendless,=a Work which has grown out of I the Voluntary, exertions of a ,single member, who resolved to devote one quarter of an, hour each day to this business, and adVertised for-those who wished employment or employeesto come to him at a certain time exactly. Anothei person tol- , unteered another' qtiartei'"of auhour, and others followed, and the work grew until it needed the services of, two persons, a lady and gentlemen, the whole time. These are now securing some hundred and fifty situations for persone of either sex, beSidet laborinc , for the spiritual welfare of applicants. This work has its especial dangers as tending to promote hypocrisy, but those who are acquainted-with its results, speak, of them in the highest tertns. The Y. M. C. A. is, hi a concatenation` of cir ounistances thrust forward, into, the position of Evangelical champion here. The Y. N. C. Union is the rival machine, representing - the Liber al Chrii3tians, whom the Association - refused ' to admit to the rank of working memhers, while "it: refuses cOntributionsAom no quarter, and num bers even JeWs among its honorary Life 116m bers. 'The contest, as 'the Union views' it, is "between the loaf and the tract," or as'the . As sociation sees it, "between.the loaf without the tract and the loaf. with it." It is a blessed thing that our: Liberal friends have •liden stirredup to work, Mitt:nay have a Wholesome effect upon the course of thought among them. If they will but do their Father's will they may cometo know whether sound doctrine of g- 9 4 or of man. True also - for us. - Another'sign of the times in this locality, is the holding of ratification meetings,' with refer ence to, the 'Presbyterian National Union Con vention. Wherever I have gone in the West, find that the effect of the Convention has beim profoundly felt. The stiffest have thawed under the blessed influence it has exerted, and the most conservative have been._ startle& out of their equanimity. It was. even; reported that such' champions of schism and bitterness as Erskine of Chicago, and D. X.' Dunkin,, of Naw Castle, Pa., were converted. from the error of their:ways, but I am 'since informed that, it will do these i two no harm to keep "the ihottrner's bench" a little' longer. They are not what the Methodists' Call " sure cases" The meetings' in this city have been numerously attended, and the speeches evinced a thorough understanding of the _merits of the controversy, and a-firm disposition 'on the: part of the laity; to d:Olhand that , theories about the philosophy of religion, shall - no longer divide the churches as the Hod , ies and Fishers of the separate churches,eart shake hands over the Cat-. eohism. - - The interest in the movement shown 14 Christians of puck high standing, and wide repute as 'Bishops Mcflvaine and Lee, and Drs. Tyng and Newton, has of itself produced a won derful effect. Presbyterians• feel that they may well be ashamed of. their apathy when such men defy prejudice and tradition that they may bid the work " God speed" Among the. Christian " institutions" of Chica go, D. L. Moody takes a. high rank. 'Formerly a clerk in a shoe store, and a first class salesman, he has of late years withdrawn from business and lived on whatever God sends hint, as does George Miller of the Bristol Orphan Asylum. He is inetant . in - word "in season and out of season," especially the latter. He cares a. 9 little for time and place as if, like Kant, he looked on these as mere " subjective forms of thought," and not realities. The intense belief that he speaks to dying men, makes all the proprieties shrivel away into nothing" with him. His labors have_ been unceasing, pertinacious and successful. He has carried on a Mission school, which he. started, Until it is no* a flour- . ishing church with a settled pastor. As the. church is in! an Irish Catholic neighborhood, and the windows_ were breken ,by the juveniles of that faith, he determined to apply to headquar ters to have them stopped. He was refused ad mittance by the Bishop's porter, but was at lait admitted by the Right Revenend's express order. • He announced.ho he was and his errand,-express ed his confidence that 'both he 'and the Hilltop were laboring for the same end, though one or THE AMERICAN PRESBTURIAN, THURSDAY, ,JANUARY 16, 1868. IP other of' them•was wrong about the means, and declared that he wanted the Bishpp to do nothing for him that he would not gladly do lor Ate Bishop. The Bishop saidihat he:did, riiht, in coming to hire,- and,that he would see that the mischief was put ari end to, (and be kept his word.) The conversation was then turned to other topics, and finally to the efficacy of prayer. "Well" says Moody, " I visit a great many kinds of people in Chicago, and I always pray with them before leaving them. ;El. - 416%s fat:" lmarl leforntheTkishop. could. say,..him ._na,y-lte-..1 .vaPc-ort m his.knees pouring out his soul to God s prt t ing all spiritual blessings npontheide t . , p , pTiy_ his flock . l tell this as it was fold me.. ~, , I peon .1 ~: 1n vero, bene trovato. The religions '''atmosphore of gltictfgo I.a, very , different pore' that Philof:delithie.: heohigii ' .. . . w , ~ .. negative .. iIIP, , ,Tr„g„). ~ cal liberalism , , itn, its 1 , I ,omgclipr , lp t tAtt . h,. and its hearths.nkeriug.Aerdzugmd,...jonderh' n takes the lead, here: , ;Itoedito, !the : paOrs,.,:ilic-, totes the popular notiohsitnciplayeldra.Grundr I geuerally. Many br *el lin okii , 6liiii:ete gfli the:, city' , are Uniiersali:it tif.ettiiiiiiit?il,'' t'llFfit:Ar." • ~_, ,a/ . . i Patterson's [4 -8- IPAE.o.loe*lie.h‘gclk. , '_l Jr 19711-. finely bidltofia peculiarApeiiets of tiitumineoirock g found-.in the Wl:Mein part' of , a e`vityi : in! l'el4iii necticiii with 2argelethere ii'NloOis l i A kfibli . iice illustrating the' e' 3 nfig it t enlent df : 'll ts P roge , s 4-!. . ive,century. - The qaarry, is, so, rieli f igrfossils,that, they impart a ' peculiar; odor to I thet stone, . 'andr f when some 'artiitiltilige:iiilseeketli Okinete then place, the '4441 at 062 . ',!.iitaR y ,fii - 4' f r , tq.i . g, waia,Pe t r9 f e ll T' B P rin i)?9ll4',oaMifkg?'.tXA was this alit: a aPer.af theAlaWctiiikkigt(l2 - . l ttnrttr. full and express revelation on the subject, which: Was printed - and ~w lde(yl l e ifetifh- t ecL. The spirits explained atldlliiiliakritititTilrukriateltliM origin of the' :otr stiiain riiLtire Rocky Mountains, and its entire.eoursireeittaard tveitieago3'. , Theyityld, tOo, that on .the spottdeaignate44 , Veit vinstita , : tiori•woilld:be erected , fir thet , enlighteirment'of mankind; . .and U' ant . intelleettatr'finti:Ao- , ;the 're: generated andlenlighteoedluniierse, all eitpentes , to be paid out of the,Prdeeeds of `the fp'etrolium: In the fulness Of.jfaith'and hope;ithey4ntdr-4,110 shaft ofb an artesian , well/for -sOnsethuillieilitkf& feet and were repaid' with` an aliurtdint'stream ; !of • --water. :The' spirits, ,hoWever, 'came to' :the` reseire'and informe&theii clients that - theirrahaftl had' dehected ' 'Pat a little 'froth i the' i right'direol. tioai 4i; atlia.,t another, tunSt,,,b,ejultk t a designa t , ted- spot. ,Their, orders" 3weT# ebejie(f r , iriot , thei same- result, . and- the.: badly . ` cheated -believers,: finding'that they hact only watertit. diiliple: of,' tried'to find n'niailret' for that: They Offered it, to the city for ihe water supply of Ole:Nest side,'hut to say nothing of the insufficient ; quan lity; the quality was .unendarable,--as-: lir-7- strongly . charged with 'sraphuretted hydrogen, a gas . familiar to Unscientifiti;nostrils in the exqui . ,- site flavor; of decomposed's.eggs,, An attempt, t r o make ice of it was equally; a; failnre, and the re-, auk of the speculation" Was.a 'total loss of all the - outlay. The well'remains,.another monument of - • supply -. ....c.,,, human folly, unless, as even the sly ot water g f, / ....'1 ' ,... , „ ' is failing, it'is,fdled up. , Yours, ,1t.i0. ; ~ . i ~, , . WILL ITALY. BD ...FORGOTTEN? LoNDON; 6,` 1867: I chanced to take np aleadiri ° o london newspaper in. a .lAondon'T.eoffee,house 4 the other. day, my eye fell on ,10 editorial which had a char— acteristic English-flavor. rit was an-attack' upon the pirpnlar interest Itely - and Itilinn affairs. It regarded that country es the home of` a nations 'of imbecile. and suite uqdesgyipg the attention of intelligentspeople. It deplored they frenzy of enthnsiasm, With which u effeminate` men and maseuline woman' liice and Mrs:tr97-1 1 i!%27. that hereditary, nest of and - The 'same paper contained telegraphic i reports of 'the 'failure of the Garibaldian and' the French occupation, of Rome,'' "s There was a combination of audacity awl, bearishness in • the editorial, which wan ~all the more interesting to me, from the fact that had just returned.from a pilgiiinage to that, country: and was fresh from .face-to-face interviews with the insurgent Garibaldians, an d.the smeoth-shorn, officials of the .city of Itoine... It hardly looks probable, even after-the: edito; - rial above mentioned,, that the travelling popula tion of England and America will learn 'to de spise and forget Italy. - Whatever may, be the, deserts of the people, however base, treacherous; imbecile, filthy or contemptible they may actually be, the tide of travel will not ebb. The lean libraries of Enolish hooks in Florence and Rome will still have patrons; the Italian inn-keepers will continue the pleasant practice of over charging in -bills and cheating in the counting of change. Just as before, travellers continue to flock to that sunny land. There are reasons why they should. would not be''safe to pre.- diet even that there would be Ile " enthusiasm" among them Scholarly men will, continue ti ',:indulge in those torrents of emotion, which are suddenly set loose by a.stroll in the ,;,° forum Romannm,"‘ and among all the mighty fragments of the an: cient city. The same charm still invests the mountains, plains, valleys — and cities, and a ill continue to• enchant:every, visitor to•that historic land. All. thope ,perscm who see Italy oboe; avill desire evermore to see'ieagain. ' - The lovers of art will not cease to admire the zn arbles . ‘,*hieit have come d "n,frora .Grecian an ~.Ronian +(pity, and e " duo rr medern st Of W. 3.0404,1 Angelo a :, 1 040vk,-..__Were arl“resm-Cks4tPai4atings in Hai!, Ve.o69yl3o logna, lorenee, Rome and Naples, which will not soon e-theleattractive power_ • Visitors climb to the pinnacled roof of Milan's cathedral, and gaze upon the glowing summit of Monte Rosa, and all the phantom seeming host, of Alps which occupy the North eta ltjr,,r Thty will Atilt ulAnttitlia wattyj ra ' VI I " Th" .o . tur - YeniceinAie will not cease to delight themselves in "the Tuscan 1 :1ralleY the'doilie of ItriiitelTesbhi, the cam pitilile of 'diOt,l4;;ttk - ic4,, ,, gik, the palaces, the gat4'cif , the titistety " worthy to be the 'gate's Qfparadtse. ot soon Will the Vatican or the forsaken 14 curious, travellers. w i lieshalf be obliged t,'4; there' other reasons of quite adOthei:roe !so+ the s i t 'tlionillid:foldlinor'e', , aleiglitjr, thilik . (ing nj'o i t" land. 'a'nti - 42niellea;' licrainize ft under lieayen " • ' di ---t has in some , tesieefs , ,the Pdlitteif ecclelia.hiVar tilt:et:est eignificanee': that l p4Ya.44at'it'g present time: be generalry that: the lakan` queition . F4rope, an ifliat, consequences of gravtal nature hang Jttpon `ita 'decision. leis as knotty_aosijnexalictlile. as any_ which 'have ever perplexed the minds of statesmen. - Put tooetliAlitiitANicti.- q theiseat of tqekver•Whieh rests upon the sin: perstitions;,and conscientious convictions of: ode hntillved , :andittikty millions of spbriiOns; whose homesl-; doe , -the) :islands, and -the' continents from JaPitultoundAo!Californis.: 'Second, , thelltalian . ,people have, acquirctt,an apparently uncontrolli; ,bleAcisire frivtatlimallimity trr the extinction'of: Aliwtelnkrilikhrer of the Pope. And thirdly; the' , [eousummatinn of suCh.an•overthiow - cannot' fail .anotte lessAo , Unsettle the foundations of every ,Catholicittrecrne.in*Chriatendom.:Lonie Napeleon, to relish 'an ar: [ rangement 7 ,l by' Which the primate'. ot- • Victor. :Onanuel:fwould, 'control 'the' clergy of.. France:. AfhwiiPontifex t Maximus '-of the Roman church. twieldi)too:Conti!lerabin a .politiOah• power .in t , any. ' batholig . couritry,tfor. - its sovekeign to regard it Iwitliont concern. And :nothing ia stair! than. tl -that:kthe independency of the,l?Ope being lost;)." ; the:potentate; `Who -controls the- residence. of the- Pontiff and his ;, cardinals, rwillA-con trol :' to a" . greater_or.lesa , degree the .Papal inituenceuover the whole world.iq-• The _.,;iritelligenttravtllerii•aware he perie tiates the Alps, and descend& upon . this awaken= ed. , country, that he is upon the! battle-ground of • two opposing ten:dericie&--,=cf , two contrar influences: "- Oristhe, one hanif,:he perceiyes the. .entluiSiasin nf the, Ipeople: Haltears.the or for nationaLunity.. .Hasees the eager rush for-,news. • -He notices a hutigerlfor4 newspapers, ';which remindsriiiiirof - the, Niartitites: in thel:lni, ted, States. , 'Heicartes-Often-upon fthe inilitench of >Bibles land Evangeliats.' He 'observes the: empty', oonvents.• r He ',perceives alb the ~ influence .of the - go.vernmentsetting against thapapal paw-: ter. Jae • a ee.S' theseutendeneies - ,Auickened; and strengthened., railways . and, telegraphs,, i byi the:civil-marriage aet;-which.requires everyilegal marriage to lie ,perforined 'by. the magistrate by thalaw, againsting, which makes' every ac tual, able-bodiedbekgar Work forlisliying,ivbtther 'jitst now-hesees inen by the ready and willing to die for theg unifi -cation Of Itidy. • ,On 4 the other,..hdndi he sees +the splendid. :churches fullrof the smoke of incense ) , andthe :asscciatiOns of ssuperitition. : _Resew' the long= ',robed, smonth-faced;tlow-pamed , prieste, the; in. carnation!of; Confident seerecy.4 i:He:sees! in , full • ;operations all the datilinguiachinery: of religious. , she ws,. an& the sseret web-weavirig, by „which, the Awakened =minds- of the people may be 'entangled 'again in= the- meshes of superstitious indolence, `twat degrading ;saint worship., And he s. knows, that thetpart3riof the Pope, whose encyclical speaks of the , delirium of toleration,". includes . all the j tyrants and despots who fear amelioration and lON. Tait WING. progress. Now, it is- pza*Nie that Papal irdhience,, assis ted, by .the rhorroz 'with • wbich the Gatbolic,gov, ernments Cannot , fail to regard the loss of the Pope's temporal power; may succeed in repressing. allipth% modern movement. It may refill tbe • emptied convierits, blot out the: marriage law, re possess the coeftseat. let.lnda,AunihilateL. the in fluence of railways and telegraphs, newspapers arid Iliblei';` bet not surely' without a struigle hard - and perhaps long. `But' if, dii 'cOntrary - the party of progress overwhelm'all Opposition, strip the Pope of - his civil anthorlity, driie out the priest rulers from tkeir musty offices in Ironic, open the populous" dungeons tci'llke imprisoned patrio ts ; and seize Mune with a . ;;rdsp - which - could not 'be loosed by all the opfesing powers'of Europe, then may oc car what hkiTheen on the Point Of occurring before. The' Catholic nations may separate from'the Papa, cy, and set' up 'lndependent churches of their own, and `the way be opened 'for reform. An cient—errors will be corrected, and singular changes,yrhich are now hard to"-predict,yrill sud denly it - Am:l6li and gratify the4orld. The Ro- MairliaeStiOn is the world's:question, andA6' Per; son who has a moderately intelligent interest in the politiettlor feligious ,condition of the !text, generation, can fail t7-re, d the settlement it q with the most sekieuAttigaion. I'venture _ to say, thabato re s pec t a bl y infellig*lt ma n can . . go from the elegant Chamber in Florence where the magistrate cements every wedding boirdrtar the dingy head-quarters of the Roman police, where ten thousand secret spies are controlled in the interests of Papal tyranny, and by hots, every resident and every traveller is watched pct,tallj,lwithor Irtfilpble reflection. _Perhaps it watid not! be too much to say that politically and religiously no country under heaven iS as' .iitereetliig to : 44ltalY.'" No' where else is the traveller'io well iewarded fOrtis Nb' other land IS 'SO . connected''iViththe `future. other regitqlt ' should studied more , thqughtfully. C. 9.-K .-; ANNUAL REPOSDOI' THRREFORIEPP,BI4 - . BYTE.RIAX,,,,IESSIo4 AT,- RQ9II4EE, [ fie' ale glad ti,presert to our readers the • Twelftll - .A:uuual Report of the Itoorkee' Mipaion Oe . fruOt our valued friend and' brother ,will ong be - • continued in hPlabOrs in the cause of OhAski" 3• 3 .1 ' All•1•1 1 9nATY • •- t J. cALD`ww. , T Licentiate,'. 4(yErs- Seriiituee Rdsiddr,. S+urrio:: The 'preselit reportis intended to 'exhibit mis sionary operations: of during_ shalt itwoAttiirds of thii,paStblimionaryelfear. , . Fronith'atloseull last yenni up till -the -coma mencenient'.. of.the Itot. weather,' the' • missionary. and• stssistants;. continued, to itinerate :tin (the - District,: as they: had. dOne;ithe. twa 'pTeceding .rnontbs. It was orirf sip :art :most: frjacia to 'repress the minds .of-uur , audiences,. if: posgi bla, with the fact, that our.. - sisits: toy ;dem wens S ,uotsilup.ly because weibelieved itrto be our•duty. . „to do 80, '01 ; frorri nrOther motive :tharr regard : for-their sours-eternativell4icing.'.; In the Connie of the •cold: season. we were enabled ttcoaCcomplish mare than last year au this' ilepartment'of:oui_ la-. tbor. 'Nearly our:w.holedistrict was twice Dished before. the. cloke: of the Heiman. In a few , instances' our 'audiences seemed: to'Aie :sensibly impiessea with the truth,- and; amidst mita: we !met with to discourage us,i afforded ground; oftihope. that oor labor was not all in ißut. we • liatL`noi• ease' of individuals 'making :the * 'eaitlest' inquiry: what they should dot° be saved. About. , the ;2s;/th Ott Merck iyenr:smissionarz, ,with, his :native preacher,,nceompanied Idrvea/.. Aerwmid Andrseveral ; native :helpers. to Hardwar, where they labored about , tliree - ,weekar In con ,: sequence:efthe . approaching fa„iesfbeing ri.Kuinbh, f or -twelfth year—which , is ;alwaysimtheasurabLy ~:z eliter than an ordinarrfair—many hundreds of pilgrithi.were going for' he purpose of bathing, regular bathing day;' and_ in Order to take.rulvin, tage of thisltatw.of things,: was deemed:-proper to coMmerice Cour labor thette 'soli long before. I the, time !vie usually .go•- thither./ EY. the: , first. Of April; the -fairbegasto bosun& crowded; and by the' 9th en ilOth -of. the trio n there' Were.. per-, ; ,paps; two: millions of pilgrims Present: Eawrly in the.fmOnth Missionary; brethren from other stir , Aionsnrrived-to ehare in the' labor of preaching to' the:vast,zioveds isseriabled:i II :fur-plan of opera dons was the saine ris that) adapter? at . the -large fai r r tof 1855: =large: awning: was Jerected Id. -a convenient spot.,:ivhere we , held regular f-'serrice, chiefly 'in ifinde, every , afternoon, whi ih 'the ,brethren , conducted turn. Large audiences, sprit kof metidican nvariably collected 'at: .these times, and..mauY 'ofAhem: remained 'After the :servine - to discras - motile - Idt the points of doe trine advanced the preaching. While one, or .twO of thilinissionaimes and some of the • native -brethten!rentaitied under-the' awning to' converse With thoge our . 'andience that stayed Wafter service for that prtrpoSe, the rest proceeded,. by twos' and (Brea, 'to different parts_of the fair, to preach' to.the crowds - in: our' usual: informs? manner. ' This last species ef later was regularly accomplished in this Manner every - morning also, while the fair lasted. . • - ' In.connection with this account, one striking feature of this fair must be mentioned: Although the number of mendieants of the different dame; amounted to many.tbousands, from all parts of India; yet there Were exceedingly few instances of self-torture, generally. so common at the great fairs throughout thecountry. In 'the *hole fair we'vritnas:sed. but tic, or three cases of this sort. One was that of kpixor Wretch who had been con stantly standing °nit& feet; as it was said; for several years Another was that of a:devotee-Ciho pretend ed to be undergoingthe severe pen &lee Sfsivinging over , a fire, head downwards. We passed the spot he had chosen for his eiliibitions several times each day, and only once : ,,, iittessed.his performance. During,the remainder of our stay at the fair r the rope' by which he *as 'to" 'to" have suspended himself by the feet, hung idly from the tree under whieh he had taken ttp his abedefand the 'smoke from' his fire curled uoimengitS branches to no pit' , poie, while the A° /. Shelve, cosily took his tate in one corner of his= temporary abode: - The : mole revolting' rites Of Hindtmut are evidently VecOrit: ing, and rapidly too, entirely obsolete.' The-faii atPirinkaly was attended; as usual, by my assistants,:in Septe.inVeir: • -*- While at the'Stalioniiithlininiona. has con ducted the iistul oti Ithe .Sab . bithsand Weditilidiji oTe I . oW4eekiktliii house. Preaching in ;he bazar has been kept up efficiently than fOrmetly. Hating had the , ,verandah in.frontof the Mission Chapel pr..p r Vii, the purpose, he missionary and his as , i-t h. fie resorted thither every evening of the , except - Sabbath, to make known the gosp e l. „ i have, almost invariably, succeeded in obtain': audiences varying from 20 to 40 person:, foe the „Mat hive given us enceurageu.e nt by their attention to what was said. Sertmal benches were - ‘ftir the use of who were willtag to occupy them. These seat, w e , net : jelly occupied, and those of our audience Rh, eat on them always remained longer than other.: toag listen' to our preset:tine, The verandah a n d the street in front were well watered every e re _ 'Wing, in ofdei to make the; place" . as invitin : , 'possible to passers by. The missionary continued thus to visit theitaikiltdoet 144, till the fir,r. iveek iu July, when the state.of his health ren. 'dered it necessaz3r for,hiut to, remove to Landour, *here he is atthe moment ef writing this repo rt , but he hopes in few days (.1;) "Nr ) that is, about ,- the Bth of this mouth, October,' to return to Poor. TANDoiciR, bctober Ist,. 1867 ;. A. ' P. 5. 7 --Sinee my return to, Tienrkee, I seen, tließ i oyerpment gficrrangement6 keepin4 prfler, cte., made by' off,teials at t 1,.. `last Hardwar fair. According to. this doeuratit 'the imunper, the pilgrims in. attendanc e anur i inte4 to 1 1 !s ; enormous sum of 2,855,90', Very probably this is not too high an estimate. AIESSItS: Eraivas :=- 1 -L•4% the' 29th of Decem ber;; tiller new , ohuich- edificie at Ne'ada, lowa, wi oatieciatecl with qiiiiiratwitit ceremonies, to A!. Iji•• • ' • • The' sertiron, eliwitteit and" appropriate, and appealin# the `deepoitit convictions of the re gan'erate heart touching God's faithfulness and truth, was by Dr.* oft`Keokuk, lowa, a;_ silted' in the' service by3Lev. M. Phillip., of Deis' chloinea, Rev. S.' Jones, of the M. E. Mama., Nevada, and the paitor, Rev. Isaiah Pei] . The teit , l7lll l / 2 1 - .1 - ohrt 1: 1-3 : " That which was Teem the 'beginning; which we have heard. whieli we have seen with -our eyes, which we ";have looked upon and. onr.hatids have handled. of - the Word' df Lifer /ie.! Theichnrch and Society,' as well as their youth devoted pastor,:haVe.reason to congratu ,iatetheniselves upon-thi'Coinpletion of this neat and-commodious house , . of' worship. Bro. Reid. then fresh from - the Seminary,h%ranhis work in :this new and - Promising field; io a church just then organized, about th 4 ree and -a half years ago. The task oPikeeting a house of worship (and the nature of such a task, none are better .1 : • . : . • __thimLahe! missionaries ur' these outpiilstif onnir 'blond was commenced months l akc:;:i-NearlY ' $4,000 have been raised And expended• in' the eitteiprise, leaving it free from' ineumbrauce: Of this 'sum our Church Ereettori'COMmittee .donhted $4OO. An anony mous- friendlin the Third `Presbyterian Church, Pittsburg, 'kindly- domited , $1,006. Hon. Win. - ,Dodge; N. Y: 1 gave= •a Itintidred towards the Ths: First ',Presbyterian :church, Yellow I , SpringsJowa, also gpre - conSiderable aid. The houSeis.i half gothio-AttuCture, of wood 26 by 48 feet, finished with a tasteful spire 77 feet high, with kfine :bieneely bell of 600 lbs swinging in.its' belfry. s;The building is heated with a furnace r and has'a fine cabinet organ t. assist insong. . Faith, and hope i _and prayer, and perseverance ; have., been , called largely; into relnisition, and unwAy. God's blessing; restlinare embodied in another spire to point the carnal thought heaven ward, and the silvery: tones of another bell to awaken the solitudes of the. prairies, and invite its: dwellers to-:the pla2e -of prayer. Here i. another center' around which shall cluster and from which shall go forth a 'saving influence . Ow brother is just now ready to enter upon his appropriate work, under:God, preaching ands3V hag _sou/sy with the' assurance . that former hin deranoes and discouragement, consequent upon no pulpit, and no house for his Hoek, will cease In weaken his hands and depress his spirit. ,The dedication is to be,fullowed by a series et meetiugs, in which,•thcpastor will be assisted by Mr. Phillips. . J. M. P. A Great Stony . - Cromwelisund his Times By the author of the " 4.A.1my," entitled Sides . 0a - Boti ,. of the Sea. A Stou of the Coinnioairtielth -the Restoration. A sequel the 'Drayton's .11. ad the DaVeaaatar - i - ssit,litmo. Pr te,11.7D. Uaitirm with the 'other 'solemn of thiseeriels. TILE LITTLE FOX; of, N'Clititoek'i Arctic Expedition. Fl. ELSIE intzimaitz, a 25. •, • , THE CLIFFORD , HOUSEHOLD, $1 Z. Three illustrated and e cellent bOoka for the young- • Now ready in three different editions, in plain and extra fronati to ht per volume, the live .other volumes of Cot' Family" unties, namely : TEEN SCHONBERG-UTFA ''The Time of Luther. THE EARLY DAWN Tite"Olden•Thnej of Inland. KITTY TRETTLYAN; or, Tho Daps of WlliteSeld and AVes l e s WINIFRED Rintritaln. moderi Engilib Society. THE DILATIONS AND THE DAVENANTS: : 1 4 100 book Ake History of OM* Ilar.ti.h..chl, Wars, the Cooly-IL iveal ,,9 4 lVM* B " '- : Togetl,iaa with* Jam variety of Other , wort, valuable for Tate, and Sunday-school , air Send for oar full Catalogue. ' • jaa9-2t. X. W. DODD, 506 BroadallY PROGRESS:IL lOWA. TEE- NEW. BOOK Mimi; lint PubLiAbed: