cgii4l)lTs gittElligntrt. THE REFORMED CHURCHES. City.—Rev , Dr. Crowell has resigned the pasto rate of the Penn Square Church, to go to St. Peter's church of Rochester, N. Y. —Mrs. Mary W. Bethune, widow of the mach la mented Dr. George IV. Bethune, of the Reformed Church in this city, died at La Tour, Switzerland, March 29th. —At the meeting of the Presbytery of Allegheny City, the pastoral relationq between the Rev. Thos. N. Orr and the Central church of Allegheny was dissolved. Mr. Orr haw accepted a call to the First Eciortned church. ' io —Rev. Dr. Boardman has so far regained his health as to preach with considerable frequency. Several of the churches In St. Paul, Minn., have enjoyed the privilege of hearing him. • Ministerial.—Rev. Jonathan Edwards, D. D., has accepted the call to tile Second church of Bal timore. Dr. EttWardirwill he remembered as Dr. Willetts' predecessor in the W. Arch St. church. —At a meeting of the (0. S.) Presbytery of Poto mac, in Washington, the Rev. S. J. Baird, D. D., was, at hist :owh' reqtiest, dismisSed td join the (Southern) Presbytery of Lexington, Virginia. Dr. Baird is the author of a recent still-born pamphlet called the". History of the New School." —Rev. A.. A. E. Taylor, of Georgetown, D. C., has accepted the call to the pastorate of the Mt. Auburn church, in the suburbs of Cincinnati. Mr. Taylor is a son of the late Dr. Edward Taylor, an elder of the Central church, of Cincinnati. Ile has been for several years the " Hawkeye " correspondent ,of. The Presbyterian.. —Rev. Robert Irwin, Jr., of Wavelandi Ind., has accepted a call from the First church of Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Wm. IL Cochran, of New Boston, recently tutor in Dartmouth College, was March 18th, or dained and installed pastor of the church in Antrim, N. H., by the Presbytery of Londondery. • —Rev. J. Halsted Carroll, who was received a year ago without question by the (Dutch) Reformed church, and ordained pastor of their new enterprise in New Haven (a secession trani the Congregational- , ists,) has received and accepted a call to the Lee A ven Ref. church of Brooklyn. This is the church which Dr. Sunderland declined. Mr. Carroll will be installed :%Itty 12th. —Rev. Dr. Brown writes to the Reformed Chassis of Cayuga: "The Classis of Kingston proposes to send me back to Japan as its MiSsionary, guarantee ing, my support there. . . . I expect to return as early ilext summer as possible, to devote my time' and strength to the translation f the Bible in Ja panese." —Rev. Marshall B. Smith, of the P. E. Diocese of New Jersey, late rector of St. John's church, at Passaic, New Jersey, and Associate Editor of The Protestant Churchman, applied to be received as a member of the Reformed Classis of Paramus. After examination in presence of the Representatives of the General Synod, and subscription of the "For mula" he was received. —Rev. Theodore L. Byingten has been unani mously caDed to the church of Newton, N. J., of which Mr. Mott With 'lately the pastor. —Rev. Joseph McKee, of the Presbytery of Red-. stone, Pa., died suddenly on a recent Sabbath morn-. ing, at West Newton. Change of Relatiou.—The 0. S. Presbytery of 111., have received W. B. Keeling, from the Presby bytery of Bloomington, (N. S.); Charles Philips, from the Reformed Presbytery of Chicago. —At the late meeting of the Presbytery of Oxford, Rev. Jacob Cooper was, at his own request, dis missed to the Class's of New Brunswick, N.Y. —At the tweeting orthe Prei3bytery of Baltimore, Rev. Geo. Waterman, formerly a`member . of Pres bytery, but late of the Devonshire (England) Con gregational Union, was, .on examination, received as a member of Presbytery. And the Rev. Hugh Carson, of the Presbytery of Belfast, Ireland, was, on examination, in accordance with the standing rule of the General Assembly, received as a'proba- , tioner for one year. —The church of Napoleon,o., has had trouble, a portion going off to form a ongregational church, under the lead of Mr. S. R. Ramsay, formerly Presbyterian minister. The loss, however, has been made up almost in numbers, and more than made up in pecuniary ability. Churches.—Twenty-five years ago, April 23d, the Central church, of Cincinnati, was organized.. Of the thirty-three members constituting the Society then, but four remain on the Church-roll. In these twenty-five years, 1,299 persons have been enrolled among her members; and, of over 500 of whom, it may be said, " This one, and that ' one, were born there." The recent Quarter Century anniversary was appropriately celebrated. —At a meeting of the U. P. Presbytery of Wa bash, the Hollanders' church of Lafayette with their pastor, (Rev. J. B. .Sliephard), was , dismissed. to unite with " The Tve Reformed Church of Holland in the 'United States,".---it secession froutthe Na tional church of Holland which has been engrafted on our soil since the Lafayette church was organ ized. —The Reformed church of Cleveland, 0., was or ganized in 1864, with fifty-one members; now it numbers one hundred and twelve. It is self-sustain ing. A deep religious interest exists, especially among the pun. A Great Revival.—The West Union church of the Presbytery of Washington, Pa., for years divided and cold, has been awakened to a deeper sense of spiritual things through a series of extra meetings. Enemies became reconciled in labor for Christ; sinners cried aloud for pardon. One hundred and fifty two have been received on profession, of all ages, troin ten to three-score and ten years. Seventy were baptized, and forty-five are heads of families. Seven weekly prayer-meetings have been established. A large Sabbath school has been organized, sufficient money subscribed to relieve the church of debt, and a unanimous call for a pastor has been given. Presbyterial.—The i U. P. Presbytery of Monon gahela n a recent meeting in Pittsburg, deposed from the office of the ministry (on account of his manifest impenitence) Rev. Jas. Prestley, D.D., whom they suspended in Nov., 1866, for flagrant offences. He was also excommunicuted from mern-. bership, Dr. Prestley appeals to the Synod of Pitts burg. The. proceedings were very solemn and of ?a, different character from those in another case of discipline in a Synod last May in the same city. The Presbytery also voted to. thank Gov. Geary for his veto'brthe Bill to comteut'e the death penalty, and for his refusal to pardon. notorious criminals. —The Cumberland. Presbyterians are discussing the propriety of abolishing the Synod as a useless court, having no place between the Presbytery and General Assembly. —ln the Presbytery of Allegheny city an able report, prepared by. Rev-A. A. Hodge, D.D., on the relation of licentiates to tne Presbyteries and church es, was adopted, and will be published.—Messrs: Win. E. Stevenson, and David Riddle, f the Wes tern Theological Seminary, were licensed to preach the Gospel. Foreign.—A London paper. says : 4 remarkable work has been going on among the fishermen of' Aberdeen. N umber s of strong men, young and old, have been prostrated and have decjare4 . that they saw visions—they, meanwhile; crying* out to the - Lord to have mercy upon them. Some have cried out that they see departed reliitiveii heaven, and reply to the beckonings of those relatives that thf.y are coming. Their eyes are fixed, their lips quiver, THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1869. and they lie on the ground, their limbs quite rigid and motionless, This is declared by the converted fishermen to be the genuine work of the Spirit. The revival work continues. The fishermen did not go to sea for a fortnight. They have been eating and sleeping with regularity. —The Duke of Argyle, an elder in the Established Church of Scotland, in laying the corner-stone of a house of worship for an English Pres. church in London (Rev. Mr. Dinwiddie's) "stated that while he did not think that any one form of church go vernment or of religious worship had exclusive au thority in the Church of Christ, and that while he frequently worshipped in Episcopalian churches, he preferred the t-imple worship of the Presbyterian Church, of which he was a member. He also strongly urged the various branches of the Presby terian Church in England to unite, and form one great independent Church. He also gave it as his opinion that a greater amount of liberty might be given to individual congregations to introduce mod ifications in the mode of worship in perfect consis tency with the. Presbyterian form of .goVernment, his Grace evidently thinking that were this done greater progress would be made in England by the Presbyterian cause. An-important part of his-ad, dress was his reference to the absence of 'Work', ing classes from the places of worship of all denom inations, which le 'characterized as a most deplo rable fact in thecongregational statistics of London, and as one to which the Chinches should address themselves ip,eeeking to provide a remedy." DENOXIMATIOASI Episcopalian.—A. new church lately organized in Washington, makes, no diStinction on account of color. A colored man whd is •a vestryman, is also a member of the Board of Aldermen. —A clergyman of Indiana has been.convicteil of the offence of witne'ssing . the "BlaCk. Crook." and his Bishop has reprimanded bin' - accordingly. —At Christ Church, New. York, (Rev, Dr. Ewer, pastor,) on a recent Sunday, the organist' became so provoked at the blunders of the choir that in the midst of a hymn he left the church, and the service was finished without the organ accompaniment. —Rev. James Oh rystal, has been - visiting Syra, one of the Cyclades . .lslands aud was there baptized by the Bishop into thedreele Chni•eh; arid soon will take orders as an unmarried Greek priest, And come back to New York as a missionary of 'the Greek Church. • —The Kansas Diocesan Seminary, for Girls, at To peka, almost the only Protestant .school of-the kind in that State, has 75 pupils, and owhs a square of 20 acres, in Topeka. —The Convention for the Diocese of New York passed an amendment to a canon, in 1867, to the effect " that any. church Which. *Mall have ,failed•to make any eitherof the collectionSor pontribiutiOns required, or enjoined,, or !directed by any canon, shall be regarded as having forfeited its connection with the Convention, and shall no longer have a right to send a delegate - or delegates to the same." The vestry of Dr. Tyng's church regarding this as designed to force Low Churchmen to contribute to institutions controlled for . High Church purposes, have protested and, declared. the ,action and void." But they, have. resolved to pay the money demanded. - - • . —Quite a stormy discussion agitated the last session' of the Board of Trustees of the General Theological Seminary at . New York. Bishop Kerfoot, Drs. Hig bee and Edson and Judge Bell; advo'cated itppoint ing a dean Of the Seininary, while Bishop . Bitter, and Drs. Van Kleeck and Goodwin contended that the dean would be merely a supernumerary.: The election was postponed till the annual meeting next June. • The Board then elected . Rev. Dr. Walton,, Professor of Hebrew and Greek. Five ballotings for a Professor of Systematic _Divinity then took place, and no candidate receiving the requisite num tier of votes, the election was postponedtill Jane. ' —Rev. E. B. Allen, the new rector of Carson City, Nev., claims that, "Every minister who 'Wishes to ask 'a clergyman of any other evangelical denomi nation into the chancel, or to preach for him, or to make'an address'on anroccasion, or who roar de sire'to'preadh for any Othe'r should have the privilege of-doingso, without being tried or censured! I shall fraternize with my breth ren in Christ to that extent, which our Church per mits, and shall unite with those who hold Similar views in having the-restrictions of inter-communion removed." ,Rev. Wm. Tracy, RD., informs ue that while in India he has' frequently preached for the English Episccipalian missio'narie's, .even for those sent gut by the. S. P .G. the. Bishop of Down's last diocesan meeting, the cry of 'No - surrender" to the proposed dises tablistnent of the Irish Church was strongly iaised. His lordship spoke of preparing like prOent men for`the coming day, but the whole assemlilyi rose to their feet, shouted,f‘To !" and hissed. Theiidea of entering into any negotiations was warmly4repudi ated. Congregationalist.—The Congregational Quarterly reports 575 churches not supplied with preaching, and• 510 ministers unemployed. —Dr. Stone has ,just declined a call to Calvary church, Chicago, (salary $7,000) on the . ground that thfough attachment to San Francisco he desires to end his days there.— Boston has now sixteen Congregational churches, a new one having been organized in March'. —The Methodists have purchased the house of wor ship occupied by the New England Church in New York, from which Rev L. Abbott has just been dis missed. This is the first fruit of the movement to devote half a million of dollars to Methodist church extension in thatcity. —The longest pastorate recorded in the history of the Christian Church, at least since the time of Polycarp, is that of John Milton Holmes, of the Tabernacle Church in ~Jersey. City. The Advance says that he has enjoyed "fc.pastorate of eighty years!" —Rev. Dr. Boynton has resigned the pastorate of the Church in Washington. Over one hUndred of his friends took letters to a new Cong. church, hereafter to be tormed, to worship, for the present, in the af ternoon in a Baptist Church. The Fast church re tains the church building, and all the officers except the pastor. The meeting at which the separation took place, was in the best spirit. How Congregational Churches are Manufactured at the South.—We recently published the following from a Congregational exchange: " Within the last two months three Congregational, churches have been founded in the South. Of these, two have'been organized in New Orleans, by Rev. J. W. Healy, and have 200 members each. . . . . Mr. Healy says 20 more Congregational churches will be or ganized this year in. Louisiana." A correspondent of The Examiner and,Uhronicle explains : " Mr. Healy went into the ecclesiastical market and bought over two Free Will Baptist churches to change their name to Congregational, and to deed their property to some Congregational. Society, the .American Mis sionary Association, we presume. These churches are in reality no more Congregational than they were befbre'beifeg,-manipullited,hy-Mr. Healy. They - are still Baptist in sentithent. 'They Were indeed told that they might, retain their views:and practi ces while bearing a tiew'name, and that if, after a trial of six months, they were dissatisfied with the change, they could withdraw from the new connec tion by paying back the money which had been ad vanced to them to aid in erecting a house or houses ,of. ,worship. Mr. Healy, so one of their number,in ffirined me, told thein that he was himself Bafitist, having been immersed, and he carefully kept in the background the distinctive views of his own church. Strong•opposition was .manifested on the 'part of many, and one church cert Only has been divided, he pastor and some dozen others hawing gone out, o be "organized" into a new church, the rest re naining firm in their old belief. Methodist. —ln order to secure lay delegation, it will be necessary for a majority of the adult members to vote next June in its favor, also for three-fourths of the members of the Annual Con ferences to support it. It can be consummated by a vote of two-thirds of the members of the Gene ral Conference of 1872. Not one of the official Advocates opposes it; some of them favor it, arid the unofficial Methodist press is strongly committed to it. The Southern Methodists have already adopted it.—The cheapest Methodist church in the coun try costs $5O ; the dearest s3oo,ooo.—There are two churches valued at $200,000 and upward, and 860 at $lO,OOO and upward. The average value is $3,- 566. Of the remaing 10 816 churches, none are to be valued as high as slo,ooo.—The Methodist churches of Boston have organized a Woman's Board of Missions.—Dr. Porter, late of the Book Ro'orn, has been appointed one of the Secretaries of the National Temperance Society. He lost the former place through his bitter hostility to Lay Delegation. ' ' 7 Unitarian..—Rev. F..E.,Abbott of Dover, N. H., having from the pulpit, renounced the name of Christian, the More',orthodiik minority have sued out an injunction` to debar him and his followers from the use,of the church property. The, Supreme Bench .of the State, in granting this,• states that the present wardens of the society, "and all other wardens and members. of said Society, are jointly and severally, strictly enjoined and forbidden to hire, employ, allow, suffer or permit said Francis. E. Abbott; or any other person, to„preach and in culcate in the meeting-house of said Society doc trines subversive of the fundaixtental principles of Christianity, as generally recel,ved and holden by the deribmination of Christians kndwn ,its Uni tarians:-or to suffer or perMqvto, preach •in said meetinghouse-any nelson Nato re*. ChHatanity altogether; -or who teaches that, as' a ,stem of re ligion. Christianity is partly tftic.and art - 117 false ; or who preaches and inculcates iolisllelief in the doctrine of. the Lordship antiMissiahship . OfaJesus Christ as taught by Him in ili`e•NeW," Testament Scriptures, or a disbelief in Jesus.; Christ- as the Great Head of the Church, or of 'gig ,Divine Mis sion and Authority as a religious teacher as thus taught by him; or who preaches and inculcates a denial of the doctrine that the- Scriptures of the Old and New Testament do contain a Divine Re velation given by the inspiration of God, and con taining a sufficient and perfect ride of faith and practice." . .-z--Rev. Robert Laird Collier, preacher in Chicago, lately created a sensation ,by preaChilng a sermon on " The Folly of Converting the Jews.' , The ser mon called out.a warm letter of approp•alfroni Mr. Adolph Moses ' a son of Abraham, .whid rejoiced to see that' a, "Christian minister manffilly dares to lay,his bands on the Orthodox cliurdh edifice to hurl it into a shapeless mass." " ; We can under stand each other fully, while we retnaill . Jews and you worship as Unitarians. The Messiah in whom we believe is the mission of the Jewish people—its beauties are just budding into resultsl" •Mr. Col lier's church is called "The Church of the Mes siah." .-Itev. J. F. Wareof Baltimore, says: " I cannot help smilitig sometimes` at the enthusi stic way in which we were, told that the South were waiting for our ideas. It never was harder to inak Unitarian ism welcome at. the South than it is to- y." Rev. Samuel G.-Osgood, D. D.,.pastor of th Unitarian Church of the Messiah, New York Ci reigned on the 21.4 Hid.. on acCOunt of ill • h ltli.The Universalist of Boston says to 'umbels of that body ; ",Always go to a Unitarian in prpference to an orthodox church, if it be one where ,the gospel is re?eivedaa the word - of God. It it be;one of the Frothingharn, Potter, Abbott, Cliakdick stripe, go to an orthodox church in preference, every time. We are a Christian Church, We have nothing in common with those thatreject chrqt." Other Univeisalist papers endorse the advice. . _.. , i . i .L. .$ . g''; .. i ;. i-1 . Romanist. —Rev. J. W. Rogers, the late Tennes• see convert from Ritualism to - Romanisin, has been lecturim , c' in Chicago in defence of the Church of Rome. Arguing reply.,to the argument whiCh asserts that the most enlightened countries are Protestant, rather. than Catholic, he says that outs- is not a Protestant country. "The Constitution does not call it such. Nearly nine men•out of ten are sceptics. The Catholics outnumberthe various. Protestant' denoininations."—The Pope is said to entertain the intention of conferring on the Prince. Iniperial of France, the : . title of Roman Patrice,' [Patricius which. was .-orke..-destined for the Em peror himself, and which was last borne ,by.Charle magn,e.A: 'sensation preacheras arisen at Vienna. He is a Jesuit and a count, and! the highest nobility .of ;Vienna, - including the Arch duchess SOPhia, the • Emperor's mother, regularly attend his pfeitictiing4:—•-Tlierdis in Naples a society of forty priests who desire and are laboring for the internal .reform, of the. Much. ,They publish a. paper called .E.Eauziicipatoie A Romish Missioninthe Pacific.—&n English officer, who has recently visited Easter Island in the Pacific, relates that he found there threeßoman Catholic priests, who had exercised a most whole some influence on the man-eating inhabitants. The first priest came alone, abOut three years ago. As soon as he landed. he was robbed,. and was to hale been kille.d and eaten, _but the chief interfered, and choie to haVe him for his slave. The next who came was 'a Frenchman, and a most resolute look in.. man, with a very powerful and determined cast of physiognomy. The moment.he landedthey crowd ed down and endeaVored to 'stone him, hat he got near them and struck the first fellow he came across such a blow with his walking staff as to Stun him on the spot, then walked unmolested through the crowd of swarming savages, now thoroughly cowed, and Since that he has never but once been molest ed,'but has them well in hand 'On the *whOle. Of course, the first thing he did was to procure the lib eration of the other priest, and the two have im pressed on the minds of the people the idea; that i they kill and eat either one or the other a ship will come and destroy them. RARE CONFECTIONS AND CHOCOLATE Stephen F. Whitman. Manufacturer of Specialities IN FINE CONFECTIONS. CHOCOLATE AND COCOA By Steam Power. Store No. 1210 Market Street, jan2B PHILADELPHIA. DO YOUR OWN PRINTING, CHEAPEST AND B EST PORTABLE PRESSES. Men and Boys Making Money. Price of Presses, $3, $l2, $l6. Offices, $lO, $2O, $3O. 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Sent by mail for this price.- oar 'Catalogues mailed without charge, on applica tion.- ' • , Address orders to PRESBYTERIAN PUBLICATION COMMITTEE, No. 1334 Chestnut - Street, Philadelphia. JUST RECEIVED A New Ithportation of French Note Paper. A box containing four quires of fine French Paper of the same Al size, or of four different sizes stamped with initial. with en velopes to match for $1 50. A LARGE SUPPLY-OF' BlaCk BOrdered French Note Paper, from the very deeP border to thevery narrow edge, at moderate French Pater, New Fancy Patterns Visiting Cards of the Finest Quality, Elegantly written or engraved. Wedding Cards of the Latest Styles. ,Commercial Note Piper per Ream, sl,' 51.20, $1.50, $2.00, $2.25 and $3.00. ^ Orders filled by mail, postage extra- White envelopes $2, 2.25, and $3.00. Mrs. T. lIAMIVICON THOMAS, 1011t28 1344, Chestnut F.. Phila. 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Last dividend 40 per cent, applied immediately, which is more than 50 per cent. four yearr. hence. Officers and Directors. WALTER S. GRIFFITH, President. I. H. FROTHINGHAM, Treasurer. GEO. C. RIPLEY, Secretary W. J. COFFIN, Actuary. A. A. LOW, A. A. Low .& Bros., 31 Burling Slip, N. Y. L H. FROTHINGHAM, Prest. Dnion Trust Co, N. Y. I. E. T. STRANAHAN, West. Atlantic Dock Co. THOS. MESSENGER, Prest. Brooklyn Bank. SAMUEL SMITH. Ex-Mayor city of Brooklyn. HENRY E. PIERREPONT,I Pierrepont Place, Brooklyn. A. B. BAYLIS, Broker, New York. PETER-C. CORNELL, Merchant, SO Wall street, N. Y. WALTER S. GRIFFITH, President, Brooklyn. In. D. COCKS, Prest. Atlantic Ins. Co. H. B. CLAFLIN,I I . B. Clafliu & Co., 140 Church street, N. Y B. B. OHITTENDEN. S. B. Chittend-n & Co., N. Y. J. E. SOUTHWORTH, Prest. Atlantic Bank. N. Y. C. DUNNING, Sec. South Brooklyn Savings Institution. /NO. G. BERGEN. Police Commissioner. LEWIS ROBE 61'S, L. Roberts & Co., 17 South street, N. Y. JOHN T. MARTIN, 28 Pierrepont street, Brooklyn. JOHN HALSEY, Haight, Halsey & Co., New York. THOS. CARLTON, Methodist Book Rooms, N. Y. HAROLD DOLLNER, Dollner, Putter & Co., N. Y. A. B. CAP WELL , Attorney and Counsellor, N. Y. NEHEMIAH KNIGHT. Hoyt, Sprague & Co., New York. EDWARD A. LAMBERT, Merchant, 45 John street, N. Y. JAMES HOW, Prest Union White Lead Co., Brooklyn. L. B. WYMAN, Merchant, 38 Burling Slip, New York GEO. A. JARVIS, Prest. Lenox Fire Ins. Co.. New York. S. E. HOWARD. Howard, Sanger & Co., New York. GEO. S. STEPHENSON, Importer, 49 South street, New York CHAS. A. TOWNSEND, Merchant, New York. JOB. W. GREENE, J. W. Greene & Co., N. Y. RUFUS S. GRAVES, 63 Wall street, New York. S. W. FROTHINGHAM, rrothingham & Baylis, N. Y. EDWARD D. DELANO, New York. E. LEWIS. Jr., valentine& Bergen, Brooklyn. AGENT/3 IN PHILADELPHIA, ESLER & COLTON, Cor. 4th & Library sts Agents Wanted. STRICT ECONOMY IN MANAGEMENT. PROVIDENT LIFE AND TRUST CO., OF PHILADELPHIA. OFFICE No. 111 SOUTH FOURTH STREET Organized to extend the benefits of Life Insurance among member of the Society of Friends. All good risks, of whatever denomination solicited. President, SAMUEL R. SHIPLEY, Vice President, Actuary, WM. C. LONGSTRETH. ROWLAND PARRY. Insurance effected upon all the approved plans at the lowest cost No risks on doubtful or unsound lives taken. Funds invested in first-class securities. Economy practiced in all the branches of the business. The advantages are equal to those of any company in the United States. june4 ly ..t..... ic s 4 IMPORTERS, I4 \s et 7 r ;" 4 3 2 *44 ' u facturers & D eA I - e/ ...e. and Red Check e Phis seamen we offer a large, varied and well selected Steel; at reduced prices No. 43 Strawberry Street, First Street west of Second, REMADELPMA.