i:tt' ablg. gir Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. This is an era of military histories, since the rebellion hal set all pens at work; but Mr. Benj. J. LOSSiDO4 . gICTORIAL FIELD-BOOK Or TOE WAR or. 1812, possesses great advantages over most recent books of this class. Its interest to the people is probably greater since , the re bellion has given us the means of understanding the situation and, the movements. Its execution is more complete than our histories of the re-. bellion itself, because• the distaste of half a century enables us to appreciate the perspective of the whole. It. possesses:the charSoteristics which. Made Mr. ,I4esing's " Field Bopk of the. Revolution q.so popular, clear and simple narra tive, moderately graphic description, popular se- . 'action of details, patriotic ferVor, and overflow ing illustrations of places, perSone, docninents and medals. There lAN 'nearly nine hundred pictures in its: 10,821 pages, and we have not noticed one of slovenly execution.' Mr.'Lossing holds that the war was on ,the whore a real . bene• fit to the nation, while it did i . not Secure ;immu nity from the •rightiof search, and lost us the right of fishery in ' , British American waters, about which our ancestors eared most. 'ltopened to us the valley of the Mistisslppi, secured the co-operation >of England and ~America in the suppression , ofithe slave-tru de, demonstrated., our national vitality and fixed our main boundaries until we were ready to enlarge them. Thus God secured for us His greater ends while 'we lost some of , oar lesser ones., Published ,by. Harper Sc Brothers and for-saki:l the Lippincottsv. The 'National Temperance oppiet l yhaa pub lished THE TEMPERANCE SPE4.I3 ; ER, a ,collectiou of Original 'and (Selected •Dialogues, Addresses and Recitations; 'Edited by 'J. N'. ptearns , .- As might be eipected the pieces in, the yolumd are of uneven 'value and quality, ranging. from the gravest to , the •gayest, , and' from dialoguo mantt factured for , children's exhibitions; iip -to , the ferVid oratory' of the great"moral reihrrners in this cause: Einergon used to say " ElOquence , dog cheap., among the abolitionists," ,Judgink from this volume, we cannot, say. quite, as, much. , of the Temperance men, although most of. the abolitionitits 'ate Temperance men.' Yet there are some piece's' here of real magnetic'power' and, from great orators, one notable one beipg ;Tiidge Denton's 0 Apostrophe to Cold Water,".which is sometimes 4uoted ati Mr. Gough's'. The poetry is 'even Jess able than the 'oratory, Veins not much above the, average of our, Political Cam paign Song books of twenty years ago. The absence of great names shows how few of our ablest singers have 'been ' ClitiMpions of the Temperance cause: 'tot"both the prose eta. poetry of the volume , have a,certain average ex cellence, and arelprobably selected and written less with a view to literary display, than for the proper pre§eutation of jtist views of the whOle . subject . 6rno. " 2' SS 1 We confess to &growing respect for Bishop Cosa of Western 'New' York. His eerlier literary produaions, written in the fer4or of , a proselyte's zeal, were not of a, kind to . cause any., admiration 'of his head or heart, and we believe that he himself has publiclyicipressed'his regret that some of thedt were evepiOnbliChed. Of late years,,and i es,pectellypnce,heilkes been raised to; the. Episcopate-^a dignity long. occupied by his. honored father in .our. own Church he has been' growing in' grace'nd honor: His recent Pastoral in' regard to'solne_ethe'siiis:cif fashion able society elicited; universal pram from the organs of all denominations. It .has grown into a book of a hundred' and fifty pages, with the general title Mciaar f 8, - E - Soßms; in which the subject is disenssed more Another and a much longer peatorid, letter on Wernan's Work in the Murat is included in the yolume, and is' in'the main soundly Protestant and safe. There is much' in the book that We dissent from ; the'au'thor has , many idiosyncrasies with' which we have , no sympathy, and 'Seemsto us,to often sink the reformer in , the: special pleader. But there it nothing in-it in the spirit of ; his f• Ecclesiastical Ballads,".and.these is much that is every way commendable 'land - valuable. • We ,rejoice to believe that its plea for`the '" weightier matters of the 'law" will cote lioide to' a Wide circle of readers With a seal Preitige and a weight of influence on account its aUther, whial, does net belong to most writers oki"ptiatlei l • morality. J. i g:'Lippincott & CO. ilabliSh It. • Miss Warner's new book will be welcom-:= efi by many waiting reaaers, as it is the tinuation of a continuation. A lt is the . 4con. ' d: series of DAISY, which is in itself ,continued from " Melbourne house.' We shall not spoil any reader's enjoyment by dicicecting, the plot, hut on ly pay that the , story runs on through the I scenes of our late 'civil war an 4 ends haypily, as Miss W.'S storitis. always clo. She always deals out Pont,,ieal,justiep before she is through. From tin expression on page 366, where the heroine's mother "declaims against the religion which does not-mike daughters dutiful and at tentive to their motherc,"'We 'infer that the au tnor has been listOing,ilo ionie of her English critics, but we inf e r that;' like baiiy in,the'Se circumstances she, would jay ." I heard hut did not feel." That Miss W. finds the martyrs and THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1869. saints of society in little girls of exceeding wis dom and piety, is not the only fault that we find with her. Her male characters are "soft," far beyond the average of the heroes of lady novel ists. NU even the bad ones have hardness enough in their bones to be endurable, though there is more manlikeness in them than in such beings as her "Guy Carleton." Yet her books are good practical sermons to young folks ; they err in a direction which is too little heeded ; and their error is so excessive as to furnish an antidote without, exciting a reaction. W e owe her many hours of pleasure. In younger years." Queechy " made along sea voy age less tedions 'to tench to thifseandal ,of an old sea-captain who' thought'' people might' to read nothing at sea except their Testaments." We commend her new book to a wide circle of. readers. Pp. 340, l6mo. 01, 4 0tfilalltkritLy IiET HALBEY D uttiNa ' Memorial Sermon by Rev. IVft. Noyes, his .sue— cessor as pastor; of the %First ~ C onstitutional Presbyterian Church, Baltimprp. . ‘f Know ye nett there is a•prinee ands great mart fallen this day in Israel Y"-2,SanTsl, As. , (Continued from, our La,Bl.)' Thus .far, I have ,considered those i qualities which .nature give hiin?•untouched bythe , grace' , of God. There are men'wlio seem to:be:born to be Christians.t Suchtan one 'W2B , =he. , To - ,themo the new birth is divorced froth ithose painst an& rendings with which it is clothed to :others: • ,SO it was ; with him: Godicalled - Samuel andßatnuel) answered. In response ~to the Divine was the charge. God callOd•..lSlr., Dunning; into his' service when he waitbuttwelve years ofrage; he. liitened, he had; been ; prepared 'lora.; and, as naturally ,as rivers flow to the.; obean, he; glided! into the. Christian life. '.; 'Follow me along ,, the 'line of his Christian character! ;.: „ . , Ills piety ioas undemonstrative.—lt was a quiet stream :gliding through the,green pastures. of •coli flding love: He had a deep religious experience, and' from its .ftillness he: furnished•guidance: arid consolation to others hat of it, as his own, he hardly ever spoke. .fle 'did' not favor: publie ref-' erences• to the life existing betweenthe soubandi its God: - One reason may,, perhaps, he traced to :the faet,- that he regarded.•many:of these•experi-! ences as related simply:for effect.: Said one.witli whom . ' visited hini one• day, same reached; the street :." He has strong feelings, .but huahhois. everything that resembles cant." •He preserved the same temper through every stage , of his sick mess. .He was the samettnpretending,elfristian. Though -many' expected memorable- revelations from him as he approached the gates of, death ; I' know not that he gave,, expression •to one irnj mortal utterance. The calmness, the cheerful ness, the patience,.the• constant acknowledgment: of God'El goodness, that , hallowed. those months> of suffering, so beautifully supplementing' and ;justifying :a life given to God, are the holiest mementoes possessed by weeping friends. Be; sides a natural: peculiarity, we trace in this type , of characters, evidences of the' old truth that the• still waters are .the deepest:,:The • most :frequent and lasting grief betrays itself the least., He is the profoundest, thinker who , speaks•en,tare!ocv casions: • The •noisy: and.!dernonstrative. Chris tian. consumes himself:: in the effort of an hour; • while he, who has an opposite disposition, reserves his forces for grand and•snecestifulectinn. Chris tians gain by weaving.,.th,eir hopes into their lives, 'rather than by using them to season their speech. M.r. Dunning excelled , in living. • . • Elemai a conscientious ehr(stian.-7-11e adopted' the idea that to be 'a Christian one muskassnthe a higher , style of thought,and.condact,--,that; , though the same duties were, performel,before the new life began,! afterward .they must be lwrought; from different motives, and refleet.a higher ;As a Christian he occupied a dill! ferent position. He was no longer own; but. another's. He was a servant of God;:bnund to 'obey with cheerfulness , the,Divine will. Every thing he did, he did. as a Christian. Whether' .he ate or drank, or sat, orlvalked,. it wasL to the. glory of GoiL, ',The Omniscient eye was on him. He did . all thingsiwell.. It'. was his doctrine to be careful, not only in speech, in conduct:in all' moral influences, hnt,,in , the preparation of a ser mon, ittlhe , offering of a prayer, in a pastoral, visit, to strive to'do iris best. Hewes regular itu his attendance on all,meetings,whethet of,alhusi nesa, or a. religions,charaeter, because he,twaslw Christian, and , was. determined; to maintain his. character. as such .at any,. cost. -1 He considered . it his duty to be present at the meetings of,the.Board , of Trustees, just fill much as at „the Sacramental Board. Duty was duty to him, in.one - sphere, as truly as in another. It is a necessity that ,the individual and the church should render religion more of an activp . , controlling principle. It is ;the want of such a recognitions of its practical power that &tett ~ e airses iti ltb , . be regarded 'Ai a us3lesa appendage toa: man's , life in this:world, having virtue only at the hour of death, ; and in the life to come. To Mr. Dttnnin..religion „ was a reality. He was a charitable Christian:.; This was ;lila: very, great measure an acquired ;virtue. 111.4 d-a Man. injure him, theifirst. intpulse was . thati of resentnient ,but in a moment„tl2e. cloud had pagsed away,--from the. lips -dropped wordi lindness,-. and the .hand of reconciliation was ;cot dially.eitended. I haveiheard hint speak of a man, ,, who, twiuse the mildest expression, never labored imuch to promote his welfare,iplanguage that surprised me,. though long before, I, had learned the golden rule. • While I fear I should have forged red-hot-thunderbolts of indignation, and: hurltd them at .the - offender, he uttered words of .kind. apology. If a; man erred, in him he had a friend. He realized, what many good men forget,,that we all are of "the same nature, that the same , dark 'Possibilities lie .along the path, each one must tread. : In faith,.he was far from bigotry.: He loved his denomination with a decided love, yet,he was no sectarian. Free from trammels he rose above names and enibraced the whole church in his .catholic arms. The Bible was.his creed: Christ, in his view, was the " Saviour,of all, men, espe cially of those that believe." ~ • •.; For fourteen years he stood alone in this 'city. No brotherly hand extended to him or his church. Hardly recognized by those trusting in the same crucified Christ as worthy to pick up the crumbs of their feasts, I have yet to learn of a singl e uncharitable word or act 'that can be treasured up against his memory. In regard to the great question of re-union, already settled, his desire was, re union, if 'practicable; if not, let it be de layed for a season. ' If' charity is the bond of peace out of t a perfect heart, he must have: been a strong bond 'tithe kingdom of God on earth. He was a prayerful 6:Aristiart. He recoollited no such . being,as a Preyerless Christia n . ° Hu n _ self; effectual in suppliOtion, , he believed it es sential to epiritnal groWth that there should be 'mueli 'fervent prayer ih the life: 'Man who p re , wails with 'God' is 'ttel i mightiest power on the earth,' Mary fePed'ilie,pra'yers of Knox more thin she did aimiee. Ido riotbelieve Knox had any'more 'Poi& to find , ' and wield the 8 tlttinder of the Almighty, than Halsey Dunnin g , 1 1 '1" the'/'..rltiek.e' of. many, -of ',You' died; befor e Thirsting, bite' the language that heaven never' 'failed' to, tiai' lig forgot not tO'pray: His marked PhYsicat diii,l4 , had elicited; much surprise . I hopeTlieiray no e6nfrderice of the sainted dead' in relating a circumstance, With which - he favored. me, as 'it' Mile:Wiles' Ws Ipoint .In,his religious ~o • ~ Was JP , •' ' 1.. I , ~.- of glipicter. He speaking of nis . prospects , Pvirig. " ifeSaia :. I . dcrii t et 'despair Of it to' come, II wlr tell''YOU . tir' hy, thgligh: it is the fret ' time r hive' menthmedthe ebent to any hi:keit A.bfitit thied }ears since,l was visiting 'lily bro r Wei In'New Jersey, Early one morning ( ' I had ; slenterrhige.'''''Cif coursed was alarmed: ''There `is ti - " f'`" al i 4 ' a with"cw - • Tittle'rise o groun , overe r es in "the `rear of' MY hrollier'e dwelling: 'Thither I `rePaire jiist as the sun ' Was, rising, fo',ine &my God."' r boWed in Hisliresenee and inqUired, of "Him Whether I shoilld li'e'or die ? '.' '1 rose' and; cleSeencled 'frorri'that kite 1, , with the Conviction that I was to live. Yo *now . how in the face' t of r physicians, , whelircirib Audit - iM,Ossible, her 'fivea,l arid 'lie 'li'ved"'An' ' sWer te, ; 't,bat'prayer. , 'l'lieltrerigth that; ii , aa. iharvelloue in' hie very ,Nteliktiese, Was the ftA :cif God; beitowed upon ; 'hint beim:tee he',Prayed: In' that morning commu nion hepaet God Dide'not Often' onjoi'Sucli' seasons with his Matter? Was not the posses' , slop of 'encli a:inaii,'Caple of' be.seeehirig God, of far more Value tq'yciiii than wealth, and influ :enbe, and eloquence ? Not many churchei are favored with a paStoel oeseisif ortnere faith and power 111 prayer. re these prayers dead or ? It .1124 - See rri:so . . 113 tit t4,y :are not. They 'are like triiii, ripening aniong,Ae v 'braiielies of 'the' tree ; When:the One 'of ' rietiing is fully, conie,,GOA will' ,shakethem I into the 'spiritual , ,t • . ~i. , . i ...,t treasury Of Inis c i tl . 4 . ,, The prayers of 'the tret pastor' of this pongre- - ' gation shall heeptue memorial gifts, / Of' , 'Prediotis'• value;-set'in these familiar walls,:; I knowof' no. better' attribUte'Aith which to 'round', off his, Christian. charaCter. ' lit,' is 'the k ' ' i'of the , 1 • ..= ~• i' I ? ;l e Yl -13 9 . 11 e arch 'He - was a man pf pcaler. .' My tiiliiiite'WOuld not, .be 641ete if I failed to •consider him in lie public churacter as al watchman on the wallio,f Zion., , 14 magnified kis a eln "this respect , he, q t i was a ,80/dloaa follO`Ne ofPaUl. , .4e had 'a most, exalted, s idea Of 'the (1 r4tian,niiiiitry: At times, fc his reverence for hie - c sing seemed 'siiperStitious; The pulpit' was, to' hi ~:b, holy eininence, from which, in' Christ's stead,'he besought men to be reconciled to God. He spake with the, 861 eniiiir , ties of ' s oeternit: h judgment wee near. lie was completely come -crated to his work' ''pl, e had but one thoyght, 44; that thought .i j was Oliriat and lie iv to brinai men into loViii.,'captiNity to his will: The' sad °- dest,hour of his life wai that, which bare -wit ness to' the conviction that his life, as li 'Preacher, was no More. , llis, intense love for the pulpit often led him here, when, lie' shoUld have, `been in :his dwelling,- Tile', Impna seron, ',Ais ever preached' ,Way on, the nternipg" of the first Sab bath intec,ember, eighten hundred and slily seven. He lelivilred,th lecture preparatory to che Coplinutuen o , i ,an ; ary, ei„, en uridred .and 'sixty-eight, „from' , th.ivords, " Prepare ye , ,-.. e , , l i, , . , • . t i i!,4 way of' t4e, Iprd. , „ Thus closed his public ministration. lla.tprrted op earth a year longer• before. ascenclimg to,the higher ministrations of God's,r i , I',, . ro --41, Jr . eternal, temple., , to . c Chtzi*ccer p, MI c rqacia ny. He preached, a pure Gospel: ' "pletie,.coniOained of his, erring froitilhe fitith, and,:forgettang gravity of speech. He dealt with the soul as creation or God, des tined to live hereAr a ssalon,on ,earth; , ,:and, by' i itslife here, to detegininc,flie , character of its etereal o state. t , • While ,maey, men , preach, the Go s pel, they ,are,apt,,.to, adopt some particular phase of it,,ind exalt,it at:, Ole expense of 'the' rest. - It is difficult to find the man who presents ,the Aospel,iti, its true.,propprtions,,giving each ~doctrine,its,,appropria4 place., The mental,Con stAtution and•the,physical 'state of the man leave, their i stemp,2n his Pub,lie teachings. Mr. Dun 9ing .was net a one-sided prearifier, but I ,think ,he gave peculiar gm:nil:one to those , features of' the Gospel that lie nearest , the law. He :' ; loved the ,eross i ,but ; he, yetnembered that God descen 'Zed ' from heaven amid thunder and lightning, long before the, cross , was raised and published His unalterable rule to mankind. 1 He never was esteemed a popular preacher. He would. have dieowned such an appellation. For who is thepopular preacher , of' to-day?, He is o the,rinin„i,vho ean create, a sensation, g4,„shall he . suatenarice for ,inferior minds ;, ,the mad who prostitaitea,the pulpit, to the laying of the beams. of his own I repntation,; who converts the Sall4- pry into a place' of jesting—not of wit, for flint, is to..be tolerated everywhere;—who says sharp : things, that he may be , considered of a rare order—who, once raised above the floo d, scruples not; to use, any.,mearis by, Whi4h'he may` bolster up his uncertain reputation. ~, „ , „ • , Neither was his style calculated to arrest the, seeker of, a chaste eloquence and faultless rhetoric. t His sermons were carefully prepared, anew ately weighed, sturdy expositions of the truth. Though he ,sometimes touched the finest chords in the human heart, he had not a poekic mind. t, He lost, in failing to enter the realm, of , his tory,, nature and daily life, to lgather. illustrations for the enforcing of truth. Though his manner was far from being perfect—though to him was denied the silvery eloqutince, of some, and he was destitute of the graceful arts of others, he had those superior gilts, character and earnest 'ilesss and all , win listened to,his solemn 'utter.. ances were sure that they flowed froin his heart. I think his weekly lectures were more fruitful of interest than the more formal discourses of a Sabbath. He was a sower. There is a time for sowing and a time for reaping. The order of nature is neither to be disturbed nor removed. " One soweth and another reapeth." It is very seldom the same man performs both of these offices. One is not often permitted to garner the fruits of his own toils. It always was the province of Mr., Dunning to east, the seed into the earth. Is he who sows worthy of less honor than he who reaps? Clould linrVests spring from a seedless soil ? • For ten years God. commissioned him to scat ter the good seed in this vineyard, and then directed him to Cuba to recruit his shattered system. During his absence the Spirit, deseended,, are ninny were &Wed. What is'the logical con clusion Y: Halsey Dunning prayed, wept, labored, sacrificed; enriched the earth with, his devotion, but,he.was not the one to, gather in the sheaves. y - et it is certain.there could have been* harves had there not been the limg year of 'faithful pre paration:" I sny'this, 'since some are disposed to undervalue the 'silent worker, and I love to see the;sealAtypesit ,put jnat where it, belongs iu this life. • • , •n There cannot be a revival of religion in ,this ,Church—a ! spiiituat 'ad'vance of o'y magnitude, 'in' which 1 wilF`not. discover some . 'evidence -that Mr. Dunning lived, and labored ;and died,, in the interests 9ft,this people, and, that his nwork ' Avas not in. vain. -.lf; ,to the unthinking man, his ministry appears to have heen barren, it is because' the ways in which God moves is not fully recog ' . nizeir and the criterion of HeaVen is not -under ,..stood•." Tathe eye Of religious philosophi it; Was ,a e , complete -success, and, from, it this church is destined,to grew, into p holy temple to the praise, and glory of the Most:High : 2' 'He w a smodd .I'ardor. . • The last time I visited' Mire; reinatkeds, in a' conversation eon- Cerningthe hest. method. of influencing the human heart kyield to Christ :." I have been more sue ; , ceseful iu personaf efforts ,than in any other." Ve,was kind in toile, loving. in deed, ever ready to - ilB good'.' He acquired' the 'friendship and 'aftectibns:cflthe people; that'he might gain their souls for the Master. I have seen many good. Piston, -14. never. his , oqual. have...knowa those wh0,.. i3 would but I have never , known :anOther wh `con vizir such purPoie—shed dinga genial influence 'all around, arid securing. the respect of; all with r whom he came in Contact. Tastora , are.friends,. since their position renders it necessary, n ; He was a friend, because his nature and his piety rendered itltnpbssibje that he — should not, be. He stood by yon,''nof pastoi only; but through the pastor shone a &kind of the: loveliest tenderness; and rarest syrepathy. He entered' a, sick. room, he was in spirit % one 9f the,faraily standing in dread anxiety around the couch of suffering, He prayed and watched, as it onthat bed lay the center of the t'opes and the'affections dna long life."' He' went into a family flow whole circle mfatlier had just ascended to the ,Parent "of' the rape. No child i arqund that hearth, on,Which the fire had ceased to burp, ,mourned more sin cerely' than' he. 'Again" he stood. by, the side of. one whose 'paitnerchad been swept airay—Whose hopes had been blighted by an unexpected frost, and so tender was, his sympathy, so, moist his eyes with ,gathering tears, that a 4 stranger ,could not tell' which was the ruined - man. He rejoiced with their who were in joy. Ills strains of thanksgiving was 'as sympathetic as his agonizing intercession: sympathies were- aetive, per omal,- always awake. ~It is not, irreN,rerence to say that, like Him who bears th, e ~ bu.rde,rksi o f ages, he, in his sphere, ivellf.nigli literallY carried the !riefli . tintl•joys of his people. Biit why - do I re hearsethese virtues? With:streaming eyes and voices tremulous with,hidden_ereotion,, you speak .more eloquently than can any human tongue, though inspired, hype gi;acespf poetry and song For fourteen years 'he' kiV , ae" the light '6f your homes. -For --fourteeno),years he baptized your children,,,j,oined,y,our, sons and daughtexs in holy wedlock; and e hOned year dead. For fourteen: yeare Vointed,nyou•iii yeur•-seasons of darkness (and gkief•to-the':ersvZ of love and the Heaven of light. He loved you, with a holy ardor. Thank God,, theugh, , you have consigned him to the grave, yen cannot hilry roemiiry., Let that live, and th't6'w - it:sl:kMa of SOftenedlight across your way forever: i'AT!'Congregation of his , love, youOcannot.yet realize thetdepth.of ;your bereave : , pent, Yota : singll4 elinreh to expect, more than on . s!ich pastor i 4 , too Inuch t, , , , ' His pastbral excellence 'Was Ili `crown. His pekniliatitids•as aqiiari ;May fade' frbm your re ; mem bra ce. , Ati preacher fiis memory may be,. 'comer dim; but:as„,a, pastot, ever live in ,your; most, ballnwed Fecollections of a, changelesi t• • past, , 1 , , It is now more than ; tia'ree years since' friends became convineed that disease Was weaving its 'fatal coils around his manly, frame.. It. It . followed him with a malignant smile along', every, path he trod. , He bade it,,retira r , He visited,pther elitnea: r lt_found him there. Hegazed on other scenes:' It revealed' itself iii very 'flower, 'arid 'bride of grass, and sounded its threatenings' on 'every breeze. • ' Others would, have' yielded. , For fortydWo months he disputed the ground. lie combated it, as man, always,+?hosld, for, if ope,ever g on es Goll in, the ,Ilesh, 4,is, when he clinks with all the te'itacity of,a great spirit to the life so kindly and divinely ,given,, Go l d loves men who wish to, live andact,. He lived and acted till hc'dicd. " ' 'Qn theinornineof the eleVenth of,Janiiary he passed frem the tests ptlife receive, the, crown which the, righteous Judge, had reserved for him. When the last,inoinent,eame'and, the roar of the dark, yaters were heard, just beyond, wrapping his mantle , abont him he descended into. the stream, rith the, firmness of the hero, the gensis tenay of the philosopher and the faith, of the Christian. He had but tt, few months before completed his fiftieth year f ,had just, entered on! Abet ~period which is the intellectual man's •prime; for, if oiie' is ever colossal, in mental excellence, it. is during the decade stretching from the fiftieth to the: tieth year of his race.. The passions. of youth are hushed; its ambitions calmed. Time, bas been afforded for the rectification of mistakes : that 'Oc cur in every Jite. Experience has. ripened; the mind and the heart, and all the-, forces : of the moral being ate ,trained to actin= perfect ,corteert.. Just as he was striking for the zenith hissun *eut down. As he died, one of God's royal men pass ed away. In ecclesiastical councils, as in every circle that he graced, he will be sadly missed. Who will catch his falling mantle and wear it as he wore it? The entire Church mourns, for from her towers, a mighty one has fallen. His trum pet.that gave no uncertain sound shall never sound again, for God has called him home. This simple tribute can shed no immortal fra grance on his virtues, it is but the offering of a heart that loved and trusted him. That silent marble is tot to perpetuate his memory, it is but the expression of a people whom he led in spirit ual paths for many years. His noble life is his proudest and most enduring monument. It is eternal, since he has built on the immortal rock of 'righteousness. • The pan,Avly,pm we saw, slumbers in his tomb, to-night. The man whom we did not see, but by whom we were , moved toholy living and Christ like sacrifice, is this moment an attendant of God, as he sits on His throne, Above., If departed spirits iu.their ministrations of love are•permitted 4 to care ; for the precious objects which they left along. the shores or time, then this Church- is watched overwith , eager tender ness by the noble leader of days no more to return, save on the waves of consecrated , memory. For her his love was unselfish his zeal. un broken till the `last, and to-night her name is written on his heart:in characters rinsing beauty. ifs has a reward' in the church triumphant. What shall be kis reeonipense here 7 What can you render? Rear ~a thous'and columns of granite ' they shall 'be splintered and broken by time. Twine ten thousand wreaths of burning gold and gleaming silver around a monument of adamant, and let each letter of the inscription it shall present to the shining. touch, of the, rising sun, be cut with the diamond; the gold shall rust, the silver lose is gloss and the letters be bleared as the monu ment crumbles to dust. • You.would- honor him. He cares nothing for •these :tplEeps of,respect. Here build a spiritual temple that shall endure forever. Let harmony be the chief song within its walls. Let each one for whom he toiled' and - prayed erect a noble Christian life to his, memory. Let him not have lived and died in vain for you. Yes; as we bid fareivell to Halsey Dunning at tbe gates'erdeath, and 'gather up our robes to hasten on to meet him amid the .radiant scenes of Paradise,,as the youth Rogers, and that other disciple, Haphine, whom Jesus loved, have already met him„there comes but one response to our competition to do hirO honor, "Remember me by remeMbering*Christ." ROMISH 011IIROH. —For, a thousand years says a North German correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazate, the Cathinhe 'Episcopate have never been so utterly powerless,- so helplessly servile to Rome, as 'at this moment. 'An ominous increase has : tAken place. in the ranks , of the Jesuits, which on the Ist of January last numbered 8,584 members, while in 1833 the entire order did not , doiint"more than a third of that nuniber. Its headquarters are of course in Rome; but by its emissaries it is übiquitous, and many of its patrons, perhaps even of the affiliated, are Ger map Bishops: —The freedom of the, Romish Church in the 'Sae j declared 6 . include the folloWing stipu lations': "That the State .shall , tolerate no dis sent fforn the Roman creed; that marriage and education are within the jurisdiction ,of the Church,and not of the State; that the members of'the hierarchy are not amenable to the civil coulltsTiind that it is the duty of the State to enforde the decrees Of the Church." What, in all this,' bas become of the freedom of the State and of the individual P• Hungary there .is a' stir as of Protestant air, in the Church itself . The laity have de manded_a recognizeitplaeain the administration °fits affairs., The government has warmly sup -porte-d'them, and the Rotiiisli archbishop`has been constrained to call a'Church Congress, which is ,expe,cted to reorganize , the. Church government under an old, law, by which churches and schools Were placed Under theof a mixed com mission of'clergymeri and' laYmen. The Con gress met June 24th. It is also asserted by a newspaper correspondent that• the Hungarian Government is firmly resolved, in case the Court of Rome s,Unable or .unwilling to furnish cer tain guarantees required as to the spirit and ten denc?Of approachiAg, 'Council, to strictly atidlibsolately forbid 'the' members of the Hun °Arian -_Episcopate 'attend it. —Mrs. Lewes, an English authoress who us fnally.signs herself ,as George Eliot, has received : from, the, Messrs. ;Blackwood„ her, publishers, l $67;000, for her'WOrks, : for " Silas Marner," '$12.000; for'" bo the Floss," $20,000, 'and'for' "Itiiihola," $30,000. tVe, l well known, London pub liiher;"is about 'to open' a'bianCh store in New York, as has been sucCessfUlly done by Strahan, Rbutledge; Nelson, Casselht and others. IMPORTERS •4? gf . 'talllt i fr , 41— ' 14 oturers ac'Dev" .-.1 $ . . . )11 CA ‘) • i ks S and Bed Check tigs' Chia sewn we ores. a large. varied and well selected Stile* at reddeedpricee. 43; Strawberry Street, • ", 1. • *kit Street west:Oiiecond: , . PIifILADELPHEA.