Original emnsunitatints, LETTERS FROM THE HILLS.—II. NEWCASTLE, PA., Sept. 13, 1869. This manufacturing town is advaneing in pros perity, aCmay be seen by many indications. Its position at the junction of the creek, canal and railroad give it considerable advantages as a centre of activity-in the--iron business. Its ad vance has been greatly retarded by want of capi tal. The first settlers were poor men, and the place had to fight its way up. This is the great. need in most of the early settlements, -here and farther West, and it is a want tliat will greatly retard the development of the.whole country unless CO-OPERATION becomes general. That grand so-: cial invention of this century.goes CM the princi-. ple that "mony mickles make a• mpickler and uses the collected contributions to, the best , advan ; tage, giving Surety of increase. . What . folly, for ; a. town to set up no factory, or workshop,, because , no,. one man has money .enotigh to stnyto . , it, and the gsve.who huge , money have it too.ac.; lively engaged in thekown-bripess l to, be ahle to. withdraw it and subscribe for Ashares!, If, those, who would expect employment in,. such ,4 9.0n 1 cern would-first unite their savings,: they,wopld find, that they had . enough• to. start it - , without ; waiting for .the.eapitalist. Yet•hardly:n.town,i the West—there are :eome, exceptions on;.the: prairies-r-has had -the .enterprise-to. , try ; co-- operation. . - • : • • Some of :the-nevr iron, furna, ces erectedl in this region are queer-kloking.agaits. Instead of ,:ge ing straight up liksa hig squarei chimney, with a lid on top, they have a ))road rountkepkiat, like a, platform, built about SIX, feet b,eloll , top: , One new one at the entrance,to she,town hasa, steam fan, and in general,ithe whole ,business is now , conducted with better apparatus-and on a larger scale. The iron men complain that only those . who mine the ore are making money at presentlin smelting and rolling.- , - • Coal oil is still a profitable business in the counties north of this, because it is noir amore regular and understood'business, and.less•a field for gantbling. Thereis still a'good dealer chance hitting On wells, and here spiritualist Mediums do'a• lively stroks of buiiness. A medium charges 875 down, and--say—ois thirtiethr of the toil as his fee. If the enterprise fails he hears no more, and the - public heirs nothing. If in succeeds the fact is noised abroad over the whole - .region; and the 'fools 'who employ him multiply. Poor' Johnny Steele is hauling oil from the wells to the station, driving anothesman's Yet' he is not quite Out of luck, yet. When he started '• to see the elephant 4 in .our Eastern citiesle gave his wife $30,000 - to get, rid of her. Mrs- Steele held fast,to thiSlittlisnm,• while her• liege lord went through muCh larger ones, and now takes him back on promise Of atnendment. After preaching yeaterday morning, for Mr, Wylie, I rode out some miles over the hills to Mahoningtown, where he was to preach in the C anpbellits meeting-house. Mahoningtown is also on the creek, but'not so favorably situated is as Neweltttle, and is much smaller. This summer it is sorely afflicted with chills. One lady told us, that in the three houses, of which tier family o..:cupied one, six had "the shakes" every day. Chills were unknown in this region until the making, of the canal gathered a large body of stagnant water,--a fact which must beregarded as one of the drawbacks &the canal system. - The little Campbellite chnrch was well filled, largely by "the disciples" themselvee. The hymn-book which we used was that compiled by Campbell himself, and revised by the more cal tivated part of the denordination. It is now really a good selection of hymns, as such things go, although containing a fair share of dogg,trel. That the church belonged to the wing repre sented by Rev. Isaac Errett and The Christian Standard, was manifest, not only front the loan of it for Presbyterian preaching, but also by the presence of a harmonium. Mr. Wylie certainly gave them 'a good strong . doie of sound Calvinist's, and that on the point on which they are especi ally adverse to Calvinism—the work of the Spirit in regeneration. As we drove back to Newcastle, Ikfr. Wylie pointed out the, scene of his winter labors. In three of the school-houses 'Slow , the road , be tween the tivo towQs, he had preached four nights of every, week,, mostly spending the afternoons in visiting around the neighborhood and gathering, in the pgople. Often the roads which he . traversed were. almost ,impassable with mud, 11.0 the weather most inclement. This, be it remem tiered, was volunteer work, in addition to supply ing his ,own church in Newcastle As a result, some forty-four persons were gathered into the churches, or are yet to join, them. Of these, thirtyifisus are to his own church in Newcastle. The ,:hundred 'church members—fifty Covenan ters and fikrNeis' school (or Free, Churchmen) .--oveyvshom he was installed two years ago, are 41911 , , two. h un dio,,ad are better trained in Christian activity liberality than most ashurches. He now c leaves, them for a more -eastern field, having :accepted .a call to the O. S. chitrdh at Bellefonte, in Centre county—a town about. thirty iisiles'from Tyrone; on the . Pennsyl; vania 'Cen'tral road, and on a line of railroad connecting Tyrone with Sunbury. He will not withdraw from the Pittsburg Presbytery, how ever, until after the meeting of the Assemblies at Pittsburg, but expects to be at work in his new field by October first. - In the evening, as it was the day of special prayer for Retinion, a joint meeting of his arid Dr. D. X. Junkin's congregations, was held in the place of worship of the latter. The two pas tors presided, alternately calling on members of their respective churches to lead in prayer, and closing with exhortations to unity and peace: Dr. Junkin's speech was the 'Arst - thati I' had eve - I:heard frOin hini, and *as certainty retnarV- , ablc.''Her began by confessing that he hadlieen' le far opposed. to Onion, that 'he' had "e t: with void+ and ,peti---every 'plan 'previously pro posed to 'accoMplistit. l: - [Your readers will re.= member' what' a Nerm friend of Uniort'lie was two years `ago, when our correspondent 'classed' him among the 'opponents of Union.- ''We oh served,'however, that in an Old School'inen• it is enongh''for` liim to Say that he'favors . Unittn; though he oppose' every plan • prephseti'for accent plisitmedt, while 'it New' School Man, though , 'he .itirpfthrt every Plan proposed,' i called etitif Union, if Oppiised - Witifplit — that might possi bly.be: offered)] •, Jun,kin,had opposed Union because ,44tad ;been,urged on wro i ng-,grennds, andproposed on; wrong tenms.r, had .been . urgedAs, a ftdfil, i men* ofShrists iptercesseryyrayer, that they>, ,might all ho.tute, but,' until he was ready to give. up the. doctrine,, of the.. Trinity in • could net accept that,interpretation,that,organigi [he .meant..oghogrdj : .,upicktr,m.as ,want . .„0141114 W,lieni he Pittle4. At.t , P4jokk. APAIts)LheRLY the -netiontiu l the • Phih4elp.Poßveptlaceal .turned. , pale„arcAnd had ` 19, Union because the old plans Aereo4,l_l94 ; nt4h, conditions; which would, i Ix in der,„,the-,.,ffereise of, discipline on: unsound members, and theretty,re-, vivo the old:, qyaarels -of 1.113. .11e, didAclt i wish te,see gene* Asseriably . „,spewied ent.byeity„ after eitypea it. was in those days. , Not that, he had ever ye:ixtied the,greAt i ttody,ef his New: School brethren as unsonnd. .Hcregarded most of them as-nll- right en this head,,and.in particu lar; he was j sure that his brother Wylie i , ivao - 8 4 seand:nn Old *heel ,I,'resbytexiap ja, theology, ; as he was , himself ., make,,this.Union there, must be no birasting. ,Near, School; kept saying to Old Schoel; !,‘,lron.bave sprren.-; dered, to usi' . ;. and -Old School; say z ing•,to.,New. School " Yen have:ome over to us,", then the Mischieflnins again.. It is - ,not,,in human nature to stand nth talk. The Doctor branched off into a dissertation• on the Federal or Representative system, and, danger. of centralized government, which we recognized as sound democratic doctrine;_ but did not quitcsee the ecclesiastical bearing 'ef. At first it. Sounded as pointing towards a plan for the -con• - federation of all the Preshyterian and Reformed Churches of the land, and, in time, of the whsle world, into a great representative confederacy. Towards the_plose, it seemed to meanihe recon struction of the policy of the omnipotenoe of the Assembly so long adopted by the pa,sclio34. He warmed, up here, until he was quite ,cordial.. His: New. School brethren were sounder -on this great topic,- than were the majority - of his own Church, and they ,weuld come into, the Union pledged to the overthrow of the. onmipotence of the Assembly. He closed his r,emarks with an • exhortation to peace,and union between the two. chnichesin Newcastle, expressing the, hope that the two would sppedily, grow to three' or even four, as , they might do in this very year, for,ig, for the, restoration of the Union . Mr. Wylie spoke mostly in the strain with which the Doctor—elosed. —lfe plead for - the promising - field of labor in - which , heihaf.l - found so much to do in the previous winter, and urged the.establishment of.a church the field. Q l l, the various other fields around the city, there` are equally promising fields ,white for •the -her , vest. Why should ,they be unoccupied P r He trusted that thin• Union would not be used as au , occasion for boasting : Frnm that, spirit t44s semblie.s had been wonderfully, free; • ‘ i ," My . Church I!' was a . cry,that had . :been x t eurse, many a soul, when,set' up as a motive ,for work. "My Saviour" was the trite watchword;,- the : constraining love of Christ the true, motive., He was glad that his last act as . a pastor in New castle was to address this meeting. It;was quite late before .the meeting adjourned and we were .glad to know that...a good,many. U. P. brethren evinced, their interest by their presence. ,9no elder of. that body seemed much: troubled,. with a refractory lad) , companion, who ; would sing: hymns, although, he got the book, 'away from her two or three times.. AN OBITUARY. e• Died „in West Philadelphia, on - the Bth, lilt., after a short illness, in the fourth year, , of her, age, Polly • She was a native of Africa , and , likethousands of those born there, she was captured, and was destined to perpetual bondage. She fell , however , into the hinds of the Rev. Albert Bushnell, of the Gaboon Mission, by whom she was- ; sent ;.te this country, where she found, in this city, a hos pitable home. Her gentle, innocent, winning manner, her quiet temper, and her sweet, voice, secured for her, in the family where she was lo cated; friends, who became greatly attached to her, and who cherished the hope that she would PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1869. 9N. THE ;WING have a long and a happy life. Sheihad lost in a great measure, her slight acquaistaitce with her native language * but was making strippij . progo* in acquiring a familiarity with the English tongtie She had no "original sin," nor was she guilty of any "actual transgressions," for she had violated no law, human or divine; Yet she sickened, suf fered, and died—and died with no apparent evi dence of a hope oga better life,or even. of an ex, istence beyond thegrave., T ' ; Will some learned theoltigian explain - I.bhy : Was; under the dfirliii - goverinunt;lhat "Sheitia l witjected suffering'imd- death; and how:Abel fact thatshe thus suffered and died; itian be re - - 'ooneiled with the-idea of a just-and- benevolent , administration ? Why should the; suffer at, all?- Why die 'not haves recompense in a , fu4 turn state And will some Old :School diyine; who teaches, as they , didat 2rineetianiffEty yea's!' agoy that; suffeking is .elfthe- natnreptifipenaltyj forlsin,- and that.deathini old-world- haat beets wayia dausedby siiii-etplaiff hew it was Eld in thin' lease? ";THE tjtaetlir'.!.:l)llung, , ;CHß.C t ll---J8,,1T; •,:', oßfoutauszt ; --ThezTope is aigreat kperioriagei.though often.a. very.bachinsin, andralirays KU-unchristian pcit,en. ltatec Harisik priest; and the head of apriesthood. of irulimited , extentl - - mchtirieas I,hel Gospel, instead-1 ieffaCknowksigingutrach a ministry; _rejects i pllicitry by theiristitutiori;ofroiretirelyurnd it - ireesincilablrdifferento ifoildo:hemnd hirreiem-i :plifythetprevaieisce:of Gaspeldnii neat:et Lsr., Under Irv:Papal prieisthoodlandthierarehlt; allimanner Of 'e§ril , thingwitaye foundwendouiraginnient-4ormal, 'ism, superstition, fraud, coirritkion,- crime. rsiit,l 'would takes volmae=tti- inventory the aboMinar 'tions of the cenverit. The world has been tloosiedi withlenoruiities of every :Jae ; from the ..pgittonona, fointaia.of,-4he win+ nut< more greedN,Lucifer-rwaso neither.; prowler, Xpri 'more ambitious, and it would li buluird,to find i .a lostspiritMaireunsetuplousi than some, : . of the wearers °Ube : triple crown.; ~"11 ;But these: things, it : is fondly said, de not affect " thel,atmeeasion."..;l. Awl ,as. the Church was founded 'Originally 'Mk , St, -Peter,..4leseendible "AuCceltional =heirs, geed, or. f bacl,. it is, of 'course, the same Churehenuw aastirst; the same 'under,A l priesthood anti a4apalthientrchy, aknn-, der, thesimplebrganisatilm atid raioiatty Of the apos,tolicage. $o they prattle, - :Founded_ on Peter, was it?: What makes you. think so ? lkcause Peter was the." entail* ands swearing" apostle ; -who showed-his petrous so'id ity andltrinireakil fprinciple, by:phitektifig, "I know s not the xaktO 7,, Probably this in:note your reason. Yorktt„lainkyou have a, better one in those : words - of ilia Sav,ienr, " Then art. Ps:stet-ond I will 'build my Church upon this. rocki" ,the being, that .the, term "Peter'l is , synonymouaw,ith. "-rock," and- that the , latter: is intrOncedsimply . as verbal alternative, to avoid • the inelegance of saying, ".I will build upon.this, Peter," The whim is plausible,..but it is only awhirn_;„ , althongh adopted by some self styled protestant, lwriters. Translation.gires,itall the grace it has ", Peter "in Greek, ia Pettus.. I/et ns keep for a, moment to thewordthe saviour used. Had He: meant to take 'the . Apostle personally for. , his foundatiori, He.,would.,doubtlefit haye said,so nn equivocally, however f inelegant; „for He came to teach truth, not, rhetoric. He: have , said, " Thou art Petros, gad, upon this Petros I .will &e.. Instead of which He chose, for the latter, averment, quite : anotlier subject of predica !tioa, saying, " Thoext,petros, and I will build my, Church upon this petra coAmite term, but of another form„and-sound, another declension, !soother gender, another meaning, too r in substan *tiye force. At any. rate petra, and !tot," petros,7. waato be the:foundation rock. We have*, fr.op this lips of Cbrist, Himself; and who shall under-, take to amend His phraseology? Who dare af firp that by a feurinine of, the . first f cleclension He mesut, not metaphorically but literally, a. mason• line of the second-? I, will puytavesticn y to" the church" VVas Peter ever known,or heard of. by t h e name of,petra y t",or if not, one least is clear —it was not upout.int.person i ctily that Christ .pused to liuild.44§o,o, all Romish interestk the point is. settled: But let ps s go ,a little further There is a fact of great importance to, toe noted. Petra, which had never , been appropriated to-the Apostle of the circumcision nor applied to, him in any , way, was 'under flit Appropriation. to, his . Master, ages be fore the church-building announeeme.nt was made., 'We see this all ,through lestAment in dozens of successive iterations- and the idiom descended into the language of , the later Scrip-, tures ; evangelists , apostles, Peter using it without reserve—the word of designation be never- ‘•-petros," invariably *era. See .Matt. avi. 18, Rom. ix 33, 1 Cor. a. 4, 1 Peter ii. 8., So habitual is this application of the term that 'from being at first metaphor it becomes , as I have called it, idiom. I may almost say, thi.t from be ing a figure,ef speech it becomes , .nomenclature. As,a figure of speech,,itjuight have been applied. to Peter; but the-fact*, that it never was so ap.-. We, consequently. know, without theieast artifice of construction, not only what the Saviour did not mean in the case before us, but also what He did Law. So, that if the , rook-pretensions of 1" His Itoliness "swill not die with one quietus, here are two `Petra does not mean Peter, and it does mean Christ. Nor is the word symmymons at all with . " pe trod Ii is the regulaka name in Greek for _a frxed, rocky ma* whereas "petrol," a word much lesS in use, means`-lather a rock-fragment,i piece of a rock, a stone. Lexicographers do n. •,- enlighten us much. In the New Testament " pe tree" -is never used for rock; para., -never -for anything but rock. (Matt. vii. 24, Mark , xv. Luke viii. 6, Rev. vi. 15, 16) I will not _drum as nprehja referepee tolGreek literature at large Witliont bettet'ineinEr t thitn I have at hand to re -aitseriinyselt-orriliffabetitc although I -believe the New.Teatasnent miage in the twofer:-strictly classibal. Of Hemet, the velly:beikt tot the Greek' van, speak With-some Agetfidence,, Po tra. occurs often in the-great poek •audvalwayekt,l! believe r iu_. the settee- eE fixed rick. Od. r 293); "-Fetros•flis MU: with : occasionally,. , 4tOnemsed for ;grinding -cort i e piece lot mar /dal& pebbie grasped-witk.the hand ; .at.a.n,vrate,: astontki-411 71. 27'0 ; 7307 - Accordbigly our. versimi oflhe gives us stone a&the English , ofictiCeplial4', , ; Peter's-first cognominal- designationfet ,the krand.pff Xis Alaw teri 4 and of,Whiiih :the ;Apostle, •John„ declares ; " PetroPlr a 4nere iiiterprittatien: or:equivalent itk:, proper Greek k whereas ‘..‘,Ceplras!!.. was, a.-;word, 'essentially -foreign= arid barbarous ;needing to 4be_i thker explaine& in. erdersto7beiag understood:' • I-ask edi, - Why.Peter,-;lwitlfrids,- unsteady cliaraeter, slionld have been mined a, acne iev,en ? Becittse his feonfessiou indicated : -(en& as &sue 'siaa:weltrawarN indicated that Ite:had , in firm AIM 'elements .of a .trew natnrep coirespoeding. , measurably with that of:his Divine Friend, and ithat he thus stood related to the great Author of spifUual life;•aera Imam itvaine-frour- , -a relatiteyat-ence "of origin !arid'of•qualitY4 liotdiaceinible to Icommen-,eyes;: perhaps,- but ir , Frietrertheless,: 'an& stildering, esectiy way just; , and meet. , . the glorious' eulogy. rthiCh hirrnewuaniii expressed. 5 . • : • ' , A,tileverybndy :Inoue; Christ:Himself is some:i dined-spoken .otin Scripture, -under the. motet I ,Phor-ori. stone: Generally as. a' bill:Ming:stone; a coiner ore foundation-stone.; eceasitmallyes "stone orstumbling,;!".•never, I believe,', withal* - some.qualifying-coetext or addition: - .Arcl even then f tha word Wed not petros,P -but lithos: 'So that he is tiowhere.pixed - up itinbiglEtitY J with. the, naniegiVenato ,the:Apostle i • The cede ettads sitaply•thus.4 , --; : • _ i L,.Christ &comet say that He--wiltboild* u.Pon Peter. ,; i' , 36," V, 1 = 2j He does aisert the :great evangelical - fact that Itawill build; ixponAlimself,. "4-The Rock of Ages i f!•:as justaindiested'ly• the Apostle's confes- I nien - ef,ffis character. - • He recognises in Peter a rblation.to aspf petfros!'•,t6: pore; thefsecender . x. to •the prineipeivihe servant to the master.; with-the as surance leaded- (neadfut to. Peter's vacillating mind), that when the r great edifice is up, =" tip gates cif hell shall not-prevail against it,r an!as suranoe . whielr, had - thi3 Aptatle• mistaken hie own person for ithe intended basisnf Church; must either hive passed his comprehension, or turheid his head: • ' -• The-wonder is,:that ecclesiastic al society pretending,to , be Christian 'should' :persistently `falsify4hat4wetension.by claiming td 1 e founded; not - upon the'Author uf ;Christianity, but upon * poor frail human. being,! full of infirmities. Peter and "his iiirecessorb!!!= W_hat. a foundation fora ' Church ! Happily Christ's •people are llis Church. And they 'are.such for'the precise rea son that they_are.huilt upon Him alone. Can a Church be His that has a man for its found ition ? —in other worls, , for its trust, •its- Main reliauce..- its ".centre, of unity" so-called t "" Other :foun-' dati.on can_ ro man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ." - „ : .TheAl . .successioni.'2too I another fond-conceit. 'There are; two ;difficulties about. it. ;In:; the &it Tlace it. is destitute :of historical evidence: Indeed, the.evidence is atl-agaiast it. • Peter 'was* never in Rowe. , Even _Millman is obliged to. cog cede:the point. - Much less-did the apostle , die : there. And, -in the pecond. place, there is no agreement ali2ofig shstoricaLauciquaries as to who wasthe finat, second, third:„ or fourth bishop of IRome.t; It, is a 'theme of utter confusion, among Andifinally, if every other difficulty were got how could a Romish priesthood succeed. as such to the office of a_man who was not a priest r ' ;; • I believe some of the -,Romisb. fathers gave countenance to •what is now -the -Popish_ view of the , subject ; 'and- that-a story •of , Petmes having gone -toßome, and suifered martyrdom there, was .manufactured by somebody in -the way of " pious, fraud," to giVe the,thinga, chalwe aiming 1108 - Bible, or at least of being made " tradition" 94: 'for after 'generations. But other.fathers, such as Origen; Epiphanius, Hilary, Augustine, scouted the:notion•of ihs' , Ohurchis, being founded on the inconstant Apostle ; regarding him as simply named after , THA Rom,. whose presence in the person of f the Redeemer, he confessed. "Non eitim. a 'Petra : Tetra," said Augustine, , ," secs , /tetra Petrol; sicut u°s' Otristus a, ,Citristiasq, sed•Christianus a Christ°, vocatur.' The moment a man gives way to nate 'desire, disqa4thile and' tor ment take fiessession of-his heart. ;The inroad and the covetous are never at rest; but the' tumble and poor in spirit possess their souls in the plenitude of peace.—Kentpis. REV. A. M. STEWART'S LETTERS. NO. XLIV, TREASURE CITY, Nev., Aug 1569, The earth is the Lord's and the fulness there of; and the Lord has given it to the sons of m en. His command to Adam, after creation, still binds his desqe9dants: " Replenishothe earth and sub -- .1 tlue , rt." NoTortion of our globe but has some peciffiar adaptation for supplying man's increas ing stunbenl and wants. Twenty times the pres ent number of inhabitants can be luxuriously supported upon our planet if rightly subdued. This " Great Anierietin Desert," as tourists and geogtapbere are iiteiused.ta call it, will yet mai n • tairr,'Cromits otvti"rtirodruitAranesd, as many p eo . pleat Mt now , ate' United States. • :An - item ofsaCred bietorY in reference to this 'subject "was to iiae a icingiiiiii'serhins puzzlement. The impressions received frOm teachers, Bible commentators, lying ''and stupid geogra• great 'Arabian Peninsula behiethat it was "riot Merely - a wilderness, but a Asrt, Wholly devoid` vegetation and covered with 'rocks and scoriae; and' `with burning, drift. ib4 8441. ' : - imPreaisiciti's'l read' in Moses' his tititeVit!en'lsrtiel'eania:otti of Egypt, they 'brought With . iheM into this same desert, " Flocks anirtirdi, eV& ''And after forty yeas 46 , j4inin thireiti,'When read" to cross over iAidari, instead:of 411klieikeattle having perished, :the again isiiords : " The children of Reuben and the children of Gad had a very great ude of Unteritand how those immense 'herds' of - eattle c n'oe*slutli lived but so gteaEly fiiithiptiA iii such a - region Did they, witlitheir owners; live - upon:manna, 'and - take a upo4: . Better informa tion instructs us,that largeportions of the terti ary i.k4r, which thC'Jsrieliteli journeyed and en eimaii of the -Mine kind's of soil, and are colthred`With the same - species' of 'vegetation, as most` ef' the ateitlnigri - ean Easin, the Artemi ati-=-Si6 Enshbeing''the predominant shrub in both?' • ' "F,l2iPerietite is 'fast demenStrating that Utah and Dte:v4da-4ail tetra:o6es, larger than New toi l. "aiirt l eiirii 3 Olvinia.—are among the final stock- - goi4tig " " countries- on the globe. J . :fere:l;l 4 B4, 'cattle" and'sibeep not only live, but thrive'and groW fat all the year round, without a lan u 1 of grain or barn feeding Flocks and , herds` can be here multiplied to an almost un limited eitent.: Shepherd days are returning. A grass called Bunch grass, from the produl tioni of each root growing in -a separate clump, is a frorite pasture, dot only , in'its early summer greenness, but after drying on the stock in July; the ,i4ialess, dewless atmosphere preserves it like newly mown hay until winter. `WA& &t i p is an ablindan.t perennial shrub About two feet high; oily and: pungent in its sum mer greenness.; in Which - Condition it is never .tantedliyeattle; bat' when the frosts of winter have unfitted nearly :all other vegetation for gra zing purpOies, this p.ant is rendered soft and palatible by the freezing. In this condition horses, cattlkand sheep become very fond of it, and, as an article of food, it is healthful and nu tiitions., The snow in the great valleys nevd. altogether covers this really pretty shrub, which is likely to prove of as much money-value to the immense_ State of _Nevada as all her rich silver mines. There is a ,finffi,'evy of it growing on &Minns . of acres, as yet unreached by graziers, to winter,all - the cattle' in the "Unites States. Such are God's wise provisions and wonderful adapta tions: No marvel titat but small developments have as yet been made in stock raising and farming in this boundless region of mineral wealth. A floating population his hurried' here with the hope of becomino , suddenly rich, and never 'dreams Of attempting the slow proe3ss of stock raising and farming as a road to wealth, thougli both were never so ittviting. A different popu• lation must come foi„these slower, surer, .yet more profitable purposes. One result from, such u condition of things is „ that every thing eaten, worn or used is at a price as exorbitant as would make the ears of every Eastern housekeeper _tingle.. All payments are in coin. Potatoes foirteen cents per pound,—all `such things are sold by the potind—o`reen fruits fifty cents per pound; eggs a dollar a dozen, and so on. Tho 'Overland route being such a gov ernment:propped monopoly, but little benefit in cheapening thenecessariei of life has as yet been derived from itscotuplitiow A. M. STE wanr. • --:--An English journal, commenting on an ex wad; from Blackwood, says :--" It is open to a man to profess kis faith. now in society as un blushingly as his, want of it, a change of even greater importance. Time was when to argue in favor, say of, the possibility of revelation in a drawing room, would Have been considered mon strous. Now men and women will listen and discuss with all the eagerness of tone and quick incisiveness of speech with which they of old would have discussed the prospects of a ministry orAhe march of, a foreign army, with an evident thrist to hear, and to speak, and to know which Pioves at least this;--that religion has become a subject of human interest, Formerly society treat ed it as something it was quite right to approve, but indecorous in the extreme eater to attack or maintain. We are out of the cycle of indif ferenee to religion." W. • 1! THIS A BARREN LAND ? stock Rersiia