JohnAWeir N e w Series, Vol. VI, No. 46. Strictly in Advance $2.50, Otherwise $3. postage 20 A dvance to be paid where delivered. f The two Pastors' Associations, of the for mer Old and New School branches, will hold a joint meeting, neat Monday morning at 11 o'clock, in the Lecture Room of West Spruce Street &Ouch, Rev. Dr. Breed's. Rev. Albert Barnes will preside. The Pennsylvania State Sabbath School Association will hold an Institute every evening except Saturday, of the week commencing next Sabbath, the 21st, in the Spring Garden M. E. Church (corner of 20th Street). The services will commence at a quarter before eight o'clock, except Saturday when there will be a service for children, at three o'clock in the, afternoon. THE ACCOMPLISHED FACT. It is written in history. The divided 'branches of the Presbyterian Church in the United States have indeed become one. Fresh from the strange, the thrilling, the unprecedented scenes which marked the event, we scarcely dare trust ourselves to speak of them. They are beyond the writer's or the photographer's art. But memory will treasure them among the grandest, brightest and most imperishable scenes in her galleries. There was grandeur in the simple, unostentatious announcement of the result of the vote, and the declaration that the Basis of Union was of binding force, made in •both As semblies, at the same moment. There was gran deur and happy omen in the fact that ONLY THREE, Out of TWO HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX Presbyteries, in both bodies, had voted in the negative. There was grandeur in the hearty, al most instantaneous, melting of the two lines of the procession into one, and in the march of a thousand ministers and elders of the Presbyteri an Church, through 'the crowded streets and amid the pressure of. jubilant throngs of specta tors. There was grandeur in the rush, of the great wave of humanity,that almost leaped into i every vacant space, and every nook and corner of the great edifice•of the Third Church, after the representatives of the church .had entered. Twenty.fkve hundred persons sat and stood with in, .a tAvelitry4iVe littlldred-reifrtlOCNY-WOUld 11114 e" done the same, if they could have gained en trance. Such an exultant, eager, inly-touched devoutly-grateful crowd, ready equally , to ap plaud, to sing, to pray, to laugh, to weep, was never gathered among Presbyterians before. Such a rush of uncontrollable emotions never went through a staid religious assembly. So many happy tears, with such an abandonment of effort to stay them, were scarcely ever wept be fore. For nearly four hours, from eleven until half past two, we lingered in those new and blessed associations, taking no note of time. One almost expected to hear the sound, as Of a rush- ing mighty wind, and to see the hovering cloud and the cloven tongues of fire descend upon the disciples, so thoroughly of one accord in one place. All through these and the preliminary pro ceedings, we confess we felt thoroughly at home. The very air was•balm to us. The whole pop ulation sympathized in the movement. Even a shoe-black paused in his application of the brushes to a delegate's foot, and asked earnestly : " Well; are they goin' to fine 7" The cars from all the surrounding country, which is densely. Presbyterian, came loaded, train after train, with eager visitors. Clerks deserted their desks to catch a glimpse of the proceedings. The daily papers loaded down their columns with phono graphic reports, scrupulously gathering up every scrap of business, and even reporting prayer meeting talks and prayers, and blazoning their bulletin boards, as in war times, with the an nouncements. We suppose Old School men felt themselves in an Old School current ;—of that we can not speak positively,—but we are sure that New School men felt themselves in a New School current; every thing seemed happily drifting in their direction. It seemed as if all Pittsburgh had become New School. There seemed to be a sudden and general waking up to the excellencies of this branch of the Church. The vigor and success of its missionary enter prises, the freedom and elasticity of its spirit and methods, its adaptedness to the character and wants of the times, were illustrated in the great missionary meeting in the First church, Thurs day night, which seemed to have been generously arranged to bring out these facts; and signifi cant comments and congratulation were ex changed among Old School men' on the great value of these elements of vigor, elasticity and progress in the united body. - The presence of the venerable Dr. David El liott, Moderator in the'storn3y times of 183'7 and '3B, in a prominent place on the platform, his rising in response to Moderator,Jaeobus' appeal, whether he knew of any lawful hindrance to the union of these two bodies, and his graceful and clear reply : " I KNOW OF NONE, Sin," were pe. culiarly pleasing to New School men. When Dr. Musgrave spoke so emphatically of the marvellous change that had come over his own branch as preliminary to reunion, and when he reckoned the division as rather permitted, and the reunion, on the contrary, as decreed by God, he touched a deep chord lir the New School heart. And when Dr. Adams endorsed Dr. Musgrave's Calvinistic view of the history of our Church, and 'of the Reunion, but added that it would not be amiss to speak of the New School view, and to rejoice to. gether that we had been able, to do so much to make our calling and election sure, the magnifir- , cent outburst of applattie,'whieh was taken 'np again and again-by the crowd, thrilled the men especially, who have alwayi kept in view that part of the inspired telt. The appointment of this jubilee meeting in the Aird:Church, and the unanimous choice of the First Church in this, city; as the first place of meeting of the joint Assembly, were also among the many intimations of the utter absence of small jealousies, and of the dominance everywhere of a broad and gene rous spirit in which the two bodies had truly be come one. We do not know that we carried with unto Pittsburgh a-spark of any other feeling; if we did, •it has utterly vanished. If any doubts, or ghosts of dOubts, which we cherished, of the expediency or future sUccess„on a large scale, of the movement, still lingered, they shrank with an unheard of velocity, when we beheld the mighty accord of that representative body; its ac cord in feeling, in humility, in respect for 'mutual peculiarities, in new consecration, in conscious ness of high calling, in resolve upon great enter prises for Christ and humanity.. An accord which so manifestly honors Christ, and cherishes Chris tian liberty, it will be our highest joy to pro mote aud'prolong to 'the best' of our ability. TIINHSGIYING•; 1869. . With justice we may, reokon it a great cause of thanksgiving to day, that the practice has be come national. It is no lon r " a_good ctld ens tom'" of tile,levr'Englariii States merely; it has, in the course of a dozen years spread from State to State, until the Chief Executives of the na tion have felt authorized, by the force of public sentiment, to give it the sanction of their official recommendation, which is almost universally fol lowed by the people. This would seem to be a sign of growing religious feeling among us, worthy of notice amid so much of an opposite and ominous character. A free nation, with none but free ehurehes, volunteering a service of thanksgiving to Almighty God, upon a set day throughout its borders, is a fact worth pon dering. The services of the, Jewish Theocracy were sacred because divinely appointed; and everytincere worshipper honored Jehovah in observing them ; but we doubt whether they were as pleasing to God as the unanimous, informal, free-will offering of a day of thanksgiving, by a whole Christian people, who, so far forth, show the law written in their hearts, of the spirit and not of the letter. And the topics which suggest themselveS at this time are of a broad, inspiring, and national character. No Christian. teacher meed go./back to threadbare subjects in these days of high ac tivity and hopeful achievement. The gracious hand of God is seen plainly amid the !novel events of our time. If " to-day is a king in dis guise," it must be admitted that some glimpses of royal lustre shine through the folds of his dress, as he passes by. May we not discern his royalty in the recent completion of the Pacific Railroad, whose termini touch the waters of the two great oceans of the globe, and whose tracks make a highway across the whole breadth of a continent? We give thanks, to-dhy, for that proud achievement of modern enterprise; thanks for the marvellous energy that so far anticipated the promised and, to many, doubtful era of com pletion, as to bring it into the earlier half of our year. Thanks have also been going up ever since the fourth of March, for the healthful, purifying, honorable change which then took place in the management of our national affairs. Thanks for the arrest then laid upon the swift downward progress of our policy towards the repudiation of just debts, and the toleration and even exaltation of dishonesty and crime. Thanks for the re versal of the last official act of Andrew Johnson, —pocketing the bill which pledged the faith of the nation to the payment, in full value , of every dollar of the public debt,—bythe re-enacting of the same bill, the very first to receive tnel signat7tire of President Grant. Thanks for,the 'clear, pbr sistent purpose of the administration to do jus tice,. to surround itself with honorable and /up right officers, and to prove to the world ( the 1 jan7o PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, NOFEDIBER 18, 1869. ability and the readiness of the American people to discharge their enormous obligations. Thanks for the sixty-two millions paid off in the first eight months of the Presidential year, and for the saiinc , in the national finances' at the rate of over one hundred millions a 'year. Thanks for the disposition shown by the'people at the recent elections, to stand by the administration in this righteous policy ; the Deniocratic victory in New E . York State 'not being capable of a different inter pretation. Bat the year of PresbYterian Re•union has come. And it is one of-the happy proVidences of the time that the 11e-union is one of the events .or tDamksg,iving' i week. Thanksgiving day stands bathed in" the 'fresh glow and radi ance of that auspicious and wonderful event. The year is crowned 'with , the divine goodness. .A whole day is -'needed 'to speak adequately or this fact alone. Thankp for the healing of a whole, generation of deep, alienations between sincere Christian men - ; thanks for the falling off of mantles of prejudice so-thick as to shut in throbbing hearts and generous hands that would have been responsive in loves and labors for Christi thanks for the extirpation of old roots of bitterness ; thanks for the high and command ing attitude before the World hereafter, of those whose. strifes and jealousies .upon the minor de tails of their creed heretofore have brought into Contempt the, grand names of Presbyterian and Protestant which they. bore; thanks .for that river which springs from the throne of God it self, whose clear, broad and sweet waters of charity are bathing our souls, and with a fresh baptism consecrating these two churches to deep er holiness, to larger services and to grander use fulness than ever. A united Church in a united country ; no hap pier occasion for thanksgiving need be asked than that ! "LET US_DO SOME GREAT WORK." On all sides do we hear this as the motto of the United Presbyterian Church. Happily, and in a 'host marvellous manner, have the two great diviAions of !_the..Preskytezlitittiity - -:-Waff, one. All the feuds and alienations of the past have been dissolved in the chemistry of Christian affection and brotherhood. In the first gushes of feeling'at this long-desired and prayed-for result, it is not strange that there should be some mani festations of great and almost rapturous enthusi asm. Warm and. hopeful natures indulge in gor geous visions of future enlargement and great ness. They feel , with the ardent disciple on the Mount of Transfiguration, like building taberna cles, and making permanent homes on this bright spot of vision. We may not be surprised to hear it spoken, that the reunited church, so grand in its historic reuirion, so linked with the spirit of liberty and progress through the ages, is to be THE CHURCH of the Future. And if there are ex pressions akin to boasting, we must pass them to the credit of high-wrought zeal and glowing hope. But will this. great Church do some ." grand work" to commemorate the union and the begin ning of its new life 7 Will it go forth into the wide-waving harvest field, girded about with new strength, and informed with fresh life and power,? This remains for the " great cloud of witnesses" to see. The waiting, eager, watching millions, expect to see some proofs of the benefit of union in the works of the Church—its charities, its intelligent zeal, and expenditure of spiritual power. And if we fail of this, it were better per haps, that no word of union had been spoken. Will the Church rise to the height of her great privilege, and.meet this reasonable expectation? If so, there will be a new song among the angels in heaven, over the triumph of Jesus in this fallen world. But how will this be done? In rapturous moments of hope, we may say " now for some great, grand, glorious•enterprise." But is it to be some one splendid enterprise, which will stir all the enthusiasth of the people for a single year, and like some resplendent meteor, leave all in darkness thereafter Is it to be a single master piece, or shall it not rather be a succession of great undertakings, projecting themselves far into the future, and losing themselves in the light of Millenial day ? Great as may be the eclat of re union, after long and bitter division, there will be no great increase of power, unless, we keep consistently in mind: 1. That the true source of strength in the Church is in the "type of individual piety, and the local church communion. Just as is the personal and social Christian life of the church at home, will be the strength and aggressive power,ef the combined life of the whole body, The individual church member may lose his personal responsibility in talking about what the Church is doing, and will do, and.so the local Church may lose her individuality, : and greatly diminish her personal power, while rejoicing in the greatness and might of the inllittude. 2. We must not allow our attention to,b e diverted from. Christ's work, by anxieties about petty. here sies and .diversities of persona/ opinion in the body,at large. 3. We must simplify our machinery •and cnt ecclesiastical tape. In this way,'we :Anil get , . . one, directly at .the work to be d lo l ling neither , time, nor strength. . - . , 4. We must be a consecrated Church, keeping ,the high, healthful table ground we haye hitherto held, in reference to the conformitY,Of Phristians to the principles, tastes and habits of the world, and all, the great questions which. affect society, laws and governments. 5. Every,man and woman telottgin' g to this honored and highly favored communion of saints, Must be up and doing, intent upon i i he greatest good - to the greatest number, the highest glory ot - our divine. Lord and Master. this raising of millions of .money for the cause of' die Church, during the ensuing year, will be a gl:eat thing, but, by far the greatest thing will be,,, a united, holy, consecrated Church, of near half a million of souls, quickened into a higher life, going forward with hearts all aflame with quenchiesi3 zeal and untiring spirit, to the last great battle of the world, remembering the thrilling words of the great apostle, " So, then, every one, of„ us shall aive an account of himself to God." G. F. W. OUR ROCHESTER_ CORRESPONDENT. HELP THOSE WOMEN. We have recently been favored with a visit from Rev. 0. P. Allen, Missionary of the Amer‘. ; can Board from Haricot, Turkey. He and his wife addressed the Ladies of our Women's Board of Missions, auxiliary to th,e Women's Board in Boston, and gave a very touching ac count of the degradation and igporance of the poor women of Turkey. One story told by Mrs. Allen, beautifully illustrates the, power of the gyp al in,,setting • • • workr - to give to—eftle -r ,'blessiiig they have found in it themselves., A poor Armenian woman, after being at first a cruel opposer, came at length to love the, gospel, and to see how degraded and wretched she and others had been without it. She came to Har• poot,l earned to read a little just a little. Her heart was touched for the women of her native village who could not read at all. She went back and got up a school. She gathered forty,wol:cren, and began to teach them the little she knew herself. But this was not enough. Some of the women could not attend her 'day school; so she gathered some twenty more into an 'evening class. She did well as far as she could go. She gained the confidence; the affections of her scholars, and excited their liveliest gratitude. The missiona ries were more than gratified with her success; it excited admiration and surprise. They thought, if she only had a little more education herself, she could go on teaching and do much good. They therefore went to her, and proposed that she should return to Harpoot, and study more and qualify herself ,for greater usefulness. But to this proposition her 'scholars objected. They said, we cannot spare her ; and some began to shed tears at the mere thought of losing their beloved teacher. But, the Missionaries said, we do not mean to take her away altogether. We only want her -to go back to school for a while, and learn more; so she can be a better teacher. But they said, she knowi enough now to •teach us; and we can't spare her, even' for a season. This was told to illustrate the eagerness of some, 'at least, of the • poor degraded women of Turkey, to learn , to read. It shows also how much goeda woman may do there even with .a very limited education. Many of those" who, :but a few years ago, ebuld not read -a word, and never expected to read, are now the true Bible Readers, going, with Out, •pay, from house to house among their own sex, reeding portions of God's holy word, and offering prayer in the hovels of the lowly, where the Missionary could not so readily find access. "Let him that heareth, say. Corse." We see that Mrs. Rhea, who was nine years a missionary among the Nestorians of Persia, has been in like manner talking to some of the ladies of„, Buffalo, in regard to mission work in that more distant - country. One or two ladies' Mis sionary SocietieS, auxiliary to the Women's' Board of Boston;have also been formed in Buffalo, and promise much usefulness; Mrs. Rhea's visit must give a new impulse to the good work which they have taken in hand. Several other female , 'Missionaries' have done much to interest, our ladies' more deeply in the. cause of Foreign Genesee Evangelist, No. 1226 f Home & Foreign Miss. $2OO. 1 Address :-1334 Cheptnu. Sheet Missions, especially in the work of the Board for degraded, heathen wo:nau. President Brown, of Hamilton College, in his centennial affaress at Dartmouth College, brings out some interesting coincidences in the founding and chariaer of the two institutions. , They were both planted originally in the fo'idst, on the out skirts of civilization. Both were started with special reference to the education of the Indians: They were intended, in part, as mission schools: A few of the natives of the forest have been edu cated at Dartmouth , but none at Hamilton. ELEA zErt WHEELOCK, the foUnder of the Dartmouth' school, and SAMUEL KIRKLAND. of Hamilton, were also intimate friends and correspondents, and both did their work with special reference to the spread of Christ's Kingdom. They aimed at mithing less than making their institutions Christian colleges. In this respect Hamilton, at least,'remains true to the pious intent of the no ble designer. Rev. Dwight W. Marsh, formerly Missionary' of the American Board, and author of that beautiful missionary volume, "The Tennesseean' in Persia," has received and accepted a call to the Congregational church of Whitney's Point, and is to enter at once upon his new field of labor. The charming chapel made out of the materials of the Old First Presbyterian church of Auburn, is now completed and ready for use. The ap pearance of •the old church is retained as nearly as possible; it is only made smaller, and the gall leries omitted, except at one ; end. The old pul l pit , is reproduced, with its antique device of arch and descending dove, and: the oil lamps which lighted it before gas was introduced. The house is now 60 by 40 feet, with 20 feet ceiling, ancl will seat 350 persons: It is in the eastern part of the' city,: high Is rapidly growing - , and where such an edifice is much needed. It was a happy thought, thus to preserie the old building. How much better than, to have sold it to the Catholics t or-cotverted-it into a livery-stable—things which have been done. ONE PROCLAMATION ENOUGH Our President issues his proclamation for a national Thanksgiving; alipointing a day and asking the people to unite in its proper obser vance. All right. What need now for a procla mation from the Governor of each State? Are we not yet a nation?'And•suppose some Gover nor chooses to appoint some other day than that named by the President; which day is to be ob served in such a state Will the people be com pelled to eat two dinners, and the ministers to preach two sermons? The Proclamation of the President is'ehough. Then the festival is natu ral, and there is no conflict or discord. Let the Governors keep silence. Enough said, when the President has spoken. Rochester, Nov. 13, 1869 —Rev. Chas. Wadsworth, D.D., has sent his resignation to ,Calvary church, San Francisco, so that his , acceptance of the call from the Third Reformed church of this city may be counted on. Calvary, church arc divided on the question of his successor. Some . want to recall their former pastor, Rev. Dr. Scott,' ,of New York, who left them at the opening of the war on account of the want of harmony with his people on political issues. He recently re-visited them. Others want to secure Rev. Mr. HeMphillo, young Irish Presbyterian, now travelling in this country col lecting money for a congregation who are " well enough off" to do without it. —The movement ~to close the Retail Dry Goods stores of Paris on the Sabbath, ended in a colli sion of employers and their clerks, the former refusing to stop work on that day. The clerks largely withdrew from the old stores, and started new establishments on a grand scale, and - on the principle of Co operation. These have secured a large share of the public patronage, and are decided successes. —The Philadelphia Baptist Association de clining to pronounce Baptism "the, necessary pre requisite" to the Lord's Supper, prefer•declaring it ," a natural and scriptural precedent "of that sacrament. They also wisely and temperately de cline asserting that their views on Baptism agree with the ".convictions of universal. Christendom." . —Bethany iltission on Wednesday_ evening last, unanimously•called• to its pastorate-Rev. J. R. Miller; late of , the II: :P. Churelynovit of the unitetl.PresbYterian , Chttreh. PehTe no doubt of his acceptance:- HAMILTON COLLEGE. MEM THE AUBURN CHAPEL GENESEE