gottritan, EmlrOtriait. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1869 REV. JOHN W. MEARS, H. H., Editor. No. 1334 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. TILE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE. Rev. Z. li. Humphrey, D.D., Pastor of Calvary Church. Rev. Herrick Johnson, D. D., Pastor of the First Church. Rev. Duni. March. D.D., Pastor or Clinton St. Church. Rev. Peter Stryker, D.D., Pastor of N. Broad Xt. Church. Rev. George F. Wiswell, D.P., Pastor of Green Hill Church. Ile,. E. E. Adams, D.D., Prof. in Lincoln Uni versity. Rev. Samuel W. Duffield, Special Cor respondent. Mr. Robert E. Thompson will continue to act as Editor of the News Department. Correspondents in every Presbytery and Synod will promptly furnish us with fresh items of news from their respective fields. i& Naples, by "B. B. C.", Female Educa tion, The Papal Syllabus, page 2d; Editor's Table, Missionary items, Temperance Items, Scientific Items, page 3d; " Be comes no Royal Vesture Wearing," (Poetry,l)Row Roger Rolfe used his Enemies, An Old Boy, Eva Sundown, Value of a Minute, Sabbath Piety, Living by the Day, Private rayer, Budget of Anecdotes, page 6th; Religious World Abroad, Page7th. 7C FI IC American Presbyterian For 1809-70. TERMS. In Advance, per Annum, $2.45'0 After Thirty Days, 0.00 Home Missionaries, 2.00 One Month for Nothing. In order to introduce the paper to those as yet unacquainted with it, we 'will give a copy from this date, till Dec. 31st, 1870, for $2.50 in ad- Your own Paper for Nothing 1 Any Subscriber not in arrears, sending us two new names and $5, will be credited for one year on his own account. If in arrears, he will be credited at the rate of $2.50 a year. One-half of the Money Returned! Fifty per cent. of the money sent for new sub scribers at full rates will be returned in books at publishers' prices, from the Catalogues of The Presbyterian Publication Committee. Presbyterian Board of Publication. C. Scribner & Co. (Lange's Commentaries, &c.) Harper & Bros. (McClintock's Cyclo:ledia, &c.) Robert Carter & Brothers. American Tract Society, Boston. ler Freight and Charges prepaid by ourselves. Webster 'Unabridged. Eight new Subscribers and $2O Freight extra. Cash Premium —One Dollar Cask on each subscriber paying $2.50 in advance. Send $1.50 and retain the balance ' • but don't give the paper for that price. If you wish to reduce the price of the paper get up clubs. OTHER PREMIUMS.—For One New Subscri ber and $2.50, any $1 25 Book; or any $1.50 book from Carter's or the Boston Tract Society's S. 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We will send a Fifty-five Dollar Sewing Ma chine of the above well-known make, for Eighteen new names and fifty-four dollars, or Thirty new names and seventy-two dallars and fifty cents. Also for a club of fifty new names and $lOO, or for a club of one hundred new names and $lBO. Freght • itra. Appleton's Cyclopedia. For Fifty New Subscribers at $2.50, paid in advance, Appleton's New American Cyclopedia. Cloth, 16 vols., Bvo. Sent free , by Express. Price, $BO. Ten Subscribers. For ten new subscribers, all the year's issues of S. S. Books of the Presbyterian Pub. Committee, in cluding Tennessean in Persia, Freed Boy in Alabama, etc., cost $14.80 ; or, all the new issues of the Boston' _American Tract ;Society, seventeen in number, in cluding Cyril Rivers, Ten years on the Euphrates, priced at $l9. Freight from 60 cents to $l.OO. Sixty Subscribers. The entire list of 162 volumes of first-dass Sunday school Books of the Presbyterian Publication Com mittee, worth at catalogue prices $92.70, will be sent free of charge, for sixty subscribers and $l5O. 1162rOnly those procuring the new subscribers are entitled to these Premiums. CLUBBING WITH MAGAZINES. New Subscribers to our paper and to these Maga slates, can have both for one year at the following Am. Fresh., and Presbyterian Monthly.. • $2.50. di dd Sunday at Home. (Bosto0). 3.00. di NORTS at Home. - 3.50. GUORWS Sunday.Magagite. 8.75. Hearth and Home. 4.25. " LittelPs Living Age. 8.00. gm. Remit by postage orders, checks, drafts, or registered letters; otherwise we cannot be respon sible for losses of money. Address, JOHN W. MEARS, 1334" Chestnut Street, Phila. MISSION SUNDAY SCHOOLS IN KANSAS. " Kansas is ripe for Sunday School Missionary work, and the schools already started are doing the greatest amount of good. One school near Leavenworth, was recently engaged in a revival reaching nearly every family. All the schools are flourishing. " An Eastern young lady, only eighteen years of age, finding no religious privileges in Osaukee, started a Sunday School there with sixty schol ars, the first ever organized in that vicinity. This stimulated the starting of another." These items are gathered from the reports of one of the missionaries of the American Sunday School Union. The Union principle is the only one on which Sunday Schools can be organized in many such communities. KOLAPOOR MISSION, INDIA. STATEMENT OF THE - COMMITTEE-IN CHARGE OF THE =I3 This Mission was re-established under our di rection in 1861. Since then its annual reports show the following : SUMMARY OP WOKK'DONE I. One , Christian church, built of stone, 65 feet long by 36 wide, valued at $5,000, standing as the only, temple of the living God amidst the two hundred,and fifty-four idol temples of Kola poor, the sweet tones of its Sabbath bell being heard over the whole city, and one hundred and fifty to two hundred idolaters gathering at every service. • IL Daily and Sabbath preaching, lectures, prayer-meetings, church meetings, Bible classes and catechetical exercises. Alora than 2,000 children and youth gathered into schools for a longer or shorter pe riod, under daily Christian teaching, resulting in the enlightenment of many and the conver sion of some to Christ. IV. More than 2.8,000 volumes or 3,000,000 pages of Christian Tracts and Books have been put into circulation, of, which 3,100 (1,500,000 pages) were Bibles or portions of Scripture. These pages of. Christian truth have been very widely circulated, and in a way to give promise of the largest results on the minds and hearts of the people. Our Missionary has also labored in Bible translation and revision, has prepared Christian Tracts and Books for the press,—such as " Scientific Errors of _Hinduism," " Jane, the Young Cottager," and "The Shepherd of Salis bury Plaiu"—books exposing and refuting hea then superstition and error ; and full of the sweet essence of divine truth and 'rich - Christian experience, and he has completed a Coramentary on two of the Gospels—the only original Com mentary ever published in the Mahratti language, , on any part of Bible. V. An unprecedented amount of labor has been ierformed on preaching tours—the Mis sionary having visited every city, town and, vil lage in the kingdom and many in , adjacent territory—in all 1,580, whose population is 1,051,140; his aggregate hearers having been over 100,000; and in 1,275 of these cities and villages, , he could find no trace of any Missionary having been there before, or that even the name of Jesus was known. KOLAPOOR is a city of 50,000 idolaters, and in the wide region * around it stand marked on 'this touring journal, forty four towns and villages, ranging in yopulation ,from 2,000 to 30,000 souls, each of which is, a favorable locality for one or more Missionaries, having around it a circle of smaller villages, suitable stations for native helpers. VI. A church of native converts has been gathered, and twenty-eight Persons baptized, of whom twenty one are now living, communi- This work has been accomplished 'With no aid from any Board or, Society, but with the volun tary gifts of a few Sabbath Schools and friends in America and India, at an annual expense of some s3ooo—an aggregate of $27,000, and with no charge for collecting or remitting funds. Stern parental duty has now brought our Mis sionary to America, but he is anxious to return as soon as possible and to take back one or more young missionaries to reinforce the mission - and perpetuate it, when he can work no longer. The committee in charge of this mission the past ten years, , fully sympathizing in the desira bleness and necessity of such reinforcement, most thankful for God's favor in the large amount of work accomplished and results secured, deeply impressed with the special eligibility of KOLA poon as the centre of a large and needy field of labor, wholly unoccupied by any other society or missionary, highly appreciating the self-sacri ficing spirit which has led our missionary to struggle on with his heavy burden, rather than accept the offer of the full value of all his build ings and property, together with a retiring al lowance—an offer made to him by the Bishop of Bombay, on condition that he make over his mission to' the S. P. G. (the English High Church Ritualistic Society,) and having im plicit confidence in his fidelity and whole-heart ed devotion to hismork, are anxious and resolved to do what we can to reinforce and prosecute the mission. And we earnestly commend our mis sionary, the Rev. R. G. Wilder, to the churches and Christian hearts who . love the souls of the heathen and desire their salvation,• hoping they will Soon furnish him means to take back one or more missionaries with him, and, place the mis . PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1869. sion on a more efficient and permanent basis. In behalf of the Committee in charge of the KOLAPOOa 3.l.l§slois OUR ROCHESTER CORRESPONDENT. DEATH Or PR. MOSES BRISTOL. A good man has 'hus gone, at 79 years of age, to his peaceful re . He was born in Clinton, educated at Yale Clege, where he graduated in 1813; studied me tine in New Haven ; prac , 1 ticed for a time in s native village, and settled in Buffalo in 1822, hen that village contained but 3,000 inhabitan —it is now a city of 120,000. For a long time he as one •of the leading phy sicians of the pla , but retired from active practice nearly twe y.years ago. During the last orty-five years he has been an esteemed and nored Elder in the First Presbyterian Chur .. , For several months past kites been seen b his friends that he was fail ing; but the end meat last suddenly. He was stricken down ith paralysis and lingered ate but a few hours. He 'ward. Bristol, Fail., an ear , ;r, and one of the Elders in church. His funeral was his death was noticed with in an unconscious was the father of nest Christian wo the Lafayette st largely attended, tokensof highest lIFFALO ITEMS Dr. Clarke, of his people an able: ,of the Old Testa , . ship, their scope a. Dr. Hopkins, o supplying Dr. flea the Lafayette St. ffalo, has been preaching to ies of sermons on the Books t, their date, their author design. Auburn Seminary, who is k's pulpit, has been giving urch some of his historical en especially busy with the John Calvin, John Huss, a krilliant, instructive, and in each one. We believe ome next. lectures. He has Johns—John Kn and John Wickli interesting, lectur Martin Luther is Mr. Anson G. ester, (brother of Rev. Dr. dhester,) a well-k wn editor, writer, and poet, has . recently been ensed by the Presbytery of Buffalo. He is al dy preaching very accepta bly as opportunity ers, although he;is still pur suing his theolo 1 studies, under direction of the Presbytery. Jhas been strenuously urged by his pastor, Dr. lacock, to enter the ministry; and feels within , h elf, " Woe is me if I preach not the Gospel," so gives himself to this sa cred calling, even ugh not now quite so young as he was ten yea go. We know that troops of friends are wis him all possible success in the new sphere o I ristian activity upon which he is entering. Rev. Dr. Ileac .f..)rnia on the 2 , warmly attached him. It will be special demonstr,j is expected home from Cali abbath of December. His .le will be very glad to see like them to make some oi l. their love and welcome. Rev. Dr. Ni •B of a successfu& mi church of Coining. have united/with h Last year his, peopl , at a cost of about $ perous, alld the pa beloved/ Arnorig other te• recently manifest, tial buggy wagon for the comfort of Rev. Danoin Chi torate of the Presb and been released bytery of Chemurvz and beloved, a g pastor. just completed ten years ry over the Presbyterian n that time 215 persons hurch, 151 by profession. ilt a fine house of worship, 00. The church is pros is greatly esteemed arid onials of their good will uable corn and substan presented to the pastor, If and his family. ter has resigned the pas ian Church of Burdett, his charge by the Pres ] e is a brother esteemed preacher and faithful our city, preached a most , abbathevening on Syste urged benevolence as a joy ; and that'it be syste genuine or efficient. A giving adopted by the Rev. Dc. Crowe admirable 'sermon matic Benee, ficence. duty, .a privilege a matio in order to scheme of system session, is also pas books, as a gentle of the times and t be taken each mo bered. Such a s cleat pastor, is th benevolent, purpo tend to it, there each one of the church nder. to the congregation uses. A collection is to Each cause is to be num , well worked by an effi . way to raise money for If all pastors would at be little left for outside be halcyon days to the agencies. Those church. • g was devoted to a re rn. By invitation of the • rst and Second convened g, which at present' is the ening services were eon wluy of the First Church, •ardman of the Second n address and report • of, emblies in Pittsburg were untington,. commissioner Last Sabbath union meeting in Central Church, in their place of Opera House. ducted by -Rev and Rev. S Church, after w the meeting of t given by Rev. ' of Cayuga Pres good; the meeti siastic. Auburn Rochester, N. The address was very eresting, and even enthu .r union. GENESEE. 1869. he Bishop of Orleans t, the editor of the ultra e Eniverse], for the pub ceding.the infallibility, of Paris, Nov. reprimands .montane organ lication of artic, tbe Pope. C - Eo. W. MEARS. J. S. CUMMINGS. JOHN W. NEARS While the two lines were standing at the Pirst church, on either side of the-street, we, and several others not members of the Old School Assembly, said : "The other line is rather short; let us desert and join them." As we did so, one of the Old School exclaimed : " What business have you over there?" We. replied : "This is the Short Line; we prefer it." Another said: "He is just where he ought to be. He has been defending the New School all along." An Old School man cried out 'to the other side : "We are glad to see you come baci to the old fold." Some one from the other line responded: "It is you are coming back. Old things have passed away. Behold, all things have become' new." Again from the Old School line some one said: "No man having tasted old wine straightway desireth the new, for he saith the old is better." The presence of Geo. H. Stuart, as Marshal, added no little to the merriment of the march. Some one cried out to Mr. S.: " Which Schobl do you be long to ?" Mr. Stuart did not hear, but another answered : "He is the manager of the Pan Presbyterian drama,• and this is the first scene." As Mr. Stuart was giving' oideis along the Old School line, some one said : " You had better go over there and keep those people in order, and' you will find it about as much as you will be able ttolo." OUR EXCHANGES. REUNION The Methodist has been a warm friend of Presbyterian Reunion_ from the first, and thus sends its congratulations on the accomplishment of the measure : This was a sublime spectacle. We doubt not that the heavealy host rejoiced over it; and all good men throughout Christendom will hail the news of it with heart-uttered hosannas. It is one of the great exponent events of our age—an expression of that deepened charity and growing catholicity which have been revealing themselves more and more through Protestant Christendom with each decade of our century, and the result of which will be a general moral, if not ecclesi astical, unification of Protestantism. CEcumeni cal councils are an historically exploded illusion; evangelical charity and unification are taking their place— the scriptural " communion of saints." Methodism, by the unification of its numerous American branches (so unnecessarily, and therefore unjustifiably apart), should have claimed the signal honor of presenting to the world this grand precedent; our General Con ference and our episcopate were disposed to win it for the Church; but we have failed, and the blessed credit of the example, has fallen on our Presbyterian brethren. Let them enjoy it with our gratitude and benedictions; but let us lead our ecclesiastical hosts into' the same line of march as promptly as possible. We, above all other people, are morally bound to sustain their bene ficent example by imitating it ; there should be no unnecessary delay. The Western Christian Advocate speaks with brotherly cordiality, and a true insight into the facts : We hail it as a harbinger of the unity of Pro testantism, as a manifestation of the power of Christian charity, and as the exponent of the tendencies of the times in which we live. We join some of our contemporaries in regrets that Methodism was not first to celebrate the consoli dation of her scattered branches. For a time we hoped this honor would fall upon the Church of our choice. But we shall not complain. Our Presbyterian brethren have earned the triumph, and we accord to them the credit of leading the way in the grand march to unification and suc cess. Their's was a victory of no ordinary char acter. The difficulties they had to encounter were not merely personal and ecclesiastical, but doctrinal. Although subscribing the same standards, a diffeient method of interpreting them had grown into a fixed habit, drawing be tween the sections of the Church distinctly marked lines of theological differences, threaten irig-to become irreconcilable antagonisms. Zion's Herald holds up the Reunion as a re buke to Unitarians and an encouragement to Methodists : The two Presbyterian churches were formally united at Pittsburg,• the week before Thanksgiv 'ing. The union was one of heart, and the differ ences in doctrine were ignored rather than set tied. The two assemblies came together with the singing of one Methodist, one Congregational, and.two Episcopal hymns. " Blow ye the trum pet, blow," "All hail the power ofJesus' name," " Blest be the tie that binds," and "Praise God' from whom all blessings flow." It was a little odd, and dreadfully shocking, undoubtejliy; to the Revised Version Presbyterians that such a mar riage should be effected without a single psalm of David, and with these four hymns, all from un- Presbyterian sources. The Church thus united has agreed to raise five millions of dollars as a thanksgiving offering. What do our anti-Chris tian and super• Christian free-religionists say to such a liberality ? By their fruits ye shall know them." This union betokens the union of the Methodist churches, and that of all the Pres. byterian bodies still scattered abroad. - "The reporter of the Presbyterian says: Next to the unanimity with which the reunion was declared, nothing calls for greater thankful ness than the spirit that was exhibited toward those who were known to have been its opponent& Not an uncharitable word was uttered about them. An examination of the lists of Trustees, Professors and Directors, elected by the Assem bly, and of the Committees appointed by the Moderator, will discover the names of some who have disapproved of the various terms of reunion. The paper itself has not yet arrived at any conclusion on the subject, except that it is to be the paper of the united Church. The _Herald and Presbyter is too full of joy for utterance. Dr. Montfort writes : Many little .pleasant and harmonious things occurred in intervals of relaxation like one that is told of Mr. Barnes, as taking place a few weeks ago during the meeting of the American Board at Pittsburg. Mr. B. rode up to the Allegheny Seminary, and meeting an, Old School friend he was asked : " Why, Mr. Barnes, what are you doing up,here ?" Mr. B. replied : "I under stand ' that we are soon to get possession of some property up here, and I thought I would like,to see it.' Another humorous point in regard to - Reunion appears in the same paper : There are two Presbyteries called Potosi in Missouri, one of which is in connection with the 0. S. Synod of Missouri, and voted for re union. The other is a part of the D. and T. Synod of Missouri, which Synod claims to be " all that will be left of the dear old Church" after reunion. Its Presbytery of Potosi has "gone through the motions" and voted against the Basis of Reunion. Whether it has voted on the Fiftegnth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, and sent up its vote to the Secretary of State at Washington City, we are as yet not informed. The organ of these malcontents, The Missouri Presbyterian says : According to the secular papers, the wedding was an occasion of overflowing joy, manifested in hand-shaking, *eel ing, and most brotherly speeches. While we do most emphatically de precate the avowed motives of the leaders in this movement, and particularly the tricks and out rages with which they have thought proper to prosecute it, and while wi do honestly dissent from the Basis as too indefinite and a virtual surrender of distinctively Old School doctrine and history, and, therefore, have our fears lest the predictions of discord and great strife be fulfilled, yet it is our desire and prayer that these fears be not realized, but that God will graciously order the reunion to the glory of His great name, in 'the'furtherance of the gospel. The Independent does not see anything in the Reunion to be jubilant ' Aver, and presses the issue of "*Union in the Spirit," but ends thus : We are sure this new exhibition of brotherly forbearance, this latest achievement and illustra tion of Christian liberality, will strike the world as pleasantly as it does us. The only difficulty in the popular mind, we apprehend, will be how to strike the balance, and award the credit of so regal a triumph of so worthy a principle. The more, we are inclined to believe, will insist on congratulating the New School on the excellent spirit of forgiveness which they have manifested, and especially on the recognition and vindication they have been able to win, at the hands of the -very men who once persecuted them to their ecclesiastical death. Our congratulations go rather to the "Other Branch." For, "to get justice dope to one's self," is that so much, as it is "to do justice to somebody else ?" And have not these. Old School brethren, with a unanimity rare for them, laid aside the garments of suspicion and prejudice, and clothed themselves from top to toe with the pure white robes of neighborly love ? Nay, by the sacrament of a solemn vote, have they not taken to closest embrace of enofra ternity those whom they once denounced and " exscinded" as heretics ? The palm is theirs. We publicly hand it over to them. And when men's shouts shall be heard in celebration of the victory of the New School, ours shall ring out clear and loud for the Old! But, be we right or be we wrong in locating our praise, emerging out of the dust and confusion and enmity of this long controversy, comes sweet-voiced and fair-browed Liberty. Her we salute. And, seeing her, we begin to suspect that the real victory is not of this party or of that, but of toleration. For that let paeans and Te Deums be sung. —The would-be murderers of detective Brooks have received their sentences, to suffer the full penalty of the law,—a fine of $lOOO and seven years' imprisonment. The ring was powerless to mitigate their sentence or to attempt a rescue. Mr. Brooks, nothing daunted, is again at work, closing up illicit distilleries, and we think he will be unmolested for awhile. Even in New York city a man who intended to commit murder, but who shot the wrong man,;was last week sentenced to nine years and six months' imprisonment. NEW PUBLICATIONS. - C. SCRIBNER AND CO, send Songs of Life, ele gant square 4t0., Holiday Edition. Cloth $5.00; also Illustrated LibrarY of:Wonders; Egypt 3300 :Years ago. 40 illestrations, $1.50. SHELDON AND Co. have issued : Susan Field ing, by Mrs. Edwards ; and Put Yourself in His Place, part 1., by Charles Reade. Illustrated paper) SCRIBNER, WELFORD AND CO. send specimens of Sampson Low, Son and Marston's, Bayard Series: Dr. Johnson's Rasselas, and Wm. Hazlitt's " Round Table." MRS. J. HAMILTON THOMAS has published an elegant volume , of poetical selections, entitled " Thoughts that Cluster Round our Homes.' Sq. gilt, pp. 223. HARPER AN] BROS. publish " Haydn's Dic tionary of Dates revised for American readers." Bvo., pp. 541. Also " Wild Sports of the World, by James Greeenwood," with 147 illustration pp. 474. PERIODICALS. Lippincott has issued Goon WORDS - "FOR THE YOUNG, and " GUTHRIE'S SUNDAY 'MAGA ZINE" for December, fully illustrated. , FOREIGN. ITEMS. —About one hundred . and fifty Bishops have already arrived in Rome. Many of them are from America. .Madrid, .Nov. 23.--The Government has de termined to adopt vigorous measures against certain Bishops who have gone to Rome without passports or p emission. The Bishop of Havana, who was recently arrested in Cadiz, was taken to Madrid yesterday under guard. Rome, Nor. 25—The religious exercises pre liminary to the openino. of (Ecumenical Council have already been ordered St. Petersburg, .Nov. 26.—The old law limit ing the -residence of Jews has been enforced in some parts of the empire recently. Two thousand of these people have been removed from the Bessarabian frontier to the interior of Russia, within a few days.' An impression pre vailed that the Emperor will disapprove of these proceedings.