ESTABL SHED IN 1786 ate (Vitt rgh Ctixtft H4TELLIGENCE Ray's bork cn the "Social Erudition o: the People of Englend' is attracting con,idera• ble attention, on !actual of of the sta^,ling (sots brought out in e work. The rel gions Nero are discussing the 'subject in reg rd to the author's suggeslions as to the beet eons of evangelizing the . "lower classes." Mr. Esy affirms that the &manilas get the beet 5C3069 to these olasee3 in England, because of the pe culiar attraction of their ritael serriee, and to the fact that they aim to have a good Bop • ply of priests rather, than of chapels; that they sustain is plurality of priests at each dispel; that the mieeionary labors, instead of being In the capacity of "oily missionary" agents; their !suburban labors are conducted in the name and under the authority of een. tral and often imposing churches, than iden tifying their suburban proselytes with their poets of reeponeibility, instead of the Protes ent, mode, (co frequedtly employed, of pauper chapels, called "city miesions,e but an the I.m• mediate work of the wealthy churches. The author of this worn enumerates, in formal propositions, and en the authority of the beet Protestant laborers among the lower claesee in England, the reasone of the superior sueceea of the Romish Church, or rather, as he pre. Bents the ciliation, the inferior success of Proteetantism, "tie want of an inlerior .order of clergy." Be does rot deny that the Protes tant laborers among these degraded °busies are "inferior" men . generally speaking, be.. they are not an ..inferior order of elergy:' They are "agents" "tract distributors, r"tert tens," Oily mieeionaries, and largely laymen. "They are not," says the Advocate and Jormal, "the Church in its apeaMlio dignity, and min isterial authority, wa:klng through the fester ing suburbs, and tithing the people and their children to its bosom as its right• thl pcseeseion, the legitimate ob,lects of ita divine misaion, but the agents of the Church distributing its constrained charities beyond - its established pale, expreesing not only its eympatil „with these suffering mosses, but al. - so arcapplication of their outside position and moral paupariszni an implication which may be truthful enough, but is only the more dis paraging and repulaivefor being -truthful, and which becomes a moral and hardly surmount able barrier between them and the Church." This volumegivee an appalling picture of the abysses el demoralization in our Protestant deification. It leaches an important lesson tha the methode of Protestantism' for the oiangett- - of the poor ne radically defective. What we need le' aninferior order of elergy"—a class of men bearing the dignity and authority of the Obureh as its recognized apostle', men of elf hand talents, who will be at home among the pcor, and make the poor feel at. home with them. ,WhEethe, various demonstrations are demanding minieteetal improvement, yet it is alleged If Wewould nee the common people of the world, we must have mialsterial labor -era adapted to them, men congenial with them. The able editor of the Methodist Advocate, published in New York, affirms that while he would urge the duty of erecting colleges and biblical ischoole, add endow Diem riably, to sp athe an educated ministry, yet au Methodists should never forget that most prominent lesson of history that a "lay ministry," men endowed will grace and gift of the Spirit, though des acatlesahi training, haie been, and probahly-will boAtilthe mission-of the Church on earth is accomplished, an essential, if cot the Most.polentiel workmen of „that, wird - ion. Local preacher!' he urges are this 'lay ministry" and. might bs ell efficient as they were in olden Rm. e. instillation of the Bight Rev. ;chi, bleClithiy, as Archbishop of the Me tropitliten See of' New York, in the room of Archbishop Rughea,deceased, took place re. iositlj hi St. Patriot . ' ffithedral. It em at tended with imposing ceremonies, and exceed ed, in the grandoer of the pageant, any eloti.. lax occasion in the United States. —The circumstaeces 'attending the des. lien of Rev. A. Cleavland Core, as Bishop of the diocese of Western New York, are of the Most leVeresting °kneader. Before the Con vention proceeded to ballot, the members en gaged in client prayer, and then with Behop Delancey, In open petitions that Rod's gni Spirit might-d rent their choice. The ballot proceeded and the tellers retired, bat coon re• turned to announce the fact that Dr. Core, on the fleet ballot, was chosen by a majority of .both Orders over all other eardilates. The . Tole was 160, of wh l oh Dr. Core received 105. -It-was voted to make his deettoo unanimous. The Chtrch fount?! ea: e, the next instant the organ, at the left el the cheroot, as though it bed caught some inspiration frcm the sublirn, iptatecle, uttered a note, and the entire Con. . Venticn poured fourth 'such an earneet Obrta in ei:teeltis as is seldom known on earth. —A gentleman residing In Baste; named Colby, has given po,ooo to Waverly, college. on condition ttat stooooo --- thare ehall bemired, and that a majority of members of the faculty doll hereafter be members of die Baptist church.. Already nearly half of the latter sum has been near: el. --The next term 'of the Western The:- logical Behcinary, Allegh ny pity, will opeo September 12th. Dr. A. As Bodge will enter °pert his dn'ies le Prctesser of Diaisetie and Pastoral Theclogy ; and Ploteasore Elliott, di. coheir, - Wilton and Paxton, will fill their sev• end departments. Dr. C. C. Bratty will con tinue as Lecturer on Practical Theology. —A clergyman In London, la an sleet. Tole Charge,' or a District Churoh,eayaamoag tisement offering hie 'services as pastor of a' other things, be can give the highest testimo.. aisle for In lit triniatratiois end pnroehial babltai,..Tekes groat Isitertet In 5th...0..5. No tfaini/yS , " 'ls ainsthat :Voice Nast to any church- 'fa 'tititesideiedir distinct reader and an - earkeell 'preacher 3 Temporary duty not objected ea. -v— Oedtt. Angeteon, the hero of Sumpter, attended the camp meeting at Sing Bing, New and'at thi.ecaTiield desire of the min_ Were, he wet presented -toilet People Jut be• .tors the , sennolt,.enlilutraday arming. The people All fate I.o' /tett; fred,,ihrin.tha, 4 l.4ril 4 4,1 1 4J,f r Yt4 , gAnd*rore3r b so broken d'own Mb - Math, that. myphyel- ; a tone forbid sop oper,King In pitblii's, b4i In pleee I cannot forhord- AO rem not only , a Looldler for my oorultry, I bat lam abiehl' degree' foe Jim. How lion-1 derfully ho hitt' protia - d . end directed met itt • Fart , Sumpter 1 . Vim - sarong "atm:giro, • terdnif tii;ori bnt iimeitib , asi4olto that poit. out. I did. ; Lei tewlioza could- talk eafely.; 554 no ,re-1 ..seceerrbetrte, prey to God, and 1-cddi pray Col he . piovht DIP alptlsViikftrietb; =lf I could ere.nldoer people' tan to God, then . tiait - sk 4,0 hate hope that ihhiwee mould; It ilifor the titre it:to - 3VMM Boni save tee- e: entreat' yent,,eny- belovedi - , ol2ainult Lto pray that God holP‘us, • —The -ger,4,l":.Teidie: MleclonarYl cf twenty - one years skidding ` in Vinnersikr, r tir ltlo - ousPlo ' d 0 - th Dinlon Chnrahi relcaery Society, fa a tiriz a Mist period drool immunity, and itomaniem 3,000. etrale; he hek - Witnessed the voluntary de- , ~.ntruotion by the worehippere of uPwardii 0 - :Xoth:devil templeroilth alr thole !dole; and ,f,be ;t0a5t...14 W sixty school; anti built /51X charchee of various dirnenstone. TIMI 4 y • k r ~ ,; r~ , Reading lialler_freta 7Neaterdal'S Evening Gazette. The Fylrl't of the Cblergo Convention— Samples of tne,- ri,eeelles ,Ey Samuel Con, of Ohio Dare you eater this campaign, and in the: nine apish you c•ve-shown- here, su the are ofto • vnrs frisrsi air and all other intimidation. w you dare curry your principles bravely and tkrosAb We shall lee. The moo woo :al tars m this great crisis is anworty of the nam e of man and disgraces the manhood of oar party', We are for peace. We deprecate violets., but there are things even worse than war, nod that Is a tame nod cowardly submission to wrong. Let us endure no longer, but meet the first oat rage of *sir ecnsatustonal rights as our fathers met the aggressors of theirs. By Mr. Johnson, of Missouri If it Aral be . nece.so, the .ef, ',eh/ of en, difficubirr to allot a frn- t. to for n coowellos • lion by thrnue;rea, I thit.l we can be furt nr safe, just ar veil prorrered, arma je.t ae free and Alppy under a Unions of Republic. GA tot have been under a Union of State. I Wklll to tee tble whale wtu titeeat bound together by • grand Union of Ra pala... retarallrb one r 7•1114, BEA the whole boundleas continent It ctn. By Mr. Sanderson, of Peony,lvapla Is it not high time that thu infernal war is etooped Rea there not bten blood enough shoot [Yee, too much 1 Ton' newt soy to Na veutber,•4Thno far but thou gone, but you shall .go no farther. [A voite—"Then give on a peace wale; we won't vote for any man who has had anything to do with this war.] We mitt sup. port the nominee of the Convention; I goser.o tee be will be right. I wont pence. Wo must home peace. [A •oleo—" Then give nt a 1100 4 0 • • • 0 e 1f the ,Youth could Lc stdjuyatedbse thG isfrrna/ ..r the bayonet/ would be turned against the North Ccm• weal or woe, we will be for the tovereige ty of the States and Individual righu. By Abbe Melia/tau, of New York: A mat who is In favor of this unnatural war intuits fhb holy name of 'democracy when he claims a place in its organisation. He is •Judas, bad should b, can tot as an •aemy to humanity and to Otd.• • • We are often railed the "Ilriterrited." I toast yon are. I bola that your nerves may be of steel, for there is a day of trial ooming, and you linnet meet It. By C. C. Burr, of New Jenev: We talk of rebellion and revolution at the t South. There is a woree rebellion in the North. The Southern people all hare an affection for the old Constitutional Union, bat here in the North there le a loge party who call the Constitution a covenant with hell! That's what's the matter. 1 . ICI ors ) . This Mot woe the great obstsole :a the ' way of a reetoretion of the Delco. South Coo line attempted to nullify as art of Coagrese, be, causeitlod uticonatutionsi and unjust. • • The question ae to "hat will be done with the South, has been often asked. I answer I do not own the Scerhand day are sot de suVecu the Ocner • al Goorrnsund in any awls" wludewer I:ISMy du • ty to bring them hack into the Colon by con comfort and compromise, if I ran, bat I have no right to burn their wheat fields or steal their Mi ter [peons. It is not One that the South le fight ing for slavery, but the great doctrine of Stow, rights. They say that 11,. Lincoln nas stolen a haakad gokalfad nOarEws- Why, gentlemen, this be true, he his not stolen a tenth part as many of their negroes sa he has of their watches and silver moon'. You cannot have the foe to ask the South to come book into the Union until yen withdraw year marauding army. • • " Conner:ling the coescription, ha Wilted ho been a Governor of New Jersey there should never have been a eorwerietieri In his:Slate. " • • • For himself, if oonscrioted, be prefer red to die at home, where his bat hours would be cheered with the presence of Oblation, rather than be taken to the army, and there murdered in a foreign lend and among ir rangers. By Capt. Koontz, of Pittsburgh: Lincoln, was now played out, the oppoeition to him wee gbing to be bald and powerfal; There must be no underhand work, sad if Democrats catch any of Lincoln's b—y satrap apts.. among them they mast eat their d—d throat', that's all. [Ap plause ] • • • • The Democratic govern meat most be raised to power, and Lincoln, with his cabinet of raga ea, thieves and spies be driven to destruction. What obeli we do with him? [A voter—" Send. him here, and I'll make a caul for him, d—n him."] Yea, continued the meek er, d—n him and his miserable followers. I do not pro p,o, oontlnaed Capt. Henn"; to' give to you to night the Platform of the Democratic parry, for as yet it h unborn ; but r Would like to Ice the noble George B. Mettlellan As President, (sheen) and that great Democrat, Horatio Sey mour. should occupy the position of Secretary of State. 'ln the Cabinet I Weald see the name of Voorhees and the brilliant galaxy of gentle men statesmen who doter round the Donee:Ole banner.' By Mr. 4/Irn, pf Illinois. wanted the crowd to got reedy to fight for their rights which were Born to be wrested from -them by LiZICOiII, and !hid he was a pence men and wee reedy to fight and die rather then be Crashed ander the feet of tyilmts. do Irlelnnen earned Mshofiely delivered a 'peach la front of the Sherteen House, in whioh be rued the following i.guage: vireo peace. " and I trovid go to the South and offer them the " Clanatitettiont an it was, aitered, tend modified to as the.'" American citizens, what do you think of this Irishman's preposition? What alteration do you think the South and this Irishman would propos.? The cry is no longct the "Constitution as it Is," but the Ccratitution "altered to suit the S'enth." IT is reported that Gov. Morgan and Gov. Morri I, who bate been travereing N.w England, watch the progress of recruiting, say that ft or dine of the quota of these Stetee trill be reavy for the h-id by the rh of September. These men have been procured by volunteering end not by draft. Tete Triianie, which gt^ee our• riney to the foregoing, add?, th.t information ju.stfles it in trying that al least two tbird., and probably three fourths of the half million celled -tor in July, will have passed muster or be reedy to mutter by the m.iraing Sertem'Nir sth, and that thus elt,ee, towns and wards will have fl;ed their unites and so taken the.s.lres in "out of the draft." Wrss the Republican National ( loorenti,n 'n IE6O nt tolzated candidates fur President and Vice Prceident, who both ruided in the free States, at el:ler-ant untcri wet rob-4 by their