MESE ESTABLISIbaf'‘h4I7B6 -.,,EITTSBURGIL:a - AZETTS ..• pi:IMMO:Ii DAILY. AND WYYSLy. BY t ' -int= CC , . 1 . f:• . - •• • •• aural .15aptra to augur the. bola*. of Alto Comm,' until Int Ant Alloodtje Neyeeebarot., 'fe6aiN • - • . .• Coruntssiosire. . - Beaument's Patent Starch Poll& ATENTED, July 266, 1.850.— . -Foriefrizir b,....una mot. mLmw atoolttut Cauttedit car and atm prevents ttto tattriog to Liven., ae.ouldA t7 14 dot from stirtat ao fektts to Limo. so. o Dirwilape—P. , •no atm LAI MT the et at., lee 10 • Alin of tz4 mats pes Catat • Irbakitaa.U4 WWI by , . %1 0 .. , Wa t ta Wixd 12=IMMIIM LUME wav—Nummt 255 - ==.7.111V CATTLE MASZZE• =EU TM O= BY BITE. 1 ..... —Theschool wee -- aturroissed; sad erary cuie - „es- .... chested to leave who did' not choose . to'. ettecie - :" 7 = -., the prayer-mesting. Ile ettom-ento-fign , duce any to stay—the coronary intherii. - -Tiren I 'll''' '' ~„ : t enrptised to see thatihreetfourths (I thdak4siahl; Y , „::: .- - - ' 1.- . hough We was partly explained atterwand hi_ -.. ,. /.1..,..F,.. the fact oneeybad hopes of a nighty lodging,. k';',,+/......-., here endelsewhere: .That prayer:meeting ~ ; ~, ,1.,... - :' was the most iarpresairer and Watery Altera' 2:1," ~.. e-.. scribal I here attended for Many years ~ Ftorz dr - 77.-i ..',- , ' ' Are prams were made hy.diferent tescherwin7.!.,."F - 1 -.T" ,,,. succession —an ch,. appropriate, . . ..f. - - -- el fervent,. affecting; A hymn was mpg Were , salter each, by - the congregation= ea tell' . thief and. cogent addresses werentadebylh ffaperinteatent and (1 . baste) =Juneau' , and. . 1 .;.,-.: ~... stn -.. -Rhea the school was dismissed, . , Puldls who had tickeis 'pezmittii‘tianq tp, f., ; ,, ,.Y-,...i In the donnitcoy LWOW; filed'orKieVagnied ~..4 . 7, 5 .;,-,,.....-. to their •severallterthe.‘: Thuf resithineft-14 . Flo womititi. :orms , Al til the Lan samscxy given iernerat of Mr.. or Stkro from London; tat swat tat Pkited bitter than the following e • &GESS IR7AHDOII.4 friday; Way 7 I havebeen mash occupied, thantithe . lair : fortnight. and shall be for sonisten-dverriare, krith. the Grest - Fabibiticek-inAtatilienct erthe duties of ajaralltereim Theinceber of Maar.: leitistunvslAstaibdtonywho eannad:criltde,; rota the ti'mliqMred for We sertieebeciarmill' *lianas can well be lamed; and the &lamas •-• ; akced.bithe Hayek Corinalndoners ineffable to place as many forekgriers (named by theca®- ' minim:era , of: their:respective- ant tricky on Britons on the several juries Well deserves to •ber Mei• corresponding spirit I did not,there: forit'fal at liberty to decline the pat at' juror,' to which I had been' assigned benne rayMrriisi,) 'tbbrighlt involve' mach labor enlace. and will keep roe here 'somewhat longer than ` I. .i mi d tended,to stay' -au the other hand..ltbasoPen. ed bi await of information ad facilities for. observation which I sonata, e, laid visit to nbuldot,*angme, have otherwise hoped to g.ad-. cads nada day at rtheiltaltd , from 10 kit 8 o'clock. have my evenings tar other pcmmits and. thtsightd—i I Yroposs heat° jot down a few of the notes-on' Leaden I hire made eines the salling dttbepot-',.. lI. WESTMINSTER ABBLti o` ;. `' attended. Divine Worshipiathis - celebsted. ~ :edifice last finsulay miming.' Situated near the - 'Houses of Parliament; the royal palsies Of litteit , '.. , c Ingham and St.'.7ameii, multi the tnest - Mtbrbo- mratie quarter the city, Its external amaranth; „... 'sites - lamming than I had expected, end Whit I raw atitairiterlor'did not particularly impresa - 5- ma ' - Lofty eeilings," stained - windows; and a_ .-- herbaria - profusion QV ottivtrie,greinizqr, and nllO ' manner iLot • costly berittiranes,l,for absorbies money and labor, made me the Impreisio4 or ... s waste rather th an:_taste; seeming:tin:shit' form ' .• and substance to the castor's simile - of theletr,r. tertian! of the eibylwithout Iteilisidratiotf.r-A. .- I ez. engrain' diceith tha addle!, Cr With efie PrioolPles or. arac*mi g ht serve locorrect- this hasty-rjud,gmenti but !'sarelylfestminzder Abbey oughtto =afford a place - of,warship equal. in !capeeity, 4Ortss and tonnage:ode tea modern 1 - .--- chirrch_edifice costing $50,000, and surely itdoes•':: ,- ..7, not. I think there is no one - of ,, tiny. ten=lind:' churches in'New York Which isnot_ superior. to the Abbey for th is puma* : :,' with ,---. v! • . • I thought myself , acquainted with all the op; :!-„, proved renderings of the Episcopal morning ear , vice, but . when the clergyman whir officiated' at . the Abbey tegan to twang out,' ...dearlybelond . brethren," fin- in a nand, drawling send-thant, I wait taken. completely stack. -It sounded as -... though some graceleas Friar Tick.hatt-wormed L . - himself into the desk and was mulearcrizig, un.'„,'. ... deithe pretense of reeding th e Seriiee;to. cart - ea re as broadly as possible the alleged pecan- wily Of Methodistic pulpit ecriziebdien =palm- pealed upon the regular Yankee ; dread- As Ilia, service proceeded,Themunaniore acCiistemeil end more reconciled to this moda'af - langence„ but neder enough, so to like it ter even the reeponsent, which were given, is the same way;rbut • much ' I better. Afterl came away, I was informed that this serni•ehant is treated encamp and is said to ''' •• be a retried of en ancient Method of - rerniefing. " - thej aura service, If such - be the feet, , I can ' . only say that in. my iloor judgment that entre! was an unwise - end tutfortunatecce.. , ..The amebae was rear lang—rnore' ' two hours,-the music excellent—the -"eon gation ., ' he'scruttni so far as I meld judge, had nothing bad in it. Yet there was aneleveuth-. ~. 1 evenfury air about the whole which Strengthened my ;conviction that the Anglican Church:, will ' •: . very soon be summoned to take her stand distinct , ' - "T: .. ly on the aide either at Rumanian *rot , Picket. , =.n . - autism, and that. the, summons will .shako' not the Ilurch only, but the Realm bait/sceptre,- RAGGED SCHOOIS, - - Ir'. •-- ~,..i Id the ' - evening I attended the rugged school ! . situated in Carter's Field-lane; near the Mae ~ mMiret in Smithfield, [where" John liogere was brined at the stake by.Catholick as Cathelies ,' • , bad honest, burned ty Protestants before him The candid history of Persecution for Felt 's sake has never yet been '- written; -whoa ~, everr it shall be,. It' cause many ears tettit-: - ham sotacthizig past seven o'clock when we reached the rough old building In afiltliy,paver- ,- -.,., ty stricken quarter which has been rudelyfitted up fir the ragged school—one.of - thelirst,Ttesr ,— ', lime, that was attimited. I ahould !ray there - '`?" were about four hundred pulite_ milts beachmt, - ,, ~'... ~ wind about forty teacheng 'the pupils were-,at.:-..:.' 4,- leash two thirds males from five to twenty year5,..,.,,-. . old, with a dozen or more adult& ' The girls were a handled or so; mainly - from three to ten - . years of age:. but ins eeparate and upper apart; ,. ' - meet ascending out of the main von:mi.:them ; , ,'s , ; .; were some forty adult women, with teachers ~..:-..; clusikely of their own am_ • The teachers were . Or various grades of capacity: but es 'hil teach . - i with at pay and under ' circumstance! which for bid - 1 e Sees of any other then philanthropic Or . •. . reli attractiveness in the dirty, they are all • ' . des 'ng Of praise' The teaching is confined, I. •, „ helices to rudimental inatrebtion.in reading and - - gelling, and techistoric, theologlo and inmates- • ---' sone from the Bible: ' As this doors are open and very one who fees fit comes in, Mays Iso Iceman _ .: ~ he pleases, and than goes out, - there is much.. . . connexion and trestle at times„ but „on the thole ; '.. . a 'satisfactory degree of - order is Preserrert. and '- considerable, though vr.ryurnsltud,progiese made by thi , pupils... • -..- " ' ".• -' But such faces! such garments ! nen dmputrt -..-..: reogpes of the superlative of . human wretched- nem and degradation! These pupils were midi- end from among.the outcasts , of London—those ' - who Hare notamily ties, no homes, no education;'. no 14 igiorik- training, but were bola: to wander:.- - . - abou4 the dOcks, picking up. a: chance , job pow . • and thee, a but acquiring no skill,no settled TOCII, . i ... ~ don often compelled to ' steal or Mute, and finally trained to regard the ' sheltered, well fed ' ' , r.. 1 and respected majorities their natural opprese,;• • • ' - ors and their natural prey. • Of this large class , of vagrants, amountingin this city to thousands, • ..7.,..1, , theft and (for the females) Harlotry, whenever the coat of a leaf of bread or a nights' lodging could be procured by either, were es matter:of.' ' , '- Course resorts for a livelihood as Privateering; campaigning, distilling or (till recently) slave-. trading was to teeny respected sod well-to-tin eharopithM,hf Oider and Conserratism through., eat Christendom.. , And the ' automata hare ten ~ -, times the e excuse - for their_ moral blindness - : and' : - . '' '-'" their misdeeds that their well-fed competitors in::: '', '*-: 'iniquity aver hact. They hare eimply regarded, .- - -...-f.i-:, the world as their oyster and tried to open its :. hard shells . as they best could, not. Indicating... - . ' .L' - therebY a special - lore ct oyster!, but a ravenous ' ' '''' appetite for food of some kind. It was oyster. , .., =', . 1 -- , or nothing' ith theia. And in tie comae ante .- . . thee forced upon them, the males who survived , : .., ... ~ 'the period of infancYnnuty have averaged thernity 7 [ five years of wretched debased, brain.' existence, '' r': ". while the females, of more delicate frame' Mid -",. • '.l". sulljected to additional cello, have usually died -.•-• .-....,:.: much younger. But the gallows, the - charity '.•.'• ..:.:211, boggles, the prisons, the work-ha - twee (refelgea ..- - 4enied to the healthy and the ruccatmleted) With the =noted kennels andbiding-plamis of thedes '''' '' ' ''..'' Linde during, incitement weather, generally eat' , ' - • ''''' the earthly end of thema/1 bythe time that mate_.',....,.•['' in better circumstances have usually attained: their prime, And all this has been going mane: .' resisted and almost unnoticed for countless ,_ erations, in the very shadows of hundreds of ' , Yr* church 'ateeples, and in the city which pays mill-'; '.-:- iOD3 of dollen annually for the support of:Gas- -,..,-..... pel ministmtiona. . . . ..:..„_ ... ~ --,, The deaf impression made on Me by th e sift.., . Uccle here presented was one of intense sadness: -, . and self-reproach. •II deeply that lirail - " " hitherto wed too little, done too little, dared too ..' , little sacrificed too little, to awaken catieetices. to wrongs Ide infernal and ahuses which inher- :. ant in the very - strnmore and ' donatibidon, .the , ...,,,, r, nature and essence, of civilized society as it note" '. exists throughout Christendom. - Oftirluit avail`. , %. , !are alms-giving, and individual bezterelenee; and ' - ' 1 ' - even the oirdes of religion, in the *mum rot, .- ~',....., i: tills no gigantic. and so inworen with the very !, i,.„.„,„, framework of society ? -There have beealens in . :: ~.....,, , all recent times charitable men, good men enough- : , *- . ` ' to hare caved Sodom, bat not enough to-pfeesd- -"-I,"''.:' cirty . front the condemnation of driving this aut.:. ~,i..-.1s1: cast race'. before it like sheep to th e, alga gbtpr,,-- • 41 -, t1.. as Its Members pleased on 14 per/Olt of their ::. ::, ~.i ., . 'several schemes of Veneta-a,' richis'oe sinitiZiii;" - , . , looked, up to ,Ood for.ills approbatinti'on' the:Jeri''' . --;''''"'" benerolence as they tonal a penny to-someiilb:oil:,.... f.:::: erable beggar after they had . 8 0ttst the,'earttc:r'r .;.. - i• , from under his feet. How long shall this ma * ==i3