mg tiE pittsintigt &Tiff. lIIIBTTE BUILDING, SI AHD 86 FIFTH Al 13=1 Of Pittsburgh, A Ilr g hen f and A Ile glom y Coravti =I U. & Boxps at ',Mn.:fon, Penrocaras rt ectwerp, arnifti CO.i Onto dolled 111 New York yesterday 61120 i. TUE 101,114UDIIIATION Yesterday our city was the theatre of one of the most important events of mod• ern times—the' reunion of two grand di. Yisions of the I:tebyterian Church of the Coped States, inch, for almost a third 'of a century had been disunited, and were known during that period respee lively as the ad School and New School. n th the interim bad grown mightily in ttimben, power and Iteffnence; both were pushing on their respective missions, and planting churches in the West, the eefoti tt. and in foreign lands, as well as in the older parts of oar country; both felt strong in the work they field ko do, and not a - 'Sign of de. strepitode was to be fot.nd in either. But ea years rolled -on good men in both felt *tore and more drawn together, and that ' lln good reason existed why they ehould tiiihvis in' separate orbits, or why they • should not walk together In unity. , They to Come together again, &hint has haPpesed,nt this case as in all cases, that " Wherolliere Is a will there is a way." egglice. 11 to say, that in the preliminary yliwritlations this attractive power of 4Thrtstisos love overcame al! difficulties,— . and -there were many,—and now these two gnat .. organizallans are one again, nitilei 'the Imme of the Presbyterian -Church In the United States of America. For two days the two Assemblies met in their respective places—the 0. S. in the First Church ca Wood street, and the N. S. In the Third Church on Sixth ave nue, to arrange mattenifor the final union "Vat bad already been decreed by -the Presbyteries.. In the evenings the mem bers mingled Air prayer and social inter • counts, but the formal union was fixed pr Friday morning. (yesterday). Not a dissenting voice, nor an exception, nor a jar, nor a crook was beard from first to list At. 9 A. a. yesterday the two assemblies met as usual In their respective placea. At ten the members of the New School left the Third church In procession, and walked down Sixth avenue Into Wood street, and as they arrived the members of the Old E . ichopl body left their church in the santi — erder, and to the street • blended skis by side and arm to arm with `theft...brethren from the Third, and thus `..iirelked back, via Fifth arcane and Suilth• ilkkllsneet, to the Third church, which hid been kept clear till the united proms. atom should arrive. l`c lieery mbid capable of grasping the ,Boane la all Its far.reselalng influences -upon theahurch and the world, the spec :WM*4s lnezpresslblyinblime—sublime Inns ahnollcity, grand In the total ab veneer of all pageantry. Those earnest . 31tenorltit no outward traPplegs to dhs. linguist' them from other men, with •het