FE2T3 111=1 9 I=l aittier aft z,(4)3lo,tate+ prris Bußriti, Oct iron gig.... 14.30, In advance; or In Clubs ; ol e os; soF t dilivprodp,spsideiscsi of litabserl. bite, 8146; See Prospectus, on Third Page. RAN /81Al AL 8 should be prompt; a little while before the year expire that we may n as sikerrasiieriii,jieltilitaitab s, *atiP*lisnilitYk TUB R7CD WRAPPER Indicates that we dodos a renewal. If, however, In the haste sr nudling. this signal should be omitted, we AMY!, billl'Oriitiont!O will still not foiliot'Ss, • IL , Rzarrriurcats. , -9•iia pairismtiar mei bands,. when. convenient. Or, send by =ally onelisliii with ordinary nobody with a knowledge or what yen are doings, a Jorgeuratowtti mond a Drafty or largo,notes. Fos one outer. paperivsend Gold or samoll "Retina Tp mAiries covisois t sand Postage stamps, or -better sljila read for Severe papers; say 851 .gosBoyouttynnallmouor for Tbirty.three nutaberin iituff o tri all Letters and `Comentunleatiosuo to RIM DAVID neKINNIGY. Pittsburgh, Obituaries. We lutist •again request our friends to be brief the preparation of these notices. We JustCCU *easilydcheaplyt • as an Fin them ai any other thing, whioh is Ott in the same sisqd. type.. • ,But,cur readers complain sidly., We-eitreat our friends , it% be very Wel V9liot,:aftic us to abhreviate them. We have not leisure `to do it, and could not do it ffight. Synod of Sonthein lowa. This Synod met, according. to the order of the General Assembly, organized and enjoyed, as welearn from a c correspondent, a very harMiinions and pleasant Meeting. L. G. Beil,was lkioderator, and D. V. Smock, Clerk. With but, one dissenting voice, the Synod recommended that .the North 'extern Theo logical Seminary :be placed:kinder: the entire control 'of the General Assembly., Directors ' were appointetrwithinatruction&to advocate this obangp of the constitution. Dr. !Tarn son, J. T. tfmsted and Col. Patterson are the Direotors:rr .?The nest meeting of the Synod is -,to te - 444:Wskaloosa, 'the second Thursday of October,lBsB. There were upwards of forty„memlOrs present. oilsa , tio4 the suiday school *Te'n, 'otieed' When . the event occurred,. the _ ter, Seeretary of the American Sunday School , Union, Made of t his position .41 that Society. Mr. Porter, it will be remembered, made wite rn ef,the Oficial signatur . e, of the society to the extent of some eighto•eight thousand dollars for his elm indivi'dual benefit,' not entering on the hoOks any . inemoraiidinn - the -' noiesf f given' - and the - money re ceived: "It` was thus ' that 'the Direh'tors were kept in ignorance of the transaction. Some twenty years ago, as we see # stated, Mr,. porter, engaged, in the Mortis Multi , callus speculation. ,He came out a loser to. the extent 'often thousand dollars:- This mailehitu to need more money than he had. the Society's indebtedneSs for piper, &c. TWO gavel-hi name a eurreney in the market, • • . and enabled him ,to , pass obligations, and hence, with mnch,risli of „detection, but with much ingenuity, he managed .to renew the notes andnole changelthem ^that lie avoided detection for twenty years, and to increase the'stiui 10 f: the extent named: Alas for the spirit of ; speculation' Let no, man indulge. Honest,business iriups up stern integrity, but t ell'orts to.get gain without giving; . therefor, undermine good principles. 'The iiieneas'af 'Mr.',Porter in perpetrating ihis,f4d 'another 'ekeni lifi' t'of ‘th p eft ion e danger of allowing one man to be the ...sole moimiagent of an institution, and it, eaches the. OettY neof Ak'dzi" obligations al ,g, all. yo ions couhteriugned;by, : a second officer, who shall keep a separate memorandum for the inspec . Ithin ref the Diiebtois; Winter Evenings. . - , r Tlit'lonkminter.rivenings are eoßtag., Row lolithl they ice employed ? Not in gad dingiebont;) ford farmers, mechanics, and all industlionsaepple, have exercise enough , , through tliefday: Not =in ,listlessness ; this . is "linitoithy* anT intelligent ' How 1 , 31 - r" Whir, partly social inter -14 ' ' ~:m pLe a sft A 5 ) 3 .11213 1:4", , in a, w e ll ordered , fuiaily, but amainly reading. • Wilatiabill be read ? • Not novels; these ' toxe)Weiee' than unless "; they spoil the taste, injure l th4itiniOr; ,the and i dieipialitylnitit for lifes highest dities;' end-lifee most elevated joys. Not in sour rilonsdetails of police - trials, the details of the is.yings and,,doinge, the basest of Mankind :'such:- }reading' ' wis an' unmixed. evil4fst r" breeini not one particle!' of ' benefit. " htira blier;ead the 9 04 - I rtV fP h task, b e. t kept , awake,Z,„Ahat shall they read? ;Theology') will mit • them- to sleep;r • .*oks generally have IliePaireet 'hpen"ilie 'Mort' b* *a rer sodull;M„ fio,; abstruse : o so'pro, in their, disitualgous, - „that the mind, by : evening readings, cannot be So , edifiedits to be interested. • There are, however, - some " inNikszwell adeptedlo en& readings ; 'some histories, some travels, some scientific tree.: -eistei 1,15 me p r a ctical '`eilie`rilifental red Someliinn few of the :Magazines afford •,; - , t r ,9l ll 4 l 3feiP v Pl i ,'qg reading. ~ilati-..eppephdly are well conducted-news- Tapers suiteditoilwee times. Their varieti; their city'; their ,presentation of affairs of living interest; comparative brevity. of their articles; . the talent that is , now . manifest in the better ••'clasii 'of them; all • these things are adapted' to 'give interest: They' r instruct ' amuse, enlarge, and liberal ise like Mind. Nempapers : are among the ximet egiotir of modern educators. Let themlboifeund every where: • _; • • %Clef the parent make a tails selleetion: 'prepare, and dliOmilic , - r people sustain, such papers as Citristise . v ,families, - all families—need. • They Rallipo .ions jouniala .should be made id 'embnict(il 15q!kery thing which"' &Hotline; _ need Li to` k now for tlialCielvei =.ku,.• 1 ,-,, i 1•1 4rj : tot their hous4 4440 - • • " • • Discovery is Africa.* „!,.` For noes the 'central regions of Africa have Veen clothed with a peculiar mystery, which seemed to baffle the efforts of civiliiation to penetrate. For upwards of two centuries the Ati'Sky inhabitants of' the Westein' coast have been giving off immense numbers of the different tribes to bondage on the Amer ican Continent and in the isles of the Gulf of hleitCo. The condition of these captives was low and degraded, and it was inferred,- that ilrhatever might be the numbers of the,,, ! Idark ,p6pulation' of the interior, they we're' .01,existing in ..a depressed state, which indi• cated little or no tendency to civilization, while the countrylvas generally believed to consist of vast and inhospitable deserts. • In the days of Mingo Park the great ob ject of explorers was to penetrate the interior from 'the West' coast,,to reach the Niger, to determineits course, its magnitude, its rela tion to the,Senegal and to ascertain the char acter of the tribes who dwelt in the region `through which,its waters rolled.' By means of,the Nile in the East, Bruce and others bad advanced.far toward the South, , and it was hoped that by,means of