MMIMI gar, di The Plowman's Whistle. whistle and Ill'coene C ye my lad. The plowmpea shrill whfatke e ringsoutn'er the its, While turning the furrow 41th heart light and free; • AM day ite Aie'lliThisWs.the,brig,haskaretto i titl:''T Ile Lightens his lehAor wilh whistleteevt. The blue !Ay &bore him, F like' tie& ewsgfing t.rt breeze' : • ••••:; Singing Softly end sweetly,T*2l 4 C . .,tist!;Vr#4 The flotrers at f ees look - up 1 soxiliirycludigop All cheering the plowman alairig lultgied-Wieyr rie plowman's shrill whistle is beard from afar, It tells of 's heartfree from sorrow' and care; gay as lark at the morning's.first dawn He whistles , and, speeds the bright plowshare along"; , He heedis'not He holedif tot' the Asek' amide 'that enreerolor the gig arm' a ile' ° er 'ireagifritk,VgAirei„ 7 1 ,4 He eiet' • . , • • 40 , 0 1 ,1 .kettesr..w r ei n; ~ The plowmen's ”ewm• mustie s t now *Votle.,•Jae BOlinat, t•••• • • • t ;Wail t..i u •, . • From eurenaeoiavryinft The Mt/a , birde.4Blol4 then,4loo l l4l4hlll0 .2 iati r Till hi11ikide4 . 4,V04?.14144:9014 /8 : 4 " .. The SeNs irstilVelpiling , irortibbseof ispgreene And thlr - Finer-c l esnoe• beet the bright a. Bunk= „ t n.'s sun eheea;. 'And the'hiliaiilttliOiriingtesei the 'peetureePsh, frei, , .I,al-. • • • • And the aparren-b , llOlO 0: 11 1 01 1Xsoltihe /W I ;••• .51! The plowapps'A . ,o99,, whistle,, music moire Than vi . ofln Ai1*4.n.W.0 1 0 4118 ,t;;; , 71t,c, So joyou s ;iflit4l 4l lt ol ): fttle!),.l, itud Opt Xtrle It ringsro'de , thilltland e theleatley&wwip.w.... The plowman' s . S . Veit'selitstl ( n 4 ,ll46. l ,444l . 4 : ' As oft on the hills . d.l I.„waye 004014 dtr 0 give me the plow . and And I IMO C4IIS .1 & - • • -51 1 , 42: : 7.1 . • 4 'l 14 I r • . • .., • . , • 1190XVilast to Us fiebr, Watley 441„ gi g t s .ditaltei, alie'.246‘#,l6ll,liikat'Air Phtlads!ph fa Offlea,ll.l rromotrolf 'rite Thew Toiraxasrr.}: By... John . 21/, berg Bengei,.acirriljps,l9l : Abe m*lttly, brought out by bia•son,adi:Etrdest ligngel gdf subsequsntly, completed by J. Stendsk doXreciViif:adiraditlitiolr frimi" . 4e;clK Seconds of 1759. IL, 006t 1 141.14;ti1e . Cormentaryt'ob t4e , GospeTs adoordirir.to Luke sad 6t.'3)lA;' ettegeorieud 90 , 41pni ties. Translated by .Auelretora.filliASC.l3%; pp. , 782: LE dinburgb ritvr. -811' Georre Strece-,PhilidaDtriike !Rfisl4lol. We hare alreadyvdrawn the- Went/mut our reader's tOitlis del f ebiated - donithiititistl;lii obtkiltl7 erable'le!'lgthl,'llt Our notice , blc.thillret The second volume ie liefore* every '1' 6 14 : scholarship whickhaverbeenledp,olite74 t4 r i partition: ,There are lOadixg.WOrks in,.erery deb PertmeiCedt444 ii4leV 3 , lll 4a nently,'"Notttiferite are so.fUlliestliblisnewthat• it only tallith iVe iCtOil j ;6444;44 in • noticing ; them, tO 0100 :OW el,CAii*# which'iniirbe Offered to'the public:. • To4hischu;s belongthe 'Works of Locke,.Reidi t and,Asmilton, in Loili;' Plit3looll3lehttit?' try; Ifenttinfikkldott, - among sitneemalifferipture Commentabin&.l f ariltilieAiftsterii: 'Theol ogy. i liaigaltlaa l btallifigliAltV fn this dig ; nitied rank, and it o ! ,l 77 epsins for !re , to say' that this second volamesU serpextsttihck'f3:chiiifieitarir' which ;o bee` riVcrerecfrad English byllialrydg itor himself, and a ti'a high classical standing a sufficient gnalapt,ClM4.o4blirtiWiAleli he has difellitirietiltliedataseigfedtehhe: - _ Tin Sniinienses or Jastia - lii-4i.iitiOn . tia:fOi! Cbrist m the .1;11 tit. from 11- 828. ^Elinburglin -T.- 4. T; amil(qCdi7dma Co Philadelphia , S►silh;~ Engiithl:4, l .74ssB..;': • , ' . Twq, 43 .O ;.• ;Sj a wonderfol'power 'of analysis. andcloseness ; or ai.vment. the book: Aiii!grall4lo present bra. ''.1111828 - it , a>Bti4ired.rils • safa;sily in the-Studiat'undtKritaen i lankib preeentramensiona: l "Tliblulect , its 'is' all i p ortantlni the• °mats*, we have iferaigied'iii i the vietion was ImNtt:lhoMult!mAti'ofi l oonalnsiOnratirlibilt houriivateingstargiliiiiii4; bitit In Chris l ' i ?iiiiigT fi edOit 71 Y elic ir they did; itiliwiisorruptiocj i n tiaoter or =attic eoult not admitaißtilluiAa j ia..slo, oneediditig" Air bill e pt.rtabe‘yote g llnptly o.:a-• The late rEdviird Irving; bfAcidarigula i rder_tto 4)4! wiry- the work, .IrefC*4o*.•l4olt... Into Lei` iiigkarli i ;*";riit of tiirj: 6 44%,*l4olt was to be found ' in all fullest innstatibtiiiAU -by Ms-Spirit retigoiargs4 4 oiiir PW4 l *.*: corruptions frgnit i bcpaltitig one batoluotuil triutial grant& ff ',that ha oriel fie'd—the et , an d4rlutopitimi over them; aid:thus 4ispiare.l:los tp3ur 3 to Rave_ 11*/1 !;P".. 4 9!! Afne ll t theory.irasirqualyliKartattlie:difitWie Atatieniaileo:AN ii.444, 1 1 11 9P+ 1 , _witisit amhe whbuthibiti s ztpdto w i l hetrsivalttgbaoro.ia;azait.,ri4w.Nr do not lvittmellOgioo4.l4'it;libr.* booiy as !I oOrlie di °o 3 7 e Vgrtim.ntfO i i oll- te title &Orr - ' 1.: 4 , Tits Pim!? NovlCOVer.Toilri 18584; 1 ggiteiip) . 4: .fregyferion Mow, 1884 Cheibsul Street. 1..1 ailldrig .110iilTilii11 4 1610Att" orthicatiwcw;m2 ; Agetrii4tfttitigilllt Pol,9micl 4 0 !Act,eavatAri7v. ooZaktg!iiirscloniiiiio pota•oncl! tondsaeler Mive spp to 1 4°.)440 _....rid-I!)it.ak.',', l l4 l o l 9Yet''. the: jo T ila,iiiit r irthrof 4ay, sootion , of•thrAUkniOh• for "manlir i eaiOLaiiiijgjrhk eeete4ooh*JOidannEnber are: Jci , ..lV 4 M No. #l;eigd4ll.; ( th ese are auuderirart 4 tieleeirtitO A a tie&Vu to of the IkOisiri@gr . The Geneieriiiii4olW494sB ; The ,Mose3e ,#4 l 3opnot of tht:Creatlon, (84$)41tifi0 &Rd MIAs" of New ßooks.' • • ' „ „. 4r4 W • •Arn::: CZ, • V Of V ` The' Dubliir 41faGif .'Pre* i iceettis thff f i, the titmihs•of;theUytebhoio ß llClOnlin Paris have rechitly fit-abed soine'ditrions, 84*• g' on'" tobacco. Dlvidiiig the young gentlemen of that Collegeinto two pen:W-4We "itliiiire'm and mirk-. u obkeriiit shimEttar thirstnokers hive proved them salve's, in' the 4arions•oompive eiamint tions fir itferfOrig`theftNot,ot4 1, 1 the examinations . on saoheolosts - the mmokerk in'' 144," ,'Vtirtrtil#4 'various ordeals^ that (tlisi:l4/4 1 #s,E9tig through in a- year, .th 4 eAnersalotkol . smokers had constanirfalfenTittlltiotint: oonsidembly, while .the went whordid not aronie ela t ed a cerebral atmosphere of the e l o wo • Yor the Presbyterian Banner and Advocate. Notes of a Jaunt. REv. D. McKINNEY, D. D.:—Having seen the Spirit of God poured upon the pee. ple of my charge, and sixty.one added to the communion of the Church in four Months, of all ages, 'from twelve years old up to sev enty, I resolved on making it` short journey into the bounds of one of the " exsoinded Synodal? and resting from my labors at least one Sabbath: Traveling in the mode practiced before the construction of railroads, very early in 'the, morning of the third day's journey f t. _said , to my wife, just , there • is . Capt. Samuel -; which saved bimjfrom a 'horrible ,death by, the Indians:- Of-the tory of the Captain, 4itnow hut little.,.cx oept what is connected. with,ihislaringtid- . venture. A very aged mitti,...Who formerly ,lived near (to. informed- Me wifewAlayar• I . ajgo;lthaVwbreitile - wiii.s'';boNlieitnetii?liintw • and .deedfifsetPhinPfe' :". , verf ) tol,'`. 'Aijaight i man, with. leeg,* . thie . / black ; and When, he plintetinirdieineil himetilf in the gaili . " 'Or an lii , di r in f -=liehi j often dressed 'when a' Indian'he lifer ,easy.!' kaiaeillis'alyearli',to 'have been 'on- 'Catfish; a swill etreallit' Wiiisbingtbi° Connty,'Pa!' iteillitly Perigdinilie - setv Ilement'sol-thit 'Coutity,n.lithibir Of sus hod ifile TilbrOPthe Onialingte, 'crossed " the:Olfitoirtireir,vande'riitirdered• number of.-• , the - settlerifilandlthen Tiled' With their Itira iihbit Capt. Brady, at 'the ;tunatf it 'Select sband , of riflemen' was in .puranierof there andevertaking them. near sh e die awn " camps, they in= ediately -wheeled ntfillgtave him battle. As Brady had but a few•men,,,and ;they : a. large force, and_ eon 'eed that they .would all be killed if - they continued thefight, he ordered a retreat,,and,, every man to save himaelf as he co uld... thelndians were aequeihed and 'great ly exasperiited at him for the chastisements ;. he 'had Often inflicted, they selected him from all the others, and the •persuit of:him .i alone became general, and the ,race was hotly contested., The Cuyahoga river was just before ,him, wh ich , , if he attempted` to ! swim; he knew he ' would be instantly shot, I as -th There was a plane, however, where ' thexisier passed through . , abed of fiat, solid i+oithe,loompressing the whole. stream into a about..twenty-twojeekieressthe top ,the chial, rs eVdiktl i feet l tlooVelthe;thirfaba .iOt wateri4 though much - .wider in the main 'bed of the;river. • As _Brady- sp-. preached this spot with which he bad been InliMiti‘d, he sidiniened phYsleal: pt wdrit''for. the effort in - whioh . was life or and lealied - the stream at a single '141244. Indianis,. after a momentary itnaament'ai, the leap which none of them could make, seeing - him likely to escape, all fired it liifin,liTs`he 'was . still ‘withiwreach of - their rifles; but he received no farther in itiry' than a slight flesh wound. While they were crossing the river in pursuit, the reader need not'beinfortned that every/moment of ;time to him, was Valuable ) ;And; he im- Proved'it. - ' = •If youAnko , an unoon- Verted sinner, lon have a : feti?".3iioinints' eking boll' and' ifeenre heaven:" ,43hould you • iliptove 'them -'-Brady tin-several •milesdesiild - frota the *hanr = iiiV i a:iien&ll, Like . • • u name in:Portage : County , and swam n- : , , aei! weed•;:;ighere be * 10 . 1 14 : a • , b*ithireglfilatse.e.W moments,. - e 'lndiatialitetrelentbding. on the wood over. r -hini,:iiiid r iffefi?ffilliatit search ronndihe Lake, rtheylitime to' the conclusion that-her. - 'was drowned, and. then' dispersed, and, he - escaped. , They had intended burninglhim : if they caughtrhim. -This is a brief history , - of " Brady's Leap, " es nearly as the writer new give ' Two hours after passing this memorable •, 'Met; we were in the-hounds of- a region in .whiohCamiliAlliiiiepfkoe'made a grilic When le bOy;receiving the first principles•of an education near••this, I, heard Alexander Cainpbell i end t his l , father, a very ',oldr : roan, boldin .forth tO•ildiniring &ends. The bnitbb 'of Ale felt d' ia#llten ivie, 4, It teloklor 'anysme• to pray, 'Thy king :4l4n comic • : takiliCkingdem ' fillY;eame the - NdiarafTini, 41.05 t The. Sabbath day , - wee not it mondifsneepta Believe the Bible itoibe,thritird'lcrGod" and his Son to be 0 18- . 6 . 3 lTegriFok4;ltt°7o4#o4 l ,M9Pmed; .Inimereioik in *regeneration. She very lit .o4ietliielnlijiist rat under ;the Water; he r,ebettres tlielergivenese - of all bas•sius and gift'rof 'the Creeds and .- C0010121 . 1A12 -- et Faith 'are useless and sinful appendages id the. W•iiti - of God. . All de .- t ,Chrietiana' are,,seots.,:' we utilin have discovered. imm ersiOn • to die re. • lenerationiponetitnte the only true Church - . •„lia ; ssliiieliiititio'et this wonderful and in, miltiagre aiiiehveri;'the desrenpon , oar. Creed cursed world; intl . the•great ~Refoinfer the tifinittieltith.' ,e4otog, . beaten it 110y , 'n . 1 . 7 - E -arbinger, 4 and 'Ciiriiiiiinity.:Aestored;l 4 . , 440 3 - ;./ee. ' When I heard,k l 4thOe.:Yrbticlfi l : Jekkvfeeetitime to superior' wisdons, , b4 as:l •:ares i -4 , r .believed .Capt' S amuel Mini& it,lbotaarrtimes more anetees— ,inVaespsiiiiien."llelijnaoped.;the riv447thilie,./.liiiinWr;,-Ciiizipbell Wee-then making ( Matt. xv.:4.41) we'Ae bad n'ow'itriveled Sevente'en'iniles 'lrithant bteakfari4 ire determined to' Call at thefiret publio. house on our way, and while: 0. 14 4 apthe.**l 6 : B 4 2 4ai, eedenVol;fd*Jeara -44:worn in 'that region ; ainLeiain 'eno r iighTin tatiern: But lest I I litil# lo /TititrAde - 1/P°P'l"! -- TIIRRa) Pr.', V, shall storhere.for the present: -• • • Lexington, O. For the lieigitedii Balmer and'hidaoisitio. 'Pay er=lie eting. ,A selW,iiirkieffineeting , Who 'over' t he A rd'ofrik, wore; t ; prayeemeeting ? • Secr e t praiertie' Veeti t, praitticed by ihe peOPle;of God in I, altlig'iskend was 'enjoined aB 7 lollAtir among- Ole first 'lessons of the great-.Be , deeper- ,I:: : • . • But, wkafraelsed)tefithitris.that of Arsecret • • progeassnesisik! each prajer-meeting Fla lifillATOr Bl*i.mdlitbit; ( *Ort Tine 'night . of each' weelipduriogithe last Fall isn'il . Winter, pareilif -liawrentreCounty, 111., by six. men, 'Who were riceprofesseis 'of religion'; the time and place !,of 'meeting • being iinktiosiii to all professedly4ious peo ple in the neighborhood, •yet:kadwuleige times:to Many- of: 1(1'1'211i:who gake an occasional atteridanire• 'Tliii*..4/00:411.'‘ ' Abd:, to , meet prom p tly Bpriagi•:einee which tame one as tiftp - berg* . the' PresbyteriaU'Ohnire_hy.:tir...a ... of' t e•Methodist church, while the iemitnink threer'are — bj thbUglitlek brit se, rionsly attentve to the matter of their eatil's eternatialvittioi. 'This; . then, is the result. of • thiti• sebritenibeting for' prayer • 'half the number Who* Vegan-surd kept it:up ere. re-• joking in tike, ' ,uop s ,,hirth ; ,the other kelt,' we trust, are "not far.from the•.kiagdem of _ :J•Ba7 • 'ttr9j l i cr git:ticrd' iniith, - "whibli - lath 'heikijjr . in her month, gall in her heart, and a sting in her t THE PRESBYTERIAL tANNMAN AN D ADVOOXTE. for itte tong. Never Yield to Discouragements. In a remote field stood a large tulip tree, apparently of a century's growth, and one moat gigantic. It looked like the father of the Surrounding forest. On the lop of the tree, for years, an old eagle, commonly called the fishing eagle, 'had' built her nest every year, and unmo lested raised, her• young. , What is remark, able; this tree stood full ten miles from the .sea-shore. It had long been •known as the "Old Fgegle'Tree." On a warm ; Sunny . iiity;theV n orkme we re shoeing •au adjoiniiilif.fielthry-Ak.a. certain hour of .tlief. ioldc'etgle.. Waal known to set off iforthe ses--pider . to gather ' food for . ler. -yOuoier: :An itirioed • 'with . .liet,Plews . the workmemiontrouPded,. the; tree ;4. - na' by` yfrl and booting,- and-rttornmiDg : ,E,49!).f.V.lo,, soared ty6;pOr'btril Abat 4, :iber;dropied;Bse. .fish, 'ana;;thisi•;,6o443 . o.f 4tr" in . tiltinifli; 3 The Men.. spool ,dispereed;,but . 7l4lo ! rxieeptk, Est under. sibuilr near , h*,..tO .watch; and be stow 1.'40 e*letg once set pi It „ STY shrill; so clear, tgitl ll6 l , ;'s o :yvla u ,'ooo4't Moyed...Tlepareirot'sl,Tul i iolaterk , tootry ,- !te: Booth tliem ;• but Ihepr 4 appetites. • were too keen,: ,144511 . 'Perched 'herself'' , on limb • Pear them,taulf booked down-into the.nest*illi a look that.. seemedy;; 4 !'`.l.'..-knoirpet , what la'. do ' 'next." But her indeOleibiLiiii-Momentary.. 'Again she:vOiled %Orli : 44)0 - 00d 4nei n l . 'tilic iiharp ocitele,- . aiiiif/tellingtheln to '" 'balanced her • body, ApreeClFOr.;. wings, and. 'was aitorstiopi:ltif i tke:.-tioc , "; c•-• ' Joseph nerr AetermiUed -to .see the result! . His e;*iin oll o - 41F4 ::1 2 1 k:- . 0 ‘ 1 0i/W i ee:Call;$ I OM a tier; ito tin 'sky, an d the n disappeared , :She - wa..srv — ii(e, nearly, two,l houni, aBoUt usual 'time , for. voyage,- wherv.elrelegairvieluriedina weary ' lOw; in order. to hive a heavier atmosphere Icy:Sustain' her, . with another fish in.. her, Op,-nearkug t the field, she , Made circuit arOundr , itto-' , : see if ber enemies Were_ therulgain. Find big th 6 Joust; clear, her tree, -. •Iltoopingfaint,-4and , ,evidnotffo'i, - nearly exhausted. -"-Again lie . up 1 their cry, which, as soon 7hup . hqd iy,the dis ; tribution of a dinner'stieltssit*4 : - tie cooking. • kink might edrritrei: "Glorious bird! - tcried- , tie • boyi-irreo ataxy t and . alone ; " what's:Spirit l" can sin g .. More sweetly;' otbera 'ea* - . lsceam • tp9re loudly; but whit:Other biid',VlAii, persecuted and rolokil;.:*be,ii,‘3o.4iftiiid.',lilP. couraged;-*hen siti!fir • , from. - the sea; Watild'. do what thou haat! doner- I • lesson . f iorii4hee ,yiiill- . tietref.ferget 'hereafter that when the spirit ie deteriiiiried,. it can, do „almost, enykbilft" . ....others . would have drisplitt the . niceowasd , •monTned- over. :cruelty and sighed ever Hike sots df'the''neetlinks; int then, by at once xecoveryfg,,the.' . 'loss, baii.forgotten-411:;: : I I lier ;this and I t , will y set my merit lAh. I • !will , try to do something, and (olio somethriiir in the world ; and I will risnerltied to dis. fooragements."—.loioiilliOfolsen.7ger. istritantotts: -. : — ; . - Telegraphing. Contemplated r ss.• • . TelegiiPh Company is proposed, in NeW:Yorit)which will likely be 80011 organ :lied; to 'Corlett - not a line to 2HSViiiite...; The Jointia l•of Commerce noting Aim: subject ) 'masa the Company will probe 6` :or`gas= ised"iri September, and addert" 7 " •-• • The dietanoe'from Key West to Hail= is Only seventy miles ,, and th - e cost of laying 'the cable, it is said, will be about 15500 a foile. The cable will' be , of the "'three,' threaded!'..pattern-- 7 that ,tteelntila ; lated conductors. The Magnetic Telegraph Company have agreed . to build a branch from Savannah, to: Bey Week, so that at.no distant day New York can be put in telegraphic communication vith Havana. vantages:of:: suolt,,a; line, to shippers and traders in NeW Yotrand•elsewhere.are 'ton otTions to need pointing out. I Tliiiiinti'.,COmpany . proposes to Ina Wired' :Irom . Havaia ki . ,Cape Antonio; the extiOnde• Westerly •PliPt of, Cuba -thence aPT9O_.$ l ): • Yucatan , ,obannel to Yucatan , ,Aiipkitloit,*oablit foity Where it will'oonneet r,...4 l aliwady lin& to the - city. of l Mexioo. .'They,7 to'exteind the wires from Yuoa•. tan' to Telininteped, "otf the Pifelflo, .about r foUr hundred . Tebe ankepee ,*o ‘ Pan ma, 'Slant eleven bdiadred ( miles,Vaiking af! fording telegraphic communication witit•the 'United Staten..nud• Ciilia - for the steamboat, 'an d railroid : , companies of .f>.„ilitu_ft ) :, ~, ; t he. ,steamboat company of Vioaragusi and l tn all; !ships' tbet.may choose to send meting* from* those , points. 3. :. . ''P' , • ' • • ' Lastly, this company. .propose• to, construct, 'aline from Tehuantepec toAantiago, where. there , is , already a± line to 'San Francisco,: three hundred „miles North. The distanoe from ,'Tehuantepec, to ; Santiago is . not far, 'from• two thousand miles: The line Will pees-through a country pretty well settled, thelnitithineri;'noW Fed:' Snit Government for the' manufsdEure 'of fire-aini6 to be its' iso'mPletifialtitylit tb'e . a "world: mneket can -belttirrfed"lnitc minutes •Gf the - WEirkiiiedii;' from ibe -ran material; and the machinery' being .to, perfect in „ivicryrespent, .I . tutt the work is dnno,witli unerring• avottrany.;leie believedithatin .no , department .of me-, ohanio arts has the ,inventive ,mindibeen erted with more astonishing ~or elaborate, results.. To produce a musket entire, two hundred and ninety font machines, and ninety , five hundred.distinot mechanical pro • iterates are involved. The iron from whioh the barrels are made , costs two hundred dol lars, per ton. This is_out up from bars into pieces of ten , pounds weight and ,fcurteen. inches in length, which, after being drawn out to forty inches under nearly a' white" beat, is ouived and welded on .steel ds* Etoblni n ii4A is`tben bored out, and redtkiet fi.orn ten pounds' to four and half ititer whiiih it is polished with erne* On revolving Wheels. _ The Conference of mieeioniiries" appointed 'to' be beld io Ootacnimutid, assembled 'there April 19,'and' was in.session fourteen days. , Thirty.two missionaries were present, name. )y: five missionaries of the Church M issionary ,Society; ten of the London; two of the .Wesleyan; six of the German Evangelical; six of the American Board ; one of. the 'American .Reformed.: Dutch; one of. tbe. .gfee;Chtirch of Scotland.; and one c1.:11,41' fßimpngstion ‘ §ociety ; A ,correspondent, flte Mci .. dras . Timemaxs: !‘,'As a fqw : o t ifui results o f t h is most interesting Ofinfittinct, WO may enumerate the follow- Fire-arm NaohinerY. Missionary Conference in India. ing : g 1. A , large increase of impbrtant and accurateinformatioa respecting. the various missions represented. Every missionary present was sensible of this in no ordinary degree. Its importance is sufficiently ob vious. 2 . An 'exhibition of liras foal union on all essential points connected with the missionary wog( in Isdift and`,Of 'Christian' esteem and loinatn.ong the Missionaries as sembled, aid the' excitement. of increased interest in each other's labors, trials, and =messes. .3'. The settlement of many questions'respicting 'plane of mi& sionary-labor, so far. as the "deOisions of the' !Oonfirenoerare - likely to - excite an-ibiluence: Itis , believed that, had the-entire number of -:missionaries represented. (Mut 'tiro. hundred,) , •been present, the • resolutions adoßted .frottld:liot .have been materially , Altered. 4. It may also be fairly anti c ipated ,that the publication of -that proceedings of theieon fere n le ad' to increased interest V the tifieibi . dit bfy Work, a inereitired,efforts. England and America 4n-1813. , ' Thefollewiegis_lkona, the': London Times cif 'March 13th, 18i,3 : .dThe putiliei with learn: with sentiments. which we shall riot presume to' antidipate; ihrat a third British 'frigate hia struck: to an 141eriCan. This is an occurrence that calls• for serious retlectionll,this,.and thalect eta-. ted in ,our- pa,per, yesterday, thak LloYd's I hit leonOties. - no tices five hundred: .Biitieh veeselk.ceptured, in. seven., roonths;,bt:'.,the . : •A&Pileig •-hiandreil to efehatitmen and treerfrigatee. • (A.Ye, and,Ahree sloops ofwaii:)Tilifilieiliitharfelltslitotrue'• crinZthe Beglishipeoplaimarthern unmoveduf- Any edealfho*hadvredieted , strahrfa ii,i‘American war this time last Year,. would hiire!beens treated vole tniadrien ore -traitor . He WonlaihaveiAlierht 441111 1 ,iii tistojhlot Ode' eondeacenditurio argue with'. him, that lopg ere' seven months - turif • elapsed, the AmerreahlitigTiehuldthave beet ;ilWelit`ltdirii ,the sea, the contemptible navy of the-United :States annihilated, antftlieW hiitfitime arse rendered it hear pfuruine.' . to thia:iiiitintE, not akin'lnAliTiicati has struck .flag..,,,*Th'ey insult us and; laugh , at.onr - -iwantrof enterprise and vigor: They leave - 'their pone< when they please, , and: return to . them when it:suits their cori 'venience,; they traverse the ,Atlantic their; beset the West India.islandri, , , they advaece, to the very , cliops- ig the Chem:t:lk they rade along the tickets bf BouthhAmerioit _nothing chases, nothing intercepts, and nothing engages iheliiihut' to' Yield them tii- Reeipts and Expenses of the United States for ihe ' • •i R!,6lipk