tanntr ants Pbecatt DAVID PaoIIINNEY,} JAMES ALLISON, Ploparwross: STEPHEN LITTLE, PITTSBURGH, '‘TANUART V. 18110. $1.609 in advance; or In Giulia piss' or, delivered at residencies of liabeert. beret AS.O 0 See Prospecituse on Whir& Page. AA b should be preempt' a little While before the year expires, that we may make Inn arisingenialate for a &sadly simply. VW. RAD WILAIIP.III. indisatom that we desire a renewal. If, however§ bs the halite ef manning, this signal should be omitted/ we hope our friends will .till not forget is. RIIIIIDS/AllOPW.—Send payment by oafs hands. irken sonvesiesit. Ori send by mud', oneiosing with ordinary ears,and troubling nobody with a knowledge of what you are doing, Vera largo amount, send a Draftier Serge notes. Per oneertwe pepersisead soli or MIMI notes. - WO MAKS CIIIMIOII. Send postage staaaprs sr Sev ent yilly send for Jaor• pNeerid se. ell or Illumbers, or ID tor Will 16 . primer all Letters and Conumnalsationi to DAVID NekINNIII £ 00.. Pittsburgh. Pa. PRESBYTERY Or ALLEGHENY The Presbytery of Allegheny City directed the pastors and Sessions of the churches under its care, to take such action as might be deemed best in each particular ease in the observance of next week as a week of prayer for the conversion of the world. HANOVER COLLEGE, IND —The Trustees have divided the collegiate year into two terms, one to commence on Wednesday after the 26th of August, and the other on Wed nesday after the Ist of January. They have also ordained an Adjunct Professorship of Ancient Languages, and a Professorship of Modern Languages. And they have au thorized the President to employ Lecturer on Natural Science. These are encouraging indications of progress. CINOINNATI —Notice has been given that a new transcendental journal is about to be established in this city, that will receive active support from Ralph Waldo Emerson, Furness, Longfellow, and other rationalists and infidels of the same clam The tenth is, these men, and others of kindred spirit, have exhausted themselves and greatly broken down their cause in the East, and they are beginning to look Westward for a suitable field for the dissemination of their ruinous teaching on the subject of religion. Revivals. PLEASANT HILL, Mo.—A meeting of twenty days was lately concluded at this piles. Over fifty persons have united in the oommunion'of the,Presbyterian church, on profession; and ten or twelve with the Methodist church. On one Sabbath, when thirty persons stood up to ()entails Christ, tweaty•two of them were males. And, while sinners, numerously, have been con- verted, Christians have been greatly re freshed. We collect the information from a letter of Rev. James T. Lapsley, in the Presbyterian Herald. The Week of Prayer. Pastors and churches will 'keep in mind the Weik of Prayer, appointed by the last General Assembly. It is the Second week in January. The mode of its observance will be determined in Sessional counsel. In some cases there may be preaching daily; but we trust that it will not be expiated of pastors to do this work alone. No pastor should attempt it.. Some, however, perhaps many, can have aid. In cities it may be easily so arranged. And where there can not be preaching, there may be social prayer meetings daily, in addition to fervent prayer in the family and the closet, for the speedy extension of Christ's kingdom throughout the world. The President's Message. We give, as usual, the whole of this most important State paper. Every man who would pretend, by a vote or otherwise, to take any part in public affairs, should read it carefully. The people are really the government. They ehould be intelligent and well informed—all of them should be so. Many readers will not approve of parte of the document; but these are as much ooncerned to .have accurate information, as are any others. Such are bound, even more.than others, to read and weigh. If the President's eonnsels are to be oppoeed, let opponents know what those counsels are. In this remark we do not endorse the paper. We leave approvals and disapprovale to our fellow•oiti zeal', with the purpose, as citizens ourselves, to use our social rights. Synod of Mississippi. This body met at Columbus, Mies., on Wednesday, December 7th, and at till the Monday following. There were present forty:three ministers and elders. The True Witness speaks of the meeting as very pleasant, though there was not a very great amount of business transacted, neither was there manifest the ardent and all-pervading spirituality which is desirable, when the leaders of the people in spiritual things are assembled in council. Dr. Humphrey, of the Danville Theologi. oil Seminary, was present; also, Dr. Wilson of the Board of Foreign Missions. Oakland College has the prospect of in creased usefulness, and a hope is expressed that Dr. Anderson will accept the Presi dency. Foreign Missions were warmly . commended. The South Western Advisory Committee on Domestic Missions was strongly endorsed. Danville and Columbia Theological Seminaries were approved of. And sundry matters of minor importance, were harmoniously settled. For the Presbyterian Banner and Advocate. Female Prayer Meeting. At the commencement of another year, allow me to urge the claims of the female prayer-meeting upon the female members of our beloved churches. A •little praying circle has met weekly, in this city, without intermission, to pray for the coming of Christ's kingdom, for sixteen years•—and in reviewing the past, their gratitude to God rises high, that so many have been the answers to their humble peti tions. They acknowledge also, that they have themselves been refreshed and quick ened in the path of duty, and they can truly saff, " hitherto bath the Lord helped us." Dear sisters in Christ, let me entreat you, the coming week, which is to be one of in tense interest to all who love our Lord Jesus, to become members of a female prayer-meeting, and , you will find it an im portant means of grape to your souls. A PASTOR'S Win. New Raven, Conn., Jun. 1, 1860. Bo t. Matthew B Ripe, Da This= faithful servant of Jesus Christ ceased from his labors and.entered into rest, on the 17th of Deoember,lBs9. He died at his own residence in -Princeton, N. J., after a few hours' ilium His health had been delicate for many years. His bodily frame was not at all equal to the ardor of is spirit, so that in this sense, as well as otherwise, " he.could not do the,things that he would." But still, he was a very effec tive laborer. He will be long honored at the college of New Jersey, both as a teach er, and as eminently instrumental in advert°. ing the general interests of the Institution. Many a son of Nissan Hall will bless his memory. Many hereafter, who never saw his face, but who will enjoy the benefit of scholarships endowed through his instru mentality, will gratefully think of the good results of a wise and'active beneficence. Dr. Hope had not the wealth which would enable him to bestow largely, but he had the spirit and the address which could win tkeir way to the hearts of men, and thus he di rected the abundance of many into useful channels. On the occurrence of the death, we an nounced it briefly ; and then hoped that ere this, we should have seen, from the pens of those who had e ready access ; to facts , and dates, fuller notices of the , departed. In the absence of definite information / we make a few' general remarks, mainly from our own' personal knowledge. Dr. Hope was about forty-six years of, age, at the time of his death. He was the sett of Richard Hope, Req., of Mifflin County, Penna. We knew his fsther well, as one of the eminently godly, exemplary and useful of Christian people. And his mother was it mother in Israel." Matthew was henee child of the covenant, and was, trained in the way in which he should go. The Lord blessed the instrumentality. The promise was sure. The ohildhad grace early, and supplies constantly. In youth, manhood, at home, abroad, in foreign lands, in retirement, and in high places, always, he had the needful Su p: plies of grace, so that be departed not from the good way into which he had - been - early inducted. . We are not informed of the time from which Dr. Hope dated his conitersion; but the event occurred in his early life. He was graduated at Jefferson College, studied theology at Princeton Theological Seminary, att ended a medical , course in the University of Pennsylvania, and was ordained to the Gospel ministry by the Presbytery of Arm tingdon. The ordination took place with a view to his departing mitt mission to China: Itwas about the year DM. The event we well remember, having aided in the ezami. nations, and been entrusted with the deliv ering of the charge. Trials more satisfactory to a Presbytery, we cannot remember to have witnessed. Dr. Hope's foreign location was Singtt pore. In about two years, his health failed utterly, and he returned honie emaciated and almost lifeless. But he was , not lost to the Church. He recovered partially his , strength, and engaged in the service of the Board of Education,' first as Assistant, and t hen as Secretary. In this labor he was highly useful. The Board:flourished under his adminisigstion. For the last fourteen y ears of his life he was Professor of Belles Letters in the College of New Jersey; a position which, as, intimated above, he ;filled with a high degree 'of usefulness, while he contributed otherwise to the general and lasting benefit of the Institution. Sometime after his return from Singapore,, he was married to a daughter of Matthew L. Bevan, pig., of Philadelphia, in whom he found a congenial spirit. She was a gift to him from the Lord—an - •help meet, suoh as the minister of Christ needs, to the fill-' i ng up of the • measure of , his usefulness. As a preacher, Dr. Hope ,was attractive and instructive, in a very high degree; but the condition of big health did not permit him to enjoy extensively the luxury of serv ing Christ and'tlie Church, in , the pulpit. Ae a writer he ranked among the excellent. Ae a Christian, a gentleman,. a husbild, father, and friend, he had but few egnale. His name end worth will be had in lasting remembrance. The' Year:lB6o. To every reflecting mind, the =entrance upon the duties, responsibilities, triels, eor rows, and joys of a new year, must be attended with more or less interest An other of .those periods by which time ; and our sins,- alas, in- sign board letters,,shall shine in the light of the Judg ment, as though :written on the heavens, with a pen allightning I We did not think to be so conspicuous. Bat, ever in our life, as the busy pen went dashing over the page,. the Recording-Angel was copying the words for the Great Day when the +" books shall be opened." And since but the title page has been written of this volume, thrown off, doubt,- hurriedly, without much , thought, might it not be well, before we write fur ther, to stop and consider what, We `are do ing ? This first Sabbath of the New Year seems eminently proper for: suchconsidering. We seem all to stop, today, writing in our private journals, and come together to write a page in the new volume :of our Church History.. And let us seriously ponder, to day, what shall be the character of this yet unwritten volume of our individual and. church life. And as -we turn the unsoiled leaves; wherenot a blot is yet, with what trembling: solicitude should we begin -the record; *hick alas, we know, shall cover the page with blanks or blots, evidence against ns of: criminal-neglect and strange-perverse ness. - - , The record of 1859 is `sealed up. We have nothing to do with it now. Much as weans, regret the year, we may not live, it overagain. The Put belongs to History. Atture:belongs to God. The „Present belongs to us; therefore the Apostle says, " walk -in wisdom—redeeming the time," making,the most of the opportunity. Let us do 80. Wehave a Personal, a Representative, and an Reclesiasti,cal 'character to sustain. We have duties., as Inditricluals, as Members of a, Communes!, and as 'Members of a 67iineli to discharge. Every position in Which, we: are placed, in this three fold re- Won, is an opportunity. Discharging AA4JI