Namur an Pboratt. DAVID Mc:KINNEY, JAMES ALLISON, }lmarose. STEPHEN LITTLE, -4 " "' PITTSBURGH, PE'BRUAHY 4, MO WIBILIIII. SLAIN la advance; or is Gleba 01.00; or. delivered at resinous, of Subserfe hers. oa.ou. See Prosyeseltec On Shard Palos Ann M w 'AL ohould lr. prtan4 while before ebe year expireac that ire mud/ snake full errangoneents,fer usteadYlloPlelie WiLAPPAII. Indleates that we desire a renewed. If, however. in Who bent K lialifitago this signal should be 011lIttilde we liege our friends will still not forget as. • 11.1111IT.AnOZ/I.—Bent payment by safe hands. wits. convenient. Orc,eneed by meant anelesiag with ordinary eery and troubling nobody with a knowledge, of 'what you are doing. Pot a largaamonett,ollll4 ft Draft, or lisrge Noise. Foroa. ortw. pnyersteend Gold .r smell notes. eo !MAKS OftelleHe e Road pontos* steal% •r holier still. mood for sera plorri say ell •r eoronty sealers, or $1 for 'ably - threo eremborr• DIRBCW udi li•ttara sad Castamailealtlow It* DAVID & VO., Plttakaralts THE Holm AND FOIVEIGH RECORD, for December, is received. We defer the usual notice till next week. Rzv. GEORGE W. SLOAN.—The name of this missionary was print.td Swan, in .our notice, a few weeks ago. He expects, in company with In4thren Spargrove and Evans, to start, from New York for Washington Territory, on the sth inst. A PRESENT.—The Coshocton papers state Jest Rev. Wm. E. Hunt, Pastor ,of the 'Presbyterian church of that place, was " among the many " favored with a New Year's Present—a well filled purse, quietly sent in, by ts the young people" of his charge. CONEBRENCIE —We see in the Presbyter, a call for a Conference% of the ministers, elders, and other members of churches in the Presbytery of Columbus,to be held at Columbus, Ohio, commencing on Monday evening, February 6th, and continuing for two days. The Southern Presbyterian Review. The January number has just reached our table. Its contents are : I. The Synod of Dort; 11. Symbolical Import of Baptism; 111. Moses and his Dispensation; Priest but Christ; V, Private. Christians in their Relations to' the Unbelieving' World ; VI. 'The Present and Past Physical State of Palestine; ` VII. The American Board and the Choctaw Mission ; VIII. The Raid of John Brown andthe Progress of Aboli tic& ; IX.: Notices of Recent Publications; X. Periodical Literature. OAKLAND COLLEgN, MISSISSIPPI.— We are pleased to learn that there is a prospect •of this important , institution obtaining a President. Rev. Wm. L. Breckinridge, D. D., has been called to the Chair; with hope's on the part of friends that he will not, de. cline to accept a position promising a very great amount of usefulness. The ~Princeton Review. .Thitev,pr. We 1001153 Quarterly •vottes :to: us rich in thought, orthodox, lueid, eloquent. The number now-on our table contains, Inductive and Deductive Pobtios; IL The Physico-Philosopby of Oken ; 111.. Classifi. :cation and Mutual Relation of the Mental Faculties;.lV. The Text of Jeremiah; V. Primeval Period of Sacred History; VI Dorner's Christology; What is Chris. thinity . ? short Notices; Literary To Parente: .3irotrire kinfily invited to read the little artiole on our fourth'psge, which *i address "to the Ladies. We , knew not who -is the *tabor, but we know that it .contains precious truths , and wise counsels. The parent who has let his child pass the 'first twelve menthes of its life uncontrolled, has lost the most, favorable opportunity for fit ting that child' for enjoyment in time and in immortality. Parents, be wise. Let your love 'be judicious,. Train. the child' aright from the.vety ' Deith — ort Minister. The Presbyterial Exiiiiitor informs its readers that Rev. Oliver Bronson, the elo. Tient and beloved pastor of the Presby. terian church of Janesville, Wisconsin, was removed from his_ earthly labors to the Ohnroh above, on the 10th inst., ; . in the thirtyfourth year of his ,age. funeral was largely attended by members and min• inters of the several churches of the place, the sermon being preached , by Rev. Mr. Buchanan, of Milwaukee. He was a son of Green O. Bronson, of New York, to w hick` place his remains were carried. Father Chhtiquy. A privateletter informs ue that the Pres bytery of Chicago .is to meet `shortly to receive Nether Chiniquy and his Colony into the Presbytcrien Church. Another state. -anent ie, that one third of the people will ',suite with the Baptists. The Colony are French Canadians, manista till lately. Mr.'.Chiniquy is their pastor and leader. Some time ago he became convinced of the errors of Roman --ism. He diffused , light among the people, -'and - 'the shover notice indicates their ad 'Tenement. The United Presbyterian Quarterly. We have received the first number of the • -new Qaartetly of our United Presbyterian 4 brethren. It is printed from good type, and on, good paper. Our friend, Dr. Kerr, has Amen, quite successful as to the general ap pearance of the first issue of this new 'enterprise. It was received when our columns were nearly full, and therefore we can only give the contents,, which The Bible on the Sooial Relations, by., Rev. J. T. Cooper, D:D.; IL Review of Letters on Psalmody, by Rev. J. T. Preasly, D.D.; Bible Revision, by Rev. David lifaeDilli D.D.; IV. The Ancient Church,* by .Rev. James Harper, A.M,; V. The Early Scotch and Sootolvlrish of Pennsylvania, by Rev. George 0. Arnold, A.M.; VI. The Sabbath Question, by Rev. James Grier, A.M.; VII. The. United presbyterisn phureb, by D. Kerr,D.D.; VIII. Short Notices. Editedand published in Pittsburgh, Pc, by David - R. Karr; summisted with Dia. 'a. T. Wilily, J. Rodgers . , * and L. a Oiark, at 0' Per • annum. The People.. The' The people, in the most extensiveaecep. tation, are the mass of hinnarOeinvi. In the distinctive and more common use of the term they are the inhabitants of .a .country.. in contrast with the rulers, as " Princes and People ;" or they are the inetnbeistoris're= ligious community, ,or of a worshipping congregation, al, .diekinguished from their officer's and teicherti. Thus, in Scripture, " the Priests and the People," or, amongst ourselves, , "`Ministers and People," or, At' Miniiitere, Elders and People." The time was, for long, when the People were regarded as a class, to serve and obey. Kings and Princes claimed to rule by Di vine right, and Ecclesiastics regarded them selves as the vicegerents of God. But those days are rapidly departing. The extrava. gent assumption; received Ha death wound, at the Reformation, and, with some alterna• tions, it "has ' been waning, century after century. It is destined to perish, and, we hope, speedily. The indications of this are manifest. In England, =for centuries, the people have been the real power, and, with an * accelerated rapidity, they are advancing in the directness and,perfectness of its use and manifestation. In France, for ,seventy years, the people have had power. They have been fitful in its exercise; lawless; rabid, destructive ; then divided and snit? dued ; but, upon the whole, there has been great progress. The present Emperor site upon his throne by a popular vote ; and his Legislative Council hold their places; throngh the form at least, of a' general election. : The masses there haye„new quite as much . influence in the- government as they have intelligence and. virtue rightly to rise. In. Germany, Kings and Princes seek diligently to discover what the peOple wish, and what they will bear. And even in Italy popular feeling has become an item of vast import.. anoe in thearrangementif 'National affairs. The great meetings now . held, in Europe by the "'powers that be,"'ire :no more called Councils of. Kings and &Venn. They are Congresses of Nations. And, though the people directly do' not send representie fives, yet their desires greatly affect the de-' liberations and their interests take a high place in the results which are sought. ; In Ecclesiastical` affairs, , also, the people's gain hits been very 'great: The Papany, `his . been stricken in its vitals True it 'still makes its ghostly pretensions ; and in some. places it rule,s Aomiriantl. but, for the most part, it is shorn of its - glory and is waning apace. Protestanidom - 4ostolical Suceeesion doctrine which is next of kin to the Papacy, exists,,htit it, is not extensively prevalent; and it is detaining. And irt most churches' the" pOpular -element is strengthening at the expense' of the official: Ecclesiastic!' are losing power,. and 'the people are gaining, influence. Whether. the danger of carrying this doe. trines of "The People" 'too fat for -the . people's own good, is imminerit, maybe a question: It, is a possibility. Changes are oft too sudden to.bc healthful, and too great to be long endured. Demderacy 'may. be carried so far as to become- a mob, and da stroy society's best interests '''tuad Congre gationalism may beeotne so rampant,,as,by . repudiating a divinely ordained ministry;=to exclude God from a 'duly recoinizeecen trol of his Church.':,, The vox:Pops . €4 vox L?ei doctrine belonge, not to . the teachings of God's unerring truth. . is ,pet lure. In some things God-'-makei . his will knOwn through the expressions of popular desire ; but he, still claims,that he is Law giver, and his will as revealed by prophets and apostles, and, written and 'proPerlY at tested, is the rule by which.; we are.tnahide. "Powers" he has. himself , ordained, both in Church and State; and Under him they rule. He is Lord of both earth and heaven Head of the Church below as really;and fully as of the Church above. Minietere of ,Christ should bear this in mind. They are servatite of the people; it is true—servants in the senee of doing good to all. But ae io receiiinginetruetione, and yielding obedience, and rendering an ac eount, they are' the eervante of Christ. We