THE PILOT ES PUBLISHED EVEY TUESDAY MORNING BY JAMES W. M'CRORY, (Korth West Corner of the Public Square,) it the following rates, from which there will be no deviation: ingle subscription, in advance $1.50 fithin six months 1.75 within twelve months 2.00 No paper will be discontinued unless at the option If the Publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No subscriptions will be taken for a less period itan six months. 9clect poettm. ....... ..... ................ ........ ............ ..„ • NAME IN THE SAND. BY O. D. PRENTICE Alone I walked on the ocean strand, A pearly shell was in my hand, slooped and wrote upon the sand My name, the year, and day; As onward from the spot I passed, One lingering look behind 1 cast, A wave came rolling high and fast, And washed my lines away. And so methought, 'twill quickly be, With every mark on earth from me ! A wove of dark oblivion's sea, sweep across the place Where I have trod the sandy shore Of time, and been to me no more; Of me, my day, she name I bore, To leave no track or trace. And yet with that who counts the sands, And holds the water in his hands, ' I know a lasting record stands, Inscribed against my name Of all this mortal part has wrought, Of all this thinking soul bath thought, And from these fleeting monisitts caught, For glory or for fame. ( 1 .3006 Stan) BISHOP SIMPSON'S ADDRESS, Veneered at the Academy of Music, Philadel phia, before the First Anniversary of the U. AS'. Christian CoMmission. On the evening of the 29th ult., an immense liumber of people—citizens of Philadelphia M' nd delegates and visitors from all the loyal tates—tnet in , the Academy of Music, Phila. ;elphia, to celebrate the First Anniversary kteeting of the .U. S. Christian Commission.— D No. 11. STUART, Esq., Chairman of the Corn ission, presided, and after making some re arks, introduced Rev. Dr. ROBERT PATTER: ON, of Chicago. who delivered an able address behalf of the Commission. The Philadel- lohin Presbyterian says!— ! Ou the conclusion of Dr. Patterson's speech, rlsicls brought most vividly to miml.some of he terrible sufferings and hardships endured y our noble soldiers on the field, Mr. Stuart troduced to the audience the Rev. Bishop impson, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, "one distinguised in the Church of Christ roughout the world." This distinguished eater and most eloquent divine then made e following address: Among all the meetings which have ever en held on the face of this earth, in Church r in State, there never has been a meeting Mite the equal to this. There have been large Essemblies; Uinta have been most important eniblies; but when we consider the age of e world, the circumstances under which we ve ue, the pressure that is upon us, the soy , w in many of our hearts—struggling 'with ope—the efforts made to relieve the sick and wounded, made so by war, I repeat it, there •s not been a meeting precisely of this char r ever held upon the face of this earth. You ye had, it is true, in this city, and in other ies, kindred meetings; but this is the anni rsary, of the United, States Christian Com *ssion And when I look over this assembly, I almost oluntarily ask, Who are here? I see the .litary officer from his command in the navy ; see here the Chief Justice from his bench ; ee here one who formerly graced your Chair , State; the merchant is here from his count 1-room ; and the professional man is here .ut his office; and, here, mingling with all ese, are youth and beauty, matron and maiden; d among us, the soldiers themselves, who, rtially disabled, are taking a little rest from fatigues of war. Why are we here? It is because of the in , est felt in those upon the battle-field. And en I listened, sir, to the report which was d, and the statements which have been made, feel almost oppressed with a sense of the agnitude of the work which you have under ken 'to do. For whom are you proposing to ovide religious reading and religious instruc on, to seine 'extent, medicines, clothing, coin ids, consolation ? Why, sir, the army and e navy contain more than one million of men ; id while siding on this platform, my mind enrred to this thought : If you take all the en in the cities of New York, of Brooklyn, Boston, of Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wash :ton, Pittsburg, Cincinnati, St. Louis, and icago, and combine them all together, the y of the United States exceeds them all in mber. And it is for' sucla an army that you e proposing to undertake these means of in ruction I Why, the States of this Union • ye been nobly providing for the unfortunate ck, and furnishing asylums for them ; but - i ,P; 114 ' - "Vail . . 4iFT7 "" j fl " 4' • 'ei WIY/Ar,giv ," , ' r 1 4 1 5 ( ,I, f 1 4 1 . , 1, :: • - 4 - 1 -- i4: - ',..,. ~ ,,, Y i - - g , _, 1.• - - - - i ,',.- 1 , ..- 7 . 4 ,.: • _ - ..- . 1...., , ,i,!`,,P. .ft.. '' '" 'A . - , - 1 7 . :.k'' , ,,i•- -- - - - -: - ' - 4-- •-•=',."-`, .„,_ , ~..--45 . =- --- - i , I , ^*.;* ' . .,...i--; '''t ' 0 f 4 • l e l i---,1...4,-- - -- 4 , r 3 4... 1 G-REENCASTLE, PA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1863. what has your great State of Pennsylvania, or your sister metropolitan State of New York to do, compare with the work which you of this Christian Commission have in hand? Then, again, I turn to another view, and ask, if we limit our cares to the sick and the wound ed only, how many there are ? One hundred thousand men are said this night to be sick in camp, and in the hospital. One hundred thousand! More than all the men capable of bearing- arms in the whole . city of Philadel phia! If every husband, and rather, and son grown to years of manhood, in this whole city, were lying sick in hospitals, they would not make 'the number of those who are sick now, scattered all oyer our land. This, then, is the work Which you hdve undertaken to do. And to do it requires wisdom, energy, sacrifice, and outpouring means, such as only a free and a great people can bring themselves, to, the point of affording. But, sir, I have hopes for the success of this Commission in its enlarged projects,'because of the sympathy which its objects have in almost every family, and in almost every bosom. One out of five of all the grown men in the United States are now in the arty. If our Northern population is estimated at twenty millions, ten millions being men, and five millions of the remainder being,under eighteen •years of age, as your statistical tables will show, we have left but five millions of grown men in the loy al parts of the United "State's, and more than one million of these are now in the army, or more than one-fifth of the entire male popula ,, tion fit for bearing arms. And, sir,,how many sympathies connect them with friends at home ! It has been my lot, Mr.. President, to travel extensively; and I have noticed, from week to week, as I, have visited the congregations in my field, that more and more of them are habited in black. lam ever thus reminded that friends have lost friends and that hearts are mourning with a sorrow that nothing can alleviate but the consolation that these friends have died in the service of their country! And when the,wives, sisters, and mothers of ,tliese men in the army, shall lay their hands to this work, and when friends who have been left at 'home, and in health, shall unite in it, I have hopes that this great work of yours will .be accomplished, and this Commission successfully . perform the work given it to do. 1 need not refer to reasons why it should'he successful. Are we pot under obligations to the defenders of our , country They are not only brethren and friends, but they have step ped in front of .us to receive the shafts 'of the enemy. Look out to•niglit, and see where they are. While your streets are covered with the snow, and your streams are being filled with ice while the winds of heaven, with their wintry blasts, are beginning to be piercingly severe, see the hundreds of thousands of your brethren, and friends, and acquaintances, and neighbours, who are now in need of protection and comforts! And is there a heart that will not be moved—a hand that will not be ready to stretch out to these suffering ones all possible aid ? But, Mr. President, thi n s good work presents tome cheerier aspects. I do not know, air, what will be the `fate of our country; it is not for me to say. I know this, and my soul relies upon it—"the Lord God Omnipotent reigneth ;" and he is working out some great wise purpo ses in all the movements of men, and in all the combinations of evil men which can possibly be formed on the earth. For though the floods may - rise, the Lord in the heavens is higher than they. I love sometimes to look out and see the in dications of Providence. When this Western world of ours was found, there were strange combinations of circumstances preceding and connected with it. There were the discovery of the art of printing, of gunpowder, an ex- tension of the science of navigation, a revival of letters in the schools and colleges, when the Lord would lay open this Western world, and stretch it out to receive a population which should make it the "land of the free, and the home of the brave!! And now, sir, while this present season of trial is upon us, I look back to strange activities and strange combinations in other directions just preceding this periods I see our Government sending out its wisest men to explore our bays and rivers, and make charts of the whole coasts, under the influence of some great idea of preparation. Without this preparatory work, what would our ships and vessels of war have done in reference to our blockading expeditions? Then I look again, and I seem to see God's hand of preparation in the material world. He has just stretched out his hand and lifted off the covering from the silver bosom of moun tains in the Nevada Territory, and shown us wealth that, if we were but to take the crust of it into Wall street, would make all the brokers in the land almost shout for joy. I have been asked, What if our national debt increases ?- 1 am no financial man—l have no teachings on the subject of finance—but have this to say, that if our country survives this storm—if our ship of State comes into port, we have not only money enough in these ;o mountains to pay off every sailor and soldier, but money enough to line with silver every deck of every vessel, and all its spars, and give to our soldiers on their return silver arms instead of their iron ones ! Well, sir, I see more than this. I live in the West. ?fy home is among the great prai ries. I have been watching agricultural fairs. I have said, What means all this excitement in reference to agriculture? Every man seems to be inventing a plough, or a drilling machine, or a reaper,,or . a mowing machine, or some• thing else to husband labour or augment its power.. I did not understand it. But we bad just built workshops, and made ships, and were throwing out reapers and mowers by the mil lion, when the necessity came, and the young men left their ploughs •and their fields; and had not God given;us these implements, we had never been able to feed these soldiers. Well, sir, I look again. That same West is connected with the East. Our coal-boats used to run down our rivers, and our streams directed all our trade. But you gentlemen of the East, far-seeing merchants and bankers, turned our attention eastward. You ran your locomotives through or over mountains, across valleys and Hirers, and bound ns .to your Atlantic ports; and just, sir, when the enemy shut off the mouth of the Mississippi, we transfer the mouth of our railroad rivers to your Philadel phia and your New York. God was preparing the way for it. I look again. And although it is but a sim: ple matter, I have often said to myself in the last five years, what is the meaning of all this amount of inventive genius spent in thd direc tion of the sewing machine? I visited in New York large factories, where these were made in immense quantities, and apparently the world would' soon be filled with them, I said. wondered why it was. When I look over the land, and see the hundreds of thou sands of men needing clothes—and when I turn my eyes to the villages and country places, and in almost every house, these machines, mul tiplying their powers by tens and by hundreds —then I have seen why God gave man just DOW the seivinpinaehine., Well, now I look in another direction—to the great revival of religion a few years ago, in which you, sir, and others, took so active a part, to the' prayer-meetings and the young Men's Christian Associations that were formed. What did they mean? A little before that the churches were stirred up to making books and religious tracts—the presses of every de nomination, and of religious associations, were set ageing, and the land seemed as if it would be filled with religious literature. The Lord was preparing. And I now see bow you can send, according to your report, your tens- of millions of tracts to the army. All the press es were working by steam, and the tracts were ready to your hand. God was in it. Then, in that connection, this revival came. It took us from our denominations—it brought business men from under the shadow of the pulpit to where there d bearts were warmed by close fra ternal association; and they learned to work, together, commenced as laymen to work, held meetings of prayer, carried religion into their shops and countlltag-rooms; and when the trial came—when they were needed to accompany their benefactions with spoken words of com fort and consolation—they were all marshalled and ready, a full regiment, in the noble work of this Commission, with you, sir, as their General, to lead them. And, sir, I thanked God that, whether the nation will or will , not change its generals, we have no need to-night to change ours. Now, all these are some of the indications of the hand of God, as I think, and they give me encouragement. The soldiers must be cared for. We are under obligations to them; we dare not leave them nor forsake them; they are onr brothers; tears .of sympathy are flow ing for them; prayers are being offered for them, and strengthening, and blessing them— e work which the band of God haa been for some time past wonderfully preparing. But let us look at another view or two. The first is this. I prize this work because of its effect upon the soldiers of my country. Men will respect themselves, when they feel that the eyes of the virtuous and the good are upon them. Some one has said that in the ragged schools and reformatories of the world, the first great step in the reformation of their occupants is to put upon them clean clothing, and wash them, and make them feel they are respectable —that some body cares for them. Sir, when the soldiers who are fighting our battles are lying far from home and kindred; if they are allowed to lie forsaken, destitute of sympathy, in temptation, and want, and wretchedness, unable to do any thing for themselves, it Is no wonder that they sink in vice, and that to some extent the feeling come, "It is useless for us to do any thing, for our country cares nothing for us." But when these soldiers are sick, and there have come and sat down by them angels in human form, and wiped, as a mother's hand used to wipe, the cold sweat from the brow, and placed, as only a sister's hand can place, the cordial to the fainting lips—when they find whole thousands of the community willing to pray for ?hem, and wishing them well, and sending out delegates from all parts of the country to their comfort and relief, the soldier feels as if be was eared for—he respects him self, for he sees that he is respected, and he rises to do nobler deeds than ever. You have the story of Alexander when a young man. When lie was about to ascend the throne, he called his young men around him. He gave to one a cloak, to another a spear, a shield, a valuable garment, until he had distributed all he had. "But," said one of the young me to him, "Alexander, what did you reserve for yourself?," He replied, pointing upward, "Hope ! And then," said he, "I seem to myself to be standing where the eyes of the whole world are upon me."— It was this that nerved him to swim the river, and that gave him power to drive the hordes of the East before him, and dream even of universal sovereignty. 'When the soldiers of our country, our fathers, sons, and brothers, know that all the ladies of the land, and men from the bench, and bar, and. counting-room, and places of responsibility, are all cheering them on; why; sir, their strong arm will be nerved; and taking their weapons anew, they will go forward, bounding over forts, leaping over ramparts, scattering the enemy before them; and victory will come upon our stand ards! And then, sir, when these men return to our land, they will , not come back as a curse to us. A writer in Great Britain says, that one of the greatest elements of her weakness is the return of demoralized soldiers, who are a curse to the community. Not only have these men talked with and prayed with the soldiers, but, Christ like, they have brought physical comforts in their hands, and ere they have ministered spiritual consolation, they have, following the example of the great High Priest of our pro fession, who opened the blind eyes, unstopped the deaf ears, healed the sick, and cleansed the lepers; and thus it has been that their hearts have been opened to religious instruction, and they have listened to words that sounded as words never spoken before; and when they re turn, they will come with Christian hearts and sympathies; and not only sing the sweet songs of Zion on the battlefield, but to their children around the hearth, in the church, and along the streets and highways. And lam not cer tain, sir, but we need Christain soldiers to come back to put more bold courage in the hearts of Christian men and women at home. We need not only to have faith, but to add to our faith bravery, and possibly Christianity, tried in this very war, is to result in a greater boldness and bravery in our Christain churches at home. But, sir, my mind sometimes exults in this thought—we are proving our Christianity in the eye of the world. We read the writings of infidelity. Sometimes they talk about human itarianism, about ameliorating the condition of the human family; and they repesent Christi anity as dogmatical, controversial, speculative, and as away from the wants and necessities of man. But, sir, in this hour of our darkness, when the clouds are upon us, when men are fall ing around us, and women are sorrowing, who go into the field to minister to the soldiers? Is the infidel there? No, sir. They all hide their deformed heads, and Christianity steps out in all her nobleness and beauty ! Yes, sir. Christianity is still young. Though nearlytiwo thousand years are upon her, there is no wrinkle on her brow, no stoop in her form; the lustre has not 'gone from her eye; she steps upon the mountain-top and over valleys, dropping com fort and consolation into the camp of the soldier, as well as upon the churches of the living God; ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will he inserted in TIM mot at the following rates: 1 column, one year....... i of a column, one year t of a column, one year. 1 square, twelve moihhe. 1 square, six months ..... . 1 square, three months 1 square, (ten lines or less) 8 insertions Each subsequent insertion Professional cards, one year NO. 4. and it is in such scenes as these that Christi anity is vindicating herself to be, as she is, the child of God, the messenger of mercy to men. And, sir, our Christianity, in this free coun try of ours, is occupying a great position. They tell us we must have State endowments, State churches, large fees for the support of minis ters, and for the progress and perpetuity of Christianity. But go where old institutions are—and I revere them—go among them, and you find this that never in France or Germany, or even in old England in all its glory, there was never a Christian Commission to attend to the wants of a Christian army. It has been reserved for Christian America, where Church and State are disunited, where the State gives the Church legal protection, and where she smiles upon the State in turn. It is for disen thralled Christianity to bring forth her rich fruits, and show her power to minister to all the sons of men. Now, sir, I rejoice in all this; and when I look over the field, and see what God is doing, I feel willing to bear the affliction, knowing that although I cannot tell just when it shall be—" in even time it shall be light"—and that when God has proved us, be will give us the victory. Why, sir, is that flag of ours ever to be lost? Are those stars of heaven ever to fade away ? No sir! Have you ever thought that no nation on earth ever had a cluster of stars on its flag till the United States prepared its flag ? .There was one nation, or tow, that had a lone star, but never a combination. I know not how to account for it. I cannot tell pre. cisely how it came; but I have thought our old fathers were men who looked up to God. They saw clouds; but they saw beyond the clouds, into the clear stars shining in the sky. I shall never forget bow I felt when once wrecked on the Pacific coast. The storm was wild, and a thousand of us, it seemed, were to be buried in the ocean. We stood on deck, in a way to prevent the noble steamer from careen ing, though it seemed as if she must go to pieces. I looked tp. But by-and-by, in the midst of the storm, the clouds gently parted. I saw one clear stars shining there. It seemed as though an angle's eye was looking down from the throne of God. In a moment more it was gone. I looked, and looked again, and in fifteen minutes I saw the clouds part again; and now two stars shone down upon us. So I took courage. I said, the storm is passing away. God made.that star of hope to shine out clear upon the dark and troubled sea. And the men were cheered in heart. ; Sir, when I look at that flag, I sometimes ask myself, "Where did our fathers get it?" Did not some angel hand clip it from those heavens of blue, and send it, with its stars, as angels' eyes, to gaze down upon the suffering sons of humanity, and lead them to look up ward,.and beyond tha heavens, to their Father and their God above? , Let those stars shine Let no power be neath the cross control them I And although, as, in the apocalyptic visions, there may come a fog that may seem to blot out one-third of the stars of heaven; and the smoke may come up out of the pit, and obscure its glory, yet God will drive 'away the thick darkness, and the stars Aar upon our still glorious trium At the con dress, which Stuart each Simpson." Ti was responds' The Chair col his valuable Brethren, yo dear friend to allude to it. for his count come here to ting aside of us as he has THE ch < of a woman's heart should, like a w i a d.o, be sweetly musical, but not, like a w i a Arp give out its kisses and love-tones to allliods alike. L well-known American citizen says that he I:aclerstands "nearly all living tongues." We know some very lively ones that he would be apt to find incomprehensible. LET a new star be discovered—another dia mond upon the frontlet of eternity and unborn millions are inheritors of glory of its knowledge YOUNG ladies rarely kiss each other except when there are gentlemen to see them do it, 870.00 aroo 20.00 8.00 6.00 4.00 1.00 26 6.00