; r Vrtsbgterian PITTSBURGH, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1860 irer- Having purchasecribr„our!Oce Right" to we Dick's Accountant and Inepatch rdtmit,lo/, or nearly all; VOW' subscribers now hare, their papers addressed to them regularly by a sine/ariy Unique machine, which fastens on the white margsn .w.imaTheolored "address stamp," or. label, whereon appears,their,name plainlyprinted, foamed to.Y the date up to which they have paid for their papers—this being authorised by . Act 'of Owns*. The date will always be advanced oil the receipt of subscription mmuy, in exact accordande with the amount so received, and thus be an ever-ready lend valid receipt; securing to every one, and at all times, a ph liet lossowledge qf his newsPoPer ac count, so that. if any error is.made he can immediately de- led it and have it corrected—a boon alike valuable to the publisher and subscriber, ai it must terminate all painful witunderStandima bilween them respecting accounts, and thus tend to perpetuate their. important relationship. *** Thaw in arreart wilt please remit. • ' Vermillion Institute, Maysville, Ohio.— The Catalogue of this institution, for 1.860, shows an attendance of two hundred and eleven pupils in the Male Department, and eighty-nine in the Female. In all ) three hundred. Rev. SANDERS DIEFEN DOR?, is the Principal of this institution. Jefferson Coage.—This venerated tution is still the place of resort for our young men, who seek an education. About ninety new students have been admitted this term. This promises well, not only for the Cofiege but ter the community. It also shows increasing need for an en larged endoiwment, and must encourage the liberal to gilve freely. The Norti. American Review contaiss:-- Rom= an his Heroines; Climatology; /Life and La ors Of THOMAS PRINCE.; ED MUND W LER ; Lord SHAFTESIVURY; Second vol 'me of PALFREY'S " History of New-E land," Quarantine and Hy giene, Rus ''s Occasional Productions; The Englishuguage in America; The Ori ginl of Sp cies; An " Inglorious Milton ;" Critical N i otices; New Publications. Pub lished- 'brt thotißY, , NicnoLs & LEE, lios- On. Western Thislogical Soniiiiari.---Wednes day, the 17th instant, was a happy day at this institution. Dr. PAXTON, who bad been kept otherwise occupied and out. of his - study, by removal from one house to another, that day entered regularly on his duties as a 'Professor. His Introductory Lecture was very numerously attended. It prodUned a most happy impression on all itho heard it. The first part of it contain ed a few modest-remarks on the novelty of his duties; but when he came to the main subject of his lecture he showed a master's hand. There are sixty new students at the Seminary. Others are expected soon. May the Lord's favor rest upon this School of the Prophets. • SYNOD OF lENTUCKY., The late meeting of this Synod, held in Louisville, seems, by the report _in the. Presbyterian Herald, to have been one of much importance. Several matters of Chiral interest Were discussed and voted upon. Meetings .of ministers and elders, whether in Presbytery, Synod, or Confer ence, should never pass without a thorough discussion of some topics, adding to their knowledge and prompting them to increased zeal in their work. One subject before the Synod, on the late occasion, was the Private Administration of the' Lord's Supper. After much discus sion, it was determined that such an ad ministration is wrong; but what .t Private Aclthinistration is, the Synod did not de termine. All agreed that the ordinance is social, but whether it may be properly ad ministered in a private room, for the benefit of a sick person, a. few other Christians being present and partaking, seems not to have been determined. Another subject was, " Who are entitled to vote in the calling of a pastor ?" The decision was, that none but communicants who submit to the discipline of the church are entitled to vote, and of communicants, none but those who pay their just propor tion, according to their own engagements, to the expenses of the church, can vote. A complaint was entered, and the matter is to be carried to the next Assembly. A third subject was, the. New Department in Centre College. The decision of this was deferred for a year, to afford opportu nity'for a fair trial of , the new scheme. AN APPEAL POI TEEIIIBLE CANE. The Allegheny Bible Society of Alle gheny City was organised for the purpose of circulating the Holy Scriptures without note or comment in that part of our county lying North of the Ohio and Allegheny rivers, and to aid the Pennsylvania Bible Society with its surplus funds. .„ • - A Bible Agent, or Missionary, is con stantly engaged, under the direction of a Board of Managers, in exploring all the territory, under our care, including the city and suburbs, to find out all who are without a copy of the Holy Scriptures, to supply the want, and kindly and earnestly to impress upon all with whom he is per mitted to converse, the importance of read ing and studying God's Word. Nearly all the Evangelical denomina tions of Christians in the city are repre sented in the Board of Managers. Unfettered by denominational lines, our Agent goes forth to'his work, That that every maw is his brother. That wherever there is an immortal soul lying in darkness and ignorance, there his work is. . His motto, " The Holy Scriptures with out note or comment to all who will receive them." He sells the Book at the Bible Society's price, to those who can buy. If any are unable to pay the full price, be sells for a half, or a quarter of the price. And if any person wants a Bible who is too poor to pay anything, he freely gives it. We ask thu Christian public to help on this good work by their prayers and con tiibutions. Mr. ROBERT DAVIN our faithful Agent, has now commenced his labors in the city and suburbs. We ask for him a kind re ception; and when he calls for donations and subscriptions, a liberal response. THOMAS MCIOANCIIE, President. .Tames Mc Cam:Ness, J. P. Fleming, , William Magee, E x . C. , %Warn Park, j . , 8 A r • Davis, a a BRYAN ' Rem Secretary'. "FOR," AND "10." Words aro things. They are things of great utility and great power. They con vey ideas, express sentiments, communicate knowledge—they govern the world—they determine the eternal state of men. They should hence be well chosen, apd used aright. The words used . . by a people not only express their sentiments, but they also serve to form sentiments, or change sentiments. The little words placed at the head of this article, are among the things of pow erful influence upon both sentiment and conduct We notice a wrong use of them, which is becoming very fashionable, and which is likely to do a, vast injury to min isters,, congregations, and the cause of Christ, In recent times it is becoming exceed iney rare to hear it said of a minister, be .preached to the people. The fashionable mode of speech is, he' preached for the people." This manner of expression may have once been entirely innocent, and even proper. A minister does preach for the people's benefit. But this, we fear, is not the common idea meant to be conveyed now by the language. It now is rather used to intimate that the minister isthe employee of the people, their servant, their depend ant, bound to .please them. This alters the nature of'the relation between him and them. It robs him of regard, them of ben efit, and the Master of lionor and glory. The true minister is a servant of Jesus Christ. His. Lord called him, endowed him with qualifications, commissioned him, gave him his message, sent him. He is the ascension gift of Christ. He is: an Ambassador' of Christ. He preaChes for Christ, as though God besought men by him. And he preaches to' men. He ,de livers God's messages to men. He in structs men. He tries to convert men. When he labors faithfully; it is as though in Christ's stead he prayed men to be re conciled to God. This is the manner in which the Scriptures, speak. And. ininis ters should• thus speak, and magnify their office, and feel their responsibility; and people should thus speak, and keep up in their minds a proper feeling of, regard for the preached Word, and of solemnity under the apprehended results of the hearing of the instructions, invitations, promises, and threatenings sent to them. The proper' use of these two little words is hence of vast importance. Upon it hang eternal things. When 'we say, the minister preaches for'us, there is no direc tion of the mind heavenward, no sense of personal responsibility. He is as one of us. We employ him. We have a right to direct him, criticise him, keep him, or turn him off. He is of the earth we are of the earth; all is earthly. But if we say, the minister preaches to us, the thought is at once, by what authority, who sent him, whence his message, what the responsibil ity. The mind goes to heaven; to find the authority, and to the judgment seat to learn the resultof heeding, or of refusing. . And so also the influence on, the minis ter will be great. If he preaches for a people, he must please 'thud, and 'if they are too hard to please, he may leave them. If they pity him well, he will continue to serve them ; if others will pay . him better he will remove and preach for others. But if he preaches to a people, then be is Christ's ambassador ,• then he must please, not men, but God; then,he must reconcile men to God; then he must preach whether they will' hear, or forbear; then he must abide and preach, till God calls him away. How vastly different the feelings, the sense of responsibility, the preaching, the hear ing, the conduct, and the actual results, temporal and eternal, when the divinely constituted relation between minister and people is rightly apprehended !* And how intimately that apprehension is connected with the very little words " for,""And " to !" Who preached to you, last Sabbath? .dlr A. preached to us ; and it was evident that he regarded himself as sent of God. He delivered his message with deep earn estness. He pleaded for Christ. 'He could not think that his 'work was done, unless we were reconcilei to God. TIM SYNOD 'OF PITTSBURGH. This Synod has just concluded its An nual meeting. The place of assembling was the beautiful and flourishing borough of Indiana. The sessions were continued from Thursday noon, the 18th inst.„_ till Monday evening, - Therseas much preach ing, religious conference; and prayer. On Sabbath all the evangelical pulpits except the Episcopalian, in and near Indiana, were occupied by the members. All the, busi ness brought before the body was duly transacted, and the last two hours were consecratedlo devotional exercises. The meeting was large, about one hun dred and fifty members being present. The interest felt by the citizens was mani fated by their full attendance on the Sab bath-day exercises, by the large number who were present on other days at the times allotted to worship, by the auditors who were with us at business hours, and by their abounding hospitality. Indiana will be long remembered, and often and fa vorably spoken of. Thee business of the deepest concern, both to members and citizens, was that of Domestic Mission& The subject was /12- troduced by Rev: THOS. L. JANEWAY, D.D., of New-Jersey, who appeared as a repre sentative of the Board. Dr. JANEWAY presented his remarks under three heads; the Present Position of the Board; its Ne cessities; and, its. Adaptation to the Mis sionary Work. 1. The Board'spresentposition he regard ed as favorable. It Was in a healthful con dition. There was an increase of , laborers beyond the number employed in any former year. Means also had been obtained to meet appropriations, so that the workmen were paid. The sources of the Board's in come are, contributions by the churches, legacies, and ,individual donations. The first was the main reliable source. The others were fluctuating. The churches were expected to contribute every year, and that with some degree of uniformity,both as to amount and increase. Their liberali ty was indicative of their state of piety and their'devotedness to the cause. The Board'want a regular flow. It was desire ble that contributions should come from all the churches. It was a duty. Giving was reidly'a' Vent& tb the -Over'. Little gifte PRESBYTERIA2eBANNER.---SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1860. should not' be despised. 'A multitiide of small streams , flowing ,together, make the mighty river. Twenty dollars from a•small country church was an exercise of more liberality than a hundred times as much from a wealthy churchin the city. The necessities of the Board were feel ingly presented. The immense Pacific Coast, its States and Territories, should immediately be occupied , by a vast increase of missionaries. Multitudes of men were flocking there. The population must be come exceedingly great, and now was the precious moment for Presbyterians to work. Others were busy. The ground was being occupied. Men were wanted there, and means were wanted by the Board, to send men there, and to "sustain them, till churches , could be established. The Territories, on' this side of the Becky Mountains, were calling for aid. .Kansas, just now, wants fifteen additional ministers. Nebraska needs a number. Other partS need large accessions. The Chiniquy Colony also made S. large demand upon the resources or the treasury. There was needed, this year, $150,000 and then there should be still 'an annual increase. •The people of New-York had just _expended a quarter million dollars, to see and enter tain the Prince of Wales, and could not the whole Presbyterian Church expend their hundreds of thousands in the: cause of their Lord. We must save 'to send abroad. We are bound to send the Gospel to the needy. • The Adaptation of the Presbyterian Church to the Domestic Missionary work, Dr. JANEWAY regarded as admirable. Its ministry, eldership, mode of worship, con servatism, acceptability in North and South, gest and West, fitted it for doing just the work which our whole country nceded. Presbyterians he did not regard as the most rapid people in the world; but, though slow, they were Sure. They were a united people. They had also numbers and wealth, and they held to. the doctrine of perseverance, and he felt persuaded that they-would yet'occupy this large country. The speaker was listened to with deep attention. He attracted much favor, both to himself and the Board, and it was deeply regretted that some things in the 'Board's present administration rendered it impossi ble for the Synod to commend it, unreserv edly and unconditionally, to the favor of the churches. A perseverance in what the Synod had twice previously spoken of as a needless expenditure of money, and the means used by, apart of the present admin istration to attain an end, made it necessary that a commendation, most cordial as to the Board's object and organization, should be accompanied by an intimation that ev ery thing is not satisfactory in the carrying on of affairs. Two years ago, the Synod mildly stated a grievance. Last year, a protest was adopted. Now, as an ultimate re= sort (as we hope,) it has been determined' to memorialize the General Assembly. The Synod's action in the case will appear in the Minutes, which we expect to issue in our next. The discussion of the subject was more earnest, full, and pointed than on any fomer occasion, but it was .fespectful to personal feelings, noble, Christian. The desire was most xnanifest to place the Board in such an aspect before the churches, that every Christian, the poor as well as the rich, might contribute cheerfully, under the full assurance of an effective,• wise, and duly economical administration. WEEK OF PRAYER A LETTER FROM DR. DifFE The following letter of Dr. Dirrx, en clSsing an invitation from the 'Cu'elate Missionary Conference to the Christian people of this country to unite with them in the observance of the first week of Janu ary next, as a season of prayer for the con- Version of the world, .has been kindly fur nished us by the gentleman to whom it was addressed, for publication, and will, we have no doubt, meet with a hearty response from all those who love the Lord Jesus and pray for the coming of his kingdom. Sim ilar calls was issued by the General Assembly, at their meeting in Rochester last Spring, by the _British Branch of the Christian Alliance and other religious bodies both in this country and Europe, showing what a deep , hold this measure has taken upon the hearts of God's people in all parts of the world. The suggestion, it will *be remembered, came originally from our breth 7 ren of the Lodiana mission. They had just passed through a season of great tribulation, and being deeply impressed with' the thought that no great progress could be made to ward the conversion of the world until the sympathies and prayers of God's people were heartily united in the work, they cere induced to send forth this call which has been so extensively and so heartily responded to, and which has already been productive of so many blessings, both to the Christian and heathen world. We trust it will; be come a consecrated season of prayer, and may be one of the chief means under the control of the Holy Ghost of arousing the Church to the great obligation of• spreading the knowipdge of the Gospel among all the nations of the earth. - We notice that the Calcutta Missionary Conference have designated the first day of January as the time of commencing this season of prayer, whereas the General As sembly have appointed the first Monday, (the 7th) and the l3ritish Branch of the Christian Alliance the first Sabbath of the month (the 6th.) As there is substantial agreement between the last two, we have no doubt our Calcutta brethren, as soon as they know of it will conform theirs accord ingly. The following is the action of the General Assembly, viz. : "Resoltied, That the Assem bly recommend to all the churches under their care, to observe the second week in January, 1864 commencing on Monday of that week, as a season of special prayer for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on,all flesh; that his Word may have free course and be glorified, that his king,dom may come, and hit, will be done on earth as in heaven ; and the Assembly affectionately invite all who love the Lord Jesus Christ, to unite With them in such •observance, at the time and for the objects specified." CALCUTTA, August 8, 1860. MY DEAR FRIEND :—The invitation, of which a few copies are forwarded to you by this mail, will, on- perusal,' explain itself. It is with much diffidence and humility that it ih isareld at all. But OhriStian Wee on the banks of the Hudson will rightly interpret and respond to , any emanation of Christian love from , the banks of the Gan ges. What, is Christian in Calcutta has alreldy been greatly moved and stirred by the wondrous manifestation of the Chris tian graces in New-York and the United States generally; and' if but, the fitintest reflection of tbe light and heat thus com municated to uer trom afhr, reach back across oceans and continents, we feel sure that the large and liberal hearts so rife among you, will not. despise it because of its tiny littleness and feebleness. It is not among. Europeans only that the influenee of the great American Revival has been felt. Many of the native Chris tians have been powerfully moved by it. Whenever authentic accounts of it began to reach me, I read extracts, with accom panying remarks, to assemblies of native Christians, others, l also, have been doing something of the same kind. In this way, Dr. Prime's excellent work on " The Power, of Prayer" has been singularly useful. It is one of the happy effects of teaching numbers of natives to read and understand the English, language, that rousing, books of this description can at once be put, into their hands, without 'waiting for the slow and tedious procesS =of translation ; and it, vast deal can be perused which it .would not be possible to translate at all. Living as we do,,surrounned bypich frowning; and` to human eye, such impregnable ditadels' of heathenism, we t feel, with an_ intensity which no language can express, that the one thing supremely needed by us is the outpouring of God's Holy. Spirit ; and that to obtain so signal.a favor the one grand instrumentality supremely. needed is the spirit of fervent, intense wrestling, unwea rying, persevering prayer. And what' a gloricua thing to think - of universal prayer —prayer simultaneous froni all God's people in all linds • what, a glow ought the consciousness of so sublime a spectacle to. enkindle in every bosom ani mated with the love of God and ;the love of Man; and burning with intense desire, for . the coming of the time when the earth, the whole earth 'shall be fdled with the glory of the great~ Jehovah. Iu eonne4cion *ith - this subject I cannot but recall to mind the loss which your con gregation—and not that only, but New - York, the United States, and I may truly add, the *hole Christian' world`"--hag sus tained in, the ,dePartare of your, revered pastor, Dr. AtExANDER ; a man whose re fined and well-cultivated mind and noble accomplishments would have enabled' him to dignify and adorn the *elks of highest literature, but who joyfully consecrated all his powers to the Crosa of Christ. Some of his treatises connected with the great revival have reached, and edified and glad dened souls on',the plains of India,, and here--,--even here; far, far away—some of us feel as if in him we had lost a father and a friend. lint he walked with' God, was ripe for glory, and, therefore,God took him. May his mantle fall on ,his,successor, and a dou ble portion of his.spirit on his children in the Lord. . Yours ,affectionately, ALEXANDER DUFF t INYIrATION, FRE& THE CALCUTTA MiSSIONARY CONFERENCE,TO UNITED. PRAYER, DURING THE -FIRST ,WEEK OF ZAHHARY 1861. "To all that in every pia& call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord, both theirs and'ours ; giace be unto you, and peace, from God our Father and from the'Lord Jesus Christ." • BELOVED BRETHREN suggestion from a &shut land - has reached this Con ference, which, fort the last thirty years, has "endeavored to;keep the, unity of the Spirit in the bond' of peace" among all evangelical laboreri3 in this ,part of India, to the effect, -that , we should venture (in imitation' of ouidear and faithful fellow workers at Lodiana last year) to invite the churches of our Lord and Saviour to join in a special service of prayer and supplica tion with thanksgiving, at the commence ment of 1861. „We, should have welcomed such an invi tationfrom others; but as it has been .re quested by some whom we love and honor. in the Lord, that it should be issued by us we, desire, in humility,, to make the proposal —leaving the 'result with Hint " of whom through whom, and •to whom, are all things!' The "signs'of the times" in which our lot is, cast; the wonderful openings for the Gospel in China, Japan, and. Central Afri ca; the restoration of peace to India; the remarkable movements in Italy and Turkey —the seats, respectively, of the Western and the Eastern Anti-Christian tyrannies ; the stirrings in many places among the scattered remnants of Israel, " : beloved for the Father's sake; the blessed and glorious revivals of religion in the United States of America, in Great Britain and Ireland,in Scieeden and other parts of the continent of Europe • have all combined in creating, in many hearts, the: joyful hope of the gra cious Lord's speedily accomplishing mighty works for the‘f,clory of his own great name. At " such a time:; as this," it-becomes his people devoutly' to remember that "His ways are higher than our ways,. and His thoughts than our thoughts;' to stir up themselves in faith to manifest, before the world, their lively concurrence in -the de velopment of. His designs and purposes, and to look for their full and'final consum mation in the sure and speedy fulfillment of all his 'promises. But, " for these things Ire will be inquired of ' by his believing people; and especially He will honor and answer fervent, united Peniel-like prayer. Yet that prayer must• be accompanied with lowly prostration and, deep humility of soul, for we are " not wor thy of the least of His• mercies;" with heart-felt confession of sin—all sin, private and public, special ' and general, secret as well as presumptuous—our personal or in dividual sin*--our sins as families—our sins as, nations--our sins as , churches, and with ardent thanksgivings for Past long-suffering, patience, faithfulness, and love, amid all our negligence and indifference, ; our forgetful ness and ingratitude, our provocations and affronts. . • Besides special subjects of prayer which may be, suggested by local events or peculiar passing emereeneies, there are certain great outstanding topics which will readily pre sent themselve‘to all who are waiting for the full answer : o the petttion, " Thy king dom come, thy mill be done .on earth, as it is in heaven "—rthe outpouring of the Holy Spirit on all teachers and of the Gospel in nominally Christian lands, on all evangelical missions and missionaries amour , the heathen, and on the circulation of the Bible, the indestructible Word ot the Liv ing God, with all Books and Tracts that are fraught with its spirit and its truth— on all means and agencies that have been instituted , for the saving instruction of the young, for the . revival of true .religion in individuals,tamilies and communities " pro fessieg godliness," and for the evangeliza tion of.the •sunken masses that live," with out God and 'without Christ," amid a mul tiplied exhibition of the ordinances of Gos pel grace and salvation—and, finally, onthe varied instrumentalities that are employed for the destruction and downfall of the gi gantic systems of Pagan idolatry and super , stition, of Anti-Christian error and delusion, and for the contemporaneous conversion of Israel and the Gentile nations—all of which„ in the vast aggregate of their tran scendent issues and outgoings, shall cause ‘‘ the glory of the. Lard to be revealed, that all flesh may see it together, as the . mouth of the Lord bath spoken." In these' and'such like . exercise of devo-, lion, we humbly-yet fervently desires to join with all that." fear the Lord and, speak- of tim one tb Wither," id every land; and in order that the union may be general, we ,send forth this timely notice, earnestly be seeching that no unworthiness on our part may prevent any of his people from agree ing with us in this proposed season of prayer and.supplication on each day from the Ist January, 1861, to the 7th inclusive. And God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause his face to shine upon us; that thy way may be known upon earth, thy saving health among all nations. Let the people praise. thee, 0 God; let all the peo ple praise thee. • let the nations be glad, and sing for joy; for thou shalt judge the people righteously, and govern the nations upon earth. Let the people praise thee, 0 God ; let all the people praise thee. Then shall the earth yield her increase; and God, even our own God, shall bless us. God-shall bless us ; and all the ends of the earth shall fear him." ' " Even so, come, Lord Jesus; come qttiek ly% , Amen." Signed by authority and on behalf of the Calcutta Missionary Conference. ALDXANDER DUEY, Chairman. D. EWART, Secretary. Calcutta, truly, 186 Q. EASTER! S=MARY. BOSTON AND NEW BOSTON is the head-quarters of Ameri can Unitarianism. . From it goes forth the principal contributions in aid of this de nomination, the leading preachers and lec turers, and the most influential literature. Consequently all Unitarian 'movements have, in a greater or less degree, respect to Boston." The Annual Convention was lately held at New-Bedford, Mass., when the Subjeot that has elicited So much" in terest for several years, again: came up, viz.: The decline of, Unitarianism in the East and the best means to be adopted for its spread in' the West. The thoughts ex pressed and the schemes proposed in this matter were wondrously various, showing an entire want, of any definite system or principle of Operation. Some supposed that if $50,000 could be expended, and fifty men employed every year in the West, great results would follow. But how to get either the money or the men. was not so very - apparent. Mr. Pierpont held that slavery was the great obstacle to raising money. Dr. Elliott, of St. Louis, seemed to have some proper apprehension of the difficulty, and, suggested that the preaching of the Cross • might be advantageous. Mr. stay expressed the belief that female preachers might do a great work in the desired Western field. At length it was proposed that each minister should give the avails of one Sabbath's preaching to the fund for Missionary purposes Mr. .Pierpont was willing to pledge himself to this if he could only get a pulpit topreach in I It seems that pulpit doors haie not been generally opened to this gentleman for some time. His intercourse with the spirits of the departed .has done but little to enlist the spirits of the living in his, be half. Mr. Nightingale was somewhat dis respectful, • and cruelly intimated' -that "most of 'the churches were not Christian churches—not precisely an aristocracy, but more properly, a snobocracy.” Mr. Wm. ,J. Clark was not a little disheartened. In his opiniOni neither ministry nor people showed much inclination to missionary labor. Mr. Hale suggested that the dif ficulty about raising funds lay in Unitarian Congregationalism,; a sort of Presbyteri anism would do this work much better. It was the opinienof Mr. Hill that the Ifni • tarian churches were cold, their atimation • Was suspended—they needed a revival. Mr. J. F. Clarke was crrieved at these con fessions.; - they • had better be restrained ; there had been already enough of self criticism., Dr. Putman referred to the late meeting of the American Board of Foreign' Missions, and advised a - closer imitation of other denominations in their modes of raising money for benevolent and religions objects. This entire discussion, conducted for the most part by men of acknowledged ability and enlarged culture; is very humiliatincr and at the same time very instructive. It is humiliating to see . • such men giving vent to such puenhties. And it is instructive, because it shows that when the true doctrine thneross is • • taken away from a people, all true life and spiritual energy depart. Unitarianism must restore Christ to his' rightftil place, in their system, or increasing weakness and final extinction are inevitable. •• At • a UNIVERSALIST CONVENTION, re - wady held in 13'oston, Mr. Skinner, one of the ablest preachers of the denomination, said that after twenty years' labor,; he' had not been able to induce the members of the Society to join the Church. The Apos tles of Jesus Christ found no difficulty, even though persecution even unto death, stood in the way. Evangelical ministers have found no such diffi.culty. What is the matter with Universalism.? Why, it is'so obviously of the world that its worldly converts see no diffierence, - and therefore see no sense in joining a church. At the conclusion of the recent PESTI- vAL of the American Board of Commis- sioners for Foreign Missions, Rev. Dr. Anderson invited to his house fifty-five missionaries who had attended the session of the Board. While at his house these missionaries repeated the first sentence of the Lord's Prayer in twenty different-lan guages. • THE FOLLOWING which we take from the Christian Intelligencer is worthy of being read and remembered. Mr. Cheever is a brother of the noted Dr. Oheever of Nevr-York. Dr. Bacon and Mr. Wolcott are the ones who lead in the crusade against the American Tract Society at the Anniversaries, because it would do nothing in the matter of slavery. And Dr. Tyng is thb man who so abundantly denounc ed that Society, because of this silence: During the meeting of the American Board in Boston, Rev, Henry T. Cheerer offered resolu tions condemnatory of the slave-trade. Among those who opposed the introduction of those res olutions were Rev. Mr. Bacon and Rev. Mr. Wolcott. As those gentlemen were foremost in • the attempt to force similar resolutions upon the American Tract Society, it is to be presumed ' that they have either changed their opinions as to the propriety of insisting upon their paisage by voluntary Societies, or else they think it makes a great difference whether they are pre sented to a catholic Society or to a Congregational body. Be this as it may, it is at least, plain that if they were honest in refusing admission to the American Board, of resolutions touching the slave-trade, they had no right to demand that the. American Tract Society should entertain anything of the kind. We have charged the opponents of the Tract Society with being governed by‘ sectarian and factional motives and feelings. If the charge has at any time, been deemed severe, it was never , proved to be more so, than now, when sive.funi Dr. Tyng; in the Epistoler:el Convention, and'Dr. Ba con and Rev. Mt-Wolcott in the Al3ol'loll. /Nord, advocating precisely that course of action which they condemned the Tract Society for pursuing. Certainly there was far more reason for asking the Episcopal diocese j which is a purely ecclesi astical body, and the American Board, which hag missions in Africa, to pronounce upon the char acter of the slave-trade, than to ask the Tract Society to perform this questionable duty. Hence forth, the consistency of certain gentlemen may be required in proof of their "sincerity.. At all events, we expect the public to remember that Ara. Tyng and Bacon, and Mr. Wole.ott areoppos ed to resolutions about slaikery in their own church bodies. . The FRIENDS OF FOREIGN MISSIONS will find with satisfaction that the Vermont : churches have this year made an advance. of forty-four per cent. This is ten per cent. more than the proportion of advance needed by the Board from all its patrons, to re move the debt, and meet the expenses of the year. The whole amount of the present missionary year is $16,815A2. EIGHTEEN MINI:MED copies of Prof Phelps' " Stall Flour," have recently been ordered for gratuitous distributiim in An dover and North Andover, Mass., and sev eral hundred have, in like manner, been furnished to students in Amherst and Williams' Colleges. Since its publication in January last, more than thirty thousand copies have been sold. MESSRS. GOULD & LINCOLN, of Boston, announce a new work on " Ecclesiastical Law," by Edivard Buck, Esq., of that city. It will exhibit the legal relations of minis ters, churches, church officers and members, religious Societies, parishes, and councils. NEXYORK. The excitement-occasioned by the visit of the PuxNcx WALEs has died out. It is now talked of as a thing of the past. And metropolitan extravagance, fashion, and folly quietly await some new sensa tion, a thing not likely to be, long delayed. In the meantime commerce, trade, and 'en terprise, are as active and untiring as ever. Large vessels, immense warehouses, 'and palatial stores are continually in progress. On . Broadway, notwithstanding the millions already expended in building, great-chang es are made every few months. Mu. A. T. STEWART, the Dry Goods Crec.sus, has purchased the block bounded by Broadwa: nd Fourth Avenue, and Ninth and Tenth. Streets, and within the past two weeks a few of the buildings on the site have been demolished, preparatory to the erection of some noble iron stores.. There are to be in all twenty-one stores, five sto ries high, aside from basement and subeel lay, covering the entire bleak. The cost is estimated at $750,000. They are intended for leasing, as Mr. Stewart has no intention of removing his own business from y his present location. DL CUMMING'S NEW WORK haS been secured by Messrs. Rudd & Carleton; who will issue it in uniforin style with his Great Tribulation to which indeed it is connected by its subject matter. It- is entitled Re demption Draweth, Nigh,; or, The Great Preparation 4 and will include the two ser mons lately delivered with so much eclat at the French< Protestant chapel, the " Ora toire," at Paris—" The Future of the Earth," and "The Future of England.." Whatever may be thought of Dr. CrOD- Tiling's theories, his own sincerity in their belief is manifest, as the near approach of the time be now fixes for, the consummation of all thinn-1867—will soon experi mentally test their truth. SHELDON & CO. are preparinv a- large edition- of "Everett's Washington," to be illustrated and printed on toned paper. Thee same house also have the following works in press. The second volume of the new edition of " Milman's History of Latin Christianity;" the second and last volume of the . " Annotated Paragraph 'Bible ;" the "Southern Colonies," being. Volume 111. of" " Abbott's American History; "A Higher Arithmetic," by A. Schuyler; and an "Excursion to the Orkney Islands," by Jacob Abbott. DR. CREEVER'S CHURCH is in a very sad condition just now. Meeting after meeting is held. Party spirit runs, high. elim inations and recriminations are made by each party against the other. The police are in attendance to preserve the peace. Forty four of the leading members have published a declaratron' that they are not paupers, that their church has no need of foreign aid, and urging British Christians to decline making contributions upon the Solicitations of Dr. Cheever. The state of the church is pitiable, .and that of Dr. Cheever is no less so. THE WANT OP CHURCH ACCOMMODA TIONS in the lower part of the city is be ginning to awaken great anxiety among Christians. FOr it must not be supposed that by the growth of the upper part of the city, the lower part is depopulated: Fashion and wealth move up town, but people of moderate means cannot do so. Nor are the inhabitants of the lower wards composed altogether of the vicious, by any means, but a large population of great respectability is also found here, as is evident to every vis itor. Yet it is a note-worthy fact that in the lower part of the Fifteenth ward, there are now no less than five church edifices for sale. in the wards below, the number of churches have been continually diminish ing—so that now in the First there is but one, Trinity; in the 'second but three; in the Third but two, St. Paul's, and the Ro man Catholic, St. Peter's; in the Fourth but three; in the Seventh, with a popula tion of 35,000, but six, and they so small as to be able to accommodate only 5,000 per sons ; and the Eleventh, with a population of 80,000, has church accommodations for only ten thousatd. During the last twenty years, thirty-etoo churches have been sold out below Grand Street, and no others have been erected in their places, though, not withstanding all the encroachments or business, the resident population below that line is now, far larger than then. Of course it is understood that the lower wards are not specimens of' the remainder of the eity-r.the great upper half, where the churches have increased so that they now number over three hundred. ,But the fact that in so large a section of the city the tendency is so continuously toward the worse, ought to arrest attention. On Monday evening the congregation of the Brick chuOch presented a service of silver to their venerated pastor, Ruv. Du. SPRING, on the occasion of the fiftieth an niversary of his pastorate over the church. Addresses were delivered by Mr. Horace Holden, Daniel Lord, Dr. Humphrey, Dr. Krebber, Dr. Murray, Rev. Dr. Spring' and others, and it was an occasion of special in_ terest to a large congregation. The service consisted of twelve silver goblets and two large silver salvers. On one of the latter is an engraving of the old Brick Chard , and on the other an engraving of the n ew edifice. They each bear the following in scription Presented to Rev. GARDINER SPRING, D. D., on the 60.ru ANNIVERSARY of his Pastorate over the Brick Church, August, 1860. The address of the venerable Dr. Spi n ,. was very appropriate and very touching. PHILADELPHIA. M.R. Goma has delivered three lectures on Total Abstinence; under the auspices of the Young Men's Christian Association, to crowded assemblies. He still retains all the intense earnestness and wonderful dra. matic power of former years. He gains the attention of his hearers at once and keep s it to the end. He employs but little ar gument, and gives but little instruction, but in anecdote, imagery, and pathos, he is exhaustless. It is certainly high time for something efficient to be done in this cause. THE SYNOD OE PHEGADELPHIA. cor e . meneed its annual session at Germantown, on Thursday of last week. Rev. Dr. Grier, of Mifflinburg, Penna., preached the open ing sermon. This Synod is the oldest and largest in the United States. Its organ ization dates from the year 1717, seventy two years before the organization of the General Assembly; and although it has been several times divided, and its limits much abridged by the formation of new Synods, it now contains two hundred churches, and 195 ministers, in the States of Delaware and Maryland, and, with the exception of the Presbytery of Carlisle, all the Old School Presbyterian churches in Pennsylvania, from the Delaware to the Eastern vale of the Alleghenies. The Rev. W. P. Breed was chosen moderator. The Rev. Dr. Lowrie, of New York, made an interesting address in behalf of the cause of Foreign Missions. When this address was concluded, on motion of the Rev. Dr. Dickey, the cause was commended to an increased interest in the prayers, and labors and contributions of God's people. The Rev. Mr. Fish, a representative of the Free Church of France, was introduced to the Synod by Dr. Boardman. He pre sented some cogent statements in favor of effort to strengthen and extend evangelical religion in his native country. The cause was commended to the churches. Dr. Junkin presented to the Synod Rev. Mr. Irwin, of the lowa Indian Mission, who was listened to with much pleasure in the remarks which he offered. The Rev. Dr. Maigrave, with his usual ability, presented the claims of the Do mestic Missionary Board. The Brainerd church. of Easton, was chosen for the next meeting. An overture was presented from the Pres bytery of Philadelphia, asking the Synod to divide that Presbytery, and ti :e request was granted. = „Egcli:RlSsTicAL. • 'ff4rl 'Wu • , 7 Rev. T.B. LEA was installed pastor over Mt. Taboit i ,4 fl utat on the Bth inst. Sermon by the Rev:Wilgam McMichael. Charges by Rev. C. P: "'Cummings. Prospects good. Mr. Leason's Post Office address is changed from Leechburg, Pa., to Brockville, Pa. For the Presbyterian Banner. Tho Choctaws Starving ! MESSRS. EDITORS is probably un known to the Christian public that famine with all its horrors is.upon the poor Indi ans. The South-west generally has ex perienced unwonted drought; so that bread is scarce, and in many localities the people are in great want. But in the Indian Territory, the destitution is appall ing! By letters received from my son and his wife, I learn that many of the Choctaws are in danger of famishing for want of food. "They are starving now," writes my son. The Only subsistence of many is wild roots and berries. For two or three years their corn crop, (their principal de pendence,) has beettshort. But this year it failed entirely. Acorns too have rioted. Game has became so scarce that they can not depend upon it much more than we could in' Western Pennsylvania. They have nothing left but their cows. Some of them subsist wholly on the milk of these. We have sympathised with the Chiniquy Colony, and with the Syrians. The poor Choctaws are less able to obtain supplies than either. Many of them are true Christians. Shall they starve to denth? It seems to me that an offering more ac ceptable to our Saviour could not be made than to send them relief. " I was an hun gered, and•ye gave me meat." "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto the least of these any brethren, ye have done it unto ine." Who will act the part of the good Samari tan? -'lf not sooner, the day of Thanks giving would be a suitable time for benevo lent hauds to bring their gifts. If trans mitted to the Mission. Bow, New-York city, the contributions will find their way to the sufferers. LOYAL YOUNG. PEItSONAL. The gel'. W. Prettyman, Superintendent of the Methodist - Missions in Bulgaria, writes from. Shumla, Bulgaria, dated September "In a letter received a few days Sine° from our excellent Ambassador, Col. Wil liams, he informs us with grateful joy, that of all the numerous American mission aries seattiered through Syria, in cities, towns, and in many of the larger Nillages, not one has suffered personal violence from the Druses in the late massacres in Syria! Resignation.—Hon. Israel Washburn, who has, been elected Governor of Maine, has"' signed his seat in Congress, to take effect on the first of January. The vacancy Will be filled by special election probably oa the day of the presidential election. By a strange vicissitude, General Calia , '• who was shot for invading Costa Rica, suf fered his execution at the foot of the very monument erected to his honor, in the Pla za at Punta Arenas, for his many services to the country. Ifidente Pfeiffer, the celebrated traveller, bas left in manuscript, an autobiography , and an account of her last voyage to _Nada ga,icar, - Which is about to be published b' her son, at Vienna. Lord Beaumont, a Roman Catholic and a member.of one of the oldest Catholic fami lies in England, was received into the Priit estant Episcopal church at Leeds, Eng land, last month. • 'The Postmaster-General has extended the maitcontraet from St. Joseph to Salt Lake Cityovith the present contractors, the Cen tral. Overland Mail Company, W. 11. litu 3 ' sell;' president:;. This insures the colitis tlane4 of the Pony Express.