resbßitrian PITTSBURGH, SATURDAY, DRUBBER Ib, 1860. Sir Having purchased for our office the "Right" to use Dick's Accountant and Dispatch Patent, all, or nearly all, of our subscribers now have their papers addressed to them regularly by a singularly unique machine, which .fastens on the white margin a small colored " address stamp," or Label, whereon appears their name Fla int!, ivinted, followed by the date up to which they have paid for their papers—this being authorised by au Act of [lngress. The date will always be advanced on the receipt of subscription money, in exact accordance with the amment so received, and thus he an ever-ready and valid receipt; securing to every one, and at all times, a perfect knowledge of his newspaper ac count, so that if any error is made he can immediately de tect It and have it corrected—a honm alike valuable to the publisher and subscriber, as it must terminate all painful misunderstandings between them respecting accounts, and Thus tend to perpetuate their important relationship. %IP Those in arrears will please remit. The State of the Country, concerns every Christian. Knowledge is indispensable to prayer, as well as to wise action. Read the Message, the letter to a Member of the Cabinet, and the letter of J. R. W. Western Theological Setuinary.—The stu dents of this Institution have invited the Rev. CHARLES WADSWORTH, D.D., pastor of the Arch Street Presbyterian church, Philadelphia, to deliver the Annual Ad dress at the close of the session. Concert of Prayer.—We invite attention to the request which we this week publish, of the Pastors and Seminary Professors in Pittsburgh and Allegheny. God is the hearer of prayer. And great promises are given to united prayer, and to earnestness and importunity. In this day of need, let ministers and people pray. The rtails.—Never has it been our for tune to have so many complaints made about the arrival of our paper at its places of destination. We can only say, the fault is not ours. The Banner is placed in the ttsburgh post office with the utmost reg ularity, and at the same time as formerly. And our Postmaster, Mr. DUNN, has been uniformly so obliging, that we cannot be lieve the fault is in him; but that there is gross negligence or inefficiency somewhere, cannot be doubted. SYNOD OF SOUR CAROLINA. This Synod met in Charleston, Novem ber 28th. The condition of the country would, of course, be a topic of considera tion ; for however much our brethren in that region may oppose an ecclesiastical notice of State affairs, the present ,crisis, with them, affects interests too important to be ignored. Rev. W. B. YATES, seconded by Rev. STATES LEE, offered a paper stating that the action of 1818 relative to slavery, re mained unrepealed by the General Assem bly, and that the North had s'howu its fanaticism in the election of ABRAHAM LINCOLN to the Presidency, and that fidelity t 3 the South required a separation from the Northern churches. It recommended as tbllows: Believing, as we do, that fidelity to the South requires us to dissolve the connexion with the Northern portion of the Presbyterian Church, therefore be it Resolved, That the period has arrived when it becomes the duty of every minister and elder South to let his position be known. Resolved, That fidelity to the South requires us to sever all connexion with the Northern por tion of the General Assembly. Resolved, That we recommend to all Pre_sbvte rielfferscrwiEffGiii—SylicTdro—lik-e—steps to their connexion with the General As sembly. Resolved, That a Committee be appointed to correspond with Synods and Presbyteries South, with the view of forming a Southern General As sembly. This paper was, on motion of Rev. Dr. ADGER" laid on the table, by a vote of seven ty seven to twenty-one; and the subject was referred to a Committee of nine. The re port of this committee was adopted unan imously, as follows: ' " This Synod is one of thirty-three, which com pose the Old School Presbyterian Church in this country. From our brethren of the whole Church, annually assembled, we have received nothing but justice and courtesy. The act of 1818 was adopted by the South of that day as well as by the North, and has since been virtually rescinded. "Our General Assembly in 1845, in Cincinnati, took action with almost entire unanimity, which has been ameptable to the South, inasmuch as it declared that they had no authority to make any laws on the subject of Slavery, not found in the Word, of God, and which has resulted in a bar [Deny of our whole Church on this subject, un broken in the least degree to the present time. "It is not for us, then, to inaugurate as a Synod, any movement toward a separation from the Northern branch of our Church. This is not the time for such a movement, which would be in advance of the action of the State. Nor are we the proper body to take such a step. It can only begin in rho Church Sessions, where Presbyte rian sovereignty lies, and must issue forth through the Presbyteries. "With regard to the political duties of our churches as composed of citizens of this Common wealth, the Synod of South Carolina is not called upon as a Synod, even in the present extremity, to give advice or instruction. Political intermeddling by professed ministers of the Gospel, and espe cially of bodies of professed ministers, has been fraught with evil for many years to our country, and has contributed, perhaps, more than any other cause to bring the country to its present condition. This Synod, composed of ministers and ruling elders, would not now be found imi tating tbe,bad example so often set us by eccle siastical bodies at the North. But there is now a grave and solemn question before the people of this State, affecting its very life and beint , as a State, and that question, of course, has its reli gious aspects and relations, upon which this body is perfectly competent to speak, and if its deliv erance therefore should have a political bearing, that is a result for which we cannot be held re sponsible. " There is involved, at this immediate junc ture, a duty to God who gave'us our rights—a duty to our ancestors, whose blood and sufferings procured them for us—a duty to our children, whose precious inheritance we may not waste nor defile—and a duty to our very slaves, whom men that know them not, nor care for them as we do, would take from our , protection. The Synod has no hesitation, therefore, in expressing the belief that the people of So uth Carolina are now sol emnly called on to imitate their Revolutionary forefathers, and stand up for their rights. We have an bumble and abiding confidence, that that God, whose truth we represent in this conflict, will be with us, and exhorting our Churches and people to put their trust in God, and go forward in the solemn path of duty which his Providence opens before them, we, Ministers and Elders of the Presbyterian Church in South Carolina Synod assembled, would give them our benedic tion, and the assurance that we shalt fervently and unceasingly implore for them the care and protection of Almighty. God." This action of the Synod will be noted with deep interest. We rejoice that they were not 'precipitated into divisive meas ures. If they feel it necessary to leave us, let the separation be deliberate and frater nal. On one reason given for not separa ting from us, the brethren, will find that there is a difference of sentiment. They may regard the action of 1845 as "virtu ally rescinding" that of 1818. Others may think differently. The Assembly of 1846,. regarded the two acts as consistent and -harmonious. That Assembly adopted without a division, the following,: .Rerolved, That in the judgment of this House, the tietion.of the General Assembly of 1845 was not intended to deny or rescind the testimony of ten uttered , bY the General Assemblies previous to that dote. This, we believe, is still the opinion of tbe past body of the Northern nintrett REV. FRANCIS HERRON, B.D. Some three weeks ago we announced the return of this venerable and beloved ser vant of the Lord Jesus Christ, from his Summer residence with a daughter at Tar rytown, New-York, to his well-knoWn home in this city, in excellent health and spirits. Warmly was he welcomed; old and young repaired to his house to take again the aged patriarch by the hand. But scarcely had that number of our paper reached its readers before disease seized upon him, which at once prostrated him beyond the reach of recovery. The most careful nurs ing, the most considerate attention, and all the skill of the physicians were in vain. He gradually sunk until the evening of Friday the 6th instant, when he calmly fell asleep in Jesus, having accomplished an honored pilgrimage of more than eighty six years on earth. The Rev. FRANCIS HERRON, D.D., was born in Shippensburg, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, June 28th, 1774; graduated at Dickinson College, Pa., 1794; pursued his theological studies under the care of the Rev. ROBERT COOPER, D.D. ; was licensed to preach the Gospel by the Pres bytery of Carlisle in the year 1800, and shortly afterwards accepted a call to Rocky Spring church, Franklin Co., Pa. In April, 1811, he received a call from the First Presbyterian church of Pittsburgh; removed to this city in May of that "year; and on the 18th of the next month he was received by the Presbytery of Redstone, and formally accepted the call. The site for the First Presbyterian church was given by the descendants of Was. PENN. The first Presbyterian preach ing in Pittsburgh, of which any account is given was by the Rev. Messrs. BEATTY and DUFFIELD, in 1766, under the appoint ment of the Synod of New-York end Phil adelphia. The late Rev. JOHN MCMIL LAN, D.D. cluing his first visit to the West in 1775, preached here on the Second Sab bath of September. The Rev. Mr. SMITH was sent by the Presbytery of Redstone, to preach here, on the Fourth Sabbath of August, 1784. In the following year, or about that time, the First church was or ganized, and the Rev. SAMUEL BARR was recognized as pastor without any regular installation, and he continued in this rela tion till June, 1789. For a number of years the congregation was supplied with preaching by appointments 'of Presbytery and by licentiates.