Irtsbotrian Nnutr, P/TTSBURUN, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1861. GENERAL ASSEMBLY. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America will hold its next meeting in the First Presbyterian Church in the city of Peoria, Illinois, at eleven o'clock A. M. on Thursday, the 21st of May, and will be opened with a sermon by the Rev. Charles C. Beatty, D.D. I Moderator of the last Assembly. say. The CessitAttee of Commissions will meet in the Lebtllre•'toom of • the church on the Wednesday evening preceding, at eight o'clock, to receive commissions, and on Thursday morn ing, the day of the meeting, at nine o'clock, for the same purpose. ALEXANDER T. MCGILL, Stated Clerk. WILLIAM E. SCHENCK, Permanent Clerk. The Art of Preaching.—For some excel lent thoughts on this noblest of all arts, see the letter of our European corres pondent. A Name Wauted.—We have a letter from Illinois, enclosing two dollars for the Banner. It . has neither name nor Post Office address, and the Postmaster's stamp is illegible. Prof. Green on the Prntateneh.—We give, on our first page a notice of this excellent work. It is from the pen of an esteemed correspondent. Ordinarily our book notices are from our own pen. A kaftan preparing for the ministry, and who has a family to support, desires emplcyment in or near Pittsburgh or Alle gheny City. He has had experience in teaching, writing, and other labor. Ad dress " R. T.," box 486, Allegheny Post Office. The Next General Assembly.-- Stated Clerks of Presigteries, and of other bodies sending delegates to the Assembly, are re quested to send in the names of delegates immediately on their appointment, with the Post Office address of each one. i3y so doing you will assist and oblige us. Address J. BOYD HEADLEY, GEO. H. MOILVAINE, for Committee of Arrangements. Peoria, April 4th, 1863. The Fast and the Presbyteries.—Several of the Presbyteries have their meetings ap pointed for the week in which the Fast day will occur. A venerable brother sug gests that the day should not, on• this ac count, be changed. .In some easel, though the pastor may necessarily be absent, another minister may be obtained, to con duct the worship, and when a minister can not be had, the elders may lead the exer cises of, the sanctuary. Let the Clay, and the same day, be observed throughout the hind, by all the people. The Christian Commission.—The Pitts burgh Branch of the U. S. Christian-Com mission held a meeting of much interest on the evening of the 16th inst., in the Penn. Street Methodist church. Addiesses were delivered by Rev. GEORGE. A. MIN- Qum, a Delegate from the Parent Society; by Rev. S. J. WlLson, D.D., of the Wes tern Theological Seminary; by Rev. W. A. PASSAVANT, D.D., of the Lutheran Church; and by the President, Rev. H. JOHNSON. The interest taken by, our citizens in the welfare of the soldiers, both as to their temporal and spiritual welfare, indicates the happy influence of the Gospel in Pitts burgh. NeW ClUttch.—On Tuesday evening, the 14th inst., a new chireh war organized in Allegheny City, embracing forty com municating members and three ruling el ders. The people had belonged, mostly, to the Central church. For some months the enterprise had been contemplated, and wor ship had been conducted in the Seminary Hall. A..very fine lot for the site of an edifice has been obtained by the generosity of that valuable citizen, Gen. Wst. Ens - =SOIL The name of the organization is The'North 'Church. The prospect is'fair for a large congregation, and great useful ness A. CHURCH FOR' ONE DAL That regiment of veterans, the 10th Pciumylvania Reserves, supposing them selves to he 'stationed, for a. time, near Washington, had got diligently to work • to prepare a . place for worship. The chaplain, in a private letter, thus speaks of the Te ak : * * * " Our church was finished on yesterday, and occupied to-day and this evening. The men worked at it yesterday and put.it in nice order. It will seat about ninety, and was well filled in three minutes after 'the church call was beat. A more attentive audience cannot be found any where. I preached very plainly. They appeared delighted to have such a nice place to meet in; and I •assure you I felt the emotions and tittered the words - of grat-' iinde to God last night and"'this morning, fOr this favor. I took a walk in the woods this pleasant morning and • had happy &tights of the future in our log-cabin church, having had so much to encourage me in lily personal intercourse with the men lately. Probably you can conceive of my feelings when, on my return to my 'teht,`One 'of our active'men called to return Amok: :te` the library, and said, 'We have orders to be -ready to move to-morrow mornings': 'I was terribly cut down by this news but it is - so. And it is but a Ample of soldier life. God's ways are not 'our ways in the army any more than, elaiwhire. We have been waiting and working to get this house, and now 'before •sjo'had pie worshipped his holy: name in ii°we are' ordered. to leave it. But he has tie to haVe one good day's use of it, and as I said to the men, if when we meet together again, as , we shall- at the judgment-seat .of phrist, it shall be foind that ( .this day's service has brought one pod*, lost sinner to Christ, or induced one a:FAAsalvation, it will be seen not to have Veen' labor and money spent in vain. One or the' men said this evening : I don't grera thiliglii3 'have dorie. lam glad it iiitefinialied'and used" evenfor one day.' *''' * .9nite a number of themen are seriously' seekhigiilvation."- • • HUMILIATION, FASTING, PRAYER The President of the United States has set apart the last Thursday of April (30th inst.) as a day of Humiliation, Fasting, and Prayer. The Proclamation was issued at the request of the Senate, which is the representative of the States in their organ ized capacity. It may hence be considered as a distinct National recognition.of the being and providence of God, of his justice and placability. The sentiments of the Proclamation are excellent, and we trust it will be read in all the churches, on the day appointed. In its language it comes not quite up to the Christian standard. It clearly recognizes the Divine origin of the " Holy Scriptures ;" but it mentions not the name of Jesus Christ, nor does it direct the mind to his mediation. The people are to approach God, each congre gation in accordance with their own faith. Christians will pray, having faith in Him who is " the way, the truth, and the life." The Proclamation was published in the Banner of April Bth. Christian ministers will have a very im portant duty to perform, in directing the sentiments and leading the devotions of the assembled people, on the day appoint ed; Christian editors have their service to render, in 'preparing the public for the oc casion. We attempted a commencement of this service when wepublished the call, and would now further prosecute our task. In speaking of public humiliation, a dif ficulty meets us, at the very outset. How shall we attain to the thing enjoined ? It is not a "voluntary humility," that is, a mere volition, a form, a ritual, a ceremony. There must be a sense of sin, a deep con trition, a confession, a justifying of God, a deprecation of the Divine anger. How' shall a people reach this depth of emotion, this sense of ill-desert, this intense desire for mercy ? Not by the demand of a ruler, nor yet alone by the contemplation of dis tress and danger. The preparation of heart to approach God, is, one of God's gifts ; a gift of grace.' How helpless poor sinners are ! They need grace 'to ask for grace. May God bestow the needed grace upon his needy people! It is a deep shame, an indelible disgrace to this nation, that' we have a civil war, that is, a war among ourselves. Enemies from without might attack us in their own wickedness, either from a desire to plunder, or because they hated. our virtues. But in a civil war, the wickedness is within—the hatred, the provocation, the spirit of re venge, the desire for plunder, the mutual, slaughter. We boast that we have the best government on earth; but how can it be the best, both theoretically and_ practi cally, when under it, such a war has sprung up 7 Is the family well governed, where there are bickerings, and reproaches, and provocations, till one-third thereof rises in rebellion; and the remaining two-thirds denounce, reproach, and vilify each, other as reptiles, and demons, and a loathing; and so cherish dissentions as that the head is able neither to command pea7ce, nor stay the destroyer's hand ? And what is to be come of that family? Now, we have thought, and still think, that our government is, theoretically, the best on earth. Under it, 'God long blessed this nation beyond all other nations. Why_ then has he given us up to one of the deepest of calamities? Why does blood shed by the hand of brothers, flow in riv ers, year after year. Why this wasting of property ? Why this accumulation of debt.? Why the home divisions, the reproaches and revilings of each other, and the ill' success of our arms? Has' God given us over to an invincible folly, leading to de struction % We hope yet to discover that .he has not forsaken the land. We trust still in his mercy. .Let us look at our sins, in all their numbers and aggravation, and confess with true sorrow ; and let us con template the justness of God's displeasure, and the imminence of the danger, and the fearfulness of his wrath, that we may pray with true desire. Of the duty of fasting we have several, times spoken. Fasting should be real, that we may feel our feebleness and dependence, but not carried to such an extreme as to disqualify us for duties which'God require& May the Lord give to his ministers words of reproof and instruction, and bring us all to a true and deep humiliation, that in earnestness of soul ministers and people may confess sin, and plead for pardon, and , obtain the blessing of national peace, to the Divine glory through Christ Jesus. THE WILBEEFORCES. WILLIAM WILBER.FoucE, of England, the philanthropist; was ' an Evangelical Christian, and one of the most eminently good men of his day. But, in one thing he failed greatly thatis, in the religious education of his sons. Alas, hoi often do pious parents come short of securing the covenant blessing to their offspring qod is faithful, but they are ,faithless. They omit the seal; or, they affix the - seal but neglect to keep their vow. The medium of blessing they emit, and hence 'do not reap the promised benefits; the due use : .of the means being a part of the contract. If child is really trained in the way in which : he should go, there is no reason to doubt but* that, he Willabide therein. God is good.. A eorrespondent , to the New-York' Meth . odist, writing from Paris, says': ‘! By the way, I told you a fee? weeks ago, that the Tiin6l, in',its notice. of the Exeter Hall demonstration, asked,' Where are the Niriinxicsoiona 7', The ingenious and ingenuous journalist 'meant thereby to insinuate that :the WititERPOROES- are really representatives of their honored father's opinions, and that if the Atherican . Government were'really engaged in putting' down slavery, they would be among the foremoit to'praise and support it. But alas'! fat the honored name. The Wit- IiERFOROES of the'ikeeene day are no more like the man who has made' that nand) im mertali in atita-slavery sentament, than in religious opinions. PRESBYTERIAN BANNER.---WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1863. FORCE was an Evangelical Christian—a Methodist, in fact, in the language of his day, which called every earnest• and prac tical Christian a Methodist. Of his four ions, SAMUEL, Bishop of Oxford, (com monly known as Slippery Sam,) is the only one that remains in the Church of Eng land; and be, as you are well aware, leas gone just as close to Rome as he could without sacrificing his high position. Another son, formerly Archdeacon in the Church of England, joined the" Papists, and died at Rome five years ago, while pre paring for orders. Another gave up a benefice in the Church of England, but being a man of family, he could not become a Romish priest, and is now editor of the Weekly Register, a Romanist journal. The eldest son has just now followed his brothers in apostasy from Protestantism; his perversion was yesterday announced in the Monde, a Romanist journal of Paris. The question of the Times, 4 Where are the WILBERFORCES 7 1 is answered." The answer is a sorry one. It reveals an awful defection. We put it on record- as a warning to parents. THE BATTLE AT THE ENTRANCE OF CHARLESTON HARBOR. This contest, of April 7th, is variously criticised. One newspaper correspondent speaks of the failure as due entirely to the timidity or fearfulness of Admiral DUPONT. He writes to the Baltimore American, and is extensively copied. He says : " On the:morning of ;the Bth, after the fight, the.seven Monitors were all examined, and found in as good condition for service as they were upon going into action on, the 7th.. Half-past one o'clock was the hour fixed upon fora renewal of the bombardment, and the officers of the different vessels were all in readiness and most of them anxious for a renewal of the conflict. The order for the movement was momentarily waited for, but the order.never came. At 3 o'clock it was ascertained throughout the fleet that the Admiral had decided that 6 .Charleston is impregnable, that Sumpter cannot be taken with the vessels and appliances placed at his disposal by the Government.' " The reason why Charleston has not been destroyed by the iron-clad fleet, even if Sumpter had not been taken, is the dreadful fear that overshadowed the fleet authorities, of rebel torpedoes?' Two days after the battle; he writes " Last evening I visited the iron-clads on the steam-tug Dandelion, and a more brok en-hearted set of men I never had the mis fortune to encounter. Each man appeared to regard himself as personally disgraced by the act, of his superiors, ancl aboard the Ironsid es the state of feeling among the younger officers and crew was that of su preme disgust". A correspondent of the . Boston Journal takes a view of the case very similar to the above. - The correspondent of the H. 1. Times, on the contrary, so describes the battle, that the editor says of it : It added to the glory of our navy, and involved no serious loss either of life or material. In the annals of naval' warfare, no instance can be found of a serious attack upon a place a hundredth part so formida ble. Considering the tremendous calibre an'd scientific construction of the guns, and the fact that three hundred .of them-simul taneously belched their concentric fire upon the little fleet at the distance of only fa* hundred yards, and considering, too, the infernal agents of destruction that lay he neath the water, as Well as the curbs and the snares and the traps,. all former at tempts. of the kind now , seem but mere child's play. Such a Titanic job was nev er before undertaken on the planet. It is almost a miracle that it was carried so far with so little harm, And we have greater reason to rejoice over the escape than to grieve over the failure." - • This is, dclubtless, somewhat' extrava gant; but still it is most manifest that the task entrusted to Admiral DUPONT . was.ut terly beyond the power of the foree with which he was furnished. He had all told, but thirty-two guns, while the enemy had over three hundred which could bear upon him. Then, the enemy's protection in forts and casemated batteries was so com plete that all our firing, for two hours, killed , but one of his men. and wounded a few others. Also the channel by which our vessels advanced was so narrow and tortuous that they could not be manceuveied, and some of them could not be got into po sition ; and . their way was blocke4:l up by piles, cribs, chain - cables, and rafts, so that they were checked right under the guns of the'principal forts. The Admiral did well in bringing off'his vessels, losing only one of them. • It is stated that the rebels fired over three thousand five hundred rounds of ponderous 'shot at our iron -clads, and that ours threw one hundred and fifty , balls at the rebel works. Much damage is said, to have been done to Fort Sumpter; but there was no approximation toward its destruc tion ; and then it, was only one of a num her. And if our vessels had got within the harbor, they.would then.have met with still greater obstacles than what were found at its*entrance. The lronsides suffered the loss o£ one of her port-doors, and had a.few.shota in„ her forward part where she was not plated. The Keokrick was a less substai , ttial ves sel than the others. She 'drew 'less,iater and ran closer to the enemy. She Was struck ninety times, and was completely riddled, theshot from rifled guns piercing her turrate, and also her - hull both 'above and below the water surface. She, retired from the fight, and sunk the nest,morning. The ilTahant received thirty wounds, some of them bad fractures .of the 'deck and sides , below and above the water line. The pilot house was struck, and a bolt started which : wounded the Captain and two men, one of them fatally. The Passaic received -about• the same number of ,ounds. One' - Ives made` by a , large ten-inch 'rifled projectile, which struck the top, of the ,turret, scooping out a huge portion of the iron, breaking all of the eleven plates of an inch thickness, and spending its forde on the pilot 'Ovhich is placed on top of thoturret,j iT'VAich it made a crater three inches ,deep,,a,nil pro ducing such a shocknn the pilot house as to' Start -its trip and laiSo it. UP th the' inches. Siintheir Shot 'Wit' tUriet; the plate inwards, and producing a big swell on the interior. The same shock disabled the carriage of the eleven-inch gun, while portions of the interior iron casing fell down, and lodging in the groove of the turret, stopped its revolution. The Nan tucket, besides receiving a num ber of wounds, had her turret so jarred that the cover of the port could not be opened, and consequently the fifteen-inch gun could not be used. The English have, latterly, been experi menting largely' ith projectiles, and have boasted that they could penetrate any iron casing which a vessel could carry. Some of their beat improvements had reached Charleston, and this battle shows that their boast was not vain: Five of our nine iron clads were badly damaged ; one being Sunk, one rendered useless by the injury to the turret, one endangered by the injury to the pilot house, one exposed by the loss of a port-shutter, and one crippled by damage to its eleven-inch gun. We have not yet attained to invulnerability in building ves sels of war. It is true that against the old style of cannon, our Monitors would be a perfect'defence; but science has done as much for attack as for defence, and hence the repulse of our noble little fleet We had heard much of the formidable army which was to unite in the attack up on Charleston ; but we now leirn that Gen . . IiNTER, had-moved but seven thausand men, a force utterly inadequate for any at tempt against the fifty thousand which pro tected that city. Secretary STANTON and Gen. HALLECK must do Vetter, if they wish to maintain Our country's cause and honor. Why , was there not a combined at tack ? • The Sabbath in PittSbltrgl—Efforts are, now madei by the proper officers, to enforce the State laws against the selling of liquor on the Sabbath. Their success is cheering, and it indicates that if the people will choose upright and energeticinen for their municipal magistracy, we may have a quie.t and orderly city. The Chronicle, of the 20th inst., .says YesterdaY WU one of the quietest Sabbaths- ever passed in Pitts burgh.. There was not a. single drinking house opened in the city, and there was consequently none of that drunkenness or disorder;which in times past have so often disgraced the Lord's. day. This is a most satisfactory state of affairs, and we trust it may continue. There is no excuse what ever for liquor-selling on Sunday, and we hope never again to see it tolerated in Pittsburgh!' • ' This is well for the present; but still there may be a motive not quite as high as a love of sobriety and reverence for law. Now is the time for •tho Tenewal of tavern and grog-shop licenses. Respectable names are wanting as signers to petitions. The Courts are to be prevailed upon. It is not the first time that . quiet Sttlabaths have been enjoyed in April.. Perhaps we have given our municipal officers more credit than they . deserve. . Well, the fact ataxia demonstrated, that it is possible for' the liquor dealers ,to close their doors on the Lord's day.; and hence the law should be enforced. - - : : - EASTERN SUMMARY. NiW-ENGLAND. A CoRRESPONDENT of the Congrega tionalist, after giving a detailed historical Recount of Presbyterianism in- New-Hamp shire, makes the folldwing, among other Summary remnrks, in conclusion: , " The above sketch presents a list of twenty-eight Presbyterian churches that have been organized in New-Hampshire, only seven of which are now in being. ,01 these, five are among the strongest and best Calvinistic churches of the, State. The other two are small and feeble. :The whole number of Presbyterian ministers that have been and still , are pastors of, the above nained churches is sixty-seven. As a gen eral ,fact the decline and extinction of, so many Presbyterian churches in this" State is no evidence of the decline of re ligion and morals in the towns where they existed:, in most instances Presbyterian ism was nbsorbed by . Congregationalism, which his maintained and propagated the same system of religious doctrine an,dorder on the same fields. In no case has a Pres byterian church changed its polity, or be come extinct as such, because the policy it erected in its,place had a'greater claim for its favor and support, but because it was more,in accordance , with the, early habits, training and syMpathies of the people gen erally. Had not, the noble Scotch-Irish element been introducedinto the. original population of many . towns of ileckingham and , counties, it doubtful whether there would ever have been tiPres byterian church 'established in the State;. and, it is equally doubtful whether Congre gationalism would have flourished to any considerable , extent had Presbyterianism beep the form of church governinent em braced by ern. Puritan fathers." . REV. CONVERS FEANCIB, Piro; fessor of Pulpit Eloquence and Pastoral Care in the Diiiinity School at Cainbridge, Maas.; died at his residence'in that city, on the 7th lust,' aged sixty eight years. He was the :brother . of Mrs. Lydia.. Maria Child. , , • • Pam' FAGEiIIT C. Smrru, of BowdOin College, has been elected to fill the ORO° of Professor 'Shedd - ire the chair of Ecclesiastical History at Andover Theolog— ical Senßinary• - RKV:;llEinty JACKSON, D.D: a Baptist minister of Newport, recently deceased, left $8,009 to University for 'Bohol ? afakips; $4,000, aftei the death. of his, wife, to ; the Abode "Island'Baptist State, COnvention ' and libiarY to . Newton Theological Institution. THE Masi , CHUROO in Hartford ; Dr. Heard and R 6% Wolcott Calkins' pastors; was the : first Congregational church organ ized in *Connecticut, and the eighth in New-England: It .has , had ten pastors. None were dismissed, and'nine of;theth lie in the graveyard with their people. THE Providence Annual Conference of the Methedidt - Episcopal Church„ln'seiiien at Warren , adopted' lately' an outspoken re pert upon the state of, the country, em= Bracing :resolutions expressing cOnfidena in;:audiappreiik of thii i itumer Of a: 4 the Ministration, thanking the Congress `of United States for including the clergy in the conscription act, and sending words of greeting to the ministers and members now in the army. THE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPH from an address recently delivered in Ecrston by Hon. Edward Everett, breathes forth the purest patriotism, and suggests truths of the most momentous importance respecting our country's future : " And now the great question which we have to settle is, Shall this mighty aggregate of prosperity perish, or shall it endure ? Shall this imperial heri tage of blessings descend unimpaired to our posterity, or shall it be igno miniously, profligately thrown away ? Shall the territory of the Union, late so happy under the control and adjustment of the National and State Governments, be broken up into miserable fragments, sure to be engaged in constantly recurring bor der wars, and all lying at the mercy of foreign powers; or 'shall•it preserve itBllo - integrity under the mgis of the National Government? Admit the right of these= ceding States to break up the Union at pleasure, nay, 9f each and every State to do so, and allow them to enforce' that right by a successful war—deny the - authority of. the Central Government to control its mem hers, and how long -will it be before the new. Confederacies created by the first dis ruption shall be resolved into still smaller fragments, and the continent become a vast theatre of civil war, military license, an archy, and despotilim ? . Better, at what ever cost, by whatever sacrifice, settle- the question at once, and settle it forever" THE Boston Transcript notices the death of Mrs. Lydia Nickerson, at the advanced age of ninety-nine years and six months. She attended the School Street Pnrish from its foundation in 1817 but was not received into communion with the church until her ninetieth year. • NEW-YORK. WE LEARN from, the Examiner that, at a late Conference Meeting of Baptist minis ters in this city, an interesting'communica tion was received from the so-called " Strict Baptists" of England, asking for counsel and sympathy in the trying position in which the latter. seem to be plaSed. The Examiner mentions the following facts as having been brought to light by the read, ing of the communication and the discus sion which ensued in the Conference " The Strict Baptists, as they are called, in distinction` from the Open-CoMmunion Baptists, are in danger of being lost and swallowed up in the Open-COMERMII.OI3 ele ment. This party, led by Rev. Mr. Spur geon, Rev: Baptist Noel, and men of that stamp, are ready to complete the coalition proposed among the Independents, Congre gationalists, and other dissenting bodies, and so form one denoinination. Mr. Spur geon admits members from Pedobaptist churches, on certificate, without baptism, and he has hundreds of Members who have not been baptized. Baptist Noel does the same thing, - and one of his leading deacons has not been baptiZed, and has been and is now an Episcopalian. Churches built by Baptists, _who lint - in the deed that' the church was to be used only by 4 Particilar Baptists,' or Strict Baptists,' have been taken by Open-Communion Baptists, and held under a decision of the Courts, that Open-Communion and`Strict Baptists mean the same thine' A letter, in reply was unanimously adopt ed by the Conference, taking the ground " that all the regular Baptist churches in the country arestriet-cOrrimunionists; that the other element has no place or footing in the ehurakes; and from numerous and unanswerable statistics proving that in the practice of strict-communion vigor, prosper ity and expansion were found." AT A' ' RECENT Fulton Street Prayer- Neeting, allusion baying - been made to the revival et Hamilton College, a speaker re marked that he had witnessed many revi vals in college, and he had always found that the Aons of praying mbtheis were sure to • be among the earliest mil:oas of a work of grace. Let mothers be importunate in prayer: THE FINANOTAL year of the Ametieen Bible Society closed on the ,31st of March. The receipts of the year were *422,588. The 'whole issues of the year, including Bibles, Testaments, and parte of the Bible, were 1,257,249. The friends of the Bible have reason to rejoice at the prospetity and extensive usefulness of the~ SoolOy.. THE FOLLOWING from the Examiner is interesting, as bearing on the agency sys teni : " Our .[Baptist] Missionary', Societies havejust closed a year of unexpected pros- Perity—the Missionary Union having re ceived: about $15,000 more than in the year , . preceding, and the Home Mission Society about $2,000 in advance of its previous year's receipts. This is very good, in any view of the case, and especially good when it is remembered' that the year now, closed is the first at rilaking, collections without collecting agents. Such results ought to do something toward giving many of our friends a little more faith . in the churches, and conaideribly less faith in a worn-out agency system. THE N. . T. Evening Post contains a glcw ing report_ of a ceremony recently per- formed. in one of the. Roman Catholic church - ea of the city, - is-headea, "4;4 eeremony. *ee`eicitio;i: of young Auyes.into the order of tlie, solidity' of the blessed= Virgin:" The . following.: is in extract "At three o!elock the procession 'ente . ted the church. The young ladies; President, vice president,-liecretary --and treasurer, bearingn:' gorgeousbalm er, •i °Labe ',blessed Virgin, wreathedin gold and bluelstream ers, surmounted, Eby a cross. 'They. wore dresses of sky bine, white velvet, scarfs, richly 'trimmed iitligoiq, long White'crape veils,•WOrn ala Madonna-litre, but 'fasteried on the shoulders' with a blue rosetie, and a cornet of reseS and lilies, with long'stream ers, ornamented 'the head. The ineinbers of thenidex•folloivediii the same costume; Seine of theta, bearing others; lighted wait torches' wreathed with flevieiN The . juvenilc - Protestants - shout to be re.; , ceived into the_order, excited particular at: tention. They were dressed 'like Wile brides, in pure white, wreaths of toses and peail, and veils reaching to' neail'ilurfeei. Many: of, theseloung - ladies are the denet t:64i' of 'most respectable traders and gentle- Men of the city Cf . New- i gnrie, and hie pyt: pile of St.!insePh's schoel;l7ho five hundred` children of iaiiiitoiliges moral, religious, and useful education, un der the superintendence of the Sisters of Charity belonging to St. Vincent's Hospi tal, West Eleventh Street." The Boston Watchman, in commenting on the report, asks : " Are there Protestant parents in this country so blind is this statement argues ? If - so, they may open their eyes too late, when their children forskke them and call them heretics ; and when they find this, too, to be the least' of the evil results of their confidence in the Sisters of Charity' " DR. WILLARD PARKER, Professor of Surgery in the New-York College of Phy sicians and Surgeons, lately delivered to the students of the Union Theological Seminary, at their own request, two lee tures, on topics connected with the general subjeet of mental and physical hygiene.. The Indepndent says : 'His purpose was to discos. the brain as a motive power and, the body as , a ma chine and to show how to keep them in order. "In his.first lecture, the Professor dwelt upon the benefits of pure air, and the pois onous influences of crowded and ated rooms. And if some of those young Ministers do not have airy . ehurehes and wide-awake audiences, it will be because these lessons are forgotten. " The , second lecture was in a great part directed against evil habits; and the use of tobacco received a full share of denun ciation. The fact adduced that New-York city spends Sixteen Theusand Defiers n day for tobacco and only Twelve Thonsand for bread, significant as it is, was AO yiade the most important; but the highest medical authorities were quoted to shoW the evil effects of tebacco on the brain and nerves, its ?rogation to produce physical and men tal deterioration in the user and' in his de , seen dents too." • • MAJOR- GENERAL GEO. B. MTLELLAN made a public profession of religion in New-York, on the first Sabbath of the present month, by uniting with the Pres byterian church, under the pastoral care of Dr. William Adams. Mrs. M'Clellan, and her mother and sister, were admitted at the same time by letter. Tun chief events in financial circles are the active demand for Government seciri 7 ties by conversions into U. S. five-twenty bonds, averaging about a million dollars daily, and the varied movement in the price of gold.. The receipts of money ,by Goverinnent from loans, conversions, and customs and taxation, are estimated, semi officially, to equal in amount the daily expenditure for the war. Money is 'abundant and easy to first-class' borrowers at . 5 to 6 per cent., and prime commercial paper is scarce and in demand at 5 to 7 per cent., according,,, to the dates of maturity. On. Saterday, April 11th, sales of gold were made at 1501 to 1521-, on Monday at 157 to , 1571-, and on `Tuesday at 1551` to 15,51. • • The foreign exchange market changes with the prices' of gold, and on Monday and Tuesday bankers' 60-dayi sterling bills were quoted at 170 to 173. PHILADELPHIA. WE ZEMIN from the Methodist ,that, the • . Philaclelplia Annual Conference having taken high: ground in regard to the exami nation of ministerial - eandidates E an unusu ally large number were Obliged; in cons& quence of their inability, to core up to the required standard, tereview the ".course of study" for the past.yea,r.- The „Methodist remarks : " This was a severe, but doubt less a necessary and salutary impasure: Like a bitter-pill it may work a raclical and permanent cure." . At the same Conference, according a' the Advocate and Journal, "the case of 'Rev. Sylvanus Townsend, who iefnsed to vote when :his name was called on the xesolution reaffirming the loyalty of the Conference, was disrobied of by a 'resolution expieta3ing the strong disapprobation' of the Confer ence at his conduct,—and refnsing to, elect him to elder's orders. The first; clause , of the •resolution was carried' by 160 votes to 8, and the lait was'adopted: unanimously." Tun ANNUAL nuPou'r of the Society for the Employment of the poor in-Philadel phia, shows th'it, during the year ending the J3th'inst.„ several thousand prescrip 7 tions were, given to petitions in and outside .of, the building, and that large numbers sought medical advice of this-institution, and obtained relief, who othetivise would have `suffered and r b bly have died 'if this institution hid not been in operation!! Gin Ann COLLEGE has within its' wails, at 'the present tind,about fife hnndred rcgiAls• THERE Axe TewUnited States vessels of war at Ale Philadelphiai Navy Yard.' They are- eitheiin the 'course of .ehostruction or repair:- - • For the PreAhyterlan Banner. Supplies Appointed by illegberip Presbytery . . Butler-L-Fourth SAbath of May; Mr. Harrison. Fifth - Sabbath in May, Mr: Hall: ;First Sabbath in June, Mr. j. Boyd. ". Rich Will---Tfiird-Sabbath of 'June, Mr. Walker ; to administer tile Lord's Slipper: Also; leave to; 'obtain > supplied' (till' next Fall meeting: -Pia-us—Leave to 'obtain " supplies till Fall meeting-. • . . North. Butler — Jam es . Coulter, - Stated Supply for one , year.- --; • NA() and Pot:tern:Ole—Leav e to oh tain:. supplies till next - meeting. -1 • ' ECCLESIASTICAL T• • • Mr. Cl:A.l3mm M. -PorrEß of the Western Theological SeSeminary , has been called to I;lMPreshiterien *ohAreiiefPkiie Creek, in Allegheny4ieibYierY Mr .'', WILLIAM -W. - ANNAN,:fiof Allegheny City, has....beenliomieed . sa,"a Probation er, for the Gospelsministry, Mr.' ' TiIt:IXAS ‘013.a-, 1 . dr:the 'Western Theohigiear Bei:nine:37;lMS boon called' to thetientral' Presbyteriiul church, ghenjr'qit,y- ; : , t, p.., , Rev. A. 13 . — CLinic., of Altoona :Pa has resigned, his ,pastoral eharge,,,oniaseount of ;longre?r 4 inuea, i:l health Rev:. Ssaitrito.V.: 'Lownis,4 of Alexenaria Pa:, has been ieleasede from ,hikohargi: Mr LOwrie (intends maki,nce's tb fGeniany. - r MT.lTtitv tilt'pigtair ehafge e Of 'irengre"-/ gation in Carlisle, Pa., where he is n ow laboring very successfully. For the Presbyterian &Mr.!. Meeting -of the Presbytery of Allegheny city. MESSRS. EDITORS :—The recent meetin g of the Presbytery of Allegheny City vas one of unusual interest, and one, we trust, whose fruits will be seen and acknowledged by •future generatiots. I allude to th e promising movement made at that ineetim, in the department of church extension. About a year ago, as many of your read. err are aware, a division occurred in the Central church of Allegheny City, of which Dr. Plumer was pastor. The origin a n d consequences of that unhappy controversy, are generally known and need not now be revived. But one of the good results which in Divine Providence has flowed from that troubled source, was realized in the organization by the Presbytery o f a new church in the North-western part of the city, to be . called " The North Presby terian Church of the City of Allegheny." Ever since the withdrawal frora th e Central church, of those who were dissatis fied with the ministrations of its late p as . tor, this organization has been kept stead ily in view, though et times under a dark cloud of disheartening circumstances. Public worship was regularly maintained on the Sabbath, and prayer-meeting during the week; but the attendance was not en couraging, and the extremely high price at which property was held, rendered it al most impossible to obtain a lot suitable for the erection of a house of worship. 'Ca_ der these circumstances, the Society did not feel disposed to apply for a cbureb.or ganization; and at one time they had al most coneluded . to abandon the project. Just at this crisis in their affairs, God put it into the heart of one of our benevolent citizens'to offer them a very valuable piece of ground on the North Common, west of the United Presbyterian Seminary, for their church edifice. This put new life into the project, and the people felt en couraged to go forward. Accordingly at the meeting of the Presbytery of Alle gheny City, on -.the I , lth of this month, the organization took place in the chapel o f the Western Theological Seminary, up waida of fifty members uniting to form the church, aiid at' the same time three Ruling Elders were installed over the congrega tion. By appointment of Presbytery, an appropriate serinon, was delivered by the Rev. 'etauies Allison, the constitutional questions; fter a brief narrative, were put by Dr. Elliott, and a charge to the elders and people was delivered by Rev. Dr. The strtsequent election of a Board of five Trustees completed the tem poral, as the installation of the eldership did the spiritual organization. A Sabbath School will immediately go into operation; and with the blessing of God, everything pronfiles a bright future for this infant cong•regation. I might dwell in this connexion upon the vast importance in our great cities, of the principle of colonization from the large and wealthy congregations. Is it too much to,inkgeet; that - the dissentious and heart burning, which God occasionally permits tti arise in old and long-established church es,, are probably intended as a sort of penalty inflicted for hiding their light under - a buihel ? He thus, as in the pres ent' instance, makes manifest how much, 14, a disiribution of their forces, even a moderately" large church can do when they have - the will ; and of course what they oughtin do, toward the extension' of Gos perinfluences, and thus carrying the cup of salvation to the perishing thousands of their' fellew-men. It was Cain the mur &re!. 'who said , "Am I'my brother's keep er.?" - A-PRESBYTERIAN. Commissioners to the General Assembly of PEZIIWITERDSIS, i , .M.T.WIIIpB., nmuts. J PldladelPhia, Dr. Blackwood, , George Junkin. Mr. Spread, - James Dunlap. Phila Central, J Dr. A. Nevin, . IM. Newkirk, IW. B. Work, Robert Graham. Sangamon, T. M. Oviatt, !. S. G. Malone. Huntingdon, f George Elliott, Mr. Patterson, IS. M. Moore, ' jr." Christie, Lewea, . Pell f; G. A. Parker- California, Alexander Scett, John Berens. City; Loats L. . Conrad, E. Nevin, Blairsville, - Dr. S. McParren, John Barnett. Allegheny, Di. L. Young, John. Boyd. Wain in Tinnessee. Lotrstaran, . ,Graham, on Sat urday, attacked' the :rebels - near `Celina, Tenn., killing seven, antUdestroYing‘th — eir camp. On Sundayithey crossed. the- Cumberland, at tacked the rebels there, 'tilling 30, routing the remainder, and, are now in hot pursuit. The Federal loss is one killed. `Riley Col. attacked the rebels yesterday, at Creelsboro', in Cumberland, killing one, cap turing sixteen, 'and are now- chasing the re mahuler. further casualties.. Affairs itillexiio—Bornbardment of Puebla— Tho . French Ropnlied. - 4nAN Fitisexico; April'l9.= 2 -The steamer So nora, from Acapulco, brings.dates. from the City of,M.exico The French bombarded Puebla for text days, and were.r4ithied thriee. The fortilinatitms of St. lit-vier were rendered untenable: .byt froni . "-'rifled guns. The Mexicans withdreiv, and the: French occupied them on the 31st of. March, Wei% 150 prisoners. ,The French holdthe outside fortifications all round the city: - The bombardment continued at the latest dates, but the principalfortitioations hold out. General Forey's. headquarters .were at the Church of Santiago, inside, the Garita. ComonfOrt was at Saint Martin, with 10,000 troops. Ortega its in Puebla. with 26;009 - troiips. The French have CIA the commiinications be tween. Ortega antl Oomonfort; The Erpaeh strength, is P,OIXt,; with 5,000 Mei:leans under Meigne.v. ' Tiebicfo'reements dalky arrive . from Vera Cruz. There are - . 30,000 bleilean 'troops in the City of lieitico.v:l ha Susquehanna Rabsoad. A bill has passed both branches of the New- York State .LegislaturA..and,heen signed by the Governor, which extends aid to the Albany and Suignehitionailittad,; 'and insures its being coristructed.,Torthwithi 7, -, Thizilwork, as we have arready stated, runalfrota Alban to Bin hamton in a direct line. At y g connects with the New4lnglanik railways-leading to Boston, Port -11/44" " a n d ; Ober. &UM.- At Binghamton it con nects.wit4 th4 , NewYork and,Erie Railroad, and this reaches fAq Iraljt - ifiliont going through is afforded' bYithe NetV-Ydrk Central, New-Yoreeity.- armtich shorter cut than an d when finished ant brotightAnto !use will operate as a cut--off,x to reancing the travel through NeW7Tork,,clty between New-England and the Weit this - ratite asannects with the atotakierit Tide etraits f itiyitraierehug the Susque hannievallei to• Baltimore; - and proceeding thence to the - national capital, affords a complete and aYallatdei. route of :travel between New-England auctWashington, wraidhig,New-York city, with all'itide,tentions and delay the Philadelphia s. At Williamsport this route alSo connects With atiof Erie'Railrolid,oand thus af f ords an avenue by.whicht:Nevr t f uglandt may communicate with the 10(q1e, network of, railways; now building is br,cergit, catern rennsylvania. At Lockhaven this rou,ciinitecti . With the Bald Eagle Valley Rai'" roirtti'Vfroite, wheie it joins the Pennsylvani a ltaalf cad to Pittsburgh; so that all the business west, arid. teava , between New-England and the via the Pennsylvania Railroad, may avoid New" „ _ York, City by. this short and simple channel. The iltikertinices of, th e work can 'scarcely be over reited: i 'liinbit, increase, it, a very large extent thWiriavisittiver thalleithern Central road, since albzieltdiWbuld save lime:will ;take this route La teMellit,ng,-,,t5k and frongoyludkington and the North.. -