EV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Editor end Proprietor. !.EV. Z. N. I" Hi" 7, SSOCI ATE EDITOII. TERMS IN ADVANCE. tlt MAIL. ',Singly or in Clubs,) $1.50 If:LIVERED IS ZITHER 07 THIC 01111te, ...... 200 Two DoLLAns, we will send by mail seventy numbers, One DOLLAR, thirty-three numbers. tore sending no TWENTY subscribers and upwards, will ,reby entitled to a paper without charge. lewalashould be prompt, a little, before the year expires d payments by safe hands, or by mall. set all letters to REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Pittsburgh, Pa. [Selected.] Distractions in Prayer. ;anent pray ; yet, Lord, thou kuowest The pain it is to me ~ ..)-1"' I ro have my vainly struggling thoughts ::- Thus torn away from thee. -14:1 446trayer was not meant, for luxury, r: , k; c'Or sottish pastime sweet ; L .l ' lis t he prostrate creature's place - At his Creator's feet. ' : gad I, dear Lord, no pleasure found r But in the thoughts of thee, 1) . Prayer would have come unsought, and been : A truer liberty. 1- Ye l t it il v, lo ,e u ak a , rt d present, prayer; Lord, oftistramoot most •.•,,''' , A sinner out of heart with self,- ' , .. , i 4i t t Most, often finds thee there. And prayer that humbles, sets the soul Front all illusions free, 7 1 .!: And leaches it how utterly, 4 Dear Lord, it hangs on thee. ' The soul that on self-sacrifice 451 p: Is dutifully bent, 4.00 Will bless the chastening hand that makes r.e ( 11116. its prayer its punishment. t 4illi" Ah, Jesus, why should I complain ? .34 And why fear ought but sin ? AN Distractions are but outward things; t ifttl). Thy peace dwells far within I These surface troubles come and go Like ruffiings of the sea; The deeper depth is out of reach To all, my God, but thee I 'l2it 1 1-4 4i, For the Presbyterian Banner. ,L. k Letter from the North-Vint. „ 1 i', _ C—, WISOONSIN. . MESSRS. EDITORS :—I havejust re ', • ied from the annual meeting of the ".nod of Wisconsin, and with your per '.on will give your readers some account le trip. matter about the starting place : it to say' that, after several hours ling over the St. Paul and Milwaukie ray, I found myaelf at the hour of ight snugly ensconced in a pleasant in a fine hotel in the city of Mil .c. After a refreshing sleep and a breakfast, I began to look about the /nd a splendid city it is. It is built ly of what is called Milwaukie brick, is of a light day color, almost white,. which makes very handsome houses. of the streets will compare favorably thq beat to be found in most Eastern I have never seen finer business ~, or more magnificent store-rooms may be seen in Milwatikie. This city very important shipping-port. It is 'Amid to be the largest wheat market on this ontincnt. ifC I was told that the sales often ' exceeded one million bushels per week. . !There is a splendid rivalry between Mil ., i t,waukie and Chicago; and though the latter ki . t as far outstripped the former in most ~ . espects, yet in the item of wheat it is ,1 ehiud. ' The city is also well supplied with .1 hurdles of almost all denominations. As ~..Pitsual in our Western cities, the Old School ' `lPresbyterian is far behind. We have but ~ a single church, and that not a large one, . in all that population of forty-five thousand souls. Our church, though small, is how ever a very active, efficient one. The Rev. J. M. Buchanan is the able and faithful ... pastor. The population of Milwaukie is repidly increasing, and affords one of the best fields for missionary effort that can be found in the West. An enterprising and able man would find here a field„that would amply repay the most diligent cultivation. There is not the least doubt but that such a man, if he could be supported for a short time, would succeed in building up a large Presbyterian church, In all that popula r tion there are certainly more than one hun .dred and fifty Presbyterians, yet that is all Ithat belong to our communion there. Here is abundant material to form a strong , church. All that is needed is faithful, well-directed labor, and the blessing of God. Leaving Milwaukie for Beloit, the next place of importance we reach is Racine. This city is located twenty miles South of Milwaukie, on the shore of Lake Michigan. /t is a flourishing and most beautiful city of twelve thousand inhabitants.. I mention it chiefly for the purpose of calling atten tion to it as a field for missionary labor. As a field of this kind, it presents induce ments fully equal, if not greater than does . Milwaukie. Here is a population that al ready reaches twelve thousand, and is rap idly increasing, and there is not a single Old School Presbyterian church, Ido not know that an Old School minister ever preached there; certainly no effort has ever been made to establish a church. This is a point that ought by all means to be occupied. It is on the great Railway from Chicago to Milwaukie and St. Paul, and also the terminus of the Racine and Nlississippi Railroad, which connects it with Northern Illinois, lowa, and the Father of Waters. Besides, it is a very important shipping-port. The boats from Milwaukie to Chicago, and from Buffalo and Cleveland, touch at Rapine. Moreover it has a large population of Welsh Calvin ists, who prefer the Old School Presbyte rian to all other churches. They have churches of their own, where their 'native language is used, but this cannot last long. In doctrine they are thoroughly Presbyte rian, and in government substantially so. The only barrier between the Old School Presbyterian and the Welsh Calvinist is language, and that must speedily fall away. Here then is a large population which must be absorbed eventually in one or other branch of the great Presbyterian family) and as they areE more nearly in sympathy with us than any ,other denomination, we ought to open our. arms to receive them. I know of no service that wealthy disciples at the East can render that would be more acceptable to God and beneficial to his Church, than to select two of the beat men that can be secured, and send them, the one to Milwaukie and the other to Racine, to preach the Gospel and establish church es. I say the best men, for it would be idle to send inferior men. They must be men able to interest and instruct cultivated minds; for with such they . would have to deal. This need not interfere with other de nominations of Evangelical Christians. They , are doing a noble work, and God speed .them; but they cannot do all the Lord's work, and we ought to help them ; and it is a shame and a sin that the Old VOL. XII. NO. 6. School Presbyterian church, comprising so much talent, wealth, and influence, should manifest so little energy and zeal in preach ing the Gospel in these Western States. But I must go on to Synod, or I shall be too late—as I certainly was. Synod met in the pleasant little city of Beloit. It is a place of five or six thousand inhabitants, situated on the line between Illinois and Wisconsin. We have a growing church there, which enjoys the pastoral labors of our talented and faithful brother, Rev. Robert Beer, an alumnus of the estern Theological .Seminary, class of '6l. Bro. Beer is very pleasantly located, has the sat isfaction of laboring among a people who prize and love him, and that other satisfac tion almost as great, of living and working , harmoniously with Christians of other de nominations, by whom ho is highly es teemed. Beloit is the seat of a flourishing College, under the auspices of our Congre gational brethren. I visited the handsome grounds and buildings, and had the good fortune to fall in with Prof. Nason, who occupies the chair of Chemistry, and who courteously conducted me through the li braries, cabinet, lecture-rooms, &a., and was glad to find afterwards that the Professor is distinguished not only as a refined gen tleman, but also as a profound and finished scholar and a successful feacher. Subse quently, by invitation, the Synod visited 'the College as a .body. This Institution stands in the first rank among the Colleges and Universities of the West. But little business of general interest was transacted by Synod. Most of the time was occupied with the embarrassed affairs of Carrol College. This enterprise was undertaken by the Synod of Wiscon sin, a number of years ago'. It was organ ized and put in operation without a suffi cient pecuniary basis. The consequence was, that after dragging out a feeble exist istence for a few years, it suspended. Ali effort to revive it was recently made by the Trustees, a new Faculty obtained, a differ ent policy inaugurated, and the Colle,ge reopened. The action of the Board eras pretty thoroughly overhauled by Synod, a long discussion ensued, which amounted to nothing except the discharge of much en perilous gas, and the stirring up of much bitter feeling. The• affairs of the institu tion were found to be hopelessly embar rassed. After a good deal of orimination and recrimination, a new Board was chosen, which of course meant another change of policy. The result is, Carrol College is practically defunct. It may exist as an Academy, but its College days are ended. This is well. It is absurd far the Synod of Wisconsin alone to talk about establish ing and carrying on a first-class College, (and none other ought to be attempted,) at present. There is not enough of Presby terianism in the. State to do it; and such institutions are so uncertain, that people from abroad are lath to touch them. There are but about two thousand Old School Pres byterians in the whole State of Wisconsin, and the vast majority of them have but limited means; hence, it is the height of folly to expect such a body of people to sus tain a first-class College. A scheme is now on foot to concentrate the energies of our whole Church in Min nesota, Wisconsin, lowa, and Northern Illinois, on one grey Presbyterian College, to supply the North-west Seminary with. students. If this plan can be consum mated, it will amount to something sub stantial. Such an institution is a great de sideratum. The Seminary at Chicago can not flourish without it. The wants of this field cannot be supplied without it. Most young men who go Bast to College, take their theological course there,' and, if possible, settle there.' A great College of this kind will meet a crying want in the North-west. The scheme is a noble one, but it will re quire time for its accomplishment. This letter is far too long already, or I might, tell you how I got home from Synod, and what I saw on the way. But enough OBBERVATOR. For the Presbyterian Banner Dependence End Freedom. HOSEA I%: 12—Woe also to them when I depart from them. Men are dependent upon God. God is ready to afford men the assistance and grace they need, and yet be may depart from them and leave them to themselves. The time of his departure is uncertain and unknown. The condition of those from whom .God de parts is dreadful ; for he says, Woe also to them when I depart from them. Man's dependence upon God does not infringe upon his moral freedom. God has made man a free moral agent, account able for all his doings ; and man must for ever continue a free moral agent—the ever lasting slave of freedom I Men are free as well .as dependent, and dependent as well as free. Dependence is not inconsistent with freedom, nor freedom with depend ence. God can let down the chains of his influence upon you, and'bind you fast, and lead you just where he pleases, and let you do just as you please all the time. He can make you love what you hate, and hate what you love, and yet let you do just as you please all the while. He will always deal with you in this way. He will never, in a solitary instance, destroy your moral freedom. For every act you do, you must give account to God; and according to these acts you must be judged in the great day, because these acts are your own, and they are, and ever will be, in every in stance, free, voluntary acts in the sight of God. We may be unable to tell, or even to see, bow dependence and freedom can harmonize, but there is a way in which they do har monize, perfectly and gloriously. Our business is to feel our dependence, and yet to act as free and accountable beings, with reference to God's glory and the day of judgment, whether we can see how they harmonize or not. It is no matter to us how they harmonize. We are to believe that man is both free and dependent, and that his dependence does not, in the least, in fringe upon his freedom; and then we are to act as though perfectly free, and yet feel that we are entirely dependent. We should never make our dependence an excuse for inactivity or neglect. It is an excuse which can never justify us. As God has made us free, we must act; as we are de pendent, we must pray, and we should dread the departure of God for from us; for if he depart, woe unto us ! If he de part, we are lost 1 0 seek the Lord while he may be found ! Call upon him while he is near I Behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of salvation ! Look to Christ and live ! W. J. M. . , 11/ 01 0 A rts rt I[ll „ -. • . t ‘, EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. Mr. Forster, M. P.—Remarkable Speech at Leeds— Analysis—Underrating of the War—" A Wicked War "—Pleas and Considerations on Behalf of England—What the Times Says—The Steel-clad Ships—Mexico and French Pressure—An Eman cipation Meeting in London—Mi. Mason's Retire ment—Confederate and Tory Anger—Conduct of Earl Russel—Confederate Appeal for " Recog nition"—Death of Hr. Ellice, Al. P.—His Amer ican and Canadian Antecedents—llls Opinions and Character—Brigandage Dying Out—Papal Encouragement and Revenge—Evangelical Alli ance at Dublin. LONDON, Sept. 26th, 1863 A NOBLE SPEECH has been delivered to a crowded meeting at Leeds, in support of the cause of emancipation in America and the neutral policy of the British Govern ment by Mr. Forster, Member of Parlia ment for Bradford. This gentleman is an orator of mark in the House of Commons, and is highly educated and accomplished. He has done great service, in and out of the House, to the cause of Italian liberty. In the debate which followed Mr. Roebuck's visit to the French Emperor, near the close of the session, Mr. Forster eminently dis tinguished himself as the friend of the North and of 'liberty. Let us see what he says on different points, now agitating the American mind and that of Britain also, and mark how honest, candid, and worthy are his sentiments. Be it remembered also that he speaks the sentiments of the vast mass of the Nonconformists, and of an ec lectic class of wise and good men of all sections. He commenced by referring to misunderstandings, and the causes of them. There exists, he said, in America, a con sciousness, and a right-founded conscious ness that we misconceive this great strug gle in its very principle and its foundation, and that we have, so to speak, underrated. it. i.,.,Jortance. 4. hree years ago," continued Mr. For ster, looked forward to the fature of the Union with fear and trembling. I did not know what punishment God 'would inflict upon America for having connived at this great sin of slavery." He then gave the history of the first stealthy and then open efforts on the part of the slaveocracy " to master the Union." Then the freemen of the North, alarmed, said : "We will not allow this slave power to go on increasing ; we will take care that it does not rule us." The slaveholders finding they could no lon ger wield the commonwealth to support their system, said : " We will set up a con federacy of our own." What followed " Men of the North, the patriots of the Union, said, We will not submit to that," and we, many of us in England, who were utterly reckless of money or life. when we thought that Russia merely threatened to stop the communication with our Eastern possessions—who were still more reckless of money and life to preserve our empire in India—when we know that there is scarcely one of us in, this country, of any party, who . would not, if it_ came_ to the dire alternative, use every power he possessed to keep Ireland as a sister country in union with England—yet we who know that we have this patriotic feeling and would un dergo the .greatest: sacrifices before we would allow. 'our country to be cut to pieces or diminished,,or .ter become a weak Power, rather than a strong power—we complained of the North Americans and said to them, YOu havn entered Upon a .wielted war," because. hey .would not allow the- slaveholci ers of the South, in order to perpetuate and extend slavery, to break up their country, and make it a divided, a weak, and" almost powerless country, instead .of a great and powerful one. I say this, that I will give many of those who argue' thus the credit that if - the same result, or anything like it, was upon the issue in England they would be as foreinost in, desiring to prevent their country from being destroyed, as the most ardent and fierce Northerner at this mo ment." As to the statements made about the wickedness of this war, he said : "I. also think it a wicked war; but I charge .the. wickedness upon those who be gan the war in the worst of all possible causes. lam •willing to allow that even with them—for a strange , thing is human nature—some of them may have forced themselveLinto the belief that they were in a good -cause. I don't pretend to deny the valor of the men of the South; I will not deny that they have shown many fine qualities in this war. I will go _even far ther, and say .that it is ..very difficult for men, even in a bad cause, to :,have submit ted to the sacrifices and self- - denial which many men in the. South have undergone, without coming out of it purified and bet ter than when they went in. But whilst that is the case, I cannot forget upon which side the right is, though I lament more than I can speak the suffering which is the retult of this war, and the crimes which havebeen committed on both sides; for in the, presence of *an influential American I cannot but say it would be well if the pub lie - ()Pinion of America were raised more strongly against the atrocities ,committed in the Northern' States as, well as in the Southern. lam well aware 'that in a tre mendous crisis like thii there are strong temptations, and that even Christian and patriotic people find it difficult to prevent war being carried on other than with that ferocity which, more or less, always accom panies war. Still, great as are the tempta tionsz_Christians must not forget their du ty. Nevertheless, I say, much as-we lament this war, - its sufferings and erinies, , l do from the very bottom of my heart rejoice at what we may now hope will be the re sult of it." Mr. .Forster then addressed the _Rev. Rev. Mr.. Charming, who was present, and afterwards Jude a telling epeech in the following words,,which present : pleas and reasons which, in a feebler way, but with candor. and fulness, I have repeatedly, in the spirit of a. peace-maker,_placed :before your. readers : it There is a feeling in America, if we may judge by the papers and: the state ments of the leading men, that- England has done them a vrrong—an-actual and pos itive wrong—which it is their business, al most their duty, to revenge•when they have the opportunity. I say -that is not the case. I don't mean that there have not been men in •England who have taken the side of the South. There have been many, especially in what are called the Upper. clas ses ; but, atter all, it is not for the speech es of men, even if they have honorable or noble stuck before their names, that the country must be responsible, nor is it for writing in newspapers that we roust beheld responsible. Mr. Channing would not like me to make him. or his country responsible for the writing of the' New.' York •Herald. PITTSBURGH, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1863 WHOLE NO. 578 I don't compare the New-Ark Herald I the animus of an editor who re-publishes a to the Times or the _Morning ;Herald, but document thirteen years old, to blacken I say the Americans should net make us her, and this in revenge for supposed responsible for anything written in the wrong. Times or Morning Herald. All we ought THE DEATH of the Right Honorable Ed to be judged by is the action of the coon- ward Ellice, M. P. for Coventry, in his try, and as far as the action of the country 80th year, is e deeply regretted by a host of is concerned, so far as we have acted in a friends, liotr f in the upper and middle national capacity, the Americans have lit- classes of society, as well as among the tie or no reason to find fault, and that is humblest of his .constituents at Coventry, what they ought to bear• in mind. They and'his own, servants and dependents. He also ought to remember, when their hearts was of an Aberdeenshire stock. His grand rankle at any expression made by any of father emigrated to America, and after the the upper classes of the country, how their war, as a 44 loyalist,'f settled in Canada. cause has been viewed by the Tat masses There he founded a great commercial of the people. For every u° .man , for House, and also a House in London, where, every man who has a title before his name in Golden Square, Edward, the son was who has taken the side, of the Shuth, there born. He was educated first at Winches have been ten, twenty, and .:even hundred ter College- and after at St. Andrews, in b hard-workine men who have taken the side Scotland. 'He became a merchant, and in of the Northand freedoin. And they have the city of London, as an officeecierk, done so • with every teniptationi e nd every i" formed his business habit's, his unweary inducement brought to • bear uptin• them to leg power'of application, and his respect take the other side. Illy hav4een told for punctuality." He was early sent to by ingenious men---(I will not sellout for h t e purpose)—that their sufferges—and Canada the House being among the larg est 'ship-owners of the world. His .first many of them have been eufferifiglieeplye-- visit to the United: States was in 1803, have been caused by this war, andethat the; when New-York scarcely contained _BO,OOO war has; been caused by the action of the :inhabitants. He' visited Chicago *hen Federals ; and yet such has been their in- scarcely a house existed—the emporium at stinetive feeling—they know **liberty this hour without a rival• of the trade and is, and ill will it be for England when. the commerce of the West. At that period Mr. working men forget what liberteeis—such Ellice formed the acquaintance of many of was their instinctive feeling that they have the families of the signers of the Deolara refused to be misled; and I .do I.l' it w ill .tioa of Independence. In 1859, in his old be ungenerous of America to member age, he visited the States to see with his anything against England wheu,we can own eyes the social progress since his pre point to that large meeting of !am. half- ceding visit and "if he had not been re starving working men of ManchestAr in , the strained by his friends he would have re- Free Trade Hall, when they took.lthe lead crossed the Atlantic from interest in the in saying, 'No matter what the suffering causes and consequences of the civil war. we may endure, no matter what the sacri fices we may have to undergo, we -will not As to his views about American polities, they will of course be differently estimated allow our Government to depart from the -- e . by different persons, according to their own strict principle of neutrality on behalf of the slave-holding Confederacy!" ~ political views. He was wont to say that he had outlived the race of great American. As to the Alabama, Mr. Forste4 acquit- statesmen—Calhoun, Webster: and Clay_ ted Lord Russel of any intentionakneglect because that while the Anglo-Saxon mate or evil, but he believed "he waickeaught rial was still left in full supply, the intelli napping." " That was not the f i e f a the .. gent, instructed, and wealthy classes had Government, and Lord Russel hae,thene his thrown away the staff from their hands by utmost to prevent any other vesset follow- the concession of universal suffrage, and an ing her." He went on to argue the ques- equal vote to every, foreigner who had tion of steel-clads being built and sent out landed twelve months upon the shores of from the ports of a neutral. America. This fatal political. mistake, he I have thus given a full analysis of this said, was aggravated by:, the weakness of important speech, believing it a duty to do the . Executive in a Federal Union with. so, in the cause of justice, truth, and in- separate State rights. Other opinions as ternational good feeling. i to the issue of the civil war, (which he had The Times attacks Mr. Forster• and Mr. predicted,) would probably meet with little Charming, a's might have been expected. - favor,, coupled with. his declaration that "-The colored freeman of our 'English Alio- : some of the most able men of the States litionists," it says, 44 is an imaginary being had expressed to him their conviction that that unhappily the' free soil' of America ' the growing and, boundless extension of will not allow to become a reality. • There the States d altogether revolutionized the the liberated black is the most despised of representative system, and would render it pariahs--kicked, cuffed, spit upon, .by, law unmanageable. The author of a memoir in expelled from some States, massacred in one of the morning papers says of Mr. El an), popular tumult in others, detested in lice: . all as a nuisance." The "kicking, cuffing " His private correspondence with the and massacre " of the black, the Times States we know has been received with great conveniently forgets, are the work of the , interest and respect. He never kept exclu pro-slavery mob of New-York, hounded on., sive American society. Last year he received' by Southern sympathizers, and perpetrated ‘ Mie Mason at his seat at Glencoigh ;" (in by Irish Papists. " President ;Lincoln,":.l the.'Highlandi of Scotland,) " the past adds the Times, "is peefectlf indiffelent is - month he was the host of the Federal Am to abolition. He is .for Union, with ale- ibassador, Mr. Adams. Mr. Ellice's mind very or without it. We think now as Lin coin and Seward, Scott and Everett thought .of all and he used the telescope opinions, before the actual outbreak."; - ' and not the microscope, in g o wing.liii fel ,. A LARGENG MEETI was held in Craven :.low men and their respecti v vernments." Chapel, London, on Monday evening last, , This venerable. man was a,leading politi at which stronaeresolutions were passed in , cian, with immense influence. He was favor. of President Lincoln's emancipation 1 first a Radical, and the early friend of Sir policy. One of the speakers, the Rev. .F. Burdett, Lords King and Althorp, and John Kennedy, MA., of. Stepney, London, .: other Liberals. When Earl Grey, in 1830, severely commented upon the recent "Ad- ; brought in the celebrated Reform Bill, Mr. dress of the Clergy of the Confederate : Ellice was Secretary to the Treasury, and States." The Rev. Sella Martin, and ' was afterwards Secretary at War. He was another man of color, spoke, amid warm ' member for Coventry for the greater part approbation, and the Rev. William Brook, iof his public career, and when I was there the eminent Baptist minister, endorsed the 1 two years' ago, I found that he was univer sentiments and views which had been pre- I sally beloved and respected. viously expressed. ' BRIGANDAGE in the name of the Pope, THE RETIREMENT of Mr. Mason, the i and supported by the money of the Ex- Confederate Commissioner, who was ordered ! King of Naples, is being at length extin by his Government, or rather by Jefferson i guished by the efforts of the Italian Gov- Davis, to withdraw from all intercourse 1 ern men G. It has dismissed the Pope's with the British Government, is a signifi- I Consul at Naples from a post which he cant fact. It proves that Lord Russel has abused by signing the passports of these deeply' offended the Confederates, and vir- !atrocious cutthroats,. who perpetrated on tually and practically snubbed their Corn- ; women, as.well se men, the most horrible miSSOner• The Morning Herald (Tory) 1 outrages. In :revenge for the dismissal of takes 'occasion of this fact, furiously to .; its Consul, Count Zecchis has been sent abuse Earl Russel. That also is signifi- 1 : away by the Papal Government. More and cant. The Money Editor of the Times i more irritated are the Italian people with did his best to -help the Confederate loan ..-the French occupation at Rome. Napoleon dupes, and this week was bitter agaiiist the ' is the really responsible party for all the Government action in stopping the steam .‘. excesses of the Papal Government, and for rams at Liverpool. I have said before, and i.etll the sufferings of Seuthern Italy. " Let repeatit, that. Lord Russel has - scarcely re- * . them 'withdraw," says a correspondent at eeived justice for his firmness; and his re- aienne, " and, St. Peter will be paralyzed— sistance of pressure not only rem France, ; Francisco" (the ex-Ring of Naples) "will but other quarters, is worthy of him. Let plot in yei e e--the Italian, Government will any American place himself, in thought, in -; know how `to defend its rights, and how to oureForeign Secretary's position, And .he ; continue the work of redemption which it will see what a difficult course, he .has had :- has already commenced in a land so long to steer. Mr. , Mason .finds himself in, a = under the curse of wicked and incompetent more congenial atmosphere in France - but ; rulers." e . Yonmay rely upon, it,. if reverses and dis- , THE EVANGELICAL ALLIANCE-has been: asters eontinue to fall on the Confederates, their agent and representative will thel Majesty, tby holding, this week, its Sixteenth Annual' "vet Conference, in Dublin. It was inaugurated cold shoulder from his Imperial a soiree in the Rotondo, W. Brooke, just as Poor Poland is doings after all the e Master in E eq., . hopes excited among her sanguine chit- Chancery,- presiding 'lThere was a very large attendance of Depu dren. Not that this matter of Russia and i tations from,.-Conferences in France, Ger- Poland may not yet lead to war, but Im- man Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, America perialism will have an eye to it§ own ad- .'fand India.; Addresses were delivered by vantageevert then._ , 1 the _Eon.. and itev: Leland Noel, of Eng- AN APPEAL to " gallant old England," , land; the Rev. Mr. Summerville, of Glas wasplacarded on Wednesday last, all over gow; Professor Messner, of Berlin; Cap the metropolis. Its aim and object (all in 1 tain Berger, of Sweden; the Rev. Mr. Vain) is to arouse the public to the claims eWalsh, missionary, from Allahabad; .the of the Confederacy to immediate " recog- e nter. 0. Bidwell, from New-York; and nition," and to press this upon the Govern- Pellet Bernatoff, from Berlin. The meet ment. It is, `professedly issued by the ling was attended by a very large number .." London Confederate States Commercial of resident clergy, and of the most respect- League," (" we "; and ,"us " being con- . able citizens, 'who manifested the liveliest stantly used,) as if composed by English- -', interest in . the proceedings. • men and sympathizers with the ' South I ' l l The Irish Christians—Established and I have -no doubt it is of Southern menu- i non-EstabliShed—are distinguished as much facture, and that the Confederate :Index by their catholicity of spirit, and their gen could name its 'peneocters. I don't believe f nine hospitality, as by their basic of the that such a a London Commercial League" 1 -cardinal truths of the - . Gospel J.W. exists. One thing is certain, that English "neutrality," which has been `treated' as a piece of hypocrisy by so many good , Northd . = friends, is a terrible reality.; to Southerners-, on, their own confession. Not only has Mr. Mason gone away furious, by order of President Davis, to France, but, here is a placard before me which says— and in this it speaks out the feelings of the South—" The so called Neutrality prac r tieed against the South, has been their greatest hardship, and inflicted a deeper wound than if England had- sent _an army Of one hundred thousand men to aid the Northern Sigted to subjugate and starve out their Southern brethren." All honor to the Banner for the noble article speak ing:saArindly of Old;Englgadi awl exposing The Patriot Hiother's Thenk-Offering. The following letter breathes- a tender ness of maternal affection, purity. of. patriot ism. and depth ,of love to the Gospel of ..erns which make it a gem worthy of the grand-daughter of , the sainted. Isabella Gra ham, and - sister of the lamented Dr. Beth une ; DETROIT, aept. 30,1863. GEORGE H. STUART, ESQ.:—Dear Sir— 'Having, with great thankfulness to God, heard by.telegraph that my youngest son, Adjutant 11.. M. Duffield, is not wounded, and, quite well at Chattanooga, I send .you - twenty dollars, as a thank-offering from .:a .uither .for ithe , preseriration' of her son at the battle of Chickamauga. I should like the money appropriated where most of the Michigan regiments are, but still I do not diotate. All souls are preCious, and you can use it as you think best. May the blessing of our Father in heaven go with it 1 I think of the Christian Commission and the Sanitary Commission as twin brothers going forward to their glorious work. Oh ! my friend, what a field is open to Chris tians now, and how ought they to improve it in trying to rescue those who are " led captive by the devil at his will." God bless you, and the dear, precious Christian Commission ! Surely the blessing of those who are ready to perish will rest upon you. Ah ! little do you know how much comfort you give to anxious mothers when they hear of your locations. "My boy is there," is her . thought, and then she bows the knee and prays, that your labors may be blessed to him and others. Surely it is like going out into the high- Vays and hedges, when you look after the spiritual wants of soldiers. You encourage Christian soldiers, while you awaken the impeuitent Oh I how noble to be near the sick bed and cheer him with your bless ed words, " When the groan his faint heart giveth Seems the last sigh of despair." Oh I how I have wept and prayed for our beloved country. Two sons (one a Colonel, and the youngest, the Adjutant,) I gave. The Colonel is. wounded so that he cannot go back, and the dear young Adjutant has been in this battle. But I put him under the shadow of God's wing, and be has kept him safe. lam anxious, but still I say, " If new sorrow should befall, If my noble boy should fall, If the bright head I have blest, On the cold earth ends its rest, Still with all the mother's heart, Torn and quivering with the smart, I yield him 'neath thy cbast'ning rod, To my country , and. my God." You will never know the good you have done till "God shall wipe away all tears from your eyes," and you see how many gems shall sparkle in your crown which have been gathered from our army. How much good your Commission has done ! God bless you all! In haste, Your sister in Christ, ISABELLA G. DUFFIELD. The Scottish Church and Shivery. . The address sent to Europe acme time ago, from• the "Clergy of the Confederate States," asking for the sympathy of the Christian world for slaveay and the slave holders, has excited much indignant com ment. The last mail brought a response from the ministers of the Church of Scot land, which shows what is thought of slav ery by that venerable and truly religious body of Presbyterians When the mail closed, the document had just been drafted, and there had been no time to obtain 'many signatures. But the•names already signed are those of some of the most distinguished of the Scottish divines. The address is as follows " We, the undersigned, ministers of the churches in Scotland, in reply to the ap peal made to us in the Address to the Christians thrqughout the World,' recently put forth by the Clety of the Confede rate States-6114241erica,' feel bound to give public expression to our views, lest our continued silence should be misconstrued, as implying either acquiescence in the prin ciples of the document, or indifference to the crime which it seeks to defend. " We refer, of course, to a single topic, that of slavery, as it is handled in the ad dress. We desire to say nothing incon sistent with our country's attitude of strict neutrality as regards the war raging across the Atlantic. We do not discuss any of the political questions connected with its origin, progress, and probable issues. We offer no opinion on the measures adopted . on either tide. Nor are we to be regarded as shutting our eyes to the past and present sins and shortcomings of the North in rela tion to the - African race. The one object we have in view is to express the deep grief, alarm,, and indignation with which we have perused the pleading on - behalf of slavery in general, and American slavery in_particular, to which so many servants of the Lord Jesus Christ have not scrupled to append their names. With the feeblest possible incidental admission of abuses' which they 'may deplore in this, as in other relations of mankind,' we find these men broadly maintaining, in the most un qualified manner, that the relation of master and slave'—' among us,' they , add, to make their meaning more explicit—' is not incompatible with our holy Christian ity' They thank God for it,,as for a. mis sionary, institution; the best, as it would seem, and the most successful in the world. They held it to be their peculiar function to defend and perpetuate it. And they ul timately contemplate the formation of the Southern Confederacy upon the basis of slavery as one_nf its fundamental and per manent principles or elements, not only without regret, but with entire satisfaction and approval. Against all this—in the name of that holy faith and that thrice holy name,,which they venture to invoke on the side of a sys tem which treats immortal and redeemed men as goods and chattels, denies them the right of marriage and of home, consign - II them to ignorance of the first rudiments of education, and exposes them to the out rages of lust and passion—we most earnestly and emphatically protest. We do not think it needful to argue. The time for argu ment-has for many a year been regarded by the whole of enlightened Christendom as passed and gone. Apologists for slavery, attempting to Shelter themselves and it under the authority of God's Word and the Gospel of Jesus Christ, are to be denounced as really—whatever may be their intention —the worst enemies of both. " All reasonable allowance, no doubt, should be made for the circumstances of Christian ministers called in Providence to -labor Ivhere slavery exists. Some soreness, even, on their part, under what they regard as unjustifiable and dangerous movements on the other side, might be excused as not unnatural. And if we saw them manfully lifting their voice on behalf of universal liberty, and setting themselves to aim at the instant redress of the more flagrant of the wrongs incident to a state of bondage, we would be prepared calmly to listen to their representations as to the best and likeliest practical methods of promoting the present amelioration of the condition of the slaves, and securing within the shortest period consistent with safety their com plete and final' entanoipaticin. "'We are reluetaut to abandon the= hope TOE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office GAZETTE BUTLDINGS, 84 Film"! Sy Prrresysaka, Pa. Pamannue, Bourg-rser Om Of I'OE ORMNaII ADVERTISEMENTS. TERNS IN ADVANCX A Square, (3 liner or 16.1%) one inaertion, 60 mute; eacb subsequent il2lOllllll, 40 ceuhi; each UM) beyond eight, 6 da A Square per quarter, $4.00; each line additional, 88 Dents A RaDoOetoof made to adverthera by the year, BIIBI3IXB/3 NOTICES of Tax line! or lam, $l.OO each id Mous! line, 10 cents. REV. DAVID NIKIIIN'EY, PsoPausroa AND PtrazzownL, that, upon reconsideration, and in view of the sentiments now unanimously held and expressed on this subject everywhere else, all over Christendom, our American breth ren may yet be induced to take up a posi tion more worthy of our common faith than that which they at present occupy. But, at all events, the obligation lying upon us, as things now stand, toward them, toward ourselves,. toward the Church and the world, toward the Bible and the Gospel, is to record, in the strongest possible terms, our abhorrence of the doctrine on the sub ject of slavery which the Southern clergy teach, and upon which they act; and to testify before all nations that any. State, Empire, or Republic constituted or recon struct* in these days of Christian light and liberty, upon the basis of that doctrine practically applied, must, in the sight of God, be regarded as founded on wrong and crime, and as deserving, not his blessing, but his righteous wrath. " ROB. S. CANDLISH, D.D., Edinburgh. THOMAS GUTHRIE, D.D., Edinburgh. W. H. GOOLD, D.D., Edinburgh. Ron. BUCHANAN, D.D., Glasgow. JOHN CAIRNS, D.D., Berwick-on-Tweed. CHARLES J. BROWN, D.D., Edinburgh. ANDREW Tnomsow L D.D., Edinburgh. • WILLIAM ARNDT, Glasgow. W. LINDSAY ALEXANDER, D.D., Edin burgh. JAMES BEGG, D.D.,'Edinburgh. " Edinburgh, Sept. 22, 1.863." The paper is being signed by all the leading ministers of Scotland. The Name That is Abave Every Name. Have you experimentally found that !here is virtue in the name of Jesus ? ,tiave you ever suffered from deep depres sion of spirit, when all around you was lark and lowering, and no single ray of :tope from earthly objects came struggling 'through the gloom, when you have felt as f all had forsaken you, and " no man cared ror your soul ?" At such an hour have ion ever experienced the matchless power :tnd efficacy of that name of love ? Oh ! there is in those short syllables a sound more soothing than the fanning of a ser aph's wings, more' musical than the melo dy of an angel's harp. For that name alone is able to sustain the sinking spirit, to bind up the broken heart, and' to bring peace and comfort to the despairing soul. Nay 'tore, that name can bring what no other name which the lips of man have ever ut tered can aspire to bring—pardon and ac ceptance to the most hardened, most rebel lious, most God forgetting spirit among us dl. He was " called Jesus, beCause he came to save his people from the guilt, the power, the consequences of their sin." Has, then, the name no charms for you ? ave you heard it often, and does it con vey no pleasurable feelings to your heart? We do not usually hear the name unmoved of one we love ' • the. quickened ear catches ;,he sound amid a thousand voices; and of thousand names hears that and that Alone; the throbbing heart beats faster and .iigher when that name is mentioned, for it comes laden with the recollection of past i ioys and hopes of future happiness. So it is to the true children of God with the same of Jesus their Saviour, Redeemer, Friend; it reminds them of all that God has done for their souls, of all the assur ances of pardon and peace which that bles sed name has sealed , to them ; of those short and transient moments of close and intimate communion with him who bears that name, which they have already real ized;' of those ages, those eternal ages of happiness and joy which they yet hope to spend in the Redeemer's presence, and amid the endearments of the Redeemer's love. Blessed, thrice blessed are you, who can in that holy name recognize one who has saved you from your sins, who is the best beloved of your soul now, and who, "when your heart and flesh fail you, shall be the strength of your heart and portion forever."--B/unt. Short Sermon. Jesus of Nazareth passel by."—.(Aike xviii: 87 . A beggar, and hopelessly blind at that ! How sad .a \ case ! He cannot go to any celebrated physician, and it were useless if he could. He has heard of one (invalids are quick to learn such facts,) who cures the blind. - But he has never been to Jer icho. Will he ever come ? Shall I know it if he come, and, knowing it can I gain an audience ? Painful and oft reptated -questions, suspending:his hopes on the frail thread of remote contingencies. But, one day, there is a crowd rushing along, trampling over and by the poor blind man. "Hearing the multitude he asked what it meant." The answer thrills him by the double fact so briefly told. It is Jesus, 'and he is " passing by." It is the,moment of.-the man's life. Jesus alone can help him, was then at Jericho for the first and last time, and was even then leav ing. What a thread for a blind man to find and follow ! He calls, is opposed, calls louder, is heard, Jesus stops ; speaks to him; .does for him all he asks; he sees the Lord of glory, and follows him in the way with gazing, feasting, adoring eyes. Oh ! many blind sinners sit by the way side of the world. Once in their life Jesus mines near, nearer, nearest, but is " passing by." How much for them hangs on that fact at that precise time 1 You were in a crowd, or in some deep sorrow, or with his disciples, or alone with- the Holy Spirit, when he •was " passing." And you knew he was going by. Did you call, and did he stop and answer you? There is a critical point for every sinful beggar when Jesus goes out once at Jqr icho's gate. The Christian looks back to it, and so will the lost sinner. It may seem a trivial thing at the time to let him pass by. But opposition should not pre vent our calling after him. For they who call are answered. And oh ! the wonder of mercy, Jesus of Nazareth will stop, and help, when Poor blind sinners call after him ! —Boston. Review. The Time to Fret. There were two gardeners whose crop of peas had been killed by the frost. One of them fretted and grumbled, and said nobody was set unfortunate as he was. Visiting his neighbor some time after, he 'cried in aStonishment, " What are these ? A fine crop of peas ! - Where did they come from ?" "'These are what sowed while you were fretting," said the neigh bor. " Why, don't you ever fret ?" "Yes; but I generally put it off till I have repaired