EV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Editor and Proprietor. ,EV. I. N. 111'K iNNEY, ASSOCIATE EDITOR. TERMS IN ADVANCE. IT 70 111., /singly or In Clubs,) $1.50 ELI VERT(' IN EITHER OP THE CITIER 2.00 rem Dom.a as. we will send by mail seventy number", 0- ONE POLIAR, thirty-three /mothers. /./resending nor/IV= eubecrihere and upward", will Keby entitled to a paper without charge. owalaahould be prompt. a little before the year expires d pay men to by safe hands, or by mall. let all letters to REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, • Pittsbtirgh, Pa. (Selected.) Drawing Near now is your salvation ncarrr than when yo be rarer ! yes ! we feel it not ;,j,4100 'Mid the rushing of the strife, t'Ae we mourned our changed lot, i Tolled beneath our shadowed life, By each step our worn feet trod '' We were drawing near to God. :.; . . , 4 . hen beneath the sudden stroke - .i!! . All our joys of life went down; ~ .- . :olhen our best beloved broke . ~ 4 1 ,,. Earthly bonds to take their crown, 3""* By the upward path they trod, ." .. ' Nearer drew we to our God. ~ In those days of bitter woe, 4," When we saw their smile no more; ii . .'*9tert our hearts were bleeding slow, L' .-. Strickeo, stricken—CM, how sore! i.. .. While we lay beneath the rod, ~, We were nearer to our Qod, -'When upon our lifted eye ,7 Gleamed a vision of our home; ~ : When we saw the glory high, Flooding all that spotless dome! In that hour of raptured sight . h Pressed we nearer our delight. • ,hrough the long and vanished years, 4 Doubting, struggling and depressed, Aided with their mist of tears, We were passing to our rest ; Tempest tossed and current-driven, Ever drawing nearer heaven. then the day was all withdrawn, And we walked in tenfold night; Nhen we panted for the dawn Of the ever-blessed : , In those hours of darkness dim, We were drawing near to.bint. For the Presbyterian Banner. tery of Blairsville, at New Salem, Oct. 6, 1863, letter was received from the Rev. A. , cc, who is Chaplain of the 11th Reg. C., making report of his labors in ,rmy. Whereupon it was so/red, That Presbytery are much 3d with Mr. Torrence's report, and he has our cordial sympathy and .s in his arduous labors. u)lvecl, That the Stated Clerk be re h.l to forward Mr. Torrence's letter, icr with the above notion of Presby to the Editor of the Presbyterian for publication. JAMES DAVIS, Stated Clerk. TER FROM REV. A. TORRENCE .P NEAR RAPPARAiiNOCK. STATIOS, VA., 1 September 11, 1863. j .he Presbytery of Blairsville: DEAR Btt6THREN :—I have not reported you since your meeting in October of t year. This omission was not wilful, was occasioned by the moving condi of the troops at the time the reports ild have been made and forwarded. I been occupied all the time since I Ltered my present sphere of duty, ex , one month, during which I was laid ,e by slckness : I do not know that I . bet - ter meet the object of a report, such would naturally be expected of me, than giving a brief account of my labors 1g the soldiers in the camp, on the and on the field of battle. The Camp affords the Chaplain the favorable opportunities and facilities systematic, and what might be called toral labors among the men, In the I have preached every Sabbath, when prevented by the inclement state of the ther, or the absence of the men on - et. This is the time for distributing tracts, and papers, as here they have it leisure for reading. Of such reading ;ter, I have obtained from various sour enough to furnish the men with a fresh Ay on an average, twice every month. iy have always been thankfully received, as I generally accompany them with a of recommendation, and often inquire ,erwards how they liked them, I get sat ictory evidence that the books, &c., are ierally read, though, doubtless, as may rurally be supposed, with more attention profit by some than by others. Through the liberalVey of a few friends the soldiers, ,among whom were John ';on, of Indiana, and Benj. K. Craig, of Alexandria, I obtained a sufficient Jber of bound volumes to supply each t of three companies with one volume :IL These I.have used as a sort of cir lating library. When an order to march 9 I collected and boxed these books, got them carried along in the baggage gm. When temporarily encamped, I do distributed them. The good effects these books are manifest and gratifying. bad a Bible class last Winter, which al ',ugh attended by comparatively few, was highly interesting to myself and those attended. The 25th of November the day appointed by Gov. Curtin for nksgiving, was observed by the 11th ',meat at Brooks' Station. This regi -1 t only of' the "Reserves," was formally ,wn out to a convenient spot, where. Di le, worship was performed, and a dis cs° delivered by the Chaplain. in the 6th of August, the day appoint by the President, for publics thanksgiv for recent victories, though we were on return march through Virginia, and temporarily encamped, religious servi were held, and a discourse delivered, were attended by the whole regi officers and men. Le public religious services of the Sa'b are generally well attended. These Age encourage me to hope that my, le l; here are not in vain. Yet there are iy things to discourage. The most ion and inveterate sins in the army, profane swearing, card•playing, and bath breaking. 'But these, lam happy say, are less prevalent in this regiment, present, than at any, former period. On the March, the opportunities afforded chaplain for doing ,good -are not so luent, or favetable; and yet . be is by means deprived of opportunities and., : tsions which, if promptly And prop., improved will serve greatly to ex- I his influence and usefulness. There the war-worn soldiers, burdened with )sack, haversack, oartridge-box, canteen, musket, moving forward, sometimes 'ugh rain and mud, at others under a .thin g sun, and not unfrequently" pro ing the march into the late hours of t--tired, weary and longing for rest, marching on. If the chaplain has a rt to sympathize or a tongue to speak, Mootti ibrboar.., to oddrese f 48 %MAME 1 4 ,trt.'sbgteri,ait' VOL. XII. NO. 7. offers, in words of encouragement and com fort. Besides, a thousand little annoy ances spring up almost hourly, both on the way, and in the place of temporary encamp. went, which chafe the temper and irritate the passions of many of the men, and oc casion vollies of profane oaths,and expres sions of bitter complaints. ere the chap lain should be, to reprove their impatience and folly, and in words of kindness and wisdom to reason them into a better state of feeling. On the Field, the chaplain's labors, if properly directed, are of very great impor tance. When a wounded or dying soldier sees a chaplain approaching (whom he rec ognizes by his uniform, if not previously known to him) be always expects to find in him a friend , ' to whom be can speak with greater freedom than to any other, both of his bodily sufferings, and of the wants of his soul. And every act of kind ness the chaplain performs, and every word of sympathy, counsel or prayer he may utter, is sure to be better received and more justly appreciated, than when done or spoken at any other time. For example, one wounded soldier on the field at Gettys burg, as he lay on the ground faint from the loss of blood, and while I kneeled at his aide, near the hour of midnight, threw his arm around my neck and told me of his conscious lack of preparation for death, and of his solicitude about that event. And when I asked him to let me go that I might give my attention to others who lay near, and in like need, it was only on condition that I would promise soon to return to him, that he withdrew his arm from my neck. He died the tenth day after. Even the rebel soldiers, when wounded and fallen into our hands, expect to find in the union chaplain a friend. Of many instances of this, the following may serve as an illustra tion : I approached a rebbel soldier as he lay suffering from a wound which would evidently soon be followed by.cleath, and having directed his.attention to the dying Saviour, as the only hope for dying sinners, I was about turning away from him, when he beckoned me back and said: "Chaplain, I have been trusting in that Saviour for the last seven years, and feel assured that he will not leave me now. I leave in his care my wife and two children, I wish you to remember me in your prayers." I com plied with his request, but the arrival of surgeons and their hurry in getting wounds examined and dressed, prevented me from doing so in his presence. But this report is sufficiently extended. The number and importance of the duties of the chaplaincy are truly great, and felt to be so by those who rightly estimate them. The boldness and prevalence of many forms of wickedness—the timid and feeble oppo-• sition made to them by many in official positions, and of' former religious profea. mons, and the oppressive sense of responsi bility which often burdens the chaplain's mind, constrains him often to cry in secret: - places, " Lord who is sufficient for - these things ?" Yet the preaching and praying, and talking, and reproving, and distributing of tracts, are evidently the means of doing good, Ist in restraining the bad from run ning themselves and leading others to great er excesses in vicious practices; and 2d in encouraging the good to hold fast their principles, and resist the power of the evils which encompass them. The great danger is, that the traits of character, moral and sooiil, which the, citizen possessed at the time of his enlistment, will be supplanted by the vices of the army, and that many will return at the expiration of their term pt' ae-vice, only to surprise and grieve their friends by the evidences of sad changes in their feelings and habits. The means of grace of which I have spoken are important, and not without efficiency, as means of pre serving in a greater or less degree the mor als of the soldiers, so that' those who may be permitted to return to the peaceful walks and avocations of civil life may do so with pleasure to their friends and credit to themselves, and that those who are appoint ed to death on the field or in the hospital, may be prepared for that change. With prayers that the Head of the Church may be with you to guide your counsels and bless your labors, and request ing an interest in your prayers, I remain your brother in the Gospel of Christ, ADAM TORRANCE, Chaplain llth Regt. P. R. V. C. For the Presbyterian Banner Presbytery of Steubenville MESSRS EDITORS :—The Presbytery of Steubenville held an interesting and de lightful meeting at Wellsville, on the 6th and 7th insts. I send you the following items forpublication, if deemed worthy'an insertion in your valuable journal. Rev. J. B. Patterson was elected Mod erator, and Rev. 'J. W. Hainilion, Tempo rary Clerk. The retiring Moderator, Rev. John Wat son, preached the opening sermon, from Ps. xxvii .1- 44 One thing have I desired of the Lord," &o. • There, was an item of business transacted on, the first day of the sessions of Presby tery„which was regarded by its members with peculiar pleasure; that was, the re ception of a newly organized church and its minister. There were two organized ,Pres byterian churches in New Philadelphia; one Old School and one New. The Old School organization : was without the stated means of grace ; the New School had an accepta ble minister. These two churches united together most happily, a short time since, and asked to be received under the care of Presbytery, which was granted: The min ister, Rev. Delos E. Wells, presented a certificate of dismissal from the Presby tery of Pataskals, and was received as a member of Presbytery. Rev. Israel Price was dismissed by Pres bytery from his pastoral charge at Am sterdam, on his own request, with which the congregation concurred, in order that he may devote his whole time to Annapolis, the other branch of his Charge's. Rev. J. H. Aughey was dismissed, at his own request, to the Presbytery of Vin cennes. Rev. John Arthur accepted the calls ten tiered him by the united pastoral charge, of; Oak Ridge and Chestnut Grove ' and a ra Consittee,was appointed to install, him as pastor over,them. Presbytoq enjoyed a season of delight fit religious exereisevon Wednesday. The Committee on Religions Exercises called the attention of. Presbytery to the fact, that for several, years past, Ihe4rst Wednesday of:Ootober has been observed as-a day of jeonoert of prayer, by Christian mothers, far timiraßne ;" Amid crowanmenda that-the PITTSBURGH, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1863. WHOLE NO. 579. social religious exercises of Presbytery take this direction. Their suggestion was cor dially adopted, and carried out. Your correspondent left home on Tues day morning at 9 o'clock, and travelled by railroad between fifty and sixty miles, at tended a pleasant and profitable meeting of Presbytery, and'reached home at 7 o'clock on Wednesday evening. It would have occupied four days to have accomplished thus much in the earlier years of his min istry. That these facilities for speeding travel may tend to promote the glory of God, is the prayer of a friend of internal • IMPROVEMENTS. S.trlve. LUKE xur : 24.34: Strive to enter in .. . How often would .. . and ye would not. Salvation has been purchased by Jesus Christ, and it ialreely offered to men and urged upon their acceptance. Long has the offer been made, and 'as long been re jected. It mast be received as a free gift; It can neither be bought nor merited. And yet efforts must be put forth, or, the prize can never be secured. Hence the exhorta tion, Strive to enter in at the strait gate. There must be decision to stop in the course of sin ; 'there must be a purpose and an effort to turn unto God. The difficulty lies not in the way of life, nor in the pro visiens of the Gospel. True, the way is narrow; but that refers rather to what men would take with them and what they must renounce—the change they must ex pPrimice and the life they must live—than to [fleecy of atoning blood or the suffi cizney of Divine grace. Men must strive. Effort is needed, not because of the way so much, as because of outward hindrances and an inward reluctance. Wordly coin- Vanions and influences, and a wicked heart at enmity with God, combine to keep them in' the ways of sin and away from the cross of Christ and the throne of grace. Yet all things are ready; and Jesus invites. He is willing and waiting to receive the return ing penitent. Yea, he follows men with his entreaties; add weeping over them, says, How often would I, and ye would not ! Yes, how often In every age, in child hood, in youth, in manhood, and even in old age, he- invites, and says, Come unto me, and I will give you rest. In all cir cumstances, in prosperity and in adversity, in sickness and in health, in sorrow and in joy, he says, Look unto me and be ye saved. And now again, reader, he, addresses you in loving accents, and says, Turn and live ! Often have I called, but as often you have refused; how often would. I, and you would not ! 0, sinner, let that word sink deep into your heart I Listen to Jesus, and em brace him as your Saviour. Strive to enter in. The door is open now. Enter before it is closed forever. W. J. M. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. Earthquake in England—Scenes of its Manifesta tWns—Terror and Alarm—The Lessons.'Sug gested—Retrospective Glance—Boding: for the . Future—The Great King and his Sceptre—Past' Earthquakes in. Britain-Nations and the " Om-• nipotent"—Mr. Beecher at Glasgow—Strictures of the " Times"—Analysis of t he . Address— " Egoism "." or Egotirm"—" The Altar" :and, " Gethsemane"—The Final Explanation—Death of Archbishop Whaiely—Local Science Congress at Edinburgh—Colonial and American Land: Unoccupied—A Grand Future. • LONDON, Oct. 10th, 1863. AN UARTIIQUAKE shock has been expe rienced in a part of England this week. It chiefly affected- the neighborheods of Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Chelten ham, parts of Buckinghamshire, South Staffordshire, East Worcestershire, Here. fordshire, and South Wales. It was felt also by parties waked out of sleep, at Stoke Newington and Blackheath—the one a Northern and the other a South-East sub urb of London itself. Within three miles from the spot where I write, a gentleman writes a letter to the Times ' (one of twen ty-seven communications from different parts,) stating that at twenty-minutes past three o'clock in the morning,-he felt his bed move with an undulating, motion, as if by an earthquake. There were four very distinct shocks in the space of two seconds The• motion was from Bast to West, and " felt as if four waves had succeeded .each: other under a boat." Your correspondent did not experience anything of the kind. Certainly it is la "sensation." which he does not covet. Another, on the North of London, tells how a heavy four-post bed stead was "violently.shaken!' But at 'Wolverhampton and elsewhere ' the shocks were - much more severe. One describes it, as if there were a general breaking of the furniture of the room, and noticed espe cially the vibration of the doors of a hang ing press mounted on friction rollers: Another said that the impression was that " thieves were' entering." A - clergyman tells how his bed shook violently, the win dows rattled, the: furniture shivered, the silver jingled (in the plate basket), and it appeared as if •the sound of a heavy explo : scan beneath the cellars' accompanied the second shock. A member of the Society of Friends' at Gloucester, who 'begins, " Respected Friend," and ends " thine respectfully," says his bed -was shaken under him half -a dozen of times, and that the tremor was accompanied by a low roaring sound and a rattling of doors and easements, which im parted the cause of it too plainly to be mistaken for anything else, and least of all for that favorite simile for all loud noises— thunder. The Head Master of the Chelten ham College relates how there was -a deep, rumbling noise suddenly heard, such as that of an artillery wagon, that the entire body of students' was awakened, and that the impression on each was, that the rest had conspired in a body to shake the whole building with their feet until the heavy stone walls on either side were heard •to strain and crack. He then adds : Con sidering that this country lies upon the great volcanic: bolt, (what 'a comfortable thought I) '" it- is matter of surprise -that these phenomena have been so unfre quent." At Wolverhampton, " to parsons - in gybed, .the whole;house , was shaken from the foun dation, with a tremulous, rapid,-and undu lating motion." There were vibrations of the furniture, and creaking noises, -as -if the whole house had been strained and--the •timber-work and masonry were 44 settling."- A night watchman on -duly at the Bank, with a policemen, was terrified by seeing the building shaking," and by thasound of ".the .church gates" also' moving:" -A aloud. oflituat tioselroni the- earth ; and at the same time he felt a breath of warm air: Far the Presbyterian Banner , . . Another saw the trees and " a wall shak ing." Not long since we bad news of an awful and destructive earthquake.. at Manila, and a gentleman residing at Birmingham, and formerly at Matiila, describes the shocks as similar to those experienced by him in that region. Ity , the jaiLat Taunton there was great terror among " the prisoners and officials," (here Paul' and Silas, and the ter rifted jailor' at, Philippi, are at_ once sug gested to us !) j,`the : latter believing that the prison was about to fall." Mr. Charles Dickens; the author, says, " It: was exactly I as if a . great Vast ,Were crouching asleep . under the bedst 41 ; and:were now shaking itself and tryinakto rise:" : - - - Suggestive sutely is such- a;phenomenon as.this. It recall:li first ,of, all, the many earthquakes men ioneitia , Scripture.- = sueh as, that,which a' upl ißrailyDathatt and Abiram, -ib t vlligh: occurred =in , the reign of Uzzialtiaing of 'Judah, to which the prophets Amos (i : 'lO and 'Zechariah (xiv : *5,) and Joiephus:also refer. Above all, it reminda fits , Of that ever memorable and "mighty earthquake" which took place when the- Saviour expired on the cross of Calvary, and when the centurion was led• to ery!but, " ' Truly this was the Son of God," chid of , which Cyril of Alex andria makes, niention, stating that in his time rocks were shown which had been rent asunder by earthquake. Sandys acid Maundrelt were convinced that 'these fissures,- as e*mined by them, were the effects of the iliarthquake. As prepursOrs of judgments, as well as one of the means of their infliction on guilty nationso.who does not ,know that earthquakes a:0 Mentioned first as matters of fact in Scripture, and secondly as 'spec alyptio and prophetic symbols of such judg ments ? Ourlord, when he predicted the destruction of Jerusalem, and the disper sion of the Jews, spoke of " earthquakes in divers places," and these were but " the hecrinnino. sorrows," for " nation should rise against ration," &c. Often have I thought that 9ur own times have been and are parallel toi those of which the Saviour spoke as ." nigh." Looking up to him now, as'the Enthroned One who sways the scep tre both as a rod of love and terror, who shall smite through kings in the day of his wrath, remembering how within the last decade of years fearful convulsions and revolutions have, taken place in Europe and the East, and in Poland, is making its throes and upheavings to be felt now, and may next year - involve many nations in war—howi moreover, Federal Germany on the one side, threatening benmark as to Holstein, and, how the American civil war, even while we expect a beneficent issue, is nothing less than a political earthquake, sudden and unexpected in its advent, up heaving in its successive throei of things which were treated tolerantly—including slavery itself, a. permanent " domestic con stitutiocaMidt,nceording to Southern the ology, a Divlne economy; considering all these, I say, what portentous events loom up before us from , tha dread past,-from the, troubled present, and it may be to a more Awful future ! Spiritual and personal lessons are also suggested—not forgetting the agonies of an awakened conscience, the terrors of the 'Day of Doom—when of the - enemies even now so proud, and blaspheming of the Christ of. God, all faces shall gather black ness beneath the frown of Him who, "robed in dreadful majesty," shall sit on tke Great White throne of supreme and final Judg ment. Even now, nations that rebel-against his authority have dark forebodings of coming days of vengeance.- What a joyful thought to the true Church of God—the family of genuine believers—that his cause cannot perish, that his kingdom, amid all up.heavings can "never be moved," and that as as the mountains are round about Jerusalem ' So Jehovah eompasseth his peo ple from henceforth, even forever. And last of all, how sale the righteous man I Amid the wreck or matter, be, the justified and sanctified one, is secure; amid the fall of worlds, lie fears-not. 44- impavidum, .feriunt ruinm." There,are chronicles which count up 255 earthquakes, of which 139 were in Scot land, and the rest in Yorkshire, Derby shire, Wales,-and the South coast of this island. There was a violent one in Perth Shire in 1839. Some twenty years earlier, on a Sabbath morning, the congregations were shaken in their pews, and saw the Plaster fall. On Feb. Bth, 1750, London was seriously terrified; it felt a worse shOck on the Bth of the following month, and be came so nervous, that when a fanatie fore told its destruction on the Bth`of April, the inhabitants took to the fields till the supposed day of vengeance was over. It was on the eve of the day of this expected catastrophe, that George Whitfield, with flashing eye and tongue of fire, preached to a multitude in Hyde Park, of temperance, righteousness, and judgment to come. Many (alas with no better results in most cases it may be, than that in the case of Felix,) " trembled," and when the danger was over, all was forgotten. Solemn lessons have, by this earthquake,: been suggested (besides those already indi. Gated) by a powerful public writer, who says "There are means, utterly beyond our ken and our computation, far" below our feet, by which cities may be subverted, populations suddenly cut off, and empires ruined. This is a thought which, in its personal application , is familiar enough ; perhaps it is not so familiar as in its no.- tional bearing." - . He then refers to American troubles, and addsin a voice of warning "We are safe from that fate, at least so we deem ourselves, for never were we so united. But there are other weapons of destruction in the arsenal of the OMNIPOTENT: Who can say what strange trials of shaping, or upheaving, sinking, dividing, or drying up, may await us. We know by science these isles have gone. through many a strange metamorphe sis, and science ce.nnot - assure us that there are none, to, come"' One thinks, at stick a time, of the Psalin ist's grayer, ", Put them in fear, 0 Lord, that the nations may 'know themselves to be but, men." • • THE REY. H. WARD BEECIFEJL has de livered an address at'a public breakfast at Glasgow. It was' his first public utterance on the Americans war:-- -I shall give you an analysis of it, but first quote what the Times says about it.:.. " We can listen to any one except a min ister of religion, who blasphemously tells us that a ,purely secular end--the mainte mince of the Ameriban UniOn—is inns lirde'iliatit'tiano'tiftei ittiMetum 'in the I sight of God, that those who offer up their children to this moloch of human pride and ambition, are to be likened to Abraham of fering up Isaac, and that the sorrows of a nation thus afflicted, resemble the woe of the garden of Gethsemane. Still less are these things endurable when they are in terspersed with the most common-place re marks on paper currency, the seizure of the Trent, the garrisoning, of Canada, and we know not how many other secular subjects. No English-audience can possibly listen to such language without disgust. It is the setting up , as an object . of, religious wor ship, that extravagant vanity and desira of 'overwhelming power which has long been the mainsprings of American politics, but which nevertheless, is not more opposed to sound views of ,national happiness, than it is to the first`principles of the%elk,. hum- Ibla peaceful``'wit = it • seeki-to identify itself! - "- We understand clearly that the preser vationnf the Union is the end, and aboli tion only one of the means. Ms love is not for his fellow-men ; his sympathy is not fer hiiman sorrow or human suffering; the spirit with which he believes himself to be filled, and which he considers to be Divine, he dignifies by the name of love of country. * * Mr. Beecher was driven to make an admission which should be ta ken notice of by every person who wishes to understand the motives of the. War Christians of America. We have been in the habit; of Opposing that the party of which Mr. Beecher is, the apostle and the ornament, were actuated by sympathy for the ma ° re race; that- if their. hands are stained with blood, .tiip motives of this bloodshed, though overstrained and fanati cal, were pure, and that no worldly ambi tion, no national pride, no lust for domin ion, mingled itself with the convictions which have led Ahem to call aloud for fresh sacrifices, to rejoice over the reeking slaugh -1 ter of every, battlefield, and to adopt a policy of extermination. According to Mr. Beecher, we were entirely mistaken; the first object was the restoration of the Union, the abolition of slavery was only an afterthought." Now let us analyse Mr. Beeeher's ad dress. I very much fear that with its ap parent egotism and other characteristics, it. has done harm to the Northern cause, or at least given occasion for the adversary to speak reproachfully. On -the other hand there are very noble things in-the speech.. The' breakfast meeting was got up 'by friends of the temperance - cause, but it really assumed a political aspect, and the desire of - those present, to hear Mr. Beech er on the war, was gratified. Bailie Govan occupied the chair and introduced the speaker, with kindly words toward himself and his country. Arderiea was spoken of as_" the beloved country from which Mr. Beecher comes—the country beloved by every right-feeling Briton in thess islands." Mr. Beeehernommence.d by speaking of ;his: hereditary love for Scotland. His fa ther said when he waked up in Edinburgh he thought he was in Boston—he felt as though New-England had been simply a branch broken off, with the sap fresh in it. He then spoke some time •on the Temper ance question, and referred to the great in crease of drinking amid" the camp and ex posures" of :the war, and that " the bad custom seems for the: time to have spread itself over the land. He then referred to himself as one who had been made by grace a Christian, and therefore led to feel he must be like Christ. " I was, like Paul, a debtor." And thus became a Temperance man, nn Abolitionist, and also in his pub lie ministrations, " loving those for whom nobody cares." Espeeially did he consid er it was his business "to do the things which ought to be done, but which others were afraid to do." "If;so, let me do them." Then carne a little more decided egoism (which in this case may not be ego tism, although it sounds like it,)—" I am born without moral fear. So far as reputa tion is concerned, I never knew what it was, to be .afraid. I have said offensive things because I have said the things folk needed and did n't want!' He went on to say that he had his reward for all this, by having sympathy in' his_soul with Christ. " When it was danger to life and limb, when all abolition press was dragged into the river Ohio, I wrought id this cause, and I deserve no more credit for it than wa ter deserves for running down hill. I reaped my reward. I never was so happy as when men were out against. me. If I wanted motives I just required somebody to say, You slant do it.' I have been paid a thousand fold. I have made these statements, having been',' in • the heart of slavery for twenty-five years." Mr. Beecher next described the unanim ity of feeling and resolve in the North, that all felt it was God's work, not man's. "My oldest 'son ,is in the war; he went when about eighteen years of age. My next boy is fifteen; and if he lives to see one year more, he shall go. I pray God that he should go. If God should say to, me, 6 Put them there,' I would do it. Abraham did not put Isaac half so, quick upon the altar as ;I would my children!' He went on to give hi.s explanation of the common com plaint of what many call jealousy enter tained toward England; as compared with France, and the alleged abuse heaped en :England, or rather as he called it, "cudg elling the British, " while " Napoleon and the French were doing the same things." It was "because we love the English so much. When we like them so much, we can't help feeling it. Be'referred to the reception 'given to the Prince of Wales, when'" we greeted him as the future King of England. Not so the South. ThuS we got our bosoms warmed." But then came the rebellion,' the 46 Trent business," and what English .statesmen said, and "we didn't like it," nor the " sending of troops to Canada!' As,to the alleged impossibility of a'uni ted nation as before,-he said that it would be united again, but " not as before." As to "moral suasion," he said " we did not fire the first gun, and they that take the sword must p.erish by the sword. * * We' mean to purge out-of the States all those• things that in their nature are antag onistic to liberty, President Lincoln wri ting about slavery, had said, "Tell your anti-slavery friends I shall go out all right." He added, "Our people-in the North feel, g Let this cup pass from me' They will not draw back even in Gethsemane." This hist passage, with that about 'his children offered on the altar, as was 'Bade, gave the teat for thelstrictures of the Times.' Along with this was .. : a later statement made in . , reply to IMr: Henderson._ The 'latter had eiitt i to we hiterimhiemeyeuMeotethie war. You should now hear ours. Had we been told at the beginning, that the war was to abolish slavery, the great mass of the people of this country would have cordially sympathized with the cause of the North, and would have been very different from what it is at present." Mr. Beecher admitted that at the outset they did not contemplate the abolition of slavery; but the rebels became so potent, that the Pres ident was obliged to have recourse to the crushing of the rebellion by abolishing Mavery, which struck right into the heart of the enemy. When it became evident that the Great flagon must be destroyed, with arms outstretched and swords . of fire in their hands, they rose like one man, and with a voice, which reverberated. throughout 'the whole world, they cried, 'Let it, with 'all its attendant horrors, go ,to „JaenVcp These_ words were ;received with silence. From , the lips of an Abo litionist they were chilling; from a Northern minister, who held milder Views about slavery, the effect might have been different, especially if he had asked the audience, 4f Could you bear to have your British flag shot down . by rebels against the Queen, and the integrity of the King dom ?" Talk as the Times may, had we been Northerners we should have fought for the integrity of the Union, also. DOCTOR WHATELY Archbishop of Dub lin' died in Ails 77th year, greatly regret ted. He was a powerful logician, an able writer, quaint, pithy and original ' in his illustrations, and his works will long sur vive. He was a man by himself—more of a " Broad" than a " High" or " Svangel ical " Churchman; but that he possessed the faith of God's elect, and died in Christ, there is no reason to doubt. He contem plated his dissolution with hope and strong desire, longing to depart. The ladies of his family were most active in their en deavors to do good among Irish Roman Catholics in Dublin, especially at the schools in Townsend Street. These I once visited in company with M. Pilatte, Wal densian pastor at Nice, and I shall never forget the astonishment not without angry looks and words from one dark-eyed Mile sian woman,) when, standing up to address the people present—including many adults who had been reading and disputing over the New Testament--he said that he be longed to a Church older than that of Abe Pope, of Rome herself. A SOCIAL SCIENCE CONGRESS is now sitting at Edinburgh, Lord Brougham be ing President. Papers from eminent men in every department are being read and dis cussed, all having- a practical bearing on social advance and development. Of this Institution, which holds "moveable feasts" over the kingdom, it has been truly said that " its Congresses are the annual review not only of its own operations, but the world's progress." It therefore embraces even political movements in its review, as well as matters of law and jurisprudence, the treatment of convicts, cooperative So cieties, clubs and: reading rooms, employ ment for young women, leisure hours for shopmen, and serial publications. Among the papers read was one by Lord Curnehill, (one of the Scottish Judges,) in which, from official sources, he indicated with regard to British Colonies, Ist, that in the North American group there are in cluded upwards of 260,000,000 acres of land, of which about 187,000 remain un alienated—not including the territories to the West of the Rocky Mountains; 24, that in the Australasian group there are more than 1,280,000,000 of acres, of which only about 20,000,000 have been alienated; while 3dly, at the Cape of Good Hope and Natal there are about 128,000,000 of acres, of which about 70,000,000 still remain un alienated. Add to these the vast prairies and half unoccupied territories ot the Uni ted States, and connect with it the spread and multiplication of the Anglo.Sason race, fresh empires starting into being, macrnificent cities built, commerce and the arts of -peace succeeding the comparatively brief sorocco blast of war, and best of all, Christianity triumphant, and " the taber nacle of. God with men "—all men partici pants in the glory and the joy—what a magnificent vista opens up before the lover of his race. P. S.—Lord Lyndhurst, the Nestor of the House of Lords, and the son of •the American painter, Copley, who was a fa vorite with ,George 111 . , has been for some days dangerously ill. Although he is in his ninety-second year, it is not im probable but he •may recover. I have heard him, within the last five years, deliver a speech an hour long, with extraordinary vigor. I regret to say that typhus fever prevails as an epidemic at Belfast, and that the Rev. Dr. Edgar is prostrated by it. There is some anxiety about the issue, but the latest accounts inform me that while the fever was in progress, there were no alarming " complications." Re has been a benefac tor both to his country at large and also to the town of Belfast itself. It was ,largely owing to his zeal and. influence that the Queen's College at Belfast, and' the system by which the late Sir Robert Peel estab lished a Queen's University in Ireland, and Provincial Colleges in connexion with it, has had such stability and success. Appeals have been issued for a fresh supply of warm clothing for the distressed operatives at Blackburn, in Lancashire. The laber market is rapidly absorbinr , ° the population which was out of work. Still, there will be considerable distress -this Win ter. In many parts of Ireland and Scotland, grain .is still in the fields. The weather lately has"been unsettled, and while prices of grain will be very low, and bread cheap, yet in such districts as the above-men tioned, there will be serious individual losSes. For the Preabytertan Banner. Heaven a Safe Place. "1 love to.. think of heaven as a safe place," said a venerable man in whose piety all who knew - him had confidence. It must not be supposed that he was afraid of being lost. He knew in whom he had believed. He had no fears of hell. Bat he was afraid of 'sinning. He wished to be free from the danger of sinning. He knew that once in heaven, there would be no more exposure to the danger of sinning. Hence he loved to think of it as a safe place. Men's ideas of heaven ararin a great measure ; : the exponents of their characters. Some regard it as a place of _safety from Pain. They desire it as a' place . Of esean.. 'film - With THE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office GAZIITTN BUILDINGS, 84 Fora Br, Parreatratta Pinarzurau,, Sounz-Wen Coa. Mt ClZMlPtriai ADVERTISEMENTS. TERMS IN ADVANCE A Square, (8 11nee or lani,) one ineertion, 60 cents; soil subsequent insertion, 40 cents; each line beyond eight, 6 els A Square per quarter, f4.00'; each line additional, 83 mate A Smarmy made to advertiser* by the year. MISINEES NOTICES of TIN lines or 101;11.00 each ad &tonal line, 10 cent*. REV. DAVID IVIIKINNEV / PSODRIBTOB AND PUBLISHED. deliverance from the penalty of sin. Such persons have no real desires heavenward. Heaven, as the object of true spiritual desires, is a condition of soul rather than a locality. The desire for holiness and the desire for heaven are not distinguishable in kind. While the Christian will first of all think of heaven as a safe place—safe from sin— yet there are other considerations which may properly awaken desires to be in heaven. There is rest for the weary there, and it is lawful for the weary to desire rest. Indeed it is impossible not to do so. There is glorious society, and it is lawful to de sire the society of those who have washed their robes and made them white in the bkood of the Lamb. We have friends, parents, Editors, children, who have, got Koine before us, and it is lawful to desire reunion with them. There are numberless considerations which render heaven desira ble ; still, its holiness should be to us its chief attraction. Vho is a Rick Man ? Poverty - and wealth are only comparative terms. What we may Call a rich man in one part of the world, or even in the same State, may be looked upon as a poor man in another. I have been in regions where a man worth $lOOO was called a rich man, and in other places where a man worth $20,000 was considered a poor man. So we cannot state the sum in dollars and cents that is required to make a man rich until we reach the highest standard. I suppose the Rothschilds, of Europe, would not consider Astor or Stewart, of New- York, rich; and if compared with their immense wealth, they certainly would not be. Where or how, then, shall we fix a standard for wealth ? Well, I will tell you the amount which I think constitutes a rich man. The man who has just enough to meet all his real wants, and is contented with what he has, with grace in his heart, is a rich man. If the man be a farmer, if the farm cost only $lOOO, and supplies im with all he really needs, with reasonable industry, he. is a rich man. If he be a merchant or mechanic, and $5OOO of capi tal will provide all his necessities require, he is a rich man. If you should fix the standard at what most men would desire to have, the whole world would not satisfy them. So I can fix no other standard for wealth but the one I have fixed. Grace in the heart, or contented mind, and enough to supply a man's real wants, is wealth.— Lutheran Observer. God's norms. Here are " God's heroes," the heroes of the sick chamber and the vigil by the era dleside ; the heroes of poverty and of the workshop; of silent, patient endurance, having learned, through much tribulation, that waiting and suffering is their destined work ; the heroes of long-suffering, forbear . - ance and charity, or of victory over pain; of the unostentatious self-denial of the household; the lowly, toiling, sad .women, climbing mounts of sacrifice under heavy crosses, without a human hand held out in synapathy ; the noble army of martyrs who have found and followed the Master's foot prints in the daily round of human duties, transfiguring that" despised, circumscribed, care-encumbered life of theirs into a living testimony to the truth of Christ's evangel ; the lonely sufferers, priests by a heavenly consecration, offering the sacrifices of praise in garret and cellar; men and women far from stimulating delights of successful ac tivities, co-workers with Christ, sowing in hope the seed whose increase they shall never reap; " the sacramental host of God's elect," ever ascending with songs most jubilant from the faithful performance of earth's lower ministries to the perfect ser vice of the upper sanctuary with its peren nial and unhindered prize. They are pass ing up through the gates of the morning into the city without a temple, and it is for other fingers than ours to weave the ama ranth round their lowly brow.—North British. Review. Is it True ? "He thinks he is right, and if he is sin cere and honest in his belief, it is all that can be asked of him," said Mr. More, re specting one who entertained some singu lar notions on the subject of religion. " Suppose," said Mr. Edwars, " that you are going to a certain place. You think the road you have taken is the right one—you are sincere and honest in your belief. That is all that can be asked of you'. You will reach the place you set out to visit, whether the road taken was the right one or not. " You owe a man one hundred dollars. You enclose in a letter a ten dollar bill. You think it is a hundred dollar bill—you are sincere and honest in the belief. That is all that can be asked of you. Your cred itor must be content with ten dollars in stead of a hundred. You go upon the principle that if you think a ten dollar bill is a hundred dollar bill, it will become a hundred dollar bill. You go upon the principle that thinking a thing to be true makes it true--that thinking a thing to be right makes it right. Is that a true prin ciple ?'} "Not in regard to some things." " Is it true in regard to anything 7" " It seems to me that it is true in regard to religion." Does religion consist in doing God's will ?" " That is a part of religion." "Is n't it the whole oreligion ? What more is required of ns besides doing the will of God ?" " We are to do good to our fellow-men." God wills that. It is a part of the will of God. Nor does our thinking a think to be God's will make it God's will? Some men, in other times, thought it was God's will that they should imprison and burn those whom they deemed heretics. Their thinkingit to be God's will did not make it God's will. Sincerity in error will not change error into truth. If religion is the most important thing that can claim our attention, then the utmost care should be taken that our views in relation to it be right. Let us never forget that thinking a thing to be right does not make it right." Let net the sun in Capricorn go down upon thy wrath, bid write thy wrongs in water; draw the curtain of night upon in juries ; shut them up in the tower of obliv ion,,and.lat them be as though 'they had not been -Forgive thine .enemies totally And arithont any, reserve of lope thathow, 'era' Grid LOOKING UPWAED