r . DAVID MICINNEY, Editor and Proprietor, REV. I. IC. )1' In N MY, ASSOCIATE EDITOn. TERMS IN ADVANCE, 11T NAlt, (5.11 , g1y or in Chis4o 111.60 • EITHER OP r3iIOITIILB .3.011 For T VoLwes, Ice win [feud by mail seventy numbers for WO! DOLI.AR, thirty-three numbers. P va.rps ., lldlng iIaTIVENTT subscribers and upwarila,will t entitled to a paper without charge. ltmewai &should be prompt. a little before the year expires Bend pay mentos by safe hands, or by mail. Direct all letters to REV. DAVID M'KINNEY, Pittsburgh, Pa. TILE NEW-YORK NEWS BOYS. The following letter, addressed to the lerintendent of a Sabbath School in Al teny City, is kindly luinisbod for pub ion. NF,tv-YonK, Dec. 3, 1863. ltaoToEft :—When you were in , ry, I promised to send a letter con our newsboys. It affords me much 'sure so to do, and I trust that the peru of it will lead your scholars to value ,'C highly the privileges they enjoy. The newsboys are_much improved of late ars. A few years since, the poor boys of r city passed their days in the streets, slept at night in the hay-barges, mar :-places, cellars, door-ways, and• empty ;ous. Ten years since the sympathies a number orphilanthropic individuals .e enlisted in their behalf,,and a Lodg- House for newsboys and other help- Is and homeless ones was opened at ). 12S Fulton Street, and placed under superintendency of Mr. Tracy. Many led upon it as a useless expenditure 'of and money, but the yorolcotors parse- fed, and success crowned their efforts. • A comfortable reading•room, and a neat airy sleeping apartment, were the in- Leements offered to the poor, friendless iilk. At first discord reigned supreme, it kindness exerted her magical charms, d the boys learned to love the pleasant Ims provided for them. The Lodging House is designed for all isses of boys who need- a home. Hence accommodates match-venders, boot-blacks, tggage-earriers, and peanut merchants. ,nce its organization it has been twice eii xged, in order to accommodate- an in- •easing number of applicants. Soon an litioaal room will be opened and fitted with iron besteads: Perhaps you would like a description of Lodging House. The visitor climbs six stories, and isushered into the recep: alion-room, This is used as a play and ini'school room. It is large and well-ventila and contains many attractions. The k, wherein the boys deposit their say ;, is divided into compartments, each which is numbered. Such as desire 'e one of these compartments, and on first of each month receives five per interest on the amount deposited. ie have saved $l5 or $2O during a single ith. Bach has the use of a closet for clothing, which is provided with a lock key. Adjoining the sohool-room is a ,h-room,. which' is abundantly supplied, hot and cold water. Cleanliness is of the rules and regulations most icily enforced. Boys accepting the priv ;gcs of the Home, are compelled to wash , triselves before retiring. Those whose r is long and matted, are put under the of the barber, who quickly removes alf ,ra and superfluous hair. The charge for longing is five cents; as are unable to pay are trusted until ter times dawn upon them. Those who fire, are placed in good situations in the entry. Many hundreds are now in the cat, who, had it not been for the , tecting hand extended to them, would re suffered punishment for orimes com tted. A teacher instructs them four or five 'eniogs during the week, and interesting 3rvices are held on Sabbath evenings. A •ee dinner (a gift of friends to the poor) given on Sabbath to such as refrain from -king on the Lord's-day. Many accept is generous gift. Since the Home has been established, y hundreds have been saved from ruin sough its blessed instrumentality. Some the boys, as Winter approaches, sadly led clothing. Donations for this purpose ould be sent to Mr. O'Connor, Superin ndent, 128 Fulton Street. In closing, it might be well to say that 1r three hundreed of the boys are now in Le army, battling for the Union cause. My dear friend, you are at liberty to pub- Leh this, which if done; you will please Ind me copies of the paper. Yours, &0,, S. M. OSTRAVELER. War-Work. lilor more than a year, I have been so urning and traveling within the bounds,- is of five or• mix counties of Virginia— ose counties which have been most over in by armies. The contending hosts have lased and fought each other, over the lls, through the fields and woods, , and .gong the roads and rivers of this part of the poor, boastful " Old Dominion." The crime of rebellion has been followed by the alamity of desolation. This once beauti -11 and, in parts, highly cultivated region ,s, since that crime was committed, been 'hanged to a waste and almost to a solitude. :ts soil is untilled, its fields laid open, its ;noes burned, its trees destroyed. No usbandman is seen at his peaceful toil, no ;rds graze in the wide pastures, no trav eller pursues his journey on the highways. The old homesteads are forsaken, and many of them utterly demolished. I can scarce refrain from sadness, almost to tears, as I look at the desolations.; nor is the sadness diminished, though I recognize the justice of the retribution, when I reflect upon the, crime that has occasioned them. Let me, before attempting to depict some of these scenes, exhonerate our soldiers om the charge of vandalism, to which hey may appear to be obnoxious, During ' the months that I have been with them cognisant of their conduct, I have oar known them commit acts of wanton struction. I have never known them in iy way injure a house that was occUpied, destroy a fruit tree; they do 'not burn epee rails, or damage a forsaken house, ex cept for the purposes of their own need, and comfort. Fences are used, as the most convenient fuel, on a march ; and old build ings, near camps, are stripped of boards, to make the quarters of the men comfortable. Nor Is the wretched appearance of the country to be altogether attributed to the Union army; the rebels have done their part, and, of course, without the palliation and excuse that our men could plead. While lying, for a few weeks in the early Autumn, in the vicinity of Culpepper, there was more damage done to out-build ings and abandoned houses, than at any other place or at any other time. The se ditious character of the region, as the home 01' a prominent rebel General, may have had some influence in 'outing to this re sult. A day or two after our oamp was estab• lisped there, taking a walk along a road which neglect and the rains of a year had con 'vetted into a deep, broad ditch, I came to For the Presbyterian Banner ou t Ni•• • • • -• • 11 11/ ` . , • "TC , • ! • 1 4 • • . 0/1.4 VOL. XII. NO. 14 a farm house which I thought was inhab ited. Approaching it, to introduce myself to the inmates, I found it unoccupied. It had been so for I know not how- long. It was a plain house, and located with less re gard to beauty of situation tharr most of the homesteads of the country; but it had the usual dense shade of old trees around it. In the grounds, at•the front, could be seen traces of walks, now overgrown with grass; and circles in which rank weeds were standing, where perhaps, under the gentle culture 'of fair hands, violets and verbenas had spread their' gay colors to the, sunlight. At the rear of the house was the thickest 'shade, beneath which the ground appeared to have been trampled to hardness by frequent use; but now it 'was overgrewnwith weeds, and grass. But the garden seemed to tell the tale of desertion' and neglect, most piteously. In the squares, the soil enriched for vegetable culture, grew a dense mass of weeds as high as the surrounding fence and, almost hiding it. Among their tangled , matted leaves, brown in Antumnal maturity, a' few bright scarlet berries showed where the asparagus bed had been A luxuriant growth of hop z vines, their supports,having fallen, was spread from one to another of a row of altheas' ' of. I _various hues, now n late blossom. A vigorous, hardy crystal themurd had maintained its piece by' the pathway, and was promising to display, ere long,_ its masses of, showy blossoms. A few morning glories, had crept up, from their shaded roots, among the weeds, and pUt forth pale and sickly flowers, here and there; atilidst their brown seed branches. A daily-roie bosh, as if contemning the base and intrusive companionships to which it was abandoned, towered above the sur rounding weeds, and demanded attention to its delicate, blushing flowers in bleom, and its innumerable buds; while .a japonica, equally aspiring, twined its slender green twigs and put forth its bright yellciw blos soms with those of the rose, as its only be fitting companion. On the house the work of decay had been begun by time; it had been hastened by neglect; and in, a few days it was com pleted, by the tranSfer of the materials to the Union camp and their transformation into quarters for brave men, engaged in the great work of suppressing tke rebellion and saving the country. J. P. M. For the Presbyterianßetmer Electioir. My dear-reader, are you troubled about election ? Yon had better be troubled about your salvation.- Abundant provision is made. Salvation *is freely offered. Who soever will, let him come. Rev, xxii : 17; Math. xi :28-30. Bat men will not.-- john v : 40. Hence Divine grace is'neees sary ; and election is C-od.'s gracious pur pose to have mercy on whom he will.—ROm. viii : 28-39, and ix :15-23 ; Eph. i :4 12; 2 These. : 13, 14 ; John 1:11-13. Reader, remember this: Election is God's gracious purpose to have mercy on whom he.will. But he is under no obligation 'to have mercy on you. .Ho may save• you, or, not, just as he pleases. He will not save you, unless you come to Christ, and, re nouncing your sins and every other trust and dependence, rely only and fatly upon Jesus Christ for salvation. Then if you can't .get along with eleetion, get along without it, and come to .Christ without, de lay. Come, and you shall have life. EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. " What a Mess I"—The Emperor and the Congress of Powers—Agitation in Europe—English Stales-: men—Dynastic. Interests and the Treaties of 1811 —What Free Italy Expects—What the Pope Fears—Pio Nono, Me Beggars, and Me Feast—, The Mendicant-Making System and its Contrast . Ingram'e Lecture on Irish. Emigration and, i d Causes—Amerieuand Bislng Irishmen—" Who Fears to Speak of '9l3l"—Dublin City—Propor tion of the Sects Episcopal Clergy and Laity Irish Church Missions—Discussions and Historic Facts—St. Patrick' not a Ilamaniet.--Niss Whale ly and Ragged Schools- 7 Preabyterian Missionary —Mr. Henley and Tracts—The Irish Gentry and Conver.sions—Denham &aid and MorriOn Hall-- Thanksgiving Day of General Assembly. Nov. 2/ 1863 • " WHAT A Mss I"—such was the ex clamation of Lord Cowley, the English Ambassador at. the Court of the Tuileries, when the Emperor had concluded his speech at the opening of the Chambers. " A Congress "—each is his proposal to re-arrange the map of Europe; to begin its work with the common recognition and confession that the Treaties -of 1815 and the work of the so-called " Holy, Alliance " is effete, and vir tually ignored. The Emperor professes to ask for such a Congress in the in terests of . general and permanent peace: But .the effect of his utterances and pre posal his been to alarm the whole of Con tinental Europe, and to cause a unanimoui protest against the proposal, by London press. The Cabinet of Lord Palmerston has twice met; the French Emperor's auto graph letter to the Queen, backino. up hia speech and its programme, has been dnly weighed. Caution and reserve, if not sus picion, rule the hour, and the German poli ticians and merchants have instineavely recoiled, and almost a panic has prevailed' at :Frankfort, in the dark forebodings of coloring and, not.distant war. 44 For a fortnight," says a leading Vienna paper, "we had nothing but suppositions as to whether the speech from the French throne would be warlike or pacific. Now we see that it is neither the one nor the . other, but it contains the source of great trouble; for it puts the preliminary ques tion as to peace or war, and in ,a tone that conceals a veiled• menace, not only with • reference to the Polish question specially, but also &Upending, European questions. A refusal of the Congress would pre-suppose se cret projects! In other words, whosoever is againat the Congress must have seera views against France. The intimidation is palpa ble. It indicates clearly that France in tends to raise her hand against any one who should refuse to agree to the Congress,- whether Itussiai Prussia, or Austria.' The Times says that "while ntheis may see in the Emperor's declarations an oa r oult meaning, we , are satisfied with their first and most obvious sense; they,earry the, impress of candor and truth. He is in a great difficulty." This difficulty is collision with Russia (after a continuous friendly. ,allianoe,) on the question of Poland' and its wrongs. The Times asks ; " Does he, mean that war is inevitable, except upon one condition; and that the condition in which wai can be avoided is impossible ? If so, the vision of an imaginary Congress fades away; the scene opens , behind it, and dia. closes an army drawn up tit line of battle." The fact is, that the Emperor .wants a I firm and treaty recognition of his own race and dynasty from the Powers, and conse quently a reversal of that exclusion of Bonapartism which was necessarily em bodied in the Treaties of 1815.. It is not forgotten that he is the man who 'mire up a long peace, and provoked both the Cri mean. and Italian wars. It is ,worthy of notice that the Italian ,press supporting Victor Eininenuel are In favor 'of a POll-- greeS, because that " Italy is mord than' any, other country interested-in this alternatiVe,, because there, are accomplished facts;)and facts to be .aceompphed, which she, has to get accepted." In other words ' _Naples is , lost to the Bourbons, a part 'of the States `of the Chureh to the Pope, Italy wants Rome as her capital,-and so, - says. a' Milan, journal, "-if-war eomeyas is most probable, it is our business to :complete 01 . 11* **pen dence; and hence to, be strongnnd prepared for hoiiilities.'! And, so the Pope is fright ened, the Cardinala are uneasy; and Austria feels very unconifortable lest a storm break forth, which shall deprive her of her Vene tian. provinces. Gleefully does L' Opinione;- of Turin, exclaim, that the Emperor's words "signify - that Rome must share the fate, of. Bologna, Aneona - , 5 arid Perugia, and be taken from under the - shameful theocratic and temporal gOvernment of kerne 'to be come the capital of Italy." , • It is possible that a Congress may assem ble after. all. -Russia, meanwhile, .is dili ointly preparing for war. . . As 'for Pio Nono's daily life and habiti l, it is understood that they. are marked by" quietude and , eheerfulness. It- also appears that Cardinal Antonelli, cunning ,and dex terous, ever compliant in aspect; while really ruling, calling the Pope doutinually " Ably Father,"- "Blessed Father," is MIL tirely,conficled in by the Pope, and that a part of the forenoon is occupied by them in matters ,of a political, character. The Pope fa just' now being' praised by the Popish papers at:Ronaci and in Ireland, for a feast prepared by his orders for the poor of the Eternal City. But the Papacy is the flagrant cause Of beggary and pauperism wherever it is dominant, and 'a parenthetic, feast amid the chronic and continuously, enforced fast of the- Roman paupers—all the year round at starvation, point—is a poor mnsolation. It is when the genius of, Protestant truth and liberty shows its benign and unfettered action, that.'idleness_. and rags disappear, that-employment be comes ondant, and that commerce brings wealth to the Merchant and comfort to the masses. Happy the day, the miming 'day, when, the Papal power swept away, Italy shall be one tide of industry, and neither begging friars nor ordinary., mendicanta shall offend the eye and ear, or bring dis grace on the 'name of so called Catholic Christianity. IRISH EMIGRATION has this week been discussed, with extraordinary _ability, by Professor Ingram, LL.D., of Trinity. Col lege,,Dublin—one whom - I have the honor to, number among my friends, and who,as the fatherless boy Or the widow' of a elei gymari of 'the Epispopal Church, has, by native talent and learned industry, risen to a lofty position in the University, and who is universally admired and esteemed for his noble and generous character. As Vice- President of the Statistical Society, in the presence .of a very learned audieute, Dr. Ingrain announced as the subject of his address, The Condition of Ireland," especially as regards its present cc:anomie circumstances, and the remarkable specta cle of the emigration which pis removing so many of our fellow.countrymen to other lands. Instead of-being surprised by.this, Dr. Ingram considered .(justly) this great movement as a .perfectly natural conse quence of , economic laws- acting under the new conditions- of humane societies. He explained his meaning as follows: - "If in former times the' Irish peasant • squatted from year to year on his 'poor lit tle petal of land, or toiled on for miserable wages in a statrof chronic semi -starvation, when in other countries he and' his chil dren might have earned, with no great effort, a comfbrtable livelihood, it ,was not because he wished to remain, but because he was unable to go. Often speaking only the Trish language, and without any dis tinct notioneither of the geographidal sit nation, or of the industrial condition of other countries, he was, in the strictest sense of the words, adnriptus glebce.. And; even if he had learned English, and * , was. otherwise fitted to take his place in a 'new . social medium, how was he from his scanty resources, to pay the expense of the Passage, then no inconsiderable amount? The two agencies which have set him Tree are _the diffusion of knowledge by, ihiC, National system of Education, and the reduCtion of the passage-money to America and Ausitra- , lia i by the immense recent development of trade and intercourse between different countries. First of ail; in the, , Natienal Schools he learned English. The number of Mailmen - who could speak only Irish was estimated in 1822 at two milliens; in 1861 it was leis than 164,000; -Here was one obstacle removed—the same that still, as we are told by'Sir JohnlieNeill, makes it' impossible to apply the obtrious rem' edY to the over population of the island of Skye. The Irish 'farming and laboring classes became generally better informed, and there intelligent; they understood more, distinctly the'facilities for obtaining land , in the United States, and the high rate of wages that prevailed there, - and , they were better able to avail , themselves of those ad vantages. The old , narrowness, of view,. tithidity, and want of enterprise -rapidly, disappeared, and' large numbers `of thepeo ple dekiied to try - their chances in 'a new country. While fitness' for emigration wee: thus increasing, and their wish for At be-. coming;:,strong,' the wonderful increase of, trade and'communication between different nationastimnlated the arts of shipbuilding and navigation ; and the cost of the pas sage to America and Australia gradually fell. Then the influence of the natural law—Eiure in its, action as thakunder-which water finds its level—began to be felt ;and the, Irish laboring classes began to pour in a continuous stream from, a country vrhere wages were low, and it was not easy, to live,' to .a country where wages were ,high, Eine no one need want who was able and •willing to work. The cheapness and abundance of the potato had enabled the Irish working classes to exist on the wretched wages which prevailed before 1846. Its failure, therefore, accelerated the emigration which was already in progress. Liberal contribu tions were sent over from America in the period of the greatest distress, ,and it is worthy of observation that these contribu tions dame in the form not dritiottei; W. J. M PITTSBURGH, WEDESDAY,I 71 . 1;Y f..• " of food. Nettling ; Ong Aairei w strongly affect the imagination of a starvinb people , than the large sitpillie er4itient.4B ndiad corn which- thettlarietlifrotiltla tniteor - States. .They plated in thelstiongerit •'Con-u, trast the abnedaneotot XliwrikkiWiArtlin, destitution ot , Ireland, ,and i inesistahly t. at, , treated the. Ittorerlrcm, a n snen l e of i penury to a land of lettii.Y` .4 . ' - -...= loti ~ , ..ii;;..l.tn = . = ii-:.• 1:,--.4 1, The speakti - wnt 0 to siiBw Init-tne emigration tai)Viratitilliflicitifiliblilitithlrov.. land,rthat it' hap beverticonlitinstflaid evicii,n creasing in, flWnkteckn EgF9PetiOPolit , l l 9; , , peace of I.Bl. l s;,,4l6ftast r y t taklnd, and . : Scotland the same moiemenk is in,prniress ;... the( tbe 'sae', &ilia" !iiliflitili%asliei t iire:i: t dutecte , largehitig4ati6 fielti%l'idliinti ilit.dsly England and tcdthard3,:soc that 1 Ihile *ha It I, 230,000 wenthemmicatilmilip, 0;084 L s from 18:11 ti ff 1,851 1.,thP.1 . f e T. 41, , ; and' froth 1851 . .t0 'fsqf abou '3v 9.' it 99 the ilait- censAS" of TegrkAa all BWotlitid - ,x' in 1881, it ivaligiacerthlri l efi r thitithete*eitsl 800,000 ' , lrish' 'itaitbiites.their, , honntlerles Thus, includink,,thn ,cl4ltirett, ; and Aying a descendants ,or:al I v i be went ,ti . .tithA „sine° . 1841'; the aggiegatn:Vrotild not be lc hia than' 2,300,000. Well' might the' leettiiiiiiity ' " It is plainly ' , impossible= to stay iiniigra, tion, with wages in England and Scotla44, at two.shillingika. dap). and the. cost of a deck passage -„to. • liITeEPPP). for four or five: l shillings, the . migration will inevitably gO 'on. With wages 'in Neiv-York at fottr shillings and Lupivaids, and the :cost. of : a • ,passage not more than ~ five. : or' six guittoa‘: the emigration :: will inevitably s go,onr„ .. ; The `accelerated "progress of enalgrntion,' was . exPlained. ' " Every one • that'goes . , makes'it ettsire for',Others lo follove. l -:`Eini. , ~ grants joining relatives already settled,**ill more readily fitid..pnitable)cmpleyment - and &milled themselves at home, We , are all . familiar with Irish emigiants,vitli 'gen'erous and, touching selfforgeifulnes'sj'haVe "sent to their relative& in :the old country ;. remit; tances, which ip the -single . " year 0f.1868, amounted to neatly a million, and a half , , sterling; These gifiPhave a double effect ; they supply the most convincing . evidence of the prosperity orthose who have gone before, and they „facilitate the movements of those who desire to follow." - But other and politipal motives, says Dr. Ingram, have something to do "with thein creasing stream, and a .Church" paper is scandalized beeauswit:speaks out thy trhth as follows : • "Besides the desire of material-prosper r .. ity, there is alai)* in the hearts of many, a spirit of - ambition at' libthe rather' engenders= disOcknienO, than latimilates ewer= Lion. The aspirintirishmin must observe with in terest, that tke, absence .of an , aris tocracy in America, and the Rritishcolo nies, leaves far more open than in our _older cornmunity; the avenues to the higheat dis tinctions of the State..; In the, Great Re public, Irish. blood did not prevent la Jack son ,fromrising to .the PAesiclen#t it;; and mo r on whom tha ban of thelit',, 6.3 been pronounced at home, in Anstra t ha it, Oan ad a, Ititti *.bjeuminiiters 'of the Dr. Ingram'hore *refers: 10 men, of the, Young Ireland tLparty; with whom, when a young stndent, in Trinity College, he had, some sympathy. It was from his pen came the celebrated verses beginning with a ref, - erence to the Irish rebellion of 1708 "Who'fears to speak of' '9B?' Who blushes at the name ?" The rest of his address at the Statistical Society, was equally as forcible as that-al ready quoted. He holds that much might be done to retain the population, by a re peal of that part of the Poor Law Act which forbids relief to the poor in their own houses in times of• scarcity, and which demands that in extremity they must break up their families and enter the parish , work-houses; he holds that as the small farmers of Ireland have it least' fourteen millions sterling in Irish joint stock banks; that it is not poverty drives them away,, so much as the want, < of leases from the Jandlords. He,,therefore, urges the assim ilation Of the poor lawS of Ireland with those of Englitud, and a thorough adjust ment of the laws relating to land. THE CITY OF DUBLIN has a populatioL. of:about 280,000. :.Of these, 100,000 are Episcopalians, 8000, Presbyterians, and the remainder Roman. Catholics. The Episco-' pallans are an influential body, and com prise ailutnber of the gentry of the coun-, try who have town residences fer the Wifi- But.a greater number are: the fami lies of Judges and Lawyers,-employees of the Irish Government, officials connected with the Custom HouSe - and other public establishments; families who have - grown wealthy in .extensive• trade, and professors, and members of the University. The ma jority of the Episcopal clergy. are Evan gelical and earnest; some,of them remark ably useful and devoted. NeVerthelese I do not think that in Dublin this class is so vigorous,- or itsiaborgiso telling as was the case twenty Or ihfrty 'yeare• .ago. '- - There is a great tendency inltlie:Church to isolation as to:Nonconformists, not unmingled with worldly pride. A large portion of_ :the laity, however,are pious . and actively nse ful. They sustain Bible Soci4ties and kin dred institutions, "and while attaelied) to their own cone:Mirth:olli recognize and re joice in the ,usefulness of other sections of . ' , .the Church of, ChriV._ The new Arehbishop elect (Trench,) has, :. arrived in Dublin,'but will not be " *be; cra t ed" for some - time Yet: "'He is very learned, refined, accomplished and amiable.' Although of Irish descent, his father set-: tied in England many years, ego, ,and his., son was, born there. It is. ago, to, find, that nearly: forty years ago, when Lord . PalmeratoU was defeated at a general elec tion' by a Tory opposition, Dean Trench's' father wRs ffesident gentleman in the , County, of Hants, near to Lord Palmerst4on's hereditary seat , at Ramsey, and earnestly supported his cause. That was not forgot ten in after Yearti ; it placed the' deserving SOU in a 'favorable position when Palmer stop became Prime Mihistei. of England, and to do, this may be traced, first :the be-, , stowment of the Deanery of WestMiester,_ and secondly the filling up, by RichardUhev enix Trench, - Onlie Vacant Archbishopric of Dublin. 'do' not imply in tills i that' he is not the right man in the right piece; that, is, generally admitted. But it is not -- always that merit is, practically recognised, or ceases to be reckoned among the unste eess u , of whom the poet says : • Full many a gem of purest ray serene, The dark unfathomettcares of ocean bear." THE IRISH CHUROH MISSIONS TO RO MAN CATHOLICS p.re sustained both in Dub lin and in the West. of. Ireland, with' re markable energy. " I have iisited'the office and central depot in DlOleeir' Street, Dab DEVM8ER±1 . :64:48163.,: -. WHOLE Na 586 aud r haveulse,h,scl,,,leagthened conver sitiPon`withthe clerical secretary. Ile has pleb - Cain my halide specimens of - the tracts and •publications circulated:` Many Alf the :Roman , ,Catholies:a.,Dublin attend :disci's. : ' " ,have,,before,,me a papte i rheaded,," Roman Catholics of Dub' : whether'will be' Catholics or Itt. Come to the 'Controiersy 27 , ToilisendtStieetivn' Tuesday evening; Subject rfor ,disoussion--litrhat the teaching, of the early Irish Church'?Or„ how Protestantism Protpstantiga and Rolnanismpanie to Breland F Mic - b ) . speaker ' 'fifteen ininuteS.- vA.fteritiie 7 o'cloCk; ter' ininutes." -- ( 1 :TO this are appendedrohisteric notes as , 10 the: introduction , .of , . Christianity into 44 . 404; andshowing,t,4atUot till four mai= eitnes after appearance : or' St Patrick, ime'iliere iitedtioihnide, this''by-a Itomish partisan, of that saintheing'cont , nectedwithr Rome?: After this comes "St. IPArt4lB.ldXgeV-asyligNisUed ;.b t rltomiku.. figiq l9 kis ,43sr : -stikgate, at Tata, rct ilt r which ,CArist alone s; exalted ' Apt 'Owe Went is' &tin' abblit the Viiiiihiktry • Other information is , given, showing that for seven hundred seers after ,the arrival-of St. 'Patrick there was no such thing as Pope's :power in Irelnd; `that the first bishop that' Claimed supremacy over Irelandi Wail Gregory TIT., in 1084; the first` Pope's Legate 'was Gilbert, Bishop of Limerick,' 1106 and ,that he was -the • first to banish the old Irish service ,hooks and bring in the Rornish mass in their stea s .d,:and that the firet Primate of - Smaugh, appointed by a Pope, Was Eugene MacGilleViler, in , the year/1206.- • - • . But Scliptural teaching is largely used. Not. only are ,the _Roman Catholics tacitly coniificed by the' information Circulated, that St. Patrick, , uccoth, had no knowl edge Of; or faith in Rome, in purgatory, in prayers for the dead ; but, the children in the Irish , Church. Mission Schools , are taught to repeat over, and over till perfectly familiar to theti, " one hundred .texts, run ninglrorn the "-First:Ten " to the " Tenth Ten," all directly or • indirectly upholding saving truth r and antagonistic to destroying error: a z . : The fpllowing explanation is added : ‘‘,,These Texts have been , selectedin order to secure in all the Mission Schools a knowl edge of passagei of Scripture on the inost impertant` doetrines. They are arranged .for, convenience it' sets of ten the more simple ,texts being placed at .the!begi n ning. Each set will be foundlo contain, some ref erence to the' five following snbjects—SlN, SAVIOUR, the HOIS SPIRIT, the SCRIPTURES, the ' CONTROVERSY. The teacher should.-carefully catechise the scholars on the meaning of 47te words, of each verse, as well, as the sense of the pas sage and of the context. .The children should also he taught to repeat these texts, and to give the chapter, and verse from • which *they are taken. If the texts are . illustrated by parallel passages,,this scale will furnish, sui*ble leseonk -for, more: ad- ;vane however, notto :supersede, but, only to in troduce or accompany, the usual Scripturak coursu which is , followed in exery school. ",IVlny God, for Christ's sake, give his ligly Spirit; that these texts may prove a blessing to all who learn them." The eldest daughter , of.the late Arch bishop (Whateley)'still keeps up the Rag ged'Sehool for adults in Townsend Street, Dublin,and otherwise labori for the diffu sion of:Gospel truth, with prayerful earn estness. ' There are many like-minded Christian ladies, not only: in Dublin, but throughout Ireland. • The Rev. Hamilton McGee, a Presbyte terian. Minister of the Irish 'General Assein bly, has: been occupying a mission post among: the Roman Catholics of Dublin, withdecided results. - 'He is thoroughly acquainted with the controversy, but•in ad dition to this,-is a man,..of prayer, adapting wisdom to. uoifsou]s. The Genpral,Assem;• bly lippreVes - of "the -doii g n of building for him a new 44 Mission Church" in the Irish metropolis. - . Tract efforts are carried on most _exten sively, and , with success, in Dublin by Henry Bewley, ESq., who also has supplied the funds necessary to ' open 'a similar es tablishmentin London. At his house and table I have met, some very devoted men. One of them; a gentleman from. Western Ireland, assured me that Whereas some years ago all was formalism among the gentry of his own country, now thore was not &family_ of rank,> in which at least one bold confessor.of :Christ andltis cause was not found. The depot of tracts in D'Oleer Street, Dublin' is constantly crowded. Mr. Bewley ! labbrs with indefatigable en ergy, and his wealth - is consecrated to the best purposes. He supplied ..a large portion of the money (X 14,000 in all) spent on the erection of " Merrion Mall," near IVlerrion Square, Dublin, erected fOr the well-known evangelist, the Bev. J Denham Sinith. It was opened abont'twO months ago, and large - congregations attend twice-on Lord's day,. and each Tuesday, : evening, Extra services are also held each Sabbath after dem in thi) 'Metropolitan Hill, Dublin, the scene of Mr. Smith's former'dagy services during ReviVal times in Dublin in 1860, and afterwards. ATAY OiIHARKSGIVINCi, coupled with confession and prayer, was -celebrated by the Presbyterians, of .frelamt ou the 18th instant. _Thanks were given, for an abun dant harvest, and also for the many tokens of a revived' Christianity, as indicated in an increase of prayer and of personal piety; as well as of Christian liberality : Confession was made-of sins, and humiliation expressed :that a sufficient number of missionaries were net offering themselyes for Jewish' and den.: tile ftehts'oflabOr. PraYer was offered that the lack might be supplied: The Irish As sembly is both a consolidated and powerful body, and although the number of its ad herents „are ,poppartOively small in the eapi4l, yet the ministers, as a body, are eminentlY efficient, and' their influence for good is conataiily extending. J.W. Scene in Canip. A devoted blinister, who labored in the work *& the 13: - S. Christian CommiesiOn at Camp Convalescent, draws the following impressive picture,:, The celebration of the Lord's Supper was - a deeply'interesting event. The scene was it once " ' solemn and piPturesque. The unfinished chapel,, part of the windows boarded up—the communion table covered with aslieet ; ordinary plates end army bread, with glass goblets, for the Wine—present ed-the outward and material - aspeet of the feadt. The picture was 6ornpleted by thP appearance of the communicants as they took their seats around the table of the / Lord. Never was there a more- solemn as sembly; and . as we remembered -that these Same men had, passed many times through the shook ,of battle, we could only lift up our 'hearts in humble gratitude:to Almighty land for the power of that religion lit the soul which calV.nerve men for the' deadly strife,.and , also fill.their hearts ( with jorand peace.in believing; • ,r, For tho Freanyterian Foriner. Baptism of two Brahiniiis of litgh Rank.: [rranilsiel from tbeFrepch.] As, t The agents of the London gissionary l So iiepy, Caldntti, - arinobnce.that they",Jiave baptized', at 'tlie Elaine ifin4 two yobng Kulid Brahniini, , :lif. the . most respe&ed ordor, ,of the ,Ifitidir, priesthood. Both had, been educated in the Cellege :of the Oresi .dPn9Y,: 44oan J3tstities ,prehihit any-direct nstnictton iii the thriatian faith, in this view, iliateliitofy `i's'a' 3 favo `' rabl'e syiri pt in. It , proves,. notwithstanding all the timidity of;the English Government, that a goodiEu repeal). edneation.may become, under the in fin.ence - of the Holy Spirit, a way to the faith, by this al on e that itdestloys; in those WU . re cieve it, all confidence and respect ter that system of foolish-dreams andsuperstitions practices which constitute.Hindiiism. , • In losing ,the beliefs of their first years, these two youths had passed successively through several states 'of mind. They had first be conie simpl e Deists, Then their 'reading had made them Unitarians. BUt not having drawn peace of mind and heart'from either_ of these systems they had sought, it ,else where and had, finally found it in the faith of which the3rhave now made profession. -The eldest, named 13hogoban Chunder Chatterjea, a young man remarkably gifted with respect to intelligence, recounted pub licly, on the day of baptistd, his passage through all these fluctuations of Admit . Ile said that from his earliest youth, religion had been the grAt affair of his life. = He had thenceforth been devoted to many prac tices with which the most part of the Brett _mins dispense, even , those most attached to their worship. He faSted,. Made intOrmi dable prayers, stood upon one' foot while' re peating, twenty-eight, times in sUccession, the gyatri (a sort‘of long formula in.great honor in his caste) ; such, in a. word, .had been the fervor of his devotions, that, in his family, he was surnamed, The Ascetic. Then, speaking of the effect produced in him' by our 'sacred books, he described; in striking terms, his experience during the period when he had taken:refuge in Unita rianism. " The beauty of the narratives of the New 'Testament,' said he, "ravished me with admiration. The whole world, and all it contains, said I, might be an illu sion • but it would be impossible to see one in my Jesus. This Man is the only one of the kind in the annals of humanity. So much wisdom and godliness; 'so much hu mility; so much meekness ; -and, above all, a -charity so perfect, cannot be found else -whern upon, earth, „nor even in heaven I" Andyet these impressions, rendered more vivid still by the, reading of the worki of some of the most celebrated Unitarians, such as Priestly and Qhanning, did not long suffice for the soul of the young Hindu. He, began, - in Consequence,, to, search the Scriptures more carefully. There, the doc trines of the Trinity and of the Expiation astonished him the most, anfi were to him, for a long time, a real stumbling stone; Some serious conversations , with a Chris tian, whom he met providentially, and the reading . of a book of Dr. 'Tholuck -- the "Letters of Guido and Julius "—dissipated', his prejudices against both these capital dogmas of the Christian faith"; and once this way, the Spirit of God from day to day made, him to comprehend better, that' Jesus was'other than a man ; and that in his Divinity alone was to be found= the cor ner atone, the foundation of the - dearest and ,most efficacious hopes of the Christian. This far," said he, "I bad always hesi tated, to pray in the npme- of Christ; but thenceforth I have never invoked this blessed name without feeling myself Over flowing with confidence and joy." *, Kali Prusunno Choudy,, the youngest of the two , neophytes, had had nearly the same experieneds,.end has recounted them in a no less"moving manner. His baptism' pre sented this particularity—without preced ent, perhaps, in the'annals of Hindu Chris tianity—that it was administered- to him by a native pastor; come out from the same cast as himself. =WI These new Christians are both' only sons, and have had to struggle, in the bosom of their families, against resistances over which an energetic conviction has alone been able to triumph. The members of the higher Castes of Calcutta have been deeply irritated or grieved at their admission to the ranks= of Christians; but the general impression has been excellent, and there is every reason to, hope that the cause of the Gospel will tbe're find , its profit. Thus it counts two new champions very decided to cbmbat valiantly for it, and who are re garded as admirably qualified to do it with success. Sunday Dinners Perhaps no one thing which, at first view, appears to be of so little consequence, more, effectually obstructs the way to moral reformation, than the practice of 'Dodog to eicess' on Sunday, especially at dinner. The whole'energies of the' brain thus be come concentrated, as: it were, on the stom ach; and you might almost as well preach to a somnambulist during one of his parox ysms,' or to a maniac, as to . one who has dined heartily. The person has indeed eyes, but he sees not; he his ears, but un .derstands not; he has a brain and a: nerv ous system, but it is benumbed and stupe fied ; and he has a- - heart, but it-cannot feel. Now I do not speak of those alone who actually sleep in church; for every one knowS that'neither the services; nor the day, nor the'force.of divine truth will be likely to affect them: But I refer to a much larger and perhaps more respectable class of corn munitY. I refer to those who, though 'they may not actually resign themselves ' 6:the anis of Morpheus, would yet do so if there were no cinnamon, or cloves, or orangepeel to masticate"; or, if they did not, make a constant effort, or perhaps prick themselves with pins to prevent it. ' There are many reasons why a person should eat a lighter rather than mheavier dinner on Sunday than on any other ; day, among which is the fact that most people use, on this day, a less amount than usual of physical exercise. Another reason is that. the air of a church,♦ confined, heated, and impure, as it , often is,' has , somewhat , of a TRE iitgitTERIAN BANNER Publication Office: GAZETTE BUILDINGS. italizirirEr., Pressoirsaa; PL. PanAviranue, BouTA-Wmer COL 01 Ira; IIID ,ClglaTrOl ADVERTISEMENTS TEEMS IN ADVANCE A Severe, (8 liuea.or Ism,) one insertion 60 yenta ; each subsequent Insertion, 40'oerns; each line beiondeight, 6 ate A Square per quarter, $4.00; each line additional, 81, cents A RLDUOTION made to advertisers - by the year. BUSINESS NOTICES of Tint Humor leas, 61.00 each ad dit al line, 10 oents. • REV. DAVID NauswEy, -PEOPICIVIVICAND Pusuensa. stupefying tendency. Another reason still is found'in the fact, that these who are ac customed to much exercase on-every other days, are of course dull when.they, come to sit still an hour or two, under circnmstan -ces the most - favorable.—Cor. of English churchman. 'Baja Earnest Runyan, in his inimitable allegory, has drawn for us a portrait of the earnest in quirer.. Pliable and Christian together ,approached the slough of despond, and to gether, `they tell, into it. This unexpected ;obstacle in their path reveals the character of the effort whidh each is willing to, make -to obtain the crown of life. He who is but half in earnesCories out, "Is this the happiness you have told' me of all this while ? If we have such r ill speed at our first setting - out, what may, We expect be tween this‘and our journey's end? May I ,getout again , with' my life, you shall pas :: eal the brave country alone for me I" Pliable finds no great difficulty - in getting out,on the side nearest his•own house, and ;lie companion sees him no more. Chris-. ian, heavily laden with the burden of eon . eious guilt, sinks deep in the mire - of the lough, but still he struggles on to the ide farthest from his own house, and next o the- wicket gate. He is the earnest eeker. Disciple of Jesus, be in earnest ! The i.arnest Christian is the living, working :;rowing Christian. - Inquirer after salvation, be in earnest! f you are only half in earnest you will nrely, like Pliable, turn back. Are you :roping in darkness after him who is the ray, the truth, and the life I Strug gle on, Tress forward till you find the wickt-gate, t .nd the cross beyond, where the burdened oul gains peace and rest. These are the words of Jesus : "Strive ~.co enter in at the strait gate ;" and again : " The kingdom of heaven suffareth violence, and the violent take it by force." Striving, agonizing, usinc , violence, certainly imply a great degree of earnestness. God was in earnest when he gave his Son to die for you. Jesus was in earnest when for - you, in Gethsemane, he sweat "as it were great drops,of blood falling down to the ground." He was in earnest when for you he gave himself up to cruel mock iugs and scourgings. He was in earnest when, stretched on the accursed tree for you,' he cried out, " My God, my. God, why hest thou forsaken me!" The Holy Spirit is in earnest when he, strives with your sinful heart, convincing you "of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment." The holy angels were in earnest when on the plains of Bethlehem they sang, " Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men." Shall there be such earnestness for your salvation, and will you be only half in earn est in asking what you shall do to be saved ? --S. S. Times. Iceland. This island, which has a population of about seventy thousand, is tinder the Gov ernment of Denmark. The language spo ken in Iceland is the old Scandinavian, closely - akin to the Saxon, with no admix ture of Greek or Latin roots. It has, sin gularly enough, a literature nine hundred years old. There are four presses on' he island, and four newspapers. About sixty volumes are issued in a year. There are colleges and, academies of medicine there, and common schools. But most of the ed ucation is domestic in its' character. The fathers teach the Children so effectually, that a young Iceland boy or girl of eight ,years old cannot be found unable to read and write. Wandering minstrels, like those of the old time in Scotland and Ger many, are still to be found traversing the country, and dropping in on families happy to receive them, who gladly give them a night's supper and lodging in exchange for their lay. The Icelandic Church is Luth eran. There art, one.,hundred and ninety nine ,:churches on the islaN, with two hun dred and eighty clergymen. Patriotic 't4otlier A clergyman recently called upon Mrs. Ellet, of Philadelphia, in company, with Mr. George If. Stuart, President of the Christian Commission, whom she desired to employ as her almoner in distributing the proceeds of two beautiful and va'uable shawls among the widows and orphans of soldiers fallen in battle. The body of her grandson had just ar rived, and the clergyman expressed the hope that the Lord would sustain her under her, bereavement. She stated that she had given her two sons—COmmodore Ellet, of the Rata Fleet, and Brigadier-General El let, of the Marine Brigade, and four grand children, adding, " I do not regret the gift to my country. If I had twenty sons I would give them all, for the country must be preserved. And if I was twenty years younger, I would go and fight myself, to the last I" • The Child we Live for. It would be unwise in us to call that man wretched, who whatever he suffers as to pain, inflicted or pleasures denied, has a child for wham he hopes, and on whom he di;tes. Poverty may grind him to the dust ; obscurity may cast its darkest mantle over him ; the song of the gay may be far from his own dwelling; his face may be un known to his neighbors, and his voice may be unheeded by those among whom he dwells—even pain may rack his joints, and sleep may flee from.his pillow. Yet has he a gem with , which. he would not part for wealth defying computation, for fame filling a world's ear, for the luxury of the highest wealth, or for"the sweetest sleep that ever satlipon mortal's eye.—Coleridge. Lift—What a shadow is the life of man ! What :a gothing-it is ! The time past, that is nothing—like a bird fled from the hand of the owner, out of sight. Thitime.pres ent, 'that is a vanishing,' a running hour— nay, less, a flying minute, as good as noth ing. The time to come, that is uncertain the evening's sun may 'See us dead. Lord ! therefore in this hour, in this min ute, maim me sure of thee, for in the next I am not sure, of myself. The central ~:'ffprd in all the Christian'a vocabulary, is Christ. This is i the , name that charms his ears; that makes light his weary way, and is the talisman of hope and joy as he advances, step by step, pro gress towur4 inuP3l:4ll#3ll.