JIVES ALLISON, 1110. ItoBERT PATTER ;ON,i JAMES ALLISON & CO., Proprietors. B TERMS IN ADVANCE. or in Olubs,) $2,00 I ,r imtro is EITHER OF THE CITIES 2.50 ,soling TIE TEN subscribers And upwards, wi 7,by otdit led to a paper without charge, and anothi paper for the second ton ",!.to._ Rol 014 . 11114 should be p rempt,ll lithe before the yeas expi pirisq till letters to JAMES ALLISON & CO., PITTSBuRaIi, PA Over the Rapidan. The advance of the army across the Rai lan and its return without fighting a gret auk, have given rise to a good deal of r( lark, much of it taking the form of criti ism and censure. It is not my business t Wend the movement. But I have beet mg enough in the army to know that nt Irson, who is not in the counsels and se .ets of the Commander—and these, I im ;inc, are very few—can form a judgmen his movements that is worthy of muol thence. The conjectures of many arm: •iters, on that point, are about on a lave all Confederate currency. In no place ii more true than here, that one may see id not perceive; hear, and not under nd. A man may be able even to say nni(6 vekli et quorum magna pars fol— iose seen it, all and patioipated init all— Id yet, like him, romance, a good deal, ii tie narration, and still more in his opinions .s for the great public, who were fairly se 1r beholding a battle, I shall . leave it tl ,en. Meade and the army, to make thei ipology for not affording them the enter lining sight. 1 t struck me as an evidence of solo , ,trategie skill, that the army was led aoros the Rapidan in such a way as to render thi orniidable preparations ,of the enemy fo weventing it, almost wholly useless. Thi WI Corps, to which the Reserves belong tossed in a quiet, secluded place.. I had t curiosity to see the pontoons laid. I wens trward for this purpose, and was not fttle surprised to see our line of skirmish. rs quietly advancing up through the field, n the opposite side—the work was don' rapidly. •No opposition was encounterei.: This unexpected crossing of a. corps, o ',heir flank, obliged the enemy to fall bac' •oin the fbrds above, where they bad strop, 'orks. Once across the river, we entered "th( ilclerness." The reader may put as mud reariness into his conception of the wil Aerness as his imaginationi can convenien tl3 supply. In this waste, which, I had almost said, is a discredit to the nineteenth cen• ;ury, the army advanced ten or twelve Ailey, leaving the extinct town of Chancel• tot - vine—historical in both senses—on the lel t. Near the close of the second day After leaving camp, it reached Locust Gro; church, near which our cavalry.were, the time, sharply engaged with the enemy 'hey were dismounted (their horses beink :ft in an adjoining field), and were fight 4g with wonderful fierceness and persist gicy in the woods. The Reserves were rmmediately put in, for their support, and ionic of them were engaged. The other liviiions of the Corps came up on the louble•quiek, heated and panting with the in, and took their assigned places. , Night Arew on, and the conflict ended. DurinE the night the lines were so near, that eon• iersation could be heard from one to al ether. We had but one badly wounded man. Ii ias well we had no more, for our hospita: accommodations were poor. The establish. )ent, indeed, was an itinerating one, owittE the changing of the positions of the army. First, it was part of a house neat ,he church that being filled with the 'ounded of the cavalry; then it was moved ,mile back; next morning, two miles fur. ,hcr back; in the afternoon, four miles tc he right; Sabbath morning, a mile for. 'art], to the rear of the Division ; and :ouday, back to the place we left on Sab. path morning. Adequate reasons demand- Id these numerous changes. The location if Friday night was in an old forsaken souse, evidently the resort and very pow 'bolter of cattle and swine forsmany a year . Tot h ng remained of the house but a huge Ihimney and its fire-place, and two-thirds of the roof with the corner timbers that tpported it. Our poor sergeant, With the buttered shoulder, was kept warm by beinE laced, on the stretcher, close to the fire, id surrounded by pine branches, to keeT the wind. After a few hours in the Ixt stopping place, amid rain and mud id dense fog, we' left it in good time to es. 'pa a dash of rebel cavalry which de. molted from the fog into the opening, and ire met on the ground we had left by a idy of our cavalry. On Sabbath, as I have said, the hospital close to the rear of the Division to .ioh it belonged. Here the battle WOE )eoted to be fought. The enemy's liner defence were in sight of ours, and vers tar; a valley, and Mine run, were be teen. Every thing that could be dont tr the care of the wounded, was completed ,s we lay down to sleep, it was with the 01 expectation that the conflict was to ten, with an attack on the rebel lines, at our o'clock in the morning. This impres• lion, and the assurance that we should have tur share of the enemy's missiles, was not if the nature of an anodyne. But weari. less maintained its claims. Fitful sleep, aternated with waking thoughts. Mid ,ight; and all was still, save that the tent !loth was flapping in the wind, and an Iffteer who had come in, sick, was tossing in his straw bed. and talking, deliriously, of its home, of the march, of the Pamunkey. o sound of battle yet. Awake again. holing the hands of my watch, it was a ivarter to four. A prayer for our 'poor soldiers, lying out in the bitter . cold wind ; for their souls; for their success in the lonfliot; for Felt the hands again, on making: half.past four. All still. Day. ight; breakfast; eight o'clock, Boom, room, boom ! the heavy artillery began, let no assault. Occasional firing, for an our or more, and the fighting was over. I have no doubt that the reasons for this muse and the retirement of the army, were mificient. Troops, as brave as ever fought battle, deemed the withdrawal of our forces a measure of the highest wisdom. Perhaps the following facts may justify their opinion: The army, at its farthest advance, was over twenty miles from its depot of sup plies. A. wilderness, with few roads suita ble for an army, but with passes available for small bodies of light troops, extended, in the rear, to the river. The weather had become intensely cold. Death, from expo sure, would have been the fate of the wounded. Houses, for their shelter, there wore next to none The enemy, driven back from. the Rapidan, had secured a very strong position for defence, on a range of hills behind Mine run, in which stream the water was raised, by dams, to .the depth of three or four feet.' Their works of de fence were 'numerous, and their forces large. A victory would have cost many lives, and a defeat would have been ,disas trous... For these reasons, the order to re cross the Rapidan is judged to have been a For the Presbyterian Banner, Pte.t-5 . ....1.. - tr...teriztist, '''7:li:Ht.Tititt,, VOL. XII. NO. 22. triumph of humanity, and, no less, of mili tary wisdom. Nor is the expedition deem ed a failure; as it indicated the spirit and energy of our army; anti moreover, which may have been its principal object, occupied the full force of the wily and persistent rebel General, which, otherwise, might have been thrown into the trembling he lium of the Western conflict. The retrograde movement was as skilful ly conducted* as the advance ; half of the forces and trains leaving in the morning, and the other half in the evening. Thus each.had the roads free and open, and no loss or annoyance ocetrred: It was my lot to accompany the second portion, in the night march. The roads were filled with trains, preceded and followed by columns of troops, moving steadily forward. 'The guards, hospital attendants and others on foot with the trains, were obliged to pink their way through woods.and bushes, at the roadside. This was not difficult to do, after the moon rose—about 10 o'clock. Fires were kindled all along the road,. and kept up by successive travelers drawing around them, for a few minutes, • warming., In some places the fire extended over large spaces" in the woods, giving abundance of light. To conolude; a march of eight or ten hours of the night brought us to our halting plane, in a condition of mind and body not disposing us to quarrel with a blanket bed on the frozen ground, this aide of the Rap idan. ' J. F. IIIaLAKEN. For the Presbyterian Banner Archbishop Hughes in Purgatory. MESSRS. EDITORS :—The soul of the Archbishop, though he was preeminently just, good, and , holy, seems to faro badly in the world of spirits. And if it be so seri ous an undertaking to extricate a spirit which had .arrived so near perfection, we need not be surprised that multitudes of the common sort, cost very large sums of money before the prayers of bishops, priests, &c., become effectual to drag them from their fiery torments ! The prayers and masses offered for the Archbishop's soul, seem tq be gratuitous, " without money and without price," on the principle, I suppose, that it is .all in the family But let some old Catholic sinner who had died' the pos sessor of a few hundred thousands, get into their clutches—then " circumstances alter cases," as the ,old copy saith. Verily he will not come out thence until he, or some one for him, has paid the uttermost far thing. But we must continue our search for the Archbishop. 1. " The fire of Purgatory," says the Catechism of the Council of Trent, "is a place in whfch the souls of just men are cleansed by a temporary punishment in or der to be admitted into their dental coun try." " The souls of just men are cleansed in the fire of Purgatory." But the New Testament as authorised by Bishop Hughes himself, tells us : " The blood of Jesus Christ edeanseth, U 8 from all sin.-1. John v: 7. What need then of any cleansing in fire 7 Z. Bishop MeOloskey and the Pittsburgh Catholic, inform us : "We do not claim for him or any other man * * exemp tion from human frailty and human infirm ity ;" and° these, they think, have left " some stain upon that great soul to be ex piated, washed away, before it shall be pure and undefiled, so as to be made worthy to enter , into the presence of God." Hence they " pray for the repose of his soul." The Archbishop must be " washed" in the flames of Purgatory in order to remove certain stains which " the blood of Christ" has not effaces} I And thus he will be " made worthy to .enter into the presence of God." But adiriitting these "human frailties and infirmities" to be sins, why can they not be cleansed by the blood of Christ as well as all other sins ? The apostle John, as we read in the Doway Testament, speaks of "Jesus Christ, who bath loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood."—Rev. i: 5. What need, then, for the Archbishop to be washed in the fires of Purgatory ?, For my own part, if T can without hesitation, trust all my other sins in the hands of the bleased Redeemer, to be " washed in his own blood," I should think it very absurd to question the effica cy of the same Divine - method of purifica tion for " human frailties and infirmities." ' 3. I have very serious doubts, moreover, in regard to the efficacy of all these prayers for the dead Archbishop. The Council of Trent says that " the souls of just men are cleansed in Purgatory." But the Scrip tures teach us that "the just shall live by faith," i. e. faith in the blood of Christ. If a just man be a peison who possesses faith, living, active, heart•purifying faith, that is enough—he dOes not need anything more or better than " the blood of Christ which cleanseth from all sin." "He that believ eth shall be saved." 4. I have very grave doubts of the effi cacy of these prayers for Bishop Hughes for another reason. The subject of prayer for ourselves and others is mentioned - in the Scriptures several hundred times. Hardly, anything is more common.- But except one obscure passage in the Apocry phal book'of Maccabees, which the Papists call Scripture, who can point to a solitary text which speaks of praying for the dead ? Surely this notion of prayinc , ° " just men" out of Purgatory, could not have held so large a place in the minds of inspired men as it seems to hold in the Ronaish system. "Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord. Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and their works do fol low them." "For to me to live is Christ," says Paul, " and to die is gain." "I am straitened between two : having a desire to be dissolved, [to depart in our version] and to be with Christ, a thing• by far better." And so in very many similar passages, the death of the just is referred to; but we never hear of their crying in the priestly manner, "Pray for us—pray for usr after we are dead! 5. &monists argue the necessity of these purgatorial fires as " a satisfaction to the justice of God" for venial or small sins, or a transitory punishment and a meri torious expiation for sins not deserving eternal punishment. Thus Pope Leo, in his Bull for the jubilee of 1825, speaks of those who have " departed real penitents in God's love, but before they had duly satis fied by fruits worthy of penance for sins of commission and omission, and are now purifying in the fire of Purgatory," &c. And they think they find some counte nance for this impious denial of the sufficiency of Christ's satisfaction for all sins, in the temporal sufferings which, even " just men " meet with in this life. I concede that "whom the Lord loveth he PITTSBURGH, WEDNESDAY, FEB RUARY 17, 1864. chaateneth, and scourgeth every son in whom he delighteth." But where is this said to be a meritorious expiation for sin ? These "light afflictions" may be sanctified to the spiritual improvement of the soul— but it is only as a fatherly chastisement, not as a punishment or expiatibn. But the Council of Trent tells us, "the fire of Purgatory is a place where the souls of just men are cleansed by a temporary punish ment;" a different thing entirely. The whole is a priestly fable, originating in an cient heathenism with its Tartarus—and if not very " beautiful and consoling," it is at least' quite profitable to those who work the machinery. 6. But if punishment be the object, and this is due as "a satisfaction to Divine justice," what is the use or the piety of so much praying ? Would it be morally right to pray that a murderer, for example, should not be pinished as much as he de serves ? Should he not be compelled to render• condign satisfaction to offended justice ? Surely the contrary would make the petitioners partakers of his crimes. If I could persuide myself that the Arch bishop is in purgatory, and that it serves him right, I should be afraid to pray for his escape, lest I should- be found to aid a sort of - scape-gallows in evading merited punishment. And especially if the fire be absolutely necessary to cleanse and purify his Reverence .T. - should say, hands off ! lie needs it all to fit him for the society of the pure, therefore let justice take her course. 7. But I forget. Pogo Leo, in his Bull for 1825, says : "We have resolved * * fully to unlock that sacred treasure com posed of the merits, sufferings and virtues of Christ'and of his virgin mother and of all the saints, * * * and succor is afforded out of this heavenly treasure * * * to such real penitents * * * as are now purifying in the fire of Purga tory," &c. The Pope says he had unlocked this vast treasure ; and I have never heard of his turning the key upon it. This makes it all clear as a sunbeam. The Archbishop's praying friends satisfy Di vine justice by heavy drafts upon this bank of supererogation. These Romish "saints" were so with better than- they ought to have been, that they left a large stock of holiness over and above that they them selves needed ! The Pope unlocks this "sacred treasure," and the faithful check it out in the shape of " indulgences " for " the temporal punishment due to the Di vine justice." The whole thing works like a charm; and " his. orthodox faith," "his irreproachable life and rare virtues," "eminently displayed in the principal•work of his life, the salvation of his own soul" —these well washed in the fires of Purga tory and helped out by large drafts upon the overplus of certain Romish saints, &c., render the case - of the Archbishop not - so bad after all. 8. But, Messrs. Editors, before I agree to trust myself to this " old method of paying new debts" and " satisfying Divine jiatice for past sin," as Pope Leo hath it, there are two or three qiiiiations I should like to have answered. Is it perfectly oer tain there ever liVed numbers of such per fect Romish saints, and that they .left in store a vast treasure of holiness and virtue to " satisfy Divine justice" for their short-coming successors ? Is it perfectly certain that "holy men of old who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost," ever made any such pretence for themselves or others—Paul, for example, wile says he was " the chief of sinners,' • and " less than the least of all saints ?" " Can I be per fectly sure that the Pope keeps the key of this " sacred treasure," and can distribute it at his pleasure ? And is it perfectly certain that prayers, masses, &0., for the dead, is the right way to get possession and apply this." satisfaction due to Divine jus; tice," so that the process of "purifying in the fires of Purgatory," as. Pope Leo• ex- pressed it, shall be greatly hastened, and the happy deliverance speedily achieved ? Is it absolutely certain that the virtues of one man can ever satisfy for the crimes of another mere man'? On. the whole, if the Archbishop has taken this course " to be made worthy to enter the presence of God," it appears to me to be not only a very circuitous and difficult route, but worse than this, it is obviously crowded with pits and bogs and impassible gulphs,- and its general direction is so obviously downward, rather than the opposite?' that it is much more likely to land him where " the rich man" of the Gospel terminated his career, than in Abraham's bosom. I have faith in the sufficiency of the blood of Jesus Christ to cleanse from all sin; the only "merits and virtues" which I want to "satisfy Divine justice" are those of Him "who bought us with his blood ;" and the , only prayer's in which I can place the least confidence for the repose of my soul, or from which I can hope to derive any benefit after death, are the intercessory prayers of " th; one Mediator." These will furnish, true'" rest for the soul;" and I want no "old-wives' fables," that savor far more strongly of baptized Paganism, than of vital Chris tianity. Dusins. For 'the Preeterian Banner. totters to Bible-Iton and Patriots.—No. 4. GENTLEMEN . :- - A joint resolution of Congress was passed March 1, 1845, to an nex Texas, which was intended eventually for four additional slave States. The Mex ican War grew oat of this measure. From the results of that war, another compro mise was made in 1850, which created a new Fugitive Slave Law. The subsequent transactions in -regard to the -repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and the judicial de cision to permit slavery to go North , of 36° 30, are all fresh in your memories, and ,were all intended to favor the slave inter est and extend the system which our revo lutionary forefathers and ecclesiastical fore fathers had repudiated as iniquitous. It must be said that there was a practical ig noring of the previous action of the Church in some of her branches. The want of ao, tion on the part of the General Assembly of 1836, and that of 1845 were not in spirit in accordance with former sentiments ut tered by that body. The Episcopal Metho dists divided on the subject; and eventu ally the New School Assembly in .1857. Religious periodicals were generally silent as to the evil that had been acknowledged to be such by the South as well as the North in former years; but some upheld it. A truce was declared by a kind of common consent, for the sake of a peace, which has been followed by a terrible war. The slaveholding South felt themselves much encouraged to believe thatetheir system was patriarchical—Divine. The writer asked a gentleman from the South, in 1856, " What do you think of slavery now ?" He replied, "We once thought that if God find the Bible were against us, we had better give it up ; hitt a Professor in • the University of Virginia has written a book which has convinced uti that it is right, and we are going to bold on twit." Ministers of the Church, and branches of it, "have, with Congress, helped to aid sentiments and usages which emboldened the South to think of extending slavery, which has brought on war. In the meantilne,.the State rights doc trine of John C. Calhoun and the deter mination which he expressed to. Commodore Stewart as far back as 1812, to ruin the Union if they could not rule it, were ma turing. Visions of acquiring Central America, parts of Mexico, and Cuba, were before the minds of , ambitious Southern men. They formed ..Golden" Knight Cir cles, relied Upon a portion of the ziorth to sustain them, as they .formerly had done, and, thinking that Iforthers racii were cowards, prepared f*-43ecessioni and, if, need be, for war. A.4s i rge• portibn of the . Southern people were not prepared for these measures ; but 'Y bloody and deceit ful men" amongst them, fabricated all manner of falsehoods,rand persuaded some to join, and others were forced into war. What the lying tongue could not accom-. plish, the bayonet effeool., Gentlemen, on the *aeration of a min ister of the Gospel wlko labored in Vir ginia, I state the origiii;of the john Brown. raid. This minister was sociable• with men who held certain meetings, and they told him that money was sent on from South Carolina into the North-eastern part of Virginia, and men ,were there engaged to go and feign to be abolitionists, and use the money to collect a party to. attack Harper's Ferry. They succeeded in deceiving mis guided men, so that there might appear to be some ground of controversy with the North, and have the appearance of justice before the world in further efforts. most -of the preceding view of fatits, most -of Which are fixed history, we see that men in the North—civilians and ministers---.- lent themselves to the South, without in tending such results is have taken place; but have partaken of ' sins, which have brought about calamity. 'True, some of these statesmen may lave never felt with Thomas Jefferson, as expressed in his letter (dated August 25, 1814,) to Ed ward Cole, Esq., when he said, " I had al ways hoped that the younger generation, receiving their early impressions after the flame of liberty had been kindled in every breast, and it had becoine as it were the vital spirit of every American "—but may have always justillhd oppression. All ministers, even in•the North, have not believed with the Rev. Dr. John H. Rice, as 'expressed in his letter to William Maxwell; Esq., (both of Virginia,) when he said, " I am most fully convinced that slavery is the greatest evil in our country, except whis key ;" .buthavnhelped4y writing, speak ing and voting, to change the:;sentiments of the. : South, ; and to involve ~us in civil war. Some such: nwstill believe that-the Bible sanctions American slavery. Their belief I must examine. lam your fellow COUNTRYMAN. Letter from a Delegate of the Christian Com- Min . oll. CEATEANooctE, TENN., Jan, 18, 1864 MR. JOSEPH ALEREE, Treasurer Chris tian Commission, Pittsbirgh: —As the Christian public i s doing a great work in supplying money and stores for the relief and comfort of the noble men who 'are gal lantly fighting our sountry's battles, it is but natural that - a very 'general desire should be manifested to•obtain inforination respect ing•the work of the Christian Commission and its results. With a view to gratify this desire in part, I address you a few lines. I, and brother Whitehill, who accompa nied me, set out for our field of labor on the last day of December, and early on the following Sabbath morning arrived in Lou isville. Here was plenty of work to dO. Here are hundreds of sick. and wounded soldiers in tlte 'hospitals in and around the city. Accepting the invitation of a,good old Methodistschaplain, I preached in Hos pital No. 18, to a goodly Amber of sol diers, and ladies, who I am informed, fre quently attend the religious services in hospitals,, and do much to relieve the mo notony of life there.. Many of the ladies of Louisville are making a noble record for themselves, and will live long in the grate ful recollections of many a poor sufferer whose misery has been relieved - and heart cheered by their kind and gentle attentions. Would that this could be said of all of them ; but secession proclivities on the part of some of them are by no means hid den, and the advent of a squad of rebel prisoners_ presents a coveted opportunity for displaying their sympathy' for the " Chivalry.' Monday morning -comes and we prepare to start for Nashville. •We proceed to the depot and are just in -time to be too late. We must spend, another" day in Louisville. We need- not be idle, however. Back we go to the Rooms of the Christian Commis sion,-arm ourselves 'with books and tracts, and-start-out. My lot is to guto Hospital No. 3. I pass in. A very large room -is lined with neat, clean cots, and a long din: ing-table extends up the middle. Some of the-cots are ocetipied. Igo - and-talk with the men one by one. Books and tracts• open the way op access to them. Not a man of them maitifesta a feeling of unkind nese. Some of them are ripe Christians"; others who are not, manifest a strong desire to become Christians, and ask to be prayed for. Yonder at the other end of the hell, an Irishman is becoming quite excited on some subject, and uses very bad langtage. Conscience whispers, Go and' speak to that man. The voice of.conscience: is- heeded ; a hand is laid on the shoulder of. the offen der ; a kindly word is spoken ; the sin is reproved; &slight touch of the crimson of shame tingee his cheek ; the fault is eon. fessed, and_ he is drawn toward >me as a new-found friend. On Tuesday morning we departed for Nashville, and arrived safely in the ,even ing. A stranger coming to Nashville can not fail to BS surprised at, the great activi ty :of this city at the present time. The streets are literally crowded with Govern ment wagons engaged in the transportation of stores. Soldiers meet you at almost every step ; and the stirring, strains of mar tial music fall upon the ear. Soon after my arrival in the city, I was - shown a beautiful and costly priiate deuce, which it is said the Secession Aris tocracy of Nashville intended to purchase and present to Jefferson Davis, when this city should become the capital of the South. ern Confederacy. From present appear ances it will be a long time before Jeff. takes possession. It had been my intention to proceed at once to Chattanooga, but when I arrived at Nashville there was great need of laborers there, and it was decided that I ;should re main at least for a time. Let me say, by the way, that no delegate should come to the field expecting to follow his own plans, or, consult =his own preferences. Delegates know nothing of the wants of the field un til they arrive;, and then the stations as signed to them may be very different from what they expected 'and desired. There is no help for this. Delegates should come, not as Outstare-seekers, but as workers, and they must.work where they can labor to the best advantage. Some delegates have been a gbod deal disappointed in consequence of this 'change of their original plans; but every man who really comes witha' desire .46 filo gOodriloon , sees thuneeessity for syste:- matie work, -- -and, ;.1 . cheerfqlly acquiesces. &And but admire the good management of Rev. E.' P. Smith, the General Agent at Nashville. While willing and anxious to gratify the wishes of the delegates, he never loses sight of the interests of the Commission, and so controls the work as to accomplish the greatest amount of good. I was assigned to the Convalescent Camp in the suburbs of the city. ,To those who have never seen arp, extensive encampment, the sight ismovel and pleasing. It's laid out with the regularity of h city—streets crossing at right-angles, and the, whole en campment divided into wards regularly numbered. The appearance of the camp on.the; morning of my first visit was beau tiful. The day was clear, but the ground was frozen like a rock. All the encamp ment looked neat and tidy. As I walked through the 'streets of this city of tints, and saw the blue smoke curling from their tops, the poles, tent-pins, and cords, I could not but think of the holy, men of other ages, who dwelt in tents and worshiped God . in tabernacles, and the fervent desire of- my heart was, that some in this encamp ment shouldprove to be men of Nike faith with them. I was - not altogether . disap pointed. A,pleasant surprise awaited _me in the very first tent which I entered. Two young men from the immediate neighbor hood in`-which some of my friends reside, greeted me :with a hearty Welcome. The meeting was the more pleasing, because it was , entirely unexpected. Cite _.of them proved to be a most valuable assisetmt4thile I remained in the camp. " He - is not only a soldier d i ps country, bearing five honora ble marks of valor, but what is far better, he, is a soldier of 3 - esus Christ, and is not ashamed of his profession. A chapel tent had just been erected a few daysteford My arrival. I listened to firsttsermon preached in it Brother Elijah H. Filcher, of Ann Arbor, Mich., was the speaker, and .delivered a good, clear Gospel Ammon to air interested audi ence of "soldiers. I was to be his successor, and immedi ately set about making arrangements for systematio daily work. In the forenoon I visited from tent to tent, distributed read ing matter, and conversed with the sol diers; in the afternoon I preached ; in the evening we met "for prayer. Our church call would sound strangely to an unaccus tomed ear. It was not the sweet r -silvery tones of the church bell, calling men to gether to , worship God; but it was just as good, perhaps. better. At two o'clock the big drum thundered, little drums rattled, and the- clear, shrill notes of the fife min gled with the 'sound. It was a fitting call to stir men's -sours and rouse theth from apathetic coldness. Soon from all parts of the encampment men flocked to the little chapel. They pass in and are comfortably seated on boards and boxes. Worship be gins. I have found : - that the best way, to interest soldiers is to encourage voluntary exercises of singing and prayer. If some of our prayerless professors of religion were present at one of these precious meetings, they might well be put to shame: "-Will some brother lead in singing ?" seldom fails,to bring forth, a speedy response, and some familiar hymn is , suno , with an unc tion and fervor truly refreshing. Then call on some one to pray, and one will rise, and in a tone of the deepest humility, will say, " Let us try to pray." Such were the exercises from day. to !lay. The good taste and judgment which many of the soldiers display in selecting hymns suited to the sermon or exhortation, is remarkable. If the speaker happens to refer to the spirit ual' conflict in whichthe Christian must en gage, he is immediately followed by some one:singing : , "Ain 111 soldier, of the cross, A follower of the Lamb." If the duty and necessity of watchfulness is .pressed upon them; another will lead off in the well known lines ".A charge to keep I have, A God to'glorify, I confess that I never enjoyed religious services any - tivhere as much as I have en joyed those among men most of whom many 'regird'as being almost beyond the reach of religious influence. I was very soon im pressed with the importance of forming a Christian Association among - the soldiers of the Cotrealescent Camp. The attempt has been "successful beyond my expectations. When I left the Camp to proceed to Chatta nooga, thirty-five men had joined the As 13omation, and the prospect is fair fora very large increase of. members. Men from al most all the Evangelie,al Denominations have rformed - themselves into a band of .brothers, on the broad basis of our common Christianity. Thank God for hiti gracious presence with the soldier& Yours, very truly WILLIAM . DICKSON. A plate-kunter in Prussia having asked Frederick the. Great for• the grant of some rich Protestant bishopric, the king ex pressed. his regret that it was already given away, but broadly hinted 'that there was a Catholic"abbacy ethis disposal. The appli cant managed to be converted in a week, And to 'be 'received` into-the bosom of , the Church . ; aftel which he hastened to his friend the king, and told - him how his con science had been eblightened: "Ah !" ex:Claimed' Frederick; "how terribly unfor tunate! - I have given away the abbacy. But the chief rabbi is just dead, and the 'Syriagogne is at my disposer; suppose' you Veri-tto JAW ?3'' WHOLE NO., 594 EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE.. JANUARY 22,1864. FROM LAwcasuris, in the house of Dr. McLean, the worthy Moderato:. of the Synod of the Presbyterian Church in Eng land—with his church in sight on the top of a neighboring hill, in the heart of a dis trict made rich in times past by cotton spinning—l address to you' my present letter. Id this immediate locality lived two bachelor brothers, .the Messrs. Grant, of Scottish birth and blood; very rich and very generous. My host was connected with them by marriage, and vividly recalls their sayings :and doings in 'his table-talk. They were the " Brothers Cheerible " of one of the best works of the famous writer, Charles Dickens, who was wont ofttimes to repair to their house and receive their hos 'pitality. So was was it also with Charles Harrison Ainsworth, who was a native of this district, and is famous for his " Lan cashire Witclies",- , -in which he embodies in the conversation of different characters, the Lancashire dialect with great -power— aieWell as many historical romaiiees, such as " Th9„.'l l eiver of London." On the other side of the corridor ' which tile door 'of the room ivhere I write, is a room where Ainsviorth was wont, when visiting here, to write. The distress in Lancashire is, I am sorry to say, returning in a measure at least, and is • likely to continue for some time. At Preston and Blackburn, some mills whiCh were working several days in week are now entirely , closed. Of course this arises from the scarcity, and consequent dearness, of cotton. For what used to cost from 3 id. to 6d. per pound,lanst now be paid from Is. 6d. to 20. - Finest cotton is still dearer. This week, in the office of a large spinner in Bolton, I saw beautiful cotton, the price of which was close upon 3s. per pound. India is contributing more . cotton every month, but much of it is adulterated, or spoiled. Frequently it has been weighted by sand or dirt mixed with it, and that fraudulently. The Bi4zils, Egypt, and the West Indies, are likely in turn, with'lndia, to furnish a full supply, and if the Ameri can war last, India and Egypt especially will be greatly enriched. As it is, vast sums flow thither. Bombay merchants and perions at home who were sagacious enough to believe that the American struggle must last for some tirne, and who consequently speculated largely in cotton, have made, or are rapidly acquiring, large fortunes. The price of cotton at Liverpool: is high, and would be higher still, but for the agitated state of Northern Europe, and the in increased rise in the Bank. of England rate of interest--eightper cent. Those towns in Lancashire which before this cotton crisis had other trades, have not Suffered at all so severely as those to which cotton was everything. Iron works 911 foundries and wholesale - shoe manufactixr jrig. have rescued other towns from collapse ind ruin. It is very sad to look out of the windows of this house, and to see the tall chimney stalk of a cotton factory which hap not been Worked for more than two years. This has partly arisen fitnt the want of _synip . athy, and the absence of that readiness to incur loss which others liave shown, on the part of a millionaire cotton lord. Such eases, however ' am the excep tions, and not the rule, for, as a ekes, the millionaires have acted nobly toward their "hands,' and Lancashire has con tributed to the vast Relief Funds a larger aura than the whole of England besides. THE RE.TQIOINPS of the nation have been general in connection with the birth of a Prince—the father and the child be ing t'he second and third in succession, to the throne. Old people recall the contrast presented in 1817, when the Prince Regent (afterward George 1V.,) was regarded with dislike by large bodies of the people, and when the Princess Charlotte, the hope and pride of the nation, with her new-born son, perished in an hour. The wail of sorrow at that time was loud and universal. There was really no heir to the throne, after the Regent, but one of his younger brothers. The Duke of Rent, the father of' Victoria was not then married, and all looked dark. The aged George 111. was alive, but his in tellect was irrecoverably gone. What a start onward and upward has England mor rally, socially, and religiously, made since that dark period ! Queen Adelaide, the wife of William IV., was a true Christian woman. She purified the British Court circle, and it has been kept pure ever since. Victoria came to the throne, and with her husband she so ordered her household and set: such, an example as has told on domes tic life with an influence beyond all human estimate or calculation. " CALVIN " was the subject- of a recent lecture in Exeter Hall, by the .Rev. E. L. Garbett, a very able Episcopal Clergyman, who holds Calvinistic views, and defines as well as deferids them, and also the whole system of truth, with singular clearness and power of logic. " The - history of Cal. via " he said, " might not be so romantic as ;hat of Luther; but in moral grandeur it was not inferior. It revealed a temper more calm and.constant than Luther's, and an influence which extended over a larger sphere, and secured for Europe more pro. gressive results. The state of incipient change in which 'Zuingle and Luther found society, required other- treatment than the cautious policy - of the one, and the distinctive work of the other. " With all his vigorous intellect, Luther never worked out to a perfect theological issue ' the fundamental doctrines of his creed. - Consubstantiation is weighted with all the difficulties of transubstantiation, and with some of its own in addition. The movement of the Reformers needed a theology. Without it, the Reformation could not havi survived. Calvin contribu ted this gift!' , As to the death of Servetus, the lecturer said it-was contrary to the just. liberties of man and the spirit of the Gospel. It is utter arrogance to occupy God's place to ward the human 'conscience; butit must be remembered that Calvin's prosecution was not on account of a difference of opin ion,-but because Servetus was to him a blasphemer. In this question Calvin was entitled to be judged in the light of his own age. 'So lamentable an act must also be viewed in the knowledge of Calvin's doctrine of the' Divine sovereignty, a doc trine to which he sacrificed his own life by an unresting and prodigious enely of body and soul. " Dismissing the shadows from such a character, and remembering his purity, his self-sacrifice, and his mental _grasp, we may well desire more •of such men as Calvin. ' - TEE MEmotas of the Rev. Di. Andrew THE PRESBYTERIAN BANNER Publication Office (4AZIITTE, BUILDINGS, 84 FMB .9 . 1, Purmultoa, rA PEILADELFULS, Soots-Weer COIL OF Till AAD CELEFFNOT. ADVERTISEMENTS: TERMS IN ADVANCE'. A Sqvare, (8 Baca or lase,) one Ineertion, 11.00 ; each attb• sequent Insertion, 60 mite; each line beyond eight, 6 cents. A 95.uare par quarter, s7.po; each line additional, DI) ate. A REDUCTION made to advertieere by the year. BUSINESS NOTICES of Tart Hues or MA 11.80; each additional line, 1t cents. Reed, of London, written by his sons, has been published. Besides being eminences a preacher and a pastor, he was preemi nently a philanthropist. Orphans and Id iot Asylums were foemded and fostered by him, and are now affording relief to thou sands. A short time ago, his old congre gation at Wycliffe Chapel contributed 200 guineas; after sermon, for the Asylum for Fatherless Children, Reedham. A gentle man has offered to give 1,900 guineas for the removal of .a building debt of .f. 14,000, on condition, that 5;000 guineas additional be raised. Du. NORMAN MIEOD, lately lecturing at Glasgow, said that there are no less than seventy-give officers of the Guards who aid in' the work of visiting and relieving the poor of London. They belong to a sepa rate Society for that purpose, and are fore most in going day after day to relieve the poor in the most squalid districts. The Scottish Episcopal Church Society —Traetarian • in its tendencies—seems to be very, unpopular,with its own lAy-11101410- A recent collection, was made (attempted rather) in the Ohirloh of St• John Bales "ton. The feeling of the congregation was sufficiently indicated by the amount put upon the plate, which. was one penny; and that panny t it is said, was contributed by the incumbent himself! The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are asked, by many Liverpool people, to abol ish pew-rents in churches in densely crowd ed districts, as endowments have lately been secured to them, and as " both here and 'elsewhere, the humbler classes are practi miry shut out from the ordinances and ali enated from the practice of religion by the system of pew-rents and exclusive appro priations, which, unhappily, so generally prevail." THE FIFTII Winter and Spring series of Theatre services in London is now in pro gress, and the attendance of the masses is .very great. Last year one hundred and fifteen services were held, attended by 161,- 850 persons, making in all, from the com mencement of this effort, 559 services, at tended by 855,100_ pernons. %Extra Thea tre services, besides the foregoing, are being held this Winter, and these reach the " very poor," and a large portion of the outcast population. William Carter, formerly a Master Chimney-sweep, is a powerful preacher among those classes. He occupies the Victoria Theatre every Sunday night, and addresses a great multi tude. The writer was present at one of these services. Carter has also tea-meet ings, to which he gathers nnavies and other seperate classes. One tea-meeting had, as the title to admission, that the applicants should have lost their character; and the applicants admitted were numerous. As tonishing influence for good is exercised by this man. The: Brittania Theatre -and St. Sames' Hall are also hired for seperate services. The Rev. Newman Hall lately preached in the Brittania, to a vast audience. Next evening, on the same stage, Tom King, with his Champion belt, and hired to fill the theatre by such an exhibition, appeared " in the dress which he wore on the field of battle, when he conquered the Benicia Boy 1" J.W. BREVITIES. Pass not judgment on thy fellow till thou halt been in the same predicament; say not of matters that are incomprehensible, that thou canat comprehend them; neither say, When I shall have leisure I will study, lest thou may never have leisure. "Ilan you read Paine's Age of Reason, sir ?" said a person to Robert Hall. " Yes, sir, I have looked over it." " And what, Mr. Hall, is your opinion of it, sir ?" " Why, sir, it's a- mouse nibbling at the wing of im archangel, sir." It we we work upon marble, it will per ish; if we work upon brass, time will ef face it ; if we rear temples, they will crum ble into dust; but if we work upon immortal minds—if weimbue tam with principles with the just fear of God and of our fellow men—we engrave on these tablets some thing which 'will brighten to all eternity. Systematic Baal= co.—" I think," said the Rev. John Brown, of Haddington, "this having a distinct purse for the Lord is one of the most effectual means for mak ing one rich. I have sometimes disposed of more this way than it could he thought I was capable of, and yet I never found myself poorer against the year's end." A lad was at work in a field. A man who was working in an adjoining field said to him, " You 'keep- very'-steadily at work." Mader is' watching me;" was the reply. God's eye is ever upon us: He does not watch us with an unkind eye. Far from it. He watches and waits to see if we will not turn from sinning to holiness, that he may bless us. His eye is ever upon us. Let us do nothing, then, that is adapted to dis please him. Practical- wisdom acts in the mind as grav itation does in the material world : combin ing, keeping things in their places, and maintaining, a mutual dependence amongst the various parts of our system. It is for ever reminding us where we are, and what we can do, not in fancy, but in real life. It domnot permit us to wait for dainty du ties, pleasant to the imagination; but in sists upon our doing those which are before Am.—Helps. Unburied Dead People.—There are many dead people in the world who are not yet buried. There are thousands who have been dead many years, and do not know it. When a - man's heart is cold and indifferent about religion; when his hands are never employed in doing God's work; when his heart is never familiar with his ways ; when his tongue is, seldom used in Tower and praise; when his ears are deaf to the voice of Christ in the Gospel; when his eyes are blind to the beauty of heaven ; when his mind, full of the world, and has no room or, time for spiritual things—then a• man is dead. To trust in God when our warehouses and bags are full, and our tables spread, -is no hard thing ; 'but to trust him when- our purses are empty, but a handful of meal and a oruse of oil left, and all the ways' of relief- stopped, herein Ilea -the wisdom of a - Christian's graoe. Yet none are exempt ed- from this duty; all are bound to ac knowledge their trust in Him by the daily prayer for daily tread ; even those that have it in their cupboards as-well es"those who want -it;_the' richest prince as *Ole 'as the Meanest beggar. WhateVer year wants are, *ant not faith; and you - carnet. want suppies. El