Presbyterian. The Rev, Casper,R. Gregory, of Oneida, Y., has received a unanimous call to.be* the pastor of the First Presbyterian ■ch, Bridgeton, New Jersey. Mr. Gre ■ succeeds Rev. S. B. Jones, IX D,, who his charge on account of dissatisfaction bis position on national affairs. Presbyterian Minister Wanted atMem- Tenn.,where there are four Presbyterian >,h edifices, only one of which is used irship, and that is controlled by Gov ii t. Correspondence should be had Angus Campbell, of Memphis. , First Presbyterian Church, Denver, ■ado Territory, was recently dedicated is is the first Protestant church edi says the statement, “which can.lay claim to architectural propriety” in that r and thriving city. Total’ cost of the iding §4,375, of which §1,325 remained ‘id. Whereuponr.aft appeal was, made he audienoe, and the deficiency at once iscribed, the Governor of the Territory ding off with a liberal sum. Startling Fact.— Says the Christian Intel tc.xcer:—One hundred and sixty .churches of denomination were; reported to the last neral Synod as having nothing to e Board of Domestic Missions during the \r. Reformed Dutch Items. — Rev. Isaac M. ' has accepted a unanimous call-from'the mt Pleasant Church, (D. C.) 50th street N. Y. -Up Toion. —Zion's (African) trch have purchased the Greenwich Re •med Dutch Church, earner of tAjnos: and 'th streets, N. Y.,for(the Bum of forty i thousand dollars,' add will remove ither. Feb. 24. The Pastor of the Ke .•med Dutch Church, of. Lebanon, received donation of §225 from the people of his ,il ‘S e - . . .. 5 .,, /v . .. United. —Rev." John T. Pressly, of Aile tny, in a recent visit to <Washihgtoti- City., ling deeply the necessity of: doing sorne ig for the purpose of preserving from jolution the Associate Reformed churches ,he South—many of which he had been ;rumental in planting some forty-five .rs ago—called upon the Secretary opr ar, having made known the object of his t, received an order from the War De tment, expressing “confidence in the Uy of the United Pre3. Church,” and di- ing “all Generals and officers command- , armies, detachments and posts, to .place the disposal of that church, all houses of •ship belonging to the Associate Re led Presbyterian Church, in which there ft at present a loyal minister,” and to e to the Church “ all the aid, counte ice, and support practicable to the exe ion of its importaniftmS&icin.” Lutheran. — Dr. I. 8. iSchmucker, Professor Didactic Theology in Gettysburg Theolof:' gical Seminary, has sent in his resignation, the directors, stating that his-chief rea- ; ' is for this step, l arC' : the,increasing infirmi is of age, and a desire to devote the re ining years of life more particularly to ii .ry labors for the cause of God and reli- Norwegian Lutherans. —There are three rrches among the Norwegians in Chicago. > first increased in membership 100 and •e in 1802, and 164 communicants have added in 1863, making a* total of 525 isent members. The Swedes and the War. —What pastor No lius, of Red Wing, says of the Swedish Lu iran Church, in Minnesota/.is . equally le of all the Swedish Churcbea over the jt. How groat the sacrifices of life and imh, of toil and service, winch these excel -> t people are making for their adopted coun and the cause of freedom !——“The con gation at Chisago LakeSO miles North-east it. Paul, in the veritable,has. , c„«±lj..<*f/tvuTct& oj one i hunared soldiers: the rges in Carver Cd;,' as many? and my churches, with pastor Beckman’s, in ■vicinity, not fifr frotA the same number, ' are facts; many of them have fallen ieir country’s .defence. lam persuaded many of them also, are true Christians: i, for instance, as Lieut. P——-, and irs like him. Sore and crushing sorrow, wer, has already fallen upon many a j, through the ravages of this frightful , but I never.hear of any murmur against Government; all are a unit in the reso lon to aid in suppressing this rebellion at cost." What a lesson do these poor ish emigrants teach many of our native iricans, who are doing their utmost to [e the draft, abuse the Government, ahd ; e themselves unworthy of their birtli t, and the privileges of freedom. •cent Deaths of ‘JMfintiteris.-HVVitMn the. few weeks, no less thaii four Lutheran sters have been called- to their reward. Lev. D. Adam, of Indiana, died in De .% and the Rev. B. Appleby, of Wash n, D. C.| on the 26th of January. On Oth of January, the Rev. C. Ivoester, of Wisconsin Synod, and on Christmas, 21th, the' Rev. IT. Wichman, of the iri Synod. Lutheran has the following:— Progress via West. —The progress of the work Church in this province, is evident ily from the growth of most of the congregations, and the organization of ones, but from the violence of the op ion which Jihe cause of truth and right ss encounters from, various quarters. vians & United Brethren in Christ, jse two denominations are very gener confounded, The formeoare aUo called ted Brethren, whose organ is The Mora published in Bethlehem, Pa., the Utter, body who went out, under Rev. W. bein from the G. B. Oh, the beginning e present century. Theirorgan is The fious Telescope published iff i)ayt'6n,-Ohio. y more nearly resemble<tiie- Metfibdists, . are quite^pfcphperous,..especially:?in- the; ist. ptist. —Alexander Campbell , from declin, .rength, retires from the Harbinger and Ctwlcgc. Ti; wii henceforth be conducted by W. K. Pendle ton. -.1 . The three items' which .follow* in con nection with the paragraphs under the next denominational head, are interesting glimp ses of progress: of our e *°hange papers 'says the AC X. Observer, affords us more pleasing indica tions of progress in the right direction, than the (Baptist) Eraminer. It is very true, and “ pity ’tis, ’tis true” that our brother Editor thereof does not,sympathize, as we wish he did, with that progress which he records. But tlie'world moves, and so does the church, and he too will come on in due time. In his last.paper, in an editorial arti cle lamenting the spirit of fraternizing or assimilation going on among the Baptists with other denominations, he says.: “ Ever and anon we hear-a pathetic voice announcing that something is wrong in the Baptist churches; The cause does not pros per ; the place of worship is not filled, per chance not paid for, the Baptist interest is not respected as it should be; the pastor has perhaps had a hint that, in the estima tion of a part of the church, his room would be better than his company. If we could only be like other folks, aj[l these evils would! be remedied, jf the relationof pastor could be a permanent one ; or if (Ms bar of dose communion could be broken down; or if this loose democratic system of church govern ment could be exchanged for the Presby terian or Episcopalian; or if we could bhild more splendid edifices which;would attract the rich and repel the unprofitable poor — ; we should be. as prosperous and stand as high as our neighbors!'”—“ Moses G, Buck, late of , Bucksport, Me., recently be queathed $l,OOO to the first Baptist society that shall organize in the first school district in the town upon an open communion plat form.” If open communionism is growing so rapidly among Baptists as our friends of the Observer think it is, Mr: Buck's thousand dollar premium for an open communion church in Bucksport, will speedily be taken up. But it is rather odd that premiums should be necessary for such an object, if the Baptists are all going over into open com munion ism.-—Examiner. In six years, ending with 1854, the Bap tiste of this country contributed for the dif fusion of the Scriptures through their own societies, an aggregate of $258,449, an aver age of $43,075 yearly. Prom that time they depliped,down to the present, when their contributions are less than $lO,OOO a year. It is plain that the time has come when it is both expedient and feasible to concentrate, all our efforts for Bible circulation on the one platform of a.national and non-sectarian institution —the American Bible Society. The way to do it is to put the society upon new enterprises; especially of foreign distri bution, large enough to show that its mana gers-are earnest men, and ought to have the help of all. - Methodist. —The statistics of Methodism for two years past have shown a diminish ing membership. This has resulted in part from a troubled border making the statistics imperfect, and in part from the great num ber of church members who have volunteer ed in the defense of the country. In these two .ways the natural was.te by death has been fearfully augmented. And then the sources of supply were mainly dried up. The public mind was engrossed by. the war. Religion was forgotten; ingatherings few; revivals scarce, So the Church ceased to grow-. Decay marked her steps. But this is now changed. New recruits are; still wanted, indeed,” for the battle-field. But the tide of war is rolling southward, and with it the troubled border. Quiet now pre vails where havoc lately reigned; The sta tistics: of the Church in West Virginia, Mis souri and Kentucky will thus be improved. Contemporaneously with this a spirit of re vival has reappeared in the Church, and is rapidly'filling up her depleted ranks. Great grace seems once more to rest upon, our ls real. Hundreds and thousands are seeking a home in our household of faith. Decay is checked. The season of growth has return ed. And hopes may be entertained that we shall yet regain before the rebellion ends, what we have lost since it began.. -¥■ * The Pittsburgh Advocate enters upon'the discussion of the, alleged decline of Method ism in the cities, and charges upon the New York papers of the denomination, the pur pose of employing the fears excited by the decline, which they assert is taking place, to urge their plans of lay-delegation, &c„ on the Church. The Pittsburg paper says, ■Methodism is flourishing in the rural dis tricts and no changes should be made to encourage Methodism in! the cities at the expense of the districts. It says: “We do not belioxa tbere is anything wanting in the machinery of Methodism to make it succeed either in the city or country. The fault is not in the machinery, but in its management,” — —To. the above, we may add the following from A Washington correspondent .-—What ever may be the relative position and influ ence of Methodism in other sections of the country at the present time, here we think it has been more prosperous for the last few years than at any former period of its his tory. We now number eleven churches, besides seven others belonging to our color ed brethren, who are of the • Methodist family. In several of these churches we have larger Sabbath schools and collect more money for the benevolent objects of the day, than any other Protestant denomi nation in the city. The Baltimore Con ference at its last session resolved to raise $12,000 during, the year- for, the cause of Missions. The .indications, now are that iftore than half of that sum. will be secured 'in this city and vicinity. The Jubilee Fund. ■ The Wesleyan,, Methodists of England are mak ing a handsome thing out of their meetings. The contributions already reported reach the noble sum of ,£llO.OOO, or. §550,000. The canvass is not yet complete. This amount will be considerably increased. When it is considered that this is addition al to their regular yearly subscriptions, we stand amazed at the liberality of Wesleyan Methodism.— —A Mr. Parrott, of Dayton, Ohio, has left in his will $20,000 to the Ohio Wesleyan University at Delaware, on condi tion that $130,000 additional be raised for the endowment.- The Wabash Avenue, Church, Chiriago, Rev. R. L. Collier, pas tor, took up a collection Sabbath, February 14th, to pay off a church debt of $28,000, of some years’ standing. The whole - amount was in twenty-eight minutes, that is, at of SI,UOO per minute.- During the year 1863, says the Advocate and Journal, the number of copies of the Sunday School Advocate printed, was five millions, three hundred and eighty-two thousand! Congregational. —The erection of a church, on Asylum Hill, Hartford, is talked of, and. §50,000 have been subscribed to se cure the removal of East Windsor Seminary (already well endowed) to that city.— y-A Weto Hampshire clergyman who has more sym pathy for the rebels than'- some, recently r found, among .the. procpeda of, a donation visit, fifteen Confederate dollars. ilev. H. B. Stratton, of the Second Congregational Church, Albany, N. Y, has accepted a-call to Great Earring tor?, Mas 3. His removal from Albany >\regretted v w *v~ - '■*' - PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 10, 1864. by his friends there, and it is feared that the Second Church will for the present sus pend public worship. Episcopal Churches Supplanting Bap tist. —On Sunday before, last the .of St. Matthias Church (Memorial of Rev. L>r. : Turner) were- transferred to the Baptist Church in West Twenty-eighth street, near Broadway, New York. Rev. Dr. Cornwall, commencing with a mere handful of people in a public hall, has now succeeded in the establishment of a free Episcopal Church. This will be the fourth or fifth Episcopal Church built up in quondam Baptist edfices, Bays The Christian Times. ' Revivals.—A correspondent in Bridgeport, Conn., of the Evangelist, gives a most stirring account of a general awakening in that city, under the labors of Rev. ‘ Edward Payson Hammond. He speaks of his hesitation at first, in regard to the work of this Evangel ist, but all his fears have vanished; the work of grace is evidently deep and extend ing; ' ' . Iu Hamilton Village, Michigan, it is stat ed/every adult, save one, has become a praying person. A correspondent of the Christian Liidli gencer writes from Raritan, Henderson Co., 111., Eeb. 17“ An extraordinary and most cheering work of grace is in progress here. During the past two weeks we have wit nessed such manifestations of the presence and power of the Holy Spirit as are seldom vouchsafed except in answer to fervent im portunate prayers of the people of God. Every means made, use of to, brings gjnners. to the Saviour’ has blessed. Thirty-one, mostly young persons, have al ready found peace and joy in believing, and been received into the fellowship of Christ's visible Church. ” Many others are under con viction.” ......., Union Presbyterian Church, St. Louis. —God is visiting some of the St. Louis churches with the gracious - influences of his Spirit. Since the Ist of January last, the United Presbyterian church (0. S.) has been enjoy ing special j religious serivoes, conducted principally by its excellent pastor, the Rev. J.J. Porter. ... ..... It is especially gratifying'to the friends Of truth, that this church 'should receive so: rich a blessing. It is the only Old School Presbyterian church in St. Louis in which both pastor and people have earnestly op posed the cruel and wicked assaults of trai tors upon our Government, and have been faithful witnesses for the truth against the unfaithful teachings of sympathizers,.with rebellion. From the first dawn of treason the pastor of this church has fearlessly and faithfully . taught the truth as revealed in God’s Word; that resistance to a just and' lawful government is a fearful sin against God. Cor. of Presbyterian. Granville, Maryland. —“ The religious in terest,in the University has been greatly on the increase the past week. Conversions are frequent. The work is still going on in the Young Ladies’ Institute, where a large number have been brought to the knowledge of God in Jesus Christ. The Divine influ ence seems also to be entering the Church, and we humbly hope for: yet greater, things ■ than these.—Jour,. and Mess.” Miscellaneous. — "Unitarian Statistics. —ln the list of societies there are the hainei of 256. “ The i Journal,” for, January, 1863, gives the number of societies as 261; conse quently.we have lost 5 names or societies, during the year passed ; :C9 societies of the 256 have no settled pastors, Boston has .18 societies, and all these pulpits are supplied by settled ministers: In the\ list of minis ters we find the names of 343, and 39 D. B.'s. Bev. Joseph Bichardson, o|F Hingham,is the oldest settled pastor. His. term of. service began in 1806. Dr. ; Crosby,«pf Charlestown, N. H., was settled in 1810.. There are 17 chaplains iD the army. We find that 93 societies are located out of Massachusetts, leaving to this State tbe'.balance,l63. ; Maine comes next, having 17. New Hampshire 15, and New York 14. ; These three States hold one-half of the number out of Massa chusetts. 11 States have no Unitarian soci ety in them, and 10 of these are slave States. The Universalist and the Christian bodies, and some of the Quakers are theologically with us. The school in Cambridge has 20 students ; the one in Meadville has 18; in cluding 3 in the preparatory class. Cam bridge graduated last year, 7. Meadville, 5. Meadville has a faculty of 7, and Cambridge has one of 3. The effect of freedom upon the negroes has been to lessen the manifes tations of religion in the merely emotional forms, and to increase it in theaform of morality and good works.-, “ The.ir piety,” as Dr. Howe rather quaintly remarks, “is less nasal and more practical.”—— fir. Fair field finds notices posted up at the dobiß of papal churches in Italy as follows: “ Indul gences daily, for the living and the dead. Hear it! Come hither with your money and buy for the sins of your friends who are dead, and- for your own sins, past, present and to come.” What deception and daring blasphemy 1 Roman Catholic Chaplains are being appointed in some English counties, with salaries. Previously, any Boman Catho lio in prison could see a priest if he desired it; now, the law passed last session, author izes the magistrates at quarter sessions, if they see fit, to appoint paid Boman priests, not as chaplains, but as priests “ appointed to.visit the Boman Catholic prisoners.” One fact comes .out prominently, that a large majority of criminals in prison in England ' are Bomanists. This is no compliment to Po pery ; it is everywhere the same. The flood of immigration setting in after the Irish fam ine in 1846-47, has defiled, with physical filth and low immorality,' many fair districts of both England, Scotland, and Wales. Any boy can teach a man; but it takes a man to teach a boy any thing. We should not so much pray for exemp tion from trials and protection from dan gers as for grace to enable us steadily to do ***** THE FINAL DECISION IN THE CASE or “essays and Reviews,” The prosecution against Dr. Williams and Mr.' Wilson is at ah end. Those famous clergymen, suspended from the office;of ■ tho ministry . and the. emolu ments of their livings for one year, by judgment of the Court of Arches, have been restored to their honors, functions, and emoluments, and will -return amid the applause of the freethinkers of Eng land, to preach essayism to their con gregations. Such is the decree' of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Cqun oil, from which there is no appeal. The Archbishop of .Canterbury and the Archbishop of York dissent from the judgment, and the only ecclesiastic present when it was pronounced was th e Bishop, of London. We are anxious not.tomxaggerate, but we are deliber ately of, opinion that this is beyond comparison the most important event which has'occurred in the history of the Church Of England since the passing of the Act of Uniformity. It has taken us, we o4rn, by surprise. The sentence of Dr< LushingtOn seemed to us the mildest which,milder the cirojnmstahces, could be considered possible or conceiv able ; ; but pihce two of the most daringly heretical,(if the authors of “ Essays and Reviews” are declared on unappealable authority To preach no other Gospel than that which .the. State of .England undertakes to provide 'for the people, we’accept' the fact, ami- endeavor, in all to ascertain what it’means, and what are the, practical inferences to WhicbH't,shuts up all those who in this country adhere to. tho theology of the Reformation- ■ ; .. ;! Let,ustclearly. apprehend what this decision Umounts . t 0. . :. We take-, to bo gin: with, jthe - question "of inspiration.' What is tl/e*cffect,of thi.sjudgmont u pon the doctrine of the Church of England With respect to thg Bible;? We reply, that the Lords of" tho' Privy Council have decided that the church of England does not attach supreme-and exclusive: authority to Scripture; and we main tain that, in thus deciding, their lord ships proclaim that the Church of Eng land has : abandoned the fundamental principle sof. the Protestant,' and one fundamental principle,:of the Catholic faith; Let ;us not be misunderstood. We do not stand up for any theory of ihspiratiop; we do not say that the Catholic faith requires us to believe that every w;ord of Scripture is literally in spired, or' that no merely human ele ment is>to be found in the Bible. But we rega l r4 it as open to no dispute that the Church in all ages. has pronounced Scripture) in a distinctive and exclusive .sense; tho;revelation of God's will, and has, therefore, ascribed to the precepts and instructions of Scripture a strictly Divine authority. Wo say not whether the Diving element has been held to be ■ the sole element in Scripture; or whether ,iL .be bpt a vein OP-‘finest gold embedded in Scrip ture ; we'aflirin only that this Divine element |as been held; by the Church Catholic to exist in th.e Bible; to be dis tinctive; to be present in no other book; and, to lend to Scripture an authority in blatters of fajth which no other book, heathen or Christian, can possess. This doctrine iio' mimster of the iChurCh of ■ England ife now required to hold. The Church legally maintains that Scripture is “ an expression of devout reason, and therefore jto be read with freedom that it is dt-ho written.voice of the con gregation that it is inspired as the Chufeh is inspired; that every man is promised -“illumination frOm the Spirit that dwelt in the sacred writers that “ the Bible was inspired by the Holy ■-Spirit , that bas ever dwelt and still |dW®ils.in the Church, which dwelt also lij the sacred writers of Holy Scripture, and which! will aid and illuminate the minds of those who read Holy Scrip ture, trusting to receive the, guidance ana assistance of that Spirit.” Beyond this thie clergy of the Church of Eng land are nqt required-to go. They must believe tbujfjthe Spirit which now ilia Urinates (Emristiana, illuminated the writers of the Bible; but if their people ask them how creeds and. churches can be built upon Scripture, when neither can be founded upon the present illumi nation of Christians; if their people ask them why . the expression of devout reason now-a days cannot be shaped into articles and imposed upon the faith ful; if their people insist that, as the voice of the congregation in the Apos tolic age was more spiritual than that of the congregation; under. the Jewish kings, so the voice of the congregation eighteen centuries after the Apostolic age ought to be more spiritual still, and •therefore worthy. of still higher rever ence; if, in one word, they are asked to showcauso why Scripture is authoritative, they will have no reply, This is the grand discussion .which lias been going on for several hundred years> ' Here is the ridge where “ wind and water shears," and the- streams descend, on this side or on that,' to mysticism, to scepticism, “or to Christianity. Grant that there is no- element in : Scripture which distinguishes it from the Ordinary communications ■of God’s • Spirit, and the religions impressions of any good man of our acquaintance will have as much authority for us as the religions impressions of St. Paul Go a Tittle farther, say that devout reason in all times and places is the highest inspira tion possible, and you arrive at Goethe’s compliment to the Gospel—to wit, that it is a pleasant brook in which one may bathe and refresh himself as he walks on under thfe sky of nature, but that it is only one hf many brooks which en liven the way. To this length the Lords of the Privj Council , do not proceed, although W 3 have no doubt that the “ Essays anil Reviews,” if not in letter, then in spirit, responded to the idea of Goethe; mt their Lordships unques tionably la| it down that the Church of England dois not assert Scripture to be insyired in Lny sense which would not apply to Bishop Heber’s melodious ap peal to Chitstians to send the Gospel to the heathen or to Addison’s hyrfim on the firmament. The clergy of the Church of England are required to be lieve that the Bible ia, on the whole, a good book ; but, the Chnrch of England does not affirm that it is, in any distinc tive and authoritative sense, Go'd’sßook. After this, it is unnecessary to dwell upon the deliverance of the Judicial Committtee of the Privy Council re specting particular theological tenets. Suffice it to say that their Lordships absolve ministers of the Church of En g land from obligation to believe in vi carious, atonement arid in the eternal punishment of the lost. The .first of these has always been recognized as one of the fundamental doctrines of Catholic orthodoxy: How are we to sum up the result of all this, looked at from the national and historical standpoint ? Ho feeling could be further from our minds than that of exultation over the Church, of England in this the day of her humiliation and calamity. But the truth must be spo ken, and tie plain truth seems to us to be that this judgement unchurches tbo English Establishment. It does so in two ways: ,In the first place, it de prives her members of all guarantee that-her ministers will preaehf the Gos pel, and we hold that the preaching of the pure'and full Gospel of God is an indispensable mark of a true Church. In the second place,, it totally annihi lates her' discipline, or rather, it pro claims to the world that her discipline is not even a name. The continuance in the ministry-of men who have pub lished the opinions of Dr. Williams and Hr. Wilson might be safely pronounced an impossibility in any Christian Church possessed of a system of discipline. But the mere continuance of the men in the. church is not all we have in this in stance. > The church has declai*ed by every organ at her command, that she regards those men .as heretics The Brehops have denounced therh; Convo cation has denounced them; the whole body of the c 1 ergylirnTtes ti fie cTagains t thhm; and. yet they ate Tin visithd hy' the slightest ecclesiastical censure! The* Church of England, her. ministers .and, her members,-have less, power to man age their own affairs; than the smallest knot of sectaries in the kingdom. How. any Church can submit to a bondage like this, how Christian men can fail to see that so complete,**, surrender of that spiritual power which is Christ’s irito the hand of Cesar is a heinous and ter rible sin, we are unable to conceive.' Evangelical Nonconformists in general, and the Presbyterian Church in partic ular, ought to address, to Evangelical ministers arid members of the .'Church of England, an earnest appeal and invi tation to leave a Church which surely, They themselves being witnesses, can no longer pretend to find her religion in the Bible- of lip, call Christ her king.— Weekly Review. •. AMERICAN Life Insurance and Trust Company, S. E. corner .Fourth and Walnut Streets, PHILADELPHIA CAPITAL AND ASSETS, $1,897.74 59. Mutual Rates—Half note to be paid by Profits of Company, or reduced rate of Premium without Profits. Total Abstinence rate peculiar to our Company, and lower than any other. . Board of Trustees. Alexander ,W;hilldin, J. Edgar Thomson, Hon. 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FOR MARKING LINEN, MUSLIN, SILK, Ac, By years of use ha?, proved itself TUX Jimt» BM&OT MOST RELIABLE MARKING INK In the world Manufactured onlr by ®Ms £ ißi) MS ® fi ■S® i * 278 GREENWICH STREET, HEW YORK. mg* For sale by all Druggists. PHILADELPHIA. INSTITUTE ■ " tom oultueb, BYrTHE PRACTICE OF DR. DIO LEWIS'S 1 NEW ’ Gymnastics and the inculcation of the Laws of Health,.established by Mr. and Mrs- GILLINGHAM,. October 15th, 1863. ; Central Branch, Horticultural Hall, Southwest corner Broad and Waimit ; streets. Classes of Ladies and Gentlemen meet on Wednesday, February 3d. Classes of Masters, Misses and Young' Ladies meet on Mondays and Thursdays at 4 o’clock. Anew class organizes Monday, February Ist. • Northern Branch, .Northwest corner Tenth and- Sprlng streets. Classes of Ladies and Gentlemen meet on Tuesday and Friday evenings at 8 o’clock, P. M. A hew class organizes Tuesday, February 2d. Classes of .Masters,' Misses and Young Ladies meet oh Wednesdays and Saturdays at 4 o’clock, P. M. A neW class organizes on Wednesday, February 3d. The Fee for a course of twenty lessons, two or four times per week, is $7. Two in the same family, $l2. For the remainder of the season, twenty weeks,' twice ft week, $l2. Four thnesper week, $2O. In the system of New Gymnastics no fixed apparatus is employed, all the exercises being performed to the inspiring strains of music, with light wooden dumbells,. hand rings, wands, bean bags, Ac. They will be . found 1 admirably, calculated to derelope and maintain the highest possible -condition of physical health, and to secure-a grace, flexibility, precision and endurance of bony, far- more desirable than enormous muscular.- strength. For further information, address C. GILLINGHAM, No, 1221 Buttoawood street. SELECT CLASSICAL AND ENGLISH SCHOOL,. NO. 1230 LOCUST STREET, PHILADA., B. KENDALL, A, M., Principal; THE SCHOOL. YEAR is- DIVIDED INTO TWO sessions of five’months each, commencing September and February. " f ; ' Pupils are carefully-prepared for any class in college or for mercantile life. . Thoroughness in the rudiments is insisted upon as indispensable to the successful prosecution of classical and-higher English studies. Special attention is .also' given to the Modern Lan guages. • , _ • - • . A fine .play-ground on the premises gives unusual •value and attractiveness to the.location-ofthe school. All other desirable information will be furnished to those interested bn application to the Principal. H @ ® Sll. TAKE THIS ’OPPORTUNITY OF INFORMING our friends and- customers that we have .associated: ourselves with E. H. ELDRIDGE, No. 628 MARKET Street, bolow Seventh, Where we would be pleased to have you call. We shall keep always on hand a first-class stock of READY-MADE CLOTHING; Also, a stock of PIECE GOODS, which we will make to order in the most fashionable style. ISAAC LIPPINCOTT, GEO, L. HAINES, CHAS. C. ozrAS, Late witli E. H. Adams, Seventh and Market sts. GEORGE ASHIBADj. * DRUGGIST, 603 MARKET STREET,PHILADELPHIA.. X\EALER in Drugs, Chemicals Ex— M A tracts. Pure Spices, and Perfumery; WmdowGlass,. Putty, White Lead, Zinc. Oils and -Turpentine,. Alcohol* etc. Importer of French Anatomical Preparations and Skeletons. • m6L LIFE AND TIMES J O H IV BY E. H. GILLETT. Two Yols. Royal Bvo. Price, $6,00. NOTICES OF THE PCLFiS Mr. Giiletthas done a good work in devoting so much talent and labor to one interesting, field of historical re search, with the view of .diffusing a knowledge of one of the most remarkable men, and one of the most impor tantmovements in ecclesiastical?history. There have been, to our view, few more valuable, contributions to our religious literature than these two volumes during the present century. The author of this work takes rank with Sparks, Bancroft, Irving, Prescott, Hopkins and others, done so much to exalt the reputa tion of our country in the world of letters by their his torical productions. —Princeton jjevieu?. A richer contribution to Historical Theology has not been made, either in this country or Europe, for many years, than by these noble volumes. —Theological Eclectic.. Fertile as the present age has been in historical work* of the highest merits, few of them will rank above these volumes in those qualities which give permanent inter est and value to a'history. It is a work which reflect* honor on American literature, and adds another name to the noble list of American historians.— Amer. Presb. and Theological Revieic. REMOVAL. 0. H, WILLARD, PHOTOGRAPHER. Has removed from 1023 Market Street, to his new and spacious galleries, No. 1206 Chestnut Street. Mr. W. would say that his accommodations now are of the most commodious and extensive .character; and he feels confident that, by close -personal attention to his business, to give his patrons a much finer quality of. work than has heretofore been produced in the city. C3-OH.3D DEIST'S. MANCTACTUasD BT TJDS AMERICAN GOLD PEN COMPANY. •These Pens have, gained great popularity in a short, space , of time, and are acknowledged, by the best wri ters, to be superior to all others now in use. Also the ARMY PEN, ■Made expressly for the,Soldiers, are the best and cheap est manufactured, and are for sale by most of the Jew elers throughout the country. COMP ART'S SALESROOM, South-East corner Eighth and Chestnut Streets. MARTER & FASER, H TJ S » - AgentSt
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers