§*K|)ioas |aidli§«B». Presbyterian Church Building and Ministerial Changes, A new church near the Chicago '.'minary was organized on the Mth ult., ■::’.der th© name of the Fullerton Avenue iiui’ch. The building is nearly completed. “/he Harris Street Presbyterian Church - ; Newbutyport, Mass., Ims given a unani :;'.ous call to Itev. Benjamin, Y. George, of - ‘ issouri. Rev. John M. Baris has accepted iho appointment of agent for the Theologi cal Seminary of the North-west. Mr. A, P. Cummings, for more than a quarter of a century one of the conductors of the New York Observer, has sold lii3 in terest in the concern to Messrs. Floyd W. Tomkins and Thomas 11. Cuthell, for the last twenty years the two estimable clerks, of the counting-room, Mr. Cummings was she financial partner of the old firm of Syd ney E. Morse ,& Co.,;and integrity, courtesy, prudence and'energy, did all that was neces sary to give it the highest standing among the business firms of the city; - When he be came a partner in the. Observer it had a cir culation of G;000. He leaves it with a circu lation of 25,000, and a'commercial value that would be an, independent fortune for any man. Mr. Cummings ‘retires from public life to enjoy the competence which he has to honorably made,'and the Observer will continue to be prosperous and useful ag heretofore. < The German, Reformed Church. —A cor respondent'df The Messenger laments that there is no English congregation of their de nomination ih Netv York city. They have s small German Church under the care of fwtor Busche, “who has labored for nearly rv. enty years in a truly missionary spirit and succeeded at last in training his people to -elf-support.” The,writer asks in conclu sion : “ Is it impossible to start an English Reformed ©liurch among the.descendants of (he 160,000 or 200,000 Germans of this city ? bet us not despise the day of small things.” The Tercentenary Jubilee in honor of the three hundredth, anniversary of the forma tion of Heidelberg Catechism, wis held on Tuesday evening, February 23d, 1804, ih the First Reformed Church, York, Pa., of which the Rev. J.,Q. Miller is the pastor. San Francisco, Cal, —A meeting was re cently held by the friends and advisers of Or. W. A. Soott, to consider the question of recalling him to that city, the proposition being to organize a new church and establish a new congregation. A heavy salary, one thousand per month, we understand, was proposed and an effort made to raise it, but without complete, success. The final result, if reached, has not transpired. If Dr. S., is manifestly and certainly loyal, and will give his influence and efforts, as a good citizen and true to the support of the government, there can be no popular objection to his resi dence and labors in this city. If he does not assume and maintain such attitude in respect of the government, his friends are, not wise in attempting to induce his return. Time will tell.— California Advocate, '• Gettysburg I . —The Sabbath School con nected with tne German Reformed church at Gettysburg, held its anniversary on the eve ning of the 22d of February. As the Library of the sohool had been destroyed during the Hebei Invasion, the opportunity was im proved in the way of raising some funds to wards the replacing of the Library. A small admission fee was charged, from which fifty live dollars were realized. The exercises are represented as having been of the most interesting character. Mrs. Anna, wife of the late President Harrison, who died at North Bend, twenty miles from Cincinnati, Thursday evening, Keb. 25th, was born in New Jersey, July 2-3ih, 1775. In the year 1812 she became a member of the First Presbyterian church in Cincinnati. In 1833 her membership was transferred to the PrSsbyterian church at Cleves, near her residence at North Bend. Union Tendencies. —The Presbyterian of last week says :—We rejoice in the tendency of Presbyterians everywhere towards one another. We have tried the force of rivalry long enough: let us try the power of con centrated and united effort. Rev. Dr. Armstrong, brother to the late Secretary of the American Board,pastor of the Presbyterian church in Norfolk, Virginia, has been sentenced by Gen. Butler to work on the fortifications at Hatteras, as a punish ment for disloyal practices: Congregational.—Henry Ward Beecher has retired from the editorial chair of the independent, but will contribute to its co lumns. —Writes the Rev. Dr. Holbrook, of Dubuque, who has been collecting funds for a western institution, to the San Francisco Pacific: “I had no conception of the aston ishing wealth of New England until I had occasion and the opportunity to ascertain the fact. The nhmber of members of Con gregational churches who are worth from J 100,000 to $1,000,000 is almost incredible, while you would be astonished could you know how many make return to Govern ment of an annual income of from $30,000 to $100,000! There is one church in a country village in Massachusetts that is said to represent seven millions of property and or.other three, to say nothing of those in the cities." , Rev. J. L. Jenkins, of Salem, Mass., will commence his pastorate of the Pearl Street Church, Hartford, about the first of April. Rev. O. T. Lanphear (recently of Exeter, ■V H.) was installed on Tuesday evening, March Bth, as pastor of the College Street Church in New Haven. Rev. A . Quint has reoeived a unanimous call to the pastor ate of the North Church in New Bedford. Our impression is that he has other engage ments with the 2d Massachusetts regiment, just now. Baptist.—The N. T. Examiner has the fol lowing items: As a-publisher we are abun dantly satisfied to have no Baptist paper m Philadelphia, for our subscription list is gaining many additions by it, from Pennsyl vania and Western New Jersey. But as a Baptist, we think with humiliation on the fact that so large and rich a city as Pmlaaei phia, where other denominations have many papers of their own, should have no Baptist newspaper edited and published within it s limits. We should be about as willing to ask our Philadelphia brethren to shut up their ohurohes, and come every Saturday to .Yew York to get their preaching, as to wish them to be wholly dependent on another city for the making of their Baptist news paper, But they will not long be thus de pendent. In reply to the inquiry of a sub scriber the Examiner says: It is believed here that laymen and unordained ministers have no right to administer the ordinance of baptism -Commendable efforts are being made by the Baptists in New York and Sac ramento tp impart religious instruction to the Chinese population —some two or three thousand of whom are among us. These efforts have in * measure been crowned with success. A chapel has bee erected for them in each city, and the con verts are numbered by scores. A mis ® lon " ary is laboring in this city among tnese idolators, and until recently there was one also in Saoramento. Some of the oonverts have been licensed to preach, and have re turned to their native land, to proclaim the unsearchable riches of Christ to their delu ded and degraded countrymen. At a meeting of the friends of Spurgeon College for the training of ministers, held last month • in London, Mr. Spurgeon ,said the college began seven years ago with one student, and now it has seventy students. Forty of the_students are now the pastors of congre gations in different parts of England, and some have gone forth as missionaries.—Rev. T. G. Jones. D. ID., of Norfolk, has received a call from one of the Baptist churches of Baltimore, which he has accepted, and ex pects soon to enter upon the duties of his new station. He is an able man, and we trust will be the means of doing a great and good work in Baltimore.—The Twenty-third street Baptist Church of New York, of which Dr. Gillette was the pastor, have given a very hearty and unanimous call to the Rev. Wayland Hoyt, of Pittsfield, Mass., to be come their pastor. The First Baptist Church of Philadelphia have given a like call to the Rev. George D. Boardtpan of Rochester, to he. their pastor.-—Rev. Miles Sanford, of North Adams,Mass.,has had the gift of $533.- 50 from His people.—t-i-The American Bap tist says; The Laight Street Church leses its pastor, Rev. I. S. Kalloch, he having just' resigned with a view to going to Kansas. Rev. R. J. W. Buckland, for seven years the esteemed pastor of the Baptist church at Sing Sing, resigns his charge to accept a professorship in the Yassar College. Methodist; — Btyiscopal Residences. ■ The PiUsburgAdvocate of January 16 th has an editorial on the distribution of our bishops, in which expression is given to some thoughts having a place in other minds, than the editor’s. Bishop Ames has re moved to Baltimore; Bishop Simpson to Philadelphia. Bishop Japes resides in INew York;, Bishop Scott at Wilmington, Del., and Bishop Baker at Concord, N. H., leav ing only Bishop Morris in the West, (Ohio,) which is no more the West. These data are taken as the ground for urging some action by the General Conference, by which members of the Episcopal Board shall be compelled to reside at centers of sections or districts. Methodism in Philadelphia; —The Northwestern Adovcate has a transient Corres pondent in Philadelphia, who thus writes of Methodism in this city: “We have in this city a class of very poor church buildings, and no other sort. There is not a handsome Methodist church edifice in this city of 600,000. The membership of the leading societies is very large, most of the churches are free, and the salaries of the preachers very small. We doubt whether the increase of Methodism in Philadelphia, is relatively as great as that of other protestant churches or commensurately as great as the increase of population. There is wealth enough here in the church, but evidently a great want of appreciation of the demands of the times, and the importance of furnishing the rising generation with comfortable and even handsome church accommodations and ap pointments. The Methodist pulpits are well manned : Drs. Hodgson, Coombe, and More are here, and other names well known to the church.” Episcopal. —The bishop and assistant bishop of Ohio have addressed a pastoral letter to the vestries of the parishes in the diocese, urging an increase of the salaries paid to their pastors, in .order to enable them to meet the present expenses of living. A Change of Relation. —Rev. Mr. Yahn, pastor of the German Lutheran congregation at Valparaiso, Ind., and nearly one hundred male, and nearly two hundred female com municants, have gone over from the Lutheran to the Episcopal Church, It is, said to be the result of a division which has sprung up in the Lutheran Church on the question of the Lord's Supper, Contributions to Foreign Missions. —The Christian Times (Episcopal) says that for three years, from Oct. Ist, 1860, to Oct. Ist 1863, more than two-thirds of our parishes did not contribute a cent to Foreign Missions. Even in such old, established dioceses as Connecticut, New York,' and Pennsylvania, the contributing parishes are only about one-third of the whole number. -Rev. Mr. Dix, of Trinity Church, N.' Y., preached a sermon in the Tabernacle church, Gth Avenue, on Sabbath evening the 13th inst., upon “Christian unity;” the animus of which was, that Prelacy is the only Scrip tural Christianity, to whose faith all sects should return, and let the Priesthood do the thinking for the people, on all matters of doctrine. Revivals. —Knox College, Galesburg, lII. The correspondent of the Evangelist says : This Institution is enjoying a preeftus revi val of religion, the result, most manifestly, of the day of fasting and prayer for Colleges. This day was spent as follows :—The morn ing chapel worship was prolonged for an hour and a half; at 11 o’clock A. M. the O. 8. and N. S. Presbyterian churches held a union meeting; at 2 o’clock, P. M. a prayer meeting was held in the first and second Congregational churches respectively; at 7 o’clock in the evening a general meeting was held in the College chapel. It was pleasant to see Dr. Candee (O. S.), Mr. Mor ton (N. S.), Dr. Edward Beecher and Mr. Perkins (Congl.), present and all equally interested in the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. The next evening was our regular College prayer-meeting. One young man, a member of the Sophomore class, and a son of one of the above mentioned clergymen, rose and asked for prayers, saying he had resolved to lead the life of a Christian. The work has gone on, and-is going on up to this present writing. In all, fifteen, we hope, have set out in a new life. -Sixty-nine have united with the Congregational church in Candor, by profession, and three by letter, as the blessed fruits of the revival in Janu ary. Forty-three were members of the Sab bath School. Fourteen adults have joined the Bible class. For all of which we give God the glory. In some little figuring which we have made (says the Western Ad vocate) we find that the accessions to the Methodist Episcopal church, East and West, the past three months, have nearly reached twenty thousand, the exact figures being 19,- 780. In many localities therehave been thor ough and general revivals, with additions that must tend to the strength and power of the Church. It was reported from Brighton in the Boston daily prayer-meeting, on Sat urday, that several business men had been hopefully converted there, and the signs are encouraging. A father said he. had asked prayer for the conversion of his two sons, and he had a letter yesterday from one of them in Indiana, saying that he had become a Christian. The Presbyterian Church of St. Anthony, Minnesota, has recently en joyed a precious outpouring of the Spirit of God. Christians have been revived, and sinners have been hopefully converted. The Presbyterian Church, O. S., in Smyrna, Del, has been visited with a gracious revival. Several of the Methodist Churches of Philadelphia are receiving large accessions. In the Thirty-eighth-street Church thirty eight have been received, and more than fifty have been converted, some of whom had joined the Presbyterian Church. One hundred and fifty-five have been received by certificate and on probation in the Heddmg M. E. Church. , Miscellaneous— 2Vse Israelites.—^ The Wil na, Messenger states that according to„ the PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1864. latest calculations made, the number of Jews now amounts to 7,000,000, about one-hall’ of whom reside in Europe. Russia contains the m05t—1,220,000; next, comes Austria, 853,000: then Prussia, 284,500: and the other-” 1 countries in. Germany together, 192,- 000. One remarkable fact is that in I-’ranee, Belgium and England, where the .Tews are entirely emancipated, the number is gradu ally decreasing, while in those countries where they are still subjected to a certain restraint, they increase. This well known people range their leading sta tistics in three provinces, as follows: In the continental (European) province there are about 4,984 communicants and a total num ber of 0,727 souls. In the British province, 3,078 communicants and s. ■ total of 5,997 souls. In the American, in’its two districts, 5,759 communicants, and a total of 9,429 souls—being thus a total of/3,821 commu nicants,and of 21,253 souls in the three prov inces. Gen. Butler has remitted the sen tence of Rev. Mr. Wingfield, of Norfolk, directing his employment in sweeping the streets for a term of three months, for noto rious! v disloyal practices. “ His., punish ment,’’ says Gen. Butler, “ is remitted not from respect to the man, or for his acts, or because it is unjust, but because its nature may he supposed to reflect upon the Christ ian Church, which, by his connection with it,has been already too much-disgraced.” Panel Hostility to the United Slates. —A corres poiulentof the New York Evening Post writes from Rome, Feb. 10th, as folfows The fact is; and the people- Of America may as well know it, the councils of the temporal power are irreconcilably and inev itably opposed to us. We have no friends in the Church of Rome, nor one in the whole college of cardinals. I am informed by an American, who has held an official position in Rome, that the Roman officials in a body have always expressed the most decided sympathy with the rebellion, and faith in its ultimate triumph. With the exception of Monsignor Nardi, one of the judges of the Rota, he nevCr met a Roman official who has any sympathy with the North. The whole moral force of the Catholic Church, in. Rome, has been steadily exercised against the federal government, and the sympathy of all who oppose free institutions and popu lar government has been as steadily with the rebellion and its causes. This state of things coupled with the worse than useless diplo matic representation of the federal govern ment at this place, brings us naturally to the recognition of the rebel Confederacy involved in the correspondence—a recognition, the importance of which may not be very great with us, but to the Catholic friends' of the rebellion is of the highest importance. The Cahierale Press': of Rome has recently published the census of the population of the Eternal City, during 1863. The total of the population amounted to 201,161 inhabi tants, being 4,083 more than 1862. The members of the secular clergy in Rome, last year, amounted to 1,894, and those of the religious Orders to 2,569. The Nuns were 2,031 in number. The ecclesiastical colleges and seminaries, to the number of 25, con tained 1,027 students. Among them are the Roman Seminary, with 94 students; the Pio Seminary, with 76 ; the Vatican Seminary, with 41; the French, with 58; the South American, with 45 ; and the North American with 53. The Propaganda College contains 128 students; the German, 59; the English and Pio-Euglish together, 49 ; the Scotch, 15; the Irish, 15 ; the Belgian, G; the Greco- Ruthenian, 22; the Lombard 11. Bequests. The late Maj. Charles Jarvis of Wethersfield, Conn., who was killed near Cedar Point, N. C., bequeathed §5OO each to the American Tract Society, and Foreign Christian Union ; §l,OOO to the American Home Missionary Society; §1,500 to Foreign Missions; and §2,000, upon certain conditions, to the Ver ment Domestic Missionary Society. Church Debts. —The Chicago Advocate thinks that now, when the currency is plenty, is the accepted time for paying off Church debts. It closes a half column of editorial with the remark that “ wherever the pastor is an efficient man, and the Church united as one man, the Church debt can be paid.” Dr. Bellows, of New York, is going to San Francisco for six moths, to supply the pulpit of the late Rev. Thomas Starr King. THE GREAT UNION MOVEMENT. We are again indebted to the news columns of Mr. Bayne’s Weekly Review, for intelligence of deep .interest and im portance on . r ' Presbyterian Union in Great Britain. At a meeting of Ward Chapel Congregation, Dundee, held in Febru ary, W. E. Baxter Esq, M. P. of the Free Church, made an address on Pres byterian Union, which is reported in the Weekly Review. He rebuked the dogmatism which prevails among “ high church" Presbyterians, as follows: “The New Testament is sufficiently vague on questions of Church government to pre vent and rebuke dogmatism, and to allow thought and inter pretation which, as tve claim for our selves, we are bound to give to others; and, depend upon it, our denominational interests will not be advanced by an exclusiveness and.segregation for which there is no Scriptural warrant, and which fosters and ministers to spiritual pride. Let us not imagine that wisdom will die with us, and that differences of opinion on matters connected with Church government and discipline will mot continue to the end of time.” He referred with regret to the opinions of Mr. Adam Black, of Glasgow, and of Dr. Lindsay Alexander, in opposition to the Union. Mr. Black believed that a single great organization, embracing, as he imagined this would, the established church also, would be “ baneful to civil and religious liberty.” He believed the established church, in the days when all were embraced in her fold, had proved thus injurious to the evangelical liber ties of the people. Dr. Alexander had told a member of the House of Com mons that these churches united, “ would put in every member of Parliament, every provost, and all the town councils throughout the kingdom." He said: “the only chance of an independent man getting in now, was that they were not united.”' Mr. Baxter confessed himself totally unable to comprehend these chimeras. These good men were cer tainly laboring under a nightmare. The difference between the Free and United churches was confined merely to theo retical idea, affecting no doctrinal truth and there was no reason why thej r should not unite. In the democratic colony of Australia no one objects to the Presbyterian Union now going on. The secret of the dislike of politicians to this union in Great Britain is the probability that the united body would prove too strong for the establishment. Mr. Baxter regarded the idea of embrac- ing the established church of Scotland in the . union as altogether- visionary. Hr. George Gilfilian opposed Mr. Bax ter’s views, in a speech which he opened by repealing and endorsing a most slanderous and abominable charge against the public men of our country, taken from a newspaper.” Thoscoun drelism of public men, which was avowed by them and applauded by the people in. America only, -Mr. Gilfilian condescended to allow might be better I ban the scoundrelism- which shrinks from view. He regretted that the dark and crooked ways of state craft were found in the church. “ Policy is there, too; the master of every situation. Cliques arid committees downstairs are the real rulers—independent action and Independent thought are in a great measure unknown; and often, when even a spark of these appears, it is in instantlv trampled onand extinguished. The cause —at least one cause of all .this—lies in tlio overgrown size of relig ious bodies. -This renders their motions so numerous and complicated that noth ing but dexterous .management and rigid conceh’tratibncan-sebiire their unity and prosperous action. Surely, the leading churches of Scotland are large enough already.” Twelve hundred congrega tions'he thought would make a “ huge church!” , To us in America with Presbyterian organizations embracing 1500 congre gations and upwards, such fears seem almost childish. And we do not believe that, thft.. immense W eel cyan body in England, 350,000 strong, has furnished any'warrant for the fears expressed, with such bitter extravagance of rhe toric, by Mr. Gilfilian. ; A fourth meeting for Presbyterian Union, of the Office-bearers of the Man Chester Presbyterian Churches, \vas held Feb. lGtb, at which one of the speakers, Rev. Hr. Munroe, of the English Presby terian Church, alluded to the case ;of the Wesleyan Methodists, above mentioned. He said : '“The idea that a church num bering 1,41)0 ;chrirches could endanger the liberties of the people was prepos terous. Look at the Methodists. They had 6,000 congregations; and did any danger to liberty flow from these ? On the principle of this objection, they should never pray for any union what soever. And suppose the 1,400 congre gations should increase to 12,000 or 14,000? Well, that would he easier governed than the 1,400. But they needed strength, constitutional strength; and he wished to be strong constitution ally—not strong by spasms, not strong in one limb and weak in another—and that strength conld be obtained only by a wide and comprehensive union.” The general sentiment of this meet ing was in favor of one great British or ganization,‘including the Free, United and English bodies. . This feeling wa!s declared to be growing among them. One of the speakers referred to the ob jection that “the wide union which he desired would extinguish the Presbyte rian ‘ Church in England, as a distinct religious/community. But, to his mind, a'far more important question than this was, Ho w can the cause of Christ be best advanced? Is it by a weak, sickly Church in England, or by a strong, united Pres byterian Church for the whole kingdom ? When it was put iu that way, he thought every unprejudiced mind must approve of the wider union." Another wished “Presbytery to be contributed for the British Isles, that it may be a power iu the earth." Another referring to the existing ecclesiastical condition of England, since the final judgment in the “Essays and Reviews” case, said well, that “There was no field in which the Presbyterian Church had such, good prospects.of success; and when he remembered the position in which recent decisions of the Privy Council had placed the Church of En gland in reference to the sentiments of its ministers concerning the Bible, he thought that by a United British Presbyterian Church they would be able to - show the English a better state of things. He thought purity of doc trine and zeal in'.the cause of Christ, should be conjoined by them, so that they might be able to show to the En glish that they were in earnest.” Rev. R. S. Scott, a member of the joint Committee on Union, took part in these interesting deliberations. He said that Committee was preparing a docu ment, embodying the results of their deliberations, on "the duty of the civil magistrate in relation to religion and the church. “He believed, the docu ment, when it appeared, would show that, while jthere was to a large extent substantial agreement, the points of difference had not been overlooked, but had been brought out at once clearly, and in a manner that showed they might be made matters of Christian forbear ance.” Other Presbyterian Items. By the agency of the Committee on Stipends, the English Presbyterian' church has raised the mimimum stipend in their ministry to one hundred pounds. The aim is to make it one hundred and fifty. —At a meeting of London Presbytery, in February, requests for moderating four calls were made and granted; two for colleagues and two for single pastors. The “ Ttegium Donum.”—We learn, says the Iteview, that Moderator Rogers, with a posse comitatus of excited Irishmen at his heels, is to visit London in order to beg at head-quarters for an extension of the Donum. He had much better stay at home, and devote his energies and those of his followers to the preser vation of education in Ireland from the insidious and menacing attacks of Rome. —The established Presbytery of Glasgow, as already stated, has negatived the lib eral overture from the General Assem bly, proposing to open the pulpits of the Church of Scotland to ministers of other denominations. Dr. N. Maeleod headed the liberals,and the decision was reached oply by the vote of the Moderator, Rev. W. Hill,ofEaglesham. This gentleman, strange to tell, had been enjoying the courtesy of the managers of the Dis senting chapel in thatJJJplace for six months, while his own parish church was undergoing repairs.—The Welsh Oa!- vamst'.c Methodists are looking forward witn great interest to the proposed or ganizaum of their General Assembly, which is expected to take place, if no untoward event occurs, in Swansea,next M ; and on showering down upon, the sun’s surfaee transfer their motion into it- thus main taining the temperature of the sun, and therefore sustaining life on our planet. The quantity of matter Which would thus have to be added to the sun’s body, in order to replace the heat lost by ra diation, insignificant in comparison to its bulk that it would not have al tered the apparent size of the sun during the historical period. If our moon fell into the sun, it would only develop heat enough to make good due or two years’ loss, and were the earth to fall into the sun, the necessazy heat would be sup plied for nearly a century. It is a question, however, if the aug mentation in the sun’s attraction which this theory presupposes would not have been observed by astronomers even af ter thelap6e of somefewyears. Whether this will turn out to be the true expla nation of the maintenance of solar heat, we know not; but, at any rate, a sun might thus be formed, and the theory serves as an illustration of the applica tion of thermodynamics to cosmieal phe nomena. —Edinburg Review. Great Discovert I Useful and valuable DISCOVERY! Hill TO IPS INSOLUBLE CEMENT! Is Of moro general practical utility than any invention now before the public. It has been thoroughly tested during the last two years by practical men, anti pronounced by all to bo 1 ’ Applicable to the useful Arts. f Superior to. any Adhesive Propagation known. Hilton’s Insoluble Cement Is anew thing, and tho result of years o study; its combination is on SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES, And under no circumstance or change of temperature, will it become corrupt or emit any offensive Bind!. A new thing. Its Combination. Boot and Shoe Manufacturers, BOOT AND SHOE Manufacturers, using Machines, will find it the best article known for Cementing Channels, as 4twor]sg without delay, is not affected by any change of tempera, ture. Jewelers. JEWEILEILS Will find it sufficiently adhesive for tboir use, as has been proved. It is especially adapted to Leather, And we claim as a* especial merit, that itsticks Patches and Linings to Boots and Shoes sufficiently strong without stitching. It is a Liquid, LiaUID CEMENT Extant, that is a sure thing for mending Fm'nitare) Croclcery, Toys, Bone, * , . Ivory, And articles of Hon sell old use. Remember. Hilton’s Insoluble Cement Is in a liquid form audios easily applied as paste. Hilton l * Insoluble Cement Is in6oluble*in water or.oil. .> Hilton’s Insoluble Cement Adheres oily substances. Supplied in Family, or Manufacturers’ Packages from 2 ounces to 100 lbs. HILTON BEOS, & CO., Proprietors, PROVIDENCE, R. I, ’hiladelphia, iiy Agents in IAING.& MAGINNIS, Family Boarding School, FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS, At Pottstown, Montgomery . County, Derma* THIS School was. established Eleven years since, by the 'Rev. M. Meigs, formerly President of Delaware College. The course of study is extensive,,: thorough and practical; including the usual preparation for Colleges, and the various branches of a substantial English Business education. The studies of pupils will be conformed to their future vocation, so far as it ■ may beactually determined, or reasonably anticipated. The Principal gives his undivided personal attention to the School, and is aided by expe rienced assistants, in all the departments. The ensuing Summer Session will commence on Wednesday, May 6th, and conlinue'Twerity ohe weeks. Circulars, containing; references, names of patrons, and full particulars, : will bfe sent by mail, on application to the Principal. iffiV. M. HESGSp A.M.' Pottßtown, April 2d 196*. ap3 ly rr is Tins only REMEMBER