The American Presbyterian. (Philadelphia) 1856-1869, October 26, 1865, Image 7

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    M h N v
uit~r' aIIIE.
ANOTHER SCROERBERG-COTTA"
BOOK.
4 SCHCENBERG-COTTA." Wanderings over
Bible Lands and Seas, by the author of the
Schoenberg-Cotta Family. New York: R.
Carter & Bro.'s. 16mo. p p. 416. For
• sale at the Presbyterian Eeouse.
Those who have feared that author
ship was being overdone by this popular
and fertile writer, will note with pleasure
that her present venture is more in the
line of literary recreation than a fresh tax
upon her inventive faculties. We follow
her with corresponding refreshment, as her
sweet discourse flows on from place to place
and scene to scene of sacred interest, listen
ing to her wise and often far-reaching sug
gestions, and catching views beyond the
horizon of the natural vision. It is a de
lightful and profitable volume, and proves
the writer to be capable of interesting quite
as much when closely_ confined to facts, as
when largely under the guidance of the
imagination.. The externals of the volume.
engravings, etc., are quite as attractive.
RIIPPANER. Hypodermic Injections in the
Treatment -of Neuralgia, Rheumatism,
Gout, and other diseases. By Antoine
Ruppaner, M. D. Boston: T. 0. H. P.
Jaurnham.,
Co.
pp. 160. Phila. :J.
B. Lipilineott & Co.
This little work upon Hypodermic InjeC.-
tions in Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Gout, and
other diseases, is fairly written and gives
with the oases appended, much valuable in
formation. It is not, like many works
upon a rare and almost new _ subject, so
highly drawn as to throw discredit upon
itself, but states plainly what has and can
be done by this mode of medication. It is
well worth a careful, perusal. There is no
doubt but many nervous diseases which
have resisted - the usual mode of treatment
will be greatly benefitted by this.
ARTHUR. Home Heroes,Saints and Martyrs.
By T. S. Arthur, Philadelphia. J. 13. Lip
pincott & Cu.. 16 me. pp. 296. = Bevelled
edges, gilt top.
Touching, truthful, wholesome stories are
these of men and women whose like has
everywhere been seen, and yet hoW rarely
described with the faithfulness, simplicity
and admirable, practical aims of the author.
No one can read them without having his
best feelings stirred, and, without yielding
his conscience in some degree to their
quickening and moulding influence.
CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT.
THE SILVER CUP. Philadelphia. American
Sunday' School. Union. 18 mo. pp. 316:
A story of great power, and teaching by
Many grievous and sad lessons the folly and
misery of habitual deceit. The characters
are numerous and well discriminated, the
plot and catastrophe are dramatic, and . a
melancholy interest lures the reader to the
end. Some of the prison scenes are un
usually well drawn. The illustrations are
good. •
GMT. Jolly and Katy in the Country. By
Alice Gray, author of "Little Katy and
Jolly Jim!' New York: R. Carter 86
Bro.'s. 18mo., pp. 360. Phila. : For sale
at the Presbyterian Book Store. -
An interesting story of life in the coun
tifis enjoyed by two city children, whose
earlier experiences had been told in a pre
vious volume. It is in a style adapted to
very young class of readers, from seven to
ten years old, but. contains some stirring
and effective narrations and is of the purest
tendency.
THE - ARTIST'S SON AND' THE EMIGRANT'S
SON. From the London Religious Tract
Society. Boston. Henry Hoyt, 18 mo.
The :first,. of these is a truly remarkable
Story. It illustrates the value, of parental
piety even to an orphan child, and vividly
contrasts the career of theorphan who has
inherited that atialmost his entire• earthly;
portion, with a the career of the outwardly ,
fortunate child of infidel parents, who give
him every advantage and indulgence that
wealth and positioocOuld, bestow.
,)'
PERIODICALS AND 'PAMPHLETS
THE ,AMERAAN PHEEBYTEAL4N AHD
.1
THEoLociiima. RawrEw contains • artioley„on
the Demoniacal Possessions of thiyaW
Tesiament. The Ministering of Christ, and:
dbriSiiatt Ministering. A Concluslon' of
the interesting and highly valuable Analy;
sis and Proof-texts of Julius Mueller's Sys
tem
of Theology. A seasonable and full
article in Mr. Barnes' best vein on the Re
lation,of Christianity In the Present Stage
of the World?s...P.rogress in Science, Civili
.
Nation andthe , Arts ) highly valuable as giv
ing, so to speak our INtitude and longitude
in the present stage of 'the conflict between
faith and philosophy, by one of the ripest
Jndgments, clearest heads, and mostcandid'
aid- best informed stUdents of - these sub
jectsAn the country. If any manift . style
and Method may claim the jewel of common
sense, it is that of Albert Barnes. Slavery
kid Ofiiistitinityi . translated from the'rGer=
man, by Prof. Hitohepek. Resume of
Geological Argument by. Rev. Denis Wart
man. Criticisms of Index to vol.
111. A good number; but in typographi
oal exeeution still culpably incorrect. Some
of the statements are very careless, as, for
intlttpoe, that the Presbyterian', Publication
Committee are the publishers of Rev. Lew
is Grout's Zulu Grammar, as well as of the
- admirable book by the same author, Zulu
Land.
THE BIBLIOTHECA SACRA for October
contains articles' on What is the True Con,
°option of Christian worship ? New , Eng
land Theology, (dunoluded ;) Lite and °or
'• re sp on d en ce of Theodore Parker; The
<-Son of. God; Frederick Denison Maurice;
_ `Coriespon ence, Egyptology,
Oriental Archgeolo . gy_and travel ; Notices of
Resent `' C er~nafi Prililications; • Recent
English and "AnierbiantWorks.
THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1865.
LITERARY ITEMS.
AMERICAN.
A severe criticism appears in the Nation
of the last volume of Appleton's Annual
Cyclopedia, exposing a great degree of
slovenliness, both in the typographical exe
cution and in the statements themselves_ of
the work. It will not do for publishers to
cover with their reputations such careless
ness, in works designed and received by the
public, as accurate and trustworthy guides
in matters of fact.
ANNOUNCEMENTS AND RECENT IssuEs.
—Claxton, Philadelphia, a second en
larged edition of Dr. Joseph H. Jones's
" Man, Moral and Physical;" also a new
edition of Judge Jones's "Notes on
Scripture," under the title, "Jesus arid
the Coming Glory."—W. F. Draper,
Andover, Winer's Grammar of the New
Testament Diction, by. Prof. Thayer.
Messrs. Charles Scribner & Co. have a book
in preparation that will possess an attrac
tion for New Yorkers equal, perhaps, to any
that could be got up. It is " Reminiscen
ces of Dr. Gardir.er Spring," of the Brick
church, including recollections, personal,
professional and miscellaneous, of the long
career during which, -he has occupied a
position of the first eminence in the eccle
siastical and social circles of the metropo
lis.—Messis. Roberts Brothers, of Boston,
promise an edition of Miss Jean Ingelow's
" Songs of Seven," descriptive of seven
periods in the life of woman; intended to
appear in a style of unrivalled beauty and
taste. The illustrations will gombine some
of the best efforts-of English and American
artists, and include"the'first:publiihed por
_trait of Miss Ingelow, engraved on steel
from a recent photograph.
GERMAN THEOLOGICAL Worms; The
Bibliotheca Sacra gives brief notices of -a
numher or late works frOm this teeming
seed-plot of research and speculation.
They are as follows :
"The Idea of Substitutionary Suffer
ing," inaugural discourse by Dr. H.
Schultz, of Basle.. " Infant ..13aPtism,"
from the Lutheran point of view. " Jesus
and the Parties of his age I" an apologetic
treatise by Dr.. Kleinert, Berlin; " Juda
ism and its History to the end of the
twelfth zentury," ,by Dr. Geiger of the
" Reformed Jewish" party, a sort of Jewish,
rationalists, very able and interesting
though requiring discrimination in the
reader. "Jesus the Christ," sixteen apolo
getic .Lectures by Dr. Held, of Zurich ;"
" very readable and stirring productions of a
warm-hearted, earnest Christian theolo
gian." "Incidental Evidences of Christi
anity from Universal History," by Dr. Sepp,
Roman Catholic Professor of History, Mu
nich ; against Renan, " curious, instruc
tive, disconnected." "Life and Labors of
Jerome;" Zoeckler, `Giessen; "Resurrec
tion of Christ," Beyschlag; "small, popu
lar, clear, able." " Prophecy. of Isaiah,
Prolegomena to the Commentary," Home,
Berlin ; " Life of Bengel," Wcechter, Stutt
gart. The Bibliotheca also contains a brief
but discriminating and highly commenda.
tory notice of Dr. Robinson's .posthumous
work on the Physical Geography of Pales
tine. '
AUDUBON'S "BIRDS OF AMERICA."-
The Grand folio edition was completed in
1840, when Baron Cuvier pronounced it,
4 , the most magnificent monument , ever
raised by art to
,natural Belem:" 'A - 'few
years since copies could be procured - lor
from $5OO. to $600; now $l5OO is asked
for a well-boudd copy,and it would not be
possible to procure one. of u any, kind for
$l2OO. As only one hundred and seventy
fiire copies were' printed, and several of
them have been lost or destroyed at the.
South, the price is certain to advance, and
will shortly range as high as $2OOO.
BLAnt's GRAVE.-A, limited but, ,very,
splendid edition of this poem, with twelve
illustrations, by Blake, and a portrait of
the designer, will be issued about . Novem
ber 10th. There will be sixty-Seven copies
13i by 11 inches for $l5, and forty for
$3O each, the latter in large paper.
FOREIGN.
HOMER AND - VIRGIL. Fivis' translations:
of the Iliad have been *announced since,
Lord Derby's. The Rneid, hitherto, neglect-;
ed by modern translators has been recently
uridertilieri'by
schOlar,of some repute in:Englami.
Prof. l'hilip - . Sukithdtui carried nearly
halftw t ay to t comletiou, his projecte4 "
vernal 'History"in- eight Volum s ea - 'The
third, just published' in,England, brings.
the narrative down continuously from the;
creation. to the fall Of the Romauempirain.
the vat, and closas the division 'of ancient
history. Itawrites with reverential feeling
on the disputed points that often vainly ;
agitate the minds of men who can grasp
.but a few isolated points of the great argn-,
meat, and brings to his subjedt's the collect-,
ed wisdom .of a hundre,d years of critical'
researches since the now, antiquated
wrote. The English edition is well sup
plied with apparatus fOr studying the book
usefully, as maps, tables, plans of cities, etc.
Messrs. Appleton reprint the work in this,
country.
The adventurous journey af.M. Vambery
to Bokhara, SataarcanclAmd 'Central Asia
(republished by Messrs.' Harper) is con
sidered to' have proved satisfactorily ."thn,
connection of the Hungarian nation With
the Altaic race, and rather with the TurCej
Tartar section of it than the FOnic.
Vambery is now engaged upon a colupara
tive dictionary and grammar of this widely
spread idiom, fritnished,with,whinlylone al
traveler mar maltts his way frinnithe:shoree
of'the Adriatic gre'at
or the freien sea of Kamtschatki—the
same speech:that by the weitern i Tnrks - has
been refined into'a language unequalled for
copiousness regularity of 9 structure, 'and
power of expressing, exact shades of mean
.
LADIES TRANSLATING GiEts.
A new version of the trilogy; or Wide connect;.
ed dramas, "The Agamemnon;ChoephOrml ?
and 'Eumenides," has just , appeared,.the
.work of Miss A. Swanwick, a ladyivhdise
debut in literature was made by the , per-,
formance of the task—scarcely less difficult_
—of translating_" Faust" for Bohn's editibno
of the works of Goethe. The merit of this
version attracted so strongly the notice, of
Chevalier Bunsen that he - 'warmly reConi- -
mended. thn, dreek tragic drainas as subjects
fcr,,Nliss - 81411*ides study. , result
appears to justify hie and her conffilence,
and her versions are generally praised for
closeness to the original, and terse and
forcible versification.
THIERS.-It is said that M. Thiers has
completed a " History of Florence," in ten
volumes, and sold it for $lOO,OOO. The
correspondent of Childs' Literary Ga
zette suspdcts the truth to be that he has
completed the first volume of the history,
and has sold the whole work for that
amount of money.
fatigiots gattitigturt..
PRESBYTERIAN.
WORK AMONG THE CRILDREN.—We take
the following paragraph from the Narrative of
the. State of Religion, made out by the Synod
of Allegheny at its late meeting in Erie, Pa.:
"And among all the facts reported by the
Presbyteries, none are more pleasing than
those which speak of encouraging results
from labors among children. ' Many of those
received to the communion of the saints by
profession of faith, have been from these
nurseries of the church.' In one case (But
ler) some forty souls were added to the com
munion of the church, and most of these
were children and youth from the Sabbath
schools and Bible-classes—some interesting
cases of children from ten to twelve years of
age. In another case, (the Orphan Asylum
located in Allegheny City), `, the minds of
guite a nuinber of the children hive been
impressed with the importance of eternal
things, and several of them have obtained
the hope of pardon through Christ.' "
THE SOUTHERN CHURCH_ TO BE MAIN
PAINED. —Theiellowing. ia ,, thelist of a series
of resolutions, sulniiitted . -by. Dr. lidge, of
Richniond, and unanimously adopted by the
Synod - of Virginia at its late meeting in
Lynchburg Inasmuch as the Presbyterian
Church in the Southern States has had for
several years a separate and distinct organiza
tion, with all the ordinary agencies for, carry
ing out the great work of evangelization;
and, whereas, in the midst of extraordinary
difficulties, the work has been .prosecuted
with encouraging success through the bless
ing of the great Head of the Church, we feel
it incumbent on us'to maintain our ecclesias
tical lines unbroken, and to go forward in the
path to which the Providence of God ,has
summoned us, and with quickened zeal and
more earnest efforts to devote ourselves to the
"upbuilding of the kingdom of Christ on the
vast field committed to our care."
MORE ECCLESIASTICAL' FRATERNIZATION.
—At the recent meeting of' the Old School
Synod of St. Paul, - Minnesota, a friendly
letter was addressed to the Synod of .Minne
soca- (New School) in session at Chatfield*
To this letter a kind response was received,
suggesting that the two Synods meet next
year at Stillwater, and that each now appoint
a delegate to attend, the meeting of the other.
The invitation was accepted, and arrange
ment's made accordingly.
TEE GOOD- , WORK' SPREADING.—Says the
Presbyterian's report of the late meeting of
the Presbytery at Northuraberland, at Lock
Haven, Pa.:—" The Presbytery had'a more
than usually interesting meeting, ai the sub
ject of revival and our need of the outpouring
of the Spirit on all our ghurches, was dis
cussed, with, more feeling: and deeper interest
than usual, which seemed to promise great
things,y as it appeared -as though the Lord
had pemmenced his work already in the
hearts of' the ministers and elders."
PROSPECT OP A DIVISION IN . KENTUea.x.
—Week before last in the O. S. Synod'of
Kentucky, Dr. R. J. Breckinridge , moved
that the members of the Louisville Presby
tery be excluded ; from the Synod.. The
_mo
tion was based upon the allegation that the
action of the majority of the Louisyille.Pres
bytery, by endorsing and adopting a paper
styled 'Declaration and. Testimony,,'. assumed
such a - state of- "Open , rebellion' against the
Church, and open ,contempt and .defiance of
her scriptural authority, and contempt, f her
faith, order, and acts, as to render each and
every one of' them unqualified, unfit,,and-in
competent to sit and act as a member of this
or any other court of the Presbyterititi Church.
Dr. Breckinridge said that either he or the
author of that document must go out of the ,
Synod. After several days' discussion, the
Synod voted: down, the motion by a vote of
102 against 25-Inon-committal 7.
ITEMI3.—Rev: Dr. Reese Happersett, for
merly of this city, has resigned the pastorate
of the Presbyterian church in Stockton, Cali
fornia. Rev. J. A. Skinner is his successor.
—,=-=T.he Presbytery of :Ohio; at.its lite 'Meet
ing in Bethel, spent a large portion of the
time in religious exercises :especially 'prayer
fOtihe outpouring of the' Holy
The Lower ;Tuscarora, ,church in Cential
Pennsylviinfa,'Orwhich thelite Dr. Thomp
son was pastor, is divicloilAct.as to form two'
pastorates. ' The divisiiin was made in good
reeling.—An ac,count of the,proceeclings..of
the O. S. Presbytery of Zanesville, says:—
"The Rev. :A...Stevfart,l(New!School, ) made
application for admission into this Presby
tery, _which was deferred until next -..--meet-
S: S. Sturgeihas been received
from the. Reformed, Dutch Church into the
0. S. Presbytery of Northumberland, and
app_ointed_as_a domestic missionary at. North
Point and , Renevo, Pa,,,-The •foundation
has beeklaid'for a second 'chiiich hi:Harris
burg in the Old School connection.
CONGIBEGAVIONd L.
ITEMS. —The, Second Evangelical Congre
gational Church in Cambridgepbri,Mass.,
after an existence of twenty-three years, has'
been disbanded.—An Ecclesiastical Coun
cil, convened' in Lebanon, Me:, on the same
day, Sept. 27th, dismissed the pastor of the
church in that, place, and ordained and in
stalled his suc.cesor.—A new.COngregational
Church edificein Cache Creek,_California,
was dedieited'Augnst on'the 'next day
the church, composed of seven.: members,
(more expected)was . organized by an Ecclesi
astical Council. Rev. Tyler Thatcher has,
since accepted a call to,the, pastorate.
BAPTIST.
ASSoCIATIONAI;,, MEETING. —The annual
meeting of the Philadelphia Baptist Associa-;
tloras-held if ; this ,eity on-the 3d,-,...4h-and,
'stir-daYs - of'theltieieritsmonth: 'The meeting
was the,ene Itundred .and ''fifty-eighth anni
versary; of, the , Association. The letters of
.the churches, the reading of which occupied
all the time assigned to business: during rthe
first two days; announced the following facts,
viz : that 1225, persons had been baptized
duringthe year, that the net increase - in All
the churolies was 795, or about six per cent.,
that the pregent number Of mem beins - 14,007,
, and 'the , contributions' Of the churches for all
purposes so far as reported were More than
$lOO,OOO, The number of church es ie 62,-in
eluding the Delaware Avenue Church, in
Wilmington, which , was- received at this ses
sion.
•` Strong . resolutions were adopted, recom
mending to ministers " to raise the warning
voice in their pulpits against the habit of re
ceiving or handing the social glass;" also,
,urging on the members generally: 'the solemn
responsibility ot their "example in abstaining
personally, and their influence to restrain the
mvages ,of••intemperance around them,'' a n d
also "requesting bspecially the merchants to
-condemn the'dq's"tem'of• soliciting custom by
clerks offering the tempting cup, so common
in the business world."
TAR WORLD DOES MOVE. —The Watch
man and Reflector, noticing the unanimous
and very earnest call of Rev. Charles Howard
Malcom to his old church in Wheeling, West
Virginia, says :—" Our readers will remember
that Mr. Malcom was ejected from the pasto
rate of that church about eight years ago, by
the Southern Baptist Home Mission Society,
upon the written charge of `refusing to preach
the Gospel of Christ in harmony with South
ern institutions;' the exact nature of his
offence being that he persisted, contrary to
the law of the State, in teaching colored
children to read. This instruction was given
in the Sabbath.school of Mr. Malcom's
church, and the only text book used was the
Bible ; but even this was deemed too much to
smack of abolitionism. Now, hOwever, after
a few brief years, a great change has taken
place in state and church. West Virginia
has becotni a free •State,• and Wheeling its
capitol; and the Baptist Church there, hav
ing passed froixithe supervision of the South
ern society, now calls its -former pastor back
to hislace.p We have not heard whether
Mr. Malcom accepts the invitation."
Rigs' .—A Baptist Church of fourteen
members has recently been organized in Sha
mong, N. J.—A revival is reported in the
Beulah Church in central Pennsylvania.
Rev. Dr. Edward Lathrop, a pastor of twenty
years standing in New York. city, has just re
signed his pastorate. —One hundred thou
sand dollars has recently been added to the
endowment of Rochester University.—ln
twelve churches connectod with the Wachus
sett, Mass. Baptist Association, there have
been, during the year, seven pastoral changes.
—Rev., Edwarkro. Stevens and his wife,
and Rev, Norman Harris sailed from Boston
on the 10th inst., to reinforce the Baptist
missions in Burmah.—The church in Lu
ray, Mo., has recently had an accession of
ninety-six members, the fruits of •Eprevival.
i , ItIXTHOD,IST. ',
•,. ,
c ty
KEN= ,—The action of the annual
Contemn, siding ecclesiastically with the
South, ha given an impetus to the loyal
church in ovington, under the pastoral care
of Rev. 4 - . H. Langley. Loyal members
from the other churches are sliding off to it,
and alzeaditl6,ooo have been raised toward
1:1
the erettio 'of a new church edifice. - -
.
EAST TE NESSEX—Gov. Bro'wnlow writes
to Bishop lark, under date of Sept. 23 :
`! We have good meetings in East Tennessee,
I tt.
largely atte ded. Rev. Mr.'Hayden has re
ceived into the Church since conference in
his district thens) seven hundred members.
A camp-meeting has just eloied twenty-two
miles north!, of Knoxville, at .which. seventy
were converted and sixty, added to the church.
A protracted meeting on Rev. Mr. Milburn's
circuit (Knoi) resulted in sixty- additions' to
the Church. Many _of them are returned
federal sokkierp,."
Imts.--The Haines Street M. E. Church
in German Own, on a recent Sabbath, after
listening to'a : ,sermon,from,,Rev. Dr. McClin
tock, of Swrork, ,cOntributed $1,006 to
wards reducing the debt on the church.—
Fifty probOteleis were received into the St.
Stephens N. E. Church, Germantown, on
Sabbath the Zak inst.— . -- - 110.1. Oliver
veterin- of the "Newark, N. J. Confer
ence,died very suddenly, October lst.—A
debt-Paying movement is just now very brisk
among the Mean:dist churches in New Jer
sey.,__Rey. Dr -Thomas H. Stocktomof this
city the venerated and beloved, has ,expe*
eticed'a sad Iffltion - in the death of his" wife.
She Aed on the,letth uIL - • -
• , NITEELBRETIIREN. . .
THE Reit iousi:Telescope . , the organ of the
UNITED
" Unite,dt,henda. Christ,' ' has accounts
of- soverai-trfrensivttevivaig infirTennesi3ee
Mitgis:#o.ot Iqtation. on-Lick Creekytwenty
five conversions are rePiortea, and tartte don
fat's' 'ar'e" brought 'into'" Chtidtian iadtivity.
Seventy-five conversions are reported in
Green County, and several in another local
ity. It has alit the ree tiri'of . .a cheering re
vivah on :Little ..Valle.y.reircnit; :in 7_Nortliwest
em Pennsylvania were, " about seventy per
sons' a.reclaimed."
were co . vertu or
FOREIGN.
ORTHODOXY OF THE LATE ENGLISH
CHURCH A.I4OINTAENVS:—The Record says
of the successor sof Dr. Jacobson as Regius
Professor pf Divinity at Oxford:—" We are
happy to - cOnfirm the annoucement made in
the limes of Saturday, that the Rev. Robert
Payne Smith, M.A.,. th.e learned and pious
sub-librarian of Bo dleian library, has been
selected by her Majesty; on the recorrimenda
tien.ofAssount.Paimerston, to fill thc,vacant
post. The Be`ir, gentlepian ranks is one of
the most' eininent Oriental scholars In Eu
rope, being in Hebrew deemed equal to Dr.
Pusey and superior to Gesenius , while in
_Syriac he is, without, a rival: •He has pub
lished both * - 'l.34in and. Englisl ,St. Cyril's
Corminentarf St: Luke, also se veral other
learned works, but , we regard as the mostiin-;
'portent and valuable - of publications
sermons entitled• The AuthenticitY and Me 4-1
dank ,Interpretation of the- Prophecies of
Isajah vindicated Course. of;, Sermons
preached before the university of Oxford:'
The appointmentof than of such great
learning, devoted to the cause' of God, and
so well able to defend the truth, must' be ,
hailed with thankfulness, 'especially, in tithes'
such as these in which we live."
FATHER. IGNATIUS.—It is said of this
author , of , the last mad-cap attempt to
found a monkish order in the English Church,
that hp is ,yipg" . ill, and in a critical cOndition,
his'at monastery in Norwich. His weakness
- is now* so great that his medical attendint
• hai prohibited the slighest physical or•mental
exertiom There can be no doubt that he has
Tassed of latuthrough a very trying and ex
'hausting period in consequence of the defec
tion of Brother Stanislatp, Bro:tl;rer,Miurus,
the Rev Cr'. - J: thiseley, etc., and this has
told upon biarfragile 4'rame. The'worki of a
new chapel, commenced near the , old build-'
hitherto,used for the purposes of the
monastery, have been stopped, and the few:
monks remaining at ,Norwich ha,ye been sent
hOme on a " Altogether, the pro-.
'needings of flie'EngliW Order of Si. Bene
dict are practically at*Eif end'at Norwich foi
the present.
WXLMARIU BARBER,
anufaoturer of Gold, Silver, Nickel. and. Steel Spec-:
- Vides, Eye Glasses, &c., has neatly furnighed a room
inconneotion with ;the, factory, for -RETAIL PUR
POSES, whereepectacles n.f every description may be
obtained, accurately adjusted to thiPredizireinents of
vision on STRICTLY OPTICAL SCIENCE.
BaleS room andlaetory, -
*be 248 NORTII".IEIOHTH Stieet, Second
- - 991-/Y
A NEW .PICTVRE.
THE PEARL FERRATYPE at J.O. HARMON &
Co.'s New, Ferrotype it.00m5,916 Chestnut Street.
The Pearl -.Ferrotype.- aii entire new thing. and the=
most beautiful and, durable,.Picture now made, is_
taken all sizes: fdr - Framesi' and - Cases; ' '
'That Little.Oem. the Card Ferrotype, is made in all'
kinds of weather; finished in ten minutes.
12 FOR ONE DOLLAR.
Also inserted in Cases, Lockets, Pins, and Rings. .
Yon are always mire of a good likeness in the Ferro .
type, as you can see them before they are finished;
Photographs, AmbrotyPes, , and all other. *good Tic
tures copied.
ThilZti,re; 'sent hy withsutitjuri to thopicture.
iScliblars6rilkend them4hshithet , thing tO wleliange
with their • classmates. We warrant all pictures to
please or nolik3FlWolll and examine specimens.
J C. HARMON & CO.,
4 th r 916 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
gtouraitts eig mil anif 45.
AMERICAN
IM MIME HD EMT COMM
Walnut Street, S. E. cor. of Fourth,
INCOME FOR THE YEAR 1864,
$357,800.
LOSSES PAID DURING THE YEAR
AMOUNTING TO
$85,000.
Insurances made upon the Total Abstinence Rates,
the lowest in the world. Also upon JOINT STOCK
Rates which are over 20 per cent. lower than hiatus]
Rates. Or MUTUAL RATES upon which a DIVI
DEND has been made of
FIFTY EF,R CENT.,.
on Policies in force Janulst:lB6s.
THE TEN-YEAR
NON-FORFEITURE PLAN, by
which a person insured can make all his payment
in ten years, and does not forfeit, and can at any time
cease paying and obtain a paid up policy for twice
thrice the amount paidto the company.
ASSETS.
$lOO,OOO IT. S. 5.20 bonds.
40,000 City of Philadelphia 6s. new,
30,000 11. S. Certificate of indebteness,
25,000 Allegheny County bonds,
15,000 11. S. Loan of 1881 i
10,000 Wyoming Valley Canal bonds,
10,000 State of Tennessee.bonds,
10,000 Philadelphia arid Erie Railroad
bonds,
10,000 Pittsburg. Fort Wayne
Chi
sago bonds . .
9.000 Realroad Ist mortgage
bonds, •
6,500 City of Pittsburg and other
bonds,
1,000 shares Pennsylvania Railroad
stocks, ,
450 shares Corn Exchange National
Bank,
22 shares Consolidation National
Bank.
107 shares Farmers' National Bank
of Reading,
142 shares . Williamsport Water Com
pany,
192 shares American Life Insurance
,and Trust Company,
Mortgages, Real Estate, Ground Rent
ilco •
'Loans on collateral amply secured
.Premium notes secured. by Policies
'Cash in hands of agents secured by - bonds.
Cash on deposit with 11. S. Treasurer, at 6
Per cent 50,000 00
Cash - on hand and in banks 50,331 67
Accrued interest and reeds due.'Jan. L . 10,454 71
THE AMERICAN IS
Its TRUSTEES are we
midst, entitling it to 'nor
whose managers inside in
Alexander Whilldin,
J. Edgar Thomson:
George Nugent.
Hon. James Pollook,
Albert C. Roberts,
P. B. Mingle,
Samuel
ALEX. WHILL:
S&!fIJEL WORK, Vies
JOHN S. WILSON.
INSURANCE
AG A TNST
ACCIDENTS
OF -
EYERY DESCRIPTION,
BY THE .
TRAVELERS' INSURANCE COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONN
CAPITAL
W. ALLEN, AGENT.
4,04 'VAI.NUT
,STREET,
pimL,ubwiumL.
- GENERAL ACCIDENT POLICIES
For Five 'Hundred Donna . , with $3 per week eienPert
sation, can be had for $3 per annum, or any other sum
between 45500 and $lO,OOO at proportionate rates.
TEN DOLLARS PREMIUM
Secures a Policy for $2OOO,
.o.r sipper week compensa
tion for all and every description of accident—travel
ling or otherwise—under a General Accident Policy, at
the Ordinary, Rate. -
THIRTY ; *MEARS PREMIUM
Secures a full Policy for $5OOO, or $25 per week oom
nensation, as above, at'thri asedial _Rate.
FOREIGN RISKS.
' Policies issued, for Foreign. *est India, and Cali
fornia Travel. .Rates can be learned by application
to the Office.
" SHORT TIME TICKETS.
Arrangenients are= course of completion by which
the traveller will be able to parches% at any Railway
Ticket Office, Insurance Tickets for one or thirty days'
traVel. Ten ,cents_will bu a ticket for one day's
travel:insuring ' , MOO, or - 15 weekly compensation.
Ticket Polices may be h adfor 3,6, or:12 months, in
the same manner. ,
Hasardous Rislistaken at Hasarderu3 Rates. POlicies
issued fors years for 4 years premium..;-'•
ANDIICIMENTS. ,
The rates, of premitun are less than those of any
other ,Company bove.ringthe,same risk. . t hous ands
;of
medical exami n ation is required and thousands
;of thosewholiaye_been . rejected , bY CornPalnies,
in consequence of hereditary_or. other diseases. can
effect insurance in the TRA V ELLERS' at the lowest
rates.'
Life Insurance Companies pay no part of. the_prin.-
algal sum until the death of the assured. The TRA
VELLERS' pay the loss or dainage sustain'ed by per
sonal injury whenever it-occure.
The feeling of security which such an insurance
gives to those dependent' upon their own labor for
support is worth more than money., No..better or
niore satisfactory - use c an : be made disco small a sum.
• • J."O.'BATTERSON.President.
RGDNEY DENNIS, Secretary.
G. F. DAVIS, Vice President.
HENRY A. DYER, General Agent. -
Applications received and Policies issued by
WILLL4II. W. ALLEN,
993-6 m . No. 404 Walnut Street.
EIRE AND BURGLAR z PROOF SAFES.
BURNING OF THE MUSEUM'
LET F.R FROM Etß. NU*.
Nine:Yoga, Julyl4, 1856.
MEssas. Haaartqa & Co.—Gentlemen:—Though the.
destruction of the American Museum has, proved a
serious, loss to myself and the, üblic, I ain • happy to
'verify the old adage that " It's an ill wind that blows
nobody anv good," and- consequently congratulate
you that.your , well-known SAFES have again demon
strated their sdperior fire-proof qualities in an ordeal
of unusual severity. The Safe you made for-me some
timer ago was in :the office of the Museum, on the
.second floor, back part of the and in the
hottest 'of the fire. After twenty four Hours of trial
it was found; among_the debriseimd,on opening it.this
day has yielded up its contents - in very good order.
Books, "papers, policies of insurance; bank bills are
'all in condition for immediate use, and a noble com
mentary on, the trustworthiness of HERRING'S Pram
Paoos , Sem. Yruly Yours;
• • • ' P:•T. BARNUM: •
HERRING'S PATENT CHAMPION SAFES, the
mostreliable protection.from fire now known.
HERRING & CO.'S NEW 'PATENT BANKERS'
SAFE,':with Herring • & Floyd's Patent Crystallized
Iron,. the: eat security against a burglar's drill ever
manufactured. , HERRING & CO..
' . No. 25IBROADWAY, corner Murray Street,
~__New York.
FARRELL, HERRING & CO.,
Philadelphia-
HERRING & CO., Chicago.
'_E ~:t -ANOTHER TEST
J- , ,--,HERRING'S ' FIRE-PROOF SAFES.
`The, "piery Ordeal Trinuippiantly.
The Herring Safe used in the office of our ware
houses, destroyed by the disastrous fire on the night
of the Bth instant; was subjected to as intense heat as
probably any safe will ever be subjected in any fire—
so intense_that the brass knobs and the mountings of
the exterior of same were melted off, and thawhole
surface scaled and blistered as if it had been in a fur
nace, and yet when opened, the contents—books and
papers—were found to be entire and uninjured.
This Safe is now on exhibition in our wari3house on
-Seventh Street, with the books and papers still re
maining in it,' just as •it was when taken from the
ruins. % Merchants, Bankers; 'and others interested in
the protection` of their books and papers are invited
to call and
.examine it. - '
BARTHOLOW.
r Herrins
No. 558 SEVENTS tr e et ,,WaallingtorO r Yl'o.
5394.136 50
207,278 86
112,755 73
114,899 ; 62
26,604 70
$966,461 79
HOME COMPANY.
.11 known citizens in -mu
o consideration than those
-tart
William J.• Howard.
Sanine.Vl'. Bodine.
johi;"11113 . 11811.
Henry Hiniett.
Hon. Joseph Allison.
Isaac Haslehurst;
Work. '
DIN, President.
le-president.
ieoretary and Treasurer.
0500,000
Batttaut taibatt,s.
CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S
FIRST-CLASS " ONE PR r
CLOTHING aTURb.
No. 524 CHESTNUT STREET,
(Under the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia.)
DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MEASUREMENT
‘ ,
fr or 4
to C s o . a a t. : 1
0.- . Length of back
( 9 .........
from Ito 2, and
from 2 to 3.
Length of
4Psleeve (with
arm crook ed) 1 4 1--------)
around the -
4111,
: most promi
,, de 'd
7 i or ge nt chest part d
hi a n p d .
' whether ws.
Statee
o
, 1 ng.
For Vest.—
Same as coat.
For. Pants.—
/ Inside seam,
and outside
from hipbone,
around the
~_ wais t an d
- - _ .."---- A good fa gna
ranteed,
Officers' Uniforms. ready-made, always on hand, or
made to order in the best manner, and on the most
reasonable terms. Having finished many hundred
uniforms the past year, for Staff, Field and Line Offi
cers, as well as for the Nary, we are prepared to exe
cute orders in this line with correctness and despatch.
The largest and most desirable stock of Ready-made
Clothing in Philadelphia always on hand. (The price
marked in plain figures on all of the goods.)
A department for Boys' Clothing is also maintained- ,
at this establishment, and superintended by experi
enced hands. Parents and others will find here a
most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low.
prices.
Sole Agent fot the "Famous Bullet-Proof Vest."
CHAALES STOKES & CO.
CHARLES STORES,
E. T, TAYLOR.
W. J. STOKES.
READY-MMDE CLOTHING.
WANAMAKER & BROWN,
I E INE CL OTHING,
OAK HALL,
IS. E. cor. Sixth and Market
ICUSTOM DEPARTMENT, I
1•111=.11
[No. 1 South Sixth Street. I
E. 0. THOMPSON,
FASHIONABLE TAILOR,
N. E. corner of Seventh and Walnut Sta.,
PHILADRLPIIIA.
N. B.—Having obtained a celebrity for cutting
GOOD PITTING PANTALOONS.
making it a specialty in my business for some yearn
past, it is thought of sufficient importance to announce
the fact in this manner to the public, so that those
who are dissatisfied may know of my method and give
me a trial. 963-1 y
FASHIONABLE CLOTHING,
Ready-made and made to order..
•
FASHIONABLE CLOTHING,
Ready-made and made to order
FASHIONABLE CLOTHING,
Ready-made and made to order.
FASHIONABLE CLOTHING,
Ready-made and made to orde
PERRY 4St. CO.;
Extensive Clothing House,
Nos. 303 and 305 Chestnut street. ••-•.
FINE CLOTHING.
JONES' CLOTHING-,
S. E. corner Seventh and Mariet Streets
JONES' CLOTHING,
S. E. corner Seventh and Mirkat Streets.
JONES' CLOTHING,
S. E. corner Seventh sad Market Streets..
$l . Qa MONDI
EXPERIENCED:CANVASSERS WANTED
' ' • ''.
ON THE"
. . .
NEW ILLESTBATED DO TIC BIBLE
With:abotrt Twenty Thousand-Notes.
. . _ .
A. work that has occapied,-,the. Editort over forty
iears. This is the third Commentary, besides two to
the-Yotuit,'lihiah he has written. Has received the
highest commendationafrom Professors of all Denom—
inations, ' - - .
NOW IS YOUR CHANCE
Strike while there is Territory to select from. Re—
tired. Clergymen and Teachers can and are doing.bet
terat it than by their professions, besides rendering a
great and lasting good to the
.communities in which
they canvass. Select a county and address promptly
for circulars. (Sold only by subscription.)
H. A. STREET,
126 N. 9TH STREET. Philadelphia.
Ihave known the Illustrated Domestic Bible for
some time. The Editor has rendered an eminent ser
vice to the Church of God by the learning and wisdom
which he has diplayed in preparing this condense&
and really useful commentary on the Word of God.
In terseness'and comprehensive style, he resembles.
the venerable Brown, of Haddington, while in rich.
experimental matter, he displays athorough evangel
' ical spirit. His illustrations are numerous and admi
-rable in their character. Instead of being mere im
aginaryaroups ofpersons. or supposed representation
of events, they are views of places, houses, and im
portant localities, or pictures-of actual trees, animals,
implements,, and objects of oriental character, and
hence they materially aid the untravelled reader in
understanding the phraseology Of the Sacred Text.
The chronological order, other tables, and the literary
matter compiled from modern sources of research of
this edition have enriched it abundantly, and the pur
chaser will have an elegant volume for a sum= much:
less than he, would be obliged to pay, for a .
procured by the protracted process of . montlilY 'um
bers to be afterwards bound. ' -
WM. BLACKWQOD„
Pastor Ninth Presbyterian Church
Please address me by letter, stating whets an inter
view c.an be had. 11. A. ,STREET.
THOMAS -RAWLINGS, Jr.,
HOUSE -AND SIGN
PAINTER,,
Broad and Spring Garden Streets.
S. F. BALDERSTON & SON,
DEALERS IN
WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADES,
NO. 902 SPICING OklitiElt NITNENT,
N. B.—Fraetical part irilooth—brinclies Promptly,
attended to: 1,, 1012-3 m.
A Mr-MADE
932-tf I
PHILADELPHIA, Pa