cligious World Abroad. ENGLAITD. A Novel Conference- —A conference is to be held is month in London, composed of lay and clerical presentatives of the churches, and of the non lurch-going workingmen, to see by fair and open Bcuesion, what can be done to remove the anoma &B contrast between the enormous apparatus pro ved for public worship and the small proportion, lot live per cent) of the skilled workmen who lend church. Disbelief in the Gospel is not to be knitted as a plea to be discussed; many others have |en suggested, such as the cold way they are treated ttbe churches, and by those who attend them; id the employment of evangelists who are inferior vthe workingmen, in education, and therefore un tie to sympathize with them or meet their difficul fe. V et, it is the rarest thing to hear of a word Sn them against positive Christianity, and, as a they send their children to Sabbath-school ugly and thankfully. Ecclesiastical Commission.—The subject lurch Extension and ministerial support, in the ish establishment, began in 1856, to attract the don of Parliament, and an Ecclesiastical com m was appointed to ascertain the facts of the ul what could be done to remedy them. They ;d that there are no less than 3528 benefices £l5O per annum. Of this number, 13 con ch a population of more than 10,000 ; 51 a don of from 5000 to 10,000 ; 251 a population 'ecu 2000 and 50 0; and 1125 have each a lion of between 500 and 2000 ; and that the if church accommodation was in as bad a ion. i-iince then, by the absorption of sinecure lies, the abolition of superfluous canonries, e management of church property on princi economy. the “common fund” of the Com n has swelled to £350,000; and will in 1859 10,000, representing a property of fifteen mil arid enabling the commission, besides build w churches, to increase the income of every nan. whose charge has a population of 4000 ;o £3OO a year; and to elicit from the private j, by asystcmof "grants in aid,” an aggregate >o'i,ooo. The churches so much needed .have niiilt without-aid from the Commission. In Manchester had thirty-two churches; it has ;venty-five. The late Duke of Northumber milt five churches and schools at Tynemouth and others on other parts of his estates. Dur •. Hook’s incnmbency, twenty-one churches, parsonages and sixty schools were provided in i. Miss Burdett Coutts has given £50,000 to purposes. At a meeting at Sheffield, to raise ■w churches in five years, one gentleman off'er : cost of a church, £5OOO, which he has since tsed to £7OOO. In the London diocese, new ms spring up at the rate of some twenty a year, enerable Bishop of Winchester has lately £ i 4,1200 to the Commission, for the purpose ising the incomes of the poorer incumbencies juthwark. Field for Bhliop Staley.—An English paper the following-statistics of the heathen in the ! Field: ire are five millions of our fellow-country pPo ' are living in open neglect of the means of In Manchester there are 150,000 who hab absent themselves from any place of worship, ■mingham there are 100,000 persons who never u the doors of God’s house. In Liverpool is a public house to every 260 "f the inhabi arid the apprehensions for crime are as one .y fifteen of the population. In Manchester is a public house for every 150 of the papula old and young, while there is bat one.aancta-, iucluding all sects, large and small, old and for every 2,500 of the people. No fewer than mr public houses have sacred music on the ',h, and thus souls are lured to perdition to the t of the “Hallelujah Chorus” and ‘‘ihe ms are Telling.” N. Y. Tribune says of the English Church : great national institution, as au evangelizing ;y, has been a woful failure. It is evident that • it has no proper conception of its mission, or irt for its work. In England, Lord Shaftesbury there are at preseut 1,200,000 women who are :d in unwomanly work, who are for the most a savage condition. In the ten chief cities 'land, it is computed there are about 300,000 utes. There are, as statistics show, 1,250 000 •s; and the vice of drunkenness, we are told, lly increasing amongthc lower classes; while ire countless numbers of men, women, and in in a state of ignorance of their duty both i and man. And, in the face of all this, the are debating about the color and cut of priestly its, about the virtues of wax tapers in religi- I’ices, and the use of silver spoons to fish flies sacramental wine I <n Missionary Society— The London Mis- Society, established 1797, has received from blic in general contributions, legacies, divi foreign conti ibutions, and special funds, up ireßent time, the sum of £3,262.346, and has id from 1796 in India, £1,025,188; China, >0; Madagascar,£79,s9o ; South Seas, £364,- mth Africa, £359,631; West Indies, £434,- iberia. £21,399; Greek Islands, £15,1>61; nt and North America, £22.226; students, 3,196; missionary families, £202,859: publi £6l,B27; home agency, £229,112; total, >52. leaving a balance in favor of receipts, of which is invested in stock, and has a nomi of £84,160. Colenso has assumed the offensive, and jatened to excommunicate the dean and his :rs. lie also intends ejecting the clergy ecclesiastical building, grounding his move n their Laving met and elected the future Kev. Dunbar Heath, was suspended from igin the Church of England, some time since, .iinents like those held by Colenso. Ritualist Controversy is unabated in vol hough it has lost in spirit and interest. Lord s bury applauds his brother peer, Rev. S. G. 0., nks “ nothing but a miracle can save the cause Reformation in Great Britain.” Yet he des the establishment as “the grand and only 'e bulwark for the maintenance of the Ketbr against the unceasing efforts, the indiesolu ibinations, and methodical encroachments, papal See. Even the Church of Scotland, i zealous in the cause, seems to be asleep in Ise security which is, to every one of us, the t danger of all.” Dean Close, of Carlisle, the “ English Church Union” that “ there se influentially working it, who are combined e out the demon of Protestantism from the i of England,’ as one frantic Ritualist has ly avowed, and one, be it added, over whom >ad shield of this society has been cast.” Ist Ritualists. —The clergymen of the of England who are seceding and joining \ es to the Baptist denomination, are carry ie of their former ideas and practices into v communion. A new Baptist church, ded- St. John, the Evangelist, with nave, chan 3epts, clerestory, rose window, tower and •edos, communion table, and all the acces a handsome Gothic Anglican Church, has i opened at Hull. The consecration services iced with celebration of the Holy Cominn which a large number of clergy took part, 11 of them being formerly priests in the Eng ■ch, and including the Revs. Baptist Noel, THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1867. and six others, ex-Rectors and ex-curates. Among the hymns sunn was the well-known Angulare Fun damentum, or “ Christ is made the sure foundation,” in “Hymns Ancient and Modern,” used at all High Church consecrations. IRELAND. The Belfast Presbyterian Almanac, for 18C7, (which gives a spirited portrait of George H. Stuart, as its frontispiece), reports the Irish General Assem bly as containing 37 Presbyteries, 556 congregations, and 599 ministers, two colleges, fully equipped and endowed, (one in Derry and one in Belfast), and a larger number of students than ever before. There are about fifty other Orthodox Presbyterian congre gations in Ireland, and several feeble and dwindling Arian organizations. Of the criminals committed to prison in 1865, 3714 were of the established church, 27.918 Roman Catholic, and only 982 Presbyterian; or in other words, 11.3 per cent of the commitments of the Established church, 85.2 per cent. Roman Catholic; and only 3 per cent, Presbyterian. The average daily number of Presbyterians in the prisons in Ire land only numbers 81.5, so that a very small jail would hold all the Presbyterian criminals in the kingdom. The North of Ireland teems with wide awake Protestant people. Large estates are becoming *■ encumbered” and in spite of primogeniture, sold to English and Scotch. These employ the original inhabitants (those who are left), who faster than Rome imagines, learn the difference. The South of Ireland in a desolate place. If it were not.lor Eng land and the “ Black North” one regiment, of well disciplined Fenians could march from Killarney to Dublin. Half the inhabitants would join them, if they would promise each family a cottage and a little bit of ground. But nearly every Northerner believes right or wrong, that Fenianism means Romanism and plunder; while they so believe, invasion would fail. _ Methodism was planted in Ireland in the year 1747. Few in numbers (the highest membership it has ever reached being 29,388), and scattered over the land, in comparative poverty, and amid hard toil and pe secution, its ministry and membership have stood up for Jesus in the midst of a Popery more bigoted than that of Italy, with much sym pathy from other denominations. It is now at a very much lower point, than it has been in the past, as the revival of church life in the Presbyterian Church, after the Arian poison was cast out, lias ren dered it less necessary than it ever was. SCOTLAND. Union, —The agitation for Presbyterian re-union is flagging. Large numbers of the United Presbyte rians do not wish it, and some of them complain that the clergy are placing them in a false position by the negotiations. The ultra Free Churchmen are still loud in opposition, and Dr. Begg, in the Free Presbytery of Edinburgh, has moved an over ture to the effect that in entering into any union the General Assembly should make provision for the maintenance of Free Church principles. Dr. Begg’s paper, The Watchword, even envies the Irish Assembly the possession oft Dr! Watts, and says of his inaugural: “ It would be a matter of true thank fulness if the same spirit ever breathed in all the prelections of our Free Church Colleges., The times especially require firmness and decision, and nothing is more disastrous in dealing with young men than either a tendency towards erroneous views or a taine halting between two opinions.” Dr.Candlish’s New Church. —The officebearers of Free St. George’s, by a vote of 30 to 19, (!) have decided on a site in Shandwick-place, in preference to the Castle-terrace, on the ground that a church on the terrace would have to be “all front." . a HERMAN A. Sr t * Erastianism A long prayer, of a character much more political than religious, has been sent by the Berlin Government to all the Churches of the conquered or annexed countries, to be added to the Liturgy, and read every Sunday in the public ser vice. The impression .produced by this has been every where most painful. When it was first read, there were commotion, disorder, and even tears, in many of the churches. In one city, policemen were sent every Sunday into the churches to report whether or not the prayer was actually read. In some churches in Hanover, the women withdrew in a body from the church when the minister began it. The Lutheran Church of Hanover lias just been gladdened by the Prussian King’s announcing, in compliance with the request of the elders, that he will keep it a separate establishment, independent of the Evangelical Church of Prussia. The latter being based upon a compromise between the oppo site doctrines’of Luther and Calvin respecting the Divine presence in the bread and wine, has been al ways repudiated by orthodox Lutherans—a class still abundantly represented among the solid and Conservative people of Hanover. The strict Prus sian Lutherans still claim for themselves the same rights as Hanover has got, and suggest that the United Church be dissolved, and the Established Church be Lutheran again, through the whole of the Prussian monarchy. The Evangelische KircK enzeitung of Hengstenberg, advocates this course, as do many of the best ministers; and in pamphlets it is brought under the notice of the public. The strict Lutherans have always complained of being wronged. They were subjected to persecutions from 1830 to. 1840, and only then suffered to consti tute themselves as a sect. Some of them are now Dissenters, and others,like Hengstenberg, remained in the Church in order to preach their Lutheran doctrines in continued warfare with the principles of the Union. Death of a Venerable Rabbi. —The death of a remarkable rabbi of the Jewish Church of Germany is announced. M. Frank was a native of Wilna, born in the year 1758, so that he had attained his one hundred and eighth year. At th.it advanced period of his life he was without any of the infirmi ties of old age: his hearing was perfect, he read without spectacles, and tooklong walks up to the last day of his life. A Missionary Family. —Wurtemburg is one of the soundest of the Protestant States, and the follow ing record shows the spirit that possesses some of her people: There died lately in West Africa, Brother Dauble, educated at Basle, and sent out hy the Missionary Society of North Germany. His brother, also a missionary, died last year in Bengal. A third bro ther is preparing for the missionary work in the in stitution at Basle. Two sisters of the family are married to missionaries, a third sister is ready to leave her country, and go to West Africa. The fa ther of this devoted family has five children more, and says the Saviour may have more of them for his work if he will. * . " Austria. —The provisions of the Concordat with Rome, were never executed in Austria with more rigor than at the present time. The priests claim to conduct the education of all Catholic children, and they have just demanded that all who attend their schools should also attend their church. 'Phis de mand is addressed to the civil power, and the Go vernment of Lower Austria has issued a decree re quiring parents to obey the direction of the priests in this matter. Schenkel. —The pastors of Baden having failed to get their government to remove this heresiareh, have published a declaration, in which they say: “As it might appear that we'consider these deci sions to be satisfactory, and our demand as ill founded, we here unanimously declare that such is not the case, but that, taking our stand on the Con fession of Faith of our Church, we hold firmly to our legitimate demand, in the expectation that it will yet be granted by the authorities; and reserving to ourselves to use other measures to this end, we snail not cease to protest against a state of things which threatens the very foundation of our Church, until it shall please God to give us our right.” FRANCE. The Evacuation. —The “Christian Nation,” which " ought to have a Christian head," is sorely troubled over the withdrawal of French troops from Rome, — the men from vanity, and the women from supersti tion. The priests are doing what in them lies to make matters worse. Two cardinals besought the Emperor not to carry out the “ Convention of Sept. 15. But he answered, that it must be loyally, ful filled on both sides, and that the divine mission of the Holy Father might certainly be exercised in com plete security.. The charges of the Bishops are almost unanimous in deploring the state of affairs and eulo gizing Pio Nono. , The Archbishop of Paris, whom Napoleon describes in.his New Year’s speech, as “a prelate profoundly devoted to the interests of religion and the state,” "sustaining by his words and deeds the great principles of faith, charity and conciliation,” —is an exception. He also expresses,great venera tion for Pius IX; he requested the prayers of the faithful on his behalf; he asks the French Govern ment to protect the Sovereign Pontiff in the event of the inhabitants of Rome attacking his spiritual au thority and his person. He has recently compelled the organ of the Jesuits, (the Monde) to contradict the.report of a false miracle they had published. The Universal Israelite Alliance, met at Paris, Nov. 29. It numbers 4500 members. The reports showed that the Jews are suffering atrocious oppres sion, to the extent of massacre and burning alive, in parts of Persia and other countries. Emigration is felt to be a necessity in various places, and appeals are made to the Alliance, which is willing to promote colonization in Palestine, although the committee seemed to incline for America. The great cry is for education for Israelites in yet barbarous lands. The receipts for the last eighteen months have been 50,6001, and the expenses 33,700 f. A New Professor, F.Francois Bonifas, has be&i recently installed in the Protestant College of Mon tauban. He'is not yet thirty; but he has recom mended himself by his constant aevotedness to the high est interests of the Gospel and of the Ref. communion. ' M. Bonifas obtained about two-thirds of the suffrages of the Consistories (61 votes against 33) for his election showing that the great majority of the Protestants of France are opposed to sceptical opinions. Dr. De Pressense writes to the, Wah-.hmm and B fleet or. —“ The moral state of the French na tion inspires the most painful anticipations. Cor ruption m high places, unbridled license in low places, atheism joining hands with immorality, and all de veloping formidably under the pressure of circum stances—such is the.prospect which is arrayed before us. Should any event—which might easily occur— open afresh the revolutionary arena, it is not difficult to imagine what might happen any day,in such a state of French society. We nave a secret impression that God, in the often severe methods of. his goodness, is about to allow us to try the doctrines of positiveism and materialism, so fascinating to thd’.-present age, and to leave the country to drink to t the dregs the turbid and bloody cup of infidelity. All the information we can gain from public rumor as touching the theaters and concerts, makes it evi dent that nothing is so vile as to be denied a place. The most shameful scenes are represented to the life every night in the presence of thousands of specta tors; and what they dare not say, they sing, accom panied with pantomime equalling the most infamous exhibitions ever known to the Roman Empire." Protestant Christianity in the “Exposition Universelle.”— The A. B. C. F. M., will be repre sented by about one thousand different publications x>£ its missions in. thirty-four foreign and some two hundred volumes which it has called forth in English. A few specimens of idols, implements, etc., illustrating the former condition of the Sandwich Islands are sent, to be seen in contrast with the Bible, six newspapers, educational and religious books, etc., which attest their present character. Space has been allotted to the Bible Society of France, and with this the British committee of the " Bible Stand" at the Crystal Palace and at the exhibition of 1862, have made arrangements to erect a large stand, permission having also been granted to circulate the Scriptures in French, Italian, German, Spanish, Russian, Eng lish, (authorized version only) Hebrew, Arabic, Turk ish, &c. It ii proposed to gratuitously distribute the Gospels, the Acts, "Romans,” &c., ~iti the. above languages. About 2,000,000 copies will probably be required, which will cost £5,000. ITALY. In Victor Emmanuel’s Speech from the Throne the following passage occurs: —“ Our good under standing with the French Emperor, the moderation of the Romans, the wisdom of the Pontiff, and the re- ligious sentiment and right feeling of the Italian peo ple, will aid us to distinguish and conciliate the Ca tholic interests and national aspirations which are interwoven and contending with each other at Rome. Attached to the religion of our ancestors, which is also that of the great majority of Italians, I neverthe less respect the principle of liberty which breathes through our institutions, and which, broadly and sincerely applied, will remove the causes of the old differences between Church and State. This disposi tion on our part, by re-assuring Catholic consciences, will accomplish, I hope, the wishes which I form, that the sovereign Pontiff may remain independent at Rome.” The Senate, in reply, says:—“Augmented, by the conclusion of peace, by illustrious provinces she so greatly desired, and by formidable defences, Italy presses around your throne while awaiting that agreement between Church and State of which your Majesty has spoken, and which is the wish and the hope not only of the Italians, but of all the Catholic world, and which must be carried out in such a man ner that- the Church, truly free and independent in its sublime sphere, does not afford any impediment to the State in the exercise of its sovereign rights and in the development of its legitimate aspirations. This will be the seal of our greatness and the. start ing-point of a revival of religious feeling, in case— possibly owing to the ardor of past struggles—it may any where have fallen off.” Cardinal d’Andrea has received notice that an accusation is being drawn up against him in the con gregation of bishops at Rome, upon which it is in tended to found an application to the Pope for his re moval from the list of cardinals. It appears that various, foreign prelates have encouraged the Pope to take this step, as the cardinal’s liberal views on the temporal power, &c., are a cause of Bcandal to the “faithful.” The Situation at Rome. —The French, in going, made the best of terms for the. Pope. Italy agreed to neither attack nor permit attack upon the temporal power of Pius the Ninth, and not to protest against a standing Papal army, even if composed of foreign ers. The French Minister declared that in the event of a spontaneous revolution in Rome, “France re serves ner liberty of action." “On its side (says Vic tor Emmanuel) the Italian Government, observant of its engagements, has respected, and will respect, the Pontifical territory." It is trying to come to terms with Antonelli, while Garibaldi and Mazzini each urge a spontaneous plebiscite,—the first for the restoration of the republic; the second for annexation to Italy. A proclamation from the Roman " Com mittee of Action,” which was pasted on the walls of the city.says:—“We are on the watch, for the oppor tune moment for insurrection, and preparing the ele ments of victory. Until that moment for uniting in one supreme unanimous effort arrives, be upon your guard against all unknown'agitators, and avoid all tumult or disorder, which might be a snare' laid for you by your, enemies. In the mean time, prepare calmly and resolutely for battle.” The Papal Policy. —Our readers are aware that the Scottish and American Protestant churches have been driven out of the city; the head of the useless American legation being too “High” a churchman to resent this insulting outrage. In many other ways, the Papal authorities are showing that they have learnt, nothing. An English lady was recently noti fied-that she had "subjected herself to arrest and im prisonment." by giving away Italian Bibles and tracts.. She was obliged to “ appear before the Go vernor” of Rome, and purge herself from the charge. The churches are almost empty, six or eight women being the usual‘congregation. Many shun the con fessional, and do not join in the idolatrous worship. They are forced to comply with the police regula tion, which requires a periodical certificate of confes sion. It is possible, “for a consideration," to induce a dignitary of the Church to furnish him with the re quired certificate, without going to the confessional or admitting the visits of the priests!. Others employ a substitute to confess for them and take out the cer tificate in their name. Bibles and Testaments were recently committed to the flames by the priests, in front of a church in the Corso, along with daggers and other instruments of crime, which had been sur rendered at the confessional. Christian. Work. —At the Waldensian Theologi cal Seminary in Florence there are four Professors and about a dozen students. Outside of their own valleys the Waldenses have in Italy 59 missionaries. In Florence they have one church and one preaching station. The "Free Italian Church,” with which the American and Foreign Christian Union co-operates, has 40 agents in Italy. Some men of distinction be long to this Church; a.Jew of the "wise” and the "noble” being called, as one member of the Italian Parliament is an exhorter or preacher. The Wesley ans of England employ 50 Agents, and the Nice Committee, also of England, employ 13. The influ ence of the Waldenses is felt in one hundred and sixty Protestant churches; 1,400 Romish priests are working to Reform the Church of Rome, and have adopted as one reform the separation of the spiritual power of the Papacy from its temporal dominion; 31,000 schools, 30 normal schools and 8 universities, are educating the people; but the power of the press is yet but little used. Prof. Tachella, of Milan, a pupil of D’Aubigne, and a member of the Franco- Swiss Protestant Church, has sunk $lO,OOO on the Keo cl'ltalia , and is now in England, asking aid to put it on a permanent basis and remove it to Rome when that city is annexed. D E A T H S. WKSTCOTT. —On. the 18th inst., in the 42d year of his age. Mr. JOHN H. WESTCOTT, of CedarviHe, N. J., late a teacher in this city and an Elder and Superintendent of the Snbbatli-school in Penn Square Presbyterian Church—a man greatly esteemed for h»ft Christian fidelity and usefulness. SLIFER.—Oh Monday morning, January 14th, SUSANNA, wife of Henry Slifer, and daughter of-the late Andrew Wray. Uptcial 43”Tlic Presbytery of Buffalo will hold their Fiftieth Annual Meeting at the first church, Buffalo, on Tuesday, February 26th, commencing at 4 o’clock, P. M. AH who have at any time been connected with it are invited to attend. TIMOTHY STILLMAN, Stated Cleric. Dunkirk , January 25th, 1867. 4&-FOX River Pres, will hold its next Annual Meeting at Steven’s Point, Wis., on Tuesday, February 6th, 7 o’clock I-', M. Session Records will bo presented. S. 11. ASHMUN, Stated Clerk. Rural TFw., Jan. 6,1867. BATCHELOR’S HAIR DTE. This splendid lIAIIt DYJS is the lrest in the world. The only true and perfect 2>ye— HSrinless, Reliable,’ Instantaneous. No disappoint ment. 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SINGERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS, will find Troches useful in clearing the voice when taken before Singing or Speak ng. and relieving the throat after an unusual ex ertion of the vocal organs. The Troches are recommended and prescribed by Physicians, end have had testimonials from eminent men throughout the country. Being an article of true merit, and having proved their efficacy by a test many years, each year finds them in new localities m various parrsof the world, and the Troches are universally pronounced Letter than other articles. Obtain only “ Brown's Bronchial Troches,” and do not takeany of the Worthless Imitation that may be offered; Sold evert where. Prevention in better than Cure" is an old adage, and must h%ve been written before Coe's Dyspepsia Cure was discovered; for one bottle has, in many instances, cured Dyspep sia in its'worsfc form, whereas it would take one a life-time to learn to so livo as to prevent this troublesome disease. TRUSSES, SUPPORTERS, BRACES, And-all other Surgical Appliances of the most approved kinds, infinitely superior to all others, at No. SO North Seventh Street. Ladies attended by Mrs. Dr. HcCLENACIIAN. Mole Department by a competent Surgeon. $28.80 PER DAY. Agents wanted, Ladies’ and Gentlemen, in a pleasant, permanent and honorable business. For farther particulars, address A. D. Bow man A Co., 116 Nassau St,Newark. (Clip out and return this notice. CLERGYMEN ARE FURNISHED WITH The Illustrated Phrenological Journal; Devoted to Ethnology, Physiology, Phrenology, Physiognomy, P >- chology, Ac., at Clnb rates. $1.50 a year—Single Nos. 20 cents. To others, $2 year. Premiums, of Melodeons, Pianos, Sewing Machine and Books are given by S. R. WELLS, Publisher, 289 Broadway, N. T. EVAN 0. ASHTON, DEALER IN PURE LEHIGH AND LOCUST MOUKTT^IKT Goal. COMMUNITY’S COAL DEPOT, Corner Broad, db Wood Sta. 1052-ly CARPET st 0 IVINS & DIETZ, * No. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET, Second door above Chestnut street. jZ3£~Strawberry street is between Second and Bank streets. CARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &C. NFW STYLES, MODERATE PRICES. IVINS & DIETZ, 43 STRAWBERRY Street, Philada. JV, CHEAP CARPET STOBE * 9^ SMITH A MOORE, GOLD AND SILVER PLATERS, 263 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. All Goods Tlated by ourselves on the Finest Metal, with the Heaviest Plate. All kinds of Old Work Rcplated. DO YOU WANT REAL GOOD FRESH TEAS? If so, call at WILLIAM INGHAM’S American Tea Warehouse, 43 South Second street, below Market, for fresh Green and Black Tea*, of the latest importation; consisting of Hyson, Young Hyson, Impe rial, and Gunpowder Teas. Finest Japan Teas imported. Black Teas of all grades, from 80 cents upwards. Coffee from 25 to 40 cents. Remember WM. INGRAM, Tea Dealer, 43 S. Second Street, Ahiladelpbia. WALL PAPEB AND FTNE WINDOW SHADES MANU FACTURED. Beautiful designs, as low as $1.50, $1.75 and $2, with Fixtures. PAPER HANGINGS; Gold and Plain DECORATIONS, neatly hung, by practical workmen, at JOHNSTON’S Depot. [The No. is 1033] SPRING GARDEN Street, Below Eleventh. WILLIAM YARNALL, IMPORTER AND DEALER IN HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS, No. 1232 CHESTNUT STREET S. E. COR. 13TH. SUPERIOR REFRIGERATORS, WATER COOLERS, FINE TABLE CUTLERY FAMILY HARDWARE, IRONING TABLES, Ac., Ac. BANKING HOUSE. 'GEORGE J. BOYD, No. 18 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA, (Two doors below Mechanics’ Bank.) DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 5-20 s, 10-408, 7-30 s, 6s ef ’Bl, AND ALL OTHER STOCKS, BONDS, &o. BOUGHT AND SOLD AT THE BOARD OF BROKERS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. GENERAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL REPOSITORY AND DEPOSITORY OF THE AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY. 0. D. GROSVENOR, Sup’t, 75 STATE STREET, Rochester, New York. All the Publications of the different Publishing Societies and Publishers of Religious and Sunday-school Books, kept constantly on band. Pastors, Superintendents and others, in Western New York, can ways find at our store an extensive and choice selection of books r Sunday-school Libraries, not excelled in that region. Bible Help, Commentaries, Sunday-school’ Record and Class Books, Singing Books, Reward Curds, and all the requisites for Sunday-school purposes. Orders promptly filled at Publishers’ prices. Subscriptions received for the American Presbyterian, of Phila delphia, and all other leading Religious papers. Also, for the American Messenger, ami all the various Children's Sunday-school Papers, and the same promptly supplied. Please address, O, D GROSVENOR, Sup’fc, 75 STATE STREET, Rochester, New York CLEMENT SMITH & SONS FURNITURE WARE-ROOMS, Respectfully inform our friends and the public that we have opened an establishment p.t the above place, where we will mum.- facture all descriptions of Fine Cabinet Work. Many years’ ex perience in conducting the manufacture of one of the oldest and largest establishments in this city, has given us the advantage of PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE and SKILL in the ART o DESIGNING and MANUFACTURING FINE CABINET WORK, on the most Reasonable Terms. For character anil ability, we refer those who may fayor os to the undersigned gentlemen:— J. C. FABB, 324 Chestnut Street 8. B. HILT, N. E. corner Fifth and Walnut W. B. TEHBBOOK, 1925 Chestnut Street. H. P. M. BIRKENBINE, 35th and Bearing, W. P. THOMAS POTTER, Arch Street. . . ANSON JEWELL, DID vine Street. 248 SOUTH SECOND STREET.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers