tion.iuxl iirranged to call a congregational meeting. ;j Mil, and provide for supplies in the inean j: e> On the 23d Rev. Mr. Branch, who had been vit't‘i.l by the session, found the church locked., utid "'id to preach from the front steps. New Castle 0. s presbytery me t early in July, and declared the iiruoecdiiigs of the meeting which elected Dr. Landis ,i be null and void, enjoined him to abstain from nrc-irliing within their bounds, and gave the entire matter into the hands of the session, besides censuring the Trustees for locking the church. The loyal members of the Board of Trustees refuse to surren ,ler the keys, and legal proceedings are to be insti tuted to recover the church property from them. It is just [lossible that neither party will be able to make out a legally valid title, in view of the way in which the property was takea from the N. S. Church. Persecution of the American U. P. Mission in pvypt- —In a letter from Cairo, Mrs. Lansing, mis sionary of the United Presbyterian Roard. speaks of the high-handed doings ot the Coptic Patriarch at Osioot, Egypt, and the bitter persecution to which "the Christians are subjected. The Patriarch has avowed lus intention of crushing Protestantism, and asserts that he has the authority of the Viceroy of l'>vpt for the course which he is taking. In some oimes lie has hail the Protestauts bastinadoed, and has cursed and excommunicated all who read Pro testant hooks, attend Protestant schools, or have anything to do with the Protestant religion; all but the Beirut publications have been 'ordered to be burned, and many volumes have, in consequence, been committed to the flames. The Protestant schools are greatly reduced, and Sabbath services neglected. There are a small number, however, who, in spite of persecution and intimidation, con tinue faithful to the truth, and attend both school and church with regularity. A young Moslem girl has recently been received into the church in Cairo. She had been a slave, and is the second convert from Mohammedanism, arid the first to make public profession of Christ at this mission. British Items. —The Weekly Review of August 3d says: —“ We are happy to announce that the Rev. Dr. Denham and the Rev. Dr. Hall, the two depu ties from the Irish Presbyterian Church to America, have returned in safety." In the Scottish Re formed Presbyterian Theological Hall, the closing meeting for the session was held on the 28th ult,, in Kdinhurgh. Of the students in attendance, eleven were Scotch, four Irish, one American, two Hun- garian, oue Bohemian, and two were of the Free Church—twenty-one in all. The Rev. VV. Syming loii delivered a short veladictory address. Only a week after the Established Church of Scotland had got quit of the disputed settlement case of Cumbrae, Ithe Greenock Presbytery haveing inducted the pre sentee, the Rev. J. S. Macnab, into the charge) another case of a similar character is reported. The Presbytery of Lerwick met at Tingwall to moderate in a call to the Rev. James Barclay, of Mid and South Yell, presentee to Tingwall. The parish ioners refused to sign the call, and objections were taken to the presentee’s suitableness to such an ex tensive parish as TingwalL The Presbytery were to consider the objections. The amount —some £3oo—necessary to defray the expense which Mr. Macnab, the presentee, incurred in connection with the Cumbrae proceedings, has been more than real- , izeil. About £2S(J has been raised in subscription and the Earl of Glasgow, the patron, lias given a cheque for £3OO. The Stirling Presbytery met at BriJge of Teith, and ordained Mr. Huie to the pastorate of that congregation, vacant by the death of the Rev. Dr. M'Kerrow.—The U. P. Presbytery of Glasgow met at Ball'ron, and ordained Mr. Thomas Dunlop, preacher, as minister of the United Presbyterian congregation there.—The Presbytery of Coleraine met in the First Presbyterian Church, Dunboe, and installed the Rev. John Mark to the pastoral charge of that congregation, The Gazette notifies that the Queen lias presented the Rev. Donald MacLeod to the charge of first minister of the church and parish of Montrose, vacant by the transportation of the Rev. Malcolm Campbell Taylor to Crathie and Braemar. Dr. Norman M‘Leod has accepted tlie appointment to visit tlie Indian Missions of the Church of Scotland, and goes out this winter. The Rev. Robert Stewart has resigned tlie pastorate of Tarland Free Church, as his wife’s health neces sitates In's residence in a warmer climate. He has been laboring with acceptance for six months at Lisbon to the Presbyterian residents there, and as they are anxious that he should continue his minis trations among them, the Colonial Committee of the Free Church have appointed him to tlie charge. Episcopalian. —Tlie Gospel Messenger says that the Diocese of Illinois, Massachusetts, Maine, Geor gia, and Connecticut, have refused, through their Standing Committees, to give their canonical con sent to the consecration of the Rev. Francis M. Whittle, of Kentucky, as Assistant Bishop of Vir ginia,—some on the ground that the case of Bishop Johns docs not come within the canon as a case of “ permanent disability," he himself not having given any such reason for an Assistant, and others on the ground that there is not sufficient evidence that tlie ‘’Testimonials” were duly signed by the members of I lie Diocesan Council. “Rev. J. E. Walton, of North Adams, formerly of Portland, lias gone to the Episcopal church in Rockford, Ills. Salary, $2,000. This shows what kind of church govern ment keeps oat heresy best.”— Congregationalisl. We cannot congratulate either form of polity on their success in that direction. The Rev. Prof. J. Kent Stone, son of Rev. Dr. Stone, of Philadelphia, has been elected President of Kenyon College -The Rev. Win. P. White, recently minister of All-Saints’ church, Paradise, Lancaster county, Pa., has be come rector of St. Timothy’s church, Roxborough, l’hilada. There are at the present time, no less than six Episcopal parishes vacant in this city. They are supplied by assistants, or by ministers having temporary charge. OTHER DEXOJIIXATIOJfS- Baptist.—Tlie Baptist Seminary about to go into operation at Upland, near Chester, under the aus pices of the Crozer family, has made a bold strike to start with. It has called as professors Dr. Hovey and Dr. Pepperof Newton, and hopes to secure their labors. -After long consideration, Dr. Henson, of file Broad Street Church, Philadelphia, has decided to resign his present pastoral relation, and give bis work to the new interest at the corner of Broad and Master streets. This decision will not alienate any of his present members.— —‘‘R o v. Dr. Burrows, of Richmond, Virginia, in his address before the Ken tucky Baptist General Assembly, at Henderson, said: ‘We can’t afford to let any one be called a Missionary Baptist for less than one dollar per an num.’ ‘There are three kinds of Baptists—the Mis sionary Baptists, the Anti-missionary Baptists, and then there is that immense class, the Omissionary Baptists.' ” I’lie Baptists in Brookline, Mass , have commenced a Sabbath afternoon service in the open air, attended bv hundreds of the men, both t-uthnliu and Protestant, at the Chestnut Hill Reser ' oir, One of the former felt moved the first day, to ‘'protest" mildly at the close, that ‘ the Catholic is the true religion after all;” but good order is pre ferred, and good fruits may be excepted. At the convention of Free Will Baptists, held a few 'l-'.'s since, resolutions were adopted recommending ’nr removal of the Mormny Star, to New York. A '"uimittce of seven was appointed to secure either ? lu, l removal, or the establishment of a new organ •,n N ew York, The Committee on Freedmen’s af ,' ilr s commended “the generous offer of a gentleman 111 Maine to give $lO,OOO for Cite establishment and ’naiiuenatice of a Free Baptist Normal school or • ollege at the south, provided we raise an equal ai »uuut by the first of January next, and urging our THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1867. people to subscribe, the sum required." During the day and evening $3,000 were raised for the Freed men’s College in subscriptions of $lO ) each, there being twenty-one ministers of the Gospel present, and each one giving $lOO to this noble cause. The Register for 1867 returns an aggregate of twelve hundred and forty ministers and twelve hundred and sixty-four churches.-Since the Christian Freeman was started in Chicago as a Free Will Baptist organ, the Western Free Communion Baptists have been drawn into closer fellowship with the Free Will Baptists. One Free Communion Baptist writes: — ‘‘We claim to be one people with you, holding tlie same great truths of General Atonement, Free Sal vation, Moral Agency, Freedom of the Will and Free Communion, <fcc. There are six or seven As sociations of us in South-western Indiana, Southern Illinois, and North-western Kentucky. Each Asso ciation has at least one missionary in the field ajid some have two; and yet we have no denominational paper.” At one of the recent Baptist anniversaries in Chi cago, considerable annoyance was occasioned by the frequent announcement of meetings of the alumni of different colleges and a sudden stop was put to the practice by a similar announcement of a meet ing “of graduates from tlie potato field, the tan yard, shoemaker’s bench and the blacksmith’s shop, to form an alumni of the Brush heap, with Nathan iel Colver for President,” and the Brush heap Alum ni was duly organized at the appointed hour, with Dr. Colver as President. The Rev. Dr. Kincaid, one of the oldest missionaries in India, says that the greatness of the work to be done in heathen lands appeared : exceeding small compared to what it did when he first arrived in India. One may now travel six hundred miles in Burmah, and, with “one or two breaks,” not have any trouble in finding a Christian family, or one where it would not be unsafe to pass the night, so great has been the progress of the Gospel in that country. There are now scores of Christian villages. Some friends of President Anderson, of Rochester, have subscribed $30,000 to purchase him a house and library. He gave as one reason for declining the tendered Presidency of Brown University: “I felt that those who had me when I was comparatively worthless, had a right to the benefit of any rise in the stock." The First African church in Richmond, Virginia, is supposed to be tlie largest on the continent. It lias over four thousand naqies on its record, and over three thou sand resident members. The number of Baptist 'churches in Great Britain and Ireland is 2,381; of members, 213,766. This is less than one-quarter as compared with the Baptists in the United States, while it is double the number in the rest of the world. The clear increase of membership reported for the past year is 3,994; of which 2,842 belong to the English churches, 1,184 to the Welsh, and only 20 to the Irish, While in the Scotch there has been a decrease ol 52. The accessions are supposed to have been somewhat larger than tit is, the reports of important accessions in the latter part of the year not having coriie in. The contributions of the de nomination for the year the various benevolent or ganizations, exclusive of the support-of the ministry, and various provincial and local objects, was fully $930,000 in American currency, more than four dol lars to a member. Congregationalist. —The lowa Religious News letter, has been purchased by the proprietors of the Advance, the new paper at Chicago, which will now have the editorial aid of Rev. Jesse Guernsey. Dr. Magoun reserves the right to resume the publica tion of the Newsletter at Grinnell whenever he chooses. An effort is made to draw Rev. Dr. Al den, of South Boston, into the corps of Andover professors; tlie Phillips Congregational Church at South Boston are making an equal effort to retain their pastor, and among other inducements have put into the church a new organ at a cost of $lO,OOO. Thirteen persons—of-wliom eight were heads of families—we’re admitted on last Sabbath to the church in Burlington, Vt. The fruit of a late season of religious interest there. The Minutes of. the General Association of Illinois, show a total of 222 Churches in the State, with a membership of 10,363, and an increase of 1722 during the year. Minutes reported 229; baptisms, 512 adults and 359 infants. The church in Columbus, 0., have presented their pastor, Rev. E. P, Godwin, with $260., and propose to raise his salary to $2,500. This was done alter he had declined to consider propositions, should any be tendered him, by Park Street church, Boston. Methodist- —The Methodist Episcopal church at Cape May, after being reconstructed and put into complete order, was re-Opened on Sabbath, July 21st. Rev. Bishop Simpson was present. Rev. J as. Neill and Rev. A. Cook man. preached.- —Rev. E. 0. Haven, D.D., President'of the Michigan State Uni versity, has declined an urgent request to take charge of the Theological Seminary about to be established near Boston by the Methodists. The United Brethren owned in 1836 eleven hundred and seventy-three meeting-houses , worth a million and a half of dollars. The denomination has seven hun dred and eighty-nine itinerants, and seven hundred and fifty-five local ministers. It has seven colleges and seminaries in successful operation. It has a printing establishment at Dayton, 0„ worth eighty thousand dollars, and its periodicals have an aggre gate circulation of sixty thousand copies. „ Accessions: —At Fernandina, Florida, the African minister and his church have joined the Methodist Episcopal Church under the pastoral care of Rev. January Felder. The Rev. Thomas Evans, of the Al'rican Methodist Episcopal Church, with some five hundred under his pastoral care, have recently con nected themselves with the Methodist Episcopal Church on the Cooper River in South Caroline. Rev. John Wesley Johnson, of Mars Bluff, with his charge of two hundred, in a body, joined the Metho dist l-.piscopal Church. Three Wesleyan Methodist ministers. Dr. Prindle, and Revs. J. S. Albertson and J. E. Johnson, and one Methodist Protestant minister, Rev. J. W. Davis, were received into the M. E. Conference of Erie at its late meeting. Lutheran. —In the Joint Synod of Ohio the doc trine of Close Communion has been formally adopted and declared to be an indispensable condition of Lutheran synodical union and Church fellowship. The Missouri Synod has practically carried it out heretofore, and the Ohio Synod, under its leadings, now adopts it. Accordingly, no minister belonging to these Synods can allow any minister or member of anv other denomination, or any one belonging to the General Synod, to commune with him or in his church, neither will he nor any of his members be allowed to commune with such ministers and. mem bersin theirchurches. Nor will a pastor be permitted to exchange pulpits with any Christian minister, not belonging to an extreme Symbolical body. On October 31st, it will be three hundred and fifty years since Luther nailed his Theses to the door of the Castle Church at Wittenberg. The Joint Synod of Ohio has determined to celebrate this seventh Jubi lee, by calling upon all the members of their churches to make thank-offerings unto the Lord for the Reformation and its invaluable blessings. These donations are to be devoted to the endownment of Capitol University and the Theological Seminary at Columbus!- There are more than 100,00(J Ger mans on Long Island, and between 30,000 and 40,- UOl of them are Lutherans. The Presbyterians have three churches, the German Reformed four, and the Methodists four German churches among this population. A correspondent of the Luthe ran 06s«n;«r, speaking of Rev. H. L. Miles, pastor of Zion church in Richland, county, Ohio, reports an increase of 300 to the membership of his charge in three vears. Also, tbg,t a congregation of Metho dists o'ffered to come, members, property and all, into the charge, if that brother Would become tbeip pastor. The Pittsburg Synod seems to be “ lengthening its cords and strengthening its stakes.” A correspondent of the Lutheran and Missionary re ports nine new churches under contract orin process of erection, in this High Church Sjnod. Friends— Revival— The Philadelphia Inquirer of the Ilth inst. says that at tlie meeting-house. Twelfth street, between Market and Chestnut, (Or thodox,) a deep*solemnity pervades the members of tlie congregation v and tlie occasional addresses and prayers are very impressive. Roman Catholic.—The London Weekly Register says:—“A private letter from Rome states that the Holy father has consented to re-establish thehier archy in Scotland, and that our co-religionists in the North will, therefore, cease to belong, to a mission ary Church. The same communication states that there will be one archbishop and six suffragan bish ops named, the former to Glasgow, the latter to Edinburgh, Perth, Aberdeen, Inverness, Stirling, and Kilmarnock. If the report is true we shall soon be able to congratulate our Scotch friends upon regain ing what they have lost for the last three hundred rears,” A French Bishop, one of the many faith ful who assisted at the great celebration at Rome, has issued a circular letter to his clergy, which makes him the laughing-stock of Europe. He dis approves, it seems, not only of the Great Exposition but. of exhibitions in general, unless they partake of an ecclesiastical character. He has therefore for bidden his clergy from visiting so dangerous a local ity, warning them against the Palace of Industry, and its contents and attractions as the work of the arch-enemy of souls, but does not attempt to explain how it is that the Pope has permitted so many of his own subjects to contribute to this diabolical and dangerous institution, and did so himself.—The Weekly Register says:—'“ Another chapter upon the wickedness of the age will surely be added to the Book of the Prophet Gumming. A Princess of England, the popular Princess Mary of Cambridge, now Princess Teck, actually attended on Thursday. July 18th, at the Requiem Mass for the'repose of the soul of the murdered Emperor Maximilian. And not only did-the Princess attend at this mass, but she knelt down, and behaved most reverently during the more solemn parts of the service, and looked as if she fully understood and positively ap preciated the rite.” A new monastery is to be erected at Dubuque, lowa, and’ the Herald ot that city says: “The building is to be of stone, now be ing quarried, and when finished will be the most magnificent and imposing building in the State. Its dimensions will be equal to a block of buildings in the city, with side walls forty feet high, aod on the church a tower two hundred feet high. In tlie cen tre of the building will be a court square of one hundred feet. The designs, if carried out, will give , Dubuque a monastery something like the grand old structures of Italy.” The Czar has given orders for carrying annually to the budget of the kingdom of Poland a credit of from 50,000 to .100,000 roubles, for the Construction ol Orthodox Russian churches in the country. One is to be built this year at Lubin, and more in other places. Unitarian. —The corner-stone of a new Unitarian meeting-house in Boston, was laid a few days ago. Rev. Dr. Robbins pronounced the consecrating words as follows: “This corner-stone is laid in the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, to the glory of Almighty God and the salvation of our fellow men, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. Amen.” The chapel will cost about $32,000, ex clusive of the land, and is to be of brick with free stone trimmings, in early English style. On a late Sunday morning fourteen persons were baptized, and twenty-two persons became members of the church in Dover, Mass. It is hoped that many more will soon enter the church.— —Carleton writes from Pesth to the Boston Journfdv—^ To Aay I have received a visit from a gentleman who wished to obtain the names of some of the Unitarian clergy men of Boston, which I gave him. There are filly thousand Unitariansin Hungary [?] —thcoldestbody of that denomination probably in the world. They have been true to freedom, and, in consequence, have suffered great persecutions from government, and they wish to open correspondence with other branches of the denomination.” In England there are about three hundred Unitarian ministers ‘who have charge of “Presbyterian” congregations. The denomination has, in London, the British and Foreign Unitarian Association and the London Do mestic Mission Society. In the country there are sixteen domestic mission and forty tract and other societies. In Ireland there are three Presbyterian bodies, which in point of doctrine are regarded as Unitarians, namely: the Presbytery of Antrim, the Remonstrant Synod of Ulster, and the Synod of Munster. Together, they form the 'Non-Subscrib ing Presbyterian Association of Ireland,” which meets annually and quarrels continually. In the English Colonies the Unitarians have eleven chap els. On the continent of Europe, the Unitarians exist as a separate denomination only in the Aus trian Province of Transylvania, where they num ber a population of over 50,000. The latter have lately commenced to cultivate more intimate rela tions with those of Great Miss Jose phine Lapham of Woodstock, Ohio, has been li censed to preach by.tlie Winchester Association of that State. She is a graduate of Antioch College, and was a classmate of Olympia Brotyn.— —It has been found necessary to close Dr. Gannett s church on Boylston street, Boston, and strip it'of all,its up holstery, to save it from utter ruin by the moths. The church in Ashby, Mass., is enjoying an un usual degree of religious interest. .Eighteen persons have been admitted to the church, and social religious meetings are so largely attended that they are ne cessarily held in the Town Ball. Ihe property belonging to the “ Massachusetts Congregational Charitable Society,” now amounts to $138,051., the income of which is applied to the relief of the wi dows and children of Congregational ministers of Mass., who were settled pastors at the time of their death. This year, $6,060, were distributed to fifty four beneficiaries, in stuns ranging from $BO to $2OO. Of thirty Trustees, the majority are Unitarians, but the appropriations are made with perfect impartial ity. The Benevolent Fraternity of Churches, the organized Society of Uuitarianism, has reached its thirty-third anniversary. The past year has been one of great activity. Its annual receipts, larger than any previous year, have reached the sum of over $14,000, A new chapel has been built in Bos ton. The somewhat famed Pitts-streetchapel is to be removed to a more eligible position, and the work of missions at the AVest to be prosecuted with new vigor. Universalist. —Universalism is about one hun dred years old in America, and it is thought that its centenary will be celebrated in 1870, which year will complete a century from the landing in this country of John Murray, the f.ither of the denomi nation. It now comprises about seven hundred mi nisters, and about five hundred organized societies. Of these, considerably more than two-thirds are found in New England and New York. The States in which they seem to be the strongest are in order named, New York, Massachusetts, Ohio, Maine, Vermont and Illinois. In New Jersey, which claims the honor .of the “ landing,” there are but four societies and three preachers. More than a million of dollars was raised by them the last year for educational and missionary purposes, and for the erection of church edifices. Seven newspapers and three magazines are published in the interest of Universalism, and the society has eleven institutions in this country, some of them well endowed. Newark Daily Advertiser.— —-Some of-the -radi'cal wingcrfitheileM(HbinUtion;do norgraizaftiil^aecpi ll ® 6o ? in the summary manner in which Hr. Connor lias been ousted from the junior pastorate of the School Street church, Boston ; and Rev. E. C. Towne, of Medford, calls to Dr. Miner, the senior pastor, to an account for his part in the proceedings, and chal lenges him to a public debate on the religious points at issue, and on the question whether his treatment of Mr. Connor was just and Christian. gpmal The SyiKMl of lowa, by authority of the Moderator, wil I meet as usual on the second Thursday of Scptemb r (I2lh), at Des Moines, at 7J4 o’clock f. M., instead of first-Wednesday of Oc tober, to which time it u<lj'-timed last year. Members paying full fare over the following Railways will he returned free, via: Chi cago A Northwestern, Dubuque & Sioux City, Dubuque A South western. Burlington A Missouri It It. Mississippi A Missouri It. R. will return at one-fifth regular rates. 11. L. STANLEY, Stated Clerk. Lyons, lowa, Aug. 13,1567. a®- Fox River Presbytery will hold its next annual sessions at Unr'rinetlo, Ocento county, Wis.,ou Tuesday, September 3, 1867. Opening Sermon at 7 o’clock P. M., by Rev. Jacob Patch, ol Steveus Point. Rural, Wis., Aug. 10,1867. 4S* The Presbytery of Lyons will hold its next stated meeting at Marion, commencing at 2 o’clock P. M., on Tuesday September 10. East Palmyra. N. Y., Aug. 15,1867. flQp* A Minister’s Daughter wishes teaching in private or in school, in or near to*u. Address JG. K. W.,” Station, C. aug22>4t DNION PACIFIC RAILROAD. The First Mortgage Bonds, INTEREST, SIX Per CENT, in GOLD, Are offered for tlie present, at Ninety Cents on the l>otlar and accrned interest at Six per Cent, in Currency front July Ist, lStt7. The Company would state that, their work continues to be pushed forward with great rapidity, and 425 Miles West from, Omaha are now in operation, and stocked with locomotives, cars, and all the appur tenances of a first-class road; The amount, already paid in by stockholders of the Company is $5,000,0110. The aid received from the U. S. Government in con structing this portion of 425 miles is: 1. A Donation of 12,800 acres of adja cent lands to the mile (nearly all very valuable), amounting to 5,440,000 acres. 2. U. S. Six per Cent, currency inter est Bonds, which are a second lien, at the rate of $16,000 to the mile, amounting, for 425 miles, to $6,800,000 The amount of the Company’s owfp? First Mortgage Bonds on 425 miles is $6,800,000 It will be seen that, exelusive of the land grant, the First Mortgage Bonds represent only about one-third of the value of the property on which they are secured. ■The Company is also restrained by its Charter from issuing its bonds except as the work progresses, and to the same amount on the various sections ,as are issued by the Government. The mortgage which secures the bondholders is made to Hon. E. D. Morgan, U. S. Senator, from New Fork, and- Hon. Oakes Ames, Member of the U. S. House of Representatives, from Massachusetts, as Trustees, who alone can issue the Bonds to the Company, and who are responsible for their issue in strict accordance with the terms of the law. . , A statement of the earnings for the last quarter will be published in detail at an early day; but. the ac counts are already sufficiently balanced to show that the net amount is much greater than the gold interest on the bonds that can be issued on the length of road operated. It should be remembered that these earn ings are only upon a way business in a new and unde veloped country, and are no index of the vast traffic that must follow the completion of the whole line to the Pacific in 1870. These facts are only intended to show that these Bonds are strictly one of the safest as well as one of the most profitable securities, and are fully entitled to the confidence of the public. The Company make no appeal to the public to purchase its Bonds, as the daily subscriptions are large, and fully equal to their wants. . Many parties are taking advantage of the present high price of Government stocks to exchange for these Bonds, which are over 15 per cent, cheaper, and, at the curreut rate of premium on gold, pay Over Sine per Cent. Interest . Subscriptions will be received in Philadelphia by THE TRADESMEN’S NATIONAL BANK. BE HAVEN & BROTHER. WILLIAM PAINTER & CO. TOWNSEND WHELEN & CO. J. E. LEWARS & CO. F. STEEB. In Wilmington, Del., by R. R. ROBINSON & CO. JOHN McLEAR & SON. And in New York at the Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau Street, and by the Continentai. Naticnai. Bank, No. 7 Nassau St.. Coakk, Dodge & Co., Bankers, No. 51 Wall St., John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 33 Wall St. and by BANKS AND BANKERS generally throughout the United States, of whom maps and descriptive pam phlets may be obtained. JOHN J. CISCO, Treasurer, STEW YORK. BEAUTIFUL HAIR. CHEVALIER’S LIFE FOR THE HAIR positively restores gray hair to its original color and youthful beauty; Imparts life, strength and growth to the weakest hair; stops its falling Out at once; keeps the head clean; is unparalleled as a hair dressing. Sold by all druggists, fashiouahle hair-dressers, and dealers in fancy goods- The trade supplied by the wholesale druggists. SARAH A. CHEVAMER, M.»., Sew York; jy4-6m-eow • SILVER TIPS. Hare you seen the new Silver Tipped Shoes for children! They have all the utility of copper, and are uighly ornamental. Applied to the most genteel shoes made. aprzo--.ni BATCHELOR’S HAIR DYE. This splendid HAIR DYE is the best in the world. The only true and perfect Dye—Harmless, Reliable, Instantaneous. No dis appointment. No ridiculous tints. Natural Black or Brown. Re medies the effects of Bud Uyes. Invigorates the hair, leaving it soft and beautiful. The genuine is signed ll'illfom A. Batchelor. All others are mere imitations and should be avoided. Sold by all Druggists and Perfumers. Factory, 81 Barclay street, New York. Beware of a Counterfeit. SAMUEL WORK, STOCKS, LOANS, COIN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, Bought and Sold on Commission, No. 129 SOUTH THIRD STREET-, v-.uiv 1 yoi!i {Floor, Eittittncei olil Dock] Street i' : JoH ■ ! /.ig/m-o'J • S. H. ASHMUN, Stated Clerk. A. H. LILLY, Stated CTerk. FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, FREDERICK. MD., Possessing full Collegiate iVwo.r, will commence its TWENTY-FIFTH SCHOLASTIC YEAR, The First Monday in September. For Catalogues. Ac.. address julv ’Jo-1 yr Rev. THOMAS M. CANN. A. M., President. “Family Boarding-School for Boys,” At Pottslown, Pa., will re-open on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1867. Circulars containing full information will be furn ished on application, by mail or otherwise, to Rev. M. MEIGS, A.M., Principal Elmira Female College. Under Care of the Synod of Geneva. This is a superior Institution for those who desire a Thorough Course of Study with all the advantages of a regularly organized College and Christian home. Whole Expense for Board and Tuition: $l5O PER HALF-YEARLY SESSION Address REV. A. W. COWLES, D.D., augl -6t TREEMOUNT SEMINARY, NORRISTOWN, PA., FOR YOUNfi MES iX® BOYS Classical, Mathematical, and Commercial. Winter Session of Six Months will commence on Tues day, Septeinper 17th, 1867. For Circulars, address Classical School* s. E. Corner of rHIRTEENTH 4LOCDST STREETS. PHILADELPHIA. B. KENDALL, A. M-, Principal. EXCUSE AND CLASSICAL SCHOOL, FOR BOARDING AND DAY SCHOLARS, FORTIETH STREET AND BALTIMORE AVENUE, WEST PHILADELPHIA. REV. S. H. McMULLIN, rjtixczpj-L. Pupils Received at any time and Pitted for Business Life or for College. References: B. A. Knight, Esq.; Rev. J. W. Mews; Rev. Jonathan Edwards, D. D.; Rev. James M. Crowell, D. D.; Hou. Richard H. Bayard; Samuel Sloan, Esq. WYERS’ BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS FORMERLY A. BOLMAR'S, AT WEST CHESTER, PA. A Classical, English, Mathematical and Commercial School, do signed to tit its pupils thoroughly fur College or Business. The Corp« of Instructors is Urge, able and experienced; the course; of Instruction systematic, thorough and extensive. M deni Lan guages —German, Ifrench and Spanish, taught by native resnleut teachers. Instrumental and Vocal Music, Drawing and Painting. The s» holastic year of ten months begins on Wednesday, the sth of September next. Circulars can be obtained at the office of thia paper, or by eppli cation to WILLIAM F. WYERS, A. M„ Principal and Propriet EDUCATION OF ?OUNG LADIES. The duties of the Spring Garden Institute will he resumed, Deo volente, on Monday, September Oth, next* Ten pupils can be admitted to the privileges of a Christian limne in the family of GILBERT COMBS , A.M., Principal, augB-2m 608 and 611 Marshall Street. FAMILY SCHOOL FOR MISSES, AT PRINCETON, N J. Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Wood, experienced educators, receive Misses to a good home and faithful instruc tion. fall Session begins September 2d. Circulars forwarded. YOUNG LADIES’ SEMINARY, FOR BOARDING AND DAY PUPILS, 1221 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Mrs. KUTZ \ Principals. Miss LATTA, j The Fall Session of this Institution will commence on the Third Wednesday (18th) of September. nugls-6t Turnip Seed! Turnip Seed 1 BY MAIL. 75 Cts. Per Lb.—lo Cts. Per Oz. Gr'-wn on our •>wn Seed Farm from Selected Stock and Warranted. Send tor price list, gratis. COLLINS, ALDERSON & CO., SEEP WAREHOUSE, 1111 and 1113 Market St.. Philadelphia 9 Pa. STEPHEN G. COLLINS. W. CHAS. ALUEUSON. ROBERT DOWNS. THE GREAT UNITED STATES Tea W arehouse, No. 30 Vesey Street, New York. AGENTS WANTED in every loca ity t<» get up r ”uh : amongst tainilies for our TEAS and COFFEES. "« own snv«r t families 50 eta. to $1 per pound on Teas, and 10 els. to i'o t is. «> . Coffees.’ We import direct, and sell at CVi>v/« prices, tans >avn.g t. consumers thefiw or six profits made I y middle-men. S iiistwci -’ii warranted or money refunded. Wo pay a liberal Loaimissiun to AGENTS to get up Ctubs for us, ami hundreds « f our jigem - iimke a make a handsome and regular weekly income. Auuro< immediately > _ __ , l he Great United States Tea Warehouse, Of T. Y. KELLEY A CO., No. 30 Vesry Street, New Post Office Box 574. angS*4t DO YOTJ WANT REAL GOOD FRESH TEAS? If so, util m WILLIAM INGHAM'S American Tea Warehouse. 4 . g ur! Second street, below Market, /o* fresh Greeir *;md»BWdL -i ,«JU 'lfMiJt n.l will Off I-• w. - . President. JOHN W. LOCH, Principal
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