eliglous World Abroad. GREAT BRITAIN'. The Romanizing party in the English Church ar to be very reluctant " to eat their leek," in ;,hence to the decision of the Privy Council nst their innovations. Each one is to wait un iv' receives some special directions on the sub . i Crom his diocesan, before making any import alterations in the service, Mr. Bennett, at , tae, wilt keep his candles burning until some , iv, authoritatively commissioned to do so, blows tin out, while Mr. Mackonochie substitutes ~ vett lamps fbr his two, candles, and waits to see hat is to be done about it. It is noteworthy that tt the annual meeting of the Society for the Pro. ~,lion of Christian Knowledge, which they so dis ,:rved by their rowdyism not long ago, several ri - members were dFopped, and evangelical :lieu were chosen in their places in the Council. • The Penny Post in the Service of the Chinch. .1 recent report of the, Congregationalist church •.• (!ationhury, England, of which Dr. Raleigh is .1-tor, has led to considerable inquiry as to where rte church finds the means to carry on its manifold -nterprtses. The Treasurer writes to The Daily V..„-s of Feb. 20, to explain the method employed. • 1,569-63 the funds were raised by collection, and, _rest efforts, the annual income had been raised 0571. In 1864 the method was introduced of -.tiding letters through the post-office. The result •.: , s the immediate and large increase of their chi nv funds, to an aggregate of £1,343 in 1864, and --it3ol-0 in 1667, besides £9OO collected for buildiwg purposes, and about £BOO yearly received by the t,enity banks, coal clubs, &c. And as a conse ,:,tence, the treasurer has never had to postpone he payment of any bills. Romanist Growth in London.—* writer in 77,t Weekly Register notes that, in 1839, just before •he Oxford movement bad begun to shed its fruit IZomeward, there. were bat ten chapels in.. theltike -ropolis and its suburb's, where there are now fifty, tilled with Irish immigrants, but bttilt and served by Puseyite converts. In' whattis no* the Romish diocese of Westminster, there were seventy priests, a id all of them but two Jesuits were "seculars." The " regulars," kr monkish priests of the diocese, now number one hundred and thirty, of.whom.six-, teen are Jesuits. The' teenier 'priests' number one hundred and eleven. ' The e,huvente ndw nunibef thirty-eight, an increase of thirty-six in thirty ran. The Romanists claim that •thirty peers of the three realms, and fifty baronets, belong to " the I.'hurch," and that thirty-eight meinbers of parlia- • went, and nineteen chaplains to the forces are of the same belief. The New Prelates.—The Bishop of London ;Tait) was enthroned, Feb. 4th, as Archbishop of cnnterbury, and the new Bishop of London has :,i-o been invested with his insignia of office. The latter speaks out strongly in denunciationof . t Romanizers , and Father Ignatius seems to have taken the hint, for he has left the metropolis and _one to Norwich to re-open his Benedictine Monas tery. Among Bishop. Tait's last acts was his inhi lotion of Ignatius (Mr. Lyne) from preaching in the churches of his diocese, for having threatened to excommunicate a young lady for breaking her vow of obedience." He tried preaching in a pula 7 lie hall for a while, but it did not pay. Ildhce his ;a.it move. THE CONTINENT. "The Evangelical Society of France" is a Home Missiouary.Society, supported. by the tines tuldished Protestant churches. .It employs Evan lists and other agents to labor among dispersed Protestants, and the surrounding Romanists. For ..otne time past it has been languiehingfor want of popular interest in its operations, and readiness to Qintribute to them. To meet tate state of thinge,it Las been reorganized on a more American basis, fhe Board of Directors are to be elected annually , y the vote of the members, and any one who con zibutes $5 a year is to be considered a member. l'he labors of the Society's agents have led. to the organization of quite a number of new congrega tions in various neglected quarters. "The Free Churches" of France are working ;1 great change in public sentiment, in the way of,' preparing for the ultimate separation of Chuich and State, especially among the, Protestants, who' ,ee doctrines the most contradictory openly taught within the same Reformed Church ; the rightnT ..litirch discipline totally set aside ; rationalists sup= . ported in their places by governmental stipend,. when the. people would let them starVe. A new religious periodical entitled The Free Church, , is pub ,. tehed at Nice by the Rev. Leon Pilatte,.who re ,'ently visited the United States. The free congre: '.ations are receiving numerous 'adherents. - Five hundred citizens of. Tours recently petitioned -the Senate that the Church may be separated from the State, and that the pastors should receive no eatery train the public treasury. They add that they can not conscientiously contribute out of their pockets for the support of rationalist clergymen, Who preach doctrines opposed to their own beliefs.. The Wesleyan also are advancing with pertinacibus activity, and have recently opened a fine church in Strasburg, after great opposition from the Lutheran , pastors of the place. Current FrenchNews.—Grattan Guinnessandbis wife, who have long been faithfulco-laborers among the degraded 'pan of England Anil Ireland, are now' at work in Paris, in bringing the Word.of Life to the same class. The Therres chapel (Meth.) 'is nearly filled with these people, who come from cu riosity, and come again from a newly awakened sense of their need, and are addressed ,with the sim plest directness by the Guinesses and other breth ren.—The Y. M. C. A. of Nimes (a. headquarters at once of the , Army and of 'Protestantism) , have begun a work among the soldiers, lire that of our Christian Commission_, throwing open their rooms for their use, to which the men flock to write, read, and sing. The services of colporteurs and Bible women are also employed.—At Arbois, in the Jura, and in Alsace—where the Lutherans are numerous and indifferent—there is special interest at present, and the Word of God is read with eager interest.— The fruits of the Special efforts made' &trig the bolding of the Exposition in Paris, are not all reaped yet, and political distrust in Rome, with its anti-national views and instincts, and its mighty organizations for education-and police, seems to be on the increase. The Protestant pastors are grow ing lesstsqueamishss to the - use of lectures in pub-, lie halls, arkLptbeit unnsuai waykof phblishing the' t ruth. They seem to begin to feel sofne godly jefil- 1 ousy in that Christians of other lands treat their country so much as a field for Foreign Missions iu charge of no competent br'efficient national 'church. —Prof, Monod has 'beerklientissed •frotri the'-'charge of the Student's Ilifhle "Montattham• a govern mental position: - The Plata .Depaiirtient orPtfb lie Placation emplOyViti the serVide of the State the system of evionagOiiiiied by,the-Jeaults,'and Prof. M. did not confOr& 'course' tcr Minh tfn manly practices. He ifaalli,:tlie,'Plee 'a. *al hae. —A Roman Catholic writer:aseer t t l at schools are not confined `to, Pro t tka4tA til es. In the. Catholic churches Of 'gams, mdll i opeS.the children are taught the great doctrines of religion and the Church more thoroughly than aNT:OI our sects. Religion in Switzerland.—The of the Clanton de Vaud, not darinipto prg i scr,ijoe the Gospel openly, are manifesting their Fothility by '' , eir petty annoyance of the members of the Free THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1869. Churches, one of whose members has been debarred rom attendance on the Public Normal school the Canton of Geneva the Evangelicals have long been laboring under the cross fire of Romanism and Rationalism, but Gasparin and Neville uphold the good cause with eloquence and success, fighting with both hands. They have been successful (with the unexpected aid of (Le Journal de Genive) in awa kening so much respect for the Sabbath that a goodly number of retail stores and workshops are closed on that day, and the employees of the post office are mostly released from labor. The legisla tive chamber of the Canton votes that without re cognizing the authority of the Sabbath, public busi ness be suspended and public worship protected from disturbances on certain '‘ farial days" This is acceptable to most of t , e Evangelicals as it releases Protestants from the observance of Romish holiday s, but others dread it as a step to new license, in that it repeals sundry old Sabbath laws which have long been a dead letter.—ln -the . Canton von Zurich the Reformed Synod has adopted a new liturgy, which contains two forms of prayer; one for evangelical pastors, the other , for the use of those who hav,e embraced the doctrines of what the Synod is pleased to call the .Modern spirit. From this follOws.a lit urgy with two faces or characters, entirely differing: Every pastor has the, right to use the forth best suit ed to his own tendencies. The evangelical minister can read,the,liturgy which confesses the divine na ture of Ohrist, his expiatory sacrifice and resurree tion; while the so-called modern preacher, can use the rationalistic formula, which allows homage to the religious genius of Jesus, but nothing more I In the Canton von .Berne a convention of Free-think ing Churchmen, presided over by Rev. Herr Lang haus, votes to found a Society "to continue the Re formation by emancipating the Church:from Rom ish and irrational doctrines," and by secularizing education. They will give lectures, and hold meet ings for worshiji.—ln- the, Cdnion-diNe7ufakatek.EY6- - totantilim big been `fighting and Ra:-' tionalism for many,years,,but wort quietly than at Geneva. A young. Rationalist Professor—Hr. Buis son—has been "scattering firebrands, arrows and death." He inveigled the general public into corn ing to hear his lecture on Educational Reform, and.. gave them instead a tirade against the Bible as a text-book whickinjured both the and:moral growth of the pupil. The Protestants have replied in lectures midpatnphlets which have fityy_vindi cated theWordlof GoiValid gained the ear lOf the people as never before. Prof. Buisson invoked aid from Paris, but the only lecturer who came was hissed down by his indignant auditory. Protesttint Worship in Spain.—The services so auspiciously begun in January, have been con tinued by Senors Ruet and Carrasco, and the at tendance has outgrown the capacity of the room secured, so that the committee are •looking about for a more spacious ball. Rioh and poor, men and women, priests and laity, have come to hear this doctrine, which, for centuries, has been " every where [in Spain] spoken against," and all the de nunciations of the priests and..their, orgaqs, have only served to adverttee the Protestant preachers the more widely. Ile most exemplary decorum characterizes the audiences, in this respect utterly unlike the Romish churches.of Romisti countries. The editoiof one paper, the Igualedad, came to hear for himself, and, in his next issue, spoke highly of the movement, and warned the priests that the Re form of the Church was, the only weapon by which Prixestantism could be successfully Combatted. An eminent ecclesiastic sent several persona to spy' out what.was done, and all brought back wor&that Christ Wee preached-in all simplicity/whereirpOn he privately wrote, assuring the Protestants of his, sympathy with their proceedings. as he hoped that these would force the Church to reform herself. The Alcalde, when a disturbance was threatened, proclaimed his purpose to protect freedom of wor ship: ' , and detailed a squad of his police • for the purpose.— In Cordova an Englishman has preaching in his own house, which is throng ed to its utmost capacity, and from, Ali cante comes an appeal that a Christian pas tor be sent thither. In Pall'adorq Senor Carrasco issued an address to the People, rebutting the state ments.of the priests, and laying dowh the outlines of PrOtestant doctrine., Ten thoutsand,copies ,have, been circulated here, and it has been., reprinted, in other parts of Spain ;,:making such, a ; stir that. the . Archbishop of Valladolid issued a pastoral letter to " his flock" on the subject. A reply to this has been prepared and. will be published., The Bible in. Spain.—T he Wcird of God and other Protestant books are being sown in Mad rid, not by gift but by sale: One English agent sells about 500 portions of the Seripturee per day, and on one occasion, sold I,ooo , copies of St. Johnie Gospel in tWo hbure, an exercise oe ihe muscles as wifil .threpirif. On the day 'of tie op'ening, of the C4te..v," he, with one or two others, who, volunteered to llelpz him, sold in seven hours 3,000 copies of the Gospels and 2,000 other portioniiilof Scripture, on_ a leading street. Complete Bibles are not to be had, all that there werecin hand having been sold. In Burgos, since the Governor's assassination, two laborers spent several days selling books and tracts and, Bibles, and hoiding.prayer meetings, :The r'itficer of the bought a "supply for hie rain, and the Colonel of a cavalry,regiment gave them, by written order, fre,e access to his command.. Two agents, o'ne - th f i owner of a Stall On the lading stie l et, the other an intelligent R. R. employee, were se- . cured to continue the work.—ln Leon a stronghold or the Jesuits, a Spaniard has founded and is• con ducting a- newspaper on Protestant principles, and has a supply of Bibles and tracts for sale. • At Pa lencia, honored as a place of Protestant martyrdom three centuries ago, a friend of the cause has become an agent in this work of distribution.'ln Seville, Senor Alonzo is preaching to audiences of ten to fifteen hundred, which Meet under ttie, name of clubs in abandoned Romish churches. Everywhere the people are eager for the word of truth; and they need it even more than they want it. One difficulty in the way is the prohibition of the importation of Spanish books printed abroad. The promise made since the•Revalutio&to admit Bibles has not 'been kept. Tbe agents of the„Ameripan and For eign Christian Union have started a newspaper to meet this want, and as labor and paper are cheap an indigenious Protestant literature - willspeedily b,e obtained. • „ , Religions Liberty in Spain. :---There has beent formed, at Madrid, with the Marquis of.Vilatna,.as, President, and others high in rank as chief officers, a "Society to protect and defend the . United Catho lic Church in Spain." ' Ii; declares its first object' to be,.to Obtain` the names' of the millions of Spain, (without distinction of age or sex,) to the following • , "We, the subscribers, pray the Constitutional Cortez to piss, a deqree t , that the United, True, Ro man, ApoStefib, Catholle continue, and tbrever be, the religion *tale Spanish. Nation; excluding all other worship, and,that , the enjoyment of all the rights, privileges, and prerogatives, ,of the Church, according to thelaw ot God, andall the force of the holylaws of said'Olii iich, be perpetu ally guaranteed. ' • ' "-• Thie petition is to be put in circulationby „ the parish:priests in every parish in the kingdom; all the names:are to be Olnimper of.nniformisizei snick ri)en all are received at the Central office, will bound in one or more volumes. Recent telegrams sh how unlikely the Society is to accomplish ita obj, un less by means of a bloody ckunterAeyolopop. A majority of the Committee of the Cortes appointed to draft a new constitution, reported ett Wednesday March atth, in favor Oa septgationofAure,hifrom State, while a minority report advocated the Roman Catholic as the State creed, with toleration towards all other religious professions. The liberty of the press and the right of public meeting w ill b e guaranteed. The Union of the North German Churches. — Dr. Hengstenberg's annual speech from the throne (thron-rede as some one nicknamed it) in his _Evan geli.sche-Kirehenzeitung, contains an agreeable surprise for the friends of Union. Speaking for the High (though not for the highest) Lutherans, he expr.:s ses his desire for the continued existence of the Na- tional United (Lutheran and Reformed) Church of Prussia ; and hopes that the Lutherans of the entire Confederation may be able to join it. To this end, however, he demands that the itio in parties, or sep arate vote of the ministry of each body on all ques tions relating to the Church's creed be established as the rule in all Synods of the United Church. He complains, however, that. Herr Mishler, the Prus sian Minister of Public Worship and Education, had four times censured the Kirchenzeitung during the past year for its course. The Union party are , less in need of such doubtful means of defence In that they appear to everywhere hold their own. Two Swabians (i. e. South Germane) are their leaders, the famous theologian Dr. Dorner, and the busy Ober-Kirchen-rade or Chief Superintendent, Dr:Hoff man. The United Church is especially strong and vigorous in the Provinces of Rhenish Prussia, where Romanism has its seat of power, and where - Thigh Lutheranism is as rare as Rationalism. The Edlieational-Questiot continues to .4e. tifie greit issue between Protestantismand Bonianiseta the Continent. Rome has lost her hold on the na tionwand would fain restore it through the schools. Hence the Jesuit order, created to restore her pres tige and preponderance in Europe; has especially devoted itself to edn9ation. 'Hence they denounce all secular' and United education as Atheism or in differentism, and will agree to nothing less than the . entire control 9f the public school. by the religious orders. The Archbishop of Cologne denoutices mixed schools and forbids " his flock " to•send their children to them. The Archbishop of Prague, whose jurisdiction extends into Prussia, has begun a contest with, the Hungarian Diet on the same is sue. The Bishop of Paderborn (N. Germany) claiins that'aH the Protestants, of his diocese are of his spiritual charge, .., that to him, therefore, belongs : their education. The Kayor of Constance, in ,Baden, has been excommunicated ostensibly for his 'dip bedience t:O the Holy See, but ieally for his express- ed preference •for the non;sectarian system;:. Ritticinalism is, not in favor .with the POwere tiat: be except in .the Grand Duchy. et. Ba den, where the Ministry have ; persisted in keeping Dr. Sche,tikel,and PrOf„Ximitschli in their The General Synod of the dEurch in Baden hail gone so far'es to vote. that all opinions, are to be equally tolerated within the Church, but the Uov ernment hesitates to sanction =the vote. :For, this the organs cif the " ProteVtant Union" cenkire:th'e Ministry as in sympathy with "Prussian Pietisin.P The refusal 'to appoint an incompetent Rationalist to a chair at Heidelberg is another grievance., Rationalism Onpopular.,A. correspondent of The angregationalia mentions a "noticeable cir cuinstance.,heyond,the. Rhine. =The Uniyerskty of Heidelberg contains , only, torty-five students, not withstanding the.scientific abilities of its faculty, while the University of Halle numbers more than three lAundredmtkeit,ta.. Thp cause of this wide difference. le (isms s to, th 6 fact that at rationalism is dominant; ,while at Halle eiftrigeli.' cal faith is in the ascendant"' The Work in. Italy.—The district of lirali, lying along the ,Sorth shore: of the the Adriatic„ from Venioe Westward to Trieste, vias in the XV'I h. century, almost entirely Protestant: By brutal force and serper.tine cunning• the light 'of thte tiiiith`. was almost extinguished) a few feeble churXekr (seven are :rte,n_tionedj alone remaining scattered he're: and 'th'ere ihrotikti 'the i#lidfle? 'Bat: inkta par, two years colporteurs, base _visited every part of this region, and their' 'sales' of the Bible andother books bave,,beeu very large, and` -great„eagerdess to hear' the truth is evinced, In Udine; the chief city tb s tle East, a mission station ' was established two years ago, and the church now 'numbers some forty methbers2 'Another Evangelist is greatly needed to carry othlre work among.- the 'feeble Evangelical churches, whose members mourn over their want ci(tde )V.ii , , pribe - Cifir ; In Treviso, 'the cl,ief ci e ty i bc theA r eet,,riu r cther young Evan , ge„ ; list ifilaborits4eten pre:aghtp_git . b, an aa . dieiteehorf two huliared or more, and the principal journal but reflects the popular ppinipri in the fri endly , and en couraging way in whieh it speaksiofdils. work. Help 'to procurefor a,time,the;_ustof aconvenifut place of worship is pressingly needed. The field is on the bordefbfigillCltaly arid Austria, :and ,much, good may be done to both countries by its efficient culti 'Verona a church of more than a kin dred meinberilies`been gathered withiti`six or eight months including , many of the educated classes who have long made the place a centre of culture. The vick,l4,6le%liiio rikereased their mission stations from t'',WeVitytt'Wo to twenty six, having now - a:Hear one worker in every principal city of the peninsula, except Rome. The adeeisione , in 1867 were only 1335 in .1868 they were 324 ; and in the Mission Schools there' are '1,°864 pupils. They have eleVen students in the TheologiCal Seminary at Florence. —The forti-eight Corporteuis Of the IsTatioiial Scot tish Biiile-Seeieti , sold in 1868 in WAY; 4,414 Bibles and Testaments for $1,070.25, and 109 ; 1114 booke and tracts for $2,117, a decided advance upon their sales of the previous year, and a ivonderiully large number for a country•in which so small a proportion of the population can read. , The United ,Cnnferenee of Italian Protest ants.--FoaftvAzzi's proposal for the tern:tat:ion ca; a National EvangelicalAlliance,to meet aurin g the sessions' of the 'Ec,uinftlital „Oilmen, has been seized with byinanY.,„- l A:Px:o l vA,Wnat,Cont r mittee has been organized,. and a stirring , address has been issued in advocacy of the proposal. It is hoped that the Christian love and zeal of the church witl i be l incrawd, thkreproael d t,pt• -their di visions be taken away, and united front present ; ed• against adelpticiern . and 'superstition. It is to meet in .May„ at. Florence, where, ,three hundred and, eighty . Years thesame Savonarola was inirneein the public scfuere, in punishment of hie zeal for the refiartnitionof the. Chasch an_d,the Aty. „ _ , Toe Gospel in Poland.—lt is the day of 'small things'at WareaWi'but progress ie made in many respects. The reading . of the 'Scriptures' in the houses of the 7pilopkt .114'welconied - 3 kiyilncreasing numbers.' • The English missionary and his assist ants read in Hebrew,,Polish, and German. Many 'copies of the Bible are purchased, and some given away to.thoSafteli buy..T,Portions of the Testamene are widely diffused. A. Bible4.lass 'in the missionary's house us attended chieflyby Israel ites who nu mbei-SixoilidsiblifidUla iu Witisaiw. = Reforms it :pridkithbOd-kd the Greek Church.are required to :be ;husband of one wife,'; ancl,wappAlte dies,th_e,h,us,band becomes a monk, retiring to a monastery. Hischildren, if he [ has any, barium!. Choose/ their ,a,k , o profession ; 'but must follow: that of:theirfatheli There erect), extensive requirement§ in .regard tb„fitneeit, for i the, sacred o ffi ce, and no gteat inducement'or a,bund ancterriekriCfOr'-iiiipitiilteretie ritter'it is entered - Upon. The wit is,tbittkbg, elergy ri are,a,degradeil set, ignorant and atiipi . d, — to,Okefl'doivir ution, ,not looked by the coinfounity;: characteristic virtue except:am overflowing love for, 'aid -care' or Weir Iwivetu Tb remedy; this - state , of thing theft:llBlin `Gcrierincient 'h'ati'srocittlx resolved to spend more on the education and port of the clergy, and to permit their children to adopt any profession which they may prefer. The Bible House in Constantinople.—lt will be remembered that Mr. Bliss, the American Bible So ciety's commissioner for the Levant, raised *50,000 in this country, two or three years ago, to build a Bible Depository in Constantinople. A suitable site has been obtained, in a commanding situation, and a house is now to be erected, in which all the Pro testant missions and religious operations will find a permanent home ; and it is expected that it will be a common centre for all the Orient. The extent of only the American Bible work may be judged from one recent fact: From June let to October Ist of last year—four months—sixty cases of Bibles, in six different languages—Arabic, Syriac, Old • Slavic and Bulgarian in parallel columns, Modern Slavic and Bulgarian separate, and Armenian—have been forwarded from the Bible House in New York to. Mr. Bliss in Constantinople. Most of these volumes —twelve thousand in' all—are large and costly books, and will be readily sold. Oriental Prelates. .The Coptic Bishop of Cairo, who is Patriarch and Metropolitan of Egypt, visiting the American U. P. Mission at Osiout, did not (it is said) hesitate to confess privately that be was at heart as much a Protestant as any or the Missionaries, but said that he was unwilling to say so publicly. Some of " his flock" are in much the same stage of progressor a little farther on. About a dozen leading men of Osiout, who are not yet ready to wait on the services of the missionar ies, meet: every night, and on Sabbath afternoons, and spend three hours each time in the study 01 the Bible; :under the guidance of a convert of -the mission.—The Armenian Patriarch of Conatanti no'ple,- who: has so distinguished himself as a perse cutormfthe Reforming party -in his own Church, and Who accepted of the Pope's invitation to attend the .Ecumenical: Council, - has "come to grief," probably for this last. trabeaction. A • company 'of prominent ecclesiastics Waited on the Sultan's Vizier to express a desire. for hid deposition front his: high office. 'The -question was referred to the General Synod, who voted 'to depose him. and to 'appoint another ecclesiastic to' administer the af.. lairs of the pdtriarch'ate until a .uccessor - could be elected.. So much for "•Romaniiing."—An Arme ' nista archbishop, who, at the request of the British, penetTrated into Abyssinia; to intercede for the re lease of the 'British prisoners, it now appears, is, with' his; suite, a' prisoner in the hands of some barbarods Afridan tribes of that region, frcim whom he.-ii experiencing Very rough usage..:—An ,Ecit menical Council' of - the' Eastern Church is probably 'soon to meet either`at• Moscow or Constantinople. • , Whether-our Episcopalian- brethren are to be invi -ted this time (as they were not to that at Rome) we are not told. The Natiire , Protestant Churches in Syria are awlikening to a sense or their responsibilities, and, lo4evelOp pative, effort, more fUlly, it was re solveir it'iecent Meeting of the mission, to estab lish" a Theoloii'eal Seminary at Abeih. Three mis-. ,sionaries were detailed as instructors for seven months of the year. . Ibso' IN PRIZES F-OR BOOKS FOIL THE SUNDAY SCHOOL AND CHRISTIAN WORK. VIZ : $4OO FOR THE BEST BOOK, OF LARGE SIZE, FOR.,THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. S3OO_FOK THE.SECOND BOOK OF' THE SAME SIZE .AND GLASS, $250 FOR THE BEST BOOK, OF MEDIUM SIZE, FOR THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. $l5O FOR THE SECOND : BOOK OF THE SAME SIZE AND OLAS ~- $159 FOR THE BEST BOOK, SMAitIN SITE, TO AROUSE THE IMPENITENT. SISOTOR THE BEST BOOK; ALSO TO BE SMALL., GLI/PE7THE - INQBIEK; $250 FISR THE BEST BOOK FOR THE:INSTRUC. The maumi t cAipts for the.,smaller Sunday-school-Book past be. serifßl thoie for the larger Book, by August 14.; those for the other Books, by S it.tiimber ist x l§69. The names of authors to be in sealed e1;e10i443. fill details as to the size of the books, etc., may be haTbiaddressing the Committee's Secre tary, Re‘,Raltit W."Du1105,33-4 Chestnut Streit, Phillidellthia. : --7 SACRAMENTS . OF THE CHURCH. What constitutes a saciaruent. Their Number, Design, Enka. cy, Modo Of' A diiiintistriiiio44A•ii suijeotii: By Rev. S. W. Crittenden . - - 174 pp.ol6nist., cloth, beveled boards:.. .. This bookjie'ait Issue& iebiliary i 2d but . lias already found friends. From an Elder in one of our 'Presbyterian - nbnrches, we have the following commendation of it :--!` I thank you eery much 'for your liiileliook: I beme ilready got half throughlt, and like it very mucli.indeed. The nublieation of it I.y the'Preabyttrian Publication Committee in so hanthome a form will give . it a Barg circulation, apq..l . 7nst much good by instructing our People on theta important ° ° = Rll gSAY,_liEft lAN PUBLIC4II,9N , COMMITTEE, No. 1334 Chestnut Street,. Philadelphia rHAti, -- Caps' -,r j ~,.! • . ..- a i ARO ' . . FUT.NISIIING GOODS. '' . 7r17.. W. C. DARE Wonld,respectfuily(intonnhis friends and the _ public generallc, that Ire bi- , r'retored' to 'his 'new add coinntodiime Store;' Ns': 3:. South 2nd Street. between Market and-Ohestnut Sts., where he is pre. pared u.- supply his rusrpeywwfflrall !belateet and most desire lae etyles of ,• ,, ' l ' ..11A.T8t , AND . CAPS . 4, ' 4 - •. .. •-• .• ••. , . . at redneed prices. A leo.oonts' FURNISHING GOODS, Ladle Furs, Buffalo Robes, Trunks, Valises, Carpet !Bags, dtc:. Vihulesele N.13.-LPartiettlar attention paid to Friends' Hats. , . • - - , W. C. ' DA/E, 35 S. 2nd St., bet. • Market le,Chestnat. WESTON & BROTHER, NERtiIAAT:RILORS, pr. 7 • - ARM, 7rSTABE"-9- tf-. 4 t 4 , "14[0454.PX • : '4ooaor i tan d so sago - SPRING AND SIPSINER GOODS .; , for Eientlenien'a wear, to ;which they:ln - site the attention br their fiThap.L_Lds and the generally 'A superior garment at a reasonable Price. ) EUTISFXOTPIi " aprs-IF. AIRY VIEW ACADEMY, Near the Perryville Station of the Pen tea. it. R JUNIATA COUNTY, PA SIIMMER Se s , ou will commence mt M .NDAY. APPAL Ttke location of this institution is convenient Will accessible the buildings new and commodiona; the surrounding seem ry beautiful nod pictur sane; the tone of morn's in tue cominkuut of IA high order, and the whole adj.eent region is in healthful, as plenty of fresh air, pure water and lofty mount ,ins can make it. The school is deetoted for mak and .1-Imile pup il s, ak d in snc ceabful in operation. The mentor Principal, an we.l as the teach ers of MUM Attie EtAINTMG, bate bad large and very emerge - al e xperience in teaching. The whole •conete and method of inetruetion are thorough, and the goterntoeut tirm and parental. CAM F. KOLBE, Teacher of Instrumental Muqic. Miss A. L. EI,IJIOTT, Teacher of Drawing and Painting, with ether competent instructors. Address, DAVID WILSON, A. M., Principal, A. J. PATTERSON, A. M., Co-Principal, mars-10t POKY ROYAL Poet Office, Penn-a. WYERS' BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS, AT WEST CHESTER, PA. 27 miles by Hail to Philadelphia. The Scholastic Year of 10 . monthe opens September 2d, 1868. Corps of Instructors, full, able, and experienced. Bend for a Catalogue. William F. Wyers, A. IW., Principal and Proprietor Agir No cbarge for Tuition for Clergymen's eons, or for young men preparing for the ministry.. ELMIRA FEMALE COLLEGE UNDER CABE OP THE • SYNOD OP GENEVA. This Is a Christian Home, and a fully chartered and organized College, where young ladies may pursue a most thorough and ex tensive course of study in COLLEGIATE, ECLECTIC, or ACA moue _Departments. TERMS : Whole expense of Tuition including Classics and Modern Lan guages, with board, furiaished room, , light, and fuel, $l5O per half yearly session. Address; REV. A. W. COWLES, D.D , President. junell=tf.. • FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, FREDERICK, , ' Ml) Possessing full Collegiate Power, will commence its TWENTY-SIXTH SCHOLASTIC YEAR. The First Monday in September. Board and Tuition in the English Departments2s9 per acholastio year. For Catalogues, Ac.. address July 25-I " Yr Rev. THOMAS' M. CAIN, A. M., President. GYMNASIUM, Corner'of Ninth and Arch Streets, r o ett liee op Ge en nt L e y men d sndhildre c n, open for the . Winter evening.:person or send for circulnr.• • PROF. L. LEWIS. oct3 6mos. ' ' •• "THE HILL" SELBC? 'FAMILY" BOARDING 'SCHOOL. An English, Classital,' ifi athematical, Scien tific and. Aitistio Institution; FOR YOUNG - MEN AND BOYS ! • At Pottstown, Montgomery county, Pa. Pupils received at any time. ,'For Circalare address, REV. GEO: V. ItIiLLER, A. M. . • REV. DRS.—Meigs, Schaeger. Mann, Krarttla. Seim, Mahlent.k.rg. flutter. Stimk, Conrad, Bonibeige , , Wylie Sterret and Mu. , HONS.—Judge Ludlow. , beonard Myere, M. Russell Thayer, P.e,j. M. Boyer, and .JscubYost. ..ESQRS —James B. Caldweil James L. Claghoru, J.. F. & B. B. Or ,, e, Janice Hamilton, Theo. G. Roues, C. F. Norton, L. L. Houpt. S Gross. Fry, Miller & Derr, Charles Wannemucher, 'James Kent, Santee & Co, John Weis!, etc, . feblti4ut Oakland, Female Institute, 2VORRI'STQWN. PA.. The 'Spring Term of 16 weeks. will. commence March. 23d. :For Circulars address J. c4Aufips RALSTON • , Principal. lEVEIBI.IILE'SETTE,E, Specially adapted' for Churches, Lecture and Sunday School Roptus Adress, W. P. VINILIINGER, Manufacturer of Patent School Desks, ac., COLUMBIA WORKS, Columbia Avenue, below 2nd Street novs-13 4 % ) IMPORTERS, • ' 44 te g 2 47 zracturers &De e 1" ' intz and Red Check: *V2,lx ittsat rah. aeon Tie.atrate a large. marifieCaild well aalibtad Rook at rednothi prices. No: 43 Strawberry greet, /list street weert ' of &beard, PHILADELnIA PHILADELPHIA.