The American Presbyterian. (Philadelphia) 1856-1869, October 07, 1869, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ~~•-Y
ZtliAirat,s
The Reformed Churches.
—The controversy in the
Theological licininary at Danville, Ky.,
has resulted in the resignation of Rev.
Robert J. B r eckenridge, D.D.; as Pro
fessor of Theology. A committee ap
by the lust 0. S. Assembly, is
pointed
attempting to make a thorough reorgani
zation, Drs. Yerkes and West have also
placed their chairs at the disposal of the
Assembly.
—Rev. E. L. Patton,Professor in
Erskine College at Due eat, S. C., has
accepted the Presidency of West Ten-
ncssee College at Jackson, Tenn.
—The failing health of Rev. H. E.
Lippert, has made it necessary for him
to retire from his self-denying labors
among the French Canadians at St. Ann,
111. Mr. Andre Changnon, a member
of the St. Ann Church, has been stirred
up, to take hold of• the work; and al-
though without any literary or classical
qualifications, as required by the Book,
Chicago Presbytery licensed him to preach
the gospel, and assigned him to that field
of labor. His strong, good sense, his
naturally acute and powerful mind, his
impressive deli , Aery, Ilia piety, his knowl
edge of the SoriptureS,-and his clear and
sound views of the doctrines of grace, the
Presbytery believed not only qualified
him for the work to which the Master
seems to have called him, but justified
them in granting him a license, though
it had never been his privilege to darken
the door of a College or a Theological
Seminary.—Corr. of The Presbyterian.
-Rev. Charles B. Smyth has been in
stalled pastor of East 11th Street U. P.
church in New York. This congrega-
tion is apparently in a much better con•
dition at present than it has been for
years past.
—At the meeting of the U. P. Pres
bytery of Alleghany, Rev.. W. P. Shaw
was received on certificate from the
Northern Presbytery of the R. P. Church.
—Rev. Loren Thayer, for twenty years
pastor of the Presbyterian Church in
Windham, N. 11., died recently. Mr.
Thayer's first and only settlement was at
Windham, where he was ordained Nov.
sth, 1845.
—Rev. D. Hall, of Mansfield, Ohio,
has received a unanimous call for the new
Second church of Altoona, Pa., at a salary
of $2,500, with a parsonage.
—Rev. S. H. Thompson has accepted
the call to the Fourth church of Pitts
burg.
—Rev. G. J. Porter has left Slating.
ton, Pa., to go to Charleston, S. C.
—Rev. Leighton W. Eckard and his
wife, left Philadelphia September 21st, by
railroad for San Francisco. They expect to
sail Oct. 4th, to China. They are under ap
pointment by the board of Foreign Mis
sions, to be stationed in the Province of
Shantung, in the north of China. Their
ultimate destination is the city of Tung
chow.
Ohurehea.—The church recently or
ganized under the ministerial labors of
Rev. S. Hair, at Plato, 111., was recently
received under the care of the Chicago
Presbytery.- By request, leave was
granted to the South church of Chicago,
of which the Rev. W. W. Harsha was
recently pastor, to unite with the 28th
street Church, a measure deemed neces
sary to strengthen the things that remain
and are ready to die in both churches.
The Occident of San Francisco, says :
Tho U. P. Church has selected a lot on
Mason, between Ellis and Eddy streets ;
and a design for a new house of worship
has been adopted. It has not been decided
how soon work will be commenced; but
from the promptitude and energy ordina
rily displayed by this congregation, there
is every reason to suppose that the house
will be completed before next Spring.
—A petition from Fall Creek, Ohio,
"Congregation for a certificate of good
standing in the U. P. Church, with a view
to a change of their ecclesiastical relations
was granted at the meeting of the Chilli
cothe Presbytery. It is understood that
they will unite with the Presbyterian
Church, 0. S. The reason assigned is
that such a move is necessary to _their
very existence as a congregation, being
few in numbers, and weak in resources.
—The new church in Pittsburg, lo
cated in 8,-.llfield, Fifth avenue, con
tains in its rear wing a lecture room
and infant school, communicating by
sliding-doors. The dimensions of the
church are 63 by 38 feet, and the lec
ture and infant school rooms are 56 by
26 feet. The cost of the building and
furniture is over $24,000.
—The twelfth anniversary of the N.
Y. Fulton street noon day prayer-meet
ing was observed Sept. 23d. Drs. De
Witt and McNair presided, and addresses
were made by Dr. Anderson, Baptist,
Rev. Mr. Sanford; <Methodist ; Dr.
Irenreus Prime, ,Presbyterian, and Dr.
Schenck, Episcopalian. Dr. De Witt
was pttstor of the Old North Dutch
Church, where the services were held,
forty-two years, and Dr. McNair holds
that position at present.
—The city of Troy is soon to have a
ninth Pres. Church. It will be the out
growth of a mission Sabbath school, and
chapel of the . Fifth street dhurch in that
city.
Educational. —
A letter dated Sept.
27th says : " Las% week Wooster Univer
sity received a noble subscription of
Twenty-five Thousand Dollars, for the
endowment of a Professorship, from a
gentleman living in the 'bounds of the
Presbytery of. Columbus. This, with
other amounts received this month, a
little more than makes up the Two Han
dred and Fifty Thousand Dollars which
were pledged to be secured before the
first of October, 1869."
—ln the U. P. Theological Seminary,
at Monmouth 111., there are eighteen
students, and more are expected. There
is also a large attendance of new students
in the College and Academy. These in
stitutions bid fair to have a larger num
ber of students than during any former
year.
—The Junior Class in Union Theolo
gical Seminary at _Hampden Sidney, Va.,
consists of sixteen, which makes it next
to the largest class since the founding of
the Institution. The whole number in
attendance now is thirty-two, to which it
is probable some additions will be made.
—Hanover, Ind., College has opened
with an accessbn of sixty new students,
and the attendance is the largest in
eighteen years. The Faculty is able and
the instruction ample. The financial
condition is healthy and improving, al
though the Treasury, as is usual with
colleges that have served the Church
most faithfully, and therefore deserved
much, is not overflowing. This pioneer
Presbyterian College of the Ohio Valley
has become now the pioneer in furnish
ing Instruction Free to young men of
good character, of all sects, parties, arid
nations.
Presbyterial—LoPnsport 0. S. Pres
bytery, after a unanimous vote on Re
union, appointed a committee to conifer
with a similar one from the New School
Presbytery, if appointed by them, in re
lation to consolidating churches. They
expect to thus arrange in six, and per
haps nine fields.
—Fairfield (0. S.) Presbytery, after
adopting the overture by a vote 26 to 3.
(elders), resolved : " While the Presby
tery approves the Basis of Re-union
sent down from the General Assembly,
we neither affirm nor deny anything in
said overture, except what is contained
in the question which we answer cate-.
gorically : and that so far as in us lies,
we will labor to promote a union in fact,
should one be consummated."
Other Denomitations.
Ciongtegationalisti—The Massachu
setts churches, 504 in number, have
added eleven and lost four since Janu
ary Ist, 1868. They employ 429 pas
tors, and have 172 ministers W. C. in
their field. The membership is 80,057,
two-thirds women. In 1868, 5;467
were added, and the net gain was about
1,800. The Sabbath-scools contain
93,814 children.
—The American Home Missionary
Society has sixty dependent churches
and over 1,900 missionary districts in
its charge. In these seventy four
churches have been organized, and sixty
have become self-supporting within a
year;, fifty-eight houses of worship have
been buikand eighty-five candidates for
the ministry secured. Of the 972 mis
sionaries employed, 564 are in our
Western States and territories.
—Rev. Hiram Mead leaves the Olive
street church of Nashua, N. H. for the
chair of Homiletics at'Oberlin: A house
of worship and a parsonage commemor
ate his pastorate at Nashua.
—The Rev. Dr. J. E. Rankin ac
cepted the call to the First church of
Washington, and has begun work by
the reception of sixteen new members—
six of them on profession. One is a
German deist, a university graduate,
who has traveled round the world, and
who dates his conversion from the Y. M.
C. A. meetings in Washington. He
proposes to go to China as a partial mis
sionary.
—Dr. Boynton's (Second) church
meets in the Y. M. C. A. Hall. His
opening sermon reviewed the past, and
he characterized General Howard's ex
parte council as an ecclesiastical imper
tinence. That of which Dr. Thompson
was moderator and Dr. Quint scribe
[and of which every member was se
lected by himself], gave; in his 'opinion,
a despotic decision upon matters 'on`
which its advice was neither asked nor
desired. He was still opposed to negroes
coming to white men's churches ; but
any charge against his abolitionism, came
with a bad grace from persons who were
never known as abolitionists, till aboli
tionism had become popular, and who
had grown rich in advocating the rights
of the negroes.
--Rev. F. A. Armstrong, for years a
home missionary laborer in Illinois and
Missouri, is prospecting in Tennessee,
with the view and hope of establishing
a line of Cong. churches in that State.
He is a native of Tennessee—of the
same vicinity where David'Nelson and
Samuel A. Rhea were born and reared.
—The churches of Illinois—accord
ing to the minutes of the General Asso
ciation, the reports in which, The Ad
vance says - are "of the imperfect sort
too common with Church officers"—
number 235. These show a membership
of 17,426—an increase during the year
of 947, with 24,289 children in Sunday
school. Fifty-three churches are unsup
plied with regular preaching. Very
many fail to report their benevolent con
tributions, so that the total of $348,563-
.20 really gives no accurate idea of the
amounts actually raised.
—The committee appointed by the
Ohio General Conference at its last
meeting to correspond with different ec
clesiastical bodies with reference to the
question of the better observance pf the
Sabbath, has issued a circular letter in the
hope that it may lead the churches to pro.
test more definitely against the desecration
of the Sabbath ; and more especially to
influence the railroad companies who
disregard the day, and in behalf of their
employs thus deprived of its privileges.
.The Conference protested against the
PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1569.
action of the railroad companies, and
appointed a committee to bring this
protest before the several boards of rail
road directors whose trains traverse the
State.
Episcopaliani—Bishop Huntingdon,
of Central New York, has organized his
diocese into six missionary districts,
with two missionaries for each.
—The Episcopalians are manifesting
wisdom by busily pushing home mis
sionary enterprises along the line of the
Pacific Railroad. They conclude that
this is the time to make an impression if
a religious character is to be given to
these new towns.
—The Bishop of Connecticut instructs
The Churchman, to omit from its dio
cesan news all compliments to himself
or his services. "If they are deserved,
they are needless; if they are not de
served, they are so many falsehoods.
In either case, they are out of place."
—The corner-stone of a college build
ing was laid at Golden City., Colorado,
the 23d. ult., by Bishop ; Randall.. The
site is about a- mile out of the town, on
a ,high elevation, 'commanding a fine
view of mountain and .valley, which
form the magnificent scenery of this lo
cality. Ten acres of land have been
deeded to the Bishop for the purpose of
this school, by a gentleman residing in
the vicinity. The building is to' . be of
brick, and will be 83 by 33 feet, having
three stories.
—The Pittsburg diocese has 3,012
communicants, 3,040 Sunday-school
scholars, raises for parochial uses, $77,-
998, and for benevolence, $20,457. It
has 47 minister's and 49'parishes.
—A. movement is on Mt to organize
a colored church in Allegheny city, by
the Rev. B. T. Brooke, rector of Christ
church.
—Bishop Lee; of lowa, takes decided
ground in favor of moderate changes in
the prayer-book, for the benefit of those
whose consciences are troubled by cer
tain expressions.
—The Wisconsin Dioceie" has' 5,580
communicants, 4,343 Sunday school pu
pils, and raises for parochial uses, $90,.
777, and for benevolent purposes, $15,-
9,19. It has fifty-eight parishes, twenty
two mission stations, and seventy clergy
men.
—"Rev. Dr. Hoyt, in Dakota terri
tory, has collected $2,500 towards the
establishment' of a• first-class school- at
Yankton. The school is in operation,
and is the only institution of the ,kind in
the whole territory. Dakota Hall, be
sides being a high-bchool under Church
care, is also a centre for Church work,
supplying reading and services for a cir
cuit of two hundred miles, a space cover
ing every single town and village in the
whole territory." --Gospel Messenger.
—At a recent marriage at a Ritualis
tic church at the East End of London
the service lasted exactly two hours 1
This included a sermon and the celebra
tion of the Holy Communion.
—The Spare Hour of San
Baptist.
Francisco says :
" The Baptists of North Carolina,
practising free communion, are in a
prosperous condition. Tee churches at
Hookerton and Little Creek, and at
Hook- Swamp, in Wayne county, are en
joying revivals of religion, and have
lately received 70 converts. " The
Spare Hour also states that in another
portion of the South; at the city of Fort
Smith, Arkansas, a New Baptist church,
which welcomes all evangelical Chris
tians to the Lord's table, was organized
the first Sunday in June, under favors.
ble auspices. The pastor, Rev. M.
Pelly, writes that the exclusion of a
member in the old chructi for commu
nion with his wife in a Methodist
church, set in motion the enterprise of
establishing a church which should not
debar Christians from the Lord's table.
He states that further separations will
take place in the churches of the South
upon the communion issue, and that the
days of Old Landmarkism, which does
not rec 'gnizo a pedobaptist as a Chris
tian at the table or in the pulpit, are
numbered.
—Farewell services relative to the de
parture of,. Rev. Win. Hague, D.
for Chicago, where he is to be a profes
sor in the Theological Seminary, were
held Sept. 23rd, in the Shawinut Ave
nue Church of Boston. A handsome
purse of money was presented to him.
—The Willamette (Oregon) Associa
tion, at its twenty-first anniversary re
ports a depffirable condition of barren
ness The accessions were, by baptism,
1; by letter, 1; by experience, 7; to
tal, 9.—Decrease, by letter, 19 ; by ex
obision, 9 ; by death, 3; total 31. Net
loss, 22. Two new Churches were ad
mitted to membership,• making the en
tire number 10, , with an aggregate mem
bership of 322. There are seven or
dained ministers in the association, and
two licentiates.
—The Northumberland Association,
an enterprising and prosperous body
occupies the central portion of this.
State. It covers, in whole or in part,
eight counties, and presents an attractive
and interesting field for effective mis
sionary labor. At the 49th annual ses
sion, there were reported 292 baptisms
and a total membership of . 2,762, com
prised in 35 Churches. Three churches,
the Second in Williamsport, the First
German in Williamsport, and the Win
field, in Union Co., were received into
fellowship.
—Rochester Seminary begins the year
with 16 Seniors, 12 Middlers and 10
Juniors. Of this number 32 are gradu
ates' of collegeS, 'arta all but three._ take
the'regular course. In. the German De
pirtment of the Seminary' here are 12
students, making 50 in Yall who are ciEi
the ground. Trevor Hall, the new dor
mitory building, besides affording ample
accommodation for the students, gives
the lecture rooms, library and chapel a
temporarary home.
—The Southern Seminary, at Green
ville, S. C., has 47 students this year,
as compared with 2a last year.
—A church in Chicago, Rev. E. S.
Goodspeed, pastor, has grown from a
membership of two hundred to two
thousand, and has the largest Sunday
school in that city. Its contributions
for missionary and benevolent purposes
range from
thirty to fifty thousand dol
lars per annum.
—The Home Mission Board are ask
ing
the . churches for at least seventy five
thousand dollars this year, for the pur
pose of training young , colored men
among them, for the South, for preach
era, teacheri and leaders.
Moravian ,-- The statistics just pub
lished show 14,871 c omm u n ic an ts, o f
whom 4,895 are in Germany, 3,208 in
Great Britain, and 6,767 in. North
America. The communicants in mis
sion fields are not counted in, but there
are 19,123 persons in their foreign mis
sion congregations, ministered to by 305
missionaries,.which gives an average of
one foreign missionary to every forty
nine members at home.
—George Frederic Bahnifon, a Bishop
of this Church, died at Salem, on Satur
day, the 11th ult.; in the sixty-fourth
yearof his age.
Lutheran—The statistics of the Gen
eral Synod (Low church) are as follows :
Ministers 591. Congregations 997.
Infant. Baptisms 7,727. Adult : Bap
tisms 1,831. Confirmations 6,409. Ad
mitted by Ceitificate 3,074. Communi
cants 91,720. Lutheran Sunday schools
556. Union, 485. Teachers 9,613.
Scholars 71,82. Prayer Meetings 723:
Synodical Ilreasury $2,615. Benefi
ciary Education $6,992. Home Mis
sions $14,205! Foreign MissionS $3,920.
Local Objects.s2B2;6o7. General Be
nevolence 829,428. Jubilee Onjects
26,278.
—The kirchenfreund protests against
Du. M. L. RricevEß's accepting the call
to Muhlenberg College, Allentown, and
advises Dij. SicEvart to remain with
the General Synod's College at Gettys
burg, becaise the Low Church Luther
aus need the influence of so conservative
a spirit there. The Lutheran says :
"Dr. STCEVER'S' reputation as an able and
successful !instructor, and as a geJial
gentleman,is known throughout the en
tire land, and his acceptance of the posi
tion will give additional strength to the
rising college of our church."
—The Danes and Norwegians who
withdrew from the Augustana Synod,
now composed principally, of Swedes,
haTe laid the fou‘dation of .a new liter
ary and" theological institution at Mar
shall, / Wis. A three-story college build
ing, nearly new, 67 by 34, has been
purphased for 83,700.. Prof. A. Wenans
has been ,elected Prisident. A theo
logical department is to be : connected
with it, in, which young men are to, be
prepared tb preach both in the Scandi
navian' and English\ languages. From
April Ist to August 13th, there arrived
aeChicago, 17,331 Swedes, 12,010 Nor
wegians, and 2,902 Danes, 32,243 in all.
REMOVAL.
J. & F. CADMUS'
NEW STORE,
No. 918 MARKET STREET,
LATE OF
Eighth and Matket Streets, Philadelphia.
WE would , respectfully announce that we have RE.
MOVED to the space us store. 914 Market street, where
we will have every facility toucan/medal.° our frknde
and patrons with every variety of
Boots, Shoes, Trunks, Sags. Saeks,&e.
Every arttcle can be obtained usually found in a
first-ilass Boot and Shoe Store.
'Guns Boots, Over-Shoes, .in a large variety
sugfr en hand.
W Blan i l i c L ß M oolr. C :an ß uf iS a in ct lr urer,
STATIONER AND PRINTER,
127 South Third Street.
LEDGERS,
CASH BOOKS,
DAY BOOKS,
JOURNALS, &e.
Fine Letter and Note Paper, Ike., Gold Pens, Pocket
Books, Pen Knives, kc., at reasonable prices (attgo-61a
GEO. WOODS & CO.'S
Parlor and Vestry Organs.
New Combinations.
New Octave Coupler.
New Vox littmonna.
. .
New Independent Solo Stop.
New Sob Bass.
Organs very superior in tone, design, and &deb, at
prices moderate and satieactory.
Somethiug new, and every worthy of your attentioh.
Address, GE O. WOODS er CO., Or,
DO4,llrE, CI7B.IIAVN6 If SMITH,
423 Broome St., New ork.
ELLS.—Chureh, School:House, sae-
G. torn Farm, Ate. Pure toned and do not
break. Width/ the means of the poorest church or
the poorest country school, and every Farmer. Weight
45 lire. to 'MO lbs. W. S. & J.ll. MERRIAM,
july22 tf Freiericktown, Ohio.
HOME
Life Insurance Co.,
MUTUAL.
254 Broadway, New York.
ASSETS, $2,000,000. Assured Members, 10,000
ADVANTAGES OF THE HOME.
Its Organization is strictly first class, interior to no
other Comp:um .
It is a Mutual Company, all the net profits go to the
aa.ured.
Its Assets are kept most securely invested, and are as
large in proportion to its liabilities as any other Coot-
Riuy.
It declares and pays dividends to its policy holders
annually on ali policies that at the dividend period
(May let), have run one year. Each &loured member
gets his full share of the surplus earnings of the Com
pany, based exacily on his contribution thereto.
Ii has declared and paid a dividend every year since
fee organization.
Its members have the choice of both the cash and loan
systems,—they may seep one-third the prendutu in
their hands as long as the Policy exists, or they may
pay all cash at rates very little above those of the non
participating Companies and receive all the darplus
which their Policies earn.
Hs Members who pay th• Ir premiums wholly'in cash
may receive their dividends in cash, or it may apply to
increase the amount of Assurance on the lite, provided
the party at the time is in good health. •
Its Po/ides are all non-forfeiting: i. e., its members
will under any circumstances, get all the insurance that
they pay for.
. .
ITS'PuLIOY-HOLDERS ARE FREE TO RESIDE OR
TRAVEL IN ANY PART OW THE WORLD WITHOUT
SPECIAL, PERMIT OR EXTRA CHARGE.
It affords every lacility iu making proofs in case of
death, and is prompt in the payment of its looses.
It makes a very liberal
. discuunt from its table-rates
to all ministers of the Gospel.
OFFICERS.
WALTatt 8 GRIPPITII, President.
GEORGE O. RIPLEY, aseretary.
L H. FROTHINGIIAM, T. eaiarer.
WILLIAM J. GJFEIIB, Actuary.
GENERAL AGENTS,
DOUGHTY & finusin„ 25 Third Bt., Cincinnati.
E. H. KFLLOGII, Milwaukee.
L. W. Cass, Hannibal, Mo.
8... K. ESLER, Philadelphia.
PHILIP PoND, New Haven.
N. O. SPALDING, Albany.
-JOHN SHEPLEY, Boston.
Good local or soliciting .Agents wanted on liberal
terms.
Address the General Agents or the Home Office.
Pamphlets and all raquirvd information will
by mail on request.
AMERICAN
0/ • ,7
e e affiageeega ' wehax,
• OF PHILADELPHIA.
S. E. Corner Fourth and Walnut Streets.
Organized, - - - - 1850.
Income, 1868, - - $1,118,530 20.
An Old Company—nearly 20 years
A Sound Company—Assets, $2,000,000 I
A Safe Company—Never lest a dollar of Investment
An Enterprising Company—Busmess largely in
creased annually.
A Paying Company-50 percent. paid to Mutual pol•
icy-holders.
INSURE IN THE
American
JOHN S. WILSON; ALEX, WHILLDIN,
Sec. and Trwis. President.
july29-ly
CHARTER 1829 PERPETUAL
FRANKLIN
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
OF
PHILADELPHIA.
OFFICE-435 and 437 Chestnut St.
Assets on;an. 1,1869 . $2,677,372 13
Capital,
Accrued Surplus, -
Premium, - -
Unsetled Claims,
$23,788 12. $360.000!
Losses paid since'lB29, over
$5,500,000.
Perpetual and Temporary Policies on Libera
Terms.
The Company also issues policiei upon
the Rents of all kinds of Buildings,
Ground Rents and Mortgages.
ICTORS.
I
Alfred G. Baker, Alfred Finer,
Samuel Grant, Thomas Sparks,
Geo. W. Richards, William S. Grant,
Isaac Lea, I
Thomas S. Ellis,
George Fales, Gnstavus S. Benson
ALFRED G. SAKES, Preside:it.
GEO. FALES. Vice President.
JAS. W. McALLIST ES, Secretary.
THEODORE M. REGER, Assistant Secretary
Mar. 2+5--Dec. 80
STRICT ECONOMY IN MANAGEMENT
PROVIDENT LIFE & TRUST
COMPANY.
OF PILEGADELPEEL9I..
OFFICE It o. Ili S. FOURTH STREET
Organized to extend the benefits of Life Inisarance among
members ot, the Society of Friends: AU good risks, o
whatever denomination solicited. .
President,
SAMUEL R. SHIPLEY,
Vice President, Actuary,
WM. O. LONGSTRETE. ROWLAND PARRY.
Insurance effected upon all the approved plane at the
lowest cost. No risks on doubtful or unsound lives
taken. Funds invested in first-class securities. Economy
practiced in all the branches of the busineas. The advan
MOS are equal to those of any company in the United
States. , june4 ly
'GYMNASIUM
Car. Ninth and Arch-streets,
FOR Ladies, Gentlemen and Children , . open for the
`Summer course. Open day and evening. Call in
person send for circular.
• Lemons In Sparring and Fencing. •
PROF. L. LEWIS.
mai23-6m
ESTEY'S
COTTAGE ORGANS
WITH THE JIIBILALNiE,I
Gave the finest tone, more power, and it takes less money
to buy them than any other instillment in. the market
Great inducements offered to Sunday Schools and Churches
A liberal disconnt made to Clergymen. RIPE ORGANS o
the best makers furnished on theRUCR, molt reasonable terms
. M.B
No. 18 North Seventh at, Philadelphia.
XS- Send for a Circular and Price List. mar2s-ly
Frederick Female Seminary,
Possessing Cull Collegiate Power, will commence its
TWENTY-SEVENTH SCHOLASTIC YEAR,
The First Monday in September.
Board and Tuition in the Engthat Department $250
per neholmitie year. For Cate de., address
eep2-15. Rev. THOMAS M. CANN. A. M.. P esident.
Spring Garden Institute
A school for thorough training la Philadelphia, altos
ted most tav-rably in the city, yet secluded from
its busy and noisy thoroughfares.
THE BEST PRON'ESSORS ENGAGED IN EVERY
DEPARTMENT.
TEN PUPILS only received into the family of he
Principal, who enjoy the culture and refinement al a
Christian home. Send for Circulars to
GILBERT COMBS, A.M., Prlnelpal,
OOS and 611 Marshall Street,
angl2-2m
SCIENTIFIC & CLASSICAL INSTITUTE
aping scholastic year of 40 weeks commences on
WEDNESDAY, Brptsanber 1, 1869, closes
June 21, 187 d: Pupils thoroughly prepired for Col
leges, Scientific Departments.' West Point, and other
higher institutions of learning, 118 well as for the vari
ous busioess pursuits of life.' Peculiar facilities for
acqu''.ing a theoretical and practical knowledge of the
German, Spanish and 'French languages. Catalogues at
the office of this paper, or by addcasing
WILLIAM F. WYERS, A. M.,
Principal and Proprietor.
Hon. Joseph Allison, LLD, Hon. William Butler
Rev. Herrick Johnson, D.D.. Rev. Wm. H. Moore, Sam
uel 0. Perkins, WK., P. Frazer Smith, Hag., Alexander
Whilidin, H 54., J. Smith Futhey, Esq., John Wanama
ker,
lyB Hsq., John J.:Pinkerton, Esq., William F. Wyers.
fu
ELMIRA FEMALE COLLEGE
This is a Christian Home, and a fully chartered and
organised College, where young ladies may pursue a
most thorough and extensive course of study
COLLEGIATE, ECLECTIC or AC4.1)103110 Departmen
Whole expense of Tuition including Classics as
Modern Languages, with board, furnished 'room, light
and fuel, $l5O per hall yearly session.
Addiens
REV. A. W. COWLES, D.D., President.
sunell-tf.;
SeIectTAMLLY BOARDING SCHOOL
An Engll.h, Classical, Mathematical
Scientific and Artistic Institution,
At Pottstown, Xontgomery County, Pa.
The First Term of the Nineteenth Annual Session
will commence on WEDNESD tY, the Bth DAY OF
SEPTEMBER next. Pupils received'at any time. For
Circulars address, .
REV. DRS.—Meigs, Schaeffer, Mann, Breath, Seise,
Muhlenberg, Stcerer, Rutter, St ork,Conrad, Bom
berger, Wylie, Sterret, Murphy, Crnikshanks, etc.
HONS.—Judge Ludlow, Leonard Myers, M. Russell
Thayer, Benjamin M. Boyer, Jacob S. Yost, Mester
Clymer, John Killings; etc.
MS.—James E. Caldwell, Tames L Claghorn, 0. 8
Grove, T. C. Wood, Harvey Bancroft. Theodore G.
Boggs, C. F. Norton, L. L. Hottpt, 8. Gross Fry, Mil
ler k Derr,Charles Wannemacher, James, Kent
Santee & C., etc. july29-3m
For both sexes. Fine building, healthy location
good accommodations, and reasonable terms. Full col
lege preparations with other first-class advantages
Pupils received at any time. Next school year begins
August 28th, 1869. For Catalogues address
. july22-ly A. P. ,LASHER, A. M., Principal.
- $400,000 00
1,083,528 70
1,193,843 43
Family School.
THE Her. Mr. Hood, formerly Principal of the Ches
ter Female Seminary, will open SEPTEMLISR Blb,
a Day-school for girls at Chester, Pa. He also will re
ceive four Misses into his family, where the best care
and instruction will be given in !English, Music,
Drawing, and Language. French spoken daily
'terms moderate. Address
REV. GEORGE HOOD,
augl2 Chester, Pa.
Income for 1869
Banker & Broker,
No. 121 South Third Street, Philda.
Government Securities, Gold, Bank, Railroad
and other Stocks and Loans Bought
and Sold on Commission.
Colleetione made in all the principal cities in the
United Stem es.
Deposits Received, subject to Check at Slfht ,
and Interest allowed.
Commercial Paper and Loane on Collateral Security
negotiated. snub-3m
ESTABLISHED TROY BELL FOUNDRY,
TROY, N. Y.—(Betabliehed 1852), a large assort
ment of Oharah, Academy, Fire Alarm, and other
Belle constantly on handand made to order. Large ll
lustruted Catalogues sent free on application to
• mart-ly JONES at CO., Tao; N. Y.
Importer and Retail Dealer in
EINE STATIONERY.
WEDDING, VISITING. INVITATION
AND BUSINESS
CARD ENGRAVING,
Arms, Monograms, Illuminating, etc.
No. 1033 CHESTNUT Street,
PHILADELPHLL.
Zir °niers by mail receive prompt attention. Send
for sampler. may27-ly
WANYBD AGENTS FOR THE COMPLETE Edition
of
CONEYBEARE & HOWSON'S LIFE AND TIMES OF
• $1.150. ST. PAM.
This celebrated work, regarded by all divines as one of
THE GREATEST AND BEST.
Is now offered at one filth the original price, and is be
lieved to be the CHEAPEST BOOK in America. It is
selling.with unabated rapidity. Agents making from
$5 to $l5 per day.-- Send or full descriptive circular.
A. H. HUBBARD, Publisher,
No. 900 CHESTNUT Street, Malady
tar P S.—Also now ready, a NEW BOOK. bye,/
eminent author, highly indorsed, finely illustrated, of
sterling worth, and universa.ly needed. It will sel
immensely. Pally explained by circulars sent free
'Address as above. eep2-ly.
G. Hargis,
Paper Hanging & Window Shade
WAREHO USE,
No. 936 Arch Street,
ocw 1y i PHILADEPIIRA.
FREDERICK, MD.,
Young Ladies.
WYERS'
YOUNG BEN AND BOYS
AT
West Chester Pa.
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
UNDER CARE OF THE
SYNOD OF GENEVA
TERMS s
"THE HILL"
FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS!
REV. GEO; F. MILLER, A. M.
Principal
References
PENNINUTON INSTITIITE.
Pennington, N.
SAMUEL WORK,
PIIIILADELPFIIA