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A Popular Monthly of Instruction and Recreation

The Conductors of HOURS AT HOME call attention to the fact that they commence the publication in this Lum of a story entitled

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By GEORGIANA M. CRAIK, author of "Mildred," "Lost and Won," "Winifred's Wooing," &c., &c. "HERO," which is one of the most brilliant, touching, and interesting of this favorite and gifted author's product will be published exclusively in HOURS AT HOME, from the author's MS., and will be continued during the gr part of the year.

In the February number will be given the first of two papers by Rev. GEO. B. BACON, reviewing the "Prose I. ture" of our Sunday Schools, and other favorite writers, previously announced, will contribute to the successive i of the Magazine.

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**All the above Premiums sent FREE, except the Sewing-Machine and the chromos with the restriction In all cases where Premiums are given, the full subscription price of HOURS AT HOME is required. TERMS: $3.00 a year, or two years for $5.00 in advance. Single copies, 30 cents. To Clubs of five and over If the Club reaches TEN, one copy free to the person who gets it up. To Clergymen, Teachers, and Theological S $2.50 in advance.

BOUND VOLUMES: This work, to the present time, is elegantly bound in nine volumes. Price, $2.50 eac paid; or, for $17.00, the nine volumes will be sent, free of charge. For $5.00, either volume and one year's sem There is more good reading, and a far greater variety, in these than can be bought for $100.00 in ordinary book. COVERS: Beautiful Cloth Covers in French Green or English Black, post-paid, each fifty cents. Or the can be exchanged for Bound Volumes by paying 75 cents each for the binding.

· Subscriptions may begin with any number. Back numbers supplied from the beginning. Persons: discontinue the Magazine will please give early notice. It will be sent as first ordered until directions are rediscontinuance or change of address. Send draft, check, or post-office order, or by express, and not risk ba mail. Every letter on business relating to the "HOURS AT HOME" should have the name of the STATE a. the Post-Office from which it comes. Persons ordering a change in direction of Magazine should always give old and the new address IN FULL. No change can be made after the 10th of any month in the address of 3r for the following month.

Address, Box 2277, P. 0.

CHARLES SCRIBNER & CO., 654 Broadway,

N

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AND

PRINCETON REVIEW,

PUBLISHED BY

MESSRS. CHARLES SCRIBNER & CO.,

654 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

This able and influential journal has now completed its forty-first year. It has outlived all the religious quarterlies in being at the time of its origin, and is, with a single exception, the oldest quarterly of any kind in the country. This is a strong token of the soundness and vitality of its principles, and of the ability with which it has been conducted.

The Rev. CHARLES HODGE, D.D., and Rev. LYMAN H. ATWATER, D.D., associate editors, will receive the special co-operation of Rev. M. W. JACOBUS, D.D., Rev. WM. HENRY GREEN, D.D., Rev. EDWIN HALL, D.D., President CHARLES A. AIKEN, Rev. JOHN FORSYTH, D.D., and Rev. WM. M. BLACKBURN, D.D., while contributions are promised by others, including authors of the highest rank an fame.

With these arrangements, it is intended that this Review shall not only retain the attributes which have made it a great power for good in the past, but that it shall be constantly improved and amplified in the future.

While it will continue to support, with whatever ability it can command, the great system of doctrine defined in the Westminster symbols, which are adopted by all the Presbyterian bodies of America and Great Britain, and, to a considerable extent, by other communions, and to deal with science, philosophy, and literature at their points of contact with religion, it will labor earnestly to cement and consolidate the Re-union of the Presbyterian Church in truth, charity, and unity; and to make it a blessing to the church and the world. Having been firmly established years before the schism of 1838, the Princeton Review will strive to do its part in moulding the future of the Re-united Church in accordance with the standards which form the basis of the re-union.

A special aim of its editors will be to increase the number and variety of its articles in the practical department; to furnish new aid to pastors and others in charge of Christian and church work, for its effective organization and prosecution, by the thorough discussion of questions relative to worship, preaching, pastoral visitation, Sunday-schools, revivals, missions, education, Chris tian beneficence and activity, church architecture and music; in short, whatever may be fitted to infuse intelligence, energy, and enterprise into any sphere of Christian life and action. In a word, it will aim to be a helper of ministers and intelligent laymen.

No efforts will be spared to extend and improve the department of criticism, and of accounts of new publications-especially those relating to our common Christianity.

Its contributors, constantly increasing, now include some of the ablest writers in the American Church.

TERMS:

Three Dollars a year, in advance. For Five Dollars, strictly in advance, it will be sent two years to the same subscriber, or for one year to any existing subscriber and a new one. We will also send it, for the years 1869 and 1870, to those who will send Four Dollars.

SPECIAL NOTICE.

By the liberality of gentlemen desirous to extend the benefit of this valuable journai to Ministere otherwise unable to take it, we are enabled to send it for the coming year to every Presbyterian Pastor, or stated supply, whose salary is not over $1,000 per annum, on the receipt of One Dollar; and for both 1869 and 1870 on the receipt of Two Dollars, until the supply set apart for this pur pose is exhausted. Those who desire to avail themselves of this offer will see the need of prompt

ness.

CHARLES SCRIBNER & CO.,

654 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

216

APRIL, 1870.

THE

BIBLICAL REPERTORY

AND

PRINCETON REVIEW.

EDITED BY

CHARLES HODGE, D.D.; LYMAN H. ATWATER, D.D.

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SMITH, ENGLISH & CO., AND PETER WALKER, PHILADELPHIA, STELLE & SMITH, PRINCETON; REV. A. KENNEDY, LONDON, C. W.; REV. WILLIAM ELDER, ST. JOHN, NEW BRUNSWICK; REV. ROBERT MURRAY, HALIFAX, N. S.; TRÜBNER & CO., LONDON.

Published Quarterly. Price $3 per annum.

CONTENTS OF NO. II.

APRIL, 1870.

ART.

ART.

ART.

I. The Element of Time in Interpreting the Ways of God
II.-Pantheism as a Phase in Philosophy and Theory of History . 206
III-Memoir of Dr. Raffles

PAGE

187

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217

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ART.

ᎪᏒᎢ.

IV. The Relation of Adam's First Sin to the Fall of the Race
V.-The Witness of Paul to Christ

239

263

ᎪᎡᎢ.

VI. The Christian giving for the Times.

279

ART. VII.--Brief Suggestions on Presbyterian Reconstruction and Unifi

cation.

306

ART. VIII.-Recent Publications on the School Question .

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The Editors of this Journal, while responsible for the general character of its contents, cannot be understood to indorse every paragraph contained in the articles of contributors. Nor, on the other hand, can they permit its known principles to be assailed, or the articles it publishes to be uncourteously attacked, upon its pages.

All communications containing orders, remittances, or other matters relating to the business department of the Princeton Review, should be directed to CHARLES SCRIBNER & Co., 654 Broadway, New York. All communications relative to the Editorial Department, including publications for notice, should be sent to the Editors of the Princeton Review, Princeton, New Jersey.

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