56 MARKET STREET, PITTSBURG.


HORNE'S INTRODUCTION.

An Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures. By Thomas Hartwell Horne, B.D. New Edition, corrected and enlarged. Illustrated with numerous Maps and Fac-similes of Biblical Manuscripts. 2 vols. imperial 8vo. Price only $3 50.

"Mr. Carter has issued an edition of Horne's Introduction, which he offers at the astonishingly low price of $3 50—for the two volumes! Truly the scholar's millenium has well nigh come. Those who have paid twenty dollars for it, in four volumes, will hardly understand by what process such a massive work can be so cheaply furnished. It is a reprint from the last London edition, with Dr. Horne's latest additions and corrections, containing all the maps and illustrative engravings.

"To commend Horne's Introduction to the clergy or other students of the sacred oracles, would be 'carrying coals to Newcastle.' It has long been regarded as an indispensable work for a theological library, and has acquired among Biblical scholars—at least English scholars—a deservedly high repute. It is a work of gigantic labour. The results of the research and erudition of Biblical scholars of all countries, and in all time, are faithfully garnered, and, on the whole, well digested."—N.Y. Evangelist.

D'AUBIGNE'S REFORMATION.

Authorized edition.

THE ISRAEL OF GOD.

A Series of Practical Sermons. By Stephen H. Tyng, D.D., Rector of St. George's Church, New-York. 1 vol. 8vo. Price $1 00.

"The fair sheet on which they are printed, with its wide margin and handsome type, attracts and pleases the eye; while the Scripture truth and holy sentiment which glow through their transparent style, delight and improve the heart. The subjects are all of an eminently spiritual character, relating to the new birth, and the sanctification of the soul. They are treated with no effort for the display of talent, but with a manifest and most earnest desire to do good. The diction is polished and slightly embellished, ranging between the neat and elegant; the method is always clear, and the argument cogent."—Recorder.