:i..-.:.t•x df. •ti r'.i. • u_+:c::.:::s:::usrc> liE .., zf..T.T.:-.,..- ::-. •• : ;.:•. -,....:•,•::?.:;::..„..„.„ ,f azilt tiv cit.. TO MY SON, On Ms leaving school to enter upon a mercantile business Child of my love—ray eidest—my first born. How swift, thy boyish years to me have flown! How short the apses -- show like the blushing morn Of transient, early day, just now but known To being tad tli r beuntT, quickly th'en Passed to maturer, soberer hours again.. my nate - boy, how like a passing drawn' Thy fifteen years of life to me have been! To thee, perhaps, a, long-spent life they seem, Crowded with being andjustionehed:by sin; To me, a flitting vision, passed and gone, Into surprising, endless, mystery borae. Thy birth thy thy infant loveliness, When heaven around thee'seennid' to play and live, 411 that love and'ohildish tendernese; Aln, youthful prOidise too, ever All, fill , child, combine this hour to prnve no deathless mysteries of life And 10ve.:. ; .;; .. ; , ~; tind now th school-days ended! , What a scene "Tlf untrie dbeing waits upon thee now MayclOd.ba with thee, child; in'faith serene . ; And nerve Thy soli fresh ' eforts to ernpoy— To venture now on seas - - For scarce thy little bark path left the shore. Thou goad forth into' he wide, ' wide world-- The ay martOrwialth, a nd tpil; and Wife, Where thousands yearly-are to ruin hurled, And only few survive this voyage of life 'Unharmed amid the storms temptation's power Can raise and roll o'er every fearful hour. Ohl God, I pray.—lf aught a father's prayers, A mother's love, can hence avail, in heaven,— If heaven, like earth, for us bath guardian cares, And angel watchers o'er our paths aittgiven,— I pray Thee, Lord, our son to keep. and save From all the dangers he goes forth to brave. Buffer not avarice, meanness, lust of wealth, To taint his honor, or his heart• control; And when, by bold advances or by stealth, The tempter whispers to his youthful soul, Ohl Thou, Almighty, fire his conscience strong, And ye, oh angels, help the boy along. Thou'lt brave it all, my Ron, if thou but will, RESOLVE AND DO. And thou shalt see, at last, In the far future of thy life, and still On to eternal scenes, riches more vast Than all earth's merchants ever can have told, Though Bawls were dollarc, and rocks solid gold. Go then, thy way, and trust in God and heaven; Let justice guide thee in a path sublime;, And let thine infant innocence be given Somewhat to youth, and some to manhood's prime, And thou shalt prosper. Fleeter years to come Shall waft thee riches, or shall guide thee Hons. w. F. F. TEE NAME OF JESUS; THE NAME NEEDED BY THE DYING Martha sat . down on the low chair at the foot of the bed, and Rosa soon fell into a deep steep. Nothing moved in.tbat half-lighted room. The silence was so complete that, but for the soft, regu lar breathing of the little sleeper, one might have thought it was the silence of death. Suddenly, a little after twelve o'clock, Martha thought she saw her mistress move. On rising, she perceived that she had pulled one of her arms from under the blanket, and that her lips moved as it' she wished' to speak. Martha bent over her, but - could not distinguish anything more than, a kind of inarticulate murmuring. And yet the lips still kept moving. By giving great attention she, succeeded ,in catching a few words, thd sense of which she could not get very well. It seemed to her as if the sink one said, me of Him? Repeat to me what he has said." "Do you mean the doctor?" asked Martha, raising her voice in order to be better heard; "be said you would be better, by to-morrow." Madam Darcy did not answer, but her eye re tained an expression of anguish and trouble, which clearly said, "It is not what mean." Martha noticed it. ' "Don't get nervous," said she, "by•and-by you will be better able to speak, and then I shall un derstand you." Rosa had , woke up suddenly. She drew near the bed, her eyes still blinded with sleep, and trying to remember why she was not in the bed as' usual. "She is talking to me, but I can't make it out," said Martha, in despair. Rosa fixed her eyes on the lips of the old lady. Those lips moved all the time, as if they were pro nouncing some name, but no sound escaped them. After a moment she succeeded in catching these words : "Tell me 'his name—his name." Martha and Rosa looked at each other in great anguish. "What name?" said Rosa. "Who can tell?" said Martha, "it's no doubt dellriutn." Some minutes after the painful struggle be tween the suffering which choked her utterance and the thought which forced itself, the invalid closed her eyes, and appeared to fall into a doze. Martha resumed her seat, and Rosa soon sought again, in the arm chair, her peaceful slumber and its dreams. Toward morning the same scene was enacted over again by the sick one, but with still more earnestness, and a more painful tension on the part of both Martha and Rosa to comprehend its meaning. An agitated sleep succeeded to that second cri sis. But Rosa kept awake, following with' her eyes the grayish light of the dawn, which was just beginning to mingle with that of the lamp. In a few moments a world of new thoughts crossed- her brain. She had heard Madam Reynold say that the name of Jesus had calmed Germaitie's mother on her death-be& Could it not be that same name which her aunt needed also, to console and support her? The small New Testament which Madam Reynold had given her was lying upon the table, She took it, opened it at random, and tried to read out of it by the failing light of the lamp. She was still holding it' in.ber hands, when a - Moan from her aunt called• her back to the bedside: 11 His name—tell me his name," again repeated Madam Darcy, more distinctly than she had done before. , "Is it the name of Jesus?" asked Rosa, in a aokbitt clear voice, which easily reached'the in valid's ears. A look of intelligence , and joy sparkled in her partially-dimmed eyes. "1 bad forgotten it," she said, making an eff or t ; yes,. jesus—" Jeans--yes, Jesus; it is, indeed, the name which is needed by th dying. It is, indeed the name which, with its gentle brightness, illumines the dark valley .For him wbo pronounces it with faith, death le deprived of its terror, and earth has no bounds which cannot be rent asunder easily; heaven becomes opened, and the things which are invisible become visible. Ah ! what does it sig nify not to have on one's lips that blessed name, provided it lives in the heart? What does it mat pro if memory fails, when the soul remembers? Jeteds - does not wait to be called by His name to it* 14 the heart which invokes Him. 'the sick , woman closed her eyes, and an ex pression of peace and contentment diffused itself over her countenance. A long and deep silence followed this short con versation. The old lady did not sleep, however, for they saw her features agitated 198 if she wished to speak. " Bay over again what He said—for me," said she; with an effort. How answer such an appeal? Oh, how Rosa regretted then not having paid greater attention to the readings she bad heard at Madam Rey nold's, and not having better *studied by herself that Divine Book which she held in her hands, without knowing where to look in it for one of the words of life now asked of her! She again opened the New Testament, and read,— "Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou haat the words of eternal life." She closed it, not knowing if th tse,words were the ones, but the sick woman, who looked at her' with eagerness, bade her go on. Then she react this passage, »~f. W: W~:A . q:w'F::•IpAGNB ; 4:YLYp+GCrLKY , iiyrp~:JF "I am the way, the truth, and the life; no man cometh unto the •Pather but by me." "Life!' repeated the . dyin,g . wetnan We!" and she seemed to be thinking. later she was heard Mu/Miring some *nide. Martha bent over her,lnd caught &el* **le "Lord Jesus, I plea InrilArii in thy hands." Ik was a solemn scene, Tho first rays of rfity light penetrated through the blinds, and the lamp was dying for want of oil 'Rosa, wife, in 'spite'of the'ignorance of her ago ; felt that•she-aSsltted at a very solemn•seene, stoo :holding' her little New Testament tight between both hertands.' Martha was kneeling at the foot of the bed, her =eyes ri veted upon her who, during more than twenty years, had been the centre of her whole life. Ma dam Darcy folded her hands across her breast. ~A few sighs escaped her half-closed lips, then:she remained motionless. After a moment's health:tin4 and anxiety, Martha approached her upon wheee face death had already set its mark. She did' trot perceive the least breathing, and the hand'jhe took fell back inert and cold. She did,not utter one word, but closed the eyes of her mistreat, - aid; after she had gazed at her features some naortientai she covered them with a white handkerchief, still without speaking. Rosa was watching her with astonishment. Then Martha took her by the hand and led bd. out of 'the room. She sat in the kitchen by the fireless hearth, hiding her face with her apron. "It is all over—all over," she said, crying.. "Js she dead?" said Rosa, who could not yet believe / it: 'l7 , • • • Mittin4; answered r only with a hdb. li • Otritt not..eirreor..said.ehn;wligngliegwris alittle'delmed.. "She peaceful, it seems to me I might have disturbed her." - Rosa was still more frightened than she was .... dr :Whit! is that death?"' She sp.i.d. ." I - thciught dying was a great deal worse.. 1 should' haie beep so afraid last, night if I had 'been told 'that my aunt Would be:Lad this in6rning: NoW' it seems to me I should not be afraid to die my self." AMUSEMENTS FOR YOUNG MEN. BY REV. F. D. HUNTINGTON, D. D. Let me say, first of all, that you ought certainly to be amused. Every man ought to be. Recrea tions have a lawful place in every well-ordered life. There must be something wrong in that state of society which makes no room for them. There must be some great misunderstanding or abuse of them, when people become ashamed of them, or despise them. The faculty in us which demands them, and is gratified by them, is as much a' part of our constitution as any other. God planted. it there; and though he has taught us, in many ways, how great the danger it of being led astray by it, lie has nowhere denounced or forbidden the thing itself. Those educators commit a mournful mistake, and show an absurd want of education in the principles of human nature, who undertake to crush it out, or fight it down, or ignore it. They aim to make ascetics, and end with making vil lain& What they crowd aside and condemn as .unlawful, is nevertheless sought out and practised, though with the feeling that it is unlawful; and thus conscience is abused, and the heart is made worse than it need be. True Christianity nowhere pronounces sentence, against amusement. What it rebukes is,the excess to which it is carried, and the bad practices and passions which spring up around it, and are perpetrated in its name. .What, then, are some of the conditions, re specting, amusements, which are required to -be carefuly observed, in order that they may not be turned from rational and innocent satisfaction into ruinous and degrading sins? Foremost among thetie conditions we should all agree, am sure, in placing this: that they must not interfere with virtue. All the parts of our nature are made to be consistent with one another. We arc never obliged to injure one to gratify ano ther;: as, for instance, to insult our conscience in or der to gratify our fe elings.'There are ways enough of being entertained without trespassing a hair's breadth over the line of right. Nay, in the , end, just so tar as you go over that line, you diminish the pleasure and create a reaction of pain. And therefore' I do 'not include vices among; amuse ments. They are the ghastliest sett of drudgeries, before you have done with them. Recreation ac cording to the very etymology of the word, is something meant to renew and replenish your life, to reduplicate your power, to make you more and more capable, efficient, energetic,—to create, again and again, the worn and prostrate strength' of body and spirit. Then, surely, the debauch that stupefies the brain, the feasting , that reduces you from a man to a mere animal, the drunkenness that besets every nobler capacity, the uncurbec/ and un- SeaSoriable revelry that makes such tretneoclous draughts on the vital powers, the lusts that. pol lute and eat out the intellectual and physical vigor, —you cannot call these recreations. They recre ate nothing. They waste, - and 'consume, and rot, and kill, and curse. We-may call' them re-degra dations, re-consumptions,--re-destructions, but not recreations. - • The next condition affixed, therefore, to all real recreations, is that they' be healthful.. In`fact, one of their grand purposes is to pro mote health. What - a blunder, then, if you, so mismanage them, either'as_ to kind or quantity, as to make them destroy health. Of course this must happen whenever they run into dissipation, or 'are connected with sensual' sins. It must happen When you pass the hounds of temperance in eating or drinking. It must happen -when your amuse ments require late hours, unhinging and , debili tating your nervous system. A man that comes out from an evening's entertainment at eleven or twelve o'clock at night, his brain excited, his bbdy tired, perhapshis feet damp or cold, and tumbles o - bed exhausted, and sinks into a weary, unna tural ale*, is in no ivay,to get any physical' ad vantage from his recreation. 'Even if it was quite innocent in itself, the accompanying errors neutra- Hie its benefits, or give,it a . character of positive damage. - Still Another characteristic of -the right sort of recreations is, that they stand as much as possible in contrast with : the nature of your ordinary em ployments. This is what makes them to be amuse ments. The great law of intellectual life to be consulted in 'recreation is variety. When we re create, we want to do what is unlike what we have to do the most of our time. A man that has been-walking, or digging, or, carrying mortar till he is thoroughly fatigued, does not care to play cricket. A soldier, after being in the engageinent at Inkerman, Waterloo, or Cawn pore, would hardly go ,out in the latter part of the day to amuse himself with shooting at a mark. A student, even where his tasks do not incline him that way, will, if he is wise, select those recreations that are farthest removed from mental application, and least sedentary. I have no doubt a man is now and then to be teund who never so closely applies or concentrates his mind as ilia game of chess. . . . But in general, it is manifest that the greater part of a clerk's or of any sedentary , man's recre ations should involve some bodily activity. As he commonly sits, so in his amusements he should i stir. As he is commonly indoers, im his amuse- 1 ments should take him abroad. As he is com monly fixing his eyes upon paper or minute mate rials, so in his amusements he should relieve them, by looking at, broad objects, like natural scenery. As he is commonly receiving through that one sense —sight.--so in amusing himielf he should; if pos sible, receive otherwise, as by conversation or mu sic. As he is commonly exercising his memory, so, in his hours of relaxation, other mental facul ties should take the lead, such as come into play in the talk and laughter of social, companions or athletic competitions,—like fancy, ready tit, de vision,: invention, self-poi3session,,and self-control, with the cultivation of genial and agreeable senti ments, The inference is ' that the very best adapted of all relaxatifins for this large class of young men, are of two' Sorts, viz.: active sports in the open air, and social intereburan with refined and intelligent persons Cf both" sexes: Wittrr you receive a M l kindness, remember it; when you bestow one, forget it. Rosa, or the Parisian Girt Thiyees Hurne 3Ylonthly. ficoll#terign awd uctittioet gtattletioi, intrztatt LITTLE GEORGIE'S PRAYER. • Little Georgie, an' interesting boy of four sum mers, had been taught by •his mother to pray, and she bad often 'told him that to pray to God was .to talk to him, and tell him _just what he wanted. At night, after he:had repeated the Lord's prayer, be was accustomed to, make a short prayer of his own, in which his childish wants were expressed in his own words. Though Georgie was generally a very good boy, and loved his parents most ten derly, yet it sometimes happened that he 'needed correction; for, like all children, he liked to have his own way. • : „ One day, being unwilling to yield to his mo ther's wishes, she was obliged to punish him, for she did not wish her little boy to grow up a wicked and unruly son. At night when it was time for him, to repeat his prayer, he could not , forget his naughty actions; and, as he bad been taught, he talked to God about it in the following manner, feeling all the while very serious, though his lan guage was so childish : " 0 Lord, bless Georgie, and make him a good boy; and don't let him be naughty again, never, no never, because you know when he is naughty he sticks to it so 1" Would it not be well for some of my little read ers to make use of "G-eorgie's prayer?" NEEDLE WORK. Needle work is thus gracefully eulogised by Nathaniel Hawthorn in the Marble .Faun; There is something extremely pleasant and touching—at least, of a very sweet, soft and win ning effect—in this peculiarity of needle work, distinguishing men from women. Our own sex is incapable of .any such by law, aside from the main business — of life; 'but women—be they of what earthly rank they-may, however gifted with intellect or genitis,'‘or eridowebwith awful beauty —have. always some little handiwork ready to fill up, the tinyi-gap of -every vacant moment"— A needle is familiar - to •.thew fingers- of• them all. A queeb; rit'v-donht f plies-it'onroceasions ; .thewoman poet can use it as adroitly as, her pen; the woman's' eye that has' discovered a :new star; turns from its glory, to send the polished hula instrument gleam ing •along the hem. of her kerchief, or to darn a casual fray in her dress. And they have the ad ,vantage of us in this aspect. The slender thread of silk or cotton keeps them united with the small, familiar, gentle interests of life, the continually operating influences of which do much for the health of the character, and carry off what would otherivise be a dangerous accumulation of morbid sensibility. A vast deal of human sympathy runs along this electric line, stretching from the throne to the wicket chair of the humblest seamstress, and keeping high and low in •a species of commu nion with their kindred beings. Methinks it is a token of healthy and gentle characteristics, when women of accomplishments and high thoughts lave to sew, especially as they are never more at home with their own hearts than when so occupied. CHINESE ETlQUETTE.—Etiquette requires that in Chinese conversation, each should compliment the other, and everybody belonging to him, in the most laudatory style, and depreciate himself, with all pertaining to him, to the lowest possible point. The following.is no exaggeration:—" My insigni ficant appellation is Wong.", "Where is your magnificent palace?" "My .contemPtible hut is at Suchen." "How:many are your illustrious children," "My vile, worthless brats are five." "How is the health of your.distinguished spouse?" "My mean, good-for nothing old woman is well." ntioteillautono. PRINCIPLES OF THE NEW CONFEDE • RACY. We publish, says, the New York. Forld,A speech delivered last Thursday, March 21st, in Savannah, by Hon. A. H.,STEPHENS, vice president of. the Confederate States. Probably no person connected with the new government, so styled, either as gislator or executive officer, has so amply • possessed the respect of the North, both as a statesman and as a man.- His defection from the loyal stand be first made against the secession movement was every where received with heart-felt pain, and did more than any other one event to prepare our public mind for the fearful sweep of treason that so soon followed. It has been supposed that Mr. STE PHENS yielded because of a pressure that could hardly be resisted; but, if we are to judge him by this speech, it was conviction that constrained him quite as much as outward necessity. The speech contains one most significant admis sion—au admission which, in effect, does away . with •every party pretext that has been used to justify the breaking up of the Union, and puts the real cause of complaint in the Constitution itself. Mr. STEPHENS avers that the prevailing idea: of the framers of the Constitution was that "the en slaverneur of the African was in violation of the laws of nature; that it was wrong in.principte, so cially, morally, and politically, and that some how or other, in the order of Providence, the instil - don would-be evanescent 'and pass away.". True,, every essential guarantee was secured to slavery while it should last, but the idea upon which- the Constitution was erected, was fun d anien tally Wrong. He goes on to say, that " Our new government is founded upon exactly the opposite idea; its foun dations are laid, its corner-stone rests upon the great, truths that. the negt, .o is not . equal to the white man—that slavery, subordination, to the su perior race, is his natural and moral condition !:And thus our new government is the first, in the his-' tory of the world, based upon ,this -- great physical, philosophical, and moral truth." Mr. Stephens'has done civilization service in tbus honestly stripping off every disguise, and presenting- the: matter just as it stands. The long and the short of it, as he -puts it, •is• made plain to the dimmest perception. The fathers framed a constitution with ideas - which do not now suit the extreme Southern States, and 'therefore these States, have.broken•away from'that Constitution; and - formed another of different:pri ci pies. .Thus it-is-conceded that the North occupy the Coniervative-_groundL-that they adhere to the old order—and that it is, precisely because they do adhere to the old, and refuse to accept and , abide by what Mr. Stephens himself denominates new discoveries, that this great secession movement has taken place. - - Mr. STEPHENS has the utmost faith in his great principle that , slavery is the corner-stone of all true government. Though, as he says, " thousands of people, who begin to understand these truths," are not yet completely out of the shell,—he it seems, is not only out of the • shell, • but full fledged and - soaring.-"He not only believes that the border States will be compelled to. join their fortunes to the maintenance of the great principle, but thinks it probable, that "all the great States of the Northwest shall gravitate this way," and,- in a different part of the speech, he avers that he cannot permit himself to doubt the ultimate success of a full recognition of this principle through put the civilized and enlightened " world."- It is Melancholy to see so fine a mind possessed with such gross delusions. If there is one fact in the, political economy of the nineteenth century more firmly established than any other, it is the superi ority of free over slave labor in respect to every,, thing that' conduces to national wealth, If there be one social tendency of the age more decided than any other, one that is especially active in breaking down all the old subordinatious,it is the moral power that treats the human race as one, brotherhood, and accords to all of the same govern ment the same rights before the law. There is no instance in modern history, of such a defiance of the opinion of the world as has thus far marked this attempt to consolidate and perpetuate the slave power, It seems to be that sort of judicial blindness which, it used to be said, Providence sends to foretoken destruction. THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION. On the 3d of March, says the Independence Beige, the Emp'eror Alexander will decree the final emancipation of the serfs. The statement reads simple enough, but for ages no event has occurred so huge at once inits proportions and its consequences: The slavery- Of Resale differs ma terially from any' formtaf• that great curse, hitherl. to known among men, from the slavery which dried up the vitality of the Roman world as much as from the slavery which is tile disgrace of North America. It was a ,purely.Asiatie institur. tion, the logical complement: of an Asiatic) theory of society; and Russia, in renouncing it, renounces. Asia, and enters Europe. not merelyas a power— the Sultanut was once, a, power—,biit Its a nation,. with Eurepean objects, and a European capacity for limitless developpent: , - .The modern ,system of serfage, ..commenced in 1599• with a deoree. of ,the usurper, Borie 4012 7 noff. As he was ,kilSurper, philosophical ,histo rians. suppose. he intended to f oonoiliatp Abe no blesse, but there is not the slightest evidence of any such intention. At that time the agricultural classes were :marked 'by a - spirit of restlessness which seemed to Russian statesmen dangerous and unreasonable. Villages were alwayi on.the move.. Every, fifth or sixth; year the, common), whichht so to speak, the integer of Russian society; would migrate. to some new locality, disappear.perhaps in a.night, without Warning or Signal; to be heard of only after a march of n hundred miles. They retained, in fact,.'say, Western philesePhers, the nomadic instincts of their ancestry. Nothing of the sort:'? They disliked u nneoessirywork,just,as Western philosophers dislike it . ; and in a:eouritry where land is valueless it is easier to break up virgin soil than to re l invigorate. an old one. aetly the same tendency at .this unguent ,pprzles British administrators in,Burrnah,.and, American politicians in. the far South. r ~.The.systern, of course, is- exceedingly,Unpleasint. to tiny gevern- . ment advanced beyond the stage of Tartar rani: It very nearly destroys* the possibility'of conscrip tion, and completely,,payalyzns the fiscal authori ties. It isotwsorr„inturious to civilization. A race whiehee*mplates MigratiOn as. an nedi 7 nary ineidenteK,444,will neither, fence, nor drain; nor build, and has, a trick-..0f preferring steak breeding to _cultivation."lnfluenced by all. these motives, the counsellors of Boris.Godunoff"resolved to prevent incomotion r and- ila,, , i , rougl4.:arbitrary way alone intelligible to Asiatics, they liaised a Law of Settlement. In less civilized phrase; they bound the peasant to the soil, thus changing at, once freemep inte, l 4yots." As the' soil;; in` their theory, belonged tb the boyars, they ordered the peasant to pay tbree days' labor ,in the;week .for the privilege of, working, on the, other. three.;:and it is in the continued effort to realize this rental that the root of modern serfage'znust besought. Gradually the class who held, though they 'did not own the land, and who could', directly in fluence the throne, drew all Privileges to them selves. The, right of .selecting conscripts gave them one weapon, the right of enforcing obedience to orders, necessary for cultivation v another; but to this hour, the power of the,Russian slave-holder is based rather on encroachment; hardened into right, than on any positive law., The throne neither felt, nor pretended any interest, in, oppressing the peasant for,the sake of the proprietor., It was the strain, to protect ;he land rental which vested, the landowner in • *Sala, as :in Bengal invests the Zemindar, with Such tremendous power. The law, for exampl4,„ intends that every man, who she - Kee the produces of certain land shall pay his share of rent in perviee and obedience. But there is no law enabling the proprietor who permits his serf to emigrate, to follow him with a personal tax. All he can legally do, is to summon him back te the estate, though, as the summons im plies to the seder the cities utter ruin, it is am ply sufficient to ensure, obedience. . In practice, partly through the operation of the law, partly through long;continued - custom ' , and chiefly through the steady bias of all officials towards the proprietor and against -the serf, the landowner bas become absolute over can order any man ,to beet:en, without limit as to the'number of blows; he can, when hard pressed, evade, the law prohibiting sale by letting the serf for ninety years; he can make life unendurable by petty,exactiops and incessant work, by insults it, is impossible tilreserit, and demands it is difficult to evade, The'actual, conduct of the class is.dif ferently represterite& by different observers, but the evidence heavy against' the landowners. Most, if not el; of the favorable accounts have been written ly foreigners. Russian writers usually_ admit that the , system, is, oppressive, and the literature, of t the.populace teems wi"th stories of the grotesque and usually filthy tyranny of the noblesse. . Uncle Tom's .Cabirt, was circulated in Russia with a speed which in such a country could be procbt,ped:'only by the sympathy arising from similarity of condition. ~Above all", i,s a certainty that the Russian peasant. detested his position ; that local insurrections were incessant, and that only *hope—the hope now justifie& by the emperortprevented them from becoming uni versal. Russian;slavery in • its best form destroys individual interest, and therefore general progress renders a true middle, class, impossible, and poisons the national mind with discontent. In its worst forms it is better than negro slavery only in the absence of race hatred, and in the peculiarity we may now describe. While the master ,is thus absolute over the in dividual, he ispowerless as against the community ; or against a general right. No proprietor ikßus sia elaimea right, to sell children, or separate hus band and wif&,•or breed slaves fof zale. He may perform isolfiltd acts of tyranny, tending to those results, but he performs them in the face,of the law and pnblieopiuion, and,not with their Support. As to communities, heis powerlessboth in thepry and practice: The Russian, like every other Asiatic, considers that •the land belongs to him and his , comMune.' Ile may be compelled to pay rent, or give service; tut his right is wholly unim paired Lille other Asiatics, toe, he will fight for, this .single right with, the most utter indifference to consequences. The sane. man, who will. bear insult and blows and taxation without. a murmur,: is a freeman the• instant land is-menaced. A real assault on his village rights produces an in nurtection, as certainly as a eland ,produces- rain. His land has, therefore, beep respected, and. it is this , remnant of citizenship, this last relic. of pro perty right, .which has saved him: from degrada tion, and which now forms the difficulty of eman cipation. It is ilot; perhapS necessary to examine very carefully the consequences of this great deed. There are occasionSt Ate history of nations, as in the lives of indiiriduals, when the act to be done is -toeivast -for human foresight, when the . single advicowerth hearingisto dceright,•an& leave the consegipinini to the God you have Obeyed.: 'But therellike-one or two results - which,sunless all history is vifueless, may, safely be predicted' from the revolution. The first is au increase in the political strength of Russia. The Rouse of Romanofi, with all its. .despotic pOnciples,_ has been ( feX aV4infnir ac cord with its':people. < The inasSes,,,while distrusting the:".Tchin, .:and detesting. the aristocracy, have' been steadfastly loyal to the throne. A mob Obeys . the direct order of the czar as submissively as his soldiery. . and, the czar" in:the 'cry-,of,the Russian peasant,' and: he •: , does not always distin guish. accurately, between 'the two Beneficences: If this has been' his habitual 'feeling, what will it be, when. the ,einperor has conceded, the freedom his nobles would have:withheld? ilen t odorward, the mad who •-menaces the 'dynasty will be re garded in Russia as he would be in England' i ,—as dangerons, but still :contemptible fool. That result alone, strengthens ,the czarn , almost incon ceivably. Add to•this that serfage is „the first of , . the . cause the, povety of t Russmn,fise, that its ' , abolition renders direct taxation on the masses possible, and must increase the customs receipts indetinitely,4hat half.the‘ abuses of the 'army have their ioc cin serfa'ge l and finally, that, the moral Weigilit otßUSsia is crippled by her udln2ronce to slavery, awl we may gain some idea of the advan tages which-will repay the.reigning holm for the enormous:saprifice they have, made , • The second result, we imagine, the -tempo- Jury extinction of the Russian. aristocracy. That body numbers some 100,000 slaveholderS, whose properties are. thus distributed c 1,4.24 possess more than 1,000 peasants. 2,273 " " 500 " 1G,740 " (i 100 cc 80,41 ; 7 2O " 5 8,457,, " less than 20 it -There''is talk of pecuniary compensation, and the einiiieiPationlyill doubtless, be accompanied by •11 decree authorizing *the collection of rent: butboth-palliatives must we conceive, break down. From the Spectator, Feb. 23d. ~u...,~. ~... a. ~---~ 14 It te . A...$ t , a' iErVER9ESdENT. SELTZER APERIENT. , • This valuable and piuiu edicine has universally received the most 'favorable . recommenda tions of the DifroIGAL Paorsssiou and.the. PUBLIC, Its the Inost.EFFICSENT & • . AGREEABLE , . .P S AI/ /,1V E. ,A , Z D It may be used, with the best eirect;io, BILIOUS 4. FEBRILE DISEASES, COSTIVENESS, SICK BIEADACHW NAUSEA;LOsS OF ABER TITE, INDIGERTION,..ACIDITYI OF THE STOMACH,. TORPIDITY. OF THE.:LI VEX. GOUT, RHEUMATIC • AF FECTIONS,, GRAVEL, PILES ~AND ALL . COMPLAINTS WHEital A Gentle and Cooling Aperient or Purgative is requirerl. It is partienlarly,adapted, to the wants of, Travellers, by Sea and Land, Residents in Dot Cliinates, Persons of Sedentary Habits, Invalids and Convaleicents. Captains of Veeselsend.tPlanters will find it a valuable addition id their Metlinine Chests. ' • • , It is in the form of a POWDER,. carefully.plain Potties' to keeP in any.climate, andmerely requires water poured upon it to produce a delightful effervescent • - • '• beverage. .-• .. Numerous .2 ` testimonials : from: professional and other gentlemen olthe, highest standing throughout the .coup. try, and its steadily increasing popularity for a series of years, strongly guarantyt its effieacy and, valuable. racter,, and commend i to the ' favorable .. notice of an intelligent pnblie. • - • • TARRANVS. CORDIAL ELTILIA OF • TURSEY B Kb , beautiful preparation, from t he TRIIi,TURICEY RHUBARB, „ • has the i giproyal and eaantion of many , of air Beet Physicians as a valuable and,favoiite ,‘ , FAMILY, MEDICI.N. And preferable to any:other:farm in wildcat .Rbnbarb is admini4tered; . eithet for Adults or . Children, it being combinettin a manner to make it at once palatable to the taste and , efficient imits operation.' TARRANT'S - • IMPRONTEP, : , MPAWBLE INK, OR.M.AitIfIN644I.I;=, ' I Has been 'Proved, by many:years' experience, to be the best, most 'permanent, and reliable preparation ••• • ever offereu to the public. •r. • • , The.superiority of: this , Article is acknowledged- by all; and.purchasers.and dealers will find it.to. their.inte rest to-give ita pmference over all similar preparations. Mannfactiiiid 0n1y.,14 JOBNA. T & Co. giisis, No. 278 GREENWICH Sr,. COB. WARREN Ijnt - New 'York. And for sale by Druggists generally. l-y.. •MELCIDEON NANUFACTORY. , • The undersigned having for .tbe -past twelve years been practically engaged in manufacturing - • , , NEl.ollitolV§ feels confident of his• ability to 'produce an article time rior to any other in the city, and upon•the ; Ingo ramie rate terms. Tuning and Repairing promptly attended to. A. MACNUTT, No. 115 N. Sixth Street. fhlOy BRONCHITIS. The usual symptoms 'of this disease are Cough, Sore ness of the Lungs or. Throat,. Hoarseness, Difficulty of Breathing, Hectic Fever, a Spitting up of phlegm or matter, and sometimes blood. It is an inflammation of the fine:skin, Which lines the inside of the whole of the Wind Tubes or Air Vessels which run through every part of the Lungs. Jayne's Epectorant. immediately suppresses the Cough, Fain, Inflammation, Fever, Dim . rally of Breathing; produces a free and easy expectora tion, and effects a speedy cure. Prepared only by DR. D. JAYNE Et SON, 242 Chestnut Street. S PECIALITY FOR LADIES. TRUSS AND. BRACE DEPARTMEN T, . Conducted by competent Ladies. Entrance• on Twelfth Street, first door below , Race. . A fall. line of Iffecha.ni cal Remedies, light and elegant in construction, specially adapted to Ladies use. C. 41. • NEEDLES,- Proprietor, 8. W. cor. TWELFTH and RACE.Sts., PhEa. MEntrance to. C. H. N's Raton, for gentlemen, At the corner. 753 BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES Cure Cough, Cold, Hoarseness, influenza, . , any Irritation or Soreness of the Tbroat, Relieve the Hacking Cough in Con sumption, Bronchitis, Asth ma, and Catarrh:: Clear • and give strength to • the voile of • P,IIIBILIC SPEAKERS, and SINGERS. Few are aware of the importance of checking a Cough or " Common Cold'? in its first stage . that which in the , , beginiiing,would yield to a, mild remedy, if neglected, soon attacks the Lungs. ' '" Brown's Bronchial Troches," containing demulcent ingredients, allay Fulinonary and Bronchial Irritation. • „ " That trouble in my Throat, (for which the , " Trochis" are:a specific) having made me often a mere whisperer.AL BROWN'S; TROCHES N .P.. WILLIS. IL ""I recommend their use to PUBLIC SPEAKERS * " BEV H. CHAPIN c.f Have proved extremely serviceable for HOARSENESS." • • REV. HENRY WARD BEECHER.. • • "Almost instant relief in the distressing labor of breathing peculiar, to MELINA." REV..k. C. EGGLESTON. "Contain no Opium or anything injuri ous." Wt. L. A. II &YES. Chemist, Boston. "A simple'and pleasant combination for COUGHS, &e." • . , • . BROWN'S TROCHES BROWN'S TROCHES. BROWN'S TROCHES BROWN'S TROCHES "Beneficial in'Bßomarrrs." DR. J. F. W. LANE, BROWN'S "X• lave proved them excellent, for WHOOPING COUGH.' TROCHES BROWN'S TROCHES. ' 9 Benefieiai when eompeileil to speak, suffering from CoLn." REV. S. J. P. ANDERSON, BROWN'S TROCRES " Effectual in' removing ffearseneis •and Irritation of the Throat, so comthon4with SPEAKERS and SINGERS." :; Prof. M. STACY 4.01:11189N, La Grange, Ga. Teacher nflVlnsio,' , Sotithern Female College. " Great ,benefit when taken ~ before and after preaching, as they prevent Hoarse ness. From their past: effect, I think they will be of permanent advantage to me." REV. E. ROWLEY, A.M. President of Athens College,. Tenn. lt Sold by all Druggists at TWENTY FIVE CENTS' A ,80X.13 BROWN'S TROCHES BROWN'S TROOKPB BROWN'S TROCHEE. BitOWN'S TROCHES 131 OYD , Fic-BATES, • • ; ..• - AI • _ BANKERS , APD DP.I4,LIIBIIT.HTLIAI OP JILICCOAPOZi 18 BOOTH THIRD ST,, PHILADELPHIA. 370 pOORS .113109 ' 'E DIECEIAII4e, BABE. Particular attention is:given to the collection of Notes and Drafte. ' ;Drafts on New :York, Boston, Baltiinore, Bre.; for sale. Stocks and Bonds bought and sold on Commission at tite'Board of -Brokers. Business Paper, Loans on Collateral, Ste 4 negotiated. ,feb. 10--ljr TILE' SINGER . SENRIN'G MACHINES. The. marked, and-Aver extending, poptilerity of SINGFR'S. SEWING - MACHINES, both in. America and Europe, is such as best to establish their superiority over all others in the .market. . Sewing machines (so Called) may be hoiight, it. istrue, for a smaller amount Of dollars, but it is mistaken 'economy to invest anything in 'a worthlatis or unreliable article, and those who do so must abide the consequence! • • SINGER'S -NEW. 'FAMILY litiOluivAl3. . . . In order to place THE BEST FAMILY MACHINES IN THE WORLD Within the reach of all, we have re 'dnced our Letter A,- or Transverse. Shuttle .Illichines, beautifully .ornamented, to $5O. Singer's No. I, and 2, Standard Shuttle. Machines, both of, very general application And •capacity, and popular both in the family and the manufactory. Prices reduced, respectively, from $135 to s3o`and $lOO. Singer's No.; Standard Shuttleilfachine, for Carriage Makers and heavy-leather work.' Price complete, 0125. Also, to 'complete the list,. ark ENTIaiLY NEW AIRTICLE, unequalled for manufacturing purposes, noiseless, rapid, • and capable of every kind of :work!, !Price (including iron stand and drawers,). $llO, cheaper at that, In view' of its value, than the machines otany other maker as a All of, Singer's make, the -interlock stitch 'With two' threads, which' is the best stitch known. Every person-tiosiring to' Procure 'full anti reliable in-: formation about .Sewing. Machines their sizesjprices, working capacities, and the beat melbods of purchasing, can obtainst by sending. fora, copy 01.1_ M. Singer & Co.'s Gazette,'which iena beautiful plUtorialPaper en tirely devoted to the subject. It vvill be suppliedifatis : L. M. SINGER & CO., 810 Chestnut Staot. oet. 18-1 yr LADD, WEBSTER, AND CO.'S , TIGHTq. OO K SIITcEI SEWING SEWI MACHINES. BUT THE HEST, AND HET 'THE CHEAPEST! They stitch, hem, bind, felt, run, and gather without basting;.use a straight needle and wheel. feed, and make stitch:alike on both shies of the cloth.. They are without any .of.those delicate and nice adjustments,which, make many machines CC more plague than profi t ." We claim thein.to be the. best made'machines in the world; and capable of 'doing a greater range-of :work, in -a more satisfactory manner. PRICES REDUO.ED to SOO, and* uPwards. I . I .Dpi,WEBSTEIt, & CO., . , 021 thistnut SL, 153-6 m. DR. G. F. BIGELOW, Boston REV. H. W. WARREN, St. Lou• WATCH' 11F :OF 1411 CEtti. .• . . • . . • Wortne lire A prolific source _of Aldo:less* ,eilllarPn• They are seldom free from them, and. by the,* _,lrritation all other diseases are aggravated. Convilsione; as welt as St. Vitus' have, been superinauccd them; death had resulted in xtretrie cases. Whenever the Skinritorosare observed, such as disturbed Sleep, grinding of the teetthitching of the•nose, weaknesi of.the bowelsi slow fever, variable appetite - and fetid breath, JAYNE'S TONIC VERMIFIME sitOuliT be reedited to without delay. it is entirely harndess,. is. readily taken by children, "effectually de stroys worms, and by its tonic action invigorates the whole system. it is prepared only by Da. D. Jayne ds Son, 242 Chegtout St., Philadelphia. COUGHS, COLD 6, 00* anti:7loN, Brotichitik . &c. JA.YNE'S EXPECTORANT been for thirty years ihe Standarel Reinedy. will be admitted that zio better eviderice of the'ireat, .arative powers ofthis EXPECTORANT Can be offered than the gratefidtestirtiony of those who have been re stored to health ,by its use, and. the wiAe-spread •Tl9Pti larity which, for sp ; long a period, ; it has maintainers in the face of all mlinpetition, and which has created , a con stantly increased, demand_for it in all.parts of the,world. As far as : possible, this evidence is laid tibfore the flublic from time to timi, until the most illeptical *ill do; knciwledfr,e that for all pulmonary complaints) it is truly an tnireliia'ble remedy: _ RECENT - COUGHS AND C01:03,. •PLEIT)Rrric are; (01014 and e'ffeettiaily eared by ill dia.- phorette, soothing and expectorant Power; . . , ` A STlllicl A: it alWays cures.,., It overcomes the ipasnuir dic . Contraction of the air vesAela and by producing Tree expeCtoratiOn, at once rein o irei iii'diffienity of breathing. BSQNCFIFTIS dilYYields to the E subdues the inifamMation which extends through the wind tubes, prodUces free expeitoritidn, and tcliepretties at once the cough and pain. CONSUIyWION.—Y,Or :this insidious and futal l disease, no, remedy on, earth has ever been foulitO It sulitlues. the inflammation ,-= relieves the cough nand pain,—rein Oyes the difficulty of breathing and, produces easy expectoration, *hereby all irritating arid Oh strueting matter's are removed from the. lungs. WHOOPING COUGH is promptly relieved by peetorant. It shortens the duration uf the disease one half, and greatly mitigates the suffering of the patient. , . 'ln all : PULMONARY COMPLAINTS; in CROUP, PLEURISY, Stc.,it _will be found to be prompt, safe, pleasant and reliable, and may be especially commended 'toy MINISTERS, TEACHES ' S and, SINEERS, foktfie. rerief of /Hoarseness, and for 'strengtherdng the organs of the voice. Read the lollowing.Statinient: REV. RUitvB 'BABCOCK, D. Secretary" of the AMERICAN and FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY, writes:— 4 ‘ Having given Dr. D. Jaynes medicines a trial in my own family, and some of them personally, Ido,not hesi tate to. commend them as a .valuable addition to 'our malaria medics., ' The EX'PECTORANTeapecially I Min eider of inestimable value, and I know that it is 'highly esteemed, and frequently prescribed by Some of the mod respectable of the regular practitioners of medicine." Ray. B. V. R. Janus, Missionary in Liberia of the Pres. Board of Foreign Missions, writes:— "Your EXPECTORANT, has been administered with the most hippy results, and I feel assured I used an article of medicine that produced a More 'sure and certain relief for the complaints for which'it is recoin mended:" - Riv. SourtDowuric, D D., Pastor of the'Bereau Bap tist Church, N..Y., writes:— cc! have long known the virtues of your EXPECTO RANT, and frequently tested them on myself and family, when.atflieted with amain or. corns. I .believe it to be one of the best remedies ever dasbovered for these mala dies,"'. - . Rev. N. M..Torms, Rector of Bhurch of Bt. Bartholo mew, (Prot. Epis.,) Philada., writes:-- "In all eases resembling Consumption, I recommend your EXPECTORANT, having in" so many cases wit nessed its beneficial effects." • REV. , J- J. WALsu, Missionary of. the Presbyterian Board at Puttegurh, Northern India, writes:— "Your EXPECTORANT was the means, under Provi • deuce, of curing a case of INCIPIENT carrsomprtort, which •bud bean pronounced y , incurable' y competent medical men." iii v. .108ATttAll D., while. President of Granville College, Ohio, wrote:— "While laboring under severe- Cold, Cqugh, and Hoarseness, my difficulty of breathing became so great that I felt imlniniiriMit dingur of suffocation, but was _perfectly cured on using. Dr. D. Jayne's EXPECTO RANT." Mist Mmtv Batt, ' of the Protestant Episcopal Mission, Cape Palmas,, West Africa, says:— "In our mission : families your ntedicm,es are.a general specific, and among , the sick poor they enabled me to do much good.. :Your EXPECTORANT has proved of great, value the case of Rev. Jacob Rambo, and in that also of itev.'Mi. Green, two of our missionaries." vv. C. L. FISHER, formerly pastor , of the . Dell Prai rie Wis. Baptist Church, writes:— cc A little daughter`of mine, aged never years,'had been afflicted Tor' some time with Asthma and Palpita tion of the heart, and having tried various •remedies without relief. I was persuaded to get your EXPBC TORAN T and SANATIVE PILLS, and afteffusing them she was restated to a good degree of health." REV. SANDED S.-DAY, Missionary of the Baptist Board, at Noßore, Initia, writes c , By the use of your EXPECTORANT my Cough and sore Throat are now well. I find, occasionally, an un heasant sensation:in my throat, as if mucus had lodged .here, but your EXPECTORANT usualry'rebeves it by two' or three applications.', REV. bOnIVIA.I 4 7, of Winfield, TisCirivaiiis co., Ohio, writes:— : , . - • , - One bottle of JAYNE'S lexercroaara, cured my daughter;of DING Fey za, after having,been. beyond the bope of- recovery: During the attach she had a number of convulsions. She is now perfeetli'well.” This Era.EcrortA.NT, and all of Ssyrre's Runny Mira- VINES, are prepared only by Dr. D. JA.YNE & SON, 242. Chestnut street, and may be had of Agents throughout the country. DISEASES QE THE SKIN: - THOUGH THE remote or primary catises of BRYN DISE ASE may be various as IMPURITY OF. THE L ROOD, LIVER, COMPLAINT,, SCROFITLA,:&c., &c., yet the immediate cause is, always , the same,.and that is An obstruction in the pcirea of the skin, by Which the perspiratioii; in ate'passage froni. the hody, is arrested ;and confined in and Under the skin, itehing, °ion "eruptibis of Piniples, Pustules, ;Ringworm, Tatter, Salt Itheurn, &e.*Ac. For all these affections, JAY NEt ALTERATIVE bia been found an invaluable remedy, as it removes lioth the primary as., well as the immediate eauses—prififying The Blood,..euring the Liver Complaint, and effectually "eradieiting:Serofula7fiont the system; while, atthe same timei it frees the pores.• f their obstructing mattere;and :heals the diseased Surface. , •Prepared only by DR. - D. JANE An 80h1;,2p,Chest nut and for sale blaients througboui the enuntry. • WHAT CAN All; THE CHILD'?—Is its "sleep dis turbed/ Dm you• observe a morbid' restlessness—a vari able appetite, a fetid breath, grinding of the teeth, and itching of the nosel Then be sure your child is troubled with - Worms. theinpresenceisawt suspected, pro:; enre at once "TCNIC'VERAITRYGE: It ef feetnally desiroys WOrmS, is perfectly safe , s aria so plea sant that childreewill not refuge to take it. 'Heels also as a . general Tonic, and no better ` emedy Can be , taken ,for all derangements of the Stomach and Digestive Or gams. Prepared only by DR. JAYNE & SON, at. No. 242 Chestnut Street. MOFFAT'S LIFE PILLS AND PHOENIX BITTERS. . , 'These Medicines have now been before the public fora Period or THIRTY .YEARS, ands during that-tizne'maintained a high ohmme ter, in almost every part of the globe, for their extraordinary end immediate, power of restoring perfect health to persona suffering under nearly ivory' kind of disease to Which the huMan 'frame Is , . , the` , The Most horrible cases Of SORCTULA;in which false, seam, • and mites of the victim have been preyed upon by the insatiable disease, are,proved, ,by . the undeniable authority of the, sufferers themselves, to, .have. been, completely cured by these purely Vege table Medicines, after all others have been !Mind MOM than useless. .. Obstinate CUES of PILES, of many years' standing, have and permanently yielded to the same means, end other of like kind . are daily cured in every part of the country. „ Habana/ 7 as well as OecasionatCostitiness; Dyspepsia, /AIMS and -, Live )INseases, Asthma, .Dropry . , Rheumatam, Aver and Ague, Worms, 'Fettled Pains in the Limbs, .. Together with a long catalogue of other maladies, are ishoim, on ,the, same Indisputable evidence, to he every where,and invariably extcrutinated by these.mildir operating, yet sure and speedy re ....sources of health and strength without the usual aid of puffery and attiliciarrecornmendatlons. .. . . .. . , • • Akii""lieffat's Vegetable Life Pills and Phoenix Bitters" have this acquireddtsolid.and anduring,rapntagon,.which tdds delimits to contradiatioa., and which is co-extensive . with the . Ainerican popu lation.; • • • • .. • . Both the Lon Pim and Pnamix amnia .an mild'and agreeable • in 'their operation, and etfactually cleanse the system of all hal:earl, ties without •oseimiening any prostration of strength, or any confinement or change of diet. . . Prepared and sold by DR. WILLIAM B. MOFFAT, BI.CrApIVAY, NEW Yon& ' Oct. 18 2 --Fir . For Saiel?3? all.Draggists. . PARK'S . PRICKLY - PLASTERS: They impart arenyth; they Annihilate Park's THESE, tiELIGX{TVOI., , iILAS TERS yield readily to the motion of Patent the ' body,; absorb perspiration and Porous throw off all the offensive :coagulated impurities Of the systeni. they should Prickly :4,used,for ail Chronic' Pains, Faint nen, Dyipepsia, Colds Consumption, Plasters Rheturiatiset, Female Colds, etc: . • Are add. They retain their active properties " when .other . Plasters are useless, and. , • ; liar where applie d pain cannot apish Every family should haye size 'Dealers • " cloth; three sizes Oil leatker. -4 "Sam-- 2 r• Prom Ito Pie sent by mail, on reeeinf of 25 ets. BARVES &PARR t 2 - Dimes. 764-3 mo. 13 &15 Park Row, N. Y. April 11, 1861. S:ATING FUNDS. AMERICAN LIFE INEO:TRAN CR AND TRUST COMPANY. ..Company's Buildings, South-Bast Corner of Walnut and Foote Streets. - Open fit= A. NI, Ito Incorporated lilSo by the legislainni UrPenusylrania. 000,000. Chiiiter perpetnal. ~„ Insu ~res.lAves diming the natural His or for short terms, grants a ntintties. se:dimmer - AI, and niaktiii cOritesets of all kinds de , pending on the haineis of life. Acting also luf Brom:dere, Trotees and Guardians, Policies of ,Life InsuranCft issued at the nsual mutual rates o f oh good companiii:-.4ith" profits to./ ilia`ainuiroll , --at Joint Stock rat:. 20 pee cent, less than above, or Total Abstinence sates 40 pe r ~,a 7 lei A thiui•Mtitual prim. t. • - BAYING FUND. Interest at 5 por cent. allowed Ihr every day the Deposit rem fi end paid hick on demand in gold and silver, and Cheeks furnish ed as in a Dank, for ;ask of Depositors. ThisCOmpany'hes "Wel lie:got^ Real Estate, Grosod eild other first-claim Investments, as well as the Capital SIOCk, foc the seating of deptisifors in thl old, established Institution. • ALEXANDE&WIIILLDIN, President, SAMUEL WON.K, Vice-President. JOHN C. Sum, Secretary. Jews S. Wailes, Troab arar. 'WARD OP TRIIIITEEB. Alexander Samuel' Work, John C. Farr, Tohli Aikinan, Sant - net T. Bodin e, . T. Esmondiaraiper; IL H. Eldridge, 3MaTiniiEß:t. Ta. F. Bird, M. D., J. Newton Walker. M D. In attendance at the Company's Office daily , atone o'clock, P. ffi lob. 22-Iy. THE iIRE .Ilt CHESTNUT STREET. tottbr trbiii Theo. H. Petetts ea Co. Phiiidelpbia, January 19, 1860, Mrssas. FARE EL,,..HEAKIT rt CO., 629 Chentilut Street. GeserrantiltrWe bays ,recovered the Herring's Patent Champion Safe, of your make- which we bour,hi from you 'nearly Eve . years ago, irons - the ruins of oul . hpilding, No. 716Ches‘skul. street, r ,whieh was entirely :lestroyed by,tre on the moissirteef the 11th SO rapid was the, progress of the flames , before we couhi reacktbe, store, the whole interior was one mass 'Of fire. The Safe being in the back pirt of the store, urroip#ed by the most combustible materials ' was exposed,exposed,to great heat. - It lett With the whils of Out 'art of=the building into the cellar, and remained im. bedded in the ruins for more, than thirty hours. Safe`7 tie wasojiened'this`morning in the presence of a number of gentlemelsoind the contents, comprishsgs our books, hips, , receivable money, and a large amount of valuable papers;iii ail safe;' tints thing Was touched by fire. .Respectfplly, yours, iTHEO. H. PETERS Co. The shrive r Sale'oirjh lie 'seen at our store, where the public, areirivited•to:pakind exaraitieit- VARREL,IIERRING SvCO. N0..629 Cursor Sr. • (Jaynes Save Youi -Proviided for your Family an InsinUILOO on your Life?. MADE EASY. v 48 tTRONCE 0011-- OFFICES: NO. 16 COURT STREET, Brooklyn, NO. 16 WALL STRERT, 'New York. MUTUAL, PITH A CASH CAPITAL OF S125:000, Imeested in 'Stooks of the' State of 'New .York 'and First:Class Bonds • and Mortgages. DIRECTORS A. A. Low, ThoMakdirlion, •••W. H. Cam, ',John J. S. T.:Shanahan, ' Jilhit;Stieden,' Thomas Messenger, .L•Milton. Smith, Harold Dollaer, Henry ,p-Pierrepont, . A. B: Capweli t Abr. B. Baylis, "Nehemiah night, Peter C. Cornell, - Edward-A:.• Lambert, Cocks, 11:B: Clatlin, • E. B. Wynian, B. B. Chittentlen, `eorge A. lareis, Theo. Polhetaus `Jr., • 'Sainuel Perry, J. E. Southworth, S. Ne. Howard, , Czar, Dynniog, George T. Hope, John Bergen,. Charles A. Townsend, Lewii Roberts, COrdelius J . :Sprague, Walter`S. Griffith, ' Tosienli W. Green. At: F. 'Odell, ••• • WALTER S GRTFEITII; PitritninT. L H. FROTHiNOlLisliVTiessotien. • • GEORGE C: RIPLEY, SECRETARY. A:2:CAPNVELT.;., dcitripti... • I !..UTCLE r ELL, , D . .,.. , Brortippl i . 'JAS. ST.EWART 111. rdew xerl• • : ttivideitda of profits deelared 'annually and, applied int mealjately,tojeduce the amount of annual premium. ..Preinininspayable one-half in' cash anti one-half in a ,note-atl2,., , ,montbs, which is not in any case subject to as l essrpent, but is IL , permanent Joan on the policy to be Pahroialyhy thh aPotiedtiori of profits, or deducted from the amount' lio *hen the pohey'limerimes"payable. The "Caah part of •the - Premiurn he vintial* annually, semi annually; or 'quarterly, in five; len, or • any number of years, or, in one sum. It 37 Polickei :the premintir on. which is payable in five annual payments, may be surrendered at the expi ;ration or two yeaystAnd thdpimpany will issue for it a paid tid Policy for Li ;te:for,..tipp fifths' of tha origina/ sam Tf at three years - for 'thrie Ahs, etd. on the same Prindipl'O:wisere - th'e pieMitnniiliiYable id ten or any other' dumber of years. Policies lssued,'_for lire or fof anylterm of years: an d on the pirticipating or'non-partiipating- scale, at rates as low as any.soudd mutual or 'Monti company. 'Rimini:as on Short term and' nonparticipating poli cies are pnyable in cash. .Entionmient: Policies issued; the mini- payable to the representatives of thepartrat death, or to him or her on attainiiig 46, 60, 66, 60, 65, or ?Q. years of aa, e. Also lit forms of.-Children's endowments and annuity' policies on the innitiiiiorable'terma ' 11,7! This Company has adopted-A principle intended to prev,cit thelep.e of Ortxpol.cy,aii,dliiiiegie tit the a - awed' in, every case all. the ctsiiranee tithiefilheir;pityrttruts win[nembeii,"need `not 'a:Pprebeadt theieforel, that 'their inability'fo pay •thh" pretriihro at an}` future time will involve the rose of what tliet have paid• Out prospect; and other dationi swot. be sent gratuitously to ftwho require it.• -• , , ' Good , Agent s wanted, and will lie treated with on th e most liberal terms.' 705W0.w.-19r. W HAT HAS JAYNE'S , _ALTERATIVE. Donl Rhea cured GOITRE, ex: Swelled Neck. It has cured CANCERand Scittknouttuvroßs, It has cured compticated.Disesses. It has cured BLINDNESS'*, *EAR EYES. It has cured Disease of OW AVART. It has curedD,ROPSY and W.A.TBRY SWELLINGS , It his cured WITITALSWELLINGS. It has cured DYSPEPSIA and - LIVERUOmpLAPrr It has removed ENLARGEMENT of the ABDoIdES, and of the Bones and Joints. It'has ' ettred I ERYSIPEL/it, - asid Skin Draftees. It has cured 110ILHAND PARBUNCLES. It. has -cured GOUT, RHEUMATISM, and 14 ; 311 " It has cured FUNGUS HEMATODES. It h as - cured.MANlA.sind MELANCHOLY. It haseured MILK or WRITE LEG. It haieUred SDAIYRE It has cured ERUPTIONS on the Skin. It has cured` or Kin g's Evil. • It Wren - red ULCERS of 'every kind. It has cured every' kind of Disease of the Skin, and o f the Mricous MeMbrane. ~ I t has cured CHOREA, or St. yitue Dance, arid awl other Neryous,4ffections. It has cured LEPROSY, SALT R ' 'REITM, and TET. See. Dr. JAYNE'S /kik:WAD 1 4 0 i. 1860. Prepared only by Dr. JA.YNE SUN; No 242 CHESTNUT ' 9TI thUadelphia. VARY H. DiEARS. 4 .L NE ,IaS 11. MEANS' SON; * C — OtEMISSTOS .s trEiteRANTS FOR Tire ELLltai OF • - FLOltit; GRAIN, SEEDS, * AND PRODUCE. Nos. 330 S:Wharves ;la 329 S. Water St. - • - • ` -- PRILADELPHIA. E 3 Cash advances made on eonsio - nments. (KIS' ''• - EDWIN CLINTDN . . . , 13 It tf Sll EM.PQAXT.7I‘I' , , . No. 908 .ohestnut Street. - _, boee7 , tine assortment of every sloe, style, fantquallty of TOI . ;; J , unusens, always on batid.' - Abio 'Shell,. Ivory, Uutfale, Dox os o and Leaden DRESSING-POMO, and- 4 .1 7 1RWTRETEt Orli"' Wham& or Retail. Aug. 0- 1 3': • J..Bdgar Thomson, Jorma Bowman, Wilnam 3. Howard, •B-. H. Townsend, IVI D, George Nugent, Albeit C. Roberts, B. , H. Townsend, H. D, sep 9—ly
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