ght Ciult. The Spells Of Home. BY MRS. HEMANS. BY the soft green light in the woody, glade, On the banks of moss where thy childhood p layed By the household tree through which thine eye First looked in love to the summer sky; By the dewy gleam, by the very breath Of the primrose tufts in the grass beneath, Upon thy heart there is laid a spell Holy and precious—oh I guard it well ! By the sleepy ripple.of the•stream, Which has lulled thee iiato many a dream; By the shiver of the icy To the wind of morn et thy casement eaves; , By the bees' deep murmur in the limes; By music of the Sabbath chimes; By every sound. of thy native shade, Stronger end dearer the spell is made. By the gitttiering around the winter hearth, When the twilight called unto household mirth By the fairy tale, or the legend old; /0, that ring of happy faces told; • , 'By the quiet hour when hearts unite In the parting prayer and the kind good night;; By' the smiling eye and 'the lovely tone Over thy life has the spell been thrown. And bless that gift = --it Lath gentle might, A guardian power and a guiding light ; It bath led the freeman forth to stand In, the mountain battle of his` native land4;, f It bath brought the wanderer o'er the seas, To die on the hills of his own fresh-breeze ; And back to the gates of his father's hall It hath led the weeping prodigal. Yes ! when the heart in its pride would stray From the phre ft4oves;of its youth away; When the sullying, breath of the world would QOM O'er the flowers it brought fromAs ehildhood'a ' home, Think then again of woody glade s And the sound by the rustling* wade : Think of the tree at thY'father's deer, And the kindlYsfell hal4owerronee more. MOTRX " Come, over here away from the window, so mother: wont see me," said Teddy to another little boy. " I on't see the use of having Mothers [ Mimother' will nevef let me do anything:" 4. My mother says, when I get into puddle, or tumble , do . Wn ,eellar, dr tip over the tea-kettle, that a child left to hintself bringeth his mother to shame," he said. "I wish my mother would leave , me to myself; she's alivays afraid I shall hurt my self. I wish she'd go to lianisehatka—that's where people go when they go off a good ways, isn't it ? I'd like.to be left alone a Ml tie while I" And then Neddy shook. his 4411 with one of those little boy-shakes that - miry one knows so well; When he went into the house his mother called him to her. " My dear Neddy, ll am going away to be gone a week, Do you think you can `get along without me ?" " I guess I can take care of myself," he replied, independently. . The mother went away, and Neddy',6 first task was to get himself ready.for'S'ehobl: had a great deal of hair, and was very par-- ticular about having it look nice.' Neddy loved his pastor verymuch. His name was Mr. May, and he wore his hair parted on the left side. So Neddy had two ways of-part ing his hair. Oho he called ala May, when he had it parted like that of his pastor; the other he called' anti May. Neddy tried to part his hair right, but could not. He went to his sister. Susie. She parted it anti May. " No, Susie, I want it a la May," he said. Susie parted it a la Man , but it was not quite straight, And Neddy was so, fretful about it thafat last she parted it exietlyin the middle, and told him that if he 'wanted it different he must part it himself. How much he needed his mother's hand, that hand which always parted the hair right, and. smoothed it down so lovingly afterward& Then no one could pin his collar to suit him, and he - flung it down and went off to school, saying. " I'll go to school without a, collar, and I shall look like a paddy, I know, I shall." Neddy had a plenty of brothers and sis ters who tried to be brave in their mother's' absence. • " -We shall have to get along without mother when we are men and women, and.we might as well begin now, they they said. So they laid their forlorn little.),:ieais ,on their Pillews at night without thelood-night , kiss, and if they waked up frightened and screamed out "Mother !" it dint do any good. There was one song which Neddy liked to hear now. His big brother Edgar played it on the piano. It begun thus:-- " Backward, turn backward, 0 dike, Make me a child'again, just for to-night." "Rook me to sleep, mother, rock me to sleep." And Neddy wished so much that his mother would come home and rock, him to sleep. If , he painted a pretty picture his ,father :would look coolly at it. His sister would say, "Yes, yea, child," and his brothers would say they Or4o better than that themselves. `lerigth' &tidy was taken sick i4,ponse quence of eating too many cherries, what there was no one to attend him. His father sat, up with him and his sisters *ere kind to, him, but he wished for one dear ,face,—oh, rsuchirlule would almost be willing.to,die. • if ihe would come. All the rest of the children were getting! into trouble. Their father said that they looked like so many scarecrows. To be sure Bridget dressed them up clean every Morn ing, and told them if they 'got dirty a bit'she would break every bone . m their bodies. Of •course this only made matters worse. Neddy walked straight through a mud-puddle just, to see 'if he should get his bones broken. Then Susie was very saucy to Bridget, and was not sorry for it either, and would not ask her pardon. Bridget had scolded her and she eouldt:Lot, see why she coUld'not re turn the complinamt. Her father said that she must not eat with the family till she had 'begged her pardon. This the proud girl WAS determined not to do, and ate alone. And blue-eyed little Alice dreaded her caressed as much as she would have (Line those of a grizzly bear. Her father would kiss her, and then look " away of " with his eyes forgetful of the little girl in his Poor child, she had been her mother's pet and missed her sadly. Then there was heedless Tom, a boy who was always doing something which he ought not to do, and every one blamed him. When his mother was at home she Would say " Oh, I think Tom did not mean to do it. Be more careful next time. ray boy." •Now there was no one to take Tom's part, ax d he grew reckless, and mischieyous on purpose, a regular Ishwaelite, gand against every one, and every one's hand against him. He tormented the cat, and kept up such a squealing among the children, that you would have thought the house was a pig-pen. The fattier looked tired and care worn. Bridget'grew careless and cross and said that she should leave if the mistress did not come home soon. One morning a sweet, mild face appeared at the door, and a gentle voice said eagerly, " My dear children !" Wasn't there a shout of joy from all ? The cry, "Mother has come I mother has come !" resounded through the house. Never had her face looked more mOtherly before. None of them remembered that she had such beautiful eyes, or thatlier hair was so smooth and soft. Alice clung convulsively to her, and all the little childish griefs that had been gathering in tieh heart and - had found no outlet now poured forth in tears and sobs. Neddy cried too, and said, • "Oh, mother, I dreamed you was dead. lam so glad you have come. I can't get along without you." Tom didn't ery, but he looked sober, - and said, " Mother, I'ye been a naughty boy, gen erally, and kept the whole house in hot water, now I'm going to " turn over a,new leaf and mend my manners. 4 . Bridget suddenly grew respectful and called the children "little " Poor things, and hadn.t they missed the mother of them." Susie's conduct was set before her in a proper light, and she begged Bridget's par don. Oh, but they , were all glad, those lit tle children who had been motherless so long. And the mother,,with her shawl half and her bonnet in a chair, rocked Alice and kissed Neddy, smiled at. Tom gave 'Susie good advice,:and mended a great hole in .a torn jacket, all at Mop ) and ..was so thankful that she had got home once.more I • , "J sayyou!" said Neddy to hialittle play mate, next morning. "You can't get along without your mother, I can't get along with out mine. Mothers are good things, and you'd better mind your mother, Tommy.”--- Boston Recorder. WI: IN .1111 E Tin women of America have played a most important part, in the present war, and their services are no less valuable,thau those of their husbands, and sons, and brothers in the tented field. Rev. Robert Collyer pays the following 'deserved tribute to our coun trywomen Then the women of our land have dis tanced all their sisters on theearth tor gen erouss, , steady devotion to the material needs of thosoldier. We may challenge any peo ple to ahow,such &perfect devotion m'anifest edin such a way, When the r history of.this war is written, the Sanitary Commission -take a large place in it, and the ,Sanftary Commission will have to write : We should have been able to do very, hide for the coin. : loytofFour,men; had it not keen for the up: tiring.levetioni of our woinen, and their gene rOus, boundless gifti of what was most need 7 ed." ,of the part 'taken by women in 'that - which pales 411 gifts of food and garments, I cannot at , this time adequately tell. Moth dregave their sons, wives their husbands, and then sat down to their daily life. "'That is the portrait of a young man, the only son of his mother, and she was a widow," a friend said to 'me one - day, ()riming her al'- bnm "They"area rich family; he was ed ucated in the' best schools, had just come hack from a tour in Europe when the war. -began; he Went into the army at ow ) .- and was killed at Bull's Bine" A. lady, now the widow of one of our 'own State who fell at Pittsburg, went up to the field'ort one of the first boats, and when she arrived found her husband dead. The nove list, who professes.to give us life as it ought to be,-will, say,: 4' Then she sat down by his bleeding corpse all night lon . gand wept." The angel who writes down in the book kept in :the archives of heaven life as it is, has written out in ,goldennharacters " The wife , of Crem , Wallace, of Ottawa,a went to Pittsburg to find her: husband, who waare presented wounded, and found him dead. Then she looked on the faCe of her. dead, And wept.foi a little season. But she saw all around him on the 'boat 'the men who shad fought and fallen with him there yet alive, in pain and thirst, with none to help them. So she turned away from the dead, aka back her tears into -her heart, and turned ;to the living.; and night long she went from man to, man with water and„words of comfort, and the holy succor '.4tliat must come xita of such 'an inspiration in snot' a place." *c.J: tfft VMS MAE GREAT CEDARS OF CALIFORNLL ItenoP SIMPSON, , ef the M. E. Church, who: hes been giving an account of his recent '6Urneyings : in. 'California to the . Christian Advocate and Journal, speaks of the great 'cedars : ...An afternoon and evening - walk through the grove enabled us to realize the magni tide of these"forest princes. They, are situa ted On , aiplateau gt, airelevation of four theu sand feet above the sea, the plateau ascend ing gently'one hundred or two hundred 'feet toward.,, , the- northwest. They are ninety three in number, young and old, and are Scattered over an area of fifty acres. No 'ethers are knownto be in the same vicinity, though recently they have been found in Mariposa and other localities, numbering in rill nearly one thousand. They belong to the cedar familY, • having a 'small leaf and soft bark, and have been named " Washing tonia,Gigantea." . Botanists say• they are a species of taxodium.' 'On entering the grove . IT is -a marked •feature of social life in we approached three close together, called England, and certainly one of its especial the -" Sisters." Two .of these ,are about charms, that mothers and daughters are so twenty eight feet in diaineter, and two hun- uniformly seen together at their own home. dred, and eighty feet high. - third, not Not only is' the mother the first' lady to quite so large, is dead, but its tall trunk, whom you are introduced at the helm where without a branch for nearly two hundred feet you visit, but mistress of the ceremonies high, Shaded' by the green branches of its sis- throughout; not only'does she preside at the tern,' presents an imposing appearance. We dinner-table, but in the evening party she walked around the trunks, and, sat down at sits as queen. Whatever may be your first their, roots. The leaves and burrs and bark impressions of such an arrangement. if it which have fallen for centuries have accumu- happens that your sympathies are with the lated several feet deep around them, and are ,younger ladies,: you `will very soon come to witnesses of their antiquity. At a dis- think that the mother's abserice would be , I tarre- stands a larger tree, tall and straight:- 4incerely regretted by the daughters. As a .It is named the "Pride of the Forest". 'lt picture all must admit the' arrangement to is about thirty feet in diameter, and three •be perfect. The. portly form and matronly hundred-feet high. Think of a girdle ninety dignity of the mother are an exquisite foil to feet long .As we stepped the ground at its the youthful, beauty and maiden coyness of base, and looked far up among its beautiful ~ the daughters. And yon will find nothing branches, we. felt we were among the trees to mar, but everything to enhance the inter " which'the 'Lad had planted." Upon one est of the picture. The mother's presence of its roots Brether Owen sat down and read I never -seems to operate - as an unwelcome aloud some passages out,of his. Greek Teita- restraint Between her and ,the darighters ment, and we admired the revelation. of the j you will not fail to mark the most jayous, 'A,ltttticalt cgtrointtti44 - ,atti . O . .t!itiott, tralt4=tii:ol Almighty in his works as well as in his word. A fallen tree,' called the " Miner's Cabin," gave us a chance to climb ikon its roots and walk over its trunk. 'There it lay, its trunk as high as the roof of a two story house, and longer than an ordinary city square. The bark is so soft and so deep that you seem to be walking on cushions. But should you slip, " falling off 'a log" is here no trifling matter. Another, called the " Pioneers's Cabin," is hollow, and has been partially burned. A family could camp very comforta bly in it. A small opening serves as a back door. I passed through it, but the doctor did not follow. Thus we wandered from tree to tree, while twilight gathered round us ere we had com pleted the entire tour. Two or three deserve special mention. The ".Mother of the For est" has been stripped, of its bark -for about seventy feet, and is now dead. The bark was cut in sections, a scaffolding laving been erected around the tree, and a winding ladd er . made by boring into the tree and inserting pins. This tree is thirty-two feet in diamet er, and three hundred and two feet high'. The bark was taken to Eiirope some years since on exhibition. When in the ;Crystal Pala, in London, in 1858, I saw this"bark. 'out forty feethigh. It was'exhibit- Id as !" Wellingtonia ,Grigantea." I threw clownthe bard which the exhibitor had hand ed me,`and said,." It is not Wellingtonia,' but ashingtoma.'" Th&"exhithiioriang e• , asked me-if I icia 6 - di - I A merican, erican, told me he Was. from - New England; but he was, obliged to flatter English vanity to secure patronage. ..The. ";Father of the Forest" is still larger, but is fallen. It was broken by, the fall at ,a .distance of nearly three hur i ldred feet, and is eighteen feet in diameter where broken. It is;supposed that it may have been four hun dred, and fifty .feet high. A portion of the -trunk is hollow, and men on horseback have ridden through - the holleW portion of it. Though imbedded deeplyin the ground byits weight, .it is still some twenty-five feet high, and so broad that a teauf Might drive along its trunk. A numerous group surround this fallen " Father." During last winter another • large tree,. named " Hercules," was thrown glOwn by a storm. I was surprised to find the ground so little disturbed. It appeared as though it had been simply seated upon the alluvial soil without any depth of root. This led me to questionthe antiquity assumed for these trees, being from four to Ave thousand years. But our landlord tells us that the roots descend for thirty feet or more, and•are very large, but that the great weight of the tree in falling breaks them abruptly off. How this is I know not'; but I shall wait for, another careful examination before I shall feel assured of their age. The wood is red, very light, and easily broken. Those various groups are named c.The. Empire' State,' Vermont,' The Old Dentin . ion, Pennsylvania,'Lafayette,' General :Scott,' ‘ The Three Graoes,, etc. Two, which stand abont fOrty feet apart, on a hill-side, are named the Old - Maid,' and the Old Bachelor.' The waist of the Old Maid ' measures about sixty feet around, and she is tall and comely., But think of such a couple sighing for three thousand years in single 'blessedness "=Near the hotel one of these trees was some years since cut down. It measured se venty-nine feet in . circumference seven feet from the ground. Five men, with long au gers: and . saws, were employed . twenty-five days in felling it: A section of the bark was exbibited.in San Trancisco_, and subse quently" sent to. New .York. The Sabbath schools of San Francisco, then fe* in num ber, met in its circle, and - there was root( for `a Piano, sot% etc. The stump ,is cut smooth for a floor,' and a house is erected over it, where companies meet for conversation and .amusement." • ENGLISH ESTIMATE OF MR. SUMNER. As AN indication of the opinion held in nroPe of Senator Sumner, we extract, the follifiVing from the Isle' of . ; Jersey I .2:ldep_en" . - dent, which publishes .a cecen4 speech of his at,,Worcester, entire •:""'After the wretched exhibitions ofpreju dice and downright ignorance on *the Amer-- can question made by the great majority of English members of Parliament, it is a relief, .a pleasure, and a delight, to turn to the mag nificent oration'of Senator Sumner, the dis tingaiShed son ofMassachusetts, which we r, give in to- day's hictepencleu.t. As a:general rule even those who' like . to listen to good speeches do not care to read long speeches, good' pr bad. But even such persons do not need our recommendation to give their atten tion to the graceful periods and electrifying aPpe4 l - 8- b r f probably the most accpmplished of Amerieau speakers ; perhaps we, might: ustly say thefforemost , orator speaking the Anglo- Saxon tongue ; for, rivaling Gladstone in genius, he more than rivals the glory of Eng land"s House of Commons,by that holy earn estness which imparts to eloquence its chief effect, and which is naturally the product of circumstances, rather thanuf individual will. Mr. Surtmer is world-fatned, and for himself personally, the most sincere sympathy has been . felt in England from the time that he Was so treacherously and brutally assaulted by the ruffian Brooks, an atrocity premonitory of the treason and ferocity which commenced with the conspiracy of President Buchanan's Ministers and the subsequent bombardment of Fort Sumter. The principles of 'the Mas a3achusetti Senator command our thorough ad; hesion as his extraordinary talents challenge -our admiration, and his courageous consisten cy 'Carries with it our respect. We feel con fident that lad ive sat in'the Worcester Con vention the orator would have commanded cur vote as well as, our applause." SOCIAL LIFE IN ENGLAND. playful, loving feedom, without the sacri fice of a tittle of iarental dignity and author ity on the one'„iind, or of sweet and grace ful filial .duty o• the other. It may be said of English famil s generally that these two things are emit v tly characteristic, to wit, k, uniform parental tauthority, and the most charming freed() , , ,iof intercourse between pa rents and their c ildren. `t an English family in a out discovering what will ou, that a deep dislike of to is a'very marked char-. alish woman. This feeling those highest in rank, and feature in. the character If from her very girlhood. one widow so prematurely, re growing to the stature womanhood, and leaving , how delightful to recall 'of her.early 'married life, loved to saunter, with her sband, over the beach near use in the Isle of Wight, .e then little children-as they with trying to find two shape, or dug wells. in ir tiny wooden spades. deal happier amid those than when - d o . ,ig . 80 00 • ALEXANDER WHILLDIN t President. :SAMUEL WORK; Vice-Piedulent. .. Jonw S. WILSON, Secretary.. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. , Alexander Whilldin, - ''J. Edgar Thomson, Hon. Jas. Pollock, . , Hon. Joseph Allison, , Albert C., Roberts, , Samuel T. 'Bodine, ' 'XII. Eldridge, George Nugent, ''' Jolid Ail' :nt- an, William : J - , Howard, Charles F. Heazlitt, : -' -•' - , ..-, ' Samuel Work: - - ' - MEDICAL EXAMINEES. J . ,. F. Bird, M. D., , J. Newton Walker, M: D. . In attendance at the Company's Office daily at 12 o'clock M. - ' : feb 22tf. g co '4' A lz) GI tz . mi P 4 )-; .47 ...3 ei Pluinber ands Gas-Fitter, , . B. E. CORNER ELEVENTH AND RACE STE, PHILADELHERA.. MS constantly on hand, or furniShCalo order; Hy draulic Rims, Water-Wheels, Windmills, 'Lift and Force Parhps, Stationary Washstands, Hydrant s, Bathing Tubs, Lead, Cast and Wrought iron Pjpes, Sheet Lead, and all other articles in the trade.' Port able Gag ant. Crater 'Works put tip on the *int' ap proved principles. •'" - All work done on moderate terms, and warranted to, give satisfaction. RB.—CimucAL Won; or" LEAD : BURNING person ally attended to. jan3o ly LIE . , THOSE interest/41g .PHOTOGIM.P . FrS are made in great quantitr; and of atiperiorOpia - REIVER'S GALLERT; Second street ...above Green; at ian2 ly EDUCATIONAL. AMERICAN THOMAS H. McCOLLIN, SEPT. 25, 1862. UNDERTAKERS. CYRUS HORNE, UNDERTAKER, No 23 Nonni ELEvasrrn SlsErr,. a. OOFFINSCHearses, Carriages , and everything ap pertaining to Funerals, furnished at the shortest ~ notice. Lead Coffins on hand. nov2B 6EORGE - W. LOTT, , general Fiiiishing . Undertaker, No. 500 Sours Turivrwswrg STREET, First house below Lombard street, Philadelphia. Every requisite furnished at shtirtest notice, and on most reflonable terms. • • PersOnni attendance at all bows: nov2l ly EDWIN, 4.. ,411G4.41 1 ,5, . UNDERTAKER AND SEXTON OE DR. WADSWORTH'S COURCH • ,! No. 259 Sou ni Tartu Smarr, above Spruce street, nov2B • Philadelphia, GENERAL FURNISHING 'UNDERTAKER , 779 South Second street, above Catharine, WOULD respectfully inform the citizens of Mal adelphia, that he 'still continues at his old stand, 356 S.- Second street, above Catharine, where he will keep constantly on hand a large assortment of. READY Kam Cornris, of all qualities, together -with the - ccunttlite paraphernalia neceisaryfor the pro per interment' of the dead. His horses and carriages are unsurpassedrarid his drivers among the most care ful. Charges moderate. Old stand, NW 356`5. Second street, New No. 770- nov2l ly TERNRY .0., BLAIR'S, • FAMILY - MEDICINE STORE, Eighth and Walnut streetsrPhiladelphia. • (Established "1829.) ATONE but -the best Medicines dispensed. Prices 111 • uniform and reasonable. Persons residing in the country ,can h ye their orders fa thfully and promptly executed, no matter how small. Physi cians supplied with pure Medicines and medical pre parations. jul2 tf • "The Pemba Mightier than, the Sword." TRE GOLD TEN—THE BEST OF ALL FENS. MORTON'S GOLD. PENS. The , •Best Pens in the World. CIN , receipt ofany of the followirLF mins 'in cash or ,k." post-stamps; the subscriber will send by return of mail, or otherwise, as directed, a ,Gold Pen or. Pens, SELECTING-THE BAN& ACCORDING To Dnicamunc, GOLD PENS WITHOUT CASES For 25 cents, the Magic Pen ; for 38 cents, the Lucky Pen for '6O 'cents, the Always-Ready Pen; for 76 cents, the Elegant Pen; and for $l 7 the Ex celsior Pen. The sizes' '2, 2y 4, 5 and 5. - TEE SAM P; "PENS IN' SILVER-PLATED EX - - ' TENSION CASES, win" PENCILS. For 50 cents, the - Magic Pen; for 75 cents, the Lucky :Pen, for $l, the= Always-Ready;Pen ; for $1 25, the Elegant Pen; and for $1 50, the Excelsior Pen. These are well finished, good writing Gold Pens, ivith'lrid6smix . Points, the average 'wean of every qzke of w14c.4 yfillfa r outlast a gross of the best Steel Pens. - . The name' "L.Merton " "Number," amt ty," arwistamped on' the following Pens, and the Points arc warranted for . six months, except against, accident. The, numbers indicate size ONLY:. No. 1 being the smallest, No.'6 the largest ' ,adaPted for the pocket; , ,-No. 4 the Smallest, and No. 10 the largest - INfammoth Gold: Pen, - for the desk: -Long ,and me dium Nibs ,of all sizes and qualities. Short,Nibs of Nos. 4,5, 0 and`7, and made only of first quality. The 'engravings are fad-siraides of the sizes and styles. GOLD PENS For 75 cents, a No. 1 Pen, Ist quality, or a No. 3 Pen, 3d quality. For $1; a No. 2 Pen, Ist quality,. or a. NO. 8 Pen, 2d quality, or a No. 4 Pen,,3d quality. • For $125 . , a No. 3 Pen, Ist quality, or.allo. 4Pen, 2dlity, or a No. 5 Pen,3d quality. - .Torsl 50, a No. 4 Penst-quality, or a Not 5 Pen, 2d qualitn or a No. .6 Pen, 3d. quality. For $1 75 a No. 5 Pen Ist quality, or a No. 6 Pep 2d giants' For $2 25,-a No. 6 Pen, Ist quality. TTT SAME GOLD PENS IN SILVER EXTEN SION CASES, WITH PENCILS. For $1 50, a No. 1 Pen, lst quality, or a No. 3 Pen, 3d quality. • For $1 75;a No. i-Pen, Ist -quality, or a-No. 8 Pen, 2d quality, or, a No. 4 Pen, 8d quality. - For $2, a No, 3 Pen, Ist quality, or a No. 4 Pen, 2d qualior aNo Pen,6d quality ty, •, . For $2 . 60, a N 0 . 1.4 Pen, Ist quality, or a No. 5 Pgn, 2d vality i or a No., 6 - Pen i 3d quality. For $3, a No. P,en,,,lstquality,py a. No. 6,Pen, 7 24 TIAN% Far $3 50, aNo 6 Pen l lst quality. GOLD PENS, AIL ler QUALITY, IN SILVER.' MOUNTED DESK-HOLDERS. : For $2, a No. 4Pen, for 12 25, a No. 5 Pen, for $2 75, a No. 6 Pen, for $8 50, a No. 7 Pen. $4,..a No: 8 Pen, for $5, a No. 9 Pen v arid, for $6 a No. 10 Feb. The , " , Ist- QualitY"- are pointed with the'very best Iridosmin Points, carefully selected, and none of this quality are sold, with, the slightest imperfection which skill and the closest scrutiny can detect. The" QuilitY" are superior - to any Pens made by him previous tolhe.year 1860: The 8d Quality" heintends"shall equal.in respect to Dib-ability,Elastieity, and Good Writing Qualities (the 'only true cdfigiderations) any Gold Pens made elsewhere.' -41 In regard to, thet. Cheap Gold Pens, be heti leave to say that, previous to operating, his New and.Poc tented Macloneg;'"he" could not have made as Good Writing and Durable Pens, for the price, had the Gold_been"furnished - gratuitously Parties;ordering must in, all instances specify the "number" and "quality" of the Pens wanted, andhe partteular to describe the kind of Pens they prefer—whether stiff or limber,:coarse orfine. All remittance by mail in Registered letters are at my risk. 1111g - I,nr sale by all dealers in" the 'line throughout the country Address, A. MARTON, No. 25 Maiden Lane, New York: Any one sending a single letter post-stamp will re _ ceive, a circulariwith the engravings above Teferred $500,000 250,000 T:ARRANTS' SELTZER APERIENT. This valuable and popular Medicine has nniveisallp received the most favorable recommenda iionS of the MEDICAL PROFESSION . and the Pusue, as the most EFFICIENT AND AGREEABLE &ALINE APERiEN'''f.' `"' zany be used *ith the best et 'lt.; Alec' tam' Bilious and Febrile Diseases, Costifeliess, Sick Head ache, Nausea, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Acidity of the Stomacik Torpidity Of the Liver, Gorit,ißheurna ta. cAffeetions, 'Gravel, Piles, - ' AND AU COXIAINTS WHERE angle and Cooling„ Aperient or Purgative ss ..ttegzrecL ,It is ,partieurarly.adapted to the wants of Travelers by Sea and Lad, 'residents in Hot Clirnate.s, Persons of Sedentary !Habits, Invalids and Convalescents; Captains of Vessels and Planters will it a valua ble addition:to tbeir Medicine Chests. It is in,thq fOrni of a Powder, carefully put up-in bot- ties to Veep in any di ate and Merely requires waterpoured upon it to produce a delightful . • . effervescent beverage *ailerons testimonialt•from professional and other gentlemen of the highest standing throughout the country, and its - steadily increasing popularity, for a series of years, strongly guarantee its efficaky and val uable character,.•andi commend it to the favorable no tice of au :intelligent public: Manufactured only by TARRANT & CO., No. 278 Greenwich 'street, ear. Warren, New York, mylb.ly~ And for sale by Druggists generally. A. S., D E DAN rmat,. .the eelbratett Fan FRANKLIN, MAMD MQI4 VEIN) LOCUST iMpuNTAIN. Ir icEorv i , AND giRINd Mehin.A.lN [Lehigitl CoAL, tfiricoLasama A". 7 YARD - 404 IT:"BICCIA13 NTilst - above Vol n AVbitiLde • ' reblS 61 LENnS FAYETTE, OUT CAS EFF*VESCENT