208 €mlt. CHRISTMAS-EVE. * r The following verses, by a true woman, simple, touching, and teeming with mother-love, come to us from Monroe, Michigan. ’Tis Christmns-eve! the tireless clock is tolling the hours away, . . , And my household all are sleeping, dreaming of Christmas-day. , My countless varying duties are finish d, One-by one, Still there is always something left—my. work is never done; „ .... , , So I sit down by the cradle, my little one to rock, And, while I sing a lullaby, I knit for him a sock I’ve filled some littlo stockings with candy and with And hung thorn by the chimney-place, to please my darlingboj’s. .... ~ T , •. ;■ They’re sleeping sweetly m their enbs, 1 ve tuqkea the clothes m tight, _ . , j.r I’ve heard them say their evening prayer, andUssd • them both good-night. 1 know that-' ere the daylight shall through the Tleir Merryolin wishes shall wake me from my sleep* I’ve many, many thoughts to-night, and they are sad to me: ~ . . , Two stockings only hang; , this year, where three were wont to be- : ■ The tears are falling thickly as I think of the day ; When I laid that little stocking forevermore away; For the happy one that hung it there, but one short In yonder graveyard quietly sleepeth ’neath the How many little stockings, that on last Christmas day Were filled by darling little ones, have since been' put away I How many smiling faces, that to our nurtery door Came wishing ‘‘ Merry Christmas,” will come again ■ no more ! Their waken hands are folded upon each quiet breast, And the Shepherd God has gather’d those little jamhs to rest. How many pleasant visions, and, oh, what sad ones too,. With each succeeding Christmas-eve, come vividly to view 1 . I see again my childhood’s home, and every loved one’s face; The stockings hanging, as of yore, around the chim ney-piaee, From the wee red one of baby’s to grandpa’s sock, of gray — Each in its own accustom’d place, not even one away. But tbo pleasant vision passes, and one of darker shade _ v Reveals bow many changes each Christmas-eve has , made.; For those whose stockings hung there so closely side by side. In happy days of childhood, are scatter’d far and , wide 1 A few still linger here to see this Christmas-eve pass by, But many, many more to-night within the church yard lie. The baby’s seek is finish’d —'tis sprinkled o’er with tears: Where will his tiny footsteps wander in future years? Perhaps this innocent will live to see, as 1 have done, _ The Christmas-eves of childhood steal onward, one by one; But, whether a life of sorrow, or whether a life of I I can trust with God my much-loved baby boy. The clock has struck the hour of twelve! I’ve put the sock away, And, by the baby’s cradle, I now kneel down to pray— ...... To ask that loving Saviour who on Christmas mom was given To save our souls from sin and death, and fit us all for heaven, —* J - -*—■*- *-"■« his love, That we may sing together a Christmas hymn above. —lypographic Advertiser. FAMILY GOVERNNENT—HINTS ONLY. BY REV. JOHN TODD, D. D. I am speaking to those whose children are young—with characters unformed, with facul ties undeveloped. Don’t drop the paper saying to yourself: “I can’t get time to read or plan. He can’t sympathize with me. I have burdens heavy enough daily, without being lectured.” Softly, softly. It may be possible that if I can’t relieve you of any of your burdens, I can help you to bear them. Those little ones—the flowers of the hearth, the sunbeams in your dwelling, are worth to you and to themselves all your anxieties, and cares, and toils, and they will, if rightly trained, repay a thousand fold all they cost you. Remember that you are to your child a friend, a ruler, and a teacher. To control him, readily and fully, you must at all times govern yourself. If the child sees that you are irritable, hasty, ill-tempered and pas sionate—and he will understand this very early, I shall not now explain why it is so—but the fact is undeniable that he who would control others, must control himself. If, then, you act and decide, say yes or no, smile or frown, ac cording as you happen to feel at the moment, you make that child feel that you are as liable to treat him with injustice as otherwise. He can’t respect passion or temper. You lose in bis respect and also in his love. And your ob servation Will teach you that among all your acquaintances, you Can’t think of one instance where parents have good, family .government, who cannht govern themselves. Insist on prompt, cheerful obedience, and that without giving the reasons. It is a very common mistake to appeal to the reason of your child and show him how reasonable your command is. The fact is, the child has no reason to which you can appeal. His reason must grow out of the experience of life. It is undeveloped as yet, and God has placed him in subjection to you, because you have reason and he has not. The child loves to discuss the matter, and debate the why and the wherefore, and if permitted, will often over power the reason of parents by the most puer ile assertions. You may cultivate the reason ing faculties of your child as-much as you please, but its not the time to do it when you have laid a command upon him, Some try to gain obedience by appealing to the love, or the shame, or the good opinion of others, but never seem to think that their commands are all the child needs. God does so. He lays his com mands upon Us without assigning the reasons yvhy we should obey them. What a volume might be written under the command, “thou shalt not steal.” In family government it is very important that the father and mother sustain each other. The child will early learn which parent yields soonest to importunity, and he will there fore if refused by the sterner one, never rest till he has tried the weaker. I shall not say which of the parents is oftener the soonest to yield. But when the_child makes a request which you see fit to deny'him, and he says, “ well, I’ll go and ask father—l know he will let me,” that father is making a great mistake. The mother, shut up, worn and troubled, wearied and dis couraged by the constant supervision of her children, needs -all the aid and support which the authority of a father can give her. The child should mover feel that there is an appeal decisions of one parent to the good na other. Even if you don’t feel that been the wisest possible, don’t ■Wow that you feel so. Take it v Mke'decision has been right. - fldgt the voice of one.be the slowly. ne, American cha- wait for %gtimulate gi‘ tei El. early. We can’t build a house. We must “ slip it up.” We Can’t build a bridge that will last ages; we must “throw one over.the stream,” and in a few years see it perish. We don’t want to have boys and girls. They must leap from infancy into manhood., We must stimu late the child, see how fast we can cram and excite the brain, and develope the man in him. Hence we must have premature and immature and obscure men—all from most promising and precocious children. Whereas, me perfection of education is slow development. When you see the fond parent trying to show you how “forward” his-child is, how “quick” he is, how he excels m his class, and when you see him trying-to “show off" his darling, I beg you to commiserate the child, and write it down in your book that the child will never be much of a man. That slow, heavy boy, whose skull seems to be so thick that you cannot get an idea ■mto it you-may be sure, will develope slowly and long, and -will retain every idea that ever gets mto that skull. He is the hoy that you may expect to make a strong, manly character. Willows sprout early and grow fast. - The oak puts out its leaf late, and grows slowly. The one is woven into baskets, the other is bolted into ships. Don’t ,feel elated because your child is precocious; don’t feel discouraged be-; cause he gepqfoslow and hard to acquire. In-? the end, the’llijrtle almost invariably beats the fox in the race:' We could give examples enough to prove this. You will find* Jihat a great deal of character is imparted and received at the table. Parents too often forget'this; and therefore, instead of swallowing your sullen silence, instead o€'rMopdid^^^M^|w’'busmess > instead of se verelyvtaih3ng( let the conversation at the table be genial, kind, social and cheering. Don’t bring disagreeable things to the table in your conversation any more than you would in your dishes. For this reason, too, the moTe good company you have at your table, the bet ter for yduf children. Every conversation with company at your table, is an educator of the family. Hence the intelligence and the refine ment and the appropriate behaviour of the fa mily which is given to hospitality. Never fedl that intelligent visitors can be anything but a blessing to you and yours. How few have fully gotten hold of the fact that company and .conversation at the table are no small part of education. One thing more. There is one thing that will aid you to govern yourself, to decide right ly, to be kind, and yet firm, to govern your children, and to meet the responsibilities of life beyond all that I have said, and that is daily, humble, earnest prayer. This is ,the mightiest aid yon can seize. Without it you will, fail, but with it you can hardly he disappointed in your hopes and anxieties.— S. 8. Times. Our readers will not be displeased with one or two additional extracts from the fine article in the last London Quarterly, on this remark able and interesting country. THE DAIMIOS OE JAPAN The regal Government a“iti now constitu ted, is hopelessly effete and seem - to be used chiefly as apolitical instrument by the ambitious Daimios and the priesthood. Of all the ano malies which are found m this extfaordmary -country, one of the greatest consists in the social restrictions which have been long acquiesced m by-the nobles', although they have constituted in effect, the /ruling power of the Not whelming'politifcal influence, they have submit ted ffor one half of his life in Ins provincial castle, cut .off from all social intercourse with b s equals, a Japanese noble passed hia time amidst his armed dependents revelling m the licentious ness and epicurism of a Sardanapalus, and sur rounded only by flatterers and slaves. - In confor mity with state precautions and the rules of a con ventional etiquette, only blood relations ate per mitted to associate with each other. If one Da iniio shpuld visit another, it would be,a recogni tion of his superiority; pride, therefore, alone keeps them apart. Those unhappy noblemen find no resource in the improvement of their estates, nor are they addicted to field sports. Habits of in toxication, originating in seclusion and want of occupation, are said to be prevalent, and other vicious indulgences are freely resorted to for re lieving the insufferable tedium of a life passed without society, without recognised duties, and without any healthy moral excitements. Even in these lonely retreats the curse of Japanese life, haunts the palace of the Daimio. He is sur rounded by spies, and his enemies are those of his own household. He may be denounced to the Tycoon for a hasty comment, an equivocal expression, or an unguarded jest; and a sudden summons to the capital may determine him to anticipate disgrace by suicide. The spirit of sus picion, by which the Government of the Tycoon is rendered almost omniscient for every had pur pose, brings into existence myriads of spies, who engender universal distrust and scatter the seed of conspiracies and false accusations broadcast over the land. The misery of such a state, of existence, in which life is rendered one scene of constant restraint, has encouraged among the nobility the practice of early abdication, for. a reigning prince of advanced age is rarely seen m Japan ; he either resigns bis oppressive dignity to his son, or dies prematurely of grief or ennui. CIVILIZATION IN JAPAN. ‘ No Asiatic nation has Attained so high a 'de gree- of material civilization as the Japanese, and it is astonishing how little they have, until "quite recently, been indebted to Europe for the progress which they have made. Their swords and cutlery are of finer temper then any which Birmingham or Sheffield produce,.their silk manufactures are admirable, their landscape gardening is distinguished for its taste, and they are no mean proficients in the arts of design. The great roaM of the country are shaded with magnificent trees, and are constructed with as much skill and care as the best, highways of Europe. Architecture is not much cultivated, ■ but the earthquakes to which the country is subject make that science, at least in its higher branches, altogether useless. Whatever may be the moral defects of the Japanese people they have a very short code at laws which posesses the rare merit of being simple and intelligible. On the issue of every new edict the magistrates assemble the people and proclaim the will of the Emperor in their presence. The law is then posted in the public halls or places appointed for the purpose in every village, town, and city of the empire. The Japariese are said .to highly .approve, the concise terms of these edicts and never for a moment to question their propriety. The judicial administration has been highly praised, and competent observers bear witness to the decorum with which trials are con ducted. .There is scarcely any graduated scale of punishment; - almost all crimes are ; pun ished alike. There is but one recognised of fence—that against the law—and the penalty is death. The severity of this Draconian code has almost annihilated crime, and its simplicity re lieves the Government from'the solution of many social problems which perplex European philan thropists. It needs no reformatories, penitentia ries, or model prisons, and. the, security of pro perty is not endangered by the presence of lib erated convicts.' . They have no lawyers, nor (strange to say I) do they appear to need any. JAPAN. The passion of the Empress for dress amounts almost to a monomania. The Empress neter appears twice in the. same dress, but changes the material and , the color every day. It is said that in the front centre of the ceiling of her private dressing-room there is a trap-dqor opening into a spacious hall above filled with “presses,” each containing'a dress exhibited on a frame, looking like an effigy of the Em press herself. In a. part of these presses there diuingcUjit. .'A. certain fear of disgrace is universal; but suicide purges all stains from the character, for death has ho terrors for a Japanese. Manners have'acquired a high degree of refinement, and when it is considered how much of the comfort of life depends on the demeanour of those about us this is certainly no slight merit in a,ny peo ple. Even the humblest classes exhibit a stu died politeness. The relation between the sex es differs, from that Of most Oriental countries. The position of woman is well-defined and na tural. She is not the slave but the counsellor . of her husband -; she assists him in his business; her sphere is the house, and her duty the educa tion of her children. There are no 'strong minded women,’ in Japan, remarks with satis-: . faction an accomplished Prussian traveller; all; are joyous girls or amiable wives. .There are pe culiarities in the marriage rite which show that • .they attach a high importance to this connec tion. It is not exactly a religious ' ceremony, for marriage in Japan is regarded as a civil con tract; biit the celebration of the nuptials takes place in a temple and in the presence of a priest The bride, at the conclusion of the cere money, kindles a torch from the altar, and the bridegroom kindles another from hers. The netity of the matrimonial relation is beautiful ly typified in this symbolic rite, and the conduct 'of women after, marriage is allowed by all to be pure, although it must be admitted that the penalty for infidelity is death ; but the national custora'of blackening the teeth and pulling out the eyebrows is calculated, and probably in tended to repel all further advances. Women - in Japan, however, are not free from the.uni versal weakness of the sex. The family of the Governor of Hakodadi and the British Consul were on visiting terms, and the first request of the J apanese lady on entering the drawing-room of her hostess was to be allowed to inspect her wardrobe, in the examination of which she oc cupied _two hours, trying Parisian bonnets and putting English dresses over her own. CONTRAST BETWEEN: TWO QUEENS. TIIE QUEEN OF ENGLAND. I have frequently heard it' said, in a tone of censure, that our court is a very parsimonious one—too economical a great deal; but if it be economical, it is just and punctual in the ex treme.- It is certainly a fact that so far as her milliners and dressmakers are concerned, heT Majesty likes to know the price of articles fore commanding them—a practice which her subjects would do well to follow; and all her tradespeople know full well that their accounts must be punctually renderedevery three months, when they are punctually discharged—another example well worthy of imitation and one which, if the ladies of, our aristocracy would but follow, they would, find themselves -saving at least 50 per cent., on their milliners’ hills. They would, too, at once rob the employers of one great and general excuse for overworking their assistants—an excuse which they con sidered all powerful—viz., that their capital is so locked up by the long credit they are obliged to give their customers, that they have to do with as few paid assistants as possible.— The English-woman’s Journal ..... THE EMPRESS OF FRANCE. which the dress effigy descends in to the Em press. If it please her Majesty, the dress is lifted from the frame and placed upon the im perial person; if not it is whipped up, and another comes, down in its place, and perhaps another and another,— Letter from Paris. EFFECTS OF THE EXAMPLE OF , THE EMPRESS, A Paris correspondent of the Morning Post says:—That which strikes terror to the heart of every parent in Paris is the daily increasing cost of life. All popular tastes are expensive; the bare necessities of existence are double the price they were ten years ago, and the univer sal race-is after gold—aye at almost any cost. A lady wears a mechanic’s income on her back. Some of our gooff, old-fashioned country house wives would start with horror could they see the milliner’s bills of clerks’'wives. The fifth story—anywhere so that the roof does not slant—will do for the home, so that the bonnet and flounces are the -newest. The fever is catching the very poor to. add to their straits. : The snow-white cap of other days, is. being put aside for the cheap bonnet. The trim, clean, economical blouse is cast away as the mark of labor, (as if there were not honor in labor,) for the square-cut suit of shoddy cloth. The reckless expenditure on dress is a pesti lence that sinks deep. It is reaching the very: poorest of the Paris poor, to the destruction of the comfort that was in their old, picturesque and rational afitirp,. . ‘ i ANALYSIS OF THE BREAD FOUND AT POMPEII. • On the subject of the bread found at Pompeii, M. de Luca has recently addressed two papers, to the Academy of Sciences, which are not de , void of interest. The eighty-onelDaves dis covered at Pompeii on the 9th of August, 1862, in a Roman baking ove’n, he tells us, have not all been taken to the museum at Naples, where only a dozen are kept; the remainder are exhi bited at Pomp'eii. They ;w'eigh item 500 to 600- grammes each, except four weighing.2oo grammes more, and one of 1,201 grammes. Their form has been too often described 'to deserve repeti-. tioh here; but their color and substance offer some interesting peculiarities. Externally, the color is. dark-brown, nearly black at the circum ference, but lighter toward the centre. The. crust is somewhat hard and, compact,-but-the: crumb, which is porous, may be easily crushed* between the forefinger and thumb, and has a; lustre not unlike that of coal. This : Crumb con tains, at the Centre, about 23 per cent of water, while the part adjacent to the crust only contains; from 13 to 21 per cent. It loses some of its humidity when, exposed .to the air and the wea ther is hot. The crumb, near the Crust contains; 23 percent of nitrogen; the crumb at the cen tre only contains 16. Tne crust does not con tain, more than 1-65 per cent. The composition 1 of this bread was not easy to ascertain, because: the quantity of carbon diminishes from the cir cumference to the Centre, while the'- hydrogen,; on the contrary, increases toward the centre. This shows that the external air has exercised some action on the bread; nbt%ithstanding it was enveloped in a baking oven. The corn found in the baking establishment of, Pompeii seems toi have been wheat of good quality; it is now of ai dark-brown color, porous, and easy to crush be tween the forefinger and thumb. It eon fains 11-2 of ashes, 68‘9 of-carbon, and 5-5 of oxygen, against 23T of ashes, 46 of carbon, and 43 of oxygen, contained in wheat gathered in 1836. The proportion of hydrogen and nitrogen is about the same in both cases. Blit the corn bfi -Pompeii has lost its starch, since it is‘-not colored 1 by iodine; nor does it contain any substance ca pable of reducing the tartrate of eopper and pot ash, or fermenting'with "yeast. Hence, after eighteen.centurieß,. the corn of Pompeii has lost all its,organic substances, and contains neither gluten nor ’starch, nor sugar; nor any fatty sub stance; while the bread contains the elements; which constitute organic matter toward the center than at the surface.— GaUgnani. A Church, exists wherever the Spirit of Christ; ! prevails.!— Galvin. PRESERVING SWEET POTATOES. The following mode of preserving sweet pota toes is given in the last report of the Agricultu ral Department at Washington, by 3. 0. Thomp son, of Tompkinsville, Staten Island: “ For winter use, after the first frost select a dry, clear day. Cut the vines with a scythe, leaving the stem to Which the potatoes are at tached three or four inches long, to lift them by. The vines are readily eaten by cattle. Use a fork for raising the potatoes; lift them by the stem, and lay them on the ridge to dry. In a few hours they will be ready to pack. Prepare plenty of dry cut straw (old straw is preferable,) and take straw and barrels or boxes to the, field. Select the best potatoes, handling carefully with out bruising them. Put a layer of. straw at, the bottom of the barrel, and then alternate layers of potatoes and straw until it is filled. The po tatoes should be placed close to each_otlier, one at a ; time, and handled as carefully as eggs. The barrels are then to be moved to a dry room.or cellar, where there will be no frost. If they are placed in a cellar they must be raised from the floor, and must not touch the wall. Keeping warm and dry is the” secret of their preservation. They will keep six,or eight months and improve in quality. From one plot of ground 39 by 100 feet, I gathered, in October last, 43 J bushels.” Sugar an Antidote for Worms. —M. De bont says that sugar is .an excellent destroyer of worms. He once accidentally put sugar instead of salt on a leech which he wished to detach from the skin, and was'surprised at the spasms produced by it. He therefore tried sugar on earth-worms, and found, it had a similar power ful effectj and since used it;in solution, with success, as an injection in children. —British Medical Journal. [The world moves. In old times, sugar used to be considered the best possible encouragement for these parasites.]— Eds. Sci. American. To impart a fine flavor to ordinary tea, place rose leaves in the tea-canister, or add one drop of- the otto of roses, on a piece of soft paper to every pound of tea; and keep the canister closely covered. jgfttmii'tmuifc U. S. 5-20’S. The Secretary of the Treasury has not yet given notice of any intention to withdraw this popu lar Loan-from Sale at Far,- and, until ten days’ no tice is given, the undersigned/ as "General Sub scription Agent,” wiTL continue to supply the public. ■ . ■ ; The whole amount of the Loan authorized is Five Hundred Millions of . Dollars. Nearly Four Hun dred Millions have been already subscribed for and paid into the Treasury, mostly within the last seven months. The large demand from abroad, and the rapidly increasing home demand for use as the basis for circulation by National Banking Asso ciations now organizing in all parts of the country, will, in a very short period, absorb the balance. Sales have lately tanged 'from ten to fifteen millions weekly; frequently exceeding three millions daily, and as it is well known-that the Secretary of the .Trea sure]?, lias ample' and. unfailing resources in the-Du-, ties on Imports and Internal Revenue, and in the is use of the'; Interest-bearing Legal Tender Treasury Notes, it is alihost a certainty that he will not find it necessary, for a long time to come, to seek aftnar- rest and Principal of which are payable in Gold. Prudence and self-interest must force the minds of those contemplating the' formation of National Bank ing Associations, as well as the minds of allwho have idle money on theirihands, to the prompt con clusion; that’they should Jose no time in subscribing to this rnbst popular Loan. It will soon be beyond their, reach, and-advance to .a handsome premium, as was the result with the “Seven Thirty” Loan, when it was all sold and could no longer be subscribed foratpar,. It is a Six per Cent; Loan, the Interest, and Principal payable in Coin, thus yielding over Nine per Cent, per at the present rate of premium on coin. ‘ 1 The Government requires, all duties on imports to be paid in Coin. These duties have, for a long time past, amounted to over a Quarter of a Million of Dollars daily,' a sum nearly three times greater than that required in the payment of the interest on all the 5-20’s and other permanent loans. Bo it is hoped that the Surplus Com m the Treasury, at no dis tant day, will enable the .United States to resume specie payments upon all liabilities; . The Loan is called 5-20; from the fact that, whilst the Bonds may run for 20 years yet the Govern ment has a right to pay them off in Gold, at par, at’ any time after 5 years. The Interest is paid half-yearly, viz: on the first days of November and May. SubcriberS can have Coupon .Bonds, which are payable to. bearer, and are $5O, $lOO, $5OO, and $1000; or Registered Bonds of same denomihatioos, and in addition, $5,000 and" $lO,OOO. For Banking purposes and for investments of Trust-monies the Registered Bods are preferable. . , These 5-20’s cannot be taxed by States, cities, towns, or counties, and the. Government tax on them is only one and a half per cent, on the amount.of in come, when the income of holder exceeds Six Hun dred Dollars per annum., All other investments, such as income from Mortgages, Railroad Stock, and Bonds, etc., must pay from, 'three,to five per cent, tax on the income. , ■ '■ ' Banks and Bankers throughout the Country will continue to dispose of the Bonds; and all orders by mail, or otherwise, will be promptly attended to. The inconvenience of a few days’ delay in the de livery of the Bonds is unavoidable, the demand being so _great; but as interest commences from the day of subscription, no loss is occasioned, -and every effort is being made to diminish the delay. JAY COOKE, . SUBSCRIPTION iAGENT, 114 South THIRD Street, Philadelphia. PhUadelpliia, November 2bth, 1863. Dc. 17 —2 m New and Valuable Books. sabbath-school libraries. , A 'LL the new Publications of the different Religious A Societies, and Book Publishers, together with a full and complete assortment of the publications of AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, Instituted in Boston, in 1814,, Among which are— The Little Captain, Uncle Paul’s Stories, . Help over Hard’Places, Transplanted Shamrock, The Cross-Bearer, - Children’s Picture Book, Etc., Etc., Etc. Which are now selling rapidly, and new issues are continually being added. JOHN G- BROUGHTON, No". 13 Bible House, New York. Bgy Directly opposite Cooper'lnstitute. GEORGE ASHMEAD, DRUGGIST, .603 Market Street, Philadelphia. ■ BEALER in Drugs, Chemicals, Extracts, Pure Spices, and Perfumery; Window Glass, Putty, White'Lead, Zinc, Oils and Turpentine, Alcohol, etc. Importer of French Anatomical Preparations and Skeletons. ■ • - m 51 * : W. P, GLAM. SHOES AND UMBRELLAS, 1626 Market Strret. All kinds of Boots and Shoes of my own manu laeture, or made to order. A good assortment ot Gum Shoes. Umbrellas repaired. Pinking in a va riety of styles, at low prices. IplMfl FOR MARKING LINEN, MUSLIN, SILK, &o. By years of use has proved itself THE BEST, . MOST PERMANENT, • MOST RELIABLE . Marking.lnk in the World. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY TARRANT & GO., 278 Greenwich Street, New York. , (for sale by all druggists. ) ~s , For THIRTY YEARS has received-the Favorable Recommendation of the PUBLIC, and has been USED AND PRESCRIBED by the " - FIRST PHYSICIANS IN THE LAND ' AS THE • ; REST REMEDY KNOV’N ' FOB Sick Headache, Nervous Headache, Dyspepsia, Sour Stomach, Bilious Headache, Dizziness* Costiveness, Loss of Appetite, Gout,. Indigestion, Torpidity of the Liver, Gravel, . Rheumatic Affections* Piles, _ . . Heartburn, Sea Sickness, . Bilious Attacks, Fevers, &c. For Testimonials, &e., see Pamphlet with each Bottle. MAS-UFACTDRED pKLV BY •• . T AR-R ANT & CO., 278 Greenwich Street, New York. ■ (fob-salk by ai.l druggists.) USEFUL AND . VALUABLE ' ; DISCOVERY I Gee it Discovery 1 HILTON’S INS OLUBL£ CEMENT Is of more general practical utility than any invention now before the public. It has'been thoroughly tested during the last two years by practical andpronounced hy all to he Applicable* to flie useful -Arts. , Hilton’s Insoluble Cement Is anew thing, and the result of years ofetudy: its combination is on A new thing. SCIENTIFIC PRINCIPLES, And under no circumstance or change of tem perature, will it become corrupt or emit any ’ • offensive smell. Its Combination. ; BOOT AND SHOE Manufacturers,using Machines,will find it the best article known for Cementing Channels, as it works without delay, is not affected by any Boot and Shoe Manufacturers. JEWELERS Will find it suffidently adhesive for their use, Jewelers. It is especially adapted to families. And we claim as an especial merit, that it sticks Patches and Linings to Boots and Shoes "it is the only a L ran ID CEMENT that is a sure thing for mending JFuxnititre, Crockery, ' Toys, Bone, Ivory, And articles of Household use, Jt is a Liquid. Hilton’s Insaluhle Cement Is in a liquid form and; as easily applied as 1 Hilton’s Insoluble Cement Is insoluble in water or oil. Hilton’s'lnsoluble Cement Adheres oily substances. Supplied in family or Manufacturers* Packa ges from 2 ounces to 100 lbs. HILTON BROS, & CO., Proprietors PROVIDENCE, R. I. ’hiladelphia, LAING & MAGINNIS, Jell ly Agents in AMERICAN Life Insurance and Trust Company. S.E.COR.WALNUT AND FOURTH STS, PHILA Capital and Assets, $1,897,746.59. Mutual Rates—Half note: to be paid by Profits of Company, or Reduced rate of Premium without Profits. Total Abstinenee rate peculiar to this Compa ny, and lower than any other. BOARD OF TRUSTEES. Alexander Whilldin, Hon. Jas. Pollock, Albert C. Roberts, Samuel T. Bodine, George Nugent, William J. Howard, Samuel Work. ALEXANDER WHILLDIN, President. SAMUEL WORK, Vice-President. John S. Wilson, Sec’y and Treas’r. . S APONIFIER, OB OONCINT R AT I D LTI, •FAMILY SOAP MAKER. WAR'makes high prices; Sapomfler helps to reducethem. It makes Soap for Jpotii cents a pound by using your kitchen grease. JITS' CA-TJ-TIOIVI As spurious Lyeß areWered also, be careful aba only buy the Patented, article put up in Iron'cops; all others being Cotinterlelts. pmsinvJjnsALTnAiniHACTUßiNoco. Philadelphia—No. 127 Walnut Street. ' Pittsburgh—Pitt Street and Duquesne Way. W. HENRY PATTEN’S NEW WEST END Window Shade, Cnrtain and Upholstery Store, ' ’V;'.. No. 1408, Chestnut Street, Neit door to Hubbell’s (Apothecary.) Window Shades, Gilt Cornices, Bedding. Furni ture Re-Upholstered, Varnished and Repaired. Car pets or Matting, cut or made, or altered and put down, by the best men to.be got in the city.' Fumi ture Slips, or Covers, handsomely made and fitted. Verandah Awning, etc, W. HENRY PATTEN, feb!2 iyr *. 1408 Chestnut street,’ Superior to any Adhesive Preparation known. change of temperature. as has been proved. Leather, REMEMBER J. Edgar Thomson, Hon. Joseph Allison, Jonas Bowman, P. B. Mingle, John Aikman, Charles F, Heazlitt, jell 3n- Samuel Work. Kramer & Bahm, Pittsburg. BANKING HOUSE OF WORK, MeCOUCH & GO., No. 36 Sooth Third Street, Philadelphia. DEALERS ia uncurrent Bank Notes and Coins. Southern and Western Funds bought on the most favorable terms. Bilk of Exchange onNew York, Boston, Pittsburg, Baltimore, Cincinnati, St. Louis, etc., etc., con stantly for sale. Collections promptly made on all accessible points in the United. States and Canadas. # ; Deposits received, payable on demand, and interest allowed as per agreement. Stocks and Loans bought and sold on commission, andßusinessPaper negotiated. Refer. ;to Philadelphia and Commercial Banks, Philadelphia; Read,*Drexel & Co., Winslow, Lanier & Co., New York; and Citizens' and Exchange Banks, Pittsburg. ■ feblS tf BANKING HOUSE. GEORGE J. BOYD i No. 18 South Third, Street, Philadelphia, (Two doors above Mechauies’Bank.) DEALER in Bills of Exchange, B ank Notes and ■Specie. Drafts on New York, Boston, Balti more, etc., for sale. Stocks and Bonds bought and sold!on commission, at the Board ot Brokers. Busi ness Paper, Loans on Collaterals, etc., negotiated. Deposits received and interest all owed.' ja9 REMOYAL. ' JAMES » WEBB, - DEALER IK ■- '■ ' . Fine Teas, Coffees, and ChoiceFamilY' ’ ■ \ Groceries. ■ Has removed to the. •• S. E. corner of Eighth and Walnut streets, Phil a delphia, a few doors from his forinerlocation, where Bri'will be happy to see his friends and customers. . Goods caretully paeked.and forwarded* to the coun try. janB ly ’> ' ~ ~ ' THOMPSON. BLACK & SON’S Tea Warehouse and Family Grocery Store, NORTH-WEST CORNER OF BROAD AND CHESTNUT -STREETS, PHILA. (Established 1836.). An extensive; assortment of Choice Black and' Green Teas, and every variety of Fine Groceries, suitable for Family use. 1 Goods delivered in anypart of the city, or packed 1 securely for the country. janl ly NEW PUBLICATIONS OR THE PRESBYTERIAN PUBLICATION COMMITTEE. The Cannibal Islands; or, Fiji and the. Fijians. An interesting account of Fiji, its islands, its peo ple, their degradation and their elevation. Fully ' illustrated. 70 cents. . , . Bane Notes,' and “It’s His Way.” - Two capital narratives 1 for Our series for youth, teaching faith and good works. 30 cents. The Two Watches,- with "The Two Ladders,” and "The Drinking Fountain. ’ ’ A book le>r the young, conveying lessons on Christ and our-Saviour in a ' winning style. 30 cents. Far Away ; (in press) or, Life in Tanna and Samoa. - By the Author o£ “Money,” “Lessons for the : Little Ones,” &e., &c. A chapter, from. Missions in the South Seas. 40 cents The Closet Companion; A Manual of Devotion. By a Layman, with a strong commendatory intro duction, by the Rev. Albert Barries. 60 cents.' Bevelled boards and red edges, 75 cents. A Church Catechism for Children and Youth in the : , Presbyterian Church. 3- cents.' Duties op our Laymen. By an Elder. In muslin, 16 cents. In paper, 6 cents. Sovereignty op God.' By Rev. Dr, Helfenstein;, 3 cents. ■■ . Almanac for 1864, 6 cents. Perhnridred, $4.00. PRESBYTERIAN PUBLICATION COMMITTEE, ' 1334 Chestnut St,, PHidadelphia. ' TJ kw._ZgoEY-^A--D J ~F. RA •’ $8 Broadway. /"'('ROVER Vj and’ BAKER’S NOISEtESS . FAMILY : SEWING MACHINES. 145.00. At our office a-I o n e can purchasers examine the relative merits of each stitch and be guaranteed. ultimate and thorough sa- w a° C m S 1 t TC t v tisfaction by our privilege " " * of exchanging for either w AmxrwW style if not suited, with MACHINES.. their first choice. $45.00. GBOVEB, BAKER’S NUMBER NINE SEWING MACHINES, •$45.00. CALI/ and examine our Machines before purchas ing elsewhere. Wemanu- BAKER’S faethre a large variety of j ~ styles of each stiteh. and bKWnrs Machiite adapted to the 'require- ' Pepot, ments of families and ma nufacturers of goods where sewingis employed. jan!7 ly ' PENNSYLVANIA CENTRAL RAILROAD. THE GREAT DOUBLE-TRACK SHORT ROUTE TO THE WEST, NORTH-WEST AND SOUTH-WEST: Equipments and facilities for the safe, speedy, and comfort aole transportation, of passengers, unsurpassed by anv route in the country. * • . . Train? leave the Depot at Eleventh and Market streets, as follows: ’ - Mail train at , Fast Line at . . through Express at - . - - - Act."" modation Train at - Lancaster at - - - - _ Parkesburgh Train, leaving West Phil*, at 6AO P. M Through passengers, by the Fast Line, reach Altoona for supper, where will be found excellent accommodations for the night, at the Logan House, and may take either the Fhiladel- Daltimore Express, each,of which makes connection at Pittsburgh for aU points. A daylight view is thus afforded of the entire line and its magnificent scenery. FOR PITTSBURGH AND THE WEST. Thc IVf ftil Traill, Past Line, and Through Express connect at Pittsburgh with through trains on all the diverging roads from that point, North to theLakeß, West to the Mifaissimii and Missouri nvere, and South and South-west to all points accessible by railroad. Through tickets to Cleveland, Detroit. Chicago St. Paul, Columbus, Indianapolis', St. Louis' Lem venworth, Kansas, Wheeling, Dayton, Cincinnati, Louisville, tairo, and all other principal, points, and baggie checked , WESTERN EMIGRATION. An Emigrant Accommodation Train leaves No. IST Doca Street daily, (Sabbaths excepted,) at,lo o’clock. P.M., offerine ssari SsK®ss.“Ss,gr"'“ ii * s ‘" " ! »" s For full information apply to ■ - FRAfcolS FUNK, Emigrant Agent, ' 137 Dock Stiee a S deßcri P tions «*» be forwarded to and from any points on the radroads'of Ohio, Kentucky SSPS toknv o^’„ r sr\, or ? riBaouri l b f «SSS Kkers ftomMtsburgh nav^W e rivers of fee West, by »SBasss^tssssasgaAfe tins Company pan rely with confidence on its speedy SLsit. Elions ® SSf& S.B. KINOSTQN, Jr.. 7’liil»l n i rMtt - D. A. l - B COy Chicago. , i House, or No.' 1 South -TOlHam J a !WSftoo Street, Boston: . . thS NMt£^ eet > Bamrnm, Agent Nor „ H. H. HOUSTON, Oenera^reight^nt^kadelphia. w « en «™ fe I |^ent ) Philadelphia. ■ • . General Superinten lent,’Altoona, Pa, v THOMAS CAEEIOK & CO., CRACKER AKD BISCUIT BAKERS, 1905 Market Street, 3?hila. Superior Crackers, Pilot and Ship Bread, Soda, Suffar and Kc-iVics, Jvm- A t>,™> ° o’ @ ln ffe r Nuts, ■ A.PBE s, Scotch anb Other Oakes. _ Ground Cracker in any Quantity Orders promptly filled. • M . T Jbr a Liquor Bitters, toe publish the foSovring receipt. Get One Bottle Hoofland’e German Bitters and mix with Three qwart* of Good .Brandy' or Whiskey, and the mitt tom be a preparation Vast tottt far excel in medicinal virtues and true excellence any of the numerous Liquor Bitters in the market, and wQi cost much less* You will have aU the virtues of Hoof* land’s Bitters in c&nneetion vnUt a good article of Liquor, at a muck leu price than theseinferiar preparations win cod you,. ATTENTION, SOLDIERS! AND THE FRIENDS OF SOLDIERS, We call tiie attention of all haring relations or army to the fact that M HOOFIiAND’S German Bitters” will core nfmotenths Hf the diseases induced by exposures and privations incident to camp life. In the Hats, published almost daily in .the newspapers, on the arrival of the sick, it will be noticed that a very large proportion, are suffering from debility. Every case of that kind can be readlly-cnred by Hbofiand’s German Bitters. Diseases resulting from, disorders of the digestive organs are speedily removed. We have no hesitation in stating that, if these Bitters were freely used among our soldiery hundreds of lives znight be eared that otherwise will be lost BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS I Bee that the signature of “G H. JACKSON ” is on the WRAPPER of each bottle. PRICE PER BOTTLE 75 (JESTS, ra OS HALF DOZ. FOB $4.00* , Should your nearest druggist not have the article, do not be put off by any of the intoxicating preparations that may be offered in ita place, but send to ua» and we will ffrward, securely packed, by •express. Principal Office and Manufactory, Wo. 631 AECH ST. JONES & EVANS, (Succwßore to C. M. JACKSON * CO,) Proprietors* SALE by Droggfrte and Dealers In every town In tba United States. MEIODEONS! HARMONIUMS l /CONSTANTLY on hand a stock of Melodeons of V.' my own make, which cannot be excelled. _ I am sole agent for C-arh art’s Splendid Haemo Nidms, possessing unequalled powers, variety and beauty of tone. The best instrument for Churche ever introduced. B. M. MORRISS,. : *an22 ly No. 728 Market street- S. TUSTON ELD RIDGE, [me davenport a eldridge,] impoetje and deader in FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC HARDWARE, Cutlery, Tools, Looking Glasses, etc., No. 42G South Second St., above Lombard, ' [Opposite the Market, West Side,] Philadelphia. E. H. ELDRIDGE, A&t., fashionable Clothier, [Formerly of Eighth and Chestnut streets,] HAS .taken the Store, : . : ■ No. 628 Market street, Where he is prepared to furnish his old&iendsand ‘ the public in general with . CLOTHING, Ready Made or Made to Order , in the Best Style AT MODERATE PRICES, As he buys and sells exclusively for Cash. [decs ly 'JOHN F. CRIPPS’ MAR RLE WORKS, FIFTEENTH AND RIDGE AVENGE, PHILADELPHIA. If you want a cheap Head-Stone, call at J- S CRIPPS S cor. of, 16th and Ridge avenue. aplfi On