tfiita&Jlrtb. PAMPHLETS AND MAGAZINES THE EaLEcnc Foe- York 5 R? 0 t TURE> Aa S UBt > 1864. Now Tho Basfn of an T? treot - Con tents :1. hahiSfl o f U Pper Me and its In mi t The Basque Country. 3. of : m P iTe 4 - Tbe ■ World. 5. Telegraph Line vu he Worid - 6. Kirk’s Charles -he Bold. 7. An Old Woman on Wife voosing. 8, Tilsit and Erfurt. 9. ’-don Editors and Political Writers. P°®pcii. 11. The Jamsetjee Jee-. 'enoy. 12. Dagmar and Alexandra. Shakspeare. 14. Naval Battle of <w Orleans. 15. The Shakspeare Fes ■val. IQ. Literary Miscellany. For this table Mr. Bidweil has drawn, ’th his usual good discrimination, upon leading foreign magazines, such as o Westminster, Edinburgh, Bently’s, lumber's, etc., etc. The first article i.ntains some Bharp criticisms on Capt. lake's' account of his explorations. ie:Last New Empire speculates upon prospects of the new sovereignty in ico, balancing the natural advanta of the country against its political j6coddnts, and closing with these sen -11,00 8“ We wished to prove what an tormous field lay open to the energy the. nbw Emperor. Whether he will ' in’Mexico the men who will follow appeal to useful and pacific action, jdo not propose to examine. The ist offers no hopes, but it might hap m that Mexico, like its Spanish mo tor country, wearied of civil wavs, may aeept a regular government." The ■osont number is embellished with an igravod view of the great naval battle New Orleans, April 24, 1862, which described in Article 15 of the letter ■ess. Statement of the Suffolk Gold xing Company, Gregory District, ■pin County, Colorado.— Tliis is a iphlot of 67 pages, containing the ,aws and a copious statement of the .tion, with its mineral wealth, the >rovoments, and the affairs generally the company.- It has for illustra ons a sketch of the, property; a map 'tho route to it from Kansas City; a ip of tho central gold region of Colo ■do; longitudinal sections of workings ’a mine; interior view of a quartz ill; a view of Central City, and of the \nt building in Denver City. Prof. E. Kent, of the U. 3. Assay Office, Kew rk, writes to tho company: “I be- <eve the gold mines of Colarado io be *e richest in the world, and that the Gregory District contains the richest lodes which havo been developed/' '0 company is a Boston enterprise. Report of the Young Men’s Chris :an Association of Sew York, 1863 —*’64. The records of a year of unostenta tious bu trreal prosperity ,are here brough t -' Following the inevitable demands the times, the army and navy, have •awn largely uponithe energies of the jsociation. It has not, however, rc .xedfrom its more general labors. The Continental Monthly. August, 1864. Now York, John F. Trow, 50 "Irdene St. Contents:—American Civi- izfttion, by Lieut. Egbert Phelps, IJ. A.; Aphorisms, by ReV. Asa S. jtton. The English Press, by Nicho las Rowe, London. Our Martyrs, by Kate Putnam. ASnono, chapters Xand Xl.'- The First Christian Emperor, by Rev. Dr. Philip Schaff. Causes of the Minnesota Massacre, by January Searle. Buried Alive, by Martha Walker Cook. Negro Troops, by H. Everett Russel. Colors and their meaning, by Mrs. M. G. Gage. Battle of the Wilderness, ■ E. A. Warriner. Tardy Truths, by R. Kalussowiaki. An Army—lts 'rganization and Movements, by Lieut, tl; C. W. Tolies, A. Q. M. Literary otices. Editor’s Table. The character of the Atlantic is well iongh known to insure a good amount if live reading from the above table— imetimes uncertain as to its evangelical indoncies, but certain enough of sus .ihing whatever kind of interest it mkens. Arthur's Home Magazine, August, T. S. Arthur & Co., 323, Walnut Philadelphia. This cozy domestic •iodioal comes to us with its usual t of genial and hearty thoughts, ised in homily, story, or verse, not ;otting the “Mothers’ i.ys’ and Girls’ Treasury,” “ Health tartment,” “ Hints for the House ipers,” and that most unnecessary jessity, “Fashion Plates." Mr. Ar ;hur himself, as a writer, has chosen line in which ho has no superior. He :is also eminently happy in his lady co adjutor, and succods in securing good contributors generally. ;$s LITERARY ITEMS. Deaths of Authors. —-The death of Charles Sealsfield an American author - rftirmerlv of 8«noe note, is announced as taken place at Soleure Hi-; ln>e baa of late been spent in Oohxi- Cental Europe, mostly in Switzerland iSnd Germany There comes also by S e WB y of Paris, the notice of 'he flshath of Reboul, a popular poet of Pro . He was born m 1/96, ami llllnecqnently was sixty eight years old fSfttae time of his d. ath. He was ih-: h rnclfSiriit'ti; who sent bun u> a boarding-school, where ho did not learn much. After he quitted school he be came a journeyman baker. His poems were so successful as to lead M. de Lam artine to address him one of his Hartno nios, that which is entitled “ Le Genie dans l’Obscurite.” In 1848, Jean Re boul was sent to the Constituent Assem bly as a representive from the depart ment of Le Gard. The city of Himes gave him a public funeral. M. Pier Angelo Florentino is also announced among the dead.. He was by birth and education a Neapolitan, but Prance was the theatre of his literary career. Ho came to Paris poor, and maintained for some time a precarious living in Paris. Of his first article, which constituted his introduction to the columns of La Presse, he said, “ I wrote it in half an hour; I was twenty nights and twenty days in translating it j for i had no diction ary, and I was obliged to hunt in old volumes, which Iknew almost by heart, for equivalent words and phrases, that I might endeavor to succeed in making myself understood in a foreign lan guage.” He afterwards became the literary copartner of M. Alex. Dumas. About the year 1850 he was ; expelled from tho Literary Men's Society, for practices dishonorable to his profession, hut there being, as the Paris correspon dent of the Literary Gazette says, “no such thing as public opinion in Prance,” he does not seem to have lost caste. He lived expensively, but left a large estate at his death. Two New Books , are announced as in preparation in Paris. One is a life of Vauban, from the pen of M. Rousset, prepared by order of the government. The other is by the. popular romancer, M. X. B. Saintind. It is to appear un derthe title of “ Second Life.” Prom in timations respecting its character, it promises to do sufficiently etherial to secure more admiration .than under standing. ■ “Slang” Dictionary. —Our English friends are about to give us a new Slang Dictionary. Tho “ Reader” says: “ Mr. Hotten, of Piccadilly, is about to publish a dictionary of colloquial ex pressions, giving, where possible, their origin, with instances of their use, which, has been in course of preparation for some time by tbe compiler of the small ‘Dictionary of Modern Slang,’ publish ed in 1839. The new hook is entitled ‘ The Slang Dictionary ; or, the Vulgar Words, Street Phrases, and “ Past” Ex- : pressions of High ancl Low Societyand it will contain, it is said, several thousand words and phrases in daily use, but which are not contained in our English dictionaries.” Mr. William Wright, of the Manu script Department, British Museum, is about to edit for the German Oriental Society, that vast repository of Eastern loro "The Kamil of EI-Mubarrad,”from tho manuscripts of Leyden, St. Peters burg, Cambridge and Berlin. El-Mnh arrad was one ofthe chiefs of the gram matical school of Basra during the lat ter half of theninth century, and the Kamil is a wonderful collection of trea-- sures—like the gatherings of Athemeus, Aulus Gellins, and Macrobius, in the Classical literatures. John Glare. —-The English journals re port the death of John Ulare, once known as the Peasant Poet of North amptonshire. He died in a lunatic Asy lum, in which he had been an hamate for nearly forty years. He was born in 1793; and his collected poems first ap peared in 1820, followed by “ The Til lage Minstrel” in 1821. His insanity was of the wildest character, and he con tinued to write poetry, occasionally, un til within afe w years of his death. His published works make five volumes. His photograph, the last taken, is ad vertised by his publishers, who also announce an album portrait, represent ing him sitting in his favorite seat be neath the portico of All Saints’ Church, Northampton. In the way of English Religious Lit erature, the Hampton and Hulsean Lec tures have each made a recent and valuable contribution—the one to sacred inspiration, and the other to personal character. The first consists of a cfcurse of lectures, delivered in 1868, by Eev. J. Hannah, of Trinity College, on “ The Eolation between the Divine and Ha man Element in the Scriptures.” Each of these elements is regarded as com plete in itself—the Scriptures being strictly Divine and strictly human—the book of God, and the book of man. The human nature of the sacred writers acts in its completest development and free dom ; yet is “ guarded from communi cating its own imperfections to the reve lation which was sent from God to man.” The Hulsean course (1862) is by Eev. J. S. Howson, D. D., joint author with Dr. Connybearo of “ The Life and Epis tles of St. Paul." The subject is “ The character of the Apostle Paul.” The points of character are: Tact and Presence of Mind: Tenderness and Sympathy; Conscientiousness and In tegrity ; Thanksgiving and Prayer; Courage and Persevoranoe. AMERICAN. Turning to the American press, we notice with surprise how little its issues are restricted by the present unexam pled obstacles to publication, such as the scarcity and enormous price of material, the still greater scarcity of working force in all the mechanical departments of the enterprise, and, to some extent, the diversion of the attention of writers to other fields of labor. With all these em barrassments, American publishers, so far as we can judge from literary an nouncements, notices of new publica tions, &c., have sustained their propor tional amount of enterprise. Among the forth-coming issues we notice, from Appleton & Co., “ Overland Explora tions in Siberia, Northern Asia, and the Great Amoor Eiver Country, with a projected Plan for an Overland Tele graph around the World, via Behrings Strait and Asiatio .Russia to Europe; by Major Perry Maodenough Collins, Com mercial Agent of U. S. A. .for,the, Amqor 'KiVer > ‘A.e4tlc''KaVsia.''' is ’oue of' PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1864. fifteen announcements by that firm. Ten are promised by Lippincott & 00., of this city, among them a new crown Bvo edition of Prfeseott’s Historical W orks. The recent Liturgical work, by Rev. Dr. Shields, of t his city, is just now the sensational feature in our religious lit erature. It consists of a reproduction of the Westminster Assembly’s amend ed version of the Book of Common Prayer, and a Historical and Critical Review of the same, with reference to its adaptation to tho worship of the Presbyterian churches, and its harmony with tbe official Presbyterian Directory for Public Worship. But beyond the at tempt to reconcile the liturgical element with the genius of Presbyterianism, the bold stroke of claiming for the Prayer Book a Presbyterian origin, will at least secure attention. We have before noticed the work. A correspondent has proposed to furnish an article on this general subject, which may be ex pected to appear in a week or two. LORD RUSSELL AND THE NORTH BRI- Gur readers are aware that there has recently been great strife among politi cal parties in England, chiefly upon the foreign policy of the British govern ment. Many are restless under the neutrality professedly aimed at by the government in American and 'Danish affairsJ A more active and warlike policy is demanded; intervention is de clared to be necessary to the honour and influence of the nation. The same party that would intervene for preserv ing-the integrity of the insignificant kingdom of Denmark, with a broad in consistency would intervene jto insure the dismemberment and downfall of the American Republic. By a small major ity, tbe House of Commons has recently endorsed the peace policy of Lord Rus sell, and by a still smaller majority the House of Lords has condemned it. ■ The North British Review for May de fends the policy of Lord Russell towards America and Denmark both. It is a very cold friendship which the Review manifests towards us. It takes pains to remind its readers that it has never " shown undue favour to the Pederals since the outbreak of this dismal war.” The farthest it would go, by way’ of sentiment, is sympathy for a great na tion which it declares to be in the paDgs of dissolution. It rebukes England for insensibility to this spectacle of a na tion’s waking from vain and foolish dreams of empire; this unexampled pros perity blighted and this prospect of boundless power fast closing on our gaze. These things must he inwoven with what it ventures to say in our de fence, or rather in defence of Lord Rus sell, to make the article in any way palatable to its Union-despising readers —doubtless a majority of all, if Ameri can readers, are not counted ip. The Reviewer then proceeds to de fend the respect shown by Lord Russell to our blockade, which he says is not a paper blockade, as the Clyde steamers can testify. He'insists that it was re spect for international law that guided the foreign policy of Great Britain and constrained the government to abstain from interfering with a blockade which made so many of her people paupers. How much regard for principle there is in British policy towards other nations we do not know. The fact that the blockade was not paper, but was main tained by a formidable fleet, increasing with marvellous rapidity, doubtless strengthened whatever of “principle” there was. One thing is certain: the famishing cotton-spinners of Lancashire have shown a far higher appreciation of tho true merits of our struggle than the governing classes of their country, and for the sake of tbe great interests of freedom at stake, have borne, with un exampled submission, tho sufferings brought upon them by the blockade, thus depriving the South and its belli gerent sympathizers in England ofthe pretext for interference they expected to find in their.tumnlts and desperation. History, we think, will honor not the principle shown by England in respect ing our blockade, hut the martyr-like patience of her cotton-spinners, {who cheerfully shared with us the burden and sacrifice of our war for free govern ment and universal liberty. The Review emphatically condemns the conduct of Messrs. Laird in building vessels of war for the South. It quotes with approval the Attorney General’s rebuke of those English merchants occu pying eminent positions, who hold them selves at liberty, by all kinds of shifts and evasions, to treat with contempt her majesty's proclamation of neutral ity, who spell out the law under the ad vice of lawyers, saying “ I cannot find in the bood,” and avail themselves of every means of escape which inge nuity can suggest, bring the country into peril, and create a precedent for future mischiefs and dangers against which the law of the country seeks to provide. He asks whether a deliberative assem bly waa ever forced to listen to greater j tWaddlo titan the' ’ of TISH REVIEW. Montague, in the debate on the gist,” "Who said; “Not only had the Southern States manufactured a navy, but they had beaten the Federal ships which had long ridden the sea, so com pletely that the latter were now fain to avoid the conflict!” Upon this the Ee viewer remarks: It is certainly new to us that the “ Alabama” or the “ Florida” or “ Geor gia” has faced and “ beaten” the Fed eral navy, or that these maraudors were “ sent to sea by the South.” On tbo contrary, they sailed from neutral portß, and their work has been to plunder merchantmen. “It cannot be too often repeated,” says the Times, “that the whole essence of the transactions now in question consists in the identity of the port of equipment with the port of departure for hositilo operations.” It is not less idle to confuse this plain question, with the fluent Lord Eobert Cecil, by expatiating on the number of muskets Una percussion-caps we sell to the Federals. There is no parallel be tween the cases. Wo would gladly sell these things to the Confederates'also, could they come here to buy them. In deed, have we not done so ? Have none of the blockade-runners carried muni tions of war ? > Hut to sell munitions of war tb belligerents, which they use in their own country, is one thing; it is quite another thing to send out vessels from our ports ready for the business of destruction) while,their own ports are ’ sealed against them. It may be that our neutrality is more mischievous to one of the belligerents than to the other; that we cannot help. It is not the less our clfear duty to observe neu trality and enforce our law, careless of consequences.: The blockade has re duced the Southern States to the position of an inland power, and the point then, is this, Can a power, without seaports, or with its ports closed, defeat a blockade, or evade its natural disad vantages, by sending from the open ports of neutrals a fleet of cruisers to infest the sea ? If this question is to be answered in the affirmative, maritime powers would do well to humble them selves before 1 inland States. England would have more to fear from a war with Saxony than from a war with France. Albthe eloquence of the Op position will not lead the country to a conclusion sO absurd.. In fine, the Eeviewer thinks the gov ernment has not gone far enough. They ought to exclude “ these privileged buc eineers” from British ports. He quotes from “Historical’ a rule which “the Americans themselves” established in 1794, to wit, “ that vessels which have been equipped in violation of the laws of a neutral State, shall be excluded from the hospitality which is extended to other belligerent cruisers, on whose origin there is no such taint.” This rule the government should enforce against rebel cruisers built in neutral ports. Ho says: But though the government may re fuse to go this length, wo owe them much for having opposed the frantic partisanship of the Opposition. If the Conservatives really mean what they say, their accession to power would be the immediate precursor of war with America. If they do not mean what they say, they are chargeable with the crime of having endeavored to mislead the judgments and rouse the pas_sions of the people, on a delicate and_dangerons theme, for the purpose of advancing their party interests. In neither view are they fit to govern the country. In the former they would go to war wih lingly; in the latter they might be fore ed into it in order to redeem tbeir pledges and fulfil hopes*they Had ex cited. Our readers will be interested in these views, which exhibit the real character of the honest.advocates of British neu trality in this war. It . is, besides, the first article that, for a long time, has appeared in ap’y of the old quarterlies betraying any disposition to do the North justice in the struggle. Kfertisifmutts. THOMPSON BLACK fit SON’S Tea Warehouse & Family Grocery Store, Northwest corner of BROAD and CHESTNUT.Streets. PHILADELPHIA. (Established 1836.) A N EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT OF CHOICE /V Black and Green Teas, and every variety of Fine Groceries, suitable for family use. Goods delivered in any part of the city, or packed securely for the country. jal-ly MARTYRS OF FRANCE. MARTYRS OF FRANCE.; or, The Witness of the Reformed Chiirch of Franoe, from the reign of Francis I to the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. By Rev. JOHN W. MEARS. Price 40 cents. “ The author has undertaken to do what he could, to keep alive the memory and the spirit of the Christian heroes of the past. For this purpose he has selected one of the noblest periods of the church's history, and with a graphic pen has furnished us with a work of singular interest. We heortil y commend it to all, and especially to the young, as Bhowiag us how martyrs lived ana died, and what our calm and peaceful religious times and privileges are worth.”— Christian Instructor. “This little book belongs to that class which, for the sake of oar youth and the supply of the right sort of books for Sunday schools, we 'desire to Bee greatly multiplied. Many thrilling scenes, including the “ Mas sacre of St. Bartholomew?’ instances of patient endu rance, even to majtyrdom, and stories of want and ante welcomed for the love of Christ, lend a more than fictitious charm to these pages. As Presbyterians, we feel a special interest in the lives and characters of these Huguenots who illustrated so troll our ancestral frith.”— Evangelist^ Heroes for the Truth. HEROES FOR THE TRUTH. By the late Rev. W. E. Tweedie, D. D. Price 75 cents. “It is good to read such a book as this: the lives of brave champions of the truth, valiant and active for God and the right. We need such men now and always, and it is welt to have the examples beforens constantly, to strengthen and lead the way. The Committee does a good service by sending such books into the world.”—New York Observer. OUR LAYMEN. Their Responsibilities and Duties. By a Layman. Woe 5 cents. ' Will not our laymen read it? - ' -pRBSBYTIiU'I ANPUBLICATI6N COMlfclTTfiß, DEEifIMES QE JQlffl HUSS. 2 Volumes Royal Syo. pp. 631—068. Pries £«. For Sale by SHELDON & CO., CARTERS, RANDOLPH, and otters, in New York; also by the Booksellers generally throughout the Country. This important and valuable as wefl aa attractive work, which is iu reality, as its full title imparts,—“The History of the Bohemian Reformation of the Fifteenth Century has been received with almost unexampled favor by the press. It covers a field hitherto unoccu pied by any work accessible to the mere English reader yet one of the deepest interest to the student of history. Huss was in some respects the noblest and purest of the great reformers, while his lofty aims, his life-long struggle and martyr-death invest his eareer with more than the charm of romance. As the victim of the Council of Constance, wo see him the central figure of a group which might well be de scribed as representative Christendom. In the elucida tion of his career, and in tracing the fete of his fol lowers down to the period of the Thirty Tears’ War, the condition of Papal Europe for more than a century is depicted. The leading minds of the age are made to pass before us, and wo discern the influences and causes which produced the Great Reformation of the succeeding century, as well as the relation sustained tc it by the labors and fate of Huss. The work is one that not only challenges the attention of the scholar hut “carries the- reader on with unabakod interest through the varied and-dramatic story.” The New York Examine) says of it: '.‘The period fur nished a magnificent range to the historian, and the hfe and martyrdom ofHuss, a central figure of unusual interest around which to group the various and attrac tive details of the picture. The work of Mr. Gillett reminds us best historical writings of our times. We hail with real' satisfaction the appearance of these volumes, and beg to commend them as especially appropriate for the increase of a pastor’s library at about iliis season of the year. The pastor who reads them aright will be, with God’s blessing* a more spirit ual man, and a better preacher.” ' TheAfew York Obsener says: “The author has achieved a great work, performed a valuable service for Pro testantism and the world, made a name for himself among religious historians, and produced a book that will hold a prominent place in the esteem, of every religious scholar.’* - : : The {New Tort) Methodist, second in literary ability to no other journal of the denomination it represents, devotes over two columns to a notice of the work. It remarks: “Rarely have we known a task performed with equal, fidelity and success. Mr. Gillett has pro duced i\ large, but not a cumbrous work. It is abun dant in detail without tedious minuteness, . . The book, however, has other merits besides those of histo rical accuracy and interest. The author is more than a mere compiler. He has not only scrutinized, but generalized. He has surveyed the whole-field as well as the separate portions, aud he has firmly grasped and clearly presented the great leading features of the period, and the fundamental ideas involved in the movement. The work, in short, is a labor of love, well and faithfully done.” The New York Evangelist speaks of it as “ One of the most valuable contributions to ecclesiastical history yet made in this country.” The New York in devoting more than a column to an editorial notice of the work, remarks: ** His researches are ample, his materials abundant, his selections discreet, his style rapid and racy, strong without rage, without o’erflowing lull. He has secured, we judge, a high and permanent place in in our litera ture.” The Christian Intelligencer speaks of it as “An histo rical and biographical narrative, in method, style, and elevation of sentiment, every way worthy of ; hia great theme. His description of Bohemia, prior to the ad vent ofHuss, is a master-piece, and reminds one of the very highest efforts of Bancroft in descriptive compo sition.” CHAS. BURNHAM, MANUFACTURER OF EVERY VARIETY OF Druggist's Tin Ware, OLD DOMINION COFFEE POTS. The sale of these Pots has increased four fold. It the best) as well as the most economical of the land. Arthur’s SELF-SEALING CANS ftHD JARS, CARLISLE AIR-TIGHT SCREW-TOP JARS Ice Cream Freezers, Summer Cooking STOVE. - GAS THE CHEAPEST FUEL. BOIL, BROIL, ROA3T, BAKE, TOAST, AND DO IRONING. Send for Descriptive Catalogue Double-Aoting LIFT AND FOECE PUMP. 119 S. TENTH STREET, 838-ly PHILADELPHIA. IRON AND EXPLOSIONS! EXPLOSIONS! ASHCROFTS LOW WATER DETECTOR never tails to give from one-half to two hours’ warning, as desired, that the water is getting low in the boner, and that danger is approaching. The instrument requires no care, and is warranted in every instance. Also, Steam and Water Gauges, .with Scotch glass tubes, self-cleansing gauge cocks, Ac. Send for circular containing Philadelphia letters and references. AUGUSTUS S. BATTLES, No. 24 North SIXTH street. T. C. PuRRINE. J. ST, D&TDEN. PERRINE & DRYDEN, Manufacturers 4ind Centers to. COAL OIL LAMPS, OhaadeUerSf Buriere# Shades, Wlcfcs, Ac., DSUSSS IN GLASS WARE, And Manufacturing Agents for LTMAH St MOORE’S SELF-SEALING FRUIT JARS, And Agents for FISHER'S PATENT COOKING LAMP. 'MW, Cbmmissum Merchant* for the Suit of Coal Oils. 103 SOUTH SECOMH STREET, ~ i 6o«nd ds.rixsfoir rbestnet, _ . . «T-« ■;' . . • WENDEROTH & TAYLOR, 912, 914 and 916 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA. PHOTO-VIINIATUFIES ON PORCELAIN. Ivorjtypes, Phetographs, Partes de Yislte, and every style of PORTRAITS IN OIL AND WATER COLORS, Executed in the highest style. J*®- VIEWS OF COUNTRY SEATS made, 10 by IS inches. V. A. WENDSROTn. [042-ly] W. C. TATLO*’ DON’T FAIL TO READ THISI Coffee! Coffee! Coffee! East India Coffee Co., 154 READE STREET, N. Y.. Three dool's from Greenwich street, call universal atten tion to their KENT’S EAST INDIA COFFEE. Kent’s Bast India Coffee Has all the flavor of OLD GOVERNMENT JAVA, and is but half the price; aud also that Kent’s Bast India Coffee Has twice the strength of Java, or any ofher Coffee what* ever, and wherever used by our first-class hotels an< steamboats, the stewards say there is a saving of 50 pel cent. r Kent’s East India Coffee Is the most healthy beverage known, and is very nutri tious. The weak and infirm may use it at all times with impunity. The wife of the Rev. W. Eaves, local minis ter of the M. E. Church, Jersey City, who has not been able to use any coffee for fifteen years, can use Kent’s Bast India Coffee Three times a day without injury, it being entirely free irom those properties that produce nervous excitement* Dr. JAMES BOYLE, of 156 Chambers street says • u I have never known any Coffee so healthful, nutritions, and free from all injurious qualities as Kent’s Bast India Coffee. I advise my patients to drink it universally, even those to whom I have hitherto prohibited the U9e of Coffee.” The PRINCIPAL OF THE NEW YORK EYE IN] FIRM ARY says: “I direct all the patients of our Insti tution to use exclusively Kent’s East India Coffee, And would not be without it on any account.” The Rev. C. LARUE, an eminent clergyman of the M. E. Church, now stationed at Halsey street, Newark* says of Kent’s East India Coffee: “I have used it nearly a year in my family, and find it produces no ache of the head or nervous irritation, as in the case of all other Coffees. It is exceedingly pleasant, and I cordially recommend it to all clergyhrea and their families.” Kent’s Bast India Coffee Is used daily in the families of Bishop Ames, Bishop Baker, and many of the most distinguished clergymen and professional men in the country. Meivare of Counterfeits! And be sure that the packages are labeled KENT’S EAST INDIA COFFEE, 154 READE ST., BfEW YORE, As there are numerous counterfeits afloat under the name of {i Genuine East India Coffee,” “Original East India Coffee,” etc., put forth by impostors to deceive the unwary. In 1 lb. packages, and in boxes-of 36, 60, and 100 lbs, for Grocers and large consumers. Sold by Grocers gen erally. Orders from city and country Grocers solicited, to whom a liberal diacounf will be made. Agents in Philadelphia—W. J. HIESS & BROTHER, corner Girard Avenue and Front street, andHOEFLICH & MOLU N, 130 Arch Street. Sold by JOHN H. PARKER, corner of Eleventh and Market streets, I’tula-delplila. JA>S. YVEB3, corner of Eighth and Walnut sts. WM, PARYIN, Jr,, 1204 Chest nut st., above 12th. THOMPSON BLACK & SON, N. W. corner Broad and Chestnut sts. SIMON COLTON & SON, corner Broad and Walnut sts. 940-tf & tsmn SO. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET, Second door above Chestnut, PHILADELPHIA. J&P Strawberry street is between Second end Beal streets. \CiORPEiTM3%GB, ®m a.®Tim, MJSTTSJY4MS, &c., NEW STYLES, MODERATE PRICES. LEWIS & IVINS, A 3 STRAWBERRY street, Philadelphia. »/* Cheap Carpet Store, a*. V s 4 , BAUGH’S RAW BONE SUPER-PHOSPHATE OF T.TME. Baugh Sc Song, SOLE MANUFACTURERS, Store, No. SO South Delaware Avenue, PHILADELPHIA. This article has for many years enjoyed a high repu tation as a manure of great efficiency and of unequalled permanence, and we scarcely deem it important in oar semi-annual advertisementto say more than merely call the attention of buyers to it. But wo will also state to farmers and Dealers in Fertilizers that it has been our constant aim to render our Raw Bone Phosphate more and moie worthy of the full confidence of farmers, by the nse of every facility at command, and the aid of scientific skill, in essentially improving its qualities, and we have never allowed this purpose to he interfered with by the great and steady advance ih the cost of all mat ters pertaining to our business throughout the post two years. , The price, for the present, of the Phosphate* packed m either Bags or Barrels will be $63 per 9000 lbs., (3 1-* ots. a. pound) Cash. No extra charge for Bags or Barrets. The Raw Bone Phosphate may be had of any regular dealer in Fertilisers (to whom we advise farmers to ap* ply) or of the manufacturers and proprietors. BAUGH & SONS, Wo. 30, S. Delaware Avenue, PHILADELPHIA, REMOVAL. 0. H. WILLARD, PHOTOGRAPHER. Eas removed from 1628 Market Streep to his new and spacious galleries, JS T o. 1206 Chestnut Street. Mr. W. would say that. hu accommodations now are of the most cop mo-iiou* and extensive character; and he feels confident that, by close personal attention to hu» business; to t:W“ h>s patrons a much finer quality of worn than nan ueretotoreheeii ©reduced in the city. W. P. CLARK, 1626 Market Street, Philadelphia JJOOTS and shoes .op m< own manvfaotcbi Ladies', Mieses’,Children's; AEenSs and Boys' Boots su ShoA »1 every variety, at moa«rh»e prioes; ■ : ~ - Tsst HAacep bt&e£&
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers