gitttati gnuttigfurf. AMERICA MAGAZINES AND PAMPHLETS. THE NEW YORK TEACHER, for March, 1865. THE ANNALS OF IOWA; a quarterly publication, by the State Historical So ciety, at lowa City. January, 1865. Edited by Theodore S. Parvin, Corres ponding Secretary. THE EVANGELICAL REPOSITORY, AND UNITED PRESBYTERIAN REVIEW, devoted to the principles of the Westminster for mularies, as witnessed by the United Presbyterian Church of North America, for March. THE RE-UNION PRESBYTERIAN, a monthly magazine devotee to the pro motion of the re-union of the Presbyte. rian Church. Edited by Rev. M. L. P- Thompson, D.D., Rev. N. C. Burt, D.D., Rev. J. G. Monfort, D.D., for February, 1865. Contents: Editors' Address; Our Mission ; Is Union Desirable ; Rev. Dr. Miller on Re-union ; Difficulties• of 183'7 ; The Doctrinal Basis; Congrega tionalism ; The American Board ; The Property Question ; The Extremists ; Dignity not quite Dignified ; Absorption ; Slavery and the Division ; The Newark Paper ; The Two Synods of Cincinnati ; Correspondence. WORTHINGTON HOOKER, M. D., Pro fessor of the Theory and Practice of Medicine in Yale College, has made a contribution to scientific literature—a volume of nearly 500 pages, under the title of “Human Physiology ; designed for colleges and the higher classes in schools and for general reading." The subject has, of late years, been strongly urged as an important one for general study, and Dr. Hooker is by no means the first au thor who has popularized it for the gene ral reader. He has written the present volume in the easy, familiar style of the lecture-room, avoiding, as far as possible, the technicalities of science, and intro ducing the topics in a progressive; self explanatory order. Sheldon & Co., New York, are the publishers. A NEW TREATISE ON LOGIC, or the Laws of Pure Thought, is another issue from the same house. The author is Prof. Brocklesby, of Trinity' College, Hartford. It comprises both the Aris totelie and Hamiltonian analyses of logi cal forms and some chapters on applied logic. It is intended to represent the latest results of the English and German logicians, and has received immi some worthy authorities the name of the best general work for higher instruction which our own, or perhaps any other country, has produced. TEE LIBRARY FOR GOLDWIN SMITH. —One of the most beautiful compliments paid to the Oxford Professor, Qoldwin Smith, during his late visit to this coun try, was the presentation, by authors and publishers, of a collection of Ameri..: can books for reference at Oxford. The , :uthors contributing their works were 1: ancroft,Everett, Bryant, Holmes, Long ellow, Whittier, Bayard Taylor, and many others, including almost every living American author of note. The contributions from publishers was also large. From this city we notice the names of J. B. Lippincott & Co. and George W. Childs. .In reply to the note accompanying the gift, Prof. Smith says: " No gift could be more welcome to one so deeply . interested as I am in all that relates to American history, intellect, and character. I shall regard these books partly . as a trust placed,•by you and your friends, in my keep ing ; on my shelves they will be open to all who may wish to consult than; and I shall be most happy if they are the means, in my hands . , of diffusing a better knowledge of America,than, to the misfortune of both nations, ut especially of mine, has hitherto been possessed by i most English critics of American affairs. " THE OLD HYMN of David Dickson, "0 mother dear Jerusalem," has, within the past few years, become somewhat of a staple for hymnological ' review, including inquiry into the integ rity of existing versions. Mr. Randolph, of New York, has given us a volume of, and about, it, from the pen of Win. C. Prime, as editor. The introduction by Mr. Prime is brief, and by no means ex haustive, yet, as far as it goes, it is writ ten with fervor and eloquence. Then we have the hymn in the old version, to which succeeds an appendix containing the hymn of Hildebert ; an extract from the hymn of Bernard de Clugny—Hic breve vivitur, &c., and a free but spirited translation of it ; several .. more modern and current versions Of the hymn are also presented or referred to. CHARLES SORIBNER & CO. have in press Lange's Life of,Christ ; the second volume of Lange's' Commentary, em bracing Mark and Luke ; the second series of Stanley's Lectures on the Jewish Church; Forsyth's Life of Cicero; Froude's History of England.--HAR rzs. & BROS. announce an edition of the Emperor Napoleon's Life of Caesar, lately published in France-FRANK H. Donn announces another of his elegant miniature series of Classics, the next voltime being Goldsmith's Vicar of Wake & HUNTINGDON, a new N6w York •firm, open their budget with the Golden Leaves series . , formerly issued by James G. Gregory; embracing selec tions from American, British, and Drama tic poets. They also announce Our Firm of Two Acres, by Harriet Martineau, and The Festival of Song, with illustra tions from all the leading American D. F. RANDOLPH, New York, republishes an Allegory of the Days of the Revolution, called " The Old Farm and the New Farm ;" written by Francis Hopkinson. Benson J. Los sing edits it, with historical notes. Its sentiments on Union render it apposite to our times.--THE AAIERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, N. Y., has published an edition of Paley's Horm Pauline.--J. 13. Lip- PINOOTT & CO., of this city, have just published Gage's Translation of Carl Ritter's Comparative Geography, for the use of Schools and Colleges. AMERICAN BOOKS IN ENGLAND. The new, enlarged, and illustrated Webster's Dictionary is undergoing republication, in twelve monthly parts, by a London house. An English journal "heartily welcomes the first part of this stupendous work, which is unrivalled for complete ness," and adds : " Dr. Webster's Diction ary has long been considered the very best yet published, and . . is now emphatically the standard dictionary of the English language.. The chief value of a dictionaryconsists in its definitions. It is in this respect, especially, that Webster's Dictionary is considered supe rior to every other." MESSRS. STEVENS BROTHERS, book sellers, of London, are doing a good work in promoting American literature in England. According to the Am. Lit. Gazette, " They propose to purchase a copy of every book, pamphlet, or maga zine (not a reprint) published in the United States." VOREIGN. NAPOLEON'S LrFE OF CRSAR.—The first volume of the long-heralded work, Napoleon's Life of Caesar, is promised for March. A magnificent edition in quarto, Consisting of one thousand copies, has been got up for presentation to crowned heads, foreign embassadors, public libra ries, etc. A popular edition in octavo was to follow in a few days. The first book, comprising three hundred pages, is taken up with a survey of the constitu tional or political history - of Rome pre vious to the time of Caesar, whose history commences with the second book. The work is expected to excite great interest by reason of the fullness of its details, and its remarkable identifi cation of the places in the Gallic and Spanish wars alluded to in the Commen taries. The whole work will comprise three volumes. (On its completion, it is reported that the imperial author will put forth another production, under the title of _Henri Quatre et sa Politique.) The English translation, revised under the personal inspection of the emperor,_is to appear in London and New York, al most simultaneously with the Paris edition. German and Italian editions are also _ nearly completed.' Cassell, Petter, and Galpin are the London_pub lishers, negotiations with the more eminent houses having failed. For this country - , the imperial candidate for a historian's fame has been so fortunate as to secure the Haspers. Even the Sultan has ordered the work to be translated into Turkish. Of the care to secure per- faction- in minute, details of representa- tion, the London Atheneum of Feb. 11th, says :-- " At the Tuillefies has been formed a 'mu seum of articles derived from ancient sculp tures, descriptions, and drawings on.pottery, &c., such as tents, wagons, standards, haver sacks; straps, boats, bridge machinery, shovels, the balista, falarica, catapult, bow and arrow. Each has been carefully reproduced and fitted for use, so that when the author desired to see a tribune, centurion, decurion, or private soldier, exactly as Cmsar saw him, all that needed to be done was to call Cent Garde, and clothe him from the museum. - The ghost of Cmsar himself might be invoked with even less of fear than Brutus had, and the `Ay, at Phillipi,' of the unmatchable spirit; have no terror for his successor." is rumored that the organ of the Liberal Roman Catholics in Paris, " Le Correspondant," will cease to appear, in consequence of the Pope's Encyclical Letter. Laboulaye's " Paris in America" has reached the thirteenth edition in the original. Mme. Agenor Gasparin is out with a new book, called "La Bande du Jura." She and a considerable party of her friends (they had a draughtsman and a clergyman with them) set out some time since to explore the least frequented por tions of France (the Jura chain.) They found the tour so agreeable, they exten ded it to Italy. The announced volume is the journal of the expedition. A se cond edition of the work has. already ap peared. Her publications have been very successful. "Near Horizons" has reached a sixth edition, " Heavenly Horizons" a seventh, " Vespers" a fourth, and " Hu man Sadness" a fourth edition.— Childs' Am. Lit. Gazette. HUMBOLDT'S CORRESPONDENCE. -M. de La Roquette, the geographer, has in preparation the scientific and literary cor respondence of Humboldt. He does not hope at once to publish the complete cor respondence, for Humboldt wrote 2,000 letters a year, and it would take 22 thick octavo volumes to contain it. He will publish volume after volume, as he amasses materials. He has two volumes in the press. The first will contain pp. xliv., 466, with two portraits of Hum boldt, a fac-simile of his letters, and with figures in the letter-press. The price will be 7f. 50c. GER.MANY.—Lange's Exegetical and Homiletical Commentary on Genesis has appeared in Germany, and is cordially welcomed by the best authorities. The theological significance of the Book of Genesis is well developed in the notes. The introduction must command special attention from the union of steadfastness in the faith, and spiritual freedoin which it exhibits. The exegetical portion does not so much offer new material as it groups and shows mastery over -the old. Further instalments of the Old Testa ment are anxiously looked for. THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1865 NEANDER'S LECTURES, on the History of Christian Ethics, have been published in one Svo. volume, in Berlin. They have been gathered with immense labor, from the imperfect notes of his students, no line being from Nea.nder's own hand. Yet they are spoken of as a very accu rate rendering of the lectures, and bring vividly to mind the great German tea cher with his marked peculiarities in the desk. The first period, to the time of Constantine the Great, is most fully handled. The period► since the Refor mation is not touched, Neander's studies having brought him but occasionally into recent epochs. • The work forms one of a series to em brace the whole of Neander's Academic Lectures, the first of which was pub lished in 1857, by Professor Jacobi, Under the title, " Dr. Aug. Neander's History of ChriAian Dogmas." Both of them, the first and the last, are described as indispensable, to the investigator in the department of the History of Syste matic Theology. MADAME GASPARIN'S ` 1 VESPERS" have been translated from the French into German. GARDEN SEEDS---LOOK OUT FOR THEM /NOW. Every good gardener should pow be looking after the seed that he is to sow this spring. Of the imported varieties, the supply will probably be much less than the demand, and even of home-grown seeds the stock frequently gives out by planting time, as was the case with onion seed last year. It is scarcely necessary to insist upon the importarce cf good seeds—good not only as being of a good sort or strain, but good as to their germinating power. Old seeds are often a source of great loss and disap . pointment, and many are sold each year which are only fit to be thrown into the fire. It is especially difficult to procure at a 'distance from seeilSmen of reputation, seeds on which one can rely with confidence. Seed - smen put up their boxes of seeds with a •flaming printed label, ". Warranted Fresh." All very true and fair for the first year; but when these boxes of seeds are brought out year after year for many years, it is neither true nor fair. Many kinds of seeds Will not vegetate after the first or second year. The only honest way is for the dealer-to label his boxes with the year in which they were, put up, leaving it to the purchaier to decide for himself whe ther or no they are " fresh" enough for his use. Test by sprouting a few of each lot. —American Agriculturalist. The. London Agricultural Gazette gives an account of one of the large farms which supply that city with food. The farm is that of Mr. W. Adams, at East .Ham,.and comUriSes, about 800: acres,, upon which he pays rent, taxes . and titles to the amount.of some . $25,000. annually. Seventy horses are employed, 'and' the annual bill for lbor exceeds $BO,OOO. These expenses, together' with the amount paid for min - fires and com- Missions on sales, make up the total annual payments to about $lOO,OOO a year. The above amounts are taken by reckoning the English pound at. $5; in our present cur rency they would,. of course, be more than double. The chief crops are cabbages; car rots, potatoes, and onions, of which, in the mode of culture followed, from six to, eight crops are taken in four years. During this four years, the land gets about 120 tons of manure per acre, and at least eight tho rough plowings. The land is kept contin ually at work, the only " rest" it has - is being occasionally allowed to produce. a crop of grain or peas. Cabbages are the main product, and of these sometimes three crops are taken from the land during the . year. This heavy cropping demands heavy .Manuring, and 80 tons per acre are not un frequently used:during the year. Notviith standing the enormous amounts of produce yielded annually per acre, a proportionate' amount of fertilizing material being added, the land actually improves under the treat ment. The instance given here, and the market gardens near our own large cities, should serve as a lesson to those farmers who scatter a few small loads of manure each year, 'over , a great surface, and then expect large crops.--. 8 The Springfield Republican has the fol lowing account of a heifer belonging to Ebenezer Cotton, of West Springfield. Massachusetts, which it calls " the hand somest and fattest heife.r in the world."l This creature is a sight for an epicure- , She is five years old, grade Durham, of a dull brown color, small boned, fine muzzle, ; playful as a calf, and yet weighs in the i vicinity of 2700 pounds. The front legs stand plump two ,feet apart •(no fun, but fact,) and the points of her shoulders full I three feet. Both literally and laterally, she sticks out with fatness, and when she moves her flanks shake like jelly. It will be remembered' that two years ago she at tracted much attention by the side of ;Ma jor Taylor's fat steer at the county fair on Hampden park. She has grown and eaten some since then,-and her owner has no idea of letting her off till she stops growing. She was always a good feeder, is as hearty as ever, and easily takes ten totwelve quarts of meal a day, besides hay, potatoes, and other side dishes. Mr. Cotton can safely chal lenge the world on fatness, and if he chose to take his heifer abroad, could draw the gaze of royalty. agtintitittat. AN ENGLISH MARKET FARM, THE HANDSOMEST AND FATTEST HEIFER IN THE WORLD. STREGTH IN HoPE.---When I look over beyond the line, and beyond death to the laughing side of the world, I triumph and ride upon the high places of Jacob, howbeit I am otherwise a faint, dead-hearted, cow ardly /33413, often borne down and hungry in waiting for the marriage supper of the Lamb. THERE is Only one evil—sin; everything else is dust and smoke. guitrantf eglilliallifo. INSURANCE AGAINST ACCIDENTS 33 _sertup , xxolv, BY THE TRAVELLERS' INSURANCE COMPANY, HARTFORD, CONN CAPITAL Wei, W. ALLEN, AGENT, 404 WALNUT STREET, PIILIADIELPIELTA GENERAL ACCIDENT POLICIES For Five Hundred Dollars, with S 3 per week coninen cation. can be had for per annum, or any other sum between $5OO and MAO at proportionate rates. ' TEN DOLLARS PREMIUM Secures a Policy for $2OOO, or $lO per week compensa tion for all and every description of accident—travel ling or otherwise—uncler a General Accident Policy, at the Ordinary hate. THIRTY DOLLARS PREMIUM Secures a full Policy for $5OOO, or $25 per week com pensation, as above,. at the Special Rate. FOREIGN RISKS. • Policies issue& for Foreign, West India, arid C fornia Travel. Rates can be learned by application to the Office. SHORT TIME TICKETS. Arrangements are in course of completion by which the traveller will be able to purchase, at any Railway Ticket Office, insurance Tickets for one or thirty days' travel. Ten cents will buy a ticket for one day's travel, insuring $3OOO, Or $l5 weekly compensation. Ticket Polices may be had for 3,6, or 12 months, in the same manner. Hazardous Eiskstaken at Hazardous Rates. Policies issued fr 5 years for lyears premium. INII~JCEINTS The rates of premium are less than those of any other Company covering the same risk. No medical examination is required, and thousands of those who have been rejected by Life Companies, in consequence of hereditary or other diseases, can effect insurance in the TRAVELLERS' at the lowest rates. Life Insurance Companies pay no part of the_prin -cipal sum until the death of the assured.*. The -T.RA - YELLERS' pay the loss or damage sustained bY per sonal injury token.etler-it occurs. - - - The feeling of security, whiqhsn c h an insurance' gives to those dependent upon 'their own labor for supporLis worth more than money. No - hetter or more satisfactory use can be made of so small a sum. - . J. Q. BATTERSON, President.' RODNEY 'DENNIS, Secretary.- G. F. DAVIS,:Vice President. HENRY A. DYER, General Agent. Applidations received and Policies issued, by WILLIAM W. ALLEN, No. 404 Walont Street. AMERICAN IFE Ii RRE MID DE CERNY, Walnut StrUet, S. E. cor. - of Fourth. INCOME FOR THE YEAR 1864, $357,800. LOSSES PAID DURING TIE{E YEAR AMOUNTING TO $85,000. Insurances Made upon the Total Abstineine Rates, .the lowest, in the world. Also, upon JOINT, STO.Oji Rates whiCh . fire over'2o per cent. lower than 'Mutual Rates. Or MUTUAL RATES upon which. g D.T.VI DEND has been made of *FIFTY RER CENT., , on.Polioicis in fOrce - Sanitary 15t:1865. TEE TEN-YEAR NON - FORFEITURE PLAN, by whiob a person insured -can make all his payment in ten years, and does not.forfeit, and can at anytime cease paying and obtain a paid up Policy for twice or thrice the amount paid to the company. ASSETS. $lOO,OOO U. S. 5.20 bonds, 40,000 City of Philadelphia 6s. new, - 30,000 U. S. Certificate of indebteness, 25,000 Allegheny. County bonds,. 15,000 U. S. Loan of 1861, 10,000 Wyoming Valley Canal bonds, 10,000 State of Tennessee bonds, 10,000 Philadelphia and Erießailrolid bonds, 10,000 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne A Chi cago bonds, 9,000 Reading Railroad Ist mortgage bonds, 6.500 City of Pittsburg and other bonds, 1,000 shares Pennsylvania Railroad stocks, 450 shares Corn Exchange National Bank, ' 22 shares Consolidation National I Bank; 107 shares Farmers' National Bank. of Reading, 142 shares Williamsport Water Com pany, • 192 shares American Life Insurance and-Trust Company, • • MOrtgages, Real Estate, Ground' Rent Arc Loans on collateral amply secured Premium notes secured by Policies .Cash in hands of agents secured bY bond: Cesh on deposit with U. S. Treasurer, of per cent Cash on hand and in banks Accrued interest and rents due, Jan. 1., THE AMERICAN IS Its TRUSTEES are• wel midst, entitling it to more whose managers reside in di Alexander Whiltdin, J. Edgar Thomson, George Nugent. Hon. James Pollock, Albert C. Roberts, P. B. Mingle. HOME COMPANY. al known citizens in our e consideration than those listen t cities. William J. Howard, Samuel T. Bodine, John Aikman, ' Henry K. Bennett. Hon. Joseph Allison, Isaac Hazlehurst, Samuel Work. ALEX. WHILLDIN, President. SAMUEL WORK, Viee-President. JOHN S. WILSON. See;retary and Treasurer piesgtapttro. WENDEROTH & TAYLOR, Nos. 912, 914' and 916 Chestnut Street, PHILADELPHIA. PHOTO-MINIATURES ON PORCELAIN, IvOrytypes, Photographs, Cartes de Visite And every style of Portraits in. Oil and Water Colors, Executed in the highest style. SW VIEWS OF COUNTRY SEATS made, 10 b 13 inches. F. A. WENORROTR. [942-lyj W. 0. TAYLOR Skylights on First and Second Floor. _ EDWARD P; HIPPLE, PHOTOGRAPHER, No. S2O Arch Steeet, Philada. Photographs from miniature to life-sine finished in the finest styles 'of the art. 960-ly GERMON's TEMPLE OF ART No. 914 Arch Street, Philadelphia. PHOTOGRAPHS IN ALL STYLES Late of 702 Chestnut Street. O. B. DeMORAT, PHOTOGRAPH GALLERIES, s. W. corner 'Eighth and Market Sta., Entiance No. 2 South Eighth, , 959-13, PHILADELPHIA. gni g, toA - 5, &v. NO. 1035 CHESTNUT STREET. IVIcINTIRE 8500,000 BROTAER, HILL & EVANS. GARPET - s i, 44 r4p lITINSI6 DIETZ . 40 No. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET, Second door above Chesnut street, PHILADELPHIA. Strawberry street is between Second and Bank streets. CARPETINGS, . OIL .CLOTHS, _ . • MATTINGS, &C. NEW STYLES. MODERATE PRICES. WINS & DIETZ, . . _ 43 STRAWBERRY Street, Philada. ce l if4', '' Chap, Carpet .Store., ( 4.: ec Vaittro grghtro. SAMUEL WORK, I WILLIAM Mcool3oll, • KRAMER & RARM, Pittsburg. WORK, McCOUCH & CO., No. 38 SOUTH THIRD Street, rhiladelpithl, DEALERS in GOVERNMENT LOANS AND COIN. Bills of 'Ex.change on New York, Boeton, Pittsburg , Baltimore,qinemnati, etc., constantly 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 at the Board of Brokers. Business Paper negotiated. - Refer to Philadelphia and Commercial Banks, Phila delphia; Winslow, Lanier & Co , New York ; and °Ri pens' and Exchange Back, Pitt, burg. BANKING HOUSE. • GEORGE J. BOYD, No. IS S. THIRD ST, PHILADELPHIA, (Two doors below Mechanics' Bank.) DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, 5.205, 10-40 s, 7-30 s, 6s of , Sl. PETROLEUM , . • AND ALL OTHER s o H. 5,11 o 1V..E0 :&C., BOUGHT AND SOLD. AT THE BOARD OF BROKERS. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS. $304,136 50 207.278 86 ... 112,755 73 s. 1.26,6094 62 6 50,000:00 „. 50,331 67 10,454 71 PETROLEUM. $966,461 79 R. GLENDENNING, Jr., STOCK BROKER, No. 23 SOUTH THIRD STREET, Oil and Mining shares, Railroad Stocks and Bonds, and Government Securities - bought and sold on Com mission, at the Philadelphia, New York, and Boston PROFESSOR OF ELOCUTION, Iro. 201.0 • LOCUST STREET, PHILAD., Will receive Pupils—Ladies' or Gentlemen—and in struct them in the highest order of the Art, (that of Nature.) by a system so perfect, that more can be learned in twelve lesson.' than is usually imparted in Y. Stammering and Hesitation of ASpeech cured. TESTIMO - From the Right Rev. 'Bishop Potter: The subscriber has attended the recitations of seve ral Pupils of Mr. Philip Lawrence, and Was present a few evenings since at the friendly competition, in the Academy of Music, between three young gentlemen who had been trained by him, and throe who had been instructed by another Master, His system seems to me to be free from some grievous faults which have marked the teaching of many Elocutionists, and to have some excellencies of a high order. As a worthy and laborious man, I cordially wish him success. Philad., April '2B, 183.6 ALONZO POTTER. . _ The undersigned, Principals of Schools in Philadel phia, cordially recommend Mr. Philip Lawrence as an admirable teacher in Elocution. J. W. FAIRES, Priam:pad cif Classical School, Dean street. P. A. GREGAR. Principal of the Girl'B High and Normal School. NICHOLAS H. BIAGUIRE, Principal Central High School _ . • A. B. IVINS. Principal of Friends' C. S., Fifteenth and Race streets, WM. FEWSMITH,I6O9 Chestnut street. E. B. BOND, Principal N. W. Girls' Grammar School. HENRY LAUDERBACII, Principal N. W. Bowe Grammar School. _ _ • _ RICHARD GLASSEN, Principal Zane Street Bove Grammar School. COMYAIMAIII REAL ESTATE GOT No. 53 NORTH TENTH STREET. PHi. A I) A FORMERLY BANKING HOUSE OF BOARD OF BROKERS PHILIP LAWRENCE, W. G. BEDFORD, attrfrant 6aiinrs. CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S FIRST-CLASS " ONE PRICE " READY-MADE CLOTHING STORE, No. 824 CHESTNUT STREET, (Under the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia.) DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MEASUREMENT Foe Coat.— Length of back 07 from Ito 2, and from 2 to 3. a ., *4,, . Length of s sleeve (with : 2 1 arm crooked) i , frg•in 4tas, an d around theJ , ~- most promi nent 1- - ..,-, , : fiT' ' part .f _,,,..,,. wthaeisethestAntode - whether erect . or stooping. For Vest.— 1 ~,, ' Same p a Pants,— c o tbat. fr l a n n s a ide o u s t e s a i m d e , from hip bone, around the _ waist and hip. _ --------.- A good fi iit goa ranteed. Officers' Uniforms, ready-made, always on band, or made to order in the best manner, an.t on the most reasonable terms. Having finished many hundred uniforms the past year, for Staff, Field and Line Offi cers, as well as for the Navy, we are prepared to exe cute orders in this line with correctness and. despatch. The largest and most desirable stock of Ready-made Clothing in Philadelphia always on hand. (Theprice marked in plain figures on all of the goods.) A department for Boys' Clothing is also maintained at this establishment, and superintended by experi enced hands. Parents and others will find here a most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low prices. Sole Agent fot the " Famous Bullet-Proof Vest." CHARLES STORES & CO. CHARLES STOKES, E. T, TAYLOR, W. J. STORES. READY-MADE CLOTHING. WANAMAKER & BROWN, IFINE C14139-i-xING-,1 I OAK HALL, I IS. E. core Sixth and Market. ICUSTOM DEPARTMENT, No. 1 South Sixth Street. E. 0. THOMPSON, FASHIONABLE TAILOR, N. E. corner of Seventh and Walnut Sta., PHILADELPHIA. N. B.—Having obtained a celebrity for elating GOOD FITTING PANTALOONS, making it a specialty in my business for some years past; it is thought of sufficient importance to announce the fact in this manner to the public, so that those who are dissatisfied may know of my method and give me a trial. 963-ly FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order. FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to orde FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order. FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order. pr... - R - n - v - A& CO., Extensive Clothing House. Nos. 303 and. 305 Chestnut street. PINE CLOTHING. JONES' CLOTHING, S. E. corner Seventh and Market Streets JONES' CLOTHING, S. E. corner Seventh and Market Streets. JONES' CLOTHING, S. E. corner Seventh and Market Streets A. WARD'S FASMOS MO TAILORS' •lIICHTITIS. PROTRACTOR SYSTEM OF GARMENT CUTTING AND "WARD'S BEST" INCH MEASURES, 950 No. 138 South Third Street, Phllada. Dr. BEALE'S DENSERVO! Is a most invaluable. reliable and delightful prepa ration for the TEETH AND GUMS. To a great extent in every case and entirely in many, it prevents decay of teeth. I t also strengthens the gams, keeps the teeth beautifully clean and the breath sweet. It is highly recommended -by both Doctors and Dentists, and is believed to be as good a preparation for the teeth and gums as science and ex perience has ever produced. • Prepared solely by S. T. 13E.A.T.M, 31.13, Dentist, 1113 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. Air For sale by Druggists. Price $1 per tar. s TEA lI Dyeing and Scouring Establishment* Mrs. E. W. SMITH, No. 28 N. Fifth St., below Arch, Philada. Ladies' Dresses, Cloaks, Skawls,"ltibbons, Sic., dyed in any color, and finished equal to new. Gentlemen's Coats, Pants -and Vests cleaned, dyed and repaired. 963-1 y TAFF., - 1., HOMEOPATHIC PHARMACY, No. 48 N. NINTH S7.stEET. PHILADELPHIA. Importer of German Homoeopathic Tinctures, Lehrmann & Jenichen's High Potencies, Sugar of Milk, and Corks. Sole Agent for Dr. B. Finke's High Potencies. 977-1 y HENRY HARPER, N 0.520 ARCM STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Dealer in and Manufacturer of WATCHES, PINE JEWELRY, SILVER - Ns ,- A. rt , AND SUPERIOR PLATED GOODS. HENRY R. PARMALEE, CONVEYANCER, Office,No;o6S.FifthStreet,below Walnut PHILADELPHIA. IMMII
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers