Ijciitttific. MORTALITY IN ENGLAND. The mortality of men in towns demands a careful investigation. At 45-55 the mortality of London men is not far from double that of men in the healthy districts of the country. It is much higher at every age than the mortality of women in London. 111-ventilated workshops may have something to do with this, and so may indulgence in spirits and other stimulants. The workmen in . all large towns suffer as much as, and often more than, the workmen of London. For instance, at the age 25- 35, and again at the age .35-45, and again at the age -45-55, the workmen of Liver pool, Manchester, Bristol and Newcastle upon-Tyne, die at a still greater rate than the men of London. In the ten years 1851-60, the deaths in thirty large town districts of England, with an 'aggregate mean population of 2,541,630, comprising seven London districts and the principal provincial town districts, averaged 71194 a year, while the deaths at the rate in healthy country districts would have been only 38,459 an annual loss of above 32,000 lives in much less than a seventh of the population. If the mortality of all England is arran ged in five great groups, the following re sult appears. Where the mortality was fourteen, fifteen, or sixteen, per 1,000 per sons living, the population was only eighty six to the square mile ; where the mortality was seventeen, eighteen or nineteen, the population was 172 to the square mile; where twenty, twenty-one or twenty-two, 255; where twenty-three, twenty-four or twenty-five. 1,128 ;■ and "where twenty-six and upwards, 3,399. Yet there can be no doubt that mere proximity of dwellings does not necessarily involve a high rate of mortality. . If an adequate water supply and sufficient arrangements for drainage and cleansing are secured, the evils which make dense districts so fatal may be miti gated. It is remarkable that some of the dense districts of cities are already com paratively salubrious. The mortality of a district is by no means bound to its density of population. B'ermondsey is less densely inhabited than St. James, Westminster, but the mortality is considerably greater. Next to each other in these tables stand West minster District (St. John’s and St. Marga ret’s) and the district of St. George, Hano ver Square, with equal density of popula tion in each, taken as a whole; but the former has a mortality far heavier than the latter. It is also to be noted that in Lon don the mortality fell from the annual rate of twenty-five per 1,000 in the decennial 1841-50 to twenty-four per 1,000 in 1851— 60. Ibe mortality of Lancashire and Cheshire also declined from twenty-seven to twenty-six. Taking all England, though the growth in numbers, of course, increased the density of population, the rate of mor tality did not increase, but continued at twenty-two per 1,000. — London, Gazette. THE FROZEN WELL. One of . the noat remarkable facts known aoCjooiuuwt^v.— - :-- in Brandon, Rutland County, Vermont, m which ice is found all the year round. The writer .visited it in the summer of 1860, and learned that in digging tor a farm well in the fall of 1858, before cold weather commenced, frost was found in the ground about twenty feet below the surface, and the ground was frozen .to the depth of forty feet, where water was found in sufficient supply. The well was stoned, or walled up in the usual way, and the frost manifested . itself immediately on the stones from the surface of the water about twenty feet up ward. Very soon it was seen that a well of ice was formed, adhering to the stone wall all around, and from the surface of the water to the bottom of the well, several inches thiok—and this has remained frozen ever since, summer and winter. In the coldest part of the winter the water freezes over the whole surface, and frequently so hard that it is necessary for some one to go down and break it to procure water. The last winter almost the entire water in the well froze solid and remained so some time. The writer has visited this well three different summers, the last time but three or four weeks since, and each time saw the ice (which is plainly seen by oasting the sunlight down the well by a mirror,) and was well informed of all the facts by the family residing on the same premises and by friends in the vicinity. The only devia tion from the facts as stated is that some times, about the first of September, the ic.e has disappeared, but for a few weeks only. It has been found, by digging several rods from it, that the same frozen condition of the ground exists at about the same depth. But none have yet given any satis factory solution of the phenomenon. In this same town, and within a few miles of the pleasant village of Brandon, are quarries of the purest white marble, iron ore, kaolin or porcelain clay, and large quantities of ochre of various shades of color, all of which are worked and sent to market, and coal of a peculiar kind, not in large quantity, of chocolate color, solid, hut in in it are found embedded the remains of nuts of a kind not known and the form of limbs and branches converted into coal. MANUFACTURED ICE. It was published last winter that a Cap tain Girarde, of Augusta, Ga., had invented an engifie by- which he could rapidly manu facture ice of the finest quality. A distin guished Kentuckian, just from Augusta, called on us yesterday with a pleasant mes sage from Captain Girarde, and confirmed all the latter had published. He visited Captain Girarde’s establishment, where he saw a small engine, about six feet long, turn out in ten minutes a solid cylinder of ice of twenty or twenty-four inches in length, and from eighteen to twenty-four in circumference, as transparent as the finest iee from the Northern lakes. The inventor now supplies the city of Augusta with the cooling article, and he says that, when he shall get his establishment in full operation upon the scale he contemplates, he will be able to furnish ice at one cent a pound. We congratulate the South that she can hereafter grow her own ice. That is an independence that she has an un doubted right to assert. —Louisville Journal; THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1865 ANCIENT AND MODERN ENGINEERS. In some respects the ancients certainly eclipsed ns conceited moderns. Our engi neers gape at their monoliths, their Cyclo pean walls, their pyramids, and the ruins of such temples as those of Luxor and Baalbec, and ask each other how they were reared. What contractor of our time especially if debarred the use of steam power, would undertake to quarry those obelisks of hard red granite, to carry them for vast distances, and to set them up without chip or flaw, in the market place ? What masons now could build such giant walls, without mortar, lead, or iron clamp, every monstrous stone accurately polished and fitted so closely that a knife cannot pass between the blocks ? Above all, how were the dolmen and menhir reared by the rude Celtic nations, untaught by Borne or Greece ? And by what prodigy of toil or adroitness did half-clad barbarians set up the astounding monuments of Stonehenge and Karnac ? It is probable that we under rate the amount of science possessed by the priesthoods of old, by- Druids, hiero phants and Magi. The relies of what their serfs did under their direction sufficiently prove that the clerical architects knew their business thoroughly. In turning a river, in cutting navigable canals, in opening mines, they showed no mean knowledge of statics. Their principal undertakings were such as we cannot approve; but of their jealously guarded acquaintance with sundry of the exact sciences, there can be little doubt. By dint of rollers and pulleys, of guys and cranes, by harnessing crowds of men and oxen to the lumbering slabs and shafts, by digging away the earth that had supported solid scaffolding for the support of the stones, they erected the granite Anakim, at which we can but marvel. THE LEVEL OF THE DEAD SEA ASCER- TAINED. A party of royal engineers, under the command of Captain Wilson, set out in September last to make a survey of Jeru salem, and to “ level” the country from the coast to that city, and thence to the Dead Sea valley. The levelling from the Medi terranean to the Dead Sea has been per formed with different instruments by inde pendent observers, and with such nicety that the result can be relied on to within three or four inches. Meanwhile bench marks have been cut upon rocks and build ings along the line followed, and traverse surveys have been made, so that the work done may become the basis of more extend ed geodesical examinations of the interest ing country toward which Christendom is turning with new and serious interest. The issue of these careful observations is to show that on the 12th of March, 1865, the Dead Sea lay one thousand two hundred and ninety-two feet below the Mediterran ean level; which, if it proves that our old estimate was slightly in excess, singularly confirms the calculations by barometer of the Due de Luynes and Lieutenant Yignes, who set it at one thousand two hundred and eighty-six feet on the 7th of June, 1864. At this season of the winter, fresh-. of 'three ’feet higher, and in the fiercest heats of summer they are again lowered six feet by evaporation. Thus the greatest depression of the Dead Sea is now fixed at one thousand two hundred and ninety-eight feet; and as we know that Lieutenant Lynoh found a depth of one thousand three hundred and eight feet opposite the Wady Zerka-Maia, we are now sure that the bottom lies some two thousand six hundred feet below the coast at Jaffa. This is a depression of surface beyond comparison with anything of the kind, and undoubtedly it is due to some tremendous natural convulsion, the memory of which is preserved in the legends of the buried cities, and in the dreadful and ac cursed aspect of the sea itself. —London Telegraph. INTERESTING DISCOYERY AT POMPEII. ‘ Abundant details have been received from Naples respecting the freshly uncovered temple of Juno, among the recent excava tions at Pompeii. Three hundred skele tons were found crowded within that sanc tuary, a propitiatory sacrifice being evi dently held in the hour they were over whelmed. The statue of the goddess, with attendant peacock, the tripod in front of the altar, the golden censer, the jewels on the person of the priestess, the rich vessels holding a deposit of animal blood, are the main particulars dwelt on, no chapter in that awful story being more instructive or interesting. The eyes of .Juno were of the most vivid enamel, her arms and her whole person richly decorated with gold trinkets, her gaudy bird resplendent with a cluster of glittering gems. -Aromatic -ingredients lay calcined within the censer, while gor-_ geous lamps and bronze ornaments ilrewed the tesselated pavement. — Globe. CHOLERA ATMOSPHERE. It has long been a question among scien tific men, says the Opinion Nalionale , whether the immediate causes of cholera ex ist in the atmosphere or not. Experi ments recently made in Egypt seem to favor the affirmative. Two balloons were sent up, one of them over Alexandria, the other over a village in the isthmus where cholera had not made its appearance. Prom each of the balloons was, suspended a piece of fresh beef cut from the same ox. After the balloons had remained up for some hours they were both pulled down, and the beef suspended over Alexandria was .completely tainted, while that which had been suspended over the village was as sweet and good as ever. — Galignani. An Enormous Steam Hammer is being made in England which will strike a blow equal to seventy-five tons. The anvil for this hammer has just been cast, and will weigh two hundred tons; it is pyramidal in form and measures twelve feet square at the base, and twelve and a half feet in depth. Three months will he required for it to cool before it can be worked. Some idea may be formed of the blows this enor mous casting will receive when we are told that it is to rest on a bed formed by a cylin der eighteen feet in diameter and twenty feet in depth, filled with concrete. A cut recently made for the Bighton and Somerset Kailroad, through a quarry in North Kaynham, Mass., struck a . layer of peculiar white rock and lots of antediluvian trees, shrubs and vertebra of extinct mon sters. One of the trunks of the trees bore plain marks of an axe. The French correspondent of the New York Times, in a recent letter, mentioned that there had been quite a panic in the southern part of France, about the develop ment of silk manufacture in the United States. It was reported that American agents had lately been making arrange ments with a' number of the best silk-work ers of Lyons to go to the United States, to put looms in operation. *“ This announce ment,” we are told, “ shook the empire, to use a strong phrase, to its very centre, for if there be any one industry more than another on which the French pride them selves, and on which reposes the wealth of the country, it is on the manufacture of silk. To touch this manufacture is to touch a vital point; and if the nation which buys the largest proportion of silk of any other should enter successfully into com petition in this important industry, the blow would be a most fatal one.” Itaal gwraamg. A MINISTER AND THE BEES. Dr. Cumming, of London, spends his summer vacation in a country cottage, and 1 finds recreation from mental toil in a care ful study of nature. He has interested himself in watching closely the habits of bees, and in a recent lecture in London gave some of the results of his observa tions. We find these extracts in a London paper: The lecturer commenced by explaining why he had chosen this subject, and how he had acquired his information. He was in the habit, with his wife and children, of going down to a cottage in Kent, in the summer months, and as it had been wisely said the bow must not always be bent, he hhd sought out amusement in hours that he could spare from those duties which devol ved on him as a minister, and he had found that amusement in studying the hive; and. the result of that study was the observa-. tions which'he would lay before them. At his cottage he had nearly a dozen hives; some of them had glass windows, and some had not. Frequently during the day he sat by these mves, listened to the music of the inhabitants and: watched their habits, and jotted down such observations as occur red to him. The lecturer proceeded to de scribe the inhabitants of the hive. There were not three different kinds of bees, but three species of bees in the same hive—the queen bee, the working bee, and the drone bee. There was a division of labor among the working bees. There were the bees that collected the honey, bees that collected bee bread, for the nourishment of the young brood, bees appointed to shape the cells, others to guard the hive, and lastly, bees to ventilate the hive. It was a curious fact that the honeyf.beef i ,did*jiot«sb„from.-SowAiv. ftrmffu' it settled, and labored at that single flower. Hd* coaid take any. of his bees , in his hand without any fear of their stinging him; but if a stranger went near, the guard at once suspected him, and imme diately flew at him. The sentinels relieved each other at intervals, mounting guard three or four at a time. If a hive were ■ watched, it would be found that those who were appointed as ventilators came to the mouth of the hive, four or five at a time, and using their wings as fans, kept up a current of air, so that the other workers labored in a moderate temperature. It was a curious fact, and well worthy of notice, that if a bee-master, in order to ventilate the hive, made a hole in , the top, the bees immediately closed it up. From this it would seem that the bees knew that fresh air was essential to healthy life but that draught was pernicious. In describing the queen bee, and the great deference and attention paid it by the other bees, the reverend doctor said that he had observed that the bees were very fond of strong drink, and especially rum sweet ened with sugar. On one occasion he found the bees in one of his hives declin ing, and he gave them some rum to revive them. Instead, however, of using it as a medicine, they drank to excess; for, on looking into the hive subsequently, he found the ladies in waiting, instead of be having themselves in their usual decorous manner, tumbling about, and the queen herself very tottering. In fact, they had got so drunk that, though it was Novem ber, they thought it was swarming time, and rushed out of the hi ve, but the frosty air soon sent them back t o their hive..and to their sfihac-sa.nsp° w —Of'drones, or male beef,/there were from 1500 to 2000 in a hive/Ylt might be asked what was the use of 3uyo drone bees in a hive, since the queen jOi/iy selected one as. her husband, and if fie'husband died never married another, bu/ remained a widow. Well, this was a pizzling question. He had made a discovery which led him tQ adopt a theory whim he must acknowledge had been opposed ty certain ab ins. During the breeding time, wl bees were developing m the cells aj for that purpose, the temperature sver less than 80 or 90 degrees. the cool of the morning, till tweh )on, the drones remained in the hive. . Atj twelve they went out for an hour or so, and; then returned to the hive, remaining 'till evening.- He noticed that the time of their absence was just when the sun was hottest, and the drones being fat, he believed that they remained in the hive to keep up the heat. The drones were drunken, lazy fel lows. . As soon as the queen selected her husband, the other males began to sip up the honey, never doing anything to keep up the stores of the hive. The other bees must have learned somewhere the maxim that if any man will not work neither shall he eat, for as soon as they began to fill the hive with honey, they garroted' the drones and threw them out of the hive. The lecturer then pointed out the folly and wickedness of those who, using the common straw hives, burned the bees to get the honey. There were three different kind of hives by which '"this might be avoided —the storying, the collateral, and the nadir hives. By these methods the bee-master saved his bees, and obtained honey greater in quantity and purer in quality. He thought that any one living in the country might make £8 or £lO a year by keeping bees, so that a cottager might thus pay his rent. He enumerated the enemies of the bees—the wasp, the spider, the tomtit, the snail, and the moth. The greatest enemy of all, however, was man, when he obtained the honey by using sulphur. In speaking of the excellent mem ory of the bee and its affectionate nature, the lecturer said that he might, in the summer time, be frequently found covered with his bees, who all knew him, and therefore would not sting him. THE CATTLE PLAGUE. A terrible disease among the cattle has appeared in and around London In many of the cow-houses in the city the whole of the stock have been carried off; in others most of the animals have died or have had to be killed, to prevent the disease spread ing. Professor Gamgee says it is the Rus sian cattle plague, and adds that the infec tion has no doubt been brought to this country by some foreign cattle. Those who are importing cattle should be on the watch agaiiist this disease, which seems to be different from and more destructive than the one introduced into Massachusetts a f&vr years since. The following are said to be the symp toms : Variations in the earliest indications of the disease will be manifested, these de pending somewhat on the severity of the attack, hut more especially on the circum stance as to whether the digestive or respi ratory system is the chief focus of the malady. As soon as |the affection declares itself, the animal ceases to take any kind of food, and in most cases even refuses water. Ru mination is suspended, and the animal stands with its head drpoping and the- ears drawn back. If made to move, it .shows great prostration’ of strength, and frequently staggers, as if about to fall. The skin is hot in places, and often remarkably so be tween the limbs, the hind ones in particu lar. An exudation early takes place from "these parts, and is succeeded by crack and sores. The hair is staring, especially along the upper part of the neck t shoulders, and back. The extremeties, are cold, even at the commencement of the disease, and in a latter stage the increased heat of the sur face of the body gives place to st remarka ble coldness, especially along the course of the spine. Tears trickle from the eyes, - which are red. and expressive of suffering, and a watery discharge flows early from the nos trils. There is a continuous-increase of these secretions, which become more or less .purulent in the advanced state of the mal ady. The mouth is hot, red, and “ furred,” often presenting here and there raw-looking spots, especially on the inner side of the lips and along the roof. The breath is foetid. The respiration is increased, and IJ A. u present in some cases. The pulse is quick and weak, and scarcely to be felt, excepting at the heart, even at the commencement of the disease. The bowels are sometimes torpid at the outset; but diarrhoea, leading to* dysentery, mostly follows, the evacuations being slimy, liquid and of a dirty yellow color, occa iS’onally tinged with blood. Tenesmus is likewise present as a rule. Slight tremors of the muscles of the shoulders and thighs are to be observed in some cases, and so also in an emphysematous condition of the skin along the upper part of the back. In milch cows the secretion of milk is quickly arrested, a remarkable diminution in the quantity taking place as one of the early in dications-of the attack. As the disease ad vances tbwards- a fatal termination, the prostration of the vital powers becomes more marked, the breathing short, quick, and more painful, the alvine evacuations foetid and more slimy, and the surface of the body deathly cold. The animal will sometimes sink as early as twelve hours from the commencement of the attack, but in many cases the disease will be protracted to the fifth or sixth, and occasionally to the eighth or ninth day. The period of incubation of the disease is found to vary, the majority of animals sickening on the tenth day after exposure :o the infection, but some have been st acked, on. the seventh day. MULCHING PEAR TREES. The pear tree abstracts from the soil a ery large amount of water, parting with it t the surfaces pf its leaves, depositing dur iiioed that a continuous stream of lukewarm soon causes the substance on which it falls to become much heated; and thus in summer the sun falling on the earth around a pear \ tree, naturally'gives to its water a large amount of heat. Although owing to the small amount of such water which would comparatively pass into other kinds of trees, they might not be injured; yet with the pear\tree the quantity is so large that it stiffens the vegetable albumen of sap, from the great accumulation of heat, and prevents the easy and natural flow to the termini of thd tree, causing summer blight, etc. All this is easily prevented by a slight mulching. 'lt Should be remembered, however, before severe weather in the fall, that this mulch should be drawn away from the tree, and not restored until the tree has parted with its leaves. When this is neg lected, the pear tree will continue to take up water during its late growth, which fre quently deposits itselffbetween the tree, and the bark, thus ’causing loose bark, winter blight, etc r . When the growth, however, is arrested by the romoval of the mulch the capillary'attraction is rendered less .active, at an earlier date; thus the tree is pro tect^. — Working Farmer. THOMAS C AMUCK & CO., CRACKER AMD BISCUIT BAKERS 1905 Market Street, Philadelphia. SUPERIOR CRACKERS. PILOT and SHIP BREAD. SODA, SUGAR and WINE PIC liriCS, JUMBLES and. GINGER NUTS. APEES. SCOTCB and other Cakes. ' , .. Ground Cracker in any-quantity. Orders promptly filled. . 974 PUBLICATIONS OF THE FRnm.ruiTii con SOCIAL HYMN AND TUNE BOOK: THE LECTURE ROOM, PRAYER-MEETING, FAMILY CIRCLE, AND MISSION CHURCH, 512 PAGES. 16 HO. IS NOW READY. THE " SOCIAL HYMN AND TUNE BOOK” is an endeavor to give, in a volume of moderate size, the best hymns and the best tones. The Tunes, carefully selected and carefully adapted •to the hymns, are fitted, it is believed, both to express the sentiments of sacred song and to kindle, in pious hearts, the flame of devotion. They are old tunes chiefly, with such approved new ones as the Church will not let die. The Tenor and Bass have been given on separate staves, at some expense of space and cost; but to many singers this arrangement will prove helpful and acceptable. , While the collection is primarily designed for social worship, it is well suited to the use of the family and congregation. The New York Observer sayslt appears to us to be admirably adapted to its purpose. . . . Many first-rate tunes, arranged and printed so as to be easily used. Itwillbe a most acoeptablebook in fam ilies, mission churches, and, if our taste was the rule, it would be used in Sabbath-schools.” The Evdnoeliet says:—“The Publication Committee of our Church have just issued a volume which we ap prehend is destined to become highly popular among our ohurches. It is entitled, ‘ Social Hymn and Tune Book,’ and is designed for the lecture-room, prayer meeting, family-circle, and mission church. It is one of the neatest and most tastelul volumes of the kind, which we have ever met with. Although a 16mo of 512 pages, it is by no means bulky, while the print is clear and distinct, and sufficiently large for common use. Most of the hymns are from the Church Psalm- by means of the' index with its references, every hymn oan be identifled in the two books. The tuneß and hymns are arranged throughout the vol ume on alternate pages, so as to suit the convenience of a promiscuous congregation, and enable them to join intelligently in their songs of praise.” The Ameritan Presbyterian says:—“This Hymn Book is really charming in its propriety and good taste as an article of manufacture. ... In the Hymns given, we find those that are loved in the churches. . . . We hail with satisfaction a book so well selected and so well arranged.” IS MUSLIN, SHEEP, MOROCCO. Presbyterian Publication Committee, So. 1334 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Joining Jjtotpm GROYER&BAKERS HIGHEST PREMIUM ELASTIC STITCH AND LOCK STITCH SEWING MACHINES WITH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS. The Grover & Baker S. M. Co. manufacture, in ad ,V he ; r . celebrated GROVER & BAKER 5 TITCH Machines, the most perfect SHUTTLE or "LOCK STITCH” Machines in the mafket. andaf ford purchasers the opportunity of selecting:, after trial ana examination of both, the one best suited to their wants. Other companies manufacture but one kind of machine each, and cannot offer this opportu nity of selection to their customers. A pamphlet, containing samples of both the Grover 6 Baker Stitch and Shuttle Stitch in various fabrics, with mil explanations, diagrams aind illustrations, to enable purchasers to examine, teat and compare their relative merits, will be furnished, on request, from our offices throughout the country. Thosewho desire machines which do the best work , should not fail to send for a pamphlet, and test and eompare these stitches for themselves. OFFICE, 730 CHESTNUT STBEET, PHILADELPHIA. HI ILL COX & Hi— ’Sewfig A Jat “nted deriea its being turned back- W & e emme C r?FeUerfand¥Sr me acknowledged GoM Medal of the American Ins«- U Tt alsoreceived the first premium for “ The Best Sewing Machine,” at the great “ New England Fair, the “Vermont State Fair.” the PenwWama State Fair,” and the “Indiana State Fair, . 1864. Send for a circular containing full information, no tices from the press, testimonials from those using tne machine, &c. JAMES VVIhLCOA, Manufacturer, 508 Broadway* New York. WALL PAPER decorative and plain. 11l 111 SKIES & EIITIES. Beautiful colors. An immense stock at greatly re duced prices, at JOHNSTON’S GREAT DEPOT, 1038 SPRING GARDEN ST. below 11TH. Country trade invited. JOHN C. CLARE & SON, PRINTERS, STATIONERS, BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, 330 DOCK. STREET. FIRST-CLASS “ ONK PRICK ” READY-MADE DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MBASURBMEKT For Coat.— Length of back from 1 to 2. and from 2 to 3; Length of sleeve (with arm crooked) fr-m4tos, and around tin most promi nent part of the chest and waist. State whether erect or stooping. 1 For Vest- Same as coat. For Pants.— Inside seam, and outside from hip bone, ground the waist and hip. A good fit gua ranteed. Officers' Uniforms, ready-made, always on hand, or - made to order in the best manner, and on the most reasonable terms. Having finished many hundred uniforms the past year, for Staff, Field and Line Offi cers, as well aß.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 m Philadelphia always on hand. (The price 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 otters will find here a. prices'* eBlra °* e a33ortment ol Boys’ Clotting at low Sole Agent fot the " Famous Builet-Proof Vest.” CHARLES STOKES A CO. CHARLES STOKES. E. T, TAYLOR, W. J. STOKES. READY-MADE CLOTHING. FASHIONABLE TAILOR, N. XL corner of Seventh and Walnut Sts., N. B.—Having obtained a celebrity for cutting GOOD FITTING PANTALOONS, making it a specialty in my business for some years past, it is thought of sufficieutimportance to announce me a trial. of tazmethgd_ aftd_gyrft ■ - 81 00 - - 1 25 * ■■ ■■>.■.! 56 FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order. FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Bendy-made and made to orde FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order. FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready-made and made to order.. /PERRY&CO.. Extensive Clothing House, Nos. 303 and 305 Chestnut street. t CARPET $ & IVWS & DIETS. IBBS Machine. j o- Strawberry Btreet is between meuuil and Bank Btreets. CARPETINGS, Cheap Carpet Store. .