%Mai KV:runty. THE TULIP. The tulip is a great favorite with almost all lovers of flowers. It has held its place in piblie esteem for more than a century. The-tulip is dashing and showy, and yet varied and delicate in coloring. It is fine even when grown as single specimens in the garden - or pots, but it is when grown in beds or masses that the most brilliant effect is produced. We know of nothing in the floral world that can equal the gorgeousness of a bed of good tulips. Our main purpose is to introduce the double varieties and say a few words of their merits. The Duo ran Theis are the earliest tulips, growing only about six inches in height. They flower often the latter part of March, and continue nearly a Month. Colors brilliant; excellent for pots. Three or four may be planted in quite a small pot. The Tournesols come next. They have large, double flowers, some:twelve or fifteen inches in height. One. variety is yellow and red, and the other pure yellow. '— ,Single Early follow the Tournesoles, and effibrace a large collection of the most bril liant colors. This class is superb in all re spects. The DOUBLE TULIPS comm ence to flower with the Single Early, and continue in flower, by I.,:proper selection, a long time, as some sorts are quite late. This class is becoming more popular every year, and this popularity is well deserved. Some are beautifully formed, with delicate shades and stripes : others are large and brilliant, and might easily be mistaken for the old red peony, while others of equal size are bril liant yellow. The Parrot Tulips are not in much fa vor. With professional florists, but they are exceedingly brilliant, most varieties having three.colors. A bee. of parrots is a grand sight`, . Late Tulips, are the florists' pets. There are Many varieties. They have fine, large, well-formed cups on stately, strong stems, usually eigheen inches in height.— .Moore's Rural. . MUTtIAL r 'NlitailtDING lATWEEN FARMERS. A writer in the RicralNew Yorkeesays : —lt has always been a matter of wonder to me that so little sympathy exists between fanners as a class. Theirinterests all lie in One direction, and they might be a great help to each oilier in many ways. They ought to.meet often and= talk over , topics that interest all in common—such as im provement in culture, in implements, stock, &c ,-prospective prices of farm produce; and the best time to sell. There shfiiild - also be an 'understanding in regard to prices to be paid for labor. This last is an int= portant item in a farmer's expentlei ttiid while labor is entitled to a fair tompensa r tion, it would be far better to have more —uniformity in prices. Faithful, honest, and ;tiro raltorera inani=emeors get what they ought to, while a great many otthe opposite class, by false representa:- ...1......hia..wh a t they_ are entitled to. In any business except fariii - ng a man must serve an apprenticeship, - mail learn his business, before he Can demand and heel-ire' fulLwages, But.in -atm business - : - Xtiflari r just from the hogs, or Hance, fresh from the "Faderland, ' thinks he can earn as much as the best man that's, . going., At harvest time, some man having ten:or ftf- 1 teen acres of wheat •to out, often obligeit his neighbor, who has four times as much, to pay from two to four shillings per day more than he ought, just because it will make but little difference with him what he pays, having but a single day's cutting. So he hires the first men that offer, and pays them whatever they ask—without spending a thought about its 'effect upon his neigh bor. A CONVENIENT DISINFECTANT The most:cionvenient and . , I believe, the most effective disinfectant, rs . Ohlorio ether. It should be burnt in a glais apirit lamp, which is liable to the same mishaps as other spirit lamps. Any place of the size of an ordinary room, that can be closed, can be completely dedorized and disinfected by five minutda'fine•of one of these lamps. For sink' rooms they are invaluable, if care be taken not to use them any longer than to accomplish this pttrpose, as otherwise it might become disagreeable from the smell of chlorine. A convenieidanci trufficiently accurate way to obtain this ether is to mix one part .ohlorOform and six of aliohOl. hydrogen in some combination is the medi ,um'of most "smells" and infections, as is frequently declared, the reaction which takes place readily explains and verifies the advantage of using this ether. Areat care should be taken not to burn thiglitbstance too, long.—Scientific Ame rica FALL. PLA.NTING OF GRAPES. Select youeground on some southern or .southeastern slope,.or any other dry land that you: may have ; ploisoit from fifteen to twenty Inches deep; With a plow do con etruoted as to rttir'in the-same furrow, virhi oh can be done at a very little cost; thek.lay your plantain 4 by 4' to 4 by 10, according tothetkind of grades you aim to cultivate. If you culti= vete dWarfishigrow,eni, such aathe:Dat'Ware, Rebecca, Diana, perhaps 4 by 5 is a very good distance. If Norton's Virginia Seed= ling, Herbemont, Concord, Taylor Bullitt, Bbylo is not far apart. Plant your vines as soon as • you oau,take them up in the fall or procure them from the nureerki and when done, bill the rows up as you would corn, covering your vines entirely. If you fail to do .this, the ground .will settle around your vines, form a basin, and hold too much water, which will injure, if not entirely kill, your vines. That . is the whole secret. Now, when spring comes— and sometimes wet and cold, like last spring—your work is done;and you can patiently wait till dry and warm weather sets in. Then( take your plow—plow your ground back to within three or four inches of the roots, so as to give them a chance with the rays of the warm spring sun, and the invigorating dews at night. This last .dea originated With Dr. .grant, of lona, N. Y., and he deserves a great deal of credit for it. Then, as the season advances and the vines grow, level your gtotirid; which the horse•cultivator will do In the coming fall, you wilt find it to your advantage to Cover up your vines. At least have the ground high enough around - them .to keep the water off Among the many reasons for. fall plant ing, let me tell you the main ones. In the month of October and.a part of November, we have the finest and most uniform wea ther in the world; the ground is generally loose and warm, and plants then removed hardly exPerience ,a change; while, on the other band, plants suffer frequently by Spring shipments in cold spells. Moreover, the fine fibrous roots get nearly all destroy ed, and sometimes the entire. roots ret,o , ff daring the winter, if they come in contact with water. Sometimes.they start to grow before they can be planted—and then the main and the best buds are knocked off. Besides, you can never have your ground in as fine a condition in April and May as it is in' October and November.—Cor. ka rat World. gtindifir. STEAM 'PLOWING. It takes a long time to effect some reforms. It is difficult to make mankind believe that there are ways better than they now walk in—methods more economical, and processes more speedy, than those: now: used. Some farmers still laugh to scorn agricultural ma chinery ; and we know of one place where the proprietor of a shirt Store displays the announcement, "no. machines used," as if bYn6 . 'd6l , h - etnWd• -malek the'.Ablic be ' So teas' this country. ThereWthAe who aresceptical . of its httlitjraNtil eCoriOnir,' and who assert that while the maChintrY is being rigged up, the engine made ready, and the system. in successful operation, a man could do as much with a team and a plough., By a: parity of reasoning, we might say that while the team and plow were getting ready a' man could spade up just as much, for• it is in the increased amount of work that; ma chines can accomplish over hand labor:that the economy of it lies. There may be some force in the views' quoted, but it seems impossible to doubt, but that steam cultivators can be intro duced and successfully used 'here' as else-' where. In England they 'are standar& machines; not merely to plow level turf and break up green sward, but to . surmount reasonable acclivities; in short,. on ,general rolling ground. Indeed' we are told by witnesses that in , Fowler's system, (Eng lish,) where the plows are drawn over the field by a stationary 'engine, that they are frequently used when they are out of sight behind a hill top. In fact, the greatest competition exists in England for superi ority in steam plows. There are now in operation no, less than six: .",different. Styles arid plans; probably inor6;bit'Of thiALittni _ber_we are assured from the business cirou lars 6f - the - proprintora7- In- this- country, for the best reason in the world—a lack of interest in it by the - class to be benefitted, the farmers,very little advance has been made. There is no reason in . the worl 'why, in_certain_parre of the _y, am, 441tivation-shiwld. not b,e crop oyed. We , are not in favor ottli English system for this country , ; for it ,seems us that it,would take so long to get the apparatus ready—it, is so cumbrous and unwieldy—without a. great force of laborers, as to render it un profitable among iture t peopl i e n yvho like to see a thing go ahead froth - the-beginning to the close, without stops to adjust tackle Or take up. anchors, and similar duties. Our ideal of a 6team•plowis one that will march into the bowels of the land without impediment. Roper has shown us how a light traction engine can be built, if that is a desideratum, and it only remains to adapt it to cultivating the soil to render it useful. Whether it is best to draw the plows after the engine or to have-them . drawn over the field is an open question. In England, however, the latter is the: general plan. Mr. Elias Howe, Jr., of -sewing-machine celebrity, has a steam plow , which drives a low of,cultivators similar in appearance to the'arms of 'a puny widened 'at the tend. These cultivators are placed beneath the engine and are driven by it as it prOgresses. There are;several other systems which, for want of space, we cannot describe; suggest that the present' fall, • when the agricultural fairs take place, the pre siding officers consider the subject thor oughly. At that time a multitude ok`farm ers—capitalists, and others interested' in agricultural machines—are gathered togeth er and concerted action, favorable to the scheme, might be had, if ever.—Soientific American, LAUGHING GAS IN DENTAL• OPERA- TIONS. The question is often asked wherein the effects of laughing gas differ from chloro form when breathed to the point of insen sibility. I answer : They are almost as different as light and darkness. ,Chloroform (and the same can be said of ether) depres .ses-the nervous system; the gas exhilarates it. Chloroform nearly stops the circuit .tion ; the gas'• increases<rit. Chloroform `often produces 'nausea and sickness, linger ing in the system .for days, anil it debilitated; the gas produces no, nausea or sickness, does not linger in the system three ,minutes, and leaves it invigorated. (This ILIA is not apparent except on delicate or, feeble perions.) Chloroform contains "ng, oxygen—the only fife-giving element of the air—has a strong,-pungent odor, and is pike suffocating to the lungs. The gas contains more oxygen than the air, has no odor at all, and is perfectly agreeable to the lungs. Chloroform cannot be breathed with safety to the point of insensibility to pain, by delicate, weak or nervous persons. All such can breathe the gas to perfect in sensibility, and often feel stronger for a week afterward as the result. I speak from an experience of over two years, and on five thousand patients. Chloroform carries the patient toward the point of death. The gas carries the patient in the very opposite direction, viz : into new and higher " The gas," says Sir Humphrey Davy, "must be the atmosphere of the seventh THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, TII4RSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1865. heavens." It certainly produces very hap py sensations. A clergyman for whom we extracted eight teeth - expressed the unani mous feeling of patients when he wrote opposite his name on our certificate roll : " When I entered the room and saw the advertisement, 4 Teeth, extracted absolutely without pain,' I •thought it a very bold statement. I now know it to be entirely true." Another wrote : ".Far greater and better than ever." A physician wrote : " Without pain, and a funny dream," Another—" A great blessing to children." The fact that we have givem the gas to-over five thousand patients without one single case of injurious effects,, or even unpleasant symptoms, is ample proOf of its safety C'otton, These are the last words in Kepler's "Harmony of the World :" g Thou who4ythe ) light of nature, hast kindled in As the, longing after , the light of thy.grace, in order, to raise us to :the light of thy glory, thanks to Thee, Creator and Lord, that thou lettest me rejoice • 'in thy works. Lo I I have `done` the work of my life with - that power of iUtellect which thou hast, given. I have recorded to j'ieen the glory of thy works, as far as my mind could comprehend ' , their infinite majesty. My senses were awake to search; as far as I - could, with purity and faithfulness. If. I, a worm before 'thine eyes , 'and born in the „ . Bonds of sin, have brought forth anything. that is unworthy of thy eOunselp,inspire me with:thy Spirit that I may correct I,f, by the wonderful beauty, of thy works, .I have been led into boldness .if ,I have•sought my owo• honer among men 'as advanced in the work - which was destined •• to thy honer, pardoen3e in kindness - and charity, and by thy grace grant that my teaching may be to thy glory and the welfare Of all M . O. Praise ye the Lord, ye heavenly harmonies and ye that understand the new harmonies,; praise ye the Lord: Praise God, 0. my soul, as long 'as I; 'Field him, through -him • "and in him is all; the material aS well - EIS the spiritual;-all that, we knew; and all that we know not yet, for there is much to do that is undone!! .., The' census controversy in New;-Ybrk. is showing'some triathErnot very flattering to the fairness in which things are mana ged _in that city While the newspapers have .been claiming 1,200,090 population,' the State census shops .only , 800,000. But 'while' the newspapers are claiming nearly a million'and a cinaiter'of 'inhabitants, the enrolinent , for last year. when =troops were showed - Only 138,000 men between the requiredr`akes, wbich the,;rribgne says indicates ap6 elation of 'Orivy 1 630,000. When representation is to be had theyopu- , ration is over a million, when trocps•-arei wanted it is not much over half a million. l These are not.our fitotp, but those of the; New York journals.—Philad. Ledger. THE; RIGHT KIND OF AN INVENTION Drulep, an inventor in France, has de signed a new umbrella, which is a simple walking stick .without any covering,., fr9P3 which t. spreads out in the,form of an nm ire la: The principle is as - yilIT tut it is supposed to be anew application of electricity :HOLIDAYS, The late Piesident Felton, in' his "Fa miliar Letters from Europe,", ,has the fol lowing sensible obs rvations "It ,is,a great / misfortune to the Greeks," he says, "and to the_Athenians in particu lar, that they have so many saints in their calendar, and so. many festivals in their ;honor, : to interrupt the usual business of life. They lose a quarter or a third of the time in putting 'on" their best' Clothes, gad ding .about ' the IT:streets, gossipping in the coffee-houses, getting tipsy on execrable wine, and singing noisy songs in the streets of the bleased•sliitfe and Martyrs who swarm 'in their ecclesiastical history. The sensible men here are gradually dimin ishing the number of their idle days, and, the sober part of the tradesmen and men of business find their advantage iii attending to their attire, While the rest are' dissipating time and drachmas, to the impoverishment of their pnises , and the4l.datriage of their, health, in bacchanalian orgies. I cannot share in the 'regrets of those persons who lament the absence of festivals eia and amuse merits ih eur - eoUntry. What I have seen' of their effects in Europe--eak t and west—' has given me a strong distaste for them, and the worst .possible opinion of their infiu euee/upen,the moral, mental, and physical ''well-berdg of the people.' "in : the next place, the waste of money,, In small sums to be sure; but swelling-in the aggregate to immense ,amounts, helpsto keep - the people poor, and make them poorer: And finally, the frivolity, dissipation, _and low habits everywhere eneour%ed by these festivals, crown the climax of grave objections to their observance, which I think must strike every reflecting person whoyavels with his eyes open through these countries. You will never` again hear me lainenting the want of amusements in America, or finding, fault with the serious Countenances of the American people. The weekly rest of the ,Sabbith, Christmas Thanksgiving, the an niversary of our Independence, and one or two other holidays' for the interchange of friendly salutations and the reunion of scat tered familiesotre infinitely better than all the festivals in the calendars of the Catho lic and Oriental countries." These nests resemble haycocks four feet high, and five in diameter at their basis; being constructed with grass and hdtbageu First they deposit one layer of egos on a floor of mortar, and having covered this with a second stratum of mud and herbage eight inches thick, lay another set of eggs upon that, and so on to the top, there being generally from one to two hundred eggs in a_nest. With their tails they then beat down , around the nest -the dense gross and reeds five feet high to prevent the approach of unseen enemies. The female _watches AN ASTRONOMER'S TitAYER, REMARKABLE FACTS. Bioultattnuo. ALLIGATORS' NESTS. her eggs nnti Ley are all - batched by the heat of the t)i, and then she takes her brood under e own care, defending them and providin for their subsistence. Dr. Lutenbur,9.l New Orleans, once packed up one of e nests, with the eggs, in a box, for the luseum in St. Petersburg, but was recom ded before he closed it to see 'that there , • no danger of the eggs being n i hatched n,n the voyage. On opening one, a you , alligator walked ont, and was soon follow by, the rest, about a hundred of which hi ed in the, house, where they we . ikt up d down stairs,- whining and barking 1 • lonng puppies.—/larper' s Hongdy. ' ' : - IeSUDDEN DEATH. 'Thomas Fuller, recorded this st sudden ' death: "Lord, be hake my clay cottage before test it down. May it totter eit doth tumble. Let me be fore lam surprised. Deliver den death. Not from sudden peet to itself, for , I care not how sage be, so it be safe. Never traveller complained that he 'on' to his journey's end. But e sudden in,respect to Me. e‘ Mak . . ready to receive death,: ThuS Ines unawares• to, him Who keeps • ble." . . •rable Professor Silliman used students,' "Sudden' death is dreaded. If it 'be God's will, ..el of death comp 'irks. flash';, only dmeat my poit of duty. He , e too quielrly."-; -. last Thanksgiving day Professor who had nearly recovered from a -ss, was•repeating Illymns . a,ppro he day, when there was a sudden his countenance, and in w Mo. ' as gone, as, he preforred top - . - ev. Dr. Belkttap, atithor of the of New Hampshire, and other ,ed of apoplexy on the 29th of '9B. The , folloWing lines were rong his papers : ;Quaint_ a t h w o h u i t b h e r summoner; me frOm death in short my any:: wea, came'. too let i(no me alwa L no guest cousta. The vi to tell never t• let the let him cannot Earl Sillim , short i i priate I 1 changfl merit i The Histor works, June, with and patienee, - hope and love, I. ade me meet for heaven above, eit the privilikte'to' . • d in a moment to the skies, .mous to resign 012 i• breatlii .te the bitterness.Ot death! e my lot,'Lord', if , it'please,, in Bileneelarid:at ease,7' thou. dont:find that I'm prepared, me,quiekto thy reyyard,l - _ .. , tli• wisdom sees it,best,. .. . .. ~ n ~ y ear froin,this ripest ; ' A-: be the appointed way '" : ' Athis frame of Minim, clay ; - - , . '.th grief and ricked with pain, . l i m • ~ Must turn' teeitith-'agal% • • - let' ' e angels round me stand— •rt ibY thy pOiverfallind. of ID y faith 'or..patienci move, nghtilabate myhope or love, , righOr may my'graces shine, 1, eyle absorbed in light divined CHOLERA. p “A:iatic cholera," as first knownin thJount y in 183 And 1833, is chiefly ti . ), 1 die , prevailing in, warm . weather,' or, re r, in a warm , atmosphere, for - it -,ean be e atiq at : any season, and in the . coldest i ia des, by combining. proper-degrees 1 ,4;i . e t ree.-essential requisites, _namely : 1,,_ 'M ' kaa...iegerable ,dediiy, and; a . regular Alea beeding,:eiglity'd:ette- andstinguishing feature of, cholera.,is, a „cop ~f frequent and .:painleiss discharge -fro , e 'bowels - - of • a ritibetarice.,almoSt ,as thi , Water; 'with a Whitish tihge;• - iii if rice `;144 , i, washed 'init . -Or as if a,'"little milk lied .ii drokped:in* '. When this Oeciira the: imit soon begins to perspire profuse T ly, skin , assumes a leaden hue and shri . up the'` nails become blue, insuf 7 fera, cramps come on, and , .the victim's deat ocursAn a few -hours- With the most pee'calmness, in therfullblit. possegsion' of a he ficulties,and . absolute freedom from eryTyTaTii:' Te , things ought-to. be known in ref eren ‘ to Cholera by every human., being': ,- - ,Fi...,,Thp.writer has_; never known a case which ; it was not, prece4d, .for 'one, two, , more . days, by the bowels acting twig: or oftener, in, every twenty-four hour niv ersallistyled c', th i apreMonitory .... PYinP '!P•” Set Callee - lute loget short with the fi place, and, o and sa Thi nate h is a c always o‘e )f eh 1 Al. A cure is impossible under any tble circumstances,' - without abso ietude of body,,' on S. bed, for 'days r; the time , of confinement being Id.in:pioportion to the promptitude ich the, quietude is secured after Action of the bowels has taken hich gives a feeling of tiredness, sitting down, a sensation of rest faction. When the patient ceases to uri 13egins todie, and , its resumption iainr.index of recovering health, td infallible. the usual attendants of an attack ble tende- -tc a is an unconquerable tendency The very instant anything reaches it.is , but.cold-wsktita' ; the mildest food meets the same oh caseck much lesisi. will medicine • g,ment, except one ; and,that it is vomit. the sicn is, ejp4to fate in ) find a r.le to vomit up if- it once-reaches leaden. That n:tedicine has no t is small in `bulk, "will retain its for a.iittarter of a century, as the knows by personal experience and observation. Unless it is in the :t stages, it is believed capable of impost its 41: taste; virtu: •writei repea , very g the disease in nine cases out of pill made up of teti'grains of calo h a little„gum-water. If the symp , not _abate in two hours, double the A let it work itself off. Do noth but let the patient be quiet, and the ice he can possibly want.— ;ToAt,rnal of Health,. arms , ten Mel toms dose, ing e eat a Hales) .L: Dr. BF AT:ErS DENSERVO! Is a Most invaluable, reliable and delightful prepa ration for the ~TEETH AND GUMS. To s. great extent in every ease,' and entirely in many, it preients decay of teeth. It also strengthens the gums. 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 scienee.and ex penance has ever produced. Prepared solely by 8. a". -13 F...4.1_,E, M. "JD., Dentist, 1113 Chestnut: street Philadebbia• Pa 'or sale by Dreggiang; , Pilee 81 per Jar. '";trOaitt taituo. CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S FIRST-CLASH " ONE PRICE " READY-MADE CLOTHING STORE, No. 824 CRESTNIIT STREET, (Under the Continental Hotel. Philadelphia.) DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MEASUREMENT For Coat.— fromof back L it t* 2. and Ill r - from 2, to 3. 5.... --.. Length of M sleeve (with ' : ... P, arm crooked)) ' t - - ~ '• around the A ~ 0 cent prom o P • - 1 ( i „, the n & P est and ' ,0 : 1 41) 4 ,., waist. State 1 whether erect i , -or stooning. ` 1 i For Vest .11 f — I Same as coat. i For Pants.— a Inside seam and -'outside t. ... , from,hipbone, , around the ,- •waist and hip. ' •••..„.. A good fit gua- . • .„ . . ___ Officers' Uniforms. ready-Made, always on hand, or made to order in 'the beat ManneiVand on the most reasonable. terms- Having finished many hundred uniforms the past year, for Staff, Field and Line' Offi- Oers, as well as for the• Navy, we are prepared to Ore cute orderain this line with correctnesaand despatch. The largest and most desirable stuck of Ready-made Clothing in Philadelphia always on hand. (Thenrise marked in plain figures on all of the goods.), • . A department for Boys' Clothing is also maintained at this, establishment, and swweiintendedAy.eineri enced .hands. Parents and others wild and here - i.' most „desirable assortment ot- Boys', Clothing at low prices. . SoliiAient fot the "Fathous Bullet-Proof Vest.” CILIUM'S STOKES It IMOI: • CHARLES STORES. ' Mir , TAYLOR,' W.;4. ;STOKES. READY - MADE , CLOTHING. • WANAMAKER & 'BROWN IMI NE LO WHIN GI I -OAK ::ALL S. E. cor. Sixth and , Market I. CUSTOM -DEPARTMENT, iNo; 1 8 9Mt, 11 81 ,tit' Street, § E. 0. TIIOIEPSON FASHIONABLE TAI:LOR, N E . • eorme,r or - Sewimth wad Wainut _ • rwmAnya.rmi. N. B.—Having obtained a celebrity for,ctitting GOOD PITTING PANTALOONS. making it a specialty in my linom'eso for some Xeors 'Pat, it is thonghtof eefficientimpoitiance to announce the fact in this manner to t,he Public. so that those who are diasatisfled inay know of my method and give me 'a trial„ 963-13, .FABILIONABLE:. CLOTIIXNU, - - - Iteady=made and made to order: FASHIONABLE CLOTHING, Ready made and made to order FASHIONABLE ,CLOTHING',' ReadyLnnide and made to order. PERRY- Ar. Extexudye Clothing N 05.203 and 305 Chestnut street. FINE CLOTAING. JONES' .d4OTHDTG, S. E. corner' Seven&e,ra'lliarket Streets. JONES'- CLOTHING, ri • S. E. coiner St 36 eilth ,and Market Streets. JONES' CLOTHING}, S. E. - corner Seventh and Market Streets. gry Goos, Sztz GARPEy 004 4 401 'IVINS & DIETZ. le No. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET, Second door above Chesnut street, atrawberry street is betivtien Seoind and Bank streets. CARPETINGS, NEW STYLES. MODERATE PRICES. MNS &DI Z, 43 STRAWBERRY Street. Philada. Chou carpet StorlAl 411:ArS Bz, LAN. gT.,7 Fourth and Arch, ARE WOW 401-,OE€IIIW4G- 4 017•1" SUMMER SILKS, SUMMER SHAWLS, SUMMER ROBES, FRENCH ORGANDIES, Bacia GR E NADINES, • - rou - Eraters , DR E GS G.143433:*4 elint4.l..rt.peru.L.A.nicbs. GRENADINE VEILS. WANTED. A FILE of. the GENESEE EVANGELIST, tte to the time of its union with this paper. Address S. AGNEW. Presbyterian Elf' Itorioal Society, 932-tf -taapkand made tp MATTING , grga:ll,s, ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGANS - - t . .. Are not only unexcelled, but they are positiveili unequalled by any reed iußtr ,, ul •r• '.., th. aoni.ry - fOu . B WKETNRSS of TYYli` It, Pow h:n ..ria 1 - virit ABILI-...- TY: For sale only by ',, No. 'lB NORTH BEV - EMIT. STRNIFE:' Also, eonstantlyma hand, a Complete assortment. the PERFEET MELODEON. A. Bradhary's Stet-class PT orvRTES. SHEET MUSIC. OARIDIRTS;BOUDOIR ORGANS! diUMMI4tHURCH HARNONIIJMS! CARILULT'S MELODEONS!`': • • - JO I Unequalled by any Reed Instruments in the world Also ;Piimelee% Patent Isolated Violin Frame Plana% anew and beautiful instrument. Sole agent.. IL M. MORRISS. • 728 Mariet street. THE MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS, Forty Different ISSylea, Plain and lineman* Cases, ...FOR DRAWING—ROOMS CHURCHES, • SCHOOLS, &a., • $llO to #6OO Each. . They oftinpy little, apace, are elegant as furniture. and not liableito get out : of order; are boxed so that that' can be gent anywhere bY'orditLaryfreight routes. all ready for we. . - • . TIIIRTT.TIVE HIGITEST PREMIUMS Have been. awarded'ws within a few years, and or circulars contain printed testimony from TWO lIIIINDRED AND NIFTY OF TS" ,LESDINQ MISMILANS of. the country that the instrument; of our make/tee TIER BEST IN THE WORLD of-theiztaarra. -- rairtvians with full particulars free. In obtaining a Musical Instrument, it is ectonon47 .to get the best. _ Address, , • MASON BROTHRIDI' . 596 Broridirior, New York; RADON -& 214 Wiiiskingtont:Street,'Boston.• MASON '4Bl HAMLIN'S CABINET ORGANS, in cases of Roie wood, plain, or carved aiid paneled; Mottled Walrnit4 Jet, or Imitation Ebony, with g ilt engraving; and in Solid - Walnut or Oak, carved or plain One to twelve stoto t -$llO to $6OO each. M. & H. ,strive for the *..0t.)!- highest excellence in all their work. In their factory econ omy of manufacture is never ity It is their ambition to make, not the loweft PriL9e ll, but the best - instrunients,, which are in the end fthe cheapest. y The great reputa— tion- of their instruments" - 10,7- in great measure, the result of this policy. qiycularsr with :full particulars free to any address. Salesrooras, 274 Washington Street, 11,6S ton; 7 Mercer Street, New York. h StFFERE'RS FROM DYSi'EPSLA. READ ! REFLECT !I ACT!!! TARRANT dc. CO. • gentlemen. I am a resident of Curaeoa. and have often been disposed to write you concerning the real value of your SELTZER APERIENT as a remedy for Indigestion and Dyspepsia. I desire to express to you my sincere gratitude for the great benefit the SELTZER has done my wife. For four or five years my wife bas been sadly afflic ted with Dyspepsia, and after being under the treat ment of several Doctors for two or three years,.she was finally induced to seek the advice of a learned Physician. Doctor Cabialis, of Venezuela. who imme diately treated her with your EFFERVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT she began to improve at once and is now PERFECTLY WELL. I feel it to be my'dety for the good of humanity to makethis statement, feeling that a medicines* valua ble should be widely.ku own. Trusting you will give this publicity, and repeating my earnest gratitude and thanks. -Tarn vemrimpectfully yours. b. 1), insratigusß, -- Merchant, Curtmoa, E. Raw YORK, June 28th, 1865. ' , WE ASK The suffering millions in our land to give this reme dy a trial: 'convinced thatby its timely . use 121849 maS be relieved, many cumi of Dyspepsia, Heartburn: Sour Stomach, Sick Headache, Dizziness, Indigestion, Piles, Costiveness; Bilious Attacks, Liver Complaints, Rheumatic, Affections, &c. Read the Pamphlet of Testimonials with each' bot tle, and, do not use the medicine against the advice of your Physician. MANIIPACTUBED ONLY BY TARRANT- & CO., 278 GREENWICH STREET, NEW YORK. Air FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. HAIR CHANGED FROM - GRAY TO NATURAL COLOR 1 BY USE OF MONTGOMERY'S rlmmm,7,warwwmn.mTmi Mr. Wm. O. Montgomery—Dear Sir:—l take plea sure in giving my testimony to the efficacy of your Hair Restorer. My hair having been gray or several Years, and hearing your }Waterer highly spoken of, I determined to try it. faw now happy to state it has done all yea advertised it to do, having restored my hair Iwhich was very gray) to its original natural preparation for the hair, and gray hair and wish it color. It is a sPendid I advise all Perrons•who have 'restored to its natural color, to use MON TOoll,lfittY'S RAUt RES'loßfilt. It also keens the Scalp. clean an d free from Dandruff and is easy and pleasant to use. Any persons who doubt the truth of this certifi cate can oail and see for themselves. Yours. truly. WM. It. BOSE, No. 905 Market street, Philadelphia; For sale at 25 South Eighth street; kLyott. & Co No. 232 North Second street; Johnson. Holloway ;11; Cowden, Depot, No. 140 North Sixth street. E. M. BRFOt
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