of tly CONGRESS Senate.—Dec. 12—Mr. Cowan, of Penn sylvania, presented a petition asking for a high tariff on imported goods.. A bill was introduced to grant the right of constructing . a telegraph line from New York to the West Indies. A resolution declaring the reb4ion subdued, and restoring the writ of habeas corpus throughout the country, was referred to the Judiciary Committee. The resolution from the House to appoint a committee on the late rebellious States was taken up, and after striking . out that part which' provides that no members from such States can be ad mitted until the committee has reported, was adopted. This leaves each House free to act without waiting for the other, and removes the necessity for Executive approval. A resolution calling fbr information as to whether the rebellion is suppressed, and for the reports of Government officers and agents who have visited the states in revolt, was passed. Dec. 13.—A resolution was adopted, calling for information whether there were any per sons employed in any of the departments who had not taken the oath of allegiance. A bill was presented abrogating all laws of States lately 'in 'rebellion, which make an in equality of civil rights among their inhabi tants on account of race or color ; pending the discussion of which the Senate adjourned. Dec. 14.—A resolution favoring the eight hour system for laborers on Government works, was presented and laid over. The death of Hon. Jacob Collamer, late a Sena tor from Vermont, was officially announced, and eulogies on the 'deceased were delivered by Messrs. Foot, Harr' Johnson, Fessenden, Dixon, Riddle, and WM.. Poland, the suc cessor of Mr. Collamer, after which they ad journed until Monday. Dec.lB—Resolutions and bills were intro duced when the Senate went into executive session. House.—Dec. 12.—A communication was presented from the Governor of Virginia, en closing an act of the Legislature favoring the repeal of the act of 1862, consenting to the division of the State, and the formation of West Virginia. The Military Committee was instructed to report upon the propriety of granting bounties to the soldiers who en listed in 1861 and 1862. Mr. Raymond pre sented the credentials of persons elected to the House from Tennessee, and moved that they be referred to the joint committee on the subject of the late Confederate States. Considerable debate ensuedrbut the motion finally prevailed—yeas - 125, nays 42. The claimants were also granted the privilege of the floor. The Committee on Territories were instructed to give the name of Lincoln to one of the new Territories.—The chairman of the House Committee on Agriculture, Mr. Bidwell, of California, is one of the largest, if not the largest farmer in the United States. He 0wn5.26,000 acres, a large proportion un der cultivation, 1,000 acres in wheat, on which he raised this year 38,000 bushels. Dec. 13.—A resolution was passed instruct ing the committee on the Lincoln memorial to consider the expediency of providing for the completion of the Washington monu ment, so that it could be dedicated to com memorate the virtues of both Washington and Lincoln. The Committee on the Judi ciary were instructed to inquire into the ex pediency of creating the eight-hour law. The committee on Pacific railroad were like wise•instructed to inquire into what action is necessary to expedite the work. Mr. Farns worth introduced resolutions declaring that impartial justice demands that our Govern ment should secure to the colored soldiers of the Union the same rights and privileges as are accorded to other citizens of the United States. A motion to lay them on the table was defeated by a vote of 42 yeas to 113 nays. They were referred to Mr. Stevens' select committee. It was resolved t that the Com mittee on the Judiciary be instructed to con sider and report whether any inhabitants of the rebel States are entitled to compensation for loss occasioned by the Union armies; also, that the same committee inquire into the ex pediency of reporting an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting any State from ma king any distinction of color in giving the elective franchise. Dec. 14.—The Speaker announced the tommittee on the part ;Of the House to in quire into the conditidi of the late so-called Confederate States :—Messrs.. Stevens of Pennsylvania,Washburne of Illinois, Morrill • of Vermont, Grider of Kentucky, Bingham of Ohio, Conkling, of New York, Boutwell of Massachusetts, 'Blow of Milsouri, and Rogers of New Jersey. It was resolved that with the agreement of the Senate the House would adjourn from Dec. 20 to January 9. Appropriations for repairing the White House, and for pensions were voted. The House by an unanimous vote of 153 yeas passed the following resolution. Resolved, That treason against the United States is a crime that ought to 'be punished. The following preamble and resolutions were adopted : Whereas, Republican institutions can find permanent safety only upon the basis of the universal intelligence of the people: and whereas, the great disasters which ha.ire af flicted the nation and desolated one-half of its territory, are traceable, in a great degree, to the absence of common schools and gene ral education among the people of the lately rebellious States: therefore, Resolved, That the joint committee on re oonstruction be instructed to inquire into the expediency of establishing in this capitol a National Bureau of Education, whose duty it • shall be to enforce education without regard to race or color, upon the population of all such States as shall fall below a standard to be established by Congress, and to enquire whether such a bureau should not be made an essential and permanent part of any re - construction: also, Resolved, That all papers which may be offered relative to the representation of the , slate so-called Confederate States of America ''atir either of them, shall be referred to the joint committee of - fifteen without debate, and no member shall be admitted from either dvof the so-called States until Congress shall declare such States or either of them entitled to representation. Dec. 18.—The credentials of J. M. John son, of Arkansas, were referred to the Select Committee. A resolution declaring it an as sumption of power for the President to ex tend the elective franchise to persons in the States was tabled. The President's message was debated. The 'Congressional Oath, passed July 2d, 1862 :—" I, A. 8., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I have never voluntarily borne arms against the United States since I have been a citizen thereof; that I have volunta rily given no aid, countenance, counsel or en couragement to persons engaged in armed hostility theretn; that I have neither sought nor accepted \per attempted to exercise the functions ofany office whatever under any authority or pretended authority in hostility to the United States ; that ,I have not yielded i voluntary support. to any pretended govern ment, authority, power or constitution within the United States hostile or inimical thereto. THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21. 1865• And I do further swear (or affirm) that, to the best of my knowledge and ability, I will sup port and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; thlt 1 will bear true faith and al legiance to the same ; that I take this obliga tion freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evaMon : that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which lam about to enter. So help me God." RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE Oregon Conference.—The minutes of this conference, show an advance in almost every department. The number of members and probationers is 3028, which is an increase of 121. There are thirty-five churches and twenty two parsonages, the former being one, and the latter four more than last year. There are sixty-seven Sabbath-schools and 2632 scholars; an increasealf fourteen schools and 215 scholars. The Two Million Fund.—The Methodists in this country propose to raise two millions of dollars next year for benevolent purposes, as their centennial offering. One rich man among them has already subscribed a quarter of a million, to begin the endowment of a theological seminary! Re will put it on a complete foundation. A good beginning. Statistics of the M. E. Church;—The Advocate and Journal gives, in advance of the publication of the General Minutes qtthe M. E. Church in the U. S. for 1465, tome important statistical tables. The totii4lem-. bership, probationers included, is 929,259, against 928,320 reported in 1864. This ex hibits an increase of 939, a figure which, so far as it is an increase, is gratifying, but which falls much below the expectation of those who, from the frequent reports of the wonderful spread of that church, have been led to expect an enlargement at least corres pondent to the growth of population. There are 7175 preachers, of whom 6014 are " effec tive." The increase of " travelling preach ers" of all classes is 354. This does not in clude local preachers, where an increase is also reported. The number of churches re ported is 10,041, being 21 more than were reported last year. In the benevolent con tributions there has been an enlargement of more than one-fifth. Revival in Virginia.—Rev. James A. Davis, pastor at Timber Ridge and Liberty, Virginia, reports to the Religious Herald about two hundred conversions in connection with protracted meetings recently held in the two churches. One hundred and forty have already come into communion by baptism. Quite powerful revivals are also reported from Bedford, Charlottesville, and churches in Culpepper county. Items.—From New York, revivals of much interest are reported as going forward in the Second Street M. E. Church, and at the Bank Street Mission. —A revival is in pro gress in the M. E. Church in Bridgewater, Mass.—On Word circuit, in the neigh boring county of Chester, the work of God has been considerably revived. At one ap pointment (Mount Rocky,) the membership has increased from twenty to fifty-seven.— Large and numerous revivals in the Metho dist churches in and around Washington city, are reported; also on Patapsco and Montgomery circuits in Maryland. —ln Genessee College, Lima, N. Y., and Cornell College, Mt. Vernon, lowa, the work of sal vation is going forward among the students. MINING INaLIGENCE. The very valuable correspondence from Nevada, which we have ' published in the Commercial List for a number of weeks, is meeting with the attention it deserves. These letters undoubtedly furnish the best history of the location, value and future prospects of the various silver bearing ledges of the Reese River region, the most prolific of rich lodes in Nevada. Mining Register. OUR NEW SERVANT. BY GRACE GREENWOOD I think I must tell the children and their mammas of a wonderful servant we have had for about two months past. She is not Irish, or German, or African, but that exceedingly rare bird, a genuine American servant—han dy, clever, and cute. Her virtues are mani fold. In the first place, she is wonderfully quiet—going silently and steadily about her work—doing all that is required"of her "with neatness and despatch." She is good-tem pered—is never " on the rampage "—never msolitrit—never unkind to children. She has no Tollowers—never goes off without warning; never wastes, never blunders, don't drink, and "don't break the eighth commandment. I call her a servant, but she seems to me more like a helpful friend, a kindly compan ion ; and yet she is but a soulless thing, after all—a mere wonderful piece of human me chanism ; she. is—one of Wilcox and Gibbs' admirable Sewing Machines. 1 was-very late in availing myself of the services of this great, beneficent hand-maiden of modern womanhood. I have longed for one vaguely for years, and made many reso lutions to procure one, but have refrained, from painful doubts of my own ability to manage a creature that seemed to me so " fearfully and wonderfully made.", Being but modestly endowed with mechanical inge nuity and insight, I dreaded the trouble and vexation of learning to work any machine, and my inquiries of friends were always for the most simple invention. The weight of, reliable evidence being. overwhelming for that of Willcox and Gibbs', I at last decided upon it, procured it, am more than satisfied. I began my acquaintance with it with some trepidation, but it soon put me quite at my ease. We were capital friends at once, and, as yet, have had no falling out. Together we fell right to work, and manufactured an arti cle of clothing very creditable that very morning. The simplicity of this machine is only equalled by the unerring accuracy with which it works. Our little daughter, after a very few trials, was able to manage it nicely, and the two are now •on excellent terms. The only trouble is, that mamma cannot supply work fast enough. She laughs to see it hungrily devour the tedious long seams which were once her aversion, and then lick up the little seams, hems, tucks and fells with such apparent relish. Ah, mothers and wives, when work pres ses—when muslins, linens and prints cumber your drawers, and little ones clamor for spring "toggery," the thought that in your sitting room waits, ever to help you, a silent, trusty friend, of forty sewing woman power, is wondrously sustaining, isn't it? And while the novelty lasts at least, a sewing machine is a great incentive to indus try in the familT. Restless little girls delight in a kind of work so exceedingly like play; and boys even take to it, and think it "jolly good sport" to be able to manufacture their own shirts. As for myself, I must confess I have not yet come to any real hard word with my ma chine. It still amuses me. lam still exper imenting with it, and wondering at its Puck like swiftness; I delight to set at a long seam, and see it go like a greyhound on the scent—like Flora Temple on the course. In short, I don't believe there will be any end to my enjoyment of my machine whikk the dry goods hold out —The Little Rlgrtm [From the Evening Telegr a ph.] Profits of Silver Mining. Anstvers to Objections to Investments in Silver Mining Property—Distance—Transportation of Bullion Inexhaustability of the Mines—Silcer versus Oil, Etc., Etc. To the end that the value of the silver regions of the Eastern Pacific slope should be properly known and appreciated by our readers, we have endeavored in several previous issues of The Evening Telegraph to describe the extent, immense wealth, and inexhaust ibility of the treasure regions of the Territories. That our efforts have not been without success is evident from the urgent requests which have reached us from various quarters and all branches of trade to continue and extend the valuable information thus furnished. We have, moreover, had the pleasure of chronicling the organization of several nevi , mining companies, which have purchased ledges in the silver region, and gone to work in a systematic and energetic man ner. All this is encouraging, and it is the best evidence we could have that the business men of Philadelphia, as well as the capitalists, are not disposed to allow New York and Boston to appropriate the whole of the valuable property here offered, or reap the im mense and legitimate profit to be derived therefrom. The objections to investment in the gold and silver mining property now offered in the market, and to which capital is invited as a eine qua non of success, are neither few nor unreasonable, at first sight; but it is proposed to show that they are not insuperable or indeed really well founded. DISTANCE FROM HOME One of the first of these objections• offered is the dis tance to Colorado, Idaho, or Montana. Shrewd busi ness men say, "It's too far off; I grant the wealth of the mines; I cannot doubt the evidence of reliable men, or the proof of returns in the amount ofbullion shipped monthly; but I'm afraid to put my money where I can't look after it myself." Now this is rea sonable and natural, but let us see as to the distance. We are within four days by rail of Atchison, Kansas, the grand starting point across the plains. From there eight days will put us, by daily stage, in any point of the Colorado mines, twenty days from Phila delphia in the mines of Nevada u and a like time by water from St. Louis in the mines of Montana. "But stop," says the objector, "that is too long for our letters; we must communicate more readily.' "Step into the American Telegraph office with me, my friend. It is now 12 o'clock noon by the ornamen tal olock there of the enterprising proprietor of our excellent daily, the Ledger. Let us send this dis patch :—' To Superintendent Franklin, Silver Mining Company, Canon City, Nevada. What is the mine dhing?"Our dispatch has gone in its turn, has it MA'?" Yes It will reach Nevada at 9 o'clock, A. M., gaining Just three hours in time, and be in the liands of our energetic superintendent actually before we sent it by the Ledger clock. When you are open ing your business letters to-morrow morning his an swer will be before you. Will not this do?" TRANSPORTATION OF BULLION "Yes, but," adds objector, "how about receiving the gold and silver,here when, we mine it. It's all i , very fine to have a M yiel4iiig• under proper man agement, $5OOO a day; itiPVciiir treasure has to pass through a wild unseptit . itmflifrY. full of hostile In dians and white lesiitald'es, our chances for divi- i . denda will be slim7' l 'IMO so, oh I Man of little faith ' your superintendent ships his bullion, be it much or little, bars or tons, with our invaluable express com pany of Wells, Fargo & Co, By them it is safely transported from Nevada to San Francisco. deposited, if required, in the Mint, and by the first mail..certifi cates, entitling your company to its value in ccin at the United States Mint in this city, are forwarded. and your stockholders get their dividends in that coin, with the additional advantage of the existing premium; or, your bullion can be sold on the spot, and your money paid by telegraph on New York or Philadelphia at an exchange of one percent., and the cost of the telegram." "That is satisfactory and better than I thought, yet there is another difficulty in my mind. I am told one 7 half of the mining property sent here for sale is what you Nevada men call ' wild cat,' with neither title to the ledge or silver in it if there was." "You never was in greater error. That irresponsible and unscru pulous speculators have placed worthless property on the market hitherto is true, but that the majority of that now offering, or indeed any of it is such, is not true. The mining laws of Nevada require strict com pliance withtheir regulations, which demand record of discovery. a.certaiwamount of labor on each hun dred feet of every claim to be done monthly, and the expenditure of a certain sum before a fee simple can be obtained. "The mining engineers of Nevada are honest and practical men, and will not furnish false reports. The assayers, whose, rtificates you can have with every claim offered, 4 arTamong the best in the world, and you have also specimens, notselected, sent you in any quantity required, which can be assayed here and show for themselves. You are not asked to go into the thing blindfolded—send a man you can trust out there, it you have no faith inhuman integrity west of the Rooky Mountains, and within six weeks you can have his report by telegraph, and act upon it." INEXHAUSTIBILITY OF THE MINES Admitting that to the objections above proffered there have...been perfectly satisfactory answers ren dered, it is not to be supposed that no others will be presented; on the contrary, a common obstacle is as , follows:—" Hven if these mines are as rich as rel.re-' sented, what guarantee have we that their wealth will not be exhausted in a short time?" To this query there is, fortunately, an uncontrovertible argument in reply—no silver mine was ever known to be exhausted. The mines of the Andes yield to this day as they have for centuries; the mines of Potosi. in South America, have been worked since 1545! The mines of Hungary still yield as they did when worked by the. Romans before Christ. Man's efforts have not and cannot ex haust the prodigal gifts of a beneficent Providence. It is idle, therefore, and puerile to speak of the inex hamtibility of a region the mineral wealth of which has been known' to man but five years I If in this brief period we have begun to learn the possibility of extracting enormous amounts of treasure from these hills, what may we not expect when only a quarter of a century shall have elapsed? The chance of any company or companies exhausting the ores of a fairly located group of veins is conseqUently about as pro bable as lightning in an unclouded sky. SILVER VS. OIL And now rises the most frequent objection offered to investments in mines:—" I went into oil when it promised as much as silver, and have lost all I in vested, and now am called upon for an extra assess ment on my stock." Let us compare the two, and de cide the case—Silver vs. Oil. Last fall and winter when the oil fever existed, and all that was necessary to raise half a million of dollars was to issue a pro spectus, every one who had any money over and above what was actually needed in their business, took stock. In the first place land was bought. likely or unlikely to produce oil; next, money was squan dered by bad management and rascality, then when the failure occurred, the whole "oil business" was denounced So much for the " bogus companies." The legitimate and well-managed have paid a bet ter interest than any other investment, save silver mining, yet known, but how much short of silver the best dividends from oil have been, we shall see. Four per cent. per month, occasionally passing a dividend, and sometimes through fortuitous circumstances de claring an " extra," has been the history of the best —the Columbia—and against this there have been a thousand failures with no dividends. In silver mining the facts are as follows :—Gould and Curry Mining Company, organized within five years, on the Comstock lode, Nevada, each share re presenting a foot of ledge—sold at $lO per share—has since yield ed $15,000,000; and for the year from De cember, 1863, to December, 1864, 'yielded $4,000,000, spending $1,000,000 in improvements. This company has declared dividends of $5OO per share. " Savage," "Empire," "Belcher," "Crown Point," "Morgan and Muncy," and numerous others are paying divi dends monthly ranging from $5O to $lOO per share in coin, to Eastern holders, in New York. Of these, the Empire has paid $320 per share. Examination of the financial adverti g column of the New York Herald will show this fa every month. So 9 uch for divi dends. Again, in oil o eratiens, there is a great risk. A well must be sunk .khree, five, or eight hundred fiset, before the presence ef oil can be decided. and the whole amount expended may be—how often has been —lost. In silver mining the course of the vein is in variably tiaced up.in the surface, and science and Practical expbrience have demonstrated that rock 6,1 yielding theslightest trace of silver, or its chlorides or sulphurets at the top, will inebitably prove enor mously rich at the water-level—growing in value as the vein is worked. There need be no doubt—no hesitation : there is no 'striking silver," like "striking oil." and conse• quently no opportunity for swindling. Given a cer tain amount of ledge yielding ores, which will assay a giben amount of bullion, and the result may be as readily computed, expenses estimated, and profits reckoned as in the investment of one thousand dol lars at six per cent. per annum. Oil is vague, transi tory, capricious, "one day she flows and then she's sulky," they tell you at the wells. Silver is always there, responding to the blows of the miner's pick. in the ore, softening and becoming friable in the roasting furnace, crushed and disinte grated under the stamps, it is finally wedded to its "natural affinity," the quicksilver in the amalgama tor—turning out at last clean and bright, in bars or coin, to pay our national debt, bless our people in adding to our wealth, and requiring no further mani pulation to add its quota to our commercial value. We have in the foregoing endeavored to answer any objections which could be presented to the investment of capital in silver mining, and honestly beg to oali the attention of all classes of our citizens to the importance of the subject. It is hardly necessary to add that everything stated as fact herein is based on actual occurrence, "the documents" for which are open for examination. In quoting prices asked for mining property. it is to be understood that in nearly every instance the original owners will take a large Portion, if not all the purchase money in the stock of the developing company—the mines remaining in trust until developed. If, in our efforts to dissemi nate information relative to the mining interests of our Territories, we shall have succeeded in inducing the investment of capital therein, or the creation of one new enterprise, we shall have been rewarded, (timid Astito. Air The Presbytery of Rochester will hold its annual meeting in Brockport on Tuesday, the ninth (9th) day of January. WA, at two o'cloOk P. M. C. E. FUR MAN, Stated Clerk. Burria.o, Dec. 15th, 1865. Air The• Presbytery o; Cortland will hold its next stated meeting at Lisle, Tuesday, the 16th - of January next, at 2 o'clock, P. M. H. N. MILLERD, Stated Clerk. /Op Wanted.—By an experienced Teacher, a situation as DAILY GOVERNESS, in a private family or School. Would have no objections to going a short distance .from the city. Best of references given. Address TEACHER. at the office of the Ame rican Presbyterian. AWAY WITH SPECTACLES Old Eyes Made New, without SPECTACLES, DOC TOR, Ott MEDICINE. Pamphlet mailed free on re ceipt of ton cents. Address E. B. FOOTE, M.D., No 1130 Broadway, New York. 1016-St HALL'S VEGETABLE SICILIAN HAIR. RENEWER has proved itself to be the most perfect preparation for the hair ever offered to the public. It is a vegitable compound, and contains no inju rious properties whatever. IT WILL RESTORE GRAY HAIR TO ITS ORIGI- NAL COLOR - . It will keep the hair from falling out. It cleanses the scalp and makes hair soft, lustrous and silken. It is a splendid hair dressing. Noerson, old or young, should fail to use it. IT IS RECOMMENDED AND USED BY THE FIRST MEDICAL AUTHORITY. .9a ' Ask for Hall's Vegetable Sicilian Hair Renewer, and take no other. R. P. HA Nashun e N. H., Proprietor. For sale all druggists. 1006-6 m BEAUTY-A JOY FOREVER. Pimples and Blotches on the Face, Freckles, Sallowness and all roughness of the Skin, removed at once by the use of " 'UPHAM'S PIMPLE BANISHER." Price 50 cents. Mailed to any ad dress for 75 cents, by S. C. UPHAM, 25 South Eighth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. A SINGLE BOX OF BOANDBEWS PILLS contains more vegetable extractive matter than twen ty boxes of any pills in the world besides; fifty-five hundred physicians use them in their practice to the exclusion of other purgatives. Theftrst letter of their value is yet -scarcely appreciated. When they are better known sudden death and continued sickness will be of the past. Let those who know them speak right out in their favor. It is a duty which will save life. Our race are subject to a redundancy of vitiated bile at this season, and it is as dangerous as it is prevalent; but Brandreth's Pills afford an invaluable and efficient protection. By their occasional use we Prevent the collection of those impurities, which. when in sufficient quantities, cause so much danger to the body's health. They soon cure liver complaint. dyspepsia, loss of appetite, pain in the head, heart burn, pain in the breast-bone. sudden faintness and costiveness. Sold by all respectable Dealers in Medi cines. 1022-Ir. FEVER AND AGUE AND CHILLS. The Best Remedy to Cure, is DAVIS' PAIN DIRECTIONS FOR ITS USE Take three teaspoonfuls of the Pain Killer in about half a pint of hot water, well sweetened with molas ses, as the attack is coming on, bathing freely the chest, back and bowels with the medicine, at the same time. Repeat the.dose in twenty minutes, if 'the first dose not stop the chill. Should it produce vomiting, (and it probably will, if the stomach is very foul), take a little Pain Killer in cold water, sweetened with sugar, after each spasm. Perseverance in the above treatment has cured many severe and obstinate cases of this disease. Sold by all Medicine Dealers. Ak_Household lie cessity exists for the Use of BIIRSO'S CATAILRH SNUFF, Which, in the first stages of a cold, acts like magic— Headache, Hoarseness, Diptheria, and Bronchitis, 'Sore Eyes, Deafness, Bad '1 este and Smell, being the result of Catarrh. This snuff removes and prevents all these, and insures a healthy Head. Its effects are pleasant and safe, even for infants who suffer from Snuffles. It has the highest professional testimonials. Sold by all Druggists, or sent by Mail to all parts of 11. S., for 30 cents for Ofie Box, or $1 for four Boxes. Address,. JAS. DORN°, P. O. Box 1235, New York. Wholesale; hell BARNES & CO., 21 Park Row; N. Y. ALTO' Van, COLD, OR SORE THROAT, .REQUIBISS IMMEDIATE ATTENTION AND SHOULD BE OWEDEED. IF ALLOWED TO CONTINUE, Lrritation of the . Lung's. a Peunitnent Throat Affection, or an Incurable Lying Disease • IS OFTEN THE RESULT BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES HAVING A DIRECT INFLUENCE ON THE PARTS, GIVE IMRE- DIATII RELIEF For Bronchitis, Asthma, Catarrah, Con snmptive and Throat Diseases, TROCHES ARE USED WITH ALWAYS GOOD SUCCESS. SINGERS AND PUBLIC SPEAKERS will find Troches useful in clearing the voice when taken before Singing or Speaking, and relieving the throat after an unusual exertion of the vocal organs. The Trochee are recommended and prescribed by Physicians, and have had testimonials from eminent men throughout the country. Being an article of true merit, and having proved their efficacy by a test of maarYnars, each year finds them in new localities in various parts of the world, and the Troches are universally pronounced better than other articles. OBTAIN WAY "BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES," and do not take any of the Worthless Imitations that may be offered. Sold everywhere in the United States, and in For sign Countries, at 35 cents per box. SLEEPER'S UMBRELLA MANUFACTORY 1002 Market Street, above Tenth, *hi Thrktiratinns. NOW READY : THE JANUARY NUMBER OF HOURS AT HOME. The following is the table of contents : The Child ou the .Judgment Seat: A poem written for Hours at Ho me by the author 01 Chronicles of the Schoenberg -Cotta Family. "Drapet'4 Civil Policy of America" " Notions About Names." by Prof. Anson J. i)oro o . -D o lly Dryden's Christmas." by Miss E. Stuart Phelps. A DREAM OF THE BEA.IITIEtiL A Poem, by W. Gilmore si mms. Gustavus Adolphus, by Archbishop Trench. Geoffrey the Lollard, by Frances Eastwood. The Late Viscount Palmerston, by G. 34. Towle. Magnanimity, by H. T. Tackerman. Luther Watching by the Body of his Daugh ter Magdalene: A Poem by the author of • THE HOUSEHOLD OF BOUVER.TE. Port Royal Des Champs, by Miss Anne Shear man. llntil Evening, by Miss M. A. Alden. Low Wood Inn, by Prof. Noah Porter. Typographical Elocution, by Prof. W. C. Co nant. The Cedars of Lebanon : A Poem, (with an il lustration), by Frances Eastwood. Patriotic Record of Havard College, by J. C. Ropes. Esq. Three Years. by Prof. A. J. Curtis. Short Sermons for Sunday-School Tea chers, No. VII.. by Rev. C. S. Robinson. The Giant Cities of Bashan, by the Editor. Book Notices. SPDCIAL For TWENTY-FIVE subscribers, ($75,) one of Wheeler & Wilson's Fifty-five Dollar Sewing For SIXTY-FIVE subscribers. ($195,) one of • Mason & Hamlin's Four-octave Single-reed Cabinet Organs ; The cash value of which is $llO. For ONE HUNDRED subscribers, ($300.) A Five-octave Double-Reed Cabinet Organ. The cash value of which is $l7O. REGULAR RATES. TERMS : $3 a year, in advance. Single numbers, 30 cents. For $5 the first number of the magazine handsomely bound and one year's subscription. Two subsriptions for one year, $5 50; clubs of five (send ing $l5) will;receive an extra copy of the magazine. Clubs of twelve and over will receive the magazine at $2 50 per annum and an extra copy will be sent to the person getting up the club. C. SCRIBNER dt CO., Publishers. New York. Now Ready---The New Story, By the Author of " The Schoenberg-Cotta Family," "Diary of Kitty Trevylyan," &c. WINIFRED BERTRAM, By the Author of the " Shcenberg-Cotta The marvellous power of this author over her read ers has been felt to their delight and profit by tens of thousands. The beauty and truthfulness of her pic tures of life. which have given her other volumes of this series, published by us, such wide and deserved popularity, are conspicuous in this new work. Of works by the same author, we also publish THE SCHCENBERG-COTTA. FAMILY. THE EAR LY DAWN, DIARY OF KITTY TREVYLYAN. Each 1 vol. 12mo t uniform with " Winifred Bertram." And in Cabinet size, 16mo, cloth, tinted paper; we have both these editions in half and in full calf. Also, MARY. 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SMITH'S DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE, Comprising its Antiquities, Biography, Geography, and Natural History, Edited by Uniform with the Dictionaries .of Biography and Mythology, etc. Illustrated with Numerous Maps and Wood cuts. 3 vols. Svo. Cloth, $21.00; Half Calf, $27.00. The scope and object of the work may be briefly de fined. It is a Dictionary of the Bible and not of The ology. It is intended to elucidate the antiquities, biography, geography, and natural history of the Old Testament, New Testament, and Apocrypha, but not to explain systems of theology, or discuss points o controversial divinity. The Editor believes that the work will be found, upon examination, to be far more complete in the subjects which it professes to treat than any of its predecessors. No other Dictionary has yet attempted to give a complete list of the proper names occurring in the Old and New Testaments, to say nothing of those in the Apocrypha. The present work is intended to contain every name, and in the case of minor names, references to every passage in the Bible in which each occurs. "We commit Dr. Smith's Biblical Dictionary to the hands of the public, confident that it cannot fail to meet with the favorable reception which it eminently deserves. It will be welcomed not only by the pro fessed Biblical student, who will find in it an efficient substitute fora large number of books whose posses sion has hitherto been an indispensable necessity to him, but also by every one who feels the slightest interest in the acquisition of a sound and accurate knowledge and understanding of the Bible. . . • • • We have no doubt whatever. that, as a work of refer ence, it will be found invaluable."—London Literary Gazette. SMITH'S CONCISE DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE Illustrated with 270 wood-cuts. Thick octavo, cloth $6.00. Half gait $B.OO. This condensation of the " Dictionary of the Bible," has been made by Mr. William Aldis . Wright, M. A., Librarian of TrinitytDollege, Cambridge, under the direction and superintendence of Dr. William Smith. It is intended to satisfy a generally expressed wish for an account of the most recent Biblical studies in a form adapted for universal circulation. A Dictionary of the Bible, in some form or another.. is indispensa ble for every family. The Divine, the Scholar, and all who desire to investigate thoroughly the various subjects connected with the Bible, and to master those controversies which are now exciting such deep and general interest, must still have recourse to the Larger Dictionary; but to students, to private fami lies, and to that numerous class of persons who desire to arrive at reaulte, simply, this Concise Dictionary will, it is believed, supply all that is necessary for the elucidation and explanation of the Bible. It is the main object of the Editor to place within'the reach of every Christian household a popular abstact of a Work which has received the approval of those competent to express an opinion on the subject. .h - To any Parish, or Sunday School, ordering ten popies, we will supply one copy gratis ; to en order for wenty-five copies, three copies gratis, or, one set of the larger work in 3 volumes. • A copy of this work will be sent, post paid, to any address, on receipt of the advertised price by the Pub lishers. LITTLE. BROWN & Co.. 1022-2 t. 110 Washington Street, Boston PHILADELPHIA Machines ENTITLED And the World she Lived In, Family." 1 vol. 12mo. $1 75 to Children THE COUSIN BESSIE SERIES COMPRISING ON DECEMBER 22d - M. W. DODD, 5% Broadway, New York WILLIAM SMITH, LL. D iii ); atijiitto. GROYER&BAKER'S Ix HEST PREMIUM ELASTIC STITCH LOCK STITCH SEWING MACHINES WITH LATEST IMPROVEMENTS. The Grover & Baker S. M. 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They are the "PERE ECTION OF ME CHANTAL" Each machine being as carefully and accurately finished as a watch. SECOND. They are adapted to the GREAT EST RANGE OF WORK. and use successfully either cotton, silk, or linen thread. They make the patent "TWISTED LOOP STITCH," which is the most beautiful, elastic, and durable stitch known. FOURTH. They are "GLORIOUSLY SlId • PLE," as readily comprehended as a pair of scissors, and not more liable to derangement. They are ENTIRELY NOISELESS and "might safely be used in a sick room, or by the cradle of a sleeping infant." SIXTH. They are run with PERFECT EASE, scarcely an effort being re quired to sew a thousand stitches per minute. SEVENTH. They are ABSOLUTELY COM PLETE, and will Hem, Fell, Braid, Cord. Bind. Tuck. Gather, and 'Em broider beauto4lly. EIGHTH. They CANNOT BE TURNED THE WRONG WAY. The NEEDLES CANNOT BE SET WRONG. The Hemmers. Fellers. &c., are SELF-ADJUSTING. A careful examination of these Machines at . THIRD. FIFTH. NINTH. TENTH. 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