fxrat Kannmg, F',AS.ONABLE SUGGESTIONS, Gentlemat!, advises its read tbitows I , : ' ae e water often injures wheat, espe when „. rains fall after the soil has ',„ O , impervious by freezing. It is well, • . : .orc. to see that suitable surface i „. are provided for all low places. ,;..,,times furrows have been plowed, but ' par tly obstructed by loose earth.. This be thrown out with a shovel, and I,tero.i thinly over the adjacent ground. winter occasionally occurs with but ~]e sn ow—or the snow leaves the ground . „ e weeks before spring. In both eases s urface is much exposed to cutting ~d. A thin sprinkling of straw over .urfaee is often a great protection, and can do no harm. We have known an in ,nee where a part of the field thus treated , re but twenty bushels to the acre, while rest was so severely injured as to be worth cutting. This work • may be Jeer the ground is frozen. that all tools are carefully housed ,rushed clean. An application of - , :curn to the parts ittade of wood, will -rate the pores and render them dura. It is more efficacious than paint, and s well to precede a coat of paint. -taring roots in cellars, see that they and clean, and that the air can cir..t more or less among them. Nothing v :se than the practice of placing heaps :atoes on damp cellar bottoms. With .;., bagas it is especially important that should 'be a free circulation of air, they should be placed in lattice cases cks, if' in cellars, so that wind from windows may pass through them ex -1: In the coldest weather. The rotting :,tubers connected with cellars where quantities of ruts bagas are stored, • I'l , from imperfect ventilation. young animals should be kept grow- A winter. Some farmers expect to r, them in a sort of half torpid state, ,enn satisfied if they come out in .7rln2; as large or' as heavy as they entered . winter. Good managers pursue a very Arent course; keeping them well fed, . 5 . and comfortable, and growing "right without cessation. Timely provi ',,Ll should be made for this object. MILCH COWS—STABLING. !such is said and written, and prOperly about protecting dairy stock from the 21.:iitudes of winter. This is true in theory d excellent in practice, if the fostering is not carried to such an extreme as debilitate rather than improve this im .Jrtant portion of the farm stock. That 11 cows need shelter during the cold :ms of spring, autumn and winter, there no doubt; but proper care does not. Illy \ close confinement , week in and week as the practice of some dairymen is. •;, require air and exercise. Without the animals will become restless and tr rish, hence far less p4ductive than ho, would be were a less rigid surveillance :ised over them. Give them a chance I•helter when they seek it, but do. not rive them of the luxury of inhaling the .ide air, when inclination prompts them indulgence. By according this, free . Ir. the return of dairy products 'win be .zinented in volume and improved in ,iiity. 11 sections of the country where the mess of clearing off the forest timber is Doing prosecuted in the winter season, II cows will esteem it a great favor to .::owed to browse upon the twigs of the ti, maple and basswood—especial favor with cattle—affording the stock air . _a semis°, while contributing materially support and comfort. Where this tom of range is practicable, it tends to . uish the cost of keeping, affords the . .'1.31s a pleasant and grateful change a the monotony of stable, confinement, imparts a healthful elasticity to their cements. During the prevalenoe of tins this freedom of action may be pro t restrained; but when the skies are %Olt, seclusion is repugnant and irksome the beasts, and pecuniarily disadvan /eous to the owners of them. ciANBERRY CULTURE IN NEW JERSEY. WM. Parry, in a paper read before the nsylvania Horticultural Society, Sep : [uher, 1866, representing New Jersey thus speaks of cranberry culture in State : The cultivation of cranberries is now , zing mush attention, and to one not sainted with the magnitude of opera :l3 in this branch, it must appear per '•y marvellous to witness the stupen -1 efforts in this branch of agriculture. Manchester, Brioksburg, Tom's River, other places, wherever there is a e of land worthless for other purposes, • cleared, and cranberry plants set out. it, :he best data at. our disposal, the Emblem states We will venture I. , ertion that there is at least one mil dollars invested in the culture of °ran r,(N in the county of Ocean.' - h Mon and kprlin g ton ,counties the culti ,n of the is still more extended, and 'ulY increasing. .It,',ltediphreys, of states that 'oranberry culture q s to have been made a specialty with owners here, they apparefltly having d more attention to that thatt - to any q. kind of fruit culture. Portions of bog have yielded at the rate 0f.220 ••bels per acre. This, at the price of cranberries last ' would give the modest little sum of [ JO per acre. Cranberries, both culti -A and wild, grow in large quantities every side of us. The amount-of land thi s county suitable for cranberries, is --known, but it must be immense. " Win. R. Braddock of Medford has 4,, ut one hundred aores planted in °ran :.:tries, twenty of which were in fruit last ear, and yielded an average_ of one hun red bushels per acre; irk all, two thou nd bushels, which brought him, clear of expenses, $3 per bushel, amounting to 000 from the twenty acres in bearing. • Theodore and Alfred Budd purchased, Nears since, a tract of cedar swamp 010 per acre; they set cranberries, THE AMEItICAN / 1 3 RFAttTERIAN. 'THEIRBDAT, DECEMBER- 20, -1866. and since have been offered $6OO per acre. Last year twenty-eight acres of it produced 1800 bushels of fruit worth $4 per bushel, amounting to $7200. " Jos. C. Hinchman, of Medford, has 50 acres nicely graded, turfed and banked for flooding the plants, most set with Zsranber ries ; those in bearing last year' produced about 1500 bushels ; they appear to in crease in productiveness for seven or eight years before attaining their greatestlield, as the first lot of ten acres, planted seven years since, produced last year 800 bushels, and from present appearance will yield 1000 bushels this year., " The harvesting is usually 'done by hand, each one picking from three to four bushels per day, for which they receive about 45 cents per bushel." THE MAMMOTH CHEESE. Canada West can undoubtedly lay, claim to:the honor Of. having manufictUred the largest cheese ever seen. One weighing a little more than - 4000 pounds was exhibited at different fairs last year, and attracted much attention ; but this has been`far sur passed by the great cheese manufactured by Mr. J. Harris, ,of the Ingersoll Cheese Fac tory, under the direction of "Father Ran ney," who began cheese making a quarter of a century since. This cheese, as has been before stated by us, weighs about 7000 pounds, is six feet eight inches in diameter, and three feet thick. The milk used was equal to one milking from 7000 cows, and weighed 70,000 pounds. The first step in the man ufacture was the erection of a house ex pressly for the purpose, 16 by 18 feet. The pressing was done by four screw presses. The hoop was strengthened by binds of iron, and was so arranged with levers that it was readily turned on its a'xis. In order to get the bandage on the cheese, the hoop was cut in several pieces. Forty yards of cloth were required to ban dage the cheese. It was finallq banded with a galvanized wire screen,,to keep it in shape. That the cheese might be safely transported, it was placed on a car con etrueted for the purpose. During the en tire process of manufacture, not a single accident occurred. This mammoth cheese was exhibited at the Provincial Exhibition at Toronto, C.W., and at various fairs, everywhere attracting much attention. It is to be taken to the Great Exposition, at Paris. We learn that the intention of the proprietor is to bring it to the West as fax as Chicago, probably stopping at the principal points on the rail road line over which it is taken. gtitutitit. THE MADOC GOLD'REGIONS IN CANADA. tHE RICHARDSON DIKE From - the door of the " Anglo-Saxon" the now famous Richardson mine can be seen. As that is the great point of inter est, we walked 'over to it through the fields before examining any other locality. John Riohard'son, a• plain, unlettered old fariner, who-struggled alone as a backwoods pioneer, and has lived upon the proceeds of his farm for the last twenty years, is the owner of lot 18 in the sth concession of Madoc. The lot is, like all others; a rocky„sterile plaoe, a portion of which is Cleared, and the balance, covered with hemlock, beech' and maple,.and a scrubby sort of under brush. There is not an acre of level land on the whole lot. Copper 'having been discovered on some of the adjoining lots, and some persons having informed Rich-. ardson that there were indications.of simi lar deposits on his land, he determined to make a test.. Accordingly, some few months ago he made an opening on a ridge of land; about four hundred yards long, by one hundred wide, and about seventy feet high in the most prominent point. The top of this ridge is ‘omething the shape of a camel's back, the smaller one being to the east, and the larger to the west. At the apex*of the , smaller cone Richardson com menced his excavations. He worked away for two or three months, blasting down through granite and quartz, until he had reached the depth of about fourteen feet. Here he struck a large deposit of brownish earth,, loosely imbedded in a hole or "pocket" in the rock, nearly three feet in diameter. It is estimated that some two or three oart-loads of dirt had been removed from the pocket and thrown' away, when a person, who knew something of gold mining, happened , to comeupon the men While at work in the hole, and struck them all dumb with astonishment by telling them that, with every shovel of dirt, they werelbrow lug away dollars worth of gold To prove his words, he 'took a small quantity of earth in an ordinary tin pan and washed it in a neighboring stream, and in the bottom of the pan was found nearly an ounce of tire precioui'metal, 'in bright, glittering parti cles,. which were before invisible. Several other pans were washed, and , in every in stance gold was found, not only in paying, but in extraordinary, quantities. The yield was really wonderful, as much as three ounceo being turned out of a 'single pan. California or Australia never, even at their richest mines, gave such a yield. What its valus l is,;may b ¢ e jidgetl froth Die. fact that if the tests made hold out,lt"tnin could oth,out 4140Q0 wifrth of gold in one day, and not work hard. On learning that heaves the possessor of such a mine of wealth, Richtirdsot at. onnettopged work, not well knowufg . how to proceed. The news of the great discovery spread rapidly, and many people came to see, for . them selves, Richardson was very obliging.' He allowed , all comers to.go downinto the mine ,and see for themselves, and as every one brought up bandsful and pocketsful of the earth, in all of which - gold Was-fouhdi NTS' estimated that several thoisand dollars' worth of gold was carried away. Among those-whonlikriosity led to the spot, was a Roston man named Carr. He examined and tested the earth, and the result was that he struck a bargain with Richardson. For tltet.mine and -sixteen tares aroundvit he o'' & veil to pay 420,000 liefore** 10of ''December burine%is M vestigttion,d a lent 4lr. Carr remove ' quantity . of earth which was washed for him by an old. Australian miner, who tells s golq in it: This was fakes to the United me thavtitv fdttnd at oa,st•s23oo worth of States by Mr. Carr, for the purpose, he said, of shOwing it to capitalists there, in order that he may induce them to invest their funds in a company he intends form ing. Before leaving the mines he had a small house built over it, the entrance to which is fastened by two padlocks, one put on by him, and the other by Richardson. No one can enter the mine not until Carr returns. If he does not pay the $20;000 to Richardson by the time settled, he loses his claim, and Richardson will, then work the mine himself, or sell out to some one else.He, will have no difficulty in finding a purchaser. In addition .to that taken from the earth, a large quantity of gold was found in the quartz. Some fine speci mens have been piocured by prospectors from the quartz thrown out of the hole, by simply breaking it with a hammer. GREAT PUBLIC WORKS. Three great undertakings in widely sepa rated regions have lately been completed, that seem to be characteristic of our age and country. These are the tunnel from the city of Chicago, two miles out under the bed of Lake Michigan, to furnish a supply of pure water to that town; the re markable suspension bridge at Cincinnati, over the Ohio river, and • the railroad bridge over the Susquehanna river, at Havre de Grace. Each of these cost an immense sum of money, and was really a bold and enterprising adventure. The Sus quehanna bridge has been subjected to the greatest perils on account of the terrible freshets that sweep down that stream, and the extreme difficulty of building piers in such deep .water. So serious was the un dertaking felt to be, that for a long time the powerful railroad corporation owning the line 'between' Philadelphia and Balti more, hesitated to undertake it. Even when begun, it was prosecuted under ex traordinary difficulties, and • subject to un common perils and.iheavy losses. But at last it was finished, and now the broad Sus quehanna is no longer an obstacle to the travel between the Noith and South. The running time between Philadelphia and Baltimore will now be materially reduced, and all the dangers of crossing the river in winter, produced by ice, will be over come. The Cincinnati bridge differs from this, although, like it, a railway bridge, in being built.from shore to shore in a single span; in other words, .being ,suspended over the stream without intermediate supports. Of course, since the Niagara suspension bridge was built, people think less of these things ; than they'used to ; but nevertheless, the, passage of the Ohio river by such a struc ture is really an achievement,• and the reader •may measure . its consequence by the cost, two. Millions iff dollars. It putg Cincinnati in direct communication with the whole railwaysystem of-the south, and enables that enterprising city to undertake a more vigorous competition for Southern trade than ever before. The present ambition of the Cincinna tians seems to be to establish direct railway connection with Charleston, Savannah, Mobile, New Orleans; and, in fact, all the chief cities of- the South, so is to make Cincinnati the western focus of the South ern trade: The Chicago lake tunnel has deemed a more hazardous entergtise 'than either of these, but in reality it *as not so. The boring was at a sufficient depth to avoid all risk, and modern sciene3 has en abled engineers to conduct such under takings without any of the perils once thought to be inseparable from them. Still itis not to be denied that the idea was a very bold one, and that the city has carried it out with a promptitude, skill and success deserving of all credit. It is in such works as these, rather than in the fancy work of ornamental architecture, that the present age of Americans must establish its renown, for while European critics may depreciate our art efforts, they are totally unable to do so in the matter df such struc tures as these. Hence the Pacific Rail road, once finished, will be regarded with a thousand-fold more wonder and interest by foreign travellers than if we could show them art efforts ri4alling those of Italy: Engineering is pre-eminently the national pride, and we must seek to shine by its feats.—U. S. Gazette. GEOLOGICAL REMAINS. It was recently' announced that Dr. Hay den had arrived at the Western frontier with a large amount of fossils of extinct animals, collected during an eipedition to the Bad Lands of Dacotah Territory, for the. Szaithionian Institution and Philadel phia Academy of Natural Sciences. his but common justice to state that this expe dition was fitted out and paid for altogether by three private gentlemen, members- of the Philadelphia Academy, and that the Smithsonian Institution in nowise partici pated in the responsibility of the enterprise. Dr. Hayden has, arrived in Philadelphia, and we had the pleasure, on Saturday last, of seeing the' fossils he brought with him at the Academy. In all such scientific enterprises these institutions' aid each other, and thus the Smithsonian Institution's Mu- seum always benefits" by outside undertak ings, just as the .Philadelphia Academy receives specimens from the Government expeditions. These fossil remits were discovered in the Bad Lands, not recently, but some time back, and by mere accident. A fur trader, named Culbertson, residing at. Chambers burg, Pennsylvania, was attracted by the ;curious appearance of them, and took some specimens to his home as matters of inter.: est to his family, and there they were seen by scientific men, who at once perceived their rarity and value. Subsequently the naturalists accompanying the Government expeditions to lay out wagon roads brought home large quantities of those fossils, and the great interest they excited induced the fitting out of the recent private expedition of Dr. Hayden. To the ordinary eye these specimens, though they, reightlie thought curious, would not be as wonderful as in reality they are. They are all remains of extinct species of animals, and belong to 'an age of the,..world of :such remote anti quity that no traces of mankind have been fond in the geological formation. We de not use the scientific terms, because we can Orbaps 'better ° explain the matter in plain way. ' ' • The rocks in which these remains are found must evidently have once been the muddy shores of some immense fresh water lake, the extent or boundaries of which can not now be defined; and as these animals perished, their bones lay undisturbed in the mud until petrifaction prevented their final destruction. In one piece of rock‘ can we plainly see the trail left by some marine animal in the original mud. In another specimen we have the skull, with the jaw wide open, as it evidently lay loose in decay, when the waves washed up the mud in the jaw and prevented its closing. There are also fresh water turtles of all sizes up to a very large one. These indications leave no reason to doubt that where these fossils are found, must have been the lines of the great lake. Next we have specimens of the fossil remains of an extinct species of camel, showing that, after the upheaval of the earth had destroyed the lake, the bottom of the latter was converted into one vast arid plain, upon which only such animals could exist as are , found in the desert regions of the old world. The next specimens are of extinct species of ruminating animals, from which it appears that the once arid plains had become covered with luxuriant grass. From the number of these latter speci mens, it is apparent that these ruminating animals must have multiplied into herds rivaling those of the ,buffaloes now seen. Nrhaps the most curious of these are the remains of several species of the horse, the smallest being about the size of an or dinary setter dog, and the largest about three times that size. It is next observable that among the specimens are several species of carnivor ous animals now extinct, evidently created by nature to prey upon these immense herds of ruminants and .prevent their in crease. Among these we find varieties of the tiger and the rhinoceros. As both the tiger and the camel are animals peculiar to tropical regions, some of .our readers will think it strange that they'ShOuld' be found in these high latitudes. But we have also among the specimens fossil remains of a spe cies of elephant as well as of the tapir, and the fossil plants .are all tropiCal., Palm trees once grew on the shores of that great lake, and several varieties of the ammonite sailed their barques upon its waters, Yet in all this immense wilderness no trace of man is found, and there nature mat have rioted in luxuriance without the footfall or the voice of any being created with intelli gence above the brutes.— U. S. Gazette. frtft(Ls ault attatinits. NWT, MATTO & KIBERITS COMMERCIAL COLLEGE TE EGRAPHIC. INSTITUTE ASSEMBLY B UILDING, S. W. COR. TENTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS: The!Mhiladelphia College, an Important 41.1cdic in the Great International Chain bf Colleges Located in Fifty Princi pal Cities in t,he ritited Shites and Canada*. - The Collegiate Course embraces a a BOOK-BSBPING, sa applied to all Departments of Business . ; Jobbing,' Importing. Retailing, Commission. Banking, Manu facturing, Railroading. Shipping, &z. PENMANSHIP, both Plain and Ornamental. COMMERCIAL LAW. Treating of • Property, Partnership, Contracts, Corpo rations. Insurance.'N egotiable Paper, General Aver age. &o. COMMERCIAL CALCULATIONS.— Trecling of Commission and Brokerage, Insurance. Taxes, Du ties, Bankruptcy. General Average, Interest, Dis count, nullities, Exchange, Averaging Accounts. Equation of Payments, Partnership Settlements, &o. BUSINESS PAPER.—Note's, Checks. 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AYYEU BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG INN AND • BOYS; • Formerly A. Bolmar's, AT WEST , WIIESTMMa. PA. A Classical. English, Mathematical and Commer cial School, designed to fit its pupils thoroughly for College or Business ' The Corps of Instructors is large, able and experi enced ; the Course of - Distruotion systematic, thorough and extensive.. Modern Languagos--Cierman, French and. Spanish, taught by native resident teachers. In strumental and Vocal Music, Drawing and Painiing. The scholastic yeaz of ten months begins on Wed nesday. the stli of September next. Circulars can be obtained at the office of this paper. or by application to WILLIAM F. WYERS, A. M, Principal and Proprietor. PRILIDELPIIII COLLlighlii ISTITITE ~OU2r G~ I~DIEig, NORTWEST CORNER OF CTIESTNET wad EIGHTEENTH STREETS. REV. CHARLES A. SMITH D.D PRINCIPAL Circulars may be obtained of B. P.- Moore & 1304 Chestnut Street, and at the Presbyterian Book Store 1384 Chestnut Street. - titourants egmpaniso+ LOSS OF LIFE OR INJITB.Y ACCIDENTS 01? EVERY DESCRIPTION. TRAVELERS' INSURANCE COMPANY Cash Capital and Assets, Dec. 1, 1865 u:ourrAwriu:orAnionimotoatuoni THE PIONEER ACCIDENT INSURANCE Where policies axe issued covering all and every de soriPtion of accidents happening tinder any circum stances. An institution whose benefits can be en . Toyed by the poor man as well as the rich. No medi cal examination required. Policies issued, for amounts from $5OO to $lO,OOO in cases of death, and from Si to $5O weekly compensa tion in cue of disabling injury, at rates ranging frem $3.50 to $6O per annum; the cheapest and most practi cable mode of Ineurance known. Policies written for five years. at twenty per cent. discount on amount of yearly premiums. Hazardous risks at hazardous rates. Ocean Policies written, and permits issued for travel in any part of theworld. • Accident Insurance to persons disabled by accident is like the Sanitary Commission to wounded soldiers in the field, Providing themeans for comfort find healing and "supplying their *ante while prevented from Pursuing their usual employment. The rates of premium are lees than in any other class of insurance, in proportion to the risk. No better or more satisfactory investment can be made of so small a sum. " Therefore—snaure in the Trace/ere. II) AI) Z ,, Z11 ME[/lIN li] *AI an VIZI 9ki,Ty :moro.: J. G. BATTERSON. President. R) 4 EY g e n c 1 ta 1 7 HENRY A. TER. General D ENNIS.t. GIRARD FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE. COE:PREY. OFFICE ON WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. CAPITAL PAID IN,, qz CASH, $200,000. This company continues to write 'on Fire Risks only, Its capital, with a, good surplus, is safely in veated.. • . • 701 Lessee by fire having been promptly • paid , and more than • • #400.99 0 Dislmrsed on thisamount within the past few yoars. For the present, the office of this . company Wire main at 415 WALNUT STREET, But within a few months will remove to its Own Building N.E. CORNER SEVENTH AND CHEST NUT. Then, as now, we shall.be happy to bibure our patrons at such rates as are consistent with safety, DIRECTORS. THOMAS CRAVEN. ALFRED S. GILLETT, FURMAN SHEPPARD, N. S. LAWRENCE, THOS. 'MACK.ELLAR,..CHARLES I. DUPONT, JOHN SUPPLEE, HENRY F. KENNEY JOHN W. CLAGHORN. JOSEPH KLAPP, M.D., SILAS YERH.ES, Jr. THOMAS CRAVEN, President. ALFRED S. GILLETT. V. President and Treasurer. JAMES B. ALVORD, Secretary. • 1028-ly IN YOUR OWN 110111 GOB, ANY, S. E. Fourth and Walnut Streets. Insurers in this Company have the additlonal gum antee of the CAPITAL STOCK allpaid up IN CASH. which, tokether with CASH ASSETS, now on hand amounts to lirreeted as follows : Princi slo°,oooll. 8. 5.20 bonds, 1 ItNO,OOO City of - Philadelphia Loan new 70,050 U. S. `!t S. Notes. 7-30, rs, o oo l o ) o l . l 67l,7 y 4i 9 ;rBg, b°nds ' 10.000 Wyoming Valley Canal bonds, 12,700' Compound Interest Treasury Notei, 10.000 Philadelphia and Erie Railroad bonds. 10.000 Pittsburg, Fort Wayne Bc Chi cage bonds. • 6.500. City -of Pittsburg and other bonds. I,ooo,Shares Pennsylvania Railroad 450 shares Corn Exchange National Bank._ 107 shares Farman? National Bank of Reading, • t • 22 shares Consolidation National Bank, 142 shares Williamsport Water Com . ma ny Mortgage:B. - 4;lmnd Rents, and Real Loans on'collateral amply secured Premium notes scoured by' Policies Cash in hands of agents secured by bon , .Cash on deposit with 11. S. Treasurer,— Cash on•band and in banks-. ... ... , . Accrued interest and rents due, Jana,' INCOME FOl3. 1114 YEAR 1865, $544,592 92. Leases Pahl during the Year amounting to ' $87,636 31. - LOSSES PAID PROMPTLY. DIVIDENDS MADE ANNUALLY. thus aiding th* the insured topay. premiums. The la.st DIV.DDMTD on all Mutual Policies in forot January 1. 1266. was FI~`TY PER CENT. of the amount . of PREMIUMS received during th• Year Its. l TBAYSTKES are well known citizens in on, midst, entitling it to more consideration than thos , whose mana erkreside in distant.cities . Aleginder din, William J. HoWard J. Edgar. Thomson. Samuel T. Bodine. George Nugent. John Aikman, Hon. James Pollock, Henry K. Bennett. L. N. Whilidin, Hon. Joseph Allison P. B. Minzle,lsaac Hazlehurst. Albert C. Roberts... - - ALEX. WHILLDIE President. . • GEORGE 1111IGIEWT,. 1 111ee-Presidens , JOHN C. SIMS, Actuary. JOHN S. WILSON. Seoretnar and Treasurer. O. G. NO N. Assistant SeeretarY, A few fout-rat.e canvassers wanted. INDEMNITY FOR HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT $596,33S 12. 409 WALNUT STREET, COMPANY IN AMERICA. PAIgIr IN samEßaoL. I. W. ALLEN & CO., Geneisl Agents for Peinasylvanin, 409 WALNUT STREET PH3:WMELPHIA INSURE YOUR LIFE AMERICAN OF PHILADELPHIA, $1,143,874 15. Attu MtMitatitnts. JUST PUBLISHED. BOOKS FOR THE SEASON.- TILE NEW AND GREAT WORK, By the Author of "The Schonberg-Ostts<• Family," THE DRAYTONS 'AND THE DAVE- NANTS. . A STORY OF THE ENGLISH CIVIL WARS. By the Author of "The Schonberg-Cotes , Family.” 1 vol., l2mo. $1.75. Uniform With our volumes of this series, by the same- This work opens in New Eneland, but is aisociated , with a period of - English history involving political and rehgrous questions, in which Americans aredeeP ly interested. In its inimitable pictures of domestic life, its lively historical interest. and hi the highly dramatic form in which the celebrated characters and events of the oivil war between King Charles and the Parliament are presented. it has a greater resemblance to the Cotta Family than any other of the author's productions. It will certainly rive/, if it does not surpass, that remarkable work in its wide popularity. By the Anther of " The Sehonberg.oo,aaa. Family." 1 vol., 16mo. $1.75. To be 'issued in tasteful style, and tinted paper, beveled boards, etc. This edition of the author's Poems includits matter furnished in manuscript expressly for it. and other gems written since the appearance of the first edition, several years since.gLovers of genuine poetry Will find much in it to admire. A New Work by the Author of "Max* Powell," • THE FAIRE GOSPELLER BEING PASSAGES IN THE LIFE OF Al ASKEW. • J. voL. 16mo. $1.75. On tinted paper, • to., uniform . with 7 yap Powell" This new production of Miss Manning is another exhibition of the power she possestes over her readers by her tact, and peculiarly artless, and winning, and truthful presentations of her characters. A TALE OF THE GREAT REBELLION. By J. G. - FULLER. I vol. 36m0. Tinted Illnstrations.Price. $1.26.7 A touching story of adventure and sufferinginci— d_ent to a loyal adherence to the Union and the old Flag in a Rebel State during the late war.. Miss Yni— leris an authoress of deservedly high repute. THE BREWER'S FAMILY. By Mrs. 'Ellit, Author of "The Women el , England," etc. 1 vol., 16mo. !Tinted Illustrations. Price, SL2S. An intensely interesting and instructive Tenkpar once Story by one of our most generally known 'and: popular 'writers. • WE LIAL - vm, THE COTTA FAMILY ForitTßS. Embracing; with the New Book: THE SCHONBERG-COTTA FAMILY. DIARY OP KITTY TREVELYAN, T-HE EARLY DAWN, WINIFRED BERTRAM. In four !different editions, viz.:. 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