Cabis. Aar Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. AFRANIUS AND THE IDUAIEAN, with other Poems, by Rev. Prof. John M. Leavitt, is a vol ume of real merit, and of excellent sentiments. The tragedies show real inventive power and a well-managed play of powerful passions. The character of Herod the Great and his depraved or his most unfortunate family, and the thrilling scenes of their history, are portrayed in " the Idumean," with that masterly pencil which needs only a few strokes to do its work. Other poems, long and short, follow, of various degrees of merit. The flow of language is easy, the flights are not lofty or obscure, the themes are such as readily interest every one, especially the Christian read er. The gems of song are not of the first water, some of them far from it, but many of them are gems, and all of them show the culture of the poetic spirit, under the influence of a devout be lieving temper. Huun & HOUGHTON, New York. 16m0., pp. 255. $2.00. Juveniles KATE AND HER BROTHERS is a touching story of two orphans whose trust in God was rewarded and their deep sorrows relieved, after a season of seeming desertion. There is a slight stiffness in the style, and the device on which the story turns —the failure of the letter to reach the London uncle, who it, travelling on the continent—is somewhat worn. HENRY HOYT. 16mo , pp. 134. Illustrated. For sale at the Presbyterian House. THE LITTLE PEAT COTTERS is also a story of orphan children, whose elevation from a trying and slavish life and from evil companions, by a succession of interesting providences, is touching ly told. HOYT, 16mo , pp. 189 ; CAurEtts, 18mo. pp. 161. Illustrated. For sale at the Presbyte rian House. LITTLE JACK'S FOUR LESSONS come from the author of that treasury of good things : Ellen Montgomery's Book Shelf—Miss Susan Warner —if we remember rightly. With a charming mixture of gentleness, acuteness and evangelical spirit, she leads ignorant Jack and his afflicted sister Hetty, in the ways of knowledge and duty. Parents and teachers will get valuable hints from the simple but sweet and significant story. It is elegantly printed on cream laid paper, with hand some illustrations. 16m0., pp. 93. CARTERS. Far sale at the Presbyterian House. CLEAN YOUR BOOTS, SIR ? A Story of Robert Rightheart. This ig one of the " Virtue Re warded " class of books. The good London shoe black, who hastens to carry back the gold sover eign given him in mistake by the close farmer, is seen and noted by business men through whom he becomes an honorable and prosperous mer chant in Calcutta, and comes back to England to have his own boots blacked on the very spot where he used, in honest poVerty, to carry on the business. Of its class, it is a very good book. 18mo., pp. 123. A. A. YOUNG & Co., Boston. For sale at the Presbyterian House. THE OILED FEATHER BOOKS, Second Series, are the very embodiment of strong good sense. They deal in real life and help us over real difficul ties. We commend them as healthful, no less than deeply interesting reading for younger old. Am. S. S., UNION. 6 vols., 18mo., in a neat box. BOORS RECEI WED. True Story Library, Pres. Pub. Corn Daily. Devotions for a Child, Dodd. Teddy's Dream, Carters. Wonders of Heat, Scribner. Glennair, Claxton, Ronsen & Co. Breakers Ahead, Skelly. PERIODICALS. North British Review, March. Hours at Home, May. Lippincott's Magazine, May. Sabbath at Home, Our Young Folks, Galaxy, it Onward, Harpers' LITERARY INTELLIGENCE American• NEW PUBLICATIONS. MESSRS. CHARLES SCRIBNER & CO. will soon 'add to their list Dr. Anderson's work on Foreign Missions—Their Relations and Claims. (l2mo. sl..7s.)—Presi dent Woolsey, of 'Yale, has revised his articles upon Divorce and Divorce Legislation, ivith Spe cial Reference to the United States, in the New Englander, and they will appear in book form. S. & Co. have met with such success in their com• pact and cheaper edition of Conybeare and How lion's Life and Epistles of St. Paul, that they have issued Dr. Schaff's Church Ilistory, former ly published in three volumes, in two, which are sold one for $4.00 and the other for $3.50. Dr. Alexander's Commentary on the Psalms has also been published in two (instead as formerly three) volumes.—As the fourth volume in their " Illus trated Library of Wonders," there will he offered Adventures upon the Great Bunting Grounds of the World, translated from. the French of Victor Meunier. They also announce: Guyot's Map- Drawing Cards, which are valuable aids in the neat and accurate—execution of this important practice of Geography. Messrs. J. B. Lippincott: & Co. announce the following religious -Works as nearly ready : The Christian Worker • A. Call to the Laity, by Rev. C. F. Beach; Preparation for Death, translated from the Italian of Alphonso ILignori], Bishop of S. Agatha, by Rev. Orbey Shipley, M. A.; Man ua/ on Prelacy a n d Ritu.alism; The Apostolical and Primitive Church, Popular.. in qquera ment, Simple and i n ft irma l 4 0 ,,iss Worship, by Lyman Coleman, D. D . . —MESSRS. —M.ESSRS. SCRIBNER, WELFORD& CO..Offer list of English and other imported works, which is bewildering in its richness and variety. We' THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1869. note in their last catalogue a work on The Mid dle Age and the Renaissance, which they offer for $4OO, and which they describe as follows : " Five volumes 4t0., with above 300 beautiful Plates from curious, exquisitely beautiful, and singular objects of ;Middle Age Art, illustrative of Ancient Costume, Manners, Designs in Fresco, Paintings, Stained Glass, Missal, and other Illu minations, Furniture, Jewelry, Armor, etc., many of which are in Colors and heightened in Gold and Silver—bound in full Levant morocco, by Bedford, in superb style—a costly and most beau tiful work, now entirely out of print, and rising in price [Paris, 1848-51]."—They also offer the fifteen volumes of Thiers' Historical Works for $9O; Bunsen's Emypt's Place in Universal History (five volumes) for $87.50 ; Mr. Grote's Plato and Socrates (3 vols.) for $22 50, and Mountain, Loch, and Glen, Illustrating the Queen's Work, " Our Life in the Highlands," from. Paintings executed expressly for this work, by Joseph Adam : With an Essay on the Char acteristics of Scotland and its People, by Rev. Norman MacLeod, D. D., (one very handsome volume, in columbier folio, elegantly bound in a new and novel style) for $63. They have also many very cheap imported books, e. g., Johnson's English Dictionary Mod ernized, for 50 cts. To the series of English Re prints is added Master Hugh Latimer's Seven. Sermons before Edward VI. [1549], edited by Edward Arber, with Introduction, Notes, and the Bibliography of all the precedinr , editions. 12ruo. Paper. 90 cis. They also offer Whitaker's Alma nac for 1869, comprising within a comparatively small compass the leading facts and figures con nected with the present condition of the British Empire in all its departments of art, industry, politics, trade, revenue, manufactures, etc. Bible Temperance men will be interested to know that a Temperance Bible Commentary has just been issued in England, giving, at one view, Version, Criticism . and Exposition, in regard to all Passages of Holy Writ bearing on " Wine " and " Strong Drink,' or Illustrating the Princi ples of the Temperance Reformation, by F. Lees and D. Burns. It has reached a second edition, and may be had of SCRIBNER, WELFORD & Co. for $3 30. J. IL CAMMANY & CO. of San Francisco, have issued a book that will be read with interest by. those who have noticed a heresy trial on the Pacific Coast : The Future State and Free Dis eussion : Four Sermons by Rev. L. Hamilton; and the Ecclesiastical Action upon them. Bvo. pp. 82. A Texas exchange says . that The Southern Enterprise comes to its office wrapped in $3O coupons attached to $l,OOO Confederate bonds, due in 1867. ATLAS OF Mlssrows.—Rev. Dr. Grundemann, of Germany, in conjunction with the directors of all the Missionary Societies in the world (more than eighty in number), has in preparation a complete and exhaustive Atlas of Missions, to contain 125 pages of maps, and to present in elegant, conve nient and legible form, the entire results of Mis sionary labors. An edition in our language will be prepared, in quarto form, beautifully printed in colors, if the publishers are assured that six hundred copies will be taken. It is impossible to estimate the precise expense per copy, but it will not exceed twelve dollars. Descriptive let ter press will accompany each map, and the book will, therefore, be a complete repository of all in formation respecting the present status of Pro testant Missions. As it is a matter of great im portance that this valuable work be published in English and made accessible to us, it is earnestly desired that every person into whose hands this announcement may fall, make special effort to se cure at least one subscriber. Subscriptions may be sent to the Rev. W. L. Gage, Hartford, Ct., who warmly endorses the character of the enter prise. Great Britain. A SUCCESSFUL Boox.—lt is cbleriog to learn that such a book as. Rev. H. P. Liddon's Lectures on the Divinity of Our Lord is continu ally called for. More than twenty thousand copies have already been sold—a demand almost unparalleled in England for a work of learning and research not appealing to the popular taste. Rev. J. F. Hurst (the 'learned Methodist author of The _History. of Rationalism) is en gaged, on a version of the great work of Dr. Hagenbach, on - the History and Progress of Re ligious Thought, known to. English readers at present only by a small portion, published under the title, German Rationalism, its Rise, Pro gress, and Decline. The Gospel and Modern Lit!; Sermons on some of the Difficulties of the Present Day is an nounced, by Rev. I. Llewellyn Davies, whose former books have been highly praised by those who claim to rank among advanced thinkers. He is popularly considered to belong to the school of the Rev. F. D. Maurice. —A letter to the London Athenwum states that a new book (unique copy) printed by the first English printer, Caxton, has lately been dis covered. "Itis a short treatise upon death-bed repentance, confession, &c., and consists of six teen quarto pages." The first volume of Sir Edward Creasy's New History of England . from, the Earliest Time to the Present has just appeared. As' this vol ume carries down the narrative to the -reign of Edward I, the promise of the writer to complete the work "in five volumes of a moderate size," seems likely to be fulfiiled. The Bookbuyer says it is to be " a real history, something more than a mere compendium of dates and facts, or 'a series . of disjointed essays, at once animated and accurate, havinc , definite unity of purpose and artistic pro portions." W.' B: Galloway's Egypt's Record of Time to the Exodus of Israel Uritically Lzvesti gated (according to The Boolclatyer) . grapples with some of the greatest problems of ancient his tory, and by a comparative survey of the patri archal history and the chronology of Scripture, arrives at the "reconciliation of the Septuagint and Hebrew computatidn, and Nanetho with both." —There was recently sold, in London, a man uscript volume in foolscap folio, entitled " Scotch. Poems by Robert Burness," contained on fifty nine pages, in the autograph of the illustrious poet, and including many of his most popular compositions. After some competition the vol ume was knocked down for $350. This is con sidered one'of the great bargains of the season. During the year 1868, no. less- than 137 newspapers were started in England, and 32' journals in pamphlet form. On the last day of the year there survived, of these, only 86 news. papers and 3 pamphlets. Very recently, at the residence of Dr. Stan ley, Dean of Westminster, Mr. Thomas Carlyle and Mr. Robert Browning were specially invi ted to meet Queen Victoria. Mr. Grote, the historian of Greece, was of the party, with his wife, who is on the regular staff of contributors to the Edinburgh Review. The Queen, it is said, had a felicitous word of compliment for each of the distinguished guests. Some one says that it must have required genius to compliment Car Lyle. Scott Russell, the great civil engineer and shipbuilder, publishes Systematic tecnical Edu cation for the English People, dedicated to the Queen. Labor, its Wrongful Claims and Right fld Dues, Actual Present and Possible Future, by Mr. W. T. Thornton, has also appeared. Also The Origin of the Seasons, by M S. Mossman, who considers them from a geological point of view, showing the remarkable disparities that exist between the physical geography and natu ral phenomena of. the North and South Hemis pheres. Other recent books areas thllows: D'Au bigne's Reformation in the Time ar Calvin, Vol. 5, Bvo. 16s. Biblia Sacra Polygldtta, ed. by Lee. 2 vols. folio. 81. Bs. Kitto's Biblical Cyclopm dia, ed. by Alexander. Volume 2, royal Bvo. 18s. Robinson's DiscOurses on Redemption,Bvo. 7s. 6d. Watson's Life in a Convent ' s or en Years in a Nunnery, 12mo. 2s. To seed's Hand book of the Year 1868, cr. Bvo. 1,25. 6d. Hans Breitmann's Ballads, 16mo. ls. How THE BOOKSELLERS COXI:INE AT LON DON AUCTlONS.—Supposing, at the sale of a library, ten booksellers, known Ito each other, find that they are the chief comOtitors for the f i books, they come immediately to a understanding. Bidding goes On languidly, for rm's sake, and the property realizes to the un rtunate owner what it is knocked down for. A r the sale these ten confederates meet, choose a ong them an auctioneer and a treasurer. Every lot purchased by them is put up and resold, tl excess amount brought by them at this second stle is paid to the treasurer and then divided by hin quaky among the members of the combination' whether they buy anything or not, so that a bookseller will sometimes return from a sale, purchaser at all, with a bonus of £5O in his pocket. It follows tl really affords little criterion of th It is only when great publicity i• and private gentlemen appear this kind of trade combination less.---Bookbuyer. France. Napoleon 111. has a third voh of Cmsar " in the press, is comple of Charlemagne, and is about pu imperial printing-office, a small " Etude sur la Situation Politiqx la France!' In the first nine months of 1868, France exported books, in dead foreign linguages, inclu ding almanacs, of the value of 4283,000, and books in the French language)of the value of $1,594,300. La Cloche, Ulbach's humoOus paper, was recently, confiscated for speakinglof Eugenie as "our venerable Empress." Germany. One Leipzig publisher 501d.70,000 copies of a cheap German translation of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Thackeray's daughter is ttivelling in Ger many, and meets, everywhere wits the most cor dial reception. MUSICAL MENTIIION THE MENDELSSOHN MUM EOCIETY, of this city, are now rehearsing Mendellsohn's " Spring Song," which will soon be prodthed in public. THE BRIDGETON (N. J.) CH4LAL UNION are practicing Romberg's Adaptatitn to Music of Schiller's "Song . of the Bell," and are also en gaged upon the music arranged for the Peace Jubilee in Boston, in which the ociety will par ticipate. THE MUSIC OF THE NATIONAt... PEACE JUBI LEE, to be held in Boston in Jun ( ~ will be prin cipally of a sacred nature, givin4 praise to God for the blessings of peace. Amcing the choruses are "Achieved is the Gloriou& Work," "The Heavens are Telling," and, tit " Marvellous Work," from Haydn's Creatrpn • " And the Glory of the Lord," "Glory tol ; God," and the "Hallelujah," from Handel's ; "He Watching over Israel," and " Thinks be to God," froM Mendelssohn's Elijah ; " T, God on High," from Mendelsshon's St. Paul; Luther's Choral ." A Strong Castle is our God ;" Gloria," from Mozart's Twelfth Mass, etc. It will undoubtedly be a grand thing to hear God's praise sung to this music pf the masters, by a thousand trained voices, butihow much more effective if each one sang from t heart, RARE. CONFECTIONS ANDOOCOLATE Stephen F. W4.tman Manufacturer of IN FINE CONFEC CHOCOLATE AND By Steam Poiver Store No. 1210 Market PHILADELPFII . , CARSARTS BOUDOIR 1 ORGANS ; OARHART'S CHURCH HARMONIUMS CARTIART.'S MELODEONS! , A.a : 4l, - i-: 47 , • Unequalled by any Reed Instruments in the world. Also Parmelee's Patent Isolated Violin Frame Pianos, a new and beautiful Instrument. Bede agent, H. M. 1110 - 11.RISS, ' nov26 - - 21 North Eleventh Street. Tennesseean in Persia. 381 Pages, 12mo. Tinted Paper. Richly This volume is by Rev. Dwight W. Marsh, for ten years American Missionary at Mosul, on the River Tigris, opposite to the site of old Nineveh. In a very vivid style he narrates the interesting and thrilling SCENES AND INCIDENTS which marked the life and the death of the Rev. Sam uel Audley Rhea, of East Tennessee, one of the noblest and most gifted of our missionaries, in PERSIA AND KO ORDISTAN. Engravings and Maps. add to its value. It is beautifully bound, and finely printed on tinted paper. Let those who wish INTE_R_ESTING BOOK, Send for " The Tennesseean in Persia." To insure its sale the price is made low, $1.76. Sent by mail for this price. fe - Catalogues mailed without charge, on applica tion. Address orders to PRESBYTERIAN PUBLICATION COMMITTEE, No. 1334 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. ( k thout being a 20 or perhaps t a public sale 'value of books. given to sales, s buyers, that ecoines power- JUST RECEIVED. A New Importation of French Note Paper. A l- xcontntf37k7t7lfi`7FrenchPe'ftiU'ame size, or r..l..3l.pedwitrintialwen velopes to match for $1 50. ALSO, A LARGE SUPPLY OF Black Bordered French Note Paper, from the very deep border to the very narrow edge, at moderate prices. French Paper, New Fancy Patterns Visiting Cards of the Finest Quality, Elegantly written or engraved. Wedding Cards of the Latest Styles. • Commercial Note Paper per Ream, sl.,' $1.20, $1.50, $2.00, $2.25 and $3.00. Orders filled by mail, postage extra.. White envelopes $2, 2.26, and $3.00. Mrs. J. HAMILTON THOMAS, ' jan2B. 1344 Chestnut t. 0 4.. Phila. me of his "Life ing a biography dishing, at the olume entitled e et Sociale de THE PUBLISHERS' AND STATIONERS' TRADE LIST DIRECTORY FOR 1889 Enables Booksellers, Bookbuyers and Merchants generally to as certain where to buy BOOKS and STATIONERY. Price • $B 00. HOWARD - CEIALLEN, 1308 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. * * *The Section of the Directory devoted to Juvenile and Rell• gionEl books can be purchased separately for $l.OO, Envelopes to match; Initials, in bright co'ors, stamped without extra charge. ONE Qom, 25 cents. Five clams, $l. . . , . Making a specialty of Stamped Parer, having my awn Designers, Engravers, and Stampers, I work cheap, give good. paper, and de liver promptly till orders by mail or express. • WEDDING, VISITING, and BUSINESS CARDS printed in the latest styles. • Plate engraved, and two packs of cards, tl. Without a plate, $2 for two packs, by mail postpaid. Monograms, Create, Landscape Initials engraved. - HOWARD CHALLEBT, Stationer, No. 1308 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. J 0 - H N S'Nl I T H LOOKING-GLASS AND PICTURE-FRAME MANUFACTURER, Bible and Print Publisher, and WHOLESALE DEALER IN AMERICAN AND _FRENCH CLOCKS AND REGULATORS Di r EVERY DESCRIPTION. Also, General Agent for the sale of the "Eureka" patent :Con densing Coffee and Tea Pots—something that every family should have, and by which they can save fifty er cent: Trade supplied at a liberal discount. aprl.s-3m NO. 916 Arch Street. BEAUTIFUL • Books for Children. FLOWERS OF SPRING-TIME. Quarto. Col ored frontispiece, and 150 engravings. It combines amusement and instruction in most attractive forms. $2.50 cloth,; $3 gilt; $3.50 half morocco, gilt. PICTURES OF LIFE, DRAWN WITH PEN AND PENCIL.' Small quarto. An elegant vol ume, w ith 112 fine engravings, many of them large and on tinted ground. .$1.85; extra, $2.25. VIEWS FROM NATURE. Forty engravings, finely printed in tint. $1.25; extra, $1.50. AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, • 1210 Chestnut Steet , - • Philadelphia. cialities lONS. COCOA Blinds, Shades, &cf &c. s CHARLES L. HALE MAYINAOTURER, NO. 331 Arch 7Street, Philadelphia. Curtain Cornices, Fiitures, &e. Uollanda, Gant Cloth, Skatle•Fixtmes, Blied Trimminge, &O. Old Blinds painted and trimmed to look equal to new. Store Shade made andilettered. : Orders throUgh mail promptly attended. A BOOK WORTH BUYING. Illustrated. $1.75. TWENTY-NINE A BEAUTIFUL BOOK, A PROFITABLE BOOK, r,:4- j k 1 - .nLASS / 7 4 4. 12 71: , , , , C 7 1 ht l f k ( Y ' R 11 79 /30 ' (9 ' CA/ESTArOT ST.7O/5//p.i BOXES OF FRENCH NOTE PAPFR WYERS' BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS, AT WEST CHESTER, PA. 27 miles by Rail to Philadelphia. The Scholastic Year 0(10 months opens September 2d, 1868. Corps of Instructors, full, able, and experienced. Send for a Catalogue. William F. Wyers, A. M,, Principal and Proprietor. No charge for Tuition for Clergymen's eons, or for young men preparing for the ministry. ELMIRA FEMALE COLLEGE UNDER CARE OP THE SYNOD OF GENEVA This is a Christian home, and a fully chartered and organized College, where young ladies may pursue a most thorough and ex tensive course of study in COLLEGIATE, ECLECTIC, or ACA DE3IIC Departments. TERMS : Whole expense of Tuition including Classics and Modern Lan guages, with board, furnished room, light, and fuel, $l5O per half yearly session. Address, REV. A. W. COWLES, D.D., President. junell-tf. FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, FREDERICK, MD., Possessing full Collegiate Power, will commence its TWENTY-SIXTH SCHOLASTIC YEAR,. The First Monday in September. Board and Tuition in the English Department $250 per scholastic year. For Catalogues, &c.. address jnly 25—Iyr Rev. THOMAS M. CANN, A. AL, President. " THE HILL" • SELECT FAMILY BOARDING SCHOOL. An English, Classical, Mathematical, Scien tific and Artistic Institution, FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS ! At Pottstown, Montgomery county, Pa. Pupils received at any time. For Circulars address, REV. GEO. F. MILLER, A. • References: REV. DRS.—Meigs, Schaeffer, Mann, Kmuth, Soles, Muhlsnberg. Rutter, Stork, Conrad, Bomberger, Wylie, Sterret and Murphy, HONS.—Judge Ludlow ' Leonard Myers, M. Russell Thayer, Benj. M. Boyer, and Jacob S. Yost. SSQRS.James B. Caldwell. James L. Claghorn, J. F. & E. B. Orne, James Hamilton, Theo. G. Boggs, C. F. Norton, L. L. Houpt, Gross Fry,Miller & Derr, Charles Wannemacher, James Kent, Santee & Co., John Weist, etc. feblB-4m AIRY VIEW ACADEMY, Near the Pereyville Station of the Pen n'a. IL B. J7INIAT4 COITIVTri PA. SUMMER So sion will commence on MOI;IDAY. APRIL 5, 1869. The location of this inetitution is convenient and accessible ; the buildings new and commodious; the surrounding scenery beautiful and picturPsune; the tone of morals In the communit of a high' order, and the whole adjacent region is as healthful, as plenty of fresh air, pure water and lofty mountains can make it. The school is designed for male and fimale pupils, and is in suc cessful in operation. The senior Principal, as well as the teach ers of mum AND !MERITING. have had large and very. successful experience in teaching. The whole course and method of instruction are thorough, and the government firm and parental. CARL P. KOLBE. Teacher of Instrumental Magic. Adies A. L. BLLIOTT, Teacher of Drawing and Painting, with ether competent instructors. Address, DAVID WILSON, A. M., Principal, A. J. PATTERSON, A. M., Co-Principal, mars-10t PORT ROYAL Post-Office, Penn's. Hats, Caps, •ao FURNISHING GOODS. W. C. DARE Would respectfully inform his friends and the public generally, that he has removed to his new and commodious Store, No. 35 South 2nd Street, between Market and Chestnut Ste., where ho is pre pared to supply his customers with all the latest and most desira ble styles of HATS AND CAPS at reduced prices. A lso, Gents' FURNISHING GOODS, Lathe Furs, Buffalo Robes, Trunks, - Valises, Carpet . Bags, .41 , c. Wholesale and' retail. N. B.—Particular attention paid to Friends' Hats. W. C. DARE, 35 S. 2nd St., bet. Market & Chestnut. J. & F. CADMUS, 736 MARKET ST., S. E. Corner of Eighth PHILADELPHIA, MANUFACTLFRERS AND DEALERS IN 'nOOTZ MOTI 9 TRUNKS, CARPET BAGS AND VALISES. Ladies' Sacs, Bags, Pocket Books ingreat variety. Wm. G., Hargis, Paper flanging tt, Window Shade WAREHOUSE, No. 936 Arch Street, OctB ly PHILADEPIIIA. OLD ESTABLISHED -TROY BELL _FOUNDRY, TROY, N. Y.—(Established 1852), a large assortment of Church, Academy, Fire Alarm, and other Bells constantly on handand made to order. Large Illustrated Catalogues sent free on application to mars-I.y. 'CLARK .& BIDDLE, Jewellers and Silversmiths, . , Will open their new store,, 1124 'Chestnut Street, . About May Ist, 1869, WithA greatly increased stock of Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, • Silverware, &c. April 7-Iy. R P. ADAIR., MANUFACTURER OF SILVER PLATED WARE . No. 124 South Eleventh St., aprB PHILADELPHIA. JONES dr. CO., TROY, N. Y
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers