Piteds Cablt. gay- Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. THE NEW COMMANDMENT, OR ELLA'S MIN ISTRY, is a book to which we cheerfully give a place in the front rank of juveniles. There is a never-failing interest in the play of character and incident; there is a dramatic power in the steady movement, and in not a few of the main facts, of the story, which are vouched for as true, and in some of which truth is stranger than fiction. We might complain of a uniformity of loveliness in the leading persons, • as . a little remarkable; nevertheless, there, is enough of evil, and some of it of a kind far from common, to give veri si militude to the book,• and its whole influence must be of the very best sort. It is anonymous. Published by Murrell & Blakeslee. Boston. $1.50. NELL'S MISSION is also an original, anony mous book, presenting, in a, well-managed and truly pathetiC storY, important lessons in regard to the, right management of wayward young per sons, with glimpses of touching interest into the child-life of the poor. Carters. Apparatus for 8. S. Touchers. MESSRS. PERKENPINE& HIGGINS, of this city, have published several little volumes of great interest to teachers: They are : (1.) MY BIBLE `Crass, consisting first of "An Essay on Bible- Class Teaching," and specimens of actual con versations, for ten Sabbaths, between the.teacher and his pupils. They are thoroughly scriptural, and show a well-sustained and intelligent inter est on the part of teachers and scholars, and, will aid any teacher'who desires to keep clear of mo notony and dullnessinlis work., (2) PICTORIAL TEACHING AND BIBLE ILLUSTRATIONS, (paper price 10 cts.) by Fountain J. Hartley, one of the Secretaries of the London S. S. Union, gives valuable hints, to which preachers should give heed no less than teachers, on the , importance of illustrations, and the various forms of them. The teacher is shown how "to keep his Sunday school spectacles on,' as he goes about his ordi nary work. (3); ' Mr. W. H. Groser's Lecture on " THE INSTRUMENTS : hat to teach, or the In tellectual Part of a Teacherrs Weekly Prepara tion for his Sabbath Duties," and (4) "TILE SUN DAY-SCHOOL SENIOR CLASS, prize'Essay of the London S. S. Union; by . J. A. Cooper," each, paper, 20 ots., are also published by the same firm. The latter Essay treats of a, Matter of equal importance and difficulty:, the retaining of older scholars in the school, and:shows to what a laudable degree the Sabbath-school effort of our day is being pushed • beyond'its first intention of teaching the poorest' and most neglected the mere rudiments of: learning. The, Monthlies THE ATLANTIC for May, has one of. Parton's striking, and pot unwholesome articles, on a topic (he chooses no other) in which every one feelsinterested.: " The Clothes Mania." He fastens most of the grave responsibility of the extravagance in woman's dress in our day on Eugenie, whom he describes as saying to her husband : " You keep down the men by muzzling 'the press and flattering the army, and I'll fool the women by wearing the most stunning cos tume that ever struck envy to the female. heart." " Never before," he continues, " were the treas ures of a frugal and laborious people, such as the French are, wasted se wantonly. No mis tress of Louis XIV., no tided, harlot of ,th.e re gency, not. Pompadour, not, Du Barry, ever, squandered the money of the French with such reckless profusion, as the woman now occupying the apartments in which they dwelt." He does net add, what is,' perhaps,' necessary to the com pleteness of his theory of the agency of Eugenie: that by her extravagance a larger number of the dangerous bourgeoisie are kept in employ, and so are disinclined to revolution, while the deep drafts ou the purses of the court are made up by notifying them, in time, of such intended strokes of public policy as will affect the funds, thus preparing them to reap the fruits of 'a rise, or, prevent the disaster of an. unexpected fall, in stocks. "Brahmanism" is one of 'the series of articles, by a noted Unitarian, James Freeman Clarke, in which 'comparisons between Christian ity and other great systems of religion are drawn. The object of the writer is, by the comparison, to show the superiority of Christianity. His propositions, as laid down in the March number, are, in substance: First, that while , most other religions are thoseuf races, Christianity alone is for all mankind. 2nd, while these raoe religions contain some truth, it is one•sided and 'defective, and Christianity alone is complete; 3rd, while all race-religions decay, Christianity, as rather a life and a spirit than a system or a form, is able to meet all the changing wants of an advancing' civilization by administering fresh supplies of faith in God and faith in man. The writer by no means accords to Chtistianity that divine, su pernatural, miraculous .preeminence which we give it, and he dees not hesitate to utter many things far more tomplimentary to pagan religides than we are wont to hear ; but the argument is a good one, 'the inquiry is full of interest, and the results are of permanent value. " The Pu ritan Lovers" is a sweet piece uf poetry, by Marian Douglass, parts of which are worthy of Keble or of Whittier: Hear her description of the religious character even of the secular joys of the Puritans : " The temple's sacred perfume round Their week-day iobes was clinging, Their mirth was but the golden bells On priestly gannents ringing." " Spring in Washingto4 . with,' an Eye to ,the Birds" is by a genuine' open-air student of na ture, who can observe and write with i clearness and accuracy, and who gives us a‘ nWpilni,V. P ie ". ture of that part of, the nkropdlitin''poiigali,on tbat does not.ge into politics. Theclose4pprixteh of utterly wild: country to ,the borderf(of":o at THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1869. city, makes it a more favorable place for the study of such creatures, than perhaps any other city of its size in the world.—The mass of re volting absurdity under the title of the " Auto biography of a Shaker," which is continued in this number, has interest as any other piece of morbid anatomy; but why thrust it into a maga zine of belles-lettres? It is a very great mistake. Shall we have some of the absurd revelations of Swedenborg next 7 or some of Andrew Jackson Davis' visions?—Bayard Taylor furnishes a cu rious account orthe patching together of scraps of evidence, and patiently worming out and er i - fy ing a consistent narrative of one who had died, as he supposed, utterly unknown.--" The Pacific Railroad—open," by Samuel Bowles, gives us rapid glimpses of what and whom we shall be made familiar with, as the result of the comple tion of this truly grand enterprise—the first to span a continent from ocean to ocean.—" The Intellectual Character of President Grant" is an anonymous article, but one which, to most readers, will be the most interesting of the whole. It undertakes to' allay the mistrust felt,in some, quarters, of his capacity for trne statesmanship. Startingfrom his universally admitted qualities, as firmness, simplicity, patience, magnanimity, the writer would show ' that the occasions in whiCh these traits were particularly conspicuous, prove that the highest intellectual qualities were behind them. That his magnanimity to Gen. Lee was not mere amiable weakness, would ap pear from the order ,he gave Sheridan to lay waste the valley of the Shenandoah. Grant's insight into character, his occasional remarkable outbursts of forcible and eloquent speech, his calm presence of mind, most manifest in the greatest crises; are well illustrated, sometimes with little-known incidents.' Take-the following, in reference to President lolinson's plot to - rid himself of General 'Grant by sending- him on a mission to Mexico. Grant, perceiving the ob ject, had declined the mission, a second time., "'After this, Grant was summoned to a Cabi net meeting, where his instructions, already printed, were read aloud 'by Ole Secretary of State; without any reference to Grant's previous refusal'. Tie at' once, in the presence of the en tire Cabinet, declared his unwillingness to leave the country on such 'an errand.., Johnson was roused by this persistent opposition to, his wish, and abruptly asked the Attorney-G-eneral whe ther there were any reason 'Why Grant should not obey—whether the General of the army could not be employed iipdn a diploriiatic service. Grantat once started to his feet, and exclaimed: Mr. President, I can answer thatqUestion with out appealing to . the Attorney-,General. I am an American. citizen, have 'been guilty of no treason or other crime, and am eligible to any civil office to which any other' American is eligi ble. ''But thisl,s a purely civil duty to, which you would assign me, and I cannot be compelled 'to undertake it. Any legal military order you give me, I will obey ; but this is civil, not mili tary, and I decline the duty. No power on earth 'can force me to it.' The plotters were electrified, and made no answer, and Grant, in 'stead of resuming his seat, quitted the room. He was not sent to Mexico." , • "The New Taste in Theatricals" keenly, but delicately castigates the depraved taste now reignirig in Theatres and Opera Rouses all over the world. It is from_ the theatre-supporter's point of view, and betide maybe the more effec tual with the parties addresSe'd, if any thing can be On such topics, besides appeal to the pocket or to the law.—We observe in 'the Atlantic Ad vertiser and Miscellany botirkd up )(- with the monthly, a defence of . G•ijith. Gaunt, copied with expressions of gratification, from the Lon. don Telegraph. This Is paper - of no standing, to 'which so good an authority as the Atlantic would never appeal except in, a dearth of the better kiwi, of cuppert. T,hat. the Atlantic is hard beset in the effort to prop the morality of " Griffith Gaunt," is evident from its acceptinc , the recent verdict of six cents damages to the author against ,the',Round Xable, as a. confirma tion, by our i ceurts of the favorable judgment of the Telegraph ! ! Pamplilets: The ADDRESS delivered before the PIP - DADA. CO. MEDICAE. SOCIETY, by the .retiring Presi dent, Dr. George Hamilton, has recently been printed by the Society. It a deeply interest ing, thoughtful review' of the present state of medical science, by -a candid, but earnest and competent friend of the profession. It concedes that late investigations with the microscope have not been followed with beneficial practical effects proportioned to the eclat and expectation attend ing the discoveries. .Much has indeed been learned, of the once utterly obscure functions of tissues, glands, and blood; the minute cell-struc ture has been observed, and an approximation ,to the facts of the molecular constitution and move ments of various parts of_ the system, as bearing on life and health; has been reached; "but it has become evident that the further these minute in vtigations were pushed,; the more extended did the field of observation become, and the obscu rity in Certain directions was such as to render further advance, as regarded 'the time or the mode of its accomplishment, uncertain." So that the practical immediate results of the medi pal discoveries.of this age, do not compare with those following the introduction of the practice of dissection, and' the scientific stuctfof anatomy, represented by Bichat. The benefits of late re searches in molecular physiology and pathology,• the tit:odor considers to below , c' rather to the de partment of hygiene and ofprevention. Ner vous diseases and disorders of the blood are treated upon different principles, and with bet ter success as a result of these inquiries. A, dif ferent type of disorders has appeared, in which the nerves play a very prominent part, and vio lent forM'S of disease, requiring " heroic" treat ment, liave diminished, with the decline which, in the view of Dr. HamiltOn, has taken place, in the robustness of the human`frame, and within the less active, more studions pursuits of men. Cer tain " causes of an occult 'character" may also ",have had some influence in effecting this change," and reference is made to "changes manifest in certain vegetable . organizations, and yet not susceptible of explanation," as,strength ening the probability of the above supposition in reference to the human body. At all events,the ; fact of the prevalence of a feebler, mere ;nervous type of disease is, unquestionable; and With it has come, in a more conservative of treatment. The writer's allusiOns to the recent multiplication of MeAkal seltools:and collegei without • cures- ponding necessities in the community, and to the excess of supply of young physicians, especially of the ill-disciplined sort, show that he believes of his own profession, as Daniel Webster did of the law—" Plenty of room in the upper story," though overcrowded in the lower ranks. The address is remarkably clear of technicalities, and is worthy of general perusal. THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY of Pennsylvania has just issued a very elegant pamphlet containin g the annual discourse, delivered by Horatio Gates Jones, Feb. 9th, upon Andrew Bradford, of Philadelphia, the founder of the newspaper press in the Middle States of America. It is accom panied with an interesting fac-simile of a bill of services and materials rendered by Mr Bradford to the Province of Pennsylvania in 1725. By the introductory note, we learn that " the annual address" has been overlooked for some time in the proceedings of the Society, the valuable ad dress of Mr. Jones being exceeptimal. We, are also informed that the Society, by the recent de plorable death: of Mr. Geo. W. Fahnestock, 'a l e member of the Society, has comelnto possession of fifty thousand pamphlets, a Coll tion ofalmost unexampled extent and richnes in American history, bequeathed to it by the eceased. The library comprises 15,000 ovolum s, and 85 ) 000 pamphlets and manuscripts, and the appeal is made for funds for the 'erection of a fire-proof building, in which to store these precious but perishable treasures. Edward J ennington, Sr., is the chairman , of the Committe for this object. MUSICALOIN *ENT' • —The Coliseum for the great Peace Festival, in Boston, will accommodate an audience of 50,- 000 persons. When a chorus,i ,well produced, the .clapping.of 100;000 hands uld alone be a novelty worth hearing. ! ,- :—.R.IL. Tabor, the organist o Williams iiCol lege, Mass., has !perfected au i vention, which, attached to a piano, is designe to print music as fast as.it is played. He con mptatss.•modi f:ying the mechanism so that it, be applied to the organ. , . • ,1 ; , . . —The Mendelssohn Society: gbve an interest ing concert on Thursday. evening, as .a, compli ment to their musical director, Jean Louis: The cantata, "'Message of Spring," ' ac • , Mendelssohn's " Hear my: Prayer,"„ and ‘L ••utumn .Song," were well rendered, and the pro yarnme was en joyable, intersperged with solos; rios, and, quar tettes. There bas•been much tlk lately of the Mendelssohn Society dying out. It seemed full of life at .the concert. We hop: it may continue to receive the support 'of the pi lie, and that we may be privileged to. hear ;man,' :more 'Such con certs by. them. ' The existenc' of societies for studying and producing the mudb of the masters, is a help to the good morals of : community. , —Philadelphia has again ta, , en the lead in .an iruproi,ement which is destine, ;to assist materi ally in the production of churelmtisic., Messrs. Standbridge ' celebrated i roan bni the lders,.of i our city, have re-modelled ad enlarged ; the organ, of. St. Augustine's 8,..0 ;church, and in trodueed, for the first time in his ,dountry, the use. of the electro-magnetic ac on. ' By thisar ranc,6ement an_organist can sit t his key-board, and have the organ at the ther end of the church, and.,still have to exel no .more power in playing, than if he was perfuming on a piano. Surely the wonders of electricity are' daily c in -reasing. • i . -- . PHILADELPHIA Mr Samples sent by mail when ritten for. ESTEY'S WITH THE JUBILANT!, Have the finest tone, more power, and it tak: them than any other instrument , in the in ments offered to Sunday Schools and church made to Clergymen. PIPE ORGANS of the 1 1 on the most reasonable I erms. B. K. BRUCE, No.lB North Seventh et:, Ph .11nr-.Send for a Circular and Price List. RARE CONFECTIONS AN Stephen F. Viiitman Manufacturer.. of IN FINE CONFE CROCOLATE AN By Steam Pow Store' No. 1210 Mirk jan2B PHILADETRIE WANTED—AGENTS—TM ISM ICA N KNITTING MAC H cheapeet and best Knitting 14110111.00 eT 20,000 stitches peerainute. Liberal indri. dress AMERLCAN KNITTING MAGNIN St, Longs, MO. PIA) OS! With Iron Frame, Overstrung Bass and Agraffe Bridge. MELODEONS, PARLOR, CHURCH AND CABINET. ORGANS, The best manufactured. Warranted for 6 Years. 100 Pianos, Melodeons and Organs of six first class makers, at low prices for Cash, or one-quarter cash and the balance in Monthly Installments. Second-hand instruments at great bargains. .Illus trated Catalogues mailed, (Mr.. Waters is the Au thor of Six Sunday School Music Books; "Heav enly Echoes," and "New S. S. Bell, " just issued. Warerooms, No. 481 Broadway, N. Y. HORACE WATERS': TESTIMONTALS. ' The Waters Pianos are known as among the very best.- [New York Evangelist. We can speak of the merits, of the Waters Pikuos from personal knoWledgc as being of the very best quality.— [Christian Intelligencer. ' • : The Waters Pianos are built of the best and most tbor ,Oughlyseasoned material.—[Advocate and Joui•nal. • Waters Pianos 'aid bleb:Aeons challenge comparison with :.the. finest:made • anywhere in the country.—[Home Journal..' Our friendiviill find at Mr. Waters' store the very best assortment Of 'Organs and Pianos to be found in the 'gni ted Stiites.—[Grohant's ! , 111traipAn DoiNns.—Since Mr. Horace , Waters gave up publishing sheet music he has devoted his ;ivhole capital ' and attention to the manufaciUre and sale of 'Pianos and Melodeons.' He has just issued a catalogue of .his new in struments, giving a new ;scale nf prices,:which sh,oivs a .marked redmition from foriner rates, and his Pianos have`recently been awarded the First Prethinhi it' several Fairs. • Many people of the present day; who are attracted, if not confused, with the flaming advertisements of rival piano, houses, probably overlook a modest manufacturer like r. Waters ; but'we hippen to know that hi's instru ' manta earned Mtn kgood reputation long before- Exposi • tionp, and the ".honors" conneeted therewith were ever thought ef;infleed, we, have one of Mr. Waters' piano fortes now in our residetiee (where it has stood for .years,) of whihh any mannfadturer in . the . world might well be proud. .W,e haye always been delighted with it as a sweet toped , and powerful instrument, and there is no doubt of its durahility; more thati this, some of the best amateur iilayerain the city, as:several celebrated- pianists, have per formed on the said piano, and all pronounced it ft superior andfirst-class,instrumeat. Stronger indorsement we could. --- 'not give.[Home Joui•hal. - Ayeeig Sarsaparilla% f f ~FOR PURIFYING TR BLOOD. ; The reputation this excellent medi toe is derived from its cures, any of which are truly marvellous. Veterate cases of - . Scrofulous disease, 'here the sydtem seemed saturated itlicorhiption; have beeii purified and /red by it. Scrofulous ,affections and herders, which were , . aggravated by is scrofulous contamination until they 'ere., painfully afflicting, have been , linalty cured In such great numbers almost every section of the country, /at the public scarcer need to be in ;tined or its virtues-or uses. • Scrofulone poison is one of , the most destructive enemies of onr rtice Often; thii unseen and unfelV tehaiitof the'organiem under mines the constitution, , and invites thslattack of enfeebling or fa tal diseases, withonfexciting a- suspicion of its 'presenne..ll, it seems to breed infection throughout the body, and then on some, favorable occasion, rapidly develop into (Meer other of its hideons forms, either. on the surface or among the, .vitals. In the latter, tubercles may beanddenly depositedin the long Tor heart, or tu mors formed in the liver, or it•shows its,presence by eruptions: on the skin, or foul,ulcerations on, some. part Jr the body. Ilene° the ()reddens' nee 'of a bottle Of thlaStarStsparilla is ,advisa 'ol6 even when no active ,symptome of disease appear. Persona athlete(' with the following complaints 'generally find' immediate 'relief, and at length, Cure, by 'the use 'of this SARNIA : PAWL- La.: St. 4ntlsonylos Fire, Rose or Erysipelas, - Totter, Salt 'athetirn, Scald Ilead. 'RingnOrni, Sore . Ly - es; Sore Ears, and other eruptions' or YiSible forms of Scrofulous disease. Also in the more concealed 'terms as . Dropsy, heart Disease, Fits,'Epilep-; sy. Rearalgia.•, • ~•• . • • Alinute.Directioos foe; mich case .itre found in 'our' Al - Mamie, 'dun plied gratis. Rhbuinatism and; Gout, when cause& tbi.ae cumulations of extrato-ous matters in the blood, yield quickly to it,'asi also Liver CoinPlainis, Torpidity, Congestion or Inflammation of the Liyer,,aad.Jaundiee, when arising, as they often do, from the rankling polsonv in the blood. This S.ARSAPARILLA. is a great restorer for tie strength and vigor of the system. Those who are Languid and List less, Despondent, SleePless, and troubled with Ner vous Appribensions. or Fears, or any of the affec tions symptomatic of Weakness. will find immediate relies and convincing evidence of its 'restorative power upon trial. PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. ATER do CO., Lowell, Mass., , . _Practical and analytical Chemists. 7 money to buy ke Great induce liberal discount est Makers furnished mar2s-ly ,Sold by ald druggists and, dealers in yas.di#ne everywhere, at whole ale by , J. X. Maris and Co., Phila. ' ' marl-Im.eaw CHOCOLATE JOHN 8.11111 - Tif LOOKING-GLA S S AND ,PICTURE -FRAME 31atiIIFACTURER ; , Bible and 'Print Pnblisber and WHOLESALE DEALER IN A IifIERWA ' ANI.) F R ENCH,CLOCKS'AND • • REGULATORS'OP EVERY • • :DES I O.4 , LIPTION. , •' ' • 'Also, General Agetit: for . the Went' the WEnreka" patent ;Con- , deneieg,Colfee and Tea Poteomethi m ; that, every family 4euld • have; and by which they ban sail, dfty l er. cent. Trade supplied ata.liberaltcliscodet. + 945.4 m , 916 Are!'Street; . . • eci,alitfes TIONS. COCOA Blinds, S a ea, c.,, c., • CHARLES'SHALE; • H 831 Arek Street, - Curtain : ; COrnices;: , Fixtuiesi &e. Holland+, Onm.Oloth, Bliade.Fixtnree, Tiimmings, ite. • Old Blinds painted and trimmed 01 . loot equal to new. Shad.elralide and , letterectl • r ' ": 1 • OTdora throogh mail promptlynttendinl, ‘L • Stkeet, ' • " THE 'AMEHI-1 ises2.s.:The simplest, invented. Will knit Yenta to Agents. Ad -44805t641; Mast; or, B apet iaffir WATERS' New Scale WYERS' BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS. AT WEST CHESTER, PA. 27 miles by Rail to Philadelphia. The Scholaetic Year of 10 months opens September 2d, 1868. Corps of Instructors, full, able s and experienced. Send for a Catalogue. William P. Wyers, A. M., Principal and Proprietor. No charge for Tuition for Clergymen'e eons, or for young men preparing for the ministry. ELMIRA FEMALE COLLEGE ORDER CARE OF THE SYNOD OF GENEVA. This is a Christian Home, and a fully chartered and organized College, where young Jadies may pursue a most thorough and ex tensive Course of'study in COLLEGIATE; ECLECTIC, or ACA DEMIC Departments. • TERNS Whole expense of Tuition including Classics and Modern Lan guages, with hoard, furnished room, light, and fuel, $llO per half yearly session. -Address REV. A. W. COWLES .President. FREDERICK FEMALE SEMINARY, FREDERICK, MD., Possessing full Collegiate Pciwei, will commence its Tiffk,icry-' mut SCHOLASTIC YEAR. The . First Monday in September. . Board and Tuition in,the English Department $250 per scholastic year. .For Catalogues, &c.. address jig) , 25-Iyr Rev. THOMAS M. CANN, A. M., President. " THE' HILL" SELECT FAMILY BOARDING SCHOOL. An English; Classical, Mathematical, Seim . -tifte and. Artistic Institution, ' " FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOYS ! At Pottitown, _Montgomery county, Pa. Pupils received at any time. For Circulars address, - • GEO. F. MILLER, A. M. - References : REV. DRS.--Meigs, Schaeffer, Mann, Krauth, Seim, Muhlenberg. Butter, Stork, Conrad, Bomberger, Wylie, Sterret and Murphy, HONS.Judge Ludlow ' Leonard Myers, M. Russell Thayer, Beuj. M. Boyer, and Jacob S. Toot. 'ESQRS -James E.Caldwell James L: ClaghOrn, J. F. & E. B. Orne, James Hamilton, Theo: G. Beggs, C. F. Norton, L. L. HouPt, Gross'EY, Miller & Derr, Charles Wanneinacher, James Kent, Aimee & Co.;John Weist, etc.. feblB-4in AIRY' - VIEW ACADEMY, Near the Perryville Station of the Penn's. J7INIAT,6I. COUNTY, PA CONKER Se sion will commence on MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1869. `The hicatierrof this institution is convenient and accessible; ,the buildings, new and commodious; the surrounding scenery beautifill 'arid Pictureserie ; 'the tone of morals in the comconnit , . •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 damned for mate and fanale pupils, and is in suc cessful in operation. • The senior Mrincipal, as well as the teach ers of • r 1/AUSIG AMP PAINTING, haveliad :large and iery:sncceisful eiperience in teaching. The whole course and method of instruction, are !thorough, and the goverrinimit aria and parental: • CARL F. Mtn.; Teacher of Instrumental Music. Atise,A, L. ELLIOTT, Teacher of Drawing and Painting, with ether competent instructors. Address, DAVID WILSON ; A. .M., Principal, PATTERSON, A. M., Co-Principal, mats-10t _ • PORT ROYAL Post-Office, Penn's. Hats, Caps, AIM FURNISHING GOODS. W. C. DA RE Would respectfully inform his friends and the public generally, that be'hai 'rentoved to his new 'and commodious Store, No. 35 South 2nd Street, between Markg and Claegiget Sts., where he is pre pared tr. supply his customers with all the latest and most desira ble styles of . • . HATS AND CAPS at reduced /prices. Also. Gents' , PURNISMATO GOODS, Ladle Furs, buffalo Robes, Trunks, Valises, Carpet. Rags, &a. Wholesale and retail. N. B.Particnlar.attention paid to Filenda' Hats. W. C. DARE, 35 S. lad St., bet: Market & Chestnut. J. & F. CADMUS, 736 MARKET ST., S. E. Corner of Eighth .'PHILADELPHIA, MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN E3OOTO 9 MO ET 9 TRUNKS; CARPET BAGS AND VALISES. Ladies' Sqcs, Bags, Pocket Books ingreat variety s • VSTin. Hargis ! Paper Hanging & Window Shade WAREHOUSE, No. 936 Arch Street, OctB ly PAILADEPH/A. syntlaupirkr.cps4l:4omiateo3.9Mitotoloh`oo:4#l PraßOlr4+llL-Y.-4Establisbed .1852), a large assortment of 111 Chard', Academy, Fire Alarm, and other Bells constantly on hand and made to order. Large Illustrated Cataloguee sent free on application to mars-ly For Churches, Schools, etc. Straw., Norton Bg. aco, Manufacturers, Cincinnati, 0. 1 These celebrated Belle (NOT Cast Iron " Amalgana").rival in purity and Tol ima of those of copper and tin, are more hirable, and cost only one-third as much. zap Send for descriptive Circular. ritarlB—fit 'eow I'.. AD A I R MANITFAMTRER OF . SILVER PLATED WARE , No. 1.24 South Eleventh sprit ' PHILADAPHLL. LOUTS DRE K. A, statiener; Card Engraver and) Plate Printer i.e4 CHESTNUT 8111ABIgs JONES d: CO., Taor, STEEL COMPOSITION R ELL S