MitDr',s Dar Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. DR. MURDOCK'S WORKS. Messrs. R. Carter & Dros., have again brought out the valuable works of Dr. Murdock, including his Translation of the Syriac New Testament, and of Mosheim's Church History. The repu tation of these works is so well established that we need do little more than call attention to their re-issue. The Ancient Syriac, Version, called " Peshito," or " clear," ' has peculiar interest from its extreme age, belonging possibly to the first century,—from the great probability that it is in the language spoken by ,our Lord and His dis ciples, and from the clear insight which the un known translator seemed to have of the . subject he was handling. It was, therefore, deemed' by the American translator of sufficient interest to be laid before the, public in an exact English version. With two Appendices, it makes a handsome octavo volume of 551 pages. • THE CHURCH HISTORY is in three ,volumes. Mosheim has the reputation of being tile father of modern Church history. His lectures , and printed works kindled the learned ardor in Germany, which has led to the production 'of a long and brilliant series of works in the same line. Somewhat in danger of being superseded by these later issues, Dr. Murdock's notes to Mosheim have corrected errors and 'supplied: de ficiencies, and given to the. public, a sound and straightforward historical view of the advance, of the hinderances and of the inward and out ward development of Christ's kingdom in the world. The exceedingly low price of these vol umes, which cover 470, 485, and 506 pages, and are sold at $5.00 for the whole, win commend them to the student of limited means. AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, THE CRESCENT AND . THE CROSS, it, Story of the Siege of Malta, presents the deeply Moving incidents of the last great attack of, the Turks upon the defences of Christendom; and thrills the reader with the grand story of the heroic de fence of the Knights of St. John at that Chris tian Thermopylae, the Castle of St. Elmo. The dawning influence of the pure doctrines of the Reformation is also happily introduced into the narrative, which, is spiced—slightly, however— with a love story. 16mo. pp. 283. 80 cents. WILFORD PARSONAGE, or, Living for Jesus, is designed to show hoW a lovely young woman, the daughter of a pastor, can do good even among inauspicious eircumstanses, and be the lovelier for her piety. But why, draw out at length the do mestic affairs of the pastor; first love and disap pointment, marriage, widowhood and second mar riage to the object of early attachment, in a book for Sunday Schools and juvenile reading? -We would criticize gently, but are labors Por Jesus so hard to work up into entertaining style, that we must have four engagements and marriages to provide the needed sensational matte'r ? The externals of the book, illustrations, &c., are ex ceedingly handsome. 80 cents, Tho Society have also published, in their usual elegant style, the FAMILY CHRISTIAN ALMANAC for 1870. Price ten cents. New Depository, 1408 Chestnut St. , , • BOOKS RECEIVED. MAN IN GENESIS and in Geology, or, The Biblical account of Man's Creation tested by Scientific Theories of his Origin and Antiquity. By Joseph P. Thompson, D. D., LL. D. New York : Samuel R. Wells, Pub. For sale by Lip pincott & Co. Price $l.OO. THE LITERATURE OF THE AGE OF ELIZA BETH. By Edwin P. Whipple. Fields, Osgood & Co. $175. ADAM BEDE. By George Eliot. Household Edition. Fields, Osgood & Co. For sale by Lip pincott & Co. $l.OO. JENNY GEDDES, or, Presbyterianism and its great conflict with Despotism. By Rev. W. P. Breed, D. D. Presbyterial Board of Publica tion. THE PROPHET ULTIMA. By J OEM M. D. D. To which is prefixed a Memoir of the Author, by the Rev. William D. Howard, D. D. Presbyterian Board of Publication, 821 Chest nut Street. A FOURTEEN WEEKS' COURSE in Nature. Philosophy. By J. Dorman Steele, A. M. A. S. Barnes & Co. For sale by Sower, Barnes & Potts. 530-Market St. REMINISCENCES ON JAMES A. HAMILTON, or Men and Events at Home. and Abroad during three-quarters of 11.. Century. • Charles Scribner & Co. For sale by Smith, English & Co. $5.00. LITERARY ITEMS. —The announcements of forthcoming books by American Publishers are very numerous. Fields, Osgood & Co., Boston, take the lead in number, having no less than sixty-four volumes in their list, some of which have just appeared. It embraces the complete works of Longfellow, Whittier, Tennyson, Ralph Waldo Emerson, (voile), Dickens (new edition) in seven volumes, Country Parson, George Eliot (prose), Bryant's translation of te Iliad, &c., an fine illustrated editions of Gates. Ajar, Ballads of New England, and Longfellow's Building of the Ship.—Scrib ner & Co. are, about_ issuing Lange on Romans, Intelligence of Animals (illustrated Library of Wonders), Bible Animals, Lange On Proverbs, and Life of J. Addison Alexgrider.Anson D. F. Randolph & Co., New York, announce 'Step ping Heavenward, by Mrs. E. Prentiss ' and The Melody of the Twenty-third Psalm, by Anna Warner.— Carter &:Bros., New York : Shining Light, by the author :of. Hedley Vicars, Autobi ography and Memoir of F; W. Srummaeher, D. D., D'A.ubigne's History of the Reformation in THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1869. the Time of Calvin, vol. 5, and many others.— Thomas Nelson & Sons, New York : Mysteries of the Ocean, by Arthur Mangin, Illustrated, and The Desert World, by Arthur Mangin, Il lustrated.—D. Appleton & , Co., New York : The Reasoning Power of Animals, by the Rev. John Selby Watson, M. A , M. R. S. L.—Felt & Dil lingham, New York : The Pilgrim's Progress, in Words of One Syllable, by Mary Godolphin.— Duffield Ashmead, Philad'a : The Illuminated Christian Year, by Jean Lee, and The Red Line Edition of Keble's Christian Year.—Lippincott & Co.: Wilson on the Lord's Supper, Christ and the Scriptures, by Rev. Adolph Saphir, Personal Experience . of Roman Catholicism, by Eliza Richardson.—James CamAell, 13oston History and Philosophy of Marriage"; or, Polygamy and Monogamy Compared, by a Christian Philanthro' pist.--;.7laTer & Bros. announce The Andes and the Amazon, by Prof. James Orton,' of the Vas sar College.—Cla4ton, I?emgen & Bafelfinger have issued Remarkable Facts I llustrative and Cenftrmatory of HolY Scripture, by MeV.' J. Lie field, D. D. 12moi , 'pp.'321. el.: $150: --In England, we as , yet hear of few neiv books.-.-The Qxferd: T_Tuiversity Pres,s.are about to publish 3 vols. of Wiolif's works; two of them will contain . his " Homilies;"' and 'the third, his Miscellaneous En c glish. Works." 'Xi. Thomas Arnold is the editor.—Mr..William Norris will piiblish in November, the Tales ,for Autumn of !!The,Earthly Paradise,'.'_and the Tales far Win ter (which will complete the work), will be brought out next May George Catlin'a" Lifted and Subsided Racks of America," with 'their in fluences on -the oceanic, atmospheric and land currents ; and the distribution of races, is an nounced. We also note : Leathe's, 'Witness of St. Paul to Christ -Boyle , Lectures, 1869, 10s. 6d., Randolph's Theology,3 vols., 'fol. 1, " Nat ural and Revealed;" 7s. 6d., Bartle's Scriptural Doctrine of Hades, cr. Bvo.,- 55., Baxter's God's PurpoAe in Judgment, 18mo., Is. 6c7:,` Philipos, The Syrian Christians of Malabar, cr. 8vo.; 2s. 6d., Williams' Female. Characters of Holy ScEip ture, new ed., 55.; Williams' Characters of the Old Testa,ment, new ecl, ss. =Stier's Words orthe 'Apostles; and Hend stenberg's Ezekiel . have 'been) translated Wand added to Clark's' Foreign TheOlogical Library. The author of the " : Myths of the Middle ,Ages;'' a successful English book, has written " The Origin and Development _of Religious Belief," and it has been announced for publication by no less than four prominent publishing houses in this country—Messrs. Appleton, Harper, Lippin cott, and Scribner. —ln Germany have appeared : Johann Cal vin, seine Kirche and sein Staat in Genf, Von F. W. Kampschulte,l. Bd.' Leipzig. $3.10 (g,old). Ulrich Zwiugli nach den urkUndlichen` Quellen, Von J. C. Morikofer. 2 Thl. Leipzig. 12.75. Zur Erinnerung an Fr: Daniel Ernst Schleier macher. Vortrag. Von A. Twesten. Berlin. 30. cents. The first of these works is' by a Roman Catholic. . —Messrs. Roberts Brothers, Boston, are print ing the 23d thousand of Miss Alcott's " Little Women."—Mr. Mill's pamphlet, " The Subjec tion of Woman," has an immense sale in Eng- land. Three editions were Sold almost as soon as printed: It has been translated into French and published in Paris.—The first edition of Messrs. Magnussen and Wm. Morris's translation of the " Gretis Saga" has been sold in six weeks I A second edition is 'in press. Encouraged by this success, these gentlemen are translating - other Icelandic sagas. —Messrs. Leavitt, Strebeigh Co.'s fall trade-sale catalogue shows -a . trifling decrease in size, when compared with that of last year; but this, says. Childs' Gazette. may be _attributed to two causes—the growing disinclination on the part of somemembers of the trade to contribute to these sales, and the falling off in the number of traveling booksellers, who, at one time, were their chief support.. The same journal says : Underselling has unfortunately shown itself in several of the large towns, and seems to be on the increase. It will be, well if the trade .unani mously set to work to trample out the evil before it is too deeply rooted. The deplorable state of the retail trade in 'England is surely sufficient to prove the utter .folly of this praCtice. —The London Bookseller states that Messrs. Bell, & Daldy, London, pay. to Dr. Noah Web ster's heirs a considerable sum annually, for the three editions bf his dictionary which they pub lish. —The Echo, a new half-penny paper in Lon don, well edited, and - containing a great deal of the day's news, is said to have - rea,ched a circula tion of nearly seventy thousand. To avoid being eclipsed by this cheap and good paper, the price of the Pall Nall Gazette has been reduced from four cents - a copy to two. --Miss Putnam, a daughter of the respected Mr. George P. Putnam, of New York, recently 'passed, in a brilliant manner, an examination in medicine in Paris. She has been studying her profession with great assiduity, and walking the hospitals regularly. —Some-astonishment has been expressed that Eugene Sue's grave, at Annecy, should be in the portion of the burying-ground reserved for sui cides and beheaded criniinals. It seems-he -him self seleeted his grave, and ordered his - body to be buried among these social outlaws. —ln consequence of the suppression of con vents and monasteries in Italy, immense quanti ties of books which formed their libraries, have fallen into the hands of Victor Emmanuel's gov ernment. There were 164 public " libraries in Italy in 1865. By a law' passed in July, 1866, the religious houses were suppressed. There are now 369 public libraries, with suitable en dowments for their maintenance and increase. It is to. be regretted that the ancient Greek and Arabian manuscripts in three of the convents of Palermo , --the Martovana, the ,Cancelliere, and the Salvatora—should have disappeared, the heads of the houses rep" during the late trou bles in Sicily. A government commission' is in ' vestigating the matter. —The Sunday .111ag,azine, edited by the Rev. Thomas Guthrie, D.D., will, in future, be pub lished by Lippincott & Co. simultaneously with its appearance in London. —A writer in the Cotemporary Review pro duces reasons for the assertion that about the be ginning of the - Christian Era books were manu factured with a speed, sold at a cheapness,,pur chased with an avidity, and circulated through out the whole Roman world to an ex.tent, at first mention, almost incredible. " Enter one of the large halls of a Roman publisher, and you will find probably not fewer than a hundred slaves at work. They have all been educated, trained, for the purpose. They write a swift, clear band; and while one dictates, a hundred copies are springing at once into existence for the great public. No sooner are the copies written than they are passed on to other workmen ready to receive them; and with a speed not less astonish ing than that with which they have been written, are revised, corrected, rolled up, bound, titled, and, when thought desirable, adorned for the market. • Let us add to these circumstances that the workmen, being slaves, require only mainte nance from their master, and one shall be, better prepared to accept what seems the 'well -estab lished, though remarkable result—that a single bookselling firm at Rome could produce without difficulty, in a day of ten working hours, an edi tion of the second book of Martial consisting of a thousand, copies, and that, a somewhat similar work, plainly' bound, if sold for sixpence; left the bookseller a profit of one- hundred"fier cent. o .=—Tlie Presbyterian, Publication Committee an: nounce The Freed Boy in Alabama, by-Miss, M. M. Mitchell; Four Little Christmas' Stockings, Olden's Mission; Stories for all Seasons, by - Two ' Sisters. Ella Dalton, by Miss M. Johnionj; Too Big for Aiinday-School, by Rev: J. Jay Dana; The Back Court, by the author .of " Chi naman in California ;" The Saviour whNeed, by Rev. Jacob Ilelffenstein D. D with Introduc tion by Rev: Harvey D. Ganse. --The Saturday R6iew was never faiiibus for treating religions topics, or ministers of religion; with respect. Under its late editor, however, it never took so broad a, license as it claims. under the new one—who was himself a clergyman be fore he hecame enamored. of jourealisrti. In a recent article on "'Railway Acciderts," (Aug. 21,) the writer speaks of railway travelers in Mexico as:being " like :acrobats or missionaries, or other., people Wlio.go, in for prizes in .this world or the next at considerable risk." - Does this sort of flippancy pass muster for' wit in the old age of the Saturday', 'Since Whits lost all that:gave it' true fire and 'spirit, would it not be well fdr it to give up :chalking its face and play ing the clown, and stick to its heavy dissertations on ethics, or its half-indecent comments wo men'?issiOnaries have dene some good in the world, incredible as it may seem to 'a Saturday Reviewer Who writes under the direction of a minister of religion.—N. Y. Times. BiZtfiiftiti3nls. GENESIS AND SCIENCE. In Augnetine's works (lib..xii. c. 31) is a passage which, considering the age in which it was written, considering also the vague notions entertained by St. Augustine himself, and by all the world at his time, on the rank . and importance of the natural sciences, is surely one of the most remarka ble passages ever written by theologian or philosopher. . " For myself, I declare boldly; and from the bottom of my heart, that if I were call ed to write something which was invested with supreme authority, I should desire most so to write that my words should in clude the • widest range of meaning, and should not be confined to one sense alone exclusive of all others, even of some which should be inconsistent with my own. Far from me, 0 God, be the temerity to suppose that so great a prophet (Hoses) did not re ceive from Thy grace even auch a favor 1 Yes : he had in view, and in his spirit, when he traced these words, all that we ever can discover of the truth, even every truth which has esesped us hitherto, or which escapes us still, but Which, nevertheless, may be discovered again." Certain it is that whatever new views may now be taken of the origin and author ship of the first chapterof Genesis, it stands alone among the traditions of mankind in the* wonderful simplicity and grandeur of its words. Specially' remarkable—rairacu, lens it really seems to-be—is that character of reserve which leaves open to reason all that reason may be able to attain. The meaning of these words seems always to be a meaning ahead of science—not because it anticipates the results of science, but because it is independent of them, and runs, as it were, round the outer margin of all possible discovery.—Primevq Man, _Duke of Argyll. SUGGESTIVE PARAGRAPHS. " We want in you," says Bishop Hunting ton, "Christianity that is Christian across counters, over dinner tables, behind the neighbor's back, as in his face. We want in Jon a Christianity that we can find in the temperance of the meal, in moderation of dress, in rqspect for authority, in amiability at home . in .veracity and simplicity in mixed society. Rowland Hill used to say he would give very little for the religion of a m a n whose very 'dog and cat were not the better for his religion. We want fewer gossiping, sla,ndering, gluttonous, peevish, conceited, bigoted Christians. • " To make them effectual, all our public re ligious measures, institutions, benevolent agenciespmissions, need to be managed on a high-toned, scrupulous and unquestionable tone of honor, without evasion, orpartisan. ship, or overmuch of the serpent's cunning. The hand that gives &way the Bible must be unspotted from the world. The money that sends the missionary . to the heathen must be honestly earned. In short, the two arms of the church—justice and mercy— must be stretched out; working for man, strengthening the brethren, or else your faith is vain, and 'ye are yet in your sins." Holiness and humility are inseparably con nected. The nearer the soul comes to God, tho more completely it is humbled; stibdued and overpowered. It was when Sob heard the voice of the Lord out of the whirlwind' that he exclaimed, "I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes." When the "still, small voice" of God spake to the exiled prophet in his cave, he wrapped his; Kush ing face in his mantle, and his whole being bowed before the Divine presence and power It was when the evangelical prophet, Isaiah, saw the glory of the Lord, and heard the six-winged seraphim crying one to another, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts," that he cried out, "Woe is me, for I am undone. ) ' It was after Paul had been caught up into the third heaven that he said of himself that be was " the least of all the saints." And it was the beloved disciple, whose head had leaned on, .the breast of Jesus, and who had beheld His glory in apocalyptic vision, whose meek, childlike spirit has been the admiration of all ages. Thus it is with every saint on earth, and it is so with every glorified spirit in heaven. The higher the soul rises in holi ness, the deeper it sinks in! humility and self-abasement. So sings Montgomery.: "The bird that soars on highest wing, Bnilds on the ground lowly'nest; And she that cloth most sweetly sing, Sings in the shade. when, all things rest_; In lark and nightingale we see What honOr bath humility. !‘ The saint that wears heaven's brightest crown, In lowliest adoratiOn bends, The'weight of glory bows hitri'dowri , The most, wh'en moat his soul ascends ; „Nearest the throng itself must be 'The footstool of humility." At a'temperance meeting some' years ago a clergyman' spoke in favor 'Of'wine as a drink, demonstrating its use to be icriptural, gentlemanlyiancl healthful. At the close, of his remarks, a plain, elderly man stated that a young friend who had long been ihtemper ate was at length persuaded to Pledge him- Self to entire abstinence from all , that could intoxicate. He, kept his pledge faithfully, till one evening, at ,a social party,• wine was passed, arid, a clergyman present took a glass, at the same time vindicating the 'prao tie°. This example decided the young'man. He took aglass, his slumbering appetite was instantly rekindled, his downward 'course was rapid, , and • he died a . raving madman, the victim .of delirium tremens. " That young man," the old man added; " was my Ben; and that clergythati was the reverend thictor who has just addressed the. assem- DANCING BY OIf.IIRCIE-MEMBERS. At the present time there must be some rather special interest among the young folks on the subject of dancing. One has asked :'Does the RefOrraed Church allow dancing? Another has inquired at a differ ent time and under other circumstances Do you approve of dancing? To each of these, we reply : No. In the popular sense, the Church does not allow dancing, any , more than it allows any other kind of intoxication or undue excitement. There is no special law against dancing in itself. Neither is there against the use of liquor till it becomes immoderate drinking or drunkenness. The whole tendency — of the Church is opposed to the disSipations that flow out-of dancing. As all its forms hang together by a common spirit, it is not possible to allow this, and condemn that. Not because just so much is sinful in itself; but because the whole tendency in its last - results are evil, without a redeeming excep tipn. In this general sense we are opposed to - dancing, and deem it proper to discourage it in all proper ways. Do you then decide against all dancing as , sinful . Yes, in practice. In theory we can also answer, with the timid or temporizing minister, by saying• that we had" no- objec tions to their shuffling their feet around - a little." Without anything more said, that may seem to endorse dancing.- At least so it was taken in this given case. But that is not the whole case. Mere "-shuffling the feet around a little" is, not what is meant by o,ncing. If it were only this, and noth 0 - ine. more, few would object to it.- And fewer still would indulge in it - to dissipation and spiritual harm: Graceful movements of the body, artistic tripping of the feet and the cultivation of the msthetical idea that gives strength and beauty even to the, abuse, are not to be, per se, or in themselves, condemned. What we may admire and allow in theory, we must, however, condemn in practice, when its whole tendency is to ran into evil. We may admire a beautiful flower in a pic ture, but if its living representative ' how li - ever beautiful, is poisonous and smells bad, we would not cultivate it ourselves, nor ad vise others to plant it in their gardens, to spread its vile efflavia and deadly poison, Root it out. We would shrink from 'saying or doing anything by which one soul might be led astray. All the dancing pleasure in the world would not redeem a single soul from the ruin to which many have confessedly been brought by this vain indulgence. The example of a Church-member in this may be most disastrous to the Spiritual welfare of others. The favor - and equivocal en dorsement of a minister may teach ":one of the least of these" to brOak a commandment of God. Rather let a mill-stone be tied to his neck, and he be castinto the depths of the sea. - Bat, in opposition to the general voice of ,the best portion of the Church, some Doc tors of Divinity have declared in favor of dancing. Doctor so and, so, and Rev.' Mr. ----- allow dancing in their, congregations. Well ! we had rather it were they than we who are to answer for that: - Every man must stand - or fall to his own master. For our part, we think we do less harm in ad vising against, than those who advise in fa vor of all dancing. If a little - indulgence will not do much harm, none at all will do less. - What shall we say of those Church-mem bers who, although they condemn dancing in the Main, yet think it necessary to send their childrento the dancing master? Just think of it ! A refined Christian mother, sends her pure, lovely daughter, and, her in nocent, ingenuous son, to be improved in nets RY THE. DANCING MASTER The dancing master - is generally, almost without a single exception, a man unfit to meet that same daughter on speaking terms on the street, and altogether unworthy to meet that mo ther and her daughter in genteel society, or in the sacred precincts cf their own home. What partial good can come from the in structions of such a man as that, which the mother could not a thousand fold better Give her child I There must be something exceedingly defective here, because more evil than good is sure to come. Dancing school associations, apart from the personal character of the master, are almost always unfavorable to grace and pie ty. Even when the children of the " flat families only" attend (and only first families generally patronize such establishments), the results are uniformly vicious and demor alizing. Like the associations of the theatre, the circus and - the ball, the whole moral at mosphere is tainted. Save the pure children of the Church 'from that! Dancing Chris tians do not want to cast their children to Juggernaut nor give them up to Moloch. Do not risk all that is precious for your children, by trying to obtain a questionable good. They can serve God and reach hea ven better and safer without" attaining the artificial accomplishments and tasting the dangerous preastre.cup of the private or public ball, to which the dancing school leads the way.• Elders and' private church-members occa sionally getAup' a dancing party for their friendsat their private houses. Into these, unsuspecting persons are drawn. Thetaste is cultivated, and, in some cases, moral ruin follows thosie " Very . nleasant evenings." We p. are too much Puritan yet to consent to such damaging influence on• the Christian life of Church-members. If all things are lawful, surely such as these, so liable to grow into abuse and harm, are not expedient. For the " weak brother's sake," let not these things prevail - among you, as bccometh saints.—Reformed Church Messenger. 'I'F,IiPEE,ANOE ITEMS. —Dr. Onyler writes of Augusta, 11l : " There are eighteen hundred inhabitants in the town, and nota single tippling-house ! The 'saloons' have all been sealed up so tight that no toper's nose can scent his way into them. The method is this The friends of temperance are associated in a joint stock company with a nominal capital of $175,000...Each man takes so many shares of stock, and is liable to a small assessment. When a liquor shop is prosecuted and closed, the expenses of the legal pr6cess are assessed on the company. Each man pays his quota. So that whenever a,hundred or two dol lars are wanted for a cold-water campaign, the fundg ire at hand. By means of this thorough machinery this pleasant village has been ' clean ed out' of rum shops and to-day local prohibi tion is entirely successful. I learn that in seve ral other towns beside Augusta the process of joint stock.. companies has been tried, and with the seine' success. But' before this, the town must vote at the annual election not to license any drinking-houses. The otject of the stock company is to aid the authorities in enforcing the popular will.' " " I never drink; I cannot afford it; it cost me three days, the first in sinning, the second in suffering, the third in repenting."—Laurcene Sterne. • • I remember a bright and beautiful boy. We were lads at school togethnr, he and I, in Con necticut. We knew each other well ; in school tasks and play ground we were comrades for years.' He had occasion to remember me, for in a playful wrestle I threw him, and to my dismay, dislocated his elbow joint. In time we entered the same college. Our pecuniary circumstances were .different. I was very poor. I once lived for' a week on twenty-two cents, in the days of my student life. I didn't have to 'live quite as close as that, but • I did it for one week, to see how closely I I could live. If any one of you have ever lived on twenty-two cents a week I don't want you to tell me, for I wouldn't accept your invitation to dinner. He was very rich. His money and the indulgence it offered led him on. He became fond of the wine-cup. The habit grew upon him. He had great talents. He was witty. He could recite - pages after reading them once or twice. The classics were easy to him. Oh, if he had never touched the wine cup itwoul,d• have been well for him. He did -not finish his collegiate career. He died in a tavern. For two weeks before his death he ate nothing. One of my brothers went to see him, and told me that he was so emaciated that he was almost transparent; you could almost see through him. Day and night for these two weeks his cry was for brandy, brandy. They gave it to him. He drank and drank, and at nothing, and he died. Oh, the horrors of that death; the horrors of that room, Where, lying on a bed, a living skele ton, he shrieked through the sleepless night watches for brandy I God save you, young man, from such a death. When he first began the use of wine, if any one had suggested to him_ the possibility 'of , danger, he would have smiled with scorn.—Dr: M. Scudder. is &40, 4 ?) . 6%, .' ' .?- IMPORTERS, din Alloy 44112,,, -4 - & v ,-, oturers e uts Whikt and Red Check VMS Semen we offer. a large, varied and well selected Roc* No. 43 Strawberm Streets not Meet west ofl,osoon‘ rm4tleLretot 4 .