I=;ii ybitor . .s Cabie. .. ;11 confer a favor by mentioning the7rrices m',ks Bent to this Department. GATI:S tE-ILLESTRATED EDITION. That irrepressible yearning for greater li ht tile problems of our future existence, - r,, a profounder analysis of what we do ,Ind often driving inquiry beyodd reason ol d r ociatiun to :the region of imagination,— it is which hhs produted Mrs, Phelps' truly rem arkable betok, and which alecoubts for its wile circulation. The htimanitarian mid realistic l i,ws of heaven, which it resents with, gueli a , j oiet glow of feeling, . and such delicate pathas, have their just place Id any compieteiconeeptieti of V. - e new heasetis kid the nel earth which'we are taught will take the'place of ,theid.' Luther's lettter to his • childreit, un immense: proportion of our popular, poetry; about heaven, as well as the oloaing• chapter of Revelation, are at the author'a ltand,toi supticirt'and give witrtartt of orthodoxy to her Views. The offace'ghe hda • / more e given, is by the sport she hag tnadeof those mor spiritual conceptions of the heavenly world, which have borne up mYrittla of saints' under trikleas great as those which crushed the heroine dr the story, which in fact make Up the greater half of the truth about heaven, and" Which are among the things spiritually dihcetzed,.which eye• bath not seen, nor ear heard, neither' have the ' ed into the heart 'Of man=the th r iiigs:Whihh God' bath prepared for them thlt lore "Min.: The :int error of the book , is, making, the inipres- Sion that •heaven- is little. more • than -a—larger• reflection of the material good of this life. The service it has doe is thattof awakening people to the high ireballilit:y tlat ih'eliioCe 'Bitch a rtfleetion, and is not a world solely of spiritual rut suits and . jriys f' 'tithe It a" irlachof definite h ippiness, as well as, linlitless,splendur and glory. The edition before, us. is etegantly,hound in beveled boards and gilt, the wiiae4eisip is, bouP4- ed with yed lines ;,the paper-is thick and creamy; and the illustrations of the story (not of heaven with piano-players as 'w'ell aslaypc't.slatla finely conceived and elegantly executed. sq. 12mo. pp. 2-1-S. 03.50. FIET.DS, 04000 D & CO. 'or sale by Lippincott tk Co. LADY GERALDINE'S' COURTSHIP has long been a favorite With` the manradmirers of grs. : l3 rown ing's poetty, anci an illustrated holiday edition from the house, of Chas. Sclibner & Co. is cape : k.ially welcome. The mechanical execution of the book is faultless. The green and gold bicid i,.g, the tinted ptipei;the Piess work, a'l cou.biuing to make it a beautiful gift. The illustrations br Messrs. nennessy. : ;and, Linton are abutidat,t, and, display at tistie. invention,and for the most ptirt, MM. draWitig ans'eng axing. Our eye detects one fault—the faces' are mostly I roar New England, while 'the'stor'y is Purelyand titanic cristically one of Old England. Theyfirst p ,rtniit of the heroine is so accurate. that it.is nearly Norman, but from that she is toned down until towards the close she.steps out " f:om the shdow of the curtains" a veritable New Eng !Ander of the " tichool-Martn" type. '• careful study of Leech's best pictures in Ptlncl Lave prevented such an 'artistic error.' Pp. 74. Stoll. Another fine holiday:book from the press.of Nelson and Song, is the 111vrTElute or 'tut OcsAN, front the Freneh of . .ctrfhtit,Mangin, by the same translator, embel ihhed•with one hun dred and thirty •fitie - illustrations'brFreetnan an'd N„id. The great deep and its . treasures of the hte passed in vivid rcyie*; the 'curious plieno tnena of the ocean are well described. The sub j, et is discussed with the thoroughness of a seholar and the vivacity of .a lorenchinan, though not with the lavish genius which, Nithelet has spent upon the Iltitp..l'his, like the other of this sales, is a book that it is safe to buy for family use as of real interest to all classes, 'eneyelopedi in the range of its information and thoroughly popular in its style. Tile translatoi'S additions are judicious. The illustrations—hating some technical errors which a sailor's eye would de feet, are real " light-bringers".to the render. Pp, 470. A " Member of the New York Bar," a Pres byterian, it is said, is the author Of a little work on the two leading theological controversies of the d a y. In the first part, called Tua 'DIVINE HUMAN IN THE INCARNATE AND WRITTEN Wont), he takes ground against the orthodox view of the plenary inspiration and entire accu racy of the Word of God. The main line of ar gument is, that there 'is a human ar.fallible iu union with a divine and infallible one, all through the Scriptures. But error, falsehood and darkness are not human ;,they are inhuman. In so far as the , Bible is a thoroughly human book, we have as'much right to infet;its accuracy RA to infer the accuracy of a truly divine book. We must prefer Tayler Lewis's fine treatise on ti e same topic. The second part, containing SomE Titortaing ON THE ATONEMENT OLDER, THAN THE ntaiiiis devoted to a review of the " met._ ( , mtile theory of. the Atonement, and' of the theory of an ess'erttial antagonism between the Divine Attributes" of jtistice and Mercy. The li , lok is not written in the reverent spirit that we had expected, and its publication will hardly do iiiuch to cast light on ktilifutlifi'it discusses. Rindolph of New York, Publisher.' Pp. 201. PHILADELPHIA_, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1869. One of the " early ripe " of the ministry, Rev. Henry James of Albany, has had a memorial erected by loving hands. Two fine and charac teristic sermons of his are prefaced by a sketch of his life from the pen of Dr. Sprague, and of his character from that of Rev. Henry Neill. He must have been a most desirable friend and pastor, and we trust that these sermons arya let tern will widen the circle of those who mourn the loss sustained by the Church in his death. We may -Surely say with Howe,—" How grand the resources of God, when He whb had fashioned and formed such an iiistftirtient for His service, could afford so quickly to lay it aside." The first sermon, and' that frotn whidh the book takes its nartie--- L. HE ARRIAGE OF - THE KING'S SON— does not, we think, distinguish clearly between the Scriptttral doctrine of the , marriage of the Church to Christ, and the Renalah lieresy of the espousal of indiVidual' sbula.ito' Christ, h' which tin's:lei - ilea 'all 'the' zilohastie'fbllleg of ecPrilifit Church. Pp i42."Stiiite pAtisher. ". i): - ' ' AINIiIIIS TAAASTE: by grs.' Webb', story (A' the struggles • and inattyrdonis' that . , tended' the progress of the titith , in'Egyptiii the. folirth century. 'Tigaste, neat . .Cattliage,' , was. , the birth place . of Auglistine; and: A:.l3 , Pins is re pitaented'ai having received datiy 'fitiptest slobs in favor of Chriitianify froth' Monica.' A'' , love-story is woven• in with .the tale,' whichl is' suffidiaiftly Stirririg and annhatliodul'tdflitagreithe pdpirlar taste While itafruling pitriidiais` to give a fatilifiii picture of the' characietS, triaie,' do inesCc eircanstnees and heroic' piety` of the: Christians of that age atid'CoUntry. in effective style/midi(' a skilftilly told anal poW erftifstnry. PittstrYm'Ettiss,BbAllD: 16ino. Pp. 329, illuittated. , $1.25. '- One'of the harfilscimest and: it OSt is 'B ti* SUCS a the oatl, is the woik a' rea ykEIOW 11 to the pub i de , : FitOtil DAWN ?lio 'l* ITALY. It narrates "the rnid eircutnatin dild g faildre Of the Refararation of the sixteenth e'en' tury in. that :country, and is'in the forth rative based ' hi,torical-factsL Toii-littliy known: of the herees 'and 'h eroin of' that' dreadful drarna;•on Which the ctirtaiii went (Iraqi 'three' centuries ago, not to 'rise 'till 'out own day.' ' In this' ed i thin; typography binding Of sn i pe' rior 'qualityi . at& ibundant Large, , l6nio. pp. -5.38. - . 001.151 EN 111 StirrinkbtorY or ine end' laWlessoess that prevailed in Ireland twenty years ago, and of the noble qualities and deeds that were nnier 'wanting amid the 'daile sCerteS Of suffe'ri'ng and agrarian outrage nkhiel pile tone td the picture. Large ltmci: pp. 375, illuStrated. THE MAICtisCRITT MAri, by the sane nuthor, is an ingenioias tale of, quite another class 'of scenes and eveist.s in 'lrelandi' the introduCtion of Pro . estantista atitong the itotnisb tenants of an estate, by the medium of the Irish New Testa raent, and - through the exemplary lives of the proprietor and his family. pp 246, illustratt R,IVERS OF WATER Dalt Pl i ecE, is, the story of the; missionary 4offat's labpc.s . ,and suf ferings in Smith Africa; ,a story that delighted and instructed the youth of multitudes of ,the mid dle aged, and that promises io remain as, fresh and charming in gen - erations to, come. pp.. 201, illustrated. $l.OO. Prof. Blackburn, of NJrth West Theological Seminary, has added. to . his list; of historical works, relating to the period; of the Reformation, THE LIFE OF ,ADMIRAL COLIGNY, With the life of this great :man is * connected a history of the, rise of the Huguenots, end properly, as, upon him almost the entire :history: hangs. He was the first and , most prominent :victim ,of, St.. Bar. tholomew's massacre'. He also represents .the laity of the truly religious Hugnenots He was more fully in correspondence with Calvin than was any other of the French Thus he may well occupy: the central position and give name to such an historical , work. :The history, is occupied with the period of sixty years, from:lsl2 to 1572. Romanists, ,extretn'e and moderate, Protestants and sceptics, have been consulted as authorities. All ,agree as ,'to the lofty, character of the Admiral. What should give greater interest to his name, in this country, are the early attempts trlire,h - Coligny made to found Protestant colonies , in-" America. The story is ably told, the style is vigorous, and "the work, as, prob kbly the only' original life of" the kimiral in the English latignage, deserves a place among the Protestant classics of , our time. 2 vols., 12mo •$'2.75. We can scarcely do more than ufentidn the numerous recent issues of the PitainrrkmaN BOARD. KARDOo, the Hindu) girl, will give to children a touching view of the sufferings of the young, under the darkness of heathenism. The STRAW RPOTET MAKER is a , story of 'qUiet usefulness in humble life. CHILD OF THE ROCK is an exciting tale of adventure in the times of the wars of Napoleon, translated from the Ger man of Dr. Barth. Taus RICHES expmes the common error, that a man's life consists in the abundance of his possessions. THE Bit WE . HEART is a moving picture of endurance and struggle against adversity. CoRNELIA'S VISIT TO ROSEVILLE brings out the opposite traits in children who hive been well or ill brought up . Many other smaller volumes we can but name, as Lovx's LABOR, A LITTLE MORE, GRACE HARLAND, ABEL CLARKE, each. 18ino., of 200 pages or more, some of them containing a num ber of short stories, and all illustrated. They have, also, a smaller book, by Dr. W. S. Plumer, on Martyrs and Sufferers for the Truth; 18mo. pp. 172. A still smaller series embraces TIM,THE COLLIER BOY; THE WILLOW BASKET; TALES WITH LITTLEEMILY; T - ,vo LITTLE COUS INS; MRS. LATIMER'S' _MEETINGS; LUCY AT HOME; LITTLE GIRL'S HABITS. OTIIEIt LOST IN THE' J tINOLE, by the celebrated -Af rican Exp'orer, Du CRAILLU, is an adtnirable juvenile, fresh and:graphic, introduCing the iedder to the Maivellous scenes witnessed' by the Writer eniong the savage med and airlift's of the West African coast: The kind spirit, pure India's' and religioin• tone of ''Du Chaillu appe'a'r` asiplainfy hia 'zeal in exploration and hispower 'ddscripticin. Handsomely bound; and. i llasirated: With inally fine 'engravin - gs..'l2ma: pp".'260..51.7.5.' Rattler 4 •Bros , Y: For sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co. •" lletas. LES - LIE ads th tee" Woodbine Series," WALTER ant, FRANK' or A.PTRORP FARM ; a tale illustrating the superiority of Christian char acter in a poor boy over all the advantages of . wealth without it. There is some stiffness and 'artificial gloss ). in the style but it is not WithOUt • - interest and • a healthful Stimulus to' the liettei; side of boy-niture., Boston : A. F. 'Giavei. 16mo. ,pp 280. Hauaomely printed, bound and, illustrated. • . LITTLE MAIDIE. , Mrs. C. E. K. Dayis published.by qoA allows us how . exen a little child can _do„home Missionary work, without going vpry, far,froni hove. 16mo. pp : 181. ittis4sitlarts —There is an increasing spirit, of 'Muni arreonk the Molia.maieda'ns of the Nestorian tiict, Persia: 'L , Orie of 'the Americanßoard'a - Missidnaries writes 'from Madura, August 11', advising, a transfer °ran adjabent, field which haat been oc,cupip.d.iby,thein, to ithe, S. P. (the. High Church Society - which sent bishop Staley toi the SandWich Island's.) This Society Is lotiking • vet) , sharply after fields already'occupied: there •no "regions beyond," in heathenism-? -; • ' Miationaries. of tha Loadon -Society going from Tientsin' :to Shantung,' China, *ere, attacked by robbers and. beaten, and onre of them wasfdrowned by the; : robbers. .Mr. Cbapin, of, the American Board, writing of the event, Says: might, have taken plime "almost "'anywhere: My' own impression is, that 'missionaries in the interior of. China. will be safer than in the inte rior of Tuiltey." —The Presbyterian Publication Comniittee have, donated one huudre i d•copies of the Ten tiescean in Persia," forl , distribution appng mis sionaries of the American Board. One copy Will be sent to' each station. —The Receipts -of the Ametican Board in October n'eke incluaina $774.75in legacies. The PresbSteria.n Board received $6,432.15 in the same time. , , —The foreign' work of the 'churches' acting through the American Board' reaches, directly or indireetly„a, population three, times as large as that of the United States, which is solely (lepeiiileitt upon them foi the first elements of cidrlization "•• -'• —Over forty thousand dollars in gold were given to Ohristiap objectS, the'rast year, by the Elawaiian and Armenian` churches'.' Partly be cause of such liberality, the , American Board have: been able to reduce, the appropriations to those tnisSions-by some ,ten thousand doll ar s,— not Withstanding the constantly expanding nature of 'the and to - transfer this'-atuOunt to other fields. For a like reason the Tamil •ioa will require leSs. —lt is estimated in the December number of the Illission9ry 'Jerald that 463 000 church members in America contribute to thetreasury of the Ameriban Board. It is also computed: that one cent per day from each oft his number weuld bring' an income to the Board' in` a year of $1,689,950. • , —Forty two years ago Christian merchant of Boston, residing in Brookline, Mass , and a few. Christians who ,were in sympathy with him, assembled, at his house, to pray for the donvcrsion of the world At his suggestion the moneys collee'ed at these mi-sionary reunions were devoted to the evangelization of the Japanese. True, .:they :had - kheir gates closed, rudely and fiercely, agaitist the Christian world.; but the _Lord could open them, whenever the " set time" should come. The merchant left Brookline ro . 1829, and sailed for Europe, whence he did not permanently rkurn till 1842 . ; but the ladies' sewing circle, forined in connection with those monthly concert's, was continued, notwith standing the persistent policy of isolation adopted by the Japanese government. This association kept" alive, during many yeats, the interest which had arisen so unexpectedly, and mure than six hundred duliarswere, in the end, paid into the treasury of the Board. The Christian merchant who inautrurated that monthly concert at Brookline, so widely known and SQ highly es teemed on both 'sides off the Atlantic-4Villiatn Ropes ' -- Esq.has gone `to his rest in a gbod old aoe. And now a son of a dear friend of his , has embarked, the first missionary of the American Hoard, to the nation in which he touk so deep au interest. Still more. The Prudential'Conimit eee'• liave placed to the credit of the new mission a snit equal to the sums which _have been. 'con tributed for Japan," with interest thereon. —A fierce persecution has been raging against a small company of Christian converts .au Sa feeto, Syria. It broke out all"9 8 h recently, when twenty or, thirty of these, Protestants were influ enced by threats and bribes to join in a great parade of the enemies of their religion. , The - 7 - fo lowing singular scene occurred :-tine woman missed her husband. She had tried to keep him secreted, knowing that he was very weak; and when she discovered that they had taken him, she ran down the hill after him, seized him and drew him back with her, even though she received curses, and kicks and blows from those who tried to prevent her. She shouted out, at the top of her voice, when she first took hold of him, addressing him with something like these words : "Is this what you learn from the Word of God ? Is this all the good your religion has done you? Last night you dreamed that your dead brother came in the form of the devil, wearing black, and tried to induce you to go ack to the Greek Church. There is the devil surely, in his black c'othes (pointing to the bishops and priests), who has come to take* you back. May God have mercy on your soul." And so she ; drew .him back to,the litinge after her, and the procession went on to, the church with the unwilling captives. Even after their deep persecutions', these CtrriStiins persevele in the; one duty from which they might• well be excused, that ~of giving. Mr. Samuel Jessup, Aucrust 19th, says: 4 0ile young man, who has Van Bunted from place to place during the paSt. month;! brought me two dollars, as the tithe 'of 'certain earningg, and said he would yet pay me the tithe, for a littledsilk, and for his wheat. A boy-, ten years old, came the day,l arrived there 2 bringing . faalf-a-kushel of wheat as the gift of his ,widowed mother,fa the'spigad of the Gospei. l lt• Was'a: large share 'from' Itdr scanty store." ' =fled. H.' H. Jessup gays the Syrian Illission pro poges an advance along, the wheile'l hie, and 'speaks of the and prospecti in , the Most' cheering tna,nner.. He, calls for. more,laborers!and :: :says , " can, give to ,atiy , man' who , will entne a pirish of .00',006 pagans„ or 15,690 lirnzei, or as triiiny Moslems as' both indether; . br amillien• of Bedonin Aratig, am'otig wan we are now 'be ginning a quiet !work.: We - thave a Bible ready ;, books pre.pared and, !preparing ;.„.% ,theologietal seminary with a < class of devoted,, intelligent young men, , preparing to take - charge. of the existittg, - churcheSi 'and intiv'the` tide lias come' fbr-ati;agytreisivework on the great' kingdom of darkness. tiroundus. I!.can ,with all .my heakt. invite young men to come to the Syria mission field.” , . —The little church of, Pain, eastern Turkey,, of Male 1 &rad ,and'le inerribers,.has sent wit three or four' Methberi a Missiortiny tour' aamongaasriicti'• , as 60 -niiles from' hoine. The. , Alisdionary, asks;: Ho.* , Many' American churches, of twelve • male ; and, two female members, so highly, appreciate 'the bles sechiess"of laboring for others as to be read . V`ti t a, uticMrfake thdeiatigelizition of their 'own ana alisfrict, 'nearly ai+•large ai • the State. of Rhode Island, besides doing sotheaing for more distantvillages? •`, .:g.,(i..ot.tift,,,.::;,:oktitjttli., - SPECTRUM ANALYSIS. [feord: a:resuine'ia tkO nibttne of Roscoe's late work.] In 1859, two German chermats, Bunsen and Kirchoff, working .together, dis Covered that each ehemibal element, , when burning in a flame, emits alight which, ,when,passed through, a prism, and forming a spectrnm, has lines or marks peculiar to itself. These lines reighthe tact), therefore, as 1169 properties of the elements, arid could be . used' to distinguish and .deteet' them. ' It is only in the condition of: vapor .that !the elements produce their peculiar, lines. If platinum wire, a solid, be heated to whiteness ; and its light, passed through a prism, it"eaves a coetiLuous spec trum; bat if' platinurn 'ba` VaPorized by ' the electric current, ita - 4eCtriirn becomes broken, and:itere 'is a s:ries of bright lines e . :epaiiited by varying intervals of . darkness. If zinc be va porized, it gives beahiiiiil bands of red and blue, while vapor of sodium givea yellOw lines situated close. to each other. • A,new and most delicate mode of nhemical analysi4 was thus found, and the very first result obtained by it was the disiovery Of several hitherto ,unknown chemi cal 'eleine,nts. Prof Bunsen; in 'examining 'The ash left after the' evaporation of. some mineral water, discoveted.lines which did not appear' to belong to any known element. Ile then boi!ed down 44 tuns of this water, and from the mine ral` reSidite he extracted, two new metals reaemb ling potash, one of which he named Rizbidiaria, because it , gave a dark red line, and the other emsium; from its producing a bluish-gray line. The lines produced by the burning vapors of the ,eleinents• are variously colored; but always, bright, with dark iuterspaces; but in the spec trum of the sun arid,stars . this is exactly reversed, the lines being dark and the spaces bright. Kirchoff explained this Ina itifully on the prin ciple. of, absorption, which we, will try to illus trate. If we go into a glass store with a violin and preduce.a tone by drawing the bow egress one' of the strings, certain of the glass vessels will be set singing; they will Cat& fup and give out the same musical note which proceeds' from the violin. But only those vessels will 'do' this which are capable of vibrating in unison with the string, or of giving out the same note that they' receive. In this case the sound of the string is said to be absorbed • by the' vessels which are capable of emitting only vibrations. of the same rate. Supposing now we have a candle flame containing sodium vapor, which gives the bright yellow lines in its spectrum. If then we take an electric light, which is' of course very much brighter, and containing also sodium vapor, and let it:shine through the candle-flame, the bright yellow lines .do not change their position, but they instantly turn dark." The explanation is that the candle-fiarne absorbed the same "rays that it gave out— that is, it stopped the bright sodium rays of the electric light, and, letting all the others pass, the contrast becomes so great in. the specti um that the lines• of absorption appear as clink lines Now in the sun it is supposed that there are two sources of light, an external photosphere, and an inner nucleus of intenser brightness, so that the intenser light from the inner source undervoes absorption as it passes through the outer sphere, and henpe the solar lines appear dark. A beau tiful verification of, this principle is furnished by a disCovery of Lockyer and Jansen that front the very Miter edge of the sun, and consequently where we -do not get the, rays from ,the nucleus, the solar spectrum gives bright lines; this outer sphere is therefore termed the chromosphere. The constitution of the sun is now held to be proved by spectrum analysis—that is, we know to a moral certainty that certain elements exist ing on the earth exist also here. The spectrum of iron vapor, for example, gives us sixty or seventy bright lines. If now we place this be side the solar spectrum, the bright lines are found exactly to correspond to a system of dark lines in number, breadth, position, and interspaces —a coincidence, that. Sixteen of the elenfients we know upon earth are thug found to exist in the sun. The spectra of the "stars have been studied with great assiduity and Success by Fa ther Secchi of Rome, Mr. 'lupins of London, and Mr. Rutherford of this city. About eighty lines in the speetruin'of the star Aldebaran have been mapped, and it has been shown tocontain sodium, magnesium, hydrogen, biatb 7 utli tellurium anti mony,, and mercury,While Sirius gives indications of the presence of sodiuiii, iriaaaesium, iron, and hydrogen. ' But the uses of spectrum analysis are not con fined to original chemical research ; it has prac tical aPplications which should not pass un noticed. In the Beshemee process of converting cast-iron into steel it is of great value. Cast iron differs from steel in containing more carbon, and is Made into steel by barning out; the carbon by means of a blast of atmospheric air sent through the,white hot; molten mass: ' Five tuns of cast iron, by this process, are converted in twenty minutes into "cast steel. - The success of the . operation depends upon the blast being stopped at the right moment, for' if fliscontinued too soon or mass becomes too viscid to be poured out, or if continued too icing it crumbles under the hammier.' By the aid of the spectroscope the appearance and disavpearance of the lines in the flame afford an exact index to the progress of the combustion.,; This instrunient' is also proving a valuable ally to jiL..tice in its eiidence in criminal eases: - It detects with unerring certainty even the one.thousandth part of a grain of the red coloring' matter of 'a' blood stain.' —A valuable diScovery was accidentally mule bisa workman in France, who, some little time ago, in varnishing various , pieces of metal, scorch ed himself most dreadfully. In his agony, and without an, instant's reflection, he thrust his in jured hand into the pot containing the varnish, and immediately felt relieved as if by enchant ment. Ire repeated the operation for a day or two, and in a Short time WAS ,Tierfectly cured. The discovery attracted c . ens,lderable attention in the neighborhood.. He was sent.for to Metz to cure some Men injured by a powder explosion ; and, being successful, he was directed to apply his cure. tri patients in the hospitals of Paris, where his treatment for burns was soon, found to be more efficient than the old method. THE- NEW YORK TIMES. ~:.p{~ - A' Political Literai-y•viiid Nriscallahi . ons )iews. paper. . , The Raw FoalTflass,--started in Sep`eMber, .755',—fins for many yearn been re .ogulaul as among toe met eueeessint, pope hit' and .influritiali new . -papers iu 1.11.4 voietry. It ERR under ro the control awl .inegement of oriz.in 110 induce, who, with „really Inerea4ed red , oirces and eiperien-e, will spare no pains to extend and strengthen its claims upon the confidence end Support the,publim. „, The Titter is a Republieen journal, and will be devoted, as in the rest, to an intelligent imppert of the Ito, uelican Party. It will sustain, with all its ability, the Inn inlei and policy"of Gen rat GRANT'S atitninivration. It will advocate tho,mineseures by which the boner, the peme . and the Prcisperity of that nation can be beet conserved and ptoinoto. it will .itid.cate our dignity before for eign nations, and will da'nentetiance alight by which o 41..1,1f-res pect onopr fove for republieen inetitution4 could lie oodAikered. ES ' dtisiree to be j o riged'hy the high. at possible standard ofjournallsm., lit Emmet Ittimenitmly sudsbe conducted in frpt of fatrthas and 'mourn i s ty, (roe alike from pereonsl rancor or undue, favor.tism; and 'will be-the prpdsction of the ablest and moot experienced wri'ters upon all the Rut j , cte treated. Its Cos- RESPONI/ENCE will be full and timely. Its a.Poircswi Itm prepared ith the nt..l int care, and will enibrice every fact or pub ic atter atice.of opinion thai tossesses tittere t aud impiatance. The:LIT • MARY DiPATIAMENT will tie in thoroughly. repaid hands; and will prbsent a full.review.Of the li'endure,ithe tine ads, the music; and ihe d. ama of the day. As a, family paper, free front all appealv ) vulgar or Impure tastes, the Timms will contisio• uu xe.ptionable, and may hesafely admitted to every domestic; circle. . . ' , , The-Wsi aLr and SEMI-Wissur editions of the T MEB will becom • pied with tlacgreateit care, a , d Will contain ; selections from the .mest important contents of lee Daily hstie, besides matters of iu.- . 4 1. e• est to the agricultur ,I so •tions ot the emntry., All Who prefer a newspai..er Mit once or twice a week, will find theme edltit us ad mirahlysuited tt• their r,quireoleale.,, , • A speeial edition of the l'imss for BOR,OYEAN.circulation will be pnbliAled ev ry Weduestlayaud Saturd,sy,.ili time for the .11guro pean mail-, and will be valnalilti and welcome to eur . friends abroad, why tlicr Americans otOf any other. ontional,ty than'our own. All iheae edizons °Elbe Times , kre of the very largest Size, on fate iinario sheets; each soot piiiittid in e:ear and legible type, at the f 'Hewing rate.: The Dana - TIMM. per'ahmnsl.o . , The 5t311.-192,A1CLY, per,annum ' • - 3 Two copies, on, year 5 Tencopies, oue year. .......... .... . . .. . ........ ......... 25 An extra cops' to getter-1M 01- . 001, and a splendid ate,' en graving-el the IVe HYNRY J. RAYMOND. WEExtr Trios, per annum 2 Five copire, one sear - • ........... ....... 8 Tem c.ipios, one year . . . An extra copy to gett r.rip of slab, and a Bpi ndid steel en, graving Lathe late HENRY' J. RAYMoND. TwentyeOireS, one year . ................ ..... ....• ••••••• Ae extra copy to getter-up of - - lob, and a splendid steel en graving of the late. HF.NRY J. RAYMOND. • The European Edition, per annum, postage extra.. .... ........... 8 The Semi Weekly and Weekly mailed to clergymen a. the lowest club rates. These pricse are invariable. We lumina traceng agents. Remit ih drafts ou'New, Tot k or .P,Jet Office Dion .y Orthrs, if possible, and where neither of these can be procur-4, send tdi money in a registerectlettei., Ail Postmasters, are. 0t.11..ed td register letters when requested t do -o, and the system is a.. absolute protectioa against losses by n.ail. Add.es4, H. J. RAYMOND & CO., Tams Office, iew York IMPORTERS, 41P: 41 c : a .4t i t• CC 1 41 1' 22 id Ouzels & te:\o2° 4 ,4 p WilL . e and Red Check 4 RVINGS,t, rtis• Seaton we offer a large, varied and well selected BK-. at reduied, prices No. 43 Strawberr!) Street, rxet Street west of Second. PfLKLAOELEnitiL