TIIE DAILY FVKNING TELEGRAPH PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1870. it it i: i ii h frvm tl4 Vowlnn Saturday ftzvkir. From the city of Laon on easy Journey tabes the traveller to anothor city whone name is in mont people's earn far more familiar the renowned metropolis of Rhei hh. It would mot be hard to draw out a scrum of points of contrast between the two. Tirnt of all, no two towns could be more unlike in position. Instead of the hill of Laon, Kheira, if not, like some EngliHh cities, absolutely in a hole, stands in a plain, with no obvious reason at first sight why it should have been pitched on that particular spot rather than en any other. Booondly, while Laon is emphatically a city of the past, Itbeims has a firm hold on the present as a flourishing seat of modern business and mo dern wealth. The history, too, of the two cities is full of points of contrast. Though the history of Laon really does spread itself over the whole range of the last thirteen hundred years, yet it is only for one short and remote period that it becomes of para mount importance, llheims, as never having been a seat of royalty, never beoomes quite so prominent as Laon was in the tenth century; but the interest of its history is spread in a more equable way over the whole of the ages from the Frankish conquest of Gaul down to our own day. As the metropo litan see of France, the seat of the first ecclesiastical Feer, as the scene of the con version of the first Frankish King, as the burial-place of so many early sovereigns and the crowning-place of an all but unbroken line of sovereigns of later date, llheims, in its two great churches, unites many of the different sources of the interest which is awakened in an Englishman by Canterbury, by Winchester, and by Westminster. As contrasted with Laon, llheims, as the burial place of the Laon Kings, may claim a joint interest in them. And as regards the succession of its prelates, Laon supplies no names which at once Hash across the mind like those of llcmigius, Hincmar, and Gerbert. And if Laon was the great centre of the history of the tenth century, it is to Rheiuas that we owe the preservation of that history. By a sort of special propriety, the two great eccle siastical foundations of llheims supplied the two historians who recorded the memorable struggle between Laon and Taris, between the Frank and the Frenchman. The metro politan church numbered the discreet, if Home what meagre, Flodoard among its canons, while the livelier tale of Iticher was penned under the shadow of the great monastic church of Saint ltemigius. To an Englishman Laon and Rhei ma have each alike a special interest of its own. The king who made Laon most famous was all but an Englishman, the son of an English mother, the pupil of an English uncle. And each of the two minsters ef llheims has its points of connection with England. The abbey of Saint Remigius became in the ele venth century a sort of place of meeting for men of other lands, amongst whom some of the most famous Englishmen of those days were not slow to appear. And in the metropolitan church, the crowning-place of the Gapetian kings, there is one special crowning of which we can hardly fail to think. On that spot we cannot but be re minded of the day which forever checked the English dominion in France, when the Maid stood by at the consecration of the king for wnoni sne nad opened a pathway to ms crown, and when Englishmen were driven to strive to wipe out the moral effect of that great rite by a fantastic coronation of their own king, not at Rheims but at Paris. Yet it may be some comfort to reflect that the formulas of the august ceremonial were borrowed from ourselves, and that the kings of the French were fain to be admitted to their office with rites which were at first devised for the sove reigns of the Island Empire. To write the early history of Rheims would be almost to write the early history of the Frankish Kingdom. We can hardly turn to a page ef Frankish history without lighting on some mention of the metropolitan city. A king is to crowned or to be buried; a saint is to be translated or a synod is to be held; a primate is to be appointed or to be deposed, and all Gaul and half Europe is in excitement about the merits of the several candidates. In the tenth century especially, when the see of Rheims had attained something like the position of a German ecclesiastical princi pality, the revolutions of the Arch bishroprio, each commonly involving a eiege of the city, well nigh divide the interest with the revolutions of the kingdom. Nor is Rheims less fertile in matters of more purely ecclesiastical concern; it has its crop of saints and of miraoles of which any church in Christendom might be proud. Let us take one out of many. A band of sacrilegious Northmen, bent on plundering the city and the minster of Saint Remigius without its walls, were kept then from their wicked purpose by a preternatural mist of three days which hindered them from finding their way either to the minster or to the city. But the main historical interest of Rheims mainly grows out of the connection of the city and its Primates with the conversion of the German conquerors of Gaul. It is with a true instinct that the crowning group of statues on the west front of the metropolitan church represents Hlodwig in the font, his Christian wife on one side of him, and the olfl ciatingPrimate on the other. Thelegendof the miraculous oil who does not remember Mr. Froude and Saint Ampull ? is possibly due to the inventive brain of Hincmar; but it is certain that the baptism of Hlodwig made the fortune of Rheims. It was no doubt the memory of that great event which made Rheims so often chosen for royal consecra tions and royal burials, till, under the Parisian dynasty, it became the one place where a king of the French could be rightly admitted to his office. And whatever may have been Remigius' other claims to sanctity. we may suspect that, had he not had the good fortune to baptize tne nrst t runkisu kmc;, he might never have become the patron of his city, ana tne minster wnica Dears ms name might have been dedicated under some other invocation. But one special feature in the history of Rheims, the almost habitual way in which it was chosen as the seat of eccle siastical synods, was no doubt, partly at least, owing to its geographical position. The city was conveniently placed for the assem bling of prelates from both the Eastern and Western kingdoms. It lay not far from their common frontier, and it possessed the advantages of lying within the boundaries of the weaker State of the two, and of being the seat of a prelate who came nearer than any other west of the Maes to the position of un ecclesiastical sovereign. The interest of Rheims, historical and architectural, is pretty nearly divided between the two great "ohmrob.es of the eity. Those two churches, it will be remembered, were confounded in a grotesque passage of Dean ' Stanley, ' who characteritically went on to build up an. elaborate theory on, his own ' blunder. But any one who, even without ' going to llheims, has paid common attention to ecclesiastical history, knows, how to dis tinguish the two. No two churches can be more different in their aspect The metro politan church of Our Lady, the seat of the long line of Primates of Belgio Gaul and Premier Peers of France, is well knowu as ' one of the noblest churches of Gaul and of Chris tendom. The church with which it seems most natural to compare it is the nearlv contemporary cathedral of Amiens. Each has the advantage, as much to be prized in an artistic as to be regretted in an his torical point of view, of being a perfect and almost untouched specimen of a single style, and that the beautiful French style of the thirteenth century. Both these noble buildings are intensely French; neither shows any sign of that approach to English or Norman work of which we can see some clear traces at Laon. All the distinctive characteristics of the great French churches come out strongly in both of them; the apse and its surrounding chapels, the vast portals of the western front, the great rose windows of the transepts. In point of height Amiens surpasses Rheims; but we are not sure that this excess of height is wholly an advantage on the side of Amiens. The vast height of Amiens not only cuts off all hope of a central tower, bi;t deprives the church of any adequate towers at all. The western towers of Amiens, if towers we may call them, strive, feebly and with imperfect suooess, to rear themselves above the ridge of that mighty roof. At Rheims two noble and well-proportioned towers, still expecting their unfinished spires, form the proper finish of the building. In short, while Amiens outside is simply shapeless, Rheims forms as well-designed a whole as any church can which lacks that crown of the central tower which English and Norman eyes will always crave as indispensa ble to a perfect outline. The vast height of Amiens, again, makes the transept fronts look almost like towers, while at Rheims real fronts with side towers, like those of Bordeaux and Rouen, have been designed and partly carried up. In the internal effect Amiens must claim the first place; the majesty of its vast scale and faultless proportion puts it above competi tion. Yet Rheims treads close upon its heels, and in some of its arrangements it is perhaps more satisfactory. The proportions of the arcade, triforium, and clecustory at Rheims are admirably managed, and the pillars are better and more truly Gothic than those at Amiens. The huge floriated capitals, how ever, are certainly disproportioned, and they arrest the eye more strongly than the capi tals of clustered pillars ought to do. In point of furniture Rheims has nothing to set against the unrivalled stalls and sculp tures of Amiens. But Rheims, like Saint Ouens, seems to us to gain greatly, both in side and out, from the absence of those chapels between the buttresses of the nave which in some churches were designed from the beginning, and which at Amiens are a later addition. At Amiens by this means the bold simplicity of the ranges of buttresses at Rheims and Saint Ouens has been exchanged for a flat wall. A great deal of the internal effect of Rheims cathedral is due to its great store of rich and early stained glass and to the admirable color of its stone. It is a church through which one may walk day after day and find new beau ties at every visit. And it is pleasant too to sit and study the exquisite work of the west front, its harmonious proportions, its noble doorway and rose wmdows, its ranges of sculpture adapted to the architecture and not thrusting themselves forward to its prejudice. And we need not say that there is no luck of historic interest in a church which has wit nessed the crowning of so many kings, and where the interest of the two latest corona tions is certainly not the least. Here Louis the Sixteenth and Charles the Tenth received the crown which each was in different ways to lose. Here Louis the Eighteenth forbore to seek the outward ensigns of a kingship which he, alone of the three brothers, con trived to keep to the end of his days. And it is with a strange feeling that we tread the for saken chambers of the palace, standing, through so many changes of the last forty years, swept and garnished, ready for the next ruler who may deem the consecrating oil of Rheims to be a needful part of his investi ture. Yet, with all this, a higher interest still attaches to the other great church of Rheims, the famous Abbey of Saint Remi gius, "the mickle minster at Remys as it stands recorded in the language of our ancient chronicles. To an ordinary observer there is no comparison between the two churches. Without, instead of the noble towers of the metropolitan church, Saint Remigius pre sents an outline which is absolutely shape less; a long awkward length of roof is broken only by a difference of height in the roof itself, and by way of towers there is nothing beyond two insignificant turrets flanking the west front. Within, instead of the uniform style and soaring height of the cathedral, we have a building whose main feature is in its enormous breadth, and whose architec ture, simple and massive, is a mere patchwork of various dates. The tomb and shrine of the saint himself, which by unusual good luck have weathered all storms, are fine in themselves, but of late eate and workmanship, the tomb being sur rounded by figures representing those twelve Peers of France, temporal and ecclesiastical, who were extemporized, as it would seem, to suit the convenience of Philip Augustus. Yet, as the eye ranges over the wide expanse of the "mickle minster," it soon learns to feel that excess of breadth, coupled with the vast length of Saint Remigius, has in it an element of majesty of a diff erent kind, no less then excess of height. The eye also soon picks out much detail of no small beauty, and it rests with greater satisfaction still on parts of the building which, though they have small claims to artistic beauty, have an in terest not easily surpassed alike in the his tory of art and in the general history of Europe. The mere antiquity of the building would alone moke it worth a pilgrimage. The nave and transepts of Saint Re migius are among the few buildings on so great a scale which belong to the first half of the eleventh century. By their side the metropolitan church seems comparatively modern. The two hundred years whioh sepa-, rate tnem saw no smaii revolutions in the building art. Saint Remigius indeed cannot go back, any more than the cathedral, to the old days of Meriwings and Karlincs. No stone remains in either church to witness to the one day when Rheims beheld the conse cration of an Emperor. It is not quite clear which of the two minsters was the scene of the great, rite of 810, when Pope Stephen drew near to the city, when Louis, already King and Ciusar by every temporal title, went forth to meet the Pontiff, bowed , himself thrice before him, led him to the church and received the Im perial Crown and the Imperial unction Vi J a Vanila Itvif 111 TiAairHaat naua A dao t Yi A existing church contain any portion which the eves of that Pope and that Ciusar could have looked upon. Far different is it with, the next time when a Tope and a Cwsar met in the metropolis of Belgio Gaul. In 104!) "the mickle minster at Remys," begun in 1005, had been brought to perfection by itfl Abbot Heremar. A goodly assemblage, in deed, was gathered for itH hallowing. A Pope, and that Pope Leo the Ninth, came to per form the ceremony; an Emperor, and that Em peror Henry the Third, formed one of a con gregation gathered from all parts of Western Christendom. Few assemblies could be more illustrious than the Synod gathered at the bid ding of such a Pontiff and such a Cmsar. One thing that specially strikes us is that in the list ef prelates and ambassadors no mention occurs of the King of Paris, and only a very secondary mention of the Primate of llheims. The Metropolitan of Trier was there; so were the Metropolitans of Lyons and of Besancon these two last still cities of the Empire not yet swallowed up by the Parisian Maelstrom. But the prelate of Rheims itself is placed lowest on the prima tial list, and Pope and Emperor seem to have held their Synod by their own authority without any reference to the Capetian King. What, they might well ask, was he in the presence of the Lord of the World and the worthy Pontiff of his choosing ? When Sun and Moon shone side by side in all their brightness, such lesser lights might well withdraw their shining. For once in the world's history, the successor of Augustus and the successor of Peter Bat side by side to judge the nations and their rulers. For once the two swords clashed not with one another, but were drawn to smite with a common blow a host of ecclesiastical and moral offenders. Most of them were the princes or prelates within the Parthian kingdom, and among them the sen tence went forth which forbade William the Norman to aspire to the marriage of his Flemish kinswoman. And among the crowd which filled the minster stood three ambas sadors of England, one of whom, Dnduc, the Saxon Bishop of Somersetshire, first raised to dignity by the Danish (Jnut, and now sent by the English Eadward to the Frankish Henry and the Lotharingian Bruno, might seem in a special way to represent on Gaulish soil the union of all the brunches or the Teu tonic race. And the stones on which they gazed we can gaze on still; the mas sive arches and rude capitals ot the church which Leo hallowed are still there, partly disguised by additions of the next age, but still essentially unaltered, forming one of the most living witnesses of an ago of which so lew great architectural works remain. And yet another thought occurs to connect those massive arches with the history of our country. Twelve years later Gyrth and Tostig and Eoldred stopped there on - their return from their Roman pilgrimage, and there liurcnard, the son of iSiltgur, the grandson of Leofric, was buried in the churchyard of the minster. To the heart of an Englishman the thought of Popes and Ctesars hardly speaks with so much force as the thought that the stones on which he is gazing were gazed at in all the freshness of their first days by the stainless hero of his own land. And yet Rheims contains one piece of an tiquity besides which even the minster of Saint Remigius may seem modern. The 1'orta Martis, the old Roman gate, still sur vives, speaking of days when Popes were as yet unknown, when Crcsars still bowed, not at the shrine of a Christian saint, but at the altar of the father of Rome's founder. The genuine fragment is a noble one, but will it be believed that the demon of restoration has seized even on this venerable relic, and that modern work, modern pillars, modern capi tals, are brought into close neighborhood with the grand, if shattered, remains of the time which has so utterly passed away. Other objects of interest, both ecclesiastic and domestic, may be found in Rheims, but these are the chief. A city which can show one church of such artistio perfection as the Metropolitan Church, and another of such surpassing historic interest as the "mickle minster," claims a high place, indeed, among the histortc cities of Christendom. FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOF SAKE REMOVAL. PARREL, HERRING & CO. 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Sign of the Golden Lamb, Are now closing ont their entire stock of "W inter O o o 1 s, consuming or CLOTns, cassimeres, vest- INO8, etc, of the best makes and finest texture, which they are selling far below Importers' prices. preparatory to the reception of their SPRING STOCK OK GOODS. 3 28 mws GROCERIES AND PROVISIONS. jyjICIIAEL MEAGHER & CO., No, S23 sontn sixteenth street, Wholesale and Retail Dealers In PROVISIONS. OYSTERS AND TERRAPINS. Btabler'i Kxtra Canned CORN. .. ,. .. pAS. PKAUHKS. Maryland Canned TOM ATOKB. Katra Canned ASPAKAUUS. 28 IIARDIING'S EDITIONS OF THE HOLT BIBLE. FAMILY, PULPIT, AND PHOTOGRAPH BIBLES, FOR WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY PRESENTS. ALSO, PRESENTATION BIBLES FOR CHURCHES, CLERGYMEN, SOCIETIES AND TEACHERS, EIC. New and superb assortment, bonnd In Rich Levant Turkey Morocco, Paneled and Ornamental designs, equal to the London and Oxford editions, at less than half their prices. No. 3M CHESNUT Street. STRENGTH, BEAUTY, CHEAPNESS COMBINED! HARDING'S PATENT CHAIN-BACK FU0T0GRAPI1 ALBLM8. For Wedding, Holiday, or Birthday Presents, these Albums are particularly adapted. The book trade and dealers a fancy articles will find the most extensive assortment of Photograph Albums in the country, and superior fi any hereto fore made. For great strength, durability, and cheapness, Harding's Patent Chain-back Albums are unrivalled. Purchasers will And It greatly to their advantage to examine these new lines of goods be fore making up their orders for stock. Also, a large and splendid assortment of new styles of Photograpn Albums made lu the usual manner. No. 320 CHESNUT Street, 1 17 Philadelphia. rp H I PRINCIPAL DEPOT FOR TBI SALS OF REVENUE STAM P 8 No. 804 CHESNUT STREET. CENTRAL OFFICE, NO. 105 S. FIFTH STREET (Two doors below Cbesnut street), ESTABLISHED 18CS. The sale of Revenue Stamps Is Btlll continued at the Old-Established Agenclce. Tlio stock comprises every denomination printed by the Government, and having at all ttmas a large supply, we are enabled to fill and forward (by Mall or Express) all orders, Immediately upon receipt, matter of great Importance. United States Notes, National Bank Notes, Drafts on Philadelphia, and Post Office Orders received In payment. Any Information regarding the decisions of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue cheerfully and gratuitously furnished. Revenue Slumps printed upon Drarts, Checl Receipts, etc. The following rates of commission are allowed Stamps and Stamped Paper: On t'2C and op wards. t per 100 " 8 " 800 " 4 " Address aU orders, etc., to STAMP AGENCY, No. 804 CHESNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. CORN KXCHANQK BAG MANUFACTORY', JOHN T. BAILKY, H. X. oorner Of Jd A KK KT and WATER Street) Philadelphia. . DEALER IN BAU8 AND BAOODia Of ever description, for . Grain, Flour. Salt. rlur-PbosyhaU Of Ume. Boa) Largo aao aaU OtTNN Aa& bAd. PROPOSALS. JROrOBAI.H FOR STAM TED ENVELOPES AND L WRAPPERS. POBTOFFICI DKrArJTstltKT, ' January 10, lfrro. J Sealed PmpoMlfl will be received nntll 8 P. M. on the 1st dav of MARCH, 1B70, for farninhing all the "Stamped Envelopes" and "Newspaper Wrap, pers" which this Department mar require during a period of fonr years, commencing 1st of July, 1870, via. STAM FBI ENVELOPES. No. 1. Not sue. H by v inches, of white paper. ro, s. urmnary letter sue, M6 try fH Inches, of white, buff, canary, or cream colored paper, or in such proportion of either a tuny vv rrtiniieu. No. 8. Full letter sice (nnonmmed on flnn. for circulars). BV by b Inches, of the same colors u no. v, ana uuder a like condition aa to the propor tion of each. No. 4. Full letter size. 8V by BJrf lnohes. of same colors as No. 9, and under a like condition as to the proportion or ea;n. No. 6. Extra letter sire (ungnmmed on flap, for circulars), 8X by 61i Inches, of same colors aa No. 8, and undfcr a like condition as to the proportion of each. No. 6. Extra letter slr.e, 8V by 6V Inches, of same colors as No. S, and under a like condition as to the proportion or eaciu No. 7. Oillcial sire. B' by 8X Inches, of same colors as No. 8, and under a like condition aa to the) proportion 01 eacn. No. 8. Extra oillcial slse. 4. by Inches, ot same colors as No. 3, and under a like condition as to the proportion of each. NKWSPAl'KR WRAPPERS, X D7 X Inches, of butt or raanllla paper. All the above envelopes and . wrappers vo bo J 4" bossed with postage stamps of such denomination!, styles, and colors, and to hear such printing on t a face, and te be made in the most thorough manner of piiper of approved quality, manufactured specially for the purpose, with such water marks or other de vices to prevent Imitation as the Postmaster-General may direct The envelopes to be thoroughly and perfectly gummed, the gumming on the flap of each (except for clrculare) to be put on not leas than half an Inch In width the entire length. The wrappers to bo gummed not lesB than three-fourths of an inch la width across the end. All envelopes and wrappers must be banded In parcels of tweuty-Uvo, and packed In strong fasteboard or straw boxes, each to contain not lest han two hundred and Ufiy of the letter or extra, letter size, and one hundred each of the oill cial or extra oillcial size, separately. The news paper wrappers to bo packed lu boxes to contain not lees than two hundred and fifty each. The boxes are to be wrapped and sealed, or securely fastened In strong manllla paper, so as to safely bear trauxportation by . mall for delivery to poHtniusR'n. When two thousand or more enve lopes are required to 1111 the order of a postmaster, the straw or pasteboard boxes containing the same must be packed In strong wooden cases, well strapped with hoop-iron, and addressed; but When less than two thousand are required, proper labels of direction, to be furnished by an agent of the Department, must be placed upon each, package by . the contractor. Wooden cases, con taining envelopes or wrappers to be transported by water routes, must be provided with suitable watcr-prooilng. The whole to be done under the Inspection and direction of an agent of the Department 1 he envelopes and wrappers must be famished and delivered with all reasonable despatch, complete In all respects, ready for use, and In such quantities as navy be required to till the darly orders of post masters ; the deliveries to be made either at the Post Oitlce Department, Washington, D. C, or at the oltlce of an agent duly authorized to Inspect and re ceive the same; the place ef delivery to be at the option of the PoHtmoHter-General, and the cost of delivering as well as all expense or packing, ad dressing, labeling, and water-proofing, to be paid by the contractor. Bidders are notified that the Department will re quire, as a condition of the contract ,that the en velopes and wrappers shall be manufactured and stored in such manner as to ensure security agaiust loss by lire or theft. The manufactory must at all times be subject to the lnspeutlon of an agent of the Department, who will require the stipulations of the contract to be faithfully observed. The dies for embossing the postage scamps on the envelopes and wrappers are to be executed to the satisfaction of the Postmaster-General, In the best stle. and they are to bo provided, renewed, and kept in order at the expense of the contractor. The department reserves the right of requiring new dies for any stamps, or denominations of stamps not now used, mid any changes of dies or colors shall be made without extra charge. Specimens of the stamped envelopes and wrap pers now In UBe may be seen at any of the principal post oiiices, but these specimens are not to be re garded as tne style and quality fixed by the depart ment as a standard for the new contract; bidders are therefore invited to submit samples of other and different qualities and styles, Including the paper proposed aa well as the manufactured en velopes, wrappers, and boxes, and make their bids accordingly. The contract will be awarded to the bidder whose proposal, although It be not the lowest, Is con sidered most advantageous to the Department, taking into account the prices, quality of the sam ples, workmanship, and tlio sufficiency and ability of the bidder to manufacture and deliver the envelopes and wrappers In accordance with the terms of this advertisement: and no proposal will be considered unless accompanied by a sufficient and satisfactory guarantee. The Postmaster-General also reserves the right to reject any and all bids. If in his Judgment the interests of the Government require lu Before closing a contract the successful bidder may be required to prepare new d.es, and submit Impressions thereof. Tub ubb or tbb fhbhknt diks MAY OK HAY MOT BB CONTINUED. Bonds, with approved and sufficient en re ties, In the sum of 2fl0,ooo, will be required for the faithful performance of the contract, as required by the seventeenth section of the act of Congress, approved the 26th of August, 1842, and payments under sold contract will be made quarterly, after proper ad justment of accounts. The Postmaster-General reserves to himself the right to annul the contract whenever the same, or any part thereof, Is ottered for sale for the purpose of speculation ; and under no circumstances will a transfer of the contract be allowed or sanctioned to any party who shall be, In the opinion of the I'OBtmsster-Ueneral, lens able to fulfill the condi tions thereof than the original contractor. The right Is also reserved to annul the contract for a fuilure to perform faithfully any of its stipulations. The number of envelopes of different sizes, and of wrappers Issued to Postmasters during the fiscal year ended June 80, 1669, was as follows, vis. : No, 1. Note size 1,114,000. No. 8. Ordinary letter size; (not heretofore used). 1 No. 8. Fall letter size, (ungnmmed, for circulars) 4,160,000. No. 4. Full letter Size 67,867,600. No. e. Extra letter size, (ungummed, for circulars! 843,600. No, 6. Extra letter size 4,204,800. No. 7. Official size 04,660. No. 8. Extra official siz 1700. Wrappers B,696,S50. Bids should be securely enveloped And sealed, marked "Proposals for Stamped Envelopes and Wrappers," and addressed to the Third Assistant FoBtinantcr-General, Post Office Department, Wash lugton, D. C. JOHN A. J. CRESWEU, 1 11 eodtMl Postmaster General. r0 ALL WANTING FARMS IN A LOCAL- lty Exempt from Fevers and Lung Complaints. To Farmers, Horticulturists, Mechanics, Capitalists, Gentlemen of Leisure, Invalids, and all wanting a homestead In a climate of unsurpassed salubrity, exempt from the rigors of a Northern winter, and In close connection with tbo commercial ocutras oX the South. Few If any soctlons offer such a combi nation of inducements as the town of Aiken, S. C, and Its vicinity for a desirable and permanent home. A pamphlet of 84 pages now ready, containing a description of the climate, soils, and the nuturo of the products in the vicinity of Aiken, eHpm-UUy fruit, cereals, cotton, corn, vegetables, etc.,' In cluding extracts from letters of dlstJngulNluid visi tors, correspondents, action of town come'Ds in vltlng emigrants, etc., to which Is edited a evscrlp. tive list of property for sale, Including improved farms, orchards, vineyards, water power", kitolln deposits, unimproved lands, and town resldoncoa. For sale by E. J. C. WOOD, Real E-suwa Aeut, Aiken, 8. C. The book will be sent by malt on receipt cf price, 60 cents. Address J. l utiltliY, Publisher, P. O. Box No. H39, New Vor, until 1st of February, after that time at Aiken, a c. 11 17 3ra