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NEVV-YORK^TRIB?NE. THE NEW-YORK. DAILY TRIBUNE 18 PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING. SUNDAY EXCEPTED. at WiusMC-rrRtrr, (optosits cinr hall,) jsnw-roRi. ?nd delivered toCdySursscribersfor Sine Cent*per week, or, when they prefer, they can pay m advance it the Ile-k for ox moutas or a yesir at the same rate, rjmgle copies Two Cent?. Maii?ubscnt?ersFivel>dlaniper annu:n, in advance, nod the pn,ssr to no cb?c esaitmued beyond Ore time for which it is paid, r*ulisenption? taken tor six months. Three Dollars id advance required in all exchanges with Country Newspaper-. Ihulv Papers received at this Orf.es whose terms ate hut her than those of Tue Trunct- t are not allowed any difference, TKKMS or APVKETtinSe. Prot Lmes, or less? Pint insertion. 3b cenu. " ,*? for each ?ulnsyjer.t insertion. 12>? '* 7V? Lmu and over six?First insertion. So || ?* for each subsequent insertion.. i?> '" " for one week.t-1 3d " " for one month.I5W H-inite/*, Funeral Notices, ike. not exceeding fine lines. . * ' KT" AU Advertisements inserted in this paper appear both in the Morning and in the Evening Edition. Yearly Advertisers?not to exceed 12 lines, with privates.'? of renewing advertisement* at pleasure, (payable quarterly or halCyearly in odvrir.c*).?10 ?/ NKW-YORK YVKBKhY TRIBl'S'E, A VERY LARGE PAPER. FOR THE COUNTRY. is rcBUsnsn kvkrt Saturday moritiso, *.t the low price of TWO DOLLARS perarmum. in advance. THE TRIBUNE Review. FRENCH NOVELISTS OF THE DAY: B A LZAC.GEORGE SAND??. - EUGEN E SUE. The thirteenth number of the " Wtttdering Jew," just published "by Winchester, has delivered us from our anxieties us to :be objects of Jesuit persecution, though by u. coup de main clumsier than is usual even with Sue. Now, wc have mat lets' arranged for a few months more of cou'est with lie Society of Jesus, but we ihink our au? thor must depend for interest during the Fast Vol? ume, no longer on the conduct of the plot, but tin the portraiture of characters. It is cheering to know hnw great is the influ? ence such a writer as Hue ex'-rli-, from hin energy of feeling on nitre subjects of moral intercut. It is trua that he Mas ulso much talent ?md a various experience of life; hut writers who far surpas? him here, i-.s we think Balxic doc;?, wanting this heart of faith, have no infliionco, except merely on the Utstes of their readers. Wo hear much lamentation among good peo? ple at tho introduction of so many French novels among us, corrupting, they say, our youth hy pictur-.s of decrepit vice and prurient crime, such as would never, otherwise, he dreamed of here, and corrupting it the more that such knowledge i? so precocious?for the Maine tc isou that a hoy may be more deeply injured by initiation into wickedness than a man, for he is not only robbed of hie virtue, but prevented iiom developing the gtreogth that might restore it. But it is tireless to bewail what is tho inevitable result of lite movement of our time. Europe must pi ur her corruptions, no less then her riches, on our shores, buh in the form of books and of living men. She cannot, if she would, check the tide which bears them hilherward; no defcnfcs are possible, on our vast extent of shore, that c:m preclude their ingress. We have exulted in premature and hufty gro? th; we must b'aco ourselvts to bear the evils that eiifcutj. Our only hope lies in lous? ing, in our own community, a sou! of goodness, u wise aspiration, that shall give us strengih to assimilate this unwholesome food to better sub stance, or caet off" its contaminations. A mighty sea of ltie swells within our nation, and, if theic be salt tnough, foreign bodies shall not have power tu breed infection there. We have hud some opportunity to observe that the worst works offered are rejected. On tho steamboats wc have seen translations of vile books, bought by those who did not know from the names of their iihthors what to expect, torn, after a curt-jry glance at their contents, and scut, tered to the winds. Not even the all but ull.powcr fill (J t-irc to get one's nmnay's worth, since it hail onco been paid, cou'd contend against the blush of shame that rose on tho chctkof tho reader. It would be desirable for our people to know something of these writers and of the position they occupy abroad ; for the nature of their cir? culation, rather than its txtcnt, might be tho guide bolh to translator and buyer. The object of tho first is generally money?of tho hut, amusement/ But the merest mercenary might prefer to pass his time in translating a good book, and our imitation of Europo does not yet go so far that tho American milliner can ba de ponded on to copy any thing from tho Parisian grisette, except her cap. One of the most unexceptionable and attraerive writors of modern Franco is De Vichy; Hie life has been passed in the Army, but many years of peace have given him time for literary culture, while his acquaintance with tho traditions of thu Army, from the days of its dramatic achieve? ments under Bonaparte, supply the finest mate? rials both for narrative and reflection. His tales aro written with infinit? grace, refined eensibility, and a digoified view. 'Iis treatment of a subject shows that closcnest of grasp and clearr.cfs of sight which aro rarely attained by one who is not at homo in active as well as thoughtful life. Ho has much pent'.ration, too, and has touched some of the must delicate springs of human action. His work^ have been written in hours of leisure ; this has diminished their number but given him many advantages over the thousands 1 of professional writers that fiil the coft'oe houses of Paris by day, und its garrets by night. Wc wish ho wcro mure read here in the original t with him would be found go id French, end the manners, thoughts and feelings of h cosmopolite gentleman. Wc have seen, with pleasure, one or two of his tales translated into tho pages of the Democratic Reviow. But the throe who have been and will be most read here, as they occupy the first rank in their own country, are Balzac, Ucokge Sand and Eu .sink Sue. " Balzac ins been a very fruitful writer, and as The is fond of ju-sgier's tricks of every description, ' and holds nothing earnest or sowed, he is rain *f the wonderful celerity with which some of his ?orks, and those quite as good as any, have been written. Thoy scent to have been conceived, eomrtosed end written down with that degrte of ?peed with which it is possible to lay pen to pa per. Indeed, we think he Cdiittol be surpassed in the ready and suutuiiiod command of nisresourcfs. Bi3 aim. st unsurpassed quickness and fidelity of ije, both as lo the dtspasit on of external objects, tod the symptoms of human passion, combined ?Rh a strung memory, have filled his mind with ?ateriala, und we doubt uot that if his thoughts ?sold be put into writing with the swiftness of bought, he would give us one ofhis-noveis every *eck in the year. ? Here end our praises of Balzac; what he is, ??? man, m daily life, we know not. He must ?agmally hove had a heart, or he could not read **cll the hearts of others; perhaps there are private tics that touch him. But as a writer, **r was the modern Mephistopheles, the sptnt **tdenicth." mom sxmvihiltr ,.?,......1 .i_ , I denicth," more worthily represented than by Sa combines the spirit oPthe man of science, ?4 that of the amateur collector. He delights itadyze, to claaaify; there is no anomaly loo **ftiroua, no apeciroen too revolting, to ensure ^ ^?t, but passionless scrutiny. But theu? - t?ste and jadgm?Dt to know wnat is fair, BY GREELEY & Me EL RA 1 VOJ.. IV. NO. ?56 rire and exquisite He takes up such an object j cnefully and puts it in a good light- Bat hi has j no hatred for whit is loathsome, no contc.-.p^or ! whr-.t is bao-c, no 1 ive for what is lovely, no faith in whet is noble. To him there is no virtue and 00 vice; men and women arc more orle-s finely i organized; noble erii tender conduct is more agreeable than the reveree, hecau.-c it argues bet i tcr health; that is all. Nor is tnis from an intellectual r&lmnces, nor from an unuiusl power ni anil izir.g motives, ;ind penetrating delusions merely ; neither ia it mere in difference. Tnereis a toucn of the demon, also, in Balzac; the c Id but gayly familiar demon, and the smile of the amateur yields easily to a sneer, as he delights to show jou on what fool juices lac fair fl >wtr was fed. He is a thorough and wil? ling materialist. Tre trance of Religion is con? gestion of the brain ; the joy of the Poet the ;hr:l ling of 'ho blood in the rapture of sense; and every good not only rises from, but hastens back into, the jaws of dean and nothingness : a rain bow arch above a pc.-tiiential chaos '. Tnun Bslzac, with ail h's force arid fulness of talent, never rises one moment into the region ol genius. For genius is, in its natuie, positive and creative, and cannot exist where tli-jrc is no h^Mrt tobtlieve in realities. Nciih<r can he have a permanent influence on a naime which is not th'rrntighly cornipt. He might for. a while t-Up; gcr an ingenuous mind which had not yet thought for iticlf. But this could not last Hie unbelief ruake s his thought loo shallow. He has nit '.hat power which a mind, oniy in part sophisticated, may retain, where the heart t-t.il 1 heats warmly, though it sometimes beats amiss. Write, paint, argue, as you will, where there is a sound spot in any human hang, he cannot l?c made to believe that this p e cut bodily frame is more iban a tern porary condition of his being, though ?meto which he may have become shamefully enslaved by fault of inheritance, education, or h.sown carelessness. Taken in his oven way. we know no modern tragedies more powerful than Balzac's " Eugenie Grandel," "Sweet Ten," "Search after the Ab? solute," "Father Goriol." See (here goodness, aspiration, the loveliest instincts,stifled,strangled by fate, in the form of our own britle nalute ? The fate of the ancient Prometheus washappiuc6s to that of tin bc who must pay forevtr having believed there was divine fire in Heaven, by ago? nies of despair, snd consctous?degrad?tion, un. known to tho'c who began by believing, man to be i he rnoit richly endowed of bruire?no more : Balzac is admirable in his description ol I >ok, tone, gesture. He has a keen sense of whatever is peculiar to the individual. Nothing in mod< rn romance surpasses the death-scene of Father Go rot, the Parisian Lear, in the utmost immortal lila with which the parental instincts tire display cd. And with equal precision and delicacy oi shading he will paint the slightest by play in the manners of some young girl. "Seraphitus" is merely u specimen ?f his grcut powers of in'ellcctuul transposition. Amid his delight at the bolanicul richtet of the new imd el? evated region in which he is traveling, we catch, if only by echo, the hem and chuckle of the Fr< nch materialist. No more of him !?Wc leave him lo his s'iiei dal woik. An ctit'toly opposite character, in every lead ing trait, yet bearing traces of the same influ? ences, is the celebrated GeoKUK Sand. It it prob ably known to n great proportion of readers lluit this writer is a woman, who writes under the name of and frequently assumes the drc^s and munnois of a man. It is alro known that she has not only broken the marriage bond, tmd, since that, formed other connections independento! the civil or ecclcsia>-ticul sanction, but that sric first rose into notice through works which systematic ally assailed the present insiitution of marriage and the social bonds which are connected with it. No fact? ara morcndap'ed to stattle every feel? ing of our community ; but, since the works of Sand are read here, notwithstanding, and can? not fail to ba so while they exert so imporlant nn influence abroad, it would bc well they should be read intelligently, as to the circums'anccs of their birth, and their tendency. George Sand we esteem to bc a person of strong paasions, but of original nobleness and a love of right sufficient to guide them till to the service of worthy aims. But she fell upon evil times. She was given in marriage according to iho fashion of the old regime; she was taken from a couvent whore she had heard a great deal about the law of God and the example of Jesus, into a society where no vice-was proscribe d, if it would wear the clock of hypocrisy. She found herself impatient of de? ception, and loudly called by pnseion: she yielded; but t-he cou'd not do so, as others did, sinning against what she owned tobctho rule of right, and the will of Heaven. Site protested ; she examined; she assailed. She 'hacked into the roots of things,' and tho bold sound of her axe called around her every foe that finds a home amid the growths of civtlizati ?n. Still she persisted. " If it be real," thought she, "it cannot be e'esiroyrd ; ss to what is'false, the sooner it goes the better; and I, 'or one, had rather perish benenn its fa>l than wilher in its shade." Schiller puts into the mouth of Matv Stuart these words as her only plea : " The world knows tho worst of me; aud I may beiast'tbat, though I have erred, 1 um better than my reputation." Sr-nti may sty tho same. All is open, noble; the free descriptions, the sophistry of passion aro, at least, redeemed by a desire for ttutit as .-trung as ever beat in. any heart. To the weak or tmthink, ing the reading of such books may not bo desira? ble, for only those who lake exercise as men con digest strong meat. But to any one able to un? derstand the position and circumstances, we be lteve this reading cannt.t luil of b; inging geod impulse*, valuable suggestions, and it is quite free from that subtle mtasma which taints so large a portion of French literature, r.ot less since ths Revolution than before. Trns we say to the lor. cign reader. To her own country Sand is a boon p;ecious and prissd, both as a warning and a leader, for which none there can bo ungrateful She has dared to probe its festering wounds, and if they be not past all surgery, she is one who, most of any, helps toward a cure. Would, indeed, the surgeon had come with quite clean bands I A woman of Sand's gearius, as ftee, as bold, and pure from even the suspicion of error, might have filled an apuslolic station among her people Thea with what forco had como her cry, " If it be false, give it up ; but, if it be true, keep to it?one or tho other !** But wo have read all we wish to 6ny upon this subject, lately uttered just from tho quarter we could wish. It. is such a woman, so unblemished in character, so high in aim, and pore in suul^ NEW-FORK, that should address this other, as noble in nature, but clouded by error, and struggling with cir Ctnn stances It is sue?! \vomcn that will do such j ^t.ce. They arc not afraid to look for virtue tnd r~ply tu aspiration, among tb.se who have not' dwelt in decencies f< r ever.' -It ir a source of pride and happiness to read this adores- from the heart of Elizabeth Bamtt: TO GEORGE SAM". A K?mt. ! Thou larc:--brair.ed wom*n and l&reu-heajted n;*n, Self called George Surnd ! whose soul, aruir: the Of thy tumultuous senses moans defiance, [lions And answers rosr for roar, es spirits can: 1 would seme mild miraculous thunder ran Abore?ib' applauded circus, in appliance Of thine own nobler natme's str-ugtii ind science, Ilrawiog two pirii'iRj, while is wirgs of swen, " From the stron? shouliiers, to amaze trie place With holier light I that thou to woman's claim, I And man V, might join, beside, the angel's (trace I Of a pure genius s;nctiri>-u from blame.; [ Till child and m-iidm pressed to tiiiue embrace, j To kia* upon 'hy lips a siainitsi fame. TO THE SAME, a REtoesmoM. True geuii?, byt true woman! dost deny I'hv woman's nature with a manly scorn, And break uwey the fjouds and armlets worn By weaker women in captivity ? Ah, vain dfoinl I ihm revolted cry Ie sollt cd in by a woman's voice forlorn :? Thy woman's hair, my sister, all unshorn. Floats beck disheveled strength in agony, l)ippro*iti^ thy man's n?me, and while bet?r I The world thou burnesr in a pout lire, We see thy Woman-heart beat evermore [higher, I'hrough the lys:?: flume. Beat purer, heart, and Till (Jed unsex thee nn thu spirit shore; To which ahmt- nnscxir.p, purely aspire. This ttst sonnet scciim to have been written aftc seeing the picture of Sand, which represents ncr in u man's dress, hut with Ions, loose hair, .?nd an eye whose mournful fire is impressive even in tne Ci-.ricatures. For some years Sand has quitted in i post of assailant. She hits seen that it is better to seek sotnfi form of life wot thy to supersede the old? lhati rudely to destroy it, heedless of tiic future. Her force is bonding to wards philanthropic meas? ures. She does not appear to possess mueh t f the constructive faculty, and, though her writ? ings command a great pecuniary compensation, and have a wide sway, it is rather for their ten? dency than their thought. Shu has reached no commanding point ol view from which she may give orders to the advanced corns. She is still at work with others in the trench, though sheweiks with more force thin almost any. Iopower, indeed, Sand bears the palm above any of the Novelists. She is vigorous in concep? tion, often great in lite apprehension and the con. trast of characters. She knows passion, as has btcn well hinted, at a white heal, when all the lower particles are remoulded by its power. Her descriptive talent i.-J very great, mid her poetic feeling exquis'te. She wants but little of being a poet, 1-ut tit it litile indispensable. Yet 6he keeps us always hovering on the borders of the enchanted fields. She has, to a signal degree, that power of exact transcript from her own mind of which almost i.li writers fail. There is no veil, no! alf-plastic integument between us and the thought. We vibrutc perfectly with it. This is her chief charm, and, next to it, is one in which wc know no French.writer that rcsom. bios her, except Rousseau, though he, indeed, is vastly her superior in ;t. This is, of concentrated j glow. Her nature glows beneath the words, tike lire beneath the ashes, deep ;?deep ! Her best works arc unequal; in many parts written hastily, or carelessly, or with flagging spirits. They all promise far more than they perform ; the work is not done masterly ; she has not readied that point where a writer sits a', the helm eif his own genius. Sometimes she plies ihcoar; sometimes she drifts. But what great? ness she has is genuine; there is no tinsel of any kind, no drapery carefully adjusted or chosen gesture about her. May Heaven lead her,?.t last, to the full possession of her best self, in har? mony with the higher laws of life! We arc not acquainted with all her works, but among those wc know, mention " La Roche Mau prat," " Andre"," " Jacque?," " Les Sept Curdee de la Lyre " and " Les Maitres Musaistcs," as representing her higher inspirations, her sincerity in expression, and her dramatic powers. They arc full of faults; still they show alto her scope and ami with some fairness, which those readers wh? dunce at first on such of her books a6 " Le? one Lioni," may fail to find, or even such as '?Simon "and " Spiridion," though into tho im? perfect web of these are woven threads of pure gold Such is the first impression made by the girl Fiamma, as she uppears before us, so noble, with the words " E l'onorc ;" such the thought in " Spiridion " of making the apparition the re? ward of virtue. The work she is now publishing, " Consttelo," with its sequel " Baroness de Rudolstadt" exhibit her genius poised on a firmer pedestal, breath? ing a fcrener air. Still it is faulty in conduct, and show some obliquity of vision. She has not reached the Interpreter's house yet. But when she does, she will have clues to guide many a pilgrim whom one lesi tried, less tempted than herself, could not help on the way. EuGSMf Sce is a wrieerof fur interior powets, on the whole, to Sand, though he possesses svme brillinnt talents that she wants. His aims and modes arc more externa 1 than hcr's ; he is not so deeply acquainted with his own nature, or with that of any other person. Like her, he began life in a corrupt society?struggled, doubted, half despa'red; erred, apparently, himself, and feared there was no virtue a-nd no truth; but is conquer? ing now. - Wc observe, in a late notice of Sue, that he begun to write at quite mature age, at the sug? gest on of a friend. We should think it was so; that he we.s by nature intended for a praclitail maD, rathtr than a writer, lie paints all his cha. ractets from the practical point of view. As an obs-erver, when free from exaggeration, he has as good en eye as Balzac, but he is far ra^re rarely thus free, for, in tempers ment, he is tuieqauJ and sometimes muddy. But then be has the heart and faith that Balzac wants, yet is less enslaved by emotion th^n Sand, therefore he has made more impression on his lime sud place than either. Wc refer now to his later woiks; though bis earlier show much talent, yet his pro? gress, both as a writer and thinker, has been so considerable lhat those of the last few years en? tirely eclip?e his earlier essays. These latter works ate the " Mysteries of Paris," " Matilda," and the M Wandering Jew," which is now in course of publication. In these, he has begun and is continuing a crusade sgainst the evils of a corrupt civilization which are in? flicting such woes end wrongs upon his ccntcm poraries. Sue, however, does not merely assail, but would build up. His anatomy is not intended to inj are OFFICE NO. I6G NAS^AU-STRE qT SATUBDi > FEBR the corpse, cr, like that of Balzac, to entertain the intellect ruerelv. Eitncs'Jy he b- pei to learn from it the remedies forrj:?case)ind the con^tt dps of health. Sue is a Socialist. He bc!iev?? he sec* !he means !>v which the he-trl of mankind ma be rr arc to beat with cne great hope, one love; and instinct With :nit tljou^ht, hatsipsr.f horn r are not tragedies. Trjis is the seeet of the deep interest ho has awtScn-'d in this country that he shares a hope which is, half unconscious!? to herscif", stT'inz all her veins. It is net so warmly out,spoken es in other lands, both because no sti h pervasive tils as yet yet call loudly i'ir're-dres?. and bec.:u*c private conservatism is here great, in proportion to the absence of authorized despotism We are not disposed to qaarrcl with this ; it is well for the valu2 of ne>v* thonch'.s to be tested by a 20 d deal of reetstrtn-c. Opposition, if it docs not preclude frre ci-cussion, is of n-e in educating men to know what they want. Only by intelli? gent men, exercised by thought and tried in vir tue, can such measures as Sue proposes be carried out; and when such Associates prcs-.nt themselves in sufficient numbers, we have no ?car but the cause of AEso''iati'.n, in its grander forms, ^ ill have fair play in America. As a writer, Sue shows h;s want of a high kind of imagination by his unshrinking portrait, urc of physical horrors. Wfl <*o cot believe any man could look upon some things he describes and live. He is very powerful in his description of the workings oi anmal nature; especially when he speaks of them in animals merely, they have the simplicity of the lower kind with the more full expression of humt-.n nature. His pic lures of women arc ol rare excellence, and it is obs.rvabic that the more simple itid pur.! the chaiactcr is, the more justice he does to it. This shows that, whatever his career may have been. Iiis heart is ii';cnnt>iiiiinated. Men ho does not describe so will, and fails entirely when iicaims at one gr.ind and simple enough for a great moral agent. His conceptions arc strong, but in execution he is tou melodramatic. Just com? pare his " Wandering Jew" with thatof Berenger. The latter is as diamond compared with charcoal. Then, like all those writers who write in num? bers that come out weekly or monthly, he abuses hinisell and his subject ; he often must; the ar rangement is false und mechanical. Tite attitude of Sue is at this moment imposing, as he stuuris, pen in hand?this Irs only weapon against an innumerable host of foes, the chain pion of p iven- , innocence and humanity, against superstition,selfishness and prejudice. Wht n his works are forgotten, and for all trttir str-jtigp /inis and brilliant decorations, they may ere lung be forgotten, still the writer's name shall be held in imperishable honor as the teacher of the gr-o. rant, the guardian of the weak, a true Tribune for the people of his own time. To sum up this imperfect account of theii me? lts, I see D-j Vigny, a retiring figure, the gen. tleman, the Bolhary thinker, but, in his way, the efficient foe of false honor, and superstitious pre. judice. Balzac is the heartless surgeon, probing the wounds and describing the delirium of suffer, ing men for the amusement of h:s students Sand a grand, fertile, aspbing, but, in some measure, distorted and irregu'ai nature. Sue a hold and gliltcriug crusadur, with endless ballads jingling in the silence of the night before the battle, They are much right and a good deal wrong; for instance, all, even Sund, who would lav down her lite for the sake of truth, will let their virtuous characters practice suutugeinn, falsehood, and vi. olencc; in fact, do evil for the sake of good. They still show this taint of the old regime, and no won? der! La belle France has worn rouge so long tbst the purest mountain air will not, at once, or soon, resti rc the natural hues to her complexion. But they are fine figures, and uM ruled by the on? ward spirit of the time. Led by that spirit, I see them moving on the troubied waters ; they do not sink, and I trust they will fir.d their way to the coasts where the new era will introduce new me? thods, in a spirit of nobler activity, wiser patience, and holier faith than the world has yet seen. Will Balzac also sec that shore, or has he only broken away the bars that hindered others from setting sail ? We do not know. When we read an expression of such lovely innocence as the letter of the little country maidens to their Parisian brother (in Father Goriot), wc hope; but present? ly we see him sneering behind the mask, end we fear. Let Frenchmen speak to this. They know best what disadvantages a Frenchman suffers under, and whether it is possible Balzac be still alive, except in his eyes. Those, we know, are weli alive. To read thtse or any foreign works fairly, the reader must undc.-s'and the national circuni stances under which they were written. To usa them worthily, he must know how to interpret them for the um of the Universe. sie BttAiriFUL Books run thl Voim. ?Messrs. Lane & Tippett of the .Methodist Bock Concern in tbii City, have recently published in the convenient andp 'pulur hand-book sly In, w hich for some time past has been so popular in England, a series of beautiful Little works oa Natural History, the titles of which are The Honey Ere, The Spider, The Ant, The Fly, The Flower, Tne Egg, I'hr Near, &c. &c. We believn they are all reprints from London editions, carefully revised, however, by Rev. D. P. KtPi'kr, the Editor of the Juvenile and Sunday School Department of that concent. The same publishers have also just published, in (he same neat style. The Jew among oll Nation-, We are Seven. Kingdom of Heaven amcng Children, Anna the Prophetess, Forty-two Children, Annnif-.a and Sophia, ic. These little botks may sa.'ely be placed in the h&nJs of children or youth?itiey are instructive and inleteeting, and solar u*n ha*e had leisure to examine them, entirely free from cvm r> thiug tike sectarieni-ni. \3F Host's Merchants' Maoazi.ne lor F< bru ary is before us. The loilowin| are the titles of ihe principal articles: ' French Spoliations of American Commerce ' Sixth Census of the United States ;' 'The Post Office Department;' 'The Railroad Movement' Trade and Cointiierce of Brazil ,' 'Resources of the Laek.iwana. Valley.' B--im-s these there is the usual 'Commercial Chronicle,' ? Mercantile Liw Department." 1 Commercial Statis? tics," eac. s^* Litt ell's Liri>o Agk, Ncs. 37, 33, an* before ua. ' Luther, hia Faith and Works,"' Travels in Abyssinia,' Excerpts from ' Punch,' ' Life in l-ondoa Lodgings,' 'Mr- Sheil,' ' Confessions of a Monomaniac,' <5cc. dec. are aracng their contente.? Burgees, Stringer & Co. 222 Broadway ; Graham; 160 Nassau-su sell this capital summary ui current British Literature. E^* The Gitsit's Waltz, arranged from the beautiful song of the Gipsey's Bride ia ibc Bohe? mian Girl, is just published at the new Music Store ot Van Geirf?r, 26S Bowery. GUM COPAL?60 cases tor sale br effl LATHKOr Sr. BARTLETT. tB Pearler. LMKY 1. IS 15. I.??cht? and Cnp? appl ed bj Mr M*-;m'?son. -t,rnerr>f Brindisi? arid Broom*-street, entrance ni Bronoe ?t New. York. Re't~ace.' ?Dr. Cbeetmas. Dr. Hi ?:. Drvltej ?-. Dr.Fran. r:>. Cr. Slenms. Dr Berxer, Dr. Weed, Dr. Smcttir. l>r. D. smith. Dr. Qtmckenhoa. Be?t Swedish Leeches constantly on hand. 3m ?T" Gt uriAin House?Sew Arraj><2;cm?-iif-? EOSWELL ? rSS ir.ti.m? hi> friend* and trse nublic thirt he has enlarged hia Bv.iRDl.Vtf KST.iRI.!SHJUE.\T. \ known as tae Graham House. r3 Baretay-Hiear, by aii.tnc U> it the aitjotnrnjr bouse, and a prepared to acccmiriodale Iran v?iil or permanent Uu?n>M on the m<*t favorable terra*. Ail j friends of Temrteranee desiring a quiet home, and freedom from tue tunas of alcohol and tJLaecu. are invited to patronize tl.> r.inaa. Tee Vegetable System, srflh the dtoteaft selection if fruits. Ice, ?turn rlie roi.rket sJl?rdi, will 1* ttrietlj adhervc tu, but a table will be served lor th? who prefer the ordinary mode, or mixed diet. Crotoo Shower; Wane aru: ColJ Br'iu. Bee. iS i ROSWELL 6CS9. 30,000 deaths by coxstj?ptios Would perhaps be a small estimate for the ravages of tkii dreadful dts.ase tit a single year ; ' then odd the fearful catalogue ofthose cutoff by hiHammntionoJ tee Lungs, Hemorrhage. Asthma. Coughs, In?uensA,Broacattis^tnd other diseases of THE LUNGS AND LIVER, And the iist WouM present an appalling proof of the fatality of the?e two clns-ses of diseases. But :t i? impormit to know Hat nearly ail of this dread w-tiste of human 'ife might hare been prevented by a timely use of DR. W STAR'S BALSAM OF WILD CHERRY. The create*', remc-fy ever discovered by man for all diseases of tne puuiioiini}' organs produced by cold and changeable climate*. Score* of eases have come to our knowledge wiier* the pa? tient had been given up t.. die of Consumption?an beyond tiie raacb of medical aid??u: -.vb-i by the u-e of this Wild Cherry Belsnm hive been ?pst-sliiv restored to complete health. A RSter Ol a well-known riern; limn recently lelt the school the warattentlint being advised thot she must die of Con. sumption?:o return tu lier home, wnhiaa to -pend her few re inaiinnir dart wan her Mends. By tome mean? ?he wai in? duced to laise Wi-tar's Bai-nn of Wild l.'herry, by which she was entuely cured in a short time, and rvturneil to her ?chool with a ligtti heart and tsrinvigaratad health. Br application to t>? otfictf. farther particulars of Ilm and ether remarkable cure* will b? cheerful!.' n.-e.i .Many >.! tiie un-i distinguished physi iii.il? of thi? city and Brooklyn cive this Balsam their uno.iia!ihed approval. Why should thev nut ? It a over] where hailed as " NATURE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION." being formed fitmchemieal extraefi of Wild Chair* Bark'and Tnr. two ?impie. but powerful ineredienu of N.tturo'* own 1 .Tbt-rntory. All who have used this wonderful compound concur in tea. lilyiBjr. that it is the rooatetrlcaciotv. renvMy evt-r known. Prmapal offiee, Cl Ann-?t. New.York. SoUal?o by Agent-, in all parlt uf the Union. <X 6m* th k d It eat r eos bO y Foil Asthma. Difficulty oj Breathing, Bleeding of the Lungs, Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Influenza, Shortness ?/ Breath, Pain and Weakness in the Chest or Sia"e, and that most terrible of all diseases. CONSUMPTION <)K THE LUNGS. DR. FOLG ER'S OLOSAON1AN. or ALL-HEALING BALSAM.?b your irst broken by 'i tattiom hu : troable. wme Cough 1 Have yon a Partita the. Suit, aceampaniad with Shortnesi ,a Breath, ami other uartninc tymptonn which lead rou u, fen* tlmi you will becaina the victim ot C .... umptian .' Heren a Remedy at hand. It will cheek your Couch, reheva the pain and sorenew in yourchesa, and speedily re-tore you to health. A? ;,mi MtTerins from .Hsthma ? Try tin. woaderful rernedr. Rend the followinc c?*os of cures which it has perforated within n sbort time: Daeid Hcndertcm, "HJ Ijuntit rtreet, was reduced very low by u teilmus roucli and l.kediiut nt the lurujrs. lie had truNl vanotis remedies without benefit.ana ln< phyMctatti hmi ntmn. doiietl ihc hope of limine htm any aond. Although he had hei-tic lever and nicht sweats, one bottl? of tln? eront iSMnody re>ior?-l hnnent'rely to h"iilth. (fcoret " ? Uaus wa* nlisrvod br two bottles of theOlosa. onian, ahhoufh so weak at '-he lime he commenced tssina it that be cotlkl ?enree walk. He couch'-t incassantly ; h s ililli cul'i" of brea'hlnn wns >uc!i that ha cmilit onb walk n few steti? nt a nine, and Im nicht sweat* were dreadful. In two week? from the comssseiteereeni of his trsrne the madteine, h* walked w Ith e:;.e dow u to the oll?-e ; ami in Six week., ha was 10 inr leitoied as to lie able In ntien.l to hi, biisines. acnni. K l.nbiiii. Esq. stl 1'ike street, wn.- cured of. Iftltmn by hull a bottle ofttie i >:o?noma:i. lie had n?t lam down in lied lot mom than ten mootha. He has never ha.1 u. "?cutrsmat of the iliien.e. ii,nv more Hem lise iii uiths. Mrs.Archibald, .i> West street, was euren ol .4srJNsaofe year-' ttandinci ^'f half a bottle, and declares it to i?- the beat medicine in the world. She had used various other reinediei without the len?t lienetit. Thousands of m-^ might v tren to show tin* efficacy ol this Remedy. More tlmn twenty years' esjierieuce in us use hns proved it 10 he the most wonderful remedy in tlie world lor the cute of the above mentioned duen-i-.. Fol sti le only at lo? Nassau street, one ditor above Ann. lasQHm*_ GRAND RKSULTStl 2 He most astonishing, all decisive and unsurpass? ed results have thus far, attended the ministration and lim-ly ute of Dr, Smith's ?*lMPr*.Ov*ED INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS." ( Susar. Cent cd.) Winch are mow attriictiiur toe attention ol mankind, in con ?eunenee of their univervilty acknowledged superiority ryvga kv khv OTBaa roan lent nsjet ot Portative,. Ipenent, hi urrtic, Sudvrijic or Kinreunrant jeuieOy: and their rapid popularity us a sovereign medicine, for Intermittent, Itemttlenl, BiltOUS and uther I'-vers, Influenza, Co/us. Head-Ache, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Perverted Appetite, Heart burn, Co*tiveness, Diurrhwn, Pool Stomach, Worms, Rheumatism and (Soul. Scrofula, Lioi r Affections. Impurities of the Blood, 'Female Compfai-its and Pains in the Head, >ule and Back. Is a most |m'?:t:ve giuirauteti of tho.r uiijinral!ele>l e.\i ?llcn. e. They are. (tudging from the ilemanit! eltiietnu more positive hp Ueneticial re-uli,. Inan any other known iso.calle:!) remedy. People have been i!o>eil with .Verciirv. and im.? expjnonce.1 the too fretiuent fatal eoii^niieiice?, and have taken the ol I nnmsaimr cathartics until toleratioa gives war to djsgust.at the verr thought ol rein!t.tion. The anti lot? to loac-Wssharl, inn! now so much coiled for. is the very remedy neededt mild. PLi is ?vt. barrrdess und etlicacious?a satcrai- 'amany: ami one that in kveky ROLTTxRV ir.siance does |>erfonn all tiint it premises. We have 'he most irrelrucahl- propl ot this in every cJi^tiinthns come to our knowleilite.'w Inch justities us WaR ra.vi1nu ereru 4et. aad in any cask of i aii.vrc, 'he purcha? ser niav have his money Imrk. Mr. ilKKWSTER, the batter, 120 II iwery, cureii ot dyspepsia. Mrs. Slftrra, ol ?inc Snii'. cured of hcad-arhe and pain in tiie side. Mr. I f iui.. Irjy Broadway, cured ol hend.nche. Mr. I.imdlicy. It3 (Ireenwich-street. cured of dy?pep,ia of 6 years' standing. Rev. Mr. Bt-knett. of Brooklyn, cured of rush of blood to the heart by the?c 1'iiU Miss Dot ola.ss, corner of Walker and Ludlow streets, cured of ilunnes? ot itcht, pain in tiie head, diziiiies?, &.c. Mrs I'oBB. wileof the baker in Hroekhn, cured"of weak ness. pain in thi: nead, side and breast, so thai she is able to be nb,,ir., which wo.* nut the civs before taking these Pills. Maa i*. UcsDSRSOrt, & Trinny-pliice, curetl of the mrat dangeious cold ami ersngb. which had almost taken her bfe. t C?rTtOst?Ask for Iir. Smith's " Indian Vtgilablt Pills,' A'o otAcr " Indian Vegetable Pills " are (sugar ciated,) and no others possess the virtues which these Pill? claim. N. B.??EE that Dr. Smith's vritirn name ison every bar. Sold nt the pnncipai offieas, 173 Gkce.swk.u-street. New York, and No. J Water.,treet. Boston. Also. Mis. Hares. 133 i'urum-street, Brooklyn. j'JS lm* FOR THE PILES!! ARK. YOU AFFLICTED WITH PILES?-Try then with, out delay, fJr. Cpham's Vegetable Elec'uary, the best Remedy ever ottered to public notice. This really excellent medicine is the lesult of a thorough medical education, and a ? knowledge of the disease for which it is recommend? ed. The im#t triumphant success attends its administration. Read the ksllowiug remarkable cases: A Irfidy. residing in Norfolk-street, was seriously afflicted with Pile- :m> freut was lier sultermg. that to use her own es preuiou, life was a burden ; for four weeks the hail been at? tended hy one of our asort eminent I'hysician*, wiUsont the least benefit Satisfied that it was an aggravated case ol Piles, 1 prescribed the Electuary ; two buasr. were used. Sixmnnths aftet, the same lady called on me to prescribe for another com. plamt, and then uilormed me that she was perfectly cured of the Piles by the two boxes, and load expenenced no return ,mce. Mn. G. residmg hi f .'rtsene-sL, called on me last spring, say. mg that she had been .iifectrd with Pilo lor iwo yeurs. accom? panied try pain in the sule, pntpitatioii of the heart, a -ease uf siraituew acrou the chest, and oppression ; she was unable to lie down Without elevating the head and chest considerably : resting honzonially produced a sense of suffocation, followed by a cough. By using one box ol the Electuary, tue pain in the side, polpitauon and oppression ceOMsj, she could be down without inconvenience, and the Piles were partially rssnmsHsJ, and a second oox nio>le a complete cute, to the gleet gratilica tiou ol the patient. Sold in this city by the Prvprirtnr'oniti.A retrularly educated Phjrs'c.aji. confined to an one* practice lor the treatment of Chrosiii' It'easl*, No ll*i Bowery. .M-iiraladv.ee in re? lation to the atx-s'e, or any other complaint gratis. Pnceof the PJ.trtu.iru one dollar. JET* Rtmenber that the Electuary is an Internal Rtmeds. and not an erternal application, and sold oM.T At Itej Bowery, four doors ouove apr:ug-*f ? ' ?tr.ee h.Kirs from 7 A. M. to 9 r. M. |SS Sr..!?->'?' From the Journal of t""mmerce of January *th. IW*. NATIONAL LOAN FUNU LIFE 5S6URANCE BO CIETY. OF LONDON, -JS C<jrr.hin.-Eapc-*?>red by act ol I'arlument, CA PITA L ?500.000 STERLING. scnerai. aoemt ma the rsitTED states or AXERlCA. J. LEANDER riTARR. St Walt su New-Yorfc. eHTSICtAK? TO TUE SOsStgTY?< Meiii'-a! Es?mincrs. i J. KEAKNY K" k.KKs. M. I: U0 Btessekerst ALEXANUEK e HO?At K. M. D. 101 F-ruikhnit. ?sjrzxxs. THE MEKI IL\N'1S' HANK OF NEW YORK, soucrrtia WM. VAN HOOKl l?se-39Wall st. The rate* ol tais Society arc as low as tliose of the American Companies, and lower than the .-ale ad-pted by many London Ur?ces. Loans granted to the extent of two-thirds the amount cl premium paid, alter the lapse of a rear. Pea sou insured in the Cn.ied State? on the sejsJe of " paat.c; patscn." enjoy the important advantage of snarmg in the whole business of the Society, which in Great Britain is very extensive. The public are raspeetfuily r^ in^tcd to examine if* distin? guishing principles at this Institution?their tables of rales? their distribution uf profits?ind the taciiitjes srT'>rda?l by their Loan department?bei or* deciding to insure elsewhere. Pamr>hiel*eouta:.'u!!g the last Annual Report,and the Socie ry's rates, togetber with blank forms, and the fullest informa? tion, rnsy be obtained upon applieatHm to any Agent or Sub Agent, A Medical Esammer in atrendaae? at the office daily, at 3 o'clock, P. M. Fee :>?id br the Society. j. LEANDER STARR. General Agent, jll 2meod _Resident in New-Y'ork BURN'AP &. BABCOCK, COUMISSIO.V PAPER WAREHOUSE, in ti_no. c john-8t_ A PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT Ff>R SALE, situated Z\. in a large und rleurahin* vtllsge on the HuCjoo, end eyi joj ing a fair palrr.nsge. Politics Whig. For further mfonca tior. apply to t.--e present Pe-.pretor, through the agency esflho Editor ot The Tr.bune. _j30 tf xroncE to engravers, prlvters. ??.-john il BhL'CE. Conner and Steel PuUe ilaaufacrurer, No 2d Plan, street, New-l ork, successor to Georg? Harns. A eon. an: supply aiwajs on hand. ;I Im* I FIVE DOLLAR* A S'EAR. WHOLE NO. 11 $7. GOODS. SPLENDID ENGLISH- PRINTS.-./. O. TAYLOR .'? ? CO. .'oAjr-s. i3 CniaTrftreet. rec*i?e,| '?-lerday 3 CASES OF MAGNIFICENT ENGLISH PRINTS, no. ?crun^cd in Patterns and Coior.rs>. In |?ei*ettiua of '.aooVasTs ziey nre r'trsu:>er.or to shy prs-vioi:' noons >??<-?. re reived, yesterday-:?. Cn-es of ?* GALLO PA GINGHAMS." ?-e-entine tse rebe?t patterns acd cuiorrng.?Ali lot cob, st to* owe,; rn.tri.el PCMCS. J. O. T. & CO. are now o;?ij:j. arc choicest styles ol rj.k?is. frcm every Foreign anivtili ami h) those who visit the CStf :.i Boy ::ne Gr> u.. uiaie it trsr:t business tu call at 5f t'rtiar. trx latest taihioss and newest Good*, may olsyay? he teen. . > j31 N K ?? pAi'ER CAMBRICS. IRISH LINEN', ?U-tJou receiv. I e<l. a good assortment of Payer tomato*, 01 alicsjlor aa?i iibenorijiian' >?; ? ;?> Iri.n 1."en. which svtil lur mvIsI ?t a irreal bargain. Also *i*b<-egd Gimp*. Br?fet?, Silk and Bubbsnet I l es. Kilri !::-,.-.:..?. new style Laer Cap-, of.jmtsjal*. I Lind?; Velvet Read Bags; Pr.utcdCauibr.es: FrsracbTOnt- | ftl Muslins; Pruhipperin GmtptUBt; Hosiery. GjsV?WrS C V. H 1MPI.E." ftp_ Joboer. T3 Ceslar street. 8PRi.\GTRlN^^aTt"rtxeTved~a Iar?rassortm-ut ot Rich Chintzes, Lana rlates. Lib: and .Medium fancies. Bine and White, two Blue* and Mourning Prints, troin t-he Amer.cmi Print Works at Fall Rive-. Lods. and outet*, cor saiebv McCURDV". ALORICH ^ SPENCER. j-J t>t C Exchange PJoces_ SaJ r LLlNtfoFl ~CH EAP]? Trie oil? '-r. caving a large ansl weil -elected Keek of Pa l and W ater Dry Go.nls.and bemc anxious l" make rcoiu for tue cm::'.; Sptiac G.-wxls, ?tl! lor a short tune idfer g.etil bargain*. T ?f y flat :er tbetn. selves that they enjoy lupstrtor fata titles for selling full a* low a<any other e%r.abi rbnei.t intheetty. as they putclia.se tnrir IjiN^li entirely from Aurluui and th?j Importers direct and loi cash. Ladies in want o! Gonsis may be assured that tbey will rind a complete assostaneal of Fancy ^Staple, Foreign and Iks DSStlC 1 >ry Goods aad at treat barcaius. jlO_W. I). GREG? )RV & CO. 175 Suring st. I .RY Gi N 'i'S ATV BARG UNS. -The at t>?criben take t / Iii? opportunity of u formier tne Ladies ol New York. Itc. that they are now prepared tu ?der great bargains in llry UskmIs: their slock coasats in psrtol Uroad Clothe, CasuBMrei -ad Satinet., Bombozasrs. .Meruioe, and A'p.iceas, Liren 5 . .-. ra a !?? . Tbwei ? .:. .Napkin-. Dieper?, i.e. L'Bshaicre-Je Lames. t^nsham>, Ptlnjs, Ace Cotton Stieetm.s and Sbirtinas, aud all otheratf es oCseas mabla i^rkU,' Lndies, fire ipv iled to call and examine their stock and make livem ?e'veiaeiiuuniled wdli toMt or.een bel'on. piirehusinuelsev?liere. ,l.i W 1). GREG? >RV ? O ?. C^ Sprint st Ei} r^'ANT?N. ??!' aeiiv. :.uree\ot;-.-. to, iM!e the fid . ? ng ... i WS i] ES Grt5?U^ SATINETS? Low, mediitm a-..l lororripr Blacks, ribbed and p;mu. Qxfoni, Steal, l uilet. (;rvy and lancy mixture!, wove, pbuded and pla n. i;assIMERES? Rae and 1 w.priced woi ami pieco-dyed Black., i htlbrd and fa . :y muted, .tripeii and plain. BEAVER flit ITH3-8-4 and i-1 Wool ttlac*,< 1 "!.i' I IIS? !tr v.u., iV;...., Iii-. .. l!'a.-As. w.hiI und p'ece. dye,!, of vnrious <iiiali!ie>. ? PLAll? LINSEYS?S-t. a ? mehiM article. SHEEP GREY CU iTBSrW, rnedinm article. -.iuo SEWING SILKS?Various .piab';..?. N line a-rsei? |..i t ,.? uses. N -WKINS, COtTt IN YARN, MADRAS HANDKBK CULKFS, i.lMvHA.MS. itc. .v ?. tte. dfl FFRIENDS OF ROBERT I!. GAGE are .ulnrniesl that twr baa located at No. ^1 l&aiirrv yrakrr. DRY GOODS at the smallestin-ssibleadvar.ee. PARTt' r,L?R ATTkSnC.1. Is re.pieste.1 to ni. st,h-k of DRAWER HOOPS AND LACE lH'OIir.. which will iilvvii>?'lef kept full and Complete, pre-uinnis on showimr the largest and fullesl aseortmenl in the eitr. n'io ism* J?> B. CLAYTON i. SONS have for sale at their Ware /. house. No.St John.tioet.n moat extensive assortment of Printin?, Wonne. Envelope, cowed and other Papers, Binders, Stress Bonnet, Bandbox and Trunk Hoards. Pres? Pnoers, .tc. _ . Tlieir ?tie-k of WhtlltS capers,adapted lor Stationers use, will be lonnd unusually estensivs. i ?oii.iantlv on Ima.l? lb?.k and New, Printing, a-sorted sue,, weidds and ipj all ties, Colo oil Medium, doable do and other sizes Cover Papeas, various coior? ami weigbu, lor Mata/iesss and i 'iienp Pubheniioaa. Lralger Writing, line nisi ssi[vet do. b'ue and white, wove and laid. Plat Bed Cut Caps, plain and ruletl. wove and laid, blue and White. loiter, ruleil nnd plain, ?lute nn.l blue, wove nnd laid, Pnekel Post. i pinniercialdo, poho ilo. liauk do, B"tik Note Pniwr,'l obac-o ib>. Envclopa Slue' aiel Tea do, Stinvv Wmiuiiris do, Pal i I eel do Hurdssare and < lotb I'.iie'rs hi gienL s nr-ly. Silk nini Leg I'ho-i. Sum! PsperS oak. fnrtridsr Paper, Pl iy Bill, llst-ei.-. p.iottius, iirngiii.is' nnd Psshms Papers, Itc. N. B.?Paper of rtery ileacriptton uro!? loonier. j'Jf ("IOMM1SSION PAPER WAREHOL'SE-CYRL'S W. \ ? FIELD, 9 Burling slip, offen roraafe WRlRlNtl PAPER?SXtl reantsCapir, Letter, plain ruled |i??? " rial fan. tine and siiperriuo VW " I>e<lger paucrs. assiui^l ?urs PRINTING P \PER-fi-lr.Mii - II ,.k.a.s..rte.l s,/u. ll?tl " Nevss ENVELOPE PAPER-WOO " Newa r.i.'-'i. JJsMandStiM k>.U Gla..eil fis.'l. ntiil JUa'JTs H \! IA'. AKl* PAPI i! r? .?? I :\ I So, 14x14. I6sl?, "vix, -4s40 i l.i Uli PAPER-3'?? Mini J'xIH. jr.vlil. Iim HANGING "' 40 tons whit*, blue, pmk, brown, ate WRAPPING " fs.'*) re mis all sire. Kug nod Straw IP ?NN ET I! ' VRDS?400 grocss orown. white and yellow PRESS PAPER?100 gr.k-e:'ls3laiiir.'4x:>l fi ?1.1 iltl'.ll " ?l(s?l realm, n rompieio o?*ortiuenl STRAW BOARDS?W tonsaseorxed nambera BINDER8 -IJ "_" }2> tf IMPllR'I'ANT I'll FAMILIES. Linen l?rn|Hirs; Po.pi e. a tors ol Hotels. Cnniaii s of SUambsosta, Packet Ship*, and the Publte generally.?'The Proprietor, cd' the WASHING. TON .-TEAM LAUNDRY. 858 Woshington-st. b-z k*ava to call the attention Ol Iba public to their new and improved iiieih'iil of Washing Linen and Cotton Upoda, sod tb atata some of the many advan'sges which render It <ii|ierinr tsiall others. 1st. Garment* washed the sienin procs.^i, will taatnaeh longer than if wnshed in iho oiduinry way,as all wringing mi very miunou. ro ladiea am! seorleroao's wea-in* appareij w en. ?rely ib?|e,ns.i| vs ith.nnd the work la done from twenty hve to thirty per cent, less Uniri tbc usual price, and incomparably better. ?. The lacibties being such, they enabled to blench nil arti? cles of linen or cotton labile, as while an Uelore iimmifnrtiirssl, and a lustra given to Ineoms or collars, of any required degree. Any amount ol work Ban bed'ine in n few hones notier, as nil urtii-len are tlned within door., and t.y artirictul letal. In ?holt, articles washed at this oxtnhhstuneni uiu?t lie ssten, in order to give it n fair and just appreciation. The attention ot the pub itc generally, is mviUrd to test its superiority. IX3~i Uders left at the office. I5i Fulton-ttrttt. one door from Brondway, hnd tW /Iroddsaey, nnnr W-iik'-^ai-. the iMurvirv. ?n Woshmgtou, between (?barle- anTrAn> ?..-,? will meet with prompt attention, where a list of price*,together with the regulations of the establishment, may lie hub in9linc_ J. P. SEAMAN Ar. Ct ?MPANY. CiUODYEAR'S INDIA RUBBER G( MJDS-TI? iub JTscriber now oilers lor rale at the old stund of llrrchrr A Benedict, Good/ear's Car'nure I loths, a new article highly limshed, und will retnia Us beauty in all kinds ofweaiher, suitable for the tir.e?t carnages. Also, au article for common carnages, Heavily coated, nl low price*. Have on hand a Urge variety of goods la this line?f.'ool?, Cbjic.. i'..... fC?. Reenag Jackets, I laps, Irlou-Westers, Qverolia, pants. Water Jackets, Ship's Letter Bap, ui and water.tighl Seaman'' Bscs, Tarpaulin forsU-an.boaU, >s hrh can be seen in use on all the boati of the New Haven Steamboat Co.: every variety aTCoverttHX, noon a horse to rooting, ot' tjuikhngs, iteanaosate, railroadCOra. olc. a-,-, msiie to order nt the shortest notice, nnd r?i the must reasonable terms. Lde Preservers, Air CnaaMOS, ftirr.iige Aprons, Mechanics Aprons, .-shower Batbu. Mltttna, Gloves, itc. *tc. Every article warranted to stand aey eUmate GotMyeara Patent Suspenders manufactured by D. 1~ Suy. dam, and wurranled u> retittn their elasticity. All articlei b r ?ale iu quautiuos to iuit purchoeen. GEORGE BEECHER, 100 Broadway, jl* betwestn Pine and Wall-si*. MACHINE 11 A.NI is.?Tho follow ing unsolicited opinion of our India tt.il.ber Machine Baiiding. we commend to the atlenUun ol the interested. HORACE II. KAY. Successor to the Rosbury India Rubber Co. "NriRwiCH. Jan. 15.1S45.?D*ar Sir; Above please rind our dtntt on-. lur-, 'he balnr.ee ot your v-ouiit ngaimt us. We rjike pleasure iu uiying that alter a full and fair trial ot your Rubber Banding, tiat lur the puruuses fur which we have u-ed it, to drive bens y or light machines with a taut band, that it gives us the fullest uttiilaction. Yours, very rruli, M'?ES PIEItf I j33 Agent Norwich Blenching arer", Calioniiermg Co." '!'<? MERCHANTS IN U ANT Ot SIGNS FOR NEW 1 Fl R.MS, ?tc.?Th<j uudersiirned titvine lesen estabhsterd fur a number of yeur? in ii:e ?tttM a>l > k.iaXl.ntaX l's;a r i.iiiHi st.sig88.alNo.ini Sassau .t-.r'. New York, during which time we have ga ned the rrpulnlion ot executing our work es well, it not superior, to nay oilier establishinent, beg leave to submit the following Card ; l.'iiden'anding that it o the general impression, that we charge more (on account of the lupereitrty of our work) than other artisrj, we have resolved to do our work on a* reasonable terms, and m a* artistic*! a n.an.err. a* ran be done or any otner establishment in the (.'rty. You are respectfully re>tue*t*d to call ard asrettmn our charges, cwforu leaving sour orders -Isewiiere. Yours, resie^tlelly. \i KCRJH \N & MILLER. Messri. A. iL M. pay particular jottosjaaoa to tlesarriuigeiooni of their SIGNS, in order to roaka them rent and attractive N. B.?Flag". Banner?. Sundanfs. i.e. jl Im ir. B. PALM EICH WERtf \N .NEW.-I M'h't SUB V rsCRIFTlON AND ADVERTISING AGENCY? No. l')J Nassiu itreet, .Tribune Buildings,: N*w. York. " Id Stale street, KosUai. " 09 Ptr.e street, philiuielphi?. S. E. eonar Of Baltirwe and Calsert stres^j,, BaJitmore. ?CT Ad?*rtiseiueot* ao>l Sulsieriptions are rer?ir?d lor some id the be?t Newspoponof uin?t ol tiie r-nncipalti,wn*and etims of every State in Uta failed State*, for which he us the duly authorized Agent. Merchants, Manufacturers, and Dealers gaoersily are re? spectfully invited to avail tbaunelves ol the medium wbse.li mr agency affnrds of eommuniealing directly with the peofk* nl the eounrrr. hy advertising in th? parwes rd' the lawiiail. V. B. PALMER, <a Agent forOiiat-r **?? ?i?i.t^'- 1 C1HEAP ACCOl'NT BOOKS?The sabecrftm mvrts the / atUrr.leoo of all who am io want id Ac-ounl Book* for um >'esv Year, to their larg? ?>socinient wI,k h .'.umieuse ?mr<* use and ?yte -?f Binding, whien ens offered at the losves? pswi ble pnc?. The moaufsetorr hfrng ureter the immediate itioennren?t. anee ef one of use firm, sum pmetwal workman, aaabtaa us to execute all order* xsn?i prumptrew*. and in the bast ur la ol the art. Banks.IosuraLce Companies.Pub sc (/llices acrl Merchant*!*. rjjOtrrasrsaris of Books Ruesl or Bound to peitern can be sup. plied at s"ort notice. A larocle* irfStatxonerr ? !d at the los*??t prce. The Kock of StarjoiiCTV eosrumsw* every article recjuired lur rh? l>sur>iuig Room nr ?rtna- u-a?Circulani. <.'*ni?. Ibil Ues>l*. C'becki, Neun, our. fcc. prnted 'o arrler. FRANCIS at I.OI.TREU ,'j5 La Manafactn;-.r.g ritatiousrrs. 77 .Me.den I.-.r.e. TO MERCHANTS, M .Nl FA' Tt RCKS. DEALERS dte.?V. B. PALMER)* the agent, duiy aoUttsrwad by the proprietori of some of the best newspapers of mast of the principal towr-s m this State. New Jersey, reaaswtvagsia acd the Etilem. S-.albern ansl Western iHotos. Us meets* ad rar rjseroect* is this City, for icaertion :n toe reapswttive popess. The ooportunity olforced to the business comuiunity by thai agency, to dtasenueat* icfemuuioa throughout toe country, and auiicit ;ha ottentK/g af U;?_pes>o?9 is sc-h a* to com? mend it u> the earnest attention oTtfta discrira:eel.ng aad enter, pgsafest TaeMrmsoad the newspapers may re sesra at his office wiser* evety informarioa will be cr^ffoij. i: imtmaXMMdL. acd the nature or the ageocy t'uBy eiplaraod. CT" CsEe* N-. WD No***ji rt. (Tniune Suildingal nioai?a City Holr-at the Cnel ?WrVesx._oij tasod Sr^liW OOOI?-Tl.r proprvrr^ofVlw Parisian B^ roar. .No. 440 Broadway, miorai dessen and oshers that he in tecds making some impo>v?inent in Use Bazaar, together wrtli a separate eutrwe to ties 41 stsa-y Show Rooms. Gallery and Artist Kooms, and tor.! tin ruiirns ore furnished wdb giow coses and couaten and titten up iu the best Wylosn order to ae coramodoto thrsse that espe-tt the lotest faihiooab.e goor1?. and wnn to hire ooe of tho best .ccatioos in Broadway lor ti-es dsv r>r*ti of taem??od poaaeswon may U bad immrdtaleiy. Akso uj >t an Artist'i Room icd Gallery. Apply on the prererses. JC lw WANTED._ PARTA, ER WANTED-Trse tdrertawr has,-.ne*'i bhjrssxN wholesale business down tosrr with mscterate mesms?a regular wt of N. Y. S"a'*> nod nsaghbonn. cu*tm~er?, n good stand. ?ikI could profitably extend the Mine br additional m?a ... ace **?.?'d 'MrWo??' take?partnereitheractiveorspa. e:ai. with f-oer. *ti,lW to t'O.OOU capital. Tbc business a a respectable biacctiof the ihy Co.*? line, affording an excel, lei.- pn fit, anu large portion of sail* for cash arwt short credit, A line .vWrt-?<vi A. and left nt Express* f XSca, U3 Broadway. u .b receivr a'tention sorl be .Kid e.?ctidsretml._j3Q 3t fTPO CHUKCifES.?A ftuifeiwr of Masse is about leaving 1 hi* p.-e-i . .': >;i s$ Organist a od Lender, and would man with ?>?!) Chureh wb.i am us waul of his serTice?. Address " <?. 1*. K.^at this Q:!ice._ . !??_ WANTEi'? By a'young tnarrsil man from the country, ..t h ch.'v lejpcctablecon.iei iW, a situation as Clerk, in ?>iw ae?sre business, whrre his tint* would be devoted to tin .-itere?: ofh? twoktrtt Thcidiertrwrhas r>e*m engaged labu'.ue?? tor himself for the hit three er four yea*?, there, fore i* capable ol taking charge of a set of books, Lne.'cep. tinoable references ran ho given ns (a rhnracer ami aenity. Address E. T. Mu-oeU, P. 3!.. Fa r Hill. Oed county, Md., I iliry. Ax., which will met stalk irnpiedtabaaasen Hon._'_t38lw? U\ Vt'Kli?Journeymen Lock Makers, to work at bank lock?. None n*wi apply but sotsrr nun and bist rata II. C. JONES. No. 7 Chiireh-si. u?7_ New ark. N. J. LOST?A ?mall Walle", containing ten dollars, and some papers of ko value to any but the owner. The tiuder. by returning the sai-.e to tbi* oTjice. will be rewarded. J*4 '1TEN ?> ?U.ARS REVV ARU.?V ti K*?fR.> 1Unk STOCK, a ?A ew-iricata for t.iirly lnirvw ol \ icntburg Bans Slock, in the asm* of Buckley .V Peck, ami numbered 3C?>. wftb Pawei .'i V.l. rr.?y attached, was !<?lunSatuni.iy.tSht Marek It wtu. enei.iMti m a letter, and U*t on its way. to vYal!-st. TI* absive. will !>e paid by leavjig it at Thc-mi-son's otEce, \\ alt ttx>V_ oihS ti" 1> POM AND BEO.ROOM it) ; ;T-\Vt:. BOARD, to l?.. r>i* I'ttw-. - -en. Apple at SI Chambers it, Raferun-es etrhiiracssd. ^ ; cyVlf ?*[?.ctrs SotelT~ THE PROrRlEToX respectfuilr mforms tu? frteiio? and 1 ?..?-e pubic that he.?^e., fpnoed his new and ?pleo.i>d Hi.'to) at l? l u.ion-street.^j, 1?** doors en?i ol Bro?uiv/ny, in the ira rn.Ht.Kt* v?rnv?7 .0 inelaniiuJ^ ..usintaa ami the i rineipal p.aees , nuse a:,d ^i'uxoishca i in a style that will bear ta roniriV con'.;iarrs.?r-wst|j ?Veen 'w.; hivtei? in t.'ie city. The pn'^r etor in liulduw anil tjttno; ui the ainive house has bad itr:>-" regVu I? e'efa.lee ard ci>n;'ort. a.; l that be has coo hired ecoi)<<niy the ftdfowmg nticsj? * II show ; ? ?>l t OR ONE MtlH l'. & A week.ISO The ro>.rr.: w ill je warmed grat.i,.vad upon no occasion wtH there be more than one bad van nvont, s? There is a REFF.CTORY'?ttaehe.i. in whiclithoraaratnaaja ?ervsfil up at all nonts ol tliedny acd ev%sning. TIk? are nis.i Bain Rooms conn*eted, lor warm, cold ami shower kutitL Tie Porter will be m a:teo.!.ano) at s.!J tinw? during the nicht, i t io.Ue/s, an.t to iei them put at aJi hours. n. B.?Tliij* srho want l..*l<inirs alleV tin rsouse ckwea will ring the hall hall , ait?m* \IIiS. ROBINSON, rrom Elilibeth <tre.O,asro7?n?bl? 11 rJa w starebar. 9 Mercar itraecj tltth ioor above Ssuing i' v>. I.r.ces, French VYorksd Capes, poUars, m\c mads to lo?ik cyuAl to new.? Sr. iw^. 9 Iks, Uaruios, Tal le Coven. Silk Hose, <tc. cienasd in 'he lw: iiuinosr ?4 Im* J[HN Ctt.NtlKR, Jr. ATlDKNEi AM? CuCNSEI.. XcSR-sy^i.-NtV AND SOLICrrOB IN CHANCE. r>\ . F vt^)swyne*i!uil. will ii'.t, n.i to pr .|e?<;otial businessm ?a?- rariooiaBtmarUiMntipl Si tui of Ins iana. Will al*o nu. ii.i ??> Ihsl p-'tiiisjrrl aMasa*, *ale? of lands, and ai. aUM I .ippertnniuigtu r. General I .ipu Ageno f.<t Northetn Indiana. Hr;'- rrBf., rt AVis-lirr'. -J. \Y. Edmonds. Evj. Messrs, l?\>ot"& l>a?ie?, w. tc t?. Woodhull jc Co. Stiyshua, 8ags75 Cb. Thorns), iluffet lluimas. Strutters, MoreooiiM & fo. i < ? u>ck *t ('onger. n?9 3iu* J" hn T. WAIT. Attnrrwy plwl t.^unwJIor at U w ami ?J ( 'ininiv, on. rtotake ickuovs laltgoiehu <>1 DeeiU and lie. i.o.ition? in tin.- for OM state ex New rvtJ^Nonwu a Chun, will daroUi pertacuitr uttcuiioii to llm collection ol :aums. isK!U'"J?x5? >3*Pmf] ghsrrws>od. E.u Tracy, Mdwi stt Irwin, ftydelt Ely. I am? fc Huntington. Dwuht Johnson. IV '->... Ku?U <Vt?c*jdrler. n?u StawSm* IAW ('ARD.?CoiJ-kiTt""' I'aata ta ma North' j \Vv?t.-K. b. VvTxshiii uni:. Attorney at i>iw.t;a. lens. 1,1 iniiois.) ssil'.giY? Iii? attnOini, to the n.iWli,? o| debts due New York MerrhaiR? in Ciena. Rocstord ami Rock Isiand, Illinois: in Du Uuuu*. Ipsrs,: n I'lntterilfet. Po'oet, |"rairio du Chijii, Mmeral Poini und Mad u ., yYiseiauin. RelHitol?. A. IVsinstAR t Co.; ISiKXMia. Si's mm & Nl\o|S. New \ ork Itil J'- SMITH DODGE. AT HOME, No. 17 Bom! stjsjet. New . York *V..m Dr. S'raacn. ?.laf: ?s.ie, f-m/war in '\* MuluM ('viltfr. .\"'Sf. I.r?. The New Yotk public l~.v* Rs| nunv yen's pn.i M ?oi|>Jn rally unii?l in onlntisn, ol 'tie ludgrMol ami.??:, of J. hmiih |lu.tgfiio Uienitnl llenti.ttr, thai I rb??.liillr give nir leatl. iiioiis in h> tvehall, and ?M, In*? m". i 'jiia'iitanee with him, that toieirtsre in b? pi.'to sion he hletvts kin.tise?. ol inantMf ima sustains 'So fnaroeuu ..( ? nu nt benerolent leehngsaml strsct loOesrHe, JOI1M V,. rKA.M irs, M. I), tuu Ui ARAMTisr. M in M 1st ami. i iiinnry b. I'welsw sears siiu-t>. Mi Knii'li Itiaigv rsercoed tri pin? t Hnoal sfctll up * i"t ItsWI s. . Ihosuof my laiinly. Iliswtxk a, Insteil will Huiee that lin-r I h.s\e !????? niiiiiendwl him ta ?i. .in . i my pnlwuts, mid w hiA4ti?RH*al.|ilaefiiHi. lie has a ragh reputation in \t? \ . rk n a t?r.i ?l t?r e/hiea prote?. sun. tpeeuliarty nunhnesl. ? yms iniswrar, aemiesttw, aad sties* A. Ml UN P.) l"JA.VI . A. AI . ,m. D. > llenlih < nlieer of Port ol New.York. I'EHI Ku "A1. ?PECTAOLE? , At No l-Jl!K?i.\I)WAY , V \ Si sV Mli'lCl.E ol Jif A uerii iui niouufarsure, M ?e .!is-.iig ol.-e i.i t|ie weary eye and strnngth lo the weak. Nutuarous lestimonla s ol their sii|?nor metil will ?. ,i . m , srhich ar? I i l?r. I.arihier nut' uther 2 ? geutloikem Itul i ol I? utoinviiml to ji)4g? it tbesnaalvea. latliruh ense? of U'Vient tiatiri lujiriasd. .V It I ..ty ?????< iltariiiiiii.: ol rtpectacls* at lats Ilia -?His*.?.--.' ^osjssssb??. MR tmi l (?eithw, M??i( d99ass>aaf r ^Sbm* I' ' ' I'.lluW N. w'e. pi nuns ihn JMsjM^i.i?'.-'-1 ? '?' ? ??itiiissai intlilil so H'.ireiSfunr fTMVRr > 'Ii??- ol ine Eye, ^^ssM>?sw es.ii en*? i|ei't*rta! locurnMic ami ahfnilon. ?1 liy eminent Physicians arnl i ?ri '?Is, heg? lo iliUial'JCO lilta i ? iiw putilir, fMilirig isaurssn Lhe . I,nrlietuf rtiulli itiU rt"tju?l' ? vsa-ranl hi? re? onoi-e. ilMtion. lt. IIRoVvN*Hpraetiea u e, upl* and easy?nailha? isyjott. meto UsiaM pawlWniethesJ* w?.. Ii ate ..so generally aik'psad, nur r?(iuinns IhatifksonHiatKinrM mert Ii.on light and so, ana rm plant aal rssstrtctsaesi n. tjajd, whirti are nu.4 usually en fiircrst. Niiineriiu. i nse, <?{ in. res t ".-till treatment base been uubln I) recnriip.1, to whiah |h- rai ns?ri, and lie iieseisas tea. ' ii.ui* ol Hie s alue and etlb ac) nf Ins mud* of piartsc*, winch mar !?*> rmieetisrl lir mn HTA who fks-m? him with ? call, II- wo: ne>er uooertnk? n ro? ?hstre thore are not gooa r?n->iis loyesinss-tiiigB cur??ami tos aim nrul nfyyert tvingto axisi in Iba ie.ii.ii.ti.il.ol ihsl in iiinabla blesssnir.sight?the (K.i.iesf of'he roinmiinlty mar ntillilMICMrfse oThs? asljH in e n. ItessU n? Iii? must optlient. ' l?r l!l(i itl'n o nr ts> etHwuh?d ?s-erv day (PurWIlirs eg. erpted) at h? "flice, l'i rii?n?i*f? strrsst, tour doors below Unwolvsny. Hann ofalleiidaurr ft., 'i II A. 31. toll P. M. Advire in Iii? pfMlf .mli?. dill 8m t* '.*?ffl K. w 1J' " '"" ?'' - ^?^' t 'oKiiplurfslPaf. If _ ^?<mis -1'ihs.iiis n'tli. .-dwifli Itoptures iiisy rely ,( jQ ?uyoathal 'n! aitj Use ssnrlrl lilt ,rd?, *^^r'QfJ?n appl ? . Cst, Ho < \rny strsyet, **a?i?ssw ,,, i,, .?m,., ,,i ?!,? ug t.'Ji in Ihn priaeipaltsiwaa n koUtt ad t?catai rWearssfUl u n.in.i.r 'h? ba.-k pailM HnlfsTn. I I iliey are r?.:..s<n!liy lir.llull in wnttn(. None are geouine, or tn be relied ?"> as gisod, without hat (nature. Many vetsons 'laass innieii?. ? i rtod tgoitatinaa cs) HuBH celebmlil Tnistes ami InaasjaM rr unimsed upon in eontsv ?luenre. Those mutation* eaan ?'? e teueJ upsift i they ate Bade hy urukillul merhaiuns, anst nn better than the ordi? nary Trussas. Ii.?um have tieeo lilts-! - . \ I I *^ey s>ri4>t,cyehsivsly i, I. . ..ig s sttpnrate eultuve .Mm (lie busine* ? lepsrt. ? here a frinnle .11 ?nnstnt.i 1,- lulanes? 1/1 wal". "~ TIP iMr-" ?775 /Ii r*rif><". n'frc* if HsssgT man slreei. ^Im.iiI 'TO ol the rtfst nhysielaaa uuls-iigsMMi. ?*! ' o'l^-siave g.sen 11?11 tie. .?illesl prelerenee Ml I tiny Tynes-iw you '??I yi.dn _ Bta tl-t piosnnre Inmi l?l ftftr {mo-nds sa |k| apti.te, without a hn# k ned, ?li?ii ? -s?y ?,, mm I. in to the spine. A tair trial ^?Ntig the *pe*t o?.- nt il? svparti. ny - 0 isappheil and ni days' 'rosl given, n y -U 1'ies a,H fsteim tkya rupture, whito p?rh?rm ??*?????. i, im , ' .. . anil giire perfect Mise-- n a isym ,' >s 1, ?? ?> ? ,'V" ?? la eyety resrsnet, the ms?j? ss ?neerfn' ? ie<?rf?*\ ? ..-t 4 * a t,'| eoly cssndition on ?hirh yi.u ii | maneiit cure it ?asily ?fl?s ''?l?as..l e? Tixaeseixliug tor*. - i r*rt? s^m. m, ? sy'sesy ??? nmi,i?. tnral and the mensem riMJiid Dsr tupe.. as u??y ran graeJaeM the pressure in suit 'iieit rase. rt. '' ?I /lasala and rciai I sf lg Beekman-street. _____ a?Jir if-U RKIiMU) K1HIIII \ ' 1 I; M A tt KK nao VV\ f**1 '"* i'*ev?r*?l Ii *ell Walehas at eanjdj >?-. ? ?! ? ??. *.- he ic iiail*i*t exiostaittli rssMaviiig nil dots '.(hmb a^r?<-: |/(4n Ifta snuiiilacttiier? m laiglartit. tnin'e aim ??iiyettaud, Ii? is en ikied to offers eery laute a~cii?.ii <" ..I Wairli?. tum? IIb to ailO each ; Kit?i . ? n ? t.-ii-nil n-irrruitad to kmpgand Uroe ni tha aKWSnr tmwi j. Abas 8 sssry atsaa ????fltioent of j iwelr, ami rsn,?i W ?" sery lew. N. fi IW ?ia.1 band Walchs?? and .?J i ...l.l rni v .|ver taken TO atrainHQ or bought lor cnsli. Waico?. i :\*< Mitu? rl-uns noo Jew. eiry repaired ist the beet amnimr end .sa.i sntesl, by SIJSIIImssiaj) wrfkmen, as lo.? ss snr ?"her a-iiise in'j r City. RltTtAkD Fl-HER. ?' ? "''.rv. wfeitetala lad ratal I, No. salilro?/twny. N??? roeli '.[?-w ilosnrs sUisa the c.ty Ifs-pital Inlll Rlt'tl AllO rTrtMJlOr VV A'l t II ES. JlAv ii \<\ stu.-A spnymiiaaa. iM,t t. . 1 '? r..t [j-??7, AiH'hor EseapetinSM, l^rptae i.nd Vertical Watches, lis.Crt ?ii in Europa. ~*mel> wi'l be w^rseniest iwfeef 1 ...?li?.?( *y? Aiw ?niner...? imitofu? "II...W I loom "_l. and tCeyt. .i..!G..i,!Petys, i..1?1. eflga. I'uss tu%. ' . . 1. .lorirsj. 4u,. !'iHe?F?*,s. Mpssons.atr Mi the above u'i'las will ua wild ?I 'S> Isswtat pfsaai gasj ""mIvV-V A. m I- ^''-Tr?^a'ta^ tat. 1 " ? I 0? a..o?? ertieass ?sret.illr ?*?|s*>ty-. and wafTyailai/ bythemsat .kihtei wswt..,-,. ,.. lb? r.i v ()jT' warranunj on iur txidies. atsu manslup. All selbas si the j Also. Cans and Ker? ol an ~iy illhvi^H K i?Ji SHE C'iv !1K - i.in fl iyV_??sr?i'_J_JM!t ' - ')?'? 'It a taesaren oflise VF.Alt Cl ?tt'KH isoa? iViat?Autyi?. tha atlsmtioe of lire iMttvtse in tha twms^W'f &???-m-n< i*' -~ 'ml s'? ??"??' ? - ? .. ., ,? * otieruasa (.?s-pa*?"?*?'? "? T???? ' *1 ? w on-yjmr wasi ' srj?J|ayts? UaW.tiri /' }ro? raltis ]tr r u.tori stftwt, *a? , it (. Tee ?wMsna is prwooesBl ssjr wsigitt* ?iJwa'cUvy bnyfAjsai ., . . ? - j wi... < a i i .... ?*.,.. ,t fha ;.,w-, . ? Use waisrk! ur a-r na te ssaarH< - t, ?wt msite io retain raguksnly la Kt mes^tsy ijntl.v,-- v m? arraasrt ia?t >/l taaesrai'ist> ?? ...dulsisi WmI- }*\ s*v?? nltao eb*g. y u peiesss? a stilt (ml! foei a onl . r.is-sat ?? .V??a iat. at Uw?ud of a sma.i ?Vat. . ;^i-b <nd a tsairnss* sesi/, bjmI the smtaa i.um?* an* Ii? i?? t?- ??>ias. At the flppav ertdWtha rod Fat) lag ease ai aaat .NtsatTM dsnstiiela. aar tp<?r->es.r, raaehirtg ta the ??.rasonei, oWets ? e?cTA*y? ard leavsa wehsitrt any swaai? ? i-?? .. i >- -r.nt usar. ra acts cpofi iha tiaJt. SAUnd by its own assys-su, eS t*w fatal}.' r~ ;ars1o.uy? as io o?har ekycJas. Tm tssxfTis Mit m*J aw* aa ?s>tsyg?vag> oaratus. by whirft ;u ,-*ary miHisnt ?? irgo'sivo- iasy-age f/yur small wetgiru,at right? n*? lumtrM tRa,? ??*>"*> rrsount aci Up.? r. wyrsx wr^h a a t. r -sn ? - ? * ? ?? r 'na/"da* - The enre has on ft 0? uwee?! t* \.?* ? " **c* turn "fit ur. which can be regalatad to thaw????? Irsc- ^ oJJiyasv The.rhertwo ?eightj agt (nSsMM ? n uUsr beret The other two weights see I iat uriinvwtn?!^^ I? ts beisi??J. aat >a ujiltV_u>r ^iT^rtTst r^i^ tta-tJteftsat^rs'tha xta^pawir lorn .i awtdad. The rsrvornt????*' tha Ulli it firTnd iyy psynmmt and observation u. be ?^stsisa?, That cine* ? aot pat <*%\ twaatrt Maily?ft n'ni>r<>to rvs ttenlleta. Toe ri^i>luu<au et thet-athg ahael mi 69 Umas BsT? io nthag wos*. i?? ?stars ui/aaimg s? malty m*..Sauoo? M t*at Bioch ormeuadnessrhiliiiii els.sk does ta orw , wngl.t of7 pounds ?Maja u OSJtlOB au-k pnrt .< the ugMeatl anj ii ? ?- aea bm / rai t w~? Tue rsoois areslrurkey rnearts if a loUry hassmar. Tha eertnVittas ol the America ri lauitutMao-a that t> May. latt. oos bf'ha ftwelvatnioih doeu wa? yuAcssl with Vhex,. and <J>ai tt e?a pertonued bj *U nar?tta ta vsts *?;a>-.<eo. Tba pacas are nyslarraa. Taa puWto 4 ta invnad to anil acal egBrnmeior uveatsaisw. 40taaatalll