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,T^v 3. *Jli 9gdr . ^27 VP4*"^^ % k* ,?jfvr? " - v ~ .sJ* \>V ,?; ^ jjm% ?fc- vMJT3 * ~ - * . rnmassmmmmmmBBmsssssssssss a'M'MMTHtD'IVZr..' |? Trom HfMjMihold Wsrds. { saP^a jimovvoT. ;als? i g?| . ? .aJgjC?. ; ' * I Ivoox not; the workings of his brain j And of his heart thou canst not see; < What looks to thy dim eyes a stain, 1 In God's pure light may only be A eear; brought from some well-won field, ' Where thou wouldst only faint and yield. j The look, the nir that frets thy sight, ] May be a token that below 1i The soul ha* clewed in deadly flight f With sotn* internal, fiery foe, 1 Whose glance would scorch thy smilinggracc, And cast thee shuddering on thy face ! The fall thou dareet to despise? < May be the slackened angel's hand lias suffered it, that he pay rise And take a firmer, surer stand; ? |l I Or, trusting less to earthly things. May henceforth leant to use his wings. And judge nouo lost, but wait, and see I With hopeful pity, not disdain ; 1 Tbo depth of the abyss may be The measure of the height of pain, And lore and glory that may raise This soul to Clod in after days! From tho Memoir of Dr. Justin KJwurJs. The Bum Trafficker's Sign-board. Suppose a man, when about to commence tho traffic in ardent spirits should write in great capitals on his signboard, to be seen and read of all men, what he will do: That so many of the inhabitants of this town or city, lie will, for thesaUe of getting their money make paupers, and send them to the alms house, and thus oblige tho whole community to supjiort them and their families; that so man v others ho will excite to the commission of crimes, and -i ?* i * mus increase me expenses ana enuan- j j gcr the peace and welfare of tlie com- { munity ; that so many he will send to! j the jail, and so many more to the state < state prison, and so many to the ( gallows; that so many lie will visit t with sore and distressing diseases, Aud, | in so many cases, diseases which would , have been comparatively harmless, he J1 will by his poison render fatal; that f in so many cases he will deprive per- > sons of reason, and in so many cases ] will cause sudden death ; that so many ( wives he will make widows, and so j many children he will make orphans, . and that in so many cases he will cause i :the children to grow up in ignorance, i 'vice, and crime, and after being nuis- \ ances on earth, will bring them to a premature grave; that in so many ' cases he will prevent the efficacy of the ] gospel, grievo away the Holy Gh<>st, < tana rain for eternity the souls of men. i And suppose he could, and should give j some faiut conception ot what it is to j lose the soul, and of the overwhelming i guilt and coming wretchedness of him ? who is knowingly instrumental in pro- { uucing in is ruin ; auu suppose ue ^ ahoult? put at the bottom of tue sign \ this question : What, 3*011 may ask, can t "be my object in acting so much like 1 a devil incarnate, and bringing such g accumulated wretchedness upon a i comparative happy people ? and under r it shonld put the true answer, Money; [ and go on to sn3*, I have a fhmny to < support; I want money, and must ] have it; this is my business, I ' was bro't up to it; and if I should not i follow it, I must change my business, g or I could not support my family. And < as all faces begin to gather blackness at < the approaching rnin, and all hearts to t boil with indignation at its author, sup- j pose he should add,for their consolation, j "If I do not bring this destruction up- \ on you, somebody else will." What ? would they think of him ? what would j all the world think of him? what ought t they to think of him ? And is it any worse for a man to tell the people l>efore hand, honestly, what he will do, if they buy and use his poison, than it is to go on and do it ? And what if . they are not aware of the mischief which he is doing them, and he can ac- j complihh it through their own perver-j ted and voluntary agency; is it not 1 equally abominable, it he knows it, |1 and does not ccasc from producing it ?;) The Girls. * W linn n vnnnrr mun Anfora flio nrr.no i c of the world in search of a wife, lie i should ask three questions before en- j tiering into courtship: 1st is she intel- j tigent i 2nd, is she kind and benevol- e ent? and thirdly, did she over get nj? t before breakfast in the morning 1 If f all these interrogatories be answered & in the affirmative, uo other qualifica- \ tion is indispensably necessary; for ii with such <1 wife* fortfine and fame can t easily be acquired. Hucli is the wife j for the laboring, man, such should be t the companion of one fortunately pos- ; Messed of wealth, and such sboula he j the wife of him who aspires to the t highest stations that society can be c stow. All this information can be eas- t ily obtained from the girl yon kavo in i view; for many boast of their inde- 1 fence, and think no higher compliment i could he paid than by caflihg tliein del- I "icate in health and feeble in mind. If, > - >: ? bo is weighed in the balances and i band wanting, pass her with contempt^ ^ md look to other resources for future lappiness. But marryj let the risk be what it may?it gives uiguitj to yo&* profession, it inspires confidence, and Commands respect. With a wife, the !awyers are more trusty, the doctor i more esteemed, the merchant gets a trigger credit, and the mechanic throws i ,he hammer with increased power, and ilioves the plane with a more dextrous nand?in snort, a man who has no wife. kf no man at all. She nurses him while sick, she watches for him when absent, Mid loves and cherishes him when in health. Gentlemen, get a wife?a pretty one, if you like them best?a good one, if she is to be found?and A rich me if yon can get her. Then yon will pass in visionary pleasures, as if on a bed of flowers, middle age will be enjoyed in the bosom of a nappy family, Mid when your head is silvered o'er with the frost of many winters, you reflect back with the happy consolation that you have spent your life in usefulness to yourself, and to the benefit of your fellow-man. What Peter the Qre&t saw in EnglandPeter 1 ho Groat, while in England, was as shy and unwilling to be seen as Peter the wild boy. lie was present it a ball given at Ivinsington by King William, in honor of the birthday of he Princess Anne, aflerward Queen; >r rather lie may bo said to have seen he ball, for his shyness confined him o a small room, from which lie could see without being seen. "When he saw King IVilliam on his throne in the [ louse of Lords (a night he had expressid a particular wish to see) it was not From tho gallery, nor from below the bar of the house, but from a gutter in the house top, from which ho was enabled to peep through a window into :he houso. Ho retired from this unpleasant point sooner, it is said, than he ntended; for lie made so ridiculous a igure (savs Lord Dartmouth, who was iresent) tliat neither King nor peers tould forbear laughing. Tlo was tak- i 511 to nil our London sights at that time )f any moment. To the lions aud arnorios in the Tower, to the monuments ind was~ figures in \V estininister Al>iey, to Lambeth Palace, to the muspicrade on the night of the Temple rebels, and to the two theatres in Drury Lane and Dorset gardens. lie was hiefly attracted by the Tower and the performances at Drury Lane. The wild beasts ami implements of .var were adapted to his rougher nature, while the charms of a Mass Cross, he original Miss Hoyden, in Vanburg's RelajMCy and the first actress who had 'Miss'' prefixed to her name in play-1 aids, were so engaging that the rough Czar of Russia became enamored of her beauty. Of tb:? Miss Cross the story is told in the Spectator that when she First arrived in the low countries, she kvas not computed to be so haudsomc is Madame Van Brisket by near half i ton. There is a fine old mezzotinto vhich still preserves to as the beauti*n 1 funftipna tliaf u?nn tlin lionPofoi? in 1VMV111 V ?? I?f ?? VI* W**V 11V- II1 V VI X VIV1 he Great. lie did not speak English, lor is he known to have been at all delirous of learning it; few of his sayngs have therefore been preserved. Chree however have reached us. He old Admiral Mitchell that he considered the condition of an English admiral liappier than that of a Czar of Russia, ro King William he observed. "If I .vere the adviser of your Majesty I ihould counsel you to remove your Jonrt to Greenwich, and to convert 5t. James's once more into an hospial." When in Westminister Hall, ne nquired who the busy gentleman were n wigs and gowns, ana being told they vere lawyers?"Lawyers," said he, 'why I have but two in my whole doninions, and I desire to hang one of hem the moment I get home. Dickens's Household Wm'ds. ? A Life Like Sketch. Tell mo where the Bible is, as a 1 leasehold book, nnd where it is not,' mdl will write a moral geography of he world. I will show what, in all j Mirticulars, is the physical condition of J hat. poeple. One glance of your eye | vill inform you thcJiiblo is, and where j t is not. Go to Italy?decay, degra-, lation, suffering meet you on every j lido. Commerce droojss agriculture, sickens, the useful arts langnish. There | s a heaveness in the air; you feel coin-! jrcsaed by somo invisible power; the j icople dure not speak aloud ; they walk I ilowly, and armed suuldiery is around | heir dwellings j the armed police take j rotn the stranger ins Jtible before he| sntcrs the territory. Ask for the Bide in a Ixxik store, it is not there ; or i 3 in ft form sojnrge and expensive as o be beyond the reach,of common jpeo>le. The preacher takes no text from ho Bible. You enter the vacation And rnjuire for the Bible, and you will be x>mted to some case, where it reposes imong some prohibited books, siue by tide with the works of Elderot and Vol- , aire. Bat pass over the Alps to Swit- { inland, and down the Rhine into Hotand, then over the channel to England ind Scotland, and come over to their i Icsccndants the people of tire United i hates, and what an ainuzhig contrast ? meets the eye^i Men look wkh in air of independence; these is industry, neatness, instruction for children. Why Is this difference. There is no ily?there xre n? ***** of nature, but tboy have the Bible ;and happy are the people who are in such a ease, for it is righteousness that exal- i teth a nation, and sin is a reproach to i any people. v A Balm for a Broken Heart A "broken hearted woman,ni as she calls herself, one Mrs. Laura Hunt, of Montgomery county, N. Yn notifies the pupnc through tne Amsterdam Znteuigeneer, that her dear husband, Joshua Hunt, has left her bed and board, and strayed to' parts unknown, and 6lio forbids all girls and old maids, and old widows, to meddle with or rna?rry him under penalty of the law. She earnestly entreats all editors throughout the world, to lav the foregoing information before tneir readers. Mrs. Hunt will please to perceive that we havo complied with her request.?Courier and Enquirer. And we two.?IV. B. Transcript. And we three.? Oin. Mirror. And we four.?IV. Y. Standard. And we five.? Western Methodist. And we six.?Zoin Herald. And we seven.?Maine free Press. And we eight.?Missouri Free Press. And we n i ne.? Woodstock's 11 h ig. Leave her bod and board, the villian I We ten.?National Eagle. And strayed to parts unknown, the vagabond !?Albany Advertiser. lie left her bed ! Oh, the vagrant! ?and we a baker's dozen.?Pitts. Avxerican. And wo start him again.?Minor's Journal. Keep him moving. Salt river is too good for him.?Jackson Courier. May he have corns on hiB toes and nains in his ribs, all the days ot his life. Leave a woman's bed and l)oard, the graceless knave! We'll givo him tho sixteenth kick,? Carlisle Republican. Oh, tho vagabond, he deserves an additional kick, and we'll give him the seventeenth.?Cleveland Herald. We underwrite the eighteenth endorsement.?Courier cf* Enqurier. And we give the rascal the nine tccnth shove.?Elton Argas. And here goes for tho twentieth.? American Sentinel. Fuse him around! Start him again, the scondrel! And hero goes the twenth-first kick.? XJtica Daily News. We givo him the twenty second.? Bretnren add your mite.? Vergcnnes Vennonter. Here's our kiok, number twentythree. Put it into the rascally scamp, thick and fast.?Concord Freeman. Break a woman's heart, the fiend ! Take that too.?Paineevi lie Telegraph And we repeat her wrongs and his shame to our twenty thousand readers.?Saturday Courier. Oh, the awful critter ! He'll be a courting our Peggy next. .Paragraph him, brethren, with venganco, (paragraph hi in.? Washington Index. Tweak his nose, the vannint! And until he returns, may ducks nible him, grasshoppers kick him : bedbugs bite him 1 nightmares hunt him! 1 May he have hairs in his victuals: corns on his toes; a flea in his stocking; and a bile on his nose!?(Jleavelana Plain Dealer. We arainge him as a heartless uur unionist, in thus dissolving the nn-. ion between l? imself and Laura and' Leaking the poor woman': heart,? Geauga Freeman. Break a woman's heart, miserab e mis reant. Earth and life load him with all stings and torment; crush out the last sneak of his miserable ex is. tence, and send him down to his father's (old Pluto.) regions there to dwell where the angelic presence of woman was never known.? Union. May he swallow just a quart Of cholera at each breath . May musquitoes hunt him out, And pester him to death. Toledo Blade. "Strayed," has lie, the scamp? and from a woman. He is certainly one of the poor "Know-Nothi ngs," didn't know when lie .was well off. Boot him along.?St. Louis Democrat May lie be stripped naked and all the musonitoes of the Mississippi valley hold a Convention around his body ; and may they leave his bones as tooth picks for Aligators.?Ed. Texan. Oh, the nasty, stinking, good-fornothing, pesky vagrant 1 Only think Break a woman's heart! Well give him the thirty-third kick. Trot him through!?Empier State. ?-He is worse than a heathen.? Tlllt WI m avr.litiil an/1 /.'./a k!.- ? l_! W HUM Mr VU1IXI ItllU ^If O XXI III II KIUK for us. Well pay a dollar to any one undertaking the work. Put lis down thirty-four.-?Southern Enterprise. A little one, after undergoing the disagreeable operation of vaccination, exclaimed, "Now I won't have to be baptised, win tn A man committed suicide in Fether river, i California, when a coroner's jury brought in a verdict that deceased was a datnu'd fool! Sensible jarv. I' , ll "Ml I1 ' 11 1 I1! Ill11 W?wutBEbaerihe fbr IBM! iOTBlWCirs MAGAZINE, 4 Monthly Periodical of Literature, Art , !%i .*** fashion, 1 * ?> ;V . P???i?G?V LA??3* National Maoaxihk for 1858, will contain nine hundred pages of original double-colume Reading Matter, about thirty Steel Plates, and nearly , three hundred Illustrations engraved on wood. lie Thrilling Original Stories Are from the best authors, and written expressly for it. Every volume contains one 'yCLUBBING WITH MAGAZINES. ?9" The Courier, and either Graham, Go dey, or Harper's Magazines, one vear, for Four Dollars. The Courier and Petersou's Ladies' National Magazine, Aithur's Home MAgaiine, or Scientific American, for Three' Dollars. Letters containing remittances may L* registered in any Post Office in the United States; in which caso only money forwarned to us at our risk. ANDREW M'MAKIN. No 141 CllKSTNUT St. Pi'ILADELPniA rp S. Arthur's Home IHagaX zinc for 1865. Four copies ay ear for 5. ARTHUR'S HOME MAGAZINE during the year 1855, will contain between 800 and 1000 double column octavo pages of carefully edited reading matter. It will, in addition, be largely illustrated in the best style of art, with elegant steel and colored Engravings, and by several hundred fine wood Engravings of cities, scenery, remarkable places, and objects in Science, Art, Natural History, Needlework, the Latest Fashions, Articles of Dress, Ac. All for $1,25 a year, in clubs of four subscribers. TERM8:?ONE COPY, for one year, $2,00; TWO COPIES, for one year, $3,00; THREE COPIES, for one year, $4,00; UAIt i_> rtAnvcici / - X- ? rvuA wi ino, iur one year, ao.UU. jar All additional subscriber* beyond j four at the same rate ; that is, $1,25 per annum. OCT" Where Twelve Subscribers and $15 are sent, the getter up of the olub will be entitled to an additional copy of the magazine. Lady's Book and Home Magazine, one year for $3,50. jarSpcciroen numbers sent to all who wish to subscribe or make up clube. T. 9. ART HUH & Co., 10? WAPTUT ST., Philadelphia, Pa. Mattress Making, Ac. rPHK anbacriber inform* the public that he JL has opened hi ? Shop one door above P. N Powaaa A Co's dry good Store, where he intend* carrying on ftr liiminea of MATTK1&M MAKER and HOL3TBRER. Mattre?*ea con taatly on hand and made to order, and repairing done at the shorteat notice. He alio engegea-to lay Carpeta, hang Window Hhadaa, ??- i He re^pcet/ullyorfiriti a eliarc of public patron ; ag* % ??OHH E FRAsKR I jo 15. ^ ' A tf I [/ : K' ' kfjsm> jL. M - or more of Mrs. Add S. Stephens' copyright Novels, the celebrated author of "Fashion and Famine." The Press and the Public pronounces it the most readible of the Mag* azines. It is strictly J&iorel, and eminently American, as its name implies. It* Superb Mezzotint* and other Steel graving* Are the best published anywhere; are ex* ecuted for it by the first artists; and, at the end of each year, are alone worth the sub* scription. - It* Colored Fashion Plate* Are the only reliable ones published in America, and are magnificently colorod plate*. The Paris, London-, Philadelphia and New York Fashions, are described at length, each month. Its departments for New Receipts, Crotchet Work, Embroidery, Netting, Horticulture, and Female Equestrianism, are always well filled, profusely illustrated, and rich with the latest novelties. It is the best Ladies' Magazine in the world ! Try it for one year ! ? TERMS?Always in ndvanco. One copy, one year, $2,00 Three copies, for one year, 5,00 Five copies, for one year, 7,00 Eight copies, for one year, 10,00 I Sixteen copies, for one year," 20,00 PREMIUMS FOR CLUBS. To every person getting up a club, our "Gift-Book of Art for 1055," with 50 Steel engravings will be given, or a volume of tho magazine for 1854. For a club of sixteen, an axtra copy of tho ningaziue for 1855 will be sent in addition. Address, host i?aid, CHARLES J. PETERSON, 102 Chestnut Street, Phil, j j?&~Speciinens set gratis, an 3. 12 tf THE MODEL AfflMiam WGfMM. NOW 18 THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. OF THE COURIER. TIIE Terms of the COURIER for a sin' gle year are two dollars per annum ; but, m order to continue its immense circulution, the Publishers still propose to Clulw or Companies the following terms, THE BEST EVER OFFERED:? Payadle invariably in advance. Two Copies one )*ear, or 1 Copy 2 years, $ 3* Four 44 u , - - - 5 Eioiit 44 44 (and one for the Agent!) 10 Thirteen 44 44 44 44 16 Twenty 14 44 44 44 20 - Over Twenty Copies, the same rates as the last. tar Members of old Clubs (not in arrears) are perfectly eligible to the offers to new ones, where they renewed in Chibs. and pay in full directly to the office, either personally or by mail, and not to an agent or third person. 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PRICK OK TUB DUTCIIUAK t 1 copy *2 per year 3 copies 5 J 5 " 7 M 10 44 12 44 15 44 15 44 Subscriptions received for 3, 6 or 0 months, at the same rale. Under the new postage law, the postage on the Dutchman is only thirteeu cents a year to any part of the State of New York ; out of the State, aud to any part of the Union, only twenty six cents a year:?in both caaeato be paid quarterly or annually in ad isubUi *? * These prices^will show thai the Dutchman is the choicest paper in the world. All orders must be addreised to EDWIN WESTON. ?k Co? No. 21 Aim-street, New York. DOCTOR YOURSELF. The Pocket iEsculapius; OR, EVERY OKk IIIS OWN PIIY8I0IAN. 3Q rpuE FIFTIETH EIMTIOtf, with One yjfl ' Hundred Engravings, showing Dmeases and Malformations of tho Unman System in every shape and form. To 61 wi,;?Vi .a.i?A - t? ? a m of Fomaloa, boing of the highest iropor- I Unco to married people, or those contemplating marriage. By W illiam Yoi:*?, M. D.fe, Lot uo fetlier fcc ashamed to preeenni copy of the jKHCULA PlUS to hi* eliild. It may save hint from en early grave. Let no yonng man or women enter intfeftfc* COT^t obi i {rations of mer rfan without r?amAg the P00Mnlyj?8CULAPI VS. Let no one ttflforing from harkbied rough, Pain in the vide, reetloM nighta, nervous feeling*, and the whole train of Dyspeptic sensation*, end given up their physician, be another moment without consulting the ^KBCVIJiflUB Heve those married or timer ebout to be merrie?l any iinpodimt # i< ad this truly useful book, ee it hae doen thr^vpna of earing thousands ? unfortunate croetcreifrom the very Uw?of death, flTAny prreoa sending lb*nty Fite C*M* an oloecd in a letter, will receive one copy of thW work by mail, or five cojiira sent for osm CHINA) SATIN ENAMEL, SATIN SURFACE AND PLAIN AND COLORED CAIIUH, ilpoi) fye Fqbo^qbie Jelrtj?*. ; wa W3 A (9ASJ&. | FOURTH VOLI HE OV YAIX1S itiTOQtl}. Great Improvements! ^TUIE present Number commences the , X Fourtli Vol. une of this Popular Peri- ( odical. Its success has been beyond preee- ' dent, and its circulation, already larger than that of any similar publication IX THE WORLD, is constantly increasing. Arrangements will be made which will enable the Publishers to make tho NOTIONS far superior to any comic paper ever published in tho United Stntf*. The best Artistic Tulent in the country has Wen cngagen on THE IliXtTSTRATIOXS. And each number will contain from sixty to! SEVENTY-FIVE ENGRAVINGS.- I in tlio lushest Rtyle of COMIC ART. Its Literary Contents, by a Lakok Corps ok Talented Conthiiiutors, will challenge compaiison with those of any Comic Pictorial ci&eir in Europe or America, and will i consist of a choice repertory of Humor, Fun, Satire, Wit, Comic Tales, Sketches, ifcc., aiming to "shoot folly as it flies," but never overstepping the lines of stiict'propriety, it being tho object of the Publisher to make the Yankee Notions an ever tfclcotne visitor to every Home Circlo. Subscription price $1 25 per ftnnnm; or 12 1-2 fenta per number. For sale by all the News Agents and Periodical Dealers in every city, town nnd village in tho United Slates tt'id Canada. T. W. STRONG, Publisher, 98 Nassau-st., N. Y, UENRYVKRNON; OB, TM& 1I8AM. BY A GEORGIAN. THIS ia the title of a Romance now in por- j cess of completion, which will l>e issued in two numbers on the 1st and 15th of July, 1855. The sconce are laid mainly in the United States, England and Spain, Tho work will be printed on pure white paper with iicw typo and will equal in quantity of matter an ordinary sized Duodecimo volume of 300 pages. It will be promply issued am|., fowarded to all who will send their orders accompanied by the cash. termst L The pHfcUtfcer* temlsr tUr flptttefel Vr* ^QwWgmeoU fori^!?^l>6r^ ^ "H* wmf of the Most Ce^br*ted^tow?iJPem>R tjjw ? ll i mo wuiuioiicou. 1m lowwmij *f8 now in the bands of an eminent aetiat, to be 90 graved, vix, Jenny Lint), Anna Sontag, Catharine llayes, Alboni, stzi Mr*. E. G.oostwlok. If (bene should Mrt with hvor, although very expensive, they will be followed by others of a similar charactern-as the publisher* are determined that the Wreath and Annual shall continue t?l* the I lest of the Dollar Magaxiues. . The Literary Matter will be entieslb original ; from the ablest and purest wwa in the eOnntry. Every thing of an imaiea^ ?r irreligious character will becareiuity exslnded, vVe intend to present the pnblis with work which shall blend entertainment with instruction, and not only captivate the* test*, but also elevate the thoughts and imyov the heart?in short, to make the Wrnath and Annual "a welcome visitor in eveiyfiiin* The Literary Department will be ably sustained. All who are interested in a pure Fauiiip Literature, and are willing to assist in fostering the best nativo talent, are invited to become subscribers and aid in its circulationEach number will contain a fine steel En? raving, and a Thirty-two harge Octavo'ages, printed on fine pnper. The May nt>ml>cr will have an attractive Title-page, making in ail Twenty five Einliellbhments, and n volume of Four Hundred and Thirtyfour pages! Notwithstanding the increased cost of the work by the advance in the price of paper and printing, we shall continue to furnish the work at the following exceoding low.price : Olio Dollar a Year, in Advance; Four Copies, one year, *3,00; Seven Copies, #6,00 ; Ten Copies 67,00; Fifteen Conies, 610,00. Money may be sent by mail, at tbo risk of the pnMishers, if inclosed iu the presence of a postmaster, whose certificate will be taken as evidence. Postage-stumps maybe sent in place of change. All communications in any way connected witli the Wreath nud Annual uiust be directed, post-paid, to HUll DICK A SCOVIL. No 8, Spruce Street, New York. British Periodicals. EARLY COPIER SECURED. LOEN'ARD SCOTT A CO, New-Turk. rsntiau* t*? re-pn blub the follow liritUh PeriwdWnl*, viz: 1. Tut Lonuox Qalkterly (Conservative) 2. The Edinburgh Review (Whig,) 3l Tuj: N. British Review (Free Chunh) 4. Tn* Westminister Review (Liberal) 5. I3lack\youi?>*? So. Mavaijnk (Tory A THE pieeent critical stake of European affairs will render itose publications unusually iuterestfngdwriag the forthcoming year. They will occupy a middle ground between the hastily w risks* news-itciot?. crude speculations and fly?ag ramort of tb? daily Journal, and the poaderees Tome of the future historian, written after the Kriue interest and excitement of the greet poStical events of the time shall have passed away. H is to these Periodicals that readers mast look for the only really intelligible and icHabW history of curreut events, and as such, in addition to their well-established literary, scientific, and, theological character, wo urge theni upon the consideration of the reading public. Arrangements are now permanently made for the receipt of Early Shuts from the British Publishers by which we are enabled to place All our Raprints in the hands of subscribers, about as soon as they can be furnished with the foreign copies. Although this involves a very large outlay on onr part, we shall continue to furnish the Pcriodicab at the same low rates as heretofore, via : ? l'er aim. t? me- ? ror nn j one 01 tue roar Keviews $8 00 For any two of tlie four Review* 6 00 For any three of tlie four Review* 7 00 Foral! four of the Reviews. 8 00 For Blackwood* 00 For Blackwood and 3 Ke.'iew* 9 00 For Blackwood 6c the 4 Review* Id f? Payments to be madein all otms in ad nonet, Money current in the Stale ?ehett issued vtill be rrcieved at far. CLUBBUTO. A discount of twenty-five per cent, from the above price* will be allowed to Clube ordering four or more coplee of aav o?e at more of the above works. Thus: lour copies of Blackwood, or of one Review, will besent to one address for $9; four copies of the four Reviews and Blackwood for 980; and so on. P08TA0X. In all the principal (Wat and Town*, these works will be delivered through Agents, FREE OF POSTAGE. 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