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The Skeptical Mother. W. H. HOLCOMBE,.
The Wives of the Poets. T. B. ALDRICH,
The Wife's Lament. R. H. STODDARD,.
Treachery. FITZ-JAMES O'BRI N,.

172

180

196

285

PARIS and Life There. H. T. TUCKERMAN,..1, 475 The Rainbow. HENRY R. SCHOOLCRAFT,

R

807

REVELATIONS of Wall Street. R. B. KIMBALL.
18, 121, 298, 404, 525, 634
Rev. Mr. Tympan's Misfortune. WM. WIRT
SIKES,.

The Sea. EDWARD S. RAND, Jr...
The Fisher's Daughter. C. H. WEBB,.
U

.598

603

Real and the Ideal. MARY FARQUHAR,.

286
507

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FROM THE NEW-YORK COURIER AND ENQUIRER.

Every intelligent person will appreciate the REBELLION RECORD, now publishing by G. P. Putnam, 532 Broadway, New-York.'

Will be issued in WEEKLY PARTS, at 10 cents each, and in MONTHLY PARTS, at 50 cents each, ILLUSTRATED with PORTRAIT and MAP,

THE REBELLION RECORD:

A Diary of American Events, 1860-'61,

INCLUDING

THE PATRIOTIC POETRY OF THE TIME; A DIGEST OF ALL VERIFIED FACTS; ACCURATE COPIES
OF ALL ESSENTIAL DOCUMENTS; AND A RELIABLE TRANSCRIPT OF ALL
NOTABLE AND PICTURESQUE INCIDENTS.

Carefully Edited, as a Permanent Digest for Future Reference,
BY FRANK MOORE,

AUTHOR OF THE DIARY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION,'

WITH A PRELIMINARY HISTORICAL OUTLINE OF THE CAUSES OF THE STRUGGLE.
I.-Diary of Verified Events.

II.-Poetry, Anecdotes, and Incidents.
III.-Documents, Proclamations, Speeches, etc.

G. P. PUTNAM, Publisher, 532 Broadway, New-York.

For Sale by Booksellers and Newsmen generally.

Twenty consecutive numbers, or four Monthly Parts, will be sent, free of postage, on receipt of $2 in curreat New-York Funds, or Postage-Stamps, by the Publisher.

GENERAL

SCOTT.

A Magnificently Engraved PORTRAIT of GEN'L SCOTT,

Size, 19 by 24 inches, is published this day, by VIRTUE & CO., 26 JOHN STREET, NEW-YORK.
Price, One Dollar. Agents wanted.

THE ART JOURNAL:

A Record of the Fine Arts, the Arts Industrial, and the Arts of Design and Manufacture. THIS work has long maintained a high and prominent place in public favor, not less for the value and beauty of its illustrations and attractions as a book for the Drawing-Room, but it contains information carefully sought and skillfully condensed, interesting to the Artist, the Amateur, and the Connoisseur. To those engaged in ART MANUFACTURE, its importance is fully acknowledged by all engaged in the numerous factories of Great Britain and the United Rates. BENSON J. LOSSING, author of the "Pictorial Field-Book of the Revolution," is at present contributing a Series of Papers descriptive of

'THE HUDSON, FROM THE WILDERNESS TO THE SEA,' Which have been written expressly for the American Edition. They are profusely Illustrated by Wood Engravings from actual sketches made by Mr. Lossing in the Autumn of 1859.

TURNER GALLERY.

Engravings from Pictures by this most celebrated Artist will be continued during 1861. The execution of these plates will be found unapproachable in quality, and each Engraving alone worth the price of the number.

Subscriptions, $9 per annum; 75 cents per month. Each Monthly Number contains three highly finished Engravings on Steel, besides numerous Illustrations on Wood. A favorable opportunity to subscribe to the ALT JOURNAL occurs at present, by the commencement of a New Volume with the January number.

Terms for Clubs will be forwarded on application, and Subscriptions received by the Publishers, VIRTUE & CO., JOHN STREET, NEW-YORK.

ENGRAVINGS, FOR ALBUMS AND SCRAP-BOOKS.

A great variety, in Packets, each containing 25 Engravings. PRICES: Large size, $1; small size, 50 cents each. VIRTUE & CO., 26 John Street, New-York.

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42,580 43.

CASH CAPITAL,

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Assets, 1st Jan., 1860, $1,458,396 28.

Liabilities,

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THIS COMPANY INSURES AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY FIRE, ON FAVORABLE TERMS.

LOSSES EQUITABLY ADJUSTED AND PROMPTLY PAID.

Charles J. Martin,
A. F. Willmarth,
William G. Lambert,
George C. Collins,
Danford N. Barney,
Lucius Hopkins,
Thomas Messenger,
William H. Mellen,
Charles B. Hatch,
B. Watson Bull,
Homer Morgan,
L. Roberts,

DIRECTORS:
Oliver E. Wood,
Alfred S. Barnes,
George Bliss,
Roe Lockwood,
Levi P. Morton,
Curtis Noble,
John B. Hutchinson,
Charles P. Baldwin,
Amos T. Dwight,
Henry A. Hurlbut,
Jesse Hoyt,

William Sturgis, Jr.
John R. Ford,
Sidney Mason,

ELE

Levi P. Stone,
James Humphrey,
George Pearce,
Ward A. Work,
James Low,
Isaac H. Frothingham,
Charles A. Bulkley,
Albert Jewitt,
George D. Morgan,
Theodore McNamee,
Richard Bigelow,

J. MILTON SMITH, Secretary.

Geo. T. Stedman, Cinn.
Cyrus Yale, Jr.,
William R. Fosdick,
F. H. Cossitt,
David I. Boyd, Albany,
S. B. Caldwell,
A. J. Wills,

W. H. Townsend.

CHARLES J. MARTIN, President.
A. F. WILLMARTH, Vice-President.

'AMERICAN SCHOOL INSTITUTE,'

(ESTABLISHED IN 1855.)

A RELIABLE EDUCATIONAL BUSINESS AGENCY FOR

SCHOOL OFFICERS, TEACHERS, AND PUPILS.

The Special Objects of the Institute' are:.

1st. To provide Families, Schools, and Colleges with competent Teachers, for any department of Instruction. The address, and particulars of suitable candidates, for any position, however responsible, may always be obtained. 2d. To aid Teachers in securing positions adapted to their qualifications.

8d. To negotiate the Purchase, Sale, and Exchange of School Properties.

4th. To be a general Depository of Circulars, and information of good Schools-for the convenience of Parents and Guardians when seeking Educational advartages for their Children and Wards.

5th. To supply School Officers and Teachers with School-Books, Apparatus, Maps, Globes, Charts, Sheet-Music, Musical Instruments, and every kind of School Merchandise, American and Foreign, at large discounts from regular rates.

6th. To keep a correct and complete List of the Teachers of the entire country, for the use of Publishers, and others interested therein.

For details and indorsements, send for our Circular.

Philadelphia Office, 25 Sonth Sixth St.
Southern Office, Savannah, Georgia.

California Office, San Francisco.

G. S. WOODMAN & COMPANY,

596 BROADWAY, NEW-YORK.

From Rev. Samuel Lockwood, the accomplished Scholar and the eminent Naturalist. Perhaps the most remarkable exponent of what METHOD can accomplish, is that system of Intelligence tactics, or that new phase of Educational business, as conducted and developed by the AMERICAN SCHOOL INSTITUTE.' Here is a set of gentlemen who keep themselves posted on the entire Educational wants and resources of the whole country. Every department of Education, high or low, comes within the plan. In a word, as to Education, taking it in a wide range, its apparatus, its literature, its wants and resources, are tabled, as it might be, in a Bureau of Educational Statistics.

And now mark the effect of such knowledge. In a time consideration, what saving! Instead of schools of high character being closed, or suffered to decline until the right man turns up, one is provided whose calibre is known. The right man in the right place.'

The loss of time, misdirection of talent, imposition by unprofessional charlatanry-each in itself no small misfortune to patron and pupil-are happily avoided.

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GARDINER'S RHEUMATIC & NEURALGIA COMPOUND.

A certain, safe, and permanent cure for Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Salt Rheum. It is an internal remedy, driving out and entirely eradicating the disease, requiring no change in diet or business, and may be taken by children and persons of 'he most delicate constitutions with perfect safety.

TESTIMONIALS.

"Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound" is the best medicine for the disease I ever saw. CHAS. A. SMITH, No. 1 Old State House, Boston. After suffering with Rheumatism twenty years, and being c nfined to my bed several weeks last spring, I was entirely cured by the use of one bottle of "Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound." NORMAN T. AYRES, 75 Franklin Street, Boston. Having been a constant sufferer from Neuralgia for eighteen months, and been driven by excruciating pain to the trial of numberless remedies without obtaining relief, I was induced to try "Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound." I have taken but one bottle, and am entirely well. D. D. BAXTER, Dry Goods Dealer, No. 5 Appleton Block, Lowell, Mass. I have been afflicted with Salt Rheum in its worst form for a long time, and suffered more than can be imagined, except by those similarly afflicted. I tried one bottle of your Compound, and can honestly say that I believe myself entirely cured. JOHN A. MORDO, Pearl Street House, Boston, Mass. "Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound" has entirely cured me of sufferings of several years' standing. W. E. HODGKINS, No. 1 Old State House, Boston.

My son, ten years of age, has been for three years a great sufferer from Salt Rheum, his hands covered with sores and in constant pain. One bottle of your Compound cured him. J. W. HAMMOND, 99 Milk Street, Boston.

"Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound" has entirely cured me of Neuralgia. W. C. THOMPSON, Proprietor Pearl Street House, Boston, Mass.

One half a bottle of your Compound cured me of a severe attack of Neuralgia.

FANNIE S. THOMPSON, Pearl Street House, Boston.

I certify that my friend Wm. T. Glidden, Esq., presented me with a bottle of "Gardiner's Rheumatic Compound" in 1836, when I was suffering with a painful attack of Neuralgia and Rheumatism, and that it proved to be of decided benefit. ALBERT SMITH, Ex-Member of Congress from Maine.

The undersigned hereby certify that they have used "Gardiner's Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound," for the cure of Rheumatism and Neuralgia, and found in every case immediate and permanent relief. We have full confidence in its healing qualities, and would recommend it to all who are afflicted with these harassing diseases as one of the safest and best medicines ever offered to the public.

S. HANCOCK, Jr., 20 So. Market St., Boston; HENRY A. FULLER, 18 So. Market St., Boston; W. H. ALLEN, Boston; ELMER TOWNSEND, 45 and 47 Pearl St., Boston; CAPT. CHAS G. DOLLIVER, Boston; SAMUEL WALES, Jr., City Hotel, Boston; C. KIRMES, 215 Washington St., Boston; HENRY D. GARDINER, Webster St., East Boston; GEO. H. PLUMMER, 1 Maverick Sq., East Boston; ABRAM WEEKS, Webster St., East Boston.

The Rheumatic and Neuralgia Compound has been taken by hundreds of persons for Scrofulous Humors with great benefit.

PRINCIPAL DEPOT, 87 KILBY ST., BOSTON, MASS.

F. C. WELLS & CO., 115 FRANKLIN ST., Wholesale Agents for New-York. For sale by Apothecaries generally throughout the United States. None genuine unless signed by CHARLES F GARDINER.

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REQUIRES ONLY TO BE NAILED DOWN. WATER-PROOF, ELASTIC, DURABLE, and CHEAP.

Sent in rolls, which require no labor nor coating. Extra width for CARTOPS, all in one piece-no seams. The Roof can be steep or flat, or any required inclination. Costs less than half as much as tin, and lasts more than twice as long. Also,

LIQUID GUTTA-PERCHA CEMENT,

FOR

PAINTING AND REPAIRING TIN ROOFS.

Costs much less than Paint, and does not require renewal.

The ROOFING and CEMENT have stood the test of time. They have now been extensively used during many years. The Roofs become firmer and more solid every year, and any number of testimonials can be furnished as to their merits. Specimens and information furnished by the

GUTTA-PERCHA ROOFING COMPANY,

No. 23 CEDAR STREET, NEW-YORK.

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