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.6 2 PO A— T NEW ruu“flfl”- A YANKFE IN rnum. mvn.v AND RE FURM PAPERS. By Tawey wihor of A oLk~ '"":-"'hm PPl 1In Concerd, one Epring morming, four years ‘sgo; there passed away a quiet man, who wore coarse ehoes, and shabby raiment, and sometimes, being in want of money, made a few Jead pencils, or taught & while, or surveyed bis neighbors’ Sields, but for the most part seemed aimless and idle. The villagers, kpew him for an eccentric citisen who refused to pay bie poll-tax—nhis friends knew him for a rare soul with womanly purity and subtle intellect—a few readers who took up eagerly any printed page of his, knew bim for the closest of cbservers, the most daring, yet the most devout of meditative thinkers, the finest of paintess of what things be bad ,seen, the most daunt- Jess apostle of those things which, unseen, he yet be- lieved. At the time of his death, but few of his shorter papers had been published. He was & con- tributor to the old Dial, but articles which he sent to otber periodicals were™gejected, or returned with a request that he would abate something of their terri- ble demand for abeolute truth, or justice, which, of course, this brave seer refused to do. Only since he died bave we had nearly all the * Atlantic™ series of his articles, his '* Letters to Various Persons,” his * Cepé Cod,” and now the ** Yaukee in Canada.” In all are noticeable the same marvelous power of observation, which is like & sixth sense, the eame in- timacy with nature, as if he were the dearest of all her children, and to him she had whispered her most sacred secrets, go that her symbols cease to be vafls to him, and become shrines; the same wonderful power of desoription by which he gives us the picture, or the fact a8 it stands, without color from his fancy—his fancy that wae yet ¢o dainty and go keen; the same amaring sccurscy of statement, \munpuc ble as the multiplication table; the same instant translation of these bard-featured facts into shining imaginations with celestial wisdom on their lips; the same peglect of mvlhod orof art, so that & sentence rhythmieal, i:ueful and peuucid is set among others care- and roggedness; and the same ex- qumu poetic sense and detective lyrical constructive- nese, or temperawent, or method, which makes 80 much of his prose poetic, and so few of bis poemws pure try. His sincerity is so utter, almost so sustere, as to seem sometimes like himor. Peérhaps no other man who lived to be 44 years of age, and whose geuius was fit to solve the most complex problems of life, ever possessed 80 much ‘‘ other worldliness” ag be. He wrote once: ** The youth gets together his mate- rials to build a bridge to the moon, or perchance, a rlwe or temple on the earth, and at length the mid- sged man coueludes to build 8 wood-shed of them.” Thoreau never built wood-sheds, but ladders reaching to the unchangeable skies whereon the angels of his pure thoughte passed continually vp and downi or, perhaps, temples to the Eternal Bpirit, rough- -bewn and irregular, but with windows all affame with a light not of earth, and an altar on which burned stead- ily a celestial fire. For this man who never went to ohurob, and once refused to pay & tax levied ‘upon him as one of a congregation of which he wag not a member, was a living gospel. There was no place in bim for an ignoble woughx to build, no capacity in. him to handle an ignoble deed. His creed demanded not only parity, but excellence. Somewherehe gays: *Be notsimply good. Be good for sowethivg.” And again, sometbing like this: ‘It is not enongh that we are truthful; we must cherish and carry out high purposes to be truthful about.” TLi€ then is our tourist. A man who travels with 0o haud-book, with no letters of introduetion, with no intent to see the men who have most silver- plate, aud richest carpets; who is cumbered by no rtmantean, but carries bis scanty changes in.a dkerchief. and bears a pocket-compass in place of | visiting-cards. A man who takes nothing ou trust, bat asks every custom, and every show what excuse it has for being: whose veneration is so deep that neither traditipn, nor antiquity, nor precedent, nor worship, nor ceremonial, nor law has any significance to bim except as it interprets the higher life. Parson and people, judge and criminal, lord and meuial, shurch &nd State be calls before the bat of his judg- ment and senteuces, without respect of persops. * That terribls Thorean” bis friends used to call hiw, %0 searching was his unalysie, so keen his insight. ] fear 1 have not much to eay about Canada,” says this realist, ‘' not baving seen m what 1 got by going to Canuda was a cold, * * * 1 wished only to be set down in Canada, and take one bonest walk lbeve, as I might in Concord roads of an after- noon.” Yet in his ten days, to which he was limited, having gone on a cheap excursion, he saw. all that was characteristio of Canada, and gives usa study minuteas & Duteh interior, and picturesque as Millais, Poering from his little square of window at Keene, s the cars rash tbrough, he moralizes after a quaint sud charming fashion: * Keene-st, strikes the traveler favorably; it is so wide, level, straight and long. I bave heard one of my relatives, who was bors and bred there, say that you could see a chicken run | scross it & mile off. I have also been told that when this town was settled they Jaid out & street four rode | wide, but at & subsequent meeting of the proprietors one rose sud remarked: ‘ We have plenty of room, why not make the street eight rods wide!' and so they vated that it should be eight zods wide, aud the town is known, far and near, for its bandsome street. It was a cheap way of securing comfort as well as fame, and I wish that all new towns would take pat- tern from this. It.is bestto lay our plans widely in youth, for then land is cheap, and it is but too easy to ooutract our views afterward. Youths so lnid out with broad avenues and parks thet they may make handsome and liberal old men'! Show me a youth whose mind is like some Washington City of mugnifi- oent distances, for the most remotely suc- ceseful and glerious life after all, when Lhose spaces aball be built over and the idea of the founder be re- alized. T trust that every Naw-l!nphd boy will begin by laying out s Keene-st., mugfi ead, ‘ ht mllvnd 1 know one euch Wasl mmn(,‘u » mah whose lots 88 yet are only surveyed an: mhd out, and except a cluster of shanties here and there, only the capitol stands there for all structares, :d every day you may see from afar his princely ides coach- wue slong the spacious but yet empty avenues.” All through Vermont he finds the ny fall of in- terest. Crossing the unmarked p:&. ‘al boundary be- tween the States and Canada, observation re- veals the action of new laws and another people. Everywhere soldiers are seen drilling, and in maneu- wer were far better than our militia. (This was before the war.) Looking at them, this shrewd New-En- fh lander observes: ‘‘I tho that the Yankee, h undisciplined, bad this sdvantage st lesst, especially is & man who everywhere, and undor all circumstances, is fally resolyed to better his eondition essentially, and therefore he could afford to be beaten at first; while the virtue of the Irishman, and to a great extent the Englhhm‘a, cousists in lnnly ldnwmn( his nd olumdnwn." whose tin roofs flashed in m lunl‘ J‘ "TM: reflections feel on the eye hlono sh of cymbals on the ear.” pou Cathedral of Notre Dame, the largest impressed him with its vastoess, go-.nlm-nd the few poo'rl- who* ltolflnuu their morning prayers, unmindful cach dunomzn presence, seemed o have some dim religious zeal. is true,” says this Dissenter, *“these Roman Ci NEW-¥ORK DALY 'PRIBUNE:! THURSBAY, :OCTOBER mmu& not, for T like one who was not aware of sny defidon.cfi in that respect. Probably there was not one of all the Yankees -homtw(!mmhfinn who was mot more splendidly dressed than I It would h-v“ been 8 poor story if Ihsd not enjoyed £ some distinotion.” "~ Everywhere the poverty smethanical assistance and the drudgery of men stared him in the face, the explanation being that labor was #0 cheap, and the thought struck bim with some pain how ¢l eup men must be! Warburton, an uuvder, bad observed that, in Canada, everything 'was cheap ezcopt men. ** That must be the ol betwaen going thither from New and from Old En- Wamng down the 8t. Lawrence, from Quebee, past the Falls of Montmorenci and La Pace, to the Falls of Bt.’Anne, this wandering Yankee sees all thioge, physical development, scenery, men and women, cus- toms, a8 with a microscope, and ghows them ssin & photograph. Yet without crudeness, or hardness, for, as he truly says, the Canada which he saw was not merely place for railroads to terminate in sod furl tive slaves to run to, but appeared dreamy and old, seeming like Normandy, r recalling memories of LuroPe and the Middle Ages. The chapter entitled Valls of Quebec " deserves to be printed entire, in phce of this article, so wise is it, so witty, 8o phil- osophie, so fresb. Of course, quotation is not erif cism, Dor extract essay nor explapation, but it is such a selfishness to read Thoreau alone, that the mptation to quote indefinitely is overmastering Chapter Fifth, and last, if less epigrammatic and terse, is hmlly less chu’mmfi it is & heartfelt sigh you breathe when this bright companion jumps down from the platform at his own door in Concord, and leaves you to make the rest of your journey alone —beit to New-York, or New-Zealand, or ven- worth. For whoever reads the book will have made the Canada journey, and in the rarest of company. In figures accuraté as a ledger, in details minute as & guide-book, in description graphio as a photograph, these pages are yet free, breezy, original, full of life and éolor. If Thoreau lacks the finigh and precision of Emerson, he has more than Emerson’s grace, and to none other can he be compared. The other papers in_this volume are addresses in- spired by epecinl oceasions, aud magazine papers pub- lished for the most part eome years ago. ~Reading 3hem one does not wonder that he was called ** that terrible Thoreau.” No shield, except the whole armor of righteousness, avails against bis thrusts. His sword of truth is more lpplflln%lhm a full armory of baser weapons. He is a_sublime inquisitor who makes us march through a fiery furnace, and not one of us comes forth unsinged. He is the jndm‘. patient and solemneeyed, who asks each trembling culprit, “ Guilty or not guilty 1” and all ave dumb in con- scious turpitude. His bigh belief is the legendary mantle of King Arthur's Court, which was the terrible test of virtne, and as he folds it around ench of us, it shrinks and shrinks and will_not cover our naked- pess. Yet this contemner of customs, whose de- mands we cannot meet, is high, and solemn, and jm- perious only because the truth of which he is the clear wedium is 60. In sympathy with nature he is a faun —a faun with a soul—on whose bead the birds sing, to whose shoulders the equirrels climb and chatter, from whose hand the fishes eat. Not through any mean Pharisaism, but through his clear gense of the divine possibilities of man, he is impatient of the poverty,and limitations of men. Living much in solitude and weighing only tbe verities of life, he is amazed that peoylv pass their years in weighing bub- bles, and proclaims them fools, fivrgrumf that ignor- ance often plays with the same toys as folly, bui upon rumm-l throws them away forever. ‘‘Guaw your own boue' ke says eomewhere in bis lptters, and nobody ever did it more persistently thandie. He follows the logic of customs, of inetitutions, of law, to jts last re- sult, which he find« an absurdity, while weé stop short, contented w..h the present proposition, and find 1t worthy and venerable. No re ion against litw was ever more carnest and consistent than hie, No layalty to justice was ever more entire, Rather | than suffer auy human being to be oppressed in the name of Government and Constitution, * I need not say what match S would touch, what system endeavor to blow up; but as 1 love my life 1 wonld side with the light, aud let the dark earth roll from under me, calliug my mother and brother to follow, 1 would remind my countrymen, that they are to be men first, and Americans only at a late and couvenient hour. No matter how valuable law may be to protect your roperty, even to keep soul and body h.gzlher, il it 0 pot keep you, and humanity togethe There is no sach thing as. nccomvluhmg » ghumm reform by the use of ‘‘expedicncy.” ‘Thero is . mno - such " thin, s slidiog up hill, ““In morals the only eliders are backsuders.” *The fate of the country does not depend on how you vote at the polle—the worst man is a8 strong a8 the best at that game; it does not depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot-box once & year, but on what kind of man you dmp from your chamber into the smev,uer{ morning.” ** It is not so important that many should be 88 good as you as that there be some absolute goodness ; 1ot that will leaven the whole lump,” £ There aré 999 patrons of virtue for oue virtuous man.” “If T devote myself to other (than so-called philantbropic) pursuits and contemplations, T must first see, at least, that I do not pursue them sitting upon another mau's shoulders. I must get off Lim first, that he may pursue bis coutemplations too.” " Action from principle * : eutially revolutionary, aud does not con wholly with any- thing which was. It not ounly divides States and charches, it divides families; aye, it divides the indi- vidual, separating the diabolical in bim from the divine.” This statesman and pbdmrhn refuses to pay his taxes, thereby peacedbly declaring war with the State, because be believes the State uses the money thus plherw for unjust ends, jndirectly supporting war, slavery and other orgenized crimes. He goes to jail therefor, whence some friend rescues bim, by paying the tax under protest of this protestant. This course of expostulation and loyal disobedience was the simplest necessity to him, who was incapable of an affectation. Yet be warne bimself to be on his guard lost bis action Le binssed by obstinacy, or an undue regard for the opinions of men, and to take heed that he does only what belongs to himself, and the hour. His enthusissma for courage, for truthfulness, for fidelity, becomes an extacy; his contempt for their shadows, for men who as be says “bavea't life enough in them to die, but delnqnuu like fungi, aud ke hundred eulogists mup z;fi w_hmd\q% off," is & white heat of indgnant scon.” ' Erery lmeodmf of Thereau makes him more loved and leaned npon. For be, who in life r uued bimself too buey, too pmmnpcedfu riendship, comes nuv as chiefest counselor, confossor, friend, to our{ soeking and thoughtful epirit. m- bruequeness no longer repeh. his large sympathy and rare wisdom attract. America is just learning what & marvelous child was born unto her, and when she fully knows she will wear bim in her beart of hearts, “He ig,” ** He ways,” we write and say of him; never “He was," “Ho said.” For there s such vitalit in this strong nature that death cannot uencfl it, nor decay consume. What he said of John Brown is true in a different degree of himself: **He is more allye than ever he was. He has earnvd immortality.” e AL LITERARY ITEMS. il i The select works of Charles nglay are sbout to e issued ju elegant form by Leypoldt & n!:oré has been engaged to illustrate Pope's “Raven." Robert H. Newell (**Orpheus C. Kerr”) is wnunp verius phases of lics, priests and all, impress me { & novel in two volumes to illustrate tie a8 8 people who haye fallen far behind the significance American life and manners. of their symbols. It i§ a4 if an ox had strayed into » d:uwh.lndmlmll to bethink himself. = Never- theless, they of reverence, but we Yan- Ioumlpo?hh ‘whom this sentiment has pearly died cut, this respect wo cannot bethink us " These vest charches suggest caves, in whose solem: Llhnunr. snd aspiration would stir,” and po priest be needed. Forests are even more religious in thew at: and in them should faves be hallowed. Our nmtln‘ houses ought W be places of meditation, always open, and always hilosophy, nd to poetry; beside a reading-room to Lvu a thinking-reom in every ecity ! Perchance the timo wi!l come when every house even will have not only its sleeping-rooms, and dining-room, and talking- room or wr-r, but its thinking-room siso; und the Moy it architects will put it inte their pians. Let it bo fur? | o OO g o nished and ornamented with whatever conduces to serious and creative thought. 1 ehould nof object to the holy water, or &ny other rimple symbol, ifit were | cousecrated.by the immgination of the . worsbijers. Thi poet; who thussoars * aloft n un ¢ ther u? fim- meditation, sees the customs of m l'nnm,e and the strong mwumm -im the eyes of the polilical econ- owiat, a0d the believer iu no government. *On every rmmmrlt ledgo you conld see England’s hands hold: { yrivsen by The Augsiurg Gazette bas a long article upan re- cent literary pufiuumu in England. The -nrmp‘g the books ate given in English, and among them is a work much by the writer, which 1 called “Felix Holf, the A “ Dramatic llon!hl(y nfume has been estab- Fuulkner. John Brougham and wbers of the theatrical profession write *in the first_number are not of the urder, but the publisher promises to improve the publi- bighe cation in this Tespect. thn Esten Cooke is writing 8 work entitled ** The sacred. e T B ot ry. The" il Sock not sivs A 0, of this e title docs "y ;hlnk of their value not only to religion but to | o clear ideaof the book. ~ Tt will chiéfly consist. Of sketobes. of the Southern heroes who distinguished themselves in the lute wat. A pew edition of Dr. Lardner's work on ‘the Elee- tric Telegray sraph is o amounecd for publication, rovised and ro- nn.m \m.rvhnrv of the British wad Irish will contain new chapiers uu Telegruph % hdl-‘q:vuh ;J»n:mm:.llnlm T nx‘-xumm ) lhklh)\q, esting 61 wor o in ra o A Gy e aln M. Buinte-Beuve's last work, £ 10 its su &e K i dyense of their common friepd. b gosiion of ML Saipie H«u‘nlu.-x the inte Alfred db ¥igny muy anot N Patin, deitverd at it s Academie, D Vj, en :hr.‘x’:rw O oy ‘“ “ Nouveanx Lun. skotchey 15 %9 dispar- 31 Dy SPRACH body Do was alimost e ug the Canadas, ndl&udged by the rednéss of her | I Yy M. ao Mole. " Sainie Beuve, sald M Patia, oot joi: wjatiouiaot.” y iuuekm w.ulu wonld soon have 1 Jet go.’ I Quebec anin qu-d the mumbers of soldiers smemed the most puticeal lo social chersoteristie of the town, and. their condition | of . repression,’ of uporigis valty, of Iukmuu, we the Eysiely « of the 'vd dedicpor bpisides i the ook, ving. LS ¥ oo0d 5., 1..11 wih the red-cogtéd snmands K OE Yeur of IEcrtoR oF Ly atone wit 9607 Vohkidy uu" 'l.w.qw ! Totlent, mats Vigny et | A ®opy of the New Freneh' Pharmacopmns has YLeen -:.v}; 10 the Emperor by the Minister o -w‘ Tnstrae ok Lan bess pud!ished by order: of, ther (husope n “ut, 594 how been drawn 99 by A cot) LIo8 b have do. voted thoe yearn 10 iy gumpllabicae Lbe wreviouyy in ke war pablisked in i<f7, and wus very, dofecives Tn the new ARl opoan, i bes been atterpeed to muke: the formilse comy an Boch a ponsiLlo w301 st 4a et (he ol 'n-mm}\p.,;:%“' " :”;‘r?uyflw’fuf}fi-‘mfi. L, w0 Sy may, il e e fua &.fl‘&’.‘:&“‘""“"fi, et 4rery aive fiufldw which the pubho hlu 1s the hflmz m-fik fl m Tor 8, samuch s it includes g e L Pl’ not current Eaghish teratus 20 o eateagis rom foreign books. For these, of Mm- American nm“w mmn or the holder of the eopyright; i ensi nu":e":.lflll 3 t 3 B8 vt u"m" without feeling elections in wmm \lmolv s, nu-y- in ndvnoo and J:o' —4—— BOOKS RECEIVED. The Rie and the Fal; Or b Orisa of Mora vl 1o thoe pare "‘"“".,.“.r:’h L nagorpeare. 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"~ Y G Tur Wons 09 Fraxcis Racos, Buron'of Veralam, Viseount Bt Alb'n and Lord mn Ch.ulla o and, collected and edited B-b-n uln s, M. L.u::‘I)oldll .- llulfl . IIUL‘&T‘)N. My 459 Brooweat,, N. Y. Al THE BEST! ‘“’- et vy w T§i un WokE ¥ HTE Givie WaR, !Ilafllili-ul nne.nunl. e ln'ru sA 1"!! cul#lasmn.l:m dustioguished for their ma.;".".- ith sbund l.m hundred sthors, whiies ‘Q‘:‘flb""'m‘ s e shovsands -l..pul.: who' bravs Horvines irey fanger an .nuu.m, or qulatly to time, health. and many of theen life, to nv‘;.-u itten by an ewineut scbolsr and divine, himneel! act! y "' 1 in philantbropic labors. The work wiil cootaln Mlfl ‘-‘:.-Iquuu u‘lh:b.w“lmm.m"“"w ers Vo the country, fromw phokogr ,.A.nn.u mmyuv S REREI, Sipen et AUBURN lel.““lfi Co., Avburn. N. Y. YUMAS' GREAT DRAMATIC ROMANCE, THE CORSICAN BROTHERS, will bn for SALE by ail Brookeell ors and News Agenta o M- Y-t -u elsowhere, oo SATURDAY weat. Prics, 0 cente. T. B, rubuun s BROTHERS, Philadelphis. %A GOOD THING." “RICH AND RACY.” STPTOPY “LOOK AT IT.” A Handsoma Pictorial. A Family Magezine. TRY THE ILLUSTRATED PHRENO- LOGICAL JOURNAL balf & year—July (6 Janvary—for 81 or & Yot for §2. 1t 16 8 good medium for srisct advertivements. News: men bave It Address FOWLER & WELLS, No. 309 Brosdway, New-York Blommm and Jnnm Gaobl S(‘“(M)I,-RFWARDH TPK’H\N)\]A! S—A very desirabile article for distribution at the clave of sehools. Sunday- Bchool Curds und Meduls, e C Papec, ke ! the sbove con N & JONES, N Open End Envelopes, Logethe NOTE: PAPERS, ualities of paper, m ualtties 6L PP, FRLIN & JON !oummlhw Noum. 66, Y, KIELY & Co. b msm,vi,"n PART- SHJP. JAMEE KIELY having mosigied. The nanulie: tarfug of Leatler Beitug wib stfhi by nllt.-i'u No. 24 Bproce s, by NEIDY & KIELY. JOMN REIDY, — JOHN K ELY. T[iLE CorART SRBH P herotofore exiting nnder bo i vae o€ FURDY, NORMAN e STORY o this day ub- boived by wurusl eunsent. H O TRk NOUMAN, New-York, Oct. 15, 1966, R R. STORY, jr. P HE UNDEREIGNED have this day entered iito wperteesd g s g e B 1 PUIDY & NORM AN Potwans of o 1kt oF \ e b, ot fare e ndi ol by Sl AN & LTORY Tt 4 JAN A HORVAN. Harw' ork, et 15, 1006, Tra s».m.. poplis adm Inetruction. M*W 'WNSEN. MMERCIAL. ACADEMY, k- .r%gglmnvw “c—a.: i a-mnufi . aminar, k. Thos ouch NM.— q l’IlENLu md ENGLISH o B umm ncnool-m BOYS, at Irvington, on A 1y Afi THON, m. C., will reopen his Classical PRENCH snd ENOLISH SCHOOL, with Primary Depart meot wnd Oymesdom, Fihave, cor. Tweitsaizit., on MON DAY, Sept. 10, l; LLENHAUER™ MU SIEAL. No. T EDW. oadway, Moal A mmn\_mga. e % B ..,’ Mg i Btgosticn }RBNLH | LADY mnpmnt w tench, would give SSON! or st D3 udd ‘?.‘., o R A, o B Sirth ave. At £ .?w AFFAH!Q MARSH'S WORKS ON BOOK-REEPING, m-cmnx aroh's Oo-dl-bhl-q 120 pp.. vo.. * r» o, Bt .':-":5:".‘.‘&4.'3:.‘. ccounts, 00 pp., RSH'S I? for Prac- I'i'u in lulinflll o Inb- ANn, Nl‘ 516 Brosdway, “"1alf the Teschers and Autnors of Boskbegingia tbe sous- try owe their bpowhedge of the acience to thew works, _ OYS infii?fi_l)nnnm—m DOLBEAR. No, way. -p-u attention, duy and eve e i — ,.,4.'**”. R ..:'.':.‘.'.'..'.“‘u...."‘““ BFORD ACA . BEDFORD, N Ty col ws Nav.l. The Pris imited narebar of :-E:' 4 M::ully. For Gliesties sddrons D, B, W!INB"HZ CHABLIEE FRENCH INSTITUTE Now, and 82 East Twenty fourt-st.—BOARDING aod DAY SCHOOL will REOPEN September 18 Pogile prepared for College, Wert Polnt, Naval Acedemy and busives. There ia & Primary Department for young boys, s Oymnasiam, ke. The prospectus of the school con- taine the samer of the pupils (200 last yrar) for the past 1] years, Prof ELIE. CHARLIER, Director. DR B W. DWIOHT" SCHOOL at No. 1141 aixth-st, will rgepen on MONDAY, wa pelerences: RBobt, ltKl-. Jeo. D, =" I'?’r' D IL la D l ML ). B o v.Dr Ko ok P Deviin. __Dr. T Linsy, 3B Veowem F M H()OL for HOV“ at. Bedford, West- cheater Co., N Y.—A. WILLIAMSON, 2. M.. Principal.—A a-.uyw-xnl Next session will open Noy. 5, For Circulars ad- SLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, — l‘ Buperb Brick Bulldings. 16 Tasckers, every advantage of the badt Femie Colleges for 9200 et Staients propared to teach Ma- at twe-th rde the current rates. The u'-axm. charge. A £a'i Commereial Collegs Course Classes praparine 1 College siwayr, Wiater tme_paying froo dete. Ad « Catalogues of tooins, Rev. Joseph E. Rivg. D, D., Fort Ed- rfiifi@? et A n-u.— ¥ !hk:-’-"hpm entar FINE ASSORTMENT of FIANOS eun Pianos o H.l’:‘l-lh- BPLEND!D PIAIO bl Il)ll Manuflctarens. No. 43 warranted 5 years: without nunlu the beet Phn-d-. Rmvfi PIANO-FORTE j Ly g O N ey m__&_..__&__ Fatablished 1883, | moniale from miost ditingalaed s A BUPERB 7-octave for SALE. Made order; ~for #30 u::mu stool aee the only istruments ma . 1rem (ne i wiich il T A -w‘ r ure the production of« more :‘nlfl #0d refined tone with eombined swectnres ond rreat power. p.mu .q.-my u{a.-..ne-l the --un«d-. ud the e-p.ully d lb-uqou-umu---l. on tbe left-heud side nl.eruM nuun\.unu o " leos.-c.. A. MUNGER, wm o e P oA tod (o7 five years. choM and 7 INDEMAN & SONS' PATENT CYCLOID PIANO-FORTES Were awarded of the late Fair of FIRST PREMIUM GOLD MEDAL, Yor NOVELTY. eurnmlm AND EXCELLENCE. Uequaled fostraments ot td B~ Warraited for six Bigrekri-ac. one biock the American lustitate N & B rers of PIANO-FORTES with FATEA COMBLATION SOUNIING- BOA D8, Patented A 14, 1866, This hiventlon, litroduced of the greatest advartagn 1o the tons of the in koot 2 1l Piano—and {Se SouniiupRaiaite oy o0l varn thereby t of tin u--mqn vhh be ,l.lwtun -.d ety bowrde, s relieved trom 1he rigidty caoved and fte wibratory quelity grestly h,mn( u of this eminently - a nnh n-pm-.uymh--nv N 08, are invited to oall e WARE RUOMA~No. 126 ¢ :-.d - rice, $180. W. 1. DAVIS l(hl( SONVILLE ACADEMY, Fergusouvilie, N. Y.. will reopen Nov. 12. Cirealars st Howe & Ferry s Bool No. % Bowery. luterviews way be bad witt the ), st the saae piace, oa Mondags, Wedoeadays aud Fridar, o tho posre -k of 2and 2. B OLIVER. Priveipal. (‘I(AMMAR . RCHOOL OF Y. UNIVERSITY, with PRIMARY sod COMMP Depanments, l'l-pnlen’n!(‘l)Ll.'fl BUSINE>: POINT aud NAVAL larv st the Unfrersity. LONG ISLAND, N. bEMY. I EMPSTEAD INSTITUTE, ¥ A Home and h, French, &5 Phynical caltare and reguiated s - lYlluA.kl. athietio hy 2 WINDS rm-d-d. ITE, Tarryivwn, N Ine-achool for boya—The ffiy e/chth semi-annusl session will mence THURSDAY oo e curcuiare sppiy pel, D. % RUWE. . OHN MacMULL way_ coiet of Twe Cirealare ot the ¢ Hrosdway and st the Sehool. OWELL™ BUSI) 4 the fute o antivtrory ow of 4 nta, the lm'» 1 !unmu hunl- 10 ie located ot 8 safe distance lm-“.n lll LITARY, CLASSICAL and Cf ACADEMY Nyack, Rockisod Co. N. Y, P ¢ Clrcalars, od am.r RUTHERFOKD A i L (OUNT \V\\lll\l"l()‘i C LGIA TUTE (Classial, Commereial and. Froach. with preparsiors departments, No. 126 West Fourtht., corner of Macdougah at., on Wishingtonsquare, GEO, W. CLARKE, A. M., Principal) pre pares puplls of wll ages for baskoess of college, N. . Stadents for Callege, West Polat or Neval Academy, are ai- Jowed (Individunily) to advance to bigher classss 8 rapidiy a their sttaioments permit. Ill LTARY BOARDING SCHOOL, Whits Plains, 3 miles fcom the eity by Harew Railrosd. O, e riucipal. N COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE, Now. 161 FIFTH.AVE. and 157 BROADWAY, of Twenty second-st. lis rooms Lave lofy ceilings, are uli e san foor, and basted by sewn. For spaciosmen, light. e of sccem. lndeed, for w1 school purpoes. tbey are Cnnarpamal. ALl the okder pugis’ e Coder the dirvct UsiDig oF UN, the younger of Mis. Light Gymnastics are tasght bl ¥ y " lll\lll"‘ A( ADEMY OF l’ll\'Sl(‘AL [ . corner Foorveenth ot., Oct. ls Mre, rl,L n-mt» Academy l.ml-y- aod ‘l‘nuv days from 2108 p. .00 and after Oct. 4. Clreaiars o the Acadeay. fi OUNTAIN VIEW BEMINARY—The above S, bail having been recently destroyed by fire the Priseipal will open s Bosrding Scheol for Boyy Iy mis Selow Weat Potut, For Clrculars, addinss. G. WELL, Woest Potul New Tork. ', PLEASANT I) Private for DWS—Auberst. Muss. H. O NASH, A. X.. Princlpsl. The 126 vi nman. voston i} commence Oct. 1. Clreulass forwasded wpon request. hllfls ARMSTR FRE ND ENOLISA BOAKDING, b DAY SCHOOL, " MR. VAN NORMAN® FRENCI ul !Nfll.wll BOARDING and DAY SCHOOL ute Ladies, N -d hlny*kllqt (two doors from Fiftn- 0 JGHKEEPSIE YOUNG LADIES' SEMINARY ~A select faml’ 12, 1866, For Otzcalass, sddress GEO. W, Iul’lLLAI.A-.. m;um N.Y l)Alfl\ ER ALADEMY—A !-‘mll, Sehool fur fi)rs, Litchtield Co ufl lll l.l‘“ ll A h: lmhu pactioular u” w ¢ PE KINDERGARTEN " SL‘HOOI. I-%B ““‘T“' will seopen SEPTEMBER 17 ot No. 1 Weat E oy Cirevlars, ke., call opon of sddress MISS E. HE POLLOCK INSTITOTE—A First Class Scientific wrd_ Cland 1for bere. at PITTSPIELD, e, cal Schoel for baye, s 4T use. MASS., offers thess advanteges s, 1. A vory oxtavelve, ld:.‘ Bereiley e exiemsivs faully of the rnmp-a."*""i K For particolurs apply te the principa! | iy i W, Tlll-. FERRIS FEMALE lNBTlTUTE—No. l:lb secondst, will .owwul'nu\y s HE EN(IL{BH '!’R!.NLH and CLASSICAL SCHOOL -lbl ITHET & ORO, B, GOODALL, will be open SYPTEMH Thers i3 s Gym- oaetum. . No. 411 Broadway. E LITC lll'thD IVBTITUTL—!A Eo.rdm‘ ot e Sk, B DTSN, acl okie, “Frol . 4 Driley WM v.mmnu sddreas WH H. LEGGET'S CLASSICAL. FRI‘.NCH ENOLISH SCHOOL, with GYMNASIUM, Ne. 1314 l«dv-v LI YO‘IKH& MILITARY INSTITUTE WILL BEOPEN SEPL. 1, 1066, Vor circulars address . Peck, Columbia Coll tohbeld. Conn. - BENJAMIN MASON, Yonkers, N. Y. @cachers. YOUNG LADY from Paris would like to make wrrngements with privete families or schools in New York or \ FULLY COMPETENT FR Parte. with the highest of city rofe;ence, w PUPILS for FRENCH CONVERSATION o CL LA vorms modersie. Flesss o. ulMl’ 'ENT LADY from Puris, with the hij city reference, would like ta form & FRENCH CONVI A TION (| Ty wood eoeia) family where Jnstroction would be rwlhu‘-u.u-nlm Pioase widiows Mile A O., Tribooe ‘VA\”I‘ED—A vxm TING GOVE RNI&S’A to u‘uh two boys un and il youn, old, vwo bours daby. Addiess Box No. LIV PO stating Dancing mmhz- l)()ll\ll()BTH‘ DANCING wwmv No. 012 flz';‘l -AVENUE, nmnnsm vumA# {wrsn\\q ..aAs'nvlnul. ‘l'llnAV MORNING Evening ch-lu Geutlemen TUESDAYS snd FRIDAYS, Terwe ke sond fo 3 (mmo DANCING Amm-,uv now open T HALL, N un\vsIv-m..n. LR DR PRI Dan Vi af tha TANO FOR RAT Teap. fisw soven octave, cily maker. an.fluu "ol TANO-FORTES, Melodeons nud Cabinet Orua for l&‘T.‘ or for SALY l‘ low fl‘.n for cash or “mente sTi:lM \Y & SONS D, SQUARE snd UPRIGRT PIANOS fairs lu this econtry, ol the Sorind Trerns' 1 Cremiaca ut the princh fon therets & ¥iret P vl P anibiiso o Loadoo, 1063, o o .- Evrry iosument constracted with heir Pateat Agraffe Arrange- ranted fo¢ five years Warerooms, Now 7land 71 8 Grand, Square and l To LET. and rent sliowed i porehased. . Ses k!h.:hl Pianos st taned bod repuired. Factory wod W arercome, No. 4l Brosdwa, or Necoud-haod Vimues. FIHE MASON & HAMLIN MASON & HAMLIN FORTABLE OROANS. ¥orry yiens prices. $79 o $1.000 hesipreiaion for my BINET ORGANS; nul--nmm-u -l e nstraments. They mvite the of (leig work by the Lest Jdges, and . with conbdence (0 newly every orgen u1ouy to e sundtiority. vdm,u TUrgans, of Amrican ad Forelgn waga 56 Arcadway, New-York HE WEBEK FIANO-FORTE 10 called te BEST INSTRUMENT MADE by wi the ‘eading wusic ave of this ¢ity nnd eliswhara. (tls promounced by the Nationa Plano-Forte Avsceisticn. after o frial in (bt soome w00/ the 6rst . FISHER PIANO, l.ha wost reliable w-‘nvA nprovements, W' olcasle and retail PIANO- H\l(IE—L bilty o i elegrace of fieb. Warer "l Bowery. Semd for -«ln-l-v. IIIIA) n-dvtrluh'rflnl purchased. Drp Ooohs KlD GLOVES, (13 <u|.uu JUST | 8125 A PAI]L THE ONLY GENUINE TIOVES OF THIS POPULAR A0 Mare anp ‘D RETAIL, B REEN, oed the most ELEGANT ASSORTMENT "(‘LOAKI. SACQUES. BASQUES. JACKETS and CIIEULAII in VELVET and CLOTIL, which cannot be Ameiica wesh Eighth snd Nint-sta. WILLIAM BUCHANAN MAC KENEL, S To "MILLINERS AND COUNTRY STORE- AT GRAND-ST. CHEAP STORE, Yoo eut lengthe of vg b MILLINERY GOODS Cheaper than down town jobbers sell Call. l:n-u-; 'Ju Bo:;»;ud:va.' 5 ivet ?l.- i Eabrederien n« 29,211 a0d 3114 GRAND-ST: Now o6, b8 aud 10 'u:'fi Entraoce to the Boaset sad Wholessle waire. Moom‘li GOODS. BOME REAL BARGAINS. W. JACKSON, Tmsporter of Moorntug Goods, ALPAC. u.Ks. und FLANNELS. 8 gan save frow Bc. to I4e. » yard; on mm LABPI.I‘E\. CAl E1 OREAT BARGAINS IN ENOLISH AND AMERICAN AT WHOLESA| D R Goup ‘nr&‘r’i‘fnlll!liil‘k‘luu n. ok lemen humg any FURNITURE, lr:: TTENTION.—Ladies or ¥y pout o Sir.or Mre. H, Hy No. 164 Sevent. dve, beiwenn Twenty st wnd Tovnty second et . NEW FRENCH SKIRT.—Also. my of CORSETS, just received fiom P Noa, 890 ind 68 Hiomdway mm Wt $1 B—Ladies’ Fronch KID %S, all :nlnu-lfll-n .b-n ull assortiment i Tow piices. . W. J. ELGER, ) 890 and W2 lrfld‘ny n,lvilllhul ren s Hote, Feath (o mhnm it mn (anum. A MHERST COLLE Alomnl willlug scd Vol In e Ay fot the Unta Kind for surh juformation seut to to affosd INFORMATION of Clase nwill ot retur in Wb to the wlumm::l wid two witvemos. ab Meys in_couutry far: 4 8 comm slon on wil NELSON LUCKEY, el g R e MM A clalme collucted througin tile wgeney. S Banker, Fo. 243 Broadwas, bases wnt. HOTOGRAYITS C()L()uv m-b.n- statyle of art, ot mederste p Al\’ll- D—-VIXTU K 8 (W)MY'!.TTI-’ for -li-fl 1, wnd sasl, b ind wud door Losiors, os 30 bowe pwun. Jown mwer . plaming e Segurensine aud v . L EY |l’2',l . w)\~x No, Io‘ Falton -e - wd LADEL MANUFACTUR ooeoo-nm 'rmpl,xsurn ok it U. 8. ABMY nu‘!xt & .--“J:lnudllhl. can be o Loy | iRt Ramaee TR Governiéut SR Ty 5?.-1:'-'“-"""' & QK.'%#L ;. WMrnwin. Aucclanewr. A BYpaxas, MERWIN c co.. Souh-q oon. dthe ‘—'d'ldll“ 'l? J.‘ PM “ % result of & o.num-n- K Sl e .'&}351'5'#%‘“ A g e R R g g T %K TRADE SALE D SALE TROOME 108 Browtway - 0 AVITE, § lmn’ c‘.nmnlx(h.‘ it 1 ' (-un-m soLicr THURS DAY, o Q}T.d wd 26, b r xvnz nul.A lv—c.- -rbdq choicg. Leirng? ;fi )’?-l"d-l with -mum. i -d: lu "h ) weeh a8 legant § nd Cowalat, 13 vols., § Tark w-nh i e, .m.f.ul:’h-..l-m“ e of boaat dully 4 iliustrated Gooks, ce key ke ready and hou! tr o exbibion. AMELLLA J«pomuu at Auction—On eI T O RS Y aito, --M':mm...m Y o et - RY JAMES M. 'llflllalifi‘.} s 4 M Lo'elock. on the. px»whnn‘.l s T o Sclomn D ;nd Sing >tug, onder the direction. of George. G Rd ARM containids 173 seres of Lind, with mension in the vifloge of Sing Sing, oue wils diatant fsom ad Depet, T (e s iviaed (s proeis fom 94e 30 | ot e, y = \prisy H. MoUrkx. Anctioneer XECT T('H\ “SALE OF VAL l‘ABLE PROP-| .« FRTY ON WEST HOUSTON, WEST TWE! l{fl‘\‘m ¥ WOIT - ADRTAN L M P. K. WILKIN: AUCLION, AY, Uctober 30, b 13 #:1 AANGE SA) TEROCAH, Ra: 111 broadwy (By cor of Ur. Yolentine MoAt, d6o ocesed, USTON ST.—The lewse of iw 0 Tots, ais on the movth side ¢f W est, Hanstonsl, 1T fouk 608 o hnown ss Nos. 24 and 356 lease from Trini R Roreaies 1. Dl st st 0 ’-—tl covenants for 1@ iewcl. COLUMBIA, DeLANGEY, BROU! GOERC 'IlfiT\r‘hA POUTION OF TH, A N of lot with the kioown as No. 220 Wesl e om, eawichrave. ound-rent of 175, (—fi- on the resr, by 103 fart 3 ine) 98 fert 6 inches on the woster) COLUMBIA AND DELAN four Sty » plot of lard, with the, 2ats o1, the southeaster! sown wa Now, 42, 44, U iuetes in width by 50 feet m font dwebing bouses and ' [ . beis o th 0 2 f-.t“-n;‘:’ 10 Loches i u the woslby Hidh of Gevrrivet, .. known ae No, 115 Uveschost, betug 1 -xm by 50 feet ia depth, & l‘l‘f"l‘l.l.l. PARK. ‘ & " s on the oot xt) A 5 54 06 8 4o, e T Fe ‘] soums v, st the option. of -:: remaiu 6a boad and emortgage. !upuua oflice of tl Sartioners HHM{\ H. LEEDS—\UCTIONEER, HENRY H. LEEDS k MINER will sall Ly AUCTION TIURSDA ck, 8t the resids near HOUSEOLD U RNTURE, FISE OTL PAINT. MIRAORS, k., the property of & fnmily breakiug ap houses vet carpets; R, W, furni W. etgete; ovil, b Parie maker. square do , g T ey RY H. “-F[N & .\HNLR will sell by sues tion, on 1 . Ocw. 25, st 11 o'elock, at oar galiery, Nog west of Brondwoy. ud velosble DAY, NG, tach 0 ent Lot by 16 faob wde) EIGHT LU 20 tegi bong by 16 feet wide, sud ONE BUILD! by et wide." The stieation of boildess 1nd oibers ulm-k "everon Trvrhu‘n;:—lo—tfil -.n-lllluv;rl.,";‘by the Auctioneer. dinze most be vewoved i 15 duys trom the e A cieanibost wil be n-u-—u-(4{d-m:1£.x e s O Desday, the 4L inat., at 11 o'cloc o examne the voill "o tavey perwens i o 1 eloek on the day of sule. 10 ho wise'1s stisad wiik's VoW’ wom For passes lnd further ’-vlewhl apply to the. = order of Brevet AL or-Gen, Stewert Vas Viiet, Obinf wa. ORAN, froves Major snd As U t GE S\LL —By vurmeohnwnppbeaa o 10h day of Juoe. 188§ wil expose 12 SALE m T Lt Sales Rooma, No. 111 3 DAY the lat duy of Noveraver, 1966, w12 /o00k weoRs i(fluasu‘i"nam&-nz' h::‘ 3 EPR TS ERNEST FIEDLER, Mortgagost | LI Tl By JORN Me. POSmVE LX!CI"IOK‘ bALE of 23 VALU: ADLE LOTS la he Sentnd Wond 2t Breskiyn w4 Putare. wnd HostonatarJ AMES COLES & BOK uu.--nun DAY, Oct. 23, o'clock, at the ton-ot.. This praperty i (ocaied in leading -drbc Fos mape apply 10 the A uctioneets New 30 Ftas-se BrookIyn. 40,000 TUNS SCRANTON COAL AT AUCTION. OCTOBER n s THE DELAWARE, uuunnuu AN wfi ROAD COMPANY w01 Suid thelr FORTY: 'n'l.i SALE.OF COAL on WEDNESDAY. m :u a- comer % e Yok o i . Mesars. JOHN H. Dnrtl u C0. Un. ow o FRESH MINED COAL, FROM THE LAcnwnnA R GIONS o wasa wina deivarnis at Whcle OFFUT. FLIZADY TR I’UKI N J., duriug the o wohth of NOVEM B! MIUD‘ will be tully made kuown ot Tou nu«-h (‘Y“( CE 1O CONTH(:[W —Bealod ected ndersigned and ¢od proposals o3 sbe ofice o€ 3. W ALLE N, "n.'n.-u,..".. ot uotil Wedoesday night, the Il!l Nn—-l- '.l. -“ T QrARTERMASTAR URNRRAL nmckr ‘ W asmixaten, D. C., Oct. ROPOSALS for BUILDING @8 hrge FIREs FPROOF WAREHOUSE, ot the Scauylkill Arsenal Philes ia. —Piane of l“ e hufi&‘-.‘.;’l’:‘b : U fl' ROSM w ) Al ot the vfl‘nl.’fl .fltflm,vj Avcmua n‘ ) ot m‘“ of B . *lm“'flvmw'“w‘“ ' ru—-blnu-m.v the buil 8 ndr“-uhmu :u-uu‘: MAN A b--pau -—udmehmdmu mm««n-um»—qb o he time o 3 ‘ il be nished, hould 18 maind .'5531'3‘.1 s oeund dodare, t‘»'."«'.'.: fi:’!.'.'.“’xf‘....,. oo B 19 with good uldm #ecurity within ten A.{‘un& v& of the sene, Qartermaster Govers), Brovet Urig.-Genersk. UryicK ov Axwy m--nu-i.:-.- 1 No. 29 Broedway, New-Y ork, Oetober, 868 gl:ALI"DI PROPOSA k Wikl be received st this TRCAING BOREE f:n"i,‘fl'l?i‘m-dfl.‘wa r...nm. in s ity fiom Novemwber 1raxiie Nowember 1L Loope, ualls. ke., sud (o be p) - nd i bas e aburtest b otice. Baden wilL slaty the m of boxes they can e0cpor D—fl and the prico per hox. Froporsss numt be aecompanicd by s by vued responsibie "l"l‘ that i -o-.l -'ul du | Y il witer Auto for tbe faishiul pestormence of I\f ¥ l\u—d States reseryes the tight to refect ol bids deoured oy J n-w-- sheild beindorsed P-'u*h(‘”m"d‘ ; ‘Lost and Fonud. POUND U GOVERNMENT INTRREST biol the owner ¢an heve by previve P PR Box Ko et aby Washingm - Mi ¥ PONEY with WAL Y wipe b ot g ifomiosgiry PRy e 1d 409 9 8 0 e b I LY. BTN AL S A D Bt B