ghg it 4 itg ivat. The Parson Going to Min. TirE parson sat in his house one days While wintry storm did rage; High wrapt, he drank in lofty thought From Hooker's classic page. But as he sat, and holy breath Into his breast did steal, His sweet wife opened the door and said : " My dear, we have no meal." With a deep groan and saddened brow He laid aside his book, And in despair upon the hearth With troubled air did look. " My people think that I must break To them the bread of heaven, But they'll not give me bread enough Three whole days oat of seven. But hunger ilsVSerious thing, And it is sad to hear ; Sweet children's mournful or, for bread Loud ringing in your ear. So straight he mounted his old horse, With meek and humble will, And on his meal•bag, patched and coarse, Ile journeyed to the mill: The miller bowed to him and said: "'Sir, by your owu church steeple, I vow I give you praise for this, But none to your church people." The parson mounted his old horse— He had no time to lag— And rode, like hero, to his home, Right on his old meal-bag. But as he rode, he overtook A proud and rich layman, Who with a close, astonished gaze, The parson's bag did scan. " My reverend sir, the truth to tell, It makes me feel quite wroth, To see you compromise this way The honor of your cloth. Why told you not, my reverend friend, Your meal was running low ? What will the neighbors think' of us, If to the mill you go'?"' ' My wealthy friend,'! the parson eaid,, " You must not reason so ; For be assured, as settled thing, . 21,9 meal is always low. "If my dear people wish to know • How to promote my bliss, I'll simply say, a bag of meal Will never come amiss. Just keep the store-room well supplied, And I will keep right still; But if the meal runs out again, • I must go to the mill." MORAL. Laymen 1 it nee& no miracle, No hard, laborious toil, To make the parson's meal-bag like The widow's cruise of oil. Pour forth into his wife's store-room Your gifts right plentiful; The miracle is simply this— To keep it always full I GLEANINGS FROM THE FOREIGN FIELD. OFFERINS UPON THE GRAVES OF CIIIRS. MIONG several negro tribes, human vic tims are offered upon every festival occa sion, and if a great person or a chief dies, the number of persons slain at the grave is in proportion to the reputation of the de ceased. Thus an English ambassador beheld with his own eyes a negro king sacrifice three thousand slaves upon the grave of his mother. When the king dies those who have dug his grave are immediately de spatched. His thousand wives stir up a general uproar, destroy everything in the palace, and some lay violent hands upon themselves ; of the rest twenty-four are se lected, their legs are broken with clubs, and they are cast alive into the grave and covered with earth. At the funeral of the king a multitude of men are sacrificed, and the costliest jewels buried with the royal corpse. 24—ouTS To THE GANGES. MICAH. 6 : 6, 7.—" Wherewith shall I come be fore the Lord?. . Shall I give my first born for my transgressions, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?" - Rom. 8 31,2.—" If God be for us, who can be against us? lie that spared not his own son but delivered him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely, give us all things." While the multitude were bathing in the sacred waters of the Ganges, near Peram pore, to purify themselves from sin at the Varani feast i a father appeared, leading his fair boy of six years old to the bank. After be had annointed him and adorned his tem ples with flowers, he descended into the stream, lifted his son upon his arm and cried ont : "0 mother Ganges ! This child is thine ! I bring it an offering to thee !" With these words he tossed his son into the stream, in which he sank straightway; but the mul titude applauded loudly. 25 7 -AN OFFERING UPON TONGA. Enz. 16: 20.—" Moreover thou bast taken thy sons and thy daughters whom thou hast born unto me and these hest thou sacrificed unto them (the idols) to be devoured." Cast a glance Tonga reposing in .the quiet sea 1 Ere the Gospel gained firm footing there, bloody scenes transpired in the service of the gods. I will place but one before your eyes. Beneath yonder majestic coco palm, an altar has been reared ; thither is brought the offering—a poor innocent child. It is laid upon the altar and strangled. You ask with a shudder why this blood shed ? Become some islander has brokeo the law, and the gods must be persuaded not to let their anger and the displeasure of the chiefs fall upon the whole people. 26--nanvEsr-ovvEnma IN INDIA. Acrs. 14: 15, 17.—" We preach unto you that ye should 'turn from these vanaties unto the living God which made heaven and earth and the sea, and all things that are therein. . . Nevertheless he left not himself without witness in that he did good, and gave us rain from heaven and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness." In the district of Gumsur, in India, the Khunds make annual offerings of human victims to procure abundant harvests from their Gods. Stolen boys are sold for that purpose in every village, and as soon as the seed is in the ground, the victim is brought forth and firmly bound. The cultivators of the village assemble around him, and at a given signal each one falls upon him with a sharp knife, hews a piece of flesh from the boy's living body, carries it to his field and sprinkles the blood over the earth, by which means he believes it is made fruitful. While so horribly mutilating the body, they take care not to destroy life, for as soon as the child dies, the magic power is utterly gone, and the ceremony becomes useless. 27 -THE MIIREER OP PARENTS. Dian. 5::16.—" Honor thy father and thy mother as the Lord thy Ova path commanded thee.' The Bushmen and Caffrees, when they go to the chase, leave their aged parents and relatives behind them in the wilderness, and. give tliem a morsel of food and an oyster 'Shell of water ; when this supply is exhausted the poor abandoned creatures must die of hunger, or they fall a prey to wild animals. The Indians of North America construct a frail hut over the old people who have be come a burden to their children and their tribe, and provide them with a little food. and milk. They then leave them. The en campment of the tribe breaks up and they journey hundreds of miles away through the wilderness. The unfortunates are left be hind. Soon the white wolves, who abound in these solitudes, gather around and fall upon the defenceless old people to devour them. And what hitherto has been the lot of aged parents upon the Islands of the South Sea I Dreadful treatment, repudiation, yea, even murder at the hands of their own chil dren. Once a son took up his old father upon pretence of carrying him to bathe, but on the 'way he threw him into a hole and buried him alive, so that he might avoid the necessity of providing for him any longer. Come with me for a moment to the island of Borneo where live the abominable Dyaks. See there I a couple of sons are carrying their sick and aged father upon their shoul ders ; they throw him down under the shade of a tree. Meanwhile the relatives and as sociates of these sons gather and form a eir ele around the tree. One of the sons then bids the old father stand up, and take hold of an overhanging bough. This done„the wild cannibals with fearful shouts and out cries begin to dance around the tree, singing these words : " When the fruit is ripe then it must fall; when the fruit is ripe then it must fall." Now step: forth the sons and shake the branch to which the poor old father is holding,. till, in hiS weakness, he lets go ; this is the understood signal for all to rush upon him, and with sharp knives to cut the flesh from his living body and devour it in its blood until the victim dies. So deep is the darkness which overshadows the even ing of many a heathen parent's life. 28-HOTT WAS THAT? AcTs 2 : 37.—" Now when they heard this they, were pricked in their hearts, and said unto Peter, and to the rest of the apostles : Men and Brethren what shall we do? For five long years the missionaries la bored for the conversion of the heathen Es kimos hi Greenland, but all their trouble and pains availed ; little. It happened one day, that the missionary. John Beck was reading to a large number of Eskimos the account of the agony ,and bloody sweat of the Savior in the Garden of Gethsemane. It took a deep hold upon a savage who was quite, a, stranger, Kayarnak by name and who had never before heard a word oeScripture. So I owerful was the impression made upon him that be rose up and in a loud voice and with great emotion cried out : " How is that ? Tell me that again !i For I would like to be saved." These wcrrds the missionary had never yet heard from a Greenlander ; they seemed, to go through his very bones and marrow and moved him so deeply that .it was with tears he described the entire suf-' ferings of the dying Saviour to the com pany and preached to them the salvation they 'had purchased. The discourse had a visible effect upon them, upon Kayarnack in par ticular. He came again and again to hear more and was the first Greenlander who really turned to the Lord. 29—LET MR REAR THOSE WORDS AGAIN ! RO. 5 : S.-" BUT God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. H. Nett, a missionary among the South Sea Islands, once read to a company of natives a portion of the Gospel of John. When he had ended the 16th verse of the 3d chapter, a native who had heard the words with the greatest eagerness and joy, inter rupted him, saying : " What were the words you just read ? Let me hear those words once more ! " IS read the verse again : " God so loved the world that" etc., where upon the Islander arose from the ttble and said: "Is that true ? Can that be true ? God loved the world although it loved him not ! He loved it so that he gave his only begotten son to die that men might live ! Can that be true ?" Nott read the verse " God so loved" again, and told him that it certainly was true, and that this was the great message which God had sent to them, and that every one who believed on the Son of God should not perish but have everlasting life. The deepest emotion overcame the as- tonished Islander. He burst into tears, and as the tears chased each other down his cheeks he retired, to reflect in solitude upon this love of God. He afterwards found com plete peace and cemfort for his soul in this love. J 1; i,Utillanitoito. (For the American Presbyterian.) POISONS USED AS FOOD. BY WM. M. CORNELL, M. D. IN what is now to be said, I shall touch somewhat more upon fermented bread. This is the kind of bread that has been generally used. To make bread in the greatest perfect. tion, the materials of which it is composed should be ground coarsely, and baked quickly, if thin ; slowly, if in large loaves. Why need bread be baked? Suppose we were trained to eat it raw, would it not be equally wholesome and answer every purpose ? This surely would promote one good pro cess, namely, that of mastication. Dr. Schlemmer was an advocate for eating grain uncooked ; and, among other advantages, he claimed that, of better mastication. It is, however, tolerably well established that grain, and many other vegetable sub stances, are much more nutritious when pro perly cooked than when eaten raw. This fact seems to have been settled by the experiments of MM. Peney and Vauquelin, of France, and Sir Humphrey Davy, of Eng land. A soft, watery potatai does not contain half the nutriment of the fine-grained, mealy one. The same is true as to the farinaceous articles of diet. There is a gain in the nutri tive properties of bread in baking it, as there is in the potatoe in boiling. It was said, in a former paper that fermen ted bread was vile stuff. I need not dwell on this point here, save only to add, it is a filthy process—semi-putrid, having advanced, at least, one step on. the way to putrifac tion. One of the best forms of fine bread (when fine is used) is that of ship-bread, or, as it is often called, pilot bread. This always has two advantageous properties connected with its use ; to wit, it has all the good qualities of the grain, and requires mastication. In the treatment of some chronia diseases, -such as epilepsy and dyspepsia where much is often depending upon a well regulated diet, Ilittriritit , vrti;o:.: b.., ,t l t , t i al ti it.t( . l - ; ..t l tittott_ 6r-alt,gtlio.t. I have often found this kind of bread very useful. Crackers are quite too generally a vile compound of fine flour, bran, lard or rancid butter. I seldom get hold of one, but in eating it, I am reminded, (as I always am in meat or minced pies, as they are called,) of Daniel's destruction of the dragon, de- , scribed by one of the Apocryphal writers. " So Daniel took pitch, and hair, and tar, and lard, and did seethe them together, and made lumps thereof." These he put into the dragon's mouth • and the poor dragon could not stand it. Were not some men and women more tenacious of life than dragons, they would not survive their mode of ,living half so long as they now do. I have never known a great oyster-eater to be long-lived. Though oysters themselves are a questionable article of diet; still, they are ren dered much more pernicious by the medicinal poisons, usually mingled with them in the fashionable mode of cooking. When com bined.with three or four kinds of medicine, and fried, they very much resemble the/imps made by Daniel, that finished the poor dra gon, and destroyed the idol, Bel. ydenhem said, an hundred die by reple. tion to one by inanition." Nitre, commonly called Saltpetre, is a dan gerous poison. Christison, the most promi ment writer, and most reliable upon poisons; calls it " a dangerous one." There are many cases recorded where an ounce of this salt has caused death. Who then can be' safe when so much use is made of •it in salting meat and for culinary purposes ? Another poison still more generally mixed with food is saleratus, or pearlash. This in some form usually enters into all our hot bread. This is, also, a poison. Its chemical name is the sub-carbonate -of potash. This is but half as Strong with the alkali'as the bi carbonate. Christison again calls this one of the concentrated poisonous alkalies, and he is one of the best authorities. Some' persons who live remote from the city have been known, when, they buy .a bar rel of flour, to buy also a bucket of salera tus to mix with it as it shall be cooked. As the stomachs of children are delicate, and as they eat freely of bread, cake, nuts, and such like, the coats of this organ become irritated and easily inflamed jy its use ; and thns is- laid the foundation for those com plaints which carry off so many children in the warm season. It is the use of these me dicines in food which destroys so many of these little creatures every summer. Dr. Alcot says, he once spoke upon this subject, and upon going home from the lec ture with a friend, the family discussed the matter and concluded they used about twenty five pounds a year. It is not unusual to find families that use ten pounds of this poison annually. People ask why are certain dis eases so much more prevalent now, than they were fifty years ago ? May we not say, here are some of the causes? Fifty years ago, a quarter of a pound of pearlash would last a family a year. Now, here again, maybe seen the value of unfermented bread. No saleratus is put into it, consequently, this poison is not found there. Vinegar is another poison in very common use in our families. Bat, you say, is vinegar, too, poison ? If you go on at this rate, soon we shall not have much left but poisons ! Yes„vinegar, too, zs a poison. Orfila gave four ounces of it to a dog, and it killed him in leis than ten hours. So we might go on and point out many other poisons which are habitually used for food. Is it any wonder, then, that so "many are weak and sickly, and so many sleep"— die before their time ! This subject is worth investigating. FUNERAL OF GEN. SUMNER. Tins solemn event took place in Syracuse, on the 24th of last month. The body of the distinguished< chief lay in state in the early part of the day at City Hall, where many thousands of persons called to see the manly form that once enshrined the heroic and noble soul of Gen. Sumner. His brief illness, had not disfigured his strongly marked counte nance ; indeed, he seemed to be asleep, and one would scarcely have been astonished to have seen him open his eyes had the trumpet of battle been sounded. He was dressed in his military uniform, and surely stars never graced a more symmetrical figure, and they were never won by a better and braver of- e'er`. The costly funeral ccse was tastefully decorated with flowers, and the rich silver plhte bore the following inscription Major-Gen. E. V. SUMNER, U S A Died Match 21, 1863, Aged 67 y's, 1 mo., and 23 days ... . .... . .. • . • . • ..... In the room where the General's hat, sword, and sash, and =several flags, entwined with craPe, also a' rebel flag, which had been captured by General Sunaner's 'corps in one of the battles. A beautiful cross, wreath, and' bouquet of natural flowers, were resting On the lid of the coffin. ' Services were held in the morning at the house of Mr. Teall, after which the proces sion started for the First Presbyterian Church. All places of business. in Syracuse, including banks,"public' schools,and the Post Office, were closed from 11 o'clock until 3. In the procession was General Fremont, Col. Zagonyi and, many other officers of the army. Arrived in the church; Rev. Mr. Fillmore, read the Scriptures and prayed, when the Rev. Mr. Canfeld, W i th out taking a text, proceeded with his address, occupying about half an hour in its delivery. He spoke in a most pathetic and appropriate manner of the noble attributes and manly virtues of the decease/ He said the demon strations made in all parts of the country showed that the public heart had been touch ed, by the great loss, which might be regarded as a. national calamity. General Sumner was a good man, whose pure life was marked with deeds of valor and kindiAs. Strictly temperate in his habits, he was a hero who could conquer himself. He was truly_ pa triotic, and deemed no sacrifice too great to make for his country. On his deatb.-bed he expressed a feeling of regret that he had not entered into the thickest of the fight at Fre dericksburg, so that he could have died on the field of battle. A short time before he died, a few drops of wine were given to revive him, when he seized the glass, and wavingit above his pillow, he exclaimed, "God: save my country, the United States of America I," His courage was equal to his patriotism, and has never been called in question ,•: indeed, he was brave almost to rashness, and his daring heroism made him the admiration of his corps. He always had a pitying eye and a helping hand for the unfortunate, and his humanity was not bounded by State lines nor prejudic ed by any man's creed or complexion. The speaker illustrated his address by relating many interesting facts, showing that Gen. Sumner was instinctively a gentleman, whose unyielding integrity, unfaltering patriotism, and unblenching 'courage, combined with great mental force and moral power, made him one of our ablest and most efficient gen erals. At the close of th'is deeply-interesting and solemn service, tie 'procession formed again in . the same order as before, and moved to Oakwood Cemetery. After the remains had been deposited a salute of three volleys was fired over the grave, and the procession return ed in reversed order to the city. QUALITY OF WATER. Where population becomes crowded, it is impossible to keep the water in spings; wells, or even cisterns, free from contamination. This is caused by infiltration of impurities from cesspools, gutters, streets and other sources, and impure and obnoxious substances which find their. , way, or which often are thrown directly *lto it. Water from such sources is prejudal to health, and in many cases unfit for ay use, as haLbeen found to be the case-with he many disirailipmells and springs at one ti e used in the old 'city pro per, all of whic are now abandoned. Some ht times verypern ions impurities do not affect the-appearance Of the water; but seem to add to its desirable ess for drinking, as they give . a certain weetnen, sprightlinees, and coolnessto its t te, which make theinjurious effects of such ter more dangerous, par. ticularly in wa in weather. In< f ac t; very many diseases ' ,ve been traced to the use of water from well: in crowded localities. This has been shown o be the ease by the patient and thorough, i , ,estigations of the English Government in , the causes of disease in lea, ,where! wells that were by, those using them for excellency of water, were sis4 o contain over eighty purities to the gallon, - and the persons using such water liable to ordinary and in- The analysis of the water particular local highly estfernei their supposed found upon ana four grains of if ai a consequenc were particular factious disease: crowded part of this city, hundred grains of impurities 'he water .of the Schuylkill, , a has been found by am , from a well in showed over on 4 to the gallon. in Fairmount tysis to contain ties to, the gallo - bout six grains of inapun '. By Clark's soap test, the R 4 water in Flat R k Dam is perceptibly softer ,than that in Fai ount Dam. There are few springs, and per aps no wells, the water of which is so pure 'nd desirable for drinking, culinary, and anufacturing laurposes, as that of the Sclitylkill, in either of these darns. It will al s o compare favorably with the water suppli to any of the cities in this country. The only objei the Schuylkill m comes turbid in r ,tion than can be urged to ter is, the fad that it be imes of freshets. This can bsiding reservoirs and filter . nbine s Rozborough, Report. be obviated by s beds.—/Efr. Bir NIEVIEW ON THE WAS. THE PRINCET RARY ARRESTS. A commandi general has the right to seize private Preperty, to arrest suspected persons, and t 8 whatever is not morally wrong, which tie necessity of the service re quires. Hem y proclaim martial law, which suspends the c mmon and statute laws, and puts in their EA the arbitrary will of the general in co.! i ! and. This is admitted. It is done in eve y war. It has been enforced during the pr sent war by the' rebels as well as by the loya generals. It is on this ground of self-preser tion, of immediate and urgent necessity, tht we hink that the right of the President to nspend the writ of habeas cor pus, is to be efemied. It has been said that Congress aloe, as a legislative body, has the right to sus. , nd the operation of the law of the land in :1 vital a' matter. To this we answer, firs r hat then the constitutional provision fort suspension- of the writ in question wool - be nugatory. Before Con gress could be . t lied together to act; irrepara ble evil might ;e done. And secondly, this is contrary to-11 analogy. A rip whose life is inimmi ;"-nt.danger is not required to go. to - Lmagis a . to ti get - permission to kill his' assailant - , ',eitheris it necessary 'for the mayor of a to - i . to call together the common council to givt.'lini authority to destroy pri yate property .;o' arrest.. a raging fire. No less unreasona )le is it to assert, that the Pre sident of the t'nited-Btates must obtain per- , mission. of Co /rem to arrest and imprison enemies of the country in times of emergency. * * lc We pr.Mtne it would not be charged as a fault age' st General Banks, if he should arrest individ als Wha,, i n the streets of New Orleans, wer haranguing the peopleagainst the governmel it, or ,exhorting them to cheer for the rebel authorities: It is because the President has the arrest of suspicions persons outside of the field of military opera tions, and within the limits of loyal States, that he has ben i so severely censured and de nounced. We tcannot see the reason for this limitation. );14 understand well enough that a subordinate general must confine the exer cise of his power to the immediate sphere of his cominand.76,..A: general commanding one department has no, more authority to exercise his military power. in another, department, thaw the Pres4ent can exercise such authori ty in Canada.t• But the authority, of the Pre sident extends over the whole United States. What he can lawfully do in one place, he can lawfully do in'another. This extraordinary, war . power, springing " from present pressing emergencies, says Judge Curtis, "is limited by them." Then it. , exists wherever and whenever those emergencies arise. There is no justification for the exercise of such pow er, but necessity; and the necessity is a jus- tification wherever it exists. It seems strange to us, that a man may be lawfully arrested and imprisoned, in one place, be cause he is dangerous to the country, alai be exempt from all harm in another place, where he may be ten-fold more dangerous. The President of the United States, in times of rebellion and invasion, may, on pressing em ergencies, do any where whatever any com manding general may do within the sphere of his authority: Neither the one nor the other can rightfully do any thing but what the la* of self-preservation demands. A pnw er which arises out of necessity is limited Only by that necessity. There may be just cause of complaint in some eases, on the ground that these ,sum mary arrests were made when. no necessity called for them ;*that men truly loyal, or whose disloyalty was a mere matter of feel ing, have' been unjustly imprisoned. Ad mitting this to be true, it does not touch the . principle. If the right.' to • arrest dangerous persons be admitted, each case of its exercise must ,be judged on its ; own, merits. Much is said about the dingerOus character of this power. It is said to put - in peril the most . sacred rights of the citizen, and the Constitu tion itself. All power is liable to alluse, and its exercise should be jealously watched. We have, however, as little fear of any ser ious danger to the liberty of the people from the power in questiOn, as we have of in discriminate manslaughter, or the general blowing up of houses, because homicide .and the destruction of private property are justi fied in cases of eniergency.--Princeton Re view. atdrutife tufo. ,red digestion from un healthy food, impil l re air, filth and filthy habits, the depressing vices, and, Above all, by the Vene real infection. Whatever be its origin, it is hered itary in the constitution, descending " from parents to children unto the .third and fourth generation;" indeed, it seems to be the rod of Him who says, "I will visit the iniquities of the' fathers upon their children." The diseases ,it originates take various names, according to the organs it attacks: In the lungs, Scrofula produces tubercles,, and finally Consumption; in the glands; swellings which sup purate and become ulcerous -sores ; the stomach and bowels, derangements which produce indi:. gestion, dyspepsia, and liver complaints; on' the skin, eruptive and •mitimeaus affections. These, all having the same origin, require the same rem edy,, viz:, "purification" and" invigoration' of the blood. PurifYthe blood, and these dangerous dis tempers' leave you. With feeble, foul, or corrupted blood you cannot have health; with that "life of the 'flesh" healthy, you cannot have scrofulous disease. • Ayer's Sarsaparilla is compounded from the 'most effectual antidotes that medical science has discovered for this-afflict ing distemper, and fOr the cure of the dis Orders it entails. Than it is far superior to any other remedy yet devised, is known by all who have given it a trial. - That it does Combine virtues truly extraordinary in their' effect upon this class of complaints,*s indisputably proven by the great Multitude of publiely•known and remarkable cures it has made of the following diseases : King's Evil, or Glandidar Swellings, Tuinors, Erup. thins, Pimples, Blotches and Sores; Erysipelas,' Rose or St. Anthony's Fire, Salt Rherim; Scald Head, Coughs from , tuberculous deposits the liing!; White Swellings, Debility, Dropsy, Neuralgia,: DyspCpsia or indeed, the whole series of complaints that arise from impurity of the blood. Minute reports of. individual cases may be found in AYER'S AMERICAN ALMANAC, which is furnished to the druggists for gratuitous distribution, wherein may be learned the directions for its use, and some of the remarkable cures which it has made when all other remedies had failed to afford relief. Those -cases. are purposely taken from all sections of the country, in order that every reader may have ac cess to some one who can speak to him of its bene fits from perSonal experience. Scrofula depresses . the vital energies, and thus leaves its victims fal. more‘ subjeet : to disease and its fatal results than are *ldly constitutions. Hence it tends to shorten, and does greatly shorten, the average duration of human life.ssiThe vast importance of these con siderations has led.us, to spend years in perfecting a remedy which is adequate to its cure. This we now offer to the public under the name of Area's SARSAPARILLA, although it is- cdroposed of ingre dients, some of which exceed the best of Sarsa,i ',aria; in alterative power: By its aid you may protect yourself from the suffering and danger. of these disorders. Purge out the foul corruptions that. rot and fester in the , blood, purge out the causes-of disease, and vigorous health will follow. By its peculiar virtues this remedy stimulates the vital functions, and thus expels the, distempers which lurk within the system or burst out on any part of it: We know the public hare been deCeiyed 'by many compounds of Sarsaparilla, that promised much and did nothing; but they wilt neither be deceived nor disappointed in this. Its virtues have been proven by abundant trial, and there remains no question 'of its surpassing excellence for the cure of the afflicting diseases it is intended to reach. Although under the, same name, it is a Very different medicine from any other which has been before the people, and is far more effectual than any other which haS ever been available to them. A. X .tlit'S CHERRY PECTORAL, The World's Great Remedy for Coughs, Colds, Incipient Consumption, and for the relief of Consumptive . patients in advanced sta ges of the disease. This has been so long used and so universally known, that we need do no more than assure the public that its. quality is kept up to the best it ever has been, and that it may be relied on to do all it has ever done. Prepared by DR. J. C. Arlin & CO. Practical and Analytical Ma:4k Lowell, Mass% Sold by all druggists every where, and tdr -COAL !! COAL 11—TO FAMILIES AND NA- V) NUFACTURERS.—Buy your Coal of A. 8: DOTTER, 304 BROAD street, above VINE, who keeps the best brands of Schuylkill and Lehigh Coal. For family use, buy the celebrated East Franklin, for which he is sole agent. • nov6 6m N.B.—Dealers will please leave orders with him. THE UNDERSIGNED re consmntly receiv tg COAL prepared ith a great deal of ire expressly for Fit ly use, and our tends who want a .re, first-class arti .le, either Schuylkill vi . _igh . , can rely on . getting lust weight, and being accommodated on the most fa vorable terms at MARRIOTT & JENKINS, n2O ean Ninth and Wallace streets. Three Invaluable Books for Every PIANOFORTE. THE HOME CIRCLE.—A. volume of 216 pages, contains 25 Marches and Quicksteps, 47 Waltzes, 81 Polkas, 6 Schottisches, 4 Redowas 4 Mazurkas, and Polka Mazurkas, 2 Varsoviennes, 1 Gorlitza, 4 Galo pades, 14 Cotillions and Quadrilles, and 44 Dances, Hornpipes, etc., arranged for the Piano. THE SILVER CHORD A Companion to the "Home Circle," containing a Collection of Favorite Songs, Ballads, Duets, and Quartets, with Accora namments for the Pianoforte. THE SHOWER OF PEARLS Containing the most beautiful Duets for Two Sopranos, Soprano Alto, Soprano and Tenor, Soprano and Bass, and Tenor and Bass. Arranged with an accompani ment for the Pianoforte. ' The large amount and great variety of Piano and- Vocal Musw comprised in the above Collections, have rendered them immensely popular, and much sought after by Players and Singers. They furnish the most• suitable pieces for every lime and occasion, and are adapted to every grade- of performance. Each vol ume is a complete library in itself of Choice Music, and no one will fail to recognize in one and all a great desideratum for every Piano. Price of each, in cloth $2.25 ; in plain binding $2, on receipt of which copies will be mailed, post-paid. OLIVER DITSON lz CO., Publishers, 277 Wash ington street, Boston. marl 9 tf MELODEONS HARMONIUMS I CON aml am sole agent:for CARHART 9 S SPLENDID HAMM minis possessing unequalled, powers, variety and beauty of tone. The beat instrument for enunoux ever introduced. 1 / 4 n22 ly cn peculiar taint or infec which we call SCROF. , lurks in the constitu ns of multitudes of men. either produces or is )(laced by an enfeebled, iated state of the blood, erein that fluid becomes :ompetent to sustain the d forces in their vigorous ion, and leaves the sys-- to fall into disorder decay. The. scrofulous itamination is variously ised by mercurial dis- COAL. COAL. deon o R. M....M0RR15% No. 728 Market street. CHARLES STOKES & .-CO W S FIRST CLASS ONEPRICE' READY-MADE CLOTHING STORE, NO, 824 CHEST- - NUT STREET, 'UNDER THE CONTINENTAL HOTEL, PHILADELPHIA. • DIAGRAM FOR SELF-MRASUREMENT. For Coat—Length • of back from 1 to Id from 2 to 8. Length of .Slee , with arm crookei -om 4 to 5, a -ound the mo -ominent part Le chest and wail itate whether .err r stooping. For Vest,,, --say Coat. -For Pants kle seam, and oi ide from hip hone sound the wai id hip. .A. go; guaranteed. Officers' Uniforms ready-made, always on han d,or. made to order in the best manner and on the most, reasonable terms. Having finished many hundred.. Uniforms the past year for Staff, Field and. Line 'Of cers, as well as for the Navy, we are prepared to ex ecute orders in this line with correctness ••and des patch. • The largest and most desirable stock of Ready- Made Clothing in Philadelphia always on hand.(The price marked in plain figures on all of the goods.) 1 A department for Boys' Clothing is also maintained at this establishment, and superintended bir experi. enced hands. Parents and others will find here a most desirable assortment of Boys'. Clothing,..at low prices. Sole Agent for the " Famous Bullet Proof Vest." CHARLES STOKES' &-CO. CHARLES STOIrF;S, E. T. TAYLOR, W. J. STOKES: ONE PRICE CLOTIIING, No. 604 MARKET gTREET, PHILADELPMA. Made in the latest 'Styles and best manner . ; ex• pressly for retail sales. The lowest selling price is marked in plain figures on each article, and never-va ried from. All goods made to order warranted satis factory, and at, the same rate as ready-made. Our ONE PRICE system is strictly adhered to, as we believe this to be the only fair way of dealing, as all'are there by treated alike. JONES & CO., CO. ? : ly 604 Market st., Philadelphia. LIFE INSURANCE. The GIRARD Life Insurance, Annuity and Trust Own/pally of Philadelphia. OFFICE . , No. 408 CHESTNUT Sr. Capital (paid up), $300,000.--Charter Perpetual: CONTINUE to make INSURANCE ON LIVES on the most reasonable terms. ' They act as Executors, Trustees "and Guardians un der last Wills, and as Receivers and Assignees. The capital being paid up and invested, together with a large and constantly increasing reserved fund, offers a perfect security to the insured. The premiums may be paid yearly, half yearly, or quarterly. The Company add a BONUS periodically to the 'ln surances for life. The following are a few examples from the Register; Sum Bonus or Ins 'd. addition. No. 89 $2500.5887.5011 . 53 ,387.50 " 132 8000 I 1,050.00 4,050.00 " 199 1000400.00 I 1,400.00 I " 383 . 5000 1 87 6 00 6 875 00 Pamphlets, containing tables of rates and explana tion, forms of application and further information can be had it the office. THOMAS RIDGWAY, PugsroEbrr. Jim. F. JANES, Actuary. febs Bm. DOCTOR A. H. STEVENS, ELECTRICAL PHYSICIAN. IS curing all Chronic diseases both of Ladies and Gentlemen, by a new method in the use of Electricity alone, without any medicine s or even any pain. Board may be had, with treatment, by patients from abroad, at reasonable rates in the Doctor's family. , LETTERS applying for circulars or further informa• tion will bepromptly answered. Office and resilience at 1418 ,SOUTH PENN, SQUARE PBILA. TA., being in a central as well as delightful part of the city. FebEt 3m SAMUEL WORK. ICRA3iER. & RAI% PITTSBIII/G BANKING. HOUSE: OF WORE, 1100011011 & CO., No. 36 SOUTH THIRD STAKE; PHILAIMLPHIA. DEALERS in imminent Bank Notes and Coins. Southern and Western Funds bought on the most favorable terms. Bills of Exchange on New York,. Boston, Pittsburg , Baltimore, Cincinnati, St. Lotus, etc., etc., con stantly for sale. Collections promptly made on all accessible points in the United States and Canadas. Deposits received, payable on demand, and interest allowed as per agreement Stocks and Loans bought and sold on commission, and Business Paper negociated. Refer to Philadelphia and Commercial. Banks, Philadelphia; Read, Drexel & Co., Winslow, Lather Co., New York; and Citizens' and Exchange Bank% Pittsburg. febl3 tf GEORGE‘T. BOYD, BANKER, No. 18 South Third Street, Philadelphia, (Two doors above Mechaniee -Bank.) TVEALER in Bills of Exchange, -Bank Note& and X./Specie. Drafts on New York, Bostou, Balti more, etc., for sale. Stocks and Bonds bought and sold on commission, at the Board of Brokers. Busi ness Paper, Loans on Collaterals, etc., negotiated. Deposits received and interest allowed. ja9 ANDREW MAID. HENRY C. BLAIR'S, PRESCRIPT.IO,N It FAMILY MEDICINE STORE, Eighth and Walnut streets, Philadelphia. (Established 1829.) Prices 11 but the best Medicines dispensed. Prices 11. Uniform and reasonable. Persons residin g in the country can have their orders faithfully and promptly executed, no matter how small. Physi cians supplied with pure medicines and medical pre , parations. jul2 tf -- -7,7 - A 311. ItEILIG . 0) Watchmaker, and Jeweler,..,. Qs\_ _2 No. 836 VINE STREET, (Near Ninth) PmlAnitrpLi.. All kinds of Timepieces repaired, and warranted. An assortment of Spectacles oa hand. n2O 1y W. P. Ot - A.RIC.. QHOES AND UMBRELLAS 1626 ISIAIMET ST. kJ All kinds of Boots and. Shoes of ing oink menu facture, or made to order. A good' assortment of Gum Shoes. *Umbrellas repaired. Pinking in a va riety of stiles, at low prices. . n 27 6m TROXPSON BLACK & BON'S Tea Warehouse and Family grocery Store, NORTH-WEST CORNER OF • BROAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS, PHILA. (Estahlished 1836.) • An extensive assortment of Choice Black and Green Teas, and every variety of Fine Groceries, suitable for Family. use. Goods delivered in any part of the City,' or packed securely for the country. jan.l FAMILY. GE,OCE-RIES. 'WILT:UM CLARKE, N. W. CORNER 12TH AHD RACE STREETS. PIMA. (IFFERS for sale an assortment of best FAMILY kJ GROCERIES, including a supply, of NEW FRUITS, FRESH GROUND SPIOES,DtC, suitable tor the sea son. Special attention paid to TEAS, which. will be sold of better quality for the price than can be usually found. (leen ly THOMAS CARRICK & CO. , C_ AND BISCUIT BAKERS, • 1905 Manryr STREET,' Puma. Superior. Crackers, Pilot and Ship Bread, Soda, Sugar and Wine Biscuits, icc-Nial, Jum bles, and Ginger Nuts, A.PEE's, SCOTCH AND OTHEE CAKES ; " Ground Cracker in any 'Quantity. Orders promptly filled. ' declB ly REMOVAL. JAMBS 8 WEBB DEALER IN Fine Teas, Coffees ; and Choice Fulani? ' Groceries. Has removed to the S. E. corner of Eighth and Walnut exacts, Phil o, delphia a few doors from his former location, where he will h - e. happy to see•his friends and customers. floods carefully Packed and forwarded to the COUR' try. - - janB Am' t of Policy and bot nus to be increased . by future additions. WILLTAX McC ODOR APRIL 16, 1863. T ARR ANTS,' ZITEVESCENT SELTZER APERIENT. This valuable and popular Medicine has universally received the most favorable recommends . _firms of the_ litenro.sn Paovessrox 40 and the Puemc, as tbe most EFFICIENT arm Aonemeime SALINE APERIEIsT i r It may be used with the best effect in Bilious and Febrile `Diseases,Costiveness, Sick Read ,aehe,Sanseai.Loss.of.Appetite, Indigestion, Acidity. of the ; Stomach, Torpidity ofthe Liver, Gout, Rheruna tic Affections, - Gravel, Piles, AND Au.-comenincrs Inman A Gentle and Coolie : Aperient" Aperient or Purgative Required. It is particularly Adapted the , wants; of Travelers by Sea and Land,Residents in Hot Climates, Persons of Sedentary Habits,' Invalids • and Convalescents; . Captains of Vessels-and Planters will find it a vale ble addition to their Medicine:Chests. It is in the form-of a Powder, carefully put up in bot tles to keep in any climate, and merely requires water poured upon it to produce a delightful effervescent beverage- Numerous - testimonials from professional and other gentlemen of the highest standing throughoutthe country, and its steadily increasing popularity for a series of years, strongly guarantee its efficacy and val uable character, and commend it to the favorable no ice of an intelligent public. Manrifactared only'br • - TARRANT & No. 278 Greenwich street car. Warren, New York, - And for sale by Druggists generally. myls ly S. TUS.TON ELDRIDGE, , • item% trfrANFElrroits. „ft :ssusma ,J IMPORTER AND .D.BALE-It IN', , FOREIGN AN'D -DOMESTIC HARDWARE, Cutlery, Tools, Looking Glasses, ete, No. 426 Sorra .&cola) ST., ,above ,LOKBARD, [Opposite the hfarket, West Side,) Philadelphia. (81'. - 1_:0 UtiS Sunday-School, Theological and Tract Depository. Aulerican Sunday-School. Union slid Amezi- Ji. can Tract Society l each, maintained foi many years depositories of their 'respective publications in this city ; these are now united under the care-of the subscriber, and be has= added thereto a. 7 select assort ment of the. publications of the various evangelical denominations, with those of private publishers, which are sold at publishers' prices. Catalouges and specimens of SinidarSchool papers sent on application. Schoolß , ooks and Stationery. Address J.' W. MCINTYRE, 1 / 4 No. 9 South Fifth Street; St. Louis aplo ly AMERICAN Life Insurance ana. Trust tomikany. OOMFANVS BUILDINGS., Southeast Coraerm Walnut and Fourth Streets; Authorized Capital, - - - $500,00C - Paid up Capital, -- . 250,00' _ _ Incorporated -1850, by the Legislature of Penna. Insures Lives during the natural life or for short terms, grants annuities and endowments, and makes contracts of all kinds depending on - the issues of life. Acting also as Executors, Trustees, and Guardians. Policies of Life Insurance issued at the usual mn tual ;ides of other good companies—with . profits to the assured—last Bobrus January, 1861, being . 48 per cen'. of all premiums received on mutual policies—at Jobint Stock rates,' 20 per -cent.- less ;thaw above, or _Total Abstinence rates 40 per cent, less than Mutual price. Also, • NON FORFEITURE PLAN, By veld& ayerson pays for L 5,7, or 10 years only, when the Policy is paid up for ox, and nothing. more to pay;'and' should be be unable, or wish to discontinue sooner ' , the Company will -uisnen YAM 111" POLICY, in proportion , to the amount of premium paid, as fol lows On a Policy of $lOOO, At Year ' 7'Year 10 Year after payment' Rates. Rates. Rates. of 2 An- Prem i sc for* $400.0052851 7O $200:00 " 4 " 800 00 571 40 400 00 " 6 do " I 857 10 600 00 " 8 do, ALEXANDEP,WI4.II.,LDIN t President. SAMUEL WORK, Vice-President. Joan' S. Wipsorr,'Seeretltry. • BOARD OF TRUSTEES. Alexander W3iiltdin, J. Edgar Thomson, Han. jas. Pollack, Hon. Joseph Alrson, Albert C. Roberts,. Jonas Bowman, Samuel. T. Bodine H H. Eldridge, George Nugent,John Aikman, William J. Howard, ' Charles F. Heamlitt, Samuel Work. IfEDICAI EXAMINERS. J. R Bird, M. D . ., J. Newton Walker, N, D. In attendance at the Company's Office datly,at 12 o'clock, M feb 22tf. EVERY MAN , BLS. OWN PRINTER. Portable Prmtmg Offices ; FOR THE xrss or THE ARMY AND NAVY, Iderch"ants,.Dr gg sts, and all Business Men, WET 1911 ION ram - um: pm:err TEEM. OWN Handbills, Circulars, Billheads, Labels, Cards, Ete., Press No. 1, prints sby 4 inches. $lO.OO. Office Completo, $20.00. Press Na.2,prints 6 by 9 inches,sls.oo.Office oniple . Complete, $30.00 Preds No. 3, prints 9 by 11 inches, $20.00. Office • Complete, $50.00. Press N0..4, prints 11 by 13 inches, $25.00. Office CoMplete, $75.0. Press No i 5, prints 13 by 19 inches, $30.00. Office Complete, $lOO.OO. 4. circular sent ,on application to the ADAMS PRESS COMPANY, jarkB , 3m .yW " al Park Row, N. Y. WILLIAM F GEDDES, Plain and 'Paney Printer, No.. 320'CHESTNUT STREET, (Over Adama' Express) Philadelphia. Pamphlets, Constitutions, Circulars, Cards, B ill heads,;Bills of %Lading, Law . and Custom Io us Blanks, etc. mar 27 ly O. H. WILLARD'S CARTES DE 1 77.51 TE and Photograph Galleries, Nos. 1626, 1628 and 1630 MARKET STREET. ALL work froth. this establishment is warranted to be of the very finest quality, and to : give perfect sa tisfaetion. • n 27 ly TICE YOUNG 'BIEN% HOME, No. 1881 PThogicr STREET. BOARD & LODGING $2.50 & $2.26 PER WEEK ter Library, Games, Periodicals, Daily Papers, etc. m 5 am W. HENRY PATTEN'S ~NSW WEST END Window Shade, .ourtain and Upholstery store, No. 1.408 CHESTNUT STREET, 'Next door to Hubbell's (Apothecary.) Window Shades, Gilt Cornices, Bedding. Furni ture Re-Upholstered, Varnished and Repaired. Car pets or Matting, ' cut or made, or altered and pi?t , dowit, by the best men to be got in the ciiy. Furra tare Slips, or Covers, handsomely made and fitted. Verandah Awnings, etc. W. ITRNRY PATTEN, febl2 Syr` , 1408 Chestnut street. The Western. Stove and. Tinware Depot. PREST ON 4%- MAHOOD, ins MAR•RET STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of Stoves, Tinware, Hollow-ware and - House. Keeping Articles in. General. V keep on hand an assortment of the most bn _proved Patterns, such as Silver's Gas Burn ers for Parlor,Store, And Office use, and a variety of patternsfor Halls and Barrooms. We also have a large stock of Gas-burning Cooking Stoves, with all the latest improvements. Heater and Range work attended to. All kinds of repairing promptly atten i dad' to. - PRESTON I - kr.A.HOt)D, liZetbn 1718 Market street, Philadelphia.