Upsfrilawims. THE PEESIDEETIAL MESSAGES, 'rhe contrast between the message of President Lincoln and that of President' Davis l inust strike the most cursory;, readers The tone of the one is calm and confident; the tone of the other is regret ful and despondent. Mr. Lincoln does' not think it necessary to recount the.oc- currences of the war. He refers to them with haughty nonchalance as to opera tions proceeding naturally to one inevita ble issue, and enters into detail only in re lation to those measures with which he in tends to accompany the suppression'of the revolt. Mr. Davis, whose admirable com mand of the English language, and manly recognition of facts, as they are, impart a dignity) almost a fascination) to his periods, acknowledges 'defeat, throws no veil' over the forpe which .is gradually closing in with resistless power qpqm the Confede racy, and puta hiS i trust, Jikq the stag, at bay, in “sheer determination to fight to the last. Mr. Lincoln, pleased with the as pect of his own affairs, diffuses his satis faction and smiles upon .the world'in gene ral. He Jhas upthing- to allege against France or England, and he rejoices that extremes are to meet by the establishment of telegraphic communications between despotic Russia- and democratic America. Mr. Davis,. ill at ease at home, finds nothing satisfactory abroad. Earl Rus sell and Napoleon 111. have both turned the cold shoulder to a Confederacy which did not seem likely to conquer, and no at tempt is made to extract satisfaction even from the Mexican expedition. President Lincoln, 1 content with the success which has attonded his arms, does not accuse tho South of ferocity or inhumanity. Presi dent Davis dwells at length on the harsh manner in which he affirms that the Fede rals have carried on the war, and attempts once more to conjure up the sympathies of Europe by naming Butler, Turchin, Macneil. Without boastfulness or exul tation, Mr. Lincoln’s message is as confi dent as it could, well be before the actual subjugation of the Confederates; and though . there is no hint at surrender, no whining or lamentation, in that of Mr. Davis, it could scarcely, so long as he has armies in the fieM, be more desponding. We frankly admit that the result of the. war anticipated by President Lincoln seems to us probable. No one doubts that the power of the North is beyond comparison greater than the poorer of the South; and when % greater power is brought to bear with sufficient determina tion and perseverance upon a less, the end may be'deferred, but the defeat of the lat ter is inevitable. The Confederates may perform.pro.digieS ,of valor; the Carthagi nians, in the last. days of their common T wealth, performed prodigies of valor; but victories) however brilliant, will not create fleets and armies, and without fleets antf armies, the Confederate" States cannot establish,.their, independence. President Davis complains bitterly of the want of sympathy exhibited by the European Powers with the Confederate cause; but in this message, which may be his last, be doggedly refuses to speak that word which would even now unseal the fountains of sympathy, for the. South in England and in France. Dark as he knows the prospectS'of his countrymen to be, President Davis gives us not one ray of hope that emancipation will be carried out in the Confederacy. The “institur tion” is-still inviolable. The “corner stone” of the slave republic stands sure. There is-not in this message, as there has has not been in any official document is issued by the Southern Government, one syllable to justify tho hope that, if the Confederates asserted their independence, the negroes would, in course of time; be emancipated. If President Davis , feels that he isolated from the sympathy of the world, he is not without knowledge of the cause. He has met the demands of civilized “and Christian humanity with im placable defiance; he must take the con sequences. ( If, on the other hand, there are not a few among us who think that, had it been possible to secure the ultimate emancipa tion of the. slaves, it would have been best for both parties that North and- South should be, separate, we, must all regard with satisfaction the statements made by President Lincoln in his message, in refer ence to ,the negro rage. He mentions that the, American treaty with Great Britain for the suppression of the slave trade has been vigorously carried out, a thing which is well known to have never occurred while the South retained power in the councils of, the. United States. He declares that be will not recede from his emancipation edict, an important an nouncement, precluding all hope and all fear that'the North will bribe the Oon federates: haek to their allegiance by the sacrifice of the negro race. He states that 50 000 negroes are enrolled in the armies of’ the Nbrth, and that they are as good as any. All who are convinced that slavery is an offence against God and man, and that Southern slavery in particular is “ the sum of all villanies ” must rejoj.co in these announcements.. It has long been the opinion of sympathisers with the North, and can now hardly be doubted by any, that' one result of this war will be the abolition, of slavery Among civilized men. If, slavery is de stroyed in the Confederate States, it will speedily be destroyed in Cuba and else where.—London Weekly Review. & BESOUED NATION. When .the real history of the last half century comes to be written—if ever it be written—it will be seen that we have been preyed upon by one demoralizing power more blighting than all others combined. It has been like an epidemic sickness, a leprosy'on the heart of the nation. 1 am not speaking now of the corrupting in fluence of slavery on the private morals of tiie South, of plantation brothels ana palatlals harems. lam speaking of its in fluence on public morals. And what I ■say is that i it has been a rottenness in Our bones. A. system founded on injustice ant inhumanity, and perpetuated by cupidity and lust, lays the axe at the very root of morality. It has bought and sold our presidents. It has packed our Su jreihe Court, appointed our cabinet of ficers, . elected our Federal law-givers, bribed our. legislation, dictated our na tional policy. It has stood up against the right of petition. It has withstood freedom of speech, and caned it in the Federal Capitol. It has sectionalizcd our: national legislation, dwarfing down pa triotism to vassalage to itself. It has brought its home-born licentiousness to the seat of government, and rising iu the ' morning from its lecherous bed: it has swaggered, into, the- Capitol to bully and brow-beat senators and the representa tives of a great free people It has de bauched the national conscience. It has subsidized the;- press,' ,or hissed its : out spoken honesty. It .has rent- in twain .the church. It has. gone into the pulpit. :and made Christ preach, not a gospel of freedom, but a gbspbl of hopeless bondage: I Its angels of mercy have been trained I blood-hounds andmore cruel. taskmasters. Its New Te stament has been—“ There are slaver rabes, bom, to serve, master races born to govern. ” —Richmond Enquirer. f To crown its dnfamy -it has laid its sacri ligious hands on the pillarsiOf the Repub lic, and would lay iu ruing the temple, of. liberty. But' in- This own time and way, God is j delivering us from this pestiferous power ' of corruption. He means by it that we | • shall'l». a.better, holier people.. We praise his name for it. Talk r to’ me of the de moralizingand infidelizing power of war ! The morals'of. >the; camp are spotless com pared with those of. the plantation. Thanks be to God, slavery will make no more, presidents,, appoint no more cabinet officers and judges, insult ho more sena tors, bribe no more representatives and presses, silence no more pulpits, preach , no; more a gospel of oppression. • Pan, . Pan is dead." Now our public men may be.patriots without danger to their pros ! pects, and legislate for the Republic ;■ without being menaced by the duelist.— [ Rev. Dr. Spees’ Thanksgiving Servian. Ipitemg. THEOLOGICAL QUABTEBLIES FOB JAHUABT. The American Presbyterian and The- OiiOGiCAXi Review bpbhh with an article on the Latin Patriarchate, from the prolific pen of Dr. Schaff; of Mercersburg, who with Prof. 1 Tayler £ewis, of TJnion College,.has also' ? cbntrihpted to the •Methodist Quarter- ly 'of 1 this month. Dr. Schaff assign's a providential significance to the Roman Patriarchate, as; forming " part of the ne cessary external outfit of tho Church for her disciplinary mission-among the hea- then! barbarians. The Catholic'hierarchy, with its pyramid-like culmination in the papacy, served among the Roman and Germanic peoples, until the time of the Reformation, a purpose similar to that of the Jewish theocracy and the old Re- man Empire, respectively in, the inward and outward preparation of Christianity.”; This is very specious, and falls in with the passion for analogies so prevalent among Scientific, men; but it raps counter to our ideas of the true Pauline, apostolic, method of subduing the world to Christ. That was by the foolishness of preaching; Rome’s method is the carnal wisdom of men. She is trying it, and has been try ing it for centuries* in . .South. America, by such means as lately issued in lelledi calamity pf.. iSan’tiago. v We may pe sure God meant something better for. the; race by his church, than the compromise between heathenism and true religion of fered by Roriie to' the barbarians of the north of Europe. Dr. ; Schaff shows how the assumption, first of patriarchal power, over ihe churches of the West alone, was ■disputed in various' . localities, and was only conceded generally in the 6th cen tury. He then traces the rise of the idea: 1 of ■universal supremacy, or the papacy, in ■the reference of Christ’s words, " Thou art to Peter,” to the primacy of that apostle, showing at the same time, how the fa thers vacillate in their interpretation of the passage } he also shows how little ground there is for appeal to the decrees of coun cils in behalf of the, assumptions of the papacy, the great councils of Nice, Ephe sus; Constantinople and Chalcedon, giving the pope simply the position ampng the five patriorchs of primus inter pares which is substantially the position of the Greek Church. ! f ; The second article is valuable as laying before theologians a document, in an Eng-, lish translation, which, few have, opportu nity to see in any form: The Epistle of Barnabas, from the Codex Sinailicus. The inconceivable superiority;of the New, Testament to the productions of uninspired men of the immediately succeedingage, is well illustrated by the trivialities of this singular production. In the third article: The Begula Eidei; or the Gospel of John, Prof. Lewis dwells upon the distinctive and sublime character of the Gospel of John, giving it the central place in" all revelation, and proposing it as the test and rule of our faith, a problem insoluble on the grounds of rationalism,—so incredible as an impos ture, that a miracle only could explain it. He traces John’s doctrines of the Logos, if ■to anything aside from his own deep m spiration, not-to Plato or to Philo, bnt to the Hebrew notices of the omnifto speech P HIL ABSL P 01 A, T •or uttered thought of God, as we find them here and there in the Old. Testament. President Fisher’s valuable address on Education in the Presbyterian Church-, forms the fourth'article. This address, de- livered by appointment of the Presbyte- rian Historical Society, before the Gene-. ral Assembly which met in this city last May commences with an argument for mental culture and general learning as accordant with the Divine purpose in the Church. “ The Jews,” Dr. F. reminds us, as a nation, were; in some reepects, the best educated of- that age, Their syna- gogues and their rabbis were in every vil lage. Their children were trained in the study of .the law and the prophets. And as this -divine -system was infinitely supe rior to that of : their pagan neigKbofo, So 1 the - mass bfthe people. siodif-on' a higher plane than even the niore.scientific natlons near .them. ’ o Our .fathers therefoteriSreiPe; in the-strict line of ScripturSl analogy in founding Schoois and seminaries of. foarnr ing. : Besides,, as Presbyterians; they held the doctrine of Scripture, in a systematic form. "The study and harmonious de velopment of these grand doctrines neces sitated the.:, severest' mental -discipline:. They are the most profound in all the Encyclopedia of human knowledge:” A training at'least as fall and thorough as that required by the lawyer and' states-' man, was hoddeH by one who is to unfold and apply those infinitely more important: teuths. Hence originated the zeal of our Congregational and Presbyterian forefa thers for colleges. Dr.F. then gives a I brief-history of the early efforts of the Puritans' mthis department ; :shows.that Presbyterians had to contend against the hostility of state governments ,in their early history, and coming as they did from diverse countries to America, with diverse tastes and views,:did not so early- co-ope rate in; great enterprises for the Church.’ The labors of Rev. William Tennant, jin. the “Log College,” the founding of Prince-;. : ton, j; Rutgers,. Union and Hamilton Col leges" North, of Washington and , Bfampden-rSiilney, in Virginia, and others. in quick succession, are referred to,-: as: proving- the-zeal: and efficiency of the - Presbyterian Chiirch when once in a poSi- ' tion to act. ohj the Subject. To the Re- . formed Dutch. Church is given the honof :i - of leading in the 5 establishment o£ distinct?: ■ institutions ‘for" the study of Theological' Seminaries. This was in; IYB4. The.dissociate Church followed in, It *2, with; her. seminary at. Canonshusg?3 ’ Pa.' • Andover 'Seminary dates from; 180fc, s Prince ton.fr dm 1812; Auburn is a few years younger. Seventeen-twentieths of our ministry - have : gone out of the various theological seminaries. : After {this brief historical view, which we should be glad to see extended and brobght down to the present time. Dr., Fisher presents some weighty thoughts sug gested by the tabjeet, and " by the present aspect of Some cff our educational institd tions.” The chua’cb, in establishing col- : leges, he says, aimed first, but by no means exclusively,' at Securing a supply of edu cated .'minister's:;.\ ( 1 / / , ~ Beyond ! this' she sought the thorough graining for.pur, youth in allthehigher.do partments p.fjlajbor,. as.one of the. moat, ef effective advancing! most rapidly, the;hingdpm pt, Jesus.'' The church sought, in this way to spread her influencedypt the. youth who were to be the leaders in both: - church apd state; to care for tho highest interests, of all,. and send them forth so educated, that, whether they mi-- nistered in the pplpit, or at thp hat, or jin the more common.walks of human enter.-., prise, they should carry with them a mind, informed with high intelligence,:guided,by correct principles, and animated by the spirit of a truly Christian* benevolence. In this way pur, colleges came.to he, in. de-. sign and effect, not merely nurseries for the .ministry, 1 but also l of those minds which were to exert a profound and, far-reaching influence on all the" high places to be oc cupied by the disciplined intellect of tho nation. In these institutions, of course, the church designed that a truly Christian education should be given. Dr. Fisher here quotes Carlyle: “To know God, the Maker ; to know the .divine laws and inner harmonies of the universe; must always' be the highest glory for a man. And not to know them, always the highest disgrace for a man, however lt is the crown ing glory of Newton,, that in all his vast discoveries he walked as in the presence of God, and sought'to unfold his kingdom. How grandly, and yet how modestly, does; he, in the conclusion of his . Principia de-, dare, that in all His work he had purposed, to bring forth the idea of God as a personal Sovereign over the universe. And it is equally the disgrace of Humboldt, that he could compose his. Cosmos; where at every step this Divine Intelligence reveals him self/without recognizing bis sovereignty or bis existence. From this divorce of science from religion; this wicked attempt to know the works without knowing the worker; this effort to educate men as the mere slaves of natural forces, and not to educate them under the inspiring idea of a personal sovereign and a divine Re deemer, our fathers sought to save us. They gave to their colleges a Christian character; they sought to develop the sublime harmonies existing between na ture and revelation; they brought our youth under the direct influence of those truths by which natural science is conse crated, and the heart trained for the re- sponsibilities of this life, and the grander destiny of the life to come. But how can we make the collegiate course of study promote and establish Christian principles in the minds of the students ? Is it enough, he asks, to .have a formal recognition of Christianity and a Sabbath service and daily prayers ? The Bible is the text book Of Christianity. Says the writer: To make our colleges truly Christian, this Wonderful book must itself be Studied by oar youth, studied in its history, sttidied with, as, thorough ah enthusiasm as the classics/ and the.mathematics, and natural science ; studied along with them, from the beginning to'the end of the student’s I course, till it shall be as ■ for a I inanito. graduate or: wear the insignia of tan educated scholar 1 without afairknow . .'ledge Of this divine-Book, as it is for him"] ,to win .the; honors ? of any? special ? depart- 1 men|b of: Science, without athoroughmas- Uery of its principles. This is the plain, | I practical, common sense method of en-* thro&ng" Christianity as the infoTimng and [.vitalizing pOwer: of human knowledge/ higher than earthly philosophy, loftier thai natural science; the finest discipline of tie intellect/the grandest force to con trol and bless the heart. • It is a sad and startling fact, that not a; few of our literary institutions have drifted away from- , this anchorage of the souk- The prodigious advance of natural science hasicrowded out this higher science ; - the knowledge of the dead past has excluded the knowledge of the living, verities essen tial? tothe true , life and greatest efficiency | of the scholar; so that, in some of our proudest and most popular and crowded | institutions, with much that entitles them to'the confidence of the churches, there is, from the beginning to the end of their cur? ribulum, not one collegiate /exercise that compels the personal attendance of the [ Student to the great text-book of Chris tianity. ■ iDr. Fisher then considers' thb question' whether the denominations should abandon the support and control of, colleges,. as they Lave have already in great measure abandoned common schools to the' State. He’ answers it, : unhesitatingly, in the ne gative. 'The child'/ while going to' the. primary school, is still in the family, and. the .deficiencies of his education mayyet -he-made dp by parental influencebut the ’college studentis for,the mpst part away Iromihome. / The average age during which students;; are found- at college is fromffif ?teeh: fito :i tw%nty-;tw6seven years, the 'diMchit,'the most perilous.of life.” /,-. We take,this high/this unassailable po sition, that if ever man 1 needs to be com t passed- about with all the power of a living Christianity; it is when he is passmg out |- of thedbmain of childhood and youth, into LtiieneW -life and ;vigor of his early mam I hood.-. If this is : not : preseht with him/ if the .intellect be cafed for/ while the higher nature is left alone to combat with? his lower, in the vast majority of bases; he I will be lost to humanity, lost to the church, f dost forevec as a creature'ofC-o'd, :- 4 Now what, we ask, has -th'e state to of? fer us that'wiM meet this highest, 'this most 1 1 indispensable want of our-higher educa tional'institutions ? The? state? is a civil institution, designed 1 for - civil purposes, and; able -to touch upon "moral and reli gious, questions only indirectly and inci dentally. ? This, at • least, is Our theory of the state/ whatever may be the theory [prevalent elsewhere. We have not/and] [according tofhislawof bur national de velopment,? we cannot have' a state reli gion to take charge "of each human soul, afcfevery-'step - Of- its' progress; from the [cradle.to . the gravb-.'- ; If the state, plants. ..universities, ?she? will /control 'them;-- She' . .may put'in charge, of them men of high ’religious-: principles';- and' she may put there men who/for-the-sake of their sa- Uari.es, will care;for the intellect, and prove [ utterly 1 regardless of the true culture of I the. heart/ men who? Care no more for the soul of a youth; than they do for the morals ,of a horso. : • : ' • ■ .. , : ? - 11 ' He comes'back, to the policy of the fa thers. The -church,; in one or-more of her organic bodies must control, direct, and be responsible for the religious culture of the young. Her sons must endow and supply the students for/these institutions.; Not [ only readers of English, history, but re sidents of Philadelphia, are made to un derstand on what ; a liberal scale Dr. [ Fisher would have the work of endow-" ment proceed. We close our notice of his article, with 1 two sentences. ? ; ■? ; There are, men .among us, consecrated to God as. his children, as able to endow them as were the ladies and gentlemen, nobles and kings, who in the 13th, 14th, 15th, and 16th centuries, laid the founda tions of the colleges of the English and Scottish universities. ' !4.nd when they rise to thb just appreciation of the nobility and Christlike grandeur of living in an in fluence reaching into, the generations of ;the future,.their deeds will not stand in shameful , contrast .with that far-sighted earthly ambition,.'which,- without Christ, reared the marble walls of your magnifi cent edifice for the children of the poor. . The National .PREACHERoontains ser mons by liev. A. L. Stone, D. D;,. on tbe Final Conflict.; and by Rev. J. M. Sherwood, on the decay of Family Power; besides ori ginal and selected articles for the player meeting. This is the first number of vo lume 38 ; whole number of sermons 918. Price $1 per annnm in advance. W. H. Bidwell, 5 Beekmau St , N. Y. The Lie® of Archbishop Hughes, (first Archbishop of New York,) With a full ac count of his Life, Death, and Burial., T. B. Peterson & Bros., Phila. 16m0., 70 pp., paper covers; 25 cents. ISSBHfc Polko—Fuller. Musical Sketches by Elise- Polko. Translated from the 6th German Edition, by Fanny Fuller. Phila.: Fredk. Leypoldt. 16m0., pp. 297. A wild, quaint volume, in which a deep ly imaginative and passionate writer seizes uplra the critical moments in the lives, of eminent musicians, and works them into narratives in which the romantic and the real are inextricably interwoven. Many of the sketches are noble and valuable; some of them are slight, and some marred by af fectation; but a grace of style and a deep, earnestness pervade: them all, andgivethe book a high place as a simply, literary and esthetic performance. , ... .. | The exterior is elegantly done, and shoyrs ■what Philadelphia; printers, type-fpunders, and publishers can accomplish in getting up a tasteful and elegant, yet not showy, vo- Tatlor. The Sacrifice .Consumed, Life of Edward Hamilton Brewer, lately a soldier in the Army of Potomac. By Jeremiah Tay lor, D..D. Boston: Henry Hoyt. 16m0., ; pp. -40, with portraits. Phila., for sale by W.S. & A. Martien. The brief story of a pious Connecticut youth, who enlisted in the army of : the Union just previous to the battle of Antie tam. It is in such volumes that weilearh of what noble material our army is made, what preoious sacrifices are freely laid’on the altar of country, and where are found the true - sources of national safety; The’ story is well and tenderly told by Dr. Tay lor; Kelly. Andy Hall, the Mission Scholar in’ the. Army. By Caroline E. Kelly, author of “ Bernice,” u Grace Hale,” «stnut St. : American Tract Sot. 16 - This is another of t»> excellent for the young issued by .^ e -American Tract Society, Boston, and J lBB eeveral handsome illustrations. Hammond. The Revival Melodist. A - tion of choice Hymns and Tunes adapts. Seasons of Deep Religions Interest and l. or use in the Famuy and the Sabbath and compiled by Edward Paysoir Hammond. Boston: Henry Hoyt, 70 pieces. A collection of simple and popular de votional melodies, with words which in' many instances- hav# also acquired great popularity, Evangelical in. tone they are well adapted to their peculiar, purpose. PERIODICALS AND PAMPHLETS The Bibliotheca Sacra, a perfect li brary of current theological learning, sur passed! by none in the English language, has entered upon its : thirty-fifth year, and carries with it not only the Biblical Reposi tory as of bid, but from the first of this year the Christian RevieVv, formerly publish ed, at Brown University, R. 1., Rev. Bar nas Sears, D. D., Editor. Dr. Sears will co operate in editing the combined periodi cals. The present number contains articles on Athanasius and the Arian Controversy; the Caraites —sect.of the Mohamedans; Doc trinal Attitude of Old School Presbyte rians, by Prof. Atwater, of Princeton Col lege ; Chas. Wesley and Methodist Hymns, by Rev. Frederic M. Bird, of Phila.; The Serpent of Eden, from the point of view of advanced science, by Rev. John Duns, D. D., Free Church of Scotland, Trophiehen- Confidence, the youngest daughter of Cau tion, by Rev. Dr. Withington, of Newbury port; Editorial Correspondence; Criticisms of Books. W. F. Draper, Andover. Price $4 a year, or $8 in advance. THe Throne of Iniquity. The moral Contrasts developed by the existing war, in its Origin, Objects, and Prosecution. A discourse delivered on the day of National Thanksgiving, Buffalo, Nov. 26th, 1863, by Rev. Dr.’John C. Lord. A. grand discourse based upon one of the most instructive views that could be taken of the presant struggle. We shall make room for some extracts. Foundations oe Saphib.es.” A Thanksgiving Sermon delivered at S. Read ing, Mass., Nov. 26, 1863, by Rev. Chas. JL Bliss, pastor of the Congregational Church. .- A powerful of the advantages gained, and yet to arise .out of the present conflict. The discourse has reached a second edition. MAJOR-GENERAL MEADE and all offi cers under Ms command are.invited to LOAG’S Printing Booms, N. E. cor. 4th and Chestnut. W. P. CLARK. SHOES AND UMBRELLAS, 1626 Market Street. AH kinds of Boots and Shoes of my own manufacture, or made to order. A good assortment of Gum' Shoes. Umbrellas re paired: Pinking in a variety of styles, at low prices* ; Books bound at the wholesale price, at LOAG’S, 4th and Chestnut; E. H. ELDRIDGE, Aqt., Fashionable C lot hie r, [Formerly of Bth and Chestnut streets,] HAS taken the Store, - • ' ‘ No: 628 Market street, ' Where he is prepared to furnish his old friends ■ and the public in general with . ~ CLOTHING, Ready Made or Made to Order, in the Best - ■ ■ ' Style AT MODERATE PRICES, Ashebuys and sells exclusively for Cash. .[decs ly Photograph Cards in endless variety, at LOAG’S, 4th'and Chestnut S. TU S T 0 N EL D RIDGE, [late davenport a eldbidge,] IMPORTER AND DEALER IN FOREIGN & DOMESTIC HARDWARE, Cutlery, Tools, Looking Glasses, etc., ■ No. 426 Southed St., above Lombard, [Opposite the Philada. Market, West Side,] Illustrated Advertising Cards at $1.50 per 1,000, ? at LOAG’S, 4th and Chestnut. ENVELOPES! ENVELOPES! ENVE- LOPES! PAPER! PAPER! PAPERI INITIALS, INITIALS, INITIALS, Stamped Free of Charge, Stamped Free of Charge. Initiels Stamped on Free of Charge. At Magee’s, 316 Chestnut street, At Ma&ee’s, 316 Chestnut Street, Between Third and Fourth. Fancy Card, Book, Job and Poster Print ing, at the N. E. cor. 4th and Chestnut. REMOVAL. O. H. WILLARD, Photographer, Has removed from 1628 Market Street to his new and spacious galleries, ; No. 1206 Chestnut Street. Mr. W. would say that his accommoda tions now are of the most commodions and ex tensive character; and he feells confident that, by close personal attention to Ms business, to give his patrons a much finer quality of work tnan has heretofore been produced in the city. The Central Depot for all kinds of Printing, 4th and Chestnut. CORNS, BUNIONS. INVERTED; NAILS, Enlarged Joints, and all Diseases of thf Feet cured without pain or inconvenience to the patient, by Dr. Zacharie, Surgeon Chiropo ' dist,92l Chestnut Street. 'Refers to Physician* and Surgeons of the city.