›ixicalautou. WORDSWOB4II'S POETRY-ITS RELI IGIOIIS TONE. - From an article in the North British Re view entitled g‘ Worsdworth—The Man and, the Poet," we extract the closing paragraphs: The question bas often been asked how far Wordsworth was a religious poet; that he was a religious man no one doubts. In his earlier poems, espe cially, as in " Thitern Abbey," and others, men have pointed to passages, and said, " These are pantheistic in their tendency." The supposition that Wordsworth ever maintained a pantheis tic philosophy,ever held a deliberate the ory of the divine Being as impersonal, is contradicted both by many an express declaration of his own, and by what is known of his life. The truth seems to be that, during that period of his life when his feelings about nature were most vivid, and most imaginatively ex pressed in verse, be felt, the presence in all nature of a vast life, a moving spirit, which he did .not, at least in his verse, identify with the living personal God of whom conscience and the Bible witness. His earlier poetry generally stops short of such distinct personality. But whether he so stopped short because nature does not in itself, and from - its unaided resources, suggest more, or whether he stopped short because he was merely describing his own experi ence, and that experience was defective, this we do not venture to determine. In Wordsworth's - treatment of human nature, the same question meets us in another form. In the "Prelude" and other poems of the first epoch, it cannot be denied that the self-restorative power of the soul seems to be asserted, and the sufficinaness of nature to console the wounded spirit is implied, in a way which Wordsworth, if distinctly ques tioned, would, perhaps at any time, cer tainly in his later years, have been the first to disavow. That he was himself conscious of this defeat may be gathered from the change he made in the reflec tions with which the story of Margaret, in the "Excursion," closes. This story was written among the last years of last century, at Racedown or Alfoxden. .Through, all the early editions of his poems, it stood thus " The old man, noting this, resumed and said, 'My friend! enough to sorrow you have given, The purposes of wisdom ask no more ; Be wise and cheerful; and no longer read The form of things with an unworthy eye.'" In the one-volume edition of his works, which appeared somewhere about the year 1845, we, for the first time, read the following addition, inserted after the third line of the above : "Ner more would she have craved as due to One Who, in her worst distress, had ofttimes felt The unbounded might of prayer; and learned with soul Fired on the Cross, that consolation springs From sources deeper far than deepest pain, For the meek Sufferer. Why then should we read The form of things with an unworthy eye? A little farther on, the " Wanderer" pro ceeds to say that once as he passed that way, the ruined cottage conveyed to his heart— " So still an image of tranquillity, So calm and still, and looked so beautiful Amid the uneasy thoughts which filled my mind, That what we feel of sorrow and despair From ruin and from change, and all the grief The passing shadows of Being leave behind, Appeared an idle dream that could not live Where meditation was." Instead of the last line and a 'half, the later additions have the following:— " Appeared an idle dream, that could main tain, Nowhere, dominion o'er the enlightened spirit Whose meditative sympathies repose Upon the breast of faith." To say, that as years increased Words worth's faith in the vital Christian truths grew more confirmed and deep, that in himself were fulfilled his own ivords— " Peace settles where the intellect is meek The faith heaven strengthens where He moulds the creed," is only to say that he was growingly a a good man. This growth many a line of his later poems, besides incidental notices in his letters and other memo randa ofhis nephew's biography clearly exhibit. No doubt, the wish: will at times arise, that the unequalled power of Spiritualiaing nattire, and of origina ting tender and solemn views of human life, bad, for the sake of other men, been oftener and more unreservedly turned on the - great truths of Christian faith. At the name time, when such a regret does arise, it i 3 but fair that it should be tempered by remembering, as he him self urges - , that " his works, as well as those of other poets, should not be con sidered as developing all the jnfluences which his own heart recognized, but rather'those which he felt able as an ar tist, to display to advantage." At an ther time he assured a correspondent hat he had been adverse to frequent . ' ention of the mysteries of Christian . aith, not because he did not duly feel • 1 1 hem, but because he felt , ..them toe wodeeply to venture on too free handling it.of them. Above all, if he has not, any more than the greatest of former poets, done all that our hearts desire, let us . ' not on that account fail to appreciate ::;_the good work he has done. What that Work is cannot be better described than ''-';ln the words in which the greatest pure iy_ religions poet of the age dedicated to W ordsworth his Oxford lectures on po -Atry : "Ut animos, ad sanctiora erige tiet,' to "raise men's minds to holier .hts" both of nature and of man. s the tendency of every line he Taking the commonest sights rth, and the lowliest 'facts of life; ovate and ennoble these, to„ find ways by which the mind may na ly pass upward to an ampler ether, finer air, this is his peculiar fume- Ifhe seldom ventures within the sanctuary, be everywhere leads to _ter court, lifting our thoughts into a region g' neighboring to heaven, and that no foreign land." If he was not,Ritiver sal in the sense In which Shakespeare was, 'and Goethe aimed to be, it Vias:lhe cause hp:wla,smitten witkc•tordee:C. t an enthusiasm for those truths by 'Wich he was possessed. His eye wastoo intense, too prophetic, to admit of his looking pc life dramatically. In fact, no 1)0(.6 of modern times has had in him so much of the prophet. In the world of nature, to a revealer of things hidded, an inter preter of new and unsuspected relations, the opener of a new seas() in men; in the moral world, the .reacher of truths hitherto neglected, or unobgerved, the awakener of the , consciousness to the solemnities that encompass life, deepen ing our reverence for the essential soul, apart from accident and circumstance, making trim feel more truly, more ten derly, more profoundly, lifting the thoughts upward through the shows of time to that which is 'permanent and aternal,---this is the office which he' will not, cease to fulfil, as long as the Eng lish language" lasts. What earth's far off lonely mountains do for the plains and the cities, that Wordsworth has done and will do for literature, and through literature for society; sending down great rivers of higher truth, fresh purifying winds of feeling, to, those who least dream from what quarter they come. The more thoughtful—of each generation will draw nearer and observe him more closely, will ascend his imag inative heights, and sit under the shad ow of his profound meditations, and, in proportion as they drink in his spirit, will become purer and nobler men. FIELDS• FOR WEALTHY MINISTERS, We do not mean those exclusively to whom the term wealthy would be ap plied at the richange, but those also who have, independent of a pastoral salary, the means for a comfortable sup port. We copy below as appropriate to the above heading, an extract from the annual address to the New York Epis copal Convention, (Diocesian,) by the Bishop, Horatio Potter, D. D. The topic has often been the serious thought of many hearts, and is here well out spoken. We congratulate the New York Diocese on the possession of "soy ral estimable clergymen" who, in the, manner stated," minister faithfully and efficiently ;" and we are happy to say that our own church has its share of men of like consecration, some of whom we could name in our immediate vici nity. But, as the Bishop earnestly inquires, " What should binder the in crease of their number ?" o re—in dobtad_ _tact Chdlislian Times for the copy of the 'address from which we here quote : But there is one , thing more which we greatly need in order to reach the desired efficiency in Church work in such a Diocese as this, or indeed, in any other part of the Lord's vineyard, and that is a large number of the faithful, earnest men in the ministry, who, from their condition in life and from their spirit of devotion, shall be able and wil ling to serve their_ Divine Master in places offering little pecuniary support, in places where there are souls to be saved, but where, even . with. the mis sionary stipend, there is a scanty pre-: vision. At this moment there are several es: timable clergymen in the Diocese who minister faithfully and efficiently, and who annually bestow upon the church more than they receive from it. But what should hinder the increase of their number ? Where are all the young men of property' who have- taken the love and service of God to be the ruling principle of their lives—young men who have the 'education, and manners, and knowledge of life, and the talents too, which, with God's- blessing, would ena ble them to "adorn" the Ministry as well as the" Doctrine of Christ;" who, if not in so . remote and rugged a thea tre as the Bah de la Roche, in which for fifty years Oberlin exercised his pains taking ministry, and by the cour tesy and poi of his manners, as well as by the fervor of his devotion, raised a rude, Godless people to habits of piety and ,amenity, which were a homely reflection of his own? I say, if not such places, which we scarcely have in our Diocese, yet in remote, secluded places, those young men might carry the influence of , a beautiful Christian life, might dispense a free Gospel, and maintain in steadfast strength and wide•spread influence those blessed min- . istrations, which otherwise such neigh borhoods could have little or no hope of enjoying. If the most cultivated and richly endowed men have: gone to make their homes and to find their graves in India and China, among the savages of New Zealand and South Africa; if some of our richest and most accom plished men have gone to peril their lives for their country (God bless them!) in the fore-front of the, hottest battle— what ails our Christian young men of property, that they should be unable to make the sacrifice of a little wordly ease, luxury, social gratification, for the sake of the ministry of Christ—for the sake of the priceless blessings which they might shed around them in some now spiritual waste, some famished dis trict far in the interior?,lf, in the primitiVe age, opulent women of rank, constrained by the love of Christ; were seen bestowing their riches to endow hospitals, and then laying aside their soft and easy life that they might spend their days and nights in ministering to loathsome sufferers, would it be a great thing for some of our Christian young men of wealth to give themselves with their riches . to the ministry of Christ,' and to avail themselves of their advanta ges to go and set up ,the kingdom of - heaven where else its true glory and saving health can scarcely be known. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1864. God forbid that such thoughts should ever come co be regarded as utopian or imp oB , 3 itae in His church ! God send the F ace of his Holy Spirit, into the hearts of our young men of property d education, that they may turn their thoughts to the ministry of Christ, and then not be_afraid to harry that minis try into places where they can make full proof of the everlasting truth that "it is more blessed to give than to receive." Just here let me say a word in behalf of these Southern women. There is a dhiposition on the part of the Northern public, forming their opinion from the instances of fierce spite and vindictive ness, of furious scorn and hatred., .which have been chronicled in the reports of army correspondents and in the sensa tion items of the newspapers, to regard them as little short of demons in female shape. All this is naturally,_ working,a corresponding dislike and ill-feeling among the masses North. To, such I would my :---Tbese Southern sisters are not demons, but made of the same flesh and blood, and passions and affections as yourhelves. The difference between you is purely one of circumstances and training, of locality—above all, of edu cation and institutions.. It is as, 'true that institutions are second nature as that habit is. The peculiar faults of Southern women they share with their Northern sisters, only in a vastly enhanced de gree ; and besides these, they have -others, born of And nurtured_ by. that terrible slavery system under whose black shadow they live and die. Their'" idleness, their lack of neatness and or der, their dependence, their quick and sometimes cruel passions, their unrea son, their contempt of inferiors, their vanity and arrogance, their ignorance, their lightness and superficiality, are all the outgrowth of its diabOlical influences. They are, in fact,no more idle, thriftless, passionate, or_ supercilious, than North ern women would bein similar circum stances. It is too much the habit among the unreflecting, in judging of the South ern masses in their hostile attitude to ward their lawful Government, to give less weight than it deserves to the ne cessary and inevitable tendency upon the mind - and character of such an insti tution as African slavery; and to let the blame be of a personal and revenge ful nature, which should fall most heav ily on the sin itself, the dire crime against God andsociety, against himself and his fellowmen, which the individual is all his life taught is no crime but a positive good. This slavery is 'wo man's -peculiar curse, bearing almost equally with its deadly, hideous weight on the white women of the dominant class as upon the black slave women. .0.324 yaf I_ , fiw del ad ed hey_ar e ! If that curse does come to an'ntteir - en - d - rin - tire South, as it _surely will, I shall hail, as one of the grandest results of its extinc tion, next to the justice due the oppress ed people of color, the emancipation of the white women of that fair , land, all of them, slaveholders and non-slave holders, from an influence too - withering and deadly for language to depict. Oh, when shall that scapegoat, slavery, with its failures and losses and shortcomings, its frauds and sins and woes, be sent of into the wilderness of non-existence, to be heard from nevermore ! God speed the hour ! But with all their faults, they have many and shining virtues. Though the ideal of a Southern woman commonly received at the North and abroad is not true to the life, being neither so perfect nor so imperfect aS their eulogists, on the one hand, and their detractors, on the other, would fain make it to be, there is yet much, very much, to elicit both love and admiration in her charac ter. The''Souilern , Ste male pr e co itnuressi",,Filent, im pulsi,h'j fan ' .The s quickne - as - Of parts of many girls offifteenitristen isbing. I used often toTthin,k,:wha s t.,spleridid wo men. they ; rciake,knith-the-train init,arittfacii tiekinfiyarNor thorn home. and school education. But, as it was, they went under a Cloud'. at Seventeen, marrying early, and either sinking into the inanition of plantation life, or having minds dissipated in a vain and frivolous round of idle and selfish gayeties. I compare their intellects to a rich tropi cal plant, which blossoms gorgeously and early, but rarely fruitens. The Southern women are, for the most part, a capable but undeveloped race of beings. With their precocity, like the exuberance of their Vegetation ' and with their quick impassioned feel logs, like their storm-freighted air, always bearing, latent lightning in its bosom, they might become a something rich, rare and admirable; but, never. bringing Thought up to the point of reflection'; never learning self-control, nor the necessity of holding passion in abeyance, never getting beyond the degrading influence of intercourse with a race whose stolidity and servility, the inevitable result-on their condition, on the other hand, are both the cause and, effect of the habit of irresponsible power and selfish disregard of fight fostered in the ruling class, on the other—what could be expected of them but to become splendid abortions ?Continental Month ly. There is no benefit where there is no partnership. If Christ therefore bled with his agony, with his thorns, with his whips, with his nails, with his spear, in so many thousand passages, as tra dition is bold to define; and we never bleed, either with the agony of our sorrow for sin, or the thorns of our holy cares for displeasure, or the scourges of , severe Christian rigor, or - the nails of holy constraint, or the spar of deep re morse, how do we, bow can we for shame, say, we are "crucified with Christ ?"—Joseph rte. SOUTHERN WOMEN. CIALVARY FOR ALL a , drtrtionntuto, DON'T FAIL TO READ THIS ! Coffee! Coffee! Coffee! East India Coffee Co., 154 READS STREET, N. Y., Three doors from Greenwich street, call universal atten tion to their KENT'S EAST INDIA COFFEE. Kent's East India Coffee Ras all the flavor of OLD GOVERNMENT JAVA, and is but half the price; and also that . Sent's East India Coffee ENS twice the strength of Java, or any other Coffee what ever, and wherever used by our first-elass hotels and steamboats;the stewards say there - is a saving of 613 pet cent. - • Hent's East India Coffee Is the dcost healthy beverage known, and, is very nutri tious. The weak and infirm may use it at all times with impunity. The'wife of the Rev. W. Eaves, local minis ter of the M. E.Thureh,lersey City, who_has not been able to use any coffee for fifteen years can use Kent's East India Coffee Three times a day without injury, it being entirely free from those properties that produce nervous excitement: Dr. JAMES BOYLE, of 1.56 Chambers street, says : " I have never known any Coffee so healthful, nutritious, and free from all injurious qualities as Kent's East India Coffee. I advise my patients to drink it universally, even those to ,whom I have hitherto prohibited the use of Coffee), The PRINCIPAL: OF . THE NEW YORK EYE IN 'FIRMA.RY says : "I direct all the patients of oar lusti tution to use exclusiyely Rent's Enst India .Cotree, And would not be without it on any account." The Rev. C. LARUE, an eminent clergyman of the M. E. Church, now stationed at Halsey street, Newark, says of lient's East India Coffee: "I have used it nearly a year in my family, and find it produces no ache of the head or nervous irritation, as in the case of all other Coffees. It is exceedingly pleasant, and I cordially recommend it to all clergymen and their ftuniliesP Kent's. East India Coffee Is used daily in the families of Bishop Ames, Bishop Baker, and many of the most distinguished clergymen and professional men in the country. Beware of counterfeits: And be sure that the packages are labeled KENT'S -EAST INDIA COFFEE , 154 READE •ST., , NRW YORK, As there are numerous counterfeits •aloat under the name of "Genuine East India Coffee," "Origihal Eait India Coffee," etc., put forth by impostors to deceivethe unwary. In fib. packages, and in boxes of 36, 60, and 100 ibs, for Grocers and large consumers. Sold by Grocers gen. erally. Orders from city and• country Grocers solicited, to whom a liberal dis Count will be made. Agents in Philadelphia—W. J. HIESS BROTHER, corner Girard Avenue and Front street, and HOEFLICR 1110LUN, 130 Arch Street. Sold by JOHN H. PARKER, corner of Eleventh and Market streets, Philadelphia. JAS. WEBB, corner of Eighth and Walnut sts. WM. PARVTN, Jr., 1204 Chest. nut st., above 12th. THOMPSON BLACK & SON, N. W. corner Broad and Chestnut sts. SIMON COLTON & SON, corner 'Broad and Walnut sts. 940-tf OLD EYES MADE NEW. A Pamphlet, directing how to speedily restore sight tnVqtagTElltiittf r i`Anbt l eftig r E. B. FOOTE, M. D., 1130 Broadway, New York. WESTON'S METALLIC ARTIFICIAL LEG The Lightest, Cheapest, most Durable, and most natural ever invented. Price $79 to $lOO. Send for a pamphlet. '• J. W. WESTON, • 9561 y 491 Broadway, New York. GROVER & BAKER'S MOOD MN ROMS, WERE AWARDED THE HIGHEST PREMIUMS • OVER ALL COMPETITORS, AT' THE.. FOLLOWING STATE, FAIRS OF IS. For the best Family Sewing Machines, the best Manufacturmg Machines,..,. ' ' and the beat Machine Work, NeW York, Vermont, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, 011 nois,Chiian, lowa, Kentucky and Oregon, beside a score of County and Institute Fairs. The work executed by the GROVER & BARER MA CHINES has received the FIRST Paxxxvm at every State Faii in thelJnited States where it has been exhibited. The'Grever & Baker Sewing Machine Company manu facture, -in addition to their, celebrated GROVER h BAKER STITCH MACHINES, the most perfect • SHUTTLE OR "LOCK STITCH" machines. in the market, and afford pu.rchasers the opportunity of selecting, after trial and examination of both, the one beat suited to their wants. Other com panies manufacture but one kind of machine each, and cannot offer this opportunity of selaCtion to their cus tomers.; ,-Pamphlets containing samples of Sewing, Embroi dery, &c., sent free to any addregs. fatrice, 130 Cheitnut fe29eow, . . 'PHILADELPHIA. REMOVAL. O. H . ." WILLARD, PHOTOGRAPHER. . Has removed from 1628 bfarket.Street, to his new'and spaciods galleries, • No. 1206 Chestnut Street. . mr.v. would say that his accommodations now-art of the most commodious and extensive character; "and he feels - confident that, by close personal attention to his business, to gtye his patrons a much Slier quality of work thin has been prodimed in the city. . . . . BANDING HOUSE. GEORGE J. BOYD, NO. 18 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHILADELPHIA. (Two doors abovnktechanics' Bank.) DEALER IN BILLS OF E.XCHANGE, BANK NORro and Specie. Drafts on New York, Boston, Baal more, etc., for sale. Stocks and Bonds bought an i sold an commission, at the Board of Brokers. Business Paper, harm on Coliatera,s, etc., Negotiated Deposits and interest allowed. ja9 DYSPEPSIA, AND . DISEASES RESULTING FROM Disorders, of the Liver • And Digestive Organs, ARE CURED BY nr-oor,san-ips GERMAN BITTERS, The Great Strengthening ' N.M,64A - e, • 'THESEBITTERS Have Performed more Cures! Have and do give Better Satisfaction HAVE MORE TESTIMONY! HAVE MORE RESPECTABLE PEOPLE TO VOUCH FOR THEM ! Than. any other article in the market. We Defy any One to Contradict this Assertion, And will pay $lOOO To any one who will produce a certificate pub lished by us, that is not oubrunqu. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Will cure every cab of. CHRONIC OR NERVOUS DEBILITY, DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS, AND DISEASES ARISING FROM A DISORDERED STOMACH.. Observe the following Symptoms Resulting from disorder's of the .Digestive Organs, such. as Constipa don, Inward Piles, Fullness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the'Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fullness or weight in the Stomach, Sour Eruc tations, Sinking or. Fluttering at the pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the head, Hurried and Difficult Breathing, Fluttering . of the Heart, Choking of Suffocating Sensations when m a lying posture, Dim ness of Vision. Dots' or Webs before the Sight, Fever and Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, l3ack, Chest, Limbs, &c, Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and great • Depression of Spirits. Remember, that this Bitters is NOT ALCOHOLIC, Contains no Rum or Whiskey, AND CAN'T MAKE DRUNKARDS BUT IS THE BEST TONIC 134 v. -mrirtlxl READ WHO SAYS SO: Prom Rev. Levi G. Beth, Pastor of the Baptist Church nt Chester, Pa., formerly of Baptist March, Pemberton, N J. * s * * * * * I have known-'Hoofland's German Ntters favorably for a number of years. I have used them in my own family, and have been so pleased with their effects that I wasinduced to recommend them to many others, and know that they have operated in a strikingly beneficial manna. I take great pleasure in thus publicly pro claiming this fact, and calling the attention of those af flicted with the diseases for which they are recommend ed, to these Bitters, knowing from experience that my recommendation will be sustained. Ido this more cheerfully as Hoofland's Bitters is intended to benefit the afflicted, and is ".not a rum drink." Yours truly, LEVI G. BECK. From Rev. J. Newton Brcen, D. L.., Editor of the Ency clopeedia of Religious Knowledge: Although not disposed to favor or reeOmmend Patent Medicines in general, through distrust of their ing re• dients and effects; I yet, know of no sufficient reasons why a man may not testify to the benefits he believes himself to have received -from any simple preparations in the hope that he may - thus contribute to the benefit of others. . . _ . I do this more readily in regard to lloofland's German Bitters, prepared by. Dr. C. M. Jackson, of this city, because I was prejudiced against them-for many years, under the impression that they were chiefly an,,aleo holic mixture. I am indebted to my friend. Robert Shoemaker, Esq., for the removal of this prejudice by proper tests, and for encouragement to try them, when suffering from great and long continued debility. 'The use of three bottles of these Bitters, at the beginning of the present year, was followed by evident relief, and restoration to a degree of bodily and mental which I had not felt for six ,months before, and had almost despaired of regaining. I therefore thank God and my friend for.directing me to the use of them. Philada„ June 23,1861. J. NEWTON BROWN. proot Rev. J. /11"..Lnona,ftn-nterl.y Pastor of the Columbus • .(1P I.) and Mitestoten (Pa.) Baptist Churches. .. Dr. O. M. Jackson : = Dear,Sir, 7 l. feel it a pleasure thus of my own accord, to bear testimony to the excellence' of the German Bitters. Some years since, being much afflicted with Dyspepsia, I used them with, very benefi cial results. I have often recommended them to per sons enfeebled by that tormenting disease, and have heard from them the most flattering, testimonials as to their great value. In cases of general debility, I believe it to be a tonic that cannot be surpassed. J. M. LYONS. From Rem J. S. Herman, of the German Reformed Church, Kutztown, Berns County,Pa. Dr. C. 151.1ackson:—Respected Sir,—l have been trou bled with Dyspepsia nearly twenty years, and have never used any medicine that did me as much good as Hoofland's German Bitters. lam very much improved, after having taken five bottles. Yours, with respect, J. S. HERMAN. PRICES: Large Size, (holding nearly' double quantity,) $l, per Bottle—half doz $5 00 Small. Size-75 Cents per Bottle—half doz .4 00 BEWARE OF •COUNTERFEITS Bee that the signature of" JACKSON;' is on the WRAPPER of each bottle. Should your nearest druggist not - have the article, do not be ptit off by any'of the intoxicating preparations that may be offered in is place, but send to us, and we will orward, securely packed, by express. PRINCIPAL OFFICE .AND MANUFACTORY, No. 631 Arch Street, Philada. JONES & EVANS, (Successors to C. M. JACKSON k C 0.,) PROPRIETORS. For sale by Druggists and. dealers in every town in the.Llnited States. THOMAS. CARRICK & • CO., erittter k Nigitttit Matta 1905 MARKET STREET, PHILADELPHIA.. SUPERIOR CRACKERS, PILOT AND SEEP BREAM SODA, SUGAR and, WINRBISCUITS, PIC-NICS JUMBLES and GINGER NM, PEE'S, SCOTCH AND OTHER CARES Ground Cracker in any quantity. Orders prom filled. delB-ly HENRY HARPER, 520 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Dealer in and Illaturfacturer of WATCH EIS, FINE JEWELRY, SIL PER IF 'WE, AND SUPERIOR PLATED GOODS Arthur's SELF-SEALING CANS AND gifS, CARLISLE AIR TIGHT SCREW-D )I .TARS LIFT AND FORCE P ONE OF THE OLDEST AND MOST RELIABLE REMEDIES l IN THE WORLD FOR Coughs, Colds, Whooping (% iron bhitis, Difficulty - of Breathing, Asthma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Croup, and Every Affection of THE THROAT,. LUNGS AND C EST INCLUDING EVEY " CONSUMPTION. •t -New Rochelle, N. Y WISTAIVS BAL SA'/ OF WILD a' ftY. So general has the use of this remedy become, an.: .o popu tar is it everywhere, tha , it is,unnecessary to recount its virtues. Its works szkuaA, fur it, and find utterance in the abundant and voluntary testimony of the ma who from long suffering and settled disease have by its use Qat restored to pristine vigor ,and health. We can present a mass of evidence in proof of our assertions, that Well known and much respected among the German population in this country, makes the following state ment for the benefit of the afflicted. -HAFav'un, Fa., Feb. 16. 1819. Dear Sirs :—Having realized in my family important benefits from the use of your valuable preparation— WISTAR'S Buena[ OF WILD Caesar—it affords me pleasure to recommend it to the public. Some eight years ago one of tag daughters seemed to be in a decline, and little hopes of her recovery were entertained. I then procured a bottle of your excellent Balsam, and before she had taken the whole of the contents of the bottle there was a great improvement in her health. I have, valuabley indindual case made frequent use of your medicine, and have always been benefitted by it. JACOB SECHLER. From 11. D. .11IA_RTIN, M. D., Of Mansfield, noga co., Pa. • Ea l ing used in my - practice the last four years, Wig tar's Balsam of Wild Cherry, with great success, I most cheerfully recommend it to those. afflicted with_ obsti nate Coughs, Colds, Asthma, &c. From Jesse Smith, Esq., President of the Morris County Bank, Morristown, New Jersey. "Having used Da. Wieraies BALSAM OF WILD CHEERY for about fifteen years, and having realized its beneficial results in my 'family, it affords me great pleasure in recommending it to the public as a valuable remedy in cages of weak lungs, colds, coughs, &c., and a remedy which I consider to be entirely innocent, and may he taken with perfect safety by the most delicate in I have on several occasions used 13s. Wissm , s BALSAM Y WILD CHERRY for severecolds, and always with decided benefit. I know of no preparation that is more effica cious in more deserving of general use. The Balsam has also been used with excellent effect by J. B. Ewer, Merchant, Hell's Cross Roads, Md. Wistazos Balsam of Wild Cherry, None genuine unless xs igned "I. BUTTS," on th wrapper. • v. , CARPET Sty,. S t** 4% ) 11P LEWIS & /VMS, 414* NO. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET Second .Inor shove Ches tint, PkIILADELPIIIA. Ala-Strawberry. street is between Second and B streets. , -; • CWRIPE 77.71 G 01L27" add TWANG. Re.. NEW STYLES, MODERATE PRICES. LEWIS & WINS, 48 STRAWBERRY street, I'LL.) . . Cheap Carpet Store. T4' 7 1r 0 p.., IS & 114.- SAMUEL WORK, WILLIAM . MeCOUGH, KRAMER & RAHM, Pittsburg. . 3.11.14115.1t146 30117813 el WORK, MCCOUGH & CO NO. 36 SOUTH THIRD STREET, PHIL ADA., DEALERS IN UNCURRENT BANE Del,i i-;:s AND COINS. Southern and Western Funds bought on the most favorable terms. Bills of Exchange on New York, Boston. 7-'l - teberg, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Bt. Louts, etc. etc., c,c-tantly for sale Collections promptly made on all accesAble 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 negotiated. Refer to Philadelphia and Commercial Backs, Phila delphia; Read, Drexel & Co., Winslow, Lanier & Co. New York; and Citizens' and Exchange Ba- 4 , Pitts burg. la Ei CHAS. BURNHAM, OF EVERT VARIETY Druggist's Tin Ware, OLD DOMINION COFFEE POTS. The sale of these Pots has increased fa the best, as well as the most economiesl of the 1;4114. Ice &cam Freeze: g, Summer Cooking AS THE CHEAPEST FUEL. EZIi2=Z:IMIII AND DOir','::_\"'.Y.,!"; lend or Deseript 33T_TIR.N13 S Double-Actin , 119 S. TENTH STREET, D3B-ly PHILADFLPHIA. P. & F. P. ITILLIAMS:'N. Scriveners and tranreft;e - ,::::-: c: , B.w. coriker ARCH and SF V ..t.re T. • WISTAR'S BALSAM, WSLD 4.iIk,XURT. CANNOT FE DISON.NraTED The Rev. Jacob Seel'ler. From Ron. John E. Smith, A Distinguished Lawyer in Westminster, Drd For sale by 7:f. DINSMORE, No. 491 Broadway, New York, S. W. FOWLS & Co., No. 18 Tremont street,Boston. And by all Druggists: 335 STOVE.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers