Miocellantono AFTER THE'EATTLE. fly LIEUT. Tll3B.•?,lwitr7rftrwe,lo,Tit..,*to.ss• Oh : but bat ' buglestiiiii!elearlii i the Ringing their song of ,victory.forth ; Weep Or the many their notes may not rally, Sleeping their Isuit'sleep--brave sons,of the North. • Never , for -diem ` sounds the the , bugles ringing, Never for them the drum's sullen roar; Vacant their plade when the.bullets are sing ing, The strength of their strong, erma is, wp.l?-ps, no more. Never for them the proud chargers, gay . pan ning, .„. r : ,*: Never again-may they sweep ,on.,tho Resistless and rapid as torrenta that diricine . Come from the mountain' tops covered With' snow. . Bed stains on the corn leaves mark the fierce rally, Blood on the violets 'staining theiiblue; Graves on the hillside, and graVes.in:the valley. Graves of the loyal, the faithful, the true. Mounds in the valley, hid'under,the elover, Mounds on the hill-side, under the grain; Just where they fell:whei.the fierce figtetwas Over, We dug the rough graves where our com rades are lain. Fatherless ohildren are thick in the Northland, Widows are weeping beside'its blue streams, Weeping for those who so pioudly, went forth, and_. , Come not again but in stilingss 'of dreams. " Only in dreams we may see their loved faces, Hear the sweet tones of their voices again— Only in dreams may we'fill nythe places Of the loyal and true who battle were slain. Cherish their memory, grand was their eallin#,- Let the proud monument speak of their Worth ; Lovingly deck the, green gravek, of the fallen, Sleeping their last sleep, brave sons of the North. —Near Peterabtirg, Va. STATE OP THE 0. S. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN XENTUOKY. Much bas been said during the slim mer and fall,' respecting the agitated state of the Kentucky section of the Old School Chureb,,but it has been dif ficult, at this distance, to obtain any clear uudernanding of the preeise poai tions or expectations `of the partiek Growing, as these dissensions have,, out of the great questionof common inter est tco.tts all, we believe we shall gratify our readers by transferring to our col umns a lu accOunt of the matter, from' the Cincinnati Presbyter of the 12th ult.: There is no part of the. Presbyterian Church so much in danger of division as in the State of Kentucky. The ques tion pf the country has produced dis traction in almost , every congregation, and he greaten prudence is necessary to preserve it from division. The dif ferences of opinion arise entirely from differences of political opinion, and the diverse views growing mainly out of the subject of slavery. Men, who are intensely loyal, what ever may have been their views on the vexed question, are ready to acquiesee in the policy ofi the Government in re gard to the colored people. They see that it'is perfectly legitimate to employ• negroes in the war. It is right em ploy the slaves or the rebels, to weaken the power of rebellion, and it is as pro•-' per to enlist and draft the slaves of the loyal as to take their masters or other white men. When any man feels that it is proper for the Government to crush the rebellion, as its first duty, and at any expense, he will not continue to op pose the employment of colored sol diers, and he will by degrees take his stand with the emancipation party. The current of events is sure , to make this the dominant paity in Church and tato. It is only necessary for men to Ten their eyes and ears to be Bare that his must be 80. The question of main interest now is, o know bow to abcept the coming -vents, and how to shape action view of them, so as to promote peace and .armony in the-church anti nave it from schism. The ap'protichitig meetingg, of he Synod. of Kentucky may be produc ive b f mach good or much evil, and ee ry mensiber should act in view of his re -ponsibility to the Head of the church. There are three parties in the church n Kentucky, and it is not'l propable hat any one of them is in the majority, 'r will be able to carry strictly party lotion at the coming Synod. Dr. R. J. :reckinrulgewsi the leader of the loyal nti-slaveryrparty, and it is not likely hat his views •can be carried, by a =- only this fall. Every man of good 'lawn, who has looked at the face of the ky, has made up his mind, that one .ear hence this will be the party of the itajority. We Shalf be disappointed if t is not mach larger this year than ever oefore. It will not, be possible, in our udgment, to pass any action in the , ynod of Kentucky in, opposition to rnancipation, or the policy of the Gov rnment in regard to it. The Stuart lobinson party, will not of course vote o censure the Administration, as this ould be mixing up the, secular and the piritual, Which it regards as the great st evil of the times. There is no dan :er of anti-emancipation action this fall 'I hereafter. The second party in our church in' 'entucky is mainly +rade up of loyal "en, who deaire their Synod and their •tate to go with the North, if division oust come. They are still for notarial '. They don't know what to expect, nd helm() do not wish to act. They 10 opposed to the action of the Assem 1 3, and they save, their•reputation for 'yalty by declaring it in private, and Y opposing the Assembly's action, as utside of the provibee thb s this doctrine °ply troubles maxi•:Oak /6 Asgemgly acts on the slavery-Viet- On, or the question of the country, its me is short. This party will soon give it up. Hit is made up of as goodymen as we think they are, they will hinder the party of theqruePresbyterian from carrying any.sehismatical ' antiou. ; Such' may hinder the Danville Review party from passing. any positive action, and tif we understand tho signs of Ihe times, , the Synod's , procordings wili show, that the loyal anti-slavery , Party has; bee'n . bonsiderably reinforced. &gm theneutrals. -We are confident, at-any rate',3l3'afilhe middle'party ~ vOl lantfal: ibctl"zone step to be taken from the , old anti-slavery ground of the Synod ' The third party in Centucky, is un der the leadershipof the Tine Presby; terian: ' In the absence of Dr. Robinscip,; Dr. S ,R.`Wilson is the leader nomman- Aing. JECe.ig able, brave 'and frank, and. we shall be disappointed if his'voice not . heard this fall., •• One .effect, of •bia speeches will be to concentrate , forces and intensify,their adherence to. principle. An effect will not he-, to draw any from the widdhisiarty, but to drive many to the standard which Dr. R .T.'Breckinriage ;had the henor to raist. • -• The middle wall of partieion.between Kentucky Presbyterians' and those north of the Ohio river is fast crumbling down, and the coming meeting of the Synod of Kentucky, 4e doubt not; will further the. work. As it goes on, the interest of Northern Presbyterians in Centro College and Danville Theologi cal Seminary is rapidly increasing. "It is the Lord's clang ; and marvelous In our eyes." . , ENGLISH` FREE-ITINKING: ' The recent theological developments in England, growing out of the cele brated Essays and Reviews, that well show how mere • speculatists can..,come most sincerely and learnedly to conclu sions at va'riance withall practical truth and common, sense. There is no ques tion that Dr. TeMple and Jovett are men of great courage, men of sincere principle and mach learning.•; Therels no question . that the name of Baden Power, will long stand high as, 'a rritia of the first power, in natural science. And "yet the extremely 'lax, dangerous and incorrect views to which these Mei:hies have led them.,are very palpableln Borne• respects. They seem. to think that the historical truths of Scripture o..the lifer of Jesus Christ are of no importance,. provided only'that the spirit of' Chris- , tninity tepeServed. Yet we wilt ved ture to.say that almost any min who chooses to take the trouble cad, in half an hour, satisfyhimself that all the chief facts of the Saviour's life are , not only true but : Were put 'on record in the books compbsing our New ''restame,nt by contemporaries furnished' `with •the' best means of information—men whose •sincerity; disinterestedness and courage to speak. all they believed true is far more plear than Dr. l Temple's. It is of course an easy matter td trace, back the' genuineness of the hooka• in question to the Yeae.A. D. 400,:beekitse before that, , ,A.,D.: 384, we all knatir 'the Latin Vulgate translation of them was made by Xerome. aack from that.pe riod to A.' D. 1.50, the genuineness of the chief books-of the New Testament may be traced with about, equal ekse and certainty. For so fond -. were the early , from ; Fathers. of quoting .fro , these, books; "that,"exeept eleven verse's., the whole of the New Testament has been actually reconstructed by an •ingenious, Scotchman from quotations in 'the' Fa-, thers, of this period. The Peahito Sy rian translation was triadatefOrh'A. 4 D: 150, arid a least parts of other yelsion9. In A. D. 139, Harcion, the heretic; wse so called among 'other reasons,, because he did not admit of any but,•Ti,k - e's gospel as being divinely authorietl, 'ad this in a somewhat different for in from mirs,nbi of the whole of St. Paul's • Epistles, while the great body of thaChristians in his day did. This provea at' least that the , four Gospels , and St. Paul's Epistles were then well kaown,and,reOeived generally and had long been. The prat Epistle of Clementis, one of the best authenticated bOoks of antiqui ty:AA :was written 14 , 'ine Clent of Rotre, abotit A.' D. 96, at the lateSt, whp was a companion of St Paul, as we learn from Paul's - Epistles.,' Clement tells the. Corinthians to, take , into their bands the Epistle of the blessed Paul and re- I- • member how he wrote to th4a, that some, were,even then , for Paul and Bottle for Apolloi3, and`.some for C.eebits and,; . 'sortie for Qtraist. A passagalike,this of course shows that ;Paul's first Epistle the Corinthians was well knOwn both. to Cldrnent and by the Churdh, to which it was written as his. Thus this Epistle. is identified ais:Paul's by a cotemporary and friend, and an open..appeal to hun dreds of persons: But Paul's Epistles . are so much alike in 'matter and style,. and all so. filled with parenthesis and other peculiarities, that no person who examines this will doubt that he WhO wrote that first epistle wrote the others attributed to him substantially. But if this is admitted, all the chief: facts and doctrines of the New Testa ment are contained in these •Epistles. The divine character, life, death nd resurrection and doctrines of Christ are all prat as in the Gospels ern 1-Coriiithitinsalone I The Epibtles,i however, show us the substantial genu ineness of..the•Acts, as Paley has well exhibited, and this must have been written before the death of Pahl was known to its author, as its abrupt clo'se proves, i. e., before A.. D. 68. Some sixtpfour marked peculiarities of style prove that the gospel of Luke was written . by the same author who , wrote the Acts, and the preface' to the Acts thus shoits that the gospel was written before A. D, 68. , There are at least ten qubtationa' from Matthew's gospel to one of IJake, showing that the one gospel 'Waß:inbra early -and extensively known and read than 'be ot.h . et; "ktrd, was in alt ., pruba ,biaty written and pa4:in circatalion 'first. We know, thetefOie, by writin, , : , 4 : p.ro:v . ed to 170: genuine and , aapentte,- that,, befo-e7A. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1864. Ei.• there.were at least , Paur - s - giPis' ties, two ..of our present gospels. and other acequntd,of the life and, teachin4s, miracles and resurrection, of Christ, ,;written substantially as we now Iniqe therm, by men of the , raost disinterested elr4tteter, andi'who were contemporary with the:events, and eyeLwittesses . 'of some of the' padat'iMpo i ttant 'of 0'4 . : ,„No person, thks:efore, - , ,apprk r hensive that any real learning will Oake the great foundations of the his torical trnat;of otirtaimity, seep away a few , - cob-webs, but the substantial fuctiarriVed at kt i Npander will - never be;wnlestqd - bY'Oor94gl3 Yestgation.--Philadelphia Ledgers MORAL QUALITY IN LANG-U.A.GE. receive 'into the mind a flaiguage soiled with:feel ideas 1 17 to rew faMillar NV It. h,„„vicelinder palliative' and hciner l able inaines arid , to. know only. the. caricatures' of .. Virtue, nicknamed by, those who hate her and• would make her an object of offence, is to debase the' Soul, and' to blind or corrupt its, moral sense. It is difficult to form an estimate of our indebtedness to,•'the' l trail- which there is in language, and: the .00rrect ideas which we 'have gained, 'from - finding them there expressed. We can scarcely image, to ,;ourselves the 'difference in, judgment, eharacter, and feeling between two Mina; Whose Mead .and modes of thought= were imbibed respectively from ,a ohi•if3tiall:,..and from a,Pagan language. All know the em barrassnient under which missionaries Mice - labetedin China, groviing out - of . the lack of. any tolerably exact, transla tion for the.nante of the Suprense Bing. —any term for God, which wouldnot, to the mind 'of a native, convey a pan theistic notion of theobject 'of worahip, 'or suggest one of -the false-deities -to which_ they are.aconstbmed , to; pay their adoration: There is no:such idea.in the minds o'f the people as is suggested us. by thesiniple utterance of . the non :Le God; . they have no notion . of ' the spirituality, infinity, eternitY; 'and glorious perfections which we have,• associated.withit. Their language taiiis' no. term' to express , it: So`'it"ig! with all ideas peculiarly Christian ; the: langinigoVief the, heathen do not contain, 'them, and hence the difficulty . pf• con veying these ideas to their minds. An •entirely new . class of notions;a4d!a•iso 'clations must be waked up within them, :diffeient from any, they have l ever had, and which there are . no teinv , capable, .of convoing_to them. It relPiree.A slow process of elaborate training to eradicate 6ortea4mated system of' false notions which is thus 'far the only thing that has' ever entered' into• n • thoughts.The'l - tanguage; needs to be christianized as well as the' people ; the work of transformation' in the latter cannotYbe cornplete and tho rough until - the , forrner shell be reached, and purified. :TheTenntaine of thengla t. are Poisened, :and': their 'l3treands are; Laden with death; The words must'be purgedpurgedof',thesefalseideas:ancld egrall in it associations the'before, natural flo*, of; ' ; thought ". can be pnie and true. • The iniptetince'Of. a proper! Tie'dijitril , for the , spread , l:eftireat: ideas mays , bp illistrated%hY 'the';coaduef;'.o'. ; 44 ) the: illet„hielfo4 his re,tion: ofadanguage , •to be- tne, bearer ot 'th fa'ets ^ and' ddCtriAes"bf 'the' revelation. The most polished and rex , fin'ed — natten net' antiquity 'w - ris.-"first"effT gpged in thAserv,ipe ;. 1 0 Temorpieces of tera tare ;wall& they !el abdrated are still the admiration of the world. The `Greek ,t6tes,lfirrqridlopop,„Voevik, , a literary,. sense, one of the most noble and cultivated etorigued. Mlle lan guage-be a:P(1;g "bb feker;2; needed a thorough purgation. This Was, effeeted ;icy causing it' to circulate , centuries in the'Jewish mint'until it was charged, with:k.deas, and ppeathed a life drawn from the Old. Testament, and 'Porn the divine traininito which the people - of Isr•ael hak'beeri - subjected for ages. • The new idiom thus created , by the transfusion of Jewish thoughts into the tongue of 'Classic"Oreece; then nence by a special lit,erature orits - own, was finally wrought z laeitS.New Testa ment form, V, t.iik,e4iF's pen sif,apos tles, trained - Chrieeliimsell in the n w4riglis whichiheAatie trolcOmpfrunii_ cate.—Princeto7 241?i6 1 4 1 . , '477 - 7fit.",:. Our Christian friends in liontreal— all evangelical :Chrisiiians uniting—hold a Sabbath aficAioon , m6ding. th,e TerriperanCeMdf,' of the CharaCte'r nseNness.of_wihich the! fo . ll9'Wingwhich ; • . we lake' from' The WWitness, rspeel On..Subbath, 16th ,Oct.,, the' attend anc*;s' Veri - full. The iortiOn . of Scripture read , was the first verses of John 15.. And thelessons , drawn were, let, Tpa i t_if i rprofessed followerspf qhrist were not briniinglorCh fidit; they4ere the most useless creatures in the world. The branch of the vine was of no use for any otherßuurpostrexcept to bring forth fruit, jiistas,isalt piras:N 4 A, nvise if it bad lost 'its,savor. The averless salt twits 451.).ii'cast out and troddetiu,Ader foot r ian'd the fruitless branch, tholegh t of no valOe for fuel, was to be burned. o 24. Thelruitful branches were to be.pnrge,d that ;the k !Wight !bilirig fortaiie fruit. Any one who bad tried vine culture, knew that the vine_even more'than oth er fruit trees bad a tendency if loft to the freedom of its own will to. run to branches and leaseS, and it bad to be purged of its uselessbicls and branches in order to bring forth richlArge clus ters. _Many fruit trees and bushes bad their fruitfulmess gt 4 eatly marred. by ,ase ' less shoots, sometimes culled suckers, w t i joi L • g :d.6yit•d-'a Way: 'the ,s try 1:1 gth:that should g o to the fruit,_ana howinany snoirers marred the disciples of, Christ. Drinking *as a chief a mong these ;suck ers,-detroying tt.e, truit , bearing powers ':whetevr it .was to Of ntl beoi-ujuyiptis and noxious tlaigs A MONTREAL INSTITUTION. =ME !-_the heavenly.Hasbandman, ~putt. g ed the. fruit-bearing branches of the true'vine. gd. A fruitful branch of a Vinet would -bear' far too 'Lliany'cleste left'ta Self! and nenc'of i theni would 'be-,valna ble,i Where,Oif tbree,,or form A t clusters,heso be,large,lnll,been, -Wel and luscious ) --ancl o far- more .Lvalua ble-than the ten or dozen of 14mall'aste lessIclustera that •would-have brought' forth'if 'riot p#ged. I The prat - fag or Ooediss Might be pairlfor o A it` was 319febTary x ,624;.Ado krta,'li grey lesson to, leer 4a her n et, to t ate rap t tool:nu:eh— ,1, „ , • A gentleman7„describedlrome -cases of intenitPerancelp &tor:Areal,. which he' ,had • attempted fititftfullY' 'Warn.' the victims,, and;, r slimed ,thkeirth ars for' so . Scke , o'f them koneop'to. 'delirium. tremv, aucj , I he ,:eaiferers send.. for him i in thew, extremity. Tfedescr/b -ed some of tire, cases,, which were bor.: rible that it was-dangerous to-go:near.. them; , and'ryetihe poor 'wives of the delirious Men were there eneauntering patiently' the'Jiorior . arid danger - from which even: 'strong Men would fain shrink., 0 A soldier, of the engineers said mode "tation' was the commencement of a4l •in- Aemperance.- No man was or meant/tO be i'drtittk.rd when he-began to drink! The moderate'' glass was the ohject . of his' affection and the extent of his intention; but he went on and ron ) tri l kl he was over mastered by moderatibn, and sank into the condition mentioned by the. last speaker. Thia - ihni the Case Satahi Cis far too' clever an ang ler to bilit his hoick-with dijunkenneSs. Oh~ no! heltiaited-it I with, Moderation:, 'and when thegot it into the Victim'sjawi her-held-the \ reel - in hell,, , and 'wound it up,by degrees till he -got his prey,to i the ° edge o,f the r piti „when with one,, swing he drew liirn l ip., See that father, teach ing his sons MOdeiatiori at his own ta ble! goes - an till drink 'kills him ? and he ,finds himself 5n hell, as all Who die of drrinkeir t neiri,'dolalie-iciibiP to Abrahani to send sdine 'dire to warn his sons - that they do not folio* the' same 'course, and come to . thee same7.:place., • What, !ills there file Vain • No e nci. "-Helcared 'nothing:: febrile salvation of "his.ebildreo Nbike on, earth,,ancl he pares ; nothing,, for ;in hell; -bat Jr ei,kn o w. 'that if they,,comethere through his ex amp% they j will m ake, his hell y in worse, fof li'l'thren ik;, they, will never cease thrdrigh eternity tti t tenr science, 'and 'hiVanitaderatiarr" -iir his' irrit'sci , '''Phie'sPeak'er' Went orrlti say that; Christians should bait" the gospel hook appreitiriately; .thata they = might, feril , 'Satarir4andrutievandr many'Cothers,! who had : come -from-distant lands t_o ,bpi refcrTAtti a/14 PP47ellt.od 'that, it was , He had come, W 5 tho,u t Goa • and without hope, but through the exertions of ChristiOas here, he had Wand theSdvionr, andwas ,no* elated With' Hie.; 'and* wherever he went 'lhe WOU'ldeinem' b'et"ilitOntreal in his prayers, -and: speak` of it as the hirt h-Placq' klia - goulf,:l. ' .Bradford, , ,,missionary . from the .Townships„ and ,a, minister. from the c l onntry, bripfly.addressed the'meet:, whichwas Closed in 'the usual way,. Several names were.afr.er.wArds added :Vo the pledge 'I! 7 - 1 7 ' ;I: .!. ' I.Ni?L9kliS Bishop whippJe,. i the.,Fol3o4lll ; 0e14R ,, Of Rio nieP94) has, wrought in!lt f*tagably '4l:l;l9 , og , the missions': which. he , maintain.ed,w have, shared tho , emblirrassments , of .th6se of our' - ciiirri 'rand other abiittivs; arising I Xioni 'Stern' re•tal atiAS • 'followin`g` Inman L -m'aeli a. Orgi: - 'Bi eh op `':has' ~! . -0 ' • more than once addressed. the country . • ~• • • ~ uPon.the subject, urging such a, change in our Indian system as will insure fOr that unhappy•pefiple. good ,faith-: r and a jtist, and paerous.,policy,yand insisting `that -the Indian, Outrages -which have' provoked' 'the - 'terrible' phniahmentS which they ; have ftßgeire,oyr" • 14 44 • tfielir origitrin aggressions , on •our part.. ,The Bishop, 11,41,li t eRn ,forted :by ill-healthlb make a;. temporary absengP, .the He left ,li; -farewell letter; in• w,h}pn,,rg f ferring to this great interest of his (heart, ha says , „,,,. , 9ne 13166'013re, , 'that' me ins' within their poiver to Bfemre the refrim of the,lndialcoeystem, wbieh respon sible for the murder of our border, ,friends, autswellTaeifiV:oo.: (letitillochiop of every-Indian tzibe.wllieh has been com-, jrnitted,to • its egr§. I go years rii have •pleadeil irk ~ ralblic and private, for, reforiA. 01:!;have',2berne-.with _cheerful mee'the' beldnesi of friends, the suspi 'cidh 'of ,istraiigere, and the'ihmtred of Oldie whom r opposed,: and would haVo been a l path,lef ~roses if I. could' have-seen oilie,ray„ of light in the: dark= ness. For that,,reform Z. must world and, praY , .untilomy - heavenly , ' Father calls me hOme: 'ltecan' be reformed: be whenever the people demand it. +lf every citizen of our beloved country knew its iniquity and Wrong, and_could_ hear' as have heard the artless plea of a•Wretcit'ed,'Savage race asking for 4ielp," it il v d t da_khagsin . ce ha , #)''peaSed to 'be a reproach.tO-our American Remember me ,in. your' 'prayere, With love, your brother in ohrig.t, B. WHIPPLE. Thii,l'iieed pal Recorddr publishing' the , above, adds the following: Othef advices that are 'int our hands are ,to, the same result that the - Bishop' so eloque4tly states in the •close of 'his ;letter. An., eminent _Presbyterian mis sionary, who .labored:; twenty years among the 'lndians, gives, 'as- the, fruit of hiS ex perience, the statement thatlin, all - the cases Of massacre he had known, the iwhites hail been the aggressors, and that the . Indians,, i at,lea4 in their pre -.,setit state, never striks.ec , eP j t 1 - goaded , On by the .grossest,ra,p,ine, and fraud. :Yet-as a..nation• we•are,perOst- , ing in this course,_and gtadually o r xtk'r-, 121:gloatingthe remnants of this unhap'py race''whild - the f•ii ) Christiqm Men who . resiste,a., these ontrages , •in. the/ 'Aprth,-west, have.beenlnade objeCtS of: publieiinsillt. ,:t • ' ; , ,L7'; ' • 'pit re 011 ' ALL INVATDS! IRON IN THE BLOOD. - SE is iveliln t e mediesl profession that' RON isithe VITAL PRIVOI-PLE or. LIFE, ELEMENT of , the yhlood. This is derived chiefly from the food,we eat; but .if the food ismot properly.-eigeeted,.or , if,from any cause . whatexer,che necessary quantity of iron is not taken into tliet.eireillation, becombs reduced, the ,whole system Offers.- The bad blood Will irritate' the heart, will clog up the hinge, will :stupefy'; the, brain, will obstruct the liver, arid Will send ite'disease-producing elements to all party of the.Systein;taid every one will sufferinwhaterer organ may bepredisposid to disease. • The grearvalue of. . . . . . . IBRIC AS A. mEpiciATIL • • „ is well. knoyva. and ac tnowletked .bY,ell medical ,men. ThedifffeuitY has %eke to obtain such' ti - preparatictia of it as will enter the circulation and assireilate'at once with the_ .This ; point, says' Dr. Hays, Itlassachnsetts. 'State Chemist, has been attained in the,Peruviau Syrup, by cotobfinitidiefri'd icily, before anknown.- •• • • , 'TELE REBIIVIAIQ STRITP-: is, a PROTECTED solution of • the' 'PROTOXIDt OF /1,. NEW DlScoy..g3t- that STRIKES,TAT THE .ROOT OF DISEASE by sp tke 1 4 0 °4* Fite . VI.T.4OFItI,NOTELE.,9It LjR.E , ELF4ENT--IRON. , ', , TtEA. PERUVIAN iSYRIIP i. .• Cures Dyspepara, , Liyer Complaint, Dropsy, Fever and Ague, Loss of Energy, Low Spirits. .• TEN PREIIVIAN SYRUP irifuses,strength,viger, and new life into the system, and ' builds up an "Jron Consiitutfon." L I THE PERTIVIALit SYRUP Cures Chronic DiffrhowgerdrulaiVetl4s2cnriy,Loss. of Colislituticitial Vigor. '. 'him TB - thirty - liar SYRUP " Cnr;Plsferviiits Affections. ~ • - , ' r ` , - TIEETERTIVAN 137111 P , ' is.a SPEoIFIO times originatin g in - • A / PAD STATE' TirE BLOOD, ace mpanied I)I1132 , Ty or to* STAVE OF -THE FROM WELL-KNCWN' CITIZENS OF NEW YORK. 'Ttie'exiterieneilvireh we have lied cif the PERUVIAN SYRUP, and the evieence'whieh'haa . been exhibited to `its of ita,great suoct . ss in the unroof.manydiseases, satisfies us that iets medieinal agent:of remarkable power, and deserving the attention of invalids. . JOHNI4I- WILLIAMS, Esq., President of the Metroptlitan Bank . _ , , ~, , i klßy.t . LSTVINIVa ~ ' Late - EactOr Christian Advocate siA - Joarrial Bev. - f. -- CHURCH, f. :I - ; ' t'' • •,- 'EditovNiw York _Chronicle IParopylete.oontainlilg certificates of quies,pd xecOm-. `riielidamons - ftoin soniebfplie ine,stethioefit - pkiydieians, plerkiiii6ii? and 'citheks,'iyill be sent FREE' fe , any 14r : : :tii• 2 F"i , epared,aebki•Atiilore CL4RII.& CO, I -}''' , D'lNSMOltElSol,e' .Ndnt,; ' , d gritkpluggisi6:o!''' - "!...: • ItINTIREcgc'BROTHER „•• 11.-1 ' 1314,61 4 1-1111: ; . .liiiclNTritE — & BROTHER, . . BROTHER - . FORMERLY : RILL 8i: Evkig, girak: 1 --- - Foßmymwak & EVAN ; FORMERLY Ent dentleinOn'e - FOliihing House, • .•,. ; ip; i I ±l.t - ,•", • d0 . 0.16#1011 1 6 i• • 1 • q, (Trot(tlehieleS 11111,16/ raO . USer .o..;:,1 ••• ft:fot;„ Gentlemen's FurnishintHouse, , • • q . : •-, 1035i_titestint Street ; ~t 4;• ,O ":• !" 1035 V. hestaut Street l ; 1O s,;Cls~estnut Street° "'" ."Il3SWCheitiiiit Si le OLD 'EYES , MO DE NEW diVeting:ll6;;:tO qp 4 4edhy, res6re l iight, ancititre up spectacles, without; 'aid'of doctor or niedf cine. Sent 'brrnail free on receipt oflo eents t Add . rees E.B. FOOTE, M. 11., ii,lsl3foldway, New York. 1 WESTON'S METALLIC-ARTIFICIAL LEG Tlie 'Lightest; Oheap.eati , moat'iDurable);and' Inciat 'natural ever invented. Price $75 to $lOO. Send for, a pinitthlet: WESTON' . • 9501 y , . 491 Broadway New 'York. • cr i.;CHAS elattell4ll " ••• .. 7 . 14 4u1A 02, MER' r .QF ,'„E V ES.M,V.A.,R LE I' Y 0", „ 013?'DONIMI,, ON,' OFFEt POTS: ,•. '3. , :•0.1, irh 'gal Y 1.4641144 fcttir'fole It the ttisi;ia well se the j mos eoonomtcsl of the land. tt ,. ., -16 t - :-, Arthur's BEM SELEIikiNG;CANS AND JARS, b.ivßidsL*Ani-TIGHT. SCREW-TOP JABS Ice- Cream Freezers, Summer ; , Cooldug : • STOVE . • GO‘VItICOF-t4PSt • 'FUEL. . • ; BOIL, 'BROIL; ROAST, BARB 'TOABT, AND` DO lit:6.1%1110 = Send or ,riesoripi#e Clato6goe ,337C—TECZA:1ierS DoubleTAlAh:Lg LIFT AND FO,RCE'FUJIP , / 19, 'T S. ..TENTI9g STREET,, 93844. PRITADFLPHIA:. THOMAS CARRICK R; CO., exattta Digujit paiters; 190 b MAR%ET . syREET,,,i3ELLADIaLpias., 4 SUPERIOR CRACKERS, PILOT AND . SELEP , ARRAI pOI4 S I TJUAR and WINE EISCITITS, PICLNIC6 ' . . and - - - .egoTql" AND grELE'R . O A/P 315 ., :Gr ontul:Cracker in any:quantity) r, Orders €1 - prom . . • . r AB-1Y BUSINESS ,, =EDUCATIOI4I. YOUNd.ME . N ' p'rerered for the C/iantini'Aoiee and businee:life.at Crittenden's Commercial College, NO. 637 CHESTNUT STREET. • Gerter of Seventh, PHILADE-LP'H.IA. Pra : ctical luitrUeilon" : 1 : 13. B: branches.; Reguaansrdp, Pia =le a a d ' : O l f : n r. :11 ; 1:P e tal n ; . 11 a e l r i 4i t i- . tile Calcidatior . , &e. ,: A ~ ox ....._ rer, taught. y , Telegraphing,by Bowler 0 ,1-1 ' b one orthe best practical Operators..tor; and received irt. any , : t.iniBtile;d,:enta,,:ins,ttilc-terd. '3!iiia,..r-_ar:4ll4 i ns iit ur iehu. ?little. ' ' 1 1 heti' 1 , 10161 . 6a5, with 'the sea o , ... , ~.. ~., awarded dik :g radul i ti °W.' " particulars fiarnialed gratj. on Catalogues couyiluiug ..,,.,.,,. 956,32.1„ applidatiou. • [E!MMIM 'MILTON CLASSICAL INSTITUTE Milton, Northumberland County, Pa. SCHOOL YEAR---Opetwon the FIRST MONDAY of SEPTEMBER. and closes the Mac of June. Pupils reeeived at any time during the-year. LOCATION-Healthful; surrounded by some of the finest scenery of the ffusquehannah ; accessible by daily trains from New• York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Elniire . , 'BOURSE OF STUDY—Is intended to prepare for business or college; special attention given to such as desire to become Teachers. MUSlC—Special advantages are offered to those who i wish to study Vocal or Instrumental . Music. PHYSICAL CULTURE—Constant attention is ,given td bOdily exercise and the formation of such habits ad will secure and preserve,good health. , 1 1 10ARDING—A few Principals will be received into the f ily with bndof the Principals; others will be direCted to pnrate .families, where pppild are subject to the snperviSion of their teachers. IDISCIPLINELParents .who !wish to Ind, under the: , name of boarding-school. a house of refuge for wilful and 'vicious ohildren,•need nob apply; as idle, immoral owaywtird pupils will not be retained in the institution. sienna Femahl' Departments are. connected is Ilia institutiqn. For further"infOrmation, apply to Rev. W. T. WYLIE of E. H. 'BANCROFT, A. Mi, Principals, tor catalogues; ;also to the editor of this paper. REFERENCES—The' patrons of the school: Rev. T, W. DI. D., Philadelphia; Itev . i.T. R. Dales. D. D., H• • . • greorge,ll. Stuart, Esq., a. •; Thomas Wallace; Jr., • - • . S. T.Dodine, •Eso., " Rev. J. N. MeLeod, D. D., N. Y: • Rev. 8:141 , enny, •• a. •e ow v • Oiliirii-ii -id,-:RiAi) ,Tlifiii - CO6itlO:dir6:6!'::,Colfeel..'.; ast Coffee Co., 154 READS STREET, N. Y., ee doers train Greenvoich street, call suitweraelatt4v.i tioa to their NT'S .EAST., INDIA. COFFEE„ 'tent , * East trOta icooittee; toel avor o.t OLD: . giOVEF:N,AiF;I4T mar . but half faeliride'Vaiid 'alio that - . lient"S Voffeelr twice the Stre:Mith of J£o7£l, orarir erChffee what er, aad wficreyerLpsecibhtoup::.fir,st.,:aiass'botels ant 1; :mboats, the stewai . ds say there is a savicgbf pet Henthi r lEaktihidiaf Coffee . • the MoShheajthy 3 beverage known, and iavety nutri us. The weal aid intirrp IA may use it all times with punity. Th'e wife of We Rev. V. of the M. B. Church, Jersey City, who has uut beeo, le to use anj"coffee for fifteen years,"Can use - Rentls East India Coffee ee timeslttlay,*thout4jumiti being eptirely free m thosepro'pinitiisTilittiiroclueenervous mititetlent. itr. JAMES BOYLE, 0f1.58 - 61u - Tnibers street. says: "1 tte never mown say coffee so rhealthful,:dutritious, d free from all injurious qualities as Eient's East India 'Coffee. advise my patients to drink it univeisaliy, even those whorn , lbmiehitlierfo Tiyceliibit4d thertt4e of coffee:"' !rho !rho BRINMIPAL,iOE - .-'IIM!NKW.IY9RIC ZY.F4 INi. - TRMARY says: "I direk, all the patients of our lasi& Lion to use exelusiyelr..., firelit,S"ESANVlNdia d*haid not be iithbat ori any acc'eunt..".- hwißev. C. Leatu,e„'an! eininent clercymanurthe E. Church, now 81.13110ne-1 at Halsey street, NeWark, ..eof" .l -t Hering East Iridla Coffee: • "1 have'tfied iteerly inY pliodueesnonclie,nffhp;r4ead nr . nerrons irrititing, r aryln. the. case of all other Coffees. . It oreseeedingly plot/bans, atid'l corchally•reeomitiend it to all elerptnettand!theit" . - .1 I. ••.,„ ; ‘ 7 1(0110i - Plit T7Stita 4 ` Is•used daily in the families yyt Bibhoi,.A.&tes, Bishop Biker, andmany',it the mast'Alsdhetii,h4 `i*i.pyiiion' mein fl enfintry; . • . f , v . ) 4, ..!B ei rf t li vi -,, O rcooll,k r i l!_l 9 ,4: ' , Andltis 'sine that Iffefroaelfngei are. labeled Ittkr'g'SAfgrl L lNDlA COFFEE; • NEW YORK,, As theYe ere ntuiteroire' coitifterfeibi , afloat under'tli e yti Genuine. Easti India Coffee," ?,Orightal,„pfunk - . India (loffne,"iete.iput,tortb,l4lmpestors to deceive On war y . .., In flb. packagell, and tiores of 86, 1 60, 100 Ail.; for Grodere consumers: Sold by Grocers lett erally,. , • ' , • Orders .from city and t country Grocers solicited, to whom a liberal titscottnt will be made. - • • Agouti d HIES'S t BROTHEI corner Girard Avenue and Front streeqand HOEFLIO :&M.OLGN,I.BO Alch Street,- • ' Sold,by JOHN. ,PARHER,,cornen'of Eleventh and . Market' streets, j'hiladelphia. JAS. WEBB, corner of • Eighthand'Walnut eta: : WM. 'PARVIN, Jr., 12e(Cheit;' nitGat:, above:I2th...:THOMPSON BLACE. &BON; N. W., .; corney, 'Broad. and. Chestnut sta. SIMON COLTON' Ale SON. corner. Broad and. Walnut sta. - 940.ty •AgtAteAx, ~,i,04.,:91'i.00.6,g STEEL ocimPosiTioN' BELLS. - AMERICAN E 946.e0wt1 THOMFSON BLACK & SON'S Tea Warehouse &.Vamily Grocery Sture, Northwest corner, of BROAD and CHESTNUT 131ir,e* • PHILADELPHIA. - , (Establislied 2836.) tr _ N ..EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT ,C l lo,_. plaok and Greed Teas. anti .every * *ariety , Of 'GrocereS, suitable for faraq use. Goode: 'delivered:tart; ,any -part. of, the eity, or packed' securely for qui . oquntry. isl-I.y 359 BELL :CO - L`reet, New YOk.' CEIM P.ER iNpubm are tote cheapest and beet Churehes,-Sehoole, he:; and: within the retch of all. Our .1 Church Bells are htmgmitti nkfrison's Pate'nt - gotaling Apparatus.. Old BeLla , taken• • • in pay. Send for' Xlsnph.... . lets containing prices , , sizes, kegs and recomnieridations'. from parties who hive thew, ; in gee. • Mk COMPANY:
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