TIE BIIIMIS TWO llllil BRF.AT BRITAIN. Items of Evangelistic Work. —From late numbers of The Revival, we cull the following:— The Theatre at Derby is a building capable of holding 1000 persons. It has been purchased and repaired by friends of evangelical effort, and convert ed into a Gospel Hall- A visitor writes to the Revival of August 31st, as follows : “To see numbers of the roughest of the obildren, without shoes or,, stockings, col lected together receiving spiritual instruc tion twice on the Sabbath, and several hun dred people, including many of the lowest and most abandoned characters, assembled three times on the Sabbath to hear the gos-. pel in this hall (but for which many, of them would never be brought under the word of God,) is indeed truly.pleasing,;an'd calls forth our warmest thanksgiving to bur Heavenly Father for leading his servantelto purchase this large building, that; hi& iteme might be glorified in the' eonversion of iim" mortal souls to Christ, whose command to his church is, 1 Go ye into Ihe afreets and lanes, and compel them to come in, that my house may be filled.’ -It is , hoped that at least 250 precious souls have been convert ed to God the' use of the means thus employed, many of Whom are connect ed with Christian ‘churches, while others remain with the theatre mission.” Lord Radstook preached an open-air dis course in Shirley; .-near Southampton, Aug ust 22d, an hour and a half long, founded on the excuses'of those invited to the King’s supper. ‘‘Jesus was exhibited to the people in all the shame and gloryj of the cross, the tale of divihe love being illus trated and its truths enforced by personal narratives and incidents, such as rivetted the attentidh' of the people and elicited their most lively interest,” Successes of evangelists and open-air preachers are recorded in many towns, in the Penitentiary of Newcastle, in Ipswich,— where the Corn Exchange, holding over a thousand persons, is regularly crowded, and where 300 conversions, mostly among the young, are reported ; in Dover and other places. -Th.erb has been a.separate.mis sion among- the cabmen of Bristol-for ten years. Mr. -Darling visits all: the drivers, horse-keepers, etc., and lends them tracts and religious periodicals. Three rooms have been opened in different parts'of,* the town, where the men are gathered together three times a week to hear the gospel, and one of the rooms, providedby the kindness of the Great Western Railway Company, answers the purpose of a reading and diniDg room. At Aberdeen there were open air services, August 13th, on the “Links.” The evangelists, Ord, Hambleton, Cunning ham, and others, were present, with about 6000 persons in attendance. At Houns low Heath, a feeble; woman, lately convert ed to Christ, commenced house to-house efforts among the poorer women and-the soldiers, and was the means of establishing quite an extensive mission among the ne glected olassea there. Romanism in England.- —Perverts 10 Romanism among the Higher Classes.— Romish authorities reckon within the last -20 years, 867 converts “ among the highest, the most gifted, and the most distinguished in the land,” and 213 clergymen, and other “ leading dignitaries of the Protestant Church.” Among the first named list we find a great' multitude of noble ladies, in cluding Queen Victoria’s mother,;; the Duchess of Kent, and many lords, titled gentlemen and M. P.’s., including such names as DeVere, Roscommon, Hamilton, Lothian, Kenmare, Talbot, Argyle, Athol, Bucoleuoh, Douglass, Deed's,‘Duff 'Gordon, Norfolk, Alan,„ MoNab, ,Palgrave, (the traveller who hUsi tciy ibe'ehtly renounced popery at Berlin,) Sutherland, etc. Among the Protestant clergy „we find Dr. Newman, Arohdeaoon Manning, Archdeacon Wilber force, Canon Qakley,jßev. Dean Dodworth, Rev. H. Anderson, M.A., &o. This is truly a formidable array, and must be regarded as a proof of the.degenerapy of the higher olasses of that country. We imagine that with the lower classes the,current is setting, quite the other way. And on the whole, we suppose the excessive tendencies to lib eralisin in religion and science prevailing in all olasses, will more than' counteract an/ leaning Romeward among the higher-ranks. —-—Unceremonious Treatment of RomiHf- Innovations —The Bishop of London,' a few weeks ago, was called on to consecrate a church in Shoreditoh, called “ St. Micha els and All Angels.” There were four bunohes of flowers on the communion table. The Bishop asked what was i the meaning of them, and at once ordered Them to be removed before he would.proceed to consecrate. Next, we are told, “ surveying the assembled olergy, most of whom were habited in snrplioes, with richly embroid ered stoles, and other (?) ‘ High Churoh’ in signia, he said quietly, but 1 sternly, ‘ The clergy here of my diocese must appear :in the Bimplejdress of clergymen of the Church of England.’” After an awkward pause, in ii id'aaid the olergy looked at one another very innocently, as though at a loss to comprehend his meaning,” he is. reported to have said somewhat peremptorily, “ I must ask you .to take off those ribbons, gentlemen.” The “ ribbons” accordingly were taken off. He then objected to a small cross in polished oak, which had been placed at the top of the wardrobehe asked what it meant," and being answered, “ Nothing,” ordered it to be taken down and “put in the cupboard.” He also observed “ that it was a great pity that the arrange ments were not completed at the time of the inspection, so that the objections might have been then,raised, and all unpleasant ness on the day of conseoration avoided.” When he reached the ohurch, he noticed a rough sketch in charcoal of the Crucifixion on the teredos, which gave him great offence; and he refused to proceed with the ooasecration till a written undertaking had been entered into on the part of the incumbent and ohurch warden, that the “oartoon” should be removed. — Guardian. FKAIVCE. A Chbistian.Commission foe Europe. —The Moniteur Has published the decree promulgating the important international convention signed lastyear in Geneva,rela tive tjb the woundedfin battle. It neutralizes hospitals, and all connected with the care of the wounded of whatever nation, bellige •A't*. ’tS&.fi**, rent or not, and recognizes the one flag and badge for universal acceptance “and pro tection, a red cross on a white field. This important decree, as well as the formation of free bands of crusaders; of peace and comfort in the approaching; times of war, are owing to the efforts of M, Henry-Du nant, one of the active Christiansctf Switz erland, who formed the- plan after witness ing the horrore of the .field of Solferino after the battle. He is o'ne of the deep Bible students of the continent.— Christian Work ■_ -£.3 ., .* a. ■ ■ lT^^T^;\£ aris Missionary Society iSi S i° r mone y‘and men. It is in debt iiiUUU irancs, and would send two French pastors, school teachers, &c.y to Tahiti.— Great activity has been shown by Protestant womeri in France, in “ making coats and garments” for the .American freedtnen.* Large boxes of clothing have been sent, and the Atlantic Company has freed their car riage. Others are reaching Paris from the provinces. An interesting church was opened for Protestant*- worship lately at Deauville, near Tronville, in presence of many pastors, and bf the* authorities ; more than 600 persons filled the edifice many of them Roman. Catholics.— Francois do Sales Association -utters a cry of warn ing to all who frequent watering-places, be cause earnest Protestants find there: /he opportunity of speaking and working*and it enumerates various spots as peculiarly dangerous. ) |» || J Evangelical Dissent. —The’ TJ. P. Mission Record thus speaks of the effect of the secession of-Monod andhis friends from the national Protestant church of France in 1850. “ Evangelical dissentyhas a stimu lating effect. It raises a .testimony for ihe truth ; it holds up the example of a pure and zealous church; and thus, while it checks' the progress of errorand decline; it diffuses a reviving influence. This has happily been the case inJtonce.;.fo!r .one of the most hopeful features liuthe religion i of that great country is the increased regard for purity of doctrine, anefthe efforts made to maintain it, which have recently appeared in the National Protestant dhuroh.” Free ? thinking. .SppiETjES. —A society with the titleti&A'ssdaazione de liberi Pen-. 'sflr/ort'yhas for some time "existed :: in Milan, which illustrates, one of the tendencies* of* the Italian mind” rebounding from its ages of subjection to priestly tyranny and intol erance. The members bind themselves to dispense with the priest in every circumr stance and event* of life,- and to live as ga lantuomini, without appertaining to any particular church, or holding; any dogmas of religious belief. Baptism, marriage, and sepulture, for instance, are to be recognized simply so far as civil law requires, without any consecrating act to hint at supernatural sanction or relations with a life beyond, this. Some crowded meetings of the sooier ty have been . held in Milan, and kindred associations' have !,been formed at Napless and; at Turin,-in. .which.' flatter' pladeiit! is 3 said that thfe-dsver'but erratic deputy, and author, Brofferio, holds and presides at the meetings in his own apartments. A. Ra tionalist publishing-house (Casa Edjtrice ‘Razionalieta) KaeTjeen' eSEaßltsfied,’ and fiat" commended a series’of issues, in Milam— Christian. Work. • t The Olaudian Press in Florence, frpm. which lately issued a translation Of Bishop s Mcllvaine’s “ Evidences of f Christiamtjy,” is still busy.’ The last issue is an extended and thorough work by De Sanctis, called “Papal Rome.” The book,is altogether a wonderful relation of what-Popery is in l its regal seat and at its fountain head; and if ever the name of blasphemy, branded by the spirit of prophecy on the brow of the beast, received comment and illustration, 'it' is in this “work of De Sanctis. Other types are also busy in the ■ great war against Popery. “ The Jesuits judged by “Political Portraits* of the Popes," and a work by Abate Reale! on Church and State, are among the publica tions originating-among Italian thinkefjT independently of any direct influence from Protestant evangelists. T The Waldensian College —Within the last month three students! from the Waldeusian-College in Florence have passed jthcir.dast examinations andjreceiyed public ordinationjo the ministry.of the Gospel of Christ in A fourth should have 'been ordiined, stSdih'd, [not at Florence, but at Geneva,-but .was jejlect-' ed on acoount of unsound views on vital matters of faith. - . , , Don Ambrogio confounds the Priests of Turin. —-On . the occasion, when from one of the principal churches in Turin a procession should have been formed to tra verse ..the city, thatierratic, ex-priest, Don Ambrogio, mouhted the stepsofthe temple and harangued the assembled people to such good effect thatthe.priests dared: not make their appearance, and the auditory, itself, instead of following .'round the city some consecrated bit of rag or bone,-formed a phalanx round the intrepid preacher, and from under the eyes of the police, who bad come to arrest him,, carried Don Ambrogio in triumph to his~ lodgings.— Cor. Chris tian Work. The Press. —The Rationalists dealing in Hard Words. —A new journal is an nounced, to be called' The Apologr tic Ma gazine, designed to meet, in a popular way, current objections to revealed religion, and supply defences of Christianity. Prof. Dr. Zockler, of Giessen, and Secy. Grau, of Marburg, are Darned as editors. Many of the most eminent theologians of Germany have promised co-operation. ‘ The odium 1 theologicum, which has well nigh vanished from the circles of the Orthodox, burns with terrible intensity in the quarrels of the Rationalists. Dr. Schenkel, in his Zeiischrift, complains that Strauss, in a re cent controversial work, applies to :him such designations as the following: “ turn coat, spiritual demagogue, parson in the red church-coat, man with unclean hands, forger, schoolboy, street lad, grimacing mocker, yelping cur.’ 5 Toleration is making progress. The Jews of Prussia who, in any town, open and sustain a public school on their own account, are to be freed from taxes for their schools and churches. In the. Roman Cath olic University of Gratz, Austria, Prof. Dr. Oscar Schmidt, a Protestant, has recently .. THE AMEBXCAa jRESBYTERIjjy. THURSDAY, * ; &RPtfegißEß <2B 1865. ITAI.Y. GERMANY. been chosen rector, and the ohoice/has been confirmed by the Government,—probably the first-case of the kind in Austria. HUSGABV. 'Among the cringing, willingly-dependent, Erastianized State' Churches of Protestant .Europe, it is_ refreshing to meet with such noble exceptions as the Reformed and Lu theran churches of Hungary: - A long; in structive, and admirably written letter from the former of these churches to Jjhet.tJnited Presbyterian Synod of Scotland appears id the Record of that Church for September; We make Copious extracts, only regretting that we cannot find room for the,whole, i In Hungary, exoludingTrapsy lyania, there are only the two evangelical Confessions— the Augsburg Confession and/the* Helve tian, recognized by law and received—in common life tolerated. The;Augsburg Con fession numbers 825,387.! souls;-’ mother congregations and 805 filial congre gations. The mother Congregations : have everywhere corresponding churfehCs, of the 1 filial congregations, only 288 possess churches: The number of the regular pastors amounts to 578, of assistant paltors lains and candidates) to 85. Tie • Reform ed number"l)s57 i ,9&2'Souls;lu 1439 mot Her congregations and 1036 daughter congre gations, with 1462 pastors add' 240 assist tant pastors. Every mother congregation possesses one Chtirch or more, the filial con gregation's together .pbssess’aboutlOO. The >whole land, together forms four church, dis tricts for each Confession j each district, which is called a superintendency,’ falls 4f|e ori.ll ed' ‘ seniorates.’ 'Th,e four cies. of the ' Augsburg Confession', number, 34, those of the'Helvetian 38 seniorates. Each seniorate-consists of more or -fewer congregations, whose, representatives are the senioral assemblies; the representatives of these, again, are "the ..super injtendential assemblies, and the deputies ofthe’ fast form the ; convents’(assemblies) of/(hesuperin tendencies as a whole. The convent is held yearly by those of the" Augsburg Confes sion ; by those ofthe Reformed at uncer tain times. . There the unity prevails ; here the ‘ decentralization.’ “The chdfches' are everywhere well attended'.) Wherepn Sab baths in the forenoon there is Sermon) in the afternoon catechising is held) on week-diys there is a prayer-meeting daily,.morning and evening ; twice a week also is a' uAfc ing for exposition publicly held. * In family circles the Bible is diligently read,, also va rious edifying publications; this in-general we can say with joyful gratitude tb the’meinbers of our Ch'tirCh, . with ut distinetion'of sex, onewili' seldom be Found who' bah not writeand read. Id; Transylvania, there ares 33 mother congre gations, 455 filial congregations, and 318,- 493 Reformed. The Evangelicals of* the Augsburg Confession possess there 267 mother congregations. .. . i - Formerly, Hungarian students-wbnt; abroad to, foreign uniyersitjes, sind “ bur saries”. exist for them- at) Jena); Halle, Tu-! bingen, Utrecht, and provision is also.made for them atZurich and Edinburgh. hatoly, politieaj’jdifflculties :were thrown in tbe way, and the rising importance of the vernacu -IST unil iVedFTungarlan afoi —instruction in foreign universities, 1 even when the Latin tongue was the medium. Hence, both Confessions united in establishing a theolo gical .school• which has 69 pupils, butjWhioh is in danger of failing from lack of funds’ There is also great need of a “ philosophi- ! caT institution,”"(College) for which the necessary funds are not furthcoming. In behalf of both these,objects they ask help. They have not -despised science hitherto. The Hungarian Academy of Soience con .sistedn great part of Protestants, .and in every branch of learning the/ Evangelicals, can show their men of consideration. But the history of their church for centuries has been a history of suffering. The Evati gelieaigatjhree difijerent.times,were robbed of -hundreds; -hundreds/- -of--churches, their schools were closed, and their fonnda rtipns withdrawn. f jQnly sin cejseyentv : ,y Cars dad'they be said to have enjoyed undfstiirb ed toleration. Hence, few congregations are able ,to do a great deal for'/outside en terprises. Yet giving is an established Christian ipustom with them. Aid is sent to Transylvania. ‘ Collections for church, building are annually made, which in one. Reformed snperinfendency reached $6000" in the year of famine, 1863. 81000 is an nually contributed to missions in Walla ohia; 84006 are annually given to the, .Or phan House at Pesth; >B4OOO annually sinbe'lBss to the ' Theological Seminary.; Nearly 870,000 haVe been raised for educa tional purposes, besides in connection with cthe Seminary buildingsanda library. The people are crushed by taxes and the want of a circulating medium, the yearly lax; be ing greater than, the sum of money in circu lation at any one time. 0 housands, and thousands are deprived of ; their property, Who, particularly in Transylvania, emigrate to Turkey. In the famine year, f 863, when on 1400 ". square miles, four minions of inhabitants were without crops, the dis tress was not so much from want of supplies, there having been a surplus previously, as from want'of money. The congregations are burthened with a special /tax paid to the State on buildings, property, founda tions, and - even house furniture; ; Pastors and teachers pay a special tax at each new election, .as also at each translation from one congregation to another. -‘ i S re fr “An Austrian statesman, a Primate of 'Hungary, 1 in the seventeenth century, put together in the following words thh : Aus trian Government policy to be followed with the Hungarians : — 1 Hungarians faeere primum mendicam, deinde Germanam, pbstremO Oatholicam’ (make the Hunga rian. Church first poor, then Ger man lastly Roman Catholic). The first point in this terrible utterance is nearly being realized; and if land and nation, with destruction before them, in vain struggled, much ' less could our Church naturally do to the avert ing of the disaster.” . In spite of these great and crushing accumulation of burdens the Hungarian Church has preferred to maintain its spiritual independence rather , than ex change it for Government aid. The letter continues: —“The Evangelical Church of Hungary has not been, since it existed, supported pecuniarily by the Government. In the. year 1859, it is true, the Govern ment offered us,- with the well- known patent for the arranging "of "'the affairs of the Pro testants, also a'yearly budget of 95,000 florins. But the Evangelical Church of Hungary, in lawfullpossession of the 1 auto nomie’ (self-government) of the church; would not exchange their pledged Histori cal rights for a pecarious ‘octroi/ and-ie . fused with decision the desire of the Gov ernment/ mostly, from the principle that the church ‘ autonomic’ is, under all cir cumstances, .to be safely, guard ed; by the less radical from wise precaution, while tiiey feared to grant in the affairs of the -Evangelical Church free scope to a Govern ment which, for almost, three centuries and a half, had showed so little - good will' to the Evangelical' Church. At least, of the 1439/Reformed congregations, not a single one accepted the imperial patent/’ ' .Noble Hungarians! We do not wonder tpat a Church like the United Presbyterian of Scotland, which sincerely believes in'the duty of the Cburch by Divine help ,to.keep clear of political entanglements and take care of itself; should, feel an interest in an organization/ whichiin the heart of Europe is illustrating and'honoring this principle, in the face of so much suffering and diffi culty. ' MISSIONARY. 'Jamaica. —The U. P. llecord for Sep tember, presents the following'statistics:— “ Out of u pop ! ulatibn 6f ' 441,248, 127,978 attend religious worship/ The children in the Colony attending .any day or evening school; are 26,270. . More than half the population of Jamaica are still nominally •Kpathen: ' It is true much has be'erp done;- drauy'dniSsipharies; and' ministers labor people ; but still it is as true that thousands of the population do not avail, themselves of the' gospel,, though placed:within.their,reabh. There , are . 2DO! ministers and >missi6nairies ; in the island : Church of England, 90 j -Wesleyans, 28; Unified Methodists, 6; Baptists, 28; Me thodist Association, 3 ; Ron don M issioria'ry 8;. Moravian,l4; Catholics,: 5 ; Jews, 1; Uni ted.P.resbyterian, 20; Ameri can Mission, 5v These 200 ministers di vide amongst them something less than 800 people each, whereas; if reaching the whole population, each would have a charge: of over 2200 souls. •' \ ;! ; ■,t Ghina.-t-A : missionary >of , s the ,English Presbyterian .Church writes as fojlowa.i— It is fearful to contemplate the vast, array of agents Which the 'Churoh of Rome has at work air over China. Their success is alsd yery great, add it will never do to pooh pooh'.’it. ‘lt is one of the most formidable facta with which Protestant miMionp/have to grapple. -The self-denial, patience,ener-. gyy'laboriousness ’ of ißomish missionaries are fitted to make - one blush: Whatever else ; of Bible teaching Borne has laid aside, learned,the wisdom of the serpent. Would that dmstians were more alive to the; claims of this vast empire.. A- few missionaries, settled down-, mostly-with families at the 'treaty ports, are no match for men wko tlive and labor among '-, the native population all throughout the interior. China is the greatest heathen empire liLt,he worl'd,!and are we:to expect it to be won without a. gigantic--Btraggle, and that Btr-ugglg _ : must be one of self-denial.on our part. Would-that more men of the right stamp were raised up lor this great work, and glorious privilege.” _ Education as part of Mission. Work. — The question of'th'e ’due ' prominence of schools in missionary work, is still under .discussion, in Great Britian. A pamphlet has lately appeared in- Edinburgh, from the pen of'Alexander! Forbes, late editor of the Bengal HitikurUj in Calcutta, whioh speaks in a most derogatory manner of Dr. Duff’s work in India, and of that branch of mission ary labor in general. The writer calls upon the Church “boldly to sweep away all their : educational establishments and send forth the missionaries to preaoh,” claiming that “ money Spent on Educational Missions is absolutely thrown away.” A copy of the pamphlqt has in some, way been sent to every. minister of the Free.. Church, with the evident purpose of counterworking Dr. Duff’s plans, now/that he is at home,. The missionaries of the Free Church' at Cal cutta have replied to the pamphlet, .prov ing the great amount of good effected by Dr/ Duff’s extraordinary and successful efforts for a Christian education of .the jyouth of India, as. well as exposing the ignorance and recklessness of statement betrayed' by Mr. -Forbes.' -‘ The Scottish Missions in Calcutta, Bombay, Poona, and Madras,'show an increase of twb' hundred and ninety-one per cent, in thg ten years, 1851-1861; the total., increase in all the* other missions,; Burmah excepted, in the same period,-/was twenty-seven per cent. The consequences of a neglect of education are beginning tP appear among some of the Missions. ■ /' ’ /The most discouraging feature in ’the Chota Nagpore ,Mission, as well as'in . those of Burrissal,, Dacca, Jessore, Krisnaghur, and Tinneyvelly, is the low state of educa tion. -Great efforts have already been made in the last mission to remedy this defect, but the majority of the Christian children have hitherto grown up in a state of lamen table ignorance, and unless this state of things is altered; the Native Churches must continue in a very unsatisfactory, condition. In Chota Nagpore, not only has an earnest appeal just been made to the European community, to assist them in bestowing a plain vernacular education on the children of Christians who are growing up in ignor ance, but the Mission now finds itself, com pelled to establish a school for training native Catechists and preachers. They feel that’there is danger of error creeping in aud being propagated by ill-instructed men.’ NEW AND POWERFUL MICROSCOPE. A foreign journal says:—lt is not many months since one of the most eminent of living mieroscopists expressed his convic tion that in the production of object-glasseß, with a one-twenty-fifth of an inch focus, the microscope had reached its utmost attainable limit of perfection. He added, that “it appears impossible to separate or define lines more numerous than ninety thousand in ap inch,- on account either of the decomposition of light, or ; some other cause. It therefore- seems beyond; our power,ever to discover more of the ultimate composition of bodies by means of- the microscope.” s lt is always" foolish to use such “ thus far and no' farther” language m reference to any department of scientific research; but it is”not often that its fallaci ousness has been demonstrated within ! so short a period as in the.jiresent case. The above extract is taken from a journal, dated December 10, 1864} and yet already the one thing which microscopists are no® talking About is an object-glass with one: fiftieth of an inch-focus, recently-made by Messrs. Powell and Lealand, which was de scribed to the Royal Societies by Dr. Lionel Beale the other day, and was exhibited; at the annual conversazione of that society a short time since. The object-glass posses es double the power of'the one which we were so lately told, and by so great an authority, was the most powerful we must ever expect to possess, and defines with wonderful distinctness/’particle's which the latter cannot render visible at all. It mag nifies three thousand diameters, with the low eye-piece, fifteen thousand diameters— .that is: to say, in popular parlance,,.one thousand five hundred of millions of times! It must immensely increase our knowledge of the lower organisms, and even aid our researches into the ultimate constitution of matter. 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LEEDOM & SflAWi No. 910 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, Are constahtlyopemn? anew and choice collection of CARPETINGS, OF ALL THE VARIOUS QUALITIES; Housekeepers will find it to their advantageio call and examine before purchasing;- : ; iOO9-3m .V ' Jjftfitograjijws. Skylights on First auk Second Floor. EDWARD P. HIPPIE, PHOTOGRAPHER, . No. 820 Arch Steeet, I’liilada. Photographs from miniatureto life-size finished the finest styles of the art. 960-ly GERMON’S TEMPLE OF ART, No. 914 Arcta Street, Philadelphia. PHOTOGRAPHS IN ALL STYLES. Late of 702 Chestnut Street. 0. B. DeMORAT, PHOTOGRAPH GALLERIES, S. W. corner ElKlltll and Market Sts., - . ; Entrance No. 2 South Eighth, -ly PHILADELPHIA. JOHN C. CLARK & SON, PRINTERS, STATIONERS. AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS, i "‘.V’ . ! ncoMm’ 330 DOCK STREET’. HJeMciiml AYER’S PILLS. Are you sick, feeble and Arc you out order with your system ranged and your feelings i comfortable ? These mtoms are often the pre ie to 'Serious illness. >me fit of sickness is •eeping upon you,' and lonld be averted by a nek use of ' the right imedy. TakeAyertPills, d cleanse out thedsor red humors—purifr tiie ood« and let the . fluids love on unobstructed in ealth again. They stimu te the. functions of the ly into rigorous activity, trify the-system from the disease. A cold settles st_. •, and' deranges its natural functions. These, if not relieved, react upon them selves and the surrounding organs, prodncinggeperal aggravation, suffering hpH derangement. While in this condition, take Ay WV Tilts, and see how directly they restore the hninra! action of the ana withittheibuoyapt.leeliiifs of health again. Wkat is. true and so apparent in this trivial and common complaint is alsb true in many of the deep seated and dangerous distempers. The same purgative .effect expels them. Caused similar obstructions, and. derangements of the i;-tnral functions of the they are rapidly and many of them surely cUttfd by the same means. None who know the virtue of theeo Pills will neglect to employ them when suffering from the disorders they core, such as Headache/Foul Stomach, Dysentery, Bilious Complaints, Derangement of the Liver, Costiveness, Constipation, Heartburn. Rheumatism,'Dropsy, Worms aha Sup pression, when taken in large doses. • - - a They are Sugar Coated, so that the most sensitive can take them/easily, and they are Barely the best purgative medicine yet discovered. A. J. TAPEI# J ‘ HOMOEOPATHIC PHARMACY, No. 48 N . NINTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Importer of German Homoeopathic Tinetarea. Lehrmann * Jeniohen’s High Potencies, Sugar of Milk, and Corks. Sole Agent for Dr. B. Pinko’s High Potencies. 977-Iy Dr. BEALE’S D E N S;.' E-'B'VI lea most invaluable, reliable and delightful prepa* ration for the »' TEETH AND GUMS. -;; j To a great extent in every case, and entirely ha many.it prevents decay of teeth. It also strengthens .the gums, keeps the .teeth beautifully dean and tbs breath .sweet. It is highly reoomniended by‘both Doctors and Don lists, and is believed tobeas good a preparation for the teeth and gums as scienoe and ez* nenenoe has ever produoed. ■ Prepared solely by '• •' 8. T. UEJkIiE, M. D., Dentist, > 1113 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Ta. Poriale by Prosaists.- ‘ . Price glperlar. ;> Iptotomti!,' ftpt*, tot, mhageTblunl ESIEI’S Are not onlyunexcelled, -but .they are positively unequalled by any reed instrument in the eonntry fog SWEETNESS of TONJK, POWER and DUBABIU TY. J?orsale only by „ E. M. BBIICE«: No. 18N0RTHSEVENTH STREET. Also, constantly on hand, a complete assortment tho PEKFECT HELODKON. fi*«t-class PIANO PORTES. -‘Also. SHBBT MUSIC. od*ly CARHART’S BOUDOIR ORGANS 1 t'ARHART’S CHURCH HARMONIUMS! CARHART’S MELODEONS! Unequalled by any Reed Instruments in the worhT Also Parmelee’a Patent Isolated; Violin Rrame Pianos, a new and beautiful instrument. Sole yent» H. M.MORRISB, ‘ v . - 728 Market street. Mason & Hamlin’s Cabinet Organs > case§'; a wood, plain,; or caiyed aiid paneled; Mottled Walnut; Jet, or Imitation Ebony, mth gilt engraving; and in/Solid Walnut or , Oak, pjain N One to twelve stops; $llO to $6OO each. ; Mi & H. strive for the very highest excellence in all Jlieir work. In their factory econ omy of manufacture is never consulted at-expense in qual ity It is their ambition to make, not the lowest priced, but the. best ; instruments, which are in the end the cheapest. The great reputa tion of their instruments is, in great measure, the result of this policy. Circulars with full particulars free to any address. Salesrooms, 274 Washington Street, Bos ton; 7 Mercer Street, New York. THOMAS RAWtJNGS, Jr., t HOUSE AND SIGN PAINTER, Broad and Spring Garden Streets. THOMAS CARRICK & CO., CRACKER AND BISCUIT BAKERS, .. moil Market .'Street, Philadelphia. SUPERIOR CRACKERS.'PILOt and' ’■ - SHIP BREAD, SODA, SUGAR and WINK BISCUITS, PIC NICS, JTJMBLES, and , GINGER NUTS, APEESTSCOTCH and other Cakes. ' : ■* ’■ ' -> r . - i Ground Craoker in an y quantity.. Order*.promntlj mad. ■ m