ttitilr'S atilt. WOMAN IN THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Trn.F.a. CitoyenneJacqueline. AWontan's Lot in the Great French Revolution. By Sarah Tytler, author of "Papers for Thoughtful Girls." Alexander Strahan: London and New York. 12mo, pp 429. A tale founded on the dark and tragic incidents of the French Revolution, full of stirring interest and illustrating in the most graphic manner the various phases of wo man's life in those dreadful times. It is a picture behind the scenes, so to 'speak, while in front goes on the awful drama of violence and blood. Domestic life among the polished and heartler-s nobility just be fore the Revolution, and among the middle classes, is described with minute but pleas ing fidelity. Life in the castle and the village inn is succeeded by life in fickle revolutionary Paris; iii the home of the merchant; behind the prison walls of the Luxembourg, for the ware of murderous fury at length breaks into the domestic circle, and Citoyenne Jacqueline becomes familiarized with all the horrors of that carnival of crime. The story is wrought with much skill; some of the characters are powerfully drawn and discriminated. Striking con trasts bring the various parts of the book into relief; the sceptic brought back to the faith by believing womanin the dying hour ; the earnest adherence of woman to the faith discarded by bloody and licentious revolutionists ; the instance of unwavering fidelity and manly courage in the midst of universal terror and mistrust, crowned with triumph at last, are all described and wrought out with a pen of unusual attractiveness and force, and form a picture of novel elements but harmonious and instructive in a high • degree. Binding and paper are in the usual attractive style of the publisher. Messrs. Smith, English & Co., are agents in this city. INDIAN AFFAIRS. REPORTS OP THE COMMISSIONER OP INDIAN AYFAIRS, for the year 1865. Hon. D. N. Cooley, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, has sent us his report, made to the present Congress. The unsettled and destitute condition of some of the largest tribes consequent upon the rebel lion, and the hostility still cherished by others, requiring active military operations to control it, are described. As as instance of diminution and decay . of these tribes, it may be mentioned that the Choctaws and Chickasaws, who now number 17,000 in all, were reckoned at '25,000, including 5000 slaves, at the beginning of the war. There are now from 300,000 to 350,000 Indians within the boundaries of our Union, many of them at the date of the Report receiv ing rations from the Goverment. We are glad to see our authorities plead ing for justice, and calling the conduct of many unprincipled white people toward the Indians by its right name. The wholesale robbery of the live stock of the,Cherokees to the amount of two millions of dollars,. and of other tribes to the amount in all of four millions, by whites from Kansas, is properly described as " outrageously crimi nal." While they do not conceal the gen eral treachery and worthlessness of the un civilized tribes, and their obstinate resist ance to the progress of our settlements in the West and Northwest, and, while they advise and are carrying out, energetic mea sures for protecting the whites and punish ing the murderous Indians, a truly Chris tian policy towards the race is commended. It is honorable to dur American statesman ship that the divine cure of religion and education, instead of the devilish remedy of extermination, is proposed and endorsed by the Government. The bulk of the volume is occupied with reports from the different agencies, closing with statistics and tables showing the con dition of the various tribes in many im portant points of view. PERIODICALS AND PAMPHLETS THE STUDENT AND SCHOOLMATE, Oliver Optio editor.. Jos. H. Allen publisher. Boston. $1.50 per annum. The April number of this lively and well conducted magazine is at hand. Its con tents are equal in quality to its former rep utation, and would do credit to any later claimants for favor. EVERY SATURDAY. This weekly Mis cellany issued by Ticknor & Fields, Boston, price 10 cents, has filled its first quarter very creditably. It contains twenty-eight double-column large octavo pages of well selected, curious, amusing, and instructive reading matter, and may readily be thrust in the pocket for a journey. THE CHURCH MELODIST, a Revival Hymn and Tune Book. New York : Ho race Waters. Price in paper, by mail, 30 cents. A compilation of favorite revival hymns and tunes of modern times, covering 136 pages. Very seasonable in this time of general revival interest. Of the hymn and tune (page 18) " Give me Jesus," it is claimed that it has been the means of con verting hundreds of seals. LITTELL's LIVING AGE, No. 1138, March 24, 1866. Contents :—Relations of Radiant heat to Constitution, Color, and Texture;, Old• Sir Douglas, Part II ; In Lodgings' at Knightsbridge; Congress against Privateering; Canada and the United States; Irish Hatred of England; Rich Uncles. Frederika Bremer. Poetry; Who Shall Deliver Me ? by C G. Rossetti; Vis-a-Vis ; Sir William Hamilton on Shaks peare. Short Articles :—London to the Land's End, by Elihu Burnt; A Market for High Art; New Spanish Grass for Paper. Boston : Littell, Son & Co. THE EVANGELICAL QUARTERLY RE VIEW, April, 1866. Edited by M. L. Stoever, Professor in Pennsylvania College. Printed at Gettysburg.—Contents: Ecclesia Lutherana ; The Human Elements Essen tial to a Successful Ministry; Hymns for the Use of the Evangelical Lutheran Church ; Pre-Adamite Man ; The Discovery of the Law of Gravitation; Lutheran Home Missions ; Louis Harms, of Hermannsburg ; Notices of New Publications. BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE, March, 1866. American Edition.—Con tents: A Religious Novel; Sir Brook Foss brooke, Part X; Memoirs of the Confede rate War for Independence, Part VII; Re form of the Bank of England; Miss Ma joribanks, Part XIII;' Cornelius O'Dowd upon Men and Women, and other Things in Genera], XXII; The Position of the Governtneut and their Party. New York': Published by Leonard Scott & Co. For sale by W. B. Zieber, Philadelphia. LITTELL'S LIVING AGE, No. 1139, March 31, 1866.—Contents : Frederick William Robertson; Madonna Mary, Part III; In Lodgings at Kinghtsbridge, con eluded; Whether Cholera is Contagious. Poetry : No Mystery; The One Gray Hair. Short Articles: The Kearsarge and the Alabama. Boston : Littell, Son & CO. THE THEOLOGICAL ECLECTIC, Monthly. March 1866. A Series of Theological Papers chiefly selected from the Periodical and other Literature of Great Britain, France, Germany; and Holland Edited by 'George E. Day, Professor in Lane The ological Seminary.—Contents : Where were our GOspels Composed ? (concluded); The Christian Ministry to Come. Cincinnati : William Scott. • THE SAILOR'S MAGAZINE and Seamen's Friend. April, 1866. Published by the American Seamen's Friend Society, New York. MUSIC FROM HORACE WATERS, NEW YORK.—The Lost One. Composed and ar ranged by EdWard Kanski.—'Tis Sweet to Think of Heaven. A sacred song by H. P. Danks.—There's Rest for All in Heaven. Poetry by Finley Johnson, music by I r rs. E. H. Parkhurst. Biorritantratz. A SHOT AT THE DECANTER. BY REV. THEODORE L. CUYLER There is a current story that a Quaker once discovered a thief in his house; and taking down his grandfather's old fowling piece, he quietly said " Friend, thee had better get out of the way, for I intend to fire this gun right where thee stands." With the same considerate spirit we warn certain good people that they had better take the decanter off their table, for we intend to aim a Bible-truth right where that decanter stands. It is in the wrong place.. It has no more business to be there at all than the thief had to be in the honest Quaker's house. We are not surprised to find a decanter of alcoholic poison on the counter of a dram-shop whose keeper is "licensed" to sell death by measure. But we, are surprised to find it on the table or the sideboard of one who professes to be guided by the spirit and the teachings of God's Word. That bottle stands right in the range of the following inspired utter ance of St Paul: "It is good neither to eat flesh, Nor to drink wine, nor anything whereby thy brother stumbleth." This text must either go out of the Christian's Bible, or the bottle go off the Christian's table. The text will not move ; and the bottle must. The pasiage itself is so clear that it can hardly admit of a cavil or a doubt. It teaches the lofty and benevolent principle— thatabstinence from things that are neces sarily hurtful to others, is a Christian expe diency that has the grip of a moral duty. This sounds, at first, like aikrery radical doctrine ; but so conservative an expounder as Prof. Hodge, of Princeton, has defined the text as teaching that things which are not always wrong per se are to be given up for the sake of others. He says that the legal liberty of a good man is never to be exercised where a moral evil will inevitably flow from it. We .are never to put stumb ling-blocks in -the•way of others. Good men ale bound to sacrifice anything and everything that is counter to the glory of God, and destructive of the best interests of humanity. It would be easy to' prove unanswerably that alcoholic beverages are injurious to those who use them. The famous athlete, Tom Sayers, was once asked by a gentle man, " Well, Thomas, I suppose that when you are training, you use plenty of beef steaks, and London porter, and pale ale ?" The boxer replied, " In my time I have drunk more than was good for me; but when I have business to do, there's nothing like water and the dumb-bells." After re- tiring . from " business " he took to drink and died like a sot. "business," water made him a Samson : alcohol laid him in his grave. As a matter of personal health and long life, "it is good not to drink wine ;" as an example to others, total abstinence is a. Christian virtue. The inherent wrong of using intoxicating drinks is twofold. 1. It exposes to datiger the man who tampers with it; for no man was ever positively assured by.his Creator that he could play 'with the "adder" that lies in a wine-cup without being stung by it. 2. It puts a stumbling-block '.in the way of him whom we are commanded to ove as ourselves We lay down, then, the proposition, that no man has a moral right to do anything the influence of which is certainly and in evitably hurtful to his neighbor. I have a legal right to do many things which as a Christian I cannot do. - I have a leg a l right to take arsenic or swallow, strych nine; but I have no moral right to com mit this self-destruction. I have a legal right ,to attend the theatre. No police man stands at the, door to exclude me, or dares to eject me while my conduct i s orderly and becoming. But I have n o moral right to go there not merely because THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY. APRIL 5, 1866 . I may see and hear much that may soil my A Conclusion this which is amply borne memory for days and months, but because out by the statements of ancient historians that whole garnished and glittering - estab- —themselves Papists, and therefore not lishment, with its sensuous attractions, is ' likely to give partial testimony in\ a matter to many a young person the yawning mael- ' like this. strom of perdition. The dollar which I Some of my readers doubtless have heard give at the box-office is my contributionthe origin of the Waldensian Church I toward sustaining an establishment whose assigned to Peter Waldo, the merchant Re dark foundations rest on the murdered souls , former of Lyons in .the twelfth century; of my fellow-men. Their blood stains its I leaving us to infer that, prior to that date, walls, and from that "Pit" they have gone the people of the Valleys were sitting under down to another pit, where no sounds of the shadow of Popish darkness. The fact mirth ever come. Now I ask, what right that Waldo's name bears a similarity to the have Ito enter a place where the tragedies designation Waldenses, is probably the that are played off before me by painted source' of this, as we believe, untenable women and dissolute men are as, nothing statement. Waldo was a French, not an to the tragedies of lost souls that are en- Italian "Reformer before the Reformation," acted in some parts of that house every whose followers in his own day were invari night ? What right have I to give my ably called " the poor men of Lyons," and money and my presence 'to sustain that never "Waldenses." Moreover, it does moral slaughter-house, and by walking into seem unaccountable that the Waldenses the theatre myself, to aid in deco: lug others themselves never spoke of Waldo as their to follow me? • founder—(had he been so, they had no Now, on die same principle (not of self- more reason to be ashamed of him than we preservatioh merely, but of avoiding what are of Knox— in Scotland). On the con ic dangerous to others), what right have I trary, they have at every period of_ their his to sustain those fountain-heads of death tory asserted that the truth had been re from which thi• drink-poison is sold? What tained among them since its first proclema right have I to advocate their license, to tion in Northern Italy after the Apostolic patronize the ti affic, or even in any way to age. abet the whole system of drinking alcoholic Let us now glance, and we can do no stimulants at home or abroad ? If a'glass more, at what ancient history itself says in of wine on my table will entrap some young regard to this assertion. The following man, or some one who is inclined to stimu- . testimony on the point is most important:— I lants, into dissipation, then am I thought- "With the dawn of history," writes Sir lessly setting a trap for his life. I am his Jam:A Mackintosh, • 4 we discover some tempter. I give the usage my sanction, simple Christians in the valleys of the Alps, and to him the direct inducement to par- where they still exist, under the ancient take of the bottled demop that sparkles so name of Vaudois, who, by the light of- the seductively before him. If the contents or New Testament, saw the extraordinary con that sparkling 'glass make my brother to trast between the purity of primitive times, stumble, he stumbles over me. If he goes and the vices of the gorgeous and imperial away from my table and commits some out- hierarchy which surrounded them." rage under the' effects of that , stimulant, I It were vain to expect that we should be am, to a certain degree, guilty of that out- able to define accurately each several link rage I have a partnership in every blow of the chain which connects the existing he strikes,, or in every oath he may utter, Waldensian Church with the Apostolic age; or in•every bitter wound he may inflict on but just as in a dar night at sea, you can the hearts of those he loves, while under 'trace the direction 01l your landing-place by the spell of my glass of " Cognac" or the lights placed at intervals along the " Burgundy." I gave him the incentive winding shore, so do the scattered hints to do what otherwise he might have left Which come to light here and there of the undone. The man who puts the bottle to existence during the dark ages of a "peen his neighbor's -lips is accountable for what li r people" in the Coulon Alps, indicate a i i comes ‘ from those lips under the influence lie, which, if followed out, leads us to the of the dram, and is accountable, too, for c nviction that the faith of the Waldenses every outrage that the maddened victim of has come down to them 'from primitive the cup may perpetrate during his tempo- times. Their documents, as we have seen, rary insanity. go back to A.D. 1100. Then in the ninth In this view of the• question, is it too century we find that remarkable man, much to ask of every professed Christian, Claude, Bishop of Turin, who may truly be and every lover of his kind, that they will styled a Reformer within the Church her wholly abstain from everything that can self, accused in 840 by Jonas of Orleans, intoxicate ? For the sake of your children, not only of personal heterodoxy, but of en do it. For the sake of a brother, a hus , couraging persons "in the neighborhood of band, a friend. For the sake of those his diocese" in their rejection- of image who will plead your example; for the worship,- and separation of what Jonas sake of the frail tempted ones who can- styles " Catholic unity." Ascending the not say, Not for your fellow-traveler's stream of time to the fourth century, we• sake to God's bar and to the eternal word, find Jerome recording that Vigilantius, the touch not the bottled 'devil, under whose opponent of ecclesiastical corruption in shining scales damnation hides its adder- that early age, had taken refuge among the sting I Catlin Alps', the very locality where the It is old-fashioned total abstinence that Waldenses '-still exist, because there he we are pleading ;for. We ask it, as Paul found a people holding sentiments similar did, for the sake of those who "stumble." to his own.; This carries us up to the year 0, those stumblers! those stumblers! We 396; and we know that toward the end of dare not speak of them. It would touch the second century the Gospel had pene many of us too tenderly. It would reveal, traced from Italy into Gaul, across the too many' wrecks—wrecks that angels havq-i Alpine barrier that divides the two coun wept over. -It would open tombs whose trigs. Who can dbubt that these early charitable green turf' hides out of sight missionaries, carrying with them the seed what many a survivor would love to have of the.kingdom, scattered some of it as they forgotten. It would Texan to me many a passed on their way across the Alps ? college friend who went down at midday where, falling among those secluded valleys, into blackness of darkness. 'it grew ; and, sheltered by, the encircling _ . _ _ And to-day I see this social .curse coming back into our houses, into our streets, into our daily usages of life, with redoubled power. Would that every parent were, a " prohibitory law" to his family ! Would that every pulpit and every platform would thunder forth the Old warning-cry, " Look not on the wine when it is red, when it giveth its color in the cup, for at the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder." At the last I at the LAST I But, 0 ! who can tell when that "last" shall ever end ? When will the victim's last groan be heard? When will the last horror seize upon his wretched soul? ANTIQUITY OF THE WALDENSIAN CHURCH. " Avenge, 0 Lord, thy slaughtered saints, whose bones Lie scattered on" the Alpine Mountains cold ; E'en them who kept thy truth so pure of old When all our fathers worshipped stocks and stones." So wrote John Milton two hundred years ago. The two latter lines discover to us that in his day the faith of the Waldenses was known to be ancient as well as pure. We unhesitatingly claim for the Walden sian Church the high distinction of being the oldest Evangelical Church that exists in Europe ; and for the twofold proof of this claim, we point to the pages of ancient history, and to the evidence furnished by the Waldensian manuscripts. Among the latter, an, ancient version of the New Tes tament, in the ancient dialect of the Wal denses (three MSS. copies of which exist, of dates between the twelfth and four teenth centuries) proves that in these re mote valleys a vernacular version of the Word of God was• circulating some cen turies before it had been translated into our own tongue, or into that of any other people—a most striking fact ! And when we point to what we are pleased to call the venerable standards' of our different Churches here at home, we should remem ber that they are documents of yesterday when placed alongside of the yellow parch ments, some in the library of Geneva, others in that of Cambridge, which are veritable manuscripts in the Waldensian dialect. Col lected in the Valleys in the times of perse cution, they had been handed down among these people since the distant time whose date they bear—a period of more than seven hundred years. Ido wish that space permitted me to make some extracts from that most curious poem, the 4( Nobla Ley zon," which with the Confession of Faith, the Catechism, and the tracts called "Anti christ" and "Purgatory," set forth the truth and exposed the corruptions of Rome. The fact that such writings were at so distant an era as the twelfth century composed by men living in these remote solitudes, pl a i n l y indicates that long before even that date a people existed the who were separate theirown tongue with the Word of God. from the Roman Church and familiar in mountains, was preserved through long cen turies in native vigor, unblighted by the blasts of error which swept across the plains of central Italy. He must be strangely blind who does not perceive,a special providence in the history of this ancient Church and people : a Providence whose wondrous ways we hope yet more clearly to unfold, when we come to tell how, amidst persecutions almost unequalled, this bush of the wilderness turned, yet was not consumed—and how, lso, through the liberation of Italy in our day, slips from this venerable tree are now being planted over the length and breadth of that most interesting land.—D. K. Guthrie, in. the Sunday Magazine. Canto'fultuistring Mocks Mclntire & Brother, 1035 Chestnut Street, Would call attention to their large assortment o very choice Silk Scarfs, Neck Ties, Scarf Pins, Sleeve Buttons, and Studs. Also, to a stork of UNDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS Fall and Winter Wear, Consisting of Extra Heavy Merino, • Saxony Wool, Shetland, Shaker Flannel, Red Flannel Canton Flannel (very heavy). Also, to their • MODEL, "SHOULDER SEAM SHIRTS Guaranteed in every case to give entire satisfaction ATELIER PHOTOGRAPHIC. A, J. DE MORAT. S. E. corner Eighth and Arch Streets. PHILADELPHIA. The public are invited to exame specimens of - Life Size in. Oil, Water Colors, Ivorytype, India Ink, and Poreelian Pictures of all sizes. "CARD PICTVRES, $2 50 PER DOZEN. Entrance on Eighth Street. WENDEROTH, TAYLOR & BROWN'S FINE ART GALLERY, 912 and 914 cuEswitruT STREET, 1019-ly AGENCY, 353 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. frixolo andgjrnfinie,s. BYAIT, SHOO & EOM COMMERCIAL COLLEGE TELEGRAPHIC, INSTITUTE, ASSEMBLY BUILDING, S. W. COR. TENTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS The Philadelphia College, an Important Link in the Great international Chain of Colleges Located in Fifty Princi pal Cities in the United States and Canadas. The Collegiate Course embraces BOOK-KEEPING; as applied to all Departments of Business; Jobbing, Importing, Retailing, Commission, Banking, Manu facturing, Railroading, Shipping, &o. PENMANSHIP. • both Plain and Ornamental. COMMERCIAL LAW, Treating of Property, Partnership, Contracts, Corpo rations, Insurance, Negotiable Paper, General Aver age, &c. COMMERCIAL CALCULATIONS.—Treating of Commission and Brokerage, Insurance, Taxes, Du ties, Bankruptcy, General Average, Interest, Dis count, _Annuities, Exchange,- Averaging Accounts, Equation of Payments, Partnership Settlements, &c. BUSINESS PAPER.—Notes, Checks, Drafts, Bills of Exchange. Invoices, Order, Certified Checks. Cer-' tificates of Stocks, Transfer of Stocks, Account of Sales, Freight, Receipts, Shipping Receipts, Sm. TELEGRAPHING, by Sound and Paper, taught by an able and experi enced Operator. A Department opened for the ex clusive use of Ladies.. PHONOGRAPHY Taught by a practical Reporter. Diplomas awarded on a sartisfactory Examination. Students received at any time. 1030-ly THE WEST CHESTER ACADEMY MILITARY INSTITUTE, The Second Term of the scholastic year commences on the Ist of February next, and closes on the last Thursday in June. The Corps of Instructors numbers Ten gentlemen of ability, tact. and experience, beside the Principal, who is always at his nost in the School- LOOM The Principal having purchased the extensive school property of the late A. Bolmar, lately occupied by the Pennsylvania Military Academy, designs re moving his school there before or during the Easter Recess. For Catalogues, apply at the Office of the AMERI CAN PRESBYTERIAN, or to WILLIAM F. WYERS, A. M., Principal. DOR AID CLASSICAL HM I FORTIETH STREET AND BALTIMORE AVENUE, . WEST. PHILADELPHIA. REV. S. H. McMULLIN, PRINCIPAL. Pupils Received at any time and Fitted for Business Life or for College. REFERENCES: Rev. J. G. Butler. D.D.: Rev. J. W. Mears; Rev. Jonathan Edwards, D.D.; Rev. James M. Crowell, D. D.; Dr. C. A. Finley, 13. S. Army; Samuel Field, Esq. 1.023-ti WQIIIILANII FOR SEMINARY YOUNG LADIES, Nos. 9 and 10 Woodland Terrace, West • Philadelphia. Arrangements superior, this Spring, for Solid In struction and Home Influences and Comforts. Testimonials of a•high ordor can be furnished for thoroughnesss and success. Situation highly attractive and healthful. • 1029-2 m Rev. HENRY REEVES, Principal. PRILADELPHIA MEM! FOR YOUNG NORTWEST CORNER OF CHESTNUT and EIGHTEENTH STREETS. REV. CHARLES A. SMITH, D.D., • PRINCIPAL. Young Ladies' Classical Institute. The Rev. JOHN CROWELL, A.M., will open a Seminary for Young Ladies at his residence, No. 1340 North Thirteenth Street, on the 18th of April. For Circulars and other intormation apply as above, eitheersonally or by letter. 1035-st. grg thRPErr _4O l cer IVINS & DIETZ. 4:fb No. 43 STRAWBERRY STREET, Second door above Chesnut street, MO= air Strawberry street is between Scibond and Bank streets. CARPETINGS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &C. NEW STYLES, MODERATE PRICES WINS & DIETZ, 43 STRAWBERRY Street, Philada. Cheap Carpet Store. Ai 4v I A r S & • ME 40 •VI STANZ A d e d % 4 / ft.../ EXCELLENCE. . 0 .1 0 448 A 114419 4 an& 2 W E ' L I'B4: or - THE WREST REMEDY FOli. • ri „, co t r o . its,s,co No. , a .001 61, Vu4PrzoN; e At!. 0 '5. 43 A 11 This most popular brand of Oils generally presoribea bY the. Physicians of Philadelphia, may be had at retail, this city from all Apothecaries, and whole • sale from Messrs. JOHNSTON, HOLLOWAY & COWDEN, No. 23 North Sixth Street; FRENCH, RICHARDS , CO.. No. 630 Market . Street; WRIGHT & SID DA_LL, 119 Market Street; T. W. DI OTT & 00.. No. 232 North 2d Street, and the Proprietor, • CHARLES W. NOLEN. 101 . 4.-61 i No. 123 54nitli Front iStroot iriitaL PERUVIAN S YRIIP IS A PROTECTED SOLUTION OF THE PROTOX- IDE OF IRON, a new discovery in medicine which strikes at the root of disease. by supplying the blood with its vital prin ciple, or life element—lron. This is the secret of the wonderful sueoess of this remedy in curing Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diarrlirea, Boils. Nervous Affections, Chills and Fevers, • Humors, And all diseases originating in a BAD STATE OF THE BLOOD Or accompanied by debility or a :ow state of the sys tem. Being free from Alcohol in any form, its energizing effects are not followed by corresponding reaction, but are permanent, infusing strength, vigor, and new life into all pars. of the system, and building up an Iron Constitution. DYSPEPSIA AND DEBILITY. From the venerable Archdeacon &arr. D.D. DUNHAM, Canada East. March 21. 1865. • • * "I am an inveterate Dyspeptic of more than 26 yetlrs' standing. * s * ' I have been so wonderfully benefitted in the three short weeks during which I have used the Peruvian Syrup, that I can scarcely persuade myself of the reality. People who have known me are aston hed at the change. lam widely known, and can but ecomm end to others that which has done so much fore." * * One of the-most Distinguished J urists in New England writes to a friend as follows : "I have tried the Peruvian Syrup. and the result fully sustains your prediction. It has made a new man orate; infused into my system new vigor and energy; I am no longer tremulous and debilitated, as when you last saw me, but stronger, heartier, and with larger capacity for labor, mental and phy:ical, than at any time duringthe last fire years." An eminent divine of Boston, says "I have been using the PERUVIAN SYRUP for some time past; it gives me new vigor, bucyancy of spirits, elasticity of muscle." Thousands have been changed. by the use of this remedy. from weak. sickly, sutfering creatures, to strong, healthy, and happy men and women ; and in valids cannot reasonably hesitate to give it a trial. A pamphlet of 32 pages, containing certificates of cureallaid recommendations from some of the most eminent physicians, clergymen, and others, will be sent free to any address. la' See that each bottle has PERUVIAN SYRUP blown in the glass. For sale by T. P. DINSMORE,• Proprietor, 36 Dey St., New York. AND BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SCROFULA. All Medical Men agree that lODINE is the BEST REMEDY for Scrofula and all kindred diseases ever discovered. The difficulty has been to cbtain a Pure Solution of it. DIU H. ANDERS' lODINE WATER Is a Pure Solution of lodine, WITHOUT A SOL VENT! A most Powerful Vitalizing Agent and Re storative. It has cured Scrofula in all its manifold forms, Ulcers, Cancers, Salt Rheum Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Consumption, Heart, Liver, and Kidney Diseases, &c., &c. Circulars will be sent free to any address. Price $l. 00 &bottle, 6r 6"for $5 00. Prepared by Dr. H. ANDERS, Physician and Chem ist. For sale by J. P. DINSMORE, 36 Dey St., New York, • And by all Druggists. WISTAR'S BALSAM WILD CHERRY HAS BEEN USED FOR NEARLY HALF A CENTURY, With the most Astonishing Success in curing Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, In fluenza, Whooping Cough,. Croup, Liver Complaint, Bronchitis, Difficulty in Breathing, Asthma, and every afection of the TlEtß4o.4l.'r, LUNGS, .11c CONSIIMPTION, which carries off more victims than any other disease. and which baffles the skill of the Physician to a greater extent than any other malady. often YIELDS TO THIS REMEDY, when all others prove ineffectual. AS A MEDICINE, Rapid in Relief, Soothing in Effect, Safe in its Ope- ration, IT IS UNSURIASSED i while as a preparation, free from noxious ingredients, poisons, or minerals; uniting skill, science, and med ical knowledge• combining all that is valuable in the vegetable kingdom for this class of disease, it is INCOMPARABLE! and is entitled, merits, and receives the general con fidence of the public. SEYMOUR THATCHER, M. D.. of Herman, N. Y.. writes as follows : " Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry gives universal satisfaction. It seems to cure a Cough by loosening and cleansing tNe lunge, and allaying irritation, thus removing the cause instead of drying up the cough and leaving the cause behind. I consider the Balsam as good as any. if not the best, Cough medicine with which Tam acquainted." The Rev. JACOB SECHLRR, of Hanover, Pa., well known and much respected among the German popu lation of this country, makes the following statement for the benefit of the afflicted:— Dear Sirs :—Having realised in my family impor tant benefits from the use of your valuable prepara tion—Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry—it affords me pleasure to recommend it to the public. Some eight years ago one of my daughters seemed to be in a de cline, and little hopes of her recovery were enter tained. I thenprocured 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, in my individual case, made frequent use of your valuable medicine, and have al ways been benefitted by it. JACOB SECHLER. Price*One Dollar a Bottle. For sate by J. P. DINSMORE, 36 Dey Street, New York. SETH W. FOWLE dr. SON, Proprietors, Boston. And by all Druggists. GRACES CELEBRATED SALVE Cures Cute, Burns, Scalds. Grace's Celebrated Salve Cures Wounds, Bruises, Sprains. Grace's Celebrated Salve Cures Chapped Hands, Chilblains. Grace's Celebrated Salve Heals Old Sores, Flesh Wounds, Are. It is prompt in action, removes pain at once. and reduces the most angry-looking swellings and indult'. mations, as if by magic—thussaffording relief and a complete cure. Only 25 cents a box. (pent by mail for 35 cents.) For sale by T. P. D185M0.P.8.36 Day St., New York. S. W. FOWLS & SON. Proprietors. Boston, and by all Diuggista, Grocers, and'Country Stores.