BLufitaitonts. WESTERN ASIA BEFORE THE BABY LONIAN CONQUEST. In order to bring the catastrophe or the conquest of Western Asia by the Babylonians more vividly before the mind, it is requisite to throw ourselVes back in imagination so as to take a sur vey of the world as it existed just before the revolt of Nabopolassar from the domin• ion of Assyria, 8.0. 625, the thirteenth year of JOsiah's reign—the year in which Jeremiah was "set over the kingdoms," and called to the prophetic office. (Jer. i.) For this purpose, let us conceive ourselves to have planted our st'spii. on the summits of Lebanon, and to be ' endowed with the power of seeing two or three hundired miles in every direction. , We should ,then have found ourselves, under . .that.glping shy, staieding on a crest Of eternal:snow u hmt beneath us , would , Jiave extended on es,rorrir side, no', as, now, file diary ivAderness,of barren Turkish proNtinces; btifthe 'dazzling scene of the old civilized` wOrld-- , -4 scene of surpassing spleitdoi, of ceaseless aetiii ty among the countless millions - Who riople the great cities of the seaboard, swarth through the Syrian wilderness' with their winding caravans, cover the river-banks on all sides with their merchandise, and plough the Mediterranean with their innu merable ships, from Phosnicia at 'our feet to the gates of the Atlantic ) arid the gloom of the Northern seas. First, let me turn toward the'setting sun. There, immediately-below us, we see stretch ing along the shore of the dark blue sea a very narrow strip of country, not more than twenty miles broad, since the mountains run parallel with the Mediterranean and inclose Phoenicia., Its length is about one hundred and twenty , miles. This short line of territory, rich in bays and harbors, is covered with lofty` hills, many of which run out into the sea and form bpla,prom ontories. - The Sea, which breaks with fury upon the rooky coast, has separated some of these promontories from the mainland, and formed.little islands at &small distance from the shore, which are not. less worthy of note than the mainland itself, being everywhere covered withextensiye colonies and other cities: Thus' Aradus Was built on one of these Islands, and on the shote opposite, Antaradus. Eighteen milei south stands Tripolis; at a like distance Byblus,'with the temple Of AdoniEl; and further south Berytus, w no'w, Beyrout. Keeping along the coast, we come to Sidon, _the most ancient of these maritime settle ments, so called after the first-born of Ca naan; and finally, fourteen ,miles lower down, at the extreme south, where Phoeni cia joins Palestine, stands the stately Tyre, the Queen of 'the Mediterranean. The spaces between these cities are filled with smaller towns and inland settlements, forming, as it were, one unbroken city, whose lights flashed, when seen by night from the mOuntains, almost in one continu ous blaze, extending over the whole coast and the islands. Iu the background the beautiful range of Lebanon is overgrown with forests, and at the base the hills are excavated in numberless quarries. The strip of country before us is the busiest scene on the face of the earth. It swarms like a great beehive—in the'aities, in the villages, in the quarries, irithe for ests on the mountain-sides, in the harbors —with one of the most remarkable and powerful races of the ancient world. These Phoenicians are the Englishmen of antiqui tY. They speak a language not unlike the Hebrew, and they have an Asiatic aspect. But, inclosed and overcrowded in their narrow territory, which supplies them with scarcely any corn, partly by natural genius and partly by necessity, they have become great manufacturers,' dyers in purple, mer chant princes, shipbuilders, great workers in trinketry, great cultivators of the fine and of the useful arts, and above all, great colonizers and brokers; for they command and transact the commerce, of . Europe and Asia., For a thousand years these skilful, enterprising peeple have been building up the fabric of their marvellous poirer, wealth, and grandeur. Tyre and Sid 4 'are their London and Liverpool Thedn'cities are filled with stately'edifices; marble palaces of their kings, coiled with cedar, temples of their gods, plated with gold=—one far-re nowned temple of Hercules, at Tyre, 'being a, miracle of splendor and magnificence— mansions of their merchant ,princes, and the crowded homes of a flourishing popu lation.' Ali that the , world could furnish of riches and beauty in the arts of produc tion is to be found along that brilliant shore. Three great lines of inland traffic —one northward to Asia Minor and Arme nia ; one eastward to the Tigris and- En - phrates, and one southward to Edom and Abrabia—conducted by multitudes of cara 7 wans, bring the wealth of zAsia to a focus in Tyre, tor export to Europe and Africa,. Two great lines of navigation and sea-trade along the northern , and !southern shores of the Mediterranean,conduo,. ,by, their in comparable fleets of merchatitn:ien, bring the riches of Europe, from as far as Corn wall and Gibraltar to the Isle of Cyprus, and the wealth of Africa front Morocco to ' the coast of Egypt, to the same vast 'empo rium, in order to its subsequent tranport into the interior of Asia. The pages of Ezekiel supply an imper ishable picture of this wonderful Tyrian commerce. The hoarse songs of their multitudinous caravan drivers, the "cries" of their sailors as they heaved the anchor or spread the sail, the music and the thunder ing traffic of their great cities, the' hum of their bazaars, filled with the radiant wealth of all nations, still echo in our ears. Here, inland, along the northern track, come gangs of slaves from. Georgia and'the Can cams; for the reckless traffiickers are great slave-dealers. " Tubal and Meshcch send slaves and vessels of brass, and Togarmah gave thee horses and mules for thy wares." Along the middle track comes corn,from Palestine, with honey. oil, and balm.* " -De mascus trades fur thy great riches in wine from Chablisn, " and in wool from 'the flocks of the desert Halfway between the KM and the Euphrates stands 'Tadmor in the Wilderness, a halting-place for the thirsty caravans. King Solomon built it. From the. south, through Idumea „Siad Pe tra, comes all the loth of Arabia.,and of the distant East; frankincense, myrrh, cinnamon, cassia, spices, for sacred rites ; gold and precious stones, the rubies and onyxes of Cefylon, carbuncles, agates, and corals ; the diamonds of India, the horns, the ebony, the ivory of Ethiopia, the em broidered robes of Babylon, the sword blades of Yemen, and blue mantles from the looms of Kedar and Dedan. These lines of inland traffic form, how ever but one-half of the Phoeniciannier chandize; for, see , the miles ,of wharfage along this wealthy.shore are covered,with chests bound with cords, and "made of cedar," ready for export to a thousand sta tions around the Mediterranean Sea. The well-built harbors are crowded 'with ship ping. Fore%tt of masts are seen close at band, :and others dimly fading' into the horizon:''Many of those vessels are,master pieces ..o.t.shipbuilding. Benches, of box inlaid pith ivory, flags of Ete.e..lineft em= broidered in scarlet 90 ripe, ihite sailS of bright Egyptian canvas, and awnings• of purple, made them "very glorious, in the midst of the seas " "The Mediteiraneitt is Ciiiefedirith their" lOfiTslii - i4. Threehtni dred-Plicenician colonies along ; the Atrican coast,'Carthage at their head,‘depend *- for their supplies upon commerce with their ,mother,, country. Asia ..Miirtor, the ~.Lrclaip elago, the Peloporinesus, and Northern Greece, ,open their piratical ports to the Tyrian adventurers, who'sometimes, like Cadmus, settle in Hellas, and bring arts and letters with their trade. They have rich settlements in Sicily, and a° thriving trade with Italy; they have found their way to Southern Spain, where gold was then as plentiful as it is in Mexico; they have planted a distant colony where the wild, citron blooms in Grenada, and the wondrous moonlight smiles over the val leys of Seville. And, having passed Gib raltar, they founded Cadiz, where the At lantic breaks in thunder on the western shores of Europe, and' pushed their adven turoue prows in the' latitudes of . Madeira ; and Penzance. The King of Tyre sits aloft, enthroned in his palace, in the centre of this scene of splendor and power, m. like, a ,god in the midst of the sea." ,'‘ By the, neatness of his wisdom," and the ~Ivisdom ofhis ances l tors for centuries, he has ''multiplied his wealth," and thinks' himself as glorious : as an angel,. while his diadem and royal robes shine with the topaz, the beryl, and the jasper, "like the anointed covering cherub.' But he has corrupted his wis dom by reason of his brightness. Through the multitude of his iniquities, and the'in finite villanies of his traffic, and the op= pressions of .his government, he has in curred the wrath of the King of kings. And the hour has come when that stupen dons fabric of Phoenician power is .to fall to the. ground, when Tyre is to burn like• a mountain of cedars in the midst of the waters, and when the sceptre of the Medi terranean is to pass away to another race of men. The catastrophe is impending; but there are no signs of ruin as we look down now upon the Phoenician shore. All are blind to their doom —Evangelical Christendom. A METHODIST LOVE FEAST. The Love Feast is in institution peculiar to the Methodist body. Its name, however, scarcely•conveys a correct idea of its ohar aeter. The love that is spoken of is the enjoyment which the brethren and sisters experience in the love, of .God; and the " Feast", is the narration of experiences by communicants of both sexes, who, in short, emphatic remarks, give expression to their feelings. Ordinarily, in a Love Feast of two hours' du-ation, as many as fifty or sixty stand up for Jesus and bear their tes timony. -, These brief speeches are inter stiersed with frequent singing. Some re mark,dropped by a speaker will suggest a verse in a particular hymn ; and as he- or she sits down, the,verse will flow out from one voice, pitched to a familiar tune, arid the whole assemtly join their voices, until the,house resounds , with the sacred song. When a brother is bearing his testimony, espeSially if he is very fervent and anii mated; the brethren diecoMe jubilant; and shouts. of " Glory to- God," " Hallelujahif ''Amen, " "Bless 'the Lord," etc., a'r heard all through the meeting. . The, effect produced by these , Love Feasts : is in the highest degree dramatici we, nsethe word in no offensive sense. , The feelings and the sympathy of lookers-on are awakened, arid many, are drawn into the fold of. :church through such,meetings. The grandeet and most effective . Meeting we ever attended was of this kind. It WO held on a Stieday afternoon, early in May of the present year, in 'the Foundry Church," at 'Washington. Rev. 'Jesse T: Peck, of California, who: is now in this city, a Boanerges of the church, preside& It was a' Union Love Feast, and drew to: gather all the old . Methodists of the Dis triet. After an opening prayer and hymn, and a brief exhortation from the pastor, the true feast began. One old lady, bent with yeara,,her voice weak and tremulous, 'arose. She pro claimedthat she had been a follovier of the Lamb seventy years, and' that 'She found religion as precious to-day as it. was when she first gave her young' heart -tO God, and learned to walk , in His ways. She was now going home to glory, and she expected, in , a few days, to be with her Saviour, to join in the songs of redeeming love throughout the endless ages of eterni-, ty. Oh what a shout went up while this aged Christian, standing upon the verge of the grave, spoke the joy and confidence that filled her soul. And as she sat down, the simple and touching hymn, " I'm going home, I'm going home," never sounded so cheerfully sweet as it did when sang by that congregation. Immediately a brother 'rose and said he had been in this good way sixty years, and, blessed be God, he loved it more and More every day: Another brother had given hie heart to Christ forty-nine years ago; and he had' taken sweet converse in the 'days and years that are gone, with the brother who bad just spoken: He con eluded by Baying her . hoped to meet all with whom he had Walked, pleasantly, on the, shores of time, in; the blessed land Where they would shout,and Bing and praise God more. The`verse---7 " Now here's, my , heart, aad heres 3 ray WO, To niietir ji4 o t hat better land,"7 was sung -s th great eff e c t . THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 1866. One of the speakers had experienced joy in believing fifty-three years before, but his love, atter a •time, grew cold, and be fell into a state of unconcern. But he was mercifully awakened to.a sense of his true condition before it was everlastingly too late, and he now, had a joy in believing. Christ was his stay and staff, and the promi ses of the Gospel were his comfort day and night. The verse— " My. God is reconciled— His pardoning voice I hear; He owns me for his child, I shall no longer fear," was sung 'as the speaker took hls seat. A brother now lose and said' he was a stranger in the city; there was not.proba bly one in that congregation who knew his face. Yet he. teit t himself at, home, far he was, with the J.,ord's people. At his,Ois taut home, a thousand Miles.p.way, he..had enjoyed, on the. Sunday prev . oys,pst such another feast ; They loved the same : and the shouts, m!)11 the hyrnns, And Om testimony were the'. eiatbe.. As he con chided, 'the' ir &se 4sras 'sirliebeginning--" There was onmsrho bore his ,testimony, a rude,. nnlettered,than, who remembered the day, and the hour, and the veu tEippt where he stood in the old Foundry Church when the burden of sin rolled off frein him thirty-two years before. He had new almost finished his pilgrimage.. He was approaching the river, and on the other side he saw the palace of his King, with angels waiting to conduct him thither. As he sat down, the brethren shouted in tune ful chorus the hymn-- . And now followed, in quick succession, testimony from brothers and sisters, inter spersed with. singing and shouting, and the exercises were 'continued until the waning sun admonished them that the , meeting must be brinight to a close. But so many pressed foiward tb bear testimony, Dr. Peck could only " - 'accommodate Them, by giving an invitation to all present] who de sired it. to stand up and testify to their love of Christ. Almost every , one in the vast asseMbly, men, women and children arose, and while they stood, they s ang— "Praise God from whom all blessings flow." During the exercises many were melted to tears, ,and one, dear old, Christian woman, almostripe for glory, thrilled thp-hcarts of all by rising and proclaiming . bhrist pr es tint with her and heaven begun below. It was a meeting full of interest and magnetic power.—Boston Courier. Amidst a denstpopulation of 200,000,- 000 of heathen, the little flock of 200,000 native Christians may semi like a speck; but surely it is that "little aloud of the sea, like a man's hand," which tells that there is to be" a great rain." =Everyother faith in India is decaying. Christianity alone is beginning to run its course. It has taken long. to, plant, but it has now taken root, and by God's grace will never be up rooted. The Christian converts have already been tested by persecution and martyrdoin, in 1857, and stood the test without apos tasy. And r believe that if' the English were driven out of India to-morrow Chris tianity would remain and triumph. In con (anion, I Would, wish to guard all friends of missions• against, two great error,—the Scylla and Charybdis of Evangelical work. 1. Expecting too great results. 2. Valu ing too little the results obtained. On the one hand, don't expect a inillenimn on earth before the coming of our Lord him self. The ,conversion of 200,000 000 of heathen is not to be done by pulling a bell at your fireside: It'is the vast inheritance of the Saviour,and must be gathered in by toil and waste of human life. But do not, on the other hand, be discouraged by the testimony. of those faint-hearted witnesses who'retiirn'from the promised land with the report that "the people be strong that &Veil m the land, and the cities are walled and Very:o66 ; 4d moreover, we Saw the children bf Anak . there? l, '' too have gobe 'l.lp and seen iq and have at Your teet a cluster , of • thethen grapes.'of Ent& It is but-".a cluster,q-it is truer for -time • and strength . do not serve to gather inote;.-but ,it testifieth. that the land ~"floweth with „ milk and honey". of Christian promise; and I 'N'yOnld. say Caleb,," Let us go pp; and possess it, for arevie t ll able to oven come it s " Put confidence; then, in your missionaries, and stiiitain their hearts. feel aShamed to offer rny'pOei testimony in behalf 'Of kith a hand; but the questions that: have been put to me in England com•I pel`.me to . say a word: I have been 25 years in the Indian Service, and have been thrown into contact with many missionaries of' many Protestant, dencminations, and from many countries:. I have found no angel among ,them. " They were all men. Some were gifted-hy God with very high 'powers indeed, and some with very humble powers. ' All had smile share• 'of human `frailty. But I have never seen one who was notelaboring with a-single eye"for the conversion of the heathen to the utmost' of his ability, and setting the example of a holy,Christian life. - Well would it be_ for the State, if in any department of its ser vice, civil or,pilitary, it had such a body of servants as .the missionaries in India. Do not discourage them, then. Do, not dis . trust them. Send out more to, help them. Think'how little can be done by 500 mis: sionaries among . 200,000;000 of heathen. I remember the two first Protestant mis sionaries who ever went-to-India—Zeigen bally and Plutscho: They were sent by Frederic IV. of Denmark, great-great-great. grandfather of our Princess of Wales in 1705.„ ,They found not one Protestant or Christian in India! Remember Schwarz, and Rhpnius„and the long line of Eva nge . lists and martyrs down to Ragland, Dr. Cander, Jamier, and Robert, Noble. These man plowed, and sowed, but only reape4 their tens and hundieds. And where are they now ? Absorbed like the souls of the Brahmins? or`annihilated like the' souls of the Buddhists? No ! They are a portion of the t great cloud of witnesses:" who en compass you new, as Noah, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob encompassed the Hebrew Chureg And they are now thank ng GO, fur the 2 00,060 nu m b er ly o i are mu rm uring withrnlc eo l l redeq4 l 4APes•P v° T.r ic°° . B 9 ll 4 discontent- Murmur no more, ,10g..140, • , "Jesue, the name high over O." "Oh Canaan, bright Canaan I" CHRISTIANITY IN INDIA, your missionaries to develops and complete the native churches—to bring forward na tive pastors for ordination ; and where these have been secured, with vast congre gations of native Christians, as at Timid velly, give no rest to the Bishops of India till they consecrate a native Bishop, and leave the native Christian church to walk alone. Christianity will then be more in digenous in India than blahommedanism has become in eleven centuries ; for instead of being propagated by the • sword of the stranger, it will be preached and evangeliz ed by the natives of the siiil. God grant that we may alllive to see it I—Sir Herbert Edsbaidei at the Auniverscay of the ehiiith Missionary Society in London. - THE MISCHIEF OF SELF-EIWCATIOIN. Self-Ad - Fielded men, says the Watchman and Reflector, often wield great, power in their .generation, for the strength of will acquired by'surmOnriting fbrinidable dift cultip.s gives 'them a persistence of pur pese'whieh naturally commands But ihey'lare apt adbpt unwise theories, and to 'forts ' one=tide9l ' , diameters, from which a liberal culture 'and intimate ac quaintance with educated men•might have saved them. Some of the most mischiev ous errors in Church and State, in litera ture, and' philosophy, and' science, have originatell with educated men, who lacired the broad views and the wise caution in judgment which a liberal education is de signed to furnish. An articje in the. Bibliotheca Sacra for April, gives a curious confirmation of this fact in the ease of . Mr. Buckle, the famous historian; a man whose marvellous erudi tion was equalled only by his eccentric opinions and rash judgments. The re viewer says : "The story of his life, told in this coin try, for the first time since his decease, gives the olue , to the singular defects of his character and his , History. He was an insatiable reader from _lts childhood, like John Milton ; and -like Milton, too, was blessed with an indulgent father, proud of his abilities, and willing to release him from care and toil, and leave him to woo the muses at`his own sweet will. But, unlike Milton, he escaped the severe discipline' of English schools and universities, and was left, at the early age of fourteen, to dimsult his own tastes in • study, without the' guid ance or control of wise teachers. Such a method of study yielded its natural fruits. The undisciplined boy grew up to• man hood with an overweening confidence in self, and a hearty contempt for men and institutions beyond the range of his per sonal sympathies. The intense dogmatism of his History is a natural sequel to his distorted education. Two or three years on - the lower forms of Rugby or Eton, with a constrained submission to older boys, and to monitors and teachers, or the experience of men and life gained by a competition with equals at Cambridge or Oxford, might have supplemented original defects, and made him a wiser man and a more die ' .criminating historian. r. Coleridge al ways confessed a great obliptiorr to` one , of his masters who, had given 'him a sound flogging in boyhood; for impudence in broaching skeptical opinions 7 and one has an instinctive feeling, in reading Cur author's 'crude theories, that :a similar dis cipline in his boyhood might have exerted a wholesome influence.", TRUST GOB FOR' SMALL THINGS. We are too much like children, who cry and make a great; do about sweetmeats and toys, while they can' trust for clothing, general care, and a house in which to live. How many of what maybe called the 'small things of this life and of religion we are anxious about,: while the great concerns we leave with Ailjod4 Now- why, can we - not commit ourselves into- his hands for the small as, well .as.the great,?.,, ; Let us not for get that he rules.,the atom, as well as the world, that he feeds the hummingbird as well as the eagle,.that he provides the crust as well as the feint, that he natribeis the liaire g ofYonr head'ite'well isihe' stars - of the firmament .Shall he uphold all things', and not uphold nrt, ?. clothe Rhea aoit feed ravens, alit not clothe anaYee4 you,' 0 'Ye &M?? As a` GOdl has nakle ever 'to- you a crown that fadeth not'away; and 'ean you.not trust him for a crumb which perishes ? Has he clothed you with the garment ',of salvation, and will you not trust him. for the clothing of the, body ? Has he pro 7 Vide& a house for you in . ,' the heavens, which hath foundations, whose Builder and Maker is. God; and will you not, trust him for a eabernacle,or a cottage iq the Wilderness ? His he given: you Himself, `his Son; hiS Spirit; his Word, `his' grace, his promises; and can you not trust him to ii-ve•you bread, friends; 'clothes, habitation, and all the neoessariegnf this life ? Surely, if he has given you the..greater, he will 'give. you the less. This: is the very argul ment of St. Paul : "He that spared, not his own Son, but delivered, him up for us all, how shall he not with him also freely give us all things ?" CONFECTIONS . . GEO. W. JENI‘INS, ' Manufacturer of choice Confectionery. Every varie ty of . . Sugar, Molasses and Cocoanut Candies. ALSO. Wholesale Dealer in Foreign Fruits. Nuts, &c. :&e. GEO. W. JENKINS, 1037 Spring Garen` Street, Union - Sqtatie, PHILADELPHIA. -1048.-1 Y SPECTACLES. WILLIAM BARBER, ? I anufacturer of _Gold, SilverMickel. and Steel Speck tooles Bye Glaises, dm.; has neatly , furnished - a' room in connection with the factory, for. RETAIL: PUB POSES.twherespectadol t.f every des c ription may be obtained, accurately adjusted to the'requireinenteo vision on OTRICITLY OPTICAL 80.11010.1 L, , Bake room and factory. No. 24IIMORTH' WORTH StieeiN, HENRY HARPER aro. aio Anon awl 'atir. PILLI.ObiELPIEIIA., Dealor in and - InfAsie FINE JE WEL s- 4 - # 3 -45rA41** WrPligokilAiltD La Ts , ••=y, r.O artaitt taitta. This is a personal in- vitation to the reader to examine our new Alice of FINN CLOTHING, tills simer Snits for $l6, and Black Suits for $22. Fi ner Snits, all prices up to $75. Wemuf ? farsx. & BROWN, "OAK, I:IALT 'Southeast cornei of Sava , and lifklurxr STS - 7 CHARLES STOKES & CO.'S FIRST-CLASS " gELICW' RE.!..DY-MAP PB S CE" No. 824 CUEIyENTNIUT STREET, . (Under the Continental Hotel,' Philadelphia.) DIAGRAM FOR SELF•MEASUREMEATT For Coat. Length of ha from 1 to 2, , from 2 to S. Length sleeve (v arm • wool from 4 to 5, around most pro, neat part the .oheat waist. , Stat whether , 'ogee or stooping. Fdr Seminal ooat. For Penni.— Inside a e am, ands outside, ..... from hip bone, around the waistand hip. " A good tit gua ranteed. - 4 -.oflioersf:Uniforms. readr-madeialwaYsuir hand.oi made to order in the best manner and on the mom reasonable terths. Riving finishe d manr:huntrec uniforms the , past year for Staff, Field , and Line OE. cers, as well as for thelv avy, we are Prepared to silk:- cute orders bithis line with correotness ant i rob:. The largest and most desirable stock of R made Clothing.m.Philadelphiialways on hand. ( e price marked m plain figures on all of the goods.) A department for Boys' Clothing is alio maintained at this establishment, and superintended by experi enced'hands. Parents and others will' 'find here most desirable assortment of Boys' Clothing at low Prices. Sole Agent fot the "Pamons Bullet.-Proof Vest."' CHARLES STORES & CO. CHARLES STORER, 7, TAYLOR, W. J. STOKES. CHESTNUT ST. TEA HONG WEST & BROWN, No. 809 CHESTNUT STREET wmsr (gr, It 0 W -20 T ARE RETAILING THEIR LARGE ST9OI OF TEAS AT , EIRESALB 'HMS. THE CHOICEST TEAS ABB ALWAYS TO BE FOUND AT THEIR; HONG CALL FOR .A ''PRICE 'LIST. Ayer's Ague Zure, FOR THE SPEEDY oinve-6 Intermittent Fever. or Fever and Ague,' Remittent Fever, chill Fever; Rama nave, , Per „ • riodieal Headache or Blitoun Headache, and Biliou s re. • • ' were, indeed for, the veliole clam ,otr diseases orlrinat. Lon,* biligur37. derangement, ' • ' • " banned 10elbe . Malaria of - MA. , somatic noitntries.. - • Fevei and Autreia +not the only consequence ofthe z miasmatic . poison: 4,ltreistvertety, tot divrders arise from its . Arrifittiotion masa-Lotus dtstrtcts, hams -which arelgeffralgtavßbeinhatisni.Vitriffilleadairite, ,Blindness, . Toothache' , Earaohe,,,Caterrh, Asthma, Palpitations Affection .of the/5P1een,...,11331t5. in th e 'riowels', - Colich Paialysis, arid .ueraik ethertt `of :the Stomach - Vali zollwthioh, Wheri , origin g ins this ,cause,out on the triermittent type or become petieli cal. " This • cues' e.y.pels the poison from the blood, and thus. • - mires them all alike. , It' id ;riot only the most effectual reme,ffy,ever -discoverted for( this' class 'of complaints, but it is the cheapest, and . , moreover, is perfectly safe. No harm can arise from its use, anti!. the ifatient Whloi:ouredis left as healthy as if he :had neverbad the disease. Can this be said. of any other mire' for Chills - anti. Fieriti? It is true of this, and its imPoivtanoe to those afflicted with the , com plaint cannot, be . over estimated. So sure As it to cure the Fever and Ague, that it may be trathfullY said to'be' a` remedy. One Deal& complains that it is not a• good medicine to sell, because! one bottle cures a whole ueighborhood. . . Prepared by DRX. a - AY ER' do CO., Lowell," ?dais., and sold by Druggists generally. ' • , TARRANT'S E.FE R I TX .SC.ENT.. SELTZER'. APEK.1118.1517. Is a gentle; odoling Chthartic or' Purgative medicine, in the form op a Powder, pleasant to take, and is re commended' arid used by the best Phssiciani in the country as a Mart reliible - sind effectual remedy: EFFERVESCENT Cares Drperisia. ' Curet Hisartbiirn. thireirgio4 Headache, SELTZER Cuterlndigenoil;* Cures Costiveness, Mies Piles, 71 ' r A RE E T CureS BOur-Stainach. Cures Nervous Headache, Cures! Liver Complaint, 'jA 'P E R Cures Bilious Headache, . Cures Rheumatic Couiplainis, Cures Jaiindii* • It is a most efficient u adenine for Females and Chil dren whose stomachs frequently reject ordinary pur gative medicines. Read our pamphlet of testimci nials, and as YOU value your life and health. lose not an hour in procuring a bottle of this most wonderfdl remedy. 4.ANUFACWRED ONLY BY T.A.,9IIANT & CO. . 27S Greessiiiels'Saeet. New Neltic-. Sile by Druggists -1011 KOLAPOOR OIVIRCIL Copies fresn. the • • • MARNA"? PEPTOGRAPH . . • • FIigt:.PIESOTEII/1411111CH Per sae atimi:OgioN for Ow htliudit 4 the/WO Pzios • • 110,7.,f; . 4 ,1 Ajnagit a m e d byw Reed.Lietnueouts la the world Parmelee's Pawl. belated Violin Fromm Pima, a mew and bosatifainstriuneat. Sole meet. Azieniniams, • 1 .1 14111414044 Bizattaitnito. _ .. . , 4 ~ ....t.,. 4, RESTORE. YOUR SIGHT! USE DE. J. STEPHENS do CO.'S PATENT CORNEA RESTORERS, OR RESTORERS OF THE EYESIGHT. They will Restore Impaired Sight and Preserve it to the Latest Period of Life. SPECTACLES RENDERED USELESS. The most eminent Physicians. Oculists. Divines, and the Most prominent men of our country, recom mend diens° of the CORNEA RESTORERS for Pres byopia. or For 'or Long-Sightednws, or every person who wears gpeettecles from old age; Dimnem of Vision. or Overworkvd kyes: A-thenoPia. or Weak Eveillttriphare, or 'Watery eyes: Pain in the Eyeball; Amaurosis .or Obsenritv of Vision; Photophobia,-.,0r ::InttAcrgisee' of Light; Weakness of the Retina and Optic Nerve; Myodesoria. or Speaks or 'Moving. Bodies, bent the Eyes': Ophthal mia, or Inflammation of the Eye or Eyelids, and Imperfect Vision from the effects of Indenamstion. &c.; Cataract Eyes; Betaionia. or Partial Ilandoea; Sinking of the Eyeball, Ito. They can be used by any one with a certainty of sue and without the least fear of injury to the eye. More than 5000 certificates of cures are exhibited at, our office. Cure guaranteed in 4046 , atir.tftw heti applied according to the directions inclosed in each box„..or the' money will be refunded. Write for a circa/dr— sent gratis. Address DR. J. STEPHENS 3: CO. Oculists, . CO.. Bx 926.) For sale at RUSHTON'S Family Drug Store o , No. 10 Astor House, corner of BarcicY Street and Broadway. New York. IP-DR. J: STEPHENS & Co. have invented and Patented a MYOPIA or CORNEA FLATTENER. for thecure of NEAR-SIGHTEDNESS, which has proved a great success. Write for a circular. 1048-/r LAW, V?1111E1101AL, INSURANCE,! FAN:CY 'PRINTER, IMPROVED BROWIDiG MACHINES, ORIGINAL: STYLES OP PRI*ING CHAGRINED BUSINESS CARDS, Wedding and Visiting. Cards Similar to Engraved Plate. . BousinestitEnveloper with +Card, $2 50 per Thousand. Baying famished a Large Room in Sansom Street Rail, with the latest Improved Maehinee and Newl:ipe, I am enabled to execute the Finest Class of Printing. OFFICE, FIRST FLOOR. Ffq-08ANT ~-,x / CI n i rSi -„,,igebli; I ii l 1 1 - FOR TH E Riisn the Testimony of a few or the many Eminent Clergymen and their Families of New York City. who, having used the Sozodont for a long time past. are convinced of its excellent and invaluable quali ties, give it their cordial commendation : Bev. THOXASDEWITT, Pastor Collegiate Ref. Dutch Church. Lafayette Place. Rev. J. W. ALEXANDER, 11. D., Presbyte rian Church, Filth Avenue. Rev.J. WAXELEY, D.D., X. E. City Xis _ sionar-y. Rev. W. F3IOROAN, D.D., Rector AIL Thomas' . Church, Broadway. Rev. E. ff., VFW' IN. MD., Pastor Fourth Universalist Church, Brent: way. Rev. SAMUEL COOKE, D. If., Reeler St. Bar _ • thole men's Church. Lafayette Place. Rev:SABEL EL OSGOOD.D.D.,Pastor Church otllessiah. Broadway. ADAMS. B. E. Church Duane Street. Rev. REXAN BANGS, late Pastor Cottle nary X. E. Church. 'Brookrily. Rev. W S. XIKELS, Pastor Baptist Church. Sixteenth Street. Rev.tGEORGE POTTS, D.P.. Pastor Presby ,tendan Church. University Place. Bev E. E. RANKIN. Pastor Presbyterian Clikowb. Feitynecond St 'fort. Rev. X. B. WERMILYE, D.D. Pastor of Col. !Batik Reformed. &stayed.. Place. ' )ROY O.' Y. J. COLIURN, DOCTOR DENTAL SURGERY. ' . • INRWARY, N. J. „ Therbituar Pentan esk nown as VAN BUSEIRI P S " SOZ DURT," besides being a very pleasant addi tion to. the toilet. contains ingredients that if used according to the directions, will prove of the greatest utility to the health of the month and teeth. BEWARE OF, POTATIONS I -VI 8014 by all Druggiita and Perfumer s RAIL & RUCKEL, NEW CROP TURNIP SEEDS. Early White Flat Dutch Strap-leaved. Purple Top Flat - Strap-leaved. Purple Top Mate Baga or Swedish. Yellow ItutUllasa or Swedish. All irtiwn from Selected and Transplanted. Roots. Priee.Bo cents per pound, 10 cents per ounce. *ailed .without additional charge. HENRY A. DREER. 1048-tf ; Seedman and Florist, 414 CHESTNUT street, Philadelphia. TRUSSES. To avoid all cloth, leather. and-rag-covered filthy Trusses, pith their parboiling, blistermg,rusting and breaking, go to J. B. SE EERY'S "Bard Rubber Truss" Establishment, 1347 OARSTRUT Street, Where you will, find the chanted, lightest, easiest, b.ut and only TRUSS R.3 0. 0WN, tbat will never rust. limber., break or soil, Wed in batbin.. itted to form , requirmgno strap. and made of soy power required. Constantly on hand, a large assortment of Suppor ters Shoulder Braces, Silk Elastic St. , e.kings, 1310115 Urinals. Jte. ' Lady in attendance. Pamphlet free. 1048.30 PAIMART'S BOUDOIR' OREIANSI CARHART'S CHURCH HARMONIUMS ! CAR ART'S MELODEONS! NEW YORK.