tbitin'o Cabls. Ear Publishers will confer a favor by mentioning the prices of all books sent to this Department. LAI4IPB, PITCHERS AND TRUMPETS is the quaint title of a series of lectures on the Vocation of the Preacher, by Rev. Edwin P. Hood, mostly lectures delivered to the students in Spurgeon's Pastor's College. They are not designed to be me thodical, but range over a wide field, and depend for their chief value upon , the aptness and abundance of illustrations, anecdotes and selec tions with which the various positions are en forced. It is a thoroughly wide-awake book, and will do much to freshen the weak and fainting laborer in the. ministry, as well as give many val uable hints to the yonng. New York M. W. Dodd. With Index. 12m0., pp. 453. $1.75. THE EXEGETICAL ESSAYS, by the late Moses Stuart, On SEVERAL WORDS ABLATING TO Fu rURE PUNISHMENT in the Old and New Testa meat, some time ago issued• by our Publication Committee, deserve serious consideration from all close students of these hard fought fields of Scripture Controversy: pp. 208, l6mo. JUVENILES. EMILY DOUGLASS ; ,or, a Year with th►e Cam-' erons, from Randolph, is the story of a worldly minded girl, whose moral training has been neg lected, and how she fared in the truly pious family of her Aunt: Possesses a fair degree of merit. 16m0., pp. 252. PHILIP BRANTLEY'S LIFE WORK and How he found it, from Dodd, is by "M. E. M." whose graceful pen, and whose gentle pathos are not unknown to many of our readers. Philip keeps a journal, and from these self,communings; we get the story of his life. In place of startling incident, we have the interesting disclosures of the working of a youthful mind under the calls , of high motive and the domestic influences of varied character around him. 18mo., pp. 262. Price, $1.15. UNCLE jOHN'S FLOWER GATHERERS is an admirable book for young botanists, and for those who would become acquainted with the fair dwel lers in wood and field, better than by a mere pleased passing inspection of their striking qual ities. Religious 'teaching, poetry, and narrative combine with the descriptions to give unceasing variety to the volume. 16m0., pp. 316, illus trated. $1.60. M. W. Dodd. MISCELLANEOUS. MESSRS. FIELDS, QsodoD & Co. have issued the Fourth volume of their popular Household Edition of Thackeray's novels :THE VIRGINI ANS. Substantial, compact, readable and cheap. $1.25 for 542 double column, 12mo. pages. Also the Vth volume, containing: HENRY ESMOND and LOVELL THE WIDOWER; for Sale ly Lippincott. MESSRS. HARPER & BROS, have issued ELE MENTS OF ASTRONOMY, by Prof. _V i llas Loomis, which is essentially the same as the author's Treatise on Astronomy, with the omission of the mathematical portions. Bvo , pp. 264, with Il lustrations and Index. VASSAR COLLEGE. The Trustees of this in stitution have issued an unusually elegant 4to. volume, designed to illustrate the life and career of Matthew Vassar, the founder, and to give some idea of the exterior of the Institution, its grounds, bandits, 40. It is the work, of B. J. Lossing, whose skill in this line is famous. It is richly illustrated with wood engravings of the finest workmanship; and is a worthy literary monument of the great and truly beneficent en terprise which it commemorates. The College will be found advertised in our columns. PAMPHLETS AND PERIODICALS. HARPER'S MONTHLY for July opens with a fully illustrated article of a startling but instruc tive character, on early aeronautics. The Elgin Watch Company furnishes the material for an other, fully illustrated. Mr. Wallace's Malay Archipelago is drawn upon for a third.' Grant on the Battlefield, Notes for Travellers in Europe, with the usually wide variety, follow. GOD'S THOUGHTS FIT. BREAD FOR CHILDREN, is the title of Dr. Bushnell's Sermon be;ore the Connecticut S. S. Teachers' Convention, March ' 2, 1869 • published by request of. the Conven tion, by Nichols & Noyes. Boston. The REPUBLIC of LIBERIA.. An address de. livered by Hon. Jos. J. Roberts, President of Liberia College, and First President of the Re public, at the Fifty-Second Anniversary Meeting of the A.merioan Colonization Society, held in Washington, January 19, 1869. A Pastoral Letter from the PRESBYTERY OF HUDSON to the churches and congregations un der its care; adopted at Chester, N. Y., Jan. 27, 1857. THE POSTURE DT PRAYER., or, God to be Worshipped with the Body as well as with the Mind. By the Rev. Isaac Todd. Philadelphia Presbyterian Board. Is IT RIGHT TO BE Rice By Lewis Tappan. N. Y.: A. D. F. Randolph. REVEALED THINGS. A sermon preached by upointment.before the Synod of New York and New Jersey, at Newark, N. J., Oct. 21, 11368. By the Rev. Samuel T. Spear, D. D., Pastor of the South Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn. Text : Dent. 29 « 29. —A. vote has lately been taken in a part of the kingdom of Bavaria on the question whether`the sectarian schools shall be changed ,into unsecta rian public schools. An interesting:Vote is re ported from the town of Neustadt. The large Protestant population cast a unanitnous vote in favor of unseetarian schools. The Roman °Atli olics voted *I for, to 1 `,(the parishpritat) against. The Jewish vote was nnaWirnouslyin favor. The result created initnAnse' THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1869. Ititatarg ofmo. —According to Chambers' Journal, Messrs. Blackwood, the publishers, paid George Eliot (Mrs. Lewes) $12,000 for " Silas Marner," $20,- 000 for " The Mill on the Floss," and $35,000 for "Romola." —A London paper contains the following ad vertisement : "To the possessors of Dean Al ford's revised version of the New Testament. You are requested to supply an unfortunate omission in the printing, by inserting at 2 Cor. xii. 18, after of you ?' the words 'walked we not in the same spirit ?' Deanery, Cauterbury, May 24, 1869." —The Congregationalist in its literary de partment gives the following account of a recent book of Rev. Prof. Finney of Oberlin AGAINST FREEMASONRY. , "In a semi-hiographical introduction to the work, Prof: 'Finney further states that, when twenty-one years of age, while at school-in Con necticut, he joined a Freemasons' Lodge and took three degrees. When he returned to the State of New York to study law,, he united with the Lodge at Adams; where he resided; and soon became its Secretary:. -This Lodge ; was composed largely of irreligious men, some ,being very pro fane, and some very intemperate, with whom he would never have associated if they, had not been Freemasons, and an avowed Deist. was ; its Mas ter. He became thoroughly , familiar with the oaths, lectures and teachings of the three de grees which he had taken, and, was "a, bright mason." Just it this time he became converted. to God. A short, time after, he went into the Lodge, and, on request, opened and, closed it with prayer;; but soon found that he had been con verted from Freemasonry - to Christ, and that he, could no - longer • have any fellowship with any of the proceedings of the Lodge; its oaths, especial ly, seeming to him to be monstrously profane and barbarous. On further and full reflection, he found that his new life so instinctively and irresistibly recoiled from any further; fellowship with the order, that the only course whiclF hg could take, in conscience, was to request his dis r charge—which was reluctautly i , granted. F years, however, he.remained silent in. regard 'to, masonry, not supposing his' masonic paths to , le null and void. When the,Norgan• revelations of the institution were made, he found them to ac cord precisely with his, own recollectien ' ,so, far, as the first three degrees' whichtlhe• had:taken were concerned, and it seemed, to. him that he could not, as the ...thinewas published, l nnd. no longer a ,seoret, be under an obligation to keep it a secret,in , the only ! way in, ;,was which„it ;s ,then practicable, by a perpetual lie, which should at-, firm that 'these were not true revelations, when he knew them to be such. On further reflection, he came to the conclusion that. he had been grossly deceived and imposek,upon;, that the, oaths were in themselves void ; that the, institu • tion was not what he had been led to suppose it to be, but, on the other hand, highly dangerous to the State, and in every way injurious to.the church of Christ. From this basis of practical acquain tance, he starts out, to discuss ,the claims, the principles, and the tendencies, of Freemasonry, "He first gives an account of , the renunciation of masonry by William- Morgan, and the publi cation of a pamphlet 'by< him •hi 1826.; of ;his alleged murder by, theiFreemasonsthereafter— as a necessary consequence of their masonic oaths; and of the excitement' that followed, leading to the renunciation of _Freemasonry by, thousands of ' members, the suspension of hun dreds of lodges, the• holding of f conventions, and the publication of books which— r on the authori ty of hundreds of the most competent and re spectable witnesses—gave revelations, thought to be authentic, of the secrets of , some forty-eight, degrees of the order. He refers also to the fact that, at this: time of anti-masonic excitement, the public 'press was so universally under. the control of Masons, that there was scarcelya jour nal in the land, in which the death, of Morgan and the circumstances therewith connected could be published ; while so largely : were, the courts. juries and officers of public justice generally, under the same control, that nothing could be done, and the murder of Morgan never could,be proved, and brought home to its perpetrators : : two or three of whom, however, on, their death beds confessed their share in the crime—and among them the mail, Renry, L. Valance, who pushed him out of the boat into, the Niagara River, where he was drowned., Mr. Finney thinks the same game in the matter, of the press would be played over again now, and• complains that Freemasons so tamper. with.the mails in his region, that he has never, received - but two num bers of the new anti-masonic: journal, Th 4 Cy nosure, although they are r,3gularly sent to, him from the office of publication." , . Bind PREACHING TO OHILDREN, By Horace .Bnabinall; D. D. Is it not our privilege and d'uty, as preachers of Christ, to do more preaching to children? I think of nothing in my own ministry with so much regret, and so little respect, as I do of my omissions here. We get occupied with great and high subjects that require a handling too heavy and deep for children, and become so fboled in . our estimate of what we do, that we call it coming down when, we undertake the preaching to children; whereas it is coming up rather, out of the subterranean hells, darlinesses, intricacies, dungeon-life profutidities of old, grown-up sin, to speak to the bright day-light creatures of trust and sweet affinities and easy conviction. And to speak to theee fitly, so as not'te thrust in Jesus on 'them as by'force, but have hini win hie own dear way, by his childhood, waiting for his cross, ten. derry, purely, and withotit art—oh how fine, tow very precious, the soul equipment it will require of us ! I think I see it now clearly : vie do not preach well' to adults, because we . do not preach, or learn how to preach, to children. Jesus did not forget to boa, child; but if' he had been a child with tts we should probably haie missed the ii?„-ht of him. God's world contains grown dp pebple 'and children'together our world con tains giown-uppeople only. And;preachingenly to - these; who are scarcely more than- half the'to tal number, it is much as if we were to set our ministry to a preaching only to bachelors. W e dry up in this manner, and our thought wizens in a certain pomp of pretence that is hollow and not gospel. The very certain fact is, that our schools of theology will never make qualified preachers till they discover the existence of chil dren. Let every young man who is going to preach put himself to it, first of all, in that after noon service. we just now spoke of, there to begin a ministry wise enough and rich enough in gos pel meaning, to take the heart of children. Some of us, I know, will say that they have, alas I too much thinking to do for this other exer cise. It puts them to the strain and shapes their habit, and how can they unstring their bow ? Yes, brethren, we have all much thinking to do; but if we are up among God's thoughts, it will riot strain us to think them, and scarcely more to have ascended• the level where they are. Up through all created .being and Scripture .knowl• edge, we -shall be climbing,, out of all .darkness and obscurity, mounting _fast and far toward the light; we shall go "sfeaditY over the rough hill's of obstruction ; we shall ascend the highest peaks to watch- for the day; and when we see the east begin to, belstreaked with gray, the gray chang ing into purple, and the , purple into gold, shall it-not be much, that, if -we have our children with us, tlay , will see God's light as clearly and be as glad in Was - W'ri?-4eimon, before the COnnecti cut'S. .5. Teachers Convention . . •' WOMEN'S RIGHTS. ASSERTED IN TURKEY. The question, of education in Turkey has at tracted much attention for many months, with as. yet no results.. The:CoUncil of State, elaborated' a law, 'but it was too sweeping. It went beyondi the pOssibilityt of execution. One most decided, step of progress is that Turkish female education, has begun to be discussed in, the Turkish newspa-, pers by Turks themselves. This abhopel . gubject has never beed introduced' before into 'a Moslem newspat•er.' It began in-this wise : A -Turkish Bey_ writes from , London, to a Turkish newspaper, in this capital some rather, severe strictures, upon. Turkish , ladies of the better class, comparing them unfavorably with English' ladies of the corps pending class.- A TUrkiih lady replies to him in , the next number admitting the truth, .but laying the responsibility and the disgrace entirely upon the Turkish gentlemen. You are, our masters, she retorts; you send your daughters to school with the boys until they are seven or eight years old. They learn little. but' rudeness. If a few learn to had , , and • write, which,;strange to say, they do, it is often forgotten in the secluded ; harem life, which follows. Comparatively, few have,Rriyate teachers to, carry forward _their edu *ion. , Others who do are subjects of envy, and often of rididule. No* instead of accusing us of utter vanity and frivglity, give US a .reasonable education. Give : us female schools, under com petent female teachers— Give.us books. Allow us access to the Turkish libraries connected with almost ,every mosque of the city, and,if we make no-good use of what now, seems to precious to us, then accuse us, and we will take the blame to ourselves. The lady has decidedly the best of the argument.. Some attempts at female schools have been made by the Turks within the past fifteen _yea,rs,,but the time had ,not come. kis; however surely corning, and, this, discusion will help it forward.—N. Y. Triby,ne., IRISH ; GENESAL ASSEMBLY; The Endowment question., was presented.un Thiirsday, the 4th day of Meeting. " It gave. : an account Of negotiations with the government, and was referred to Comaiittee of Conference., The reports - on Magee. College; Derry, a Jewish Mis, sion, on Intermediate Education were presented and adopted, add the depirtation of the English Presbyterian. Church;was heard,Auring the re mainder of the:morning arid evening sessions:. On ,, Friday, the sth day,!the Endowment pies don was again introduced , ,--by a - Resolution to, the effect that the Committee already appointed. should secure justice to the Presbyterian Church,, and :in' case' of .any proposal' inconsistent with the testimonymf the Church against the endow;' meat of) error, this should be strenuously opposed.l After 'mid' discussion thts was mnanimously adapted, and Rev; Dr. ,Watts 'beirig called upon by the Moderatbr offered thanksgiving for the.re sult: Reports.on, the Church, Manse, School fund andJDebt.' Extinction schemes were prnsented in; thn evening—when the deputies: .oi the Free! Churnh ofScotland were also. heard. On Satur-, day the Rev. 'Mr. Orr of Antrim was elected Se cond Clerk in place of late Rev: Mayne Reid: On Monday the death' ofthe son of Dr. Camp-. bell.of Uniontown, Pa., a delegate from the O. S Presbyterian Assemblyin this country, was an nounced. He had died at the.Royah Hotel, the preceding day, cheered by a blessed-hope of hea wen. r 'A:resolution of .condolenee was passed and a Colutpittee appointed to unite iii the funeral ser-, vices at Cookstown. 7 =Ell The'report on the iustentatiOnTiiiiii was adopt.: ed, after some animated discussion in the course of which Prof. Rod&ers declared :that no wore hybrid voluntaries should , be trained in Belfas Presbyterian College. 'The'amount received during the year was about £2.300. lii the 'evening interesting 'reports were pre sented in regard to the Rbuian 'Catholic Mission, and the Connaught Schoo)s, in the' discussion of which Prof. Rogers gave notice' of his intention to overture the Assembly,- next year, to re ; :open friendly communications with the Established Chuich of Scotland. It was stated in ' the re marks which this occasioned that the Established Church of Scotland,. sent its contributions for Irish •Missions through 'tlie Episcopal Church, and that the United Presbyterian Church also operated'throUgh another channel. The Church Extension and Sabbath Obser vance reports were presented and adopted; and the deputation from Canada was heard. ' ' On Tuesday morning the Assembly Hall Com mittee reported, and a resolution was adopted in regard to the late Dr. Cooke. In the evening, the Foreign Mission report was adopted: It re viewed the progress of the work at various sta tions in India and referred to • the establiehment ,of a new station at New Chwang, China. The summary`of receipts for' various schemes 'is s'fol Colonial and Continental Missions, £1,949 Church Extension, 2.211 Roman Catholic Missions, 2,203 Sustentation Fund, 2,147 Foreign Missions, 5,079 Jewish Missions, 2,258 From all sources, 21,886 An increase of 4,087 In 1868 there were 330 blanks; this year only 141. There is a balance in favor of each fund, except the Foreign Mission Fund, where there is a deficit of £lBO. Wednesday was spent in ineer/nuitur , the principal subject being the harmonium used by Enniskillen congregation, which was referred to a Commission to report' to the next Assembly; Di. Knox, the chairman (meeting to be held 3d Tuesday, in August.) On Thursday an address to the Lord Lieuten ants with‘the usual complimentary platitudes, was adopted, and a Petition adopted, opposing the ,proposed-law to legalize the marriage of a de6eased'wife'a sister. The Board of Missions was directed to appoint a Missionary to Spain. A resolution was adopted recommending the ap pointment ;of deacons in every congregation. Measures, were proposed to reach the outlying masses, and the Assembly adjeurned with a do sing address by the Moderator, and by singing and prayer: • 811,55tintarts ttfino. —The Kazzel bash Koords are again making appeals, for teachers. —TNio Mohaturnedaits at Marsovan, men of mature age have professedly received the truth, and are contemplating a public profession of their faith in Christ by baptism, although for a Mo hammedan to confess Christ is no light thing. Duff, is 'a recent missionary address, plead for th'e Tanis and ißernabases, the ,leading men of the ministry, as just as truly re quired' now for 'the missionary work, as at An tioch. He would extend the call to all'ranks and classes. "-Peers of the realm can go to India to Ipint tigers., and why cannot they go to save the souls of men ?" =The missionary societies of the Protestant countries of 'Europe and America, with a popu lation .of ,about 100,000,000, last year had,an in come of about $6,000,000 ;,while the Society for the PrOpagaiion,of the Faith the great miSsion ary organizatiOn of the 195,000,000 Roman Catholics, received only $1,000,000. —The Baptist: Missionary Union .which began with the abandonment by Jud son, of the Ameri can Board, - now sustains 101 American' and 423 native laborers, with 414 churches, to 'which 1,529 , have been added in the year. Including the converts in Burnish , who have, outgrown the. need, of immediate, missionary supervision, they . have,2o,l93 ehurch members. —ln the district of Shanghai, $lB,OOO are ex , , o.endedisin three annual. festivals, to appease the souls_ of the ,dead. Taking this, as an average for the ,1,5,20 dist,4 9 o the , empire, it would giye 'an annual expenditure of $29,160,000 for this,Purpose. It! is estimated that $31,75'2 are annnally-expended for the Foo gods. Reckon ing -$150. as the amount spent annually in each family;; for •the: worship of its ancest ors, and the aggregate fur, the 8q,Q00,000 families would be 8120,1300,000. —..4Tupg Chow,, North China, there have been ten or a dozen hopeful conversions within a few weeks; two who had been baptized, have given sad evidence of"the imperfections of their Christian charaoters. One of the hopeful cases was the; subject of the most severe and protracted stru.cde,witnessed bythe missionary in China. 31r.'Biodgei writes that, while no additions have Veen ''Made for Months in Peking, companies of 'Bible readers are forming among the natives in the surrounding'towns. —At Sivas, 400 miles S. E. of Constantinople since the week of prayer, a ,degree of progress has been enjoyed which would have been in credible a short time ago. 'two weekly prayer meetings, attended by twenty. to thirty, have taken the place of one, larely attended by more than three; aud, ;instead of looking to the mis sionaries for increased support, the native preach er has 'volunt'drily yielded a tenth of his salary,' and is urgitg , on, his people the duty of sustain ing him. Sivas is a centre 'of. influence upon surrounding ; villages. • —Mr: Doane Writes of the women of POnape, ';(Micronesia,)' "'They outnumber the' men .as chureh members`; , they Outnumber theni - as , at , teudants on our schools; they axe by fir our best scholars;,, they are the most teachable: And,were it right, I should jump astride the hobby of rn i'Woan's rights' arid put up some of our good sisters—the Marys, and Ruche's, and others—as spiritual guides, to the people.. They, are such now, somewhat, in, a silent way, but I am almost inclined to give them the office of a bishop,' or soinething akin to it." —Rev. H. C. Riley, a missionary of the Ameri can., and Foreign Christian Union, the first Pro testant clergyman ever, sent to, labor permanently in. Mexico, writes : " There is a perfect hurricane of Protestant feeling raging against the Roman 'Chureh'. I feel much as if•l had sudden& found myself in the time of the Reformation. The great thing for us to do is to plant Christian churches and. institutions, here as rapidly as pos sible:6 .. " The' intliienee'Of the evangelical thought- and liberal 'ideas of the - United States, has been gradually leavenhig this 'country with an intense desire for something like American civilization to ; take the place of the idolatry, fa, natieistn,'immorality, tyranny, avarice, pride, false teaching of the Acqpish priesthood." . . --In Japan, one of the Damps or great barons, whose name is kept secret, has for his prime minister a baptized Christian convert, and so far from regarding this as a crime, the Daimio has listened' to the arguments of the minister upon the need of Japat for"Phristiatiity, has read his Chineserßible'.and religious books, and has sent him to bring the missionary into his own do minions. The minister went upon the errand and took with him his own son and a physician of his country to be baptized, they having come to the knowledge of Christ and faith in Him, through reading the same Scriptures and the in fluence of the converted prime minister. Thus, in one of the provinces hitherto inaccessible to missionaries or other foreigners, there are now four men of high positions, who have become the humble followers of Christ. —Opposition to the missionaries among the Armenians in Erzroom, 150 miles S. of the Black Sea, and in Kars, near the Russian frontier, has resulted most favorably to the missionaries, the authorities in one case apologizing profusely for the interference of the opposers. At Ordo, on the Black Sea, the scene of a great uprising in 1867, active preparations are going on, mostly at the cost of the natives, for the establishment of a mission. Near Bitlis, iu the same mission, in one new village, more than a hundred come to gether to hear the truth. A writer from Erzroom to an Armenian paper in Constantinople says, that the Protestants have purchased several large houses in the city, and are soon to organize a g seminary ;' that they are enticing the children of the Armenians into their schools; that their preachers are increasing in numbers, and are go ing forth into all the, neighboring region, estab lishing schools and preaching the gospel; that they visit the villages on hunting expeditions ; and that it is more than probable the writer will, in his next letter, have to report the entire suc cess of these movements. , . s &el 4 as. 4 IMPORTERS, 4s 3r4Z4f acturers dzia 62 ` 1e 1.6" - C a !-- A)3l)riss .--. , 1 , 1 . OIL CLOTHS ' 11 , White and Red Oheck . 7</ - A, ' W u rINGISt rtis meson we offer a large, varied and well selected Stool ' at reduced prices. No. 43 Strawberry Street, ' . First Street west of Second, PEDILAWILPHIEL Hats, Caps , FURNISHING GOODS. W. C. DARE Would respectfully inform his friends and the public generally that he has removed to his new and commodious Store. No. 35 South 2nd Street, between Market and'atesliaut Sts., where he is pre pared to supply hls customers with all the latest and moat desira ble styles of • . HATS AND CAPS at reduced, prices. Also,Gents' FURNISHING GOODS, Ladle Furs; Buffalo' Robes,Truriks, Valls* Carpet Bags, &c. Wholesale and retail. N. B.—Particular attention paid to Friends' Hats. W. C. DARE, • 35 S: 2nd. St., bet. Market & Chestnut. AYE R'S HAIR VIGOR, For Restoring Gray Hair to its natural Vitality and Color. A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. Aided or gray hair is soon restored Wits otiginel color with the gloss and fresh ness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, fall ing hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can rest he hair where the follicles are de stroyed, or the glands atrophied and de yed. But such as remain can be saved for neemeness by this application. Instead of toiling the hair with a pasty sediment it will keep it clean and - vigorous. Its occasional use will prevent the hair from taming gray or fat ing off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious enbstancea which make some preparations dangerous and injurious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a If AIR D.RWS.S.ING, nothing else can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts long on the hair; giving it a rich glossy lustre and a-grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. J. C. AYER Br, CO., PRACTICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTS, • LOWELL, MASS. PRICE, MOD. mar4-121n.eow , Ayer's Sarsaparilla, FOR PURIFYING THE BLOOD. The reputation this excellent medi ie enjoys, is derived from it. cures, any of which are truly marvellous. veterate cases of Scrofulous disease, ere the sy-tem seemed saturated Ith corruption, have been purified and wed by it. Scrofulous affections and writers, which were aggravated by le scrofulous contamination until they we painfully afflicting, have been 'loftily cured In such great numbers almost every section of the country, that the public scarcer need to be in --- formed of its virtues or rises. Scrofulous poison is one of the most destructive enemies of our race. Often, this unseen and unfelt tenant of the organism under mines the constitution, and Invites the:attack of enfeeb ing or fa tal diseases, without exciting a suspicion of its pros nee. Again, it seems to breed infection throughout the body, and then on moms favorable occasion rmildly develop into one or other of its hideous forms, either on the surface or among the vitals. In the latter tubercles may be suddenly deposited in the lungs or heart, or tu mors formed in the liver, or it 'shows its presence by eruptions on the skin, or foul ulcerations on mine part if the body. Hence the occasional nee of a bottle of this Sarsaparilla is advisa ble 'even when no active symptoms of disease appear. Persons afflicted with the following complaints generally And immediate relief, and at length, cure, by the use of this MARS A PA RIL LA : St. Anthony's Fire, Rose or Erysipelas, Totter, Snit Rheum, Heald Head. Ringworm, Sore Eyes, Sore Ears, and other eruptions or vial Is arms of Scrofulous disease. Also in the more counseled farrna as ,Dyspepsia, Dropsy, Heart Disease, Fits, Epi.ep. Sy. Neuralgia. Minute Directioas for each case are found in our Almanac, sop plied,gratis. Rheumatism and Gout, when rascal by ac cumulations of exiraneonsmatters in the blood, yield quickly to it, as also Liver ;Complaints, 'tCongestion Congestio or Innaiinistaitioni of the Liver, and Jaundice, when arising, as they oftendlo, from the rankling poisons iu the blood.. This SARSAPARILLA is a great restorer for the streng , h and vigor of ,the system. Those who are Languid ami List less, Despondent, Sleepless, end troubled with Nor- VonS Appr. henslons or Fears, or any of the erec tions symptomatic of Weakness. will find immediate relief end convincing evidence of its restorative power upon trial. PREPARED BY . Dr., 3. C. AYER & Co., Lowell, Mass., Pr.aelteal and, Analytical Chemists. Sold by ail drugyists.and dealers inmedicine everywhere, of who ak by 1. IL'Haris , . andCb., ; marl—tui.euvr
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