TE.skts OF Tus auNERS'I7OI/171AL. ' , fonts. SVltklarTlON:Ttt .' • ) rinfAlti per attnutn, piyable , In ;4 * ;try If not 0141M:tin six moutho—nak .rithlo the ye.y.. 23 (M: ' . ' •.1 to one luttreeni(la .mkreeee,) , - ra , oo .4re ' r' im - , o do -• . i`•do ,• • • 'lO 00 o'ol ‘ . l' . ~,,, " - di. -'... ••• 20 00 I"t,n, do ... ' out , .0„,011.Ine meet be invariably pal 4 lo .rd ranee. and add. to roe Addrer!. . 0:: . „ . ~ .• . . ,600.01L3t3 Al3O OltteFi il ibe furnished to tlarriars nd others T ite.lorr a 0.. st . .di en deliver 1 el i ; per IN 4 " 14 -'' ' -;7s:.'eatt Youther Y ;aUpplit. with the . C,r€Ce'rJPr'l 3 I J .p.aalual.f3,l,l 5...ria1V.C., ~ '; 117° LOT Of 7t3r3PAPr.33., . C order tbn dtwottl i RIM Wet o f b fiir . new ,, if r ".. o. l t e lw , rt p ta i ;r wi. ,..,. o . l y continue to send hem unlit 1:171'. - r trot are red. : , . • fi,,-;:,,,,,,ir0..et or refuse fn take th .Ir neweex. 000ata. so eot , h they are dirnot th. - peea from t , ~u , ,„ aye At. .. , , r are t f ~...ros.s• • ea": " ; .1 1 . tied the bills and I,PY e a ro.a.oetnea - I tares without informing .r. , r ~, f,,,,,,e, to oth e r p I ),I,,fgldi;he.,land .t he .newspapers areneut. the Wrraor. direico. tbi are held roPottaltde. rt,,arrgii, decided.:that retutdnu to ho new* pa . : r ow the illice.. or ntosovlng, grid leavin thentuu: L'i r , jaw, It ;alma facia evid.tnee of intantioral fraud. . . .... -. . . . • - , . . • . , . - RATES, OF ADVERT'S* C;, • one sioare 0 1iner....41 cents for otte iit ation—sub ,asent itt`crii"s , 25 cents each. 3 lines i one • lime. 25 . „,,,—sut,sequelit insertion', 13 Celtt.tch. All 'ad. i lu r ti.ce uni over 3 lines, fur bhort periodsi charged as's ~i3are. ?r..r.1... .0:1111. TWO. ?HILL. • 611. TWIELVIL 'Sow Ilitis,• i G 3 85 - SI 25 ' $225 1,3 00 if..ur Hues, , 80 125 175 2is 400 IFi r , tines, ,1 00 150 2 00; 00 500 B.is lines„ 125 ' 2 25. 2GO 400 .6 00 .7„.reo lines, 125 '2 25 •2 70 450 • '7 , 00 I",i2ht lines, 125 223 • 2 8500 BOO !iine lines, 125 . 225 .. 3 00, •' 640 ' 900 ALL OVER 71VC EARLS ROUSTED ANA SQUARE Or TAX LW tine square, 125 ' 225 360 600 'lO 00 Ts' squares, 225 400 .5 MI 000 14 00 211i'reesquares, 350 5 .00 750 •12 00 15 00 r our iquares, 450 600 800 • 1: 00 -20 00 (Ostler col., 600 900 .. 12 00 1 00 30 00 '.. * * * Larger spate for short perrods, as per agreement. : Sirnosiners Notices, At each—accomp used wll6 an advertisement, 59 cents each. i'- AdvertiNments before Marrisges and D ths. 10 renl4 p.-rilitoror Omit inreritonsubsequent in rams,Sceitts per line. Nine words are counted aim lineln advertising. NieVehants and other!. advertising by the •yoar„ with /hinges, and a standing advertisement twit exceeding 15 Burs. will be charged, Including subscript on, $7OOO Eparg to the anmuut of four squares, with chow. . ~ '-'• c.s mntl subscription,. .: 00 Without changes, at th rates deslznated•sbore. . Advertisements set in larger type than! usual n 111 be rhargo.loo per rent. advance, on these prices. All cut's will i.- charged the same as letter press. . No Trade adVertisements received from Advertising A gen t s.abrottd2 exer,pt at 25 per cent. ad Vs nee on theta viers, unless by special agreement with !the publisher. 3la rriages 25 cents each. Deaths necoinPanleti slat no-' tires, 'l.l cents: without notice., ito charget, ea s : All notices, except those of a religious character and •foredurat Iona! porposes, : will be charged ',Scents for any number of tines tinder 10. ,Over 10 lines,{ cents pectin° altitional. . , ' I Proceedings of Meetings not of a general or publk character, charted at 4 cents per line 13r each Inserting! To 'facilitate calculations we will state that 3)8 lines In Ike a column-164 lines a half column and 62 linet.a quarter column. Zl2 *cords notice a column -1176 a hilf .damn—And 738 a quarter column. All xl,l lines over etch square, charged at the rate of 4 cents per lini, for one thou, and 8 cents per line for three ti nes. • 'e ally advertisers must routine their dvertidng to i l , itt-ir own business. i.tt,Ce. A....are not Inctudedin bEIPItIeNA nilrertitemetlts. IRON WOlt. EAGLE IRON WORTS. Tamaqua, Sill tiylkill lepiruty, Pa. II EN It V 1 1 AI.TI. IS t l epp.,l rully In. t'lnes the attention of tti taninesa com -771;,:— litunity. and isPecialiv•xl. the propele rr •'"• tors of Cord litirs. Rollin.* Brist and at IIP = • - • ", ' e.,. - . eatr MII Nand Ihe Managers of Railroads,' o• la- Irma Works, at Tamaqua, 14.111.1 one of the olde • lt practical.Mac i llinisla in the r.onty ot • Sclittylkill. and hasing . always made it his 1...! I,•tese businet.s au4 daily duty to PI udy the different .tries prevented by dille,ent Merhanlce. to facilitate th- tiniatlng, Breaking and Sltioping of Conl in the An . , -It C. Coat Regions - of Pennsylvania, be consequently 1 e• , .r. httuself that he is as will to construct se l t,nish with accuracy. Steam linginel of any power, l'uqir , of any rapidly, Call Itreakera o ertry deerrite ti n. 1111.1 !In; kind. of tie:wing for itollin...tlefst and Saw Ni.;-, nod M.. I:Ailrond Cm. - 411J,...5, asau;l:dher Foundry and Miteltine tih-p Gratin the Authrdcit Qua 'legions of I%,,ilgyiralitill. llcsarWatvras would also call the attention - ill . Coat op,rators to hts newly Improved' Coat Itreaker, now In t”. 11);-? Coal Mines of Messrs.thairge tViggan & Son, And )1e 4, 1,. Shoemaker & Medlar, Tam:Mut. Tile , rte' te 12 inches: In diameter. omit Ininc,77 teeth. 3 :tad hslf inches apart. • The athlitfon or Improvement from the old plan Is in the luse4m 41 . a Comb. underneath "Is folios. go as to prevent the Coll; from running; lareugh the rollers until It is brollen into., an uniform' rr.e.a at lst tu Inches square. It akesl the best kind; f Slovo Coal, and makes, also, less dirt than any othi:rl C ;al Breaker now in use. . "V ; ; _ l'oelos de<lroua of pot tiny; upellreakir of the landl a, Invited to rietill op i Itch. °taloa, tt hieh will be petrupt• I ettoodeA to, .4.), dere on' e r r, y ki:oli thankfully re crived. ' ZW-Tiß3tp, ItE.tiONAUL. - Iti .Tamaqua, Janutfry 2,4'49 ': • • 2-ly - - • • -• .TAMAQUA IRON WORKS: Carter at Allen, ; Iron Founders, 3lnchinirix. Wire Iltelliniste Tool, ...Voters owl enrlhtilderi. • - , The ou6eribets are now prepared tol reeeiro urdisra for all kinOs of Stationarl lingiH. and 7hlr - ''' for rollierleP, '•., "" "*" linghies and machluerY f"; blast furnaces, mills. kM :Exten.ive fa. dillies and practical 'experience In the' basin. Warril [IL th 1211.11 41 taking the largest contracts et the lowest prices. Particular attention is cilled to Ivens k :New; Patent Winding Machinery, by which the Slopes or ~hett runupr chatns,run ou,the toil of both drutns in thuble ex) s. This at ra ngement, It is contldeptly believed, will savei in U. wen- and tear Of ropes or chains., the price of The 11 ollincryin Ilv,.years; and for fast winding, rimpltcit y et' c ostru,•tiun quit durability, It cannot la. surpassed! .1..0 1'et.i.111111.111.1.111e new car wheel. invented by Mr. Lain 11. Sllen: This wheel can only be had at our and Into stood the test uf tlo. FI. c•tral severe win= r. It est, triumphantly; not a single wheel having been sin...ells introduction, e are' now Oaring it oar thee.i,rs manful' the,priucipai Mnilroad Compa. , in the ronntiv. , . tf, would akue . all the attention of the , public to th Tro.olui C.rr :..hop,connertmrtrith the ahere works sod ly er,vtedfor the manufacture of Itailmad.l.lryt{ Fr. izlit Cars and.Truttks, and furnished with ail Mete. cut nruveiroolt.. s 9 that they are lhus enabled to ex. ~cat,, work much cheaper and with more despatcla than beret.;lere.. • All w,,rk uuirantoort. gerxrnoi wanting anything in our !Jou troulA %101 l to OIL LA • i CARTER & April ' 1 - • 17- .. FOUNDRY tSt. MACHHIE SHOP, Port. Carbon, StAinylkl Co u .Pahi • , , ) T. /..N TERSTE EN nnnounc ogii, e'S hi mtliness, front the convict eou tilt '''''' **** of theabove na nn medestablisiebt.tosup ' pl y all orders in his line of Inv.iness-' 'ltch as for Stearn Engines. ltailioad and, Drit t Cat s, vamp:, Coal Itreakers.Cast ings and .Mar.hint4; ry of every pattern. lie warrants his Writ kto give sat's ri tt fqn, and 4&ordingly solicits patronage at home and abroad. Jan. '27.1857 4-Iy. FOUNDRY AND V IVIACHINE SHOP, • Sienna Car netery. &e. pre NMI Cl . i i llh4 i l inli rg i t i lLln c t o e i nr i : 1 . .L.,,, a y al , ( o 'f efj..1 : ,1: 1:1 1111. subscriber 111'01 Its various f t'''. ti- :; :,,;, ~n „ braurbes 6! Steam Engine . building. Iron i.arw.o. Founder. manufacturer of alrkinds of tla , hioerv. for !telling Mills; Blast Furnaces. llmllrend 7 11., ,tr..k.c.. lie will also continue the buAiness'of 3111 f :a.z and Selling tloi celebrated Pine Purest 11109 AA mid L.,' is 'lnd ..t:pd,n rrials'lled.A A C.olx.lof•lng. sole proprie . t , ~f. these Collieries GE011(11: W. Valli:ll.i January 21. 151.7 ' 3-t f. I PALO ALTO ROLLING MILL. TILE uliseriliere Img vu to 1111. 1.„„ nounre to their friends and the puhne, t." .zenerally Abel their new Rolling Mill it t r i='" Palo Alto is now routprete. a nil in full r 7=7Z Iperatlon. and that they are prepared it', .IhllSll r roue. of various pattern?. weight filan io per yard. Alsoolitierent sizes of llat,squar'e and tn,rehants' bar iron. kkhwsf r rails or liar Shun are rOapactfully'solleited; wilt. me:A with prompt attention if left either riC Ino VtAlin4 Mill, Bright .t Lereit's hardware Store. Cent r.. •treet, or at their elder. N. IL- Comer cf Centre, an 1 11 , ,,t g; 2d story. 11 AT WOOD. ICE At. , r.,. COAL OPERATORS & MINERS: ,1 - lancer. holler ilk °rho..., ! I !i.•• I'll 4 ruhsclite7 respectfully invite the Mention of 'the business I . omu niulty 1 his holler IS or It:ahead st reet.hell t.' the l'ast.etk,er Depot. Pettaallle,ta.ilh .:hel P he Is )w.p.tre,l to manufaeture EARS OF EV.V.ItY DESCI:11"flON. ~ smelts, Air Starks. Riad Pipe's, Gasometers:Orli: .E......t.c. 11311ers-on hand., ' ''‘ i I .1 e ! prArt teal nieellanle and haring for yearsdevotdl 'lf etnl,l3 . to title hr: nelti,of tha Imoiness. ho flail him.elf that. work dope at his estabildiment Will - s I , i. 4 e•ti.m in dill who Away fnvne lulu avllll a en 11,41 lit i la da 110 companle; , will find it greatly totheir adi et ~:.• i...,..tinine his work Leforeengningelsewiterel N ,v • 71. '57 41 . 4 f . 1 JOHN T. NOBI r IIr. 1 1 13 AVER MEADOW IRON r r-t-i„fit 1, rirnis ~ I . 116,,.; I, iel 1111 1a t ho to P now sort; •.' - ' ereps iefor or the teaser Meadow Iron - 1 .r. 11411% Inapt Werliv, and la roily prepAred to ..... .." omilufacture, at It& ' estaldishmer,, t 2 yn F. 14111,A of a.ery pl , lO I Lumps; Rail road and Drif - iii. vet every mho• description uf Iron and Brut I 0,111 ,:s %nit ibk rot lite Coal mint nr, oi7 other le.inesr; * nu Ili' n‘.."t r , ' tmennid.term.. Alto, Blowing Cylinder" ',,r 111341 Furoaees and vfarhlntl work ingenetal. • I :'E: It..p.tlrin..: of all kind. done with neatnessand despele t the lowest prices. All work - furnished by then, will oot,i to p.rfornv ut4l. They would Follett theenstohl ni ;, 'me who tear want articles in their lint. in thiseleini orders I ders will meet with humediate *led promptatt ti ill., • ... . •" , . I , 'Delive l r '..feadows. JanUary 1. 'Lk • _ • . 1 ASHLAND IRON WORKS:. ~.--1 lii TILE r.••UiIIiIIERIIS are nois full! 1 Pa. . :r ' ' ) l :ill% i t t u o au lu t rE'tit'gli=a":.ed AP't,l:ll-7.ls",!tirtat v.i. - NN ;,,V. ~ mnr .-4. " . -er and capacity. for mining el,4„th q k '',.....t.i . „= '} o c ti7pustes. Coal !break,. rs of every sire an t s sera now 1.1 use. together with ''easlings and f. etssin rit ;cry .I.ssrriptione. Coal and Drift Csts•of all sits ~ 'll ott 0i .,,, , 141 . 4; Truck and Home C:tro,.;-Allfurithhe t the sh trtest notice. The subscriberr• tint ter them 1 dyas t h l t., itms much as every member of the firm tea I •ts tie it tim-lmniei they will be aide to fllrftipti m i d 4 1 ~f that will compare favorably with any in the Reit ~t .• All orders directed to L. I..G . AENEF di Ilsota., .Ar.b 1:t, Aell nylkil I county, Pa . , r ill receive prompt atter, , tt, • . 1., t'. OR:A;A Et:. Id INIA EL GA RICEII, ! .' • 10$1.3•11 GARNER. ' 'Ashland, .an 10,,"47. ~: ' ' t • / 9 -- —.., = . 1 •' DEHAVEN'S IRON WORKS, • p r • ffillisersihllle. • 1 .i Li i, izitww THE itiubseriber is prepared to mop. " 14 ra l'u c n t u i p7 - ot r ati 4 Il eaggk \ n 'l n 4 d Z f oa a l n .gr l ;;: . ~,,•, e 1 " t m ,„•-- or every description il asa' urn As eve y other kind of mar:binary 11F4,41 in Mlu ,„ ~,e oro.,ors, Rolling Mills, ills, Saar.lliilP. ar. . i Froa the facilities pt.stoistiod for manufacterlng• a d en Mat: experience In tho business, Work can bet urn 4 't at thisesashll.htnent.aelite eery lowest pricies t ' 4 - . It. superior qu.slity. ~ ,l'er.mn, 'estrous of putting up machineryoftioyitio 41 'invited to call end examine patterns end become afi , o , ll'oll s'it It prim beforecont yarding elsewhere. , ' ~ :!, Or t ',of every dimd are solicited. and strict attentlatii iliti Oren to t helr prompt exi , exel Inn : ! WILLIAM DI:MAVEN., i: •Ileacrseilli,Docembeir 9,1997 1 ' 4B.tt r . _ •_,. _._ • WASHINGTCN IRON WORKS. HV ; Pottsville, Pa., ; , . it 110$. é JAS Witi::t rosperlitilly !intite. he attention of the business ertnnienlii 0 tierihNt•W Mirlllllo Phopsnd n r Folmar; reeled bet wren and j: hi I rota d street , ~.l td fronting on NorwaTiall st reef e vainstr .. are' I , .r.-. 1 t'? s'o'ralts• all orders for ntaohiorry i I ,tS in.l Irm, tielt is •ttnn fi ns.lin.s.all'itintis of Gear: : o , r it Atio;.: Ma ` tote k: Grkt sod , mifts,' Siuttle.and 5e , ,,.. ~,•1,,,,,, p,, , nes, tail Breakers. Drift 'Fars. ill klsiths ... ill r', id , :':usti it ;so , . neh as Chairs for nal and T Halt; •tii fa. tz•rilr's•t. ke.: allhinds of cast anystiOultht lint Fr?.. II .i.l i ro oils o 7 praet teal mechanics. add hoolito mit de f the CIA Itrzloq theleiqudy for rem:: , ttl!Lio Is tf tlt , tiltiory In their I toe of business. t h )., '''se....t.sna dyes that work dOste At theirestalsilshine II ili. l . l . :, t rs, t., lac:Ilion to all Who moy hawthorn wit al ;1 .. ll 1 •' , :t •he tired re Ignitable terror. ~ r', ,p:; % Wlt rN, i JAMES W . INN . . 47t t i ! l i, ' " 10<nMe•—• $2 30 if PUBLISH VOL. XXX MEDICINAL: . . 00; W. DDLESALE EPTING; • AND: RETA;I; 6it:commitert etzkla 31:113rsavalist. S. E. Corner Centre and Norwegian Stu., • isovrsviLLE. ird-.LEA k PERRIN'S Cslellsatod ssWo &&&&& ere ►hire Natice, ,, constantly on band. . lita i reh S t '59 . 10- • THE GREAT AMBASSADOR OP HEALTH I ' TU ALL MANKIND. .I.IOLLOWAY'S PILLS. ii' . * . it Boon to the Sick! liTh" want or a sterling Medicinal to meet the Ills and 'wet...R.lllPN of the suffering portion of bumanity.and one entirely freeform mineral and other deleterious par. fiche , . was severely felt till this. all powerful medicine was ushered into the world; lIOLLoWAV'S EVVALOALLI ['ILLS have become the ,tudentIOLD,UMMEOV of all nations. Their attribute is to PREVENT al,, well as to cuss ; they at tlik the,e AMX or Rem' of the complaint. And thus by ye. ' eitwin g the hidden cause of disease reinvigorate and re style the drooping energba of the system. assisting na. tore In her took of VITAL and TTNCTIONLIIT alroeurrtorr. 'I; , Dyspepsia. ,I The great scourge of Ibis continent, yields quickly to , lc fenrse of ' tnese antiseptic Pills, and the 'digest ire or.' glies are teetered to their proper lone; no matter In what hideous shape this hy.tra of disease exhibits itself, this 'searrhlog and unerring remedy disperses it from tine patient's system. i , I : General Debility and Weakness, Slim whatever ea use. LOW NESS OFRI.IBIIII , and all ot h er A 144% of a diseased liver. and other disorgantrat ion of the eyetem, vanish uuder OIL eradicating influence of this all powerful antiseptic and detergent remedy.:; ' • 1 i. i • 'Bilious Disorders. !The proper quantum and right condition of Hittite is' ofinoutentous importance to the health of the ' human !tame, this APITI•DILIOCS medicin e expels the bidder. seeds op (he complaint, and rendersall the fluids and secretions pure and. fluent, * cleansing . and resuscitating the total fictions of the body. • . • - • i Sickly Females • ' . ;Should lose he titer In trying a few doses of this rept. Ming and renovating remedy, whatever may be their ebinplaint; It can be tagep with safety. In all periodical' Ad other disorganizations,and its effect (Sall -but fel. .nteelone. • 1 1 . 17nrefuted Proof. , 1 I.7tift testimony of Nation , I. noon imonsly borne to the' ' health giving virtues ,of his noble remmly, and certiti-1 cites in every living language beer witness to The imiw. titzutexest,of their,INTDISIC sutra. , ~ YatOleftYl Pi)fs are the brat rented y Lunen in fie ' I'll ' ,sushi for thefollusciroj diac,isa4 ; i 1.1111.11 ma. ' , Dropsy, Inward Weakness, .RtoVel Com plalnts,Debitity, '•• Liver Com pla bite, 'otertis, • ' Sever and Ague, Lowness of Spiting, , Female Complaints Piles. - nide. • Chest Pise'asea, lleadaehes„ , • Stolle. and Gravel, r'teetivertess, , I ndigestien, Secondary Symp. rlalsltda, Int:moan*. MUM rrloe.t„ ' Inflammation. , Venereal Affectiotti, i.!l ._, - - Worms of all kinds, ,I*.A.;ntst lon !—None are treunitre unless the words , , Ibrdlato,v, New reek unit Lorsthat,"'are discernable as ;Voice Nark in everyleaf ef the book' of directions tmund each pet or lox : the same may be plainly seen ,y holing( the Mt/ to the light. 'A handsome reward will to given to any one rendering such Information as may sad to thradetection orally party or parties counterfeit / IM: the Medicines 'or vending the came, knowing them ito.be spurious. • M 1 1, , . , ,,,* S Id at the Mktufactoties of, Professor HOLLOWAY, Mlt Maiden Lane. New York, and by all respectable Drug. , htielsand Dealers - in "Medirine throughout Gm United '4llntee and rhe civilized world, In boxes at 2.5 cents, t 3 &MR, and el'each. . I 'fir•Thereils considerable saving by taking the larger . Sizes. 'N. li.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every dlimrtlei are affixed to each box. 1.. June 5 '5B ' L---- , A 1 1 30 Y to, the, Adizar`• ers 'of 1 -, ,s FINE HEAD OF 0..), itirin . irri g.11 1 1r17 - DA 2 7)) aIiWZ • .‘1111)i)4) ii Ilnitille 1 i • . • ALK of beauty, it cannot exist with . , ' out a fine head of hair, then read the following. p if you ask more.'see circular around each bottle, Mt uo one CRP doubt. roressor Wood'. hair Etestorative... We call the attention of all. old end young, to this wonderful pre ration,Wittch turns back to its original E) pf. lot. gray hal corers the heed of the bald with a lux. hirlant growth , r emoves the dandruff, Itching , and all tidaneous erua iontattses a continual flow of the nat. und fluids,• an hence. if used , as it regular dressing for , he halt will p ,eserve its color, and keep it from filling Itte,extretee ofd age, In ail its:natural beauty. We call Vann upon thej bald, the gra'y, cie,'diseased' in scalp, to llnse it; and au ely the young will not, as they Veins the bowinglocks, the vritchingcuri. ever be w ithouff It,— kilts prais • is up u the, tongue of thousands. 1 - I l 1 The Agent fqr Professor Wood's Hair !lean - n*lllre in , New Haven. received the fdlowing letters In regard to thellestomtive, a few week!. since. :. DEEP BITER, CONN., July VI, 1856. 1 I ,Me.LtsvrtrWearn—Sit:—l have been troubled With.' dandruff or scron my head fir morb than a year, my hair Levan to me out. Feud and hair together. I saw 1 in a dew, Haters paper aleint ;Wood's Hair Restorative'; ns a cure. 1 called at yob r stem on the tfirst of April I last. and purchased one bottle to try it, and' I found to 1 Inv satisfaction It was the thing: it motored the scurf and to hair beget' to grow ;It Is now two or three in. ches in length tchrrra tea) all 011 . : I have great faith • In it. I wish you' to send me two bottles more by Mr. Pest, the bearerof thie. I don't know As anyof the kind. is used in 'hit place; you may have a market for many! ' bottles after!t le kuown here. ' ' Yours, ith respect, ' It litiFilS PRATT. ' ' • .' . PRILADEEPIitA, Sept. 9,1856. • Tani , : Worte l -Dear Sir; Tour flair Restorative is prov ing itself beneficial to me. •Thofront, and also the back part of my tied almost lost Its coveting—ln fart lIALTI. I bare used Mi t t two half pint betties of your Reetora tive, and now , be lop of my bead is well studdielwlth a promising crc4 of young hair, and the front is also re eelving its nefit. el have tried other preparations uithout arty bereft Whatever. I think from my own perennal recommendation, I can Induce madyothers to try It. Yours:, respectfully, D. R. THOM AS, le " .. N0.46t, 'flue reel. • . YMCA:INES, lA, Juno '22.1851 PROF. 0. J. AVOOD: As you aro abut to maga:More and rend your recently diseorered Hair teestorttive. I will state, thr whomsoever it may concern, that 1 here used It and known others to tide it—that I have. for , ) , ereral grant icon 1n the habit of using other Hair Re storatlres. and that 1 find your curtly 'superior to any .. other t,know. It entirely cleanses the - head ot dandruff. ' ',and with one month's propel use. will restore any per il son's hair to' i lto original youthful color and texture, i gtv . lug it a be It hy. soft and glossy appearance; and all 1; •this, - withoutiscoloring the hands that apply it, or the i t ;dress on whir it drops. I would. therefore, recommend its use . to oce y one destructs of having a fine color ana texture to hair. . ' Respectfully yours, '• I'' WILSON KING. , 0. J. WOOD k CO.. Proprieton..3l2 .Itroadway, New lrent.(lll the gre4 N.Y. Wire Railing. Establishinent,) and 114 31ar lik sfit.. Si. Louis; 510. And sold by *good Druggists. .. , April 2.711 . ' ' ,' ' 11-3°l COGGSWELL'S NEW MEDICAL BALT For Inflammatory DI Only. Se* 3ledical Salt! New Medical Salt ' IT 10 NOT A CURE-ALL! .7.o—For Inilanintatory Diseases Only. COGGSWELL'S NEW AlED ,iekr: instead of bring a remedy fir all Ills, has control °ter' but one ill, bee but one alm.-and ae complishem but one wit: sooners gm.Alown. sr - ma/Aar.. wbaterer Le its form or locality. whether in the head,: tliinat, abdomen, extremities or skin. • XTEWIMIA)ICAI, SALT.—fts'oecu _La liar excellence Is; t hat .wlt hoot the u.eless loss of Shod and ( ttrength, It effectual ly curee Irtfluoimatnry (n !et hera,) by erbducing nu equilibrium of all the 11,11dA id j the body, the, want of which is . the sole' rAusr. of lollanunal lon. ! VOT.I,CE INVALIDSI!—The' j 1 11 , 0 9 1i:fo g ttirmi lyhteti uninflanied fluids as. and many not hens mentioned, that Lave more or less fever or, pain, aro an easily subdued by the NEW MEDICAL SALT. as fire is extinguished by water, to wit : nrain Fever, Headache, itmht of Blond to the Head and Ilearl, *ifs, Inflamed eyes, ears, nose, longs and liver. Neuralgia, Spinal affections, Erysipelas, Bronchi. Pleurisy, Astbuta;aughs, Dyspepsia, Venereal Die eat.es, lilieuranthni, flout, Scrofula, and all! ltchlog and other cutaneous eruptions., D i n. COGGSWELL'&-NEW. MED ICAL ...11UFICAL . Al! exerts, like the earelnemater t an ex t rautdinarj, nil enee over thevelus and arteries,:result• lu••yn agr ualaltelluo of iraflatnnial 100 as indlasted by the , pulse, bleb' pone reautura its natunl stale, as the heat pain a id refer disappear. • • . ....___ _.' THE BALTIMORE AMERICA] -1. r Beets' over the recent great 1) 11- () d ( TRAVFaIari'S NEWIIEaI -e— -trtilt, ono or two very Satisfae ICA SALT does Just what it claims to do-no i - . . rn ;,, th e A i more, no I se-equalizes the fluids by removing Anna 1, inevitable.. (h e t..r., - Abe system all. arterLd and venous obetructione.• Da..l d ..± !rillined to magnify pursuit %script:re Ci cedars may he eht.iined, front any Druggist. . at who has this valuate medicine ter 'AM. t andAtieond, that the way to In , _ to Dr. oggswelrs Antiphlogistin Salt. beitvity,chAbotn. . Lookin g Acorn l'ACI T tok., $1; Ciraotoe do., t.: :,17 ;itraamr do . inaLing ,Mall things : groat • &At bY'srdit, free of expense, oli retei),tnr price VP that yeti , !Hi rb• h • 1 • Invalids _Eh chronlC or long standiug di - , eh . ould . -- - - --"" ' e° - id" I t ings At.ivrtiord r• chronic package. • , ; ~ in ills immediate future. In 1 For test ii 'minis end directions see cirrular. • ' D. C. TAT Its co. Cen.dgenti, 202 Dock Ag. Phil .da. 1 front - th..1 11. .d 4.1 e . ' - 174r P ir's -"Jun ' N. IL-A eels wanted In every City.Tulrli and Village. will contain a regular. "lentil 1 1 ., . , • • frllt. ,OGGSW ELL'S NEW MED. c ijr ICA SALT Is . for tole in Pottsville, by C. W Se rino; in 111 ersellM, by H. W. Pat -Total-in Nen l'hitm driphia, by .W. Doosms: In Port Carbon, by H. Bins& try.: in, St. pl.l r , at Suttees; In Middleport, by J. 11: Pdirrta; In Fascanni, by Itracum k stnr, and brall . re•* l spectablu Drur.gists wherever the "Jounzest." is recd. i AA It 14 ndt it patent medicine, but the pnaseription ofl i an eudnent physician, nu Dna shotild fall -to try the SEtrSiEDICAL lIALT. February 6,'Y9 FLOUR 'AND FEEDe•neinoTal• - • rrliE undersigned having renioved;liis Flora hod reed Store friin Centre to' Norwegian orreet, near the tot uer Third stmeLetbere be. . 111 eoeittn oe to keep regatantly on hantrand' for sale,. trtt• pt riot Fatuity littooF, i , f vertoluebrandio Ilya Mop, f.korn pill...Brea and other teed; Ilay and *taw, bithe Bate: which will he sold et the lowest: market primer, And -re. a*tfolty t cliche the patronage of Lie , fanner enatorn tilt, and the'pobile generally. • -X. L. LOOS. rottstillei,Ao IC-".1 1 , 1 . • 1 • i , • -, .. ~...,..... ~- ~.. „.:,. _„ .. :-- ,-.,, , ,-- , t 1,.:,- . . A.::-:;.---'-' ,re;l.---....- -.:: - •. - A*7'...: . .,' r* . --;,•.;.',.t--,•; • , ; T' ; ,':,',:"'.,,•, • '- 2 ,:•: f .'-, 7 .:, : -.2.:,„::•:- ?? s:,:.;,,.,., f ,:':', : :„-i T .;'',,:'. ; ,:. • '..,,'..'•,'5,,.:y.7: .. ,ii " .., , i' .. * .. -..0r ---...- . . .. ....• . . . ~ wit' -- . - - ... • • ... . - ...- — . 7, -, ~,,l. ,', ~. ... i ..- t -0 ; ,..„.....:::::•;••/--i-:_.:1-.:•.6.:::-- , .,...-.-,,_••....,•-•.-, , - , 1 , :-:.•?..- 5.-,....,...:,.,.:,-._,..., : -.J ~,:..:;.,.':.,-... .. __ ~. . m . ...,..„.... , .......•__:_....„..._A.......•=5.*„:4,...,•,,...........,.,.,..::,.‘:_•_.--__.2:y.. _.=.,_, ~.. _. .......,, ..,....,.. ,_,... -_,..,„ •_ •• ..-...-, . ........,......._,..„ „::_........„4,.„. •:....„.....:.•,,,; .1. ..„......4.. .... . i .•,,, ..: ~„ _..„ .......• ;,.., .„,_. ~....... ........„..,...,.:„:. ~., _ . ~ : .• _. • •.2•. .. ~,..• ..... -,. .._:......:1...- - . -- 1 ...4.,.,..•....,,..::::.. , ..„,..,..:....:.„..„.:....,...,..:......„.,.1......,......._.,.•,,:__.:-.. .41 •...:.4.„.:..1.! , :2'....: _ . . . .. _ . . . . \ 4.4„ ; „. 0 • • D i,.. 3 .*: ,: r il• -... . .. . ~ -- -'''"----- 4 : h:* 4-..„0.,ii -:. _ , . ' r ,- - - - E ., AND :POTTS' . •• . -ILL •••,..- --.....:...:.-.....-..,, :-.. • • NERAL.A.O. • • •IS pi. ,•:. - 1 -: ; ._ ~.,:::• !:.,,...-.. 114.- ''' GE - L - ► VERT 'IT ,-,:.:•:-L_._:,;...;,.:•.. -. .„ . -_ -- r 2)- - ..... i ..,:...,....._,. ''-..f. -,./,.., • ".:-.;.,..- ~- - - : -.: ' ir -- ' ---:' :'.- 'i - ' ' ' '' -: . . . - -- - ,,•:- - I'. -. _... . . -., -- WIWILL 11 4 4CFAIE41 TO PI RC& THE BOWELS OP TUE &MITE, AND BEING OUT 4 FROWTOE EATEENEOF HOUNTADTE, lIIETiI3 WIIICH WILL CITIIrIESETIITeIpiI,ais os In suius7 .11.1, NA.TII ,EHTO H HE IHIE ,IIH . . 71.E1, SHElLt — Droiolllllilo l , 11,,, i ..,,,, . , . g . ill,* ~ i t • - ED EVERT•SATURDAY...MORNING,' BY BENJAMIN. BANNAN,: . POTTSVILLE.,..' CHUYLKILL COUN :.y - , - .. PENNS- - ': • . . _ . . . : - •IL, . . .. ,• , ..,_ . , . . • , ' SATURDAY' MORNING MAY 7, '1859: , - .1 -.-. -, -_: . • ••; ... • .-, • .; • , ~...„,_ , I. • , . ... • ........--,-, .me omtrEure C OßPO ', e i sus ; Ash in ,er Cr i • I POI CY. Iles. In iss rot "A of lb . r l:sto . it r . E .eT f e . r r. eb ..- . A-- a ti _______ • it, , ~ f .. . ?POI b 0 a. At. i lug 0 .. , energyi I distill:al` is add to s tracter little of Am rican sinks. We are genentlij ed with a 'err larg stock of selt-reltance, and are . uttered for eni rickti rig the principle tif weary 111311.1 FF his Awn way in,t e ri t 3 world.. We question whetht hare not Veen mis preseuted in this respect. Its to us that we are . ther too 'fond of a gregarlotts r.j We lean t o hine, Or chartered compote n many cases, - wh e the desired end would be met .ty attained by Individual energy and competition, ring other heti develo ed by the trials of '47, it Was red that man- i ofitOt oriel aseociat lons were far less de than estab lishments managed by oue or two to si parties who lad 'their ail embarked in Cite knit ..... enterprise.- 1 .iThe mobster corporations of New En and were found. t) have been conducted upon piinclples not at all In har moey with our notions of economy a d. prudent fore sight. They suffused severely on accou tof the inherent weakness of their plan of operation, Sr Ife smaller con ;semis, which bad been held under a a te ngent control by individual owners, were less vitally i jured, and recu perated with tetireeese and rapidity w en tasks began to brighten. The existence of these g at corporations Is continually threatening to singleni nofacturera. At the j occurrence of a slight pressure, t income Itliell IN! log; from poor management, always. In want of money, -.are compelled to throw their goods u Mthe market, at prides which would, prove rotation to Individuals. In fact, the necessity ofeonmeting with t • coeporatiens at low. rates has ruined a number of et r manufacturers, who, with.the prevalence "of fair pr s, would have weathered the ordinary troubles of trade. , The individ ual system ought to be more generally adopted. its ad vantages over the cornerate policy .i re 11111011 S, but . chiefly an econondeal management of bovines.; a closer attention to detail, a superior quality of work, and, in the loug run, prices as cheap as can be. made consistent with profit. When, responsibility is teo much subdivi ded, and the' consequences of dismitroua operations 'shared by too many owners of stock. Matters are attend 'ed to on-the well known doctrine, ‘-‘lTat Is erfiryborlfs business, Is neltody's business." The ticreteeof a mom featuring luridness depends, first, u a sufficiency of capital; secondly, upon the fact of h ove who have charge of the basins-la befog direct Inters-Medi. and lastly, upon the condition of the mar et. The corpora tions have tbe necessiry copital,but th trust too much • to the hands of salaried employees, an are thus victim ized by wasteful extravagance and in rior goods. The above is from the •Philad , dot List, and meets our vieers ex been satisfied for a number of y • eras unwise policy to build-up lard fur manufacturing purposes—aril deMonstrated during the lost eras England where this poli l and held taßas worthy, of imitatio • . a reaction has taken place and i-• byihe reflecting Portionof the bur • It. is the Incurproated Compa daining and selling:coal, and tha dabbling in stocky, thus Making . • that — are ruining the coal trade and imporeibliing 'the .Individui furnnish inure than twothirds of :It hi time for our Legislature to business, atiit is beginning serio 'toter este of pur Commonwealth. PARAQUAT.—A copy of the ..treaty 1 Id...spatetted by the English, mall Meatado. I do. but it is anticipated by the At ti Mae, which brooch f'Lleut. Renshaw as bearer of despatches; and who ha itreaty. Lieut. Renshaw proceeded a ten. I , . The letters brought by the Hartle I length the festivitlea. which folio I with President, Lopez. and give eta 1 Urqulza and his hospitality,at his c Jose. At this entertainment Were p er Boutin and the officers of the Ful -Witch, the "other 'vesfels having p ricer, by order pf the Commodore. dinner was on Iliondak, the:ffith of r • having, gone frod Cottceprion to San • The dinner was every way a grand!, In its poniVatad splendor. A corres of I:Nola:it. “Ueueral thquiza is now.st3 years ticulars of his story consult Captain Plata. 1114 profile is much that of lots the same dark, metetrie ,eye, though less massive, does nqt lesson His estancia at San Jose embraces • lie has 30,000 head of cat tie, 60.000 It .. sheep. and Z/0:000 MI xed'breeds. "Ile sold lase-year 66,000 bides of Let the gentlemen of the ‘svrainti_r as for his clip of wool, I could (min interested in every useful and prod the ( . ...7nifederatioli ' and mentioned to of Rosario alone he had $ . 460.000 eng nerships. tiolo hint with I scheme test of analysis, and hula your maul the industrious and the aspiring. at hand to Bare the honest and nufort was a company who ran a line of the Confederation, which ramillekt such atiTuenmanand Salta. The 'What 'will carry,:tou tli.oughr I I hundred thousand dollars.l 'Cant so and got the money. . .. 23-Iyenw *'At t his, tow a of Concepcion ther . founded by hint., It occupies the 1. ,201 P feet s ware, and educated bud, are taught, lodglid and fed gratis. Its support a email school fund—G. plies the remaintllcr. Th s Profess° gnsduates and their ph Gospel' Ica, a library, ke., are the fruits of his co able bouritv. Ile gave 4 luln lately for au hospital—one was Wilt 111 , - . While we wore there he was told th 'Double it,' said he. 'and draw un m The bluff old soldier in as free wit his good offices. It is no wonder th, Impression uponlbe susceptl. le A erect at his table, by his lavish • and his warm-hearted hospitality. TUE NEW YORK Tntausts is el re itsues a grand total - of 211; publishers pay' $44,000 per Curreipundents and. Reporters ; fur labor in the departuient o $16,000 in that of 31;itiiing,.ai boo fui Telegralihing, employ 1 • e ighty personibesides carrier., They have used, during the pounds of Ink, costing over 112 ring that period, employed 2,3 and 11 barrels of the'liest%rati I the manufacture of tie Rollers is applied. The Steam Power }machinery used in the rapid I ntsues have'coat them over .S 7 I 'aboat $10.,000 per annum furl •Ptesses, owing to that:latent , f f reduce to a defaced and inetip Minns ... may be considered ant i ential and profitable papers pi fact is duilto its. fearless at all its phases; Its abhorrence ving sycophancy, and the et played in its columns. Altbb accept the opinions of the 1 1 pacts tbe,paper fur its evident la fact which cannot be said of tad, or papers of kindred char deserves the poSition it ,ocet fairly and honorably won by on ,the parfof Messrs. Greet°, THE SZA CArtAtN AND DReACRER. i f-Tbe nee. Mr. mina,- who recently left the United Sta l es ,to join the Metho. 1 mil t dist Misadon ;in India, tams writes from "Off the Isle of Wight," to the editor of the Nor western Advocate: . “Our Aldo; the Earl of Ilardnic e. Is of nine hundred and fifty tone burden, tvicanty-two years old. and affords m rate accommodations for Pa tigers; though from her "Le, you. will Judge her .. dest lute of many modern impr vacant& We have an °ape fenced captain, of the Rapti t denomination. Teeter . y.=-Sebbath—be eon. ducte rellgous service , morning and evening. In the morn mr, passengers and crew e wded Into the ruddy i of th chip—a menu nay 1:i by '2l end exikinn*ti Num.. bent x. 20-31. In theerenlng he exhorted ()ad ealah ill. 'lOll. It gave ea a beginning, an this weekiThir. Pink ney—a . Wesleyan Misalonary--o elates at iliatabsin.— Mr. P. Is a man of fine spirit alto t lents, hat spent some 1 ., fifteen years in the South er I in, and we espect to profit much from his godly felion hipantirmineele. We have on board two other Weide an mitudomaries. one min.:led. and 'one single . We h ie. also, a . young.lady , 1 acing to marry a Minion:try In I dia. There's love and .hernisan fur you! A young lady hat will leave home and Mende, and brave a -veyeg ,to India to marry a mbeflonary. must have a love that many waters cannot 'quench_ and bless the We; shr deserves *husband, and ta geed One. . ..We hare. also. a minister-who represent* the breth ren thattiook for the second personal advent of Christ.— Ile is-to take partfn leading thealevottons of the ship, and we expect to be enlightianed en . the doctrine of the pre-millennium reign of Christ op the earth. - The hrs. then Is all primed for controvorayi but we Me happy to my, be tails sympathizers." '.) and tom (tetra to time tbe. g Yu/It will record the exploits plops Owl mighty "toototurp'? .the Republic. Aid a happy reopi ? we, Ainerioaas Riltot I ....Iv M . An instance of almost: unpi u l • estedoass is saluted try Atr. W, Oar. or ...rot nun/awl a Ye ago a gentleman ,to Itngtem.l worth . 10,000- —wio indigo:lu 1 aniotity shll4l,ke !oirrylni. 11 Ino qitstrolscl wi th her, ditluti tile Isbrls . propertypr tits Alt tleulSo. - lits a ttOrnoy iviitt!to ..,theist to ego their ctsinos OVII I pikl tbs s iihOls .£lO,OOO to thi tr. ATI Iva lit /Ix the operiiitg'of the East Pennsylvania 'Rail road. the - instance from Row - York City Watt Schuylkill Coal Region by rail is as tollova, • • Riles. N. York to Easton iio. N. J. Central R. IL, 75 Easton to Ailentown vial Lehigh Wel 11 . ..' 'll,. 16 Allentown in Reading via. Bust Peonn.R.4 34 .Reading to Pottsville via. Rending R. 114 , • 38 ' Total t - • • 161 'A difference of 27 Miles in favor of.this over that via. Ilhiladelphis. The pr,ijeited-.Att -burn and Allentown mate however, would tie More favorablu fur Coal traffie between the' two points.' than the route -via. Reading. That road 'should be eonstructed. It is the moat direct route from New York to the West.- Iloxou and fortune, were lately Ateitowed by the British government upon William Armstrong, the lucky inventor of a rine cortege, in which it is proved there is nothing new, and nothintrf Pr#: tient utility. It turns out that the reward 'of twenty thuusatid pounds tiras bestowed on him,' as well as the knighthood, before his kuo . 64 been tried. The . experiments made with guns of a two inch bore promised well, but in application to genial large calibre, the principle it is supposed, ah-dly fa!: ..L , A Cos/tees Daimons= liorrama.—The Duylestowti Stomierti bolds tbet nu member of the Democratic party bee a rightto exercise his own judgmectin !nerd to public matters. Ile must."fu la. blind'? akb thh party, right or wrong, or be excommunicated. A - pretty position fur an intelligetit freeman! Tu be i goad Dell:10MA he must endorse wbet Lie judgment. condemns Pennsylvania we think, is tired of swallowing such stuff.;' . . !Iphia 4'CUMMet• ctly. ike have 'ars pas; that, it e 'incorporations I this Was fully 1. Even in New y was nurtured, in other States, BY a legislative act, the pay of the supervisors of this coi:ay has been increased to -$1.25 Per day: This was rendered neecuary in conseqtence of the strict provisions of the trt,tegolating town: ship otheeks, which prevents what was fOrmerly politely te'ated' perquisites. If that - sem is not stamientOt Could- bo louvered to $1 50 . far day The fornut remuneration was certainly, not so cleat; . . • now condemned . 1 nets community flea engaged in eatrrun about profit on coal, Pennsylvania, 1 Opera Corr, who - 7 a IF we ithould believe the Detneeratic - press, there is no need of . opposition the designs of their ,party—no neccesity for, arresting the flood I , • of extravagance. Their ery that "all is well" Ise fetal deeePtiun. !low truV it has been said that "the onrylreason for not 'attempting a reforth of the state Of things is that the interest of corrtip. tilos requires them to remain as they are." the whole trade. Ingo`ire into this sly to affect ttie ith Parajtaay was , er from Montevi al of the Harriet ^ of the Bainbridge. alma ropv,of the i once to 'lireettiug , le Lane deeerlbe at Tame is detirmined rallying oboist tho old bonnets, (Of Democracy) which can be felt through out the State, Harrisburg tiniest. - Where, pray? Nut: here, we can assiare the Union. The Union appears to be a=political 111- carrher—hoping in its trouble, fur something to "turn tip,r an‘l at last realizing what does not ex ist. Happy, buoyant Utii?o. the Settlement NArate aerounts' of entry seat of San assn t Commission . in and the Water eded dawn the The grand state brawl, the party opt, theday before. r, almost barbarle 1 ,. deu t. speaks thus 1. Jag largestSteatn 11:numer in the world has recently Moen completed by the celebrated machi nists, Messrs: Morrison & Co., of Newcastle, Eng land. Vie -total height is twenty•one •teetond the widthlbctween the frames fourteen feet, six inches. The hammer bar is a mass of solid steel weighing i scran tons in the fiuisheti state, and will have a stroke o: six feet. . I Id. For the par- Pagep, book on the Ir. Webater. lie • nd the forehead, the riormblence.— •0 Nuara 80,000 uldriuo to &in prodnie.— kon .tbelr value; n rslimate., Ile Is able enterprise In .ethatln the town Loutstista is following suit. *The Democracy are preparing fur their State Convention in May, and as a preliminary step, they repudiate the Sli dell, or tichuinistration wing of the Democratic party in Louisiana. Poor Buchanan kills party . will shortly consist of himself and "court jester" —Brigadier General Oeorce IV. Bowtney—alone. • gad In 'pedal pert thst will bear the Ile ;thee a lift to d rearbei out his 4 nate. Thus there tneriran : stages in i ' ifs remo!est towns. Axle caught them. Not /WS than one I Morrow."rhey did IT is now quito evident that theChareh party of .514mieo It on - its last legs and mast soon disap pear. gesito cannot even comme i tee a career of prosperity' until that part y is co pletely over. throsin. All Sieziee's degradation l ean be traced direCtly to the arrogance and aggrandising policy ef• the Boman Catholic hierarehi. IX a State College .ur side* of a Welk ear 463 boys,. who he State devotes- to neral Urqulza sup. are all Europran • arable. laboratory, taut and inexhaus n addhinnaloquare for a dozen beds:— t It•traa too small. his inonei,aa with t he made a grew: • erlenne. whn gath i splay of generoFlty A.cOuitutoceNT of the Chicago Press nut Tri , bugle, thinks that the ssooobilliart.l match it Del trait was a more &alga . to raisn the wind, and fleece th i s, uninitiated.' Ile does not believe that Seerleter; is out of pocket ,$5000; or any other sum. In any phase the recent game was certain. ly a pocketing arrangement. • -41•11 • Tug IlaltitnoFeExchauge, t Democratic papci, makes the admission that. "if . the Demo cratic prirty has not now the vigor and vitality which.charactcrised it some years back, it i f loo• causo its resources have been too frequently and freely drawn upon for the 'maintenance of bad men and reckless menmres." ghteen ye s ans oid. 00 copies.- • The year to Editors, -62,000 per year ePrintirig; nearly rage about. $13,- one hundred and Tue New York 'comm': of Coniiiteree, with an oracular l dignity that Jack Bonsbyi himself . never attained, says "if parties would al ays select their best mein for candidates, we should have much better legislatures and much better laws than we now. halve." prtnan, ace., 4te.—.— Ipast year, 00,049 000, and have" du. i 0 pounds of Glue ~ 1 Pune Syrup in whcrehy that ink Presses and other • eduction of their 1 • 000, and they pay ype,.. which those [ he editions, rapidly mad. The of the 'nest into. blishod. And the nee of Freedom in 'of base, 'time-For- Rorie! ability ilia• ), gh, a Inert tany , not rsiial, yet be res. t`eitnderand truth ; the New York ger. 1 p . eter. The Tribune lee. It bat been .ears (if severe tull EDITOR'S TA - 13LE. TITAV. LS Alin DISCO - CRISS to CTIN wAL APRICA. HENRYBY, Mint, Ph. D., D. C. L.. , Fello of the . Port Geographical clad As'aric Socirtfar. ete.„lPkiladelphia: 4. W. BRAD ZY, 48 Nok:th l'oth tiers. '• • ' ' ' ' . • 1,, -= Th e e travels dad disceveries ire l e wAtten from the journal of an' expedition undertaken under the anim i ces of 11.13. M.'s pee I mpact in } he nt years 1549-1855. This'volue also contains 'n tes and extracts from Mr. Itichardso 's aceountl i ef the expedition, arid a sketch of Den lamina CI p: porton s expedition. The work is c. 4 epiourly illus. histrad. The success of the cheap edition' of Dr., Livingston's Travels. in. South Africa; star gested the propriety of liming a similar edition of Dr. Ittrth's 'Travels in North CentratAfrica, as a suitable. companion and supplement% the formerlwork.- :The Eighth edition of Dr. Barik'sl travel si fills five octavo volumes, at a cost of about twentykfivo dollars: For the general reader the i Philadplphia edition is equally as valuirylp a a blat otlil 25. It gives almost : entirely in the Is own words all the really important and Itiog portion of his journal; nod *mats its hating details. It is really, an entertain ! . ad instructive book. The re Hier. of Dr. stiane's: travels will recollect that kai ni ts 'extended, chiefly, among pagan nations, Sunth Central Africa, to within eight de ath little equator. Dr. Barth's research. In so ded °ear a considerable portion of North lAfriers„ to within eight degrees north of i'titer, and his intercourte Iraa with Me dens and pagan.s 7 the former being the hunt power. With many points of\ sitni. !there are Very striking points of diference !two *oat!. Dr. Livingstone for - the 'most as. alone among man /sieges, Dr. Barth! IDwantons and attendants, and his inter. was chiefly with hfohainamians Bring. in lefties rind' possessed I certain isolletant el tg:tad civilisation. - • ., and hia associate's author' interet , unintei • I ing an searchi says that when it illiurd tilt iti.Det ry conclusions are orjcan peyple air" the most frivolous, rgnify thecu iu to bet this *sal process of ingt, .it is evident re in store foripi US thin two years 'nal of CiVilitatiore , I - le-theleg" column, t dailies is New f "push-Din" cham. pinbers throughout en extraordinary t.ddy be. " 4enta.iiiiinter rron, M.'P., tbo art ,:..:!' A short dins 14 largo tartaric , — witErlik driochter, Ifiethisr*lrb6.—. rill:Choi, itrol. left nay - sod other goo #ll, co.ligatomi, got Id, to him, And ,- then kozktor. :. - .. Centro Afritir t 'whictsilril rocbgnised ira of stook iiiptirtlineo to the futoii`itell-b!lng:oi!AfFlo,;:as welt Itte adviseensont' Of the stoild'o tio,rio, aid filo Interests of. uman r. two, *tail/weld be rod Le fitectssioa . 1 11 he the duty of the next Cungteu to prIO: the census of 1860, and by the applies'. a little of that wisdom, liberality, and 1 ; em which are s u pposed to dwell in the , we may git a !M i nable moue report. Sliariveippi river very much relmbler, in at at Icon, the Loctited) press. It is ed ti;cmit trim its mouth !fifteen million nide of dirt every year. ivingstono . was a Scold'. physician. and .ary who bad long resided in Africa p had knowledge` -of African languages and of Mat. ienee, and undertook his jourdey on his responsibility. ' Dr. Barth _ was a °crimp 1., a groat linguist and antiquatlin, who had k already/ in Africa; and: r waa attached to i ic. Tspeditlan , under the. Britith govern.l A d by Alr. ..Ricbardsoei .at the outset, but r.l.l,lebahlittn'a death, completed by Mtn. tiotb Livingstone and' Barth eshihiMil the ;it tratudienry conrageOierfirrevabee," pre*. ' mind,, and can t etapt , • of . danger and ofd Both wade additions to oar knowledge of iitligions. ' ANNUAL. "SERMON; - Preached at the Request and , in Behalf of the "mints= Sunday-Ilehool Union, April 6th, MIN by the Jtev. Charles Wadeworth, D. D. "Remember wow thy Creator ID the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, we the years draw nigh when thou 'eheltaay,l have no plenary tit them.; "While the sun, or the light, or the Mini, or . theststrs, be not,dirkened, nor tbeelouds return after the rale: . oln• the day ;When the keepers of the himse shall tremble. and the strong .men.shall bow themselves, sad the grinders cease because they.are few, and those that look one of the windows to darkened, ' • I . 4 dest the doors shall be shut In the street, when the . sound of the grinding is lair, and be shell rise up at the voice of tbe bird, and all the daughters of music shall be brought 10w.".--LEedesiastts all, 14. • • .The man who. now ur- hereafter, rises to sdvo eate the American Sunday School Union; must at the Outset humble hieiself ,atrt . Of all self-con ceit of originality, and, as a gleaner aftergteaner, saying things' which hive been already raid and perhaps better, only reiterate those familiar truths which his hearers will be sure to regard either au platitude or plagiarism.. ,On'enels 'occasion we bare no need of a text is involving g theme for elaborate exposition.— The occasion ; presents its own subject. It we. the wont of, the. Grist 'preacher to use as texts Ged's enweitteia oracles.. A bird, agiswer, - A city oda - bill, a fruitless fig • tree—these were subjecte of his'eareest discourse. And we would tonight imitate his example. The.Aiericap . Sunday School ,lldion is a great thought OF God fl ung before us for " consideration, And upon it, as unwritten revelation. -we would discourse simply and humbly. •.' The portion of Sacred Scripture I-have read is; therefere, nut fur elaborate exposition. but as an. inspired illustration of the grand principle which this association rests upon and 4 evelops. The .designof .t he inspired penman in ese terser, is, to set faith the wisdom' of early pieig: . . : Thisbe dues by tnetaphorioal representations of the disadvantages under' which religious culture must he bugun,in the later.perlods of tile. - The fi gure is taken tram the Ineteurology of the reasons in the land of Judea. There the weather In spring is in general Wight and fair.— seldem fouler cloudy. The day ia'genial with sunshine, the night lus trous - with'mann anti stars. But the winter is a season of wildlinclemeney : thick clouds obscure - the teavens, the rain pours Mayfly upon the cheerless and teething landscape; and though now and then there may be a mornert tory lull of- the , storm, a partial lifting of the shadows, a struggling nunburst,-a fitful dash of , stais, yet the promise disappaints u+: the clouds return again, the sterns rages.. And such ate the contrasts between youth and old age : the one is the spring -time, whin the husbandt an can work, the other, thmwinter,:when be must repose. And • the man who bath not re m embered is Creator in the days'of his youth finds that with tho buoyan cy, the bo?e, the anticipation of his young life, hare passed his advert tagel for religious culture, and that amid the gloom end despondency of age that eultute is like winter husbandry, when the sun is darkened and the earth swept by storms. ....The other figure is military: the language is' Oescriptive of a beleaguered fortress, - whose bra. , tint defenders hare been slain or are sadly weak• - ened by watching and hunger; _whose keepers - tremble; Whore menials; grinding corn for food, .cease In despair; whose walls are in ruins; whose ' doors and windows are kept- darkly closed, and the voices of music hushed through fearful despon dency; whose trembling watchmen are startled, as at a roman's tread, by the very voice of the wild bird that builds its nest in he crumbling ' hattlementroind which Only awai t s the final as. 'atilt to be carricd . by torm and Ten up to de. •struction. . ...4 . , The interpretat ion of the fignr is arparent.— • In youth the hearttwas us a strong . old nohly.gar. risonett; many a gentle and grace ul instinct was there, as on angel-guard against, evil, and the soul with comparative ease might have been sen tinelled for virtue. But, es the man grew in 'ears; passions rarengtheued within, and tempta tions preyed Aniely. without. And when age comet, the itott4rpil fortress is o scene of despon. dency and terror; its bulwarks have been beaten down ' - its resources are . e i simusted; its strong men bow themselves ; its 119pes of 'ultimate delis. *ranee have well nigh perished, and the soul seems about: to be given•up to the power of the destroy. ei.,A3otti figures teach the same truth : they sat Lath an earnest argument for religious culture; for the active toil f,of .. .the spiritual' husbandman when the sun shines, in the genial, spring.time; for the earnest watch'. and ward of the spiritual soldier before the walls of the fortress are but tered and the garrison slain under the fierce as sault of the besieging foist:deo. • Now, this Iciest the truth millets this Christian association rests upon and develops :—Tiss impor tanes of early religious ' • Let us consider it in souse simple practical as pects, as it has to do with 'rho individual; the Ratiou and the Church of Christ. First, with the Individual. The Sunday-school syiteat assumes and acts upon the truth gat the brat time fur. true :twill culture and for geutthie religious eionvertiou is the season pf early youth. That a principle lying confessedly at the founda- Hun of all physical and intellectual development, so that a man's life . takes its character and sam ple:ion from the training of childhood, should lie ne a ell ut the foundation of ,tha true religious culture.; and that children; instead of twee:warily rosing up in iniquity, marbe, and amid be, front the• first, trained up in. the nurture and admo nition of the Lord. Let us not be wis,understood here. We have surely no aympathy, with the n.stion that a child, however carefully trained, would, without the di vine word of regeneration, 'grow up to be taper. lmentalli a Christian. Education is, as th i eword itself denotes, not an Weston, but an education; not a quality imparted. not a grace addedibiet a preiesistesit principle brought. forth: eltelittllun• ed, developed. If, the name be depraiid and unholy, no education con chanig. it. As!thts in- natelerocity e. (he lion's whelp will surely dis play Well in the monster's Maturity, so:the na tive carnality or She • child's, heart 'will have its development in actual.infulness.. b • • Men may philosophise us they will upon the possibility ofedueating childien out uf all that is evil and into all that is good.. liaVertheless, the eonearrent testimony of all time proves thpt, spite of all mero moral culture s every child of the human race fins grown up a sinner. And this not beiause i 1 any educaVonal deficiencies, but for the Pimple sateen that the child is of a race ounatitutionally sinful.- Train a 'flung tiger as you would a lamb, amid, green fields -end sweet :natural Vales, led by illy end folded at night by the loving cam Of a shepherd, and yet, when its sinew' has waxed•_:strong;' if in year sport with that pettiger, bin fang' - break the skin of your finger and - one drop of your blood fall on his hot tongue, thee;with flashing eye and a wild roar, be wi ll upon yild in his stren g th and rend 'you in pieces. The lamb will gr it'sup.a lamb; the lion, a lion. 'The physiological,. nd psychological principles of.,apecies are, spite!of all modification : .by culture, positive and pormai3ent in their essen tial character. • ••• • , And train' up a 'child as you will—let angels rock its cradle ; and bear it in their hands, lest its `young feet stumble' , ..nerertheleis,.just because it bits a human -Fitt:ire, • the wimps, the soul; the of:the species, it will grow up to be a wow, and not to be ! on angel', end trill still need the miracle of regenerating. grace, if it .grua up a Christian. And yet this philosophic truth affects not the play Of the greed law we are considering. All sacred and profane, biographies ' all observation, . all experience, alike set forth t he fearfulness of the error that will leave childhood to grow, up in wickedness with the hop? and prayer that byand. .by divine grace will convert it k • Unquestionably, does tied desire the training of children from , their cradle in if of holiness; • nod as unquestionably there if a style of Chris. tiara euliure,l differing essentially Irian ' natural culture. termed ' , lke nurture ausiNdlestaitioss of She Lord," whicti l tactd himself bas instituted- and so promised to bless to the conversion of iti subjects. Be our theory ar human depravity, or of regime- Fallen what it may, there is bathing in , it which conflicts with this statement: If the Ghost worklannedistely or directly upon the spill, then that energy will more probably be exerted. before 'the conscience has -been seared' by iniquity and the heart hardened through thedeceitfulness, of All natural analogies lead ire to expect this ; and the .fine metaphors-of the text area divinb warren( fur deducing, from physical analogies, ' the principles cited's operations in the economy of grace. • Or if thelfoly Spirit operetts mediately or .tlirtough the instrumentality of truth, requiring, as condithinal to regeneration, that truth be re. ceired andAppritheuded, still the same termite= time remains; fur the truth whose cumpreliensien is necessary to saving faith," being among the simplest of all Moral truths, can be apprehended by the child as early as its educational life be gins. Thiel)* old enough tb understand oath. rat obligation, bee 'understaed as well spirituel obligations. • -If it tan 'grieve at a' father' dis pleasure, and quit to a mother's tore, and..tern from childish tittobetlienoe to seek parental for giveriese, then It A cies understand all OM phiuso. phy of-religion intolved in repentance; and duty, and faith. ;` : - - , Indeed, we ge,further Shin maintain that, even intellectually received, or as forms' of doctrine, the truths necessary to salvation are best apprehended in thiklhood ; that - the intellectual • °Pinion's or judgments little ithillren form of high . theilogical mysteries - ate neater to the realities, and ad 'truer, than the metaphysical elaborations albs ambitious rabbisvf theology: Fin exam.. * pleaMmie to one of these men of neattemiteru• • slitietvend I ask; "WArre'44" , tlodr - add been. swerve-410d is neelfzexlsting, Independent, lute, - legit/tip `Spirit I- w *bout etaiitiont, Per emotion lmpifes eacieseirn ' ou Witht dwelling:latter; fug `pure spirit ima-lerelations to, imiitionl without; laileisdi-ishY , resemblances it anelogimii by which .rta'entshjerg,'et tangelo!, hluLt i ;" w f , :11as - may:be allivery profohril • and philosophic, asp not Very comforttng. - G o a i s ! Oa 4 11 abi 9 late end infinite spirit! Ahine! that mysterious and awful word.,Spilit! IQo marvel that the disciples .4p. Tiberias ere troubled, is . ititatigit the wild, -night cams a Won drous form snaking on the billows,and they tholight , it was "rt , - And so, hen I look forth on the immensiti es of the universe , struggling to behold. tbe innaible and ip manliest' the incomprehensible; s t r4, calch log glimpies as it were of an absolute a Spirit, sad told that it it God, then Intuits kind stand back In the wild night, as, the mighty teas, roar around me t as from the foragoing of stuns% awful and !iiicumprebensible Phantom. But, sick of this vain searching to find out God unto perfection; }turn from the sehbol of the rabbi and find sae a lithe child, happy and .trustful in its onatnhitions and earnest instincts. And l l ,say again, " What is God ft" And the:child answers, . "God se n ' Heavenly rotifer." • - . And I know better now, r.r I 'know as man h as I can know 'now. God tba.Spirit is my Fatho in heinveu,.. . . I go to thn theologian and say, "Sir, sakot is Acorns 7" and be answers me with learned dui; courscs'about essences, and elements, and develop meal% and adaptations-wiib physical theories of another life; and intellectual and moral tbeorses, till the banyan to which I had so fondly luoke. as an enrapttiring reality'seeina to We Dow, i ethereal refinement, such an unfamiliar real • unsubstantial spirituality. that I recoil . 6o '• glorious' gates as if they opened only upon spheres o f immortal life weird and spectral, B turn ogaio to my child.teacherinnd I ask. Wk keneess 1 And the child answers, "Heaven is 'home beyond the grave; Heaven is my Fatb house of,' many mansion;" and I know, be now. . .1 ' Theme are a - ohilfl's answers . . God is fay Ifea ly railer"! liearn is my oloriait• Home. these isomer* are , moro in accordance with words ufJesuseand so truer to the grand-reali than all the profound deliverances of Pbiloso And we might affirm the same thing in re. to till th&grend titubs fundamental to Salvo Nay, we might go much ftirther, andArow be nut unlikely that theundeveloped mind o child in , its metaphysical analysis, is, more the mind 'matured under philosophic culture, a of the life that peoples immortality. We do.notjay that what we term the ante lee teal faculties as distinguished from the moral /, he• ing conditional to earthly life, do really, as 4' pa ren tly„. decay in old age, falling off es only rudi mental to mortality. We do nut my this; Or ,so far es we can judge, our intellectual are indis mn • sable to our moral powers, and Most go wi us to eternity . , Dot thia we do acy,.that our pr ent 'atonement exercises, subordinate in moraliteul tore irottilful search ;Der knowledge, will nti be medal id the afterlife. .. Newton has net ascended t glory to p ursue there biareld scietitifie researches, and to spell nut, as on earib. with ;chum and calculus, the law end precedes of creation.. and to pace it, as it, ere, with sloir intellectual footsteps, in laborious ea- Summon! of the universe. No! he has gone Tether ash little child taught by n parent, to sit inlitter ing (AIN in the Divine presence, and learn d red ly from G‘i4 of the immensities of creation' and the laws thist govern it. • The old giants of theology bayonet eche ttl i thalr arch either the broad fie sof eternal home to se nature or - the brighter page of revelation, ft r the deep thoughts +. f God seen as through a glass darkly. i No! 'they have goue, all of them. o sit as littlal children at the heavenly Father' feet, 1 1 while be teaches them, by mysterious and lireet guntrettniention, all wonderful knowledge, s the truth is in Jesus. e _ • Ah toe! that glorious oracle of Gild wh.l b de clares that though in heaven there shall os no night. yet they need no candle, neither lightf the' . sun, because God and the Lamb shall be th light thereof: 7 .l.e, that, though intellectually * . shall I be in no darkness, lnie shall see as we at* sees and known as we are 'known, yet our knoilledge . will result from none of those painful intellectual exercises—that faith umlaut science will 4e the low of the scholarship—the darkness being dis polled, not :hy finite instrumentality, Out . , y the direct illutnination of the Spirit of God. , ' There does seem in mate; moratioltire en an. alogy to vegetable development, this llrifald last conditions being nlikei—the seed, after progress through flower and fruit, finding its last dieter'. m went again in the seed - To, en.l so the ein tianal ,of 'childhood, niter its earthly intellectual ; strugl gles, reaching its last and highest condition again! in the emotional. That in our higher ;ate -state, all In our childhood, the moral will carry t over the intellectual ; that, so to speak, the sou itself will be rather a trustful, loving heart thanin cold understanding; and that here Christ's words have -a literal significance, and anis in' the develepment 01. his intellectual faculties a man ,must Auscoute i like a little child, or he cannot enter theingalom ; of God: • . . . But be all this as it may, sure lam that there is nothing jo any true theory, either of mdn's de praiitY .or regeneration, antagonistic to the thought that a child should nut be left to grow up, in sits With a view to future and adult contusion, but Ought, from Its very cradle, to be brodght up in the tontine and admonition of , the Lords And this is the truth this Society reciignisas and acts upon. Assuming the possibility ef leech heavenly training. It is urged on in l i s woik by all the mightiest motives of time and eternity'- by the solemn, fact that so many . die in childhood +so thist in any given case the fearful likelihood LI that, if not converted early, there will he no conversion ; by . the ,consideration that every howl delay weakens the power of truth,' by harden)ng the heart led searing the conscionie, strengt ens the controlling power of sinful babies, adda t othe evil and takesfrom the good of the child 'it,a r.influ enee in his iraY and generation. shortens tie eartb ly'priod of the soul's discipline and development l io ,Plsonal eanetilication, diminishes +Weal, the, glories of butnertality- r ei herein , risp , mom , pence of reward, though:altogether of gr e, Jaye% *cording to our works — by tnetivel, i a word, Involving every consideration of . the obi! 's "stk. ly and everlasting interests, pod so use g to en i tivity by tite incalculable worth' of the . qui,end the grandeursthat make up eternity—b all such motites is it urged to bring children, at the first dawning of iutellectual and moral life, to the feet of Christ in repentance. and faith, a l This is this Suciety's,grand aim and e art, Act bights the Patent' laws or God's tinitjarsd, it takes advert:Alyce worts/trifles. -It brings Opel truth to bear upon th e soul in its most impreseible con ditions. In the nursery hod by the cridlo 'pillow 'it lifts the dross of the rackets Itedeetner.'• It guides the 'tombs front moral wanderings', into the green pastures and by the still waters Where the heavenly-Shepherd.iloads. It. seattere its holy literature as leaves from the tree of life its all their pleasant places. It pours into the story-loving earl tbe matchless- tales of Bethleherh, and Nemeth, and Gethsemane, and Calvary, and links all,the 'clustering and tender associations, of ebildhOod with the gracious truths of thenraeles of God. It acts, in a word, precisely on the prinelpki of the tines metaphor. :ne years of early Touchily* 'the moral spring time, and it plies ita spiritual husbandry when the soil is soft and the sunshine gehial, and 'Mays not its work ,to this; ehill and stonily winter, when the light of the sun and the moon;tind the stars are- darkened, and the clouds return after therein. It has learned of Soloman to loOk .opoo the young heart as nn; italliaryi - strezgholdif not already watched and warded each.with its angel, as, at least, more easily car. tied and garrisoned for heaven than in those later yearslwhen the man, given up :0 Strong pagei o ns, Willits wall over his own spirit, and rails a city that is broken down,. without vsal!/when ' the iirtuaus priuciplcs within are sadly weal:Mimi, anti into dell habits Wks gone all the earnest strength of triehhood—sothat the soul has its fitting emblem in a besieged fortrass, enbatiated oflte resources., and. Weakened in its de fences,;whoso melodies are hushed, whose lindens are darkened,'whose bat tlementa hie unwarded..whose strong men bow themselves, while around the mighty hosts of-evil l pitch their encampments, and plant their ordnance, I, .and advahco their banners, preparing to carry it by fierce assault, Ind give it op hopelessly to thel destroyer. • . - And, learning this from Solomon, itiwould per-1 'nada that young heart to open its ; Auer to the Great Captatto"to remember the Cratitufiti the ilays ifyouth; before the evil day come}, when the keepers of the house shall tremble and the strifes men shall bowthemselves." enuredil ' Now, although we have but just ant on he 'icinaideration of the importancb of early religious culture as it has to do with the individual, yet we , are pressed by the remainder of the itubject, and go on to consider, as the second thin proposed : ~ Th, l e , i inporiamca oi:thie 2' rincipls is ts reference to oar sortibn. -. ':- . -.1, _ i i .1 - . , --Beynna all controversy, tbe Anted an Suhday School Union has; alike in. design 'slid results, a grand Work to du in our national edualition. -And had *t the limits, it were easy, to sterile the vast importlance of that work even in its attest aspect , of simple mental , eel tiva thin, and, sert, from its hieherrettgious bearings, en this gro i n& Only - wo .mighttuild aostrong argument and•Qrp a resist less sil ein behalf of year Society. 1 r ' There ire; at, this very Moment, large and ritt,' idly inettaisihg portions of outland depending on your, Sunday School missionaries and literature for their'. first and simplest rudiments of learning. So for in many cases has our immigrant ,anil pioneer poput Om gone - in igncrance, al to !despise and] deny education, , es an enervating and over refine= i meet t 'qtn4, it' iti their midst these matchlem civil' franchises do . not prove suioldal—men casting ipto rho ballot.box votes that they rennet read.'andl which, so far as' they go, decide the destinies 'of 1 tbs . :Milan—if ell this do not happen; it will be only because these men have been taught the ab. phabetia youeschoolkand learned to.thatl,froul your i pnblieetiona, • , - - _ , -L, But we basalt* limits for litie 4 irguininti our theme leads gusto et:kidder only the religions twill:l -ig/ or tiotion....!o show haw your Bodo, looks opoo _America an 'yet .in..:tha Sears - of • Ira - *astir youth, nail la*. to:train-1m grand; national Wit li Ibis same Durbin ant admonition of tbi Lord. ::- TOl . ibislabar; this Saciiiiiitintanilltaiilintin. -lidgOt truth html Out/Ilia feligieti - latieisstrit . ~ . , national pratfall This Is trot inivirsally.— No farm of government is either tatlf•creative or ielf•conserving; none baa ever existed without a Powefful tint pervittling religions element. A na tion 'of atheists it simply impossible . ; because some divine:ism:tam is easential to the influence Of la.W , sad obedimuca to law is - the condition of 'national life: And so we find all the old pegan end philosophical.builders of fitates.resting their structures on the religious rock, sad (halving from a theologic faith:the strongtua motives for political 'cripe N tie' sm. And it this be necessary in regard of national life slowly develoPed onderartned den* , dim. bow emphatically is it true of our life! T"Qor nationality," says an eloquent orator, "is tdilneztratordinary degree net a growth, bat a production. .It hsd its origin in the will and the reason, and,so depends upon the will and the 'ca. ;son fgr,itv preservation." , i,And even this is not lie whole Of the trn th.— or the wid and the reason which,eonstruited our ationality were a wiWand a reason truly and Practically Cbriatisn. Its authors and finishers were more than statesmen : their faith and. hope rested not on political science and sagacity. They fooked for its preservation to no power that was its it of itself, Out ever, and only, to a power de 'Mending to it from on high. A constitution of self-government cleated by selfish will may be dis- Solved again by that same selfish will, hopelessly mind forever; and the will and reason which would conserve a . self-gtforntitent must be essentially Christian. Our nitional edifice rests on two grand gospel, truths—the equality of human rights, end brotherly love equal 10 Seltiove—the first remit log in. our sectional and state self respect, the other in our system of grand federal Compromises. Take away frotn• us therefore, our perviding evangelical influences, and we fall in pieces eg once eueforever. , And what then? I speak not ithe I is riay er's tter of such dieseverance as it looks tube °jerk( states nfamhip and philanthropy, but as regarded by • enliglatened Christianity. What is this American nationality, itescign from • I,ho plutfurm whereon we meet to night+tho platform of • philanthropy broad, lar-seelng,' comprehensive Christian ? What, In - our evangelical reckoning, is its worth end itemiiiion 7 =seeing in It, as 'we roust, a divine . purposes of wisdom and• lore, working not hurried ly with Man's fiery and headlong progress, but in that great majestic patience, in those cycles of .immense sweep , wherewith mb OW achieves his deep counsel'-;—working by and thriugh those convulsions of human passions that have rocked he cradles and.dag the graves of i old, , empires= ; 'truing and overturning old system; for the es ablishment on thelreains of an everlasting king oin whose Monarch ig Clod? Seeing this in our itationality—judging froM lite * misrvellons prowl: dances that hays anarded and glorified it, [he mar. els of its hirth,*the marvels of its preseFvation f--the opening toqo of a new continent for s_ new civilisation—from its grand central position on the earth, from the strung bold it has . oti the eurld's sympathiei, from the contrasted condition of all other nations, the deep darkness of heathen dom, the clouds that Owershadoi, the volcanoes that underlie old European Christendom, threat? cuing to render its presently all missionary ground, or, at least; to limes it, amid political convulsions, only enough of Christian strength to keel; aflame 1 i.he disturbed liret on its own holy altars—from 'the mighty influences and sources of influence which our land embodies, the power within us; and the power from on high. that is descending upon Isti---from all this - I say, judging that taunts. . - tiunality is the development of a glorious provi .dmtial - thought running- through all time, God raises us up and conserving, and rendering 'us mighty, with a purpose grander all purposes 'of statesmanship,! all dreams of philanthropy— grand with the greatness of divine mercy in the salvation of a race—just that we may stand forth 1 - - in the embodiment -of all moral. power, God's., miry instrumentality to work out the world' , poll al and evaegelical redemption, the • grand muct flung up amid the waste of generations, whites the spucalyptic anel, with they crerliet lag,:gospel of_peace tO rue and glory to God in th 4 highest, is to spring t his last embassy and i t take flights world— ver a iarld— .„ us seeing, thus ludg-_ itig, this nationality of nun seems worthy of pre servation it all hazards, with all sacrifices through alltime—rut merely fur, iteowneake; not merely for ours, not morely_fur our rhildren,* sake and tint of per childrenS ehildren for a hundred gen-. eratione—but preserved as Welles &divine Instru mentality fur'the salvation of a world, preserved for the lure of! Christ and for °ttre great glory. And. thus reckoning its truth and ministry, this Society is working (or its! reservation, by under . laying its institutions with an adainintine Chrie tianity, training its piling children fur • il.tal end for glory, making its.national character Christian in the only possibl e . way—u the composite of in . divialtial Christian character. . • • . ! Andin this wofk you are idling on the philo sophic law of thelezt—working with the nation. as'with the individual, "ia the days of its youth.? '!Here is the power and!the prolate. of your labor. We are yet s yoting land. >Amid the hoary and ancestral nations lilies of the Old eentineuts, Amer. ice, like a child of. hopeful heart and undeveloped strength, keeps holiday in God's fields, and rests In Gud'ecrudie. It giant babe, indeeila Web ild of mighty honeond mighty amele—whose manhood will be as SiIIONOWII, rocking.tbe pith* add beir.„ ing away the gates of the world's old despotisms, —nevertheless, only a :child' ~et, its heart' open, ' its character enformed,!to be trained for God hope- WHY under`this Outlaw of early culture. • , Speaking of the preicrvation ot•American. na tionality, says the time, great orator we hare quoted, "la Wising American -patriotism, you ,must begin with the infant. Let the first word be .lisps bo!Washington; tell him the story of the flag 'as It glitterialong the r dad t• bid him listen to the old-fashioned musie of the, Union ;lead him at' eventide Jo the grays; of his great grandfather; the old soldier of the war; bid him, like Hannibal at Dina years old, lay his hand ,upon the poostitu flaw and swear re . itly to observe it; lift him' .up to the height of American feeling; show bits ioa the map theireato which Ameriea haieztend ed herself, the climates that come into the number of Months, the silver paths of. bee . trade wide as the 'world; tell him. of her contributions to bu. multi and her protest for free government f keep with him, the *tall and , solemn feasts 4t. her ap., pointine,nt; Lary her great names in, his heart I contemplate habitually, lovingly, intelligently this grand itistraistion, this vest reality of gaud. end-jots will do much to transform this sentiment of, amassing beauty into a national life that shall last, while the sun and moon endure." ! . . ! Now, this is all said elequentlY and' well—said is.a great statuntatt, as a' true and pure patriot; 'still it reaches not to the depth of our argument " —the true argument. It reaches not, Indeed, to the perfect application drabs principle he had in • band as a statesman - apt a patriot; that principle was, the necessity, in'thepreservation of saltation of reprOticing and perpetuating "she first pried. pies, the ancient freedom, the masculine virtue's, the plain wisdom, of the Original." • And surely it did not maim him that foremost among.' those first principles and . masculine virtues ma which our nationality ,was Wilde). was practical Chas. firma:. ' . It was 'not a love of man, Int a love Lot Gods-- not a love 'of country,lbet a love 'of Christ over in:olefin and crucifying 'all love of country; a personal conseeeithin to the gospel superior to all philanthropy, to all tittrietistn—that, planted the germs of,our national life on Plymouth Rock and Jamestowo. I Our national ity had int'origin not in mere "Will 1 add reason," b t in. a Changed, Christian ised, re generated willotod reason; and the kill and.rea. eon that conserve it must remain regenerate and .Christian. WO have no faith , in any philanthropy or Patriotism, ney , sense of respbusibilifj to coun try or to man, any lefty pride or profound senti-. went m nationality, that takes' not alike form and spirit (tote the gospel of Christ. • ' •. - - Those ministries of popular education which, as edueing thought, imparting knowledge, strength ening the judgm ent , evolving practical state/titan ' ship, deepening - the old urneries' of a common • past, pouring violated* glories over a dazzling 'and limitless failure; ',reducing or strengthening what the world calls civilization, philanthropy, love of coontrYlipopular liberty, loyalty to titled order as the old common law of the race, do, in deed; enlighten the natural will and reason—such ministries are !pod in their sphere and place ; they beautify! the fabric of our: freedom with, things fair as the lonic pillar at the portal, and. graceful as the fairy_ arch that spans it. Dut, then, alas ! they lay do eternal rock at the teen, dation ; they are effects, and out causes—rather decorative than constructive. , The Bible, with its free gospel upon tier young popular . naind,lreprodueing the old, perronal sad social, godliness, the Ailing, dcerrrooted, Wing faith,'whiCh,inspired oar first State builders— thin is the adamant 'oar which oar nationality Was founded, and do which it must rest. Without thiS, there is before us tin dueling and limitless future ,without this, wo are at sea upon stormy waters- and our coafedetatiire , ties are as fretted cableifthen the hark drives Meads break era. -Without Ws, we can readily believe that the social elements—powerful, positive, enthusi estie, extravagantof oily great Western impala. don mat hi us!oulded and hardened Intl the must monstrous denelopmeats. -. -,-.- . • , . - That population nsarbeettme radically and the. roughly ! to AL 'We IN scarcely a braver or wiser trace, 'Ufa wire- frenehmen when the , old forces of civilization combined in 'volcanic prOper. thins, and , thelmountairvitif their nationality reek. .ed, and all Whirs pare - end 'barely and of good re. 'pert:taint du en in the fiery flood of politica tithe ; It msy bedtime theretighly and golltlealitPat. yief. Talk • niit tweets:of Angio-Sazon instincts and intellect:l'lU elements 'with . .witieli sispersti. thin has to data& rather moral dismount/IL- Man comel to his Von ensues thresith his passions then his Intel tist.: :11, the old, Hebrew races fresh from frees this' MI - , ilea ot the !WI leainii.the Nits. end ..nsetsftettowtsll4; Waivers ..Theophany of 'Sinai, coat tisrit'suddettbt from that ,eotnezenion !Stith fe'reii*fi -, Aluit tolrtnibip au idol--if the "old Little,- , .inittli.lts,lltirstere; sad atm, and peetty *elk • souse" nlts grindlettesstrot,glery.tts 1611440 eh , tk ot i% Aids past, amid thispleadhl we insert* et 14 Ititellemnal. eivitisstian; mild .4n -- temple the Din W even on the itialgtlf the Tibet • ~411ANNAN.Si: _.- ..- STEAMPRiVING',•:I'OF.FICE', IlLariupproeured thee•Proaaes, ire are airy prepared toeseeade JODadd DOOR PRIKUNG of atm desert!. tih °See of the Maas' Jetddes.,eheaper the e It as bed:meat a nyotberiatabllshapestl thereat t y . auk as ' . - Do4s,P4stirkkls ; BiElattfordiorg. . Urge lialra... AAaresi MAO/. ' Hand Bills, ' Paper/bias. .Artielesif .IgreesareVliite Bioko, ' _ - -Bill &ads, Or4W.1114.011.„. At the vary shortest Donee:, Oiar uteri Of JOB TYPlrte more atonal,* than that any other tare I this see. nen *ilk* State,aed we keep baolteemployedeapreerly foe Jobbing,' Nang a prettiest Printer enneklif. we 11411 guarantee our work to be as seat is any that can be tifeedi int In the cities. PtIINTINO IN COLORS dou • at ihie shortest zones. ANIA. Books bound in iron, Ts_ .rieei style t: Booluk of otters description insantsetered,lnrind sad /pied tie order at shorttst tOtiro. NO. 19. • . _ thee orleo will dais' coaddeitly to predict that he Americas mind shalt serer bow 'dews to Re. monism It may herons posltivoly iearbariso. Alas for this boasted law of development sod pro• tress ! What saya.the history of our twee:written everywhere—is the death-dust of Egypt, on Slims. comma:bliss, is the reins of Niserab sad Baby- ,; los; la the pull Montero of the (road Animas wor6l? What says It all hot thisi—Thar withe,a the Divine &rend, sits fair 'body of cieilimniest ermobres back to the dee again ' Verily, If in this holy bone the Om Turk soles in barbaric pomp on that - golden bill of Zion where David worshipped and Soloseo walked to his glory—if the wild Ateb pitches his teat on the share of ()alnico and the war-horse of the Moslem .feeds In the manger of Bethhhere—who dare as sure me thateln generations soon to tome, dm Goth and Vandal may not be rooked in the old Puritan cradle, and the owls of old Night b ro and nestle in thesagle's owa, eyre Sine I am, if there be rtivolnowlwriibin fere and blood co all'paetliefory, it is that any depth of degradation is possible--rasy,"probable—to ea irreligion, prOgrers-stbst . eivilisation,had erithip it is no earetitial principle of life, bet depends for Its very being on • power descending to it from or high. • ' t • t • Snell, et least, Is the billet which yoBr Society. • professes and nets atom.: that oar_ national Ilia depends •upon evengeliaal indessess; that the hopes and destiny of this republic! tan be realised only as a vital and vigorous' Clirtsilitilty is dis. sentineled through the land; end, - wiih such phile• sapid° sad practical faith, the Aiteriein 'Sunday School Union totes its place emid'elte-ntightiess . Instruments of our national prosperity. Andeid, • . oreeall the otbor great tolssioostr, assoeletlese thot arceeekitig more thoroughly to eiitigelise the nation, yours bus all the advantage which ea earlier culture gives. You get the start of all ad versaries. You 'ers'abroad in God's hesbandry, with the , good seed of the world, in the' dewy morning, beforelhe enemy is there with the tares.. With your Sattbatis Sehool missionary Watching the young child's' it springs rivet the cradle, and costing your pure, free, sanctified literature into tbe, home-circles of the.new society, we are war- ranted, In all principles of human nature, and all historic experienee,in predicting a tutors psrma. Deasy and glory to our lanfr, which shall realise the grand destiny Gotha* offered us tp the re. generation of our sperms and the redeinption of our world. • • ' Yours is a practical wisdom profoander MO the stab:satin% Like him, indeed, in training' the Amerinan nationality, you , begin with the infant; bat your training is more powerful. The brat word on theyoong child's lip is not "Washington," bat "Cams? J ews." You toll him oat of oar storied war Beide, bat ef Gethsemane• and Calva ry. You bid him listen, not to the atusloof the old colonial battles, but to the grankluld , psalms that the Pilgrim Christians Sung in the sounding "s y isles of the wilderness. You overshadow him, not with the flag of our nation, but with the CMS of our blessed Uuspel. Tins bind his young beast. like Hannibal's. not so much to his country as to his Creator. You lift him up to this height loftier than all ',Antiiirtean feeling—tho height .if true Christian fueliug. You open his wonderlog eye to the relations, not merely political. but roligloue and evangelical, which America sustains tu all peoples and nations.. You tell him_ of all God% past miracles—more marvellous ihnnthe,ul.l Hebrew signs and .wonders—bringing forth and preserving a•td strengthening this great. Christian nation a* the'•inatrument whereby the ,nee is to be etnanei• pated and the woad saved. Arid in this yon here done' much to realise this great idea of Christina faith, to develop this gloriouspurpose of Divine , love, ion natiaml life that shall be fur man's good and God's ary while the sun and moon endure s You ate, it least, striving. while Ainctlaa 10 yet itk the days of Its youth, to train up its wimps' life "in the nurture nuoi athematic.* of tie Lord." Aryl in doing this you are doing a wjerk whose int• prOtance no language can exoggette. Ab me! - this grand American nationality, it . leams to. - day to a wisdom Glaris from above! • • In its.youth yet! Yes, indeed, a, child yet,—but - a mighty child Likelhe wqnderfal l babe that Slept in the rushrts of tbo Nile. upon WINN train ing for Jehovah depended such immense i all the'-miracles of Isrpel's deliverance, all the imperial splendors of the old Hebrew . 1.4170' all the' infinite glories of the Messianic redemption— , in , whose frail ark, so seemingly there' lay eradled'anti incarnate one of God's loftiest pious and most magnificent purposes. Such seemwthis young•nation—a national. life • involving In itself God's grandest designs of re= demption to our race and the world, and yetasleep on the wild tides of Time, as the child Hosea in the Egyptiani river—tossed by stormy waters, pressed, upon, Ito the- Niles fierce muostert, by all forms and 3 powers of evil. A life so nobly gifted, sci fearfully imperilled, is oar young nation-. ality. And now, Christian indaenee, like the ' nursing mother's watch, can train it for Jehovah,' now, on this true law of early culture, a nursing ley caw alt by its young pillow and teach It to say, "Out Father, who art its Heartne---catt lead its young feet Into the ways of obedience, eau • train it up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord—till presently it shall stood up in Ullman.% rity, on this mount flung up for the enthronement of the man-child, the tlevelopment of God's eter nal purposes of Mercy, clowned, glorified, seen. 'tractor, and more thin a conqueror—the chains of a race shivered at its feet, the kingdoms of the • world conquered lovingly for JOSUIL • Bat leave this work undone fur another Tar. ter centurp—thir work ef.easly culture your So ciety is doing; leave it undone upon the heart and conscience of this generation of youth ; just alio*" the children that now are to grow up in ungodlit ness, and then send, if you will, whole armies of earnest missionaries to labor with the unrighteous. Yet, alas! the babe *ill have sprang from its ens. dle into the strength of an infidel and unholy into. hood. and, setting its mighty feet upon the Bible and its brazen face spinal, the heavens, and tramp. ling all precious-things under foot, will perish In the flash of .God's 'awful thunderbolts 1 • • - 111. Now we have small limits left is le sea sider,,as we premed— Luny, the importance of di prineipla of dm tart is !Veneers to the Church. . You have- only to look carefully, and yew will p ecce itr e. e beneficent, evangelical influent's in the react i o n of this Sunday School' Union:Open its ownmanagers and patron", overpaying* dummied. and d all its sacrifices and toils. There it 14 this work. a ieltealture and discipline finely preparing the Church for its millennial state. BOOK BINDERY. .While the American Church .is •••••aptially apostolic, yet fOrmally It is a novelty-is view de velopment of treelesiestical life, untleittint lola- COCCI' Or popular and civil freedom. It is get emphatically "la the' days of its youth;" and demands Abe peculiar culture of childhood. Its dangers ire the peculiar dangers of yo6tb, bora of Its intense egotism, its ambition, Osman" sad unrestrained-impulses. Our very. freedom in re-- ligion.tends to foster rank growths of ecciesiestf es I licentiousness', bringing fortb fruit in the bigot ed arrogance of inquisitorial opinion. This boast ed catholic toleration encourages .an intents re ligious seetarienista, whoso charities are. measured by its creeds, and whose ethical sympathise s era no broader then Its theological agreements. Lotus not be misunderstood heroes objeetingto Christian Mpg. 'An honest tome( deambleation ii unquestionably a good thing--altagether in har mony with God's laws in creation. From the floweisArf the field to the grind epitomes( the.. firmament. all classified ordersof life are emblems ut theta Christian soots with their specific lifer - And the same law It patent is farmer religions dispel:is:diem. Coder the gsanson theocracy, the various tribes of. Israel went forth, ascii with its' Own 141adsr and bearing ins - own banner; sad that ' generous-emulation between the champions - of Judah, and Reuben .and Gad, sato which should plant a banner first on the walls of the oettryterat cities of Canaan, VA* the secret of the strength tag' glory of the old Uebrew name. And we would' emulate this spirit in oar militant Chrirtlanity,--' We give thanks 'to Ood that, for the ssaralso et. ,all our constitutionally different tastes and ja j dg: - roma in minor things, there is mate and sphetelo, our American Zion. and we would no more eliaego - ' , all these healthful and happy Christian souls into one &impelled composite of droomisationoltan we would transform ill our sweet homes', with their separate boards end.nresikst, into one broad pantisueruejr of socialism, or consolidate all the separate and shining worlds Of astronomy into the huge bulk of one stariess.ettellitente • - A warm, genial, generous love of denomination le,a goodly sad graceful thing: Useless, there is a thing called seetarianient,whieh is of another bops, sod other spirit. Zeal for forms of faith, eonsisteney, Christian fidelity, some men cell Arrogance, folly, intolerance, treason to God sod man, self-willeJ, persica ling:lnge isitorial bigotry, we call it—burn of little minds, of shrivelled hearts, of benighted consciences, coefouedi ng la rip things with small things, false issues with real issues, the contour of the shadow with the coo-, posits of the sabstania; the plumes of the soldiery wlib the spoils of etnquest, the music of the marsh with the abockof the battle—a spirit loving a church more Oran Christ, inspiring the strife of armed men fur the 'seamless rube of Jests--the biekering of •rabbi and, priest—about mist and anise and' commit:, whlle the heavenly fire pales on Gods golden attire. And this, like all 101 growths in a virgin 'soil, is likely to thrive in the bestt of the young Church sailer ear grand Bath* oils liberty. - • • • . • Now,it Ii just in .its powerful Nadiney to n• press this .spirit that your assasiation resents° benedrially on the Chuck Itself, This • type of a l etari a nista 'orithen sindettts parading Masses of a society which gathers all Christian seete in a common effort to giro ittoternott gee* to a com mon world. • - • • : •. • : • lime is the_ philosophy and the-titundatlon of ttltit Christian t. not:thot hilits tinier of nal en that parades its Platforarprefessleas untruth... •eibisod °Alyea a plaseantiaterlottaralkamits,P*l - seebarilithleneer--the eltivelvair allots of Mr • .knights of the tildteeritayi ere they lay 'lanes in reit and raidr lath tattlethe ;sheer estintes7 of Introlnlittnt ar•Ohriotjakaalsa - ,exalissited as oar outside - platforms et Plopping, places of the, gawk Chnrchdoadochile tacactrieparste
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