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fWtBf >lr muse n bird of passage flies, From Frozen climes to milder skies You np. A Song of Solitude. SWifttt.t the shadowy eve, Steals o'er the landscape of day ; Palely a diamond star, Sheds its first silver)- ray. Laden with balm is the air, With rest and a calmness divine? Would that such heaven'y calm. And such rest were eternally mine. Where are thy vales of repose, Beautiful land of my dreams ? Where are thy nightingale groves, Meadows and musical streams ! Loved ones are wandering there, Secure from the storms of the past, Life is so sorrowful here? It were sweet to escape it at last! Cease, my disquieted song, Sink every sigh to rejwse, Rouse thee! dispirited heart, Rise o'er tho world and its woes 1 Life has its beautiful hours! Though transient their exquisite zest, Cull the less permanent flowers, And contentedly wait for the rest. From the Evening Port. City Rhymes. I saw two children in the street, Two little maidens, yester eve. And one was pale ami both were fair, And both did make mc grieve. Nestling in robes of silk and down, On velot cushions one rolled by, One went a wan and ragged thing, A tear-drop freezing in each eye. One sped to fashions princely seat, To learn the guile that jewels sin, The other grouped through dismal doors, And found her mother dead. ^oatlj's SfjiartiniMit. Answer to Puntle. I understand that you undertake to overturn all my undertakings. Answer to Riddle. Four Cats. Conundrums. Why is a circus actor like a glass 1 Because he is a tumbler. Why arc stars like lovers ? Because they shine best at night. What is the difference between a lazy mule and a postage stamp .' Because you lick one with a stick, and stick the other with a lick. A determined spirit, breasting great calamities, and victorious over them, should not doubt his success. The pledge of conquest is already given him in a fore-assuring purpose. eer For the most refined pleasure of life, wc tmut look to the intercourse of the sense. The sweetness of this pleasure depends not so much on the equality of minds as on their sameness of taste. What wc perceive gives our companion pleasure, will givo us more delight than his utterance of wisdom. The greatest intellect wants but the appreciation of a correct taste. It is thus that tho justness and beauty of female minds .dt.-ast and reward the society of the wisest men. Young Men. The idea is prevalent in some communities, that the young men are unfit for generals aud statesmen, and that they must be kept in the back-ground until their physical strength is impaired by age, and their itrtdleivusi faculties blunted by years. I^et us look at the history of the past, and from the long list of heroes and statesmen who have nobly distinguished themselves, we will find Yftnf thmy Were young men who performed those nets which won for them an imperishable meed of fame, and which placed their names on the pngo of history. Alexander, the conquerer of the whole uh ilizod world, vii, Greece, Egypt; and Asia, died rvf fhinythroc. Bonn parte was crowned Emperor of France, when thirty-three years of age.? Pitt, the Winn Wntlu, ?? years of age, when (n Britain's parliament, he boldly advocated the eaune of the American colonies ; and but twenty-two years old I wh?M made (*hanc?H%; of the J&x<-hci|ucr?Bdhouatl Burke, at the ugo of twenty-five waa the first lord of the Treasury. (far own I Waaliington wae'Vnt twenty-five, when he covered the retreat of the' British at Braddocka defeat, and wqp appointed to be Com* I inandtT-iu-<-l?ief of all the Virginia foreea.?I Alexander Hamilton, at twenty, waa a Lieut. I ; at twenty-five I a liMinbcr to Congress, an?l at thirty-two Secretary ajLUmTrcasurv. Thomas JeflTeraeo \fmm bnCKtoity-tlirec when he drafted the ever menionArie Declaration of IndepcnAt the age of thirty years. Sir Isaac -n1 MUaied the nioehaflbMkl chair at CaMtBrtdgb Allege, Kngland, having by hie bad g9i a ringing in hie head. "Defr* ben - AC ' "Aodbtm yethcf^wcm? because m\h\\ Untiring. : SSeknants of Goo in joyful lays, SSing ye the Lord Jehovah's praise. ( Montgomery. 1 Revolutionary Sermon. "They that take the sword shall perish by the sword!" 'I iiv. following interesting document was , recently found among the papers of Major I John tSheaifmyer, a deceased patriot of the | revolution. It is a discourse delivered on the eve of the battle of Brandy wine, by i Rev. Joab Troute, to a large portion of the American soldiers, in presence of General Washington, Gen. Wayne, and other officers of the army: Sofdiert and Countrymen?We have luct this evening, perhaps, for the last time. We have .shared the toil of the march, the peril of the fight, and the dismay of the retreat, alike; we have endured the cold and hunger, the contumely of the eternal foe and the courage of the I foreign oppressor. We have sat, night after night, beside the camp-fire; we have | together heard the roll of the reveille which i called us to duty, or the beat of thctatoo j which gave the signal for the hardv sliwn - # y J % V of the soldier, with the earth for his bed and the knapsack for his pillow. And now, soldiers and brethren, we have met in this peaceful valley on the eve of battle, while the sunlight is dying away beyond yonder heights, the sunlight that to-inorrow morn will glimmer on scenes of blood. We have met amid the whitening tents of our encampment; in the time of terror and gloom we have gathered together. God grant that it may not Iks for the last time. It is a solemn moment. Brethren, does not the solemn voice of nature seem to echo the sympathies of the hour? The flag ot our country droops heavily from yonder staff; the breeze has died away along the green plain of Chadd's Ford, the plain that spreads before us, glittering in sunlight; the heights of Brandywine arises gloomy and grand beyond the waters of yonder stream; all nature hold a pause of solemn silence on the eve of uproar and bloodshed and strife of to-morrow. "They that take the sword shall |>erish by the sword." And have they not taken the sword? Let the desolate plain, tire hlood-soddcn valley, the huriied farmhouse blackening in the sun, the sacked village and the ravaged town answer, 1st the whitened bones of the butchered farmer, strew n along the fields of his homestead, answer; let the starving mother,with the babe clinging to the withered breast that can afford no sustenance, let her answer with the death rattle mingling with the murmuring tones that marked the last struggle of her life; let the mother and her babe answer. It was but a day past, and onr land slept in the quiet of |>ence. War was not here. Fraud and woe and want dwelt not among us. From the eternal solitude of the green woods arose the blue smoke of the settler's cabin, and crolden fields of corn looked from ami<l the waste of the wilderness, and the glad music ol human , voices awoke the silence of the forest. Now, God of mercy, behold the change. Under the shadow of a pretext, under the sanctity of the name of God, invoking the Redeemer to their aid, do these foreign hirelings slay our people. They throng our towns?they darken our plains, and now they encompass our posts on the lonely plain of Chadd's Ford. "They that take the sword shall perish by the sword." Biethrun, think me not unworthy of belief when I tell you that the doom of the British is near. Think me not vain when I tell you that beyond the cloud that uow enshrouds us, I see gathering thick and fast, the darker cloud and thicker storin of divine retribution! They may conquer us to-morrow. Might and wrong may prevail, and we may be driven from the field; but the hour of God's own vengeance will come! Aye, if in the Yast solitude of eternal | space, there throbs the being of an awful God. quick to avenge and sure to punish guilt, then will the man George Brunswick, called King, feel in his brain and heart, the vengeance of the eternal Jeho* j vah! A blight will be upon his life?a withered brain and an accursed intellect ?a blight will l>e upon his children and on his people. Great God, Uow dread the < punishment! < A crowded populace, peopling the dense towns where the man of money thrives; i want striding among the people in all l forms of terror, an ignorant and God-defy- i in<r nrie?tho<-tfl ?!.<> ?' 1 of millions; a proud and merciless nobili- I ty adding wrong, and heaping insult u|>oii i robbery and fraud; royalty corrupt to the i very heart, and aristocracy rotten to the I core; crime and want linked hand in hand, i and tempting men to woe and death? I these are a part of the doom and retribu- I tion that shall come upon the English i throne and the English people. j Soldiers: I look around upon your fam- i iliar faces with a strange interest! To- | morrow morning we go forth to the battle ?for nocd I tell you that your unworthy minister will march with you, invoking 1 God's aid in the fight?wo will inarch * forth to>the battle! Need 1 exhort you 1 to fight the good fight, to fight for yonr 1 homesteads, for your wires and children! ' My friends, I might urge you to fight by * the galling memories of British wrong? Walton. 1 might tell you of your father butchered in we silence of the night on ' the plains of^nnton; I might wring his ' eath shriek in your cars. Blielinire?I * might tell you of a butchered mother, ' and a sister outraged", the lonely farm 1 house, the nlrtt assault, the roof in flames, 1 the shout# w the troopers as they dispatebod their victims, th.i cries of tnercy r am! the pleadings of innocence for pity. t I might paint this all again, in the vivid c colors of the terrible reality, if 1 thought courage needed CUeL wild excitement. Q But 1 know you are strong in the might t of the Lord. You will march forth to g belike on the morrow witfi light hearts c am? determined spirit, though the solemn duty?the dnty of dvtaging the dead? mav feat heavy on yonr souls. ? d I And in tfc? hour of battle, when all c *lBad is darhaecs, lit by the lurid cannon p jgjlfcandjho piercing musket flash, whear d he wounded strew tho ground, and the M l1* lead litter your path, then remember, sol- Hi I iliers, that God is with you. T e eternal _ God lights for you; lie rides on the battle 1 cloud; he sweeps onward with the march of the hurricane charge. JL God, the awful and iutinite, fights for wish t you, and you will triumph. variou "They that take the sword shall perish cided by the sword." 1853, Von have taken the sword, hut not in ICAL the spirit of wrong or ravage. You have It 1 taken the sword for your homes, for your chara< wives, lor your little ones. You havetak- highe en the sword for truth, justice and right, reviev and to you the promise is? lie of good cupict cheer, for your foes have taken the sword " I in deliar.ee of all that men hold dear, in readei blasphemy of God?they shall perish l>y attem the sword. each And now, brethren and soldiers, 1 hid To you all farewell. Many of us will fall in work the battle of to-morrow. God rest the aspect souls of the fallen. Many of us may live views to tell the story of the fight to-morrow, such t and the memory of all will ever rest and comm linger on the quiet scene of this autum- as ma nal eve. profit; Solemn twilight advances over the vnl ted t< ley; the woods on the opposite heights j fling their long shadows over the green of j ""o tl the meadows; around us are the tents of ^ < the continental host, the suppressed hustle exists of the camp, the hurried tramp of the cither soldiers to and fro among the tents, the appro stillness and awe that marks the eve of public battle. jierioc When wc meet again, may the shad- much ows of twilight he tiling over 'lie peaceful uI*i land. God in heaven grant it! Let us the in pray. Art? ? m pects. Benefit of Obedience. Km . i?b im A boy wishing one afternoon to go with jnfTS j some other boys on a sailing excursion, comp< asked permission of his mother, which sn,.|, ( was not granted. After a severe struggle 0f in his mind between inclination and duty, lie gave up his anticipated pleasure, and jndep remained at home. The other Iniyswent. ;ls jM)! A sudden llaw of wind capsized the boat. a ? vstruiii and two of them were drowned. The lH| a f l>oy, wlien he heard of it, was much ef- ^\r, fected, and said to his mother, "After this, .\nier I shall always do as you say." natiiu ? - to tin The Mother's Duties. both I lead in Here is a beaut-ful gem from the pen <;jH of l-'anny Fern. Widowed mothers, who (ers c, have one or more children looking to you |,;|| r,. for wisdom and counsel, read tho follow- J(|,,| t| ing, and ponder well the lesson it teaches: | "A little fatherless Ik?v, of four years of ^y| age, sat upon the lloor, surrounded by his pjctori toys. Catching sight of his mother's face, <K.CUsi as the tears fell thick and fast, he sprang that t to her side, and peeping curiously in her on wp face, said, "You've got me." (Simple, 'flu artless little comforter!) 1 >rv your tears, exprc* young mother. There is something to HtH| w live for, there are duties from which even eratioi your bleeding heart may not shrink! A eonfril "a talent" you may not "bury;," a stew- Irvin?' ardsliip, of which your Lord must receive Mitclu an account; a blank page to be tilled with Warn your hand with holy truth; a crystals-ate 11awk io keep sjiotless and pure; a tender pfnnt |{ancr to guard from blight; a mildew, a drop |jev. that must not exhale in the sun of world- Cooj>e lincss; an angel for whom a "white rol?e" er>ot, must bo made; a cherub, in whose hands Wavh a "golden harp" must be placed; a "little Fitzc t lamb," to be led to tlie"(?ood Slu pberd!" (^ M*You've got me!" Aye! Cloud not It's (Jiilcsj sunny face with unavailing sadness; lest Tapins lie cateli the "trick of grief," and sigh ?0-i amid bis toys. Teach him not by your j?rU vain repining, that "Our Father pitietb huiiiIk not Ilis children!" in M.., "Teach him to love Hint in the cloud Orde as in the sunshine! You iril/ have your ol,t th gloomy hours! There is a void even that en,. little loving heart may not full, but there is still another, and Ho says: "MEyr To KeepTYoung. i?."til1 ? SO M rs. Cowden Clark says : "No surer destroj*er of youth, of youth's privileges, dkvoti and powers, and delights, than yielding,to the empire of ill-temper and selfishness.? And th We should all be cautious, as we advance in life, of allowing occasional sorrowful experience to overshadow our preception of the preponderance of good. Faith in good is at once its own rectitude and reward. To believe good, and to do good, truly an 1 trustfully, i- tIf healthiest of j 11.1.ITS humanity's condition*. To t.ih*- events] cheerfully, and promote the happim-s of' others, is the way to ensure the enduring j V spring of existence. Content and kindli- I Thirty rtessaro the soft, vernal showers, and fos- i i tering sunny warmth that k?*ep a man's the cot nature and being fresh and "green," would ligent i be no less a wise prayer than the one so of the beautifully recorder I respecting a man's memory. If we would leave a gracious 1 memory licbind us, there is no better way 6 io secure it than by living graciously. A tboerful and benign tem]>er, tliat buds Forth pleasant blossoms, ami lienrs sweet Vuit for those who live w ithin its influence, s sure to produce an undying growth of The jreen remembrances that shall flourish 4'eite<l mmortally, after the present stock is dc- jr narted and gone. ? ? 100 Tiie f?iant West.?What constitutes ii*3 fiwieoi imnois, inmana ?n?J Wineonlin, having twenty three Representatives ind six Senators in Congress, was not SOU'I iiany years ago one Congressional Disrict?and the delegate who then repreen ted all this territory is yet living. . , ?\f Collkok IUrxid.?At Jacksonvill, II- r0yBj 0 inoia, on the 30th ult. a fire occurred in ings, nr llinois College, which destroyed the ly bout vholc building except the south wing. The diseouii om is estimated at ^'20,000 of which Each 13,000 is insured in the Hartford Protcc- ?.r "J0" ion Company. Jly i| Smoke itemed into Fdkl?A iato P**"-n lumber of the Srirnti/ie Amrrican slates wnrc hat the smoke in the factories in large ij? g itiee in England and Scotland is now onsuined, it having been ibade a penal ffenee, by act of Parliament, for any fa?- CA ory to allow their smoke to eaeape. The moke ia all burned by simple contrivances . " f turna<?*. o en There is an army, of at least five hun- Tiaus: red Shoemakers m Marlboro', Mass*- &*? 1ft Uiuetts, who manufacture six thousand mon'T airs of children's shoes every woffcinw *** Ml ty S C E L LA N E 0 UN. PJ TJTNAM'S MONTHLY' ? UK subscribers, responding to the > repeated and urgently expressed \} >f eminent and judi?iotrs persons in *, s sections of the country, have dc- ? lo commence, on the 1st of January, . an entirely OI4IGINAL PERIOD- <jre , under the above title. pre s intended to combine the lighter I ft ?teristics a popular magazine with yoi r and graver qualities of a quarterly *; tilling a position hitherto unoc- Pni I in our literature. iile attractive variety for the gonenl r is thus obtained, there will be an pt to secure substantial excellence in noi department. coi accomplish this we intend that the bci in all of its mechanical and business H'u 8, shall be such as will meet the J of our most distinguished writers; i medium as they would seek for in .,;c nnicnting with the world?and such ?tn y tempt some to write ably and cai ibly, who have not hitherto contrbu- de< ) periodicals. Oo intend that ali articles admitted Be lie work shall be liberallv paid for. ? believe that an ample material cjn for such a work; there is no lack nt.| of talent among our writers or of tin ciation on the part of the reading isli ; and that a properly conducted P'< lical of this kind may bring to light true genius, as yet undeveloped, ntnam's Monthly" will Ik? devoted to terosls of Literature, Science and Gf in their best and pleasentest as- to COI tierlv independent of nil merely self- Me Icreats or partisar, or sectional lead- ca' in management, it will be oj>en to stent writers for free discussion of opics as are deemed important and tr(, die. interest. f?r :? critica! department will l?e wholly pil indent of the publishers, and as far tin sibio, influence or bias. Wholesome wn at ions of public abuses will be allow- t-'l 'air field without fear or favor, elevated national tone and spirit, Vy iean and independent yet discritnif and just, both to the literature and j u social condition and prosj?octs of letnisphcres, will tie cultivated as a ig principle of the work, fcial attention will Ik* given to inatMinectcd with social policy, muuicigtilatious, public health and safety, *|m to practical economies of everv-day Vai iM>l ten a subject needs illustration, or cv? id example, such illustrations will be #f' onally given, but it is not expected P? he success of the work is to depend lat are termed "ombelishments. j-r0 following among many others, have pr, wed their hearty approval oftlie plan, *jd ill all give it their generous co-op- sot ii?while nearly all of them will Ik* cci luitors to the wo'k: Washington ^ , II. W. Longfellow. Donald Gr i*l, Haw thorite, W. C. Hryunt, Miss !pj er, author Wide World, llnv, Dr. s. Geo. Win. Curtis, Hon. Geo. (In oft, iVof I.iehor. K. 1\ Whipple, ,*oi Dr. Kohinson, K. D. Kimball, Miss tin r. Prof II. Silliman. Jr. R, W. Km- hci I lev. Orville Dewey. Hcv. Dr. md, Mr*. Kirklatul, Miss Sedgwick. Lireene Ilalleck, Rev. K. II. Cliapiu, iiimmer Ut. K**v. lip- Potter, Pmr, me lie, Proof Henry Heed, Pre* II. II. arc u. lion. E. G. Squirer, Ac., Ac., j>;" ;e annum or 25 cents pe me r, terms forcluba, Ac., will be given n|j urate eirculnra. im rs received byall l?ook-sellcrs through c I'nited States, and by the publish- off en* O. P. PUTNAM A CO, 10 Park Place, New York. PUTNAM'S POPULAR LIBAKY. ' continued semi monthly. Jan 0. ^ UTIIERN CULTIVATOR, f A Monthly Journal, 1K" r.I) TO THE ISTrRF.STS or BOOTH run tile a a it ic ul rvit e, *?y >signed to improve both the toil and the I'11' I; lo derate the characters if the Til- the rs of the soil, and to introduce a req More Enlightened System if Agriculture, Horticulture, H 1 Stock breeding, and trei General Farm ?4**' Economy., ITU \TKI> WITH NUMEROUS & Elegant Engiavings. t i i e,w. !).. and i>. in i-MAN. Editors. I ,t'.\l II Kiev on commenced I si of Jan- n;,t each number will contiin bo> -two large octavopages, (7| by 11 in- i of closely printed mutter, embracing era itributions of some of the most Intel- the itnd practical planters in every section Lai Southern States. abc terms: 1 Copy one yesr, ft 1 l''C - - - 5 , 1 4* a a .... 10 ? * a 20 by u m m _ "jj the Alwuys Its Advnnre. Kills of all specie-paying flunks re at pnr. All money remitted by mail, b paid, nt the risk of the Publisher, idress W. 8. JONES, Augusta, Go, 0 BOOK AGENTS WANT ED EI FOB THE hern ?f western st a tes [ TO CANVASS KOK A 7 WORK IT T. 8. ARTHUR rr TCIIKS OF LIFE AND CJIAR- 1 rrER?contuiuing over 400 juigcs. Mo ctsvo, with 16 finely tinted Engrav- Ft., id a Portrait of the Author, handsome- Mo id. Price Two Dollars. A liberal day . ?.a--- *? it 111.un: 10 /igcnm. | Agent hits a district allotted of one ) t counties, by which he has the ex- Ari control of sale. Han ftcloiiing $3 to the publisher, post Han specimen copy of the book will be M ? led to any part of the United States. |Mt E DEW DROP: aiIj^dhkal ran rnt J>STt OF tXXFXKAVOX, T* md tftmi-monChim at It adrtbaro' JV. C. r FRANC. H. PA0L, O. W P. pd to the patronssdntf the Temper- tef| A0C6 p VI III It. For rtingio copies fiO cts^ 9 eopio :? copiea fifl; 20 cupice #6. JfcjrThe D| m?st aooompsny oH orders. Per- J,J adinp clubs of nins, fifteen or two* ITENT MEDICINES, &C. ME >50 0 CHALLENGE. " [7HATEVER concerns the henlth nnd N] hnppiness of the people is nt nil times the most valuable inportnnce. I take it granted that every person will do all heir power to save the lives of their chiln, nnd that ever)- person will endeavor to unote their own henlth at nil sacrifices ? ;el it to be inv duty to solemnly assure i that WORMS, according to the opinion the most celebrated physicians, are the tf mary causes of a large majority of disca- Dis to which children nnd adults are liable ; is ti on have an appetite continually changea- or from one kind of food to nnofher, bad M. nth, pain in the stomach, picking at the t >e hnrdness and fullness of the belly, dry igh, slow fever pulse irregular?re memr that all these denote Worms, and you )uld at once apply the remedy? 'IOUEXSAC/CS WORM SYRI'P An article founded upon scientific princi- Feti ft, compounded with purely vegetable snh- cy o necs, being perfectly safe when taken, nnd skir i be given to the most tender infant with limi sided beneficial effect. Where Bowel ino i niplaints nnd Dinrrho-a have made them evii. nk and debilitated, the tonic properties of be c r Worm Syrup are such, Uiat it stands ithout an equal in the catalogue of mediics in giving tone and strength to the stomi, which makes it an infallible remedy for >se afllicted with Dyspepsia. The astonling cures performed by this syrup, after ysicians have failed, is the best evidence its superior efficacy over all others. THE TAPE WORM 'i exec, This is the most difficult worm to destroy all that infest the human system. It grows man an almost indefinite length, becoming so q* led nnd fastened in the intestines and jnva imach, affecting the health so sadlv, as to ri.rfl ise St. Vitus' Dance, Fits, &c., that thooc |esS( licted seldom if ever suspect that it is Tape pow onn hastening them to nn early grave. In dj,,? lor to destroy this worm a very energetic tarn ntment must bo pursued. It would, there- ' e, Ik- proper to take fi to 8 of my Liver Is, so as to remove all obstructions, that i Worm Syrup may act direct upon the inn, which must be taken in doses of 2 " lespeonfills 3 times a day. These dircc- j',r ' ns followed have never been known to fail ' curing the most obstinate case of Tape desc orni. cinei used I OVENS A CK'S LI VKR PILLS No part of the system in more liable to J"*? ' ease than the LIVER, it serving as a ercr to purify the blood or giving the *Wn >|h t secretion to the bile ; so that any thy ong action of the 1 jver affects the other portant parts of the system, and results perw ion sly in liver Comptuint, Jaundice, Dyspsia, Ac. NVe-should therefore watch RPr rrv symptom that might indicate a wrong a?'* ion of the liver. These Fills being com- u, sed of Roots and Flanta furnished by nav to henl the sick.vir.: 1st. An KXPKC- ^ (RANT, which augments tho secretion un the pulmonary mucus membrane, or |ur? motes the discharge of secreted matter. ".v " . An ALTER ATI VE, 'w hich changes in me inexplicable aud insensible manner the CMC rtain morbid action of the system. 3d A >MC, which gives tone and strength to ?" s nervous s\ stem, renew ing health and 1 w to all parts of the IhmIv. 4th. A CAIARTIC, which act* in perfect harmony 'J11'" tli the other ingredients, and operating on ' j bow els, and expelling the w hole muss of rrupt and vitiated matter, and purifying hloodw hicl destroys disease and restores 1* dlh. City TO EEM. I IPS Von will find these Fills an invaluable dieine in mane complaints to wldcli yon lt'H subject. In obstructions either total or ^ i tial, they have Wen found of inestimable t,j|icflt, restorir.g their functional nrmgo- j r ts to a healthy action, purifs ing the blood t.?c# i other fluids so effectually to put to flight r(>aj| complaints which may arise from foliialc t|u. ( *gnlaritiea, as hcad;ieho, giddiness, dim- mae is of sight, pain in the side, liaek, Ac., and crcd the public ns the best Fills for all dis- wc _ X'S upon the following. e. MEDICAL EVIDENCE tem rv di ivs, the undersigned Physicians, having thy < I the receipt of their manufacture submitto us for inspection, say, that the ingrents of w hich they are composed makes , in the W*st Fill in use for all diseases of 1 aver. Impurities of tlie Blood, Ac. Wc ever; this not only from our own judgment, t also from that of the best inedicnl an- |j, irity in the United States. All diseases -j < - ni 11 nirinjj tin- use of an ALTERATIVE, |j,0 ( APHORKT1C i)ml PURGATIVE MEI>- cnt x, INK, 111tit cuinr under our notice, has been more itted with the hIhivc I'ilU with the luoat |nr |i iafactorv success. nosti GEORGE WOOD. M. D. ostal F. CROWLEY. M. D. c Prc L BOWKS. M. I). pr,,vi 'urshasc nono hut those having the wjp T| tire. "J. N. HOllKNHACK* upon each plain :, as all others are worthless imitations. t,.r ,, Vgents wishing now supplies, and nil oth- upon wishing to become agents, must address i0 ca Proprietor, i. N, 1IOBENNACK, a*, his |m x?ratory, No. 120 North 8KCOND street f,.m? .ve Rare, PHILADELPHIA. efl, n Sold by all Druggists and Merrhants in i United States. 11 'aniphleta giving Certificates ofcores per- JACI mod in different sections of the country, blow the abovo medicines, can be had gratis of spun agents. p 'or sale by BILLINGS, & BELK. , I.nncastor, C. II., D. C., Nc CANE CREEK " ACADEMY: ( S MILES WORTH Of LANCASTER C. H. ) ^ IWAJLD LIVIMORTOE, Prim?ip?l, then, TRUSTEES : vn lev. D. P. Rorinsor, G. W. Gam rle, I. D. M. Durlat, R. H.Crocrrtt, luoit Draw* L. Z. Williamsor. ....o.... MIE Academic year coniiiti of two m?- ** * aions ; the first commences on the 3d r*rtr uday in November, and close* the 3d lay in April, and the 3d open* on the 4th ndajr in April, and closes on the 4th Fri. ] in September. Inlet mi Tallltam Par eewlnt. Q}* tedfiaff. Writing Spelling and W,th thmefle ft. 00 ro' no, with Geography It E Grammar,#8.00 ne, with all the higher branch- I'J >f Mathematk-a. Natural, Intel* ' ual, and Moral Philosophy, r 22fias3r*?5&...aw? sa he Soheol rMOhtmenda, itaelf to parents goardiane as well by the heaHhineex of * ** location, ash* the comae tansy of Its In- [f**1tctor. Boarder# will Bod good arcom- "J?* 1 lation near the academy upon reasonable ui( lov. 10,185ft. 80? It. ? ^ ? _ sitrol DICINES& PERIODICALS. 1 ver complaint N DICE, DYSPEPSIA, CI IRONIC OH I ERVOU8 DEBILITY, DISEASES OF THE KIDNEYS, and all i diseases arising from a disordered liver or Stomach, such as Constipation, inward Piles, Fullness, or Blood to the Head, Acidity or ie Stomach. Nausea, Heart-burn, gust for Food, fullness, or weight IE STOMACH, SOUR rRUCTATIONS, SINKING 3 fluttering at the tit of t1ik stoich, swimming of thf. head, hurried, .ND difficult breathing, fluttering at the heart, choking or suffocatin . brssattoff* ? ".? .a lying fosture, DIMNEiS of V1SMW, DOTS OR WEBS , before the sight, f.rs and dull pain in tiie head,deficits- 1 r pf.rspiration, yellowness of the and eyes,tain in the side, rack,chest, p is, &c., sudden flushes of heat, burnin the flesh, constant imaginings of ? and great depressu>n of spirits, cob Hecu tally cured by S 1>k. llofland's fr CLKIMATKI) OK UMAX HITTERS. PREPARED BY \ d DR. C. W. IACKROM, C. fi THE GERMAN MEDICINE STORE, f, 120 Arch Street, Philadelphia. p heir powrr oxer the a burr diseases it not a iird?if equallexl?by any other prepara- h in the United States, as the cure* attest, in f y catet after tkiUful physiciant had failed. n hese Bitters are worthy the attention of ? lids. Possessing great virtues in the t] ideation of diseases of the liver and ? *r glands, exercising the most searching c era in weakness and atVeetiona of the stive organs, they are, withal, safe cerand pleasant. i IE AD AND RE COKV1SCED. ? From the M Boston lice." n he editor said. Dec. 22d, ? r. Unfland's Celebrated Herman Flitters v lie cure of liver Complaint. Jaundice, J* pepsin, Chronic or Nervous Debility, is j' rvedly one of the most popular medi- ' s of the day. These Bitters have Wen I by thousands, and n friend at our e'bow " he has himself received an effectual and f nancnt cure of Liver Complaint from the of this remedy. Wo are com ineed that, ie use of these Bitters, the untient eon- d tly gains strength and vigor?a fact wor- ^ of* great consideration. They are plea- c in taste and smell, and can f>o used by r' on* with the most delicate stontrcha " i safety, tinder any cimimHtances. We l' speaking from experience, and to the ted we advise their tt*e. ? H Scott's Weekly," our of the heat liter- a paper* published, said, Aug. 'J5: ti Dr. HoflanJ"* Hainan Dittrrr, manttfae- c d by l>r. Jaekson, are now recommended e onte of the most prominent member* of faculty a* nn article of much eflicaey in sot* female weakness. A* auchiathe ' , we would advise all mother* to obtain * tile, and thus *n\e themselves much R rtcaa. Persona of debilitated eonatitu- n twill find them* Hitter* advaula;.eons to r health, na we know from experience talutarv effect* thev have upon weak n i-m*." ' - b MORE EVIDENCE. he lion. C. II. ! (incline. Mayer of the of Camden, N. J., says: IlnocLASn's (itlMAX UiTTClts.?We seen many Haltering notices of tliia I ieine. and the source front shirk they f i induced na to make inquiry rc*|H vting lcrits. Front inquiry we were perauato use it, and must *.>y we found it spcin it* action upon diseases of the liver digestive organ*, and the powerful intluit exert* upon i.crvous prostration is V surprising. It enim* and strengthen* terve*, bringing them into a stale ot're, making sleep refreshing, f thia medicine w as more generally used, re satiatied there would be lesa aicknesa ont the stomach, liver, and nervous aysthc great majority of real and imaginasenses emanate. Have tiiem in a heal ondition, and you can bid defiance to mle* generally. This extraordinary cine we would advise our friend* who " it all indisposed to give it a trial?it v? III j1. 11 mend itself. It should, in fart, be in , > family. No other medicine ean jwoaucti evidences of merit." idenee upon evidence has been rereiv- 1 ike the foregoing) from all sections of * Jnion, the last three years, tlic strong- '! I'stimoiiy in its fnvor, is, that there Is ' i of it used in the ornetico of the reguliysiciitna ? f I'hilnorlphia, than all other , rums combined, a fact that eon easily lie ? dished, and fully proving that a seientif- K" partition will nieetwith their quiet ap- P1 il v? hen presented even in this form. P lat this medicine will cure Urrr Coint and l>yspepsin, no one can doubt uf- n sing it ss directed. It arts specifically ^ the stomach arA Hvcr; '< is nrefernblo P lomc) in all biltout disrates?<oe effect mediate. They esn be administered to . le or infant with safety and reliable bent any time. took well to the marks ef the genuine. P* ley have the written signature of C. M. . KHUN upon tin wrapper, and his name ' n in the bottle, without which they are . out. or sale Wholesale and Retail at the GERMAN MEDICINE STORE, || >. IttU Aryh street, one door kslevr Sixth, E del phis; and by respectable dealers K rally through the eonntry. ? PRICKS RKDUCRD. > enable all eUaes of invalids to eqjoy ivautages of their great restoraUre pow- g Single Bailie 7ft Cents. J so. for sele by IfAlLE ft. TWITTV .. U1 tor, C. II. t? hokeal# Agent* for N. C., ft. C? G*k>., j,( HA VfLASD, HARRAU j C'on Utlom, 9. C. M ly 14 91 ?w If th *1 Un OF BaUST EXXXTT, ? Ctlebrmird frisk Patriot and Martyr. p< i kit tfperchrt, jr. aim an Appendix, tin inino xaluabU portion* of frith iff*- T y, ha John IV. ffjflr. it lift work b one of th* neat rrtdabU fa biographies *ver offered to th* AmortiHwler, and trill ho hailed with jo* by In admirer of th* distinguished but ill- d? subject. M Me* the life of Imut T.nntrrr, it winuie <Mntl of the mien iiwar. N ? and outbreak* of the Irtaft to attoa*p> tn In free thunnlraa from EagUeh boo- b? Abo *? 1* of Th?*?ld Woifb \Mmaka\U CflbUo. MoogW. D. S9ESfadiL?v^" mI! ry^k A^i* Fot by b* JTOTHER SCIEHTUIO WORDER GREAT CURE FOR DYSPEPSIA. DR* J. 8. HOUGHTON'S Tho true Digestive Fluid, or Gastric Juice repared from Ron net, or tbo fourth atom* rhe of the Ox, nfler directions from Baron iobig, the great Physiological Chemist, by . S. Houghton, M. I)., Philadelphia, Pn. This is truly a wonderful remedy for inrpestinn, Dyspepsia, Jaundice, ljvcr ConiInint, Constipation and Debility, curinp aftr Nature's own agent, the Gastric Juiee. $-#?" Haifa teaspeoafal ef Pepsin, infuad in water, will digest or dewolve Five ounds of Roast Beef, in about two hours, ut of the stomach. Pepsin is the chief element, or Great Di* estmg Principle of the Gastric Juice?the dlvent of the food, the Purifying, Preaervip and stimulating npent of the stomach and itestincs. It is extracted from the digestive lomnch of the ox, thus forming an artificial igestive fluid, precisely like tho natural Inatric Juice in ita Chemical powers, and irnishing a complete and perfect substitute ?r it. By the aid of this preparation, tho aina and evils of Indigestion and Dyspepsia re removed, jnst as they would be by a ealthv stomnrh It ? - 1? *? .. m uuing unutrm inr tyspcntics, curing RiMiif Dcbllllj, Kmaett'ion, Nervous Decline, and Dispeptic Conumption, Rnppond In lie on the verge of fie grave. I he scientific evidence upon rhich H is based, is in the highest degree urious and remarkable. SCIKNTIFIC K VIDKNCK. Baron I.iebig in his celebrated work on Inimnl Chcrrtlstry, says: "An nrtlflclat dlestive fluid, analogous to the gastric jniee, lav bo readily prepared from the moeoau iciiibrane of the atnmaeh of the calf, in hicli various articles of food, a* meat and ggs, will be softened changed and digested, list m the same manner as they would to i the human stomach." Dr. Combe, in his valuable writings on the Physiology of Digest! n,w olwerve* that Ma liniinution of the dueq usntity of the gn?? rie juice is a prominent and all prevailing nunc of Dyspepsia; " and he states that "a istinguished Professor of Medicine ia lots on, who was severely afflicted with this oinplsint, finding everything else to fuil,had ecourse to the jpistrie juice, obtained from lie stomach of living animals, w'uicli proved n be i*rfrctly successful" Dr. (traham, author of the famous works n * Vegetable Dirt," says: "It is a remarkble fact in physiology, that tbo stomachs of nimals, macerated in water, impart to the uid the property of dissolving various nrtiles of food, ami of effecting kind of mvtijiuil dixetfims of them in no wise different pom ?F?e mrtmral digestire process." 1-41" Call on the Agent, and get adeurripive circular, gratis, giving a large amount of rientifne evidence, similar to the above, toother with reports of remarkable cures, from 11 parts of the United Htileu AS A DYSPKPSIA CURE, Dr. Houghton's Pepsin has produced the tost mttrrehms effects. tn curing crises of dcility, emaemtion. nervous decline, and dyaoptic consumption. It is impossible to give lie details of cases in the limits of this adoftiscuicnt; but authenticated certificates ave hired given of more than /im hututmi tntarkable cures in Philadelphia, New York, nd Boston alone. These were nearly all cape rule cases, and the cures wore not only ipirl ami wonderful, hut permanent. It is a great nervous antidote, and particuirly usiful for tendency to bilious disorder, ver complaint, lever and ague, or badly tfea d fever and ague, mid the evil e(Tect? of uinine, mercury, and other drugs upon tho igestiv* organs, after a long sicklies*. AU ti, for excess in eating, and tho two frequent se of anient spirits. It almost reconciles ralth with in tempera ace. >LD STOMACH COMPLAINTS, There is no fonn of old stomach complaints liieh it does not sueai to reach and removo t once. No matter how bad they may be_i - - - Ki*ua in nam rclMj > A single done reiovcs nil unpleasant symptoms; and, it only ceds to be repeated for a abort time to make ieao pood effect* permanent. Purilu of ?/y anil i igor tf blood follow at once. it is artirularly excellent in easeoof nausea, voning, cramp*, aorrne** of the pit of the toinnrh, distress after euting, low, cold state f the blood, heaviness, loftimas of spirits, espondency, tendency to inannity. auWido IC., &e. Dr. Houghton'* Pepain in sold by nearly II the dealers in fiuo drugs,and popular mod inc* throughout the United Slates. It is rvpnrvd in powdor and flahl form, and in r> script ion vials for tlie uso of physician*. Private circulars for tlie nao of physicians, lay be obtained of Dr. Houghtou or his a* cnU, describing the whole process of pfearution, and giving the authorities upon hi.! the VlnllMf V. ?nio tiv M K'ltlVUJF HIU used. As it is not s tecrel remedy, no ob> rtion* against its use can be raised by phsisns in respectable standing sod regular raetiee. Price one dollar per Itottle. Obterce fkis t Every bottle of the genuine 'El'SIM, bus re tho written signature of J . Houghton, M. D.( sole proprietor, Phils elphia, Ps., Copy-right end trade mark so ired. aothts.?IT a it.it ICTwii yy,Isncaster C, I.; W. A Morrison &- Co..Wtnwsborni Dr. . Curtis, Columbia y Dr. J. A. Reed, OMv. irville ; P. M Cohen, Charleston. V K i< t A TURK DKATIf. j ink e I in on SeW-Pmrrxmlifm?omhi 95 ?ntt. pillH BOOK, JUST IMJBUmiED, 10 L filled with useful information, on is infirmities end dtusnues of thehnnmn aysft. It addresses itself siike to Youth, Men>od and Old Aga~to ull who apprehend or iffer under tlm dire cunncgnwicsn ftf esrly ' prolonged iftiisrwtioM -to all who Awl ? exhaustive efforts of baneful habits?to I ft bo in addition to declining physical envy, am the vfeflms of ncrvnvs and mental bility and of DiOfdng and tnchmrhrriy deft, indeoey?to alt each Dr. K. would any? READ THIS BOOK! ho saiwnhla addon and Impcnssifo warning given will pmvant ynfian of misery end ?u > ring, and anvo annual ir th go sonde ef Uvea. HT A remittance of 96 tenia, enclosed a letter, addressed to Dr. Kiakeltft, Pliila dphia, will ensure a hook, under envelope, ir return of and!. Dr. Km It jrenrs iCiMml Pbysiafcn, , W. oomor of Id end Union tftmst, ho. i seaoulcsi ccafidiariiiHy. lis who pUoeshitimlf under tho cm* <>f r^K. his honor