Decatur Eagle, Volume 13, Number 21, Decatur, Adams County, 27 August 1869 — Page 2
The Eagle. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY. DECATUR, IyPIAVA. fridat, august ar isca. News Items.
Congressman Stokes is at Washington from Tennessee with a list for the removal of every officeholder in that state who is tinctur- ! ed with Senterism. The Republican Convention of Massachusetts, for the nominating of State officers, will be held at Worcester, September 22. U Three millions in gold were shipped from New York, on Sat urday, to prominent San Francisco houses, by the Pacific Railroad. Articles of consolidation of the Wabash and Lake Shore railroads were signed Aug 20. They will be submitted to the stockholders in thirty days. Numerous lettters have been received at Gettysburg, from Southern gentlemen, accepting the invitation to participate in the indiction of the battle field. Commodore Vanderbilt was married on Saturday morning, at London, Canada, to Miss Frank Crawford, daughter of Robert L. Crawford of Mobile, Alabama. At a meeting of manufacturers at Fall River, Friday night, it was determined to run all factories but three days in the week at present. This will put over 500,000 spindles on halftime. The first conviction, under the new prohibitory law.of Massachusetts, was made in Superior Court, at Boston, yesterday. The jury were out five hours. The defendant was fined fifteen dollars and cost, '
The century plant now in blossom an Frost’s green house, at Rochester, will be moved to Chicago, next Thursday, to be exhibited fpr the benefit'of the Young Men’s Christian Association of that city. It is nineteen feet high. A dispatch from St. Joseph, Mis sotiri, mentions the reception there of a letter from California which says that five hundred Chinese will shortly be sent to St. Joseph. An agency is to be established at St. Joseph, one at St. 'Louis, and still another at Springfield, Illinois. It seems to be the understanding, now, that if the test-oath is exacted of the Virginia legislature, such members as cannot take it will resign, and thus require anew election to fill the vacancies. These vacancies, it is maintained can be filled by conservative men who can take the test oath. A comparative statement of the Mortality of the cities of Boston, Cincinnati, Chicago, and St. Louis, from Jnauary 1 to July 1, 1869. hosed upon official figures, show' that every eighty-ninth persen died in Boston ; every one hundred and fourth in Cincinnati; every one ( hundred and eleventh in Chicago, and every one hundred and tenth in St. Louis.
Mississippians, of prominence write that while the president’s support of Judge Dent for the governorship of Mississippi was fully expected when the latter's name was first mentioned for the place, the former's recent refusal w'ul not prevent the nomination of Dent, and his election is regarded with equal confidence. A campaign of great vigor is anticipated after the nominations made, on Sept. 7.
The cable telegram from Madrid, stating that a treaty had been signed for the cession of Cuba to the Cubans, is generally credited at Washington, though no official dispatch is at hand from Special Agent Eorbos, who. in connection with Minister Sickles, has been conducting the negotiations, framed in accordance with a protocol agreed on in this city, on July 1. and exclusively detailed in thbse dispatches on July 3. The treaty said to have been signed requires the approval of Cespedes, and this government is to he in some way responsible for the security of the purchase money. The Cuban envoy is here, awaiting advices, and also the return of the president.
The Herald's Washington disCtch says: ‘ The movement ailed to some time ago, favoring a modification of the laws affecting incomes, has assumed a more formidable and general character. The plan proposed is to increase the tax on whiskey to 81 per gallon, which, it is claimed, will realize 85.000.000. if the means now within reach of the revenue for the prevention of fraud shall be adopted. From tobacco, at least <33.000,000 can be realized; from vtAmps. with a modification of the preaentlaw say 810.000.000; from fermented liquors. 810,000,000; from licenses, 810.000.000; and th*n fr.»m the modified income tax b-rt * J 5.000.000 would he required ♦ ♦ mak“ a total of 8155.00ti.Q00. •i »*»onnt equal to R .»•/*«“<* estimate of tbeetpend
itures for the present fiscal year. The plafFis to confine the income tax to the interest paid on the national debt, the five per cent, to be deducted when the interest is paid. This will realize 86,255,000, without a dollar of expense incurred in the collection. The balance it is proposed to raise by taxing incomes derived from surplus prop erty, embraced in stocks of banks, railways, and other corporations, and from interest paid on bonds of such corporations.”
STATE NEWS. There are three lodges of Odd Fellows in Vevay. Nearly 2,000 bushels of peaches are received daily in the Indian apolis market. The Richmond merchants and manufacturers have organized a board of trade. The “champion laugher" of Indiana is Senator Pratt, and not Mr. Colfax, as many have surmised. The Union Lutheran Synod convenes at Mount Solomon, Harrison county, on the 15th of September. The Central railroad has shipped 1,650,000 pounds of wheat from Indianapolis during the past week.
The following postoffices were established in Indiana during the month of July: Schellsvilie, Dubois county; Lettsville, Daviess county; Sitka, Martin county; Ditney Hill, Dubois county. The enforcement of the Sunday law in Evansville is causing considerable excitement. The saloon keepers met on Friday night, and resolved to prosecute all offenders under the law. James and Edward Curry, brothers were drowned in the canal at Logansport, on Thursday, while bathing. One of the brothers was blind. i The United Brethren conference in Randolph county, last week, made short work with all ministers who belonged to sfcret societies. All were subjected to charges, and handed over to a committee for trial.
The Howard Tribune says : “A gentleman of truth, who came here on Tuesday, from Peru, stated to us that a woman, at that city, had recently given birth to six children, that the mother died, also one child, and that five children were I still living. The Lafayette Journal says: ‘•There is a great deal of sickness in the city at present, as we learn from our city physicians, who are all kept hard' at work, night and day attending the numerous calls made upon them. Fevers and bowel complaints arc the prevail4ng diseases." The Laporte papers contain the particulars of a horrible attempt on the part of a black villain living in Johnson township, named Zeke Thompson, to perpetrate an I outrage upon -a young girl aged i 14, the daughter of a gentleman i living in the same township. The I young lady succeeded , after a terrible struggle, in escaping to . a neighbor’s house. The negro i was arrested, lodged in jail, and 1 has since been bound over in the j sum of 8300 to appear at the next | term of court.
The Diflference. Democratic journals are pathetic over a coastwise voyage by the president and family in u government vessel. They shed no such economical tears when those sterling patriots. Howell Cobb, Jerry Black, and J. B. Floyd sailed all around in the Harriet Lane, taking their families for pleasure, and the red-dressed Marine band for music.— liadical sheet. Because in that case Howe’.l Cobb paid the expenses of the voyage out of his own private purso; whereas, in Grant's case, Uncle Sam. pays the expenses out of the public purse. There’s r distinction with a good deal of difference.— Chicago Times.
< aba. ■ W ashingtom. Aug. 23.—Advices from Cuba to Aug. 13, receivad by Cuban sympathizers here, give an account of a fight between a portion ot Gen. Jordan's command, and the troops of Nalmazeds, >ear Puerto Pad re. The Cubans, num bering less than 600, were encampled near Puerto Padre, where they were attacked by a force of Spanish regulators and volunteers, over i 1,000 strong. In the first attack the CubaiSi were compelled to fall back. They, however, rallied, and. securing a more defensible position, repulsed the Spaniards in their second attack. The loss of the Cubans in this contest was 150 in killed, wounded, and missing ; that of the Spaniards is represented as more than double that number. Col Figuerro commanded the Cobans. "-The fight is reported to have l»een one of the most desperate character, the Cubans fighting wtth an earnestness that was irresistible.
Stave and Heading Factory.— Hon. D, Studabaker, Common Pleas Judge of this District, re siding at Decatur, and Mr. Linn, a skillful mechanic of the same place, were here last week making preliminary for the establishment of an extensive Stave and Heading Factory. They selected ground west of the railroad, north of Wabash street. They have gone for their machinery, expecting to have it here and in working order inside of sixty days. The great, almost inexhaustible quantity of excellent white oak timber with which our county is supplied, makes Bluffton the best place in the country for such machinery, and the fact that Judge Studabaker is thus taking time by “the foreward top” is but another evidence of his good judgement. —Bluffton Banner.
Miscellaneous Items The last sensation at Baookville, Pa, is the elopement of a colored lady with a white Radical. She has feoled herself. A private letter from Arizona says that a wagon train belonging to Gonzales was attacked by Indians, on the the Gila river, on August 4, and thirteen man killed. There is a lady in Sutton, New York, who was married at twelve years of age, who is the mother of sixteen childien, weighs 210 pounds, and is “fair, fat and forty.’ A man in Quebec, arrested for endangering life by leading bears about the streets, was acquitted when he showed that his animals were only boys dressed in bearskins.
It is said that Senator Cole has sailed for San Domingo, with authority from our government to negotiate for the purchase of the Island. Why not include Cuba in the job ? A drunken fallow, walking along the street at night, with his head thrown back looking at the moon with sovereign contempt, was heard to exclaim : “You needn’t be so proud, moon. You are full only once a month, and I every night. There is nothing purer that honasty; nothing sweeter than charity ;* nothing warmer than love; nothing brighter than virtue, and nothing more steadfast than faith. These united in one mind form the purest, the sweetest, the richest, the brightest, and most steadfast happiness. * The directors of the Central Pa cific Railaoad Company have received information of a conspiracy among some dissatisfied men, for merly employed on the road, to burn all bridges and the stock fuel east of the Sierra Navada mountains in one night. The company has taken measures to frustrate these designs.
A singular succession of fatalities occurred at Princeton, Kentucky, a few days ago. An immense millstone rolled from a wagon down hill, . crashed through a fence, upset a number of beehives, the enragec inhabitants of which stung three children so that they died, and the millstone, still rolling on, bounded into a stock pasture and killed two horses and a calf.
In many parts of Holland there isn’t to be found a single grindstone. The emigrant shoemaker from' Holland still brings his lapstone with him. He does this in the supposition that nature is as chary in that line of production in this country as in his own. The farmer there has always sharpened his scythe by hammering out its cutting edge. He does so to this day. Mrs. A. is well-known as one of those malignant Christians who, as Hood says, “think they’re pious when they’re only bilious,” and who furnish their highest evidence of religion by perpetually recommending it to other people, as if it were an article they wished to dispose of, to keep it from spoiling. Brown was asked if he didn’t think she was “deeply pious. Yes,” said Brown, “her piety is so deep that I never could see any bottom to itP'
Getting Educated for the Ministry. • A Louisiana negro, somewhat advanced in years, was accosted a few davs since by a former employer,' with the question as to how he was getting along. ell, sir,” said he, “Tse quit work now, and am studyin’ for the ministry. The gentleman, upon asking to see what work his sable attendant of former times had under his arm. was handed, with a great show of importance, an old copy of one of Webster's elementary' spelling books, which the old darkdy declared that the colored preacher up at the school house had told him contained all the “lamin’ dat was worf picking up afore gwine in de pulpit. Arter yon gets dare, continued the old would-be divine, “you'se got to pound away' on de Bible and sarch de Scriptures.**
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Sheriff's Sale. Joseph Crabbs) In the Court of Common vs: L Pleas, of Adams County Mahlon Bailey J Indiana. By virtue of an execution to me directed and delivered by the Clerk of said Court in the above entitled cause I have levied upon and will expose for sale by public auction at the Court House door in said County between the hours of 10 a. x. and 4 o’clock p. m. of the 18th. day of September, 1869 the rents and profits, for a term not to exceed seven years, of the following described real estate, in Adams County Indiana, to-wit: , The southeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section (27,) township (2b,) range (14) east, And on failure to realixe therefrom the full amount of the judgement, interest thereon and costs, I will, at the same lime and in the manner aforesaid offei for sale the fee simple of the above described premises. Taken as the property of the defendants to satisfy said Execution, this 28th day of July, 1869. JAMES STOOPS, Jr. August 26,1869, Sheriff.
Sheriffs Sale. George F. Brubach, j In the Court of Com vs. > moq Pleas of AdChristiana Voight.) ams County, Ind’a. By virtue of an execution to me directed and delivered, by the Clerk of said Court, in the above entitled cause, I have levied upon and will expose for sale, by public auction, at the Court House door, in said county, between the hours of ten a. m., and four o'clock p. m., on Saturday, September 18th, 1869, the rents and profits, for a term not to exceed seven years, of the following described real estate, in Adams Coutty, in the State of Indiana., vix: The south part of the east half of the south west quarter of section (26,) township (27,) range (18) east, containing sixty acres, more or less, Ahi on failure to realixe therefrom the full amount of the judgement, inter est thereon, and costs,l will at the same time and in the manner aforesaid offerfor sale the fee simple of the above described real estate. Taken as the property of the defendant to satisfy said order of sale. JAMES STOOPS, Jr., August 14th, 1869. Sheriff. Sale of Real Estate.
NOTICE is hereby given, that by virtue of an order of the Adams Common Pleas Court, the undersigned, Administrator of the Estate of Christina Kilchoffer, deceased, will offer for sale at public auction, at the Court House door in Decatur, Adams county, Indiana, on Friday, October 15fA, 1869, the following described real estate to-wit The southwest quarter of section twen-ty-five (25,) in township twenty-six (26) north, of range thirteen (13) east, containing one hundred and sixty (160) acres of land, situate in Adams county, Indiana. Terms:—One third cash in hand. The residue in equal payments at one and two years from date of sale, with notes at interest waiving benefit of valuation and appraisement laws, and secured to the satisfaction of the Administrator. Sale at 1 o’clock, p. m. PETER HOFBTELER, Aug. 27, 1869. Adminintrator. .Thfice of of .Administrator. NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Administrator of the estate of Benjamin Fravel, deceased. The estate is supposed to be solvent. WILLIAM J. FRAVEL, Aug. 27,1869, Administrator.
J. P. WAGGOIER, Licensed Auctioneer, RESIDENCE, near Salem, Adams Co., Indiana. Post-Office address, Wilshire, Ohio. May* Special attention given to crying public sales. PFR D —Agents wanted evV ery where. Sample for 2 cents. Address, BATES, HAINES & CO., Cleveland, Ohio. 19w4. AGENTS WANTED FOR THE BEST BOOK OF THE PERIOD, WOMEN OF NEW YORK: Or, The CwSer WerW es the Great City. The moststartlimg revelations of mod ern times. New York Society Unmasked. “The Aristocracy,” “Women of Pleasure,” “Married Women,” and al classes thoroughly ventilated. 50 Illustrations. Address at once The New York Book Company, 145 Nassau Street, New York. <B. AGENTS WANTED FOR “WONDERS OF THE WORLD." Ove* ot»« thovsamd iLLtrrrnATioxs. The largest, best selling, and most attractive subscription book ever published. Send for Circulars, with terms, at once Address UNITED STATES PUBLISHING CO., 411 Broome St., N. Y. 19w4
AGENTS WANTED FOR THE SECRET HISTORY Os the Cnnfederacy By Edward -f. BaMard. The astounding reneUtions and startling disclosures made in this work art creating the most intense desirs to obtain it. Ths secret polawal intrigues Ac., of Davis and other Confederate leaden, with the //«■- den Mysteries from “Behind the Scenes in Richmond.” are thoroughly ventilated. Send for circulars and see our terms, and a full description of the work. Address, - NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO„ Phil's, Pa.. Chicago. TH , or St. Louis. Mo. 19w4.
FRONEFIELD A TOOD, MANtTFACTDBEBS OF SASH, DOORS, BLINDS WINDOWFRAMES, Alley, North of the City Mills, FORT WAYNE, IND. I@“A large stock of Doors, Sash and Window Frames on hand which will be sold cheap for Cash. All work made of Piue lumber. vl2n7y2
PIANOS! —;o; — O. L. TYTTsTa, Mos. 5» k, 54 Calhoon Street, ' FORT WA THE, IND., Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Pianos, American Organs, Melodeons, and all kinds of Small Inatru.XD.enta. Sole Agent for Wm. Knabe & Co’s Pianos, Baltimore; and Stienway & Son’s Pianos, New York. Also Agent for Wheeler & Rison’s Sewing Machines. Parties during to purchase will do well to give me a call. vllnll.
DAVIS & BRO., BOOK BINDERS, Blank Book and Paper Box Manufacturers, N 0.25 Calhoun St., Opposite Court House FORT WAYNE, INDIANA. to: Magaxines, Music, and old Books, etc., bound and re-bound in any style desired. attention paid to county work. T. ADELSPERGER, Agent, vlOnl. ‘ Decatur, Ind. •ora. SADDLE & HARNESS SHOP. FL. BTTFLT«JS, - MANUFACTURER AND DEALER INSaddles , Harness , BRIDLES, COLLARS, HALTERS, WHIPS,
BRIDLE-BITS, HAMES, sc., <fc, Decatur, - - - Indiana. I keep constantly on hand and manufacture to order, Saddles, Harness, Bridles Collars, Halters, FlyNets, &c., which I will Sell Cheaper than any other establishment in the county. All Work Warranted to be of good material and put up in a sub) stantial manner Repairing Done to Order on short notice. Call and examine my work and prices. A good stock always on hand. Ou Second street,in Meibers’ building. v11n47. v R. BURNS. DE GROFF MELSON & CO., -DBALEBSINCRAIN, SEEDS, —ABD— Ajrricnltnral Prodncts Generally, Proprietors of the ELM PARK NURSERY, (Established in 1850.) Experimental stock, fruit, Grain, Seed and Vegetable Farm four miles east of the City of Ft. Wayne, on the New Haven Pike. Agricultural Ware House, Farm Implements, Machinery, Grain/Flour and Seed Store, Opposite Aveline House, on Calhoun street, Fort Wayne, Indiana. PURE CIDER VINEGAR, warranted free from poisonous compounds, furnishFactory an the Fruit Farm, or atthe Store, in quantities to suit purchasers. v!2 n 25.
FORT WAYNE HOOP SKIRT FACTORY No. 91 Columbia St. Hoop Skirts in New Styles, Made of the very best material,cheaper than ever, and will be ■ Repaired Free es Charge when broken. OORBETB, an Immense Stock, CW»Hr and Better than the Ckeaseot. Every Corset Warranted all Whalebone DRESS TRIMMINGS and BUTTONS, an entire new stock, well selected and rich. LADIES UNDERCLOTH, a complete stock. PARASOLS, a fall line. NOTIONS, WORSTEDS, and other articleetoo numerous to mention. Will t>e sold cheap, at the Hoop Hkirt Factory, JOSEPH BLACK, v!2n7yl. -Proprietor
rft HALL'S BCVJ Vegetable Sicilian igft.%/1 1 Hair Gt'RE'X HAIR Restored to Ro Ortataal Yootkft.l Color ky its aoe. Rt will make Hair Grow upon bald heads except in very aged persons, as it famishes the nutritive principle by which the hair is nourished and support ed. It will prevent the hair from falling out, and does not stain the skin. attaj ialtatioaa of it offered to tke " It is a Spleniii Hair-Dressing. Our Treatise on Hair sent free by mail. For sale by nil Druggists. R.P. HALL & CO., Nashua, N. 11., Proprietors. Lost Cow. Estraved from the undersigned, in Wilshire, Ohio, about the 10th of March, a light colored Cow; red specks or spots on the sides and neck; red ears; long neek; horns point in and slightly drooped, one more so than the other; of Durham stock; about 5 years old, and springing to.calve when last seen. A reward of $5 will be paid to any one giving the undersigned intelligence as to the whereabouts of said cow and calf. J. W. PEARCE. June 29th, 1869. 17t8. *
Y. C. SHACKLEY, House Painter -A-JNTX> PAPER HANGER WALL TAPER of all k inds furnish ed at Fort Wayne Prices. Samples can be seen at Dorwin’s Drug Store All orders promptly attended to. Decatur, May, 1869. - 13n8m6
IWH H H To ths Wobkixo Class:—l am now prepared to famish all classes with constant employment at their homes, the whole of the time, or for spare moments. Buisnesss new, light and profitable. Fifty cents t 055 per evening, is easily earned by persons of either sex, and the boys and girls earn nearly as much as men. Great inducements are offered those who will devote their whole time to the business; and that every person who sees this notice, may send me their address and test the business for themcelves, I make the following unparaleled offer. .To all who are not well satisfied with the business, I willsend $1 to pay for the trouble of writtingme. Full particular, dirrections, &c., sent free. Sample sent by mail for 10 cts. Address E. (.. Allen, Augusta, Me.
THE BRIGHT SIDE. A PAPER FOGLE CHILDREN. MONTHLY 25 CENTS A YEAR. Specimen sent for 3 cents or 4 months on trial for 10 cents. .Weis the cheapest paper ever published for Children; contains nearly as much as other papers for $1; is beautiful in appearance at in name; filled with the choicest stories, poems, sketches, dialogues, declamations, and facts worth knowing. Occasional illustrations will beautify its pages. Its mission is to picture to its readers the “bright side’ of the world as it is, has been, will be, and should be; remembering, too, the brighter world beyond. The price is so low that it is emphatically “a paper for all children.', The poorest may get it and the more well-to-do will find it a treasure worth possessing. Send for it. Ac dress, ALDEN &TRUE, Publishers, CHICAGO, ILL. Please say you saw the advertisement in‘the Decatur Eagle.
I State of Indiana, 1 . ( Adams County, J , In the Adams* Circuit Court November , Term, 1869. i David Studebaker * ▼a. 1 John McGill, Foreclosure. Nancy McGill, Mortimer Ferres. ' It appearing from the affidavit filed in j the above entitled cause, that the rest- | dence of one of the above named defendants, Mortimer Ferres, is unknown, , Notice is therefore hereby given the ] said above named Mortimer Ferree of the | filing and pendency of this cause of action, and that he be and appear before ‘ the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court, at the Court House, in the town ' of Decatur, on the first day of the next ' regular term thereof, to be hold Monday, < the Ist day *of November, 1869, and ' plead by answer or demur to aaid complaint, or the same will bo heard and de termined in his absence. Witness my hand, and the seal (us.) of said Court, this 9th day of August, 1869. A. J. HILL, August 13, w 4 Clerk. AGENTS WANTED TO SELL THE Oalr Comrlvt* UnabrMted PsosJe’s edition of Dr. Wm. Smith’s Bible Dictionary. IT contains over 1,000 closely printed; double-column, octavo pages, and is illustrated with over 200 hundred engravings, and a series of fine authentic maps. The DICTIONARY embodies the results of the most recent study and research of over sixty of the meat eminent Biblical Scholars. Clergymen of all denominations regard ii as the best woi± cf the kiud ever published, and one wfFich ought to be in the hands of every Bible reader. « It is a great library in itself. The labor and learning of centuries are gathered la thio one volume, to throw a clear, strong light on every page of the inspired word. Agents are meeting w ith unprecedented success One reports H orders taken the first three days of his convene; another Tffi in two days; a noth»er 91 9 in ten days. Bend for Circulars with terms, testimonials, and a fall description of the work. Address N PaklHklag C«., Cincinnati, Ohio, or. JONES. JENKIN *CO.. llwd Chicago, 111.
IPECIAL RdTICKB. AN—IN THE YOUNG AND RISING generation, the vegetative power of life are strong, but in a few' years how often the pallid hue, the lacklustre eye and emaciated form, and tho impossibility of application to mental effort, show its baneful influence, it' soon becomes evidence to the observer that some influence is checking the de-’ velopment of the body. Consumption is talked of, and perhaps the youth is re-' moved from school and sent into the country. This is one of the worst move-*' ments. Removed from ordinary diversions of the ever-changing.scenes of the ;ity, the powers of the body too much* enfeebled to give sest to healthful and rural exercise, thoughts are turned in-' ward upon themselves. If the patient be a female, the approach of the mcnsesg is looked for with anxiety, as the first symptom in whics Nature is to show her saving power ip diffusing the circulation and visiting th<T cheek with the bloom of health Alas! increas eof appetite has grown by what it fed on; energes of the system are prostrated, and the whole economy is deranged. The beautiful and wonderful period in which body and mind undergo’ so fascinating a change from jhild to woman, is looked for in wain; the hearts bleed in anxiety, and fancies the grave but waiting for its victim. Helmbold’s Extractof Buchu, for Weak.ness arising from excesses of early in-’ discretion, attended with the following symptioms: Indisposition to Exertion,. Loss of Power, Loss,of Memory, pifflculty of B-eathing, General Weakness, Horror of Disease, Weak Nerves, Trembling Dreadful Horror of Death, Night Sweats, Cold Feet, Wakefulness, Dimness of Vision, Langour, Universal’ Lassitude of the Muscular System, Often Enormous Appetite with Dyspeptic’ Symptions, Hot Hands, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin, Pallid Countenance and Eruptions of the Face, Pain 1 in the Back, Heaviness of the Eyelids,Frequently Black Spots Flying before the Eyes, with Semporary Tuffusion and Loss of Sight, want of Attention, Great Mobility, Restlessness, with Horror of Society, Nothing is more desirable to such patients than Solitude, and nothing they more dreid, for Themselves; no Repose of Manner, on Earnestness, no Speculation, but a hurried Transition f.om one question to another. These symptoms, if allowed to go on—which this Medicine invariably removes —soon follow Loss of Power, Fatuity, and Epileptic Fits, in one of which the patient may expire. During the Superintendence of Dr. Wilson at the Bloomingdale Asylum this sad result occured to two patients: reason had for a time left them, and both died of epilepsy. They were of both sexes, and about twenty years of age. Who can say that these excesses are not frequently followed by those direful diseases Insanity and Comsumptionf The records of the Insane Asylums, and the melanchaly deaths by Consumption bear ample witness to the truth of these assertions. In Lunatic Asylums the most melancholy exhibition appears. The countenance is actually sodden and quite destitue—neither Mirth or Grief ever visits it. Should a sound of the voice occur. “With woeful measures wan Despair Low sullen sounds their grief beguiled.’ Whilst wc regret the existence of the above diseases and symptoms, we are prepared to offer an invaluable gift of chemistry for theremov.il of the consequences. Helmbold’s Highly Concentrated Fluid Extract of Buchu. There is no tonic like it. It is an anchor of hope to the surgeon and patent, and this is the testimony of all who have used-or prescrebed it. Sold by Druggist* and Dealers everywhere. Price $1,25 per bottle orsix bottle for $6,50. Delivered to any address. Describe symptioms in all communications. Address H. T. HELMBOLQ, Drug and Chemical Warehouse. 594 Broadway, New York. XT ONE ARE GENUINE UNLESS DONE UP IN steel-engraved Wrapper, with sac-similar of my Chemical Warehouse, and signed. 11. T. HELMBOLD.
The Great Medical Mistake Os former days was an utter neglect of sanitary precautions. No efficient means were adopted for the prevention of sickness. Sewerage was unknown in cities; drainage was rarely attempted in the country. Heaps of offal were left to rot in the public streets, and domestic cleanliness, the great antidote to febrile diseases, was sadly neglected. It is not so now. Wise laws, philanthropic institutions, and a vigilant sanitary police have, to a great extent remedied the evil. Nor is this all. Patvxttrivx Medication has helped materially to lessen the rates of mortality. It is not too much to say that tens of thousands escape sickness in unhealthy seasons in consequence of having tnviyorated their eyitem in ad ranee by a course of HOSTETTER 8 STOMACH BITTERS. This pure and powerful vegetable tonic and alterative comprises the extracts and essences es a variety of roots and herbs, renowned for their strengthning, soothing, vitalising and purifying properties. These medicinal agents are incorporated wi»h a spirit absolutely free from the acrid poison which defiles, more or less, all the liquors of commerce, and their effect is diffused through the whole system bv thia active, yet harmless stimulant. Tbs result is such a condition of the system ae renders it all but impervious to the exterior causes of disease, such as damp, fog, sudden alternations of temperature, Ao. Strength, and the perfect regularity of all the functions of the body, are the best safe-guards against atmospheric poison and the effects of unwholesome wa ‘* p » and HOSTETTER’S BITTERS are the best strengthning and cine at present known. For and billiousnees they are a specific absolute. * • to WHrs •FM>eH4to«to ’ SrM JUoJ RctoJe. State of Indiana,) Adams Countyj VfOTICE is hereby given, that John Hower, Administrator of the Estate of Wm. Clymer, deceased, has filed his petition to sell the real estate of the decedent, his personal estate being insufficient to pay his debts, and that aaid petition will be heard at the next term of the Court of Common Pleas of said : my hand this 23d day of Ju,1y,A.D.1««., Joly 23d. • 2T. CUrt
