Indiana American, Volume 7, Number 48, Brookville, Franklin County, 30 November 1839 — Page 4

to Mr I.4lGITKIl, On the Morniuij of her Birth. BT LORD BVKOS. II in. to Ibis teeming stage of strife! Hail,, lovely miniature of lite! i'ilgriui of many cares untold! Lamb of the world's extended fold! Fountain of Lopes and doubts and fears! Sweet promise of ecstatic years! Mow could I faint bend the knee! And turn idolater to thee! 'Tis paturo's voishi, felt oonfest, Far as the life w hich warms the breast; The sturdy savage, 'midst his clan, TLg rudest portraiture of man, lu trackless woods and boundless plains, here everlasting wildness reiirns. Owns the sliil throb the secret" start The hidden, impulse of the heart. Dear babe! ere yet upon thy years The soil of human rice appears Ere passion hath disturbed thy cheek. And prompted what thou durst not speak Kre tbst pale cheek is blanch'd with care. Or from those eyes shoot tierce despair, Would I could wake thine untuned ear, And ust it with a father's prayer!" But little reek Vt thou.-oh my child! Of travel on life's thorny wild; Of all the dangers all "the woes Each tottering footstep which iuclose Ah, little reck'st thou of the scene Srf darkly wrought that spreads between The little all we hare can find, And the dark mystic sphere behind! Little rockVt thou, my earliest born, Oi clouds which gather round thy morn Of arts to lure thy soul astry Of snares that intersect thy way Of secret foes of friends untrue Of fiends who stab the hearts they woo.Little thou reck'tt of this sad store Would thou migh'st never reck tbera more. Hut thou will burst this transient bleep. And thou wilt wake, my babe, to weep The tenant of a frail abode, Thy tears must flow, as mine have flowd; Beguiled by follies, every day. Sorrow mutt wash the fault away; Tprove And thou maj'st wake, perchance, to The pang of unrequited love. Unconscious, bibe! though on that brow No half-fledged misery nestles now Scarce round those placid lips a smile Maternal fondness shall beguile, Ere the moist footsteps of a tear Shall plant their dewy traces there. And prematurely pave the way For sorrows of a riper diy. Oh! could a father's praver repel The eye's sad grief, the bosom's swell! Or could a father hope to bear A darling child's allotted care,' Then thou, my babe.shouldst slumber still, Exempted from all humau ill, A parent's love thy peace should free, AnJ ask iu wounds again for thee. Sleep on, my child! the slumber brief 1 oo soon shall melt away to grief; 1 oo soon the dawn of woe shall break, And briny rills bedew that cheek; 1 oo soon shall sadness quench those eyes; I hat breast be agoniced with sighs And anguish o'er the beams of noon Lead clouds of care ah! much too soon! Soon wilt'thou reck of cares unknown, Of wants and sorrows all their own Of many a pang, and many a woe, 1 hat thy dear sex alone can know Of many an ill, untold, unsung. That will not, may not find a tongue Hut, kept conceal'd, without control, Spread the lelTcancers of the soul! Tot ba thy lot. my bjbe, more blest! May joy still animate thy breast! Still, 'midst thy least propitious days, Fhedding its rich inspiring rays! A father's heart shall daily bear" Thy name upon its secret, praver. And as he seeks his last repose, Thine image cae lire's parting throes. Then bill, sweet miniature ?of life! Hail to this teeming stage of strife! INIgrim of many cares untold! I.amb of the world's extended fold! Fountain of hopes and doubts and fears! Sweet promise of ecstatic years! How cou!d I fainly bend the knee, And turn idolater to thee!

AMISEJIEXT. Another cause of apparitions, and of the behel i!i supernatural appearances, is to be n J the rich J the tcogghh. Dr. IMotf in his Aa ural history of Oxfordshire, relate, a marvclkvis story whkh will illustrate this position, fcouii alter the murder of King Charles I. a commission wa appointed to smv. ti. (.'HOST Tnto lo'csfnrb. w-itli ilx ... iiMu roval oak from the IIii;h lark, which, that nothing might be left with the name of kin; nhout i, they had dug up by the roots, and split and bundled up into fagots for their tiring. Things being thus prepared, thev sat on the I61I1 lor the despatch of business: "and, i the midst of their first debate, there entered n large black dog (,8 thev thought,) w hith made a dreadful howling, o'verlurned two or three of tnetr chairs, and then crept under the bed and vanished. This gave them the greaUr surprise a? the doors were kept constantly loekrd, so that no real dog could ect iu or out. The nest d, ihtir surpiise w i..erad when, sitting s,t dinner iu a lower !-octn,tlirT heard hiinr the itoisc cf jnirtont

park, woods, and other demesn . be. w , Z i o T U'l n' W- f to twcnty-nV dollars, by 1 .'fj to that manor. On ColPii unl, 1 l- t . i ) ' 1 ft . room ht kfx "'". collon flnZ, til!c fa. wrf. Ju,' fi'cncor, the 10th day of Nove.nWr 1 N name, hired hiclf ai . ''e St Z it T-W "P' m'"J " fire ,n;iJt? lsHk anJ t:nen r,.; gro I 1 certify the foregoing is a true Take' Vm iniSiioner,,who.np0!Uh" S , oVt h'tflS bmSinof'Vr l,Ur,,i,,wa "Ltmc mcnJarinc.plJiJ hcLnianJ fci "ray M' J- ScAbeY, J. p! where thy mA to despatch busing 1 I cn, gingham, end lmM thePereonal p.ope'r y o? s d mjtvV dinin-roevn thev trade eir'wo ! ?I ' , ' ? Lour after, the candles IbreUas; bvrJcrcd, pU.t and fad parasols: aJ"c Zln cf co,u' ''"t, oats, haV, potivard. and stored it Ji, ?! ' Z Li T' .WCnt"1 US.aal' 1 10 cratk ?fy gnitcr lee!,; Lth-r. Kid, ttoZco. ! " tea o'clock! M.

walking over their Uad, though. tLcy weU'ect it in the door way between the two chaaif ... U . -I II ill lata . . ..

knew the doers were all locked, and could be nobody there. Presently after, they heard also all (he wood of the king's oak brought by parcels from the dining-room, and thrown with great violence into the presence-chamber, as also all the chairs, stools, tables, and other furniture forcibly hurled about the room; their papers, containing the minutes of their transactions, were torn, and the ink-glass broken. "When nil this noise had ceased, Giles Sharp, their secretary, proposed to enter first into these rooms; and in presence of the commissioners, from whom he received the key, he opened the doors, and found the wood spread about the room, the chairs tossed about and broken, the papers torn, but not the least track of any human creature, ncr the least reason to suspect one, as the doors were all fast, and the keys in the custody cf the commissioner. It was therefore unanimously agreed that the power that did this mischief must have entered at the key-hole. The night following. Sharp, the secretary, with two of the commissioners' servants, as they were in bed in the same room, which room was contiguous to that where the commissioners lay, had their beds' feet lifted up so much higher than their heads, thai they expected to have their necks broken, and then they were let fall at once with so much violence as shook the whole house, and more than ever terrified the commissioners. On the night of the 19th, as thay wire all in bed in the same room for greater safety, and lights burning by them, the candles in an instant went out with a sulphurous smell, and that moment many trenchers of wood were hurled about the room, which next morning were found to be tlte same their honors had eaten out cfthe day before, which were all removed from the pantry, though not n lock was found opened in the whole house. The next night they fared still worse; the candles weut out as hefore, the curtains of their honors' beds were rattled to and fro with great violence, they received many, cruel blows by eight grttt pewter dishes and a number of wooden trenchers being thrown on their beds, which, being heaved i!T, were heard rolling about the room, though in the morning none cf these were to be seen. The next night Oie keeper of the king house and his deg lay in the commissioners' room,and then they had no disturbance. But on the night cf the 22d, though th- dog lay in the room as before, 3 et the candles went out, a number of brickbats fe ll from the chimney into the room, the dog howled piteously, their bed-clothes were ail stripped off, and their terror increased. On the 24lh they thought all the wood of the king's oak was violently thrown down by their bedsted?; they counted sixty-four billets that fell, and some nit ana shook the beds in which they lay; but in the morning uone was found there, nor had the door been opened where the billet-wood was kept. The next night the randies were put out, the curtains rattled, and a dreadful crack, like thunder, was heard-, and one of me servants, running In haste, thinking his master w as killed, found three dozen of the trenchers laid smoothly under the ci it it a liv 5m. But all this was nothing to what sueceeded afterward. The 29lh. nl.mit night, the candles went out, something walked majestically through the room, and opened and shut the windows; great stones were inrown violently into the room, some cf which fell on the beds, others on the floor: nnd at about a quarter after onr. n tinier no li-al a 7 - wv 113 UCniU as of forty cannon discharged together, and again repealed at about eight minutes' inter val, i ins alarmed and raised Hm wlmU. neighborhood, who, coming into their honor room, gathered up the gn at stones, forscore in mimbci,and laid the Mil br ill tilf rnriwr i f r. field, where, in Dr. Plot's time, they were to be seen. This noise like the discharge cf cannon was heard over the countrt for sev e-rai inucs rouiut. Iluruig tlies g these noses the commissioners and the servan's cave one another over for lost, and cried out for help and Giles Sharp, snatching up a eword, hat weiniigii Kiiieu one ol their honours, mistaking him for the spirit, as he came in his shirt from his own room to theirs. While, thev were together the noise was continued, and part of the tiling of the house was stripped ot, and all the windows of an upper room were taken away with it. On the 30ih, at midnight, something walked into the chamber treading like a bear; it Walked many times about, thou threw the warming-pan vi olently on the lloor: at the same lime a larire quantity of glass, accompanied with great stones and horse bones, came pouring into lite w hole neighborhood alarmed w ith the most o. .c-.giioo.ncoa alarmed with the most adfu noises; nay, the yerp rabbit-stealcrsj it were abroad that tdglit n the warren dreadful th. le ft their ferrets be hind them. One of their 1 11.11 lllttl llltlL lUl'V ll'i.l I..r liinr i .. came ngaiu; and. as thev all rn'A ft tereti ditils zcvrse'lhan ttste1. One of the rerrents tiosr lighted a large candle, and

raini in in iiii.-.itiiiti.Mi . . i i . At . e- -, . v . a, it ikl ii'irrr i viivj ijiti i:itr annm k l

....... ...... u,nuiimi, ii iuice:, Uie lt Cl Fluid n;d ftW -7. it . t i . . .. 1 -. . r iuo leu niilU loot at i . . .... 1 ' 1 1 il ",i ' Jig 'to. Ill k and scarlet , White. ii i.tl.pr l,r. 1 ,. ..

'i i il if : - i iviu iioir.i A k ; 1 1 . . l t r t . i .... . ... ""rviieaiuuav. i nrnisi in .!. i.

stinking water were thrown upon their hen- ,'.,.; Men's kip end course broat 'cor A ov.

. Wiv; Mv.ii; .i.(i inrown in cna tine ec-eff, v. ivas before, the bed-eui tains and bedsteads torn 90

u.vani.iiii- llill.onj Sl;ailert'il. Slllrt I u. .? rrr...j-l

im.. r... i. : .1.. - I . 1 .

"...iui mis iii-iu none, nun id ffttf nnme eift ci...i. .

Crorf asked sthal it ::,7. n,1 rr . '; . '""",Jvr'i I'ainieu uuck-

themsof No answer w'ns tc bul S W? Shards-, Simmon's and the noise ceased for a while, vhci the snirit z! Ci'' Bd Gnd Chopping Axes, be.

bers, to Eec what Dassed: and ns he watched

it, he plainly saw a hoof striking the candle and candlestick into the middle of the rom, and afterward making three scrapes over the snuff, scraped it out. Upon this the same person was so bold as to draw a sword; but he had scarce got it out when he felt another invisible hand holding it to, and pulling it from him, and at length prevailing, struck him so violently on the head with the pummel that he fell l'owii for dead with the blow. At this instant was heard another btust like the dis charge of a broadside of a ship of war, and at the interval of a minul'ortwo between each, no lcs than nineteen such discharges. These shook the house so violently that they expected every moment it would" fall upon their heads. The neighbors, beinc all alarm ed, flocked to the house in great numbers, nnu all joined in prayer and psalm-smcing: during which the noise continued in the other rooms, and the discharge of ct.nnons was heard as from without, though no visible agent was seen to discharge them. But what was the most alarming of all, and put an end to their proceedings ifiectually, happened the next day, as they were .ill at dinner, when a paper in which they had signed a mutual agreement to restive a part cfthe premises out of the general survey, and afterward to share it equally among themselves (which paper they had hid for the present under the earth in a pot in one corner of the room, and in which an orange-tree grew,) was consumed hi a wonderful manner by the earth's taking fire with which the pot was filled, and burning violently, with a blue flame and an intolerable stench, so that thry were all driven out of the house, to which they could never be again prevailed upon to return. This slory has been somewhat abridged from the l'ncj clopa'dia Britannica, where it is quoted from Dr. Plot's history. If I recollect right, it is imbodied in the book entitled Satan's Invisible World Discovered," and the extraordinary occurrences it relates ascribed to satanic influence. At the time thev happened, they were viewed ns the effects of supernatural powers J and even Dr. Plot serins disposed lo nseribe the m to this t ans. 'Though in.my lrii ks,"' says the dorter, "have hrcncrlcn jdajed in a flairs cf this kind, many of the things uboVe related are not reconcilable to juggling; such as the loud noises be)ond the powers of man to make without such instruments as were not there the tearing nnd breaking the beds the throwing about tin: fire the l.oof treading out the candle the striving for the sword, and the blow the man received from the pummel of it." It was at longtli ascertained, however, that this wonderful contrivance was all the invention of the memorable Joseph Collins of Ox ford, otherwise culled Vunny Jo, who, having hired himself as secretary under the name of Giles Sharp, by knowing the private traps belonging to the house, and by the help of pul Uim ,i7m.,,, ...! . il.,.r ,Lmil L1P. tions, and letting his fellow-servants inlo the scheme, carried out the deceit without discov ery ti the very last Lxrarf from Dick's improvement ej oo(itl. FALT and WINTER GOODS. Bsv i u ict. cc cvj. are now receiving from 1 hiladelphio, Baltimore and PittRlmrn-h heavy and well selected stock or Fall and Winter Goods, which they offer for sale at the lowctt prices, at w holesale and retail, consisting in part or the lollowiug articles, viz: JWie, bCl Iruxcn, tlrab, olive, inviiitjle green, dahlia, fleet tnixrtt and pilot clotht; Hue, brvwn, drab, ribed, nnd plnid eassimeret; bine, fcroion, LVk, drab, leel mixed, striped and plaid stfinrtts; K'y. jeans; plaid lintey; red, tcAiVe and y-fcto flannels; printed do.; blue, preen. Aip n,,,l..l ' j co.ifou do.; plain and Jig'd merinoes, f ro de tiap 1 Wo. Ztt'A-, iroui and cteen bombazctts. ii'Abembazine. French, Fiigiitb and American prints. Ginghams. Cvtlon and linen diapers. Jiutsia sheetings, bed ticking, cul'd nnslint, apron checks, canvass and padding, carpeting, merino fringe, resliitgs, rorded skirls; culton, worsted, gum elastic and tut susper.Jirs; bl'k worsted hose; bVk and white cotton and silk '.., lamb's wool do., white and mired cvllon half do. Ladies braver, kid, silk, cotton and berlin gloves. Gentlemen's braver, buckskin, German, kid, thread, silk and cotton do. Buck mitts. T.iJ'ala, gauze, satin and bell ribands. Satin, bombazine and velvet stocks. Shirt ----- ivuuii. vuw. mreaa, luie , blond edgings. C-Hon, thread, lisle and muslin insertions. Jiobintll and thread lares. Grecian ana ooomcii J,wtn:gs. .,cd:e work and bobinctl ana cuitars. I te d - end Cull, uf Groceries, lLrdteare end Cullery. Queens, Glass and Tin traTf,1 Drugs owrf Vfrf.' Blank, ,V irt n, r . t II a m " r 7 siwi " v .T'1 MtlUHand I?ood . """'I oaa-j.'itfom ann .in, rn ir . ". V" Brockville, Vcr. 21, IS3S. Mobile bt)ki returned vmcnt, Nov.

cape, ana cottar: 'g d aid plain jaconrtt TISTRAYS. Taken ..p by Thonns Evsrs of Hook Sntss and, null, nu.lins. Cambrics. Vlain Springfield U-r.-hip F. C. Indiana the nrk and Green dotted , first day of November, 1, two estrays of the S sTn , e'nrt g g7 "f ua!',a"J ''ring lowing uescrfjition; the one a sorrel mare, su-,;.0f ed ii;, 5. years old, both hind feet nh te.'k fevv onation ,.. Satin lavcntine. Sersnett. Whit, "lute l.airs in the forehead, shod all round anrallll. ft hlle. ,l,it- on, SI I rvr.,.l .,..ii.. .... . ' o""u, ap-

' i . . ' (,m,i,irrali, jin, r""--'uw.-cii uonarp. i lie other a hv m.n white anJ itn. . I . .ul,,lr a ua mare

1

1)111 CiS, MUDICIIVES, AC i npHE subscriber, liuving purchased tie MediJLL vine and Drug Store of Dr. Kennedy in Brookville, offers to the public a good assortment ofRegular and Botanic Medicines, Drugs, Paints, ana Dye Stuffs, consisting, in part, as follows;

Alchohul Cal. Magnesia Annise Seed Antimony Antitnonial Wine Arrow Koot Arsenic Aqua Anionic Acid Sulphuric do Muriatic do Nitric do Tartaric Balsam Capavia Barbadoes Tar llorx Burgundy Pitch Castor Oil Cardanion seed Carbonate iron Cam. l'lowers Cloves Cinnamon Colomba ftad Corosive (Sublimate Cream Tartar Colocyntli Coculus Indicus CanthariUes Calomel Digelatis V.x. Hyosciomua Kinetic Tartar Ess. Cinnamon " Peppermint Manna Nutgall Nitrnte Potash Nux Vamice Liquorice Ex. Oil -Almonds do Anise do Close do Juniper do Lemon do Olive do Sassafras do Hemlock do WintergTeen do Lavender do Spike Orange Peel Paregoric Elixir Peruvian Bark Prepared Chalk Cluassa Quicksilver Hed percipitale Uheubarb Rotten Stono Ited Saunders Ep. Salts Bock Salts Soap Castil Soda Soap Sp'ts Turpentine Squills Syrup of Squills Sul. duinine Spigelia Senna Bi. Carb. Soda Sugar Lead Sulphur Ether Sweet Sp'ts Nitre Sponge Syringes Tin. Castor do Digtalis do Valerian do Rhcubarb Venice Turpentine White Vitrol h lour sulphur (linger (Jura Opium do Camphor do do do do do do do do do Aloes Arabic Assafujtida Cuiacum Myrrh Hcammony Tragacantb Shellac Kino Ippicac Jalap Juniper berries Laudanum ! Perfume Bear Oil PATENT MEDICINES. Batcinau's Dropti Spanish brown British oil (iardner'a l.ininiont Balsam of Lire Godfrey's Cordial Opodeldoc Thompson's Eye Water Worm Tea Lee's Pills Alum Blue Vitrol Madder Litharge Prussia Blue Eahncstock's Vermifuge Cleveland's Ague Drops Mcilicamentuiii Pulmovary Balsam La Motl's Tooth Balm Itch Ointment Ward's Hair Oil Essence of Soap Indigo Hive Syrup Shoo Varnikh together with a great variety of other Drugs and medicines, paints, patent medicines, A:c. nccensary for a gcod apothecary shop, for wholesale or retail. Orders from physicians will be carefully and promptly attended to. C.CAIN. Brookvllie, Dec. 1, 1837. 49 bty Administrator's Kale. THE undersigned will offer for sale at the late residence of Maigaret Blew, dee'd. on Saturday the 1st or December, the personal property belonging to the ebtate er the dee'd, consisting, in part, of horses, hogs, ehecp, one two horse wagon and harness, cows and household and kitchen furniture, and many other articles, too tedious to mention. Hale to commence at t?n o'clock on said day. Conditions of sale made known on the day of sale JOHN BLEYV.adm'r. November 14, 1S38. . 4U-LHv Sale ol Ileal Estate. THE undersigned will sell to the higher bidder at public outcry, on the premises, in White-Water township, Erauklin countr, Ind., immediately below New Trenton, on Saturday the 82d day of December, 1&3S, between the hours of 10 o'clock A M. ond 4 o'clock P. M. of said day, tho following described rea. estate, to-wit: beginning at the B. L. corner of the south cast quarter of eectiou 82 in town 8 of range one west, running thence north 5 degrees, west 100 peles, thence south 65 degree?, west CO pules, thence south G degrees, east 100 poles, thence north bo degrees, east 00 poles to the beginning, containing o7i acres more or le'es, of which Ralph Wildridge, late of said coun'.y died Ecized. Tkbus. One half of tho purchase money to be paid on the day or sale, and the bilance in i ne year thereafter, to le secured by bond and approved security. By order of the Probate Court f said county. HCNKY SCO I T, i: I'lIliAI.U BOCK A FI'.LLE R , liMPHALUT UAltUKU, . CunmiiEsic.fcrs. isov. io, lise: 40.:v .y ofl W M. UUBC?50X, ad,n. 40-b'w 12th, 1So3. Taken H't. k,in county . on the second daroKov m.rks-f TiTJi f of ",r ,f V'6 m"ked ith a crop off each car nd A3 v;.tT, ::u"l? i"'1'1 i-?uiP. . " ?ZZa:SlLW ?ud-.6 el. car; one tWO S lit ill tha .iiu . r "".ciun m iu leit an.i rrn .,j i , .7 . B" one wan a eron. holo and undorbit in the left . r .,"" . 10 I in " ri?" one with a k auu a Sin m tho right, and one unmarked i prslsed to $U CO by v,. Chap S and J.j Sherwood, on the 14th day of Nov. A. D ISM I certify the above to be . true co? ?f r.- 2-L JfeV" 14tb 1KW trot copy from my estray WM. McCLUKE, J.p. I

! . . .

it. kvktmvh's KMI1U OF HKALTtl. Formerly tailed Dr. BloodgooiTt Elixir of tltnlit.

) untu i uuvistu anu prepared tbit Medicine, which I called Dr. BtoooVood'a Elixir of Health; of which I was the sole Inventor and proprietor. No medicine was known by that name, nor was that medicine known by any other name. It proved a very successful remedy, became popular, and others wishing to profit by its popularity, are putting up a medicine which they call Blo..!gnod's Elixir of Health. Tint the public may not be deceived on the subject I have now given it my own name, and the direction, accompanying Each Bottle are signed with my own sirnature, without which none is Genuine, and to counterfeit which would be forgery. Sold Wholesale and Retail at my Drug Store, Zanesville Ohio" II. EASTMAN. ' March 15th. 18:17. This is a Universol Restorative in all esses where the stomach, bowels, liter, or any of lbs organs concerned in the digestive functions t re tie primary seat of the dieease, and that such is true of almost the whole catalogue of human maladies is well known to every physician. A 11 diseases incident to people living in warm climates, or new and flat countries, or such as border on largo lakes or rivers, partake more or less of what is termed bilious, from the organs concerned in the process t-f eliminating bile being those primarily or principal, ly affected, and ague and fever, bilious fever yd low fever, lake fevci, jaundice, bilious clmlick dysentary, common cholera morbus, ague, cake and' liver complaints, are all diseases in which the sane organs are first derangej and arUe from the same predisposing cause, vir.- Exhalations or marsh or vegetable miasmata, but mKlified by some peculiarities in the constitution of the patient, or the climate or season where it occurs. A sure and never failing preventive, as well as cure for alt tbois complaints, u the ELIXIR OF HEALTH. For sale at the Drug Store of C. CAIN Brookville, where additional certificates and directions can be obtained. Ronand's Tonic mixture: Or, Vegetable Ftbrifuge. A specific and lading cure Jor the Fever and Ague. THIS worthy remedy earnestly repels the slur of being a quack medicine, it having been the result of many years' study, experience, and labor, in the medical practice and observation of Fever and Ague, It is composed of such medicinal principles as were considered most lit to restore the harmony of action between the Stomach, Liver, and the other important functions of the system, the loss of which harmony is evidently the immediate cause of the ditcaee. It speedily promotes a regular and health oipetite. which ia rrptioml'v ... tircly drt-troyed er rendered very prccarioi:; by which effect, vigor and strength is soon sffordtd to the whole system. It must be sppareU to all. that a medicine possessing these peculiar virtues, is useful in a great variety of complaints. By renewing the hesltby action of the digestive organs, it has proved itself of remarkable benefit in Dyspepsia. Depraved Appetite, Heart-burn, Water Brash, Flatulency, Jaundice, Night Sweats, Dysentiry, Bowel Complaints, tnd many other affection, of simiUrorigin. But it is in the treatment of l evers, and especially in Fever and Ague, or Intermittent Fever, that its powers have been prinCipaUy tested, and with those who have seen iu usefu.ncsf , it ie pronounced sovereign to all remedies heretofore discovered for those diseases. It has slso been used as a preventive, bt many who were subject to a periodical recurrence of the Chills and Fever, and it has always warded offtLe apprehended uttack. ft-It was deemed not iir proper to occoinpany the Vegetable Febrifuge witb a few or the mnnr unequivocal certificates politely furnibhed to the proprietor, corroborative of tLc foregoing statcmctits. For further accounts of iU great usefulness, see pamphlets accouiiianyin"eai;li battle ' For eale at the Drug Store of C. CAIN, Brookville, where additional certificates acl lirectioiis can be obtained. Dr. Burnlt'Tblldl'r Medicine for Fiver. - AS an anti-billious and anti-dyspeptic .Medicine, the Drops are unrivalled, where thev are known, uy any in.ng yet recommended. Fergus wLo have suffered lor years with pain in He sidcureasi eioniach or lungs and when, to all op pearances. disease hml m,!a i and seemed to be beyond the control ..f medicine, have been in all cases of trial greatly benefitted; ond in a large majority of instances entirely relieved as the cases or Mrs. Hunter or Lancaster. -"its uurweii or Uolumbus, and Miss Tiffany if j..u.cv., .uumuuouj lesuiy and many others net uv.c cuuuicnivu, uo nave been relieved from ll. j-uueriis oi pcriouicul sick, or nervous head-aebe, owiioui- ana cramp cl.olic. These facts in emincc tion with the eate.and tho skfrtr .,r it- ,..tn;n;n lion, render it indeed an interesting tnd dttirabie remoitr la oior.t i.j . v V. ' , , J "i.j.it0 persou. n is gncn in a .... . w.u ulv,, uUu mis agreeable beverage niay be Uraiik eiuiuig its administration, in all r.itp c. cept eruptive fevers, such as scarlet fever, measles, Miiail pox. 4c, in w hich cases warm drinks are only admissible. The desc being small renders it .v.j vuu.cun.ui meuicinc ror children and infauU; and it operates kindly and promptly in thote dieeases ofabillious character, f.n.1. .. . l..,lir mi... mcr complaint, fits, S, c, which cither rUiu the erafclilulioii at this caily period or existence, or otLei w-ise terminate in the death of a vatt rroportiiK or the children of this countrv. For sale at the Drug Store of C. CAIN, lirooKVille, where additional certificates anc Uij-eetiona may be obtained. ... ,Ali2msfpntors Sale. rgHLUC will be offered for sale at public ancIl ut" .n r'y lLe 7lh dy cf cccir.ber. S .1 a ? , reei,?e'ce of James Swiggttt deceased, late of Brookville, Franklin count,; h -all the personal property belonging to the estate t said deceased, consisting of horsest cattle, bogs as; sheep, corn in the crib, farming utensils, Lcufe!. nd kitchea furniture; too numerous to menliot Sale to commence at ten o'clock A. 31. A crcd: oi twelve months, on all rums over three dollin wi.l bo given, by the purchaser giving note sfc i srr-' dvluiiit. i uriiifls in .. ,i . r. nr.. the lf 6aIe "d "ttendance iriven by v. Ifith. 13?. 46-.Jr B U il.iain Calson, Harmony township, t'niia county, la ,on the 12ih day of October IStw o cstiay marcs, one marked as follows, darktij i i V " ,eK8' wane and tail, shod befon and about fifteen hands high, supposed to be lb;c years old last spring, appraised to fifty dollars i no other a dark chesnut sorrel with a star in ttf lorehead, a wart under the right eye, shod before about fifteen hands high, supposed to be three yei o ,Il,E2rir'ePPred to forty five dollars, bj tjoel Calson and Lewis Muliin. , A true4opy froso . . '7.;'f' iEItI OGDCX, J.I October gg,t. 18:m. 46;w (pOTTON YARN.5.500 lbs. cotton yarn," Vr. eo numbers, Tor sale by Nov.??, P4M. B. &S. TYNER.