Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 26, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 March 1869 — Page 2

fejjf Union. «Jh»-ra.-S;r brffr.T-r--r.a:-rr- —-- 4_. Thursday, March 26.1869. -4 HBAI.Y * JAMES. EDITORS.

The Specisl Election.

Dispatches from the districts in ivhich special elections were held last Tuesday to till vacancies in the {Stale Legislature caused hy the rev* dlutiouary action of several Democrane members w ho resigned (o j.YeYeUt a vole being taken Mi the imposed XVtli Amendment t<>' the United States Constitution, leave no doubt that the bolters were nil re* •elected, but by a largely reduced Vote. The election passed off quietly, and with little enthusiasm, none hut Democrats voting except in. four or tive counties. The bolters now go back pledged to break' up the Legislnte.ru again it an attempt is made to have a vote npoh the’Amendment. The Democracy clairtt a great victory, and we hn\e no doubt they led as jubilant over rt as they did over a rebel victory (hiring the war. And Imthem, they pay $150,000 lor it.

The Tenure of Office Law.

The news from Washington indicates that although it was supposed 1 the Tenure of Office Law could bo j repealed with little difficulty, the question is still in doubt, with the : chant** in favor of the opponents to its repeal. . j It is said the law is very obnoxious to President Grant, and that he desirts its repeal that his efforts to Weed out unworthy officers may be tintramnielcd. Bntfthe Senate is loth to surrender the power it places in their hands, and while professing the greatest cbntidence in General Grant and while they would be willing to suspend its operations during his administration they are j hot willing to repeal it, because hit sue- , tetsor may itotbe to flood a moil. The law was made to curb a had President aii«l to prevent him fi ling nuportautoffice-s with the enemies of, the country, and also to stop the dis- ; graceful system of removing worthy j men from place because they did not endorse the peculiar tenets of his revolutionary policy. Wc do not believe any lasting good wilL result from the passage of l:\wsjjike the one in question. While ii was intended by its aut hors as a cheek upon ' the arbitrary act ions of a traitorous 1 Executive, it* workings did not stop there, but it became a standing apology in the tboutlis of Ills friends for ' his failure in collecting the revenues of the Government, and instead of being a protection to*worthy officers, it became a shield behind which 1 knaves and scoundrels could intrench I thchnclies and successfully prey | upon the public revenues in defiance < f laW and right Wc do not believe it v, ise to make laws whose workings are unequal. — Congress should not pass a law | whose workings make it a good law for a bad President but a bad law - for a good Presideut—Let the.yuiC mid the unjust'be goverened by the same law. And let all laws be so framed that their penalties will be visited upon those alone who do evil. If the Tenure .of Office law is not lit,, to remain on our statute books while General Grant is President, let it not be suspended (tut let it be repealed. In. President Grant’s j n augural j he says, “i know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious j laws so effective as their gtringent execution,” aud it is. said he pro|)os- j cs to ensure 'tfiiTrepca! oiuHsf uwby . stringently enforcing its provisions, and we believe nine-tenths of the people will endorse him in this course. General Grant was elected because the people, believed him capable and honest, and that under his administration then?would be most searching reforms,in the execution of the laws, a strict collection of the public revenues, an economical expenditure of public moneys, that thieves and plunderers would be sup : 1 planted by honest men, and they demand that ail lets and hiudcrancc to j these desirable ends be removed.

Swindling in High Places.

On last Frhiay the House of Representatives having under consideration the Indian Appropriation Bill, Mr. Lawbknce, ot Ohio, took occasion to denounce the wheie-policy of dealing with the Indians- as a vast system of fraud aad* eorroptipn, and characterized the Indian Bureau as a den of thieves. In the coarse of his remarks he said': “Treaties have been put through the Senate when there were not six , Senators present Every' ilian who participated in a fraud ot that sort is unfit to occupy a seat in a deliberative body. I wish to God that J could reach the Senate, and the ears of every man jn the country, until j the Senate should be compelled to pay some heed to the voice ot the, people, and have some respect for thi interests of the people, iustead mm 1 11 1 11 1 :

| Now, if this |s nbt all buncombe,! .){». Laivkkvce can easily reach the i psople. And if be really has the J , good of the country at heart, lot him ; name the Senators who havo been j guilty of the charges he prefer*. General Grant was elected upon a platform pledged to economy and j retrenchment. lie reiterated these pledges in his inaugural, and the people will sustain him and ail oth-) ers in all measures looking to such result*. ‘I General Butler took occasion the other day to unmask the thieving operations of certain members of the whiskey ring, by vrhich’one hundred and fifty miliums a year was stolen front the Government. ! The on , j- way thefce gross frauds 1 can he prevented is to expose, re* i move from office and punish those : who arc guilty of them. Let Mr. Lah kk.m i; follow the example set by General lini.icu, and fearlessly ! name the guilty parties as the latter 1 <lid General Ssiiiknok and Judge] Holman, of the whiskey thieves :ir»4j he will not be harmed by the result. I 1 ——'!!

Death of Col. James D. Test.

The Chicago Timet of the 19th 1 chronicles the death, in that city, on j the 18th inst.,of Col. Jami> I). Tkst, j ! of Council Jiltills, lowa. ' Col. Tkst was a son of Hon. i C'liAKi.Ks 11. Tkst, Judgeol this, the ' Sixteenth Judicial Circuit. He was ! a highly respected citizen and a ■ leading politician of his State, having been 5 member of the State j Senate, a representative in the convention which nominated Horatio Seymour for President, and , was a memberof the lowa State Democratic Central Committee at the time of his death. Ilis funeral took place at Council Bluffs on Sunday, and was a very imposing affair. The procession j was formed under the supervision of the Odd Fellows of that city and : Omaha, the Fire Companies of Council Bluffs and Omaha joining and appearing in uniform. The flags of the city were displayed at half-mast, all the hells tolled and an immense ! throng of citizens followed the body to the grave. Col. Test was 37 years of age. Sonic of our friends take i 1 exceptions to ihe squib :ippenring in the Union last week which statiul that "Major Kinney was in Washington seeking an appointment of General Grant” and pronounee it an unmitigated slander. Weil we got our information from the Chicago Timet, "the great exponent and leading journal of the j Northwestern Democracy.”

Railroad from Indianapolis to Chicago.

The Delphi Journal of the 17 th, copies the conyrmtniration from Dr. S. W. Ritchey, which, appeared in j our columns on the 4th inst., and {comments as follows: “We see by a communication front Dr. S. \Y. Ritchey, a leading x-ili/xu us Jasper comity, in the Rensselaer Union of the 4th inst., a proposition for the construction of a Rail Road oh the above named route, w hich strikes us as practieaMe. ‘•lt is conceded that nothing would add mi much to the prosper--1 ity ot our county, and of our city, :as the construction of the Rail , Road above proposed. What has j left Delphi so far behind LsjJJajgr i ett c and Logan sport of infajriori.tv of the surroundiHg lands ami ot | other natural advantages —for no county in the State has, in proportion t<» its size, a> much superior agricultural lands, or—greater ad- • vant.ages in timber, lime stoiu* am! i w ater power than Carroll. It is | simply the fact that' these two rival j cities, the one below and the other above us -on the Wabash River, have each the great advantage of a number of Rail Roads, while j Delphi has hut one. and eanno’t ! reach Chicago, Cincinnati, or Indi- } unaprdis without change ot cars,—, Build the * above indicated Rail j Road, crossing the T. W. «fc W. R. ! W% at this place, and Delphi would j have all the advantages of commerce possessed by Lafayette and Legansport. The route indicated is very near an air-line from Indianapolis to Chicago, and will pass through the counties of Boone, Clinton, Carroll, White, Jasper and Lake. We say let these counties [ agitate the building of this Rail Road—hold m&tijigs, and appoint delegates to meet at some central point, say at this place, about the first of May. We throw as a suggestion. What say our cotemporaries along the line?’’ Wc will have occasion to noticethis project at length at a not veryfar distant day. ' The Democratic bolt in Indiana j ♦ill cost the ... ... -...... ''w. .. . ......A

Proclamation.

State ok Ixi>ia*a; ) Executive Department. £ j WiiiiiKAS, The Gerieral AssemIMy of the State of Indiana, at its lute Regular Session, failed to pans j the .necessary appropriations to | I carry on the State Government and j t«> meet the eitrrent expenses of the Benevolent and other Public ■ Institutions of the! State, and by i ■ reason thereof, the public welfare I imperatively requires that said ' General Assembly should be coil- : vened in Special Session with the ! least practicable delay: Therefore, I, Conrad Baker, Governor of the State of Indiana, do issue this Proclamation eopvening the General Assembly of the j State in Special Session, and sum- 1 inoning the members therefore to I meet in their respective Halls of| legislation in the State House, at i Indianapolis, at two o’clock e. mV, ] of THURSDAY, the Bth day of' ] April, A. D., I«(i9. In witness whereof. I have here- ' ■ tmto subscribed niv name and | ■ caused the seal of the State to he j ' hereunto affixed, at Indianapolis, tlii- iVjd day of March, A. !)., lnist). ; ji..s,j CONRAD BAKER. By the Go\ eruor: M. !•’. A. ill l-’KMAN, Secretary of State.

The Law of the Fathers.

I The following law was passed by ] the Colonial Congress in 1778: “‘Whereas, Frequenting playhouses and theatrical entertainments lie.s a fatal tendency to divert the minds of the people from due attention to the means necessary for the dcfense of the country and the preservation of their liberties. “ 'Rksolvkji, That any person holding an efiice under the United States, who shall act, promote, encourage or attend such plays shall be deemed unworthy to hold such office, and shall be accordingly dismissed.’ _____ “How many of the present incumbents of offices under the Government of the United States would retain their places to-day were this wholesome liw to be enforced? And yet this law has a better foundation in reason aud morality than that of eleven years later date, which was unearthed in time to render Mr. Stewart ineligible to the office of Secretary of the Treasury. Those who stickled over the repeal of that law because the} - perceived in it the profound w isI dom of the fathers Tn guarding against temptation to do wrong, would do well to consider whether It would not be an equally wholesome public service to revive the law of 1778 and apply it to those who hold great ami responsible trusts under the Government.”-—* Cincinnati Commercial.

Important to Soldiers.

j An act in relation to additional ! bounties, anil for other purposes: “Be it enacted hu the Senate and Huuee •/ - Representatives of the United States of America t n Congress assembled, I “That when a soldier’s discharge states thatlie is discharged by reason of ‘‘expiration of term of service,lie sbnl! be held to have completed the full tei’m of his enlistment and entitled tuianinty accordingly. “Sec. 2. That the widow, minor eliil1. <1 ren or parents, i n the order named, . of any soldier who shall have died, “rift er 1 id ng honorably ttisetraigetffrom i the military "service of the United States, shall be entitled to receive the additional bounty to which such soldier would be entitled if living, under the provisions of the twelfth and thirteenth sections of an act entitled “an aer making appropriations for simdgp# civil expenses of the tjumoot?RCfnT the year ending, J-flUinW, 1867, and for other approved July 28, TJjtiiM ~tfiiuTii said provisions of said pSfrshall be so construed. 1 “Sec. 3. That all claims for the addi- : tional bounties granted in sections ! twelve and thirteen of the act of July 28, 1860, shall, after the Ist of May ■ next, be adjusted and settled by the 1 accounting officers of the Treasury, ! under the provisions of said act; and such claims as may, on the said Ist of May, be remaining in the office of the 'Paymaster (tenera), unsettled, shall i be transferred to the Second Auditor of the Treasury for settlement. t'Sec. 4. That all claims for bounty ! under the provisions of the act cited in the foregoing section shall be void, ! unless presented in due form prior to i the Ist day of December, 18C9.’’ Approved Marcli 3, 1869. i J-gT'The Cincinnati Commercial says that 7,167 arrests were made in that city during last year, and thinks ! that six-sevenths of all the crimes and disorders are traceable to the excessive use ot spirituous liquors. -* y*. —* ■•••-*- - The Boston Traveller says: “In the years of 1851-2 George S. Boutwell was Governor of Massgchsetts, Henry Wilson was President of the Senate, ?md Nathaniel P. Banks was Speaker of the House of Representatives. It was quite a new era in the politics of this State. They held the three most important political offices in the Commonwealth. They were all young men,- educated in the public schools, without any powerful friends to lean upon or great-in-fluences in tfievr favori” ■ Ex-President) Johnson 1 reached hi* old home in GeeeavUie, Temnes- J see. Ust Saturday. <

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Wigfall is a lawyer in England.’ Gold has been discovered at El Paso Texas. Orange trees are in bloom in Louisiana. Jeff Davis’ health is better than it has been for years. The Indiana Soldiers’ Jloine has 70 inmates. Texas cattle fever is ravaging Washington county. One hundred and ten additions to the Methodist Church have joined at Salem. Mr. Longfellow is expected to rctnrn to this country in August. Woodstock, Vt., has this winter laid under nine feet of snow. Salt Lake City is manufacturing porcelain. The peach crop is reported as promising finely in Tennessee. Slavery has Wen abolished' iir the Portugese possessions. Victor Emanuel is renewing the excavations at Herculaneum. Eight million head of horses are owned in the United States. Tt is said thatXasby will be made postmaster at Toledo. Oregon has twenty-one quartz mills ip operation. L_ John Stuart Mill says all reforms “have to pass through three stages —ridicule, argument and adoption.” The British and Foreign Bible Society will send one million new testaments to Spain. A San Francisco leather store exhibits a dressed ox hide having a surface of 145 square feet. It is said that Grant’s Inaugural is the briefest since General Taylor’s in 1849. The first piano shipped to Japan was bja Nt*w Haven mftnuf'aetufTr.-- V*~ A transparent agate inclosing a drop of water lias been found in Willamette river, Oregon. , The product of the N evad.n mines for 1808 is stated as being sixteen millions of dollars. Gpneral Steadman has been released from the Havanna prison and arrived at New Orleans Monday. There is a rumor in Paris that the Empress Eugenie has got the small-pox. A colored youth graduated from Jhe Dental school of Harvard University, last Wednesday. The land sales of the Hannibal & St. Joseph Railroad the past year amounted to over $1,750,(100. Snow fell in Montreal, Canada, during the month of February, to the depth of six feet, one inch. Samuel Miller, of Lynchburg, has given SIOO,OOO to the University of ... -y*s \ lrgima. It is said that .tames Cordon Bennett, jr., is going abroad (or a two or three years’ tour. The Chicago Tribune says:“George 11. Pendleton, of Ohio, has gone into the liott'L business, in If 1 d oputfS+Tb wa. ” A sews cows’ tails on ojitfjt&rsc-hides, and thus comtaJffr yhe latter into a merchant*Hraie article. RoberUM. Douglas, a son of the late Senator Douglas has been made Private Secretary to the President. Some bold follow stole a $4,000 horse at New York the other day, and made good his escape with his prize. Bellewood Seminary, near Louisville, was damaged by fire, last Thursday, to the extent of $4,500; insured for $2,000. The expenses of the convent case recently tried in London were two hundred thousand dollars in gold. A valuable sulphur deposit has been found in Louisiana, near Lake Charles, 500 feet beneath the surface. * Burlington, Vermont, lias a new paper, called The New Idea, whiejf is printed in alternate columns of French and English. One of the greatest feats yet (lone with the velocipede, is a jburney of of one hundred and twentythree miles in twenty-lour hours. — This was in France." Children wouldn’t cross their parents 60 often when they are grown up, if they were to cross their parents’ knees a little oftencr when they arc little. , A dispatch from Rome states thatLueien Bonaparte, the youngest of the Cardinals, is regarded as the most available candidate fbr the Papal succession. Baron Rothschild always undervalued his property for taxation purposes, and there is talk of bringing a suit against his heirs to recover heavy arrears.

The Indiunnpolifl Journal of the | 22d, Hays “Gefi. Sol. Meredith is improving.” So we Bniqtose he is not dead as was published in the | papers of last week. Thfc largest single nugget ever ; found in any part of the world, weighing twenty-eight pounds of pure gold, was found in Cnbarras county, North Carolina, in 1803. The aides-de-camp of the French Kmperor live in the garret of the Tuileries; they have one hundred steps to'cli’rnb, which they go up and down e times a day. Horace Greeley says that the darkest day in any man’s carreer is that wherein lie fancies there is some easier way of gaining a dollar than by squarely earning it. The picture of the “Rat Catcher.” drawn by John Carter, the artist who painted by holding-the brushes in bis mouth, has been sold to a Boston merchant for $4y300; The Baptists have twenty-three institutions of learning in this country, in which there are 2,500 students. Of these 1,309 are professors of religion, and 701 studying for the ministry. The Presbyterian Church in Hanover, Indiana, has been visited with a very gracious revival.— Quite a large number have been added to the- church, among them nineteen students of the college. Fred. Douglass and other prominent colored men ’lire considering the propriety of establishing a firstclass weekly paper at Washington, in the interest, of the colored people of America. The entire clerical force of the New York Post Office was kept busy all day Sunday in “distributing” two tons of letters which lia.l been snow bound in tho P.oekyMountains for three weeks. Anna Diekin-on was too late for VSthe train at Des Moines, lowa, a few mornings since, and hired alo-com«»»iv-e to take her 165 miles, and rode upon it with the engineer and fireman. The Vulcan Founders', at. Bock Island, Illinois, was burned last Friday morning. Boss between $30,000 and $40,000. Insurance small, and a large number of men thrown out of employment. j Win. Coslett, a Welsh miner, re- i ccntly committed suicide at Tall- j mridge, Ohio, which so affected bis intimate friend, Kvan Harris, a feeble old man of sixty-five, that j he drowned himself a few days ago, | Frank Pant, Gcneral-in-ehief of the Japanese army, is a German-j American, and was Colonel of the i Fifty-somnd New .York Regimentl during the war. lie left the I'ni- j ted States regular army to accept: his present position. The sales of the great Dry Goods house. Field, Loiter it Co., for 1808 were 810,410,200, exceeding thatirf any other house In Chicago about illustration of wnat Fair dealing, based on a cash system can accomplish.The Italia of Naples announces that at Pompeii there have just been discovered two marble busts — one of Pompey and the other of Brutus. They are both of fine expent,ion T and have been placed in the National Museum. A man stepped into a lager beer saloon, in Syracuse, bought two glasses, and threw down a ten-cent silver coin. The Teuton exclaimed: “M ein Gott in hitnmel! dis is tier spesehie bayment vat I read so many dings about, und nefer sce j no time peforc.” The New York Times says that j [public beggary has become a most: grievous nuisance in New York.— Squalid and haggard beggars, mostly women and children, haunt i the offices, business places and res- j idences of the citizens, at all hours of the day. A Russian Prince was sentenced to four months’ imprisonment for a certain offense, but the people were so enraged at the lightness of the sentence that it was changed to two years’ imprisonment and transportation to Siberia for life—quite a change. One thousand persons employed in one hundred and seventy-eight manufactories ™ Sari-Francisco, manufactured 50,000,000 cigars the past year. Fifty of these cigar factories are owned and managed by Americans. The others are managed by Chinamen. The Bishop of New Jersey, it is said, has given notice that he will refuse at confirmation to lay his hands upon the piles of false hair and chignons which disfigure the heads of so mahy young ladies seeking admission to the church and; communion^ , . ... K ’

The statistics of the late Methodist Conference al fffcfrodsburg show that tlicy have 19,718 members in the State of Kentucky, including 8,028 colored. A separate conference was organized for the colored people, composed of two Presiding. Riders’ districts, containing 28 stations and circuits. • The regular Baptists in Ohio have 364 ordained ministers, 518 churches and >7,571 members. In Indiana there arc 285 ordained .ministers, thitty-one licentiates, 475 churches and 31,659 members. The number of baptisms in Ohio last year was 2,290; in Indians’, 3,703. Three children, aged two, four am] six years, respectively, were discovered in a vacant room in a house in Cairo, Illinois, on Tuesday, where, several days before they had been left to starve by their unnatural father. Not an article of furniture or nourishment was in the room. In Montreal the snow is said to be ten feet deep on the level, and fears are entertained of a ruinous freshet when a thaw comes, to avert which as much as possible the city authorities have, five hundred teams aud a large force of men at w ork removing the snow from the streets, and depositing it on the ice in the St. Lawrence. The Central Pacific Railroad Company finds it exceedingly difficult to keep their employes from deserting, on account of the White Pine gold excitement. They ship ear loads of workmen who get their ride for nothing, and strike for the gold region when they get as near as the road can carry them. A little negro girl, at Vicksburg, was badly burned the other dayover her entire body, and, in obedience to the directions oT the “wise woman” of the neighborhonil, a cure was sought by bold-, ing her scorched and blistered body over the fire, to “draw the burn out,” until the little sufferer was fairly roasted, despite her screams of agony. A horrible crime has been committed at the village of Dolee-Ava, North Italy, caused by,the enforcement of the grist tax. The population rose in mass and killed the Mayor, whose head was then mounted on a pike and paraded through the streets. During the same day twelve of the municipal ! councilors were assassinated. | The Great Western mail, leaving j New Fork at 9 o’clock P. M., on ; the 16til inst., being carried by the j Adams Express Company in its ! through New York and Cincinnati , car, was, with the exception of two I bags and one box, totally destroyed j by fire, together with the freight of I that company, near PefryvilTe, j Pennsylvania, at an early hour ou the morning of the 17th inst. It is said that contracts have been made with a French Company for opening a canal across the Isthmus itv Nicaragua and with an* American Company for an Isthmus railroad. Work on the latter is to begin in the ipring, and flic first thirty miles of the canal are to be finished in eighteen months. The contract price is ten millions of •dollars. .. —— Dr. Isaac M. Wise, of Cincinnati, one of the ablest Jewish Rabbis of this country, denies that any of the Jews maintain that Jesus was an impostor; or that he was justly slain, and affirms that nothing of the kind or any thing similar to it is taught in their synagogues, or to be found in any Jewish book. The Legislature of British ColI umbia lias appropriated about twentv thousand dollars to brinec | from England servant girls for the | wealthy families of that colony.— The Pacific coast American papers chuckle over this vote and tell their British neighbors that the effect of I this will be to cheaply provide ■ good wives for the hardy pioneers 'of Washington Territory. t A fox hunt was attempted near St. Louis on St. Patrick’s day.— Reynard was let slip and the thirty horsemen and a half dozen hounds joined in the chase, which lasted only two minutes, for the fox having ascended a tree was brought down limp and dead by a pistol shot from Judge Yastine, of the Probate Court. Tho sports succeeded in covering themselves with mud. Discoursing of fleas, Josh Billings says: “They bite wus than the muskeetoze, for they bit 6 on a run, one flea will go aul over a man’s suburbs in 2 minnits, and leave him as freckled as the mca zles. I don’t suppose there is ever killed, on an average, during enny oue year, more than 16 fleas in the whole ov the United States ov America, unless there i* a casualty ov some kind—once in a while there is a dog gits drowned suddei), and then thare may be a - few fleas lost”

- Ibtfab’s ifirtitints. EOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS, ABB Hoofland's German Tonio; The Great Remedies for all Diieates of the XITMR, STOMACH, OB DI9MBTXT* ORGANS. HOOFLAND'S fi¥MAN BITTERS Ie aonpoMd of tho par* Jniece (or. ae they are medicinally tnaii Bxtracle) of * o o 1 1 Herbs, mod VEamoMM ( Bark*, ■akin* » pr.pereted, and e» 1 tlraly/iwe /Tom alcoholic admixture of any kind. HOOFLAND’S GEBMAN TONIC, la a combination of all tho Ingredients of tho Bit* tart, with the purest quality of Srinfa One Sum. Orange, Ac.. making one of the moit pleasant and agreeable remedlea ever offered to tho white. Tboeo preferring a Medicine free frflm Aleokelte admixture, will nee Hoofland’s German Bitters. Thoee who bar* no objection to the combination of tho Bitter., aa etated, will nee HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO/ They are both equally good, and contain tho came medicinal virtue*, tho eholee between the two being a mere matter of taete, tho Toole being the mom palatable. The atomaeb, from a variety of eeucee, tech aa Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Iterroua Debility, etc., la very apt to he e Ita fuseIlona deranged. The Mre r . sympathising as closely ae 1* done with the j Stomach, thee become, affect ed, the recall of which la that the patient anSfere from several or more of tho folio wing dieoaaoo: Constipation, Flatulanoe. Inward Filea Fulness of Blood to the Head, Aotdity of the Btomaoh, Nauaea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fulneaa or Weight in the Btomaoh, Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Fit of the Btomaoh, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Flattering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating BematioEp when, in a Dying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, DuU Fain in the Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Fain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc.. Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in . the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Orest DepreaaN-m of Spirit#. Tha sufferer from thee, dialed ehonld exereidthe greeted caution la the selection of e remedy fit hit cnee, par ehnelng only that which he i» euured from hie inTeeiige f | tione end lnqniriee poesess ) ee trne merit, la skilfully com ponnded, ta freefrom Injurious Ingredients, and bee established for Itself a reputation for the •ora of that# diseeeee. In this connection wa would inbuilt thoea wall-known ramcdlae— Hoofland’s German Bitters* ASP HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO. PREPARED BT J>r. C. X. JACKSOR, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Twenty-two years elnee they were tret latrednecti lato thie country from Germany, during which lima they here undoubtedly performed more carte, and heneflted tnffering humanity to n greater exteat, than any other ramedlea known to the public. These remedies will effectually cure Liver Complaint, Jauo pgw—wpmnaßW dice, Dyspepsia, Chronic or'—Bcrioue Debility, Ciirun HMI is Diarrhoea, Disease of the Kidneys, and all Diseases . arising from a Disordered Liver, Stem ■ aah, or Intestinal. . - r — - DEBILITY, Resulting from any Cauaa whaterarFBOSTHATION OF THE SYSTEM, induced by Barere Labor, Hardahips. Exposure. Fevers, Ac. Where la ao medicine extant equal te theca ream dice Ir auch caaei. A lone and vigor ie Imparled te the whole system, the appetite Is strengtheied, fold, la enjoyed, the etomaek digests promptly, the bleed> te purifled, the complexion becomes round and kealthy, tha yellow tinge is eradicated from that ayes, a bloom is gives to the eheeke, sad tha weals sad nervous invalid becomes a strong and healthy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN HEM, And feeling the hand of time weighing heavily spew them, with all its attendant ills, will And In the aea •f this BITTERS, er the TOXIC, an elixir 'hat will laatil new life Into their veins, restore In ■ meaanrv the energy end ardor of more youthfnl da #s. build ■p their ahrunken forme, end giro healih and happiness to their remaining yean. , NOTICE. Hie a well-eatebltahed (Set that fully eaa-halfef lha female portion of our pepsin-. Uoa are sal dom la the enjoyment of good health; *r, to nee their JFovd axpreeeion, never aMSHIkMEtIB f **' well." They are lan v ' —1 gold, deveid as all energy, extremely nervone, and have ae appetite. To thie elans of persons the BITTERS, er lha TOJfIC, is especially recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE OHILDBE® Are made etrong by the nee of either of these - remedlea They will care every cnee of MAKASMCh, Wtthont Ml— Thoueaqd* nf eertUcilcahavc Mcuum'e'ed iaVS* * Sands of the proprietor, but epaee will allow es tha publication of bat afew. Those, It will be observed, are men of note and of each standing that they must ha believed. TESTIMONIALS. Hon. Geo. W. Woodward, OhlsfJutttot of the Supreme Court of Pa., writatt Philadelphia, March I<, IStT. “I And‘Hoof JHBn land's German Bitiers’ k tea good tonic, neeful in diseases of the dlgeitive organs, and of great bene smtifHML fll in Cason nf debility, end ■■ wantefnerrcus action In the ayetem. Yours, truly. GEO. W. WOODV^ARD.Hon. James Thompson, Judge of the Supreme Court if Penneylvantm Philadelphia, April 28,18 M. “ I eoneldar ‘ Hoofland's German Biitere' a valuer Ke medicine In ease of attache of Indigestion er Dyspepsia. 1 ean certify this from my experience efit. Yonrs, with respect, JAMES THOMPSOIf.'* From Rev. Joseph H. Kennard, D.D-, Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Church , Philadelphia* Dr. Jackson —Dear Sir: *1 h»r# been fr*<yiently requested to connect my name with reconuaeada* tiona of different kinds of inedieines. bnt regardiaf the practice U out « e“pUT U ' : •• eases de l 1 elinedjbul with a clear proof varione In > etaneeeand particularly In my own family, of the nsefulness et Dr. Hoofland's German Bitten, I depart for once from my nsnal course, to express my fall couvtcttea taat, for general debility of the eyetem, and especially for Liver Complaint, it ie a'iafe and valuable preparation. In aoms cases it may fhll; hut nanally. I doubt net, It will he very bentflelal to these wli# enffer from the above causes. Years, veey respectfnlly, J. H. KENNARD, ... Eighth, below Coatee M. From Rev. E. D> Fendall, Aeetetant Editor Christian Chronicle, Philadn. I have dtrlved decldad beneflt from tha nae el Boolend's German Hitters, and feel It my privilege |o recommend them aa a most valuable tonic, te all who are suffering from general debility or from disease* arising from derangemant of the liver. You re truly. •> A B. VEND ALL - -•'* V - CAUTION. Hoofland's German Remedlea are ceueterfeltetil Bee that the signature sf C. M. JACK SON i. on the wrapper of t EH | each katlte. All others are rsnstarfslt. . Principal oflSe * aid Manufactory 'at the German Medicine Store, Be. 631 ARCH Street, Philadelphia, Pa. CHABLES X. EVANS, Proprietor, 1 formerly C. M. JACKSON k Cti V rPRICES. Voelaad’e German Bittern, per bottle, . >1 OB •* half dezen, . •0® Hoofland’s German Tonic, put up la qaart hettlee, #1 60 per bottle, or a half dogen for *7 80. EOL. Do not forget to examine well the irtlegff kev, tn order to got the gennlao FOR SALE BY . Druggists’ and Storekeeper* ' r' ■ -■-'""■L- 5 . Tm Eye it Tow* i» rm CffTW StitE 8-4-MJ*.’ ' ’ s