Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 28, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 April 1869 — Page 2

Oc ilinon. Thursday, April 8. 1889HEALY & JAMES, EDITOKS.

A Question Settel.

Under the above head "the Koehtator Un<o* Npy makes a most disgraceful attack on our Congrcssrnau, General Pa< kaiu'. it seemthe father of the editor of thst paper Waftited the I‘ostoffice at Plymouth, but failed to gpt/it a* many nn honest man has done before him. Vinter the inti nonce of frarfnl passion, the son of. his father, afltf Mitorof tiro Union Spy. Meets General Pa< kai:i», as the cause of the wrong and object of his wrath, kbit without regard Id* propriety, drt-cuey or truth, strikes right and left. He charges Packahi* with having defeated a crippled soldier in las race for Auditor of La Porte comity, two or threi years ago. We don't know v\ hether the man Kas a cripple or not, but onr informant states that if he was etippied while in the United States service he must’ have beeii _ liiift Awbifoiu llici’xo.rxisL.Mjin’.blllN l’!l ti<-c at LaPorte, as he did not get nearer the enemy than that place during the war. If the statement of the editor .of the Union s)»y is true he knew it at (Io 1 time the t'onvention was held which nominated General Pai Ka rd,and he should have used it t<» have defeat' d hi-' i>oniii:ati"i: for t OHgrcss. but Ire did notch* so, on the cmilrury, Mr. M.vmv..'.r th l '” rejoiced exceedingly over the nomination mid hailed it a- a great trfmiiph of the soldier element over »tny-at-hoine patriotism. TJiis he , said in the is-ne of his paper announcing the Westville nominations, and published that he fell so gushingly glorious tlrtit he rode (ill night that ho Plight publish the result to the people of Fulton Comity before they could obtain it from any other source. We bad supposed from this that the editor's friendship for General P.i< k ai:i» was of the most disinterested, but if appears to have beem a P.ogtoftice friendship—a v cry common kind indeed. Come Bii.L get over your little pet, quit crying, wipe your Bose and be a man, and if “Pater” really needs a Postoitiee perhaps he mav be accomodated in this county as it •aid a new one will soon be estnb fished at Alter's Mill.-

Let Us Have Peace.

Scnrce'.y five weeks has (lapsed I since General Guam was inaugura- i led President, yet Low marked is . the contrast between his administra- ■ lion and that of his predecessor.— ' Instead of a feverish cxriteincn£amF feeling of insecurity pervading the country, a feeling of profound peace, almost oppressive in its intensity possesses the public mind. Instead of the papers being filled with such startling black letter head lines, as ~ “The recvi.t cuup d'Uut of the Pi c sident,” “Senator So-and-so’*' great speech in the Senate alcnouncimr. o the administration,’ “Congressman hal's-his namc preparing Articles • f impeachment,” “Horribleku-kluf outrages upon Southern loyalists," '■Bloody massacre in New Orleans,” etc., etc, there is scarcely interest enough in the political tTews to make 1 the dispatches readable, and the . sensational newspapers of the country, like the Chicago Tribune and New York Hera'd. have recourse to “revolting murders,” “bloody tragedies,” disgusting “divorce trials;” rapes, suicides, accidents, etc, to < ke out a filling for their columns

From General R. H. Milroy of Delphi

General Mii.koy, of .Delphi, in a recent letter to a gentleman in this place, writes as follows: “Dt Aii’Siß: There is considerable talk here about the air line R. R. from Indianapolis, via Frankfort, this place,.Monticello or Reynolds, Rensselaer and Crown Point to Chitmgus Tlwre is a strougJeeling in favor of the project m tins comity and Clinton. Meetings will be called to organized Joon. Stir up Jasper, and keep agitating the matter. If Monticello don't wake, up we wiH put the R. R. tjirotigh *Revix>ld>; which would be a nearer and better route to your place, and better for this county. Keep it prominently before the people In every th® Vsion. . det up FdosiiJg meelnfgs! A ppomVcofres-" ponding and executive committees, and get up a delegate meeting of all the counties along the line, and the , R. R. will be built certain. ‘Where there is a will there .is a way.’ ”

R. H. MILROY.

Your friend,

-Michigan elected a Republican bUk ticket by aver “O,O0f». r

If??'" A dispatch ftold Kan Fran-' cisco states that the fur trade in Alaska luas been entirely on account <\f the Indian troubles. While the Russians hail control of Alaska no one ever heard ot any Indian troubles, but nlmost as soon as the “Yanks” go there trouble , begins. A little judicious hanging of wjiite men who create strife with the Indians w ould have a good dTict. and be the means of saving thousands of lives. The cause of the sudden illness of ex President Johnson, a few days after he returned to Greenville, Tennessee, has been ascertained. He hail so much grit that as soon as the demand for it in fighting the liadicnls in- defense of-lhe—G-onMitutiow ccascd, he was attacked by the gravel.— (.»«. Cvmmerehd. The election for governor and Slate officers in Tennessee comes off iii August i.extT *3'hb latest report in Nashville about Andrew Johnson, ' is, that he will not be a candidate for governor, but that he will can-, vass the State during the summer in the interest of the democracy, with the view cf securing a democratic tnajdrjTy in the ingtsfriturr, —ami of securing his election to the Luited States senate. There are, in Massachusetts, sb'dit 700 colored Freemasons, who have seven (loiirishing lodges hr existence. They have never been acknowledged or recognized by the white Freemasons of .Massachusetts, and have forr —t'" -is ■ . a long time been trying to secure 1 what they term their rights. 'I he ' Masonic publications aixjfiscnssing : the subject, and so is the Grand Lodge (white) of Massachusetts. The directors of tho New 1 oik and New Haven Kailroad have decided, as an experiment, to use woqdetrwjieeis on some of the ears upon their road. Quite a number ofthcsc-wrlTeels-lmve been purchased, and will be sulc-titwled for the present iron ones on some of the new ears. They are understood to cost nearly treble the price of iron wheels, but are considered quite as cheap in the end. They arc made of elm or teak. wood, and bound with steel tires. Besides being less liable to break by action of frost, they make less noise. It is believed that quite a respectable number of live weli in New York city by supplying graveyard poetry- to people who have been bereaved ol their friends and relatives by death. These versifiers (some of them females) cari'fully peruse tiie newspaper obituary column every day, and select from it the ■ places of death, where they imagine ' a few dollars can be made by writLlug rhymes tos <> o 11;S,ille..fee]ylg.S P r I tint ter the vanity of tender-hearted survivors. Il is said the price ot. one of these sympathetic effusions is often as low as 25 cents, and seldom higlicr than $1.0., An English inventor has built some houses on a novel principle at Nou Hampton. The houses are of a cheap order designed for laborers. lie compresses straw into 4» -asolution of ilint, to render thenl fireproof, coals the two sides with a kind Of 00nient or concrete; and of these slabs the cottages are built. By ingenious contrivances the quantity of joiners' work is much reduced, and the chimney is so constructed as to secure warmth with the smallest consumption of fuel, and at the same time to heat' a drying closet. The cost of a single cottage of this description, ebmbining “ill! thej'equiremciits of health, decency and ■ comfort,” is eighty-fii e pounds, i (*425). The commissioners on the . . employment of .children, young . |.-r*pns, and women in agriculture, I report favorably of these cottages. .

The Springfield Republican says: “Il ought to be made a statutory of- ■ fence to put a shovel full of dirt up- ’ on the highway jjjfter the Ist of June, i except where the ground has been viewed by the County Commissioner, and the work ordered for the public, safety, ( Ini geffefai, all the repairing I that is done should be furbished three #eeks earlier than that The ' true theory of road-making is that the new earth should be added in | the spring, while the frost is coming [ out of the ground, so that new and old shall settle down together for the summer. When this is done, the addition is incorporated bodily, and never heard from afterwards.— It is the only way in which hard, firm roads can be obtained. On tlie other band, when, as generally at present, the repairing is put oft' till after harvesting, we have bad roads all the fall, execrable roads all whiter, except where the ground iadeepJy covered with show; and, come spring, the passage to and from even ■ tlie nearest localities, becomes a matter to be seriously considered, I well prepared for if inevitable, or ■ altogether avoided, if this can be 1 done." , I

INDIANA ITEMS.

Tho StKte Legislature convenes to-day. ■ Fresh fish sell for a bhilling A pound in LaPorte. There are 337 prisoners in the | Northern prison. J. A. Burbank, of Indiana, has been confirmed Governor of Dakota. W. It. Holloway, of the Indianapolis Journal, is to be postmaster nt Indianapolbh —i , Alice Kingwbftry is running - a nice little form very nicely, near Aurora, Indiana. The Mishawaka Furniture company have received nn order for their , ' goods from Foo Chau, China/ Jno. S. Bender has assumed e.velusive control of the Plymouth ' lUpililican, S. I’. Ihmieroy retiring, j The Laporte Union and f/rraldho.n ' : recently been enlarged and is now i 1 one of the largest and ablest coji- j ducted papers in Indiana. Isaac K. Julian, brother to the Congressman, has been nominated by the postmaster at Richmond, Indiana. I A terl . in LaPorte. It will be called thf Aryus ami conducted in the interests of the democracy. About 1850 cords, or 5,550 tons ■ of icy, has been stored up for the i use of LaPorte people during the coming summer. The Crawfordsville City Council 1 proposes trW —-appropi-i.-ite seven i hundred dollars for eafalry boots j for rhe use of citizens as ti '-sttbsti--tute sos sidewalks. An extensive fruit grower us I Spencer county reports that the ’ peach buds in that County have been but little injured, and if no bad ' weather intervenes hereafter to injure them, the crop will be as large as was ever grow n in that county. ~~Thi're lives in Eawrcnce county a-MiSs Ritter, who is only twentyfour inches high and weighs but thirty-three pounds.' She is 41 years old, but looks much older than that. She is very ehildTsTi in her manner, and destitute of education. A son of Colonel Bemusdatfer, of Brookvi'le, aged about twelve years, broke his left leg just above tin- ankle, while playing with some other boys, on Alonday last, under and old rickety- shed opposite* the Seminary building. The shod fell down suddenly, ami his leg was accidently caught by one of the heavy timbers. Barnabas C. Hobbs, State Superintemleirt Public Instruction, lectured to the Young Men's Christian Association in the Presbyterian Church of this city, on, laut Sunday evening. Tho church was crowded. The lecture is spoken of in the highest terms of commendation by all who heard it. Air. Hobbs is, everything considered, the best Superintendent of PuTdic Instruction our' 'State has ever had.—ColuiiiUus Union. One <liiy last week' aneldl'fly llliin came into Terre Haute for the purpose of having tested a piece of mineral ore which he had found at some point not more than iifteen mites from: the city. It -was examined by experts and pronounced to be a mass of nearly pure silver.— The old man was singularly reticent about the location where he found "this specimen, but he'stated that there was plenty more of it in the same place. Mr, Isaac Sluder, of Little York, AVashingtoumounty, is supposed to be the oldest man in Indiana, being 10C years of age. He walked to church the other day, a distance of four miles, John Longfellow, of Bethel, is the oldest man in Wayne j county, and perhaps in eastern Indi-1 He was 103 years of age on his last birthday, ami is as spry and active as most men at 70. x He has the use of all his faculties, and bids fair to survive another score. i

| The Huntington Democrat says ' that Thomas La Fontaine, the last 1 of the male line of the descendants of the Chief La Fontaine, of the Miami tiibe of ludiuis, died on Thursday last-, and was buried on . Saturday. Prince Tom \vas in every essential a gentleman,.and ever niaini tained a dignified decorum with those among whom he was thrown i into association. Hq was one of , the best educated and most intvlli-; ; gent of his race, and passes away ( lamented by all who knew him.

■I ■ There is now, in running order ! within the borders of/ this State j 2,560 miles of first class railroads. The tracks, engines, shops and -all their property complete was valued ’ due year ago at §164,224,000.'* The. J. three roads that have the' greatest ; number of miles of track are- the j Ohio Louisville, New I Albany Chicago and the Indian- ' apolis, Cincinnati Lafayette, ac- ‘ cording to the old plats;. but since , j the consolidation of tire Indiana ; Central, Peoria & Logansport, and > Chicago Air, line into the Columbus ■ and Indiana Railway, the letter takes the lead of all; and iu a few ■lays the track to Vincenucj will j be added also. , - i

.. MISCELLANEOUS -IJEMS. I Savannah has green peas. President Grant signed the. new teuure-of-oflict) bill on llie sth. F. A. Eastman has been confirmed Postmaster at Chicago. Congress will adjourn sine die on Saturday next. There are said to be 12,000 grog- > cries in the l uited States. A comet superior in size and lustre to Enck’s, is nightly expected. General Longstreet has bepn con- ' firmed surveyor of the port ot New Orleans. _ The Connecticut elections, held qn the stli, went Republican by increased majorities. ' The number of persoTYtllat c‘dtnpose the Penobscot tribe of Indians In Maine, is 452. Over 3,000 Jesuit priests areconstantly employed on missions throughout the world. A mail at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, hns a beard eight feet long —they say. Indians respect the colored race. They do not scalp negro soldiers when they kill them. Mosby lias bought a farm in Bedford county, Ya., and is living on it with his father’s family. Wade Hampton has been buying mules in Illinois for use on his plantation in South Carolina. Confederate General Thomas G. Polk, brother of the militant Bishop of Louisiana, died last week in Mississippi. - Newlwrn, N. C., is swchyi ing in linen coats, and straw hats. Let Neu hern l ' l pui'<its lin-.m" if it <b>n't want to swelter. Bruce, independent democr.it, was elected Mayor of Louisville, Ky., on Monday, over Baxter, the regular nominee. Licensed dealers were recently selling.good oranges in the streets of New York at the rate of fifteen so r twe nt y -five cwjrts. A newspaper is to be published in Alaska, it will eschew polities, and <levote itself to the material interests of “our new possession.” A company, with Brigham A’onng as President, has been organized in Utah for the purpose of building a branch railroad from Salt Lake City to the Pacific Railroad. Earthquakes are apprehended in Oregon. According to recent exchanges, “tmoke is issuing from the (volcanic) mountains Hood, Jetferson, and Three Brothers.” New silver mines have been disewvercil in the mountains rear Sonoro, Cal., about seventy miles from San Francisco. The excitement is great. -f»— W. Randall, late postmaster gencrftljjiasn arrived in Elmira with his family and furniture, and taken possession of his elegant residence, purchased some lime Jsinee. „. ; One of the—results of the hev* velocipede excitement is" that it takes' the young men away from ; the drinking saloon, and gives a pleasant and, beneiicial turn to their minds, and a healthful exerci se~oT-bt>dyy ; —..-L Chicago has ohe hundred iron establishments which furnish employment to 15,(JOO men, to whom is paid $12,000,000 yearly. The capital invested amounts to $15,000,000, which nets an annual product of $20,000,000. A New Orleans paper says that United States troops are being rapidly concentrated in Texas, on tho Rio Grande border, and additional barracks are being built It is thought that a movehiciit oh Mexico is contemplated. 1 Miss Mary Grant, of Richmond, was matried in that city on Thursday last to a -Mr. Ford, of Goochland county county, Ya. It will be remembered that, they were the subjects of the article in the Southern i Opinion which resulted in the killing of- its-editm, If. Rives PolUird.

An immense dam is being constructed at Cohoes, tin the Mohawk river, for the supply of- the Champlain Canal, in New York. The entire length will be 1640 feet, or near- ' ly one-third of a mile. It is built of granite bltfcks of immense weight, and is to be 16 to 18 feet wide at the bottom, and 10 tbet at the top and will be from 14 to 20 feet in height. ’

Jacob Wright, of Washington, N. IL, 81 years old,-who was with Jackson at New Orleans, and went through the whole war of 1812, was snowed up in his home on the last election day. The 1 democrats of the place got a sleigh and drew th® old man three miles to the polls. He was putting on his snow shoes to walk to the polls when the party ar- ' rived at his bouse. \

, General I’. Ht. G. Cooke has been ordered to’relicvc General Thomas from the command of the Department of the Cumberland. * I’rizc fighters in Michigan are ■ hereafter to be punished by a fine I of not le.-s than $2,060, or impris<>nin<nt from one to five years, or by fine and imprisonment. The tariff on Atlantic Cable messages will, after June Ist, be one dcilar and twenty-seven cents porwor<l, a reduction of nearly half pfrotiFpresent rates. The snow shed of the Central PaI cifie Railtoad is the biggest building in the worhl. It is 16 feet wide, 16 feet high, and 22 miles long, and took about forty prillion feet of lumber.-- — : —

Charles M. Wilder, the first col-, oreti ilian and ex-slave nominated to a United .States office, was confirmed'by the Senate, on the sth, as Postmaster at Columbia, South 1 Carolina, with a salary of $3,200 per annum. i~ Isaac and M. E.« Burbank, the I parcnH <>f ?drs. Senator Morton I and Mrs, Postmaster Holloway, of I Pndianapolis, celebrated theirgold+vn w<nh 11 n<jt, 1111 efi 1 lic tk ami ive r s .1i rv), week , ago last Tuesday, at i their resilience in ( entervi'le. All ■ of their children, seven in number, ' were present. I President Grant has telegraphed to Admiral Hoti, commanding the : Gulf Squadron, enjoining upon him ; to see that all American citizens are I | protected from outrage by the au- ■ thorities of (. ftba. The necessity I for the order was urgent, several ’ Anjerie.an citizens having been lately I arrested and-tthprts&SOtl. < A tr.avclkr writing ,of lexa? sums up in this marpier “The best women ami the meanest men, more sb’kness and less health, more porn I bread and less corn, more negroes I and less labor, more pretty dadacs J with Tiftlo feet-awl no e;Aves__to ; match, than any other State in the I I'U'O.I.” ' The daughter whom Mmj ITowiard bore to the Emperor N apoleon ; has recently married a Captain .of 'the Imperial Guard. The Empe- ‘ ror gave her a dower of slo,tio<J. — ' She was riiarried as M.'ile de Beauregard. She is not admitted to ' Court circles - . The yoyngest couple known are |in Gofl’town, New Hampshire, the ' groom being 18 and the bride li| I years old. A clergyman whoinjlyey j called on thought it was a bit of i fun, and sent them to the town clerk i for a “stifikit,” but on the way a man Tmarried them for thirty-seven Cents. ' The wife attends school and talks I gravely about her old man. ' The liivertide Echo, published nt T]’or 11 an d, M e.;'Telia t lie" folio vving" ; story- ~of a <k>g: “The chihhyir ' were in the habit of sliding d.own ' a hill near the house, accompanied by a favorite dog. Early, one morning they diseortred that the ; Tog had taken the sled, drawn it to ■f-rhe top. ; -. l n l n.liw;‘s now sliding down hill nill almie by himself; and this was frequently repeated.” The Germans are a thrifty race. A German berry-worn, 11;,- diyiiig in- ! Corning, Steuben county, says that I she and her husband,' who is :i“la- , borer, have saved, within a few : years, $2,000. Yet she’ has sold berries of her own picking, as ’ though the only way to keep them I from starving was to rise before ' day,walk some miles for berries, Land, after a weary- day, peddle them out around town.

A common sight in Italy is a dirty nurse-maid leading along a little boy i baby, two or three years old, who I has a cigar in his mouth. The American colony at Bordeaux , numbers one hundred and fifty perI sons. There are near’v'one thou- : sand Americans at Havre. The Cuban insurgents have issued a decree placing that country under the protectorate of thtf*T’n : - tod-Stntcs.- - A It is said that a Parisian glass manufacturer has succeeded in producing glass threads so flexible and tenacious that they can he used as ordinary sewing-thread. Two million of cattle ■ arc, upon the authority of Letheby, killed Annually in South America for. thefat, skins and bones.

Dispatehee from Alexandria received at London, April 4th, says: A nother plot to assassinate the Viceroy of Egypt has been discovered and frustrated. A , Loaded bomb was found under his chair in the theater and was withdrawn before it could explbde. A large number of arrests have been made of suspected parties. ■' . ■ *»

The elections for members of the Cortes have been suspended iu Porto Rico. “ „ General Prim tho Spanish Secretary of War, has asked the Cortes I to fix the Spanish army during 1860 I at 800,000. i An old lady once' s'aid that her i idea of a great man was “a man ■ who was keerful of his clothe?, : didn't drink spirits, kin read the j Bible without spelling the worxh, and kin cat a bold dinner on a wash I day to save the women folks the I trouble of cooking.” —• ——

SAMUEL FENDIG, At R. F. Goodakd'b pays the highest market price in CASH, for all kinds COUN'I'IiY PRODUCE Such as Butler, Egee, Feathers, Poultry, BAO3, HIDES, OLD IRON, COPPER, &.C. Patronage respectful'^solicited. l-IG-ti; 1 • Agents Wanted—slo a Day. TWO|I« MAPS FOKB4. LLOYDS PATENT REVOLVING DOUBLE MAPS, of America and Europe, America tiKil thedittett-Slate* o-f America. Colored—in 1000 Counties.' THESE great Maps’,- just now completed, show t very place el Impcrt nue, all Railroad* to date, and tho latest ulter.itmiK in the ■ vicious European States. These Maps ere needed in every School and family in the land —they occupy the space of one Map, and by means of the Revorser, either .side cm be throw if front, and any part brought level to the eye. bounty Rights ami largo discount given tn food Agents. Apply* . Circulars, Terms, and send mon y . for Sauip, Maps, to J. T. LLOYD. 1-27-4*. 23 Cori landt Struct, Y. , —r/f .'pt: •[ 50,000 Acres Of trzsr improv szo Land for Sale jwiiriffiifffl COUNTIES! Some of which are convenient tn R»*t! Rom(N,< Lurches and Schools. Some-Timber.* Soil Vul to Farnyng aud Grnjiug. UHTii'Ue Leultliy and pleatwut. Water goo 1. Prices from $3 t<> I*3 per Acre. General one-third daw*) and ba bi non. in'twe yearly pnyinrntH, but iu some iuatauc* es a longer time will be given. 1 am aieo nulhuriZPil to sell A Number of Fine Fanns at From .sl3 to $25 per Acre. Hut ing been located in Jasper county for eleven years, end having Ixa-n eugajpuLlhe greater part of th-it time pi loculi' g ditches, shewing lands and surveying in this anil Ne'.vlon counties, my acquaintance with u!l the land rituuxed in these counties is superior to Unit of any other man. I Propose Givkig Beltcißargains than any other Agent in the West. A niTwill be ready \ JOHN MLI.I.ER', \ County Surveyor and Land Ag'iit. OiriceNßensselai'i, Jasper County, Ind. X . 1-27-ly. I Espeaalty designed for the- nse of tbs hinlical Profestion and the family, possessing those intrinsic medicinal properties which belong to nr. Old mid Pure Gin. Indispensable to Females. Good for Kidncu Complaints. A delicious Tonic. Rut up in cases, containing one dozen bottles each, and sold by all druggftts, grocers, tec. A-M. Binninger &Co , estnbli.-hed 1778, No. 15 Beaver Street. New York. l-27-ly. c f —y-a- —— , 1 - » ■ THE WORLD RENOWNED -a 1

SINGER SEWING MACHINE! lam agent for this splendid machine and would request all those needing machines, to calf at my residence and see some rtf its work. I challenge comparison. HEFFEJIEXCKB; Mrs. I. M. Stackhouse. Mrs. Thos. Boroughs. Sirs. Beth. Cox, . fr, John B. Spangle, and others, Ail kinds of niachine twist and colors of threads, Brooks 500 yds. H Cord thread, best in the World, for sale. * WJit- H RHOADES. Sept. 11,

Slcbitincs, lIOOFLAND’S GERMAN BITTERS, AMD Hoofland’s German Tonio. The Great Remedies for all Diseaaei of tin irrsß, stomach, oh DiGxsrrrtf OHGAXS. HOOFLAND’S GERMAN BITTERS !■ compoMd of th. purs Juices (or. m th.y st«, medicinally tsrmsd.. Rr(n<.7«) or 1 Root, and ( Bar k • ■asking a pre para! highly eooc. nlra. tsd, and en * Ursly Aw from aleonoltc mlmMurs of any kind. HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO, It a combination of all ths Isgrsdlsnls of th. 811. ten, with the purest quality of Banta Crus Bum, Orlnge, Ae., making one of the most plsa.s<x and agresable remedies ever offered to the pablls. Tho>e s preforrlng a Medicine free from AidoheKo admixture, will me Hooflani’s German Bitters., Thotewko hare no objection to tho corablnatlen of the Bitters, as ■rated, will ms HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO? They ar* both equally good, and contain the Miqrf medicinal virtues, the choice betweep the two Imlnif a mere matter of taste, ths Tonic being tho most palatable. The stomach, from a variety of eansos, smh aa Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, ste., Is very apt to kt > Its fuse* Worn deranged. The Diver* sympathising as closely as 11 does with the HMkk J Stomach, thon. becomes affect sd, the result, of which Is that ' the patient suk fersfrom several or more of the foil* Xing diseases: Constipation, Flatulenoe, Inward Piles Fulness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Hoartburn, Disgust for Food, Fulness or weight in the Stomach; —— Sour Eructations. Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at the Heart, Ohoking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Pain in the Head, Deficiency of Papspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes. Pain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Bud. den Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Great Depress->n of Spirits, j Tho sufferer from these should exereld* the greatest cautlou In-the •election of a remedy f>* hli case, pur chasing only that which lie is assured from his luvestiga s® ( tioiia and ini qulries possess JBBf J es true merit, la ! akllfully com panuded, is frM ; from injurious lix-g-T ud I a QU, | and has established for itself a reputation for the cure of these diseases. In this connection we would I submit those well-known remedies—- ’ Hoofland's German Bitters, AND HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO. ' rRBPABBD BY !{»•. C. M. JACKBOX, PHILADELPHIA. »A. ! Twenty-two yearn sinee they Were first Tatredueed latoi thin country from Germany, daring which lima they have undoubtedly performed more curen, and benefited auffoiing humanity to a greater extenl* than any other remedies known to the public. Thev remedies will effectually cure Liver C«»wv ' plaint, Jauu t,ice ’ j mi r, Chronic or Nervous Debility, (,'hron ie Diarrhopa, Disease of the Kidney*, and all Diseasesarising from a Disordered x - J Liver, Store acb, or Intestine*. DEHIIATY, Resulting from any Cause whatever? PHOBTRATION OF THE SYSTEM, induced by Severe Labor. Hardships, Exposure, Fevers, dtc. •tier© Is no modldne extant equal to these ream i dies ip such cases. A tope and vigor is imparted to the whole system, the appetite Is strengthened, feed j is enjoyed, the stomach dlgesta promptly, the bleed I U purified, the complexion becomes sound aad healthy, the yellow tinge Is eradicated from the I eyes, a bloom is given to the cheeks, and the weak : and aeryous invalid besomes a strong and hoahb/- | being. PERSONS ADrANCKD IN LIFE, I And feeling the hand of time weighing heavily npea ; them, with all its attendant ills, will find In the use * | of this BITTERS, or the TONIC, au elixir that *IN ; 'naXil uew life into their veins, restore in i men*urn* the energy and ardor of more youthful da/e. l»nil<U _x_np_ their shrunken foruiSt and give health and happiness to their remaining years. NOTICE. Visa well-established fact that fully ono-half of the > female portion aMMHIVh of our papula- ■ tioa aro sei d°m in im I enjoyment of gudd health; >r, to use their JVI own expro*M never feel well J They are lan J suid, devoid *• of all energy r extremely _nerxuna t ._iuuL have no ■ 1 appetite. ■' - ■ ' -■ • To this class of persons tho BITTERS, or the ■ TONIC, ia especially recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Are made strong by the use of either of theag ; remedies. They will cure every case of MARASMUS, , without fail. 4 Thousands of certificates hare accumulated in Ibe i hands of the proprietor, but space will allow of tho publication of but a few. Those, It will be observed, are men of note aud of such standing that they must Til BUMYM. L TESTIMONIALS. Hon. Gao. W. Woodward, ' CMtf Justice of the Supreme Court qf Pa., writeot J BulatJelpAia, M.reh U, IM7. i “I And‘Hoof' land’. Ore- ! man Bitters’ Is a good tou- ' Ic, useful, in diseases of I the digestivo organs, and’ of great bene c»*c” debility, aud x - J want of nervous actlvu in the system. Yours, truly, GEO. W. WOODWARD.Hon. James Thompson, i Judge of the Supreme Court qf Penneylvanta, I Philadelphia, April 28, I “I consider ‘Hoofland's German Bitters’ a W#? medieine in case of attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. 1 can pertlfy this from my experience of it. Yours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON. ’ From Rov. Joseph H. Kennard, D.D., Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Church, Philadefphhjtk Dr. Jacfcro,*—Dear Sir: I have been frequently requested to connect my name with recommendations of different kinds of medicines, but regardingthe practice ** ont my appro \ P r ' R 1 • sphere, I W ( have iu al! cases de cliuedjbui With clear proof various in -A . stances and' iu my own family, of the usefulness r. Hoofland’s German Bittern, I depart for' oaO from my usual course, to express my full conviction’ tn at, for general debility (f the system, and especially for Liver Complaint, it is a safe and valuable preparation. In some cases it may fail; but uatfMly?’ I doubt nob it will be very beneficial to those Wtia* suffer from the above causes. Yours, very respectfully, J. H. KENNARD, Eighth, below Coates Ste From Rev. E. D. Fendall, Assistant Editor Christian Chronicle, Thitadn. I have derived decided becellt from the nee of Boofl.nd'. German Bitten, and feel it my privilege Io recommend them aa a meet valuable tonic, to all who are suffering from general debility or fr.ora discaies arising from derangsment of tl|6 liver. Yours truly. B. D. mD ALLCAUTION. Hootend’s German Remedies aro counterfeited. ■ Bee that the slgnatnre eK C. M. JACK BONlsontba wrapper of each bnltle. All others are o.iiaterfolt. Principal Often and' Manufactory sat the German Medicine Store, No. 631 ARCH Street, PhlladM* PhU.P*. CHAXLJM Jr. MrjLXS, Praprttlor, ■ lormarly C. M. JACKBON k Cor

PRICES. Bootaiid’l German BHtere, per bottle, . fr «• “ " “ balfdoren, t<» Sooland’e German Tonlo, put up la quart bottles, •1 AO per bottle, or a half down fqr »7 60. M_ Do not forget to examine weU the artMa' wv In order to get Um gennlae FOR SALE BY Druggists and Storekeepera la EvgarTows is tb« UjntßJl States ■' . I