Rensselaer Union, Volume 1, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 15 April 1869 — Page 2
Cb(f st«nther Smwr. HEAI.Y * JAM ICS, I'-DI'iOKS.
The Legislature.
The Mhfr drawn agony is over!— ‘•RiehaH l» himself agnln!” Tin; I/PgIsUture, kept apart so long hy the lowering Shadow of the possible woolly hemled Afrieo-Auierican, lias again united, and everything is serene at the State Capitol. On Monday, at -two o’clock lb Intf afternoon, the newly llected membeftresponded to roll-cull, Vero tjworrr l;i and graciously took theirsv&ts. a motion wag piuwttl postponing action upon the dreaded Mod dtwnlftil Fifteenth Amendment nnlll fh* 11th day of May. It strikes us that lmd half (hediepo* sttiou toward concession been shown hy the room beta of both parties when the question eanie up in thr regular session, which they are now compelled to adopt, the expense of a special-dot lion and an extra session of (lie LegMature might ’have been avoided. However we should not find fault and j crumble al>out that which Is past and j cannotliow be helped, hut rather be thankful for harmony restored, coin-! foiling our spirits with the hope that 1 members will he dlHlgenl to frntisficl sli the important business of the State before tiieterriblei‘man-and-brother” | puts in his sable apiiearuiicc on tire eventful lltli of May coining, forif tiie Democracy could not endure the odor when the disinfecting blasts of midwinter were prevailing, how terrible will be its effects uj»on their delicate olfactories daring the increasing heats of May! When the Eleventh roils Around there maybe*expected another *tami**de of thef >neat Designers, flock- > lug around and bearing aloft t heir - banner u]>on whoso billowy folds is in- j scribed in letters of bold relief the significant motto: ’‘Preserve tis from Xe- j gro Equality.” _ j Ah! thsn slid tlisrs’ll b* burryiiig to and fro, I Aodgnihrn*?c tears, nr.d tmulitingsof distress And cliseki ati palft, whish hilt Mil hour ago lilarhcii nl the j-raiae of their own loveliness;” , • « « * • a Ana ih-r-’ll bs mou iting in lioi liasle; die Meed, TSS rrl'iiiif nnißtiMls, aon Oie clattering car, The two whcrlrci cr-‘i\ find fiew velocipede, Im*t r» ice pressed to tote ’m way Jrem that!
The Governor's Message.
Governor Baker, in his message , »o tho General Asswnßly- oT In- j •liana, now iu special session at In- j dianapolis, recommends the passage ! of in act providing that whenever 1 the General Assembly of the Elate, ' at its regular session shall fail to pass laws making appropriations for the ordinary expenses of the State Gov- j eminent, and for the support of its benevolent and other public institutions, then that the State officers shall direct the Auditor of State to draw his warrant on the State Treasury, for the purposes, not exceeding the amount appropriated tor the *atne purposes lor the last year, for which such appropriations shall have been made. If tho legislature will pass a law embodying the recommendation of the Governor, it will do much to prevent all future failure of legislation and prevent many acts from being passed by tacked upon, or put behind appropriation -lnlift, jiiA.as to >ecura_actinn on them.
The New Reconstruction Act.
The following is the act authorizing the submisson of the Constitution of the States of Virginia, Mississippi 3nd Texas, to a vote of the f>cop!e, as signed by the president: Be it enacted, <fcc., That the president of the United States, at such time as he may deem best for the public interest, may submit the constitution which was framed by the convention which met in Richmond, Va., on Tuesday, the 3d day of December, 1867, to the registered voters of said State, registered at the date of said submission, for ratification or rejection, and be may also submit to a separate vote such provisions of said.constitution as he may deem best —such vote to be taken cither upon each of the said provisions nldue, or in connection with tl)e other portions of said constitution, as the president may direct Sec. 2. That at the same election the voters of said Stale may vote to elect members of the general assembly of said State, and all theoflicers of said State provided for by the said constitution, and members of congress; and the officer commanding! the district of Virginia shall cause the lists of registered voters of said Stale to bo revised, enlarged, and corrected, prior to such election, according to law; aud foi* that purpose lie may appoint such registers as lie may deem necessary; and said elections shall be held, and a return thereof made, in the manner provided by the acts of congress, commonly called the reconstruction acts. Sec. 3 That the president of the United States may, in like manner, submit the constitution of Texas to the voters of said State, at sucli time, and in such manner, as he may direct—either the entire constitution, or separate provisions of the same, as provided in the first section of this aot, to a separate rote, and at the Mine election the voters may vote tap and elect the members of the legislature, and aH the State officers, provided for in said constitution, am! members of congress; provided, also, that no election shall be held in pH id State of Texas for tfiiv purpose until the president sodirOff.
IT Fee. 4. That tho president of the , United States may, in like manner, a* rtiny become expedient, direct eir . ther the constitution,) or separate 1 provisions ol the saijje, as provided } ip the first section of this act, to be | submitted to a separate State deci lion, in the Slnte of Mississippi, and | at the same election voters may vote for and elect the members of the ; legislature, and all the State officers | provided lor in said constitution, I and members of congress. Skc. 5. That if either of said con--1 slitutions shall he ratified at such j eleOtkm, the legislature of the Slate, so elected as provided in this act, l shall assemble at tho cnpitol of. said J Statin on tin* fourtli Tuesday after | the official promulgation of such. 1 ratification by the military officer ! commanding in said State, j Skc. 6. That before the States of i Virginia, .Mississippi, and Texas | shall be admitted to a representation |in congress, their several logijsla- ’ ttires, which may bo hereafter Ist- ! fully organized, slyill ratify the fif- ’ teenth article which has been pro- | posed bv congress to the several ! Statekus nn amendment to the conj ?titntion.of the United States. FkC. 7. That the proceedings in ’ any bl the said States shall not lie 1 deemed final, nor operate as a complete restoration of the same, until |Jieir action,* respectively, shall he approved hy congress.
Andy Johnson and the Nashville Negroes.
In its account of the reception of cx-Presidcnt Johnson, tho Nashville Banner says: *‘A little episode occurred right here, which was by no means the least interesting feature of tho excursion. Mr. Johnson, while the train stopped, was escor- j ted into the car occupied, by the Nashville committee of colored citizens. He moved among them, shaking hainlt and exchanging cordial greeting* Elias Polk, of Nashville, met him in the aisle of the car, and, striking an attitude of .attention, thus addressed him: “ ‘Pkksiuent —We are here to welcome you, sir, to your native State. We conic to show you, by our presence, our appreciation of your endeavors in the preservation of the constitution and the union of these United States. Wc honor i you, sir, for your perseverance, and | we are glad to hive you hen*, and I we are going to take care of you. ’
This appropriate little speech was greeted with applause. When Trsubsided, Mr. Johnson remarked that it w as peculiarly gratifying to him to be the recipient of such a testimonial from such a source. — lie would say to them, not in the phrase of a set speech, but in a conversational way, that while he thanked them, he felt that he was receiving at their hands no more than was his right, lie had never i dceerted them, and called to mind I the circumstance when the c'maitci- ! pation proclamation excepted Ten--1 nessec, and asked who it was then i that proclaimed them free from the steps of the capitol. There had been a good deal of talk about Moses. Who was Moses? Why, he added, it took Moses 40 years TfTTead.iTio children of Israel out I of the w ilderness, and I have only i been away from you four of five.— i Moses was 160 years old tvhen he j died, and lam yet only CO. They would yet live tcHcnow who were their real friends and who were j their pretended ones. lie had been ■j. the first in Tennessee to befriend I them and set them free. The hos- . tility against him began here in 1 Tennessee, and. for what reason? Why, for this very act of justice to tli e colored people, at between man and man. Perhaps there were some present who could remember a speech he made to them at Nashville a few years back, when pistols were firing in the street, and the messengers of death hurling ! through the air, and war t and desolation raged, that he had said, if ;no one else w ould, he would be ; their Moses and lead them out of bondage. He owned some slaves j hitnself in the days of slavery, but ; he had emancipated them every* one. The other day he had met at home his former slave, Sam (and, bv the wav, lie added, he is a much better looking man than I am),and ho had said to him, “Sam, you have had much the advantage of | me, for you were emancipated five j years and more, and I was only set ; frep on the 4tli of March last.’ lie ! renew*ed his obligations of grati* tude to his friends, and hoped soon to b"e permitted to talk with them and counsel with them about the future. 'He then took leave of them, shaking each, in turn, by the hand, and returned to the sleeping coach,” " < tar Col. Eli S. Pabkek, late an aid on Gen. Grant’s staff, has been j appointed Commissioner of Indian ' affairs. Parker is an Indian Chief, | and unless be has improved much in l the past year, is a drunken vagabond. —ljr • —— f3T"Botk Houses of Congress adjourned ou last Saturday.
INDIANA ITEMS.
. Peach trees arc in bloom, in New ’Albany. The council of Terre Ilauto have passed an ordinance prohibiting tho i use of velocipedes on the sidewalks of that city. 1 James P. Luse, of the New Albany Commercial has been confirmed in his appointment of Surveyor of I the port of Louisville. (Jrecncastlc lias had more than five hundred cases of measles this i Spring, only one. of which was fatal. An Elkhart county man named ' Scalf, is one hundred and five years old. His eldest son living is seventy. Some enterprising burglars on last Friday night broke into the office of the American Saw Company, at Indianapolis, blew open the safe and got 30 cents for their trouble. The Covington (Indiana) Fret l'ress tells of a man at that, place, who is a candidate for Postmaster, going into the church yard to copy nanies front the tombstones, to go on liis petition. The genuine and original Thumb, accompanied by his wife, Commodore Nutt and Minnie Warren, wilLgive two entertainments in Kendallville, on Wednesday, April 21. Prof. R. T. Brown estimates that the coal and iron fields of Indiana cover an area of 8,000 square miles, and the great#!* portion of it is accessible without the expense of shafting bt phmping in its mining. "'■■j- ■; Rev.’ T. B. Taylor, of Indianapolis. writes that on the ‘2sth ultimo, as lie was sitting humming two lines of a hymn, the disembodied spirits of his sister and son presented themselves to, and conversed with him. /
Tanner, who was suspected bf murdering Shaffer, in Newton county, last fall, but was acquitted at the preliminary trial before a Justice of the Peace, was indicted by thq grand jury for murder iir the first degree, and was arrested and taken to the Monticcllo jail to await his trial at the September tprm of the circuit court. Last week he was brought before J udge Test and released on bail. The milk business is becoming quite profitable in Lase county*. — Milk is now shipped to Chicago on tho morning train each day*, and sold tor 20 cents a gallon. It has been demonstrated that, with reasonable care, a cow will much more than pay for herself in a single year.
£gT"Col. Thomas 11. Nelson, of Terre Ilaute, lias been nominated as Minister to Mexico. Peters’ Musical Review for April is at baud, and, in addition to fifteen pages of seletft-readjnjt matter, contains the following new and beautiful music: ’ “Ain't I Sweet?” A lady’s comic song. By T. Brigham Bishop. “Rest, Darling, Rest.” A beautiful lullaby. By E. C. Ilsley. “I’m Still A Friend To You.”— Song and chorus. By Will S. Hays. “lie Wipes The Tear From Every Eye.” Sacred Song. By 11. P. Danks. “Forest Gbde March.” By Chas. Kinkel. “Damask Rose Waltz.” By E. Mack. “Golden Sunset Mazurka.” By J. Harristoun. Music is generally considered expensive, but .when such a quantity is furnished for the small sum of thirty cents, it ceases to be a luxury, and even the poorest may sing, play, and be happy. Our musical friends will do well to examine this work, and we feel confident that thirty cents, sent to the publishers for a sample copy, ; will yield them a larger return tor their investment than any similar outlay they can make. Send for a f copy, or get your news-dealers to 1 get one for yOu, and we will guarani teo you will thauk us for calling your • attention to it. It is issued by J. L. Peters, music i publisher, Box 5429, New York, at j the low price of $3 a year, or 30 ■ cents for single copies. The Senate rejected the treaty entered into between Reverdy Johnson and Great Britain, by a vpte of fifty-four to one. The solitary individual was McCreery, from the loyal State of Kentucky. Mr. Boutwell has sent a circular i to the female clerks in the Treas- ; ury Department inquiring where j they came from, who influenced their appointments, and other questions which some of tho fc- : tualos will be loth to answer. • Wh. 'v
! MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Small-pox is raging fearfully at ' Panama. -.1 ■ ■ , v 1 • j ; J. Lathrop Motley has been appointed Minister to England. “Impeaeher” Ashley was confirmed as governor of Montana by one majority. The clerical force in. the departments at Washington is being daily. reduced. It is said that the health of General Robert Anderson is seriously impaired. William Scott, nephew* of Sir Walter Scott, died in Montreal, Thursday, aged sixty-four years. Baron Von Tschudi, the Swiss naturalist, says that without birds successful agriculture is impossible. A battalion of German volunteers lias been organized at Rome, which will be commanded by Prince Lichtenstein. Oxford and Franklin comities, in Maine, have had one hundred and j forty-four days of uninterrupted ! sleighing up to the present time. It is said that fifty thousand people will move from Manhattan Island to the suburban towns on tho Ist of May. Cause, high rent& The House of Representatives last Friday, passed a bill prohibiting the payment of bounties to any person other than the parties themselves, or their heirs. A rustic, describing Louisville, said the finest residence there belonged to Mr. Mi E. Church, whose name was cut in big letters over the door, and there was a sharppointed chimney on the house two hundred feet high. Bennett, Sr., is sending Bennett, Jr., on » three years' tour of Europe, “in the interest of the Heruhl.” It is popularly supposed the longer the young man stays away, the better tor the paper.
Queen Victoria will, this year, visit Switzerland again, and make also a trip to Sicily amF She w ill, however* keep away from Florence and Romo, and go hy the steamer from Genoa and Palermo. Ex-Gov. Sprague, of Rhode Island, ha® a farm in the south part of the State, on which he keeps mammoth oxen. He has now one weighing 5,100 pounds, and two others weighing 3,000 pounds each. Five rustic New Yorkers gave a polite metropolitan sharper £330 lo buy their tickets to California, on his assurance that he could save ten dollars oh each one's passagemoney. The clever fellow disappeared in a crowd, and forgot to return. Cincinnati offers a dollar a head for dogs delivered at the pound.— A venerable German from “der country” made a good tiling by gathering up over three score of dogs on his way, hitching them to his wagon, and delivering them at the pouiid. __i A number of citzens of Newton county, Georgia, who left for Honduras shortly after the war, have returned to their old homes, perfectly satisfied with the anticipation of wealth and happiness in another land. V In a recent trial between two Germans in New York city, it came out that the great whale, which used to disport himself so furiously in the New York “aquarium,” to the great awe and amusement of visitors, was nothing more or less than a piece of mechanism, with a man inside of it. One of these Germans was th<* Jonah in the belly of this artificial monster. A German doctor maintains that the.buraai”skin, when healthy, does not absorb, and that baths can have no effect upon it. He offers to go into a bath containing the most poisonous substances, provided they be not corrosive, -tirTest the truth of liis theory, to pay a fine if he be wrong, and to go to Paris and submit himself to the disposal of the academy of medicine at any time for the purpose. There arc not sixty or seventy Chinamen regularly living in New York. They have apparently only one occupation, that of cigar making. They do not mak#,, cigars for the trade, but eacli man makes a stock of cigars, which h« sells at a stand on the "Mriiers of the streets, on tl|e following day. They buy cheap remnants of tobdec,o, out of which thfy will make from 150 to 180 cigafs every night They retail "these at three cents , each, and earn, many of them, S3O to $35 a week. As he sits rolling his cigars, he smokejs one, and between his puffs off smoke chant# a sort of low, rolling dirge, in rath or h,arsb strains. ■. ’' ♦ ■■ ■ .
These wore 25,000 deaths in New York lust j’car, scTenty-sii per ct. of which were in tonemeftt rooms.
HOME TESTIMONY.
Nashville, Bbotyn Co., I>d., f July 23, 1859. ) . Du. C. W. Horace —Dear Sir: I have practiced medicine for some ' twelve or thirteen years, and have i nil my life been more or less op- : posed to patent medicines, in any j shape whatever. At the same time, 1 hnve kept l hem in my store to accommodate those ol my patrons who called for them. But, nf--tcr having labored under disease for some six or seven years, I concluded to give your Scandinavian Medicine a fair trial, and did so.— At the time I began using them I weighed but one hundred and thir-ty-five I gained rapidly until I weighed one hundred and seventy-three pounds. I conilder myself almost entirely well. My w ife also labored under the influence of the mother’s sore throat, and became greatly reduced—so much so that she had to wean her child at six weeks old, but, after using four or five bottles of your Scandinavian Blood Purifier, she became fleshv and in good health. Yours, in F. L. & T.
W. M. MASON.
FRESH ARRIVAL.
Of new good ls , at J. \V. Coats’, in the way of Cigars and Tobaccos. A full line of Dark and Bright Plug, Fine Cut Chewing, and Mountain Dew and Ambrosia Shorts. A full line of Smoking Tobacco, from the cheapest to the best. The very best Cigars ever offered fur the money. Pipes of every kind from the 1 •renuine Meerchanm down to Ac ! CT commonest Clay Pipe. Cigar Holders, Tobacco Boxes, Pouches, etc. —largest and finest stuck of the kind ever exhibited in Rensselaer. Thanking the public for past tavorSjT shall make it my constant aim to supply all who call on me with the best goods at the lowest price s. Call at the sign of the Big Jndi-
-n.
rOi( THE 5KI1 ; Boyd's Cream Cures Itch. l’ovd'f Cream Cures Scratches. Bovd’s Cream Cures Pimples. Boyd’s Cream Cures Old tSores. Boyd's Cream Cures all Eruptions of the Skin. It is mild and pleasant to use, highly perfumed, contains no poison, and 1s especially adapted to children. Sold by U. I. Jackson. Rensselaer, and ail Druggists- in Jasper Com.iy.
SAMUEL FEN DIG, At R. F. Gor>n*Rp‘» paya l lie higheiit market price in CASH, fur nil kinds if COUNTRY PRODUOB Such as Butter, Eggs," Feathers, l’oultry, BAGS, HIDES, OLD IRON, COPPER, AC. Patronage respectfully eolicited. 1-16-ts. 50,000 Acres ==r Oli TJNIMPROVBD Land for Sale IN COUNTIES! Some of which are convenient to Rail Ronds,Churches and Schools. Some Timber. Soil Adapted to Farming ami Grazing. Climate healthy and pleasant. Water goo l. Prices from $3 to $8 per Acre. General terms one-third down and balance in twr yearly payments, o but iusome instances a longer time will be given. 1 am also authorized to sell, A Number of Fine Farms at From sl3 to $25 per Acre. Having been located in Jasper county for eleven years, and having beeii engaged the greater part of that time in locating ditches, showing lands aud surveying in this and Newton counties, my acquaintance with »]1 the land. situated in these counties is superior to that of any other man. I Propose Giving Better Bargains than any other Agent in the West. Aud will be ready at all times to show-land-JOHN MILLER, County Surveyor and Land Agent. Office, Rensselaei, Jasper County, Ind. 1-27-lj. tei , Especially designed sos the nse of tbe Medical Profution and the Family, possessing those inlrinne medicinal properties which, belong to sc Old and Pur* Ota. Indispensable to Females- Good for Kidney Complaint». A delioions Tonic. Put up in cases, containing one doien bottles eech, and sold by all druggists, grocers, dec. A. M. BlnUluger Sc Co., established 1775, No. 15 j Beavdr Street, New Verb- „ 1-27-Iy. ~ V"*
iooflauVs Bltbitiuts. BQDFL&ND’S GERMAN BITTERS, ns Hoofland’s German Tonic. Tbe Great Rrmediei for all Diieait* or the LITER, STOMACH, OR DIQESTITB OROAXS. HOOFLAND’S g¥mAN BITTERS In ooropoMd of the pare juices (or. u they are medicinally termed, Extracts) of Hoot* Herbs, and f Barks, making * r preparablglil/ coiic-ntift ted, and en -tlrely frm from alcoholic admixture of any kind. HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIC, Is a combination of all the ingredient* of the Bitters, with the purest quality of Santa Orut Rum* Orange, hr.., making one of the most pleaaaat and agreeable remedies ever offered to the ptiblis. Those preferring a Medicine fret from Aloohotts admixture, will use . Hoofland’s German Bitters. Thou who ha.. no ohj.ctlon to tlio loutiullM of ih. Bltlora, a. .tiled, will au HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO. Ther ar« both fqnall, good, »nd contain Ih. "am. mxUcinal Tina.., (ho choice between tho two b.lng . m.ro matter of taste, the Tonic being tlio mod palatabl.. The stomach, from a rarlsty of .axiei, each u Indigestion, Pjripep.la, Nerroua DobiMiv, etc., la T.rj ap( to hi IHa functions deranged. The Unr, •yinpatliliingas MT f closely as It does with the J Stomach; the. becomes , affect ed, the result of which Is that the patient sub fsrs from se.eral or mor. of th. foil, flog diseases i Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Pilea Fulness of Blood to tbe Head, Aoidltx of the Stomaoh, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust for Food, Fulness or Weight in the. Stomaoh, Bour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomaoh, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Dying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Fain in tho Head, Deficiency of Perspiration, Yellowness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in tho Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the Flesh, Constant Imafeininßs of Evil, and Great Depression of Spirits. The sufferer from ihe.e dls ...* ihould esereic th. greatest caution lu th. .election of a remedy fd his ease, pur chasing only that which he Is assured from his iu.extiga egg f Hoi tions and Id* qnlriea possess JgS I es true merit, Is skilfully coin pounded. Is frts from Injurious Ingredient., and has established for itself a reputation for Iks ears of these diseases, in this eonuection we would submit those well-known remedies— Hoof Kind's German Bitters, AND HOOFLAND’S GERMAN TONIO, PEBPARED BY Dr. C. M. JACK SOX, PHILADELPHIA, PA Twenly-tTYo years sfnee they were first !«tredne«4 Into this’eountry from Germany, during which time they hare undoubtedly performed more cure*, sud benefited suffering humanity ta a greater exteal, than auy other remedies known to the public. These remedies will effectually cure Liver Coiaplaint, Jauu pqHppHnm. dice, Dyspep si a, Chronic or j Nervous Do- . billty, Chron is Dmrrhoa, : Disease of the Kidneys, aud all Diseases «jfds3w>wir» arising fret* | a Disordered * Liver, Sima ach, or Intestines. .... ——- JJXTKiraIT'Y, ! Beaulting from auy Cause wh.lfru I PBOSTRATION OF THE EiV Si'EiL induced by Severe Labor, Hard■hips. Exposure, Fevers. &o. j vbero I, no medicine extaut eqn.l to these rem—- ; dies Ip such casa*. A tone and vigor i« imparted Is | the whole system, the appetite is strengthened, food ! U enjoyed, the stomach digests promptly, the bleed j Is purified, the eomplexiou becomes sonnet Ad healthy, the yellow tinge is eiadicaled from the syes, a bloom is given to the cheeks, au J tl,o weak '• and nervous iuvalid beeoues a strong and healthy | *«ing. , PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE, And feeling the hand of time weighing heavily up*n them, with all Its attendant llhr, will fln<l In the n«e of this BITTERS, or the TONIC, an elixir that will Instil new life into their veins, restore in t weavurs tfco enersry and ardor of more youthful d».*s. build up their’shrunken forms, and give healiii and happiness to their remaining year*. NOTICE, | IMa a well-established fact that fully on*-hn!fef :h« 1 femate portion ofour popu a* ! Won are sel flora la ths { fnJoyni9iit~"Of good he.nlth; j »r, to use their BKf) owu exj.res- “ nevor I feel well. n . i They are lan N -V,— ■■■■-—■* guid, devoid 1 of all energy, extremely nervous, and have ns appetite. I To this class of persons the BITTERS, or the TONIC, is especially reeommeudfiil. 1. -WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Are made strong by the use es either cf ihes* ! remedies. They will cure.every case of MAK ASM US, L...without fail. - "■ 1 ' ' 1 Thousands of certiflcatek hare iccumulaledTh the : hands of the proprietor, bnt space will allow of ti.o publication of but a few. Those, it will'be observed, are meu of note and of such staudiug that they nud be believed.
J. W. COATS.
TESTIMONIALS. Hon. Geo. W. Woodward, Chief Puttie, 9f the Supreme Court of Pa., writesi Philadelphia, March IS, 1837. 4 * I find‘Hoof land’s German Bitters* Is a g «od tenic, useful in dUeases of Ibe digestive organ*, aud of great bene At in »»f debility, and j want of nervous action in tbe system. Yours, truly. GKO. W. Wo6l)\V/iK!>." Hon. James Thompson, Judge of the Supreme Court of. Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, April 128,156 A. "I consider ‘Hoofland’s German Bitters’ u valuaHe medieine in case of attacks of Indigear’.ou or Dyspepsia. I can certify this (rota my experience , es it. Yours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON. ’ From Rev. Joseph H. Kennard, D.D., - Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Oiurch, Philadelphia. Dr. Jackson —Dear Sir: I have been frequently requested to connect my name with recommendsj tlons of different kinds of mediciuca, but regarding the practice as out of my appro P r ‘ a t « sphere, I km nsve In All cases da \ dined; but with a clear proof iu various in stances and i particularly In my own family,„;of tbe usefulness of Dr. Hoofland’s German Bitters, I depart for once from my usual course, to expre«s my full conviction i tnat, for general dMlity of the system, and especially for Liver Complaint, it is a safe and valuable ration. In some cases it may fail; but usually, rt not, it will be very beneficial to those wbe suffer from tbe above causes. Years, very respectfully, J. 11. KENNARD, Eighth, below Coatee 8L - from Rev. E. D. Fendall. Assistant Editor Christian Chronicle , Philat f<t. I have derived decided benefit frbm the nse ot Hoofland’s German Bitters, aud feel It my privilege lo recommend them as a most valuable tonic, to all Who are suffering from general debility or from diseases arising from derangement of the liver. Yoars truly. .1 E. D. FENDALL. CAUTION. Hooßsnd’e German Remedies era counterfeited. Bee thet the etgnetar* es C. M. JACK SON l.n tithe wrapper es eech bottle. All others ere W MCI cn.terf.il. Principal OBce end Manufactory el the German Medicine Store, Mo. 881 ARCH Street, Philndel, phis, Pa. CHARLES JT. Hr Ah'S, P ropriotor, Formerly C. M. JACKBOK h do. t PRICES. ■oofand'a German Bitten, per bottle, ft M <• " “ half dozen, . IDO ■oolani'e German Tonic, pat iy> in anart hoKtea, •1 60 per bottle, or a half dozen for *7 80. win- Do not forgot to examine well the MttaU . .her la order to get the gaanin. FOITSALE BY - ' Druggists and Storekeepers I* Ev*bt Tow* iw tut U*it*d State*
jTHE WOULD BENQWNEfI LINGER SEWING MACHINE! r nnugml for (liispplondlil machine •*- anil would ruiiU'Kt all tlioso nocdirifr inacliincs, to call at my resilience ana see some of its work. * I challenge comparison. It EKFKKI INCUS; Mix. I. M. Biackliouae, Mrs. Thoa. Boroughs. Mrs. Beth. Cox. Mr. John B. SpariKle, and others. All kinds of machine twist and colors of threads, Brooks 500 yds. (i cord thread, best in the World./or sale WM. 11. RIIOADEa. Sept. 11. IMtf. 1-38-ts. e call the attention of our [ readers to the remarkable ceriifi- ! c ites of cures perform'd! hy Dr. V. 1 . Rohack's celchrated Scandinavian Medicines. We do so, know- : tifiig them so lie giViiible. Til© j agent has shoxni us the original letters, copies of which appear be ; low. The proprietors of these j inediefr.es autheri/.e us to say, that j they will give a reward of ten j thousand dollars to any person who j will show that any of tin letters ■ referred to are not authentic. They i have been sent unsolicited, and the company have in tin i.* pivceb.siou over s.(it'O of a similar character. Any 17niggi-if can satisfy the most skeptical of the value of those truly Wonderful Agents, Rohack’s Stomach Bitters, Rohack’s Scaudilia viaii tr ßlootlPurifier wmi lllood. Pills.” READ I The fulSowmg from |lho CINCINNATI | TIMES,- osie of the | most reliable new#i i *■ - | papers in the United Stales. What can he in ore convincing? - HOME TESTIMONY. - \S ** }~ — —•- Tin: CFNoiSKATr Daily I’imrr 1 of March 21, 1861, says:/ ThcScandinaviaiiremedies appear to be growing in favor with the public, if we may judge hy the testimonials constantly received by the proprietor. A letter from Wisconsin, to be found in our advertising columns, announce that among the physicians of the locality it is becoming very and what is very unusual, is being adopted by them in their practice, as a cure for many diseases which they can not treat effectually in any other way. We understand th**t the immense trade carried on for several years in these medicines has during the present year nearly doubled. ** Their process of operation is by"* a thorough purification of the blood, and a consequent eradication of dis-‘ ease.
