Semi-Weekly Journal, Volume 3, Number 259, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1841 — Page 1
IBMH-WBIgnIL
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BY DOUGLASS & NOEL.
INDIANAPOLIS, SATURDAY,. OCTOBER
1841.
VOL. 3. NO. 259.
rUBLIBHED THREE TIMES A WEEK ; DURING THE SESSION OF THE LEGISLATURE TWICE A WEEK FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE YEAR. Terms. Four Dollars a year, -payable in advance, and eon'sidered due at Ihe date of the subscription.-, if not paid mad- ; vance, however, Five Dollars will be the price. Advertisements will be inserted at tho following rates: 1 en lines or less, for one or three insertions, one dollar, and twkn tt-five cents for each continuance. Or, will be continued on control one veer, for 15, and will be altered occasionally if desired. On 'longer advertisements, a reasonable deduction will be made. fljSljGLE COPIES 6J Cents - . : ..
BY AUTHORITY. LAWS OP THE ISHEU STATES PASSED AT THE FIRST SESSION OF THE 27TH CONGRESS. Public No. 15.J . AN AC T making an appropriation for the purchase of naval ordnance and ordnance stores, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the sum of six hundred thousand dollars be paid out of any moneys in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, for the purpose of purchasing ordnance and ordnnnce stores for the use of the Navy of the United States. , , 0 Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the Secretary of the Navy is hereby authorized to apply a part of the sum herein and hereby appropriated, not exceeding fifty thousand dollars, to the purpose of making experiments to test, the value of improvements in ordnance, in the construction of steamers and other vessels of war, and in other matters connected with the naval service and the national defence; and also to the purpose of defraying any charges left unpaid on account of experiments of the like character heretofore made by authority of law. iore imuie y JOHN WHITE, Sneaker of the House of Representatives. 1 - SAM'L L. SOUTH AKD. President of the Senate pro tempore. Annroved, September 9, 1841. PP 1 JOHN TYLER.
Public No. 16 AN ACT making appropriations for outfits and salaries of diplomatic agents, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That, the following sums be, and the same are hereby, appropriated, to be paid out of any money in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, viz:
h'fir nntfcts or ministers u nuwu, u
nH TW.il. and of champs d'affaires to Portugal, Den
mark. Sardinia, Naples, Chili, and Texas, sixiy-three
Lntwnrnl rlrillurs.
ooinrioc f,f m'inistRrs to Snain and Brazil, for
.v, raA.,a nf thp -iirrfiit vear. eiffht thousand dol-
LUC ItOlUJIU -v, - J ' U In rQ
Forsalaries of the secretaries of legation to the
same places, one thousand eight hundred dollars.
iiM cn rnnpii ns rnnv he necessary to pay, for com-
nensatinn. to the clerks and other officers in the
ne tho tum Houses, the librarian and' assistant
11 VI tnv v w j librarians of Congress, the gate-keeper and lamplkm. fin. tho sorvir.ps rendered hv them during the
present extra session, three months' additional pay and to the messengers, assistant messengers, pages and laborers of the two Houses and Library of Conhe hostler of the House of Kepresen-
.:..o ,ha iinql allowances made at the close of
iuiivt;a, wnv . . each session; and to each of the police of the Capitol tU cnmP ns to the messengers, to be paid under the
nf the Committe on the Contingent Fund of
each House. And the regular pay of the messenger of the office of the Secretary of the Senate and office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives shall be equal to the pay of any other 'permanent messengers employed in the Capitol. , , Also, a sum not exceeding two hundred and seventy-three dollars fur completing the contract for printing and binding the catalogue of the library. Approved, September 11, 1841. Resolution. Public No. 4. A RESOLUTION in relation to the purchase of domestic water-rotted hemp for the use of the United States Navy. V Be it resolved by the Senate and House af Representatives of the United Slates of America in Congress ; assembled, That the Secretary of the Navy be, and lie hereby is, directed to purchase domestic water-rotted hemp for the use of the United States Navy, so far as the same shall he found of suitable quality, and can be used beneficially to the service, having regard to the cost, strength, and durability of the article; and for that purpose shall cause purchases of such hemp to be made in the different hemp-growing regions of the Union. , . . . Sec. 2. And be it further resolved, That this joint resolution shall be and remain in force for the period of seven years from the passing thereof. Approved, September 11, 1841. - Public No. 17. AN ACT relating to dnties and drawbacks. Be it enacted by tlie Senate and House of Representatives of the United Stat.es of America in Congress assembled, That on all articles imported into the United States from and after the thirtieth day of September, eighteen hundred and forty-one, there shall be laid, collected and paid on all articles which are now admitted free of duty, or which are chargeable wiih a iintvoflpss than twenty per centum ad valorem, a du
ty of twenty per centum ' ad valorem, except on the
following enumerated arncies, mat is i" aay. uiuimiM, acid, sufphuric acid or oil of vitro), alum, tartaric acid, aquafortis, blue vitriol, calompl, carbonate of soda, corrosive sublimate, combs, copperas, indigo, nitrate of lead, red and white lead dry or ground in :i crrnr nflpad. manganese, sulphate of magnesia,
bichromate of poiash, chromate of potash, prussiateof
potash, glauber salts, rochelle salts, suipnaie o. quinine, refined saltpetre, which shall pay respectively the same rates of duty imposed on them under existing laws; and the following articles shall be exempt from duty, to wit: tea and coffee, all painting and statuary the production of American artists residing abroad, all articles imported for the use of the United States, and the following articles, when specifically imported by order, and for the use of any society incorporated or es;ab!ished for philosophical or literary purposes, or fur the encouragements of the fine arts, or by order and for the use of any college, academy, school or seminary of learning, in the United States, to wit, philosophical Apparatus, instruments, books, maps, charts, statues, busts of marble, bronze, alabaster or plaster of Paris, casts, paintings, drawings, zravings, specimens of sculpture, cabinets of coin, gems medals, and all other collections of antiquities,
statuary, modelling, painting, drawing, etching, or engraving; and, also, all importations of specimens in natural history, mineralogy, botany, an anatomical preparations, models of machinery, and the models of
1 ' . - . ii
otherniiventions7phnts and trees,- wearing" a pparet, i one;
vessel bound to any port of the.United States, actually ha ving left her last port of lading eastward of the Cape of Good Hope, or beyond Cape Horn, prior to
the first day of August, eighteeen hundred and lorty-
and other personal baggage in actual use, and the implements or tools of trade of persons arriving in the United States; crude antimony, rpgulus of antimouy( animals imported for breed, argol, gum arabic, aloes, auibergri3, bole armenian, arrow root, annotto, anniseed, oil of nnnisced, amber, nsofootida, ava root, alcornoque, nlba canella, bark of cork tree unmanufactured, burr stones un wrought, brass in pigs or bars, old brass only fit to be remanufactured, brimstone or sulphur, barrilla, braziletto, borucicacid, Burgundy pitch, berries used for dyeing, smaltz, lasting or prunella used in the manufacture of buttons and shoes, vnniila beans, balsam tolu, gold and silver coins and bullion, clay unwrought, copper imported in any shape for the use of he mint, copper in pigs, bars, or plaits, or plates or sheets of which copper is the material of chief value, suited to the sheathing of ships, mid copper fit only to be remanufactured, lapis calaminaris, cochineal, chamomile flowers, coriander seed, catsup, cantharides, eastanas. chalk, coculus indicus, Colombo root, cummin seed, cascarilla, cream of tartar, vegetables, and'nuts of all kinds ufeed principally in dyeing and composing dies, lac-dye, emery, epaulets
and wino-s of cold or silver, turs
kinds, flaxseed or linseed, flux unmanufactured, fustic, flints, ground flint grindstones gamboge, raw hides, hemlock, henbane, horn plates for lanterns, ox and other horns, Harlem oil, hartshorn, hair unmanufactured, hair pencils, ipecacuanha, ivory unmanufactured, iris root, juniper berries, oil of juniper, kelp, kermes, madder, madder root, musk, manna, marrow und other soap stocks and soap stuffs, palm oil, mohair, mother of pearl, needles, nux vomica, orris root, oil ofalmonds, opium, palmleaf, platina, Peruvian bark, old pewter fit only to be remiinufactured, plaster of Paris, quicksilver, rags of any kind of cloth, India rubber, reeds unmanufactured, rhubarb, rotten stone, elephant's and other animals teeth, polishing stones, bridles, ratans unmanufactured, raw and undressed skins, spelter, crude saltpetre, gum Senegal, saffron, shellac, soda ash, sponees, sago, sarsaparilla, senna, sumac, tapioca, tamarinds, crude tartar, teutenegue, tin foil, tin in pigs, bars, plates, or sheets, tips of bone or horn, tortoise shell, tumeric, weld, woad or , T. i 1 XT ... . . .1 1 m
pastel, brazil wooo, Nicaragua wuuu, itu wuuu, una
wood, or wood,, dye woods of all kinds, unmanutae
tured woods of any kind, except rose wood, satin
wood, and tnuhopanv. - whale and other fish oils of
American fisheriesr and all other articles the produce
of said fisheries, and zinc; and, also, wool unmanu factured, the vulue whereof at the place of exporta
tion shall not exceed eight cents per pound: Provided,
That, if any fine wool be mixed with dirt or other rna
terial, and thus be reduced in value to eight cents per
pound or under, the appraisers shall appraise said
wool at such price as in their opinion it would have
cost had it not been so mixed, and a duty thereon
shall be charged in conformity with such appraisal:
And provided further, That when wool of different qualities is imported in the same bail, bag or package, arid any part thereof is worth more than eight
cents a pound value as aforesaid, that part shall pay a duty of twenty per centum ad val.irein: Provided,
That boards, planks, staves,, scantling, sawed timber,
and all other descriptions of wood which shall have
been wrought into shapes that fit them respectively for any specific and permanent use, without further
manufacture, shall be deemed and taken as manufactured wood. Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That there shall be levied, collected, and paid on each and every nonenumerated article which bears a similitude either in material, quality, texture, or the use to' which it moy be applied, to any enumerated article chargeable with duty, the same rate of duty which is levied and charged on the enumerated article which it most resembles in any cf the particulars peibre mentioned; and if any non-enumerated article equally resembles two or more enumerated articles on which., different rates of duty are now chargeable, there shall be levied, collected, and paid on such non-enumerated article the same rate '-of duty as is chargeable on the article which it resembles paying the highest doty; and on 6.11 articles manufactured from two or more materials, ihe duty shall he assessed at the highest rates at which any of its component parts may be chargeable.' Provided, That, if in virtue of this section, any duty exceeding the rate of twenty per centum ad valorem shall he levied prior to the thirtieth of June, eighteen hundred and forty-two, the same shall nut in any wise affect the disposition of the proceeds of the public hinds, as provided for by an act passed
at the present session of Congress: And provided further, That no duty higher than twenty per centum ad valorem, in virtue of the said section, shall be levied and paid on any unmanufactured article. Sec. 3. And'be it further enacted, That from and after the passage of this act, the drawbacks payable on exported refined sugars, manufactured from foreign sugars, and on exported rum, distilled from foreign molasses, shall be reduced in proportion to the reduction which shall have been made by law (after the passage of the act of Congress of the twenty-first
of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-ftine, and
twenty-ninth of May, eighteen hundred and thirty,
allowing said drawbacks,) in the duties on the imported sugars or molasses, out of which the same shall have been manufactured or distilled, and in no
case shall the drawback exceed the amount of import duty paid on either of those articles.
Sec. 4. And be it further enacted. That prior to the
second day of February next the wines of France
shall not be subjected, under the provisions of this act, or any existing law, to the payment of higher rates of duty than the following, namely: on red wines
in casks six cents a gallon; white wines m casks ten cents a gallon, and French wines of all sorts in bottles, twenty-two cents per gallon: Provided, That no
higher duty shall be charged under this act, or any existing law, on the red wines of Austria, than are now, or may be by this act, levied upon the red wines of Spain, when the said wines are imported in casks. Sec. 5. And be it further enacted, That the act entitled "An'act to release from duty, iron prepared for, and actually laid on railways or inclined planes," approved fourteenth of July, eighteen hundred and thirty -two, be, and the same is hereby, repealed; and there shall be laid, collected, and paid on such iron hereafter imported a duty of twenty per centum ad valorem: Provided, That such repeal shall not operate, nor shall such duties be imposed on any railroad iron which shall be imported under the provisions of the said act prior to the third day of March, eighteen hundred and forty-three, and laid down on any railroad or inclined plane, of w hich the construction has been already commenced, and which shall be necessary to complete the same. Sec. 6. And be it fvrther enacted, That nothing in
this act contained shall apply to goods shipped in a
T
Sec. 7. And be it further enacted, That all laws or
parts of laws inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed. . Approved, September 11, 141. Public No. 18. AN ACT to repeal a part of the sixth section of the act, entitled "An act to provide for the support of the Military Academy of the United States, for the year eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, and for . other purposes," passed July seventh, eighteen . ...hundred and thirty-eight. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United Stales o f America in Congress assembled, That so much of ihe sixth section of an
act entitled "An act to provide for the support of ;
the Military Academy of the United Slates for the year eighteen hundred and thirty-eight, and for other purposes," as requires the Secretary of the Treasury to invest the annual interest accruing on the investment of the money arising from the bequest of the late James Smithson, of London, in the stocks of States, be, snd the same is hereby, repealed. And
undressed of all I the Secretary of the Treasury shall, until Congress
hall appropriate said accruing interest to the purposes prescribed by the testator for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men, invest said accruing interest in any stock of the United Slates bearing a rate of interest not less than five percenlum per annum. Sec. 2. And be ' it further enacted, That all other funds held in trust by the United States, and the annual interest accruing thereon, when not otherwise required by treaty, shall in like manoer be invested in stocks of the United States, bearing a like rate of interest. Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That the three clerks authorized by the act of June twenty-third, ; eighteen hundred and thirty-six, "to regulate the deposites of the public money," be, and hereby are, di
rected to be retained and employed in the Treasury
Department, as provided in said act, until the state of the public business becomes such that their services
can convenient ly be dispensed with. Approved, September 11, 1841.
I Resolution. Public No. 5.
JOINT RESOLUTION making it the duty of the Attorney General to examine into the titles of the
lands or sites fur the purpose of erecting then on armories and other public works and building, and for other purposes. Resolved by the Senate and House, of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That it shall be the', duty of the Attorney General of the United States to examine into the titles of all the la nds or sites which have been purchased by the United States, for the purpose of erecting thereon armories, arsenals, forts, fortifications, navy yards, custom-houses, light-houses, or other public buildings of any kind whatever, and report his opinion as to the validity of the title, in each case, to the President of the United States. 2. Resolved, That it shall be the duty of all the officers having any of the title-papers to the property aforesaid in their possession to furnish them forthwith
to the Attorney General, to aid him in the lnvesliga
tion aforesaid 3. Resolved, That no public money shall be expen
ded upon any site or land, hereafter to be purchased
by the United States for Ihe purposes atoresaia, until
the written opinion of the Attorney General shall be had in favor of the validity of the title; and, also, the
consent of the Legislature of the btate in whieh the
land or site may be shall he given to said purchase. 4. Resolved, That it shall be the duty of the Dis trict Attorneys of the United States, upon the appli
cation of the Attorney General, to furnish any assis
tance or information in their power in relation to the
titles of the public property aforesaid, Jying within
their respective districts. 5. Resolved, That it shall be the duty of the Sec
retaries of the Executive Dcpaertmnts, upon the -ap
plication of the. Attorney General, to procure any
additional evidence of title winch he may deem neces
sary, and which rany- not be in the possession of the
.-,n;,.ora .nf R-nvprnment: the expense or procuring
which to be paid out of the appropriations made tu
the contingencies of the Departments, respectively.
6. Resolved. That it shall he the duty ot trie secre
taries of the Executive Departments, respectively,
Under whose direction any lands for the purposes
aforesaid may have been purchased, and over which
the United States do not possess junsaiction, u apnhr tn tho T.pirislntnres of the States in which the
lands are situated for a cession of jurisdiction; and, in case of refusal, to report the same to Congress at the commencement of the next session thereafter. Approved, September 11, 1841.
A sure reuiwly for Dinrralo?anul Cholera Infantum.-
UlE CKAMl.N AX1V K BALSAM, prepared by Llr. Uavm
Javne, of Philadelphia, is, without doubt, the most certain,
safe, and effectual remedy ever yet discovered for Dyssentary, Diarrlid-a, Cholera Morbu9 and Cholera Infantum or Summer t'omplnint-ot' children, and indeed the only article worthy ofthe least confidence for curing this last named1 disease; besides,, it is so cheap, that it is within the reach of erery family, and if mothers could possibly appreciate its virtues, there would be few families without It. The following; is an extract from a letter received by Dr. Jane from M. I.. Lnapp, M. D. of Baltimore, which, coming from so liijrh a source, is in itself a sufficient evidence of the astonishing efficacy of this medicine in curing diseases of the stomach and bowels. "You ask me what proofs I meet with of the eflicacy of your medicine. I can safely say that I never prescrihed a medicine for howe! complaints that 1ms given me so lnirch satisfaction, and my patients so speedy and perfect relief as thiB. Whenever introduced into a family, it becomes a standing remedy for those ailments, and is called fora gain and aainf which I think, a pretty good proof of its efficacy and usefulness. In the Summer complaint of children it lias frequently appeared to snatch the little victims as it were, from the grave. lt has saved the life of my child, and of such and snch a child," Iiinve frequently heard said. In dyf enteric a flections of adults, I have time &. again seen it uct like a charm, and give permanent relief in a few hours,. I may say in a few minutes. In fine, it is a valuable medicine,. and no family should lie without it. Respectfully, M I.. KNAPP, M. D. It is to be hoped therefore, that persons will not allow their prejudice to 'overcome their better judgment, as is not unfrequeutly the case with regard to quack medicines, as they arc very generously and indiscriminately termed; but, whenever either of the above named diseases occur either to an adult or the tenderest infant, do not ask "What shall I do? shall I give it this or the other?" do not fold your arms in listless and unavailing sorrow and cry "my child," or "my friend is past recovery," hut fly ut once and procure the Cauminativk UalsaM, 'Tis this which has ad"orded relief nfler all others have failed 'V is this which lias repeatedly snatch'd, as it were, suffering humanity from the verge of eternity, when the last ray of hop had-ceased to be indulged, either by their friends or physicians. He careful to obtain that which is fresh as it is a medicine which becomes somewhat impaired by age. Jayne & Pancoast being agents for the article, are constantly receiving fresh supplies from the East. Tnc citizens of St. Louis and the public generally, therefore, would do well to call upon them in preference to purchasing elsewhere, where they would he liable to get that which has been made several yews' and which, of course, would not he so effectual in its operatious. JAYNE & J'NCOAST, No. 138 Main st. St. Louis. Sold wholesale and retail at the sign of the Golden Mortar, directly oppositethe Washington Hall. TOMUNSON BROTHERS, Who are Agents for Indianapolis
OES NOT REASON" and Common Sense teach ustnatei-
pectoration is the most natural as well as the most enec-
tual agent in arresting and curing ruimonnry uiseuoea.- a.. answer must be yes, because obstruction is cither immediately or remotely the cause of Inflammation and Catarrhal Fevers, producing Croup, Consumption and Abscesses of the Lungs, pain and soreness of the Throat, l'.rcast, Sides, or Shoulders Uronchiiis, eAciting mucous and purulent secretions, thereby clogging up the lungs, so as to more or less impede both respiratiourand the free circulation of the blood, causing difficulty of breathing and asthma, Pleurisy, Hoarseness and Loss of Voice Dropsy of the Heart and Chest, Rupture of lllood vessels and bleeding from the throat and lungs, and spitting of blood. To remove this obstruction, from which all these alarming and dangerous diseases originate, and to produce a radical cure, nothing has ever been found equal to Jayne's Expectorant. ItstandB unrivalled it stands pre-eminent try it, and you will be forced to acknowledge that its virtues haoenot, nor cannot be overrated; that it stands far above and beyond the reach of competition; that it is the only reasonable, the only natural, and the only truly successful method of arresting and curing diseases of the Pulmonary Organs. : JAYNE & PANCOAST, Ageuts, 130 Main street St, Louis, Sold wholesale and setail at the sign of the Golden Mortar, directly opposite the Washinglon Hall. TOM LINSON BROTHERS, Agents, Indianapolis
rPuELic -No. 61
4 v trsnT.TTTTON mnnifestinfr the sensibility of
Congress upon the event of the death of William Henry Harrison, late President of the United States. The melancholy event of the death of William Henry Harrison, the iate President of the United Stales, having occurred during the recess of Congress, and the two Houses sharing in the general grief, and desiring to manifest their sensibility upon the occasion of that public bereavement, therefore, Resolved bu the Senate und House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the chairs of the President of the Sen
ate and of the Speaker of the House ot Kepresontatives, be shrouded in black during the residue of the session; and that the President pro tempore of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and the members and officers of both Houses, wear the usual badge of wourning for thirty dr vs. Resolved, That the President of the United S-'ates be requested to transmit a copy of ihese resolutions to Mrs. Harrison, and to assure her of the profound respect of the two Houses of Congress for her person and character, and of their sincere condolence on the late afflicting dispensation of Providence. Annrovcd. Junle 4. 1S41.
NOTICE. THE annual meeting- of the Stockholders of the Branch at Indianapolis of the State Bank of Indiana, will be held at the Banking House on ther Mondai) in Xorember next, between the hours of 12 o'clock M. and 4 o'clock P. M at which time and place an election w ill be held for the choice of eight Directors of said Branch on the part of the Stockholder for the ensuing y ear, sept 29. 1341. B. F. ilORKIg, Cashier.
Read and be Convinced. JAY'NE'S HAIR TONIC Having ourselves witnessed the beneficial-effects of this article on the persons of several of
our inhabitants, we hesitate not to recommend it to all those wlio have unfortunately lost their hair. We refer such to the certificate o( Mr. Holmes, which will be found in anothercolmini Bristol Phenix. . CERTIFICATE. - Bristol, It. I. Feb, 16, 1841. Mr. Rapely Sin Hnving about four years since, tnrough disease lost the hair from the top of my bead, and having used many articles recommended to restore it, without effect, I was induced, from the recommendations I saw in your Phenix, to try Ur Jayne's Hair Tonic. I am now happy to eay, that after using three bottles, my head is now covered with a fine growth of young and healthy hair. Several of my friends and acquaintances have also used it to their entire satisfaction; I, therefore, cheerfully, recommend it to all who are suffering the disagreeable sensation caused by baldness. James A. Holmes. The above certificate is from a respectable young man whoia an overseer in the Steam Mill, whose statement can be confidently relied on. JYNE & PANCOAST, Agents. Sold wholesale. and reataii at the sign of the Golden Mortar, directly opposite the Washington Hall. julyS, l41tljan442 TOMLINSON BROTHERS, Agents, Indianapolis.
FOOLSCAP AND LETTEK PAPER, a K,,,rinr article of Foolscaa and Letter paix-r. Just re-
Xteired and for sale at July
DAVIS' Bookstore.
40
BBLS. SALT just received end for sale by july 2 E- JORDAN.
THE COIUVTEKFEITEK'S DEATH BLOW. THE public will please oliserve that no Brnndreth's Fills are genuine unless the box has three labels upon it, each containing a facsimilie signature of my hand writing thus B. Brandretb.
These labels are engraved on steel, beautifully designed, and done at an expense of several thousand dollars.
THE BRANDKETII PILX.S. MMIE remarkable ciucs which have been effected by Brandreth'a X Pills have astonished the whole medical faculty, many of
whom have conceded that they are the greatest blessing that ever was given to the world.
The reason these celebrated Pills have such an universally
good effect is beeause their action harmonizes with the human bodv.
Purge out the old leaven, that e may become a new lump,"
is the language of tue Holy Writ, a figure applied spiritually, it
s true, but how could it have any application unless confirmed
by practical experience in the body of matter! The foundation
upon which this figure of scripture rests is as immovable as the laws which govern the tides, or that occasion the thunders of
heaven.
"The Condition." The condition upon which God has given health to man is a
constant care to keep his stomach and bowels free from all morbid
or unhealthy accumulations. The means to effect tins must be those remedies which cleanse the bowels and purify the blood.
Good healthful medicine is only a Secies of food; when the
animals, whose habits we have the means of observing, are aick.
they wander through the fields, and make selection of those herira which open their bowels and purify their fluids, which immediately restores their health.
When a dose of lirandretirs fins are laKen, nicy are digest
ed and pass to every pari of the system; hut they leave the body
wheu they have effected the intended purpose, and neaiin and
vigor are by them insured.
Mineral medicines may enter the system; but tney are with
dirtkultvgot out again; and they always occasion pain and mis
ery while they remain in tbe body
Whereas Hrandretlis fills are as innocent as a piece oi Dread,
and areevacuatedwlt li the disease for which they are taken.
From the time we are born to the time we cease to breathe.
our bodies are constantly wasting, and as constantly building up. The action of the atmosphere wears or waues them. The fd we eat. the digestive organs convert into blood, which renews or builds up by its circulating power. Thus the human
body is healthy when the blood circulates freely, and when any thin? prevent its free course through tbe Tains, disease
commences. Remember! the top tbe side and the bottom. JJ'My own office is on Third street between Main and Walnut, where the oeki ixi Tills can always be obtained. The followini are the only authorised agents for the sale of Brandreihs Pills; C. B Davis, Indianapolis; Jac os Loccib, Cumberland; F. THACUta, Pleasant View; A. W. Stiiiily, Bridseport; who have teem at all times for stle. junell-6rao. " MOKPHIXE &C 10 oi Sulphate of Morphine, I 8 oz Crotoa Oil, 12 Fipcrine, ; 1 " Oil Cantharide. 8 " Kreosote, Just ree'd aid for sale by -. June 4, 1841. TOMLINSON BROTHERS. Opposite tbe Washington Sail.
