Oregon Republican. (Dallas, Or.) 1870-1872, October 21, 1871, Image 2

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DALLAS, SATUKDAY, OOT. 21.
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help ONii a mrtn i.iJ
In the busy whirl of life. al feel
more or less their dependence on each
other; and yet we are proue to be too
suspicious, and watch with too jealous
an eye - the movements, words and ac
tions of our fellows, not with a view to
their reformation, but with a desire,
efidenced , by actions, if not expressed
in words, to pull them down iu the
public estimation, and show to the pub
lie that they are no better than they
should be. This should not be po. Any
man, however strongly fortified, is
liable, in the whirl of business, to do
what a more careful consideration
would teach him was wrong In the
excitement of debate, all are liable to
use . lauguage which sober second
thought wou d lorbid. ; To hold a per
too strictly to account for this, and to
make no allowance for weak, erring
nature, is to put up a standard 'of judg
Ejent by which we would shrink from
being judged ourselves. Yet how often
is this done. In the every day inter
course of life, how of ten do we denounce
people fur act3 which from our stand
ppiqt look wrong, when the persons de
nounced liave apted ip gqod faith, and
did vihat they thought right, both for
themselves and oth.rs. Iu our inter
course with the world, then, we should,
as far as possible, forbear censure ; and
jf a brother offend, tell him of his fault
privately, and give him an opportunity
to vindicate himself, or prove that his
course was rigljt and proper. Thi.s will
be following out 'the Divine injunction,
and will make life what the Creator
designed it to be, both a pleasure and a
profit. 4 . ...
CONGRESSIONAL 11121'K ESENTA.
TION.
But few States in the Uniou show an
increase in fthejr representation in Coo,
gress. Illinois, in the last Congress,
had fourteen representatjves ; iu the
next she will have sixteen. Iowa had
six in the last, and will have seven in
the next. Kansas had one, and is now
entitled t6 two. Michigan had six, and
will to the next Congress send seven
representatives. Missouri 1 nad nine,
and has now the privilege of sending
one Wrev The States which show a
falling off, in representation are Con
necticut, Indiana; Kentucky, Louisi
ana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New York, North
Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, llhode
Island, Tennessee and Virginia- The
representation in all the other States
remain the same. The whole number
of representatives in the next Congress,
according to the apportionments will be
two hundred and forty-three.
The Pacific Railroad has completely
falsified the early predictions of those
who were so sanguine that the freight
traflje would be of little accoupt. Great
freight trains are constantly passing to
and fro, and the earnings of both road
Steadily increase. The through freight
shipped at San Francisco for the East
during the eight "months ending with
August, reach 32,932,153 pounds em
bracing wool, tea, hides, silk, quicksilver,-hops,
coffee, wine, fish, leather,
&c.p besides the shipments from the
interior cities.
Or? the i 31st of July Mr. Coxwell, an
Englishman, in an experimental balloon
ascent from' Hornsey, England, ascer
tained that at an elevation or 7,850
feet, the thermometer declined from 74
degrees Fahrenheit at starting to 42
deforces. At a quarter of a mile from
the' earth, there was a reduction of 4
degrees; at half a mile the thermome
ter indicated 63 degrees. ' When the
barometer stood at 24-2 the temperature
wis'43, and nearly a mile and a half,
it was lO degrees above freezing.
We read in the Universe that a mag
nificent candle, wonderful in size and
exquisitely ornamental; was sent to the
Vatican .with the request that it
hul4 be lighted the next time the
Itepe was to say mass. The request
waVeoofrrmed to hot t soon as Pius
saw thecandle burning by itself in
an isolated pojrner of the chapel, he:
Erected that it should be extinguished.
Afterwards when it was opened, in the
presence of His Holiness, it proved to
(Contain a small . Orsini bomb, evidently
placed there with destructive inten
tions. Austria's army numbers 217,000
and 37,009 horses.
THE STATE FAIR.
The annual exhibition of the Oregon
Agricultural Association passed f off
pleasantly. Wp deem it hardly worth
while to say much concerning it, as wo
are inclined to think, judging from the
crowd, that everybody was either there,
or sent somebody in their place ; and
the reports have gone out, and all uu
derstaud what was done. Some cases
of lawlessness, of course, happened, but
not as many as might naturally have
been expected where so largo a crowd
was assembled. Miss Susan 11. An
thony and Mrs. J. lakesly Frost were
both there, the former giving the men
particular fits, calling them brutes and
tyrants, and giving the ladies advice as
to the best means of freeing themselves
from the tyrants yoke. The latter
(bless her compassionate heart) was
advocating the cause of the men, and
showing up the effects of women's en
franchisement. All kinds of amuse
ments were indulged in : circuses, pan
oramas, and an endless variety of minor
entertainments were to be met with. It
would hardly be expected that iu this,
the close of the nineteenth century
that people would indulge iu tl sports
of a century ago, and enjoy them, yet
such was the case. We noticed one
man with a duck in a box, with an ap
erture in the lid J'or the duck to put
his head through, allowing men and
boys to throw at the duck's head, a dis
tance of several paces, for two bits a
thiow, giving a prize of half a dollar to
to the one hitting the dock. This, we
suppo.se, was fuu for the boys, but death
to the duck. The fair, as a whole,
however, passed otl very well. The
weather was pleasant, and everyone
seemed to enjoy it. The exhibition
was hardly up to our expectation, yet
we hope to see it grow better, until our
fairs will compare favorably with those
of the older State.
PIKE.
The fire-fiend seems to have brokco
loose in all iis fury. Chicago, the gar
den city of the West, is in ruins. Loss
too great to bo even estimated. A strip
eight ratios in length and two mile-
in width has been burned out of the
best portion of the city. Fires are also
raging in many other places. Along the
line of the Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and
Chicago Railroad much damage is bciog
done. In Wisconsin fires are raging to
a terrible extent. The town of Pesl.
tigo was entirely destroyed the same
night of the Chicago fire. The place
numbered about two thousand souls,
one third of whom is reported to have
perished. Reports from different parts
of Wisconsin show that over fifteen
hundred ersons have perish d in the
flames in that State alone. The people
of different portions of the country are
coming forward with exemplary gener
osity to the relief of the suffering, and
the losses will be partially repaired. Tt
will be years, however, before those
cities will recover the shock.
The approximate losses by the late
fire in Chicago amounts to 200,000,
000. The area burned over was 2,000
acres. The number of buildings burned
is not less than 20,000. The dispatches
state that the losses by insurance com
prnies are not so great os was at first
supposed, and the action of said com
panies has inspired coufideuce among
business men.
Sleep Walk Kits. A gentleman in
Illinois writes the following to tho
Scientific American: " My observation
has led mc to believe that sleep walk
ing is a habit of tho system. I have
noticed that children who arc allowed
to sleep on the floor or lounge in the
evening, and afterwards at some regu
lar hour arc srouscd of course only
partially awakened and sent to bed,
will in time acquire the habit ot sleep
walking. I have no doubt that the
man mentioned in your paper of June
22d, who would get up in tho night
and go to the cellar for a drink of wino
while asleep, had been in tho habit of
first .going for it, in the night time,
while awake. I presume that few have
failed to notice how soon the mind, by
dreams, will recognize a habit of walk
tng at a particular time for any pur
pose. I think that the whole philoso
phy of sleep-walking has its foundation
in habit, acquired by disturbance at
Bouiu regular nuur mbvuiuu Bicuy.
1 L , J A A l-. tl
A musk melon five feet long is one
of the wonders of L03 Angelos, Cali
forma. We furnish the Republican and
Demons? t Monthly for 4 a year.
i'A era, von r h acti c a i i ko p l 12.
Having become a practical people,
discarding old notions and theories, it
now becomes us to ; look well -to the
training of those who are to follow us
ill. the life bVttle that is opening; upto
us with such wonderful promise. They
must be trained directly for the exi
gencies of the age and times, and he
who can prepare best both men and
boys in the practical concerns of life,
fitting them in the shortest time and in
the best manner for successful, useful
men, is the best benefactor. Not more
than one third of our young men at the
age of twenty-one are qualified to meet
with success in the business world, and
it is much to be regretted that practical
education, go essential to success, has
been so much neglected. The training
of our boys at tho common school and
academy has always been too. theoreti
cal, and not sufficiently practical and
useful. The result is that thousands
of our young men to day are nobodies,
that might have been men of influeucc;
and many others arc engaged in pur
suits that they heartily dislike, and in
which tlu-y will never excel, simply
because they had not sufficient confi
dence in themselves to make au ex
change. There are also middle-aged
men who have followed so long in the
same old beaten track of their ances
tors that their ambition has become
blasted, and it requires the teachings of
some leading spirit to arouse them from
their lethargy, and bring out their
talents and energies. Then there are
fathers by the score who show no more
J judgment in the management of their
sons than their horses, forgetting that
the boy must sometime be the man, and
that he can only rise to distinction and
be independent by being as common
sense dictates, iu the school of prac
tice, and then permitted to pursue
some avocation suited to his taste.
Why do People not Starry Hotter I
You hive seen a beautiful j;irl, beau
tiful in person and spirit, graceful iu
form and feature, and of a lovely dispo
sition married to a man of common
mould. Who cannot recall tuany such
instances? Then rgaio you sic strong,
intellectual men men every way supe
rior so grievously mismated. It has
often been remarked that if matches
are made in. heaven, they must have
got dreadfully shaken upand.miiphccd
on their way down.
Now it is very natural not only that
people should, in the first place, all
Want to marry well themselves, but
also, in' the second place, that their own
friends should be particularly well mar
ried. At the same time, when wo take
a broad, philosophical true vit w of the
matter, what do we find our conclusion
to be on tho subject '(
It is very simple, and it is this
Marriage, on the whole, cannot average
above a certain medium rjuality ; in
othe r word-, marriage in tluj general
must bo precisely on the level wyh the
ordinary character of the persons of
whom the community is made up.
And, as a comprehensive proposition,
the whole problem of marriage is
reduced to this question: Is it better
for such people to marry each other or
remain single 'I
It. is inevitable that, as marriage is
general, there must be thousands of
instances in which parents , will be
disappointed at the matches which
their children make. Love is myste
rious, and it leads the feet of hoys and
girls in directions which their fathers
and mothers would fain not have them
go. They will not select the compani
ons for life which othcr3 would select
for them. The most that can be done
to render marriage happier, is to contri
bute what one can to the improvement
of the whole community. It is not in
your power to foresee who may becomo
your son-in-law or your daughtcr-in-law
perhaps it may be the very last
person on earth you would expect.
Whatever parents do, therefore, for
the physical, intellectual and moral
education of the whole people, will, in
a manner, tend to increase the chances
that their own sons and daughters will
succeed in ! obtaining partners for life
in the best way suited to their several
dispositions Farmer.
Forty two of tho tradesmen in the
onnlinrri r.nrf.- nf London wrrr fined.
during a recent week for having fraud-'
i i !ti. .1 . rrt. -
Uicni WCJgms huu muusuiea. jluu ju
toll ttin rt(TVndnra ornrrtr Vnavps.
lia iaii m.v. v.. imivj '
' as they cabbage wretched profits out of
r .. 1 ll -1J
tne poor man s ioai auu me oiu
woman's ounce of tea.
There are 450,000 miles of telegraph
wire in Europe, 19,000 in America,
14,000 in India, and 10,000 in Aus
'tralia. There aro in addition 80,000
miles of sub-marine cable, and yet tele
graphio extensions throughout tho
world are goiDg on at the rate ot
100,000 miles -of wire per annum.
Slate Items.
Gleanings from Stale ExchauKcs.l
From the bulletin of the I7th ins't.
we glean :
Major Roberts, Engineer in charge of
the river improvements of Oregon ac
companied by Captnih West, Assistant
under whose immediate supervision the
work on the Umpqua has been done,
arrived at Roseburg on Thursday last.
Wo' learn that they will proceed down
tho river to day iu a small boat, to
inspect and receive the work -K. II.
IJurchard has been appointed Justice
of the- Peace for Scottsburg. The
viewers appointed to locate a county
on Smith river, having failed to perform
the duty assigned them, Fred Metz,
Aaron Allen and .fames Otey were ap
pointed in their place, with William
Theil, Surveyor, to meet at Scotbburg,
October lGth. Scarlet fever is increas
ing in Eugene City. Miltou McMurry
lost three childreu from the disease in
one week. Some mischievous boys,
residing in Eugene City, have been iu
the habit cf placing spikes and other
obstructions on the rails to see the cars
jump. A couple of evenings ago they
succeeded in throwing two passenger
coaches from thej track. Fortunately
nobody was injured.
There were over fifteen teams loaded
with lumber in one halflay this week
at McCune & Manna's mill mostly for
Liuu Couuty.
On last Sunday the Steamer Pioneer
at Ynquin i Ray; b!owed a tube out of
one of her cylinders. No damage done
except a short delay in her trip.
The bridge ou Mary's River, under
the surpervisiou of Mr. William Mc
Lagan, is now being put to its final rest
ing place.
A Yaquina correspondent says :
The Schooner W. S. Phelps sailed Octo
ber 4th ; T. Starr Kinjj; "sailed October
fth both bound for Coos May. The
Minora is loaled, and will sail as soon
us the tramway is ready for hoisting
freight at Cape Fouhveather.
R. N. Raker sold his ranch yesterday
to a gentleman named Eddy for l.f0U
Real estate is looking up. Everybody
seems in a good huuior -indicative of
good times.
The Eugene City GttorJ publishes
the following real estate transactions
for the week ending 1 4th inst.
David Bridges to W. & I Edward--,
interest in donation claim of S. Rridge-:
S1,0U. J. P. Kennedy, to Win. &' A
S Walker, 200 acres in Coast Foik;
$1,000. Springfield Manufacturing Co.
to A. W Lane, lot in Springfield; $.0.
Jacob Eagle to W '. I? Woo-fer, 4 acres
in Plea-ant UM ; $200. II. A. Ste
vens to James Campbell, 1021 acres in
Camp Creek ; $7". Jas. J. McMurry
to E. Chichester, 10'J acres five mile'
south of Eugene; 8400.
From tho Orrrnnivn of tho Jth
in-t. we glean the following .
Mr. James Hall, from Pundea Scot
land, i one arron the terent immk
urants who eamo out upon the- repre
sentation of Mr. O. S. Phelp of thi
eity After having spent sorwMimo in
lookint; about for a plc t -etth, he
ha ju.-t purchased Walker A' Carey's
piaoe, at Weston, on the Willamette
river, where he will settle and eirrr on
a. dairv business. I le is hi:rMv ide-,ied
with Oregon and ha ail vised t wo
brothers ii.w in Sootlaud, tn eoin out.
His rrporta concerning our State will,
doubtless induce nnny others to inimi
grate and settle, in "Oregon. All such
men as Mr. Hall are doubly welcome
among us. Mr. 1J. l. Hutler, a resi
dent, we believe of the IaHc, has a
ranch, in the Klickitat vallry, upon
which In his a large hand of sheep anil
-10 head. of Angorn goats. 3Ir. llobin
son of Nisqnally Plains, PupH Sound,
who visited JMr. Kutler's ranch a few
tlays since, 'says that the goats are flonr
ishing finely, are hardly, heathy and
require hut little feeding. He thinks
they will be much more profitable
to raise than sheep. We are informed
that cortain parties interested in such
matters have it in contemplation to
make a survey of the channel of the
Columbia river, with a view to ascertain
iog whether or not the river pilots arc
doing the square thing in grounding so
many vessels. They particularly intend
to see if there is not a better channel
on the north side of tho river opposite
Astoria Ou the 10th inst. the loco
motives Eugene and Hamburg reached
San Francisco. These locomotives are
enroute to this city and will probably
reach here during the latter part of
thfl present or the first of tho coming
week, when they will immcdately be put
into service. We learn from a resident
of Kalama that the track of the N. P.
It. It. has been laid to Corroll's Point.
Two construction trains running, and
the line of the road has a very lively
appearance.
The wagon and blacksmith shop bo
longing to Henry Bowman, living on
Birch Creek, 8 miles from Pendleton,
was consumed by fire on tho 12th inst
together with his tools, stock, and sev
eral wagons and buggies nearly finished.
Lobs about 82,500. It is supposed that
it caught from a load of charcoal that
had ouly been out of the pit about
twenty four hours, and had just been
put in tho coal house.
REAL ESTATE.
REAL ESTATE & GENRI AGENT,
; KEPUIHJCAN" OFFICE.
r Dallas, Oregou.
Special attention given to Sales or Purchase of
Heal Estate, Collection of Claims, Ac.
Agent Union Mutual Life Insurance Co.
For Male.
fflEX ACRES OF LAND, with good House
ft and Burn, all fenced and under good Ims
provemetit, situated in the Town of Dallas,
Polk County, an extraordinary 'opportunity.
fMWO JlUMiliKD AND FORTY SIX
Acres of Land one Milo North of Eola,
Polk County, good Houe, good Double Barn,
and other IJ r. i I ! in ir- All under fence, with fiue
Orchard, and in high state of cultivation.
V HOUSE AND LOT IN CENTRAL
Salem, near the two Central School
Houses. The House contains Eight Rooms,
all Plastered, with Hard Finish, Darn, Wood
HotiHtt. and all conveniences to make it
desirable.
1 FINE MILL SITE IN SOUTH SALEM,
,V Willamette Slough. A block of Six
Lots, enclosed with Board Fence, good House,
Bam, Ac.
V
GOOD STOCK FARM, CONTAINING
!'" Acreh, good Houe, two JJarns,
Orchard, Ac, Mtuated on Upper Salt Creek, 7
miles from Dallas.
4 FARM CONTAINING 250 ACRES, 100
f acres utelcr feiif-e, 50 acres under the
jKw ; gooa House, isarn, anl line urcuaru,
ituuted li miles west of Dallas.
VFAllM CONTAINING 137$ ACRES, 1
Mile north-west of Bethel, Polk County,
7i acres under cultivation, Kj acres prairie
land, good House, B.iru, Orchard, Ac.
T
iIIREIi HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES
of laii'l, L'ot) acres under fence, 25 acres
cultivated, good log barn, with lumber for
houxe, g'jo'l urchaid, living water near all the
year round, .'i miles ecutli-west of Simpson's
Bridge, Big Luckiamute.
AFIKST-CLASS FARM, SITUATED AT
Pleai-ant Hill, about two miles from Sher
idan, in Polk County, containing 4it acres, all
under fence, 1'uu acre in cultivation, good
Barn, Orch.ird, and a comfortable farm House
For sale at the low pri- of fifteen dollar per
acre. Kiejuire of John Miller, on the premises,
or the undersigned.
For Particulars enquire of R. H. Tyson,
Rice i buca Of o k.
In Flames ! !
The rcatet Conflagra
tion oT the Axe
Notwithstanding the destruction of
the above named City, the OVER
LAND STOItK" still continue to sell
Goods cheaper than ever, as the fol
lowing prices will fully show, viz. :
yard. l!et Calirn made at 10 rents
l-r yard.
.'(i.tii'U jarJ Heavy luUHti one yard vide,
at 1 1 tent jtr yard,
yard Honviejit Jt, nicotic, nse yard
wi ir. at ll'i -erit..
:'VH0 yards FirtM Pit-ached Shirting at 125
trr.ta per yard.
1 0,000 yard WliiU- Fhii.i.tl at 2.'i cent per
yard.
s S,000 yards lf?t Ann riian Iklaines at 20 cent
yet yard.
.',O0O yards Fine M.duiir I)rea (Joods at IC3
rents j'tr yard.
1,000 Fine Asfortcd P--.pl in Drcsjos at $2 ,'fl
each.
.",000 yards French Cal'd Ilombazines at bO
tt-nts per yard.
3,000 yards U-st Frrnrh KmprtJS Cloth at 00
cent. per yurd.
ALSO,
Fine IhiMncj Suits for 115, worth $20.
Fine Frenc h Cassiineres Suits $18, worth $2..
Fiue Gtnuino Ik-aver Suit for $24, worth
Fiue Genuine Chinchilla Suits $2", worth $3.S.
ALSO,
Ltnliea' Foxed Ilalmoral Shots $ I f5 per pair,
worth $.1.
Ladies' All Cloth Shoes for $1 75 per pair,
worth $3.
Men's California Screwed Boots $5 per pair,
worth $7.
ALSO,
1,000 doien pairs French Kid Oloves at II per
pair, worth $1 60.
100 dozen Ladies' French Corsets at $1 each,
worth $2.
1,000 Fine Linen Handkerchiefs at 12J cents,
worth 2h cents.
1,000 pairs Ladies' White Hose, six pairs
for $1.
1,000 pairs Children's Woolen Hose at 12J
cents per pair.
The Highest Prico raid for
COUNTRY
PRODUCE.
Sare your Money hy Trading at the OVER
LAND STORE.
FIRE! ! FIRE!!!
fpO MY FRIENDS AND PATRONS I
JL would say that I havo re-built my Shop
on the
SAME OLD CORNER,
Where I am . prepared to do all kinds of
JOBBING.
WAGON WORK AND HORSE
SHOEING ON SHORT NOTICE.
As I have lost all my proporty by Fire, those
indebted to me for work will confer favor
by paying up immediately.
A frind in need, is a friend indeed.
-.ASA SHREVE.
12-tf
NJS W A 1) VER Tl SEMEN TS.
G. W. HOB ART. J j. w. HOBART.
SAD3f,R, HARNESS &
COLLAR SHOP!;
North-Eaist Corner of
Main and 31111 Street. Dallas.
GEORGE W. HOBART & CO.
Will Manufacture and keep CONSTANTLY
ON HAND a lurge Assortment of
SADDLERY, HARNESS, AND
COLLARS,
Consisting of all the
HORSE FClUH'UEiVT
Usually kept in a
FIRST CLASS SADDLERY SHOP,
All of which will be made ot
THE BEST MATERIAL.
AUk CARRIAGE TRIMMING and RE
PAIRING done to order on the shortest
notice.
Call and exarnirc our Work before purchase
ing elsewhere.
41-tf GEO. W. HOBART k CO.
: 1
illollicrs I've Found It!
1:1 OR YEARS I HAVE SEARCHED FOR
a remedy that will CURE your children
Vy removing th CAUSE, and at lat I c&Deay
"Eurtka." TRY IT.
CARMINlfivY CORDIAL-
This is a pleasant antacid, and in large doses
laxative; in small dopes, an astringent medi
cine; exceedingly useful in all bowel affeetions,
especially of children. It is a safe, certain
and eCectual remedy for Cholio, Diarrhoea,
Cholera Morbus, .Summer Complaint, Griping
Pain, .Sour Stomach, Costiveness, Wind on the
Stomach, Crying and Fretting of Children. In
Teething, there is nothing that equals it. It
softens the Gums, and renders Teething easy.
It is no humbug medicine, got op to sell,
but a really valuable preparation, havingbeeo
in use for several years it recommends itself
Do not givo your children the "soothing
syrups," f.,r they stupify without doing any;
permanent good.
Prepared by
Dr. W. WATKRIIOCSE,
MONMOUTH, OREGON.
For Sale by Druggists. The trade supplied
on reasonable terms. Hundreds of Testimo-.
nials caa be given if necessary.
13-tf DR. W. WATERIIOUSE.
This Space
E
H
V
P
FOIl
J. W. GILBERT,
Roof and Shoe Dcaleiy
COMMERCIAL STREET,, SALEM.
t 2S-3m
Or. J. P. I van Den Rcrgh,.
From Prussia, the Great
Worm Exterminator!
I.nte of S.in Francisco. Cal. would; inform
the f ick generally, that about forty years ex
Unive j ractice of medicine and surgery in.
Europe and the United States of which twenty
one have been in California, and close obsenra- .
tion and great experiments, come to the. con
clusion that there aro more acut.and
chronic di.ea?cs caused by worms, hydadids, .
animaloula or other Fpecics of cntozoa. The
public genarally, or the profession at large, are .
not nware of the number of patients who are
treated by eminent phjsicians for this, that, or
such a complaint without any relief. If the
disease had been understood, a few doses of"
Dr. V's Sovereign Worm Jiemedy would hare,
immediately cured the complaint, and have
saved a great many lives. Dr. V. has collected
a large variety of California roots and herbs
which, by analysing, close observation and ex
tensive experiments, he can conscientiously say
that he has discovered new remedies for sue,
ceasful cure for the following diseases :
JST-Dyspepsia, Chronic affections of the.
Liver and Kidneys, first and second stages of
Consumption, White Swelling, Palsy, Sperma
torrhoea or Jocal weakness, Nervou Debility,
Epileptic Fits, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dianv
hoca, Incontinence of Urine, Gravel, Flor Al
bus, Diabetes, Dropsy, and all those disease,
which are known under the name of Venereal;,
such a? Syphilis, in all its forms, Gonorrhoea
Gleet, Strictures, False Passages, Inflammation
of the Bladder and Prostrate Glands, Exeorhw
tions, Pustules, Piles Pimples, Blotches, and all
Cutaneous Eruptions of the skin. Cancers Tu
mors cured with or without operation. In re
cent Venereal Diseases, tho Dr. effects a Cure
in 3 to 5 days or no charge.
For the Eye, Ear and Throat, Dr. V. possess
es new and invaluable remedies.
Dr. V. would advise those ladies troubled
with irregularities of the Uterus to try bif
new remedies and get cured.
Dr. van Deu Bergh's Infalliable Worm Syrup
for children. Price, $1 Warranted to expel the
worms, or the money refunded.
Dr. J. P. P. van Den Bcrgh'8 Hair Tonlo--a
sum cure to destroy all animalculso of the
Hair Follicles, prevent falling out, and pro
moting tho Growth of the Hair. Price 91 50
Warfanted.
By consulting nd underfroinff limpl
examination, the afflieted can learn if their
disease is caused by Worms or not j at all
events Dr. ven Den Bergta can tell them from
what disevse they are suffering.
Consultations and examinations FEES of
obarges in all eases. Dr. fan Den Bergh
guarantees, tn all cases, to expel the worm,
and Cure all diseases he undertake, or no.
charge.
Dr. van Den Bergh will remain at Sales)
until the 15th of October next.
Office at the Opera House Black Salem. -