‘ff E F NTImMi Ni THURS>it MA|fcbl «.j|W r*w*wagNirwftid|gjk XHE RAIL ROAD bOAV BILL. ' As wb have before said, if the aid proposed in this Bill can be given to the Rail Road Companies witfffeot loss to the State; what valid reason can 'be given for withholding it ? lathe con struction fif these roads of no impor tance to AJfihbcsota ? Can we expect W keep pace in improvement with other States which have Rail Roads already, if this opportunity is allowed to pass without availing ourselves of the means now in our hands to complete as mag nificent system of Rail Roads as was ever originated in any State in the Union ? Pass the Bill. It may hare objectionable features—but recollect it is to come before the people; and they are to pass upon it. Continue the discus sion, and the people will be prepared to act when they are called to vote upon its adoption. If it is Wrong when brought before the tri bunal of the people k will be rejected. Is any one afraid to have it passed by such a body ? We trust nO one is wafts ing to injqfe Minnesota to manufacture ] political capital for himself ■' .ftU FALSE ACCUSATION. | It is charged by the Louisville Jour- 1 nal and other leading papers of the * •country, that the patronage of the Gov- ! ernmeiit is being withdrawn frOin those 1 papers which follow the lesd of Senator ' Douglass, and gi vea4o-those which sus- 1 tain the President in hie views in regard 1 to the adminission of Kansas under the * Lecompton Constitution, Thlsliiay be * •the case in some parts of the country, 1 but it certainly is not, so far as this 1 Territory is concerned. The J ■and Democrat has been one ol the fore* • most in opposition to Buchanan; 1 ing it almost to bitterness, accusing hiiii ' of resorting to misrepresentation, etc., 1 to sustain his position ; and still that * paper receives, we believe, all the gov- 1 eminent patronage the President has to I bestow upon the press of the Territory, >t These presses tio doubt hope for what 1 they very much desire to have brought 1 about—a complete disruption of the 1 Democratic party. We trust they wilt < be disappointed, and that wafh&li sooftk sec this that it will be placed in the hariasof tkip| people of Kansas, where k property be- < longs, and where it can be settled with out distracting the General Government, J or without its aid. The excitement has * been kept up long enough, and would, I in our humble opinion, long ago haVe 1 been settled to the satisfaction of a large I majority of the people of the country, had * not agitation and excitement been deem- 1 ed necessary to advance the fortunes' f of jplitical aspirants both in Kansas and* .f the Stales. Surveyor General Emenion | could not have given a contract forsur- veying the country above to a better , man than Robert Lancaster, of our . town, as the energy witty which he prose- ] cutes the survey this winter abundantly proves. He is one of our best citizens —is perfectly reUable, and whatever business may be oohfided to him will be faithfully attended to. He may have rather a hard contract, but we believe he will fulfill it to the loiter. JE3T Wo thank those friends' who have by letter given us their sympathies in the work of conducting a public jour sial, and have expressed a hope that ours •will not be suffered to “go down,” but whilst we express our gratitude, we would beg leave to say that however useful sympathy may be to season the necessaries of life, it is rather poor as an exclusive article of diet. |o* Wm. H. Wood, Esq , will lec ture next Tuesday evening, at the Con gregational Chbrch—subject, "The Press.” Wo may expect a fine intel lectual treat. The church will be well warmed and lighted. Let our citizens all be out. ¥ _ • To CottßEsrciti) buts. —Names of the authors of all communications for the JFronlunnan must accompany such com ir. unicat ions. The names can be sent to the editor, and need not be disclosed tfk is so desired, and if the communications are not published, they can bo returned to the authors. A " translation from the Welsh,”is a pretty thing, but we wish to know the name of the translator. tjgr* The Rail Road , Plats of the N. P. K. R. Co., exhibiting the location of ******** ** the Land ' last, and'are now v g ■ S|vm place, a poigraot Jreurrgiug certain townships ofJftnd Above thp on the west side of ftie ’MissUslppi, was in town a few days ago, and reports that ttia <1» tfce'*«rvejNM» well as he expected when |ie enterwi into^the contract. Hi* survey is almost wholly in timber, which is generally of good quality together with Tania rack,. Which is do vdluabtd ttfiffWlWach used' in this country tor fencing. This is the timbered region north-west of this to which we have often alluded, and which cannot be surpassed by anyinMinneso ta. Mr. Lancaster's contract does, pot ex tend into the heart of this forest, hut he has penetrated it sufficiently far to show the exceeding great value it will be to this part of Minnesota. On actual sur vey, this proves to be much nearer.Sauk Rapids than was supposed. On a straight line the distance cannot exceed four miles. The timber at this edge of the forest is called good, but does not com pare with that found farther from the prairio. It improves in size and quality as the forest is penetrated, until it is fully tb’pny timbered region we have over seen in New York or Pennsylvania, rhis timber'extends, with little interrup :ion, to Grow Wing, fifty miles above his, a^d.bewlrfrom 4 the Mississippi from wenty to thirty miles. That portion skirting is rapidly being'lak tnd Maples of a plenty )f which aro 'id. .be"We •ountry, jt sJheqjd bnvwPtaSpfefclT sO long com- Whilst prairie was avidity by those vho musff have understood well the ad 'ftntagestw. timbered lands; and the 1 1 most certain indication they afford of i superior, ijfiif The land, however, is ipw bejgjgf surveyed and cannot much remain unknown. .It will attract he attention of eastern people—the orests wdl be felled—clearings will be nade, houses will be built—where now 10 song is heard but that of the feather q] songsters, and no (read but that of flejijld, beasts of the forest—the note w ‘l! be heard, and the enterprizing “migrant, setk ng a home in its wilds. Contracts have been made by the Government for the survey ol but a mail portion of this country above al uded to, but k is believed that Mr. Emerson the Surveyor General seeing lie importance of having k opened for ieuftement day, will urge the ttjggwryey ns fast as possible. LECTURE.,, r We dpjjpot ever to have been ntt£grf|tffed to a lecture ban we to one deliver vish time space permtt will that of sentiment, pSrfty of diction, and ease and beautvot delivery, it could hardly be excelled. was listened to with the deepest interest by a large and intelli gent audience, showing by their fixed the Lecturer had been siiccessfbs'Ht r Wis efforts to entertain a Stl Cloud audience. We hope Mr. H. will be induced, at some future time, to repeat this lecture in Siak Rapids He will deliver a lecture here a Week from next Tuesday evening—Subject, " The Crusades.” -W f The ladies of Sauk Rapids have the thanks of the membersofthe Con gregation of the Congregational Church for the set of curtains furnished for the church. With them k■ is much more comfortable and pleasant than it Was before they were put up. : ’ ' ! • 5 , ! ■ ftf —-— 1 ■!•«—!■»» H"|' fgt* Wc invite attention to an extract on our first page, from some most singu lar papers—papers as wonderfules wes< -s v .r :••• b Ji-« • n ■■ ■ n ~ aid WAIT’S LKCTURE. v This Lecture was delivered,, ding to previous p .fiee, on Tew*dey evening leet, t*> a very roepectnfile au dirnco. Toe subject, “ Our j&ciitJe men,” was well treated, end the Whole lecture proved the author a good writer, and capable of doing justice to any sub ject he might take in hand-. The sub ject selected by Mr. Wait, far his lec ture, though it may, as it did in this in stance enchain an audience, is not of that practical kind which enlightens, the understanding as weil S 3 tickles the fan cy. The Lecture was well received, and the audience left, evidently Well pleased with the evening’s entertain moot, rejoicing that there were' so few of that useless class in Minnesota* the character of which, tho lecturer so viv idly and humorously portrayed. seems to have broken out between the St. Paul Minnesotxan and six prominent Republicans, with S. Balcombe at their head, members .of the legislature. The war first originated mainly in the support these gentlemen gave to the 5,00‘J,000 Loan Bill, which the Minnesotian opposed. They accuse that sheet of endeavoring to work the thing into a party measure. It .is a question which concerns all, and we sincerely hope it will never be made ti hobby for any party mm to ride into power upon, or an instrument to advance the interests of either political party. @T* Messrs. Cavalier and McFet ridge of Pem' irta, left town this morn ing for their home in the north. They were just Up fitun Si. Paul, *nd i Rif that the S,CKMKKH) Loan Bill, whidnhad before passed the Senate, was sure to pass the' House the day they left, (yes terday.) Important amendments had been made to the Bill, which had shorn it of all objectionable features, it is said. We hope soon to receive it entire, whbn we shall place it before our readers, to gether with all we can get to prepare them for Acting intelligently in regard to its acceptance or rejection. jgy* Thor# will he found in our. col umns to-day a com mil meat inn front “ A' Taxpayer of Stearns County,” to which we invite the attention 61 ail interested in the fact* upon which it ft matter whichever/ Taxpayer ehould investigate and understand. It seemsto us that the erection of a court house might as well be deferred until times are a little easier, and until the scttlrrs can see their way a little more clear for procuring seed with which to seed their farms the coming spring, at least,lf the pcople understand that they are to be saddled with this debt, with the accu mulating interest of 12 per cent per su num on the amount, then it is aU right, but if they do not, they will no doubt claim the right to be consulted about it. Stearns is a great and good County, and we fear 'to see a debt incurred which must hereafter prove burdeesoine to k» iohnbkants. ; ' -«%t~ f. 1 * m- | . ( «T Those of our readers who may have a curiosity to hear ’ about Ipdian eloquence, will read the speeches made by the Chippewa Chief, F|at Mouth, and Mshjegahbo. Flat Mouth is orfb o! the best Indian orators now living, and ha* many a time astonished his whit* brethren .with Jii* eh'quence. ir We see rttarty comments in thi papers upon the s.ffair in the house # ftepreseutalives, in which Mr, Keiu upon 1 the occasion, arid the fi >or hiu him. and the two were mimukakatit) e ntit led to each othpr. There set-ms however, t«* he-some, tittle dispute as tJ whether Keitt#ill By stubbing his toe or was knoeked down by an enemy, o\ pull' d down by ft frisnd. One siate ment apparently'true; is that Keitt dts appeared immedWrely after rising frrift ,th» floor. A|r. Grow, pained some Jittk eclat if* the Kept lost. Gi^y first individual who has had a dowhftil by being tUo grasping LouittifU Jour »•»« i|!»»M that fee will have noote c drier weather, and in that case # wHf Iw abln In jjaek away a suffieiVirt quantity Mf that excellent,’ Solid,, clear ice. that' is peculiar to this remop of conntrv,. ' ' Persons at a distance who have never experienced n Minnesota winter, are not prepared to understand its pleasant pe culiarities. .To..t|H9qv,;,:t||^|M^fd >; the rnrcury standing at .ftoru ‘2O to3o de cree* .aerp.fpr week*, if-almost horribly but to ua them i* nothing un pleasant about it. The air is pure and Bracing, and the sun shines as brightly its in midsumdte'r l' trhUethesky is clear and cloudless, and the wind is entirely at iiiest. The snow is t» dry as powder, and our people travel around in moccasins, without the least daixjptefto to the feel. With every breath Ute'tfftiw!, we inhale life and health as thnugfetw were sipping: from the cup of the Elixir of life. We have on coughs Or ©ala** here, unless {hey are imported ‘ chapped hands or faces ; but with rtwfoy cheeks and healthy lungs we bid defi ance to the cold. SidkhesS or death|is rare among us, at all year, but in the glorious brfu., *; time, the dark s and mourning do not Come f« "^^||ii£!|s* If this seems incredible t* er. come and see U*, and \& j#*r 'self. Come in the when, our magnificent bef.>re you covered with I verdure ; when our crystal *trentnp&Rp&.j merrily along, over their pebbly and When our farms begin;to first Words of harvest. . - Como summer, when nature is in her etWmn Conte in the autumn, when the rich vest is rolling in from those farms When the varied tints of departed sum mer clothe those forests in their royal' robes ; and when at niohf.the glaring fire roll# Over those wild, prairies, and. keep along our bluffs and hills, kissing the very heavens with its liquid tongue# of flame,' and lee v’es behind it those prairies and hills errirhed for the use of man. Or c *me to us in the wioter, When, our sky is bright, pur air*pure* our fuel plenty, our spirits high, and opr health good, and our word for it, you will say ‘With tis, “ (lero is our Home.**— IFtno ha Time!. ENCOURAGING *C MIGRATION. Minnesota is walled about on the east and South by cordons of enemies. Emi grants hither, like the Israultles in search of Canaan, have absolutely to fight their way through our enemies, combined on all.sides to misrepresent and abuse us. The people of lowa and Wisconsin es pecially, alarmed at the emigration of their own citizens to Minnesota, itnd in dignant at being spurned hv the tide which rolls over them and past them tt| f>nr own beautiful, t erritory, ha ve ted no opportunity to give effect trVwffip|P jealousies. To these sou*res Ave rejl the drizzling rain of paragraph ti»n which is forever trickling lijjjMg; news columns of multitudinous, of no origin, which tide-of d»tily facts fay tnotis' letter-writers from Milwaukee, and other way pl'ces. Their never conr.es to light. The entire press 1 of the Territory has concurred—not nncea'mvß —but hundreds of times*—in placing tne brand of falsehoodWn the stories which have been circulated abroad to our dis credit. Yet the denial scarcely reaches further than the limits of our newspaper circulation. And it has come to this— that’ Minnesota is in bad odor at the East, and it has com** to be believed that We have nothing left of all the magnifi cent gifts with which nature has endow ed us, $o offer as an inducement to emi gra’tlpU.—that our ’ climate, the thHg above all otfaers whinh is our boast and oxultnti>mretiiat our climate, the climate of the Crimean vine dresser and of the wheat region of Ru-sia, is inhospitable and unfavorable to egricnltnre—that our •oil is poof, dUr soil Which :»cre by a era equal* that of any ayca of«qual extent . in fh« World, in fra productiveness, cul* livability .and in all the conditions of successful culture—that our harvests are nnnudly devastated by grassoppers —that out* finances are bankrupt, and that wn are. living on the proceeds oi exploded humbugs. * i Against all this the facts that trickle through the Post Office are of little avail. Indeed the fabta themselves are not vm ciieeonaly anedurnging, and are quite K i without the { ,cxa«gereUona uiea. The facts are nuitorm state of things which exisl y Where else in ifae Union rested—money ao snanre a« pressed the nioriey fable ol to oho-tiurd less than the ' six months ago—the credit chants impaired by foreign i- estutnoiOs^—ami ! • the Whole' commercial ' fabric aubsWttng inertly upon the hope I that aff.iirs will tike a new turn in th« ! spring,, and that the tide nf emigration I wilt .bring, business and prices up tr • high-water mark .again .— St. Paul M fPAX ygy, READ. V j March 4, ’&] ■ htM' to your fjjlereat tax-payer* of Steam* CoMfe ; I have recently Some to the knowledge, of tho fact that u fligrnnt imposition baa been, perpetrated oil tho people of eaid county by their 6oa'niy #ommi«ioneW i««in g , n otffett* ; , fT ;,^VEN yyQUMM DOLLARS of Coiraty|Scrtp, lo tie inued (or the purpose of b«M»| a Court House in St. Cloud ; laid rer p Inhpiiy per annum, which ‘>'"nA yigb»>gJr«l % f»«d forty d,,!- w«« per y<*«r. This Court flome w nf't fof the benefit of iho peMpfe of .Steatns but to bn sn ore*mem |o,the lows t*f St. Cloud, pud b> enhance »h« y*l«e pi ihe property of n few de •igning men,, *ho undoubtedly have ’ impoaed upon the Cooirui-wioner* by their influence to commit such n guti* error ; fe*- it i* ppt' reasona ble to wupproc that ihe County Seat can remain at St. Clofid over n yrir or two at the! firtberst —for on St. Cloud i» on the eaatern border of the County, fee people witbmoye the Connty Seat to rome site n<*n r the centre. , thin Seven Thousand Dollar*, bearing twelve per cent inter ert wrung from the poor people by Taxing their property, blight as well be thrown into the Mis sidppi, Si far as it* geoerai use would be to the people of the coi nty. Such an extravagant cooric of policy will retard -emigration to our -Wfent# sod be i genera I stagnation to our proa- what prudent man will'settle in a Comity, and invest capital, that t burthened with a dm infancy, where he would be harfanfed by tqgntfen to pay off this debt, for the neift twenty y«*ra Mark me down us a vain pf«ten«|i:ifi wewre mpt groaning under a debt of fifteen itmnind didlflHfera years from this date, if I am confident if ili<* p. ople of the chanty tnfeiuglg fejiderstoo time in petitioning the County .to, revoke the irder. This is my* nk no friend tb the prosperity of think otherwise . A 'imPAYER of Stearfa, Co. Oft* Tho London TXtfte* leogn fe»m ioit/r»ii«n to i“iin a match yd repeat 100,001) a r Tcu ‘Ck course at »e accepted. The Times Zatlapd to become a a British turf, and send )jyorse Skirmisher to do lie American celebrities. (f Sauk Rapids and Sauk River MANUFACTURING COM’Y.” PUBLICNOTICE t IS hereby to a Resoludon pissed nt a ftgblic meeting of the Corporators of said Company held at the house of Or in B. Day, in Sunk Rapid*, on life Jd day of December, 1857, *l7 H. M. Books will be opened at the office (-rT.iiwipd O. Ilmnlin, in Sauk Rapid# on the feh day of March next, for sub scription*. |o th«{ Capital (Stock, of said Company in accordance with the Act of the Legislature of fee 'lVftitory of Minnesota, to Incorjairate said ('ompany May 23d, 1857. £dwaro n, J. Rl T SSF.LL, ! ’kb ,18th, 1 SoB. Ilstf ltwf PKOSPEJJTUA OF THE 1318; times, M Paper tuple■ Freedom Notional— fflpMtvfiy ecttonaf. Twenty Copict to One fegiijtfe**, §2O. Abtn it the time to get up in Advancf, PRINTING FEPARTMF,NT. ■f/(K)0 Curds for $2 50—Other kinds Of «r at greatly Reduced rates f e now Tive Presses constantly run. in our Otßce, and turning off all iting. from a Oae-Line Card to a Mam (liiving purchased ihe exclusive right f Sj. Paul, to use Gordon's celehrateil Piri -Klt Card Press, which pilots, counts and cuts IWTbminand Cards |>er Honr, we are able to furnbril Cards at« Lower Price than nnyoilier es ubKslmWht in the 1 State, and printed in a surerior manner. Particular attention paid to .Bill-Heads, Circulars, etc., etc. Nctdflttllh years ago the Tits Minnesota W MEatue W-foie ihe pubtiaim from that |M*n*a,l*> lhw*pre*cnl ii has licen bottliog for the ehjlfe of Freedom and the Rights of Man, regardless nfi'Ae ties of Party or th» sneers and jilies of parii 'xpnesidenfc By pursuing a cnomstmit and straight 'forward car* er,bvii persistent devotion to Principles, it ha* won its way to psiLlic fitvnr, and not withstand ing it is th - youngest of fee city Press, it has attain ed e very large and rapidly increasing circulation.— This has been accomplished, not l*y a system of sejf laudaVmn , !mt by the Sjioiiiane.nis patronage *.f its friends Minaeyota find the Eastern SJ tales. The TiM t s has ever advocated, and'will continue to advocate, fee cause of the Pe*H>*e, and in doing so it has advoeatisl the cause of the great Republican Parly whose principles it has warmly espoustd and will defend to the Iwst of its abitiiy. tt nftv*r has and never will pander lo the vines «>i the, vicio.is, and : never flinches from' grappling with Error wherever it I exists. It believes in no honest ntu mnee «l the Tmth—in ndhering to Right, Jt siire and Temper nore—i n an outspoken, mnitly c**ndenmat»on of W rong j —in a just appreciation of the wants of tho honest settler, to wh an a h<>me th-uild be guaranteed by Gongtess,, and in the Development *>f those re* smirces which are cnleoluted to place us first among the States oi this g ent Cmledci-auy. t Many nuw fi«ftan»s will be added to the Tl* K* in fen course of the year 1858. M T e shall spat e no twins to pr°** ,,;, V fee fetwi and T , '^. re ,'S , w ’? B .itoth at home and Irom nbroad .■‘hullptiblish week ly a lull and rurrect report of tb«alarl»t«v-U/id shall at all times devote our energies to make oiir paper equal in every respects to any oih-y in «a»r new charged lor writing subscribers’ names on their paper*. If out friend* throughout the State and chut' wheie milt |nit lorth a liula., exei tion, we can greatqi ‘ increase our snbsrrtptioa list and thereby Iw abla. t<> enlarge and Imattlily the Times to a degree which wilt meet with their entire approbation. Please give n* a Call at the Jbmtioa of Third, Beach, Bt. Ao n»r Jffe.* 1 j TJUtli NOTICE. A LL parson* indebted to C, B. VAN NKBT. by Note or Brndt Account, ate requested to 1 onti on tb« subscriber ni . seula, a* the accusmte am left la his hands tar v, With good opp<.i attention to |*r*C tical Aiiutninv, nod u ilh Hinitle Cinic.il facilities fit. the Couimeirial H<>,piial. Tlje arrangement-of feo chi iis will l»e as" fidlows T. E.'lif »-HN, M. D., Professor of r Anatomy anti Physiology. ’ f J. F. Judge, M. yL)., Professor of Chfinistry and Pharmacy. A. J Howe, M. D , Professor of Sur# gerv C. H. CiEAV*i.*ptD, M. D., Profess or of Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Wm, Sherwood, M. D. f Professor of Medi-al Practice and Pathology. J. R. BucHANfiv, M. D , Emeritus Professor of (Jerebral Physiology and Institutes of Medicine John King, M. D., Professor of Ob stetrics and 1 Diseases of Women and Children. The Terms fir thif Session will, lie the name as heretofore,, viz :—Mairiculution, §S,OQ. Tuition, $20,00. Demonstßitor'e Ticket, $5,00 (Every Student is required to engage in dissection ore ix-s --sion lief >re graduation.) Gradnation €25,00. Ticket to UomnWircfei Hospital, (optional) £5,00. The Lecture-Rwms an* newly finished, neat, and cninfortiible, and in a central locality (in College Hall, Walnut Street,) where xtudents will find it conreniettt to call on their arrival. Tickets for the session may be obtained of the Dican qf the Fac-‘ I'LTV. at his office, No. 118 Smith Stieet, or of Prof. C. H. Cf.EAVEt.AUU, Secretary of the Fac* ulty, No. 139 Seventc Street,.near Elm. 116 JOHN KING, M. D., Dean. Of all disease*, the great first cause Spring* from neglect of Nature’s law*. ' % SUFFER NOT 5 when a CURE is guaranteed in all stages of SECRET diseases: SELb'-Mxii*, Nervovt Debility , Strictures, Gratel f Diabetes), Diseases if tie Kidneys arid Bladder, Jl/Jrcuriui Rheumatism, St rofug la, Pains in the Bones and Jlnkles , Diseases ty the LungS, Throat, Nose Ht.d Eyes, Ulftt sr upon the Body or Limbs,- Cancers, Dropsy , Epiliptic Fite, s*(. Vita's Dance, and all Dio ceses arising from, a derangement of the Sexual Organs. Such as Nervous Trembling, Lsies of Loss of Prwer, General Weakness, Dimness of Vis ion, with peculiar spots appealing before ihe eves. Loss of Sight, Wakefulness, Dyspepsia, Liver Dis ease, Eruptions upon the face, pain in the back and heaj, Female insularities and all inpiuprr ut> odor, causing no sickness, and free fpbm mercury balsam. H iring twenty years of practice, I have< rescued fi'om the jaws o( Death, many thouswnds, whsrj in the last stages of the alwve mentioned disease had been given up to die by their phvsicians, vhife warrants me in promising to the afflicted, who may' place themselves under my eare, a perfect end most speedy cure. Secret dieeasea arc the greatest ene— , mie* to heahh, as they are the filer cause of consump tion. Scrofula ana many other diseases, and should lie a terror to the human family, as a permanent cure is scarcely e.vcr effected, a majority of the cases fall ing into the hands of incompetent persi us, »h<> not only fail to cure'the*disease* but rain the Const filling the: system with met cun, which with theCffis ea*c, hastens, fee Mifil*rt*r into rapid consumption. Bet shotthbifaMHiseasc and the treatment not rause death speedily Md the .victim mafiif*, the di.-rare i* entailed tipon th “children, who are born with fee - Ide e-mstitmion*, and the current of life corrupted by a virus whirh betrays itself in Srrulida; Teller, Ul cers, Erupt imis and other affections of the skin. Eyes, Thioal an.l Lings, emailing upon them a hrief exist ence of suffer ins, and consigning them to an early crave. Self A busk is another formidable enemy to healfe, for making else in the dread catalogue of hmitaa diseases causes so destructive a drain upon the system dtawing its thonsands of victims through a few vests of suffering down to an untimely gra’Vß. It destroys the. Nervous System, rapidly wastes away fee.cnergiri of life; rause* mental derangement, pee- . vents the proper development of the system, disquali fies for marriage, society, business, and all eaith'y happiness, ami leaves tne sufferer wrecked in body and mind, predtsjawed to consumption and a train nf evils more to be dreaded than death itself. With the fullest confidence I assure the unfortunate victims of Self- Abuse that a termanent and speedy cure, esn he effected, and with the abandonment of ruinous practices, mv patients ran he resorted to lobnst, vigorous health. The afflicted are cautioned against the use ol Patent Medicines, for t lie re are so many ingenious snares in the column* of the public prints lo catch and rob the unwary sufferers, that millions have their constitutions rained by the vile Compounds of quack doctors, or the equally poisonous nostrums vended as ‘ Patent Medicines.” , 1 have carefully imalyzed many of the so-called Patent Medicines, and find that nearly all of ‘hem contain Corrosive Sublimate, which is one ol the strongest preparation* of mercury, and a deadly pni sou, which,' instead ot curing the disease, disables the system for hfe Three f.mrths of the patent nostrums now in use are put tip by unprincipled and ignorant persons who do not understand Sfeeri the al|dtaliel of the materia medica, and are equally as destitute of any knnwfedge of the human system, having one object wily in view, sud that t<» make money regardless of consequence*. Irregubrities and all disease* of males end lemales treated on principles estahliehed by twenty years of practice, and sanctioned by thousand* ol the most reniHikable cute*. Mt*diciiws with full ditectione sent i<> any part of the United State* or Canadas, patient* c’oinmnoicafing their symptom* hy leiter.- Business correspondence strictly confideniial. Ail letters asking advice most contain a postage stamp. Address J. SUMMERVILLE, M. 11., Box No. 53. Office No. 1131 Flßiert St., old No. 109, Below Twelfth, Philadelphia. ERRII OR Y OF M INN fcS OTA, 1)13* TRICT COURT,Benton County, 2d Jfe dicinl District. ; • «. . ! Charles Gilman ngait tt Charles D. Mead. T«» the alstve named defendant, Charles D. Mead. Y«u are hereby summoned and requited to answer the comp'aint in this action, whirh has I*7ll fil d ir. the office of the Clerk of this Court at Watnb, in tfcr Connty of Benton, in’ said Territory of Minnesota, and tu send a copy of your answer to the raSt com- Itlaint on the subscriber at his offine in the town of Sauk Rapids,, Territory aforesaid, within twenty day* after the service of this Summons on jm, ex elusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer tie the Rife afcaeratd, the pbintiff igthisactiqnwill take bdgment againa yuMb mi* tit (rvi betides the cost* and disbursements in thi* action. tvm W. H. WOOD, fPBVAttV Doted Sank Rlfeid*, 11. T., iawu*ry- 3feh, 18W. finHECOLLEGE JOURNALOF MEDICAL JL SCIENCE, a Monthly Msgyxine ef 48 page*, conducted by the FaCoHy of the Eclectic Col lege iff Medicine, is fekmlM at One Dollar a Year, payable in', advance. The vpfcme of fee Jounrd commence* wife the fW< . Capmunicatiune for std’- Seventh Street, Cjncinnatt, O. lift