3 3 TO BE DISPOSED OF, 
_& FINE-TONED CHAMBER ORGAN of considerable power and in excellent 
++ order. This instrument is well calculated for a small Church or Chapel. It has two 
“rows of keys with long octaves, and an octave and a half of German pedals. The great Organ 
‘contains an open and a stopped diapason throughout, a dulciana, principal, twelfth, fifteenth, 
‘three-rank cornet and sesquialter, and trumpet. The swell, which is to fiddle G., comprises 
an open and a stopped diapason, principal, and hautboy. The instrument is ina handsome 
“mahogany case, which stands thirteen fret high. 
__ For further particulars, application may be addressed, post paid, to Mr. Barlow, Bookseller, 
‘Bennett’s-hill, Birmingham. 
IVANHOE BATHS, 
ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH. 
SHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH possesses many advantages, both natural and acquired, 
in the extreme salubrity of its climate, in its finely sheltered situation with an open 
southern aspect, and in its position surrounded by a fertile district which abounds with excel- 
lent fuel, and yields an overflow of the strongest medicinal springs. These originally, issued 
_at openings in the surface ; and, for ages before Ashby acquired celebrity as a sapere Place, 
they were held in singular repute, and variously applied by multitudes of the sick and infirm, 
desirous of profiting by their virtues. 
_ The Ivanhoe Baths were erected in the year 1826, and are not more admired for the beauty 
of their structure, than for the convenience of their several arrangements. The building con- 
“sists of a centre and two wings. In the former is the spacious pump room, finished with rich 
_architectural decorations and ornamented with an elegant ad lofty dome. In each of the 
“wings is a range of six Baths, with Douche, Vapour and Shower varieties; and to every bath, 
a distinct and comfortable dressing-room is attached. Those for Gentlemen, with a large one 
for swimming, and a Billiard-room, are in the north wing ; and, in the south, are those appro- 
‘priated to the use of Ladies, with a suite of apartments for the accommodation of company. 
‘The Baths are plentifully supplied with the Mineral Waters, which have their sources in an 
adjacent mine, upwards of one thousand feet in depth. 
ba The Ashby Medicinal Waters, naturally combine the Chlorides of Sodium, Magnesium and 
Calcium, with the Bromides of Sodium and Magnesium, in extraordinary proportions ; and 
they contain a far greater quantity of Bromine than any water in the kingdom used for similar 
purposes, They derive their peculiar qualities from being highly charged with Chlorine and 
Bromine: this last is a newly fecoversd alkaline substance, having very energetic properties. 
“These waters when judiciously employed according to rules, haying reference to the Patient’s 
constitutional, habitual and eardered conditions, operate with remarkable efficacy in attain- 
sat salutary purposes for which the Chlorides and Bromides are medicinally prescribed. 
_ These Waters furnish an excellent natural medicine which is powerfully tonic and deob- 
struent ; and hence, their use is clearly indicated in all the diseases which are characterised by 
‘congestion or exhaustion, unaccompanied with fever or inflammation. Asa Deobstruent, they 
purify the blood and other fluids, and prevent or remove a tendency to swellings and dropsy. 
As a Tonic, they support the powers of digestion, and stengthen the whole animal economy. 
In numerous well authenticated instances, the cures effected by them have been rapid, com- 
plete and permanent; and, as auxiliaries to other remedies, they act with decided benefit in 
“alleviating or subduing the virulence of many inveterate maladies. In gout and rheumatism, 
“Under their manifold complications ; in disorders of the nervous functions, and the distressing 
results of palsy ; in cutaneous and scorbutic affections ; in glandular enlargements and scrofu- 
‘Tous tumours, inducing a liability to wasting and decline in the young ; in general debility and 
indigestion ; and, in tender constitutions pre-disposing to consumption, whether administered 
nternally or externally, a regular course of these Waters is generally attended with great ad- 
antage and success. ‘They may be exhibited also as an invigorating restorative to the system, 
hen depressed by an excess of corporeal or mental exertion. Immersion in them, if rightly 
imed and regulated, and at the degree of temperature required by peculiar circumstances, in- 
variably produces a re-action of the vital powers, most favourable to the conservation of 
alth and the prevention of disease. 
ANALYSIS OF THE Waters, by ANDREW Une, M.D., F.R.S. 
One Imperial Gallon, consisting of 70.689 grains, includes, 
GRAINS, 
MIITIGOL CAIONIS «.; 3-4. ¢iaoipvaseecoralceos savin dectoe ts Rebrasticodse serge acaceey heaMarhee tee erae 851.2 
Bhloride of Magresium.........+.0.+sessssscteccessssssvossesssssersssecesanssevesseetecsersensaan avs 16,0 
hloride of Sodium ...........see0c0+0- Ggtit tet eeeneeaesascaeesccsnsereassensortaetaeenatenegenansess 3700.5 
MR fe EXOLOCHIOYICG.s.0c.sue ce xeces saves sinehtvarsedeedaedunucerededes detews A U7ACE.. 08s ecee-. 
bromides of Sodium and Magnesium. ..........ccssescsssersevscorersoesessorscceessorssssereoesnns 8.0 
The above eight grains of Bromides are equivalent to six grains of Bromine. 
