Obituary. , 209 



family, who almost adored him for his merits and his 

 worth, in the various relations of husband, father, bro- 

 ther, master, his death is a loss irretrievable. The 

 writer of this tribute to the memory of an excellent 

 member of society, feels and acknowledges, in this re- 

 cent removal of another of his medical friends, a new 

 diminution of the quantity of his happiness. He begs 

 leave to mingle this feeble estimate of the merits of 

 Daniel Conrad, with the more just, the infinitely 

 more eloquent and impressive, tributes that are paid to 

 his talents, his virtues, and his usefulness, by the tears 

 or regrets of thousands. 



B. 



