University of South Carolina Libraries
THE JOURNAL." Camden, April 8,1880 FIR E. A few minutes after four o'clock on the afternoon of last Tuesday, the Gili iust0 the citizens our town were rudclj Startled from their after dinner ruminations by the alarm of fire. The flames tfere discovered in full headway amonp some old, dry wooden buildings in rcai of the principal business part of the town. The fire companies and the citizens generally turned out in full force and put forth the most strenuous anc well directed efforts to arrest the pro gress of the destructive clement. This is always done, but more especially die all feel called on to acton this occasion perceiving as they did, the iinuiinen danger of destruction, which threatenec the whole of the chief block on Broac street. For some time the issue of th< contest was donb'ful, tho fire buruin< fiercely, close in the rear of severa stores. But at the most critical mo ment, the wind sprung up from a favor able quarter, blowiug the flaurs fron the buildings most in danger, enable* the firemen to get them under thei control. Tho fire is thought to haw orignatcd in a stable in the rear of tin builofing owned by Mr. Wm. JoilNSON Whether it was accident or not, wi cannot say, but are inclined to believ that it was. The place and the tim< preclude thc idea that any one wishin; to destroy the town, or get an opportu ?ity for plunder, should have chcsci sach an unseasonable hour. The bacl yards of all the stores arc, more or less filled with rubbish, and crowded will old, rotten sheds, so that a spark fallinj in some places would be sufficient t cause an alarming conflagration. It i fortunate that the fire occurred when i did and burnt up what has long been ; source of apprehension to many. If i Bad broken out at night, when the wint was high, the consequences might hav< been ruinous. As it was, no propcrt; of any great value was destroyed. Thi thanks of those, whose property wa most iroperillcd? are dae to the firemei white and colored, for their heroic ef forts. The industry of the colored citizen was most commendable and is fully ap .predated by all who have the intercs of our town at heart. SOUTHERN MANUFACTURES. Every day wo discover new evidence of the rapid increase of the inanufactu ringiuterest of the South. To day th< Journal contains the card of Mr. P P. Toale of Charleston, an cxtensivi manufacturer of sashes, blinds, door and house trimmings of every descrip tioo. From Messrs. Walker, Evans, <S Cogswell, the enterprisirg printer; and publishers of Charleston, we hav( received specimens of their ruled Lettci Head Paper, with a list of their whole sale prices of a variety of other station ary, which we find, upon comparisor with northern prises, in favor of thesi gentlemen. Let us encourage home manufactures. Call at our office ant examine specimens and prices. FOR THE JOURNAL THOUGHTS ON SPRING. When Spring comes laughing in with flowers And fragrance floats from every tree, And birds in their sequestered bowers, Chant forth their dulcet melody, Who would not raise n cheerful voice To Him who brings the seasons round, While nature smiles and all rejoice, Can there a heart that's sad be found. Spring coraeth gently, softly, roving ]y?her fairy breezes whisper throagl the budding leaves?sweetly the; breathe an under tone of melody, am: join the myriad songsters of the woo: in fresh glad notes of joy and praise while every zephyr, as it dies away leaves its rich load of perfume on tin genial air. Slowly the mists of morn ing rise above the earth, and float awaj ra vaporing masses towards the horizot of the glowing shy. The bursting bud: ana flowers spartle with the mynac gems the angel hath shaken from his roseate wings, and light, And life, anc hope seen springing upon earth, yet i: the spring time sad?sadder far time the chilly autumn days or the cold bleak winds of wiuter. Change con:ctli to all things?and most of all to tin hearts idol, and oh! when all else c: earth rejoicetn in the light of the Spring time, then most of all do we "turn frou all it brought, to all it cannot bring.' It may be we have laid the dust upor the sunny brow, or folded baby liandi in breathless, dreamless slumber. I may be, we have seen the coffin and tlx pall shroud from our gaze forms we Lav* remembered since childhood's hours, or yielded to the graves' embrace the strong, the wise, the neb'e and tlm good, those, who in life's early morning left all, to cleave to us forcvcrmore?who have gone hand in hand with u;i over the rough places, and the thorny ways of life; who have shared our joys, aud ; mourned in bitter anguish for our sor rows. Whatebr it be, there isagravein every heart, but love is strong, stiongei ' than death, and memory liveth forever more; whenever the dirge's wail sounds ! in our cars, its'all th^same, we bury deejour treasure, we cover its tomb wi'h the ' altar where no flatnc burns, and wrcatht | it with imrnotelles from niemorys gar den?we suffer no stranger hands tt J deck its mound, no stranger form t( i ' ? 1 linger beside our. dead, but wc gaze ir ' silent anguish on its ruin, and robe oui 1 hearts in sackcloth for its fall. Oh litii | in the spring time that these thought! I come; we can bear sorrows alone?w< B can crush the yearning for sympathy ? where our hearts are heavy with thcii ' weight of woe, and the world is dark ant dreary around us. Few live on earth whe know not what it is to suffer and be si II lent, but it is bard to feci wc may noi share our joys, that months and yean r must run their appointed course anc c each bright springtime bring its budi c of beauty and its gentle breezes wooing us to joy, and yet its light shall ncvci e come again for those whom wc hav< B loved; yet the Spring doeth its work e and we too have ours?lit us make i ? spriDg time in our souls, and bid Jov? " and charity bring forth their choiccsi 1 buds for the garlands of those arouik 4 us. Let us cull bright flowers of hop< > for the sinking spirit, and whisper/ii/7/ 1 to the aching heart, and then shall tlx angel of peace spread his wings above 0 us also, and the gentle, budding, tunc s ful spring time, be no longer sad. anc 1 when the day light fadetli, and lonj 1 shadows tell that the evening couicth 1 when the night falleth upou the vallej ' of death, and we stay our weary foi t " steps, and fold our busy hands for theii ^ last long rest, thai, beyond the grea e waters, in the land that is very far off s where the storm never conjcth, anc * hope never fadetli, there where our losi ones dwell, we too shall rest forever more. s It is but a little while, and tlx Spring flowers shall Lh pin upon oui ' graves, and the sunshine of suminej _ ii >xwt?rrnrt^TTfiTd the IiTkii frost of autumn shall scatter them afar and we shall heed them not, if so, w< s can leave a completed life, for then olmll rv.-? titflinra lliA K?nnfirii BUUI1 nv wv tfiiviv W>uumu melts not away." M. B The Georgia Wheat Chop.?Tin 3 Rome (Ga) Cumme cud, of Sunday, says that the wheat crop iu that section is looking fine. No accident occurring : between this and harvest, a full crop is 3 expected. Up to the present date, the J fruit crop has not been injured. Farm r ers are planting corn and with unusual " care. Cotton planting has not com menccd with us. About the same area 1 of land will be planted this as last year ! SENATOR SCRAG CM ON TIIF WAR PATII. When, sonic months ago, Scnatoi Spraguc, of Rhode Island, came down to South Carolina, bought the Columbia canal and declared that he was willing to lead the revolution which must take place in cotton spinning in America, it was not dreamed that he would he the first Republican senator to point out the brazen armor of his party, oi that the subversion of this government was in more danger from a body consM tuted as the Senate than from anyothei - source. And yet this, and more, Sen , ator Spraguc has done. With a boldness which we cannot but admire he has defied without, betraying his party, 1 1 1 * . .1 __ i? li* arm is Known 10-uay as a ncpnuiicai 1 whose devotion to the Union is unqucs ; tioncd, but wlio Ins been able at last it see the curraption, the blunders and the crimes of Radicalism, and, seeing has the courage to denounce. At the first swing of the tomahawk, I he made a sensation by declaring thai i there were too many lawyers in tlie go . vernuicnt fur the public good. Of the j sixty-six members of the Senate, fortyfive were lawyers and live others re5 ceivod a legal education. There was a I surfeit of Jejtal lore, and the Rhode Isj land senator seemed to wish that he ! were a Czar Peter so that lie might put . a speedy end to the quibbling and special pleading which now take the place 1 of statecraft. And this was but the be; ginning; for in regard to slavery lit f made this remarkable admission : "The mainspring of our prosperity had been slavery and foreign immigra1 tion. The former hud stimulated the growth of cotton and made it un Amcri iean inoiioply, and so had built up the j manufacturing and commercial and railroad interest of the N"rth, and tliex: had. in turn, invited and grown upon - t'mn^11 immigration " ; It was, however, in reviewing the consequences o?' the war that S< n it Sprague spoke most emphatically at pointedly . Ho said : "I for one, in looking back upon tl past listory of this country?and t people, whatever pliilosophcrS^Bay sa will couie to the same conclusion th conic to believe that your war has n been won for the liberties ufany class peop'e ; your war that you have jt partially concluded has had no big i virtui us principle at the bottom ol It has not had simple contentions I power, lor place, and for occupatic commencing here in this body and pe ctrating throughout the country." 1 And again: : ''You have, by the contentions begi nirnr tiorn fhmilcrll tho !l 111 hi t i OP O? t '""h "vl,l "."""pi" ? -cla^s of men, built up two powerful I dies of people; audjfou have built th< up fur a purpose, that they might un with your owti ambitious ends fur offi and place, and power; and you ha gone from here to your respective p< pies, both North and South, in order create great opportunities, that y might go on in that way prospering employment and in office. You fight against titles and aristoc cies. There never were titles and at tocracies that exercised the oomph power and jurisdiction over every ththat concerned a people that is not c< ccntratcd in this body to-day. Sir, all have studied the results the Inquisition, commencing with t fourth C'ntury and ending in this. (. noxious and cruel as the result of tl action suggests itself to every nia; mind, I do not believe that its acti caused more anxiety more trouble, un terror, tliau the acts of Congress appli I ?l,n rw./.rJn flllriltrr llm wnr. hi I" ? "? |"WJ..V ......... , ' North and South, and sineo the vi t ended." ; To those words we could add but 1 ^ tie; for they repeat what has been s; . in tiic South a thousand times, in rcga i to the war itself and the. political pal - which has ruled the country durir gt 11 last nine years. And if any proof wi ? needed of the excesses of parry don: , ion, it is found in the fact that a I publican senator repudiates and c< deinns them from Alpha to Omega, fn 1 first to last. ; The sound sor.se of which Srnal Sprauue gave evidence in his vi>it the South, is now guiding his action a legislator. As a man of largo mea as a manufacturer interested in the pr r p/'riry of the whole country, he has < t sired to see the expenses of the govc tnent reduced, its revcnu< s honestly c | ! lected, and its disbursements so I ranir'd as to give ease to the money in 1 i kef,?not for speculative ourpo es. 1 j for business and investment. There j but one barrier in the way, and thai , j that intolerant,"Selfish, malignant Kn j calisui, anaitisL whiel. Ue haa i?ikiuL voice. While the senatorial and rep cLi.i ir-ting* control legislati hi. t r | masses must and will snfF? r. We h: ! no faith in half cures; but Sena 4 Spraguo may, if he persevere, sha his party into some show of justice a 1 generosity I Whatever the result, we believe :1 tlie condemnation of radicalism whi Senator Spraguu has pronounced, w . be concurred in and sustained by t people in general; and we of the Son ' j may, in any event, find someconsolati I j in the fact that oar day of absolnti : must have come when a Nr\v En^la i | llepulican declares that slavery was t , mainspring of America; that in t i North there was no virfuou* prin?*ij at the bottom of the war; the acts ' I Congress applied to the people b> j Nortli and South, and since the w II has ended, caused as much anxie j trouble end t rror as the famous Inij ' silion;: lid that the war mux not iron ; the liberties of any pe <p 'e. L ha r lex'oh Xcics. i Found Dead.?The body of Willi; . I Bowers, whom we noticed as liavi . niysteriously disappeared seven wet I; a_'o, was found on Inst Saturday in lb . | Cr< ek, about a half mile below the hrid | on the L'iiHiUeu ri'.-iu, ana in a i< w m [ I dred yards o! "McKcnnaVr neg.o <ju . ler. Tlie Coroner, W 31. Adams, E: I empantie^ed a jury and proceeded tot . spot late in the evening, hut at the si r rostion of the physicians, a guard v . placed over the body and the jury d . missed until the following nnrni . (Sunday.) Drs. Wylic, White, Uei ham and Wilherspoou made a post im i t'-m examination of the body. T . testimony before the jury occupied t , greater part of Sunday, ami on aecnti I of flic ahscence of material witnew the Court adjourned over until Wedu day at 1- ni. The evidence of the physicians ?;o > establish, almost beyond doubt, that t . deceased was murdered. .Cousideral , interest is mainifested in the proem irigs. \\ e may publish the most impn ant points in the evidence in our m , | issue, if thought prop r to give publi ty.?Ijiincash r Jjrdyv. MUS. J. W. KODGKRi WILL open her Spring importation French J'ATTKHNS, HATS, J}() NETS, LACES, FLOWERS a TKlM MINUS of the Latest Stylo. Tuesday the ldth inst, at 11 o'ck A. M. Anvil 8. It* ? " " MAS JNIC, _ THH Regular Communication <fK i >haw Jjudjc No. 29, A.'. F.\ AJ,, v ho held at their Lod^e Room o.i Tu d.-iy tlii! loth April, inst at 12 o'ciu A!., J. A. SCiiROCK, iSe'cy. A CARD; u' We the undersigned citizeus be; leave to tender our thanks to the Fire ':e men, both white and colored, also th 'ie citizens both ladies and gentlemen, fo J' their gallaut couduct at the fire of Apri at 6th in>t. Had it. nn' honn fnr vrmr nv^rtinna t arrest the mad flames, many building ,st now stundinL', Arould be in ashes. K CHAS. El,IAS. TI10S. SOANLON. r"r W. JOHNSON. ??. BUKNS & BOS WELL. WITKOSKY & IIYAMS. MATILDA WILSON. AprilS. It. P. I\ TO ALE, )0" Charleston, .S. C., Manufacturer of He DOOilS, SASIL ILI.XDS. )Dof Note.?Wo would call the particular n j)e tenlinfi of our frienUs to the above caid. .. I'. Toale has a large Factory, and ouch f ici ities as enable hiu: to- -upply the best work mt his own make at low prices, a very large ai n's complete assortment always <>n h ,.i<l at h on actorv. Hi tRLBKC I'S 'All ARF, near tl North Eastern Rail R 'ad Depot, J CHARLESTON, S. C. ;th N. B.?Old r front th country solicit!) rur an<l strict ait n:ion j ai?l to shipping in got order. April 8?ly. Walker, Evans & Cogswel STATIONERS, PRINTER! 1,0 AN0 BLANK BOOK '? MANUFACTURE US, {e' No 3 BKOA D-ST REET, to)DI AND No TOO East Bay Strekt, tor CHARLESTON S. (i. 186 9. OS rt SPUING G08DS ol AT'T)OX A LI) A*. M'UURir jut r ,n the i'lTblic Uiii.oic Variety i ! Is Spring aud Summer Good IS ... j: Embracing everytliirig kept in a reft \. ^ t re, w 11: uh w t II ' ? * "I I it til" llfflTC rc figures fur Cash. J'liey luvici; parncul }JC attention tu the following specinlitie 've LADIES' DRESS GOODS, [HI FANCY GOODS AN u*i TRIMMINGS, . MOOTS AND SHOE lat ,.|| HARDWARE, CKO KKKY, AN ril! glassware. X -READY MADE CLOTHING. 00 Als'i Gents' IIATS of every deseri "" lion arid af price.0 11 suit till, "d Feeling satisfied that our Stock he Goods is equal to any other hou-e. he prices and styles, we r.*s .ec>fully in* i pm old customers and I'ricads to exami d the same, and to bring al >ng with the 'h all their neighbors and friends -;?r Mcdonald & mccurry 'y, Aprils. tf Ul for UNITED STATES I XT K UN A L RKVEXITI A-scssor's Office, 1st Dist., S C. lil'.NNETTSVILI.B, Mar. 31, IS 09. Til 10 Assessor will atrmid, in the tow ks l''oren<'e- S. . on Muud.y the 19i day of ApFil, t'?>r the purpose of rccoi .rt. i"o i,,1(l detcrmininj: Appeals, relati '7 to any erroneous or excessive valuation in- J , ar ' assC8s,,,<'"^*? or enumerations by tl Assistant Assessors returned in the liU Annual Lists, for 1SH9. Appeal-t" I J r made in writlmr, and to specify the pa ^ ticular cause., matter or thinjr, r? spec iiry which a decision is icqnestecT, at *if state the ground, or principle of erru i~ complained of. ;irl ' C. W. DUDLEY, l0 April 8.?It Assessor. ? KERSHAW? n EquiTyT <es W. K. Johnson, President, W 1>. M es- Dowall, et. al. Directors of the ^ Hunk of Camdeu, S. C. I ' v*' I The Hank of Camden, S C , Join*. Fr 5,J. ser & Co., J. II. Carson, et al. rt- IT appearing to my satisfaction that , ?xt II. Carson, Robert Wilson, Mai ici- Hanks, Kx'ix of h. H. Hanks, J. & ' Green, Amelia llaile, Kx'ix.. Kdwaj w llaile, T. K. llaile, CJuinbus Hail ^ Kx'ors of H. llaile, sr., d ceased, d . fendants in the above s'atcd case, r J! side without tin. lunifs of tl.is State, i J J motion of J. 11. Kershaw, complaiuan I iV'iicitor, it is ordered thai they r I plead, answer or demur to tlie said 15 of Complaint within forty days, or d crce pro coufcsso will he entered ajrain them C. SillVKIt, Clerk. Clerk's Office, April 7. 1 Still er_ Self-Raising Flour. ill QAA packages of JI0W KLIi B110I l fc* ivl/U celebrated Self Leavening, ( ck Self-Raising Flour, just received Ti 'it. JAMES JONES. Office of Udolpho Wolfe, S Sole Importer of Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps> r No. 22, Beaver-street, u New Yokk, November 3, 18G8. To the People of the Mouth. 0 WHEN THE PURE MEDICINAL ;s RES lOKA'l 1VE, now so widely known as WOLFE'S SCHIEDAM SCHNAPPS, wub iutroduced iuto the .world under the endorsement ot lour thousand leading members ot the uudical profession some twenty years ago, its proprietor was well aware that it eouid not wholly cscipc the penalty att.'wlwil to nil now and usetul ureuara - tious. lie, therefore, endeavored to invest it with strongest possible safeguard against counterfeiters, and to render all attempts to pirate it oitiieult and dangerous. it was submitted to distinguished- chemists lor analysis, and pronounced by theiu the purest spirit evi-r manufactured. Its purity and properties having been thus ascertained, samples of the article were forwarded to ten thousand physicians, including all the luuuiug practitioners in the United States, lor tlic purposes of experiment. A ciieular, requesting a tnai ot the preparation and a tepurt of the result, accompanied each specimen. l'uur thousand of the most eminent medical meu in ihe Union promptly responded. 1^* Their opinions of the article were unaoI. imously favorable. Sueli a preparation ol tin y said, had long been wanted by i lie >,d profession,, as no reliance could be placed on the ordinary liquors-of commerce, ull of which were more or less adulterated, and therefore unlit for medical purposes. The peculiar excel '1. I .ilri.ii.rtll of rlinoil lit illllMit!!'. )d ?? w-- ? j-?k - i which loriui'd one uf the principal in_ gradients of the Schnapps, together with au unalloyed char act- r of the alcof hoi element, give it, in tlio estimation ) of the faculty, a murk eel superiorly over every other diffusive stimulant a: diur. tic, totiic and restorative. These satisfactory credentials from professional uicn of the highest rank, were publish- d in a condensed form and enclosed wiih each bottle of the Schnapps; as one of its genuineness ? Oher precautions against fraud wen also adopted; a patent was obtained foi ? the article, the label was cop)righted, i jnc simile of the proprieties autograpl signature was attached to each labclum Cover, his name and that of the population we're scab d with his private seal No article tiad ever been sold in thi: couutry under the name ot iSchiittpp: prior to the introduction <f Wolfe': Schiedam Arouiatie Schnapps, in 1S:j> 1 and the label was deposited, as his truth S, mark, in the United District Court foi the Southern District of New York du til . . ring that year. It w.itfht bo yii;ipoaed Uy pcr-mi.' uu aci|Uainted with the daring charactero the pirates who prey upon the reputa | rion oi honorable merchants by vendb i I i i . .. .... i i... , ? p UUIUIfriUUi? IIJKMI UIJ'IL-I inun Uiiii.v, I II. the protectiuiis so carefully thrown a round these Schnapps w<u.d have pre v eluded the introductions and sale o counterfeits Tltey sceui. In?wevcrr nnl> to have stimulated the rapacity of iin ( ostois. The trade mark of the pro prictor Ins beet) stolen; the indorse incut which his Schiedam Aromatic p- Schnapps alone received fr.'tu the u<edi ual profession Ins been claimed hy men o daeioit" humbugs; his labels and bottle; ii have been imilated, his adveiti.iemcit: it paraphrased, his circulars copied, ane wur.-o than all, d.rhoiioiable retailer.in after disposing of the genuine content: of his bottles have lilted thetn tip will common gin, 'he most deleterious ul all liquors, and thus made his name am ? brand a cover f>.r poison. The public, the medical profession ^ and tlic sick, lor whom the Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps is prescribed as a retm dy, are equally interested with tin propiietor in the detection and supprcs 'J1 siuu of these nefarious practices. Tin i/eiiiiiiie article, munuiaetured at the establishment of tli? uu-ieisigned in 5,1 Schiedam, Holland, is distilled IV mi a ' barley of the finest quality, and flavored with an essential extract of the ir berry of the Italiun j.uniper, of unequal" letWpurity. I>y a pruoess unknown in the preparation ot any liquor, it i? freed from every ucrimouiuus and Cor1 rosivc element. Complaints have been received from the loading physicians and families in Southern plates of the sale ot cheaj imila'ions ot the Schiedam Aiumatn Schnapps iu those markets ; and traveller who are in the habit ot using it a; c" an antidote to the baneful influence u! unwholesome river water, testify thai cheap oil), put up in Schnupp bottles, is frequently palmed oil upon the uu a_ wary. The agents of the undersigned have been requested to institute inquiries on the subject, and to forward l< J- liiui the names of such parties as the) r.V may ascertain to be engaged in tin " atrociou- system of decepfi u. In eon elusion, the undersigned would suy thai he has produced, from under the liamb of the most distinguished men ofscienet (!" in America, proofs unanswerable uf tin " purity and medicinal excellence of tin ,s Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps; that 1:? )" lias expended many thousand dollars ii surrounding it with guarantees am safeguards, which he designed should st protect the public and himself agaius' Irauiliil ntiinitiitioiis; that tie has.-iiowi it to bo (lie only liquor in the world ~ that can bo uniformly depended upon as unadulterated; that, lie has challenged 3. investigu'ion, analysis, comparison and ar experiment in all its forms; and from y every ordeal the preparation which bears his name, seal and trade mark, has . "> cotno off triumphant. He, therefore feels it a duty he owes to his fellow-citizens {generally, to the medical profession and the sick, to denounce aod expose the charlatans who counterfeit those evidences of identity, and he calls* upon the press and the public to aid him iu his efforts to reuiedv so great an evil. The following letters and certificates from the loading physioiuns and chemists of this city will prove to the reader that all goods soki by the, uttjdenjigijed are all tliey are represented to bef UDOLDJIO WOLF., I feel bound to say, that J regard your Schnapps as being iw'every respect. pie-eniinently pure, and deserving of medical patronage. At all events, it is the purest possible article of.iiol' land Gin, heretofore unobtainable! and as such may be safely prescribed'by physicians. . DAVID 1. MO'iT, M. jL m|||| l harmaccntical Chemist, N. Yv 26 PlNE-STRRtfT, N ?., Wsffiiii November 21, Udolpho Wole, Esq., tretad4\% Dmr Sir?I have made, a chemical examination of a sample of your Schic ^Ke|l? dam Schnapps, with them tent oif de' termining il any foreign of injurious ?lSm| substance had been added to the simple distilled spirit**' . The examination has resulted in the 91|| coriclu.-iun that the sample contained no poisonous or harmful admixture. I have been unable to-discover any trace h of the deleterious substances whieh are ".ji? emp'oyed in the aduLteratieo of liquors. 'iM I would not hesitate to uso myselt or to -ftp recommend to others, fur medicinal pur- <8 posi s, tho Schiedam Schnapps as an 1 excellent and unobjectionable variety of'gin Very respectfully yours,, -r (Signed,) CHAS A. SKELY, Chemist. New York, No. 53 (Ydaivat-jf November 26, 18671 ? Uoor.ruo Wolfe. Esq., Present: D< iir Sir?1 have submitted to aheniion 1 analysis two bottles- of "Schiedam Schnapps," which I took, from a fresh package in your bonded warehouse, and find, as before, that the spirituous li- f quor is free from injurious ingredients1 or falsification; that it has the marks of J being aged and nut recently preparedl>y mechanical admixture of a'cohol aud. aroma tics " lte-pectfuJly. FUEL'. F. MAYER, Chemist.. New Youk, Tuesday, May 1, rnohpiio VVoi.fe, Esq.: Ih-nr Sir?The want.of pnrc Wines' and Liquors lor medicinal purposes has- been h^-g felt by the profession, thousands of lives hare been sacrificed* by the miaduitcrated articles. Delirium tremens. iitiB oTRer di-ca*es of the 1 brain and nerves so rife in this eouiriryr j an-very rare in Europe, nwitig, .in a> j great d-gire, to the difference "in th* | purity of-the spiiits sold. Wo have tested the several articles* imported and sold hy you, including' y<<iir Gin, which you sell under the name of Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps, which we consider justly entitled to the hLh repu-'atioii it lias acquired in this' ci'Uii ry; and t'r-?Ui y? ur long experience' ! as a foicign importer, your Bottled j Wiins and Liquors should meet with. | the same demand. We would rei-ommend you ro appofnC some of the respectable apothecaries in different parts of the city as agents for i the sale of you-r Brandies and Wines, wh *re the profession c.m obtain the ' J same when needed for medicinal purpo I I "C9- .. j U ishiag you success in your new em turj rist?, wo rciuuiiiy > Your ulu client servants, 1 VALENTINE .MOTT, 31 D., Profes1 fcur wf Sui^ory, University Medical ! College, Now Y??rk. J. M. CAKNOCU AN, M. D., Profes! sor of Ulinica SursyTyr Sotycou-in. Chief to the State Hospital, &c.? No. 1 1+ East Sixteen'!i street1 LEW IS A. SAYUE, 31. 31, No 795 Urondtrav. H. P. DkWEES, 31. D., x\o. 791 15road way. 1 JOS. WOUSTER, 31. D., .No 120 Ninth street. NELSON STEELE, M. D., No. 37 Bloeker-strect. i JOHN 0'Ri'.ILLY, 31. D.r No. 230 i Pynrth street.. 13. I KAPHA EL, M. D>., Pmfessorof : the Principles and Surgery, New York 3J<'dieal' College, &c., No. 91 Niuth' street, and others. L The Proprietor also offers for sale, , BOTTLE I) WIN ES & LIQUORS', j Imported and bottled by himself, exI pressly for medicinal use.. Each bottle has his certificate ot its purity. UDOLPHO WOLFEPec. 31. . 3m ! DENTISTRY. i I. H. ALEXANDER, J DENTIST. ] ! TEETH Cleaned, Filled, Extracted, 4 and Artificial Teeth, inserted iu the '! LATEST IMP HOVE P STYLE, for : J tlie LOWEST OASII PRICES, i | Patients waited upun at their resU I ! dense if requ-'ted. I j Office, on Broad Street, above J. M. ' | Legrand's Jewelry shop. !i "KiYncE. i HAVING rented the plantation of I Juhu A IVny, I strictly forbid all perI sons from hunting or fishing on any i portion of said plantation from this i date, without niv permission, i JOHN JACKSON. - i