University of South Carolina Libraries
THE JOUKNAL." Thursday', January 21, 1809. KELIGIOUS. Rev. James McDowell has been preaching in tlio Presbyterian Church at this place for several days past, commencing last Friday evening. The thanks of our community arc certainly due to him J'ur the readiness with which lie has consented to continue his ministrations among us. It has seldom been our privilege to lisicn to a more- car-, npsf .mil interesting? divine, and we were MV*'" *"**" " * " O . ' glad to see so many io aficndance during the evenings of the week, in spito of the fatigues and cares of business.? Those who have heard him, will certainly remember, for many a day, the able and touching manner in which lie acts as an ambassador for God. The effects of his sermons n;uit be lastingand beneficial. Great and solemn truths uttered by a man who feels, and makes his hearers feel their importance, eaunot fall powerless to the ground. Those who staid away, have lost :t great opportunity. If Mr. McDowell continues to preach, wc hope our people will turn out generally to hear him. Wc hope lie may Javor our town with frequent visits. * " EST" Shall we have an Agricultural So" cicty in Kershaw ? What say the planters to having a meeting on the first Monday in February for the purpose of forming one ? INCOMPLETE LEGISLATION. The legislation of the Slate, under the new government, presents many new and anomalous features. It is apparently modeled after existing systems, but as a whole, 'does l ot seem to be derived from any one homogeneous source. The consequence is that in incorporating laws 0/Massachusetts and New York with existing laws of South Carolina into one body of jurisprudence, there necessarily results an imperfect piece of patchwork, not adapted (0 the w>nts of the community. For instance, the remedy by distress for rent has been abolished, and no remedy is left the landlord except that provided for the goo.orc.1 arc .IL-oc- '1'l.c -jvrC jtr-r-utjs lrliu % rent houses os a genera 1 ride, ore not property holders, but persons in bumble circumstances. In nine cases out of ten, under tbo botiUy-tcad exemptions --iv. ...ill. l.. 1. . 1.,. ,.1 HOI it i ir.*' rumu I'; iiuiuc uj i? ?? ? i'iuvvvuings such persons. The landlord knowing this in advance, must cither demand security for the rcnfpin the first instance, or depend entirely upon the integrity of the tenant and his d.tily success hi hn-?uo<-s. In the present condition of the people, very few tenants can" give the vcfjtiircd security, and very few landlords are willing to rent their properly without it. The remedy hy distress was very seldom resorted to in practice heretofore, but its existence was a security to the landlord, operating to procure punctuality in tiie payment of the rents, and facilitating the poor in procuring houses -to shelter them. Of all other investments of money. that iu lauds and buildings ought to be rendered the most secure, and in all civilized countries, the laws have bccu so framed as to pvmotc that end. The large majority of the people in any country, must consist of those who own no lands and houses, yet they should have a roof to shelter them. Hut if there be no inducements to capitalists to build and rent bouses to the poor, bow are tlicy to be supplied ? The law of the Slate of Xcw Voile, after which this of ours is modeled, abolishes tho remedy by distress, but substitutes that by attachment. a rcmcdv more f?mnlc and quite as efficient. Our legislated s content themselves with abolishing the one remedy, in J substitu ing no other. TVe do rot consider t'uitour attachment'aw can he applied to the collection of rent in ordinary cases. Again, the laws have abolished imprisonment for debt. This is in accordance with the humanitarian sentiments of the age and meets with our entire approval. But", simply to relieve the unfortunate debtor, without providing the creditor any means of coercing the dishonest debtor to pay, is to offer a premium to fraud and to victimize the innocent, and generous creditor, whose property has j asscd into the pockets of the protected defaulter. I 1 ' " As the law row elands, a debtor might be a millionaire, live in a first class hotel, lavish thousands on his pleasures and pursuits, and yet snap bis fingers in defiance of the tailor whose clothes he wore. If his money is not invested in visible, tangible property, such as may lie levied under execution, there | for is no way of reaching him. The laws I of of other States where imprisonment ? r J?c debt has been abolished, provide otlicr means of making debtors dis- an, gorge their money to satisfy their just im debts, and the system is obviously aud 11' ruinously incomplete without them.? *'1( . . , Rfo Just in proportion as the creditor is jt^ afforded facilities for enforcing his dc- thi mands arc the facilities afforded the to poor to procure the necessaries and convcnicnees of life on credit, when the , _,i ^ lCllUJ IliL'iiu* iiru wuiii/iij;, vim f|j( law obstructing tlie <ollcciion of debts, vi< is at llie expense of those whose ncccssi- pt| ties force them at times to depend upon credit for their supplies. * That is but j ' a bastard humanity which cheats and {]< cajoles the poor,.by a legislation, appa- pe rcntly in flicir interest, but in rcaiity depriving them of the credit to which ... ce tlicir necessities compel them often to rc.-ort for food," raiment and shelter, tu Under these laws the rich only cau en- to joy the advantages of credit. The very class of all others to which it is wholly unncossary if not injurious. Let our m. legislature consider these things and tic give us better laws. * * P? to FEUTILIZEIi. ,U1 Tl Wc call attention of fanners and plan- :l]] Icrs to the advertisement of Messrs. ca I>au.m Bio., agents of Zell's Am MoMATED Sll I'KR-l'iJOSPIl ATE. TIlCV liavc .< 1 I"1 cerhlteuks from poisons well known hi iliis community, who have used the \\' fcrtiliz r the past year, both on corn O'l and cotton, who express entire satisfuc- j'" lion with their experiments. ' re | LODGED IN JAIL. ^ en Nelson McLean, afias Frank Tatter- wl son who was arrested near Chcraw a week '?i or two aero, having in possc-sion a mule stolen from a wagoner in this Distvicf> c'(, was brought over on Monday evening tci last, by Constable Gray, and lodged in it the jail of this place. Harmon Jones, ni; who.was in his company with a stoleD ^ horse, is still at large. " IVi for. 1 ii e camden journal. ul Mr. Editor : Please oblige the lei great cause of Bible distribution by tu ' 1 publishing the folhwing Circular.? 1 * fl|) Bibles and Testaments in all language ..p rim be furnlsiieit liy < 1?r? <mm: Bible Society for tlislribution according <111 to I he terms of the Circular. ' i?" Yours truly, E. A. DOLLES. Edg.-fit Id C.'H.j Jan. 8,1SG0. * CIRCULAR. To the Officers of tub Bible So- ? br clel'if.s and others co-oi'ettating with tile American Bible Socie- ni; ty in h'outii CaQOLIXA. I >ka u 13 it kt 11r e .v: Permit nie to dimet your attention to the following im- ^',l jtortant instructions from I lie Secrctarics of the Amciican Bible Society. ca Bible Ilouse, Astor Place, New York '1> city. "The Committee on Distribution 1 avc instructed us to state that, hcrcaf- ;\j tcr they will expect all applications for CI grants of Books by Auxiliaries, and so of far as practicable all others, to receive the endorsement of the Agent from . whose State the requests arc made, to- th get her with full iuforuiatioa of the facts rci which enforce each case. They are Wl especially desirous (o know the extent S,( of destitution, the efforts made by applicants to help themselves, or to pay pC in part for Books received from our l?c- W pository, or to contribute to the cau?c, nj' the number and character of the population to be supplied, [and in line all ; j,c thai may assure the Committee of the on propriety of these requests." in To meet tue demand for the Word ^r' of Cod in this Slate, "the Auxiliaries wr are earnestly requested to increase their ^ efforts to raise funds for gratuitous work, and especially to forward without sh unnecessary delay all funds now in ev hand, or readily collected for Books or 2) . . .? * tin on donation account. Collections from Castors of Church- wl c.s, and from all friends of the Bible, to and contributions of any amount will be wr thankfully and duly acknowledged. Please address me at Columbia, S. _u 0., and it will afford me much pleasure Sai to serve you. Yours truly, At E. A. BO LEES. Aprnt American Bible Society for South Carolina. fa Columbia, S. C., Jan. Est, 1SG9 wr na In reference to the cotton bill intro- let duced in tlic Flitted Suites Senate by tui Senator Spencer, of Alabama, the New Orleans Tinus gays : nn The telegram published this morning Ci that a hill had been introduced into the M United Slates Senate, and referred to sh the Finance Uouiniittee, ostensibly for so "regulating the price and encouraging tic tlio production of coUod/' but really ui 1 n?*ain imposins; a la* on the stapla t.hvce cerit^ per pound, w.19 the sub' t of peneral remark in our cotton cir s. If the Government had the cash buy tlic entire crop oFthe country 1 pluce less on tlie market than w..> pcratively required by tlic demand :'ould control prices, or ot least force ;m up to a point at wliicli tliev woult p consumption. Gut where author for such a measure is to be found ir } Constitution, or where the money ii come from to control the crop, i uld be 'difficult to say. We apprebeni it the farmers of this bill had no ex elation of accomplishing the enact mtofunv law containing sue1) pro sions. Gut if, either from its con tutional defects or the poverty of it: asurv, the Government is unable l< iy the iole of the speculator, jt ba tb the power and will to impose tifxes ence tlic proposed tax of three cent r pound on all cotton not sold to tin easury agents,.with a drawback in fa r of manufacturers of two and a lu?l Qts per pound, means nii?chic jansanvlbing. It the cotton mwJrfnc vers can bp induced by this drawbac forctro all opposition to the tax. it nm passed as readily as the foriiicrtax wi ponied. The manufacturer-,-, as abodj :re in favor of repeal, because it w; iriifcst that tho tax restricted prndiu in; it was not only contrary to soun litical economy, lmt was prCjudici: their own particular interests by d ini.shing the supplies of raw materia ic result of the repeal has been acti y what was anticipated hy its advi tcs. It imparted a new impulse t c cultivation ol the staple; pivc prof lie employment to every ficcdman wi to labor, and probably increase e yield ten percent., or 250,000 hale 'hother we tnahc 2.500,000 or2.GO0 0 hales., the product will exceed h c amount we have stated what woul veliccn 'produced had the tax not bee pealed, fc'npp'isintr. tlteb. that the ol x had been maintained, and our pre' t cro[? were only 2,250.000 bales, i tat point would not pr'ccs have bee reed up hy the law of supply and d< ind'! Xo intelligent nianiifacfim n n fleet upon this subject without ill nwictiun that the surest means to lb: r Ids own branch of industry is to leav tree to obtain full supplies of the r e lterial at ihe cheapest niieC po*siM ill regard l?? the co>t of prodm-tini lot * lie v want, moreover, Is stcadinc d re.-nlavity in the trade, oxetn] on tin* H'ibe:<li hy perturbations whic mi l result iioui Governmental info: rrnce. In this matter the inimtifii; no* and the planter are built in I ores: in iiiaiii'ainii!!; iVoedoui of aeliot il s' linhl i:i nntied onrtosilv nM I nltcm;-**->^-*wnnmrl tJ~CPOtTnn t^il ",ui? i* t?i TTfe | V.?ilo( > ?MI of the T.i aterial or in the maitufacturcof it in! i." id. WRKCK OK TUI-: STKA.MSIJIK . GULF CITY. n.c survivors from the wreck of lli mmship wire, ycsterd ay tnorniiif ought into this port on board of th '. I1. C/yilc, from .New Yo.'k, eon indcd by 1). 1'. Morgan. From the mate of the Clyde and froi c unfortunate men themselves. w ve learned, full particulars. The 6V \ly was a steamship tl at plied bctwee ew York and Galveston Texas. Ii?. plain was James Stewart, who c fan ' lives fn Connecticut. Her owm is a New York ft nil about who. mcs some contradiction exists, lr e principal name ccotaed upon i r. James Mallory. The Gulf Hit c;fcd from New York about the ?2n November, and made a prosperou yugc to Galveston, which point sh ft New Year's day. .The lapse of tim tween the two dates would intimat at her trip was a delayed one. lie turn voyage as far as Key West wi thout incident, and she departe )tu that place Thursday, the 7th iusi iir w inds and a smooth sea were he rtion for a few days, and Kate aj ared to he in a propitious mood.itli Monday eaiue a tolerably bris le, and t lie night was dark and -cloudy iwards 8 or U o'clock, it bcearue in ssibleto control the direction of th ^sel and at 10 o'clock, she ran nslior the shoals of Cape Lookout, and was a Jew hours, dashed to pieces by th rakers. . At 2 o'clock, site wa* a complct cek, and the moans of the dying mic id with the clashing of the broke ubcrs, were [so terrible as to create udder iu the most resolute, and f okc a prayer from the most hardened II .was confusion, and each momen e gapiug,sen claimed its victim. Th ijority #iicre found a watery grave lilc others, clinging with desperatio the shattered, tiuuting pieces of th cek, escaped momentary death an re thus enabled to offer a few prayet i their agonized hearts ceased in thei Isations and their biuiscd bodic ok beneath the stormy waters of th :ln nt ic. Of twenty-five human beings, be ree remain to tell the sad story, an weep for the fate of their comrade: ;uong the number who were drownee is a passenger?a gentleman?wheme we could not ascertain. Man t families, and among others the Oaj in. The three men who were saved ar mcd, Patrick McCube, from Jerse ty, and Anthony Thomas and llcnr cCardle, from New York. When th ip was rent asunder, three men wcr 1* 1* 1 A fortunate as to Cling nruny 10 u jim jn of the deck. Their dangcruu! icertain lifeguard was nothiug sav i several planks nailed together, aud nut . more than ten feet wide. On this frail . craft they were to-scd about for forty i eight hours, without food or water, [ without means to steer their course, s without any promise of relief, and to, tally at the mercy of the treacherous waves. Five who bore them company, 1 gradually expired, and when the IK P. Clyde passed by, but three, half starved i men remained to receive the needed * succor. a l - At this time they were floating to1 wards the open sea, and were a dozen . miles from the scene of disaster. The - olliccrs 01 i no UH/nr report inc spot, as . oil'Cape Lookout, N. W., anil distant . twelve miles. This opportune relief * from drowning or starvation was on ^ Wednesday afternoon last at about 2 s o'clock. When carried on board the . Cli/(h the poor sailors were only pars tially c'ad, and were rapidly declining c under accumulating weakness. They . are now in this city, stopping at the I Seaman's Home, and show many signs I of the terrible ordeal through which . they have gone. It The cargo was principally cotton, and y we could not learn with certainty whes thcr or not it was insured. ; They desire us to return to the ofliiji ccrs and crew,of the W. 1*. C/j/ifr, their j. warmest and most grateful thanks, and ,] they speak in touching tones of the ,| kindness extended to them, i- The more than called lor humanity 1. of Capt. Morgan and crew deserves and t. will receive approbation from all. ). Wilmington ii/or. 0 1 Governor 1'ickkxs ?We are much |. pained to announce that ibisdisiin^uishi] od and much honored citizen of South ... Carolina, is lyinjr seij^us ly II, at f'al-ewood, his home, a mi^C iVom this vill -o. v 'l or two months Gov. Pjck*eiish:i9 heen | afflicted with siinc subtle nervous allocn lion, ol' which jrre.it dirticiiliy ofbreaih,] ing seems to he the chicl'initw.ird si.n. ... I)r. Hill, of our town, and Ihs. Caiuji,, hell ami Shiner, of August a, are in atn tendance upon him; and though they >. tie not consider 'he eace hy any trumps >r hopeless, yet they all concur in the opinio ion that it is a very curious and a critical one.?E(Jyjic!tl t 'r. c iv The c'ccii in v.h'eh came ofTin Ncivle berry I. ^t Touts ayl rsel din n, &< .. i. re iiheil in the choice of the llcmocrtio s ticket hy a majority of 200. Inrsehviil turn? ). M. iV'cisnn,-f. >1. Paxsinvcr, h ). 1'. Att'l Stirvcy-o'?(J. 31. ("Jii.nl*. tie.hi. ('.iiisia'de?II. 31. ]?lon-c. (Hoik ?T. 1. 11 .it-eal. The ivd'cal-j.olono j. *>0 votes and the 1 V-uiocrats LVi'h 'J! , i, L'r' nr." : V/o have never sen n ii more orderly a d unio* oJeoiiuii any* n Tfi-I'i;. Vi . .r ' 1...... I , .1. .... I . .1 tv icalsj we are told, voted an open I'cmoc r*c t'fhct. A correspondent of the Wa'balla (kmricrsays : "fn ISid, I phmlcdahout tlitre ipiarlcrs of an acre of poor new .round in tobacco, and realized one ,s hundred and forty dollars from the sales ' l.i ? r i . .i.i. . ? : ; ">? inrrroi, w.'siuc* iimii-.' 11 nm vrars my e -t.If. The same !;iinl would not yield o-orc than ten bushels of coin. I took I'-'in.-s in the selection of my seed :md 34 ilio cultivation of my crop." Take ^ nolo of litis. 11 IIas "Woman a Soul.?A Pe low in r Cincinnati, Ohio, ha* published a !* pamphlet, in which be attempts to 'r prove, 1j.#f lie Scriptures, that a woman c lias no .soul?that she wm* not designed ^ in, nor was she a part of the creation.' ls That man is the bigge-t fool* tlie sun V ever shone upon, and lie is entitled to a ^ premium for Ignorance and on I raucous IS slander. Woman is the best and lair0 est of creation, and if either sex is dcte void of soul, it certainly is man. In c fact we do know men, whom we have. 1 at times, deemed soulless; but never yet have we found a woman, no matter, what her position or station in life, who ^ did not, at times, give evidence of Ood:r like virtue, truili and charily. She blesses earth, is n ministering angel on ~ the merged load of life, and will adorn " (lie higiie-t station in the unexplored r' regions of futurity. Without licr crealion would have been a failure, earth a c blank, and Heaven would lose its charms e if deprived of her presence.?Nt w Era. e The Colored Convention, now in session in Washington', called upon Lungc stun, ''the intelligent contraband," for i- a speech Here is a part of what ho n said: '-The enemy of the colored man a is to be found in the North. The nc0 gro in The South has his rights, ean I* vide and hold office, but in the North t it is different." c A Galveston gentleman, lately slop' pinjt at tlie NichoNon House, Bastrop, was in a room recently occupied by ilie j Agent of the Frccdnicn's Bureau.? One evening, Tom, a freedman, entered the room to make a lire, and after doing bo sat down, crossed his legs and e made himself at home, smoking and spitting in the lire place. The Galves. toman n*kcd what lie meant by such 1 familiarity; Tom looked up in evident } surprise, and immediately arose, hat in j' hand, and, in his politiest manner, ^ said: "Beg pardon, Ma-sa! didn't know yon was a gcniinan ; thought you Hilil UW J # f I ##114*' O XXl'f l.uu. General Grant was met cam in cj out of e hishcnd(|nartcrs.stiinp-shoiihlcrod, hands y in his poelccts, look in jr as indifferent as y if he were not oppressed with the earns e ofa nation. A friend saluted him, "fr?toil e niorninjr, General." "Good mnrninjs." r- "General, you don't look as if you were j President of the United States. "X e ' ain't." no |/i ivi/i ?.-w ..... could not wholly escape the penalty attached to all new and useiul prepaiu- * lions. ilc, therefore, endeavored to ( invest it with strongest posatble sate- j guard against countertenors, and to j render alt attempts to pit ale it diilieult , and dangerous, it was submitted to uislinguishcd chemists lor aualysis, and ' pronounced by litem the .purest spirit ever manufactured. Its purity and properties having been thus ascertained, samples ot" lite article were lot warded to teit titousaud physicians, including all the leaning practitioners in the United States, lor luo purposes ot' experiment. A circular, rcijucsliiig a trial ot the ( preparation aud a report ot the result, ( aeeoiupaoh>d each specimen. Jb'uur , tliousaiid o* the must eminent medical ( men iu the Union promptly responded. Their opiuiousui ihc artteiu were uuau- ( imously tuvorable. Such ^ preparation they said, had loug been wauled by the nroiession, as no reliance could be ( placed ou llie ordinary liquors of coui- ( uicrce, all of which were more or less adulterated, and lliereiore unlit, lor medical purposes. The peculiar excel lcuce and strength of the oil ui juniper, ( which loruicd ouo of the piiuclpul iugrediouis of the iSclniapps, together with an uiiuilo^cd character of the alcohol cleuieut, give it, in the estimation of lite lacnliy, a inuiked superioiiiyover every oluer dillusive stimulant as diuretic, ionic and re torative. These satisfactory credentials from proics-ional men oi tne Ingiicst rank, were puu.islud in a condensed form and enclosed wijh each bol-lu of the Schnapps; us one of its genuineness ? Oilier precautious' against iraud acre also adopted; a patent was obtained lor thc.arlicle, ihe i.ibel was copyrighted, a Jac simile of the propriet d s autograph signature Was attached In each label anu cover, his name aud that of the ptepar ation Were scaL-d with his private seal ^'o urtiele had ever been soid in this couh'ry under the name of tSchunpp" pj-iof (lie introduction tf Wolfe's jjebiedam Aromatic Schnapps, in iS-'.l: and the label was deposited, ns his trail ft - ,n..i !>,. 1 I 'i ? iiu?LLuMia./<<i: the S"Ukhoi :i District of New York du- ' ring that year. It might be supposed by persons unacipitiiikd with the during character of the pirates who prey upon the reputation of honorable tnereh.wiis by vending | deleterious Inihil under their ria.: c, th.it the protections so carefully thrown around UiosjjSeliui'f'ps would have precluded too introductions and sale of counterfeits They seem, however, only to have stiniul;ted the rapacity of iiuposiuis. The trade mark of the proprietor h's Boon stolen; the indorse-, mint which his Schiedam Aromatic Schuappsalone received from the medical profession has-been claimed by mendacious humbugs; his labels and bottles .have been imitated, lii.s advertisement paraphrased, his circulars copied, and worse than all, dnhonoruble retailers, after disposing of the genuine contents of his bottles, have tilled tboiu up with common gin, the most deleterious of all liquors, and thus made his uamoaud brand u cover for poison. The public, the medical profession, and the sick, for whom i lie Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps is prescribed a.^a remedy, are equally interested with the proprietor in the detection and suppres- , siou of these nefarious practices. The genuine article, manufactured at the establishment of the undersigned in Schiedam, Holland, is distilled from a .barley of the finest quality, and flavored with an essential extract of the berry of the Italian jumper, or unequal-1 led purity. IJy a process unknown in the preparation of any liquor, it is freed from every acrimonious aud corrosive element. ? Complaints have been received from the loading physicians and families in Southern States of the sale of cheap imitations of the Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps in those markets; and travellers who are in the habit of using itas an antidote to the baneful influence of unwholesome river water, testify that cheap gin, put up in Schnapp bottles, is frequently palmed off upon tho unwary. The agents of t he undersigned have been requested to institute inquiries on the subject, and to forward to him the names of such parties as they tnay ascertain to be engaged in the atrocious system of deception. In conclusion, the undersigned would say that he has produced, from under the hands of the most distinguished men of science . in America, proots unanawuruuiu ? purify and medicinal excellence of the Schiedam Aromatic Schnapps; that he has expended many thousand dollars in surrounding it with ^Murantecs and safeguards, which he designed should protect the public and himself against fraudulent imitations; that hehasshown it to be the only liquor iu the world that can be uniformly depended upon as unadulterated; that he has challenged , investigation, analysis, comparison and i experiment in all its forms; and from ] every ordeal the preparation whioh ( bears his name, seal and trade mark, has Office of Udolplto >Volfe, c Sole Importer of' Schiedam Aromatic J Schnapps. . ' \o. 22, Beaver-street, F New Youk, November 3, 1808. t To the People oj the South. 1 W11 EN TH E i'UliE MEDiCIN AJ, \ RESiOilA'iiVE, uow bo widely c known as WOLFE'S SCiii Eld A Al SCilNAPEd, was introduced into the . world under the eiidorseiueiit ot lour thousand leading iiieiiiborsot' the uicdi21 cal profession some twenty years ago, vii-mifint. ,1* ur:is well aWUl'G thill 11 ome off triumphaut. He, therefore, eels it a duty lie owes to his fellow-citzens generully, to the medical profesion and the sick, to denounce and exlose the charlatans who counterfeit ^ hese evidences of identity, and he calls ipon the press and the public to aid lim in his efforts to remedy so great an ivil. The following letters and certificates rom the leading physicians and cbemstsof this eity will prove to the reader hat all goods sold by .the undersigned ire all they are represented to be. udolivho wolf. T feel bound to pay, that I regard jmul^Sohuupps as being in every re<pect.pt c-emincntly pure, and deserving medical patronage. At all events,t is the purest possible article of Hoi-' and Gin, heretofore unobtainable, andis such may be safely prescribed by chysicians. DAVID L. MOTT, M. D. * U Pharmaceutical Chemist, N. V. 26 Pine-street, N. Y., November 21, 1867. uljolpho Wolb, Esq., /resent: Dfir Sir?I luivc made a chemical examination of a sample of your Schiedaju Schnapps, with the intent of detevniining if any foreign or injurious substance had been added to.the simple distilled spirits. The examination has resulted in the conclusion that the sample contained no poisonous or harmful admixture. 1 have been unable to discover any trace . of the deleterious substances which are employed in the adulteration of liquors. I would not hesitate to use myself or to recommend to othci^, for medicinal purposes, the Schiedam Schnapps as an Gxcelleut and unobjectionable variety of SinVery respectfully yours, (Signed,) OHAS A. SEELY, Chemist. Nk\v York, No. 53 Odir-st. November 2(3. 1867. Unnr.rno Wolfe, Esq., Present: D'Of Sir?I have submitted to chemic.fl analysis two bottles of "Schjedaiu Schnapps," which I took from a fresh package in your bonded warehouse, and lind, as before, that tlm spirituous liquor is free liom injurious ingredients or ratification; that it has the marks of being aged jind not recently prepared by mechanical admixture of a'cohol and. aromatics" Respectfully, FRED. F. MAYER, Chemist. New York, Tuesday,-May 1, Udw.pho Wolfe, Esq.: J>rnr Sir?The want of pure Wines and Liquors for medicinal purposes has fett hy thfl . pnit'u^OTfr. -wtri- ? thousand.- of lives have been sacrificed by the unadulterated articles. Delirium tremens, and orhfr diseases of the brain and nerves so rile in t hi** cnuntrv. y r arc very rare in Knrocc, owing, in a great d'-giee, to the difference in the purity of the spi?it< sold. We have tlie several articles imported and so|J by you, including your Gin, whmii you sell under the name of Aromatic*Schiedutn Schnapps, which we consider justly entitled to ibo high reputation it lias acquired in this conn ry; and front your long experience as a foreign importer, your Bottled Wines aud Liquors should meet with the same demand. We would recommend you to appoint some of tlie respectable apothecaries in different parts of the city as agents for the sale of your Brandies and Wines, whore the profession can obtaiu the same wheu needed for medicinal purposes. Wishing you success iu your new enterprise, we remain, Your obedient servants, VALENTINE MOTT, M. !>., Professor of Suigery, Univeisity Medical College, New York. J. M. OAKNOCIIAN, M. D., Professor of Clinical Surgery, Surgcon-inChief to the State Hospital, &o., No. 14 East Sixteen'h-strcet. LEWIS A. SAYIIE, M. M., No. 795 Broadway, n. P. PKVYEES, M. D., NO. 791. Broadway. TrtJ U'AIJ.QTKH AT T) Kn I'M 'J V'.'i ' ? V n?J JI u A' j * v Ninth street. NELSON STEELE, M. D., No. B7 ' lilct'kcr street. JOHN O'REILLY, M. D., No. 230 Fourth street. 13. I. RAPHAEL, 51. D., Professor off. the Pfinciplesand Surgery, New York Medical College, &c., No. 91 Ninthstreet, and others. The Proprietor also offers for sale, BOTTLED WINES &'LIQUORS, Imported and bottled by himself, expressly for medicinal use. Each bottle lias his certificate ot its purity. UDOLPiiO WOLFE. Dec. 81. 3m DENTISTRY, I. H. ALEXANDER, DENTIST. TEETII Cleaned, Filled, Extracted, and Artificial Teeth, inserted in theLATEST IMPROVED STYLE, for the LOWEST CASH PRICES. Patients waited upon at their residence if requet cd. Office, on Broad Street, above J. 51. Lcgrnnd's Jewelry shop. . NOTICE. HA\ ING rented the plantation of Juhn A. Peay, I strictly forbid all perions from huutiug or fishing on any portion of said plantation from this date, without my permission. JOHN JACKSON.