Daily chronicle & sentinel. (Augusta, Ga.) 1837-1876, January 29, 1840, Image 4

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s* % ' • new goods. C* NOW DEN A SHEAR ara happy t, anoounc* their friends in the city and co ntry , that they are now opening a very large a; i splendid assortment of sUplc and fancy DR GOODS, f suitable for the Fall and Winter season/ aM # TS* variety of new and fashionat » ancles, which they have selected with great ca » most recent importations. W e would I « solicit our friends and the public to call md exam ine the assortment for themselves; ano ® especially invite the attention of Pja® n/pi rU unusually large stock of BLANKETS WELCH PLAINS, NEGRO KERSEYS and and low priced FLANNELS for servac | LAW BOOKS. . . . REPORTS of cases argned and dc’ ™| ne the Hieh Court of Chancery m Ir land, uur l nr/t Chancellor Mans irs ; from ihg the term of Lord tliancen or?e 111 the sittings after Michealmos. Term 48, eorge in. ■WS - r d in .he High Court of Chancery from 1707, K 17b6 U. Sby the Honorable Robert Henley Ed is, of Lin coln’s inn, Barristerat law 1 I Note# to Phillips’ Treatise on the L * ot Uvi. fdence. by Ksek Cowen, one of the Ju< ;es of ine Supreme Court of the State of New 'Vo ;, assisted by Nicholas Hill, Jr. Councilor at Law .... * A full and arranged Digest of Cases lecided in the Supreme, Circuit and Distict tour .ol the u. States, by Richard Peters, Councellor a Law, and reporter "of the decisions of the Suprei e Court of life United States. Vol 3d. •Also, a new edition of Turners’Che istry. Nurse’s Guide cental ling a seris f instruc tiona to females who wish to engage in he impor tant business of nursing mother and c ild, ic,by J. Warrington, M. D. Towndrow’s new and improved Wn, ng Books, with copies to accompany. Just lecei M*^» or gale by J. W. &T. S STOY. j|n 23. __ ■ HAYS’ LINIMENT. THIS fine article is warranted to cur Piles or Rheumatism in all cases, or no ay taken * for it. 8 GLARING FRAUD! I A notorious counterfeiter has dared 1 make an attempt upon this article, and several ave been nearly ruined by trying it. Never buy , unless it has the written signature of COMSTO. IK if Co. on the splendid wrapper. That firm ha: * the only right to make and sell it for 2D years, ai 1 all Horn them is warranted perfectly innocent ai i effectual in all cases. N. B. Always detect the false by its ot having the above signature. The true sold onh by * COMSTOCK 0., Wholesale Druggists, No. 2 Fletcht -st. N. V. SOLOMON HAM !, ' Original Pr jrietor. The genuine isfor sale byGARVTN & HAINES, mnd ROBERT CARTER, Augusta. f jan 9 THE HIM ANHAIR, IS Warranted staid or restored, and the head kept free from Dandruff, by the ger ine OLDRIDGE’S BALM OF COLUI BIA. Remember the genuine as described t low. This is certified to by several Mayors. Ministers of the Gospel, British Consul, Physici: is, and a great number of our most respectable r tizens, to he seen where it is sold. DARING FRAUD! This article has been imitated by ; notorious counterfeiter. Let it never be purcha >d or used unless it has the name of L. S. COMSTi 2K, or the signature of COMSTOCK & Co., on splendid wrapper. This is the only external te; that will ® secure the public from deception. Apply at the wholesale and retail c ice, No. 2 Fletcher street, near Maiden Lane and ’earl st. — Address, COMSTOCK i, C , • Wholesale Lh iggists. The genuine is for sale by GARVIN & HAINES, and ROBERT CARTER, Augusta. y-jan 9 PROSPECTUS For publishing by subscription, in Augur j, Ga., an Agricultural paper, to be style GLEANINGS OF HUSUAN »RY. “Who makes two blades cf grass grow where one grew before, does more for his rountr , than an Alexander or a Bonaparle.” AT the solicitation of many friends, lesubscri . her has onsented to become the editor and pul Usher of a periodical exclusively dec tied to Ag riculture, Gardening, and ihe other b anches of Husbandry in general. Its object will h , in plain style, to communicate useful informarier o tlie cul tivator, whether of the vine or the Sow r, of vege tables or plants, of fruits, grapes or tre s, as Ihe mulberry and all kinds of orchard trees with the best manner of planting them ; furnishii ; suitable bints lor the improvement of tlie va ous soils, breeds of cattle, and other stock, with iL treatment of the diseases to which they are habi and the management of liees and silk worms The editor will endeavor to illustrate te impor tant principles ujhui which the art and cience ot agriculture is founded, and to introduce a economi cal system of the labors, in the garden o vineyard, in the field, meadow or cocoonery, that n y be best adapted to the seasons, climate and atitude in which we reside, and which in most res| tets, differ greatly from the Middle, Northern at i Eastern States. Os more than one million of Planter and Hor ticulturists in the Southern States, sci cely two out of a thousand have an opportunity f consult iug any agricultural works, ami are vvh lly guided >*y casual observations upon the waj of their neighbors and ancestors; for they posset* no means of learning the almost daily improveraei s ihal are making in their own particular branch . : culture ; neither can they become acquainted w h the im proved varieties in trees, fruits, vine . flowers, grain and plants, which are continually itroduced to our notice from every portion of tfu habitable globe, nor with the various improvement and new inventions in the implements of tillage. The pub lication shall contain a full account of all hese that are likely to benefit our part of the cot itry, and increase intelligence, virtue, happiness an prosper ity at every hearth in the oouthern Slate ItSdvall be free from all sectarian or polii al views, wholly governed by Southern feelings t id princi ples ; our endeavor will he to render it» rviceable to the young and the aged—to “ Heaven last best Jilt to man,” even in her teens, and to i ,e sturdy arraer—by informing them ot the proj r season, w hich from experience in our section of ie Union may have been found most congenial i > commit lheir seeds to the roil—to prune their ines and trees—to transplant their tender shoots a d flowers —to engraft, inoculate or bud theirsarubs md trees, and turn the “maiden’s blush” into the charming “moss” or “raonihlr rose," with the be manner of harvesting and preserving their crop and pro duce. We shall, by no means overlook the gr t South ern staples. Cotton and Rice, lor upon t! se, 1 ttle information can be obtained from North* a publi cations. From the kind promt**, tendered by lends to the undertaking, valuable original con i but ions may be anticipated : and other corresj.cn mts are respectfully solicited to communicate ant informa tion that may be interesting or beneficial , others, relating to their mode of culture ; ae fact, . ollecled fKira the tillers ol our own soil, with the. obseiva- OOns and remarks will be highly appreoia d bv the eduor; end since the happiness and cor on of a country mam y depend upon its agricultu >, in fu “ nishmg useful mtormation to the coinmu itv con tributors will afford the brightest evidenc of the-r seal and patriotism. Terms —The paper will be issued thlv on • sheet containing mteen very large qua « (same sue as the “Albany Cultivator,”; i the verv moderate price of One Dollar, payable in ill etui in advance Ihe price being su small no num her w ill he sent to any person on credit It shall be printed on good paper, and with new n *, order ed expressly for the purpose. The firs number will appear in March next, it possible. As by the rules of the General Post Os *e Post masters are allowed to trank and forward t! amount 222 , /° » nv oowspapei, they are re x-ctfullv esired to forward to the editor at Aug sta anv ihera in bankable money * early as ’ pubiish inf it, shall receive W* sonlam Postmasters and editors „ ed to art as our agents, t v? Rr6 copy of this Prospectus, they al n ° l 3061V ® * one from the papers which maTbe^^ 6 *° . CUt publish a; and we, with resWt *iuugh to friends of the objecu we have m alI 4 assist in procuring subsmbers to the and Husbandry,’ 1 mugs ol ,au IT MO * EtHOL BIMK>K,A.M M. D. rheumatism. RHEUMATIC EMBROCATION.—• Or. *M. B. Cohen, proprietor of the universally vv , . /■ ~ ptjrg of Chronic &nd Inn^ - ’ Pain* »n<l mato > Joints &c., known as Cohen s RheSc Embrocation,’begs respectfully to refer ail person* suffering from these diseases to the thousands of cures that his preparation has accom plished, and to the numerous atrange and htghl respectable testimtinials which have, from tune to been published to that effect in New York and other places. So certain and searching is t is Liniment in its operations, even in cases of g rr^ntir.ffV;r at T h n e s p’o«, n K.e..« ! befw’rto* hf the Liniment see that it is accompanied with the Itnature of the pro prietor in his own hand writing. Since the introduct ion of this remedy to the public, various empirics have been palmed upon the coun try, Nostrums and Lotion* and Liniments, and “Infallible Rheumatic Mixtures, all of which be in* a compound of ignorart’quacks, are calculated, more or less, to injure the system rather than re move any complaint. In proof of the estimation in which the Embrocation is held by respectable men in the medical profession, as well *s by the thousands of persons who have been effectua ly cured of Rheumatism, the subscriber has subjoined letters from a few who are well and popularly known to the entire society in New and whose opinions ard professional judgments are universally esteemed. m r cohen> No. 275£ Hudson street, N. Y. New York, Aug. 3,1838. Dear Sir —Havin' frequently witnessed the ap plication of your Rheumatic Embrocation,and tie beneficial effects arising therefrom, it affords me pleasure to state that I most cheerfully recommend it as an invaluable ::emedy, and the best known for the cure of that pa nful and distressing complaint, either in its acute or chronic form, WILLIAM F PIATT, M. D. Late Corresponding Secretary of the Medical Soci ety of the City aid county of New York. To Dr. M. B. Cohen. Dr. M. B. Cohen—ln reply to your request as to my opinion of your Rheumatic Embrocation, I most willingly acknowledge that I have used it in my practice, and found it an invaluable remedy as a palliative Liniment in cases of Rheumatism. CHAS. A. VAN ZANDT, M. D. New York, April 20, 1839. I certify that I have used Dr. M. B. Cohen’s Rheumatic Embrocation, and have found it a most useful adguvant in the treatment of this painful | disease, and therefore hesitate not to recommend it in all cases of Rheumatism. WILLIAM ANDERSON, M. D., &c.. No. 342 Broadway, N. Y. I, Henry B. Nones, Ist Lieut, of the Revenue Cutter Alert, in thu service of the United States, do certify that I was for five months afflicted with { the Inflamatory Rheumatism,and had every reme | dy by advice of physicians, without any relief, and I finally by advice of Dr. W. Rockwell, health offi -1 cer at quarantine, I applied to Dr. M. B. Cohen, in j the month of July, 183, for a bottle of his Rheu matic Embrocation, and after one week’s use of the specific, was entirely free from all pain, and was able to resume my place in the service. H. B. NONES, Ist Lt. U. S. R. S. New York, August Ist, 1637. 1 i OCT P r i ce » $3 per bottle, > TO THE PUBLIC. —Be it known, that on this 20th day of January, one thousand eight hundred and forty, we have appoir ted Mr. Benjamin F. I Kenrick, proprietor of the Mansion House, city t iof Augusta, our sole Agent for the city of Augusta, | in the State of Georgia; also, sole agent for the - i city of Hamburg, in the State of South Carolina, . j for the sale of our Rheumatic Embrocation, a re medy calculated to cure with certainty any Rheu j matic complaints, whether of a chronic or inflama \ tory nature. Witness, our hand, this day andyeai B aforesaid. M. B. COHEN & Co. i The public will remember that this is simply an 1 external applicatic n and free from minerals. . I The public are cautioned against purchasing of j any other than the above authorized agent, as thal ! purchased from ary other person cannot be genu s ! ine. i I Dr. M. B. COHEN’S principal Office, No 272$ Hudson street, N. Y. Each bottle of the Embrocation is accompanied i with printed directions for use, and none is genu * ine unless bearing -;he signature of i jan 22 3m M B. COHEN. \ TO THE FACULTY AND HEADS OF i I FAMILIES. R. MILES’ COMPOUND EXTRACT OF 1 f TOMATO —a substitute for Calomel, and I does not belong to the family of quack medicines; for the reason that the component parts are made , known to the faculty, or any one else that may t wish to know, by any of the agents keeping them i for sale. Since this discovery so long and anx r iously looked for, some one in almost the extreme ‘ North has advertised a Tomato Pill, purporting to be made from the stalk, a thing not more aosuru ’ than for one to offer meal from the corn stalk, to say nothing of the difficulty of raising the Tomato so far North. Dr. Miles, of Cincinnati, is the proprietor of the r Tomato Pills (proper) for the great benefits of | which, he holds himself bound, and in honor pledg * ed to prove by thei:: use, that they are all that they ’ profess to be, and will do for othcis what they have done for such as mav have used them; as I this is a vegetable of great use, and value, it will , doubtless be valuable information to families to know that the Yellow are just doubly as valuable as the Red Tomato, and produces twice as much of the hapatine, or active principle, and when used as a daily vegetable will be found to keep the system in much better condition than the other kind ; many will recollect with what trembling , anxiety calomel has been given to children, and how they then wished for a substitute. It has . long been known that the Tomato contained ca thartic principles, but not until of late was it ascertained that they contained alterative and diu , retie properties. The Faculty embrace and use i the preparation most cheerfully, for the reason that t they know what it s W’ere it a patent mystery, 1 they would be bound to reject the medicine, as they i justly do the one thousand and one cure-alls of the , day. If you wish to cleanse the system with a r , mild, sa.e anti-bilious medicine, use the Tomato Pill, of which a supply, we learn, will soon be in this city. We all know something about this. June 18 ts Radical Cure of Hernia or Rupture, by Dr. Chase’s Improved Surgeons’ Trusses. THE subscriber has oj>ened an office, at Ihe Drug store of Messrs;. J. J. Robertson &Co., for the treatment of Hernia or Rupture, by means of these ustly celebrated instruments. He has now used them for nearly a year, and, did not delicacy forbid, he could name several persons who have been radi cally cured, of this truly distressing and dangerous affection, by the use of these Trusses, besides many otners who are in a fairway of being entirely re lieved. The following is the language jf the com mittee ot the Philadelphia Medical Society on the Radical Cure of He mia. “ The instruments of Dr. Chase have effected the permanent and accurate retention of the in testines in every case of Hernia observed bv the committee, without material inconvenience to the patient, and often under trials more severe than are usually ventured upon by those who wear ether trusses; trials that would be imprudent with any offur apparatus known to the committee.” J “ The committee are induced by the foregoing conclusions to recommend, in strong terms the in struments of Dr. Chase to the confidence of ; the profession, as the best known means of me ohamcal retention ir hernia, and as furnishing the highest chances of radical cure.” 1 cJIlf foll l owin S, is Uom the Southern Medical and Southern Journal, published in our own city. i All must admit of the raHiroi ...» • and that Dr. Chase’s Trusses are deei<Wt°i yet invented to effect Persons from a distance can hav* applied, upon application at the office, and'alTne! cessary information given to enable ♦ a t it themselves. TheW, who « S'™ this afflicting complaint,will be treatedgrSliS’ lyupon presenting a certificate,from son^ re s “ 1 ble person, of their pecuniar}-disability The instruments are of all sizes, and’ annlicaht to every variety of reducible rupture ™ I f « b 20 F. M. ROBERTSON, M. D. O. COSBY’S DYSPEPTIC BITTERS* PERHAPS there is nothing more calculated to \ disgust the public eye than ihe innumerable advertisements ol nostrum* that are constantly ap- j nearing in the public prints. All are ready to ex- | claim,our souls are sick, our ears are pained with , every day’s reports ol ills and specifics. This state , ol i In- public mind would seem to forbid any person i of delicate mind from sending forth any new' ois- , coveries in medicine, to the trial of th? public.— , Still, motives of delicacy should not prevent us from ] making known real discoveries, which w e are con fident will benefit our fellow men. This latter ( consideration has prompted the author of these bn- , ters to make them known. He knows they are high ly efficacious, for he himself, his wife, and many friends, have given them a thorough trial. He was himself a onnfirraed dyspeptic, so much, that even his recollection was gone. By using these bitters j he has been restored to health. Mrs. Cosby was troubled lor many years,but was restored to health by the use of these bitters. This has been the case w-ith many of his friends. Mr. Cosby in sending forth this advertisement, addresses those who know him. He has been for many years a resident ol Augusta, at which place he can at any time b» consulted about the bitters. They are good in all cases of diseases of the digestive organs, the symp toms of which are indigestion, pain or oppression in the stomach from food, lossot appetite, flatulen cy, heart burn, giddiness in the head, pain in the side, shortness of breath, lassitude, general weak ness, disturbed sleep, &c The composition is en- | tirely Botanical, and has proved efficacious w hen many celebrated medicines had failed. In support of which he refers lh?mto Freeman VV. Imcy, she riff ol Richmond county, and William T. Thomp son, editor of the Augusta Mirror, and he might re fer you to many others, but deems it unnecessary, as he is willing to place it on its own merits. All he asks is tor ttiose who are afflicted with the dys pepsia to give it a trial. They can be had at T. H. Plant’s book-store, Augusta, and of O- Cosby himself, at the corner of Washington and Ellis-etreets. nov 30 ly cma jours, OR ANTi-BALSAMIC GONORRHOEAL SOLUTION, Warranted to cure in Five Days. THIS incomparable and invaluable remedy so long known, and used with such unparralleled success in the Canadas for the last 30 yeats, ap pears to need no panegyric. Its operation upon the human system is such that it invariably acts like a charm, for the relief and radical cure of a certain common and disagreeable “ills the flesh is heir to.” This prize obtains its own name from the certain success which has attended it through all of its , trying circumstances, namely, “five days,” —the same success which followed it in a Northern lati [ tude still obtains in a more Southern. The formula or recipe was obtained at great expense, intrigue and hazard by M. Cheveres, from the celebrated Indian Chief Wabenothe, or Great Moon, whilst he, with others was pursuing the lucrative Fur bu siness in the North-west with the Indians. — , Wabenoshe prized highly and use it with invariable success throughout his two tribes. Its known and I valued virtues have already enriched to an almost . incredible extent the children of this warlike prince, I not only by actual sale of the article itself to in dividuals, but by parting with copies of his receipt at enormous prices to the Chief of every' tribe of ’ Indians in America, with a solemn promise to the • Great Spirit, never to divulge the “art of its com [ position until he sleeps with his fathers,” although free to use it in their respective tribes, which places it in the hands of every Indian who rely with, I may say, religious confidence on its cura ble powers. Below is a copy of the translation as near as it can be anglisized of the deed given by Wabenoshe, to 5 M. Cheveret, when he purchased the original recipe, I and had twice assisted the Chief himself through the tedious manipulatory' process of manufacture. ‘ Few white men would credit the length of time which is consumed in preparing the article for ira- e ’ mediate use. TRANSLATION. ’ “I, Wabenoshe, Chief of the nations Ottowa and _ Chippewa, for the love and good feeling which I _ have for ray white friend M. Cheveret, (for he has r done many good things for me and my' people,) I give to him my greatest cure for the bad sickness which my children have had sent among them as a a punishment by the Great Spirit, and hope that in his hands it may do much good, and make him very f rich.” t Signed WABINOSHE,his X mark. Witness APPAHO, hi* X mark. EVERETT LAYMAN, l HILL AM MCAKIE, * J. B. ROY, j R. O. DUPUIS, J. S. CARDINAL. This Medicine,! warrmt by this publication,un der a penalty of $5,000, not to contain one parti cle of corrosive preparation. It is purely vegata ’ ble in its essences. Its first and prominent virtue is to subdue every vestige of inflamation, and then ' acts mildly and copiously as a diuretic ; thereby i holding within itself, every' requisite virtue, for ; the subduction of this loathsome malady—and ev i ery regular graduate in medicine, will sustain the r assertion, that copious diuresis and reduction of in i flation, are the only two things necessary to effect - ajsound and radical cure 5 The most peculiar virtue of the “Cinq Jours,” ) is in this, that wherever it alone has been used to l affect a cure, none of those tenacious and disagree • > able consequences which almost invariably results > from the sudden cure of Gonorrhoea, have been known to obtain such as stricture, hernia, humor ; alis, incontinence, and a swarm of other of the f most loathsome, perplexing, and disagreeable dis • eases, consequent upon erroneous diagnosis and r treatment of Gonorrhoea. r Those affected are requested to call and try for i themselves. If the prescriptions are well foilow -1 ed and fail to cure, the money will in everv case be > returned. s You can do what you please and eat what you i please. I To be had at Antony & Haines, No. 232, Broad s street, who are the only authorised Agents in Au : gusta. All orders addressed to them, will be ; promptly attended to. I. lor sale, also, by Wm. B. Wells & Co, Druggists, 1 Athens; and P. M. Cohen & Co. Charleston, au 29 ’ iCHALLENGE. The genuine I ranch PiUs against all the QUACK ‘ NOSTRMUS of the age-for the cure of i ****** ) The French Pills are applicable in all cases, foi i either sex, (warranted free from Mercury,) and nog sesses great advantages over the Balsams and all liquid medicines, by being entirely free from smell and consequently do not effect the breath, thereby * Preventing the possibility of discovery while using ? Besides this important advantage, they never b disagree with the stomach, and in the first stages of b the disease they usually effect a cure in a fewdavs 1 with little regard to oiet or exposure " ’ , In the most obstinate stages of the disease, they - are equally certain .having cured many after everv s other remedy h°d failed. In short they have been r f° universally successful that the proprietor chal - lenges any one to produce a remedy of equal 1! " . tamty, under a forfeiture of Three Hundred Dollars’ s Harrisburg, Dec. lu ihvr Dr. Valier-Dear Sir: About a month ago j sen* j to you for three boxes of your French Pills, »„<] fee i . much obliged to you for furnishing me with a raedD > cine so effectual and so pleasant to When I j sent for your Pills I had been troubled w ith the i, disease for nearly 6 months, and had tried a r many medicines without any effect. Dnrine the r fi I rel 81 ? weeks . l under » Physician of this place, but finding little or no chance of beinir cured , b y him, I left him, and a few days alter visited I Philadelphia, where I bought a v ariety of adveilnd f specifics (almostenough to stock an apothecary fi t.™ f and all of this I took with the same L 'Kf ’ I fore, leaving that c****d smell of the bafsam he.' - hind them, which I think lean smell to th™ dav Not Rowing what to resort to next, and seeing you 1 French Pills advertised m the Public Led/' U determined to try them, and am only sorry I did I get them sooner, as it might ht*e saved me* for! 1 dollars and have cured me long ago. My object writing to you at present, is to procure B nrr ~ ! .woof my V„en<CX £ ■ same kind of a scrape. You will it., r \ In L «od by Ihe bo l LandoM,~: for ' pIeM r lours respectfully, ° ’ „ D P.'S.—lf it will be any advantage vnn K ‘. , hsh the above, with the initials. ’ U may pu^‘ The genuine French Pills are for sai* a . • by Havdand Rialey * Co., Thoma, Barrel ifr "* and bv Nelson Carter. Price *2 Do r. / 9.°: full directions. june 6 * °° DR. E. SPOIJN, a German physician of much mite, having devoted his attention for some years to the cure and removal of theesusesoi NER VOUS AND SICK HEAD ACHE, has ihe satis faction to make known, that he has a remedy which by removing the causes cures effectually and perma nently this distressing complaint. There are many families who have considered Sick Headache a con stitutional incurable family complaint* Dr. S. as sures them that they are mistaken, and labouring under distress which tncy might not only alleviate, but actually eradicated by the use >f his remedy. It is the result of scientific research, and is entirely of a different character from advertised patent medi cines, and is not unpleasant to the taste. HEADACHE, SICK OR NERVOUS. The extraordinary reputation that Dr. Spohn’s remedy fur this distressing rompaint is every day gaining is certainly a matter of much astonishment. That so much suffering should have existed for ages without any discovery of an effcclual preventive, or cure, is truly a subject of much regret but Dr. S. now assures the public that such a remedy has been invented as will convince the most credulous. The principles on which it acts are simple and plain. It is an milted fact that this complaint, whether called Sick Headache, or Nervous Headache, arises prim arily from the stomach—those who think they have the Nervous Headache may rest assured that this organ, the stomach, is the first cause, that lh a sys tem has become vitiated or debilitated, through the stomach, and that only through the same channel must they expects restoration ol the naiural and healthy functions ol the system. This object, Dr. Spohn’s remedy is eminently calculated to attain- The truth of this position cannot be controverted, and the sooner sufferers with the headache become convinced of it, the sooner will their suffering end in restoration of health, Dr. Spohn pledges his professional reputation on this fact. The remedy may be had of apothecaries generally throughout the United Slates. For sale by ANTONY & HAINES, No. 232 Broad-street, Augusta. mar 26 THE great celebrity of this unrivalled Compo sition, especially in,the Northern States, leaves the proprietor but little need to say any thing in its favor: for it lias been generally conceded to it, that it is beyond all comparison the best remedy for ex ternal complaints that has ever been discovered. Indeed thejspoed and certainty of its operations, have the appearance of miracles : as ulcers, wouuds, corns, fever sores,chilblains, white swellings, biles, piles, spider and snake bites, &c. <kc M immediately yield to its superhuman influence. Thus, il prop erly applied it will remove an inveterate corn or break and heal a bile in five days, will allay and perfectly cure an ulcer in two weeks, and the most desperate cases of white swelling that can be ima gined, have been destroyed by it in less than two months. In the bites of poisonous reptiles its effi cacy is truly surprising, and if applied in time, its powers of attraction are so wonderful that they will at once arrest the poison and thus prevent it from pervading the system. It is likewise greatly supe rior to any medicine heretofore discovered for the chafed back and limbs of horses—for tetters, ring worms, chapped lips—and in short, for every exter nal bodily evil that may fall to the lot of man or beast. The proprietor has received at least a thousand certificates, and other documents, in favor of his “ Specific Ointm nt,” upwards of a hundred of winch were written by respectable members of the Medical Faculty. Albany, July 9th, 1837. To Dr. Harrison. Sir —I useyour Specific Ointment in my practice, and cordially recommend it as a most efficient reme dy for Tumors, Ulcers White Swellings, Scrofula, Rheumatic Fains, Chapped Face, Lips and Hands: and for general external complaints. I write this at the request of your agent here, who furnishes me with the article, and am pleased to have it in my power to award honor to merit. RUFUS R. BEACH, M. D. Brooklyn, N. Y., Oct. 29, 1838. Dear Sir—My daughter,a girl of fourteen, was sadly afflicted witn thecornp aim that physicians termed a scald head ; and I feared, independent of ever\ other evil, that she would be bald in conse quence. By the recommendation, however, of the Reverend Mr. Perrin, I applied your ointment to the afflicted part; and 1 thank God that my child is now entirely recovered from the disease, and is getting her hair as fast as can be expected The cure was effecied in lather less than two months; during which lime I used fiv dollars worth of oint ment; I had spent upwards of a hundred dollars doting the previous three years, without any benefit whatever. MARY HOWARD. I hereby substantiate the truth ol the above { statement CHRISTOPHER HOWARD. 1 know the above statement to be coirect, and I can add from experience that “ Harrison’s Specific i Ointment,” is an excellent medicine for external complaints MATTHEW PERRIN. Boston, Jan. 7, 1837. Dear Sir—l have to request of yon to forwarti me, two hundred boxes of Ointment, by the most immediate conveyance, and without regard to the expense of carriage, as lam quite out, and much in want of it.—You know ray estimation of your valuable discovery, and therefore I shall only add, mat further experience has increased my enthusi asm and established me in the opinion, that it is su perior to any remedy extant for external diseases. Respectfully yours, • CHARLES P. EMERSON, M. D. New Orleans, Match 20th, 1838. Dr. Harrison —The virtues of your Specific Ointment, have been long known to me,as I have used none other in my rather extensive practice for several years, and it you think it would be to your advantage, I can furnish you with twenty certificates of important cures which it has effected under my own imme diate inspection; the last being one of a severe and apparently perpetual ulcer, in the back of a poor woman, Mary Baxter who resides in 216 Di vision street, which it completely healed in twenty one days. My present chief object in writing to you, is to learn who is your authorised agent in this city, for,being in want of a supply of your oint ment, and the person Mr. Boyle,from whom I used to purchase it, having failed and gone out of busi ness, I am fearful if I purchase at random, that I may be imposed on by a counterfeit. Your obedient servant, EDWARD RAMSEY, M. D. _ TT . Cincinnati, August 9,1837. Dr. Harrison. Sir,--I have no hesitation in stating, m reply to your note, that your“ Specific Ointment” is truly equal to the majority of the ends for which vou re commend it. 1 qualify my certificate by the word majority, as it is my maxim to give no opinion in medical matters where I have had no experience, in sprains, bruises, inflammations,eruptions, whit lows, piles, <fec., it is my universal recipe. I have also used it on the leg of a boy which had been bitten by an adder, and the extraction of the poison and ultimate cure was so rapid, that my patient was as well as ever in a week ; and has remained so to this day. Yours respectfully, HENRY JACOBS, M. D. Lo E ;s,K;' elterlrora Drj-w --tt T , October 8, 1837. and L a ™s p r ep tf ed t 0 % tha , l for Rheumatic Fains, and the Sore Breasts of females, Harrison’s Specific Comment has no superior, if indeed it has any equal m the whole catalogue of external medicines, as Known and prescribed in this country.” Extract of a letter from Dr. Potts, of Utica, N. Y Dated July 28, 1339. ’ “ Harrison’s Specific Ointment” is, in my opinion a most important discovery ; and is particular! v effi ’ cient in scrofulas, ulcers, sore legs, eruptions and* general outward complaints. I speak of its merits from an experienceot four years.” 18 . ... ew Orleans, January 4th 1337 This will certify that my lace and neck were a* m °A rtemirriycovered by an enormous ringworm* and that after the trial of a variety of ineffeS remedies, I was completely cured of i! i n mornb., by the use of EDGAR FOSSET. For sale, wholesale and retail, by Haviland p ley & Co., Thomas Barrett <fe Co , NeLnn r ' S ‘ Antony & Haines, and Thomos I. Wrav JO arer ’ Remti price, 50 cents per box. with full direefom ~ , p .JIESE Pills are no longer among those of douht .l. ful utility. They have passed away from the hundreds that are daily launched upon the tide of experiment, and now stand before the public as high in reputation, and as extensively employed in all parts of the United States, the Canadas, Texas Mexico, and the West Indies, as any medicine that has ever been prepared for the relief of suffering man. They have been introduced wherever it was found possible to carry them ; and there are but few towns that do not contain some remarkable evidences of their good effects. The certificates that have been presented to the propnetor exceed twenty thousand! upwards of five hundred of which are from regular practising physicians, who are the most competent judges of their merits. \ Often have the cures performed by this mediciii been the subject of editorial comment, in variou newspapers and journals; and it hiay with tru i e asserted, that no medicine of the kml has evei re ceived testimonials of greater value th in are at tached to this. , . They are in general use as a family medicine and there are.thou sands of families who declare they ' re never satisfied until they_have a supply alway s on hand. They have no rival in curing and preventing Biliious Fevers, Fever and Ague, Dyspepsia, Liver Complaints, Sick Headache, Jaundice, Asthma, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Enlargement of the Spleen, Piles, Cholic, Female Obstructions, Heartburn, Furred Tongue, Nausea, Distension of the Stomach and Bowels, IncipientDiarrhoja,Flatulence,Habitu al Costiveness, Loss of Appetite, Blotched or Sallow Complexion, and in cases of torpor of the bowels, where a cathartic or aperient is needed They are exceedingly mild in their operation, producing neither nausea, griping nor debility. The following was forwarded to Dr. Peters, by a Highly respectable Planter of Wake County, No Ca.,March 3d, 1838: Dr. Peters —Dear Sir, —By request of your agent, Mr. Harrison, I send you a few lines respecting the almost miraculous effects of your piPs; and I would add, that you may make use ol them, in connection with my name, in any manner you deem proper, I speak of their merits from experience, as I and my family have taken upwards of thirty boxes in three years ; and so great a*e the benefits we have receiv ed from them in general, that I would rather pur chase them at ten dollars a box than have my house without them. I will not enumerate the afflictions they have relieved us of; but I can assure you they were many, and of very opposite natures, which has fully proved to me that your medicine is a sim ple purifier of the system, and therefore equally the enemy of every disease. I will mention one case. I have a sister who had been for a long pe riod severely afflicted with dropsy in the chest and was brought by it to the very verge of the grave. She was attended by the most eminent physicians that money could procure; but all their efforts to restore her to health, or even to mitigate her suffer ings were fruitless ; and accordingly,we all consid ered her immediate death as inevitable. By good fortune, however, as she was in this situation, ex pecting every day to be her last, your pills were introduced into my family, and so speedy and pal pable were their effects that three doses visibly re lieved her, and in less than three months she was perfectly restored to health. This case, I and all who were witness of it, (but more especially the suffering party,) considered to be the next thing to miraculous; and yet I could mention many more of an equally desperate nature, in which your pills were equally successful in rescuing the patients from the jaws of death. Need I add that the popu larity of your medicine amounts to enthusiasm in this section of the country ? But this I presume you know from the immense quantity y r ou dispose of. I may mention, however, that notwithstanding its general use, I never heard an individual complain of its effects. My residence is 12 miles from Ral eigh, on the road to Fayetteville. I am, with sen timents of regard, your ob’t servant. A. G. BANKS. To Dr, Peters, —Sir—For upward’ of fifteen months, I have been cruelly afflicted with Fever and Ague; and during the time could find nothing— though I had applied to every tiling that gave me any thing like permanent relief. At length, how ever, your pills were recommended to me, by one of our best phj sicians, and I am most grateful and happy in being able to add, that I had scarcely used two boxes when I found that they had restored me to perfect health. Since then, various members of my family have usefd them with equal success— and consequently I feel it my duty to apprise you of the fact, and to request of you to publish this certificate, as lam anxious to add my public testi mony to the almost miraculous virtues of your un rivalled medicine. Respectfully yours, THEODORE JAMES. Augusta, Ga., Feb 10, 1839. Communication received from the eminent Dr. J. H. Irwin of Florence, Georgia : Dr. J. P. Peters —My Dear Sir—On the night of the 11th inst., I was called in great baste to the house of a fellow ciiizen, (Mr. Lee,) where I found his son laboring under a most alarming attack of Cynanche Tracnealis (Croup) and apparently be yond the aid of remedy. By the greatest good for tune, however, 1 had in my pocket a broken box of your pills—four of which I administered, with such immediate happy effect that in a few minutes my patient was at ease, and out of danger. This case, in connection with my name is at your ser vice—and I have the pleasure to be able to inform you that your inestimable medicine is in such great favor with the faculty here, that I believe there is not one of them who does not use it in his private practice. Yours most resp’y. March 13, 1839. J. H. IRWIN, M. D. Extract from a letter written by Dr. Francis Bo gart, of Providence, R. 1,, Dec. 17, 1838.—Peters’ pills are an excellent aperient and cathartic medi cine, those effects being produced by the differences of the quantity taken, and are decidedly superior to Lee’s, Brandreth’s or Morrison’s Pills. Extract from a letter by Dr. Hopson of Bangor, Me , Jan. 9,1839. They are apeculiarly mild,yet efficient purgative medicine, and produce little, it any, griping or nausea. I have prescribed them with much success in sick headache and slight bil iious fever. " Extract of a letter by Dr, Joseph Williams ot Burlington, Vt, July 9, 1837.—1 cordially recom mend Peters’ Pills as a mildly effective, and in no case dangerous, family medicine. They are pecu liarly influential in costiveness and all the usual diseases of the digestive organs. Extract of a letter from Dr. Edw Smith of Mon tieal, U. C., Sept. 27,1836. —I neverknev a single patent medicine that I could put the least confi dence in but Dr, Peters’ Vegetable Pills, which are really a valuable discovery. I have no hesitation in having it known that I use them extensively in my practice,for all complaints, (and they are not a few) which have their source in the impurity of the blood J Extract of a letter from Dr. Dye of Quebec I €., March 6, 1837.—F0r bilious fevers, sick head ache, torpidity of the bowels, and enlargement of the spleen, Peter’s Pills are an excellent medicine Extract of a letter from Dr Gurney of New O-I leans, La„Oct. 9, 1837.—1 have received much as sistance in my practice—especially in jaundice and yellow fever, from the use of Peters’ PilH I pre sume that, on an average, I prescribe 100 boxes in a month S v’ll 01 ,*™ 1 fr , om Dr - p rahardof Hudson, iN. Y., Juoe 3, 1836.—1 was aware that Dr. Peters was one of the best chemists in the United States and felt assured that he would some day (from his intimate knowledge of the properties of herbs and drugs) produce an efflcientmedicine, and tmust acknowledge that his Vegetable Pills fu ly reswnd to my expectations. They are indeed medicine, and reflect credit alike upon the Chemist the Physician, and the Philosopher. t? co. Va. Feb - 1957 Having used Dr. Peters’ Pills in my practice fn,- he last twelvemonths, I take nleasnro • C • • my testimony of their good effects in casesof'd'v"* r- ♦ . , , GEORGE C. SCOTT M D Def X 17418367 4 1836 11 T Uer fWm Dt ’ Scott of Bal Gmo*re, K- ’ ou’ 1 , ■~“ I am in the daily habit of presort bmg them, (Peters’Pills) and they in warty o’ l mprtL anSWe ‘ ed my P ur P° se - 1 have discarded other medicines, some of them very good ones, in their Charlotte, N.C., Jan. 1 1837 Dear Sir—l have made frequent use of yourPi’p* m the incipient stage of bilious fever, and ohstf nate constipation of the bowels ; also, in the largementof the spleen, chronic diseases of th hver,sick head-ache, general debility, and in !n case have lound tnem to be very effective 11 J D. BOVD. M D. Extract of a letiei from Dr. Waines of i . n»li, Feb. 2. 1838.—Vour Pills are the rmij, 1 1* ‘ n * their operations, and yet most powetiul i n the, *,•' sects, of any that lliavc ever met with in a p ra ,l. 0 " of eight and twenty years. Their action on V <e chyle, and hence on the impurities of the blood ■ evidently very surprising. 1 » ls These much approved and justly celebrated P n are sold wholesale and retail, at New York n. . by Haviland It is ley &Co., Thomas Barrett ic and Nelson Carter, and by all the principal d^ o'’ 0 '’ gists throughout the United States, the Canal* 2 ' Texas,Mexico andthe West Indies. Retail p, a> ’ 50 cents per box wholesale price, $4 per dozen' 00 ’ june 3 IE CORi>IAL 1)E UJUNE^ OU L’ELIXIR I>E L’AMOUR. f INHE subscriber has the p’easure ol annomi Clr 1 to the citizens of the U. States, that he k* purchased, for a very large sum and from ih e \ ventor, the celebrated Dr. Magnin, of p aris recipe ard rirht for making this astonishing mp,Z cine. Until the appearance of the •* Lucina ( * dial, - ’ (about three- years since,) it wasthougln [h& t the complaints, which it speedily overcomes W ere beyond the reach of human remedy, as for upward of a thousand years, they had hafflpd the wisdom and ingenuity of the most profound physicians i* nil pans ot the world. This Cordial, however to iho great advantage of the human race,soon proved itself to he the desideratum so long sought fur • am , accordingly, notwithstanding ti e brief peri dos its existence.it has required a celebrity so great, th at it Is eagerly inquired for throughout the civilized globe. Dr. Magnin soon finding that the demand was so vast as io render a supply impossible, du. posed of the recipe and right ol sale, under obli<r ft * lions of secrecy, for England, the United 813*6* and othei countries, only preserving France ant Italy for himself. Thus has the subscriber p os , sessed himself of the invaluable secret ; and now hastens to give the inhabitants of his line of agency the benefits of his speculation. “le Cordial De Lucine,” or, in English, “il le Lucina Cordial,” is a general invigomtor of the human frame! In all the various cases of languor, lassitude, and debilitation ; it is an unfailing reme dy ; as it i* equally its province to impart cheerful, ness and decision to the mind, as 1; altH and vijor to the body But the peculiar virtue on which it* celebrity is based, is the facility and certainty with which it restores the virile powers when they have been destroyed by disease.time,recklessness,orany of the numerous causes which terminate in the prostration of those functions. In common with the generality of really good medicines, this Cordial contains nothing of a rrer curial or deleterious nature, among the many ingre dients wdiich compose it; but is, at the same tune, so simple, yet so efficacious, that while it can reno vatc the prostrated energies of a giant, an infant may use it.not only with impunity, but with ad vantage. The usages of society are unfortunately such, that, notwithstanding tlie benefits which would be sure to result from it, we cannot enter into an analy sis ol this ine.'limable Cordial here, or publish many’ of the documents which have been received, a s vouchers of the blessings it has conferred on num bers of despairing individuals. But tois wc cannot forbear remarking—that it has been demonstrated that t here is scarcely ever, if any such thing at all, as natural barrenness, or as natural imbecility of ihe procreantfunctions.ineithersex; and therefore, that these evils are the effects of artificial cause*, and may be speedily subdued and removed by the use ot “ Le Cordial de Lucine.” The Lucina Cordial is also tn indubitable cure for the Gleet, and the Floor Albus, obstructed, diffi cult, or painful Menstruation ; also, for the incon tinence ot Urine,or the involuntary discharge there of It is likewise an invaluable and unrivalled medicine incases of Chronic Eruptions of theskin, and In the dropsical affections of the aged. Most imp .riant to the American Public. The United States proprietor of the celebrated “ Lucma Cordial,” or “ Elixir of Love,” begs to lay before the community, the following certificate, which he has received from the inventor, the illus trious Dr. Magnin.of Paris • “ Thi» is to certify, that 1 have disposed of the recipe for making the “Lucina Cordial,” or “ Elixir of Love,” and also the right to sell it throughout the I nned States of North America, to John Winters Holderwell, M. D. My reasons for so doing is, t hat the demands to me forthe above Cordial, of which 1 am the inventor, are so nume rous, that I am unable 10 supply all the orders from France and Italy alone; and have therefore dispo sed of the privileges vouchsafed in this, and oilier certificates of a like nature m order to generalise the benefits of my discovery throughout the world Given under my hand at Paris,onjhis nineteenth day of January, in the year of our Lord, e.ghteen hundred and thirty eight. , r „ ERASTE magnin. Gaspa d Delluc, ) William Merritt, J W «nesses. Postscript to the above. As you requested me to state the number of bot ties ol the “ Lucma Cordial,” which I have already sold, I have referred to my books, and find it to ex ceed four bundled thousand ; while the orders now on hand cannot be supplied in less than three months. From an immense number of tesiimonials from the regular faculty, touching the virtues of the Cordial, 1 have in particular selected the following which may be of use to you. You will also find s’ number oi others of less importance inclosed. This immediate cen.ficate is from a body of eight of the ablest medical practitioners in France g To Dr. Magnin, inventor of the Lucina Cordial, or Elixir of Love Respected and Honored Bir : —VV e have all in a variety of cases, tested ihe remarkable effects ol your great discovery, and have assembled for the purpose of bearing evidence to the facts, and tend enng you the honor which is your due The “ Lucma Cordial” is in our opinion, an infallible remedy for the prostration of the Procreant Mine lions, and Artificial Barrenness : and therefor, must prove a blessing to ihe human race. We ca also bear evidence that there is nothing in i to f a mer curial or deleterious naiure ; ana in short, ll r it is ° n u? 1 r e noblest medicinal discoveries of any a o e. \Vuh feelings of admiration and respect we “re main, dear sir, your obed ent servants Josselm Boasmt, I Jean Blanc, Sigismond de la Marline, | Robert Stevenson, Adrien Decrand, I Louis Ouiseau, Octave Nmol* I Pi erf e Buffen Extract of e letter from the elebraied Talleyrand, to Dr. Magnin. I am now on the wrong side of eighty, and vet 1 could beon my honor or oath if necessary, that a bot tle or two ot your Cordial of Love has made me feel as vigorous as a boy of five and twenty. 1 think you have dtscoveted the “Ehxir of Life,’ which the alchy mists have been so long in quest ol; ant. that (pardon my officiousness.) you should have named it accordingly. From the eminent Dr. Devigney, of Brussels. rp October 3, 1837. To Dr. Magnin:—My dear friend-1 am mo. gratified at the unprecedented popularity ol your Lucma Cordial, and am able to hear testimony to its surprising virtue. I had a patient recently, 1 M , a gentleman 01 fortune, who had for several years abandoned himself in the vortex 01 dissipation ; and was only reclaimed from it at length oy the utter prostration of all Ins virileener- By*-. "f was indeed, reduced to the last extremity of debility and t.istelessness. for, if an occasional flash of excitement warmed his system, the reac tion was almost immediate, and the result perfect prostration. 1 had applied all the usual nokruffl* in such cases; but, as I had anticipated, without success ; and when I saw the “ Lucina Cordial” advertised, I must confess that even the great weight of your name did not give me much hope in it, at least so far as regarded the case in hand. I felt bound to try it, howevir, and was soon satisfied ol us efficacy; for before a bottle was expended, my patient gave evidence of the returning elasticity of his system ; and he is now, having used four bottles, as well as ever. The number of documents, RUC h as the above which have been received by Mr. Magnin, since the first appearance of “ Le Cordial de lS ”would fil } * yohwnf large as the Bible. WmtP«H h n important medicineis for sale by John Yorkfh- il e /R e ‘c’ ?°- Eiberty street. New iork, Charles R lyler,N o .7o Cheslnut-st Fnila* □e ph.a ; «nd m Baltnoore by Rober , s & A ido«*. John M. Laroque, and G. R. Tyler • in Washing ton Cuy by Tobias Watkins and Charles Stott; fn bvTh'rS F.°V ]Vl Lm,hacum ’ “ Richmond Ji ’ ust,c e» in Petersburg by Bragg* fidk hv*V A Rosser & Jones; and in Nor 1. S nd B Emerson; and by John Woodly No. 65 Poydras at New Orleans It can also be found at all the principal Drug cstores in South Carolina, and in Augusta, by Havi i2 n » d K, ® le y & Co » Thomas Barrett <fe Co., ami Nelson Carter. Price, $3 per bottle, with full di factions. June i