Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, March 10, 1841, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    jmmmmmBim inil miiii imi i m.
CURING PRACTICE.
The principle of purifying the body by purg
? g with vegetable physic is becoming moie and
i lie understood as the only sensible method by
v men sounu iieaitli can be estabiiaued. mm-
drcds ul individuals have become convinced ol
ibis doctrine, and are dai y acknowledging the
practice to be the best ever discovered. Now
is the unhealthy season when our bodies are
liable to he affected with disease; and now is
the lime the suite of the stomach and bowels
should he attended to, because on the healthy
slate of those organs depends the healthy stale
of the general system; and every one will see at
once, if the general health be had while that re
mains, local disease cannot he cured.
All the medicine that is requisite to restore
the body to a statu of health is Brandreth's Veg
etable Universal Pills, which have performed
cures upon thousands of helpless and hopeless
persons, after the uswl scientific skill of phy
sicians have consoled them wish the assurance
that ihey could do no more. The properties ol
those Pills as aim-bilious and aperient medicine
are unrhaiied; all who use them recommend
them, their virtues surpass all eulogy, and mu.5t
be used to he appreciaied. The weak and del
icate will he atreiigihcued by their use. not by
br.icing but by removing the cause of weakness,
the gross and corrupt humors of the body.
They require no change in diet or care of any
kind. Plain directions accompany each box,
so thai every one is his own competent physi
cian. Remember, none are genuine sold by
druggists.
D.v. BRANDRETH'S Office in Philadel
phia for ihe sale of his Pills, is No. 8, North
.Eighth street.
KT Agents for Monroe and PiXe Counties are at
the following places.
At .Milford John H. JJbodhead.
" Stioudsburgh, Richard is. Staples..
" Dutottsburg, Luke Brodhead.
" New Marketvile Tkoxell & Sciioch.
Harrison's Specific Gintmetit.
The great celebrity ol this unrivalled Composi
tion especially in the Northern States leaves
the proprietor but little need to say any tiling in
lis favor; for it has Leen generally (-(.needed to it,
that it is beyond all comparison the best remedy
for external complaints that has ever been discov
ered, indeed the s.peed and certainty oi i;s oper
ations have the appearance of miracles : as uicers,
wornids, corns, fever sores, chiiulains, white swel
lings, tiles, piles, spider and snaks bites &c.
imiue.liately yield to us apparency super human
influence. Thus if properly app.ied it wiu temove
an inveteraie, corn or bieak and heal a biU in rive
days, will allay and perfectly cure an ulcer in two
weeks ; and the must desperate cases of white
swelling that can be imagined, have been destroyed
by it in less than two mo;.t!is. In the bites of
poisonous reptiles its eiScacy is truly "surprising;
?nd even in the bite nfa rabid dog, font applied
in time, its powers of attraction are so wonderful
that they will at once arret ihe poison and thus
prevent it from pervading the sjsiem. It is line-1
wise greatly superior to any me-licine heretofore!
discovered for the chafed backs and limbs of horses
for tellers, ring worms, chapped lips, and in
shcrt for every external bodily evil that may fall j
to the lot of man or beast. !
The proprietor has received at least a thousand
certificates and other documents, in favor of his
"SjWtta; Ointment' upwards a hundred of which
were written by respecjable mem!ers of the Med
ical Faculty; and m selecting from this pile the
fnttowjng sen pies, he was governed more by their
brevity, than their contents, as they all breath the
isame spirit of eulogy and satisfaction.
CERTIFICATES.
Albany, July 9, 1837.
To. Dr Harrison, Sir I use your Specific Oint
ment in my practice and cordially recommend it
as a most efficient remedy for Tumors, Ulcers.
"White Swellings, Scrofula, Rheumatic Pains,
Chapped Face, Lips and Hands; and for general
and external complaints. I write this at the re
quest 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
Extract of a Lettor from Dr- J. W. Sanders, 1
of Louisville. Ky. October 8, 1837. J
" I am prepared to say, that for Rheumatic Pams
and the iSore Breasts of il-males, Harrison' Spe
cific Ointment has no superior, if indeed it has
any equal, in the whole catalogue of external me
dicines, as known and prescribed in this country."
Extract of a letter from Dr Potts, of Utica. N Y.
& Dated July 28, 1R38.
"Harrison's 'Specific Ointment" is, in my opin
ion, a most important discovery; and is particular
ly eScient in scrofulas, ulcers, sore legs, erup
tions, and general outward complaints, speak of
its merits from an experience ot lour years "
Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct. 4, 1838
To Dr. Harrison, Dear bir, 1 write to con
gratulate you on the extraordinary virtue of yonr
4 Suecific Ointment,' in the curing of burns. A
little boy of mine, 4 years old, fell against the
fire-place three weeks since, whon his clothes be-
ltecaue ignited, and he was instantly enveloped
in flames. After sums difficulty the fire was ex
tinguished, but not before the poor little fellow's
lower extremities were almost covered with a con
tinual blister. Having mucn faith in your oint
ment, I immediately purchased three boxes, which
I applied unsparingly, according to your direc
tions in such cases ; and it is with great pleasure
and gratitude, that I am able to inform you that it
allayed the pain in a few hours; and-in ten days
.ad effected a complete cure. 1 need scarcely
add that it ought to be in tho possession of eve
ry family, as there is no telling when such acci
dents may occur. Yours respectfully.
H. M. SHEPHARD.
A supply of this valuable Ointment just received
and for sale, by
SAMUEL STOKES.
Stroudsburg. Nov. 6, 1840.
TIMOTHY SEED,
For sale by tfie subscriber,
' WM, EASTBUHN.
Stroudsburg, Feb. 14. 40.
JOB WORK
Of all kinds nealty 3zecuted at
-fibis Office.
TO AVOID DISEASE AND ATTAIN
HEALTH IS NOW IN THE POWER
OF EVERY ONE. DR. BENJA
MIN BRANDRETHS Vege
table CJisiveveal JPiils,
!,ti - 0rfCed into the United Slates, May 18, 1835 I
I There has never been an instance of these cele-i
brated Vegetable Universal Pills not riving relief
unit? ii:im iutMi i if- mm :i ri miv;i:mii'p fit iiimvm i't J.t
and perseverance in old. obstinate cases, is sure
making a cure, provided nature is not entiiely ex
hausted. They have cured since their introduc
tion into this country at least 20,000 twenty thou
sand persons of disease heretofore always con
sidered incurable. It is only five years since I
. ... - ' w I
opened the first office for the exclusive sale ol this ! sasionaliy benefited by the use of Peters' Pills !
medicine in New York; yet, in that time i have j No, assuredly not ; lor the human frame, like any
sold over twelve millions of boxes, and have now ! other structure, will fall into confusion and ruin,
eighteen offices for their exclusive sale, at least A neglected ; but, by the aid of medicine judi
one in every principal c.ty in the Union, at an ex-, ciousiy applied, it is enabled to preserve a heal
pense of near forty thousand dollars per year - j thy anu" even tone ; and it is the lirt of well-tested
And. with the expenses of advertising, and other 'public opinion, that Dr. Peters' pills are the me
incidcntnls, the sum was a little over One Jlun- dicine of medicines in the prevention or cure of
dred and Thirty Thousand Dollars for the year j the general diseases which the human tenement
1S39; some idea may be formed how the medicine
is appieciated Irom these facts; they are indeed
the greatest blessing that ever yet has been be
stowed on man.
I have often found persons desirous to know
how som this medicine wiii cure them. It is im
possible to say it altogether depends upon the
state of the blood and humors. One thinn may
be lelied upon that if the pills are persevered i
with according to the printed direction which ac
companies each box, the cure will be effected much
sooner than the patient could have expected. 1 he
many lingering chronic diseases we daily see, are
owing either to mercury or bleeding, or to not
having been properly purged in fevers, injiamalions,
cold, measels, small pox or lying in. It is utterly
impossible for us to attain or keep health without
sound j urging. We may fasten up the disorder
by barks and tomes, but it it be in the body, it must
come out before health is enjoyed, and sooner or '
later it will break out of itelf, worse than ever, if
this method of purifying the body is delayed too
long. No danger can arise from purging with
Brandreth's Pills- It has been proved, beyond
doubt, that these celebrated Pills and ttie human
body are naturally adopted one for the other. By the
use of this Glorious Me Heine the contents or hu
mors of the body, can be entirely evacuated, al
tered, and completely regenerated; and in a man
ner so simple as to give every day ease and pleas
ure. Brandreth's Pills are no less a cure than a pre
ventive of diseases. When we feel dull, pain in
the head, back, or side weary on the least exer
tion it is then we ought to take a dose of these
rids. 1 his will alwavs have a crood effect, be-
cause it is impossible for pain to be in the body
without the presence ot those humors which pro
duce it, and it is only by their being forced out
with purging that health can be restored.
All that I have been able to ascertain, either by
experience or from books h.is confirmed me in the
opinion, that pain, every feeling contrary to health,
is produced when the natural outlets of the body
become incapable of discharging the corrupt hu
mors generated in the body, as fast as nature re
quires their expulsion. And that to sorure health,
we have only to purge ourselves, until health is
restored. A practice which experience has es
tablished, is fully able to produce this result, with
out the possibility of any injurious effects. They
who have adopte 1 this simple plan have secured '
the hi st state of health their bodes were capable I
ofenjovinc The weak have become robust. The '
robust have become more so. All mankind would
be benefitted by this practice, except physicians:
Jind they would be boJily, though not profession
ally.
Let ms now recommend two things, never be
bled, and never go to a Druggist for Brandreth's
lJdls. 1 he first weakens the princiole of life, and
long keeps the blessings of health from the body,
And the last, to purchase a Pill called Brandreths i
of a Druggist, is to insure the purchaser a base
counterfeit, entirely incapable of producing the
beneficial results of the genuine medicine, i o in
sure this it must be purchased of the undermen
tioned Agents duly appointeJ by me, and who
hold a TficrnlTir rnrtihr:itf nl aapripw. w itch w ro.
newed yearly. There is an agent with one of;
these certificates in every town in the United
State-?. Those purchasing at wholesale, must re
member that all my travellers have a power ol At-
torney. regularly proved to be my act before the
Llerk of the county of .New York.
The foUcxoitig is a list of names of all the
Agents in Mouroeaud Pike
"cnn""
i
To purchase of any in these Counties not mention
ed in this nsl will subject the purchaser to
sure deception.
JOMONROE COUNTY.XH
Stroudsburgh. RICHARD S. STAPLES.
New Marketville, TROXEL & SCHOCH
Dutottsburg, LUKE BRODHEAD.
JEPPIKE COUNTY.XK
Milford, JOHN H. BRODHEAD.
Bushkill, PETERS & LA BAR.
Dingiman's Ferry, A. STOLL & Co.
Observe, no pills are genuine sold under the
name oi Brandreth's in Monroe or Pike coum
ties, except those sold by the above agents.
Philadelphia Office, No. 8, North Eighth street
B. BR ANDRETH. M.D.
THE CONSTITUTION.
What is that we call the Constitution ? The
consuiuuon is evmentiy mat wjin n constitutes,
ana ioai wiucn constitutes is trie olood. w e. there-
lore, know that the blood U the constitution, and
that a good or bad constitution is neither more nor
less than a good or bail state of the blood. There is
no person who, having lost health, does not wish to
have it restored. Use then the proper means. Ex
pel with Purgative Medicine all currupt humors
r .1 i.i i , , , . ; , ...I 'V.UUI unit, yvu wt uin-nuii- i iuiiuiiu u uju oUU
from the body, and the blessing, Health, will be Lr ,.5ii ,..i.;i, t ....u Ji n.i
the certain resuL: for .all pains or unpleasant feel -
inns proceed irom the presence of corrupt or vi -
tiatod humors, which are the real cause of every
disease, and therefore the only disease to which the
human frame is subject, because they clog up tho
veins and arteries, and prevent the free circulation
of the blood.
Brandreth's Vegetable Universal Pills cur this
disease: because they remove the corrupt or vi
tiated humors by the stomach and bowels, leaving
tho good humors to give life and health to the bo
ly. It is morally impossible that they can fail to
cure, provided Nature is not entirely exhausted.
PrHrandretrVs Office for the sale of his pills
in Philadelphia, is No. 8, North Eighth street.
Sold in Stroudsburg, by RrcuARD S- Staples,
m Milford", by J.. H. Bkodhead, and in Monroe and
Pike couuties, by the agenta published in another
part of this paper
JEFPERSONIAN REPUBLICAN.
KEEP IT BEFORE 'JTilE PEOPJLE.
oct. Joseph Priesily Peters'
Celebrated Vegetable Antibilous Pills,
are daily effecting some of the moat astonishing
and wonderful cures that havr, ever been- known.
- .
T S"?1 anU ?TtlrH f' T lh irJ,raisc
run ttnr an.; ..- , , I . I . . t. .ir am
the Palace and Poor-house alike echo with their vir
tues in all climates and under all temperatures
they still retain their wonderful virtues.
PETERS' VEGETABLE PILLS.
Breathes there the man who may not be occa
is incidental to
Do men in robust health require medicine! Cer
tainly, for the very excess of health begets cer
tain diseases unless duly regulated. If the blood
is suffered to run riot without correcting laxatives,
costiveness, megrin. tales, scurvy, spleen, pimples,
furred tongue, or offensive breath, are the inevita
ble consequences; for exubeiance of health, like
over-rich soil, becomes rank, and prone to the pro-
duction of weeds, if care is not taken to have it
judiciously moderated.
But healthy men have an antipathy to the very
name of medicine! And no wonder, for ninetecn
twentieths of all the medicines in the worhl com
mence operations by making the people very sick,
whom it was intended they should make very well;
and thus in most cases the cure is considered rather
worse than the disease. But Dr. Peters' Pills is
the celebrated and particular exception to this al
most universal rule. In them there is no gripe,
no nausea, no si kness of any kind; nay, thev are
absolutely very pleasant to the taste, and rest as
quietly on the stomach as so many confits of green
peas, even when their operations are as sudden and
effective, as if they were as disagreeable and as
sickening as an old fashioned bolus. Thus the
man who uses Peters' Pills, and where is the
man that does not use them ? expels headaches,
fevers, blue devils, blotches, pimples, &c. &c. and
makes his blood course as linuid and as gently
through his veins as a mountain rivulet, without
having put himself to any more inconvenience in
taking the medicine than ho would have done in
swallowing so many black currants.
Should ladies take Dr. Peters' Pills 1 Doubt
lessly they should, for they not only assure them
of health, complacency of spirits, and every bod
ily comfort, but thiough their miraculous agency
in the purification of the biood. speedily remove
every thing pertaining to harshness, pimples, or
casual scurvy, from the flesh, animates the eye,
and give an elasticity and a vigor to the limbs,
and the general carriage ; and hence, when you
see a lady with a cheek of velvet softness, a pure
lily and carnation complexion, and an easy & grace
ful bearing, the general inference to be drawn is,
that she is her own physician, and very particular
in the choice of her medicine ; and the especial
one, that she is a patron of Peters' Pills.
Leaving health out of the question, should poets,
novelists, editors, machinists, and men of genius
and science in general, patronise Peters' Pills ?
Unquestionably, for the vigor which - they impart
to the frame, exercises a most wholesome influ
ence upon the intellect : and the writer of this
feels justified in saying, that any person about to
carry out an idea, whether of composition or in
vention, will have a more lucid understanding of
his subject, and think belter and more to the point
on it, after he has vivified his system by a dose of
liom one to lour ot l'eters pills- rersons in bu-
siness, merchants, store keepers, clerks, specula-
tors, &c. will derive great advantage from them
on the same principle; lor if the mind is not buoy
ant, no man can attend to the usual pursuits ot
life with due perspicuity, judgment, and pleasure
and there is nothing in the world, at least that has
l een ever discovered, so efficient in brightening
the faculties, and freeing them from participating
in the languor, decay, and imperfectibilty of their
mortal abode as Dr- Peters' pills
To what may be attributed these singular and
wonderful effects 1 Why, to their mysterious and
inevitable action upon the chyle, and that particu-
lar region of the system whence the living fluid is
generated ; for thus they do not only purify the
blood, but create pure biood, the issue of wi ich is
healthy veins, arteries, and other functions, unob-
scured vision, firm arid pulpy flesh, smooth and
clear skin, and the consequent buoyancy of heart,
feeli.ig. and action. In short, whether we take
them as a matter of health, business, feeling, or
personal appearance, there is none of us should
leave our houses without a regular supply of Pe
ters' Pills.
More than six millions of boxes of thes-! cele
brated pills have been sold in the United States.
Canada's, Texas. Mexico, and the West Indies,
since January 1835. The certificates that have
been presented to the proprietor exceed 20,000,
upwards of 500 of which are from regular prac
tising physicians who are the most competent
judges of their merits.
TESTIMONIALS.
OPINIONS OF THE REGULAR FACULTY.
The following are but a few taken at random,
from a title of complimentary epistles forwarded
to Dr. Peters by regular physicians, touching the
: ofheacy of his pills. He feels pioud and grate
Jul in being able to 1
lay such documents before the
public.
New Orleans, April 21, 1837.
Dear Sir As an old classmate of yonrs in Yale
college, ltake the liberty of opening a correspon
dence. I learn that you are making a fortune by the sale
; lv awre t!)Ht lhrouch thfim vou arQ confeirinfT -
1 Xrn kw.; t,n
1 mvself am anion? those who have bean ner.nl
iarly benefited by their use. Since my arrival
- i -
here I had been subject fo severe bilious attacks,
which had nearly brought me to tho grave, but
(and I acknowledge it with gratitude,) a few box
es of your pills havo completely restored mo.
would add that their effect upon Sick Headache
and sour stomach is almost miraculous.
With sentiments of esteem,
H. M. SHEPERD, M. D.
Clarhcsville, Mechlenberg Co., Va., Feb. 1, 1837.
Deai.Sir, I embrace this opportunity of ox
pressing to you my pleasure at the unrivalled suc
cess of youx pills in this section of thq country.
It is the general fault of those who vend patent
medicines to say too much in theiravor ; but in
regard ito your pills I am firmly persuaded that
they deserve far more praise than you seem in
clined to give them. Six months ago 'they were
scarcely known here, and yet at present there is
no other medicine that can compare with them in
popularity. In Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, de
rangement of the Biliary organs, and obstinate
constipation of the bowels, 1 know of no apiricnt
more prompt and efficacious; and I h$ve had con
siderable experience in all these complaints
1 would add that their mildness and certainty of
action render them a safe and efficient purgative
for weekly individuals; and that they may be giv
en at ail times without apprehension of any of
those injurious consequences which so frequently
atiend the application of calomel, or blue pill. On
the whole 1 consider your Vegetable Pills an in
valuable discovery. Very respectfully,
S. HARRIS, M. D.
Charlotte, N. C, January 1, 1837
Dear Sir I have made frequent use of your
pills in the incipient stage of Bilious Fever, and
obstinate constipation of the bowels; also in the
enlargement of the Spleen, Chronic Diseases oi
the Liver, Sick Headache, General Debility, and
in all cases have found them to be very effective.
J. D. BOYD, M. D.
Mccklcnberg Co., Va., February 7. 1837.
Having used Dr. Peters' Pills in my practice
for the last twelve months. 1 take pleasure in giv
ing my testimony ol their good effects in cases of
iJyspepia, bick Headache, Bilious Fevers, and
other diseases, produced by inactivity of the liver.
They are a saA; and mild aperient, being the
best article of the kind I have ever used.
GEORGE C. SCOTT, M. D.
Extract of a letter by Dr. Joseph Williams, of Bur
li?iglon, Vt. July J, 1837.
"I cordially recommend Peters' Pills as a mild
ly effective, and in no case dangerous family me
dicine. They are peculiarly influential in cos
tiveness and all the usual diseases of the digestive
organs."
Extract of a letter from Dr JEdKartLSmitht of Mon
treal, U. C. September, 29, 1836
" I never knew a single patent medicine that I
could put the slightest confidence in butDrPters'
Vegetable pills, which are really a valuable dis
covery. I have no hesitation in having it known
that 1 use them extensively in my practice, for all
complai.its, (and they are not a few,) which have
their source in the impurity of the blood."
Extract of a letter from Dr Pyc, of Quebec, L- d,
March's, 1837
"For bilious fevers, sick headaches, torpidity of
the bowels, and enlargement of the spleen, Dr Pe
ters' pills are nn excellent medicine."
Those who have used these valuable Pills in this
State, give them the preference to all other kind.
Prepared by Joseph Priestly Peters, M. D. in
ventor and sole proprietor, No. 129 Liberty street,
New Yoik.
These Valuable Pills can be obtained of Doct.
Samuel Stokes and . D. & C Malvin'a, Strouds
burg. only agents for Monroe county.
Stroudsburg, October 23, 1840.
DELAWARE ACADEMY.
The Trustees of this Institution, have the
pleasure of announcing '.o the public, and par
ticularly to the friends of education, that they
have engaged Ira 13. Newman, as Superinten
dent and Principal of their Academy.
The Trustees invite the altention of parents
and guardians, who have children to seiuJLfr.om
home, to this Institution. They are fitTfngtip
ihe building in the first style, and its location
from its retired nature is peculiarly favorable
for a boarding school. It commands a heauti-
ful view of the Delaware river near which it
is situated, and the surrounding scenery such
as the lover of nature will admire it is easily
accessible the Easton and Milford Stages pass
it daily, and only S miles dislan from the latter
place, and a more salubrious -ectton of coun
try can nowhere be found. No fears need be
entertained that pupils will contract pernicious
habits, or bn seduced into vicious company it
is removed from all places of resort and those
inducements to neglect their studies that are
furnished in large towns awl villages.
Board can be obtained very low and near the
Academy. Mr. Daniel W. Dingman,jr. will
tako several boarders, his house is very conve
client, and students will there be under the im
mediate care of the Principal, whose reputa
tion, deportment and guardianship over his pu
pils, afford the best security for their proper
conduct, that the Trustees can give or parents
and guardians demand.
The course of instruction will be thorough
adapted lo the age of the pupil and the time
he designs to spend in literary pursuits. Young
men may qualify themselves for entering upon
tho study of tho learned professions or for an
advanced stand at College for mercantile mtr -
o,,:,. f,,. i,f;..- r rt,'wt,1
suits, for teaching or the business of common
life, useful will he preferred to ornamental stud
ies, nevertheless so much of the latter attended
to as the advanced stages of the pupil's educa
tion will admit. Tho male and female depart
ment will he under the immediate superintend
dencnofthe Principal, aided by a competent
male or female Assistant. Lessons in music
will be given to young ladies on tho Piano
Forte at the boarding house of the principal, by
an experienced and accomplished Instructress.
Summer Session commences May 4th.
EXPENSES.
Board for Young Gentleman or Ladies with
the Principal, per week, $1 50
Pupils from 10 to 15 years of age from $1 fo
$1 25
Tuition for the Classics, Bellcs-Lettres, French
&c, per quarter, 2 00
Extra for music, per quarter, 5 00
N. B. A particular course of study will be
marked out for thoso who wish to qualify them
selves for Common School Teachert with ref
erence to that objoct ; application made for
teachers to tho trustees or principal will meet
immediate attention,
Led tiros on tho various subject pf stqdy will
ho delivered by able speakers, through the
course of year.
By ordor of the Board,
DANIEL W. DINGMAN. Pres't
Dingrhan'a Forry, Pike co, Pa., May 2 1840
LADIES' COMPANION..
New Volume commenced with the Nov. Number.
A Casrcnlatsoa e 20,000.
THE Ladies' Companion, established in May,
1834 a popular and highly esteemed magazine U
General Literature and the Fine Arts.; embellish
with gorgeous and costly engravings on steel, and
the Quarterly fashions; and also with Fashiona
ble and popular Music, arranged for the Fiano
Forte, and Guitar.
Since the publication of the number for May,
the demand for the Ladies' CompariionVjhas been
unprecedented and beyond the mos't sanguine
anticipations. At the commencement' of the vol
ume an additional number of copies were printed,
which was considered at the time adequate to sa
tisfy all the orders which might be received, and
leave a considerable number on hand for subse
quent calls. The publisher is more than gratified
in stating that the whole of an edition of six thou
sand, five hundred copies, was completely exhaus
ted before the issuing of the third number of the
volume; and, consequently,. he was compelled to
reprint a second edition of two thousand copies,
making the circulation of the Ladh-s' Companion
eight thousand five hundred, at the termination of
the tenth volume. In conseounncrR nf tln rrrn.it
and unparalleled increase of new subscribers, lie
has determined to commence the new volume for
the ensuing year with thirteen thousand : hoping
that he will thus be enabled to supply all the de
mands for the Ladies' Companion, as well a those
disappointed in commencing with the tenth vol
ume. The proprietor feels grateful for that en
couragement which has been so lavishly bestowed
upon his magazine, and at the $ame time he begs
to asure the readers of the Ladies' Companion,
that it is determined resolution to meet it with a
corresponding liberality to merit its continuance.
The work appears in beautiful new type, printed
on the finest paper ; smoothly pressed, and neatly
stitched in a handsome cover.
The Ladies' Companion contains a larger quan
tity of reading thau any other magazine issued in
in this country, and its subscription price is only
three dollars a year, while the great combination
of taletit secured lr the coming year will render
it unequalled by any other periodical.
Splendid Steel JLngravwgs, prepared by Mr. A.
Dick, ornament the work one ot which accompa
nies each number. These plates are entirely new,,
and are engraved at a heavy expense by one of the
best arstists m America, expressly for the maga
zine. The designs are selected with a view ol in
teresting the general reader, and enhancing the
value of the work, for its superior pictoral embel
lishments. It is with pride the proprietor announ
ces that the Ladies' Companion is the only maga
zine published, in which new and elegant steel
plates- appear regularly. Those accompanying
other monthly periodicals, are generally hist worn
out in- annuals. In addition to the engravings
mentioned, a correct plate of the Quarterly Fash
ions for Ladies4 will appear in the June, Septem
ber, December, and Marsh numbers, independent
of the usual embellishment. It is the determina
tion of the proprietor, that these fashion piafes
shall appear in a style hitherto unknown. 1th e
rary character will- undergo no change, as it wiH
i k r .1, T? !:. v ,
neretolore. Articles- nom the pens ot itnei'
distinguished writers, will appear in ihe fcnfcc"
ing numbers, among which may be enumeredii:
following: Mrs. Holland,- Emma O. Ernbt;)
Ellct, Caroline Orne. Seba Smiths-Ann S. Siemens
Miss Hannah F. Gould, Mary Ann Brov.neC:vr
lotte Cushman, Mary Kmily Jackson, Henry Wj
Herbert, author of 'Cromwell,' &c. ProfessofJ Hi
Ingraham, author of ' Burton,' 'Capt. KiddJilr.
Professor H. VV. Longfellow, auihor of 0ut
j Mer' Wm. E. Burton. Chief Justice MellemfJa
Neal, Park Benjamin, GrcnviMe Mellen,
Brooks, A. M., George P Morris, Rot. Han-
Isaac C Pray, m Comstock, Hiram B. :'lrni
Rev H Clinch. James Brooks, Albert Pine, j
A. Durivage, C. F. Daniels, former Editor Ipl'i)
N. Y. Gazette, together with several others? tri
wnom negotiations are peuoing j.ney wm Here
after be announced.
Mrs. Ann S. Stephens, )
William W Snowchm, S Editors.
The Musical Department of the Ladies' Compa--nion
has ever commanded a large share of atten
tion, and has been looked upon with no little in
terest by its readers, and more especially the La
dies, whom the publisher is anxious to please. It
will continue to be a subject of more than usual
care to him, and to the Professor under whese su
pervision it is placed, to make that portion of tho
magazine deserving of the countenance of every
lover of music.
Tac Work in General. Of every department an
equally careful supervision will be strictly exor
cised by the Editors, and all appropriate expe. ci
tures will be liberally bestowec, as it is the de
sign of the publisher, with the aid of his contribu
tors and the advice of his friends to make the La
dies Companion distinguished for the beauty and
accuracy of its typography, the variety and hieh
ton? of its literary articles, the quality and value
iof musk;, and the unequal splendor of its pic
toral embellishments, and the accuracy of Us quai-
terly fashions. The proprietor pledges himself to
use all honorable means to maintainthe superiori
ty which the Ladies' Companion lias obtained.
For five years he has steadily pursued a course of
improvement, and he flatters himself that his pre
sent facilities are such as to give ihe work eminent
advantages over ah other publications
From the foregoing it will be perceived that the
Ladies' Companion embraces every department
within the range of Belles-Lettres and the Fir.c
Arts: and no exertions or expense will be deemed
too great to render the work equal to any other
extant. The flattering and general testimonials
nf nearly every contemporary journal in the United
States, and in fact, many on ihe other side of the
Atlantic, have strongly "assorted the .undor.in! It?
claims of the Ladies' Companion to the suppoitot
the public generally. Tin re is no wwk that r ive
its readers such a great return for their moncv.
lcrmsinrce jjoitars a year in advance, or Fair
Dollars during the year.
No subscription received for less than a yeas
Letters must be postpaid, otherwise tho postal
is deducted, and credit given only for the balance
Address WM. SNOWDEN.
inn Fulton street. New York.
A CARD.
7
THE holders of the tortificntps or notes f
the TaylorsvillB Delaware Bridgo Company,
are hereby informed that said certificates or
notes are redeemed by ihe Treasurer, at tK
nffilMJ ff I tin sw,.,,..,.... .... I
w.wv. n.u .utiiiuii , mi pi:eniniiMii as iimi&j
. M. K. TAYLOR, . Treasurer.
January, 20th, 1841.