II I i Having a gencr.il assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every description of ards, Circulars, Bill Meads, iffotcs, T" Clunk Keccipts, . JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER KEjJLIVKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable tems AT THE OFFICE OF THE .Teffcrsoxtian Republican. look here. We have just received for sale, at ihe JefTer sonian Ofiice, a supply of "Fanner's Oderife.r vus Compound for strengthening, softening and beautifying the Hair," also of " Fcnner's Den trificc for Preserving and Bcaxiltfying the Teeth, preventing Tooth Ache, tyc." and also "Fcnner's Fotnadc Divine," a preparation for curing chap ped IimiiN, l-rot-fx, Ac. Tli articles are aiS of ihe fir.-t quality, and the high reputation which they have acquired in the cities, and wherever else they have been used, cannot fail to recom mend tht'.m to the general notice and patronage of the people of litis place and vicinity. A number of our citizens have already tried them, and pronounce them excellent. We invite all, who are in want of any such articles, to give us a call, and we are sure they will not go away unsatisfied. December 19, 1S14. THE NATIONAL PRESS A JO URN A L FOR HOME ; A RepoAilnrj' of Letter ; a Reeori! of Art; a ifiirror of Easeti;r Events. To be Published every Saturday, at Two Dollars a Year, in Adrance. GEORGE P. MORRIS, Editor and Proprietor. A number of the most eminent literary persons of this country, have proposed to the undersigned to publish, under the above title, a refined and val uable ncicspaper, upon a plan combining the high est resources- of .National Talent with the best el ements of extensive popularity, and at so trifling an annual cost, as will place it within the conve nient reach of all classes of society. The control and management of this publication will form the exclusive and undivided attention of the Editor whose long experience, ample facili ties and practised care, will be exerted to select, unite and harmonise the various skill which is willing to seek devopment under his direction The scope, design, and character of this paper will differ from those of any journals heretofore established, while it will comprehend all that they contain of importance to the community. The contents will be fitted to engage the attention of the man of business, and be a source of elegant .instruction and entertainment to the domestic fire side and family circle. The leading characteristics of this paper will be as follows : 1- Early and Copious Intelligence of all inter esting occurrences in Literature, Society, and Art, both at home and abroad. 2. A Foreign Correspondence of tried popular ity and acknowledged merit has been engaged, and will be commenced with the first number. 3. Prof'ucu'V's in fiction, romance and histori cal narrative; Sketches of the taste and manners of the lime: Essays, after the manner of the Tat tler and Spectator, on subjects connected with so cial interests; biographical notices and anecdotes, literary and professional ; bon-mots, epigrams, and elegant trifles of every kind; the rumors of the day, and the comments that float upon the conversation of the hour materials of this kind will form the ordinary staple of the work. 4. The department of Criticism will exhibit a discriminating and popular survey of the Literary Productions of the day. There will be a thorouch and careful'chronicle of every thing of value ac complished in Painting and Sculpture, and a can did and patriotic estimate of the National produc tions in comparison with other countries. Such exposition of the character and special excellen cies of what is exhibited in Music will be constant ly given as may lead to the more intelligent enjoy ment of that most imaginative and delicate branch of the Fine Arts. 5. No original papers will appear, but those of obvious and decided merit; and the selections (which will commonly be from the foreign journals the least known in this country) will be made with the utmost attention and care. The predominant design of the Editor is to add to the Republic of Letters a Weekly Journal, dis tinctly and decidedly national in tone and features, and at the same time, to avoid all connection with meie party politics, THE NATIONA L PRESS j will, in brief, combine the striking and novel at- tractions of the newspaper, with the more abiding! interest of the higher class of periodicals. It will j be printed in the folio form, on large and superior I paper, on a. new and clear type, obtained expressly for the purpose, and will be, in its whole arrange ment and details, a favorable specimen of the best! Typographical skill ot the country. In addition to these, and as one of its most valuable peculiarities, it will be, in reference to the diversity of talent that wilbe employed upon it, the cheapest paper in thejUnited States. Terms Two dollars a year, or three copies for five dollars, ini'ariably in advance. It will be sent by mail to all parts of the United States, and to the British Provinces, done up in strong wrappers, with the utmost punctuality and despatch. Postmasters are requested to act as agents, re ceive subscriptions, and make remittances. The first number will be issued on Saturday, the fourteenth of Februaiv npvt. That a proper estimate may be formed of the ' number ol copies that will be required, subscribers , ould oblige the Editor bv sending in their names at as eany a period as possible. Newspaper and periodical agents and newsmen supplied oh liberal terms. Burgess, Stringer & Co. 232 I? mad way, wholesale agents. Subscriptions, orders, remittances, and all com munications, to be addressed, post-paid, to GEORGE P. MORRIS, 222 Broadway, corner of Ann St., New York. tp" With those Editors who copy the above Prospectus, the Editor will be roost happy to ex change, and, at all times, as always heretofore, to reciprocate the liberalities and courtesies of the press. 43LANK MORTGAGES, For sal at Uiis office. CABINET MAKING. The subscriber hereby informs the public that ho still continues the Cabinet Making Business at his old stand in Elizabeth st., Stroudsburgh Pa. where he will be happy to furnish any per son with Cabinet Ware, at low prices. He in tends to keep on hand, and make to ordei, all kinds of wares in his line of business. Side-Boards, Bureaus, Centre, Break fast, Dining and End Tables, Wash Sta?ids, Bedsteads, Wardrobes, Book Cases, Secretaries, cj-c. ALSO COFFINS made to order at the shortest notice. CHARLES MUSCH. Stroudsburgh, April 4, 1844. 'J't'Sl 'P llV 'Sjnqspnoiig Hosniv surra v ho pauStsjaptin oqi Xq paAioosj Xnjjut!ii oq t.w sjapjQ Suiyui mq st '.ittm icojS su titA psjEdutoo 'aAtj-j aqi jo isoo oqj, di pnojis 'HSlNTOtfO AV3HCINV "P '3M0J.S SVIV'OH I. 'rianqspiuuts 4SAOe MHOf asn til aou tujqi a.r.q oiia 'paiioisjapun otji jo jaqtta uo 2uibo Xq soAir-j oqt jo Aii(im aqtjo paysnes oq nuo suosjaf p3J3jud st ja.xo qotiA 'tou jo 'Xatioq snjdjns oijein oi jjiOAV oi idaj oq una -Xaqi jo sb.;u AEJts jo xoq iioujuioa aqi ui op Aqi sb 'ssajj-1 os3in ui ouius aqi ujiuAvs a saocj aqj -asn ui 9JOjoir?jaq uaaq ssq ltjqi ptitjj aqi jo fitiiqi Auv oi joij.dns jbj put! iiioJj ittajayip A pit itto ajdtotiud no poianJisttoD si OAifj aqj, uoii -ujAin oqt oi oqqnd aqi jo iioiiumib aqi b.i oi aABOj sS,iq '.fiunoa aojuojj joj ,t'ff; But -jos)Ojdfi9g ju9io(i psaoudujj sjidjj jo iqSij luajud aqi pasBipjud Suuuq jaquosqns aqj. OMLLOaiOHJ-tfTIS XXSfiLYJ a&AOVJKI SlttYH 'saaa anoA says MATTHEW T. MILLER, SUCCESSOR TO ROBERT T. BICKNELL; EXCHANGE BROKER, No. 8 South Third street, Philadelphia. Bank Notes.. Notes oh all solvent banks in the United States discounted at the lowest rates. Drafts, Notes and Bills collected on the most favorable terms. Exchange. Bills of exchange and Bank Checks on most of the principal cities of the Union, bought and sold at the best rates. Exchange on England in large or small sums constantly for sale. BicknelVs Reporter, Counterfeit Detector and Prices Current, is issued from this office every Tuesday. It is devoted chiefly to the condition of the currency, the Markets, Banking institutions, Countetfeit Notes, &c. Terms, $3 per annum payable in advance. BicknelVs Counterfeit Delcclor and Bank Note List is nublished semi-monthly at SI 50 per an num, payable in advance. This work is printed in pamphlet form of 32 pages. Single copies 12 1-2 cents. Ofiice open from 8 a m to G p m Exchange hours from 9 a si to 3 p m. Worms Kill X'hoiisasuls. CHILDREN are most subject to them, but per sons of all ages are liable to be afliicted witli them. Bad breath, paleness about the lips, flush ed cheeks, picking at the nose, wasting away, leanness, pain in the bowels, joints or limbs, dis turbed sleep, frightful dreams, moaning and some times a voracious appetite, ate among the symp toms of worms. Many are doctored for months for some other imaginary disease, when one box of Sherman's Worm Lozenges would efFect a cute. Dr. Ryan, corner of Prince street and the Bowery, cured a man of worms that was reduced to a skel eton, and by only one box of Sherman's Lozenges: he is now as fat as an alderman. The Hon B. B. Beardsley has saved the life of one of his chil dren by them. The sale of over 2,000,000 of boxes has fully tested them. They are the only infalli ble worm destroying medicine known. What family will be without them ? Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Whooping Coughs, Asthma, and all affections of the lungs, will find a healing value in Sherman's Cough Lozenges. They saved the Rev. Richard l)e Forrest, the Rev. Mr. Streeter, Jonathan Howarth, Esq., and that worthy old hero, Leonard Rogers, from the consumptive's grave. They cured in one day, the Rev. Mr. Dunbar, the Rev. Mr. Handcock, Wm. H. Attree, Esq., of distressing coughs. They are the pleasantest cough medicine and cure the soon est of any known remedy. Headache, Sea-sickness and Palpitation, re lieved in from five to ten minutes by Sherman's Camphor Lozenges. Persons attending crowded rooms or travelling will find them to impart buoy ancy of spirits and renew their energies- Those suffering from loo free living will find a few of the lozenges to dispel the horrors and lowuess of spirits. Mr. Krauth, of the Sunday Mercury, has repeatedly cured himself of severe headache by them. Captain Chadvvick, of the packet ship Wellington, has witnessed their efficacy in a great many cases of sca-sickuess. They operate like a charm upon the agitated or shattered nerves, as Sherman's Poor Man's Plaster docs upon rheu matism, lumbago, pain or weakness in the side, back, breast, or anv part of the hodv. Mr. H. G. Daggers, 30 Ann street, Henry 11. Goulding, 3.") Chatham street, .Moses J. Henriques, Esq., and a multitude of others have experienced the wonder ful effects of these Plasters., Price only 12 1-2 cents. Caution is necessary to see that you get the genuine Sherman's Lozenges and Plasters, as there are many worthless articles attempted to be palmed off in place of them, by those who would trifle with your life for a shilling. A fresh supply of these valuable medicinesjust received and for sale at the Republican office. December 10. I fi l l. NOTICE. Sherman's Cough Lozenges, and CJickener's Pills ... For sale at thi.- offioe. , . STROUDSBURG IRON AND BRASS FOUNDRY. , The subscriber, having purchased ihe inter est of Wm. Schlaiigh in the above establish mom, takes this method lo inform the public generally, and Millers and Farmers especial lv, that he has removed to the large and con venient Foissidry audi ftlachsnc Shop, in the rear of John Boys' Store, and would be thankful for any patronage extended towards him, and respectfully announces that he is prepared to execute all orders in his line of business m the best manner and with despatch Flo will manufacture MILL GEARING for Flour and other Mills, together with Cast ings of every description turned and fined up in thu best possible manner. Ho feels confi dent in his ability to execute all orders with which he may be entrusted m a workman-like manner. Particular care will be taken to em ploy none hut good workmen in the different departments of the establishment, and no pains will be spared by the proprtetot lo give gen-1 eral satisfaction lo those who may favor hun with orders for work. BRASS CASTINGS, such as Spindle Steps, Shaft and Gudgeon Boxes, &c. will be made to order. Old Cop per and Brass taken in exchange at the highest price. Patterns made lo order. Tliresliisi? Machines & Ilor.sc Powers of the most approved construction, will be fur nished lo order at the shortest notice. Wrought Iron ITSill Work will be done on the most reasonable terms, and all kinds of smith work. The best kind of Sled Shoes and polished Wagon Boxes will always be kept on hand. Ploughs of the most approved plan will be kept on hand, and an excellent assortment of Plough Castings which he offers for sale to Plough makers. SAMUEL HAYDEN. Stroudsbnrg, March 13, 1845. READY PAY. DKY GOODS, GROCERIES, U HARDWARE, CROCKERY, BOOTS AND SHOES, Drifts :inl medicines, Iron, Nails, Giass, Boards, Shingles, Ceiling lalii articles & CHEAP FOR CASH OR PRODUCE. POSITIVELY NO TRUST! The subscribers having adopted the above method of doing business, feel confident that it will be beneficial to the interests of their cus toiners, as well as their own. They have just received in addition to their former stock, a larue assortment of Dry Goods selected with care. Also, Groceries, Hardware, &C. which thev will sell at prices to suit the times All persons having unsettled accounts with the subscribers, will confer a favor by settling and paying up. at their earliest convenience. Grateful for the liberal patronage heretofore extended lo us, we respectfully solicit its con tinuance, and pledge ourselves to use every exertion to merit the favors of their friends and customers. C. W. DeWITT & BROTHER. Milford, July 12, 1813. DISSOLUTION. The partnership heretofore existing between the subscribers, Hading under the linn of Hay den & Schlaiigh, has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. All persons having de mands against said firm, will present them to Samuel Hayden, for Kotilemcm ; and all who are indebted thereto, are requested to make im mediate payment to him, he being authorized to receive the same. ' - SAMUEL HAYDEN, WILLIAM SCH LAUGH. 4tfN. B. The business will be continued bv Tsihscriher. in the new huihlimr in tlm rn.-ir ofJjoho Boys' Siore, wh' respectfully solicit a continuance of public patronage. SAMUEL HAYDEN. March f. IrMf). BAR IRON. DOUBLE AND SINGLE REFINED, Bar Iron, Car,CoacI& Wagon Axles CHOW BAR, SJ,KDGE AND PLOUGH MOULDS, Axle ad Uun Barrel Iron, And a general assortment of WAGON Tlr-iJE & SfcUAl!B2 81iO constantly on hand and will be sold on the mos reasonable terms, bv MORRIS EVANS, Analomink Iron Works,. Apri 10, J 812. INDIAN QUEEN HOTEL, Has fitted up a commodious and elegant Ho tel on Elizabeth street, nearly opposite the store of G. H. Miller & Co., and directly op posite the residence of Daniel Stroud, Esq. He has every convenience lor entertaining strangers and travellers. Persons from the ci ties, and others who wish to take a pleasant jaunt in the country will he accommodated in the most satisfactory manner at his house. THE TABLE will be supplied with the best productions. af- lorded by the market. HIS ROOMS AND BEDS are such, as will, he hopes, prove satisfactory to all reasonable customers. THE BAR is, and will continue to be, furnished with choice assortment of Liquors. THE STABLING is new and extensile and surdssed by none in the roumv for comfort and convenience. With these advantages backed by some ex perience in the buMiiess and a determination to keep a good public house, he confidently ex pects a fair portion of public patronage. Permanent boarders will find a quiet home and be satisfactorily accommodated at moderate prices. Sttoudsbtirg, Sept. 28, 1843. Di j . i ISSOHltLOll 01 J nrtnerSllIJ). The partnership heretofore existing between the subscribers, as publishers of this paper, was on ihe 17th of August last, dissolved bv O 0 mutual consent. All persons having demands against the said firm, will present them j inff-journals of less price and wider circulation, Theodore Schoch for settlement and all wholhev may supply the Farmer's table with lighter are indebted thereto are requested to make im- j anJ more agreeable refreshment, while in the Li mediate payment to him, he being authorized j brary he may may find more solid as it will be to receive the same. THEODORE SCHOCH, THOMAS L. KOLLOCK. P. S. The JefTersonian Republican will con tinue to he published by Theodore Schoch and F. E. Spering, who respectfully solicit a con tinuance of public patronage. THEODORE SCHOCH, F. E. SPERING. Spi itting of Blood, Night sweats and pain in the Side Jonathan Haworth, Esq. the well known Tern perance Lecturer, was attacked with a cold from sleeping in damp sheets, in the winter of 1841. He obscure to American readers, or calculated to mis neglected it at first, but soon found it assuming a j ieacj the beginning in Farming, owing to differen somewhat alarming aspect, and then resorted to Ces of Soil, Climate, &c. The works published the various remedies usually recommended for lung J jn the Library will form a complete series, explor complaints. When one thing failed he tried an-)jng and exhibiting the whole field of Natural other, until he had exhausted his patience and the 1 Science, and developing the rich treasures which whole catalogue of remedies. His cough was al- j Chemistry, Geology, and Mechanics, have yielded most incessant, so that he could get little or no j and may yield to lighten the labors and swell the sleep attended wjth pain in his side, spitting of harvests of the intelligent husbandman. The blood, night sweats, and all the usual symptoms off work will be so arranged that the Farmer's Libra Consumption. While at Rome, (N Y) he felt that j ry may he bound up by itself, forming a mam his end was nigh that in that place he must soon moth volume of 600 pages at the end of each year: end his journey of life. Providentially, a lady 0r each work contained therein may be bound se who visited him advised a trial of Dr Sherman's ' parately. Cough Lozenges. He accordingly sent and got a j n. 'Hie Monthly Journal of Agriculture will box, and the iirst dose gave him more relief than , likewise contain about 50 pages per month, and all the other medicines he used before. By the . will comprise, 1. Foreign: Selections from the time he had taken one small box, he was able to higher class of British, French and German pe start for the city of New York, and in three weeks' : riodicals devoted to Agriculture, with extract; time he was perfectly restored to his usual health. from new books which mav not be published iru He often announces the fact to his hearers, when the Library, &c. cjc. 2. American: Editorials lecturing on Temperance, and says he owes his i communicated and selected accounts of experi life to Dr Sherman's Lozenges nients, improved processes, discoveries in Agri- From the Cincinnati Daily Times, of Jan. 4th 1844. culture, new implements, &c. In this department: Coughs The variableness of the weather this alone will ours resemble any American work ever winter has caused an unusual number of persons ' yet published. It can hardly be necessary to add to be afflicted by colds and coughs scarcelj' a ' that no Political, Economic, or other contsoverted family has escaped; and .with many, carelessness doctrine, will be inculcated through this ccogazine. in attending to a cough, has laid the foundation for , Its price will be Five Dollars a year iit advance, consumption. Our family has not escaped the , for two royal octavo volumes of 600 pages each general affliction, but owing to a remedy, used Each number of the Library will be-illustrated for the first time, they were speedily cured. Sher- by numerous engravings, printed on type obtained man's Cough Lozenges, which we were induced expressly for this work, and on good paper the to try, proved what they are represented to be, and j whole got up as such a work should be: 1 f it does affected a cure in a few days of a troublesome not prove the best as well as the amplest and most cough, which appeared so "deeply seated that ! comprehensive Agricultural work ever published seemed doubtful if it could be removed at all. ' in this country, the fault shall not rest with the We have not written the above as a puff, but as I publishers, and we are sure it will not fall short facts which the community should know. G F. for want of industry or devotion in the Editor. 1 nomas, iNo 14 Alain street, is the sole agent in this city WORMS CAUSE DEATH. Thousands upon thousands have gone down to graves from Marasmus, or a wasting away of the body, Epilepsy, Fits, St Vitus' Dance, Locked Jaw, Apoplexy, Mania, Dropsy in the Head, Pal- sy, Consumption. Pleurisv Dvsenterv. Convul- sions, and many other supposed apparent diseases; and many have suffered lor years and years, and have been doctored for some imaginary complaint without the least relief; and others are still suffer ing, when all the trouble arises from worms, and worms alone, wnich are entirely overlooked, and when the proper treatment would have saved their lives, and restored them to health. Every obser vant mother cannot but see and admit the truth;! but still many physicians shut their eyes to that all-impottant cause of disease. Persons of all ages and sexes, from the tender infant at the breast to old age, are all liable to be afliicted with worms. Many a.porson has suffered his whole life from them, and never suspected it. Different kinds of worms inhabit different parts of the body : but a long uifsertatton on their particu lar locality, originate, is superfluous and unneces sary, so long as a proper, safe, and certain remedy is at hand. That is all the public wants or cares for. The sale of over two millions of boxes of Sherman's Worm Lozenges, in less than five years, places their reputation far above all other "worm medicines. BeWitl, Elrofthcvs & Ilagcrty, Have on had 150,000 feet Hemlock and White and Yellow Pine Boards and Siding, at their Lumber establishment in Lord's Valley, 14 miles from Dingman's Bridge, which they will sell cheap for Grain, Straw, and Iron, and will not refuse to take current money or Pork. Wo respectfully solicit a share of public pah rotirtge. farmers' Library. . Prospectus of the Farmer's Library, and Monthly Journal of Agriculture. John S. Skinnrr, Hrli tor. None can well have studied the true Bourcea of National welfare, without perceiving the natu ral and friendly connexion existing between Ma nufactures. Commerce and Agriculture. The p0. licy which strikes at the prosperity of the Manu facturing consumer, must damage the Agricultural producer, and neither can be injuriously affected without detriment to the Merchant, at once con sumer and canier for both. As, however, the ele ments of manufacturing- and commercial industry must be derived chiefly from the soil, is it not the obvious interest of all other classes that the one which gives to all their employment and subsist ence, should be encouraged and benefitted with every advantage that science can confer and the most enlightened industiy make available Yet it has not been until comparatively a late period in Europe, and still later in America, that the pub lic mind has been made properly sensible of the necessity of science to Agriculture, and so to re spect Farming as essentially an intellectual and dignified pursuit one which should imply for its followers high mental cultivation and vanocs attainments. Happily, however, educated young men are now betaking themselves to Farming, as a business, which, like the learned professTons, has its own principles and will have its literature : I o rwl ft-i,1,r it ma,f ti otlmrl ivhnt cnh!irt lino tnfnl.. . ; e , memoir9 an,l worte5 more momJi and instructive, or been fruitful of more interest ing results of scientific investigation, than Agri culture 1 Who, among modern Literati, enjoy more enviable distinction than Liebig and John, slon, and Boussingault and Candolle 1 The taste for Agricultural Literature in our country, thanks to the able journals that encourage it, keeps pace with its progress in Europe. The more fully t meet the demand thus created, we have decided to publish on the first day of July, and monthlv . i r. .i rt t r i .. inereauer, ine rarmers jwrary ana Monthly journal of Agriculture, to be edited by John S Skinner, late Assistant Postmaster General and ' founder of the first Agricultural periodical pub- lished in this country. ! , ar irom oeing oestgne o or in any way caicu- it r 1 i t more costly food. . Each number will consist of two distinct parts, viz. : I. The Farmers'1 Library, in which will be pub lished continuously the best Standard Works on Agriculture, embracing those which, by their cost or the language in which they are written, would otherwise seem beyond the reach of nearly all American Farmers. In this way we shall give for two or three dollars the choicest European treatises and researches in Agriculture, costing ten times as much in the original editions, not easily obtained at any price, and virtually out of the reach of men who live by following the plough In the r armers Library they will be accompanied bv notes from the Editor, exolaininor what mav bo . Ihe low and dehntte rate ot postage charoeable; on such a periodical after the 1st of July say six to eight cents a number will enable many tr j ahe. 11 ,wno wou olerwise nave oeen repeuea ! 0 hef 2nd capricious exactions of the Post I 0Rlce- , As Postmasters are permitted to frank- k - I . ! .1 I 1 mone '?"ers l0. pusners until mat penou, anu as we ,WIsh t0 Ptonly so many copies as may be wanted, we respectfully solicit orders from all who may incline to aid us, as early as will suit their convenience. Address GREELEY $ McELRATU, Tribune Ofiice. Corner of Spruce-street, opposite the Citv HalL New York, July SI, 1845. ' docks Brass 30 hour Clocks, Wood 30 do da For sale cheap, by C. V DbWITT Milford, Dec. 3, 1842 BRICK. 250,000 Brick, just burnt, are offered for sale by the subscriber, among which may be found say 160,000 Hard Brick. 75,000 Soft and Salmon dr. 10,000 Jam do. 5,000 Square Hearth do: All kinds of produce (cash' hot refused) la- ken in exchange. C. W. DeWITT. Milford. Nov. 21, 1844. JOB WORK Neatly executed1 at this Office.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers