MXLLHirSRT. H...American Traveller, semi-weekly, 4,00 Juvenile Miscellany, bi-monthly, 2,00...
Transcript of MXLLHirSRT. H...American Traveller, semi-weekly, 4,00 Juvenile Miscellany, bi-monthly, 2,00...
James <j. Brooks, Esq. has left New- York for Rochester, to take charge of the Literary department of the Craftsman.— He carries with him the good wishes of the Corps E ditorial.
T h t Printers.— We learn, says the Washington Telegraph of Tuesday, that the senate * esterday confirmed the nomi nation of Mr. Kendall, the vice president giving the casting vote. Mr. Noah tvas rejected, 25 to 23, aod Messrs. Dawson and Gardiner were rejected by a large vote.* A correspondent informs us that all the members were present.
At the late session of the Legislature of Rhode-Island resolutions were offered for abolishing the imprisonment of males for uff debts under $5— and for abolishing altogether the imprisonment of females for debt.
Mr. Kmg, in Greece, remarks in a letter, that he has distributed upwards of 300 copies of the Sacred Scriptures, of which number he had sold more than 170. In th e Schools, the number of which, Mr. King is striving to increase, the N ew -T e s tament and J ’racts are used, which are printed at the press in Malta.
Since the introduction of steam-boats into England, we are informed that but a single boat(the Norwich) has burst her boiler. This was more than twelve years since. Immediately afterwards, there was a parliamentary enactment on the subjec t , ami no disaster of the kind has since taken place.
Pennsylvania is said to lose $25,000 annually, by the deficiencies of militia offic e r s . T h e fine co llectors ars rep resen tedas a precious body of men.
When Godfrey de Boutoigo, the great champion of the crusaders, was inaugurated king of Jerusalem, he was offered a crown, which he meekly declined, saying that he would never wear a crown of gold in the place where his Saviour had worn a crown of thorns.
A priest of yore, took the following textt viz : “ T h e world, the flesh, and the devil.” After having entered upon his discourse, he remarked “ I shall take but l it tle notice of the world, pass lightly o- ver the flesh, and hasten as fist as I can to the devil.”
Getting up an Almanack.— One of those useful little vagabonds called “ printers’ devils,” ran up stairs to the editor of a Belfast town and country almanack, with the message, “ Please sir we want the- weather for June .” T h e prophet consulted his oracle, and replied, “ Let me se e ; the weather for June ? Go down stairs, you rascal, and tell the printer to make it any weather he pleases, but be sure to keep out frost and snow !”
Polite -Notice Id Genteel T h ieves.— T he following is a copy of a notice which has been erected within these few days in a field belonging to Mr, Harvey Combe at Cobham : “ Ladies and Gentlemen arerequested not to steal the turnips— others i f detected, will be prosecuted.”
Apple trees were in full blossom this season a week earlier than in any year for the last 24 years, and a month earlier than in 1812.
T h e r e are nineteen newspapers published in Upper Canada, of which six are published at York, four at Kingston, two at Niagara and Brockville each, and one each at Ancaster, St. Catharines, Perth, Prescott, and Port Hope.
A gentleman at Philadelphia proposes that Congress should offer $20,000 for th e invention o f a Safety B o iler tor SteamBoats. Another writer announces that such an invention has been made, and half the patent is for sale.
American Hats.— A Ne*v-York paper asserts, that Hats to the value of a million and a half of dollars are manufactured and vended in that city annually ;— the yearly sales of some of the venders reaching n« high as 100 ,000 dollars. T he most fashionable hats do not weigh more than six ounces 1
Encyclopaedia Americana, qttarlerl^,North American Re v ie w .
PERIODICALS.
HE N R Y O L I P U A N T , having been appointed agent, wili receive subscriptions
for the following valuable works. per annum£10,00
5.006.009.006.00 3,253.003.002.00 2,00
do,Westminster Review, do.London Literary Gazette, weekly,Canfield's American ArgU3, do.London Mechanics’Magazine, monthly,Boston Ladies’ Magazine, * do.
Journal of Education, do.Mechanics’ Magazine, do.Monthly Traveller, do.American Traveller, semi-weekly, 4,00 Juvenile Miscellany, bi-monthly, 2,00 Essayist, semi-monthly, 1,00
Philadelphia Journal of Health, do. 1,25Ariel, 1,50
a A S ju st returned from N ew York
-vith a fresh supply ofnew and fashionable
BONNETS,of various descriptions.
Also, a variety of Fashionable
TRIM M INGS* _She will also keep up herJorm er assort
ments, as she will often receive fresh supplies.
0^y“She continues her establishment one door east of the Postoffice, where all favours will be thankfully raceivp d and punctually attended to.
.Auburn, M ay 26, 1830. 1
WHEREAS William S. Burling and Elizabeth his wife, then of the
to w n o f Aureliq?, m the County of Gayih ga, did on the twenty-seventh day of the fourth month (April) in the year one thousand eight hundred and twenty-two, by indenture of release by way of mortgage for securing the payment of the sum of seventeen hundred and fifty dollars, grant, bargain, sell, release, alien and confirm unto Walter Wood, of Sempronius, in the said County, since deceased, all that certain lot or piece of land situate, lying and being in the now town of Sprmgport, in the said County of Cayuga, known and distinguished by being a part of lot number ninety-eight in the Cayuga E.-ist R e se r v a tion, and bounded as follows, to w i t : b e ginning at a stake and stones standing at the distance of one chain and thirty-eight links from the South-West corner of the late dwelling house of Elizabeth Lucky measured on a course South fifty-two degreesand thirty minutes West, and runs from7thence South four degrees and fifteen minutes West two chains upon the West side of the highway, from thence North eighty-five degrees and foity minues West three chains and eighty-eight links, thence North four degrees and fifteen minutes East one chain and sixty-two links to the mill pond (as the same was at the date ofthe said mortgage,) thence North fifty- eight degrees and twenty minutes East one chain and eighty links, along the pond (as the same then was,) and thence South seventy-one degrees east two chains and fifty four links to the place of beginning, containing three roods and thirty-six perches ofland, be the same more or less : as by the said mortgage, registered and the pow- e r# f sa le recorded in the C lerk’s Office of the said County in book H. of Mortgages pages 07 &.C., on the twenty-first day of May, in the year aforesaid at nine o’clock A. M. will more fully appear :—
And whereas the said mortgage has been duly assigned to the subscriber; — And whereas default has been made in the condition of the said mortgage, and there is at this day due thereon the sum of seventeen hundred and seventy-six dollars and eighty-one cents :
N otice is therefore hereby given that by virtue, and in pursuance of the power of sale, contained in the said mortgage, the said mortgaged premises, with the appurtenances, will be sold at publick auction at the Am erican H o te l, in the town of Auburn, in the said County of Cayuga, on the twelfth day of November next, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, of that day. —- Dated 26 May, 1830.— 5m6.
WILLIAM R O T C H . junior,
, SHERIFF’S SALE.
BY virtue of Execution to me- directed and delivered, against the goods, chat
tels, lands and tenements of Royal T o rry , I shall sell as the law direotrt at tne Ameri* can Hotel, in Auburn, on the seventh day of July next, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, his right, title, anu interest, to “ All that certain piece or parcel of land, situite, lying and being, in and near the village of Montezuma, County of Cayuga, and State of New-York, and described as follows— to w i t : Number one ( 1) of the farm lots on that part of land formerly owned by the Cayuga Manufacturing Company lying between the Turnpike Road on the North, the Erie Canal on the South, land of James Sacket on the East, and Salt Street OH the West, containing fifteen acres and ninety - eight hundredths of an acre ofland, as the same was surveyed by Owen Forman in Miy, eighteen hundred and twenty-four, and d escribed by him on a map of such survey now on file in the Clerk’s Office of the County of Cayuga. Also, numbers eight and ten ( 8 ) and ( 10) of the village lots contained in the above mentioned tract, and lying on the East side of Salt street, as the same is laid down on the map above mentioned. Also, lots number ten (10) and three (3) in tract of land situate between Salt street on the East, the Seneca River on thp West, and lands own* ed by the Cayuga Manufacturing Company on the South, and Salt Creek on the North, as the same was surveyed by Owen F o r man in May, eighteen hundred and twenty four, and described by him on a map of such survey on file in the C lerk’s Office of the County of Cayuga.” —~Da:ed Auburn, May 26, 1830,
A. G R E E N , late Sheriff.A. U n d e r w o o d , Under Sherff.
Encyctopcedia Americana :JL P O P U L A R D IC T IO N A R Y OP
Arts, Ssiences, Literature, History & Politicks, brought down to the present time, and including
a CdplOUS c o lle c tio n o f o r ig in a l a r tic le s in
BXOGmAYSTSf, .On the basisof the Seventh Edition of the German | opening a new and fresh supply of
S P R I N G A N D SXSTHmSB. G O O DS,of the richest patterns and newest style, which are offered unusually low for Cash.
0 =>Customers are invited to call and examine. Auburn, M ay 5, 1830. 50
O T W < B d 2 X £ > 9 D S 2S t f f i W
■O S H U A L . J O N E S Sc C O . havejust received from New- York, and are now
CONVERSATIONS LEXICO N.Edited by D r. Francis Lieber. assisted by- Edw ard
W iggleswortk. Esq.
J O U R N A L O F H E A L T H ,
T h e c o n v e r s a t i o n l e x i c o n ,of which the seventh edition in
twelve volumes has lately been published j H £ S W S ! P R I ® F © in Germany, originated about fifteen years j a t t h e
since. It was intended to supply a wantoccasioned by the character of the age, in —,«©©—w hich the sc ie n c e s , arts, trades, and th e ! fT ^ H E various forms of knowledge and of active supply oflife, had become so much extended and I S P J t I J S G Az S U M M E R GOODS? ̂diversified, that no individual engaged in comprising a general assortment of Fancy, Mil- business could become well acquainted Goods, which shall be sold verywill, all subjects of interest; »hi!e the] "^j-ourcustomers are requested to eall and
subscribers are now receiving a new
wide diffusion of information rendered such knowledge essential to the character of an accomplished man. This want, no existing works were adequate to supply.— Books treating ot particular branches, -uch as gazetteers, &c. were too confined in character ; while voluminous Encyclopaedias were too learned, scientifick, and cum brous, being usually elaborate treatises, requiring much study or previous ac quaintance with the subject discussed.— T h e conductors of the C o n v e r s a t i o n L e x i c o n endeavoured to select from every
examine them for themselves.LUNDY & VREDENBURGH.
Auburn , A pril 28, 1830. 49:f
H AS removed first door east of the Bank, and has on hand a general assortment of
S A D D L E S ^ H A R N E S S E S , 8 3 1 Z D Z .2 S , 5H EAB .TSN G AZaES,
T R U N K S , & c . See.which he offers for sale at a very reduced price.
also requests all those whose de- WpS? mauds are due, to make payment by
branch of knowledge what was necessary j faring ^e*to a well-informed mind, and to give popular views of the more ahtruse branches of j learning and science ; that their readersmi^ht not be incom m oded, and deprivedof pleasure of improvement, by ignorance of tacts or expressions used in books or
mands against him to present them. Auburn , May 5, 1830. 50
conversation. Such a work must obviously J foupd (by several gentlemen who have made trial o f it,) to
A son’s Urethritick 3aisam, much celebrated for the core o f Gonorrhoea, long Standing Gieet, and alt djffleulties in the unnary passa- ges arising from structure or gravel, with com-
b K L d S jdete directions accompanying every bottle, xcellent Balsam, since its intioduction, has been
W 5 B W , O K J O S ® .
R E E D & X S U i r C E R
ARE now receiving their Summer supply, comprising a large and general assortment
of Staple and F an cy
ONTOAlso—A general assortment of
Crockery and Glass-Ware, Groceries, fyc.
all of which they offer at very reduced prices for ready pay.
(CTA11 those who wish to pufchaae good Goods and cheap Goods, are invited to call and examine. Auburn, May 26,1830.
N S W & F A S m O N a B H B
M XLLHirSRT.— *
H W A T K IN S & CO. four doors east § of the Exchange, beg leave to in
form the Ladies of Auburn and its vicinity, that they have just teceived from New- York their Summer stock of
M ILLINERY G O O D S ,comprising every article usually enquired for in their line of business ; among which is a large and elegant assortment of Caps, of the latest and most approved fashions ; splendid Leghorns and Navarinos , plain and fashionable Straw and Silk Bonnets,&c.
Grateful for past favours, they assure their friends of the continuance of tbeir efforts to please, and respectfully solicit at share of tbeir patronage,
HARRIET W ATKINS, A M A N D A H U S H ,
A uburn , M a y 1 2 , 1B3Q. 51
DISSOLUTION OF COPARTNERSHIP.
T
A POPULAR, PERIODICAL,Conducted by an Association o f Physicians
PUBLISHED SEMI-MONTHLY.“ Health—the poor man’s riches, the rich man’s bliss.”
HE primary object with the conductors of the Journal of Health, is to
pomt out the means of preserving health and preventing disease. To attain this, all cl asses and both sexes shall be addles- sed in a style familiar and friendly, and with an avoidance of such professional terms and allusions as would in any way obscure the subject or alarm the most fastidious. T h e Iruits of much reading, study, and careful observation, shall be placed before them, so arranged and applied as to conduce most efficaciously to their bodily comfort and mental tranquillity. To whatever profession or calling they may belong, the readers of this Journal will find precepts susceptible of valuable application. Air, food, exercise, the reciprocal operation of mind and body, climate and localities, clothing and the physical ed u cation of children, are topicks of permanent and pervading interest, with the discussion and elucidation of which the pages of the work wilt be mainly filled.
T E R M S .— T h e J ournal of H e a lt h will appear in numbers of 16 pages each, octavo, on the second and fourth VVednes- days ofevery month. Price per annum, $1 25, in advance. Subscriptions andcommunications (post paid) will be received by Judah Dobson, Agent, No. 108, Obesnqt-street, Philadelphia!
Subscribers at a distance, will discover that the difficulty in remitting the amount of a single subscription will be obviated by any four of them sending on five dollars to the Agent. Those to whom this may not be convenient, can receive sixteen numbers of the work, by remitting a dollar to the same person.
T h e Journal of Health, including lades, will form at the end of the }'ear a volume of400 pages, octavo.
All new subscribers to commence with No. 1 of each year— back numbers at all times furnished. T h e strictest punctuality observed in supp ly ing agents, and in forwarding by mail to any part of the country.
H E N R Y O L IP H A N T . A g e n t .
be of great Utility to every class of readers, possess great virtues iu removing gravel, and likewise pain ® c i u - n and uneasiness at the neck o f the bladder, occasioned byIt has been tound so much so m Germany, the irritation of stone. Versons afflicted with gravel, stone,
th -it it ic m a t w i t h PVPPV w h p r p arnnno- o rstoppage o f the urine, will use the ba’sam in the follow-that it is met witti every waere, among .n g m ” a£r: a haiftoa 8,>oonfuii dropped on loaf sugar,andthe learned, the lawyers, the military, ar- then dissolved in a wine glass o f warm gin toddy, taken
I . u ■ > j r fwo or throe times a day, especially at bed time,l i s t s , merchants, rnechanicks, and men of 1" I " • ’ ’ I fTJHTITIClTVall stations. T he reader may judge howwell it is adapted to its object, from the circumstance, that though it now consists of twelve volumes, se /en editions, comp r is in g about o n e HUNDRED THOUSAND COP IE S , have been printed in less than fifteenyears. It has been translated into the j Druggists, Auburn. Swedish, Danish and Dutch languages, and a French translation is now preparing in Paris.
A great advantage of thU work i* it* liberal and impartial character ; and there can be no doubt that a book like the E n c y c l o p e d i a A m e r i c a n a will be found peculiarly useful in this country, where the wide diffusion of the blessings of education,
c e r t i f i c a t ePhiladelphia, April*!, 1829.
M r.Dawson—Sir: I have used your Urethritick Balsam fora complicated affection o f the urinary passage attended with gleet, and received great benefit by its use, whilst! was using it, several gravel stones passed off from the bluddor. I have reason to think it a good remedy.
Your humble seivaut, JAMES Y. BAMAGE.
0^7=* F o r sale by S T E E L , COOK &i Co.U y l
THE
ANDl i l T E R A R Y G A Z E T T E ;
£JDX'X*£& B Y 2VERS. S A R A H J . H A L E .
THE LADIES’ MAGAZINE has been, for two years, before the publick,
and the constant intercourse of all classes, J receiving a measure of encouragement, create a great demand for general informa- rar i ty , K ever befoie in this country, ex- jj tended to a periodical devoted to subjects
in the preparation of the work thus far, taste anc ̂ general literature, the Editors have been aided by many gen- publishers of the Ladies’ Magazine,tbm en of distinguished ability; and for have now become proprietors of the -Yen the continuation, no efforts shall he spared kee and Boston Literary Gazette*
Assignee.Infant Schools.— An exhibition and ex
amination of thp. scholars of the New-York Infant School Society, took place yes te r morning, at the Church in Canal and Greene streets. Six or Seven hundred children, most of them between two and
years of age, were collected and a r ranged in the church, a large and respectable audiauce being present. T h e ex - iiibilion was delightful and effecting. T h e I t e r , Mr. McCartee and Mr. Seaton superintended the exercises. T h e acquirements of the children as developed by the questions put to them, were found to be mraordrnary. They were exercised in repeating scripture stories and interrogated as to the subject and meaning of them, and in the elementary branches of knowledge. Several songs and hymns were sung by them with very pleasing effect.— A Colloquy is mentioned in the accounts of the exhibition, us having been very pretti ly spoken by two ver j young chj|. dren. T h e system pursued in infant schools ivas practically illustrated : and
spectators were at once gratified and surprised by the scene which to most of them was altogether nQYel.— Com. Adv.€3
K e l l o g g & S a n d f o r d , A ttorneys.
SHERIFF’S SALE.
BY virtue of an Execution to me directed and delivered, I shall sell, as the
law directs, at the American Hotel, in Au burn, on the 7th day of July next, at ten 0 clock forenoon of that day, a house -and lot, situate On the South side of G ene s e e street , containing about one fourth of Jin aace o / land being part of lot 4J, Aurelius.— Dated Auburn, May 25th, 1830
A. GREEN, late Sheriff.
SH ER IFF’S SALE.
BY virtue of an execution issued out of the supreme court of the state of
New York, to me directed and delivered, i shall sell, as the law directs, at the Western Exchange, in j3uburn, on the twenty- sixth day of May next, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, all the right, title and interest o. Jesse Swift, Calvin Swift, Ichabod Swift, and Otis Cutler, to the following lots of land :—.dll the said Swifts’ right and title to the state’s one hundred acres, on lot number ninety, Sempronius, being the farm or homestead formerly owned and occupied by Ichabod Swift, the elder, now deceased— also a lot or piece of land, of about three acres, situate upon, and being parcel of lot number one hundred, in the township of Sempronius, with a dwelling house and shop thereon, erected by Jesse Swift, one of the defendants, and now or late in the the tenure and occupation o f said Jesse Swift, and which said tot, be the said Jesse, purchased of Benjamin Young —also to about fifty acres of land, being part of lot number ten in the township of Locke, which said Jesse Swift purchased of his father, now deceased, and now or late m the tenure or occupation of one Crocker and others.— Dated .Auburn.April 14, 1830.
A. G REEN , late Sherff.A . U n d e r w o o d , Under Sheriff.
9 5 *T he sale of the above property is postponed to Wednesda3*, the ninth day of June next.— Dated Auburn , May 26,1830.
A. G R E E N , late Sheriff,A. U n » e r i v o o d , Under She riff
K X L L X H S I W .
J J A S just receiveda very handsom e
assortment of Spring & Summer
MIULINJEK.YGOODS,
comprising many new and fashionable articles in the above line.
O ^ T h e latest fashions are also ju*t received.
0O” A large assortment of fashionable plain Bonnets for Methodists.
***Geese fewthcra roeeived in payment. Auburn , M ay 19. 1830.— 52tf.
m
C A R I I A R T A P O D I I E M U S ;
AT the Briek Store, corner of Genesee and South streets, A u b u r n , have just received
a large and elegant assortment of
D ry Goods, Groceries, Crockery, Hard and Glass
Ware, 6pc. 6pc.which they are disposed to sell on very accommodating terms for prompt pay. All those w is h ing good bargains will do well to give us a call- Tavern-keepers are requested to call and examine their G R O C E R IE SJV L Y E S 6: LIQ U O R S, which are very choice.
T h e y a re th a n k fu l for the liberal patronage heretofore received, and hope by strict attention to business, to merit a continuance of the same.
Flour, Whisky Mackerel,for s a le b y th e b arrel o r s m a lle r q u a n t ity ,
Auburn* May 18, 1339. 52
to secure the aid of all who can, in any way, contribute to render it worthy of patronage.
T h e American Biography, which is- very extensive, will be furnished by Mr. W a l sh , who has long paid particular attention to that branch of our literature, and from materials i i the collection of w hich he has been engaged for some years.For obvious reasons, the notices of distinguished Americans will be confined to de* ceased individuals : the European biography contains notices of all distinguished living characters, as well as those of past times.
T h e articles od Zoology have been written expressly for the present edition by Dr. J o h n D. G o d m a n ; those on Chemistry and Mineralogy, by a gentlman deeply versed in those departments of science.
In relation to the Fine Arts, the work will be exceedingly rich. Great attention was given to this in the German work, and the editors have been anxious to r en der it, by the necessary additions, as p e r fect as possible.
To gentlemen of the Bar, the work will be peculiaily valuable, as in cases where legal subjects are treated, an account is given of the provisions of American, English, French, Prussian, Austrian, and Civil Law.
T h e Publishers believe i tV il l be admitted, that this work is one of the ch ea p est ever published in this country. They have been desirous to render it worthy of a place in the best libraries, while at the same time they have fixed the price so low n? to put it within the reach of all who read.
F IN S FLINT W ARE,E M B O S S E D A N D P D A I I V ,
Manufactured by D. 4* I. Hendersofi, Jersey City, J\r. J.
Lu n d y & v r e d e n b i j b g h ,having been appointed (by the Manufactu
rers) Agents for the sale, at Wholesale and Retail, of the Jersey City
a new and splendid article, never before offered in this cou n try , among which are
PITCHERS, o f different patterns and sizes, COFFEE POTS, BU TTER BOXES,TEA do, MUGS,FLOW ER do. PIPKINS,INKS FANDS, TOYS, &c. fee.
invite their friends and the publick, and particularly merchants, to call and examine said Ware at the A u b u r n C a s h S t o r e ,
Auburn, May 18, 1830. 50
f j^ t HE Copartnership o f Hinman & Nelson
CGT
F O R S A L E .
T HE large and commodious S T O R E HOUSE, with the appurtenances,
situate in the village of VVeedsport, and lately owned by Seth .Makbie, and now occupied by Finck & Sheldon. T h e terms of sale, and the payments will be rendered easy, to suit purchasers.
65-InqQire of T . S P E N C E R , Esq. Auburn.
March d , 1830.— 4 If/.
andhenceforth, the united publications will bear the title prefixed to this prospectus.
Mrs. Hale will cbntinue in the editorial department,— and aided by friends and intelligent correspondents, she hopes to give an increased interest and value to the work.
Our readers, will, undoubtedly, be much gratified to learn that Mrs. Hemans has expressed her approbation of our course, and encouraged us to hope, that the pages of the Ladies’ Magazine will sometimes be enriched by original poems from her pen. She has already sent an offering, which will be found in the January number.
With regard to our future course, we can only state that we shall unremitingly end eavou r to m ake the work w orthy publick approbation, and useful, as well as entertaining to the Ladies, on whose aid and encouragement we confidently depend.
In the literary department, the progress of education, and all improvements con- nected with that most important, and, to mothers, deeply interesting subject, the physical, moral, and mental culture of children, will receive particular attention. T h e cultivation of the female mind is so obviously connected with human happiness and the best interests of society, that no effotts should be spared to disseminate that knowledge which will improve the taste, call forth the talents, and thereby make the virtues of women more effective in their influence on the manners and morals of the world. We would not by this encourage display. It is an excess of superficial accomplishments, not of real information,— sound learning— that should in republican America, be feared.
T h e established character of the work will be preserved, native writers encouraged, the history, scenery *nd cbaracter- isticks of our own country and people described and displayed ; and, should we receive the assistance contemplated, all subjects connected with L iteratu re, Science and the Fine-Arts, which are usually discussed in the best periodicals, will her# find a place. A monthly list of new publications, will be furnished.
T h e re w ill be four ornaments, either engravings, or lilhograph ick draw ings, executed by our best artists, given during the y e a r ; the first engraving to b# inserted in the March number.
Subscribers for the Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette, will be furnished with the Ladies’ Magazine, and Literary Gazette , and wp cannot bui hope they will continue to us the encouragement they have bestowed on the former work.
Terms.—$'3 per annum, to be paid in advance. Each number to contain about fifty pages of original matter, the whole making a beautifully executed octavo volume of six hundred pages, with title page and index. E fA U letters relative to the Magazine, should be addressed to P u tn am and H u n t, Publishers, No. 3 Cornhiil, Boston. PUTNAM & HUNT,
Printer* and Proprietors, 3 ComMll.Boston , January , 1830.
is this day dissolved, by mutual consent.All those indebted by note or account, must make n.oitdir. payment.
LYMAN HINMAN.JOHN H. NELSO N.
Auburn, Feb. 8,1830.The G -R O C E & Y B U S I N E S S
ill be continued by J . H. NELSON at the old 9! and, who will be thankful for a share of patronage.
Threshing Machines.TH1 HE subscriber bus purchased the exclusive JL right to Edmund Warren’9 patent Thresh
ing Machine for the county of Cayuga, calculated both for hand and horse power » also the ex-' elusive right of making, and selling John H . Bennett’s patent Threshing Machines, for the counties ol Cayuga, Onondaga,Seneca, OntarioT and Wayne ; also the exclusive right o f building and selling Douglass’s patent Threshing Machine, for the counties of Seneea and W ayne, and the towns of Auburn, Aurelius, Flem ing, Ledyard, Genoa and Menlz, and hereby informs the publick that he has commenced making said Machines near the mills of Edward Allen, in Aurelius, about half of a mile west of Auburnr where he will furnish either of the above Machines on short notice, and at a reasonable price. JOHN P. H U LB ER T .
Dated !th Dec,, 1823.—29tf
F O R S A L E ,A first rate double CARDING A N D
PICKING MACHINE, made in the bes t manner, and of first rate materials. F o r terms &c. apply to Ambrose Cock & S oe>, Abram Goodrich, or the Subscribers.
COCK, G IL B E R T k Co. A uburn , March 29, 1830.
DR. M ILDERBURG’S ~ Indian V egetable Compound
FOR TUI). GROWTH. i.NJ) SO V U lSaH iE A T OFHAIR OS BALD PLACES.
R. M in his travels through the Creek nation of Indians, and during his resi
dence o f two years,paid pnrlicuhu attention to their method o f curing diseases, and Ilia compound they prepared and used for Uio
I growth o f their hair. It was the custom o fthe iuuiaiiB, whenever the heads o f their chiidrc-n In came scu.-fed, to get severai plants, bruise and iu.il the juice in bears’ oii; with this ihcir heads were anointed inornjr.gand night, until a thick growth of black hair w as pioduced.— Both the males and females were in the lmLit of inbLin* this ointment at the roots of the hair two or three tunes a. week. The reason they gave, when interrogated ly the Doctor, for this custom was, that it made long black h a ir . What was astonishing,the doctor never saw un-lutiian i aid during his intercourse with them! The proprietor having made use o f this preparation for some years with decided success, in several instances, fine head* of healthy hair, lias been bronghtout when the scalp has been as smooth as the back o f one’s hand. lie is also aware that this method o f introducing remedies lias been resorted to by the authors o f all the usual nostrums that have been offered to ihe publick. for the growth o f hair ; so much so, that it has been with the greatest difficult j' he could persuade himself that it was the proper way to ensure the benefieial effects o f this valuable remedy, and make its circulation as extensive as its virtues are excellent. Many gentlemen o f the faculty, and others who have seen the benefits obtained by its applications, httve with one accord recommended the author to put the Cerate before the publick on its own merits, as a i'ai trial would showits unrivalled excellence.
The human hair on the head appears to arise from th« celuiar textuie lying under the scalp, originating from a Jit tie bulb which is membraneous, in w hich little bulb another bulb is hid, surrounded with blood. In the second L-uJb is the hair, laid over « itb a fat humour. The hair grow s continually by a profusion o f the madulary substances fr<.in the skin outwards ; and when this secretion is deficient, r.nd tha hair destitute o f its madu .ary, they dry up,split, and fall off.
The falling off and destruction of the hair generally arises from a deficiency o f circulation in the capilary resfcels; jig colour is made by the sectetion at the roots, the absence o f which causes the hair to turn gray. Two geneial cans* 9 may he given for the destruction o f hair. The first is a coldness and debility o f the scalp, whieli can he felt both summer and winter, by laying the back o f the hand on thu bald place, or the place where the hair is thin. Secondly, insensible perspiration becomes obstructed by a secretion o f. ecurl, having an appearance o f bran.
CER TIFIC A TE.A lbany, J u n e 6 ,1629 .
Dear Sir,—Since I saw you last, 1 have been travelling the west for my health. The Cerate yon sold me has been used as directed. My hair has become much thicker, and has stopped coming out. I shall be in town in a («w d ajs and will call for more Cerate before I leave for the souih and then you will be able to judge better than I can o f the benefits 1 have already received from the use o f the Cerate
J am respectfully, JAM ES W . COKW ARD0 7 * F o r sale by S T E E L , COOK & Co
Drugg sts, Auburn. 15ylT O PJfiJUtfTJBRS.--'The subscriber re
spectfully begs leave to infornHiis Brethren o f the profession , that be w ill attend to orders for supplying all kinds of PRINTING MATERIA LS, either new or second band, at tile very lowest price. From a thorough k n o w le d g e , and loDg experience in supplying articles, he feels confident, by his persanal attention, to b e enabled to make such selections as w ill gpve «t-.- tisfaction, at the shortest notice. T e r m s for new materials, w ill be s ir .month*, with satisfactory acceptance, and 7£ per cent de-luelion for cast*. O rders r e c e iv e d for th e W a sh in g to n , F r a n k lin , and other Tresses, M ather's Ink, Rollers, and Type, from all respectable foundries.
On hand, 700*lbs. W hite’s Minion, scarcely soiled* at 55 cents, 60 days, 54 cents, cash. K.O lbs. Minion; 200 do. Nonpareil; 300 do. Long Primer; 100 do. Brevier, used only in stereotyping, frqm which * handsome deduction w ill be made.
T w o second hand Washington medium Presses, a t $125 each, cash. One su^er-royal do. a t $ 1 3 0 , c a sh . I . H O I T ,
‘ » 44 William-street*JYew-YorKyFcbruary 12 .