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—“A poet’qkand and prophet’s fire,
‘‘Struck the wild war filings of his lyre.
Altt —Scots wha ha tv? Wallace bltd,
l.
HAIL, our country’s natal mom !
Hail, our spreading kindred born!
Ilail thou banner not yet torn.
Waving o’er the free!
While, this day in festal throng,
Millions swell the patriot song,
Shall not we thy notes prolong,
.Hallow’d jubilee-!
n.
Who would sever freedom’s shrine!
Who would draw the invidious line !
'Though by birth, one spot be mine,
Dear is all ,the rest: —
* Hear to me the soil’s fair land,
< Hear, the central mountain-band,
.Hear, New E ngland's rocky strand,
Dear the prairied west.
111.,,.
.Hy our altars, pure and free,
By our law’s deep iu*tcd tree,
*Py the past’s<§Fead memory,
By our WASHINGTON;
By our common parent tongue,
By our hopes, bright, buoyant, young,
Hy the tie of country strong —
We vyill still be ONE.
IV.
dPathprs ! have yet bled in vain !
Agfes! must ye droop again <•
% .MAKER ! shall we rashly strain
Blessings sent by THEE !
Now ! receive our solemn vow,
W hile before thy throne we bow,
•-liver to maintain as now
“UNION-tLIBERTY." •
A CARELESS WORD.
.A™*ord is ringing og my brain,
It was not meaut to give the pain ;
It had no tone to bid it stay
When other things had passed away;
-Tt had no meaning more than all
Which in an idle hour.iall; •
It was, when first the sound I heard,
A lightly uttered, careless word.
That word—oh! it doth haunt me now,
In scenes of joy, in scenes of wo:
Jly night, by day, in sun or shade,
With the half smile that gently played,
.Reproachfully, and gave the sound,
JEternal power through life to wound;
There is no voice I ever heard,
So deeply fixed as that one word.
.It was the first, the only one
Of those, which lips for ever gone
Breathed in their love —which had for.me
Rebuke of harshness at my glee ;
And if those lips were here to say,
* Beloved, let it pass away,”
Ah ! thek perchance—but I have heard,
.That last dear tone —the careless Word !
Oh! ye who meeting, sigh to part,
Whose words are treasures to some heart,
ileal gently, ere the dark days como,
When earth is but foil one a home;
2.est musing o’er the past, like me,
They feel their lie arts wrung bitterly;
..Auil heeding not what else they heard,
jHvelting, weeping on a care ness word.
From the Jlthcneum.
MODERN LOVE.
The sportman-Love, a youth of skill,
Since lime began by all confessed,
iffur want of noblSr game to kill,
An arrow aimed at Florio’s breast.
"i’<> miss his mark Was something new ;
He bent his trusty' bow again ;
limes his whirling arrow fit w ;
_Vud thrice the archer shot in vain.
Thru at Ids mother’s feet he flung
Ilis well-stored quiver and his bow ;
W ith spbbing heart and faltering tongpe,
dried; “ Take these weapons, useless now !
‘•Three times I’ve aimed at Florio’s heart,
* id tliriee has he my skill defied ;
3ly blunted shafts will backward start,
\\ liile he nor shrinks nor turns aside.”
The Queen Of Love with Fondness smiled;
“Take up your arms, my son” she cried-;
** I w iff avenge my daring child,
And punish Florio’s stubborn pride.”
be -strung his bow with auburn hair
That flowed on Cynthia’s snow-white neck,
And said, “cheer up—for sport prepare,
Yoirr arrows now must take effect.”
'lc t rested to the magic string,
With steady hand his bow he drew,
Swift through the air, on vievtfless wing,
The erring weapon harmles flew.
i?h<‘ gave a shaft, dipped in tho beam
Of-bcauteous Mary’s bright black eyo,
-< This must he fatal, as the gleam .
Of lightning datttng from the sky.”
.Still dauntless, he received the shock,
His indurated heart unmoved ;
A feather on the flinty rock
Had just as formidable proved.
“Take this” she cried, “’twill vengeance wreak
Its feathered wing with crimson glows ;
It is a blush from Laura’s check,
As sweet as morning’s dewy rose.”
"t struck his adamantine form; —
1 le fearless gragp’d it in his hand ;
Then a look of haughty scorn,
Aid filing it slavered on the sind.
THE MACON ADVERTISER. AND AGRICULTURAL AND ’MERCANTILE INTELLIGENCER.
* An arrow winged with sparkling wit,
With keeness cleft the yielding air,
And Florio’s naked hosomKii,
But failed to make impression there.*
Each charm that e’er in woman shone,
Each virtue that adorns the mind,
Was hurled against that heart of stone ;
Yet none—not one —could entrance find.
The archer had his quiver strained
Against a bosom stern and cold ,
One anew only now remained —
He tipped its gleaming point with gold.
With feeble arm and careless aim
He reckless launched the gilded dart:
It shook the clcd-pole’s trembling frame,
And deeply quivertd in his heart.
“No more my son, disgrace your arm!”
The Queen of Beauty cried, and frown’d ;
“What boots the loveliest female charms,
Since gold alone has power to wound.
AKMCII/l'l Rile
From the Southern Agriculturist.
On the Beat Mode of applying Cotton Seed
and Stable Manure ; by A FKACTJCAL
PLANTER.
Near Mo. Vintage, P. O. Edgefield, hi. C.
23d February, 1831.
Mr. Editor. —There is perhaps no sub
ject in which there is so great a diversity of
opinion as that of Agriculture, and it is a
titisiVKufle, that treatises on it, are so much
at variance. • This may in a great measure be
attributed to theoretical speculations, and mi
niatured practical -experiments. One w riter
will state, that cotton seed manure is best ap
plied in one way, another will give quite con
trary advice, and botfesay they have succeed
ed, still there is an inquiry about the' best’
! mode of application. One planter will till
you, that the best way to clear, and prepare
new land, is to grub the wnrfer-grojvth, and
burn oil'the leaves, considering the roots Will
act better as a manure than the leaves ; still
this remains unsettled ns regards the utility.
One will pursue horizontal culture’in a hil
ly country, another advise it tg be done
diagonally,a'third perseveres in the old plan
of the up anti down hill system ; ask them nil
and they will tejl you their way is best. Ain
the sea-board of the lower country, where na
ture has provided an*inexhaustible source of
'marine manure, which has been brought into
sufficient use to test the best mode of prepa
ration and application, the same difficulty ap*
pears to exist; that this should be the case,
where is such.au abundance of labor, combi
ned with wealth and science, is astonishing.
Some excuse may be offered for the up-coun
try planters, who require all their force to
be applied to a specific object to gain a sup
port, leaving them no supernumerary moans I
to carry fully into effect, those experiments,!
that would otherwise .ultimately benefit them. |
I have been Jed to these remarks, from the
productions in your volumes, as well as other
periodicals on the same subject. The great
object, it appears tp me, is to arrive at a sys
tem of husbandry in the application of the
means that is afforded us on the most econo
mical plain benefit does agriculture
derive from the exhibition of an extraordinary
large potatee or turnip, or a single acre of
corn producing eighty or a hundred bushels,
whi n the means applied for these produc
tions cost more than their value. Let us ex
hibit the returns of a whole crop, and the
mode adopted to give these returns and not
merely partial attempts to gain a reputation :
this should be our guide -by which the ag
ricultural interest would be advanced, and in
strucrion afforded to the planter : it will act
as a stimulus to imitation, arid will no doubt
be attended with beneficial result.
As far as my experience go. s, l would re
commend the application of cotton seed as a
manure to corn ; after the vegitatie;; quality
is destroyed, to be puPto the corn when from
six to twelve inches high, according to the
time that can be appropriated to this work,
by digging with a hoe on each side of the
corn, sufficiently deep t<# admit of a large
handful or more to be put in ear i ho c, and
sidficiently covered over to prevent evapora
tion from the sun.
Fresh cotton seed should never be used,be
cause the greater parf will sprout, and the
manuring quality will be destroyed, it is only' l
the oil which this kind of manure possesses,
that makes it so valuable, besides when it
comes up in a great mass it opens the earth
about the plant, so as toadmitfcir which dries
the earth about its roots. Fresh cotton seed
caji, however be soon prepared for use. Have
it carried out in the fields, and placed in piles
at convenient distances, make these piles
pretty large, and have the tops of them made
concave, and through the centre drive a stake
into the earth, and in the absence of rain have
pails of water frequently thrown in, this mois
ture, with the sun acting on it, will in a short
time heat the seed: if it is perceived, that the
circumference of those piles do not become
heated in time, open them and throw the out
er part into the centre. 1 have applied it so
hot to the corn, that it was difficult to handle
it.
As we are now on the subject of manure. 1
would further observe, that in my view, the
best mode of applying stable, cow-pen, or oth
er manures, is broad cast, and immediately to
plough it in, but as we arc net furnished with
a sufficient quantity to do this to any extent,
the drill mode is to be recommended ; this
should be done by making a furrow about a
foot deep, in which scatter the manure and
cover it over flush, the holes or furrows made
for planting, will be above the manure, but
the roots of the plant will soon reach it. ’The
hoe is to be pri .ft rred in Case a drill is made
for planting, for the horses destroy the bed too
ranch in the operation, the covering may be
doqc with hand rakes, which leaves a smooth
top on the beds, taking all the stalks and
trash that may Have thrown on it by the
plough, and. tv ill in domo measure separate
the seqd without drawing them otlt, as it is
passed lightly over the beds. We cannot ex
pect that manure will act every year alike,
all depends upon the seasons, it has been
found, that stable manure particularly, in an
extreme dry season, has proven injurious,
from what is called fircing the corn, and in
floods of rain it ts said, that it has been Car
ried beyond the reach of the plant in the bow
els of the earth. Renee may have arisen the
diversity of opinion as regards manuring, to
which l have allutled from the want of obser
vation, which only can constitute the suc
cessful farmer.
The fact is incontrovertible/ that if it was
not For manure, and good tillage, the Europe
an countries Would long since have .been de
populated. A PRACTICAL PLANTER.
~ J '
The crier in a certqynTourt, while happing
in court, was recently aroused by a clap of
thunder, starting upon his feet, bawled
out, ‘silence,’ to the infinite diversion of all
present.
[This is not so bad as what happened to a
man the other day, who fell asleep in church.
He fancied himself playing nine pins, and in
the middle of the sermon broke out with the
ifcclamation,‘all down by the hokey !]
A son of Neptune said the other day to a
; brother tar, ‘Jack, you never caught me in a
lie in’your life.’—-‘Very true,’ replied Jack,
‘but and n you, I have chased you from
one lie all day.
. w
From the N. Y* Constellation. *•
• A BITE.
; #oh! Oh! I’m bitten to death—l'm a dead
man—l jjav’qt two hours to live—Oh dear !”
wildly exclaimed an honest countryman,lnot
a hundred miles off, as he rushed into the
i house one dark evening—“l’<e been bitten
i by a rattlesnake !”
“By a rattles#kc !” asked some oneypreg
; ent—“are you sure it was a rattlesnake®”
“Sure! Oh Lord! I’m too sure;
j him rattle and felt the bite as plain as day.”
: ‘Then it’s a gone.case with you,” replied •
; the Compassionate neighbor, “and the sbon
]er you make your will the better.” •'*
“Oh! that I should be cut off in the prime
of my days by .such a cat-as-tro-phe !*that I
should ever live to die by the bite of a rattle
snake ! that it should be my fate to go our of
the world swollen like a bladder and speck,
led as a sarpent!”
“But where'is the wound, Mister—”
“HereJ here !wi mv instep—l had no
stocking en-—Oh ! I’m a dead i*rn—-there’s
no help for me. See how ray foot s wells ?
“Alack ! alackaday ! poor man I pity you
upon my soul I do. But there’s no help—a
rattlesnake’s bite is fatal—all the medicine in
the world cant cure it- You might # as well
undertake to .call a matt from the dead as to
cure the bite of a rattlesnake !”
“But where was the snake r ” asked a con
siderate man among the crowd who had run
in on hearing of the fatal accident.”
“Where was the snake t do you sav ■?" re
plied the bitten man in agony—“he was bo i
innd the barn among the weeds.”
“We had better go and kill him,” said the ’
considerate man, before he kills somebody !
else.”
“Oh mercy !” ejaculated several voices. “I
would’nt go near him for all the world.”
“Nevertheless the prudent man went, welfe
armed with a club and furnished with a lan
tern ; while some others cautiously followed
at a distance to see the result. The man soon!
descried the cause of the mischief, still lurk
ing among the weeds ; but instead of striking
the blow, h< merely gave a whew-whistle,and
•returned to the house.
“Have you killed him?” asked the wound
ed man.
“ Killed him ! why, you fool you, the rat
tleenake is nothing but a poor old setting hen
that had made her nest among the weeds,and
merely pecked vour foot to keep you from
treauing on her.”
‘The devil she did !” exclaimed the man
with the swollen foot, leaping up two feet
high, “then ’twas no rattlesnake after all, hey?
Oh, Lord, that ever an oil! setting hen should
put me in such a fright. But I am perfeetly
well now—-my foot swelled a bit—the
old setting hen, hey? Hot.—-hoo—hoo—But
d—— n her ! I say, for putting me in such a
fright lor nothing.”
-**!?*>
Clear the Way.— On one of the hot days
last week, a yankec, apparnuitlv just caught,
and not perfectly tamed, came' into the Court j
House puffing and blowing with force and '
speed, sufficient to warrant the belief that he
was propelled by steam. Halloo, mister,
said he to a bystander, where's Judge Fitch
the Constable live? I want to catch that are j
feller what’s stole my bundle. By gauly I'll j
lam him to steal three yards sattinet ana my !
all-wool shift and two razors. After obtain
ing a warrant, he started in pursuit of a Con
stable, having ascertained from the Judge that
he did not act in that capacity, and the last
that was seen of him he was seen heading
down Court street, at a rate that would en
danger the life of any thing composed of flesh
and blood w ith which he might happen to
some in contact. — Portland Courier.
From Badger's Weekly Messenger,
SHORT LECTURES ON HEALTH NO. 1
By the term health, is ordinarily under
stood, that state of the body in which every
organ performs its appropriate functions, with
out pain, or inconvenience. This may bo
considered the low est definition of the term
health, and yet, without extending it, we shall
find from observation on ourselves and oth
ers, that health is the most scarce commodity
in creation. If we make the inquiry of our
friends and neighbors, or of evey man and
! w oman wo meet in our intercourse with so-
I ciefy; we shall not find one, who will declare
i unequivocally that he or she is Well. They
| have all taken cold, or have a headache, or
! weak eyes, or pains in the. limbs . or have the
dyspepsia or some other fashionable or un
fashionable disease. The fact then, that ci
ther real or imaginary disease is almost uni
versal cannot be questioned, unless we admit
that veracity lias loft the world, for every bo
dy is sick according to their own testimony.
V,’hence then the cause of tlxis universal
absence of health. It is not because this •,
blessing is not desirable, for every body is in j
pursuit of it. Almost every bedy young and ,
old, male and female is found travelling be*!
cause are “out of health.” Millions oi
dollars are expended not only open the Fac
ulty, whose professional education fit them to
preserve and restore health; but millions more
upon those empirical charlatans, who specu
late upon health and life at haphazard. A
multitude of -our population are employed
more than half the days of their" earthly pil
grimage, in following bard after health. They
compass sea and land,,visit watering places,
far and near, ride-and sail under every possi
e?e modification .“they alternately • cat and
starve; drink and famish for thirst; plunge in
cold and hot water, salt and lresh; journey to
the North and South/East and West; take ad
vice and physic, drink rum and lose blood,
and all these and a thousand other means arc
employed in pursuit o'health, without Cver
overtaking it. True they are getting better
and better all the time, until they die- and if
may be remarked that*thosq*w ho follow the
chase aftet health, most zealously and rapidly
are the most unsuccessful; having mere when
they commence the pursuit, after
ward; although they think themselves better
just before they end their lace in the grave
than (Tver before. Rente the
who are Unequivocally well in their own es
timation, and whom you cannot persuade to
acknowledge themsplves sick, are those who
are sinking from consumption, or some simi
larly fatal malady.
Let ii not be supposed, froth thrs at I less
narrative ofsimple truth, that the want of
health, is imaginary in the gVif-,
ferers, for nothing tan be more real. It is_
its reality that ought y.interest us all, in "the
inquiry we propose tom&key fVf'U* cannot IST
denied, that in oW aflußtry/ifc fAte; in otlu f
countries, so fat as tm/iza/ioa
every body'is but of health more t lew* half the
time. While it is equally mm, that jn
western wilds, aqfl in the isles of th#sea, there
are among the savnnem the unsophisticated
children of
good old whowiqjewknew a pain or' an
ache in their lives, were never heajd tocoirr
plain of being unvyell, or indisposed, Or out
of health. And it ought not to he futgSttenj
that among caff prymtive fathers who soiled
thi continent fhjystandard of was far
hat it now is among their descendants,
and the same>remark will be found to apply
to the progenitors of the present race in eve
ry civilized country.
W!tv isdt* then that wir countrymen are so
generally and unUversaft* Without health
We h!fve w rs not be
cause ft is not pursiTed with industry and zeal. |
Nor can it. be Creator has indict- j
ed uprtn this latter gtWgiraUon any judicial
visitation. The secret is tobe found •here: 4 *
“God pna% \gright, liut he has* sdKght
out inventions.”
Shoeco Springs.
WARREN COUNTY, CAROLINA.
ON the firsi d* of June next, the Buildings of
this Establishment witl4>eprepared for the
j reception of Visitors. The Houses are large and
| numerous, sufficiently so, to accommodate an as
semblage of twotir threw hundred persons com*
[ t'ortabiy. , *
! She subscriber is flattered with itjon,
that the comrenieaces and improvements \vki**> I
have been adhml to ihir Establishment, in ail!
those matter *which essentially concern the j
health, comfort-, and amusement of its visitors, I
will rendeT it the ensuing season, more attractive
Jhan ever. The private apartments will afford
r.mple retirement to invalids, families, and others
who prefer it. They are so arranged, as to com
bine every Convenience and accommodation, sift
ed to the largest or smallest assembly, male and
female. Arrangements are also made, with the
particular design of accomodating large families,
by affording them large, spacious cabins, near to
or remote as they may select from the centre build
ing, with double ana single rooms, ft here they
can be at all times, perfectly secure in the
menfef quiet retiremqat. •
Tire Subscriber nledgesjierself to devote her
chief exertions to tV accommodation of private
families, & >vili spare no spans to render visitors
happy and agreeable, by providing every thing
that may contribute to their health,, by carefully
guarding against annoyances of every description.
The Public Halls are abundantly spacious to j
receive all who ruay desire company.
No Public Balls wjll be given at Shocco during
the season, but those who delight in Music and
Dancing can partake of them without its disturb
ing or annoying, in the slightest degree, the rest
.of'the Boarders.
Few Watering Places present mere rational
objects of attraction than Shoeco. Located in the
most healthy, rich and populous part ofths coun
try-, in the midst at a polished society, it affords
in its Springs and climate many and
gives it ascendancy over all the Mineral Water
ing places to the South. It is believed that the
Water never failed in its senative effects upon
persons afflicted with Dyspepsia, Billious dis
eases and general debility, where they have per
servered in its use.
An arrangement w ill he*made to haWe Divine
Worship performed at the Spring on the Sabbath
day, when such visitors astnav choose, can attend
preaching without inConveni®ice.
My terms for Board, &c. w ill be the same as
ast year, viz. $1 per day for each grown person ;
#22,50 per month, or $6 per week ; Children and
Servants han price. For Horses sls per month,
or 60 cents per day.
ANN JOHNSON.
May 12, 1831. 9
s&mtw ira uittKinr
I S a candidate for the office of Sheriff of Bibb
county, at the ensuing election.
May 19 10-tf
vww
4 XFFERS himself as a Candidate for the She
V* ritfality of Bibb County, at the ensuing elec
fei. He pledgee himself to his friemls that he is
induced to do so more from an earnest desire to ■
receive the emoluments arising from tint office
than from the reason assigned by most candi
dates, (to wit) the importunity of friends.
YOUNG JOHNSTON.
■Tune 1, 1831. 14—tde
HUM. Hot ret rtf,
\MTE are authorised to say, is a Candidate for
▼ ▼ the Sheriffalty of Bibb county, at the eusu
ing election.
April 29
George Vigal.
"VI7" E are authorized to say is a Candidate for
v™ Receiver of Tax Returns, at the ensuing
election* July 15, 1931 25-tf
JVoticc.
Y School w ill open again in Macon on Mon
1. day next. I have a grateful sense of the
patronage received, and'hope it will be continued.
F. V- CUMMINS.
July 14, 18?!. *2s—2w
*Flie American Farmer,
Edited by Ciidern Ji. Smith,
ffs published in Baltimore, Md. by Tw-'ine Hitch-
COctk & Cos. (successors of J. S. Skinner,) in
weekly numbers of eight quarto .pages, at Five
Dollars per annum.
THE purpose of this periodical is to be a me
dium through a great number of the most en
| lightened and scientific practical cultivators of the
I soil, residingriuevery section of the Unite delates,
"•to'-cojninunicate the results of their experience to
each other, and to and receive similar
benefits from'the best theoretics 1 and practical
writers of foreign countries, on every subject con
nected wilk husbandry in the broadest souse of
dihe term. •
addressed to either the Editor or pub
lishers, ordering the paper, (not less than one
i year) or braking inquiry concerning it 'with a
j view to subscribing, will be thankfully received
; apd promptly answered, and a number of the work
| &nt to tm- enquirer as a Specimen., *
‘N. B. A few, (and oyjy a very few) complete
[.sets of the'work, from its commencement, in 1819,
no u3.Arols. half bound and lettered, may'be had
irom me publishers for $5 per vol. The subscrip
| tion price will also be paid by them for either of
, the volumes, 3,7, or 5, delivered in good saleable
! order at the office. <
May -25 13
Medical College.
WORtiaiATOA.
ITI Y, and with the consent of the Reformed
j-O Medical'Society, of the United States, the
t ‘new Refoßned Medical Institution has been loca
| ted.in W jfthington, an interesting and flourishing
I oon the Whetstone River, 8 -miles north of
Columbus, on the Northern Turnpike. This site
j has been cr.SSen because it presents the greatest
j advantages to facilitate the researches of the Bo
j'tanital student; thecountry aropnd it abounding
l | with'eve* variety of medical plants ; and the sit
uatiort beii%the most healthy and delightful in
j the cmmtry--and because the occupanev
Mjr large College Edifice, together with grmtnd
j of variety of soil for an extensive botanical
I gardeq, 1n been presente* to us by the board of
; trustees of Worthington College.
L will be attached to the institution, a Dis
pensary- for analyzing mid preparing Vegetable
j ah. iieinrs;pml an InfirtWry. where'persons from
| tliettt ighbojhood, or a distance laboring'under
j fevers, consumptions, dispepsa, liver complaints,
! gravel, ulcers, fistulas, cancers 4 &C. &C, will be
j successfully treated, without mercury or
| the knife, and from which the student will acquire
j a correct knowledge of the nature,* operation and ]
superior efficacy of vegetable agents in removing !
| disease. •
The foian Institution of this kind in
| the wests to be under the direction of the compe
I tei%Prtessors is strikingly evident. It is an insti
tution that is feigned to concentrate,and dissem
inate all^he-knowledge of Dts. of Medicine and
empyrics, sages; & savages that will demonstrate
to the student ;tp<! the sick that vegetables alone
; afford thf#onlv rational, safe and, effectual means
of removing diseases without impairing the con
stitution, or endangering life or limb. The pre
sent system of practice which treats diseases of
every form with metaiic jmnerals,*he lancet or
knife 5s Hangerous as. the lamentable facts
which every Aliy presents too fully illustrate. Nor
is this truth more: clearly exhibited tjian the fact
•hat vr-getabl Aiff.stance* alone, are void of dan
ger, and powerfully efficient when administered;
a reference to the success of our New York In
finmiry and the success of ignorant botanical
phWiciar.S, proves this fact. *
The College arublnfirmary will he opened the
first week in December, where stuflentsafrom al!
parts may enter and complete their Medical Ed
ucations, and where persons laboring under every
species of disease shall receive prompt and faith
ful attention. •
The course of study to he pursued and wlfich
will be taught aaccording •> the OLD end RE
FORMED Systems y Lectures, Recitations,
Examinations tnd suitable text books is. Ist A
natomy and Phisiology. 2d. Old and Reformed
Surgery 3d, ’Theory and Practice cf Medicine.
4th. The old and irfiproyed Sygeni ofLMidwlfery,
with the diseases of women and children." sth.
•Materia and Medica with practical and general
Totany. Cth. Medical and Botanical Chemistry
and Parmacy- 7 th. .Stated Lectures on collater
al Science—Moral and Mental Philosophy
PhrenoPogy—Medical Jurisprudence—Compara
tive AVatomy—Medical History,’ &c. ■ *
By attending this Institution, the student will
acqure a correct knowledge of present practice
of Physicians—a knowledge of the use and abuse
of minerals, the Lancet. Obsterical 'Forceps and
the knife, and a knowledge of the new and im
proved system that supercedes their use, with
tenfold more safety and success. There wall be
no specified time to complete a course of*sUidy;
whenever the student is qualified he may grad 4
ate and receive a Diploma—some will pays in one
year, others will require more.
.Requisitions for Admission.
1. A certificate of good moral charcter.
2. Good English education.
Terms. —The price of qualifying a person to
practice, including a Diploma, and access to all
the advantages ofthe institution will be $l5O in
advance, or $75 in advance, and SIOO at the close
of his students. E very advantage given, and some
allowance made to those in indigent erreum
stances, Board will be had at $1 per week, arui
books at the Western city prices.
Every student on entering Worthington Col.
lege will become an honorary member of the re
fomed Medical Society of the United Statqs from
whom he will receive a diploma, and annual Re
port of all the doings and discoveries of its differ
ent members, and be entitled to all its constitu
tional privileges and benefits.
Those wishing further information will pleasp
address aletter (postpaid) to Col. G. H. Griswold
or the undersigned,<tmd it shall motive prompt
ttention. r
Students and others had better beware ofthe
slanders ofthe present physicians’ who know no
more about ouflmf titution, than they do about
Botanical mediciiw.
J. J SIR RLE, President.
Worthington. O. Oct. 1831.
Note. —Editors publishing the above Circular
52 times, shall receive as compensation a cer
tificate entitling the bearer to tuition gratis, or an
equivalent to that sum ($150) in medicine, advice
or attendance from us or any members of our so
ciety. Those publishing it 26 times, to half that
compensation.
May C, 1831. r*_
Printing.
The Advertiser Oilier
IS fitted up with entire new Type, and every
material which enables Printing to he execu
ted neatness. The assortment of Job and
Fancy Typos are ofthe latest and most approved
manufacture. Pains will be taken to have Print
ing executed in the best manne. The subscriber
solicits the patronage of his friends and Dm ?mh-
Kc M- l>. J. SLADE:
The JLailyTs Book. I
a card. n
In commencing the pub'icatfon'of a ,■
time of the Lao V’s Book, the proprietors ■
avail themselves of the opportunity thus e*- ■
of again inviting attention to thr-ir a ork. *
Notwithstanding the necessary nnavoi-bw I
difficulties against whirh they have had
tend, they find themselves at the close ci e' ! ‘M
fust year enjoying; through an unexanipbd
tent oi patronage, all the advantages w hich be!o ■
to old established su'd long prosperous pa’oV’B
tions. For this liberality on the part of the t>
lie they are truly grateful, find it shall fcj {v*
pride and pleasure to pursue such mtdns as /',]■
deserve its continuance. The same zeal a Uv i
votion which they have hitherto felt and exhiv’B
ted in regard to their work, will still be fcimdiU
influence them, and with the additional faciliti*
now within their reach they hope to render
coming volume £ven more attractive than t’
whicMiasjust been closed. They have in CO -B
tempMion many improvements, a particular
umeraflon of which tl% deem ucimportant,
doubting that the promptness and fidelity \ I
j which they have fulfilled all formerengagcmir ■
i have created public confidence in their ability
perform whatever they may feel disposed to* I
dertake. They prefer that their work ahould" B
tested by its own merits, rather than re!y for
1 port on any specious promises which they
put forth.
Since the commencement of The Lady’s BcoJ
the publishers have avoided all proper matterrfß
offence to the proprietors of contemporary
icals. In the occasional notices which theyhaval
felt themselves called upon to make in relation tdl
the progress and prospects of their own work!
they have made no allusion which could be cot; I
strued disparagingly toothers. They have purl
sued this coursefrom motives of justice and mi. I
cy—as well because it corresponded with tL'j I
own feelings, as because they believed it would I
contribute to their jnterests. They believed that■
with the American public no gobd end could b*l
achieved by uncallcd-for interference with tin I
rights of others, and they have yet tcrteariUhitiu I
this opinion they have been mistaken, ”j le I
ronage which they have hitherto received assure 1
them of the favourable regard in which their work I
is held; and they know that they can only look
-for future encouragement in a proper employ
ment of the ample means Within their power ti>
give jncrea’sed satisfaction.
The publishers of The Lady’s Book taU
pleasure in acknowledging their obligations to tho
conductors of thfr public press in all sections of
the country*. Tim general commendation whirl;
these gentlemen have bestowed upon their n ork
is doubly gratifying to them because they hrvo
reason .to believe it is deserved, and they know
that.it lias been productive of great advaiVt .
It is a source of much excusable pride to thepib
lishers that the comments which the Book hr
elided have? uniformily been favourable. Inns
instance have they had the mortification of find,
ing their efforts, ’to 'please, unsuccessful, or ia
properly appreciated . The publishers cannot be
lieve that the remarks, contained in a iccent ad.
j vertisement of a “con temporary journal, to which
| their attention has been specially called, ar
! meant to allude to the Lady’s Book. The insin
.uutions there expressed concerning “cast-off plain,
mere reprint and mutilated music," can have no
reference to a publication whose costly embti
lishmeirts and general merits have been for many
months a theme of general admiration and cult,
gy. They cannot think the publishers of tb
journal spoken of so deficient in respect to a pub
lie dpon whom they depend for support, a a to
charge that public with a gross want of per
ception, and an inability to discriminate in mat
ters of literary judgement. The publishers of
The Lady’s Bouk know that the minds of som*
men are so unVapily framed that they cannot en
dure successful competition in those pursuits u
which they may happen to be engaged; and Ar>
further know that those who are e nvious ofsiipt’.
rior desert are frequently prompted to the indul
gence of a malicious spirit; but they will not wil
lingly believe that the conductors of the journal
to which they have had allusion eughtto be ides
tifiedwith either of these-etasees. On the con
trary, they are satisfied that the amiiigudus cen
sures tlius spread before the public are intended
to be applied to some publication whose want of
merit rendered it obnoxious to such condemns
tion.
The Publishers of The Lady’s Book have ob
served that Several monthly periodicals have no!
only imitated the general arrangement of their
work, but have-also attempted to follow their ex
ample in illustrating the Fashions. This tacit
acknowledgement of the superiority of their plan
is certainly gratifying,.and they recognize it with
‘pleasure; but at the same time they cannot for
bear saying that as they were’ the first to intro
duce successfully this particular Speofos of embel
lishment, so they can it in a formo:
greater perfection than it tan readily be acconi
plishod-by others. 'They do ifot makß this remark
invidiously, but as'an act ot simple justice tc
themselves, and the artists employed under their
directions.,
In concluding this card the publishers renew
their assuiances (/Steadily persisting in their en
deavours to improve the character o The Lads'r
Book. In its present state they have no fear ‘c.
a comparison with any similar publication, ant
they flatter themselves, that therime is not distant
when its superiority will be generally acknowl
edged. They have no wish to boast of corns*
pendents- in Russia or “ConstantinopACr” satisfied
that whatever they may require in this way fi'D
cart-procure much nearer home. They are
American in their feelings to build their cl urns to:'
support upon foreigp aid<or foreign praise, though
both might be easily obtained without incurring
any serious expense. The publishers have uww
pleasure in receiving the untaught testimonials
theirown countrymen* than they could possibly
derive from any common datum of writers “D
Europe,” -Railed upon to praise thaf which the/
had never seen, and eulogies would be ittG*
ted out in proportion to their reward.
wxm
A Repository of Arts, Utcratw.-e 4t> F./shoi*
Pahlishsd hy L,. A. Godey & Go. Philadelphia,
•?f. H. J. SI tide. Agent; •Hacoiu
This work is issued in uumbers, on the first oi
every moLth, comprising fifty six large octavo
pages, printed on fine supcrroyal paper with en
tirely new type, and carefully stitched - in coloreu
covers. Every number will contain a piece o.
music, one Copper-plate Engraving, arid at least
four Wood Cuts, illustrative of some of the con
tents ; and every three mouths a colored plate oi '■
the palest Fashions,
The subscription price is $3 per annum, pay 3 '
hie in advance, 25 per cent, semi-annually, vni
he added to all subscriptions that remain unpai"*
and the work discontinued to all those who ufa'
lect to settle up tjieir arrears.
Great attention will ho observed in forward
the work to country .subscribers, that they rn "i
leceive it uninjured by mail transportation. _ ,
Agents, receiving subscriptions, anil reinittgc
the amount to the,publishers, will be allow'd D
per cent, discount or a proportionate number c*
ofthe work.
Agents are requested to settle tb.clr account;
semi-annually. The publishers are aware, iroia
long experience, that to succeed fn the satisfacu
ry prosecution of a Work, much depends upon
the punctual remittance of sums duo on suD
scriptiona; they, therefore, solicit A Uuiiijiß
compliance with tK:s