Newspapers / Tarboro' press. / June 23, 1849, edition 1 / Page 1
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iff!! llitti JBJ BK311BII1 B! l.lpS-...:' f 1 . Mi.ynuc nuwjinu.jiH. . Js published weeklv at Turn rw, ... . - tc Jcai Mjiuaugu oi WIO SUDSCriptNKI year, AHvftrtimn, K ... . fuened a. Oot Do " .Z" " Cents for everv swoeftdi(r i t that rate per square. "Court Orders and Judicial advertisements 25 per cent, higher. To the Ladies of the U States it being now conceded THAT ; (HnAwrln I ,i 9 n HjrOdey7S Jad's J800k o i aw at trie head ; m a mo-.- Marines, A becomes the duty ofthe pub- lisher lo show every Lady what amount : of reading, and how many useful embell- fafameots she will receive for three dollars. Be not deceived by new beginners, who .. . r .i nromise every thing and perlorm nothing. . J r Now is about the season when the coun- , . , try will be deluged oy prospectuses ma- "r Mi i r mi, i a ' k nira kinds of promises. The Lady's: Book has been published by the present nrnnrietor for eiehteen vears and he is weil known to the public, and publishers throughout the United States. His prom isesare always kept, which is not the case with all other Magazines: for instance every Number he publishes a colored Fashion plate, gives sixty pages of reading matter, and sometimes more. There is not another Magazine published that does this. Sometimes with them the plates are colored, and again they are not some months 60 pages and others 48. There suit is obvious; the coloring of our Fashion plates alone, we say nothing of the Flow ers and Cottages, cost us over 2000 in one year. To omit this is certainly a saving, but is it just to subscribers Is it honorable? We cannot practice such a deception. We were the first to give Fashion plates; we have hosts of imitators who boast wonderfully; we have no need to bolster up the Lady's Own Book by such means. Paris Fashions as published in Paris the ladies of this country dare not , wear. Therefore they arc altered by one of bur most fashionable dress makers to suit thc more refined taste of American Ladies. Compare our reading matter with any r - o v other Magazine; see which contains the most solid as well as pleasant reading. Our object is to elevate the female mind, to give tone, and to enable women to take that place in the community to which their worth entitles them. Steel engravings in Godey's Lady's Book. Two steel engravings in each number in one year, 24 one colored Fashion plate, j 12 two pages of originally music printed j separately, 24 Patterns for window cur tains, and occasionally. A Colored Plate for Model Cottages, Model Cottages exterior and interior two ! xt . u . t engravings in each Number in one year,' t i 21 extra Fashion plate on tinted paper one jgainedVe in each Number in one year, 12 Bonnet,:two soagain, the mixture of twenty grains can Chemisette, Caps and Cuff patterns, say i be again multiplied by an addition of two grains, 50 three and four cuts of horsemanship , for ladies in each Number in one year, 42 Crochet work, Knitting, Nettine, &c. J say three in each Numberin one year, 36 's Engravings Of Churches-about fouHn : w . ! one yew - : i . -; " 228 i Here we have in one year the large ' number of two hundred and twenty-eight ' engravings, besides, extras that we give j occasionally of any matter that strikes us ! Reading matter in Godey's Lady's Book. In each Number are sixty pages; in one year, seven hundred and twenty, equal to' : ir i? ... . i nine novels ot ordinary size. Now these pages are the choice productions' ofthe best male and female writers of the coun-; try, including a novel by Miss Leslie as County throughout the Union, to procure well as ' the Treasury, and articles on Subscribers to "Sears' Pictorial and II health, by Mr. Hale. The above hetns. lustraled Family Magazine," and to Ifpurpfaspd separately, would cost the 'sell Sears9 New arid Popular Pictorial purchaser twenty dollars. Besides all Works universally acknowledged io be this, she will receive for the same three the best and cheapest ever published, as dollars they certainly are the most saleable.' Any The Lady's Dollar Newspaper Edited .1 active agent may clear $500 or ; glOOO q by Grace Greenwood. jycar. A cash capital of at least 25 or A Paper of the ordinary si2e, Published $50 be necessary. Full particulars at one dollar per year: ; of the principles and profits of the Agency Maying three publications in one month. ' will be g n on application, either per The Lady's Dollar Newspaper contains sopally or oy letter. .The postage must the best poetry and the best stories, . by in all cases be paid. Please to address, the best authors." Receipts and Amuse- ROBERT SEflR A Publisher, entaMlie latest Fashionable news from No, 128 Nassaq ptreetj New York. , naon anJ Pafiy and a great vrJety ofl : uu,er interesting matter; Nr ,.. . j . maKaime in ine world gives monev OrlP l,f.n,,l jr. c II,oney une hundred and forty four re P in than the New" York iuagaznes, and more useful and ornamen engravings each month than all the ower Magazines together. I erms of Godey 's Lady's Book. Post- age to be Paid on a,! orders, i copy one mon ny number that may be selected, ct3' 1 coPy four mnths, one dollar. These l.rms are offered that any person "iVJp; yeiore suoscrwing lor a Lj a N S3 tWo c ies to gfl e o and a j(hout thc p w. five g . j - To insure the Lady's Dollar paper with , r . . i t the Lidy's Book, the rhohey inudi be sent ' m to the publisher's own office , O Any paper copying the above ad . , lJ ... . . vertisement will be entitled to an ex- change with both publications. LOUIS A. GODEY, 113 Chesnut street, Philadelphia. March, 30, 1S49. A sciciif i lie I!I vcii cine. GREAT experience and judgment are required to make a valuable, and at the same tirno, inno cent purgative. This is possessed only Uy tew. The great majority of the remedies advertised of this class are manufactured by j rrsons who have no Idea of the relative or individual powers of the drug, they use. It is this cause, rro re than, any other, which occasions Ue inertness and often j ; injurious elTects, produced by advertised remedies, j TOR the cure of Headache, G iddiness An! hence the general preju-ice which prevails, Salt Rheum, Rheumatism, Piles, Heart against therm NTov there is a great difference in burn, Worms, Dyspcpsii, Cholera Morbus, this respect, with regard to the pills made h I)rJ pains in the Back and Limbs, Liver com B, Brandreth, and consequently, their superior; , , R: : ; lhe lhroat Fevers of all claims upon the puiuiu Each of the articles composing the Dt andreth Pills Are prepared in that way which will secure their beneficial elects to the system in the safest and easiest manner. For instance, some ingredients have to be prepared in the vacuo; is, th 5 ovtiQiietofl !r ftio nfnneil rwt rem iini OA until -i .. . ..... .. ! uttiuiiiawuu 19 cucttcu tin uiiici ui" irtiicui?, ii which afterwards prevents the air from acting in- juriously upon the medicine. Again. theropor-l ded cxcIusively 0f such ingredients,0 -"" -tionofeachingredientdepenJs upon its multiply- . ;h d q on lh, Por sale by Geo. Howard. in? power upon othr ingredients-! or the power t . .. 1 et..:hJ Tarboro. March 31, 1849. of different vegetable purgatives upon each other , mpunties of the Human System. Mi ike j is governed by similar laws that govern the power ! at the root ofthe disease, removing all im-j fristarS Balmmof Wild Cherry. of figures by multiplication. Nine added to nine1 purities from the oody, opening the pdres . make eighteen; but nine limes nine are eighty-; cxternall) and internally, separating all From the Maine Deniocratk (SaCo,) June r-i onei so ti is wiui some vegetable purgatives, By adding nine parts of one ingredient, and nine parts of another ingredient together, the power is increased, not to eighteen, but to eighty-one. l or exam, le, ei.her of Tho articles to produce any nurfrativftf lT.t- would lvntnh., tn 11. pt. tent of jghty.0ne grains; by combining ihem. only eighteen grains have to be used. Again, a-' nother ingredient is found to multiply this power again, which in a proportion of iwo grains, would have no enect upon the animal economy but which,added to eighteen grains of a compound of two parts of nine grains, each of two Ingredients, 1 . b f will again multiply the power which they have . : e i -i to the power of three hundred and twenty-four grains ofthe original power of the two first ingre- dienls Here we have twenty-two grains, which ' as a purgative, contain the power equal to three j hundred and twenty.four grain, of either of the j articles alone; nevertheless, also so powerful after being thu, combined, are eafe in an, quan.l,,-1 always having a beneficial effect, and in oecaise j capable of doing injury, of which thousands bea ample witness. 1 oxe in any way out of health use th:se Pills, TheV HVnf i rnuch to their advantage. for sale by Geo. Howard. Please to read this. A Good Chance to clear from 500 to y 1000 a year. AGENTS wanted in every Town and ' - -at-: (PROM the IMMENSE INCREASE ot our business, we have been under the necessity of taking the whole un-storv IMTn T T n . J -v. . rcnaer-s store, at the sign of Stock of Furniture, Consisting of the same articles which will be seen advertised at the Old Stand. Per sons that have not had an opportunity of seeing a magnificent stock of ' Jurniture, are respectfully solicited to. call, as prices and quality shall surely suit Furniture repaired at either place at the shortest no tice. F. L. BOND. N. 1). In order that a. man may do himself justice, let him see articles of Fur niture before purchasing. No body likes to buy a cat in a bag. , ; 7arboroScpt. 29 1848. illUI3, CUIUS, VJUUl, UloVtl. 4 LIIIUIV, win- . . i . .t,. plaints. Nervous complaints, and all other V J - u f! ..... n r1.. from impurities of the O ' blood, and morbid secretions ofthe uvcr ' andStomach. ...... r ' cryuisuciowmciiuii.umJ..u-u gubjeet, originates from impurities of the: !o cnlinf nriirin nine frnm i m niirities of the ' " - , . . ood or derangement of digestive organs. mC(lidnal vlrlUe9 for lhe cUre 0f many dis Dr. Gordon's Family Pills, being cdm-; ..... . . . foreign and obnoxious particles from the chyc so that the blood, of which it is the b(J lhoroughy pUre and ne- .t . r ,-..4. ccfsarlly "'g a frcc . ".gorods aCUOn lO Hie IlCUIl, J-.UI1&S, xji. aw Stomach, thereby restoring health, by opening the pores, cleansing the veins and arteries, unimpeding all the natural veirtS ni purifying the blood; they render the ..,iMrt ii,,Si,Mit enim,! bitt.-tl. , . ....... , j , J J ' J $o im rvilJ , ' other mean ous to disease, even when all is have failed. Within the last twelve months, . more than one hundred coses of the movt ag- gravated forms of Dyspepsia have been cured by the medicine where rigid diet- jng the Blue rill, and almost every other means had been resorted to without any bencfitj and whcn cJeath stared its misera-j b, , , ful ly In the face. t Dr. . J' . A . A . c n'. P.lls were not adapted to the duie of any but this horrid malady, their uni- form success in this disease alone would be sufficient lo waft on to fame' the name of their inventor, as a benefactor of his spe cies. This medicine never fails to cure the worst cases of piles in one week! . For sale in Tarboro' by A. H. Macnair & GEO. HOtVARD. Februarys, 1849. ly Br. Kuhi's Abyssinian Mixture . - 1 " From the Milton Chronicle. Laurel Grove, (near Milton) Jan. 15,1848- Dr. Kuhl Beat Sir:. We have now been about seven years, Agents for the sale of your Restorer of th Blood, and oth er Medicines, and are happy to state they have oiven in all cases general satisfaction, particular, y the Abyssinian fixture has given universal satisfaction, so that every bne who has used it has received ' that relief that you guaranteed in your directions. , ,Mr, James M Vernon, to whom you recommended yqw. romatie Extract, foi Rheumatism, bought a bottle of it at 50 Cents.. tnd two embrocaUons cured him enlireljind :.thf iisease has never returned. Yoursi respectfully: ; KIRBY & ANDERSON " For sale by Geo. Howard. Townsend's Sarsaparilla. From the Wilmington Journal The following statistics which has been handed to us by Mr. Crandall, Messrs. Uapp & rownsend's travelling agent, will lurnish the reading public some idea of the magnitude of their Sarsanarill h,;o. . their manufactory which is erected at Al bany, at an expense of seventv h,o,i dollars. They prepare and put up 5,000 bottles every day; to perform this labor it requires United States are kept in constant opera tion. 1 his sine e item alone amounts to 100,000 per annum. Three Napier steam printing presses, with a double set of hands each, are constantly running on Circulars and Almanacs. They published last year 4,000,000 for gratuitous circula tion, containing a great variety of useful information, besides their own advertise ments. It took 50 females six months to fold and stitch them. Their Almanacs cost $30,000. Independent of all this, they publish a full column of their medi cine matter in over 400 papers in the Uni ted States, British Colonies, West India Islands, and South America, where they have extensive sales: this costs them over 80,000 per annum. They have a large number of men and boys engaged in col lecting root and other ingredients. Indeed all the hands they employ directly and otherwise, in making glass, paper, corks, sealing wax, packing boxes, together with their agents in selling thc medicine, can not be less than 2,000 persons. The a mount of capital employed to keep all the A ironf fiiirtnlinri and fhrir tvhn!f htiainp o 'I' . c . . . m successfu operation, is not less than v j 500,000 dollars. 1 1 V3 1 f wrkfilri cnorVi Irinr m m rrl i(inrl .v u j u i u. which has gained such a high reputation, and such unprecedented sales, swelling to lhe enormOUs sum of S800000 a year, mll,f nnB - " in And of itseir ;ntrinSiC Mtu.t uuewv..'.)) 22,1847. tti$tarss Balsam.A few days ago Mr. Elijah Witharn of Sanford, in our county, being in our office, requested us to publish, for the benefit of the public hi testin;ony in favor of fVistar's Balsam of Wild Cherri tn lhe fall of 1346, Mr. W4 W0S attacked i . ..i wtlh a VefV bad cold, Which continued to' grow worse uu marcn, wueu wa!5 - . . -ti ihvk - ! .lined io tne nouse, wun nine nope oi re- CoVery. t earing ot Wistar's Balsam pf Wild Chefry he'resolved to try It. He soon, found re- jef and after taking four bottles, Was able I t0 g0 0tit dnd attend to business. He as 1 -rihps his cure entirelv to the Baisattl, and recommends those who use it to persevere, Oor-!even if tl . , benefical 0f writin they do not at dnce perceive any ial result. We are not in the habit g puns xor meaicmes, ana ouiy gjve this at the request of Mr. W. ED.' DEMOCRAT. For sale by Geo. Howard, Tarboro - ... Dt-.t-tiii. Abyssinian Mixture. For GoNorfttitoilA, Glbet, Fluor Al bus, Gravel, &e., Letter from Dr. James R. Callum, dated Milton, N. C. August 14, 1847. Dr. J. Kiihl Dear Sin Your medicines hafe given entire sltisfaction in this section of country, the Abyssinian Mixture especially, is highly approved of, it has never fail ed to cure in every case. It sells like hot cakes. I have never had enough to supply the demand. You will please send me a large supply of it as soon as you arrive at home Yours respectfully, l L P. CALLUM. ; i Milton Drug Store. Agents Q&0. HO WARD, . Tafboro; F. Marshall Halifax; James Simmons, Weldon; C 0. Pngb, Gastonv F E Cook, Varrenton; Her ty Goodloe, Warrenton; P. C. BlrOWn, Louisburg lohn Brodie, Frank li"nj Louis H.' Kittle, Hen derson; Rt Hi Mitchell, Oxford. May 16 Gates, Stedman & Company U( Nassau Street, New York, I ABE now PUBLISHING 6e opuluv eficlo jjrmn8 OF MODERN DOMESTIC MEDICINE. BY, KEITH IMRAY, M D. Fellow of the Royal College of PhmU wiu jutccnitaie oj the lioyal College of Surgeon 's, Edinburg. THIS work gives a clear, and conrian idea of the nature of the distinctive symp. toms, of the premonitory signs of diseases. uy me m ua rxrraTmgvrtgrrrf y j The best modes of employing the med icines in general use are faithfully describ ed; as are also the diet and regimen neces sary under various .diseases, and during convalescence. Diet, Atmosphere, Temperature, Bath ing, Climate, Clohing and Exercises are specially treated upon. The publishers ofthe American Edition prefix to Dr. Imray's work, short illustra ted, and very valuable Treaties upon A natomy, Physiology and Surgery; also Directions for the Treatment of the Sick Management of the Sick Room, Prepara tion of Food for the Sick, &c. &c. Many valuable articles have been fur nished by the courtesy of medical gentle men ofthe United States. The entire volume, with its full Index, Tables of Doses. &c., will prove, it is con fidently believed, a most valuable book for Family use. The work will be completed in twelve weekly numbers, forming one large 8vo, volume of about 1000 pages. ,v Gentlemen of respectability and good address wanted as canvassers for the above , . 4 4v,n work in every town and village intho United States. Address (post paid,) . GA TES, STEDMAN $ CO. 116, Nassau st. Notice. -Ht- ; . :; for toughs aril lung complaints trse Dr. Bar tholotnew'B Pink Expectorant syrup. Sick head ache, though constitutional of ineiden tal, is cured by Spohn's head nche remedy. Lin's balm of Ckina for the cure of all diseased ihat requite external application -J: The gray Haired will find the Indian Hair Dyci perfect ahd effectual For sale by Geo. Howard. A prill! Gracfenberg Medicines JUST RECEIVED, the Oraefehberg" Sarsaparilla Compound the cerebrated T Childfen?s Pahacea-the Eye Lofron th Health Bitters -the Fever and Ague Pills " tun VPinhlA Pilts. nnd the- Green , Mountain Vegetable Uihtmenf, . . March 26. geo. fiotVAttn. The Press) Types and fixtures 0I1 tHlS Warr enlim (N V ) Reporter OFFICE fOR SALB. -ee- HAVING determined on eulttlhg tho printina Business, we now propose sell- j . our printing; Press, ?Vpes and Fix- tures at a very j0v price tot taSh, of Oh a short credit for a part of the purchase mon ey, with bond and approved security The Press and a part of the 7Vpe are Considerably worn, but will do pretty fair work for two or three years to come. Tho Job and Advertising Type are In better condition, and will last many years. The, Cases, Stands and other fixtures are very, good. There is a sufficiency of type ot all kinds for a village establishment. War-- renton Is a desirable place to reside in, be ing remarkably healthy, and has as good society as any village in the State. . We have been engaged in the publication of the Reporter for 21 years, and have been tolerably well sustained. ' Ve will fell at a price so law, thatany o"n6 i Wishing to en gage in the business would do well to call and see us. or address f the -itor, post paid, Warrenton, .N. C R. N. VERELL, Bditor Prop. April 21, 1849. Lilfe PHls and Fneni BUleirs. 4 For sale by G?o. Howard. s. ft 4? 1 i r t.
June 23, 1849, edition 1
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