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over individual and party despotism. To maintain this ascendency, so important, not to ourselves alone, but we believe to the world, all legitimate means must be employed. As one of these means, and we trust not the least, we appeal to all who think with us, for a decided and continued support of our work. But in doing so, we ask no sacrifice from any one. Each one's investment with us shall be returned with usurious interest. For, in addition to the support which he thereby gives to his own cause and our cause, he will be benefited by a monthly converse with the best thinkers of his country; and his principles fortified with well-considered arguments from its statesmen and scholars. He will, too, be kept informed by it of all important matters in contemporaneous history, literature, and art. And, in addition to this, he will receive in each number an exquisitely finished portrait of some eminent man, forming, in time, a gallery of national portraits, worth alone the price of subscription. In this department especially we think we shall maintain a position unequalled, as we have secured the services of an artist unsurpassed in his profession. In short, the arrangements we have completed for the future conduct of every department, enable us confidently to hope to make this Journal a work worthy the growing greatness of the country; and fit, if not essential, to every household where there are true minds formed or to be formed, having the intellectual, moral, and political well-being of their country at heart; and sometimes, too, we trust, not too grave for pleasure, but displacing that which, being merely for pleasure, leaves no lasting good behind.

The REVIEW is published at 118 Nassau strect; and is printed royal octavo size, monthly, in large and handsome type. Each number contains 112 pages, making two elegant volumes in the year; each volume containing six portraits, executed in the highest style of the art. Price five dollars per annum,-payable in advance, or carly in the year.

Connecticut Mutual

Life Jusurance Company of Hartford.

This Company, chartered by the Legislature of the State of Connecticut, with a Perpetual Charter, and upon the purely mutual plan, ranks among the soundest institutions of the country.

There are many features in the operations of this Company not common to other institutions of the kind, among which are, first-a payment of all the dividends to the insured during the lifetime of the party insured; second-when the party insured prefers, he can pay one half the annual premium by giving his note, which note may be renewed, from year to year, by paying the interest at 6 per cent. Thus far the dividends of the Company have been equal to the notes, thereby cancelling the notes, and thus saving to the insured one-half the premium taken by other companies.

NEW YORK OFFICE, No. 54 WALL STREET.

W. S. DUNHAM, AGENT.

R. S. KISSAM, M. D., EXAMINING PHYSICIAN.
AT THE OFFICE DAILY FROM 2 TO 3 O'CLOCK, P. M.

HARTFORD OFFICE, No. 158 MAIN STREET.

JAMES GOODWIN, PRESIDENT.

GUY R. PHELPS, SECRETARY.

OF

THE AMERICAN REVIEW:

A Whig Journal, Devoted to Politics and Literature.

JAMES D. WHELPLEY, EDITOR.

In the original Prospectus of the AMERICAN REVIEW, issued at Washington by Mr. Colton, its former proprietor and Editor, a number of the leading Whig Members of the Twentyseventh Congress (1845-6,) subscribed their names to the following resolution:

"Earnestly approving the plan of such a National organ, long needed and of manifest importance, the undersigned agree to contribute for its pages, from time to time, such communications as may be necessary to set forth and defend the doctrines held by the united Whig Party of the Union. Signed by Geo. P. Marsh, Daniel D. Bernard, J. McPherson Berrien, J. R. Ingersoll, E. Joy Morris, T. L. Clingman, Daniel Webster, R. C. Winthrop, Thos. Butler King, Hamilton Fish Kennedy, J. Collamer, Wm. S. Archer, Rufus Choate, Alexander H. Stephens."

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An engraved portrait of some distinguished person will be found i: every number of the Review. These will usually be portraits of living American Statesmen, and whenever that is possible, will be accompanied with an authentic Memoir of the person represented.

The first objects of the Review are of course political: it is designed to set forth and defend the principles, the measures, and the men, of the UNITED WHIG PARTY of the Union. It has been a matter of just reproach to that Party, that, though it embraces in great part the intelligence and learning of the country, it has had no Quarterly or Monthly organ devoted to the expression and defence of its opinions and measures. The conductors of the American Review have done what in them lies to remove this reproach by securing contributions from sources of undoubted ability and truth. It is their intention, if possible, that no Whig in the Nation shall want either Arguments to defend, or Authorities to support his opinions.

The literary department of the Review will agree in spirit with the political. The conductors believe that there is learning and originality enough in this country to sustain their enterprise to the full.

TERMS.-$5 00 a-year. Payment to be called for in advance, or early in the year.

AGENTS FOR THE REVIEW.

CHARLES MAPOTHER, GENERAL AGENT.

CHARLES W.HUBBARD is our travelling agent for the State of New York. HENRY J. ADAMS for the South and West.

Mr. ISRAEL E. JAMES for the Southern and Southwestern States, assisted by James K. Whipple, William H. Weld, O. H. P. Stem, John B. Weld, T. S. Waterman, John Collins, James Deering, Isaac T. Guyer, and R. S. James.

Mr. C. W. JAMES for the Western States, Iowa and Wisconsin, assisted by James R. Smith, J. T. Dent, T. Gardiner Smith and F. J. Hawes, John W. Arm-· strong, Jassen Tayler, E. M. Stevenson, and W. Ramsey.

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Postage on this Review (five ounces) in all parts of the Union, 7 1-2 cents.

Frinted by E. N. Grossman.

AMERICAN REVIEW:

A WHIG JOURNAL,

DEVOTED TO

POLITICS AND LITERATURE.

"TO STAND BY THE CONSTITUTION."

NEW SERIES. NO. XXVIII.-WHOLE NUMBER LXIV.

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TERMS.-$5 00 A-YEAR. PAYMENT LIABLE TO BE CALLED FOR IN ADVANCE, OR EARLY IN THE YEAR.

All communications addressed to American Review, 118 Nassau street.

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