The Atlanta daily sun. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1870-1873, November 15, 1871, Image 3

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THE DAILY SUN. Wkdnehdai Mosicnta Novkmbkb 16. yfp-Nete Advertisements etoagsfound on hirst Page; local imrl Business Notices oh Fourth Page. TIIE CAPITOL. Senator Norwood. This was the principal result of yes terday’s proceedings of the General As sembly. It was a very quiet and a yerj orderly election. The result was not on expected, as the matter had been aettled beyond’a peradventure by the canons held last week. Before the caucus the contest was pretty spicy. Several dis tinguished gentlemen ware mentioned in connection with the high and honorable office, all of whom were backed by highly respectable number of friends in the Assembly. It became a question of who had meet friends. The candidates were alhso suitable—so able and distin guished, that it was a very nice point to Mil between them. But the caucus was held, add a preference was expressed for Hon. T. M. Norwood, of Savannah and this gentleman may well feel flat tered, as his was no mean opposition, bnt an opposition oomposed of some of the beet and strongest men in the State. Thus, having secured the canons nomi nation, his election yesterday was a mere matter of form, as there was no consid erable opposition. The Badioal Saints trotted out no candidate, but fell back upon the Unadulterated Blodgett, as their Senator, by right of a previous election, which was irregular, illegal, un constitutional, null and void, and no Caere entitles Mm to a seat in the Senate, as representative from Georgia, than one of the savages of Otaheite is entitled to it The King of the Ashanteee, and his fragrant adjuncts, in both branches of the Assembly, entered their protests against the election of Hr. Norwood. They have a right to protest as much as they please, but all their protests cannot entitle the dapper Mr. Blodgett, intel lectually, morally, or legally, to a seat in the United States Senate. One aromatic Saint rallied all his intellectual and phyaical forces, oompreased them into a single ballot, and exploded it for Ephraim Twnedy. The Senate declined to agree to the re port of the Printing Committee, which was sdverae to letting the State work out to the lowest bidder,>nd committed the matter into the hands of a special com mittee of three, of which Senator Nun- nally is chairman. It this matter is pro perly investigated, it will be found that there is a vast dsal of room for curtailing expenses in this matter of State Print ing, and as the Legislature appears to be marking out a wisely economical line, it war* well to make a clean sweep as it goes. A few thousand saved on Publio Printing annually is that much clear gain. SUN-STttOKES. »®. “ No yellow fever reported to day," jubilantly comes from Charleston. 40“ After the New York detoctives inform the Courts who killed Nathan perhaps they will go to Boeton and as certain who killed Kate Lehan. AST* Among the curiosities at a Georgia Fair, t?as a velocipede.—(Boston Post.) The curious part of it was not the velocipede, but the man who had the audacity to cuter the thing. IkP The Japanese thiak a great deal of fish. So does Grant. DGk, Dickens is to have a bronze mon ument in London. GEOUUIA MATTERS. A cow attacked a lady on the streets in Savannah Saturday, and gored her dress in a wsy not prescribed by the mode. Savannah jumps Hon. Julian Hartridge as the man to make the race for Gov ernor. Borne hoists J. I. Wright for Mayor. That’s right A correspondent of the Savannah Be- publican suggests General Colquitt for Governor. Mr. Clark, of Savannah, died in Orif- fin Sunday. Savannah acknowledges the receipt of the fiist frost of the season. Templeton will run St Andrews Hall daring Fair week in Savannah. A horned snake, in liqaor, is the latest addenda to the Savannah News office. Harris looks at the jar all day, and lan- guiahes for the liquor, and woulds that the sarpent were only out of it A baby bus beon found lying around loose at night in Savannah. Having read an unfavorable notice in Le Figaro Mile. Hinson hired a hack and ordered the driver to take hor to the door of Le Figaro’s musical eritio (M. Jouvin). She sent up for him. “A lsdv whom he does not know wishes to s]ienk to him." JX. Jouvin wont down stairs, and found waiting at his garden gate a fu.-y, who bawled, "Do you reoognizo me.'” M. Jouvin is one of the De-st near-sighted men in Paris, and he w ould probably have been obliged to say no hud he not recog nized Mile. Hinson’s voice. She con tinued: "You are a blackguard! You have killed me. Had I giveu you moi ay you would have praised me. I don’t know what keeps me from boxing your ean.” M. Jouvin quietly replied: "Your good sense. These words were scarcely out out cf his month when Mile. Hissou sprang towards him with denoted fists. He seised her hands, held her tightly and said: "You must be crazy to act in this way, for, box as well as you may, goad holing will not give you good talents as a songstress.” More angry than ever she returned to the hack, screamed to M. Jouvin, “Consider your ears boxed," and ordered the driver to take her home. —Paris Cor. A correspondent of the World recently visited one of the haunts of politioal ref ugees in London, and found, among many other members of the Commune and Central Committee who were said to have been shot in Paris during the scenes of tho 21st to the 2tith of May, Le Moussy, whose hand, it was said, fired tho shot whioh dispatched the Secretary of Moreau, Minister of War under the Commune. LOOK XUntnnl Life Jnsttraute. TO YOUR INTEREST The Mtitu.il Life Insurance Company OF NEW YORK. ITS CASH ASSETS OVER $50,000,000 r ( das a surplus or nous than six millions or eolum, after pnovrorao fob lit liabliitie* M determined by the Inenntuee Dqiertment o( the State of No* York. Hoe tke Lar*,-.t Aeeete, Income, Number leaned; end pay* Ik* largest amount of Dividend*, end bee the emeileet P age of expense* of any company in tbe World. The undersigned will gladly give all Information neoemry to effect Insurance on your live*. Do your duty to those that you love by taking a policy iu THE OLD MUTUAL* Henry R. Christian, SPECIAL AGENT. BUILDING, Whitehall Street. Oflloo: JAMES’ F. ALEXANDER, M. D„ MEDICAL EXAMINES. . jtgents HViitlfd u-fio ssrc ll'orkers. The Modernization of Hebrew Names. Bibical names, says the Jewish Messen ger, are frequently " modernize A” Tho custom, we fancy, arises generally from a feeling of false shame, which is certainly culpable; for names of themselves express nothing and it is altogether ridiculous to supposo that the change of one or more letters will whiten the moral character or raise one’s reputation, save airoug a oomir unity of the sill’est and most des picable. Thus Abraham becomes Brabom; Abrahamson, Bramson; Baruch Barrow; David and Davidson, Davis and Davison; Elias, Ellis; Emmanuel, MaDuel; Jonas, Jones; Levi is made to undergo several transformations, appearing successively as Lewis, Levey, Luvett, Lieber, Levin; while Levison is transmuted into Luvison, and Leviberginto Lavenberg. Moses is Americanized into Moss, Mosely, and at times Morris; Solomon is transformed into Salomon,Salmon and Solemn; Zack- arias is changed to Zacharie; Jacob and Jaoobson appear as Jacques and Jack- Scriptural names are frequently altered by the ini rations or omission of one or more letters, the bearer thereof becoming correspondingly glorified Thus Aaron and Aaronson came blandly upou you as Aron and Aronson; Esther, “the star,” loses all its significance ween turned iuto Estelle; Eve would not know hersulf as Evs, nor Hannah as Annie, nor Elkunah as Elkan, nor Joseph as Josephi. Judah shortened into Juad and Sarah into Sara. On the other hand, Boehel is lengthened into Bocbael, aud Samson in to Sampson. _ Grant as a Logician. 40- Mobile poets frame their produc tions and raffle them off at one dollar a chance. This is a new trick of the Mu se*, bnt it amuse*. 40-Jim Fisk has 17,400 notices of himself pasted in a scrap book. When ever he feels his vanity about to over- oome him, he goes to his scrap book and reads. * 40- If Spain meddles with our ves sels, she will get into a Hornet's nost— (Boston Post.) At present, bowover, the Hornet has got into Spain’s nest, and is forced to lag there. 40* An exchsngo says: “ Sneer not at old clothes. They are often made holy by (ong sacrifices. ” Pogno says his were made hole-y by long woar. Iu fact that is the way he sacrificed them. 40* "Canada is to be bored for petro leum.” It seems om’nontly desirable that the world should let this petroleum bosincss alone, until a few hundred in cendiaries should have been caught and banged, H3_ Tho President may receive pres ents of houses, homes, or money to any amount, but a poor letter-carrier is for bidden anything of the kind This ooutrovsrts the old adage, Like master like man.—(Boston Post.) But tho Presi dent only gets 4*5,000 a year, and how ii a man to keep fine hastes, smoke fine segars, pad travel ever so many thousand miles a year, on that unless he had some ontside help. The Pest fc unreasonable. —r ■- JtiP 1 The Washington Chronids of the Uth has this item: T We lean that Governor Sam Bard,late of th* Irm Chorgian, will resume jour- J*et the Hourbon Democracy "stand from Thofhstlbat this fiat appeals In Wssh- Ington—-thwfset that it first appears in the Washington Chroniels means some thing. The Chronicle is one of the most ultra Badioal papers in the country, and aomewhere or other, something is said abOM II dbg returning to bis vsstiL .Me »l l A I • * M. It is hoped that Grant, or his subordinates, will soon be sober enough to let the public know what the admin istration knows about South Carolina— A few weeks ago Marion county was de clared to be under martial law. A sup plementary proclamation mid that it Wat uot Marion but Union, that wo* meant Still another proclamation came supend- ing habeas corpus in Marion, uud the dis patches published yesterday motuing again repeat uot Marion but Union.— The popular belief is that some body is muddled if not fuddled. The newspapers are making fun of the President’s Portland speech. They ought not to do it Was it not a very good speech? It will bo remembered it ran follows: "CilUens r/ Portland: I havc.very vivid recollection of a, to me, gratifying visit I made six years ago in your city. Now I return from an equally pleasant one, both here and in other ports of your State. My reoeption has been most pleasing, and I hope my visits will uot bo so lar apart in the future, otherwise I shall not be able to visit you often boforo I am a very old man. I thank you for this greeting.” Now, we oontend that this was an emi nently wise, patriotic, and conservative speech. We can find no fault with it It waa not tedious. Nobody oould com plain with being tired out with listening to it It waseasily reported. Above all, it was sound and true, which publio speeches sometimes are not It will bear the closest analysis. See what a beautiful aeries of syllogisms may be made of it—vis fc) Six years is along time; I have not seen you for six years. Therefore, it is a long time since I sew y«o. ik (a.) A few long times msko a lifetime, Six years is a long time. Therefore a few times six years make a lifetime. (-D.) In tho course of lifetime I shall bo a miscellaneous. TO EMIGRANTS. THE BEST! ROUTE FROM Atlanta to Memphis Western and Atlantic Memphis & Charleston R. R. Leave Atlanta C:00 A* 1C JOjW P. M. Beach Memphis, next day.12.15 P. 1C 10:15 P. M. NO OT1IEB BOUTS OFFERS Double Daily Trains TO ANT POINT ON THE Mississippi River SOUTH OF CAIRO. Qarbtmre, <tmlers, Cunte, #c. W. L. WADSWORTH, Atlanta, Ga., j W. L. WADSWORTH Importers and Dealers in OKAS. WYNN & CO Hardware, September 10*ly OppoHlto .Tamos* linukf Whitehall Htroot* ATLANTA, GA 'Atlanta 6nn Uroopectao. THE ATLANTA SUN! DAII.Y AND WEEKLY, 'Live Paper on Live Issues PUBIjISHBD BY THE ATLANTA, GEORGIA. ALFeXANDER II. NTFPIIENH, ARriIIBALD NT. HPK1GUTH, J. IIENLY (SMITH, Proprlotora, very old man, A fe Macon & Brunswick RAILROAD COMPANY. Macon, Qa., October 28, 1 few times six years make a lifetime. Therefore, in tho course of a few times six years I shall be a very old man. (iv.) If I don't aee you oftencr than hereto fore,! Bhall see you only once in six years. In the eourae of a few times six years I shall be a very old man. (Q Therefore, if I ace you no otleucr than before, I shall see you only a few times before I am a very old man. ■ Wo really think Mr. Grant s speech was one oi the 4 most lucid and logical ever delivered by that distinguished orator. —Exchange. Levi Fowler left here on Monday last, for Atlanta, having been summoned before the Sub Ku Klux committee now in ses sion in that city. Miss. Adkins, danghtor of Jo Adkins, deceased, and a Mr. High tower, of Powelton, have also, wo learn, been called to appear. These parties have been summoned bv Horace Maynard, a Radical member of Committee. We ex pect that a number more of our citizens will be called upon to take the same trip. The county can stand it if the U. 3. Treasury ean. P, S.—Since ilia above was in type Mr. Fowler has returned, aud tbe com mittee adjourned, satisfied, we Oppose with tbe botch of lies which they have wormed from negroes' aud Chap. Nor ris. Norris’ evidenoe was shown Mr. Fowler, and his opinion asked as to its truthfulness and Norris’ character. His answer was neither satisfactory to the Radical members of the committee not complimentary toOkap.— fi'anenUmClip- /*”'■ r Tbe New York Standard seyv • 'Gentle men are not considered dressed for the opera without a ‘swallow-tail’ coat, white kid glovea, white nook-tie, opera hat, and ■malt diamond, or plain flat gold studs. Some of our young men are again intro ducing white veete, cot low and well open, made with three buttons and wide rolling collar. The effect for evening or opera wear is pleasing to the eyo and a relief to tho everlasting black suit. In very bad -_ . taste some wouktbo fashionable young -* * - men are wearing velvet collars ou their | Qlrf “wlTSSf' drC88 Costs. A velvet COll.tr OU WJ but gappoeedto have bevn last ou VliiliLili itrut, U an overcoat looks os if it replaced a worn-1 tw«n aMawaasdluicken. out cloth collar—ou economical plan, .Darlenes , t **ui ° j. w. mo mas. adopted by seedy young gentlemen. | Over w* woca 73 MILES SHORTER Thun Any Ollier I,Inc to Memphis, LITTLE ROCK. Starting from Atlanta at 10:30 p. in., yon leave Chattanooga 6:30 a. m., arrive at Memphis 10:16 p. m, ieavo Memphis for Little Bock 7:50 a. m. If any one should offer Inducements to you to go via Nashville to Little Bock, remember that there Is but one train on that route, which loaves Atlanta in tho Morning starting 12 hours too soon, yon aro on a todious Journey 0 hours lougsr, and arrive in Memphis only to meet with 7 hours more detention than if you had left Atlanta on the 16:80 p. m. train, and gone direct by the only RELIABLE BOUTE. If you aro to go by boat from Memphis, leave Allan* ta in the morning, arriving in Memphis 12:16 p.. Boats leave at 6:00 p. m., allowing smplo time for tranafer and avoiding confusion. Finding Agents who will give reliable Information, and allow no one to deceive you. L. P. OUDGEIt, Agent, Dalton. W. J. AKEBS, Agent Atlanta. B. F, PABKEB, Agent, Chattanooga, Or Address i A. A. BABNES, General Ticket Agent, octlO-lm. M< mphis Alexander H. STEPHENS, Political A. R. WATSON* News Editor Editor. Cotton -factors and Cotton JPooD ®nano Ape t, fftt. New Cotton and Produce Warehouse. THE FIjANTTHEUI LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK. ■utosKirltoed. Capital OWE MILLION DOLLARS. Tlio Warehouse of This Bank, ICor. Campbell and Reynolds Streets, Augusta, Chnvgia, JS NOW BEADY TO RECEIVE COTTON. LIBERAL CASH ADVANCES will be made upon Cotton is Warehouse, or upon Railroad Receipts. MB- Parties Storing Cotton with tho Bank will b* fnnrisbsd with receipts lor same that will be available in this city or any other lor borravtog sonsy, 40- The Bank is prepared at all times to moke LOANS ON FBODUGE or PROVISIONS on the most reasonable terms. L Parties would do well to apply at the Warehouse, or communicate with the Officers. CBABLES J. JEWKIN8, PraslAsat. JICO. I*. ICINCi. Vloo-Prceident, __ , T, X*. nilANCU, Cashlor. WILBRRFORCE DANIEL. DANIEL Ac HILL, COTTON FACTORS, Agents Cotton Food Guano, NO. 3,WARREN BLOCK, OPPOSITE GLOBE HOTEL, AUGUSTA, GA AU business entrusted to them will have strict personal attention. Orders for Bagging, Tice or Rope and Family Supplies promptly filled. COMMISSION 11*4 PER CENT. iimnoiii, _T,. | Col. L. If. BILL, Director da. X. . WttMOnt Jud||« JOHN P. KINO, I _ President National Bank of Augusta and Augusta I havings Bank of Facte*,. -----n f, X. U AJUIINXB, Eh.. freeH Dtotocm V*rtU**r Co. | W. W. MMTSOlt, !•«., Bfwrta. 0a ammUMcrclunt» Mentor*' MMlootl Ben*. Xisnurt* 1 so |»*■ BRANCH, SONS A CO., COTTONFAOTOBS — AND — COMMISSION MERCHANTS, Oflloo at Planters’ Loan A Savings Rank Warehoase AUGUST A, QKOKOIA. Henly SMITH, General Editor and Business Manager. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally—Single Copy. Twelve Months Six Months a QUO OO I Three MoiiIIin • S OO J One Month * Clubs For Dally-For Annum i Til re© Coplew Four “ Five “ 37 Ofl I Fliglit •• 35 00 Ton « 43 OO Hliitfie Copy WoeRJy-Por Annum t Change of Schedule. 1871, the following schedules will be accommodation train, DAILY KXCIOT BUY BAY. Leave Maooa Arrive at Urunawtok 945P. M. Arrive at Jacksonville. Fla. 6:00 A. M. Leave Jacksonville, Fla *... 8:48 P. M. Leave Brunswick 6 45 A. 16. ArriveMeoon 6:28 P.M. Connects eloeely at Jreeup with traina of AllanUo k Gulf Railroad to and from all pointa In Florida. Til ROUGH PASSENGER TRAIN, DAILY EXCEPT PUXDAY. Leave Macon 8:10 P. M. Arrive at itevannab 7:45 A. M. Arrive Jacksonville. Fla 7:60 P.M. Leavs Jacksonville, Fla. 7:00 A. M. Leave Havannafe «... 7Mt P. M. Ajrtve at Macon. 6UW A. M. Connects eloeely at Jessup with trains for Ravsn- naL Florida, and all pointa on the A. k O. K> B. At Macon with the M. A W. 1L U. traina to and, fiurn Atlanta. No change of can between Macon and Ravahneh. and Macon end Jacksonville, Via. IIA.WKINHVrLLK THAI TV, DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. Laave Macon paaeenger shed 3ft6P. V. Arrive et HawkiuevUle 8 45 1*. M. Leeve Hawkiueville 6:45 A. M. Arrive el Meson k):36A. M. Slnjglc Copy Tliro© Copies Five Copies • • • One Hundred Copies 3 OO 3 OO Ten Coplo« • • Twent y Copies Fifty Copies • OR OO ft 4. OO 3 C»t§ • 13 OO • 30 OO 03 OO 8133 OO ^IBERAL CASH ADVANCES MADE ON COTTON, TO BE ELD HERB, for Shipment to Domestie or Foreign Markets. SriT SPECIAL ATTENTION paid to the WEIGHING of sept2G-6m .familn faootilc Bribing Hlrctiine*. w' ]S i>“ . Family Favorite Sewing Machine. SIMPLE, DURABLE, Will do a greater ohangea than any other mnenins. Bold on the installment plan, la en dollar* a month. Office and salesroom at ECONOMICAL variety o*_ wen*, with rawxB ATLANTA, Mluiglo Copy Tlirco CopleN Five CoploM Ten CopleN WooRly SLac. Montlos: 1 OO Twenty Copies a 30 FIIY y CopleH One Ilttiulred Cox>lwa 4 oo 7 50 ^Jttlgle Copy 13 OO 3d OO 03 OO 3 Cta No Subscription*, to the WEEKLY, received for a shorter period then si* months. All HtilwcripUmiH uinst t»o paid^r iu advaueo; and all names will be strickou from v time paid for expires. ^ ^ J M jk M J W Z r Books when the Nemcii Ibr GLUUH must all he sent at Ulo and all be at the Kamo Pont Oilin’, Each mibarriber’e name will be written oi advantages of Club rates It is only iiuo time, aud toko tho 'paper for the i bin W^r- the same in Clubs as otherwise. To oociiro Uio rin of subeorlptlon for each one shall begin and end at the vamo timo, and that all l>e tekuit at ti>o wnw i'"st Office. kLow to Xtojxj.it Mont> y ■ WewiU bi r3«p)itiible far tha »af.j arrivtl of all money sent i by Express, or by Draft, but not otherwise. If lAouuy ssul iu the lose of the person ss*ndlng it. No^pepcr uiUl be senl from thu o£ics Uil 4 is paid for, and cao.es will always he erased when the time ^8. Peraone ending money by Erpresa nmst prepay uergee. To Oorrospondonts i Mr. Stephen* Will remain Hf rrawWdTllle. ID* connection with THE 8U N wil1 nok bis rei tdence. All letters int>>uded lor him, oither on private mattera or connocu d with tbe Political iH-partmcn- of tins paper, should be addressed to him at CrawfordvtlU, Ga. AU letters on busiups* of any kind, cynnected wiU> THE HUN, except its Political Department, should be addfeaorf! to J. Henly Smith, Manager, Atlanta, Ga. The Weekly Sun J Interest. AU of Mr. Htepheua’ I largo. 8 page aheet (ia uuat tv fuc/ni fl of the Delly—«*ver> thingwBkm eppoere lu u Editorials apjieor in the Weekly ^ TUB fltntli Vhe olgtili of tlin People, th« Advocate of Juatice, the Defendei of Popular Rights, and tho opponent of bnrdftna heaped upon a tax-paying people, ana Oppressions of all kinds. It will Adhere to the old, wf* time-honored landmarks of the Demooratio Par ty. Mr BTEPHEN3 ta thoroughly enhated In tho Work, And will contribute to its columns almost daily, We ask the friends of Utterly, ewerywber'' to aid in extending oar clrouteUoa. Our Weekly is a very Map paper, end Its Club Hal*a are particularly favnrtblc. Tbe presidential contest for 1*7 J wiU be th* rao-*t tin portent ta the history of Atoertea. The issues In- vutvad are momentous, and all that patriots bold dear ta at stake IftdeUty to the Constitution ta the true teat of oeisaemcjr in every Htets of the Union, and we raeognlae every m«* who ia a true mend to that aacr-d inatrameot, as a co-worker with us in the great cause of American Liberty* Tbr rights and liberthu «•; th* whole ts-opfe »n*>e<*p*rttlred— not any more ao In the Houth tha-i in tho North, and we of .h • osHihav« no lut"re><te at euko in tho momeutoua ts«uae of Ute day, wtou i ar* not commou u» Nurlh aad Houth, alike. We renpoctffiHy a«lr a fkir *hffT* < f pnli.ie pa*mmre. All cuuiiuum<iaL(>B6 <>r iottecs JU Uuauieee should lie addrrsaed to J. HENLY SMITH, Manager, ATLANTA, GA, 0. V. SHIPP. Ifnipertltg pnbllshlng Wowpaitj), UN8E0TI0NAL, UNPARTI8M, UNPOliTUUU. The freshest scries of Text-Books published—cosstssississx Use Issteet results of discovery and scientific research. OfflcUUj adapted bj tho VlrglnU and Goorgta State AMD MOV L.MRT I, VII It MVBHY a O UTBXRW I And ia many Northern Matas. th? several 8outh(*nt State*, School-Books which thonld bo cn- unpolitical, which ahonld present science—nro now issuing u com* Tcxt-lxioks by the eminent ecbol* which arc the Of th* moat cmlmnt eitino, of Sag fissMSb, a» s arias o t tin||r ounSmA urasrsiw, and Cheapest, Best, and Most Now published. Tho " Unimwt/ Series” Maury’s Geographical By Commodore M. F. MAmrr.of the VlrguiU Military Insdtnte. made mi «m iu the study of this science, and which, in Um word* of i lumpluhcd Southern teacher, * aro characterized by s felicity of aft frmhness of *tyl« which mnat ever render them attractive to the vonag, rmA wkltk will'be by all who wish m teach Qeofrmphy njf a teicuct, ns «ome ih» s »stak.rawUsa0t, aud uot merely ua uu enumeration of dry facta. Holmes’ Readers and 8p*n#r*. Br (inosoe F. Hoi.mi*. U, IV, PmhMorof Hilton «adOrastst Utiratsifi jifi-tbs tbi- ver-itv of Virxiui*. A uric* of Heodon onequollvd In enrataw*, ttrellraS; rad (Hra ir*;iTiV ,1 Iv-uiitr. They ire atcidily progrtaan la chiraeter, hrirbt rad Arab la lb •el. eiions of proM utd vrem, and illu*tnuJn of Soattani r * “ Venable’s Arlthmatleal hrlfbt ssi laJ>si»s ||>|ggy <t stwoeli Nl« r of M.rttemirim la dm VHm+y of by IntelHMl teachwp with the hkhtal meutkLdiUkmmdkm Imbmtmmdmm Bv (.'karlr* R. Vknabl^ LL.D . Virginia. Thevi hooka are received everywhere •aaisLu tion. as beiau moat admirably adapted for lion. Their method*, mica, aud reasoning* are clear, diliac! laglral, aad and ths serial ii carefully graded throughout. Holmes' History et th* United itaftaa, By Gwnos F. Houuo, LLJ1, at th* 0.Gladly at Vbglria fe b Ihi- :i'lroin*!>le work, iuuntiing, unpordal, and tnibAU, as woB * style. That It it th* mly Hbtofy of tho United 8t»te* which ii C(inoi down to the pneent data Aloo, Do Vcro’s French Grammar, Readers, etc., Clldersleeve’s Latin aeries, Carter** Elements of General HleSote, Holmes’ EngUeh Of Leconte’s rtmmtff, ltffio fgHgg. Johnston** aiMHIeh Ian Writ! DuntordaifeJ _ S-n-1 fir onr n-w II.T.I’^TRATfW DSSGIUPTIVB OATAUMMrawMfe01 b m*ii«i free to eny triL-her or ednml otneer. U tell* wbnl tratraa SdsR sTota btaba ra cout,,:.!. .pecimon p^uf each. Add rat* UNXVURSITY PUBLISHING IIS A. SLAYM GENERAL AGBNT. w. iDr.wor 10, Offleo: ulyV-dlawtiun