Newspaper Page Text
VOL XI.
| From the Cleveland Herald.]
Plain Language by Truthful Jane.
■Which I wish to repeat,
And my language is plain,
That in ways of deceit,
And in tricks that arc vain,
Tne “ girl of the period ” is lively,
Which the same I would rise to explain.
Lilly White was her name,
And I need not deny,
In regard to the same,
Waat that name might imply ;
But her cheeks were provokinglv rosy,
And bewitchingly penciled her eye.
’Twas in Lent, week third,
With most penitent skies,
Which it might he inferred
Lilly White was likewise ;
Yet she humbugged Johannes, my lover,
In away I shall always despise.
Which we had a small game,
Called by some hide and seek ;
’Twas flirtation. The same
She thought sinful and weak ;
But she smiled as she ogled Johannes,
With a smile that was saintly and meek.
Yet the game it advanced
1 n away I detest.
And mv sorrow enhanced
At the state of John’s vest,
Which heaved like a wave of the ocean,
When the same has a turbulent breast.
But the tricks that were played
By that girl of the P.,
And the progress she made,
Was alarming to see;
Till she twirled on her left hand forefinger
What Johannes had promised to me.
Then I looked up at John,
But he looked not at me ;
Ami I rose with g groan
And said; What do I see?
We are ruined by harmless flirtation,
An 1 I went for that girl of the P.
In the scene that ensued
John amazed did not speak ;
For the floor was bestrewed,
In the height of my pique, .
With the cards Lilly White had been playing
In the game she thought “sinful and weak.
Os those “ exquisite charms ”
[ laid hare in a trice
“ Paddings,” “ paniers ” and “ forms
Os most cunning device ;
And there fell with her tresses so airy, i
What is frequent in hair, rats and mice.
Which is why I repeat,
And my language is plain,
That in ways of deceit
And in tricks that arc vain.
The “ girl of the period ” is lively.
Which the same I am free to maintain.
A Strange Interview between Grant
and Cameron.
From a Donn Piatt letter to the Cincinnati
Commercial.
But then wc have the venerable Came
ron to the fore to enlighten the Inscruta
ble, and protect us in our rights. Simon
was telegraphed the very moment the
treaty agreed on by the Commission was
submitted to the President, and Simon
promptly responded. The meeting be
tween his Excellency, the Inscrutable, and
the Honorable Dick Turpin, of Pennsyl
vania, must have been exceedingly enter
taining, if one could only have been pres
ent to witness it. Simon knows about as
much of our foreign relations as a cow
does of a camp meeting, and the Inscruta
ble knows less, as I have said. The inter
view, was, probably, about as follows:
<• Now, mind, I don’t assert there is a word
of truth in what lam going to relate. I
can only assert that it is true in character.
President (smoking) says, slowly and be
tween puffs—l scut lor you, senator Ca
meron.
Cameron—Yes, Mr. President, I came
immediately. There is hell to pay in my
State with this mao Geary, and I ought
to be at home. But as Chairman of the
Committee an Foreign Relations, it is my
duty to consult with you, so I had only
time to put a clean shirt and a few blank
commissions in my valise, anil bury on.
What do you think of this treaty'/
President—Pretty fair, I guess, (puff,
puff,); don’t know (puff, puff,); will send it
in ; and let you Senators work it (puff,)
out (puff).
Simon—ls the Yankees get all they
want in fisheries, and the Western men
the free navigation on the St. Lawrence
an<> we have pretty a plump sum paid for
the Alabama Claims and a few apologies,
I rather think we ought to be satisfied. —
But they must not touch our duties —to
lnwer the duty on coal one cent would lose
us Pennsylvania. We’ll lose Pennsylvan
ia, any way, if we don’t crush out that
ass, Geary. He’s giving us a deal of
trouble. Now, Mr. President, I have a
few friends of yours and mine hero to be
provided for, and if you just knock’cm in
to those offices, Geary is a dead cqck in
the pit, and we cau count on Pcnnsylva
ia all the time.
President—How (puff, puff) about
Sumner? (puff.)
Simon —I don’t koow, and I don’t care—
nobody cares for Sumner —lie s collapsed,
long ago. But, Mr. President, as I was
saying” this Geary must be crushed, and
our friends provided fur. Now, here, I
(ftulj) douutu ■
T© ™SO© HOROiEOT ©HIITO— TOCS© TO© *©«
——————————————————————————————— ,|,, U i„i UBIJ ■■ .MM—j.
have thought the thing over, and il you
can make way—
President (smoking with great vigor) —
flow about this question of neutrality?
Simon (in rage)—l don’t know ; how
the devil should I know? The Commis
sion has not consulted me, and I’m devil
ish glad I was not consulted. I have as
much as I can do keeping the party to
gether in Pennsylvania. And that is of
more importance, I can tell you, than any
question between England and this coun
try. If the Democrats carry Pennsylva
nia, good bye, John—that’s all; and this
Geary—
President —Did you buy that Morgan
colt you were talking about last winter?
Simon —Yes, I did, and have had him
in training for two months, now. He can
make his mile in 2:40, or I am a sinner.
So soon as he is well trained I want to
present him to you as a token of PcniiSyl-'
vania’s personal regard.
President—Umph ; what is he worth?
Simon —Two thousand, if a cent.
President —Who are the people you
want appointed?
Simorr—Here they are, Mr. President, —
every man a loyal man, and a friend of
yours —every one of them was the first to
nominate you for the Presidency, and will
be the last to leave you as long as there is
a cent in the Treasury.
Aud here ended the famous consulta
tion on foreign affairs with the illustrious
successor of Senator Sumner.
A Sound Letter from a Soldier to Gener
al Grant.
The following letter (says the New
York Nun of Saturday) was forwarded to
President Grant by a general officer who
served under him, and since the war has
voted for and supported him :
New Yoruc, May 5, 1871.
Dear General: Oue who served near
your person in the Western army takes
the liberty of enclosing to you the accom
panying picture that must strike you as,
excedingly appropriate iu view of your
proclamation of yesterday. It is a matter
of astonishment to us soldidrs—and I may
say of regret —that you have affiliated
with the man you “ blottled up,” aud al
lowed yourself to be used tq force upon
the country another civil war. God kuows
we have had enough—at least I, who par
ticipated in thirty-three battles under
Buell, Thomas, Rosecrans and Sherman,
and have been three times wounded, tecl
that I have had—and we hoped that our
devoted leader would aid in a peaceful re
construction. ' We have sadly been disap
[Jmnted and tve see that every act of yours
from the appointment Os the members of
your civil household, in violation of the
Constitution, to outrageous disregard of
the rights of States, has been directed to
wards making you dictator. You may
think that you have such a hold upon the
affections of the soldier citizens of the
Union that you can depend upon them in
an emergency. Don’t make any such
mistake! Be warned in time. AVe shed
our blood for the perpetuity of a Republic,
and even our hero who led us to victory
cannot wean us away from our love for a
Republic.
I speak as one who knows the senti
ments of soldiers, and do so in the best
spirit. Let you take ODe step of an ag
gressive character looking to a dictator
ship, aud eight out of every ten soldiers
who followed your lead will rise up against
you. Where one man shouldered his
musket tc maintain the Union three will
rush to the ranks to prevent you or any
other man from seizing the Government
against the wishes of the popular voters
of the land.
The action of the Republican commit
tee of this city yesterday, which follows
Horace Greeley’s lead, must show you
even the Republicans are against your pol
icy, while, Sherman’s spceeh in New Or
leans is the keynote of warning that will
go rolling from one end of the land to the
other—from the Konebcc to the Pacific.
There is time enough for you to retire
with honor. As a soldier and a sagacious
statesman, you must sec the futility of any
attempt to force yourself upon the coun
try against the wishes of the vox popnli.
“He who climbs too high, climbs to fall,”
is an old proverb. Gen'cral, do not climb
any higher; you have reached your height.
Respectfully,
Grand Army of the Republic.
New Orleans magistrates have away of
giving the fines imposed for drunkenness
to the family of the offeuder, the result of
which proceeding is that wives who waut
new bonnets have materially altered their
views on the temperance question, a hus
band judiciously encouraged iu inebriety
being a steady source of pin-money.
A Maine man has invented a new style
of spring bed; it is wound up at night and
set to tlie hour oue desires to arise, on the
arrival of which it turns the occupant out
on the floor and curls it up hammock fash
ion.
AATiat is smaller than a chigger’s mouth ?
That which goes in it, of course. ‘
BLAKELY, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 2. 1871.
Georgia Officials.
Mr. Salem Duteher, one of the Editors
of the New York 'World, has recently been
in Atlanta. In a letter to his paper he
gives the following pen picture of the Su
preme Court and Governor Bullock ;
The Supreme Court of Georgia consists
of three members —a Chief Justice, A. O.
Lochrane, and two associates, 11. K. Mc-
Cay and Hiram Warner. No robes are
worn as in South Carolina, neither is there
any gentleman from Africa upon the bench
Judge Lochrane is an Irishman by birth,
and was once a protege of Chief Justice
Lumpkin, in whose seat, ad longo interval
la he now reclines. He is a man of spright
ly mind, not much troubled wish sticking
to anything long but A. O. Lochrane, to
whom he clings with sweet devotion, was
a fine advocate at the bar, and docs very
well upon the bench. This is the gentle
man of whom Senator Hill, of Georgia,
said in the Senate, “Lochrane is every
man’s friend.” Colfax has no laurels to
win as a suiiler by his honor’s side. 11.
K. McCay, is of Northern birth has lived
in this Sitate for many years, and has a
good legal rniud, thought at times to be j
over acute so as to cause him to forget |
apices juris non sunt jura. Iliram Warner I
has kmg been a Supreme Court judge in
this State, and is known and honored alike
for his legal knowledge aod upright char
acter. Taken altogether, the Supreme
Court is a very great improvement on the
affair in South Carolina.
Governor Bullock has been so frequent
ly mentioned that it is tiresome to speak
of him agaiQ. He is a portly, prompous
person with huge mustaches pulled out a
la Victor Emmanuel, and a devouring
thirst a la Tantalus for good society. —
The size of his fortune is commensurate
with the bulk of his body. The wildest
imagination recoils from estimating how
much he has made out of his office. He
Was declared elected by the military in 1808,
and holds till 1872. There has been some
talk of impeaching him, but the existence
of a Democratic two-thirds in the Legis
laturc ties hint so tightly that the propo
sition to unseat him has those who think
it inexpedient. On*entering this office,
this man is recorded as paying not a cent
of tax in Georgia, and as a part of the
history of the times, his whole State Gov
ernment, himself, executive officers, and
the entire Legislature, did not count SIOO,-
000 worth of property owned by the crew.
A r uw the figures need altering.
Truth from an Unexpected Source.
Our correspondents have now becu so
long in the disturbed districts of the South,
that we can form from their letters a dis
tinct idea of the state of society in that
unfortunate part of the Uujpn. It is a
melancholy picture that they draw for us
■ The most intelligent, the influential, the
educated, the real useful men of the South,
deprived of all political power, have come
to look upon themselves as the outraged
subjects of a despotic conqueror. Taxed
and swindled by a horde of rascally for
eigo adventurers, and by the ignorant
class, which only yesterday hoed the
fields and served in the kitchen, they care
.nothing for politics except to throw off the
oppressive yoke ; they have no interest in
national affairs; they would call them
selves of either party, provided their ru
lers wore only of the other. Tiro refuse
of Northern cities, who went southward
after the war, out at elbows and destitute
of character and education, now roll iu
splendid carriages, drink rare wines, glit
ter with diamonds as big as Fisk’s, and
steal taxes as fast as a New York Street
Commission. It is no wonder that the
impoverished planter, growing poorer ev
ery day, the ex Confederate officer who
fought bravely for a cause iD which he
honestly believed, the professional men,
accustomed all their lives to hold office
and lead the public sentiment of their
communities, look on such things with
rancorous hearts. They might submit to
be ruled by soldiers who had beaten them
in battle ; but hero they arc plundered by
sutlers and camp-followers.
This is a misablo state of tilings indeed
for a Republican government —a bur
lesque upon the suffrage, when the only
restriction upon voting is thut the votes
shall not be cast for tire most intelligent
rind virtuous citizens.
These true words arc part of a leading
editorial in the New York—AA r orld or
Express, you say, of course—but there
you are wrong. They are spoken by the
Tribune in its issue of the 17th rnst. —
AVc submit them without comment save
to ask is there any wonder that disorder
and violence prevail in some portions (on
ly) of a section thus cursed? Docs net
the condition of affairs at the South, as
set forth by this staunch Radical newspa
per, fully account for, if not measurably
excuse the existence and deeds of the so
called Ku-klux, even as represented by.
the Radicals themselves? llow long
would the men qyho read the Tribune and
get rheir politics from it submit tt> what
it tc’ls thorn Southern men are forced to
bi ar? AVe would like to have an answer j
to that question. — Telegraph it- Messenger, j
©OT[iUL s
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BLAKELY, GA.
Office at the Stafford Office.
v9-25-tf
TO©© o ©□ JKMU'JIb
ATTORNEY AT LA W,
BLAKELY, GA.,
AYill give prompt attention to all busi
ness entrusted to him. 39-ts
T. Ta ©TOM,
ATTORNEY AT LA AV ,
Blakely, Early Co. r Ga.,
AYill give prompt attention to all husincs
confided to his care. v5-13-tf
uird ©r©M¥
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BLAKELY, EARLY COUNI F, GA.
Office in the building next to Judge Peter
Howard’s City. Hall.
'Wn
.A-ttornev at Lbavi
AMERICUS, GA.
22-ts
$ a ®'h©ik7"
ATT OR NE Y AT L A W,
MORGAN, GA.,
AYill give prompt attention to all business
entrusted to liis care. 46-ts
©a ©tfetTOGglL©,
ATTORNEY AT LAAV,
COLQUITT, MILLER COUNTY, GA.,
Tenders his professional services to the
public, assuring those who put business in
liis hands that it stall have prompt and
faithful attention. 6-ts
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CGLQUm, GA„
Mill gif e prompt attention to all buginefts
entruslrU to j)i«s tjanfc*. 28-ts
T. M. HOWARD,
SURGEON
BLAKELY, GEORGIA.
May 19, 1871. 38-ly
©TO C© ©TOCmfOAKL
BLAKELY, GEORGIA,
TENDERS his sincere thanks to the peo
ple of Blakely and Early county for
their liberal patronage in former years, and
now again offers them liis services in his
profession, and solicits a share of their pat
ronage. 41-ts
STOTo [TOs3®©S©?vmT©7 s
MORGAN, GA.,
Offers his professional services to the citi
zens of Calhoun county, being permanently
located in this community. Particular at
tention paid to Chronic cases. Can be found
at his office or his residence unless profes
sionally absent.
Those indebted must pay up, or they will
find their papers in an officer’s hands for
collection. 4-ts
HL [3, ©©©TO)© y G&L
BLAKELY, CEO.,
Tenders his services to the citizens of
Early in the various branches of his pro
fession.
" ©.©©(§>©oto [©©to:u
COLQUITT, MILLER COUNTY, GA.,
JOHN V. HEARD,
PROPRIETOR.
TnE Proprietor of this House having re
cently taken charge and refitted it, takes
pleasure in stating to the traveling public
that ho will do his best to make nil who stop
with him comfortable during their stay. On
liis table will always be found the best to be
had, and his rooms and beds clean.
July 10, 1868. 45-ts _
~HF g ca © @ »IT
Planter’s Hotel,
OPPOSITE CAR HART & CURD’S,
NO 58 CHERRY STREET,
MAfON, GA.
B . F . D ENS E ,
22-ts Proprietor.
" '"3 ©TO[U ~
OPPOSITE DEPOT,
Macon, - Georgia.
E. E. BROAVN & SON,
2G-tf Proprietors
~T. L. JONES'! ~
Watch Maßor aad JcAtfelcr,
BLAKELY, GA.
SHOP AT THE STORE OF IIIAVIN BIRD.
mm, wMm
WILL BIT (M,n Kir.VtflL
March 11, 1879. 29-ts
€<tr(g Count]] |tdus,
IS PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
OFFICE IN “NEAVS BUILDING,”
South Blakely.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Copy, Four Months SI,OO
One Copy, Eight Months $2.00
One Copy, One A r ear $3,00
Six Copies, One Year :..!5'15,00
In advance—but when not paid until the end
of the year, fifty per cent will he added.
RATES OF ADVERTISING :
One Square, (ten lines or less of Rolid
Bourgeois,) 1 insertion ~52,00
For each subsequent insertion SI,OO
AVhen advertisements aro continued for
one month or longor, the charge will be as
follows :
Number M 0
to, k, 6# “
ft
0f § § § o
a 3" ' S' S 1 g.
Squares. a> » g
1 sT $lO sls S2O
2 8 15 25 35
3 12 18 35 45
4 16 24 40 53
5 20 35 45 GO
io’l’n 35 55 . 80 120
1 “ GO 80 130 200
All personal matter double price.
Obituaries will be charged for ns other
advertisements.
Notices, in local column, thirty cents per
line. Editorial notices, where requested, for
individual benefit, thirty cents per line.
For a man advertising his wife SIO,OO
Advertisements inserted without spccifi
cation as to the number of insertions, will
be published until ordered out, and charged
accordingly.
All advertisements due when handed in.
RATES:
Citntionson Letters of Administrate..sG,oo
“ “ Dismissory 10,00
“ “ “ GuardVp.,6,oo
Leave to sell Real Estate 8,00
Notice to Debtors & Creditors 0,00
Sale of Real Estate by Executors, &c.,
per square 10,00
JOB WORK.
Wo aro prepared (o dei JB©” JOB WORK “©a of all
kinds with noalnoss and dispaloli, and on as reasonable,
terms as any oilier Office in this section. Also all kinds
of lII.AAKS printed lo order on excellent paper. Give ns
a trial, and wc guarantee you will not go away dissatisfied,
L. J. GI'ILMABTIN JOHN FLANNERY.
§. §. ©uilmurtin & Co.,
Cotton Factors
AND
©©K3H D 3 & L
Commi ssi on Merchants,
BAY STREET,
S A VA N N AH, GA.
AGENTS FOR BRADLEY’S SURER
PHOSPHATE OF LIME, JEWEL'S
MILLS’ YARNS A- DOMESTICS,
BAGGING, ROVE dc IRON
TIES ALWAYS ON
HAND.
Usual Facilities Extended to Customers.
3-6 m
iioii mm®
Guthtot, Georgia,
Is keeping the Kiddoo House, and will he
pleased to have liis old friends and the trav
eling public give him a call. Tables fur
nished with the best. Comfortable rooms,
clean beds and attentive servants.
In connection with this House there are
good Stables, where stock will be well at
tended to.
Terms moderate. Call and sec “ Uncle
Henry.”
March 11, 1870. 20-ts
CLOCK S,
WATCHES AND JEWELRY
CLEANED & REPAIRED.
Tiif. subscriber being nssociated with Mr.
T. J. Guimarin, (a AVatch maker of many
years standing) is prepared to do all jobs in
the above line with neatness and dispatch.
work warranted.
THOMAS WILLIAMS.
August 5, 1870. 40-ts
A. M. Sloan, Romo C. F. Stubbs, Macon
C. E. Groover, Brooks C 0... A. T. Mcln
tyre, Thomasville, Ga.
Sloan, Groover k Co.,
COTTON FACTORS
COMMISSIoV M E RCHANTS
Clagliorn & Cunningliaiii’s Range,
BA Y STREET,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
todf' Liberal advances on Cotton consigned
to our Correspondents in New York & Liv
erpool, » .1
NO. 40.
REMOVAL.
A GREAT DESIDERATUM
NEW ORLEANS,
FOUNDED IN 183:?
Chartered by the Legislature of la.
Is
Stieet, opposite Christ Churcli, and on (ho
same square, as (lie Law and Medical Col
leges, tho University of La., and the Me
chanics’ Institute—the Headquarters of tho
Mechanical and Agricultural Fair Associa
tion—thus concentrating the leading Edu
cational Institutions of the State on the seine
square. It is in the most central and fash
ionable part of Canal Street, the great IVu
lcvard of New Orleans, on which all tho.
city rail roads concentrate, and hut three
minutes’ walk from the St. Charles and City
Hotels.
THE OLDEST & MOST EFFIOTEVI
AND SUCCESSFUL COMMER
CIAL COLLEGE IN THE
UNITED STATES.
THERE IS A FULL FACULTY.
And a Si’Eciai, Professor, for each Si ci v
so as to Save the Time and Money of
Students.
Students begin at any time. Then: is hit
Vacation.
When clubs of three or more enter at the
same time from the same place, ten per cent
deduction will be made.
Hoard and Lodging —s2s per Month.
Any graduate can at once take charge of
any set of books.
An education that enables the student to
earn
SI,OOO, $2,000 or $3,000 a year,
Is the best FORTUNE parents can give
their sons. The South must now educate
all her sons PRACTICALLY'.
TERMS—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
Penmanship—lessons not limited per
fect course $25,( 0
Bookkeeping—Double and Single En
try, &0., &o.—a perfect course, 50,< 0
Arithmetic, including till commercial
Calculations 50.(10
Lectures on Commercial Law 20,00
Stationery, Book keeping
Blank books, &u 10,00
Do Penmanship 2,50
Ornamental—Penmanship 5,ti1l
The above constitutes the ‘‘Commercial
Course.”
Usual timo for the Commercial Course •'!
to 4 founths.
English—Grammatical Course 50,00
English, French, Spanish, German—
full course, to learn to read, write and
speak the language correctly, not
limited 100,1 it*
Latin, Greek—full course 100,Oil
Algebra, Surveying, Ac . 50,00
Geometry—full course, not limited.... 5<U it
Teacher’s Course in Penmanship 100. on
Ornamental Penmanship and Flourish
ing 25,0 it
Agricultural Chemistry —full course.. 100, On
A Life Ticket in all the Dopartm* nts.soo;oo
A Perpetual & Transferable S'e/wl-
All SHIP. 1,000,00
A student having paid for a course in any
branch, as above, is entitled to a Life Tick
et in that Department. He can attend such
branches ns he may desire. Persons from
12 to 00 years of age attend.
N. B. All the Graduates for the past dS
years arc now in good business, so far us
known-
CAOTRON. —Beware of R. R. and Hotel
Runners and Drut mors, and apply at once
at the College. Put your money in the
hands of your Merchant or the President of
the College.
For Catalogues, &0., apply at the office, or
address,
RUFUS DOLBEAII,
10-ts President.
STEREOSCOPIC VIEWS,
ALBUMS,
CHROMOS.
E. & H. T. ANTHONY" & CO T
591 BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
Invite the attention of the Trade to their .ai.-nmve n«*nrtrfen< of the
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W- pablieb ee«r four Tkoasau* etibj* te of fttercoernp.c V ewe
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lliiJsom. Trenton Fnlle, \ . n. ri. |.«.
White Mountain*, I Ureal Went, *1 he
Washington, | lloueatowir, t Im.i,
Huratoga. I Del ware, J.( i .
Weal Point, | Inaiautaaeoae, 1 Ku.timl, 4t«v, frc.
Our Imported Vn-we enihrn-r a Iters* semrimeiit, i.* Imliiif ihn
cbonewt production* of Win England, H W W.i.ou. Latny, jud
either eminent phoioKiaphef*, coneiatmg of
HwiUerland, | lrela.nl, Binn. j ID ri iil-wimmi.
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Pvieimee, | Po npeil, Bt. Cloud, • 'oii.feigne,
Pune, I Oermany Trimion. 1 Vereeille*,
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A new and intensely tntereeling rntriee. Also, lllatnii.at.-d anil Tinnepe*
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for " PKKKIF.K'M ULaHH VIEWS,” of *hl«h w hove a • lei .i l
neeortnieut Agent* for Frtth’a Kefir* of flti il I J u 1 h :>phi«
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PHOTOGRAPHIC ALBUMS. —Our Manufacture of \fhutn- -» *.
known throughout the couutry an superior in quality and inuuty te all
•there.
All we cell are made in oar own Ferforf. and ur -tyt.— nr- dilf' i- n*
from tbone of any other maker. lluyiru «hould in>t fail to i« «U»
•lock before making their parchue**.
CHROMOS.
Theee beautiful pictorcn, that cannot V r *" m **•
finest Oil Paintings, at one tenth their *m.t. *- m>|.»ri larg-i- tfo-u
Pnrie, London, Berliu, Vicnua and Koinr, and eupplv th«- trade »» 'be
leweel ratte.
E. &H. T. ANTHONY & CO.,
v» 591 Broadway, N. Y'.,
luifo'. tern iuhJ iLmufij of rUo',Oirat>Uic M.uwii!-