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The South
Gradually the eyes of the North
are being opened to the true condi
tion of the South. That visit of Mr.
Greeley’s to Texas is likely to bear
good fruit. In traveling through the
Southern States the editor ot the
Tribune saw how the people were
gobbed in the name of the great Re
publican party, and he had the cour
age to denounce the robbery. Oth
er men of influence in the North were
induced to look at the question with
impartial eyes, and the more they
looked the more they were astonisded
at the misgovernment of the South.
The Nation, a Republican journal
wants to know what service the car
pet-baggers “have rendered the conn
try that we should grant them the
monopoly of robbing the rebels.’
The question is as pertinent as it is
difficult to answer. The Itey. Henry
Ward Beecher now comes to the
front with an earnest plea lor the
South.
In the last number of the Christian
Union he views the whole matter
ably and dispassionately. He points
out how the south was exhausted by
the war, how it yielded as a man drops
from exhaustion. On the heel of
financial ruin trod a total disarrang
ment of the system of labor. The
immediate consequence was to great
ly paralyze the industry of the whole
section. Then came a failure of crop
after crop, and the southern people
were poor indeed. But this was not
all. The crowning burden was mis
government. The State government
fell ipto the hands of “ignorant and
knavish men.” Public money has
been wasted and stolen, and “a proud
and spirited population have seen
their places of trust and honor filled
by foreign adventurers and unedu
cated freedmen.”
When men like Mr. Greeley and
Mr. I3eeche» earnestly demand a
change in the government of the
Southern States, surely deliverance is
close at hand, for no two men are
more trusted and respected by the
northern people at large. The south
ern people have stood up nobly under
the heavy burdens imposed upon
them, and they have proved them
selves worthy of the high honors of
American citizenship. Though crush
ed as proud people have seldom been
crushed, they have not folded their
hands and quietly drifted out upon
the black ocean of despair. They
have worked with energy and heaped
up spoil after spoil for the plunderers.
The night has been long and dark
and now it is full time that the day
began to dawn. —New York Turf,
Field und Farm.
For Old Soldiers. —Congress ha
provided, by recent enactment, pen
sions to soldiers of the war of 1812-15,
and to their widows, where the mar
riage took place prior to 1825. By
other acts of Congress all soldiers who
served in any of the wars in which
the United States were engaged, prior
to 1855, are entitled to bounty land.
The word “ loyal ” has been stricken
out of the acts.
Humorous Items.
A talkative man ne’there hears nor
is heard. He wont listen to others
nor they to him.
May growing very corpulent
against ones will bo looked upon as a
fatality?
Someone calls the high-crowned
hats which has been so long in sash
ion the “cylinder of civilization.”
“Grandma,” said a shrewd child,
“do you want some candy?” “Yes
dear, I should like some,” “Then if
you’ll buy some, I’ll give you half”
said Poly.
A Toledo druggist had his name
taken ofl a petition for a street im
provement when he learned that such
would improve the health of the
neighborhood.
A young lady recently tried to do
up hoi black hair with a honey-come
to make it look sweetly.
‘ Caught in her own net,” as the
mau said when lie saw one of the fair
sex hitched in her crinoline.
Many who repent of public life and
retire to obscurity, repent of their re
pentance, and long to retire from
their retirement.
A medical student says he has nev
er been able to discover the bone of
contention, and desires to know
whether it is not situated very near
the jaw-bone.
A line iii ouc of Moore’s songs
reads thus: “Our couch shall be roses
bespangle with dew.” To which a
sensible girl replied, “ ’Twould give
me the rkeumatiz, and so it would
you.”
When a penny bank was establish
cd at Putney, and the deposits were
added up at the end of the year, a
brewer who was on the committee
lemarked, “Well, that represents thir
ty thousand pints of beer not drunk.”
The Virginia press is the fiercest of
. any for Greeley. They say the South
is coming to Baltimore to vote for
him in the Democratic National Con
\ention against all comers. One
sajs “\ irginia has her opinion with
out waiting for Baltimore.”
I hey give Voorhees and “all such”
the bold shoulder, decidedly.
Clover a 3 a Fertilizer.
Mr. Frank Graves, of Marcellos
Falls, New York, writing to the Ger
mantown “Telegraph" on tins subject
says :
“Not only should we bring*to our
assistance every available stimulant to
vegetable growth, but also at the same
time that kind should come first which,
is the cheapest. A great* deal has
been written about composting, col
lecting forresting leaves, dissolving
bones, and saving rubbish generally,
all good in a measure, and adding
their mite to theenrichiugof the land,
but not wholly satisfying the great
craving of the soil for food. It is the
deduction of our leading farmers make
from years of experience, that Glowt
is the cheapest manure. A principle
is the cost of applying fertilizers. I
| set a man at work hauling barn said
; manure, lie must have a team wag,
lon and fork, lie does a good d.n >
w ork if he covers nu acre, l '-end a
man to the field with a bag of fewer
! seed on his shoulders, and when night
comes he has seeded down ten acres
■or more, lie has added more fertility
! to the soil than is contained in one
hundred loads of common barn yard
manure. A not very distant farmer
says: “ I cannot afford lo put my
straw back on my land,” so at five
dollars a ton, his wheat straw goes to
the paper mill and is immediately con
verted into paper, and he buys Clover
seed with the money. Os course lie
can afford to put it back, though the
resulting profit wouldn’t be near so
great as is commonly estimated. It
seems to me to grow Clover seed and
keep the straw too.
“Clover protects the surface, lienee
it may be trully called a mulch. A
thick mat of Clover prevents the
escape from the earth of fertillizing
properties that would otherwise be
wasted. Leave a board on the ground
tor a few months, and no matter how
barren the soil, a profitable amount of
fertilizing material will accumulate un
der the board. Just in this way does
the Clover plant fetch up barren, worn
out land to a prodrucing state. Rossi
bly as much hummus is kept back to
the earth in this way as is drawn from
the air by the leaves of the plant.—
Again Clover mellows the soil. Laud
having a natural tendency to become
pasty, heavy and tough may he con
verted, with a liberal seeding into a
mellow, friable seed bed, and when
we have got a mellow soil we liave
reduced the expense of cultivation.
“ Again, a heavy coat of. Clover
keeps down many kinds of we.eds that
would otherwise spring -up abundant
ly. It heads them off, just as a tobac
co plant shading the ground stops, es
fectually any growth beneath its
leaves. Finally, as fodder, it is indis
pensable. Sheep prefer Clover hay to
the best of Timothy and other fine
grasses. Dairymen rank Clover high,
and seed their land accordingly. In
fact, many farmers here sow nothing
else,'. But then there .are acres of
land that will not, unassisted, grow a
Clover plant two inches high. For
such, gypsum is the resort, the natural
food. We have only to come down
with this dust and then leave the rest
to nature. The common course is to
seed down liberally, then top dress
with gypsum in the Spring, and mow
once. The next year more top-dress
ing and either stock lightly or mow
again and plow under after growth.”
The Delicious Scoffer. — The fol
lowing is related of the celebrated Dr.
Belknap;
Upon a certain occasion, in the
presence of a vast and brilliant assem
blagc, a person more noted for his self
esteem than for his learning, was
speaking against the Christian religion
in terms of the severest scorn and
derision.
Unfortunately for the orator, his re
marks were overheard by the doctor,
who stepping up to him, asked:
“Well, sir, have you found a religion
that is better ? ” The scoffer, consid
erably abashed by this unlooked-for
question, was forced to acknowledge
that thus far he had not “ Well,” re
sponded the doctor, “ when you have,
let me know, and I will join you in
adopting it.”
The rebuke was as v ise as it was
just. Os all classes of sinners, cer
tainly the religious scoffer is the least
to be envied. No followers of Satan
receive poorer wages, no trangressor
against God, shall be more severely
punished. “ Whoso despiseth the
word shall be destroyed.”
WEIGHTS A>T> MEWS HUES.
BUSHELS. LBS-
Wheat (^0
Shelled Corn *56
Corn in ear -
Peas 1”
T *ye 50
Oats f!
Barley ‘.V.7.’. .'.W
Irish Potatoes * ‘
Sweet Potatoes ’'
White Beans
Castor Beans * -
Clover Seed !".!*' r;o
Timothy Seed
Flax Seed 5^
Hemp Seed f .44
Blue Grass Seed 14
Buck Wheat 52
Dried Peaches 40
Dried Apples * 04'
Onions.... - n
Stone Coal ’**’ 80
PROSPECTUS FOR 1872.
riim year.
A Reyre::-r.taflee and CJiarnpion of Awn-lean A a
Tiie XAlcliirs.® ?
A> i IlluKtraleit. Motithlii Jom nrl ihimtJt!' l-’
the liunso/nest Papt'ti' in theHorfd.
>< Give my love to tin* arid workmen of
tiik Ai.DINM who are striving <6 nmkc their
prolesion worthy of admiration *>>r i><'uui y.uu
it has always been lor use I Milan;*. iLiun
lthird JUahet ’
Tuv \t ions, while b-mvl wall nil the teg
ulnrity, ha* none ol the UmpeHuy or tiinrhj
inter*"'t ehm not* rnuh* ot ordinary periodic
nU' It is no ri« ipiut niUivlhuty of pure,
light, and gracofui literature, am! t» collection
id picture*, the rarest tiperiiticns of artistic
Auh io black amt white. Mtltoogh each
•ueoe*diiu‘ number affords n ftv-di pleasure to
it. U tend-*, the ual value atal beauty ot Ihu
Maine will bo me t uppieviaud alter it has
Uvu bound up at the- eto-o * *l the year-
I While other public publications may claim
superior ehenpne«s a . compared with rivabof
! a Miullur ehtvi, The Mdinen a unique and
I or .final conception- alone ami umtpproueh
,‘d absolutely without competition in price
or character. The possessor ot the volume
! just completed cannot duplicate the quantity
i of Hue paper and * ogiavij"!* in any other
shape or number of volumes for ten tones its
I cost.
The labor of getting The Aldinc ready on
the press is so gioat that repri ting is out ol
the question* With the exception of a small
number specially reserved lor binding, tbe c
dition of 1871, is already exhausted, and it is
now a scarce as well as valuable book.
NEW FEATURES FOR 1872.
A Tit DEPARTMENT.
The enthusiastic support so readily accord
ed to their enterprise, wherever it has been
introduced, has convinced the publishers of
The Aldino of the soundness of their theory
that the American public would recognize
and heartily support, ?,ny sincere effort to ele
vate the tone and standard of illustrated pub
lications. That so many weakly wicked sheets
exist and thrive is not evidence that there is
no market for anything better-indeed thesuc
cess of The Aldinc from the start is direct
proof of the contrary. With a population to
vast, and of such varied taste, a publisher
can choose his patrons, and his paper is rath
er indicative of his own than of the taste of
the country. Asa guarantee of the excel
lence of this department, the publishers would
beg to announce during the coming year
specimens from the following artists:
W T Rickards, Granville Perkins, James Smiley,
Win liar,. F O O Darb y, R E Piguet,
Wm Beard, Victor Nehlig, Frank Beard,
George, Smiley,'Vm II Wilcox, Fan! Dixon,
Au.g. Will, James H Beard, J Howe,
These pictures are being reproduced with
out regard to expense by the very best en
gravers in the country, and will bear the se
verest critical comparison with the best for
eign work, it being the determination of the
publishers ihat The Aldine shall be a success
ful vindication of American taste in compe
tition with any existing publication in the
wo; Id.
LITERARY DEPARTMENT.
Where so much h paid to illustration and
get up of the work, too much dependence on
appearances may very naturally be feared.
To antieepate such misgivings, it is only nec
essary to state that the editorial management
of The Aldinc Las been intrusted to
Ml*, men All!) HEN IIY STODDAP.D,
who .has received assurances of assistance
from a host of the most popular writers and
poets ot the country.
THE VOLUME FOR 1872
will contain nearly 300 pages and about 250
fine engravings. Commencing with the num
her for January, every third number will con
tain a beautiful tinted picture on plate pa
per, inserted as a frontlspice.
Tbe Christmas number for 1872 will be a
splended volume in itself, containing fifty en
gravings, (four in tint) and, although retails
at 81, will be sent without extra charge
to all yearly subscribers.
A CIIRGMO TO EVERYSUBSCRI
ber was very popular feature last year, and
will be repeated with the present volume.
The publishers have purchased and reprodu’
cod, at great expense the beautiful oil paint,
ing by SKIS, entitled “Dame Nature’s school.’
f!ie chromo is 11x13 inches, and is an exact
facsimile, in size and appearance, of the orig
inal picture. No American chromo, which
will at all compare with it, has yet been of
fered at retail for less than the price aked for
xhe Aidiue and it together. It will be deliv
ered free, with the January number, to every
Subscriber who pays for one year in advance
TERMS FOR 1872.
One copy, one year, with Oil Chromo $5 00
Five Copies ■“ “ “ __ 20 00
Any person sending 10 names and $lO will
receive an extra copy gratis, making 11 cop
ies for tee money.
Any person wishing to work for a prem turn,
can have our premium circular on applica
tion. We give many beautiful and desirable
article offered by no other paper.
Aliy person wishing to act 1 permanently as,
our agent, will apply, with reference , enclos
ing §l, for outfit. James Sexton &Cos.,
PUBLISHERS,
23 Liberty street,xew York.
The Savannalißcpublican,
ESTABLISHED IN 1802.
PUBLISHED By
HARDEE & SCLtDDER.
CIIAS. S. HARDEE. HENRY W. SCUDDER.
Terms—lnvariably in Advance :
One year ... SIO,OO
Six months ... ;3,00
_ Monthly .... 1,00
The Weekly Republican is published every
Saturday Morning.
One year ... £2 00
Six months - - - 1 00
Three months - - 50
Rates of Advertising:
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Each subsequent insertion - - 75
A square is ten measured lines of Nonpa
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40“* All advertisements ordered to be in
serted weekly in daily paper, or in weekly
edition, will be charged one dollar per sqpare
for each insertion, except when varied by
special contract.
TITE REPUBLICAN,
Is the oldest newspaper in the South, and is
earnestly devoted to ber interests. It con
tains all the latest news, by telegraph and
by letter, on all subjects of general intercst-
Cornmorcial, Agricultural, Scientiffic and
Miscellaneous—thereby adapting it to every
class of the reading public. iVo pains or
expense shall be spared to maintain its repu
tation as a first class paper iu every respect.
E6L- Send for sample copy.
GEORGIA. Cvf.rot.i. County.
Michael Good on has applied fur exemption
of personalty and setting apart, and valua
tion ol hpmestead. and 1 will pass upon the
same at ten o’clock a. i:. on Saturday lDh
duv of May, at mv office.
* 'may ' I). B. JUHAN, Ord’y.
Ailiuiuiairator’s Notice.
All p«M>vnv indebted to the estate of IT. C.
M»rtfa decosod, late of Carroll*county, a«t*
iv.juested t-» come im waul aiul settle,ail per
mum Imving demand-* against said esmt£, will
prm.ent them In term* ol the law?
I ut 1U lod D. lb M AUXIN, Admr.
Ucicnlic American for 72.
TWENTY • F.VENTII YEAR'.
ThU-U'h’VHmi w*ujdv, greatly enlarged airl lm
urovM. i» one of thtj n’io»i u«efut aiul iut#r«J*tiug
jotmeiU ever published. Every number id beauti
fully prliileil ou tine paper, and elegantly UlattlNi
ted’with original engravings, representing
Nmv |nv km ions, Novklt'E* iv Mitcnsics, M.w
--l r*t re It!,a, C uKMUTRY, I’HOTOuHSI'IIY, Au
eairccTi to:, AmuiTt.Tima, KtmiNKEit
INU, beiMKOK X AilT.
Farmers. Mechanics, Invetitqrs, Euglnoern. Man
i;taetwi'srs, I'hemlsts, aucl Peon la ol all FruJes
i-iuu». or Trade, ui Tiades, will Und the
SGI KM TIFIO AM ERICAN
Os Great Value and Interest.
Its practical suggestions will save hundreds of
dollars to every Household. Work-Uop, aim Fac
tory iu tho laud, besides affording a continual
bout ceof Valuable ln-jtrnctlon. 'the Editors are
assisted by many of the ablest American and Eu
ropean writers, and having access to all the lead
j ing Scientific and Mechanical journals of the world,
: the qoUimns of the S.-iesitJftc Anv-ri.-au aje cou
.tanuy enriched with the choicest informal ion.
Au Ol.kial Li.-t of all the patents issued is Pub
lished Weekly.
The y* orly numbers of the Scientific American
make two splendid volumes of Nearly One Thou
sand page s equivalent iu sise to Four Thousand
ordinary hook pages. Specimen Copies Free.
Tkum -Vi a Year; $15!) Half Year ; Clubs of
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Wiih a vplcudid premium to the person w ho forms
the Club, consisting of a copy of the celebrated
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J,i connection with the publication of the
Scientific American, the undersigned conduct the
most exWiiHve agency ia. tiie world for procuring
Patents.
The he ! way to obtain an answer to the ques
tion—Can I obtain n Patent? is to write to Monk
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over twent y five years experience in the business.
No charge is made for opinion and advice- A pen
and ink sketch or full written description of the
invention, should be sent.
For instruct ions concerning American and Eu
rope iu Patents—Oaveats—He-issue, Interferanees
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menta, etc., etc., send for Instruction Book, which
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strictly confidential. Address
MUNN & CO.
Publishers of the Scientific American
3T Park Row New York.
Savannah Morning News.
Now is the time to subscribe for it.
You have your choice, and can take either
ihc-Daily, Tri-Weekly or Weekly edition-
THE MORNING NEWS.
Is, in all respects a Democratic Journal
faithful to Democratic principles, and earnest
in advocacy of Democratic measures It be
lieves that the success of its pgrty is necessa
ry to the salvation of tiie country. Its rep
utation as a News Journal will be mantain.
ed as heretofore. In Domestic, Foreign and
Commercial Intelligence, Literature, Ac., it
is pot surpassed by any paper in the count.rve
Its whole chatrader is comprehensively that
it is a great Democratic and Family News
paper, devoted to the interests of the South,
To every business man its markets alone is
worth many times its subscription. COL.
W. T.'l UOMFSON, wiih abto Assistants
has control of its Editorial and News columns;
white its corps of Reporters are reliable in
every respect.
Terms—One year, §lO ; six months, §3;
three months, §2 U.
THE TRI-WEEKLY NEWS
Is published every Monday, Wednesday
and Saturday, and is made up front the Dai
ly Editions*
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three months $1 j 7
THE WEEKLY NEWS
Is issued every Friday; is designed for
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mary of the nev 7 3 of the week with the prin
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Address J. if. E3TILL,
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A FKEOSITOBY OFFASUION, PLEASURE, AND
INSTRUCTION.”
Harper's Bazar,
NOTICES OF THE PRESS.
It is really the only illustrated chronicle of
faslih min the country. Its supplements alone
are worth the subscription price of the paper.
While fully maintaining its position as a, mir
ror of fashion, it also contains stories, po
ems, brilliant essays, besides general and
personal gossip. —Boston Saturday Evening
Gazette.
There never was any paper published that
so delighted the heart of woman. Never
mind if it does cost you anew bonnet; it
will save you ton times the price in house
hold economy it teaches.—Providence Jour,
nal.
The young lady who buys a single number
of Harper’s Bazar is made a subscriber for
life.—New York Evening Post
The Bazar is excellent. Like all !he peri
odicals which the Harpers publish, it is al
most ideally well edited, and the class of
readers for whom it is intended—the moth
er and daughters in average families—can
not but profit by its good sense and good
taste, which y.e have no doubt, are to day
making very many homes happier than they
may have been before the woman began tak
ing lessons in ]>ersonal and household and
social management from this good-natured
memo.—The Nation N. Y.
SUBSCRIPTIONS.— IS 72.
ITarper’s Bazar, one year, $1 00
An Extra opy of either the Magazine
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every c’vt cf Five übscribers at SI,OO each
in one remittance ; or, six copies for S2O 00
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Subscriptions to Harper’s Magazine, Week
ly, and Bazar, to one address for one year,
$lO 00 ; or two of Harper’s Periodicals to
one address for one
Back Numners can he supplied .any time.
The four volumes of Harper's Bazar, lor
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post-oflice. Address
llap.per & Erotfer, N. Y.
HIBERNIA;
OR
IRELAND TIIE WORLD OVER,
Is the title ot a book of one hundred and
forty three pages, teeming with fun an humor.
It contains one hundred Poems, Odes, Paro
dies and Songs, and is one of the best hits at
political Kings and Irish influence ia Ameri
can affairs ever published. The Songs are
many of them arranged to popular airs, and
the Pamqies include all the popular poets.
The leaaiDg journals speak of it as a book es
uncommon merit, every page of which fur
nishes the occasion for a good hearty laugh.
Fifty cents, sent with the address of4he
sender, to McLaughlin Bros., No. 73 Duane
Street, New York, will secure a codv, sent
prepaid by mail.
CARROLL COUNTY TIMES
IS PUBLISHED
lErSTESJEI/ST 3?BII>AT mornino
AT
CARROLLTON GEORGIA,
at the low price of
SS, Per Anum, or
$1 25 Tor Six Months.
Now is Hie time to subscribe, so
that you can commence with
the new year 1872 ;
SUPPORT HOME INSTITUTIONS,
Every citizen of Carroll county
who feels an interest in the wel
fare and prosperity of his county,
should take his
CO UM'TYPvItPER.
So come along with your
ami let us enter your names for
the year 1872,
ALL KINDS OF JOB TOM, SUCII AS
Posters,
Illanks,
Letter Heads,
liill Heads,
Cards, <&c.,
Neatly and promptly executed at
the office of the
CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
SHARPE dts HVXISXCSVjS.
FORTY-SECOND TEAR.
Cody's Lady's Look, tor 1x72.
The cheapest of Ladies' If age/hies b>rp, H
is the by!.
For the past forty-two years the Book baa
been uauuiered tl>e guide, of wt i !;u
every thing l H !s calculated l 0 ck-va'e \C
sex.
The Old Familiar Wkitess,
Whose stories have largely contribute *
this end, have all been retain'd Marion lh
land, Jno Churchill,
I/Miisa 3. Dorr, Mctta Victoria Victor
S. A'nnie Frost, Airs. C. A. Honk f
son. Sue Chestnutwood, Mrs. R,
nison, etc*, ‘ "
Have a reputation for excellence in ti>? v ■
ting far above any others iu the in >.'a
line.
Ol'r Colored Fashion im atfv a*
the most correct of any published ia p
country.
Beautiful Steel Plates. —Ol’t] lt <
the lady’s Book gives 14 (ach year.
Original Music.—Cody's is die of
magazine iu which music prepared exui. ,
dor it appears.
Model Cottages.— The only ma»
nsinc in this country that gives these de>.
is the Lady’s Book.
Drawing Lessons.—ln this we are ay
alone.
\VC nave also a Children’s a Llortrcnltr-.
and a health department.
Gody’s Invaluable Recipes upon ev -
subjcct, for the Boudoir, Kurserv, Kitchen
House & Laundry.
Tinted Engravings.- -This is a serif* es
engravings that no oue has attempted :
ou.^lvcs.
Ladies fancy Work department.- •Somo of
(lie designs iu this department are printed i
colors, in a style unequalled.
In adition to all vibe above attraction
there will be published, monthly, a doubt
page engraving, the general title of wh ,
will be Mrs. Lolipops’ Party. We prou
these sketches (outline in their character) t (
be superior to any ot the kind hcretofe
published.
TERMS.
One copy, one year jjj
Two copies, one year
Three Copies, one year 7
Four copies, one year
Five copies, oue year, and an extra copy •,
the person getting up the dub, amkii •
copies. LIV
Eight eojdes, one year, and an extra c, (
to the person gotting up the club, niak i
nine copies. 21 e
Eleven copies, one yea.r, and an extrai ■
to the person getting up the dub, mat,.-
twelve copies. 27 '
To r.cfonnnodate our subscribers, wo v
dub with Author’s Home Magazine aiidfiii'.
cren’s Hour at the to Ito whig prices:
The receipt of si, GO will pay for God
Lady’s Book and Afctfior’s Horn v
for one year.
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Book, Author’s Home Magazine, and Cl.'.
dren’s Hour for one year. -
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A DAILY PAPER IN GRIFF,N
Prospectus
Ol' Tilß
(MW BUM IE
Having, by experience abroad, be ■
fully satisfied that Griffin is as good a | ..
to live and make a living in as any in (it
gia, 1 have made ujT my mind to return.»
on the 10th day of January, cowmen■
publication of a live morning puj.cr, -
called
THE GRIFFIN DAILY NLS
The paper will be published in the itu r :
of do party, clique, faction or ring, o 1
the interest of any individual except my -
It will be independent in politics— ;>
eating only the right ns it i. : given to nz
understand what is right.
The purpose of the paper will be to c ;
7 HE NE JVS- —true news—news n! r 'I
and. from abroad —commercial, gt nemi &
political news, all prepared in such a n;a
as to give the most of it in the must :
ble shape
People who want to patronize such a '•
per as this, are invited to come vp
their subscriptions and advert-Viiiin''
News will be printed on good, dear iy
at five dollars per annum for the daily
one dollar and fifty cents per annum for
weekly. A. M. SpßiGi-ft
SORIDNER’S MONTHLV,
Au Illustrated Magazine, Jidite
J. G. HOLLAND,
Author of “ Bitter-Sweet/'’ “ katlir:
“ Timothy Xis combs Letters, 4c.
This magazine, which has ri.-cu so r-V
--in popular favor, has now been
GREATLY EXLARfH'P,
and will be still farther improved du-urg ’*
coming year.
Arrangements have been per? eted
cure the best illustrations, and the
neat contributions on both sides of
lantic. Scribner for 1872 will
ed i*r Itccviry 5.3 well as art:-tic exce' r "
any periodical of its class iu the ' v0!1 M
The January Number will be especi-;/■
tractive, and will be worthy of presertw*
as an excellence of Jmerisan art. -t j ■
of Papers by Mr. Gladstone, I’r.ae
ter of England, will shortly
an able discussion of the National j y ■
System of this country; a neW ( , utC , I
Mrs. Olimphant is promised, £ c > H
every number will be rich in shorter -
Illustrated ‘Articles of popular
Poems, Esays Editorials Mb [ e /f ""i“ fl
The subscription prfee a 3M.W . - • ■
payable in advance. - J
“To enable all parties to corra^ oC " ..1
the series, which we are sure will j* ( i
of careful preservaUpn, we I
dealer or new subsmber, the 1- [E I
Volumes 1. and 2 for 3100 or the - I
hers prior to Jan. 1872, for one dm*- - J
half. The whole will contain eg* I
Three Thousand Pages, more than-r y J
dred Brilliantly Written articles, *- c I
One Hundred completed Stones- y I
Adventure, Wit and Humor, 1 I
combining with these the abl fl
and the most beautiful illustratin'' - t
them said by the critics to be ' u “.'
the work of Gustave Dore.
'Die cheapest, choicest ami
gift books for the family- C'-fl
A Whole Library is
so}<. We quote, as fairly n L r - M
the general sentiment of
press in regard to the Monthly,
from the Buffalo Commereia
°Seribucr's Monthly is a splnn / ■
It ha3 taken its place iu the J
the periodicals of the world- In p/j
of its typographical appearance- . /fl
tion of its illustrations, the yyy-c •/ fl
reading matter, and the vigor of i ■ fl
and iu general good and moral.
is a publication of which America -
proud.” Remit iu Checks or i •
orders. For sale by all dealers fl
Scribner » IB
851 Broad^J 1 * I