Newspaper Page Text
Agricultural Department.
Jellies, Preserves, Etc,
Wc notice in some of our exchan
ges, says the Farmer and Gardener, a
receipt for making cheap jellies and
preserves. It consists of sugar, alum,
water and the proper flavoring ex
tracts. Not a particle of the fruit
whose name the <ft>m pound is sold un
der, enters into its composition. Pre
serves made from the genuine mate
rial are a healthy and nutritious ad
junct to our more substantial diet ;
but, unfortunately, the commercial ar
ticle, composed of such ingredients as
the obove recipe recommends, can be
purchased so cheaply and ready, that
many people imagine that it is more
economical to buy them of the grocer
than to make them at home. The
Consumer does not for a moment im
agine that he is thus using a com
pound that is not only a fraud upon
his purse, but a positive injury to bis
health. There is no possible excuse
for our Southern people especially
for bdying such articles, made only to
sell, whose manufacture at home for
the genuine material is so simple, and
the elements ot which are in such pro
fusion at our very doors.
Our native fruits, both wild and
Cultivated, furnish an inexhaustible
supply of the proper ingredients for the
making of all kinds of preserves. We
give a few tried recipes for their man
ufacture, and trust that they may be
used extensively to the exclusion of
the unhealthy compounds that w r c are
so prone to patronize :
Jellies of Strawberries and Blackber
ries.—Bruise the fruit, put in a thin
cloth and allow to strain over night.
Next morning add half pound of su
gar to each pint of juice ; boil twenty
minutes.
Grape Jelly.—Bruise and boil the
fruit, then strain ; add half a pound
of sugar to each pint of juice, then
boil from ten to twenty minutes, ac
cording to stage of maturity of fruit.
hig Jelly.—Wash, and add water
sufficient to cover the fruit, boil twen
ty minutes ; strain, then add sugar
and boil as above.
AV ild Crab Apple.—Cover the fruit
with wafer and boil until soft, then
strain ; ftdd one pound of sugar to
each pint of juice ; boil from fifteen
to twenty minutes.
llaw\—Cover with water, boil until
soft, mftsh, strain and add half a
pound of sugar to each pint of juice ;
boil twenty minutes.
Sloe Jelly.—Mash, boil, strain; half
pound of sugar to pint of juice.
Blum Jelly.—Mashy boil strain, as
ftbove.
Beach Jelly.—Wash without re
hioving skin or pits ; cover with wa
ter ; boil until soft, strain, add half a
pound of sugar to pint of juice ; boil
twenty minutes.
Canned Fruit.—Make a syrup with
sugar and water, averaging a quarter
of a pound of sugar to each pint of
juice ; boil the fruit until done, fill
the jars boiling hos, seal up immedi
ately. Keep jars warm before filling
with the fruit.
Street Potatoes Without Hoe
ing.
A correspondent of the Rual South-
Land gives his plan for making sweet
potatoes as follows :
Heretofore it has been the custom
with farmers to plow up a high bed,
then rake up with a hoe still higher,
open and plant with a hoe, and after
the potato has come up, scrape the
entire bed, then hill, and finally dig
with the hoe. Too much hoe-work
entirely for the white man ; since the
black or collofed man has leceived
his foity acres and a mule, it is entire
ly too much for him.
My plan is to flat-break, with two
horses, early in April and May, lay off
rows four feet with a subsoil, which
makes nothing more than a mole trace
'drop the potatoe and sink it into this
trace with the foot; then run a har
row and continue to run often enough
to keep down the grass until the pota
toes are up. When up to a good
stand, throw two furrows with a turn
ing plow, covering them up entirely.
Let them remain until they commence
'coming through, then run a subsoil in
the hist furrows and throw two more
furrows with the turning plow, which
uill cover them slightly and cover up
the grass, leaving them in a nicely
hilled condition. Before they com
mence running, break out the remain
'hig balk with a turning plow and
about three furrows with a subsoil
M hen you dig, use the plow. I say
nothing eff the Use of manure ; of
course a liberal supply of that is indis
pensable.
W e would modify tliis plan, by
planting ‘‘draws,” instead of potatoes
and by avoiding, as far as possible,
covering the vines.—AW L'arolm
tan.
Agricultural Maxims. —Sandy
lands can be most effectually improv
ed by hay. 1
Shallow plowing operates to im
poverish the soil, while decreasing pro
ductions.
AH grain crons should he harvested
several days before the grain is thor
oughly ripe.
f he chopping or grinding of grain
o be b'<] to stock effects a savins of
‘*t h'.ust twenty-live per cent.
Lime as a Fertilizer.
In response to a correspondent
wlk> asks m to say something about
the uses of lime on land, we give some
of the principles which should govern
in its application, gleaned from John
son’s Agricultural Chemistry.
Lime exists in all fertile soils, and
its presence is considered indispensa
to the growth of vegetation. The
need of supplying it to the toil will
l>e seen when we reflect that every
crop removes a quantity.*
The effect of blue is both mechani
cal and chemical. It opens and ren
ders freerer such soils as are stiff and
clayey while it increases the porosity
of such as are already light and sandy.
To the former, its mechanical action
is almost always favorable, and to the
latter not unfrequently the natural
produce of the land by killing some
kinds of plants and favoring others.
It extirpates heath moss sour herbage
and brings a sweet and tender growth
and is said to make all fodder to which
it is applied richer and more palatable
to the stock. It is especially valua
ble in old meadows that are filled with
mosses and coarse grasses. It im
proves the quantity, and hastens the
maturity of most cultivated crops.
The effect of lime is greatest when
it is well mixed with the soil, and
kept near the surface. On new soils,
or those containing much valuable
matter, its effi ct is strongly marked ;
also on subsoil brought to the surface.
As lime requires some time to pro
duce its effects on the soil, it should
be applied as long as posible before
the crop is sown and worked in. If
used on a fallow for wheat, it is best
to spread it after the last ploughing,
and work it well into the soil with
harrow and cultivator; or it may be
spread in the field before it is first
ploughed and subsequent will incor
porate it with the surface soil. It
should not come in contact with 1111-
fermented manure in the air as it rap
idly expels ammonia, but if the two
substances be covered with a few
inches of soil, no waste occurs.
The use of lime in heavy doses Sets
partly as a stimulant to the soil, and
enables the farmer to extract much
more from it during three or four
years following than he would if no
lime were applied. To illustrate, ii a
farmer were on a leased farm having
three or four years to remain, it would
pay him best, if be used lime, to ap
ply it in doses as large as two hundred
bushels to tlie acre, making only one
application. The soil would be thus
stimulated to produce large crops and
use up its vegetable matter quickly
For most cases this principle will hold
good, viz: lime heavily at the first
dressing, and follow it with frequent
applications of sinfill doses.
We do not recall any experiments
which determine the value of lime in
this country as a fertilizer. In Europe
it is used largely, both in Great Brit
ain and on the Continent. With us
the best practical illustration of its
benefit cun be found in some localities
in Pennsylvania. Its continued use
has proved that the farmers deem it a
profitable fertilizer —Rural Home.
Two Crops at tiie Same Time.—
The fact that it is possible to raise two
different crops at the same time on
the same ground by mixing the seed
is not very widely known, or if known
is very seldom made use of. The
practice is not new' for Scotch farmers
have for many years past been in the
habit of raising crops of oats and
peas together, with the effect of gain
ing nearly as much as could be pro
duced by raising these crops on dif
ferent fields. Two and a half bushels
of oats mixed with Che and a half
bushels of peas will yield a crop nearly
if not quite equal in bulk to the two
crops sown separately. Turnips or
rye sown in tlie rows between corn
and 1 1 arrowed in after the last working,
when the corn is laid by, will not nf
fect tic yield of corn while very con
siderable crops for Winter feed or Fall
pasture may be secured with very little
expense for seed and labor. It is not
at all uncommon for 200 or more bush
els of turnips per aero to be raised
thus on a corn sttibble which, with
the tops, has furnished a very welcome
addition to the feeding resources ot
the farm, llye thus sown can often
be grazed by*milking cows until after
Christmas, and will have a marked ef
fect on the quantity and quality of the
butter.
WEIGHTS AND MEASURES
BUSHELS. LBS.
Wheat 00
Shelled Corn.... 56
Corn in ear 70
Peas 00
Rye 50
Oats 32
Barley... < * 48
Irish Potatoes 00
Sweet Potatoes 00
White Beans 00
Castor Beans 45
Clover Seed 00
Timothy Seed 40
Max Seed 50
Hemp Seed 44
Blue Gl ass Seed i t
Buck Wheat 52
Dried Peaches 40
Dried Apples 2f
Onions * . ... 50
Salt 50
Stone Coal 80
Malt 38
Bran... 20
Turnips 58
Plastering Hair 8
Unslacked I.ime 80
The Campaign Opened!
Sharp Times mi head I
The Presidential campaign for
1872, will, no doubt, be, one of
the most exciting, ever held in this
country, and in order to place our
paper in the hands of every
it .f/./.v
in Carroll County, wc have de
termined to offer the
CARROLL COUNTY TIMES,
from now till the close of the
election in
«
November Next 9
at the following reduced rates :
Single Copy - - CO cts.
Clubs of five or more *SO cts.
Always in Advance.
i
1 *PH33
CARROLL COUNTY TIMES
is the official organ of Carroll
county, and in Politics is
DEMOCRATIC,
and will therefore in the coming
campaign, advocate the principles
and interests of that party. We
shall endeavor to make the TIMES
an acceptable paper in the Home
circle by publishing weekly, inter
esting miscellany ifec,
TO THE FARMER
we would say, that we expect to
devote a special department to his
interests, which will he filled with
valuable clippings from our agri
cultural exchanges.
To the Business Man
The TIMES offers an excellent
medium, for advertising, as its cir*
dilation is rapidly increasing, until
now it ranks as one of the most
popular weeklies in the State.
To Out* FriemMs
Every where we would commend
our enterprise, and ask for their
aid in extending our circulation.
SHARPE A MEIQS,
Publishers.
PROSPECTUS FOR 1872.
FIFTH YEAR.
A Representative and Champion of American Art
Tlio iLld.ine *
An Illustrated Monthly Journal claimed to be
the hansomesl Papeer in the florid.
“Give my love to the artist workmen of
thk aldtnk who are striving to make their
profusion worthy of admiration for beauty,as
it has always been for usefulness." — Henry
Ward Beecher -
The Ai.d?nk, while issued with a?I the reg
ularity, has noue of the temporary or timely
interest characteristic of ordinary periodic
als- It is an elegant miscellany of pure,
light, and graceful literature, and a collection
of pictures, the rarest specimens, of artistic
skill, in black and white. Although each
succeeding number affords a fresh pleasure to
its friends, the real value and beauty of The
Aldine will be most appreciated after it has
been bound tip at the close of the year.—
While other public publications may claim
superior cheapness as compared with rivalsof
a similar class, The Aldine is a unique and
original conception—alone and unapproach
ed—absolutely without competition in price
or character. The possessor of the volume
jtrst completed cannot dnpiicate the quantity
of fine paper and engravings in any other
shape or number of volumes for ten Hines its
cost.
The labor of getting The Aldine ready on
the press is so gieat that repri ting is out of
the question* With the exception of a small
number specially reserved for binding, the e
dition of 1871, is already exhausted, anu it is
now a scarce as well as valuable book.
NEW FEATURES FOR 1872,
ART DEPARTMENT.
The enthusiastic support so readily accord
ed to their enterprise, wherever it has been
introduced, has convinced the publishers of
The Aldine of the soundness of their theory
that the American public would recognize
and heartily support any 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
cessof The 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 Richards, Granville Pcrlcra-s, James Smiley,
Wm Har,, F O C Darley, It E Piguet, ’
Wm Beard, Victor Netilig, Frank Beard,
George Smiley,Win II Wilcox,- Paul Dixon,
Aug. Will, JarneS II Beard, and 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 that The Aldine shall be a success
ful vindication of American taste in compe
tition with any existing publication in the
woild.
LITERARY DEPARTMENT.
Where so much is paid to illustration am*
get up of the work, too much dependence on
appearances may very naturally be feared
To anticepute such misgivings, it is only nee
essary to stale that the editorial management
of The Aldine lias been intrusted to
Ml*. RICHARD IIENRY STODDARD,
who has received assurances of assislance
from a host of the most popular writers ami
poets of the country.
THE VOLUME FOR 1872
will contain nearly 300 pages and about 200
line engravings. Commencing with the ntfhi
ber for January, every third number will con
tain a beautify! tinted picture on plate pa
per, inserted as a frontlspi&f.-
The Christmas number for 1872 will he a
splemled volume in itself, containing fifty en
gravings, (four in tint) and. although retails
ct sl, win be sent without extra charge
to all yearly subscribers.
A CHROMO TO EVERYSUBSCRI
b;r was very popular feature last year, and
will be repeated with the present volume.
The publishers have purchased ands ftp rod u’
ced, at great expense the beautiful oil paint,
ing by SEIS, entitled “Dame Nature’s school.’
The chromo is 11x13 inches, and is an exact
facsimile, in size and appearance, ol 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
The Aldine 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 S4O will
receive an extra copy gratis, making 11 cop
ies for the money.
Any person wishing to work for a premium,
ean have our premium circular on applica
tion. We give many beautiful and desirable
article offered by no other paper.
Any person wishing to act* permanently as,
our agent, will apply, with reference, enclos
ing sl, for outfit. James Sutton &Cos ,
PUBLISHERS ,
23 Liberty street,New York.
TlicSavannalißcpiMcan.
ESTABLISHED IN 1802.
PUBLISHED BY
IIARDEE & SCUDDED.
CIIAS S. HARDEE. HENRY W. SCUDDKR.
Terras—lnvariably in Advance:
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Six months ... 5 qq
Monthly .... ijoo
The Weekly Republican is published every
Saturday Morning.
One year - * - $2 00
Six months - . - 1 0<)
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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All advertisements ordered to be in
serted weekly in daily paper, or in weekly
edition, will be charged one dollar per square
for each insertion, except when varied by
special contract.
fITE REPUBLICAN,
Is the oldest newspaper in the South, and is
earnestly devoted to her interests. It con
tains all the latest news, by telegraph and
by letter, on all subjects of general interest-
Oommercial, Agricultural, Scientiflfic and
Miscellaneous—thereby adapting it to every
class of the reading pablic. A r o pains or
expense shall be spared to maintain its repu
tation as a first class paper in every respect.
Scud for sample copy.
ELIZABETH GOLDEN,! Libel for Di
vs. > vorce in Haral
HENRY GOLDEN. )son Supe-ior
Court, March Term 1872.
It appearing to the Court by the return of
the Sheriff, that the Defendant does not reside
in the County, and it further appearing that
lie does not reside in this State. It is there
fore ordered by the Court, that service be
perfected upon the defendant by publication
in a public gazette of this State once a month
for four months, that said defendant apj>ear
and answer at the next term of this Court,
or that tire case be considered in default, and
the plaintiff be allowed to proceed.
It. D. HARVEY, Judge S. C.R. C
J. S. McEbvreath, Att’y for Libelant.
A true extract from the minutes of the
Court this March 27th 1872.
Green B. Jfnktns C. S. C.
may 10, 1872 —
Scientic American for 72.
TWENTY-SEVENTH YE AIR
This splendid weekly, greatly onlkrged and im
proved, is one of the most useful and intereatiuir
journals ever published. Every number is beauti
fully printed on tine paper, and elegantly illustra
ted with original engravings, representing
New Inventions, Novelties in Mechnics, Man
ufactures, Chemistry, Photography, Ar
chitecture, Agriculture, Engineer
ixa, Science & Art.
Farmers. Mechanics, Inventors. Engineers man
ufacturers, Chemists, and People of all Profcs
sious, or Trade, or Trades, will uud the
AMERICAN
Os Great Value and Interest.
Its practical suggestions will save hundreds of
dollars to every Household, Workshop, and Fac
tory in the land, besides - affording a continual
source of Valuable Instruction. The Editor* afe
assisted by niauy of the ablest American and Eu
ropean writers, and having access t.» all the lead
ing Scientific and Mechanical journals of the world,
the columns of the Scientific American are con
stantly enriched with the choicest information.
An Official List of all the Patents Issued is Pub
lished Weekly.
The y< arly numbers of the Scientific American
make two splendid volumes of Nearly One Thou
sand images, equivalent in Eire to Fonr Thousand
ordinary book pages. Specimen Copies Free.
Terms— s3 a Year; $1 50 Half Year: Clubs of
ten copies for a year, $"150 each, $<5.00.
With a splendid premium to theperson who forms
tlie Club, coHsisting of a copy ot (he celebrated
steel-plate engraving, “ Men of Progress."
In connection with the publication of the
Scientific American, the undersigned conduct the
most extensive agency in the world for procuring
Patents.
The best way to obtain an answer to the ques
tion—Can I obtain a Patent ? is to write to Mi nn
& Cos., 37 Park Row, New York, who have had
over twenty 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
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For instruct ions conC'cYhtSg American and En
ropean Patents—Caveats—Re-issue, Interferences
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and Proceedings of the Patent Office, The New
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ments, etc., etc., send for Instruction Book, which
Will b e m-ailed free, on application. All husines
strictly confidential. Address
MUNN & ro.
Publishers of the Scientific American
37 Park Row New York.
A Pit EO SI TORY OFFASHIOX, PLEA.SCR4, AXD
INSTRUCTION.”
Harper’s I’azar.
NOTICES OF THE PRESS.
Tt is really tlie only illustrated chronicle of
fashion in 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 a* new bonnet; it
will save you ten 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 the 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 ami daughters in average families—can
not but profit by its good sense and good
taste, which we have no doubt, are to-day
making very many homes happier than they
may have been before the woman began Lik
ing lessons in personal and household and
social management from this gotsl-natmed
metfto. —Tlie Nation N. Y. %
SUBSCRIPTIONS. —1872.
Harper’s Ba*ar, one year, 8 I 00
An Extra Opy of either the Magazine
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every < "ub cl Ihi übscribers at 84,00 each
in one remittance ; or, six copies for 820 00
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ly, and Bazar, to one address for one year,
810 00 ; or two of Harper’s Periodicals to
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Back Numoers can be supplied any time.
The four volumes of Harper’s Bazar, ior
the years 4 868, ’G9, ’70,71, elegantly bound in
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The postage on Harper’s Bazar is 20 cents
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post-office. Address
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FOR THE CAMPAIGN.
The Savannah Morn'ng News,
The approaching Presidential canvass judg
ing from the extraordinary condition of our
political affairs, will be the most interesting;
xciting, and hotly contested campaign in
the history of the Republic, and its progress
wll be Watched with feverish anxiety by
thousands who have heretofore taken but
slight interest in elections.
In order to place in the reach of all that
widely-known medium of *be freshest and
latest intelligence, the b'avannah Morning
News, a liberal subscription schedule has
been arranged.
From the first of July to the first of No
vember, or from the first of Angust to the
first of December-four months inclusive-the
different editions of the Morning News will
be sent to subscribers on the following terms:
Daily - - $2 50
Tri-Weekly - - 1 50
Weekly - - - 50
In the stirring times just ahead, the Morn
ng News will be in the van of all its con
temporaries in the extent, variety and fresh
ness of its intelligence, and its readers will
lose none of the salieut points of the cam
paign.
Money may be sent by express at the risk
and expeuse of the Proprietor.
J. 11. ESTILL,
Savannah, Ga.
GEN. LEE AT
“Soncwall’s;’ Grave.
A 14 X 15 inch Engraving of the grave
of u Stonewall” Jackson in the Lexiugtou,
Va., cemetery. The noble Gen. Lee stands
the flower strewn grave over which
hangs a weeping willow. In the distance is
to be seen a beautiful landscape, hills deck
ed in verdure, clouds as natural as real ones,
and many other things which make this
picture a gem of art : one which should
h#»g in the parlor of every Southern home.
It is without a rival the sweetest and most
touchingly beautiful engraving before the
public. Sent by mail, mounted on a roller and
post-paid on receipt of 20 cents or 3 for 50
cents. Add 1 ess J. C. &. W. M, Burrow,
No. 200, Main st., Bristol, Tenn.
Agents wanted everywhere to sell our
popular Pictures, Books, Charts, Potograpbs,
Jk. Catalogues tree.
FOUR WEEKS after date application wil
be made to the Ordinary of Ckrroll ccunty
for leave to sell all of the real estate belong
ing to the estate of Henry O. Martin, deceas
ed. D. E. MARTIN, Adm’r.
march 1, 1872-lm.
FORTY-SECOND YEA I;
Body's Lady's Book, for 1370
The cheapest of Ladies' Magazines be
is the Imst,
For the- past forty two years the Book 1
been considered the guide of worm .
every tiling that ia calculated to etev ...A,"
sex. e b*
The Old Familiar Writer,,
Whose stories have largely contribute,- .
this end, have all beeu retain'd Marion it
land, Jno Churchill, “ “ lia *
Louisa S. Dorr, Metta Victoria V' 1
S. Annie Frost, Mrs. (J. A ||
son. Sue Chcstnutwood, M rs p
nison, etc*,
Have a reputation for excellence in the *
ting far above any others in tf* ffla ’
line. ’ g£u “*
Our Colored Fashion plates V
the most correct of any published j a ,'
country.
Beautiful Steel Plates. Os ii
the Lady’s Book gives 14 inch year. '
Original Music. — Goily’s is sh e
magazine in which music prepared exj
for it appears.
Model Cottages. — The only m . v ,
azine in this country that gives these ,1. "
is the Lady’s Book.
Drawing Lkssos& —ln this we are
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We have also a Children’s a Horticu’i
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Body’s Invaluable Recipes upon eve
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ourselves.
Ladies fancy Work department.—Some P f
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colors, in a style unequalled.
, In aditiou to all Hie above nttraetior
there will be published, monthly, a dt it
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be superior to any of the kind heretofore
published.
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cron’s Hour at tlie following prices:
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Having, b y experience abroad, beeti.•
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on the 10th day of January, com menu tie
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GR EA TL Y ESLAR GED.
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Arrangements have been perfected to
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any periodical of its class in the
The January Number trill be espetwy? 3 '
tractive, and will be worthy of
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of Papers by Mr. Gladstone, Prime Mm*
ter of England, will shortly appear;
an able discussion of the National
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every number will be rich in shorter
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Three Thousand Pages, more than Ffo ; f
dred Brilliantly Written articles, and y
One Hundred completed Stork's, a: °.
Adventure, Wit and Humor, Poem' y
combining with these the ablest eui l yy ,
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them said by the critics to be fully ( ' ( i u "‘
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Tlie cheapest, choicest aod most c. - r
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