Newspaper Page Text
THE MONROE HE ADVERTISER.
GEORGE A. KING k CO. ]
VOL. XXI.
i£iu ijiflum &&vtxttetx.
FORSYTH, TUESDAY, JANUARY 4,1 T
Out of l>**l*t.
llulf tlit perplexity, annoyance and trouble
that un n have in this world is in consequenc e
of getting into debt. It seems to be natural
for some people to buy, and incur obligations
w ithout measure, so long as they can avoid
paying away ready cash. Give on* of this sort
a c hance to buy on a credit, and the question
of payments are matters that he cares but littl/
about. Licit what a crop of trouble**prings U>
from the seed of debt. How many gray ha’s
it brings, and how often it shortens life; some
times leading men to commit suicide or ur
der. And yet how easy to keep clear oftbis
terrible monster. Every living man should
form a fixed and unalterable deteruii*tiun,
before commencing bis active business areer,
not to incur otic penny of inclebteclnea under
jiiiv circumstances. Never buy anyl/mg un
b you have the money to pay for i'l once.
J’uy no attention to the “rare chaneth” “splen
did opportunities," “bargains," an* the l>k e -
Such are only traps set to catch vieflus. If you
see anything that you would like t/accept, look
first at your money pile, and mac.e the answer
depend on that. Always pay )' ou K°- R
you are short of money, gtmgeyour demands
accordingly.
\ oiitig .Hail, Save Pan !’ Your *•>
cairn*
Again and again we urge apon all young
men who are just starting ’ll life to make it an
invariable rule to lay a ad* a certain portion
of their income, whateverthat income may be.
Extravagant expenditures occasion a very
large portion of the sufiViings of a great ma
jority of the people. And extravagance is
wholly a relative term. What is not atall ex
travagant fo r one person may be very extrava
gant for another. Expenditures—no matter
how tun ill lin themselves they may be—are ul
ways extravagant when they come fully up to
the entire amount of a person’s whole income.
The mode of living is almost entirely a mat
t iof habit. It is just as easy to get along on
three fourths of your income, whatever the
income may be, as on the whole of it, if you
only think so, and restri< t your expenuiimts
accordingly. A young man who afterwards
became one of the wealthiest merchants in
Philadelphia, began house-keeping on a salary
of three hundred dollars a year, but he laid, up
part of that three hundred dollars, and he
made it a rule of his life never to increase bis
expenses as fast ms bis income increased.
The thousand inconveniences of debt, em
barrassment and dependence may all be avoi
ded by a firm aud undeviating adherence to
this rlc
Uue great aid in pur-suing the course we have
recommended will be found In keeping an ul
timate account of all receipts and expenditures,
ltv frequent reference to this you will see
just what you can afford to expend, without
encroaching on your rule; and you will see
what of your expenditures you can most con
veuicn'.ly curtail or cutoti entirely.
Misery Lv<k Company
vr.'^T“
Wewuun SUf \
|f there be uny truth in ibis proverb the fol-
Jowlug from the JUitJapd, (\'t.) H'Tld will
furnfsU the poop peupltt rtf Gcoflgpt wUU 00l-
Jinny. Vermont is the thriftiest little State in
IbuVniou She make* everything she euu
and more too. He*' "* <u, ";* 4 ; ns lire tilled with
r.eh minerals which are mined and exported
>v the million. She furnishes even the crowned
heads of Europe with her famous horses. Her
sheep are the finest in America, and command
the highest prices. Her cheese and butter
quotes even higher than Goshen If the peo
ple up thre are suffering, what is to become
of the balance of the world?
IIA HD TIMK9 IN KITI.AND.
Do our readers know that there is a large
number of able-bodied men in Rutland who
ar* literally without work? <>r that there are
men wow working at wood-chopping at thirty
cents a day and their board ? Or that there are
carpenters and other mechanics who would be
glad of s job at a dollar a day. or even less ?
Yet such are the facts Are our readers aware
of what that means mw, an 1 will mean before
the winter is over ?
If thev are, it would seem to us that some
measures ought to be taken without dtlay to
meet the present, and ward off the impending
danger. It is stated that, within the coming
w eek, something liks one hundred men will be
discharged from the marble quaries in West
Rutland. Many have already been discharged
from other employment. We heard to-day of
an excellent mechanic, honest and industrious,
who had not iu his house enough food for a
day 's supply for his wife and family, and would
have been sbliged to apply at once to the poor
master, but for a friend who relieved his pre
seut necessities. He knows but little of affair
who fail* to understand, when savage want
stares willing, sturdy labor in the face, how
much of misery has already got foothold iu
widow's housci Such relief as comes of the
poor master debases while it feeds. Such
charity saps manhood of self-respect and thrusts
the recipient into a gulf of misery out of which
few ever struggle. The need of the hour is
wor g employment, out of which bread and
fuel mav be won—or else some arrangement
by which food and fusl may be put at a lower
price. God help the poor says Sanctimony
That’s all weh enough when there are willing
hands to back the pious prayer. Now-a-dav*
however, no mauua showers succor on aban
doned Israel, and God don’t send angels wheel
ing barrels of beef and liour to feed the widow
0 r her sons. It the starving mans brethren
don't help him, or help him to help himself
he starves. That’s the English of it. The
man who, at his cosy lireaide, this bitter night,
contents himself with pious prayer or wish for
the shivering poor, aud who does not to mor
row back up his prayer with willing help to
warm and feed the suffering, is a miserable,
whining hypocrite, who assaults God and
blasphemes the brotherhood of men.
“You see, grandma, we perforate an aper
ture in the apex, and a ccrespoading aperture
in the base, and by applying the egg to the lips
and forcibly inhaling the breath, the egg is en
tireiv discharged of its contents." ‘ Bless my
aoul,” cried the old lady, “what wonderful im
provements they do make! Now, in my young
er days, we just tnads a hole in both ends aud
•uektl”
InltluaUon of a iaumblcr,
I ilLgive you an instance of what gamblers
are—tb tale is over true : li had taken a
high Tgree at Cambridge; and with tbe ex
ceptiv'i of the late Baron Smith, I never met
a me* elegant scholar and polished gentleman.
Wi® abundant talent to have taken a high
poition in any walk in life, through this ac
cused rage for gaming, his career was a suc
frsion of wild literary speculation, all suffi
iently specious, and all equally unfortunate.
A long probation in a debtor’s jail might
have been expected to work a reformation.
There every extreme of misery poor B— had
undergone; and when lie was at last discharged,
he had wearied out every friend, and found
himself once more upon the world, burdened
with a helpless woman, (his wife), and without
a coat. A tailor whom he had once befriended,
heard of his patron’s misfortune, visited him in
prison, and begged to present him with a suit
of clothes. Poor B— was too deeply humbled
to allow him to reject the offer ; aud as he was
unable to leave bis obscure lodging in the day
light, he flitted in the dusk of the evening to
the friendly tailor’s, to receive the welcome
supply, lie was returning to his\umhle home,
where she, the faithful companion of his mis
ery, was awaiting him, when he unfortunately
passed a low gambling bouse, termed in slang
parlance a “ silver belland the infernal spirit
for play returning, the impulse w ? as irresistible,
lie turned into 4 pawnbroker’s —borrowed
some money on the new clothes lie had ob
tained—entered tbe den of infamy—and in half
an hour came out—a beggar. The wretched
man was desperate. His companion was await
ing |his return with means to enable him to
venture decently abroad, and seek some honest
employment. How should he look the wretched
girl in the face and own the damning fact that
he was hu irreclaimable castaway? At that
instant a stranger passed, a.id B— caught a
transient glance of well-remembered features.
The face was that of a school fellow, a meek
aud estimable clergymau, “ passing rich,” not
on forty, but four hundred pounds a year. B—
followed his quondam class-fellow to a cheap
and unfashionable hotel, and asked for and ob
tained an interview. At first tbe stranger did
not recognize in the abject pauper the second
wrangler of his year; but the painful remem
brance was recalled, and to the tale of B —’s
distress a ten pound note was given, with an
ardent squeeze of the hand, and an entreaty to
“go and sin no more." Will it be credited?
but on its sad realty I pledge my word. The
w retched man returned to the den in which
an hour before, be hau been beggared—staked
his tan pounds—and lost it. Madness followed.
He rushed wildly from th hell and committed
suicide from the battlements of the next bridge
—recording in a hurried scrawl to his wretch
ed companion, before he fijok (ho fatal leap,
the circumstances w hjcp hgd immediu’ ly led
to self-desU’ficfion. — Maxwell.
——•
1 lit? Slhii ot ll'alii* *ml tilt* of
BllHioiiN.
By a coincidence two men have yielded to
the mandate of death within a few' days of
each other, both known throughout the land,
and who were born under reverse circum
stances n- U\x t,. ihe pu.v-.yssicai o( wealth \va*
Concerned. of ißse men was our late la
mented Vice President, a child of extreme
poverty—who worked Ills twelve‘and fifteen
iioui’v f(timing and squeiuakutg till lm wu
twenty-three, dimply by studviu"
. . * ' ami read
ing out’, two and
- ..<ree hours a day, he eventu
ally made himself a man of mark, and finally
landed in the Vice Presidential chair. The
other was William B. Astor, who was born
with a gold spoon, studded with diamonds, in
his mouth. His father died, leaving him $20,-
000,000, which is estimated to have been en
hanced to $200,000,000 at this day. The son of
poverty worked solely for the purpose of im
proving the condition of down trodden human
ity, as was shown by his war against slavery,
his favoring the eight hour and homestead
laws. The son of wealth worked exclusively
for his own selfish benefit —to increase his al
ready' mammoth wealth to its present gigantic
proportion, never caring a copper’s worth for
the welfare of the human race. The son of
poverty died poor, universally mourned from
one end of the land to the other. The son of
wealth also dies, and nobody seems to care
much for him, except to inquire how much he
w as worth —an excusable curiosity considering
he was adjudged to be the wealthiest man in
the world, with perhaps three or four except
ions. The son of poverty was gifted with that
which money could not buy; namely, brains.
The son of wealth was gifted with money, but
a small amount of brains. Henrv Wilson’s
name will go down to posterity as a great
statesman and philanthropist. Win. B. Astor’s
name will be utterly forgotten and pass out of
memory before half a century passes away.
Such is the difference between brains and
wealth.— (7. cehmd Leader.
The Hawkinsville Dispatch relates the fol
lowing horrible occurrence:
A most awful catastrophe occurred on
Wednesday night of lasi week, in Dooly county,
near the line of Worth. The unfortunate vic
tim was Elder Samuel Wright Story, a Primi
tive Baptist, very highly esteemed. Mr Story
had been to mill on Swift creek, and was re
turning home late iu the evening. He stopped
to warm himself in front of the house of Mr.
StaveßS, on the roadside, where an old stump
of a tree had been fired and had burned into a
hole. None of Mr Stevens' family went out
where he was or paid any atteation to his l>e
ing there. They ouly noticed that his cart re
mained there an unusual length of time for a
person merely to warm. About ten o'clock at
night they ol>served that his cart was still on
the roadside, and finally concluded to go and
gee if anything was the matter. On arriving
at the stump hole a most horrible sight was be
fore them. The head and shoulders of Mr-
Story’s body were Ring in the hole and had
burned to a crisp. It seemed aa if he had fall
en into the burning hole headforemost.
Whether he Struck l is foot against some obsta
cle aud fell, or whether he had been prostrated
from a tit, is unknown. In either case, he wua
unable to raise himself oat of the hole, and
death, in its most terrible form, put an end to
his struggles.
Forward aud loquacious youth.—,‘By Jove,
you know—upon my word, now —if I were to
see a ghost you know, I would be a chatting
idiot for the rest of my life.”
Ingenious Maiden—“ Haven’t you seen a
ghost?’’
FORSYTH. GEORGIA. TUESDAY MORNING JANUARY 4. 1876.
I here liooin in Angcl-Luiul t
[These lines were written after hearing the
following touching incident related by a min
ister: A mother, who was preparing some flour
to bake into bread, left it for a moment, when
little Mary, with childish curiosity to see what
it was, took hold of the dish, when it fell to
tbs floor, spilling its contents. The mother
struck the child a severe blow, saying, with an
ger, that she was always in the way! Two
weeks after little Mary sickened and died. On
her death-bed, while delirious, she asked her
mother if there would be room for her among
tbs angels. “ I was always in your way, moth
er ; you had no room for little Mary! And
will Ibs in the angels' way ? Will they have
room for me?" The broken-hearted mother
then f*lt no sacrifice too great, could she have
saved her child.]
Is there room among the angels
For the spirit of your child?
Will they take your little Mary
In their loving arms so mild ?
Will they ever love me fondly,
As my story-books have said?
Will they find a home for Mary—
Mary numbered with the dead?
Tell me truly, darling mother,
Is there room for such as me?
AVi 11 I gain the home of spirits,
And the shining angels see?
I have sorely tried you, mother—
Been to you a constant care,
And you will not miss me, mother,
When I dwell among the fair;
For you hsve uo room for Mary—
She was ever in your way,
And she fears the good will shun her
Will they, darling mother, say?
Tell me—tell me truly—mother,
fir* life’s closing hour doth come.
Do you think that they will keep me
In the shining gngel’s home?
I was not so very wayward, mother,
Not so very—very bad,
But that tender lovt* would nourish,
And make Mary’s heart so glad !
Oh ! I yearned for pure affection,
In this world of bitter woe !
And I long for bliss immortal,
In the land where I must go.
Tell me once again, dear mother,
Ere you take the parting kiss,
Will the angels bid m* welcome
To that land of perfect bliss ?
Splitting Wood.
I was expecting John home a little earlier
that night, so I determined to have some nice
spring chicken broiled just to a turn already
for him, when he came. All went very w ell
until just as the crisis came in the broiling of
those chickens, I discovered that the wood was
out. What should I do? If I waited till John
came the chicken would be quite spoiled,
I picked out a nice, straight maple stick,and
leaned it up Rgftptsf supiktf stick, just as I’d
seen Johp do, and then I actually laughed at
the idea that a woman couldn’t split wood. T
placed the tip of one of luy to<*s against the
stick, arranged my dress gracefully, and then
taking hold of the extreme end of the handle,
I raised the ax high over my head and brought
it down with all my might, the bjade Striking,
not the stick, but beyond it. Oh ! oh ! how
my hands did sting !
I rolled them up in (py apron (W a few min
utes, and **• jtvnggllpg'a moment to keep
back the I took up the ax and went at U
agair.
This time I look hold of the h:uJ>'* u ,., irer
down to the blade, ami w>' , . , .
, „ > 11 i came to bring
down the ax • - , , ,
. remembered my former experi
ence. I hesitated just half a second before let
ting tbe ax strike.
Fatal hesitation! It turned the ax a hair’s
breadth, and it glanced on tat side of the stick
and struck deep into the suit earth. I wasn’t
prepared for this, and losing my balance, over
I went head foremost, stick and all. 1 can’t
tell exactly how 1 'landed.
I placed my stick in anew position, shut my
teeth hard, and —no I didn’t though. There
was a clothesline just behind, winch I had not
noticed; my ax caught in this and jerked me
backwards over a big chunk, the ax falling al
most in my face. There was a sharp twinge
in my back and a buzzing in my head, so I
laid quite still, until I was startled by the
strained voice of dear John: “Mollie, Mollie,
are you hurt ?”
He picked me up in Ins great strong arms and
carried me iu the house. I wasn’t hurt much
after all, but I had a good cry on John’s shoul
der, and ever since that I’ve had a whole wood
house full of nicely split wood always on
hand. If a woman can’t do a thing one way
she can another.
I Cannot Support a Wire
“I am in love with a young lady, who loves
me in return, but lam not iu a situation to
support a wife. Ido not want to ask her to
wait for years. We are engaged. Shall I
break off the. engagement ? What would you
ailvise me to do?”
Such is the burden of hundreds of lettt-rs ad
dressed to us.
In reply to one aud all of them we have to
say that if any voting man in this country, in
good health, is not aide to support a wife, he
can soon put himself iu a condition to do it. If
he does not it is his own fault. Every Amer
ican can support a w ife if he chooses to. We
do uot mean if he ha* a sicklv, sentimental de
sire to it; but if he possesses a manly, strong
determination, aud is willing and resolved to
make the sacrifice and the effort essential in th
beginning to make money anywhere.
It is childish and wtik to assign poverty as
the reason—a permanent or lasting reason—for
not getting married. No man in this country
need be so poor that he cannot support an eco
nomica], sensible wife, comfortably.
The fact is that poverty with many persons
means simply irresolution and indolence; and
if most of these correspondents would write
—instead of “I am too poor"—“ lam too lazy
to support a wife.” they would come nearer
the truth.—X F. Ledger.
A singular case is reported from Brooklyn.
A woman was badly frightened by a cat some
months previous to the birth of her child.
That child proved to be a girl, and is now
eighteen years of age and married. During
her childhood she gave no evidence of being
affected by her mother s fright excepting in
deed, a propensity to chase mice and occasion
ally to sit on the backyard fence and howl a
little on moonlight nights ; but strange to re
late, since the birth of her own baby she al
wavs lifts it out uf the crib by the back of iu
neck w ith her teeth
It is an interesting sight to see a young lady
with both hands in soft dough sad a musquito
on her nose
“In G-od w© Trust.”
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Attention Planters!
I HAVE PURCHASED THE LARGE
FIRE-PROOF WAREHOUSE
2S Cents Per Bale
lam well prepared to store cotton, or sell to the best advantage. I give nty friend* a
cordial invitation 4o come and see me s T “* a
JEFF. DUMAS.
1 he undersigned Directors or Committee, having assumed the management and control
of the former interest of W. L. Lantpkin in this well known Warehouse, and huviug asso
ciated with us S. D. MOBLEY, would ‘inform the Planters and Public generally of Moll*
oe and adjoining counties, that we will be fully prepared on and after Sept. I*l to
Weigh and Store Cotton,
And conduct a General
WAREHOUSE BUSINESS,
on our part shall be spared to extend any facilities and accommodations in our power -and by
our promptness and close attention to business, we hope to receive a liberal share of the nub
lie patronage. p
W. T. MAYNARD, E. 11.-WALKER,
PETER McMICKLE, JNO. A. DANIELLY
E. M. MOORE, THOb G SCOTT. ’
Mli.UM.in GOODS AT COSrT
, A' ILDER & MISS McGINT\ , proposing to discontinue business, offer to the Meo
pie of Forsyth and Mo nroe county their '
ENTIRE STOCK AT COST.
TUK STOCK. EM D >ACEa j
. ine Dress Goods, Fancy Millinery Goods, Hats, Trimmings,
Anil Everything Usually Kepi in a First-Class Store.
These goods were selected with great care, and purchased at the lowest New York price*
Fucli an Opportunity May not Occur Again
\\ e mean what we say and will sell the entire stock at first cost. •
yv 11,1 )KU & McGINTY.
Sometningr New
Wiley L, Smith,
NSOLNCES TO It IS FKiEC-'DS THAT HE IS OPENING A NEW BUSINESS IN
A
SAT ITU’S BUI r,I)l NCT
Next dii b.kv* Lis < r i iic.jlm lujnilj iitiybd Ij 1. lb. Bitmlty, I titfe side
a WITH A FULL STOCK OF
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS,
Wood Willow and Tin Ware,
SADDLES, BRIDLES. HARNESS. FARMING IMPLEMENTS. ETC, Eftl.
1 For Cash Only.
1 buy n>) Gix-iri !o- Cob and boi determined to eil them a* low as u>boa.T, *d soilel'*
u:iji per ■-air••. I > x t u<l a cordial invitation to all my rUuds to call.aud tx -mms *oo<D
M J>K l). G. FROt ToK if wl b me and will be gled to te hie old lriends id customer*.
w. L. SMITH.
Se2* Suios
SOLOMON & MOUNT ‘
have .made an
iftjwENSE REDUCTION
IN THE PRICE OF EVERYTHING IN THE
DRY GOODS LINE.
WE are selling Dry Good*, Clothing, Boots, Shoes and Groceries at prices far below any
ever offered in this market
B st Calico at 6 an 1 S cts per yard, Shirting at 7 cts per yard.
Bnirting vard wide, S 1-2 cts ' Osnaburgx, 10 cts
Columbus Checks, 10 cts 1000 pr Ladies Shoes at $1 00 a 1 50
lOoOprs go >1 Ladies Cloth Shoes $125 and #2 00 1000 prs Brogan Shoes $1 25 to $1 75
500 prs Ditching Boots $2 00 to $3 50 300 prs tine Calf skiu Boots $2 to $3 50
100 suits of e turning $5 00 to $lO uo 50 tine Cassiuitre suits sl2 00 to s2o 00
-And Other Goods in EVoportion
have two stores, one in the Morse building next to the Pye Hotel block; and another in
the Head building, formerly occupied by L. Wolte, we have in both
wo
Of every tiling usually kept In a
First Class Dry Goods Store.
Together with a large and choice stock of
Family Groceries & Plantation Supplies.
All of which are offered at the very lowest price*. If you examine our go<-ds you will b
bound to trade. We buy our good* in large quantile* and get the bottom price* In New
York city. None buy to better advantage than ourselve*, and in consequence of large gales
we sell at small margins in the wav bf profits.
BE STJB.E AIiNTD CALL TO BEE TJS.
oetiS tf *>l.o*ON 4c MOL NT
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
T\ .A. Banks & Soiisj
FORSYTH, - - - - caJ
the largest and moat deairable Stock of
Dry Goods, . \ Domestfcsj
White Goods, Z' Jeans. J
l- aces i Notions, Hosiery/ J
Boots, Shoes, £tc. J
of amt house in the place. Social attention is railed to our *
CLOTHING DEPARTMENTJ
Comprising a full and complete assortment of 'S
FAIL AND WINTER SUIT?
AT
EXCEEDINGLY LOW PRICES.
OUR
IMSS GOODS DEPARTMKfiXi
Is very large aud will he sole 'v J
As Cheap as the Cheapest. "*
Ueweuibtr these I’awi When Purchasing Tour supplies.
W, A, BASKB & Sm&
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
TO
Frank Losl'e’s Illustrated Publications
POSTAGE Pi ID.
Frank Leslie’s 111. Newspaper, Weekly $-1 00
Frank Le- lie’s Chimney Corner, “ 40(
Leslie’s Illustrate Zeitung, “ 4 (X.
The Day’s Doings, “ 4 001
Leslie’s Lady’s Journal *• 4 00 j
The Young American. “ 2 50!
Leslie’s Boys’ and Girls’ Weekly 2 50 j
Leslie’s Popular Monthly, 2 00 j
Leslie’s Lady’s Magazine, Monthly 350 j
Leslie’s Boys of America, “ 1 50.
Leslie’s Pleasant Hours, “ 1 50
Leslie’s Budget of Fun, “ 1 50
The Jolly Joker, “ 1 50
Leslie’s Illustrated Almanac 50
Leslie’s Comic Almanac, 15
Every yearly subscriber is entitled to a beau
tiful Premium Chromo with each publication.
The originals were designed and printed ex- j
pressly for our use, and the Chromos are print
ed in oil, exactly repropucing, in every detail,
the original masterpieces of art.
Description of Chromos, Publication and
Gift, with sample papers, sent on receipt of
stamps for return postage.
AGENTS WANTED.
Address AGENCY DEPARTMENT,Frank
Leslie’s Publishing House, 527 Pearl Street,
New York.
‘‘A Repository of fashion, Pleas
ure, and Instruction.”
Harper’s Bazar.
ILLUSTRATED.
Notice* of the Pi e**.
The Bazar is edited with a combination of
tact and talent that we seldom find in any
journal; and the journal itself is the organ of
the great world of fashion.- -Boston TruteUr.
The Bazar commends itaelf to every mem
her of the household—to the children by
droll and pretty pictures, to the young ladies
by its fashion-plates in endless \uriety, to the
provident matron by its patterns for the chil
dren’s clothes, to paterfamilia* by its tasteful
designs for embroided slippers and luxurious
dressing-gowns. 15 jt the reading matter of the
Bazar is uniformly of great excellence. The
paper has acquired a wide popularity for the
til* side enjoyment it affords.— N. Y. Meaning
Post.
In its way there is nothing like it. Fresh
ami trustworthy as a fashion guide, its stories
and essays, its po* try and squibs, are all invig
orating to the mind. — Chirugo Kienit-g Joorval.
TERMS:
Postage free to all Subscriber* in tbs Uuitsd States.
ILi Ptk’s Bazak, one year #4 00
$4 00 includes prepayment of U. S. postage
by the publishers.
Subscriptions to Harper’s Magazin*- '5 erkly
and Bazar, to one atidiess lor one year, $lO 00,
or. two Harper * Periodicals’ to >ue
for one year, $7 00 : postage free
An Extra Copy of either the Magazine,
i Weekly or Bazar will be supplied gratiTror ev
-1 cry Club of live uLscF.t <T at $4 in
j one remittance; or, six copies for tf.2vt.ob * th
■ out extra copy ; postage free ( ‘
Back number* cn >. supplied ,u _
The annual Yoluiuea of Harper Uunr* m
i neat cloth IXAu ing will in- sent by'express, free
|of expense, for $7 00 each. A
comprising eight .volumes, sent Aon
cash at the rate of *5 23 :M
publishei
Pi--:.. :.-t.'. s.iei.iio • w .1; owH| j
".'l
N- *
:.t a ... ..; -qg
Brothers. 7
A t-.-s HARP- 'H*.OTHLi!?B '
[PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETY
THE WEEKLY SUN.
ITT 6 NEW YORK. 1*76
Eighteen hundred and seventy six it, the
Centennial Year. It is also the year in which
an Opposit.on House of Repr sent:!lives, thta
first since the war, will be in power it Washl
ington; an 1 a year of the twenty third elecl
tion of a President of the United States. All
of these events are sure to he of great iutclWfl
and importance, especially tin two latter;
all of them and everything
them will lie fullv and freshly -
expounded in THE SUN.
The Opposition House of
taking up the line ot inquiry opened year>B
by THE SUN, will sternly and di!ig<.-ni]^H
vestigate the misdeei s of (.rant‘d ndaujjfl
tion ; and will, it r> 1 be hoped. Jay
Uation for a mu, ;.m tie; p - rj*t in
tional history. Of : in MuiJi
< on.p.ste • •
;nc it- read, r- w , - v
.:. f•■ ri: ih .: •r i ::
Tin tveen’v ~
the preparation- toi m- n^B
■tec, ;inj ... < . ... •
of |,',\\er v 1
deej.jjng who -..an !■■■ !.C
par*y , f Rep.rn; . .. - '
da’e ( oi.i era l a.- •> * ! 'j'’’SMi-’t’
ren ; J !,. .sea' *. ,e '
being in or- - • Totim
'I In- Wei . w! i( h
e.la'a.n ot • . th^HHHBB^,
i A. V ■ iHk ’ .
v. ,■?--!& ''
J
. ■ ■■ ■
, w ~ - • •. - r. .
‘•s' : t an '■ • : a:.'
It ii our an. 'a .5 - t|j,. 'i; ’Vg
h-t fail.,- . -i -. in J®*
lii.oi ( out.lll •• t ; \ in ji, .
ainoun' '.l ;ei- -i, on, ~
•>’ ■ o i- ;.r. is, ~ 1
•'I 'gfM
able to n*ks -'• iiti .our daj|
'!
i
uiark*’i of -vi ry k ind.
1 tie ’V• e■ * .sun e.. 1,1 } 2
broad columns is only -
i A jji
! " .i" dm .. ii_ ’
*
one. *
The Daily Sun, a 1 argelP
’w, refits a i opy Sul iseri j■:
a. >V a month •.; s*;.so
- nthXi ex’ra, $i in p. - v. w^mr,’Wk 4
':a\"..lig qtl.’* . a
Assignee’s Sale of Vy
EstateTJi
WILL BE -<> >.N 1
of Jaliu.ni. "" " •'/fc, a
virtue (~! an 1 e U. u' flB
it- l' -'• ru. I'.. JS
property to-wit
One ia. .oty brick
• -J r . -nt ~He thru- JmsMi.
20 xN- 'if at.ai iouijflß^
< dlio a a.
•econo aUiiy.
k one hundred and riftv-f- -■
•-‘Jh’ - H :.t*p'.ai H
•ol r 4’
>(). fl