The Cassville standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 18??-1???, November 11, 1858, Image 1

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3 IBttklij /imnilij fimspiptr-—St&ntrli to tlit Untmato of tin j^aturanl ftmorratir ^arh), littraturf, ttje IHnrfette, Jerrign irai Domrstir Utm?, &r. B. F. BENNETT, Editor ui Publisher. 1 Efialttf la Ike Uaioa or hiepeaieiee oat of it.”. TERMS—TWO DOLLARS a-fwr, ia Airuee. VOL. X. CASSVILLE, GEO.. THURSDAY. NOV. 11. 1858. NO. 42. Spberiismeiits. JOB OFFICE. The Standard Office being well supplied with a large variety of the best kinds of print- ins' materials, we are prepared to do all kinds JOB PRINTING-, in the best style of the art, and at short no tice. Haring just received a Urge quantity of all kinds, and the latest styles, ot plain and fancy Cuts, Ornaments, Ac., and having oi •• line’s lightning Hand Presses,” we can do as nice printing as can be done at any office in the State, and at as low terms. Particular attention will be paid to the printing of Blanks, of all kinds, Blank Notes, Pro grammes, Hand and Show Bills, Posters, Ac. We respectfully solicit the patronage ot the public, with the assurance that all orders will he promptly and faithfully executed. U\ F. BENNETT, Cassrille, Ga. Publisher. Laws of Newspapers. 1. Subscribers who do not give express no tice to the contrary, are considered as wishing tu continue their subscriptions. •2. If subscribers order the discontinuance ot their newspapers without settling all arreara ges, the Publisher may continue to send them until they are paid for. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their newspapers from the offices to which they are directed, they are held responsible until they h ive settled the bills, and ordered a dis continuance. 4. If subscribers remove to other places with out informing the Publisher, and the newspa pers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. 5. It lias been decided bv the Courts that subscribers refusing to take their newspapers from the office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence of inten tional fraud. t». The Courts have also decided that a Post master who neglects to perform his duty of giv ing reasonable notice, as required by the Post- Olfice Department, of the neglect of a person to take from the office newspapers addressed to him, renders himself liable for the subscription price. Terms of the Standard. If paid strictly in advance, $2; if payment is delayed G months, $2.50 ; if delavea until the end of the year, $4. X » paper discontinued until paid for, except at the option of the Editors. Miscellaneous Advertisements inserted at $1 per square (twelve lines) for the first insertion, and on cents for each weekly continuance. Contracts for advertisements by the month or year will be made at fair rates. AND BUGGY-MAKING, AND SUOK-SMITtilNS, BY H. H. HOLMES, CASSVILLE, GA. I can put up any kind of Vehicle wanted, at short notice, and in as good style as it cau be done any- •c'ltrf. All work warranted. Cassrille, July 1st, 1358. SHOP, William Headden, CASSVILLE, GEO., , IS prepared to make and repair Carriage*. Buggies, Wagons, or ^ earthing in bis line of business. Ie has «n« oi the bast BLACKhMITH S and some of tbe best WOD WORKMEN in ^baufafal for past palronarft, be begs a con tinuance of the same. Work warranted. All those indebted to him for Inst year s shop accounts are requested to call and settle t>r cash or note, without delay. Cassrille, Mch 25. 1858—ly TTsSnuT aUate ftousw St Commission Dfei'ctani. AVGUSTA, GA. CONTINUES the business in all its branches, in his large and commo- . dious Fire-Proof Ware-house, on eksou street, near the Globe Hotel. Orders fur Goods, 4c., promptly and rare ly filled. Tbs usual cash facilities afforded iturners. July 22, 1858- ly BgT Messrs. Howard A Erwin, of Carters- le, are authorised to make cash advance* 00 turn or other produce consigned to hint. JNO W. FOSTER, CASSVILLE, GEO. . WILL do anr kind of work in hit line of business at aa low. rate* aa — > it can be done by any jpmd work, man in the State. As to his abilities as a work, man. h* refers t* any work done fay him. Con trasts takas in any part of the State. Jane Sd, 1858—ly. imuumii FRESH SUPPLY of Sida-striped Muv ' June A Hasi *1*0 Cigar.. CaHat ^usintss Curbs. JOS. DUNLAP, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Kingston, Cass co., Ga. June 10th, 1858—ly. B. II. LEEKE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Caksville, Ga. T>U31NESS entrusted to my care will meet Xj with prompt and vigilant attention, and monies puid over punctually. Feb. 1, 1858—ly. W V. WESTER, ATTORNKY AT LAW, CALHOUN, GEO. \\t ILL practice in all the counties of the | VV Cherokee Circuit. Particular attention paid to the collection of claims, and to prompt ly paving over the same when collected, i Nov 26, 185T—ly ANDREW H. RICE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Cassville, Geo. ; "PRACTISES in the Counties of Cass. Cher- , JL okee, Cobb, Catoosa, Gordon, Gilmer, i Fannin, Paulding and Whitfield, i Prompt attention given to the Collecting bu- j siness in nil of the above named counties. May be found in the office formerly occu pied by J. II. k A. II. Rice. June 17th, 1853—ly. THOMAS J. VERDERY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CEDAR TOWN, GA. Y1KTD<L practice in Ihe counties of Floyd, Vf Polk, Paulding, Carroll, Haralson and Cass. Strict, attention paid to collecting. Feb. 13, 1853—ly. M. J. Oil AW FOR |t, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, RINGOOLll, CATOOSA COPKTV, r.A. \\TILL practice in. all the counties "of the VV Cherokee Circuit. Particular attention paid to the collecting of money, and to paying over the same when col lected. mb 19, 1858—ly W offord, Crawford & Howard, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Cassvillk, and Cartf.rsville, Ga. rXTHiL faithfully attend to any business en- V v trusted to their care, in any of the coun ties of Upper Georgia. Win. T. Wofford, J. A. Crawford, Cassrille; J. A. Howard, Cartersville. July 23. E. M SKAGO & GAAIL SUCCESSORS TO E. V. SEAGO, Wholesale Grocers, PRODUCE DEALERS, AND GENERAL Commission Merchants, SOUTn SIDE PASSENGER DEPOT, Atlanta, Ga. March 13, 1858—ly. * S. B. OATMAlf, Dkalkk is Americas, Italian Axn Egtptiam Statcarv, and Tennessee Marble, Monuments, Tombs, Ub.ns and Vases, Marble Mantels, and Fcknishixg Marble, Atlanta, Ga. James Vaughan, Agent, Cassville, Ga. April 22, 1358—ly. SUMMEY A HURLICK, DEALERS IN MAEBLE monuments. Tombs, Urns, Vsi- SES, VAULTS, TABLETS, HEAD AND FOOT STONES, Ac. /~vRDERS promptlv filled. Address Marble V / Works P. 0., Pickens Co., Ga. James A’anglian, agent, Cassville, G*. Feb 1st, 1858—ly. DR. J. T. GROVES. —^HAS removed to the office next door to Mr A. C. Day’s shop, where he may be found both day and night, unle&sprofesaionally engaged. Prompt attention given to all calls, by day or night. Cassville, Jan. 21, 1853. M. McMURRY, Dealer in Family Groceries, CONFECTIONARIES, Ac., Cassville, Ga. Feb. 1st, 1858—ly. NEW XftflE UIU! isdlannms. From the Southern Recorder. A Type Foundry. To the Editors of the Southern Recorder: When at the Type and Stereotype Foundry of L. Johnson & Co., Philadel- - , . . phia, several months ago, I w« shown j " P the “ *"« '"** (th ? through the establishment bv Mr. Mack-1 letters >nd be,n * k * pt “P* _ oi, . , . T rate) and pass them over to the dressers, eller, one of the partners. On leaving, I > 7 , r A A „ I . , . . , ... , ; who work at tables arranged all around expressed a desire to have a written de- j _ ^ ® „ . .. .. ... . the walls. They undergo a searching scru- scnption, as it was impossible to remem- . . , 7 ® _ her all that I had seen during one hasty i *"* throu ^ h a S ,ass ’ and the visit Mr. Murphy, the intelligent fore- 1 defective **** **** W * !cfed ’ the re ‘ mainder,—a line at a time—are tightly ing to the large uppermost story of the' mixture is afterwards pouted on to form ceding experimenters, laid the foundation Sansom street HalL Here is a busy hive j the mould of a proper thickness. It is! of the present Philadelphia Type Foun- j of men and boys. The floor is nearly cov ered with circular stones, on which the rough edge of the broad sides of the types are polished to a glassy smoothness. This operation is performed with a powerful deftness. Another class of boys now set nd then. ling—its unfairness. Count the result of hostile meeting certain, and it is murder; count it hazard, and the stakes are une qual. Quoth Punch: Now in England wf have put an end man of the composition rooms, politely handed me the following slip from a news paper, which I beg you to republish. M. “ An idler, sauntering listlessly along Sansom or Swanwick street, might glance with little interest at the massive pigs of lead which sturdy men are carrying into the tall building on tbe corner. It is lead, and nothing more—the symbol of dullness and stupidity, and worth the market price, six or seven cents a pound perhaps. But if he were told that the skill, talent, and ingenuity of the occupants of that building converted this common material into shapes which, in some cases, com manded three dollars a pound, he might feel sufficient curiosity to ask for admit tance and permission to observe the curi ous process which can transmute so base a metal into such valuable forms. Permission being courteously granted, he is first ushered into the metal-house. Here is a grim-visaged man standing be fore a large caldron, and stirring with a long-handled ladle a molten combination, of which lead, copper and antimony, are the principal constituents. A metallic va por is slowly escaping up the chimney, as if it were the grosser nature of the metal exercised, and leaving behind a mixture of better potency than that concocted by j the witches in Macbeth. The floor is co-! screwed up and grooved at the bottom.— After being nicely scraped on the narrow sides, the types are now arranged in pages of a convenient size, and tied up and pa pered, and sent down to the warerooms ready for use or sale. A printing type may have been small and contemptible in the visitor’s estimation ; yet now, having learned that the services of ten persons are requisite to produce a single letter, and having witnessed somewhat of the then smoothed evenly and allowed to set, dry. Air. Binny’s ingenuity soon effect- j He has struck the sensible view of dud or harden. When this takes place, the ed a series of valuable improvements. The ” - ' ' ~ x “ ’* 11 flask, with the plaster mould adhering to stiffness and irregularity of the types in it is generally raised from the type by former use was avoided, and the long 2nd means of screws, and the mould is placed i various compound letters were abandon- in a fiery oven to have every particle of jdoned. A new hand-mould was invented, moisture evaporated from it. The casters I so perfect that it was never superseded to this kind of thing. Without reference arrange in an iron pan as many of the | until the recent introduction of machine' to the brutal folly and wickedness of the dried and now brittle moulds as will fill | moulds. The reputation of these foun- duel, we have put an end to it simply as it A cover is then clamped on, and screw-! dors was widely extended. Isaiah Thorn- rational beings who can do a sum in sub- ed on fast The pan is laid on the sur- j as’s “ History of Printing” was executed traction. We have—after a good many face of a glistening caldron of a thousand ' fro,n tyP 4 * manufactured by them. In years, wc confess, of Montague House and pounds or more of liquid type metal, which! 181 ’ 5 > the partnership was ended by the: Wormwood Scrubbs—arrived at the con- is allowed to run gently into apertures at! withdrawal of Mr. Binny. Of him, it was elusion that duelling is unfair, because the comers of the pan.’ Bv the aid of the 1 said b - v his Partner, Mr. James Eonaldson,; men are unequal in value, arm of a crane, the whole "is then forced! “ 11 Ls due to his character and talents to We now agree that an educated, in down to the bottom of the mass of molten i state . “ m - v hu,,,ble °P inio, b that the let '; tcllectual, working citizen, the mainstay metal After a short time it is lifted bv ter foundin S owes more of its improve- of a loved family, the adviser of trusting means of the crane, and deposited careful- menr 41111 simplification to him than to friends, a useful recognized man, with life ly into a trough in which water slowly an Y other individual, since its invention, assurances that would be vitiated if he flows. The hissing and spluttering of the Archibald Binny wc must consider as the fell in wilful fray, is no match foranemp- watcrasit comes into contact with the: fathcr and succcssful introducer of letter . ty-headed younger son, with just brains founding into the United States.” , enough for drill, pale ale and Skye terri- Thc Philadelphia foundry was carried ers, who has been put into the army to on for a few years longer by Mr. J. Ron- be got rid of, and who may chance to find warm-heated pan impel the visitor invol untarily to step backward. When suffi ciently cool, the pan is laid on a block,, skill and accuracy displayed bv the work- and its contents are removed. The moulds i al<Lson ’ when his brother Richard assumed room in his narrow skull for an idea that men, he looks upon the potent bits of; are ruined, surely enough ; but from the ! the business - He in turn was succeeded i be bils bccu insul;cJ - Arithmetic has set- metal with profound respect, and perhaps 1 crumbling ruins the solid stereotype plates | b - li- dobnson and * lr - < -* eor g e I - j ded tbe question, and t ocker forbids his philosophizes on their mighty influence ! come forth, instinct with science or senti-1 Smith, under the title of Johnson & Smith. > pistol cocking. on the weal of mankind.' ; menL While one pan of moulds is cool- Mr. Smith had long before been connect- In an aborning room, large types and ing in the water, another is being placed borders for show bills are cast These are 1 in the caldron ; and so on, in a continued necessarily slow in cooling, and are there-; course, the operation proceeds throughout fore cast in hand-moulds. If the visitor! the day. The plates, having been clean- should incautiously pick up one for ex-: sed from the adhering fragments of the amination, he would probably drop it in-! moulds, are sent to the stereotype finish- voluntarily, to the material detriment of, ing room for inspection. If they are ap his fingers as well as of the type. ! proved, any minor defects arising from He now enters the electrotype depart- j wind-holes in the moulds are removed, ment. Here he sees a press, moulds and and the plates aretumedand shaven down * * i * • . • j ivi null ifiii_ ilw tutv n. galvanic batteries, but hears no noise.— on the back to a uniform thickness; prov- °PP° se an experimenter in a new w,d , b n0W n to the family the .... ... i •< c .a .a a a C/MIfOoItT 11 nJorctlWlll VlO CM/'PAoHdiI 111 * 1 Nature works silently. His admiration is • ed again, levelled on the sides, and pack- excited by the perfect and beautiful ap- 1 ed up in nice little compartments in box- pemrance of the moulds which are taken ! es, which are labelled, ready for the press- from pages of type or from wood-cuts, and J man. which, after a certain preparation, arc j The visitor next turns into a little room , placed in the batteries. Quietly but ef- 1 adjoining, where Ihe wood-engravers are j circulating throughout the country. The UI vered with iron pans containing small ^ CUJTent precipitates ! at work . H ere his curious eye is delight- ! a «*^0“ of the new firm was signalled, ,nother Wl11 > 0U b -> , | Tectotalis* ix America.—A German ed with the foundry, as the head of its „ . . , mechanical departments, which he con-j'^’ M ‘-."ssinger, who has recently .. , . c . »* * • i * visited the United states, savs: tinued to oversee for ten years, the period i ’ . • . of the duration of thenew firm. Mr. John-, “ Tbe le,p f rance f ,ma B nl0st at son was a native of England, and had em- J ^ ^ Nortbt ™ tbe ** . . ,. , , , 'ey nave thoroughly frightened the nr- igratcd to this country m his boyhood.—, . ° * ° , ° . . . , , * . I mors into it. They mean it honestly e- He became a printer, and early gave cvi- • t . / „ , J , r t c Tii nough. If you visit one of them, you will dence of the possession of remarkable ° t , , * c u k v: 4 hnd nothing but water on the table—w&- shrewdness and energy of character. .Not-1 ^ _ ? . A • • , j. . , . * . . , | ter for breakfast, dinner, and supper. Af- withstandmg the many obstacles wind) . . , , . ter staying a lew days, and becoming son will first scarcely understood art, he succeeded m! __ , ...... . e ; take you one side. He will lead you into establishing an emcient stereotype foun- J dry ; and his imprint soon became “famil- i tbe stable - and «P rcss h,s 0 P UU0n ** a iar as a household word” on the title page dralu v ’’ ould do no hurt such a coU1 roor - of numerous standard and popular books j ni,1 «! but > ou n,ust not W at O thin S to father or mother. After dinner the house compartments, into which the metal-mixer pours the sparkling, silvery-looking com pound. This is now type-metal, ready for the caster’s use—a substance easily fused by heat, but hard and brittle when cold. The visitor next ascends "to the punch- cutter’s room. One of the workmen is cutting steel punches for a new fount of ctually tne electnc current precipitates at wori,. nere ms curious eje is ueugnt- ° . ! you into her sanctuary, and, behind the copper coating over the surface of the ed with specimens of beautiful wood-cuts ; | ^ tbe P“ blw f tl0a of a tkick a " d substan '! clothes press! she will open a secret door, mould, producing an almost indestructible ( and no wonder that he marvels at the tad Book of Specimens of their 1 and proJuce a nice bott i e of ^ ^ fac simile of the original. A metal filling, skill which can portray life and character j was perhaps twenty tunes as large • ^ whl>h she wil , gi ve yon some ‘stom- is run upon the back of the plate, which j so exquisitely by means of delicate touch-1 35 tbc original Specimen Book of tlus | ^ ^ , S[(C fhinlfs t j lou „h the fa- is properly trimmed, and the operation is es with a graver on the surface of a block j Joundiy, and evinced a determination toj uw d know’nothing of these of: of hard wood. keep the establishment in the nrst rank, j ^ ^ complete. Multitudes of wood cuts, every variety of design, are here produced ; A small printing room is next glanced from patterns got up by the establish-! at, where the standing and general appear- Last of all, after supper, yoiw rad The introduction of a type-casting ma- . ... , _ ... ,. - ~ . j ,! host will conduct you into his study, chine was soon after effected with decided. ...... ... . from one of his bottles m a medicine chest, the best of the guages. IV ith skilful finger, he is fash- J Another room contains skilful workers j terly publication of the establishment are I ed advance fof bbi times, and productive j ^ ag to ^j; c j nc jj 0 too warns T0U but the successful; •’ ‘ , J type. His eye is hidden by a magnifying j men ^ an( j exhibited in their Book of' ancc of new types are tested, and where i success - The improvements devised by , ^ ^ vou 0((t # , glass. Before him lie delicate files and | Specimens.,. I the elegant specimen sheets and the quar-1 ^ lr - ® lnn y in ^ be h an d-mould were a mark-, , " , ° t J • W't.K clrtir.,1 tirnr 5c fact,-I ... . . , , I. . ... .. . .... . mA advance for hU tinum. and nmdnrtiv* • » UUl J ou uo un ioning a letter on the end of a strip of sof- ; n alM i WO od; for this establishment! printed, with all possible care and accura- i £ rea *' advantages; tened steel ; a touch here, and a touch ' there, and the constant testing by a guage—so he proceeds in his beautiful use Printing blocks superior to any j looks around at the immense number of work, till, letter by letter, in the course of weeks the alphabets composing a fount ,. .. „ , . . , . ' to keep the secret to yourself.” is so complete as to be able to produce or ■ cy. Descending now to the lower story, i application of machinery to ty pc-makmg; furnish every thing requisite for printers’! the visitor enters the warerooms. j] e | is an era in the art deserving ol commem-, The F. F. \ s.—Many of our rev.d- e number of ! oration - t1m: machine introduced into [ er s have cither seen or heard of the made in Europe, galleys, cases, stands,' packages of types of various styles on the ! this foundr y was invented by ^ Mr. David | « First Families of Virginia,” but few, we racks, boxes for packing type or stereo- j shelves encompassing the rooms—he; Bruce > Jr > of New York * Vanous at ', take it, know how t!ie tenn originated.— arc completed—capitals and small letters, j typc plate) arc manufactured here, as j marks the busy operations of book keep-! tem I lts to cast S 00 * 1 D P® b J* machinery i An exchange explains it thus: Roman and Italic, small capitals, figures, j weU ^ brass ^ of p ] a5n or fanciful | er , clerks, and persons employed in put- j ^ h* 611 made » but b,therto 411 had fiul - j In the early settlement of that State, it fractions, reference marks, &c I styles, either in long strips, or cut accu- j ting up and sending away to all parts of' ^ in producing type that was not porous. ; was f oun( i impossible to colonize it unless The punches arc carried into the justi- ! rately to pica ems, from one to fifty ems ' 0 ur countiy articles ordered by numerous j The l - v P e made in **•“ machine is solid, j WO incn went there. Accordingly, a ship ficr’s room. Here, one by one they are ! long, for the convenience of printers in ■ customers—he rapidly glances over one | 41,(1 superior to any cast in a hand-mould., load was sent out, hut no planter was al- adjustedina machine, and an oblong table work, &c. Here alsothe electrotype 0 f the ingenious and elegantly printed! A short time after the introduction of, i oux d to marry one of them until he had ,, _ .. [ “ Specimen Books,” which exhibits an j this machine, the partnrrship of Johnson j first paid one hundred pounds of tobacco laid under it, and by one motion of the ; height, so as. to be used in the same page impression of a line or more of all the i ^ Smith having expired, Mr. Johnson as- for her passage. AY hen the second ship piece of copper, previously prepared, is J cuts are blocked on mahogany of type- ^ « Specimen Books,” machine an impression deep and durable ! with printing type. Machines and appli- kinds of type manufactured here—he runs 1 s°ciated with him Mr. Thomas Mackel-; load came no one would pay more than is made in the copper. The justifier ac- ! ances for accurate and expeditious work j over the columns of the “ Typographical' ler ( lbr many years foreman of his sterilo- j seventy-five pounds for the matrimonial curately files and squares up the pieces of j abound in this room, not the least curious j Advertiser,” a quarterly papar edited by ; ^FP e foundry.) and Messrs. John !•. and privilege, except it were a very superior copper, which are now called matrices, \ of which is a machine for mitering rules the firm—he peeps into a large fireproof Ricliard Smith (sons of his former pert- article. Consequently, the descendants one for every letter and sign used in : for diagrams of almost every shape. ' chamber, connecting with the warerooms, uer.) A new volume of specimens was of all those who were sold for one hundred printing. This is exceedingly nice work, I At this stage, the visitor perhaps feels ■ w hich keeps out of harm’s way the thou- the bcau ty, ingenuity, and superi-, pou nds of tobacco were ranked as the as the variation of a hair in breadRi or ■ that he has never witnessed so many cu- sands of punches and of the matrices in °rity of which over all others, were at ■ fj rsl families, while those who brou^it thickness would be fetal to the appear- rious and interesting processes in so short w hich types are cast—and he must be of, once demonstrated by the large increase bu t seventy-five pounds are now ranked ance of the type cast in them. Around a space, and comprised in a single estab- an exceedingly uncommon species of man °T business consequent upon its publica-, ^ the second families, and the reason A. C. Day’s shop, where he be found j ^ Qthcr artisans are busfly engag- J lishment But he is not through yet— I if he does not now entertain the idea that j tion - T1, ' ,s firm sti11 continues, and pn- why n0 one can ever find any of the sec- red. Prompt attention given to all calls, ed—some building type-casting machines, He is conducted into the stereotype de- a vas t amount of skill, talent, and indus- j a reputation at om~ an a roac sec ond families, is because jou cant get a others making moulds, filing, polishing, ' partment j try. is requisite to originate and keep in j ond to nonc in thc country.” j Virginian to admit that his mother only j ljrofight seventy-five pounds of tobacco. try, is requisite to originate and keep in j' planing iron by machinery, others tum-j The three rooms he now passes through succe ssful operation a business so multi- ] The 11 Qoose Question.” ing brass rule circles, or making brass are occupied by compositors and proof fa riously intricate. Nor would he be; 0 ur readers have all heard of thc fa-i Genius. Talent, Cleverness, ovals, of various fanciful styles, for labels, readers and filled with hundreds upon wrong in such a conclusion ; and he would mous « Googe Question ;’ but fevr , wc 0 . j r ^ nius nishcs , jkc a whirlwind . ufant Ac., and others manufacturing broad type hundreds of cases of uncounted vanet.es furnish good indication of the possession ^ uu ^ nUA with iU} origin, or j lnarcbus uke a ca Va icade of heavy men metal rule, Ac. j * ^ ”» f thoughts fece of ^ intelligent mind desirous of new ac-; ^ ^ , ble t0 furnish a satisfactory solu ] horses; cleverness skims like a swal- The interested visitor next proceeds to and nimble fingers make visible and prac- quisitions, if he should inquire into the ^ of it If uy onc ^ furnish a ^ ^ - n a eve - with a gha _ the type-casters’room. Here are some tical the ethereal mental operations of the history of American type founding in gen- ^ we ^ ^ him todogo aml thus ^ ^ ^ tu ^ place us “ all nght on the Goose Ques- man of talent in his study. But genius i tion:”—At. Amer. : dwells with men and nature. The clever “ A man goes to market to buy geese man dances here, there and everywhere, string men^of Books. e Stat!onerv*MB*i- ! ny as one hundred and twenty a minute, h^-from the ponderous quarto to the . mestic pnnting-types. The firat.success- rate of $1 for 2) and $15 for the ;i0 . The ' ^ iQ picce8# Xhe man of talent cal Instruments, Fancy Goods, This i s a curious machine, of American timest booklet for children; t e exa sci- ful effort on record was made inli- , y gc^md parcel he obtained at the rate of w ;n attack theories. NEW GOODS! NEW STORE! CATION AND NEW ARRANGEMENT lIliriY UUILUUIW IVI J a ’ u • large* and small, plain and ornamental, as perience and cultivated taste not unfre- far. weU as music and borders, going dick! quently lay authors under obligations by j The permanent establishment and in- j W _ A™,** ' ! click! making letters as fast as the work-j valuable suggestive hints. Here perhaps CT eas,e of printing-offices, in the colonies and buys two lots containing thirty each. | like a butterfly in a hurricane, W m. ILay, Agent, ! man can turn a crank, some kinds as ma- twenty or tlnrty volumes are at once m j naturally incited attempts to produce do- purchasing ^ first , ot) he ^ ^ tlie j hin , r J d enj ^ but tot The clever whole^e«dre’Jr.‘tae Wrat°^‘bfe invention. In the hinder part is a pot of ences-hLsto^, music andpoetry-figimes Christopher Sowers, a printer in German- $1 for 3 and $10 for the whole lot , thits sails individuality. But thc man of geni cVu . I . , 1 , Kt- . and words—books for the learned, the town, Pennsylvania, who cast types for ! . ,, . , u.e cash rates. A share of the public patronrge is ! m etaL which is kept liquid by a furnace and words books respectfully solicited. ' " “ types for gj v i n g for sixty geese. us despises both. He. heeds none, he fears Particnlar paid to eoanirv orders ! underneath. In the pot is a forcing pump, not so-learned, and the simple-allat once j his own use, and who was followed more , .. Ifeing d^satu-fied with the bargain, be Uves in himse.i; shrouded in the and forwarded per return mail, railroad, ex- \ w hich at every revolution of the crank in- assuming body and perpetuity. Type y extensively by his son. A jerman ' e he wishes to sell them for the amount consciousness of his own strength—he in- preas or stage. P!e«e remember foe place- mlan titv of metal into type, line after line is formed m the com- is said to have been printed by him. Ben- ^ CQgt To Mye in counting terferes with ,^6, and walks forth an ex- CSKar-aSr ' jects a sufficient quantity of metal depot, Atlanta, Geo. Jan. 21,185S—ty. * * ‘ ■ “ REMOVAL. Dr. J. W. Kinabrew, the mould as it comes up with undeviat- posing stick, till the pages are made out, jamin Franklin brought materials for a he mX]s ^ in lots of 5 at $3 per amp.e, a representative. Eagles biuld a- ing regularity to receive the charge; the which are then securely fastened in an type foundry from England, and succeed- ^ wou]d seem that , having in separate lont . sheep bed together, ft a venomous mould then springs back, opens its steel iron frame called a chase, and a proof is edm producing a few type and metal or-. trades bought them at the prices of 2 for rmtifa com his path he may crush it with jaws, and, as it were, spits out the type taken. This is read; the errors (humam- naments. , These partial endeavors to in- ^ and 3 for he would loose nothing in: his foot The ear which snarls at him, | into a gutter leading to a receiving box. ties’ faffing) marked and corrected; anoth-, troduce the art in a new countiy served seUing them at the of 5 for *2. But he mav ch a St fa e ,- bu t he cannot rad will > ! The letter on the end of the type (or its er proof taken and sent to the author. . to open the way to the success of others concluding the trade, he finds he has : not attack. Clover men write venea, taen eontinaes to ««er fa^) fa fonned in the copper matrix, When it has been returned by him, it is of superior dull and cultivation. At leas ^ hjs gixty geege for ^ and of course 1 0 f talent write prose, genius creates poet- toerery which is held at the back of the mould read agmn-in some rases ^reread-and seven experiments had been made p rev.- ha8lost|lin ^ tlade . Why did he ^ -• * ‘ ' ‘ n fi),o «fmn the naees ase sent ’to the stereotype ous to the advent of Messrs. Binny A Koo- n.. .i ik. * m jy There are two thin^ that wilt t make us happy in this life if we attend! to ; them. The first is, never yex ourselves Bohannon. aldson. One of these had been in opera- nte he pmjd for fa fa. rju j r b y of a s p™*- ^y oi Terrell’., where he can be type is formed in the mould. casting-room. found during the day. at ^ mould with ’ Here a frame (called a juu*,) wun a uou mnn ---mous goose night aa the reaideoee Utaly V-* 1 I Tbe t yP e , CO “" .. , , .. , ___ —j. is placed around the Baine, who had essayed it and had found _ " *• " ~ ' ‘ Uttte 2fl° f, !f , ! i rbien off by boys, pages ■ the surface tff thl type is oiled, full employment, died, and his foundry “ Are these pure ranari^V” asked about what we can’t help, radthe swmd J cScd into the finishers L^d. mixture of gypsum and water, mar- was closed. The type for twenty^ne a A Good Supply OF fine Candies, Oranges, 'aMWTBI. * *• 1 YffiJ^rSowtT*. Cassville. July Trt, IFM. end. The jets are orwira ou oy ^“ d ” ’ ixture ofWmmm and water, "« dosed. The type for twenty-one n gentleman of s bird fender, with whom fa, to never vex ourselves about what we ;^the^.s c^ed mtotihefin^rs “^^^ckwheat batter, volumes of an Encyclopedia printed by he w« negotiating for a pair. “Yes, sir,”.era hdp. >■»- room. To reach this, the ^ -sldlfui: Dobson vras rast ^ hi. foundry. said the dealer, confidentially; “I raised — *“* a® airy yet substotid mm stairbndge Messre. Binny Bonalifecn. in 1776, thm ’ere birds from this very canary i A fine coat may cover a fool, but (nniiidiac one of Ihe .maul bridy et faU? to neprftheeir ie CaA Ihe ptoei the bSM- aa m «»** purchasing Hie materials and tools of pre- seed.'' never conceals one %