Newspaper Page Text
(Suns front tjjo flirts.
SONIi~FDK ALGbfci'.
BY HARRIET MARTINEAU.
Beneath this starry arch,
Nodght or is still;
But all things hold their inarch
As if by one great will.
Moves one, move all;
Hark to ihe foot-fall!
On,on, forever.
Yon sheaves were once but seed;
Will ripens into deed ;
As cave-drops swell the rtreams
Day thoughts feed nightly dreams;
And sorrow tracketh wrong,
As echo follows song.
On, on, for ever.
By night, like stars on high,
Tne hours reveal their tiain ;
They whi-per and go by ;
I never watch in vain.
Moves one, move all;
Ha:k to the foot-fall!
On, on, for ever.
They pass the cradle head,
And there a promise shed,
Taey pass the moist new grave,
And bi.i rank verdure wave ;
They bear thiough every clime,
Tne harvests of all mne.
On, on, for ever.
LOVG SONG.
Girl, of the red lip,
Love me! love me!
Gid of the red lip,
Love me!
’T is by it* curve, I know,
Love fa.hioneth his bow,
And bends it, ah! even so—
O girl of red lip, love me!
Gi.l ol the blue eye,
Love me! love me!
Girl of the dew eye,
Love me!
Worlds hang for lamps on high,
And thought’s world lives in tuy
Lustrous and tender eye—
O girl of the blue eye, love me !
Girl of the low voice,
Love me! love me !
Gill of the sweet voice,
Love me!
’T is the echo of a bell—
’T is the bubbling of a well,
Sweeter, love! within doth dwell—
O girl of the low voice, love me!
(Scittrnl Ctlrrtir.
[From the London Chronicle.]
CONFESSIONS OF \ SWORD SWAL
LOWER.
1 have been connected with the con
juring and tumbling professions, and
every branch of them, for forty-six
years. I lost my mother when a child,
a id my lather was a carpenter, and al
lowed me to go with the tumblers. 1
continued tumbling until my feet were
knocked up. 1 tumbled twenty-three
or twenty four years. It was never
what you call a good business, only a
living. 1 got £3 a week certainly, at
one time, and sometimes £4; but you
had to live up to it, or you were no
thing thought of; that is to say, if you
kept ‘’good company.” Now there is
not a living to be made at the trade. —
Six and twenty years ago 1 began to
practise sword swallowing against the
celebrated Kamo Samee, who was then
getting £25 or £3O a week. 1 first
practised with a cane, and found it diffi
cult to get the cane down. When I
first did it with the cane 1 thought I was
a dead man. There's an aperture in the
chest which opens and shuts ; and it
•keeps opening and shutting, as I under
stand it; but I know nothing about
what they call anatomy, and never
thought about such things. Well, if
the cane or sword goes down upon this
aperture when it is shut, it can go no
further, and the pain is dreadful. If
it’s open, the weapon can go through,
the aperture closing on the weapon.—
Ihe first time I put down the cane 1
got it back easily, but put my head on
the table and was very sick, vomiting
dreadfully. 1 tried again the same af
ternoon, however, three or four hours
afterwards, and did it without pain. 1
d.d it two or three times more, and the
next day boldly tried it with a sword,
and succeeded. The sword was blunt,
and was thirty six inches long, an inch
wide, and perhaps a sixth of an inch
thick. I felt frightened with the cane,
but not with the sword. Before the
sword was used, it was rubbed with a
handkerchief, and made warm by fric
tion. 1 swallowed swords for fourteen
years.
At one time 1 used to swallow three
swords, a knife, and two forks, of course
keeping the handles in my mouth, and
h iving all the blades in my stomach
together. I felt no pain. No doubt
many of the audience felt more pain in
seeing it than lin doing it. I wore a
Turkish dress both in the streets and
the theatres. I never saw ladies faint
at my performance—no, there was no
nonsense of that kind. Gentlemen
often pulled the sword and knives by
their handles out of my mouth, to con
vince themselves that it was real, and
they found it was real, though the peo
ple to this day generally believe it is
not. Iv’e sometimes seen people shud
der at my performance, but I general
ly had loud applause. 1 used to hold
my head back with the swords in my
stomach for two or three minutes. I’ve
had a guinea a day for sword swallow
ing. 1 his guinea a day was only for
a few days at fair times. I was with
old “ salt-box” Brown, too, and swal
lowed swords and conjured with him.
1 swallowed swords with him thirty
times a day—more than one each time,
some times three or four. I had a third
ot the profits; Brown had two-thirds.
We divided after all the expenses were
paid. My third might have been thir
ty shillings a week, hut it wouldn’t be
half as much now if I could swallow
swords still. If 1 could swallow a tea
kettle now the people would hardly
look at me. Sometimes—indeed, a
great many times—say twenty —I have
brought up oysters out of my stomach
after eating them, just as 1 swallowrd
them, on the end of the sword. At
other times there was blood on the end
of the blade. I always felt faint after
the blood, and used to take gin or any
thing I could get at hand to relieve me,
which it did for a time. At last I in
jured my health so much that I was
obliged to go to the doctor’s. I used to
eat well, and drink too.
, hen 1 felt myself injured by the
shallowing 1 had iost my appetite, and
e octor advised me to take honey
and liquids, tea, beer, and sometimes
f ,o° gro . s * At three months’ end,
16 ? A . me I swallowed swords it
would be my death; but for all that I
was forced to swallow swords to get a
meal to swallow. 1 kept swa i lo * ;
swords three or four years after this
not feeling any great suffering. I then
tnought 1 would swallow a live snake.
I’d never heard of any one, Indian or
any body, swallowing a live snake. It
came into my head once by catching a
grass snake in the fields in Norfolk. I
said to myself, as 1 held it by the neck,
“ There seems no harm ia this fellow ;
I’ll try if I can swallow him.” I tried
then and there, and 1 did swallow him.
It felt cold and slimy as it went down.
1 didn’t feel afraid, for 1 kept tight hold
of him by the tail; and no one has any
right to be afraid of a grass snake.—
When I brought the snake up again, in
about three minutes, it seemed dead.
After that i introduced snake swallow
ing into my public performances, and
did so for about four years. 1 have
taken five shillings, and as low as one
shilling, when 1 have swallowed snakes
in the streets of London. I catehed
my own snakes a few miles from Lon
don, and killed very few through swal
lowing on ’em. Six snakes, properly
fed on milk, lasted me a year. The
snakes never injured me ; and 1
shouldn’t have given it up, but tbe per
formance grew stale, and the people
would give me anything for it. 1 have
swallowed swords in the streets thirty
to forty times a day, and snakes as
often, both in town or country. 1
thought once I couldn’t have followed
any other sort of life; you see I’d
been so long accustomed to public life;
besides 1 may have liked it far better
than labour, as most young men do,
but no labour can be harder than mine
has been.
If my father had been what he ought,
he might have checked my childish do
ings and wishes. 1 have tried other
things, though, in the hope of bettering
myseif. 1 have tried shoemaking for
five or six years, but couldn't get a liv
ing at it. 1 wasn’t competent for it—
that’s two years ago—so now I’m mu
sician to a school of acrobats. Very
many like me remain in the street busi
ness, because they can’t get out of ir;
that’s the fact. Whilst 1 swallowed
swords and snakes I played the fire
eater. I did it once or twice last week.
1 eat red-hot cinders from the grate;
at least I put them in my mouth real
ly red-hot cinders. 1 have had melted
lead in my mouth. 1 only use a bit of
chalk. I chalk my palate, tongue, and
fingers; it hardens the skin of the
tongue and palate, but that’s all. Fire
eating affects the taste for a time, or
rather it prevents one tasting any thing
particularly. I’ve eaten fire for twen
ty years in the streets and in public
places. It hadn't brought any money
of late years. I wasn t afraid when 1
first tried it by eating a lighted link—
a small flambeau. 1 felt no inconve
nience. The chalk did every thing
that was right. You may stroke a red
hot poker with chalked hands and not
be burnt. I make the same as the acro
bats; perhaps I average 12 s. a week,
and have a wife and six children, the
oldest under eleven, to maintain out of
that. Sometimes we’re obliged to live
upon nothing. When I was slipper
making 1 had from 3s. 6d. to 4s. a
dozen, the grindery costing me Is. 6d.,
leaving me 2s. for a dozen. I eou!d
only clear 6s. a week by it; that’s all
I could get out of the slop-shops.—
There’s one thin” coming from sword
swallowing that I ought to mention. —
I'm satisfied that llamo Samee and 1
gave the doctors their notions about a
stomach-pump.
llwiiimjri nt Ilnniumt.
‘l’ll put you through a course of
sprouts,’ as the man said when he plant
ed his potatoes.
A woman that does not love a flower
—particularly a so/i-flower—deserves
not to be loved.
If a man were to set out calling
everything by its right name, he would
be knocked down before he got to the
corner of the street.
Never be angry with your neighbour
because his religious views differ from
yours; for all the branches of a tree do
not lean the same way.
When Simpkin’s wife kicked him out
of bed, says he—“ Bee here, now!
you'd better not do that again! If you
do, it will cause a coolness!”
There is a young Miss in this city,
who, when her parents refuse to allow’
her to attend a ball, will set to and have
a bawl at home. Interesting child,
that,
————
It is full fifteen years ago that we
asked an acquaintance how he felt
while a prisoner in Egypt; but we re
member the reply : “l felt like a book—
bound in Morocco.”
A Western editor requests those of
his subscribers who owe him for more
than six years’ subscription, to send
him a lock of their hair, so that he may
know they are living.
“Is them there Bibles?” asked a
verdant specimen, of the clerk of the
superior court, as he pointed to a pile
of blank records of wills. “ No,” an
swered the clerk, “ those are testa
ments.”
A Western paper informs us that “a
lady, w hile stepping into one of the
cars with a pair of spectables on, missed
her footing, and came near losing her
life.” A car with a pair of spectacles
on must be a curiosity.
“ How is your son to-day ?” asked a
friend of a stock-brother. “Very bad,”
replied the old gentleman, striving to
compose his agitated features; “very
bad indeed ! 1 would not give ten per
cent, for his chance of life.”
“Julius, do you know de halls ob de
Mon tezu mars ?”
“Os course I does, nigga; he’s de
brother of Gen. Taylor, and was nurs
ed by Sarah Gordon.”
“Why, how de darky talks; by and
by coloured men will know as much as
the militia.”
“ What are you writing there, mv
boy?” asked a fond parent the other
day of his hopeful son and heir, a shaver
of ten years. “My compesition, thir.”
“ What is the subject?” “ International
law, thir,” replied the youthful Grotius.
“But really, 1 shall be unable to con
thentrate my ideas, and give them a
logical relation, if I am conthantly in
terrupted in tliith manner by irrelevant
inquiries.”
SOUTHERN LITERARY GAZETTE.
far tilt
THE ALLINE TUNNEL.
Modern utilitarianism is rapidly de
stroying the romance of travel, and
the wonders of nature will soon be en
tirely eclipsed by the triumphs of art.
The Britannia tubular bridge is a great
er marvel than the Meuai straits, and
the Suspension bridge at Niagara shares
the popular applause with the cataract.
We can go by steam through the Orient,
and will, ere long, cross the Isthmus of
Suez in a railroad car. Ruins are be
ing demolished to make way for mo
dem improvements; brigands, and other
romantic incidents of travel, fly before
the car of progress —the locomotive—
and travellers now-a-days can as little
count upon a “sentimental journey,” as
they can count upon a journey to the
moon. Even the Alps are to be abol
ished from the catalogue of travellers’
wonders, and instead of scaling the
heights and wondering at the magnifi
cence of mountain, valley, glacier and
cataract, we are to slide through the
interior of Mt. Cenis and emerge on the
opposite side, leading nature and all
her marvels far over head, while art
drags us through a pitchy tunnel.
To give an idea of the nature of the
great seven mile tunnel through the
Alps, we are enabled to inform our
readers, from descriptions given in Ei -
glish journals, that in its progress th ■
tunnel must pass under some of the
most elevated Crests of Mount Cenis
—one, in particular, where there will
be 4850 feet of mountain, capped with
eternal glaciers, over head, at the mid
dle of the tunnel; so that not only will
tlfe workmen and machinery in con
struction, and the passengers and trains
in transit, be buried to that depth in
the heart of the mountain, but all idea
of shafts, either to facilitate excavation,
or to promote ventilation, must be out
of the question. The breath of life it
self must be respired, from either ex
tremity, with artificial aid, in the shape
of currents of fresh air transmitted, and
of foul withdrawn, by mechanical ap
paratus ever at work, at least during
excavation, which is also itself to be ef
fected by machinery of anew and sim
pie nature, worked by water power of
mountain streams, whereby the trains
are also to be run through the tunnel,
which ascends, from the northern or Sa
voy side, at Modane, all the way to its
exit at Bardonneche, with a gradient
equal to 19 in 1,000. The machine,
once presented to the rock, projects in
to it simultaneously four horizontal se
ries of sixteen scalpels, working back
wards and forwards by means of springs
cased in, and put in motion by the
same water power. W hile these are at
work, one vertical series on each side
works simultaneously up and down, so
that altogether they cut four blocks, or
rather insulate four blocks on all sides,
except on the rock behind, from which
they are afterwards detached by hand.
It has been already ascertained, that
each of the two machines, at the oppo
site side of the tunnel, will excavate to
the extent of twenty-two feet a day ;
and it is estimated that the whole exca
vation will be completed in four years.
The gallery to be perforated by the ma
chines will be thirteen feet wide by
seven feet high; and this once cut
through, the bore will be enlarged by
ordinary means to twenty-five feet in
width and nineteen feet in height, and
a double line of rails laid. The esti
mated cost of this great tunnel is only
13.804,9421’ or about $2,700,000. It
is to be immediately commenced at the
north entrance.
Hannibal and Napoleon little imagin
ed that the perils of the passage of the
Alps were to be abolished in this sum.
mary manner, by science in 1850. No
after hero can ever boast of the gigan
tic task which the Carthagenian and
French generals accomplished, for sub
sequent armies will be sure to pass
through the tunnel, comfortably seated
in railroad cars, rather than drag artil
lery over the mountain roads, with fin
gers and toes freezing in the bitter air,
and enduring privations that are to car
ry their names, or their General’s name,
down to posterity as models of endu
rance and courage. Travellers —all ex
cept poets and romantic ladies—will pre
ferthe journey through the bowels of the
mountains, to the labour and delay of
the journey over their summits, and
hereafter crossing the Alps will be
looked upon as a traditionary absurdi
ty, abolished by the common sense
views of the nineteenth century.
[ Bulletin.
GLASS WATER PIPES.
We are glad to know that glass tubes
are now coining into a very general
use for conveying water. Mr. Win.,
T. Ue Golyer, of Schenectady, N. Y.,
has a patent for making tubes of such
a form as to couple different lengths
together, and form glass conductors for
water, of any length. About 1000
rods of glass pipes of different diame
ters have already been laid down, and
Mr. John Matthews, of First Avenue,
this city, has tested the strength of a
pipe 1 1-4 inch in diameter, made at the
Albany Glass Works, (Mr. Mayer, 139
Front st., N. Y., is agent,) and found
it capable of standing a pressure of
200 lbs. to the square inch, or a column
of water 450 feet high. Mr. Wilson,
of Hastings, a few miles out of the
city, has connected these glass tubes
with a hydraulic ram to stand a pres
sure of 80 feet high. After the joints
were cemented only four days the wa
ter was let on, and the joints were
found perfectly tight. It is well known
that glass is anti-corrosive, and resists
all action of the elements of air and
every kind of water: it is therefore in
destructible, and when kept from the
action of frost, it may be considered
as enduring as the everlasting hills.—
By them water is conveyed in all its
purity from the fountain, as the interior
is too smooth to allow any weeds or
vegetable formation to adhere to it. —
We do not know the price for laying
down different sizes of pipe, (although
they are very cheap), but Mr. De Gol
year or Mr. Mayer will no doubt
promptly furnish all necessary infor
mation on the subject, if letters are ad
dressed to them, post-paid.
[Scientific American.
Paper Folding Machine. —We have
seen several descriptions of the newly
invented machine for the folding of
sheets from the press, but until yester
day never saw it in operation. One of
the inventions lias been temporarily at
tached to the printing press of the Tran
script, and the sheet as worked off ful
ly printed, passes through a succession
of four sets of cylinders, placed at
right angles, one above the other, which
deliver the paper upon a platform, com
pletely folded as fast as it is printed. —
We have a young man in our office who
thinks that he can beat steam in fold
ing papers, but the machine beats him.
[Boston Courier.
1 Cnhrara tn fm.
VIOLINS AND FIDDLES;””
OR HOW JACOB LOST MONEY BOR NOT GO
ING TO SCHOOL WHEN HE WAS A BOY.
Near Pittsburg there lives an aged
Dutchman, named Jacob Heinman,
who has by his industry accumulated
a large property. The old man is at
all times ready to yield up his sub
stance liberally, for the support of
schools. He deems it his duty to do
this feeling the want of early education
in his own case.
A gentleman called upon Jacob not
long ago, to ask his aid in establishing
an academy in the adjoining county,
and in the course of his appeal to the
old man’s philanthropy, he casually ob
served that there were many words
in the English language which signify
the same thing, and that it was neces
sary that boys should learn them from
books.
“ Schtop—schtop—l know dat,” said
Jacob. “ Now 1 dells you how I knows
dat. Soom twenty years ago. I goes
down on to Filadelfy mil, my vagon,
to kit soom koots for de Bittsburg mer
chants. Veil 1 kits him, and up in de
top of de mountain, my . agon sdicks
fast in de mot. Den I takes off all
mine koots, and put him by de site of
de read. Veil, mishter schoolmaster,
I feels one light parrel, and 1 say to
mineself “ Dere, dem poys in Macal
ester’s store in Filadelfy play on me
anuder trick—dey send one empty par
rel py me giear to Bittsburg. Veil, I
takes de empty parrel, and I puts him
on his het up, and I sees him marked
“Violins.” Den I know it vas von
drick, pecuuse I knows dere vas no such
man in all Bittsburg as Mishter Violins,
and I kits so mad mit myself for being
made such a fool of dat 1 shoost dukes
my axe and l prakes de empty parrel
ail into lcetle smashes. Now, Mr.
school-master, vat you dink vas in dat
parrel marked to Mr. Violin? Fittles
(fiddles) sur, all full of fittles ! Veil,
veu J gets to Bittsburk I have to pay
doo hooutret dollars to one French
man, shoost because I did not know
dat vio.in and little vas de same ding.
Now I gives you one hundred dollars
for your pig school. Here ish de mo
ney.— Cineinnati Gazette.
£3pln New England, many years
ago, it was absolutely indispensable
that the cellar of every famby, who
laid claim to any respectability , should
boast of a barrel of pork. Consequent
ly, as it is a Kingly prerogative to pos
sess the power of conferring the “hon
our of Knighthood” upon a “ common
mortal,” so was t his “vile stuff”—which
Jews regard with such an intense de
gree of loathing—invested with the mi
raculous faculty of elevating to a grade
of comparative distinction or depress
ing to a point which “ argues yourself
unknown,” any individual in society.
The unfortunate Mr. Hogsf esh , in
Lamb’s farce of “ Beware of a Bad
Name,” notwithstanding the high esti
mation in which pigs ought to be held,
would have lost both a beautiful mis
treas and a tempting fortune, had not
a generous and witty parliament mag
nanimously changed his name t<> Bacon.
A gentleman, in a certain little town
where an aristocratic feeling prevailed
to an alarming extent, was blessed with
two daughters, who had long ambitious
ly panted after wealthy husbands, and
the entree into fashionable society, and
whose claim to that latter enviable pri
vilege was not quite firmly enough es
tablished. This gentleman, to his hor
ror, one day, met a villainous looking
rascal rapidly ascending his cellar
stairs, laden with “ stolen sweets.” —
With a dauntless courage he rushed
upon him, and, in thundering tones,
roared forth, “ You young desperado,
what are you doing in my cellar?—
Stealing my pork , I suppose ! You
shall rue it, sir!” The unblushing bur
glar, with an effrontery worthy of all
admiration, his keen eves twinkling
with Yankee shrewdness, avowed the
premeditated theft of pork, “ but,” con
tinued he, “I didn't find any, and if you
will let me off, I won't expose you.”
[Drawing Room Journal.
Smart.—A little boy was sent up
stairs by his mother to get a satchel
that hung behind a wardrobe. The boy
returned without the required article,
upon which his mother asked :
1 Couldn’t you find it’!’
‘ Yes; I saw it there, but— ’
‘Why didn’t you get it then V
‘ Because the old musket stood close
by it,’ said the boy shaking his head
knowingly, \md I was afraid it would
snap.’
Linden is the heading to
a very amusing parody on Campbell’s
famous ode on the Battle of Hohenlin
den, which we find in a Boston news
paper :
“ On Lind, when Barnum’s sun was low,
And bootless was the Mermaid's show,
The lessee counted for a flow
Os rhino to his treasury.
“ And Jenny Lind, whose ready sight
Saw Barnum in his golden light,
Said, for a ‘ thousand ’ every night,
She’d sing to all Ameriky.”
from the argument of a
young lawyer before a Mississippi Jus
tice : ‘ May it please the Court—l had
rather live for thirteen hundred centu
ries on the small end of a thunderbolt
—chew the ragged end of a flash of
lightning—swallow the corners of a
\ irginia worm fence and have my bow
els torn out by a green brier, than to
be thus bamboozled by the gentleman.
Cool.— ‘ May be smoking is offen
sive to some of you,’ said an inveterate
smoker, as he entered one of the ferry
boats.
‘Yes, yes,’ immediately responded a
dozen voices.
‘ Well,’ said the inquirer, immedi
ately placing his cigar between his lips,
and puffing away at it for dear life,’ ‘tis
to some folks.’
£-gP*A convict in the Ohio States
Prison, made his escape over the walls
in rather a singular manner, the other
day. lie crawled into a cannon, and
got one of his comrades to “shoot him
over the fence.” He landed in the next
county. Eight constables and a bed
cord are in pursuit of him.
LIFE-INSURANCE.
The southern mutual insurance
COMPANY, of Alliens, Georgia, during Uie
mouth of July, have issued 17 new policies.
Insured < >l,lOO in tliree policies.
Received sl6o7.tin cash lor premiums.
Invested SISOO in Georgia State Stocks.
Lost nothing,
Oar rates ar • a trifle lower than those ot Northern Corn
palm's. Twenty-five per cent of the first premium is re
mitted to the insured. The whole profits of the Company
are applied to reducing the second and subsequent pre
miums. ASBURY HULL, President.
C. F. McCAY, Actuary.
Pamphlets explaining the business ot Lite Insurance,
and blank forms of application, furnished tree of charge,
by F. BRAFORD, Fitzsimons’ wharf,
Agent for Charleston.
LEWIS COLBY,
THE OLD STAND, 122 NASSAU-STREET,
NEW-YORK,
Offers at Wholesale and Retail, at the Lowest Prices, a
great assortment of
RELIGIOUS AND USEFUL BOOKS.
AMONG ms OWN PUBLICATIONS ARK
THE TEXT BOOK AND TREASURY, a work an
swering the purpose at once ot a Body of Divinity, a
Concordance, and a Bible Dictionary. Really inval-
THk“ PASTOR’S HAND BOOK, a neat Pocket
TH u* A LMOSTCHR IST lAN; Introduction by Dr. W.
R. Williams. Just published. , ,
FULLER S WORKS, new edition, edited by Dr.
MEMOIR OF SARAH B. JUDSON, by Fanny For.
rester, now Mrs. Judson.
JUDSON OFFERING, by Dr. John Dowling.
DOMESTIC SLAVERY, as a Scriptural Institution,
in a correspondence between Dr. r uller and Ur. VV ay-
COMPREHENSIVE COMMENTARY, (6 volumes)
general and Baptist edition. Also, Henry s, L-iark s
and Scott’s. . _ a „
School and Blank Books, Stationery, Sermon Paper,
Marriage Certificates, Bibles, Hymn Books, and Theolo
gical Books in great variety. , „ .
* A comtilete depository ot Sabbath School Books,
tjrMinisters, Students and others wishing to replenish
their Libraries, are requested to call and examine my stock ;
before purchasing elsewhere. bw
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
THE undersigned will run a daily line of four horse
Coaches from Athens to Madison Springs, travel
ling time not to exceed four hours, as D. Morrison has just
finished the entire road, audit cannot be excelled by any
road in the State. They will also keen extra Coaches at
the Spring to take passengers to Clarksville, uainsville,
Sulphur Spring, Tallulah, and Toccoa Falls.
***Extra Coaches of all sizes can be had at any tune, to
take passengers to Pendleton, Greenville, S. C., and taken
over the best road in the State,only one night from Athens
to Pendleton, and that at a good
Stage and Livery Proprietors, Athens, Ga.
June 8 simo
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS.
nPHE attention of purchasersof DR Y GOODS is re
spectfully invited to examine a complete and very
extensive stock at 253 Kmg-street.
My stock of INDIES’ DRESS GOODS tsunusually
large, and prices probably less than was ever known in
Charleston.
Silk Tissues and Bareges, 20c.
Foular Silks, rich Summer Silks
Albenine Alvorines, Emhd. French Muslins, ite.
4-4 fine French Jaconet Muslins, 31c.
On the second floor will he found a very extensive stock
of SHAWLS, MANTILLAS and SCARES.
Constantly on baud, a largestockot DOMESTICS,
JJNENS, GJ.oEES, HOSIER T. ire.
W. C. BANCROFT, 253 King-street.
May 5 5
SOUTH CAROLINA INSTITUTE.
THE Institute, at its Annual Fair to be held in this
city on the tnird Tuesday in November next, will
award Premiums, (in addition to specimens oi Mechanism
and the Arts) lor me following articles:
For the best bale oi Sea island Cotton, not less than oOU
For tne best bale of short staple Cotton, not less than 300
pounds.
For tiie best tierce of Rice.
For the best Hogshead oi Muscovado Sugar.
For tne best leaf Tobacco, not less tnau lU6 lbs.
For the best barrel ol Wneat Flour.
For the best tierce of Indian Corn.
For the best barrel of Spirits oi Turpentine.
For the best barrel of Rosin. 4 r
It is the intention of the Institute, with the consent ot
the persons sending the above articles, to forward such as
receive Premiums to the “ World’s Fair, ’ to be held in
the city ol London, in the early part ot the year 185 L It
is likewise intended to select, irotn the specimens ot * Art
and Design,” which may he presented, such as may be
deemed worthy of especial distinction, to be forwarded tor
competition to this great “Industrial Exhibition.
‘Pile Committee on Premiums therefore earnestly appeal
to all the productive interests of our country to ahl the In
stitute in thus advancing our home enterprises, and give
them reputation and character abroad.
{*• N. REV \OLDS. Jr. ) c omm ittee on
WM LEBittV, S Premiums.
Charleston, S. C., May 4.
TO DEALERS.
PORTABLE DESKS. Ne plus ultra Desks, with
Dressing Cases attached ; Leather and Wooil Dres
sing Cases, Work Boxes, Work Cases, and Needle Books
of Wool, Ivory, Pearl, itc.; Port Mounaie*, Pocket
Books. Card Cases, itc.: Bankers’ Books, polio* Back
gammon and Chess Boards, tie., with many other articles
too numerous to mention in an advertisement. Manutac
tured and constantly on hand.
Also a heautitul assortment of well selected r reneh and
Other goods, imported by the subscriber, and which are
offered to the trade at low prices. ,
GEO. R. CHOLWELL.
Manuiacturer and Importer.
24 Maiden Lar.e, New-York. May 5.
PIANO-FORTES AND MUSIC.
THE subscriber lias on hand, ami is constantly receiv
in? lar e supplies of Piano-Fortes trom the celebrat
ed manufacturers, Bacon & Raven, Dubois & Seabury,
and A. 11. Gale & Cos., New-Yorkand Hallei, Davw &
Cos., Boston,—all warranted to be or. the first quality.
Mclodeons of every style and finish, made by George
Prince Cos., Buffalo,—the best article manufactured.
Guitars, Violins, Violincelios, Flutes, Clarionets, com
plete sets of Military Band Instruments, of the best French
and Italian manufacture. . . ... .
Also, the largest assortment of J\lustc in the Southern
States. _ _ , . .
The above articles are all offered for sale at the lowest
cash prices, by GEORGE OATES,
Piano-Forte, Book and Music Store,
may4tf 234 and 236 King-st. (at the bend).
EVERY MAN HIS OWN PHYSICIAN !
A POPULAR WORK ON FAMILY MEDICINE.
THE Planters Guide, and Family Book of Medicine,
lor the instruction and use oi Planters, Families,
Country People, and all others who may be out ot the
reach of a Physician, or unable to employ them. By Dr.
J. Humic Simons.—With a supplement on the treatment
of Asiatic Cholera, by a Ciiarleston Physician.
The popularity of this book is attested by the rapid sale
of the first large edition; which induced the publishers to
ster otype the work, after a careful revision, and they are
now prepared to supply any demand for it. It has been
approved by the ablest physicians, and is itself the result
of a long practice, ami thorough observation ot disease in
the south. The Medical Tables are arranged on a simple
and original plan, and the volume contains more matter in
a small space than any work of Domestic Medicine now
1,1 EVERY FAMILY IN THE SOUTH
should have a copy of this hook, as it may trequently
Sare both their Health and their Money.
It is published at the exceedingly low price ot <1,20,
and a liberal discount made to the trade or to agents
McCarter it allen-
Charleston, Jan. 26, 2850.
BLANK BOORS, PAPER, AC.
FRANCIS & LOUTREL,
77 MAIDEN LANE, NEW-YORK,
H| ANUFACTURE all styles of Account Books, En
lYI velopes, Gold Pens, Croton Ink, Copying Presses,
Manifold Letter Writers, itc. , , _
We also import every style of Writing Paper and Sta
tionery, articles which we offer at the lowest cash prices.
FRANCIS’ MANIFOLD LETTER WRITER.
By which letters and copies are written at thu same time.
No extra trouble and a great saving oi time. Books com
plete at sl, $2, $3 50 and $5.
Orders per mail receive prompt attention.
FRANCIS & LOUTREL,
Manufacturing Stationers,
6 m. 77 Maiden Lane, New-York.
CONNER A SON’S
UNITED STATES TYPE FOUNDRY,
NEW YORK.
THE Subscribers have now on hand an excellent assort
ment ot BOOK, NEWSPAPER and ORNA
MENTAL TYPE, BORDERING, iic., which they
are prepared to sell at reduced rates, on approved paper, at
six months, or at a discount of ten i>er cent, ior CASH.
The series of Scotch faces, so much admired and approved
oi by the trade, and our type in general, we ted assured
cannot be excelled either in beauty or finish by any Found
er. All type manufactured by us, are made by a mixture
ol metals different in proportions to those used generally,
by which we insure greater durability. To our assort
ment of
ORNAMENTAL AND JOBBING TYPE, BOR
DERING, tie.,
we have made a large increase and are constantly engaged
in adding to the variety.
PRESSES, WOOD-TYPE, CASES, STANDS,
BRASS AND H OOD R E 1.1.,.1., IMPOSING
STONES, COMPOSING S PICKS, BRASS
WOOD GAI.EEYS, CJ.OSET RACKS,
CUTS, REGEETS,
And every article necessary for
A COMPLETE PRINTING OFFICE,
furnished with despatch.
Old Type taken in exchange for new, at nine cents per
pound. , . , .
Publishers of newspapers who will insert this advertise
ment three times, and forward us a paper, marked and en
closed to -• Horn’s United States Railroad Gazette,” pre
vious to the 4th day ol July, 1850, will be paid in materials
oi our manufacture, by purchasing four times the amount
of their hills tor advert^ Eg CO jjjj Eß & SO N,
Cor. Ann and Nassau sts.
Our New Specimen Book is now ready for delivery.
STATIONERS’ WAREHOUSE.
HYMEN L. LIFMAN,
IMPORTER and Wholo-ale Dealer in FANC Y and
STAPLE STATIONERY] offers to the trade at
tne Stationers’ Warehouse, N'C- -6 South Fourth street,
corner of Ran-tead Place, a full assortment ot the best
English, French, German and American Stationery, in
cluding goods trom the celebrated house oi Thomas
Rhoads £ Sons, oi London, and no pains wijl be spared
to keep the Warehouse constantly supplied wilh Station
ery quite as good and cheap as it can be had eilner in New
York or Boston.
Tne newest and most desirable goods will be constantly
forwarded by agents residing in London and Paris.
Catalogues may he had upon appjiealion.
STATIONERS’ WAREHOUSE,
36 South Fourth street.
Philadelphia, June, 1850. ts
JOSEPH GILLOTT’S STEEL PENS.
MANUFACTURERS WAREHOUSE,
91 JOHN-STREET, NEW YORK.
ALARGEstock of these well known PENS constantly
on Hand, lor sale as above.
CAUTION. —Certain PRETENDED MANUFAC
TURERS ol Steel Pens, having adopted Joseph Gil
lott’s style of Label, his mode of putting up his
Pens, and also Designating Numbers, he desires to
give the following
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
That all genuine packages or boxes of Joseph Gil
lott’s Pens have a sac simile ol his signature on the
reverse side. None other are genuine. This caution espe
cially refers to his original No. 303, the great popularity of
wiiieh lias caused it to be imitated, and the uumberadopt
ed by a host of PRETENDED MAKERS.
Joseph Gillott would further advise the public that,
in all cases where his Numbers and the phraseology of his
Labels are adopted by the parties above alluded to, the
Pens are not made by him, although asserted to be.
An experience of tliirtv years has enabled Mr. Gillott to
bring hi* Steel Pens to the highest state of perfec
tion, and the liberal patronage which he haa long enjoyed
at the hands of theAmeriean public, will incite him to con
tinued exertion to maintain the favor which lie has ac
quired. HENRY OVVEN, Agent.
May 4 3m
STATIONARY AND BLANK ROOKS,ofevery
description, of the best kinds.
.JOSEPH WALKER, 101 East Bay.
NEW BOOKS. . . ,
KITTO’S Daily Bible Illustrations, being original
readings for a year. By John Ketto, D. D.
Tne Philosophy ot Unbeliet in Morals and Religion. By
Rev. Herman Hooker.
Creation : or the Bible and Geology. By Rev. James
Murphy, D. D. .
A Treatise on the Canon and Interpretation ot the Holy
Scriptures; lor the special benefit oi Junior Theological
Students. By Alex. McClelland, Prohssorol Bib. Liter
ature at New-Brunswiek. 3d edition.
Sketches of Sermons on the Parables and Miracles ot
Cliri-t. By Jabez Burns, D.D., author oi Pulpit tyclo
pa-dia, tie. tie. . , . .
The Gospel Mystery ot Sanctification, opened in sundry
practical directions,lo which is added a Sermon on Justifi
cation. By Walter Marshall, late preacher of the gospel.
The Lighted Valley, or the Closing Scenes in the Lite ot
a Beloved Si-t;r, with a preface by Rev. William Jay.
The Golden P-alm being a practical experimental and
prophetical exposition ot the 16th Psalm. By Rev. Tho
mas Dale, M.A. , .
The Morning of Joy, being a sequel to the Night ot
Weeping. By Rev. Horatiu- Bonar.
Jay’s Prayers lor the use of lamilies, or the Domestic
Minister’s Assistant. By Rev. Wm. Jay.
Letters of Rev. Samuel Ruther.ord, with a sketch ot
hislile. By Rev. A. A. Bouar. New edition.
Lite of Joseph Hall, I). I)., Bishop of Norwich. By
James Hamilton, D.D.
A Memoir of Lady Colquhoun. By James Hamilton.
Liber Psalmorum (.Hebrew). Miniature edition.
Foster's Essay on the Evils of Popular Ignorance.
The Happy Home, affectionately inscribed to the V\ ork
ing People, by Rev. James Hamilton, D. D.
Gospel Sonnets, or Spiritual Songs, in six parts; con
cerning Cr atiou and redemption. Law and Gospel, Justi
fication ami Sanctification, F’aith and Sense,Heaven am
Earth. By the late Rev. Ralph Erskine. Republished
from the 33d Glasgow edition.
may 4 F’or sale by JNO. RUSSELL, 206 King-st.
UNITED STATES MAIL LINE.
N E W-Y ORK and CHARLESTON
STEAM PACKET.
The Steamship SOUTHERNER, Captain M. Berry,
will positively leave each port as follows:
from charleston. from nkw-york.
Tuesday, May 7 Thursday, May 2
Friday, May 17 Monday, May 13
Monday, May 27 Wednesday, May 22
Thursday, June 6 Saturday, June 1
Saturday, June 16 Tuesday, June 11
Wednesday, June 26 F’riday, June 21
Saturday, July 6 Monday, July
Tuesday, July 16 Thursday, July 11
For Freight or Passage, having splendid state-room ac
commodations, only two berths in one room, apply at the
otiice of the Agent.
HENRY MISSROON,
Cor. E. Bay and Adger’s South Wharf.
Cabin Passage, (Slate Rooms,) .... <25
Do. (Open Berths,) .... 20
Steerage Passage 8
SPOFFORD, TILESTON St CO.
May 4. New-York.
FARE REDUCED TO TWENTI DOLLARS.
FROM CHARLESTON TO NEW YORK.
gWNHE Great Mail Route, from Charleston, S. C-, leav
m ing the wharf at the foot of Laurens st. daily at 3
F. it. niter the arrival oi the Southern cars, via Wilming
ton and Welilon, N. C., Peter-hurg, Richmond, to Wash
ington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and New York.
The pubiic is respectlully iirortned that the steamers ot
this line, Ironi Charleston to Wilmington, are in first rate
condition, and are navigated by well-known ami expe
rienced commanders, and the Railroads are ill fine order,
thereby securing both satety and dispatch. A Through
Ticket having already been in operation, will be contin
ued on and after the first of October, 1843, as a permanent
arrangement f rum Charleston to New York. Passengers
availing themselves thereof; will have the option to con
tinue without delay through the route, or otlierwise to
stop at any of the intermediate points, renewing their seats
on the line to suit their convenience. By this route travel
lers may reach New York on the third day during business
hours. Baggage will he ticketed on hoard the Steamer
to Weldon, as likewise on the change of cars at the inter
mediate points from thence to New York. Through Tic
kets can alone be had irom E. WINSLOW, Agent of
the Wilmington and Raleigh Railroad Company, at the
ofliceof the company, loot oi Laurens street, to whom
please apply. For other iutormatiou inquire of
L. C. DUNHAM,
At the Am -rican Hotel.
Papers advertising for the company are repuested to
copy
iltacon Carts.
WASHINGTON HOUSE,
BY ROGERS &. MEARA,
CORNER MULBERRY AND SECOND STS.,
** Office of the Tallahassee Stage Line.
LAMER HOUSE,
LANIER & SONS, Proprietors.
MULBERRY STREET.
63P” This new and elegant house will he opened on the
first of June next.
J. J. AND S. P. RICHARDS,
DEALERS IN
I BOOKS, STATIONERY, MUSIC AND MUSI
CAL INS TR UMIN TS,
At the sign of the ‘‘New Book Store,” in Brick Build*
ings, Cherry-stret t.
.•.Agents for the Southern Quarterly Review, South
ern Literary Gazette, the Eclectic Magazine, and the
Schoolfellow, and
LjT Honorary Secretaries of the Am. Art Union.
J. M. BOA RDM AX.
BOOKSELLER AND ST A TIONER,
SECOND-STREET.
Supplies School, Miscellaneous and Professional Books;
Stationery and Drawing Materials, at the lowest prices.
Carts.
WM. N. WHITE,
WHOLESALE JiJXfD RETAIL BOOKSELLER ,
AND DEALER IN
Stationery, Music and Musical Instruments, Lamps. Cut
lery, Fancy Goods, itc.
Orders filled at the Augusta rates.
COLLEGE AVENUE
FERRY AND CO.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
HATS, CAPS, ROOTS, SHOES, TRUNKS, &c.
BROAD-STRETT-
R. J. MAYNARD,
BOOK-B l N D E K ,
OVER THE “SOUTHERN BANNER” OFFICE.
vluciusta Curbs.
JAMES A. AND C. GRAY,
WHOLESALE and retail dealers in
FOREIGN, FANCY, STAPLE AND DOMESTIC
DRY GOODS.
NO- 298 BROAD-ST.
They keen constantly on hand the choicest and
most fashionable Goods of the season, at the lowest prices.
CHARLES CATLIN,
Dealer in
FINF. WATCHES, JEWELRY, Silver Spoons and
F’orks, Plated Castors, Lamps, Girandoles, Fancy Goods,
tie.
Also Agents for Chickering’s and Nunn’s and Clarke’s
Piano F'ortes, which they sell at the lowest factory prices.
O. B. PLUMB AND CO.,
BETWEEN V. 8. HOTEL AND P. O. CORNER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in DRUGS, MEDI
CINES, CHEMICALS, PAINTS, itc.
Agent for Landreth’s Garden Seeds.
ALBERT HATCH,
Manufacturer of and Dealer in
SADDLES, BRIDLES, HARNESS, TRUNKS,
Military Equipments, tic.
BROAD-STREET, IN METCALF’S NEW RANGE.
COSKERY, JANES At CO.
WAREHOUSE & COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
[ Old stand of Bryson, Coakery <s• Cos. ]
CAMPU ELL-STREET.
G. W. FERRY & CO.,
W hide sole <V Retail
HAT, CAP AND BONNET WAREHOUSE.
BROAD-STREET.
WM. 11. TUTT,
Wholesaie and Retail Dealer in
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS. DYE
STUFFS, CHEMICALS, &c., iic.
SCRANTON, STARK & OAYIS,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
AI9O Dealers in Bagging, Rope and Twine, Nails, Iron,
Salt, Sic., for Planters’ Trade.
THOMAS W. FLEMING,
COMM IBSI (>N M E ltd 1A NT,
Continues to do business, and solicits consignments of
PRODUCE.
CRESS AND HICKMAN,
DEALERS in
STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS.
268 SOUTH SIDE, BROAD-BT.
UNITED STATES HOTEL,
BY G. FARGO.
CT9* This House is the centre of business.
GADSBY’S HOTEL,
CORNER PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE AND THIRD-STREET,
Near Railroad Depot, Washington.
WALTER 1,. WARREN.
ATTORNEY AT LAW, TUSKEGF.F., ALA.
Will attend promptly to all business entrusted to his care
NASH'S HOTEL.
REUBEN NASH, Proprietor.
CLARKSVILLE, GA.
.* Conveyances to the Falls and Nacoochee furnished
at the shortest notice.
PLANTER’S HOTEL,
BY MRS. CAMPBELL,
EAST SIDE ri'BLIC SQUARE, MADISON, GA.
VEAL AND BROTHER,
DEALERS IN
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, SILVER
AND PLATED WARE, FINE TABLE AND
POCKE T C UTLER Y, AND IN FANC Y
ARTICLES GENERALLY,
MADISON,GA.
Charleston ifarbs.
WHOLESALE CLOTHING.
PIERSON & JENNINGS,
100 Hayne-street, and 194 Broadway, New York.
Particular attention given to orders at either of their
stores.
MASONIC HALL CLOTHING STORE.
W. A. K E N T & M ITCHELL,
KING-STREET, CORNER OF WENTWORTH,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Clothing and Gentlemen’s
Outfitting Articles.
H. W. SHIFFER,
270 KING-STREET, CORNER OF WENTWORTH,
Manufacturer and Wholesale and Retail Dealer in every
article yet made of India Rubber.
KLINCK Ac WICKENBERG,
N. E. CORNER BROAD AND CHURCH STS.,
Importers of and Dealers in Teas, Wines, Liquors, Pre
serves, Segars, Groceries, tic.
BLINDS, SASHES AND PANEL DOORS.
The subscriber is agent for two of the largest manufac
tories of the above articles, and is prepared to supply con-
Iractors at a small advance on factory rates.
JOHN C. SIMONS, 236 King-street.
N I NNS AND ( LARK'S PIANOS.
Six and a half, six and three-quarters and seven Octave
GRAND ACTION PIANOS ; n\so *EOLIAN AT
TACHMENT PIANOS. with Ives’ Tunable Reeds.
GEO. F. COLE, 127 King-street.
DAWSON AND BLACKMAN,
DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES,
17 BROAD-STREET,
Importers of Drugs, Chemicals, Perfumery, Surgical In
struments, tie.
CAREY AND COUTURIER,
IMPORTERS OF AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN
DRUGS, CHEMICALS & PERFUMERY,
35 BROAD-STREET.
E. M. Carey. J. R. E. Couturier, M. D.
JOHN S. BIRD Ac CO.,
MILITARY, LOOKING GLASS AND FANCY
STORE,
SION OF THE GOLD SPECTACLES, 223 AND 225 KING-ST.
Mathematical and Surveyors’ Instruments, Spectacle
and Optical Instruments of all kinds, Plated Castors, Can
dlestieks, Cake Baskets, tie., tie.
Oil Paintings and Engravings, Picture F’rames made to
order, and old F'rames re-gilt and made equal to new:
Glasses and Pebbles fitted to Spectacles to suit all ages and
sights.
GROCERIES, FRUITS, CIGARS, AcC.
N. M. PORTER,
(LATE W. L. PORTER AND SON.)
No. 222 King-Street, third door above Market,
Has an extensive and varied stock of Groceries, Fruits,
Cigars, tie., suited to the wants of Families and Dealers,
which he sells at the lowest prices for cash or city paper.
DAVID LOPEZ,
STEAM FACTORY FOR
SASHES, DOORS AND BLINDS,
36 GEORGE-STREET.
CAMPHKAK AND SPIRIT GAS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
Witn a large variety ot Lamps lor hunting the same, at
the original Importers prices.
GEORGE ABBOTT,
Paint, Oil and Colour Store, No. 97 East Bay.
CHARLES LOVE,
(Partner and Successor of the late firm of Jos. Thomson
4- Cos.)
SADDLE AND HARNESS MAKER,
At the O and Stand, corner of Broad and Church streets.
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPAN Y.
Net Assets of Company, $1,000,439 62. Last Dividend
of profits, 52 per cent.
L. M. HATCH, Agent.
l-<> MEETING-STREET.
Dr. D. J. C. CAIN, Medical Adviser.
GEORGE OATES.
234 AND 236 KING-STREET, (.NEAR THE BEND.)
GEO. A OATES St CO.,
BROAD-STREET, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Dealcrsiu Piano-Fortes, Music and Musical Instruments,
Books, Stationary, &c.
G. AND 11. CAMERON.
Importers and Wholesaie Dealers in
CROCKERY, CHINA & GLASS WARE
NO. 153 MEETING-STREET.
ty A choice assortment always on hand, and for sab
low.
M’CARTER A ALLEN.
BOOKSELLERS & STATIONERS
Have an extensive assortment of Law, Medical, Theo
logical, School and .Miscellaneous Books, which will b
sold at the lowest rates.
11. B. CLARKE A CO.
IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, VESTINGS,
TAILORS’ TRIMMINGS, he.
NO. 205 KING-SI.
GREGG, HAYDEN AND CO.,
Importers of
FINE WATCHES, JEWELRY, SILVER WARE
GUNS, MILITAR Y AND FANCY GOODS,
CORNER KING AND HASEL STS.
F. AND J. 11. BRADFORD,
FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
fitzsimons’ wharf, charleston.
F. Bradford, Georgia. J. B. Bradford, Alabama
GEORGE JACKSON,
TIN PL ATE WORKER.
Zib king-street.
Tin and Japanned Ware wholesale and retail ; Importei
ot Block Tin and Japanned Ware, and dealer in House
keeping Articles.
P. * . DIBBLE,
FASHIONABLE HAT AND CAP STORE,
37 broad-street.
B. W. AND J. P. FORCE AND CO.,
Wholesaie Dealers in
BOOTS AND SHOES.
NO. 18 HAYNE-STRKKT.
FERDINAND ZOGBAI’M,
11A RMO NI 0 INSI'I TUT E.
Importer of Mnsic and Musical Instruments.
king-street, sign of the lyre.
WELCH A HONOUR.
BOOK-BINDERS,
CORNER OF MEETING-STREET AND HORLBECK’S ALLEY
Blank Books ruled to any pattern, and bound in the bes
manner.
JOHN RUSSELL,
BOOKSELLER As STATIONER,
KING-STREET.
English and Foreign Books imported to order.
W.M. L. TIMMONS,
GENERAL IMPORTER OF HARDWARE AND
CUTLERY.
east-bay.
GILLILANDS A HOWELL,
Importers and Dealers in
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS.
no. 7 hayne-street.
CHARLESTON HOTEL,
B Y D . M I XE R .
This establishment has been entirely remodelled and re
fitted in the most elegant manner.
PAVILION HOTEL,
BY 11. L . BUT T ERFIELD
FORMERLY OF THE CHARLESTON HOTEL.
EDGERTON A RICHARDS.
D RAP ER S & T AILORS.
NO. 32 BROAD-STREET.
T. WILLCOCKS.
DRA PE R AND TAIL 011
NO. 39 BROAD-STREET,
tr For Cash only.
C. I>. CARR,
DRA PE R AN D TAIL OR.
NO. 30 BROAD-STREET.
11. STODDARD,
WHOLESALE DEALER IN BOOTS, SHOES, Stc
NO. 13 HAYNE-STREET.
CLASSICAL, FRENCH AND ENGLISH
SCHOOL.
KING-ST,, ONE DOOR ABOVE HUDSON-ST.,
C. W. CROUCH and B. R. CARROLL.
Assisted by F. GAUTHIER.
Boston Carbs.
CHAMBERLAIN A RITCHIE,
MANUFACTURERS OF
PHILOSOPHICAL INSTRUMENTS,
For the use of Schools and Colleges.
NOS. 9 AND 11 SCHOOL-STREET.
*** C & R. beg leave to refer Southern Professors am
Teachers to W. C. Richards, Esq., Editor of the Southeri
Literary Gazette.
LITTLE A BROWN,
LAW BOOKSELLERS & PUBLISHERS
WASHINGTON-STREET.
*.* L. & B. publish, among many other valuable lav.
hooks, the works of Gr-enleaf and Story, and furnish t<
order all others, either American or English.
GOULD, KENDALL AND LINCOLN,
BOOKSELLERS & PUBLISHERS
WABIIINGTON-BTREET.
G. K. & L. publish the “ Psalmist,” Chambers’ CycL
pallia and Miscellany, and many other choice works
religious and miscellaneous.
LITTELL’S LIVING AGE.
Published in Weekly Numbers or in Monthly Parts, at
six dollars per annum in advance.
“The best and cheapest Eclectic Magazine in the Uni
ted States.”— So. Lit. Gai.
Address E. LI XT ELL & CO., Boston.
sJl)ilabelpl)ia <£arbs.
J- W. MOORE,
BOOKSELLER, PU KLISII ER AND IMWistp.
OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN Buoh;T' r£^
193 CHESNUT-STREKT.
J. W. M. publishes Sales’ Koran, Taylor on rv..,
Montague s Essays, and many other valuable work- °^’
HENRY CAREY BAIRD,
(SUCCESSOR TO E. L. CAREY I
PUBLISHER,
s. e. corner market and fifth sts.
. *VT h 5, E,ley , c,O P® and,a °fChemistry, Overman nr, i
8 Oomph te Cooktry, Longieflow YViu?>
Gray s Poetical Work.-, and many other Stin.uid Pid r
cations otKred to the trade. dru ‘ “kj.
HAZARD A MITCHELL,
“THE POPULAR CHEAP BOOK-SELLERs ,I
PHILADELPHIA,” <>K
Have always a large and suberb assortment of lirint o
in every department ot Literature, wnich thev ..ti
cheaper prices than el* where in PhJladelphir TANARUS, ‘’ 11
to “Jones” and all the pnncip^X^
1 .SChesnut-street, yposUc Masonic Hall, between ‘tl,
LIFF'ACOTT, GKAMBUA Cos.
SUCCESSORS TC ORIou, ELLIOT AND CO.
PUBLISHERS, BOOKSFL! FRS vr ,-r,
ERS AND BLANK BOOK mZn T,OX
VFACTUREhs.
NO. 14 NOHTH FOURTH STREET.
L. G. & Cos. publish School, Theological
Law, Classical and Miscellaneous Book- ai ,d V*
lions ol Bibles aim Prayer Books, in &h.
mg and size, also Dealers in Paper, Blank R^t' 1 01 B, “' 1 *
nonary. Country Merchants, Public
trade supplied on advantageous terms. rar,e “ *“d the
TIIE CHEAP BOOK STORE.
“SMALL PROFITS AND QUICK SALES.”
DA.\l EL S AN D is MIT H
No. 36 N. Sizth Street, between Market and Arch
Keep constantly on hand and for sale a I
ol Old and New Theological, Cla-lJal, J?hoof S^”u ,U
cellaneous hooks, wholesale or retail, al very bw
Monthly Catalogues received rrgularlv *id tt, i
teugrted to order Iron, London. HSIC?
CHARLES 11. BUTT,
STEREOGRAPH SAFETY BLANK MAN
UFACTURER.
62 WALNUT-STREET.
Bank Checks, Promissory Notes, Ate., made to order.
JESSUP A MOORE.
PAPER RAG DEALER
21 NORTH FIFTH AND 23 COMMERCE STREETS.
order* 1 * ’ NeW9 ’ llardware alld -Manilla Paper made lo
HARRISON’S COLUMBIAN INKS.
Black, Copying, Japan, Blue, Red,Carmine, indelible
Cotton Marking, Ink lowders, Leather*worker Powder*.
A. W. HARRISON, 8 1 . South Seventh. Street.
C. AHREXFELDT A CO.
NO. 205 MARKET-STREET, UP STAIRS.
Knu-Cork Carts.
lx. PC KLLI>.
BOOK-BIN DEli,
114 NASSAU-ST., N. Y.
•.•Cambric Book Cases made lor the trade.
SPENCER, HEN DELL A DIXON,
MANUFACTURERS OF GOLD PENS
170 BROADWAY, CORNER OF MAIDEN LANE.
N. B.—The above firm was awarded aGold Medal, the
■ugbesi Premium ever awarded ior Pens, at the last Fail
ol the American Institute.
Dealers supplied at low prices, with or without
lolders.
C. M. SAXTON,
PUBLISHER OF THE AMERICAN AGRICUL
TURIST,
NO. 121 FULTON.BTREET.
C. M. S. also publishes the American Architect, Allen’-
t arm Book, Dome-tic Animals, Poultri Book and the
Bee-Keeper s Manual. Orders res;>eetlully solicited awl
iromptly executed
WM. 11. BEEBE A CO.,
FASHIONABLE HATTERS,
156 Broadway, ana 158 Chestnut-street, Philadelphia.
G r ,lL )t ai‘ d ‘ outli’s Dress. Riding and Travelling
Ladies Riding Hat?*, Pans Strnw and Fancy
iats ior children, Caps for the Army and Navy, tie., ol
ie best material and in the latest styles.
JOHN S. CAULK INS,
MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF
WALKING CANES AND UMBRELLAS,
69 Maiden Lan-e, one door below William-street.
. N.• B.—The Goods at this establishment are all perfect,
unshed in the best manner, and ottered at reasonable rates.
SMITH A PETERS,
100 John-Strekt,
Importers and Manufacturers of Staple and
fancy Stationery.
S. & P., with their facilities in England, France an
Germany, can offer toods al the lowest prices.
SILL A THOMSON,
IMPORTERS OF FRENCH AND ENGLISH
FANCY GOODS, JF.WELRY, PERFUMERY, kc.
23 MAIDEN LANE.
FIRTH, POND A CO.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
MUSIC & MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS OF AJ.L
KINDS,
No. 1, Franklin Square.
WILLIAM WARD,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER
IN ALL KINDS OF INDIA RUBBER GOODS.
No. 159 Broadway.
GEORGE SNYDER,
LITHOGRAPHER.
138 WILLIAM-STREET, NEAR FULTON.
GEORGE P. PUTNAM,
PUBLISHER AND BOOKSELLER,
NO. 157 BROADWAY.
*•* G. P. P. publishes the complete and uniform edition
it Irving’s Works. Also similar editions of the Work”
>1 Cooper, Miss Sedgwick and Miss Bremer.
LOWITZ, BECKER A CLUDIUS,
38 JOHN-STREET,
‘mporters of GERMAN ZEPHYR WORSTED, Em
roidery Patterns, Canvass, Flo's Silk, tie. Dress Trim
■lingsdn all varieties and extensive assortments.
Artificial Flowers, Feathers and Materials for Flower
vlakers.
FRANKLIN’ HOUSE.
JOHN P. TREADWELL, PROPRIETOR,
BROADWAY.
rtf’ No house in the city is more conveniently located
or the merchant or man of leisure, and it is kept in the
ery best style.
WM. HALL A fcOX.
PUBLISHERS OF MUSIC FOR THE PIANO AND
GUITAR.
AND DEALERS IN
PIANO FORTES ANI) OTHER MUSICAL
INSTRUMENTS.
No. 239 Broadway.
KELLOGGS A COMSTOCK,
8? FULTON-STREET,
PUBLISHERS OF COLORED PRINTS,
AND DEALERS IN
MAPS, CHARTS, FRAMES, GLASS, he., he.
Jeo. Whiting, Agent.
A- S. BARNES A CO.
WHOLESALE BOOKSELLERS it PUBLISHERS.
51 Jonn-Street.
** They pubhsh Davis’ Mathematical Series, Parker ‘
’hilosophies, Cht.mh. rs’ Educalio.ial Course, and many
■ther popular school books.
WM. A. WHEELER A CO.,
IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN —
STATIONERY, PRINTERS AND MANUFACTU- I
RERS OF ACCOUNT BOOKS,
80 wall-street.
WM. W. ROSE,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALFR IN
IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC STATIONERY,
BLANK BOOKS, COPYING PRESSES, kc-
NO. 19 wall-street.
RICH A LOUTREL,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN AND IMPORTERS OT
FRENCH, ENGLISH it GERMAN STATIONER'*
AND M ANUFACTURERS OF BLANK BOOKS.
NO. 61 WILLIAM-STREET.
MARK LEVY A BROTHERS,
IMPORTERS OF g
FRENCH, ENGLISH AND GERMAN STATIO>
ERY, FANCY GOODS, itc.
li Houndsditch, Loudon. 49 Maiden Lane,
GEORGE W. FRENCH,
16 ANN-STRKET,
Manufaetunr and Dealer, Wholesale and
IN GENTLEMEN’S FRENCH DRESS BOt
SHOES AND GAITERS.
E. B. CLAYTON’ & SONS,
COMMISSION PAPKR WAHeHOL^’
84 JOHN-STREET. pFR of
tF” BOOK and NEWS PR IN G ‘!££noti<*
•very description, on hand or made to order
IT.l T . P. A E. DOUBLED.*’ •
IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE
FRENCH, ENGLISH, GERMAN & aM
STATIONERY,
NO. 40 JOHN-STK T 1
SEYMOUR A < 0 *
97 JOHN-STREET, ,
Healers in WRITING and PRINTING
iinds. Importersot'FOßElGN WRITING, Lt *
vnd various other PAPERS.
LOB6ING A BARRETT, _ Qj
DESIGNERS AND ENGRAVERS ON H ( )
CORNER OF NkSSAD AND JOHN STS., (UP S TA | ‘
L. & B. will faithfully and promptly execute and 1
in their line on naaouable terms.