Newspaper Page Text
From the PenfieM Temperance Banner.
At the Temperance Convention lately!
held at Pcnficld, the Ilev, J. H. Camp
bell offered a resolution in support of tern*
pcrance papers, which was accompanied
by a few very appropriate remarks. He
deemed it unnecessary, before so enlight
ened an audience, to dwell upon the pow
er and influence of the press—suffice it to
sav that whew once its power was brought
*«w ' 1 o
to bear upon the minds of the people, it
would exert an almost irresistible influ
ence either for good or evil. In the days
of the Huguenots when Infidels spilled
the blood of Martyrs, the use of the press
first suggested the idea to the church to
publish tracts in order to stay the destruc
tive tide of infidelity. He said that po
litical papers could he sustained, and that
too without much difficulty. But tern
pcrance papers could not, because the
people were not sufficient interested in
their support. Ho would therefore urge
upon the members of the Convention (lie
necessity of writing for temperance pa
pers; and hoped they would endeavor to 1
make them interesting to tfle people.
He stated that there were something like
24 political papers in the State and be
lieved they were generally well sustained.
But™pps are only two little temperance
publications, and they were languishing
lor fne want of patronage. They need
subscriliers and the money too; for sub
scribers without money could never sus
tain any paper. He rejoiced at one
thing greatly—and that was that political
editors were not ashamed to publish tem
perance articles in their papers. Only a
few years ago they were unwilling to ad j
mit temperance articles into their col
umns for fear of losing patronage. But
now they arc willing and even anxious to
publish. This, he said, argued well for
the cause, and he hoped the time was ap
proaching when temperance publications
would supplant others of far less inipor
tance which are now flooding the land.
A Looker ox.
An Argument for Tavern-keepers.
We profess to publish an independent
paper—to advocate the cause of the weak,
and resist the oppression of the strong.
Now, heretofore, we have been on the
side of the Temperance men, because they
“ fought a good tight” when they had a :
powerful army opposed to them, but now
they have waxed strong, and have almost
annihilated their opponents, they are ex
ulting over the weakness of their pros
trato foes. It has been shrewdly remark
ed, that his Satanic Majesty is a most ex
cellent friend to the Ministers of Religion,
tor so soon as his influence is overcome, ;
and his powers annihilated, the field would .
lie closed against their labors, and the I
millenium would ho at hand. So with i
the nim-sellers and temperance men—
annihilate the former, and the latter would
• immediately disband their forces. Hence
* ouf sympathies in favor of the ruin-seller,;
and hence our desire to furnish him with
a strong and impregnable argument in 1
favor of his glorious traffic. Here it is, i
and let doubters no longer dispute the t
legality, honesty, and morality'of his cal- I
ling. Let our new allies of the grog-shop I
and tavern rejoice that they have one i
■press devoted to their interest, and award <
us a “ jorum of punch,” for this our first
overpowering argument in their favor! <
We stand on firm constitutional ground,!
and wo defy all the powers of the Tern- I
pcrance Advocate to dislodge us from our I
position. Tremble ye Temperance mer, <
as if the mania a portu was already riot-;
ing through your Veins! Rejoice and he i
strong ye rum-sellers, while you read the
following ad captandem argument in your I
favor: I
“ Mr. Picrpont, says the Boston Post, l
delivered a temperance lecture at Cabot- 1
ville, the other evening, and said, as lie
had been accused of bearing down rather i
heavily on the venders of intoxicating
drinks, he proposed on that occasion to vol
unteer his services to the injured iudividu- :
als aforesaid, as counsel and advocate.
He then went on, (as the Chronicle in
forms us) to state the various pleas which
men tnake to excuse their continuance in
the traffic; and answered them seriatim.
The last plea which he put and answered
was the license. Yes, said the speaker, |
you have a license, and that is your plea.
Well, mv friend, it* that is your pleu, I
would adjure you to keep it—guard it as
the apple of thine eye—and when you die,
and are laid in the coffin, be sure that the
precious document is placed within your
cold and clammy fingers, so that, when
you are called to confront the souls
of your victims before your God, you may
be ready to file in your plea of justification,
and boldly to laydown your license on the
bar of the Judge. Yes, my friend, keep
it—you will then want your’lieense, signed
by the commissioners of Hampden, and
endorsed.by the selectmen ofSpringfield.”
Thus,'our grog-shop friends will per
ceive, the Rev. Mr. Pierpoxt manfully
sustains the licexsk plea; so success to
rum-sellers and the License system! Who
would’nt be a drunkard? —Cheratc Ga~.
Extracts Irani the ** Drunkard’s Looking
Glass.
BY M. L. WEEMS. 1812.
“For God’s sake, don’t go in, the
creek’s past fording”—were the words of a
Jfrienato John Walker, Esq.,ofS. CL, as,
.half shaved, he dashed down on horse -
| back to Rocky Creek, in a fresh. He
>• swore by his Maker he had never yet
. asked any odds of Rocky Creek, and that
.| he’d be ifhe’ddo it now; and there.
j iipon pitched in and perished,
i! “ Rptwixt the saddle and the groiimi,
I Mercv l sought, and mercy found,”
_ j was the favorite song of poor Andrew
Lipscomb, Halifax Co., Va.; but return
i ing, half shaved, from a regimental mus-
Jter, he gave his horse the lash, and stav
ing through the woods like a huntsman
Jrun mad, was dashed with such violence
!against a tree that his brains gushed out.
j j “Hurra! for my ten years of sinning
iand serving the devil—and then for my
; ten years of repenting and serving God.”
j Such was the hope wherewith young Torn
, Madden, when drunk, used to comfort
’ himself! But alas! he never saw his re
pent ing years. For coming home one
>j night, quite blue, from a grog shop, he
I got his neck snapped short by a fall into
[ | his own saw pit.
“You are an impertinent puppy, sir,
and if you’ll only get down, I’ll give you a
[ whipping, sir”—These were the
' very words of Patterson to Briene, both
j blue, at the door of a grogshop, in Mil
ledgeviilc. Briene, who was on horse
back with a gun in his hand, did not get
down, but struck Patterson with his gun,
and, turning his horse, set off. Patterson
threw a brick-bat, which struck him an ill
knock on the back of his head, and then
;he lurgied and fled. Briene wheeled his
I horse and took aim. The people who
were present called out, “don’t shoot!
don’t shoot! tor God’s sake don’t shoot.”
But being too drunk to reflect, he pulled
away and lodged the contents of his gun
in Patterson’s hack. What made it more
melancholy, poor Patterson had come to
town that very morning to get his wed
ding clothes.
“ Boh! who the pltigue’s afraid to die ?”
said an old sot by the name of Ransome
Buckingham, “I wants, when I go, to go
like a flash.”
Ho got what he wanted; for coming
home quite groggy from a tippling trap,
he took what the jockies call a ground
start, and went head foremost down into
his own well, sixty feet deep.
I “ Last night a littlo boozy,
On whiskey, ale and cider, —
Such was poor sailor Tom Halyard’s
song, interrupted at times with hiccups,
as he staggered along Baltimore street,
under a press of grog, and as happy as an
admiral. But, unlucky, broaching to, all
standing, he capsized, and pitching down,
bow-sprit under, into a deep cellar, he
jfnctuml his skull, and never rose again.
Our Parson, he preaches for tythes, 0!
Our Lawyer, he prattles for prog;
Our Doctor, he blisters—as you know,
But, hang’ein, they all love the grog.”
Thus huHupedyoung Bon Glover, the
brick-layer, Milledgeville, as with “a drop
in his eye,” lie skipped into a carpenter’s
shop, and reached his hand to the whis
key bottle. But, alas! mistaking for it a
| bottle of aquafortis, he knocked down a
bumper, and went off, as with a dram
of hell-fire in his throat.
“ Never fear, Tom, I’ll soon have some
of your democratic blood out of you,” said
a certain Maryland doctor, as he bound
his patient’s arm for bleeding. But being
fuddled, lie did what a thousand Fiddled
doctors have done before him—he pricked
a tendon for his patient, whereby he died
in all the agonies of a lock-jaw.
“ Who the will pay a dollar for a
ferry boat, w hen he can go over ibr no
thing on such a fine bridge of ice, like
this.” Thus brawled out a drunken wa
goner, as he drove down to Hammond’s
ferry, Patapsco, in time of frost. On
reaching the channel, 15 feet deep, down
he went through the bursting ice, and
was lost, both he and all his horses, with
a load of fine teas and muslins.
“ A candlestick, indeed! Who wants
a candlestick when there’s a barrel at
hand with such a nice little bung-hole in
it as this?” and therewith stuck his can
dle into the bung yf a half barrel of gun
jpowder, which, by a strange fatality, hap
pened to lie by him. Such were the
words and deeds of a young midshipman,
who, with a do’zen other young midship
men and surgeon’s mates w ere carousing
in the cock-pit of one of the U. States
frigates lying in the road of Malta, whence
they had just procured a hamper of good
wine: presently in the midst of their
singing and roaring, down popped the
candle into the powder, which broke loose
upon them with a sisserara, that quickly
discovered three of them, and so black
ened and burnt and crippled the rest,
that several of them never got over it.
Among this latter sort was an elegant
young medical gentleman—a relative
of ray own.
“Oh, if all the trees in the world were
but one tree, what a great tree that would
be!—and if all the axes in the world
were but in one axe, what a great axe
%
wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmammmammm+mmimi i 11 IB » ,iww—l
; that would be! —and if all the men in the
world were but in one inan, what a great
man that would be!—And now, if that
- great man were to take that great axe,
Vand cut down that great tree, O what a
!fall that would be!” Thus spouted a
-jsilly young sot in Alexandria, profanely
' j mocking a piousold Quaker —his drunken
in the mean time all around
Mhim, reeling and roaring, excessively tle
■ lighted w ith his wonderful humor. But,
ibehold! just as he came to the ending
iclause of his sermon—“O what a great
'fall that would be!” one of the sots, by
v way of practical pun, overset the table
' on which he stood, and down, head fore
‘ most, on the floor came the
‘ preacher, and fractured his skull so mis
-1 orably that he died the next dav.
2 'ffc.: - ■ ■ ■
. Aii Ancient Pledge.
? On the blank leaf of an old English
f Bible which has been handed down from
parent to child through successive gener
-1 ations, and appears at the time to have
t been the property of Robert Bolton,
- Bachelor of Divinity, and preacher
-of God’s word, at Broughton in North
1 amptonsliire, is written the following
5 pledge:
“From this daye forward to the ende of
j my life, 1 will never pledge anye health,
t nor drink a whole carouse in a glass, cupp,
J I bowlc, or other drinking instrument what
ever, wheresoever it ho, from whomso
- ever it come, except the necessary of na-|
■ turedoe require it. Not my own gra-j
1 cions Kinge, nor anye the greatest mon->
» arch or tyrant on earth, not my dearest:
1 friende, nor all thegoulde in the worlde,j
I shall ever enforce me or allure me. Not
1 an angel from heaven, (who I know will;
5 not attempt it,) shall persuade me. Not;
1 Satan, with all his old subtleties, not alf
; the powers of hell itselfc, shall ever be- |
trayc me. By this very sinne, (for a
I sinne it is, and not a little one,) I doe:
1 plainly find that I have more offended
and dishonored my great and glorious
Maker, and most merciful Savior, than!
by all other sinnesl am subject untoe :l
and ffor this very sinne it is, that my God
has often been strange unto me ; and for
that cause and no other respect, I have
1 thus vowed ; and heartily beg my good
Father in heaven, of his great goodness
and infinite mercy in Jesus Christ, to as
sist me in the same, and to be favorable
unto me flor what is past. Amen.
Robert Bolton.
Broughton, April 10, 16.39.
Temperance.
i The last New Orleans “Crescent City,”
, gives a pleasing detail of the temperance
, cause in that quarter. It says, “Teiuper
i auce is going ahead at a very fine rate in
[ this city. Four of our most promising
, young lawyers have signed the teetotal
■ pledge, and a pair ofthe most prominent’
knights ofthe quill in this city have come |
to the same conclusion. One of them is
the handsomest man in town, and ‘time
; w as,’ us father Bacon’s brass head is re
j ported to have said, when this political
I Apollo could carry more good brandy wi
lder his vest than any other we wot of.
On Tuesday evening he went to the tem
perance meeting, and when he came
home, instead of going to the sideboard to
that decanter, he set himself down by a
! little mahogany table, took a glass of ice
water, and wrotd a long article on the
; virtues of total abstinence. Wc would j
| that some “ knights of the quill,” politi
jeiansand public men, that we know of;
I could only be induced to “go and do like
.■wise.
A Good Speech.
The following speech was recently
made by a Washingtonian in Connecticut:
“ There is no mistake about it, sir. Rum
never did, nor never will, make the man
rich that drinks it. The last winter has:
been a hard season for us poor folks, gen
erally. But I have lived better—happier ■
—laid up more money during the winter,
although destitute of work more than half
jot the time, than I did last summer, when
I had work every day. I have not done
half so much labor, and still am twice as
well off. And, sir, the reason is this,—j
last summer I dranli rum, and last winter !
I drank water.
Temperance in Ireland.
Father Matthew says: “ Our cause pro
gresses ; it gathers strength every day.—
We now' number in Ireland more than'
five millions of total abstainers, (loud
cheering,) not to mention those who have
j fallen—men, women and children, whom:
j no inducement would cause to bend the;
| knee to-Baal. Lately the daughter of a;
wealthy farmer was married, and the fa
ther of the bride sent two vats of porter
' into the town of Naas, that the inhabitants 1
might partake of the festivities, and though
the vats were broached there, not a single ;
1 i individual was found base enough to taste j
'a drop of it. (Much cheering.)
|
s We learn from the Honululu Temper
ance Record, that 0f203 men on board the
5 U. S. ship Boston, only 72 drew tlieirj
1 grog—the others, in lieu thereof receiving!
1 6 cents a day as the value of it. The!
: boys were not allowed to draw grog. A
? donation of sls from the officers of the'
t Boston was presented to the Seaman’s
tj Chaplain, in aid ofthe temperance cause ;
, also a Bethel flag by her commander,
i Capt. Long, which donations are thank
i folly acknowledged by Rev. Mr. Damon,
on behalf of “all seamen visiting the port.”
n [ Traveller.
The chief of the Medical staff of the
French Army, has stated it as a fact, that
’ the six thousand survivors who safoly re
■ turned from Egypt, were all men who
. abstained from the use of ardent spirits,
yj [Safeguard.
;|XiviRTiiBEMiMTe.
■o ® a aas?a£ s? o 9
r OF ETEKY DE.SCKIETION,
NEATLY AND PROMPTLY EXECUTED AT THE
©ffifee of the SiLasljfngtonfan;
—SUCH AS
1 Business Cards. Steamboat Receipts,
.;Ball Tickets, Rah. Rosd Receipts,
(Invitatioh Tickets, Hand Bills,
3 j Circulars, Horse Bills,
'Checks, Notes, Stage Bills,
’lßill Heads, Show Bilis,
r | Catalogues, Labels,
Bills of Lading, Pamphlets, &c. &.C.
!j Law Blanks,
■ Os the latest and most approved forms, always on hand
pi or printed to order at short notice, on the most
reasonable terms.
Printing done in Gold and Sitter Bronze, or in
various colored Inks, if required.
■j, Ct7"The office is fitted up with a splendid assortment
iof Materials for the above work, and the proprietor
’ | pledges himself to use every exertion to please his cus
, i temers, both in price and correctness of execution.
HAVILANI), lUSLIIY Afc CO.
: Near the Mansion House, Globe , and U. Slates
,) Hotels, Augusta, Ga.
DEALERS IN
Choice Drugs and Medicines.
Chemicals, Patent Medicines,
t Surgical & Dental Instruments
Perfumery, Brushes,
Paints, Oils,
Dye-Stud's,
Window Glass, <Ssc. &c.
I June 17 2jy j
REMEDY FOR WORMS.
j'T’HE Compound Syrup of Pink Root,
prepared by the subscriber, from the origin-1
al receipt oftheiate Dr. M. Antony.
This pleasant and safe preparation is recom
mended, as one of the effectual remedies for
expelling Worms from the system. For rale, in
quantities to suit purchasers.
July! 4 if] WM. HAINES, Jr.
BRASS & IRON FOUNDRY.
r pilE subscriber lias now on hand a
large stock of the raw materials, of the best
quality, tor Mill and Gin Gear, also, fust rate
: patterns of every description of Machinery, at
lbs Foundry, in the rear of the Presbyterian
, Church, on the Road from Augusta to Savannah
--where he is prepared to do all kinds of business
■ in his line, as low as any other establishment in
tile city, fie Hatters himself that he will he able
to'give satisfaction to all who may entrust their
work to his care. Orders left at the Foundry, or l
with any ofthe merchants of Augusta, wi.l be
promptly attended to. >
j July 1 4 «m| P. H. MANTZ. j
LIVERY AND SALE
STABLES. The undersigned
r<, .specUully .informs his friends and
.V 3 V I lie public, that he has taken the!
j Stables on Ellis street, formerly known as GUed-j
ron’s Lower Stables, and more recently kept by!
Mr. N. Baltingal. which are now undergoing!
thorough repair. These Stables are large, airy j
. and commodious,with splendid Dry lots attached, j
, Every attention will he paid to the Drovers, and:
charges moderate, according to the times.
1 1 will also keep on hand Vehicles of every dc-j
. scription and fine Horsrs, to hire, on reasonable
. terms. CHARLES McCOY.
Augusta, August 12 10 4m
1 1000 brick for sale—
i 1 The subscriber bason hand
. 150,000 Common Brick, 25,000 Well Brick, also
, 10,000 Cornish and Water Table Brick, suitable
for binding for Door Yards or Garden Walks;
all of which arc well burnt, .rift for sale low, at I
flic yard, or can be delivered at any place in the
city or on the Sand Hill. His residence is near
the yard. Orders left at the post office will be
immediately attended to.
July 1 4 3m] S. L. BASSFORD.
TIN MANUFACTORY.'
/JPINNER’S Work of every description
1 made to order, at short notice, such as
! BATHING TUBS,
| FACTORY CANS,
CYLENDERS,
. OIL STANDS, (from lup to 100 gallons.)
PATENT COFFEE POTS, of all sizes, to
suit hotels or private families,
PATENT BOILERS, for washing or heat
jitlg water lor Baths.
! O’ All the above mentioned articles made of
, Double tin.
A regular assortment of TIN WARE kept
constantly on hand, to suit merchants or pedlers
All kinds of ROOFING and GUTTER.'
. made and repaired, low fob cash.
The above business superintended by
E. E. SCOFIELD,
Jackson-street, between the Globe Hi>
tel and Rail Road Depot.
Augusta, June 17 2 ly
WI.CHURCIIILL&CO
Wholesale anil Retail Dealers in
EARTHENWARE, GLASS AND CHINA
209 Broad-street, Augusta.
June 10 1 ts
S *T <
FOR SALE, —a Bargain !
MA ywo Story HOUSE and LOT, on
Reynold street, near Lincoln-street, in
the lower part of the city, adjoining va
cant lot belonging to Mrs: Gardner. It will b<
! sold low for cash. For further particulars apply
'j at this office. June 24—3 ts
-iTAECISIONS of the Superior Courts
. “of Georgia—published in compliance with
! i the Act of December 10, 1841—containing De-
Mcisions rendered during the year 1842. A few
.[ copies left for sale at this office. [May 2 (
if PROSPECTUS
;! OP THE
Al'GUm WASHINGTONIAN,
VOL. 11.
' DEVOTED TO TEMPERANCE, AGRICULTURE
! MISCELLANY :
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY.
At Augusta, Georgia,
, By JAMES MoCAFEERTY.
- per, the publisher has the gratification to. presto
> a sheet to the public, which he trusts will meet
with their approbation—and he asks from tho*
friendly to its prosperity, their aid in extendiu
its circulation.
,; Competent gentlemen having kindly acceded
jtothc call made upoir them by the Board ot
Managers of the Augusta Society, to conduct
, the Editorial department, the publisher flatter*
I; himself that he will be able to place the paper on
I a permanent basis, and to give it a much more
, elevated character.
Thus far, the march ofour cause is onward
and in a tew years, it may reasonably be expected
that if the energy which has characterised tin
members of the Washington Reform, for the
past three years, continue, an entire reformation
must take place, and that the greatest curse to |
our country, will only be mentioned as anion: 1
'the evils that were.
| The subject of Temperance will be the promi
. nent object of the “ W ashingtontan yet then
will be room for the stirring events of the du\
11 and for other items of interest to the general rea
er—as Agriculture, Science, a Prices Current j
the Market, Exchange Table, &c. In short, the
j publisher will endeavor to make this paper whirl
l it should be—an able advocate of Temperano
and a useful Family Paper, strictly moral in it* I
bearing.
The “ Washingtonian'’ will be published. I
' ’EVERY Saturday, (on a Sheet 20*26 inches !
at the unprccedcnlat low price of One Doll.
per annum, ahtaijs in advance- -thus placing i: I
| within the means of all who desile an excellerr 1
;; Family Paper, at a very cheap rate, to obtain it
1 The oublisher looks confidently to all the friem
• of'lemperancejand Morality, to aid him iaearr
Sing successfully, this enterprise into effect—aii j
with their aid, it can be done.
' CLUBBING.—To persons who will rlu: j
■together, and forward to the publisher, (dree . I
| postage) Five Dollars, in current funds, will ], I
entitled to six copies, and so in proportion. Ft
a package of twenty-six papers, to one add n s
1 wenty Dollars.
fj* All Post Masters are respectfully request ,
ed to act as agents.
O’All communications, by mail, must b. '
•post paid, ton*ceive attention. By ttie rules . j
tho General Post-Office, Post Masters ma, 1
Frank subscription money for Newspapers.
June 6th, 1843.
O’ Editors inserting the above prospectus, <> !
| noticing 'the appearance of our paper, through j
their columns, will confer a favor which w< 1
| shall be happy to reciprocate.
The Southern Miscellany :
I A SOUTHERN FAMILY NEWSPAPER—NEUTRAL IN l>o,\
mes and religion.
Illustrated with fine Engravings on Wood.
W. T. Thompson, Editor.
C. R. Haiiletter, Publislicr.
IIE “Miscellany” is the only pnjn r |
of the class published at the South, and b;
been in existence little better than a year, duri ■<
which time it has acquired an extensive circu
i lion thri ughout the Southern and Southwest,
| States. It is a strictly Neutral Family Mews, ,
per—embracing Moral and Sentimental Tales- I
Sketches of Adventure and Tra v el Moral an
j Scientific Essays—Fire-side Readings—Sell
| Poetry—Readings tor Youth— Seasonable A.
[ ricultural Matter—Historical Sketches—Fori v
iand Domestic Intelligence—Commercial Items—
j Amusing Miscellany—Congressional, Leg is i;
live and Political Mews—llumotous Aijeciloti -
—Advertisements, &c. &c,; but the reader wi;
j look in vain in its columns for the records n
I Horrid Crimes—Bloody Murders— Revultii
: Outrages—Disgusting detailsx»f Licentious Liu
—-Obscene Anecdutesr-Personal Billingsga:
land Pull's of Ctuack Medicines that make up tl
j chief staple of most of those |K>imlcss public,
j tions that are specially devoted to every thin:
and designed to circulate every where.
The “ Miscellany” is issued every Saturdu
Morping, on an imperial sheet at Two Dollan
and fitly Cents, invariably in advance.
J3* New subscribers to the second volun
(which commenced on the first of April, 1813
will be entitled to a copy of “ Major
, Courtship,” tree of charge Any person re
mitting the names of Five new subscrilicrs, (with
the money,) will be entitled to the sixth copy nt
the paper and pamphlet, gratis.
O’All letters relating to the business oft!
office, must be post-paid, and addressed to
C.R.HANLEITER,
Madison, Morgan county, Ga.
Madison, May Ist, 1843.
TYPE,
AT REDUCED PRICES.
jrTYPES, and all other PRINTIM
MATERIALS, manufactured at Conner I
i United States Type and Stereotype Foundry I
; corner oi Nassau and Ann streets, New-York— I
jean be had at Eighteen per cent deduction lair, I
old prices.
Tho undersigned respectfully informs the Obi I
’ Patrons of the Type and Stereotype Found r; |
formerly known as James Conner’s, and mor |
1 recently as Conners & Cooke’s, and the Publ; I
in general, that they are prepared to execute Or ]
: jders for PKITING TYPES, PRESSED
CHASES, CASES, IMPOSING STOVE ' J
INK FRAMES, and every 'other article t 1
form Complete Printing Establishments, on a I
favorable terms, and as good a quality as an; 1
other establishment in the United States.
New prices, per lb. Old price.
Agate, !*6 cts. Agate, 108 cts
Nonpareil, 66 “ Nonpareil, 84
Minion, 54 “ Minion, 66 ” j
Brevier, 46 •“ Brevier, 54
Burgeois, 40 “ Burgeois, 46 l; 1
LongPiimer, 36 “ Long Primer, 42 “I
Small Pica, 34 “ Small Pica, 34 11 I
Pica, 32 “ Pica, 38 |
Borders, cuts, Brass rule, and all other articlisl
manufactured at their establishment at equal! !
low rates.
New articles got tip to order, on being furnish I
' ed with the patterns.
The type cast at this establishment is both ii |
style of Face and the material of which it i-|
made, particularly adapted for service in New--|
paper printing.
All kinds of stereotype furnished to order.
JAMES CONNER & SON. j
N. B. Such Newspapers as will copy the ,i I
bove three times, will be entitled to pay in Type 1
on making a bill of 4 times the amount of thr j
insertions. July 17 6