^HwwaeaEii.ju v.?.?>>**
now sad then. "*
AB.fcfil(l. yoa mighlv mnlirnl?all liale t
T??,4 thousand pound?, and am purty
VfygyaM
^yjWiiiond^ i'nwj trsmenjns boveon nuggit f
I wonder how big you was wen you
Wos littie, and if yure mother wud no you
-w^lf BOW i W -' .4'. l
That you're grone so long, and thick and
JB2?wt - x
Or if ynra father would recognise his ofspring
. . '.t,..
* And his ksflf, thou elefhnteen quodrupid 1 * ;
I wonder if it hnrts you rautch to be bo big,
* And if you grade it in a month or ro.
I spose wen you woa young tha didn't gin
You skim milk but all the kreme you kud
stuff
Into your iiitie stuminick. jest to see
dow big yude gro; and afterward tha no
doubt
Fed you on otes and l>a, and sich like.
With perhaps an occasional punkin or
^ squosh I
In all probability yu don't no yure enny
Bigger than a small kaff; for if you did,
* Yade brake down fences and switch your
V*r,V
And rush around, and hook, and boiler,
And run over fowkes, thou orful beast.
0, what a lot of mince pize yude maik,
And aassengo?, and your tale,
Whitch kan't wa far from phorty pound*,
' Wud maik nigh unto a barrel of ox tail
soop.
And cudn't n heep of stakes be cut oph yu,
Whitch, with salt and pepper and lermater
Ketchup, wouldn't be bad to tnik,
Thou grate and glorious inseekt !
Rut I must klose, O most prodiju* reptile!
And for mi adiniraahun of yu, when yu di,
I*Ie rite a node unto yore poddy and rcmanes,
Pornouncin' yu the largest of yure race ;
And as [ don't expect to* have a half a dollar
Agin to ?pare for to pa to look nt yu, and
M
I ain't a ded bed, I will sa, farewell.
Squash.
(pop.
Education Needed.
The following actual dialogue occurred
in a court, in a Stato not two
thousand miloe from New England.?
A quack doctor of the Thompsonian order,
was called to the stand as a witness,
and alter he had testified to having
made a night visit, the prosecuting attorney
began the cross-examination as
follows:
"Mr. Doctor, to what school of practice
do yon belong ?"
"I don't belong to any school. I
never went to any school in my life, I
thank you."
"But that is net what I want to
know. I mean to what school of medicine
do you belong ?"
"1 tell yon, sir, I never went to any
school of medicine or practice, or anything
else. I believe nature makes a doc*
wr. 1 am a sevenin son, sir, aucl
didn't need to go to school."
Well, well, what system of medicine
do yon practice ? That is, what kind
/)f medicine do you give?"
"Oh, that's what you want, is it??
Why, I give the Brutanic always, aud
everywhere."
"The Brutanic? You mean the Botanic
system, don't you ?"
"No, sir, tse Brutanic, I say."
"Now will you tell mo how much
you charge for a nocturnal visit?"
"Sir, (very indignantly) I don't give
any such medicine. I practice as I
told you, to the Brntauic system, and
111 hAve you and this court to understand,
I don't give any such medicine
as that horrid stuff.'
No more questions were asked.? 12.
I. Schoolmaster.
Worrx> Have tiie Reason.?On
Tuesday last. Mr. John Rooa prosecuted
his 8hopmate, Robert Land, for assault
and battery. While the complainant
was under examination, the
fol'owing colloquy took place between
him and the defendant's counsel:
4Did you not call my client here,
and defendant, a fooll"
T did.'
4Why did you, sir?"
'I decline to answer that question.'
*Why do von decline to answer it ?
IH appeal to the court to. punish you
for your contumacy. Yon ought to
be fined for contempt. I'll let you
know that yon can't call my client a
fool, without giving your reason for
it.'
'I don't know that my reasons have
anything to do with the case."
IH let you know they have. Jow,
AWWtt the question."
'Well, if 1 must, I must. I said I
thought ha was a fool,.because he didn't
know batter than to Mre such a chucklehead
at you to defeipS him.'
The counsel dropped the witness
nnd let the question of contempt pass.
jfc -c - jy- 5i
, . 1 ... j, ' .. i
A city editor, who is bachelor,
having said iu bis lost issue that he rca!!v
rrished that be had a son so that
he could dross him up in fashion, was t
called upon next day by his adorable, ?
to whom bo had been paying ho alten- |
tions for the last two years, and asked ?
if he really said that. I
"Oertamlv I did, my dear." 1
"Well, Billy," said she, "why doa't c
you make arrangments for one T 1
Our friend says it was the first time f
he was ever oornered. Ho felt so i
mortified that he went right away to 1
the person. 1
ty A gentlemen being in com- <
pany with a sprightly damsel about '
fourteen, was somewhat annoyed by 1
her trickery. At length heexelairaed : J
"Now, my dear girl, be stflH.* !
This was touching a chord of fem- I
inine vanity. Assuming au air ofim- 1
portanee, and retiring to a position of j
defiance, she responded:
"Girl I indeed I / am as much of a 1
? * "11
wvwati as ycm ore. J
er uHere are two faces under ^
one hat," as the young lady remarked ^
when her lover was kissing her. i
Where did Noah strike the 1
first nail in the ark? On the he&u. )
<
If a girl thinks more of her \
heels than her head, depend upon it j
sIhj will never amount to much.? ,
Brains which settle in the shoes never j
get much above them. Young gen- <
tleuien on the look-out would do well 1
to uoto that down carefully. i
Little acts of kindness, gentle 1
words, loving smiles?these strew tho '
path of life with flowers; they make 1
the sunshine bright and the earth *
greener: and lie who made us "Love
one another," looks with favor upon
the gentle and kindhearfed, and he j
pronounced them blessed. y
Witticism.?An Eastern editor says i
that a man in New York got himself 4
into trouble by marrying two wives. I
A western editor replies by assur 4
ing his contemporary that a good '
many men in that section have done '
the Same thing by marrying one.
A Northern editor retorts that <
quite a number of his acquaintances
found trouble enough by barely prom- I
ising 10 marry witnont going any further.
A Southern editor says that a friend
of his was bothered enough when simply
found iu company with another ;
man's wife.
"Mother how long is it before i
the 4th of July? "About six week?
iny son." I'll be darn'd if I wait,
give me my crackers and I'll fire them
off now," replied Young American.
f^T* It is said that a diamond, as
largo as a lien's egg has been found 1
in California. A wag say a he thinks '
the printer made a mistake?that it 1
ought to read, an egg as large as a 1
diain* ud. (
1
"My clear, what is the matter with <
puss?seo how 6he swells her tail, and 1
arches her back, at the sausage I gave <
her, that was left on the plate?" i
"Oh! that's nothing, she merely t
scents her old enemy, Ctesar in it!"
A lady making inju ries of a i
boy a\>ont his father^ an intemperate (
man, who had been sick for some time, 1
asked whether he had regained his
appetite, 'No ma'am,' says the hope- j
ful, not exactly; his appetite is very \
poor, but his drinka lite is good as t
ever. 1
An itinerant preacher of the Methodist
church was travelling in the back i
settlement of Missiouri, and stopped at 1
a cabin, where an old lady received^*
him very kindly. On sitting provisions
before him, she began to question him; i
'Stranger, where mout you be from I j
'Madam, I reside in 8helby county, <
Kentucky.' 'Well, stranger, hope no ;
offence, nut what mought you he doin <
way op here ?' 'Madam, 1 am search- i
ing for the lost sheep of the tribe of
Israel." 'John; John I" shouted the i
a!/"1 lflilv '/tAirtn ? f Kama * ? ?4 ? '
I w.v. , wuiv ngni. ucin IUMIUIIIUI?", I
! here's a stranger all the way from |
Shelby connM'," Kentucky, a hunting
stock, and I'll just l>ot my life that j
tangle-haired old black ram, that's bin j
in our lot all last week's one of his'n.' i
"You said, Mr. Jones, that yon dfll- '
ciatcd in a pulpit, do you mean that j
; yon preached if"
"No, sir, I held the light for the '
man that did."
"Ah I tho court anderstood you dif- 1
ferently, They supposed the discourse
caine trom you."
"No, sir, I only throwed light upon 1
it."
"No levity, Mr. Jones. Crier, wipe {
your nose, and call tlio next witness. ^
An old. gentleman in one of the stage ?
sleighs, the other morning, audibly |
wondered what caused tlie uncommon
? severity of the weather. "Why,"
grumbled a muffled personage noar 1
to him," "when Dr. Kane left the e
north pole he forgot to shut the back i
door after him." i
r_ { . A'
VKS Tv" '>^ tf'aL * T";. -'ln?\tfCE^f " Va
---.-i. ? .?.?... ?-. rl. |_ ? |
" is Kraro*.?Editor is but another
jets more kicks and cuffs than mo- r
lies or praises. Having a multiple *
>f masters, of cotme he ones in for a
>roportk>n?ie quantity of slave far*,? f
liasatisfaction, faultfinding and hard 1
end. ^He is supposed to be?judging I
s considered of little valueif ncft wn- 1
iipotent. He must know every thing 1
M3 poet, philosopher, statesmen, histo- !
ian, naturalist, tfcc, Ac. Ho must be 1
everywhere; attend all meetings, lectures
and entertainments; be at all
private parties and balls, and go on
:ure and the^ommon CkiunciM^am- ^
>er; mast visit all celebrities and
form the acquaintance of all proranent
charcters as well as those who
think themselves such, and give a particular,
accurate and favorable notice ,
jf every thing he sees. He must be allpowerful?-promote
and secure the
public weHarh; puff all artiats and all
who aspire to be artiste, into notoriety >
uid success; insure the elettion of ufl
plaeeloving noliticans and the triumph
>f some party, however often and cler 1
testable its principles; defend all par:y
measures, and keep the good will *
f the public. And tor all this, what *
recompense is offered him ! lie is con- *
lemned at every corner for not doing
tietter! Not one of the many he pro- n
notes or labors to promote is willing to ?
>ay him the "first red cent" for his ser- ?
rices. He must do all through pat- h
riotism and the love of truth?get Ass
living by extra exertion.
Girls ox Hollers.?It is stated that
it a largo b??r ?l< fusing nouse in
Berlin, Jrrussia, the customers are
waited upon by female skaters. The
instant a customer takes his seat, one
:?f the damsels darts from the end of
the room, skims over the floor, des- l
bribing graceful curves, and in a
moment is at his side, and requests to \
know his wishes! One of thoso female
waiters will collect a number of or- j
ders is her round, or carry her beer
vessels to her customers without rnf- lling
their snowy froth. The motions
performed resembled skating, and [
strangers arc likely to be deceived, ?
but the act is performed by employ- ?
ing6inall iron rollers^ set into the soles j
of strong, but neatly fitting boots? *
tl:. _ii . r. -
auib i? uu mywcry. n iukcs time i*
and practice tu execute the uioyetuouVm
well, mid the work is somewhat fatigue 1
ing- The floors over which they
glide are made of very smooth hard (
wood l)oards.
Our Colored Brethren run largely i
to religion. Indeed, in doing up the \-\
extras at a camp-meeting, or execu-; \
ting winter landscapes on a wall with j c
s whitewash brush, the colored raco r
mn claim an ascendancy over all
:he world. The darkey deals abundantly
in polysyllables, and in ?xut>erauce
ot idea sometimes displays
tn intimacy with rhetoric which would
nake fortunes for any of our star ac- r
ore.
We annex the following morceau u
just as it was delivered last Sunday in
i seven-by-nine lime shed in an up ?
own alley. Every line contains a
volume ot startling truth:?
"A man without grace, my brethren, e
is like a hungry king fisher perched h
upon a fenco rail beside a frraen blook;
the fishes, which represent the joys of *
the Christian, are sealed up from beyond
his aeces*!"
"Grace, my brethren, is to a man's i
soul what the President's signature is
to a bank bill; without it they are alike 1
valueless ! urace,~m y fellow sinners,
is to the soul what a lightning-rod is to .
a house: the bolts of Satan may fly
about it like king-bird* around a swarm
of bees, but, fortified by its shielding
Sower, they leave the soul unharmed ! j
irace, my dear friends, is like the bel!
around a pet sheep'* neck; it tink- t
les sweetly in the Good shepherd's ear,
and when the sheep strays. lie brings c
him home again. f
The first thing, brethren -' ; *he i
beams of morning appear to your waking
eves?ask for grace. And i
through the day aek for grace, and in
the night, too, ask for grace. And c
mind, never think that you've qot en- *
ough. When the Lora gets tired of
giving he'll stop, but never stop asking .
through apprehension that you are
tn nnl i
*"f I""***'
"And now, brethren, lot us sing the
thirtieth psalm."
The adviee of the preacher *d pted.
the congregation arose and g^re r
m old fashion hymn with a style of
earnestness that we have never heard j
sxeeoded.
There is no rubbing out the fact *
that if yon would find genuine, double
tweasted square toed piety, voc must 1
ieek it in one-story houses with subtor- m
anean parlors.
1 1 ? 1 ' ft
A western editor mneh wishes to ^
enow whether the law recently enact- *
id against the carrying of deadly wear ?
>ons applies to doctors who carry pills
h their poclrets.
of IBfotWek^
IN GREAT VARIETY.
Tb? above, together with
Rich Mlfttt) Ribbons, &c?,
AS USUAL,
Velvet Moss Trimmings,
NKW AND BEAUTIFUL,
AT
nr. a. aofirs,
(TATE OF 80VTH CAROLINA.
GREENVILLE DISTRICT.
aay o?aHan?ii>r mtoLSss^
Valkor Jk Irvine, ) Declaration in Assurasit,
tm. V Damage $800.00.
John McBride. ) B. F. Praar, PlfT* Atfy.
WIIKKEA9 the Fiainiia ui?5 uu tSre lOth day!
of Antutk 1865, file h's declaration aainst
the defendant^ who ia abeent from, and
rithout tho limits of the State, and has neither
rife nor attorney, known within the same, n;?on
rhom a copy of tho aaid declaration might be
erved.
It ia ordered that the aaid defendant do ap ear
and plead to the aaid declaration, on or
efore the 11th day of August, in the year ot
ur Lord, one thousand eight hundren and fiftyix,
otherwise final and absolute judgement will
* given and awarded against him.
D. HOKE, C. C. P.
Clerks Offioe, Greenville C. 1L I
August 10 1865. ) 8m ly
-ry? oBowotn book,
The Tkree Goldrn Link?,
OR
TaUt qf Odd Fellowship.
BY MISS C. W. BARUER.
LiIKK THE First.?Friendship, or the Mysterious
Governess.
?IRB the Second.?Love, or the Adventures
of an American Student.
.ink the Third.? Truth, or Craxy Madge
and her Child.
E"N tlio present work Miss Harder lias
n. succeeueu, most nappiiy, in illustrating
lio three cardinal, principle* of Odd Fellowhip?Friendship,
Lone nud Truth. Tlio
tore* are well written and, while they will
wirticularly interest the Odd Fellow, are of
uch a character as to reooiumend them to
Mid em of every elm*. The Authoress stands
tarvedly high in literary circles at the
PStl;, and we feel sure that till* boob' will
Mihnnce her reputation.
It will he published in a volume of near
wo hundred pages, printed in double c*dnnn*,
on fino while paper, and elegantly
>ouud in mit?lin, gilt. Price 73 cents.
Six copies will lie sent for Four dollars ;
Ten copies for Six dollars. The trade will
h; supplied on the most liberal terms. The
ash or undoubted reference must accompaiy
orders, in all cases. Address.
TIIOS. A. BURKR, Publisher,
January 171 * * ? Cassville, Ga.
"Tlse QeedTlme Cmlsi,"
V T. S. Alt THUS.
1"MIOSE who wish to hear something of that
long-expected day, should read this hook.
It is harmg an immense sale; S000 copies hav
)g been ordered in advance of publication.
W? send a copy by mail, postpaid on receipt
f the price, $1.
i
Philadelphia, Pa.
MWSaffiSi:
U-J V * X-A J ^ ' A- A a
KUU IW1 vur KUU Minn* MI Aftau
dec. SO ** tf. )
\TOU ?rc requested to moot at the Division
X Room of th? 8ou of Temperance art til 1
urther order*. Meeting?Friday Evening*.
By order of W. P. Pi** W.-. P.'. *} 1 i
-i"wy " * !_J!
V Mew Yolmme.?IM6.
QrahMn'i Awmtmitmn WLmmMMlj ,
HftAOAZINE,
lie voted to Literature, Art
and Fa?bion.
rHE new volumes, commencing wiUi the
January number, 1856, will contain
>ver Twelve Hundred pages of lite choicest
muling matter, Steel and Wood Engraving*,
md Mode.
Tcaus.?One copy, one year in adrance.
18 ; Two copies, $5; Five oopies, (end one
o Agent or getter tjp of the Chib,) $10; 11
opiee, and one to agent, $20; for $6, one
opv will be sent three year*. Additions to
2lebe at the seme rate as Club sent.
Specimen copies sent gratis to those desirng
to got up elube.
All nmnrtrnilax 1AM (* '' 1 ?? i -
. ?... iu " i>uum?f) lO
ABRAHAM H. SEE.
Jannary 17, No. lOdChesnut *t., Phil*.
The Trie CurelftnftaatT
FE undersigned will issue At Anderson
G. II., on or before the flntt of Febnary,
n LITERARY and NEWS JOURf
AL, bearing tlio abovo title. It will be
n independent pnper in every sense of the
ma. It will be the die of the let* Green
fRe Mountaineer, and about m large e* the
laaette and Adeocato. It will t* publkbed
I the aapreeedentedly low rate of One Dol*
ir per ecnnm. Pereone desiring to ttib- orihe.
weald do well to wad h thdfotalMi
a eooa as poeetble, tegether with the ewb* !
eripdon price, aa we intend to require it in
dranee,or eend no neper. an&Si
JOHN V. MOORE,
Prb 14?if Ed" h%\ PTWfMNbr.
I
r|^Hlflifhtt??rnb?r ofthUperiodlcaEisbsAjl
Kini in Mny'liwt, the object uf wbk-h
is, in part^tfl pnlilTate a spirit of lore ?h?<|
lions, and to encourage their united efforts in
"every poid i&ord' i?k$ Stwk," " The spirit
of sectarianism bus, hitherto, in it great
measure, impeded the progress pt' Christianity,
and always will. Such a spirit, to a less
extent, however, is rife at the present lime.
SCTSKOv
Refined literature, and the general cause
of humanity, ate embraced in its contents
Its contributors are all gentlemen of ae
knowledgedtalents and piety. ^
The friepds of Christianity are earnestly
and MMTulVMlidM lagir.?l?k u?iud
support to tbu entcrpilae.
Aivy person tvho will procure ten sub
scriplions, and collect and forward the
amount, shall receive a copy gratis, besides
a year's subscription to either of (liereligions
papers published at the South. If twenty.
collected and fotwMtfqdi lie t>liall, in Addiliou
to a copy of this Magazine and feoulhcrn
religious paper, receive a copy (a year** sub
script ion) of the "Southern Literary Messenger?*
TEItMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
Single subscribers, ppr m. in advance, f2.00
Fire w " 14 6.00
Ten ?' u " 10.Q0
Address \VM. rOTTER.
January 17. Richmond, Virginia.
NEW-YORK ADVERTISEMENT.
Great Reduction in Prices.
Fne Geld Hunting P'nt. Lever Watchee #75-150
? rrerrt. " 45-85
' " Open Face ' V 35-45
" Lcpincs * 28-32
Silver Hunting Patent Lever Wntchea 32-38
V JDot'tl, > . " 18-22
Gold Veet, Nrek and Fot> CHAINS
Ladies' Chatelaine Chains
Breast Pins, Ear Kings. Caff Pins, Bracelets
Gold Pens and Pencils
Studs, Sleeve Buttons, Collar Buttons
And every article in the Jewelry line, of the
Seat quality and workmanship.
Silver Spoons, Knives, Cups,
Napkin Kings, Ladles, Ac, Ac.
Also a new article of Sleeve Buttons and Collar
Buttons, our own pattern.
Any of the above articles may be ordered and
will be sent by Express at our risk, and if they
Co not give satisfaction may be returned.
BAMUKL W. BENEDICT,
6 Wall street, New York.
Augusts , IS 2 in
DOCTOR YOl'RKKI.K.
The Pocket JEsculapius;
OU, RVKBT ON'K UI? OW X l*h VaJCl A V. '
rpiiH Firnmi edition*, with one
1. Hundred Engraving*, showing Discues
and Mnlfor mat ions of the llnmnn
System in overy shape and form. To
gg which is added a Treatise on the Diseases
GE of Females, hcing of the highest importance
*o married j>oople, or those contemplating
marriage. By William YAiiio, M. 1).
Let no father he ashamed to present a copy of
the jSSCULAPIUti to his child, ft may save
him from an ymly-grave. Lot no young man or
woman enter iilto tlio secret obligations of jnnr
riage without rending the POCKITt sEBCULAPIUS.
Let no one suffering fVoin n hockniod
cough, Pain in the side, restless nights, nervous
feelings, and the whole train of Dyspeptic sensations,
and given up their physician, l?e another
moment without consulting the JfBCULAPWB
Havo those married, or those about to be married
any imjwdlment, read this truly useful book,
as it has deen the means of saving thousands of
unfortunate creatures from tlievery iatre of death.
OTAny person sending JWtUy-rT** Centa en
eluoed in a letter, will receive one copy oLlhis
Tssgszzpsm. k&t
yiiivv-wuv* Aiiiimueipmn.
july , 18M. lv
scxxmno information
FOR THE WHOLE WORLD.
chapman's cheat discovery.
M .iV
THE Monthly Rainbow, or Chapman'#
| pre-calculation* for elementary chanEbased
upon the discovery of the physical
and harmony of electrical action pens
j tlie solar system, as involved in tfce'differing
effect* of light modi tied (or polariied)
by differing angles Or reflection on n large
scale. This important discovery of the laws
of nature which regulate the changes of the
elements, constitutes a subject of magnitude
and importance, perhaps unsurpassed by
any other on the pages m historic record.?
The surprising accuracy writh which Dr.
Chapman is enabled to pre calculate all elementary
changes predisposing more to
storRr, earthquakes, aurora*, <fec., and also
atmospheric changes within the hour of each
day, months m the flifare, and the physical
effect* on the health, feelings ami humors of
mankind, must be admitted by all unprejudiced
minds to be of incalculable Advantage
In presenting the Rainbow to the public
W4 do not claim it to be an infallible woollier
guide. 13ut this much ice do claim, that it
will be found to be coircct to the letter eight
times out of every ten. All we ask is a candid
examination. Terms of Rainbow, $1
per vear, iq advance, 50 cents fur six months.
Chapman't Paiitcipia, or nlaurt't first
principle!, cloth binding, 12 wo., 200 pages.
Volume Bret contains a full explanation of
the discovery r0 which I>r. Chapman has
devoted the last nine years of close ol*erva>
tains. Published every six months, (March
and September, price $1 per volume, for
which it wilfrbe tent,postpaid, to any pari
of the country. First volume now ready.
Address CAMPBELL A Co^
No.~YB South Fourth St. above Walnut,
Phitada.
-f? t : 1
nOOK AND JOB PRINTING neatly done at
a V th? "Pnt^rprl*
-o?. <-> jHPnHifeC N*S MAOA
A ^mt'A
tliiw liumtreJ^nWrat^^^gnuJ^M
wootl. . ? -i
Itt Thrilling Original J^toriti
Aro from the best authors, *n<l written expressly
for it. j Every vojaflM ?rtriMnfla
or more of Mr*. Ann S. 8tepheittf <)?j|ilHMf
Novels, the celebrated author of "Fashion
and Famine." The Pre* andtN* Pt&H*
pronounce* it the most readable of tiki??'
azinca. It is strictly morel, and ontifefcaUj?
American, as its name implies.
/ft Superb Mezzotint* and other Steel Jfc.
gravingt
Are the best published anywhere; are ex* .... ^
ecutcd for i| by the first artists; and, at tfc*
end of each year, are alone worth the sob*
sciiption.
IU Colored Fathion Plata
Are the only reliable ones published in
A morion, and are magnificently colored
plate*. The Paris, London, Philadelphia
and New York Fashions, are described at
length, each month. Its departments for
New Receipts, Crotchet Work, Embroidery
Netting, Horticulture, and Female Equea
I triftnktn, are always well filled, profusely illustrated,
and rich with the latest novelties.
I f3T It it the best Ladies' Magazine is the
world 1 Try it for one year 11
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One copy, one year, $S,00N
Threo copies, for one year, 6,00
Five copies, for one year, 7,00
Eight copies, for oos year, 10,00
Sixteen copies, for ono year, 20,00
THEM IU MS FOR CLUBS.
To every person getting up a club, our
"Gift-Book ef Artfor 1666," with 60 Steel
engravings will bo given, or a volume of llio
niMgiusine lor 1864. For a club of sixteen,
an nxtra copy of the magazine for 1866 will
be sent iu addition.
Address, roar paw,
CHARLES J. PETERSON,
102 Chestnut Street, Phil.
/^"Specimens set gratis. *
au 3. 12 tf
THE MODEL .1 "
lESMUMCOMm.
SOW 18 TIIK TIME TO SUBSCRIBE.
O irrSTooSSfflL
THE Terms of the COURIER for a si*.
gle year are two dollars per annum;
but, in order to continue its immense rirculution,
the Publisher* still propose to Clubs
or Companies ths following terms, THE
BEST EVER OFFERED:Payablk
invariably in adyanck. . -v
Two C?ipie? one year,or 1 Copy 2 rests, $ 1
Four u ** . " g
Eight m " (and one for lh? Agent 0 10
Thirteen " " M ** 11
Twenty u *i u u 20
Over Twenty Copies, the same rates
8 TUE LAST.
1ST Members of old Clubs (not in arrears)
arc perfectly eligible to tba offers to mw
one*, where tliey renewed in Clubs, snd pny
in full directly to the office, either personally
or by mail, snd not to an agent or* ikirJ
persoWVijtjt, > " '; v * ' $ la?
Post masters or others sending tor Clubs,
would confer a favor by having them snet to
one address when they car do so.go&Tynient*
''' CLUBBTNG WITH MAGAZINES.
Jt^"The Courier, and either Graham, Godey,
or Harper's Mngaxinea, one rear, for
Four Dollar?. The Courier and Petersen's
Ladies' National Magazine, Aithur's Homo
Magazine, or Scientific American, for Tirr*
Dollar?.
v Letters containing remittances may be
registered in any Post Office in tba Ufcitad
Slates; in which case only money forworn ed
to u* at our risk.
~ au.. ANDREW M MAKIN.
No 141 Caasnnrr St. Pri la Delphi a
Tft. Artfc?r'ell??e Mmgrn .line
for 1865. Fouroopaasayamr.Car
td. wit * H r *' * >'-?'*I-9 :itJ i *
ARTHUR'S HOME MAGAZINE daring
the year HAS, will contain between 900
and 1000 double column octavo pages of
carefully edited reading matter. It will, in
addition, be largely illustrated in the heat
?tyt? ?t art, with elegant steel and colored
Engraving*, and by several hundred fine
wood Engravings of cities, scenery, reraaikable
placets ami objects in Science, Art, Hat*
ural History, Needlework,the Latest Fashions,
Articles of Drees, Ac. AU for $1,95 a
year, in cluba of fonr subscribers.
TERMS:?ONE COPY, for one yew,
$3,00; TWO COPIES, for one ysesy $*.00}
THREE COPIES, for one year, $4,00;
FOUR COPIES, for one yeer, $5,00.
jar All additional subecribera beyond
four at the same rate ; that is, $1,25 per anuum.
.
OCT Where Twelve Subecribera and $15 ^
are sent, the getter up of the elub will be ear*
titled to an additional copy of Ike ttagndne.
Lady's Book and Hota? Mbfifcp, one
year for $5.50. M.
JSirSpecimen numbers lint to nil who
wish to subscribe or make up dubs.
T. a ARTHUR k Oo,
I i at XV a T wni> Q?n * *
vi TTi?uHut<?*^9HPWfM|'l,Vt
Mattreu Making, An.
Pow*o? A Go-.
i ing done ?t the ahorteet notlae^l
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