IVERSITY OF MIC OF ANG THE M HIGAN • LIBRARIES: SCIENTIA VELIS 1811 z CINCINNATI Z 250 .65 1878 TYPE FOUNDRY CO. 37073-9 SPECIMENS 1878. CHARLES WELLS, TREASURER. HENRY BARTH, PRES. W. P. HUNT, SEC. OFFICE: NO. 201 VINE STREET. WORKS: 7 TO 17 LONGWORTH STREET. CINCINNATI. osto REFACE Er J his Book is never sold; if of no use to you in the business of Printing, you will oblige its owners by returning it to them at once. If of use to you please to give it ordinary care, and preserve it from mutilation. While we show this as a Specimen of the most fashionable type of to-day, we do not wish it considered all that we can supply; all new styles as they come out will find a place in our stock, and we shall issue sheets from time to time. When present list was adopted it gave the Lowest Cash Prices, Since that time there has been considerable reduction in the cost of raw material, but little in the price of labor. It follows that heavy goods in which iron or other metals form a large element of cost, can be sold at a greater discount from list price than those of which labor forms the principal expense. On large and important orders some concession either in price or time is common. Consideration of the above will show the uselessness of asking us: “What are your best terms ?” or, “On how long time will you sell goods?” “What discount will you make for cash?” without telling in the first place what goods you want. And it is best also to state the time you want, and if a stranger what security you offer, then you will get promptly, the lowest prices at which your wishes can be met. On small orders no variations can be made from list. We do not wish to be understood as offering Printing Materials on any un- usual business time. In all cases where a definite time is not understood at the start, goods will be sent C. 0. D., or where we have open accounts, they are considered due on 15th of coming month. We hope for a continuance of your favor, Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. January, 1878. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. PRICE-LIST 476 OF PRINTING MATERIAL, FROM THE Cincinnati Lype Foundry Co. LOWEST Cash or LONGEST TIME Prices will be given on application, stating Goods and TERMS desired. TERMS Quads and Spaces--Job Founts. Cincinnati Cylinder Press. CASH in all cases where a special time is not agreed on. $0 90 070 0 45 0 75 0 70 Prices at present are liable to change; and we advise heavy purchasers, especially of machinery, to write for fresh prices when about to purchase, and when writing, always state the Goods you want, the Terms you want, and, if a stran- ger to us, the security or reference you offer. With table distribution. Bed. 33 X 48 for hand turning $1,240 00 Ditto power 1,360 00 30 X 44 66 hand turning 1,000 00 Ditto power 1,200 00 Boxing and shipping Each press furnished with tapes, blanket and cast rollers. 40 00 o 65 o 60 o 60 0 55 0 55 55 55 Double Stop Jobber. Diamond Pearl Agate. Nonpareil Minion Brevier Bourgeois Long Primer. Small Pica Pica English Two-line Brevier Great Primer. Paragon Double Small Pica Double Pica. Double English Double Great Primer Double Paragon Four-line Pica Five-line Pica. Old Metal. Old type taken in exchange Old Plates Freight deducted. per lb. $0 10 o 08 o 55 0 55 Bed. Size of form. No. of rollers. 18 X 24-inch 14 X 21-inch 4. $1,500 00 Each press furnished with blanket, moulds, counter-shaft, two five-speed cone pulleys, and chases. I 00 I 00 Mark the boxes containing old type with your own name and our address, No. 7 Longworth-street, weigh them, take freight receipt, and send us duplicate. I 00 New Nonpareil Press. I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 320 00 CLASSIFIED PRICE LIST. DISK DISTRIBUTION. Quarto-Folio, 9 X 12 $225 00 Half-Folio, 12 X 17 Receding Bed, extra from $25 oo to 30 00 Fountain, extra Boxing and shipping $6 to Each press furnished with mould, two chases, and double set of cores. Fixtures for applying steam, extra. 10 00 First Class. Brass Leaders. IO 00 Second Third Per lb. Sizes. Founts of Founts of 50 lbs. and less than upwards. Class. Class. $1 60 I 60 50 lbs. I 50 I 50 1.62 2.80 3.20 2.80 I 00 1.30 0.76 0.66 0.58 2.00 1.60 1.28 IO 00 Nonpareil Brevier. Long Primer Pica Great Primer Double Small Pica Double Pica Double English Double Great Primer. Corner Quads Brass Leads. Brass Space Rule. Curves and Clamps 6 00 Asteroid Job Press. 772 X 10 inches inside chase $225 00 Steam Fixtures Boxing and shipping Each Press furnished with mould, two chases, and double set of cores. 1.12 1.00 2.40 2.00 1.80 1.60 1.44 1.30 1.22 1.16 0.55 0.52 0.50 090 0 90 o 86 o 82 per set 0 15 per lb. o 75 2 00 1.80 1.40 0.90 0.76 0.68 0.64 0.60 0.56 0.54 0.52 0.52 0.52 0.52 0.52 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 8 00 Diamond Pearl Agate Nonpareil Minion Brevier Bourgeois Long Primer Small Pica Pica English Two-line Brev.. Great Primer Paragon Dbl. Small Pica Dbl. Pica Dbl. English: Dbl. Gt. Primer. Dbl. Paragon.... Four-line Pica... Five-line Pica. 0.48 0.46 0.46 0.46 0.46 0.46 -$45 00 Roller Proof Press. 15 X 28-inch, on table without table.. Each press furnished with proof roller. 1,12 1.06 8 X 24 30 00 1.00 Flourishes. 0.90 0.82 0.78 0.74 0.70 0.66 0.66 0.66 0.64 0.64 0.64 0.62 0.60 0.60 0.58 Metal, Series A, A, B, 66 66 66 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.45 0.43 0.43 5 00 15 00 0.94 0.90 0.90 0.86 0.82 0.78 0.72 0.64 whole founts $10 00 half whole half whole half 5 00 Army Press. Prints 14 X 18 inches $60 00 This also makes a capital proof press in a job-office where its size is sufficient. 8 00 8 00 Brass Flourishes 0.48 0.48 Improved Washington Hand Press. Stop Cylinder Press. 14 X 18 2CO 00 FIRST CLASS,- Roman, Italic, Old Style, German, and Quads and Spaces. SECOND CLASS, – Titles, Two-line letters, Condensed, Aldine, Dorics, Antiques, Gothic, Clarendons, French Cla- rendon, Ionics, and Roman Card Founts. THIRD CLASS,Ornamental, Shaded, Scripts, etc. 26 X 34 66 225 00 275 00 Bed. Size of form. No. of rollers. 1844 X 24 inch 15 X 22 inch 4. $1,750 00 23 X 28 1942 X 26 2,200 00 25 X 35 20 X 31 2,800 00 32 X 47 5 3,8oo oo 38% X 52 .6. 4,600 00 Each press furnished with tapes, blankets, moulds, counter- shaft and cones Boxing and shipping included in price. 26 X 42 WITH ROLLING BED. Platen. Bed. 18 X 22 $150 00 19 X 25 22 X 29 5 column folio 22 X 30 6 column folio 23 X 35 2672 X 39 7 column folio 25 X 39 2872 X 43 8 col. folio, or 5 col. quarto.. 300 00 27 X 43 312 X 4772 9 column folio 29 X 43 3212 X 4772 6 column quarto Boxing.. 7 00 Two pairs of points, one wrench, one sheeps-foot, pair of bearers, and one extra frisket go with each press. 32 X 48 325 00 350 00 Leads, Slugs, etc. Accurately shaved, in 14 inch strips, or cut to measure. Per Ib. Leads, 6 to Pica and larger $0 20 7 8 65 0 O 30 38 Cincinnati Cylinder Press. Inking Apparatus. IO 0 70 0 30 0 20 66 Labor saving, 6 to Pica or larger Slugs, Labor saving, Nonpareil and Pica column width, cut to order. letter or figure, for takes Foot Slugs Metal furniture, fonts 25, 50, or 100 lbs. Quotations 6 00 FOR HAND PRESS. Stand, Cylinder, Roller Frame and Cores for Presses. . . $35 00 Same, with self-distributing screw, improved frame. ... 45 00 Roller Frame for two Rollers, 35 inches. 42 47 9 00 Extra Roller Core With rack and screw distribution. Bed. Largest form printed. 28X40-inch 24X36-inch $1,200 00 31X46 27X42 1,350 00 30X48 1,750 00 Boxing and shipping $40 to 50 00 Each press furnished with tapes, blankets, moulds, etc. 66 0 20 each o 10 0 05 per lb. o 25 0 25 66 66 34X52 8 50 66 66 66 66 I 25 Fanuary, 1878. PRICE LIST. $1 75 Hand Rollers. STOCK AND HANDLE, IMPROVED. 6 and 8 inches $2 00 Extra Core.. 10 inches... two handles Mailing Machines. Times Mailer.. Williston's Mailer ... Mailing Type, Dates, etc. furnished to order. $30 00 6 00 $0 40 Type Cases. News, per pair, Job Triple Figure Cases... Labor-Saving Rule, common new style Type Cleaners I 15 I 15 66 12 2 25 2 50 2 75 I 00 66 66 o 50 0 60 0 70 o 8o 0 90 14 I 25 I 25 66 16 18 3 00 3 50 per pair 6 00 66 Tapes and Blankets. %, 4 and 56 inch Tapes, 36 yards in bolt.....per yard $o 03 1, and 1/4 inch Tapes, 36 yards in bolt Rubber Blanket for Cylinder Press per square yard 7 50 Felt Blanket for Cylinder Press. 7 50 Felt Roller Covering, 2% inches wide per yard 0 50 Galleys. 005 Hand Rollers, Frames & Cores. Cheap Eastern Style. Common, Wood... $0 40 6 X 18 inches 8 X 20 6 X 10 o 50 Extra Core. Slice Galleys 2 00 $1 25 10 X 16 2 50 $0 40 o 50 16 X 22 4 00 Printing Inks. Frames with one Core. 6 and 8 in. with one handle. 10 inch I 50 with two handles 24 2 00 16 18 66 12 I 75 0 60 2 00 0 70 2 50 . 3 00 O 16 2 25 2 50 o So 0 90 64 66 66 3 50 o 50 Job Galleys, brass lined, 6 X 10 874 X 13 10 X 16 12 X 18 14 X 20 15 X 22 Proof Galley, single column, brass lined double 4 00 100 4 50 2 00 $0 30 2 50 I 50 2 00 0 35 5 00 o 50 2 00 O 06 2 00 Roller Composition. Van Bibber's Roller Composition, per lb. Souer's 25 Rollers cast, per lb. Cast Rollers. Rollers for 7 X 12 Nonpareil each $0 50 10 X 16 o 75 15 X 19 I 25 15 X 25 I 75 Cincinnati Cylinder Press, per set, 2 form and one fountain roller.. Eighth-Medium Rollers. Quarter-Medium 75 Half-Medium Hand Rollers per lb. o 40 Cores and boxing charged extra Furniture. Reglet. per yard $0 05 Furniture, Five-line and less.... O 05 Six to Twelve-line, and Side-sticks. Wood Rule. per yard $0 15 to o 40 Quoins, boxwood, best. 75 common.. ....0 50 Planer, mahogany Mallett. $0 35 to o 50 #tb. News Ink in 10 lb. cans $0 20 in kegs, 25 lbs. or over Book Ink, fine... $0 40 to Job Ink, for dry and calendered paper, will not set off $0 50, 75 Special quick drying Black I 00 Superfine Ink, do. Extra Super Ink. do. Wood-Cut Ink Varnish Gold Size $1 00, 1 50, White Size, for dry colors I 50 Ultramarine Ink $0 50, 75, 100, 1 50. Light and Dark Blue $0 75, 100, 1 50, 2 00 Blue and Green Poster Ink Light and Dark Green. $0 75, I 00, I 50, 2 00 Red Poster Ink Fine Red, for paper $200, 300 Red Ink, for paper. $0 75, I 00, Extra Fine Red $5 00, 10 00 Lake Ink IO 00 Light and Dark Brown 50, 2 00 Carmine Ink per oz. Purple Ink 2 00 Bronzes of every shade White Ink Lemon and Orange Yellow Gloss Varnish per 100 o 50 o 30 o 50 12 00 each.... o 50 1 50 Cabinets. I 20 GALLEY TOP. $90 00 $1 00, 20 40 Cases, full size and 34 job full size, job and triple. two-third size. 15 2 00 20 50 00 40 00 30 00 o 50 Roller Moulds. Cast iron, complete with Foot and Centers Brass. 66 10 20 00 per inch $0 40 100 $0 50, $1 00, FLAT TOP. per lb. o 60 2 00 20 Cases, two-third size. 15 $35 00 25 00 100 66 Composing Sticks. ΙΟ 18 00 $0 75 1 75 Marble top, for imposing, extra 5 00 Miscellaneous. Screw Sticks, 6 inches .... German Silver Composing Stick, 6-inch Grover's Patent, 6-inch... Each additional 2 inches 24-inch Mahogany Job Stick I 20 $0 15 0 75 2 50 0 20 $5 00 I IO Stands. Wood, Single, with Racks... without Racks Wood, Double, with Racks. without Racks. Galley Rack for 12 Galleys 4 00 $1 oo to per pair o 40 2 00 6 00 1 25 I 50 30 36 5 00 2 50 8 00 Bodkins Pocket Bellows Bearers Bronzing Pads, 4 inch 6 inch Chicken Foot Electro Date Lines. Frisket Ink Slice Ink Brayer Inking Stones, 12 X 18 I 50 0 40 $3 oo to 5.00 $0 60 $160 00 Cast Iron Chases. Heavy, extra finish. Card .4 X 5 inside 474 X 674 .5 X7 Bill-Head ..6 X 8 .8 Job 9 0 75 . 2 00 Stereotyping Tools. Shaving Machine, improved rising table, 9-inch 14-inch. Chiseling Machine... Shooting Boards and Planes, all iron. 66 250 00 375 00 2 50 o 85 0 90 I 05 I 50 1 65 66 100 00 18 X 24 4 00 35 00 100 X 10 X 12 X 14 X 17 x 24 per lh. 0 30 0 50 Іо 2 55 14 18 Programme 5 X 16% 8 X 2372 100 Lead and Rule Cutters. Lead Cutter (patented) Rule and Lead Cutter 3 15 4 50 5 00 15 00 2 25 66 3 30 o 50 28 oo o 30 0 75 0 30 Mitering Machines. Universal Rule Shaper Upright Mitering Machine Thorp's Rotary Mitering Machine $28 00 24 00 25 00 per pair 50 4 00 Cast Iron Chases. Cheap Eastern Style. Card 4 X 5 inside 474X6% 5 X 7 Bill-Head, 6 X 8 $o 28 1 25 4 00 per foot 0 20 per 100 75 8 X 10 o 50 Job $45 00 50 00 450 00 500 00 550 00 9 X 12 inside per set 300 22 O 35 O 40 0 40 0 55 0 70 0 75 0 90 I 15 o 65 0 75 lb. O 20 Card and Paper Cutters. Card Cutter, 28-inch rotary, improved Paper Cutter, Plow, 28-inch. Guillotine, 22-inch, hand power hand 28 power hand power Gem 28 hand 66 Lamp Holder Ley, concentrated Ley Brush, Tampeco bristle Mallet, lignumvitæ Mitering Machine. Oiler, Tin Rubber Planer, mahogany Points .... Press Springs Printers' Manual, by Lynch Printers’ Price List, by De Vinne Perforating Rule Quoins, boxwood, best common Mechanical Saw Saw and wooden Miter Box Saw and iron Miter Box Seal Presses furnished to order Shooting-Stick, brass wrought iron Screw-Driver Sheeps foot Spring Bodkins Steel Rules, Composing 66 Imposing Tympan Guage Pins Type Measures, made to order Treatise on Punctuation, by Wilson Tweezers Wrench, large for Hand Press 2 00 28 66 2 50 66 10 X 14 14 X 17 18 X 24 Programme 5 X 16% 8 X 2372 Other sizes made to order . 600 00 6 00 32 650 00 700 00 175 00 32 66 1 50 per 75 $0 50 to 0 75 $8 00 I 50 0 50 0 25 10 00 66 66 12 00 ܆ 16 00 66 66 Wrought Iron Chases. No. 3 17% X 23inside, per pair $14 00 4..18% X 254 15 00 5. 19% X 2634 6..20% X 2774 7..2156 X 2834 8..2158 X 294 Other sizes made to order, accurately finished... per lb. O 40 Malleable iron Side and Foot Sticks per inch 006 teel 007 Counting Machines. Hart's No. 2, counts 10,000 3, 100,000 4, 100,000, extra finish Newspaper Files. Herr's Patent. 20-inch 22 and 24 inch 26 and 28 30 and 32 17 00 18 00 20 00 small 0 30 per doz. o Co $0 75 2 25 0 50 1 25 1 00 1 25 1 50 0 60 NEWSPAPER ESTIMATES ARTICLES. 5 Col. Folio. 6 Col. Folio. 7 Col. Folio 8 Col. Folio. 9 Col. Folio. 4 Col. Quarto. 5 Col. Quarto. 6 Col. Quarto. Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper Size of Paper 20 X 26 22 X 31 24 X 35 30 X 44 26 X 40 28 x 44 22 X 32 26 X 42 Washington Hand Press (1)... $200 00 $225 00 $275 00 $300 00 $325 00 $225 00 $300 00 $350 00 Chases in halves 12 00 13 00 14 00 16 00 18 00 18 00 20 00 15 00 Steel Side and Footsticks 3 50 4 00 4 50 4 90 5 50 8 00 5 50 7 00 Inking Apparatus (2).. 35 00 40 00 45 00 45 00 45 00 45 00 45 00 45 00 Roller Frame and Core. 2 75 3 00 3 50 4 00 4 50 3 00 4 00 4 50 Roller, cast 1 75 2 00 2 25 2 50 2 75 2 00 2 50 2 75 . • • • Single Brass Galleys. 3 6 00 4 8 00 6 I2 00 8 16 00 10 20 00 4 8 00 8 16 00 10 20 00 Composing Sticks 3 2 25 4 3 00 4 3 00 5 6 3 75 4 50 4 6 8 6 00 3 00 4 50 Pairs of Cases. 3 5 25 7 00 5 8 75 6 10 50 may 12 25 4 7 00 6 10 50 ng 12 25 Job and Triple Cases my 8 05 ng 8 05 10 II 50 10 II 50 10 II 50 by 805 10 II 50 10 II 50 Double Stands with Racks 1 6 00 2 12 00 3 18 00 3 18 00 4 24 00 2 12 00 3 18 00 4 24 00 20 00 20 00 25 00 30 00 40 00 20 00 30 00 40 00 Imposing Stone and Stand (3) Mallet, Planer, Sh. Stick, Quoins. Ley Brush, Spring Bodkin. 2 50 2 50 2 50 2 50 2 50 2 50 2 50 2 50 I OO I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 News Ink 4 00 4 00 4 00 4 00 4 oo 4 oo 4 00 4 00 Column and Head Rules for one side 5 60 6 40 8 70 12 30 IO IO 7 00 9 60 12 80 50 2 00 3 00 ng 5 3 00 100 125 5 00 100 4 00 3 00 4 00 125 5 00 10 60 15 90 20 I 20 20 20 I 20 15 20 I 20 0 90 20 I 20 I 20 50 2 50 50 2 50 175 3 75 100 125 6 25 100 125 3 75 5 00 5 00 6 25 Advertising Rules... Paragraph Rules.. Single Dash Rules . Leads and Slugs Composing Rules Bourgeois (4) Minion (4) 20 lb. 5 00 25 lb. 6 25 30 lb. 7 50 40 lb. 50 lb. 12 50 25 lb. 40 lb. 6 25 IO 00 50 lb. 10 00 12 50 2 50 3 75 4 I 00 4 I 25 3 0 75 4 I OO 4 I 00 I 00 100lb. 52 00 150 lb. 78 00 175 lb. 91 00 200 lb. 104 00 225 lb. 117 00 150 lb. 78 00 200 lb. 104 00 225 lb. 117 00 50 lb. 75 lb. 43 50 100 lb. 58 00 125 lb. 72 50 50 lb. 100lb. 58 00 125 lb. 72 50 50 lb. 29 00 29 00 29 00 Head to Paper 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 3 00 Minion Title 1 1 3 50 3 50 2 7 00 2 2 7 00 7 00 1 2 3 50 7 00 2 7 00 Brevier Aldine 1 2 90 1 1 2 90 2 5 80 2 2 5 80 1 5 80 2 2 90 2 5 80 5 80 Brevier Doric 1 3 So 1 1 1 3 80 3 80 3 80 1 3 80 1 2 90 1 2 90 1 2 90 1 1 2 90 2 90 1 2 90 1 2 90 1 2 90 Brevier Antique Extended No. 3 .. Two-line Minion No. 7 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 1 2 30 Two-line Minion Cond.. 1 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 1 I 35 1 35 1 1 I 35 I 35 1 I 35 Great Primer Aldine 1 3 50 1 3 50 1 3 50 1 1 1 3 50 1 1 3 50 3 50 3 50 1 3 50 Pica Gothic Cond. No. I 1 I 20 1 I 20 1 I 20 1 1 I 20 1 I 20 1 I 20 I 20 1 I 20 Paragon Gothic Cond. No. I 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 I 35 1 I 35 Two-line Pica Gothic Cond. No. I 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 I 05 1 5.60 1 1 5 60 5 60 1 5 60 1 5 60 Double English Aldine Dbl. Paragon Skel. Antique No. 2 1 7 00 1 1 7 00 1 7 00 7 00 1 7 00 Long Primer Ionic 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 1 2 60 Pica Clarendon Extended ... 1 1 3 60 3 60 1 3 60 1 1 3.60 3 60 1 1 60 1 360 3 60 1 2 25 1 2 25 1 1 2 25 1 1 2 25 1 2 25 3 00 3 00 5 00 5 00 5 00 3 00 5 00 5 00 Bourgeois Italic Title No. 2. Quads and Spaces assorted Boxing and Shipping Total, on Auxiliary Plan. 10 00 IO 00 II 00 I 2 00 13 00 IO OO 12 00 13 00 449 50 521 60 659 95 734 25 820 80 531 95 738 60 852 05 If the entire Paper is to be printed at home, add: Column & Head Rules for one page 3 00 3 50 5 00 6 00 7 oo 4 00 5 20 7 30 Advertisement Rules 25 I 00 25 I 00 50 2 00 50 2 00 50 2 00 25 I 00 50 2 00 50 2 OO Bourgeois 50 lb. 26 00 50 lb. 26 00 50 lb. 26 00 52 00 50 lb. 26 00 175 lb. 39 00 100lb. 52 00 175 lb. 39 00 100 lb. 14 50 50 lb. 29 00 50 lb. Minion 25 lb. 14 50 25 lb. 14 50 25 lb. 29 00 25 lb. 14 50 50 lb. 29 00 50 lb. 29 00 Pairs of Cases. 1 I 75 1 1 75 2 3 50 2 3 50 3 5 25 1 I 75 2 3 50 3 5 25 Total to print Whole Paper ... $495 75 $568 35 $710 95 $813 75 $916 05 $579 20 $817 30 $947 60 (1) These Outfits include our Patent Rolling-Bed Washington Hand-Presses, from seven column upwards. Second-Hand Presses may often be had at lower prices. (2) May be dispensed with, and Hand Roller used only. (3) Can generally be procured at home and paid for in advertising. (4) In case Type of different sizes are used, the price only need be changed, the quantity remaining the same. Prices are subject to constant changes, and printed lists are not always perfect. When about to purchase write for latest prices, stating the Goods and the Terms desired. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. No. 201 Vine Street. CHAS. WELLS, Treas'r. JOB OFFICE ESTIMATES. January, 1878. Job Outfit for Village Newspaper Office. Work to be done on Hand-Press. Job Office for General Job and Poster Work. $250 00 I 50 $22 50 6 00 350 00 4 00 20 00 7 00 2 50 Small Job Office. 9X12 Nonpareil Press, with Receding Bed 1 set Rollers, cast. I Stand with Racks. 4 pairs Cases I 18-case Cabinet. i Brass Job Galley, 834X13 2 Wood Galleys 2 Composing Sticks. Reglet and Furniture. Mitre Box and Saw. 90 00 37 00 2 00 8 75 I 50 2 50 o So I 25 3 00 2 00 1 2 50 2 40 I 20 2 50 5 00 I Lead Cutter 5 00 30 00 I 35 66 2 00 50 lb. Double Pica Poster Type. 3 founts Wood Letter, say 50 yards Reglet and Furniture 1 Wood Job Stick 10 yards Wood Rule. Double English Clarendon 5 30 Double Paragon Ionic.. 8 85 Four-line Pica Extra Condensed Double Great Primer Gothic Condensed No. I. I 55 Two-line Pica I 05 Great Primer Long Primer I 45 Long Primer Antique Extended No. 3 Two-line Brevier 2 65 Two.line English Double English Black Ornamented No. 3 Two-line Pica Orna. No. 20 Quads and Spaces. 15 lb. Leads, assorted Ink, Black, Red, Blue I Double Stand. 1 pair Cases 5 Job and Triple Cases 5 75 Boxing and Drayage 3 00 $110 00 2 50 100 120 66 1 75 20 3 10 I So 2 65 36 00 2 50 3 60 3 60 66 12 50 5 00 63 3 00 IO 00 30 lb. 6 00 8 00 2 50 10 00 6 00 13 00 1 75 19 00 3 00 45 00 16 00 6 00 14 00 19 00 66 16 00 Small Job Office I CG in connection with Weekly Newspaper. I 2 60 60 00 1 2 75 6 00 1 I 75 20 50 25 lb. Metal Furniture. 6 25 20 lb. Labor-Saving Leads. 5 00 10 lb. Job Leads, assorted Mallet, Planer, Shooting-Stick 1 75 Quoins, Brush, Nippers. Labor-saving Rule, single double parallel dotted 2 65 4 founts Borders Half fount each Metal and Brass Flourishes Curves and Clamps S oo 25 lb. Nonpareil 25 lb. Brevier 25 lb. Long Primer 25 lb. Pica 13 00 I fount Great Primer No. 5 3 50 Double Small Pica No. 2 4 75 Nonpareil Italic Title No. 2 Long Primer Italic Title No. 2 Great Primer Italic Title No. 2 2 65 Brevier Title Extended No. 3 3 65 Pica Title Extended No. 3 3 55 Brevier Gothic Italic No. 2 Pica Gothic Italic No. 2 Double Small Pica Gothic Italic No. 2 4 70 Nonpareil Light Celtic. 4 60 Long Primer Light Celtic. Double Small Pica Light Celtic 6 75 Great Primer Celtic No. 2 3 50 2-line Pica Celtic No. 2 2-line English Celtic No. 2 3 90 Double Pica Payson Script, card fount 3 15 24 lb. Long Primer Copper-plate Italic 19 55 i fount Great Primer Black Cond. No. 3 I 65 Double English Black Cond. No. 3 Great Primer Black Orna. No. 3 1 65 Double English Black Orna. No. 3 I 80 3 founts latest style Fancy Letter Job Quads and Spaces assorted 6 00 Cuts, Dashes and Ornaments Job Inks assorted. Boxing and Drayage 10 00 66 1 II 50 I 9 00 2 80 I 25 I 3 00 IO I 80 I 2 95 IO 3.60 2 50 Half Folio Press, 13 x 17, with Receding Bed Rollers cast, or Compo. 10 lb. I Double Stand 6 00 40-Case Cabinet 5 pairs Cases 4 Job Cases 4 60 I Rule Case 1 Job Galley, 6 x 19 12x18 3 50 3 Wood Galleys I each 6- 10- and 16-inch Composing Stick I 36-inch Wood Job-Stick.......... 1 50 Imposing Stone and Stand, 2 x 6 feet Quoins, Reglet and Furniture 3 25 Mallet, Planer, Shooting Stick 1 75 Ley Brush, Nippers 2 doz. assorted Feed Guides Mitre Box and Saw Lead Cutter Card Cutter 28-inch Paper Plow 50 00 50 lb. Metal Furniture 25 lb. assorted Labor-Saving Slugs 6 25 Leads Curves and Clamps I fount Flourishes, A and B combined Assorted Job Inks 10 00 Ink Slab and Knife Job Proof Press. Pearl, card fount. 25 lb. Nonpareil, old style 25 lb. Brevier, 100 lb. Long Primer, No. II. 50 00 30 lb. Great Primer Poster Type 13 80 50 lb. Double Pica 22 50 5 founts Wood Type, assorted Double Pica Payson Script. 27 00 5-line Heading Script, No. 1 Lower case 17 00 25 lb. Long Primer Copper-plate Italic 6 lb. Long Primer Brass Leaders. 10 feet Labor-saving Rule 6 to pica No. 1 4 to pica No. 2 2 65 Pearl No. 3 Nonpareil No.4 Nonpareil No.7 8 sets Brass Corner Quads. Ornamented Corners. Combination Border, Series 48 46 3 founts small Borders. I fount Brevier Celtic, No. 2 Pica Celtic, No. 2 3 50 2-line Pica Celtic, No. 2 Long Primer Light Celtic Great Primer Light Celtic 7 55 Nonpareil Gothic Italic Pica Gothic Italic. 3 25 Nonpareil French Clarendon Long Primer French Clarendon Double English French Clarendon 4 10 Double Paragon French Clarendon. 7 45 Pica Egyptian Extra Condensed... 2 65 Double English Egyptian Extra Condensed.... 3 90 Double Paragon Egyptian Extra Condensed 5 50 Pearl French Clarendon Extended .... 3 75 Long Primer French Clarendon Extended 4 50 2-line Brevier Antique Extended No.3 2 65 2-line Pica Antique Extended No. 3. 3 30 4-line Pica Skeleton Antique No.2 Double English Skeleton Antique No. 2 Nonpareil Doric Pica Doric 3 50 2-line English Doric 2-line Paragon Doric Nonpareil Aldine Pica Aldine 2 50 Double English Aldine .. Brevier Antique Condensed No. 2 2 go Pica Antique Condensed No. 2 3 00 Nonpareil Ionic Nonpareil Light-face Extended 370 6 Latest styles Black and Ornamented Job Quads and Spaces... 15 00 Check Blanks, Dashes and Ornaments, 5 00 Boxing and Drayage 15 00 $1220 00 IO 1 4 80 4 80 10 1 120 2 00 I 6 50 3 00 I 12 00 I 1 5 10 4 65 66 I 1 5 00 2 00 I 66 1 66 1 1 5 00 2 50 1 6 50 1 5 00 1 2 40 22 50 66 1 1 So 1 20 00 66 1 1 I 80 2 80 1 1 1 10 25 Second-hand Job Press, from $100 to $200 00 i Double Stand with Racks i pair Cases 10 Job and Triple Cases I 30-inch Job Stick, wood 1 12-inch steel i Job Galley, 834X13 I Lead Cutter 5 00 10 lb. Long Leads. I fount Labor-saving Rule, 4 to pica No. 71 2 65 4 to pica No. 2 2 65 4 to pica No. 1 2 65 66 Pearl No. 7 3 60 i Labor-saving Rule Case, new style I 25 50 yards Reglet and Furniture Job Inks, assorted. 50 lb. Double Pica Poster 3 founts Wood Type. Brevier Italic Title No. 2 3 50 12% lb. Long Primer Copper-plate Italic Long Primer Title Extended, No. 3 3 70 Pica Gothic Condensed, No. 5.. Great Primer Runic. 2-line English Skeleton Antique, No. 2 Double Paragon French Clarendon 7 45 Pica French Clarendon. 5-line Pica Egyptian Extra Cond. 2-line Pica 3 15 Double Small Pica Antique No. 3 3 55 Nonpareil Antique Cond. No. 2 Double Small Pica Black Cond. No.3 1 85 Double English Black Orna. No. 3 2 founts latest style Ornamented, say 12 00 Check Blanks, Dashes and Ornaments 3 00 10 yards Wood Rule 3 founts Borders One-half fount Flourishes 5 00 I fount Curves and Clamps 8 00 Quads and Spaces assorted 3 85 Boxing and Drayage 9 00 $400 00 18 00 1 1 2 50 1 5 00 2 15 I 5 00 1 6 50 1 $575 00 1 3 00 1 6 65 1 6 10 1 6 50 1 2 75 1 2 35 66 1 6 50 6 45 1 1 2 35 I 80 1 1 5 60 It is not an easy thing to estimate a Jobbing Outfit to please the taste and the needs of every customer. We give here a few Estimates; they make good, useful outfits just as they stand. The type selected comprises only the most staple ar- ticles, and if the selections do not suit every customer, they will at least serve as a basis for estimating. JOB PRESSES can be furnished in every size and variety, new, or second-hand as good as new; for all second-hand Presses taken by us are thoroughly overhauled, and war- ranted to perform satisfactorily. A great deal of time will be saved, if customers, in writing about new outfits, state exactly and in detail, the articles they want, the terms on which they want them, and let us give them the lowest prices at which we can meet their wishes. 1 I 50 1 66 2 go 4 65 1 40 00 CINCINNAT TYPE FOUNDRY. THAT umy SI MUT KULD CINCINNATI CYLINDER PRESS. WITH RACK AND SCREW DISTRIBUTION, For Prices and Sizes see List. TRT CINGUNAN (0 RO WHINE IMORKISH GADAM SCENO CINCINNATI CYLINDER PRESS. WITH TABLE DISTRIBUTION. For Prices and Sizes see List. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. STOP-CYLINDER PRESS . PATENTED. Is well adapted to the finest kinds of Wood Cut, Book and Color printing. The register is perfect. Speed equal to Drum Press of same size. Each Press is provided with our new, patent Guide, which is fastened to the cylinder, and does away with the tongues. They run quietly, smoothly, without bed-springs or the need of them, and occupy far less room than large cylinder presses of the same capacity. The price includes counter-shaft, hangers, driving pulleys, two cone pulleys, two sets stocks, roller- moulds and shipping. For setting up we only charge actual traveling expenses. The above cut shows the delivery with tapes, but we make presses with and without them, as pre- ferred by the purchaser. Other sizes made to order. Bed inside bearers. Matter printed. No. of Ink Rollers. Wt. of Machine. Size of Ground Frame. Space occupied by the Machine. Hight of Diameter of Machine. Driving Pulleys Face of Pulleys Revolutions for 1 impression Prices 14% X 20 4 4000 lbs. 8 ft. 11 in.X4 ft. 9 in. 4 ft. 2 in. 14 in. 5 66 19 X 24 6500 11 " 2 " X 5 " 3 " 4 " 6 " 16 5 1874 X 24 23 X 28 2544X35 32 X 46 8500 6 X4 5 ft. 4 in.X3 ft. 4 in. 7 "3" X3 " 9 " 8 " 6 10 3 X5 - 6 • 12" 0 " X 6" 1 " 66 12 " 1 X5 - 7 4 " 10" 20 212X31 27 X 42 27, in. 372 472 572 5% 4 $1.750 2,250 2,800 3,600 4,500 66 66 66 5 11000 5 " 8 " 24 13 10 X 7" 9 17 " 3 " X9“ 3 472 5 38 X 52 66 64 32 X 48 66 6 16000 6 26 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. No. 201 Vine Street. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. . NONPAREIL JOBBERS. This cut represents the two smaller sizes of the Nonpareil Presses, which are built without fountains. They are too well known in the West at this day to need any description, other than that given by the cut. They are very simple and positive in their movements and do good work with great rapidity. The Sectional Feed Roller and adjustable distribu- tion accompanies each press, and is of great use in saving ink on small jobs, or printing lines in different colors at once—and at present dis- count for cash, are the cheapest first- class Job Presses in the market. The sizes are 7 x 12, and 10 x 16 in. inside of chase. The 10 X 16 size has been fitted up with our newly patented Receding Bed, for the advantages of which see description of Centennial Nonpareil Presses. all acன். For Prices see Price List. No. 4 THIS cut shows the large Presses, which have foun- tains attached. They have also Sectional Feed Rollers for small jobs and colors, and are the only Jobbers made that print large and heavy forms as well as the most delicate work. is the largest Platen Jobber now made ; it is useful for large Programmes as well as for Blank - book Headings, and many of them are in use, giving entire satisfac- tion, printing paper bags in colors, to which work it is admirably adapted, because it takes in a sheet 35-inches long, though its largest form printed is 24-inches. JULIO Sizes : No. 3, 15 X 19 in- side chase ; No. 4, 15 X 25. For Prices see Price List. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. DISK-DISTRIBUTION NONPAREIL PRESS. “ The new Press is a jewel.” Elyria, o. FISHER & SMITH. "Press suits us exactly." Meigs Co. Herald. C. S. SHEPHERD. 996 The Nonpareil Press we purchased of you some six months since gives us entire satisfaction, and we do not hesitate to recommend them to any one who wants a first-class printing- press. SHULTY & Mc.DONALD. 225 Pine St. St. Louis. The Nonpareil continues to give us first-rate satisfaction. Our pressman says he would not exchange it for any press he ever used or saw. Tiffin, o. MYERS BRO's. *** My Press works like a top, and gives entire satisfaction. Findley, o. J. M. BEELMAN. laba) - " It is a gem in machinery, and does admirable work. We are fam- iliar with many presses, but would not exchange it for any we ever saw." J. G. CAMPBELL & Co. Marietta, Ga. Field & Fireside. I candidly and honestly think them the best Press for mercantile job work built. Ours both give entire satisfac- tion. The smallest boy in the office can run them. JAS. S. MORGAN. Cincinnati. "Our Press is all we could wish." Montgomery, Ala. JAS. T. SMITH. 998 The Press is simple, rapid. and per- fect. Would not exchange it for any press made. We have all fallen in love with it. R. H. WEAMER. Auturn, Ind. Republican. “ The little Press works well." Mendon, Mich. A. RINDGE. --"Nonpareil Press has given the utmost satisfaction. We have been using it now for four months, and tried it on all kinds of work. It is equal to a quarter medium Gordon. We will recommend it to all printers. St. Louis. SCHROBACK & Co. The Nonpareil is in every point a convenient and good machine. I like it very inuch indeed. Toledo, Ohio. JOSEPH BENDER. The Nonpareil is all that its name implies. I prefer it to the Gordon. Wapokoneta, o. C.P. DAVIS. Our job printer thinks there never was such a press, the more he works it, the better he likes it. In fact, he is in love with it. The Press suits us to a T. Sullivan, Ills. SMYZER & MYSE. - Press is in continual use, and does every class of work perfectly. Would not exchange it for any press we have ever seen. SHIVEL & SMITH. Indianapolis. use "The large Nonpareil Press arrived in fine or- der. I am heartily glad that I purchased it. For beauty of finish, smoothness of running and ex- cellence of work, it has no equal." Salem, Oregon. E. M. WAITE. “I have tested the Nonpareil thoroughly on all kinds of work, and find it gives entire satis- faction. It is very strong, compactly built, sim- ple in design, beautifully finished, runs easily and smoothly. It gives a clear and elegant im- pression, on a form of any size, from a single line to the full dimensions of the chase. I have worked upon nearly all the different styles of presses in use among western printers, and am free to say, I give this my decided preference. St. Louis, Mo. A. C. CLAYTON. “We brag a good deal about our little Press; it's the very thing for our office. Times Office, J. F. Mc.CARTNEY & Co. Metropolis, Ills. We have that Nonpareil in daily use; it does beautiful work and gives entire satisfaction. Ex- perienced job-printers who have examined it, speak in high terms of its capabilities. Bolivar, Tenn. ARMISTEAD BRO's. *gives entire satisfaction on either large or small work. The impression is even, and the receding bed a very convenient contrivance." CHAS. R. CLARKE & Co. 136 Bank St., Cleveland, O. The Press I got of you last December is giving the best of satisfaction; its work is faultless. I would not exchange it for any press of its size. Independent Office, A. H. SMITH. Burlington, Kansas. - "gives entire satisfaction. It is fast, easily made ready, does excellent work, requires about twenty-per-cent less treading than a Gordon. 1 like it better than any press I have ever run. Republican. J. F. MOSES. Řushville, Ind. The Nonpareil Press botight of you last August gives entire satisfaction. Any boy can run it rapidly and do good work. Times Office, S. M. Mc.MILLEN. Marietta, 0. “Press does splendid work -- think it one of the best presses made." Democrat Office, B. B. PADDOCK. Fort Worth, Texas. “After twenty-seven years experience in the se of all kinds of presses, we can unhesitatingly say, that our Nonpareils are the best presses for all kinds of work we have ever handled. We have recommended Nonpareils to several of our neighbors, some of whom have purchased them, and are perfectly satisfied with their investment. Kalama, Washington Ter. MONEY & Co. -"Beats anything in the shape of a printing- machine I have seen in twenty years experience. San Francisco, Cal. A. A. Mc.LEAN. - "It's a firstrate press, and gives us entire satisfaction. Race St. Cincinnati. SPENCER & CRAIG. --As regards the Nonpareil, let me say that I am delighted with it. It does its work nicely, runs easily, and is so simple that a child could understand it. I could not be better pleased with it; and if I have good luck, I will have a smaller one of the same kind beside, inside of a year's time. Sharon, Pa. W.M. WILLIAMS, The 12 x 17 Nonpareil sent us last month gives good satisfaction. We think it far superior to the Globe or any other press in our office. Dayton, o. Fritch & WALKER. That Press bought of you in August last is a splendid machine - stout, solid, and does excel- lent work, ranging from a quarter sheet poster to the finest card work. Union Office, HORACE E. JAMES & Co. Rensselaer, Ind. “has given entire satisfaction; and I am now fully convinced it is the best job-press made. Loogootee, Ind. John R. O'BRIAN & Son. The Improved Nonpareil Press sent us last July can't be beaten for convenience. It runs smoothly, and gives the finest kind of an im- pression. In fact, it works like a charm. Leader Office, Bellaire, 0. John R. Gow. The above Cut shows our latest style Presses. THE IMPRESSION is regulated by four screws in the platen, and in the Presses with receding bed, can also be changed evenly over the whole form by a single screw below the bed. Our PATENT CUT-OFF or RECEDING BED enables the operator (1) to ink without printing; (2) to take impression without inking; and (3) to distribute ink without doing either: all by a single motion of the lever, shown at the left hand of the press. 9x12 inside Chase Receding Bed Fountain Steam Fixtures Boxing $225.00 $25.00 10.00 15.00 6.00 12 x 17 inside Chase Receding Bed Fountain Steam Fixtures Boxing.... $320.00 $30.00 10.00 20.00 8.00 Cincinnati Type Foundry Co., Chas. Wells, Treas. EXOXOXOXOS8OCXOXOXO8XOXOXOXOOXoxosos soos 50 GUILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER. WNIOND SHTYPE OUN NDRY STILLMANCADARES, EL GUILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER. PLOW PAPER CUTTER. GOUNDEM CING This admirable machine is intended for either hand or power. It is strong enough to cut full width of the hardest paper without flinching, and is very rapid in all its movements. When turned, the knife descends quickly to the paper, and then has both a sliding and rocki or oscillating motion, cut- ting cleanly, with but little inclination to pull the paper under the clamp, and the cut completed, the knife returns promptly to its place, ready to repeat the operation. When operated by power, the belt is slipped on the machine, starts, cuts through the paper, knife returns to place, shifts its own belt, applies its own brake and stops at the right place. There is no reverse motion to the shaft, and no clutch to slip in and out of gear, but the whole operation is completed while the fly-wheel moves in one direction. This machine is without any question the best in the market. It is intended for large offices where a large amount of work is required. It is a higher- priced machine than many other cut- ters, but reliable; and will be found, by parties having sufficient work, the most economical. Guillotine, cuts 28 inches $500 Do. 32 550 Do. 600 Is well known as the lowest-priced machine for the purpose, and the known want of a good tool of the kind has in- duced us to make considerable prepara- tion for their manufacture. The little machine is neat and elegant in appear- ance, and all the parts fit and work in each other with the greatest smooth- ness and nicety. The pinions are made of smaller diameter than usual, giving greater power to hold down the head upon the paper. The cutting board slides in planed ways in the frame, so that several cuts may be made without moving the pile of paper on the board, the only piece of wood in the machine. As a well made and cheap machine it has no equal. Plow, cuts 28 inches $50 65 66 66 66 32 PLOW PAPER CUTTER. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY, 66 CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. 36 GE 50% OD OSXODXOXooooooX00:00:00 00 00 00 SX500*50oo 506 IMPROVED WASHINGTON HAND PRESS. Improvement Patented Oct. 26, 1875. WASHINGTON PRESS PATENT ROLLING BED. This latest improvement consists in placing wheel tracks beside the ordinary ways, and instead of sliding the bed out with great friction, it is easily rolled in and out on wheels, so arranged that they are free, and do not support the bed when in position. This improvement saves much of the power required to run a hand press. Platen. No. 3 5 66 7. Bed. 23 X 35 inches....2642 X 39 inches 25 X 39 284, X 43" 27 X 43 31% X 4714 29 X 43 32YX 4742 Boxing.. Price. $275....7 column folio. 300 8 column folio. 325....9 column folio. 350 6 column quarto. $7 00. 8 Price includes two pairs of Points, one Wrench, one Sheeps-foot, pair of Bearers, and one extra Frisket. Presses without the improvement at considerably less than the above prices. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS OFFICE, NO. 201 VINE STREET CAP CASE. THREE-QUARTER CAP CASE. LOWER CASE. JOB CASE. THREE-QUARTER LOWER CASE. TRIPLE CASE. RULE CASE. HALF CASE. RULE CASE. (OLD STYLE) GN TYPE FOUNDRYCO o o FIGURE CASE. For Figures, Leaders, or other Sorts. COMMON DOUBLE STAND. Packed for shipment. A OL STILLMAN-ADAMS. COMMON CABINET. FORTY CASE CABINET Is intended for Job-Offices. It holds full-size and two-third ses; all slide in tight enough to keep out the dust. The top may be used either for cases or galleys. Of two-third Cases, with or without Galley top. SCREW COMPOSING STICK. COMPOSING RULE. MAKE-UP RULE. TYPE CLEANERS.--CAP CASE. 그 ​ALBION COMPOSING STICK. PATENT LAMP HOLDER. STEEL SHOOTING STICK. GROVER PAT. COMPOSING STICK. BRASS SHOOTING STICK. M.H.THORP RCO CLEVELAND.O TYPE CLEANERS.--LOWER CASE. These have wire bottoms, can be laid on top of common cases, the whole turned over and dust sifted out, and type turned back into its old or a new case. SPRING NIPPERS. MITERING MACHINE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRYCU PATENT LEAD CUTTER. CLEVELAND Z. 20 | VINE ST. MH.H. THORP.00 CARD CUTTER, No. 1. UM CAST IRON DOUBLE STAND WITH RACKS. DOUBLE LEVER RULE CUTTER. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY. CARD CUTTER, No. 2. WOOD MITRE BOX. CINCINNAY ryer FOUNDA 201 VINE SU IRON MITRE BOX. IMPROVED INKING APPARATUS. READY-ROLLER PROOF PRESS. IRON SIDE STICKS. IMPROVED ROLLER FRAME & CORE, SLICE-GALLEY, WOOD. 20 NEW STYLE PRINTERS' CABINETS. UD M SUBARU 10120 BRACKET CABINET. 18 Cases, 2-3 size $40 00 18 Cases, 3-4 size 18 Cases full size $48 00 COMBINATION CABINET. Containing 18 Job Cases, and 10 Sorts Boxes, divided off for Quads, Figures, Leaders, &c. Combination Cabinet - $100 00 Eagle Cabinet $90 00 California Cabinet $80 00 -- $44 00 THE NILES ENGINE. PRINTERS CUTTER. och DI 111 tuli hope PRINTERS CUTTER ENTEE Mu I o Ito NILES TMT HANMAR JENY TENZYCK 717 This Engine is not attached to the Boiler, but is erected on the same base with it; it is not subject to the injurious effects of contraction and expansion. The bearings are not heated, and the lubricating oils are not baked on the working surfaces. Neither is the Engine injured by vibration when running. The Engine is complete with Governor, Feed Pump, Band Wheel, Stop Valve, Oil Cups, and Drip Pipes. Sizes from 2 to 12 horse power. Prices given on application NEW AND IMPROVED LEVER CUTTER. For Printers and Binders. Cuts 30 inches. Price, $175 00. Boxing, $3 50. Weight of Cutter boxed, 900 lbs. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. Chas. Wells, Treas. OFFICE, NO. 201 VINE STREET. Border composed of Nonpareil Borders No. 205, No. 213, No. 818, DI UC and Half Nonp. Border No. 9. UNIVERSAL RULE SHAPER. This is the first practical instrument for the purpose that has ever been introduced for the use of printers; others will do to miter a few special Rules occasionally, but this one is equal to all emergencies likely to occur in a printing office. It does its work rapidly and accurately, and the cutters are very easily sharpened and kept in order. You can cut Rule squarely off, or miter any of the common angles in use, with the cutters or bits sent with the machine; and special bits can be cheaply made for extraordinary or fancy shapes. The machines in use by type-founders, and those who prepare Rules for printers' use, have always been too complicated and costly, and the saws by which they do their work, too delicate to be kept in order to work smoothly by any but a skillful man expert in their use. The heavy shears often used to cut rule always ruin one, and often both of the cut surfaces; and if planes are used to trim the ends in- to shape, the rule being fed up to the bit by hand, often springs, twists, chatters and boggles the surfaces it is so important to make smooth and true. repeat the clamping, cutting and dressing, lay in 16 ems and repeat, 24 ems and re- peat again, break off the ends and smooth them up, bend up your corners, and tie your Rule with a string, and set your card in its frame, or, if you prefer, sep- arate all the sides and smooth them up, and use as ordinary mitered Rule. It is a very strong machine. The cut- ters are simply shaped bits, to be sharpened only on the flat side, and consequently always retaining their shape as long as they last. A set of ordinary page rule of given size can be well mitered in two minutes, and Rule for a large number of pages of uniform size still more rapidly. All know how Labor-saving Rules will show their joints after a little use, no matter how accu- rately made and cut to length, squareness and height. A truly labor-saving fount of rules should be of lengths to fit all jobs, with no joints except at the corners. It should consist of pieces mi- tered at both ends. The pieces that made the side of a small job making the end of a larger one; but no one has as yet formulated this fount of Rules. No maker of Rules knows the lengths, and numbers of pieces of each length that will be most useful and economical to the printer. With the hope that this little machine may soon develope and shape this ideal fount of Rules among printers themselves, we offer the following sug- gestions.-- Buy your Rule only of a house whose Rules are made from steel standards; and who can constantly and exactly duplicate their work, so that the Rules you buy now, may exactly match those made in the future. Make, in the start, a selection of a few standard sorts of Rules; it is better they should be on half nonpareil, non pareil, non pareil and a half, and pica bodies. . In your future orders for strip Rules confine yourself to the same sizes and numbers; miter your Rules carefully to sizes needed, and you will soon accu- mulate such founts of Rules as we all want to know how to make; and the cost of them will be a great deal less per pound than the labor-saving founts in such com- inon use. Be careful!! Do n't play with the ma- chine. Rule-cutting is worthy of your best care-delicacy-skill. It is a job that should always be confided to a com- petent workman, This machine is constructed on the gen- eral plan of a machinist's Shaper; of course simplified and confined to this one use. The Rule is cut off, and the ends properly mitered at one operation. The tool is screwed into the slot made to contain it--set to the proper depth--the strip of Rule is clamped down to the table in proper position -- the little crank is turned -- the bit passes firmly back and forth across the table, and each time it recedes, touches a little lever, which raises the table firmly the hight of one shaving-- the Rule is rapidly cut away, leaving both ends mitered with the greatest smoothness and accuracy. The work-table rises only to a given point, where it stops while the bit makes several passages through the groove, when the table suddenly falls to the starting point, ready to repeat the operation. In setting the bit the table should be raised to its highest point, and the bit so adjusted as in no case to cut quite through the rule or gouge into the table. It is best to cut only through the face of the Rule, leaving the shoulder to be bent around the corner, or broken off, and the broken edge trimmed off with a fine file. The table has motion enough to cut a pica rule, consequently, when a thinner rule is on it, some motion of the machine is nec- essary before it rises so as to begin to cut. To obviate the tediousness of this, place the bit immediately over the face of the rule, lift the table by hand till the bit touches the brass, turn the ratchet below with the fin- ger as far as it can move, and you will no longer turn the crank ineffectually. Every time a cut is made, the strip should be taken out and the little burr turned up at the corner filed smoothly off. - To use the guage:-- For instance, you want to miter Rule for a card, 16 X 24 ems, outside measure.-- Lay a strip of Rule on the table, face from you, so that the end will be cut off, set the guage against the left-hand end, clamp the rule down and cut it, take it out, dress off the burr at foot, put 16 ems of type in front of the guage, clamp in the Rule as before, cut, take out, dress burr at foot, lay in 24 ems more in front of guage, Price of Machine $28.00 F USE SIX-TO-PICA CORNER QUADS, TO HOLD MITERED RULES IN PLACE. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY, , CHAS. WELLS, Treas. Border composed of Nonpareil Rule No. 5, and Nonpareil Borders, No. 205 and No. 207. ROMAN AND ITALIC. PEARL We all know that the records of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrances of mankind. We know that if we could cause this structure to ascend not only until it reached the skies, but until it pierced them its broad surfaces could still contain but part of that, which in an age of knowledge, hath already been spread over all the earth, and with which history has charged herself with the making known to all the future times. We know that no inscription on entablatures less broad than the earth itself, can carry information of the events we now commemorate to where they have not already gone; and that no monument which shall not outlive the duration of knowledge and let- lers among men, can prolong the memorial. But our object is by this editice to show our deep sense of the value and the importance of the achievements of our ancestors; and by presenting this work of gratitude to the eye, to keep alive similar sentiments and to foster a constant regard for the principles of the revolution. Human beings are composed not of reason only, but of imagination also, and sentiment; AGATE, No. 6 WE know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the sky but till it pierced them, its broad surface could stiil contain but part of that, which in an age of knowl- edge hath already been spread over the earth, and which history charges herself with making known to future times. We know that no inscription on entablatures less in breadth than earth itself, could carry information of the events we commemorate to where they have not already gone; and no structure which shall not outlive the duration of a knowledge and of literature among all men, can prolong these memorials. But our objects are by such an edifice to show a deep sense of the value and importance of the achievements of our own ancestors; and by NONPAREIL, No. 8 We know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrances of all mankind. We know that if we could cause this struc- ture to ascend not only till it reached to the skies but till it pierced them, its broad surfaces could still hold but a part of that, which in this age of knowledge hath already been spread over all the earth and with which history charges herself with making known to all the future times. We know that no inscription on entab- latures less broad than the earth itself can carry all the information of the events we commemorate where the same have not already gone, that no structures which shall not outlive the duration of letters and knowledge among men, can ever prolong the memorial. But our object is, by this edifice to show our deep sense of the and that is neither wasted nor misplaced, which is appro- priated to the purpose of giving right direction to sentiment and opening the proper springs of feeling in the heart. The perpetuation of national hostility is not our object, or even to cherish a mere military spirit. It is higher, purer and nobler. We consecrate our work to the spirit of national independence, and we wish that the light of peace may rest upon it always. We rear a memorial of our conviction of that unmeasured benefit, which has been conferred on our own land, and of all the happy influences which have been produced by the same events, on the general interest of all PUBLIC DEBT OF THE UNITED STATES presenting this work of gratitude to the eye, to keep alive similar noble sentiments and also to foster a constant regard to the principles of the revolution. Human beings are composed not of reason only, but of imagination also, and sentiment, and that is not either wasted or misapplied, which is appropriated to the purpose of giving the right direction to the sentiments, and opening proper springs of feeling in the heart. But let it not be supposed that our object is to perpetuate national hostility, or to cherish a mere military spirit. It is higher, purer and nobler MANUFACTURER OF PAPER BOXES value and the importance of the achievements of our ancestors, and by presenting this work of gratitude to the eye, to keep alive similar sentiments and to foster a constant regard for the principles of the revolution. Human beings are composed not of reason only, but of imagination also, and sentiment; and that is neither wasted nor misapplied which is appropriated for the purpose of giving a right direction to sentiments, and opening proper springs of feeling in the heart. Let it not be supposed that our object is the perpetuation of GREAT CLOSING OUT SALE OF DRY GOODS. When we gaze on ruins of ancient magnificence, or rare remains of ancient skill, we are obliged NAVIGATION IN ANCIENT TIMES. We all know that the records of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrances of mankind. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. From the disorders that disfigure the annals of those republics, the advocates of despotism have all drawn THE FIRST PRODUCTIONS OF THE PRESS NONPAREIL, No. 9 We know that the record of illustrious actions is safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad sur- face could still contain but part of that, which in this age of knowledge, hath already been spread over the earth, and with which history charges herself with making known to all future times. We know that no inscription, on an entablature less in breadth than the earth itself, can carry in- formation of the events we now commemorate to where they have not already gone; and that no monument, which shall not outlivé the duration of knowledge and letters among men can pro- MINION, No. 6 We all know that the record of illustrious ac- tions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, still its broad surface could contain but a portion of that, which in an age of knowledge hath already been spread over the earth, and with which history charges herself with making known to future times. We know that no in- scription on entablatures less broad than the earth itself, can carry information of the events we commemorate where it has not already gone; MINION, No. WE know that the record of illustrious actions, is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend not only till it reached the skies but till it pierced them, its broad surface could still contain but part of that, which in an age of knowledge hath already been spread all over the earth, and with which history charges herself to make known to all future times. We know, that no in- scriptions on entablatures less wide than the earth itself, can carry information of long these memorials. But our object is, by this edifice, to show our deep sense of the value and importance of the achievements of our ancestors and by presenting this work of gratitude to the eye, to keep alive a similar sentiment, and also to foster a constant regard for the principles of the revolution. Human beings are composed not of reason only but of imagination and sentiment also; and that is neither wasted nor misapplied which is appropriated to the purpose of giving a GIGANTIC TREES OF CALIFORNIA National pride, like the pride of individuals, is often founded on slight or dubious pretensions. At LANDING OF COLUMBUS IN AMERICA and that no monument which shall not outlive the duration of knowledge and letters among men can prolong this memorial; but our object is, by this edifice, to show our deep sense of the value and importance of the achievements of our ancestors; and by presenting this work of gratitude to the eye, to keep alive similar senti- ments, and also to foster a constant regard to COMMUNE WITH YOUR GOOD ANGEL While upon this subject, we can not forbear to say that tendency to moralize, which many persons have GRAND MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT the events we now commemorate, where they have not already gone; and that no structure, which shall not outlive the du- ration of letters and of knowledge among men, can prolong the memorial. But our object, by this edifice is, to show our deep sense of the value and importance of the achievements of our ancestors; and by JOURNAL OF HORTICULTURE Philosophers have speculated concerning a process of sensation which has commonly a MORNING IN SOUTHERN ITALY. BREVIER, No. 8 We know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal re- membrance of mankind. We know that if we could cause this structure to ascend not only till it had reached the skies, but until it had pierced them, its broad surfaces could contain but part of that, which in an age of knowledge hath already been spread over the earth, and with which history charges herself with mak- ing known to all the future times. We know that no inscription on entablatures less broad than the earth itself can carry information of the events we now commemorate, where they have not already gone; and that no monument which shall not outlive the duration of letters and knowledge among men, can prolong this memorial. But our object is by this edifice, to show our deep sense of the value and the importance of the achievements of our ances- THE ILLUSTRATED ALMANAC This is the evangelic method of propagating Christianity which casts into discouragement FOREIGN MISSIONS IN ARMENIA BREVIER, No. 11 We know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind, we know that if we could cause this edifice to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad surfaces could still contain but part of that, which in this age of knowledge, has already been spread over the earth and which history, charges itself with making known to all future times. We know, that no inscription, on entabla- tures less broad than the earth itself can carry information of the events we commemorate where it has not gone already; that no structure which shall not outlive the duration of letters and knowledge among men can prolong the memorial. But our objects are, by this ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPER The first settlers followed the course of the Indians, and planted themselves upon the CINCINNATI OPERA HOUSE BOURGEOIS, No. 9 We know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, too, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it had reached the skies, but until it pierced them, its broad surface could contain but small portions of that which in an age of knowledge, hath already spread over the earth, and which History charges itself with making known to all future times. We know that no inscription on entab- latures less broad than the earth itself can carry information of the events we commemorate where it has not already gone; and that no structure which shall not outlive the duration of letters, and A COMPENSATING CONTRIVANCE Of the old festivals, that of Christmas awakens the strongest and most heart EMINENT STATESMEN. TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (1.) ROMAN AND ITALIC. BOURGEOIS, No. 12. We know that the record of illustri- ous actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of man- kind. We know too, that if we could cause this structure to ascend not only till it reached the skies, but till it had pierced them, its broad surface could still hold but a part of that, which in this age of knowledge, hath already been spread over the earth and with which history has charged herself to LONG PRIMER, No. 8. We know that the record of illustrious actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad surface could still hold but a part of that which in an age of knowledge, hath already been spread over the earth, and which history has LONG PRIMER, No. 10. We know that the records of illustri- ous actions, is most safely deposited in the universal remembrances of all mankind. We know too, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad surface could still contain but a part of that which in this age of knowledge, hath already been spread around the earth and with which history charges her- self with making known to all future times. We know that no inscription on entablatures less broad than the earth itself, can carry information of THE INSURANCE RECORD. Time in its course has produced a striking epoch in the history of our MELODIOUS MORNING make known to all future times. We know that no inscription on entabla- tures less broad than the earth itself, can carry information of the events which we commemorate where they have not already gone; and there is THE EDUCATIONAL TIMES. In looking forward to a future life, recollect that we have not to sustain a THE SMITHSONIAN CHOIR charged herself with making known to all future times. We know that no inscription on entablatures less broad than the earth itself, can carry the information of the events we commem- HARVARD UNIVERSITY But as nothing perhaps is gained in point of practical improvement by PROMINENT PERSONS PICA, No. 6. LONG PRIMER, No. 11. We know that the record of noble actions is most safely deposited in the general remembrance of man- kind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them its broad sur- face could still contain but part of that, which in an age of knowledge hath already been spread over the earth and with which history now charges herself with telling to all future times. We know, that no inscription on entablatures less in breadth than the earth itself, can CINCINNATI EXPOSITION His intellectual power was most conspicuous in the investigations BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS SMALL PICA, No. 11. We know that the record of noble actions is most safely deposited in the universal remembrances of all mankind; we know too that if we could cause this structure to rise, not only till it reached to the skies but till it pierced them, its broad surfaces, could still contain but a part of that, which in an age of knowledge have already become spread over the earth, and which history charges herself with mak- ing known to all the future times. MERCANTILE MAGAZINE We know that the record of no- ble actions is safely deposited in the remembrance of mankind, we know too, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not only till it reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad surface could still contain but part of it which in an age of knowledge has already been spread over the earth and which history, charges THE ANCIENT MARINER We have mentioned heretofore what seems the most striking AMERICAN WRITERS We had scarcely spoken when the ground began to tremble beneath ORNAMENTAL WORKS PICA, No. 8. ENGLISH, No. 2. GREAT PRIMER, No. 5. We know that the record of noble actions is most safely deposited in the universal re- membrance of mankind. We know, that if we could cause this structure to ascend, not We know that the record of noble actions is safely deposited in the universal remembrance of mankind. We know, that if we could only till it reached the skies, but until it pierced them, its broad surface could contain but part of that which in an CINCINNATI TYPE In almost every case the young begin well. They come out on NATURAL HISTORY cause this structure to as- cend, not only till it had reached the skies, but till it pierced them, its broad THE means of exten- ding knowledge and influencing the mind are now multiplied a thousandfold; and it is pleasing to look on the youthful mind in MORNING NEWS CHRISTIAN AGE Eastern Line Steamer Feature of American Scenery Real Estate and Note Broker EXCHANGE BROKER TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATT TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. (21.) NONPAREIL, No. 8. PLUTARCH. PLUTARCH. We present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on educa- tion from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solid writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve the serious deliberation of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent or depraved and miserable. Surely all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. "If God should ever grant us children then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, husband and wife, to have those who are to assist us, and maintain us in old age, as good as possible.' We know not an object of more importance in its results on individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know, what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society- from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palla- dium of freedom, should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement, which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philos- ophy, and its vital interests are too often alike absorbed in individual machinations or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, it may be safely said, has a greater number of theories been formed than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and the physical powers of youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this conflict, each theory has claimed for itself the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be deemed still very problematical whether we of the present time, with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summit on which it stood and thrusting it, as it were, “into our very hands, " and with all our short roads to every science, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself, not only to receive learning, but to make it think and act properly in complicated circumstances, and to grapple successfully with things as they are actually pass- ing. To talk of achieving this is very easy indeed. Pretenders to knowledge who are numerous in every age, are always loud in defense of magic modes of instruc- tion, but they should be listened to by those for whose benefit they pretend to act, with that deliberation and caution which characterizes wisdom and foresight. We do not say, that intrinsically, the intellectual faculties of either the Greeks or the Romans, in their virtuous days, were any better than those of our own times; but whether they were not superior, on a broad scale, in regard to their system of ed- ucation, inasmuch as mere mind was to be operated upon, and in the employment of those who taught their youth; in the requisition of long and patient study on the part of the scholar; in the exactitude of the discipline and the improvement of all the mental powers; in the principal of understanding a thing once presented to view, in its various bearings; and in the necessity rigidly required, of making their studies a part of the imperishable stock of the perceptions and knowledge of students, is a question which may admit of many serious doubts, before it be an- swered in the negative. But the reverse of this obtains too generally at the pre- sent day, and the collective body of the people seem to think and to act as if mere skimming over the surface of things, whether metaphysical or material, is enough of itself, to plant deeply in young minds, all the learning and the sciences. That power of mind is not exclusively limited by geographical lines, but depends to a great extent on moral causes, is a position, proven by its own history. It matters little whether a country is blessed with a genial and life-stirring atmosphere; or whether all its mountains be covered with forests, and its valleys watered by the purest streams, and clothed with a rich soil and very abundant crops, if the moral causes which operate are unpropitious to the heart, the manner and the minds of the people. In proportion as moral influences prevail in all their proper efficacy, in the same proportion are individuals either elevated or depressed in the scale of intellect and virtue. And amongst these, which in truth, seem to contain within them all the rest, the systems of education, and the men who are employed to take their supervision are first in power, and deficiency in either must create beyond a We present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on educa- tion from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solid writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve the serious deliberation of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent or depraved and miserable. Surely all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. “If God should ever grant us children then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, husband and wife, to have those who are to assist us, and maintain us in old age, as good as possible." We know not an object of more importance in its results on individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know, what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society-from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palla- dium of freedom, should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement, which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philos- ophy, and its vital interests are too often alike absorbed in individual machinations or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, it may be safely said, has a greater number of theories been formed, than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and the physical powers of youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this conflict, each theory has claimed for itself the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be still deemed very problematical whether we of the present time, with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summit on which it stood and thrusting it, as it were, “into our very hands,” and with all our short roads to every science, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself not only to receive learning, but to make it think and act properly in complicated circumstances, and to grapple successfully with things as they are actually pass- ing. To talk of achieving this is very easy indeed. Pretenders to knowledge, who are numerous in every age, are always loud in defense of magic modes of instruc- tion, but they should be listened to by those for whose benefit they pretend to act, with that deliberation and caution which characterises wisdom and foresight. We do not say, that intrinsically, the intellectual faculties of either the Greeks or the Romans, in their virtuous days, were any better than those of our own times; but whether they were not superior, on a broad scale, in regard to their system of ed- ucation, inasmuch as mere mind was to be operated upon, and in the employment of those who taught their youth; in the requisition of long and patient study on the part of the scholar; in the exactitude of the discipline and the improvement of all the mental powers; in the principal of understanding a thing once presented to view, in its various bearings; and in the necessity rigidly required, of making their studies a part of the imperishable stock of the perceptions and knowledge of CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (22.) NONPAREIL, No. 9. PLUTARCH. PLUTARCH. We present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on education, from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solidest writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve the serious delibera- tion of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent, or depraved and miser- able. Surely, all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. “If God should ever grant us chil- dren, then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, (husband and wife,) to have those who are to assist us and maintain us in old age, as good as possible." We know not an object of more importance in its results on individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know, what object ought to claim deeper thought from every rank of society,- from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palladium of freedom, should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philosophy. and its vital interests, are too of- ten alike absorbed in individual machinations, or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, it may be safely said, has a greater number of theories been formed than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and physical powers of youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this conflict, each theory has claimed for itself, the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be deemed still very problematical, whether we of the present time, with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summit on which it stood and thrusting it, as it were," into our very hands," and with all our short roads to every science, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself, not only to receive learning, but to make it think and act properly in complicated circumstances and to grapple successfully with things as they are actu- ally passing. To talk of achieving this is very easy indeed, Pretenders to knowledge, who are numerous in every age, are always loud in defense of magic modes of instruction, but they should be listened to by those for whose benefit they claim to act, with that deliberation and caution, which characterises wisdom and foresight. We do not say, that intrinsically, the intellectual faculties of either the Greeks or Romans, in their virtu- ous days, were superior to those of onr own times; but whether they were not superior, on a broad scale, in regard to their system of education, in- asmuch as mere mind was to be operated upon, and in the employment of those who taught their youth; in the requisition of long and patient stu- dy on the part of the scholar; in the exactitude of the discipline and the improvement of all the mental powers; in the principle of understanding a thing once presented to view, in its various bearings; and in the neces- sity rigidly required, of making their studies a part of the imperishable stock of the perceptions and knowledge of students, is a question which may admit of many serious doubts, before it be answered in the negative. But the reverse of this obtains too generally at the present day, and the collective body of the people seem to think and to act as if a mere skim- ming over of the surface of things, whether metaphysical or material, is suficient, of itself, to plant deeply in young minds, all the learning and science. That power of mind is not exclusively limited by geographical lines, but greatly dependent on moral causes, is a position, proven by its own history. It matters little whether a country is blessed with a genial and life-stirring atmosphere; whether all its mountains be covered with forests, and its valleys watered by the purests streams, and clothed with a rich soil and very abundant crops, if the moral causes which operate are WE present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on education, from the treatise on morals by Plutarch, one of the solidest writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve the serious delibera- tion of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent, or depraved and miser- able. Surely, all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. “If God should ever grant us chil- dren then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, (husband and wife,) to have those who are to assist us, and maintain us in old age, as good as possible.” We know not an object of more importance in its results on individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know what object ought to claim deeper thought from every rank of society-- from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palladium of freedom, should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself, none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philosophy, and its vital interests are too of- ten alike absorbed in individual machinations, or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, it may be safely said, has a greater number of theories been formed than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and physical powers of youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system, has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this conflict, each theory has claimed for itself, the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be deemed still very problematical, whether we of the present time, with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summiton which it stood and thrusting it, as it were, “into our very hands,” and with all our short roads to every science, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself, not only to receive learning, but to make it think and act properly in complicated circumstances, and to grapple successfully with things as they are actu- ally passing. To talk of achieving this is very easy indeed. Pretenders to knowledge, who are numerous in every age, are always loud in defense of magic modes of instruction, but they should be listened to by those for whose benefit they claim to act, with that deliberation and caution, which characterises wisdom and foresight. We do not say, that intrinsically, the intellectual faculties of either the Greeks or Romans, in their virtu- ous days, were superior to those of our own times; but whether they were not superior, on a broad scale, in regard to their system of education, in- asmuch as mere mind was to be operated upon, and in the employment of those who taught their youth; in the requisition of long and patient stu- CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (23.) MINION, No. 6. TRUTH TRUTH TRUTH and reality have the advantages of appearance, and many more. If the show of anything be good for anything, I am sure sincerity is bet- ter: for why does any man dissemble, or seem to be that which he is not, but because he thinks it good to have such a quality as he pretends to? for to counterfeit and dissemble is to put on the appearance of some real excellency. Now the best way in the world for a man to seem to be any thing, is really to be what he would seem to be. Besides that it is many times as troublesome to make good the pretence of a good quality, as to have it; and if a man have it not, it is ten to one but he is discovered to want it, and then all his pains and labour to seem to have it are lost. There is something unnatural in painting, which a skilful eye will easily discern from native beauty and complexion. It is hard to personate and act a part long : for, where truth is not at the bottom, nature will always be endeavoring to return, and will peep out, and betray herself one time or other. Therefore, if any man think it convenient to seem good, let him be so indeed, and then his goodness will appear to everybody's satisfac- tion ; so that upon all accounts sincerity is true wisdom. Particularly as to the affairs of this world, integrity had many advantages over all the fine and artificial ways of dissimulation and deceit; it is much the plainer and easier, much the safer and more secure way of dealing in the world ; it has less trouble and difficulty, of entanglement and perplexity, of dan- ger and hazard in it; it is the shortest and nearest way to our end, carry- ing us thither in a straight line, and will hold out and last longest. The arts of deceit and cunning do continually grow weaker and less effectual and serviceable to them that use them; whereas integrity gains strength by use, and the more and the longer any man practiseth it, the greater service it does him, by confirming his reputation, and encouraging those with whom he has to do to repose the greatest trust and confidence in him which is an unspeakable advantage in the business and affairs of life. Truth is always consistent with itself, and needs nothing to help it out; it is always near at hand, and sits upon our lips and is ready to drop out before we are aware; whereas a lie is troublesome, and sets a man's in- vention on the rack, and one trick needs a great many more to make it good. It is like building upon a false foundation, which continually stands in need of props to shore it up, and proves at last more chargeable than to have raised a substantial building at first upon a true and solid found- ation; for sincerity is firm and substantial, and there is nothing hollow and unsound in it, and because it is plain and open, fears no discovery; of which the crafty man is always in danger; and when he thinks he walks in the dark, all his pretences are so transparent, that he that runs may read them; he is the last man that finds himself to be found out, and, whilst he takes it for granted that he makes fools of others, he ren- ders himself ridiculous. Add to this that sincerity is the most compen- dious wisdom, and an excellent instrument for the speedy dispatch of business; it creates confidence in those we have to deal with, saves the labour of many inquiries, and brings things to an issue in a few words. In a word, whatsoever convenience may be thought to be in falsehood and dissimulation, it is soon over; but the inconvenience of it is perpetual, because it brings a man under an everlasting jealousy and suspicion, so that he is not believed when he speaks truth, nor trusted, perhaps, when he means honestly. When a man has once forfeited the reputation of his integrity, he is set fast; and nothing will then serve his turn, neither the truth nor lies. And I have often thought that God hath, in his great wisdom, hid from men of false and dishonest minds, the wonderful advan- tages of truth and integrity to the prosperity even of our worldly affairs; these men are so blinded by their covetousness and ambition, that they cannot look beyond a present advantage, nor forbear to seize upon it by ways never so indirect; they cannot see so far as to the remotest of TRUTH and reality have the advantages of appearance, and many more. If the show of any thing be good for anything, I am sure sincerity is bet- ter; for why does any man dissemble, or seem to be that which he is not, but because he thinks it good to have such a quality as he pretends to ? for to counterfeit and dissemble is to put an the appearance of some real excellency. Now the best way in the world for a man to seem to be any thing, is really to be what he would seem to be. Besides that it is many times as troublesome to make good the pretence of a good quality as to have it; and if man have it not, it is ten to one but he is discovered to want it, and then all his pains and labour to seem to have it are lost. There is something unnatural in painting, which a skilful eye will easily discern from native beauty and complexion. It is hard to personate and act a part long : for, where truth is not at the bottom, nature will always be endeavoring to return, and will peep out and betray herself one time or other. Therefore, if any man think it convenient to seem good, let him be so indeed, and then his goodness will appear to everybody's satisfac- tion; so that upon all accounts sincerity is true wisdom. Particularly as to the affairs of this world, integrity has many advantages over all the fine and artificial ways of dissimulation and deceit; it is much the plainer and easier, much the safer and more secure way of dealing in the world; it has less trouble and difficulty, of entanglement and perplexity, of dan- ger and hazard in it; it is the shortest and nearest way to our end, carry- ing us thither in a straight line, and will hold out and last longest. The arts of deceit and cunning do continually grow weaker and less effectual and serviceable to them that use them ; whereas integrity gains strength by use, and the more and the longer any man practiseth it, the greater service it does him, by confirming his reputation, and encouraging those with whom he has to do to repose the greatest trust and confidence in him which is an unspeakable advantage in the business and affairs of life. Truth is always consistent with itself, and needs nothing to help it out; it is always near at hand, and sits upon our lips and is ready to drop out before we are aware; whereas a lie is troublesome and sets a man's in- vention on the rack, and one trick needs a great many more to make it good. It is like building upon a false foundation, which continually stands in need of props to shore it up, and proves at last more chargeable than to have raised a substantial building at first on a true and solid found- ation; for sincerity is firm and substantial, and there is nothing hollow and unsound in it, and because it is plain and open, fears no discovery; of which the crafty man is always in danger; and when he thinks he walks in the dark, all his pretences are so transparent, that he that runs may read them; he is the last man that finds himself to be found out, and whilst he takes it for granted that he makes fools of others, he ren- ders himself ridiculous. Add to this that sincerity is the most compen- dious wisdom, and an excellent instrument for the speedy dispatch of business; it creates confidence in those we have to deal with, saves the CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (24.) MINION, No. 7. PLUTARCH. PLUTARCH. We present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on education from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solid writers of old and renowned Greece. They de- serve the serious deliberation of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into the world souls that are imperishable; which must either by educa- tion be virtuous and intelligent, or else depraved and miserable. Surely all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. "If God should ever grant us children then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, husband and wife, to have those who are to assist and maintain us in old age, as good as possible.” We know not an object of more importance in its results on the individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society,- from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palladium of freedom should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philosophy, and its vital interests are too often alike absorbed in individual machinations, or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, perhaps has a greater number of theories been formed than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and the physical powers of our youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this con- flict, each theory has claimed for itself the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be deemed still very problematical whether we of the present time with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summit on which it stood, and placing it, as it were, into our very hands," and with all our short roads to all the sciences, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself, not only to receive learning, but to make it think and act properly in com- plicated circumstances, and to grapple successfully with things as they are actually passing. To talk of achieving this is very easy indeed, Pretenders to knowledge, who are numerous in all ages, are always loud in defense of magic modes of teaching but they should be listened to by those for whose benefit they claim to act with that deliberation and caution which charac- terises wisdom and foresight. We do not say that intrinsically the intellectual faculties of either the Greeks or the Romans, in their virtuous days, were superior to those of our own times: but whether they were not superior on a broad scale, in regard to their system of education, inasmuch as mere mind was to be WE present after a few general remarks, a translation of some passages on education from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solid writers of old and renowned Greece. They de- serve the serious deliberation of parents. The present and the future world demand it from those who are bringing into the world souls that are imperishable; which must either by educa- tion be virtuous and intelligent, or else depraved and miserable. Surely all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain which has been so well expressed by Zenophon. “If God should ever grant us children then we shall consider concerning them, how we may educate them in the best manner possible; for it is an advantage to us both, husband and wife, to have those who are to assist and maintain us in old age, as good as possible.” We know not an object of more importance in its results on the individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are disciplined and prepared for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society,- from the statesman to the sage-nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the palladium of freedom should speak more frequently and fearlessly. From the nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philosophy, and its vital interests are too often alike absorbed in individual machinations, or left to perish from the personal indifference or pecuniary considerations. On no other subject, perhaps has a greater number of theories been formed than on the best means of developing the moral, the intellectual and the physical powers of our youth. From the days of the Stagyrite philosopher down to the present time, the human mind has been prolific on this theme; and the failure of one system has been quickly succeeded by the introduction of another. In this con- flict, each theory has claimed for itself the highest excellence. Some light has been thrown upon the subject, but it may be deemed still very problematical whether we of the present time with all our zeal in the great cause, with all our inventions for making knowledge easier of attainment, by bringing it down from the lofty summit on which it stood, and placing it, as it were “into our very hands, and with all our short roads to all the sciences, from the highest to the humblest are yet very much in advance of the ancients in preparing mind itself, not only to CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (27.) BREVIER, No. 8. THE PAST AND PRESENT. THE PAST AND PRESENT. It seems to be the law of the human mind to trace effects to causes. Hence hypotheses arose as soon as mind began to take cognizance of things around it. The works of creation claimed the early attention of mankind, and led them to attempt an investigation of the laws by which they are governed. But the means must be adequate to the end. Time, observation and experiment are necessary to develop and to confirm any of the great truths of nature. Mere abstraction and generalization cannot accomplish the object. All the knowledge that we have is founded upon experience. It is from this source we draw facts, and the comparison of these leads by induction to the develop- ment of general laws. It was in this manner, that Newton proved the existence of universal gravitation, and that this force, governed by a certain and in variable law, is the same whether it acts to bring falling bodies to the earth's surface, or to cause the planets and their satellites to be retained in their trajectories. This great discovery as well as all others pertaining to physical truths, flowed from facts, and an uninterrupted chain of inductive reasoning. All who are conver- sant with the nature of the human mind, know how slow its progress towards truth, whether we regard it as the object of our search in the properties and laws of matter or of mind. The failure of the ancients in becoming deeply acquainted with physical science cannot be attri- buted to any deficiency of intellectual power; for, as far as force and originality of mind are concerned, it is questionable whether they are equalled by moderns. Their eloquence, their poetry, their sculpture, , are still esteemed indications of capacious and transcendent genius. Their metaphysics have cost the labor of centuries to overturn, and their geometry remains a model of reasoning—of pure intellectuality. In the earlier ages of the world, all was blooming and fresh ; and if, as Lord Bacon represents it, antiquity be the childhood and youth of creation, it is nothing more than we might expect, that at that period of its existence, imagination should prevail over reason and experi- ment, and that the calmer and more successful exercise of the latter, should not unfold themselves until a later period. The want of intel- lectual liberty was not then the cause of circumscribed knowledge of the Romans and Greeks of physical science. It was, so far as we can gather from the records which time and barbarism have spared, because they had no solid general principles, and these, as we have intimated, they did not possess, as they had not previously studied particulars. It was on this ground the ancient philosophers were lost. They sought a knowledge of physical nature through metaphy- sical reasoning ; nor did they properly discriminate between physical and efficient causes. "With them philosophy was esteemed the sci- ence of causes, and by these they meant such antecedents as were necessarily connected with effects, and from an acquaintance with which the effects might be foreseen and demonstrated." They aimed to deduce the phenomena and laws of nature, rather by synthethic reasoning than by endeavoring to find out established conjunctions between successive events, and reducing them to general principles. The hypotheses of the ancient philosophers, are generally looked upon at the present day, as dreams of visionaries, and as indications of in- IT seems to be the law of the human mind to trace effects to causes. Hence hypotheses arose as soon as mind began to take cognizance of things around it. The works of creation claimed the early attention of mankind, and led them to attempt an investigation of the laws by which they are governed. But the means must be adequate to the end. Time, observation and experiment are necessary to develop and to confirm any of the great truths of nature. Mere abstraction and generalization cannot accomplish the object. All the knowledge that we have is founded upon experience. It is from this source we draw facts, and the comparisons of these leads by deduction to the develop- ment of general laws. It was in this manner that Newton proved the existence of universal gravitation, and that this force governed by a certain and invariable law, is the same whether it acts to bring falling bodies to the earth's surface, or to cause the planets and their satellites to be retained in the trajectories. This great discovery as well as all others pertaining to physical truths, flowed from facts, and an uninterrupted chain of inductive reasoning. All who are conver- sant with the nature of the human mind, know how slow its progress towards truth, whether we regard it as the object of our search in the properties and laws of matter or of mind. The failure of the ancients in becoming deeply acquainted with physical science cannot be attri- buted to any deficiency of intellectual power; for, as far as force and originality of mind are concerned, it is questionable whether they are equalled by moderns. Their eloquence, their poetry, their sculpture, are still esteemed indications of capacious and transcendent genius. Their metaphysics have cost the labor of centuries to overturn, and their geometry remains a model of reasoning—of pure intellectuality. In the earlier ages of the world, all was blooming and fresh ; and if, as Lord Bacon represents it, antiquity be the childhood and youth of creation, it is nothing more than we might expect, that at that period of its existence, imagination should prevail over reason and experi- ment, and that the calmer and more succesful exercise of the latter, should not unfold themselves until a later period. The want of intel- lectual liberty was not then the cause of circumscribed knowledge of the Romans and Greeks of physical science. It was, so far as we can gather from the records which time and barbarism have spared because they had no solid general principles, and these, as we have intimated, they did not possess, as they had not previously studied particulars. It was on this ground the ancient philosophers were lost. They sought a knowledge of physical nature through metaphy- CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (28.) BREVIER, No. 11. STATE OF NAVIGATION. STATE OF NAVIGATION. AMONG all the nations of antiquity the structure of their vessels were rude, and their methods of working them very defective. They were unacquainted with some of the great principles and operations in navigation, which are now con- sidered as the first elements on which that science is founded. Though that property of the magnet, by which it attracts iron, was well-known to the ancients, its more important and amazing virtue of pointing to the poles had entirely es- caped their observation. Destitute of this faithful guide, which now conducts the pilot with so much certainty in the unbounded ocean, during the darkness of night, and when the heavens are covered with clouds, the ancients had no other method of regulating their course than by observing the sun and stars. Their navigation was, of consequence, uncertain and timid. They durst seldom quit sight of land, exposed to all the dangers and retarded by all the obstruc- tions, unavoidable in holding such an awkward course. An incredible length of time was requisite for performing voy- ages, which are now finished in a short space. Even in the mildest climates, and in seas the least tempestuous, it was only during the summer months that the ancients ventured out of their harbors. The remainder of the year was lost in inactivity. It would have been deemed most inconsiderate rashness to have braved the fury of the winds and waves during winter. While both the science and practice of navi- gation continued to be so defective, it was an undertaking of no small difficulty to visit any remote region of the earth. Under every disadvantage, however, the active spirit of com- merce exerted itself, The Egyptians, soon after establishing their monarchy, are said to have opened a trade between the Arabian gulf, or Red sea, and the western coast of the great Indian continent. The commodoties which they imported from the east, were carried by land from the Arabian gulf to the banks of the Nile, and conveyed down that river to the Mediterannean. But if the Egyptians in early times ap- plied themselves to commerce, their attention to it was of short duration. The fertile soil and mild climate of Egypt produced the necessaries and comforts of life with such pro- fusion as rendered its inhabitants so independent of other countries, that it became an established maxim among the people, whose ideas and institutions differed in almost every point from those of other nations, to renounce all intercourse with foreigners. In consequence of this, they never went out of their own country; they held all seafaring persons in detestation, as impious and profane; and fortifying their own harbors, they denied strangers admittance into them; and it was in the decline of their power, that they again opened their ports and resumed any communication with foreigners. The character and situation of the Phenicians were as favor- able to the spirit of commerce and discovery as those of the Egyptians were averse to it. They had no distinguishing AMONG all the nations of antiquity the structure of their vessels were rude, and their method of working them very defective. They were unacquainted with some of the great principles and operations in navigation, which are now con- sidered as the first elements on which that science is founded. Though that property of the magnet, by which it attracts iron, was well-known to the ancients, its more important and amazing virtue of pointing to the pole, had entirely es- caped their observation. Destitute of this faithful guide, which now conducts the pilot with so much certainty in the unbounded ocean during the darkness of night, and when the heavens are covered with clouds, the ancients had no other method of regulating their course than by observing the sun and stars. Their navigation was of consequence, uncertain and timid. They durst seldom quit sight of land, exposed to all the dangers, and retarded by all the obstruc- tions, unavoidable in holding such an awkward course. An incredible length of time was requisite for performing voy- ages, which are now finished in a short space. Even in the mildest climates, and in seas the least tempestuous, it was only during the summer months that the ancients ventured out of their harbors. The remainder of the year was lost in inactivity. It would have been deemed most inconsiderate rashness to have braved the fury of the winds and waves during winter. While both the science and practice of navi- gation continued to be so defective, it was an undertaking of no small difficulty to visit any remote region of the earth. Under every disadvantage, however, the active spirit of com- merce exerted itself. The Egyptians, soon after establishing their monarchy, are said to have opened a trade between the Arabian Gulf, or Red sea, and the western coast of the great Indian continent. The commodoties which they imported from the east, were carried by land from the Arabian gulf to the banks of the Nile, and conveyed down that river to the Mediterranean. But if the Egyptians in early times ap- plied themselves to commerce, their attention to it was of short duration. The fertile soil and mild climate of Egypt, produced the necessaries and comforts of life with such pro- fusion as rendered its inhabitants so independent of other countries, that it became an established maxim among the people, whose ideas and institutions differed in almost every CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (29.) BOURGEOIS, No. 9. DECISION OF CHARACTER. DECISION OF CHARACTER. I HAVE repeatedly remarked to you, in conversation, the effect of what has been called a ruling passion. When its object is noble, and an enlightened understanding directs its movements, it appears to me a great felicity; but, whether its object be no- ble or not, it infallibly creates, where it exists, in great force, that active, ardent constancy, which I describe as a capital fea- ture of the decisive character. The subject of such command- ing character wonders, if indeed he were at leisure to wonder, at the persons who pretend to attach importance to an object which they make none but the most languid efforts to secure. The utmost powers of the man are constrained into the service of the favorite cause by this passion, which sweeps away, as it advances, all the trivial objections and little opposing mo- tives, and seems almost to open a way through seeming impos- sibilities. This spirit comes on him in the morning as soon as he recovers his consciousness, and commands and impels him through the day with a power from which he could not eman- cipate himself if he would. When the force of habit is added the determination becomes invincible, and seems to assume a rank with the great laws of nature, making it nearly as certain that such a man will persist in his course, as that in the morn the sun will rise. A persisting, untameable efficacy of soul, gives a seductive and pernicious dignity even to a character and a course which every moral principle forbids us to approve. Often in the narrations of history and fiction, an agent of the most dreadful designs compels a sentiment of deep respect for the unconquerable mind displayed in their execution. While we shudder at his activity, we say with regret, mingled with an admiration which borders on partiality,"" What a noble being this would have been if goodness had been his destiny!” The partiality is evinced in the very selection of terms, by which we show that we are tempted to refer his atrocity rather to his destiny than to his choice. In some of the high examples of ambition, we almost revere the force of mind which impelled them forward through the longest series of action, superior to doubt and fluctuation, and disdainful of ease, of pleasure, and of opposition and hazards. We bow to the ambitious spirit, which reached the true sublime in the reply of Pompey to his friends, who dissuaded him from venturing on a tempestuous sea, in order to be at Rome on an important occasion: “It is necessary for me to go—it is not necessary for me to live." You may recollect the mention in one of our conversations, of a young man, who wasted in two or three years, a large patri- mony, in profligate revels with a number of worthless associ- ates, who called themselves his friends, and who when his last means were exhausted, treated him of course, with neglect or contempt. Reduced to absolute want, he one day went out of I HAVE repeatedly remarked to you, in conversation, the effect of what has been called a ruling passion. When its object is noble and an enlightened understanding directs its movements, it appears to me a great felicity; but, whether its object be no- ble or not, it infallibly creates, where it exists, in great force, that active, ardent constancy, which I describe as a capital fea- ture of the decisive character. The subject of such command- ing character wonders, if indeed he were at leisure to wonder, at the persons who pretend to attach importance to an object which they make none but the most languid efforts to secure. The utmost powers of the man are constrained into the service of the favorite cause by this passion, which sweeps away, as it advances, all the trivial objections and little opposing mo- tives, and seems almost to open a way through seeming impos- sibilities. This spirit comes on him in the morning as soon as he recovers his consciousness, and commands and impels him through the day with a power from which he could not eman- cipate himself if he would. When the force of habit is added the determination becomes invincible, and seems to assume a rank with the great laws of nature, making it nearly as certain that such a man will persist in his course, as that in the morn the sun will rise. A persisting, untameable efficacy of soul, gives a seductive and pernicious dignity even to a character and a course which every moral principle forbids us to approve. Often in the narrations of history and fiction, an agent of the most dreadful design compels a sentiment of deep respect for the unconquerable mind displayed in their execution. While we shudder at his activity, we say with regret, mingled with an admiration which borders on partiality, “What a noble being this would have been if goodness had been his destiny !” The partiality is evinced in the very selection of terms, by which we show that we are tempted to refer his atrocity rather to his destiny than to his choice. In some of the high examples of ambition we almost revere the force of mind which impelled them forward through the longest series of action, superior to doubt and fluctuation, and disdainful of ease, of pleasure, and of opposition and hazards. We bow to the ambitious spirit, which reached the true sublime in the reply of Pompey to his friends, who dissuaded him from venturing on a tempestuous CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (30.) BOURGEOIS, No. 12. LANCASTER AND PESTALOZZI. LANCASTER AND PESTALOZZI. THE comparative merits of Lancaster, Pestalozzi, Jocatot and Hamilton, have been long and eagerly contested. In the ardor of making proselytes to what is termed the new system of instruction, the extent of their real claims has been lost sight of by their partizans, and feeling has been suffered to triumph over the decisions of sober judgment, and arguments deduced from the nature of the human mind and heart. The advantages which have been con- sidered as resulting from them, would imply a perfection of mode suited to every condition of youth and to every grade of intellect. Under the impression, perhaps, that they are acting for the public welfare, the advocates of those systems transfer to mind the doctrine of political rights. Thus, the strongest intellectual powers, are, with the weakest, to be swathed and bound down by mere out- ward forms, as if these forms were all sufficient to invig- orate genius, and to train the wayward passions of the heart into a proper channel. But every one conversant with the nature of the human mind, knows that the me- chanical drill, which seems to be both the body and soul of those methods, can no more effect the purposes of ra- tional education than conceited ignorance can successfully put in motion the wonderful machinery of the human un- derstanding, or vice, give strength and rectitude to the moral affections. That method by which the mind, the most intricate of all objects of knowledge, may be pro- perly developed, are still deemed imperfect, is evident from the fact, that there is a constant succession of them, each claiming to supply the deficiencies of former ones. It would seem, as if every defect in a system, was consid- ered sufficient ground for bringing forth a new one. But the discovery of one defect in a system, does not justify the total rejection of that system, any more than a bibli- cal interpolation would justify the rejection of the truth of the christian religion. Reason, too, might claim praise on the same ground, because all things are not equally durable, and the very frailty of their natures might be considered an argument for their immediate destruction. But, when time has tried a system, and it is not under the most propitious circumstances, found to answer the pro- posed end, we see no good reason for its retention in use. If the new methods are adequate to deep and extensive knowledge, how happens it that not a single individual is recorded to have risen under their discipline to literary eminence? On the contrary that which we shall call the old method, by which we mean the inductive, pursued by all able teachers from the days of Pythagoras to the pre- THE comparative merits of Lancaster, Pestalozzi, Jocatot and Hamilton, have been long and eagerly contested. In the ardor of making proselytes to what is termed the new system of instruction, the extent of their real claims has been lost sight of by their partizans, and feeling has been suffered to triumph over the decisions of sober judgment and arguments deduced from the nature of the human mind and heart. The advantages which have been con- sidered as resulting from them, would imply a perfection of mode suited to every condition of youth and to every grade of intellect. Under the impression, perhaps, that those systems transfer to mind the doctrine of political rights. Thus, the strongest intellectual powers, are, with the weakest, to be swathed and bound down by mere out- ward forms, as if these forms were all sufficient to invig- orate genius, and to train the wayward passions of the heart into a proper channel. But every one conversant with the nature of the human mind, knows that the me- chanical drill, which seems to be both the body and soul of those methods, can no more effect the purposes of ra- tional education than conceited ignorance can successfully put in motion the wonderful machinery of the human un- derstanding, or vice, give strength and rectitude to the moral affections. That method by which the mind, the most intricate of all objects of knowledge, may be pro- perly developed, are still deemed imperfect, is evident from the fact, that there is a constant succession of them, each claiming to supply the deficiencies of former ones. It would seem, as if every defect in a system, was consid- ered sufficient ground for bringing forth a new one. But the discovery of one defect in a system does not justify the total rejection of that system, any more than a bibli- cal interpolation would justify the rejection of the truth of the christian religion. Reason, too, might claim praise on the same ground, because all things are not equally durable, and the very frailty of their natures might be considered an argument for their immediate destruction. But, when time has tried a system, and it is not under the CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS, (31. - LONG PRIMER, No. 8. THE CRUSADES. THE CRUSADES. CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion, which gave rise to the Cru- sades. What avail the endless tirades upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandisement, a whit more respectable than that poetical devotion that carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth- born selfishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of contempt on the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt, by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of reli- gion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the opulent and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respect- a ble persons upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. This is not the manner in which the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so barren of results, as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to ob- tain a clear insight, into the thoughts and feelings of those “ fervent days of old,” when religious faith instead of being a moral probability floating in a medium of metaphysical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and a life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the most powerful incentive to action. In modern times the poetry of devotion has been so much sobered by motives belonging to the present state of being, that it is hard to tell whether the chief sources of of our prudential morality, are in the earth or in heaven. Yet there is no reason why the self-complacent shrewdness of this rather barren and prosaic age of transition should be particularly lavish of pity or contempt upon half-enlight- ened, but still glorious manifestations of those high proper- ties of our nature, which distinguishes us from beasts that perish. The chivalric, like heroic ages, exhibits a striking CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion which gave rise to the Cru- sades. What avail the endless tirades against the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandisement, a whit more respectable than that poetical devotion that carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth- born selfishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of contempt on the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of reli- gion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the opulent and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respect- able persons upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. This is not the manner in which the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so barren of results, às some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to ob- tain a clear insight into the thoughts and feelings of those · fervent days of old,” when religious faith instead of being a moral probability, floating in a medium of metaphysical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and a life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the most powerful incentive to action. In modern times the poetry of devotion has been so much sobered by motives belonging to the present state of being, that it is hard to tell whether the chief sources of CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (32.) LONG PRIMER, No. 10. PHYSICAL EDUCATION. PHYSICAL EDUCATION. upon the THE organization of man is extensively modified by the circumstances by which he is surrounded. Food, climate, habits, associations, and exercises both of mind and body, almost transform him into a different animal. If healthy and properly regulated, they elevate him, but if otherwise, they sink him in the scale of life. The wandering Carib, who lives in indolence both of mind and body, amidst the filth of his domestics and food of the monkey, is but little superior to it, either in intellect or bodily development. He is moved by no feel- ings except such as are perfectly animal. His will is governed by his instinct and consequently all his efforts are directed towards self-preservation and the protection of his offspring Contrast the frozen Laplander or the half-starved Esquimaux with the stately European, and the difference is wonderfully striking. The one appears to be but little above the inferior animal, while the other approximates our visions of superior beings. A part of this difference depends upon physical causes, indepen- dent of education, but the greater proportion is the re- sult of those habits both of the body and mind which increase the size and power of the animal organs at the expense of the intellectual. Nothing but education and mental discipline can secure that alteration in the organs of thought and reflection which is necessary to rescue him from the degradation in which he is placed. This will require time under the most skilful philanthropists but it can never be done until they adopt the proper modes, and understand the correct principles of proceed- ing. The effects of physical cultivation on the physical development of man are greater than are generally sup- posed. However much has been said on the subject of general education, this has scarcely attracted a passing notice. Philanthropists and philosophers have too fre- quently turned their attention to the mind, and hence, one plan of mental improvement after another, has been proposed and discussed, until it would seem that almost all has been said that can be said on the subject. Phy- sical education has also attracted a share of notice, but it has almost entirely been confined to the preservation of health, or the improvement of the locomotive organs. Discourses have been delivered, works have been written THE organization of man is extensively modified by the circumstances by which he is surrounded. Food, climate, habits, associations, and exercises both of mind and body, almost transform him into a different animal. If healthy and properly regulated, they elevate him, but if otherwise, they sink him in the scale of life. The wandering Carib, who lives in indolence both of mind and body, amidst the filth of his domestics and upon the food of the monkey, is but little superior to it, either in intellect or bodily development. He is moved by no feel- ings except such as are perfectly animal. His will is governed by his instinct and consequently all his efforts are directed towards self-preservation and the protection of his offspring Contrast the frozen Laplander, or the half-starved Esquimaux with the stately European, and the difference is wonderfully striking. The one appears to be but little above the inferior animal, while the other approximates our visions of superior beings. A part of this difference depends upon physical causes, indepen- dent of education, but the greater proportion is the re- sult of those habits both of the body and mind which increase the size and power of the animal organs at the expense of the intellectual. Nothing but education and mental discipline can secure that alteration in the organs of thought and reflection which is necessary to rescue him from the degradation in which he is placed. This will require time under the most skilful philanthropists but it can never be done until they adopt the proper modes, and understand the correct principles of proceed- ing. The effects of physical cultivation on the physical development of man are greater than are generally sup- posed. However much has been said on the subject of general education, this has scarcely attracted a passing notice. Philanthropists and philosophers have too fre- quently turned their attention to the mind, and hence, CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (37.) LONG PRIMER, No. 11. THE CRUSADES. THE CRUSADES. CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirade upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandizement, which has embroiled nations, a whit more respect- able than that poetical devotion, that carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born sel- fishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of con- tempt upon this the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the rich and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts, may be affirmed, of every large body of men, that ever gathered on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respectable people, upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last de- gree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this manner that the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of the world. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so barren of beneficial results as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear in- sight into the thoughts and feelings of the “fervent days of old,” when religious faith, instead of being a moral probability, floating in a medium of meta- physical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the most powerful incentive to action. In modern times the poetry of devotion has been so much sobered by motives belonging to the present state of being, that it is hard to tell whether the chief sources of our prudential morality are in the CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirade upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandizement, which has embroiled nations, a whit more respect- able than that poetical devotion which carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born sel- fishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of con- tempt upon this the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the rich and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever gathered on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respectable people, upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last de- gree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this manner that the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of the world. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so barren of beneficial results as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear in- sight into the thoughts and feelings of the “fervent days of old,” when religious faith instead of being a moral probability floating in a medium of meta- physical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (38.) SMALL PICA, No. 11. THE CRUSADES. THE CRUSADES. CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion, which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirades upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandisement which has embroiled nations, a whit more respect- able than that poetical devotion which carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born sel- fishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of con- tempt upon this the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the rich and the voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respectable persons upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this man- ner that the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so bar- ren of good results, as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear insight into the thoughts and feelings of “fervent days of old," when religious faith, instead of being a moral prob- ability floating in a medium of metaphysical abstrac- tion and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the most powerful incentive to action. In modern times the poetry of devotion has been so much sobered by a CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion, which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirades upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial ambition, or the lust of territorial aggrandizement, which has embroiled nations, a whit more respect- able than that poetical devotion which carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born sel- fishness to pass with perhaps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of con- tempt upon this the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor that Europe poured upon Asia, was turbid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the rich and the voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscientious and respectable persons upon the folly and wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this man- ner that the historical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The Crusaders were not so foolish; and those wars have not been so bar- ren of good results as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear insight into the thoughts and feelings of “fervent days of old,” when religious faith, instead of being a moral prob- ability floating in a medium of metaphysical abstrac- CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (39.) PICA, No. 6. PLUTARCH. PLUTARCH. We present after a few remarks, a translation of ome passages on education from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solidest writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve serious deliberation of parents. The present and future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent, or depraved and miserable. Surely, all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think, although they do not always follow, in that noble strain, which has been so well expressed by Zeno- phon. “If God should ever grant us children, then we shall consider concerning how we may educate them in the best manner possible.” We know not an object of more importance in its results on the individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are prepared and disciplined for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know, what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society from the statesman to sage—nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the pal- ladium of freedom, should speak more frequently and more fearlessly. From the very nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself, it is often left to be managed by those who have drank but slightly at the Castalian fountain, or the cup of deep philosophy, and its vital interests are too often alike absorbed in individual machinations or left to perish from the personal in difference or We present after a few remarks, a translation of some passages on education from the treatise on morals, by Plutarch, one of the solidest writers of old and renowned Greece. They deserve serious deliberation of parents. The present and future world demand it from those who are bringing into existence souls that are imperishable; which must either by education be virtuous and intelligent, or depraved and miserable. Surely, all who are in this responsible situation, must frequently think although they do not always follow, in that noble strain, which has been so well expressed by Zeno- phon. “If God should ever grant us children, then we shall consider concerning how we may educate them in the best manner possible.” We know not an object of more importance in its results on the individual and national welfare, than the system of education under which the young are prepared and disciplined for the performance of the duties of life. Nor do we know, what object ought to claim deeper attention from every rank of society —from the statesman to sage—nor one on which the press, which has been so often termed the pal- ladium of freedom, should speak more frequently and more fearlessly. From the very nature of the subject, it is far removed from the bickerings of civil divisions and ambitious views, and possessing in itself none of that keen excitement which the intensity of politics is so apt to throw around itself CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (40.) PICA, NO. 8. ADDRESS. ADDRESS. The faculty of communicating knowledge is itself a noble and high endowment. It is this which mainly distinguishes man from the in- ferior animals; though endowed with under- standing how very feeble would be the light which man could strike out by the operation of his own solitary and unassisted reason? Without the faculty of communicating there could be no perpetuation of ideas, no great improvement in art and science; and by the consequence, no progress of the human spe- cies. Writing and language are the means by which we hold inter-communion with each other; which makes the thoughts and feeling of every individual mind the property of all; and which constitute the improvements and discoveries of each successive age the birth- right of the whole human race. Thus we are all preceptors of each other. We live only on condition of being taught by our fellow- In this sense also, all the former gen- erations of men are teachers of the present; and the lights which we acquire, we in our turn do but hold in trust for the future. How admirable is the moral administration, which by the essential law of man's nature, makes his progress and whatever elevates and en- nobles him in the scale of existence, depend upon each turning the scale of his own indi- vidual stock into partnership stock, and on this constant and universal interchange of feeling, thought and knowledge. Moreover, this faculty of communicating is a self-sus- tàining, self-improving power. It is like the The faculty of communicating knowledge is itself a noble and high endowment. It is this which mainly distinguishes man from the in- ferior animals; though endowed with under- standing how very feeble would be the light which man could strike out by the operation of his own solitary and unassisted reason? Without the faculty of communicating there could be no perpetuation of ideas, no great improvement in art and science; and by the consequence, no progress of the human spe- cies. Writing and language are the means by which we hold intercommunion with each other; which makes the thoughts and feeling of every individual mind the property of all; and which constitute the improvements and discoveries of each successive age the birth- right of the whole human race. Thus we are all preceptors of each other. of each other. We live only on condition of being taught by our fellow- In this sense also, all the former gen- erations of men are teachers of the present; and the lights which we acquire, we in our turn do but hold in trust for the future. How admirable is the moral administration, which by the essential law of man's nature, makes his progress and whatever elevates and en- nobles him in the scale of existence, depend upon each turning the scale of his own indi- men. men. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. NONPAREIL, No. 13. SCIENCE OF GEOLOGY SCIENCE OF GEOLOGY To trace the history of remote events, and to investigate the manners of the ancient nations, has given occupation to the highest talents of the philoso- pher and the antiquary; and in this interesting inquiry, mouldering records, decaying monuments, fabulous legends, and the sibylline leaves of tradition have given up their respective tributes to the ancient history of man. But though the course of civilization has offered no interruption and no physical convulsions have disturbed the latter progress of our species, yet the details even of probable history, carry us back a little way into the dark recesses of antiquity, and we soon reach the epoch when truth and fable are inseperably blended. At this limit of our knowledge the records of inspiration fortu- nately came to our aid. From them we learn the origin of the human race, —the catastrophe which swept them all from the face of the earth,-the re- peopling the globe, and the dispersion into distant lands of the various tribes which animated its surface. This brief chronicle, even when exterided by the most minute details of profane history, is but the monograph of a single genus of living beings, which in its undisturbed occupation of the globe, it has suffered no change in its physical or intellectual organization. Endow- ed with superior intelligence, man regarded himself as the undisputed king of the world around him. The cattle on a thousand hills were for his use- the mighty deep yielded her treasures to his skill, and the savage denizens of the mountain and the forest became tributary to his power. His charter to these vested rights he found in the inspired page, and from the command to subdue the earth, and to exercise dominion over its living tenants, he has drawn the inference that their final cause, was to increase his luxuries and to increase his dominions. These views of the ancient history of the world, though universally received, have been singularly modified by the lights of modern society. Within the bowels of the earth the geologist has discovered the hieroglyphics of the primeval annals, during thousands of years before it was occupied by its own race. Inscribed on marble, incased in the pedes- tals of the everlasting hills,-these symbols have been preserved from the destroying powers of man and the elements; and time respected the only record of its own lengthened duration. Gathered in fragments from remote countries, and at distant periods, the elements of this new language were at first rude and mysterious. The development, and it required the united ser- vices of thousands of laborers to decipher one sentence of the subterranean record. The disclosures thus made, though by no means ambiguous, were at first received with distrust and fear. The few who were first admitted to its secrets, anticipated the conflict between science and religion; and dreaded that the geologist like the astronomer might be summoned to the bar of some modern inquisition. Conscious however, that one truth could never be at va- riance with another, patient geologists pursued their labor; and in less than half a century, they have created a new department of knowledge, which in point of philosophical importance and scientific interest, will not yield to the most exalted of all the physical sciences. They have made all antiquity modern, by carrying us back to periods that preceded its commencement- they have outstripped the theologian, by discovering the true interpretation of the first page of sacred writ- and have proved by infallible evidence that previous to the creation of man, the earth was inhabited by races of animals that were successively overwhelmed by great and destructive convulsions; and that new races, different from those which preceded them, and from those which now occupy our globe, were created by the immediate interpo- sition of divine dower. The pre-occupancy of the earth by the animal world during cycles of long endurance, and its present joint tenancy by man and the lowest creation, are two striking facts which hold out to us unequivocal indications of the future. The present is doubtless the first cycle of the in- tellectual occupation of the globe; and when we consult the past, we read in its buried monuments, that this must also terminate. May not this then be the first of a series of cycles, at whose close the existing races of living beings and the gorgeous fabrics of national vanity, shall yield their haughty relics to the sport and desolation of the elements? Even the sacred volume forewarns us of the coming day, when the elements shall melt with fervid heat,- when the earth, and the works that are therein, shall be burnt up ;- and when new heavens and new earth shall replace the ruins of the world. These views of the former and the future condition of the earth may appear even to some of our well-informed readers, as bordering on the marvellous ; while others will not fail to consider them as incompatible with the soberest To trace the history of remote events, and to investigate the manners of the ancient nations has given occupation to the highest talents of the philoso- pher and the antiquary; and in this interesting inquiry, mouldering records, decaying monuments, fabulous legends, and the sibylline leaves of tradition have given up their respective tributes to the ancient history of man. But though the course of civilization has offered no interruption and no physical convulsions have disturbed the latter progress of our species, yet the details even of probable history, carry us back a little way into the dark recesses of antiquity, and we soon reach the epoch when truth and fable are inseperably blended. At this limit of our knowledge the records of inspiration fortu- nately came to our aid. From them we learn the origin of the human race, --the catastrophe which swept them all from the face of the earth,--the re- peopling the globe, and the dispersion into distant lands of the various tribes which animated its surface. This brief chronicle, even when extended by the most minute details of profane history, is but the monograph of a single genus of living beings, which in its undisturbed occupation of the globe, it has suffered no change in its physical or intellectual organization. Endow- ed with superior intelligence, man regarded himself as the undisputed king of the world around him. The cattle on a thousand hills were for his use- the mighty deep yielded her treasures to his skill,--and the savage denizens of the mountain and the forest, became tributary to his power. His charter to these vested rights he found in the inspired page, and from the command to subdue the earth, and to exercise dominion over its living tenants, he has drawn the inference that their final cause, was to increase his luxuries and to extend his dominions. These views of the ancient history of the world, though universally received, have been singularly modified by the lights of modern society. Within the bowels of the earth the geologist has discovered the hieroglyphics of the primeval annals, during thousands of years before it was occupied by its own race. Inscribed on marble, incased in the pedes- tals of the everlasting hills,-these symbols have been preserved from the destroying powers of man and the elements; and time respected the only récord of its own lengthened duration. Gathered in fragments from remote countries, and at distant periods, the elements of this new language were at first rude and mysterious. The development, and it required the united ser- vices of thousands of laborers to decipher one sentence of the subterranean record. The disclosures thus made, though by no means ambiguous, were at first received with distrust and fear. The few who were first admitted to its secrets, anticipated the conflict between science and religion; and dreaded that the geologist like the astronomer might be summoned to the bar of some modern inquisition. Conscious however, that one truth could never be at va- riance with another, patient geologists pursued their labor; and in less than half a century, they have created a new department of knowledge, which in point of philosophical importance and scientific interest, will not yield to the most exalted of all the physical sciences. They have made all antiquity modern, by carrying us back to periods that preceded its commencement,- they have outstripped the theologian, by discovering the true interpretation of the first page of sacred writ- and have proved by infallible evidence that previous to the creation of man, the earth was inhabited by races of animals that were successively overwhelmed by great and destructive convulsions ; and that new races, different from all those which preceded them, and from CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (13.) BREVIER, No. 13. ADDRESS. men. The faculty of communicating knowledge is itself a noble and a high endowment. It is this which mainly distinguishes man fr the brute creation: though endowed with understanding how very feeble would be the lights which any man could strike out by the operations of his own solitary, unassisted reason? Without the faculty of communicating there could be no perpetuation of ideas, no great improvements in arts or science; and by consequence no progress of the human species. Writing and language are the instruments by which we hold inter-communion with each other; which makes the thoughts and feelings of every individual mind the property of all; and which constitute the improvements and discoveries of each successive age, the birth-right and inheritance of the whole human race. Thus we are all preceptors of each other. We live only on condition of being taught by our fellow In this sense also, all the former generations of men are the teachers of the present; and the lights which we acquire, we in our turn, do but hold in trust for future times. How admir- able is that moral administration, which, by the fundamental law of man's nature, makes his progress, and whatever elevates and ennobles him in the scale of existence, to depend upon each turn- ing the scale of his own individual acquisitions into partnership stock, and upon this constant and universal interchange of feeling, and thought, and knowledge! Moreover, this faculty of commu- nicating is a self-sustaining, self-improving power. It is like the sun of the firmament; traversing in glory the moral heavens, dis- pensing floods of light in all directions, and illumining every orb which circles within the system, yet without any diminution of its own original and exhaustless splendors. Rather does it acquire new lustre from every new dispensation of its own glories. Like charity, it is twice blessed: It "blesses him that gives and him that takes.” Thus by the law and appointment of nature, man is made the teacher of his fellow-man; and from this necessary re- lation springs the chief moral dignity of his nature. How much more exalted then is that relation, as it appears in him who is a teacher, not by nature only, but by choice and by profession; in whom it has been perfected by cultivation and philosophy; who has been prepared for his work by long years of very patient and laborious discipline; and perhaps at the expense of many noble and generous sacrifices, has made it the office and business of his life! Such were Aristotle, and Plato, and Socrates, and all the great masters of ancient language and philosophy. Such were the founders of the Christian faith. Moreover, educators should be not less mental than moral guides. This, by our estimate, is the very first requisite of his profession; and it is this which, so far as qualities are concerned, stamps his office with its peculiar elevation. Were man a being of pure reason,-a mere piece of intellectual mechanism, he would be indeed shorn of half his dig- nity; but the educator might stop with the discipline and cultiva- tion of his intellect. But he is made up, not of reason only, but of will; of feeling; of moral and social susceptibilities and home affections. Reason is a tree of sterner growth; but these are to THE faculty of communicating knowledge is itself a noble and a high endowment. It is this which mainly distinguishes man from the brute creation: though endowed with understanding how very feeble would be the lights which any man could strike out by the operation of his own solitary, unassisted reason ? Without the faculty of communicating there could be no perpetuation of ideas, no great improvement, in arts or science; and by consequence no progress of the human species. Writing and language are the instruments by which we hold inter-communion with each other; which makes the thoughts and feelings of every individual mind the property of all; and which constitute the improvement and discoveries of each successive age the birth-right and inheritance of the whole human race. Thus we are all preceptors of each other. We live only on condition of being taught by our fellow In this sense also, all the former generations of men are the teachers of the present; and the lights which we acquire, we in our turn, do but hold in trust for future times. How admir- able is that moral administration, which, by the fundamental law of man's nature, makes his progress, and whatever elevates and ennobles him in the scale of existence, to depend upon each turn- ing the scale of his own individual acquisition into partnership stock, and upon this constant and universal interchange of feeling, and thought, and knowledge! Moreover, this faculty of commu- nicating is a self-sustaining, self-improving power. It is like the sun of the firmament; traversing in glory the moral heavens, dis- pensing floods of light in all directions, and illumining every orb which circles within the system, yet without any diminution of its own original and exhaustless splendors. Rather does it acquire new lustre from every dispensation of its own glories. Like charity, it is twice blessed; It "blesses him that gives and him that takes.” Thus by the law and appointment of nature man is made the teacher of his fellow-man; and from this necessary re- lation springs the chief moral dignity of his nature. How much more exalted then is that relation, as it appears in him who is a teacher, not by nature only, but by choice and by profession; in whom it has been perfected by cultivation and philosophy; who has been prepared for his work by long years of very patient and laborious discipline; and perhaps at the expense of many noble and generous sacrifices, has made it the office and business of his life. Such were Aristotle, and Plato, and Socrates, and all the great masters of ancient language and philosophy. Such were ADDRESS. men. (14.) CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. LONG PRIMER, No. 13. THE CRUSADES. THE CRUSADES. CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love, it added that poetry of devotion, which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirades upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial am- bition, the lust of territorial aggrandizement, which has embroiled nations, a whit more respectable than that poetical devotion which carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born selfishness to pass with per- haps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of contempt upon the offspring of great and generous emotions ? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was tur- bid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the opulent and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscien- tious and respectable persons upon the folly and the wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this manner that the his- torical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The Crusaders were not so foolish ; and those wars have not been so barren of beneficial results as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear insight into the thoughts and feelings of “ fervent days of old," when religious faith, instead of being a moral probability floating in a medium of meta- physical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the most powerful incentive to action. In modern times the poetry of devotion has been so much sobered by motives belonging to the present state of being, that it is hard to tell whether the chief sources of our pruden- tial morality are in the earth or in heaven. Yet there is no reason why the self-complacent shrewdness of this rather barren and prosaic age of transition should CHIVALRY reached its perfection when to the poetry of love; it added that poetry of devotion, which gave rise to the Crusades. What avail the endless tirades upon the folly and absurdity of the Crusades? Are the worship of gold, the enterprises of commercial am- bition, the lust of territorial aggrandizement, which has embroiled nations, a whit more respectable than that poetical devotion which carried the chivalry of Europe to the sepulchre of Christ ? Why suffer the enterprises of sordid and earth-born selfishness to pass with per- haps a gentle expression of disapprobation, and exhaust the vocabulary of contempt upon the offspring of great and generous emotions? No doubt that inundation of fiery valor which Europe poured upon Asia, was tur- bid enough with profligacy seeking to expiate a life of guilt by a martial pilgrimage to the cradle of religion, and with vague hopes of reckless adventurers to repair their fortunes and gratify their passions in the opulent and voluptuous East. What of all that? Similar facts may be affirmed of every large body of men that ever assembled on earth. The solemn homilies of conscien- tious and respectable persons upon the folly and the wickedness of others, are to the last degree wearisome and unprofitable. It is not in this manner that the his- torical philosopher contemplates the great movements of society. The crusaders were not so foolish ; and those wars have not been so barren of beneficial results as some short-sighted persons imagine. It is difficult to obtain a clear insight into the thoughts and feelings of “fervent days of old,” when religious faith, instead of being a moral probability floating in a medium of meta- physical abstraction and patronized by politicians as an auxiliary to law in the preservation of social order, was a warm and life-like reality, glowing in the hearts and living in the daily business of men, and affording the (15.) CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. The Philadelphia Mercury. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY COMPANY. BREVIER, 13 NONPAREIL, 13 SPECIAL NOTICES. STOP CYLINDER PRESS. Stop Cylinder same number of rollers. ADVERTISEMENTS. ease and the allurements of rank, afluence ence of these sentiments was signally ma- paper stereotyping was first made success- W and size, but particularly large sized Wash- ADDRESS TO LAFAYETTE. that long succession of time, the people of NEWSPAPER STEREOTYPING. these United States, for whom, and with PERHAPS the greatest improvement for Plow Paper Cutter.-Is well-known as the low- GENERAL LAFAYETTE,--It has been the whom, you have fought the battles of lib- facilitating the rapid production of news- good fortune of many of my distinguished erty, have been living in the full possession papers, since the introduction of the power est priced machine for the purpose, and the known fellow-citizens, during the course of the of its fruits, one of the happiest among the press, is that by which newspaper forms are want of a good tool of this kind has induced us to NEW year now elapsed, upon your arrival at their family of nations ; spreading in population, quickly and cheaply stereotyped. In fact, make considerable preparations for their manu- respective abodes, to greet you with the enlarging in territory, acting and suffering it would hardly be possible to use either the facture. The little machine is neat and elegant, respective abodes, to greet you with the according to the condition of their nature , Bullock or the Walter press to print from in appearance, and all the parts fit and work in welcome of the nation. The less pleasing and laying the foundations of the greatest, type, as the cylinder which the stereotype each other with the greatest smoothness and nice- task now devolves upon me, of bidding you and, we humbly hope, the most benificent form is made to fit is so small that the type ty. The pinions are made of smaller diameter in the name of the nation, adieu. It were power that ever regulated the concerns of could not well be held in place. Even with than usual, giving greater power to hold down man upon earth. In that lapse of forty the Hoe presses, however, if it were not for the head upon the paper. The cutting-board slides PRESS. fluous to recapitulate the remarkable inci- no longer seasonable, and would be super- years, the generation of men with whom the process of stereotyping, great difficulty in planed ways in the frame, so that several cuts you co-operated in the conflict of arms, has would be experienced, and was felt in form- may be made without removing the pile of paper dents of your early life, -incidents which nearly passed away. Of the general offi- er years, in printing an edition of anything on the board, the only piece of wood on the cutter associated your name, fortunes, and your cers of the american army in that war, you more than twenty or thirty thousand copies As a well made, cheap machine it has no equal. These Machines are admirably adapted for all reputation, in imperishable connexion with alone survive. Of the sages who guided with sufficient rapidity to meet the demand kinds of Book, News and Job work. They are much simpler than the Stop-Cylinders heretofore our councils ; of the warriors who met the of a daily newspaper. To obtain and make OLD TYPE.-When you send us old type, be made, cost less money and require less skill in The part which you exception of a few, to whom unusual length up and put in the form, requires the full box or package, and forward by mail á shipping springs, run with little power and no jar, for which the independence and history of the North foe in the field or upon the wave, with the ready a daily news, and have the type set sure that your name is marked distinctly on every their management: They have and require no bed American Union. performed at that important junction was of day has been alloted by heaven, all now force of editors , reporters and compositors receipt notrs bill of lading as soon as the type is sent reason they are adapted for use in high places ; marked with characters so peculiar, that, sleep with their fathers. A succeeding and up to two and three o'clock in the morning. ered to us free of charge. presses which print the same sizes and use the realizing the fairest fable of antiquity, its their places; and their children's children, page, for as many presses as desired, accord- In Register they are Perfect, The Asteroid Job Press.-This Press is com- parallel could scarcely be found in the au- while rising up to call them blessed, have ing to the number of copies to be printed, pact, convenient and elegant in appearance, and and in all cases where more than two rollers are thentic records of human history. You been taught by them as well as admonished If three of the ten-cylinder presses are to will do twenty-five per cent. more work than any required are far superior to any other presses. deliberately and perseveringly preferred by their own constant enjoyment of free- be used, by making three sets of plates, fif- other platen press made. Give it a trial. Prices according to terms given on application. dom, to include in every benison upon ty or sixty thousand copies can be printed CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY, toil, danger, the endurance of every hard their fathers the name of him who came per hour instead of only twenty-thousand Chas. Wells, Treas. 201 VINE STREET. ship, and the privation of every comfort, from afar, with them and in their cause to per hour, which was the maximum before in defense of a holy cause, to inglorious conquer or to fall. The universal preval- tne introduction of stereotyping. News- a , years ago: HAND PRESS. It must not be ington Hand Presses, suitable for newspaper and unrestrained youth, at the most splen- representative of the whole people, and all supposed that this was the first successful printing, For good 23X35 to 26X42 Washington did and fascinating court of Europe. That the states of the Union, requesting the stereotyping for any kind of printing, as Presses we give from $200 to $300. trade. this choice was not less wise than magnani- President of the United States to commu- printing has been done from plates almost mous, the sanction of half a century, and nicate to you the assurances of the grateful as long as type has been used; but by the BRASSOD ASHES Senatokinds for Newspaper IMPROVED Send for and affectionate attachment of this govern- ordinary method of making stereotypes ABOR-SAVING .fonts the gratulations of unnumbered voices, all ment and people, and desiring that a na- from plaster-of-Paris molds, the time con- L AF25, and 100lbs. at 30 cents per pound. unable to express the gratitude of the heart tional ship might be employed, at your sumed was so great as to render this me- OB INKS.-The well-known MATHERS' Black . , J has been welcomed, afford ample demon- mitted to you by my venerable predecessor; what is called the paper process of making stration. When the contest of freedom, to himself bound to you by the strongest ties the stereotype mold was successfully intro- W round wood, in walnut op poplar, plain or PRESS. which you had repaired as a voluntary of personal friendship; himself one of those duced. This consists into beating the face painted, at from six to ten dollars each. champion, had closed by the complete tri- whom the highest honcurs of his country of the type, with a heavy brush, a prepared had rewarded for blood early shed in her sheet, with a body almost like paper pulp, G UILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER.-- For pow. We have recently patented an improvement in the er the best made. Prices from $500. to $700. Washington Press, which meets the approval of umph of her cause in this country of your cause, and for a long life of devotion to her and somewhat thicker than heavy railroad our customers. It makes no change in any of the adoption, you returned to fulfil the duties welfare. By him the services of a national card. The type form, with this wet blanket *HEET COUNTERS.-Hart's, and Thorp's working parts of the old press, but consists of of the philanthropist and patriot in the land ship were placed at your disposal. Your kind of mold beaten in to it, is then placed S Tento fifteen dollars each. narrow ledges alongside the usual bed-tracks, on of your nativity. There, in a consistent delicacy preferred a more private convey- on a steam bed to drive out the moisture which wheels run and carry the bed, -the old nubs ance, and a full year has elapsed since you and harden the mold, which in a few min- W a splendid assortment of farge Panele Smaji misses them and rolls in and out instead of sliding and undeviating career of forty years, you landed upon our shores. It were scarcely utes can be taken off almost as a sheet of sizes. All the latest styles. and just at the place where the impression is taken the ledges are low enough to permit the bed to of alternate success and disappointment, the people of the union a year of uninter- sion of the type. . advantage To make and trim a the same glorious cause, to which the first rupted festivity and enjoyment, inspired by plate, with type metal is now very simple, CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY, your active life had been devoted, your presence. You have traversed the and the same mold can be used for as many I ROSES STANDS: F. Puikilean witharacks for ten Chas. Wells, Treas. 201 Vine Street. twenty-four states of this confederacy; you plates as desired. The shortest time occu- -the improvement of the moral and polit- have teen received with rapture by the pied in getting a plate ready, from the time Throughout survivors of your earliest companions in in which the form is ready for the stereo- PRINTERSY CASABINETS: Containing from ical condition of mankind. cases. Price according to . SEND FOR PRICE LIST AND CUTS. This page is printed on Brevier, No. 13, and Nonpareil, No. 13. 16. of years Washington Hand with which your visit to this hemisphere convenience, for your passage to the border thod totally unavailable for all newspaper and Colored Job Inks. A large stock on hand. have maintained, through every vicissitude an exaggeration to say that it has been to card board, but holding a perfect impresc forty-five dollars each. Foot, long shear, $35. is obvious and extra cost very small. CINCINNATI DAILY REPORTER. MINION No. 7. Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. AGATE No. 6. We STOP-CYLINDER PRESS, it is to be printed. In addition to the there is great danger of injuring the face when it is laid on the furniture it will be and best styles kept constantly on hand. 0 other machine and ond side. Making Ready. In printing 12mo forms the edges of pages adjoining, will sometimes ADVERTISEMENTS. STOP-CYLINDER PRESS. points must be placed at exactly equal print heavy, and with a dull impression. THE mode of getting a form ready to be distances from the edge of the paper. The In such cases, bearers made of reglet, to printed, which includes the modes of un- cutting out of the frisket is the next thing bear on some parts of the furniture or Bºo OOK FOR PRINTERS.-LYNCH'S PRINT- ERS MANUAL: a practical guide to Compo- to be done. Having fastened the frisket chase, or hard paper rolled up, and past- sitors and Pressmen, By Thomas Lynch. derlaying, overlaying and cutting out, to to the tympan, lay it on the form, and rub ed in proper position on the frisket will desire to call the attention of Printers to a Book , make up for any inequalities in the hight the back of the tympan gently with the remedy the defect. on which the author has bestowed the greatest care or face of the type; putting up the rollers palm of the hand, so as to give a distinct in proper order for printing the form, and impression. This is preferable to pulling and soft paper, sometimes occasions the that the trade might be put in possession of a work Slackness of the tympan, or very thin and on which we have been lavish of expense, so MANUFACTURED BY THE adjusting the amount and quality of the because, the frisket-paper having a rough, the tympan is turned down. To prevent presenbranch of the business pas carried out at the Prepaid by mail, $ ink to suit the form, and paper on which hard face, and being sometimes lumpy, this, cut an ordinary bottle cork, so that, Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. latest of the type if - above, in book-work, this term embraces it. The frisket should now be laid on a of the form; place it on the furniture near making register, remedying any defects board, and the marked parts cut out, at the matter which shows slurs, put a little L have just completed a series of labor-saving Awarded the Large Silver Medal, at the locking-up the form, to prevent the exact the edge of the printing, so that no part come attached to the frisket when the and will be found very useful in table and job work which may have arisen in imposing or the distance of one-eight of an inch from paste on the upper part, and it will be- Brass Rule. It is cut accurately of various lengths Cincinnati Exposition of 1871. backing of the pages. In fact, making type. locking-up the form, to prevent the exact of the frisket will strike the edge of the next impression is pulled. The addition: METAL CORNEREN Per neste ris et meter For fine Book, Cut, or Job work, these Machines ready may be said to form the chief por- An impression is now taken and ex- to remain in its place until the platen is ornamental book and job printing. tion of the pressman's duty, to which the amined to see if it be uniform throughout. pulled down, when on account of its al height of the cork will cause the paper tion with our new series of rule, for all kinds of have many advantages over the Drum Cylinders or any other Press in common use. The paper being As this is seldom the case, the form must springing nature, it will give way until UTFITS FOR NEWSPAPERS.-We can taken while the guides and cylinder are at perfect rest, is handled with an exactness attainable in no other matters pertaining to presswork are be overlaid where light, and the heavy the pressure is removed. only auxiliary, while it often requires the parts cut out, to produce a uniformity of Register must be made before commenc- Register is made with Absolute Perfection. exercise of the highest skill, taste, judg- color over the whole form. RASS DASHES.-All kinds for newspaper ing to print the form, no matter whether B and job work. Send for samples. The distribution of ink is thorough to the last The overlaying is done with thin, unsiz- it be whole or half-sheet work. After the degree. Two Distributing Tables, three Ink Cylin- ment, and artistic excellence. UOINS, WOODEN FURNITURE, &c.- ders, and seven Vibrating Rollers being used on a HAND-PRESS.–In hand-press printing, weak, a piece of paper of the size of the centers of the gedoves, puil an impression Q'Always on hand, in large quantities. large press, on which the whole form is rolled with six rollers. the form, if for a book, is placed in the weak part is pasted on it, and where too and if the form be an octavo, or any other MPROVED INK , For center of the bed of the press, so that, strong, that portion is cut out to make it form which is printed in a similar manner, IMPresses, Edylinder vibrates aith a Fight and the eye of the pressman, and can be planed down, when an impression is pulled, the piston, sheet. A sheet is then pulled to see the which was at the top of the tympan, will guides over the cylinder. The roler frame itsert fering with other partstee the presso to which the platen is attached, will fall effect of the overlaying and cutting out, be at the bottom; then put the spurs of adjusting on a stiff steel rod. Either one or two distribution, thorough rolling, save noise and jar, at gone over, wherever needed, until the paper, and pull another impression. If take in cores of various lengths. Price $45.00 exactly in the center of the form. The and if not quite even, the same process is the points into the holes in the sheet of rollers may be used; and the frame also adjusts to rolling a similar form, with same number of rollers; and do a quality of work approached by no other machine in existence. form should then be securely fastened by pressure of the platen is the same in the points will be in their places, the and Felt , Felt means of suitable furniture and quoins. every part of the sheet, and a uniform pages and lines will back each other, and B Roller Eovering, Press mapes, etc., etc! Below we give a list of sizes made, with the num- ber of rollers used by each, and size of form printed The tympan is then laid down, and paper color is obtained. The unusual hights of the work can be proceeded with; but, if and inked by all the rollers. ABOR or blankets put in according to the nature parts of forms sometimes necessitates the they do not, one or the other, or both of Lfounts of 28, 51 and 100 pounds at 30 cts.per Th. Prices according to terms given on application. Bed. Rollers over Form. of the form to be printed. The drawer is as well as the making-ready sheet, in or- cumstances may require. If the sheet OB INKS.-The well-known MATHERS' Black 25 X 35 in. then laid on, and fastened with the hooks der to make the impression even. does not register after the second side is and Colored Job Inks. A large supply on hand. 3872 X 52 in. for that purpose. A sheet of paper to be , or the greater part of a work, it is gener- serve in which direction it is out—the FOFADEA LSeven-columnleashington Presente Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. printed is now folded into quarto, and the ally preferable to overlay on a sheet of first or under impression being the one lbs Long Primer. 200 lbs. Minion. Thirty founts creases placed so as to fall in the center stout, smooth paper, placed inside the on which the direction of the movements Display letter. Cabinet Stand, Imposing stone, etc. of the long and short cross. The tympan tympan. This sheet should be cut to fit of the point will depend. Suppose it be all as good as new. The outfit cost $1200.00 cash, but NONPAREIL PRESS. a few months since and is to be sold at a sacrifice. Also, One-fourth Medium Nonpareil Press, with is now dampened slightly, and brought move, which will keep the overlays in pressman is out of register one-eight of throw-off to impression and all the latest improve- down, a slight pressure will cause the their places while the form is being print- an inch, the first impression being the etc., costing over $1000.00. The job material will be NONPAREIL JOBBER. sheet to adhere to it, when it should be ed. This system saves much time in lowest; the point at that side must be sold separate from the news if desired. fully stretched, and pasted on the corners printing the succeeding, sheets of the moved upward half that distance, which work, as each one will prove to bring to its proper Print and size, but particularly large sized Wash- improvements added, including sectional ington Hand Presses, suitable for newspaper print- roller and adjustable distribution, paper is folded into thirds, and the long sheet pulled, thus requiring very little as before, and, if the register be correct, ing. For good 23 X 35 to 26 X 42 Washington Presses and the short crease is placed over their making ready. the pressman may go on with the work. we give from $200.00 to $300.00 trade. COMPLETE description to the CINCINNATI TYPE Apply with a Confining the Ink in Stripes on any part of Type-high bearers, placed across the FOUNDRY CO., NO. 201 Vine street, Cincinnati, O. the Rollers, respective long and short creases. The narrow way of the bed, one on each side, OLD TYPE. points are now screwed to the tympan. should be used where the size of the form B Farved lines great Pariety of shapes and same devices A great saving of ink on small work; and by the If for large paper, short-shanked points will admit.. They should be placed in WHEN you send us old type, mark your lengths. Clamp straight lines, and are every way such a position that the ends of the roll- name distinctly on every box or package, superior to anything of the kind now offered. Fonts VARIOUS COLORS are used, and long-shanked for small pa- ers will not touch them when the form is and forward by mail a shipping receipt or 160 pieces $8.00. They will be found of the seatest per. In printing an octavo, or form of a inked, to prevent tearing the frisket and May be Printed at One Impression. like character, the off points may be a soiling the tympan. The impression can bill of lading as soon as the type is sent. Straight and curved lines, saving a vast amount of Ten cents per pound is allowed for old justification and time. It is very simple and easily adjusted, adding noth- little larger than the near one, as it ena- be regulated in any manner desired, by type, delivered to us free of charge. ing to the cost or complications of the Press, placing cards or paper underneath the Send to the following address: Cincin. WODA. TYPE: Webeer omhandua stock of nor detracting from its usefulness for Plain Work. bles the pressman to detect any error in ends of the bearers. nati Type Foundry Co. No.7 Longworth composed of the most useful kind. Orders for any turning the paper when working the sec- The bottoms of short pages, and the street, Cincinnati, O. size and face will be promptly attended to. SEND FOR PRICE LIST. 32 X 47 in. Size of Form. 20 X 31 in. 26 X 42 in. 32 X 48 in. 4 5 6 to the tympan. In a sheet of twelves the nearly an even impression on the first another sheet on both sides, and examine . WANTED.-Second-hand Presses of any kind This press has been lately remodeled and many new This page is printed on Minion No.7 and Agate No. 6 Dayton Morning Advertiser. BREVIER No. 11. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY COMPANY. . NONPAREIL No. 8 BY B. P. S. from six to ten dollars each. And his form was tall and straight, hind the press. The press is compact, convenient and machine has. In construction it has few variations enough to cut full width of the hardest smaller sized job presses, with the ex-STEEL COMPOSING RULES.-Price each twenty- them all alike. Eight cores go with each press. Five SECOND-HAND PRESSES. them fully, tell us their name, age, size, THE OLD PRINTER, ADVERTISEMENTS. CYLINDER PRESS. “SEND us your list of second-hand maker, how broken or damaged, (for a presses,”—is an inquiry we now hear break that has been mended as strong from all quarters. Well, gentlemen, it is ever, is still a damage,) and whether W Wood, walnut ora poplar, plain or painted, at there are any parts missing; then tell I SEE him at his case, CINCINNATI is only occasionally that we can print us what goods you want in exchange, With his anxious, cheerless face, a list of second-hand presses; they come for when we fix a price in a dicker like Worn and brown; of all and go here so rapidly that like the far- this we want to see both sides of the the different sizes, kept constantly on hand. And the types' unceasing click, CYLINDER PRESS trade. mer's pig they cannot be counted. We If we offered you $300. for a As they drop within his stick, IMPOS, With Soxhout fremherst white marble, all hand-press as part pay for a country Seems as life's old clock the tick, will write you a list of what we have in cylinder, we might object to the same Running down. WITH TABLE DISTRIBUTION. the line of your wants at any time you price in exchange for nonpareil type, A , chase 7 x 10 inches, intended for fine work and a express them, --so when you want our and when you get an offer, it will be I've known him many a year, high rate of speed. Inks from a plate and yet distri- Bed 33 X 48. list, please tell us what press you seek, our offer then and not considered stand- butes without rolling. The form may be rolled, as That old typo, bent and queer- For six-column quarto or often as the pressman likes to each impression. Forms Boy and man; ing at all. that get muddy with too much ink may be printed nine-column folio. or for what purpose you intend to use Old presses sent us must always be Time was when step elate clean without removing the rollers. The impression it. It would take most of a day at any boxed properly, or breaks on the way Distinguished his gait. adjusted by four screws behind the platen may be evenly the press Possessing advantages in simplicity that no other time to write up descriptions of all the will be at your own risk, for few of our second-hand presses that we have in railroads will stand damage on unboxed We now scan. elegant in appearance and will do twenty-five per plan of most well-known table cent. more work than any platen press made. buting presses. machinery. possession and prospect; and we do not The impression is regulated in a manner not so liable MAKING READY, to abuse as the one usually in vogue. Inexperienced care to write up Country Cylinders to a G large stock always per haha, hat a reasonable prices large stock always on hand, at reasonable prices. persons are not so easily tempted to change the im- GUILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER. SMALL JOB PRESSES.–The rules ap- pression, when an overlay or underlay on the form man that wants a Novelty; or Hoe Ro- Tus admirable machine is intended Proof plicable to tympans for different des- BRUSHLESS Les and Proofer Brushes of all kinds, would better answer the purpose. The multitude of rollers used on all table presses is in a great measure compensated for in this, by having define your wants closely, and we will do our best to meet them. cents; Make-up Rules, twenty-five are required to the ception that in working old type or ing all alike they are all transposable. . fountain adjusted Whenever an important improvement pid in all its movements. When turned plate forms several thicknesses of soft M'the best machine in the market for the mitreing screwst; the Hy is taken away by Yoosing two thumb- is made in presses, good machines of a the knife descends quickly to the paper paper are used in place of the ordinary of Brass Rule of any thickness to any desired angle . screws, and thumb-screws are used in every part of similar character, are thrown on the the press where their use can be an advantage. blankets. As the impression can be ar- or oscillating motion, cutting cleanly, market at greatly reduced prices, but with but little inclination to pull the ranged to suit the wants of any form PRINTERSES. RINTERS CABINETS.-Containing from ten to Each press is tried before shipment, and sent out Price according to finish. with blanket. impression, bearers, tape, etc. all pro- standard presses of the latest styles, in paperi ender the clamport and the cut is in the platen, many ofices adopt the Lute, UNTERS. -Borth's Entent Rexarsitet, ead. perly adjusted perfect order and condition, are not often completed, the knife returns promptly plan of setting the impression even with a Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. C. WELLS, Treas. 201 Vine Street. sacrificed at half-price, as many appli- tion. When operated by power, the belt given number of sheets when the press is set BEST BULL EDM CHASES:--Very heavy and perfect cants seem to think. The Washington Hand Presses, large through the paper, knife returns to its to be moved in the subsequent making ready against any side. All sizes made to order. PAPER CUTTER. of any form. Care should be exercised Wemeents per pound in exchange for new. Mark good as ever they were are sold at about , and stops at the right place. There is no reverse motion to the not become loose and move in the direc- our address, weigh them, take freight receipt and send twenty per cent. less than their nett shaft, and no clutch to slip in and out tion of the face of the type and destroy us a duplicate. GUILLOTINE cash prices, and if we could get enough of gear, but the whole operation is com- tact. A bend in the nippers will throw YOLORED AND BLACK INKS.--We keep con- stantly on hand a full stock of MATHERS' Inks. to supply the whole demand we should pleted while the fly-wheel moves in one off the impression from the form and direction. sell but few new ones, yet we sell more in cause it to slur. In forms having so lit- Prevery office, and a necessity where a power-press new than second-hand presses, because COMMERCIAL. tle outside margin as not to allow the is used. Price 8 x 24, without stand, $35. 15 x 28, we can't get enough of the latter. nippers to hold the sheet after the im- with stand, $65. They are sold with or without table. Business in general has shown a fair pression is pulled, while there is plenty THREE SIZES. UILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER.- For power the try however, to keep enough for those degree of activity during the past week, of margin running from end to end in G best made. Prices from $500.00 to $700.00. customers who want cheap outfits. in fact, rather better indications were the inside of the form, it is usual to This machine is without any doubt the best in the VNE PLOW PAPER CUTTER.- Latest improved, market. It is intended for large offices where a great amount of work is required. It is a higher-priced taking the two nippers as side-frames, machine than many other cutters, but reliable; and also in demand, and the standard kinds ceries and Dry Goods are doing consid- and tying the cord or cutting the paper ceries and Dry Goods are doing consid- and tying the cord or cutting the paper SHEET COUNTERS.-Hart's, and Thorp's Can be will be found by parties having sufficient work, the Hoe, Potter, Cottrell, and Cincinnati erable in order business for the season, so as to press in the blank space. The attached to any kind of press. $10. to $15. each. most economical. readily bring prices ranging from ten and prices are well maintained. Flour almost imperceptible indentation of pa- This admirable machine is intended for hand or pow - and kinds, at er. When operated by power, the belt is slipped on to twenty-five per cent. less than new, and Wheat have been firm and fairly per given by impressions on the small B from 60 cents to $i.20 per hundreds the machine, starts, cuts through the paper, knife re. active during the week. Corn was in presses saves the pressing of small job turns to place, shifts its own belt, applies its brake, when we can get them. fair demand for new, and steady until work, and only makes it necessary to Francouver A la secondoband fylindern i Pressiu for and stops at the right place. To those who have Old Presses they the close when, in consequence of large lay out the work to dry the ink before country paper. In good order. Cheap for cash MANUFACTURED BY want to turn in trade we say, describe receipts, the prices became much easier. packing for delivery. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co.. 201 Vine street. Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. enough to print a newspaper, and as place, shifts its own belt, applies its own in setting the nippers so that they may the boxes containing the old type with your name and ROOF PRESIMA Proof Pretoria, a convenience in PAPER CUTTER We Second-hand Country Cylinders are perceptible than the persistent grum- make a frisket of paper or page-cord, for only Fifty dollars. A very cheap cutter. This page is printed on Brevier, No. 11, and Nonpareil, No. S. 6 THE COMMONWEALTH ADVANCE. BOURGEOIS No. 12. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY COMPANY. NONPAREIL No. 9, MAKING IMPROVED HAND PRESS. ADVERTISEMENTS. THE which should be adjusted a trifle as such forms can be made ready more of the usual bed-tracks on which Pvenience in every oflice and is a necessity ROOF PRESS.-A Proof Press is a con- FOR MPOSING STONES.-Of best white mar- BY THOMAS LYNCH. for new. BRASS RULES. C. 0. D." PRINTING MACHINERY. READY. so destructive to the type as the softer PRINTERS' MANUAL. CYLINDER PRESSES.—The bottom of kind of tympan or blankets. WE have recently patented an im- For posters, with wood type, old provement in the Washington Press, F OR SALE.- A Second-hand Cylinder Press for hand power; large enough for a nine should be perfectly free from dirt. been much worn, a woolen blanket is of our customers. It makes no change the form and the bed of the press stereotype plates, or type which has which meets the universal approval column country paper. In good order. The impression screws should have an best adapted, and may be used on all whatever, in any of the working BOX WOOD CEOso per varieremake PRINTERS' MANUAL: cylinder should touch the bearers, quires only to be brought up fairly, consists of narrow ledges alongside even bearing on the journals, and the kinds of common work, which re- parts of the well-known press, but cheapest are not always the best. A PRACTICAL GUIDE above ordinary type height. material. the old nubs are still in the ways as sizes, sold with or without table, to reduce price quickly with this than with any other wheels may run and carry the bed, - wherever a power press is used. There are two The tympan sheet should be select- The above are only given as general usual, but the bed barely misses them without stand, $35. 15 X 28, with stand, $65. ed to suit the class of work intended rules, as pressmen very often combine and rolls in and out instead of sliding without stand, $35. 15 x 28, with stand, $65. COMPOSITORS AND PRESSMEN. to be done, as upon this work, in a ing to the kind of work in hand, and pression is taken the ledges are low great measure depends. these materials or use others, accord, and just at the place where the im- I be, all sizes, with or without frame. The india-rubber blanket is best rience and judgment. are guided in these matters by expe- enough to permit the bed to rest on Lsible Cutter, the best out, only so. Thorps adapted where the press may be used The tympan should be stretched the nubs in the old way. The advan- Cheap Lead Cutter, only $3. Very cheap. tage is obvious and the extra cost very for all kinds of work, and is not found yetyr tightly swer the cylinderzace, as small . It is necessary to keep the LEER CUTTER; Afirst-rate Lever Cut- W desire to which the latten tjent sherinters to present a smooth, even surface, as ledges clean and the wheels well oiled. ing the above title, on which the author has convenient or profitable to change the the time and labor spent in making bestowed the greatest care, and we have been tympan with each succeeding form. ready are but thrown away, should W Foundry at 10 cts . per pound in exchange la pobsessioner sa work which would give them It combines in a measure, the qualities the tympan be loose in any part. with your name and our address, No. 7 Long-, information in reference to every branch of the worth street, weigh them, take a freight receipt business, as carried on at the present time. of all other tympans; and where it is WE have just completed a new and and send us a duplicate. Price, $1.25 Prepaid by mail $1.40 designed to print book-work, posters, RINTERS' CABINETS.-Containing from and general job and newspaper work uniform series of Brass Rule which P! ten to sixty cases. Price according to the finish and capacity. on the same press, no better tympan WHEN strangers or others with whom equalled for uniformity of line and can be obtained. we have no open account, order small height, and smoothness of finish and W&Co . a splendid assortment of large and A tympan made of binders' board, quantities of goods without specifying face. small sizes. Cheap for cash. or packing is most suitable for new the modes of payment they desire we CINCINNATI These rules have no knife-edge lines; type, wood-cuts, and the finer kinds peuadly send them.c. 03. Det some every line however delicate has a flat I RON STANDS.-Double, with racks for ten Only fifteen dollars. The counters are all sloping, TYPE FOUNDRY CO. of presswork. A proper making ready to this mode of collection, one of with rounded bottoms, so that it is no S HEET COUNTERS.-Hart's, and Thorp's, on this surface will show a more deli- which is “its cost," yet except on the trouble to the electrotyper as rules cate impression and a sharper outline very smallest orders where the whole commonly are. C. WELLS, Treas. than can be obtained from any other profit does not equal the cost of col- Very fine labor-saving rules may be W round wood, walnut and poplar, planina por lection, we, ourselves pay that cost useful on special occasions, but are so painted, at from six to ten dollars each. No. 201 VINE STREET, YINE PLOW PAPER CUTTER.- Latest the edges, and is less likely to dull with the individual. The cost of col- economical in the long run; for gen- and will not wear the type round on gladly rather than open an account easily bent and injured as not to be Fimbrevea, For only fifty dollars. CINCINNATI, O. the hair-lines on type or cuts. It re- lection being the least of the two. eral purposes do not order them thin- YARD CUTTERS.-Rotary, at from thirty to forty-five dollars. Foot long shear $45.00. Another objection is that they cannot ner than four or five to pica. quires a nice discrimination on Manufacture and keep constantly on hand the the Do not order less than ten feet to a following presses: part of the pressman, and a very elab- would have no objection to their see- fount, or you will be charged extra G power best made. Prices from $500 to $700. Stop-Cylinder Presses, orate making ready to attain good ing, but can't expect the express mes- for it. Make a close calculation of Cincinnati Cylinder Presses, senger to take the trouble to show, your wants and order enough at once. Band perfect E DUCHASES: --Very heavy Nonpareil Jobbers, results. Still this house has been serving and A large fount of rule or type made May lock type against any side. Made to order. Asteroid Job Press, Tympans made of thick paper are Washington Hand Press, seeking the service of printers for up by bits and dribs cannot fail to at Proof Presses, &c. more generally used for book-work, nearly sixty years. It has played no show irregularities. Nshort notice on most reasonable terms. and the lighter kinds of jobbing, such sharp games on them yet, and its ex- We shall make some of our old as script circulars , checks, etc. Paper perience proves to it that fairness and series of rules, with notched and or- BRNKETverinRubber and Felt Cloth; Felt GUILLOTINE CUTTER, is very serviceable on forms where the honesty pay very satisfactorily, what- namented lines. We cut these also ever the reverse may do. We warrant into labor-saving founts, but not at Metal Corners will be found very useful PLOW PAPER CUTTER, type is slightly and uniformly worn; every article we send out satisfactory, the new prices; the labor of cutting in connection with our new Brass Rules. Patent Lead it does not require the patient making —if defective or not according to or- them being about double that of plain A stock, And everything needed in a Newspaper, Book, ready of the hardest tympan, nor is it der, it may be sent back to us C. O. D. rule. I fresh and of the finest quality on hand. or Job Printing office. cases and drawer. ten to fifteen dollars each. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE PAPER Cutter, This page is printed on Bourgeois, No. 12, and Nonpareil, No. 9. 7 THE TYPOGRAPHIC NEWS. LONG PRIMER, No. 10. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY COMPANY. MINION, No. 7. NOR SALE, A SECOND-HAND CY- INKS FROM A PLATE Price ac- AND YET DISTRIBUTES WITHOUT ROLLING. pressman likes an entire stranger to us, lacks the fol- est prices given of which the circum- each article on a line by itself. Read large and small sizes. Cheap for cash. CORRESPONDENCE. of letters we must make some offer, ERRORS. ADVERTISEMENTS. ASTEROID PRESS. and always make it high enough to In conducting a business such as ARE human and so are we, and we cover the unseen contingencies. sometimes make mistakes or over- FI ours, almost entirely through the Suppose however, our customer, as LINDER Press for hand-power, large mails, it is not at all uncommon to most of them do, gives us a complete sights in putting up orders, and when enough for a nine-column country paper, THE ASTEROID receive letters containing enquiries list of the articles he wants, and we do so, we do not shrink from the in perfect order, very low for cash. This is a new Job Press, chase only 7 x 10 then asks the prices at which we can responsibility or refuse to stand the Boat Hom to gutt Nos si wapiousumakes: inches, intended for fine work and a high rate of speed. so indefinite that no satisfactory an- afford them, saying, perhaps, “ I can common and each case is rigidly in- damage. Complaints of errors are un- The cheapest are not always the best. propose to devote this column. RINTERS CABINETS,-containing swer can be given, and to such we pay you $400. with order, or on ship vestigated and though mortifying to P ment and $100 per month afterwards from ten to sixty cases. be found in the wrong sometimes, it cording to finish and capacity. For instance “ what is the lowest till paid,—the enclosed letter, from is a slight consolation to find in at price and longest time on which the Cashier of the First National you least three-fourths of the cases the W and found a sea, Saint Sz pomare . The form may be rolled as often as the Bank, of our city, who is well known fault is in our customer's order. Make plain or painted, at from $6. to $10. each. TO EACH IMPRESSION. worth of printing material?” is a sponsibility and promptness." This can sell me one thousand dollars in yours, will inform you of my re-orders carefully, give the names and numbers given in the specimens - I ten cases and a double, with cenacks for Forms that get muddy with too much ink question very often asked, and sup- kind of letter can be seen through, neither abbreviating or adding to May be Printed Clean without Removing Rollers. low- them. , -Just received from CO The Impression though adjusted, by four Screws behind the platen may be stances will admit. It is always bet- them over afterwards-and if not too Changed evenly over the press by a single screw BEHIND THE PRESS. make up our own minds. First, we ation, than to refer us to the writer will rarely find mistakes in filling lowing information to enable us to ter to send the letter of recommend much trouble, take a copy, and you F'est improved for only fifty dollars. The Press is compact, convenient and FIRST-RATE LEVER CUTTER, elegant in appearance and will do twenty- can base credit at all and even though and much useless delay is thereby oversights, overcharges or any other lack any information on which we of it, if he should be at a distance , them, but if you should find errors; A klinch, kor'$185. five per cent. more work than any other saved. Many an applicant wonders platen press made. good security," we wish to know what when all the causes of it were at G for power best made. Prices from he has added, as he often does, “ on at the delay in answering his letter, don't keep still about it, let us know at once, and you may rely on our has- five-hundred to seven-hundred dollars. SECOND-HAND PRESSES. the security is in all particulars that his own door. we may not after making an offer All letters of enquiry to this house tening to corrector of explain good CheachTTobt, Tong Shear $1.5. are most valuable cus- have cause to differ with him as to are answered. If we cannot accept NONPAREIL JOBBER, tomers. HEET COUNTERS, -Hart's, Thorp's what is good security. the terms offered by our customers, ten to fifteen dollars each. FOR $160.00 we hasten to inform them of it that PLOW PAPER CUTTER. Secondly, “printing materials” is they may lose no time in looking L versible Cutter, best out. $5. Thorp's NONPAREIL JOB PRESS, a very wide term, covers as much as elsewhere, and we are glad to have Is well known as the lowest priced Cheap Lead Cutter, only three dollars. the mantle of charity, and whether he the offers of trade, even from those machine for the purpose, and the For sale, in perfect order, platen 6 x 10 means Presses that we have in stock, whose terms we cannot meet. is a known want of a good tool of this P convenience in every office and a ne- inches. Will be sold for $140.00 In conclusion, never ask the “long- kind has induced us to make consid- cessity wherever a power-press is used. and willing to sell on liberal terms, est time” on which we can sell; tell erable preparation for their manufac- The size here represented will accomo The little Machine is neat and date a double salley and is sold without Ruggles' Bill-Head Rotary or such as we must go out and buy us the time you want and let us tell ture. for cash at a very small margin ; or you the price of the goods. There elegant in appearance, and all the figure. Price, 8 * 24, without stand, $35. A good Job Press for only $80.00 types covered by the same conditions: are some things that we may as well parts fit and work in each other with 15 x 28, with stand, $65. are points we always want to see say here that we will not do,—we will the greatest smoothness and nicety. not take a note at three months, with The pinions are made of smaller di: OD TYPE:- Delivered at the Foundry Half-Medium Lawyer Press, at 10 cents best we can do. with your name and our address, No. 7 work at 1200 impressions per hour contingency to be extended to six, be power to hold down the head upon Longworth street, weigh them, take a and yet sells for $140. cash. Thirdly, "lowest prices and long- cause if we could afford six, we may the paper. The cutting-board slides freight receipt, and send us a duplicate. est time,” are antagonistic terms, as well give it at the start, and if you in planed ways in the frame, so that CHASES. those conditions never go together,— are able to pay before maturity we several cuts may be made without I marble, ali sizes with or without frame. removing the pile of paper on the lowest price will be for nett cash and NKS AND BRONZES.—A large stock, Best Milled Chases, We will not sell on indefinite terms. board, the only piece of wood on the I fresh and of the finest quality on hand. highest price at longest time. We will not trade type and presses machine. As a well-made and cheap Very heavy, and perfectly true. Smooth and square. May lock type against any Of course in answering this class for lands and lots. machine it has no equal. No. 201 Vine street. side. All sizes made to order. AS GOOD AS EVER. 6 x 12 Inches. EAD CUTTERS.-Barth's Patent Re- clearly before we mention the very the understanding that it is in any ameter than usual, giving greater new. Mark the boxes containing old type With treadle and crank. Will work fair CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. This page is printed on Long Primer No. 10 and Minion No.7 8 ROMAN OLD STYLE. NONPAREEIL, No. 13. BREVIER, No. 13. ONWARD, is the watchword of the times; and it should be applied to the advancement of teaching, as well as other great national interests. Onward the nation is going with astonishing rapidity, both in population and wealth, in civilization and refinement, and consequently in the means of promoting any object which shall seem desirable. It is unspeakably desirable that this wonderful external progress should be accompanied by a corresponding one in moral education, enlightened, and liberal religious sentiments, so that when we equal the older nations in wealth, and exceed them in numbers, we may not be mortified by an inferiority of character, virtue and goodness. We must not accustom ourselves to think that our glory is secured when our national treasury is overflowing, or our speculation of multiplying gold is successful. We must be ambitious to obtain for ourselves and our country some higher distinction than that of unsanctified Carthagenian prosperity. What constitutes national glory, what is the renown we should most covet for our now great and flourishing republic? Not that of surpassing other nations in extent of territory, novel improvements and overgrown wealth. Many communities have risen and perished, and left no memorial but traditionary fame of affluence, or crumbling monuments of mechanical skill and great physical power. The glory of our country is that it contains a people eminent for moral and intellectual wealth; that it may be the home of the free, the intelligent, and the virtuous; that here human nature may exhibit not a few rare specimens of superior excellence, standing out from a surrounding mass of ignorance and depravity, but an entire nation, well educated in all that is essential to form and elevate the individual man, and rear him up a pillar in the great and harmonious fabric of society. This can be accomplished only by seeing to it, that progress in mind and morals does not lag tardily behind the growth of outward prosperity. This it will do as inevitably as effects correspond to causes, unless our youth are trained in a supreme regard to the highest objects of man, and sedulously cultivate in themselves the love, the unquenchable love of moral excellence. Let them be taught to take counsel of their moral natures, instead of their imaginations, and dreams of gold. Let those who have had the benefit of education, especially feel that to them is committed a a most solemn charge in this respect. They are not wanted in the counting-room or in the market place. Enough without them to do the active work, and carry on the commerce of the world. But they are wanted in the seats of education. More teachers in all departments; more sober, enlightened, judicious teachers, both in the hunıbler schools, and in higher seminaries of science are pressingly needed, and he does more service who puts his books in a knapsack, and walks away to some frontier settlement, and lays the foundation of a solid education in that rising village, or he who by venture or speculation becomes the nabob of a city. Specimens, Newspaper and Job-office Estimates sent on application ONWARD is the watchword of the times; and it should be applied to the advancement of education, as well as to other great national interests. Onward the nation is going with astonishing rapidity in population and wealth in civilization and refinement, and consequently, in the means of promoting any object which shall seem good. It is unspeakably desirable that this wonderful external progress should be accompanied by a corresponding one in moral education, enlightened, well-principled religious sentiment, so that when we shall equal the older nations in wealth and exceed them in numbers, we may not be mortified by inferiority of character, virtue and goodness. We must not accustom ourselves to think that our own glory is secured if our national treasury is overflowing, and our experiments of multiplying gold are successful. We must be ambitious to obtain for ourselves, and our country some higher distinction than that of unsanctified Carthagenian prosperity. What constitutes our national glory, and what is the renown we should most covet for our now great and flourishing republic ? Not that of surpassing other nations in extent of territory, physical improvements or overgrown wealth. Many communities have risen and perished, and left no memorial but their traditionary fame of affluence, or crumbling monuments of mechanical skill and gigantic physical power. The glory of a country is, that it contains a people eminent for moral and intellectual wealth, that it may become the home of the free, the intelligent, the virtuous; that our human nature may exhibit not a few rare specimens of superior excellence, standing out from a surrounding mass of ignorance and depravity, but an entire nation, well educated in all that is essential to form and elevate the individual man, and rear him up like a pillar in the great and harmonious fabrics of society. This you can accomplish only by seeing that the progress of morals and mind does not lag behind the growth of outward Latest Telegraphic News and Editorial Commeuts LONG PRIMER, No. 13. SMALL PICA, No. 13. ONWARD, is the watchword of the times; and it should be applied to the advancement of education as well as our great national interests Onward the nation is going with astonishing rapidity in population and wealth, civilization and refinement, and consequently in the means of promoting any object which they shall deem desirable. It is unspeakably desirable that this wonderful external progress be accompanied by corresponding progress in moral education, and enlightened well-principled religious sentiment, so that when we shall equal the older nations in wealth, and exceed them in numbers, we may not be mortified by inferiority of character virtue, and goodness. We must not accustom ourselves to think, that our glory is secured if our national treasury is overflowing, and our experiments of multiplying gold are successful. We must be ambitious to obtain for ourselves and our country, some higher distinction than that of unsanctified, Carthagenian prosperity. What constitutes national glory, and what the renown we should mostly covet for our great and flourishing commonwealth? Not that of surpassing other nations in extent of territory, physical improvements and overgrown wealth. Many communities have risen and perished, or left no memorials but the traditionary fame of affluence, and crumbling monuments of great mechanical skill and gigantic physical power. Commerce, Manufactures and Agriculture ONWARD, is the watchword of the times ; and it should be applied to the advancement of education as well as other great national interests. Onward the nation is going with astonishing rapidity, in population, wealth, in civilization and refinement, consequently, in the means of promoting any object which shall seem desirable. It is unquestionably desirable that this wonderful and external advancement should be accompanied by a corresponding progress in moral education, and in enlightened well-principled religious sentiments, that when we shall equal older nations in wealth, and exceed them also in numbers, we may not be mortified by our inferiority of character, virtue or goodness. We must not accustom ourselves to think, that our glory is secured when our national treasury is overflowing, or our experiments of increasing gold are successful. We must be ambitious to obtain for ourselves, and country, some higher distinction than that of external Carthagenian prosperity. What constitutes national glory, and the renown we should most covet for our now great and flourishing republic? Not that of surpassing other nations in extent of territory, physical Comprehensive and Valuable Contributions CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, TREAS. PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. LONG PRIMER NORMAN COND. 20 A, 32 A, $3.25 BREVIER ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 36 A, 52 a, $2.40 Manufacturer of Latest Improved Machinery AUTHENTIC REPORT OF NEW INVENTIONS NONPAREIL TELESCOPIC GOTHIC, No. 5. 60 A, $2.75 PROFITABLE AND IMPORTANT INDUSTRIES OF THE COUNTRY. $46 ADMIRABLE IMPROVEMENTS MANUFACTURE OF WHITE LEAD NONPAREIL TELESCOPIC GOTHIC, No. 6. 60 A, $2.75 IMPORTERS OF FANCY GOODS, AND MUSICAL WARE GR. PRIMER NORMAN COND. 10 A, 16 . $3.50 LONG PRIMER ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 30 A, 42 a, $2.70 WINE-GROWING CENTER OF EUROPE CHARMING STYLE COLUMBUS REFORMER NONPAREIL TELESCOPIC GOTHIC, No. 7. 60 A, $2.75 CATALOGUE FURNISHED ON APPLICATION Reliable and Comprehensive Accounts NONPAREIL TELESCOPIC GOTHIC, No. 8. 60 A, $2.75 CONCENTRATED PREPARATIONS DOUBLE PICA NORMAN CONDENSED. 5 A. SA $4.25 PICA ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 22 A, 38 a, $2.80 BEST PROGRAMME PUBLISHED Useful Channel of Communication MERCHANTS PINE LUMBER THESE FOUR GOTHICS ARE CAST TO SAME BODY AND LINE, AND CAN BE USED PROMISCUOUSLY AS CAPS AND SMALL CAPS. PICA COND. HAIR LINE. GREAT PRIMER ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 18 A, 27 a, $2.70 DAYTON TRADE JOURNAL Paints, Oils, and Chemicals 10 A, 20 a, $1.20 DECLARATION OF AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE History of the American Revolutionary War. 1976 DBL. GREAT PRIMER NORMAN COND. 4 A, 6 A $5.00 JOURNAL DEMOCRATS TWO-LINE SMALL PICA ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 14 A, 80 a, $4.20 BREVIER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 30 A, 60 a $3.00 Landscapes, Portraits and Diplomas GERMAN CHROMO-LITHOGRAPH COAL CONSUMERS Practical Information PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2. 36 A, 52 a, $3.00 LONG PRIMER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 20 A, 38 a, $2.50 Bohemian Enameled Glassware FRENCH CHINA TEA SETS Baltimore Temperance Vindicator and Family Journal 35 TWO-LINE ENGLISH ITALIC GOTHIC, No. 2. 10 A, 14 a, $4.80 GT. PRIMER GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2. 2-LINE LONG PRIMER GOTHIC ORNA. 12 A. $2.00 GREAT PRIMER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 10 A, 16 a, $2.80 TWO-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2. 18 A, 32 a, $5.25 TWO-LINE SM. PICA ORNA. No. 5. 10 $2.50 FAIRCHILD'S ILLUMINATED JUVENILE PUBLICATIONS JOB PRINTERS BREEDERS OF IMPROVED ANIMALS“ Specimen Books SCIENTIFIC RECORD Literary and Scientific North American Journal of Agriculture PATENT REAPER ARMY OFFICER NURSERYMEN AND FLORISTS SPECIMEN Camp and Garrison Prosperous , Enterprising Farmers GOLD MEDALS COMMERCIAL CHOICE GEMS OF POETRY Steam Printing Grand Advertising Medium BORDERS COLUMNS FRENCH and GERMAN MINER Inducement DOUBLE SMALL PICA FRENCH ANTIQUE. TWO-LINE SM. PICA ORNA. No. 11 12 A. $2.00 TWO-L. ENGLISH GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2. 14 A, 20 a, $4.50 TWO-LINE PICA ORNA. No. 30. 6 A, $2.50 DOUBLE ENGLISH FRENCH ANTIQUE. 6 A, 8 a, $4.40 TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER ORNA. No. 18. 4 A. $3.00 TWO-L. GT. PRIMER GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2. FOUR LINE PICA FRENCH ANTIQUE. 3 A. 4 a, $7.50. Fine GOLD Pens Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. JES PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. AGATE TITLE, No. 1. 30 A, 60 a. $2.80 What can now surpass the celestial purity of THE SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL 24803 AGATE TITLE. No. 4. 30 A, 60 a. $3.20 Intoxication is the paroxysm of a disease INTEMPERANCE IS A CURSE THAT AGATE ITALIC TITLE, No. 2, 20 A, 30 a. $3,60 Reclining on a couch of fallen leaves in a THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY NONPAREIL TITLE, NO. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $2 90 What can now surpass the celestial THE ENCHANTING VIEWS OF 3685 NONPAREIL TITLE, No. 4. 30 A, 60 a. $2.65 Words are vain, eloquence is feeble, and THE PECULIAR ARRANGEMENT FOR NONPAREIL ITAL. TITLE, No. 2, 30 A, 60 a. $2.60 I saw an aged Beggar in my walk, and he PERFECT DISTRIBUTION PRESSES MINION TITLE, NO. 2. 30 A. 60 a. $3.50 What can surpass the celestial MOUNTAINOUS COUNTRIES BREVIER TITLE, No. 4. 30 A, 60 a, $3.40 The power of conscience is with REVELATION TO CHRISTIAN BREVIER ITALIC TITLE, No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $3.50 Foreign and Domestic Exchange NATIONAL BANK OF ERIE BREVIER TITLE, No. 3, 30 A, 60 a. $3.50 What can surpass the celestial THE IMPORTANT MACHINES BOURGEOIS TITLE. No. 4. 30 A, 60 a. $3.55 Farewell to order, endearment WHAT SOLEMN THOUGHTS BOURG. TITLE ITALIC, No. 2. 20 A, 30 a. $2.25 Milton has certainly triumphed RECIPE FOR MAKING INKS BOURGEOIS TITLE, No. 2, 30 A, 60 a. $3.40 Commercial Misunderstanding THE FINANCIAL REPORTER L. PRIMER ITALIC TITLE, No. 2, 20 A, 30 a. $2.75 LONG PRIMER TITLE, No. 4. 30 A, 50 a. $3.75 The glorious constitutional MORNINGS IN SUMMER Religion is a moral principle RICHMOND MERCURY LONG PRIMER TITLE, No. 1. 30 A. 50 a. $4.25 Medical and Surgical News MUSTARD PLASTERS 2 PICA ITALIC TITLE, No. 2, 15 A, 30 a. $3.00 PICA TITLE, No. 2. 15 A, 30 a. $3.25 Common Comparison STEAMSHIP LINES Wonderful Discovery THE COMMANDER SMALL PICA TITLE, No. 1, 20 A, 30 a. $2.75 50 lbs. 48c per lb. Heroes of the Revolution GEORGE WASHINGTON GREAT PRIMER, No. 5 10 A, 20 a. $3.15 50 lbs. 46c. per lb. L. PRIMER ITALIC TITLE, No. 1, 20 A. 40 a. $2.90 Engraver and Designer FINE HAND STAMP PICA TITLE. No. 1. 15 A, 30 a. $3.25 50 lbs. 46c per lb. Losing confidence in HUMAN NATURES PICA ITALIC TITLE, No. 1. 8 A, 18 a. $2.15 Foreign Dispatches ENGLAND IN ARMS DOUBLE SMALL PICA, No. 2. 10 A, 20 a. $4.75 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. Printing Presses MINING NEWS GREAT PRIMER TITLE. No. 1. 10 A, 20 a. $4.00 50 lbs. 46c. per 1b. Asteroid Jobber CONSCIENCE GT. PRIMER ITALIC TITLE, Morning Dress TERMS CASH 10 A, 20 a. $2.65 Superfine Black Inks TYPE FOUNDRY PARAGON 10 A, 20 a. $4.20 50 lbs. 46c. per lb. DBL. ENGLISH, No.3. 8 A, 16 a, $6.65. 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. DBL. SMALL PICA ITALIC TITLE. Roman Chariots ADOLESCENT 8 A, 16 a. $3.55. 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. DOUBLE PICA, 8 A, 16 a. $5.15 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. DBL. GREAT PRIMER, No.3.4A. Sa, $5.30. 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. DOUBLE ENGLISH ITALIC. 7A, 12 a. $5.20. 50 lbs. 450 per 1h. Manufacture DIAMOND Patent Machines ADVENTURE Honesty and FOUNTAIN Mountain - TIMBER Amusements Romans MONTANA MODES Marine Ornament Marine DOME MAPLE DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER. FOUR-LINE PICA, No.3. 4A, 4 a. $5.85. 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER ITALIC. 4 A, 8 a. $4.50 50 lbs. 450. per lb. DOUBLE PARAGON. 4 A, 8 a $6.90 w ginace வ CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. (45.) CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. gipe 5 PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. BREVIER TITLE EXTEN. No. 3, 30 A, 30 a. $3.65 Exhibition of Paintings 123 MEDICATED 781 AGATE LIGHT-FACE EXTEN. 30. A, 60 a $3.20 Cards, Programmes, and Invitations STEAM JOB PRINTING ROOM TWO-LINE DIAMOND COND. No. 1, 24 A. $1.05 WOOD AND METAL FURNITURE ON HAND L. PRIMER EXTEN. No. 3, 24 A. 24 a. $3.70 NONP. LIGHT-FACE EXTEND. 30 A, 60 a. $3.70 Type, Chases, Rule, Borders TYPE FOUNDRY OFFICE TWO-LINE PEARL COND. No. 1. 24 A. $1.25 MANUFACTURING STATIONERS Commission Dealers EXTENDED 1589 TWO-LINE NONP. COND. No. 1. 24 A. $1.50 BREVIER LIGHT-FACE EXTEND. 24 A, 30 a. $3.15 Marching Homewards 3 CINCINNATI WHISKY PICA TITLE EXTEN. No. 3. 18 A, 20 a. $3.55 BLACK AND COLORED INKS National Theatre STEAM PIPE TWO-LINE NONP. COND. No. 2. 24 A $1.50 MADISON COUNTY HERALD L. PRIMER LIGHT-FACE EXTEN. 18 A. 24 a. $2 90 Musical Instruments MAGIC TRICKS 1 GT. PRIMER TITLE EXTEN. No. 3, 9A, 14 a. $4.40 TWO-LINE MINION COND. No. 1. 15 A. $1.35 Communistic PRINTER 1 PICA LIGHT-FACE EXTEND. 12 A, 18 a $3 35 HUNGARIAN FRIEND Cincinnati Post PRESENTS 6 TWO-LINE BREVIER COND. No. 1. 15 A. $1.50 PICA TITLE EXTEN. No. 1, 6 A. 12 a. $2.85 AMERICAN SIGNAL DBL. SM. PICA LT. FACE EXTEN. 8 A, 12 a. $5.15 Ornamen MANAGER TWO-LINE BOURGEOIS COND. No. 1. 12 A. $1.50 The Times MOHAIR GT. PRIMER TITLE EXTEN. No. 1. 4 A, 8 a. $3.00 THE COLUMBIAN TWO-LINE BREVIER EXTRA COND. 15 A. $1.00 Frames MANES TWO-LINE L. PRIMER COND. No. 1. 12 A. $1.85 LIBERAL PREMIUMS AWARDED COLUMBUS NEWS GREAT PRIMER EXTRA COND. 15 A. $1.35 DBL. PICA TITLE EXT. No. 1. 4 A. 8 a. $5.95 TWO-LINE PICA COND No. 1. 12 A. $2.65 REPUBLICAN CONTENTIONS Rome ROSE SHERRY WINES TWO-LINE PICA EXTRA COND. 15 A. $1.85 MERCHANDISE BROKER TWO-LINE ENGLISH COND. No. 1. 6 A. . $1.80 ASTEROID FIVE-LINE PICA, No. 1. 4A, 4 a. $7.25 DBL. GT. PRIMER EX. CONDENSED. 19 A. $2.67 MOUNTAIN ROADS TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER COND. NO. 1. 6A. $3.35 MISSED TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER COND. No. 2. 6 A. $2.05 MERCURIAL FOUR-LINE PICA EXTRA COND. 6 A. $2.40 Cement MOLITAN - THORN MATHEMATICS Printers LIPE NISURED MORAN DOMES Cincinnati MINES TWO-LINE PARAGON COND. No. 1. 4 A. $2.85 SIX-LINE PICA EXTRA COND. 4 A, 4 a. $5.75 CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. (46.) 00 PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. IWO-LINE DIAMOND, No. 5. 20 A. $1.15 RICHMOND MAIL STEAMERS NONPAREIL IONIC. 30 A, 60 a. $2.90 Large Sale of Foreign and Domestic Dry 89 MANY STEEL ENGRAVINGS 12 LONG PRIMER CLARENDON. 24 A, 60 a. $2.70 Manufacturers and Dealers in Iron COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES 38 TWO-LINE PEARL, No. 5. 20 A. $1.25 JOURNAL OF SCIENCE BREVIER IONIC. 30 A, 60 a. $3.00 New Idria Silver Mining Company 435 CHUNKS OF SILVER 7841 PICA CLARENDON. 20 A. 45 a. $3.00 TWO-LINE AGATE, No. 5. 20 A. $1.35 MUSICAL INSTRUMENT Humidity of the Atmosphere BARON MUNCHAUSEN 146 TWO-LINE NONPAREIL, No. 5. 20 A. $1.85 WESTERN HERALD LONG PRIMER IONIC. 20 A, 33 a. $2.60 Bargains in Embroideries and EDGING OF ALL KINDS 24 GREAT PRIMER CLARENDON. 15 A, 20 a. $2.90 PICA IONIC. 20 A, 38 a. $3.35 TWO-LINE NONPAREIL, No. 6. 20 A. $1.85 CABINET ORGANS Latest Improvements in PRINTING PRESSES 1 Steam Printing House 23 COMBINATIONS 67 TWO-LINE MINION, No. 5. 20 A. $2.10 MINERAL POINT ENGLISH IONIC. 15 A, 20 a. $2.65 PARAGON CLARENDON. 12 A, 18 a. $3.00 TWO-LINE BREVIER, No. 5. 18 A. $2 55 Democratic Principle ORNAMENTED 857 Patriotic American COMMEMORATE 1 JASPER TIMES GREAT PRIMER IONIC. 10 A, 16 a. $3.15 TWO-LINE BOURGEOIS. No. 5. 15 A. $2.30 DBL. SM. PICA CLARENDON. 8 A, 16 a. $3.25 TWO-LINE L. PRIMER. No. 5. 10 A. $2.10 DOUBLE SMALL PICA IONIC. 10 A, 16 a. $4.00 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. TWO-LINE SM. PICA, No. 5. 10 A. $2.35 DBL. ENGLISH CLARENDON. 8 A, 16 a. $5.30 TWO-LINE PICA, No. 5. 8 A. $2.40 DOUBLE PICA IONIC. 10 A, 12 a. $5.00 TWO-LINE AGATE. No. 7. 20 A. $1.75 DBL. GT. PRIMER CLARENDON. 4 A. 8 a. $5.35 HORACE HUMMEL TWO-LINE NONPAREIL, No. 7. 20 A. $2.30 DOUBLE ENGLISH IONIC. 6 A, 8 a. $5.50 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. REPUBLICANS Communion Wine MANCHESTER 3 Hammond News DEMOCRATS MONOGRAMS 21 Public Libraries COMMUNES RETREATS 28 Selma Times ROMANTIC French Goods SUMMER 76 MILLINERY Premium FOREIGN NEWS Consume OPERA HOUSE MINER 1 ARTIST HOMESTEAD Embroidery SPECIMEN Dancing Academy ROPE WALKERS Musician CLAMPS Mammoth Cave SILK BALOON Cement Machine Shop POETS TWO-LINE MINION, No. 7. 18 A. $2 30 TWO-LINE BREVIER, No. 7. 18 A. $2.80 LONG PRIMER CLARENDON EXT. 10 A, 16 a. $3.30 DOUBLE PARAGON IONIC. 6 A, 8 a. $8.85 50 lbs. 45c. per lb. GT. PRIMER ANTIQUE, NO. 3. 10 A, 12 a. $2.65 PICA CLARENDON EXTENDED. 8 A, 12 a. $3.60 DBL. SM. PICA ANTIQUE, No. 3. 8 A, 10 a. $3.55 TIME 1 Bond FOUR-LINE PICA IONIC. 4 A, 6 a. $9.15 PARAGON CLARENDON EXTEND. 6 A, 8 a. $4.45 DBL. PICA ANTIQUE, NO. 3. SA, 10 a. $3.70 bo TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. (47.) CHAS. WELLS. Treas. PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. LONG PRIMER COND. No. 1. 15 A, 30 a. $1.25 Characteristics of Distinguished Statesmen REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED STATES NONPAREIL ALDINE. 30 A, 60 a. $2.35 Man wants but little here below, nor wants that MANUFACTURER AND WHOLESALE DEALER NONPAREIL DORIC. 30 A, 50 a $2.75 Manufacturers of Cylinder Presses NONPAREIL PRESSES 16895643 PICA COND. No. 3. 20 A, 38 a. $3.00 Horses and Cattle For Sale HOUSTOWN REPUBLICAN BREVIER ALDINE. 30 A, 60 a. $2 90 Frames and Mouldings made to order LIFE OF ALEXANDER HAMILTON BREVIER DORIC 35 A, 38 a. $3.80 Land and Collection Agent RAILROAD COMPANY PICA DORIC. 18 A. 20 a. $3.50 Arkansas Traveller TYPE FOUNDERS ENGLISH COND. No. 1. 10 A, 20 a. $1.70 LONG PRIMER ALDINE. 18 A. 40 a. $2.70 Commercial and Financial News THE LATEST FROM STANLEY Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. NEW YORK COMMERCIAL TWO-LINE BREVIER DORIC. 12 A. 12 a. $3.40 50 lbs. 46c. per lb. PICA ALDINE. 15 A, 30 a. $2.50 Beautiful Transparencies UNITED STATES MINTS GT. PRIMER COND. No. 1, 6 A, 12 a. $1.50 Daily Tribunal AMUSEMENT Make a Desert Blossom COMMERCIAL EDITOR GREAT PRIMER ALDINE. 12 A, 24 a. $3.50 TWO-LINE L. PRIMER DORIC. 10 A. 12 a. $4.00 50 lbs. 46c. per ID). Brass and Metal Rule STEAMBOAT BILL DOUBLE PICA COND. No. 1. 4 A, 8 a. $1.50 DBL. SMALL PICA ALDINE. 12 A, 24 a. $5.15 TWO-LINE ENGLISH DORIC. 6 A, 10 a. $6.50 50 lbs. 45c. per ll). DBL. GT. PRIMER COND. No. 1, 4 A, 8 a. $3.20 DBL. ENGLISH ALDINE. 10 A, 16 a. $5.60 2-LINE GT. PRIMER DORIC, No. 2. 6 A, 10 a $7.95 50 lbs. 450. per lb. DOUBLE PARAGON COND. No. 1, 4A, 4 a. $2.85 Merchandise Importer of Fine Jewelry MINERALS SEWING MACHINE Ornaments, Rules THE FLOURISH Magician Sunday School BEN JONSON The Meridian STANDS HAMELTON Demons Martins Commune OBLONG MASONIC SINGLE This Union Border SUPERIOR MINES DBL. GREAT PRIMER ALDINE. 8 A. 12 a. $7.50 TWO-LINE PARAGON DORIC NO 2 +A. 6 a. $6.45 50 lbs. 450. per II). DOUBLE PARAGON COND. No. 2. 4 A. 4 a. $3.20 L. PRIMER ANTIQUE COND. No. 1. 20 A, 40 a. *2.15 Wholesale Dealers in Dry Goods MANUFACTURED TO ORDER PICA ANTIQUE COND. No. 1. 20 A, 30 a. *2.60 Ornamental Brass Corners THE NOMINATIVE CASE AMERICAN CANON. FOUR-LINE PICA DORIC, No. 2. 4 A, 4 a. $7.20 50 lb. 43c. per lb. GT. PRIMER ANTIQUE CON. No. 1. 15 A. 20 a $300 4 A. 6 a $10.15 50 lbs. 43c. per lb. Richmond Mail Lines Home BOARDING STABLES Brain SALE MISSIONARY IRON CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (48.) PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. PEARL ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 3. 35 A. $2.50 L. PRIMER SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $3.60 Beautiful Productions of Distinguished Artists LITERATURE AND GENERAL INFORMATION GEORGIA CONSTITUTIONAL NONPAREIL ANTIQUE COND. No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $2.35 Manufacturer and Importer of Violins and Organs MODERN INSTRUCTIONS FOR GUITAR 2460 NONPAREIL ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 3. 35 A. $2.75 PICA SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 20 A, 40 a. $3.20 GRAND COMMOTION BREV. ANTIQUE COND. No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $2.90 Useful Porcelain and Enameled Ware NEW AND ATTRACTIVE NOVELTIES BREVIER ANTIQUE EXTEND. No.3. 25 A. $2.90 THE AMERICAN American Newspapers and Periodicals NONPAREIL PRINTING COMPANY 1 GT. PRIM. SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 15 A, 30 a. $4.25 L. PRIMER ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 3. 24 A. $2.50 L. PRIMER ANTIQUE COND. No. 2. 24 A, 50 a. $3.00 Combining Color with Elegance ENGLISH PAPER HANGINGS COUNTY BOND Standing Committee on Finances MANUFACTURE EVIDENCE 2 PICA ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 3. 15 A. $2.25 CYLINDERS PICA ANTIQUE COND. No. 2. 20 A. 48 a. $3.00 DB S. PICA SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 15 A, 30 a. $5.00 TWO-LINE BREVIER ANTIQUE, No. 3. 10 A. $2.65 Gold and Silver Instruments INDEPENDENCE TRIBUNE Cincinnati's Fire Department STEAM FIRE ENGINES 4 DOMINIE TWO-LINE L. PR. ANTIQUE EXT. No. 3. 10 A. $3.75 GT. PRIMER ANTIQUE COND. No. 2. 15 a, 24 a. $3.70 DB. ENG. SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 12 A, 24 a. $6.50 EARTH Combination Borders DAILY TELEGRAPH TWO-LINE PICA ANTIQUE EXT. No. 3. 6 A. $3.30 RITES AGATE ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 1. 40 A. $2.80 THE NONPAREIL PRESS DBL. PARAGON SKEL. ANT. No.2, 8 A, 16 a. $7.00 TWO-LINE ENGLISH ANT. EXT. No. 3. 5 A. $3.10 NONPAREIL ANTIQUE EXT. No. 1. 15 A, 30 a. $2.90 Newpaper Heading THE NONPAREIL NONPAREIL ANTIQUE, No. 2. 24 A, 60 a. $2.10 BREVIER ANTIQUE EXT. No. 1. 15 A, 30 a. $3.75 Printing and Binding FRANKLIN HERALD Useful Specimens MITE TYPE FOUNDER Domestic Wines MERCANTILE Most Direct Railroad Connection to Roumania THE CINCINNATI SOUTHERN RAILROAD Portable Engine IRON MANTLE BREVIER ANTIQUE, No. 2. 30 A, 50 a. $2.80 4-L. PICA SKEL. ANTIQUE, No. 2. 6 A, 12 a. $6.10 L. PRIMER ANTIQUE, EXT. No.l. 12 A, 18 a. $3.40 Commemoration of Handel Society HUNGARIAN DANCING WOMEN Hard Money THE HOME LONG PRIMER ANTIQUE, No. 2. 24A, 50 a. $3.10 The Universal Remembrances PICA ANTIQUE EXTEND. No. 1. 10 A, 12 a, $3.90 DIRECT COMMUNICATION PICA ANTIQUE, No. 2, 15 A, 24 a. $2.50 American FRENCH GREAT PRIMER GRECIAN. 18 A. $1.20 GT. PRIMER ANTIQUE, No. 1. 4A, 8 a. $4.00 GT. PRIMER ANTIQUE, No. 2. 8 A, 16 a. $2.75 Printing and Engraving ROMAN CHRONICLE SPECIMENS OF USEFUL LETTERS Mourning Goods HAND PRINTING PRESS MANCHESTER Sonnet BEAT DBL. PICA GRECIAN. 8 A $1 15 DBL. PICA ANTIQUE EXTEN. No. 1. 4 A, 4 a. $4.50 FOUR-LINE PICA GRECIAN. 4 A. $2 35 DBL. PICA ANTIQUE, No. 2. GRECIAN New Roman Hart New Roman Hart MONSIEUR MEB CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. (53.) CHAS. WELLS, Treas. PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. L. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 4. 18 A, 24 a. $2.80 Comprehensive Guide for Families 23 CONDENSED GOTHICS 45 NONPAREIL GOTHIC, No. 3. 40 A, 60 a $2.60 Choice Selection of Jewelry, and Gold and Silverware BEAUTIFUL NOVELTIES OF LATE IMPORTATION PEARL GOTHIC, No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $3.25 Consolidated Petroleum and Mining Co 12345 COMMERCIAL CORRESPONDENCE NONPAREIL GOTHIC, NO. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $3.05 Attractive and Valuable Premiums HANDSOME ENCRAVINCS 12345 PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 4. BREVIER GOTHIC, No. 3. 30 A, 50 a. $2 65 Extensive Assortment of Furnishing Goods FASHIONABLE CLOTHING EMPORIUM 20 A, 38 a. $2.80 Magnificent Gothic Monument UNITED STATES BOND 7-30 LONG PRIMER GOTHIC, No 3. 20 A, 40 a. $1 65 Grand Roman and Grecian Architecture MAGNIFICENT ANCIENT TEMPLES BREVIER GOTHIC, No. 2. 30 A, 60 a $3.90 Blank Book Manufacturer PAPER WAREHOUSE 123 GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 4. 18 A, 24 a. $3.50 Mechanical Operations 12 COMMEMORATE 34 PICA GOTHIC, No. 3. 20 A, 30 a. $2 35 New Series Brass Rule Corners SPECIAL BY TELEGRAPH LONG PRIMER GOTHIC, No. 2. 20 A, 30 a. $3.00 Pure Domestic Wines COMMENDED 12345 PICA GOTHIC No. 2. 15 A. 20 a $3.25 Silver Palace Cars MONMOUTH 234 TWO-L. BREVIER GOTHIC, No. 2. 15 A, 20 a. $3.50 NONPAREIL GOTHIC COND. No. 5. 35 A, 70 a. $2.10 BREVIER GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 32 A. $1.00 New Series of Complete and Authentic Biographies 12345 DISTINGUISHED MEN AND WOMEN 67890 REPRODUCTIONS OF DISTINGUISHED ARTISTS BREVIER GOTHIC COND. No. 5. 30 A, 60 a $2.50 Forming a Complete Manual for Builders 1234 MANUFACTURED MANTLES 6789 LONG PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 24 A. $1.45 JOURNAL OF GENERAL INFORMATION PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 1. Printing Material FOUNDERS 234 20 A. $1.20 MANUFACTURER OF ORATORS L. PRIMER GOTHIC CON. No. 5. 30 A, 50 a. $2 90 Sketch of Manners and Scenery 201 VINE STREET, CINCINNATI TWO-LINE L. PRIMER GOTHIC. 8 A. 12 a. $2.80 GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 15 A. $1.35 INTERNAL REVENUE PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 5. 20 A, 38 a. $2.50 PARAGON GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 12 A. $1.35 Constitution of United States 123 CONSTANTINOPLE 456 MACHINERY WORK Polar Regions CONNIVING Monmouth AMERICA TWO-LINE PICA GOTHIC. 8 A. 12 a. $4.50 ENGLISH GOTHIC COND. No. 5. 20 A, 38 a. $3.10 TWO-LINE PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 6 A. $1.05 New Historical Engravings 123 MAMMOTH CAVE 456 EMPIRE BRAND DBL. GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 4 A. $1.55 FOUR-LINE PICA GOTHIC. 4 A. $4.05 123 CELEBRATING 456 HUM DBL. GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 2. 4 A. $2.50 LONG PRIMER RUNIC. 30 A. $1.65 WATCH AND CLOCK MAKERS 123 HARMONIC 456 PICA RUNIC 18 A. $1 30 FOUR-LINE PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 1. 6 A. $5.05 LITERARY COMPOSITOR DBL. ENGLISH GOTHIC CON No. 5. 14 A. 18 a $6 00 GREAT PRIMER RUNIC. 18 A. $2.15 New Printing Materials EASTHAM Manchester Record RATION Mexican Horses BONDS COMMONS 1234 TYPE FOUNDRY COMPANY Colored Map 5-20 BOND NATIONAL WORKS TWO-LINE LONG PRIMER RUNIC. 12 A. $2.15 2-LINE PICA GOTHIC EX. CON. No. 1. 10 A, $1.50. JOB CYLINDER DB. PARAGON GOTHIC CON, No. 5. 6 A. 10 a. $4.90 TWO-LINE PICA RUNIC. 12 A $3.20 5-LINE PICA GOTHIC EX. COND. 64. $3.50 IMPORTANT American DOUBLE PARAGON RUNIC. 4 A, 6 a. $5.25 (54.) TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. 7 ST PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. PICA EGYPTIAN EXTRA COND. 15 A, 24 a, $2.65. PEARL FRENCH CLAREND EXT. 30 A, 40 a. $3.75 NONPL. FRENCH CLARENDON. 30 A, 60 a, $1.80. TREATISE ON MATHEMATICS, FOR PUBLIC SCHOOLS Specimen of the Higher Department of English Composition CHOICE PRODUCTIONS OF MODERN POETS Summer Rambles through Celebrated Places Conneotions with all Western States WESTERN RAILROADS 23456 NONP. FRENCH CLARENDON EX. 30 A, 42 a. $3.50 GR. PRIMER EGYPTIAN EX. CON. 15 A, 24 a, $2.75. BREVIER FRENCH CLARENDON. 30 A, 60 a. $2.75. DEALERS IN MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Astronomical Instruments Manufactured Extraordinary and Interesting CINCINNATI, OHIO 12345 SPECIMENS OF OUR MANUFACTURES Numerous Favorable Recommendations BREV. FRENCH CLARENDON EX. 20 A, 36 a. $3.50 L. PRIMER FRENCH CLAREND. 30 A, 50 a. $2.80. FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS Agents Supplied on Liberal Terms DBL. PICA EGYPTIAN EX. COND. 12 A, 18 a, $3.15. Ornamental Brass Corner ACCOMODATING 23 PICA FRENCH CLARENDON. 20 A, 30 A, $3.00 GREAT INDUCEMENTS TO BUYERS Fine Assortment of Colored Papers UNION COUNTY HERALD Proceedings of Government LONG PRIMER FRENCH CLARENDON EXTENDED, 22 A, 32 a. $4.50 Northern Fountains DBL. ENGLISH EGYPT. EX. COND. 8 A, 12 a, $3.90. COMMONER 234 GT. PRIMER FRENCH CLAREND. 18 A, 24 a, $3.30. PICA FRENCH CLARENDON EXT. 16 A, 20 a. $4.00 MARBLE MONUMENTS Bronze Mantel Ornament Monumental HAMPER 12 TWO-L PICA FRENCH CLAREND. 12 A, 18 a, $4.35. DBL. GR. PRIMER EGYPTIAN EXTRA COND. No. 2. 8 A, 12 a, $4.55. GREAT PRIMER FRENCH CLARENDON EXTEND. 12 A, 14a. $4.75 Ornaments IRONIC 23 TWO-L. ENG. FRENCH CLAREND. 10 A, 16 a, $4.10. MUSICAL INSTRUMENT Harmonium and Concertina CUSTOM HOUSE DRAMATIC POEMS French Trimming New Comic Pantomime MACHINERY Lumber Dealer Finisher COMMISSIONER MORE 2 ANCIENT Flour Merchant Mouna INK 12 PARAGON FRENCH CLARENDON EXTENDED. 7 A, 10 a. $4.50 DBL PARAGON EGYPTIAN EXTRA COND No. 2 6 A, 8 a, $5 50. DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER FRENCH CLARENDON. 8 A, 12 a, $7.30. TWO-LINE ENGLISH FRENCH CLARENDON EXT. 5 A, 7 a. $6.90 Merchant Prominent GOLD MINES SEASON CHARTER Manufacture Fountain RATES Seminaries DOMINIONS PINE FOUR-LINE PICA EGYPTIAN EXTRA COND. No. 2. 5 A. 8 a, $6,85. DOUBLE PARAGON FRENCH CLARENDON. 6 A. 8 a, $7.45. 8 A. $2.60 DBL. GREAT PRIMER FAHNESTOCK. 6 A. $3.60 FIVE-LINE PICA EGYPTIAN EXTRA COND. No.2. 4 A, 6 a, $6.65. FIVE-LINE PICA EGYPTIAN EXTRA CONDENSED 4 A, 6 a. $6.65 FOUR-LINE PICA FAHNESTOCK. 4A. $5.10 (55.) TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. PRICE LIST OF JOB TYPE. PICA BLACK, No.1. SA, 16 a, $1.25. NONPAREIL CELTIC, No. 2. 35 A. $2.00 JOURNAL OF GENERAL INFORMATION NONPAREIL GOTHIC ITALIC. 60 A. $2 40 PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL NEWS LETTER Hamilton Seminary and College MINION CELTIC, No. 2. 35 A. $3.50 MERCHANTS ASSURANCE CO. 'GREAT PRIMER BLACK, No. 1, 6 A, 20 a, $1.90. BREVIER GOTHIC ITALIC. 35 A, 50 a. $2.90 Cincinnati Southern Railroad Company PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMMITTEE American Associations BREVIER CELTIC, No. 2. 28 A. $2.00 UNITED STATES SENATE DBL. SMALL PICA BLACK, No. 1. 4A, 8 a, $1.95. L. PRIMER GOTHIC ITALIC. 35 A, 46 a. $3 10 Arts and Sciences LONG PRIMER CELTIC, No. 2. 28 A. $3.65 MERCANTILE AGENT Useful Porcelaine and Enameled MANUFACTURERS OF SHOES DBL. PICA BLACK, No. 1. 4 A. 6 a. $2.00 Premium Fruits PICA CELTIC, No. 2. 20 A. $3.50 PICA GOTHIC ITALIC. 22 A, 32 a. $3.25 FINE PRINTING Compendium of the Science COMMERCIAL COLLEGES ENGLISH BLACK COND. No. 2. 10 A, 30 a, $1 40. Strength and Resources of Trade GREAT PRIMER CELTIC, No. 2 12 A. $3.50 GT. PRIMER BLACK COND. No. 2. 8 A. 20 a. $1.75. TWCL. BREY. GOTHIC ITALIC. 18 A, 27 a. $3 90 Grand Musical Entertainment TWO-LINE PICA CELTIC, No. 2. 10 A. $5.00 DBL. ENG. BLACK COND. No. 2. 4A, 8 a, $2.10. STEAMBOAT Machines for Binders DOMESTIC WINES NATIONS Internal Revenues PUBLIC NEW MATERIALS PARAGON GOTHIC ITALIC. 14 A, 20 a. $4.50 TWO-LINE ENGLISH CELTIC, No. 2. 6 A. $3.90 DBL GT. PRIMER BLACK CON. No 2. 4A, 8 a $2.75. Montana Independent Specimen Sheet NONPAREIL LIGHT CELTIC, 36 A, 70 a. $4.60 Price List of Manufactured Articles of MECHANICAL EXECUTION 1234567 NONPAREIL SHANGHAI. 40 A, $2.50. DEVOTED TO COMMERCE AND AGRICULTURE PICA BLACK COND. No. 3. 10 A. 20 a, $1 40. General Commission Merchant GR. PRIMER BLACK COND. No.3. 8 A, 16 a, $1.65. 2-LINE NONPAREIL ORNA. No. 15. 20 A, $2.05. COMBINED IMPROVEMENTS Mechanics' Home Journal BREVIER LIGHT CELTIC. 36 A, 52 a. $7.40 Specimen of Elegant Pointing Mementoes of the Revolution TOBACCO WAREHOUSE 24 DBL. SM. PICA BLACK CON. NO.3. 6 A, 15 a, $1.85. TWO-LINE BOURGEOIS ORNA. No. 4. 15 A, $2.25. ENCHANTING SCENERY LONG PRIMER LIGHT CELTIC. DBL. ENG. BLACK COND. No. 3. 4A, 6 a, $1.80. 25 A, 42 a. $6.50 Montgomery's Regulators MORNING SUNBEAMS 23 CELTIC SERIES 45 TWO-LINE PICA ORNA. No. 25. 12 A, $4.35. Distinguished Authors DIRECT LINE Translated Poems ORATORS Printing Press PICA LIGHT CELTIC. 25 A, 32 a. $7.65 DBL, GT. PRIMER BLACK CON. NO.3. 4A, 6 a, $2.50 TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER ORNA. No. 19. 6 A. $3 70. Nonpareil Job Presses NATIONAL HOTEL 26 MARGINAL 35 PICA BLACK ORNA. No.3, 10 A, 20 a, $1.40. The Cincinnati Fire Department GREAT PRIMER LIGHT CELTIC. 14 A, 20 a, $7.55 FOUR-LINE PICA ORNA. No. 21. 4A, $3.25. GT. PRIMER BLACK ORXA. No.3. 81. 16:1. $1 65. Romantic News COMMEND 161 Ornamental Brass Corner DBL. SM. PICA BLACK ORNA, No 3, 6A, 15 n 1.85. MOULD Portsmouth Democrat Gold Medals HONEY 141 Prairie Lomes Oriental Recorder DBD. SM. PICA LIGHT CELTIC. 10 A, 14. $6.75 DOUBLE. GREAT PRIMER BLACK ORNA. No.3. 4 A, 6 a. $2 50 TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. (56.) 77 SCRIPTS. 25 $3.35 8 A, 45 a. $3145 $3.65 8 A, 45 a. $$1$6 PICA UTILITY SCRIPT. PICA HANCOCK SCRIPT. we we mean not that vulgar nor The various forms of government, under which our society has existed, may with sufficient accu= racy, be reduced to two; government of will, and government of power. A government of will is one that supposes two classes of society are created, the rulers and the ruled, each possessed of a very different and dissimilar rights. It supposes all the power to be vested by divine right, in the hands When peak of the glory of our fathers, renown to be attained by physical strength, yet that higher fame to be acquired by intellectual (power. Both often exist without lofty thought, or pure intent, or generous purpose. The glory which we strictly of a moral and religious character ; righteous just as to The American Revolution had its origin neither in ambition, noi avarice, nos envy, nos in celebrate was as to its ends: its means. GREAT PRIMER UTILITY SCRIPT. 8 A, 46 a. $5.75 8 A, 25 a, $5.25 SININENTABIRI GREAT PRIMER HANCOCK SCRIPT. Excepting several very short tales Goldsmith gave to the department of novelist only one fine work, the Vicar of Wakefield. It was sup= pressed for nearly two years, until the publication of the Graveller had fixed the author's fame, Goldsmith Preceived in good order and well-conditon- ed on board the good Steamboat Gen. Fleetwood, the following articles, marked and numbered as beloru, which are to be delivered in like good order unto Johnson, Smith, Co. Ieru, Ohio, he oi they paying freight for the same at the rate of DOUBLE SMALL PICA HANCOCK SCRIPT. 6 A, 30 a. $5.75 LONG PRIMER MADISONIAN SCRIPT. 6 A, 20 a $2.80 The pleasure of your companų is respectfully soli- cited to attend the Grand Literalų Entertainment qiven lių the Longfellou. Dramatic Association of Marrowe, to be held at Exposition Hall, Il'lisday LUL, October, 21st 1875. James Mariowfat, Seç. Mineral substances useful in the arts, are exceedingly ceedingly numerous that it is difficult to classify them. Pirst come the various kind of stone or slate used for PICA MADISONIAN SCRIPT. 6 A, 30 a. $3.50 GREAT PRIMER SCRIPT, No. 2. 8 A, 45 a. $4.65 A man's mind may be said to be desperate, when his mind is brought into such a state as that the necessary means of eefomation, shall have lost their effect upon him; and this is to Manufacturer of Fine Embroideries, Shawls The partnership heretofore existing between John I. Cummings and George Robertson, has been this day dissolved by mutual consent, either partner is authorized to sign the firm name in liquidation $3.00 5 A, 16 a. SPOD GREAT PRIMER MADISONIAN SCRIPT. DOUBLE SMALL PICA SCRIPT, No. 2 5 A, 40 a. $8.20 20 lbs. 90c. per lb. As most of the unhappiness of the world arises cather from disappoint- ed desires than from positive euil, it is of the utmost consequence to at- tain just notions of the laws and onder of the universe, that we may In presenting you with this circular , we desire to call your attention to our large and well selected stock of Dry Goods, Notions, Boots and Shoes, CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. (61.) COPPERPLATE AND LAW ITALICS. 24 A, 80 a, $3.80 24-UNTINISHT BREVIER LAW ITALIC. 10 lbs. $10.00 20 lbs. 20.00 30 A, 60 a $3.50 L. PRIMER COPPER-PLATE ITALIC 15 lbs $12 30 30 lbs. 24.60 No inquiry regarded as a medium through which to study the powers of mind, can be more suitable to the purpose than that which respects the origin and structure of those external signs which are used to denote the various mental faculties with which it is our object to become acquainted. The difficulty of forming a system of artificial signs, by which men might communicate to each other their thoughts and feelings, has appeared to some philosophers so very great, as to exceed the utmost efforts of human in- genuity. Such authors have accordingly, ascribed the origin of language to the immediate interposi- The position when setting type, should be such that the right side of the compositor would be in a line with the central division of the lower case, because he will be able to reach the boxes at left-hand side with more case than he would were he to stand directly in front of the centre of the case. The hight at which he ought to stand should be such that he could reach every part of the case with facility, yet not enough to make him liable to stoop his shoulders, in fact, his position, at all times should be erect. When setting types the com- positor should be careful not to acquire a habit of 20 A, 70 a, $3.60 201 NITAMIINITI LONG PRIMER LAW ITALIC. 12 lbs. $ 9.84 24 lbs. 19.68 15 A, 42 a. $3.00 PICA COPPER-PLATE ITALIC 15 lbs. $11.10 30 lbs. 22 20 In his rudest and most uncultivated state, the language of man is of the same kind as that of the inferior animals, differing only in the greater degree of perfection to which it arises from the higher and more noble fa- culties possessed by the former. On this ac- count, the collection of signs audible and visible, by means of which communication is carried on, is denominated natural lan- guage-being those particular declarations of want, of desire or of intention, to which Our Guillotine Paper Cutter is intended for either hand or power. It is strong enough to cut full width of the hardest kind of pa- per without flinching, and is very rapid in all its movements. When turned the knife descends quickly to the paper and has then both a sliding and rocking or oscillating motion, cutting cleanly, with but little in- clination to pull the paper under the clamp 18 A, 40 a, $3.50 121101 INSOMNI PICA LAW ITALIC. 12 lbs. $ 8.88 24 lbs. $17.76 12 A, 60 a. $5.10 GT. PRIMER COPPER-PLATE ITALIC. 15 lbs. $ 9.90 30 lbs. 19.80 The reader will best form a notion of the manner in which men communi- cate by natural signs, by supposing two solitary savages to meet together for the first time. After mutual surprise, they would perceive their resemblance, in many respects, to each other; and each would conclude that the other was constituted with similar powers, pos- sessing a similar principle of life and As the Art of Printing has without question, been of very great use in advancing learning and knowledge, the abuse of it, as of all other good things, has likewise produced many inconveniences. The number of books printed on the same subject, most of 10 A, 60 a. $6.70 DOUBLE SMALL PICA COPPER-PLATE ITALIC. 15 lbs. $ 9.60 30 lbs. 19.20 In setting up matter which is to be stereotyped, the quads and spaces used are of the hight of the shank of the letter. A line of bearers is put above the head line, to keep it from being battered when the plate is shaved. Bearers are also put in any large blank places in the body of the matter, for the same purpose. Bevels the hight of CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, Treasurer. (62.) Ornamental Initials . Series 32. SINGLE LETTER 40 CENTS; Per SET OF 25 LETTERS, $5 00 y A B C E peo Bopy F G 6 K M ก כן R S T U W E 23 Z SIX-LINE PICA TYPE CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (63.) COCO GO Ornamental Initia nitials 00 Series 33. Single Letters, 50 cents; Per set of 20 Letters $0.50 A В с E F F G HJK L M N O P l) R S T U W X Z SIX-LINE PICA TYPE CAST IN MATRICES BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (64.) OLD STYLE AND LIGHT FACE TWO-LINE NONPAREIL OLD STYLE. 18 A. $2.15. TWO LNIE PEARL OLD STYLE COND. 36 A, $2,50. PORTLAND NEWS TWC-LINE DIAMOND. No. 8. 2: 1. $2 25. RAILWAY ENGINEERING DOUBLE ENAMELD CARDS TWO-LINE BREVIER OLD STYLE. 14 A. $2.65. TWO LINE NONPAREIL OLD STYLE COND. 30 A, $3.00. TWO-LINE PEARL. No. 8. 24 A. $2.65. GRAMMAR TEACHER JOURNALIST THE CORRESPONDENT TWO-LINE NONPAREIL. No. 8. 24 A. $3.50. TWO-L LONG PRIMER OLD STYLE. 12 A, $3.15. TWO LINE BREVIER OLD STYLE COND. 24 A, $2.80. HURON HERALD SENTINEL NOTARY PUBLIC TWO-LINE MINION. No. 8. 22 A. $4.55. COMMISSIONS GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE. 18 A, 14 A, 52 a, $9.25. TWO LINE LONG PRIMER OLD STYLE COND. 18 A, $3.00. TWO-LINE BREVIER. No. 8. 18 A. 3.80. COLUMBUS TIMES FINE AROMATICS 276 German Banking Co. ROMAN LIGHT MERCHANTS TWO LINE PICA OLD STYLE COND. 12 A, $3.25. TWO-LINE BOURGEOIS. No. 8. 18 A. $4.60. DBL. SM. PICA OLD STYLE. 14 A, 10 A, 27 a. $3.50. MONUMENT COMMERCE TWO-LINE LONG PRIMER. No. S. 12 A. $370. HOME RECORD AMERICAN WORKS Poems and Parodies GREAT PRIMER OLD STYLE No. 2. 25 lbs and upwards, 46c. per lb. Title Fonts, $9.00. RECORDER Navigation COMPANY TWO-LINE SMALL PICA. No. 3. 12 A. $3.85. DBL. ENGLISH OLD STYLE. 7A, 4 A, 14 a. $7.70. DOUBLE SM. PICA OLD STYLE NO. 2. 25 lbs and upwards, 45c. per lb. Title Fonts, $8.50. TWO-LINE PICA. No. S. 12 A. $5.60. DBL. GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE No. 2. 16 a, 8 A, 6 A, $12.40. LONG PRIMER LIGHT-FACE. 30 A, 52 a, $4.10 HISTORICAL SKETCHES Character of Washington 2-L. GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE. 7 A, 4 A, 14 a. $10.40. FOUR LINE PICA OLD STYLE No. 2. 8 a, 6 A, $14.00. PICA LIGHT FACE. 22 A, 42 a, $4.30 STANDARD LETTERS Foreign Correspondence TWO-LINE ENGLISH OLD STYLE ITALIC. 5 A, 10 a, $4.00. GT. PRIMER LIGHT-FACE. 18 A, 32 a, $6.10 PICTURES IMPORTED Carpet DEALER INSTRUMENTS HISTORI Ball Costumes New TYPE RECORDS Mariner CAMBRIDGE University PRINTING North America ROMAN Historian Portsmouth Printing Press MACHINES Permanent TOMB Paper Cutter Finance Mountain Specimens COLORED INK Red and Carmine DBL. PARACON OLD STYLE. 5 A, 10 a. $9.30. DBL. SM. PICA LIGHT FACE. 14 A, 24 a, $6.85 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER OLD STYLE ITALIC. 4 A, 8 a, $5.10. NONPAREIL DBL. ENGLISH LIGHT FACE. 10 A, 20 a, $8.00 DBL. PARAGON OLD STYLE ITALIC. 4 A, 7 a, $5.70. FOUR-LINE PICA OLD STYLE. 4 A, 6 a. $9.45. FOUR-LINE PICA OLD STYLE ITALIC. 3 A, 5 a, $6.75. FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. ITALIC LETTERS. LONG PRIMER ITALIC HAIR-LINE. PARAGON MODEL SCRIPT. Fonts, $10.00, $20.00 and $30.00 8 A, 30 a. $2.10 Magnificent beyond all Description MOUNTAIN SCENERY 1875 LONG PRIMER VENETIAN. 15 A, 42 a, $4.40. LABOR-SAVING ARTICLES General House=Furnishing Goods Catalogues sent on application 24 PICA ITALIC HAIR-LINE. 8 A, 16 a. $2.25 For Value Boeceived Thirty Days After this Seventy Gellars 7 20 A, 45 a, $6.70. Rolling Mill Company CINCINNATI 187 PICA VENETIAN. COMMERCIAL AGENTS Board of City Improvements L. PRIMER LITHOGRAPHIC ITALIC. 18 A, 50 a. $8.10 Industrial Expositions CENTENNIAL 1876 PICA TREASURY OPEN. 10 A, 24 a. Price, $3.20. GREAT PRIMER VENETIAN. 12 A, 45 a, $13.00. Popular Baw-Making Machine PICA LITHOGRAPHIC ITALIC. 20 A, 60 a. $10.60 Commission Merchant Music Boxes, Albums GREAT PRIMER TREASURY OPEN. 7 A, 16 a. Price, $3.50. For Sale Very Cheap NEW MACHINE Bet-Weather Prophets NONPAREIL LATIN ITALIC. 24 A, 70 a, $2.70. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL LIQUOR MERCHANTS Importers of Foreign Wines, Brandies, and Cigars TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TREASURY OPEN.. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $3.90. G. PRIMER LITHOGRAPHIC ITAL. 15 A, 36 a. $12.85 Plucidated Problem Morning Dew HEROIC S12 BREVIER LATIN ITALIC. 24 A, 70 a, $3.15. ELEGANT AND SUBSTANTIAL HOUSES Complete with all the Modern Improvements TWO-LINE ENGLISH TREASURY OPEN. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $4.95. DOUBLE SMALL PICA LITHOGRAPHIC ITALIC. 12 A, 24 a. $10.00 LONG PRIMER LATIN ITALIC. 20 A, 52 a. $3.10. NORTH'S SPARKLING CATAWBA Celebrated French Wines and Liquors Publio Opinion Bright Hope TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER TREASURY OPEN. A, 8 a. Price, $6.55. MEDIUMS Organic Law PICA LATIN ITALIC. 15 A, 42 a, $3.35. NEW PRINTING MACHINES Offices Completely Furnished ENGLISH CENTENNIAL SCRIPT. 18 A, 6 A, 100 a. Price, $14.30. Small Founts, $7.50. PICA TREASURY. 10 A, 24 a. Price, $3.20. I rinters of the United States GREAT PRIMER LATIN ITALIC. 10 A, 27 a, $3.65. Attacking Philosophic Bişmires GREAT PRIMER CENTENNIAL SCRIPT. 18 A, 6A, 100 a. Price, $20.00. Small Founts, $10.25. GREAT PRIMER TREASURY. 7 A, 16 8. Price, $3.50. George Henry Fellowbury WESTERN JOURNAL North Western Farmer Marvellous Discoveries Two-LINE SMALL PICA CENTENNIAL SCRIPT. 18 A, 6 A, 70 a. Price, $21.70. Small Founts, $11.00. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TREASURY. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $3.90. Business & keceptions Midnight Peculator VW TRIO TWO-LINE ENGLISH TREASURY. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $4.95. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CENTENNIAL SCRIPT. 10 A, 4 A, 50 a. Price, $22.65. Small Founts, $12.00. Music Professor NONPAREIL TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 30 A, 52 a. Price, $1.50. Fools Bestrewing their Homes with Nettles BREVIER TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 22 A, 18 A, 32 a. Price, $5.40. HYMEN'S COURTS of Banleruptcy LONG PRIMER TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 18 A, 14 A, 32 a. Price, $5.90. DOCILE TOOLS of Ringsters PICA TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 12 A, 10 A, 24 a. Price, $5.00. Singing Dessor Dinner Horn TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER TREASURY. 4 A, 8 a. Price, $5.55. PICA CONTINENTAL. 14 A, 20 a. $4.00 Fine Interior Decorations EGYPTIAN Antiquities GT. PRIMER CONTINENTAL. 10 A, 16 a, $5.00 GREAT PRIMER TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 10 A, 10 A, 18 a. Price, $7.30. Literary Emporium KITCHEN Dandies GT.PRIMER BANK NOTE ITALIC ORNAMENTED. 8 A, 8 A. $5.50 2-LINE SM. PICA CONTINENTAL. 7 A. 14 a. $5.40 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 10 A, 8 A, 12 a. Price, $7.90. DBL. SM. PICA BANK NOTE ITALIC ORNAMENTED 6 A 6 A. $5 60 2-LINE ENGLISH CONTINENTAL 5 A, 10 a. $6.40 TWO-LINE ENGLISH TITLE ITALIC OPEN. 7 A, 5 A, 10 a. Price, $9.25. Boston Common ROAST Turkey PORT WINES Pocket Book FERRY Slip Fountains New York. FINE ART 2-L. GT. PRIMER CONTINENTAL. 5 A, 10 a. $8.40 DBL. ENG. BANK NOTE BLACK ORNAMENTED. 8 A, 4 A. $6.50 GREAT PRIMER OLD SHADED ITALIC. For Sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. MISCELLANEOUS. BREVIER EXTRA COND. No. 2. 75 a, 30 A, $3.20. Beautiful in Formation Characters Condensed Symmetrically Don NONPAREIL GOTHIC ITALIC No. 4. 32 A, 64 a, $3.00 OFT ON YOUR SWELL-GIRDLED STREETS, EVE HAS NONPAREIL INCLINED ANTIQUE. 50 a 30 A. $3.20 New Summer and Autumn Guide Book AMERICAN MOUNTAINS 123 Found Me Inhaling Odors from over the Rhine LONG PRIMER EXTRA COND. No. 2. 50 a, 30 A, $3.00. Enlarge Your Office From Our New Handsome Display Type BREVIER GOTHIC ITALIC, No. 4. 24 A, 48 a, $3.15 OFFICE SEEKERS' LACHRYMOSE LAMENT BREVIER INCLINED ANTIQUE. 50 a 30 A. $3.65 Simms' Revolutionary Romances HISTORIC LEGENDS 76 PICA EXTRA COND. No. 2. 50 a, 30 A, $3.50. Cold blow the Political Winds of Nou. The United States Centennial Commission Offiec LONG PRIMER INCLINED ANTIQUE. 40 a 25 A. $3.85 Library Edition of Byron ENGLISH BOOKS 19 PARAGON EXTRA COND. No. 2. 30 a, 20 A, $4.25. LONG PRIMER GOTHIC ITALIC, No. 4. 24 A, 48 a, $3.60 OH, DRINK MY BOYS, BIG DRUNKS Are Ge-lorious! No Reference to NationalTrust and Banking Company Department of Public Works WHEN CONVULSIONS CLEAVE TWO-L. PICA EXTRA COND. No. 2. 20 a, 15 A, $3.85. PICA INCLINED ANTIQUE. 30 a 20 A. $4.10 American Publication CATALOGUE 15 PICA GOTHIC ITALIC, No. 4. NONPAREIL ANTIQUE EXTENDED, No, 4. 25 A, 40 a, $4.20 SPREADING LEAFLET Rich, Autumn Fruits TWO LINE GREAT PRIMER EXTRA COND. No. 2. 15 a, 10 A, $6.00. The Laboring Earth, Before Furnishing Warehouses GREAT PRIMER GOTHIC ITALIC, No. 4. 12 A, 24 a, $3.40 BREVIER ANTIQUE EXTENDED, No. 4. 20 A, 30 a, $4.00 EASTERN YOUTH Treasure Hunter AWFUL YAWN APPEAR To Run Home, Sonny TWO-LINE PARAGON EXTRA COND. No. 2. 12 a, 8 A, $5.05. Treasury Department LONG PRIMER ANTIQUE EXTENDED, No. 4. 15 A, 20 a, $3.50 DOUBLE SMALL PICA GOTHIC ITALIC, No 4. 10 A, 20 a, $4.00 SOLID ROCKS Bills Payable PICA FASHION. 16 a, 12 A, $4.50. American Industry A BANQUO'S GHOST Was Sat Down on PICA ANTIQUE EXTENDED No. 4. 15 A, 20 a, $5.00 GT. PRIMER FASHION. 12 a, 8 A, $3.00. FRANKLIN The Printer Regents Park LG. PRIMER SLANTING SHADED. 25 A, 36 a. $3.60. GRAND PANORAMIC VIEW OF ROME Principal Edifices in the Eternal City DBL. SM. PICA FASHION. 10 a, 6 A, $6.00. TWO-LINE BREVIER ANTIQUE EXTEND. No. 4 5 A, 8 a, $5.90 Lotus Club RINDLES Braying PICA SLANTING SHADED. 22 A, 32 a $4.35. FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE Regulations of the Commissioners PICA GROTESQUE SHADED. 25 A 20 A. $4.35 BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS DETROIT BOSTON 12 DBL SM. PICA ANTIQUE EXTENDED No. 4. 5 A, 8 a, $6.30 ENGLISH SLANTING SHADED. 18 A, 32 a. $4.60. GR. PRIMER GROTESQUE SHADED. 20 A 12 A. $5.25 INSTRUMENTAL CONCERTS Harmoniums and Concertinas MENTO Blastin FANCY BRASS RULES PHILADELPHIA 78 GT. PRMIER SLANTING SHADED. 16 A, 24 a. $5.65 DBL. ENGLISH ANTIQUE EXTENDED, No. 4. 5 A, 6 a, $7.70 PICA ROMAN SHADED. 20 A 15 A. $4.95 DRAMATIC AUTHORS Handsomely Illustrated MODERN BUILDINGS BANKING 25 CLOS Mort DB. SM. PICA SLANTING SHADED. 12 A, 20 a, $5.90 GREAT PRIMER ROMAN SHADED. 12 A 10 A. $5.75 CHEAP EDITION SERIES 18 PAPER CUTTERS Printing Machinery DBL. PARAGON ANTIQUE EXTENDED, No. 4. 4 A, 5 a, $12.30 DBL. ENG. SLANTING SHADED. 8 A, 14 a. $6.60. DBLE SMALL PICA ROMAN SHADED. 10 A 8 A. $7.00 BANKRUPTS DIRECT LINE LAWS 8 Western Routes FID Tri FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. SHADED LETTER Two-LINE BREVIER PARALLEL SHADED. 10 A, $4.00 GREAT PRIMER GRAVERS SHADE. 10 A, $0.00 LONG PRIMER COPPERPLATE. $2.90 HIRING GIRLS CONCERTS PANTRY DRAWERS 12345678 TWO-LINE PICA GRAVERS SHADE. 8 A, $0.00 Two-LINE BOURGEOIS PARALLEL SHADE. 10 A, $4.60 PICA COPPERPLATE. $3.20 OUR POLICE OUTE'CT MANUFACTURES 1234567 TWO-LINE SM. PICA PARALLEL SHADE. 8A, $5.00 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER GRAVERS SHADE. 6 A, $8.00 REPLEVIIT GREAT PRIMER COPPERPLATE. $3.80 CORIV DOUGHNUTS Two-LINE ENGLISH PARALLEL SHADE. 6 A, $5.90 PICA INTERLINE. $3.55 TWO-LINE PICA COPPERPLATE. $4.90 TIPE TO HARD METAL BULLION TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER PARALLEL SHADE. 4 A, $6.10 PICA RADIANT. $3.10 GREAT PRIMER INTERLINE. ARTISTIC JOBBING BRITS BAKBPAN GREAT PRIMER RADIANT. $3.80 TWO-LINE PICA INTERLINE. $5.05 RHAPSODICAL TWO-L NONPAREIL RAY SHADE No. 2. 15 A, $4.10 CROWN MOUNT VERNON TWO-LINE PICA RADIANT. $4.50 WWW MIRRORED TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER INTERLINE. $7.70 TWO-L. BOURGEOIS RAY SHADE No. 2. 12 A, $5.65 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER RADIANT. $6.15 OKYAWEXS JOYS BRAND TWO-LINE PICA RAY SHADE, No. 2 10 A, $9.15. AURORA LONG PRIMER AMERICAN. $3.00 PAINTING AND COLOURING Imermeable Whitewash for Committees 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 GREAT PRIMER ILLUMINATED. *4.30 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER RAY SHADE, No. 2 7 A, $14 25. Science Academy PICA AMERICAN. $3.15 E TWO-LINE PICA ILLUMINATED. $5.25 Matrimonial Engagement Managers HURRYUP & WEDMEQUICK Pimü-Saving GREAT PRIMER MONASTIC SHADED. $3.00 GREAT PRIMER AMERICAN $3.65 Two-LINE GREAT PRIMER ILLUMINATED. $6.66 SKETCHING AND SHADING 1934567890 NOAH'S ARK WOOD Picture Frame, Walking Cane TWO-LINE PICA MONASTIC SHADED. $3.50 TWO-LINE PICA AMERICAN. $4.90 GREAT PRIMER RIMMED EXTRA COND. $5.00 TWO-LINE ENGLISH MONASTIC SHADED. $4.20 New French Calicoes. 18 New Fare Blue Glass BATHER WHOLESOME JUNDECIPHERABLE Preserved Milkings Mineral Waters. 4 Body Politic WRITTEN PIRTICTIONS Unconsciously Lotus Club. 8 TWO-LINE PICA RIMMED EXTRA COND. $6.50 DBL. PARAGON MONASTIC SHADED. $4.60 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER AMERICAN. $5.60 TWO-LINE ENGLISH RIMMED EXTRA COND. $6.50 For Sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. Toy ainas FANCY TYPE. 29 GREAT PRIMER CELTIC INITIALS. 12 A, $2.80 GREAT PRIMER CELTIC SHADED. 12 A. Price, $4.35. GREAT PRIMER CELTIC SINGLE SHADE. 12 A. Price, $4.35. MORTUARY BEAUTIFUL GOLD ENGLEAMS TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CELTIC SHADED. 10 A. Price, $5.00. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CELTIC SINGLE SHADE. 10 A. Price, $4.90. DBL. SM. PICA CELTIC INITIALS. 12 A, $4.15. CORONET SAN JOSE INSURANCE TWO-LINE ENGLISH CELTIC SHADED. 7 A. Price, $5.65. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CELTIC SINGLE SHADE. 7 A. Price, $5.85. DBL. GT. PRIMER CELTIC INITITLS. 6 A, $5.75. HONIES PONIES AMERICA BREVIER OBLIQUE SHADED. 22 A, 32 A. Price, $1.50. INCREASED SALE OF PAREGORIC LONG PRIMER FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 30 A, 42 a. Price, $3.75. BREVIER LITHOGRAPHIC SLOPE. 22 A, 32 a. Price, $4.10. Clean Speech, and Correct Habits LONG PRIMER LITHOGRAPHIC SLOPE. 18 A, 27 a. Price, $4.10. Gentleness, Modesty, Respect LONG PRIMER OBLIQUE SHADED. 18 A, 27 A. Price, $4.80. The Towering Mountain for Lofty Aspiration PROFITS IN PRODUCTIONS PICA FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 25 A, 32 a. Price, $4.80. PICA OBLIQUE SHADED. 14 A, 20 A. Price, $5.30. PICA LITHOGRAPHIC SLOPE. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $4.20. Around the World in Eighty Days CENTENNIAL HALLS Juvenile Parlor Matinee ENGLISH FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 22 A, 32 a. Price, $5.25. GREAT PRIMER OBLIQUE SHADED. 10 A, 14 A. Price, $6.35. ENGLISH LITHOGRAPHIC SLỌPE. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $4.80. Avoid the Tracks of Busybodies TISSUE PAPERS Left Shoulder Hitters GREAT PRIMER FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 18 A, 27 a. Price, $5.75. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA OBLIQUE SHADED. 10 A, 14 A. Price, $8.30. GREAT PRIMER LITHOGRAPHIC SLOPE. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $5.60. Automatic Kitchen Servant WILD HORSE Modern Fashion TWO-LI. SM. PICA FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $5.80. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA LITHOGRAPHIC SLOPE. 7 A, 14 a. Price, $6.15. Quintessence of Falsity TWO-LINE ENGLISH OBLIQUE SHADED. 7 A, 10 A. Price, $9.25. OLD HENS Rocks, Blocks TWO-LI. ENGLISH FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $7.00. NONPAREIL BROADGAUGE SHADED. 25 A. Price, $3.75, SLEIGHING PARTIES TWO-L. NONPAREIL ORNA. No. 16. 18 A. $2.05 COUNTING MACHINE BREVIER BROADGAUGE SHADED. 22 A. Price, $4.00. Two-Li. GT. PRIM. FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 7A, 10 a. Price, $7.90. PICA PHILADELPHIAN. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $4.10. SILVER LININGS Upright, Magnanimous LONG PRIMER BROADGAUGE SHADED. 18 A. Price, $4.10. Leaking Teapots Nibbling Mice Rum Punch CHEAP FARE GREAT PRIMER PHILADELPHIAN. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $5.85. Highway Rings PICA BROADGAUGE SHADED. 14 A. Price, $4.20. DOUBLE PARAGON FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 7 A, 10 A. Price, $9.25. THUMPING TWO-LINE SMALL PICA PHILADELPHIAN. 7 A, 14 a. Price, $6.00. GREAT PRIMER BROADGAUGE SHADED. 10 A. Price, $5.50. Evening Joys NATION FOUR-LINE PICA FRENCH CLARENDON SHADED. 5 A, 7 a. Price, $10.60. TWO-LINE ENGLISH PHILADELPHIAN. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA BROADGAUGE SHADED. 5 A, 7 a. Price, $7.30. TWO-LINE BOURGEOIS ORYA No 19 5 A $4.50. FAME Sentiments RIVET Cape May Bordering MIST Pleating FAT INK Article TIN NE DOUBLE PARAGON PHILADELPHIAN. 5 A, 7 a. Price, $9.50. TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER BROADGAUGE SHADED. 5 A. Price, $8.90. DOUBLE PARAGON BROADGAUGE SHADED. FOUR-LINE PICA PHILADELPHIAN. 4 A, 6 a. Price, $12.00. 5 A. Price, $11.30. mine 12 ig FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. gio ar CHAS. WELLS, Treas FANCY LETTER. PICA NUBIAN 10 A, 14 a. $4.05 GR.PRIMER CELTIC CONDENSED. 15 a 10 A. $2.35 Manchester Houses NONPAREIL LATIN ANTIQUE. $3.25 RULING THE MARKETS Railroad Securities Knocked Down 1234567890 Educational Institute LITERATURE 12 GT. PRIMER NUBIAN. 8 A, 12 a. $5.50 John Hamilton BREVIER LATIN ANTIQUE. $3.25 TANGLER & TWISTEM Automatic Platform Speakers DOUBLE PICA CELTIC CONDENSED. 10 a 6 A. $2.90 DBL. PICA NUBIAN. 6 A, 8 a. $6.35 Fine Times Natural Sciences GEOLOGY 17 DBL. GT. PRIMER NUBIAN, LONG PRIMER LATIN ANTIQUE. $3.25 CORSET STRINGS Broken Bustles Replaced 4 A, 6 a. $8.55 Dinward $3.25 DBLE GR. PR. CELTIC CONDENSED. 12 a 8 A. $5.75 CANON NUBIAN. 3 A, 4 a. $10.10 PICA LATIN ANTIQUE. ELOPEMENT Ladders of Silken Cord Public Record DAILY 78 L. PRIMER BANK NOTE ROMAN. 16 A, 16 A. $4.15 NINE GRANITE FARMERS DBL. PICA MAYENCE. 8 A, 6 A, 12 a $6.70 PICA BANK NOTE ROMAN. 14 A, 14 A. $4.80 THE Warden $3.55 THE NORMAN PUNCH PICA KEYSTONE. DETECTIVES Habits and Prospects DBL. GT. PRIMER MAYENCE. 6 A, 8 a, $5.80 GT. PRIMER BANK NOTE ROMAN. 10 A, 10 A. $5.50 FORT Hills ROMAN DESIGNS GREAT PRIMER KEYSTONE. $4.35 DBL. SM. PICA BANK NOTE ROMAN. 8 A, 8 A, $6.55 BREVIER ANTIQUE CONDENSED, NO. 4. $3.15 CENTENNIAL EXCURSIONIST Says Good-by, and Kisses his Sweetheart FARM WORK DREAMING Noonday Siesta PICA LACROSSE. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA KEYSTONE. $5.30 LONG PRIMER ANTIQUE CONDENSED, "No.4. $3.50 TUNNEL ENTRANCE Plenty of Time to Change his Shirt NATURE'S FORCES Hurricanes and Tornadoes BUREAU Information $5.00 PICA ANTIQUE CONDENSED, No. 4. $3.50 GREAT PRIMER LACROSSE. GENERAL LAUGHING Insensible Lying-Over on Road HOUSEHOLD Cold from the North TWO-LINE ENGLISH KEYSTONE. $7.95 ENGLISH ANTIQUE CONDENSED, No. 4. $4.20 TWO-LINE PICA LACROSSE. $6.30 HOSPITAL HOME Emerges Thin and Shaky GREAT PRIMER ANTIQUE CONDENSED, No. 4. $4.40 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER KEYSTONE. *8.85 Two-LINE GREAT PRIMER LACROSSE. $7.45 CONVALESCENT Resumption of Travels Two-LINE SM. P CA ANTIQUE COND. No. 4. $6.00 NOTES MUSICAL Waysides Gentle Zephyrs HOME RUIN Agriculture Castles SHORJ MEN RESCUED Traveller Waits Contracts Socials a UNDERMINED Down to the River DOUBLE PARAGON LACROSSE. $7.50 DOUBLE PARAGON KEYSTONE. TWO-LINE ENGLISH ANTIQUE COND., No. 4. $6.40 FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. FANCY TYPE. GR. PRIMER ALHAMBRA SHADED. 15 a 10 A. $3.00 NNOPAREIL ATHENIAN. 30 a 25 A. $3.00 Italian Sculptors, Painters and Architects BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES 79 BREVIER CAMEO. 18 A. $2.40. HISTORY OF AMERICA Cunard steamsbiy tomgan y CABIN PASSAGE 34 LONG PRIMER CAMEO. 18 A. $2.90. NORTHERN LIGHT BREVIER ATHENIAN. 30 a 25 A. $3.80 Recent Explorations in Jerusalem ANCIENT RECORDS 35 PICA CAMEO. 14 A. $3.20. DOUBLE PICA ALHAMBRA SHADED. 12 a 8 A. $4.50 LONG PRIMER ATHENIAN. 25 a 20 A. $3.90 Marine and Fire Insurance REGULATIONS 46 GREAT PRIMER CAMEO. 10 A. $3.50. PICA ATHENIAN. 25 a 20 A. $5.25 DBLE GR. PR. ALHAMBRA SHADED. 10 a 6 A. $5.75 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CAMEO. 7 A. $3.60. SALEM ISLAND Landscape Painters EUROPEAN ARTISTIC 15 FRAMES Moslem Rulers ORIENTI 12 Foreign and Native Production BRAID Midsummer Ramblings MOUNTAINS 18 TWO-LINE ENGLISH CAMEO. 5 A. $4.90. GREAT PRIMER MANHATTAN. 15 a 10 A. $2.75 GREAT PRIMER ALHAMBRA. 15 a 10 A. $2.50 INTERNATIONAL 12 GREAT PRIMER FRANKLIN SHADED. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $5.50. Illuminated Juvenile Publications PICTORIAL BALLADS 67 DOUBLE PICA MANHATTAN. 12 a 8 A. $3.85 DOUBLE PICA ALHAMBRA. 12 a 8 A. $4.10 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA FRANKLIN SHADED. 8 A, 10 a. Price, $6.20. TWO-LINE ENGLISH FRANKLIN SHADED. 7 A, 8 a. Price, $8.40. DOUBLE GT. PRIMER MANHATTAN. 10 a 6 A. $5.15 DOUBLE GR. PRIMER ALHAMBRA. 10 a 6 A. $5.00 GREAT PRIMER CURVED ANTIQUE. 15 a 10 A. $3.50 GREAT PRIMER BOLDFACE CELTIC. 15 a 10 A. $3.65 2-LINE SMALL PICA ORNAMENTED 27. 10 A. $4.00 DOUBLE PICA CURVED ANTIQUE. 12 a 8 A. $4.75 SNOWCLAD PEAKS New York State Guard DEFENSIVE 84 ROCK-TUNNEL Centennial Exhibition NATIONAL 13 American Grocer NONPAREIL Western Prairies MARKETS 12 Dramatic Entertainment FARMER 17 IRVING HALL 19 Ancient History GIBBONS 13 Eminent Patriots EXCURSIONS Nassau Bank HAMILTON 12 Guide-Book for Travelers NOTES 17 PHILADELPHIA 15 Scenic Effects Historical GARDEN 15 English Language ASIA 3 EUROPEAN 12 Decoction Corners Mining Stocks ENDS DRUG 6 BONDED 65 DOUBLE PICA BOLDFACE CELTIC. 12 a 8 A. $4.85 GREAT PRIMER CURVED GOTHIC. 15 a 10 A. $3.25 DBL GR. PRIMER CURVED ANTIQUE. 10 a 6 A. $6.20 DOUBLE PICA CURVED GOTHIC. 12 a 8 A. $4.75 DBLE ENGLISH BOLDFACE CELTIC. 10 a 6 A. $6.45 4-LINES PICA CURVED ANTIQUE. 6 a 4 A. $7.75 DBL GR. PRIMER CURVED GOTHIC. 10 a 6 A. $6.00 DBL GR. PRIMER BOLDFACE CELTIC. 6 a 4 A. $6.40 FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas'r. Ornamental Letter. PICA OLD STYLE SHADED. 18 A, 24 a. $6.65 2-LINE NONP. ORNAMENTED No. 49. 15 A. $3.05 NONPAREIL FRANCONIAN. 25 A. 42 a. $3.25 Demonstrations of the Principles of the Art SHORT LINE RAILROAD Elegant Engraving PICTURE FRAME 2-LINE BOURG. ORNAMENTED No. 23. 12 A. $4.00 BREVIER FRANCONIAN. 25 A. 42 a. $4.00 True Narrative of the Emperor's Life GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE SHADE. 15 A, 18 a, $7.95 ANNUAL REPORT PICA FRANCONIAN. 18 A, 32 a. $4.70 Handsome Picture Frames Street Railroad IMPROVEMENT 2-LINE PICA ORNAMENTED No. 42. 10 A. $5.85 COAL MINES GREAT PRIMER RIMMED ROMAN ORNATE 10 A 14 a. $7.00 DOUBLE SMALL PICA OLD STYLE SHADED. 12 A, 16 a. $8.45 Fire Engines STEAMSHIP 2-LINE GT. PRIMER ORNA. No. 26. 8 A. $8.00 Combination ELABORATE TWO-LINE PICA RIMMED ROMAN ORNATE 6 A, 8 a. $6.60 DIAMOND Ornamental PROSE FOUR-LINE PICA ORNA. No. 36. 5 A. $9.70 Continent GERMAN 2. L. ENG. OLD STYLE SHADE. GT. PRIMER RAY SHADED. 12 A, 25 a. $8.50 ERIE LINE Fire Companies TELEGRAPHIC PICA RIMMED CONDENSED. 18 A, 24 a. $5.80 L. PRIMER RIMMED ROMAN. 16 A, 24 a. $5.85 Bridge for Railroad CORRUGATED IRON Commission Merchant STREET RAILROADS DBL. PICA RAY SHADED. 10 A, 20 a. $11.35 PICA RIMMED ROMAN. 18 A. 24 a. $7.85 GT. PRIMER RIMMED COND. 14 A, 18 a. $6.25 GT. PRIMER RIMMED ROMAN. 10 A, 14 a. $6.65 DBL. GT. PRIMER RAY SHADED. 8 A, 15 a. $16.60 TWO-L. SM PICA RIMMED COND. 10 A, 16 a. $6.55 TWO-L. PICA RIMMED ROMAN. 7A, 10 a. $7.65 China Ware Large Diamonds American Banner FINE JEWELRY PRINTING DAYTON REVIEW Printing Ink Material Commonwealth MONUMENT AGRICULTURE EMPIRE Improved Chicago Fire CASTING FLOUR MERCHANTS INSURANCE Westimonials Yamaished France Perfumed Violets ORXXMXXXXX CHINA Handsome Frame Concentrated TWO-LINE ENG. RIMMED COND. 8 A, 12 a. $8.30 GREAT PRIMER ORNA. NO. 25. 15 A, 15 a. $5.40. DBL. PARAGON RIMMED ROMAN. 5 A. 7 a. $10.15 DOUBLE PICA ORNA. No. 44. 10 A, 10 a. $6.50. PICA ANTIQUE POINTED. 18 A, 27 a. Price, $5.10. GREAT PRIMER ANTIQUE POINTED. 14 A, 14 a. Price, $5.45. FOUR-L. PICA RIMMED ROMAN. 4 A, 6 a. $13.95 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA ANTIQUE POINTED. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $6.00. TWO-LINE ENGLISH ANTIQUE POINTED. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $9.35. Dangerous IRON Xnstruments FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. FANCY LETTERS. MINION GALLIC. 30 A, 52 a, $3.70 VIVID DESCRIPTIONS OF AMERICAN SCENERY PICA GREENBACK. 10 A, 27 a. Price, $3.80. LONG PRIMER EGYPTIAN SHADED. 25 a 20 A. $4.50 Economical Architecture Office-Hunters' Bill of Fare Boundless Prairies, Mountains, Rivers, Lakes, Oceans AMUSEMENT 16 GREAT PRIMER GREENBACK. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.75. LONG PRIMER GALLIC. 30 A, 42 a, $3.80 WORKS OF DISTINGUISHED AUTHORS Tell-Tale Susybodies PICA EGYPTIAN SHADED. 20 a 15 A. $5.00 Journal of Literature and Useful Information TWO-LINE SMALL PICA GĶEENBACK. 8 A, 18 a. Price, $5.85. Printing Machinery CINCINNATI 13 PICA GALLIC. 22 A. 32 a, $3.80. Pilgrim Official GR. PRIMER EGYPTIAN SHADED. 15 a 10 A. $6.00 THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY Permanent and Profitable Investment TWO-LINE ENGLISH GREENBACK. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $6.35. Wire Pullers South America BRAZIL 19 GREAT PRIMER GALLIC. 18 A. 27 a. $4.75. ATLANTIC LINE STEAMSHIPS TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER GREENBACK. 4 A, 8 a. Price, $7.70. DBLE S. PICA EGYPTIAN SHADED. 12 a 8 A. $6.75 AGRICULTURAL WORKS DOUBLE PARAGON GREENBACK. 4 A, 7 a. Price, $3.00. BREVIER EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 30 a 20 A. $2.65 Atlantio Insurance Company DEPARTMENTS 68 TWO-LINE PICA GALLIC. 14 A, 20 a, $6.35. PICA FANTAIL. 25 A, 42 a, $3.80. COUNSELS TO YOUNG MEN Success and Happiness in Life L. PRIMER EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 30 a 20 A. $3.70 Steam Printing House NEW TYPE 13 GREAT PRIMER FANTAIL. 22 A, 27 a, $4.80 TWO-LINE ENGLISH GALLIC. 12 A. 18 a, $7.00. PICA EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 30 a 20 A. $4.45 FRUITS OF AMERICA American Steamers COLUMBUS 12 TWO-LINE. SM. PICA FANTAIL. 14 A, 20 a, $4.90 GR. PRIMER EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 25 a 15 A. $6.00 Sale Transportation to England Bell Rope Lithograph SIGNS 8 Important News to Farmers Reckless SAFE MANUFACTORY Fire and Burglar Proof AMERICAN WORKS Beautiful Spring Blossom Combination Borders STEAM ENGINES Second Edition NATIONAL BANK Latest Improvement COOPER 18 United Companies. MONUMENTS Expositions Eminent Actor CRAIN 9 FANCY TYPES Superior Designs AUCTIONS Dunkirk Government ERIE 7 MOUND TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER GALLIC. 10 A, 14 a, $7.45 DBLE PICA EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 12 a 8 A. $5.45 14 A, 20 a, $7.80 DOUBLE PARAGON GALLIC. 7A, 12 a, $6.85. DOUBLE PARAGON FANTAIL. 7A, 12 a, $8.10 DBLE G. PR. EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 10 a 6 A. $8.40 DB. PARAGON ANTIQUE POINTED. 6 A, 10 a, $8.50. FOUR-LINE PICA FANTAIL. 5 A, 8 a, $9.60 4-LINES PICA EGYPTIAN EXTENDED. 8 a 5 A. $12.00 Planing Foundry Horse For Sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. Ornamental Text. TWO-LINE PICA EUREKA SHADED. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $4.90. Practical Slipshods BOURGEOIS CONDENSED BLACK, No. 3 J. 20 A, 52 a. Price, $1.00. Cherubs in Peaceful Gambols, Tigers in Quarrel SMALL PICA CONDENSED BLACK, No. 3 J. 15 A, 42 a. Price, $1.20. THREE-LINE SMALL PICA EUREKA SHADED. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $6.00. True Knights Ensnaring Lair Damsels MINION TEUTONIC TITLE. 20 A, 52 3. Price, $4.05. Sovereign Medicamenta for National Troubles BOURGEOIS TEUTONIC TITLE. 15 A, 42 a. Price, $3.80. Creeping into Pirty Holes and allowing LONG PRIMER TEUTONIC TITLE. 15 A, 42 a. Price, $1.40. Rules for Getting Through the World SMALL-PICA TEUTONIC TITLE. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.00. Rich Limburger PICA CONDENSED BLACK, NO. 3 J. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.60. Double-Quick Oblique Marches Two-LINE GREAT PRIMER EUREKA SHADED. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $7.10. ENGLISH CONDENSED BLACK, NO. 3 J. 10 A, 27 2. Price, $1.40. Adversity the Bridge of Fortune Starving upon Half Rations PICA TEUTONIC TITLE. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.80. GREAT PRIMER CONDENSED BLACK, No. 3 J. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.90. Grumbs from Death's Tables Impetuously Charging FOUR-LINE SMALL PICA EUREKA SHADED. 4 A, 7 a. Price, $7.80. ENGLISH TEUTONIC TITLE. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $1.20. Extravagant Sousekeeper TWO-LINE LONG PRIMER TEUTONIC TITLE. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $5.30. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CONDENSED BLACK, NO. 3 J. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $7.10. Road Finger-2oards TWO-LINE ENGLISH EUREKA TEXT. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $7.50. TWO-LINE PICA TEUTONIC TITLE. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $5.70. Store Houses Golden Cup Health and Industry Livelu Coons Hightoned Snobs Oceans of Carbon Barn Door Serene Repose Crescent City Arctic Shore Buncombe Hoop Poles TWO-LI. GREAT PRIMER CONDENSED BLACK, No.3J. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $6.75. DOUBLE PARAGON CONDENSED BLACK, NO. 3J. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $3.40. DOUBLE PARAGON EUREKA TEXT. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $9.20. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER TEUTONIC TITLE. 4 A, 71. Price, $7.10. My PICA RIMMED BLACK. 12 A, 36 a. $5.80 Eminent Naturalists BREVIER EXTENDED BLACK. 30 A, 60 a. $7.10 Devoted to Science and Hine Arts FOUR-LINE PICA EUREKA TEXT. 4 A, 8 a. Price, $9.90. 2-LINE SM. PICA RIMMED BLACK. 8 A, 20 a. $6.65 LONG PRIMER EXT. BLACK. 14 A, 40 a. $5.20. Deamatical Entertainment Printing House Pictures 2-LINE ENGLISH RIMMED BLACK, 7A, 14 a, $9.25 PICA EXTENDED BLACK. 10 A, 30 a. $5.50 Beauty and Elegance Real Estate GT. PRIEER EXTENDED BLACK. 8 A, 25 a. $8.25 DOUBLE PICA BLACK ORNA. 7 A, 20 a. $6.75 Pate Invention Machine Works TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER RIMMED BLACK. 6 A, 10 a. $8.65 DBL. PICA EXTENDED BLACK. 7A, 20 a. $11.10 DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER BLACK ORNA. 6 A, 15 a, $10.25 4-LINE PICA RIMMED BLACK. 4A, 8 a. $11.90 DBL. GT. PRIMER EX. BLACK. 6 A, 15 a. $16.70 Commercial City News Fine Letter Market Modern Nonpareil Press Menigsmers Premium Fruits DBL. SM.PICA BLACK, No. 1. 4A, 8 a, $1.95. CANON BLACK ORNA. 5 A, 12 a. $15.85 FOUR-LINE PICA BLACK RAYED ORNA. 5 A, 12 a, $9.75 America For Sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. و شرک Ornamental Text DBL GR. PRIMER SIDEROGRAPHIC. 6 A, 15 a. $5.00. DBL. SM. PICA BLACK No.4. 8 A, 16 a. $1.85. DBL. SM. PICA BLACK ORNA. No.4. 8 A, 20 a $4.05. Örnamental Brass Corners Natural History of Creation DBL. ENGLISH BLACK No. 4. 8A, 20 a. $7.10. DBL. ENG. BLACK ORNA. No. 4. 8 A, 20 a. $7.10. DBL GREAT PRIMER SIDEROGRAPHIC SHADED. 6 A, 15 a. $5.00. GR. PRIMER BLACK COND. No. 2. 8 A, 20 a, $1.75 ENGLISH CARD TEXT. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.00. DBL. GREAT PRIMER SIDEROGRAPHIC ORNATE. 6 A, 15 a, $5.00. Denummebug's fourth importation of Original Pa ain DBL. ENG. BLACK COND. No. 2. 4 A, 8 a, $2.10 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CARD TEXT. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.40. TWO-LINE ENGLISH TEXT ORNATE. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $5.00. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CARD TEXT. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.40. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CARD TEXT SHADED. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.40. Daydreams of Magnificeni Palace The Board of Education Asteroid Job Press Commercial Academy İmportant ( ontributions American Christiau Review Government Securities Hester Jeremiah itpeimp's l'amplimentis Asteroid Job Press 1 Anticipations and longlomerations Beach Braces at Matering places Romunie lensmad Trip Saturday Evening Shepping European Tiled fashionables ourageous Supporter Sauer Hirmut Luncheon (Childhood Thoughts fireside (Comforts Saturday Evening Tindoubting Trustful thildren Popular Lines to Ploor Harbour THREE-LI. SMALL PICA CARD TEXT SHADED. THREE-LINE SMALL PICA CARD TEXT. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $5.00. DOUBLE PARAGON TEXT ORNATE. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $6.65. FOUR-LINE SMALL PICA CARD TEXT. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $6.00. FOUR-LINE SMALL PICA CARD TEXT SHADED, 5 A, 10 a. Price, $6.00. FOUR-LINE PICA TEXT ORNATE. A, 10 a. Price, $7.20. FOUR-LINE PICA CARD TEXT. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $7.20. FOUR LINE PICA CARD TEXT SHADED. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $7.20. GREAT PRIMER TITLE TEXT OPEN. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $3.50. National Ranks of Rosy dromises TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TITLE TEXT OPEN. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.30. GREAT PRIMER TITLE TEXT. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $3.50. GREAT PRIMER FANCY TEXT. 12 A, 32 a. Price, $4.00. Wanton Perversion of Woman's Power TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TITLE TEXT OPEN, No. 2 J. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.20. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TITLE TEXT. A, 20 a. Price, $4.30. TWO-LINE SMALL PICA FANCY TEXT. 10 A, 27 a. Price, $4.30. Catchem & Cheatem, Bankers Airline Telegraph Company Chains of Bewitching Womanhood TWO-LINE ENGLISH TITLE TEXT OPEN. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $5.75. TWO-LINE ENGLISH TITLE TEXT. 6 A, 14 a. Price, $5.75. TWO-LINE ENGLISH FANCY TEXT. 8 A, 18 a. Price, $5.40. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER TITLE TEXT OPEN. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $5.80. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER TITLE TEXT. A, 10 a. Price, $5.80. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER FANCY TEXT. A, 12 a. Price, $5.40. DOUBLE PARAGON TITLE TEXT OPEN. 4 A, 7 a. Price, $5.30. DOUBLE PARAGON TITLE TEXT. 4 A, 7 a. Price, $5.30. DOUBLE PARAGON FANCY TEXT. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $5.40. Napoleon Plugindorf Christmas Holidlays Heterogeneous Hatchpotch Reell Biol Potpie Fernwood Grove Silver Tinteil louds Society Gossip Natural Jewels Portable Hulstand Shot Pouch Mail Coach Ancient Wines FOUR-LINE PICA FANCY TEXT. FOUR-LINE PICA TITLE TEXT OPEN. 3 A, 5 a. Price, $6.85. FOUR-LINE PICA TITLE TEXT. 3 A, 5 a. Price, $6.85. 4 A, 7 a. Price, $7.20. For sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. Ornamental Text. L. PRIMER HARLEM SHADE. 6 A, 18 a. $3.65 L. PRIMER HARLEM OPEN 6 A, 18 a. $3.65 LONG PRIMER HARLEM. 6 A, 18 a. $3.60 Western Advertiser Fine Printing Press Lightning Reporter PICA HARLEM 6 A, 14 a. $4.05 PICA HARLEM SHADE. 6 A, 14 a. $4.05 PICA HARLEM OPEN. 6A, 14 a. $4.05 Park Advertiser Hartford Times Midnight Fralics GT. PRIMER HARLEM. 4 A, 10 a. $4.80 GT. PRIMER HARLEM SHADE, 4 A, 10 a. $4.90 GT. PRIMER HARLEM OPEN. 4 A, 10 a $4.90 Blanche Ney ancy Taste Minnie Well DBL. PICA HARLEM. 3 A, 8 a. $5.85 DBL. PICA HARLEM SHADE. 3 A, 8 a. $5.80 3 A, 8 a. $5.55 Midnights Nay Light Way Pots PICA MODERN BLACK SHADED. 12 A, 30 a. $5.50. GT. PRIMER COPPERPLATE TEXT. 7A, 12 a. $4.65 Miscellaneous Articles PICA MODEL BLACK 12 A, 30 a. $5.50 Sixty-four Dollars Finance and Commerce GREAT PRIMER MODERN BLACK SHADED. 8 A, 20 a. $5.00. DB. SM. PICA COPPERPLATE TEXT. 6 A, 10 a. $4.75 GT. PRIMER MODEL BLACK. 8A, 20 a. $5.00 Concord Reporter DOUBLE SMALL PICA MODERN BLACK SHADED. 8 A, 16 a. $7.00. DB. ENGLISH COPPERPLATE TEXT. 4 A, 8 a. $5.50 Orpheus Clubs Hudson Lelegraph Social Circe Dayton Banner 2-L. SMALL PICA MODEL BLACK. 10 A, 16 a, $7.00. Oil Paintings DOUBLE ENGLISH MODERN BLACK SHADED. 5 A, 12 a. $7.50. 2 L. ENGLISH MODEL BLACK. 5 A, 12 A. $7.50. DBL. SM. PICA TEUTON TEXT. 8 A, 18 a, $4.20. Mountains 3-LINE SM. PICA TEUTON TEXT. 5 A, 10 a. $5.52 LONG PRIMER ALBION. 40 a, 15 A, $4.50 TWO-LINE PICA ENGRAVER'S TEXT, No. 2. 8 A, 12 a, $4.00 Messenger Fire Insurance Company Que tjew Elegant fletter. 7 Messenger of Peace Admit One Gentleman . Printing Works Eguptian Shrines sind Antiquities. Poetry of Hölderlin 12 DBL. PARAGON TEUTON TEXT. 4A, 8 a. $5.50 TWO-L. GT. PRIMER ENGRAVER'S TEXT, No. 2 7 A, 10 a, $5.50 PICA ALBION 30 a, 12 A, $3.90 Modern Educational istitution Diisseldorf Galleries 45 GREAT PRIMER ALBION. 25 a, 10 A, $4.75 FOUR-LINE PICA ENGRAVER'S TEXT, No. 2. 5 A, 8 a, $6.00 ENGLISH TEUTONIC EXTENDED. 8 A, 20 a. Price, $4.15. Richest Silks and Cloth Cristals, Qolecular Forqes Artists Reünion 36 (i TWO-LINE SMALL PICA TEUTONIC EXTENDED. 6 A, 14 8. Price, $4.80. talian Opera Delicate Manners DOUBLE SM. PICA ALBION. 15 a, 6 A, $4.00 GREAT PRIMER ITALIAN BLACK ORNAMENTED. 8 A, 25 a. $7.75. TWO-LINE PICA TEUTONIC EXTENDED. 5 A, 10 a. Price, $5.70. Fancy Corners. Two-LINE SMALL PICA RADIATED. 8 A, 14 a. Price $6.00. DOUBLE PICA ITALIAN BLACK ORNAMENTED. 7 A, 20 a. $10.15. DOUBLE ENGLISH ALBION. 12 a, 5 A, $5.00 New Design Government Resources Shorn Lambs Specialität 89 Post Stamp Standard Coinage City Item Literäti 59 Studio Public Work TWO-LINE ENGLISH RADIATED. 7 A, 10 a. Price, $7.50. DBL. GT. PRIMER ITALIAN BLACK ORNAMENTED. 6 A, 15 a. $14.25. DOUBLE PARAGON RADIATED. 5 A, 7 a. Price, $9.75. DOUBLE PARAGON ALBION, 10 a, 4 A, $7.65 Monitor ក្នុង FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. Miscellaneous. PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 3. 14 A, 50 a, $4.20 PICA SLOPING BLACK. 12 A, 32 a. $4.60 PICA SLOPING BLACK SHADED. 12 A, 32 a. $4.60 GT. PRIMER SLOPING BLACK. 8 A, 20 a. $4.75 GT. PR. SLOPING BL'K SHADED. 8 A, 20 a. $4.75 GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No.3. 18 A, 36 a, $5.25 2-LINE SM. PICA SLOPING BLACK. 8 A, 18 a. $6.00 2-L. SM. PICA SLOP’G BL’K SHADE. 8A, 18 a. $6.00 POET AT THE BREAKFAST TABLE Book and Newspaper Letters Western Union Telegraph Co. Sensibly Salted many a Clam Manners and Customs Great Mineral Region MASQUE OF THE GODS Clean Gallery Patrons Southern Telegram Insurance Agency PARODY ON POETRY Central Road Paper Dealer Muse on Low Diet PARAGON GOTHIC COND. No. 3. 12 A, 24 a, $4.20 2-LINE ENG. SLOPING BLACK. 5 A, 10 a. $6.60 2-L. ENG. SLOPING BL’K SHADED. 5 A, 10 a. $6.60 2-LINE GREAT PRIMER SLOPING BLACK, TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER SLOPING BLACK SHADED, 4 A, 7 a. $6.60 QUIRK & QUIBBLE Observatory Gold Mine Study the Law NONPAREIL AUGUSTAN TEXT 18 A, 50 a. $3.10. First Grand Performance of the Columbian Society GREAT PRIMER PHIDIAN. 22 A, 32 a. Price, $3.75. Gashionable bacas and thereal fawns GT. PRIMER BLACK INLAID. 8 A, 20 a. $5.00 TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 3. 10 A, 16 a, $7.50 Cincinnati and Dayton TWO-LINE SMALL PICA PHIDIAN. 18 A, 27 a. Price, $4.25. 2-LINE SM. PICA BLACK INLAID. 8 A 18 a. $6.40 State Capitols , Moyamensing #alls TWO-LINE ENGLISH PHIDIAN. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $5.25. 2-LINE ENGLISH BLACK INLAID. 5 A, 10 a. $6.55 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER PHIDIAN. 12 A, 18 a. Price, $6.20. DOUBLE PARAGON GOTHIC COND. No. 3. 8 A, 12 a, $7.75 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER BLACK INLAID, 4 A, 7 a. $6.90 DOUBLE PARAGON PHIDIAN. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $6.60. TWO-LINE ENGLISH ENGRAVERS TEXT ORNATE 5 A, 12 a $5.00. FOUR-LINE PICA PHIDIA 7 A, 10 a. Price, $7.50. FOUR-LINE PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 3. 6 A, 10 a, $9.30 To be Lean Black tun Rmigrant Society Salem Times SO GENTEEL Bmbraces and Grimaces Patent Law The Maiden Peak-Heeled Stumps Skeel Ingravings MARTINE National Bank Faxpayers' Party Dancists Publie Schools Cineinnati Gazette Poslun News PRINT Christian Review WESTERN Life Jnsurance American 2-LINE ENG. ENGRAVERS TEXT. 5 A, 12 a. $5.00 TWO-LINE PICA ORNA. No. 21. 3 A, $2.75 2-LINE GT. PR. ENGRAVERS TEXT. 5 A, 8 a. $5.15 DBL. GT. PRIMER LITHOGRAPHIC BLACK. 6 A, 15 a, $10.87 For sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treasurer. CHAMFER, GOTHICS, ETC. PICA GOTHIC COND. No. 4. 20 A, 38 a. $2.80 NONPAREIL CHAMFER CONDENSED. 52 A. Price, $2.00. PROFESSOR TAXGATHERER'S PROGRESSIVE SYSTEM OF PRACTICAL DRAWING PICA GOTHIC EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 2 J. 36 A, 52 a. Price, $4.00. Public Vendue, a Choice Assortment of Antique Goods Magnificent Gothic Monument BREVIER CHAMFER CONDENSED. 45 A. Price, $2.00. CHURCHPORCH LOUNGERS AND GENERAL ASSURANCE BROKERS GREAT PRIMER GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 25 A, 42 a. Price, $5.60. GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 4. 18 A, 24 a. $3.50 LONG PRIMER CHAMFER CONDENSED. 36 A. Price, $2.00. Gentleness, Chastity and Self-Abnegation Mechanical Operations TWO-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 18 A, 32 a. Price, $6.80. L PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 4. 18 A. 24 a. $2.80 SMALLMEASURE & LIGHTWEIGHT DEALERS AT RETAIL PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. CLEANHABITS & GOODLIVING, RENOVATORS GREAT PRIMER CHAMFER CONDENSED. 36 A. $2.60. Comprehensive Guide for Families Truthfulness, Fortitude, Integrity TWO-LINE ENG. GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $6.05. ENGLISH CROSIER. 22 A, 32 a. Price, $5.00. 25 A. Price, $3.60. Fantastic Excursions to California TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CROSIER. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $5.40. Two-LI. SMALL PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. 18 A. Price, $3.00. TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER GOTHIC COND. No. 2 J. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $8.20. Eventide Corner Smoker Two-LINE ENGLISH CROSIER. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $6.80. TWO-LINE ENGLISH CHAMFER CONDENSED. 14 A. Price. $4.00. DOUB. PARAGON GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER CROSIER. POORFARE'S OCEANIC RETREAT Temperance and Cultivation CRAMP'S COLIC REMEDIES Thoroughly Handsome Skaters' Rink Carnivals CRISPINIAN SOCIETY Becoming Behaviour Fashionable Boots BRANDY PEACHES CAPITAL STOCK Modest Respect Mountain Range Two-LI. GREAT PRIMER CHAMFER CONDENSED. 10 A. Price, $3.75. FOUR-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 7 A, 10 a. Price, $8.70. DOUBLE PARAGON CROSIER. 10 A, 14 a. Price, $8.70. DOUBLE PARAGON CHAMFER CONDENSED. 10 A. Price, $4.90. FIVE-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 7 A, 10 a. Price, $10.40. FOUR-LINE PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. GREAT PRIMER PEAKED. 22 A, 27 a. Price, $3.80. FIVE-LINE PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. 7 A. Price, $7.15. SIX-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. 5 A, 7 a. Price, $11.35. Imaginary Profit in Working TWO-LINE SMALL PICA PEAKED. A, 24 a. Price, $4.60. Cheap at a Dollar Apiece TWO-LINE ENGLISH PEAKED. 14 A, 20 a. Price, $6.40. SUSPENSION Very Patriotic Deean Waves MUSHMUD Public Men MASSIVE Demented Liberal Charge DIICTIC Rough Roads Six-LINE PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. 7 A. Price, $9.90. Growing of Turnips SEVEN-LINE PICA GOTHIC EXTRA COND. No. 2 J. SEVEN-LINE PICA CHAMFER CONDENSED. 5 A. Price, $10.30. 5-LINE PICA GOTHIC EX. COND. FOUR-LINE PICA PEAKED. 7 A, 10 a. Price, $10.15. For sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS. Treas. 3333333333333333333 حححححح FRENCH ANTIQUE. BREVIER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 30 A, 60 a, $3.00 LONG PRIMER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 20 A, 38 a. $2.50 ENGRAVING ON WOOD AND STONE. FRENCH CHINA TEA SETS American, French and German Chromo-Lithographs Bohemian Ware and Fine Enameled Jewelry Cut and Stained Glass. 374 Landscapes and Portraits. 256 PICA FRENCH ANTIQUE. 20 A, 38 a, $3.35 GREAT PRIMER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 10 A, 16 a, $2.80 INTERESTING WORKS In every Department of Literature 25 Charming Volumes FLOWER GARDEN Balsams, Roses, Geraniums Morning Glory. 12 DOUBLE ENGLISH FRENCH ANTIQUE. 6 A, 8 a, $4.40 DOUBLE SMALL PICA FRENCH ANTIQUE. 10 A, 16 a, $3.70 GOLD PENS Western Agents IRON FOUNDERS Portable Steam Engine DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER FRENCH ANTIQUE. 4 A, 6 a, $5.35 Government Printing Office NEW MACHINES CANON FRENCH ANTIQUE. 4 A, 5 a, $8.55 Handsome Specimens CONTINENT FOUR-LINE PICA FRENCH ANTIQUE. 3 A, 4 a, $7.50 Commercial Times MONUMENT Cast by the CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. ====================== PLAIN AND FANCY LETTER $3.55 Two-L. PICA TITLE TEXT OPEN, No. 3. $4.85 PICA EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 6. OUTLINES AND SKELETONS Longshanks Spindlefellow, Editor and Publisher 123 4567890 Wealthy Gentlement NONPAREIL OLD STYLE TITLE. $3.75 LABOUR QUESTION Toil Placed on other Shoulders I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 90 TWO-L. ENGLISH TITLE TEXT OPEN, No. 3. $5.75 ENGLISH EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 6. *3-30 MINION OLD STYLE TITLE. $3.85 MODERN MARTYRS Tight Lacing, Shoe Pinching SOCIETY OF EXCLUSIVES Autumnal Reception at Delacreme Mansion Bright Sunny Born Two-L. GT. PRIMER TITLE TEXT OPEN, No. 3. $5.80 BREVIER OLD STYLE TITLE. $3.00 TRAILING-SKIRT Poisonous, Dusty, Filthiness GT. PRIMER EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 6. $3.80 GOLDPEN GOODCREDIT Warrant and Certificate of Indebtedness Lover's Plarailisie BOURGEOIS OLD STYLE TITLE. $3.90 ADVENTURES Travelling Correspondent TWO-LINE SM. PICA EXTRA COND. No. 6. $4.05 DOUBLE PARAGON TITLE TEXT OPEN, No.3. $5-30 EVENING MEETINGS Immoral and Profane Association Biliss Eleonora LONG PRIMER OLD STYLE TITLE. $4:35 TELEPHONES Instructing the Egotistic TWO-LINE PICA TITLE TEXT OPEN, $4.55 PICA OLD STYLE TITLE. $4.95 TWO-LINE ENGLISH EXTRA COND. No. 6. $4.40 Delightful Memories MONOTONOUSLY Brilliant Learned Professor EXHAUSTIVE Previous Acquisition TWO-LINE PICA TITLE TEXT. $4.95 NONPAREIL CONCAVE. $1.45 PLEASURE TRIP TO THE ANTIPODES 1234567890 DOUBLE PARAGON ExtrA CONDENSED, No. 6. $5.30 Nature Womanhood LONG PRIMER CONCAVE. $1.65 MATERIALIZED RAINBOW Two-LINE LONG PRIMER FILIGREE. $5.90 PICA CONCAVE. $2.05 DIFFICULT SAILING GREAT PRIMER CONCAVE. $2.80 Two-LINE PICA FILIGREE. $6.60 CANON EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 6. $6.35 THUNDERING YTYRADE SALE TWO-LINE SMALL PICA CONCAVE. $3.45 del PROPERTY GRENADIERS Cutting in Canebrakes Sonc à Caionus LENGTHENED TRADE Persons of Obesity DR. LAW MARRIED PIALANN ORATOR Solid Marching CLEE GROAN Two-LINE GREAT PRIMER FILIGREE. $7.75 Two-LINE PICA CONCAVE $3.90 FIVE-LINE PICA EXTRA CONDENSED, No. 6. $7.70 TWO-LINE ENGLISH CONCAVE. $4.20 FOUR-LINE PICA FILIGREE $10.20 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER CONCAVE. $4.40 For Sale by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. Chas. WELLS, Treas. Border composed of Nonpareil and one-half Rule No. 16, Nonpareil Border No. 206, TRIINI Pearl Rule No. 5, Half Nonpareil Border No. 24. vv PLAIN AND FANCY LETTER. PICA OLD STYLE CONDENSED, No 2. 16 A, 32 a, $2.70 PEARL IONIC, No. 2. 24 A, 48 a, $3.40 NONPAREIL IONIC TITLE. 24 A, 64 a, $3.55 Versatility of the Rising Generation to Wander MODERN APPLIANCES AND EXERCISE IN FASHIONABLE FEEDERS ON MORSELS. 23 Beacon Lights, or Shadows Cast ANTIQUATED MOUNTAINS 78 RELICS OF THIS DEPARTED 36 GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE CONDENSED, No. 2. 10 A, 20 a, $3.55 NONPAREIL IONIC, No. 2. 24 A, 48 a, $3.15 Unfortunate Mortals on the Road to Debt SILENT MEMOIRS OF THE YEAR 45 BREVIER IONIC TITLE. 24 A, 64 a, $4.10 SUPPLEMENTED THE PROCEEDING CONSIDERED OPINIONS 42 Oratorical Declamations REGION OF TRUTH 26 BREVIER IONIC, No. 2. 24 A, 48 a, $3.45 Hard Times, or The Road to Sadness LONG PRIMER IONIC TITLE. 18 A 48 a, $4.30 PASSING OVER THE GLACIERS INTELLECTUAL BANKRUPTS 67 DOUBLE PICA OLD STYLE COND. No. 2. 6 A, 12 a, $4.10 RESIST TROUBLES 82 LONG PRIMER IONIC, No. 2. 18 A, 36 a, $3.45 CURRENCY QUESTION 23 Two-LINE SMALL PICA UNIQUE, NO. 2 J. 12 A, 20 a. Price, $4.40. PICA IONIC, No. 2. 16 A, 32 a, $4.20 Grab Grind and Pinch Two-LINE ENGLISH UNIQUE, No. 2 J. 8 A, 16 a. Price, $5.35. DBL, GT. PRIMER OLD STYLE COND. No. 2. 4 A, 8 a, $4.95 GT. PRIMER IONIC, No. 2. 12 A, 24 a, $5.40 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER UNIQUE, No. 2 J. 7 A, 12 a. Price, $6.10. That Child of His Liquid Dry Goods in Package WE UNITED 45 Point-Lace, Ruffles and Muits SOLID ON SILVER 89 Heterogeneous Wonder Fashion List Numerous Notes DECLINE 20 DUSTY PENS 4 Philosophy, History Rudge STROLLED 5 Smutmouth Seribblings SISTER 39 Never Fade Assembly Building GREEDS 9 DOUBLE SMALL PICA IONIC, No. 2. 10 A, 20 a, $6.70 Two-LINE SMALL PICA UNIQUE. 12 A, 20 a. Price, $4.40. DBL. PARAGON OLD STYLE COND. No. 2. 3 A, 6 a, $4.40 Bold Robert Magic Artists Barnaby Radyo Social Club TWO-LINE ENGLISH UNIQUE. 8 A, 16 a. Price, $5.50. DOUBLE EGLISH IONIC, No. 2. 6 A, 12 a, $6.80 TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER UNIQUE. 7 A, 12 a. Price, $6.50. NONPAREIL OLD STYLE ANTIGUE. 36 A, 70 a. Price, $3.15. Pecksniff Doublets and Absconders' Leggings BREVIER OLD STYLE ANTIQUE. 36 A, 70 a. Price, $3.c). Jenkintown Pippins, Round and Sound TWO-LINE SMALL PICA ROMANESQUE. 8 A, 14 a. Price, $3.60. DOUBLE GREAT PRIMER IONIC, No. 2. 6 A, 12 a. 8.05 LONG PRIMER OLD STYLE ANTIQUE. 36 A, 52 a. Price, $4.50. Perfumed Ladies' Headquarters TWO-LINE ENGLISH ROMANESQUE. 7 A, 12 a. Price, $4.85. PICA OLD STYLE ANTIQUE. 25 A, 32 a. Price, $4.05. Frauds in Belgian Blocks GREAT PRIMER OLD STYLE ANTIQUE. 11 A, 20 a. Price, $4.55. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER ROMANESQUE. 5 A, 8 a. Price, $5.10. Safe Deposit Company Fast Men STORM1 Cooking Machines Necessary Trouble TINT Meadow Lands Cabinets, Cases FURNITURE Bound HUNTERS DOUBLE PARAGON FRANKLIN RAY SHADE. 4 A, 6 a. $10.00. TWO-LINE ENGLISH ORNA. NO. 26. 4A, 6 a. $4.20 TWO-LINE GT. PRIMER ORNA. No.l. 4 A, $2 25 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. LE JUDUL LOUD Composed of Half Nonpareil Border No. 22, and Nonpareil Border No. 218. ULUDUDL # 0000 DOUBLE PARAGON HEADING SCRIPT. PRICE OF COMPLETE FONT, INCLUDING THE THREE STYLES OF LOWER CASE, $25.00 - PATENTED. DOUBLE PARAGON HEADING SCRIPT, No. 1. 12 a, 5 A. Price per Font, $15; Lower Case only, $7. The Oiations on Demosthenes Soonumental outplures on Soome DOUBLE PARAGON HEADING SCRIPT, No. 2. 12 a, 5 A. Price per Font, $14; Lower Case only, $6. American Greek Pullisheis. The Commissioni a Subtii Miiks. 1878 andsome Ditter. S DOUBLE PARAGON HEADING SCRIPT. No. 3, 12 a, 5 A. Price per Font, $13; Lower Case only, $5. Bemember This Beautiful Slow Peript Toucantil Viting 364 . The Vonited States Treasuren, FIVE-LINE PICA HEADING SCRIPT. 4 A Caps, a complete fount, including the three Lower Cases, $35.00. LOWER CASE No. 1. Sa, with Caps etc. $20.00. Lower Case only, $9.50. LOWER CASE No. 2. Sa, with Caps, $19.00. Lower Case only, $8.50. Home Insurance Co Soamnjarleiv Gerinments LOWER CASE No. 3. 8 a, with Caps, $18.50. Lower Case only, $8.00. a CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. ito Composed of Nonpareil Borders, No. 207. 00000000 and No. 211. OOOOOO 03 SCRIPTS. DBL. GT. PRIMER MODEL SCRIPT. $13.75 The Cincinnati Supe eundy C. Somnufacturers of all, Arinds of Punting Tresses No. 201 Vine Street Any Cand, Beautiful Sorips Hamilton 16 FIVE-LINE PICA HEADING SCRIPT. Four A Caps, a complete Font, including the Three Lower Cases, $35.00 8 a Lower Case, No. 1, with Caps, &c. $20.00.---Lower Case only, $9.50 LOWER CASE, No. 1. 8 a. Lower Case, No 2, with Caps, &c. $1900-Lower Case only, $8.50 LOWER CASE, No. 2. She Vonion Insuiance Co. Commercial Sitional Banking Wholesale Dealer in Diy Goods 8 a, Lower Case, No. 3, with Caps, &c., $18 50.- Lower Case only, $8.00 LOWER CASE, No. 3. DOUBLE PICA ROUND FACE SCRIPT. 1672 lbs. $15 50 We desire to call your attention to the finest assortment of Plain and Fancy Type, Rule, Borders, Corners, Cuts, FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. SCRIPTS. GREAT PRIMER PAYSON SCRIPT. 28/2 lbs. $28.50 DBL. PICA PENMAN SCRIPT. Complete with Two Founts of Lower Case. $29.76 We hare the largest stock and the greatest variety of French China Glassware, Table and Ornamental Articles to be found in the Westo fames 16. Rabins, Portsmouth DOUBLE PICA PAYSON SCRIPT. 31 lbs. $27.90 TWO-LINE SMALL PICA SCRIPT, No. 7. Whole font. $20.00 Hall $10.00 Beccinéd in good ordev and Anthony Thoinly H Cincinnati Sype Founding The attention of wholesale and Siwspapes and pob offres vetail dealers is invited, by the undersioned, to their large stock Messrs. Sbolenshade g Co. take pleasure of Foreign Waika, Periodicals. in assuing the musical public that every Piano bearing their name can be equal Script from the Cincinnati Foundry. Every description. We desie to call of Fancy Belter: Printing for sale in this city, induling Bunge finest lot of goods in our line over offered DBL. GREAT PRIMER PAYSON SCRIPT, No.1. 32 lbs. $26.25 DOUBLE ENGLISH SCRIPT No. 4. Whole font. $23.60 Half 11.89 call your attention to the DBL. GREAT PRIMER PAYSON SCRIPT, No. 2. 32%lbs. $26.65 THREE-LINE PICA SCRIPT, No.3. Whole font. $22.25 Hall 11.15 Dealers in Õmbroidery North Insurance Company . FOUR-LINE SMALL PICA SCRIPT. Whole font. $21.00 Hall $10.50 Commission Brokers French Diinting Onde Consulting American Patent William Sirmstrong Nonparail and Asteroid Barmon, Sonic Co., Machines of Excellence DOUBLE PARAGON PAYSON SCRIPT. 31 lbs. $28.45 FOR SALE BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS. Treas. NONPAREIL GERMAN. NONPAREIL GERMAN. Der Bedarf von deutſchen Schriften iſt in dieſem Lande ein immerwährend ſteigender; hauptſächlich Schriften, die ſich für Zeitungsdruck eignen, werden verlangt, und die Hauptaufgabe des Schriftgießers iſt, dauerhafte und dabei leſerliche Schriften herzuſtellen. Schwere fette Schrift bewährt ſich für Zeitungen am beſten. Der Schnitt der Schrift hat mehr mit der Dauerhaftigkeit zu thun als die Güte des Metalls. Beinahe jeder Schriftgießer ſucht, ohne Rückſicht auf die Koſten, das beſte Material zu ſeinen Fabrikaten zu verwenden, da der Koſtpreis des Materials in keinem Verhältniß zum Reſultate ſteht, das durch gutes Metall erzielt wird. Seit langer Zeit haben wir uns bemüht, den Anforderungen der Zeit Genüge zu leiſten und der ſich fortwährend ſteigernde Begehr zeigt, daß unjere Bemühungen von den deutſchen Buchdruckern anerkannt worden ſind. Es war ſtets unſer Beſtreben, das Beſte zu liefern und ziehen es vor, die Ausdehnung des Geſchäfts zu fördern, als großen Gewinn zu erzielen. Unſer Geſchäft iſt das älteſte und umfangreichſte dieſer Art im Weſten, und beſchränkt ſich nicht blos auf Anfertigung von Typen, ſondern mit der Fabrikation aller in einer Buchdruckerei nothwendigen Gegenſtände, mit Ausnahme von einigen Specialitäten, als: Holzſchriften und Farben; wir halten jedoch auch dieſe als Handelsartikel ſtets auf Lager. Die Anfertigung von Preſſen und Maſchinen iſt ein Hauptzweig unſeres Geſchäfts: die Güte derſelben anzupreiſen iſt überflüſſig, da ſeit mehr als 20 Jahren dieſelben für ſich ſelbſt ſprechen. Wir ſind ſtets bereit, Koſtenanſchläge für Buchdruckereien zu machen, die vollſtändige Ausſtattung derſelben zu übernehmen, nöthigenfalls Pläne zu liefern und die Aufſtellung von Maſchinerien zu beſorgen. Accents für die franzöfiſche, ſchwediſche, böhmiſche und polniſche Sprache werden geliefert. Anfragen werden in deutſcher oder engliſcher Sprache beantwortet. Beſtellungen aus irgend einem Specimenbuch werden pünktlich und ſchnell ausgeführt. Was klagt ihr? Warum weint ihr? Freuen ſolltet Jhr euch mit mir, daß meiner Leiden Ziel Nun endlich naht, daß meine Bande fallen, Mein Kerker aufgeht, und die frohe Seele ſich Auf Engelsflügeln ſchwingt zur ew'gen Freiheit. Da, als ich in die Macht der ſtolzen Feindin Gegeben war, Unwürdiges erduldend, Was einer freien, großen Königin Nicht ziemt, da war es Zeit um mich zu weinen! Wohlthätig, heilend, nahet mit der Tod, Der ernſte Freund! Mit ſeinen ſchwarzen Flügeln Bedeckt er meine Schmach Den Menſchen adelt, Den tiefgeſunkenen, das leßte Schickſal. Die Krone fühl ich wieder auf dem Haupt, Den würd'gen Stolz in meiner edlen Seele! Wie? Melvil hier? – Nicht alſo, edler Sir! Steht auf! Ihr ſeid zu Eurer Königin Triumph, zu ihrem Tode nicht gekommen. Mir wird ein Glück zu Theil, wie ich es nimmer Gehoffet, daß mein Nachruhm doch nicht ganz Jn meiner Feinde Händen iſt, daß doch & in Freund mir, ein Bekenner meines Glaubens, Als geuge daſteht in der Todesſtunde. Der Bedarf von deutſchen Schriften iſt in dieſem Lande ein immerwährend -ſteigender; hauptſächlich Schriften, die ſich für Zeitungsdruck eignen, werden verlangt, und die Hauptaufgabe des Schriftgießers iſt, dauerhafte und dabei leſerliche Schriften herzuſtellen. Schwere fette Schrift bewährt ſich für Zeitungen am beſten. Der Schnitt der Schrift hat mehr mit der Dauerhaftigkeit zu thun als die Güte des Metalls. Beinahe jeder Schriftgießer ſucht, ohne Rückſicht auf die Koſten, das beſte Material zu ſeinen Fabrikaten zu verwenden, da der Koſtpreis des Materials in keinem Verhältniß zum Keſultate ſteht, der durch gutes Metall erzielt wird. Seit langer Zeit haben wir uns bemüht, den Anforderungen der Zeit Genüge zu leiſten und der ſich fortwährend ſteigernde Begehr zeigt, das unſere Bemühungen von den deutſchen Buchdruckern anerkannt worden ſind. Es war ſtets unſer Beſtreben, das Beſte zu liefern und ziehen es vor, die Ausdehnung des Geſchäfts zu fördern, als großen Gewinn zu erzielen. Unſer Geſchäft iſt das älteſte und umfangreichſte dieſer Art im Weſten, und beſchränkt ſich nicht blos auf Anfertigung von Typen, ſondern mit der Fabrikation aller in einer Buchdruckerei nothwendigen Gegenſtände, mit Ausnahme von einigen Specialitäten, als: Holzſchriften und Farben; wir halten jedoch auch dieſe als Handelsartikel ſtets auf Lager. Die Anfertigung von Preſſen und Maſchinen iſt ein Hauptzweig unſeres Geſchäfts; die Güte derſelben anzupreiſen iſt überflüſſig, da ſeit mehr als 20 Jahren dieſelben für ſich ſelbſt ſprechen. Wir ſind ſtets bereit, Koſtenanſchläge für Buchdruckereien zu machen, die vollſtändige Ausſtattung derſelben zu übernehmen, nöthigenfalls Pläne zu liefern und die Aufſtellung von Maſchinerien zu beſorgen. Accents für die franzöſiſche, ſchwediſche, böhmiſche und polniſche Sprache werden geliefert. Anfragen werden in deutſcher und engliſcher Sprache beantwortet. Beſtellungen aus irgend einem Specimenbuch werden pünktlich und ſchnell ausgeführt. Was klagt ihr? Warum weint ihr? Freuen ſolltet Jhr euch mit mir, daß meiner Leiden Ziel Nun endlich naht, daß meine Bande fallen, Mein Kerker aufgeht, und die frohe Seele ſich Auf Engelsflügeln ſchwingt zur ew'gen Freiheit. Da, als ich in die Macht der ſtolzen Feindin Gegeben war, Unwürdiges erduldend, Was einer freien, großen Königin Nicht ziemt, da war es Zeit, um mich zu weinen! – Wohlthätig, heilend nahet mir der Tod, Der ernſte Freund! Mit ſeinen ſchwarzen Flügeln BREVIER GERMAN, No. 4. BREVIER GERMAN, No. 4. uns Das Gießen der Schriften in unſern Geſchäft iſt ein Fortſchritt, es geſchieht durch die von uns ſeit einiger Zeit erfundene und verbeſſerte Dampfgießmaſchine; dieſelbe liefert beſſere und gleichmäßigere Schriften als die frühere mit der Hand betriebenen Es ſind ſchon häufig Verſuche gemacht worden, Dampf- anſtatt Menſchenkraft zu benußen, dieſelben waren bis daher niemals ſehr erfolgreich, da die dazu verwendeten Mittel als Stufenſcheiben, u. ſ. w., nicht genügend genaue Abſtufung der Geſchwindigkeit erzielten. Das von uns angewandte Syſtem von verſchiebbaren Frictionsſcheiben hat ſich ſo gut bewährt, daß die Fabrikation dieſer Maſchinen ſo wie überhaupt aller Arten Schriftgießermaſchinen einen beträchtlichen Theil unſeres Maſchinengeſchäfts in Anſpruch nimmt. Das Gießen der Schriften in unſern Geſchäft iſt ein Fortſchritt, es geſchieht durch die von uns ſeit einiger Zeit erfundene und verbeſſerte Dampfgießmaſchine; dieſelbe liefert beſſere und gleichmäßigere Schriften als die frühere mit der Hand betriebenen. Hand betriebenen. Es ſind ſchon häufig Verſuche gemacht worden, Dampf- anſtatt Menſchenfraft zu benußen, dieſelben waren bis daher niemals ſehr erfolgreich, da die dazu verwendeten Mitttel als Stufenſcheiben, u. 1. w., nicht genügend genaue Abſtufung der Geſchwindigkeit erzielen. Das von angewandte Syſtem von verſchiebbaren Frictionsſcheiben hat ſich ſo gut bewährt, daß die Fabrikation dieſer Maſchinen ſo wie überhaupt aller Arten Schriftgießermaſchinen einen beträchtlichen Theil unſeres Maſchinengeſchäfts in Anſpruch niumt. Es gibt im Menſchenleben Augenblicke, Wo er dem Weltgeiſt näher iſt, als ſonſt, und ein Frage frei hat an das Schickſal. Solch eine Moment war's, als ich in der Nacht, Die vor der Lügner Action vorherging, Gedankenvoll an einen Baum gelehnt, Hinausſah in die Ebene. Die Feuer Des Lagers brannten düſter durch den Nebel ; Der Waffen dumpfes Rauſchen unterbrach, Der Runden Ruf einförmig nur die Stille. Mein ganzes Leben ging, vergangenes Und fünftiges, in dieſem Augenblick An meinem inneren Geſicht vorüber, Und an des nächſten Morgens Schickſal fnüpfte Der ahnungsvolle Geiſt die fernſte Zukunft. Da ſagt ich alſo zu mir ſelbſt: „So Vielen Gebieteſt du: ſie folgen deinen Sternen Und ſeßen, wie auf eine große Nummer, Ihr Alles auf dein einzig Haupt und find In deines Glückes Schiff mit dir geſtiegen. Doch kommen wird der Tag, wo Dieſe alle Das Schickſal wieder auseinder ſtreut; Nur Wen'ge werden treu bei dir verharren. Den möcht' ich wiſſen, der der Treuſte mir Vor Allen iſt, die dieſes Lager einſchließt. Gib mir ein Zeichen, Schickſal! Der ſoll's ſein Der an dem nächſten Morgen mir zuerſt Es gibt im Menſchenleben Augenblicke, Wo er dem Weltgeiſt näher iſt, als ſonſt, Und eine Frage frei hat an das Schickſal. Solch ein Moment war's, als ich in der Nacht, Die vor der Lügner Action vorherging, Gedankenvoll an einen Baum gelehnt, Hinausjah in die Ebene. Die Feuer Des Lagers brannten düſter durch den Nebel ; Der Waffen dumpfes Rauſchen unterbrach, Der Kunden Ruf einförmig nur die Stille. Mein ganzes Leben ging, vergangenes Und fünftiges, in dieſem Augenblick An meinem inneren Geſicht vorüber, Ilnd an des nächſten Morgens Schickſal knüpfte Der ahnungsvolle Geiſt die fernſte Zukunft. Da ſagt' ich alſo zu mir ſelbſt: „So Vielen Gebieteſt du: ſie folgen deinen Sternen Und ſeßen, wie auf eine große Nummer, Ihr Alles auf dein einzig Haupt und find Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. LONG PRIMER GERMAN, No. 4. LONG PRIMER GERMAN, No. 4. Die Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunſt beruht ureigentlich auf der Erfindung und Herſtellung der beweglichen Lettern. Als Kunſt umfaßt ſie aber alle Manipulationen, die vom Schnitt des Buchſtabens in Stahl bis zur Firirung deſſelben auf dem Papiere nöthig ſind; ja wir fönnen vielleicht noch wei- ter gehen und ſagen, daß auch der Verlagsbuchhandel zu Anfang ein Zweig derſelben war. Einestheils das myſtiſche Dunkel, worin der Bücherdruck gehüllt war, ſo daß man ihn für Zauberei hielt, anderntheils aber auch der wohlthä= tige Einfluß, den er auf die Menſchheit ausübte, indem er ihr die Geiſtesprodukte aller Zeiten und Nationen zugänge lich machte iſt wohl die Veranlaſſung geweſen, daß man die Erfindung des Bücherdrucks den Künſten zugezählt hat. Die Buchdruckerkunſt umfaßt alſo in Summa (incl. Graviranſtalt und Stempelſchneiderei) die Schriftgießerei und die Buch - druckerei, und ſolche Anſtalten, die alle dieſe Specialitäten in ſich vereinigen, können auch heute noch mit Recht das Prädikat Kunſt-Annſtalt führen. De künſtleriſchen Manipulationen ſind eigentlich aber wohl nur beim Graveur und Stempelſchneider zu ſuchen; die Schriftgießerei ſowohl wie die Buchdruckerei gehören dagegen entſchieden den Gewerben an, obgleich ſich mancher Buchdrucker noch gern das lange Künſtlerhaar wachſen läßt. Als Gewerbe nimmt indeſſen die Buchdruckerei den anderen Gewerben, auch der Schriftgießerei gegenüber eine Sonderſtellung ein, der man bisher gar keine Beachtung geſchenkt hat, und die in ſocialer Beziehung doch von ſehr großer Wichtigkeit für den Buchdrucker iſt. Es mag hier eine kleine Abſchweifung erlaubt ſein, um dieſe Sonderſtellung etwas näher in's Auge zu faſſen. Faſt ein jedes Gewerbe producirt Gegenſtände, die nicht blos ſichtbar, ſondern auch fühlbar oder greifbar ſind; es werden zu dieſen Gegenſtänden gewiſſe Rohſtoffe verarbeitet, die dan die Geſchicklichkeit des Die Erfindung der Buchdruckerkunſt beruht ureigentlich auf der Erfindung und Herſtellung der beweglichen Lettern. Als Kunſt umfaßt ſie aber alle Manipulationen, die vom Schnitt des Buchſtabens in Stahl bis zur Firirung deſſelben auf dem Papiere nöthig ſind; ja wir können vielleicht noch wei- ter gehen und ſagen, daß auch der Verlagsbuchhandel zu Anfang ein Zweig derſelben war. Einestheils das myſtiſche Dunkel, worin der Bücherdruck gehüllt war, ſo daß man ihn für Zauberei hielt, anderntheils aber auch der wohlthä- tige Einfluß, den er auf die Menſchheit ausübte, indem er ihr die Geiſtesprodukte aller Zeiten und Nationen zugänga lich machte, iſt wohl die Veranlaſſung geweſen, daß man die Erfindung des Bücherdrucs den Künſten zugezählt hat. Die Buchdruckerkunſt umfaßt alſo in Summa (incl. Graviranſtalt und Stempelſchneiderei) die Schriftgießerei und die Buch = druckerei, und ſolche Anſtalten, die alle die Specialitäten in ſich vereinigen, können auch heute noch mit Recht das Prädikat Kunſt-Anſtalt führen. Die künſtleriſchen Manipulationen ſind eigentlich aber wohl nur beim Graveur und Stempelſchneider zu ſuchen; die Schriftgießerei ſowohl wie die Buchdruckerei gehören dagegen entſchieden den Gewerben an, obgleich ſich mancher Buchdrucker noch gern das lange Künſtlerhaar wachſen läßt. Als Gewerbe nimmt indeſſen die Buchdruckerei den anderen Gewerben, auch der Schriftgießerei gegenüber eine Sonderſtellung ein, der man bisher gar keine Beachtung geſchenkt hat, und die in ſocialer Beziehung doch von ſehr BOURGEOIS GERMAN, No. 3. PICA GERMAN, No. 1. Wir halten außer unſeren eigenen ſtets ein vollſtändiges Lager von Jobſchriften aller anderen Gießereien an Hand und ſind deßwegen im Stande, in kürzeſter Friſt Joboffices irgend welcher Größe auszuſtatten. Alle unſere Leads ſind durch eine von uns erfundenen Maſchine mathematiſch genau ausgeführt und werden dieſelben zu dem nämlichen Preiſe verkauft als wie die nur gegoſſenen. Der durch den größeren Verkauf erzielte Nußen wiegt die daran verwendete Arbeit circa 15 Prozent auf. Meſſingarbeiten, als : Linien, Ecken, Labeleinfaſſungen, Leaders, u. . w., werden von uns durch bedeutend verbeſſerte Maſchinen genau und theilweiſe billiger ausgeführt, als irgend ein anderes Etabliſſement dies zu thun im Stande iſt. Jobpreſſen unſerer eigenen Conſtruction ſowohl als die der beſſeren Claſſe anderer Firmen ſind in großer Auswahl ſtets an Hand. Die lepteren werden zu Manufacturers Preiſe abgegeben. Für Koſtenanſchläge und Specimenbücher addreſſire Cincinnati Type Foundry, 201 Vine-Straße. Ein poetiſches Werk muß ſich ſelbſt rechtfertigen, und, wo die That nicht ſpricht, da wird das Wort nidyt viel helfen. Man könnte es alſo gar wohl dem Chor auch überlaſſen, ſein eigner Sprecher zu ſein, wenn er nur erſt ſelbſt auf die gehörige Art zur Darſtellung gebradyt wäre. Aber das tragiſche Dichterwerk wird erſt durcy die theatraliſche Vorſtellung zu einem Ganzen: nur die Worte giebt der Dichter, Muſik und Tanz müſſen nody hinzukommen, um ſie zu beleben. Solang nod dem Chor dieſe ſinnlicy mädytige Begleitung fehlt, ſolang wird er auch in der Oekonomie des Trauerſpiels als ein Außending als ein fremdartiger Körper und nur als ein Aufenthalt erſcheinen, der ſtets den Gang der Handlung unterbricht, der die Täuſchung ſtört, und der den Zuſchauer erkältet. Um dem Chor ſein Redit anzuthun, muß man ſich alſo von der wirklichen Bühne auf eine mögliche verſeßen; aber Das muß man überall, wo man zu etwas Höherem gelangen will. Was die Kunſt nocy nicht hat, Das ſoll ſie nocy erwerben; der zufällige Ein poetiſches Wort muß ſich ſelbſt rechtfertigen, und, wo die That nicht ſpricht, da wird das Werk nicht viel helfen, Man könnte es alſo gar wohl dem Chor überlaſſen, ſein eigner Sprecher zu ſein, wenn er nur erſt ſelbſt auf die gehörige Art zur Darſtellung gebracht wäre. Aber das wirklich tragiſche Dichterwerk wird ſtets erſt durch die theatraliche Vorſtellung zu einem Ganzen: nur die Worte giebt der Dichter, Muſik und Tanz müſſen hinzukommen, um ſie zu beleben. Solang Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. German Titles BREVIER GERMAN TITLE, No. 1. 15 A, 45 a, $2.75 Luſtig gelebt und felig geſtorben. NONPAREIL GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 15 A, 50 a, $2.35 Einfürunga-Verordnung, Miniſterial-Inſtructionen Beobachtung der Partiellen Sonnenfinſterniß NONPAREIL GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 1. 24 A, 60 a, $3.10 Geſellſchaft zur Beförderung nütlicher Wiſſenſchaften BOURGEOIS GERMAN TITLE, No. 1. 12 A, 40 a, $2.95 Salz und Brod macht Wangen roth. BREVIER GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 1. 15 A, 50 a, $3.25 Karl Borromäus Schul- und Leſe Verein. MINION GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 15 A, 50 a, $2.70 Verlag Außerordentliche Sißungen des Deutſche Reichhaltiges Lager Neuer Spielwaaren LONG PRIMER GERMAN TITLE, No. 1. 14 A, 30 a, $3.70 Im Mondſchein am Bach. LONG PRIMER GERMAN TITLE COND. No.1. 15 A, 50 a, $3.70 Stempelſchneider und Schriftgießer PICA GERMAN TITLE, No. 1. 12 A, 30 a, $3.70 BREVIER GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 15 A, 50 a, $2.85 Einladung zum Abonnment auf das Journa Landſchaften von der Rheingegend Induſtrie und Ackerbau. PICA GERMAN TITLE •COND. No. 1. 15 A, 50 4, $4.85 Deutſche National-Verſammlung. NONPAREIL GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 30 A, 60 a. $3.50 Alles im Univerſum unſeres Weltſyſtems iſt einem natürlichen Prozeß der Entwickelung BOURGEOIS GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 15 A, 50 a, $3.15 Menſchen und Sitten der Vereinigten Auf dem Congreß zu Karlsbad GT. PRIMER GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 1. 15 A, 50 a, $8.45 Buchdruckerei Maſchinen BREVIER GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 15 A, 45 a. $2.75 Alles im Univerſum unſeres Welt- ſyſtems iſt einem natürlichen Prozeſ GREAT PRIMER GERMAN, No. 5. 24 lbs. $12.48. 48 lbs. $24.96 LONG PRIMER GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 12 A, 40 a, $2.90 Zeitungen für Handel und Gewerbe Luzern am Vierwaldſtätter See LONG PRIMER GERMAN TITLE No. 2, 14 A, 30 a. $3.70 Alles im Univerſum unſeres Weltſyſtems iſt einem natürlich SMALL PICA GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 9 A, 30 a, $2.25 Die Gerichtsbarkeit der Bühne fängt an, wo das Gebiet der weltichen Ge- ſeße endigt. Wenn daß PICA GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 12 A, 30 a. $3.70 Gran Dizionario grammatico-practic Mancheſter Taſchen-Kalender Alles im Univerſum unſere Der Einfluß der Deutſchen PICA GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 9 A, 30 a, $2.70 DBL. SMALL PICA GERMAN, No. 5. 24 lbs. $12.00. 48 lbs. $24.00 GREAT PRIMER GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 7 A, 20 a, $3.70 Mährchen und Jugendſchriften Elementar-Mathematic Alte Bildergallerie von Deutichland Wenn man ſich der ſchönen Natur erin- nert, welche die alte Grichen umgab; ſo ENGLISH GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 8 A, 25 a, $2.60 DBL. SMALL PICA GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 7 A, 20 a, $4.85 Cijenbahn von St. Louis na Chicago, New York Göthe in Zittau Trauerſpiels DOUBLE ENGLISH GERMAN, No. 5. 24 lbs. $12.00. 48 lbs. $24.00 GREAT PRIMER GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 7 A, 20 a, $3.00 DOUBLE ENGLISH GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 4 A, 10 a, $4.90 Neuhäuſel, Möllenbed Götter und Heron Posth, Bern Es giebt in der griechiſchen Fa bellehre keine fürchterlichere DBL SM. PICA GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 7 A, 20 a, $4.10 DBL. GT. PRIMER GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 3 A, 6 a, $4.20 Germania Schiller's Denkmal Berlin, Leipzig DBL. PARAGON GERMAN TITLE, No. 2. 3 A, 6 a, $4.50 DBL. PARAGON GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 3 A, 6 a, $4.00 DBL. ENGLISH GERMAN TITLE COND. No. 2. 4 A, 10 a, $4.00 Der Sun Albrecht Dürer Göthe, Jena CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. German PICA BLACK CONDENSED. No. 3. 10 A, 20 a, $1.40 GREAT PRIMER MISSAL. 6 A. 10 a, $2.00 PICA BLACK ORNA. No. 3. 10 A, 20 a, $1.40 Dante's Hölle; Reintau. Brücke Fumuriling zur Jirljjudit. Rekin Deutsche Correspondent GT. PRIMER BLACK COND. No. 3. 8 A, 16 a, $1.65 GREAT PRIMER BLACK ORNA. No. 3. 84, 16 a, $1.65 DOUBLE PICA MISSAL. 4 A, 10 a, $3.20 Friedens der Lroclamation San Francisco Telegraph Litrratur und Runt DBL. SMALL PICA BLACK COND. No. 3. 6 A, 15 a, $1.85 DBL, SMALL PICA BLACK ORNA. No. 3. 6 A, 15 a, $1.85 Lolytechniſches Heften DOUBLE ENGLISH MISSAL. 4 A, 12 a, $4.80 Richmond Commercial Grlifjäft Ralruirr DOUBLE ENGLISH BLACK COND. No. 3 4 A, 6 a, $1.80 DBL. ENGLISH BLACK ORNA. No. 3. 4 A, 6 a, $1.80 Wiener Medaille Liberal American DOUBLE PARAGON MISSAL. 4 A, 8 a, $6 30 Winnatsheft DBL, GREAT PRIMER BLACK ORNA. No. 3. 4 A, 6 a, $2.50 DBL. GREAT PRIMER BLACK COND. No. 3. 4 A, 6 a, $2.50 Berlin, Erfurt Boston Times CANON MISSAL. 4 A, 4 a, $6.90 Tüyliifjr DOUBLE SMALL PICA GERMAN. 24 lbs. $12.48. 48 lbs. $24.96 DOUBLE PICA GERMAN. 16 A, 60 a, $16.40 Specerei Waaren Anneration Heſſen FIVE-LINE PICA GERMAN No.1. 4 A, 8 a, $16.10 FOUR-LINE PICA GERMAN. FIVE-LINE PICA GERMAN, No. 2. 4 A, 8 a, $16.10 SIX-LINE PICA GERMAN, No. 2. 3 A, 4 a, $15.70 Zum Verkauf Entene Schiller. Aicitlidic Wolfsblatt Kirchen Zeitung Der Anzeiger SEVEN-LINE PICA GERMAN. 3 A, 4 a, $15.90 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, THEAS. NEWSPAPER HEADLINES. SIX-LINE PICA SLOPING BLACK. EIGHT-LINE PICA SLOPING BLACK. SEVEN-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT ORNA. No. I. SEVEN-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT DOUBLE SHADED. Independent Weekly Berlin Gazette Southern Watchman Toledo Commercial Nevada Telegram National Union EIGHT-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT DOUBLE SHADED, TEN-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT DOUBLE SHADED. The average price of Electrotyped Heads from any type in any Specimen Book is $3.00. Special Engraved Heads made to order at prices according to style and size, from $15.00 to $100.00. THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS WELLS, Treas. 89 NEWSPAPER HEAD-LINES. FOUR-LINE PICA No. 3. CLERMONT SENTINEL FOUR-LINE PICA LIGHT FACE No. 2. CANTON MONITOR FIVE-LINE PICA No. 1. TOLEDO BLADE SIX-LINE PICA LIGHT FACE No. 2. EATON STAR SIX-LINE PICA No. 1. THE TIMES HERALD SIX-LINE PICA ITALIC. The average price of Electrotyped Heads from any type in any Specimen Book is $3.00. Special Engraved Heads made to order at prices according to style and size, from $15.00 to $100.00. 90 THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS WELLS, Treas. NEWSPAPER HEAD-LINES. FOUR-LINE PICA OLD STYLE. CINCINNATI MONITOR FIVE-LINE PICA OLD STYLE. DENVER RECORD Journal of Commerce SIX-LINE PICA OLD STYLE. REPUBLICAN Fairhaven Pioneer SIX-LINE PICA CONDENSED ITALIC. MORNING DISPATCH The Memplis Observer The average price of Electrotyped Heads from any type in any Specimen Book is $3.00. Special Engraved Heads made to order at prices according to style and size, from $15.00 to $100.00. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 91 NEWSPAPER HEAD-LINES. SIX-LINE PICA BLACK COND. No. 3 #inchester Journal EIGHT-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT. EIGHT-LINE PICA MODERN TEXT ORNA. No. I. EIGHT LINE PICA MODERN TEXT ORNA. No. I. Richmond Times Fulton Monitor Oxford Signal Trenton Argus TEN LINE PICA MODERN TEXT. . The average price of Electrotyped Heads from any type in any Specimen Book is $3.00. Special Engraved Heads made to order at prices according to style and size, from $15.00 to $100.00. 92 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas, NEWSPAPER HEAD-LINES. TWO-LINE GREAT PRIMER CONDENSED No. 1. INDIANA TRUE REPUBLICAN TWO-LINE PARAGON CONDENSED No. 4. THE NEW AUBURN REFORMER FOUR-LINE PICA CONDENSED No. 4. WISCONSIN TRUE DEMOCRAT TWO-LINE PARAGON CONDENSED No. 1. NORTH BEND CHRONICLE FOUR-LINE PICA CONDENSED LIGHT FACE No. 1. ROCHESTER BULLETIN FOUR-LINE PICA LIGHT FACE CONDENSED No. 2. CINCINNATI ENQUIRER SIX-LINE PICA LIGHT FACE CONDENSED No. 4. HAMPTON LIBERAL The average price of Electrotyped Heads from any type in any Specimen Book is $3.00. Special Engraved Heads made to order at prices according to style and size, from $15.00 to $100.00. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY 93 0. C. WELLS, Treas. COMBINATION BORDERS. egy Combination Border, Series 14. 10 lbs. $6.00. 8 6 9 co 1 Combination Border, Series 10. 6 lbs. $3.00. Combination Border, Series 11. 6 lbs, $3.00. 95 96 95 104 101 105 97 100 105 97 102 103 کو حیر le 5 Combination Border, Series 6. 6 lbs. $3.00. Combination Border, Series 19. 8 lbs. $4.80 35 36 37 38 46 1 4 I D 1 H T D Combination Border, Series 9. 10 lbs. $5.00. 15 14 17 16 30 2012 94 CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS, Jika Pog COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 22. 10 lbs. $6.00. 2 4 5 6 CUTS FINEST 3 8 PRINTING BORDERS Spoon 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 INKS. RULE sch bec 市 ​Ged go COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 18. 7 lbs. $4.20. COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 16. 6 lbs. $2.40. 1 2 3 1 2 3 7 6 8 D J *) PURE COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 17. ( astor Dit 7 lbs. $4.20. 1 7 8 6 4 3 5 2 9 VERBENAS J. SMITH, Family Chemist, ERIE. ရာ 2009 og 0202 Jo X COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 21. 4 lbs, $2.40 7 1 6 2 8 6606 POGOVORJON GOTONGGONGONICO COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 3. 5 lbs. $3.00. 25 24 ୧୦) ୨୧ 26 نر CO Ceca CD 28 29 3 23 gelea 2616 ୨୧(20୨୧:୧୦୨୧୧୦୨୧୧୦୨୧୧ ୨୧(୧୨୧୧୨୧୧ 2299 SZ O 02 Cou Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 103 0 من Combination Border بیعی ععع SERIES 31. 10 lbs. $6.00. 1 SERIES 33. Slls, $4 S0, } 2 3 مل با SERIES 32. 5 lbs. $3.00. 1 3 4. 5 6 7 8 9 SERIES 43. 4 lbs. $3.20. 6 SERIES 30. 4 lbs. $3.00, 3 دهه * ست مه 102 Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 6.24 . BORDERS. AGA IE. 6-feet including corners, $1.55 7 8 12 4 10 NONPAREII. 6-feet including corners, $1.55 12 64 94 •XC... XC... XC... ***** leee eeeeee 30 65 96 OKKA . . lielokrokielek 49 80 155 74 93 75 MINIONEI IE. 6-feet including corners, $1.55 10 20 ته 600DDDDDDDDDDDDDDD.2 11 21 2 ըԼյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյէ: 12 22 3 0946666666666666666 13 14 23 15 16 24 1 7 17 25 caso 0922923023 2.9888 Sogo 18 26 9 19 27 6 OOOOOOO ... .... ਫੋਟ. ਹਣ ਨਹ... 2 * Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. ie 109. SU SU பபபபபபபபபபபபப பா பப் TWO-TINE MINIONETTE. 6-feet, including corners, $2.50 1 11 16 OCO 5 * கு 17 5 ப .* மடி 1ST 19 10 15 JINI រ 7 --- Tint for No. 15. FOUR-LINE MINIONETTE. 6-feet, including corners, $2.50 12 URU வர தி COMBINATION BORDERS. 165 166 167 SERIES 5. 6 lbs. $3.00. 73 73 பபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபபப 20 21 ( 74 75 பபபபபபபபபபபபபபப COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 23. $7.50. COMBINATION BORDER, SERIES 15. 5 lbs. $3.00. 1 2 7 - 4 E 1 4 5 9 10 11 12 13 14 * 15 16 17 18 19 * 110 Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. ՈՐՀԷՀԷՀԷՀՀԱՀ-Հ-Հ-Հ-Հ-ՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԷՀԼյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյ1յյյյյյյԷյԷյ- ԷյԷյԷյյյյյԷյ-Էյ-Էյ-Էյ-Էյյյյյյյյյյց 6. ոյյյյյյյյ։ S2 25 «ԵՋԱյյյյէյԼյ ԵՀ կը Combination Border, , յյյյյյ։ ՊՑԻ յյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյ CINCINNATI NEW COMBIN ATION BORDER, No, 44. $4 50. 1 2 7 Stop-Cylinder 3 d Type-foundry ծ 201 VINE ST. PRESS COMBIN ATION BORDER, No 45. $2.50. 222222) ) ) OOOOOOOOOO 0000.0 COMBIN.ATION BORDER, No. 46. $5.10. 1 2 4 5 6 7 9 Կյյյյյյյյյյ ru` 10 11 12 13 14 0 0 M 15 16 17 18 19 20 Rought of 11 MINIONETTE BORDERS. . 6-feet, $1.55. No. 13. No. 14. Էլլէյլէյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյ ԼյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյL77 No. 12. GGGGGGGGGGGGGO No. 11. ոյյյյյյյյյյյյյլ No. 15. No. 16. Փոքի 46.22: No. 17. N 0, 18. No 10, 2. Ծ՝ Ծ՝ Ծ` ծ՝ մ "Ծ 8 Ծ Ծ՝ 2.Թ: 1յյյյյ ՔԻ NEW FELT Լյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյ-Լյյյյյյյյյյյ CORNERS ( ) ) ) BIANKANS RULES Չ TAPES . VI °C Ծ` Q ") 2. :): Ծ՝ Ծ Լյյյյյյյյյյյյյյց Էյյյյյէ ԱւյԼյյյյյյԼ Լյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյյէլ յյյյյյյյյյէ 111 CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. X.X.X.X.X.XX.X.X.X) V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V. Y (W.YOX.YY. 7 남 ​ENEWZ Combination Border, Series 48. JYYYYYYY 15 tot CHARACTERS. FONTS, 16 LBS. PRICE, $12.00 1 1 6 7 8 9 10 | 11 en a 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 លល 5 ates NOTICE. This Border is put up in Founts large enough for ordinary use, but purchasers of Founts will be supplied with any amount of special sorts desired, at reg- ular Border rates. Six Y C: CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. 112 (X.X.X.X.X.X.X.X.X.X.X ORIGINAL BORDERS. -0000000 w PICA BORDER, No. 205. PICA BORDER, No. 201. ht X 10 feet, $3.00 10 feet, $3.00. ma ni Tamanho. PICA BORDER, No. 202 PICA BORDER, No. 206. 10 feet, $3.00. 10 feet, $3.00. DZI 野 ​సమయంలో PICA BORDER, No. 203. PICA BORDER, No. 207. SE F DILI . 10 feet, $3.00. 10 feet, $3.00. GSTS 15600305500450550.00 PICA BORDER, No. 204. PICA BORDER, No. 208. II 10 feet, $3.00. 10 feet, $3.00. BRASS RULES. Series 15. 6 to Pica, No. 5. Nonpareil, No. 15. 6 to Pica, No. 7. Nonpareil and one-half, No. 15, Series 14. Nonpareil, No. 14. Series 16. Nonpareil, No. 16. Nonpareil and one-half, No. 14. Nonpareil and one-half, No. 16. Pica, No. 14 Pica, No. 16. Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. ORIGINAL BORDERS . HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 1. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 7. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 9. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25 10 feet, $2.25. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 2. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. S. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 10. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 3. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 11. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 4. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 12. THESE Borders have been especially designed to supplement and combine with each other and with Brass Rules, of which many are imitations. The main pieces are cast in long sections to facilitate composition, and stay better on their feet, so as to conceal the joints. The Corners are cast on L Shaped bodies which justify with the borders; are not so liable to displacement as m corners; and when used with rules, hold the mitred corners in position admirably. Our experience proves that ten feet is a good useful fount of border; less than that may do for an amateur, but will run short in a business printing- office, so we have printed the prices of ten feet, and not the price per foot. Smaller quantities than ten feet will be charged at regular pound price; viz., Half Nonpareil $2.24, Nonpareil $1.28, and Pica $0.74 per pound. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 5. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 13. M? my 10 feet, 2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 6. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 203. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 14. "} ? 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.25, NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 201. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 204. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 15. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.25. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 202. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 205. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 16. WWV Em 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2,00. 10 feet, $2.25. Cast by CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 252525 ܒܒܒ HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 17. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 25. ORIGINAL BORDERS. SO00000000000000000 to feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25 HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 18. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 22. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 26. o feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 205. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 23. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 215. 00000.. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.60. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 207. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 210. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 216. svog 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 19. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 217. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 211. 0000000 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2,60. MOON DO0000000 252 nnnnnnnnnnnnnn HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 20. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 27. വ NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 212. nnnnnnnnnn 10 feet, $2.60. 2525252525252525 252s 25 252520 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. donnnnnnnnnnnnnnn ഗഗഗE HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 21. HALF NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 24. ITUMINE NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 218. 22 ULLD * 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.25. 10 feet, $2.60. cull will NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 208. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 213. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 219. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. 13-13333 NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 209. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 214. NONPAREIL BORDER, No. 220. IIIIIIII 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. 10 feet, $2.60. ווווווווה ------- Cast by THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. et 00000000 tuli mums 0000000 ILLUSTRATIONS co 25252525252525252525253 Dollars, . too Metal Corner No. 174. 40 cents per set. S PRACTICALITY 000000 NEW BORDERS 000000000000 Cast by the Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. No. 201 Vine Street, CHAS. WELLS, Treas. CINCINNATI. QUINO Metal Corners, Prices for Four Pieces. No. 52 8 to Pica No. 0. 25c. No. 35. Series No. 1 30c. No. 11. 8 to Pica No. 2. 40c 1 No. 59. 8 to Pica No. 0 250. No 3572 Series No. 1 30c. No. 31. 6 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 57. 8 to Pica No. 0. 250. No. 27. Series No. 1. 30c. No. 10. 5 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 58. 8 to Pica No. 0. 250 No. 3 Series No. 1. 450. No. 24. 5 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 60. 8 to Pica No. 0. 25c. 1 No. 30. Series No. 1. 400. No. 63. 5 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 54. 8 to Pica No. 0. 40c. 中 ​No. 29. Series No. 1. 40c. No. 61. 6 to Pica No. 0. 40c. No. 73. 4 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 13. Series No. 1. 40c. No. 9. Series No. 1. 25c. No. 62. 3 to Pica No. 2. 40c. # 出 ​No. 55. Series No. 1 250. No. 19. Series No. 1. 40c. No. 28. Pearl No. 2. 30c. No. 2 Series No. 1 30c. 5 ༡ No. 12. 6 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 34. Pearl No. 2 30c. No. 16. Series No.). 30c. go GE No. 43. 5 to Pica No. 2. 60c. No. 15. 8 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 5. Series No. 1. 30c. No. 25. Series No. 1. 30c. No. 18. 8 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 22. 4 to Pica No. 3. 30c. No. 4. Series No. 1. 30c. No. 42. Nonpareil No. 4. 40c. No. 20. 8 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 6. Series No. 1. 30c. ges CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. (69) METAL CORNERS. Prices for Four Pieces, No. 157. 10 to Pica No. 0. 200. No. 153 Pearl No. 3. 50. No. 116. 3 to Pica No. 4. 250. SK No. 158. Series No.1. 12c. % 12 No. 161. 3 to Pica No. 4. 750. No. 136. Pearl No. 3. 30c. No. 131. Series No.1. 30c. 17 o sie No. 137 Pearl No. 4. 30c. No. 112. 250. Series No. 1. 25c. No. 111. Pearl No. 3. Hoo ot No. 113. Pearl No. 4. 25c. No. 143. Nonpareil No. 3 40c. No. 109. 8 to Pica No. 2. 20c. ER No. 162 Nonpareil No. 4. 25c. No. 166. 8 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 151. Brevier No. 3. 50c. No. 125 Nonpareil No. 4. 30c. No. 117. 6 to Pica No. 2. 30c. I No. 152. Brevier No. 3. 30c. No. 150. Nonpareil No. 4. 50c. No. 124. 5 to Pica No. 2. 40c. No. 7. Brevier No. 3. 30c. 出 ​No. 149. Nonpareil No. 4. 40c. No. 132. 5 to Pica No. 2. 30c. No. 144. Brevier No. 3. 40c. No. 173. Pearl No. 2. 40c. No. 40. Nonpareil No. 4. 40c. No. 148. Minion No.3. 40c. EP No. 103. 20c. Minion No. 4. Minion No. 2 Center No. 104, set 20c. No. 159. 3 to Pica No. 4. 40c. No. 146. 50c. %C 2 No. 14 to ca 3. 40c. No. 150. 3 to Pica No. 4. 30c. No. 115. Pearl No. 5. 30c. - Le (70.) CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. METAL CORNERS. Prices for Four Pieces. No. 163. 3 to Pica No. 5. 40c. No. 133. Long Primer No. 11. 30c. No. 138. Pica No. 13. 50c. ( Male No. 145. Pica No. 12. 40c. No. 142. Nonpareil No. 14. 40c. No. 164. 6 to Pica No. 7. 250. 168 169 170 169% 16874 No. 139. No. 140. 4 to Pica No. 7.2 No. 141. No. 7.} 30c. 30c. Pica No. 12. 남 ​No.'s 168, 25c.; 169, 25c.; 170, 20c. per set. No. 138. Can be used with any Rule. 50c. No. 171. 4 to Pica No. 7. 20c. No. 101. Nonpareil No. 14. 25c. No. 165. 4 to Pica No. 8. 30c. No. 114. Minion No. 14. 40c. No. 130. Nonpareil No. 13. 250. B. X デス ​25 No. 110. Brevier No. 14. 250. No. 154. Minion No. 13. 50c. No. 129. Pica No 8. 30c. ZG No. 121. Long Primer No. 14. 30c. No. 134. Brevier No. 9. 30c. 122 123 12372 No. 156. No. 102. Nonpareil No. 10. 25c. No.'s 122, 20c.; 123, 250 per set. 部 ​12 No. 118. Pica No. 14. 30c. No. 135. Pica No. 10. 30c. No. 155. 119 120 12072 No. 107. 20c. Minion No. 11. Center No. 108, set 20c. No.'s 119, 20c.; 120, 25c. per set. No. 147. Long Primer No. 13. No. 127. Brevier No. 11. 30c. 문 ​No. 126. Minion No. 13. 50c. Brevier No. 13. 50c. No. 138. Pica No. 14. 50c. 40c. 19 먹 ​No. 167. Series No.'s 1 and 2. 40c. Pica No. 13. 30c. No. 105. 20c. Brevier No. 11. Center No. 106, set 20c. OC CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. (71.) CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. Brass Rules. Series O. Series 1. Series 2. Pica, No. o. Pica, No. 1 Pica, No. 2 Long Primer, No. o. Long Primer, No. 1. Long Primer, No. 2. Brevier, No. o. Brevier, No. 1 Brevier, No. 2. Minion, No. o. Minion, No. 1. Minion, No. 2 Nonpareil, No. o. Nonpareil, No. 1 Nonpareil, No. 2. Pearl, No. o. Pearl, No. 1. Pearl, No. 2 3 to Pica, No. o. 3 to Pica, No. 1. 3 to Pica, No. 2 4 to Pica, No. o. 4 to Pica, No. 1. 4 to Pica, No. 2. 5 to Pica, No. o. 5 to Pica, No. 2. 5 to Pica, No. 1 6 to Pica, No. o. 6 to Pica, No. 2. 6 to Pica, No. 1. 8 to Pica, No. o. 8 to Pica, No. 1. 8 to Pica, No. 2. 10 to Pica, No. o. 10 to Pica, No. 1. 10 to Pica, No. 2. Series 10. Series 11. Series 9. Pica, No. 11. Pica, No. 1o. Pica, No. 9. Long Primer, No. 11, Long Primer, No. 10. Long Primer, No. 9. Brevier, No. 11. Brevier, No. 1o. Brevier, No. 9 Minion, No. 11. Minion, No. 1o. Minion, No. 9. Nonpareil, No. 10. Nonpareil, No. 11. Nonpareil, No. 9. Pearl, No. 11. Pearl, No. 1o. Pearl, No. 9 PRICE LISI. 66 WE here present a new and uniform Series of Brass Rules. We have bestowed great care upon the tools and flatter ourselves that the Rules we now produce have never been equaled for uniformity of line and hight, and smoothness of finish and face. These Rules have no knife-edge lines; every line, however delicate, has a distinct flat face. The counters are all sloping, with rounded bottoms, so that they make no trouble to the electrotyper, as rules commonly do. We cut Labor-Saving Rule from all straight line Rules to order and have given a Price- List that will enable the printer to tell the cost of any fount he may require; the cost per pound and the weight of ten-foot founts giving the data for founts of any weight. Very thin Labor-Saving Rules may be us ful on special occasions, but are so easily bent 3 3 4.80 and injured as not to be economical in the long run; for general purposes do not order them thinner than four or five to Pica. Do not order less than ten feet in a fount, or you will be charged extra for it. Make a close calculation of your wants, and order enough at once. A large fount of Rule or Type made up by bits and dribs can scarcely fail to show irregularities, We still show some of our old series of Rules, with notched and ornamented lines; we cut these also into Labor-Saving founts, but not at the new prices; the labor of cutting them being about double that of plain Rule. Any face of Dotted or Leader Rule is made to match any body, and line with any letter, when ordered in sufficient quantities. In printing, rule forms should be put slightly oblique on press to insure perfect rolling. Body. In two feet Cut Smallest founts Cost. strips. Labor-Saving. of Ten feet. Pica..... per ft. 6oc.. per lb. $1.50. weight 6 lbs. o oz. $9.00 Long Primer 46c.... 1.50... 4 8 " 6.75 Brevier 38c. 1.60 05 6.40 Minion 340. 1.60 5 5.30 Nonpareil 300. 1.60 Pearl... 220. 1.60 3.60 Three to Pica 18c. 1.75 14 3:30 Four to Pica. " 140. 1.75 S“ 2.65 Five to Pica 120. 2.50 2.80 Six to Pica. 1OC. 2.50.. 2.80 Eight to Pica Sc. 2.50 12 1.90 Ten to Pica 6c. 3.00 1.90 Mitering Rules: one set only, 150.; more, 10c. each. 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 o 0 66 IO use- Cincinnati Type Foundry Co. C. Wells, Treas. (72) Brass Rules. Series 4. Series 5. Series 3. Pica, No. 3 Pica, No. 4. Pica, No. 5. Long Primer, No. 3. Long Primer, No. 4. Long Primer, No. 5. Brevier, No. 3. Brevier, No. 4. Brevier, No. 5. Minion, No. 3 Minion, No. 4. Minion, No. 5. Nonpareil, No. 3. Nonpareil, No. 4. Nonpareil, No. 5. Pearl, No. 3. Pearl, No. 4, Pearl, No. 5. 3 to Pica, No. 3 3 to Pica, No. 4. 3 to Pica, No. 5. 4 to Pica, No. 3. 4 to Pica, No. 4. 4 to Pica, No. 5. Series 6. Series 7. Series 8. Pica, No. 6. Pica, No. 7. Pica, No. 8. Long Primer, No. 6. Long Primer, No. 7. Long Primer, No. 8. Brevier, No. 6. Brevier, No. 7. Brevier, No. 8. Minion, No. 6. Minion, No. 7. Minion, No. 8. Nonpareil, No. 6. Nonpareil, No. 7. Nonpareil, No. 8. Pearl, No. 6. Pearl, No. 7. Pearl, No. 8. 3 to Pica, No 6. 3 to Pica, No. 7. 3 to Pica, No. 8. 4 to Pica, No. 6. 4 to Pica, No. 7. 4 to Pica, No. 8. Series 12. Series 13. Series 14. Pica, No. 12. Pica, No. 13 Pica, No. 14. Long Primer, No. 12. Long Primer, No. 13. Long Primer, No. 14. Brevier, No. 12. Brevier, No. 13. Brevier, No. 14. Minion, No. 12. Minion, No. 13. Minion, No. 14. Nonpareil, No. 12. Nonpareil, No. 13. Nonpareil, No. 14. Pearl, No. 12. Pearl, No. 13. Pearl, No. 14. 3 to Pica, No. 12. 3 to Pica, No. 13. Long Primer, No. 15. 4 to Pica, No. 12. 4 to Pica, No. 13. 6 to Pica, No. 7. Cincinnati Iype Foundry do. [13] Chas. Wells, Treas. PAIR OF LABOR SAVING RULE CASES. THIS page shows some valuable Rules from the old series which found no place in the new order. In strips the prices are the same as plain Rules. There has always been a difficulty in putting up notched, waved and scolloped Rules in good labor saving founts-- without serious expense For Rules cut by Schemes Nos. 1, 2 and 3. For seven founts short measure Rules. $2.50 per pair. Scheme, No. 3. Scheme, No. 1. Brass Rules. Labor Saving Brass Leaders. 10 feet. 6 to Pica, No. 71. 6 to Pica, No. 168.1 2 16 pieces i em pica. Brass Rule. Labor Saving 10 feet. 8 pieces i em pica, 8 8 4 2% 4 3 4 32 4 4 4 4 5 6 122 2 6 to Pica, No. 137. 6 to Pica, No. 169.1 12 3 12 .. 4 .. 8 5 6 to Pica, No. 138. 6 to Pica, No. 158.1 8 .. 6 .. 2 8 .. 7 .. .. 6 to Pica, No. 139. 6 to Pica, No. 159.1 8 .. 8 8 2 8 .. IO .. 9 10 2 6 .. 12 .. 5 to Pica, No. 141. 6 to. Pica. No. 157.1 2 12 6 2 14 16 14 16 5 .. 4 to Pica, No. 126.* 2 6 to Pica, No. 166. 20 4 18 2 24 28 2 5 to Pica, No. 86. 4 to Pica, No. 149.* 32 36 8 sets Mitres. Larger fonts dou- ble and triple this scheme. 6 to Pica, No. 73.* Pearl, No. 144.7 Scheme, No. 2. Labor Saving Dotted Rule. 6 to Pica, No. 74.* Nonpareil, No. 108.7 10 feet. Scheme, No. 4. 8 pieces i em pica. 8 12 6 to Pica, No. 75.* Pearl, No. 102.7 8 2 4 272 6 to Pica, No. 80,* 4 3 Nonpareil, No. 142.+ 2 4 372 4 1 4 432 6 to Pica, No. 77.* Brevier, No. 143.+ 4 4 5 Labor Saving Brass Rule. 60 feet. 20 pieces i em pica. 16 16 12 2% 12 3 12 3% 12 4 12 4% 12 8 534 8 6 8 6% 8 8 774 12 8 8 874 8 9 8 974 8 IO 4 6 4 to Pica, No. 124.* Brevier, No. 147.4 5 4 7 .. 4 8 .. 6 2 9 .. 3 to Pica, No. 125.* Pearl, No. 105.+ 4 IO .. 4 12 4 14 .. 3 to Pica, No. 136.+ Minion, No. 146.+ 2 16 2 18 Brevier, No. 11. 2 20 4 to Pica, No. 121.* : II 2 .. 12 24 28 2 .. 2 32 4 4 4 13 4 14 4 15 4 17 to 50 24 sets Mitres. 2 Dotted Rules are made to match almost any type in body and line. Founts of Labor-Saving Rule furnished of all kinds except those marked thus (*). Labor-Saving Founts of Rules marked thus (+) $2.50 per pound. For prices of Rules see Price List. Rules marked thus (1) made on bodies of any thickness desired, for column or cross rules. 36 16 2 THE Schemes by which we cut our Labor-Saving Rules are given in the side col- umns of this page. You may know before ordering just how many pieces of each length you will find in each fount. We have now in preparation & new series of Rule Combinations, which for jobbing purposes will be a great improve- ment over the Fancy Rules here shown. The Figures will measure accurately to pica or nonpareil type, and will then match our Labor- Saving Rules exactly. Labor Saving Rule Case. Old style. For Rules cut by Scheme No. 4. $1.75. Single Labor Saving Rule Case. For Rules cut by Scheme No. 1. $.175. (74.) BRASS FLOURISHES Whole Fount, $8.00. Copyright secured, Nov. 16, 1868. Half Fount, $5.00. 1 3 7 10 13 4 12 9 20 21 16 17 45 46 22 18 23 24 25 32 33 49 50 26 40 29 30 15 14 36 31 37 38 39 19 47 48 27 28 54 53 41 51 52 DASHES, SHT , JOHNSON & GILMORE, ANTIQUES, BRASS RULES LASS CORNER Printers and Publishers, GOTHICS, RUNICS, BLOOMINGTON TONICS, DORICS, . PTLE LETTERS METAL CORNERS, Corner Quads. BRASS CORNER QUADS. LABOR-SAVING BRASS LEADERS. Made to match any type, if ordered in suficient quantity. 15 cents per set. Nonpareil Brevier Long Primer Pica Great Primer Double Small Pica Double Pica ... Per lb. $1 60 1 60 50 1 50 1 00 0 90 0 90 2 3 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. (75.) CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. SPECIMENS OF BRASS FLOURISHES OFFICE OF Avenue, URBANA, O. Madison USEFUL MATERIAL LABOR-SAVING BRASS RULE, NEW STYLE AGRICULTURAL MAGAZINE FLOURISHES, , BRASS DASHES. The American Republican SPRINGFIELD, N.Y. GARD CURVES, BRASS BORDERS, LABEL OFFICE OF THE HOMER & BURTON Printers, Publishers AFP PAPER DEALERS BOOKBINDING IN ALL BRANCHES No. 120 Richmond Street. Bordentown. ГНЕ STOKULL SOLUTK 5 FRANKLIN BUILDINGS. 24 SYCAMORE STREET. PORTS MOUTH COMMERCIAL OF THE SUPERIOR MACHINERY. PHE LIGHT CYLINDER NEW OFFICE PFFICE THE NONPAREIL PRESS, PATENT GUILLOTINE PAPER CUTTER IRON FRAME PLOW PAPER CUTTER. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. C. WELLS, TREAS. NEW Typographic Flourishes • Сс Whole Founts, $10.00. Series A. Half Founts, $5.00. 1 10 2 57 12 11 7 5 3 C 13 15 17 19 21 23 22 20 18 16 14 o 25 55 27 29 24 30 23 56 26 36 37 Metal Flourishes. Brass Flourishes. 50 PRINTING MATERIAL 51 all kinds of ORNAMENTAL TYPE a. 41 42 ill .cccccc . • ၁၁၁ကာ ALSO BORDERS, RULES, CORNERS, 43 44 Brass Dashes Brass Rules 32 45 47 54 40 46 33 OG 34 38 52 31 53 39 35 a GOLD PENS PRINTING INKS Do Sign Painter ENGRAVER CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. ♡ (77.) OG METAL FLOURISHES. •ccccc ၁၁၁၁ R. MELDRUM, Pres't. Established 1820.2 W. H. GRAHAM, Sce'y. OFFICE OF THE CONTINENTAL OFFICE OF THE SWHOM - TAHVH NO L TEM FH 27 SYCAMORE ST. IRON FOUNDRY WESTERN LITERARY MAGAZINE AND GENERAL MACHINE-WORKS DOC EWM. SMITH, Treas'r OFFICE, 21 MAIN ST. 5 Central Avenue, R. M. PRESTON, Special Agent mazon Insurance Co. CCCCCC OF CINCINNATI. CE WASHINGTON OFFICE OF THE J. BATEM MANUFACTURER OF RUSTIC ORNAMENTS FOREST AVENUE, ROCHESTER اد NILES & CRANE e CHRISTIAN ADVOCATE DESIGNERS General Printers .ccccee. 353 No. 47 COLUMBIA ST. AND WOOD ENGRAVERS ..cccccc. 125 West Farmington Street WWilmington, O, (78.) CAST BY CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS E NEW TYPOGRAPHIC FLOURISHES Series B. Whole Founts, $15.00. Half Founts, $8.00. 60 61 63 65 64 62 60 66 68 70 69 67 71 73 75 74 72 - 76 78 80 79 77 G 81 83 85 86 84 82 1 87 89 91 90 88 ccc. .ددددد 92 94 96 95 93 a 97 99 101 100 98 102 104 106 105 103 o CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, Treas. (79.) SPECIMENS ccc > OF MODERN DESIGN . Merchants Printing liorks = FRANKLIN ST. DENYER WM. JOHNSTON ENGRAVING JOHN BUCHANAN STATIONERY PETER GILBERT BLANK-BOOKS THOS. WILLIAMS PUBLISHERS OF THE COLORADO MONTHLY MAGAZINE THE FRANKLIN 3 INSURANCE COMPANY MUTUAL BENEFIT INSURANCE Fire and Marine CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, TREAS. (80.) BRASS DASHES. 170 10c. 96 10c. 99 10c. 171 10c. 89 10c. 173 10c. 174 10c. 81 10c. 76 10c. 164 10c. 108 10c. 18 10c. 157 10c. 172 10c. 135 10c. 130 100. 112 10c. 215 25c. 163 10c. 105 10c. 217 30c. 10 10c. 1 10c. 214 25c. 79 10c. 86 10c. 219 30c. 85 10c. 12 10c. 216 250. 93 10c. 73 10c. 212 35c. 11 10c. 2 10c.. 213 35c. 72 10c. 218 40c. 211 40c. 220 40c. 210 50c. 209 50c. 208 50c. 221 750. 222 75c. 223 75c. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas Brass Ovals and Ciroles. 17 18 14 15 11 12 8 9 5 6 3 18 19 15 16 12 13 9 10 6 3 4 20 19 17 16 14 13 11 10 8 7 PRICES. CIRCLES. I to 6, $0.60 each. 7 to 13, 0.75 14 to 17, 1.00 18 to 20, 1.25 66 OVALS. 1 to 6, $0.90 each. 7 to 12, 1.00 13 to 16, 1.25 17 to 19, 1.50 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. A much greater variety of sizes and lengths are given in the founts than shown on this page EN E Ge IMPROVED PATENT CURVES AND CLAMPS, MANUFACTURED BY THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY. IMPROVED PATENT BRASSI i CLAMPS, From Nonpareil to Four-line Pica. CURVES CLAMPS, Fonts of 170 pieces. Price, $8.00. Patented Sept.2, 1873. FORMING! EVERY VARIETY OF CURVED LINES, 3 WE here exhibit the complete construction of a form containing straight and bent lines; it is intended to illustrate the use of New IMPROVED PATENT BRASS CURVES AND CLAMPS. They are indicated by hyphen rule and are made to hold lines of any shape and body firmly. The Clamps match nonpareil, brevier, long primer, pica, great primer, double small pica, double pica, double english, double great primer and four-line pica, and are marked to designate body. All intermediate sizes, for instance, bourgeois, can be clamped with long primer clamps, in connection with a thin lead in order to make up for smaller body. They can be used in connection with 6-to-pica leads, enabling the printer to produce any possible variation of straight or curved lines. Lines clamped in this way occupy scarcely any addi- tional room, are easily arranged, can never be thrown off their feet, and save a great amount of justification. All the reglets and quads required to lock up those ten lines in our little job are shown in print, in order to prove these facts PER SET OF 170 PIECES, $8,00. • E 117 9. BILL HEAD LOGOTYPES, Price for complete set, $5.00 45 40c. 46 40c. 47 40c. 48 30c. 49 40c. 50 40c. ught of OFFICE Office Bought of 314 tiglit TOF ul BOUGHT OF of 51 40c. 52 40c. 53 40c. 54 350 55 35c. 56 350. 57 40c. BOUGHT Orrier ice Bought OF Hiffice of Office UF 30 of OF. LOF BOUGHT 58 40c. 59 40c. 60 40c. 61 40c. 400. SSUUGAR Vought OF BOUGHT * BOUGHT Bought OF 93 750. 80 $1.25 92 750. Bonght of THE First National Bank Bonght of OF Also "Second and Third National Banks," same style. 88 50c. 89 50c. 77 50c. 78 50c. 74 12c. 75 12c. 91 12c. BOUGHT BOUGHT OFFICE OF 187 OF OF BOUGHT OF 81 40c. 79 30c. 84 40c. 76 20c. 73 12c. Bought of NA S Benghtof Bett M H con и 70 12c. 69 12c. 67 12c. 72 250. M M M No Say to 87 40c. 85 40c. 63 250. 66 25c. 65 20c. Cincinnati, O Cincinnati, O. m Bearer or Oider Delary CARD LOGOTYPES. In fonts of 108 pieces. Price $3.00 1 2 3 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 HD and pue ND JOD and and ano AND Ouv AND AND int ano 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 ANOS AND AND کہ 29 Filtr CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDI CO CHAS. WELLS, Treus. 118. BILLHEAD LOGOTYPES. 133 40c. 134 35c. Dollars Orgice we OFFICE OF OUGHT office of WA 3 OR BA- 135 35c. 136 350. 137 35c. 138 350. 139 35c. 140 35c. OUGHT OF B. Bought of OUGHT FFICE OF BUURT OF Bouche of 141 750. 142 350. 143 30c. 144 35c. 145 750. OFFICE JOffice BOOGUT 146 50c. 148 40c. crciurd Artired all 147 30c. voo ECEIVED Cue ffice of 152 750. 149 750. 150 400. 151 40c. 00012 کے (2) FFICE OF 18 BOUGHT OF RCRVEIO 153 40c. 154 30c. Rrrriurd from OFFICE OF > MOR Bought alimish OF SITIO 964 60c. 974 40c. 1086 60c. 971 40c. Card Serollis RECE TION رک EREMONY 977 40c. 963 60c. 979 60c. CHO RECEPTION: 981 60c. CEREMONY 965 60c. 967 60c. 1030. $1.50 966 60c. CRECEPTION (agame leeeee 969 60c. eeeeeeeee 1032 $1.50 Beseerer ccceee Peeeeee မှာ - 1031. $1.50. CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. CARD SCROLLS. 978 $1.50 1087 $1.50 975 $1.50 976 $1.50 990 $1.50 968 $1.00 100s 973 $1.50 972 $1.50 970 $1.50 WH . నా 956 $1.75 955 $1.75 958 $1.75 OC G 953 $1.75 MAMMA 954 $1.75 sus 959 $1.75 pe 957 $1.75 25 MICO 960 $1.75 961 $1.75 962 $1.75 Jun Diena THE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. CHECK BLANES 109. 750. 101. 40c. 126. 50c. 105. .750 QOI N. 104. 40c. 115. 30c. 000 OOOCOOOOOOOOOO0000000OUOCO Shares DOLLARS C0000000000000000. 2000 CCOOR 102. 40c. 127. 50c. 106. 750. 110. 750. 113. 750. 122. 50c. 120. 50c. 107. 75c. is No NO 116. 40c. 0. 114. 750. 123. 50c. 121. 50c. 108. 750. ox S 9 111. 750. 128. 50c. 117. 50c. 124. 50c. HALI NUMBER NUMBERS for 129. 50c 125. 50c. 118. 50c. 112. 75c. DOLLARS S DOLLARS 10 YAKO 95 75c. 119. 750. 94" 750. 103. 40c. Rrrrived G side int] Prom Shares crrived CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY, 201 VINE STREET. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 119. CHECK BLANKS CHECK 1. 30c. 2. 300. 3. 30c. Na NO 7.350. 350 5. 350. 6. 350. NO $ NO UMBER SDOLLARS 11. 30c. 9. 25c. 10. 250. $ 13. 30c. 14. 30c 15 350. 1635e. ടിമ, S 17. 30c. 18. 300 19. 300 Na. AS 21. 30c. 22. 30c. 23. 350 34 35€. JVQ M. 27. 30c. 230e 25. 30c. 26. 30c. No. ga NS 29. 400. 30. 10c. 31. 350 32 35e No. S. No. 35. 35c. 38 350 33. 30c. 34. 30c. Ve. $ No. 37. 40c. 38. 40c. 39. 350. 0.350. fy ENO 41. 35c. 42. 350. 43. 350 4.35 . No. NO 8 120 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, TREAS. NEWSPAPER CUTS. Price 6 cents each. 1 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 1s 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Seal. AU 31 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45 an 46 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 14 75 76 T X 79 si 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 ah TS 94 95 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 GC 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 PRATI ca 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 x å X C* 142 143 14 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 03 A € 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 DO7 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 156 157 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. NEWSPAPER CUTS. 197 12c. 198 12c. 199 12c. 200 12c. 201 12c 202 12c. 203 12c. PREST HARDWARE DRY GOODS AUCTION SALES DISSOLUTION COPARTNERSHIP DENTIST. NEW MUSIC 204 12c. 205 12c. 206 12c. 207 12c. 208 12c. 209 12c. 210 120. QUID MUSIC CONCERT EXHIBITION COAL பய UITO CABINET FACTORY AIR 211 12c. 212 12c. 213 12c. 214 12c. 215 12c. 216 12c. 217 12c. 218 12c. 219 12c. 220 12c. 221 12c. ) 120 Seal ** BUCH T C 223 12c. 224 12c. 225 12c. 226 12c. 227 12c. 228 12c. 229 12c. 230 12c. 231 12c NEW MUSIC 2 232 12c. 233 12c. 234 12c. 235 12c. 236 12c. 237 12c. 238 12c. 239 250 240 120 241 30c. 242 30c. 243 30c. 244 200. 245 30c. 246 30c. 247 30c. 248 250. 249 300 250 30c. 251 12c. 252 12c. 253 30c. 254 25c. 255 12e. 256 12e. 257 38c. 258 12c. 259 12c. 260 12c. 261 12c. 262 12c. 263 12c. 264 12c. 265 12c. 266 12c. 267 25c. 268 12c. 269 25c. 270 12c. 271 12c. 272 12c. 273 12c. 274 120 C 275 30c. 276 12c. 277 12c. 278 12c. 279 12c. 280 12c. 281 12c. 282 12e. 283 12c. 284 12c. 285 12c. 286 18c. 287 25c. 288 12c. 289 12c. 290 12c. 291 12c. 292 12c. 293 12c. 294 50c. 295 12c. 296 12c. 297 12c. 298 12c. 299 12c. 300 12c. 301 12c. 302 12c. 303 12c. 90 304 18c. 305 18c. 306 12c. 307 12c. 308 25c. 309 12c. 310 12c. 311 12c. 312 12c. 313 12c. f CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. C. WELLS, Treasurer. 321 12c. 315 12c. 316 12c. 317 25c. 318 12c. 319 12c. 325 12c. 326 18c. A 342 35c. 323 30c. 324 30c. 1042 30c. 346 35c. 322 38c. 314 12c. 327 60c. 328 75c. 338 750. 330 750. 334 750. S ES 329 $1.00 333 $1.90 1054 $1.00 Bu wat 332 750. 339 350. 340 350. 337 75c. 1051 $1 25. 345 750. 341 750. FEERDE w 336 $1.25 335 950. 1055 75c. IES PoonTrust is dead! CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 348 $1.50 347 $2.50 (Page del . S.F.BAKER ENG? D-T. XY'S. CIAL 1053 50c. 350 $4.00 349 50c. 351 50c. IN, 352 $2.00 353 $1 50 CHIUSI JOELINS 2124 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 329 50c. 524 $3.15 525 60c. MERCY 535 $1.25 RECNANJ POPULLORE QUR U COUNTRY LOWRTITUTION 522 60c. 534 $4.50 523 60c. UNUM. OLURIBUS WOND 531 90c. 530 90c. 女​女​女​女 ​OUR LIBERTIES VD OUR VRIGHTS WE (WILL MAINTAIN **** WE ☆ ***** PRIZE TAND TUTET CD WE FAN SALUS POPULI LEXESTO. SUPREMA MDCCCXX. Seals of all the States of different styles shown, at prices to correspond. 444 90c. 443 90c. 540 $1.25 445 $1.25. Mortised. IMPERIUM IMPERIO G IN 526 $1.25 592 $1.85 594 $1.85 596 $1.85 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 493 30c. 492 30c. 486 $1.90 488 30c. 489 300 sir SUHI UUUUUU. CASENOK 485 $1.25 491 $1.90 FREIGHT DEPOT MBIC MAIL EXPRESS FAST MERCHANTS FREICHT DES PATCH LINE DESPATCH UUUU WEWN 19 OD 1081 $1.25 487 $3.75 US MAIL 496 50c. 494 $3.15 பசு TITUT 1082 750. IST UNI 490 $1.25 00000000 LOOOO000 0000000001 1083 $1.00 MORTISED No. 495 கர்ப்பப்ரான $3.75 497 50c. 아이​에 ​to CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 498 650. 946 250. 502 650. 500 350. JM-12 U.S. MAIL U பபபபபா BAHRU LPOLVENCHEHOMPS 499 $1.25 509 $1.25 512 $1.25 الم 1884 501 $1.55 514 $1.25 511 $1.25 FOX 515 $2.50 510 $1.25 TROT பாய om WE Tel 513 95c. TIESU ME GOD TELEGRAPHIE 503 $1.25 UORITUR UTATUD RAUTILUTEEN Inn 506 $3 10 TUTUSTIEDE LA DO LI RUMP MORTISED ITEIT # NH 587 $4.00 CUP CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. (Larger Cuts 16 and 18 inches long.) CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 420 $1.25 421 $1.25 431 $1.25 432 $3.00 ☆ 433 90c. THE CINCINNATI FOUNDRY CO. TYPE LISOHNSON rifo 435 $1.00 1035 $1.25 436 750. 440 90c. 423 12c. 428 18c. 425 18c. 439 $1.00 434 60c. 429 35c. 422 35c. 430 40c. UNURI 1084 60c. W UNUMI 427 60c. 426 50c. DE PLURIBUS I 438 60c. 1085 $1.25 437 50c. Ra Also larger Cuts of Eagles, 12, 18 and 24 inches long, 666 20c. 547 18c. 548 12c. 556 30c. 543 18c. 546 12c. 693 12c. 661 20c. 468 50c. 688 12c. * 672 12c. 685 12c. 507 12c. 637 18c. 662 30c. 647 12c. 700 20c. 649 12c. 684 12c. PAPER L.S. ICH HANGINCS 683 25c. 469 12c. 651 12c. .677 10c. 624 15c. 856 12c. 687 12c. 694 12c. 699 12c. 463 25c. 12 . 7 6 660 38c. 1062 38c. 508 12c. 557 18c. 667 30c. 475 25c. TA * " BATS 553 18c. 551 18c. 541 18c. 542 30c. 691 25c. 545 12c. 928 25c. 554 12c. 555 18c. 479 25c. 375 250. DRY JERE 453 25c. 455 25c. 465 18c. 549 20c. 552 25c. 544 18c 472 25c. FURNITURE 466 65c. 478 25c. 695 20c. 701 25c. 648 12c. 550 25c. 449 30c. 1033 50c. 636 30c. 708 250. 454 650. Salou RERUM 伝い​う ​200 627 90c. 676 250. 610 38c. 476 40c. WINES DIO 618 38c. 609 30c. 632 18c. 709 25c. 611 30c. AUS LUNCH COODS 1043 50c. 457 $1.00 JUUTTUM 674 30c. 658 50c. کارفرما 608 38c. 634 18c. 620 50c. MACK 447 35c. 451 35c. 704 50c. 452 60c. 474 60c. 639 90c. URBANIT MUND CHINA GLASS ANO VEEN'S WARE PETUNTUTIT CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS WELLS, Treasurer. 364 $1.00 365 50c. 366 75c. 367 50c. 368 $1.00 369 $1.00 370 750. 371 750. COAL 372 750. 373 750. 385 40c. 375 60c. 1056 $2.00 376 $1.00 381 90c. 1057 750. 379 750. 875 18c. 380 $1.25 SOLUSIN NECUNE coon SAT WROLES ALS 1058 $1.50 378 $1.25 389 40c. 390 400. WA VAZU 384 30c. 374 25c. 388 $1.00 391 750. 392 750. SHEIN ADAMS CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY Co. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 576 30C 847 30c. 850 38c. nie 387 750. 417 40c. 401 1061 $1.00 1059 30c. 848 30c. 343 30c. 849 30c. 404 40c. 681 40c. 1060 50c. 846 38c. 483 95c. 403 40c. 853 65c. 851 90c. 854 50c. 345 75c. 382 50c. 859 90c. 418 75c. 419 75c. 50c. 0 405 $1.00 400 750. 855 $1.25 1038 50c. 414 $1.00 377 $1.25 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS WELLS, Treasurer. 607 30c. 652 60c. 644 30c. 622 30c. 1039 40c. of Bock Biei; HARDWARE AND CUTLERY 615 50c. 664 40c. S60 250. 477 40c. 461 35c. 464 10c. nnnnnn BOOKS NEATLY SOUND 645 90c. 456 95c. 940 40c. 1043 50c. in GIOR 603 750. 574 90c. 579 90c. 1063 75c. SEDILEN TREVIT 19.VIITED EN 10 In two pieces. 450 $1.00 692 50c. 635 $1.25 OYSTERS 1041 50c. Cu PATRONS PLOW DEEDA 1040 50c. 448 90c. 852 650. 10.0.0.00 0.000) ° 480 65c. 631 60c. 621 50c. 623 38c. 1064 750. 642 90c. 9/4 2 c. 677) 60c. 663 50c. 675 $1.00 OLD VIRCINIA PIPES CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 706 $1.00 588 $1.25 458 $1.00 ܕܐܐܐ coop pread OPTI Dolchi 612 90c. 1036 75c. 602 950, 619 $1.00 SITHE CONSTITUTION/ 942 75c. 600 $1.00 643 $1.25 697 $1.25 G rat 951 750 591 $1.00 945 40c. 950 $1.25 s MACAUS Bhi OLD VIRGIN SCOTCH PIPES 462 $1.90 659 90c. 412 $1.25 luc Il CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 566 950. 568 95c. 570 50c. 564 65c. 582 750. DEATHS MAR GES F.C.B 598 750 559 50c. 561 50c. 567 950. 1065 30c. 473 650. 948 $1.90 939 60c. f ILLS FARE 595 50c. 1066 50c. 925 30c. 630 50c. 926 30c. 930 30c. 931 30c. 583 60c. SLHOINA PYTHIAS. F.C.B. 1067 750. 939 30c. 571 450 1068 40c. 572 30c. 640 50 -THE CONSTITUTION/ H H W W 573 75c. 605 75c. 638 38c. 578 50c. 682 50c. FINIS 1069 650. 565 650. 563 65c. 1070 50c. 100 hro NY 558 $1.00 593 50c. 641 38c. 560 $1.00 625 60c. 1071 75c. 581 75c. 584 75c. OF G PYTHIAS ரொக VOUTE F.C.B. F.C.B. SFIRSI CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 937 $1.00 $1.50 Mortised 657 50c. 1049 40c. В. N 457 $1.25 702 50c. 320 18c. 711 90c. 1037 50c. 1072 $1.25 580 $1.00 OF STHOINY PYTHIAS F.C.B. 599 90c. No. 424 589 60c. 943 40c. 947 50c. 707 60c. 460 40c. 2 690 $1.25 696 $1.25 703 50c. 646 90c. FRRRRRRRRRE VALEN 710 $1.00 590 $1.00. 562 $1.00 606 750. 633 $1.25 PRINTING 1073 75c. 1074 75c. 673 60c. 577 $1.25 TRAILER: LEDGER WA BA SAW CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 935 $1.00 1075 $1.25 1076 $1.00 30aGodon 013013003 1077 656 616 90c. 459 $1.25 604 750. ఇది 650 $1.25 614 $1.50 1078 $1.50 601 $1.25 V... T: PAN EXCELSIOR T ON YOUNG HYSON 000 TH FINE TDA BLACK TEAS son 686 $1.25 698 750. 654 60c. 1079 50c. 1080 50c. 442 $1.25 470 $1.25 712 $1.90 1050 75c. H HARDWARES $ CHINA GLASS QUEENS WAR CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. 864 $1.50 865 $1.25 868 $1.25 869 $1.50 922 $1.25 861 $1.25 HEIDI GE LILLED UN wa 862 $1.50 907 $1.90 ته 952 $1.50 1099 50c. du 900 $1.50 915 $1.50 TO THOROR MODERADOIDUAINETELLET 1100 $1.50 SHOT AD 912 $1.50 1052 $1.50 1101 $1.50 906 $1.50 UWIE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. -CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 793 $1.25 794 $1.25 795 $1.25 CONFECTIONARY WATER ICE ICECREAM FLOUR ESUGAR HU YOn0000 CROCER WHISK del WEDDING CAKE SOAP 218 RAISINS 796 $1.25 797 $1.25 799 $1.25 w 799 $1.25 800 $1.25 801 $1.25 802 $1.25 803 $1.25 804 $1.25 FRESH Sign&nlal Painting BAKER THE ws Siin BAKERY BREAD 806 $1.25 4-TRUNKS CAND UVALISESU 653 50c. 690 50c. 805 $1.25 807 $1.25 670 50c. 678 50c. 626 50c. 679 50c 656 50c. 705 500 TEA CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 808 $1.25 809 $1.25 810 $1.25 AY RUN SOAP PALM SOAP g MUSKY 812 $1.25 813 $1.25 811 $1.25 CANY COPY 815 $1.25 816 $1.25 814 $1.25 or 818 $1.25 819 $1.25 817 $1.25 THOT COFFEE RESTAURANTO HOT COFFEE BILLO FAREA TUUT OYSTERS 822 $1 25 821 $1.25 820 $1.25 0 o Doonga) SUS FIRST ON MEMORY OF CHOP AE OUTLET 597 90c. 569 95c. 629 90c. 655 40c. 628 90c. Frank PALM SOAP 17 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treas. 786 25c. 760 18c. 1097 25c. 1089 250. 1090 25c. 109125c. 1092 20c. 1093 20c. 1094 20c. 1095 20c. 1096 20c. 突然 ​ LOVE PURITI FIDELITY 714 18c. 715 18c. 716 18c. 717 18C. 718 18c. 719 18c, 20 IS, 21 18C. 722 25c. o ※ 7325C. 724 18c. 725 150. 26 18c. 727 18C, 728 18c. 729 250 (3) TSC, 769% 12c. 1 ISC, m → 多 ​782 18c. 733 18c. 734 18c. 735 18c, 736 18c. 737 18c. 738 18c. 739 18c. 747 18C, 748 15C, 762 18c. 768 18c, 革​線 ​RE 742 25c. 743 25C. 744 18c. 749 18c. 752 12c. 753 25c. 754 TSC, 705250, 756 12c. 737 TSC, (X 759 12c. 792 12c. 740 18c. 750 18c, 741 18c. 765 12c. 769 6c. 770 6c. 758 6c. 766 6c. 7676C, 726c, 768 60. T1 SC, 780 50c. 781 38.. 75125c, 782 38c. 783 50c. 784 60c. 787 38c. 790 30c. 764 38C, 788 60c. 六 ​789 $1.25 791 $1.25 行 ​30C, 785 50c. E 776 50c. 779 50C, 1098 $1.00 773 50c, 774 50c. 77550C. 778 50c. 关 ​If not delivered in ten days return to CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, TREA8. CUTS. 75 cents each. 1000 1001 1002 1003 LIS-0-0-0-06-1 A 1004 1005 1006 1007 NUN Wit 1008 1009 1010 1011 ERTEN VCD T т PYT T 1012 1013 1014 1015 الى الداله 1016 1017 1018 1019 PLOCH quella 1020 1021 1022 1023 99 NE Wind 426 Z OTTOTO 1024 1025 1026 1027 wwwhat ரொமா Shirt 1028 1158 1029 JAN 1159 SCHOOL BOOKS di சோயா KNIGHT.CO.CAN.DE CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. CUTS. One Dollar each. 1104 1105 1106 MUSTARD , www PRENES RAISESS - SUGAR set 100 1108 1109 1107 NI UN 1110 1111 1112 ICECREAM SHORTCAKE 1113 1114 1115 IN THE BEST CIG ARS IN THE WORLD. M RACCO RUGAASE INADI 1116 1117 1118 PAYING TELLERY RECEIVING TELLER SCRUM RASHIER 28 22 1119 1120 1121 D CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS, WELLS, Treasurer. CUTS One Dollar each. 1122 1123 1124 intorno 1125 1126 1127 W Eu 1128 1129 1130 ulun 6 1131 1132 1133 الجيم) www.es TW JUR 1134 1135 1136 w alb 1137 1138 1139 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer. CUTS. One Dollar each. 1141 1140 1142 Ч w D Ro UNISINI 1143 1144 1145 sta 1146 1147 1148 cia NOM VUAN 1149 1150 1151 XII 20 1152 1153 1154 1155 1156 1157 CINCINNATI TYPE FOUNDRY CO. CHAS. WELLS, Treasurer.