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CORNELL
UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY

FROM

Cornell University Library

arY158
Specimen book.

3 1924 032 199 238


olJn,anx

rf>N

The

Cornell University
Library

original of this

book

is in

the Cornell University Library.

There are no known copyright

restrictions in

the United States on the use of the

text.

http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924032199238

White's

New York Type

63 and 65 Beekman

We

Foundry,

Street,

have the pleasure of calling your attention

May

1867.

1st,

to another edition of

our Specimen Book.


It has
classified as

been our desire to present a

Book

as coniplete

and properly

our limited time and constantly increasing additions would

allow.

While we point with great


only at this time the series of

satisfaction to

Eimmed

our

Condensed,

own

productions, citing

Eimmed

Rimmed

Shade,

Black, Light Face Series, Skeleton Antiques, and

many Ornamental

our aim will be to add the

when produced by

either at

home

latest original styles

artists

or abroad.

We can readily furnish any


In our Firm are
tical ability,

Letters,

men

Styles not

shown

in this

Book.

of long and varied experience combined with prac-

who, by close and assiduous attention to business, regardless of

expense, have ever studied to promote the interests of the" Craft, and elevate

the standard of the Art.


Thanlcfully acknowledging the
in the past,

we

many

favors, of our friends

shall strive to merit a continuance of the

same

and patrons

in the future.

FARMER, LITTLE & COMPANY.

/>

CQRNrn
111 iAil Pllili.
^PRIL,
and German.

Italic,

Diamond

lb.

|!

Pearl

$1 80
1 40

Agate

1 00

Diamond
Agate

60

Nonpareil

38

Minion

76

Minion

Brevier
Boni^eois

70

Brevier

06

Long Primer

63

Small Pica,
Pica

58

56

Englifeh

56

Columbian
Great Primer
Paragon
Double Small Pica
Double Pica

56

Bourgeois
Two Line Diamond
Long Primer
Two Line Pearl
Small Pica
Two Line Agate

Nine

Ten

Hoe Neisr
Hand
Bed

60

Signs

$1,600 qO
73 00

Printing

Machine.
Bed 31+46

$1,280 00

Keller Moulds, extra,

73 00

,0

82
78
78
74

Line Nonpareil

74

70
70
66

'.

Great Primer
Two Line Bourgeois

66
66

Paragon
Two Line Long Primer
Two Line Small Pica

66

66

64

Two Line Pica


Two Line English

64

Three Line Small Pica


Two Line Great Primer
Three Line Pica
Double Paragon
Four Line Small Pica

63

64
62

60

58
54
54

Superiors
Inferiors

Type

Single Large Cylinder


Printing Machine.

Hoe Railway Newspaper

Cases.

Best quality, seasoned,


^ pair
"
''
''
two-third size
Job,..,, each

$3 50
3 00
2 36

Half, ....

"

Triple,

"

2 25

Music
Greek
Rule

25

2 20
5 00
3 50

Blank, for Wood Type, to order

Boxing and Carting extra

Cabinets.

Taylor's Newspaper Press.


Bed 33 + 36
$1,600
" 38 + 33
f
1,400
Countiy, Bed 46 + 31
1,300
Boxing and Carting extra

Cherry, 30 Cases,
00

20

full size.

Galley

Top $55

00

45 00

'

35 00*

00

36 00

00

27 75

18 50

Gordon and Degner Card and Job


Press.

10 50

Black Wahuit, $6
Pine, 10 Cases
"
"
14
"
"
30

If ordered of

Half Medium, 13 + 19 in side of chase


Fountain, &c., extra

$650 00
26 00

10 00
Boxing
QuartoMedlum, 10 + 15 Insideof chase 425 00

Fountain, &c., extra


Boxing. .'.

25 00

and Drawer,
pairs, 3 pairs

Boxing

6 00

Extra charge

One

for

Steam Fixtures

Eoller Mould,

Two

Patent "Washington Printing Press.


BED.

+ 191^. -IS +24 ..$347


300
+36
,22J4 + 29!4.
SuperrEoyal 22^ + 28 ..26 +8214.. 330
Imp., No. 1,21 +30 ..241^ + 341/2.. 345
" 3,33 +32V4.. 361/3 + 37 ..300
" 3, 33 +35. ..3614 + 39/2.. 375
" 4,24 +37 ..37'/2+41i^.. 390
" 5,35 +39 ..28'/i+43Vi.. 412
" 6,26 +41i4..39>/2 + 46
4a6
Fooiecap,

1414
19

Other sizes

35 00
3 50

6 Job, 6 triple and 3


on top, or Galley Top, 80 00

to order.

Case Stands.

Sets of Eoller

each Press.

Medium,

24 50

15 00

Stocks, and Three Chases, are included with

PLATEN.

17 50

16 Cabinet Cases, or 13 Cabinet Cases

7 00

exti'a.

Galley Top, exfra

Eighth Medium, 7 + 11 inside of chase, 250 00

30

40

44
40

+ 43
Holler Moulds extra
Boxing and Carting extra

1 .30

58

90

31

Two

Five Line Pica


Six Line Pica
Seven Line Plea
Eigh-t Line Pica
Borders

68

82

64

64

1 44

Long Primer

Five Line Pica


Six Line Small Pica
Six Line Pica
Seven Line Pica
Eight Line Pica
Piece Fractions

40
45

to Pica
Quotations
Metal Furniture
Space Kule

Bourgeois

90

60

Twelve

90

66

Canon
Four Line Pica

48

."

1 50

73

48

to Pica

Brevier

73

62

to Pica

Minion

00

Four Line Pica

English
Two Line Minion
Two Line Brevier

53

B.

3 00

60

54

52

3 40

Nonpareil

Canon,...'

Two

54

Six to Pica or thicker


Seven to Pica
Eight to Pica

2 80

Agate

6Q

Pica

54

&o.

$3 30

62

56

63

LEADS,

lb.

1 12
1

56

54

Pive Line Pica


Six Line Pica
Seven Line Pica
Eight Line Pica

%t

Pearl

Line Pearl
Small Pica
Pica
Two Line Nonpareil
English
Two Line Mniiou
Two Line Brevier
Great Primer
Two Line Bourgeois
Paragon
Two Line Long Primer
Two Line Small Pica
Two Line Pica
Two Line English
Three Line Small Pica
Two Line Great Primer
Three Line Pica
Double Paragon
Four Line Small Pica

54

Canon
Four Line Pica

'

Diamond

$3 80
2 00

84

Line Englisb
Line Great Primer
Double Paragon

lb.

Pearl

Nonpareil

Two
Two

THIRD CLASS.
Ornamental, Shaded, Scripts, &o.

Antique, Gothic, &c.

Title,

^^

1807.

SECOND PLASS.

FIRST CLASS.
Roman,

W8RARV

50

00
00
00
00
00

00
50
00

Racks
Double, without Racks
"
"
with
Single, with

$7 00
7 00
8 60

1 33
1

16

10

1
1

13
13

06

00

00
94

94
90

90
86
86

83

83
78
78

64
64
60
60

3S

"OP 3E ]ME jISl *1P


FOE JOB OFFICES AND WEEliLT NEWSPAPERS OF VARIOUS

NEWSPAPEE

24

BY

Lye Brush

Proof Brush

".

100
50
50
10
10
20

T5

112

Saw and Mitre Box


25 lbs. News Ink, at

1 75

25 cts

6
5
8
5

Advertising liules, at 5 cts


Single

Dash

Kules, at 6 cts

Brass Dashes, at 10 cts


Double Cross Itulcs, at S cts
Parallel Bules, at S cts

Column Kules, at lis cts


Head Rules, about
800 lbs. Long Primer, at 80 cts

25
00
00
00
SO
80
60
OO
00
00

13
3
108
250 lbs. Brevier, at 44 cts
110
56 lbs. Nonpareil, (if wanted) at 58 cts
82 48
Display Type for Heading matter, about
15 00
"
"
for Advertisements, about
15 00
20 lbs. Leads, at 27 cts
5 40
Head for Paper,
from $2 00 to 5 00
Cuts or Ornaments, about
S 00
Boxing and Carting, about
14 00

AMOUT

50

PER CENT. ADVANCE ON ABOVE

$758 58

PlilCES.

1
1

1
2

5
6

4
20

Eighth-Mediimi Fi-anklin Press ....

(jn'esent price)

Super Hoyal Washington Press


Super Hoyal Chase, with bars
Cap Chase
Assortment Job and Card Cliases
1 Super Hoyal ^JoUer Mould
1

8 60
21 00

Saw and Mitre Box


cts

Mallet
Planer

Lye Brush

Proof Brush
Brass Kules
"
Metal

Yards
Leads
10

Wood

Rule, at 18 cts

20 lbs. Quotations, at 27 cts


2 lbs. Space Kules, at $1 20
lbs. Book Ink, at 50 cts
" at $1 00
2 lbs. Fine
5 lbs. Colored Ink, at $2,60
3 oz. Bronze, at 75 cts
Composing Sticks
1 24 inch Mahogany Job Stick
6 lbs. Pearl, at $1 08
60 lbs. Nonpareil, at 58 cts
50 lbs. Brevier, at 44 cts
50 lbs. Long Primer, at 86 cts
100 lbs. Small Pica, at 34 cts
60 lbs. Pica, at 82 cts
50 lbs. Great Primer, at 32 cts
50 lbs. Heal Double Pica, at 82 cts
60 lbs. Double Paragon or Canon, at 82 cts
30 lbs. Great Primer Script, at 76 cts
8 Fonts Condensed Black and Text
5 Fonts Ornamented Pearl to Long Primer
"
Two Line Nonpl. to Gt. Pr..
5 Fonts
"
Gt. Pr. to Four Line Pica.
10 Fonts
2 Fonts Two Line

20

Fonts Condensed

2 Fonts Clarendon
2 Fonts Full Face
8 Fonts Gothic, Antique, Ionic, &c
4 Fonts Large Metal Job Type
5 Fonts Wood Type Seven to Twelve Line Pica..
"
Fourteen to Thirty Line Pica
3 Fonts
Borders
Cuts, Ornaments, Dashes, &e

ABOUT 50 PEK CENT. ADVANCE ON ABOVE

PBICES.

By deducting Presses and Apurtenances the above


is

12 00
14 00
13 50
6 75
20 00
2 00
4 00
4 00
5 00
2 00
1 50
50
83
83
1 12
12 00
4 00
1 25
18 50
5 40
2 40
10 00
2 00
12 60
2 25
12 00
2 00
6 48
29 00
22 00
18 00
34 00
16 00
16 00
16 00
16 00
22 80
12 00
11 00
14 00
35 00
3 50
10 60
5 50
5 50
20 00
26 00
30 00
25 00
12 00
10 00

Lyo Brush

Proof Brash

Saw and Mitre Box


85
150
75
75
12
12
24

News

Ink, at 25 cts
Advertising Rules, at 5 cts
Single Dash Rules, at 6 cts
Brass Dashes, at 10 cts
Double Cross Rules, at S cts
Parallel Rules, at 8 cts
Column Kules, at 68 cts
Head Rules, about
400 lbs. Long Priniei-, at 86 cts
825 lbs. Brevier, at 44 cts
56 lbs. Nonpareil, (if wanted) at 68 cts
Display Type for Heading matter, about
"
for Advertisements, about
"
80 lbs. Leads, at 27 cts
Head for Paper,
lbs.

Ornaments, about
Boxing and Carting, about

ABOUT

50

The
28

by

PEK CENT. ADVAKOS ON ABOVE PBICES.

$910 29

^^T OXTE. PRKSEIN'T PRICKS.

Pica to G-reat Primer, - -

Two

5.

"

Newspaper Heads and all other descriptions of cuts are designed and engraved by us with elegance and despatch.
Also, Newspaper Heads and Cuts Lleotuotyped in the best
manner and on reasonable terms.

Lyo Brush
ProofBrush
Saw and Mitre Box

75

60 lbs. News Ink, at 26 cts


250 Advertising Kules, at 5 cts
100 Single Dash Kules, at 6 cts
50 Brass Dashes, at 10 cts
20 Double Cross Rules, at S cts
20 Parallel Rules, at 8 cts
28 Column Rules, at 68 cts
Head Rules, about
500 lbs. Long Primer, at 86 cts
400 lbs. Brevier, at 44 cts
56 lbs. Nonpareil, (if wanted) at 68 cts
Display Type for Heading matter, about
"
"
for Advertisements, about
60 lbs. Leads, at 27 cts
Head for Paper,

Ornaments, about

Boxing and Carting, about

ABOUT

50

PER CENT. ADVANCE ON ABOVE PKICES.

$1071 54

1
1
1
1
1

Half-Medium Franklin Press


(jn-esent price) $550 00
"
425 00
Quarto-Medium Franklin Press
"
250 00
Eighth-Medium Franklin Press....
275 00
Imperial No. 5 Washington Press
Imperial No. 5 Roller Mould
Set Imperial No. 6 Distributors
Pair Imperial Chases, with bars
"
Pair Cap Chases,

Job Chases, assorted


Job Holler Stocks and Handles
Double Stands with Hacks,

at

$6 00

20 Pair Cases, at $2 00
20 Job Cases, at $1 18
10 Triple Cases, at $118
2 Cabinets, at $20 00
1 Cabinet with
B Blico Galleys

Standing Galley

8 Mallets
8 Planers
6
8

Shooting Sticks

Composing Sticks
inch Mahogany Job Stick

1 30

Iron Mitre Box


Mitre Box
Dbl. Imperial No. 5 Imposing Stone
lbs. News Ink, at 25 cts
" at 50 cts
lbs. Book
"
at $1 00
lbs. Fine
Blue, at $1 60
lbs. Poster "
"
Red, at $1 50
Poster
lbs.
lbs. Colored Ink, assorted, at $2 50
Varnish,
at
50 cts
lbs.

Wood
lish,

Two

6.

"

8,

"

Line Great Primer to

Four Line Pica,

An assortment of 30 fonts from


JPearl to

Four Line JPica

will cost

say $300.

WOOD TYPE
OF EVERY STYLE AND

SIZE.

IHK

FROM ALL THE MANUFACTURERS.

30
25
5
5
5
6

2
1 lb. Gold Size
8 oz. Bronze, assorted colors, at 75 cts
100 lbs. Leads, at 27 cts
30 lbs. Quotations, at '27 cts
8 lbs. Space Rule, at $1 20

Brass Kules
"
Metal
20 Yards Wood Rule
25
100
200
100
800
100
60
50
50
50
60
SO
50
25
20
80
20
8
12
15

$1 08
Nonpareil, at 58 cts
Brevier, at 44 cts
Long Primer, at 86 cts
Small Pica, at 84 cts

lbs. Pearl, at
lbs.
lbs.

lbs.
lbs.
lbs. Pica, at 32 cts

lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.
lbs.

Great Primer, at 32 cts

Double Small Pica, at 82 cts


Double English, at 82 cts
Double Paragon, at 82 cts
Four Line Pica, at 32 cts
Great Primer Script, at 76 cts
Double Small Pica Script, at 72

cts

Dbl. Small Plea Mercantile Script, at 72 cts.


Double Great Primer Script, at 56 cts
lbs. Two Line Pica Calligraphic Script, at 68 cts.
"
"
at 52 cts.
lbs. Canon
Fonts Ornamented Pearl to Long Primer
Two
Line
Nonpl.
to
Fonts
"
Gt. Pr..
Gt. Pr. to Four Line Pica...
Fonts
"
lbs.
lbs.

Two Line
Text
Fonts Clarendon and Full Face
10 Fonts Gothic, Antique and Ionic
6 Fonts Large Metal Job Letter
20 Fonts Wood Type Seven to Fifty Line Pica
Borders
8

Fonts Extended and

6 Fonts Condensed B'aek and


8

HAND, JOB AND

POWER

12

75
12 50
12 50
6 00
5 00
1 60
1 60
19 04
6 00
180 00
176 00
32 48
25 00
26 00
13 60
fnun $2 00 to 5 00
10 00
16 00
1

Saw and

42.

The following sizes are also considered regular sizes, though


not 60 certainly kept on hand.24 by 38, 27 by 42, 29 by 44.

BY 44 INCHES.

2 Lye Brushes, at 88 cts


2 Proof Brushes, at $1 12

Line Eng-

'Kllft^llf'O
are always kept on
82, 24 by 36, 26 by 87, and

PER CENT.

4 Double Brass Galleys, at $2 75


2 Quarto Brass Galleys, at $4 00
10 Coininon Galleys
200 Yards Furniture, &o
1,001) Hickory Quoins

18B7.

Pearl to Long Primer, - $4, per font

to

50

$290 00
Imperial No. 6 Washington Press
80 00
1 Set Im]>erial No. 6 Koirers, complete
19 20
1 Imperial No. 6 Holler Mould, cast iron
55 00
1 Dbl. Imperial No. 6 Imposing Stone and Frame.
12 00
Half Chases, at $6 00
2 Imperial No.
15 00
6 Single Brass Bottom Proof Galleys, at $2 50
4 00
6 Coumujn Galleys, at 75 cts
9 00
6 Eiglit-ineh Con'iposing Sticks, at $1 60
24 00
4 Do uble Stands w itli Hacks, at $6 00
50 00
26 Pair Cases, at $2 00
4 50
4 Job Cases, at $1 IS
5 00
100 Yards Furniture
4 00
Mallet, I'laner, Sliooting Stick and Quoins, about ...

1
1

JOBBING AND ORNAMENTAL

Paragon

TO

Apkil,

29

30

ESTIMATE FOE LAEGE JOB OFEIOE.

ATllEA^'S @S1

for a

NEWSPAPER

hand by Paper Merchants. 22 by

5 00
3 50
75
1 12
1 75
8 76
7 50
4 50
7 50
96
96
16 82
3 50
144 00
14;i 00
32 48
20 00
20 00
8 10
from $2 00 to 5 00
10 00
15 00

estimate

reduced to about $500, and can be further reduced

NEWSPAPEE

DrOHES.

$1113 61

small country Job Olllce to $800.

following sizes of

-40

100 Yards Finiiiture


Mallet, Planer, Shooting Stick and Quoins, about ...

$250 00

Roller Stocks, &c


1 Single Super Hoyal Imposing Stone
2 Double Stands with Hacks, at $6 00
T Pair Cases, at $2 00
12 Job Cases, at $1 13
6 Triple Cases, at $1 13
Cabinet 10 pair Cases
1 Super Hoyal Slice Galley
1 Quarto Brass Galley
Conmum Galleys
100 Yards Furniture

Hickory Quoins, at 50

BY

220 00
7 00
5 00
7 50
14 40

1
1

800
1
1
1
1

26

Imperial No. 4 Wasliington Press


$260 00
Set Imperial No. 4 Hollers, complete
25 00
Imperial No. 4 Roller Mould, cast iron
17 60
Dbl. Imjjeriai No. 4 Imposing Stone and Fianie.
45 00
Imperial No. 4 Half Chases, at $5 00
10 00
Single Brass Bottom Proof Galleys, at $2 50
12 60
Common Galleys, at 75 cts
4 50
Eiirlit-iiicli Composing StieiiS, at $1 50
7 50
Double Stands with Hacks, at $6 00
24 00
Pair Cases, at $2 00
40 00
Job Cases, at $1 18
4 50

ESTIMATE rOE SMALL JOB OFPIOE.


1

FOR A DAILY PAPER THE PRINCIPAL FONTS SHOULD BE INCREASED FROM

NEWSPAPEE

36 INCHES.

No. 2 Washinaton Press


$240 00
1 Set Imperial Nu. 2 Hollers, complete
25 00
] Imperial No. 2 EoUer Mould, cast iron
10 00
1 Dbl. Imperial No. 2 Imposing Stono and Frame.
85 00
2 Imperial No. 2 Half Chases, at $4 50
9 00
4 Single Brass Bottom UiUleys, at $2 50
10 00
6 Common Galleys, say
3 75
4 Six-inch Composing Sticks, at .$1 50
(i
00
5 Double Stands with Hacks, at $6 00
18 00
15 Pair Cases, at $2 00
SO Oo
S Job Cases, at *1 13
8 8S
100 Yards Furniture
5 00
Mallet, Planer, Shootini; Sticli ami Quoins, ab(nit ...
3 50
1 Imperial

SIZES.

PRESBES

Cuts, Orn.aments, Dashes, &c


1 Standing Press, 2^ inch Screw

ABOUT

50

PER CENT. ADVANCE ON ABOVE

PBICES.

18 40
30 00
-6 00
10 00
12 00
8 50
86 00
40 00
22 50
II 26
40 00
28 00
7 50
11 00
8 00
5 00
13 00
6 00
1 50
1 00
60
15 50
2 50
1 75
2 25
6 75
50
50 00
7 50
12 50
5 00
7 50
7 60
12 50
1 00
4 00
6 00
27 00
8 10
8 60
60 00
10 00
8 00
27 00
58 00
88 00
86 00
102 00
32 UO
16 00
16 00
16 00
10 00
16 00
22 80
36 00
18 00
11 20
20 40
10 40
16 00
84 00
60 00
20 00
26 CO
24 00
80 00
86 00
150 00
26 00
50 00
115 00

$8196 50

FJOUJEI^^
2

10

In preparing these Flourishes we have


purposely limited their number, choosing

from

FRIMTIM

their infinite possible variety, a


few graceful, elegant and useful forms.
They are stamped and bent with great
accuracy, with tools made for that purpose, by the combination of which, wo
can produce a thousand figures so that,
for special jobs, we can make Brass Flourishes of almost any shape desired.

As they are made from thin sheetbrass, there are openings for type everywhere.

Founts of 80

pieces.

Price, $10.00

Selected Flourishes from 5 cents to 25


cents each.
CopyrigHt secured.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

12

13

LABOR-SAYIHG LEADS.

These Leade (and Sings, as they are sometimes called) are cast Six to Pica,
Four to Pica, Nonpareil and Pica in thickness, and are cut to 14 different
lengths, viz. 4, 4
6, 5
6, 7, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 and 23 ems Pica.
The smallest assortment of either thickness weighs 25 lbs., and hy a com:

bination of them, for example, over 800 medium 8vo. lines (22 ems Pica) can
be leaded from a 25 lb font Six to Pica. They are cut very accurately, and

NUMBERED SLUGS.

Numbered Slugs have been


newspaper

upon it. No job office should be vi'ithout


them. The time saved in having them ready cut and stamped to your hand
will soon pay for them, and if you will, either singly or in combination,
use them as measures for your composing sticks, you will cease to cut up
leads for jobbing. Price 45 cents ^ lb, for Four or Six to Pica; 40 cents ^
lb. for Pica or Nonpareil.
the length of each lead stamped

METAL FURNITURE.

in use several years in the principal

Each compositor has a few slugs,


corressponding with the number of his stand, and puts one before
his matter on the proof-galley so that his number Is also proved,
with the other matter as the record of his work. They can be furnished of any face, electrotyped and cut to the measure of the
column, for 15 cents each.
offices in this city.

New and useful Metal Furniture, combining lightness with


great strength. Put up in fonts of 50 and 100 pounds at forty
cents per pound. 100 pound font contains 545 pices. 50 pound
font contains 300 pieces.

CIRCULAR QUADS.

This series of Circular Quads, while it comes within a sutaciently


reason^le price, will be found just what is wanted for Card, Note,
Bath and Letter work -the main classes of work requiring Circular
Quads. The utility of Circular Quads in a Printing Office is now well
established. Fonts can either be duplicated, or sorts furnished, when
Fonts 8 sets $4.00.
additions are required.

FARMER, LITTLE &

[L

CO..

New Youk.

New

York, Oct.

1,

1870.

These Prices are a Reduction Of 20 per cent,

From

Prices prior to this date.

BRASS RULES.
CENTS

NO.
25

2B

FOOT.

NO.

10

50

CENTS

^ rOOT.
15

12

.2728 -

51

r24

29 -

30 -

34

31

62

15

44

15

63

15

54

20

mi
45

20

32

20
33 =

20

34 =

v,.^

^-.-

21

,,.^,w

...,w.,.. .-

20

20

23

.34

20

- -

22

16 =

.-.-...-....

'

24

24

55

49

24

^-

28

46

48

10

20

'

fli-

20

3i

35

.36

!24

28

28

34

28

134

148
14

12^1

39

1
!

40

PAKMER. LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

PRESENT PRICES.

52

58

New

York, Oct.

1,

1870.

These Prices are a Eeduction of 20 per cent,

Fro:m Prices prior to this

elate.

BRASS RULES,
NO.

CENTS

57 =

sp

FOOT.
20

CENTS

NO.

81 j;^,;;;;^;^;;;;^-

59

rOOT.

80

:38

24

8360

38

84-

^ 24
85

*^Sr^ 38

86

63

87"

;28

28

28

90

134

34

67

28

:
:

=
69

28
93

95

96

97

98

:34

72

73:

m
34
I

72

74-

172

76:
101

77;

78

''''

52

102

liH>ilt*

38

79'

FAEMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New Yoek.

PKESENT PKICES.

Wl
No.

No. 27.

51.

No. 34.

N0TE.-N0S.
lb.

N09.

3, 37,

16.

No.

17.

1.

No.

2.

No.

3.

No.

4.

No.

5.

No.

6.

10.

No. 36.

No.

11.

No. 37.

No. 38.

No.

12.

51, 27,
38,'

No.

No.

No.

per

No. 48.

and

and

48,

are put up in fonts of

12, in fonts

of 12,

6,

and 3

6, 3,

lbs., at

and

ly^ lbs., at $2. per lb.

$1.60 per lb.

Enle Nos.

51,

Nos.

34, 10, 11, 16, 17,

48 and 27

made on

4, B, 6,

and

1, 2, 4, 36,

in fonts of 10,

5,

and

2%

lbs., at

$1.75

or 7 to Pica.

smallest sized fonts are intended for job work, where only one or two
The rules are accurately cut to pica ems. All fonts contain an assortment of mitres. The
into a common case. The larger sets need a Rule case, which costs $2.
pages are to be put up at a time, and contain no pieces too long to go

BRASS

SPACE-BITI.E, from Nonparlel to Pica body, Six to Pica


Fonts of 2 and 4

PAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tokk.

lbs., at $2.

per

tliicliness.

lb.

AI>VAlfCIlI>

50

PER CENT. ON THESE PKICES.

MMi
CENTS

imi
CENTS

FOOT.

W FOOT.

Perforating Rule.

22
24

24

22
;

22

24

ADVANCED

ritESENX rXICHS, April, iSer. CIRCLES.Nos.

Z and

5,

22
24

'60

22

50

24

22

24

PER CENT ON THESE PBICES.

60 cts. each.

No.

9,

FARMER, LITTLE, &

75 cts.

CO.,

No.

NEW

12, $1.

YORK.

OVALS.Nos.

and

5,

$1. each.

No.

9,

$1.12.

No.

12. $l.i

BIlAiSS Qi^SHiS,
Dashes from

1 to

16 cut to suit the column, 10 cents each.

No. 1

No. 26

No. 89

27

40

28

41

29

42

SO

48

31

44
45

'

10

46
*

*-

84

47

35

48

-t-*-^

11

49

12

37

18

88

14

60
51

52

05

58
15
16

<

66

fc-

54
t

67
55

IT

56
18

57
19

70

20

71

21

72

22

78

23

74

24

75

25

76

58
59
60
61

64
15 cts.

15 cts.

n
T8

No.

25 cts.

80
82

SIX

97

63 cts.

FAEMEE. LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tobk.

OiJ> PMICHS.

mmi

CT.

A to D 5 cts.

each

H 10 cts.

to

each

I to

K 15 cts.

each

l'^

to

20 cts. each.

=*-=

ota^cx!

ir4CE EUIilS*
AGATE ANB SMALL

NONPAREIL AND PICA.

PICA.

12

18

I
I

m
I

DIAMOND AND

12

113

m
I

m
I

PEABL AND LONG PEIMEK.

BOTIRGEOIS.

112

I
I

PEARL CHECK.
No.

1.

CHESSMEN AB GHEGKEHS.
A complete font of Chessmen contains 96 pieces

Checkers, 68 pieces.

12
t

Price, 4 cents a piece.

% ^ m

mAM

10

11

12

16

17

18

i
13

14

15

We furnish all the other sizes.

fM^M^'M

mmWAmm
Mi

19

1*1
25

CO.,

21

22

23

24

26

27

28

29

2S

e 8 ^

acJ^Ei^^
FAEMBE, LITTLE &

20

9 M3 W m 'M

New

York.

'//Mm,

No. 46

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

ADVANCED

50

PER CENT. ON ABOVE PRICES.

^
:fM

rgp

sig:^s.
Cast on

all

bodies Nonijareil to Small Pica

incliiBivc.

ZODIACAL SIGNS.

Aries.

Gremini.

Leo.

=ii=

Libra.

Q,

Taurus.

Cancer.'

TTfi

Yirgo.

ttl

Scorpio.

PLANETARY

Moon.

Mercury.

Venus.

"^

Sun.

# New

Ceres.

g Hebe.

Pallas.

Juno.

S Vesta.

Mars.

Jupiter.

Saturn.

jt^,

jxy

Aquarius.

}i

Pisces.

SIGNS.

'^ Flora.

Eartli.

Moon.

Sagittarius.

:f:

VS Capricornus.

Iris.

Astrea,
Clio.

,4,

Metis.

Parthenope.

Neptune.

L-ene.

Tgi

Greorgium

^
Siclus.

(B

Last Quarter.

Conjunction.

Quadril.

f)

First Quarter.

Q,

Dragon's Head.

Opposition.

Sun.

FtiU Moon.

Dragon's Tail.

Trigonus.

Sextile.

MATHEMATICAL, ALGEBRAICAL AND GEOMETRICAL SIGNS.

[g]ir-^

CO

-^

<

>

COMMERCIAL, PHYSICAL AND MISCELLANEOUS SIGNS.

SUPEKIOR LETTERS AND FIGURES.


Cast on

all

bodies.

bcdcfghijkl miiopqrsiuvwxyz

2346

7B0O

PIECE FRACTIONS.
LoNo Pbimee Piece Peagtions.

Bourgeois Piece Feactions.

r^^TKTS'TS"

234:107 800

"

TYS'S'STfTWTT IS.5

"

FARMER, LITTLE &

d^

123456

1234567890

S 6 7 8

CO.,

New

Yoek.

-__

ig_3 i

tl 89

j!

Pica Piece Feactions.

Small Pica Piece Feactions.

T3'34S678!)0

4661890

90

1
"2"

3
1

T2 345678t)0

1234567890

3.4 5
3'4 5~6

_2

3.

"2"

H anil

Cyue/ialed

and ati

-2

Pica Script.

1(1 lbs.

/uiviuiA

-/o

mem/

wM every

o/her^ inaUriai neceddai^it

and 25

io

dedcft/Uion

o/crc^d,

^'^^fX^f^-'p^'^

't^-t-'^/^g.^^^^

'^di^^

v^^^

$43A5:^

iclei, o4-

.=JiiiantAA aitei

^uncA; =Mati6x

<?Cst5=&

/ ^^r^i^^:^^^

JN'eiu-

JIAuc

and

C/i'mamcn/a/ St^ oTy/ie,

Script.

(3y'ep4^^ -^i^ti

Great Primer Script No.

lbs.

.Siiaim.

.^^inima umce''"!^^

Double Small Pica Mercantile

lbs.

(^'^^d-

12 and 94

o4<:,

t^eQu/a/ed

u-'eu

a,

^y

"J'P^ f^e 'C--'^

4.

^il, ^ay. Ut, 4M6.

^ate

lu-e

AimniAe ta

Double Geeat Primer

lbs.

aiae
6^

ana

o</n/m??ie^i/y (?/:::>

FAEMKE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Aau

ta tAe

(^^amfianu, '2/Aiite&n '^alia/16,

^(i- '3untei

20 and 40

ii'ted-^.^-e-t?

and

SCanq)

Script.

C:^7oana4a(m6.

(^yA&' '!^oanc/eM

13

and

Great Primer Script No.

35 lbs.

at(o/i6 /i(n'iiir/

ui //u

nncie/it

(/ t/te

T'r/L^

ana

//teni

iciY/ii)).

'?iioae'tn

ma/ieit im/io'tfanc6 /ol

uiccic, tnaeeci^ /tcni.ic// aeiiamea

Man

//>

/ui

i>/(ain/na
to

/o'r^

ie-ieaic/e.i

and jc/a/i/'/fie,

/no,)/ e/Ud-iaed

l/te

ar/es <a/-i

t//e

fl^oUcc,

not mo'u

C i/d/t.ion

ot^

am) cuuivafed

nave evel

ie/&ite//U'nt

t/ic

coiie.i/iondino/y

aiu/

3.

/iii/idi,

ier/a'u/ea f/ie .itiu/// ^

ana i/n/iUrcmenl a/

feauMu/

(/ -)

ieaci

devoted &ev6ia/ o/

/ud

o/ -^

ontna.

t//6

and /we/ly.

/luUuil ojf i/ictaiw

t/ic

('ot/t

//iecian

''t/ii
a-'ci

nioit tnoe/uoai

0/

"I

tne >eco?iuneno/atajn o/ t/is -?nos/ enc/an.tu>r/ ia/'/ec/

/y-^

tj4^dyS'^o

%.%%%7J

*'{fl
-ii'%.'^A

/^'(*,

15

and

.30

Double Small Pica Script No.

Ib8.

(Z Yat/otu nc(/m7ia

va/ec/ Tn/ncM,
K^O'i/c/-

na^'e

i/n/oi/cincc

w/n

et'e/--'

UM^/nm

tn

'

tne

//ic?n

teaataect /de

dtuctu

/a^^ /ne^ ze//'ne}7ien/ a?ic/

/eeto, im^c/eec/, At^9Ji4e// aeua/dect

eina /ioe/'^, /nei^i

'2.

7710 4-/Z)

anaen/^ anat

'^/^

P^e/oUc

/Ac

/u^

PM

en/a'kaec/ anct
aaed-

macie'tTi

0/ C-cl/^i 0/

/ne

imJii(/t'e?Jie'??d-

0/

ne/^

fno^^e

tn^

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cmh^

c/d /ne
//m//ej/

//le '}?tind.

yiinsai/ e/a

eo^i'ed/ionc/cna./H-

^?7^T

o
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

^_

NEW
Fonts

30

and

-IS

FROM FARMER, LITTLE &

SCRIPT

Double Pica Payson Script I'atented.

i,bs.

/ird

d;W^

(r/i(^

4-fte

CO., N. Y.

^6t^n

/'// / / / /;/ yf^/Xj


jilditrZ/jcrrt
-un
''!

/ / /
dndepilca

</

'J/di'i'-^^'

^Cdi!-i/?ir/ /i^

/.

nrdr/de

ddi/iod' d

^di^y/ied,

'Idic

-//-

"/
-/^i?^'/-/-,

//ii

'Aid.

/(X'l

dner/zid

r/dCd'-adicdnrd

-fa-l

d/ie

C^dl' /
7

dd LJ( d//ioie
"^Z (lddtd7dCtd'i/d/(.^

-i/i

S2>^i-eru.

cj ii-mei

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'Id Id

r/.ddt'd-

d?^

f-/

ddtr/idt/..

/d/iiddird'.

'/dt-dod^uid'jin

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//.

//de Ly(^,V/v/v/ (Glddd-rdd

^l'C'e4'dJ-&'(i
ddi

fi-adt

dd//.ld

dd

-l/'dd

//.r/d-

d/iel idiu/i //ifd^

d^ ii/i^^d-'id/'

,-J erdddidi-r/-

^^e ddinddu

dad

-t^-U-eU

-Hai^

/J

d-'e4-adi'dd^

(0-d/dle-d'?'-i{C'di

Kdyd^U'O-^

S,

JS' /O.

uddd/nd'dt7

dl-i.

^Iddi'-ddd

C^dca-

d-ld

d^ddye

do-a

l-!t
UJ-

t-e.

d'('4d

n4''&

-i-edde^dd-d

//2^

dy''d/d/dt 'dJ

'dtddl
c/'dc

i/^^^^

r/e/A/iri -au-u

/^}r/dAi^/d/^

^A

(^4.4/^-/

y//^.

S'^

// /pl'-ldd?''de'n

d
/
d / f
r/udi /i/ddi'^cdi. dU'-zdi
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c^'s^ l'

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BOUBLE GREAT PRIMER PAYSON SCRIPTPatented.

Me

o4/My0^pt^^

^//le

Me

7?ie/a

^nucW

nmit udM'ta
'/

'??t^(He

i^'Uieid/

mdi'^'Ui^

^'7'w4e

de^eie

/'

'M ^/ine /iO^au "^^ned^

du-

u^o-m eJ &ait^ei C/ieJd nii/^^A'na ^7?timd

ace, u--/iicn {d

7/,

en eui

'72en/ /ealuie

nauei

iAeadne7'i d^^^^V/!

e/ a?!^^

/a All? eidJi ^i/en/d

naiice, afl d?meie

/'

eiu

/iia??ii^

eeie Aiu^

mian/iez/^ eiA dAe^i/


'im

CJ7'd7i,

'/et

daAtd/acAw-d^

e?7i/iieu

7re^e?7

i??mo4/a''n/

^I'l'

Aa-

a;

if''e?ecn

'Udl^7ia

/)

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med a/ea

^a?iaeAa

eii-

\\

AnaA me ale

Uam/ Ao^^

'"^c/^d-me.

A'7U7UdA

eu/i

cT''

3
CO.,

ffi^e^'ileid

a?i

S'l

FARMER, LITTLE A

AAU

New

York.

rj

/^

S S e

//
Fonts op

30

and

60 lbs.

V
/
Double Paragon Patson Script. PATENTED.

^.eAea^u Mi/u4ed,

(y^H>tmiui&t{i^/i/7'i^

A^^nm

n^{p(ui'm 'm-eM oyD^l/ /^^<^ "l^en^^idd,

a4 iH^^tnu ^d A{iddau/
ufA^c/i

dnmcM

u^

Ma/ Me^

i^^

4^nau4

u^iJ

n^ tAu

e^n-

<^^a/U de4/us

/udi, 'ic^Aut

i^4.e/i:{)^lda^'i^

ecUn^d'^edd

/^/^ /eu^e ^^ diene

\&U

'^

A&// u A^M}n^, it

Am

^^/^

iz^t^

^ixpa

^u4=

^^^Mm mtwiu-

C/Nxlm?mA

(m-

(^k

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Fonts op

.52

lbs.

?^

0, 10,

14

'Vt^
ifi.

&

Pica Title Script.

23 ibs.

l&^Vi&fie/nf/t^

l/ie

AitO-mt'l /i.t^

Cfti 1 4^f-eoei.<.t titbit,

o/

14

n&iet

t/i.e

&

28

lbs.

Double Small Pica C'alligeaphic

-j/ctr/i /

.-^'Vc /^/e

'^ ifttfe.

sT^Lrit/it,tr ti r/

bMU^WA^niy^

/uwl

me.Vvxj

/OJW)

|^^45 !B:

10, 14

&

=i>4f^

'28

lbs.

Great Primer Title

ai/tc.tei4-

Sckipt.

c^'n^tnac

.=J^ew (^^i/? J^yJie

10, 14

&

28 lbs.

Double Small Pica Title

Sckipt.

cC&d^tg/vij

@ "id ^

14

&

28 lbs.

Two

14

&

28 lbs.

Double English Calligraphic

Line Pica Calligraphic Script.

c/

ti/it'

^auneAy.

Script.

Script.

loM

20 lbs.

Canon Calligraphic

Scr.iPT.

i^

\mQ^

.MWA^

)Yvi>.)LaiY\)iU\)
;CyOjl

>^Ajuaj\YA;e!\\laA)
FARMER, LITTLE &

St

CO.,

New

York.

fmxk^

Vi)AAiix\.

oS

AmU/OmyCjeAc

Vg),,

lOX

Brbvieb

lt>s.

Deeds in the State of JYew York

Law

W 00

Italic.

and in

lender seal,

iiiust be

oj^der to he available

against a subsequent purchaser or incumbrances, must be duly aclcnowledged

in the County
seal,

and in

Cleric's Office.

and recorded

must not only be executed under


must also be delivered either directly
some third person, to take effect upon the perform-

deed, to be effectual,

the presence of at least one iritness, but

to the grantee, or, as

an

escrow, to

ance of some condition. A deed may be a simple quit-claim, or one mith covenants of
warranty. In the former case, although it purports to convey one's right of expectaMcy,
or possibility of inheritance, it will nevertheless convey only the title

actually possessed at the time of


title will

remain unaffected by

its

execution

and

delivery.

Any

which the grantor

siibsequently accruing

it.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMJ^OPQRSTVVW'XI Z^MCE. $ U3Jf567890

lOX

Long Primer Law

Its-

83c

Italic.

deed admits of no implied covenants, and hence the grantor


can t)e held to no act or thing not expressly covenanted in the conveyance. In a common warrantee deed, containing simply covenants of
warranty and for quiet enjoyment, the grantee must have suffered an
eviction from the premises, before he can he entitled to recover against
his grantor. But in case a full covenant deed is given, or one containing a covenant of seizin, that is broken, and allou'S an action to
be brought immediately on the execution and delivery of the deed, if
the grantor has no title.

ABCBEFGHIJKLMKOFQUSTJJYWXYZS^MCE.

lOX

'?ict..

lt>s-

Law

12SJf567890

$.

Italic.

66c.

deed cannot convey any greater estate or hvterest than


the grantor himself possessed at the time of its delivery, or
could then lawfully convey ; hut it may always he set up as
conclusive against the grantor, and all such as claim from,
Tlie

him hy

In the State of

descent.

Kew Yorh

it is

unnecessary

to

words of inheritance, in order


to create a conveyance in fee ; as evei^ grant of real estate ivill
he held to pass all the interest of the grantor therein.
insert the

term

^'

heirs," or other

ABCBEFGHIJLMmPQUSTJJVWXYZMCESf
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

$ 123^567890

YORK.

Off
4ts

Pearl Itatjc Figures.


Entered u

-r,//ji;/ to

tkc act

o/

(V.(/-/c vs

.^,1/,

of

Nonpareil Italic Figures.

.^fj'triiifor

jst;s

by

Aii'j<tst"\

Dedttt'itthm of ImUpentlettce, hth of July 1776

Con.ii

Anno

JMnii'uti

1331,567890

Bourgeois Italic Figures.

Brevier Italic Figures.


Gi'diye

}\'iiti'/iiiir/toii.

Bunt,

of IfehriKiry I'/oS

iliiy

!.',.'ii<l

Forti'ti.nleil hi/

b'letiiiihwit

l.'.JJir,iy:8'M

day of Nori'mher

,.'Slk

:.'7ih

of March 186S

Small Pica Italic Figures.

Long Primer Italic Figures.


Orgaiiht'd

the

VJo.'l'iinS'M

the

Yciir 2,S<!3

0i'tjiiAti2<:'tl

Jufh ihiy of

Jjiji-enibei'

IS(J'^

J'-J4'j07S!.iO

Pica Italic Figures.

of Sefifemher 1863
1:^34007890

Or(/uin'?:e(l :24tli dtnj

In fonts of less than

und

11)

.3

lbs.

iit

second class prices.

Nonpareil Engraver's

LBS.

Italic.

mas iiowahd.

GHA.yr, smtshj/aa; sirjESis.^.v,


l^Jngraring on yrood done in the jiealesi

manner and at

Februa>:y Sixleenlh.

SCJE.\'!S

Iftwlesale

and

Sistorj of the Tfdr.

Long Prijier Engraver's

AS3iAMAM

Dry

iti

Goods, &c,

13 LBS.

/,

/866

Pica Engraver's Italic.

DAJVCJJVG

;?iJVD

MUSIC

Manager^s Comptimeniary ^atl


-Fridqy Maj '23, 7866
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

HILLS WITH VERDURE CLAD.


in the

amendment passed
year 1234567890

Long Fiiimek Caledonian

Italic.

ZIJVCOZJV.

ITALIC.

Congressional articles of

$f2Si.

2'he Z/hiied States Sanitary Cotnmission.

JTanuaty

most reasonable prices

BrEVIEU CALEiJONIAN

IJV CEJrT.RAL TAUJi:

'Reiall 3)ealers

the

$i33i.5ft7S90

Brevier Engraver's Italic.

9 j.Bs.

10 LBS.

OCEAJ^'S

Italic.

SWELLING

TIDE.

History of the Fenian War ivritten


hy a native, 1234567890

12 lbs.

Pica Caledonian Italic.

DEEPEMIJ^G SHADOWS.
Drifting along the stream of time

June 123J^567890

York.

^
\
Great Primeh Lithographic

12 A.

36 a

JlltKoixgK tKeJ\etal
der's

ozw Type

iThOT^e

Italic.

Patented.

$10.00.

are noTsr

iT-e

zLsiizg -perh-

moTe Q^uLPcCble Ijy gii^iixg


tlxe Fine ScuLt Lines, still

rruxclx

TozLgJuxess to

of ^OTvei^ JPress Printing


moJces it im.por'tcLrLt to Jzai^e a Strong, Full
Face, i^Jriclx is so p-pominent a fecLtn~re in ozur
tlxe se-ve-re Tvov~k.

Specimen

FooT^.

(PJlY

IV^e a-re prep cured to fnrnisK

to OSl

ORFFR

For Valne

(JDOLL^RS

Sleceii^ed.

jlNCIFNT J\lONTJ2TFNTS
a

10

$10.00

Double Small Pica Lithosraphic Italic Patented.

jUthouLgfi the Metal jve are

no^ izsiizg

renders onr Type JVEizcK More ^nrable


Ijy giving more Tonghness to the fine
Modr Lines, still the seVere y^orh. of
^ower Fress Printing, ir^akes it important to haVe a Strong Fall Face
which is so prominent a featnre in oar

^ay

to the

order of

J^JLTIOJsTjLIj
PARMEB, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoek.

^jlni^

6 12

&

Great Peimek Postbk

25 lbs.

Italic.

66c.

History has not preserved the nafne of


the inventor or manufacturer of the first
Printing ^ress. It waSj no doubt^ a crude
and unwieldy machine that was used in the
infancy of the art ; but the attention of machinists

time

and experimental printers^ from

of J^aust

to the

the

present day^ have been

engaged in the invention and improvement of


printing presses, Mge after age^ time and

money have

upon

been lavished

this object.

Mmc ^JEi'a HiJicL Mjvo ^Qms


1234667S90

36 a 18

Great Pbimbb Condensed

Machinery now
saving strength^

We

does nearly

Jiealth^ time^

66c.

emry part of

and money in
^

lalor^ thus

all that it does.

tread wpon leautifully fgwred car])ets that are woven hj

machinery from single threads.

made ly machinery
stitches

a minute.

the locomotive^

and

Italic.

at the

We

We

wear

clothes that are

swprising rate of two thousand

hear in every direction the whistle of

which saves us incalculable

convenient transportation of person

time^ in the safe

and property.

ABCBEFaHIJKLMNOFQBBTUYWX TZ&^(E
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW YORK.

50 a,

15

Pica Venetian Bokipt. No.

This
is

Lio-Jit

and Elegant

Script

with

VEJ^ICE QUEEI.' OF

50 a, 15 A.

tlie

Heads &c. as

THE J1)mjTIC

]>,CA Ven3:tian,

No.

in the ancient

and

it

combines the

compactness of (koman.
1870

$7.00.

8.

JTahc:zs naving luit'iin the:n the :ncsi enlarged


'ccTn

'Typographic Art,

Letter, a 7nastcrpiecc of the

partittdarly tiseful for Circulars, ChccJ;s^ JVote

flowing grace of

$T.0O.

1.

-.ncdcvz aaes of the world,

and

cultivated,, :ni7ids,

have ever regarded the study

of Art of the highest irnxortance 18'J9.

aOYE(BjYJ\EJTT 8ECU(RITIES

(BCUGHT AJiQ SOLQ

Great Primer Venetian Script.

Another beautiful Xetter in time


of the Sprinter.

from

S/'his

an

is

Fonts of

to -meet

and

24 lbs., at $1.00

per

lb.

the requirements

very plain and free

artistic cut,

the faults of J'cripts generally, viz.

Arrangements are Completed for

80 a,

13

S'rade.

1 SY'i

Pica Currency.

15 A.

$f) 50.

Metropolitan ^ank.

dmong

Explorations

fery

the South

American Mountains

Ifseful 'Jor Circulars

Receivable for Ifnited States Stamps 1^70.

34

II,

Great Primer Currency.

10 A.

$5.00.

fractional Currency,
Exquisite

:/lll

Workmanship (Defying Competition,


3he JVational Monument,
Sizes

Of Calendars

3^or iSro,

Patent PenrJing.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO..

New

Yotik.

<v.^V^^

(Pica

Venetian Script.

This Light and Elegant Letter, a masterpiece of the Typographic


Lirly

useful for Circulars. Checks, JVote=heads

of Script with

tlie

complete without

compactness of (Roman.

&c.

Fonts of

<9rcat

Primer Venetian
Fonts of

la

and

24 lbs., at $1.00

Another Peantiful Metter in time


Sfhis is

THE

QUEEJ\' OF

an

artistic cut,

of the

1=2

lbs.

JfL^RlJTIC

at $1.16

per

lb.

1870

meet the requirements of

very plain and free from' the

Mutual ^rabSag

and kerned

letters.

Association 1 8Y0

Great Primer Eimmed Gothic.

12 a.

can be

lb.

faults of fcripts generally, viz.: indistinctness


Gfftre

Office

j^cript.

per

to

particu=

combines the flowing grace

it

JVo well appointed (Printing

(Beautiful Series.

tJiis

AMP'HimOUS VEJ^ICE

the Sprinter.

as

art, is

$5.75.

iii tifiif iiiiii iiiiifiii


inpiilil

iiiiiiiii

fir'

Sriiiiiiltf

20

ibitriitit*!

iii
Two

10 a.

ill

iiifirsiii

if itilpi

peirfifillo'i

Line Small Pica Rimmed Gothic.

^iii

$6.50.

iitie!iii& iiiiiiPii
iiitipi^tiiif iiniiiifeejiiii^

of

fill i fill liiiil

li

CO.,

'P?

New York.

iififtiiiii Siiriiii

lirliiiiit li

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented,

A.

FARMER, LITTLE &

No.

15.

ii

$B.OO.

50 a 30

NoNPAKEiL Antique No,

50 a 24

4.

HOUSE CARPENTER AND BUILDER


LARGE PHOTOGRAPH AND AMBROTYPB GALLERY

MiNioK Heavy Pace.

NEW TIMBER SPECULATION


BOSTON AND PROVIDENCE EXPRESS TRAIN

United States Musket Factory-

Monument

to the

Memory

Heavy Demand

of Alexander Hamilton.

for

Type

Continued Activity in the Produce Markets

Merchandise. 186*7

Petroleum.

BO a 30

Brevier Skeleton Antique.

60 a 30

CHOICE &OSHEN BUTTER AND CHEESE DEPOT.


DESCSIPTIOlf OF RIYERS

AND WATER POWER

IN SOUTH

1867

Long Primer Skeleton Antique.

FERINE CLOTH LINED PAPER COLLAR

WESTERS TEIAS

THE CUSTOM HOUSE AND INTERNAL REVENUE BROKERABE

Prodnctions ot our Natioaal Poets

We

Inrnisli Calimets

and

all articles

EiDire Sewing MacMne Company


In a Printing Olce

Diaionis

mi

all otiier

Precions Stones Bonglt for Casli

1867

Electrotyping,

1867

Practical Business.

30 a 18

Pica Condensed No.

2.

DESCRIPTIVE AND BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES

ELECTROTYPING IN THE BEST MANNER AND AT REASONABLE PRICES


Ornamental Paper

Box Manufacturers

Twentieth Annual Trade Sale of the

New York

Publishing Houses

Rosendale Cement. 1867

50 a 20

Pica Venetian.

55 a la

Pica Pen

Hand Roman.

fBEJUTIES OF VENICE

(DELIGHTFUL S^Pmj^G MO<RJ^IJIG


Enhancing

(kaptures

Gliding along the Stream of Life

Hawthorn. i86j
FABMEE, LITTLE &

njg^o

CO.,

New

BRiatlTSKWa DilWK 0? TOVTH


Girand EntertaimneTLi:
English. HuiTiorists

and Lecturers

JlCaidenliood.

678

Yoek.

^^

r
Gkeat Peimer Bulletin.

Pica Bulletin.
Fonts of

^^\\!vs.

"vs.

and

5,

Fonta-of

10 lbs.

V>o\\v otWYOtc^v^e-

7, 12,

and 24 Iba

awdi wse^uX.

Double Small Pica Bulletin.


Fonta of

^\\v%

7 14,

and

28 lbs.

%Vv^\.e^ \^v\.\^ \>e; w-'SQ^di

5^y

Pica Mabisonian.

Long Pbimek MADisosrLiN.


Fonts of 3,

^h-Ls.

is.

CL LLa.Lua.LLe.

5,

and 10

Fonts of 4,

lbs.,

acLcLLtLan.

to.

iLte m.an.u.

af ^a^LfiL. ^t can. Le. used


adoLa.n.ta^e faf- neat an.d tasLUr

LLat^LetLes.

ujiLth.

a^f^eat

^t^L

uxat^L:.,

as.

Lt

eam.Lin.es

0^i^Ln.tei^s'

LatLi.

an.d

nxLUieLtLi.

madeta

of

5, 10,

and 20

3ke fLladiLctLanA
n^atianaL

and

14 Iba.

aa^es. af. tke. uiatLd,

g^atded tke

in.

3ke

YS'tO.

s.tiLdii^

^tLantic

fiaEtSu,

kaiie eujet te-

af cllli^

and

SleLeg^i'afLk,

New

iS'bO.

q^i^e.at

martif.

af

and

^fale^
h-CLcL

cLaajLn.

t/re.

lbs.

cLak.

LtaacL^cL

aael

cl^^s.

nuLtkLLi^

the.

jfLn^ma ^am_Ln.L
CO.,

and

af att vf tke kio^keAt

Fonts of 7, 14, and 28

Iba.

tke. Lualksi afcLLLl laLn.tEl&

FAKMEE, LITTLE &

cllL-

Double Small Pica Madisonian.

Gkeat Pbimek Madisonian.


onU

7,

S3^ea/zLe. af tke m.a&t enLatq^ecL and


tiiLated minds., Lo.tk in tke. ancient

jWai^eLLause.

^'aun.di^U. ULa& ^&taLLLsh.ed

^*v<&\c\.gc\^*vvc^

f^cLce

af.

73S3 !

York.

Efflti

THE LATEST FROM FARMER,


36 a

18

TikSft Healtli-s^

and

mo

<a-ipeanfc(B]p

Blessing

Happi-s^ Imstimct

Bootee audi

IS

15

]Ma,ii Tbliani Ibo lia.-^e ^cqiali^edL

leadls lilm to talce D>ellglit In Ills

IMCagaialjaes Kecsel-^edL.

ifcliKB

CoHmp)llim]i<e]i]nfca.ify

imoslc

p><a>-w<Bifi[Tail

ISsitliamailbe

30 a

iToi? ai

-vv^lilcli

$5.50.

-vs'oi'ls:

IS'?.

Beeviek Extended Open.

Fn'liLlter'
nPn^iiiilbliDLg'

CO., N. Y.

Nonpareil Extendeb Open.

T]nie]ie Is

36a

LITTLE &

IKxouwfglom amdl

mnKBEtims olF
iSSaic

$6.25.

]BiiiiL<g[iuielt.

pieifjp'Oltti.Eilfciiaig'

pjEigsiinig

ICveiMtSc

1 '?'.

'PTrim.t&Ts^m.

Long Pkimer Extended Open.

THE

I3.A^T^]ES]E3ffi5@

$6.50.

H^iaVEBT.

Fiire IiagTar'aLnce OompaLiciies olT T^e^v^ "^orlso


Tltieologicai,! einttiiaair'ies amd.

24 a

13

iblliKB

TLJmilteclI

Pica Extended Open.

(GrCP'^eiriaLimKBiiiilb

jfj

ohools of

IPir^imlbim^

TTHrim

CO.,

New Yokk.

$6.75.

]0<B]p>aLiribinm.(Biii.ltc

$7.50.

M[nKTr3Ei.oiPOiL^z

TTEne ISaL^le (DaLlbiiniet

FARMER, LITTLE &

Gkeat Pkimek Extended Open.

g j^

^Itatteso

T<d>i^

OiPimaLrameimtgtL]!

IType

Copyright applied for.

50 a,

24 A.

Nonpaheil Italic Open.

$5.00

50 a,

20 A.

Brevier Italic Open.

$5.5(1

SPI^MM'lillli AjmaiTIiBiM.

TMs Very

Meautiful X,eUer Slmmld be

FritiUn^

36 a,

Mverp

Long Primer Italic Open.

$5.50

Vi

L^^'u>^^tj"u>

a,

im,

Office

18 A.

jPTactlcul

Wtmnd

a J

Pica Italic Open.

12 A.

JDUMABILITY OUM ABVEMTISEMEWT,

Extensive Asmrtwient Of Job Types 1870,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York,

$5.00.

=?

Nonpareil Light Face Celtic, No.

36 A.

FIRST NATIONAL

2.

$3.0(1.

BANK OF THE UNITED

THE HOME JOURNAL,

STATES.

Minion Light Face Celtic, No.

36 A.

MOONLIGHT ON THE OCEAN WAVE

YANKEE STATE

1870.

36 A.

$4.25.

2.

Brevier Light Face Celtic, No.

FAIR, 1692.

$4.23.

2.

THE INTRODUCTION OF PRINTING WAS NECESSARY


EASY READING TYPE.
Long Primer Light Face Celtic, No.

6 A.

1434

$5.75.

2.

MONTHLY REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES


NEW COMBINATION BORDER 32.
!

A.

Pica Light Pace Celtic, No.

$5. TO.

2.

MERCANTILE BANKING ASSOCIATION


RAIL ROAD CROSSING, i8.
18

Great Primer Light Face Celtic, No.

A.

$7.00.

2.

NIAGARA SUSPENSION BRIDGE.

HARD METAL,
Two

12 A.

Line Pica Light Face Celtic, No.

27.
$7.25.

2.

WASHINGTON HOUSE.
JUBILEE,
Two

8 A.

49.

Line English Light Face Celtic, No.

$7.50.

2.

HOLIDAY PRESENT
SUPERIOR,
FAEMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

10.

York.

u
^^-

NONPAKEIL LiGHT-FaCE CELTIC.

Long Primer Lioht-Faoe

$6.40

Barry's Comparative

Professional Patriots' and Seedy Scamps' last Refuge

LEGISLATIVE HALLS

LILYVV^HITE

in

Tropic

of a

HAND
$7.65.

Dignity of Labor, Independence

Isles

CELTIC

Great Primer Light-Face

Beautifully Clear

Two Line

Ssialt.

$7.55.

and Finely Cut


I

Line Nonpareil Ornamented, No.

2.^.

$7.ft5.

Pica Ltght-Face Celtic.

Impeeuniosity the Root of

NEW

GENTRY

Celtic.

SUPERB

Two

$6.50.

$7.40.

BANJOS' DULCET STRAINS

IS A.

Anatomy

Pica Light-Face Celtic.

Brevier Liqht-Face Celtic.

Feathery Palms Dreaming

Celtic.

all

Evil

DOCTRINES
$3..t0.

18 A.

Great Primer Ornamented, No.

14.

$5.2.5.

WBME W-R^mmG mmTwo Line Small

12 A.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Pica Ornamented No.

10.

$5.00.

33 A. 12 A.

Gkeat Pbimeu Grotesque, No.

$5.81

2.

2:;

24 A.

FOf^

1868.

$6.00.

2.

j^OMINATIONg FOR 1868.

Two Line

12 A.

Paragon Geotesqub, No.

8 A.

pEMOCRATIC I^EPUBtlC pARTY

1\ePUBL1CAN and PeMOCF(ATIC -pAF^TIEp


JHOMINATIONP

A.

Pica Grotesque No.

$fi.25

2.

<^REAT Democratic and


]\(0MINATI0N^

30 a 20

Long Primer Monastic.

8oz.

2 lbs.

I^epublican

FOR

20 a 8

1868,

paper ruling

Articles of ^Werit are "^orth their yALUE.

ji

Double Pica Monastic.

fi

l)s. 4

oz

10 A 5

in

20 A 8

Great Primer Monastic.

SERVICEABLE

Richness

Two

24

Hardware Manufactui^ng Company

superiority 6^

Unrivalled

3 lbs. 8 oz.

Enclisu Monastic.

DESERVEDLY POPULAR.

14

}^artie^

4 lbs.

75

EoTH Novel and Ornamental

Line Great Primer Monastic.

BENEFACTORS

6;

N iTED States Cotton Sales

RR
J

NDEN
)

FARMEE, LITTLE &

CO..

New

York.

\r^--

A 8

Bnoush Monastic.

PAPER RULING

Wa^dware

10a

Company

Two

Both Novel and

States

Two Line Nonpabbil Fbanklin

memoirs of JEFFERSON

Cotton

ancient men

Sales

Line Beetiee Fbanklin Title.

WASHINGTONIAN,
Two Line

Title.

Two

Ornamental

6!

Two

Title.

Two Line Long Primee Fbanklin

j^

Line Gkeat Pkimeb Monastic.

BENEFACTORS
Jnited

Gkeat Pbimer Monastic.

serviceable

24

M.anufactu^ing

A 8

Pica Feanklin Title.

ENCIRCLE

Line Gbeat Peimer Feanklin Title.

FRANKLIN.
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

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NEW YORK.

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GREAT PRIMER OLD STYLE

NO.

2.

minds of men were warmed by reHgious enthufiasm which was awakened, first by the Crusades, and

While

the

afterwards by the Reformation, the

fined

Art

of Printing, de-

moral world, perpetuated

to alter the face of the

the impressions thus created, and widened the circle over

which they extended. The

spirit of religious

freedom was

no longer nourished only from the exhortations of the


developed in the fervor of secluded congregations
it breathed into the permanent exertions of human
thought, and spread with the increafmg wealth and enThe charms
larged defires of an opulent state of society.
of genius and the discoveries of science may attract a few
but it is by religious emotion chiefly that
in every age
and it was
the great body of mankind are to be moved
by the spread of enthusiasm, accordingly, that the greatest
pulpit, or
;

FOSSIL'S

MODERN ANTIQUITIES

36

%y^

REMAINS OF THE CENTESIMAL PERIOD

Geeat Pkimer Old Style

24 a 12 A.

Italic, No.

$S.OO.

2.

of Printing it is necejfary
to carry our research to a period far more remote than that
at which the art became applicable to making books or that

To

invejligate properly the origin

The

New

York Type Foundry Eftablished

FARMER, LITTLE
FARMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New Yokk.

&

i8iO-.

COMPANY.

ijh;

fp
A

50 a 18

Long Primer Old Style.

have

Pica Old Style.

books

Printing has been applied to fo many fub-

rapidly increased, they have been fo admirably

jeds; books have fo rapidly increased, they

every degree and

have been fo admirably adapted. 1234567890

Printing has been applied


fo

50 a 18

adapted to every

tafte,

many

to fo

subjefts

1234567890

BOOKSELLERS' EMPORIUM.

fb

fli

fi

United States Army.

fk

50 a 18

fl

DOUBLE CYLINDER.

ftffi ffffl

Great Primer Old Style.

24 a 12

Printing has been applied to fo


many subjedis ; books have been
SO rapidly increasing.

fffiflfflffi

16a

fb (la

Ik

ft

Printing has been applied


to so

many

subje6^s

2345

MACHINE

COMPOSITORS.
Stick.

Presses,

Double Small Pica Old Style.

234.567890

Patent Iron Shooting

Power

Ancient

Curiosities.

Double Pica Old Style.

AuLD Lang

Syne. 1340

Ancient Paper was Smooth and Durable,

OLDEN
50 a 18

To

LOW} Primer Old Style

to

carry our research

is ne.

of printing it
a period far more remote

to

than that at which the art became applicable

The

early inhabitants

to

making

Pica Old Style Italic.

Printing
year 1604.
the city

Great Primer Old Style

air.

to the 7no5t

authentic history

established the first printing press

name of the

inventor

FROM EXPERIMEN'TJL PRINTERS

16 a 8

Nothing can improve a merry


tale fo much as its being delivered

introduced into America about the

According

Tlie

Italic.

with a grave and ferious

was

of Mexico

of the earth

HEROES IN THE ELYSIAN FIELDS

44 a 12

ia 18

Italic.

invejtigate properly the origin

cefary

TIMES.

Double Small Pica Old Style

The

Italic.

ancients steemed hunt-

ing not only as a manly and

Our
Incidents in Life

Ancient Authors

//UNT/NG EXERCISE
FAKMEE. LITTLE &

CO.,

THE REFORMERS

New York.

16 a 8

Double English Old Style,

6 A

FARMER, LITTLE & CO.


Old New York Fire Insurance Company
Benjamin Franklin. 76
16 a 8

Double Great Primer Old Style.

ROMANTIC HISTORY
Old Manuscript and

Hundred
10 a' 6

Curiosities

Years. 246

Double Paragon Old Style.

WASHINGTON
The

Oldest Generations.

Foundry 1867
8a 6

Four Line Pica Old Style.

ESTABLISHED.
Things

New

and Old

Reception.
FARMER, LITTLE, &

CO.

New

York.

Gj

LIGHT FACE SERIES.

PEARL KO.
The method
TaiR-y

no fixed rules

on the

tftste

4.

AGATE

of eetting or diaplayiiig a title page


for inatrucliou

and ingenuity of

tlie

governed entirely by

can be laid down, ns

compositor

the learner, as a help or guide to

is

him

we

it

depends so much

shall, therefore,

recommend

in this part of hia business, to refer to

which nre considered neatly executed ; and it would be well for


every apprentice to commence, when he begins hia apprenticeship,
to preserve
pasted in a book, all title pages, or cards, that may strike his I'aii.y for neatness
and proper proportions, and refer frequently to them which would enable him
printed

titles

to correct
title

any deficiency

in his tiiste.

Authors should endeavor to make their


pages as short and concise as possible, for a crowded title can never
be

displayed

Avitli

elegance or tnste.

The

should never be profusely indulged in


BuHicient where

temj'ora !

ii

title

mores

is

not too

full.

use of

what is called ornamentjil type


roman capitals are generally

the plain

The

dedication generally follows the

NO.

3.

OuB CoMsiEECiAL Age. It IS an age of commercial civilization.


A man not only hears tliis truth from the lips of every orator on the
platform, and every pliilosopher in the lecture-hall ; it not only
reaches him through the press and the iiulpit but his eye reports the
;

fact along the wluirves

and tln-ough

vphole country, indeed,

is

of every city. The


a gigantic advertisement of this commertlie streets

character of the age.


The great world itself owns a common
brotherhood in tliis new spirit of modern life ; and unlike as tribes
and nations are, the productions of their soils and the manufactures
of their hands are uniting them closely together. Some find fault
with it others condemn it ; while not a few, rising above the mere
cial

materialism of commercial phenomena, see therein the sure prophecy


of a higher humanity. One thing however, is certain, viz. inter-

Catllina patient'i a nostra f qitamdiu nos et'iam furor


eludet? hie tameii vU'lf,

tempora

mores

Catilina patientia nostra

guamdiu

iios

isle tuiiB

etiam furor

ENTERTAINING HISTORICAL NARRATIVES.

12S45G7890

tuus eludctf

iste

EMINENT UNITED STATES SENATORS.

PRINTING MATEEIALS OF EVERV DESCniPTION.

ADVAMCEMENT OF THE

title, and seldom exceeds one page.


It should be set in capitals and small
capitals, displayed in the manner of a titlt; ; but where it is extended
to a considerable length, it is generally set in letter lai^er than the work.
The preface
IS usually set in a type varying in size from the bodv of the
work. The runnin"
title to the prehiceb is commonly set in the same manner iis that
of the body
of the work, and the folios are put in numeral letters, beginning with ii over
the
second pagre, and the rest continued in the same mamien If the work itself is

printed with folios only, then the preface should have them also in the middle
of the line. Figures are now generally used for signatures in the body of a
work ; but for the ike of distinction, and to prevent the binder from committing
errors
putting up the book, the signatures to the prefatory sheets, such as

and contents, ave put in letters. For off-<;ut signatures in 12mo, and
other lorms that have oft-cuts, an asterisk is added to the figure. The contents
follow the preface, or introduction, and are usually set in a size smaller
than
the body ; the first line of each summary full, and the rest indented an em
quadrat, illi the referring figures iiistified at the end of the reqiective lines.
Numerous errors would be avoided, were authors to endeavor to render their
copy more legible, before they place it in the hands of the printer. It can
prefaces

12S45678fl0

HISTHIOJSrO AET.

course is the law of the age. If men tliemselves will not or cannot
and products cannot remain with them. The
industry of the world is all in motion, floating over the ocean, liasten^-'"
_.....
'
ing over the land, brealdng
__
through
all barriei-s, penetrating
every
solitude, and entering into the daily thought and living of mankind. Each part of the globe is fast becoming a necessity to every
other part, and, at hist, selfishness serves benevolence by executing
the commands of universal sympathy. It is not a new lesson. Divine wisdom taught it long shice. The sentiment of brotherhood
and race, revealed in the early ages of tlie world, illustrated by
prophets and confirmed by Christ, was alwajs a truth for reverence
travel, their inventions
'

and love. But it slumbered in beautiful parables, and lay hidden in


mystic figures, until the slow working of time brought it forth and
enthroned it in the practical creed of obedient men. Step by step
religion has advanced on the intellectual and social convictions of
human society step by step it has mastered one interest after another so that now trade and commerce are exerting their wondrous
;

EMERALD AND DIAMOND FUENISHED TO ORDER.


NONPAREIL NO.

MINION NO.

8.

It has ever been the object of eminent printers to have the


woi-ks they print without faults or eiTors, not only with respect

and

but chiefly in regard to their


coiTCCting- and illustrating such words and passages as are not
to Avi-ong- letters

false spelling's,

fully explained or expressed, or are obsciu-ely -wi-itten

would be a

m the copy.

advantage to a proof reader, if, beside ha^-uig


a thorough and competent knoAvledge of his own language,
he should likewise understand those in frequent use, as the
It

gi-eat

Greek, Latin, French, Spanish,

Italian,

and German, and possess

a quick: and discerning eye; these are the accomplishments

which

a,

proof reader

temi^ral

may

raise his

own and

by

Most

9.

who for the most part, have


and their information together, feel
that the pressing and material busmess of life has a
to

wm

self-educated men,

their bread

tendency to interfere with the memory of the

scientific

facts or of the philosophical truths A^^hicli, in the inter-

vals of leism-e, they

have been

Now

at pains to acquire.

many every-day familiar thmgs which, by any


one sincerely in earnest, may be made powerful helps
there are
to the

memory, and

to habits of reflection,

through the

his employer's

temporal

mores! Catilina patientia nostra? quamdiu iste tuun eludetf

ESSAY ON SPELLING AND PUNCTUATION.

186T

Tnores I

etiam

BLAOKSTONE'S

Catilina patientia nostra?


tuxes

LAW

iste

eludetf

COMMENTARIES.

1867

WASHINGTON AT MOUNT VERNON.


MANIIATT^VN INSURANCE COMPANY.
credit; for it is a maxim ^ith booksellers to give the first edition
of a work to be done by such printers as they know to be either
able proof readers themselves, or that employ fit persons, though
not of universal learning, that are acquainted with the elements
of those arts and sciences that may fall under their examination.
"We say examination for in cases wliere a proof reader is not
acquainted witli the subject before him, he, together with the
person that reads to him, can do no more than literally compare
and cross-examine tlie proof by the original, ^^^thout altering
either the spelling or punctuation; since it is in an author's
province to prevent mistakes in such case, either by delivering
his copy very accurate and fairly written, or by carefully perus;

ing the proof sheet. But where a proof reader understands the
language and character of a work, he often finds occasion to alter
and amend things that he can maintain to be either wrong or ill

FARMER LITTLE &

association of ideas.
It may be useful to illustrate this
position by a few examples. There are few readers who
nave traveled by any sort of carriage, who could have
failed to remark the appearances of motion impressed
upon the landscape. Tliese are due, not to the landscape, but to the carnage.
Such simple phenomena are
easy of association with the motion of the earth and the
immobility of the sun they read many lessons to us on
;

the difference between real and apparent motion. One


of the highest ti-uths in nature is the now confessed
universality of motion.
The fixed stars are no longer
fixed in the ordinary sense, and the belief of thousands

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

LIGHT FACE SERIES.

NONPAREIL NO.

MOST

who for the most part have to


and their information together, feel

self-educated men,

win

their bread

that the pressing and material business of

life

has a tend-

ency to interfere with the memory of the scientific facts


or of the philosophical truths which, in the intervals of
leisui:;e, they have been at pains to acquire.
Now there
are many every-day familiar things which, by any one
sincerely in earnest may be made powerful helps to the
memory, and to habits of reflection, through the association of ideas. It may be useful to illustrate this position
by a few examples.
There are few readers who have traveled by any sort of
carriage, who could have failed to remark the appearances
of motion impressed upon the landscape. These are due,
not to the landscape, but to the carriage. Such simple phenomena are easy of association with the motion of the earth
and the immobility of the sun; they read many lessons to
us on the difference between real and apparent motion.

Among

the highest truths in nature is the now confessed


The fixed stars are no longer fixed

universality of motion.
in the ordinary sense,

and the

belief of thousands of years

that they were absolutely fixed, is

now proved to have


now conceded

arisen from an illusion of the senses. All are


to

be moving around each other with marvelous velocity

to ohdee.

though, from the distance, the motion appears to us to be


remarkably slow. In the words of a modern astronomer,
"mutation and change are every where found; all is motion orbits expanding or contracting, their planes rocking
up or down, their perihelia and modes sweeping in opposite directions round the sun." It is well that we are likewise told that " the limits of all these changes are fixed
that these limits can never be passed, and that at the end
of a vast period, amounting to many millions of years, the
entire range of fluctuation will have been accompllslied,
;

the entire system, planets, orbits, inclinations, excentricities, perihelia and modes, will have regained their original
values and places, and the great bell of eternity will have
then sounded One

Now among many things which we have not mentioned,


but which are nevertheless involved in the above statement, there are not a few that are extremely difticult to be
remembered, but which it would be serviceable to retain
in memory by the aid of familiar associations. Eecurring
again to the phenomena of travel (for earth is to man none
other than a mao;nificcnt chariot wherein he i-ides around
that gi-eat central luminary, the sun, in the midst of planetary systems without end,) we may again refer to the apparent motion of the objects through which the passenger
on the railway progi'esses. While passing in a direct line
through a forest of trees, those trees toward which he is
moving will appear to open out or separate from each other,
while those left behind will appear to close up. Now this
same opening out, and this same closing up, are actually
the criteria employed to determine the astronomer touch-

i^ow while the minds of men were warmed


which was awakened^ first by

l?y

the religious

the Crxisades,

DESTINED TO ALTER THE FACE OF THE MORAL WORLD, PERPETUATED

1234567890

AND AFTERWARDS BY THE BEFOBMATION, THE ART Or PRINTING,

MINION NO.
who

9.

TO ORDER.

Among

most part apparent motion.

the highest truths in


universality of motion.
The fixed stars are no longer fixed in the ordinary
together, feel that the pressing and material busi- sense, and the belief of thousands of years that
ness of life has a tendency to interfere with the they were absolutely fixed, is now proved to have
memory of the scientific facts or of the philosophic- arisen from an illusion of the senses. All are now
conceded to be moving aroiind each other with
al trviths which, in the intervals of leisure, they
marvelous velocity though, from the distance, the
have been at pains to acquire. Now there are many motion appears to be remarkably slow. In the
every-day familiar things which, by any one sin- words of a modern astronomer, "mutation and
all is motion
orcerely in earnest, may be made powerful helps to change are every where found
bits expanding or contracting, their planes rocking
the memory, and to habits of reflection, through up or down, their perihelia and modes sweeping in
the association of ideas. It may be useful to illus- opposite directions round the sun." It is well tliat
we are likewise told that "the limits of all these
trate this position by a few examples.
changes are fixed that these limits can never be
There are few readers who have traveled by any passed, and that at the end of a vast period,
of years, the entire
sort of carriage, who could have failed to remark amounting to many millions
range of fluctuation will have been accomplished,
the appearances of motion impressed upon the the entire system, planets, orbits, inclinations, exlandscape. These are due, not to the landscape, centricities, perihena and modes, will have regained

MOST

have

self-educated men,

to

win

their

for the

bread and their information

nature

is

the

now confessed

but to the carriage.

Such simple phenomena are

easy of association with the motion of the earth


and the immobility of the sun they read many

their original values and places, and the great bell


of eternity will have then sounded One
!

Now

among many things which we have not mentioned,


but which are nevertheless involved in the above
lessons to us on the diiference between real and statement, there are not a few that are extremely
;

Life seems nothing

than a tour through the illusory world, where the

else

traveler

communes with phantoms

as he passes.

WILLIAM BLAOKSTONE'S COMMENTAKIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND.


MANHATTAN FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

67

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MEDIUM FACE

NONPAUEIL NO.

SERIES.

9.

depends on the sustain any fabric reared by mental labour." Reading and
it.
On study is admitted by all to be useful. Not only useful, but,
if properly pursuedat an early period, will, througliont life,
none can this fact be urged with greater propriety than on be found among our most agreeable, chaste, and enduring
apprentices to the printing business for none have it more l^leasures. Printing, in Europe, and also in our own counconsidered a calling of the greatest
in their power to exercise beneficial influence in society, try, in former times, was

"pESPECTABlLITY
-^*^virtue

and

in

any

pi-otession

intelligence of those

who pursue

than printers. It is of great advantage to a printer to


have some knowledge of the arts and sciences, the Greek,
the Latin, the French, and the Spanish languages. All this
may not be in the power of many to acquire to any degree
of proficiency
yet, a limited knowledge of them will be
;

found of great

service.

But what

nay, indis-

is essential,

pensable, to constitute a good printer,

is

a thorough know-

The study of it may at first appear dry


and tedious but a slight progress w^ill convince a youth,
that " on grammar is founded all excellence in writing and
speaking," and that a competent knowledge of it is necessary
A man who underto his hopes of distinction in society.
stands and can speak his native language grammatically,
will never be treated with contempt in any company, nor
on any occasion without this knowledge, he cannot think
systematically, or reason logically, on any subject, however

ledge of grammar.
;

" It is not only adapted," says a learned writer,


" to invigorate the powers of youth, but in more advanced
years to exercise the profoundest erudition, and the most
exquisite taste. It is, indeed, the only foundation that can

familiar.

Can it with truth be said that it is now so


considered? Is it not almost ttic reverse? And to what
can be attributed this deterioration ? Surely, to the want
of early mental culture in those who pursue it, and of whom
the public, from the nature of their business, expect much,
but are too often disappointed. Has it not become almost
proverbial, that printers, from their limited acquirements,
are incompetent to be editors of our newspapers ? that none
but lawyers, doctors, or graduates at universities or colleges,
can fill such stations ? It should not be so. That printers,
with minds early and properly cultivated, make the best
editors, history adduces many instances in our own country.
A responsible printer is required in a newspaper establishment, and his occupation is likewise adapted to editorial
pursuits.
Printers should also be the booksellers of our
country ; and for this purpose they should have enlarged
views of general literature, the foundation of which can be
for when the cares and turmoils of bulaid only in youth
siness occupy a man's attention, it is too late to begin the
time to lay up mental treasure for future use has passed
away. If a youth occupies a portion of his hours of relaxation from daily toil in the attainment of useful knowledge,
he will not be likely to acquire a relish for frivolous company, and will shun, with the greatest self satisfaction, the
haunts of folly and of vice, Should the course recommended
be pursued by those who commence learning the printing
business, the opprobrium would soon be cast off, that at
respectability.

tempofa O mores nostra furor tuus

G-REAT HISTORICAL PAINTING OF THE REPUBLICAN COURT IN THE DAYS OF LINCOLN.

1867

BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER.

NONPABEIL NO.

THE

GOLD-FIELDS OF

some ten or twelve

NOVA SCOTLA consist of

districts of quite limited area in

themselves, but lying scattered along almost the whole


southeastern coast of the Province. The whole of this
coast, from Cape Sable on the west to Cape Canso on
the east, a distance of about two hundred and fifty
miles, is bordered by a fringe of liard, slaty rocks,
slate and sandstone in irregular alternations, some-

times argillaceous, and occasionally granitic. These


rocks, originally deposited on the grandest scale of
Nature, are always, when stratified, found standing at
a high angle, sometimes almost verticle, and with a

10.

boundary only a rude


its southern margin, and comprising,
over about six thousand square miles of surface, the
general outline of what may, geologically speaking, be
called the Gold-Eegion of Nova Scotia. It will be
most interesting hereafter to mark the gradual changes
already beginning to take place in this rich, but limited
It is destined throughout, we may be sure,
district.
to very thorough and systematic exploration. Eor,
although it is true that gold is not to be found in all
parts of it, still it is not unreasonable to search for the
precious metal throughout this whole region, wherever
the occurrence of true quartz veins the almost sole
matrix of the goldis shown by boulders on the surface. Back from the coast-line, a large part of the
district named is now little better than an unexplored
points, presenting in its northern

parallelism with

room for new discoveries.


course, in the main, very nearly due east and west. wilderness, and there is
They seldom rise to any great elevation, the promon"IVe can supply
tory of Aspatogon, about five hundred feet high, being
all kinds of Printing Presses at manufacturers'
the highest land on tlie Atlantic coast of the Province. prices. Printers who are ordering bills of Type, can
The general aspect of the shore is low, rocky, and avail themselves of our services, and have their purchases made through us.
desolate, strewn often with huge boulders of granite
OIJK
or quartzite, and where not bleak and rocky, it is covhas obtained great reputation for durability. The
ered with thick forests of spruce and wliite birch. The
and
the Metal is hard, and
counters
letters have deep
picture is not enticing, but this is, nevertheless, the
has a solidity and toughness which gives it great durabefore
us.
masses
splendid
exclusively in the
the
Metifl
nutrix"
of
this
"arida
using
true
are now
bility.
The zone of metamorphic rocks which lines this inhos- manufacture of our Type.

PRINTING PKESSES.

THE TYPE CAST IN

FOUNDKY

We

pitable coast varies in width from six or eight miles at


eastern extremity to forty or fifty at its widest
i,ts

done In tlie neatest


EliECTKOTTPING reasonable
rates.
manner, and

at the

most

BocTiester Mercantile Houses.

EXPLANATION OF THE PEINCIPLES OF STRATEGY AND GRAND TACTICS.


FUENISHED TO OKBBK.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

TORK.

8739

.;

MEDIUM FACE

MINION NO.

SERIES.

10.

or conveying the different to accomplish this desirable end, would more than
compensate for the trouble. Other evils I'esult
from this want of uniformity, and particularly
is commonly the first of a compositor's practical affect the master.
Some compositors, rather than
though it would be found more safe charge their memory with different situations of
exercises
sorts, transpose them into such boxes
particular
and advantageous, were this custom reversed, and
as contained them at their last place of work concomposing made antecedent to distributing, which sequently, the situation of the letters, in that
knowledge
of
what
is,
or
roman
case at least, is destroyed, and the transupon
a
perfect
depends
become
contained in each of the different posed sort not being replaced, the boxes

DISTRIBUTING,

sorts of letter to their respective appartments,

ought to be,
boxes in a pair of cases.

But

as the disposition

would
HARD METAL.WeMetal
we

call the attention


are now using.
of Printers to the
It is the result of long continued experiments for
or less, it follows, that such irregularities
the purpose of obtaining such toughness as will
have their effect accordingly ; of which we do not preserve the hair lines, and resist the pressure put
want for instances. The first which offers itself to upon it by power press printing.

of sorts differ in almost every printing

office,

more
must

our observation is, the loss which every composiFURNITURE. This article has come
tor sustains every time he changes his place of
to be a necessity in every Printing oflice, and
work for, being unacquainted with the situation no well appointed olficc can afford to be without
upwards.
of each sort, he is hindered, for some time, in his it. It is put up in fonts of 50 lbs., and
Our pattern gives a greater number of pieces in
quick and ready way of distributing, which might
the same weight and is stronger than the old kind
easily be prevented, were those who establish new
greathouses to follow one uniform method indeed, to PRINTING MATERIALS. Having the
est facilities for furnishing all kinds of Printing
those who are already established, the advantages
materials our customers may depend upon getting
that would accrue by changing, when necessary the best article.

METAL

mores! Catilina patientia nostra? quamdiu nos

tempora!

etiam /"uror

iste

tuns aludtt ?

PRINTING TYPES AND THE NOVELTIES OF THE TRADE ON EXHIBITION.

1867

NEW YORK AND HUDSON RAILROAD COMPANY.

BREVIER

EDUCATION

mean merely

does not

reading

and writing, nor any degree, however considIt is, in


erable, of mere intellectual instruction.
its largest sense, a process which extends from

commencement

the

child

comes

ucation begins.

to the termination of existence.

into the world,

During the

and

first

at

once his ed-

period of infancy

delicate structure is influenced for

but

good or

evil

by surrounding circumstances, cleanliness, light,


By and by the young being
air, food, warmth.
The senses become
within shows itself more.
The desires and affections assume a
quicker.

more

Every object which gives a

definite shape.

sensation, every desire gratified or denied, every


act,

word, or look of affection or of unkindness

sometimes slight and imperceptible,


sometimes obvious and permanent, in building up
has

its effect,

the

human

direction in

being; or rather in determining the

which

it

will

shoot up and unfold

tenipora

11.

Through the different states of the infant,


the child, the boy, the youth, the man, the developement of his physical, intellectual, and moral
nature goes on, the various circumstances of his
condition incessantly acting upon him, the healthfulness or unhealthfulness of the air he breathes
the kind, and the sufficiency of his food and clothing ; the degree in which his physical powers are
exerted
the freedom with which his senses are
allowed or encouraged to exercise themselves upon external objects the extent to which his faculties of remembering, comparing, reasoning, are
tasked the sounds and sights of home, the moral
example of parents the discipline of school the
nature and degree of his studies, rewards, and
punishments the personal qualities of his companions, the opinions and the practices of the
society, juvenile and advanced, in which he moves
and the character of the public institutions under
which he lives. The successive operation of all
these circumstances upon a human being from
earliest childhood, constitutes his education ; an
education which does not terminate with the arrival of manhood, but continues through life,
which is itself, upon concurrent testimony of reveitself.

the physical frame expands and strengthens


its

NO.

mores

Catilina patientia nostra ?

nos etiam furor

iste

quamdiu

tuus eludet ?

EDUCATIONAL DISCIPLINE FOR HIGH SCHOOLS AND ACADEMIES.


LIFE

AND CHARACTER OF WASHINGTON

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

IRVING.

NEW

YORK.

1867

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

BREVIER NO.
JYOTES OF SUMMER TRAVEL.Leaving
-'-

'

we

the

shore of the river, fringed with beautiful landFor a long distance above Quebec the
bank of the St. Lawrence slopes down to the
water, and, interspersed with field and wood, presents a variety of scenery.
The right shore, on
the contrary, is one continuous and abrupt bluff
from ten to forty feet in height, and lined with the
left

" City of the Straits" upon a lovely afternoon,


steamed up the broad and majestic St. Law-

rence, the great artery to the heart of the

scapes.

left

American

Continent, which, receiving the waters of our

11.

in-

land lakes, flows "unvexed" for fifteen hundred


miles to the sea.
The elegant steamer Europa,

little French Canadian cottages.


The setting sun
shimmering upon the water imparts to it the flamcomparing very favorably with some of our Hudson
ing scarlet hue so frequently seen in paintings.
River boats, contained its complement of passen- " I have often witnessed this gorgeous color on
gers, who crowded the upper deck to catch a lin- canvass," remarked a lady standing close by us,
but I have never before succeeded in finding an
gering look of the walled city, with its lofty spires
original to copy from."
A sunrise from Mount
and frowning battlements. Anchored in the middle
Washington is only equaled by a sunset upon the
of the stream lay a steamer containing an English Lower St. Lawrence. The one is a counterpart of
regiment which had just been relieved by one from the other, and it is difiieult to tell which produces
the continent, and was now returning to Old Eng- the most ravishing ocular effect upon the gazer.
We watched the declining orb throwing long, exland after some years' absence on service in the
tended shadows upon the still waters, clothing the
Canadas. In order to prevent desertions, the reg- foliage with a sombre hue, and playing hide and
iments are not permitted to remain in one place seek behind a heavy bank of clouds, until the
evening shadows gathered around us. StroUing
for any serious length of time, but are changed
over the steamer, we found our load of human
from point to point and finally sent back to the freight
composed of a variety of material. Many
mother country, their places being supplied by Americans were on board, who, as usual, confresh commands.
An English writer, who has re- trasted very favorably in dress and manners with
the representatives of other nationalities.
During
cently returned home from a tour through the
the war very few Americans made this tour, but
provinces, says " The men, seduced by high pay,
now, that peace has come, more than ever are to
either in the States or as farm laborers in Canada, be seen.
The Canadians complain that they put
are seized with an irresistable desire to quit the on a great many airs, and talk and act as if they
owned both hemispheres and all of salt water to
service abruptly,
without leave, and resort to
'

'

'

'

boot.

little

incident at

Montgomery

Falls con-

ingenious artifices to escape.

Sometimes a whole vinced us that there was some foundation for these
guard will march off bodily, non-commissioned complaints. When one of the natives, after the
officers and all
occasionally one of the number manner of the Niagara Falls cormorants, endeavored to exact an unjust fee, the spokesman of our
will submit to be handcuffed, and will be marched
party, after considerable dally, tossed him a greenby his comrades through the post as a deserter, back, with the remark " Here, take your money
;

or a

man

will

put on a sergeant's jacket, or sew

chevrons on his coat sleeve, and march

off his

they were going out on picket or patrol

party as

if

duty.''

Federal soldiers are to be seen

no English

privates are permitted to

side of the border, lest they

may

come

over

all

the Canadas visiting their friends on furlough

but

to this

you can have I shall get that back, for


we are coming over here in a few days and take
the whole of you fellows." Several of the Americans were returning from a trip to the Saguenay
River, which empties into the St. Lawrence one
hundred and twenty miles below Quebec, and conthat's all

stitutes the chief

They were

never

watering place of the Canadians.

in raptures over the wild picturesque

return.
scenery which they had witnessed, and described
the frequent changing of the Saguenay as being the most wild and romantic
On the
the commands, the posting of guards at prominent region to be found on the continent.
lower deck of the steamer was a party of Canapoints, and numerous other precautions, desertions
dians emigrating to the States.
Should the tide
are continually taking place, and some regiments
of emigration continue as great as it has been
have been more than doubly decimated from this since the close of hostilities, the women in Canada
cause during their sojourn in the Canadas. But will be badly off for husbands. After indulging
in a game of dominoes, which is the favorite pasto return to our voyage.
Quebec soon disappeared
time of the Canadians, we retired to wake from
in the distance, and we moved swiftly along the
our slumbers at an early hour in the city of Mon-

Notwithstanding

this,

Quousgue tandem,

THIS FACE

IS

abutere,

ADAPTED FOR BOOK AND MAGAZINE WORK.

1234567

THE INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPEMENT OF EUROPE.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

BREVIER

T IBERTY

witliout

law

the dream of

is

-L'impossil-ile of realization, and, if it


sible,

fools,

were

pos-

could only result in anarcliy, confusion

and every species of

evil.

We

know nothing

of such a condition, either from revelation, observation, or experience.

The very

relations

between men as individuals, or as aggregated into communities,


states and nations, give rise to law by which
these are adjusted and maintained without
violation.
So that he who would escape from
the dominion of law must needs find a place
outside of the universe, where he can neither
affect another by his presence and acts, nor be
aflected in his own person and feehngs by any

which necessarily

exist

relation to a fellow-being.
suffice to explain

statement will

Tliis

the necessity for

human

law,

without reference to the grand fact, distinctly


impressed upon all the works of creation, that
one law-giver has boimd all things that He has

made

and obedience to that


which He has ordained for the
government of His universe, and that there is
no escape from just responsibility if the provisions of His law are infringed, either positively or negatively, by contravention or non-fulin due subjection

rule of action

We are then the

fillment.

servants of law,

and regarded as moral beings, we are bound to


obey the moral law, being servants of righteousness

if

vants of sin

our obedience
if

we

fall

is

short of

complete, or serits

or openly transgress and defy

In this latter

class, all

men

are comprehended, because

requirements,

its

commands.

in a state of nature

have sinned, by

all

omission and commission, both failing to do

what

is

right,

and actually and continually

doing what is wrong. They are therefore in a


state of condemnation, for the law pronounces

udgements upon every soul that doeth evil,


and awards its sentence of death for the oflence
its j

of wliich the transgressor is guilty.


pel proposes to free us from

tliis

The

gos-

condemnation,

and reverse the sentence which has been judiNot, however, by rendering
the law inoperative generally, and so releasing
all from the penalties wliich they have incurred
by its violation nor by extending mercy to
cially declared.

NO.

SERIES.

13.

the individual, on account of past disobedience,


or promises of future respect for its provisions,
and amendment of life. The exactions of the
law must be met and fully satisfied, no part
can be altered or modified, all must be obeyed.
The judge is bound by its requirements, he
must provide for the infliction of the punishment, and take care that its majesty be not
dishonored by an abatement of any just demand. There is but one way to avoid the consequences of transgression. The sinner must
consent to the law that it is good, and acknowledge that the commandment, even while it
condemns him, is holy and just. Then, if he
can show that he has been made free from the
law, having beccmie bound to another master,
even to one who has satisfied the requirements
of the law itself and who has bestowed his
righteousness upon the guilty one who, otherwise, must suffer
there is an obligation upon
the judge not to condemn but to acquit, not to
declare guilty, but to justify, not to execu.te,
but to pardon the offender. He goes free from
the law of sin and death, not in absolute, uncontrolled liberty, but as a servant of righteousness. Henceforth, he is bound by a new
law which is no less stringent than that from
which he has been delivered. It equally demands a perfect obedience and the subjection
of every power and faculty, and the man is
none the less a servant because he obeys a
new master. These are familiar truths to all
who have learned the principles of the gospel,
yet they need to be stated anew that they may
have their due weight and force in stimulating
the hearts of God's people to a new activity in
His service. There is, too often, a vague feeling in reference to spiritual duties, as if the
fact that the christian is not under the law,
but under grace, was sufficient to discharge
him from all obligations, and leave him free to
render service, or deny his master, as his own
will might dictate obedience, or disobedience.
Hence arises in great measure that indifference
to the claims of the Gospel upon all that we
have and all that we are, which makes us so
unwilling to work for the cause of Christ and
His church, or to honor him with the substance which his bounty has bestowed upon us.
The Apostle looked at this matter in a very
different light, and understood the obligations
of those who professed Christ to be far too high
in their character to admit either of negligence,
or disobedience, of the law of righteousness.
Yet he recognized this tendency in the human
mind and therefore he earnestly besought his
brethren, to present their bodies as living
sacrifices, holy and acceptable to God, which
was but a reasonable service. He reminded
;

Neatly Cut atid Handsome. 1S67

THE VERY LATEST FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC EXCHANGES.


PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

1334

MEDIUM FACE

BREVIER

SERIES.

NO.

9.

ON WRITING.No one will deny ue is greatly enlianced by the possession of tliis.


advantages of a good style of penman- The elegant and rapid writer will always command a much higher salary than the slow and
ship.
As a qualification for business it is of the
inelegant.
It is therefore abundantly worth
first importance, and goes far in the mind of an striving for, as a business qualification.
It is
7 TINTS
-^tlie

employer, towards making up for other deficien- also a valuable means of success in intellectual
cies.
Let a man in business circles step up to a and social life. If one writes rudely and with
difiiculty, he will very seldom put his thoughts
desk and write some document in a clear, free,
upon paper, and will thus fail of an important
and bold hand, and he will at once create an means of mental culture. For the same reason
impression in his favor. When a young man he will fail of penning those entertaining epistles
are the delight of fi'iends and an importgoes in pursuit of employment, the first thing which
ant element in social life. The truth is, there
he is asked to do is to give a sample of his hand is scarce!}' any position in which a man may be
writing.
If he can give satisfaction in this, his placed where a good hand writing will not be
Read the ad- of great value. It is always admired and genesuccess is comparatively certain.
rally appreciated. And yet most people are unvertisements of business men for clerks, bookwilling to spend very much time in its cultivakeepers, (fee., and you will notice that they re- tion, which appears to be an inconsistency. This
quire the applicant to apply in his own hand can only be accounted for on the ground of false
writing.
We have before said that a good hand theories. It is quite generaUj' supposed that
if it can be learned at all it can be done in a
writing goes far towards making up for other
very short time. We are aware that this imand we might add that when other pression has been made, to a great extent, by
deficiencies
men who go
first class qualifications are possessed, their val- teachers of writing themselves
;

tempora

snores

CatiUna patientia nostra

furor

iste

quamdiu

tuus elmht?

HOUSEHOLD BOOKS FOR THE NURSERY NEATLY BOUND.


MOONLIGHT SAIL UP

TI-IE

186Y

HUDSON.

BOURGEOIS NO.

9.

cannot linger in the beautiful crea- bloody ashes of war, of grass growing in the
streets of great cities, of ships rotting at the
tions of inventive genius, or pursue the
wharves, of fathers burying their sons, of
withscience,
modern
of
discoveries
splendid
strong men begging their bread, of fields
out a new sense of the capabilities and dig- unfilled, and silent workshops, and despairvoice of rebuke
nity of human nature; which naturally leads ing countenances, we hear a
to our clamorous sorrows and peevish comresolves,
manlier
to
self-respect,
to a sterner
plaints; we learn that pain and suffering
and higher aspirations. We cannot read the and disappointment are part of God's proviways of God to man as revealed in the his- dence, and that no contract was ever yet
virtue should setory of nations, of subhme virtues as exem- made with man by which
cure to him temporal happiness. In hooks
phfied in the lives of great and good men,
be it remembered we have the best products
without falhng into that mood of thought- of the best minds. We should any of us esful admiration, which, though it be but a teem it a great privilege to pass an evening
such a
transient glow, is a purifying and elevating with Shakespeare or Bacon were
admitted to the
were
we
but
possible
thing
history
of
study
influence while it lasts. The
presence of one of these illustrious men we
self
is especially valnable as an antidote to
might find them touched with infirmity or
It teaches us lessons of hu- oppressed with weariness, or darkened with
exaggeration.
When we the shadow of a recent trouble, or absorbed
mihty, patience, and submission,
To us
obtrusive and tyranous thoughts.
read of realms smitten with a scourge of by
the oracle might be dumb, and the hght
famine or pestilence, or strewn with the

ONE

tempora !

mores !

furor

Gatilina patientia nostra


iste

tuus eludet?

WEITTEN NEWSPAPERS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

1867

DISOOVEET OF LITnOGKAPHIO STONE.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

FACE

Liai-IT

HISTORY lias not preserved the name of the

SERIES.

press, is but too well known to


master printers for both their pockets and their
patience bear testimony to the fact. "We regret
press.
It was, no doubt, a crude and un\vield_y
that we are under the necessity of remarking, tliat
machine that was used in the infancy of tlie art a rage for new inventions seems to have taken
but the attention of machinists and experimental the place of practical experience, attention, and
"While we look upon a zeal
printers, from the time of Faust to the present close observation.
for improvement, when it is properly directed, as
day, have been eniiag'cd in the invention and impraiseworthy, we hope, nevertheless, to be exprovement of printing presses. Age after age, cused for endeavoring to direct the attention of
time and money have been lavished upon this printers to other means of producing good work
object.
Some have been practically beneficial, than the construction of presses. So much depends on the pressman, in wetting down, turning
while most seem to have originated only for the
and pressing his paper, in taking and properly
purpose of perplexing and discouraging the printer. distributing the ink on his balls, or roller, in keepIf it were correct to judge of presses from the ing them in good order, and in examining the
the press itself beexecution of presswork, the conclusion would Ijc sheets as they are pulled, that
comes, in fact, but a secondary consideration;
irresistable, that no real imjjrovement has been
hence the probability that, at the period above
made for at least two hundred years. But this mentioned, when printers as a body, were unwould be visiting on the press evils that may be doubtedly possessed of more scientific knowledge,
and more ambitious to become masters of their
attributed either to the paper maker, the ink maprofession, greater inducements were held out to
ker or the pressman. That too much importance journejmien than at the present time.
slovenly
Let his press
is generally attached to the construction and pressman can never do good work.

inventor or manufacturer of tlie

power of the

first printing-

iifiripora !

mores!
etiuiii

Catilina patientia nostra?

furor

iste

qimmdiu iws

tuus eludet.

LECTURES ON ASTRONOMY, aEOaRAPHY, AND ZOOLOaY.

1615

GEOLOGICAL RESOURCES OF lIONT.iNA.

BOUEaEOIS NO.

MACHINERY
part of labor,

now

does nearly every gress, occur in our daily experience.

economizing strength,

and money, in all that it does.


upon beautifully figured carpets
that are woven by machinery from single
We wear clothes that are made by
threads.
machinery at the surprising rate of two

health, time,

We

8..

tread

Manu-

and commerce w'ould


In all
yield us others quite as impressive.
this we see that man is finding out and applying the economy of Nature, and thus that
the world is advancing, by well directed
effort, toward a more natural, and therefore
facture,

agriculture,

The labor-saving proa happier civilization.


cesses of mechanism are in the highest dehear in ev- gree advantageous and admirable.
thousand stitches a minute.
Types
ery direction the whistle of the locomotive, were once oast in moulds, such as boys use
they are turned
which saves us incalculable time, in the safe for casting bullets.
out, with inconceivable rapidity, from a castpersons
of
our
transportation
convenient
and
ing-machine worked by steam. Ink and paread in our newspa- per, too, are made by machinery; and when
and our property.

We

Now

We

pers messages that are brought instantaneous- the types are set, we invoke the aid of the
Steam-Press, and we print off at least fifty
ly, from points far as well as near, by a
impressions to each one produced under the
simple electric current, governed by machinMachinold process of presswork by hand.
ery, which prints its thought in plain Roman ery, moreover, folds the printed sheets, trims
characters, at a, rate of speed defying the the rough edges of books, directs the newsof the
emulation ofthe most expert penman. These, paper, and does, in short, the bulk
that used to be done by operatves,
drudgery
among many illustrations of scientific pro-

temporal

mores!

Catilina patientia nostra?

nos etiam furor

iste

quamdiu

tuns eludet f

PROCEEDINGS OF THE ATLANTA LITERARY SOCIETY.

1867

SOUTHERN IMPORTING AND MANUFACTURING DRUG HOUSE.

FARMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

BOURGEOIS NO.

nY1~AKINQ READY A FORM.Before


-^'--'--

10.

ought to be so placed, that he may prick the


laying a form on his press the press- point holes within the grasp of the hollow be;

should wipe the bed perfectly clean for ^"''^'"^ '^^'^ ^''S*^* hand thumb and fore finger
'Ijecause, when he works the reiteration, he
,
I,
11
any v,o,.^
nard ^,.+;i
particle, j-u
though
ever so o"ni,
small, bo
j
u^. , v-v,
i
ij.
ii,
Li.
jj-ij^y (-|^g better manage and point the sheet
^
on it, the letter that stands on that matter when laying it on the tympan. Nor will he
will, with pulling, quickly rise, and not only place his points too near the edge of the pamake a stronger impression than the rest, but P'^'' I'ecause in working the reiteration, he
would be forced to carry his fathermost point
;,-.
!
nil ,.m,k;i;(- -11 V,
fc i.1
t'
all
piobabihty, will bear off
the adjacent
hole the farther from him, whiclvis a loss of
letters.^
He must also carefully examine the time, and the laying the sheets quickly on
back side of the form and see that it be clean, their point holes greatly facilitates the speed
Also, the less distance there is
before he attends to the register or other- ^ *^<^ P'^'^^s.

man

if
11

ov,-.,

j.

'

'

point hole, the betsaves time '"f


because he must draw
be laid under the center of the platen. He! his body so much farther back
to place that
then lays the tympan down upon the form, hole on its point
he therefore places the
and places the blankets, which he rubs tot"***'' PO* farther into the paper than the

wise makes ready his form.


,

^^"^ *^,^"'^

The form should

,,

J'"'''''^""
ter,
as it

q""*"' o^^^^^O- '^.'^'i


soften them, in it; then putting in the inner ^'*'l''^P*' '^'^ ^,''^}''
out to twelves, and other forms that require
tympan, he fastens it with hooks and1,buttons the sheet to be turned in a similar manner,
it
for that purpose, which serve to keep it from is required that the points be equally distant
springing upward.
He then folds a sheet of' from both edges of the paper. By placing
the paper he is about to work, in quarto, and ^^^ Pt^ unequally from the edges of the_
,,

,,
paper, as m folios, quartos, and octavos, as
1,

lii-i.,,

'

'

it upon the middle of


aforesaid, -he also secures himself the more
the long cross, and the short crease over the from a turned heap when he works the reitemiddle of the grooves of the short cross, if it ration because without very much altering
quoins, he will not be able to make regislie in the middle of the form, for in twelve itj^he
Iter; and
pressmen, especially if they are em,
,,
,
1.
J 1
T
^^i;^
he
folds
it
accordingly,
and
then
does not,
^he same sort of work, seldom
pj^^^^
Now wetting his tympan, which is done for or never remove the quoins on the farther
close, heavy work, but not for very light, side of the carriage, nor on the right-hand
open work, he turns it upon the paper, and end of the carriage, but let them lie as guages
for the next form
for by thrusting the chase
,,
1,- u
11
iu
I,
i
pulls the sheet, which,
running
^ -r
xv,
i
i
in the carriage,
*^
against these quoins, j.-u
the register
is almost, if
with the wet tympan and the force of the not quite made the compositor having before
and turning up the chosen chases exactly of an equal size, and
pull, causes it to stick
tympan again, he examines if the sheet is laid made equal whites between the crosses, &c.
having chosen his points he placesthem so
even; if it has not been laid even on the form,
.'
,
.
that they may both stand in a straight line,
.,
,, .,
It IS better to relay it, and pull it again, for it
^^^^^^^^ with the top and bottom sides of the
is of considerable importance that it should tympan.
He then lays the tympan down
be put on perfectly even. This sheet is called upon the form, holding the frisket end of it
in his left hand, about an inch or an inch and
the tympan sheet, and is placed there as a
a half above the face of the letter, and sinks
the
other
sheets
exstanding mark to lay all
his body downward till he can see between
actly even upon, while he works the white the form and tympan
and with the ball of
Having laid on the tympan sheet, he the middle finger of his right hand, presses
paper.
the point ends
chooses his points; for large paper short- gently upon the tympan over
of each point successively, to see if the points
shanked points, and for small paper longfall in or near the middle of the grooves in
shanked points, and others in proportion touhe short cross. If they fall exactly in the
the intermediate sizes of paper for his points middle of those grooves, the form lies exactly

lays the long crease of

-J.

>

'

'

'

'

Curiosities in the British

Museum.

EDUCATIONAL ADVANTAGES OF AMERICAN INSTITUTIONS.


THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF DESIGN NEW YOKK.

FARMER LITTLE &

CO..

NEW

YORK.

1867

MEDIUM FACE

LONG PEIMER

CHURCH

rriHE

SERIES.

NO.

9.

a very peculiar so- trines are his teachings, which he as a


its disciall prophet has given from God;
its members become so, not by constraint pline is law, which he as its king, has ordained. The power of the church, accordbut willingly
but not in the sense that
ingly, is only ministerial and declarative.
its doctrines, discipline, and order are
the The Bible and the Bible alone, is its only
creatures of the human Avill, deriving rule of faith and practice.
Beyond the
their authority and obligation from the Bible it can never go
and, apart from
the Bible, it can ne^^er speak.
To the
consent of its members.
On the contralaw and to the testimony, and to them
ry, it has a fixed and unalterable
constitu- alone, it must always
appeal; and when
tion
and that constitution is the word they are silent, its duty is silence. " This
of God.
It is the kingdom of the Lord Synod is clear that the provinces of Church
Jesus Christ.
He is enthroned in it as a and State are entirely distinct, and that
the Church as much transcends its sphere
sovereign.
It can hear no voice but his
in pronouncing upon questions pohtical,
obey no commands but his; pursue no as
the State transcends its sphere in dealends but his.
Its officers are his servants, ing with matters ecclesiastical.
It is true
bound to execute only his will. Its doc- the Church is to declare and enforce reJ- eiety

is

voluntary in the sense that

tempora

mores

CatiUna jyaflentia nostra ? quamdiu nos etiam furor


!
tuus eludet? patere tua non consilia sentis?

THE LATEST STYLES OF ORNAMENTAL TYPE.


NEW

v>'er

knows,

is

the

as probably the read-

This,

ever since the invention of movable types,

made by

NO.

Laurentius Coster, in 1430, has

A movement toward economy in this respect was, indeed,


made some sixty years ago, by Charles,
been done by hand.

10.

determined;

method of arranging would

types in the jDroper form for use.

1234567890

PRINTING MATERIALS.

LONG PRIMER
/COMPOSITION,

iste

since, using

such types,

it

happen that the compositor would need to make but one


movement for two or three or even four
letters.
The desired economy, however,
was not secured. Subsequent attempts
at combinations were made in England,
but all proved abortive. In the office of
fi-equently

the London " Times," castings of entire


words, devised, I think, by Sterling, were
the third Earl Stanhope, inventor of the
used, to a limited extent.
It remained,
Stanhope Press, and of the process of however, for
a New York mechanic to
stereotyping which is still in use.
His make the idea of combination type a
plan was to make the type-shank thicker practical success. Mr. John H. Tobitt,
than usual, and cast two or more letters being a stenographer as well as compositor, was enabled to make a systematic
upon its face instead of one. This, his
selection of the syllables most frequently
Lordshij) rightly considered, would save occuring in our language
and thus it
labor, if available combinations could be happens that his combinations have stood
;

tempora

mores

CatiUna patientia nostra

tuus eludet

quamdiu nos etiam furor

patere tua non consilia sentis

FOREIGN RELATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES.

1234567890

THE ESTABLISHMENT.

FARMER, LITTLE &

00.

NEW

YORK.

iste

NEW NONPAEEIL
FAllMEll, LITTLE
ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE.
The government of all schools for children
must necessarily be of an absolute nature, depending from day to day on the will and word
of the teacher.
There must be no debate between master and pupil, no disputing by the latter
of the former's complete authority, no criticising
of his motives or his policy, but strict obedience
in every case and a reference of all supposed
unjust treatment to parents or trustees. But in

&

CO.,

NO.

NEAV YORK.

men and ladies under their charge as responsible PEINTBRS WILL ALWAYS FIND AT OUK
human beings, possessed of some little share of
establishment, 83 and 65 Beekman St., N. Y.,
the sense supposed to be common among men every article necessary for a complete Printing
and women, and not as unreasoning children.
IS tmie the old blue laws that have been

Office, of

the best manufacture.

It

handed down from generation

to generation in
our colleges, with not a single line erased or a

smgle word obscured, were abolished completely.


The foolish or malicious pi-anks which make
college students appears so puerile or contemptible may be attributed in a great measure to
the specillc rules intended to prevent them, all
of which are founded on the assumption that
they are mere boys continually on the watch
for opportunities for mischief. They have just
enough of the boy in them to knock off the

seminaries and colleges, where long dresses and


challenge chip when it is
short beards abound, and the students are sup- temptingly. Do away withpresented to them so
all these regulations
posed to have arrived at something like years of and the system of espoinage and give students
discreting and to be capable of understanding to understand that in college they are to be
governed by precisely the same
the cause of things, the little in-door world is and politeness which they mustcodes of morals
observe when
more like a coiimiunity, and government on any they leave it, and the general character of the
other than an approximately democratic basis undergraduate will at once become much more
manly and dignified.
is absurd,
In this matter, as well as that of the
A similar revolution is very much needed in
cast-iron curriculum, we need a revolution. The the government of advanced schools for voung
ladies.
We have before us the last catalogue of
idea that it is not the best 'thing for the devolopone of the most flourishing female colleges in
ment of a hundred young men of diverse tastes the comitry; and in the "general regulations"
and capacities to jam them all into the same we find the following "After the ringing of the
college molds, is faintly dawning on the minds bell which gives the signal for preparing to
retire, young ladies are required to abstain from
of boards of managers and faculties. "What they all noise which may disturb others, so that the
want to learn next is to treat the young gentle- retiring bell may be followed by complete still:

LABOR-SAVING KULB.

Double, Parallel, and


in fonts about $TO
Cases, $3 each.
rule will be found very convenient
for table and all other like kinds of work and as
the mitred corners are accurately made to certain
ems, much pains and labor will be spared by having
fonts of this rule in the Printing Oftice.
Single,

The above

WOOD

TYPE. Orders for Wood Type are respectfully solicited. Having made arrangements to keep on hand a stock of the most useful
and latest styles, we can All orders for almost any
kind or size, at the shortest notice.

PRINTING PRESSES OF ALL KINDS

FARMER, LITTLE &

The government of aU schools for children


must necessarily be of an absolute nature, depending from day to day on the will and word
of the teacher. There must be no debate between master and pupil, no disputing by the
latter of the former's complete authority, no
criticising of his motives or his policy, but
strict

obedience in every case and a reference

of all supposed unjust treatment to parents or

But in seminaries and colleges,


where long dresses and short beards abound,
and the students are supposed to have arrived
trustees.

something like years of discretion and to be


capable of understanding the causes of things,
the little in-door world is more like a community, and government on any other than an
approximately democratic basis is absurd. In
this matter, as well as that of the oast-iron
curriculum, we need a revolution. The idea
that it is not the best thing for the development of a hundred young men of diverse
tastes and capacities to jam them all into the
same college molds, is faintly dawning on the
at

CO.,

NEW

furn-

ished at manufacturer's lowest prices. Printers who are ordering bills of Type can avail themselves of our services and have their purchases

made through us.

PRINTING INKS. We are agents for the best


manufacturers of Newspaper, Book and Colored Inks of all qualities. We are able, therefore, to
supply Printers at the lowest prices.
BORDER. Our new Combination Border we
must commend to Printers, as the mostuseful
and yet simple in its formation of any that has yet
been issued.
LECTROTYPING done in the mostTmproved
manner, and at reasonable rates.

NEW MINION NO.


ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE.

17.

17.

YORK.
PRINTERS WILL ALWAYS FIND AT

charge as responsible human beings, possessed


of some little share of the sense supposed to
common among men and women, and not
as unreasoning children. It is time the old
blue laws that have been handed down from
generation to generation in our colleges, with
not a single line erased or a single word obscured, were abolished completely. The foolish or malicious pranks which make college
students appear so puerile or contemptible
may be attributed in a great measure to the
specific rules intended to prevent them, all of
which are founded on the assumption that
they are mere boys continually on tlie watch
They have
for opportunities for mischief.
just enough of the boy in them to knock off
the challenge chip when it is presented to
them so temptingly. Do away with all these
regulations and the system of espoinage and
give students to understand that in college
they are to be governed by precisely the same
codes of morals and politeness which they must
observe when they-leave it, and the general
character of the undergraduate will at once

furnished at manufacurer's lowest prices.


who are ordering bills of Type can
avail themselves of our services and have
their purchases made through us.

become much more manly and

PRINTING INKS.We are

be

dignified.

similar revolution is very much needed


in the government of advanced schools for
have before us the last
young ladies.
catalogue of one of the most flourishing female colleges in the country; and in the
"general regulations " we find the following:
" After the ringing of the bell which gives the
signal for preparing to retire, young ladies are
minds of boards of managers and faculties. required to abstain from all noise which may
What they want to learn next is to treat the disturb others, so that the retiring bell may
young gentlemen and ladies under their be followed by complete stillness throughout

We

our establishment, 63 and 65 Beekman St.,


N. Y., every article necessary for a complete

P rinting

Office, of

the best

manufacture.

LABOR-SAVING RULE. Double,

Paral-

and

Single, in fonts costing about $75


The above rule will be found
very convenient for table and aU other like
kinds of work ; and as the mitered corners are
accurately made to certain ems, much pains
and labor will "be spared by having a font of
this rule in the Printing Office.
lel,

Cases,

$'^

each.

OOD

TYPE.Orders for Wood


are respectfully solicited. Having

Type
made

arrangements to keep on hand a stock of the


most useful and latest styles, we can fiU orders
for almost any kind or size, at the shortest
notice.

PRINTING PRESSES OP ALL KINDS


Printers

agents for the

best manufacturers of Newspaper, Book


and Colored Inks of all qualities. We are able,
therefore, to supply Printers at the lowest
prices.

BORDER. Our new Combination Border


we must commend to Printers, as the
most useful and yet simple in its formation of
any that has yet been issued.
LECTROTYPING done in the most improved manner, and at reasonable rates.

^EW

AG-ATE

FARMER, LITTLE &


WHITE'S TYPE FOUNDRY. Change of Firm.
that stands at tlie head of this item
household words" to printers througlxont the Union, and also in Europe. The typo fl-oni this
foundry has sent its items of rare news, and flowing sentiments of heauty, dressed up in choice language, to the
heartlis and firesides of thousands, giving joy and pleasure
to some, to others, mayhap, a tinge of grief and sorrow,
according as the record may have run. The handsome
font of type from which th.QCou7'ier and Union is printed
and- sent out each morning to gratify an eager public with
its well filled news columns, is from this old estahlished
foundry, and we venture to say a more handsome typographical outfit eannot be seen in Central or Western
change has just been made in the firm,
New York.
whereby practical gentlemen under the firm and title of
Fakmek, Little & Co., have become successors to
Charles T.White & Co., and will conduct the extensive business of that concern with judicious care and prudence at the old stand, 63 and tiS Beefcmau Street, New
York. With their new t j pe composition, they iu"e enabled

NEW

12.

YORK.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

The name of the llrm

is

CO.,

]^0.

COMMERCIAL.

as famlUiar as "

to preSfent a quality in fonts that for durability, elegance


efface and attractive outline, cannot be excelled perhaps
in the world. They arc always up to the latest improve-

ments, and never satisfied while not producing new and


satisfactory results through extensive experiments. We
heartily

the new firm of Faesieh, Little &


and publishers everywhere.
Courier and Union, Sj/racuse, JY. T.

recommend

Co., to printer's

T ABOR-SAVING RULEDouble,
and
in
-L/iillel,
$2. each.

fonts costing about S76.

SiiiRlc,

with promptness and accuracy. J/et/i/fa Tribune.

Oases,

for table
;
tred corners are accurately nuidc to certain ems, much
pains and labor will be spared by having a font of this
rule in the Printing Office.

Tlie Type

cast in this Foundry lias ototaincd great reputation for durability. The letters
have deep counters and the metal is hard, and yet lias a
solidity and toughness which gives it great durability.
We are now using this metal exclusively in the manufacture of our Type.
;

PRESSES OP ALL KINDS


PRINTING
furnished at manufacturers' lowest

who

prices. Printers
are ordering Bills of Type, can avail themselves of

our services, and have their purchases made through us.

pABINETS OP CASES CONTAINING


vyten, sixteen, or twenty

cases, suitable for small Job


Also, all the ordinary Type Cases, Stands, Racks,
Galleys, Furniture, Mallets, Planers, and every article to
fit out a well appointed l^rinting Oflice.

Fonts.

Combination Bor-

der we must commend to Printers, as the most useful


and yet simple in its formation, of any that has yet been
issued.

AV IT H CHEATER FACILL
than heretofore, to furnish evervtliiiig required
FARMER. LtTTLE & CO.
in a Printing Office.

"VXTE
Yv

ARE PREPARED

ties

TO ESTABLISH
EDITORS OR PRINTERS WISHING
Ofltce,
a Newspaper, Book, or Job
will be furnislied
with an estimate in detail for the same.

FARMER, LITTLE &

New Yokk Type Foundey.Among

the

many ex-

cellent Type Foundries in the country, there is no one


which sustains a higher reputation than that of Messrs.
Fakmek, Little & Co., New York, whose card we
publish this morning, and we take pleasure in recommending them to printers and publishers of the South.
Their Type are always finished in the best style, and
The
all orders filled in the most complete manner.
following extract which we copy from the Macon (Ga.)

Telegraph, of the 23d August, renders but simple justice to the above excellent firm

" The new material upon which the Telegraph makes


appearance this morning, is from the foundry of
Messrs. Fabmeb, Little & Co., New York. The bill
was filled upon order, and perfect. Our printers have
found nothing wanting for the establisliment of a complete News Office. Our friends of the press will understand that this completeness rarely occurs in the
making np of a large establishment and we invite
its

CO.,

NEW

&

house without any reservation whatever."

LynchMrgh DaUy

Mepublican, Sept.

13, 1866.

The best proof we can give of our good opinion of


Messrs. Fabmbk, Little & Co.'s type is the fact that
It is

used in the Courier.

Sales 800 bales.

Bkeadstitffs. Tlie market for State Flour was dull


and heavy, and the only transaction of moment being 500
bbls. Super. State, at $5 30. The medium and high grades
of Western were in good demand, and prices Arm and
buoyant but the whole transactions in State and Western
were less than the average.
We annex quotations
5 30 @
Super State
Extra State
5 37X
5 30 @( 5 85
Common to good Western, tfec,
Round Hoop Ohio
6 @ 6 15
Trade & Family brands Western, St. Loni8,&c.6
fe 6 50
6 30 @ 6 50
Southern Common to good super
Southern fancy and extra
6 GO
1 15
6 00 @, 7 75
Genesee, fancy and extra
;

(ii^

Canada, extra

Our New

Deess, in which we take especial pride,


from the Foundry of Messrs. Farmeb, Little & Co.
63 and 05 Beekman Street, New York, with whom we
have had pleasant relations ever since that old establishment was in the hands of Mr. White. We have
always foimd them courteous and obliging; and their
Type A. No. 1. It will be seen from m& iroptession
that our new type are substantial, handsomely formed,
and clean cut. The Display Type used in the advertisements are worthy of attention, some of the styles
being new, and well adapted to catch the eye. We advise those who are in want of type not to forget

&

Co.,

when

they visit Gothani.


Saralogian, Fed, 1, 1866.

which the Democrat appears


to-day is from the well-known Type Foundry of Messrs.
Farmer, Little & Co., 63 and 65 Beekmftu Street,

The New Dress

in

New York,

(formerly White's.) In all our experience


as publishers, we have never been so well satisfied
with the quality of our printing material as in this
instance. The clear and beautiful print of the Democrat to-day is sufficient evidence of the superior
quality of the printing material furnished at tliis Type
Foundry. The readers of this paper will doubtless join
us in congratulating Farmer, Little & Co., upon
the
the successful perfection they have attained
manufacture of metal tj^ie, as well as all other mateof
a
preparation
mechanici*!
the
rials requisite for

nev/spaper.Savenna,

0.

Democrat, Ain-U

5 65

7 15

MARINE NEWS.
SAILING DAYS OF STEAMSHIPS
FKOM THE
Ships
Prince Albert

TJN ITED

Leaves

New York
Glasgow

Portland

Arago
Anglo-Saxon

Persia
Borruaia
Vanderbilt
Africa

America

Hammonia
Europa
Asia

NO.

states.
Bale.

I'^or

New York,
New York
Portland.
New York
New York
New York
New York
Boston
New York
Boston
New York
New York
.

.Galway

April
April
April
April

.Havre
.Liverpool
.Liverpool

Soutliamp ton
.Havre
.

.Liverpool
.Liverpool

.Hamburg

Liverpoo'l

.Liverpool

.Southampton
.Glasgow

May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May
May

21
22
20
28
5
5
6
9
11
15
23

27
31

12.

COMMERCIAL.

is

Messrs. F. L.

^'fj

^^

YORK.

Printing Type. There bas been considerable inquiry with large sales. It is becoming generally known
that the New York Tj^ie Foundry manufactures very
Durable Type, and its peculiar adaptation to endure
the bard usage of Power Press Printing ensures a continued bi'isk demand.
annex a tew quotations at present prices
Agate
1 00 ^ lb
Nonpareil
84 fi lb

We

@
@
@
@

Minion
Brevier

Tfi

frequent and extensive dealings with


these well established type fonnders, and have al^vays

found them accommodating, reliable, and liberal dealThey manufacture every variety of type, and
ers.
their metal is of excellent quality and very durable.
The present dress of the Advertiser came from their
foundry about a year since, and the impression is as
clear and beautiful as if it had been used but a few
weeks. This fact is of itself a "good advertisement"
for the manufacturers.ilioMfe Advertiser.

lb

Mktals. Led is heavy, as usual. Antimony glistens from the hardness of holders, large purchases
being made by tbe New York Type Foundry. Tin is
without change, although tough 'at present prices.

Money Market. Money continues to be valuable.


Type and Printing Materials are to be bad with comparative ease, for cash.
Stocks. Onr stock of Book Tjqieis extensive.

Our

assortment of Accents of all kinds for all the Modern


Languages, Signs, Marks, and Characters used in
Book Printing, is immense. We have a well assorted
stock of Job and Fancy Type, Kule, Cuts, Borders,
Oraaments, ttc.

ADVERTISEMENTS.
ENGRAVINGS OF NEWSPAPER HEADS,

We have had

$
$

lb
70
Printing Materials of all descriptions are active.
Our supply is ftilly atjeqnate to meet the constantly
inci-easlng wants 6f the Printing Trade.

18, 1866.

their attention to this fact, as well as to the quality of


the outfit. Onr experience in dealing with Messrs.
F. L.
Co., justifies us in the recommending their

11 ^c.

SPECIAL NOTICES.

NEW

which cannot be excelled.

The undersigned invite tlie attention of Paper Buyers


to their stock of Writing Papers, consisting in part of
Foolscap, Letter and' Commercial Note, of all kinds and
prices.
WHITE, SHEFFIELD & CO.,
63 and 65 Beekman Street, N. Y.

NEW NONPAEEIL
NONPAEEIL.We now have the pleasure of
submitting to Newspaper publishers, and the Trade
generally, our new NONPAEEIL NO. 12.
We can only repeat what has been before remarked
about the durability and iinisb of our type they are
made of the best metals, experienced and skillful
workmen are employed in eveiy branch of our establishment, and we can therefore famish an article

New York, Fi-iday, April 20.


Cotton.Prices are steady, but the market is inactive
only a spinning demand to be noticed Middling Uplands,

NEW YORK PAPER WAREHOUSE.


BORDER. Our New

OrK New Dkess is ft'om the Type Foundiy of Messrs.


Farmee, Little & Co., of N. Y., the most celebrated
Type Founders in America. The face is beautiful, the
type hard, and made in the very best manner. Besides all
this, persons who desire to purchase type can rely on
their word every time. Orders sent by mail will be filled

Par-

The above rule will be found very convenient


and all other like kinds of work and as the mi-

BILL

Heads, Cuts, &c., will be attended to with prompt-

and electrotypes furnished when desired. Electrotyping done in the best mannei", and at the most

ness,

reasonable rates.

PRINTING PRESSES.We can supply all kinds

of
Printing Presses at Manufacturers^ prices. Printwho are orderingbills of type, can avail themselves
of our services, and have their purchases made through
ers,

us.

FARMER, LITTLE & COMPANY.

NEW

MINION

FARMER, LITTLE &


NEW

MINION.The

calls

of Printers, aud

espeeially Newsijaper Pnbllsliers for a style of

which will economize room and at the


same time present to the eye a large and clear
face, has induced us to make an efl'ort to meet
this demand; and we now have the satisfaction

letter

specimen of a New Minion,


an entirely new aud original cut difl'ering from
anything to be found in any of the existing
Specimen Books. "With what success our effort
has been attended we leave for Printers to deterof presenting

tliis

mine.

"We think the face of this letter all that


could be desired lai-gc, strong, and so well proportioned that all the letters harmonize with the

most perfect accuracy, gracefully tilling the body


in length and breadth, and adjusted with such
nice proportions as to save

room without having

CO.,

NO.

NEW

Newspaper Columns.
Although the improved metal we are now
using renders our type much more durable by
giving

more toughness to the fine hair lines, still


work of power press printing makes

the severe

important to have a strong, full face, which is


so prominent a feature in this specimen. We
are prepared to furnish fonts of any quantity of
this or any other size at sliort notice, all made
of our improved metal, which has given such

it

New York Type Foundht.We should have


mentioned before this, that our elegant New
Type upon wliich the reading matter of the/ozrHiil luis recently, and
for tlie past year been
printed was from the old Foundry of Farmidu,
Little tfc Co., New York. These gentlemen oceup^V a very high position, as tirst in tlie lirstJ line
of Type Founders, and their reputation is co-extensive with tlie nation. They are, we believe,
perfect gentlemen in all their business transactions, and we cheerfully and cordially reeoramend
them to the patronage of our brethreu of the
Press who may stand in need of a new suit.
have no Southern Type Foundries, and as
long as we have to go Nortli for Type and Printiug Materials, we certainly prefer tliose who have
done well ivith us heretofore, and will give them,
we hope, another trial before a great while, in
still further additions to our pretty well supplied
stock on hand.
advise our friends to call on
the above firm when in N. Y. Soutliem Paper.

We

We

universal satisfaction.
furnish Presses aud all kinds of Printing
Materials. Also, Type from other Foundries, and
Printing Inks at the usual prices.

We

The Type with which the Courier is printed


were made at the old "White's Foundry,"

New Yoi-k, now under the management of Messrs.


Farmer, Little & Co., and were coj^per-faced
by the "Newton Company." Our two or three
last suits were from the same estabUslinients, and
we have shown in tlie most substantial way our
appreciation of
their material.

excellence and durability of


Louisville Courier, Dec. 5, 1865.

tlie

The oldest and the best Type Foundry in the


United States is that of Farmer, Little & Co.
63 and 65 Beekman St. New York City.
Certainly we do not wish to deal with any more accommodating or gentlemanly men.
,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

The government

of

all scliools for

children

must necessarily 'be of an absolute nature, depending from day to day on the will and word
of the teacher. There must be no debate between master and pupil, no disputing by the
latter of the former's complete authority, no
strict

of his motives or his policy, but


obedience in every case and a reference

of

supposed unjust treatment to parents or

criticising

all

not as

unreasoning children. It is time the old blue


laws that have been handed down from generation to generation in our colleges, with not
a single line erased or a single word obscured,

were abolished completely. The foolish or


malicious pranks which make college students
appear so puerile or contemptible may be attributed in a great measure to the specific rules
intended to prevent them, all of which are
founded on the assumption that they are mere
boys continually on the watch for opportuniThey have just enough of
ties for misWiief

trustees.

But in seminaries and colleges, where


long dresses and short beards abound, and the

the boy in
chip when

students are supposed to have arrived at some-

ingly.

thing like years of discretion and to be capa-

to understand that in college they are to be


governed by precisely the same codes of morals

ble of understanding the causes of things, the

in-door world is more like a community,


and government on any other than an approxi-

little

mately democratic basis

is

absurd.

In this

matter, as well as that of the cast-iron curricu-

lum,
is

we need

a revolution.

The

idea that

it

not the best thing for the developement of a

hundred young men of diverse tastes and capacities to jam them all into the same college
molds, is faintly dawning on the minds of
boards of managers and faculties. What they
want to learn next is to treat the young gentlemen and ladies under their charge as re-

from designs furnislied and electrotyped. Also,


Electro typed Newspaper heads from styles shown
in this Book.

TETAL FURNITURE has come to be a neiTicessity in every Printing Ofllec, and no well
appointed office can afford to be witliout it. It is
put up in fonts of .50 lbs., 100 lbs. and upwards.
]

Our pattern gives a greater number of pieces in


the same weight and is stronger than the old
kind.

WOOD TYPE. Orders

for Wood Type are


respectfully solicited.
Having made arrangements to keep a stock of the most useful
and latest styles, we can till orders for almost any
kind or size, on the shortest notice.

PRINTING INKS.We are agents for the


best manufacturers of Newspaiier, Boole and
Colored Inks of .all qualities. We are able, therefor, to supply Printers at the lowest prices.
PECIMEN BOOK OF PRINTING TYPES.

s A very
furnished

valuable work for printers, whicli is


gratis to those wisliing to order Type,
Printing Materials, and Presses.

PRINTERS WILL ALWAYS FIND AT OUR


establishment, 63 and 65 Beekni.an St., N. Y.,
every article necessary for a complete Printing
Office, of the best Manufacture.

ELECTROTYPING

done in the most improved manner, and at reasonable rates.

them
it is

to

knock

otf the challenge

Good Morning.

This morning we present


in an, en tire new dress of type,
one week earlier than our announcement. We have no praises or vain boasting-s
to bestow upon it.
It speaks to the eye for
itself
We have aimed to make our garb plain,
the

Gazette

which

is

and unostentatious believing that the


exterior should reveal a true index of the heart
within.
The type in which the Gazette appears today, is from the extensive foundry of Messrs.
Fakmeb, Little
Co., of
York, and it
is but simple justice that we should acknowledge om' indebtedness to their good taste in
selecting the styles.
cheerfully commend
this firm to the craft.
Hudson (M Y.) Oasette.
neat,

&

New

We

presented to them so tempt-

Do away

with

all

these regulations

and the system of espoinage and give students


politeness which they must observe when
they leave it, and the general character of the
undergraduate will at once become much more

and

manly and

12.

YORK.

little

mon among men and women, and

YORK TYPE FOUNDRY.Eleetro-

NO.

sponsible human beings possessed of some


share of the sense supposed to be com-

ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE.

NEW

ty])ed Jobbing Fonts, cast on Metal bodies,


being mueli more durable than tlie metal faces,
and not easily injured liy rough handUng, .are
now produced. We strongly recommend them
to the trade.
Newspaper Heads will be engraved

Gloversville Standard.

NEW BKEYIER

12.

YORK.

a crowded appearance, a matter of great importance, particularly in

dignified.

similar revolution is very much needed


in the government of advanced schools for
young ladies. "We have before us the last catalogue of one of the most flourishing female
and in the " general
colleges in the country
:" After
regulations" we find the following
the ringing of the bell which gives the signal
for preparing to retire, young ladies are required to abstain from all noise which may
disturb others, so that the retiring bell may be
followed by complete stillness throughout the

OuK New Dress. Our new type comes


from the Foundry of Farmer, Little & Co.,
of New York. The material of which it is
manufactured is of superior quality, and the
casting is the best which has ever come from
that old, extensive and popular establishment.
Those of our brethren who want anything in
the type line we can confidently recommend
to

& Co.
Bingliamton Daily BepvMican.

Parmer, Little

Our Type. It gives us pleasure to state


that our printing office has been completely
furnished with type and material from the
Type Foundry of Farmer, Little
Co., of
this city.N. T. Weekly Argus, Dec. 7, I860:

&

LARGE FACE

SERIES.

BOURGEOIS NO.

12.

New

BUSINESS.The Western metropolis is

Dkbss. In noticing
The Blade's
tlieruiometer wliicli the neA\' dress of our paper yesterday, ^\ e
unintentionally omittecl to state that it came
governs the trade of tlie continent. As beats
from the ]\Iessi-s, Farmbk, Little c^' Co., of
the auriferous pulse in AVall street, so flour- New Ycu'k, proprietors of White's A\ell
ishes or slackens the trade and traflc and known Foundry, one of the oldest estabgigantic commercial interests of the Union. lishments of the kind in this country. LitAs avc said
tle need be said of their type.
In order that our readers may take in, at
uudouljtedly

tlic

of Hekky Clay's mouth, they "speak for


one view as it were, the condition of busi- themselves." W^e must say, hoivever, that,
ness, our reportorial staff have been engaged to our taste and judgment, they form the
in investigating matters appertaining to the best ne'\vsi)ai)er dress that

trade of the city, and below will be found

the result of their researches.

As a rule business may be rated as dull,


although there are many branches of trade
more flourishing than they were last year.
As an instance of this, we may very properly refer to those

kinds of business which


life.
Produce,

deal in the necessaries of

the cereal crops, groceries, meats,

ifcc,

find

a ready sale at greatly enhanced prices;

"body type" were

all

we

e\'er

saw.

newly "cut"

The

letters,

of large face in admirable proportions. The


metal is hard and durable. Of the durability of the type from that Foundry, it is sufttelent to state that the old dress of the
Blade from the same establishment was in
use on our three editions for over five and
a half years, and that during the last six
months M'e have been repeatedly congratuThe
lated on the new drenH of our paper.
" display type" used in our advertisements
are from the same place. Tvlcilo Blade.

while silks satins, jewelry, and all other addenda of luxury have comparatively few

The New Dkbss, in which the DbmoCHAT appears to-day, is from the cclel)rated
much higher rate of compensation than Type Foundry of Paembr, Little & Co.,
ever before. Of actual want there is com- 63 and fj.j Bceknian Street, Ne-\\' York, (for
In all our experience as
paratively very little. Those aljle and will- merly White's.)
pnl)lishers, we have never been so well satising to work in most instances And plenty
quality of our printing material
purchasers.

Labor generally commands

fied with the


of labor at enhanced prices. Probalsly we as in this instance. The clear and beautifnl
might here make an exception of those print of the De.mockat to-day is sufficient
of the suiDerior quality of the printtrades and mechanical avocations which evidence
ing material furnished at this Foundi-y. The
depend upon the shipping interests for sup- readers of this paper will doubtless join us
Ship builders, joiners, spar makers, in congratulating Fahmeu, Little & Co.
port.
riggers, caulkers, sail makers, boat builders, upon the successful perfection they have atthe manufacture of metal type, as
ship painters, and such like trades find com- tained in
well as all other materials requisite for the
the
building
while
paratively little to do
mechanical j)reparation of a newspaper.
interests afford an abundance of work to
narena 0, Deiiwemt, April 18, 1866.
house carpenters, masons, plasterers, brick;

layers,

mantel makers, house painters,

tin-

This Press, and the new Type for the


from Messrs. Farmer,
Little efc Co., the eminent New York Type
conmay
that
now
we
ually increased, so
Founders, who are among the most prompt
sider them to have reached the highest and liberal business men with whom intepoint attainable. It will be easily seen that rior publishers have dealings at the Metrop-

roofers, &c..

The prices of labor have,

when

labor

is

in great

since 1860, grad- Daily, were procured

demand the branches

tempera!

Omm-ea!
nos

olis.

Bochester Express,

Catilina imtientia, Nostra?

etiaiii iste

May

31, 1866.

qua'iiidiu

tuns eliidd.

CRITICAL NOTICES OF LATE BIOGRAPHICAL PUBLICATIONS.


IMPORTATION" OF EUEOPEAN BMBliOIDEKIBS.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

1867

LA"RGE FACE SERIES.

THE

HISTORY OF IRON
ore that

shapeless

earth folds in

its

the

is

Tlie rougli,

lustoiy of civilization.

hidden in the

lies

unlovely bosom such

and fortune as the haughtier sheen


of silver, gleam of gold, and sparkle of

fate

diamond may illustrate, but are Avholly


Rising from his
impotent to create.
undisturbed repose of ages, the giant,
unwieldy, swart, and huge of limb, bends
slowly his brawny neck to the yoke of
man, and at his bidding becomes a
nimble servitor to do his Avill. Subtile
as thought, rejoicing in power, no touch
delicate for his perception, no
is to
too

service

mighty

of faerie,

Tales

his

for

strength.

of magic,

feats

pale

before the simple story of his every-day


labor, or find in his deeds the facts

which they but faintly shadowed forth.


And Avaiting upon his transformation,
a tribe becomes a nation, a race of
savages rises up philosophers, artists,
gentlemen. Commerce, science, warfare
have their progress and their vicissibut underneath them all, untudes
;

noted

it

may

be, or treated to a super-

and perhaps supercilious glance,


yet main-spring and regulator of all,

ficial

runs an iron thread, true thread of Fate,


coiling around the limbs of man, and

impeding

all

imtwisted

its

he shall have
Gordian knot, but bidding

progress,

till

him forward from strength


with each successive

mance of court

or

to strength

release.

camp

No

surpasses the

but not an eminently heroic person


teynpora!

feeble beghming of the savage, rejoicing in the fortunate possession of two

old nails, and deriving a sufiicient income from letting them out to his neighbors for the purpose of boring holes,
down to the true Thor's hammer, so
tractable to the masters hand that it
can chip without breakino; the end of an
egg in a glass on the anvil, crack a nut
without touching the kernel, or strike
a blow of ten tons eighty times in a
minute, we have a steady onward movement. Prejudice builds its solid breakwaters ignorance, inability, clumsiness,
and awkwardness raise such obstacles as
they can but the delay of a century is
but a moment. Slowly, and surely the
waters rise till they sweep away all ob;

ro-

blacksmith
romance of the
respectable,
us
a
to
at his anvil seems
forge.

walking backward along the past by


the light which he strikes from the
glowing metal beneath his hand, we
shall fancy ourselves to be walking in
Kings and warthe true heroic age.
riors have brandished their swords right
royally, and such splendor has flashed
from Excalibur and Morglay that our
dazzled eyes have scarcely discerned the
brawny smith who not only stood in
the twilight of the background and
fashioned with skilful hand the blade
which radiates such light, but passed
through all the land, changing huts
into houses, houses into homes, and
transforming into a garden by his skill
the wilderness which had been rescued
by the sword. Vigorous brains, clear
eyes, sturdy arms have wrought out,
not without blood, victories more potent, more permanent, more lieroic, than
Such books
those of the battle-field.
as this under consideration give us only
materials for the great epic of iron, but
with such materials we can make our
own rhythm and harmony. From the

yet.

mores!

overtop all barriers, and plunge


forward again with ever accelerating
Tlie record of iron is at once a
force.
stacles,

CatlUnd patkntja nostra?

quamdiic nos etiam furor eludet?

NOTED ANCIENT AND MODERN PHILANTHROPISTS.


NEW

FEINTING MATERIALS.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

TORE.

MEDIUM FACE

LONG PEIMER
While

the minds of men were warmed


by the religions enthusiasm Avhich Avas
aAvakened, first by the Crusades, and
afterwards by the Reformation, the Aet
OF Pkintikg, destined to alter the face
of the moral Avorld, perpetiiated the impressions thus created, and widened the
circle over which they extended.
The

freedom was no longer


nourished only from the exhortations
spirit of religious

of the pulpit, or developed in the fervor


of secluded congregations

it

breathed

permanent exertions of human


thought, and spread with the increasing wealth and enlarged desires of an
into the

opulent state of society. The charms


and the discoveries of science

of genius

may
is

attract a few in every age

by

great body of

and

but

it

religious emotion chiefly that the

it

mankind

are to be

was by the spread of

its

moved
enthu-

siasm, accordingly, that the greatest ex-

European liberty have been


But the diffusion of knowledge through the medium of the press,
is not destined to awake mere transient
bursts of popular feeling. By imbuing
the minds of those master-spirits who
ertions of

sustained.

direct

human

thought,

it

produces deep

SERIES.

NO.

13.

decay seem counteracted in a powerful

manner by new

principles of vitality,

derived from multitudes whose talents


are brought to bear on the fortune of
the state and the influence of despotic
power shaken, by the infusion of independent principles even into those armies which are destined to enforce its
;

authority.

But it is not unmixed good which


has arisen from the diffusion of knowledge. If the iDrinciples of improvement
have acquired a hardier growth, those
of evil have been more generally disseminated ; the contests of society have
grown in magnitude and increased in
violence, and the passions of nations
been brought into collision, instead of
the ambition of individuals. Vice has
here, as elsewhere in human affairs,
mingled in largo and often overwhelming proportions with the stream of time,
and continued in the most advanced
ages that struggle between virtue and
which has been the lot of man from
the beginning of the world. The visions of inexperience and the dreams of
philanthropy, at first anticipated the
eradication of evil from the spread of
knowledge, and an unbroken progress
of improvement from the extension of
education; forgetting that the heart
is the fountain from which the issues
of life, the direction given to the acquisitions of science, flow and that unless
it is purified, it is of little moment
what is put in the hand. In the midst
of these entrancing prosjDects, human
iniquity mingled with the current and
the new powers thus acquired were too
often applied to the basest purposes;
crime and corruption increased with
the extension of desires, and vice mulsin,

and lasting impressions on society, and


is perijetually renewed in the successive
generations

who

inhale, while in the

maxims and the


freedom. The whole

ardor of youth, the


spirit of classical

face of society has been modified by this

mighty discovery

the causes of ancient

AET PEESEETATIVE OF ALL AET.

PATENT HAED METAL PRINTING TYPES.

1867

3I0DEST AND RETIRING.

No

expense or care is spared

to

Materials are

produce the very lest Type, and the Printing

from

the best makers.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

1867

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

LONG PRIMER,

THE

HISTORY OF IRON

the

is

The rough,

history of civilization.

shapeless ore that lies hidden in the earth


folds in its unlovely

bosom such

fate

and

fortune as the haughtier sheen of silver,

gleam of gold, and sparkle of diamond

may

illustrate,

to create.

repose

but are wholly impotent

Rising from his undisturbed

of ages,

uuwieldly,

the giant,

huge limb, bends slowly his


brawny neck to the yoke of man, and at
his bidding becomes a nimble servitor to
swart, and

do his
in

Subtile as thought, rejoicing

will.

power, no touch

is

too delicate for his

perception, no service too mighty for his


strength.

Tales of faerie, feats of magic,

pale before the simple story of his every-

day labor, or find in his deeds the facts


which they but faintly shadowed forth.
And waiting upon his transformtion, a
tribe becomes a nation, a race of savages
rises up philosophers, artists, gentlemen.
Commerce, science, warfare, have their
but unprogress and their vicissitudes
derneath them all, unnoted it may be, or
treated to a superficial and perhaps supercilious glance, yet mainspring and regulator of all, runs an iron thread, true
;

thread of Fate, coiling around the limbs


of man, and impeding

all

progress,

till

he

have untwisted its Gordian knot,


but bidding him forward from strength to
strenerth with each successive release.
shall

No romance

of court or

the romance of the forge.

camp

surpasses

blacksmith

at his anvil seems to us a respectable, but

not an eminently heroic person

temporu

yet.

tnores !

SEEIES.

No.

15.

walking backward along the past by the


which he strikes from the glowing
metal beneath his hand, we shall fancy
ourselves to be walking in the true heroic
age.
Kings and warriors have brandished their swords right royally, and such
splendor has flashed from Excalibur and
Morglay that our dazzled eyes have
light

scarcely discerned the brawny smith who


not only stood in the twilight of the background and fashioned with skilful hand
the blade which radiates such light, but
passed through all the land, changing
huts into houses, houses into homes, and
transforming into a garden by his skill
the wilderness which had been rescued
by the sword. Vigorous brains, clear
eyes, sturdy arms have wrought out, not
without blood, victories more potent,
more permanent, more heroic, than those
Such books as this
of the laattle-field.
under consideration give us only materials for the great epic of iron, but with
such materials we can make our own
rhythm and harmony. From the feeble
beginning of the savage, rejoicing in the

fortunate possession of two old nails, and


deriving a sufficient income from letting
them out to his neighbors for the purpose
of boring holes, down to the true Thor's
hammer, so tractable to the masters hand
that it can chip without breaking the end
of an egg in a glass on the anvil, crack a
nut without touching the kernel, or strike
a blow of ten tons eighty times in a
minute, we have a steady onward movement. Prejudice builds its solid breakwaters ignorance, inability, clumsiness,
and awkwardness raise such obstacles as
they can
but the delay of a century is
but a moment. Slowly, and surely the
waters rise till they sweep away all ob;

overtop all barriers, and plunge


forward again with ever accelerating
The record of iron is at once a
force.
stacles,

CutaUna patientia nostra

qvamdiu nos etiam furor

eludet?

THE VERY LATEST FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE.


BEST FEINTING MATERIALS.

EAEMEE, LITTLE &

00.

LIGHT PACE SERIES.

L(

TTAVING-

)NG PRIMER NO.

14.

taken notice of the state of the copy, and


received his dii-ections, the
and here we would particularly call his attention

compositor begins to work;


those rules

l)y

which he

habit once acquired,

is

to

may compose

with

difiiculty

with accuracy, ease, and expedition.

shaken

off;

An

the variety of motions exhibited

ill

by

some compositors

arc truly ludicrous; such as nodding the head,


agitating the body,
throwing out the arms, ticking the letter against
the case or composing rule, with

many

other false movements, which not only lose


tune, but fatigue the mind, and

exhaust the body. The swift movement of the


hand is not the criterion of a quick
compositor.
In composmg, the left hand, which contains the stick,
should ahva\-s
follow the right, which takes up the letters.
If the left hand remain stationarv much
tune IS lost
bringing each letter to it, and tra^-ersing a, greater
space than is'neres
sary the eye should always be fixed on the nick
of the letter, before the flnoer is
ready to take it up this will effectually prevent any
false motion, as it may be lifted
and conveyed to the stick
its proper position.
sentence of the copy should if
possible be taken at one tune, and while putting in the
point and space A\liich concludes tliat sentence, the eye is at full liberty to revert
again to the copy for a fi'esh
^

All the standard

own and

styles

of

Letter, hichtding

neii}

issues

of our

other Foundries, 2>romptly fnriiislied.

THE IXVEXTIDX AXD PROGRESS OF ENGRAVING.

123456

LAKGE FEINTING ESTABLISHMENT.

SMALL PICA

NO.

8.

"TN

one of the wildest sections of Orange County, in the State of New York
-*-a solitary farmhouse stands, or stood at the period of which we now write
in lonesome beauty, shaded by two magnificent oak trees, the growth of more
than a century.

For miles in every direction the rugged, rocky land and


means of livelihood to only a half dozen poor and
hard laboring families, who starved on their rocky possessions. No house
was within a mile of the Eocky Glen farm, but around this quiet spot were
abrujDt hills afforded

evidences of the toil of many years, perhaps many generations.


There was
a lawn in fi-ont of the house, on which grew fruit trees, such as are usually
found nearest the house.
fine orchard was on a hillside and over the
hilltop close by.
Patches of smooth land here and there, fi-om which every
stone had been carefiilly picked, indicated the ability of the farm in the way
of clover and timothy, while in the summer time many garden spots, rich
with waving gi-ain, lit up the otherwise dark and sombre aspect of the four
hundred acres which were included in the farm of Ichabod Armstrong.

Farmers in

the

Northwest are beginning

confidently on

the

to

calculate

next harvest.

LIGHT AND HANDSOME, YET DURABLE.

1234567890

PROGRESS OF THE ART OF PRINTING

FAHMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

SMALL PICA NO.

CHAELES
Engine,
calculator

own

BABBAGE,

first

was

of London,

9.

inventor of the Calculating

tlie

His

essayed the application of machinery to composition.

so contrived that

computations.

would record

it

in type the results of

its

At about the same


Cambridge, Massachusetts, who was bred a

This was over forty years ago.

time Professor Treadwell of

and ascertained by experiment the feasibility of the type-setting machine. But mechanical enterprise was then comparatively inactive in America, and noth-

practical mechanic, turned his attention to this improvement,

ing of immediate practical importance resulted from the Professor's experiments. Kor did greater success attend the efforts of Dr. William Church,
of

Yermont, a contemporary inventor, who constructed an apparatus

setting tjrpes, but failed to provide for their distribution.

a long time, the idea slumbered.

At

for

Subsequently, for

length, about the year ISiU, Mr.

Tim-

othy Alden, a printer, and a native of Massachusetts, conceived a plan for


setting and distributing type, which has since been put into successful ope-

Mr. Alden's workshop was, I believe, situated at the coi-ner of


Canal and Centre Streets, in New York City. There he labored in privacy,

ration.

temporal

mores!

Cat'dlnu initlentla nostra? (luamdiu nos etiam

furor

ivte eludet.

MONTHLY EEYIEWS AND LITEEAEY


GOLD FIELDS OF NOVA
year after year, encountering

all

manner

NOTICES.

1867

SCOTIA.

of difficulty

and discouragement,

substantially completed. His invention was patented


till his
in 185Y, but the studious and persevering inventor did not live to reap the
Worn out with care and toil and longfruits of the seed he had sown.
His
suffering patience, he died in 1859, a martyr to scientific progress.

great work was

patent passed into the hands of his cousin, Mr. Henry W. Alden, who has
since organized a company for the manufacture and sale of the Alden
Machine. In appearance, this machine resembles a circular table, having
which
in its center a wheel, placed horizontally, from the outer edge of
of about one
lines of tj])e radiate, like spokes from an axle, to the distance
Three-quarters of the circle is filled up by these lines. In front is a
foot.
key-board, containing one hundred and fifty-four keys, by which the opera-

The central wheel controls some


tor o^overns the action of the machine.
"
the types into language, while
compose
which
half
of
conveyors,"
forty
upon their sides,
the other halt distribute them, guided by certain nicks cut
may go
operations
Both
needed.
longer
to their proper places, when no
a
out
are
fed
composed,
are
they
as
types,
The
time.
on at the same
The operator then divides
at the left of the key-board.

continuous line,
hand. "Justifying it
the line into proper lengths, and "justifies" it by
the words, and making
between
spaces
placing
in
consists
stated,
be
should
invention, and
ingenious
very
is
a
machine
the lines of equal length. This
the method o
improvement
successful
towards
step
great
marks the first
H. Mitchell,
Type-Setting. Another machine, originated by Mr. William

EARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

LARGE FACE

SERIES.

SMALL PICA
TYPES.
of

Me. Samuel Wellee,

was

of facetious

memory, has

to get so

little.

it

told us

was not

This, to say the least of

and should be condemned accordingly.


which even scholastic young maidens cannot be
I therefore warn the reader of this article against

disrespectful to Cadmiis,

Authors have

feelings,

permitted to lacerate.

any

12.

having learned the alphaloet, concluded that

tlie girl Avlio,

worth going through so much


it,

No.

sympathy with the critical mood of that obnoxtheme is not as lively as "Punch" used to be but,

inclination toward

ious female.

My

on the other hand,


vestigation

may

I propose,

it is

find

then,

Patient in-

not as dull as a religious novel.

agreeable

it

good-nature will not find

a bore.

it

Type-

gossip concerning Types,

half-hour's

setting, and the machinery connected with Printing, at the present

would, perhaps, be interesting to review in detail the printing


devices of the past but that would be to extend unwarrantably the

time.

It

limits of this article.


facture,

and use

saving instinct in

Enough

that

any sketch

of the invention,

manu-

would illustrate the triumph of the laborman, and thus confirm the scientific lesson of to-day.

of types

and Paper, too, are made by Machinery; and wlien


Types are set, we inmlte the aid of the Steam-Press, and so print

1864r-65.In7i
the

one produced
off at least fifty impressions to each

under

the old process

Machinery now does nearly every sort of labor economizing health,


We tread upon beautistreno-th, time, and money, in all that it does.
fuUy^gured carpets that are woven by machinery from single threads.
at the rate of two thouWe wear clothes that are made by machinery
the whistle of the
direction
every
in
hear
We
minute.
a
sand stitches
locomotive, which saves us almost incalculable time, in the safe and
convenient transportation of our persons and our property. We read
instantaneously, from
in our newspapers messages that are brought

points far as well as near, by a simple electric current, governed by


machinery, which prints its thought in plain Roman characters, at a
expert penman. These,
rate of speed defying the emulation of the most
occur in our daily
progress,
scientific
of
among many illustrations
would yield us
commerce
and
agriculture,
Manufacture,
expenence
man
is finding out
that
we
see
this
all
others quite as impressive. In
the world is adthat
thus
and
Nature,
of
economy
the
and ap-plying
natural, and therefore
vancing, by well-directed effort, toward a more

a happier

civilization.

The labor-saving processes

t j
mechanism as applied
.

of

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

to Printing are

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

PICA NO.

TT^DUCATIONAL. ^The
-L^ mnst
on the

6.

government of schools

for children

necessarily be of an al^solute nature, depending entirely

A\ill

and word of the

There must be no debate

teacher.

by

betAveen master and pupil, no disputing

the latter of the

for-

mer's complete authority, no criticising of his motives or his policy,

but

obedience in every case and a reference of

strict

But

unjust treatment to parents or trustees.


colleges

where long

dresses

all

supposed

in seminaries

and

and short beards abound, and the

students are supposed to have arrived at something like years of


discretion

the

little

and

to

be capable of understanding the causes of things,

in-door world

is

more

community, and government

like a

on any other than an approximately democratic basis

is

absurd.

In this matter, as well as in that of the cast-iron curiculum,

tempora!

mores'.

we

CatiUna patlentia nostra? quamdiu

etiam furor

iste

tuus ehidet?

COMPEEHENSIYE LECTURE ON MAN.

1867

PHILOSOPHICAL TRUTH.

,it

is

not the best thing for the

iiiiX

"1

FARMER, LITTLE &

men

of divevse tastes and

O"

CO.,

NEW

TORK.

LIGHT PACE SERIES.

The conquerors

of Europe had their acquisitions to maintain, not

only against such of the ancient inhabitants as they had spared, but
also_

against the

more formidable inroads of some new

invaders, self

defence was their chief care, and seems to have been the chief
object of their

institutions

first

and

policy, instead of the loose

which though they scarcely diminished personal independence, yet had been amply sufficient for their security, while
they remained in their original countries, they saw the necessity of
uniting in more close confederacy, and of relinquishing some of
every freeman
their private rights in order to attain public safety
associations,

on receiving some portion of the land which was divided, bound


himself to appear in arms against all the enemies of the community
this military service was the only condition upon which he received
and held his land, and as they were exempted from all other burden, that tenure

among

so warlike a people,

was deemed both easy

Miner ills of America.

THE PROPHETIC FUTURE OF EUROPE.

234567

THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK.

and honorable; the king or general who led them to conquest


continuing still to be head of the colony, had of course, the largest
Having acquired the means of rewarding
part allotted to him.
he parcelled out
past services, as well as of gaining new adherents,
they were bewhom
on
those
his lands with this view, binding
proporof
men
number
a
stowed to resort to his standard with
and
to bear
received,
they
which
tion to the extent of the territory
their
of
example
the
imitated
arms in his defence his chief ofl&cers
among
own
lands
their
of
sovereign, and in distributing portions
condition to their grant thus
their dependents annexed the same
estabhshment rather than a
a feudal kingdom resembled a military
out in the country
cantoned
the victorious army
civil institution
ofl&cers, and subits
under
which it had captured continued ranged
and a free
soldier
a
of
ordinate to a military command; the names
girt
with
a sword,
land,
man were synonymous, every proprietor of
the
and
take
superior,
at the summons of his

was ready to march

field against the

common enemy.

But though the feudal pohcy

against the assaults


seems so admirably calculated for defence,
interior order and tranany foreign power, its provisions for the

of

FARMER LITTLE &

CO..

NEW

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

ENGLISH NO.
Wherever on

this earth

4.

an understanding

know and

serve the truth; wherever a

sheltering

wing over husband and

is

active to

home spreads

its

and parent and


child, there, under every diversity of outward circumstance, the true worth, and dignity, and peace of man's
soul are within reach of
floats

all.

wife,

In the hght of beauty that

over the changing aspects of the material universe

grand interpreting thought which pervades the


broken story of the ages, and translates it into coherency;
in the

which comes to you from the smiles of gladness and tears of sorrow, and softens your heart in genial
sympathy with human weal and human woe in the inin the spirit

Quousque tandem ohuiere,

Oatilina, nostra f

THE SOIL AND "PRODUCTIONS OF MAINE.

1867

COTTON AND WOOL FACTORY

terchange of ideas which kindles enthusiasm, and draws


a higher meaning and purpose out of life, acknowledge
realities which transcend the limits of sense own a spiritual world whose mysteries encompass you on every side,
by whose laws you are bound, and in whose issues of endless unfolding you are yourself perhaps destined to be
involved.
Those who have shown in all ages as the lights
of the world, the most celebrated names that are recorded
in the annals of fame,
legislators, the founders of states
and the fathers of their country, on whom succeeding
ages have looked back with filial reverence patriots, the
guardians of the laws, who have stemmed the torrent of
corruption in every age; heroes, the saviours of their
country, who have returned victorious from the field of
battle, or more than victorious, who have died for their
country; philosophers, who have opened the book of na-

FARMER LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

MEDIUM FACE

SERIES.

GEEAT PRfflEE NO.

Much

time

is

4.

unnecessarily lost by

many

compositors in looking at a word before they


distribute

he

may

By proper attention

it.

avoid

this,

in a learner,

and become, without the

appearance of hurry, an expeditious as well as


clean distributer.

To

recommend him never


his

attain which,

to take

more

hand than he can conveniently

possible, always to take an entire

Quousque tandem

FOREiaiN^

we would
letter in

hold, and, if

word and to
;

ahutere^ nostra f

A^D DOMESTIC

GOODS. 67

HOME MAI^UFACTURBES
keep

his handful

on an inclining

that the face of the letter

position, so

may come more imBy proper attention

mediately under his eye.


and practice he will become so completely acquainted with the beard or break of the type,
as to know the word he takes from his handful,
with the cursory view he may have of it while
It is to this method
in the act of lifting it.
that so many in the same business are indebted
for their expedition and accuracy in distribu-

though to an observer the movement of


It is not to the
their hands appears but slow.
tion;

velocity of their

movements

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

that compositors

NEW

YORK.

English No.

Gazing on

Gkeat Pkimee No.

3.

the powerful

THE NEWSPAPERS.

Secluded Valleys

ERIE RAIL ROAD. 8

185

Publications

Double Small Pica No.

The

3.

Jffajestic

Double English No,

1.

Morning

Pictures

OUR NATIONAL.

1.

PLEASURE.

Kindly

Smiling
Double Gkeat Peimee No.

1.

Laws and Ordinances.

EMBLEM OF VICTORY

JYew anthem
Canon No.

1.

TIMELY. 27
Printing has honors
Festal Hour
Four Line Pica No.

1.

The Dime 35
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

fe-

CO.,

New

York.

in roNTS OF 25

and

50 lbs.

Paragon.

Double Small Pica No.

From Hudson

GRAND VIEW.

Constantly

EARNESTLY. 7

Express

Financial,
Ebal Double

2.

Double English No.

Pica.

2.

Impo^in^

Abounding

FRAMES.

HUDSOJ^. T5

Feast

Jfface.
Double Great Primer No.

3.

liumber Dealers.

SUPREME COURT
mfUlusions.
Double Paragon.

Job Printing

PUTWAM.
Canon No.

Four Line Pica No.

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

2.

2.

Volume
(E

Sd;751

New

York.

Fun 6
IN FONTS OF 25

AND

50 LBS.

19,

50 a 30

Peakl Full Face.

50 a 30

l,AKGE OKDERS ARE ANTICIPATED.


Goiigrees, I think, po88csftc the

power

to pu6 n

PRllVTIIVG

uniform Bankrupt

Applienblc to all Banklnij; luistltutlons.


Its Exercise would be Productive of Oood Results.

50 a 30

Agate Full Face No.

Agate Full Face.

Law

1S84

50 a 30

2.

In Relation to the Same


Presented to tlie House of Representatives. 326

30 a 30

NoNPAEBiL Full Face No.

ADVAIVCEMENT OF CHRISTIANITY.
Commerce has done much
The

50 a 30

to spread Civilization through the Earth.

Truth, Viiine and Temperance.


Primer is the Adjutant of Thought.

Minion Full Face No.

3345

is

Minion Full Face No.

Bkevier Full Face.

BOLDNESS

very useful in Newspapers

Relig^ion

is

Life

is

For Head and Display Lines.


Attractive generally for

36 a 18

its

Neatness.

2357

PRIWTIHIG MATERIALS.
Heavy Faced Title should be in every
State

36 a 18

36 a 18

BouEOEOis Full Face.

Office

For General Jobbing.


Liaws and Ordinances. 2 75

Small Pica Full Face.

BATVKIIVG HOUSE.
Manneri^ and Customs of Australia.

New

Hebrew Mother.
York Exchange. 365

FAEMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Y6bk.

1.

aiJVENIliE PASTIMES.
Beiieatli my feet a busy W^oi-ld is lL,yiiig-.
Hour of Romaiice.
Forests of our Native I^and. 675

tABOR CONQUERS EVERYTHIJfG.


This desirable Fullface

1.

P1.AIN I.ETTEK

Education should be based on PMIosopIilcal Truth,


Supported by Sound Reason.
Knovrledge eudureth longer than Riches. 24?

50 a 30

2.

Nonpareil Full Face No.

HEAVY FACED

50 a 30

2.

made

FRENCH TROOPS

IN MEXICO.
Important Diplomatic Correspondence and Communications

OFFICE CYLINDER PRESSES.

rapid Progress throughout our entire Country,


Opening Avenues for Competition,
Developing the Strength and Resources of Trade. 9876

Printing has

IIV

ARGUMENT.

promoted by the Art of Printing


Kindred Hearts.
but a

Oame

of Cards.

2343

Long Pkimee Full Face.

SPIiESTDID FARM.
Very neat size of this Style of Title
IiOn^ Primer
Cabinet Furniture. 5147

24 a 12

Pica Full Face.

UNITED FACES.
Finely proportioned Type
Well Finished
Hard Material 3457

r
A

50 a 24

Nonpareil Bold Face

Italic.

50 a 24

Bketibe Bold Pace

ACKNOWLEDGE!} FAVORITJE
Hie

first

impression prod/uced on the

when

mind of the

enthitsiast

confronted at once

with disappointments

Re finds

of

how

Italic.

INDES TR UCTIBLENESS
The

first

impression produced oh the bustling


world tvhen confronted

123

at once with the types

50 a 24

Long Primek Bold Face

36 a 18

Italic.

first

impression produced on the


enthusiast

when

confronted at once with 567

36 a IS

NoNPAKBU. Italic Full Face.

The first impression produced


on us when
confronted at once 865

36 a 18

Selectlont

Bag-tter't Commentarlet on the Old Testament,

36 a 18

Extensive Assortments or Display Types,


For Books, JITetvspapers,

36 a 18

.Ancestral

and Fancy Printing,

REWERIES.

Glorious JVew England'.

Long Pkimek

Italic Fuij. Pace,

JEJLFCTR O Tll^PIJVG
Book and JVewspaper Printing Ink
Black or Colored

From

24 a 13

Small Pica Italic Full Face.

Fame of

The Pilgrim Fathers,


Matnilton Seminary and College,

36 a 18

BouKGEOis Italic Full Face.

Jtlagasines,

Bketier Italic Pull Pace.

jaOUJTTAIJV

jnicRosconc uEVHii-tTiojvs.
Ufe of Benjamin Franklin with very Intereattng
from Ma Mstay ifrlUngs,

Pica Bold Pace Italic.

ENDO WMENTS.

PRACTICAL innAS.
The

123

the best Jflanufactories.

Pica Italic Full Pace.

FRIJVTIJVO
Pictorial Revolutionary Field
Bound in Cloth

Valuable for Reference.


FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Book

Scenes in the Holy Land


JBetUany
Jftount Delectable

Yokk.

^
24

Two

LrsB Agate No.

24

3.

NAVIGATION COMPANIES

Two

LnnB Minion No.

Two

Line Pearl Back Slope.

Two

Line Pearl No.

WATER POWER

18

Two

LIFE OF

12

Two

WEBSTER 2

NEW ORLEANS.
12

Two

Line Small Pica No.

1.

COMMERCIAL.
FARMER, LITTLE &

k^.

CO.,

New

Yoek,

5.

Two

Two

Line Peabl Italic.

Line Agate No.

568

2.

Two

Line Minion No.

3.

FREE LIBRARY.
12

2.

No.

HARMOIVIC SOCIETY. 54

18

2.

Two Line Beeviee

NT^R OF THE WEST,

18

L.IMIT. 34

Line Beeviee No.

IN ITALY 4

TRIUMPH OF ART
BALUSTRADE

18

2.

Line Nonpaeeil No.

18

6.

SOCllTlf I^\lJLTt^. S92

24

5.

EXPLORATIONS.

GREAT DrRABILITY 1
VERY USEFUL

18

Line Nonpareil No.

TRAYELma

MONUMENTAL
18

Two

Two

Line Long Peimee No.

2.

MAGNETIC. 8
6

Two

Line Pica No.

1.

MARINER 4

^
^
Two

Line Diamond No.

aA

2.

FIELD BOOK OF THE REVOLUTION

Two

Line Agatb No.

NEW YORK

No.

18

Two

Line Boitegbois No.

Line Brevier No.

4.

12

4.

Two Line Long Pkimek

No.

COMMENDABLE
STANDARD

67

Two

Pica No.

Lnra Pica No.

Two

3.

25

2.

TRANSPORTATION VESSEL
RAILROAD COMPANIES
12

152

3.

BRIGHT VISIONS OF PARADISE


EVENING MEDITATION
12

82

DELEGATION

Two Line Small

4.

THE KENTUCKY

69

HARDWARES
12

Two

18

MANUFACTURE.

Line Nonpakbil No.

56

AMERICAN INSTITUTE
RECAPITULATIONS

5.

CIRCUMNAYIGATE
DISTANT SHIP

Two

24

4.

DIRECTORY. 402

Two Line Minion

4.

CENTRAL AMERICA
CHRISTIAN MESSENGER

FUNDAMENTAL TRUTH
18

Line Peabl No.

LIFE IN

EXTRAORDINARY REFORM
34a

Two

Link English No.

36

1.

BLITHE AND YOUTHFUL

CHRONOMETER
FARMER, LITTLE &

li

CO.,

New

York.

sM

IR)

24

Two

Line Diamond No.

mA

7.

MECHANIC ARTS
A

Two Line Nonpabeil

No.

No.

7.

AMEEICA^ HOME GAEDEI^S


HEEO OF EOME 15

PLEASINa RURAL EXPEDITIONS

24

Two Line Pearl

Two Line Minion

24a

No.

7.

7.

MORNING SCENES
READING 65

ACADEMY OF DESIGN
CONDUCTOR

20

Two Line Bkeviek

No.

GOLDSMITH'S VICAR OF WAKEFIELD

EXPLORING EXPEDITION
18

Two Line

Boxihgeois No.

7.

NEW YORK HARMONIC

SOCIETY

PULPIT AND ROSTRUM


Two Line Long Pkimer

No.

35

68

7.

OUE EDITOEIAL DEPAETMENT


HOUSEHOLD WOEDS 23
12

Two Line Small

Pica No.

7.

MECHANICAL HANDIWOEKS
THINKING HOURS 23
Two

Line Pica No.

7.

MOUNT YERNON PAPERS


GREAT REPUBLIC

FABMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

48

York.

(d

.^
\^
LoNS Primeb Light Face.

50 a 25

$4.50.

50 a 18

OUR STATE ELECTIONS


Very Useful

Series

New York Dry

Goods Market
JSTational Bank.
Light And Handsome 23.

Of Liglit Faces

Types and Presses 1870.

18

$5.00.

THE MAGISTEATE

American. Notes.

36 a

Pica Light Face.

Gheat Pbimbk Light Face.

OUR

$6.50.

CORRESPO:NrDENT.

AiTLUsing Reniiiiisceiices of Olden Times

Sewing Machine
36 a 16

Double Small Pica Light Pace.

THE

24 a IS

$9.50.

1870.
A

National Festival

Borders 710.
8

$10.00.

REPUBLIC.

COR]t^EE.

Labor Saving Leads

16 a

Double English Light Pace.

America

5.

DouaLE Gbeat Primer Light Face.

$10.00.

THE EMPIRE STATE


Pacific Rail

Road Company

Useftil for Circulars.

36 a 18

Pica Anglo Gothic.

$4.50.

FB'$iClD PA3Hir3WtB$
ftlhittiers'

Barefoot

Boy 3n

iDU

iThe 3lirror
iTalenbars

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

For 1871.

New

16 a

Double Small Pica Anglo Gothic.

$5.50.

HiDUSEHiDLD
iColors

North American Fine Arts

Geography

8.

York.

Ifi

Double Small Pica Light Fate.

Printers will find this a becoming Style


for Short Circulars and Headings to Blanks,
also appropriate for light

Display Lines.

Lahor Saving Fnrnitiire.

DISTOnTGUISHED men.
DOUBLB

ENGLI^,!!

46

LiGHT FaCE.

attention of parties wishing to


advertise in the Eegister is invited
to a special notice in onr colnmns.

The

Corn Exchange Bnilding

INSUEANCE COMPANY
jg

jj

35

Double Great Peimek Light Face.

was springtime. Morning


l^roke fresh and beautiful over
a cloudless sky and landscape.
National Park Bank.
It

LADIES DEPAETMENT.
PARMER, LITTLE &

CO.

New

York.

r
36

NoNFARBiL Condensed.

36

THE CONFIDENTIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF NAPOLEON AND

Two

Link Peael Condensed No.

TESTAMENTS.

ai

3.

THE NORTH AMERICAN MAIL STEAMSHIPS


LECTURES ON ELECTRICITY.

24

Two

Line Bretieb Condensed No.

12

INTERESTING WRITINGS.

Line Nonpareil Condensed No.

i,

THE GENERAL SOCIETY.

18

3.

Two

Line Long Pbimer Condensed No.

THE DELAWARE

AND HUDSON.

475

Two

Two

NEW

THE MECHANICS AND TRADESMEN

1857

REYOLUTIONARY HISTORIES
FOR THE FREI^CH.

Line Diamond Condensed.

CLARKE'S COMMENTARY ON THE OLD AND

CONTRIBUTIONS TO NATURAL HISTORY. 248

36

Two

Line Pica Condensed No.

2683

2.

CiMl
1823

2.

MANUSCRIPT HUNTING IN ENGLAND


CENTRAL AMERICA 23
12

Two

Line Engiish Condensed.

LACES AND HANDWORKED EMBROIDERIES

NEW HOLIDAY
Two

ISA

PRESENTS 58

Line Great Pbuieb Condensed.

HISTORY OF THE TELEGRAPH


SAllTICAL MES 64
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

:o3I

^
a

Two

24

Ldte Nonpareil Condensed No.

18

CABINETS, FURNITURE, CHASES

12

Two

Line Lonq Primer Condensed No.

1.

REFOEM MEASURES

24

Long Pkimee Condensed No.

258

THE FRANRIIN IITERART SOCIETY OF BROOKLYN

18

English Condensed No.

64

RETAIL CARPET WAREHOUSE

Two

Line Pica Condensed No.

1.

Pica Condensed No.

1.

Great Primer Condensed No.

1.

CHAMPION IRON SAFES

Double Great Primer Condensed.

Sa

AMERICAN RAILROADS

18

18

Great Primer Extra Condensed.

ADDRESSED TO THE PRINTERS. 7

12

FARMER, LITTLE &

If

Double Paragon Extra Condensed.

CO.,

New

Toek.

28

FONTS OF TYPE FOR BOOK BINDERS

18

1.

1.

BIIDERS' FONTS 32

24

2.

Line Brevier Condensed No.

SUPEEEIIE BLACK UK
12

58

Two

Two

Line Pica Extra Condensed.

75 a

Bkeviee Extka Condensed No.

30 A.

JOIN JACOB ASTOH. WAS BORN AT WALDORF, SEAR nEIDELBERG, IN BADEN, JULY M,
parents,

and came to Baltimore

made

in 1184,

commencing

1163, OP

a fur-trader.

liusincss as

frequent voyages up the Moliawlt River, tlien resident of

60 a

$4.00

2.

tlie

State of

HUMBLE

Long Peimer Extka Condensed No. 2

30 A.

WILLIAM APPLETON WAS A PROMINENT MERCHANT Of BOSTON, AND

He
also a raemlier of Congress from lliat ciiy in

liis

business to

Columbia River, founding

tlie

to

50 a

24

l^cvions

Pacific,

to the

war

Pica Extka Condensed No.

MTHAMIEL BOIDITCIIIAS
He was

26, 1773.
son of

cation,

24 a

12

M^ AT

president of

lie

tlie

30 a

$4.60.

2.

Was

In

$5.00.

2.

hAPll

111

ll01ilaPTAfll

V JUiiiQl'iniKi

ledaseafariijo'

28,

life.

Line Pica Extra Condensed No.

kf

mi
$5.40.

3.

FDLTi THE (iEliMTi iERICAS EilllR,


lar

Tie

1765,

Id

Little Bi'itiiii,

Eenefaeter Te Tie

Great

Tivo Line

20 a 12 A.

Mfaiiig ircliiise
rr

Two

01

"

iiie

1 in

IIPP

Li

Eosloii

li

Mkm

IjOiiiiii],

Line Paragon Extra Condensed No.

cMPi

$7..50.

2.

hM

Em

lull

Cemtj, PeMsjbii.

Of Amrica,

States

Ti FOIIM

Uwm

k,

8 A.

lliiitei

Lauder

Great Primer Extra Condensed No.

mil MMDEI

16 a

Pakagon Extra Condensed No.

15 A.

a limited edu-

Two

Borii

Mr. Applelon

American Aeadeiiij.

iMRT

1861,

SALEM, MASS,, MARCH

sliiprinaster, lie liai only

From 1795

in

1862, aged se?ent,y-six years.

of ISI2

QO
Tlie

extra session

llie

overland journeys projected

tlic

died

by Mr. Astor to the

years 1851-53, and was

but resigned, after sitting

37lli Congress,

tlic

Astoria,
tliroiigli

Washington Irving has recorded

tlic

New
again elected

York, and extended

$4.00.

$7.00.

2.

rr

11

fc
n

Cast

by FARMER,

LITTLE & CO. New York.

Ml
to

lit,

'

li

I
I

a?
H

60 a SO

Long Primek Extra Condensed.

MTHEM
Printing

has

been

INSTITUTE AND ACADEMY OE FINE AETS,

applied

to

so

many

snlijects

Pica Extra Condensed.

50 a i25A

have

books

so

SOUTIIEM PORTS OF THE UNITED STATES.


rapidly

Printing- lias been applied to so


increased,

and been

so

adapted

admirably

many

subjects

books

458

rapidly increased, and so admirably

30 a 30

Brevier Condensed No.

50 a 24

1.

MATERIAL OF GOOD QUALITY FURNISHED,


All of our

ia

18A

English Condensed No.

MANY STYLES
This noble invention

is

34G5

34 a 12

2.

one of the blessings

tion of tlie noble art of Printing,

3B a 18

This noble invention

36 a 18

tiie

inven-

last

Long Primer Condensed No.

ALTHOUGH

4.

four centuries have not yet elapsed

Double Small Pica Condensed.

3.

PRINTIIVG OFFICE

week put us

in

ALTIIOIGH

foni-

centnries

possession of the joyful

news of peace in the old world. 25 T


FAEMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

tlie

since the invention of the art 65

725

TYPE ADAPTED TO HARD USAGE


The several arrivals

one of

is

ADVERTISEMENT DISPLAY LINES.

24 a 12

Pica Condensed No.

2.

greatest blessings 2

2.

four centuries have not yet elapsed since

Great Primer Condensed No.

ADVERTISEMENTS.

TRAKSCENDANT AET OF TTPE FOUi\DING.

ALTHOUGH

EVERT PRINTING OFFICE

be furnished at short notice.

OF LETTER.

Brevteb Condensed No.

1.

Cases and every article required in a Printing office can

heaven has bestowed 570

50 a 30

Long Primer Condensed No.

WANTED

advertisement fonts are made of hard material) and will

be found Tough and Durable.

have been

632

York.

have elapsed 5i

36 a 18

Great Peimek Condensed No.

24 a 13

3.

Pharmaceutist and Apothecary

Hanover Bank

Boniform. 1867

Pica Condensed No.

3.

GKim PEODUCE

LITHOGIRAPHING

16 a 10

Two Line Small

of

Medora

Diamond. 1867

Two Line English Condensed

No.

3.

HOUSE FURT^ISinG DEPOT


Romaine Beneyolent Association
National Banlt

14 a 8

JN^otes.

Two Line Great Primer Condensed

COURIER

Am

No.

of Gralveston

1867

3.

UNION

Melodeon and Organ Estabhshments

Harmoniums. 1867
lOa

Canon Condensed No.

STEAM

3.

mimim

Fabulous Grredan Romancer


Emulation. 1867
FARMER. LITTLE &

CO..

New

York.

TS

50 a 80

Xh.e

Agate Roman Extbndbd.

la,rl txatX

called

nVJIy olieerfVil toils

N'or

"vvlieii inild.

at tlie

i-ne

50 a 24

l>irtli

Had. sleep l>een

ftiglited. iDy tlie

tlie

la^wn.

voice of care.

THE

Can bid the -warring passions cease.


Or snxooth the discords of the hour,
BEA.TJTiaT'tJL JLNT) TJSEFXJL. 38

LilG-HT ITA-OK KXTEIiriDKD. 1834

50 a 34

Nonpakeil Eoman Extended.

"Wisclom! if thy soft control


Can sootlie tlie siclin.ess of the sonl.

and. rural sports to sliare

evei^ing glixnxner'd. on

of cLa-s^ni

Brevier Roman Extended.

EXPANSIOlSr OF KNOA^^EEDGE 346

Tliat glorions Constellation of the ISTorth treads itp eternal circle


"With, -what

36 a 12

a stately and majestic step

LoNS Primer Roman Extended.

FEUSEVERII^ra IISTDXISTHY 345


The Lord is my Slieplierd, no ^^^emt sliall I knoAv;
I feed in green pastiares, safe folded I rest;

24 a 12

Pica

REFHSTED

Roman Extended.

^ND COURTEOUS

23

^iniasing HeminiscerLces of the Olden Time.


Se^vv^ing Mach-ine Oompany

16a 8

Great Primer Roman Extended.

DOM^ESTIC 258
Extraordinary
Centrgil
FARMER, LITTLE &

l!

fe

CO.,

New

York.

IntelligerLce

Park Rainble

50 a 24

Nonpareil Title Expanded.

first Impression pi'odLuced.


on tlie entlinsiast >^lien
confi'onted. at onoe >vltli tlie "bnst-

llng ^vox-let.
r*III2L,OSOI>HICjV]L, LDECTTJKE

a 18

50 a 24

The

Beeviee Title Expanded.

He

finds of ho^w little

comparative avail are those


hig'h intellectual

GOODS

ATF "VrHOLESAJL,E

Long Primer Title Expanded.

The

impression produced, on tlie


enthnsiast ^when confronted at once ^v^ith. the bustling- -world
hoAV little comparative avail

AU^E

first

THE HI&H

IIVTELLECTU^^L

E]VI>OAV]\IE]VT

^7^^,000 JLC]RES FETIiOLEUIVI.


24 a 12

Pica Title Expanded.

The

impression, produced, on. the


entlmsiast Tvhen confronted at once >vitlx the
fix*s5t

one of

Imstling- Av^orld, is

36

Brevier Doric Expanded.

I-BIWCS-TIIEIVIIWG-

36

HOXJItS

Long Primer Doric Expanded.

XS3436"7'800
Pica Doric Expanded.

mcs.

FARMER LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

r
3B

Pearl Antique Extended.

33Xl.'Sr

C3rOOX>SI. -^578

24 a 12

NoNPAKEiL Anthjxie Extended.

24 a 12

24 a 12

Long Primer Antique Extended.

16a 8

lOa

8a

6A

fla

PAKMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

8A

6A

Brevier Antique Extended.

Pica Antique Extended.

Paragon Clarendon Extended.

Double English Clarendon Extended.

Double Pica Antique Extended.

York.

sp

6 a 18

Gkeat Pbimek

Ionic Compkessed.

SPECIAL EUEOPEAI COREESPOOEITT


Recent Critical lotices of Ancient Grreek and

Eoman PuWications

Compreliensive. 1867

Earmeis and Horticnltnralists

24 a 12

Two

AM

BOOK

Line Small Pica Ionic Compressed.

JOB

PEDfTHG

OEEICE

Contritations to the Jfatural History of the United States

Samholing. 1867
If

jg

J,

ew Manual

Two

3 j^

of

Phonography

Line English Ionic Compeessed.

BURKET COPPEE FOUIDEIES


Eastern lechanical and Blood Stock Association

lemoranda. 1867
&reat Peabody Institution
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk,

[^

.3=!J

c
r

^uah
12 a 8

Double Great Primer

Ionic Compressed.

EEEATHIMS

OE SPEIM.

Eoreign and Domestic lamfactures

AicMtectuTal Eeauties. 56

FouK Line Pica

SPLEmiD
Endiantment

Home
g 3 g

Ionic Compressed.

lANSM
of the Scenery

Products. 27

rivE Line Pica Ionic Compressed.

COPAETIEESIIP
Eour Thousand Dollars
Parlor Organ. 34

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

4
50 a 18 A 31

Lono Primer Condensed Clarendon.

The
enthusiast

when

Pica Condensed Clarendon.

The impression produced

impression produced on the

first

is

50 a 12 A 18

confronted by the bustling world,

on the enthusiast when confronted at

one of disappointment.

GOLD AND STOCK BROKER

NAVIGATION AND TRANSPORTATION

true greatness 300

the vanity of temperament.

Winter Evenings with American

36 a 12

18

Character

Poets. 186.

is

the Basis of Truth.

Great Primer Condensed Clarendon.

Labor-Saving Processes of Mechanism. 423

OUR DARLINGTON FAIREST VILLAGE OF THE PLAIN


how sweetly

shines the skies.

Confronted at once with the Bustling World.

Two

a 12 A

Line Small. Pica Condensed Clarendon.

Extraordinary Discovery.
Franklin had

won

for himself

1232.

a world-wide Renown

NEWSPAPER INTERESTS ADVANCING

15a

Two

Line Enolish Condensed Clarendon.

Petroleum

Oil

Stock 123.

The Beautiful and the Useful Combined.

magnificent undertaking
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

.^

12a

Double Great Primer Condensed Clarendon.

Petroleum

Oil Lands.

Considerable of this land

STERLING
12 a 8

BANK

is

rich

52

Double Pabagon Condensed Clakendon.

Health of

New

York.

Hudson Sanitary Commission


CONGRESS. 123
j2 a 6

Four Line Pica Condensed Clarendon.

Mining Improvements
ELEGANT. 65
Five Line Pica Condensed Clarendon.

the Mammoth Safe


REAMS. 32
FARMER. LITTLE &

CO..

New

York.

1
A

50 a 24

Many

Pica Skeleton Antique.

Illustrations of Scientific

36 a 18

Proiress occur Daily,

FLAVORED WITH PURSLANE.

a 18

1851.

a 12

12 a 6

of

MellectEal

Enineiits.

PATIENCE EEf AEIEIl.

63

M U\mu\

of tie

Mei

of tte MisslssiBPi.

leafl to

appreliensifliis

of a

sniei

fall.

Double Faeagon Skeleton Antique.

FouE Line Pica Skeleton Antique.

FARMER, LITTLE &

HisloriaK

Double English Skeleton Antique.

Ureal Brices fliicli

le a 8

Great Primer Skeleton Antique.

Double Small Pica Skeleton Antique.

History of tie DlscoTory

Tlie

CO.,

New

Yokk.

I-cU

NONPAKEIL Fkenou Clakendon.


the General Order of Thick and Thin Strobe. Qreat

BEAUTIFUL

$3.80.

Demand

for

Novelty

Long Primer French Clarendon.

Queer Mental Lucubrations Ingeniously Applied

BBAIWOIiE

EXHAUSTLESS IDEAS

Brevier French Clarendon.

Pica French Clarendon.

$8.15.

Popular Appreciation of Scientific Plugugliness. For Congress

BUPHER MAWLEY

$3.(iO.

Topsy

$4.65.

Turvy Typographical Taste

cohghatulatoiiy

ESQ.

Great Primer French Clarendon.

$4.70.

Equilibrium Lost by Excessive Chignons, Regained through Weighty Paniers

TOPHEAVY AND HEAVY BOTTOM


Two

Line Pica Fuencu Clarendon.

pl'M.

Exceedingly Uniiiue, Ucvel, and Fanciful in Design

ALL THE ITEWEST STYLES


Two Line English French Clarendon.

Rung Upon Type Metal


MELODIOUSLY CHIMING

Manifold Changes

Two

Line Great Primer French Clarendon.

$9.80.

Welcome the Christmas King*


DICKENS' STOBY
Four Line Pica French Clarendon.

Richest

Gem

of the Cluster

liAaiTIFICEUT
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New York.

$13.10.

'7/-.

/
;

24

Pica Akcadian.

THE

$3.60.

NEW MAMMOTH

PRESS

Contributions to the Natural History

Fire Insurance

20 a

Company

o!

18

Gkbat Pbimee Akcadian.

$4.70.

PEABODY INSTITUTION

America

The

Beautiful and Useful Combined

Spring Morning

18.

15

24 a

$117,

Double Small Pica Akcadian.

$5.25.

MOUHT WASHIHQTOH HALL


Sducational

AdvantagGS

UsgM

14

10

Korth

AmGrican Institutions

Labor Saving FurniturG

Two

of

23 G5,

Line English Akcadian.

$7.50.

AUTISTIC EXHIBITIOH
The Original Pre-Haphaelite Photographs
'

10 a

of

Arcadian and Utopian Scenes 18T0

Two Line Pabagon

Arcadian.

$8.75.

CELEBRATED
national Typographic ComMnation

Broadway Arcade 187G


FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

as

Tokk.

n
50 a 30

Agate

50 a 30

Ionic.

history of the press of

Beetiee

198

is

required.

Shall not

ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF PRINTING. 608

50 a 24

Ionic.

Industry, Enterprise and Intelligence.

True
76

Long Pbimer

Ionic.

lies -wholly in
the force of
in
force of soTil, that is,
thought, moral principle, and love;

THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER

Grandeur of cliaracter

Printing, in a more comprehensive sense, is a


very ancient art that is, the art of making an
impression upon one body by pressing it with

36 a 18

America

Discoveries that genius has achieved.

VERY INGENIOUS MECHANICAL CONTBIVANCE

Ionic.

in concluding this glance at printing and. newspaper progress, let us say, that a comprehensive

Extensive Improvement in Type Founding.

50 a 24

NoNPABEiL

Now

Diligent seekers among the ancient ruins of oriental cities,


claim to have discovered tokens of devices for disseminating
information, and it is perhaps -well established, that half a

Intellectual Greatness.

INDUSTRIOUS MECHANICS.

38

Pica Ionic.

MACHINERY FOR VENTILATINa BUILDINaS.


This Beautiful Letter should be found in every Printing Oifice.
Tour throughout the United States in 1860.
36 a 18

Great Primer

Ionic.

THE PACIFIC RAIL ROAD ENTERPRISE.


Productions of our National Painters and Sculptors.
Excellent style of Printing Type 3579
34 a 12

Double Small Pica

Ionic.

MECHANICAL IMPROVEMENTS.
Encouraging Progress of American Fine Arts
Parlor Entertainments. 2478
24a

Two

8A

Line Pica Ionic.

STEAMER SYLVAN SHORE.


Printing Press and Machine Company
Moonlight Excursion. 5073
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

(3

10 a 6

Double Gbeat Primeb

Ionic.

SPRING MORNING
Burnished with golden Hue
Shadowing 74
10 a 6

Four Line Pica

Ionic No.

1.

DELIGHTFUL
Summer

Recreations

Bowers 28
jQ a 6

Four Line Pica

Ionic No.

2.

MIDNIGHT
Costumes
Border 3

Ricli
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

3H

r
50 a 30

Life's

purpose

Nonpareil Antiijue Condensed No.


is

both these claims

only adequately

and, indeed, the more limited a service is a ne-

You

cessary condition of the general development.


then, occupying a given position iu the world.

find yourself,

It has its appointed

duties, its special opportunities of usefulness, also, diffioulties

temptations of

its

own.

Take your

OKDINAEY rUTELLI&ElSrOE OAU

its

TrfrDEESTAin) THEM.

end

2.

once our labor has begun, the comfort

that enables us to endure

it is

the prospect of

for though, in every long

NoNPAHEH, Clarendon.

classics possess

They are the early voice


fiUed with
of the world, better remembered, and more cherished stiU
conflicting emotions.

SPEINGFIELD, DECEMBEK

25, 1863.

EXEMPLIFICATION OF TYPOGRAPHICAL MARKS.

36a ISA

life

How

vain are eloquence and poetry,


compared with this heaven-descended
Put in one scale that simple
truth.
utterance, and in the other the love of
antiquity, with its accumulating glosses
and commentaries, and the latter will
1862.

GREAT MEN GENERALLY GOOD.


FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

select

2.

from the records

Is

whose current of

flowed most equably and pleasurably; whose desires

were crowned most

liberally

with means of gratification

OOMMEEOIAL ADYEKTISEE,
EEASONnf G IMPLIES DOUBT

36 a 18 A.

The

AISTD

1862.

UNOEKTAINTT

Pica Antique Condensed No.

toil with,

2.

which performance
is so irksome and

struggles after idea


disgusting,

and

so frequent is the ne-

cessity of resting below that perfection

which we imagined within our reach,

INTELLIGENCEE,

1856.

PHILOSOPHEE MALEBRAKCHE.

Bkevibr Clarendon.

But they show with most unwelcome frequency


the tokens of the world's childhood, before passion

had yielded to the sway of reason and the affecThey want the highest charm of purity,
tions.
of righteousness, of elevated sentiments, of love

MANCHESTEE,, NOVEMBER

23, 1862.

NOTED ANCIENT AND MODERN WRITERS

36 a 18

LoNo Primer Clarendon.

WINCHESTER, MARCH,

man whom you

he who Uved to indulge himself

50 a 24

a peculiar charm, from the circtunstance


that they have been the models, I might almost say the
masters, of composition and thought in aU ages. In the
contemplation of these august teachers of mankind, we are

The

the

is

of time as the object of your special admiration?


it

WASHINGTON STEEET.

SENTENCES SLIGHTLY CONNECTED.

50 a 30

Bkeviek Antique Condensed No.

work, there

some joyous intervals of self-applause,


when the attention is recreated by unexpected
facility, and the imagination soothed by it,
are

123

Who

1862.

Losa Pkimek Antique Condensed No.

When

and

lot as it is assigned you, without

PEESIDENTIAl nfATJGtHUTION,

50 a 24

50 a 24 A.

2.

aooomplished in disoharging

Pica Clarendon.

Our own productions, though


they

may yield to

those of the

ancients in the arrangement


of ideas, in method, in beauty
of form, and in freshness of

ROCHESTER, 1862.
TRUE SOURCE OF REFORM.

York.

Ji

24 a 12

16 a 8

Great Pbimeb Clakbndon.

New

Double Small Pica Clabendon

Printers 53

Gases. 42

Rich Household Furniture.

Brogans and Balmorals.

CORPORATIONS

TYPE METAL

16 a 8

Double English Clarendon.

Provision Dealer 87
Mutual Accident Insurance Company

FURNISHING HOUSE
10 a 6

Double Great Primer Clarendon.

nechanism 57
Enameled Leather Goods

CONFECTIONER
8 a 4

Four Line Pica Antique Condensed No.

2.

BanbslZ
Regular Mails.

GRAPmC.
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tobk.

1
A
Agate Antique No. 1.
WEBSTER'S REVISED ENGLISH DIOTIOTTARY

50 a 30

At the end of

years from the arrival of the

fifty

New

at

Plymouth

Men

Brevibe Antique No.

The English language has been


Oovenunent

a 18

36 a 18

lately adopted

Long Primer Antique No.

by

the

The

compose

their finest

Long Primer Antique No.

2.

they are the models 8571

3.

36 a 18

Pica Antique No.

3.

MINING COMPANIES

which has

Honesty

exerted such influence. 584

36a ISA

to

Classics possess a peculiar charm, for

8943

origin and history of an art

condemned

ILLUSTRATED ASTRONOMY

CENTRAL PRINTING HOUSE


The

3.

works, which are usually their earliest 1492

3.

of the Japanese

NoNPABEm Antique No.

of genius have usuallf been

SPANISH CHARACTERISTICS

.S()

THE DISCOVERIES OF EARLY NAVIGATORS

England colonies were supposed 1857

50 a 30

emUrants

5 J a 30

is

the best policy of

in-

surance for eternity 5

Great Primer Antique No.

3.

POETRY AND THE DRAMA


That nation vrhich employs the greatest
amount of machinery 857
16a

Paragon Antique No.

1.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
If

the virtues and accomplishments of nature


are to be admitted 234
20a

Two

Line Pica Antique No.

1.

THE EMPIRE STATE


The

light it is
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

whatever
viewed 97

art of printiug, in

New

York.

:^\

iC"

m
36

Pearl Antique.

36 a 18

PRIVATE LIFE OF GEORGE -WASHINGTON


RECOLLECTIONS
PRACTICAL VIE-W OP THE IVIUTUAL DUTIES AND
RELATIONS OF IMANKIND 5786

24

Nonpareil Antique No.

Nonpareil Antique No.

COiaFANZOM' FOR

36 a 24

2.

Minion Antique.

DICTIONARV OP THE SCIENCES


Wyoming- -Valley

HOITSZiHOIiS

70aK ASSOCIATIOZr FOR THE


HEIiXEF OF THE POOR 1234

Homestead and cot send up

ZrXS'W

36 a 18

Brbtiek Antique No.

AND ADVENTURES

BRATED

OF

CEIiE219
TRAVEIiERS.

Pica Antique No.

JOHNSON'S

Circumstances
The inunense products of CaUfbrnia
mines supply 425

2.

GENERAI.
IiIVES

1.

MANUAI. OF HISTORY

16a

smoke from

1857

REPORT OF THE POST MASTER

24 a 12

Long Phqier Antique No.

dell.

Brevier Antique No.

24 a
1.

French Naturalist
The great discoverer of these general
lavtrs ivas Baron Cuvier 68

their curling

every bosquet and

MECHANIC AND LAWYER

36 a 18

THE FARMER

Government Printing
According- to the most authentic history the city of
niexico has the honor of 2468

AxrcTxoxr saimH of FuaxriTURz:

THE

1.

1.

WORKS

Monarchs
Fortune appears in the most
extravagant 369

Great Primer Antique No.

1.

NEW PUBIiICATION
The Hammocli

The

application of rotary motion


effected

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

wonders 48

York.

36 a 18

Long Pkimek Antique Condensed.

a 18

HOKIES OF BRITISH POETS. 57

Few

men,

24 a 12

my

friends,

comprehend

this Science

CORRESPONDENT. 86

New

history of the Printing Art

12

Two

SIR

WALTER

SCOTT. 57

Printing Machinery on free Exhibition

16 a 8

Great Primer Antiqtie Condensed.

Pica Aktique Condensed.

Two

Line Pica Antique Extra Condensed.

MINNESOTA. 57
Patent

Roller

Composition.

Line English Antique Condensed.

INVENTIONS. 1857

CUTLERY AND FINE WARES


!

a 8

DouBtE Paragon Antique Extra Condensed.

TELEGRAPH NEWS

57

General Ranking and Insurance Agencies


Sa 4

Four Line Pica Antique Extra Condensed No.

1.

ADGTIONS 75
Lantern Manufacturers.
^..-.".=. Condensed No.
Ai.i<<uAa Extra
JTiUA Antique
IjlNJK Pica
Four
J?OUK Lise

2.

HARDWARE STORES 28
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

""Si

Nonpareil Gothic No.

Nonpareil Gothic Condensed No.

7.

Enlarge thy free-born heart and thank kind Heaven, that America

still

Beautiful

in

enjoys the blessings of sweet Liberty.

HAPPINESS THE

Bkeviek Gothic No.

0!

grant,

Prosperity

is

is

Cowed by

PERSONIFIED.

pedagogues

Human

TO

precaution,

HARIVIONIOUS

1865.

of virtue than adversity

ATTENUATION,

rightly

1866.

4.

understood,

BLACKSMITH.

Pica Gothic Condensed No.

4.

True eloquence consists

severe.

is

is

merely

in

1866.

4.

saying wliat

proper, notliing more.

TYPOGRAPHICAL ELEGANCE.

PRETTY SHAPE AND SLENDER,

If

trial

enlightened prudent self-love.

the ruling rod and haughty frowns


of

stronger

1234.

4.

Long Primer Gothic Condensed No.

4.

health and universal joy.

Pica Gothic No.

work.

an ancient proverb and true,

INCLINATION

123

each smiling countenance appears fresh blooming

MODERATION

much

HEALTH.

Long Pkimeb Gothic No.

fine

ABOVE OPINION,

WITH

Brevier Gothic Condensed No.

indulgent Heaven, no rising stornn may darken, with

CLEANLINESS ESSENTIAL TO

COINCIDING

HEARTILY

1865.

4.

black wings, this glorious scene

In

admirably adapted for small

REWARD OF INDUSTRY.

4.

formation, characters condensed and symmelrically proportioned

18

IS

34 a 18

24 a 12

Beeviee Clabendon Extended.

Extensive IDealer

in.

Kard-ware

Over

Peabl Gothic Extended No.

86

1.

SPREADINO BRANCHES OF THE OAK. 4B


RIVULETS AMONG THE HILLS.
A

NoNPABEiL Gothic Extended.

FLOWERS STREW OUR PATHWAY.


AN UNCHANGINa LANDSCAPE.
ISA

12

CIRCUMSTANTIAL
PAEMEE, LITTLE &

Co.,

New

Yokk.

36

Peakl Gothic Extended No.

2.

Beeviee Gothic Extended.

ONWARD AS THE

TRUTH.

RAPIDLY ADVANCING

ISA

Lon Pkimee Gothic Extended.

RECOMMENDATIONS

far extending Flains

GOTHIC EXTENDED AND WEl-l. PROPORTIONED 2


RESOLUTE FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY.

24
21

Long Pkimek Clarendon Extended.

IvIXJSIO^^L 57

EN'OIlSrES 3S

30

54-

Pica Gothic Extended.

EXPANDED TYPES. 5

NEW INVENTIONS

n
Nonpareil Gothic No.

3'i

36

1.

THE ENDLESS CHANGES OF THE KALEIDOSCOPE

Bbbvier Gothic No.

36

1.

A Two

Line Pica Gothic Extra Condensed.

Actwell your part, there

COMPETITION

36

all

IS

the tionoi

lies,

14

HIGHLY ENTERTAINING SKETCHES OF TRAVEL

IN

36

LEGISLATURE ON

2.

mUU SUSPENSION BRIDGE.

51

[R|[ CENTRIL RllLROtD

Nonpabeil Gothic Condensed.

THE FIRST AMONG THE LATER ISSUES OF NEW PRINTING TYPE

HEAVY IMPORTATIONS OF RICH GOODS FROM EUROPE

24 A.

LoNQ Pkimeb Gothic Condensed No.

3.

RECENT ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATIONS


PITMAN'S PHONOGRAPHIC MANUAL

36

1.

INSURANCE COMPANIES

Long Pbimeb Gothic Condensed No.

Gbbat Pbimeb Gothic Condensed No.

INTRODUCTION TO FRENCH
Two

Long Pbimeb Gothic Condensed No.

1.

REMARKABLE PERSONS OF EVERY AGE

OF

Pica Gothic Condensed. No.

1.

NEW YORK AND AUSTRALIA STEAM


18

1.

MEMOIRS

36

2.

ANNIVERSARY OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE

24

Pica Gothic Condensed No.

2.

Beetiek Gothic Condensed No.

ACTION OF THE

Two Line

THE UNITED STATES

Bbeviek Gothic Condensed No.

1.

LET BENIFICENCE EVER RULE US

36

CHARM OF MUSIC AT THE EARLY DAWN OF MORN


THE ATMOSPHERIC PHENOMENON

36

Long Pkimeb Gothio No.

iiORMLE

Peakl Gothic Condensed.

2.

EARLIEST SETTLEMENTS OF CALIFORNIA

18

PEN AND PENCIL SKETCH OF THE BATTLEFIELDS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

36

Nonpabeil Gothio No.

24j

MAIL STEAMSHIP STAR OF THE WEST

24 a 12

Pabaqon Gothic Condensed No.

1.

DETERMINATE RESOLVES

Line Pica Gothic Condensed No.

1.

FINE PENCIL SKETCHINGS


FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoek.

36 a 18

Pica Gothic Condensed No.

2.

Mercantile Mutual Fire Insurance Company of the State of Connecticut

The New York, Philadelphia and

Baltimore

Preferred and Guaranteed

Consolidated

and

Petroleum

Railroad Stocks

Mining

Company

456

and Bonds

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION BOUGHT AND SOLD

a 18

Gbbat Pkimer Gothic Concemsed No.

Farming Lands
Practical

Examples

for

of

2,

Sale by the Central Railroad

Company

Ingenious Methods of Living without Working

Cimmerian Darkness Overspreading. 589

EUROPEAN AND NORTH AMERICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY

24 a 13

Paeaoon Gothic Condensed No.

Benevolence

is

active,

2.

and combining

with his strong social nature, renders


to

it

influence

its

very

difficult

for

him

say no when appeals are made 25

SUPERINTENDENT OF THE PROVIDENCE RAILROAD

a 12

Two Line

Pica Gothic Condensed No.

2.

Emulation is large, and acting with

would

give

him

great

mechanical

aptitude

for

pursuit to which

genius

almost

any

57

INDUCEMENTS OFFERED TO CAPITALISTS


FAEMBR, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

-stt

18 a 12

Two

Line Great Primer Gothic Condensed No.

2.

THE STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL 27


The Dictionary

of General

Knowledge

Excursion to Lansingburgh

12 a 8

Two

Line Paragon Gothic Condensed No.

2.

MERCHANTS AND TRADERS 45


Revised

Documents.

Gongressional

The Printers Warehouse


JU ^ g

Four Line Pica Gothic Condensed No.

2.

SATURDAY EVENING. 25
American Bank Note Reporter

Steam Navigation.
FARMER, LITTLE

Jfc

CO..

New

York.

tin
Pearl Gothic, No.

50 a 36 A.
Printers will find
Tariff

it

to their

advantage

PRINTING MATERIALS OF THE BEST MANUFACTURE

Brevier Gothic, No.

The United

Meeting of conference of Union Conventions


Allied Expedition against Mexico

SALES OF ELEGANT HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE

36 a 18 A.

3.

Additional particulars of

tlie

for N. Y.

Battle

CARPETING AND OIL CLOTH

Pica GothiCj No.

36 a 18 A.

Cottage

Hill

3.

This Foundry Established 1810.


United States Treasury

AND PAINTERS MATERIALS

OILS

Long Primer Gothic No.

Nomination of Candidates

States Express

Over $500405 800 En Route

4.

Nautical Exhibition of a Soutti Sea wiialing voyage

between the Northern Sea Board and Interior States 1862


Accumulation of Produce in the West

50 a 24 A.

NoNPAKiEL Gothic No.

50 a 30 A.

3.

to give us a call

Seminary

1.

for

Young Ladles

Extensive assortments of superfine black Belgian Doeskin Cloths


Office of the Germania Fire Insurance Company.

TYPES AND PRESSES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION


1

Great Primer Gothic, No.

a 18 A.

The

1.

Republican Nominations

Democratic Union State Convention 1862.


Commonwealth Fire Insurance Co.

ENGRAVING AND ELECTROTYPING


Two Line

Pica Gothic, No.

2.

Our Recommendations
Handsome Series of Gothics

18

Useful to the Job Printer

MOUNTAIN EXCURSION
PAESIEH, LITTLE

U Pi

&

CO.,

New

York.

m-\\
_5__ij

^L^=^

50 a 38

Peabl Gothic No.

50 a 30

2.

Splendid Achievements of our Countrymen.


Recollections of Celebrated American Statesmen. 18S

50 a 24

IN FINE

NORTH AIMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY


36 a 18

2.

Birth day of

Long Pbimer Gothic No.

2.

Editor and Proprietor.

Hints on Cottage Architecture.

The

3.

Transportation Company
Established December 25, 1789.

MATHEMATICAL INSTRUMENTS

Bbevibk Gothic No.

NoNPAEEiL Gothic No.

New Jersey Railroad

Large Assortment of Domestic Goods.

DEALERS

Pencil Illustrations of the Rebellion

Washington and

George Washington.

his

Times 18

Presidictatorial. 185

Metropolitans.

IMPROVED PRINTING MACHINES.

FARMING IMPLEMENTS.

36

!i

Pica Gothic No.

18

Exciting

& Groundless

Rumors

2.

in

Circulation,

May, 1862.

Elastic Door and Furniture Fenders.

IMPORTANT TO MECHANICS' DEPARTMENT.


36 a 18

Two Line Bbevier Gothic

No.

1.

History of the Constitution of the United States


Flowers and their Teachings. 27.

THE METROPOLITAN CITY IMEW YORK.


I

a 12

Two Line Long Pbimeb Gothic

The Useful and


The State

No.

1.

Substantial Blended.
Legislature 52.

REFINEMENT AND POLITENESS.


21 a 12

Two Line

Pica Gothic No.

1.

many
Metal Furniture. 45
TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCH.

Wealth the misfortune

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

of

Yokk.

Ml

50

a 24

Long Primer Doric.

Heavy

6 lbs.

11-

oz

Frontispiece

Specimen Type Judiciously Arrang:ed 307 M^%

FOR GENERAL INSPECTION


30 a 18

Enolish Doric.

8 B)s. 8 oz.

34 a 15

13 >3. 10 oz.

Paraoon Doric.

WELL FORMED

PRINTING

Inclined to Rotundity T

Excelsior Type 8
of America h\%

English Burliness HH.%


24 a 15

Two Link

20 Its. 13 oz.

Pica Doric.

J5,

STATE PRINTING.
The Jobbing Department 453 hh%
16 a 12

Two

Line Great Primer Doric.

S2 B)s.

6 oz.

GOOD METAL.
Printers' Furniture 68
12

Two Line Paragon

a8 A

Doric.

H%%
20 fts. 12 oz.

STANDARD.
Bill Posters. 1868.
8

Four Line Pica Doric.

a6 A

l^lz%

^^^
24 tts, 8 oz.

THOUSAND
Park Ramble 7 Si^
PARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

10 a

8 A.

S a

6 A.

10 a

PARAGON CLAKANDON EXTENDED.

$1.10.

DOUBLE ENGLISH CLARANDON EXTENDED.

DOUBLE PARAGON ANTIQUE POINTED

6 A.

NO.

1.

$10.90.

*10.00.

PUBLICATION
The Mammoth Safe
Red Bank 2.
6 a

FIVE LINE PICA DORIC.

S16.50

The Job Printer

New

Styles

DORICS!
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

1871.

36

NoNPAKEiL Doric.

86

ARCH^OLOGICAL RESEARCHES
LO'WEST RECESSES.

Two

24 A

IN

THE

Brbtier Doric.

ARCHITECTURAL SIMPLICITY
EXEMPLIFIED.

1866.

Line Nonpakeii. Doric.

14

ANCIENT NOBLEMAN

Two

Line Brevier Doric.

ARCHITECTURE
TAUGHT.

DIGNIFIED. 186
Two

1866.

Line Long Primer Doric.

BEAUTIFUL EDITIONS.
IS

68.

Great Primer Grecian Ektra Condensed.

18

13

Great Primer Skeleton.

CAM BE USED ADMNTAGEOUSLY. 4


18

Two Line

18

Pica Grecian Extra Condensed.

SUITIIBLE FOR JOB

FUTil}.

Two Line

Pica Skeleton.

SUPERIOR JOBBIl T!PE

Two Line Great Primer Skeleton.

ism imTAiim
24

Two Line Nonpareil

18

Gothic Tuscan.

MISCELLANEOUS INTELLIGENCE. 180

14

Two Line

IMPORTED METALS. 4
7

Pica Gothic Tuscan.

THE CAMPAIGN. 8

Great Primer Gothic Tuscan.

Two

Line Great Primer Gothic Tuscan.

RECORDS 83

Four Line Pica Gothic Tuscan.

5a

HEARTHS 3
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tork,

]C

n
70 a 52

When

Nonpakkii. Rukic.

lightning

was made subservient

mankind,

it

marked an important

HISTORICAL ACCOUNTS

5-2

We

3(i

and

interests oi

period.

OF PRINCIPAL EVENTS.

new

Bbevieb Runic.

The benefits

world derived from the Art

COLUMBUS DISCOVERED AMERICA.

23456789.

32 a 25

styles of types

with

new

For

187.

Pica Runic.

plain

and ornamental type

see specimen sheets.

confldence of satisfaction.

EMBELLISHED TYPOGRAPHY.

27 a 22

to the

of Printing are incalculable.

Long Fbieb Runic.

present our

63 a 36

to the will

PRINTING MATERIALS.

456.

Geeat Pbimeb

The introduction of

316.

Rxtnic.

Printing

was necessary

for

the development of science.

12345

DEVOTED TO LITERATURE.

20 a 18

Two

14 a 14

Line Long Pbimeb Runic.

Plain and Ornate

Type

7a

7A

Two Line

Pica Rxmic.

Ornamental Signs
Assortment.

Improved Metal

ELECTROTYPES

MITRE BOX

Canon Runic.

STEAMBOATS

53

Boston Provision Marlcet


FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New Yobk.

21 a 8

Pica Antique Pointed.

14

ii

la

Oreat Pkimek Antique Pointed.

Popular Comedian

Artistic combinations of
superior talent

Hunch.'back
I

GOMIG CIRCUS. 67
14 a 10

Two Line Small

IVIACBZ-^ril.

83

Pica Antique Pointed.

The Adamantine Diamond

MERINOS
14 a 10

Two Line English Antique

45

Pointed.

National Exhibition of Horses

ENGINEER
jQ

J,

Two Line Paragon Antique

29

Pointed.

Superior Specimen
EXCELSIOR 65
; j^

Four Line Pica Antique Pointed.

Petroleum 65

MODERN
FAEMEH, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tork.

TWO

4 A.

LINE PARAGON ANTIQUE POINTED NO.

3.

$10,00.

This Face Is Bold


Haxidsoxxie Letf er
i/^XuGFlCaZIi

GOLDEN HOUR.
NEAT 1870.
FOUR LINE PICA ANTIQUE POINTED.

$lil.'M.

Grand Central
Printing Type
Standard

OUR PATENT
TYPE 12.
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO..

New

Yiiiik.

50 a 18

NoHPABEiL Black.
jPi'inting teas iiittotuceTi into

ilccoTliins to

tilt

most
at

autiientic tistorg,

50 a 18

America about
tlje

oE iEciico

citj;

l)ai>tnc! cetablisljcU tl;c Urttt

Bebtieb BLAOii.

\e02t.

ffi

fiais

ti)t

^onor

Snt

Mwtifct

aU

Ustahmts

tit

all ll)e

biscooeries

been mabe, roe conceice

abmit

tl)at

tl)e

none

ia

2.

roljicl)

Pica Black No.

roill

:ilccorbmg to

Geeat Peimee Black No.

man

tlje

1857

ftvo men,

comprebcnbs

mg

t\)t

impMbtmcnt

|)rintxng ltlacl)mc

l)at)e

refleEting ntinb
l)at)e

to tit

laA

citB

no

maiit,

nont

Jaiit tjniJti)

^rcsie

Long Pkimer Black No.

itm

iabt

tit rtxlttting minir bill aiimit, tiat

ntDM

iaiaA

infiiti)

of

2357

2.

immBiona

most autljmttc

Mtnco

l)gs

l)tstovn,

tl)

1857

2.

frienbs, auspect, pcrliaps

extent of

support gioen bg

tt)c

religion.

Improoeb Stanbing l^xtssts 82

16a

DoiTBLE Small Pica Black No.-

tl)e

meeiinglg

ingeniotia mt)mti0n of printing

Ittetal

16a

Momt
ti)e

age

Line Pica Black.

of Ut^wQtntatiHQ.

it

10 bkifftis

12a

Double Paragon Black.

ta 3mpr0t>e

FABMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

ujitl)

first

art of printing, in

Ugijt

12a

tapes, toas

Two

Ci)tt0

2.

S^l)e

H^^attHv

57
Four Line Pica Black.

:^mmca

York.

^sM

w
36 a 12

Long Pbimeb Condensed Black.

36 a 12

lift anir Iriiuipl Saritings of Soutljeg.

Waxh

falnabk

for

gout^s,

toitfe

|mprtana

frantifnl fUnstralions.

%\^i

36 a 12

PavtHE Sabings ianh.

of

ail

W^t

|0Mlyff.llf

36 a 13

2.

fjertaittik

^mmcm

fepmn. 2M

Sroji Commtrrial

"xkUxn

aiKau|)

lU

ill

t\}t

|oiuiC|

Barlut

i\iitm\i\}

CMir]|

gimaita

2.

Ranking |^ss0ttati0n 0f ^tto fork.

DovBLE Paragon Condensed Black.

dTottstitorat

(Kkmtitte of

Mar
g ^ 4

IJatioualitB.

p^prtinrat. 72

Canon

j^

ondensed Black.

ittoteal lltkMst,
FARMER, LITTLE &

%\(ism.

Double Small Pica Condensed Black.

Double English Condensed Black No.

^XU.

mull

Essac|us^tts giSMciattott of

fistori of Irattre.

s( i\t llwIlTOit

Of t|j ^axtl)

Iitkstr^

j2 a 6

fywMm

13?4

Geeat Pkimer Condensed Black No.

16 a 8

English Condensed Black.

CO.,

New

York.

ilJE

ly

Nonpareil Imprint Gothic.


we HAVE THE PLEASURE

OF CALLING YOUR ATTENTION TO A

.32

a IB A 18

Minion Hair Line.

Printing Maohineet on Exsibition in 1845.

NEW

SPECIMEN BOOK CONTAINING MANY NEW VARIETIES.

Tlie

Mobile Union

is

one of fhe

first

Soutliern Associations

NEW DRUM CYLINDER

30 a 30

The newspaper

is

emphatically the poor man's lyceum

INTERESTING- TRADITIONS.

36 a IS

From

Hudson

to the

36 a 12

l"!!!

36 a 12

St

i?f

Fortune never appears in a more extravagant humor

ISA

ia

Lakes the scenery

THE MOUNTAIN TORRENT.

Pica Hair Line Condensed.


tlian

wlien

slie

reduces

2SS8

Pica Hair Line.

the

36 a 18

BouKSEOis Hair Line.

PRESS.

How

dear

Pica Skeleton.

to

my

heart are the scenes of

my

PLEASURES OF CHILDHOOD.

5732

16a 8

LoNS Primer Outline.

English Outline.

ILamos watlh pifocsESMim dliFgiwmo

Hctc00ars to an cagg uvM ftappg &e, fo

12a

Pica Black Outline.

16a 8

Long Primer Black Outline.


peggiesiji

our

Two Line

Pica Black Outline,

mmmw
18 a 6

18 a 6

Double Small Pica Saxon Open.

1,1'

12 a 5

mw

PARMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

Double Pica Saxon Open.

i)i->

Double Great Primer Saxon Open.

trtiiJ

9a

5A

Canon Saxon Open.

Wmnmt
New

York,

41

-^u
3

Pica Chokoh Text.

12

;i

^liBDlngital iBininnriBs nf

'^IjB

24 a 12

16 a 8

tjit

EnM Itatts

lingraiititi nt

50 a 8

185

oEo cw:&iMuntan,ce4.

0).

'M,eEic6 of

ofem 9Ime6 5

Double Small Pica Secretary.

^^^^

Cnnugeliml leui}mraatinE0.

oP-

Great Primer Secretary.

^cmlcmUe

(^e!t

Double English Church Text.

60 a 12

Cimes 7

tjie

Pica Secretary.

oiateteiliag, 'ixnu.nitxxnce.i-

Double Small Pica Church Text.

CjirWira

100 a 18

^^^

^^^^'^

H^ttm.

i^

School Soy.

^8

^'

-<^-oS-^B@^^=-S'S'+^=-

>

artisfic^i

86 a 12

LoNO Primer Arabesque.

a 12

ioMtions

iogeoioq?

of ^0

30 a 10

|)ei;goo.

570

Pica Arabesque.

iUk)iitlii]g Jh(i{)gij]^tio]^ of ^

Great Primer Arabesque.

Je^k^lfe

i(eici]e^

of

^obei J^pe.

Bas5-s'-3<'-r

50a

Great Primer German Text No.

io^as g0rttttt8

rttt^

F*f"5^8

^C[ttstwt^ $

Htf

l|

24 a 12
)

a 8

A Great

36 a 12

Primer Condensed Black No.

1.

2.

Double Small Pica German Text.

anlr

mkt foxcdm

l)tntt

A Two Line Long Primer Condensed

mm.

Black.

tranlialfs JHantle (Drnametits. i

gs
A

24 a 6

Double English German Text.

24 a 12

Two Line

Pica Coneensed Black.

l)t ^tlotttic
'V>Cy

24 a 4

Double Paragon German Text.

FARMER. LITTLE &

^rr^

25

v5^

me ^ttgtrat)w^5>0

1^

^mm.

CO.,

New

16 a 8

A Double English Condensed Black No.

1.

Jnkiitrial friiibittun 4

York.

Tl

60 a 18

A Long

Pbimeb Condensed Black Shaded.

Long Pkimeb Condensed Black No.

50 a 18 A

l)[jwtnMttt of itttwattistojr

34

Two Line Long Pkimer Ornamented

%^W

No.

THIS TYPE rOUNDKY

.4,

Q'Tis

14.

,.*

WAS ESTABLISHED

IN HAKTEORD,

REMOVED TO NEW-YORK,

Patltmatifsi

AND ^vEAUTirUL #PECIMENS


OP #YPOGRAPHY.

l|?^#^#

60 a 25

mA

Bkeviek Haik Line

Italic.

60 a 20

industry of the world is all in motion, floating over


oner fhe land, hreaking through all

CT.,

1810;

1812.

Long Pkimek Haib Line

Italic.

Supplementary Specimen, ^ooh

^ecaUifid

lately issued

the ocean, hastening

IJie (Printers

JIotai

For what you'd hardly


FsfiliJlSIl, iJQ'CTiJB

Sr

them

What

|r

Ocean's rough, tempestuous ujave ?

6 S^eTcman

We, -who hoast

tJie

matGhless
Ji

Isfi^OIi

8t.

'TWfiS

THE

(PIIESS, fi gEJieOJi

Two

jl-rb -wTvooJi Gcun IsbgJht

and

a 8

A Two

iral

GOJ^qUEIiB EYFIiYCCHIJ^a.

LnjE English Black Ornate.

Line Small Pica Black Ornate Shaded.

gtiaiOT^lif

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

QsriMtJi

impcurt.

'Free, UThsJicbGTded (Press.

18 a 6

A Two

1&6&.

Line English Black Ornate Shaded.

mma
i

LIQHT.

Pica Halb Line Italic.

40al4A

18 a 6

inspired our sires to brave

.'

guess.

63

CO.,

love

18 a 8

Two

ilttiqi

Line Small Pica Black Ornate.

^0mp4JiB
Yobk.

a 12

English Open Shade.

16 a 8

<s;

IB a 8

Two

Line Pica Open Black No.

32 a 12

16 a 8

1.

Pica Condensed Black Shaded.

^m&w

0l

Two Line

Pica Black Open No.

2.

Double Paeagon Shaded Black.

12 a 6

kMtiM

20 a 8

J^tJB^IJf(n!l)lll^^

Double Paragon Shaded Text.

Great Phimek Black Shade.

5f)i?^^^^^StU^%

mis

10 a 6

a 12

A Great

Primer Condensed Black Shaded.

iartial Wlrt0W

14 a 6

Del. Small Pica Condensed Black Shaded.

Double English Condensed Black Shaded.

<_

14a

(WA/

32 a 12

20 a 8

m/

tttf|

Pica Condensed Black.

A Del Small

ike

Double Great Primer Condensed Black Shaded.

.32 a
^"^
^~
'^ 12

Great Primer Condensed Black No.

Pica Condensed Black No.

14 a 6

2.

A Double

English Condensed Black No.

SmencM ^tiqtU\uAm
14a

Double Great Primer Condensed Black.

\^\mm
FAEMER, LITTI^ &

CO.,

New

York.

3.

0i

tk Jidwiil

^Mtp

3.

a
^n

c=

A Two

Line Long Primeh Saxon Ornate Shaded.

14 a 6

Line Pica Saxon Ornate Shaded.

Two

0.^"

10a

Double Great Primer Saxon Ornate Shaded.

33?

20 a 8

A Two

14 a 6

Line Long Primer Saxon Ornate.

Two

Double Great Primer Saxon Ornate.

10a 5

%_

'^^

'

J,

12 a 4

Three Line Pica Ornamented Text.

n a 3

10 a 3

-V

'^-V

'

<,

Four Line Pica Ornamented Text.

Five Line Pica Ornamented Text.

FARMER, LITTLE &

Line Pica Saxon Ornate.

CO.,

New

York.

-^r^M

TfEyTQPJd El>TEtiB

20 a S

English Teutonic Extended.

lOa

14 a 6

Two Line

A Two

Line Small Pica Teutonic Extended.

Pica Teutonic Extended.

(S)oIbcn S)out^ of ^2ftabiiaiion

TEyT@PlllCi

20 a 8

Two

Line Small Pica Teutonic Shaded.

10a

Two

SHaiB

14 a 6

Two

Line English Teutonic Shaded.

Line Great Pbimeb Teutonic Shaded.

'iisM t
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

-_!lG"

ESeMSI|.STI65 SWIES.

311

1-2

Long I'himeu Ecclesiastic.

^W^

B:i5jS'f ??j:S<?

Jioyal

Pica Ecclesiastic.

l'i$BL:g|i;tBi\

magnificence and majestic loftiness petivading


the vast assemblage of

Wnt tuB cawwut


Wfi

(f)fficen

of the

speak the tbiags

Uaue

sfimi;

awd

beatid.

of Leopold, (Jheualieii of the

i^t|deti

Jiegion of ^onoii.

X234567890

24.

Great Pkimer

3)tarli tjtin soft

These

ttut

pattiiots,

3f ritttrng; Ttjp;es

Ecclesiastic.

white cluujis

are cast tvnm

at rest

aWve

Uvi^maX

xjur vale.

^Jj^atrices anxl

H^unehes

3^fiuntamttus ^.^^inns, i56

24a

Double Small Pica Ecclesiastic.

he cameth leaprng uy^nn the

IxBhtild;

Bbippmg upixB the WUb,


1 a

ti

Two Line English

3|emBmtier
Elsgattt lisplaii

CO.,

New

York.

1867

Ecclesiastic.

mxw t% reator
at leautiM SpBcimBtts.

mamBiital
FARMER, LITTLE &

maut^^taiBS,

Ifritttmg;

67

%
A

Pica Stalactite.

12 A.

lESiqiNis

pi\ OR|lApifjTA\t
fl

12

$3.80.

65

20 A.

10

Biik[iA|f.

8 A.

$5.50.

Ball W8\k.

Double Small Pica Stalactite.

$6,30.

Li

10

1%

Great Primek Stalactite.

5 A.

rjjm^

DoiTBLE Great Primer Stalactite.

$7.40.

O^JC STA\TES|

12 a

Two Line Gkeat Primeu Gothic Grotesque Shade.

6A

Two Line Great Primer Grotesque

POTH ^oVEl
i^niericaii

Qei)ilis

Jile\v

PAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

No.

$8.00.

$6.35.

3.

iSjp oiiMjyiEj^Tiil.

{^listicatiiig

anioag

tl^e

2^24
i(diroi|dacs

Ifofk iicadeniy of pesigq.

York.

10 a

Two Line

Pica Shaded Dobic.

$6,80,

BMieHTLT FEMI

10

Two

a 8 A.

THE

Line English Shaded Dome.

$8.00,

BO]EI SHAB:

EMmbl fw ttk- Fmestt Work


mbstai]ie

Two Line Gbeat Pkimek Shaded

8 a 6 A.

EiIh s

Tlh
FAKMEE, LITTLE &

C^

Shadow

CO.,

New

Yoek.

Doric,

$10.90.

Ia99i ILetter

Almamm

Wew
12 a 10

Two Line Long

Styles.

Pbiiibr

Ornamented No.

dYalble ia IPaymemt f ail

By
24a

fe

8A

orations

Bm

16.

to tk(B iBiit(B(i States

tk Treasurer
Two Line

among

Mevada

Pica Ornamented Black.

tl^e

Soutl^ fi.mericaa

SoU

ILktml l)wot)me$

"ISm

Mines.

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

Mountains

Black.

m M^h^^U aub

^.WJ""*.

"^-^

^^\

J)afcok

/^

lOa

Two Line Great Primer Rimmed

6A

Black.

Mm

StMt
tfi

itmk St
FARMER. LITTLE &

CO.,

New York.

go a 18

Long Primer Condensed Black Shaded.

50

ii

Long Pkimek Condensed Black No.

18 A

ifirarttttfttt of

She

Two

24 A

WAS ESTABLISHED

10

OF

Two Line Long Primer Ornamp:nted

^IyPOGKAPHY.

Pay memt

CT.,

1810;

1812.

>o.

Ifi.

:cY
eeeiYalbl ia

%mih.

3lUtioual

HARTEOKD,

IN

REMOVED TO NEW-YORK,

12 a

Pntlumatifisi

Line Long Pkimeb Ornamented No. H.

^B^W AND :BXAUTirUL #PECIMENS

THIS TYPE rOUNDRY

mA

^emnanisWir

8lE

f all Buei, to tk Baited States

Two Line

Pica

Ornamented Black.

piimf miiiw 1111211


"^xploi'atioiis

16 a

among

i\e Soutl) Ji-merican fllouniains

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

Black.

\^}%

.iLiMml 'S)immm in Mthx^d^hd mab


FAKMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New York.

j>i

Two

Line Enuilsh Card Text Shadkd.

$1,111.

ENGLI8II
Somft^ing ^tb,

lie

^iibti-

fl)c

|mi,

Card Text.
|n6nitrairaul

tm\
Three Line Small Pica Card Text

$5.(111.

Two Line Small


fvcri)

IDttl

Siiadei).

^rfirlc

^ttinhd

I'arti

Text Shaded.

Ijrinting

nib.
^~

\\m
t!

'J'ext.

$4.40.

^Site.

lesf.

the

Li.NE Pica Caki*

Text Shaded.

of

Inwnte^

|)Ctthi^

*7.an.

miS

likrtu

Foun Line

:jriniin|i

Knglisit Caiio Tex'

|;a{iott^^

Ijeaitiiful

Three

^ffi{t^

Smaij- Pica

Lin^b S.iiall Pica

uiithout |aiii.

Cauo Text.

jjrmm

Card Text.

^upH^H

jj^^ii^dlg

and

1)00^

Two

*H.OO.

fr^rgiteg.

mi\\

$7.20.

rqn |]mtd,^M^ |gpt

Line Great Primer Sidebo(;raphic Ornate.

$5..30-

\m

Two Line

(iREAT Phimek Sidekograpuic Shaded.

jiffofe

Two

FARMER. LITTLE

<fc

CO..

New

York.

$5.00.

ftt||tier;

Line Great Primer Siderographic.

|hi[ pearei[ to

Idtttit

*5.00.

o| Jaol^"

Four Line Pica Card Text.

15 a 6

lobits.

Jfat

$(i.0().

Two Line

mi

Oakd

|ii

li

FouK Line Small Pica

FouK

in

Pica

$4.00.

|s

tl;e

|wtttieatiu0

$5.00.

])itiitl^nd

lotfietu

FITRNISHED.

^^-^^

_:^

Tie

Mtmt

ipecimemi of

Joto

Type

CAST BY

f lEMIE, LI-TTLI t
-SSESsSESa-r:

Two

5 A.

CO., FL

?3S=E^SS!IIS=^

Line Great Primeb Rimmed Black

Rayed

]-

ATENTED.

$6.75.

^Mf^t

12 a

Two

10 A.

Line English Old Style

Shaded Patented.

$7.7

ITOIENT PEOWCTe
Tie iermam Empire

Eslatolisitoei

ancaiiCe
Rkeat Primer.Ornamented No.

FARMER, LITTLE &

^"

CO.

New

12.

$9.00.

York.

z/

a A.

12 a,

Two Line Great Pmmek Kimmed Black Condensed,

$7.00

itflfii IttI
o^SJ9

gtlfi|tlltit

It

Design Patent,

St'44.

Silt Ititfttf

till

#tflm

Iffllit Itffti
li

!l,

li

A.

Two

$7.00

Two

6 a

IKi

11

Line Gkeat Primer Rimmed Black Rayed

wmm
.

jMMljilwilif
^
^V W >
'^- ":^

12 a,

(1

A.

Two

$7.01)

liJ
^'^'^

HiHA.

pltlitf

f||ltil

NEW

YORK.

$B.75.

tfiiitt^t

atttttti^
ri' ^

Design Patent,

3(i44.

il lit Jflittw

Jiilwtt ll|

Ittfiiiitii*
LITTLE, & CO.

'4>

Patented.

Line Great Primer Rimmed Black Shaded.

ittwtw

PARMER

Design Patent,

|iftlif| tl Stttfil Jitilfltt


1

Line Great PnuiER Rimmed Biack Open.

a,

20 a.

10 A.

Pica Rimmed Black Open.

$5.00

Two Line Small

8 A.

Pica Rimmed Black

Man^ittlie
rS'-

Design Patent,

Ornate Patented.

.32T.S

$0.50.

tfii

^55.;9

itfsS

13 a

Two Line English Rimmed Black Ornate Patented.

$7.25.

wmmittv
Biifet

^iMMliiilM
*s^ Mto

MMl

10 a,

Two Line Great Primer Rimmed Black Ornate Patented.

5 A.

tttSt

mmwm
FARMER, LITTLE &

K^

CO.,

New Yokk.

Pf^

Hii

$8.25.

la

20 a

Pica Rimmed Black. Patented.

12 A.

Two Line Small

8 A.

Pica Rimmed Black.

$f -gittti

14 a

Two

T A.

Two

B A.

^*

^i

Line English Rimmed Black.

Milt
10 a

$5,115.

ft!

$8

95.

Mf,^/^^^^

Line Great Primer Rimmed Black.

$8.70.

|$tf tlill Sitlf-.


8 a

Four Line Pica Rimmed Black.

4 A.

$mmh
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

NEW

YORK.

$(

$12.25.

Sift*

a 18

Great Primer

$4.00.

New Eimmed

24 a IS

Series

from Farmer,

mmM

i^''ii.tii*fli

10 a 7

$6.75.

$7.25.

Co.,

New York

Patented Mat

mmw if

1.

ISfiR.

1,

1868.

1,

1868.

i8

Patented Mat

Pica Eimmed Eoman.

$6.00.

PICA BIMHH

14 a 10

&

Mwrnm^mtmrnm Wmww&iW'&'mM Wwmm^w'^'^W

mum wrp

Little

Long Primek Eimdied Roman.

fO.OO.

Bsili^sbids

20 a 15

Italic Condensed.

SSMAlff

Patented

Great Primer Eimmed Eoman.

Two Line

Pica Eimmed Eoman.

TW# UHH FICA,


"lEl^
lA^ni

r'

Mat

Patented Mat

1.

1868.

7 a

TWO

LINE PAKAQON RIMMED ROMAN. PATENTED.

VMs Bmnds
dmlFed

iDMLfi^

DDIE

<I#B

HIEI

lift

AKDSSMB
C a

FOUR LINE PICA RIMMED ROMAN. PATENTED.

(^plating
0]

TMm
H

187
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

24 a 18

liitf aai Pfflatif^ am


liil

18 a 15

Patented Mat

Pica HiMitiED Cootjensed.

to iffiFmlili

Mw rt iFi

will litlali im ial

lmmirF

ISI

Patented Mat

Gkeat Pbijiek Himmed Condensed.

15, 1866.

15,

111 IIW iPIilBll liil Ai?AIilI


ill]
If mil at II ir#i#lltom lamfe Iw lrl

16 a 10

Two Line

Smai,l Pica

Eimmed Condensed.

Patented Mat

15, 1866.

Kllllli if IlilS f llllilll


llm ti tl trtptltmi mill
itrlal Itptrti* Sf

12a 8

Two

m Hit

Line English Eimmed Condensed.

piiiiiiif All

Patented Mat

15, 1866.

graai
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

The Two Line Great Primer

of this style

is

underway.

^'.

24 a 18

Pica Bimmgb Shade.

16 a 13

24 a 16

English Rimmed Shade.

Gkeat Pbimek Eimmed Shade.

^P^lill^41^Il

1 Wml@m Mmtm^l Mt toiw

Two

14a 8

J)MdII(D

Line Small Pica Rimmed Shade

^^[m,^\

A.^mmmmmkmmt mi Mtmwmtmiwm mt H@)^


W)BMLm

12a

Two

mmi

Line English Rimmed Shade.

@i>aaffitffital ilfffi

li
Patented Apkil

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New York.

18. 1865.

TOmmk mmtm Itmlte Beriet^.*


From FARMER, LITTLE & CO, New York.
A

30

15

Long Pkimer Bank Note

$6.50.

IS

Italic.

$6,40.

Pica Bank Note Italic.

Wrpm-MErQM,riJ\-G Ma^CffiJVM, t86&.

10 a 5

fl

$5.20.

$5.45

GREAT Primer Bank Note

Italic.

Double Small Pica Bank Note

$S.OO.

Double English Bank Note

Italic.

Italic.

>

50

30

Many good
may

$.3.50.

Brevier Clarendon No.

2.

(Oast Also on Minion.)

Type have been brought out the last year or two, most of which we make. Specimens
not have reached the Printer, or have been mislaid, that we are again led to repeat that
we can furnish every Style of Type made in this Country or Europe, quickly.
Styles of

SEND THE IMPRESSION

WHEN YOU HAVE NOT THE

TITLE OE

NAME BEFORE

YOU.

^^^^_

2ii;5riiKi:i!3MfiSiil

'~,"<*'rT~^^

[-'^^^-^^^^f^.%$^)/<Mv^)

FABMEE, LITTL E & COMPANY,


^

-foo

^cy

-'

Beautiful Original Styles furnished by Farmer, Little & Go.


Great Primer Phidian.

Two.LiNE Small Pica Pbidian.

Price, $3.75.

IffllJJ

ilM, life

mm
|p|i Mi
PUP

m
[si

fel

If 61 Ik

|ll5jfflg5j|l

Price, $5.25.

Two-Line English Phidian.

Ui

(,)),

m\

Price, $4.25.

ill

Two-LnjE Great Primer Phidian.

Price, $6.20.

Double Pabagox Phidiak.

Price, $6.60.

ii mi
rr

lillllll lit iiiiiii Ifiiif II


I,

Price, $7.50.

Four-Line Pica Phidian.

ii.

.LJ^

M fmlB$m te pig
NEW YOEK TYPE FOUNDRY,

li,

l^^^^^

,j^55g!iij^p|^^^^||g?P'ggfiS^^

Beautiful Original Styles furnished by Farmer, Little


& Go,
Pica Smithsonian.

Phice, $4.65

Great Pkimer Smithsonian.

Two-Line Small Pica Smithsonian.

f@Mf tm

iitit

wim

riirf-F^^i

Price,

$.5.7.5.

Price, t6.30.

wm tUm&

Two-Like English Smithsonian.

Double Great Primer Smithsonian.

Double P.aragon Smithsonian.

iO#MM#ff WIHB

Price, ?7.00.

Price, $9.S0.

Price. $9.90.

Two

18A

Line Nonpareil Okkambntbd No.

M4HliMl TtWM,

11

r i mmmm%

Th%
Two

15A

18a

Line Beeviek Ornamented

Ilif 1141S
I

22.

mi

pifapi
Two

16a ISA

tJo, 5.

if f Si ilYillf lil,
ia ml ^

Line Long Primer Ornamented No. 13

MQWfiiPv flip AMiiiii'finA


Omi MbiI^iI Sa4i)itelaaats
.

4A

Double Great Primer Bank Note Black Extended.

$6. 45

'%jt
15A

Two

IPs

Hjt^i

Ipjditttsttg

Line Long Primer Ornamented No.

Two

12A

17.

IK^titoiii
Line Pica Ornamented No.

mi
rs ^1^

Two

lOA

Line English Ornamented No.

5!)

1^

'5?)

2.S.

'S?^ "^

P"

m-^n^
w

Two

8A

Line Great Primer Ornamented No.

"-

/m

PHI
10.

FARMER LITTLE &

CO..

New York.

24.

a 16

Two

Line Long Peimer Oknambhted No.

12.

14 a 10

Two Line English Oknamented

No.

19.

^^IliCll
Siiii ttramatii Clti
Bi

lOa

Two Line Geeat Pkimer Oenamentbd

11.

PUD

Kit"
f

No.

litpnits tB tht

Hint

SlDBlt

EBclaitmtBi
12 a 10

Two Line Long Pbimer Oknamented

No.

IG a 10

6.

Two Line Small

(saiTsausro

C7f

Pica

Oknamented No.

1.3.

>)( YD-

asoa asd Suilde^o

12 a 8

Two

Line Pica Ornamented No.

Two Line English Oknamented

CO.,

New

York.

Indian.
No.

15.

ITTO^gK

Mm:
!1

FAEMBR, LITTLE &

32.

American

IhloirtSi

12a

II1=

27

18 a 13

Two Line Small

Pica Corinthian.

B&elineations of Oriential sSustoms

36 a 18

(pipeststifeCy

NoNPABEiL Eound Shade.

^o^ern

fiy

a 34

eemlcaC and laugfitep ppiavefetag

travelers.

2345

Brevier Eound Shade.


iiita)tE@iics @)f emi @iitDf Bi

piPQ4uc!iie roast fieaBtfiful roeiririftient.

PERFQRMfiDtGES (NBiFCNitTEtY PTPlil

SI a 12

Ma

Pica Eound Shade.

Life sMRijm.tp fep@@)fes

12

Pica Ionic Shaded.

wttHn)|

g^aeefmllY emtwimlmg.

Two Line

8a 6A

English Round Shade No.

3.

ntFil Park !lmpr@iiiiits. I@@?

13a

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

No. U.

ti*pli^ 1

^imi*iiia

!IM^M
12a

Two

Li.ve

Paragon Ornamented No.

16.

Ill Irtlili!!

'Illll
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Mi

36 a 18

24 a 12

Two

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No.

Two

Line Long Peimer Ornamented No.

18.

8.

g^^rm4^
Two Line

15a 8

Pica Ornamented No.

20.

4#m^

12 a 6

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

No.

10.

S\m
)

mm mmmw
5a 4A

FAEMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

)t#miii#f

8.

'^

r
36

35

Nonpareil Tuscan Shaded No,

2.

Two Line Nonpabeil Tuscan Shaded

No.

Long Peimeb Tuscan Shaded No.

22

Two Line Brevier Tuscan Shaded.

lllf H

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

No.

7A

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

IMillill

36

7.

dkth\ XMchakcfUiiKkK

10a

2.

3.

I If

12

36

No.

La

M HMlf10

f MMMTSB P01MS

19.

f1#WM S^wiil liMM. in

36

Bbetiee Gothic Doubie Shaded.

2.5

Two Line

Nonpabeii, Gothic Double Shaded.

mmm ^mmm
18

Great Primer Ornamented No.

14

11.

iiiii waiPiBiiisi
12a 8

6 a

No.

13.

Line Paragon Ornamented No.

11.

ii

Ti

ni@ii>
New

Pica Gothic Double Shaded.

wmm m wi umm
Two

CO.,

Two Line

if

Two Line Great Peimeb Ornamented

4A

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

smmikk

5a

York.

4J

:^P

C-

18

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

12

22.

Two Line Brevier Ornamented

No.

5.

B141Slf 111 ilPlglMlli

JB)

W3EMMEMB

BttMMB ^
Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

12 a

No.

13.

IlAll

tilfilOff'OHlill

iiamii^iHis
Two Line Bnolish Ornamented

No.

20.

faiwiis if fiiiiiiii
ligypf^fi!
--=5.*3|:

12

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

No.

15.

12

Two

Line Small Pica Ornamented No.

vjf

iilll 35

FAEMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

16.

1 ilgli

atlii

Ef

^t\\

18

Long Primek Oknamented No.

HAppi' M'SMomzs
12

o:f

18

9.

Great Primer Ornamented No.


If

TT?

Pis?"

'I.

i\'w

Two Line

BfflP

24

Two

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No.

WHE lEE

Two Lira Small

gfiiifi
ISA

13

24

18

71

16.

Two

Line Brevier Ornamented No.

4.

SOLITUDE OF THE fflOUHTlMS.

ST2S SSS^
11

10.

7.

(Piniyrio''

Pica Ornamented No.

Long Primer Ornamented No. U.

No.

the past

10

13

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

Two

2.

l^ui^i 6s' tyul3.

Pica Ornamented No.

Line NoxPAr.EiL Ornamented No.

ft

S.

iiiiiiii iifiiuiiiEits iiii

Great Primer Ornamented No.

1.

HisToiaeiii ligifiSif 62

18

14.

Two Line

No.

4.

fMiieii

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

Great Primer Ornamented Ko.

5.

lliPii list If if t

Pica Ornamented No.

Mi

13.

ilTiiPiUTii ISI
Two Line Paragon Ornamented

No.

4.

CO.,

New

Line Paragon Ornamented No.

7.

m
mm

Four Line P;ca Ornamented NO.

FARMEE, LITTLE &

Two

2.

York.

ft

(c!

'^.

u'n

18

Two

Line Nonpakeil Ornamented No.

NiRKiTIlfE
18

TIE LiST WiE

MMORI

IN

Two

24

Two

12

Two Line Small

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No.

13.

78

Gkeat Fkime Outline.

12

12.

Pica Ornamented No.

7.

OF M1DI80N.
8

Line Pica Outline.

Double Paragon Outline,

(i

Two Line English Ornamented

Two

No.

11.

Line Paragon Ornamented No.

8.

ntrn

Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

Two

Line English Ornamented No.

Two

IO.

Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

12

8a

Two Line Long Primer Tuscan Shade

1.

12

Pi

Two Line Paragon Tuscan

SMUWM

Line Great Primer Ornamented No.

4.

Two Line Long Primer Eat Shade

L'SL

CO.,

New

No.

2.

Willi

Shade.

mi 1

Line English Ornamented No.

Two

6.

Wti-,\

FARMER, LITTLE &

5.

Two Line English Eat Shade.

Two Line English Tuscan Shade.

fmmipi
6

No.

3.

^^^''

Xt^ V'^" ^^'.\\W-

Wv!v\^'?\^'

York.

(d

Two

8 A

Line English Ornamented No.

9.

Two

Line Great Pbimeb Ornamented No.

Two Line Parason Ornamented

Two

6a

No.

3.

Line Parason Ornamented No.

9.

Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

Pour Line Pica Ornamented No.

5.

4.

WW

'CQ

8 A

Two

Line English Ornamented No.

^'

Two Line Paragon Ornamented

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

17.

Two

Line English Ornamented No.

18.

tH.

No.

2,

Two Line Paragon Ornamented

No.

5.

NONPAKEIL Oknamented No.

33

KBOSry tOtOtKS

BEAVTtPUUtV BEWtTCHma OAV SPARKS

24

Two

34

3.

PENDAHttV 8VSPENDED FROM THE tOV R00P8.


OATCHtlltt. 76.

Line Nonpakeil Ornamented No.

18

20.

FAR ABOVE THE FOlOmC HtllS. Sa


18

Great Primer Ornamented No.

Nonpareil Ornamented No.

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

31.

REMEMBRANCES OF HOME
English Ornamented No.

24a

10.

5.

SINGULARLY DIABOLICAL APPEARANCES


STARTING NERVOUSLY. 1234.

73

4.

NIGHT BLOOMING FLOWERS 93

12

Two

Line Pica Ornamented No.

12

17.

aotoEK furnu 3
8

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

No.

6.

SAKCTVARY

Two Line Smail

US- ir< r

12

ST.

CO.,

New

York.

.. fjiPX

.OBJ

Line English Gothic Condensed.

6.

muz, I
Five Line Pica Ornamented No.

FAKMEE, LITTLE &

Two

Ck t\tt

14.

NIGHTINGALE

Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

8a

oT

Pica Ornamented No.

1.

IP

Long Primer Ornamented No.

12.

3uOHGSB[OR3SMAH

1-3

Two Line Nonpakeil Ornamented

No.

Great Primer Ornamented No.

8a

1-1

Two

12 A

S.

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

No.

12

5.

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No.

12.

Two Line Small

17.

Pica Ornamented No.

10.

Willfi PI
Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

No.

3.

iragw^wwB^J^
Pica Shade No.

OI^O NErTUBIB
Two Line

Two

PAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

1.

Line Great Primer Ornamented

t^

Tobk.

lA

24

Long Pkimeb Oknamented No.

Two Line English Ornamented

3.

No.

12

1.

Line Minion Ornamented No.

Two

Line Long Primer Ornamented No.

Two

Two

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No.

Great Primer Ornamented No.

12

4.

Two

liiilO,

Line Small Pica Ornamented No.

HMiSOIME PiESEI^T
!

8.

16.

MliLi eiiiiATi
18

1.

LiPllWlil iill

mwim)

18

18

Two Line English Ornamented

No.

11.

14.

FiiiiiTifiii
Two

Line Great Primer Ornamented No.

8.

UTHiiiiPii PiiiTei
Four Line Pica Ornamented No.

7.

iiPiiTIi
18

Pica Gothic Shade.

24a

ill iiPiiif 11 iiiii ii iiiWi


12

Two Line

Great Primer Ornamented No.

Elf ElKISlii riiPEIS

Pica Ornamented No.

8.

ciiPiiiiiS ss
Four Line Pica Condensed Open Gothic.

6a

Ni
FAKMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

3.

Sa

Two Line Enolish Ornamented

If

No.

22.

mm

fiy

>

WH ^

\^ ^^a^ ^j^S>

m^

M
mi

Two Line Great Primer Ornamented

No.

14.

)6|'

R5

^l9

v^9

Iff

FoDR Line Pica Ornamented No.

FARMER. LITTLE &

CO.

New

York.

9.

<4pH$

IC-

TCU

un
Peakl Oknamentbd.

24a

Nonpareil Open Shade.

36

IS

Nonpareil Ohnamented No.

j^

4.

Nonpareil Ornamented.

24

AT

DEVOTED TO NEWS, LITERATURE, LOCAL rSTERESTS

IG a 8

Bkevier Extended Shade.

12 a 6

Long Primer Extended Shade.

Minion Outline.

21

Brevier Ornamented No.

24a

THE
Long Primer Ornamented No.

24

18

1.

AiflNiyAL TRAiE

Two

Line Nonpareil Back Slope Open Shade.

24

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

18

Two Line Minion Ornamented

No.

No.

10.

2.

SALES

Long Primer Ornamented No.

liWA miMMiikS

24

4.

18

18

18

BSS'T.

2.

ii(illl 111

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

5.

Pica Back Slope Shade.

Two

Line Nonpareil Ornamented No,

15.

BRAZIL aiAMOWBS 846

f lEIl if ilEiiil... iSl

^
English Ornamented No.

12

1.

16

Two Line Brevier Ornamented

No.

18

Two Line Minion Ornamented

No.

3.

PRESERVATIVE OF All ARTS. 32


18

Great Primer Ornamented No.

FAEMBR, LITTLE, &

CO.,

New

York.

Great Primer Ornamented No.

Great Primer Ornamented No.

Two Line Bretier Ornamented

8.

14.

No.

2.

NARRATIVES OF AMERICA 5687


9

2.

gAEJlT WAIIHOUSI

18

3.

Two Line Long Primer Tuscan Shade

No.

2.

ammiMl*lMaB9

TS,

24

Beeviee Oenamented No.

ffiHlMSHT EX'S1SSH

24

T HA11W'H

Long Pbimer Ornamented No.

i.

CamCAL

NOTiCSS OF

NSW

TTims ^(BiEiss

H8BI

4.

(DiF

sum

1.

^5yiiL'[rii[B sceodipip

Long Peimee Tuscan No.

18

18

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

4.

18

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

9.

Two Line Nonpaeeil Oenamented

No.

11.

2.

PUBLiGATiGNS 78B

Long Pkimee Oenamented No.

a4A

Minion Ornamented No.

34

1.

5.

ELE&ANT SPR5NG GOODS AT AUCTJOM 43


24

Long Peimee Ornamented No.

7.

mn
18

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

7.

24

24

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

1.

13

18

Great Primer Ornamented No.

a
<

'fl'SWJIfi

ffiMtt

mm
12

9.

HUH.
Two Line

18

Pica Open Shade No.

12

Pica Open Shade No.

Two Line Small

24

Pica Oenamented No.

BBf

11
12

Two Line Small

3.

im.

Pica Ornamented No.

Great Peimee Oenamented No.

Pica Ornamented No.

2.

fr^^^m ^ffl
6.

iLEi'MmMfwms s

^^

24

English Tuscan.

14.

Pica Geeoian Shade.

ssa
18

12

gsnsssi[i?a ssf^susisiE.
English Oenamented No.

Two Line Small

3.

Pica Oenamented No.

9.

IS

12.

Two Line Small

12 A

Pica Gothic Shade.

E fASHES..
Two Line

Pica Oenamented No.

1.

f MMf 11 if lEIMlM. i
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

^^J

k.

iy

24

Bkevier Antique Shade No.

21

18

Brevier Antique Shade No.

18

BouKGEois Single Shade.

18

Long Primer Antique Shade.

Long Primer French Shade.

18

Long Primer Gothic Shade.

18

Long Primer Meridian Shade.

1.

2.

ismm 04i.aasg!?si c5i3\JSAa


24

Two Line Pearl

Italian.

HSUT'S AITCIENT HISTORY 85


IS

Long Primer Ornamented No.

6.

18

18

Two Line Peael Double Sade.

18

Two Line Nonpareil Meridian Double Shade.

18

18

Two Line Nonpareil Meridian Shade.

18

12

Two

Line Minion Italic Shade.

13

12

Two

Line Brevier Open Shade.

Two

Line Nonpareil Single Shade.

Two Line Nonpakeil Double Shade

Two

No.

3.

Line Minion Shade.

Long Primer Ornamented No.

8.

MIii^WlI^il(g^W]BIM B

Brevier Tuscan Shade.

34

Long Primer Tuscan Shade.

18

Brevier Ornamented No.

2.

Two Line Nonpareil Ornamented

No.

0.

l^
12

IS

Pica Tuscan Shade.

Two Line No>pareil Tuscan.

ilf ffiWWWlAl f Ml

Paragon Eat Shade.

^W^ W% f
12

Two

w^ ^,

12

Two

Line Brevier Ornamented No.

1.

CO.,

New

York.

Two

Line Small Pica Ornamented No.

5.

www

Line Small Pica Tuscan Open.

FAEMEE, little &

ft

18

English Eat Shade.

ISA

Two

Line Pica Ornamented No.

w^

HI

m
4.

^'

w
EG _LL_3,

ly

18

Two

Line English Scroll.

Two
IWO

Two Line Long Pkimer Eat Shade

No.

iio.
Oknamented No.
Small Pica
noA DKNAMENTBU
Line SMALL
LINE

18

1.

9
12

12

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

Two Line Small

Two Line Great Primer Gothic

fftz:

CO.,

19.

New

\t> \P> Cs> v".

17.
11.

Two Line Long Primer Ornamented

York.

No.

1.

4.

Two

6.

Two

Line Pica Shade in Relief.

liAlfll, 6i^

.5).

Line English Ornamented No.

imK

Line English Ornamented No.

FARMER, LITTLE &

Pica Ornamented No.

iiw
Two

Two Line

Two Line Long Primer Black Ground.

il:ilM^

8 A

18.

'tili^iifllWPIBIMiPI^^
12

No.

Pica Ornamented No.

l^ll^ll||U

Pica Oknamented No.

W\i>0> Cn>

Hillli^
12

Two Line

10
3.

Shade.

lJ

^~)

13.

(EIW
A

Two Line English Condensed Shade.

Two

Line Great Primer Condensed Shade.

Two Line Long Pbimbr Ornamented

18

No.

12 a 6

10.

Two Line Small

Pica Open Antique.

p^MH mm
H

HORTIEULTURALIST
9

Two Line Small

[HB^i^li^ ^li'i^'liRi
y&aR

12

W9JM

1.

Pica Ornamented No.

Two Line Small

^iL^'S/

Pica Ornamented No.

Two Line

IB

15.

Pica Ornamented No.

liSili 11
Two Line

13

Pica Ornamented No.

5.

Til iiTiijMT
A

12

Two

8.

^l^t&P'1=^^^l "^Ml^ j^B^ iSV

;V-

Two Line Small

Pica Ornamented No.

Line Pica Ornamented No.

Two

iBuimLiriBw

3.

m mm m

Line Pica Ornamented No.

6.

m^'^m^mm
Two

12

12

Line Pica Ornamented No.

9.

m^

lilllil "II
Two

Line Pica Rustic.

12

Two Line

fill
8

Two

Ifilfl!

'I

Pica Ornamented No.

Two Line

13

10.

Two

Pica Grecian Shade.

ifllili

Line Pica Double Shade.

IlillT
Line Pica Ornamented No.

11.

Two

Line Pica Ornamented No.

12.

d
l^lfeS,^

12

Two Line

HIP 1

Pica Ornamented No.

10

W WM W M(C

Two Line English Ornamented

FARMER. LITTLE, &

CO.,

New

York.

Two Line English Ornamented

No.

2.

15.

No.

4.

iiw loiK lunc


8 A

Two

Line English Ornamented No.

5.

"^^
M
^i'

Two

Line English Oknamenned No.

7.

Two Line English Oenamented

No.

8..

ll
12

Two Line English Oknamented

No.

12.

Two Line English Oenamented

No.

16.

SUPEHB GOODS
a

Two

Lists

Gksat Pkimeb Oknamented No.

1.

Two

Line Gkeat Peimee Ornamented No.

Two

Line Great Primer Shade No.

1.

Two

Line Great Primer Shade No.

S.

2.

xmm^mi

Two Line Gkeat Peimee Oknamented

No.

Two Line Paragon Oenamented

1.

No.

7.

'v

^P"

6a

Two Line Paragon Ornamented

X-A

\:v-*v4'

^S^~s

Two Line Paragon

No.

x^.'^vix"

'^nsSCvs^

Shade.

Four Line Pica Shade No.

1.

WMA
4 A

Four Line Pica Grecian Shade.

v^DW

Biiniiyf)ni(

6.

iltllOi

Five Line Pica Geecian Shade.


g

FouE Line Pica Gothic Shade.

8a 4

Five Link Pica Antiqde Bxtea Condensed.

MAGNET
The
H I

Contrivance.

Double Great Pkimer Gothic Condensed.

ti

Four Line Pica Gothic Condensed.

FOUNDER 5

MORALS

Six Line Pica Gothic Condensed.

ORDINANCE

MERCHANT
Four Line Pica Antique No.

1.

Five Line Pica Italic Antique.

FARMER, LITTLE &

/ISl-

CO.,

New

York.

10 a 6

Double Pakagon Condensed No.

1.

Union Trust Company

FOUNTAIN
6

Five Line Pica Condensed.

PUBLICATION
Six Line Pica Condensed No.

4 J 3 j^

2.

Monday Evening

EMBLEM

Four Line Pica Condensed.

CHAMED

PICTURE

Six Line Pica Condensed No.

6a

4.

RECOEDS
FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

"'U'^M

Fomt Line Pica Roman Extra Condeksbd,

8a

i
Six Line Pica

6a

Roman Extra Condensed.

Five Line Pica Roman Extra Condensed.

4A

Dora Ixchange 28
Eight Line Pica Roman Extra Condensed.

mi
Ten Line Pica

FARMER. LITTLE &

CO..

New York.

R(

man Extra Condensed.

Double Gkeat Primbe Grecian Extra Condensed.

WESTEl Mil ROA]


li A

Canon Grecian Extra Condensed.

COIM

19

Four Line Pica Grecian.

imLnT75 ORNAMENT
Five Line Pica Grecian Extra Condensed.

SM

OF IUIHE 3i

Seven Line Pica Grecian Extra Condensed.

Ten Line-Pica Grecian Extra Condensed.

FARMER, LITTLE &

/Nl-

CO.,

New

Yob.v.

rc_

I
6 a 4

Poun Link Pica Antique Extra Condensed No.

;i.

GREENBACKS
Practical

Piv3 Line Pica Antique Extka Condensed No.

4 a 3

Knowledge.

85.

2.

METROPOLITAN
Unremitted Care. 38
Two

Line Great Fbimer Gothic.

MEDFORD.
Four Line Pica Gothic No.

3.

HAMPSHIRE
MORE 8
Five Line Pica Gothic No.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

2.

*i

5 a 5

Double Gkeat Primeu Antique Extended.

Double Giieat Pkimbr Antique No.

1.

BWeiilSH. 5
A

Double Geeat Phimeii Antique No.

2.

AMERICA
I)

(i

In this country. 28
Four Line Pica Antique No.

gj^

1.

AUCTION
g a 4

FouB Line Pica Antique No.

2.

The news. 5
FAEMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

T-W/jre,.

FiVB Line Pica Antique Condensed.

MEtGANTILE HOUSE
Six Line Pica Antique Condensed.

ESTABUSIHENT
"^

Five Line Pica Gothic Condensed.

FANCY JOB PRINTER


^

Six Line Pica Gothic Condensed No.

2.

SLENDER BODIES
5

Five Line Pica Tuscan Antique.

WASHINGTON
5

Six Line Pica Tuscan Antique.

BROADVAT
FAKMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Electrotyped Fonts.
Six Line Pica Gothic Tuscan Open.

Six Line Pica

Oknamented No.

1.

COMET MATU6E
Seven Line Pica Oknambntku No.

1.

Six Line Pica Open Gothic.

HOSE
Eight Line Pica Gothic Tuscan Open.

Eight Line Pica Oknamevteu No.

1.

DIMES
Ten Line Pica Oknamented No. L

HER
Ten Line Pica Gothic

Tu!-ca.v

Open.

Eight Line Pica Ornamented No

3.

ifflEU
Ten Line Pica Ornamented No.

2.

KINE
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Vobk,

Electrotyped Fonts.
Seven Line Pica Skeleton Antique.

Ten Line Pica Skeleton Antique.

Gardener.
Six Line Pica Ionic.

RINO

Ten Line Pica Roman Extra Condensed.

Nine Line Pica Roman.

FIG
Nine Line Pica

Eleven Line Pica Eoman.

^^H

^^^^^

Ten Line Pica Gothic.

Eight Line Pica Gothic.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO,,

New

York.

Sevbn Line Pica Condensed Open Black.

Seven Linb Pica Condensed Black.

Wh^ ^hfonMt
Eight Line Pica Modern Text Kay Shaded.

mMi^M

mr

Eight Line Pica Modern Text Double Shaded.

eifiiel
Eight Line Pica Modeun Text Shaded.

(lie
FARMER, LITTLE &

Co.,

New

York.

iiiri

<^

Six Link Pica Opkn Black.

EewMkftm
Eight Link Pica Condensed Black.

ftenina

to.

Eight Line Pica Open Condensed Black.

t
Eight Line Pica Open Text.

^
^
Six Line Pica Condensed Koman.

DAILY NEWS.
FARMER. LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

Wood Letter
Ten Line French Antique 9

Fonts.
cts.

per letter.

Fifteen Line French

Antique 12

cts.

Eighteen Line French Antique. 14

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

per

cts.

letter.

per

letter.

^OOD Letter
<

Fonts.

Eight Line Antique Treble Extra Condensed.-?

n n

cts.

per

letter.

im

1)

111

III
Ten Line Antique Treble Extra Condensed.-9

cts.

per

letter.

Jl

Twelve Line Antique Treble Extra Condensed. 10

cts.

j(i

per letter.

Ill

J
Fifteen Line Antique Treble Extra Condensed. 12 cts. per

u
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

letter.

Wood Letter
six Line Aldine. 6

Fonts.

cts.

per

letter.

CX)RN bread
Nine Line Aldine. 9

cts.

Twelve Line Aldine. 12

Sixteen Line Aldine.-16

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

per

cts.

cts.

letter.

per

per

letter.

letter.

V^ooD

Letter Fonts.

Twelve Line Arabian, No. 1.-13

cts.

per

Fifteen Line Arabian, No. 1. 16 cts. per

Twenty Line Arabian, No. 1. 19

Cut from Ten Line upward,

PARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

to

any

cts.

per

letter.

letter.

letter.

size required.

WOOD Letter
Four Line

G-othic

Fonts.

Tuscan. 6

per

cts.

letter.

HORN Combs 152


Six Line Gothic Tuscan. 7

cts.

Eight Line G-othic Tuscan.9

Ten Line Gothic Tuscan.! 1

cts.

cts.

Twelve Line Gothic Tuscan.-! 3

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

per

letter.

per

per

cts.

letter.

letter.

per

letter.

Wood Letter

Fonts.

Six Line Egyptian Ornamented 7

cts.

per

letter.

FROnniSS taactioii 123


Eight Line Egyptian Ornamented. 9

Twelve Line Egyptian Ornamented. 13

cts.

per

cts.

letter.

per

letter.

EOHEdide
Eighteen Line Egyptian Ornamented.- 18

to any
Cut from Six Lino, upward,

FAKMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

cts.

per

size required.

letter.

"^OQD

Letter Fonts.

Six Line Clarendon Condensed 6

cts.

per

letter.

DOWN stream 5
Nine Line Clarendon Condensed 9

cts.

per

letter.

ONE Dollar
T-welve Line Clarendon Condensed. 12 cts. per

letter.

per

letter.

Sixteen Line Clarendon Condensed. 16

Cut from Three Line, upward,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

to

any

cts.

size required.

Wood Letter

fonts.

Six Line Clarendon Extra Condensed.-6

SUNTIFIC

cts.

per

letter.

imnhes

Nine Line Clarendon Extra Condensed 8

cts.

per

letter.

T'welve Line Clarendon Extra Condensed. 10 cts. per letter.

Sixteen Line Clarendon Extra Condensed. 1 3

Cut from Six Line, upward, to any

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

cts.

size required.

per

letter.

62

VJooD

Letter Fonts.

Six Line French Clarendon 5

cts.

per

letter.

PIMM Uw y 29
Eight Line French Clarendon. 7

PEUEFOL

cts.

Mis

Twelve Line French Clarendon. 10

cts.

Eighteen Line French Clarendon. 14

Cut from Six Lino upward,

l^ARMER, LITTLE

&

CO.,

New

York.

per letter.

to

any

per

cts.

letter.

per

size requiroil.

187

letter.

'TiuJiiiiiaSL;;:,-;

^ooD Letter
Four Line Gothic Round5

OYSTER
Six Line G-othic

Fonts.
cts.

CO.,

New

letter.

roasts
Round 6

cts.

per

letter.

Eight Line Gothic Round.8

cts.

per

letter.

Ten Line Gothic Round. 10

cts.

per

letter.

Twelve Line Gothic Round. 12

FARMER, LITTLE &

per

York.

cts.

per

letter.

V\looD

Letter Fonts.

Eight Line Antique Tiiscan Extra Condensed.-9

cts.

per

letter.

SOUND debates
Ten Line Antique Tuscan Extra Condensed 1 1

cts.

per

letter.

GOLD finder
Twelve Line Antique Tuscan Extra Condensed. 13

cts.

per

letter.

Fifteen Line Antique Tuscan Extra Condensed. 16

cts.

per

letter.

Cut from Six Line, upward, to any

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

size required.

Wood Letter

Fonts.

Six Line Egyptian Condensed5

cts.

per

letter.

OBEDnmT Fuic Servant 87


Eight Line Egyptian Condensed. 7

cts.

per

letter.

Twelve Line Egyptian Condensed. 10

Eighteen Line Egyptian Condensed. 14

Cut from Six Line, upward,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

Kkw

York.

to

any

cts.

per

cts.

per

size required.

letter.

letter.

Wood Letter
Six Line Columbian. 6

Fonts.
cts.

per

letter.

COLD meals
Nine Line Columbian. 9

cts.

Twelve Line Columbian. 12

Sixteen Line Columbian. 16

Cut from Four Line, upward,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

to

per

cts.

cts.

any

letter.

per

per

letter.

letter.

size required.

^OOD Letter
Ten Line French Clarendon.-9

CO.,

New

cts.

per

letter.

Fifteen Line French Clarendon. 12

cts.

per

letter.

Twenty Line French Clarendon. 15

cts.

per

letter.

Out from Six Line upward,

FARMER, lilTTLE &

Fonts.

York.

to

any

size required.

>. ^

-7^

No.

No.

1,

No

-1,

No.

:j.

No.

4.

No.

5.

.Vo.

G.

1.

VIGNETTE,

(enijperfaceil.) each,

S2.2

'

iti

'''"^j^-

IPARMBBff

PJ#W'

No.

:^

S.

^:

Thursday, Nov. 28th, 1867,

day of our

1.

''This

2.

i'n\iitiii:i,

;1

Clionis,

4.

Solo,

T).

(iuark-ttf, ' Die Kapelle."

0.

Duett, "See the Pale

is tlif
'^

"O

Vnii

J^ord.

Yoct.^."'

Dajimdwlim."'

"The Forset-me-not."

.Nroim.''

%^'S

O^^^

No,

1.

TINT,

(type

iiieUil.) i-acli,

No,
N^

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^f

tgtewf*.*

No,

X
X

,%.

~iife^'^.^'.^

This Border
rale

viia

0#

may

is

4f

composed of two pieces and with

be lengthened to any desired

single

size.

beautifnl design for Programmes, Bills of Fare, &c.

--^/

(^S^/

ORNAMENTAL CORNERS,
PER
109.

SET.
$3.50.

?^;=^-->

96.

$1.50.

^f^
/It

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108.

103.

103.

IM!1

litr'

:S'^-^^^~=?g?^rirfV^

86.

$1.00.

$2.00.

:-?

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92.

.$2.50.

$2.00,

$1.00.

'v T^'

6-(^^T^j

t-ig

,-MiJ

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1.

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87.

93.

$1.00.

$1.00.

PIM%.,

5P^^5^/

102.

$2.00.

106.

$2.50.

84.

40

c.

S114Mllf41 illlll
No.

5).

No.

.30 c.

^
51.

.30

rs^
l^^

No.

c.

(S

30

52.

5# Wi
No.

c.

53.

No.

.30 c.

30

54.

No.

c.

56.

30

No.

c.

57.

30

No.

c.

30

58.

c.

crfe

m
No.

30

55.

No.

c.

30

59.

No.

c.

80

60.

r^^;
No.

c.

30

61.

c.

^S^3-

No.

63.

30

No.

c.

64.

30

No.

c.

65.

30

No.

c.

66.

30

No.

c.

30

67.

L^

c.

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31

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68.

30

c.

No.

69.

40

No.

c.

70.

40

No.

c.

71.

30

No.

c.

,1

72.

40

c.

ccAi
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1
No.

73.

40

c.

No.

74.

30

No.

c.

75.

=^'

40

c.

No.

76.

40

c.

Sri
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No.

77.

40

c.

No.

78.

40

No.

c.

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79.

30

c.

No.

83.

40

c.

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No.

83.

40

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BaBK@^PB MWBMl
No. 19 $2.00

^/-J-V^^^S)

COMBINATION FILLETS.
PICA SERIES NO.

1.

(^S
PICA SERIES NO.

I)

II

3.

lEaiMiHaiB

GREAT PRIMER SERIES NO.

3.

m\ f^
>V

HJIJ
TWO

LINE JPICA SERIES NO.

FOUR LINE PICA SERIES


3

NO.

4.

5.

fim

9
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^V>^/ ^V>^/ "^V

^^^J-~^^ .,l~^^4^^.

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A useful assortment of this elegant


Combination Border will weigh
about 25 lbs. at 75 cents per pound.
This Border is simple and readily
combined, and the various sizes and
beautiful arrangement of its differ-

%:

"^

ent parts, for varieties of work, give


it great advantages over other more
The
complicated Combinations.
larger pieces are very appropriate
for ends to checks, receipts, etc.
Either Border sold separately at the
same rate per pound.

^^3

Our Type is now cast of our "Improved Metal," which has already

.^7-;^j:5

gained great reputation for durability.


[}

Specimen Books furnished

to those

wishing to order.

^.^X

Wei-

TAKMEE, LITTLE &

.^,

.i^^^^^^,^^f

/^"

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Ti-

-^o

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m^

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S^'-^-

m^

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OOMBIMTION BOKDEE,

Series 0. 7.

IgS^SSl 6^3^

]=i3jj

pavi-nisajjjs^

\'y

FARMER,

COMPANY

&

LITTLE

'^ss-^ua^ssa^.i

%V_^ffit.'a'
;*-<niu3:=:i:!.>!Cli1liffi:!=itJ

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'1^ ELECTMOTYPING |

PRINTING PRESSES
AND

AND

ENQMA VIWG.
-(Vi^'/i^

iaVj?

^->t -

Farmer, Little &


63 mtl 65, BeeJzmiin

Sireet,

Netv

Co.

Yorils,,

.^5?3!rN_jl.-

_<^--<l4.

^euan

laM/t

Mli^l*f=E=iii['iX''^-

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NEW YOEK TYPE

FOUmEY^'^;^^^^

-=~{l<>^C-in<A^

Or

^TVf'Ti''

CornJjiiLatioiL rJ^orders

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Che

New

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lype Foundry 1810,

IJork

^=^^&&^,^'M*,S^^^^G^^^=^'S^&=s?^^'SOO'@^^^S=@'&S-0^&S^=S@@^?l?^,S^J@^@^@

Coml^inatioii Hoi-cLer Series 13.


Nonpareil Body, at

$1.28r.

per lb

CHARACTERS
12

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Un.lJ

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COM:BI]Sr^^TION"

liOEDKR SHiRIKS

pirt

up in
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CI

11.

'01.

/ 5

JF'&n-fs

74c. per

Vbs,

Ih.

Bmly.
=-==^j)

ft

PICA JBORDER
Fonts 8 ok

5 lbs.

at

74c.

per

SOI.

ISrONFAEKIL

i.e.

F,ailMS]R, LITTLJE

Fonts

cj-

or

3 lbs.

15

at

ORDER

$1.28.

per

CO., JV.

SOS.

lb.

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New

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39.

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2 50

3 50

4 50

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15 75

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New

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18 50

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22 75

19 50

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23 50

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24 50

0.

21 50

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25 75

0.

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27 75

c.

31 75

30 $1.

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CO.,

28 75

c.

New

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29 75

32 $1

0.

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1401 90

c.

1402 90

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1404 90

1405 90

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1406 25

1408 75

c.

1407 $1.25

1409 90

c.

1411 90

1414 $1.

1412 $1.

1413 60

FAEMEH, LITTLE &

CO,.

New

York.

0.

c.

c.

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2779. 40

2780. 40

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2781. 40

2782. 40

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c.

2785. 40

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2786. 40

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2788. 40

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2789. 40

2793. 40

c.

2798. 40

c.

2803. 40

2794. 40

2799. 40

2790. 40

2801. 40

2805. 40

c.

c.

c.

0.

2797. 40

2802. 40

c.

2806. 40

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2809. 40

c.

2811. 50

2796. 40

c.

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2808. 60

2807. 40

2795. 40

0.

2804. 40

c.

c.

2810. 40

0.

2813. 50
c.

2812. $1.25

2815. $1.50.

Zoi-^

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

c.

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c.

1141lllfl,li IllflAIi llfflis,

SrNOLK Letters 20 cemts.

Single Letters

30 cents.

Single Letters 40 cents.

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SERIES ONE.
$5 PER Skt.

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SERIES ONE.

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at

prices

marked over

'("fAifW^

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an aavance of 25 per

''ffed

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each,

which are

the old prices.

We furnish

of Script.

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17.

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10 c.

27.

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66. 6 c.

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68. 6 c.

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157.6

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169.6

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170.6

182. 6

188. 12

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192.15

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FAKMEE LITTLE &

New

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178. 6

o.

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151.6

168.10

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174. 6

185. 15

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194. 10

150.10

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184. 10

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149. 10

c.

161. 6

172.6

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198.10

CO.,

148.10

147. 10 o.

0.

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195. 6 o.

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152. 6

176. 10

175. 6 o.

186. 10

164. 6

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196.6

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187. 6

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144.10

141. 10

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198.10.0.

154.6

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0.

178.10

148. 10 c.

155.6

167.6

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c.

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189. 12 c.

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180.

190. 15

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66. 6 c.

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55. 6

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56. 6 c.

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70. 6 c.

59. 6 c.

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57. 6 c.

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93. 10 c.

92. 6 c.

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75. 6

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10

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116. 10

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109. 10

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114.

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115. 10 c.

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c.

118. 6 c. 119. 6

121.6

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122.6

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124.6

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144.10

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10

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c.

10

149.10

c.

138. 10
138.

187. 10 c.

c.

160.10

c.

c.

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128.6

129. 6

c.

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181. 10

158.10

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c.

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0.

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162.10

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0.

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190. 15

o.

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191. 10 0.

192. 15

193. 10 c.

c,

FABMER LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

194- 10

c.

195. 6

c.

196. 6 0.

197. 6 c.

198. 10.

c.

199. 10

c.

200. 10 c.

CUTS.

TVETV^SP^^JPDEK,
201. 10

202. 10

c.

208. 10 0.

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204. 12

205. 12

c.

206. 15

c.

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10

c.

20S. 6 e.

217. 20 c.

219. 10 0.

220. 10

221.10

0.

222.10

c.

10.

2.

15

10

c.

2-31.

4.

c.

290. 15 c.

291. 15

22.3.10

c.

15

e.

20

10

c.

226. 25

c.

233. 20

c.

286. 15

c.

0.

225. 12

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285. 15

0.

292. 15

c.

20

224. 10

c.

294. 20

c.

218. 6

c.

0.

287. 10

0.

209. 15

288. 20 c.

0.

295. 10

297. 20 c.

0.

298.

12 c.

299. 20 c.

300. 10 c.

.301.

10

c.

303. 10 c.

L.S.I
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

303. 20 c.

304. 15 c.

305. 20 c.

c.

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314. 20 c.

c.

800. 2D c.

cuts.
310. 15 c.

311. 15 c.

313. 15 c.

815. 10 c.

313. 15 c.

317. 85 c.

.T.Tiia.iiii.i.'n

320. 20 c.

318. 20 c.

326. 20 c.

325. 20 c.

321. 20 c.

327. 10 c.

340. 20 c.

338. 25 c.

346. 30 c.

343. 23 c.

Sol. 30 c.

aii).

350. 25 c.

25 c.

FAKMER, LITTLE &

328. 10 c.

334. 26 c.

332. 25 c.

337. 15 c.

323. 15 c.

CO.,

New

York.

20

329. 20 c.

c,

335. 25 c.

341. 20 c.

347. 20 c.

352. 30 c.

353. 2.JC.

354. 25 C.

1425 20

1426 20

c.

1429 20

c.

1432 25

1430 20

c.

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c.

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c.

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c.

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0.

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1461 25

1402 25

0.

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c.

1160 25

FARMER. LITTLE &

CO..

c.

New Vork.

1463 25

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1467 25

c.

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FARMER, LITTLE &

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1613. 20

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1618. 20

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c.

SIGNS

AND SEASON

1612. $1.50

CUTS.

1619. 20

c.

1620. 20

c.

c.

1621. 20

0.

1622. 20

c.

c.

1623. 20

c.

1624. 20

0.

1650.

40

c.

1652. 50

1651. 40

c.

1654. 40

c.

1653. 40

1656. 75
1655. 50

0.

1657. 75

c.

c.

1658. 75

0.

c.

1660. $1.

1659. 75

c.

1661.

1662. $1.25

1665. $1.25

1663. $1.25

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

c.

1675 $1.

1676 $1.

1679 $1.

1677 $1.

1680 $1.

1678 $1

1C82 $1.

1683 SI.
1684 $1.

1685 $1.

1690 $1.

1688 $1.

1687 $1.

1689 $1.

cS^^S^i^^"-^^''

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO..

Nkw

Yokk.

1691 |1.

1692 $1.

1694 $1.

1696 SI.

1699 $1.

1702 SI-

FAEMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

Xew Yokk.

1703 $1.

1704 $1.

1700 $1.

1705 $1.

1706 $1.

1707 $1.

1710 81.

1711

1715 $1.

1714 $1.

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

1709 $1.

1712 $1.

1713 $1.

1717

1720 $1.

1718 $1.
1719 $1.

1723 $1.
1722 $2.

1721 SI.

172.5 $1.50

1724 SI.
1726 $1.

^S

FAKMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

1750. $1.25

1751. 11.2;

17.04.

1753. SI.

$1.25

1752. $1.25

1755. $1.

175G. $1.2.0
1758. $1.25

1757. $1.25

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

1759. $1.25
1760. $1.25

1761. $1.25

1762. $1.25

1764. $1.25

1763

,125

1766. $1.25

1765. S1.25

FAEMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

1778. $1.

FAKMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

isoo

1804. 75

SI

KAUMKK. MTTLK

\-

<()..

Xew

Vi>i!K.

0.

1802. Jl.

1815. 75

e.

1818. $].2r,

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoiik.

1816. 75^

1S2G. $1.

1825. 75

1827. 75

e.

c.

1830. 38

c.

1829. $1.

1828. 75

c.

1831. 30

c.

1833. Mortised.)

1832. 38

c.

1835. 75

c.

1834. 50

1840. 50

c.

1839. (Mortised.) $2.25

1837. 25
1836. 25

c.

c.

1838. $1.

1841. 75

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

0.

1851. 75

1853. 75

1852. $1.

c.

c.

1854. (MortiBed.)

.|2.

1855. 75

1856. 75

c.

1858. $1.25

1857. SI.

1861. $1.50

1859. S1.25

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

1871. 25

1873. 30

c.

c.

1876. $1.
1874. 75

c.

1878 $1.50
1877. 30

c.

1879. 40

1880. 50

0.

1881. SI.

1882. (Mortised.)

1883. SI.
1884. 50

p.

1887. $1.

1885. 25

FAEMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Y(irk.

1886. 35
c.

0.

c.

1900. 50

1902. 40

1901. $1.50

0.

1906. 60

1903. 75

c.

c.

1905. $1.

1907. 60

1904. 60

c.

1909. $2.00

1908. $1.50

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

c.

c.

1910. $1.00

1913. 75

1914. 40

1911. 50

1915. $2.50

c.

c.

1916. $5.

FAEMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

1912. 50

0.

New

York.

c.

1925. 75

c.

1926. 75

1929.

1928. 50

1927. 75

1930. 30

c.

c.

c.

1931. 75

FARMER. LITTLE &

TO.,

New Yokk.

c.

1976. 30

1980. 75

1978. 50

c.

1977. 30

c.

1979. 50

c.

1983. 50

1981. $1.

c.

0.

1982. 25

c.

c.

1984. 40

1986. 75

0.

1987. 75

1988. 75

c.

c.

c.

1985. 50

0,

1991. $1.

1990.

40

c.

1992. 40

c.

1993. 40

1997. 50
1996. 50

1994. 50

1995. 50

c.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

c.

c.

c.

c.

2001. $1.

2000. $1.

2003. 50

2005. 40
c.

FAKMBH, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk,

0.

2002. $1.

2025. 75

c.

2026. 50

2033. 40

2031. 40

0.

c.

2027. 75

c.

2028. 50

c.

2029. 50

0.

2030. 75

c.

203G. 50

FARMER, LITTLE &

c.

CO.,

New

Yokk.

c.

2076. $1.

2075. $1.

2080. 75

2078. 40

2077. 75

0.

o.

2087. 75

c.

2094.

2090. 20

2089. .$1.25

2091

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

30

2092. 30

c.

2093. 50

c.

c.

c.

0.

2100. 30

2103. 30

2102, $1.

c.

c.

2106. 50

e.

2105. $1.

2104. 75

c.

2109. 30
2108. $1.25

210T. 50

c.

2111. 75

2110.

ft

c.

2112

1.25

2115. 45

fO.,

p.

2110. $1.

2114. $1.50

FARMEE, LITTLE &

40

New

Yoek.

c.

c.

2125. 75

2127. 75

2126. $1.

c.

c.

2132. 25

2128. 40

c.

c.

2130. 50

2131. 50

c.

c.

2133. 40

2129. 25 c

2135. OMortisea.) $1.25

2136. 75

c.

2134. ?1.

2138. $1.25

2130. $1.
2137. (Mortised.) SI-

FAKMEB, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk,

c.

2150. 30

0.

2151. 25

2152. 40

2153. 40

c.

i-H^%.-

2154. (Mortised.) $1.

2155. 50

2156. (Mortieed.) 75

c.

2159. 50
2157.

40

2158. SI.

2160. $1,25

2161. $1.25

2162. 11.50

2164. SI,

2163,

.30 0,

2167, 75

2165. 65

2166. 50

c.

c.

2169. (Mortised.) $2.50

2168. (Mortised.) $1.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO..

New

Yora-:,

c.

c.

C.

2170. SI,
-'171.

.c;].

2172.

2174. iO

,ju

c.

2170. .$1.50

2170. 40

2179.
2177.

2178.

.$1.

.'j;].

.S1.

Stki:;

-ilSO.

2182. 75
SI.

2181. 75

c.

2183. (Mortised.) isl.25


2184. $1..50

FARMER. LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

2185. $1.

2186. $1.25

2189. 50

2187. (Mortised.) $1.25

c.

2191. (Mortieed.) $2.50

2188. 40

c.

2190. $1.

2192. (Mortised.) $3.50

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

>

2200. $1.25

2201. .$1.

2202. $1.50

2203. 1.25

2208. $3.

2206. 40

2207. 30

c.

c.

2210. $2.50 (WithSealsofauy ofthoStntei!,

$4.)

2209. $1,

FAEMEB, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Seals of evebt design of all the states edenished to order.

York.

2211. 75

2214,

2212. $1.50

c.

?^1.

2217. $1.50

2216. 50

2213. $1.

2218. 30

0.

c.

2219. 50

c.

2221. $1.50

2220. 50

c.

2222. 62

c.

2224. $1.

2223. 75

c.

2227. 1.25

2226, $1.25

2225. $1.

ALL THE STATES FURNISHED TO OHDEK.


Seals or EVERT DESIGN OF

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Tobk.

2250. $1.50

2251.

2.5 c.

2252. 25

2255. $1.50

0.

r '^itijt^

2253. 30

2256. 40

2257. 75

c.

2254. 30

c.

c.

2258. $1.

0.

2259. $4.

2264. $2.50

2263. $1.50

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO..

New

York,

2272. $1.

2270. $1.

2275. 75

0.

i'^^^^^
2274. 75

i."a

2278. 75

isbB

0.

iwBi

c.

2279. 25

2276. 50

0.

c.

2280. 50

2281. 25

2282. 25

c.

c.

2283. 25

c.

2277. $1.

2285. 50

2287. 30

2284. 40

c.

c.

2290. $1.25

2286. $1.

2289. 50

2288. 30

c.

c.

c.

0.

2300. 40

0.

2340. 75

2341. 50

c.

c.

2342. 30

2343. 50

c.

c.

^HtUTlifsni.E'
2346. 25

FABMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

2347. 25

c.

2370. 60

2371. $1.

c.

2373. $1.

YVS

S"!"J

lyi
f<^

MtM\*

2372. 50

0.

2395. 25

V.

2396. 40

2393. 1.

2397. 50

c.

2398. 30

0.

2.399.

50

c.

2402. 40

c.

2401. $1.

2400. $1.

2403. 75

2406.

2404. $].

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

$'i.

c.

c.

2416. $1.2.5

2415. $1.

*
KABMEK, UTTLB

CO.,

N.-

Vohk.

2450. 20

2451. 20

c.

2452. 20

c.

2453. 20

c.

0.

2454. 20

0.

2455. 30

c.

2457. $1.

2456. 50

2458. 75

c.

c.

\<^

^K^
2461. 50

2460. $1.25

2459. 40

c.

2464. 50

c.

2406. $1.
2468. 75

2467. 50

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

c.

0.

e.

2480. 50

0.

2481. 40

0.

2482. 75

0.

ffilTM^

2484. 50

2483. 50

c.

c.

2485. $1.

2486. 40

c.

2487. 40

2489.

c.

2488. 40

.$.3.

2490. !^1.25

^^_r^'V

2491. SI.

ia]uJDi |uo

^^^iW;fc/^^^;^g^ ^_

r,__

~; ^; ,ir-

2493.

2492. $\.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

.;l.25

c.

2510. $1.
2512. 75

2511. 25

0.

c.

2515. $1.25

2513. 75

0.

2514. 20

c.

2516. $3.

2518. 75

2517. $1.50

2520. $1.25

2.519.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

$1.

New

Yoek,

c.

Of

V.

Q
pi

o
o

U
CD
CO

P
O
O

w
o
o

P^

2^

02
CD

pi

O
t-S

CD

CD

Pi

O
O
Hi
pi

2540. 50

2541. 50

c.

c.

2544. $1.

2546. 50

2545. 40

2547. SI.

0.

c.

2550. $1.25

2548. $1.
2549. $1.

2553. $1.

2551. SI.
2552. 75

c.

2557. 75

2554. $1.25

2555. 75

FAKMBR, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

2556. 40

c.

c.

2570. $1.

2571. 30

c.

2.572.

$1.

2574. $1.

2575. 50

2573. 50

c.

2577. 30

2576. $1.

c.

2580. $1.

2579. $1.

2581. $1

2583. $1.25

2582. $1.

FAEMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

0.

'

m">''

2590. 50

c.

2593. $1.50

2592. $1.25

2.596.

$1.25

2599. $1.25
2598. $1.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York,

2600. $1.

2601. $1.

2604. 50

2603. T5

2602. $1.

2605. 40

0.

c.

c.

'^-^OSTSCBIPT.k

2606. 40

2607. 40

c.

2608

2610. 30

c.

"^ISO

c.

2013. 40

2611. 40

2612. 40

c.

c.

0.

vi

./
~l
2614.

$L

2616. $1.

2615. 65

FARMER. LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

2625. $2.50

2626. 75

2627. 75

2628. $1.

2630. $1-

2631. 50

c.

2632. $1.

2633. 50

c.

2637. $1.50
2635. 50

2634.

30

c.

2036. $1.

FAEMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yokk.

(;.

c.

c.

2650. $1.50
2651. $1.

^.r-^tf^^^
2653. 50

2655. 25

0.

2654. 30

c.

2656. 40

2658. 40

2657. 50

0.

2660. 40
c.

2601. $;.

FAEMEE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoek.

c.

2662. $1.

2665. 75

2663. 50

2664

0.

9,2.

0.

2C66. $2.50

2667. 75

c.

2668. 75

2670. $2.50
0.

-w^

",

J?^

2669. 75

c.

rT^:::^^^*^^^^^^^'^^^^^

- .i

piiw

2678. $5.

2679.

FAimEB, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

1,5.

2680. 30

2681. 25

0.

2682. 25

0.

2683. 50

2684. 50

c.

2686. 50

2685. 80

0.

'^l^SSI^ttSS:;S!:il!iaii.s=r-

2689. 75

2687. 75

c.

c.

2688. 50

c.

2691. 63

0.

2693. 30

2692. $3.
,V;!'?ti

2694. 75
^rtliitirittiiiii

FAKMBE, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

0.

0.

2G95. 50

2697. 50

c.

2696. 50

0.

2699. $1.50

2698. $1.

2700. $0.

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yobk.

c.

2706.

2707. 50

c.

2708. $5.

J^3.

^713.

i^i.

2715. 6.50

FAKMEU, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

JT14.

S'5-50

2709. $1.

2710. $3

2711. $

2712. $5,

mmmmm\-Rmm
2720. 30

|,

c.

2734. 50

2721. 50

2728. 50

c.

c.

2735. 50

ieli^tjprug.

c.

c.

lepartmcnt J

'sy^S

2729. 50

2722. 50

2736. 50

0.

c.

c.

^^^

2723. 50

2737. 50
0.

2730. 50

ro

m.

>u;

2724. 50

c.

c.

ttenO^.

2738. 50

c.

c.

2731. 50

c.

ingfe^^ionaf.

2725. 50

2732. 50

2726. 50

2739. 50

0.

2740. 60

c.

c.
0.

c.

2733. 50

c.

^latit>e'.
FARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

Nbw_York.

mm:illlttllllW,
'(f^^^S^^

2750. $1.

2751. $2.
2752. $1.

"

r!gWVMMwi.ioi==P*"~'""""-=*^*

2753. $1.25.

2755. $1.50.

2754.

2750.

2757.

.'Sl.OO.

2758. $1.2.5.

$1.2.5.

27G0. $2.50.

2759. $1.

FARMER, LITTLE &

,30 c.

CO.,

New

York.

2761. 60

2762. 50

0.

2763. $1.

2764. 25

2765. 25

c.

0.

c.

2766. 30

f.

2770. $1.

2767. 75

c.

2768. $1.
2769. 50

c.

2773. 11.25

2771. $1.25.

2778. $150.

2774. $1.50.
2775. $1.50.

PAKMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoek.

2776. $1.50.

2777. $1.50.

2865. 6o.

28B6. Be.

S!868. 6c.

28fi7. So.

2869. 6o.

2870. 6c.

2877. 40

2878. 40

0.

2881. 75

2871. 6c.

^^ V'

2873. 10c.

2874. 10c.

c.

2879. 50

c.

2884. 30

c.

2880. 50

2882. 75

c.
e.

2768. 75

c.

2876. 25c.

2875. 25c.

>^

2883. 30

2862. 75

2872. 6e.

c.

c.

c.

2863. 75

c.

2850. 75

c.

-'^

2851. 4(1.25.

2848. si.

2858. $1.25.

FABMEK, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

Yoek.

2852. 75

c.

8200.

10

2801.

c.

10

2802.

o.

10

2803.

c.

10

10

2804.

c.

2805.

c.

15

15

2806.

c.

c.

(6

2807.

15

15

2813.

15

2808.

c.

2814.

c.

20

c.

2809,

15

c.

2815.

20

c.

15

2810.

10

2821.

c.

10

2822.

c.

10

2823.

c.

yj^/
50

2827.

c.

c.

2819.

10

2825.

10

^(?/
2824.

c.

10

2818.

c.

10

c.

Tsf^J
2828.

c.

10

10

2817.

c.

9d^
10

20

2812.

c.

c.

2816.

2820.

15

2811.

c.

50

2829.

c.

50

2830.

c.

50

c.

C^

2832.

20

2833.

c.

20

c.

2834.

15

2837.

c.

283.5.

2838.

40

2839.

c.

30

2844.

2843.

50

2840.

c.

50

80

PARMER, LITTLE &

CO.,

New

York.

c.

2836.

2841.

c.

50

20

40

c.

50

c.

c.

2842.

c.

2846.

c.

2845.
c.

15

60

50

c.

c.

2847.

30c.

c.

CAMPBELL NEWSPAPER PRESS.

TAYLOR'S IMPROVED COUNTRY NEWS

PAPER PRESS.

PRINTING PRESSES
FURNISHED ET

FARMER, LITTLE &

CO., N.Y.

MANUFACTURER'S LUWEST PRICES.

LARGE CYLINDER HAND


PRINTING MACHINE.

HOE'S SINGLE

HOE'S PATENT WASHINGTON PRINTING PRESS.


EVERY ARTICLE NECESSARY FOE A
COMPLETE PRINTING OFFICE
FURNISHED BY THIS
ESTABLISHMENT.

HOE'S RAILWAY

NEWSPAPER PRINTING MACHINE.

GORDON FRANKLIN JOB PRESS.

HOE'S

HOE'S SINGLE LARGE CYLINDER PRINTING


MACHINE.

READY PROOF PRESS FOR

JOBBING-

Printing Materials furnished by Farmer, Little

&

Company.

GROVER'S PATENT COMPOSING


STICK.

SCREW WRENCH.

SLICE GALLEY.

CABINET

COMPOSING STICK.

LEAD CUTTER.

SHEEP'S FOOT.

IRON SHOOTING STICK.

IRON BOUND MALLET

LYE BRUSH.
^c^^SS*-,

.^-^s

PAPER CUTTING MACHINE.


PLANER.

PROOF BRUSH.

BODKIN.

WOOD MITRE

SPRING BODKIN.

IRON MITRE BOS.


SINGLE BRASS GALLEY.

FURNISHED BY THIS ESTABLISHMENT.


EVEEY ARTICLE NECESSARY FOR A COMPLETE PRINTING OFFICE

BOX.

1lii(!!i(iifffii!i:

'iU'

III

MMim

i!l!(iliiii!iW!ii'^

:iil!iili!iiiil!i:

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