. The Photographic art-journal . ew dress-es. Mary, pitying her visitors evident cha-grin and mortification, cheerfully broughtout the Magazines, and, when Miss Hallsaid that she intended having her dressesaltered, insisted on her taking it home withher. You never can make the correctionshalf so well as with the plates before you,and the descriptions to refer to, said Mary. Pray, carry the Magazines to your house ;I shall not want them for several days. Miss Hall accepted this kind offer, andprofited by it to such an extent, that, onthe ensuing Sunday, her dresses were nolonger a laughing-stoc
. The Photographic art-journal . ew dress-es. Mary, pitying her visitors evident cha-grin and mortification, cheerfully broughtout the Magazines, and, when Miss Hallsaid that she intended having her dressesaltered, insisted on her taking it home withher. You never can make the correctionshalf so well as with the plates before you,and the descriptions to refer to, said Mary. Pray, carry the Magazines to your house ;I shall not want them for several days. Miss Hall accepted this kind offer, andprofited by it to such an extent, that, onthe ensuing Sunday, her dresses were nolonger a laughing-stock. Early on Mon-day she brought back the Magazines toMary. You dont know how much I thankyou, she said. Only if I had been asubscriber, I should have saved the moneythe altering cost, which is a good deal morethan two dollars. I have become interest-ed too in the stories. I will not let anotheryear go by without subscribing.* A. REVIEW OF THE CIRCULAR OP L. L. HILL, ADDRESSED TO THE DAGUERREAN FRATERNITY AND THE PUBLIC AT \^^ Hillof Westkill,Greene ; N. Y. hasthought proper to pub-lish a sort of manifestoto the public throughthe columns of one ofour city papers, and al-so to embody it in a cir-cular, addressed to all the daguer-reans of the Union—under theabove title. Without questioning his right toissue as many proclamations of his allegeddiscovery as he chooses, 1 would ask whatpossible object has he gained by this lastpublication, for as far as 1 can understandit, he leaves the subject precisely where itwas a year ago. Therein, he states thatu the process is my own invention in everysense and not anothers in any sense, andthe right of others to control it, or me, to* pull me out, or drive me out, or scareme out, I utterly deny. If the discovery is of such a nature asthis, and it actually requires force to bringhim out, and it really appears he appre-hends it, then indeed, it must be desperate—and it will require more patience and long suffering than
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, booksubjectphotogr, bookyear1851