The Post-Office annual directory and calendar . th andfineness of flavour, he is confident cannot be surpassed. One Ounce of which beingequal to Three Ounces of the generality of Lozenges sold. No extra Charge, andrequires only publicity to be approved of. No inferior or secondary quality of Lozenges or Mixtures being Manufactured byA. F. Customers may, therefore, rest assured that, while the Goods A. F. offers arethe best in the markets, articles of a base or inferior quality cannot, even by accident,be put into their hands. ^fholesale Dealers, Agents, and Exporters, \vho buy with Cash, may h


The Post-Office annual directory and calendar . th andfineness of flavour, he is confident cannot be surpassed. One Ounce of which beingequal to Three Ounces of the generality of Lozenges sold. No extra Charge, andrequires only publicity to be approved of. No inferior or secondary quality of Lozenges or Mixtures being Manufactured byA. F. Customers may, therefore, rest assured that, while the Goods A. F. offers arethe best in the markets, articles of a base or inferior quality cannot, even by accident,be put into their hands. ^fholesale Dealers, Agents, and Exporters, \vho buy with Cash, may have a Cwt. to a Ton of Confections carefully packed and ready on a few days Notice. Printed by J. Gall & Son, 22 Niildry Street. NOW COIXEPLSITE, IN TIVO QUARTO VOLUMES, 1 15 &C. OF ABOUT ^eben S?untiret> J^^^^^^^^^^^i; INHABITANTS OF EDINBURGH: DRAWN AND ENGRAVED BY THE LATE JOHN KAY, MINIATURE PAINTER, PARLIAMENT SQUARE;ACCOMPANIED WITH BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, ANECDOTES, &c. COMPRISING NEARLY One Thousand Pages of PUBLISHED BY HUGH PATON, CARYEB & GILDER TO HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, A\D HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE DUCHESS OF KENT,HEAD OF HORSE WYND, WEST CORNER OF THE COLLEGE, EDINBURGH. RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE WORK. In J 784, he [Kay] published his first caricature, which represented a half-crazed Jacobite gentleman,named Laird Robertson, •who was wont to amuse the citizens of Edinburgh by cutting caricatured resem-blances of public characters, which he fixed on the head of his stick, and whose figure was perfectlyknown to all the inhabitants. The portrait, accordingly, excited some attention ; and the author was in-duced to attempt others. The style assumed by Mr Kay was the stippled or dotted style ; and nothingcould equal the felicity of the likeness. From that time forward, till he was a,bout eighty years of age,this untutored son of genius pursued his vocation, taking olf, one after another, the whole of the publicand eccentric persons who appeared in the Scot


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