THANKS TO OUR FRIENDS EDITORIAL.

Fellow-Laborers:—We address you at the close of the year 1850, with an involuntary wish struggling upward from the heart, for a happy New Year—a glorious baptism of good for 1851. We do this, too, with some misgivings lest we may presume upon your forbearance—but the cordial response you have given to our monthly labors—the encouraging and timely words spoken in our behalf at the outset of the somewhat perilous enterprise of carrying our shattered bark into harbor once more—with all its sails stripped and cordage gone, came over the dark waters cheeringly, stimulating our weak endeavors, and nerving our heart for the tempest or the calm.

With no money—a few friends, and a thousand discouragements thrust upon us by timid well-wishers—and half-hearted comforters—we undertook to carry Graham’s Magazine—with its harvest of money, received in December, January and February, the pick months of the year, scattered—we undertook, we say, to carry this book triumphantly—in the face of the fiercest competition the business has ever known—through the year 1850.

The American Press with a chivalry for a prostrate brother, such as has never been witnessed—with one accord, from the extreme North to the extreme South, raised its voice of encouragement—its cheer for our success—and we now close the volume with an addition of over 10,000 subscribers since July, and with the uttermost liberality in expenditure in the manufacture of Graham’s Magazine, met by the tremendous resources which you, gentlemen, by the power of advertising, in liberal notices, have showered upon us. From our heart we thank you! Our experience in the press, daily, weekly, and monthly, for twelve years, has taught us how little the press itself knows of its own power—how few out of it know its giant resources—the wealth it carries on its wings to those who use it wisely. Judge, then, whether we, who have partaken so largely of its benefits from your generosity alone, knowing fully the vast service your kindness has done us, can do less than convey to you our sense of the obligation, with a hope that the day is dawning which will enable us to attempt in some poor sort to repay you. We say attempt to repay, for the reactionary benefit will be ten-fold upon ourself—so that we must by inevitable laws, remain forever your debtor.

Graham.


LE MONITEUR DE LA MODE.

Journal du Monde Elégant.

Toilettes de la Maison Popelin Ducarre. Modes de Mélanie Brun & Cie., 5 rue de la Paix. Fleurs et

plumes de Perrot & Cie. Bijoux Gillion, 9, Boult. des Italiens. Mouchoirs de Chapron & Dubois, rue de la Paix.

The styles of goods here represented can be had of

Mess. L. J. Levy & Co., PHILADELPHIA, and at Stewart's, NEW YORK.


Transcriber’s Notes:

Archaic spellings and hyphenation have been retained as well as some spellings peculiar to Graham’s. Punctuation has been corrected without note. Other errors have been corrected as noted below. For illustrations, some caption text may be missing or incomplete due to condition of the originals used for preparation of the ebook.

page 330, in maratime states ==> in [maritime] states

page 333, litterally by people ==> [literally] by people

page 336, Save were the steel-shod ==> Save [where] the steel-shod

page 338, strayed were the soft ==> strayed [where] the soft

page 344, his hand in her’s ==> his hand in [hers]

page 351, his anamolous position ==> his [anomalous] position

page 351, large body of calvary ==> large body of [cavalry]

page 352, Master of St. Jago ==> [Maestro] of St. Jago

page 357, had began to civilize ==> had [begun] to civilize

page 357, sur ves revolutions anciennes ==> sur [les révolutions] anciennes

page 358, the Duke of Bourdeaux ==> the Duke of [Bordeaux]

page 358, ownership of the Murcure, ==> ownership of the [Mercure],

page 363, having not forseen the ==> having not [foreseen] the

page 365, prophecied your destiny ==> [prophesied] your destiny

page 366, side thy stood now, ==> side [they] stood now,

page 372, be got, hav n’t you ==> be got, [haven’t] you

page 372, his grizzley moustache ==> his [grizzly] moustache

page 373, falls of his horse ==> falls [off] his horse

page 375, and cross questiong on ==> and cross [questioning] on

page 381, the foot lights begin to burn ==> the [footlights] begin to burn

page 381, by the abscence of ==> by the [absence] of

page 381, in his posession some ==> in his [possession] some