Catalogue of stereopticons, dissolving view apparatus, magic lanterns : and list of over 3000 carefully selected views for the illustration of subjects of popular interest. (1867)

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16 McAllister, Optician, 49 Nassau St., New York. One of the Effects of the War. (Comic.) Army Contractor's Wife. " And say, young man, put me up a Diamond Necklace and a couple of Gold Watches, along utith them other things. Hard Times in Old Virginia. (Comic.) Reb. Soldier. —" Pay, give us some old rye?" F. F. V. Barkeeper.—" Which will you have, twenty-five or thirty dollars a pony ?" The Rebellion in the South, and what they got by it. Officer.—' 1 What in h—ahem 1 have you got that flour barrel around you for?" Zouave — ' Waiting for my shirt to dry, Cap'n." Officer —'• Then why in h—ahem I don't you put on your pants?' Zouave. —" Ain't got any, Cap'n It's the other regiment what received the pants ; we got the shirt* Jefi. Davis and the European Shylock. J. D. —" I can call million* across the vast deep." Shylock. —" Ferry goot, but will dey comes?" Mr. Lincoln's " little story " about Blondin on the Tight Rope. " Keep quiet, friends, and I'll wheel my barrow across." • After the War. (Comic.) Uncle Sam's College—the Noodles and Doodles of Europe getting a notion or two. Jeff. Davis " Calmly Contemplating." (Comic.) " Our country is now environed with perils which it is our duty calmly to contemplate."— Extract from Jeff. Davis 7 Last Message. Blessings in Disguise. (Comic.) Jeff. Davis' Te Deum : " Savannah, Charleston and Wilmington are fallen ! Our armies are relieved of out- post duty, and are falling back upon the last ditch. Sherman and Grant are doomed. Let us await the issue with fitting composure. Allah be praised." The proposed " First Step to Peace. 1 ' (Comic.) North and South polishing ofl the innocent ^Neutrals. Old Mother Britannia and her daughter, Miss Canada. (Comic.) Miss Canada —''O, dear I Mother Britannia, here is Uncle Sam, wanting to run away with me. Help I" Mother Brittania. —" Bless the girl, I wish to heaven somebody would, and have done with it." The Narrow Path over the Last Ditch. (Comic.) The Return Home. (Comic.) Columbia — 'Tell me, soldier, did you n^t pass a Wayward Sister of mine on the road?" Returning Soldier. —" I did. I fetched her a good p.-tr* of the way myself; but she says she don't require my services any more now ; and here she comes over the hill. Reconciliation between the North and South. (Comic.) Miss South —"Oh, dear Sam, you've been in the right all along, and I acknowledge that I am to blame; but I'll t ever do it ag«in." Uncle Sam. —" L°t by-gones be by gones ; I don't think we will be likely to fall out again, as the bone of contention has been removed " The Eve of War. Allegoric representation of Fort Sumter, March, 1861. The Dawn of Peace. Allegoric representation of Fort Sumter, March, 1865. Etc., Etc., Etc. 33.—PORTRAITS OF PROMINENT OFFICERS AND LEADING MEN ON THE SIDE OF THE UNION. Franklin. Etc., General McClellan. Colonel Ellsworth. " Rosecrans. Lieut. Frank Brownell Colonel Etc. Etc.