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HANCOCK IV EEKLY JOCRIHL l!' a t j -
VOL.
The Hancock Journal
IS PUBLISHED WEEKLY,
(Office, Old Masouic Hall—Court House.)
William II. Royal,
Editor & Proprietor
Hates of Subscription:
On, copy 12 months $3 IK)—8 months $2 00
Oa« copy # months. 1 50—4 months, 1 00
Two copies to one address, 1 year, 6 00
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company the order.
Hates for Advertising:
Transient Advertisements will be charged
• I the rate of one dollar per square for the
firat and seventy five cents for each subsequent
insertion, for one month or less.
A liberal dis •ount will he made to persons
advertising extensively, both as to time and
«r»c«. Cards, three months longer,
Business for or
will he charged six dollars per quarter tor
oath square.
TwAlve lines of this type fill onesquare.
Professionals:
F. L. L I T T L E ,
Mmmm mw
Sparta, Ga.
Office in Law Building, west of tlieC. II.
GEORGE F. PIERCE, Jr.
Sparta, 6a.
Office ia Law Building, went of the C H
PROFESSIONAL CARD
T\R, \ ) A. F. DURHAM, thankful for priBt
patronage, takes pleasure in announcing
that ho (.till continue* the practice of Medicine
and Surgery in the town of Sparta.
Having associated with himself his brother
Dr O. W- Durham in practice, one or the other
of them may be found at their office nt all times
•f the day.
g©r Special attention is given tq the treat
sent of Chronic Diseases aud diseases peculiar
to Female*. Feb 12—1 y
GDORGE H, JONHS,”
WITH
M II YAMS & CO
234 I*road Street.
Under Central lintel , A uyusta, Georgia
Dkalkkh In
*-• | % E GK 4H! ft* K 113 Si,
Wines, Liquors and Cigars ;
ALSO,
GES'llL COMMIT A MARCH ANTS
April 80 1809. ly.
(’liar I cm A* Mledgc,
Trimmer & Upholsterer,
Harness Maker and Repairer,
Sjxirti, 6a.
JJ[| TV/1 " foil ml in the upper story of J A,
Scml liiy’s t uning* Shop, where he ia
prepared to a»tve th* public, in hi* line of
work, on term* to suit the time*. muy?-ly
JEWELS MILLS.
(FORMERLY ROCK FACTORY.)
Post Office at CULVKRTON, Ga.
F. WILL MANUFACTURE WOOL FOR
■CUSTOMERS this season, on the following
4ertn* :
Wool Manufactured in JEANS (col'd warp) nt
80 cents per yard ;
Manufactured into Kersey* at 20cts per yard;
wr Carded into ROLLS at 12} cents per lb.
Sheeting*. Shirtings, Oanaburgs and Yarns
constantly on hand.
Wool lYanfcd,
In Exchange for Goods, nt market value, or
for CASH.
Consignment* by Ilaifroad should be direct¬
ed to Culverton, Ga. D. A. JEWEL,
may 14 tirn Proprietor.
New Cabinet Shop.
JOHN FRIEvSE.
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN
ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE,
T) E8PKCTFULLY informs the citixcns of
XU •' part a lin and this vicinity place that he has re¬
cently opene nn establishment
far the
ftlttnuftocture and Repairing
OF FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION,
•ad will keep on hand a full assortment of
Bedsteads, Tables, € hairs, Ac.
•r make to order any article in the cabinet
line at the lowest price* and nt short notice.
Gall and see him.
Will also Supply Collins at
alanrt notice,
jaa. 15.
H. H. SASSIETT,
HO Broughton Street,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Will keep constantly on hand a select stock of
BOOTS & SHOES,
BOfll AT WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
HMIE i patronage of my friends aud the public
ia oernestly solicited.
I will fill all orders promptly for CASH,
Jaly 16—ly II- 11 . sainett.
Carriage, Buggy and Wagon
REPOSITORY.
J AME'* A 8CUDDAY ha* re-opened hi*
b ARRIAGB SH'IP. at hi- old *t*nd * here I #
ie prepared to *erv-> hi old friend- m»d patren*
and the public generally, iu every bionrti of hi*
koaiu.'M, eiih-r with New Work, repairing nr
Ho uivv/i ng of t'Hrnaiee, Bnggie., llViui &e
ptth* ,
«n>wt reawt.iab', pne-* He hw i.* »>t* em¬
ploy th* well kuown fre«.!ai*u ote Coleo aSa*
Tom Ti.oii)o*ou. and wd' warrant all work to
•tend the t**t. T«.in *« a tho ougb Democrat,
Ho win aloft d* all manner oi Biack-mithing
ih poalto patvoMfo-
INDEPENDENT IN ALL THING8-NEUTRAL IN
SPARTA, HANCOCK COUNTY, GA„ NOVEMBER 12, 1869.
ATLANTA BUSINESS DIRECTORY.
A D A I It & BKO.
Wholesale Dealers in
GROCERIES, TOBACCO,
AND V. ESTERN PRODUCE
Siilub'e Pacific Gun no. end Mape’ti
J. M.&J. 0. A EXANDER,
Dealer* in
Hardware, Iron,
Carriage Material, Bol ing Cloth*, and
Implements, Whitehall street.
FRIED IAN & LOVKMAN,
Wholesale Dealer* in
Dry Goods, .Notions, Boots,
HATS, CLOTHING, Ac.
Whitehall—Thace doors Irom Alabama street.
IIUNNICUTT & BKILINGRATH,
Plumbers, Steam and <*as Fitters,
COPPER SMITHS, AND
ORNAMENTAL WORKERS IN SHEET
METALS,
Sheet Itonfiing Iron, in all its brandies—Tin or corrugated
Copper Valley*, c RR Croesiug
r H SNOOK & CO.
Wholesale and Retail Dealer* in
F u r n i t u v ©»
Decatur Mreet At’aoia,
Ke* p constantly oil hand a large and well eclect
stock of Parlor, Bed-room, Dining and Office
T. It. RIPLEY,
Dealer and Jobber in
China & Glass T^are,
Whitehall Sued
i KCK. D SAULLE k CO.
W liolet-ale aud R tail Dealer* iu
Dry Motions, Skc.,
lame*'Building, Ivor. Whitehall and Iluuter Sts.
W. C. LAWSHE,
Weolt*a!e and ^etnil Dealer
I3ST :03rt.TTGrSt
Medicine*, Faint*, Dye*, Fancy Good*, Feriume
Drui'tsis’ Articles.
Corner Peuchttce and Marietta htreeta.
A. J. WEST & CO.
Wholesale Grocers,
Aud Cnininiaeiou Merchant*,
Peachtree Street,
Order* pmm.itly filled. Consignment* solicited
S1LVEY & DOUGHERTY.
Doaiere and Jobber* in
DRY GOODS,
Hoxmry, Notion*, White Good#, Shoe*.
Hui*. See ,
Coiner Peachtree and Deca ur Street*,
CHAMBERLIN, BOYNTON &TT67
Wholesale and Retail Dealea* in
and Fancy Dry Goods,
CAHrKTH, Wl-lrow HI! .1)1’H, OIL CLOTHS 4tU.,
t’or- Wh'iehnll and Hunter Str’*,
W. A. LANS DELL,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer iu
drugs, iHhhiciies,
Paint*, O.le, Glims. &.c.
Whitehall St - e*t.
COX k 11 I L L,
Wholesale Dealer* iu
Foreign aud Domestic
Xj I Q TJ O E 8,
FINE ShuARS,
TOBACCO AC.
Peachtree Street.
MOORE & M A RS II,
Wholtsalo Dealer* n
DRY GOODS,
hats, shoes, & boots
Corner ,‘ecatur and Pryor Streets.
BEKItMANN & KU11RT
Importers of ami Dealer* iu ail kind* of
Havana A Rome*tic Sega **,
Smoking Whitehall and Chewing Street Tobaccn,Pi)>e- 8■;uff, &c.
m ar th Kail Road
F. M. JACK & CO.
CONFECTIONERS & BAKERS
Corner Whitehall aud Alabama 8tre
AUGUSTA BUSINESS
PETER KEENAN & CO,
W’holesa’e and Retail Denier* in
Boots, Shoes, Trunks,
&c.,
230 Broad t Under Central Hotel.
F. A. BEALL,
Dealer iu
Drugs Medicines* Oils,
den Seeds, &c.
180 Biond Street
P. IIANSBERGER & CO.
Cigars, Tobacco,
Snuff
at Who!e«ale end Retail
204' Bioad Street.
F A. BRAHE & CO.
Dealer iu fine
Watches. Clocks and
Silver and Plated Goods,
V. B.—W'*tch*a, and Jeweby. R-par> d
Warranted. 206 Broad Strer t.
J. J. BROWNE,
Gilder, Looking Glass Sc
ture Fra ut Maker.
0:d Frames Re-ti.R to Look equal to New
Old rdinting* I'ar-fuliy Clean*. , Lmed
Varn.-hed
135 liromi S.reei
Augusta. Ga.
HtiKPHY Ik MAY, PROPRIETORS
I. T. i ANKS
Wholesale’ aud Kteail Dealer in
Boots and Shoes?
Leather Calf Sk<ns and Shoe rinding*,
(Ri.w-ou’s Building) cot Whitehall Sl Iluuter el
No connection with any other Hush in I he city
CT Extra Inducements at Wholesale.
G. II. & A. W FORCE,
Wholesale Dealers in
Boots and Shoes?
Sign Big Iron Boot. Whitehall street
McBride & co.
Importers and Jobbers of
CROCKERY, CUTLERY,
And SILVER PLATED WARE.
MEADOR & BROTHERS,
Tobacco Com’n Merchants,
and Mauufactuter of CIGARS,
Whitehall street.
CHAPMAN, RUCKER & CO.
Wholesale Grocers
aud
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
Whitehall street.
PHILLIPS &CREW,
Booksellers & Stationers
and Dealer* in
SHEET MUSIC, PIANOS & ORGANS.
TOMMEY & STEWART,
Dealers iu
Hardware, Iron, and Steel,
Cutlery, Material, Tools, of all Cotton kinds, Builders’ Presses, and Carriage
l>r<*»k«’ Screw ete
W hitehall stieet.
J. H. BARRETT,
Auction and Commission Merchant,
and
REAL ESTATE AGENT,
Liberal Cash Advance* made on Good* iu Store
Peachtree street.
PHILADELPHIA & ATLANTA
Wine and Liquor Company
Granite Block, Broad Street
I. GUTHMAN, Agett.
PESSELS <fc S'.EKN,
Dealer* in
Domestic & Fancy Dry Goods,
French Corsetv (loop Sk rt*. Balmorals, Ki
G ove*. Fancy Goode Sc c.
No. 6 Whitehall Street.
J. W. CLAYTON & CO.,
Whole.ale Grocer*,
Commission Merchants,
And l.iquo- Dealers.
Whitehall Street.
JAMES 11. WYLIE,
Wholesale Grocer
AND
Commission llerclinnt,
Peachtree Street.
J. C. HOLBPO K,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer iu
Fur and lYool llals,
(f all th- Latest Styles,
Lad e** and MiW Fur*,
lVsehtree Street.
PEMBERTON, WILSON, TAYLOR & 00.
1 in por 1 v r s, Ha tin fa c t ii rer s
and Wholesale Dealers in Pure Drugs Medi¬
cine*. Ch* nvcals, Paint*. Uils, Glass Ac.
In ut w dd story Biick BjiMingforuer Peachtree
and Deca er Streot.
JOHN FICKEN,
MaiiufxucUira and Deal*r!«n
Fine Segar*. Tobacco, Snuff,
Snuff Boxes, P>pe* ke,
’Opposite Nat'onal Hotel.
GEORGE SHARP, Jit.
Live Jeweler, Imporrer and Dealer in
Diamond*, lYatclies Sk Fine
JEW’ELRY. solid Si ver, Plated Ware u Fancy
Goods, next door to Jack’* Confectionery,
W'h tehall Street.
Watches and Jewelry rf all kinds carefully
Repaired and Warranted
T. MARKWALTER’S,
'Sj
Marble Works.
Broad Street , near lower Market
Keep AUGJSTA, CIA.
on hitud and ready for sale, a larg- selec¬
tion, and ol»o lu'Ot be*, tootd-r. all sort* of
MARBLE MONUMEN T8, TOMBSTONES,
etc. etc
Ml work for the country carefully boxe I aud
•hipp d.
Sett. 3d—tf. •
_
W.II.WARREN, AJ LANK, J.W.WAI.LACE
Augusta, Hancock Co, Augusta.
Warren, Lane & Co.
(Successors to W Henry Warren &Co.)
@Ot»tOH actors
\VA R A II O Lb L A N D
uummisswn Commission me Merchants r^nanis,
CASH ADVAXC^ AUGUSTX « GFC
CO"..“ r " k
We are ag*m* for Georgia and South i,aro
iBa for the celebrated
Kettfewell’s Manipulated
Ober’s Ptio-<pliatc
“ 4
lagr The interests of the firm will be repro
■onted in Ha.tccck c-mnty hy J. ('LAKK5* K
81MMONS. E#q..of8p**r>*. W.,L.
Crowding tbe Cities.
The bow Governor of Virginia, in a
late agricultural address, very earnestly
urged the young men before him not to
imitate those who had forsaken their “pa¬
ternal acres” and gone to the large cities.
This same point was enforced by our own
Governor, [Ioffman, and by Ex-Governor
Seymour, in their receDt addreeses on
similar occasions. These dignitaries,
Northern and Southern, all agree on the
superior claims and advantages of agricuU
tural life. The young men of every part
of the country need such testimony, and
and wc are glad to see it adduced.
The fact is undeniable th t for some
years farming pursuits throughout the
country have been rather losing than
gaining favor. The official returns show
that agricultural production has no 1 been
keeping pace with tbe advancing popula¬
tion of the country, and alike demonstrates
an increasing tendency to concentrate in
large towns and cities. Farmers’ sons
Lave been moved by a spirit of adventure
ti turn their back- upon the steady occu¬
pation of their fathers, and betake them¬
selves to speculation, or trade, or mechan¬
ical employments in town. The immense
iramigraion into tbe country has by no
means contributed its just proportion to
the demands of agriculture. The last nr
tional census showed that nearly forty per
cent, of the Irish of the country were liv¬
ing in the large cities, and thirty-six and
a half per cent, of the Germans. If to
these had been added those who were loca*
ted in villages, and those who were scat¬
tered through the country employed in
constructing railroads and other works of
internal improveme Dt, it would be seen at
once that there were far more acricultural
consumers among this great class of our
population than agricultural producers —
It is tu be feared that the census will
show this disparity in a yet more marked
degree. One thing is certain : that, tuk
iBg the country at large, there will be
shown an immense falling off of produc
er*, to the extent of four millions as least
from the single event of emancipation.
Now, there cun be no more fixed axiom
in political economy than that agriculture
must lrom the basis of the prosperity and
power of the American people. It is the
foundation of our wealth and consequence
primary source of all our prosperi¬
ty. It feeds us. To a great degree it
us. Without it we could not have
manufacturers, and should not have com¬
merce. It turnishes our factories with
their raw material, and it fills our ships
with their cargoes. Social industry de¬
pends upon it; individual life depends
upon it. There is no man in the country
who is so wealthy as to be independent of
the success of this great interest, nor any
so poor as not to be affected by its prosper¬
ity or its decline. This country has pecu
liar facilities for advadtagcously prosecut¬
ing this department of human labor. The
variety of its climate, the abundance and
cheapness of its fertile soil, are such as no
other nation on the surface of the globe
can boast. It is no credit to our vaunted
enterpise that wc have never yet made ade¬
quate use of these ingal advantages—that
the time has never yet been when the
proportion of our farmers to the whole
population was as large as it should have
boen—when the number of those engaged
in professions and trades were not, at the
very least, twice as great as the actual ne¬
cessities of society required. There is
reason to apprehend that this dispropor¬
tion will increase. This restless, advens
turous spirit is ever tending to take more
complete possession of our people. Ev¬
erybody is getting more infected with the
eagerness to get rich in haste. There is a
growing import-nee of tbe good old plan
of earning a competence by steady, pre¬
serving labor and frugal living. The
young men of the day have tired of the
isolation Ind monotony of agricultural life
and pant for sojntithing more stirring and
exciting, and something that seems to pro¬
mise quicker and more splendid returns.
They have seized upon the first opportu¬
nity to launch away into the tide of
trade and speculation. And that tide
once embarked-upon, it ia very seldom
1 * ,.. 1 elr . way . k* ck . a j> a,n ,0 1,6 .
j >loweu htid ** A iarge proportion of them
tonnTih^lonh tea. of of them h have " eW m^blj PUrSU M ;
^ T*r Z/T ^ T "Th £ J
" 1,6 W,th *"
It cannot be too well undferatood by
these young u.aicuofcnt* in tbe country
that failure there aimost infalibly foreto
j te ? 9fai,u I r f f cre The same qualities and %
city. the It ia everywhere the same all over
world: to fill any situation successful
ly, one n.u*t fill it as belonging to it.—
The man who feels abort his business, 1st
thut business be what it may, in actually
below any business. He is without any
thing to hold him up anywhere, and is
bound to sink anyhow. The great work
of life, whether in the city or country,
cannot be maintained by any suck weak¬
lings. Least of all is this tearing, grind¬
ing, We crushing mart the plaoe for them.—
alreaty have an over production of in
eapablcs and drones. There is no room
here for the drift of rural weakness and
cowardice. Let tbe farmers’ nuns heed
the counsels of their Governors and stay
at ho ne—holding independent fast to tbe oldest, hap¬
piest most and most honors
of human occupations. ,
Tbe above sensible remarks arc from
the New Yoik times of the 28th. In con¬
nection with the above see from the Ce
Iambus Sun—
W r ii at Boys Gan Do—A Pregnant
Example —A young man of an adjoin¬
ing county, “not yet nineteen years old,”
aided by his brother, between twelve and
thirteen years of age, and a pony, has this
year, on rented land cleared three bales of
cotton, and one hundred and fifty bushels
of com, and “lots of potatoes,” besides
supporting his mother and a little sister.
He also Las cotton yet to pick. He is
the son of a deceased Confederate soldier.
He will commence the next year with
the following capital:
Three hales of ootton, at 23c 8345
One hundred and fifty bushels of
eorn, at 81 50 per pushel 225
8570
and his pony.
He contemplates buying a mule, and
hiring tivatecflhhirty a hand aud more ground. He cul
acres this year.
THE SOUTH-DIRECT
AN ENGLISH VIEW.
As it is impolitic in domestic
omy to put all the household
one basket, so it is inadvisable
national policy to be dependent on
one customer or one friend.
monopolist of trade or friendship
may turn his favors into a
in which event serious
riment may result to the
victim. Great Britain and the
States, however, appear to
putting themselves of within this
the mode conducting their
trades. The commerce
two countries flows through
in which there happen
numerous obstructions,
leakages, and not a little
hostility. The whole seaboard
the United States is
New York—thither the raw
ton of the South is transported
goods to Liverpool of ; the
Lancashire
the same hands en route
the American consumer. On
eastern coast New York enjoys
monopoly of American commerce,
and it is clearly to the interest
this country to break the
power, lest it be wielded against
to the national detriment.
On the practical ground of
my, too, there are reasons why
wider and freer intercourse should
be fostered between tbe two
tries. The Southern States, now
steadily recuperating, will soon again
become the great cotton field of the
world, and it is important that the
raw material should find its way to
British mills burdened with as few
imposts as possible. The prevailing
system makes the New York
dlemen rulers pf the market, and
adds needless charges to the grower
and manufacturer. But the policy
of New York and the rest of the
is antagonistic to free trade.—
Massachusetts and its congeners de¬
to foster local manufactures by
a high protective tariff; they would
drive foreign competitors out of the
field by differential taxes, and give
a non-natural stimulous to their
home mills until they are
to stand on their merits. This
try has already felt the evil
of this repressive policy in the
minished exports of manufactured
goods.
Nothing can be done we are
afraid to alleviate the burden of the
protective tariff until the Amiricans
recognize the fact that imposts
led upon the foreigner, who prod
ces manufacturer, more cheaply than the
the retail t*re extra charges
on consumer. The system
compels the public to pay more
f 00d8 % th ? y WOuld be "J. uired
to pay if the cheaper commodities of
fore.gmrs-who work under
WBuTtH Uxfng
icam are really the commu
nity for the advantage Of a class;
but as yet the folly has not yet been
raade clear to their understanding solely!
Tbe North is chiefly, fJadou, perhaps
*0 thU principle,
,u those ‘“teresU of being antagonistic The to
the South* former
manufacturer desirous of
the exclusive right of
NO. 2
people, and seeks id promote this
policy by subjecting foreign rivals
to burdensome charges. The South,
being a grower of raw material, is
interested in obtaining manufactured"
goods at the lowest possible price,'
irrespective of the locality of their
production ; but its the North, for the
ies “protection” differential of own interest, lev¬
which a with tax undue on foreign goods,
falls severity on
the South.
This state of things cannot be al¬
tered at present, but its existence is
another strong reason avoided why needless trade
charges should be on
with the cotton growing why districts.
There is no possible reason and raw
cotton eign should be exported, for¬
York. goods imported, through New
It is a circuitous route, in¬
volving waste of time and needless
expense. These may be avoided by
the establishment of direct trade be¬
tween Europe and the South. Let
the raw cotton be exported direct
from New Orleans, Savannah and
Charleston; let the Manchester
manufacturers and the Liverpool
brokers deal direct with these ports,
or, better still, with the planters in
the country. And in the same way
the manufactured goods required for
the consumption of Southerners
should be landed at the nearest port,
not shipped to New York, ahd then
this reshipped to their haudling destination. of articles All
unnecessary
of trade enhances their selling price,
and ultimately falls on the consu¬
mer.
GROWTH OF STATES.
In I860, Illinois had a population of
851,000, Missouri of 682,000, and Iowa
of 192,000. Ten years later the popnla*
tion of Illinois and of Missouri had doublo
ed, and that of Iowa had increased nearly
fourfold. The railroad system had offect
ed these great changes. In 1870, Iowa
will have a population of 1,200,000. Five
railroads are being constructed East and
West across the State, and others are an¬
ticipated. The plan is to havo a latitude
railway in each tire of counties, of which
there are nice. The State is fertile be¬
yond comparison. The crop of grain rais¬
ed is immense. Out of 85,000,000 acres
in the State, 3,500,000 were drvoted to
grain in 1857, and these produced 56,000,
000 bushels of corn, 14,000,000 bushels
of wheat and 15,000,000 bushels of oats.
Only a portion of this was used in the
State, the residue went to feed the hun¬
gry elsewhere. This grain must be trans¬
ported on railroads, and henee we may
form some idea cf the utlmate value of
the railroad system of the State. There
is no northj and south line in the State,
though one is chartered. lows is and
will be essentially an agricultural State
and every farm will furnish freight.
The Political Situation.—A prom¬
inent Democrat, in conversation regarding
the political situatien, asserted publicly
to-night that the Democratic party would
continue its policy of opposition to the
principles of the reconstruction acta iu all
future elections, adding that finall the
Supreme Court would snstain them, and
predicted that the next Presidential cam¬
paign will be narrowed down to a struggle
over the legality of the fourteenth amend¬
ment. In explanation he declared that
repudiationists, as well as anti-reeonttruc
tionasts, would unite on such a platform,
because the amendment, while prohibiting
the payment of the rebel debt, guarantees
the payment of the national debt, and op¬
position to it is, therefore, the national in
clinatioh of the great masses of the Demo¬
cratic perty.—Washington special to Phil
delphia Press, October 27th.
-1 0 m ( —
A letter from Virginia oompalins of
great scarcity of labor in that State. The
writer says that 75 negroes left Richmond
yesterday for Louisiana, hiring themselves
at 818 and 820 per month to work on cot¬
ton plantations. The oxodus from Vir¬
ginia southward of tbe black clement of
her population, has recently been quite
large, and instead of diminishing, seems
to he increasing with the rigor of the sea¬
son.
A Texas editor thus laments:
“Fourh of July! Yankee Doodle
equality played thy death match. Negro
is rocked in thy cradle,
while we but remember with mourn
ful pride thy past and glorious mem
ories.”
A man name Towers hung him
self to a bedpost in Schenectady New
York, and succeeded in putting and
end to his earthly existence.
m. hnvs it Mmm* PurKnn p«
one day j a8t ' week took little ’ b ”
named Frederick Hornickeleven
oW built a fire , and horrible to
to relate, held the lad over it until
^
John Holley Depute inter,,.!
_ Collector Oakland,
f*® supposed venue hav^ at absconded pal.
18 to p«8
tbe ^ a8t ^ anama »tcamer. He is a
defau, J er to the Government iq the
,° f *!*“?’.
rhe ties.that connect business
with ttyp Jfqblie-- advertise,
5£en opd slip on water when it i* ftcu
Ijpn OP whiskey it i?p't»