Newspaper Page Text
POETICAL.
TIE OHUEOH SPIDER.
Two spiders, so the story goes,
Upon a living bent,
Entered the meeting-house one day,
And hopefully were heard to say :
‘•Here we shall have, at least, lair play,
With nothing to prevent.”
Each chose his place and went to work ;
The light webs grew apace ;
One on the altar spun his thread,
But shortly came the sexton dread,
And swept him off, and so half dead,
He sought another place.
“I’ll try the pulpit next,” said he,
“There surely is a prize :
The desk appears so neat and clean,
I am sure.no spider there has been ;
Besides, how often have I seen
The pastor brushing flies.”
He tried the pulpit, bttt alas !
■His hopes proved visionary;
With dusting brush the sexton came,
And spoiled Lis geometric game,
Nor gave him time or space to claim
The right of sanetuary.
At length half-starved, and weak and lean,
He sought his former neighbor,
■Who now had grown so sleek and round,
He weighed a fraction of a pound,
And looked as if the art he’d found
Ol living without labor.
“llow is it, friend,” he asked, “that I
Endure such thumps and knocks,
While you have grown so gross ?”
“’Tis plain,” he answered ; “not a loss
I’ve met, since first I spun across
The contribution box.”
An Indianapolis beggar goes about
selling bis wife’s wedding ring to buy
bread for his children. He has already
sold seventy-five of it.
A Baptist clergyman says the reason
why the Baptist Church is like a beaver’s
hut is because . “there is only one en
trance to it, and that is under water.”
“Good morning, gentlemen,” said a
book-peddler, entering a railroad car.
No one responded. “Beg pardon, if I
have said too much ; I withdraw the last
word.”
An Irishman quarreling with an Eng
lishman, told him that if he didn’t hold
his tongue he would break his impene
trable head and let the brains out of his
empty skull.
An Indian maiden is singing in opera
at San Francisco, which gives occasion
to some desperate joker to remark that
she has been transferred from “a squaw
into a squawler.”
“How many deaths last night?” in
quired a hospital physician of a nurse.
“Nine,” was the answer. “Why, I or
dered medicine for ten.” “Yes; but one
wouldn’t take it.”
A Dooly county granger says the
cheapest way to make commercial fertil
izers is to get several loads of swamp
muck and bury a billy goat in it. It is
ready for use as soon as it cools.
A woman being enjoined to try the
effects of kindness on her husband, be
ing told it would “heap coals of fire on
his head,” replied: “I have tried boiling
water, but it didn’t do a bit of good.”
A German speaking of a severe head
ache he had had the previous evening,
said to his companion: “Mine got!
mine head ached so pad I couldn't raise
it mine pillow until I gets up and walks
around a lettle!”
An old bachelor said: “There’s more
jewelry worn nowadays than when I was
young; but there’s one piece that I al
ways admired which I don’t see now."
“What is that ?” asked a young lady.
“A thimble!” was the reply.
A member of the New York “Lazy
Club” has just been expelled for going
at a faster gait than a walk. The re
cusant offered in mitigation of the sen
tence the fact that the sheriff was after
him, but the society was inexorable.
We are willing to oelieve that a Cali
fornia miner fond of whisky took a drink
by mistake of quicksilver, but we are
not willing to believe it in the accom
panying statement that “the miner has
been kept busy ever since breathing on
panes of glass to convert them into
mirrors.”
A little boy and girl had been cau
tioned never to take the nest-egg when
gathering the eggs ; but one evening
the girl reached the nest first, seized an
egg, and started for the house. Her dis
appointed brother followed, crying:
“Mother! Mother! Susy she’s been and
got the egg the old hen measiu'es by ! ’
Young Forney writes from Florida:
“Months ago I wrote a personal, on the
authority of a gentleman who had trav
eled in Florida, to the effect that the
people of some of the sea-coast villages
had declared, in answer to inquiries, that
they ‘lived on fish and strangers.’ It is
true they do, but they care very little for
fish.”
London Punch contains this account
of “A Young PositivistParson—What
is a miracle? Boy—Dunno. Parson—
Well, if the sun were to shine in the
middle of the night, what should you
say it was? Boy—The moon. Parson—
But if you were told it was the sun,
what should you say it was ? Boy—A
lie. Parson—l don’t tell lies. Suppose
I told you it was the sun, what would
you say then ? Boy—That yer w T asn’t
sober!
A Keokuk wife asked her husband for
anew dress. He replied: “Times are
so hard, my dear—so hard I can hardly
keep my head above water.” Where
upon she retorted: “You can keep your
nose above water easy enough, if you
have a mind to; but the trouble is that
you keep it too much above brandy.”
Right again ; and there are lots of noses
in the same bad fix.
A WARNING TO LOVERS.
“Metildy, you are the most good for
nothin’, triflin’, owrlacious, contrary piece
that ever lived.”
“Oh, ma !” sobbed Matilda, “I couldn’t
help myself—’deed I could not.”
“Couldn’t help yourself? That’s a
pretty way to talk! Ain’t he a nice
young man ?”
“Yes’m.”
“Got money ?”
“Yes’m.”
“And good kinfolks ?”
“Yes’m.”
“And loves you to distraction ?”
“Yes’m.”
“Well, in the name of common sense,
what did you send him home for ?”
“Well, ma, if I must tell the truth, I
must, I ’spose, though I’d rather die.
You see, ma, when he fetched his cheer
up close to mine, and ketched holt of my
hand, and squez and drapt on his knees,
then it was that his eyes rolled and he
began breathin’ bard, and his gallowses
kept a creakin’ an’ a creakin’, till I
thought in my soul somethin’ terrible
was the matter with bis in’ards ; and that
flustered and skeered me so, that I burst
out a cryin’. Seein’ me do that he
creaked wors’an ever, and that made me
cry harder; and the harder I cried the
harder he creaked, till of a sudden it
came to me that it was nothin’ but his
gallowses; and then I bust out a laughin’
fit to kill myself, right in bis face. And
then he jumpt up and run out of the
house mad as fire; and he ain't cornin’
back no more. 800-boo, ahoo, boo boo.”
“Metildy,” said the old woman, sternly,
“stop sniv’ling. You have made an
everlastin’ fool of yourself, but your
cake ain't all dough yet. It all comes of
them no ’count, fashionable sto’ gal
lowses—’spenders, I believe they calls
’em. Never mind, honey! I’ll send for
Johnny and tell him how it happened,
’pologize to him, and knit him a real nice
pair of yam gallowses, jest like your
pa’s, and they never do creak.”
“Yes, ma,” said Matilda, brightening
up : “but let me knit ’em.”
“So you shall, honey; he’ll valley them
more than if I knit ’em. It’ll be all
right. You mind if it won’t.”
Sure enough, it proved to be all right.
Tildy and Johnny were married, and
Johnny’s gallowses never creaked any
more.
>
SPANISH MAXIMS.
He is a rich man who hath God for his
friend.
He is the best scholar who hath learned
to live well.
Change of weather finds discourses for
fools.
A pound of care will not pay an ounce
of debt.
The sorrow of men have for each oth
er hangs upon one hair.
A wise man changes his mind, a fool
never will.
That dAy oh which you marry yon ei
ther mar or make yourself.
That’s wise delay that makes the road
safe.
When all men say you are an ass it is
time to bray.
Let us thank God for what we hate.
The foot of the owner is the best meas
ure for his land.
Enjoy that little you have while the
fool is hunting for more.
A life ill-spent makes a sad old age.
’Tis money that makes men lords.
We talk but God does what he pleas
es.
Go not to your doctor for every ill,
nor to your pitcher for every thirst.
A wall between two preserves friend
ship.
The sum of all is, to serve God well
and do no ill thing.
Setting down in writing is a lasting
memory.
As you use your father your children
will use you.
There is no evil but some good may
be made of it.
No praise is great enough for a coun
sel.
Examine not a pedigree nor patrimo
ny of a good man.
Keep out of a hasty man’s way for a
while; out of a sullen man’s way for
your life.
If you love me your deeds will tell me
so.
I defy all fetters, though they were
made of gold.
Few die of hunger, a hundred thous
and of surfeits.
Govern yourself by reason—though
some like it, others do not.
No companion like money.
Nothing is valuable in this world ex
cept as it tends to the next.
Smoke, raining into a house, and a
talking wife, makes a man run out of
doors.
God keep me from still water —from
that which is rough I will keep myself.
Tell me not what you know, judge
not what you see, and you will live in
quiet.
Hear reason, or she will make herself
heard.
A great fortune with a wife is a bed
full of brambles.
There never was but one man who nev
er did a fault.
He who holds his peace gathers stones.
Leave your son a good reputation and
an employment.
Receive your money before you give
a receipt for it, and take a receipt before
you pay it.
God taketh the care, and the physician
takes the money for it.
Fools make great feasts and wise men
eat them.
The first grin of the late war was fired
by Edmund Ruffin, a prominent Virgin
ian, seventy years of age. Soon after
the surrender of General Lee and the
collapse of the rebellion Mr. Ruffin com
mitted suicide, June ’65, at his residence
in Amelia county, Virginia, near Mat
taox. He was seventy-four years old
The Richmond Whig, a couple of days
after, gave the following account: “It is
now said that Mr. Ruffin’s mind had beefi
very perceptibly affected since the evac
uation of Richmond and the surrender
of the Confederate armies. For a week
previous to terminating his life, Mr.
Ruffin kept his chamber, busily employed
in writing what subsequently turned out
to be a history of his political life. He
also wrote letters, and in one of them
he left directions as to the disposal of
his body. He bathed himself, put on
clean under and outer clothing; and di
rected that his body should be buried in
the habiliments he had put on, without
shroud or coffin. He then seated himself
in a chair, put a loaded musket to his
mouth, and, leaning back, struck the
trigger with his hickory stick. The first
cap did not explode, and he replaced it
by another, which discharged the mus
ket, the charge of ball and buck blowing
off the crown of the venerable old gen
tleman’s head, and scattering his brains
and snowy hair against the ceiling of
the room. When the family, alarmed by
the report, reached Mr. Ruffin’s room, be
was found lying back in bis chair, the
gun leaning against him, and life gone.
A paragraph in the letter left for the pe
rusal of family and friends explained the
tragic deed. It reads: ‘I cannot sur
vive the loss of the liberties of mv coun
try.’”
SUGAR PROM SAWDU.T.
An exchange says that it is reported
in Engle nI that a French firm has dis
covered a method of making artificial
sugar from materials so cheap that it can
be sold at a farthing a pound. Concern
ing which the Manufacturer and Builder
says ; “When we consider that sawdust
is cheap and rich in lignite, which by
chemical treatment with mineral acids
may be changed into grape sugar, we
should not at all be surprised that the
above report turns out to be true, and
the sawdust is the material from which
this cheap sugar is obtained. Changing
old linen rags into sugar is a well known
chemical experiment. Such rags are
almost pure lignite, while sawdust also
consists of lignite, however, with some
other ingredients, easily removed. From
rags to sawdust is but one step.”
A Western paper speaks of the house
cleaning season as that when divine wo
man has her own way at the house, while
the “ old man” takes his solemn repast
from the top of the flour-barrel, and, in
sleeping, enjoys the freedom of the inter
val between his bedroom and the front
fence, it is a season of meditation, white
wash and calm, unimpassioned profanity
THE SUN.
WEEKLY, SEMI-WEEKLY, AND DAILY
THE WEEKLY SUN is too widely known te
require any extended recommendation • but tho
teasous’ which have given it fifty thousand sub
scribers, and which will, we hope, give it many
thousands more, are briefly as follows:
It is a first rate newspaper All the news of
the day will be found in it, condensed when
unimportant, at full length when of moment
and always presented in a clear, intelligible
and interesting manner.
It is a first rate family paper, full of enter
taining and instructive readiug of every kind,
but containing nothing that can offend the most
delicate and scrupulous taste.
It is a first rate story paper. The best tales
and romances of current literature are carefully
selected and legibly printed in its pages.
It is a first rate agricultural paper. The most
fresh and instructive artieles on agricultural
topics regularly appear in this department.
If is an r dependent political paper, belonging
to no party and >. earing no collar. It fights for
principle, and for the election of the best men
to office. It especially devotes its energies to
the exposure of the great corruptions that now
weaken and disgrace our country, and threaten
to undermine republican institutions altogether.
It has uo fear of knaves, and asks no favors of
their supporters.
It reports the fashions for the ladies and the
markets ter the men, especially the cattle mar
ket, to which it pays particular attention
Finally, it is the cheap -st paper published.
One dollai a year will secure it for any subscri
ber, It is }ot necessary to get up a club in order
to have THE WEEKLY SUN at this rate. Any
one who snnds a single dollar will get the paper
for a year
We have no traveling agents.
The Weekly Sun. —Bight pages, fifty -six
columns, only $1 a year. No discount firotn this
rate.
The Semi-Weekly Sun.- Some size as the
Daily Sun, $2 a year. A discount of 2©per cent,
to clubs of 10 or over.
The Daily Sun- —A large four page newspa
per, of twenty-eight columns. Daily circulation
over 120,000. All the news for 2 cts. Subscrip
tion price 50 cts. a month, or $6 a year. To clubs
of 10 or over, a discount of 20 per cent.
Address, l! THE SUN,’’ New York City.
It costs less than S3OO to make any S6OO
Piano sold through agents, all of whom make
100 per ce’nt. profit. We have no agents, but
ship direct to families at factory price.
We make only one style and have butoneprice.
Two Hundred and Ninety Dollars , net cash, with
no discount to dealers or commissions to teach
ers. Our lumber is thoroughly seasoned; our
cases are Double Veneered with Rosewood, have
front round corners, serpentine bottom and carv
ed legs. We use the full iron plate with over
strung bass, French Grand action with top dam
pers, and our keys are of the best ivory, with
ivory fronts. Our /’iano has seven octaves, is 6
feet 9 inches long, 3 feet 4 inches wide, and
weighs, boxed, 955 pounds. Every Piano is fully
warranted for five years.
Send for illustrated circnlar, in which we re
fer to over 700 Bankers, Merchants, etc., some
o whom yon may know, using onr Pianos in 44
States and Territories.
U. S. I'IAISO COMPANY,
810 Broadway, N. Y.
Pleas* state where you taw thii notiee.
SOMETHING WORTH REMEMBERING
OUR BUYER (MR. KEAN) IS NOW IN NEW YORK, CULLING GEMS FROM ALL THE
LARGE IMPORTING HOUSES.
in the United States, and feels confident that for
Style, Quality & Cheapness
HIS SELECTIONS WILL BE HARD TO SURPASS.
088 WHITER m&@W
fn coming in rapidly, and we cordially invite all to visit us daily, as there will be something
NEW, ATTRACTIVE AND NOVEL
Every day, and it affords us pleasnre to display them, whether you buy or not.
We will sell to COYJITTRY MERCHANTS at New York quofa
tions for CASH.
For aporoved City Acceptance we will sell on a credit to Ist October next, adding lj per
cent interest per month.
Apply with perfect confidence in our willingness and ability to
serve you as well as any house South, and you will not be disap
pointed. Very Respectfully,
KEAN & CASSELS.
DOZIER, WALTON & CO.
’**'*** s
BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GUA
S.D.BLACKWELLIHON
ARE NOW RECEIVING %
A LARGE aND WELL SELECTED STOCK
OF
CONSISTING OF EVERY VARIETY OF
Staple & Fancy Dry Goods
A LARGE LOT OF CLOTHING, HATS AND CAPS!
LARGE ASSORTMENT OF BOOTS & SHOES!
A FINE LOT OF LADIES’ HATS!
HARDWARE, GROCERIES, &c., & c .,
Which they pledge themselves to sell as
Cheap as the Cheapest.
The recent test of Fire-Proof Safes
by the English Government proved
the superiority of Alum Filling. No
other Safes filled with
Alum and Plaster-of-Paris.
MARVIN & CO.,
265 Broadway, N. Y. y *>
721 Chestnut St., Phila.
BACON * KARR’S
PIANOS.
FIRST-CLASS INVESTMENTS.
INTew Scales,
ISTew Styles,
3S"ew Prices,
V ery Ijow.
WAREROOM
255 Greene st., near Eighth
3NTEYAA YORK.
University Place Cars pass (be
Door.
To the Patrons of the Elberton Schools.
THE PRINCIPALS OF THE ANDREW MALE
High School and the Female Collegiate
Institute having appointed the undersigned col
lecting agent, in order that they may devote
their time to the legitimate duties ot the schools,
he respectfully calls the attention of t’ e patrons
to the time of payment ot tuition set forth in
the advertisements of said schools. He will be
govertied altogether by the rates, and expects to
make prompt collections. He hopes to be great
ly aided in the discharge of his duties by par
ties settling without solicitation.
Respectfully.
Jan. 21*, 1872, " J. T. MeCARTY.
Iron in the Blood
EH
MAKES THE WEAK STRONG,
The Peruvian Syrup, a Protect
ed Solution of the Protoxide of
Iron, is so combined as to have
the character of an aliment, as
easily digested and assimilated
with the blood as the simplest
food. It increases the quantity
of Nature’s Own Vitalizing
Agent, Iron in the blood, and
cures “a thousand ills,” simply
by Toning up,lnvigorating and
Vitalizing the System. The en
riched and vitalized blood per
meates every part of the body $
repairing damages and waste,
searching out morbid secre
tions, and leaving nothing for
disease to feed upon.
This is the secret of the won
derful success of this remedy in
curing Dyspepsia, Liver Com
plaint, Dropsy, Chronic Diar
rhoea, Boils, Nervous Affections,
Chills and Fevers, Humors,
Loss of Constitutional Vigor,
Diseases of the Kidneys and
Bladder, Female Complaints,
and all diseases originating in
a bad state , of the blood, or ac
companied by debility or a low
state of the system. Being free
from Alcohol, in any form, its
energizing effects are not fol
lowed by corresponding reac
tion, but are permanent, infu
sing strength, vigor, and new
life into all parts of the system ,
and building up an Iron Con
stitution.
Thousands have been changed
by the use of this remedy , from
weak , sickly, suffering crea
tures, to strong, healthy, and
happy men and women; and
invalids cannot reasonably hes
itate to give it a trial.
See that each bottle has PERU"
VIAN SYRUP blown in the glass*
Pamphlets Free.
SETH W. FOWLE & SONS, Proprietors,
IVo. SO Harriion jly., Boston.
Sold bt Druggists gbkexai.lt.
CHARS CANED. Sr*
gg§
AibliSLLliililuiflL
Dr. J. Walker’s California Vin
egar Bitters aro a purely Vegetable
preparation, made chiefly from the na
tive herbs found on the lower ranges of
the Sierra Nevada mountains of Califor
nia, the modicinal properties of which
are extracted thorofrom without tho use
of Alcohol. Tho question is almost
daily asked, “What is tho cause of the
unparalleled success of Vinegar Bit
ters?” Our answer is, that they remove
the cause of disease, and tho patient re
covers his health. They are tho groat
blood purifier and a life-giving principle,
a perfect Renovator and Invigorator
of the system. Never before in ths
history of the world has a medicine been
compounded possessing tho remarkable
qualities of Vinegar Bitters in healing the
sick of every disease man is heir to. They
are a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs in Bilious
Diseases
The properties of Dr. Walker’s
Vinegar Bitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic,
Sedative, Counter-Irritant Sudorific, Altera
tive, and Anti-Bilious.
It. ii. McUONALD Ac CO.,
Druggists and Gen. Apts., San Francisco, California,
and cor. of Washington and Charlton Sta., N. Y.
Sold by all Druggists and Dealers.
/|kll TO f)2O PER DAY easily made by
lj*NJauy one. We want men,.women, hoys,
■L L and girls all over the country to sell our
m ' lFine Steel Engravings, Chroraos, Crayon
|JI jlDrawings, Illuminations, Photographs,
\J|r|yetc., etc. We now publish the finest as
sortment ever placed before the public, nnd our
prices are marked down so low as to defy eoin
petion. No one subscribes lor a premium giving
paper in order to get a picture after seeing our
pictures and learning our prices. We have ma
ny old agents nt work for us who have made
canvassing for books, papers, etc, their business
for years, and the/all report that t(iey can make
more money at work., for us than at any
thing else. Our pricess are so low that all can
afford to purchase, and therefore the pictures
sell at sight at almost every honse. New begin
ners do as well as agents who have had large
experiencs, for out - beautiful subjects and low
prices are appreciated by all. To make large
sates everywhere all an agent has to do is to
show the pictures from house to house. Don't,
look for work elsewhere until you have seen
wliat great inducements we offer you to make
money. We have not space to explain all here,
but seud us your address and we w ill send full
particulars, free, by mail. Don’t delay if you
want profitable work fer your leisure hours, o?
for your whole time Now is the favorable time
to engage in this business. Our pictures are the
firest and most pleasing in this country,and are
endorsed hy all the leading papers, including
the New York Herald. Those who cannot give
the business their entire attention can work up
their own localities and make a handsome sum
without ever being aw a) from home over-night.
Let all who want pleasant, profitable employ
ment, witboit risking capital, send us their ad
dresses at ouce and learn all about the business
for themselves. Address GEORGE STINSON
k CO., Art Publishers, Portland, Main*.
Cx EORGIA, Elbert County: To all whom it may
J concern—John M Brewer, having in proper
form applied to me for permanent letters of ad
ministration on the estate of Charles V Brewer,
late of county, State of Florida, dec’d, this
is to cite nil and singular the creditors and next
of kin of Charles V Brewer, to be and appear at
my office within t e time ; rescribed by law
and cause, if any they can, why perma
nent administration should not be granted to
John .VI Brewer on Charles V Brewer's estate.
JAS A ANDREW, Ordinary
CITATION.
To ill whom it may eoncein: M B Comer
in proper form applied to me for permanent leis
ters ot administration on the estate of Mrs An
na Comer, late of Ashley county, Arkansas :
This is to cite all and singular the creditors nnd
next of kin of Mrs Anna Comer to he and ap
pear at my othce, within the time allowed by
law, aud show cause, if any they can why per
manent administration should not be granted to
M B Comer, on Mrs Anna Comer's estate.
JAS A. ANDREW, Ordinary.
Ec 2 1 ’7e
CITA TlON. — Georgia, Elbert County:
To all whom it may concern.—D B.Verdel
having in proper form applied to me for perma
nent letters of administration, this is to cite all
and singular the creditors and next of kin of
Elizabeth Bradford to be and appear at my office
within the time allowed by law, and show cause
if any they can why permanent administration
should not be granted to D. B. Verdel on Eliza'
belli Bradford’s estate.
Witness my band and official signature, De
cember Hi, 1873. Jas. A. Andrew, Ordinary
Ctsttion ft r Letters of Dismission.
STATE OF GEORGIA, Elbert county. Wcre
as J. B. .Vaxwell, ex’r of Robert Maxwell,
represents to the Court in his petition, duly
filed and entered on record, that he has fully
administered Robert Maxwell’s estate. This is,
therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred
and creditors, to show cause if they can, why
said executor shouldnot be discharged from the
administration, and receive letters of dismission
on the first Monday in May 1874
JAS. A. ANDREWS, Ordinary.
Citation for Letters of'D'sinlsslon
TA TE of Georgia, Elbert County: Whereas
O James J. Burch, executor of Mary Ann
Burch, represents to the court in his peti
tion,duly filed and entered on record, that he has
fully administered Mary Ann Burch’s estate
this is therefore to cite all persons concerned
kindred and creditors, to show cause, if any
the\ can, wiiy said ndniinistratorshould not be
discharged fh m his administration and receive
letters ot dismission on the first Monday in
March, 1874. Jas. A. Andrew, Ordinary.
Notice to debtors and creditors.—
Notice is hereby given to all persons Lav
ing demands against William H Adams, late of
said county, deceased, to present them to me
properly made out within the time prescribed
by law, so as to show their character and amount
And all persons indebted to said deceased are
hereby required to make immediate payment to
mO . WILLIAM M. BROWN,
Nov. 4,’73-6t Ex’r of Wm. H. Adams, dec’d.
Georgia, Elbert Cnunty.
To all whom it may concern : Thompson B.
Dye, having in proper form applied to me for
permanent Letters of Administration on the Es
tate of Ladorian B. Dye, late of said County,
this is to cite all and singular the creditors and
next of kin of Ladorian B Dye to be and appear
at my office, within the time allowed by law,
and show cause, if any they can, why perma
nent administration should not he granted to
Thompson B. Dye on Ladorian B. Dye’s Estate.
Witness my hand and officirl signature
JAMES A. ANDREW, Ordinary.
February 2, 1874
rf.y ’ Aftent. wnt.rt I All cliwm" of worklnit pn
ple> of either sei, yung or oltl, make more money
work l*r us tu their spare moment*, or all the time, than at anything
else. Particulars frea. Address 0. Stinson A Cos ., Fm tland, Maine.