Newspaper Page Text
THE MT. VERNON ESTATE.
Till' 1’roponMl Vr»e Untr.nio—A Statement In B. .
Imlfofthr AMmlntlnn.
A Washington special to the Baltimore
Sun says: At Mount Vernon there are 200
acres to care for. It is a country home and
farm. There is the old mansion to bo
looked after, and greenhouses, gardens,
lawns, roads, a wharf, descendants of the
Washington family servants) with their
little dwellings, cuttle, all necessitating a
constant drain upon the resources ofthe
association in carrying out its design—to
maintain the estate os Washington left it
and make it a visible tradition for the en
joyment of generations to come. The
tomb itself was originally a poorly built af
fair, and is a never-ending care
and expense. All repairs which
are made to the old mansion, the
barn, the other outbuildings, the fencing,
the roads, are scrupulously made to con
form in design, mater ial and construction
to the original, and if Washington could
return in the flesh to the place he so loved,
he would find it all exaetly as he left it, ex
cepting a few additional articles of furni
ture and bric-a-brac, which have been
placed in some of the rooms, but which
are also mostly of the style of his day. In
view of the actual facts, it is almost unac
countable how many false impressions
have obtained as to the amount and man
agement of the Mount Vernon funds. The
New York Herald has asserted that no re
port has been made of the finances for six
years. To the contrary, a full report has
been made and printed year by year
of all the receipts '' and ex
penditures of the association, and
I have never seen a more simple or satis
factory exhibit ofthe affairs of any corpo
ration. Mrs. Margaret J. M. Sweat, vice
regent for Maine, and secretary of councils,
is Just gbout to send to the printer her
minutes of the session for this year, with
the rr ports of receipts and expenditures.
The minutes and the report are a model in
•style and comprehensiveness, entering into
every detail with a cogency and a per
spicuity which can leave nothing to be
asked. Omitting the centennial year of
1870, when about r?SKX>0 was added to the
endowment or permanent fund, the aver
age of current receipt s and expenditures
were nearly $1000 in excess of the receipts.
The whart, which is subject to extensive
■damages every winter and spring by
reason of ice and freshets, cost 1*1970 to re
pair; *410 was spent on the tomb, 1*1192
on the mansion and *1153 in keeping
the grounds in order. The endowment
fund, which constitutes the balance in
bank, is now between $10,000 and £40,000.
Outside *>f the,*9000 placed to its credit in
(lie centennial year, it has been made up
altogether of voluntary contributions. The
nucleus of this fund was a contribution of
*11,000 from Charles Maealester, of Phila
delphia, tlie father of the regent, Mrs.
Laughton, and a contribution of $500 from
John Mussey, of Maine, the father of Mrs.
Sweat, the vice-regent from that state.
The ladies have all interested themselves
in securing accretions to this fund. Mrs.
Laugiiton has obtained the largest number
of individual subscriptions, and it is rarely,
if ever, that a year passes when Miss Emily
Harper, the vice-regent for Maryland,
does not hand in a contribution for
it. It is invested in the bonds of
the United States, and the object
is, when it attains sufficient proportions to
meet expenses, to repeal the admission fee
to Mount Vernon. From the time of the
purchase all visitors coming by land have
paid only twenty-live cents. Visitors by
water pay fl, of which the boat owner re
ceives sixty-six cents and the association
thirty-four cents. Nine cents of this latter
is applied to the repair of the wharf. The
round trip by water is thirty miles. Be
fore making the existing contract for the
transportation of water passengers the as
sociation invited estimates and proposals,
and in awarding the contract were influ
enced by the belief that it was required to
■construct a boat especially adapted for the
purpose, and the association reserving a
supervisory control. Nothing is easier
than to criticise, and the
Mount Vernon association has had
to bear its full share of carping
and complaint. Its members are not infal
lible any more than those who attack
them, but a little Inquiry and investigation
•only is necessary to dissolve all of the ma
terial indictments brought against their
management. Their method has been to
make tjie atmosphere of Mount Vernon
like a private home, with the halo of
Washington forever around it. No tomb
•can be more tenderly and more efficiently
cared for than this, and this care is under
the personal and gratuitous supervision of
those who represent the women of Ameri
ca, through whose noble eftorts the pur
chase money was raised. No man, no
■woman,no true American,who stands with
reverent head by the tomb of Washing
ton will object to contributing twenty-five
cents, not indeed as a fee, not as the price
of a show, not for the pecuniary benefit of
any one, but as his or her individual mite
to keep the home as he left it.
A STUDY IN LEGS.
Their Position Indicates the Mental Condition of
Their Owner.
New York Morning Journal.
Men generally cross their legs when
there is the least pressure on their minds.
You will never find a man actually en
gaged in business with his legs crossed.
The limbs at those times are straighter
than at any other because the mind and
body work together.
A man engaged in auditing accounts
will never cross bis legs, says the Denver
Tribune, neither will a mail who is writing
an article, or who is employed in any man
ner where his brain is actively engaged.
When at work in a sitting posture the
limbs naturally extend to tile floor ill a
perfectly straight line.
A mail may cross his legs if lie is sitting
in an office chair discussing some business
proposition with another man, hut the in
stant he becomes really in earnest and per
ceives something to be gained, his limbs
uncross quick as ii flush, he bends forward
toward his neighbor and begins to use liis
hands. That is a phase that 1 believe you
w ill always observe.
Men often cross their legs at public meet
ing, because they go there to listen, or to
be entertained; they are not tin; factors in
the performance, and they naturally place
themselves in the most comfortable posi
tion known to them—namely, leaning well
back in their chairs and crossing their
legs.
A man always crosses his legs when lie
reads a newspaper, lint is more apt to lie
down when he roods a book. He reads
the paper, of course, to inform himself,
but at the same time the perusal of its con
tents is recreation for him, and his body
again seeks its position of relaxation.
When a mail is reading a newspaper and
waiting for his breakfast his legs are al
ways crossed, but so soon as the breakfast
is brought to him he puts the paper aside,
straightens out his legs and goes to work
that is, begins to oat, his mind now turn
ing on the duties of the day before him.
Men cross their legs in a ball room, but
it is far from an elegant tiling to do, and
is not done by those who have been
brought up in good society. It is your
“three-penny-bit young mini” who crosses
bis legs at a ball, and, would you believe it,
I have seen young ladies do the same tiling.
Itui'lii'l, Hip Actress.
Shortly before the death of “Rachel,”
with an indescribable expression in her
wondrous eyes, ahe said toner sister Sarah,
“I have been thinking of Polyeucte all
night. If you only knew what new, what,
magnificent effects I have conceived ! In
studying, take my word for it, declamation
and gesture are of litlle avail. You have to
think to weep.” „ , .
This dying utterance of Rueliel s, pub-
!! s „ h ® d 4n he ’’ !»t«st biography, diBclosoi at
least a possibility of immortality. As the
near approach ot death unveiled her spirit
ual perception to new and grander revela-
tions of her art. the question arises—Why
aid those .higher conceptions, those
magnificent effects come during her dying
moments, if there were to be no use for
this reawakened jiower, this genius in
whatever shape it may assume 7 Was it
wasted and lost before attaining fuller de
velopment ?
The gleams of light like those seen by
Kachel, and visions of departed friends
tnat often come to dying people, give as-
surance of immortality for the individual
soul. It seemB to us that they outweigh
any material evidence of a future life that
the world thinks it possesses to-day.
It may be said that the sight of beloved
friends making their appearance at the bed
side of those who are passi’ g through the
change are but the hallucinations of disease
or disordered fancy. E ven then a significant
fact remains to revive the hope. It is
noticeable that in Jail the numberless ac-
counts of these appearances, there is never
an instance when one absent living person
is seen. It invariably proves to be some
one who has departed this life. If these
visible presences appear, and repeatedly
when the patient’s mind is known to be
clear and conscious, it is strange tiint these
so-called hallucinations, or optical illusions,
do not occasionally take the shape of some
absent person still in the flesh. No, these
forms are invariablylvisitors from the “un
discovered country.” And so long as this
striking fact remains, this singular phe
nomenon will be at once our slightest, yet
strongest and most satisfactory assurance
of immortality.
Till* ffri'iif Host In I hr- Northwest.
The hot air reservoir of the American
continent just now is the great northwest
ern plateau. A celebrated physicist com
pares the earth to a mighty engine, of
which the Equatorial zone is the boiler
and the polar regions the condenser. This
illustration, however, apparently fails
during mid-summer on this continent.
While in some parts of the West Indies,
nearest to the equator, the sun’s heat does
not, within a period of twenty years, ex
ceed eighty-five degrees, the mercury on
our great northern plains rises above 100
degrees. ’Die maximum heat officially re
ported from Dakota was 103 degrees.
Ladies
Do you want a pure, bloom
ing Complexion l If so, a
few applications of Hagan’s
MAGNOLIA BALM will grat
ify you to your heart’s con
tent. It does away w ith Sal
lowness, Redness, Pimples,
Blotches, and all diseases and
imperfections of the skin. It
overcomes the flushed appear
ance of heat, fatigne and ex
citement. It makes a lady of
THIRTY appear but TWEN
TY ; and so natural, gradual,
and perfect are Ins effects,
that It is impossible to detect
its application.
u- lT
Opelika, Ala., May 8th, 1886.
f tN and after Sunday, May 9th, 1886, the trains
v r on this road will be run as follows:
No. 1.
Leave Columbus * 8 54 a m
Arrive Opelika 10 20 a m
No. 3.
Leave Opelika 10 40 a m
Arrive Columbus 11 55 a m
No.
Leave Columbus 2 28 p m
Arrive Opelika 3 58 pm
No. 4.
Leave Opelika 5 05 p m
Arrive Columbus 6 31 p m
No. 5.
Leave Columbus 7 30 a m
Arrive Opelika 9 43 a m
Arrive Good water 6 02 p m
no: e.
Leave Goodwater 6 00 a m
Arrive Opelika 10 16 a m
Arrive Columbus 119 pm
No. 7.
Leave Columbus 1 45 p m
Arrive Opelika 3 38 p m
No. H.
Leave Opelika 4 13 p m
Arrive Columbus 5 54 p m
The night trains are discontinued for the pres
ent. A. FLEWELLEN,
dtf General Manager.
O
N and afte
lows:
Mail Train No 1—Going West Daily.
Leave Union Depot, Columbus 2 30 p m
Leave Broad Street Depot, Columbus 2 46 p m
Arrive at Union Springs 5 37 p m
Leave Union Springs 6 46 ]> m
Arrive at Troy 8 30 pm
Arrive at Montgomery 7 23 p m
Arrive at Eufaula 10 33 p in
Mail Train No. 2-Daily.
Leave Troy 4 20 a m
Arrive at Union Springs 5 W a m
Leave Union Springs <• 33 a m
Arrive at Eufaula 10 50 a m
Arrive at Columbus 9 41 a in
Night Freight ami Accommodation- Daily Ex
cept Sunday.
Leave Columbus Union Depot 5 15 P m
Leave Columbus Broad Street Depot 5 55 p m
Arrive at Union Springs 8 59 p m
Arrive at Eufaula 10:P m
Arrive-at Montgomery 12 20 a m
Night Freight and Accommodation-Daily Ex-
ci pt Sunday.
Leave Montgomery 3 30 p m
Arrive at Union Springs (5 to p m
Leave Union Springs 7 io p m
Arrive at Columbus 10 181 biu
Wav Freight and Accommodation No. 5—Daily.
Leave Columbus Union Depot 1 55 a m
Leave Coin minis Broad Street Depot BOjjp in
Arrive at Union Springs 3 57 a m
Arrive at Eufaula... • - v 10 ’5P‘'l, 111
Way Freight and Accommodation No. 6-Daily.
Leave Montgomery 7 40 a m
Leave Union Springs 10 iio a m
Arrive at Broad Street Depot, Columbus.. 1 49 p m
Arrive at Union Depot, Columbus 2 02 pm
W. L. CLARK, Snp’t.
D. E. WILLIAMS, G. T. A. dtf
Office General Manager.
Coi.r.Mnrs. (!a„ .July 18th, 188'i
/ vN and after Sunday, July 13,1886, the schedule
' ' of Mail Train will be as follows:
No. 1—Going North Daily.
Leave Columbus 3 00 p m
Arrive at Chipley 5 01 p m
Arrive at Greenville fi 07 p m
No. 2—Coining South Daily.
Leave Greenville J2® a m
Arrive at Chipley 8 02 a m
Arrive at Columbus 10 11 a m
No. 3-Freight and Accommodation-North.
Leave Columbus 7 00 a m
Arrive at Chipley 9 32 a m
Arrive at Greenville U 10 11IU
No. 4—Freight and Accommodation-South.
Leave Greenville 3 55 p m
Arrive at Chipley J 22 p m
Arrive at Columbus < 07 P m
W. L. CLARK. Gen’l Manager.
T. C.'S. HOWARD, Gen’l Ticket Agent.
feb24 dly
Still the Good Work Goes On!
HEAR THE WITNESSES.
SCAT!!!
SCIATICA !
, Mi. A. T. LYON, the beat known photographer
IN THE THREE! STATES of South Carolina.
Georgia and Florida, says:
* I liftye suffered EXCRUCIATING PAINS from
SCIATIC RHEUMATISM. Stepping on uneven
surfaces of a sidewalk would give me Perfect
Agony. Various remedies have been tried, but
with uo effect, until I commenced the use of
Guinn’s Pioneer Blood Renewer,
which has relieved me of the least semblance of
F am. and ffiven me the f.ntirr itsk of my limbs.
conscientiously commend it to the public.
A. T. LYON.
No. 118 Cherry St., Macon, Ga.
A Certain Cure for Catarrh !
A Superb Flesh Producer and Tonic
Guinn’s Pioneeh Blood Renewer cures all
Blood and SkiniDiseases, Rheumatism, Scrofula,
Old Sores. A perfect Spring Medicine.
If not in your market it will he forwarded on
receipt of price. Smull bottles $1.00, large size
Essay on Blood and Skin Disuses mailed free.
Macon Mc.llclne Co.. Macon, tin.
A. FINE
Florida Tonic
Mr. FOSTER S. CHAPMAN,
One of the landmarks of the Georgia Drug
trade, now of Orlando, Florida, writes:
“I can hardly select s single case
ofthe many to whom I have sold
Rubin’s I’liiiieer lllond Renewer
but what have been satisfied: and I
find it the best remedy for all Skin
Diseases I . have ever sold, and a
CHAPMAN,
Orlando, Fla,
A Certain Cure Cor Catarrh!
A Superb Flesh Producer and Tonic!
Outiin'M Plonker Blood llrnrwor
Cures all Blood and Skin Diseuses, Rheumatism,
Scrofula, Old Sores. A perfect Spring Medicine.
If not in your market, it will be forwarded on
receipt of price. Small bottles $1.00, Large $1.76.
Essay on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
MACON MEDICINE COMPANY, Macon, (i
Cares all Blood and Skin Diseases, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Sores.
A PERFECT SPRING MEDICINE.
PRICE, $1.00IPER BOTTLE. HLAljELG-R] SIZE $1,75
Essay on Blood and Skin Disease Mailed Free.
Macon Medicine Company, Macon, Ga.
Wholesale by Brannon & Carson and City Drug Store.
l’KOCEKSIONAI. CARDS.
D r. c. t. osburn,
Dentist,
(Successor to Dr. J. M. Mason.)
Office next door to Puinkin House. Same en
trance as Riddle's gallery. oc4-ly
W F TIGNER, ~
# Dentist,
35% Twelfth street (formerly Randolph street.
e7-ly
SPBI3STG- GOOFS 1
Spring Fashion Plates,
PIECE GOODS!
Suits Made to Order,
CLOTHING!
GLOTHIIT CG!
C TOME and give us your order. Do not wait tilt
j you are pressed by the season, and then wan I
a suit made m a hurry. We are prepared, bow
ever, to get up suits at very short notice. If you
want a suit quick! give us your order. If you
want a suit in thirty days, give us your order, u
you want a suit in sixty days, give us your order
G. J. PEACOCK,
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
By F. M. KiiowIck A- Co., Auctioneers.
BY VIRTUE of an" order issued by the Court of
Ordinary of Muscogee county, < ia.. l will 11
from ofthe auction house ol l-.M. Knowles
Po„ Broad street, city of Columbus. Mason,
Overstocked
—IN—
HAMBURC EDGINGS AND LINEN TOWELS,
We Must Unload
AND WILL OFFER
GOOD BARGAINS
TO ENABLE US TO DO SO.
REMNANTS IN EM DEPARTMENT
AT PRICES TO SUIT YOl
Co., Broad street, city of ( oiumhus. Muscokci j
county, on Tuesday, the 13th da> of July, ism,, ad
A KIRVFN & CO
continued from day to day until the stock is <tis- ■ # m ■ 0 m m «. w Q t
Wesleyan Female institute,
GORDON AND BACON.
READ WHAT THEY SAY!
Will bo Noltl to tlio I'lrNt Lndy or den*
(t email f lint fill In TVi In Way,
—FOR—
$2250 and $1800. Two vacant lots on First avenue.
1600. Six room House, out-house and kitchen*
First avenue.
8000. Comer Sixth avenue and Eighth street, K
aero lot, Store House, Wagon Yard, and
out-houses
1600. Quarter acre lot, 4 room House, up town*
Second avenue.
2000. Quarter acre lot. 8 room House, 2 room
kitchen, well of good water and watei
works, First avenue.
Six Houses and Lots 150 yards from lowef
oridge, in Girard. Will sell separate.
House with A, acre lot in Girard.
One acre lot and four Houses in Girard.
One House and Lot in Chipley.
Two 2 room Houses in city.
I have some fine suburban property which l
will sell cheap. ,
Also several small Farms and some large Farms
Will either sell or exchange for city property.
FOR WENT.
Several Houses from $4 to $20 per month.
Come and sec and ask questions. We cannot
trade unless we come face to face.
J-. O. REEDY,
Real Estate Agent, No.io 12th St.
dtf
Central Line of Boats,
THE OLD ~R EL I ABLE
Columbus, Ga., May 12,1886.
O N and after May 12, 1886, the local rates o
freight on the Chattahoochee,Flint and Apa
lachicola rivers will be as follows:
Flour per barrel 5 cent
Cotton Heed Meal per ton 40 ceut
Cotton per bale •. 25 cents
Other freight in proportion.
Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola, $6:00.
Other points in proportion.
STEAMER NAIAD
Will leave Columbus for Apalachicola via Bain
bridjjo every TUESDAY morning at 8 o’clock, re
turning via Bainbridge.
Above schedule will be run, river, etc., permit-
ting.
•Shippers will please have their freight at boat
by 8 a. m. on day of leaving, as none will be re
ceived after that hour.
Boat reserves the right of not landing at any
point when considered dangerous by the com
mander.
Boat will not stop at any point not named in
list of landings furnished shippers under date of
April 1, 1886.
Our responsibility for freight censes after it has
been discharged at a landing where no person il
there to receive it.
SAM’L J, WHITESIDE, Pres’t.
GEO. B. WHITESIDE, Sec’y and Treas.
febl4-tf
People’s Line
STEAMERS!
The Steamer Milton H. Smith
Will leave Columbus every Saturday at 8 a ra fo»
Bainbridge and Apalachicola. Leave Apalachi
cola Monday at 2 p ra for Bainbridge and Colum
bus. Connect with evening trains at Chatta
hoochee Sundays going down and Tuesday!
coming up, river, fog, &c., permitting. The local
rates of freight and passage to all points on the
Chattahoochee and Apalachicola rivers will be
as follows :
Flour per barrel 10 cento
Cotton per bale 25 cento
Other freights in proportion.
Rates and schedule subject to change without
notice.
Passage from Columbus to Apalachicola $6 00.
Other points in proportion. Through tickets sold
by this line to Savannah, Jacksonville and all
points in East Florida.
Shippers will please have their freight at boat
by 8:00 a m on aay of leaving, as none will be re
ceived after that hour.
Boat reserves the right of not landing at any
point when considered dangerous by the pilot.
Boat will not st p at any point not named in
the publi- .vl i.. 'f landings shed skip
pers for ; -J.
Our re-'” sibility for freight ceases after it has
been di ed at a landing when no person is
there to . v e it. T. H. MOORE,
Agent, Columbus, Ga.
C. D. 0\\ r, Ns,
Trat.c ..auger, Suvannan, Ga. tf
Dr. W. W. Bruce & Son,
Physicians and Surgeons,
r l , HE Senior ofthe firm will devote special at-
I tent ion to Female Diseases. Office over
Frazer & Dozier’s Store. Residence at Lindsay
place. Dr. Robert Bruce’s residence on Rose
Hill. dtf
ALL FIRST-CLASS
StoretBBpers now teen itfor Sale
said deceased. Terms cash. The sale w
continued from day to day until the i
posed of. J- G. 131 RIU S,
| jy2 eodtd Temp. Adm’r hst. P. McArmc.
j Postponed Administrator’s Sale.
BY virtue of an order from the Court ofOrdina-
1 ry of .Muscogee county, Georgia, will tie sold on
. the first Tuesday in Auxust next, on the i-erner of
I Broad an.! T, nth streets, in the c;t> ol < •oiumhus,
, bet«cell the lejfal houisof stile, to the blithest
! bidder, tile following d sc ribed property, to-tvit:
| One hundred and sixty-lix e neres opt.ml, emrt ,,r
I less, lying east ofthe etlv ol < oltaiP.tisanill uo'.yn
and deserihed as part ol lots s.i. and ■ . in the
! Coweta Reserve of said county. Sold as the plot)-
< erty ofE. If. Thornton.
j jysoawlw
t-'oa Ano
INFANTSrffteft f N VAL! D3
it %a£ZZz ; * •
B[
THIS irTf.Y nerfec UVi I u * 11 il 11 e for MOTHER'S
mDk Inr»lunni»* in CIIUl.KIt MM V N I l
Teuthlnir.Ul Mi HIKE A and nil disuses of nhilD ■»
A prctiltfCMU‘<! food for Dynpopllu*, Conriunp-
liven, Convuleaccntm Ac, Her feet nutrient In «»
wasting diseases. Requires no cooking. Keep- in
»U climate... Sold . very w hero. Our book
Cure and Feeding of Infants,” MAILED *KFM
DULHJLli, (aOOUAJLL «L CO., iiostou« Alasfe
jy6 tu th sat 6m
STAsUcrnsTTOisr, -vta.
Pll4J'!SlIr £ #. ! 4 : r ip i f m
iff iilp!ka Kt*
TO PARENTS.
Many linking p<
SKA FOAII
on tains r
ui’tlui in
of th** l.-id finalities of baking
• *:• sab r.U i*. It mptainti no
cut—lin uliun or ammonia.
Opens Peptember 22d, 1880. One of the Fikst Schools for Young
adics in Tin: Union. All Departments thorough. Buildings elegant,
team heat, lias light. Situation Beautiful. Climate splendid. Pupils
•teen States. AH important advantages in one greatly reduced
charge. Board. Washing. Lights, English. Latin. French,* Ge
** . for Scholastic year, from September to .June, vjflO. No t
All f”remistsj,who Invo analyzed Son Foam
'"iim.-nd it. liotisuKeepors wh i have used it
rill have no other. Cooks, whose la-st efforts
lav. failed with other powders, are jubilant
'verSua Foam. Saves time, saves labor, saves
li is positively unequalod. Absolutely pure.
by the lending hotels and r-Mauraiils
i Now York'cit.vaiul throughout the country,
or sale by all tirst-class grocers.
GAXTZ, JONES .0 CO.,
17G Dunne St., N. Y.
For Catalogue write lo
jy7 eod‘2m
:tras.
Rkv. WM. A. HARRIS, D. D., Pie ident.
Staunton, Virginia.
k R. WARD’S SEMINARY,
N ashyillp^, t ^
en* of "iTberai minds in uL*
D Nashville, T«nn. Real Southern Home
for Girls. 350Girls this ye
school. Patronized by men of ijueni »•..« .
fSv citaloi’vfriKs DkI'v|( A lVAlffi.
Je2tfeod2m
M
ORELAIMD>>PARK MILITARY ACABEMY<f5
Near ATLANTA, OA. Twonty-slx .
Lawns, Torracca, Ten-pin Alley, Lake, etc. English, Classical ami Business Courses, unde,
a full corps of excellent tenc)wrn. Complete Military Organization. A thorough school for
Boys. The next year begins Sept. 13. For Circulars address CUAS. M. NEEL, Supt.
ty!3 eodlm
NOW
when business lo dull and prices are low 1$
BUY YOUR fall shooting
KRPEoaU| | |t| Q
■ •■giiuoi waicn-s uuiob.^teirtiinr (i.iods anu^i W lw C*
I> IV.I:IhIIIiiA i:«.. iU-A(l Duane Ml- Vsw VnrU-
V
moraai ALLEXPENSES P*7l?
t homo or to trnvel; stato which prefcrrel
aisosalary wanted SLOAN & CO.Manufacturers^
Wholesale ] lealurs, XS4 George bt., L uicuiuatij O. ,
je!4 wly