Newspaper Page Text
Courier.
M . dWINELL, proprietor.
" WISDOM, JUSTICE, AND MODERATION."
FOUR DOLLARS PER ANNUM.
$0 SERIES.
ROME, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 31, 1879.
VOL. 18, NO, 105
ftuwt and (Cummtttial.
3NSOUDATED APRIL IQ, 1876.
rates OF SUBSCRIPTIONS.
One year
month*
Three months.
kok the weekly.
rz oo
foil the tri-weekly.
One year - 2 00
SU month"-- •""" 1 oo
"yeariy, strictly In advance, the price
,,lCu^gor.erwlllbo»150,
CONTRACT RATES OF ADVERTISING.
Oue square 8 "
their independence, calling themselves
the United States of America. Sever
al years after their independence was
achieved a Constitution was adopted
which created a central Government
with certain powers therein set forth,
which Constitution provides as follows:
“The powers not delegated to the
United States by the Constitution, nor
prohibited by it to the States, are re
served to the States respectively or to
the people.”
These reserved powers are the great
mass of the powers of government.
You are protected in almost all of your
rights of person and property by the
State sovereignty alone. Our whole
code of lawB defining the rights of per
son and proporty, and providing reme
dies and punishment for wrongB, which
make up the very body of civilization,
is adopted or created and enforced by
the States and not by the General Gov
ernment. Outside of the scope ot this
State sovereignty lie the powers spe
One »q““ re ll>r<!0 ~", ,2 00
One square twelve months....". ® ™
Cne-fourth column one mouth •
One-fourth column thr™ months lo 00
rfe-fourth column twelve months 6000 cially delegated to the other sovereign
one-half column ono month 15 00 jy—trie whole people of the United
one-haif column three months & States operating through the General
.halt column nix months....... ~ “
One-half column twelve months 80 00
§. column one mouth ...
One column three months oO 00
One column six months.... M00
one column twelve months 120 00
The foregoing rates aro for either Weekly or
MAVcekly. When published In both papers, 60
percent, auiltlonnl upon table rotes.
Gen. Ewing’s Speech.
Gen. Tom Ewing, Democratic candi
date for Governor of Ohio, recently
made a speech to ten thousand people
at Lancaster, Ohio, his-home. It is a
ringing appeal for a return to Demo
cratic usages and for reform in the
Government. Its great length precludes
its publication entire, and we therefore
give only Borne of its concluding para
graphs. On the subject of a free bal
lot-box he says:
The question of free elections has as
sumed a prominence never before given
it, although the statutes out of which it
arises have been long in force, and the
Democracy have heretofore repeatedly
attempted to repeal them. I may as
well tell you plainly the reason the De
mocracy forced the issue, now, though
only six members of Congress are to be
chosen this year. The people were
swindled out of their choice for Presi
dent in 187G. That fraud was accom
plished by the audacious and revolu
tionary threat of the leaders of the Re
publican party, that, when the election
returns came to be counted, the Senate
and House of Representatives should
not count them as contemplated by the
Constitution, and as practiced from the
foundation of our Government, but that
Mr. Ferry, of Michigan, who happened
I to be President pro tempore of the Sen
ate should himself exercise the power
of determining all questions arising in
the count. This threat, backed up by
President Grant with a show of bring
ing troops to Washington and sending
ironclads to New York, was successful
in accomplishing the swindle by the
indirect method of the eight to seven
commission. It needed no gift of proph
«y jo toll that a party which was ready
to disregard the Constitution and al
precedents in ascertaining the result of
a Presidential election in 187G, would
resort to any measure, however unjust
or violent, to win a second victory in
18S0, The army had been used to ter
rorize voters at the South and to pack
“ud disperse Legislatures. Why would
it not be used again if the law permit
ting this use remained on the statute
nooks? Supervisors and marshals had
u ..appointed by the thousands at
csch Congressional election in the large
cities, made up chiefly of bummers,
Md paid out of the public treasury five
', 8 a day, many of them ten days
* n stretch, to force the election of Re
publican members of Congress against
‘®»illof the people. Hundreds of
,. ,n lr j the Soutli had been indicted for
W interference with supervisors
, j ■narshals, and were being tried un-
naA d *t/ 0r ei ?I ,ane lli n g juries which
I, 7,7“ lu convict— making the jury
.*• *? 0(1 cub and shameful mockery
J, 8tlce ; Was it right to leave this
J n Jj w, .*8 fho lawful authority to
in l • cmlhons of the people’s money
imnri nR c. ullies to threaten, arrest and
mpn on State electors and State Judges
t 0 °j election ? We determined
Ihf, v* le 183Ue on these laws now, in
whi h" pre ? et ' in e tlie great contest, in
pWed'tn „ foared they would be em-
1-L thwart the will of the people,
the Il r , e8ult °f llle struggle, so far, is
PackiiJ - ep . ea of the odious system of
payment JU p ne8 ’ 11,8 P r °hibition of the
troon s ?[ m ' ,no .V to send or maintain
bfaLmn- e .- po " s ’ and the withholding
notion ptlutlon8 f° r fees of marshals
10 U ntthf r 39 m 8 , ee wllat the fees are
the p.L, f ? r ; We have appealed from
10 <lecida t? 1 lo the Peo P le - You have
to Pay hnn i co , n treversy. If you want
es ch p„ n n ^ rei *. 8 thousands of dollars
ngressinnai election to have
cgressional
®bala"an!l aro . Und the polls and mar-
State electir- 168 ™ 0 ' nB1,00t aud control
inspect and
can ticiL * n °®cers, vote the Republi-
tr «Pen,l „ i „ the Democracy will nov
Vou an\ dollar for thatseivice.
Iiav e fellow-citizens, that we
Oov M '“JZ ,V a ‘ted States a fora, of
men. mtherto unknown among
that tho the result of the fact
8e Parate n ,» r e - en colonies were eaoh
Qn< Ier diant^^ n, ? at,ons °f government
^ttfederatmi 01 oh “ ao t®ra, and that they
^ 118 States and declared
Government. These two sovereigns,
the Republic and tho State, have dis
tributed belween them by the decree of
iartition, the Constitution of the United
tates, all of the powers regarded by
the people as safe to bo en*rusted to
any government.
Now, by the Constitution of the
United States, the whole power to pro
vide for and regulate elections of Mem
bers of Congress was left with the re
spective States; but for fear any of them
ight fail altogether to provide for such
elections, Congress was given power to
itself, by law, to provide for them. If
Ohio should refuse to pass a law to elect
members of Congrer b, the United States
might pass such a law, and provide for
the times, places, and manner of hold
ing such elections and the ai
of all the election officers. But none of
the States ever did refuse or fail to pass
such laws, and from the foundation of
our Government down until 1871, the
elections were conducted without any
interference whatever by Federal offi
cers. In 1871 the Republicans enacted
this Federal election law. It did not
pretend to repeal, alter or amend any
of the State laws providing for the ap
pointment of State officers to conduct
these elections or prescribing their du
ties, but it gave the Federal Courts and
marshals the power to appoint supervi
sors and deputies, to inspect and direct
the action of State officers in the per
formance of their duties under State
election laws. From the very nature of
our Government—from the separate
character and powers of the General
and the State Government—it is just as
unconstitutional to subject State officers
while performing duties under valid
State laws to the supervision or control
of Federal officers, as it is to subject
Federal officers to the supervision or
control of State officers. That sort of
interference is organized anarchy. If
submitted to in respect to this subject
by the States there are no duties which
State officers are called on to perform
which the Federal Government may
not supervise and control. Mr. Foster
says that “tho great question is, whether
the State or the Nation is supreme.” I
say the great question is, whether the
Republic and the State are co-ordinate
agencies of government, each supreme
in its sphere as defined by the Federal
Constitution; or whether the State can
exercise no powers of government not
subject to Federal supervision and con
trol.
This assumption of sole supreme pow
er for the Federal Government illus
trates the fact that the pendulum is
swinging from the extreme of secession
on the one side to an equally danger
ous extreme of consolidation on the
other. Secession held that the Union
might be divided whenever any State
believed that the Constitution had been
violated. On that theory the Republic
was but a rope of sand. Consolidation
demands that the Federal Government
yet among us, he would, I believe, ap
prove their effort to resist, by peaceful
methods, the attempt to impair the dis
tinctive feature of our system of govern
ment on which depends the perpetua
tion of popular liberty.
My friends, all the policies of the Re
publican party I have dismissed this
evening, though apparently differing
widely in character, are in fact closely
related in purpose and effect. I believe
them all to be part of a general tenden
cy of the classes which control that
party to practically subvert popular
government. The steps are first to de
stroy the independence of the masses
by immensely increasing the burdens
of debts and taxes and by cutting off the
opportunities and rewards of labor, and
by the same act swell the wealth and
power of tho favored classes; and then, by
allying the money power to the illimita
ble forces of Government patronage and
plunder, to control elections by bribery
and force and practically subvert the
free rule of the ballot. Look at the
powers whioh may be brought to bear to
effect this result 1 See the vast growth
of corporations, some of whioh already
rule with an iron hand the greatest
States of the Republic; look at the two
thousand National Banks, holding al
most every business man and business
interest in their graBp; see the veteran
corps of one hundred thousand active
partisans paid from the public Treasu
ry ; and tell me whether, if the policy
which has impoverished the mass of the
people and piled up the vast fortunes
which have risen as rapidly os cloud
mountains in the sky, shall be per
mitted to go on, these powers, backed by
the army and navy, may not Boon be
strong enough to make the rule by bal
lot as completely a farce as it was in the
republic of the bogus Napoleon.
Neither the great wealth holding pow
ers of this Republic, nor the party
whioh represents them, can be trusted
with the preservation of the sacred .fire
of liberty. They have not sufficient in
terest in preserving it. They are at
least as safe under a corrupt and aristo
oratio rule. They want privilege, ex-
eruption, aristocracy; not equal rights,
equal taxation, and the ballot. It may
be long before they strike at the mere
form of our government, but they have
struck aud are striking at spirit. I
Bpeaknotof individuals but of classes;
for among the wealthiest men are many
of both parties who love and are faith-
ful to our Democratic system of govern
ment. But it is the mass of the people
—the farmers, the owners of small in
dustries, and those whose dependence
and hope for themselves and their chil
dren is in well paid labor—who have the
profoundest interest in the preservation
of every part of this most perfect form
of government, in which is set the jewel
of popular liberty. They have it in
their keeping—in the free ballot, held
by independent men—and if they would
hand it down to their children,
they must protect themselves from im
poverishment by insidious finance leg
islation, and prevent the ballot box from
being wrested from the control of their
Home government.
Rome Railroad—Change of Schedule
O N AND AFTER WEDNESDAY, MAY 28th,
182#, the trains on the Rome Railroad will
run aa follow!:
MORNING TRAIN.
Leaves Rome daily at 6.80 A. M
Return to Rome et a....10.00 A. M
SATURDAY ACCOMMODATION.
Leave! Rome (Saturday only) at 6.00 P. M
Return to Rome at 8.00 P. M
Morning tr> la makee oonnaotlnn with traia on
W. A A. Railroad at Klngeton, for the Weet and
South. O. M. PENNINGTON, Gen’l Supt.
JNO. E. STILLWELL. Tiokot Agent.
shall exercise all powers which the
dominant party may think expedient.
, -i», K um B jun ra wuiuu On that theory all tho boundaries of
Packed them with partisans pre-deter- Federal power bo carefully marked by n } 8 t.
mined to convict— mnlrlno tim inn, our forefathers will be obliterated, and
we shall have one great imperial Gov
ernment, to whioh the States will have
the same relations that the counties Mid
townships now have to the State. Se
cession would have broken up the
Union into petty, but free Republics
consolidation would swallow up the
States and sink liberty in an empire.
Fellow-citizens, I was not brought
up in the school of strictest construc
tion of the Constitut’on, and far loss in
the school known as “State Rights.” My
venerated father, under and about
whose root you are assembled to-night,
who gave a large part of his life to the
study of our complex form of govern
ment, taujht his sons to learn from the
Constitution, as expounded by the fath
ers and the courts, that the General
Government is supreme only within the
scope of its limited and defined powers
and the States and the people thereof
also supreme in the exercise of all pow
ers not granted to the Federal Govern
ment. He taught them that it was
equally the duty of the patriot to main
tain in full vigor all the powers granted
*„ *i,o fjannrnl Government, and all tne
to ‘he General Government, am
powers reserved to the States respec
tively or to tho people; so> that our dual
form of government might not be lost
through either the centripetal or me
centrifugal forces of the system. He
willingly saw his sons go forth to battlo
for the constitutional powers of the
Federal Government; and now, were lie
Innocent Amusement.
United States Mail Line—The Ooosa
River Sthamers I
O N AND AFTER NOVEMBER 6vn, 1828,
Steamers on tho Oooia Rtvor will run 01
or lohedule al follow*, lupplying all tha Foit
Iffioei on Mail Routo No. 6189 s
Leavo Roma every Tuoiday and Friday
at ' 7 a. u,
Arriro at Uadeden evory Wednesday
and Saturday at 2 A. M.
Loavo Qadedon every Wodneiday and
Saturday at 8 A. M.
Arrlva at Rome every TLursday and
Sunday at 2 P. M.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Gan') Supt
1879. SPRING & SUMMER TRADE. 1879.
New Goods! Fine Goods!
MRS. T. bTwILLIAMS,
M ILL.IKTER.,
Noa 61 Broad Street, Rome, Ga.
T hanking my many customers for the liberal patronage given me
in the pait, l am proud to aav that I am better prepared to attend to ilieir want! than ever
before. I have now Id itore and to arrive Bonnet!, Hate, Flowori, Plumes, Sllki, Velreli, Plusbei,
Ribbons, Ornaments, Hair Goods, Zephyrs, Combs, Notion!, ole., oto., which I have telected in
S erson In the Northern markets. My Goods aro in tho Latest Styloe, end I have my Trimming
ono with good material by experienced milliners. Call and examine my goodo and gel my prices
re purchasing elsewhere. (octl7 tw wtf
Selma, Rome and Dalton Railroad—
Change of Sohedule.
BLUE MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
O N AND AFTER SUNDAY, MAY 26th,
1879, trains will ran as follows:
GOING NORTH.
No. 3. No. I.
Daily. Daily.
(Sunday excepted.)
Leaves Selma. 4 00 P M 6.00 A M
Leaves Randolph 7.16 P M 8.16 A M
Leaves Colore.. 10.00 P M 9.36 A M
Leaves Talladega 1.60 AM 11.46 AM
Leaves Oxford - 3.20 A M 12.41 P M
Leaves Anniston 3 50 A M 12.66 P M
Leaves Jacksonville 6.00 A M 1.28 P M
Leaves Patona 5.50 A M 2.02 P M
Leaves Teeumseh.. 7.05 AM 2.44 PM
Leaves Prior’s 7 36 A M 3.12 P M
Leares Cave Bpring 8.10 A M 3.31 P M
Leaves Rome... 9.56 AM 4.20 P M
Leaves Platnvillo 10 55 A M 6.00 P M
Arrives Dalton 12.60 PM 0.15 PM
GOING SOUTH.
No. 4. No. 3.
Dally. Daily.
(Sunday exoepted )
Leaves Dalton 3.10 P M 8.00 A M
Leaves Plalnvllls 6.00 P M 0.10 A M
Leaves Rome 6.85 P M 0.56 A M
Leaves Cave Spring..... 7.45 P M 10.39 A M
Leaves Prior’s 8.15 P M 10.68 A M
Leaves Teoumssh 8.40 F M 11.06 A M
Leaves Patona 0 55 P M 11.56 A M
Leaves Jacksonville.....10.40 P M 12.28 P M
Leaves Anniston 11.50 P M 12.56 P M
Leaves Oxford 12 20 A M 1.03 P M
Learta Talladega 1.00 A M 1.07 P M
Leaves Calera 0.00 A M 4.35 P M
Loaves Randolph 8.20 A M 5.00 P M
Arrives Selma 11.25 A M 8.C0 F M
No. 1. Gonneots olosely at Dalton with E. T.
Va. A Ga. R. R. for all Tennessee and Virginia
mineral springs, and for all Eastern eitles. Alio
with the W. A A. K. R. for Chattanooga and all
Western eitles.
No. 2. Conneeting with E. T. Va. A Ga. and
W. A A. railroads at Dalton, makes close con
nection at Calera for Montgomery, Mobile and
New Orleans.
No. 3. Connects at Calera with through mall
train of L. A N. A Gt. So. R. R. for Eastern and
Western cities.
No. 4. Leaving Dalton at 3.10 p.eonnaots
at Calera with L. A N. A Gt. So. R. K. for Mont
gomery, Mobile and New Orleans.
NORMAN WEBB, Gan. Bupl.
RAT KNIGHT, G. P. A.
W. S. CRANE, Agent, Rome, Go.
HARDY, BOWIE & CO.,
WHOLESALE HARDWARE DEALERS,
BROAD STREET, ROME, GA.
WE CARRY IN STOCK
RUBBER BELTING, 3 ply, 2, 2 1-2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 inches;
“ “ 4 ply, 8, 10, 12 and 14 inches.
RUBBER PACKING, 1-8, 3-16 and 1-4 inches.
tsr-Strictly Best Goods Made.
HEMP PACKING—MANILLA ROPE—LACE LEATHER—CUT LACINGS—
VFRIGHT MILL SAWS— CROSS CUT SAWS— ONE MAN CROSS CUT
SAWS—SAW SWAGES—FILES-BELT RIVETS—FINE HAMMERS—
WRENCHES, dr., making Complete Line of Mill Furnishings.
, , OUR PRICES ARE ALWAYS RICHT.
marOtwwtl
OLDEST AND BEST
DR. J. BRADFORD’S
liver & Dyspeptic Medicine
This is a Prompt and Certain Cure for all Diseases of the Liver,
Such as Dyspepsia, Headache, Chills and Fever, &c.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY CA8E, OR MONEY RETURNED.
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS GENERALLY.
J. Gk YBISER,
Dealer in Drugs, Medicines, Garden Seeds, &c.,
Sole Proprietor, Rome. Ga.
R. T. Hoyt, Wholeoale and Retail Agent for Rome, Ga.
febl tw wly
Greenville, N. C. July 25.—One of
the most novel contests known to the
orting world took place here to-day,
. ,’ith a desire to overdo the white peo
ple, the negroes arranged a butting
match for a purse of $450 and the oham-
B ion cap. The entries were Charles
iurlington and Bob Brooks, two pow
erful built negro men of about 24
years. The butting took plaee in a
large lot on the outskirts of the town,
and was witnessed by several hundred
people. The contest opened at 11
o’clock, and continued with unabated
fury for two hours. At the start Burl
ington was the favorite, and was loudly
cheered by the crowd, but he soon be
gan to Bhow signs of fagging, and after
the first hour failed to come up to time,
and had to be accorded a brief respite
for rest and breath. As soon as the
novel contest was renewed, Brook’s re
markable powers of endurance and
thick skull began to tell on his antago
nist A few minutes before the close of
the contest Burlington fell down from
exhaustion and had to be carried out of
the ring, and medical attendance sum
moned. He was terribly bruised and
butted about the cranium and face, and
died a few hours after leaving the field.
Brooks got the purse, and will, no
doubt, be arrested and get a good term
of imprisonment in the state prison for
manslaughter.
Spring and Summer Sohedule of the
Steamer Sidney P. Smith.
O N AND AFTER MONDAY, APRIL 21st,
1879, tha steamer Sidney P. Smith will run
es follows:
Leave Rome Monday at. 11 A. n
Arrive et Gadsden Tuesday at 8 a. it
Arrive at Greensport Tuesday at 12 h.
Leave Greensport Tuesday at 1 r. x
Arrive at Gadsden Tuesday at 6 p. x
Arrive at Rome Thursday et. 6 r. x
S. P. SMITH, President.
Afghanistan—^Triumphal Entry
of the British Dictator.
London, July 28.—Dispatches from
Lahore aunounce the triumphal entry
of Major Cavagnari, the political agent
who accompanied the army during the
Afghan war into Cabaal. He was es
corted by a strong force of cavalry, de
tailed from Telia!abord, and received
with most distinguished honors by the
Afghan troops in garrison. At the
southwestern gate, at which the entry
was made, he was met by Yakoob Khan,
and most cordially saluted. If ® aa
the prison over this gate that Yahoob
was incarcerated for seven years pre
vious to the flight of his late fathor to
Russian Turkiatan. The populace re
ceived the mission with every demon
stration of respect. Cavagnan’s posi
tion will ho similar to that occupied by
the British resident at Webal, and tbe
whole foreign and much of tho domestic
E olioy of Afghanistan will bo decided
y him.
W. & A. E. E. aud its Connections.
“KENNESAW ROTJTK I”
The following eohednle takes effect May II, 1871
NORTHWARD.
No. 1 No. 3 No. II
Leavo Atlanta... 2 00 pm... 6 20 am... 6 00 pm
Arr Oarteriville.. 6 36 pm... 8 42 am... 8 00 pm
Arr Kingston 7 04 pm... 011am... 0 24 pm
Arr Dalton 841 pm...i064 am...11 46 pm
ArrOhottnnoogo.1016 pm...l2 42 pm.
SOUTHWARD.
No. 3 No. 4 No. 13
Lve Chattanooga 4 00 p m... 6 16am ..
Arrive Dalton 64lpm... 701au... 100am
Arr Kingston 7 IB pm... 9 07 am... 4 10am
Arr Oartersvilla.. 812pm... 042 am... 618am
Arr Altanto. 1010 p m.i.ll 68 a m... 0 80 a m
Pullman Palace Oars ran on Nos. 1 and 2
betwoon Now Orisons and Baltimore.
Pullman Palaee (fare ran on Noa. 1 ana 4
between Atlanta and Nashville.
Pullman Peleeo Oers run oo Nos. S end 2
between Louisville and Atlanta.
ftm* No ehange of oara between New Orleans
Mobile, Montgomery, Atlanta end Baltimore, ana
only one ehange to Now York.
Passenger! leaving Atlanta at 4.20 P. M. ar
rive in New York the seoond afternoon thereaf
ter at 4.00 P. M.
Excursion Tiokets to tho Virginia Springs and
various Rummer Resorts will be on sale in Ni
Orleans, Mobile, Montgomery, Columbus, Mate
Savannah, Augusta and Atlanta, at greatly
reduood rates 1st of June.
Partial desiring a whole ear through to the
Virginia Springs or to Baltimoro, should ad-
tress the undersigned.
Parties contemplating traveling should send
for a copy of Ktnnuau) Route Quiette, cot tain-
<ng schedules, ate.
xV-Ask mr tiokets vie*-Kennoiew Routo.
B. W. WRENN,
Gen’l Passenger end Tleket Agt, Atlanta Ga.
“Fill of PerfectionIt is a hard “Pill” for the
Old-Time Sewing Machine Companies to take, but
when ihe WHITE MACHINE comes in direct Com
petition with them theg are obliged to haul in their
old Machines. They don’t find any second hand,
made over White Machines, neither can you buy a
White on two or three years time. They are sold for
Cash, or on short time, at lowest possible price. They
are so constructed that the Lost Motion in all the
wcatHugparts caused from long and constant use can
be taken up by the simple turning of a screw, there»
fore they are obliged to outlast any other Machine
not provided tvith this necessary device,
Statements of Agents of other Maohines to the Contrary Notwithstanding,
They have more space under the arm, and are the lightest running
Machine made. Therefore pay no attention to wliat others say, hut try
them yourself and buy the White if you want the best. For sale by
jui 24 twwti E. C. HOUGH, Borne, Ga.
Georgia B. B., Augusta to Atlanta
D AY PASSENGER TRAINS ON GEORGIA
Railroad, Atlanta to Augusta, ran aa below:
ueavos Augusta at - 8.00 a.x
Leaves Atlanta at.. -7.00 a.x
Arrives Augusta at. 8.80 r. x
Arrive! at Atlanta at. *.00 r. x
Night Pasieogsr Trains as follows!
Leaves Auguste at.. 8.16 r. x
Loaves Atlantaat -E-G r. x
Arrives at Augusta -8.00 a. x
Arrives at Atlanta al.... k
Accommodation Train as follows :
Loaves Atlants 6 00 f- “
Lo&yoi Covington 7^' Jt
A.rriY®B Atlanta... ~
Arrtvoi Covington 30 r.
“F\ O. P
R. T. HOYT.
II. D. COTHRAN
HOYT & COTHRAN,
Wholesale Druggists,
POME, GEORGIA,
HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LAROE CONSIGNMENT OF
Green and Black Teas,
WHICH THEY OFFER TO THE TRADE AT
NEW YORK WHOLESALE PRICES
FREE OF FREIGHT.
jullOtwwtf
ALBIN OMBERG,
Bookseller, Stationer & Printer
IVo. 33 Broad Street,
Has just received a Large Stock
CROQUET SETS, BASE BALLS, ETC.
A LARGE STOCK WALL PAPER.
nprOJw-wly
<©“WRITE FOR SAMPLES ANT) PRICES.-foa