Newspaper Page Text
the thomaston herald
published by
g. w *
fc VERT SATURDAY MORNING.
TERMS.
0n fear 15 0
civ Montliß
a;, payments INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
[ t’ii \L ABVEKTLSLNG KATES.
„ or**t mnce war, the following ar
AS h ' re V l „ ,rices of ordinaries, sc.—ro be paid
■ he price* k a ' ni
Ti,fnyDa/S 6 25
Fifty i* l 'S - „ r giir. of teu Lines soo
; jn ,OfLSft‘W*; >t ;t 7 00
si x Months - f 3 , 11 HS pr . sqr 2 Otf
Ten D<l “ s v 3 *i,K3 —For these Sales, for every ri fa
Sites, per square $5 00. .
Professional Paros.
ir u\vn'VlCH, Attornay at Law and Solic
\ f 8 u!nkrDtey. Practices In all the
lr V r .“,SSiFederal. Office to Cheuey-s
r „,-is, Icjtn Stau,
__
b.m^tubner,
;} given to collection of claims -
Pr "•* . f '. .! ‘ T onice Nov. *>,-ly
yfflee over r xpress vimcc.
„ . y W. X. Beall
j W. Gbkbnk. f ' j
IIKKENE & BEALL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
THOMASTON, - - GEORGIA.
will Practice Law m the Counties of the PUn j
" n ,, 0 f Atlanta circuit, and Talbo ,
* r rt <>r be (’ attaboochee Circuits; also.in th ■
VSsl States District court of Georgia at Atlr n j
to and Suvannah. JaD ~ 2 ’~ tf !
\ nr’-I. M. BLALOCK, Dentist,
r n mion fia. When you visit Thomaston, call
> v and have your Dental Work done as
} V* J,e Teeth inserted, teeth tilled, teeth
'rn ted teeth attended to in the best style of
, i itntal Art Call once, and you will not only
i f !iii lull will bring all your friends, Includ
• : JSr sweetheart and mother-in-law. Office,
r’ os Sorthwest corner, Cheney’s brick bulld
op sUlrs, Noria j&arvh 22. 1873.-1 y
pOTELS.
IWWNpOTEL
Reduction of Board!
§3,00 lE!XX DAY !
it E. BROWN & UN. proprietors of this pop-
Pi, uiar hotel, would Inform their numerous
tr! a,is that on ami alter the first day of Septem
ber 'll" rates will fie reduced to $3 per day.
! iit* pr prleiors would respectfully return their
gra •tiii blanks for the very liberal patronage ex
t<‘iiil-iitotlwliouac for nearly twenty years, and
a;,-uri' their many frtohds that we will use our
in'.st cuar,ivors for the future to give the same
satisfaction that we have in the past. Every ut
teutloii given to tube's and ramllies, and large
i mis always In re.ullue-s far commercial travel
ers vlglttug Macon.
Jan. u, tf E. E. BROWN & SON.
GREEK HOUSE.
j. o. soft
FORSYTH, ----- GEORGIA.
ISoaial :
1 Meal 50
J|, 0 2,00
5 'HVK.... 10,00
u .'O' an i attentive Poters. Table supplied with
'••• ,T - to.'t to,- market ullords. Baggage ear
■■ u! 1 *od tr ai toe Depot free of Cuarge, and a
r u i k to and from Depot to Hotel.
Viv.ji, tr
bTIMILEEiELD i 01Te7
MUbBERRY ST.,
MACON, GA.
'• s . L Whitehurst, Eroprietress
1 INBIEXr BOARD PElt DAY $2.0
. ii irb ami per month, on third floor. s2sand
'' "H i-- lay *>oar,i *2O per moLth. This
; ; " >uv.-!ueutly located next door to the
i mid has been thoroughly renowned
OCt. 31,-tl
house,
SYNNAH, u V.
A. B. LUCE, Proprietor
(BOAHD I*EK DAY $3,00)
I JAME - OCONXELL, Ci.KTiK.
gARNESVILLE HOTEL,
p. T. POUrJD,
Pr Prietor, ... Barnesville. G*.
NATIONAL hotel
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
JAMES E. OWENS
p ROpRiETOR,
‘ ' " Hedmoni and Orange Hotels,
Lynchbuig, Virginia.
REHCVATLD, elegantly furnishe
' ‘ Daj\ Board $3 per Day
uirrigd to and from depot free o
Caarge.
a li y e, family paper, fall of
•' - >i ,r •s'nnuT fading. No sect aria n
' •*.ave?r’ 2’ p ffs Dor advertisements. On
r •••’i i r'r ( >V L‘f and 10 cer l ts for 3 specimen be-
E Qts waraS,! ’ *,r s Plen<Hd Map Premiums
P l; H.i.f,^Trs, ver^wllere - Commissions
*' Arvh Wasli'nSt., Boston, Mass.,
ua., ra, 4^
SULEIMLNOS
' v*t ARK and upright.
'-rt'U, pu^! ade : Tl ie touch elastic, the tone
bellow md s^,fj t en lllr DUgh the entire scale,
CONCERTO ORGANS
! ; tone or beauty they defy
'™r° "
u. 5r part Prices Extremely Low
t ; N c sond-h ; nirt B wS* bala,lce ln “untidy pay
ti a ' U ' F -X r s n u U fv.p?3! umeuts at great oar
' .. N - A liberal discount to
' thurehes, .Schools. Lodges,
L- xd\ Ll'd ogues mailed. HORACE
’A. 4-Si Broadway, New York. P. O.
IA 4W
r' i,:i iJp and sav Cost.
■\ u 10
■L'°wie ! nd *tdd ’o me will please
B? ftge mentf, n n f st ‘ tt,e or oiake some ar
■ :. l 'W ,1 w , hat tli ev "we. It this
Ir* L , eir claims will be placed in
I a lawyer for collection.
■ Respectfully,
O. R. Garside.
"$Lg -■ -.*.ii.uioi..
' v ?* •P-'Tr*l of r<^
SSffl By .•... c a. r*„T; * l *m A lr!<rle trial *tt\* M
■■ k. *" ;V r “• wren*- h. Bt ru r- IBJ
Bf| I aS.in lr a 9st £ ?* rkct "••raprepared
B 8 ; - - V,V < r].-. u t
I V.‘LV WV ‘ ? * * 'raiwr*. tUUI B
I KfeLl *> w 0 L I> ®. Cut| e rt ', he.. *. Brest HR
■ **° I1 kind.of f-jfl
VOL. VI.
HIE THOVABTON HERALD
D. CARA W AY, - - Pciuikik.
L C. McMI( II A EL. - Editor.
Thomasto Ga., Saturday. Ap’l. 17. 75.
SNOW SLIDE.
HOW AVA LA NC'fMS ARE Ff'BMF.D IN THE
RO( KY MOUNTAINS.
A Nevada paper, s pen king v >f the
avalanches of snow which have been
so destructive ol life and property this
winter, says: Ihe purely sliding ava
lanche, or snow-slides, are such as
occur in dry or mere moist snow,
while the rolling avalanches take
place when the snow is wet or suffi
ciently moist to form into balls by
rolling. Ihe avalanches that occur
red in Virginia City were of the gen
uine rolling description, the kind
most dreaded and the kind most de
structive in valleys of the Alps. A
very small beginning, when the snow
is in the proper condition may end in
a destructive avalanche. A ball of
snow no larger than a man’s head,
started high up on the side of Mount
Davidson, might have swept away
several houses at the foot of the
mountain. The fearful force of the
avalanche was shown here when one
broke into a house and killed two
men, and another demolished two
houses and buried five persons, who
were rescued with much difficulty.
A further illustration of the terrible
force and destructive powers of the
avalanche is to be found in the fact
that twenty-eight Chinamen were
killed by one that fell near Genoa.
As we have said, a small ball of snow
started high up on the slope of Mount
Davidson would result in a genuine
avalanche. In rolling a distance of
fifty yards in the moist snow would
become four ar five fiel in diameter,
when it would burst, and each piece
of it would an instant after form a
ball of large size; these in turn would
explode as soon as they acquired a
certain weight un-.l velocity, and a
moment after there would be hun
dicds and thousand of these balls in
motion, all bounding down the steep
side of the mountain.
\N bile hundreds of these are explo
ding or just forming, other hundreds
•are or full size, and are picking up
rocks, dirt, and all manner of rubbish
u nieh becomes involved in the grand
downward rush. Toward the latter
part of their course the balls become
so numerous that they bound and
clasii together so often that they are
broken before they acquire any great
size, and the whole avalanche is then
a rdunging, sliding mass of enow.
The avalanche which knocked two
houses to pieces and buried five per
sons started but a few hundred yards
above where the houses stood. It
started at a bunch of rocks which pro
jected fifteen or twenty feet above the
the general surface of the slope of the
mountain. On these rocks the snow
had fallen and accumulated to the
depth of about three feet, hanging m
places as snow is seen to do on the
eaves of a house. From one of these
rocks fell a bunch of snow, which be
gan to roll down the hill, and the re
sult was a destructive avalanche.
Doubtless the avalanche which killed
two men started in much the same
way.
NO SCHOOLMASTER WANTED.
Some years ago some emigrants
from Ohio and Illinois settled in a
little town in this State, and soon
began to agitate for the erection of a
schoolhouse and the employment of a
teacher. A town meeting was called
to consider the proposition; and one
of the Northerners made a very neat
little speech, telling of the blessings
which education had brought with, it
to Ohio and Illinois. When he had
set down an old man in the corner
arose, gave the customary hitch to
his corduroys, pushed back his hat a
trifle and auswered thus: “Stranger,
up in yer Ohio State you've got a big
penitentiary full of people; h'aint
yer? Well, yer’ve got lamin’ up tiiar!
Lp in yer Illinonois State yer’ve got
a big penitentiary full of people;
verve got lamin’ thar! But I’ve
lived here for thirty-seven years in
peace and happiness. I’ve raised
nine boys and tew gals, and I sleep
pertickly sound o’ night, ’cos I ain’t
’fraid any of my boys’ll go the peni
tentiary for forgin’ notes, ’cos they
can't none of ’em write!” (Sensation in
che audience and sympathy manifes
ted.) Another of the new-comers
then spoke, arguing in favor of educa
tion; and then a tall, lank native
stood up and “fixing the Northerner
with his glittering eye,” made his
speech, "See, hear mister, ain’t you
Tin AM ASTON. GA.. SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 17, 1875.
the machine tnan?” “Yes,” suid he;
“I did sell some machines here last
year.” “Wa’ul when the wheat got
ripe, all the people went to neighbor
Jobneon's to see how yer mowin ma
chine would operate. We got the
tarnel thing into thi field, and
neighbor Johnson he hitched his
young tiily into the shafts, She allers
was a fractious critter, and the first
tning we knowed she gave a flounce
and caught neighbor Johnson’s boy
Biii’s leg and cut it clean orf! (Man
ifest sensation.) Then, mister, in
just about two weeks yer pardner
'•ome around peddlin’ wooden legs,
and neighbor Johnson had to buy
one of them ’ere things. Nice ed
dieated people you are! You under
stand it, you do! Eust you sell the
machine, and then yer pardner be
furnishes wooded leges!” This en
ded the matter, and no schoolmaster
will be welcome in that village for
some time to come.— San. Antonia
Herald.
SPELLING BEES.
The following from the Constitu
tion is the most sensible and liberal
view we have yet seen concerning this
highly entertaining, instructive and
innocent pastime:
Kurely in the history of this country
has any ephemial amusement taken so
strong a hold upon the people as that
of the spelling bee. Without a solita
ry exception, so far as we have seen,
its success has been complete and im
mensely enthusiastic, wherever it has
appeared. The mania, for to such
the excitement over it amounts, has
affected all classes and ages alike, and
whole communities are swayed by it
with an irrcsistable power. When
the night of the entertainment ar
rives, one thing is quite certain, aim
that is a crowded house. Street cars
are loaded to their utmost capacity,
the streets are full of wen ling multi
tudes, carriages block the front of the
amusement hall, and the box-office is
besieged by a surging mass of human
ity. It might be interesting to in
quire iuto the secret of this marvelous
success, but such is not the purpose
of the piesent article.
There is one charming feature about
the spelling bee, and that is its abso
lute purity. i'here is no exhibition
or amusement which is superior to it
in this regard. Its most ardent at
tendants are ministers and ladies..and
it militates in no respect against re
ligion or morals. And yet equally
delighted with it are the rougher
classes of societies, and so we find, at
last, an amusement, perfectly legiti
mate and moral, equally entertaining
to the most virtuous and most vi
cious, the most re lined and most rude.
This reflection is a very pleasant one,
and we go a step further to remark
another feature of this all-conquering
sensation.
The spelling bee is generally re
garded in the simple light of a fun
ereating expedient for charitable pur
poses; but we think it aserts higher
claims upon our esteem than this pop
ular estimate awards. To our mind
it seems clear that the entertainment
is educative in its character to a very
great degree, and accomplishes no
small result. We shall not enter here
into any disquisition upon the bene
fits of correct spelling, for these are
familiar to all intelligent persons.
Consider the study which it provokes,
the extended knowledge imparted
to the thousands that hangs intently
upon the sounds ol the wordy con
flict. But more than this, consider
the increased information acquired of
the meaning of words, of the power
and scope of the English language.
Still more does it accomplish in stim
ulating researcli and investigation,
for of the thousands who attend these
bees, it is safe to affirm that the large
majority, on their return home, pro
ceed to interview their dictionaries
for their owu satisfaction, on doubtful
and disputed points. In view of these
considerations we are decidedly of the
opinion that there is something more
in the spelling bee than a little un
bending of dignity in a generous spir
it ot fun making for benevolent ends.
It is an entertainment whose benefi
cial results will reach farther than
may be readily computed, and will
materially affect the life and business
of many in years to come.
We are glad then of the advent of
this last sensation so fascinating to a
fun loving public. We desire to see
it spread. We hope to here of bees
in every town and village of the State,
assured that they will not only con
duce to charity and amuse the people,
but will also educate and stimulate a
spirit of research and a desire for
accuracy that will accomplish a very
large modicum of good, and contri
bute in numcreus ways to the general
welfare and advancement.
MEXICAN NEWS.
Troops ordered to be stationed on
the Nexican border of Texas to pro
tect the country. Such is the news
from Washington, and where this
administration like most that we have
had, the item would startle the coun
try from one end of it to the other.
As the case stands,no one can tell
whether we are to look for war or
only a job of some ring more or less
allied to the \\ hite House. The
third term scheme has taken shapes
so many and so diverse that it has
become only reasonable to suspect it
in any, the most questionable
guise.
When Mr. Grant recommended in
a message to Congress the civil rights
bill, shortly after he had procured
Durell’s order and approved of Kel
logg’s seizure of Louisiana, no man
would for a moment have imagined
that the same Mr. Grant would be
found within a twelve month court
ing the favor of the South and brib
ing a few Southern men into the
delusion that he was the friend of the
South and that the South ought to
befriend the third term. The in
trigue lasted but a little time in that
shape, for when it came to be tried
in Virginia it failed at once and for
ever. Vet, then, one year ago, few
be lived that this same Grant would
change front and ally himself with
the most extreme faction at the
North to advance his pet ambition,
the third term. Y r et that is just
what lie did, and the man who urged
the civil rights bill and then declared
he would veto it was . seen lobbying
through the House the force hill.
Careless of all inconsistencies, deter
mined to try successive even if con
tracictory means, lie has been presis
teot and constant only in the object
to re-elect himself.
In view of tliis notrious fact, peo
ple would have no reason now to be
surprised if this Mexican trouble
prove to be slired up by Mr. Grant
for no other end than that same third
term. Indeed, this would he a surer
plan then any he lias Hide, for there
can be little doubt that Mexico can
be provoked into fighting, and that
Mexico could certainly and very
quickly be beaten; aud lastly, a for
eign war is the surest means to divert
attention front domestic affairs, and
lias ever been a favorite method with
rulers who desire to strengthen their
power*
1 Ins is merely speculation, of
course, and we shall wait for fuller
information than we have, before in
fact believing anything that comes by
telegraph from the Kio Grand, for,
while it is possible enough that Mr.
Grant desires a war, it is equally
possible and perhaps more probable
that the disturbances on the frontier
are magnified to give a pretext for
contracts for supplies, your army
contractor being still alive, and hav
ing of late made ailliance with rings,
which link him to the Capitol in a
manner at once close and profitable.
—Nash ville Ua ion.
PROSPECTS OF THE PLANTERS.
Every indications points to a deter
mination on the part of our planting
friends to devote more than their
usual energy to the work of preparing
for and Wanting the new crops, and
all accounts agree in stating that
farming operations will be conducted
with more activity the present year
than ever before. And this, too, in
spite of the many vexations drawbacks
that have characterized the season.
The wet spell, it will be remembered,
was of unusual length, and where it
did not take the shape of a freshet or
un overflow, soaked into the ground
and left the husbandman naught to do
but mend his fenceis repair bis out
houses and read the newspapers. In
additon to this, certain sections,
among the most prosperous and fer
tile in this State, were visited by the
most teribly disastrous tronadoes ever
known in this country.
But now the outlook is more hope
ful. The delay occasioned by the
rains, and the destruction set afloat by
the floods, no longer exist; and even
the distress which followed in the
direful wake of the cycioue, has in
some sort been ameliorated by the
charity which so promptly ami so
graciously manifested itself in all
portions of the State: so that, all
things considered, the prospects are
at least not materially worse than
they w<sre last year at this time. In
deed, we are inclined to believe the
vantage ground of the farmers of
Georgia is considerably higher just
dow than it has been at any time
since the war. For one thing, hard
times and the low price of cotton
have tough t them the sweets as well
as the uses of economy, and the ne
cessity of keeping clear of debt—and
for the rest, the lack of edequate
security, the uureliability of the la
boring class, and the by no meaxs
unwholesome transition state of busi
ness which now prevails, all conspho
to throw the agriculturist more than
over upon his own resources.
There is one feature of general
activity of the farmers, however, that
does not stricke us very favorably,
and that is the extraordinary large
amount of commercial fertilizers that
have been and are now going forward
to tlie plantations. Our correspon
dents and our State exchanges inform
us that hundreds and hundreds of
tons of guano are daily carted away
from every rairoad station. Our
Eatonton correspondent, for instance,
records the fact that he met in the
public highway one nay last week a
procession of twenty wagons freighted
with this fragrant commodity. This
state of things is by no meanes fltter
ing to the economy of our agricultu
rists. We have been strongly of the
opinion for some years—an opinion in
which we are sustained by the expe
rience of some of the most successful
agriculturists in the country—that
every farm contains within itself, and
is capable of producing, all the mat
erial necessary for its own recu
peration. This, of course, is not in
variable, but it is so general in its
applicat.on that it takes the conven
ient shape of an axiom. Hence, the
information that our planters are
perchasing extensively of commercial
fertilizers is not an evidence to us, as
it once was, that they are cultivating
their lands upon the principles of
improved agriculture. Can there be
any extravagance more inexcusable
than that which purchases to the
extent of millions of dollars every
year an article the component parts
of which are going to waste in every
direction ? The agriculturists of no
other country under heaven so sys
tematically expended their profits
and waste their credit for that which
they do not need, for the reason that
it lies right at hand.
There must be a change. Extra v
gance exhausts itself. The concen
trated economy of all the misers that
e\er lived would not be adequae to
sustain the planter in supporting a
system of agriculture which not only
exhausted all the profits of the crops
but compels him to fall back upon his
credit to recuperate the land. A
system so exhaustive is radically
wrong in practice, whatever it may
be in theory, and prosperity will con
tinue to be an exceptional condition
of the Southern farmers until there is
a change. What economy can there
be in paying a high price for that
which might be readily manipulated
at home ? We are in favor of stimu
lating—of recuperating—land, but
there are fertilizers and fertilizers, as
the French would say. The compost
heap and the various simple formulas
of preparing land plaster are equally
as valuable as the best brand of fertil
izer manfactured, and can be obtain
ed at a mere nominal cost—the cost of
manipulation.
The Southern planters are lavish,
but they will wake one of these days
to an appreciation of the mortifying
fact that if the money thrown away
upon commercial fertilizers had been
judicially expended upon improving
their farms, they would have been
wealthier by many millions of dollars.
The secret of successful farming lies
somewhere in the direction of diver
sified crops. Land may be otherwise
stimulated, but it is only by rotation,
alternation and rest that it can be
really fertilized. —Savannah Morning
News.
East Tennessee.— The wheat crop,
in all this section, never was better,
the prospect being good for heavy
yield. But in consequence of the se
vere drouth, last summer, bacon and
corn are not only scarce, but very high,
the former selling for 12| cents cash,
and the latter brings readily 75 cents
per bushel. Stock hogs art also scarce;
but the beef, chickens, eggs and but
ter plentiful. Undoubtedly, this is
the greatest and most productive coun
try of these articles in the world, car
loads of eggs, butter, chickens, ducks
and turkeys being shipped weekly, and
sometimes daily, from Sweet Water.
The money crops of this section are
beef and wheat. The first is 4| cents
per pound now, and wheat only 90
cents per bushel.— J. B. Gorman in
Talbotton Standard.
New Bedford has but one whaler
left—a schoolmaster.
Order is haaven's first law,* and it
has never been repealed.
StTBCCftiBE for the HLeral©.
rnCHHE
And Most Durable Machine Mdae
ty* Agents "Wanted tn erery county. Job* 6 ly
Standard American Billiard Tables!!
(Patented Jnne 6, 1871 and Dec. 23. 1873.)
NEW DESIGNS.
11. XV . CULLENDER,
SUCCESSOR TO
Phelan & Collender.
*
XO. 738 BROADWAY,
F * O- Box, 1,847, YORK,
CLOTH,
BALL*?,
CUES,
+
Ami Even thing Appertaining to
13fLLI A R D S
2<r~ A1 IHE LOWEST PRICES. Illustrated Catalogues sent
b y Mail - Jan. 9, 1875.-ly
THE SINGER SEWING MACHINES.
The First and Only Machine Ever Intro
duced in Schools!
SEWING MACHINE SALES 0F,187
The iable of Sewing Machine Sales for 1873 shows that onr Sales last
year amounted to 232,444 (two hundred and thirty-two thousand four hun
dred and forty-four Machines,) being a large increase over the sales of the
previous year (1872.)
Ihe table also shows that our Sales Exceed those of any other Company
for the period named, by the number of 113,254 Machines, or nearly double
those of any other Company.
It mav be further stated that the Sales of 1873, as compared with those
of 1872, show a relatively larger increase, beyond the sales of other makers,
than of other year. k
lor instance, in 18 1 2 we sold 45,000 more Machines than any othfc
Compuuy, whereas, in 1873 the sales were
113,254 Machines in Excess of Our High
est Competitor.
These figures are the more remarkable, for the reason that the sales of
the principal Companies in 1873 are LESS THAN THEIR SALES IN 1873
whereas, as has been shown,
Our Sales Have Largely Increased.
The account of Sales is from the returns made to the owners of the
ing Mitchine Patents.
It will hardly be denied that the superiority of the SINGER
CHINES is fully demonstrated—at all events that their popularity in
household is unquestionable.
THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO.,
17 Broughton St, Savanna, la.
C. A VOSBURCH, Manager,
FOR SOUTH CAROLINA, GEORGIA, FLORIDA and part of A LA BAM
Liberal Terms to Agents who can give bond and furnish their own horses.
BRANCH OFFICES: Atlanta, Ga.,G. W. Leonard, Ag’t:* Macon,
L. M. Murray, Ag’t. Thomasville, Ga., S. L. Mallard, Ag’t. Nov. 11.-
TO GROCERYXDEALERSI
Seymour, Tinsley Cos..
MACON, Gr A .
TT E S*nvr?Tnva h * nd Larjr - e v, n< L?°^ plete Assortment of GROCERIES and
1 SA T LSF*aG TLQN I"A ojders filled at Lowest market
rates. W" oAiUJI? aCJIQW GLARANIEDO. ap Gjods sold only in whole
packages. Retailers will bear this in mind. Trial orders solicited. *
Jan - 9 >~ tf SEYMOUR, TINSLEY & CO.
ANDREW R STEWART. ?11. P. WOOD
MAY-FLOWER” COOK STOVE
® T X3 WAPI T tb W OOD,
WHOLESALE ASD RETAIL DEALERS IE
STOVES, HOL L O NNV "W ARE,
House-Furnishing Goods, hildren’s Carriages,
TIN WORK OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
90 Wliitelaall St-, ATLANTA. q-A
Nor 31.-Gm *
ADVERTISING RATES.
The following ere the rate* to which we adhed
in all contract* tor adTenitnfr;ofCwfaeru atfenrtt: •
ments are handed tn wtfhont lustraettona.
One square ten lines or leea (Koaparlel type) t
for the Qrst and lO centa for each subsequent m
eertton.
it. irrunrx i^.
1 Square 1 *1 OS ft so rOO flow n
t Squares too soo loooiftootsej
• Squares 100 TOO 18 00 10 00 i too?
4 Squares | 400 10 00 MOO M 140 0*
H Column i 800 IS 00 MOO 40 00 0*
H Column. I io oo MM MOO otoo no*
rnr i IS 00 MM 40 00 TO 00 1M
NO. 20.