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Ti jE THOMASTON HEKaLD
Published by
H W. I>. a c AIt.VW 4Y,
kveky satuuuay mokkino.
TERMS.
OBC ‘ ' Iyl
SIX Months 1 °°
V 1 payments INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
egal advertising RATES.
. since the war, the following nr
, } nrircs for notices of Ordinaries, &c.—to be paid
£ filmys Notices *>
VS rtJ n, vn Notice 625
port' hf. r _ sf . r> often Lines *5 00 1
Notices t ioo
Noties io oo j
n •s’Notices of Sales pr. s.jr 200
TsHSKirw" Sai.ks.—For these bales, for every fi ta i
Soles, per square $6 00. *
Professional Pards.
.. ciNDWICU, Attorney at Law and Solie
\[ it' r in Bankrupt*;/. Practices In all the
both State and Federal. Office^ Cheney’s
BuUdlnif. '
B ; M, TXJKNEH,
m ,ov.;; AT LAW. Barnosvllle, Oa. Will
V T *‘ Xwfn all the Courts of the Flint Circuit,
£,;sattedlon given to claims -
’ ly __
eeall
G KEENE & BEALL,
ATTORNEYS at raw.
THOMASTOS, - - GEORGIA.
Will Practice Law in the Counties of the H!n
siLS ms.net coart ot Georgia Jt Uljn
ta and Savannah. ’ J
Vf O T I
> Dr. J. M. BLALOCK, Dentist, !
it, m .m.in oa. When you visit Tliomaston, call i
“r* ,* ’ a: ’ d have your Dental Work done as j
n l add 1)'“. Teeth inserted, te.-th tilled, teeth !
,‘uru 1, teeth attended to In the best style of j
in,, i mihl Art. call once, and you will not only !
,VL.iii but will bring all your friends, includ- j
U ‘ vo! r sweetheart and mother-in-law. Office, j
, lrs Northwest corner, Cheney’s brick build
up stairs, M arcn 22.1873,-ly
pOTELS.
iniOWFsTIOTEL ;
Reduction of Board I
I
00,00 pbh r>^3r!
ti R bkoWN <t ON, proprietors of this pe>i>- !
L, ular hotel, would inform their numerous !
frifuds that on a id utter the flrst day of Septem- |
Ber the ral.’.s will be reduced to id per day.
Hie pruprleturs would re.sp - tfully return their ]
•Ta'M.uil thanks for the very liberal patronage et- 1
tend’d to tho house lor nearly twenty years, and '
asMirr :he!r many friuhds that we will use our >
best endeavors tor the future to give the same ;
tion tliat we have in the past. Every at- I
teat! given to ladies and ramllles, and large j
1 Dolus always In readiness isr commercial travel- ■
ers visit tog Macon.
Jan. , -tr E. E. BKOWN & SOX.
GREEK HOUSE.
J. 6. GREER, Frcp'r
FORSYTII, ----- GEORGIA, i
I
Hoard :
1 Mp.il $ 50
ihuy 2,00 !
1 10,00 !
T l :', 25,Wl 1
'‘■'lit* 1 and attentive Poters. Table supplied with j
;.i- v, r.v h’ stHit; market affords. Baggage car- 1
n.-,l Ui ana from the Depot, five of charge, and a
tree ii.uk to and irom Deoot to lletel.
Njv.il, tr
ISbblefTeld“Tod eT I
ST.,
MACON, GA.
Mrs. S. L. Wiiiteiiukst, Proprietress I
j
transient board per day $2.0 ;
Rfgiil ir board per month, on third floor. s2sand 1
■ 0:1 s-. You I—day >ourd S2O per month. Tills I
,"; ! 5, ls douveulenlv located uevt dour to ihe !
1 ' Us ' ; . and has been thoroughly renovated
will itturirished. 0ct.31,-tf
JjAUSIIALL HOUSE,
SVW MI, ti v.
A. B. LUCE, Proprietor
(BtUKI* PI'.K DAY $3,00)
JAM E. OCONNELL, Clkkk.
JJARNESVILLE HOTEL,
F. TANARUS, FOUND,
11 'in letor, - Barnesville, Ga.
NATIONAL HOTEL
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
JAMES E, OWENS
PROPRIETOR,
Lie ot Piedmont and Orange Hotels,
Lynchbuig, Virginia.
IHOROUCHLY -REMOVATLD, ELEGANTLY FURNISHE
lj “ ' P er Bay. Board $3 per Day
u =s a c r o carried to and from depot free o
Charge.
tryep ■i large live, family paper, full of
fem.hititt "* 8 good reading. No sectarian
!v r.L ;T* > n ; s - l'uffs nor advertisements. On
f-r.’ v.u, 10 o©nts for 3 specimen ue
h: nt- w , il ' s l*len(Jld Map Premiums
bill 1 1f, e i everywhere. Big Commissions
s>, \ P u• -gtigos,s3S Wash’ttSt., Boston, Mass.,
_ r -> Euila., Pa. 4w
I! Si!S^wiiLEPllis
, ARE AND UPRIGHT.
•Mrtui' rn^ Cle j l lie Touch elastic, the tone
' tuelinw and^vveet 111 Ulrou ® 11 tlie eutlre scale,
CONCERTO ORGANS
Jiuperm ,n XC ™ ea fD Lone or beauty they defy
u '^i "f the limnan Votv rt ° stopl3a flue Eulta-
I r sil i-'V, 6 yctu’s. Prices Extremely Low
ts. a ‘', , and balance In monthly pay
?* s. i v‘,.'TSP d instruments at great har
- linerV A liberal discount to
f* !llus,r ,1 1 tfc f s ’ Churches, Aehools, Lodges,
' Catalogues mailed. HORACE
“■j.' g’ O', tsi Broadway, New York. P. o.
' 4W
Up and sav Cost,
A^° >°m e will please
raoEren,,, ? p and settle or make some ar
isnotl to what they owe. It this
ttie handc ! I^leir c Lims will be placed iu
ol a lawyer tor collection.
Respectfully,
*" O. R. Garside.
B S^wtb?**P r ® T * •Tmvtj Plani-r •** fife
M ** roi * or Cnn, * ' l^l l * A *i:s’e trUI at th Kg
Rj *^ f at te -' J*** *®*™ Its stri:;. k ,L, mrnu *J W
jj *Pplr ,s, “T' thwart t •-* j,e prpa*< Sf
B “•M* Oro.r. l ** prices. Orisrs and K|
M . * ™l**lfa!ly iollelU*. Address B£
I cj... '*• HtLUS & CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. gl
■ ! tJ * H U ‘ #t '*' 8 * n< ltans of " ktnes g
■ t SRr L'i>_l ot ~. n Swwps, Berapsrs, Bui! Sj
ft_ f> 1., w,-,,-. las Patters.~*c, Ac. SUsi Si
PgSe>- r ‘' T&aaU t r w*<>—ii.Hfciad.of .. Jlj
VOL. VI.
THE THOMASTON HaRALD
B. ,D. CARAWAY, - - Publisher.
•T. C . Me MIC HA EL, - Editor.
Fhomastci Ga., Saturday, Ap’l. 24. 75.
THE CENTENNIAL.
PROCURATION by the president.
ncrons by the Act of Congress
;t])pro\cd March third, eigliteen hun
dred and seventy-one, providing for a ■
National Celebration of the one huu
dretli anniversary of the independence 1
of the United States, by the holding
of an international Exhibition of
Manufactures and Products of the j
Soil and Mine, in the City of Phila- j
delphia, in the year eighteen hundred j
and seventy-six, it is provided as
follows:
“That whenever the President shall
be informed by the Governor of the
State of Pennsylvania, that provision
has been made for the erection of
suitable buildings for the purpose,
and for the exclusive control by the
Commission herein provided for the
proposed Exhibition, the President
i-hull, through the Department of
State, make proclamation of the same,
setting forth the time at which the
Exhibition will open and the place at
uhieh it will be held; and he shall
communicate to the diplomatic repre
sentatives of all nations copies of the
same, together with such regulations
as may he adopted by the commission
eis, for publication in their respective
countries;’’
And whereas, His Excellency the
Governor of the said State ot Penn
sylvania did, on the twenty-fourth
day of June, eighteen hundred and
seventy-three, inform me that provis
ion had been made for the erection of
saul buildings and for the exclusive
control by the Commission provided
for in the said act of the proposed
Exhibition;
And whereas, the President of the
b aited States Centennial Commission
nas officially informed me of the dates
lived for the opening and closing of
the said Exliibituon, and the place at
which it is to be held;
Now, therefore, be itkimnm that I,
Ulvssns S. Grant, President of the
X. nited States, in conformity with the
pio\isions of the act of Congress
aforesaid, do hereby declare and pro
claim that there will be held, at the
City of Philalelphia, in the State of
Pennsylvania, an international Exhi
bition of Arts, Manufactures and
Products of the Soil and Mine, to be
opened on the nineteenth day of April,
Anno Domini, eighteen hundred and
seventy-six, and to be closed on the
nineteenth day of October, m the
same year.
And in the interest of peace, civil
ization and domestic and international
friendship and intercourse, I com
mend the celebration and Exhibition
to the people of the United States;
and in behalf of this Governmernt
and people, I cordially commend them
to all nations who may be pleased to
take part therein.
In testimony whereof I have here
unto set my hand and caused the seal
of the United States to be affixed.
U. S. Grant.
By the President:
Hamilton Pish,
Secret art/ of State.
The Chicago Times is now vigorous
ly engaged in attacking what in terms
‘‘The Granger Lunacy.” In conclud
ing a lenghthy and characteristic es
say upon this topic, it says:
“Substantially, the Granger lunacy
is over. It has passed the culminating
point, and is now rapidly giving way,
as the Know-Nothing movement did,
to a season of sanity. - ’
The Times undertook topiove some
three years ago that the Democratic
party was dead and buried. It has
been trying to convince the public
ever since that the organization has
no existence, out despite itseffoits the
party survives and continues to grow
and strengthen. It is just possible
that the Times has similarly under
estimated the cause of the Granger.
It is still an active and growing cause,
and unless the people obtain relief be
fore another year it is likely to make
its power felt. The organization con
tains many crudities; it is in some res
pects wrong iii theory and practice;
but it is the out growth of a system
which oppresses labor and renders the
toil of the tiller of the soil unremun
erative, and it is not likely to die in a
day.
To accumulate money rapidly, be
gin life as a carpenter. Mr. Brown,
the sexton of Grace church, New
York, began in this way, and now he
is worth £300,000.
THOMASTON. GA.. SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 24, 1875.
MR. BEECHER UNDER CROSS EXAM
INATION.
When he was sworn as a witness the
Reverend Henry Ward Beecher de
clined to take the oath upon the Bi
bie because he had conscientious scru
ples against it. He affirmed with
uplifted hand. But when asked up
on cross-examination whether he did
not swear upon the Bible when he
appeareed before the Grand Jury a
few months ago te obtain an indict
ment against Theodore Tilton he did
not recollect distinctly, but persumed
taut he did. \V iicn further interro
gated .f he had no recollection upon
the subject—whether he did uot then
and there swear upon the Gospel —Tie
said: “1 ha>e none at all.*’ This
puts him in a pretty dilemma. He
inis no recollection whether he viola-
ted a conscientious scruple or not, but
he thinks he did. \V hat is the value
to be atteched to the testimony of a
, witness who is so indifferent to what
| * ie admits is a "‘conscientious sern- j
pie ? ’ \\ hat other man having a j
“conscientious scruple” would not j
distinctly remember every thing in i
i relation to it, especilly if a minister |
! of the gospel? In point of fact Mr.
Beecher did swear upon the Bible
when lie was a witness before the
Grand Jury. Then, after being
caught, Mr. Beecher said his cousoieu
lious scruples arose after he ha I come
into Court on this trial. This is too
thin to bear a moment’s inspection.
Again, Mr. Beecher admitted that he
had buggy-rides with Mrs. Tilton.
But when asked whether, on any of
the ojeasions, he remembered whether
he had alighted from the buggy, he
stated he did not have any recolletion.
ibis is most extraordinary. People
who take buggy-rides, especially with
ladies, and who remember the rides,
art not apt to forget where they stop
ped, or if they stopped a tall. It is a
very convenient memory that remem
bers the one fact and not the other.
Mr. Beecher is likewise faulty iu hie
recolection as to whether Mr. Rich
ards, the brother of Mrs. Tiltor,
ever, upon going uninvited into the
parlor, caught him and his
sist“-, Mrs. Tilton, in suspicious prox
imity, from which Mrs. Tilton retrea
ted in great haste, with a flushed face
and evident marks of agitation, lie
had no retnemberanee of it. No re
membrance! It was either true or it
was not true. In any event he could
not have failed to remember the oc
currence. The no recollection asser
tion must have been false.
The defense of Beecher is that he
had advised the separation of Mrs.
'1 llton from her husband, and that all
his agony in his letters arose from Ins
tear that lie had made a mistake.
But this docs not tally with subse
quent evidence. Mr. Beecher admits
that he was in the habit of kissing
Mrs. Tilton, especially when alone,
and that lie corresponded with her
when he was abroad. How many
husbands could reconcile the inno
cence of their wives with tins fact,
especially when it is admitted that
the wife met the alleged criminal
with a Hushed face, which was seen,
hut retreated as soon as there was an
observation of the occurrence. All
t lis is but preliminary to the main
event. There is prejury out between
four persons. Mr. Tilton Mr. and
Mrs. Moulton have all deposed that
Mr. Beecher admitted to them his
guilt with Mrs. Tilton, lie denies it
under the responsibility of an oath.
According to him all these persons,
two gentlemen and a lady, have com
mitted perjury of the worst and
blackest kind. We must believe this
in order to be reconciled to his inno
cence. Now, where there is conflic
ting, testimony juries must give the
preponderance to that side which lias
the majosity of witnesses an 1 which
is the m >?t disinterested in its charac
ter. !So far as witness are concerned
there are three to one. The three have
nojseltishiness to subserve. Mr. Beecher
has. He is lighting for more than
life—for a repupation that he can not
aiford to lose. Admitting him to be
guilty, he can, not if be is human,
say it. Therefore of what value is
his testimony when it is in antagon
ism with plain facts? It is motives
which govern mankind, and therefore
we must believe that one has commit
ted perjury and that three have told
the truth. We presume that as scon
as this trial is over Mr, Beecher will
be indicted for perjury. Two wit
nesses to a material fact are sufficient
for a conviction. In this case there
are three, if not more.
C. B. Lewis, the Detroit Free Press
wit, is said to be a son of Dio Lewis,
but has promised his father half the
profits of his forthcoming book, if the
old turn will only deny the relation
ship.
liiE Ti IRD TERM CRUSADE.
A Washington dispatch to tbe Phil
| adelpnia 1 lines says: Tne policy of
the administration will henceforth be
one of relentless proscription of ail
leading Republicans who do not favor
the whole policy and ambition of the
: President including the third term.
The Grant organ iu Washington and
the home organ of Cameron in Peun-
I Scania, edited by his private secre
j tiU T> w h° i s P a id by the government,
iia\e led oil in the work of hunting
i °
down all tnose who do not bow abject
ly to the third term programme. It
; is openly declared bv those who speak
for the President that there shall be
: no more distractions of the part? by
• the “independents;” that they shall
: all be compelled to go to the rear at
once and be treated as outside the
pale of party xavor. It is proclaimed
tout Morton and Cameron will full
into the line as soon as they return.
Morton must do so or yield the lead
ership absolutely to -Coukling and
Cameron must obey or loose his posi
tion as Chairman of the Committee
on foreign relations and his control
of Pennsylvania patronage besides.
Many will incline to revolt, but when
it is evident that they cannot make
the issue inside the party but must
go, like Scliurz and fen ton and Trum
bull in 18 2, outside of the Senators
will yield a sullen obedience and the
President will triumph, ihe special
friends of Grant say that the best pos
sible result for the Republican party
is to Jose the elections generally this
year as it will prove the absolute ne
cessity of taking him as the candidate
in 18? G. They give up Ohio as lost,
and they do not regard Gov. Har
tranft with favor. 11 is intrusion into
the Presidential arena last year was
an offence that has never been forgiv
en, and his defeat next fall will be
grateful news to all about the White
House. It is now no longer possible,
says the dispatch, to question the
President's purpose to make the race
for the third term, and those who still
doubt it but display their want of or
dinary political sagacity.
PUNG EN T PAR AG it A PUS.
A riGIUN HUNTER.
A man about thirty years old, hav
ing a shot-gun on his shoulder and
two pigeons in his hand, was yester
day standing on a street corner telling
a crowd that he hud been out and
killed live hundred pigeons since sun
rise.
“You're a liar!” shouted a man in
the edge of the crowd.
r lhe stranger looked at him long
and earnestly, and then inquired:
“"Where did you get acquainted
with me?”
BLUFFED HTM.
“Five cents fare for that child,
madam.” said a street car conductor
yesterday, as he opened the door and
put liis head inside.
“Very well,” she replied, “this is
an orphan child, and I'm its guardian.
I must have a receipt for all moneys
paid out, and as soon as you write one
I'll drop a nickel in the box.”
lie shut the door and leaned over
the brake like a man in deep thought.
A BIT JEALOUS.
Yesterday as an old couple from
Canada were wandering through the
City Hall market the man became so
deeply engaged in watching two hand
some ladies that he failed to reply to
his wife’s inquiries. She saw what
ailed hitn, and catching him by the
coat-tails she slung him “kewhop’’
against a stall, and then, taking him
by the collar, she said:
“Samuel Hanover, don’t attempt
to tribe with me. You know me,
Samuel, and you know that I’ll break
your old neck if I catch you trying to
play off on me.”
He turned his attention to the veg
etables after that.
ON THE WAT.
It was night. A policeman was
pacing liis lonely beat, wondering if
it would ever bo his luck to find a fat
wallet when no one was around.—
Through the gloom and darkness a
boy appeared, some bread and meat
under one arm, an old atmy blanket
under the other, and a lutcher-knife
in his belt.
“Whither?” growled die officer as
he halted.
And through the dirk shadows
which were hiding the biy from sight
came the answer:
“Of! for the Black fils.”
We never really comprehend the
grandeur of modern li>eralism before
reading Carlyle in tie last Fraser,
where lie refers to its “rectangular
beatitude* and spherical
ea. n
bIGNS OF SPRING.
Spring is here! “You can’t see it?”
Turn to your almanac. And if that
fails to convince you, come with us
and we will point out the signs to
you. Do you see that old darkey
with his white-wash bucket and
brush? That’s a sign of Spring.
There! See that man, with his hat on
the back of head, his clotes half-but
toned up, his toilet unmade?—lie has
just jumed from the first story win
dow this early morning. His wife
has undoubtly commenced her Spring
cleaning and he lias been routed out
of bed and is glad to escape without
breaking his fast, taking the chancel
of breaking his neck, rather thau
meet the she-demon that these sun
shiny days have developed in his
; household. And is not this a sign of
j Spring? Glance at these advertise
ments of vermin exterminators; do
you see them in Winter? See that
back-yard Granger turnin hot water
on Ins still frozen back-yard garden,
trying to force the season so that he
may get in an early crop—to greet
tle caterpillars and early grasshop
pers. See the various shrubs and
bowers for sale around the markets.
People are never seduced into buying
o • swindled by buying rose-bushes
warranted to blossum every month
(when they have barely vitality
enough to sustain the bowers they
now nod with) except in spring time.
Behold the slush in our streets. It is
not so in winter. See the man who
has bought a house in the suburbs;
observe him at the seed and garden
tool store. See him buy every imple
ment known to agriculture and a
sample of every seed in the catalogue.
It makes no difference whether he
can use half of the tools he buys for
want of elbow-room, or whether there
is space for a quarter of seeds, it is a
sure sign of Spring nevertheless.
Finally, hear the birds and tbe
newspaper poets sing. Of course,
the birds don’t count for much, but
the poets are an unfailing sign.
They never make a mistake. They
feel in their bones that Spring is here,
and poets are hefty on bones. So,
taking all these signs, gentle reader,
we think you must admit that Spring
is here and no nnstkae.
Ihe scene occurred in a railroad
car on the Union Pacific Road, in
which two men were gambling, while
the rest of the passengers looked on.
One of the gamesters was a type of
the professionals, who “work” the
road, a desperate trickster, sleek and
ugly; the other was a rough grizzled
miner, fresh from the mountains, and
carrying abundance of money. The
game—draw poker—was for large
stakes, and played silently and watch
fully. Finally a huge pot accumula
ted. Each man had evidently a good
hand, and was resolved to stand by it.
Each man raised the other until final
ly the miner “called.’’—The gambler
showed his hand—three aces and two
queens—at the same time covering
the money with his hand. The mi
ner uttered not a word; lie merely
took two of his five curds and laid
them down; they were aces. This
meont five aces in the pack. The
gambler had dealt. Then the miner
reached back like lighting, drawing a
huge navy revolver. lie cocked it
and placed the mnzzle between the
eyes of the gambler. Not a word was
spoken, but each of the two men look
ed steadily into the eyes of the other
Soon the gambler’s hand upon the
monoy began to draw back, and the
gambler’s form as well. The revolver
followed. The gambler stepped into
the aisle, and at this point the pass
engers in the car seemed to lose their
interest in the game, most of them
trying to get under the seats. The
gambler backed down the aisle toward
the door, and as lie passed out the
muzzle of that huge revolver still
stared him in the face. Then the
miner put up Ins pistol, pocketed the
money, lit his pipe, and was as otiicr
men. Mot a word had been spoken
from the time the “call” was made.
It was merely one of the rare occasions
where a gambler on the Union Pacific
mistakes his man.
This is what a voting man up North
thinks of it! “Of all tne joys vouch
safed to man in life’s tempestuous
" hill, there s naught approaches heav
en so near as sleighing with a girl a
rosy, laughing, buxom girl; a feeling,
llu ting, da.-Jiiug doting, smiling
smacking, jolly, joking, jaunting, jo
vial, posy-looking, dear little duck of
a girl!”
The political economist are some of
them tolerable reliable, but a school
master i 3 the best on© to apply to for
an opinion on the scions of the times.
" how e
jsmm mm
• is the simplest
And Most Durable Machine Mdae
£3?“ Agents Wanted in every county. June 6 1
Standard American Billiard Tables!!
(Patonted June 6, 1871 and Dec. 23, 1873.)
| %
.
NEW DESIGNS,
H. W. CULLENDER
SUCCESSOR TO
Phelan & Cos Slender.
NO. 73 8 BROAD WA Y ,
X*. O- Box, 1,847, NEW YORK..
CLOTH,
n A L LS,
C U ES,
And Everything Appertaining to
H t L, L I A. R E S
AI iHE LOWEST PRICES. Illustrated Catalogues sent
h y Mail - . Jan. 9, 1875.-ly
THE S S MYCHim
The First and Only Machine Ever Intro
duced in Schools!
SEWING MACHINE SALES OF 187
The fable of Sewing Machine Sales for 1873 shows that our 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.)
'The 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 Companv. J
It may 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. * *
1 oi instance, in 18,2 we sold 45,000 more Machines than any otht
Company, 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 1872
whereas, as has beeu shown,
Our Sales Have Largely Increased.
The account of Sales is from the returns made to the owners of the
mg Machine Patents.
It will hardly be denied that the superiority of the SINGER
CHINES is fully demonstrated—at all events tha‘t their popularity in
household is unquestionable.
THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO.,
17 Broughton t, avanna, Ga .
C. A VOSBURGH, Manager,
IOR SOU 111 CAROLINA, GEORGIA, FLORIDA and part of ALAB/
Liberal Terms to Agents who can give bond and furnish their own horses
BRANCH OIFICES: Atlanta. Ga., G. W. Leonard. Ag’t. Macon,
L. M. Murray, Ag’t. Thomasville, Ga., S. L. Mallard, Ag’t. Nov. 11.-
TO GROCERY DEALERS!
Seymour, Tinsley <s• Cos..
MACON, GA.
IN F inb.vi V ifnvS hail<l aa Lara nd Complete Assortment of GROCERIES and
mN TTSATlßF*f%V°Er*ravienn ß * 1 ' o * to micrt Lowest market
r.uts. wi? bA 1 Iblr aC L lU2s G L ARAN i EDI). G xxls sold oniv- in wVirO
packages. Retailer* will bear this in mind. Trial orders solicited
Jan - 9 >~ tf SEYMOUR, TINSLEY & CO.
ANDREW P. STEWART. } ~ TT, p
MAY-FLOWER” COOK STOVE
® T -LI "W" AL H. T cfc "W O O ~T~~. (
WHOLESALE AXV RETAIL DEALERS TX
S -T O S . TrY OL L O *'W 'Vv?' .A. RE 3
House-Furnishing Goods, hildren's Carriages.
TIN WORK OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
advertising- rates.
The following are the rates to which w adh' ©
In all contract* for advertising.orjwbere advert! •
mcnta are banned In without Instructions.
One square ten lines or less (Honpartel type) •
for the first and so cents for each subsequent in
sertion.
~SQi\AHE^TTTrnTM 1 BIfTTsMT 11 IT.
4 *1 no I ft so V eo liooo fir, o
a Square too 600 1000 isoo tso
8 Squares 3do Too is oo to Z■ •
4 Squares 400 10 00 to 00 so 7a , 9
V Column 00 it 00 too.) 4000 an 0
X Column 1000 to 00 3ft 00 moo m to
mn lft 00 t& 00 4000 70 00 130
NO. 21.