Macon daily enterprise. (Macon, Ga.) 1872-1873, November 30, 1872, Image 1

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|<|| .^ | , . T - . | , fl . n .... 4 „ . _ .. * . i -■! i —ll i.—i. ■i • ■ iKiantei nwMvaMt— tmm —*—iii ninw'.->'- •. . — 1 1 • ™ M fUncun Pailj} £ntrr prior Links, Wing & Smith, Proprietors, Term* of Muli*crlptlon : Uno Year 5 ® Sit Months 4 00 Three Months * w Invariably in advance. To city subscribers 6;/ the month, Seventy-five cents, served by carriers. FOR MAYOR OF MACON, HO N. W. A. HUFF. Gleanings. The Rev. Dr. Saunders, Doan of Peter borough, was Mr. Gladstone’s tutor in the study of Hebrew, has refused the proffer ed Deanery of Winchester, Fngland. The Duchess de Persigny, wife of the deceased favorite of Napoleon 111, and daughter of the equally famous Prince da Moskowa, is going to be married again to a French advocate, who is only a common er. An acorn suspended by a piece of thread within half an inch of the surface of water in a hyacinth glass, will, in a few months burst and throw u root down into the water, and shoot upwards its straight and ladering stem, with beautiful little green leaves A young oak tree, growing in this way on Mie mantle shelf of a room is a very elegant and interesting object. Sunday Sohooi, Literature —The December number of the Sunday School Magazino, published at Nashville, by A. 11. Uedford, for the Methodist Episcopal Church South, states tho aggregate circu lation of tho year during their different Sunday School periodicals to be : Sunday School Magazine U 5,750 Sunday School Visitor 591,300 Our Little People 578,300 Lesson Papers 924,000 Total.' 2,343,300 This is a gratifying exhibit, and relied* the highest credit upon the energy, tact and ability of their editor, Rev. Atticus G. Haygood, D. D. With him it is a labor of love. It has often been said that there is no mechanical genius in woman ; but there is a representative woman down east who is endowed witli remarkable genius. Her name is Miss Martha Knight. She has iaveuted a machine for manufacturing paper bags. The contrivance is very sim ple, and is pronounced an invaluable ac quisition to paper bag making. Tbe authorities at the Patent Office, Washington, say this is the first complete invention out by a woman. Among tire many proposed materials for tbe manufacture of paper, there are t wo— wiregrass and palmetto—which a Georgia Company guarantees will furnish better paper than any now in use, and at prices that will be really low. The Rome Courier hears it rumored that Gen. Eugene Lellardy lias recently sold, in New York, hi* interest in a patent type setting machine fox* $200,000. Gen. Le if,rdy was tbe Engineer and Superinten dent of tbe Selma, Rome & Dalton Rail road, and is a man of much scientific skill. Municipal Election.— Under the new Corporation Charter, an electiou for mu nicipal officers will be held by the present Hoard of Commissioners of Forsyth, on tbe first Saturday—tbe 7th of December Tbe term of tbe Mayor and Hoard elected on that day will commence January Ist, 1873. —Monroe Advertiser. Admitted. —On Thursday last Messrs. P. H. Miller and C. A. Turner, late stu dents iu tbe law office of Messrs. Ham mand & Stone, were duly admitted to tbe legal profession, after a critical examina tion in open court, at Griffin. — Ibid. When Judge Nelson retires from tbe Supreme Court of tbe United States, J udge Cliffoid, of Maine, will be the only Judge remaining on the bench appointed by a Democratic President. Should lie retire within tbe ensuing four years every mem her of the court will then be the appointee of Mr. Lincoln or General Grant. Bishop Beckwith.— This distinguish ed Divine is now visiting tbe Episcopal Churches in upper Georgia. Last Sun- day, in St Peter’s Church, Home, he or dained three Deacons. This week he visit* Atlanta and will lay the Corner Stone of the new St. Ifiiillips Church. Next Sunday he will visit St. James’ Church in our city. We understand that there is a class ready for confirmation. — Marietta, Journal, 23th. As Industrious Hes.— The smartest hen in Pulaski county is just now engaged in her legitimate business on the place of Mr. John W. Harrell. This very remark able hen has lteeu laying an agg every day this season, and, strange as it may seem, has on Sunday really laid two. Thero is no joke or hoax about this state ment. Those who doubt the fact are re ferred to Mr. Harrell for particulars. This hen deserve credit for her indus try, although she does break the Sabbath by her double labors. Eggs are selling in this market at 25 to 35 cents a dozen, and here is this hard working hen doing her clean best to re duce the price. She ought to be encour aged. Just lay on, MeDuff, And hanged be he Who says youv’e laid enough. Hauskintville Dispatch. The Board of Trade of Rome, Georgia, call* a convention at that place on the 4th proximo, for the purpose of taking such action as may secure the opening of the Coosa, Oostanaula and Etowa rivers, and the completion of the Great Southern Ca nal. The intention is to memorialize Con gress upon these subjects, and bring all the pressure possible to ensure an adequate < appropriation. The Board of Trade of j Knoxville will take part in this conven tion. This remind us of a suggestion we threw out the other day, for the Board of Trade of the cities of Knoxville. Chattanooga, Nashville, Jackson aDd Memphis to set about organizing the mercantile interests of the whole State. With a view to securing such National aid State legislature as will improve the navigation of our navigable streams and the improvement of public roads, for in creased facilities in the transportation of the produce and commerce of our Stale. The mercantile classes can wield a pow erful influence for good in this direction, and can be greatly assisted by the co-oper ation of the farmers and producers who are equally interested, in affording facilities for the easy and quick transportation of the produce of our soil. We hope the Boards of Trade will take action in the matter. Where’s the use of Boards of Trade, unless practical results are reached through them? Let the live men wake UJ> — ftufeiO* &mr*r, 28KA. PNEUMATIC TRANSPORTATION. TIIE EXPERIMENTAL TUBE FROM THE CAPITOL TO THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE IN WASHINGTON. [From the Washington Star.] The pneumatic tube, about which so mucli has been said within the past quar ter of n century, will soon bo constructed and put to a practical test between tbe Capitol and the Government Printing Office. Reference lias heretofore been made to the project of Mr. Albert Bris bane. Congress, it will be remembered, at the last session appropriated $15,000 to construct a tube between the Capitol and Government Printing Ofiico, and, as tbe work of laying it will soon be commen ced, there will no doubt be much interest felt in its completion and practical working. Pneumatic tubes are now suc cessfully working short distances in New York, London, Paris and Berlin, but they arc constructed on a different plan from that of Mr Brisbane, the vehicle ill those tubes being run on wheels, while in that of Mr. B. it is not. and consequently much loss by friction is avoided. Mr Brisbane claims that be can transmit packages through a tube from New York to Sau Francisco by hollow spheres in the tube and exhausting the air from tbe other end from that in which the sphere is started, thus creating a vacum, causing tbs atmospheric pressure of fiftceu pounds lo tho square inch, to drive tbe sphere through rapidly. The tube is made of pine staves of three or four inches width, one inch thick, put together in circular form, and securely fas tened with heavy iron hoops placed at in tervals of four or five feet. Several coat ings of thick paper are then wrapped around it to make it perfectly air tight, and the tube is placed in the trench se curely packed in clay. Before it is put together, however, the weoden staves are subjected to a steam exhauston of sixty pounds pressure to the square inch, which drives out the sap and congeals the albu men. They are they boiled in a prepara tion of resin and linseed oil to make them perfectly water-proof. The inside diante ter will be thirty-one inches, and that of the sphere thirty inches. The entire length of it will be 3,200 feet. The machinery lo work it consists of two small engines, one in the Capitol and the other in the printing office, with a sin gle telegraph wire betweeu the two points, two air-pumps and blowers, one of each at each end. Parcels to bo irausmitted from one building to the other will be placed in the sphere, the signal given to the man at the other cud by means of the telegraph wire to start the engine there, which exhausts the air trout that end, and the atmospheric pressure upon the ball soon starts it toward its destination. The exhaust is kept up. and the natural pressure behind the ball carries it along at a rapid rate, not more than two and a half or three minutes be ing consumed from tbe Capitol to the printing-office. To send it the other way will, however, require one or two minutes longer, as there is nu ascent of about forty five feet from the printing-office to the Capitol. The exhausting machinery at the Capitol will need to be more powerful than at the other end on account of this ascent and tbe greater force requisite to bring tbe sphere up. The inventor claims that the atmospheric pressure alone will drive the sphere through the tube ; but if necessary tbe machinery can also be used to force air in tbe rear of the ball, which will increase its rnotioH. There will be a dozen or more of these spheres, some made of wood, some of thin steel, and others oi papier maehe. The material for the tube lias all been prepared and it is expected here daily, when the work of laying it will be commenced. In fact, workmen have already commenced cutting through the north wall of tbe foundation of the Capi tol, through which the tube is to be car ried. Mr. Brisbane expects to have I completed and working in tbe course of t couple of months. How Fools Are Buried. We know an old lady, as blithe a body as ever lived in this world, who, years ago, prepared becoming garments ready for her last journey. David Garrick’s widow rigorously preserved her wedding sheets that they might serve her for a shroud. In 1763 a young married lady was, ut her express desire, buried in all her wedding finery, consisting of a white negligee and petticoats, quilted into a mattress, pillow and lining for her coffin ; her wedding shift was her winding-sheet, and she wore a fine point-lace tucker, handkerchief, ruffles and apron, and a lappet head of the same costly materials. Diamond car rings were placed in her ears, gemmed riDg on her fingers, and a valuable neck lace around her neck ; whit* silk stock ings and silver-spangled shoes with stone buckles, completed her costume. A Norfolk gentleman preserved such a happy recollection of matrimonial life that when at the age of ninety-one, he lay on bis death-bed. he gave instructions that he should be buried in his weddiug shirt, which he had carefully kept for the pur pose, that garment being supplemented with his best suit of clothes, his best wig, his silver-buckled shoes, black wrist rib bons, and his favorite walking-cane. Margaret Coosing. who was buried in Cux ton church-yard, Kent, in 1783, ordered her body to bo attired in scarlet satin, put I in a mahogany coffin having a loose lid, 1 and placed upon trestles in a vault under a pyramidal monument, the glass door of the vault being covered with green silk i curtains. Another example of vanity strong in death was afforded us a few years ago, when a wealthy court milliner left strict injunctions behind her that her body should be enfolded in point-lace Chamber s’ Journal Heard county is becoming depopulated, if we may credit the news, which says The exodus from this county to Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas, promise* to be pretty heavy this season. A number of families are to take up the line of march in a few days, and others will follow in the course of the winter—the object of all being to better their fortunes Americas Ilepuh j Kean. i The Supreme Court of New York de cides that denying the colored children . admission into white school# is no viola tion of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the law is fully met by providing equally good school* sepurat* lor eoloreo J children. MACON, GA., SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1872. The Goorgia Emigrants to Liberia, We referred several days sinco to tbe emigration of oue hundred and fifty color ed geoplo from various portions of Ibis State to Liberia. They arrived safely in New York, it seems, and joined tho bal ance of tho emigrants, the party number ing in all three hundred and ninety. They were trauslcrred to the bark Jasper,which sailed last week. Tbe emigrants comprised a number of families and men of more than ordinary intelligence, very few sin gle persons being on board. Tbe New York Herald says : ‘ Tho Jasper is the property of the Messrs. Yates & Pottetfield, and has been specially chartered to make this trip. She is about six hundred tons burden, bark rigged.and is rather clumsy in shape and appearance. Her commander is John F. Webber, who is said to be an experienced seaman. Every care has been taken that tho emigrants shall be comfortably treated on their long voyage, and tbe accommodation provided for them is nmch superior to that of tbe groat transatlantic lines. The Jasper takes out an abundant supply of excellent pro visions and stores and a competent color ed medical officer, Dr. John N. Lewis, a Liberian, who lias lately graduated at one of tho New England medical colleges. Tbe emi(.rants, who bad been under the care of Mr. Coppinger since they de parted from Georgia, were taken under charge by Dr. Lewis, an African by birth who will accompany the expedition to Liberia. The voyage will occupy thirty five or forty days. Some of tbe passen gers will land at Monrovia the capital city of the republic, but the larger body will proceed to Cape Palmas, where they will bo located. The intending colonists have received encouraging letters from Mr Roberts, tbe President of the republic,and others, detailing tbe rapid advancement tlmt is being made in agriculture and commerce. On lauding each family will be provided with twenty-five acres cfland and will be entitled to tbe rights of Libe rian citizenship at once. The cost of transportation from this port to Liberia is fifty dollars per bead for adults and twenty five for children. > — A Living Christ. [By Rev. 11. A. Holland (Episcopal) Missouri Democrat, November 2. ) This whim that the Gospel means noth ing but the exposition of the plan of sal vation, is itsell an ecclesiastical innova tion. While right thinking forms the foundation of right acting, if not built up on according to design, It is as fragmenta ry and worthless ns any other foundation, without superstructure. Trinity, atone incut, justification by faith, immortal life, though the sublimest truths ever revealed to human intellect, are of no practical benefit w hatever, except as they inspire with mo.ives of that pure morality to which tli y have given the name of godli ness, or God likeness. The religion which promulgates these truths has a worthier aim for its work than by simply binding them together as the plank of a raft to rescue drowning souls from perdi tion and carry them, still dripping, to a celestial shore where they are suddenly dried into saints. Its business is to make men better here ns well as hereafter, better in their conduct to themselves, to their neighbors aud to God. Christ is not dead, that lie should l>a for ver shut up in a sepulchre and lament ed by bereaved pulpits, that discuss with reverence his extinct miracles, and specu late about the texture of his cere-clothes. Christ is alive, and in the world ; alive, and at home everywhere ; uiivc, to heal the sick ; alive, to open the eyes of the blind understanding, to strengthen the palsied arm of the will; yea, and to enter the temple port of the heart, aud to whip out the sins that would make that house of God a dun of tl*eves. Surely, then, He lias as much right as the devil to a re cognition on Change, or in the parlor, or iu other places, where the soul is to be found He came so far to seek. It is in this combination I speak. Hut for this com bination I should remain silent altogether. AVith any other combination, it seems to me, the pulpit plays poor ventriloquist in attempting to feign a voice from the char nel dust of 1800 years ago, that shall im press the world more by its ghost-like quaveriqgs than by its tone of moral com mand.' Jay Cooxe’s Brother to he Secre tary of the Treasury—Excitement was created uinong the Custom House He publicaus yesterday by a rumor that Pres ident Grant lmd decided to appoint Mr. Henry Cooke, a brother of Jay Cooke, to the oflice of Secretary of the Treasury in case Mr. BoutweJl should resign. The Custom llouso Republicans say that the oflice should be given to some member of their party in this city, as an acknowl edgement of their services at the recent election, and they have named two candi dates, Mr. Henry Clews and Senator Mor gan. The Western Republicans, however, say that they gave Grant large majorities, aud that as the Custom House Republi cans failed to carry this city for Ulysses they should be satisfied with mere local patronage. The President it is said kept out of tin- quarrel by promising the office to Mr. Cooke, who represents the District of Columbia, on neutral ground.— N. Y. Sun 2Gtli. Masonhy. —The Grand Lodge of Ma sons in Scotland never lias recognized more than the first three degrees of Ma sonry—the Entered Appentice, Fellow- Craft anr Muster-Mason -and holds all other ord rs and lodges as unconnected with them This is the original Bt. John's Masonry with that grand body, and they have no other. The Grand Lodge of Scotland lias frequently fulminated reso lutions and manifestos against spurious Masonry, nd has preserved a consistent coarse on •.his point for a t : me as long as their recoils reach back into the dimness of past ages. During the last decade the United States has imported from Paris, for pur poses of di ess merely, more than $260,- 000,000 worth of goods, in the form of bombazines, crapes, merios, shawls, silks, laces, toilet articles, jewelry, hair, leather, gloves trimmings, human hair, and so on, through 'he haberdasher's whole cata log ue. It is stated that Rev. Dr. J. E- Evans, now Mstliodist pastor in Savannah, will iraaafar himself to to the North Georgia ' Confereace. [■■■Mr. This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not to contain a single particle of Mum i itv, or any injurious mineral substance, but is l>l Ki:i.r VIIUKI'AHMI. For FORTY YEARS It lias proved its’great value In all diseases of the Liver, Rowels and Kidneys. Thousands of the good and great In all parts of the country voueii for Its wonder ful and peculiar power In purifying the Ut.oon, stimulating the torpid Liver and Bowels, and imparting new Life and Vigor to the w hole sys tem. SIMMON’S LIVER REGULATOR knowledged to have no equal as a i.ivi.i: iah. It. contains four medical elements, never uni ted iu the same happy projairtiou in any other preparation, viz: a gentle Cathartic, a wonder ful Tonic, an unexceptionable Alterative and a certain Corrective of all impurities of the body. Such siguul success has attended its use, that it is now regarded as the Urrat linlailinu b|>ri ilir for I.IVEU Co.MPI.AINI ami the painful offspring thereof, to wit: DYSPEPSIA, CONs’III’A TION, Jaundice, Billions attacks, SICK HEAD ACHE, Colic Depression of Spirits SOUR STOMACH, Heart Bum, etc., etc. Regulate the Liver ami prevent. <’HII,I.M AK I'l.Vl'llt. SIMMONS’ LIVER REGULATOR is manufactured bv .1. ii. zi:ii.i* a ’<., MACON, GA., and PHILADELPHIA. I Priccfl per package; sent by mall, postage paid, 11.25. Prepared ready for use in bottles, $1.60. SOLI) BY ALL DRUGGISTS. JSy-Bewure ot all Counterfeits atul Imitations. 113-523 U 1 UIIU/UA. xl -iCUo iVll ..umuuto.ii, * tics, Headache, Lumbago, Ague, Nervousness or Kidney Atleetions accepted for treatment that I cannot cure. no‘22 tf CROP OF 1812. Clover and Crass Seeds. RED CLOVER, CRIMSON CLOVER, SAPLING CLOVER, ORCHARD CRASS BLUE GRASS, HERDS GRASS, LUCERNE SEED, &c., &c. Just received, HUNT, RANKIN & LAMAR, Wholesale Druggists, 146-156 82 and 84 Cherry Street. The Greut Democratic Journal, THE .HEW VO It I* WEEKLY NEWS. BENJ. WOOD, Editor and Proprietor. A Mammoth Eight Page Sheet, Fifty six Columns of Heading Matter. Contains all the veirs, foreign, domestic, po litical and general, with full and reliable murket reports. Each number also contains several short stories, and a great variety of literary, agrieultural and scientific matter, etc , etc., constituting, it is confidently us.-.crted, the most complete weekly newspaper In tin country. TERMS, $2 A YEAR. Inducements to Clubs: Five copies, one year- * y Ten copies, one year, and an extra copy to the sender low Twenty copies one year, and an extra copy to sender to w Fifty copies one year, and an extra copy to sender K Partin Herulinff dubs a* aboer. man retain .10 per rent, of the money rceeioed by them , * rom \ paneation. Persons desiring to act as agents supplied 1 with specimen bundles. Specimen copies sent free to any addreni. All letters should be <ll - to NEW YOKE WEEKLY NEWS, Bo* 3,765, 1 novlll tf A ’em York City Ph*t Q/fle* MERCHANTS AND PLANTERS WILL FIND IT TO THEIR AD VANTAGE TO CALL ON US BEFORE MAKING THEIR BILLS. WE HAVE IN STORF, 100.000 LBS. BACON CLEAR R. SIDES. . 25.000 LBS. BACON SHOUL DERS. 10.000 LBS. BELLIES. 50.000L85. FLOUR, all grades. 500 ROLLS 2i BAGGING. 10.000 LBS. ARROW TIES. 10 BALES TWINE. JOHNSON & SMITH. JOHNSON # SMITH, Have, mid are offering at very low figures : 100 BOXES TOBACCO, all grades. 100 BBLS. WHISKIES. 150 BBLS. SUGAR. 50 BBLS. MOLASSES. 100 BALES HAY. 1.000 BUSHELS CORN, TocethtT with a full stock of till all goods in our line of business, l w-tf Brown’s Hotel, MACON. GA. I F long experience and a thorough knowl edge of the business in all its diversified brunches arc essential to the keeping that which the public has long heard uf hut seldom wen, A UOO HOTEL, the undersigned flatter themselves that they are fully competent to discharge their obliga tions to their patrons; hut they are not only experienced in hotel keeping, they modestly would claim to have the BEST ARRANGED and MOST COMPLETE LY AND EXPENSIVELY FURNISHED house throughout, In the State, which Is loca ted exactly where everybody would have It sit uated IMMEDIATELY IN FRONT AND ADJACENT TO THE I'ASSENOER DEPOT, wtiere travelers can enjoy the,mo*! eleej) and less liable to he bft by the perplcxingly constant departure of the trains. To all these important advantages is added a TABLE that Is well supplied with the best and choicest dishes the city and country can afford : nor would they omit to mention tkut their servants, trained to the business, have never been surpassed for politeness and atten tion to guests. For the truth of these statements, we reler the public to our patrons who reside In every litate In the Union. E. E. BROWN & BON, Proprietors. Macon, Ga., April 15, 1872. 78-104 DAVIS SMITH, (Successor to the lute firm of Smith, VVestcott. be Cos., and of Hmittr, MeGlashuu A Cos.) MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN SADDLES, HARNESS, BRIDLES, SADDLERY AND HARNESS HARDWARE, Carriage Materials, Leather of all kinds, Shoe Findings, Children’s Carriages, It I It It Ell, GIN BANDS, ETC’., Together with every article usually kept in a saddlery home. 109 C’HEKRY TANARUS„ MACON, A I IVMK FOR THE FALL AND WINTER TRADE ■ LAWTON Ac BATE , roiirfli Street, (Next Door to I.awton A Willingham.) l' r, 'l mr,,< * t® furnish the trade with (atoniKitis, i>KoriNio\M, im.vvtviioy ni ppuen, dau UINW, THIN, ETC., tern as reasonable tonne ns any house In Georgia. We will keep constantly on hand, BACON; I.ARI), CORN, OATS, HAY, SUGAR, COFF UK, BAGGING and TIES, and a general assort ment of such goods as are kept in a llrst class Grocery House. Give us a call. We arc running the RAGLEI'LOIIItINO MILI.N, and direct special attention to our “CHOICE,” “EXTRA,” "FAMILY” Flours. They will be found exactly adapted to the trade, and we guarantee every barrel to give satisfaction. Our prices are as low as those of the same grades can be bought In thc£outh. CORN MKAL, bolted und unbolted, ulways on band," of our own make and of the best quality. 120-188 J. 11. BANDY & CO. TIN AND SHEET I HON ROOFING, jo]Bm Gsiterim, PlntiK ill Repairif, m||l $ AL ° Y TIN AND GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES r, J \3a f K l ,*” | V u| Mg ~~1 [/] \ Executed at short notice and satisfaction V | J \IJ guaranteed. j) / \jl .Ho. 40 Third Street, Macon, On. ' Particular attention given to Guttering put up V WOODRUFF’S Ns PATENT HAVE FANTENINGN, M-migß IMPROVED OT GEAR. NO >1 ixr HIA G NKW. SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HORSE POWER IT IS NO HUMBUG!! zpilE settling of the Gin House Hoor has no effect on the Gearing. King Post of Iron and all I the work boltud to iron. IT IS MADE TO LAST, AND TO RUN TWENTY-FIVE PER CENT. LIGHTER THAN ANY OTHER POWER IN USE. Call ami see for yonaself. I build n Portable Horse Power that challenges nil other MAKES, but it will not do the work with the same DrnCHlmt m.v PATENT GIN GEAR will. All kinds of Machinery made and repaired at t'ltOCKin’T'N IRON WOK KM, IOH IHU Near Brown House, Macon Georgia. BROWS’S GALLERY! No. 8 Cotton Avenue, Is the place where all the differ ent styles of pictures are made at greatly reduced prices. W. & E. R TAYLOB, Cor. Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street, DEALERS IN MITII, CMHIK, BIS, OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, etc. Metalic Burial Cases & Caskets, Fine and Plain WoodCofllns and Caskets. mi fjf Orders by Telegraph promptly attended to. JASKft 11. BLOUNT. ISAAC HARDEMAN. HI.OUXT A IIARUEMAX, ATTORNEYS.**AT SLAW, MACON, GEORGIA. OFFICE, at entrance Ralston H“lL f Lbw r Y Btrwt. Barber Shop For Rent. THE Basement room, formerly oacupted by Mike Napier, In Brown’s Hotel for rent This 1* on* of tbs tor ■ B^5 8 tf opln etty 'Bssr hotel. Volume I. —Number 198 I*N MAN LINE I ar-glggcaragas Sjjkf* &s&s%&&&£■