Newspaper Page Text
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M vcoy. NOVEMBER 25. .1*73.
The Ohio Statu Journal thinks “The
Cincinnati Hotel” too inexact a name,
and suggests “Inn Aplgseyo.” That
trould W too common, for wherever the
rural editor goes he always puts up at the
firat-clas- hotel Inn Apigseye.—Cincinnati
Commercial.
“Poetical Dramas for Home and
School,” by Mary L. Cobb, is a new book
just published by Lee & Shepard, of Bos
ton, and for sale by Brown & Co. The
object of the book is apparent from its
title. It contains thirteen dramas, adapt
ed for school and domestic exhibitions.
A Solid Tax.—Beckoning State, coun
ty and city tax, the News and Courier
says the Charlestonians will be called on
to pay 44} mills on the dollar, which is
as near 4 j per cent, as it can well get to
be. A tax .of forty-five dollars on every
one thousand, the News says cannot be
collected, and advises the Legislature not
to make the levy. It says the money is
not in the State.
A French savant has been experiment
ing upon himself—not however in the in
terests of science - to decide whether to
bacco is injurious to the mental faculties.
While he was a user of tobacco he observ
ed a rapid decay in the faculty of mem
ory ; and after six years of resolute absti
nence from the use of the weed in any
form, he enthusiastically declares that
he h»s experienced a veritable resurrec
tion of health, mind and memory.
The Bose of Disentis.—Messrs. Brown
& Co. send us a new novel just published
by Sheldon & Co., New York, with the
above title. It is from the German of
Heinrich Zschokke, and is a story of the
French revolutionary wars of the last cen-
tuiy, the scene being laid in Switzerland.
The author held a high place among the
fiction writers of his country, and is well
and very favorably known this side the
Atlantic through other stories of decided
merit.
A Certificate of Character.—Har
per’s Weekly, that model organ of the
party of high moral ideas and civilization,
under the heading "The Public Service
for Sale,” says: “This is an era of cor
ruption. On all sides private and public
dishonesty is so common that the only
question asked of a man is getting to be—
will he steal ?” Nobody can speak more
authoritatively and intelligently about
the Badicals and their administration
than Harper’s Weekly; and now the
point is whether the first inquiry of the
Civil Service Board to candidates under,
examination for office is, “are you an
adept in stealing?”
Pacific Soundings.—After all, the
ocean is not full of such fathomless abys
ses as we have been taught to believe,
although there is a sufficient depth of
water for all practical purposes. The
Tuscarora, which for several months past
has been making soundings across the
Pacific Ocean in connection with the tel
egraphic cable project we have before
noticed, reports that the greatest depth
to be found anywhere between California
and China, where soundings were taken,
was only two miles and a half. Several
curious diecoveries were made, which will
add greatly to marine scientific knowl
edge and dispel certain incorrect theories
which have, until now, held good.
The Viroinius Fxecutions.—A tele
gram from Havana via Key West gives
the following particulars respecting the
slaughter of the crew of the Virginius at
Santiago de Cuba: “On Friday morning,
the 7th, thirty-seven of the crew of the
Virginius were brought on shore and
taken to prison, to remain there until
their execution, which was ordered for
that afternoon. Capt. Fry, a noble-look
ing man, fully a head taller than the rest
of the crew, when he met his men on the
wharf, previous to the march to the
prison, saluted them all. The salute was
returned with affection. At 4.45 p. m.
Capt. Fry and thirty-six men and officers
were publicly shot, despite the protest of
all competent foreign authorities. The
marines were sevon minutes killing the
wretched prisoners. It seemed as if they
would never finish. At last the sailors
marched off, and the troops filed past the
long row of corpses; then the dead carts
were hurried up and loaded indiscrimin
ately with the mangled remains. The
American consul has done all that could
have been done; indeed it was threatened
that his exequator would be withdrawn
for his exertions in behalf of the prison
ers. In an interview with Gen. Burriel,
this officer yelled at him and otherwise
treated him disrespectfully. The Brit
ish Consul also made an ineffectual pro
test against the executions. It is re
ported that sixteen of the victims were
British subjects.”
The Gale in Eufaula;
The News of Tuesday says the clouds
gathered about 12, m. last Sunday, and
before the congregations at the different
churches could get to their homes the
rain commenced falling almost in sheets.
The morning being favorable, large num
bers attended services at each of the
churches, and in consequence, many were
seriously incommoded by the unexpected
rain. This condition lasted during the
afternoon, the clouds remaining low and
thundering. About palf past nine o’clock
at night the approach of a fearful gale
was heralded by the continuous roaring
of distant thunder. Soon it was upon us
and the exceeding darkness of the night
was dispelled by a continual blaze of
lightning. The first visitation was ac
companied by a heavy fall of hail. This
over, every thing was as calm a3 a sum
mer evening, and we thought that the,
fury of the elements was spent. AbouF
an hour afterwards, however, a fearful
storm of wind, accompanied by some hail
and rain, burst upon us coming from the
Northwest. It lasted only ten or fifteen
minutes, during which time many palings
and fences were prostrated, signs, and
trees and chimney tops blown down.
Is will be seen that the great cyclone
struck Eufaula about an hour before it
was felt in Macon. The most material
damage inflicted in Eufaula was upon the
warehouses of Hart and L. F. Johnston
& Co. A few out houses and two small
dwellings were also blown down and
about two hundred feet of the Southwest
ern railroad bridge was unroofed, and the
bridge sprung' to some extent. The
bridge, except this, is as good os evei
the passage of trains not being inter
fered with.
- —- f- 1T —
The ex-Empress Carlotta is now
, completely insane that all remembrance
of her former life nos faded away from
her mind. She cannot even bfe made to
know that Bazaine, who deceived 'and
brought her husband to death by his
treacuerous' conduct in Mexico, suffers
now the consequences of a similar trcach<
ero, and is quite likely to have hia ca
reer terminated in the same. tragical
manner in which her poor Maximilian
Buffered death.
A Remarkable Case.
There was one man in New York last
Monday suddenly seized ^ by a common
sense idea and he uttered it in a -World
editorial of that date. A dirty and irre
deemable rascal, who by a long course of
brutal cruelty—(beating and other tor
ture endangering her life)—had driven his
wife to the roof and protection of friends
for safety, met her in the street with
every demonstration of violence. She
implored the protection of the police, but
the stupid policeman, misled by the hyp
ocritical protestations of the villain, gave
the latter the opportunity to shoot his
victim through the head. The World
says if the victim dies it will be some
consolation to know that he can not es
cape the gallows:
But (says the World) if the poor wo
man recovers, what adequate punishment
can then he inflicted upon Hie assassin P
In England, where the tendency of legis
lation has been to an ever-increasing ten
derness and forbearance, it has been
found wise to try tbe experiment of chas
tising crimes of this especially hose and
cowardly sort with the old-fashioned rod
and scourge. Wife-beaters and wife-
manglers, nocturnal garroters and other
wretches of a like prowling and
hyena-like sort, are now in England most
soundly,religiously,seriously, and serially
whipped. The experiment has so far
proved a successful one. - Either from a
greater average gentleness in our men, or
from the more fierce, forward, and formi
dable quality of our women, wife-beating
is much less common here than in Eng
land. But precisely because it is less
common does it excite greater disgust and
indignation t and wo von tare to nay that
every decent man in New York would be
glad to know that the wretch who did
this dastardly deed on Saturday was like
ly to get a couple of dozen well laid on
with the raw hide of an ox upon his own
at least once a week for the rest of his
unnatural life.
Now, to borrow an idea from the good
Bailie Nicol Jarvie, “there are some glim
merings of common sense” in the fore
going. It does assume, to some extent,
that disgrace lies in the crime and not in
the punishment, and that he who first out
rages “the dignity of humanity” by foul
crimes and misdemeanors, cannot justly
plead it to escape an appropriate retribu
tion. Yet Kentucky, North Carolina and
Delaware have all been or are all about to
be fairly prated out of the appropriate
punishment of scoundrels, who insult
women and terrify households by prowl
ing and stealing around them—who rob
widows and orphans of their mite in
cows, pigs and chickens, and by stripping
fields, gardens and fruit trees.
The whole outside world of stnpid phi
lanthropy lifts up its hands in holy hor
ror when one of these States takes the
outlaw, whose trade is the destruction of
all social comfort and security, and reg
isters their indignation and justice in
strokes upon his bock. Ah! it is a ter
rible crime against “manhood”—human
nature revolts at it—sensibility faints—
liberty goes frantic—tbe “civilization of
the 19th century” rips and charges—
Christianity groans, and, we may add, all
newspaper Bohemia vomits on the people
endless pages of objurgation, and stnpid,
irrational sentimentalism over the whip
ped thief, whose “manhood” and “native
nobility of soul” failed to keep him from
persistent raiding into his neighbor's hen
coop, garden or poultry yard.
No, sir, these petty thieves who har-
rass society from the cradle to the grave
—who tax the people ten per cent, of
their hard earnings spent in providing
bolts and bars for everything they hold
at homo—and the expensive, cumber
some, dilatory and lumbering machinery
of justice—whose eternal pillaging fairly
undermines and destroys fee simple title
and defeats the usufruct—we say all phil
osophy and common sense demands that
these chaps should be disposed of by
some punishment as prompt and inex
pensive as the crack of a whip, and we
are glad to see that there are some symp
toms of a reactionary opinion on this
point. Men discourse heavily ut>on the
“habeas corpus,” but in our opinion good
magistrates armed with the power of the
-hip would be more generally useful just
now than the venerable “habeas corpus,”
and as for trial by jury, has not that be
come a mere contrivance to defeat the
ends of justice ? , What else is it?
Famine in India. .
We reckon the British intend to
starve out their East Indian dependents
and make an end of them. Nothing will
do the British but that India must be a
cotton country. But India, with its hun
dreds of millions, cannot raise coton
without starving the people. The people
need all its broad acres for rice and other
food crops. But, in consequence of the
inhuman persistence in cotton growing,
Bengal, for the second tune in a few
years, is in a famine. Six years ago mil
lions starved to death, and millions more
are going to starve within a year from
this time.
The India press talks about importing
food from the Western American States
to save them. As well talk of feeding an
army with a teaspoon. It is not a light
business feeding American cotton plant
ers from the Western granaries—a dis
tance of a thousand miles, and it can be
done only by raising the price of com
from fifteen cents to a dollar and over.
But when it comes to feeding countless
millions of India cotton planters from
Chicago and St. Louis the case is desper
ate. The fleets of Christendom can’t do
it. Tbe India cotton planters may at
tempt to prove it is better to have their
com fields in the West, but itseems to ns
the eighteen thousand miles of distance
must make the argument eighteen times
more ridicnloas than it is in the Southern
States. However, there’s no accounting
for the follies and absurdities of mankind.
A Nice Programme.
The Cincinnati Commercial continues
to preserve its reputation as a singular
level-headed journal amidst all the gassy
clamor of its cotemporaries of that sec
tion for a war with Spain. Beferring to
a hydrophobic roar from tbe Chicago
Times for a general wiping out of every
body in Cuba, including the rebellions
Cubans themselves, and tbe seizure of
tbe -island by the United States-^for
which the Times alleges every man, wo
man and child in this country is "foam
ing”—the Commercial says:
This is a nice- programme. It would
cost about three years war, and one hun
dred and fifty thousand lives, and fifteen
hundred millions dollars. We would re
gain on island reduced to a desert and a
wilderness, largely stocked with utterly
ignorant black people. In other wards,
an enormous national sacrifice is!de
manded that we may add to our posses
sions an island that will be for anarchy
and corruption, thriftlessnes3 and prof
ligacy, equal to Louisiana, Florida and
South Carolina in one. And every man,
woman and child is supposed to-be foam
ing about it. - v
WIio are to do the Fighting.
A Herald, representative has been talk
ing Cuba with prominent aiufy m ehat
Washington, .ead^gives the fallowing as
their idea of v wh& should make up the
army to invade that island:
The opinions gained mpon the subject
of invasion and conquest of Cube may be.
summarized as follows:
The invading army should consist of at
least 50,000 men, chiefly if not wholly
volunteers. The regulars being confined
to the requisite number of batiariss of
light artillery and sufficient cavalry for
scouting and escort duty. From consid
erations of economy in transportation,
their reedier power of becoming accli
mated. the possibility of withdrawing
them from the counfry with lew disturb
ance to industry and the opportunity of
winning beck their allegiance to the flag,
the volunteers should be taken principal -
ly from the South.
But suppose the Southern rebels should
not volunteer to any Manning extent—
what then? The Government may suc
ceed in getting a few companies of high-
headed Charleston darkey militia, as we
understand some of them are fairly foam
ing to get at the Spaniards; but our no
tion is that white volunteers would not
bother the mustering officers with offers
of themielves as targets far Spanish bul
lets. They have something else to do.
They have their wives and children to
take care of, having lost all their prop
erty through the tender merries of the
party that now controls the Government.
They feel very little interest in this
fight with poverty and ruin staring them
in the face. They have a living to make,
and with all their efforts find it very diffi
cult to keep tbe wolf from the door.
What will it profit them to see Cuba
in the hands of the carpet-baggers and
other vermin, and that fair and fertile
island under the murderous heels of the
same gang that now dominates South
Carolina, Louisiana and Mississippi? The
Southern people have had more than
enough of such infamous prostitution of
the name and spirit of liberty. If the
Administration wants volunteers from
the 8outh let it call on its faTorite color.
It has no right to expect “rebels” and
"traitors,” as it calls and treats the true
Southern people, to desert their homes
and risk their lives for the purpose of
setting up another model on the fashion
so-called governments that now rule and
rob in three or four States of the "Union.”
If the country is invaded or menaced
with invasion Southern men will rally, as
they have ever done, to its defence.
They are Americans, and will stand up
for their native land when it is threatened
by hostile fleets and armies, but that is
as much as can be expected of them.
When it comes to volunteering to subju
gate another country as they have been
subjugated and to impose such oligarchy
of fraud, force, ignoranoe and brutality
upon others as they have been forced to
submit to here, count them out.
' Tbe Cuba News and Talk.
A special telegram of the 17 th, from
Washington in the Courier-Journal says t
Secretary Bobeson is not expected to
return here for several days. The prin
cipal object of his visit is to make a per
sonal inspection of the condition cf our
naval vessels at the Philadelphia and
Brooklyn yards, and to push forward as
rapidly as possible tbe work of repair and
fitting up now going on.
THE DISPATCH BOAT.
The tug-boat Tints, which is preparing
for a dispatch boat between Havana and
Key West, is a rapid sailer, and it is sup
posed will be able to make the trip in
from 8 to 10 hours. It is the intention
that the Navy Department shall have
daily intelligence of what is transpiring
in Cuban waters, and the commander of
our naval forces will have instructions to
send constantly foil dispatches.
NEWSPAPER CORRESPONDENTS.
Numerous applications have already
been addressed here in behalf of prom
inent newspapers of tbe country, asking
permission for their correspondents to go
aboard of tbe men-of-war destined for the
Gulf squadron.
WAR THOUGHT LIKELT.
The general impression seems to be
settling down now to the conviction that
we are to hare war, which, however, does
not seem to be shared in to any consider
able extent by prominent officials.
PROMINENT CUBANS.
Most of the prominent Cubans who
have been sojourning in Washington left
to-night for New York, avowing their de
termination never to cease iheir efforts
till Cuba is free. Telegrams and letters
by the score have been coming to tbe
Secretaries of War and the Navy, from
volunteer officers in the late war, tender
ing their services’ in case of hostilities.
Many of the ex-Confederates have also
written that they would like to have a
chance to serve the Government if diffi
culties should arise.
THE PRESIDENT IN EARNEST.
President Grant, who returned this
morning, was called upon by quite a
Humber of people, despite the very in
clement weather. He was as usual
somewhat reticent-, but what he did say
left no doubt that be meant business.
THE LONDON PRESS.
Some surprise is expressed at tbe tone
of the London papers in accepting as a
foregone conclusion that Cuba must
speedily fall into the hands of tbe United
States. A few years ago such a proposi
tion would not have been looked upon
with any degree of equanimity in any of
the countries of Europe.
The great war meeting in Steinway
Hall, Monday night, was attended by
3,000 people, and presided over by Hon.
William Evarts. At the conclusion of
Mr. Evarts’ intrqjuctoiy speech, the
crowd shouted vociferously for war. Sun
set Cox followed in a severe denunciation
of Spanish cruelty and tbe. bloodthirsty
spirit in which the war in Cuba has been
prosecuted. Letters were read from
Henry Wilson, Governor Dir, Governor
Parker, of New Jersey, Governor Inger-
soll, of Connecticut, Governor Hendricks,
of Indiana, Beecher, Forney and Gerrett
Smith. Bnt the most remarkable pert
of this performance, consisted in an omis
sion. The meeting had asked the views
of the Honorable Chawles, bnt Sumner
wrote so little to its purpose that his let
ter was never read. Sumner wrote, in
substance, that if the Virginias was.a
filibuster she was entitled to no protec
tion, and there had been no grievance.
It would be foolish to make her case a
plea for the recognition of Cubs, and it
would be cruel to precipitate a war, which
would result in tbe rain of the Spanish
Bepublic. Sumner advised the people to
keep cool and listen to calmer views,
Gus Peterson, negro, convicted of
murder, wffldaahung to-day at" Albany,
the Governor having refused^ to pardon
him.
The Atlanta Constitution reports tbe
mysterious disappearance of Mr. A. J.
Whidby, who lives near Lithonia, and.
who came to Atlanta on business Wednes
day of last week. He was seen late tbe
next day at the Union passenger depot,
bnt as he has not returned home fears of
foul play are entertained. '
All the black troops in Jamaica are
embarking nnder orders from the British
Government for active service in Africa.
THE GEORGIA
The Savannah^correspondent of the
Columbus Sun writes that'there - m - no
crowd at the Fair, and the display is small
but will be better the latter part of the
week. The races, however, are good.
We get these items from the Sun i
Low Prices of Mules.—To show that
our market is no exceptional one, we men-
torn that mules in Montgomery, on Mon
day, brought $25 to $50, which last year
fcould have realized $100 and $150.
i£s Damage in Talbotton.—Sunday
right’s storm blew down the African M.
E. Church building, and broke in one end
of the brick court-house in' Talbotton.
Trees and fences suffered considerabl .
No person was injured. From aU the
accounts we infer that only the lower
edge of the storm passed through this
section, as the damage in the up country
was much heavier than in Columbus and
vicinity.
The Bankrupt Case or Mb. John
Kino.—By reference to our special tele
gram'from Savannah, it will be seen that
the United States Bankrupt Court has
decided the case of Mr. John King, the
ex-banker, in his favor—that is, refused
to declare him a bankrupt. This confirms
the assignment.
Oub Factories.—The Columbus Fac
tory is still running on full time. The
Muscogee Mills nave increased from
three-fourths to full time. This com
menced Monday. The Clegg Factory for
some weeks has been in operation eight
hours per day on four days of the week.
The Eagle and Pherix Mills after to-day
will run no more until Monday, when
half time will he adopted. The difficulty
in collecting is the only trouble.
The Savannah Advertiser says Bishop
Beckwith reached that city Monday right
after an absence of several months spent
in travel, with health greatly improved,
and prepared to renew his official duties
with increased zeal and usefulness. He
officiated at Griffin on Sunday, and goes
to Columbus, Ga, the last of the week,
where he will officiate on Sunday next.
His return at this time was caused by the
illness of Mrs. Beckwith.
Savannah cotton exports on Wednes
day amounted -to 6,330 tales, valued at
$447,44416. j
The Barnesville Gazette says the farm
ers of Pike county are busy sowing wheat
and will put in a large acreage in small
grain of all kinds. We hear this sort of
talk every year, but somehow or another
cotton generally gets the upper hand.
.The “Society for the Prevention of
Crucify to Animals" met at Augnstaon
Tuesday, and the Secretary read his re
port advising, in conclusion, "that the
Society memorialize the Legislature at
its approaching session to make cruelty
to animals a statutory offense; to pro
vide, alike in the interests of humanity
and of agriculture, for the protection of
insectivorous birds, and-to inhibit the
unseasonable destruction of game. He
also suggested a petition to the City
Council, asking the passage ef an, oral-
nance prohibitory of the ill-treatment of
animals in the streets and other public
places of the municipality, and an ad-
dress requesting the humane to present
similar memorials to the various city and
town councils throughout the State.”
The Savannah News rises to remark
that "the editor of the St. Mary’s De
portment of the Brunswick Appeal is
chock fall of solid little chunks of wis
dom. He says that the Atlanta papers,
in order to make up for their shortcom
ings, intend to give their subscribers a
chance for a prize of some kind. The
best prize a paper can give is good ideas
clearly expressed.”
The Brunswick Appeal relates that
several years ago a very wicked colored
man professed convers on, and was taken
by his pastor to be baptised in one of the
small creeks on the coast, which was the
usual place for baptising. It happened
during a season when shrimps were very
abundant. The minister and our friend
went down into the water, and everything
being ready, the words "I baptize the,”
etc., wercjutfcered, but at the word "Son,”
the colored man cried out: "Stop, massa,
stop, dear d—d shrimp, da tickle me.”
We leant from the Barnesville Gazette
that tiie house of Mr. J. H. Williamson,
of Monroe county, was burned one right
last week, together with all its contents
of clothing, furniture etc., and 1,800
pounds of seed cotton. Loss, between
$800 and $1,000.
Horrid Murder.—The Borne Com
mercial, of Tuesday, has tbe following:
An account of a horrid murder came
tons yesterday. A desperado,working
at the JEtna Iron Works, named Bill
Donohue, went to the house of Captain
Clements, at Prior’s station, on Monday,
armed with a double-barrelled gun. He
hailed parties inside the house, when
Miss Bush, a sister-in-law of Clements,
came to the door. Donohue fired one
barrel of - his gun, the contents of which
entered the young lady’s abdomen, in
flicting a mortal wound, of which she
died in abont two hours. When the shot
was fired Captain Clements rushed to
the door and Donohue fired the other
barrel at him, inflicting a dangerous and
perhaps'mortal wound. Donohue, we
learn, claims that bis wife bad been in
sulted by Captain Clements. The mur
derer escaped, and had not been arrested
at last accounts.
Our Idea Exactly.—The Constitution
alist expresses it as follows:
The New York Herald attemps to show
that a war with Spa : n would put money
in the purses of various and sundry citi
zens. A vast deal of the f* rvor supposed
to exist in consequence of the shooting of
Fry, Byan & Co., is nothing bnt a pocket-
book pantomime, or sheet-iron thunder
evoked by the prospect of stealing some
thing from somebody.
The Fort Valley Mirror says an old
man named McCoy, who travels through
the country sharpening gin saws, was
caught stealing money out of the drawer
at the store of N. Binswanger, in that
place, on Wednesday and arrested.
The same paper has this item:
Orville Green, while oat partridge
hunting last Saturday evening, found a
valise down on the Columbus road con
taining a fine suit of clothes worth about
forfy dollars. We believe it was stolen
from Willingham on the train while he
was in the hotel getting supper a week
ago.
The Griffin News has the following:
Failure, of Messrs. Barnes Bro. <fc
Co.—For some days we have had rumors
of the failure of Messrs. Barnes Bro. Sc.
Co., of Senoia, and on Saturday they sus
pended business altogether. This was the
leading firm of the place, and life of our
flourishing little sister town. Their lia
bilities amount to about $65,000 and their
assets to some $45,000, the large propor
tion of their indebtedness being at the
North, and very nearljr all the balance in
Atlanta. They deposited collaterals for
the change bills recently issued by them,
and have called in most of them and will
redeem tbe remainder upon presentations
In High Feather.
Thn Caban*tfo83Soottfl» are again in
high feather. With plenty more people
to murder they are happy. There’s no
need of bull fights when they can draw
upon an jnexhaustible stock of men and
women to shoot, and they have discovered
plots and correspondence which enable
them to draw ad libitum on tbe best fami
lies of the Island to supply the daily
butcheries. A, happy t redbreache3! a
world of crime, misfortune and misery is
your element and you can never sigh, so
long as you can make other people groan.
> MARGIN.
TIE 5#HlMSlCALlEES W THE THINS.
■«w You P«^ Your Money ami Don’t
Take Your Choice—Devastations of
" Margin ” In and Around Wall
Street—A Blue Outlook In Gotham.
Correspondence of the Chicago Trioune.1
New York, November 12,1873.
Houses, lands, bonds, mortgages,
horses, dry goods and groceries are all
very nioe things to have; and an income
of pertain thousands'a year from any such
properties as th&e is very comfortable
indeed. You can receive and dine your
friends on Murray Hill, and your drags
and wagonets can come to be known on
the Brood Drive, whether you pay for
them out of your profits by the law, or
guano, or shoe-pegs. But there is one
kind of-property the especial invention
of New York. New Yorkers have put
millions into it of late, and it is remarka
bly remunerative (in kind)
The property is technically known as
KARGIN.
The beauty of Margin is, that it is within
the reach of the poorest, and it3 profits
are incapable of calculation. A man may
put $100 into Margin of a morning, and
be may go to bis couch that night worth
$10,000—in Margin; and he may realize
by the following evening—supposing he
puts that Margin into Margin—a whole
million of Margin.
One can readily become a Bothsclnld.
It is a simple rule; it is “Affluence with
out a master.” A single week at this
rate will make you a richer man than all
the nabobs in the world—than all the old
fogy millionaires who own lands, and
parks, and railroads, and steamboats—
rolled into a lump. A billion of money,
or a trillion even, is not an impossible
figure to your ambition. Duodecillions
are not without your grasp. It is easier
than lying.
What wonder, then, that Margin hao
become tbe specialty of New York; that
millions put their fortunes into ifdrgin,
dower their daughters, erect banking in
stitutions, savings institutions, trust com
panies, and venture upon all sorts of ex
travagance—in Margin.
There is only one drawback to the
beauty of Margin. That drawback is
(also technically) known as
SHRINKAGE.
And, should silly, old fashioned, pig
headed, idiotic people,—people who ate
an incubus on any enlightened communi
ty, and who do not deserve to live in a
country of Progress and Enterprise like
ours,—people who have heaped up their
fortunes penny by penny and shilling by
shilling,—should such people, I Bay, dis
cover that banks are in a rotten and rick-
etty state, that railroads are shaky and
trust companies bankrupt, and (dinging
to tbe absurd and exploded fiction that a
man may do what he will with his own)
he so niggardly as to draw out their
money and (this phrase, again, is techni
cal) hoard it, this terrible fiend of Shrink
age may swallow np all your Margin in a
single morning, and your grocer may sell
you out.
To speak seriously: The present panic,
when book-keepers are going without
their dinners, and millionares are selling
their liveries, has hit the half-million or
so of New Yorkers who have been putting
every penny they could borrow into Mar
gin,
PRETTY SEVERELY.
For instance: It is in everybody’s
mouth tnat the estate of the late Horace
¥. Clark, supposed to have been at least
$10,000,000 in value, is in process of go
ing through the Bankrupt Court. A
well-known gentleman who has figured
recently, and is generally alluded to by
the press as “Commodore Vanderbilt’s
next friend,” from a capitalist has be
come a borrower; that ten or twelve
dozen establishments in Wall street,
which have been doing an immense bank
ing business on a capital of Margin, have
smashed hopelessly; and that there is
not a soul in this vast neighborhood,
perhaps not in the circuit of a hundred
miles around our City Hall, who is not
retrenching his expenses, if nothing
more.
If, when Shrinkage came, it did noth
ing more'ihan dissipate Margin, it would
amount to nothing; in another week one
might be a billionaire again. Bnt, un
fortunately, though you paid nothing for
your Margin, when you have lost it you
.have lost just as much again in
HARD, 80LID CASH.
For instance: By the investment of $1,000
in paper, you may realize $75,000 in pa
per; bnt, if you lose this ppper $75,000,
you are indebted to A, B, and C, with
whom you may not even have a nodding
acquaintance, in the exact figure of $75,-
000, and they are base enough to demand
that sum in greenbacks. The broker has
lost nothing by carrying you; tbe Cen
tral or Lake Shore bonds are safe in tbe
vaults they have never left; but you owe
just $75,000, and, until you have paid it,
every cent, you can do no more business.
Supposing, now, instead of mere Mar
gin, you owned the stocks themselves.
Very well; you would be scarcely any
better off. Their value, and your for
tune, are dependent merely and solely
upon whether you can go on buying more
of the same sort or not. As long as you
can take every share that is offered, you
are worth your millions; but, if you can
not, then you must unload and depreciate
your own capital.
Queer property this! If you do not sell
it you cannot pay your butcher. If you
do, it will not satisfy his bill.
Speculating in stocks is the only game
in which
NOBODY WINS. -
We used to complain, in the old days,
before Kaiser William became virtuous,
and said we should have no more cakes
and ale, of the three Zeros at Baden-Ba
den. But sometimes you could win gold
even there. The game they play in Wall
street is one in which nobody wins a sou,
and the bank breaks too. •
This was precisely the trouble with the
Clark-estate-Schell-and - Banker - Union-
Trust-Company combination. These three
had a little triangular game wjth some
$2,500,000 of Lake-Shore in the vaults of
that wooden institution. Now, the estate
ishankrupt, Schell a borrower, and Banker
busted. The $2,500,000 is missing from
the Trust Company’s safe, and the conun
drum is,
WHO HAS. MADE ANYTHING ?
. I am not financier enough to answer,
but I think the consideration above pre
sented, concerning Margin and Shrinkage,
may suggest a solution.
I am not old enough to remember other
financial crises; bnt, they toll me, none
approached tbe magnitude of tbe one now
raging—if a crisis can be said to rage—in
this city.
Happily for the others, men then had
not learned the mysteries of Margin.
Evennow, if only thehandfulof speculators
and speculators-in-chief (known as opera
tors) had been investing in Margin, they,
and they only, would nave been crushed.
But unfortunately these men have banked
ona capital of Margin; they have organized
Savings Banks and Penny Trust Compa
nies for the Poor thereon; and so, in their
fall,
EVERYBODY—
You and I, and your laundress and my
barber—must be ruined to pay for the
year of prosperous sport which these op
erators have enjoyed on the green cloth
of Wall street. Here we all are, flat on
our backs, butchered to make a Soman
holiday I
^ Meanwhile, there are twenty-four
theatres, innumerable star-lecturers, cir
cuses, spectacles, and concerts "to amuse
us and keep our minds off our troubles.
The Avenue, of a Sunday, is packed as
always, with none the less gaily dressed
throng, and the newspapers tell us, in
leaded coluinns, that “the worst is over,”
“Nous verrorisque nous rerrons," .said a
grocer to a prominent broker who had
been crushed, and on his knees, trying.to
make his legs again, “I am all right;
business never so good; cash prices—
cash profits.” "Ah, yes !” said the bro
ker; “but about'the middle of-February
you’ll have a visit from about a- thousand
customers you never saw he’ore, who'll
come in without knocking, and \, J
TAKE WITHOUT PATINO;”
Let us pray he nay . not be among the
seers. ' - "
* , . ' ■ •:? u..’ U.
If you will glance with me at the up
town restaurants of an evening—restau
rants like Delmonieo’s an<( the Cafe
Brunswick—you will see no sitters at the
tables, waiters whispering to eaeh other
in little groups, and the cashiers nodding
on their thrones.
The great Hotel Windsor, all cut glass
and velvet, built on ground worth a mil
lion, and leased at half a million- or so
more, would have had a heavy pull for
its first season under the best auspices;
but, as it is, its builder has failed, its
palatial suites at from §20,000 a year
downwards are vacant, and its propietor
TALKS OF CLOSING DOORS.
A few hardy souls keep on. There are
three new theatres st 11 building, and
business houses in process of erection all
along Broadway; but I fancy the work
men are on board-wages—if as much as
that—to keep up appearances.
The estate of Paran Stevens—owning
a magnificent property at the comer of
Fifth avenue and Thirty-seventh street,
which has stood almost idle for so many
years, terraced up from the sidewalk, and
covered with a quaint old mansion of a
hundred years ago (used as a florist es
tablishment)—lately tore down the ten
ements and excavated for a second grand
hotel like the Stevens House on Twenty-
seventh street. But the otaer day work
was stopped there.
Newspapers have
CEASED TO PUBLISH THE LIST OF FAILURES.
I fancy they are too numerous nnd too
common to provoke comment. Only the
larger crashes, like that of the Spragues,
the Grinnells, or the Paysons, attract at
tention ; the quasi-failure of a great bank
like the Central National, even, make
hardly a ripple. Only lawyers and pawn
brokers are busy; but the former work
without retainer, while the latter cannot
find room for th'eir pledges. Ask a gen
tleman of any other line about his busi
ness, and he says, “Don’t mention it!”
I am casting about for something
cheerful with which to close my letter.
This is all I can think of: The fall, so far,
has been like er.rly summer—sweet, rav
ishing weather, in which young men and
maidens can still be happy—Qu’on est bien
a vingt ans. No sealskin yet, and no No
vember days. So, as yet, no suicides.'
Arthur Bede.
FOB THE FALL TBALE, 137^
C8TT0IAIDWE AH ^
One of the best selected stock, of
BOOTS AND SHOES
Ever offered by ui in this rauket
Ladies', IGaw’, CMlfcta’i, fa#
Boy*’ «d Youths’ Wear. ’
w Iwmmwrnlm m We ».
XJfflMEflT, iSSgSHMMHHk
SUPERIOR COURT.
The End of tbe Pike Trial-No Verdict
Yet by the Jury.
After a fatiguing labor of four consec
utive days, the Superior Court has at last
gotten through with the trial of Louis B.
Pike, charged with the murder' of Chas.
F. Baer. At half-past four o’clock yes
terday afternoon the case was given to
the jtuy.
This case has excited a vast amount of
interest in the commur ify, and the trial
has attracted great attention, both on ac
count of the inteibst felt in the homicide
and because of the eminent counsel em
ployed on both sides of the investigation.
The case has been fought as hard and as
ably as ever a case was in Macon. Every
inch of the ground was stoutly disputed.
The counsel for the State, believing that
their case was good bent all their ener
gies to make it out, while the counsel for
the defense were equally active and vigi
lant in the interest of their client. The
testimony was handled with the greatest
adroitness, and the points in the case
were developed frith the most cautious
precision.
Col. Hall concluded his magnificent ar
gument yesterday morning, and was fol
lowed by Cols. Lofton, Weems and Har-
rii in scarcely less able and eloquent ar
guments. Tbe five speeches made in this
trial are pronounced the equal of any five
speeches ever made in the Court-house.
The speeches yesterday occupied the
Court from nine in the morning until
three in the afternoon, when Col. Harris
closed. A recess of half an hour was then
taken for dinner, after which Judge Hill
delivered his charge to the jury. The
charge was about an hour in length, and
laid the case before the jurors in a man
ner that was so plain and enlightened
that it seemed to be impossible for them
to be mistaken as to their duty in the
matter.
The jury failed to agree upon a verdict,
and at a late hour last night it was an
nounced that they were locked up for tho
night. They will pro! ably not be heard
from before the court meets at nine
o’clock to-day.
——
Caution.—Purchasers of the Peruvian Syrup
(a protected solution of the protoxide of iron) aro
cautioned against being deceived by any of the
preparations of Peruvian bark, or bark and iron,
which may be offered them. Every bottle of gen
uine has Peruvian Syrup (not Peruvian hark)
blown in the glass. Examine the bottle before
purchasing.
Hunt, Rankin 4 Lamar—This well known
and reliable firm have received a large lot of Dr.
Hood’s Bureka Liver Medicine. It has the praise
of all who have tried it. In bottles at 60 cents
and $1.00.
Yellow Fever! Yellow Fevee! Wuebbis
the Antidote f—Reader, you will find it in the
timely use ‘of Simmons’ Liver Regulator. This
vegetable cathartic nnd tonic has proton itself
the sure preventive and cure of all diseases of the
liver and bowels.
........ . . — .
The Cheapest and Rest.—Hook’s Eureka
Liver Medicine gives universal satisfaction in tho
treatment of Liver Disease, Dyspepsia, Sick Head
ache, Costiveness, and all that class of diseases
arising from a disordered state of the stomach
and liver. novSOly
Jot to the'World ! Woman is Free !—Among
the many modern discoveries looking to the hap
piness and amelioration of the human race, none
is entitled to higher consideration than the re
nowned remedy—Dr. J. Bradfleld’s Female Regu
lator, Woman’s Best Friend. By it woman
emancipated from numberless ills peculiar to her
sex. Before its magic power all irregularities of
tho woinb vanish. It cures whites. It cures sup
pression of the menses. It removes uterine ob*
ttruct ions. It cures constipation and strengthens
she system. It braces the nerves and purifies tho
blood. It never fails, as thousands of women will
testify. This valuable medicine is prepared and
sold by L. H. BradQeld, Druggist, Atlanta, Ga
Price 5160 per bottle. All respectable drug men
keep it.
Tuskbbgee, Ala., 1863.
Mr. L. H.Bbadfibld—Sir: Please forward us,
mmediately, another supply of BradpiEld’s Fe
male Regulator. We find it to be all that s
claimed for it, and we hare witnessed the most de
rided and happy effects produced by it.
Very respectfully,
hunter Sc Alexander.
We. the undersigned Druggists, take pleasure
in commending to the trade Da. J. Head field’s
Female Regulator—believing it to he a good
and reliable'remedy for the diseases for which he
recommends it.
W. A. Lanbdell, Atlanta, Ga.
Pemberton, Wilson, Taylor 4 Co,
Atlanta, Ga.
Rbdwihe 4 Fox, Atlanta Ga.
W. C. L awshe, Atlanta, Ga.
W. Root 4 Son, Marietta, oa.
STATE OF GEORGIA—Troup Couxrr:
This is to certify that I ’have examined, the
recipe of Dr. J. Bradfiejd, of this county, and as a
medical man pronounce it to he a combination of
medicines of great merit in the treatment of all
the diseases of females for which he recommends
It. This December 31,1338.
V ' f< ‘ Wm. P. Beasley, M. D.
Hunt, Rankin 4 Lamar,
lyholesale Agents, Macon, Ga.
maylOdfiawiwW
' Pratt’s Astral Oil.
A BSOIiUTELY'safe. Perfectly odorless. Al-
■a1 ways uniform. Illuminating qualities supc-
nor.to gus. Burns in any Imnp without dimgcrof
exploding or taking fire. Manufactured expressly
to displace the use of .volatile and dangerous oil.
Its safety under every possible test, and its per
fect burning qualities, nre proved h.v its continued
use in over 300,000 families. Millions of gallons
have been sold and da accident—directly or indi
rectly—has ever occurred from burning, storiugor
handling it. The immense yearly, loss to life and
property, resulting from ilia useof cheep nod dan-
ierons oils in tho UnllM State*, is appalling. Tho
gnsuronse companies and lire eonmiU-ioner
lirouglioiit file country re.'omm.ud tlm ASTRAL
as the best safeguard wfrtaJi.mjis uve use 1. Send
for circular. For sale at iv* i’ l.v the trade gen-
er»H.T, and at wholesale by the nrdnrietors, CHAS.
PRATTA CO, 108 Fulton street, New York.'
augWdeodAwU
. SO Yean tf lrial has wswra*
to be thsbestheallBg mria
■cbdalag Ualmest la the W«m>
It la MeoBuaended with unbounded aaan*.
mnoe In all cue* of Cute3rni*eajurna, Benin*
Rheumatism. Hard Swellings, Bites, Chffl-
Wains, etUftiewsoftho Joints, frozen Feet, Isas
Ac, Ac, among all persons, and for Sprain*.
Founders, Ringbone,Poll-Evil, 8cntches.Wind-
Gslls, Hoof-ale, Spavin*, Springhalt, Beddl*,Co4>
|»r tndHsmes* G*U*; afro <li*e*M* oftte
aadEsrla A
Horses, Males or Cattle.
USTAS61
LrafflEHf
WILL ALSO
Oars neuralgia, Bheumsttan, Gout; Lam*
Back, Salt Rheum. Poisonous Bites, External
Bone and Muscle Affection*, Sore Hippie*, A a,
andi"»y be justly termed the panacea ter «U j
EXTERNAL WOUNDS.
na- Remember, thla Msfl—St dM
not spring up In»dsyersy**r,|Mt
duelngSRi! most absurd and xranuxujuxitmaas
rr innn BY HeW-BORN AND MUB8ROOX LOO-
vwm But we have the experience of orar
tflirty years of trial, with the xnoetaab-
Cti3tielre*ultMadby »multitude of wltn trass.
If tbe Uniaentte not ae reeoouMBMUlhn
MopcywibeMnnded.
Do no t be lopeaed upon by wring any attar
liniment claiming the same properties or re
mits. T- 'Fare a cheat and • fraud. Bason
And get editing but
0- Sold st all Dsuooibs* and CoobI
Stores at
26c., COc. atad fl per Pofaleu
HOOSB Sssi or Boms, Btom. AO,
LYON MFCL Oft
HAGAN’S
Best Xateriai!
Country merchant* will And it to thsfa.-x_
tege to examine our stir:, from
good selections can be made at
3£r e in , tto mWy rtWgg
Betell DepartnKBt;
We have, at No. S Cotton avenue m ..
street, all the latest style* d
end Children’s Boote, 8hoe#,^^,'Sft®ea’A
finished in the meet aE*l£E"*5*oi
ranted durable, to all riwhk-h we^JS*-
ourfriend. sad the public «ra—s’Mlfr
spbW * srcn-AKD.
OLD EYESMADENEW.
RESTORE TOUR SIGHT.
SPECTACLES KERBESED USELESS
AO disease* of the Xye sueeeeshll r traded ty
Ban’s Hew Patent Ivary Eye Caps.
Read for yourself and restoie year skH
Spectacles and surgical operation* readnrd-
useless. The Inestimable Blessing of Sight
Bade perpetual by the use of the new
Patent Istprartf Ivary Eye Cap*.
Many of our most eminent physfrisia, omilut
and students and divines, have had their sight;
lermanentlj restored far life, sod curad (f ttefei-
erwing diseases:
1. Impaired Vision; t Presbyopis-orPir-ftirH
edneaa, or Dimness of Virion, conunsa^ csDeg
Blurring; S. Asthenopia, or fresh Eyes; A Epipht
re, Running or Watery Krer; s. S*reXn*-s» .
dully treated with the Eye Caps—care guana
teed; (.Weakness ef the Retina,orOptic Nerr
7. Opt halm is. or Inflammation of the Ijeondi
imperfect vision from (he effect:
A Photophobia, or Intolerance
recto. Fsrttsl Bhndneas; the Iom of tight
Any one can use the Ivory Eye Cups witboct tie
aid of Doctor or Medicine; so as to eeedve immedi
ate beneficial resalte and never wttr rpeetsdet
or, if using now, to fry them aside forever. We
guarantee s cure in every esse where the directas
are lofcwed. or we wiH refsnd the money.
SMB Certificate* af Cure,
From honest Farmers, Mechanics and Xerchtntv
some of them the most eminent leading proies>: i:-
ml and business men uid women of education tnd
refinement, in oar country, msy he reenstotr
Under dale of March Hon. Horace Greeley
of the Ifew York Tribune, irrites: J. BaU* of cor
city, is m conscientious and responsible ttin./Kho-
ol intentional deception orimpoeitkn.
no«e, areer usmgtne r»*eni ivory is ye
days, thkmenung perused the entire contents
of a HtUjjr Newspaper, and all with the unassisted
e Sily I am grateful to yoor noble mrention; eb
tk watt I YtAYSkHopn ncm
U. ArwlY VOWg
Rev. Joseph Smith,Maiden,Ms«s-cwedof P»i-
tfrl Blindest, o*l»years’ standing,in one taunt t
Missouri State Lottery I
Eye Cups, and I ant ratisfiod they *»e good. »!■
pleased with them; ttey are tbegreatest invention
AI1 persona wishing for fall pertkahn, certifi
cates of cures, priceMfrid
dress to us, ana we will send oor Treatise on th
Bye, of forty-four pages, free <rf chuwe, bvretnra
mail. Write to Dr. J. BALL A CO., P-0. Bo;
No. »1, Liberty street, New Jorio
For the worst cases of MTOPU, » a|AE
SIGHTEDNESS, use
tachments, applied to thelTOKTEYECrPS.tas
proved a certam cure tor tins dfeMsa. _
Sendtorpamphlets and certificates—tree-
no more money by adjusting hngeglaww ®
noae and disfigure your face. .
w,-—— uU. Agents wan ted for tnfne
m _ a infralllft!
lVrflgnffilifl.Hfl.1m
A FEW APPLICATIONS KlW A
Pure Blooming Complexion.
It la Purely Vegetable, and its op station I*
Men and felt at once. It doss away with the
Flushed Appearance caused by Heat, Fatlga*
and Excitement. H ealsi and removes *11 Blotch**
and Pimples, dispelling dark and unrightly
spot*. Drives away TRn, Freckle* and "Baa-
burn, and bylta gentle but powerful lnfhmaoe
mantles the laded cheek with
MOUTHFUL BLOOM AND BEAUTY.
Sold by aU Druggists and Fancy Storm, Dte
pot, 53 Park Place, New York
Legalized by state Authority n<
Drawn in Public at st. Louis.
Grand Single Number Scheme
50.000 NUMBERS. '
CLASS L. TO BE DRAWN NOT 29, 1873.
5,880 PRIZES, AMOUNTINB TO $300,000.
1 prize of. .$50,000
1 prize of 13,430
1 prize of 10,000
1 prize of 7,500
4 prizes of. 5,000
4 prizes of 2,500
20 prizes of.. 1,000
20 prizes of..:...;., 600
40j}rizes of.....;.'.: 260
6000 prizes of. $100
9 prizes of. 1000
« prizes of 600
9 prizes of......
9 prizes of......
86 prizes of......
86 prizes of
180 prizes ot
5.000 prizes ot.....
Tickets $10. Hay Tickets $5. Quarters $2A0.
Our lotteries nre chartered by the State, are all
ways drawn at the time named, and all drawings
are under the supervision of sworn commissioners.
The official drawing will be published in the 8t.
Louis papers, and a copy of drawing sent to pur
chasers of tickets.
We will draw a similar scheme the last day of
every month during the year 1873.
Remit at our risk by Fostofiice, Honey Orders,
Registered Letter, Draft or Express. Send for a
circular. Address,
MURRAY, HILLER A CO,
Postoffice Box 2446 St. toils. Vo
SACKED MUSIC BOOKS.
THE STANDARD.
S TILL “waves,” and true to its name, keeps
well to the front of all books far Choirs, Con
ventions and Singing Schools. By L. O. Emerson
and H. R. Palmer. Price $180.
AMERICAN TUNE BOOK.
Contains 1,000 of the very best psalm tunes of
the century. Has no superior as a collection of
the most approved sacred music for Choirs and
Congregations. 600 Editors. 400 page*. Price
$160.
THE RIVER OF LIFE.
Is attracting the notioe of all lenders of singing
in Sabbath Schools, because of its very superior
arrangement of Bible subjects, its department ot
songs tor little children, its adaption to the inter
national lessons, and its general richness and
freshness of music and words. Highly commend
ed by all. Price 85 oents in bds. This Beautiful
Sabbath School Song book is sold at *30 per hun
dred in b'ds: $25 per hundred in paper.
The above books sent, postpaid, on receipt of re
tail pnoe.
CHAS. H. DITSON A CO,
711 Broadway, New York.
OLIVER DITSON A CO,
nov8d2aw4wtf RmtoWt
Tbe Greatest .Strike Yet.
E VER (WHERE the sick are striking against
metalic medicines and powerful vegetable
poisons. Everywhere they are strong in the be
lief that a Constitutional luvigorant—a prepara
tion uniting tho propert ies of a tonic, a gentle pur
gative, a blood uepurent, a sedative, and a gene
ral regulator is absolutely necessary in all diseases.
Everywhere thoy are coming to tho conclusion
thnt
Tarraat’s Efftrraefnt SrlUtr Apperienft
is precisely such a prep’u-.ttion. Within the past
year IhoiiMindsoI Itenfifea have adopted it as a
household remedy—disc tiding all the drugs they
had previously l iuimiui-temi to their
children. Ip general debility, nervousness, liver
complaint, constipittum. indigestion, rheumatism,
and favors, it is indeed a marvelous medicine.
Bold by aU druggists. mtU
those wish_^
whether gentlemen or xaoira, cm.
ble living at this light and profitabfcemptoy^i
Hundreds of agents are making from
DAY. To live agents $20a «Kkm!lbeynra!it^
Information furnished, sent free o[. ctBr fh ‘; s
forpamphletri^laraandpnrofrtJI-
P.O.Box 967. No. 91, Liberty street, B- *•
wtUljan26—
(HFrENTETOE
Tim only Reliable Gift Distribution in tbe «*> cW
X.. zi. BINS'*
TWENT1ETH
lAiialOitfl
To he drawn Thursday. January 1st. IS*
$200,000
IN VALUABLE GiyT*
GRAND CAPITAL VBiZB, (
$20,000 IN GREENBACK'
ONE GRAND CASH PBIZB ’ f
$10,000 IN GREENBACKS.
Oil GASI Kill W$5,W® IS
SixPmzj? of* (WOO each nr| 0Pfleill)3^ ^
T*jr PaizsaoFloOO J Wstclrt
2,500 Gold and Silver Lever Hunting
(in all) worth from $20 to $3001 nmlis*'
Coin Silver, Vest Chains, Sohd1 and
Plated Silverware, Jewelry, jtc, e “ c ’„ v . u £3
Whole number of Gifts 25,000.
ited tc 100,000. ir
Asents Wanted te sell U® m,
wham liberal premiums *
be paid.
Single Tickets $8; Six Tickcts$10: T* 81
at* $20; Twenty-five Tickets $40. • zeSl s3 s ’
Circulars containing B 'iSL, snd m
scriplion of the manner of drayh^.,,wc W *
formation in reference to tho 5 st »lnettcB* 1 ^
sent to any one ordering them.
he'addre^ed to _ etVE.Boi”/,
Main Office. L. »• 0
101W. Fifth Street. u
nov19 d4w6w ——
/~tEOBG C CRAWFORD
ijr Ro-sb s QPi lied jo? eiOurptr^V^f,»
and I will pis. upon tho same R-tf-
camber St m 1S78. JAMtS ^
nov)9 2t*