Newspaper Page Text
Telegraph & Messenger
BU’UtMt MOUfUMG,
Established *
'rindpal office 101 W. Fifth-eU Cincinnati. 0.
F. OF I.Y BKLIABLE GIFT DISTRIBUTIOH
IS THE COUNTRY.
For nearly half a century the Georgia Telegraph and the Georgia
Journal and Messenger, either separately or united, have been the
great organs of general intelligence to this and the contiguous sections
of Georgia and Alabama. In all the varied social, civil and political
experience of this region during that extended and momentous period
in its history, these old Journals have been the constant and familiar
visitors of thousands of households in this vast area of country, and
have numbered their readers and patrons by successive generations.
In the whole scope of this great Agricultural section of two of the
most important Cctton States, the fortunes of these journals have varied
simply with the varying fortunes of the people, and to-day their cir
culation and hold upon the public confidence and estimation have never
been exceeded at any period in their long history. Indeed, as the
demands upon newspapers bccaMe yearly more exacting—the expen
ses of publication increase and concentration of capital and labor be
come more indispensable, so, we are glad to say, our circulation and
influence increase with equal steps. The former have multiplied more
than tenfold in the last twenty years, and the circulation and business
of the Telegraph and Messenger have increased in the same propor
tion. We rejoice to believe that in no section of the United States is
there a newspaper possessing a more complete occupation of its pecu
liar field of circulation than do the various editions of the Telegraph
and Messenger, within that whole region of country to which it can
carry the earliest intelligence. Its circulation in gross we suppose to
be not exceeded by that of any newspaper in the Carolinas, Georgia,
Alabama and Mississippi, with perhaps a single exception, but its cir
culation in its appropriate and particular field, is without an approxi
mating rival.
These are the circumstances and this the condition which make the
Telegraph and Messenger such a remarkably good Advertising Me
dium. There is scarcely a family or individual doing business with
Macon, within a radius of two or three hundred miles around the city,
who does not read the paper, so that an advertisement in its columns
reaches all eyes. The Macon merchant can scarcely add a greater
publicity to his business, among people who can trade with him, after
he has advertised in this paper. . The Northern or Western merchant
or manufacturer can rely on the fact that by advertising in this paper
he will address the whole mercantile, professional and agricultural
population of this large area, and need go no further for that purpose.
We are frequently in receipt of testimonials from advertisers of all
classes as to the peculiar value of this newspaper as an advertising
medium.
And we are ready to place these advantages at the disposal of the
public on the most reasonable terms compatible with our expenses and
circulation. Our policy is to encourage advertising by moderate
charges; but it must be obvious to every man of common sense that
we cannot multiply copies of advertisements by thousands, for the
same price that others can furnish them by scores and hundreds. This
point is better understood in the great commercial centres where ad
verlising is valued and paid for precisely according to the scale of cir
culation—where one paper will be cheerfully paid three dollars a line
and another five cents a line for the same advertisement, according to
their measure of circulation. The first furnishes paper, press-work
and circulation for a hundred thousand impressions, and the latter
perhaps for a few hundreds. The contracts have all the difference
which exists between a pound and hogshead of sugar ; but both, it
may be, print and circulate a merchant’s address to the public for less
than half what a corresponding number of circulars or handbills would
cost, which could have no other circulation than they might obtain
from a range of limited personal acquaintances and mere fugacious
personal efforts. There can be no cheaper or better method of ad
vertising than through the columns of a popular, widely circulated
newspaper, which by long habit and association has become the daily
source of information to all within the scope of country which fur
nishes the trade of its commercial centre. All other expedients to
communicate with the people are comparatively inefficient and value
less. We place the Telegraph and Messenger before the public, as
a certain, popular, and unrivalled medium of advertising communica
tion with all that part of Georgia and Alabama which looks to Macon
for its market or for the earliest news.
Iff VALUABLE GIFTS 1
TO BE DISTRIBUTED Iff
L. D. Sine's 153d Regular Monthly
GIFT EMTBKPKISB.
To bo drawn Moodsy. February 9.1S72.
Two Grand Capitals of
$5,000 EACH IX GREENBACKS!
SfeasssTj.' GmMs 1
TEN PRIZES *100 |t U1UUUUUUJ1U.
1 Horae and Boggy, wiili Lilver mounted Har-
noftflt worth 1100.
Ooo Fin* toned Roeewood Piano, worth $560.
Ten Family Sewing Machines, worth f 100 each.
The cHlfdhood »f ViChens was pa-w-d in *6-
jert porirty; hie father, a man of shifts and
expedients, werflhe prototype of Mieawber, and
familiar with the inside of prisons as an insole
rent debtor. At an early age, the aon waa prt
to service in a blacking manofactory, the
wretchedness of which ho Urns describes in his
autobiographical sketch.
“This speculation was a rivalry of ‘Warren's
niaeUng, GO Strand,' at that time wary famous.
Ooa Jonathan Warren, (the famous one was
Robert! living at No. 80 Hunger ford Stairs or
Market, Strand (for I forget which it was called
than), claimed' to have been the original inven
tor or proprietor of the blacking recipe, and to
have Men deposed and ill-need by his renowned
relation. At last he put himself in the way of
selling his recipe and bis name, and his SO ilno-
gerfurd Stairs, Strand (80 Strand very large,
and the intermediate direction very small), for
an annuity; and be set forth by bis agents that
a little capital would make a great tininess of
it. The man of soma property was found in
George Lamert, the cousin and brother-in-law
of James. He bought this right and tiUe, and
went into the blacking bosinoss and the black
ing premises.
"In an evil boar for me, as I often bitterly
thought. Ila chief msnager, James Lamert, the
relative who had Uved with us in B yham
street, seeing how I waa employed from day to
day, and knowing what onr domeaUo circum
stances then were, proposed that I should go
into the blacking- warehouse, to be as meftal as
I oould, at a salary. I think, of six shillings a
week. 1 am not clear whether it waa six or
aevsn. I am inolined to believe, front my un-
certafafy on this bead, that it waa six at first
andRren afterward. At any rate, the offer waa
aooepte.1 very willingly by my father and moth
er, and on a Monday morning I went down to
the blocking, warehouse to begin my hosinea*
life.
“It is wonderful to me bo* I oould have been
so easily east away at snob an age. It ia won-
Vfill, ay 1, 1872, sell the following goods at the astonishingly low prices annexed
l000 SACKS FLOCK ALL GRADES AND SIZES,
4 CABS CHOICE WHITE CORN,
2 OARS TENNESSEE OATS,
60 CASKS A HALF CASKS G. B. SIDES,
60 CASKS A HALF CASKS SHOULDERS,
67 SACKS CHOICE RIO COFFEE,
75 BOXES TOBACCO, ALL GRADES,
25 BARRELS SUGAR,
60 BARRELS MOLASSES,
NEW CROP MACKEREL, ALL NOS. AND 8IZES,
60 ROLLS DOUBLE ANCHOR BAGGING.
600 BDLS. EUREKA TIES (BEST IN U3E)
50 BARRELS WHISKY
The above Goode, with everything else in our lino, will be eold at
THE •WERT XiOWEST PRICES,
Either for CASH OB ON TIME. Satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded. Try ua one time, and
you will bo certain to try us again. eepU9
REAL CHXER SETS, containing 150 pieces
REAL CHBErS, containing 44 pieoes '.
1MITATIO DINNER SETS, 140 pieces
miTATIO TEA SETS, 44 pieoes
CHINA, AIR, MILK GLASS, and PARIAN VASES, from
ENGLISHMAN TOYS, from.
MOTTO C SAUCERS, for Fathers, Mothers, Sisters, Brothers, and
from
DECOBAUBER SETS, 11 pieces, from
Ten Ladioa’ Gold Hunting Watches, worth $100
Meb.
800 Gold and Silver Lever Ranting Watches (in
ail,) worth from *20 to $300 each.
Ladies' Geld Leootine end Geet'iGold Vert Chain*,
•olid and donhle plated Silver Tab!
FIFTHS GOBLETS AT FORTY CENTS PER SET.
r u«iiu uutuuu »umu.w<#t limited Co 60.000!
Agenta wasted to fall ticket!, to whom liberal we-
injda tickets IS; 12ticket* iHh 2S |20.
Circular* containing stall lilt‘of rnicr. adeecnp-
Tkie is nccite the readers of our advei tisements. We have the goods and mean what we
indotiicr information
a, will be sent to any
L.D. SINE. Box W.
Cincinnati. Ohio.
dec27eod&wtf
WISE & DOBBS,
82 Mulberrry street.
"WIG & SOLOMON
Factory East End Hasel Street, Mines oil Ashley River.
derful to me thet, even after my descent into
the poor little drudge I bed been since weeame
to London, no one bad com passion enough on
me—a child of singular abilities, quick, eager,
delicate, and soon hurt, bodily or mentally—to
suggest that something might have bean spared,
as oertainly it might have been, to place me at
any common acbool. Our friends, as I take it,
were tired out. No one made any sign. My
father end mother were quite satisfied. They
oould hardly have been more so if I bad been
twenty years of age, distinguished at a gram
mar-school, and going to Cambridge.
‘The I decking-warehouse was the lost honse
on the left-hand side of the way, at old Hanger-
ford Stairs. It was a orasy, tumble-down old
bouse, abutting, of course, on the river, and
literally overrun with rats. Its wain-scoted
rooms, and ila rotten floors and staircase, and
the old gray rata swarming down in the cellars,
and the sound of their squeaking and scolding
coming np the stairs at ull times, and the dirt
and decay of the place, rise np visibly before
me, as if I were there again. T'bo counting
bonae was on the first floor, looking over the
ooal barges and the river. There waa a recess
in it, in which I used to sit and work. My work
was to oover the pots of psato-hlaokins, first
with a piece of oil-paper, and then with a pieee
of blue paper; to tie them round with a string,
and then to clip the paper dam and neat all
round, until it looked as smart a* a pot of oint
ment from an apothecary's shop. When a cer
tain number of groatosof pots bad attained ibis
pitch of perfection, I waa to paste on each a
printed label, and then go on again with more
(»ts. Two or three other boys were kept at
similar doty down stair*on similar wages. One
of them came np, in a ragged apron and a paper
cap, on the first Monday morning, to show me
the trick of nsing the string and tying the knot.
Hia name was lluli Fsgfn, and I took the liberty
of using hia name, long aftorward, in “Oliver
Twist."
“Onr relalivo hsil kindly arranged to teach
me something in the dinner honr—from twelve
to one, I think it was—every day. But an ar
rangement so incompatible with counting-house
imaineea soon died away, from no fan It of hia
or mine 1 and, for the same reason, my smell
work table, and my grosses of pots, my papers,
string, scissors, paste-pot and labels, by little
and little, vanished ont of tbe recess in tbe
counting-house, and kept company with tbe
other small work-tables, grosses of pots, papers,
string, scissors and paste-pots, down stairs. It
was not long before Bob Fsgin and I, and an
other boy whom name waa 1‘anl Green, and who
waa currently believed to have been cliriatened
Foil, (a belief which I transferred, long after
wards again to Mr. Sweedlepipe, in ‘Martin
Uhtuzlewit’) worked generally, side by side.
Bob Fsgin waa an orphan, and lived with his
brotber-m-lsw, a waterman, l’oll Green a father
had the additional distinction of being a fire
man, and was employed at Drury Lane Theatre,
where another relation of Foil’s, I think his Ut
ile sister, did imps in the pantomimes.
"No words can express tbe arcrot agony of
my son! as I sunk into this companionship;
compared these everyday associated with thorn
of my happier childhood; and felt my early
hopes of growing up to be a learned and dis
tinguished man crashed in my breast. The
deep remambranoe of the sense I had of being
utterly neglected and hopeless; of tho shame I
felt in my position; of the misery it was to my
young heart to believe that, day by day, what I
bad learned, and thought, and delighted in, and
raised my fancy and emulation np by, was paas-
iug away from me, never to be brought back
-OFFER THE-
iling Silver Ware, Plated Goods,
In the citj 18 LOW PRICES AS THEY CAN BE BOUGHT ANXWBEKE.
new. Their stock consists in part of
Dire. a. rorier, uruuii, us.; xurs. i»eueocs or eras-
worth. Bartlesville, Ga.; Mrs. D. Lewis, Bamcsville,
Os.; Mrs. It. Goodman, Montieelln, Gs ; Lon (color
ed,) former servant of B. W. Collier, Indian Hprings,
Ga. The above is only a few of the many names
WAtlES ITV GOLD & SILVER CASES,
I •
IS’KALF SETS IN CORAL, CAMEO, ETRUSCAN, PEARL AND JET,
,-ehcf r upon firs. M. J. Bonyer’a eye, after eminent
physicians bad failed to relieve her; and I firmly
believe bn Cancer treatment to l«> specific for
Cancer. L: A. HANSE, Macon P. O.
To Hie A-fflicted!!
I prefer not treating doubtful cases. After sat
isfying yourself describe yqnr cancer to me and I
will give yon my candid opinion.
At your request I will visit your houses when dr-
cuniHtiDCov permit.
My residenco is twelve miles east of Griffin, Ga..
which is my nearest express office. Money may be
ELEC OPERA. LEONTINE AND VEST CHAINS.
SLBVE BUTTONS, IN ONYX, CAMEO, AND ALL GOLD,
WANDO FERTILIZER
A viried «da, Hain Gold and Soal Rings, Elegant and Latest 8tyle Ear-ring*, Lockets in Gold,
Petory, (old and Coral Necklaces, Jewelry for Misses and Children, Jut and Shell
jy, Cicka in every style, eight and one day—with or without alarms,
and a large and new stock of FANCY GOODS.
TCE WORK DONE AND WARRANTED,
RECOMMENDED BY AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTS AS A SPECIAL MANURE FOB
COTTON, WHEAT, CORN, AND OTHER GRAINS.
de!9f PLAIN, ORNAMENTAL AND MONOGRAMS AT SHORT NOTICE.
V& E. P. TAYLOR,
Gomel Cotton Avenue and Cherry Street,
—DEALERS IN—
Fniture, Carpetings,
B, OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, ETC.
PHOSPHATES
GROUND ASHLEY RIVER BONE
FOR COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED.
VA1TILLA, LEMON Etc.,
For Flavoring Ice Cream, Cake* & Pasfry.
THOMPSON,STEEI.F,& PRICE M’F’GCO.
Depots, Chicago and St. Louis.
KASrrAcrnttits or
OB. PRICE’S CREAM BAKING POWDEB,
AND BLOOD ENRICHER.
Agents, Macon, Ga,
ITALIC BIRIAL CASES AND CASKETS
Fine aiuiPiain Wood Coffins and Caskets.
dera by'jTelegraph pro* Jy attended to.
eov18 3m
Is an immense sheet, 38x52 inches iu size and containing fifty-six col
umns. It is designed to contain a full and connected history of the
week, and although its great size is complained of by some, yet we
find the whole space essential to the grand design of the paper. A
family in possession of this paper need be ignorant of no important
event in the world’s current history,
idea or discovery bf the times.
ADJOtNG PASSENGER DEPOT, MACON, GA.
05 INSTALLMENTS.
R. J. ANDERSON Sc. CO„
Agents for the
HALLET A DAVIS,
EMERSON, ami
SOUTHERN GEM PIANOS, and
MASON A HAMLIN ORGANS.
T HERE are first-class instruments, and can be
bought ou installments of from $10 to $25 per
month. Thoee wanting a desirable and sweet-toned
instrument would do well to examine ours before
purchasing elsewhere. Orders for all kinds of
I J • » : a a_ — .1—
THE SHUT RECUPERATOR Of EXHAUSTED ENERGIES.
The most reliable Blood Purifier.
The sure Repairer or Broken Health,
The true Nerve Supporter.
The Permanent Strength Rencirer.
The most Energetic Tonle.
In *11 cases of Debility, Poor Blood, Weak
Nerves, Disordered Digestion, it surely
and durably benefits.
Sobi by alt Druggists, or the Manufacturers
on the receipt erf £<?, «rs/Z tend, by ltrprcss, 6
Dottles, rchickxs sufficient Jot Sot 4 months.
Prepare.! only si the Laboratory of
Thompson, Stcclo & Prico MVsr Co,
w.srrsrvmnu cr
DR. PRICE'S CREAM BAKING POWDER.
Special Flavorings tor Ire ( rram. t akes t Pastry.
t<7 ai 50 LAH S7SSS7, - CSEi.50, HA.
327 SXCCS3 S5UI7, - - ■ ST. A!TC, 1C.
Of all Bizesy Saw Mills, Plantations or any otbor'purpoae.
C MILLS, MILL GEARINthe host SAW MILLS mails in the Sontb, IRON RAILING, LEF-
I WATER WHEELS, (recei'the first premium at tbe Georgia State Fair, 1871), GIN GEARING,
nly substantial article to ruins), SUGAR MILLS and BOILERS, (the best madein the State),
Dliofield’s ^atent Ootton ^Presses!
TO RUN HORSE, HAND, WATER OR STEAM,
ved nil the premiums at tGeorgia State Fair, 1871, for BEST COTTON PRESSES, (all the
articles we exhibited).
FTING, PULLEYS and HAK43, MACHINERY of ail kinds, IRON or BRASS made to order.
e are determined to keep the rtation wo have always enjoyed of mannfatnriiig or repairing
iunery, etc., in the beet mannet lets cost with promptness, and to the satisfaction of all.
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON-
'g- Having the best Lathes for fm Engine Building in the State, we notify other Steam Engine
— - -■ - we can turn their Fly eels any size from seven to twelve feet. nov7tr
miss any important
In State news it covers the whole
ground and gives all current events of importance in every county
of Georgia. It also furnishes an invaluable original summary of foreign
news—and gives the latest market advices from every commercial
point. This paper is a universal favorite of the Georgians who have
emigrated to Texas and other distant points, and in this way its cir
culation is coextensive with the United States and is, in fact, scattered
over foreign countries;
We feel that so invaluable a paper, large as its circulation is, has
never yet attained the full measure of its deserts. Will not its readers
eveiywhere interest themselves in extending the sphere of its useful
ness? The price of the paper is three dollars per annum, but if any
reader has a mind to add another new subscriber to the list, he may
remit five dollars, and we will send the paper to the new subscriber
and add a year to his own account.
don'tknotr; but I out sco him now, storing u
me as I ate my dinner, sml bringing op the
other welter to look. I gsve him s halfpenny,
and I wish now, that be Hadn’t token it.
Where is the original of ette of the incidents
related in the history of “ David Oopperfield,"
which was literally drawn from his own expe
rience.
“ I wss such a little fellow, with my poor
white hat. Rule jacket, and corduroy trow sere,
that frequently, when I went into the bar of a
strange public-house for a glass of ale or porter
to wash down the saveloy and the loaf I had
eaten In the street, they didn’t like to give it
me. I remember, one evening (I had been
somewhere for my father, and wss going back
These‘'ders that
snd for tbe best manufacturing machine.
superior machines can be bought on easy terms oV
t» t a \if»D tionv
K. J- ANDERSON,
Agent, No. 15 Cotton Avenne, Macon, Ga.
Agents wanted in every town and county in South
weet Georgia. From $50 to $500 per month guar
anteed. decs If
to the borough over Westminister Bodge,) that
I went into a pnblio house in FarUament-rt.—
which is still there, though altered—at the oor-
aod said to the landlord behind the bar, ‘ What
is your very beet—the very beet—ale, a glass? ’.
For the occasion was a festive one, for some
reaaom: I forget why. It may have been my
birthday or somebody elm’s. ‘Two pence,’
toy* he. ‘Then,’ says I, 'just draw me a glass
of that, if you please, with a good head to it'
Tb# landlord looked at me, in return, over the
bar, from head to foot, with a strange smile on
his fsoe, and, instead of drawing the beer,
looked round the screen and said something to
his wire, who cam# out from behind it, with her
work in har hand, and joined him in surveying
ms. Hare we stand, alt three, before me now,
in my study in Devonshire Terrace. Theland-
lord, in hie shirt sleeves, leaning against the bar
Window-frame; his wife, looking over the little
half-door; snd I, in moat confusion, looking
up at then * '* “ —
asked me
FAIRBANKS
Fruiterers and Candy Manutacturers
Baltimore. Maryland.
sengJAwtei* tkess case.
GEORGIA LA\D AGE.WJY.
T he undersigned (surviving partner or Butts A
Brother), has vattubl* Ootton Plantation* and
Standard. Scale*
More Than 250 Different Modification
AGZSTB ALSO FOB THE BEST ALAMi MONEY DBA',
OT only does it bats Labor, fuel, clothes, etc
but by nsing it, housekeepers get rid of th<
ovance and discomfort of hot water in summer
Is a compact paper with few advertisements, and furnished twice a
week. We most particularly recommend this edition to those who
have more than one and less than six mails a week
In this connection we call attention to the propositions at the head
of the first column in this edition.
FAIRBANKS & CO.,
232 BROADWAY, NEW TOR
FAIRBANKS, BROWN & CO
118 MILK STREET, BOSTO
For sale by Caih&rt &. Curd, Macon, Ga.
eep27wed,satimos
good many questions, as what my
—. how old I was, where! Uved, how I
(ployed, etc., etc. To all of which, that
V.VANNTJCKI,
nzAT.ru ITS
XiAGJQB. B23ESR,
COTTON AVESTE, OPT. OCECXCEE SO. 2,
TTAS just restocked his Saloon with all the popn-
I I Ur brands of Mines, Liquors and Cigmrs. and
would be pleased to have bis old friends, and the
public generally, give him a call.
FRESH FI3H AND OYSTERS
Received every
po301o
WASHINGTON DESSAU,
ATTORNEY AT EAT
MACON, GA.,
W ILL practice in the Coorta of Macon Girts
Office—With XiabeU A Jackson.
oct24-lw8nn&d6m
, . nm vt/lanf ftd to Cotfcain and Tobacco, being tbe well known article bwetoro
J^iStoe X”hih^de of 15^er dissSved Cffta^hate of Lime with the addition, .*
hmtoforo of pSnvian Guano, Ammofl Polish. Price $56 per ton, if paid on or before tae lrt
otA^?U next, and$60 per ton, payablember let, 1S72, wtthoct WTZEZer.
ETIWF. CROP FOOD.
1 „„„ -rtiri* of the earns high grade -b!e Phosphate, compounded with the elements of Cotton
Tanner asto ensure one best fertilizers for Cotton and Gram, at a lower pnoe th«>
thTEttelfaSm. Price $40 per tifeaid on or before the first of Apni next; $45 per ton,
payable November let, 1872, without ml
ETIWAN 3SOLVED BONE.
red Bone Phosphate, and thus enabling the Ejjf
e, at a caving of one-half tost and freiaht.
,3xt; $10 per ton, payable November 1st, 1872, without
of the highest grade of Soluble Phosphate, and must
O- BEE tfc OO-,
DRY AND FANCY GOODS !
A T New York cost, to close out the stock. Hav
ing ruwbsesd tbe emirs stock of Dry Goods
NoKop* brtongiag to Mr. A. Springer, in Tri-
MigulAT Block, I am offering the same it New York
cost. These good* are all vf the very Uteet fall
and winter purchases of Calicoes and Ladies'
Drees Goods. I mean what I ear erben I
offer there good, at NEW YORK COST!! as I
With the approaching year we enter upon’..the canvass for the next
Presidency—an event fraught with momentous results to the South,
and which cannot fail to awaken absorbing inter est among the people.
The progress and conclusion of this grand event, will be chronicled
with particular care by the Telegraph and Messenger, and all the
questions and facts which affect its result will recei ve very careful at
tention. We hope all our readers and patrons, old a.ud new, will assist
us in increasing the circulation ai)d usefulness of all our editions.
CLISBY, JONESES; REESE.
Macon. November 21. 1871. ' *
A.
PURE GYPSUM.
C ONTAINING ninety-nine and two-thirds r
cent. (99 CS per cent.) Soluble Matter. Wt
ranted free from ail impurities. Prepared in ti
city, and for sate at tho low price of FIFTEI
DOLLARS PER TON, CASH, by
JOHN H. HOLMES, Commieeion Merchant,
Charleston, S. C.
r.'Opridur
1F.VDY MADE SUm,
corner of Trial:
yon want good,
novQVtr
SAVANNAH, .... GEORGIA
Fronting South, a Frontage of 273 Feet.
decS Sm WM. H. WILLBEBGER .Proprietor.
FOR RENT.
- STORE, also a amt of rooms suitable for a cot-
.. ton buyer. Apply at THIS OFFICE.
sepS tf
Averaging from 18 to 20 per tent, or
composting to obtain two tons of half ti
per ton, if paid on or before tbe let or
TAKE NOTICE, that all these fertile
help for more than one year-
eep23 dUw3m
SCREVEN HOUSE.
TOTICE TO ALL PARTIES INTERESTED.-
S Major John W. Cannon baa consented to con
-.1 :-a. 1 r.t
NOTICE.
e'ripticn to the ttevi cfti.eEi-
°f Mecca are now optn at the
liVUEi.3 a BOjq;,
' ;K8 for •
. J rt-ange t!.>
u*ure of
luct, and ia dniy appointed Manager of th<
‘Screven House.”
declO Im J?. J3RAD£*EX.
ileuerni Aficnts. CtaHeatoui
declleodSm