Newspaper Page Text
WHOLE NO. 335.
The Quitman Reporter
IH PUBLISHED EVEIIY THUIMDAt lit
%TOX. TILLMAN, Prop'lN
T Iff it M fee
\}ne Year... :: $2 fK)
hi* Mdnthft ~ i (W
Tt'hri'e Months 50
All subscriptions must bo paid invariably
"in advance —ild clisdiiitiiuatloil in finer of
Anybody.
The paper will bo stopped in all instances
Kt the expiration of the time paid for, unless
■subscriptions ate previously renewed.
RATES OP ADVERTISING.
Advertisements inserted Ut tipi rate of
11.00 per square- one inch for first inser
tion. and 75 cents for each subsequent in
sertion, for three weeks or less. For a ldit
'ger period the following afe our rates:
tgqrs 1 M. 2 M. 3M~ ti NT lilT
1 SI (111 SSOO 10 00 15 00 S2O 00
2 800 12 00 15 00 20 00 25 00
:t 10 00 15 00 18 00 25 00 Oil 00
4 12 03 10 00 12000 | fit) 00 35 00
5 14 00 1180012300 135 00 40 00
fi 15 00 1 200012500 [4O 00 45 00
H 18 00 j2SOD|T) 00 145 (111 50 00
icnl 25 00 130001 35 00 50 0(1- 00 00
1 col 35 00 140 Oil 145 IKI |OO 00 100 00
A square is cite inch. These are quf low
bst rates, and will be strictly adhered to.
All advertisements should be marked tor
n specified time, otherwise they will be
blunged under the rule ot so much for the
first insertion, and so much fdr each subse
quent insertion.
Marriages, Obimaries and Tributes of Re
spect will be charged same rates as ordinary
Advertisements.
ir/r/Lv if in a ul due.
All bills for advertising in this paper are
due on the first appearance of the advertise
hinnt, except when otherwise arranged by
Contract, and will ho presented when the
inoney is needed.
fir. E. A* JELKS,
Practicing Physician,
QUITMAN (, A-.
?)pncE : Brink Building adjoining store
of Messrs. Briggs, Jelks it Cos., Screven
Itrect. [.l-tf
8. T. KINGSRERY,
Attorney at Law,
'QUITMAN, - - GEORGIA.
*rOFFICE in now Brick Warehouse. "tS-R
Business before lliS U. S. Patent Oinee
jttouded
A. A. Allbritton,
Attorney at Law,
- - - - CrA
jMK>FFIOE IN COURT HOUSE.
W. A. S. HUMPH KEYS,
Attorney at Law,
QUITMAN. - QEORdIA.
,S*OFFICE in the Court House. "tS^
HADDOCK & 11AIFORI),
Attorneys at Law,
QUITMA.TVO I-iO.
Will give prompt attention to all business
to tlieir care.
j?E£f-Oflioo over Kayton’s store.
Dr. J. S. N. Snow,
T> E IST T IST
OFFICE -Front room np stairs oveiEKay
ton’s Store. Gas administered lor jraifuess
iy extracting teeth.
to suit the times.
jail 10, ly
' E. J. Vann. (J: \f. S'tevknb.
YAW & STEVENS,
Attobnilys at 1 daw
—AM#—
SOLICITORS IN EQUITY,
Madison, Florida.
Will practice, in all the Courts of the Stale;
hlso, in the Federal Caurt.s. f'reinptnese
guaranteed. 21
B. C. POLLARD,
Cabinet Maker-
BHOP atlil office at the old post-office
stand, next dofor to BEroiiTEu office.
Will offer liberal inducements to parties in
Want of ttrst-cliUfc COLT AGE FURNITURE,
And Will
Dl'U’Y DOjifeSTition
fta to prices, mate or finish of stoclc in my
lino. Full Bid- lino'rfl Sets can be contracted
lor at remarkably low rates.
All kinds of repairing of Furniture, either
Bid tfi Hew, done at tlio shortest notice, and
|rf and satisfactory manner. ORDERS SO
LR'ITED. Cali and see me.
B. C. POLLARD.
ads'- Quitman. Ga.
- -- . 1 ■ ■
Til THE PUBLIC!
UNUSUAL INDUCEMENTS AIIE
OFFERED AT
John Tillman’s!
WHO tS CONSTANTLY RECEIV
ING HIS EXTENSIVE
STOCK OF
Spring and Summer
OOODS*
Which ho is offering at greatly re
duced prices, consisting of
I !
| DRY GOODS,
~ ] ' T~
! OF ALL KINDS, !
i Roots and Shoes, j
; HATS,;
_l L
J HARDWARE^
~r “ " r
j CROCKERY,;
[ I
I1 5 liow sJ_
1 I
—AND 6thnil
* * —^*
| Fannin? Implements ! |
The price on plows reduced 33 J per cent,
from List year.
My friends and tlio public generally are
respect folly invited to cull and trc-minc my
stock helorc purchasing elscwhere.
1 expect to sell, if low prices will induce
customers, and will keep goods constantly
coming as they are wanted.
JOHN TILLMAN.
April 5, 1877. 214
GO TO
Badger & Johnson’s
TO CKT YOUR WORK BONK !
Patronize Home Industry, Carried on
by Mhite Men Who are True
Blue Bemocrats !
“The Best is the Cheapest in the Thai."
TTTILT, DO ALL KINDS OF BUGGY,
V? Carriage, Giu, Engine, and
plantation work noon short notice, and at
HARD PAN PRICES. Wifi guarantee that
no better work can be doue South of Mason
and Dixon’s Vine than will l>e done by us.
We use lione but the Rest Northern and
Western hickory, oak amt ash. Vehicffes of
every description made to order. We will
keep constantly on hand,
Hubs, Spokes, Wheel Rim's, Plows,
and, in filet, everything needed by tho farm
ers and planters of the country. Give ns a
trial is all we ask. Will bo found at the old
stand of B. W. L-cvci'ctr.
In addition to onr shop we have secured
the services of C. W. HOWELL, carriage
and buggy painter. NovSO-tf
Da. E. A. Jei.es. Du. Haicry Mabbett.
Dr*. Jelks & Mabbett,
Having purchased the drug department of
Messrs, iiriggs, Jelks it Cos., would respect
fully notify tlicir friends and the pitblic gen
erally that they have just opened a NEW
DKUCr STOKE, in the house formerly occu
pied by Dr. Jelks as an office, which they
have considerably enlarged, and are now
supplied with a full and complete stock of
Drugs,
Patent Medicines,
Perfumeries,
Toilet Articles,
Oils, Paints,
Window Glass,
Putty, &e., &c.
Also a fine stock of SCHOOL BOOKS,
STATIONERY, TOBACCO, SEQARS,
SNUFF, Ac.
E. A. JELKS A HARRY MAUBETT.
7-fim
BOOK-KEEPING
riIHE ttndei'signed by request, offers his
A sefvices to the young inen of Quitman
for the purposes 61,instructing them in the
above science, and guarantees that all who
pass through a regular course of instruction
shall bo able to take charge of a set of hooks
by double entry.
Those desirous of informal ion without
going through a regular course of instruc
tion will be accommodated.
For terms and particulars, apply at this
office or to Mr. Brass personally.
SI JOHN BRASS.
QUITMAN, GA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1877.
FLORIDA ITEMS.
The new jail at Jacksonville now
contains forty prisoners.
The wholesale poisoning of dogs is
going on in Jacksonville in a socret
way.
Mr. A. L. Eicholbcrgor, near Ocala,
will make 80 barrels of sorghum syrup
this season:
There is a good opening in Talatka
for a hardware and furniture store.
So sajs the Herald.
Two negro whiskey thieves were
arrested ill Tensficola Inst week while
engaged in rolling off a barrel of the
juice.
—We have received a copy df the
Weekly Advertiser) an amateur paper
published at Mandarin, Fla. It has
somo novel features.
A bee tree in Jefferson county, near
Waukeenali, yielded 25 gallons of
honey and 22| pounds of beeswax—
■ the latter worth $5.70.
J —A now paper is to he started in
Quincy, Gcdsdeu county, about the
first of September. It will bo devoted
principally to the interests of the
planters.
A colony of Philadelphians have
located in the western part of Putnam
county. That section is filling up
rapidly by thrifty Northern and West
ern settlers.
Columbia county will make an av
erage crop of Corn and cotton this
year. The cane crop is also good.
The cultivation of rice is receiving
more attention, and does well.
They have some very large people
in Gadsden county. The editor of
tho Herald recently counted in one
crowd nineteen radii, dach of whom
would weigh over 220 pounds.
The foundation of anew jail has
been laid in Madison, and Capt. lu
glis has commenced a brick fire-proof
warehouse at tho depot. The ware
house will bo one hundred and ten
feet square.
Fred Roth, a German barber of
Jacksonville, lias undergone all the
forms and ceremonies of the Jewish
religion and become one of “the
chosen people of God”—all for the
sake of her ho loves.
The Mayor of Pensacola has issued
a quarantine proclamation forbidding
all vessels from ports in Cuba from
lauding at that port until frost. Yel
low fever is said to exist on that
island, hence the proclamation.
Jackson County has $20,000 of scrip
outstanding, some of which is thought
to bo fraudulent. The Commissioners
of the county have proposed to the
holders to fund their scrip in ten
year bonds at fifty cents on the dol
lar.
Somebody around Fernandina is
stirring up the Liberia movement,
and trying to induce the negroes to
emigrate to that country. The couii
ty paper speaks against the move,
and gives some good advice to the
negroes.
A Washington dispatch of last week
Contained this information: “Ex-Gov.
Sam Bard is here, cn route for New
York to buy anew press for the Pen
sacola Herald. He endorses the
President’s policy and says he don’t
Want a post-office either.”
Work on the St. Jotins and Lake
Fastis Railroad has been suspended
for the present, and twenty-seven
convicts, who wer'o employed there,
passed through Jacksonville lajst
week on their way to Live Oak, where
they were turned over to Major Wise,
of the latter place. Five of the num
ber were white men.
Tho Jacksonville Sun and Press
gives this as a “Florida curiosity/’
and it surely must be a curious dwell
ing: “Frank Ross, a former citizen of
this place, lias just completed one of
the most uniquo dwelling houses on
the St. Johns. Tho edifice, so to
speak, has a foundation nine feet
deep, and the ground floor of tho
building is 22x22, running up five
stories, and tapering to eight feet
sqdnro, when it expands into tt room
twelYc'fect square, which is surmount
ed by a largo windmill.”
Seeing a wagon loaded with goods
a few days ago come into town from
Bainbridgo we made inquiries and
were surprised to learn that some of
our merchants, being dissatisfied With
the freight tariff on the Jacksonville,
Pensacola and Mobile Railroad, bad
determined to have tbeir goods hauled
on wagons from some point on the
Apalachicola River, and from Bain
bridge. This matter should com
mand tho attention of Mr. Papy, who,
wo have no doubt, will soon make
everything satisfactory. —Quincy Her
ald.
tiIIIEE-SCORE AM) TEN.
Threescore and ten ! -the bygone yearn,
How rise the memories to my thought;
Tho joys and griefs, the hopes ami tears,
That till the measure of my lot.
Yet these are but the wayside sheaves
Wo glean upon the. field of y os-
Oblivion, in it* reaping, loaves
Bat here and there some scatter’d cars,
Perhaps ’tis well we can but glean;
For could we harvest all the past,
Joys too intense and griefs too keen
Were o’er our present being cast.
Life’s current duties must he met;
And ’tis but glances we can give
The darkening jtftst; the game is set,
And we niust tor the mastery strive.
Gird up thyself, my spirit, (lion.
In Him who gives all needful grace j
Thou canst, not How afford to spend
Thy closing years in idleness.
The past thou canst not now regain
The shortening future is thine own;
To Faith, Hope amf Ltfve attain
These spoils from time may still be won.
A Word to Girls.
Girls, listen to this, and with a
virtuous resolve demand as your
right a pure love:
Young men of bad habits and fnal
tendencies never like to marry a girl
of their own sort, but demand a wife
above suspicion. So pure, sweet wo
men kept from tho touch of evil
through girlhood, give themselves,
with all their costly dower of woman
hood, into the keeping of men who,
in base association, have learned to
undervalue all that belongs to them,
and then find no repentance in the
sad after years.
There is but one way out of this,
and that is for you to require in asso
ciations and marrages, purity for puri
ty, sobriety for sobriety, and honor
for honor.
There is no reason why the young
. men of this land should not be just
ias virtuous as young women, and if
! the loss of your society be the price
they arc to pay for rice, they will not
pay it. This is plain, sensible talk,
and just such as ought to be heeded
by all our boys and girls, till the much
needed reformation is established.
Too much of the happiness or misery
of onr children depends on this for it
to pass without producing deep
reflection and action in the right
matter in the right direction.
Signification of Dreams.
To dream of a millstone about
your neck is a sign of what ton may
expect if you marry an extravagant
wife.
It is very lucky to dream that you
pay for a tiling twice over, since ever
afterwards you will always take care
to have your bill receipted.
For a person in embarrassed cir
cumstances to dream that he is ar
rested, is very fortunate, for it is a
warning to him on no account to ac
cept a bill.
To dream of fire is a sign that if
you are wise you will see that all tho
lights iu your house are out before
you retire to bed.
To dream that your nose is red to
the tip, is an intimation that you had
better leave brandy for water.
When a fashionable young lady
dreams of a filbert, it is a sign that
her thoughts are running oil a colo
nel <
If you dreUiri of clothes, it is a
warning not to go to law, for, by the
rule of contraries, you will be sure of
a non-suit.
When a young lady dreams of a
coffin, it betokens that she should in
stantly discontinue tight stays and
always go warmly Clad in w r et weather.
A Preacher Patch. —Last year a
gentleman of this county planted a
patch of cotton which he termed his
“preacher patch,” the proceeds of
which were to go toward tho support
of the pastor in charge of his oliurch.
It never •suffered a day from drouth
and made a fine crop. This year the
experiment was repeated, and we have
been informed that said “preacher
patch” is flourishing, while other crops
near by are ruining for want of rain.
Moral—Plant a patch for your
preacher. —Dawson Journal.
It is hardly possible to form an idoa
of the ravages of tho famine in India.
The loss of life is placed at 300,000,
and, instead of decreasing, tho suffer
ing pi'omises to increase in intensity.
An appeal is to be made to tho people'
of England, Scotland and Ireland.
The most important lesson of lifo is
to know how to bo happy within our
selves, When homo is oiir comfort and
all in it, even to the dog and cat,
shnro onr atfoctions. Do not repine
away happiness by thinking that
which is good may be better.
Straws swim upon the surface, but
pearls lie at the bottom. Showy
parts strike every common eyo. but
solid ones are only to be discovered
by the most accurate observers of the
human head and human heart.
An Irish gentleman, hearing of a
friond having a stone coffin made for
himself, exclaimed: “By me sowl, an’
that’s a good idee! Shure, an’ a
stone coffin ’ud last a man his life
time!”
Riches cannot purchase mental en
dowments.
Why the South Remains Poor.
Tho great problem of political
economy for us of the South is to
combine the producing mid tho man
ufacturing interests. Sectionalism has
almost boon our ruin—wo do not
cherish it. Wo wish to soe tho people
North and South prospering, but wo
can see no prosperity for the South
until we learn to produce our food,
manufacture our staples and give em
ployment to our mechanics. Wo want
factories of every kind, but those fac
tories must have patronage, and, like
charity, this patronage must begin at
homo. Wo remain poor because we
must have everything from the North
We plow out crops with Northern
made plows, hitch our teams with
Northern made harness, cut our wood
with Northern made axes, dress our
lumber with Northern mado planes,
drive our Northern nails With a
Northern made hammer, and paint
our houses with a Northern made
brush dipped in Northern paint.
In short, wo are rooked in Northern
made cradles, wrapped in Northern
made swaddling clothes, suck our
paps made of Northern made corn
starch, through a Northern made
nipple from a Northern bottle: We
are educated from Northern made
books, are poisoned with Northern
physic, and being gently laid in a
Northern coffin, our minister clothed
in Northern made clothes, takes our
funeral text from a Northern made
Bible, and loving hands in Northern
made gloves lower us by means of a
Northern made rope into a Southern
grave, and our last resting place is
marked by a tombstone quarried,
dressed and carved at the North.
This policy is not tho true one. Wo
must manufacture and patronize home
institutions. Then, and not until
then, can we expect to be independ
ent of the Northern States. — Agricul
tural Journal.
A City Under the Hen.
A strange discovery is reported from
the Lake of Geneva. A tourist hav
ing lost his trunk, two divers were
employed to search for it. While
they were below water they found
what they supposed to be a village,
since covered by tho lake. Their
statements led to an investigation of
the spot by the municipal authorities,
who took measures to ascertain the
truth of the extraordinary account of
the divers. On covering the placid
surface with oil, these latter were able
to distinguish thef plain of a town,
streets, squares and detached houses
making the lied of the lake. The
ruddy line which characterized them
led the observers to suppose that the
building bad been covered with the
famous vermillion cement which was
used by tho Colts, Cimbri, and the
early Guals. There aro about two
hundred houses arranged over an ob
long surface, near the middle of
which is a space more open, supposed
to have been used for public assem
blages. At the eastern extremity
lies a large square tower, which was
taken for a rock. A superficial inves
tigation seems to indicate that the
construction of these buildings date
from somo centuries before our era.
The council of Vaud has decided to
have the site of the dwellings inclosed
by a jetty stretching from the land,
and to drain of! the water, so as to
bring to light what promises to be
one of tho most interesting archaeol
ogical discoveries of the present time.
--Paris Cur. London Telegraph.
The Famine in India*
London, Aug. IS— The Times' Bella
ry correspondent, writing under date
of July 17th, describes the awful
effects of the famine in Southern In
dia. “A few months ago,” lie says,-
“the working gangs contained a fair
proportion of stalwart men and wo
men on whom tne famine at that time
had made no visible mark, but this
is no longer tho case. The great
bulk of the people are now emaciated,
their ribs are sticking out iu painful
prominence, and their skins covered
with a duty-looking desquamation of
the cuticle, described in tho Irish fam
ine 181(5-7 by Dr. Donovan as a j
‘peculiar famine eruption.’ If we
look at the thousands of people col
lected on tho relief works, these fam
ine marks aro of almost universal pre
valence. The superintendent of the
relief operations to Adoui reports that
a journey overjonoof his roads resem
bled the path of a great battlo in the
numbers of the dead and dying. If
tho people had been smitten by a lo
cal outbreak of cholera in ordinary
times, they would have fled from tho
works and never returned; but so se
vere is the pressure for food that
none could afford to leave tho works
and lose their pav, even for a single
day.” •
Queen Victoria’s speech has a i
passage on tho Russo-Turkish war.
In one place she says that tho neu
trality of England will bo preserved
as long as the interests of the country
remain unaffected; and in another
place she says that she will vindicate
and maintain tho rights of her empire
if in the course of the c'ontost they
should he assailed or endangered.
In putting these words into tho
Queen’s mouth, Disraeli retains for
his Goverment tho fullest liberty of
action.
CnOsiNd the Campaign. —The Czar
announces that he will close tho cam
paign this year on the line of tho Bal
kans. The Sultan expects to close it
u the liuu of tho Danube.
Real Estate, Etc.
'no r r icu].
FOR SALE, A SPLENDID
LITTLE FARR.
rpllE PLACE NOW REtNG RUN BY
I \Y\ 11. WILSON, just two miles from
town, is now offered for sale. It contains
one hundred and fifteen (115) acres, about
sixty acres cleared find in a high state ot
cultivation. The buildings on the place
are quite adequate. The place can lie
bought cheap. For further particulars ap
ply at the
aid REPORTER OFFICE.
A SPLENDID
PLANTATION
FOR SALE!
IT CONTAINS ABOUT FOUR HUN
DRED (io(i) ACRES OF LAND, and
lavs directly east of Quitman; about 50 acres
inside the incorporate limits of the toWn,
and are eligible as town lots.. 125 acres
cleared land on the place. Good Gin-house
and new Gin, a dwelling house and two
negro cabins.
The land is good for furmiug purposes,
and a bargain can be had by any one who
wishes to purchase, by applying to
MRS. e. CULPEPPER,
213- Quitman, On.
YALUARLE
LAND for SALE
1* NOW offer for sale Lot of Land No. 102
. in the 17th district, and south lmlf of
Lot No. 310, in the lltli district, all of
Lowndes county, Ga, Lot No. 10*2 lafu on
the Withlucoochee River, a part of which
is valuable hammock, the balance good pine
land.
Lot No. 310 is first-class farming land,
and lays in a good neighborhood, ana is well
timbered.
Apply to the undersigned, or to R. Y.
Lane, at Valdosta, Ga.
JOSEPH TILLMAN,
22G Quitman, Ga.
Splendid Fiannitioii
—AND
COMPLETE OUTFIT
FOR SALIO!
A splendid PLAN TATIOX in most cnee
lint repair,
NEW GIN HOUSE,
New Horse Power,
New Eclipse Serov,
New Gin, New Cabins,
An Excellent Dwelling House,
Good Out-houscs,
Corn and Fodder,
Mules and Horses,
Cows, and other stock,
WagoDs and Carts,
can be bought cheap by applying to the
undersigned. The Plantation contains
526 ACRES OF LAND,
and is situated iu as good neighborhood as
there is in the State. Schools and churches
near by. The lands aregofodand productive;
the water is excellent, and health unsur
passed. The place is situated in the centre
of what is known as the Hickory Head set
tlement, and is seven miles southwest from
Quitman.
Any one desiring such a place would do
well to confer with me at once.
JOSEPH TILLMAN,
40 Quitman, Ga.
$ # $ $ $
HEAD THIS!
ONLY ONE~DOLLAR!
For one dollar the Savannah Weekly
News wilft.be sent, postage paid, to any ad
dross for six rtfonths. It is Ctneuif the cheap
est papers published, Sud is a welcome visi
tor to the count in <_c room, fireside or fttrru.-
It is a neatly printed lour-pagc sheet, com*
pactly made up, and contains the political
and current news of the wi ck; a oompro
ln isive summary of the telegraphic, dis
patches and local nows, and interesting
sketches and stories. It also contains full
reports of the markets. Thus, those who
have not the Advantage of a daily mail can
get the news ictf six mouths by sending one
dollar. It is just the imper > for everybody
interested jrt Qetifgitt and Florida. It will
be' Weil id vested, dud will educate your
children rtnd make home hrtpp.Y.
Mont y for either pap’cf can bo sent by
Post-office order, registered letter or Express,
at publisher’s risk. Address
J. H. ESTILLr,
211 Saviinftub, Ga.
hill Houses
anil thoir contents insured in au old veliabl
ompany. Terms liberal. t
B. T. KINUSBERY, Agt.
VOL. IV.—NO. 27.
S20,0(>0.00
—Worth of—
DRY GOODS,
CLOTHING,
HOOTS, SHOES, Ac.,
To bo sold immediately to make room
for more goods.
Oi 11 FRIENDS IX FOREIGN MAH
kvts having heard that \to afe doing a
large business, are crowding goods upon us
on consignment and otherwise, daily from
every market, consequently we must sell to
make room for them. If you want goods for
Cash or Produce*
VERT CHEAP,
Oome N o w!
•
You will buy at such bargains as you have
not thought of. We can assure our frienrl
that we are surprised at the prices of many,
kinds of goods being daily sent to ns. anil
wo moan to sell them accordingly W
MEAN BUSINESS, and ’ HUMID No
market shall out do 01 7. >
BRIGGS, JELKS& CO.
Quitman, Ga., April 4, 1877. 214
Use Brooks Comity
MANUFACTURING
ASSOCIATION
ARE RUNNING
Their Factory
—ON—
FULL i IMF,
til HE MO‘ST desirable goods, such as ex
-1 aetly suit the wants of the people aro
made here, and at
New York Prices',
less the freight to the purchaser.
BROWN COTTON GOODS.
•1 4 SHEETING- Standard weight.
7-8 SHlßTlNG—Standard weight,
7 and 8 OSNABURGB.
ALL COLORS OF STRIPE'S,
YARNS IN BALES, Bs-10s,
ROPE—in half and whole Coils.
SEWING THREAD—I 6 balls to
the pound.
KNITTING THREAD.
WRAPPING TWINE.
GEORGIA PLAINS,
MIXED PLAINS.
WOOLEN PLAINS—AII colors,
JEANS—AII colors.
CSyWOOL. CARDING A SEE*
CIALTY.
PutrpnUe homo industries. Send bf
price list, lied satisfy yourself where it will
ho to your interest to buy. Address all
communications to
Joseph tillman,
President 15. C. M. A.
PULASKI HOUSE
Savununh, Ga
JAS. O’CONNELL, - - Proprietor
mills favorite HOUSE, witb aCcommoda
-1 tious for three hundred guests, has been
leased by me for a term of years, and will
be opened to the travelling’ public on Tues
day, February 13. The Hotel has been
thoroughly cleaned and refitted, and is now
equal m all its appointments to the best
hotels in the United States* The TABLE
shall not be surpassed by any other house.
Feeling willing to divide the depressed
state of the times with the travelling public,
J hitfrti made rates to suit the times. My
terms will be: 25 rooms at $2.50; 50 rooms
at $3.00; 50 rooms at s4*oo per day. By'
the week from $12.50 to $21.00, according
to’ location and number in a room.
JAMES O’CONNELL,
50-51 Proprietor.
i not easily earned in these
111 times, but it can be made in
tjj 111 three months by any one of
* * cither sex, ill uy part of tho
country, who is willing to work steadily at
the employment that we furnish. s(>(> per
week in your own town; you need not bo
away from homo over night. Aon can give
your whole time to the work, or only your
spare moments. Wo have agents tvhO are
making over S2O per day. All who engage
at once can make money fast. At the pres
ent time moixey cannot be made so easily
and rapidly at any other business. It Costs
nothing to try the business. Terms and $5
outfit free. Address at cncc, H. Hallivtt &
00., Portland. Mu in Of