Daily journal and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 18??-1865, July 08, 1865, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

by si ROSE & CO. DULY fOUtfIL tfß MKBBBWJM. KBlSiii* ft WW. CWB£U ‘ mKT * OB * > M 8 j f r3*CBIPT!OK RATM. ~ , v 1,00 Ou« ** th . • 2,60 -ibiM 5,00 SI, Month* •• • ' 10,00 Oat *** ADVERTISING RAtM. • J' M j rin* fail a re—one insertion —$1,00. Each tnbw* rHMt inirtioo, for first week, 60 cents per square. * Hecoud week 40 cents per square each insertion. Third week 80 cents per square each insertion.! fourth week 25 cents per sqnare each insertion. . Advertisements one njMth $8 per square. Swmd month 17,50 per square. Third sad each succeeding month, f5 per square. . _ _ Special Notices 25 per cent on above fates. & ■ y; jrfarriajres and death notices sl. ; / Obituary notices 10 cents psr line in DxUywid 26 cents per fine in Weekly paper. /* ; > WEEKLY EATSS. 4 ' for Three Months. .1 ••>. .SI,OO “ One Year i<S?/. Advertisements inserted in Weekly at SI,OO per square for first insertion, and 50.cent* for each subse quent one. If any of onr patrons prefer to pay us in produce, supplies, food or anything wvoanuw, wt will take it st the market rates in Macon, for al 1 dost to the office. Our friends who lire in the - eonntry can send these things to us by express at our expense. Persons who reside njptfr each other can club to gether and send their provisions, supplies or corn in one package. * SINGLE PAPERS IK CITY, Single papers will be sold on the streets and at the desk at fire cents per copy. BTWe will not receive any money but specie, greenbacks or Macon and W estern and South-Western Kaillroad issues at present. EVENING EDITION. FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 7th. A Mistake, —Our attention has been called to a mistake under which we labored in our article this morning, headed “ Is it Right?” We there said the parties re quired to qualify were not personally in terested in the matter about which they testified. Mr. Wyche has since informed us that the object of ascertaining into whose hands property of the “so-called Confederate States” has fallen, is to pro cure it for distribution among the poor of the State. Such being the case, every one is interested in discovering where *uch property exists, and in: rendering it up. lie also informs us that parties need incur no cost, if they will make out their own affidavit and go before a Judge of the In ferior Court or a Notary Public. " .1 i———— i ■—— v Important Order. We invite attention to the following offi cial order. It is important as determining the relations which are to exist between frecdmen and their former masters, for the time being: Headquarters TJ. S. Forces, ) Macon, Ga., July 5, 1865. ) Orders. Until other orders are issued by the Freedmen’s Bureau, the following rules will be in force, and are published for the guidance of the Freedmeu and their form er masters. I. The common law governing the do mestic relations, giving parents authority and control over their children, and guar dians control over their wan is, are in force. The authority and obligations of paients and guardians take the place of those of the former master. il. The former masters are constituted the guardians and minors, and of the aged and infirm, in the absence of parents or other near relations capable of. supporting them. 111. Young men and women, under twenty-one (21) years of age, will remain under the control of their parents or guar dians until they become of age, thus aiding to support their parents and younger brothers and sisters. IV. The former masters of freedmen must not turn away the young and in firm, nor refuse to give them food and shelter, nor shall the able-bodied men and women go away from their homes, or live in idleness, and leave their parents or child ren or younger brothers or sisters to be sup ported by others. V. The former masters of freedmen will not be permitted to turn away or drive from their plantations faithful hands, wfco have helped to make the crops, when the crops are saved without paying for the la bor already performed. VI. Freedmen, like all other men, are amenable to civil and criminal law, and are liable to be punished for violations of law, the same as white citizens, but in no case will brutality be allowed on the part of the former master. Thinking men will at once see, that with the end of slavery all enact ments and customs which were necessary tor its preservation, must cease to have ef fect. II- Persons of age who are free from toe obligations referred to above, are at liberty to find new homes whenever they can obtain proper employment, but they not be supported by the Government or by their former masters in idleness and vagrancy. \ 111. It will be left to the employer and *mant to agree upon the wages to be paid, * aud *ny just arrangement or eontract will interfered with; but freedmen are wvised that for the present season they to expect only moderate wages, and en their employers cannot pay the money, a tn k 0u^ fc to be contented with a fair crop I moA ri \ ise<i ' This rule subject to such W u,, uir^ tlon w the Freedman’s Bureau may m °®cers, soldiers, and citizens, are I &nd^ str ° n glfe L P Qb b«ty to these rules, *° th#ir 4ii °bli(gatiOQs. ,triW and post commanders, MACON, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JULY 8; IS^£ are authorized and required to correct any violation of the above rule, within their ju risdiction. All offences hereunder may be tried before a military commission or pro vost court. By Command of Brevet Maj. den. Wilson. Edward 1\ Inhof f, Oapt. & A. A. A. G. * THE INTERNAL REVENUE. The principal articles relied upon to raise an internal Government revenue, are cotton, tobacco, sugar, rice and distilled liquors. Os these, all but the latter, have heretofore been the product of slave labor, and have constituted a large part of the export wealth of the nation. But that element of success exists no longer. Cot ton, sugar, tobacco and rice will not-, for a number of years, if ever, become the great staples of commercial success. As a source of revenue they will contribute comparatively little towards meeting the financial exigencies of Government, and the South will no longer be able to boast of her lavish contributions to the Federal treasury. Hence the revenue tax must fall peculiarly heavy upon the great West, the distilling region. How the people of that section will bear this burthen of tax ation we are unprepared to say, but as they have materially aided to reduce the South’s ability to assist them, we presume they wilfrcheerfully acquiesce in its impo sition. But bas the Government itself considered how inadequate will be its financial re sources based upon a taxation of Southern productions which exist only in fancy ? Has it considered that the great staples, onoe so prolific of national and private wealth, are now but the fancy creations of statistical old fogy ism? We think it alto gether probable that the magnitude of Southern desolation is not half appreciated by those who oollated the Government re venue figures. Her abandoned plantations, rat haunted sugar houses and overflowed rice fields, promise but a dull business for the tax gatherer. Her four millions of pro ductive population are now huddled about towns and cities, consuming more than they earn—adding to, rather than diminishing the public expense. What, then, is the hope of liquidating the public debt from a revenue on Southern products ? Clearly it must be small, and the items of taxation must be revised, the list extended and other sections brought to share largely in the burthen before a satisfactory solution of the national finance question can be arrived at. New England is sensitive on this point. She likes to appropriate the hon ors and emoluments of success, but is charry of contributing substantially to wards it. And yet we are inclined to think that the Western States will require that New England shall foot her share of the bill in this case, especially as it is a heavy one, and will otherwise fall mostly upon the sturdy shoulders of our late stubborn an tagonists. Something further will have to be done, we feel assured, before the intern al revenue will reach a sum approximating the necessities of Government. What will it be? The Par of Exchange. The principal on which American mer chants and bankers calculate exchange on England is thus clearly set forth by a cor respondent of the New York Mirror: “ The par of exchange is determined by the relative proportion of pure metal in the coined piece which forms the unit of price in the different commercial countries of the world. The alloy is reckoned of no value. “ To simplify the matter as much as pos sible, we will waive all consideration of the different standards of fineness, and state that our American dollar contains 23.22.100 grains of pure gold, and the British sov ereign 113 grains of the same. Eveiy reader may not know that the sovereign is the coined piece of which the pound ster ling is the money of account. A simple calculation in the rule of three, therefore, determines that the equivalent of the pound sterling is $4.86, 65.100 of our currency. “ Thus as 23.22.100 is to one so is 113 to $4.86 65.100. But the English, through all the variations of the mint laws, here and elsewhere —indeed for ages—have been accustomed to value their pound sterling by the old Spanish carolus pillar dollars, now entirely out of circulation in Europe and America, having all been sent to China, or gone into the melting pot Os these $4.44 4 100 were equivalent to the pound sterling. It will be seen that it re quires the addition of 9£ per cent., with a scarcely appreciable fraction, to make the present value of the j»ound sterling in our currency. Thus *. .$4.44 44.100 Add per eent. premium of exchange.. 48 22.<>00 14.86 66.100 “It may be well to explain that, when nothing is said to the contrary, the quota tions, of sterling exchange are by custom for bills at 60 days’sight; which at the legal rate of interest here, involves a loss of one per cent., besides the time of trans mission- But, on the other hand, at the most favorable rate of shipping specie, one per cent, is the cost, including insur ance, of laying it down in Liverpool, the time lost in transmission being the same in either case. Thus, as one of these items balances the-other, the true par of exchange is 9| per cent, on England, at which rate generally it is as wall to remit good 60 day bills as specie." 4 t, ' J ohnatOß , a Policy. At f * From the Louisville (Ky.) Journal We have already cordial ly ir. aorsed tbe wise and statesmanlike policy announced by President Johnson in his several proclama tions authorizing the restoration of civil government in the lately insurrectionary States. That policy is direct and practical, recognizing the poll deal organizations of the respective they existed prior to rebellion, regarding the ordinances of aeeqs sion as null and void, as well as subsequent aofcs predicated upon them, and resting the civil power upon the will of the legal loyal voters of the States. He is unwilling that those States should be held in military sub ordination any longer than the actual neces sities of each case may require, and he has opened the way by which the people them selves, acting in good faith to tfce'Govern ment, may speedily restore their former practical relations with the Union. A small class of ultra men, whose ideas of govern ment are fundamentally antagonistic to the cardinal principles of the Constitution, have been urging President Johnson to assumo the power of conferring the elective franchise upon the emancipated slaves in the reorgan ization of the returning States, but they have received no sympathy from him, tak ing, as he does, the sound position that the Sualification of voters is aud must be under le exclusive control of the respective States themselves, neither the President nor Con gress having anything to do with the subject. We have before us a letter which appeared in the Ohio State Journal on the day of the assembling of the recent State Convention at Columbus, Ohio, and which was written by a prominent delegate to thatyjcopvention. We are directly and reliably informed that, the letter fully embraces t*ie views of Pres ident Johnson, and that it is in truth a semi official expression from the President himself. The writer says: The true key to the President’s procla mations is that he holds the doctrine that the so-called acts of State secession are null and void, and all acts done in pursuance thereof, and hence that all offices held un der rebel authority can be declared vacant by the military authority of the President of the United States on the quelching of the rebellion. Further, that the State Constitutions and laws in force at the date of the pretended secession, having been held in abeyance during the war, remain in full forco and effect, as they originally stood before they were changed, aud subjected to recognize rebel authority. Therefore, his proclama tions recite, “ That, whereas, the fourth Section of the fourth Article, of tution of the United States phr.li Jtupa.otee to every State in tlfe Union a form oi government,” therefore, he, as Pre sident of the United States, proceeds to put in motion the machinery that may enable the legal loyal voters of the State to set in operation* again the civil government, re ferring back to the date of the so-called ordinance of secession, to ascertain who are the legal voters of the State. However, by his authority ns Commander-in-Chief of the army, he prevents the rebel legal voters from exercising the right ol suffrage by re quiring the test-oath set forth in the Am nesty Proclamation of May 29.1865. By this action he enfranchises no one, but. by virtue of his pardoning power, prescribes! the condition on which a legal loyal voter of the State may exercise his pre-existing : right of suffrage, by acknowledging the! authority of the Government of the United States, without which oath he is no voter under the Constitution and laws. President Johnson believes that neither himself nor Congress has any constitutional right to create a voter; but; that power the people of the several States composing the Federal Union have rightfully exercised from the origin of the Government to the present time. (See Proclamation.) It by bo means follows, as some argue, that if the States are as tbey were, ante hel ium, that the officers whom President John son has displaced, are the legitimate State Government, because there can be no legiti mate State Governments that acknowledge rebel authority and resist the paramount authority of the Constitution of the United States by armed rebellion ; which forfeits the rights of these officers to hold office, but not the right of the legal, loyal voters of the State to choose other officers who may bring their State again into “proper practi cal" relations to the Government of the Union. In the beginning of the war, this principle was fully recognized by every de partment of in reference to Virginia, whe&lpierpont was elected Gover nor by the legal, loyal voters, and Messrs. Carlisle and Willey admitted as United States Senators, long before West Virginia was separated from the balance of the Bta?e. President Johnson, in bis proclamations, has not wiped out any State Constitution or laws that the United States ever recog nized; he has merely ejected the rebel usurpers of office, acknowledging nothing that did not exist previous to the so-called secession. Taking up the old State Consti tution and laws as they existed then, he gives the loyal people an opportunity of filling the office with loyal men. Slavery fell with the operations of the laws of war, and the people are duly notified that it can not be resurrected; but the President had no more power to confer the right of suf frage on negroes than to prasciihe that minors of eighteen or women should vote, contrary to the old State Constitution and laws. * The foregoing is a clear and forcible and accurate interpretation of President John son’s policy, and the action of the Ohio State Convention was shaped in accord ance with it. It at once refuses the hair brained and impracticable theories enuncia ted by Chase Tmd Sumner and Phillips, and renders unequivocal tffe position of the Administration before the country The restoration policy of t President Johnson furnishes the platform upon which men of national, mnservativo principles, without regard to old .party ties, can rally in the great work of re-establishing peace and union upon an enduring basis. Editorial Proprieties and Court««lei. From the Nashvill* Dispatch.] - There are two virtues who«e obligation should be felt by - every editor, iu vmw of the responsibilities and influence of his pro fession, viz :—to ba honest and to be gen tlemanly. And yet it must be confessed, it is rare to see those virtues iu their high est perfection, especially in the conduct of the political press. Political warfare taama to have a strange influence iu blunting the moral sense; and many persons who would scorn the imputation of a mean or dishonorable act in their private and'social life, are accus- I tomed to think and to act upon the rdea, | that everything is fair in polities. The way 1 in which dishonesty in the press is most usually shown', is not so much in the utter ance of dishonest sentiments, and of those at variance with the writer’s real convictions though there are men base enough to nuke a journal with which they are connected the ve hicle of disseminating pernicious errors and know nuntruths,for some paltry reward of mo ney or power; but in the wilful and deliberate misrepresentation of the opinions or argu gnments of another. To the utter discrace of the profession, this is done every day. No man in public life lias any chance of having justice done to himself or his views by his political opponents. Everything bo says is distorted and misrepresented, quoted against him out of its natural connection, aud inferences drawn from it which ne nev er dreamed of. It is a great triumph of can dor and magnanimity to do entire justice to ( the argument one is endeavoring to confute, aud nothing indicates greater confidence i j one’s position and ability to maintain it. it was often remarked of Mr. Webster, that instead of endeavoring to weaken the case of his opponent, he rather sought to state it as strongly as possible, and to give its full weight to the argument by which it was sustuiueu, j thereby making his own triumph iu itsrofu- * tatiou the more conspicuous and signal. Misrepresentation is the certaiu iudiea it n | of weakness. When a person ii unable <o meet your position, he misstates it. He raises a false issue, and thus seeks to evade i the real question in debate. The press * lend? itself too much to this base work of I party ; and what is the consequence ? Just so far as it does this it loses its influence.! There are unscrupulous party ’journals in the country, whose political articles excite no g.nd nr maio re- ; xpqctv than the- ftjteh'orfe frrizVmjjjffa bed*-! lanrite. No one Iter expects to find a word of fair argument or honest couviction in t them. Even their supporters get ashamed of them ; they become a reproach to the of the age, and only to point amoral against the freedom of the! press and the blessings of liberal iastlfu- 1 tions. I Akin to the virtue of honesty in the i press that of gentlemanly treatment of i those from whom it differs, especially po litically. Vulgar abuse, personal vitupera tion, assaults upon private character, im | peachment of the motives of an opponent j —though, we blush to say, too common in j the press of the country —are but poor ar guments. We know that the private and public virtues of a candidate for office, or lof a person in high station, may become the proper subject of discussion; and any instance of flagrant political dishonesty should receive its righteous and indignant re.buke from those who assume, the otiice of censor of the public morals. But this is very different from the practice, too com mon, of heaping disgraceful epithets upon opponent personally or politically obnox ious; of vituperative attacks; of assailing, without just cause, his private character; of holding up his personal peculiarities to ridicule; ot invading the sanctuary of hie home, and making his private relations and his household sanctities the subject of bru | tral comment. The freedom of the press | should afford no immunity to such a con spirator against private reputation and the peace of society. He should be held up to the scorn of an outraged community, and a moral whip should be put in the hands of every decent person tglash the rascal naked through the land. A courteous and gentlemanly treatment of political opponents will be suro to tell in the long run, and give to the calm statements and honest sentiments of a jour nal which habitually practises it, a consid eration and respect which they could in no other way secure, . t Even where tho motive of political action may be justly open to it. The influences which operate upon the human mind are so various, ihe outward circnmstancee of society are so constantly changing, that we should be slow to attrib ute a change of political sentiment to a want of moral honesty; and it is only in view of the grossest inconsistencies and tergfversa- : tions in one's political course, that an un worthy motive should be assigned for it. The principles which a person maintains re* maiu the same, and they are always the j subject of fair discussion aad anti-mad ver sion—all the more effective, in most for not being mixed up with personalities. The people are slow in comprehension of, abstract political principles, but r tbey are pretty sure to ©om« right at last- Toe dor minion of error io a,country of free thought and universal snd unlimited discussion is, and must be, short lived. * ■> . ' - . . The Holy Farther baa sent a g ; ft value to M. Theirs as an aekhowledgament of the services rendered by his oration in defence of the temporal power. t - Prince Napolccm has sold his Roman house, Avenue Mon -atgae* but to whom and for what sum, no one can discover. Y(ff » idi s:%. JL*Jr A m.TT itw, .J j- ’ mfcilhftu«&£ iWifcfcjg. *J II *cckty Cotmtici'eifti » * ABYjnm s'isrc .Suinas, WITH AS ESiTIOM JF TEH THW9W CiPItS F«i< wuiunws |-i£l * , ; : -y- . --TVi ; |,j #,*// j^j, To bo l«<tUfd.on or IbuutUiv loibuf Jui fl BT J» ll • u 141.1 haUov, fcr.ußCi.V. 1 f I >ll IS enterprise is nndertntrpn nr the f _1 inanv of Uio lsa«j ; air »| trie «*ot* dx a Method of extpr.&ive v •idveri.i-ini’ tlje>r L’t >V * While we will'publish the advertisement* of .1 rnav favor us with their palmnfc;:*, u«s t nicT * ,t.- contain Prices Torrent of the tfafkh* t:; „ » t’,« r - r>. cipat Cities, Ru es ol Kxoh|u'jr* t tirnktrair* .Vo «uH Commercial News of every ch -cri, i,‘n th.iV .. interests to the Mercantile Commoni»r. Nor wi.l tbs “ill(itioli” Uj mJu2j Advertisements ; bo* the £«frver' be > > large to leave ample room ..., T deuce, Select Reading .Matter, Ac! It wiil’b** H ‘ Y»r • ly, a? well as a F q.ci, n«J v shall visit every Citr, Town afid Tiliai-o m tb < l i try. “ A'l can pe-ceivo the of adrerttsoig 10 s osner of this diseriptron. OCR T’-’tlV'* W r l f *o LIBERAL. We ure uiiub'e to nnbiuih tkem m Uum Circular, tint knowing wtwt nhtr.bcc ol m. (VI. 1 will want their Cuds, Nota.--*. A-., bn o/fc before the I’ublic through this medium. \V«* v\, I ..[.fv sav to all, send yntir Ad vert icemen’s ly ; state how much apace you wish jh* u ! o ov o> directions, Ac. We hare a larp* ck ol T , -,- f Cut* and nmteriai for uiaplaymp sh» t., anu ltd om i dent of meriting the pairom-e ,i .-1 *., • r,, , Business Men. As soon as we ar;f' _ c st ts. •... of matter and sizttof paper rei^uu■ and, w.: wdi u tke an estimate, find publish the rate* f>- . ’vr* . i.v, j, it.. first, number. THEY WILL BE AS Lo\V as I »>-»- BIBLE TO ALLOW Us To PUBLISH TmE P.'.l'tß Deeiniug it superttnons to argue ttie b* n. fit ot this . - ■ terprise to the adve iising world, we lei te the %nbi c; with it, feeling it will meet iu cordial co*operufa4» -tu . support. , Address, J. W. BL RulK A CO., Ua Mcßride & dorbett, coimv AS l) PHUIWIC BUOaflts ' •» * AND General Cununl <sloa Jltrciocti, (iT J. K. UAaMAM'a, CiUKi T HH-Bk T > , O -JJST 9 Cjr-A...., .4 WILL give their rrompt and oer on* -n to the purchase ami aaJe of Itlltb ) 1 . i . v■■ . » BONDrt, G-OLtk, MEttCHANUIXt and nlMtrti Ys if n t" TRY PKOUUCK. llavihi: am le fa-Rlftr* for aola«Te t’.-v lie*' eonatgoments of MBR-HANUIZI font *U p >n* ot “•*■■■ I'uiuu. Con !giime..ta of cub .I.o' TROhLcX r*.* fully aoliciied. KisFitßKscKs.---1. W . Feftfs A 00., url J. I„ KiaMnrr Macon, (ia J. 1$ Walker k ? >», I>. L vo ..... •. r’-.i s, A. Aiisiey AOo., Ainata, Gif. R*e* mood, Va. 8. ti li< u > & Gt., K,. *s>y» * Colbert,'Cotnyir.us, (»a. W. Herrin 4 ; J V houa, At!ant4,Oa. ..... ( jut<c )s—Util,* The Arinnh IntelHjteTi?cr TrfH eo -y to". r t. ’t an i S,ad hil. to t ! is <did ;c. ' tr, WM. Sf. DUlffl. THOs’w. MANttliTvt DU NN cl MA N GHAM, Gfiiifral ?roV?*!f» WIIOIaKSAIaIii AND UFFI'AH., OP AI. f£ rib IS GpOCtfUtS AND PbJV.SIGNS SHUERALU. VVE buy arK i Se ji Hiicon, Isard. H tod, So. o But *• , Cofitw, Hour, i00..c00, ftjeyt mgß, Oanabivga, lung. Silt, Leather, Chttr.v etc., e'rs., etc. t*r Consigiiments aud iiwue r. - jMttuily '' cite,]. RALSTON’S (;JtANITE RaNOi . anrl-tf . f \I c . R» B. CLAIYTON 6c CO., GENERAL INTELLIGENCE OF THE. at tftc-ir B laud on Cherry Street, anil wl:i attend to t.. lurU 4 of Rentiha; of ITouh ‘. A Information given regarding Laborer*. Ac, if eve/v in scription, and satipfactorj iw lav meal, m* • o *t* • Servants and Ma*’urn Give ws a call and we w !! satisfy yen. A/ucTloisr sales, AS CoUAL ON KV££Y Tuesdays, Thursday * ami .SaUi«ij June . , juf FURNITURE SND V/COR WORE OF ALL KINDS MADSS 10 Oliii..:. Furniture Meaused anJ Kefiirc.:. COFFINS ALWAYS ON HANU, AND LUMBER FOR BALE AT MV PAPTOHT. r Third Street. GKKNMuLk. WOOD. jane 2 -Bm* * A Desirable Garden Let FOR RALE. T WILL »el<, on verv reason it> ter .i*. a rppy deidrsk 1 - JL GaRDIiN LOT in V . 0 the •> e - .. 0 » . lent well of W * TLU, and r»nc rs t « be • OKCHARDd-.;. the city. The plae iis eae ore.! by a u»w Ita’e, : .. % NFATtfOUSEoait. Call and see u", as »e will telllow. <*. F. AH. K. OLIVER: je2L-tf LAW NOTICE. I HAYS resumed-the p*ictme ftf my r*' Vtslon, and wv; attend to all business *-ntn * <’ •>mvc* .. ~ the: ,te. HsTinir just reta r « i 'd frtiia Wesht rton t. part • 4*- flriog udv ce »i c»’u.sel rets v- l i t).s l,<i »(*!.• r. :,f paper*onder,tire It ociamnw» :i Ur 'it.rr ara the status of cont/nCO an! tt> and ,u . r( y r . . e last four years, e?.n consult me 1 y hrt«r .* to n •—»* CiSi’e at t#» t>. i*L .*cc, i ear ih / «*. y t Macon, Ga. O A? L iCf > Young- Ladles Academy. GA. Th* wrdcrc roc". # f-* Yurso Lad, :s, » boat the FIR. c t Os. *KFI Mt’gF Inthe building fointerly u e<l by ti.m i r tb t t ... _ !r . \ Olicular,containi’-r ad tt.'«*e*r«ry a t r. ;u r- , \ I to the School, R'iU ic is»utd in die Ui . j of pupils wi 1 he Itmltrd. i. a.FUaMUtt. •m L t'ONXELIji, atto jjiey at law. ALE Aa2<r*X\ CiIiOWIA. »«**• ? ?a, d *-^rew!l.RStT lh“ Ci:CTNi- Cl V.-‘ Os tl C . St-vIU fM ! -’ 3 0 .4rt.T^r- J -* ,A- Vfi ‘ -■TNO'TICE. THa VEIL-; ’"V*. '•» main Ike WAP -1 uous. JAM3 If. AXDr^fllf. jyl-lao-i*