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■EXAMINE HOW YOUR HUMOR I s INCLINED, AN t i r WHU'lJ THE RULING PASSION OF YOPU MIND
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CANTON, GEORGIA, THU USD A Y| MO RN IN G, AUGUST?. 1884
NUMBER 32.
T it CHEK
^.E ADVANCE.
—aLVKHY THU RBI'AY
pl’BLdSHI^ —IlY
. »,KliU>r and Proprietor.
UUN. ]\ ,*t Marirtta ami tloin ■
~l Wit* ~*nvr ■iimrl Jioitse.
OJtre up-4f
■ o. organ »;iiitUOKi:i:coim y.
'IT. I! MS OF Rl DISCI Ill'll ON.
i Jf Annum in Ailvahh', $1.01
If payment its delayed ............ 1.2’>
fi‘ay*Adv»‘iii«iup Union oil renicly I »\y,
to unit tlie timoM.
lil'IIAI, IV IvOrtisi'UHMlts inserted .Ulil
i hurgod fur an proscribed l*y un wt nf
llio General Assembly.
Ailvi'rtimjnfnto will bo run until tor
bidden, mimss otherwise marked, nnd
charged fur accordingly. All eousidore 1
vino after licit in.-ortinu.
All omnniniii^'iitionH int. inloil fur puli-
lie ation must Iteur H»c nanm of writer,
nut necessary J'or publientinfi, lnit ha n
I'Maranti'u of good I'nitli.
Wi shall nut ill any win lm rot puniiblu
fur (lm opitiioiiB uf cun tri I in turn.
Nu ouiunmnii'iiliun will bo ml mi i toil
into our I'ulninim having fur j|s onil a
■ lolinuntinn uf privivtn cliiirnctcr, nr in
iiny other way uf n scuiriiuns iinpnil uf
public good.
Correspoiideuoe sohoitod oil nil paints
nf geiicrul importance - rljld l«'l tlioiu bn
l iriolly to the |a tint.
All commuuioriUous, letters uf bnsi-
ih’hh, or monoy rcmlttancea, In receive
prompt nttnntien, must h ' a h’.i esso I to
HEN. F. FERRY, Canton, (1a.
P. (). Drawer Jft.
THE STORY OF A LIFE.
P.ny, what in llfo? ’Tin to bn horn
A helpless linin', to greet tlin liifiii
With a sharp wail, on if Hip morn
Foretell a cloudy noon and night
To wt>('|), to sleep, nnd iverp ngs-in,
AYitli sunny smiles between - and then?
And then space the infant grown
To bo n laughing, uprightly liny,
Ilappy ih apito Ida little woe*,
Were he hut conscious of his joy I
To he, in short, from two ten,
A merry, moody child and then
clad,
Professional and Business
Cards.
And then, in coat auil trousers
To learn to say the decalogue,
And break it, nn unthinking lad,
With mirth nnd mischief all agog;
A truant oft by Held and fen,
And capture bnttcrllieH- and then?
And tin n, incrensi it in strength and size,
I'ii Is* anon a yuntlrfnll grown;
A hero in his mother's eyes,
A voting Apollo in liis own;
To In'iilnto the ways of men
In fashionnhlc sin and then'/
And then, at lust, to lie a man,
To fall in love, to won and wed !
With seething brain to selieiue and
To gather gold or toil for bread;
To sue for fame, with tongue and pen,
Amt gain or lose the pi ism !
Ian
"Oh tonohor, tlm crook is getting aw
ful high," sniil Tommy Smith, ns he
plunged into his sent. And Jennie did
not con-net him for the improper use of
"awful," which proved to bo more ap
propriate in this case than tonohor or
pupil supposed.
"I suppose tho snows are all melting
nnd running into it,” sho answer*, ab
sently, as she took her place at hot desk,
nnd by another tap of her mlor indicated
that the afternoon session of school was,
now in order.
Then site ran her eye over the room to
oe that no pupils wore missing,
"Whoro is Tod Brown ?” sho asked,
•f do not soo him hero.”
ToiV wan tho smallest child in tho
school, a little boy scarcely live years
old, who was placed in her charge, not
so much to learn hiH printer, as to keep
him out of hiH mother’s way. She wiih
burdened with two smaller than lie be
sides a babe in the cradle.
"I loft Tod down by the creek,” an
swered Tommy Smith, "playin' throw
ibles into tho water. I told himachoo'
And tlu n ill gray and wrinkled eld
To momn tin- speed of life’s decline;
To praise the hcbiiph our youth beheld,
And dwell in the memory of lung syne;
'Ji> dream awhile with darkened ken,
To drop into the grave and then V
»Jemii<*'s Mission.
W. A. & G. I. TtASLF.Y,
Attorneys n L I ,n \v
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Will givo prompt a-tent ion to nil busi
ness intrusted to them. Will prii'tiee in
all the courts of tlio county and in the
Superior Courts of tho Blue Bulge cir
cuit. pliably
'■£). D. MADDOX,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CANTON, GEOBGIA
Refers by permission to John Silvoy At
Co., Thos. M. Clarke & Co., James R.
Wylie and GramLiug, Spalding & Go., all
of Atlanta, Ga. janl-’83-ly
GEO. R. BROW ',
ATTRONKY AT l^AW,
Will practice in the Superior Courts
of Cobb, Mil on, Forsyth, Fiokons and
Dawson counties, and in the Superior
nnd Justice courts of Cherokee.
Office over Jos. M. McAfee’s storo
Special attention given tu the collec
tion of claims.
Business respectfully solicited.
LjanB-’SS ly.j
II. W. NEWMAN.
JHO, J>. ATT A WAY,
NEWMAN & ATTAWAY,
ATTORNEYS
CANTON,
AT LAW,
- G BORGIA.
Will practice in the Superior Courts
»f Cherokee and adjoining counties.
Prompt attention given t:> all business
placed in their hands. Oflieo in the
Court House. | jsnd-’X.'M y ]
P. P. DuPREE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Will practice in tin Blue Ridge
cuit and in Cherokee county. Ofli •
tun Court House with the Ordinary
Administrations on estates.
{piy“Co lections a specially. "'OsO
BEN. F. i LlRRY,
AOI’.NT —
FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE <
0(11 Cl with Citi:iii,iit:n At>v\: cf
J. TM. IIAlll >1 NT.
House,
Sign, C«ni?gc
—AND—
ORNAMENTAL PAINTER,
nm\) ash : roii! artist w».
Oriental gr.d Gjoeia-t painting. Jb/. i
Tin tin ', Car Jo-Tiuiinj, paint in;; it Ne-
pei and [inlia Ink
Twenty-five per cent awed by ipnly-
'ngio'm * beforecwitt'.ieHtig with "thera.
Material furnished at bottom pi ices.
Satisfaction given or im eharg-i ma L>.
See nr address, J. M. HARDIN,
(j j.n3-’83-lv] Cantun, Georgia.
A fkiknd of a merchant,whose son
has recently returned from his studies at
a New York business college, was asking
the old man if the boy hud improved his
opportunities. “I should say that he
had. He can imitate anybody’s hand
writing, and ho is so expert at figures
that I am afraid to let him touch the
books.”
UT It till a wit tna,nit.
"Ob, this dull round of small duties,
how tired I am of litem all, how I wish
some grand mission in life would come
to me 1”
Jennie Orson, tho pretty little sch<»>l-
uiistresM, leaned her chin upon her band
as she mused in the above manner, and
gazed out over the gray fields, whoso
dreary plowed furrows were thrusting
tlieir ragged faces up through tho rapid
ly-disappearing snow-drifts.
"Why, how tho snow lias gone to
day,” sho added mentally, as the
changed appearance of tho fields struck
her eye. It was the last day of March,
and all winter long llio .now had boon
heaped in miniature mountain ranges by
tho roadsides, and on tho fields and
meadows. During the last week warm
weather hail set in, making rapid inroads
upon snow and ice.
Tho children canto running under the
window where Jennie stood, playing at
"Round the House.” Then they flocked
off together toward the brook that rip-
plod by tho school-house a few rods dis
tant. Jennie wntehed them absently.
Her mind was not upon her duties that
day. Ifer plodding round in a country
school room seemed very dull and mean
to her. Sho sighed for some great and
: lofty mission.
"If I could do somo one great act,
heroic and noble,” sho said to herself,
“I would bo willing to die then. What
is life worth if wo must plod on forever
like this ? I am no more than an ant, or
a spider, or a squirrel With tho life I
live l llow gladly would I givo up the
monotony of years of this routine for one
hour of saoriftoe, heroism, and then
welcome death.’*!*
! How she hated her homely life as she
| looked hack over his ninotocu uuovcnt-
| fnl years. She had always lived in this
; dull country place, ever since sho was a
| wee child and her parents had emigrated
to tho West. Bho had received her cdu-
i cation in this same little sohool-liouso,
attended divine service there also- as
tho place boasted no ohnroh edifice—
and her only knowledge of the world
beyond was obtained by a yearly visit to
tho city, fifty miles distant, whero the
family supplies were purchased, and
from n few hooks and newspapers. Now
she was very tired of it all— tired of her
dull past, her duller present, her doubt
lessly dull future. Even tho thought
of her fond, true lover, Jack Kellogg,
wlio was building tho liottso where sho
was to reign mistress, annoyed her to
day. How poor and monotonous life
stretched before her, llow much better
to perform some one grand act and die,
than to live on to old ago in this dreamy
fashion. It was a very romantic girl
who stood there in the little school-room
j dreaming her discontented dreams, you
! see.
i Suddenly sho sow by tho moon mark
I that it was time to call in her scholars.
! She had no hell—for this was in the
I early days of Wisconsin history, before
, the railroads had spread their great iron
! spiderwebs al! over the State, and Jen-
I nie’s school was conducted on a very
i primitive plan. She took the great
ruler, with which sho inflicted ptiuish-
| ment on the palms of unruly boys, and
rapped loudly on the window. Then she
stit down and waited tor the pupils to
pome trooping in—not with the regula
tion and order which governs school
rooms in these days, but belter skelter,
hurry skerry, laughing, pushing each
other nnd playing "tag” to their
benches.
IH
whs called.’
"You should have brought him along.
Tod is only n child,” Jennie said, reprov
ingly. "But go nnd bring him now; and
hurry, for your lesson in arithmetic
comes on directly.”
Tommy entno back In a brief space of
time, white nnd frightened.
"Tod is stannin’ on a stone nndcryin’,
and the water’s nil round him,” he said,
j "I couldn't got near him at all,”
I The whole school rose cn masse, and
Jennie at tho head of the small army '
led on to the rosette of Tod.
Yes, there he stood on a stone which a
I little time before had been on the shore; |
1 but now, altiH, was In the midst of the
rapidly-swelling stream, beyond tho j
reach of any in that little group.
"Mammal mamma,” ho oallcd itt
piteous tom's, “come nud take Tod. Tod
is ’frald. Gome, tuumrnn, come I”
Jennie looked over her little tloek of
pupils who crowded about her. Notone
of them was largo enough to wade out
and rescue Tod. Tho only boy in her
school who might safely have attempted
this had remnlnod at homo that day to
nssist his fftther.
The water was rising higher every
i moment. What was to he done must bo
Hone quickly, or the angry waves would
; seize poor little Tod and sweep him away
| down tho swelling stream,
j "John I” oried Jennie, speaking to the
largest boy in the flock, "you stand here
j on tho bank, while 1 wade ont to Tod. I
| shall want you to take him frommyjirms
ns soon os I have him safo. Borne of the
larger girls must hold fast to your coat, ,
so that you do not fall into the stream. ”
Then Jennie drew Iter skirts cfoso |
a I ion I her slight flguro and pluttgod |
bravely into the cold waters, sinking
almost to her waist nt tho (irst step.
Slowly, slowly, sho made her wnv to
ward the crying child, tho waves rushing
it]) higher over his feet every moment.
The little flock on tho shore huddled
together like frightened lambs, watching
their teacher with wide, distended eyes
and sobbing ont their fear and terror, aa
she slowly forced her way against the
waves.
Another effort, another plunge and
sho lmd him in her arms. Then sho
tried to make her way back to shore, but
tho waters were growing more furious
every moment, ns if angered at the loss
of tlieir prey. They almost swept her
from Iter foot—they dashed above her
shoulder, and her little burden screamed
and struggled with terror, making her
task tenfold more difficult.
“Just another step, teacher, and I’ll
L 'fttell hold of him,” cried John from the
shore, reaching out almost his whole
length over the waters, while two sob
bing girls held fast to the skirts of his
loat.
it was an exciting scene, a wild mo
ment of Husjicu.se. Jennie’s face was
white as chiseled marble; her long black
hair hod fallen from its fastenings and
floated back over the billows like a dark
mantle; her eyes were large with fear,
her mouth drawn with pain, and her
slender form swayed as if hor strength
wore'well nigh exhausted.
With one Inst, mighty effort sho laid
her burden in John’s outstretched arms.
Tod was saved !
A wild shout of joy and triumph rose
trom the excited band on shore, and
they flocked about the prostrute form of
the almost inanimate child.
Just then a great wave swept down
upon Jennie, lifted her from her feet,
just as she was about to grasp the shore,
and bore her rapidly*down the stream
like a light piece of driftwood.
As sho was whirled away tho whole
events of her past life arose before her;
that life, which only an hour before t
seemed so poor and mean and dull to j
her. Ah, now how precious and bright j
and beautiful it became 1 She remem-!
bored her rash wish, that she might he ,
given some one heroic net to perform- t
and then die. Tim act had been grunted •
her almost instantly, and she hail per- 1
farmed ft heroically. Bnt now mnst
she carry out tho remainder of Iter
thought, and die I Oh, death was so
da4i m > cold ; tho unknown scented so
tfcnpWo ; sho was so young, and life was
SO (WlX't I
She thought of Jnok, hor lover, and
the half-oonipleted house. Life with
hint there, that an hour befnro had
Bcomtd a dreary, monotonous waste,
shone upon her like tho departing
s!n»N» of somo lost paradise. Oh, to
Mehta dear oyos smiling fondly upon
hiTj onoo more to hear liis voice ; life,
youth, love, how precious they all wore!
Then all grow blank. "Jack, Jack, 1
At 1 cold. Oh, God 1 save mo pity
fi -rgvye,” she oriod, and then sunk away
intojiiiooiisoiotisuesfl.
Two miles below tho school-house
they found her tosHod on shore with a
mass of driftwood. Quite dead they
pronounced her nt first, and the old vil
lage doctor oonllrmod tho assertion.
lint Jack Kellogg would not listen to
any of them.
"Hite is not dead,” ho oriod. "How
dare you tell mo such n thing I HUo is
alive, niul will look up nnd smile in my
face before tho day pasm's.”
They shook their heads, and thought
the jsMir hoy had gone mad, as he set to
work over her. lint they all lent a help
ing hand, nnd every restorative known
to them was applied to the pallid figure
of lift' young girl.
It was hours before they saw any
sign^ of returning lift'. Then she drew
a doin', quivering sigh, opened Iter eyes
and jntiloil, even as Jack lmd said she
w-itqtl, into his loving face bent anxious
ly uflovo her.
"Is this heaven ?” she asked in a whis
per. “I thought I died I”
“You went out clear to the very
threshold of death," Jaok answered, as
lie elnsped her in his nmiH, "but love
was strong enough to bring you buck."—
//o' ll’/nconatn.
THU MlMOItOIJS TAPERS.
wiivr tv if it mi in thi
ov i'ii.
M TO SltllliK
AN 01,D FA III, K UKVIHtcn.
"Look lu re, wnitof," called a feeder
at a city restaurant, "look at tho hair I
found in this turtio soup.”
"Yes, I see. Yon have heard nf that
famous race between the turtle nud the
hare?”
"Yes. What of it?”
"Why, in this ease the hair nnd tur
lie oumo in even.”—•7’Ac Unotm r,
BALI - GROUND, OA
'tenders liis professional servtoee it
the citizens of Ball Ground Mil snr'
rounding country.
Ollie*—R. J. B lings’ Hotel.
th v tbh
‘Where ls v tl
ei^NR nAmannia, /
Mltelmr ?" asked a gentle
man, hurriedly, as he ycgislorcd nt u
Chicago hotel.
"Juft around to the loft, sir.”
"Where is the bar?” naked another
gentleman, at the same place a moment
Inter,
"Just around to the left, sir."
"Where is the ha ”
"Just, around to the loft, mr, By
Jove,” the clerk continued, "tluj.^lelc
gab's arc beginning to come in',”—>Tht
Cal/.
Dr. J. P.
r
SSD'l
HOUSE-BUILDING
AND
CONTRACTING.
Cam novCHtlly prepared to $>roinj)4lj
complete oil contracts for Building i*
Repairing Houses
I keep constantly on hand and on*
promptly fill all orders for any kind of
£ ash. Doors, Mouldings,
Rough and Dressed
LUMBER,
WIIAT Til K DISK ASK WAH.
l)ti in ley came into the dining-room
and, easting a sweeping glaneo over the
table, jammed down into his clmir and
muttered under Iiih breath:
"Liver again, of course. We’ve had
liver every morning Tor two weeks.”
"What’s the matter, Mr. RumleyV"
asked the landlady; "ain’t you feeling
well this morning V”
"No, nnulnm," he replied, shortly, "1
am suffering with liver complaint." —
I J'hila. Fur. Ca l l.
and in fact Building Material of every
description.
All work guaranteed satisfactory, and
at, prices that defy com petition.
It contemplating anything in tny li»«
call and get my plans and prices
11. H. T< H-HKRT.
TH08. W. HOGAN,
DENTIST,
Canton, Ga.
Tenders his professional so vices to the
citizens of Canton and surrounding coun
try, and guarnnicos satisfaction in work
and prices.
Cilice—Over W. M. Ellis’store.
THE TZAR DOOM El) TO DIE.
The MIOI lulu I’lacar.l ■■ Dirror Wuriilii*
11tin nl Ills I'nie.
MotlTAIt FOlt MAHONH.
"I can’t finish plastering your house
until I get more sand,” Htiid a plasterer
to a grocery man the other day.
"flow much sand will you require?’
asked the grocery man.
‘‘About three bushels will do, I guess. "
"Here, John,” said the groeoryman,
roll ou$ another barrel of that brown
fti-|A>rts from Rttssin says that tho gugur and send it tip to my now housi
Bus man Nihilists have renewed tlieir uo- j Wl mt to keep the plasterers at work.”
tivItV, and begun n hew campaign of ter- "Thnt won’t do,” said-the plasterer,
rorist in the province of Moscow. They "Why, isn’t that good sand ?’’
have placarded that province und its cap- "Not very good; and besides, tliosi
ital willt hundreds of copies of a in an i- in the garden will he constantly
festo oonveying a threat of dqgth to tho trying to suck tho sweetness out of the
Czar. As these placards wore all jmsted MftlJ(1 uftur it j 8 j,] un torud on the walls."
nn tho same night, and as ouch person .. Not muo b, my friend. Guess you
engaged in the work could have posted j on * t my sugar. If the la •os slick
hut very few of them owing to the neons- H woetness out of it they will do Home
sity of avoiding the police, ft Is evident dangdest hardest sucking you
that tho Nihilist* must have lit their pVl , r Bnw |» p ai i„ /ieaaon.
ranks a large unrulier who are willing to ;
risk their liberty in the prosecution of A match.
such nn enterprise. Tho proclamation jyy r> oiewdrop was slowly walking
reminds the Czar that ho was warned in down Alabama street when lie saw one
Sale and Feed
STABLE,
6. W. LVANS,
Canton, Ga., near Railroad Dipt.
H ,1-scs and Buggies nt rMMonalil
Chi it'd nnd Horses always ready.
Will semi in any part of llio o.iuntry^
with careful drivers and gentle teams.
,\ 11 kinds of stack feed, and stock well
cured for.
J*
HaDilug and Draying Done at Low Kates.-
< usl.oincrs will ho politoly waited on
at all hours—(lay or night.
May, 1881, that if ho would avoid tho
fate which had befallen his father two
months before, ho must grant a oonsti-
tnlional form of government mnl organ-
ice a parliament composed of representa
tives of the people. During the throe
years that havo followed this warning,
the proclamation says, the revolutionists
have suspended tlieir agitation, but now
that this warning him been so long un
heeded they inform tho Czar that ho
mnst be prepnred to bo dealt with as
pitilessly nnd removed as suddenly as
liis father nnd predecessor. The police
tore down tho placards before most of
the citizens were stirring, and have made
strenuous efforts to find tho persons who
printed and posted then). Many students
of both sexes have been arrested on sus
picion, and a thorough search has been
made of the offices of all newspapers and
printers suspected of disloyalty. None
of tho peculiar type liHod in printing tho
placards has been discovered, however,
and the police believe thnt it was melted
up immediately after being used.
of his friends wildly striding toward
him.
"What is your hurry?” asked Mr. G.,
catching him by the coat.
"Don t slop me I'' yelled the other,
struggling to get free, "turn mo loose.”
"Anything wrong?” gasped dew-
drop.
"No, no, but lot mo go.”
"What are you rushing so for?”
"Oil, Jiang it, I’m walking for a
match.”
"]f that’s all,” smiled Olow^rop, feel
ing in liis vest pocket, "I can give you
one without your walking yourself to
death for a match.”—Atlanta Consti.(u
Hon.
CANTON, GA
Uiuli-r an entirely new managemou-t,
|„ I,,nv iipi-ii lor the accommodation of
those M'oking n healthy and pleasant
locality. Accommodations FirstCIsss
nnd iviccs Low. Hplondid sample looms
tor Drummers. rt,.oeinl rates to fmnilios.
In connection with the lion e are
qil nil d Siidih-s where horses, buggies,
ile, (sdi receive prompt attention and
nl moderate prices. For further par
ticulars call on or address
They Were Careful.
Snodgers is u thrifty man, and knows
tho value of money. Ho also endeavors
to instill Die appreciation of tho worth of
Ibis useful commodity into the minds of
his boys, of which possessions ho lias
two. Snodgers lives out of town, and
last Friday, after the boys had put in a |
day of hard work in helping him do tho j
spring "cleaning-up” about tho house |
and yaril, ho told them that they might j
have the liorso and buggy tho next day,
and go by themselves on a pleasure trip
to Boston. Accordingly, on Haturday
morning, tho liorso was "hitched up,
Mis. Bnodgers stowed a luncheon under
the seat, and tho elated boys prepared
to set off Then to them camo the
paternal Bnodgers, who put his hand
into, his pocket, und said: "Now, boys,
you will want somo pocket money”— a
suggestion at which tho youths visibly
brightened—"so hero is five cents apiece
for you. You take it, and spend it as
you like, and have a good time, but”—
very impressively—"don’t make hogs of
yourselves!” Jt is believed that the
boys carefully lived up to this adjura
tion.
MiernioATi, jiut not muhioat,.
"You look like a poet,” laughed the
funny editor, as the handsomely dressed
youngster entered.
The hoy smiled and begun fumbling
in his pocket.
‘Maybe you write Hongs, too,” sng
gested tho newspaper man.
"Yes, sometimes,” wus tho answer.
"1 lave you got one for mo ?”
"Yes, i think I have.”
"Is it sung by long or short metre?”
By this time the young man had fished
ont a document, which he threw down,
yelling excitedly :
"Neither, m.y friend,, it is sung by tl"
gas metre.”
It was a gas bill for 813. — Atlanta
ConsHtn/itjn.
NILS, ItllSA L Mcimil,
l*r«|>riftreii«
MEDICAL CARD.
7) /f. N. SEWELL
Returns thanks to the eitizensof Canton
| and vicinity for tlieir liberal patronage
i an I oslr a continuance of the same
j Being permanently located, will con-
i tiinm to practice Medicine, Hurgery and
Midwifery.
Hoping by industry, energy and strjet
application to b siness to merit an in-
ere.wed piitumage und continuance of
tlie same
< fii ■ i* and Drug Kiorc first dooreart of
R, T. Jones’ store. Residence adjoining
Ren. F. Perry.- jauT
TIII5 DIFFKIiBNO/t.
New York Broker- "No, dear, I can-
l not take you to Baratoga lliis year.”
His Wife—"You can’t, indeed? I
I should like t<> know why.’
"I can’t afford it.”
"Tho idea ! Why, the Bimpersins are
' going to Newport just the same as usual,
and Biiiipersin has failed, loo.”
‘‘Exactly, my dear, and 1 haven't.”
j "Well?”
"Why, I have to stay at homo nnd
ouy my dobls.”- Fhita. Fur. Call.
H. Hi MctHTfflE
BRICK, PLASTERING
—AND-
STONE WORKMAN.
Canton, * • Grn.
ly prepared to do any kind of
r Blast-ring
I am fully
Masonry or Blast-ring at the lowest pos
sible rates, and solicit the patronage of
thos ■ desiring work in my lino,
janfl H. II McKNTYRE.
A. STEADMAN,
GrJ\
(; a.n j om
Amkktoa exported 750,000,000 eggs
i cl year to England, and Germany eio
ported 15,000,000 to this country. The
heus seem to bo working at cross pur-
. poses.
Having taken charge of liis father’s
Imp returns thanks m his cu;s omers for
. .it p i rouago and asks I'orucoiitJiiUuuee
■\ \v ik H'l-h as H i fin;
ipper, m
I all ivp.dis Will
iixe-nieil. anil nt reus .nablo prices,
him a trial is all ho asks.
Guttering
be promptly ,
Give