Newspaper Page Text
THE CHEROKEE ADVANCE.
I'XAMINE HOW YOUR HUMOR IS INCLINED, AND WHICH T11K RULING PASSION OF YOUR MIND.’
VOLUME V.
CANTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 25. 1884.
NUMBER 39.
THE CHEROKEE ADVANCE.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
—by—
BEIT. F. PERRY, EJltor and Proprietor.
Often upstairs, cor. West Marietta and Qains-
tille Street*—near Oc‘urt Mouse.
DKmm OSLO Ah OlllKOKCK COFNTT.
mm or bubsciuption.
Per Annum in Advance fl.00
If payment ia delnyod 1-26
(^Advertising Rates extremely low,
<o suit the times."®*
Legal advertisements inserted aud
< I Minted for aa prescribed by on net ot
the General Assembly.
Advertisements will be run until fpt-
bidden. unleaa otherwise marked, and
charged for accordingly. All considered
due after drat insertion.
All oonununieationa intended for pub
lication moat bear the name of writer,
not neoeaaarv for publication, but as a
guarantee of good faith.
Wc Shall not in any way be responsible
for the opinions of oontalDutors.
No oommunioation will be admitted
into our oolutnna having for its end n
defamation of private onoracter, or iu
huv other way or a soiurrilous import of
public good.
Oorreapondenoe solicited on all points
of general importance—but let them be
briefly to the point.
All oommunioations, letters of busi
ness, at money remittances, to receivs
prompt attention, must b.i addressed to
BEN. F. PERRY, Canton, Ga.
P. 0. Drawer 49.
Professional and Business
Cards.
W. A. 16.1. TtiSLEY,
Attorneys n.t F^nw,
CANTON. GEORGIA.
Will give prompt attention to all busi
ness Intrusted to them. Will praotine in
all the courts of the county and in the
Superior Courts of the Blue Ridge air-
cuit. jau8-ly
C. D. MADDOX,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,.
CANTON, GEORGIA
Refers by permission to John Silvoy A 1
Ca.Thoe. M. Olarko A Oo., James R.
Wylie and Gramling, Spalding A Oo., all
of Atlanta, Ga. janl-’88-ly
GKO. R. BROWN,
ATTRONEY AT LAW,
Will practioe in the Superior Courts
of Cobb, Mil .on, Forsyth, Plokeus and
Dawson counties and in the Superior
and Justice courts of Cherokee.
Office over Jos. M. McAfee’s store
Special attention given to the collec
tion of claims.
Business respectfully solicited.
[JaD8-’88 ly.]
U. W. NIWMAX.
mo. D. ASTAWA*.
NEWMAN & ATTAWAY,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
CANTON, - - - GEORGIA.
Will practice in the Superior Courts
ef Cherokee and adjoining counties.
Prompt attention given to all business
placed in their hands. Office in the
Court House. [jan8-’83-ly ]
P. P. DuPREE,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CANTON, GEORGIA.
Will practice in th • Blue. Ridge cir
cult and iu Cherokee county. Oui.: • in
the Court House with the Oriinary
Administrations on estates.
IflrOo lections a specialty. *1®®
BEN. F. fliRRY,
AGENT —
FIRE AND LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Office with Chekokee Advance.
J. P. BllOOKE,
SSttofqey at I^aw
ALPHARETTA, GA.
Will practice iu all the Courts of the Blue
Ridge Circuit and hi the Justice Courts of
lliltou and of such other Districts (G. M.) as
border ou Miltou.
J. M. HARDIN.
House, Sign Carriage
—AND—
ORNAMENTAL FAINTER,
FRESCO AND SCENIC ARTIST ALSO.
Oriental and Grecian painting. Mezo
Tintin', Carbo-Tinting, painting iu Se-
pei and India I*k.
Twenty-five per cent sived by npply-
'ng to me before contracting with others.
Material furnished at bottom prices.
Satisfaction eiven or no ^hargi* made.
Bee ur t^ldrcss, J. M. HARDIN,
(jank-’83-iyJ Canton, Geozgia.
THE FA TURKS HAND.
I’m only an old wife now, sir, aud I’vo time to
sit on the strand,
A-watcUing tho boats oomo in, and tlio chil
dren at play on the sand;
Seventy years, sir— all my days—I liavo livod
hostile the sea,
And it has been meat and money ami Joy aud
sorrow to me 1
Father and ha-hand and boys, sir—there was
net a man of them all
Jould have lain still in the house, sir, when tho
winds and tho waters call.
My father and husband sleep in tlio graves of
our folk by tho shore,
But both of tho boys who loft me—they nevei
came hack any mure 1
Oft I’vo been ready to sink, sir, but ono though
would keep uio atloul—
I learned it, sir, as a littlu lass at play iu my
father's boat.
(Do you know, sir, it’s often struck mo, the
lesson of life is writ
Plain out in the world around us, if we’d but
give our miudi to it ?)
My father hadn't a lad, air, so lie paid the
more heed to mo;
Be would take me witli him in summer, far out
on the open sea.
And he'd let mo handle the oars, sir, and pul-
with my might and main
But if Fd been left to myself, sir, I'd no’or
have seen home again 1
•Tull, littlo maid !’’ ho would clieor me, but
still kept his hand on tho oar;
Though sometimes I'd try to turn us to sonio
pretty nook on tlio shore.
Htill straight wont tho boat to the harbor, and
aa 1 grew stronger each day,
I found that tlio only wisdom was iu rowing
my father’s way.
And I think, sir, that God our Father keeps
hold of the world Just so,
We may strive and straggle our utmost, that
wo may stronger grow—
Stronger and wiser and humbler, till at last we
can understand
Tho beauty ami peace of Ilia keeping the oar
of all life in Uis hand I
For the Father knows wliat we rc&ily want is
labor and rest witli Him I
So Ho bears us straight through Joy and loss
over discontent and whim;
Though oft it's not till wo sit, like mo, a-watch-
ing life’s sinking sun,
Wc feel our best U rur latest prayer, arid that
is “Thy wijil bo doner” j
A GEORGIA WEDDING.
SOCIETY AND DIKE IN TIIE BACKWOODS—
betsy Hamilton's nr ton bobs.
■ It hail been whispered around that
Jake Loftis had flirted Malindy Jane
Trotman, and was a hitcliiu’ of his ridiu’
nag up at our house; but they didn’t
know that when Jake’s critter was a
chawin’ of our fence, Malindy Jane wac
inginnerly in the house. ,
The Trotmans is not the sort that
sounds a horn and tells they business to
everybody, and for that very reason
somo folks trios to find out ther affairs.
Malindy Jane she kep' ber sowin’ hid
and never let none of the neighbor gals
but mo aud Oaledony see it, and Jake ho
got so he taken the nigh cut, aud gin old
Miss Freshours aud old Arminty. the
dodge when he went to sec hey, and
they sot it down that he had quit gwine,
and that it was all busted up betwixt
’em, or, "Meblie,” says old Arminty,
“at ter all he hadn’t never co’ted the
gal.”
But when the Trotmans let in to
whitewasbin’ ther house and fence, and
then let in on the trees around the houae,
they knowed in reason it meant a wed-
din’; but tbar wasn’t nothin’ like flndin’
out for sartin. So Arminty tnk it on
hersef to go over thar aud stay the live
long day. She hinted and hinted, but
all she gathered from Malindy Jane’s
maw was that the dock ’lowed Uine was
healthy.
Galedony was tollin’ it at our house,
and she ’lowed that when granmammy
Eve was a leavin’ so much ou’osity to
ole Arminty she never forgot ole Miss
Trotman. She left her sense enough to
come ahead of her. They didn’t only
whitewash, but they scoured and fix up
tel they didn’t skasely know they own
place, but Malindy Jane was the onliest
gal the old folks hod and she didn’t git
married every day.
To bo sho if they’d had ther own sesso
about it, they never would have picked
out Juke Loftis; but who in all the laud
could they have picked out for a hus
band for ther gal, Malindy Jane ?
Tho day was sot, and sho axed me aud
Caledony to wait on her. Cal she come
over to onr house and we all went to
gether. She fetched her yaller buff
muslin mine’s ofFn the same piece)
and ’lowed me and her could fix and
dress alike. So we wheeled in and
starched our yellow buffs so stiff they’d
stand alone, and ironed ’em slick enough
to see your face]in ’em, and we tuck the
artificial ofFn our last summer hats and
stuck ’em wbar the overskirt was tucked
up to one side, and wo tacked a row ol
cedar all around the bottom of the frock
aud put a piece under our breastpins
und a piece in our hair, and I wisht you
could have saw us—I tell you we was
flxt. Aunt Nancy ’lowed; “Gals, for
all you do, don’t outshine the bride. ”
Buddy, he hitchod the steers in the
waggin and sot in the cheers, and ws alb
went, even to maw. We wont soon so as
to ke'p Malindy Jane fix, and bless you!
when we got tliar thehouso aud yard was'
plum full. I won’t be sartinbat, but f
think that everytiody that oome fetched a
baby and a bench-legged floe aud a flop-
yea rod hound. We’uns oilers fastens’.
"Old Scrooge” aud "Trip," and never'
lots ’em toiler.
After I flxt the artificials in the fashion
ou Malindy Jane’s head and lent her my
neck-ribbin (it’s good look to marry in'
sump’n horrid), why I taken a peep in the
settin’ room to nee who all was thar, and
behold thar sot the Simmonses big as
who but they, and I kuow iu reason they *
wasn’t axed nor wanted; and who should
bo hiked up ou a bouoli all iu a row, but'
them tore-down Froslionrs’ chillum
grand os you please, and still for the
"I pronounce yon man and wife fur
better or fur wusser salute your bride
aud if any preseut has any re-jeotions
let ’em speak now or forever afterward
hold thar tongue you’re dismissed
amen ar."
Then old mau Trotman atepped out
and ’lowed: "Git your pardners and go
into ther house to supper; theole ’omau’s
got a bite to eat in tbar, and sitok as it
is you’re welcome to it.” Bo wo looked
arms aud marched in to supper. The
table was plum full, nothin’ wasn’t skaoe
uor skimpy. The bride’s oako was sot
on a block of wood that was kivered
over with letter papea out in fringe to
hang all around the aige of it. It had a
tliiu whitewash over it, and was dressed
off with little sprigs of cedar stuok iu a
row all around, and a loug stiok of pep-
jwrmint candy stuok right straight up in
the middle, and I tell you it sot the ta
ble off powerful. They had a taller
candle at each cend of the table and a
THE HUMOROUS PAPERS.
WHAT WK KIND IN TIIK.VI TO E.un.s
OV Kit TIIIN WKKIi.
fust time in they lives, and their faoeiy p i ne light in the flreplaoe. Atter sup-
was raily so clean I didn’t skasely knowper we sot in to playin’ kissin’ games,
’em. They hail sliorely boon put to soak * oio brother dole had done all he could
the night afore. Their skin was shiny ■
and slick ns a peeled ingon, and ther bar
plastered dowu tight with saff soap, and
they looked plum satisfied.
Over in the corner sat the three old
maids, Miss Buneli Beasley, Miss,
Patience Potter and ole Arminty Pen-1
dergross. Miss Bunch is as broad as
site’s loug, and as good as aho’s broad.
Miss Patience is no long os a beau polo, I
and ns good as she’s long, and is funny
enough to make a dog kill hissef a
.laughin’. She weers a abort frock to
try to mako her look abort, and all ti e
colors of the rainbow to make her look!
young. Pap ’lows sho looks like
Joseph’s ooat. Ole Arminty was a settin'
right sido of ’em. Now thar was thre*
old maids as different as the elepbaht
aud the monkey and the tiger. Bo folks
needn’t say old maida is all alike. Atyd
widders looks a heap of bein’ all alike
too. The widder Comings was thar,.
and you wouldn’t have knowed she wm 1
a widder. But the widdOr MoAllistH
played flsbln’ for love, and put cu *?■£*¥
of airs. Bhe tuck keer to let everybody
know she picked the turkey and baked
tho tator custards and half-moon pies.
Juko he was the lost one to oomo. Ho
had his head dripping with lard and
scented with oinnamon drops, and his
new shoes was so tight he oouldn’t
skasely walk. I wonder if a feller ever
got married without havin’ on tight
boots or shoes ?
Homo town boys was out in tho entry
a gigglin’. Cal ’lowed if she’d a been
Malindy Jane they shouldn’t er been
nxod, one of ’em in pertiokler, I disre-
mernber his name. Sho ’lowed he
thought kase he livod in town that was
all he needed. He hod the enshoranoc
to laugh at country boys with their
home made jeans, and all he was fitteu
fur was to wear lino Sunday clothes that
wasn’t paid for. He strutted around
mighty bigoty, and smoked and chawed
terbaoker, and took his sweetened dram,
tied his cravat in tho fashion, pulled his
moustache, and played with his watch-
chain, and when he laughed at them
boys ho laughed at his betters. One
good, honest, hard-workiu’ country boy
like Iky Roberson, Cap Dewberry, or
Jake Loftis is worth enough of his sort
to build a fenoe from here to town.
Yes, everybody knowed when Jake
got thar by tlio cinnamon drops.
Brother Cole was axed marry ’em, and
as many couples ns he has joined he
don’t know his piece; he had to read it,
and they helt a candle and dript the
taller an inch thick on the po’ old man’s
coat-sleeve, and then after all he came
nigh marryin’ ’em by the wrong names.
Caledony and Iky Roberson stood
together, and I and Cap Dewberry, and
when we tuck our stands, Malindy
Jane she got on tother side of Jake, and
Brother Cole he wiped his spooks and
sot in to readin’ and spellin’ out hip
words.
"The couple which now stands afore
us for the occasion and benefit of being
jined in wedlock, will please to jino
their right hands.”
Old Miss Patience Potter squeaked
out in a loud whisper:
"Lindy Jane, yon air on the wrong
sido of Jakey.”
Then Brother Cole helt up his paper
and read on:
"Will you, John Loftis ’’
"Jacob, not John,” says Miss
Patience.
"Well, then, we’ll proceed to con
tinued. Will you, Jacob Loftis, take
tho ’oman, Malissy Ann "
"Ma-lin-dy Jane,” says Miss Patience
a little louder. Then in a loud whisper:
"For the lands sake don’t get ’era mar
ried wrong.”
“Well,” says he, "fling on a piece of
light ’ood, or hold mo a torch, fori can’t
see. ”
Home of ’em grabbed a torch and helt
it high. Then jiut as fast as one word
could foller tother, without atoppin’ to
git his breath, he went oa;
—he had jined ’em in wedlock and ho
had et his supper.
The games was a gwine ou, and nil
was a laughin’ and havin’ fun, somo
playin’ "William with n trimbllng too,"
“Chip in and clap out,” "All around the
mulberry bush," and somo was "Fishin’
foi lore,” when Brother Colo knocked
for silence,
"Blethering and state ring,” says ho,
"let us unite in pra’r and be dismist
or."
Atter he was gone Annt Nancy ’lowed;
"There are a time fur all things, and
tliat ar prayer was very on-timely.
# Brother Hagin wouldn’t have done aioh
a on-timely thing as that.”
But they soon got to playin’ and
laughiu’ louder’u ever aud baviu’ a
power of fun, and all looked happy ’oept
Miss Trotman. In coso she was foolin’
bpd about Malindy Jaue a marryin’,
The women folks all had sump’n to say
to her about it. Olo Arminty ’lowed in
a roligious tone: "Ah I I tell yon, Miss
W oiuuin. 1 Lain’t never married, anil all
of ’em o«n marry that’s a mind to, but
marryin’ air a mighty solemn thing.”
"Yes," says Miss Trotman, with tears
in her eyes, "it’s a solemn thing to
marry.”
"Yes,” says Caledony, "but it’s a heap
more solemner not to marry. ”
"1 bound for Cal,” says pap.
Aud that sot ’em all to laughin’. -
Er.tsy Hamilton, in Atlanta Constitu
tion,
One Way to Cure a Balky llorse.
A friend, whose name and address 1
will give to any one, writes to the
Talker thusly: "I notice you are
always ready to say a good word for
that noble animal, tho horse. Our
neighbor had a good horse—a large,
handsome horse. In ono respect ho was
better than most men, for he had but
one fault, but that was a bad one, and
greatly reduced his cash value. Ho
would balk, and always just when you
didn't want him to. My father was a
humane and a practical man. He hap
pened to want a good horse. He offered
our neighbor a low price for his balky
horse, and then and there he became
straightway the owner of the animal.
For several days he fed and flattered the
horse, making his acquaintance. On a
pleasant day he put him before a single
wagon, putting a newspaper in the Beat,
leaving the whip in the stable, and
started off for a drive. After going ofl
in good style about a mile the horse
came to a dead halt and expressed signs
of a good, long stay. My father quietly
took up the paper and perused it. In
about one hour the horse started off in
full gallop and went about a mile farther
and came to another full halt. The
paper was resorted to for about one-halt
hour, when the horse started again in
fall stride. After going a short distance
he headed him toward home, which was
reached in good time. The next day he
repeated the experiment with only one
balk, and that only one half as long.
The third day was u success; no balk
at all. He then passed him to tho
teamster, who put him in with another
horse and worked him six months, dur
ing which he was never known to balk,
and not having further use for the horse
sold him for $50 more than he paid.—
Christian at Work.
Congress.—Of the 111 sessions of
Congress twenty-seven have lasted over
two hundred days, the last one included.
Tho longest was the first session of the
Thirty-first—302 days, from December
3, 1849, to September 30, 1860, There
have been thirteen special sessions,
nearly all short. The Fortieth Congress
held five sessions, and is tho only one
that ever held more than three.
The Prohibitionists of Upton, Iowa,
tore down a saloon and set fire to the
rains.
WELL QUALIFIED.
"Bo you would like to beoome a black
smith, would yon?” he said to a little
barefoot boy, as he stopped blowing the
bellows for a moment.
"Yes, sir,” tho boy replied, "1 would
like to learn tlio trade. ”
"Are you strong and hoalthy ?"
"Yes, sir.”
"Aud qniok ? I wouldn’t have a boy
aronud me who wasn't quick.”
"Yes, I’m quick."
Here tho boy stepped his bare foot on
a hot horseshoe, and tho blaoksmitb re
marked:
"Well, I guess I’ll give you a trial.
Yon seem to l>o oue of the quickest lit
tle boys I ever saw."—AT. Y, Sun.
MYSTERIES Of A BUCKET- HIIOP.
"They called It a 'bucket-shop,'" he
was explaining to the boys, "and 1
dropped in to see wliat sort of buckets
they sold. They had some little ticking |
machines, and a blackboard, and n man
with a loud voioo and a pointer, and 1
put up fl’25 as margin on something or
other, and made 815 iu less’u twenty
fijinutes.”
"Is it possiblo I”
"You bet I And I made up my mind I'd
havo somo moro of it, aud I put up 840
ns margin again ou something et other
more, and iu Iohb’u twenty minutes 1
~ "Made $761”
"No, ma’am. The fellow said I was
closed out, and had bettor oome the
preparatory.”
"What on earth is that ?”
"Why, grease my boots preparatory
to a walk of twenty-five miles by tho
dirt'road to get home 1”— Wall Street
Newt.
THE WRONG SHOE
"Here, mister, you’ve dropped your
overshoe 1” shouted a gentleman in a
Mission street car the other day, us nu
old man got out at a crossing and hoisted
Ids umbrella.
The old party didn’t appear to heAr,
so the kind-heartod passenger seized a
No. 12 gum boot that lay ou the floor
and hurled it after tho oblivious party,
his property taking him square iu tho
hack of the neek ns tho ear rolled away.
The passengers wore all astonished f
at the shoe-loser’s irritation, for ho shook
his fist angrily after the oar and walked
off without piokiug up his rubber.
Everybody roared, especially tho shoe-
thrower, until a littlo boy stoppod unting
peanuts and said to him:
"I guess yon dropped that Hhoe your
self, mister; you’ve got only oue on."
The explosion nearly jarred the car
off the traok.—San Eranoiseo Cost.
Dr. J. P. Saye
BALL GROUND, OA
Tenders his professional services k
Uie citizens of Bull Urotind and sur
rounding country.
Office—H. ,1. B .lings’ Hotel.
M - BOILWM
■—and —
CONTRACTING.
I am now fully prepared to promptly
complete all contracts for Building oi
Repairing Houses
I keep constantly on hand and call
promptly fill all orders for any kind of
Sash, Doors, Mouldings,
Rough and Dressed
LUMBER,
aud in fact Building Material of every
description.
All work guaranteed satisfactory, and
at, prices that defy competition.
If contemplating anything in my lius
call and get tny plans and prices.
H. 8. TQLB1SRT.
THOS. W. HOOAN,
DENTIST,
Canton, Oa.
Tenders his professional so; vices to the
citizens of Canton and surrounding coun
try, and guarantees satisfaction in work
ami prices.
Office—Over W. M. Ellis’ store.
Sale and Feed
STABLE,
G. W. EVANS,
Cantos, 6a., near RailFoail Depot.
Horses and Buggies at reasonable
prices.
Carriages and Horses always reiuly.
Will send to any part of tho country,
with careful drivers and gontle teams.
All kinds of stock feed, and stock well
cared for.
HaoiiDt and Draying Done at Low Rates.
Customers will lie politely waited od
at all hours—day or night.
McAFFEE HOUSE,
CANTON, QA.
Under mi entirely new man*K"mont, is now
open for the Accommodation of those scckiiiK
s lictdlliy and pleasant locality. Aoconimoda-
i lions lir.it-claKM amt prices low. Hnlendiil
Sample Hooiiih for drummers. Special rates to
j families.
In connection with the House sre splendid
staliles, where horses, buggies, etc., will ro-
WHAT TIIE RAD ROY GOT.
"Once upon n time," began the
teacher, "two brothers started to Bun- j
day school on Babbath morning. Their |
way led past a fine poach orchard, where ,.,.j vo prompt attention, ami at moderate rates,
the trees were hanging over with ripe, t All jurors and citizens of the county having
liiHCioiii, ,■»„],«. On. d .b. I,return SXbS ffuKS
proposed going into the orchard and (>r
getting some of the fruit, but the other
refused and sped away, leaving his oom-
punion greodily devouring the peaches.
Now it happened that tho owner of the
orchard saw them, and the next day re
warded the good boy, who refused to
steal his peaches, by giving him fifty
cents. He got a prize for his honesty,
aud what do you suppose the othor boy
got for his dishonesty ?”
“He got the peaches 1” yelled every
member of the class, and another poni
tontiary story was ended.—Atlanta
Constitution.
BOYS’ COMPOSITIONS.
There are a great many sticks in the
world, some big and somo little. Borne
are sticky and some are not. There are
large Bticks of wood, and that is one
kind of sticks; and there are little bits
of sticks, and that is another kind nl
sticks; somo people when they handle
money it sticks to their pockets, so tliat
in another kind ot stick. Sometime!
when a horse is going along in muddy
weather he gets stuck, so tliat is another
kind of stick. That is all I can think of
now, so that is another stick.
The pig is about ns big as a sheep,
ony a pig’s wool isn’t good for making
stockings of. Why is a pig like a tree?
Because he roots; that is a conundrum.
A pig washes himself in the mud. A
pig has four legs, one under each comer
of his body. They pickle pigs’ f oet, but
not until after the pig is done using ’em.
A pig squeals awful when it rains, also
when you pulil its tail. A pig has got a
first rate voice for squealing, and he
grunts when ho feels good. You oan’t
make a whistle ot a pig’s tail, ’cog it is
crooked. Why is a pig like Tommy
Grant ? ’Cos he’s got his nose in every
body’s business. This is another con-
nundruri, which is all I know about the
pig.
COL. H. C. KELLOCC.
C’unton, G«orgi«.
MEDICAL CUD.
7) K. JV. SE WELL
Returns thanks to the citizens of Canton
and vicinity fur their liberal patronage
and ask a continuance of the same
Being permanently located, will con
tinue to practice Medicine, Surgery and
Midwifery.
Hoping by industry, energy and strict
application to b sinews to merit an in-
creased patronage and continuance of
the same
Office and Drug Store first door east of
R. T. Jones’ store. Residence adjoining
Ben. F. Perry. jan3
H, i McENTYRE,
BRICK, PLASTERING
-AND-
STONE WORKMAN.
Canton, * * Ga.
I am fully prepared to do sny kind of
Masonry or I’lastsriug at the lowest jiob-
siblo rates, and solicit the patronage of
those desiring work in my line.
jau3 H. H McENTYRE.
~aTj . ST E AD MAN,
CANTON ... G- A.
Having taken charge of his father’s
shop returns thanks to his customers for
past patronage and asks fora continuance
of the same.
All w. rk, such as Rooting, Guttering
copper, and nil repairs wifi ho promptly ,
executed, aud at reasonable prices. Give ' -
him a trial is all he asks.