Newspaper Page Text
VOL. VL
THE SOUTHERN SUN.
Ptiblirflied Weekly by
J o hin r. Hayes.
Proprietor.
Serins of Subscription.
T
bopy. one year, r ...... .. ~........*.52 So
One Copy, six months 1 50
One Jopy, three months 1 oO
Ad vorttsem ents.
Will be inserted at one dollar per Square for the
first insertion. Libera] deductions Wl| lie made on
contracts. Obituaries and marriages will be charged
the same as other advertisements.
RITES OF ADVERTISING.
No Squares. 1 Mo. 2 M a 8 Mos ti Mos 12 Mos
1 square $4- 00 $7 <>o ~s9 tMl| 14 01) S2O 00
2 squares 800 11 00 14 00(20 00 '.30 00
8 squares 12 00 15 00 20 00 20 00 40 00
4 squares 10 00 20 00j 20 00 83 00 50 00
5 squares 20 00 25 q 03200 40 0 00 00
0 squares 24 00 81 00 38 00 48 <»0 7u "0
i squares 28 00 37 OOi 45 00 00 i>t) 80 00
8 squares 32 00 43 00 02 00:04 On 00 o 0
9 squares 30 00 49 Oy 00 00172 00 1 00 00
10 squares 40 00 55 00 08 Uo|Bo 00 110 o<>
| column 44 00' 02 00 74 GO 39 00 120 00
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
B- B. BOWES K. 0. BOWER
BOWER & BOWER.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
OFFICE IN THE COURT HOUSE.
March 23. 1871. • 44-ly
It. W. DAVIS*
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BAINBRIDGE. GA.
ST Office over Patterson & McNair's Store.
OIIARLEB 0. CAMPBELL H. F. SHARON.
CAMPBELL & SHARON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
BAIN BRIDGE. GA
Ail business cntrus.eil to their care, promptly at
tended to.
Office lu Court House. [julyl3, ly
DFTETJ MORGAN.
OFFICE on SohtVi RVoftd, ovet J W. Den nurds
store. RerideOce on West Street.
March 30-1 y BAINBRIDGE, GA.
MISC ELISA Ntit) US
THE SHAR3X HOUSE,
JOHN SHAItON, Proprietor
Bainbridge Georgia.
TRANSIENT BOARD $3 PER DAY.
THE traveling public are hereby notified that
thiH house has been thoroughly repaited an*
refited, an well as refurnished throughout, and ten
dered one of the most desirable and agreeable
hotels in the State worthy the liberal patrona e it
has heretofore r ceived from the passeuiers on the
river and railroad. No pains or expenses wilt he
spared to make the SHAKOS HOUSE all tin* auy
one could desire. Call afid test its merits.
fff“ln connection with the Hotel Is an elegaiu
SALOON where the finest of liquors are kept.
C. Hates, . Sen. J. Lestkb
Richmond, Va Savannah, Ga
9 iq»i*w WhotosaU
Tobacco, Liquor, and
Commission House
Wm. C. HAYES & Cos.
141 Bay Street, Savannah. Georgia.
fiFFKR special and particular inducements to the
U m.rohXnt« and planters of Cteorgw and _ ■
«T Hidea, Cotton and general l>ro*te»wild
exchange, and on consignment, V* ith lib*. «' a «
vincSquick sales, and small
hope to share a liberal patronage from then Da 1e
generally.
THE BBS”
IS THE CHEAPEST.
sat pmpoot & f #t»tioß & m\>t
Fire Insurance Co
s over S2O,(XH',OOO in Gold. Over $8 000,000
Pays losses immediately alter adjustment.
The New York Life insurance Comp’y
Assets $it5,000.000.
J. E. JOHNSTON St CO , General Agents.
T. B. HUN NEWELL A CO., Agents
. , nmr at arrrtW ft CO., Cotton Factors an
La General to Cus
Savannah, Ga. Ustu* Facilities lgf(My
BIEINHABD, BEOS &C 6.
Wholesale Dealers iu
SO©TS SHOES. 1 HATS,
Ready Made Clothing,
etnHtmfn’u |uruisUing <6o#dS
111 BougMon St.
savannah, Georgia.
ai iv OJTIC*
H. MeluW . 82 WHITE BT. j S. Kelnlia
sl. MelnbaroJ & & \ g.
flic ifouflion Sun,
The Premium Cotton Bale at the St
Louis Fair, and What the Man Who
liaised it had to Say
We oopy the foil-•wing from the St. Louis Re
public m, of Siturday :
Next in interest after the bale of co*ton which
carried off the sweepstake*, was the lucky gen
tleman, Mr B Mc'-han of Le*> county, Wissfs
ti?l>i. Ibe producer What he said may be con*
dewed into the following statement,' which, is
nearly ’verbatim.
MR. M’SHAfc’a STATEMENT.
I take the Wist premium for the best bale raised
in of SSOO, then the premium for the
third best; hd McGehee, the dionged competi
tor I dread and, getting the second premium I got
the sweep-takes of SI,OOO as a-ainst all the ten
competing States, I hid three bales this year
on exhib tio 1, but one was defeated on account j
of being improperly entered; Last year l got the
sweepHt.ikes and the first premium at the St. Lo .is
Fair, the contest being geneial Several suits
were made for myself ai.d family out of the cot- ’
ton by the New Brunswick, Now .Te.sey, Hosiery 1
company, as complimentary of our industry, en. j
torp rise and energy. A female and mile suit is!
on exhibit on here, manufactured out of my pre
mium bale of cotton, mixed with fine merino
wool. These goo Is wore piesented by the manu
facturer through Me.-srs. Fhyrock <t Howland
The piemium bale I have presented to the Wid
ows’ and Orphans’ Home through Shyrock <fc
Rowland. It has brought me within a fraction of
$4 per pound. Its ordinary market value would
be between 25 and 30 cents per pound. My son.
Wm. S. Meehan, was offered, a ter the premium
was awarded, S4OO for the bale. It weighed 408
pounds.
It is an improved cottm, from which is termed
the “Old Pettigulf seed” so named f.ora a point
below Vicksburg, and took its name from being
there fir-t introduced It is the most commdnly
planted cotton of the country Asa general tiling
it has very much deteriorated, it LDing mixed up
with other varieties Since the war, in picking
cotton my son discovered that there was a great
difference in the texture of the lint, and in pick
ing he made a selection from the choicest stalks
and bolls For the paid six years ho repeated the
same process, and has succeeded in obtaining a
choice variety, 'i hi ee years this fall , we took it
into our heads to exhibit odr cotton at the fairs.
The first premium we obtained at Memphis, of
SBOO, on a five bale entry The next season. 1870
we made a one bale entry at St. Louis, and took
the first premium of $500; also, the sweep
stakes of $ :000, and with one other bale at the
Mi>sisdppi State fair at Jackson, we carried off
tho ftr.-t premium of slo<> the same year.
I now enter three bales; on one I net the state
premium of $ •< 0, and the general sweepstakes of
sl,ooo. On the second bale I get a premium of
sloo, making in all si,6ow at this Fair.
'Hie merit of the cotton depends on its fineness
and silky texture. It is a hard discrimination to
make between long and short staples, if raised on
upland; because if well cultivated the length and
strength is improved by good cu'ture and manur
ing When I first commenced expeiimenting in
toe matter, and piepairing cotton for fairs, my
principal object was to induce others to produce
cotton ofabi ttei quality, belieVtng that it would
be more remunerative to the planters to produce
and make a better quality of cotton than finder
our old system of labor, which bus been cl>ftng**d,
a great deal beinur made by white labor, they
being better capable of handling it than under
slave labor.
Suicide and Life Insurance. —tn the Unt
ied Stales Circuit Court, at Hartford, some
days past, a suit was brought to recover
from a Life Insurance Company of Maine the
amount of a policy on the life of one Sher
idan Gay, the suit being brought by his
widow. Gay, shot himself on a railway in
Connecticut in 1869, dying from the effects
of the wound.
The defendants, the Life Insurance
Campanv, on their fide alleged that he
deliberated suicided in consequence of ex*,
tcutuxe defalcations in New \ont,aud tliti
as the policy exempted suicide the plaintiff
could not recover.
The plaintiff, the suicides widow, on her
side put in a pb-a that her husband was in
sane, and presented a number of witnesses
who testified to his previous dondtiost.
The arguments weie made by the leading
Hartford lawyers,and the jury brought in a
verdict awarding the full amount of the
policy, $5,000; with interest iu the sutn of
stst 40 additional:
A well known E«*u lucky miaistor, sobject I
to severe spoils of nervous headache, was
in our office the other day,says an exchange, j
during one of those attacks. M »jm ' j
of Mexico, was present, and proposed to re- j
lieve him in five minutes, which he did mos |
egectually > . The foilwing is the prescription:
Take a dessert spooful of common soda.snc:
as is us.d iu making bread, and dissolve u
thoroughly in a quart of cold water WHn
this thoroughly shampoo th * head for about
five minutes, scratching 'he skin of the head
and the back of the neck well with finger
ntt jl ß Then rinse the lo ad with clean cold
water. Major Brown says that he has used
this remedy iu perhaps a thousand cases
since 143, and never once faded to g»™
lief in five or ten minutes. This renn y
for nervous headache, and is not for those
afflictions of the head irking from dee
ranged etomachs.-American Rani home.
£.,, -■ - 1 - .
l3acie 'Pe:ricaerLt Journa—Demoted to tlae Interests of Georgia.
I'. —— >»■ - «Jt
BAINBRIDGE, GA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1871.
Tlio Insurance Companies an<| the
Greater©.
The following information is said to bare
been gathered from reliable sourcea|
The Royal Insurance Company, ofliver
poo!, logos $133,000; the Imperial titer—
pool, $000,000; North British,
$2, 700,000. Good authority lb@tSnp the
loss of Liverpool and London insuMnce
companies at $4,500,000. All Chicago
companies are bankrupt;
The Boston Transcript says the insu
j ranee companies of Boston have suffered
severely by the great fire. Those having
j agencies in Chicago are National, New
j England, Hide and Leather, and Indepen
dent. A dispatch front the agent of the
: first named company announces is losses
ito be $500,000. The officers of New Eng
, land company estimate their loss at $700,-
| 000, and have voted to suspend for tbe
| present. Hide] and Leather Conpany’a
liabilities foot up nearly the same. This
company also suspended. The Indepen
dent advises its patrons to cancel their
lices and reinsure pending reports from
their Chicago agency. Several other Bos
ton offices are reported sverally crippled.
The following additional losses are re
ported: Home Coiunibus(?) $150,000;
Commercial, $80,000; Howard, $275,000;
Lamar, $200,000; Mercantile, SIOO,OOO
Manhattan, $500,000; American $250,000;
Resolute, $75,000; Washinston, $400,000;
Yonkers and New York, $300,000. All
the above are New York companies. The
Hartford loses $1,200,000; Manufacturers,
$350,000; Pacific of San Francisco, $500,-
000. The JEtna, of Hartford and Home,
of New York, have each about $4,000,000
insurance in the burnt district. The
Phoenix, of Hartford, has $700,000 insur
ance. Several others are reported, but
their losses are comparatively small.
All the Chicago banks, it is said, wdl
be al>le to resume business. A number of
bank vaults have been opened, and tl/e
contents, without exception, wore uninjur
ed. Every bank iiethe city claims that
in time it will be able io pay every dollar
of its indebtedness.
How They stand It — Dr. C. A. Dents, of
Quincy, in a let tear to the Journal, thus
speaks of the general health if the Swedes
living ill Gadsden county:
Those who came in October of last year
have been remarkably exempt from the fe
vers incident to our climate. Some were
sick whou they arrived from exposure in
dt-ck passage, and some who settled in lo
calities that were notoriously subject to
intermittent fever, suffered accordingly.
The majority of them, however, have been,
so far as my information extends, entirety
free from sickness; have been toiling in the
fields during the summer without any call
for medical aid.
Those who canie in May last have suf
fered more from fever, of an intermittent
type, mild and easily controlled. Every
case that came under ttiy observation, how
ever, has been attributable to imprudence
iu exposure and rain—such imprudence as
going about in heavy rains without um
brellas, as no home-born citizen would
tliiiiK of committing,
gome difference is evident in favor of
those who left 'Weeden iu ihe Fall and be
gan their aclimation here with the winter
season*
A Sweet Temper.
No trait of characier is in«*re valuah ! e
in women than the possession of a sweet
temper. Home can never lie made happy
without it. It is like the flowers that
spring up iu our pathway, reviewing and
cheering us. Let a man go home at
wesf.ed by the toils of day, and how sooft
ing is a world dictated by a good disposi
tion. It is sunshinefalliug on his heart. He
is bappj’, and the cates c.flife are all forgot
ten. A sweet temper has a soothing in
fluence on the minds of a whole family.—
Where it is found in the wife and mother,
you observe kindness and love pred«»tnin»-
ling over the natural feeling of a bad heart
smiles, kind words and looks characters-*
csi Orel) , and peace and love have their
dwelling there, A sweet temper is more
valuable th in gold; it captivated bean'y,
and to close of life it retains all freshness
and power.
Information has been received of the de
direction of the town of.Crocket, Texas, by
fire, on the Ist instant. The whole busi
ness portion of the town, including <he.
principal hotels, was bnrned, except the
dry goods house of L. E. Down. The loss
is not known. The insurance amounts to
about $50,000*
General News.
The first trial by jury bus taken place at
Home. The accused waa a Woman; she
was convicted of theft and sentenced to three
years imprisonment. The proceedings were
interestiugiand the Court-house waa crow*
, ,
The Thirteen-year ol<l lowa girl weighs
230 pounds.
At Muscatine, lowa grapes are selling
for three cents a bushel.
A San Francisco firm is shipping cured
salmon to England.
There arc 486,000 acres of corn reported
in Livingston county, Illinois.
It is estimated that there are 75 000 cat
tle in the vicinity of Baxter Springs, Kan>
aas.
Mr. E'lis, of Mouiuie county, Illinois,
last week found a rich specimen of gold
quarts in his coal mine.
Very large amounts of currency are find
ing their way Westward in payment of the
enormous giape crops.
In the past three months twenty persons
have committed suicide by jumping into
the.river at St. Louis;
A colony of Shakers from Ohio has purs
chased a large tract of land in Osage coun
ty, Kansas, and intend locating there im .
mediately.
All colored laborers oh the extension of
the Chicago and Southwestern Railroad
have been discharged at the deuiaud of
Irishman employed on the work;
Kansas City, Missouri, claims to be the
wealthiest city in the West. With a popu
lation of 35 000, it has a property valuation
of $30,000,000, or nearly SI,OOO tor every
man, woman, and child.
A Kansas paper says, that M. C. Page,
while digging a well Upon his farm a short
distance from Salina, iu that State, came
upon the most perfect fossile found in this
country. He found wonderfully perfect
specimens of oak. walnut, maple, and pine
leaves, which would be of great value to a
museum. Mr. Page has also found a good
indications of coal upon bis place. The
many discoveries directly the attention of
scientifiic men thither
The shipwrights Clyde who have joined
the nine hour league have been locked out
by their employers.
Some parts of Ohio are suffering
ly from the drouth and the prevalence of
fires along the railroad routes.
Twenty Professors in the University of
Rome have refused io take the oath requir
ed by the Italian Government.
Business is improving in Utah, and min
ing transactions are unsually heavy. 8 fi
ver Cloud Mine, in Camp Floyd, was sold
last Friday, for $350,000.
The municipality of Pairs has voted two
million francs for repairs to monuments
and public buildings damaged during the
siege and the reign of the Commune.
A son of John Mumphy, of Springfield,
Ohio, was bitten in the heel by a rattle
snake ' while walking in the woods last
week. It is thought he cannot recover.
Brigham Young takes his imprisonment
very quietly, but some of his newspapers
are takeing blood and thunder at a ra id
bate; There are no fears of a disturbance.
The National Convention of the Rail
road Conductors’ Association closed its
proceedings In« hicago last week. Louis
ville was selected for the place of holding
the next convention;
The exploring party of Governor Safford
of Arizona, arrived at Fort McDowell des
titute and suffering, having been misled by
a man named Miuea, who professed to
know where there were rich places.
The New Yolk elevated Railroad, from
the Bttterr to its northen terminus, was
sold last week, by an auctioneer, for the
sum of $75 ,000, to ihe Trustee for all bond
holders. ihe sale was by order of refer
ence, to pay off mortgage.
Prairie fires have broker! out at several
points east and west of Yankton, D. 1. re*,
suiting in the destruction of several dwel
lings barns and other property. At B »n
--hauitne a saw-mill and a large frame dwel
ling were burned from this Cause*
The jail in Laramie, 'V. TANARUS., was ‘uv.ded
by a gang of borne-thieves fr«.ni the Black
Hills on the 4th itist., about 7 o'clock, wlio
with sledges, crowbars, cold-chisels, Ac.,
broke into the ceils and liberated three of
their champions. All made their escape
into the UilU- There was no officer on
gnard. N»m* have as yet been recaptured.
Upper Sandusky, Ohio, has a repetition
of the Buffenbarger case. Barnabas Wag
oner, an old soldier of 1812, is the name us
the victim, aud the parties implicated, by
(he reports thus fax published, are his wife
I her brother Robert; and a peripatetic
! tor named Forney, who now proposes to
confess, because as he says, his fee of S2OO
has not been paid.
The Santa Fe Daily Post has just received
a letter from B.L. Pipers, United States
Indian Agent, dated Covoda, Alamasa,
September 30, stating that the fahiotis Ap
ache chief, Clichis and party came in en the
24th ultimo, and went through the ceremo
ny of making peace; It 19 hoped that this
will do more toward settling the Indian
troubles in Sew Mexico and Arizona than
anything that has taken plane for year**.
She Southern Claims Coniniission will
not at this time allow their oommissioite in
the South to receive testimony in support
of any claim exceeding three thousand
dollars in amount, but claimants who have
already filed claims/ exceeding that eiim,
by reduceing the amount, bring their
within the jurisdication of their resident
commissioner. No further application for
the hearing of testimony can be entertain
ed by the Commission until after the first
of January next.
Deficiency of the Indian Cotton Cop
Accordig to the latest mail advices
from India it would appear that
the prospect of enlarged supplies
from that quarter are not likely to
be realized. Messrs. Finally Muir & Cos.,
in their last Bombay Circular, state
that their best information is that ‘no
efccoss oVer last year's Crop can be looked
for, and unless the Weather improves, there
seems room lor a considerable deficiency.
The season generally is a lato one.' So,
too; Messrs, Watteiibach, Hedgers & Cos.
write from Calcutta that it “is reported
that the late heayy rains have seriously ins
jured the growihg ciop.'
Tns Ladies’ MAGAZtNE, St. Louis.—'The Oc
tober ntlmber of this Magaziuo is before us
looking brighter and fresher than ever. It ned
ed but one tiling to make it superior to any ladies’
book in America, ami that was an engraved title
page. That has now been furnished, and the Mag
axine is compelet. The design of the cover sym
bolical of the high intellectual standard of the
work. It consists of five portions of as many
American women who have distinguished them
selves iu their chosen life work. The upper right
hand corner is adorned by the portrait of Alice
Car ley, Author: the Upper left corner by Mrs.
William, Teacher; the centre by Ilariiet Hosmer,
Artist; the right lower corner by Anna Dickinson,
Orator; the left lower corner by Mrs. kozier, Phys
ican. The plate is beautiful and appropriate.
TERMS.
1 copy, one year, - ; . . $3.00
4 copies for dne year, - . „ . 11 *>o
6“ « 15.00
0 “ “ •' and one to getter
up of chib, ----- 18 0Q
12 copies for one year, - - - 21.30
Semi twenty-five cents for sample copy and Pre
miuna list, to Morgaret L. Johnsofi, 407 N. Fourth
Street, St, Louis, Mo.
Macon, Ga. October 12,1811.
Editor* Telegraph and Messenger: I band
you herewith a copy of a dispatch received
Irom General J* E Johnston; General Agent
for the ‘Liverpool and London and Globe In
surance Company. * This company will
have a paid up capital of eighteen million
dollars in gold in baud, after paying all
their losses in Chicago which will be paid
promptly. Yours, truly,
I. C* Plant, Agent at Macon.
To I. C. Plan’, Agent at Macon, The Com
pany b'legraphe, *\Ve estimate our loss at
two million. If every risk had been burnt
it would not have seriously impaired the
Company's strength. J. E. Johnston,
General Agent.
General Albert Pike, of Arkansas, re*
Cently visited Newburyport, Mass., the
place of his birth. A little supper, to be
given bird by his friends at one of the ho
tells, was Spojfi-d by the lanlord's saying
there was not money etibugh in the city to
buy a supper for a rebel General. Another
pnplicau was found, however; who was not
so ardent a Republican, and at his house
the supper took place as proposed.*
‘Patrick,* said a lady to a slip of green
Er*n who wSs officiating in the kitchen,
‘where is Briget ? Indeed m'aam she'd fast
asleep, look in at the bread baking**
Scratch ed. -The veterinary editor of ‘Wilkes
Spririi of the Times* recotnrtiends the fol
lowing for scratches in a horse: Take sul
phate of zinc, one drachm; glyceriuo, two
ounces; apply every morning.
A Lively Race. —Massachusetts has fonr
candidates for Goveruot—Democratic, Re
publican, Ltbor Reform and Anti-Liqnor.
Asa plurality elects, Jobu Quincy Adams
stands a good chance for an election. ‘So
mote it be.*
A Fenian Raid. —Montreal o<j{olW*l2.
It is oft dally atated that the Fenian Gen*
era I O’Neal, with a fiircd not atated, haa
crossed the border at Pembina and fieftfbd
the Canadian Custom bouse and Hudson Bay
Fust. They were attackttTby United State*
troops and O'Neal cuptared, It wa* also
reported that a large party hfid crossed at
St. Joe, with United Statea troops in pur*
suit.
A special telegram from Washfhton, to
the World, says a grand scheme for gob*
bling up Mexico is on foot. Generftl Jos
s<«ph E. Johnston is spoken of as thsmil/
itary leader of the tutiprisc, and Generals
Rosincrahs dud Logan are cohhected with
it. it is claimed that Jaurei, with quite a
number of trusted puplic men br Mexico,
favor the move.
I ■ -—■■■■■■» *■» © » 1.l .1! —Mil I, . ..
The ihineral wealth of TeJtafl ilßald to be
enormous, but yet sleeps undisturbed. She
has iron enough to divide the earth Into
railroads ten miles across j ahd baait least
5,000 tons of coal in a dormant dortditiun
She alsd po*Boßßea millions of acres of
tiraber«land, and an Untold wealth of other
matters. All this says; Mr. Uotaco Gree
ley.
What Ift the and inference botWett Stabbing
a man and killing a hogs ‘
The one is assaulting with intent to kill;
and the other is killing with intent to
salt.
General Beauregard has been interview*
ed. He says Grant will iuaugiirate a mil
itary despotism if ne is re-elected. Ha
goes for the now departure and Grata
Brown for President.
An Ohio young man had a girl whoirt
he was courting arrested for biting his lips.
The fool l We would be chawed into bash
before having a girl arrested ifor that.
Blacksmith.
and
WOOD SHOP*
At the old stand of Randle Kenney, there yori’
find tho
THE BE3T OF VV.VOO NS
iaj-ui
/flaiSL-EMari
miS&£S!3SB5m!lLk
That can be bought on
mra-mrmarmTa fm
Complete and ready for the road.
CrawforD & ArliND.
COABLE3 A. VASA. ZdUor.
fc&egfonwWwMtjJ&ni
A ibsPmnt Tl***.
latnM tor Feofl* Saw a link:
Including Farmers, Mechanic*. Mere*****, Pie*
Suelonal Mas, Worker*. Thinkers, sad *ll Mam
aer of Eonset Folks, sad tka Wltss, Mas, sal
DsogMaraof allaaeh. * *
oilt on dolus A nit i
/ OKI HUNDRED COPIES FOB «M
Or |«s than Oaa OaHiOo pf. Let there he a
SOO Ctab at sveey Fast Odtos.
BIKI-WEEKLY SEE, «9 A TEAK,
ot tbs same sis* and gcaertl character a*
TBS WBEKX.T, bat with a greater variety es
—eaUaasoa* readme, sad fonUahtag the mw
to H* samorUMis with greater ermbnem. haaaaaa
MMaoaitwlM a want fastest of aoeeaair. -
THE DAILY SUM, i4 A YEAS. f
TERMS TOCLTTBa i /
THE DOLLAR WHKLTBCT.
Ftra m iniaa ana mar separately afldfaaaad.
tv— fQwjW. fill TBftr. MMftftllvSdAFflMai In#
an sKttZmgyte^gea>^m^Vmß^” f
shbse:
Ǥi&es^g3l
THE BEXL-WSEKLY SUIT. A
Fiv copue.oa* j»ac«Mpar»lciy adTtiigai. .
T * ***.
MUNI
BUD TOUR KOKXT
ft «*•**»«-* ***
jSSfOI
NO. 22