Newspaper Page Text
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SOUTHERN BANNER: MAY 81. 1878.
A Mysterious Portrait.
In a snvilUuit liamisonioly-furnislieii
s't>i i .-room in :i London hotel, :i
vo hi-- holy w.t* sitting in an easy
c ih Instore a Mazing tire, one dreary
No\ ember afternoon Her hat and
clo i lay noon the ifthle beside her,
nod i.o:n the eager, impatient glances
a'u* lined toward the door at every
so i > * ot a too', step on the staircase
on'*, ie, it was evident that she ex*
pee .*d a visitor.
At last the door opened, and a tall,
mi- icratiedooking young-man eit*
ter- ■ t lie room.
•• Harry, what a long tim • y <u
h iv- been !” sit
in ' n,» tronv her seat,
h ,ve yon bt ought ? What does vonr
fat. e • say about, onr—onr marriage?”
h-b i .ing with the shyness of a bride
*• 1'ir i.i>t words
•iv ad lor yourself, Helen,” replied
h Miirh uni, handing her an open
int..r, and standing opposite her,
to ni.ig against’ the marble mantle*
•)1 <• , watehing intently the expres-
sin i oi her fair young face as slie
red -
*- 1 ; marrying as you have done,
yn i have aeied in direct, deliberate
o ijio-iiioii to my wishes. From this
day you are no longer my son, and I
wash my hands ol you forever.”
•‘ Larry, why did you not tell me
uf lii s before?’’ exclaimed Helen, as
•ih.- .• nl the hard cruel words, look
ing it through her tears into her
husband’s face.
“ ,hy d irliug, what was there to
tell ? How could I know that my
father would act in this hard hearted
maimer? 1 knew that he wished me
to marry the daughter of a nobleman
living near Marston Hall, and so
unite the two estates; but I had no
idea he would cast me off for diso
beying Ins wishes. And even if I
had knowu it,’’ lie added, fondly
ulaspiiig'liis young bride to his heart,
and kissing away the tears from her
eyes, “ I should not have acted dif
ferently. My Helen is worth filly
estates, and as long as she loves me
1 shall never regret the loss of Mars
ton Hall and its fair acres. But my
love,” he fclitinued, more seriously,
“ there is an end of your promised
shopping expedition into Bond street.
You shall have to do without dia
monds, now that your husband is a
penniless outcast, instead ot the heir
to fifteen thousand a year.”
•* Hush, Harry ! Please don’t talk
bke that,” she said, hurt at his bitter
tone. “You know that it was not of
the diamonds and dress I was think
ing. But what are you going to do,
flury?” she continued, laying her
hand upon his arm, and looking up
sadly in his pale, sa 1 face. “You
cannot work for a living.’’
“And whv not woik for a living?”
he exclaimed in a determined voice.
“ Bee utse I happen to be the son of
a baronet, brought up anil educated
without any ideas or knowledge of
business? But I will work for my
living, and show my little wife that I
am not quite unworthy of the trust
ami confidence she reposed in me
vlwu she placed this little hand in
i ine,’’ he added, stooping to kiss the
small white hand that rested con-
fidingly upon his arm.
It was while pursuing his favorite
stu ly„of oil paintings am nig the fu
rious galleries of 11 nno that Harry
M u'.-iun wood and won Helen Traov,
a governess in an English family re
siding in Italy, and the orphan daugh
ter of an officer in the army. Before
he had known iier a month, harry,
who had been in love—or fancied
himself in love—with at least half a
dozen different young ladies in as
many months, felt that he had at last
met liis late.
Delighted at the idea of being
loved lbr himself alone, lie had not
told her of his real position, and it
was not until after the marriage cere
snony that Helen discovered she had
manied the eldest son of a baronet,
and the heir to an estate producing
fifteen thousand a year.
It was not without some . inward
misgivings that Harry wrote to- his
father teTung' him of his marriage,
which tjerv'jpAre <ihriq r«ajia$d .Uy
the result, as we4mvo seen by the
letter'Tr©nf ! Sir Phillip < Marsto*.
■ 4 *•«!* •**‘>4
.•’ll 1 M i V X ,ii> *4
exclaimed, spring*
What news
which awaited him at his club on liis
return to England with his bride.
But, full of confidence in his ability
to maintain himself and bis young
wife by bis own exertions, and think
ing that surely bis father would relent
and be reconciled to him after a time,
Harry troubled himself very little
about his inheritance; and though
their new home consisting of three
small, poorly furnished rooms in a
back street—was very different from
the grand old mansion to which tie
had hoped to take his bride, he set to
work cheerfully at his favorite art,
and tried hard to earn a living by
painting pictures and portraits.
But lie soon found that it was not
so easy as he thought.
It was all very well when lie was
heir to Marston Hall, and studied
painting merely from love ot art; but
picture dealers, who in those days
had been all flattery and obsequious
ness toward the young heir, now that
he really wanted to sell liis pictures
and sketches, shook their heads, and
politely but firmly declined to pur
chase
At last, one dreary afternoon,
when Harry was sitting in the little
room he called a studio, trying to
devise some new scheme to replen
ish liis slender purse, the servant
opened the door and ushered a
white-haired old gentleman into the
room.
Placing a chair by the fire lbr hi-
visitor, Harry inquired his business.
“ You are a portrait painter, I be
lieve sir ?” said the old gentleman,
looking at him through his gold spec
tacles.
“ That i- my profession, sir,” re
plied Harry, delighted at the thought
of having found a commission at
last.
“ Well, sir, I want yon to paint the
portrait of my daughter.”
“ With pleasure, sir,’’ said Harry
eagerly. “ When can the lady give
me the first sitting? ’
“Alas! sir, she is dead—dead to
me these twenty years, and I killed
her—broke lien* heart with my harsh
ness and cruel’y !’’ exclaimed the old
man, in an excited, trenihlininvoice.
A strange thrill came overalarry,
as the idea that his mysterious visi
tor must he an escaped lunatic crossed
his mind; but mastering, with an
effort, his emotion, the stranger con
tinued :
“ Pardon me, young sir. This is
of no interest to you. My daughter
is dead, and I want you to paint her
portra : t from my description, as I
perfectly well remember her twenty
years ago.”
“ I will do my best, sir, but it will
be no easy task, amt yon must be
prepared lbr many disappointments,”
said Harry, when, having given a
long description of the form and fea
tures of his long-lost daughter, the
old man rose to depart, and for
weeks he worked incessantly upon
the mysterious port rail of the dead
girl, making sketch alter sketch, each
of which was rejected by the remorse
stricken lather, until the werk began
to exercise a Hrange kind of fascina
tion over him, and he sketched face
after face, as if under the influence
of a spell.
At last, one evening, wearied with
a day of fruitless ex» rlinn, he was
silling over the fire watching 1 is
wife, who sat oppnsLe, busy upon
some needle-work, when an idea sud
denly flashed upon him.
“Tall, fair, with golden hair and
dark blue eyes ? Way, Helen, it is
the very picture of yoursell,!’’ tie ex
claimed, springing to his teei, taking
liis wife’s face between his two bauds,
and gazing intently it.to her eyes.
Without losing a moment he sat
down and commenced to .-ketci IIcl
eii’s face ; and when liis strange pat
ron called the next morning, Harry
was so busily engaged putting the
finishing touch s to Ins portrait, that
ho did not hear him enter the room,
and worked on tor soing moments
unconscious of liis presence, until,
with a cry of “Helen, my daughter!’’
the old man hurried him aside, and
stood entranced over the portrait.
•* After, gazing for some minutes in
silence, broken only-by his half-sap-
pressed- cries of remorse, the oldlMh
turned slowly nrounchto Harry, and
asked him in an eager voice where
he had obtained the original of the
picture.
“It is the portrait of my wife,*’ he
said. •
. . .... _ apl8-1873-tf
“Your wife, sir! Who was the?
Pardon me for asking the question,”
lie added ; “ but I have heard lately
that my poor Helen left an orphan
daughter, and for the last six months
I have been vainly trying to find the
child of my lost daughter, so that by
kindness and devotion to 107 grand
child I might, in part at least, atone
for my harshness toward her mother. *’
Harry was beginning to tell him
the story of his meeting with Helen
at Rome, and the’r subsequent mar
riage, when the door opened, and his
wife entered the room.
Perceiving that her husband was
engaged, she was about to retreat,
when the old gemlaman slopped, her,
and, after looking earnestly into her
face for a few minutes, exclaimed,
“ Pardon uic, madam—can you tell
me your mother’s maiden name?”
“ Helen Treherne,” replied Helen,
wonderingly.
“I knew it—I knew it!” ex
claimed the old man in an exalted
voice. “ At last I have found the
chihl of my poor, lost daughter!”
In a few words Mr. Treherne ex
plained how he had cast oft’ liis only
child on aygcuut of her marriage with
a poor officer, and" refused even to
open her letters when she wrotfnsk-
iug for forgiveness.
“ But, thank heaven!’’ said he,
when lie had finished his s.-ul story,
“ I can atone in some measure lbr
inv harshness toward my Helen by
taking her Helen to my heart, and
making her my daughter.’’
It is needless to add that when Sir-
Philip Marston heard that his son
had married trie heiress of one of the
finest and oldest estates in the coun
try, he at once wrote a letter of re
conciliation to Harry, and, after all,
Helen eventually became mistress of
Marston Hall, in the picture gallery
ot which no painting is more valued
and ti ensured than “The Mysterious
Portrait.”
Becamerl^Pfft-
law jsroTiCEa.
S. DORTCU,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Carnesville, Ga.
g 3E. THHA8HEB,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Wotkinsvillc, Gu.
Office in former Ordinary’s Office.
jim25-1376-ly
How Dixie
tional Air.
Gin 1857, when Campbell’s Minstrels
were at Mobile, Dan Eininct, one of
the members of the company, heard
the negroes sing an air and chorus
while rolling cotton on the levee.
He thought it good, so by a little
alteration he arranged it into what is
culled a •* walk around,” which always
winds up the entertainment of an
Ethiopian concert. It was a success.
In the spring of 1801, when (lie war
broke out, Mrs. John Wood came to
New Orleans to play an engagement
at the old Varieties Theatre. She
produced “ Pocahontas.” Near tiio
close of the second act there is a
zouave march by the ladies of the
“ corpse de balletic.” At the re
hearsal of the piece, the leader of the
orchestra was iu a quandary as to
what music they would have. Carlo
Patti could not select anything that
would suit tlic stage manager, T. B.
McDonough, and the consequence
was the rehearsal came to a standstill.
At length Patti struck up “ Dixie ”
It suited and was adopted and played
with a chorus to the same air.
“ Dixie’’ t >ok the town by storm ;
the pianos rang with i;, the boyssang
it and the negroes whistled it. A
musician 'by'the name »f Hlotneo
Minera arranged it foV a march for
the Washington Artillery B.ifterv,
and from that hour all Southern men
and women hail it with delight. Cold
mast lie the Southern heart that does
no’ glow with delight at the sound
ol onr ih-ar “ Dixi<*.” But the com
poser, Dan Emmet, what of him?
Why, he can be found iu a very
comm in variety sa’oon in Chicago
imw, playing on iiis fiddle-fir a mere
pittance, eking out a miserable exis
tence liy playing “ Dixie’’ to an
admiring crowd of newspaper boys,
roughs and beer jerkers.
p G. TIIOMSOX,
* ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Special attention paid to criminal practice.
For reference apply to Ex-Gov. T. II. Watts
and lion. David Cloptou, Montgomery, Ain.
Offico over Post-Office Athens, Ga.
feb3-187o-lt‘
JOII2V W. OWEN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Tocoa City, Ga.
Will practice in all the comities of the West
ern Circuit, Hart mid Madison of the Northern
Circuit. Will give special attouion to uli claims
.intrusted to liis care. oct20-187a ly.
Pope Bakuoiv. 0. C. Harrow, Jk
jjarrow iiros.,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Office over Ta)nudge, Hodgson & Co.
janl-ly
£1 ». IXiljli*
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Athens, Ga.
Prompt a It tut ion given to al> busiifcss and
the same respectfully solicited. janll-ly
Lamar Cobb. Howell Cobb.
jk & II. COHH,
ATTORNEYS at law,
Athens, Ga
JOffioc in Pcupree Building,
fcb22-187<J-Iy
AJ
E
Ai.ex s5. Erwin.
Ft WIN .5 COBB,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Athens. Ga
w J. Cobh.
Office on Cornc-r of Blond ari l Thomas streets,
ovei Childs, Nickerson A C<>.
feb22-lS7‘I-ly
^SUBUHY. McCimitY,
Atfcorniy a-b Law,
Hartwell, Georgia,}
Will practice in the Superior Courts of North
east Geoigia and Supr.-tni- Court r.t Atlanta.
Aug 8. 1878 tf
James R. Lyle,
Watkinsville.
Alex. S. Erwin,
Athens.
^YLE & ERWIN,
A TTORNE rs A T LA W.
Will practice in partnership in the Superior
Court of Oconee Com u. and attend promptly
to all business Intrust to their cure J jgfa
jan9-3iu.
JACKSON A C O MAS,
attorneys at law; '
Athens, Ga.
Office South West Corner of College Avenue
aud Clayton Street, also at the Court House.
All parties desiring Criminal Warrants, can gel
them a*, any time by applying to the County
Solicitor at this office. decl6-187-t-tf
^ >1. COCIfUAN,
’^.TTOniTS'2' AT LAW,
Gainesville, Gn.
dlcal Estate and General Land Agent forthe
purchase and sale of Mineral and Farming
Laudsin Hail, and the other counties of North
east Georgia. Mineral ores tested and titles to
property investigated. Special attention given
tothe purchase and sale of city property.
may-2—Cm J. N. DORSEY. Attorney.
BT73I2TES33 CAHDS.
rjl A. lLElt,
■’SWa'bsls.Kvaieor Sc «Xowolar,
At Micliael’store, next door to Reaves <fc Nich
olson's, Broad street, Athens, Georgia. All
work warranted 12 months.
septl2-tf.
JfYKUV AND SILK STABLE.
C.n’i'lugcs, Rugglos* liorses
asonable.
I-i. M. WHITEHEAD,
Washington, Wilkes county, Ga.
v2.’>- IS
t!
LIVERY, FLED AND SALE STABLE,
ja.-fclxex5J3, GSsorgia-
GANN & REAVES, PROPRIETORS.
Will he found at their old stand, rear Frank
lin House building, Thomas street. Keep nl-
wavs on hand good Turnouts ami ca viiii dri
vers. Stock well eared for when err rusted to
our care. .Slock on hand for sale at -ill Mines.
deeiOtf.
3AM^ lkA.KdR.ifc,
Boot ariad. Slios-^i2a.l~er r
atiif.n s, g eg bg IA,
(Ovkb Jacobs fit Michael’s Store.)
First class work turned out on short notieo,
at liberal prices. Give me. a call and get goo'
material aud fine work. niarehl3-tt
CITY MLRCHAIfTS AMD OTHER BUSINESS MEN
WHO WANT CASH-READ.
A LL who have tried the experiment have obtained
ready money by advertiiiug ih the Hartwell Sun.
A spicy newspaper, sparkling with wit and httmor,
keeps up with the times in everything It is the pa
per for everybody. Printed in the neatest manner.
’ Has a too4 circulation and is thoroughly read by
just the people to whom you want to sell. Examine
uspolamas and see ■tMtfmthV ma
houses. They are tegular advert!
and be convinced that it,
liberal. Pabcrfree to ad'
B*Hon&11cG»H
R. J-
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
(Singer Machine Office, College Aronuc)
iLTTIEITS, - GEOROKA.
I have opened at the above place, where I
will give strict attention to repairing and
cleaning of Waichos, Clocks find Jewelry. All
work-done in first class style and at reasonable
rates. Give me a call. april 23-6m.
PRESCRIPTION FREE!
Forthespeedy Cure or Semi nal Weak ness, Ixist
MuiitioodaimaUdisorders uroaght ou Cylndls-
,30 tvrst Nlxtti Street, Cincinnati. O.
.- J L
i
Tit ltrncdj of Ut 19th hntxry.
I Barham’s Infallible
PILE CUBE.
■a
llnmfeetmcd by Urn
Birain Pita Cy» Ca., Sat!
Itatrcr Wit to car* Ilr
•r run. whea a tore it imaia
Prim IMnONaHttatnisUl
Garden Seed!
AND
GRASS SEED.
We have now the largest stock of Seed in
this part of the State, all of which are Fresh,
ot a single package of old Seed in our stock.
We have also a large stock of
STEEL HAIR BRUSHES,
The fourth lot since .October last. Our
DRUGS,
Paints,
Lead,
Oils,
Varnishes, Turpentine,
We cun offer at low prices.
C. W. LONG & Co.,
sepll-ly Athens. Gu.
PLANTERS’ HOTEL,
>YT3 GrXJSTA, GkA..
The Leading Hotel the City.
Noted for its cleanliness, and the excellence
of its table.
RATES—#3 on I'F.E DAY.
,1 4 »
The Proprietor solicits from the citizens ot
Athens a continuance of that litreml patronage
they have heretofore gi\ cn him.
B. F. BB.OWXT,
oct!6'lm. Proprietor.
Meriw@th.er <& Few,
BLoA.OISlS'JMIXTHC’S
TWO SHOPS FOR 1877.
One at the old stand in trout ot
Messrs. GANN & REAVES,
The other on the road to the upper bridge aud
opposite
Mr. JOHN Z. COOPER’S,. 1 '
Livery Stable. Wc have first class workmen
HOUSE SKOEI1TG
of every description,
Plating and Concave Shoei;
Manufactured to order.
WAGONS, BUGGIES, CARRIAGES,
Aud all kinds of Machines and Im
plemcnts repaired on short notice.
jan9-tf.
SIMMONS
Liver Regulator.
Hepatine Comp. Cathartic Pills.
Tutts Pill, Poms Plasters.
Worm Candy and Vermifuge,
Sarsaparilla, Buchu.
Tutts and Hambleton’s Hair Dye.
Aniliue prepared for use.
Long’s German Cologne.
Long’s Cologne.
Lead, Oil, Glass and Varnish.
Morphine, Opium, Chemicals.
Hair Brushes and Combs.
Perfumery, Toilet Soups.
And everything in the Drug
Line, at lowest prices at
C. W. LONG & Co.’s
Drug Store,
Athens, Ga.
septll.ly.
Southern Mutual Insurance
coovr ip-A-nsr-sr,
ATHSaTS, GHOnOZA.
YOUNG L. a. HARRIS, President
STRYKXS It O il VS Secretary.
Cross Asset?, Ajiril 1. ts;j, - . $;8t,.',3f tit!
Resident Directors.
Youxo L. G. Harris
.Toils' It. Newton,
Or. IIknp.y Hull,
Aliiin P. Hkakino,
Col. Robert Tuozas,
m 22-wly
Stkvkns Thomas,
Klizv (,. Ni.wtom,
Ferdinand PmNizr
|ir. R. M. Smith,
John W. Nicholson,
The Image of her Mother.
TnTO'V ^Xa.
BY nUTH Tl'CJBTZG-
In the Savannah Weekly News of Saturday,
2"th April, will he commenced a new serial
story with the above title, written by a lady of
Savannah.
TilE WEEKLY NEWS I * TI!B
Largest and Best Weekly
IN THE SOUTH.
it is a complete newspaper, and contains the
latest Telegraphic and Mat New*, Markets,
etc., an Agricultural and Military Department.
It adapted for general circulation throughout
the South.
Subscription, one year 32.00.
Six mouths LOO.
Specimen copies scut free.
Address J- II.- KSTILL,
april 1G Savannah, Ga.
% Notice. !
Xha Celebrated <4 BELLE OF KENTUCKY’V
Flour for Sale.
april 23-8m. LUCA8.
U" 1 UT I i 9
XPECTORANT
la the most cental b il-nni ever used by
sufferers from pulmonary diseases.
It Is composed of herbal prod nets,
which have a sped (1c effect on tlic t h ron i
and lanes; detaches from theaircelN all
Irrltatinc matter; causes It to lie ex
pectorated, and at once checks the In
flammation which produces the eoucli.
Aslncle dose relieves the most d 1st ress-
MC paroxysm, soothes nervousness,
and enables the sufferer to enjoy otiiet
restat nicht. Heine a pleasant cordial.
It tones the weak stomach, and Is
specially recommended for children.
What others say about
Tntt’s Expectorant.
Had AslhmaThirtyY ears
Bm.TIMORF, February 3. iS ;.
“I have had 1 I'aiitv \si* A i \,- r
fouml a medicine 1 •'‘>t hn<l »m". Vi :i I-jm- v t lit »•• •
W. F. HOGAN, Charles S«.
A Child’s idea of Merit.
New Orleans, Ncv/mlrr u, ,w,.
u Tutt*s Ex|>crtonint is a t.miiliar name in mv
house. My wile thinks it the lu-sl medic-ine u\ th';
world, ami the children say it is ‘niter than
molasses candv.* ”
NOAH WOODWARD, 101 N. Poytinu St.
“Six, and all Croupv. 5 ’
** I am l he mother <d c! litli ?•:. ; : 1»| of
have Ihicii <T(ni)iy, iihou*.Kn f
X don t think tlM-y c.*uld ie.iv .* *- :r\,j ic
the attacki. It i«. a ninthfi-'^ l i»”
MARY STEVENS, Fraitfa.-f. V
A Doctors fi.dvic
*• In my practice, X advi^.* it!: v . , •
Tull’s Expectorant, in mu»<m •: , •. r. .
coughs croup, diphtheria, t
T ELl.‘S M.D . r !• j
Sold ftfl fteitffi/i.utn. #'»•.
Murray sin-n.
?tov
v ^ RE.V. i. R. SIMPSON’, Leui:
*' 1 nit’s IVls nn* ;t sj», . i ! !•
nineUcnih >« • \
REV. F. R o ;c : .
«I have -TS.-.I TautTl*. is | r I
liver. TV v Me <u;h t'-t 1 » : ,
bdiarv !• ^ . x 1. ;
I. P. CA5.7, Attorney tt Li ve /
-i havens, rr.rn’rm ,,,
Hv. ’t hey l, r •
ioucitess."—F. R.WILSDM, Cforc
•‘I have tts.-d . " .
bencfit.’ -W.W. MANN Editor I,.cl.lL
“ We Ss-ll pftv hmtTTTim : f >
til others."—SAYRE A CO., Carte:
“Tatt’s Fills have <>::lv l« l a li
tablish their merils. Tr.'v v ' !
W. H. BARRON, 9S Summer S:
rare ot hilimis Hi'-or-lers as 'I n '■ i-
JOS. BRUMMEL, RidmonJ,
AND A THOt/SAND htOf
Sold b>f drittfnlots. mif it (m
SS Murray Str >1, .%/ J ,
. C..s
t- 11.
TUTT
HIGH TESTiMOriY. y
rROMTIlKr.tClf-lr.it: ■ ,i. ;r
. . -A CHEAT INVt'NTi:.^ d
ha*been made hv tin. ri-Ti, < i :•:<,-j
ehich re-tores yoiithrnl heard to tie js
That eminent eheinlst has ,nree»<!e.| «
duel!]i? n Hair live wh!,-a i ..|: ij
ore to perfection. Old bn-lieh.!-* ma ti
ow rejoice." U|
i St.OO. Office! ,3.7 \ r u fruit St.,ol
r York. Sold by all An-y.jielf. M
TYIIIKI1 III'
BL ACK SMITHING
-AT—
OUR NEW BRICK SII0R
-AT THE—
Corner Clayton And Jackson Sts.
First-Class Horse-Shoeing.
A Specialty, by the best Shoei in Georgia.
firMnsmithing.
Guns, Pistols, looks, etc., repair'd at short
notice and satisfaction given.
STEEL WORKING.
Axes, Mill Picks, Hoes, etc., of tlic finest
temper. Work warranted
PLAN CATION WORK.
Plows, Wagons, Carriages, etc., repaired in the
best uuuncr and ut. short notice.
Sole patantee of Bassett’s plow stock.
.Jj oHn £v£- Bassett.
ir-«reli2o-i v.
THEWliTE SEIIIS MACHINE,
. t mm
** * * l , -4*
H m't U
GB WORK OF ALL T £§GSiP-
tion neatly done at tb>- of$<i§ ’ *'
.. u* on .»!
• ' V. i".’' J".. ,uua*? »• - V.
Said to be t..e 1 .gules',-running, the ino&t
be 'Utiful, cheapest, best, and largest Sewing
Machine in the world. Ladies aud the publio
are invited to call aud see, ot the Office, next
door to Win. McDowell’s, t) liege Avenue.
J. BANCROFT, Agent.
feb5-ly.
Legal Blanks at Low Prices
A full supply of J. W. Burke & Co’s. Legal
Blanks—the best that are printed, alwuya oa
hand 1 Price 'redncfcB tH'75 centr per quire, at
** BURKE’ BOOK STORE,
©allege Aveiiite, Newton House Block.
april23-6m.
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