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THE CLEVELAND PROGRESS.
Bj JOIIX li. Q L EX.
DEVOTED TO THE MINING, AGRICULTURAL AND EDUCATIONAL 1STBRW8T8 OF OLRVELAIfD, WIITTB OOVMTT AMD MOIiTHBABT 9B0B0IA.
TERMS:—One Dollar Per Tear.
VOL. IT.
CLEVELAND, WHITE COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, MAY 1<L 1893.
NO. 20.
A. II. HENDERSON,
Manager.
J. W. II. UNDERWOOD,
Attorney and Abstractor.
BILL ARP'S LETTER.
&
Real Estate Agents,
CLEVELAND, GA.
^ ill Huy and Sell Mineral, Timber and
Agricultural lands in White and adjoin
ing counties, guaranteeing the title to all
properties sold.
AVill negotiate sales for reasonable
commission. All properties entrusted to
to us for sale will receive a liberal ad
vertisement.
Parties having Real Estate for sale
will do well to to call on or write us,
. He Gives Some Chanters of
FncU In Itcgurrt to Emancipation amt
Subsequent Events.
&
LOGAN & SON,
MANUFAOI UHKItS OF
Buggies and Wagons,
CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
Hwtoeii and Reptririni Neatly ail Cleanly Einented,
THE PEERLESS EXTENSION TABLE.
A BOX OF TABLE LEAVES IS NOT AN ORNAMENTAL PIECE OF
* - FURNITURE FOR ANY DINING-ROOM; AND IF PLACED IN
SOME CLOSET, THERE IS ALWAYS MORE OR LESS TROUBLE IN
GETTING AT IT. AVOID ALL BOTHER BY CETTINC A " PEERLESS"
TABLE IN WHICH THE LEAVES ARE CRATED.
Nothing to Wear Out or get Out of Order.
It work.. Ask your dealer for it or write uo for prices.
We can suit your p**ket-book.
The oftener used the easie
THE HILLSDALE MFG. GO.,
HILLSDALE, MICH.
Are you interested in Harness?
We claim to make the Best
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money. We only re-
a sample
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quest
order.
' x©"
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L FOR PRICES.
sw
V'.-.V
0
All our Harness
Hand-made and
Hand-sewed. Only the best
v ' ' r Oak Leather used. Buy direct
from the manufacturers and save
two profits. Let us know what you
want, wo will make you a special price.
All goods can he returned if not satisfactory.
-Manufacturers and Dealers in -
r YOU LLAPPRECIATE
™ E 57 EARNS WHEEL
SO EASY TO RUN:
Almost runs its self.
.NONE. OF THAT TERRIBLE.
tRATTLNG NOISE SO COM MOM
ITO LAWN MOWERS,
J / , \ \ wT V \find it cuts dandy in H/Gfi, TOUGH GRA55\
Tho institution of African slavery is so inti,
m&tely connected with the history of Georgia
an.l has been so closely interwoTon with her civ
ilization that a brief account of its origin and
growth and suddoii abolition should bo record
ed. Not tor elimination or exculpation, bn .
that tho truth of history may ho vindioited.
haota—cold facts- arc history, and they never
blush to bo narrated.
Until 1813, only flrty years ago. African bond-
agt> prevailed, not only in many of the less civ
il zed e.mntvii h of Europe and Hontli America,
hut in England, tho foremost and most enlight
ened government in tho world. Early in tbit
j century the slave trade became odious to nil
philanthropists, but slavery itsolf was not
Tho brutality with which tho trado was con
ducted and tho ‘ horrors of tho middle oils*
sago,” as it was called, had awakened the pi tv
of mankind, and by common consent tho trattle
m Africans und their transportation toother
countries was prohibited under tho severest
penalties, both in Europo and tho United
btatis.
But, still the institution of slavery continued
where it had boon planted. It not only con-
tinued, hut was encouraged as a moral a'gcncv
! of civilization until Wilhcrforco began the agi-
i taticu of its abolishment in England and ln r
colonies m 1825. But tho plant of this great
reform was of slow growth, nml enian*
oipalii'iii was not nccnmplinhcd until lonir
ufti'r Wilborforco hud ilio.1. In ii u .
nlavik ot England anil nil her eoloniw
ncro nn.anoipntoil, nml their owner.: \ vu , c pai.i
$H00,000,000 for them out of tho milionul troan-
| ury.
' he scntlinont, of tho pooplo of tho Unite!
. hlatoH a^auiHl slavery was moro nrononncial
than it was in Janglanil. an.l tho males lagan
tally to provide fur immodiato or gradual
, emancipation. Goorgia «•», the II st stale to
: prouilnt the slave trado with A ftfen, nml sho
Kept Iliat ] rttliihilion Inviolate wltiln Btnno of
the northern states carried it on long at cr their
, own slavo.i were emancipated. Tin tv was to
| them no profit in slavery, hut (here was f,hu.
Ions gains in tho traffic. Honeo tlmv gratluallv
! tllstKised of lltclr own liy sending them south",
and in smite instanoos tho young of their slatet
w. to given away (Appleton's Cyclopedia is
authority for tins )
tint tho feeling in ii, 0 states was gc
a vet so lo slavery and that feeling wti
tlnu. stronger „t the south than at tin
Hie ordittaned of. 1787 Hint excluded th
I it I ion from the northwestern lerrilurt
supported liy soutlteru men.
ronnsylvanla provided fo
nation, and ns lain ns 18W h
all freo, and In Borne cases \t
(Nm Appleton.) Ithodo Irlitmi ami (innmHL
ent had a few left in JS-KI; New .Icrsov
18?7 '" i ° KU ° N ° W Yoik t ' nmnci Ptvtod in
That tho son thorn states did not rmanci-
pnto wan owing to a variety of circuit!
Blancos.
Tim climate wan suited to the negro ami ho
seemed contented and happy. .
Tito masters had invested moro of their
money it. them than had been done further
north.
'I he inventionof tho cotton gin ha 1 snridrnlv
stimulated tho cultivation or cotton, for which
tho negro wan peculiarly fit,loti, amt tin- growth
of rice, tobacco and sugar cano was cnuullv in.
viting to his libor.
lint more than all thoso reasons was tho fe tr
that thorlavoH were in such fast increasing mini,
hern OB to put, tlio commonwealth in prut jf I hoy
woro frood. They wero ntill nfT,ci.-d with th-«
Haino raco trait,a they had inlnrited from bnrhn.
riun auco.dors, and could not ho control!* d ns
froerlmon or ns citizens.
Hyill, litem was an inlolllgenl onrl inlluenlial
number of our p oplo who favored /'-inrlu>, 1
emaitcipallon. TIh'h bmtiiiicn' was slow r hut
surely flint)iding. Joseph Henry Lumpkin,
llto chief justice of onr stiniTtnu court wa. ,„,t-
spohen
rally
gradual entanei-
' slaves were not
'Id for debt.
Sash, Doors and Blinds!
CLARK, BELL A €<>.,
Sash, Doors, Blinds,
Mouldings, Brackets.
SHUSTOIiBS and LUMBER.
Also BEWER and DRAIN TIPE. Prices as low lb the lowest. Satisfaction
guaranteed.
CLARK, BELL & CO., Gainesville, Ga.
with tlmgradual tmam-,
tafiau policy Inaugurated and ndvooolod by
usury Clay, of Kentucky.
'Otis policy would certainly have been adopt
ed hv Georgia, hut for the intoleranew and bit
terness with which tho Nmv England abolition-
ists waged their unceasing war upon llte sou'll,
Out; people resell I, ,1 their threatened denoitli-
itu'iun and saidt - If you let us alone went tv
do it. hut yen cannot drive us We aro penned
up with llteso negroes and knew where our
raft ty lies."
William Loyd Garrison or Boslo i, rounded
the anti-slavery party in 1811. Arthur I np-
pin heeamo its fourth president in 18fi:). They
expend d inudi money in magnifying and ex
aggerating the. abuses of H itvcry. Tuey declar
ed that all lews of ihe government tint rtcog- j
ni/.ed slavery were nt.'erlv null and void. As
their pa,tv giew -tronger they hientno more
aggr- ssiyit, and in 1811 the free soil par .v j
openly avowed that tLoir ohj -ei was lo elT a
dissoltitiuii of tie- union and to I’otitt a northern
republic. 'J hoy said flint a union with hI ivory
in it was a league with hell and a covenant
witli donlli. They wero Urn (list access onista
fid remained so itti’il tint late civil war. Tho
troops they furnished and tlm money they
so froely conlr.bitted were not for the inainten-
anct of tint union, hut to oontpt-r the south and
lihtralo (he slaves. When Nathan el Haw
thorne was asked ,n J801 if lie was not in favor
of tho war In, replied, "Ych 1 suppose so, hut
really I don’t see what tve fight about."
It te emed (o him that the south hud don , just
what New England doBirtd her to do that is
to BCCtxlo.
TIiiH denporafo JiuHto and intonsifled hoBtility
on the part of Now England toward the Month
i« fliflficult to explain. Jt was only a ft w yearn
nirice th y had ornancipalcd tho kIiivi h they had
not sold. If wuh loot than twenty years xinco
England had emancipatel hors, and neiiher
Georgia nor her ni&lcr Btatos wero ready for tho
change.
Wan it an earnest sympathy for tiio slav s or
political hatred of tlicir masters or both? for
hh Judge Tonrgoe says in his "Fool’s Errand.”
“I’li- south had controlled the gov< rnmenfc !
for fifty years, and New England was jealous- i
jealous to exasperation, and slavery was hut :
tho shibboleth that intensified thoir animosity. !
They made no war upon the slavo Irado, but !
rather winked at it arid enjoyed ifH ri jli re urns. !
'J'his is not an assertion hut a fact, if their
own historians are to ho belli ved. In 18JO Jus- ,
tico btory, the groat jurist, charged the grand !
juries of his New England circuit in the follow- !
ing words:
“Wo havo but too many undeniable proofs |
from unquestionable sources that the African i
slave trade is still can iod on among ns with all 1
the implicahle ferocity and insatiable rapacity
of former times. Avarice has grown more !
subtle in its evasions of the hw. It watchoi
and siezc8 its prey with an app-tirc rpiiokcn-
rd rather than suppressed. Americtu citiz ns
are steeped up to their very mouths in this j
iniquity.”
W. W. Btory, thogiftedson, in writing the hi- j
ography of Ids father says: "The fortune! of j
many men of prominence woro seer dly invest- j
ed in this infamous tralfic. Slavery itself had j
hardly disappeared m New Engl nd when the
traffic took on new life arid was winked at. A
man might still havo position in society and
claim consideration ah a gentlemen, nay, os a
Christian, while his ships w.re freighted with
human cargoes and his commerce was in the i
blood and pain of his fellow or-attires. This i
practice was abs'raotly inveighed against, but
was secretly indulged in. the chsnces of
great fortunes influmed the cupidity of men in j
my fathers circuit. It is iiotorioiu that many J
large fortunes wero the blood money of the j
slave trade, and owed their existence to the 1
wretched cargoes that survived tin liorro s of j
tho middle pa sage. Hut this charge of my fa-her J
to the grand juries of Massachusetts ami Rhode
Island seemed only to a’onse flio passions of
those engaged in the traffic. Tho rewspuj^-rs j
of the day publicly denounced m-' father and
one paper iu Boston declar. d that any judge
would deliver such a charge ought to bo j
hurled from the hooch.”
And so tlio trafti! went on unmolos'od. Tho 5
Nlw York Ereuing Poet Btatod thftt uo K-sj than 1
oimIily-flvo vessels left tho port of New York it.
1850 and I860, built, manned nndiqn.ppod n>
Now England for tlie African hIrvc trade, and
that they brought away not less than th rt.v
thousand sluV« s to I3raKil and tho south. But
still thero wen. no proseoutions. The navi- h or
tho world Boomed to bo asleep or poll nips tho
traffic wns still winliod at by the m reliant ships
that traversed the seas. Whether it him ceased
sine.o southern slavery was abolished is not
known, but a tolegram to tho Associated Press
tells of & cargo that was rooently wreckod off
Madagascar coast.
This much has boon recordod to show to tho
youths of this generation that neither Georgia
nor tho south was responsible for slavery nor
tho trnftio in them across tho Heas, for from
1770 down to tho proHont, thoro was hut a single
attempt made try a sonthorn man to introduce
African slavos into a southern port, and that
attempt was a fafluro. Tho littlo yoeht called
tho "Wamloror,” was h m'zoiI and condemned and
her officers pursued with unrelenting vigor by a
southern man, Genoral Henry It. Jackson, who
was then assistant attorney general of tho
United Slatos.
But, nftor all, slavory was really tho provok
ing eauso of the lato unhappy War between tho
statos. Georgia aocodod from tho union not
hecauso sho desired to perpetuato slavery, I»ut
rather because sho could not maintain her
rights undor tho constitution. Hho do-dred an
outlet in tho tenitorios, an outlet for tho negro
for thoir rapid increase was alarming. Hho
believed that it was perilous to emancipate and
still moro perilous to await results, ller white
population who wero not alavo owners wero
rapidly emigrating to the woat, Tho most
thoughtful minds iu Georgia and especially
those ndvancod in years, saw and felt lho peril
of thoir Mituation—secession meant war and to
remain in tho union was to ho imprisoned by
state linos with an inferior raco that might bo-
como a terror. A few slavoa had h. en ninini-
mittod and sont to Liberia, hut tho r Mult was
bad, Very bad.
Major Waters, a wealthy plnuter of Gwinnett
county, had by will manumitted th rly-sevon
slaves and his executor delivered thorn iu Sa
vannah to tho colonization Bocicty. They woro
well provided with clothing and each with $100
in gold and sent to Liberia freo of charge.
Thirtv of them died within two!vo months—1 he
remaining seven escaped from their exile and
found pas ago in a morchant vessel to Phila
delphia. From thero they made thoir return
to Georgia through tho friendly aid of Howell
Gobi) and Alex H. Stephens, who furnished
them with tho means of coming home. This
caso is fully reported in one of tho cailior vol
umes of our mu promo court reports, for the will
of Major Waters wns attacked by his heirs.
But tho 0 minion pcoplo of tho south, the
yeomanry, tho toilers, were no lovers of tho
negro. They realized that ho was in their way.
Tho masters owned tho best of the land nml
had tho best stock and tho ho t houses mid
tools and vehicles, while the toilers had to take
what they could gotr— no wonder they wore
jealous of tho institution.
And yot those men, poor and struggling fora
livelihood in tho mountains of north Georgia
or down in tho pinoy woods, did not hoaitato to
shoulder tlicir lilies aud hurry to thoir coun
try’s call. "My country—right or wrong”—
wits their motto. Duly one-seventh of tho tax
payers of tho state woro owners of slaves in
1800 and not more than 0110 soldier in ton was
interested in slavery. In fact, somo counties
in north Georgia sent moro soldiers to tho Held
than there woro slaves In tho county.
Surely these mon wore not lighting for slavory
or its perpetuation. They fought ns tlu-ir
ferofathcra did who resisted a littlo tnx on twu
when not one in a thousand drank it. Tho
common idea was that “them fellers up north
had boon kickin’ at us a long timo, and if old
Joo Brown nnd Bob Toombs and Howell Cobh
fluid it was timo to cut loose from ’em and fight
them it was all right nnd they wore ready.”
But anti-slavery was not a predominant sen
timent up north outstdooMfowEngland. Tho
cry of tho wont and of most of the north was
“tho union—it must bo preserved." General
Grant, whom tho north idolized and honorod,
w as himself a slave owner and lived off of their
biro in Bt. Louis until froedoiu oamo. Homo of
Mrs. Lincoln's kindred in Kentucky wore slave
ownors and her brother sotved ns a staff' offlcor
in tho confederate army. Mr. Lincoln himself
declared that ho only signed the emancipation
proclamation nn a wnr measure to suppress the
1' hellion as it was called and to savo tho union.
Ho repeatedly refused to tako such a step
though urged by tho members of his cabinet
to do so. General Fremont, In August, 1891,
issue l a military order that emancipated tho
slaves of rebels in Missouri. Mr. Lincoln prompt
ly r voked this order. I11 May, 18G2. General
Hunter issued a similar order declaring all
Blaves in Goorgia, South Carolina aud Florida
?■ rover free. Bo soon as Mr. Lincoln henyd of
it ho issued a proclamation declaring it. void
nnd in his lotter to Horace Gifiely in August,
1802, ho said: "My paramount object into
savo tho union and not oil her to save or destroy
slavery. If I could save tho union without
freeing any slnvo 1 would do it; If I could do
It by freeing all tho slaves I would do it, and
if I could save it by freeing somo and le.ving
others alone I would do that.” In tho minds
of both Lincoln and Grant thero was but littlo
sentiment cone rning slavory as an institution,
but after emancipation they very naturally ac
cepted all tho honor that the north and Eng
land sh owe rod upon thorn and entered heartily
into plans for tho safe adjustment of the nmt-
Un that this sudden enfranchisement in
volved.
Such, my young friends, wero tho causes nnd
eon sequences of tho institution of slavery in
Georgia. For half a-century it had moved a
blogsing to both races—a blessing to the negro
bccauso it had brought him from a savago
state into that of semi-civilization and had ele
vated his posterity and given thorn a ohanco
to livo as human boings and to worship God as
Christians --a hh'ssiiig to tho whito raco in
clearing up tho forests and advancing agricul
ture and in building onr railroads. But as tiro
years rolled on it seemed to bo umnif. sted that
tho institution had run its course and tho timo
whs near at baud when it would cease to he a
blousing to either race. Before tho late war,
its doom was inevitable, for even had secession
succeeded and slavery continued it could not
have boon maintained against tho convictions
of tho unfriendly north and tho nations that
sympathized witli her.
Why this wonderful chango in tho status of
4,000,000 of slaves had to be baptised in blood
and in tears to nnke it a reality is known only
to that Providence who doeth all things well.
We might as well ask why Cain was permitted
to kill Abel, or why Napoleon was permitted to
ravage Europe anil destroy millions of lives,
and after all accomplish no good that we can
But tho negro was safe during all tho strug
gle, Whether ho stayed or lied ho was in no
danger. Ho seemed to have no deop concern
about his freedom or a continuation of his
bondage. Thousands of them followod thoir
joung masters in the war—many of them were
f.iptiirod, but would not stay. "Gwino back
to Dixie” was their song. Never was such mu
tual affection shown between master and ser
vant; never such proof that in Uie main tho
master was kind and the servant loyal. Du
ring all these bloody years when our men were
in the field and wives and mothers and daugh
ters were unprotected at homo not a single act
of violence was hoard of from the Potomac to
the Bio Grande. As General Jackson so beau
tifully said: “They deserve a monument that
should reach tho stars, and on it I would in
scribe, ‘To the loyalty of tho slaves of the con
federate states during tho years 1862-’63-’04.’ ”
What monument will be d served by their
children is tho unsolved problem. They aro
•till on probation.—13ili Arp, in Atlanta Con
stitution.
Silver Day at the Fair.
A Chicago special says: Governor
Prince, of Mexico, chairman of the
committee appointed at tho recent
trails-Mississippi congress at Ogden
to arrange for u silver day at Chicago
during the exposition, had a confer
ence with the committee on ceremo
nies on Saturday, which resulted iu
September Jltli Being appointed as
silver day. It is expected that the
most prominent champions of a bime-
talic standard will be present at that
time and that addresses made will bo
of national importance,
HIGH ART CLOTHING!
- FOll-
Spring and Summer Wear,
Tint |it't.p’o tint with its llto mituito wo put tlio pritto on our elof'iint lino of Now Sl jlcs. **
Buyors 'W'alto ITp! ’Tig* tho Spring of "OO !
Tint op tiitijr Mi tilths of (Ilf Fir-t Munson wo slitill mulco you nil roinombcr AS A HKVI5LA I’lON IN FINN GOODS
AND k Alii i’HR'KS. Wc tire going to <lu business with you bcotiuso wo Imvo just exactly what you waul, anti our nrices
are simply irresistible. 1
Our Spring and Summer Attractions Will Cause a Turnout.
Rueh quantities of Now Styles as wo show in all department,3 leave nothing to be asked for. In mnlily anfi variety
onr Fresh New Lines nrortriotlf llrst-elass iu every detail. Wo Imvo llto disposition, the ability and tho K’ocant Quods to
plcftso every buyer who is seeking bargains in the line of °
MENS’ AND BOYS’ CLOTHING, HATS, CAPS AND GENTS’ FUBNISHING GOODS.
Our coinploto assortment insures perfect satisfaction in the selection rtf Goods to satisfy individual tastes. You will
find our larno stock made up entirely of Goods that nro trustworthy, serviooahlo mid tho best of their chits KVRHY.
i.imoi' 001 '' 8 f!' 11112 aOWKST POSSIHLE PRICE. Como nnd soo how FAIR wa trout you, how well wo will
11 EASEyouand how much wo will SAVE for you.
LIPSTINE & HUMAN,
Arlington Block, Two Doors from Postoflice, GAINESVILLE, GEORGIA.
WRECKERS OF HIGH PRICES AND SHODDY CLOTHING.
„, , ^Cincinnati,Ohio,
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All Kinds,Sizes; lRrrvT'LE^
and prices of JHHWtl
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Buy a Good Gash Register.
# THE MERCANTILE, PRICE, $25,00. 0
Used nnd endorsed hy nearly 10,000 progressive Merchants.
A PERFECT CASHIER,
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It is tho quickest register to operate.
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WRITE TO THE MANUFACTURERS
FOR FULL PARTICULARS.
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230 Clinton St., Chicago.
THE ORIGINAL HYGEIA
CLEVELAND HIGH SCHOOL,
CLEVELAND, GEORGIA.
Spring Term Begins January 2d, 1893. Fall Term
Begins July 10th, 1893.
BEST FITTING. BEST WEARING.
MOST DURABLE AND A
QUICK SELLER.
Agents wanted. Send for catalogue, terms, &c.
WESTERN CORSET COMPANY,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
NORTH GEORGIA
AT DAHLONEOA,
A branch of the State University
Spring Term begins First Monday in Feb
ruary. Fall Term begins First
Monday in September.
Best school in the south, for students with
limited means. Tho military training is
thorough, being under a U. B. Army offlcor,
detailed by tho Secretary of War.
Students aro prepared nnd licensod to teaoh
In tho public schools, by act of the legislature.
Lectures, on Agriculture and tho Soienoea
by distinguished educators and scholars.
For health tho climate is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2287 feet.
Board $10 per month and upwards. Massing
at lowor rales.
Each senator and representativo of tho state
is entitled and requested to appoint one pupil
from his district or county, without paying
matriculation foe, during his term.
For catalog or information, address Secre
tary or Treasurer, Board of Trustees.
Tuition in all Classes per Month, $1.00.
In connection with the Spring and Fall terms, wh'i
be taught the terms of the public schools.
For further particulars call on or address
ALBERT BELL, Principal,
Or CIIAS. W. MERRITT, Assistant.
1 THE CUSHMAN IRON CO.
IFOR FENCES;
If’
DASHED TO DEATH.
A Cage Containing Ten Miners Falls
Three Thousand Feet.
A Hnughton, Midi., special Bays:
Ten men were dashed to pieeeH in the
Red Jacket perpendicular shaft of tho
Calumet and Heela mine at noon Sun
day. The miners were coming up in
the cage to dinner and the engineer
hoisted tlie cage against the timbers of
the shaft. The coupling pin broke and
the men were dashed downward over
three thousand feet to the bottom.
The men were aboard a ship, used
in hoisting rock, and when the load of
human freight reached the surface, the
engineer did not stop it in time, lmt it
went to the trip of the derrick, when it
broke loose and went back with a crash
to the bottom of the shaft. There is
no way of reaching the bottom, nor
getting the dead men out, except by
going through another shaft, half a
mile away, so that it, was nearly three
hours before; the true state of affairs
could be ascertained. It is necessary
to hoist the bodies five hundred and
lifty feet by ropes to reach tho level of
the next shaft, then carry them nearly
half a mile through tho drifts,hoisting
them by the man car,
-;j Cemetery
Window Guards,
*—JAILS—*
AND
’STRUCTURAL IRON.
i Roanoke, Virginia.
Richmond, Virginia.
Yyy * * *
} he MilXER
mnnumnTnu hi v
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til5ND KOI* CATXI.OGIIB.
J ETX-ZTXXTXXr.XXXXXXZXI-XXZ-3
11
>° Jy v \ , v f- *
Carriage and
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iM'SlN’rtft
CPOLE'R/t
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are the leaders. Let those who can.follow. Our
manufactures are made to give perfect satisfac
tion and the “ .Miller ” cimmutco stands Rood ail
Finish, Work ut it null I p,
t-njth
TYPHOID f :tD YZLLOW FEVER
rfiil Disinfectant nnd deodori:
Inrj agent., the most •
-•die
id iicautu combine the ‘‘Miller’
.. ‘'Send for our illustrated Catalogue and
j List giving you full particulars and Ideas
• manufacture, to
MILLER CARRIAGE AND HARNESS GO.
St. Paul Building,
27 West 4th Street, Cincinnati, Oblo.
Offensive odot
second.', n:i v. e*. I r.
hereby prevent;:
<p7ending of all <
Vouched 1 1 1 .
Authorities.
f.lAN'j:•
ih:able* discovery
•nee. It destroys
on tp;e of the odor,
id arresting the
auitary
JJUD DY THE
INDIANAPOLIS CHLMiUflL CO.,
543Pi8(3ison!!vc.,ip,iianapoii8,in(i
ism