The democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1877-1881, August 10, 1877, Image 4
MISCELLANEOUS. [Frontthe Chronicle A Constitutionalist.] To the Convention Greeting. Cimilntu ftfthf O T Of ( 0,1 - A friendly word or two with yon. You do not roastitote the “ablest and inoat intellectual flK*’ .Jtad y of men ever aa sembied in Gee The provincial press has told yon this, and it is cruel to undeceive you. But it is neef-awry__ Your autobiographies in pamphlet form have deceived notiedy, not even your¬ selves. This device of an Atlanta bo¬ hemian was a pleasant little prelude to your labor*, flattering to your personal vanities, and altogether harmless to any one save the future readers of biographi¬ cal encyclopedias. The members of every Constitutional Convention, save that of 1867, were jour peer* in every thing, your sapmience in many Even that n,-,t military miiit -rv mulatto , 1 .,, hybrid men who hav proved themselves to be better Constitution tinkers than vo Ur - selves. They have left upon draft of an organic law which you seem unable umurl to to «mal equal or or surpass s„ric,« You lou tmve i,„ v „ been in session eighteen days, Hhve near ;;„ : tTY r vmir work by the people, of whom you ’ •,rn are but but 1 a fraction, f, and , n a „ a vulgar one at , Snigen^'orlrntriotimm K your neighbors without special care 0 r espionage, and your constituents and masters had come to believe that you were capable of attending to the ordina O' duties of every day life. Because you desired to go to the Convention, they reluctantly sent you witli fear and trem Wing as to the result, and their worst forebodings have been more than real ized. Alter a great waste of wind you have framed a bill of rights which would have reflected credit ui><>n the composing 1 lowers of a boy of thirteen. If there is u Imy of thirteen in the State who would father its grammar, no argu nient is needed to prove our com* mon school system a failure, and the educational bureau an expensive and useless excreeence. You have tackled the Executive Department article, and "illi pragmatical ignorance huve plas¬ tered it all over with protoplastic notions and ideas which seem to jiervade your minds upon all imints of Constitutional Ikw. Indeed you seem to lie animated, hut by a single purjiose, viz: to cniuscij late a great State which for the time la ¬ bile unhappily lies prostrato and i>ower less in yonr hands. My pen baa done you rank injustice in that lust para graph mnl 1 hasten to 'amend. Yon all seem to be candidates for something, from Governor down to Justice of the JViirc. It Is safe to say that not more than half u dozen of your party have parted with political and official aspira¬ tions. And you scorn altogether oblivi¬ ous of the errand upon which you were sent. The call under which you have assembled was to revise the Constitution of the State. The jieople did not desire a new one. It is problematic if they even desired a revision of the old one. The incessant agitation of the capital question at length forced the call of a Convention through the Legislature by a bare majority. A very small jsipular vote after much ivrsonul persuasion and the appeals of the press sent you to re visau good organic law as to those jHir tions in which it was defective or objec¬ tionable. And under this warrant you have dipped your hands into the public purse and have presumed to dig down and overtopple the social and |»olitieal fabric of the State. You boast that you are doing the work to last for geil orations is bosh and balderdash. Con¬ stitutions do not ontl.ist the iiarclunent upon which they are written. The world moves, (society ch.ng.s and States grow , ('ourte, the special guardians of ""“““T j ours Wi>u](3 not .stniul 1,1 n minute? ...... . beforp & Justices Court Ill these dull ilavs your sessions :ue not —«»<< w— -I of the Convention, the people are pay ing too dearly for the amaaement. rw,,, . in witnessing Toombs bully nnd you with his dogmatic nssumacy ludd assertions, it is the first since the war that he has had an wee s» respectable in numbers and in tflligeueo. and he makes the most of the opportunity. And Gus Wright, as a religlo-political acrobat, is unequalled.— He is alw ays fresh, lithe and full of ini possible notions and ideas which he gets off » with ... a grace and , agility novel and pleasing. ' Tile men' political student can find ,. no bet ... ter school , , than that , af forded bv Squirt' Wofford, who, true to the instincts and traditions, of the Cherokee, skillfully lavs the pipes for a Gubernatorial campa.gn, by calling to Uuffee to come up to the ballot 1 h»x without money and w ithout price. Offie jx'litica! economist :uid financier may louder upon and learn w isdom from the solemn .v-ntslices of the Rev. Josiali Warren, ot Chatham, as he anticipates the thunder of Toouilia' strike at rail exenmy t old tnend Jack f.ucrranl, Savannah who is ; ,ft to iaik out his ' ' , luniks , of legal ,, lore very much , after the fashion of chucking dice from a box, has caught the infections afflatus, and upon -dvyaD.'nt >" impri onment for debt. iiwulgfs in nv, nn^ulAtixsg :uui a voluptuous Aetorie which recall* best efforts of Tom Hardeman and Loch rane in presenting tin trumpets at a fire •nan's totimament. And where, per¬ mit me to ask. in the annals of the world is there to be found a nobler example of misdirected courage in the diflcbargB of S SS/lEi “r^and those parliamentary 3 athletes. 1 George ® • 1 t. icrce and , lorter . . Ingram f _ Pardon this diversion, and I proceed with the ............... a, . a ,„^ y served, it is an unpleasant necessity to <***«*•"*■ »-—*•«* fact that you have Herbert Fielder to „i, btau»i, ,„u b.„ nothing io, far beyond the certain re 1 { f* .. , y °” .. „ , „, W" UlarV “ te ’ T ,e Republicans will rally, organize, and strike it solidly. They ^ f ,, , y ^^ / 1 " ’ ^ fc,,ofth T w “ . * to f n “' '«PPH^ ‘ ° Iq "' tt “ n / , the ’ art,aI sa lanr to vou ffuil — - *'« * as supposed 1 to be averse to your ass ,. mbly , though he voted an open ‘ ,...... u „ , «? ......- ..•...... u,, > tl,,n K 1,v tr > inz to » ,rcfii(le ov « r - v “" r organization. Bob Ely told him u t , . th , ,aW ’ and . 1Ke .. Avef . y a * Un ' <l 1,im il , ’“ cn Uie ‘ t i ‘ luette of . d^nmiimHng looking people at may him have and l,s- ao '"" K to,,m,talk - I know him, a,,d TOCh ift " 0t B fact ' Anoth * r tlir, ' at from you in regard to the Agricultural Bureau, and the State administration is on your back. But I weary your pa¬ tience, and perhaps intrude upon the precious time of men engaged as you are. My only excuse is your good and the welfare of the people. After a care¬ ful reading of your proceedings and s|>eeches r my heart goes out to the poor victims of your economy, from old man Warner who will not have money enough to buy ii “black veil,” which he so de¬ lights to wear, to the petty page who will have to forego the pleasure of pea¬ nuts. And as I scan your work at Con¬ stitution making, I am amazed at the providential foresight of the much abused Legislature which could provide for certain coming contingencies, by au enlargement of the State Lunatic Asy¬ lum. Good-bye, friends! Give Nat 11am inoiid, (ins Beene and Aleck Lawton fair compensation and a competent clerk, and they will make a revision of the Constitution in three days that will give universal and entire Bali faction As for the blance, come home, ami come at once. We have not looked on a picture so pitiable as that presented by you, wive the one uncovered by the strikers in the North. There States, weakened by a centralized Government, quailed aud cowered before a mob. Here, the sous of a Commonwealth are shearing her of her strength and glory just as the American |ieople are begin¬ ning to see and appreciate the true the¬ ory of State governments. Come home ! Gcorgii uocs not need politicians and Constitution-patchers. Como 1 The plow stands in the furrow, fodder rijH'iis under a harvest moon, the cotton boll smiles lo the kiss of an Au¬ gust sun, and the crow-feet from the crest of potato ridges waves defiance to the sable statesmen of the land. The field is inviting. Your State calls. Como 1 A Sovereign. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. (HAMPTON BROTHERS’ Celebrated Imperial Soap. r ill K celebrated Imperial Soap for sale at the post office. the r HtF. celebrated Tmnertal Soon nt thc ^ MIK r»‘ii‘brnti*<t ln)j>t iiai i^oiip at D. A. " illiams A Son. f 3l|F. celebrated lmi>erial Soap at Charles Bergstrom's. O Rrolhers’celebrated Soap on sale. ! ..... “ There jg Money in it. - C,. ,r A \ nln , | Y, 1 f l'i( \ v L I 1 I 111 l T»K undersigned begs lev ive to inform the public that he will buy all the Cicely Dried Pealed Fruit and markct*pricc for ». FRUIT is" m'oNEY, to leave it to rot upon the ground or to waste it, is to throw away T11E GREEN HACKS. Every child can pool and drv fruit—and every orchard is loaded. Go to work, save it. and brine H** ifc to me and 1 will pay vou for It. None .rantCA un less it is peeled and well dried. - ^ CHARLES BERGSTROM. ‘ Frillt JarS. O'M EN1HU JARS for preserving fruit, c R ^th. iXUlll Yf YP1PU L. [Vsr gallon, iKkKSE- A I’PLK VINEGAR for uv ju-r at the mud office. cheap barge tot of Glassware and Crockery, at Charles Bergstrom’s JiMHEs PUtASOKSfmm VITA AV. tofe.w. ai»rl3 HI Fs BERGSTROM 'Protect Your Buildings. Which may be done with one-fourth the j usual expense, by using our PATENT , ^ L -A. i E E A. I ]\ T ^ (Fiftefn Year* Established.) ; Fire-Proof^W^to^wff DOABLE, A . roof mav be covered with a very cheap shingle, mad andbvapplication of this slate be ? to lsst A to ii years. Old roofs for fl > In * ^rs. a* may be easily tested by any one.i IT STOPS EVERY LEAK, and for tin or iron has no equal, as It ex psndsby cracks heat,, scales. contracts by cold, and never nor **K Roofs covered with Tar st “ a ‘ hin K «*» |>e made water-tight at a y“«™ tnd V™”'* for ■"»* Thin State Paint la . Two EXTREMELY CHEAP, gallons will cow a hundred square « f s h ‘ n K'« «**. "Mleon tin, iron, felt, matched . boarda,pr any smooth surface, from VStieST* *■*» - —.......“ NO TAR IS USED BS this COMPOSITION, therefore, it neither cmcks in Winter, nor runs in Summer. and On decayed shingles, it fills up the pores, and gives a new substantial roof that wilt Vast for years. Curled or warped them shingles it brings to their places, asd keeps there. It fills upall holes in felt room. stops rain the leaks—and although a slow drier, does not afreet it a few hours after applying. black As nearly all paints that are contain tar, be sure you obtain our genuine article, which (for shingle roofs) is CHOCOLATE COLOR, When first applied, changing in about a month to a uniform slate color, and is, to all intents and purposes slate. On TIN HOOFS, our red color is usually preferred, as one coat is equal to live of any ordinary paint, BRICK WALLS, our Paint bright red is the only reliable Slate ever introduced that will effectually discoloring prevent dampness from penetrating and the plaster. These paints are also largely used on out¬ houses ami fences, or as a priming coat on fine buildings. Our only colors fro Chocolate, Red, Bright Red and Orange. NEW YORK CASH PRICE-LIST. 1 Gallon, can and box 8 1 50 2 2 35 5 ss 5 50 10 keg ... y 50 20 14 half barrel - - 10 00 40 barrel ’ one - - 30 00 10 We lbs.. have Cement for bad leaks - 1 25 roofing Instock, of our own manufacture, prices: materials, etc., at the following low l.oiio rolls, extra Rubber Roofing, at three cents per square foot. (Or vve will furnish Rubbing Paint (or Roofing Nails, Caps, and Slate ail entire ilea roof, at 4 y 2 cents jier 2,000 square rolls foot.) Tarred 1% cents 2 -ply f«J>t. Roofing Felt, at xnoo ,Jl. per a square fty ,1 KA» 6 Walt. V/, cents toft. n ff a t rolls per Tarred square 200 Sheathing, cent per square foot. ready 5,000 for gallons fine inside Enamel paint, mixed use, on or outside work, at $2 per gallon, all shades. 1,000 Bbls. Slate Flour - per bhl. $3 00 1,000 “ Soapstone Flour “ 3 00 1,000 “ Grafton .Mineral 3 00 1,000 “ Metallic Faint, dry 44 3 00 All orders must be accompanied with the money, well know or subject parties. to thirty days draft on n N. Y. SLATE PAINT COMPANY, 102 & 104 Maiden Lane, New York, junn22-h-m $18 Sewing Machine. $18 FULL SIZE—FIRST CLASS THE MODEL SEWING MACHINE, Simple, Durable, Compact, and For Elegance of Finish IT HAS NO RIVAL. ly No complicated out machinery to be constant¬ wifi getting all of order, a child can run it, do kinds of Sewing, from the finest to the coarsest, w ill llem, Fell, Tuck, Braid, Cord, justing Gatiiur, straight Embroider, etc., uses self-ad¬ Cotton, Silk and needles, Thread. all description Makes of strongest before the stitch known, the cloth will tera seam will rip, uses the thread direct from the spool. The machine is beautifully anil finished aud highly ornamented, WARRANTED for FIVE YEARS. deal All persons .Cloned not to make, 1 "A r USR ’ a "y, Sowing Machines which heril Attachment, unless the same are pur chased from fhts Company, ot their Agents or Licenses, and stamped under our patent. Beware of worthless imitations and unseru israsa^ 7 ?.sas!»s^« bio rnbilitv to drop eanimt stitch tv excelled. It is imjUwi Sffigfc'jSSJtfR a owing to its peculiar ntaelnne iu Persons S&ZZ& who have ; now use. tested it pronounce it excellent, and say thing they never used a better. It will sew that eon be sewed by any high-priced mac iiine in the land. We'advise all w t loare at all interested in useful machines to ex¬ amine it. “From personal inspection we are sewing prepared machine.—Chronicle.” to say it is a most superior of Sample the machines forwarded to any part world on receipt of EIGHTEEN DOLLARS, male Special and . terms female amt agents, extra store inddeements keepers, Ac. to Samples bounty rights of given to smart agents circulars free, containing terms, sewing, testimonials, descriptive engravings, - sent free. All money sent in post ®*«* money orders, drafts, or by Express, ^rfecriysecure AU orders, communications, bafe delivery-of etc., must gi'-d, he FAME MANUFACTURING CO., S33 Broauw.it, j015T7j ' } ' New York, i r- RTOKSfrom756 . 40^60 - — - - -- - M.ainxrswl^ CHEAP2ST YET TT York per do*., boxes or S 2.25 per gross. New prices. Now is vonrtime. py. i WILLIAMS ^ A SON r 20 t-o FOR SALE. CE and LEMONS for sale for the cash. D A WILLIAMS A SON. BEEGSTROM’S COLUMN. 1877 Hats. 1877 ^ ftj) 1*1 II Mill oUIMHCr StylCS# C;+ 1 . s I.arge w/n■. Straw Sun Hifii Shades 40 !?; c w^n’s F^nrv P,n, v Hla'k^tr^w m,.h « 8 J , ff v Ien -« Common Wool «oc bLvs Hats all siz^s and kinds’.*" ' * ,,r2S _ lO \Q. r // 7 r T VrW J, T T 1«’7 iO / r 7 / . . Spring * Goods. Just Received by ’l. _ _ M aCj J J( l££\8IIOIll, ' ” CRAWFORDVILLE, GEORGIA, I take this method to inform my old friends and customers, and the public generally, that I have just received a FULL LINE OF and Beautiful GOOdS. * which I 1 will WU1 sell 5eM it at the thc ww lowest prices " There is no neces sitv Augusta for thc people to go to or anywhere else, and as the goods are here, and will be sold as low as they can be had In any market, if the cash is in sight To my old friends and customers, I say now is the time to buy your goods. GENTS’ NEW SPRING GOODS. Coats from 75cents up Rants from 75 cents up. “a sr &£.• - war a Ladies’ Goods. A beautiful line of Calicoes, from 6H to 10 cents per yard. Ginghams, 10 cents cents'. per yard. Opera W bite Flannels, Flannels, 50 20 cents. Georgia Livingston Stripes 12)4 cents. stripes 10 cents. Crockery, Glassware, Ac. Tumblers, 50c. per set. Goblets, 7.5c. perset. Fine Syrup Pitchers 25c. to 50 cents. Fine Glass Pitchers 65c. to $1. Knives and Forks, cheap. Genuine China Plates, $2.25 per set. Genu¬ ine China Cups and Saucers, $2 per set. Genu¬ ine China Tea Pots and Sugar Bowls Bowls. $2.00 per set. Wash and pitchers, 81 to $2 Boots and Shoes Slip^f (none”ikethemh| lot Fine Boots. ,1 town.f rD * KW A small of AU my sold goods are new and beautiful, and will be at the lowest possible prices, but the hard times and the uncertainty of men compel me to require the Cash. Chas. Bergstrom. & mar23’77-j-y OCB PROSPECTUS FOE 1877. Saturday Night The Best and Brightest of Weeklies! Circil|U«ii Still Rapidly Increasing. Jtreat I^riy^ar rapidity, our aud circulation tin.-, assurance Increased of with the public favor has determined us more than f ver t0 relax no f fferts * spare no money, will’l^entcrta nmc* • r HVs np \tiJin SketCh€ n v^saaKsaBCiifts one, gious or political Dehef of any Tens of thousands of dollars were paid last year to our exclusive corps of writers a3tfsi€lSS writers, but shall add to staff such authors we our exclusive as may prove their claim to popularity and show themselves worthy to write for a paper which holds a proud pre-eminence over all competitors. Now istheTime to Subscribe Single Subscription 83.00 Parties wishing to take “Saturday Nig ht” for a shorter period than one year, can li are the paper mailed to them six months for Si.SO, or four months for 81.00 I-»?~ We pay all postage. ,, OUR CI.UI1 RATES : For 810 we will send four copies for one year to address, or each copy to a separate address. For 820 we will send eight copies to one ad¬ The dress, or each copy to a separate address. party who sends us $20 for a club of eight copies (all sent at one time) will be entitled to a copy free. Getters-up add of Clubs of eight copies can after¬ ward single copies at $2.50 each. Send Post Office Orders, or register all money letters. Write name, town, county, State, plainly. We will send specimen papers free to any who will send their addres. DAVIS & ELVERSOX, Prop’s and Pub’s of “Saturday Night,” may25t-o-o Philadelphia, Pa. FOREST CITT FOUNDRY —ASD MachineWorks, Geo. R. Lombard a Co., AUGUSTA, : GEORGIA, Manufacturers of and Dealers in Steam Engines Mills, and Boilers, Grist and Saw Mill Rocks, Gear¬ ing and Belting, Ac. Repairing promptly and well done, at Reasonable Terms. Send for list of Mill Gearing Patterns. Wheels, Agents for Eclipse cheapest Double Turbine Water and the and best Planta¬ tion Mills out. Send for Circular and Prices. may25.1877-j-y. Bargains. GREAT REDUCTION IN TIIE Price of Liquors, FOR THE CASH ONLY. ^utssisssisie^^ to $3.00. N. E. Rum, Holland Gin, Catawba Wine, Fort Wine, Sherry Wine, Claret, from $4.00 per Pure gallon to $3 Vinegar oo. at'35 Also Apple cents per gal. have a full line of case goods. All goods will be warranted sold FOR standard and proof, and CASH ONLY from this date. D. A. WILLIAMS & SON. je-15-h-m The Attention of Farmers is called to our American Mammoth Rye; OR, DIAMOND WHEAT, For Fall or Spring Sowing. A new variety, entirely distinct from the common It Rye or any other grain ever intro¬ duced. was first found growing wild on the Humboldt River, Nevada ; since which time it has been successfully cultivated wherever tried. It yields from sixty to eighty bushels to the acre. Mr. A. J. Dufur, United States’ Centennial Commissioner from Oregon, eighty-seven asserts that he has known it to yield and a half bushels to the acre. It was awarded the highest and only pre iftium at the United States’ Centennial Ex position, and pronounced the, finest and only It has grain been of the kind oil exhibition. grown as a Fall and Spring grain with equal success. Single grains measuring one-half inch in length, and the average close to that. Price per package 25 cents, Five packages, $ 1 . 00 ; One dozen packages, $2.00. Scut post paid by mail. Agents this wheat. wanted everywhere to introduce . Notice.— We are in no wav connected with any other seed house in Cleveland or Chattanooga. should Address all orders, letters, etc., be plainly addressed thus Cleveland, ;s. Y. HAINES Bradley & CO., Water, eo., Tenn. BRANCH HOUSE, Sweet Monroe co., Tenn. Sample sent free on receipt of a three cent Stamp. —-THE NEW ' SfWlNCM4CHtNE irp mm I® \ A Simplest & Best. ^ —Assets Waited— o^i? No. 177 W. 4 t ."St. CINCINNATI,©./. aprl8,lb77-j-r Fine lot of Boots, from 81.00 to 85.50 call on Charles Bergstrom's. FOUTZ’S X* CHiPHRAi n) Horse and Cattle Powders: igmsssasssBis i On mt towapinid t *y*!?*i ‘•“TT• th * mpp,tito k u*-»od ~ hSfaS LST.j -ymtenitfoe. yggS, 1 • • , j. i aas< ^»g r JJHsawjsMjus^ BoUaw ^*^ m-tm.™*«**««,. SlsJ£sSSs itsS* *» *H 8i»*»e» of swim, IU ch >< coutu riL u, “ *“ **“*» • " rt * in prerooti™ u 4 ""‘"‘■“ wChoitw DAVID __ E. FOUTZ Pn»,d.i.. Dm^stfaidsS Saitiwom ® u, gold by For Sale by H. S. SMITH, Druggist je-15-’77-j-y Crawfordville, Ga, IxoLpSi A HAI This standard article is compound* ed with the greatest care. Its effects are as wonderful and aa satisfactory It as ever. restores gray or faded hair to ita youthful color. It removes all eruptions, itching and dandruff. It gives the head a cooling, soothing sensation of great comfort, and the scalp by its use becomes white and clean. By its tonic properties it restores the capillary glands to their normal vigor, preventing baldness, and mak¬ ing the hair grow thick and strong. As a dressing, nothing has been found so effectual or desirable. A. A. Hayes, M.D., State Assayer of Massachusetts, says, “The con¬ stituents are pure, and carefully se¬ lected for excellent quality ; and I consider it the Best Preparation for its intended purposes.” Price, One Dollar. BvLokingkam'g Dye FOR THE WHISKERS. This elegant preparation may be relied on to change the color of the beard from gray or any other undesir¬ able shade t to brown or black, at dis¬ cretion. It is easily applied, beingin dne'preparation, and quickly and ef¬ fectually produces a permanent color; which will neither rub nor wash off. Manufactured by R. P. HALL & CO* NASHUA, N.H. W4 to in Bnuliti. ui SuUrt la RICHARDS & LEGWEN, Agents, fe\)10-jo-m CRAWFORDVILLE, GA. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla For Scrofula, and all . scrofulous diseases, Erysi \ A ny’s pelas, Fire, Rose, Eruptions or St. Antho- and Eruptive skin, Ulcerations diseases of the ■ of the § Liver, Lungs, Stomach, Kidneys, ■£| Boils, Blotches, Pimples, Pustules, H Tetter, Tumors, Salt Rheum, Scald Sores, Head, Ringworm, Ulcers, the Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pain in Weakness, Bones, Side and Head, Female from internal Sterility, ulceration, Leucorrhcea, arising and Uterine disease, Syphilitic and Mercurial dis¬ General eases, Dropsy, Dyspepsia, Emaciation, Blood. Debility, and for Purifying tha This Sarsaparilla is a combination of vegetable drake, Yellow alteratives—.Stillingia. Man¬ Dock — with the Iodides of Potassium and Iron, and is the most efficacious medicine yet known tor the diseases it is intended to cure. Its ingredients are so skilfully com bined, that the full alterative effe ect of ekeh is assured, and while it is so mild as to be harmless even to children, it is Still so effectual as to purge out from the system those impurities and corruptions which develop into loathsome disease. from The_ its reputation and it the enjoys confidence is derived which cures, prominent physicians all over the coun¬ try repose in it, prove their experience of its usefulness. Certificates attesting its virtues have accumulated, and are constantly being : received, and as many of these cases are evidence publicly known, they furnish convincing of the superiority of this Sar BapariUa medicine. over every other alterative So generally is its superi¬ ority need to any other medicine known, that we da no more than to assure the public that the best qualities it has ever possessed are strictly maintained. PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mast. r Practical and Analytical Chemists. ■OU> BY ALL DBCO 01 SXS BVERTWBXBB. RICHARDS & LEGWEN, Agents, febiG-jo-m CRAWFORDVILLE, GA. A. G. & G. W. HOWARD, Dealers in General MERCHANDISE. Barnett. Ga., HAVE ON SALE THE CELERATED Crampton Brothers’ . . J.MPERIAL P. 9 9 SOA It goes further, than Goand twice : buv tbe same bar. weight of common Soap. a