Newspaper Page Text
DOC. P. ttowum,
111 West Sixth St
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Ta* Swurr Srkcmc Cog Drawer t,
Atlanta, Ga.; Few York, 756 Broadway.
Grdirary's Advertisements.
, ) > Rf»i NARY'S OFFICE, Spaddins Cotjn-
, ' vt, Georgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha A. Darnall, administratrix of Katie
D«m»!l, has applied to me for letters of Dis¬
mission on the ostate of Katie Darnall, late
of said county, decased.
1*1 all persons eoncernrd show cause be
fore the Court Griffin, of Ordinary of first said Monday cocnty
at my office in on the in
; .-tit miter, should 1888, by ten o’clock, granted. a. m,,why
Mich letters not be
*6,15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/YRDINARY’S OFFICE, Spalding Coon
TT, Georgia, May 26th, 1888.—Mrs.
Martha A. Darnall, executrix of Tlios. M.
Darnall, has applied to me for letters of dis
mission from the exeoutorsliip of said estate.
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary of said county, at
niy office in Griffin, on the first Monday in
September, 1888, by ten 'o’clock, a. m., why
ash letters should not bn granted.
$6.15 E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary,
/'ORDINARY’S OFFICE.— Spalding Coun-
\J tv, Georgia, Angus' 8, 1888.—Mrs. Lei
la B. be mar, Guardian of Arch M. and James
Nrfll makes application to me for leave to
sell one undivided half interest in house
and iot belonging to her wards for distribu¬
tion.
Let all persons cuueervd show cause be.
fore the court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin on the first Monday in September implication by
ten o’elock a. m., why such
should not be granted.
$3.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
Executors’. Sale.
GEORGIA- Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted us by the
Court Court of Ordinary we highest will bidder, sell before Griffin the
house, said to the the first at Tues¬
Georgia; in county, on the legal
day of of September sale, eighteen next, and between three
hours quarters
(18%) shares of the capital stock of the Sa¬
vannah, Griflin and North Alabama Railroad
Company. Terms Sale of sale for distribution cash. Aug. among Oth, 1888. leg¬
atees.
E. W. RECK.
-J. II. MITCHELL.
$8.00 Executors W. D- Alexander.
Rule Nisi.
B. (J. Kinard & Son 1
vs. r
I. .1. Ward&J.W. Ward. )
State of Georgia, Spalding County. In the
Superior Court, February Term, 1888.
It being represented to the Court by the
petition of B. C. Kinard & Son that by Deed
of Mortgage, dated the 16th day of Oet. 1887.
I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward conveyed to the of
said B. C. Kinard & Son a certain tract
’and, towit; fifty acres of land lying in Akins
District of Spalding county, Ga., bounded as
follows; North by landsof Bill Wise, East by
•Ino. Ward, South by Barney Maddox and
West by Zed Gardner, for the purpose of se¬
curing the payment I. J. of Ward a promissory & J. W. Ward note to
made by the said
the said B. C. Kinard & Son due on the 15th
day Dollars of November 1887, for the sum of Fifty
and Ninety-six cents ($50.66), which
note It is now due and unpaid. said I. J. Ward & J.
is ordered that the
W, Ward do pay into this Court, by the first
day of the next term the principal, interest
and costs, due on said note or show cause,
if any they have to the contrary, or that in
default thereof foreclosure he said granted Mortgage, to the
said B. C. Kinard <fc Son of
3«d the equity of redemption of the said I.
J. Ward& J, W. Ward therein be forever bar-
. «<1, and that service of this rule Ward be according perfected
u i,aid I. J. Ward & J. W.
.j n« by publication in the Griffin News,
»r by service upon I. J. Ward & J. W. Ward
vf a copy three months prior to the next
term of this court.
JAMES S. BOYNTON,
Judge S. C, F. C.
frank Flynt and Dismuke & Colleus, Peti-
t.unere Att’s.
/ true copy from the Minutes of thisCon
Wm. M. Thomas, Clerk 8. C. S C.
oaru4rn
ENGINES,
ALL FIRST CLASS,
AND A NO. 1 I
Priw and Quality Guaranteed.
Also, the celebrated 1IIOMA8 HARROW',
both in Wood and Iron
15ff“ A few Buggies on hand will be sold
cheap.
G. A. CUNNINGHAM.
taepl
J bgwmm VAy D6 io*nyi on tt
Origin and Groa t!. „f the Horse Hot Fly.
How the Egg* Are introduced Into the
Animal's Rtowaeh, Vi;hero Tlipso Hatch
Out the Hot Maggots.
The illustration hero given of the tarvsa
of the hot fly,.showing its attachment to
the coat of the stomach by the large end
rie —tho Farmer, head—appeared with originally in Prat-
, the following explana¬
tions:
TUK BOT MAGGOT.
Farmers . have
often noticed ou tho
breasts and forelegs of horses minute yel¬
low specks, These are the eggs of the
horse hot ily. These eggs are licked off
where laid from irritation and, passing
larva), through then the stomach, hatch, and the
pass their lives until ready
again to transform, when they are ex¬
truded with the ftcces. The attachment
to the stomach, is by means of the hooks,
where it sucks liquid nourishment from
the food of tho horse. They do not eat
through having the stomach, as often supposed,
no means for so doing; neither do
they cause serious disability, unless in
sucb quantity as to take the nourishment
so horse, indispensable to the well being of the
or in case they accumulate in such
quantities in the etomacli and bowels ns
of to considerably interfere with the process
The digestion.
head maggot, tho being of the mature, lets go its
to coat stomach, passes
out of tho intestinal canal, falls to the
earth with the excrement, makes its way
to the earth, whence it, in about six
weeks, transforms and issues as tho per¬
fect fiy, lays its eggs upon tho ends of the
hairs of tho horso and dies.
Once tho insect is lodged in the stom¬
ach, little can bo done. When they exist
The hole sometimes found in tho stomach
of the horse infested with hols Is caused
by tho action of the gastric juice of the
animal acting upon inflamed and Suppu¬
rating surfaces. Tho preventive is to
carefully clip off all eggs found. Watch
for them.
Hints on Cactus Cultivation.
Almost every grower of flowers,
whether amateur or professional, culti¬
vates at least one or more varieties of the
cactus. To these
growers the fol¬
lowing Illustra¬
tions and hints,
by American Gar-
den, will bo of
great Interest.
Theso cuts show
methods of grow¬
ing delicate spe¬
cie s of cactus
from stocks of a
stronger, charac¬
ter, or to elevate
low growing or
drooping they varieties
so that can
bo seen to advan¬
tage.
Some of tho
slender cereuses,
such as C. tuber- no. 1— grafting the
osus, arc hen- cactus.
efitedin growth, but it makes little differ¬
ence in • blooming, excepting that a
strong plant does better than from a
weak one. Cereus columhinus
Cuba forms a favorite stock for graft¬
ing. Fig. 1. shows a rat tail eactus All (C.
fiagelliformis) grafted upon it. of
those having a
gummy sap unite
readily, and a
number of differ¬
ent kinds are
often grown upon ■
tho same stock.
If tho scion and
stock are both
slender, wedge
grafting ally adopted, is usu¬
the parts be¬
ing cut to fit into
each other aud ty¬
ing them around,
but not so tight
as to prevent cir¬
culation of the
sap. Sometimes
the parts are fast¬
ened together by
the slender spine’s
of tho larger vari¬
eties without ty-
% ir.g. In the sec¬
ond cut is shown
a head of a free
blooming Echino-
KO. 2—gkaftikg the cereus grafted pectinatus this
CACTUS. in
way on a stem of
C. eraudiflorus. The roots, and a small part
of I ho plant above them, should he cut
awav and an incision made, shaped which should to re¬
ceive tho end of the cereus,
be cut into a wedge shape aud held in
place by a long cactus spine. In propa¬
gating the long stemmed sorts it is not
best to bury the slip in tho earth, as is so
often done, but to tie it'about three inches
above tho lower end of a small stake,
keeping tho growing end up. Insert thi3
in a pot of sand, letting tho cutting just
touch the sand; roots will appear usually
iu'about two weeks. As soon as the roots
ore well started the plants may be potted
in soil consisting of good soil with one-
fourth sand and one-fourth manure. Give
plenty of water and hot sunshine while
growing. ___
A Good Dntt Bath.
WO
be free from ..— -----
the cheapest, easiest and most^ effective
way of ridding fowls of lice that is known.
The beauty of it is that the fowls both
take and administer the if own medicine.
THE SEVENTEEN YEAR LOCUST.
Habits of a Remarkable bisect Which
HW Sovcutcen Years in the Roil.
ProfiMfOl Riley has called attention to
the fact that during du tho prose present year two
brood* of the periodteal cicada or so called
seventeen yew locust will make their ap¬
pearance In different parts of the country.
He asks in a circular sent out from the
department of agriculture at Washington
for information in regard to the appear¬
ance of these locusts whenever seen.
Readers who send this information to
Professor Biley will doubtless do a ser¬
vice to science and indirectly to them¬
selves.
bn its winged state tho seventeen year
old locust is of a black -color, with trans¬
parent wings and wing covers, tho thick
anterior edge red, and larger veins of which
are orange and near the tips of the
latter there is a dusky zigzag lino In the
form of the letter W, supposed by the
superstitious to indicate war. The eyes
are red, the rings of the body are edged
with dull orange, and the legs are of tho
same color. The wings expand from two
and one-half to three and one-quarter
inches.
In Its many years of underground life
this insect does more or loss damage by
feeding upon the roots of plants, but its
manifest Injury is when in the perfect
state the female deposits her eggs in the
twigs of fruit and other trees, where
punctured limbs, as a rule, languish usd
die soon after the eggs are hatched. The
eggs are of a white color, about one-twelfth
of an inch long and taper at each end.
The insects hatched out are grub like in
form and are covered with little hairs.
They soon find their way to the soil,
into which they descend to where the
roots are most abundant. The only change
to which they are subjected during the
long period of their subterranean confine¬
ment is an increase of size and the more
complete scale like development of tho four "small
which prominences on their backs,
represent their future wings.
When tho time arrives for them to issue
from the ground they come out during
successive nights in great numbers, come
up the trees, fasten themselves to the
same with their claws and proceed to Cost
off their skins. A long rent appears In
the skin of tho back, and through this
the cicada pushes itself, and withdrawing
its legs and wings from their separata
cases, crawls away, leaving its empty
pupa skin.
Within a fortnight after their final
transformation the females begin to lay
their eggs, and in six weeks the whole
generation becomes extinct. Such are in
brief the general habits of this remark¬
able insect, which passes seventeen years
of its irfo in the soil and at stated periods
appears for a short time to life above
ground. *
"'40> Of Interest to Dairymen.
By an act passed by the New York leg¬
islature and approved by the governor,
the dairy commissioner is directed to em¬
ploy exceeding expert butter five in number, and cheese whose makers, duty
not
It shall be, under his directions, to exam¬
ine and inspect butter and cheese factor-
stitutes, meetings i
the state ns shall be designated by the
commissioner, to impart thereat informa¬
tion as to the best methods of making
butter and cheese. Five thousand dol¬
lars have been appropriated for the pur¬
pose. On or before Dec. 15 next the com¬
missioner must report the number of
experts with their employed compensation under the and act, together
and must include the whole In his expenses, annual
report. Another the appropriation State or $2,500
has been made to Dairy associa¬
tion to be expended in holding a number
of dairy conferences in various parts of
tho state to illustrate butter ana cheese
making.
To Keep Clilnck Bugs from a Corn Field.
A great many remedies and preventives
against chinch bugs have time been suggested the
and published from to time,
most thorities, of them emanating generally from good difficult au¬
but very so
and impracticable In thdr app}ieg$ij» t£eir as
to be of little general use.' In s mi¬
. ab
gration from ono field to another, the
time they first appear on the side of a
field of com and before they have entered
it, cut five or six rows of the com aud
the perpendicular side of the furrow to¬
ward the field to be proteoted. Into this
the bugs will fall, where straw may be
thrown on them and burned. Or the fur¬
row may be covered with some ot the
stalks that hawe been out while they were
green, by laying them across it, when the
bugs will remain crawl under there them in the into shade the long fur¬
row and
enough for the stalks to dry and be
burned.
Conclusions About Kfisilago.
Professor Henry, of the Wisconsin ex¬
periment station, who has been investi¬
gating the silo system, sums up his con-
elusions somewhat as follows: 1. Even
though ensilage made from Indian com
has no more feeding value than the same
amount of material dried into good fod-
deii the difficulties and expense of curing
and caring for the dried fodders are such
that ordinarily the silo feeding is preferable. dry fodder 2.
The usual waste from
is very considerable, while for ensilage it
need be none at all. 8. Feed can be more
compactly secured in the silo than In any
Other way. 4. Husking, cribbing ana
... -—* - ——for
the value of the crop by any of these pro¬
cesses. 5. For the northern com belt
smaller varieties of com will give nearly
or quite as much feeding material as the
largo varieties, with less labor to handle
them. Lastly, the clover crop is a yer|
promising farmer candidate for ensilage, the silo aud wiU^fxS the
who tries it for
well pleased with the results.
Bero and There.
For a pond with muddy bottom carp is
S&itl to be the best fish. 'f
Tho prince of Wales is a patron of the
Red Polled Cattle society of England.
The report is that all through the Shen¬
andoah valley the wheat acreage excellent. is large
and the condition of the crop
of Queen president Victoria of tho has Royal accepted Agricultural the office
society jubilee of England daring its forthcoming
year.
It has been announced that the Minne¬
sota State Agricultural society offers this
year premiums amounting to $20,000 to
be awarded at the fair which will open on
Sept, a
Farmers in the provinces are protect¬ by
ing against the selling of potatoes
measure; they demand the adoption of
the legal standard of sixty weight pounds per
busheL This is the Union. legal in most
of the states of the
Tt* "Slicing Tr ocem " ta China.
Owing to the absence of wagon roads
railways canals the and Chinese the depend along upon Che the
ocean
for nearly all their carrying. Any
to the immense traffic and
! these waterways would prove
- .ous. It Is from this condition
at ..As that piracy is considered one of
most heinous offenses. For this
death by the slicing pror.^ is the
The slicing mo Y <>• xecutlon
any of the fiendibl. t ; tunes prac¬
upon captives by our North Ameri¬
savages. There ere degrees even in
devilishness. There are deaths by
10, 20, 50, 100, 1,000slices Theeon-
person is fastened to a roes, aud
the executioner oomnu xca at tho
and cuts away such portions of
body as will not produce sudden
by shock or bleeding till there is
more tissue to hack at, when he
the chest and tears out the heart
I was told by an Irish gentleman in
Chinese imperial customs that he
witnessed the slicing execution of a
pirate, and he described it as hor¬
beyond imagination. Another gen¬
had been present when a poor
had been sliced to death because
husband had died suddenly, and she
been tortured into a confession of
poisoned him. At other times
had stoutly denied any knowledge of
cause of his death. I^^evcr, she
been condemned to this horrible
and she met her fate with a resig¬
who and bravery which astonished
saw it The American who
present described it aa a most ho
sight, and one that returned to him
fearful dreams. —San Francisco Chron¬
The Journalist and the Publisher. >
One thing, I fear, mart always place
other professions, at a disadvantage, compared law,
such as art,
teaching and engineering. By
very nature of tha cast, the writers
the daily press ca*» have little inde¬
action. Speaking roughly, and
of the press as wo And it now
New York, and the other large cities
the United States, the publisher is
the writer is nothing. The
gifted and the most enlightened
must of necessity write to or¬
and, in very many instances, the
who gives the order is the person
an enlightened and patriotic spirit
least willingly obey. This appears
be unavoidable. The man who has
bought or inherited a news-*
must cither control or lose it It
hfa; he is the master; no power on
be can nullify his right, and yet he
a person singularly unfit to
such an organ.
The newspaper is often a mere ap¬
to other enterprises, Important, which the
deems far more and to
the journal bears the combined
of cow and cow bell, feeder and
But the newspaper belongs
huh; and all who write for it are, and
be. his obedient servants.—-James
in The Wirier *
Moffett's TEETHIIA (TeitWng Powders)
state* the
and Sorea, >M nothin? equals U tor
troubles of Children of any age. It
eafeandturt. 'i’KKTHIN Try It and yon will never b.
A a* ton? ms tharu are child,
Uifciae House. A«kyour l>ragg;;a
!New Advertisements.
REVOLVERS, tend -Gamp for
price list to JOHNSTON & SON,
Penn.
CONSUMPTIVE
jog OogBh, &ron£bm^ AKhma, Indigestion I U»o
all nuuxyoftb if ?worsteuaand the throat and lunsre, latbebeMremedy and disease,
sanctions
tick, from straggling impure against blood and disease, eihausuon. and slowly The drifting feeble
tlie grave, will in many raae. recover their health by
timely u*e of I'arkor’a (Unger Tonic, but delay it dan¬
Take it in time. It w Invaluable for all pain*
disorders of stomach &ud bowels. 509. At t>ruffrfsU.
exhausted vitality
4 SCIENCE OP LIFE, the
Kreat Medical Work of the
age oa Manhood, Nervous andl
Physical Debility, Premature
Errors of Youth, and
the untold miseries consequent
thereon, 800 pages 8vo, 125
prescriptions for all diseases. >
Cloth, full gilt, only ILOO, by*
sealed. Illustrative sample free t
middle-aged men. Bend now. The Sold and
Medal awarded to the author by the Na¬
Medical Association. Address F. O. box
1*95, Boston, Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grsd-
Harvard Medical College, 35 years’practice
Boston, who may be consulted confidentially.
of Men. Office No. 4 Bulflnchtt.
0. A. CUNNINGHAM,
GRIFFIN, : :: GEORGIA,
Been Appointed Land Agent fot
Spalding County,
the GeorgUi Bureau of Immigration, and
parties sale by having placing land their for sale property can expedite in hi*
Full particulars in regard to the most
lands in this county can t>c obtai
addressing him as above. A full li f
and lands and lots of all descripti
GINGER TONIC
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
)UW«)P Ill s —wa ns Uh- toUUw
HINDERCORNS.
i®WS4.i s 't&m» 1
FOR OLD PEOPLE! jiffSM
fn <®W people the orrvowiydan k we»l«med,«nd<Jiat MM be ttresgthcMd.
One of the most prominent medical writers of the day, in speaktog of the pr*v»-
/O* laice of rheumatic trouble* fcnoeg the aged, toys: « The
rOMftfctt,'
wait from disordered merre*.” Theta* a in am* shell
—Ibe medicine for old people mast be a nerve tonic.
OH people beset with constipation, Sate-
Imcr. arow+mets, dhtrhctM, iadtgeMloti. then-
autism, neuralgia. These diseases Ore ttf
nil's~eri 11 i OnglBt —t —ti-‘ fWMDflr# « _ g- - — »
that great nerve tank, is
3a these disorder*, tad by its 1
kidney*, •UUWVAIVV, cm the the fiver, HTCI, * bowels, WMVUy MM
to old removes Old people disorders find k slitSalating peculiar
the age. vital productive of appetite,
to powers,
and a promoter of digestion.
Sold by dniggiitu. ft no Six for fj.oo. Srad for tight-poc* p»pcr, with onsy
from oervoui, dchUiuwd, and »**d proplr, who U*M P»i u , Olery Ccmpouad.
WELLS. RICHARDSON <& CO., BurUngfpn, Vt.
WHIPS, WM9HS, BUtCIES.
ANI) HAPNKS 8
—H- - V '
StudebaRer Wagon i White Hickory Wagon I
Jackson G. Smith Wagon f
Jackson G. Smith Buggy I
And the COLUMBUS Specialty. BUGGY at the Lowest Prices possible. Repairs §»
old Buggies a
W. II. SPEKCE,
nug38dAw6tn Dor. Hill A Taylor Streets, GRIFFIN, GA
Shipment Finest Teas,
CRACKERS, ALL SORTS, 15c. lb.
HAMS, BONELESS SHOULDERS. ETC. FINEST
FLOUR ON THE MARKET.
McFarM, Beyliss & Ce's.
-
HAMPV f V .%000 AGENTS WANTED at ouos to supply TEN MIL- -
Dl» IvlwiaSi * ■ ■ LION voters with the only official lives of
CLEVELAND AND THURMAN
By Hon, W. U. Hmoao.; alto, Ltfe of Mbs. Clotblahh; exquisite steel portraits. "Uccess.Fo* Voter
Cartridge Box, Reform Trado Polley, Ac., $500 complete. month. Aghutb Outfit reportimmeuse 35c. HLBBARD BROD,
best work, apply quick and make t«QQ to a
Philadelphia, Pa.
NO WORE EYE-GLASSES
Mo re
MITCHELL’S
A Certain, Safe and Effective Remedy for
Sore, Weak and Mamed Eyes
PnOaclif Rcal.rt.g L.ag-ll(htMlM(«. the Sight ef
aid
u the OWL
L'nrea Tear raps, Granulation,
Red Eyes. Matted Eye Loss
Also, equally efficacious when used in oth
er maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever Sores,
mors. Salt Rheum, Burns, MITCHELL’S Piles, or
inflammation exists,
may id be used Druggists to advantage, 25centg.
o bv all at
A GREAT YEAR
In the hUtorr of the United State* I* now
ub. Every person of tntelllf eno* desire* to
pace with the coum of it* Mat *. There i*
better w*y to do*o then to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
It* news faculties are unsurpsmed tha f ouest br any paper
In the South. In addition hMHHsciri to
ated Press dispatches, letter it from all
ence by wire and Bta
points in Georgia and session tho neighbori of Congress ng tea.
ington During will the bo present the most Important and most
teresting news centre in Urn coon Telegraph try.
Washington Correspondence of the
the very beet that can Im had.
tie regular correspondent furnishes the
news and gossip in tell Hoa. dlopatchna Amos J.
%mcU 1 letters from
known newspaper writers at the issues capital, of
cuss tho lives (and most important
dftV ft'e Democratic Tariff
Telegraph It is thoroushly la a in Una with the
pap. r. Cleveland and the
of i resident ift.eiKmat Mtnnaiwn ♦
r _ at..
pol uteTgenutee Democratic faith.
■tones.
(tally, one yea r, . . • • - *7
•ally, ftx months, .... *
Dally, three meathf, • • • - *
Dally, eae month, ....
Weekly, one yestr, • • • *100
Term*; Cash la advance. Address
TBS TELEGRAPH,
UAMM. GBOMIA
HE
MACON, GEORGIA.
-tet-
T7MFTY FIFTH ANNUAL SESSION o|>
September 28th and ctiiaee June 28tl»
Elegantly furnished class rooms end
new rottsges tor students.
Cen: n ly located- Good board at
ble rates.
For catalogues and other information
ply Julyl2w4 to REV. J. A. BATTLE, '*
jfi- ‘ ~ President.
Rule Nisi.
Duncan, Martin A Perdue j
W. T. I? Taylor. j
tition of sg Duncan, represented Martin to Urn Jt Court Perdue by that the pe¬
Deed of Mortgage, dated tho ISih day by
o
January Duncan, ,1887, Martin W.T.ILTay A Perdue lor “a conveyed,to certain parcel eeM
of part land'containing of lot No. 115 thirty in the (S0f Mb term District itotef iff
by Spalding Jock Crawler, county, Ga., the bounded Booth by on P. the Cham- East
on
less, North by P. L. Starr, West by «NM
of my own lands, said lend, thirty acres, be¬
ing worth of three securing hundred the payment dollar*,” of tor premia the
purpose H.Taytorto a
sory.note made by the natd W. k T,
the the said 1st day Duncan, of Oet.,1887, Martin for A Perdue, the of due Obe Ok
asm
Hundred and Forty Eight and 50-100 Dollars,
principal, amount ianow interest du6 and attorneys tom, which
and unpaid.
It is ordered that the said W. T. B. Taylor
do pay lute this Court, by interest th* first day of the
next term the principal, and eoeta.
due on said note and mortgage or show omm
it any he hoa to the contrary, or that in de¬
fault thereof foreclosure be granted to tho
said Duncan, Martin A Perdue of mid Mort¬
gage. and the equity of redemption of the
said W. T.HTayior therein be forever perfected bened,
and that service of this rule be os
saidW. T. H. Taylor according to taw. 3&a
Beck k Cleveland, Petitioners Att’ye.
I certify that the foregoing to a true copy
from the Minutes of this Court, this TboHa*, Febraa.
ry Term, 1888. Wm. M. C.
febflSoamtm Clerk B, B. C.
IAN WANTS BOT UTTLB
Here below,* but he Wants tbat little
mighty quick. A
LITTLE 1ST,
or a big one it promptly Rile i by ad¬
vertising M*the5|Dt8ygei'
'.Weekly j^EWS,
ADVERTISERS
can learn the exact cost
of any proposed fine oi
advertising in American
papers by addfefiring
Geo. P. Rowel} &Co n
Newtpapsr **1 WtMinq
tend tOd*. «* lOO-Pkoa
ISY PILL!
> u4>Hrort*