Newspaper Page Text
.(In Advance) Pov Annum . 10.00
r,One Year,............. . 1 . 00 .
Brum., May 11, 1MO.
i Piper of Sptldiog Go.
________
Ten Hues oi* 1«H8 to be counted as ft
^irOTSSJ^Sg AU InacftioMtorJese
t as for the Dally
mmSBBSSBB
adulations which the At-
:i button has hastened to
I Parm are said to be very
We shall print them ns
.
^acopy
; *«ya:
_______ _ straight from
comes pretty
,--n to Birmingham, and it
t out that no Alabama of-
mflent service will
_____ heir terms expire,
r cause In fact it looks a
if the President wants to
ama,”
lag, carried by the
regiment in the cen-
and which has created
In the breasts of a
i demagogues because
know its history or
i it its national colors, was
,d and fully described in the
f hist Sunday and was one of
live features of that issue.
h .
(leot^fa .bear in
aportant conven-
l be held in Atlanta Moy 22?
1 congress should be the ini-
p to some very substantial
r the benefit of the people of
in, and particularly of the
tofithc state. AJde and prac-
have been appointed as
nd if all of them attend,
f l of the convention will Ire
1 It Is to be supposed
gates are giving the
spe&Tc tatemgentTv when
fivention meets. 7 :
,
he. PBPVIMCIAMSM.
; or two New York papers hove
n very bad taste, not if sayim.
b in their refereneA to the
i of strangesrs who visited
T rity during the centennial in-
They referred to their
, visitors as “jays,” and
— tended them not to blow out
% the gas. In New York slang a "jay”
is a greenhorn.
A, provincial person is one who
* little of the
thinks his own corner
earth is perfection, and all that is
different from that is inferior. Peo¬
ple whose ways are in any respect dif-
• iterant from the ways of his little eor-
ner are ignorant and outlandish.
From this point of view, no Ameri¬
can alive today is so provincial as
the born and bred New Yorker. He
hits a very large lesson to learn,
which it is to be hoped lie will rooster
pinion the next that centennial ceremonies well be-
arrive. It is one decent,
| havetl person in this country is
.
1 - about us good as another, yes, and
v
as handsome, too.
Hospitality and courtesy to stran-
gsreisone of the first virtues ever
inculcated in the heart of man. The
- true cosmopolitan te"he who knows
that underneath all differences of
garb and manner the human hearts
that are beating are just the same.
Therefore he will not set himself up
over another because the cut of that
afttwr’s garment* to different from his
own. He will not call a stranger
f ♦•gawky’’ because that stranger nat-
’ orally looks about objects untami-
at
' Bar to him. And he will be under all
^ circumstances kindly and polite.
more Catarrh 5a thin section of tii
all other disease* put together
tact lew years wae supposed^to
remedies, and by constantly
with local treatment.pronoune-
>le. Science has proven catarrh
litntional dicwwe, and therefore
stitntiomU treatment. Hall’s
j manufactured by V. A. Cheney
i». Ohio, is the only constitution
I from e 10 market, drops to It is taken tcaspoontai. internally It
a
rectiy upon the Mood and muons
runy system. it They fails offer to one Send htm-
cam* cure.
i and testimonials Address. F
r A 00.. Toledo. O.
I by Druggists, 75o.
would „ _
«lb.
' wy 1
solid south wakes a solid north,
a divided south would make a divid¬
ed north, and that when some of the
southern states go oyct to the Re¬
publicans, enough northern states
will become Democratic to insure the
election of a Democratic President.
What assurance can these Demo¬
crats give that what they say is true?
Do they understand the situation
better than thoee who do not agree
with them? Are they in better po¬
sition to speak knowingly? The
south has not always been solidly
Democratic, and at the time when it
wae not a Democratic President was
not elected. There may be better
grounds tor believing that one would
be elected now, if the south should be
divided, but if there are,
not been started, and until
and shown to be good
very unwise to relinquish our hold
upon southern states in the hope of
carrying northern ones which areun
Even if such a policy would bring
about the election of a Democratic
President, what would the south gain
by it? These Democrats appear
to have lost sight of the fact that the
south is not solid against the north,
but against bad state and county
government in this section. If the
north were eliminated, and if the con¬
dition that confronts us in the south
were what it is now, the south would
still besolidly Democratic. Her inter¬
ests are all in that direction, and the
election of a Republican President is
far preferable to the turning over of
local ] government in even a few states
of this section to an ignorant and a
vicious class of people. This is no
doubt the view that nearly all of the
southern Democrats take of themat-
ter, and as long as they hold to it,
President Harrison nor anybody else
can evolve a plan that would break
the solid south.
A Cincinnati suburb lias been called
“Elsmere.” If it enjoys (?) the same
happiness that its namesake did for
a few years it will be about half way
between hell and perdition.
Peculiar in medicinal merit hnd woudertu
ares—Hood’s Sarsaparilla. No w ie the time
o take it, for bow it will do the most good.
v > Jt t* - —
Monasteries awl Mental Diseases.
The monasteries mental ital frequent disease
sources of that form of
which was supposed to be i caused cat Dy
bewitchment From the a earliest i
it u> evident that monastic MMU life
tended to those develop St. Anthony insanity, andSt
cases as of i
Augustine are typical of ito
-upon the strongest .. .... minds; but it was
especially the convents for women
that became the great breeding beds of
this disease. Among the large num¬
bers of women and girls thus assem¬
bled, many against of them their forced will, into for con¬ the
finement
reason that their families could give
them no dower, subjected to the un¬
satisfied longings, suspicions, bicker¬
ings, petty jealousies, envies and
mental hatreds, disease so notorious in unlikely convent life, be
was not to
developed excitement at in any nunneries moment took Hysterical shapes
sometimes comical, but more gener¬
ally tragical. Noteworthy it is that
the Iasi places where executions for
the witchcraft neighborhood took place of great were nunneries, mainly in
and the last fameus victim—of the
hundreds of thousands executed in
Germany for this imaginary crime—
was sister Anna Renata Banger, sub-
prioress of a nunnery near Wurzburg.
The same thing exposed was seen sundry among fa¬
young women to
natical Protestant and preachers; insanity,
both temporary permanent, was
thus frequently France, developed and among has been thw
thus Huguenots produced of in America, from the
days of the Salem persecution down
to the “camp meetings” of the present
time.—Andrew D. White in Popular
Science Monthly.
Big Prices for Pottage Stamps.
The highest price that was ever paid paid
for old and rare stamps was re¬
cently to a resident Coin of Denver by New the
Scott York. Stamp The and stamps company the first of issue
were
of tite two cent, five cent and thirteen
cent numerals of the Hawaiian or
Sandwich the missionary Islands. stamps They were end knows
as wen
issued about 1839. There arh only two
and saved os curiosities by the finder
till the Now York dealers, hearing of
lector for ($50.—Denver Republican.
The Invalids Hope.
Many wwmingly incurable caeraTM Wood
poison, catarrh, scrofula and rheumatism
have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic Mood
Balm), made by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, Ga. Write to them for book fltled with
convincing proof.
G W. B. Snider, living nevenmftes from Ath-
ciih-.G a., writes: “For several years I suffered
with running ulcers, which doctors treated
and pronounced incurable. A single bottle
of ft. B. B. did me more ft good than all the
doctors, J kept on using aad every ulcer
Ws 9. induced C. Kissed neighbor A Boa, Tswaliga. B. Ga., B. B. write: for
a to try
V
{purifying the blood eatv
l<« overesl lute tod, 4, for for Without without jaws j blood
j ou cauuot enjoy good health.
At this season nearly every see needs a
good medicine to purity, vitalize, *ad enrich
the Wood, and wo ask yoo to try Hood's
peculiar Pm^nfiesw Sarsaparilla. It strengthens
and bonds up the system,
crefttee an appetite, and tone* the digestion,
while U eradicates disease. The peculiar
combination, proportion, sad preparation
of toe vegetable remedies used give to
to itself
other medicine has such a record of wonderful
cures. II you bare made up your mind to
buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not be Induced to
take any other Instead. It is a Peculiar
Medicine, and is worthy your eonBdenee.
Hood’s Saweparillaia eold by aO druggists.
Prepared bylML Hood A Cp., Lowell, Haas.
too Doses One Dollar
If You Have
fis^seF® 89 *
Tutt’s Pills
’ffiS&^iZSSSL’iSSSS
SOLD EVERYWHERE.
The Georgia Midland KB
Shortest and Beat Line
With Through Counh
es Between
COLUMBUS aid ATLANTA.
ONLY ONK CHANGE TO
Washington, New York,
Na8hyille or Cincinnati.
Schedule iu Effect Sunday, Jan. 6,1869.
TRAIN NORTH
Leave Union Depot, Columba*.. -.1:05 p, m.
Arrive Griffin.....................8:50 **
Arrive Atlanta....................6:40 “
SOUTHBOUND TRAIN
Leaves Atlanta....................S:!Sp. Griffin....................4:06 « m.
Leaves
Arrives in Colnmbns........ ..7*5 “
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN
KOKTH BOimD—(DilLT EXCEPT SUNBAV).
. rrives at McDonough........ ....
soern Boesn-CDiitr except sukdat'.
EE AS “
Leave Griffin....................,.830
Arrive Columbus, Midland depot,.2:05 p. w
SPECIAL TRAIN -Sunday Oxly.
Leave Columbus— Union Depot, 8-85 a.
Arrive Mriffln...................11:40
Arrive McDonough......... .18:30 p.
Arrive at Atlanta...........- 1:10 “
• - •
RETURNING- South Bound. *
Leave Atlanta...... A ............8:S0 a. m.
Leave McDonough...............735 ’*
Leave Griffin...................8:85 “
Arrive Columbus—Uniou Depot, 11:® “
Ask for tickets to Atlanta a ad points be¬
yond over the Georgia Midland RR. Tick¬
ets os sale at Union Depot, and at life office
in Georgia Home building.
M. E.HRAV, Supt
C. W. CHEARS,
Gen*! Pass. Agt. Columbus. Ga
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
Notice l* hereby given to all who are in¬
debted to the estate of Mrs. Josephine Pad¬
gett, deceased, to call ard settle at once.
of AU said parties deceased holding claims notified agaixet to present the estate them
are
at ob *e in J. legal G. Mathews, form to A imiahtr
83 00 rt r.
m- , U:.U ■ Kfc, - t.*. ,*
•iu it*. ►«. Y U» ** -
j.rr#oi* iti eatc-L: *<•-
* but »**»* mg- ;
•
tuv world,with *’ *i.
W* win also tvur til f « ><^-4
* «t <mr ro*tit ur<! a
iplre. ItsTTfim. w" - V rb’ * f-v
w w!iM »r *•-*.«(- w. tkewe * !--»
mar «*sH at ;«•«*• !•“**••. n«»: •*
ifttOWtlM Si! *lll»lf lrt* *U..C
Mtrw|*nr. This f taU»i mmw n .. a
ijMte sitter r fl». Nfnrcr <* f»,
havi-ntt.tin: »*«f -1 n«*
run *t ,
atlnrhOM’Dl*. hoti-Bi*. . »u*l »w*i mow *tert* for
HAO. Brvt.zjr.-TH-rst.
fal —Hllwr RQf
write to sta nt *mr* ««»
ton frmm tb sewinp-tnachme is »h«. W‘ri.«l. Ml. s».d snd ths
tsniE over shown t«r- 1 11 Atnwrtes.
740s Augiuiit, tfcuBte
$500 Cash
boffhred to the person who Shull K*nd In ihe
hugest number of yearly *ut*cribcr» to ths
Ladies’Home Journal
between now and J uiy 1st, !•.*•«. at SO ernls
HALF t wire*IS. Af.n #."0per that real dati..
i received Ived/or for leu lea than thni HO tbr per rear.
largest ______ clubs. ____ta oabre-t respective* ------- • pdM next fcr
subecrlber AgoodcaUt If desired, instead of
Hundreds secured, dotlurs be-mad*
of cau
i next six months, sample by men, copies, women post- or
We furnish free
•rs, fra Address
^TOaaBttg'Bg co -
Administrator’s Sale.
fj^j ri rtiie of an order p^ ted-lytbscwtrt
Term, 1 in 'tofl'ourt
house door the city of Griffin, daring the
legal ' hours 1889. of sate, on the capital first stock Tuesday of l>n- in
is, ten shims
I RR. and Banking Company of Georgia,
#400.00, aad one interest due certificate amounting Hold thr to
by said company. as
" EKtabethO. Mills.
. -
tew . the ,
rest of
keeps them
«»d "
that ther are over on the lookout
(ho best of the encounter The thqy with are
sometimes the electricity “done machine up.” man plying
was
his vocation on the street and appar¬
ently doing a good business. A crowd
stood around him amused at the
twistings and contortions of those ex
oerimenting with the unseen force,
> the manager would sin gout m
tall, gw noticed
low, who had made himself
by some sneering remarks as each cus¬
tomer relinquished his hold on the
handles ain’t and of straightened account,” up. said “That he to
feller no
die taken proprietor proprietor tig big dose dot as let one go. chap The who proprie¬ bad
n a a ■ his rule
tor ___jrafihmttcw was induced to break over ,
of dignity and challenge the odd ... look¬
ing cove to try his nerve. “Humph,” make
the squirm fellow lute grunted, dia “you those can’t other fel-
me "Bet you $61 "said the
lent you can, “and make man
with the ’nough; machine, “Quern you I’ll
holler luck,
have to go' you jest once Aft for
down in a nis pocket, nsnea out a nver.
“Well, machine 1, la^rt lay the money mor right both there on it;
the so we can see
now then, open up her valve."
As the stranger said the last words,
sen it
The electrical man though opened out on of him do¬
gently at first as fearful
creased ing some the damage, force and Gradually^ looked' 1 ® in¬
quivering saw ssrssSi neither aud shako shaking nor
feaze feaze him, him, and and the the machine man said
be but was tie playing could some gouge wliat it on him, he
as not see was
■POmpigr, ........
him: “This is the fourth machine Tv*
worked today, and I could make a for¬
tune if they said, would and only he hold showed out. See the
here," looker he wire passing from hand
ona one
to the other and over his neck, but so
flexible as not to interfere at all with
his movements. The wire explained
the cessful secret—it destroyer had proved of the a current.- mart suc¬
Chicago Herald.
She Was Sat tailed. -
In front there of is a shop on showcase Twenty-third filled
street set a
with photographs of famous peo¬
ple, and it is always surrounded
by a curious group the of women
eagerly scrutinising faces of
the actors and actresses that
and they read see so much often, about on in the the news¬ stage
so
papers. collection As I passed of along pictures, I glanced and
at the
found the most placid conspicuous one
to be of that delineator
of. Shakespeare, Mrs. Langtry.
As I was moving away a victoria
drawn by a team of bay horass drew
up at the cuit. A handsomely dressed
woman raised herself front the seat
aid strained her fine gray eyes in an
endeavor to see over the crowd to the
photographs evidently in anxious the showcase. to discover She If
was
some special picture was being dis¬
played there. She satisfied herself in
smiled regard to this in a moment, and
to herself as she sank back into
her robes, and ordered the man on the
box to move ahead. It is a fact that
among the many who were raving
over the loveliness of the woman in the
photograph, and afterward glanced
carelessly toria, at the recognized occupant of that the Mrs. vic¬
not one
Langtry picture had driven there up to exhibition. see if her
own was on
-New York Sun.
Easily Explained.
That is a queer story which The Ar
gus prints. It is told that a man on
the Grand Trunk fell off a car while
from rounding a curve, bank, jumped hastened up unhurt
n snow to a
neighboring farm house, hired a horse
and overtook his train at the next
station. That sounds very much like
Munchausen.
People used to tell about the “pea¬
nut” trains on the old Androscoggin
railroad, before the Maine Central
leased it, and there are stories ex¬
tant of trains on certain Maine rail¬
roads where the passengers wild get and off,
then pick jump a bouquet of ‘ flowers
on ag
the locomotive, d
train would seem to have been slower
than that even.
fate Trains of people usually who stop fall to ascertain off, but this the
one was apparently in too great a
hurry to do that, for all It was going
so slowly.— Portland Advertiser.
A Story of Coiuciileoot*.
Tho Medical Jurisprudence society
recently listened to Lawyer Paschal!
Coggins’ relation of a case of mistaken
identity that came under his personal
observation. Two men — John A.
Mason, of Boston, and John A Mason,
of Illinois—left their respective homes
and went to California in search of
health and makers. wealth. One They left were wife both and
wagon a
two sons in Boston and the other a
The wife Boston and two wife daughters heard nothing in Illinois. of her
husband after three veers’ absence.
death of John A Mason, a wagon
maker. She brought suit for hisprop*
arty, his photograph was identified by
twenty witnesses, but at the last mo-
meo t the Illinois wife turned up, and
proved later that developments the man was her showed husband, that
and
the Boston pioneer had died alone.—
Philadelphia Recon
Agony b Courted
By peraoM who, attacked by a mild form of
rheumatism, neglect to seek prompt relief-
Subsequent torture Hootetter’e is prevented Stomach by an Bit- im¬
mediate resort to
Company
‘ n ’Td
HS'll'Aim DBAWKOS *. *»
5 ^
FOR TWENTY YEARS,
For Integrity of its Drawings, and
Prompt Payment of Prizes,
Attested as follows:
“We do hereby certify that we supervise the
arrangements for all the Monthly and Semi-
Annual Drawings of The Louisiana State Lot¬
tery Company, and in p«rsoii manage and
control the Drawings themselves, and that
the same are conducted with honesty, fairness
Ws tee undersigned Banks and Bankers
will pay all Prixcs drawn in The Louisiana
State Lotteries which may he presented at
our counters:
M
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
A,U “ISSS’fiSJfYCiSSk 0 ***
Capital Prize, # 300,000
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars Each.
H*d - ves^flO; —' Quarters - #5; 80; Tenths#3;^Twen-
LIST OP PHIZES.
isssfiaat:........ 50,000 is............ 8300,000 100,000 50.000
1 Prize or
1 Prize op 25,000 is............ 25.000 20.000
2P*izbsop 10,000 are..........
5 Phizes op 5,900 are.......... 25.000
25 Prizes op 1,000 are......... 25.000 50.000
100 Prizes op 500 are..........
200 Phizes of 300 are....,— 100,000 60.000
500 Prizes op . 200 are..........
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prize* of 8500 are.................. 30.000 50.000
100 do. 300 are......—..—
100 do. 200 are................. 20.000
TERMINAL PRIZES.
09 Prizes of 8100 are.................. . 99,900 99,900
999 do. 100 are.................
3,134 81,054,800
Note—T ickets drawing Capital Prizes
not entitled to terminal Prizes.
For Club Rates, or any further the undersigned, information
desired, clearly write legibly residence, to with State,
County, stating Street and your Number. More rapid
re¬
turn mail delivery will be assured by enclosing
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Addrese M. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, C. La.
or M. A. DAUPHIN, Washington, D.
By ordinary letter, contain) ng Money Order
issued by ail Express Companies. New York
Exchange, Draft or Postal Note. We pay
charges on Currency sent to us by Express in
sums of 85 or over.
‘ ' ' * *
Address Registered Letters Contain¬
ing Currency tc
imr MUAH n t TUX AT BAIR
5 New Orleans, La.
IVISAAkAsl AAAUA/ AS * A V V
KS of New Orleans, President and of Institution
signed chartered by the recognized an the
whose highest Courts; therefore rights are beware of all in imita-
part or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
in any Drawing. Anything in our name of-
ered for less than a Dollar is a swindle.
June Sheriff's Sale.
' ILL BE SOLD ON THE FIRST TUES-
y, to-wit:
d____________ and fold by virtue ,_____ of Justice Court Levied fl fa
on a
issued from the 1001st District G. M., of
Spaldingcounty ruff Willie B. in Pritchard, favor of Fanny aud other H. Wood¬ fa*
vs. fi
in my hands. Tenant in possesion legally
notified. 86 - 00 .
B. S. CONNELL, Sheriff.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
Willis,
deceased,
the lands
Fifty acres of
--------------riot of Pike county it
being in n'eee the northwest corner of lot No. 103
of woods lying in the west of said
lot adjoining E. C. A on the north and
Thus. Baird on the south.
Let afi persons concerned show eause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary, at my office in
Griffin, on the Bret Monday in June next, wny
such permission should not be granted.
$0.00, E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
/ORDINARY’S XJ Georgia, OFFICE— May 3rd, Spalding 1889.-J. Copk- H.
ty,
Keith, admistrator on estate of W. 8. Brown,
deceased, the has made application for leave to
sell undivided half interest in an acre of
in the
follows; onthenortl ;h o.— square-
as r the , by uh euv 2nd 4iut ui by uj Broad „uuway the south street, by
on east street, on
Ftemister and Arnold and on the west by the
other property belonging to Mrs. Elizabeth
Brown and said estate, for the benefit ol heirs
ad creditors. i ......
Let all persons eoneerened show range be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary, at my office in
Griffin, on the first Monday in June next, why
' tears should not be granted.
.00. E. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
f r '\BDINART’S * OFFICE—Bps lding Coes
tedge V ty, applies GEOHOU.May for 3rd, tetters 1889.—A. of M. El
to me Adminietra
tion on the estate of John D. George, late o
said county, deceased:
Let all person, ooueerned show before
ths the Court Court ot of Ordinary, Ordinary, at at my office, by bv ten ten
o’clock a. ur., on the first Monday ia June
next, should why such tetters of administration
not be f. granted.
88.00. W. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
dinary. By virtue wiM of an order from the Court Court of Or¬
be sold befor thee House
SSS&g&S* “ in the city of Grif.
next, between
improvemento^ther^'n' 1
- or less, wtth with improvements t
and known as the the Georgia Georgia Hotel Hotel lot, lot, bound¬
ed as follows: Oa the north by alley, east by
south by Broadway
.11 JUlU VAW DJUUU FJ
? ' 7, ^.TXxAJbTTJA, l QEOSiQ-lA,
asTo-txr lxi. It* 3 Poxty-*e-trm*».taa. TTwmx o£S»XLloUc*,t
.assess?
A BRILLIANT feoRPS OF WRITERS.
The editorial com of writers and contributors Is unsurimssod. if o«uMted, by :h»tof»
ilor publication in all tho Union. HON. W. J. NORTHBN is tho Prosidont of the Qc artl
Agricultural Society, and a practical former of the most thorouch culture, and his a
always Instructive to formers. DR. DANIEL LEE L not only on. of th, ablest mid ,
virtually _
ad agricultural Journalist in tho country, but he was far font years Commisth
Washinston, D. C., and later, Professor of Agriculture at tho Georgia State University. {
B. J- REDDING is the able and thorouzhty equipped Assistant Commissioner of A«ri<
tho State of Georgia, as wallas an experienced writer- Ftof. J. 8. NEWMAN is In oh
n.k___ Btato Experiment SUUon, and standi ia tho front rank of agricultnral odu______
writers In tho South. With these emUent writers are associated a score or more of msl* cl
mate contributors—including not a few professional agricultural writers-whose monthly j
ales cover every department of form manogeihent and household work, making Tat f
T«a ths most complete, attractive and valuable agricultural Journal la tho South, ea
being worth more than a whole year’s subscription to any fanner who reads aad thlaks I
aection with his work*
Its illustrations are superb, and every department will ho found full to oversowing with )
ter to Instruct, enlighten aad aatortaia. Bacb number is worth tho sum oharged for the |
Xo family eaa afford to bo without TUB SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR. Now is tho
send U your subscriptions. Only One Dollar per annum, tho twelve numbers constit
volume ot extensive information useful to all classes. Smdomi bt Pnm mud People at a J
for tho form, fireside and counting-room. Subscription, It per year. For-* "
etc. 0 address PUBLISHING
THE CULTIVATOR 1
Gxo. W. Hakrison, ) Drawer 8, Atlanta, <
Manager. J be ml for sample copy.
T H K —
GRIFFIN NEW
THE GREAT NEWSPAPER OF MIDI)]
GEORGIA
★ WILL CONTAIN DURING 1889
ALL THE NEW!
FULL LINE OF XELEGRAMS,
FULL LOCAL DEPARTMENT.
FULL FARMERS DEPARTMENT.
SOUND DEMOCRATIC E0IT0
.1
' ’’fl
INTERESTING MISCELLANY.
MOBE AND BETTER MATTES FOB LESS C0S1
THAN ANY OTHER PAPER PUBLISHED.
totrr*
TWENTY-EIGHT COLUMNS DAILY FOR 0
$5.00 Per Year.
..*£> •
FORTY-EIGHT COLUMNS WElkLV FOR
50 Cents a Year.
-tol-
No one can afford to be without it.
Everybody can afford to take it.
Subscribe now and get all the news di
‘
ing the year. xj-.i i