Newspaper Page Text
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Wmm
m
V.
• V ; •
. dfc Prop’r
• Annum. .90.00
J* •■* » «.« * *»« « . 1 . 00 .
r«b. 5,1890,
nmu <*■
• tor the Irit
sqptfftSrtrt
»Mr js&isi w*r**~**»U U,««.r
r^M*terttePtete
i la reported to
« ;de facto
M never than
'
H "that under the
pay of baaehaU play-
k ** teetna hna when been little re-
l i year a
monarch like the King of
i $7,500 a month.
should entertain no
with the United
African affaire,
has enough on it*
shape of ft gjDSfefred
at home.
1 Ingulja Si
to the fast t
srr^s
*
leftof 1
erceptWagan,,
lit will be Woo KrurU •
ss- PeterJaekaon, the colored pUgiliat,
hk readumH 1 In New it* Tork,
to meet
L. gntiiv&n. If Sullivan con-
reject* the gage of
ahonld receive a good
Senator ln-
n Horr,
who need to poae aa a CongVee-
says that the b gen-
opinion over the country ‘ -y la
t President Harrison is wefiken-
than strengthening the
party. It wIM be ins¬
tills that Mr. Horr iow
Harrison has followed
up his riding rough shod over bbth
from Illinois a by by quarrel- quarrel-
mittfcg ling with Senator Sherman iberamn ftS find
Senator Qw* Jnay. has
lovely black eyes res to sumklry
members of the lower
as if he
XTpnr bks taken a contract to knock out
party friends in Congress.
New York legislative district*,
which the Republicans are eon
to maintain a majority in the
lature and elect two United
i, is shown by the fact
Republican Senatorial
i ths vote is 165,520, while in
•even Democratic districts the total
As 888,401, nn average of 29,600* ns
to the former and 84.000 os to the
Utter. One strong Republican cdun-
ty. 89. Lawrence, costing 21,100
votes, has three members ot the
while the Dei 10 -
i county of Queens, casting 24,-
to.' Other instate**
It |s by this sprite
ut the Republicans
their ascendency in the
i of tiie State and Ito the
ms Senate. To ensetfioir
they jabber d«wsSoii4 waul atout
'
twin af OintmenliforCsla-rb {hat
fifkki HsMiff,
: kMf Ni«ly deitirey the the whole repeat
derange the «ys-
mucuasur-
ir be use l ex-
itable p iy»f-
o is ten fold
derive
lanufact ired
0., contain*
lly, and Mirfcce* net*
taoeou*
Mite Han’. Cat irrh
be . genuine. It ia taken
Cure t
Toledo, 9, Ohio, hy F.
, price 75c per hot tie.
k’s iwell,
8 S Exi r ,
Cure in
’with great
>-:ig the oily
’ 1 alfiy.
m
Itasotkh-
i*a
utry in
un
‘Reed,
; a quorum
no quorui , and clour* u* 4oI-
Iowa:
If any legal political question by tbe
can be aetuad i nts country jurists
long acquiescence of all of }i certainly and
statesmen this has passed beyond parties, the domain
of discussion. When, therefore, the
present speaker repudiated this set
ii*d^con*traetioa o t . t b s con.
stltntion and decided that
when tiie official record, which the
constitution requires the House to
keep, shows on the call of yeas and
nays that a quorum has not voted
be can count members present and
not voting, and thus by nis own act,
outside of the recorded vote, deter¬
mine that a measure duty has passed, we of
considered it our of as a part
the representatives the people form to
enter onr protests in every
available to use under the circum¬
stances.
We are not contending for the
right of the minority of the to speaker govern, have as
the supporters
endeavored to make the country be¬
lieve. On the contrary we are den: eject
ing the right of the minority to
members from seats or to pass laws
for Under the the government constitution of the majority people. of
members a
the of the House constitutes
a quorum to do business and we are
simple insisting that lew than a ma¬
jority We shall contending not do business. that the
are ina¬
nity shall take tne responsibility
shall blob properly the belongs House to of them Itepre- and
come to
setutives and vote if they desire to
control it* proceedings, against their and right we are
carry protesting their measures by counting to ns
when we do not vote.
Tbe claim of the majority that they
have the right to govern the House
without attending its sessions and
business taking part is in the conduct of its
refutation. too It preposterous be evident to require
must to
any one who onderetands the posi¬
tion taken by the Democratic minori¬
ty of the House that it cannot possi¬
bly result in any injury to the coun¬
try, or in any injustice to the ma¬
jority. compel Its the only Republican effect will majority, be to
elected by the people, to assume the
responsibility Upon the other imposed band, upon one them.
no can
foresee the evils that may result Jrom
the inauguration of the practice of
oounting make votes not cast in order to
a quorum,
Under it a minority of the mem
bers elect to tbe House and Senate
may pass the most tyrannical laws
for the oppression of the people and
the most corrupt laws for the spolia¬
tion of the public treasury. Whether
so intended or not, its direet ten¬
heretofore dency is to existing break down the barrier
for the protec¬
tion of the citizens against the en¬
croachments of power and the spolia¬
tion of the treasury by destroying
the limitation which the constitution
has wisely imposed upon the legisla¬
made tive department. restrain Constitutions majorities are
to And
protect minorities. A majority riding
without limitations or restraint*
upon its power is a pure despotism
mid is inconsistent with our system
of government.
"The American Federation of
Labor,” says tbe Chicago Herald,
“has asked that the next census in¬
clude the number of men in the
United States that are ont o! work.
But it won’t do it. The statistics
of idle workingmen to whom Pro¬
tection has promised to give steady
employment will be os carefully
omitted from the census as those of
the mortgagee which Protection has
compelled farmers to put on their
farms. The protected monopolies
did not get Porter appointed Super¬
intendent of the Census to collect any
such figures.”
Ever sinee' the Republicans en¬
franchised the negroes of the South,
and thereby increased the represen¬
tation of the South in Congress and
in the Electoral College without in¬
creasing the Republican vote, they
have bad b&d luck with thair rascali¬
ty. Every solitary infamy that
they have ever invented to cheat
and oppress the Democracy has re¬
turned to plague theinventors. The
same result may be anticipated from
any new force law that they may
pass tor federal ejections.
A ranrehanfs clerk wrote a check
for forty dollars, and spelled the nu¬
merical adjective “f-o-u-r-t-y.” His
employer directed his attention to
the error, with the remark, “you
seem to ha\e a bad spell this morn¬
ing,” to which theclerk replied, “sure
enough; I’ve left out tne ‘g-h’!’
Let ns how the clerk will still fur¬
ther while, amend his orthography, from "bad meon- spell”
it and suffer a
of headache, superinduced by consti¬
pation, ask your druggist for I>r.
Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets.
Entirely vegetable, mud prompt and
effective, and n most efficient remedy
for derangements of the Hver. stom¬
ach and bowels.
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mm. Winslow’s Soothing vhcp
children teething, is the pres rip-
of one of the best eniate aaraes
physicians in the United States,
nas been used for ortv vreirs
never-failing success ifvmi'lions
mothers for their children. J hir¬
tbe process of teething i t* value
incalculable. It relievesf he -iiild
pais. cu«* dysentery and dinr-
nug2eod&wlv
ABBOTT~s"iA8T all INDIAN CORN
Reninves Corns, Bunions
Wart*.
more truth
presen tative
said to Mr.
other day:
the Ideal
speaker who
House. He
irat to*mnke
| a motion to adjourn; ■■1 he won’t re¬
cognise tbe demand of a Democrat
for toilers, and’#- leaning k B over con-
fldcntially—"he is ^ considering a
proposition to require the indorse-
mentof ment of two two Republicans Repot torn Berfi-
you, Cuibepsou, if you can get any
one for a second."
Senator-elect Brice ha* gained a
significant victory over the newspa¬
pers which unjustly charge him with
securing his election by bribery. In
the election for a successor to tbe
late Representative Knapp, the Re¬
publicans opposed John L. Geyer
vigorously on tbe ground that be
was a Brice worker in the recent sen¬
atorial contest, bnt Mr. Geyer was
elected by a majority greater than
was ever before received by a Demo¬
cratic candidate for tbe Legislature
in his district. This is the way the
Ohio Democrats answer the charges
against Mr. Brice,
“ The Merry Wives of Wlneor ”
could scarcely have played such fan¬
tastic to the pranks ills had they been subject
many so common Pierced among
tbe women of to-day. Dr.
Favorite Prescription is a legitimate
medicine, carefully compounded by
un and experienced adapted and woman’s skillful physician, delicate
to
organiiation. in its composition, it is purely and vegetable perfectly
harmless in its effects in any condi¬
tion of the system. It cures ail those
weaknesses and ailments peculiar to
for women, aud it is the only medicine
women, sold by druggists, under
facturers, a positive guarantee it will from give the satisfac¬ manu¬
rnat
tion id every case, or money will be
refunded. This guarantee has been
faithfully printed on carried the bottle-wrapper, out for many years. and
A Haunted House.
this body of our* ha* been likened to a ten¬
ement. It often ha* a hannted apartment—
the stomach. Seared by the eldrich sprite,
dyspepsia,digestion What break the flies spell, and what refuses to return. the
ran can raise
ban laid upon the unhappy organ*? We an¬
swer Bitters, uoheositatingly, Hostetter’s the Stomach
and we are warranted in response
ing by the recorded testimony of myriads, cover¬
a period of over a *|hird of a century, A
course of the Ritters, begun in any siege of
the affliction, and persistently followed, will
terminate in cure positive, not partial. The
Bitters restores tone to the epigastric nerve,
the renews cellular and purifies that the juices exuding the food from dl-
tissue act upon
geetively, expels bile from tbe stomach and
ths blood, and promotes a regular habit of
body. Malaria, kidney complaint, nervous¬
ness, rheumatism and neuralgia give way to
t R. R. TIE TABLE 10 . 10 ,
In effect January 20th, 1800.
No. 15— Daily.
Idea ve Griffin...........................
ArriveAtlanta.........................
No. 10 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta........................
Arrive Griffin.......................... '
.....7:05 '•
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon..........................
Arrive Griffln.......................... .......5:28 “
M Atlanta ...v..*.................. .......7:00 “
No. 11 —Daily.
Arrive Griffln.................................10:20 “
** Atlanta......................... 12:01 D.m.
No. 1 —Daily.
Leave Macon...........................
Arrive Oriffln........................... .......7:55 “
Arrive Atlanta.......................... .......9:30 “
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta........................ ..... 7:00 a. m
Arrive Griffin.......................... ..... 8:82 “
11 M n con........................... .....10:25
No. 12 —Daily.
ijeave Atlanta.........................
Arrive Griffln............................
*• Macon ...........................
No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta..........................
Arrive Griffin.........................
u Macon.......................... ...11:00 “
No. 83 —Daily.
.... 8:86 a. m.
“ Newnan........................ ...10:21 “
Am vp Carrollton......................:..U:35
No. 84 —Daily.
Leave Carrollton ..................... ..4:20 p. m
Newnan............. 5:25
Arrive Griffin..................................7:20 “
No. 31 —Daily, except Sunday.
Leave Griffln................................12:01 p. m.
Arrive Carrollton..........................14:58“ “
No. 32— Daily. Except Sunday.
l*>ave Carrollton. .........*................5:45 it.ni
Arrive Griffln................................10:00 ”
‘For hu ther information relative to tick
et rate*, best route*. Hchedule, Ac., write to
or call on .1 NO. L. REID, Agt
E. T. CHARLTON. 0. A.. Griffl D . (in.
New Advertisement*.
TO ADVERTISERS
A lint of 1000 newspaper* intc
ST ATES AND SECTIONS wil on ap
pljcation—FREE, To those who want their advertising to pat
we and can o f fe r no work better thauthe medium for thorough
effective variou sestionsof
our Select Local List.
GEO. P. ROWELL A CO.,
Newspaper 10 Advertising New Bureau,
Spruce street. or
IT WILL PAY YOU
write If you propose going We*t or Northwest, to
to me. I represent the ShortLin*.
FRED. D. BUSH, D. P. A.
octSdiwflm • Atlanta. Ga.
PlSSBf 5
lit i U.I ■ IE5 GOLDEN SPEant
j t j, - —
It openttM ao
ty Uut tiio pntinnt t
m h«i• «wir«. book ;
NHL ««
a W. MANGHAM A SONS, Street,IGrifin. Druggist
87 HOI. I
sometime* craving food and CsHiMf ra-
Wy vjnoa;. IV :ng and grim aafpiqg at then
ot ms are
finatt<
l-Mk's Try VermIfutrie
mm sec l ir
"OR TO
=S= -1 ¥ f 7 W
- v»
■
psia
people miserable,
and often lead* to self-destruction. Distress
stomach, sick headache.
appetite, a faint. “ all gone”
. irregu-
feeling, bad testa, coated tongue, and
Distress iarity of the bowels, are
some of the more common
, After symptoms. Dyspepsia does
evt W *SLS£: ’ *’*
Cgtlna * g “
ffilSgrtn* r----T ____
hi mil i surely
l-a,nUa. which it acts gently, yet
efficiently. t tones ton. the stomach and other
•*** relates the digestion, create* a
overcoming tiie loeai»y*np-|j A€kr i a «L|%
torus removes the sympa- neauaviiu
thetle effects of the disease, banishes the
headaeuo, and refreshes the tired mind.
“ I have been troubled with dyspepsia. I
had but little appetite, and what I did eat
ii.. . distressed mo, or did me
neari” jjjtie good. In nn hour
bum after eating I would expe¬
rience a faintness, or tired, all-gono feeling,
ut though I Iiad not eaten anything- My trou¬
ble, I think, was aggravated by my business,
whirl! Is that of a painter, and from being
more or less shut up in a ffoUf
room with fresh paint Last g^mapjl
spring I took flood's S:.r3.i-
rhla ritla—tooif —took throe throe bottles. bottles, ft did me an
immenro *m< *nt i( gout H g-tvo me an
appetite, and j::y toed ri’.ished and satisfied
the crowing 1 had .previously experienced.”
C20HOE A. Fade, Watertown, Mass. ^
_____
Hood's Sarsaparilla Prepared only
grid by u U «ln>ri.a* ! *■ ft; dx for ft.
by C. 1. liOOIW C>. ApoU.coarienJ5bwcTl, Msss.
too Doses Cne “Dollar
■Jew AdvetlisemenU.
MM mSa M fiC* of
1 I
i
Red Cross Diamond Brand.
CkldteMr
Tb« only mire
RBufort to the f
MADE WITH BOILING WATER.
EPPS’S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
COCOA
MADE WITH BOILING MILK.
AGE NTS WANTED
AT OKCa to*sell the
Cheapest, Aii«h™ttc» moat Com¬
•saw* plete,
HISTORY of
STANLEY’S wJ WONDERFUL
ADVENTURES
" AFRICA
Just Out. Already Belling immensely. Profit* Out¬ 98
fit* FBEEr SnppUes on credit.
to 95 per pay Big terms. Immense
to coin money pmsT chance, address
at once,
E. R. CURTIS & CO., Pubs. Cincirmati.
THE G LORY OT M A I
jTRENGTH.ViTAi IT’ b
How Lost f How RegalMtf,
KNOWTHM TH*
SCIENCE OF TredttM t
A Sc!entitle and Standard Popular Medical
on :! •: Error* of Youtb,l > rematureDecline,Nervous J&SL
tnd Phytteal Debility, Impurffle* otJUt
ExhaustedVitality Miseries
ntold
h v'tm
Jo,- L ,Vi . .Business, the') H
M«4 i . rkiUful intains pretenders. Possess taW Beautiful Rrmt
Wo: jf . Ii c 300 paeei, rojralSva
« 1 .- x. c obossed, full gilt. Pries ofily $1.00 bj
m j,. concealed In plain wrapper. Mu*
into i.-i * i*i. jectua Free, if you apj “—
dk -rioiKal author, Wm, II. Pari
Cd 1 Cw GOLD AND JEWEL
Do. . r < Notional BSSAT Medical Ai
this P C7,H on 1
PHVHiUAI, DEBILITV.Dr, be
of dentlallr. Assistant br Physicians mail in may
PEABODY or MEDi pe
THE Maw&fcOVtor _______ _ alf
No. « Bniitach St« Boston.
ordm^for ^booka or letters for advice should be
vannah LIPPMAN^BROS.,. Oa. Wholesale jnen25dAwlya Agents, fl
QUfltS SALT RHEUM, PILES
TETTcn. BURNS
^SCALDS, SORC9,
WOUNDS. IN¬
FANT'* SORES
And CHAFING,
SORE NIPPLES
AN INVALU¬
ABLE REMEDY
FOR CATARRH
25^ ftcuatit Feeirovt asuaoisr* Gu*a**»rec *cu
IT *N A
ate by M B Dr cw ly
NORTH BfJifND—D aily
Leas* Columbus...........................7: 96 a. m.
Arrive Oriffln..................................10-18 ............................01
“ Columbus..........!..................4:20 A tjsirt*. P-®-
Leave ::
Jsctre^Myta*,.....-.....................
liveCulumbuHo....................
OriOn*.'!""".'"'..".""!. ........... 4:00 6:80 “
Arrive Columbus...........................
NOBTH BOUND—SuhdaV Okly.
Leave Griffin....................*............. P “'
Arrive McDonough.........................4:45
SOUTH BOUND—Sunday Only.
Leave ArriveQriffln...... McDonogh................,........7.80 ....8:16 am.
..............
NOBTH BOUND—Fxsioht.
Leave Columbus.............. 7:50 a, m.
Arrive Griffin.............................2:05 4:00 p. m.
Leave Griffln............
Arrive McDonough................5:05
.SOUTH BOUND—Freight.
R^.ve McDonough.. .... ....7 00 a. m.
Arrive Gnmn...... .......8:05
Leave GrUBn.....'..................9:25 “
Arrive Columbus...........................•..8:20 p. m.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
f t EORGIA—Spalding County .—Whereas.
\y C. P. Daniel, administrator of E. P. Dan¬
iel, represents to the Court in his petition, he ha*
duly filed and entered on record, that
fully administrated E. P. DanM’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concern¬
ed, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administrator should
not be discharged from his administration,
and receive letters 6f dismission, on the first
Monday 96.15. in April, E. W. 1890. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
JN VDt BORGIA—Spalmno County.—W hereas,
Mary A. Burdett, administratrix of
Presley Burdett, represents to the Court
in her petition, duly filed and entered on rec¬
ord, that she has fully administered Presley
Burdett’s estate.
This is therefore to cite all persons concern¬
ed, kindred and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administratrixshould
not be discharged from her administration,
and receive letters of dismission on the first
Monday 9«.15.* in April E. W. 1890. HAMMOND, Ordinary
* t yKDINART’S " OFFICE—Spauuxu Loun-
ty, Georgia, Jan. 81st 1890.—J. H.
Whitt has applied to me for letters of admin¬
istration on tne estate of Charles Hammond,
late of said connty, deceased.
Let all persons concerned show cause before
the Court of Ordinary, the at Monday my office, in by March ten
O’clock a. m., on first
next, why such letters of administration
should not be granted.
93.00. E. W. HJ IAMMOND, Ordinary.
Eclectic Magazine
• -OF—
Foreign Literature, Science and
* •*)-
1890--46th YEAR.
The Foreign Magatine* embody the
thought* of the ablest Eclectit^'agaxine writer* of Europe.
i* the aim of the articled. to
and reprint these Esh.vys, T 'he plan of
Eclectic include* Science,
Biographical Sketch**, Historical
Art Criticism, Travel*, Poetry, and
Stories, from
THE ABLEST WRITERS in the
The following are the names of some of
leading authors whose article* appear in
pages of the Eclectic.
AUTHOR 3
Bt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone,
Alfred Tennyson,
Professor Huxley,
Professor W. H. Maliock, Tyndall,
J. Norman Lockyear t R. S.
E. A. Freeman, D. C L.
E. B. Tyler,
Prof. Max Muller,
Prof Owen, _
___
Henry Tainc,
James Anthony Froude,
Thomas Hughes,
Algernon C. Swinburne,
William Black,
Mrs. Oliphant, Newman,
Cardinal
Miss Thackeray,
Thomas Hardy, •
Robert Buchanan,
American Etc., Etc.
The Eeleetic enables the reader
keep himsell informed on tbe great
of the day throughout the world, and no
telligent American can afford to be
it.
The Eclectic comprises each year two
volumes of over 1700 pages. Each of
volumes contains a fine steel
which adds much to the attraction of
magazine.
TERMS.—Single |5; copies, 45 920. cents; Trial one
one year, five copies,
aenption for three months 91. The
TIC; and any magatine, $8.
E. R. PELT0N, PubHrtiffr;
25 Bond Street, New York.
T.i- Rr^TSpRi'SG
/AEDICIN T
IN Tjii? WORI d is ;
I n w r te * I Liu w S
t e ©
AS A S F p | N G fN 1
v 7 n i r 1 n h TO 1 ¥ I
AILMENTS ri rr \TJr OF C R^r THE Y
5Y5TE/«\,TAKE li • ^
Big G ha* given nnlvet.
sol aatiafaction in tbi
curs of Qonorrhcea and
“fi Sleet. I preacribe It and
feet safe inrecoipmepd-
Dsa Har , IH.
PRICE, SI.OS.
Sold by Druggist*.
TO l||§fc§| WEAK WEN
C, Viwum, p ssf , com,
NEWS,
ABLIfi
Griffin News and
DAIUY AND WEEKLY, 1
* Wm
(CONSOIJDATED MAT 2ff r 198S,)
-- \ OF --—
More Value vpyi
jr To
other medium in
— -—• 11
Wilh the combine
and well established«
prices of only one. "■4^
~—
It is published In one oi the agricult
commercial, of manufacturing most progressive and State rail in
centers the 1
South, with a large and Intelligent s
for rounding distribution. population and extra
Being a first-claas tihe * newspaper, folly
all “ demands * ‘ of times “ at and;
ments of its constituency, it t is Is P not oi
by nearly every family ltt counties,
but in the eight surrounding
a good general circulation in tbe State mt
other States.
IT COVERS ITS WHOLE HEI
and covers it completely*
Of tbe 257 newspapers >rs and periodic
published in the State of Gc Georgia, the NE
AND SUN ranks eminent an among the two d
en that stand at the bend lead of the list.
greatest foreign patronage comes ft
largest the and shrewdest most experienced and best advei adv<
ana
agencies.
copies Prices of low. Daily Write and Weekly for lates and sample
to
' DOUGLAS GLEANER, Publkter.
Griffis, Ga. |
The Best Newspapers.
........................ ■ ......-......-........ L -;r WM
Geo. P, Rowell A Co., proprietors of tbe AmerieanNswagspar AfiverMStag Burras,
No. 10 Spruce Kti-eet, New York, have issued a pamphlet coetahriMf idUktriP
fioli of newspapers for advertiser* to use, who prefer to confine their i
vestments to such as art likely to pay them best.
This catalogue names all the greatest and all tbe best neWgpMlgk*. fitters
made incluyes every religious, agricultural, or othet oUM Wsektf, kArireN rtg»ta
issue of so many as ten thousand copies; all tbe great monthlies, the leading ^
lies in all the largest cities, and aims to name the best p op e r fo exerg county seat hat¬
ing a population of so much as three thousand, and evety other tOVH, rOUrngt *
city having so much as five thousand population, provided * pwpev li priwted wbiA
The total output for a single edition of the publications named hr this Catalogue si
Preferred Newspapapers iB between fifteen and eighteeen million copies, and is, ttere
fore, more than enough to place a paper regularly with every family in every 8Mt*
apd Teritory.
The number of American newspaper* is now so large that the great advertisio*
agencies do not find it wise to attempt to specially represent them «U, and wt th*
laet meeting oi the Association of General Newspaper Advertising Agent* it wss t*
solved that each member should prepare a list which, nil Ilf i niiwnutlsg the beet pu¬
llers, should name only about one iu ten of oil which am published.
It has been demonstrated that fully one-haH of all the output of ilmsrjr*n news*-
pers emenate frpra less thpp seven hundred offlere, and that a list of more than t«
thousand newspapers cap be made np, among which no single ope fJMAt* rrgutoBj
so many as a thousand copies To have dealings with this myriad of small papen
cannot be thought of hy the majority of advertisers, and advertising agShcte *"4
transactions with them to he the reverse of profitable.
The carefully selected list which is now issued by Geo. P, Rowell k B*. is tte Sf^
I which has been pnt forth ir, accordance with ifle resolution of the AaseociatWtf’ff
General Newspaper Advertising Agents, v"
ft is issued hy one of the oldest, liest equipned apd most favorably kuown M •*
the agencies; and is likely to invite cartful examination and criticism from both ad¬
vertiser* and publishers. Geo. P, Rowell & Co. have one of the mo« thoroughly
fected systems and te«t facilities for conducting the necessary negotlat**!* *ftts
papers and watching the fulfillment of. advertising contracts that ha* «T*r tern *t‘
tempted hy any house iu ttd« line in thi* or any otter country. At tteir Advertta
ing Boreau, which was established in 1865, have originated moat of tte method* <*
conducting such a business, which have proved to be permanently s u ecea a fai- They
have issued the American Newspaper Directory for tweuty-tWo yUarC’ They now ad¬
vise their o<l verti sing patron* that it will alway* be well to confine adi wti * —** t ou
ders to pafiers selected from tbe Catalogue of Pretarred Papen here reisried to, ■»'
)eM the advertiser has conclusive W ^
some re«e<
The population of.every place where a net
aloguc; county last seats are designated, and t
paper by the thousand issue f the American “
seventeen papws named in the
tactad: of these only twenty-four are
itte perhaps not necessary to add,
weave to whieh it* ments entitle it.