Newspaper Page Text
t 5Vm mtu£ 2lmmVr.
VOL IV.
TRI- WEEK.LY.
AMERICUS, GEORGIA. FRIDAY MORNING MAY 19. 1882
NO. 2.
£mtim I PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS |
1'1 1IMSIIE1) 11T
W. Xa. OXiESSirXlR.
OFFICE OX ( OTTOS AVENUE,
Su-Toscription. Xlates:
Tar-Weekly One
Weekly One Year
Si'NBAY Issue One
Official Directory,
aMKRICU*
Americiw I* tin* county seat of Sumter Uouhtjr,
Georgia, and in riiuitvd on the Southwestern
Railroad, 71 miles southwest of Macon, and about
eighty miles north of the Florida line. It is a
city of 0.000 inhabitant^ beautifully situatod and
liandsoniely Improved. It I* the centre of trade
lyrising some six counties,
receipt.h belli^ 80,000
It. B. HINTON.
HINTON & MATHEWS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAWj
Will practice In all tho counties of this .Tudplal i
Circuit, also In Dooly county, in the Supr
SOUTHERN CARMISO. often by renting, and they were far j best customers are buying less and j
j better able to manage the lroedmen i making closer bargains, and i lind ;
in tbe then disorganized and dis-; the planters, confirming their state-1
tur. of ucoraia Porminu, Pn.t and | conraging state of labor, than the 1 meats ami allowing themselves close j plaster.
I’Hl’N AND PHfNIC.
The doctor’s tree. Mustard-
old slave owners. I buyers wlien they have cash in
Hartford ( Comu) Daily cour.ni. | Nevertheless tho country was | hand.
A Hartford gentleman who has | without money and cotton was the . Northern capital,especially from ;
boon a»nn<l:../* 0 An,n flmn in . 011 1 V ftl'flM Oil wllifll j I. COIlM 1 NcW Yfirlf. IS KPolfilltr 11T Unfit m All t. I
for si large «
the Kind. Guard-
melon patch.
W TT imif'RPnTTr'XT I telligent study of the condition of j handling or the owner’s cotton, and j mers oftlie now south, and which i .... . , , ,
. XI. MlHDlW/llTn, affairs in one section of the state t to get on advance of provisions. | are rapidly being converted into i *V!mt is the writ of attach-
ATTORNEY AT I.AW, | since the war: | mules or farming tools, or fertili-1 rich und highly productive lands " ,c . nt • A letter from a young Indy
f FFSIU'IU'll GFOKCIA 4 - . • - A :i • ?.»!. toon > vnra tlm nbintor miial. ulmlirn Ilia I .,»•.» k..ln» (nnH»nM.v.,>l Cam u i»nll ' 1‘.
Collections a Specialty.
ilajllwly
Amehicis, Ga. April loth, 1882. j zers.the planter must pledge his are being mortgaged fora small
Dkak Sir: I have been able du- cotton to lie delivered at tile ware-j part of their value to furnish eapi-
Tho rattlesnake carries bis music
box on train.
Romantic death. A voune ladv
lady dentist,
bowling sue-
Valparaiso has
Doubtless she is
cess.
I ring the past tliree weeks to meet j bouse in the full. The loan ot what- J tul for the *o men to work with, at L
j a large number of planters, cotton j ever amount must be paid in lull) a lower rate and for a longer time i ci
w. n. beaks. j f act0I . Si bankers, merchants and 1 within the current your, so that new ! than local banks or capitalists will ( superlat ive eonmarison
HR IV I tll’lltv f, Wlf ; others engaged in business through ! advances might uc obtained the , do it. With small interest pay- bates it worse than a barher
l'Il« ft, J, Mwlllft IV iM'il. I middle and southwest Georgia and I I°ll 0 ' v, ng season, eonsni|iienlly the | inents to meet each year, instead i on „i 1 nir
V/. .1. SKAII:
He
hates
EI.LAVII.LE, GA.
ml Aincrii’U-s ha* for many year* bad tbe repu
tation of boiitir on® of ths bcnlthioet cities in
America. Heine situated but a short distance
•hove the tropical region. n«ir!y nil varieties of j
fruits, grains and flower* can be grown success- •
inlly.wl.il.' v.-fit-lntion I, luxuriant .rid rapid in »
It i growth. The city has lino public schools, «<•*«! ! ./a-LIjOI. HC? y
'Lurches, u large public library, u new opein nn ivtur n .
Louse completely furuished with scenery mid FiLiIjAv LLiiAj, l»A
which scats 1.IXK) persona, a well organized tire
department which includes two steamer*, while
C. R. McCRORY,
at Law
the streets are sewered and lighted. Three good
l.oiel* furnish the best of accommodations. It is
;he largo-t city in Southwest Georgia, and L
fdlv growing til imputation and
of lu sines- * -■*
calth. As a place
Collections
■April-6 tf
Specialty.
place
nda beautiful slid pleasant rcsKlem* |
ii presents a-rraetlon* pos»e*.«t d .»•/ few cities in !
the South. IVra*n*;at a distance looking for a !•>. .
cation in the South, will be supplied with all Birth- ,
er iuformat'o.i they m»y desire by addressing the ’
Editor of the Kixorukr.
(.TTY OFFICERS.
Mnvar—I. B. Felder. •
rierk and Record. r-D. K. Brinson, !
Aldermen—W. F. Burt, 1*. II. WilllHms, K. K.
To h, I.. B. Bosworth, It. I). Wat»*, W..I. Ilnr- '
per. Citv Council meet* every Monday eveiilni;. ,
Voile® Ferre—City Marshal, A. I*, ldngo.
Policemen- AY. \V. Wheeler, Pat Krsklnf, .1. W. ;
v.hb, S. II. Mltcheli.
''Mil
(V .
—I. P. Halford.
• IKE DEPARTMENT.
Dhici—W. 1* Burt.
Artshtant ('hie —T. Cl. Nnbolsin.
Wide Awake No. 1. (Steamer.) Foreman, W.
M. Hawke*.
Mechanics No. 2, (Steamer,) Foreman, II. D.
Watt*.
Vigilance No. 2—Foreman, Mingo Glaze.
Hook and Ladder—Foreman, Henry Aiidcr.ion.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Third District, o- mposed of the counties n
Taylor, Macon, Schley, Sumter, Dooly, Pulaski,
Dodge, Montgomery, Wilcox, Telfair, Lee Web
ster, Stewart, Irwin, Coflee. Gen. Phil. Cook,
wngrestmau.
LEGISLATIVE.
Senatorial District composed of the counties of
Sumter, Schley, ’ ” “
Cucrry. Kepretov
.John L Adderton.
SUPERIOR COURT.
Southwestern Circuit, composed of tbe countlrs I
of Huuiter, Schley, .viacoii, Lee, Webster and
Stewart. .
Judge, lion. <\ V. Crisp. Solicitor General. C. »
Drs. Westbrook & Joiner,
Physicians and Surgeons.
andehsoxville.
H. C. GARDNER,
ATTORNEY AT l AW,
OGLETHORPE. GA.,
tion given to collections maylO.tf
Lawson F. Collier,
Attorney-at-Law
—AND-
Roal Estate A/gent.
DRAYTON, GEORGIA.
Twenty thousand acre* of wild laud for solo In
Dooly County.
TONSORIAL EMPORIUMI
ANDEltSON & LIINFORD
»K I'.n
yl® ami •<
Thcv lire
e be
to learn from them the past liisto-1 faniiei* evttrv acre oi «oi.* j of Ibo whole «l' tlioir principal Holes 0
ry of southern farming, its present! ton ,ie no,| W earn for. and as little on which the)' have paid a largo “J »<** that winter is lingering in
' corn and small grain as possible to j rate of interest, this class of far- j the lap of spring. The horrid
feed through the fall, and raised f mors will have the surplus money thing.—[Susan 15.
little or no meat, trusting to bis ; from these crops to put into the uni \ y e stoops to eulogize coil-
next spring x advances to enable , improvement of their farms, and i |j 8 (, | )a || s j»;|| nevol . ; lve j at jj os .
him to buy cuougli then to carry j mu tln-m on a cash system and this ton boarding bouse,
him tliroiigli the season. When | alone will rapidly increase tbe sc-
lands became exhausted, instead of J curity for the loan. From careful ••*>' Gould s ineome is *1 a see-
plowing deeper or fertilizing, more ! inquiry I learn that the credit of ont b ^O-- if wouldn’t be if be
land was cleared and this “rever- j these farmers is considered tbe best : ployed poker with Henri Watter-
cut’' or new land put into cotton ; be country alfords, that they have HOn -
the second year. For the past four j been prompt and reliable in meet j l!ob Ingersoli is willing to liet
or live years, the intelligent class j [ n g their obligations at maturity , y 1,000 that there is no bell. That's
of farmers, iiave seen that, by tliis i and are sought for by the banks as 1 a safe bet for the other man if be
kind of farming they were impov- i the best borrowers. loses,
ensiling their lands and that the | Kvory progressive, successful
improved condition, and wiiat is
ex pee led in tbe immediate future.
My own inspection of a number of
farms, including old plantations of
thirty years or more cultivation,
and new farms only recently clear-
ed, corroborate these statements
and utlord convincing proof that
tbe southern farmer is rapidly
learning that with hired labor, a
small quantity of land, well culti
vated, will produce a more profita
ble crop than the large acreage
worked with slave labor was ever
capable of doing.
At the close oi the war, the south ; factors and bankers, with their j farmer is an oracle in Ids neighbor-! , " ' , . H . ”"- v I!* 1 '* 01 . 1 wh0,n
...is stripped of everything but its high rates of interest, and tbe mcr- j hood and his now methods are » di -bke, mat is the per-
lands and owed a large individual I chnnts with the enormous prolitx, J carefully observed, dismissed and s “" 1* " hn,n 50,1 on * ht never t0
indebtedness incurred upon oredit! attending a long credit system, 1 followed. Tbe ideas of northern
were reaping all the benellts of farmers, especially in tbe
their labor. The planter wn« kept j proved machinery and I
upon
given to the property value of the
negro this valuation in Georgia
alone amounting to $30,000,000
more than the whole amount of her
present taxable property.
Tiic high price of cotton induced
all the planters to cultivate as much
ol this crop as they could, and us
tbe new status of the negro Imd put
tbe management of the labor outol
the planters’ power, they almost
invariably rented out their plunta-
tions to tlie freedmen to get, if
possible, ns large a revenue as in
the days before the war and witli
no mere personal. Many planters
went to the cities to live, leaving 1
tbe entire -management of tli
poor by tho warn of enough capita
to run bis farm on a cash basis,
and bis farm was worked at a great
and increasing disadvantage. This
lias led to buying smaller farms,
working fewer acres on tho large
plantations, rotating crops, and
resting the land; to a better and
deeper system of plowing, and to
the use of home-made manures, and
tbe best commercial fertilizers, for
improving the soil, so as to get in
muuy instances, a bale of cotton to
Hie Abre
look 11
useof im-
tools. are
lesired and any of thin class who
wdl come here and settle, will be
gladly welcomed and bis opinions
and advice respected. The soil in
this section is strong with a deop,
red clay subsoil, easily tilled and
yields ularge return fora miuiII
amount of labor. The land is cheap,
tlie expense of clearing and prepar
ing for tlie plow, not over two dol
lars and a half an acre and the eli- i paper
The New York Herald inquires:
“How shall we swear the Chinese?’ -
How would it do to swear st
them?
Oscar Wilde plays poker. In
San Francisco lie recently won
$300 on four (luce?. A clear case
of two two.
Tlie boy who said soda water
tastes like your foot’s asleep, now
says Whins heei is Iliuwnl solid
Iiave got so long
not for tlie lingers
*' Ili-uulwrtiimsufCourt .re hrM follow.: j prepansl tlmn everts woltopoo thler customer*. J J -- " ‘
lee county, second Monft.y iu March und roc- , All wljo mnv tvl.li to huvo Ktinvtnic. Huir Cutting, long as the COttOll relit WHS paid,
or.,I Monday iu November. i Slmmpooinir, etr., done lit Unn.elate etylv, they IImI., f nl . t |,„ mP | |i n ,]„ ,..l,j r .l,
Seldey count v, fourth Monday tn Mcrcb and ! trottlil bu plumed lolmve them cation them. 8hop [ cateuillUC lOI lilt lilt. hllOtlS fly WHICH
li.urth Mouitcy "In September. ! near the entrance to Barlow llotm-. | they Were farmed. 1 lie negroes
Moruievfn October~~ ~ i worked immense tracts of land,
• Smh-re^S OTenil Monday In April .nd SOabrOa ' -
:*ct»ncl In Urtobsi*.
Stewart county, fourth Monday in April and fSiircM-vir to,I
fourth Monday In Otr'*— ^
plantations to the freedmen and ns j And’ this fertilizing is not more
stimulating tlmn nourishing, ns tlie
j nin ecu in
JTS8iglXl| ’ scratching over tlie soil with tlie
cotin . n , : smallest kind of plow, using little
ouiity *cc »nd Monday in
•road Monday in IhteroUir.
BOUNTY COURT.
i
EASHIOiYAIlLE DARDER,
uxDF.n -r. wiiKATi.EV s, os- tub con neb.
or no fertilizer, nor resting tlie
land, following in tiie easiest way
such methods of farming as they
and ! SHARI’ RAZORS!
ATTENTIVE HELP! j
cd tlie surface of the laud and were
mate dry, healthy and so mild the I Ladies "lo
. . . farmers can do some outdoor work j (,bat wer,” it w .» „„.rr.
i-c, where four years ago it | every day in tho year, upon tboir they might be mistaken for other
ve or six acres to produce a ' land. The great variety of crops ami | t.hiiiirs.
tiale and tlml.nl' poorer quality, j small fruits which can he raised, to- , . T
gethcr with tiie almost absolute .llouey for u Rainy Duy.
certainty of a good yield ol cotton, j “For six years inr daughter wns
make fanning a safe and profitably sick f,. om kidney 'and other dis-
industry. I have been over a large | „ r( |,!rs. We bad used up our sav
portion of the northern and eastern j i n g H on doctors, wlien our dominie
part of this (Suuiter) county and | tt ,| v iscd us to try Parker’s Ginger
lind it almost Icvci or slightly roll-1 T on i c . Four bottles ellectcd a cure,
ing country, with farms in good j and as a dollar's worth lias kept
cultivation, abundantly watered j olu . family well every year, we have
been able to lay by money ngain
A Poor Man's
land is soon brought into such eon
ditiou as to need but a small amount
each year to maintain its high pro
duction. Large quantities of cot
ton seed, which used to lie sold oil
the farm, are now mixed with sta
ble manures and/ bone phosphate,
by tbe farmers and used on the
land. Ground-pea vines and Hie
and the limber lands lieavilv wood-
lmd learned in the days before the land. Ground-pea vines and the ed witli yellow pine, hickory and ft, r a rainy day.”
war, and in this way soon exhaust- luxuriant growth of grass which I several variety of ouk. (In uimost I wife.
follows the crops are all plowed in-
: Monday <»f avery month.
COUNTY OFFICERS,
i T-r!< ..r Superior Court, .1. If. Allen.
Sheriff, .1. W. Mine.
Tax Collector, W. U. S'twnrl.
Tax Ucre’.ver, J. A. Daniel
'Treasurer, tC. Shep|.ercl.
Survey--r, M^O. Loipin.
t’.»
•r. \V. W. Guerry
. S. K. Taylor, t\ A. Hunt I ok- i
ton,4. II. Ill.ick. S. 11. Hawklna, .1. W. Wheatle). ■,
Mi'<‘t Hr.*.* Monday of every mouth. |
JUSTICES.
Dl.trln No. 75’,|N.*II. White,* J 1\, W. H.
Phillips. N. I\
Oi* . No.
nut. N«. ii
Thomas, N. I*. ........
I>l»t. No. 769, Britton Smith, J. 1'., M. t«. I.og»»,
| PH(EE\ FROM HER ASHES.
I Theflneat finished, moM i»W*nnf wearing »nd
I elegant BOOTS AMD IHOKB made. The
| best repairing done in the moat aul»t*ntlal and
artUtio atyle, and nil on ruuaonubio feriu$. llvfcr*
to every gentleman In Anierlcu*. Call »n m® a
at tny new shop In front of Col. N. A. Smith's of
Gee, yn tTnrkxon Street. Anirrlcua, Ga.
ANDREW DUDLEY.
Jnnelt.tf
AHCSZTBOTTJZIB,
unable to raise enough crop cither ' 10 so 'l t° udd vegetable matter
to pay rent orgetaliving fortliein- i lo if® strength. More corn and
selves. The owners of the plunta- j oats are being planted, forage of
tlor.s soon foil ml llicir revenues cut \ 'lillcrcnt kinds secured and meat
oir and tlieir lands so worn out as I raised to feed laborers and stock
to be unproductive and tlie conn- j through the entire year, instead of
trv so full or similar plantations as 1 buying provisions, grain and liny
to make tlieir sale, at any price,! »> Ihe spring. Tbe oat crop this
impossible. They then commenced j V 1 '- 11 ’ * s nearly three times as large
returning to tlieir homes to work ! “ s ovor before, in this slate and
tlie plantations themselves, and if | ncv,!l ' waH in better condition,
possible to get them back to some- 1 Many fields, in a few weeks will!
tiling of tlieir former productive I .Vivid from 2'> to 100 bushels to the
all. tbe dwellings, buildings for la
borers. burns und fences are in good --Rough on lints.”
repair and well kept up. New frame j dears out rats, mice, roaches,
houses are In-ing built nil over the | (lies, ants, bed-bugs, skunks, chip-
counlry for laborers, and many I miiuks.gophers. 16c. Druggists,
freedmen arc begiuiug to own tlieir | — . ——- -
o vu little faruiH. 1’urties from i Curryiug concealed weapons is
New York have just been here toes-. q „ itc similar to bliifllmr on a poor
tablisb agencies lor the sale of emi-1 pukcr band. You are in no
grant tickets and an effort will l«? I danger until von are caught
made to turn a portion of (lie tide ’ a t it.
of emigration here. J. II. T. - —» .
Now that an attempt has been
Mrs. James 'Iroubles. made to lilow up Yanderbllt and
1)1,1* No. 11 So. A. J. Wllllair.,. .1. I’, R. A.
1 'ijinu *No. 78V, P. I.. Ml/.., J. r., Cis a. stul'lj-,
1 AM prepared to furnish Detail. Drawing ami
Full Kpeciflcatioii* in
dUEEM ANNE AND EAST IjAKE
rothfr of tbe modern atylM,**o madified as
J-sioA^AvcUlsvl,
j power. They bad little or no nion- 1 acre, though the average yield on j Nahiivii.i.k, May 11—Mr. A. K. ■ Field, it is in order for the
cy, for the exorbitant charges for j l al| d sown will tali below tliis. I Sneed, of this city, has received « j ,. zur l0 ,- n l>le over some congiatu*
luxuries and even necessities in 1 hear of yields lust year and the letter from Mrs. .Icssc .lames, with i lations.
J.E.
i the years immediately succeeding i > cni ' before of 125 to 13$ bushels
! the war, bad exhausted their in- l<> the acre on sma ! patches. .With
| comes, and many ot them still kept I tll<! scarcity of fodder for the hors-
j up their old style of living; tlieir j es nnd mules, owing to lust year’s
■ ^ ! lands were worthless as security j drouth, this crop will soon he an
i \/ n tw 1—4 -I y-vz-vy) j on which to borrow nnd many were ' untold blessing to the farmers.
V CAj LA _L 11 »- j still heavily in debt forante bellu:r. | t'O'n, sugar-eune and cotton are
HAS RETIIRNKH •
*i jx WStUSBi,
West Sidf Square, Americas, lia.,
rARKIKH
A SPLENDID STOCK
OF
Watches s Jewelry
OF
Tlio ZiAtoMt Doalsna*
His Photograph Gallery
NOAV oi'KN!
FINEST PICTURES,
LATEST STYLES
and AI.I.STYI.E8
whom be was ucquaintisl when site'
lived here under lierasxuined name j He Can’t Talk
of Howard, in which she says: “I ; Without showing the condition of
am the same person, without doubt, I our teeth. Kvery laugh expose
that boarded at Mr. Kent's under | them. In order not to be ashamed
the assumed name of Josie Howard.; of them, let iis use that standard
_ I would have answered sooner, but j dentrifriee, SOZODONT, which is
claims. This class ol indebtedness ! Wfi H started iu tliis section, and I have so much tn look after I sure to keep them white and spot-
: was so universal 'throughout tlie I the large increased acreage of j could not do so. 1 Iiave received less. No tarter can encrust them,
.south that many debts amongst' 001,1 it is evident that King Cot- several letters from friends iu no ranker atl'uet the enamel, no
neighbors were forgiven, many to11 ' s not - t0 n| l < -' so many objects, Nashville since tlie death of my species of decay infest the dental
compromised in ail sorts of wavs,; nor over s* large i-xtent, ot territo- j linsband, und urn sorry that 1 could bone, if SOZODONT is rcgularitly
and many were paid in full. An' r .y as >» the past, though it is con-1 not answer them promptly. Mary, used. It is a botanical preparation,
! ex-judge of the Georgia Superior i fid e otly expected tlial his weight I my little girl, lias not forgotten you and its beneficial effects on tlic
! court, which is also the insolvent W 'H he diminished. The eul- ! yet, although she was quite xiimll teeth and gums ore marvelous, as
court told me that at least eighty ! tivation of sugar-cane and home | when tiiore. Jesse (uliae Tim/ of- it removes nil discoloration, and
: per cent, of these claims, where col- manufacture of syrup, large quail- j ten tells her that Dr. Sneed is her renders the gums hard and rosy,
lections was sought lo be enforced i tities of which are used by the sweetheart. Jesse is the boy's name. —- • » - -
’ hv l.iw wap« ivnlil In full a vm.nn freedmen, is hecomiiig a prolitable I Kudosed find a card which I would Hoston and Lowell arc now
industry connected with Gin best 1 like lo have published iu the Nash, quarreling over tho question which
firms. The prog ressi ve farmer of villo papers. If it will uol Le ask- has the most religion. Itistbouglit
the soul Ii has learned that siu-i-esa- ing too lunch of you i would like that the amount of genuine religion
ful farming requires a diversity of i to have you hand it to the editor
crops nnd that soiling the produce j and usk him to publish it lor me.
Satisfaction (limiiintced
Prices Moderate
ovkht. whkati.bt’s stobe,
Amoricus, : : Georgia
Prof. VAN RIPER.
man told me that twelve j-enrs ago,
be took bis father's estate with -in
ante helium indebtedness of $10.-
000 uiion it, and lie bail paid every
dollar of it to save tbe family home
stead. The southern man loves his
old home and is loth to encumner
or part with it, and f bear of a num
ber of instances of these claims be
ing kept in force as personal claims,
Courier-Journal. I’lenso accept
my thanks for your sympathy. Mv
lieurt is nlmost. crushed witli grief.
ALL REPAIR WORK
FBOMPTLY ATTEND ED TO.
■ep2I-wtwtf
J. E. SULLIVAN.
in tlie (all and buying it back, at
high prices in tlie spring, is not
prolitable farming though it may
keep your credit good at the hank
and with tbe mercliunt. Now to
by yearly payments on them. The t P''t “ portion even of tlie larm in-
old national bankrupt law was made I anything but cotton is to eon-
little use of iu this district of the ! tract the security lor advances and
state. j diminish the cash resources for re-
It is generally admitted that' payment of such advances within j I can’t write any more ul presenl. "
when the owners of the plantations the current yar. Thu p unter is • • —
realized Hint they must work them- thus learning economy in the n—• The llistingiiisliiug Charm
tcleee or lose their lands, a brighter 01 home products and outside t delightful fragrance ol Ireslily
and better future opened to tlie purchases, that lie may run bis farui j gathered fiowers and spices is l lie
south and the commencement of with less cash or use of credit. I Jjatinguisliing ehariu of Floreston
her prosperity dates !rom that time' Nearly all the bankers and factors, (;„[ O g|, 0 ,
Many of the' plantations fell ii.*to tell me that planters are borrowing j . , ^
(£Ii*2uwW«m! ! the bands of younger men, either I less money this year than ever lie- j A Chinese adage. Love 'on lit-
kmhss.’. Dm* si—, i by inheritance, or purchase or more . fore: the merchants sav that tlieir | tie, love Oolong.
to the square foot hi either city
will not transform mein into nun
nerics.
This man Chambers has bough! oil
the leading papers ot Missonii and
1 can't get nnything published here
atnll. It looks though as if every-. -
body was trying to swindle me. I dyspepsia ami similar diseases. It
will send the same card to the 1 * mK llL ’ ver l**:cn equalled. Drown x
A pure strengthening Ionic, lue
from whisl.es and alcohol, cures
Till: JONES
Mated Trusses
SUPPORTERS
Ars Ih. i
Iron Ritters.
Opera cloaks -liould lie made on
Sing--r m.u-hines.—Exehange. And
kiti-iieii garments on the Domestic.
— I'clio. And leamsters’ clothes
on the Wheeler Yeio Jertty En~
Itrpnte. Wo can only ask Howe
, sew?
-Ituchupalba.”
i i|uich, complete cure, all annoy-
i ing Kidney, Illadder and Urinary
, Diseases. $!. Druggists.