Newspaper Page Text
A MODEST REQUEST.
Mow dear to mine eye is an oral top coffin.
Whether made from red cedar, white oak,
or from pir.e;
I care not for rosewood, nor cvea for wal
nut—
Such beauties as these are not in my line.
But give me a tasty, though cheap wooden
duster,
With plenty of screws hammered into
tbeie aide.
And put a pie-plate, with the name on the
centre.
Inscribed with my age and the data that I
died.
And give me a shroud made from unbleached
merino,
Made up iateat fashion, with long swallow
toils.
And lark in my trimmings of purple alpaca,
As strong as you can with some wrought
iron nails.
Pleaee put in a fish line, with hook, bob and
sinker,
For the worms are profuse, and I honestly
bate
To go unprepared, where I might enjoy
pleasure,
Aud be freely furnished with fresh, whole
some bait.
Then slap on four bandies to carry my car
case—
Trunk handles will do, as they’re both
strong and cheap—
Or icc tongs would do if no handles are
Lundy,
And very firm grip would be likely to
keep.
And plant me ut night, while the bell deeply
tolling,
Betokens another hath taken a tramp;
The Angel of Death now calls for a mortal,
And by a slight puff it bath blown out my
lamp.
Instead of a monument over my remnants,
Set a stove-pipe from “Duffy's” just over
my eyes,
And place on its summit a sheet of fly paper,
To keep out the air and the blue bottle
flies.
The last parting wish which I beg leave to
utter.
Is pack np my dunnage at soon as I’m
dead,
And paint the address of my last destination
As plain as you can in laige letters of red
Then plant me as near as you can to the
gate, please,
And then, to prevent me from wondering
in doubt,
Just fosten a tag on the lid of my duster.
With full explanations regarding the
route. —Key of Ihe Gulf.
His Last Hand.
Old John Watts was a gambler by nature.
Tie would bet on anything, and last Thurs
day, when he died in his little room on Tenth
street, the last words he uttered were : “1
bet you I get well.” There were no takers,
for his son, a respected and able physician
practicing in New Jersey, stood by bis bed
side and watched over the dying man only
to alleviate the paiDs of death, not with any
hope of saving a life. They carried Watts
out to Mount Moriah yesterday, and the
humble little funeral cortege that paid the
last tokens of respect to the gambler’s mem
ory passed out of the gat6 of the cemetery
as lbs long line of mourners that came to
bury Major Maguire filed io ostentatious
hundreds up the road from the railroad sta
tion. Watts was not known much in
Philadelphia, but more than a score of years
ago bis lace wr.s much seen on the Western
river steamboats, and his name was as well
known as any man’s in the Mississippi Val
ley. He was the typical river gambler.
Elegant of address, uncxcitable. calculating,
skilled at cards and willing to bet on any
thing in the world.be lucked nothing that
could distinguish him io bis calling.
He was one of the men who traveled on
the lower M issifsippi in ante-bellum days,
wheu the eotire long cabins of the steamers
were given up to card parties, poker their
game, aud the stakes thousands. It was in
those days that the pi6tol and bowie knife
ofteD came in as referee in discussions over
the game, bnt that occurred only when some
body did a mean thing with an ace or filled
a pair by stealing a card, or doing some such
little pleasantry in a way so shamefully bold
and unskillful that detection could not help
but ensue. Watts would Dot do that, it is
said. He played fair aDd demanded fair
play or fight. That these encounters were
not of unfrequent occurrence with him two
bullet holes iu bis check, others in his body
aod knife wounds of greater or less dimension
all over him. gave testimony. For many
years he tiaveled on the New Orleans, St
Louis and Louisville line of boats. His pe
culiarity of traveling was that he always
made the full trip ; for instance, bound to
St. Louis on one steamer, if there wus no
play, or if luck went against him, be would
not drop c-fl at Memphis. Vicksburg or
Cairo and try a new lay. He was always
the best dressed man on the river.
Hisjewelry was unostentations and bis
clothes of the latest fashion. He had bis
measure at Dell's in London, and that Re
gent street artist supplied bim. A swell
tailor in New Orleans once solicited Watts
for an order and importuned bim so that he
finally gave it. Walts wore tbe clothes for
some time and talked much and in terras of
bigb praise of them, but refused to pay tbe
bill when presented. Ry this means he found
himself a defendant in a suit sf law, but,
netting up tbe plea that in condescending to
wear the clothes be rendered the tailor full
value by adding to tbe reputation of tbe
maker, be thus *OO bis case. Although
Walts professed to be a mao 0 1 honor—al
though a gambler—be was by no means of
tbe very best of morals, cod he did not ob
ject to take advantage of bis fellow-man in
this way. For instance: With his friend
and accomplice he would board tbe boat at
Louisville and, scanning tbe passenger list,
pick out for bis victims some old card play
ers of wealth with whom be was personally
acquainted. To these people be would go
very quietly and say of bis owo accomplice:
“There is a'man who plays bigb. and we can
beat bim ; you join with me and we’ll do it.”
Tbe victim agrees, tbe party is made up, but
Watts always succeeded iu regulating suc-
cess the wrong way for his victim, and thus
the would-be biter was often bitten.
One time he was accused of swindling in
that way. the charge being made in the Heat
of play by u man from whom Watts’ accom
plice had just won SIO,OOO. "Is that yrtnr
opinion ?” he quietly asked. “Tea, sir, that’s
what J think,” roared the loser. ‘‘You
swindled me, and I stigmatize yon as a
scoundrel.” The hour was late, and only
♦he watchman and the party engaged in
playing heard the charge, hnt all of them
drew back and held their breath, for they
were sore Jack would toko a life to wipe out
the in l all. It is said that he has dore
that thing. “I will give you $5,000 right
here if yon will not make that opinion any
further public,” said Watts, drawing forth
his pocket book. “No, sir, ldo not want
the money ; yon cannot buy my silence wi'h
money.” Then Watts smiled tn his wicked
way and hpld a pistol in one hand and the
money in the othpr, and said qnietly, as
before : “My friend, for the snppresrion
of your opinion I offered you 85,000 You
refused. Now I offer yon (hat amount of
money and yonr life. Do you accept ?’* The
man looked into Jack’s cold, ateel gray eye
und what he read there was convincing. He
took the money aod his life and kept quiet.
AH relations concur that the great steam
boat race between the R. K. Lee and
Natchez from New Orleans to St. Louis
broke old John Watts' heart, depleted his
parse und e*en unsettled bis mind. He
slaked every dollar he had, some S2O 000 it
is said, on the Natchez, and lost if. He
took a state room on board o( bis favorite
to make the trip and to see the race, but he
never occupied it. Night and day for the
five duys and odd hours the race lasted, he
stood on the upper deck leaning over the
rail, just where he wanted the champion
trophy placed when the Lee had shown
that she was only toe second best boat on
the river, watching the contest of Levia
thans. When the Natchez fell back and
the life swept by and peseed on so lar
abend that there was no longer any hope,
old John, for he hod come to be known
ub old, stamped, raved and swore, and
fioolly rushed down to the bar room aud
took the first drink of liquor that ever passed
his lips. He paid up his losses aud come
East and took up racing as a betting event.
In early life he married a young Ohio girl,
whose heart, i( is said, was broken when she
discovered his vocation. Sha died shortly
afterwards, leaving him one son, whose edu
cation was carefully looked after. The
schools of Europe contributed to his learning
and the old man stopped at no expense in
advancing his sou’s welfure and position.
The boy was not ungrateful, lor when age
and odversity had brought the old gambler
to the threshold of want his son came for
waid and cured for him lovingly und ten
derly. For nearly a year the old muu has
been in l’biludelphia receiving treatment
from a great siiecialist in nervous affections
'I he old gambler preserved till the day of
his death the pack of cards with which be
first learned to play poker and all fours
They were worn dirty, but he would have no
others, and it was with many a game of sol
taire with these old cards the paralytic old
gambler solaced the last duys of bis lile.
He was 74 years of age, and he used to say
he was the first while child bom West of the
Mississippi.— Philadelphia Times.
Dr. Blazer.
"Me was no kind of a doctor for an alms
house, anyhow,” said the steward, referring
to the late resident physician of the institu
tion. "Me hadn’t the qualifications.”
“How do you mean ?"
“Why, he’d get interested in a novel or
something, and he’d sit up thero in his room
and never go neur the paupers. And when
I’d ask him if he wasn't going to see some of
the sick ones to day, he’d look up and say :
■l'm not very well this morning, Jones; s’po
sin you just step over and put mustard plus
ters on tbe entire institution.’ So I'd have
to obey orders, you know, and I’d plaster up
the whole crowd, sick and well, and pretty
soon you could hear them paupers howlin
worse than a menagerie, and hoppin about
as if they were dancio plain cotilions. But
they hud to bear it. Doctor's orders, you
know ; and there he’d sit ami read, until he
lound if the heroine got married or not ; and
the plasters couldn't come off till he said so.
It was awful!”
"Was he always that wuy ?”
"Not always, of course. Sometimes he’d
practice on the paupers to find out the ef
fects ol medicines. One time he ladled out
a bucketful of paregoric among the inmates
and put the whole crowd asleep for five days.
Never waked up once. It was like a grave
yard, only the snoring. A short time after
ward he gave them ipecac, and for a week
there were 85 paupers going around with
asthma, wheeling like an omnibus horse with
the heaves ; and last September he trepanned
three bald-beaded paupers »ml set brass door
plates in the top of their skull. Nothing at
oil tbe matter with them, only be said be
thought they would look uice with lids on
top of them, and he wauted to keep his hand
in practice for the operation.”
"Did the victims like it ?”
"Like it! Certainly they didn’t. But be
was allowed by the directors to do what he
pleased. One time, when he wanted a bone
for somethmg or other, he took a rib out of
the side of a tramp from Mauch Chunk
Baid tbe operation was necessary to keep a
man from going joto consumption He had
the rib made iuto suspender buttons. And
he used to experiment with the transfusion
ot blood, too. He would take blood from an
Irishman and put it into the veins of a Ger
man, and vice versa, until tbe Irishman at
last could speak nothing but Dutch and tbe
German talked with a brogue Always try
ing some ridiculous plan or other. 1 never
saw such a wan.”
"Wos be successful in his practice?”
“That depends on what you call success
ful. If a man was real sick, and a nuise
was sent for Dr. Blazer, the mao would send
a farewell message to his relations, tell them
where be’d like to be buried, soy his last
words aud make up his mind tor the worst.
He’d flit off before morning, 6ore. In seri
ous cases, the doctor was regarded as certain
death around here. I know when I told tbe
undertaker that be was to leaTe, the under
taker sat down aud ciied like a child. Said
it wasn’t right to take tbe bread out of a
man's mouth in such hard times. He got so
much for every borial, you know. And one
of the directors voted straight along not to
dismiss Dr. Blazer; because, the director
6aid. there were too many paupers anyhow,
hy legal means, i* would he a good thing for
the tax pavers. Do you know what I think?
I think I’d rather have Asintic chole'a in
my family than to have Dr. Blazer arouixi
It’s not half’so deadly.”
“Why was he discharged ?’
“Well. I’ll tell you. It seems that he was
partner of one of the contractors for fnr
nislilrigr the poorhousc with victuals. He
kept it secret, hut we all noticed that he
used to go around with a kind of two-horse
power dooble-aetiof) stomach pump. About
thrpe days in the week he’d start in ward
No. 1 right after breakfast, and pump ont
every pauper clear through to ward No. 8
Gonseqnence was the inmates would he po
hangry by dinner time that they’d eat like
anacondas. • After dinner not’d come that
pump again, and bv supper time the inmates
would be willing to eat paving alone or
brickbats, they'd be so near starved And
so he’d go on until the commissary depart
mpnt’d be bankrupted every 24 hours. I
believe that man could have pnmpod out
the whole Russian army in a day with that
machioe. It u-ed to turn some of the feebler
paupers nearly wrong side out. 8o the
directors began to inquire what made the
expenses so heavy, and when they called the
doctor up about it, he owned np, and Mr.
Perkins said that ns three more weeks of
that stomach pomp would pul the county
treasury in the hands of a receiver unless it
could incur a second national debt, lie
thought the doctor had better go. So he
was dismissed.”
“Left, did he?”
“Yes, left. And the morning he was
going away he cut five toes off of some pau
pers in ward No. 4, and pat them in alcohol
lor study, he snid ; and be gave a pauper
from Lower Merion some kind of medicine
that threw him into fits, so that he’s been
bouncing around up stairs like an India
lubber hall ever since. There he goes now.
Hear him? I’ll have to go up and sit on
him. Have to do it two hours every day
by ord u r of the directors. I’m not employed
here 8s a kind of paper weight to hold down
paupers with fils, hanged il I am.”
Then the steward Hew up stairs, and I
withdrew. It is to be feared that the death
rate will suddenly increase at Perkbimeo,
where Dr. Blazer has gone to practice.—
Max Adeler.
APOSTROPHE TO A FI.T.
Dance on my nose with your tickling feet,
Blue bottle fly I
Sing in my ears with your buzz to greet
Me, as l lie.
You will seek me out in my dark retreat,
With an eager zeal that no screen can beat,
And 1 try to slap you cleur into the sweet,
Sweet bye and bye.
I haven’t seen you since seventy-eight,
Little house fly;
And I see you now with the bitterest hate
You can defy.
Oh, how 1 hate you, nobody knows,
Author of half of my summer woes.
Oh, how I prayed that you might be froze,
Villainous fly.
A masked burglar entered a room where
a man and his wife ley asleep. They both
awoke, when the robber pointed a pistol at
their heads, ar.d quietly backed out of the
room and off with his plunder. The startled
slumberers were terribly frightened, "the
man’s hair turning white before morning.”
The woman wa9 as much scared us her hus
band, but upon examining her hair, which
hung over the back of a chair, it was found
not to have changed a particle. Something
strange about this.
“Why, papa,” snid a young lady to her
father, as he walked into the parlor away
long in the night, when she and her Adol
phus were conversing upon Ihe ethics of the
dust and kindred topics, “Why, papa, wbnt
are you looking for?” “Oh, nothing; 1
just thought I’d get up to see the sun rise.”
Then the clock struck, and the sou rose and
vanished, and the old man went back to bed.
Pianos similar to those sold ten years ago
for S7OO, can now be bought for $350. And
yet there is just as much distress and suffer
ing in the land—and will continue to be as
long ns the young lady who is practicing oo
the piano tries to play five tunes at once,
and thus causes a tumble in rents and real
estate iu the immediate neighborhood.
Wasii a baby up clean and dress him up
rcnl pretty, and he will resist all advances
with a most superlative crossness, but let
him eat molasses and fool around the coal
hod for a half hour, and he will nestle his
dear little dirty face close up to your clean
shirt bosom, and be just the lovingest, cuu
oingest little rascal in all the world.
The following testimonial of a certain
patent medicine speaks for itself: “Dear
Sir: Two months ago my wife could
scarcely speak. She has taken two bottles
of yonr ‘Lilt Renewer,’ and now she can’t
speak at all. Please send me two more
bottles. I wouldn’t be without it.”
The man whose pantaloons bag most at
the knees isn’t necessarily tbe man who prays
tbe most. Sleeping in a day-coacb wiih
your knees propped up against the seat in
front of you will wreck the knees of a
straight pair ot paDts quicker and more suc
cessfully than two years of prayer-meetings
There are men who, with increasing yeors,
have not yet learned to view with equanimity
the inevitable oveiflow that follows tbe at
tempt, no matter how carefully and scientifi
cally regulated, to pour one’s coflee into a
saucer.
There was a tide in the oflairs of Noah
taken at tbe flood, which did not lead on to
glorious fortunes, though the patri-srk man
aged to keep his head above water, and save
"the oniy complete collection of wild aud
trained animals in tbe world.”
An aristocratic papa, on being requested
by a rich and vulgar young fellow for per
mission to marry “one of bis girls,” gave this
rattier crushing reply: “Certainly; which
would you prefer, tbe waitress or the cook ?”
Somkbodt once called disappointment
“medicine for the soul.” It’s a good deal
like eastor oil—it may be wholesome; it
certainly is disagieeable.
“Do you drink ?” asked a lady of a ped
dler. He dropped his pack and remarked :
"Veil, 1 shust lieve drink mit you as any
odder mans.’’
We are always told to pot our best foot
forward. A mule always puts his best fcot
■ Wil*#it aft one. ■
NEW FIRM!
Copartnership Notice.
IH AVK this day sold n half interest in my
business to G F. Turner, and the name
and style of the firm will be known in future
as Harper & Turner. R. T. HARPER.
January 9th, 1879.
%
We respectfully solicit a share of the pub
lie patronage, believing we can show as fine
and well assorted stock of goods as will be
fouud anywhere. Our stock of
DRY GOODS
Is complete in every particular, and includes
a fine assortment of Ladies’ Dress Goods,
Linens, Bleachings, Domestics, and Fancy
Notions of all kinds.
ciotnms 2
A new and elegant lot of ClotbiDg, of every
style and quality. Gents’ Underwear a spe
cialty.
HATS AND CAPS
To suit tbe tustes of tbe masses, aud at prices
that will meet the requirements el tbe trade.
BOOTS AND SHOES!
Onr stock of Boots and Shoes, having been
bought at a bargain in the Northern mar
kets. we can afford to sell cheap, and arp'frre
pared to offer extra inducements trade.
/, f V
a. y '
if>/ ■ y
1
V 1
Furniture!
We have also a large lot of Furniture —Bed
steads, Bureaux, Wasfcstands, Wardrobes,
Tables, Chairs,,’ etc—which we will sell at
extremely low figures. Bed room setts 0
specialty.
GROCERIES.
Special attention is called to our stock of
Groceries, which is quite large, and com
prises every article kept in that line.
Our etoek is being constantly replenished
with Goods that are carefully selected by ex
perienced buyers, and are bought for cash
from first hands, thereby enabling us to set! to
advantage—both to ourselves and custotaers.
VV ith all these facilities we are prepared to ex
hibit at all times a complete general stock,
ana parties wisbrag to buy can always find
some specialties at very low prices at our
store. Give us a call.
Harder & Turner. 1
This important organ weighs but about three
pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about
three gallons; passes through it at least once even
half hour, to nave the bile and other impuritie'
strained or filtered from it. bile is the natur
purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver become
torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car
riea through the veins to all parts of the system
and in trying to escape through the of tl
skin, causes it to turn yellow or a dirty brow
color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dy
pepsia, Indigestion, Constipation, Headache, Fiiii
ousness, Jaundice, Chills, Malarial Fevers, Piir-
Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility fo.
low. Merreli/s Hepatink, the great vegetable
discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver to throw
off from one to two ounces of bile each time the
blood passes through it, as long as there is an ex
Icess oi bile ; and the effect of even a few dose>
upon yellow complexion of a brown dirty looking
skin, will astonish all who try it—they being th'.
first symptoms to disappear. The cure of all bili
ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain
by taking II bpatink in accordance with directions.
Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist
if a fair trial is given.
SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Price 25 Cents and $1.0?
HEPATINI.
LUNGS
The fatality of Consumption or Throat and
Lung Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
one-third of all death's victims, aru.es from the
Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu
pefies as the work of death goes on. SIO,OOO will
be paid if Opium or Morphine, or any preparation
of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
in the Globb Flow er Cough Syrup, which has
cured people who are living to-day w-ith but one
remaining lung. No greater wrong can be done
than to**ay that Consumption is incurable. Tk«
Globb Flower Cough Syrup will cure it when
all other means have failed. Also, Colds, Cough,
Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of the throat
and lungs. Read the testimonials of the Hon.
Alexander H. Stephens. Gov. Smith and Ex-Gov.
Brown of Ga., Hon. Geo. Peabody, as well as
those of other remarkable cures in our book —free
to all at the drug stores —and be convinced thnt ii
you wish to be cured you can be by taking the
Globb Flower Cough Syrup.
Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat,
when you can get Globe Flower Syrup at same
price. For sale by ail Druggists
Price 25 Cents and SI.OO
GLOBE FLOWER SYRUP.
BLOOD
Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of all
diseases that arise from poison in the blood. NOl
one case of Scrofula, Syphilis, White Swelling.
Ulcerous Sores and Skin Disease, in a thousand,
is treated without the use of Mercury in some form.
Mercury rots the bones, and the diseases it pro
duces are worse than any other kind of blood or
skin disease can be.® Dr. Pf.mbekton's Stillin
gia or Queen's Delight is the only medicine
upon which a hope of recovery from Scrofula, Sy
philis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can be
reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer.
SIO,OOO w ill be paid by the proprietors if Mercury,
or any ingredient not purely vegetable and harm
less can be found in it.
Price by all Druggists SI.OO.
Globe Flower Cough Syrup and MerrellV
Hepatine for the Liver for sale by all Drug
gists in 25 cent and SI.OO bottles.
A. F. ME2RELL k CO., Proprietors,
-* PHILADELPHIA, PA.
STILLING I A.
Gullett’s Improved Cotton Gin.
Planters are respectfully invited to ex
amine this Gin before buying I will keep
sample Gin. with Feeder. Condenser and
Gullett’s Double Revolving Cotton Press
(dispensing with a lint room,) always on hand
lor exhibition. We guarantee the most per
feet satisfaction to purchasers, in every par
tieular. The price will he reduced next sea
son from $4 to $3 50 per sow on the Gins,
and from $1 25 fo $1 on the Feedeis. I
refer ail to the accompanying certificates of
our cotton buyers and planters of last year,
and to the certificates of well known planters
who are using Gullett’s Gins, as to the extra
prices obtained lor cotton einned on them.
J. A. REEKS, Agent.
Griffin, Ga., March 10, 1879.
Griffin, Ga., March 1,1879.
We, the undersigned, are using; theGullett
Improved Light Draft Cotton Gin The
Gin i 9 of superior workmanship For fast
ginning, safety in running and light draft, (to
do the same work,) we think it has no equal;
but the most important feature is the attach
ment for opening and improving the sample.
The best cotton is improved by it so as to
bring from to % cent, and stained and
dirty cotton from to 1 cent per lb. more
in the Griffin market than on other Gins
(Signed) W J Bridges, T W Manley, J T
Manley.
Griffin. Ga , May 17.1878.
To J A Beeh, Agent for the Gullett Gin
Man'f'g Co, Griffin, Ga: —At your re
quest, we, planters and dealers in cotton, give
to the public our opinion of your Gio. We
take pleasure in saying to all in need of new
Gins that it is now a well established fact
that cotton ginned on these Gins brings a
higher price in onr market than any other,
and the Gins are growing in public favor.
Cotton ginned on them sold last season at
from to 1 cent per pound above tbe mar*
ket price. Mr.Gullett's attacnmeot for im
proving the sample of cotton, we are satisfied,
is whsl he claims for it. Tbe Gin appears
to have reached perfection in gin machine y.
(Signed) A C Sorrel, T J Brooks, B P
McWilliams. S B McWilliams, D W Pat
terson. B li Sims T J Bloodworth.
I am also agent for the celebrated Eclipse
Portable Engine, manufactured by Frick &
Co, for the counties of Butts. Spaldiug.
Fayette and Clayton. J. A. BEEKS.
mai2Bj3m
•
• jis»j
SSSsiiSSM
OFFICE N? 177 W. 4™ ST
Cincinnati, cx~ ,
L.C- N£B TN G ER.. Manager
- - - -
JgpForsale bj Q. E. Wise, Hampton,
Ga. »epl3-ly.
Job Work solicited and executed with
neatness.
Scbscrise for Thb Weekly,
Reduced to $1.50!
TUB
HENRY
COUNTY
WEEKLY.
PUBLISHED EVERT FRIDAY
AT
Hampton, Ilenry County, Ca.
A DEMOCRATIC PAPER, SOU HD
IN PRINCIPLE AND UN
SWERVING FROM
PARTY LINE/
Confident that Democratic supremacy err
only be maintained in the State by strict
adherence to the cardinal principles of Dem
ocracy. and unfailing conrage in their sup
port, THE WEEKLY will never be foand
remiss in its duty, either by departing in the
slightest degree from Democratic doctrinec,
or failing to maintain them to their full ex
tent at all times.
Believing it also to be a fair assumption
that a large proportion of the readers of
weekly newspapers see no other, special
pains will be taken to present each week,
though necessarily in a condensed for*.
ALL THE NEWS, OF EVERY KIND,
AND FROM EVERY QUARTER/
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One year SO
Six months 7i
Three months 40