The Macon telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1905, September 07, 1894, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE MACON TELEGHAPII: FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1804. LARGE LOT JUST RECEIVED. Two collars go with each Shirt and we sell them for Also a lot of those low neck Night Robes at the same; we can give you others tho’at 60c. Summer Bows and Ties at 15c. J. H. HERTZ Corner Second & Cherry 1). A. KEATING, rrcnr.nTAKBK an» Kitin*i.MHU’ OHDInlbeirySt* - Mucon, Ra. 4071 itoeltluiice, *03 WOTlCifl. Marriages, births, death*, funeral* and tneotlnga Inserted in this column at W tor ten lino* and Jit cents per line for *ach added line. A responsible name must accompany the advertisement u • guarantee of good faith. Copy for contract advertisements to appear In Sunday's Telegraph imuet be funded Into the business office before 3 o’clock p. m. Saturday to Insure Insertion. MARRIED. Ait Cochran. Chi.. Thumday night, Berrttoimher G. Duncan L. MoRtie and JJJ** kiria V. Pejoock. Mr. and Mrs. McRae •will foe ait hcvne 'to tlhohr frt iltda October 1 ah 231 High elire-at. DIED. Du ve Barnett* dfied at the residence of hla metther. 319 Walnut cOreot. The funernl will take place THIS MORNING at 10 o'cl&ck. L. McMANUS CO GENERAL II, Day Telephone Right Telephone • 238 - 232 Undertaking Establishment Next to Hotel Lanier. Day Telephone . 436 Night Telephones.... 435, 178 0O&# * < ► :: Look at It this way. Wo offer to send you a freo sample of Ilx-NoTra. This must cost somethin);, jf you do not llko tho tea wo oro that much out, plus the eost of this advertisement. *We can got nothing bnck without your np. p royal. Wo positively assert that this Is the purest tea we can get. C MARTIN GULET* CO., £ I Established, mi.) Italllmorc, Md. »♦♦♦»»♦♦♦♦♦♦»<♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦! 1 THE FAIR WHITE FRONT, Almost Opposite Post Office. I SQUARE ON WINDOW. , New goods overy week. Notions, crockery, glasswaro and Bolls. finest collection 10c. and 25c. Cabinet Frames lu tho city. Nicest line J Sc. sett Shirt Studs in town. The latest stylo Corsage Pins 10o. Five-cent HUk Cans anil up. Clause Setts. Landers, Fratjr & Clark Knife So. Lurgo line Purses closing out- very low. ‘ K. F. SMITH. Cfias. C. Holt, —Dealer in— Artists’ Materials, Picture Frames, Stationery and Fancy GoodB, Engravers of Visiting Cards and Wedding Invitations. Correspondence invited. Send for catalogue of Artists’ Mate rials. c. Office and Store, Triangular Block, Macon, Ga. JAMES T. HOLT, Rec’r, to g«t a million of Circular* to dUtrltuie at $4.00 per 1,000. How to become a flrap clara MoMmcrls!, Hypnotist. I Mind Be&dor and Clairvoyant, a largo JUDGE GOBER GETS A PROD Atlanta Commercial Asks Him to Re tire From the Race For Su preme Court Judge. CHARGES HIM WITH CORRUPTION III. Judicial Conduct, the Kdltnrlnl Snya, llna I'lnced . Stigma Upon the Parity of the Ilanclt. Democrat. Meet. Aittorita, Slept. 6.—(Special.)—A sensa tion wus stirred up here today by the publlcuutoia in the Evening CwnmercUl of an edftoilal which calls upon George F .Ootoer of .the Blue Ridge circuit to resign from the bench and itb withdraw hla name from canrideraitto.' in connec tion wiirh ithe position upon the su preme court, no which he in an avowed uspliuue. These demands ere made of Wft Gorber In Che juitme o1 the Demo cratic party, which Che edltortal de- oila-rea We silence, under the many charges of corruption that have been made against him, endlangera.. Judge GdSer'a candidacy for tho supreme bench Is alleged to be the cause of such serious oppoolcSou to the proposed 'amendment cne.ui.ing two now piuicrtj on Chat bench, that it (s in Hunger of being robed down by bite people. Whom he has dcsguebed by Cils course fa the recent campaign. At the same time, While he wUs not ten advocato of Mr. Atkinson ishiunrghout the canvaso, It la claimed by Editor Blackburn that Mr, Atkin son, though tn no sente a party to J ildge Gober’s political aots, -will suffer the loos of votes on his account. The attack is a most severe one. It Is directed 'personally to Judge Gober Ga the form of an open 1 ill ter, and can hord'.y fall to provoke a reply from thorn. i 'Sumirted up, .the direct charges road® against Judge Goher ore: Than tola udlcdii conduct has put a stigma upon the purity of the bench and de stroyed confidence tn Justice as well •as to-the Democratic party, which ele vated Mm to the position. Thalt his solicitor general agreed to secure the mi'J.'gution of'the punishment of certain offenders provided (they carried their counties for Mr. Atkinson in ithe late contest, and ‘that dhe fines ultim'altely 'Imposed upon there men. were nominal. T.-.u*. la a recent municipal election In MaitO-Ua he deputized officers to lnfltkn- IctULe vcLt'iU \v!il> favored the itlcket he opposed. Thalt toe enliitUvoreid to se cure the fndCH'siemetot of itlhe grand Jury of Oohb county (br the supreme bench, mud frilling, had 'ttoe naimes of ttoe men vetoing -asaln's; his lndorsemenit dropped out of 'the Jury bo*, without further C '^Judge Gober was not In the cil'ty to day arid could not too recto by your cor- respcndenit, 'but I ihave-M upon reliable aulthortty tdhUlt itae Was beeto considering the advisability of re'drtJng from the race for the supreme court for several d’avs past. There ds no disguising tlie fact Shat there 1* conuidetulbJe opposi tion to 'Che proposed ulm.«nlm<lnlt of the consMi-cuItton. Increasing the supremo court Judges to five because of Judge Gobcf s.ojindldacy. On this KSooun*-to prominent . Sou th Georgian recently Smote Judge Gober, putting Che awretw- foro 'ham In *th’at light and suggesting that toe should withdraw tols nume tn order to quiet this opposition. To th.s letter Judge Gober repRbd In a frank way. btatlng What he would give the suggestion serious oonsM'ei'akloin'. lie tous >not, however, been heard from IU JudSO Gober’s friends claim tJratlio Is being persecuted. They say that most of the attacks on Mm appear to toe -Che result of tola action In sending Stephen A. Rjmn to Jail for contempt of Court. He also tous polJildal echo are 'tireless fn their determination to injure him, 'they say, and ° c the persecution comes from them also. DEMOCRATIC LEADERS MEET. The Executive and Campaign Commit tees Discuss the Situation. Atlanta, Sept. 6—(Special.)—The Dem ocratic executive und campaign dammit- tees held a meeting at Democratic headquarters today to discuss the cam paign up to date awl lay mines for the PupuMrlts »n ishe future. Party leaders drum nearly oveny dis trict In the state were present ait the meeting and made reports on the con- ill)on and proopeot In ibe&r respective L'xraDtlevs. Acning those iwlho were present and took part In the discussion ware Messrs. Coney and Warren of tlie Sfcond dis trict. B. «. Richardson, T. A. Atkinson, R. W. Freeman and Price Gilbert of the Fouidh: IV. H. Venable, T. R. R. CM*, B. 0(1. Blackburn und J. F. O’NeMl of the Ftf.4h. \V. G. Ft Price, R. L. Ber ner, Douglua Glesoner. Marlon Hatitn nri.1 J. H. TOSMlamson and Sim Blalock of the Sixth. A. IV. Pile, T. B. Jonee. Judge Brown end S. P. Maddox of the Seventh. Jack Shannon of the E-sphth, W. E. Simmons of the Ninth, W. H. Fleming and Bob Lewis of the Tenth. From all wrts of ttoe Btate ttoe news received was moot encouraging. Ev erywhere (the party is well organize! und splendid iwlark Cs toeing done. On ttoe other side, the Populists are luring faith In tVUlson and his pjlltkul vaga ries, and marry axe returning to the Demoreutlc standard. Watson Is going to make a hot can vass in the Tenth dktntot, tout Hon. W. H. Kerning and R. H. Lewl3 of Hancock, wlho represented that district in today's conference, suy he does not Blind the ghoot of u chance to beat Mij. Black, who Is stranger by far than he was two years ago. while IVhtsin is weaker by reason of the lick of fadth of Ms foilors-tra In tols slncerfty. Tticy are begfrunlng to realize Ulie sehlfitnesB of Wuitren's odvoojcy of third pirtylsm— It l« a mraney making and altogether aulte a congenial k*> to torlm to poae as dictator of ttM (parity, a»l distention and division among o.liie who feriawed' Mm blindly toeret:Oire fa the result. From wtousc he eikl at today's confer ence, it appesre that Chalsman Clay has been mlsrepresetifted oh his finan cial views. 'He has been quoted toy the "11 to 1” papers <8 having strongly fa vored the free coinage of silver n» that ratio In his recent camplgn speeches. He said today In reply to these publ!- eadom» that he htu not been discussing the oolntge question, except to answer any questkms nut to him on ttoe sub- lect. Then he says he replied that he was opposed to a change of ratio It Biiver must continue to to* coined, be cause tn view of the present Large am -iunt of Silver In cSecututloo X would n« toe wise, he rtonughi, to change the rarfio. He insists Sint If silver Is coined It must toe on u.purity frith gold.' Chairman Clay esys there Is a differ ence of opinion mo me tie best.and mot loyal Democrats In the party ns to the plan tof coinage, tout all are blmetolltorts. The platform Is a toimetolUc platform, and all De.m-*-r.Mn stand upjn it, their only difference toeing the best wny to Se lire : IIV l.i-n• / .illism. At the meeting today J. D. Cunning ham. represcn'lng Tom Watson, pre sented a request ,fivm the Populist state committee that at Democratic com mittee should unite with it tn c.\lllng for fnlr electrons and asking for Popu- lt slmanagera ut the polls. The- committee took this as a cam paign trick c< Watson, by which he wished to make the Democrats acknowl edge that past elections have been un fair. So no attention was paid to the communication. The ordinaries appoint the election manasem, the state com mittee having nothing to' do with that. COMPRESSED COTTON BATE. Atlanta. Sept. 6.—(Special.)—When the railroad commit dan m(k this morn ing to continue hearing ttoe caui mid'a by the cotton cora-preoemen, being an application (tor u reduced rate on cam- preosod ctdtco. the oompreesmen aolced leave Ito withdraw their petition, ns the rnilrvuUs and oompreftanen. toad arrived ut an agreement thait abuld be eaitlatac- Diry 'to .bdth 'Wichout the further In tervention of ttoe railroad commission. . The commission granted tho request of One comprasomen arid the fight is plow settled &r Uao time being at least. In suspending Ithe oase, however,Chair man Trammall of the cnmmteston s.itd tf the question wju over again brought before thait body It would be acted upon regardless of any agreement or compro mises between the ttillroads and com- preaamew ton the price to toe paid for compressing cotton. Further than this, OM. Trammell «Md tho question could be reopened toy a cotton ahUpper as well as the compreosinen. tols remarks being in 'the nature of a warning against fu ture wrangling over uauf. The agreement which brought about the Biispsnsian at bostlllUes before the commission Is (that the railroad- tlhnll naiy 'Hie compressmen 8 1-2 cents per hundred for compressed cotton. Instead of the 7 cents as agreed upon at tho recent medtfngof tho Southern Railway and Steumstolp Amodoftloo in Now York, which rate.' being n cut of 3 cents per 'hundred, was the cause of all She trouble. The oomrorccnitae Is a splitting of the dlfforentoc between the oM rate and 'ttoe now raite. Both sides felt un certain as roa the action at the railroad comanutiloa and were wilting to com promise rather ttoan fight It out. TO HOLD A DEMOCRATIC RALLY. Cufhbert, Sept, (Speciul.)—The groindest political rally ever held In R'andoJph epun'iy will toe held In Cuth- bert on the inch Instant toy the Demo crats. It .will toe a grand feast of speeoh-making and barbecue. Col. At kinson and MaJ. Bacon h'avo alrettdy promised to be here. In addition to the above either Gen/ Drains, Gen. Gor don or Chairman Clay will be on hand. Reduced rates will 'be toad on tho rail roads and large delegations will bo toere from adjoining counties. Commit tees are at work, Democracy Is being organized and will overwhelmingly trl umph In Randolph county. A series Of meetings are In progress at <ttoe 'Methodist ohuroh, this city. Rev. E. H. McGetoee, local pastor. Is being assisted by Presiding Elder Dowmnn and the following vlSMifg ministers: Revs. Ainsworth. Hainmam and Clark. Several accessions have toeen made to the membership of ttoe church and con siderable interest Is being manifested In the meetings. HADDOCK PERSONAL MENTION. iHUdtllick, Sept. 6.—(Special.)—Mr. W. II. Keller of GrconWlle, G'a., Is visiting his sons. Frank and Charles Keller, of this place. Mr Keller reports crops good and politics quiet In. Meriwt'lhor county Saiys they are standing square by Deiaxanacy and they will give W. Y. Aitklnaon an overwhelming majority Dir governor. IMlse Daisy Kingman of James Is vis iting the family of Mr. J, T. Finney. Sdr. "W. E. iLeeiter attended a whist puny given by the Mieses Evans of MllledgevUle last night. There seems of late to toe some great aittmotSon In the Educational City for Billy. 'Haddock .High School, under the tu torage of Professor E. L. Ray, Is be ginning to rank among the beat schools In 'the aousitry. The many friends of Mrs. s. M, Les ter wtll regret to learn of her serious fllneas arid wo hope Dor her a speedy recovery. Stationery, Monograms. Wedding Invitations and visiting cards engraved at lowest prices. No de lay: work done by sklll- .1 workmen In our establishment. Send for samples and prices. «J. P. Stevens & Bro.. Jewelers. 17 Whitehall street. Atlanta, Ga. NO CAUSE FOR ALARM. The Cholera Scare In Pittsburg Was With out Foundation. Pittsburg, Sept. C.—A careful Investiga tion made this morning by the leader of the (bets surrounding the reports of death of an emigrant, John Walttoer, at Cum berland, Md., loaf night gives no grouno for the desertion that tho death was due to Asiatic cholera. Dr. Guy McCandlcss of tho bureau of health, stated this morning that *ho re- celved a report from tlie Inspectors sent to look after, the quarantine corpse of the dead man, that every member of the party was well and no signs of tho least disorder was evident. Superintendent Ba ker of the Pittsburg health bureau was also Been and stated that he had a report 'that there was no cnango In the condi tion of tho quarantine people and no signs of any disease. Superintendent Baker left for Shaner Station at 1020 o'cloek to look after the quarantine Immigrants, and took with him an Immense amount of disinfectants. Superintendent Paflan of the Baltimore and Ohio, to whose energetic course and prompt action are due all of the precau tions taken, suld that his report from Shaner Station was of a kind to allay all fear of cholera. ' He was very cm- phatla Ilf his statemnet that he did not be lieve that there was any cholera In the parly quarantined there. DEATH OF A NOVELIST. London, Sept. 6.—Mrs. Augusta Webster, novelist ana poot, died at Kew this morn ing. She was tho daughter of the Late Vice Admiral George Davies. ANSWER THI^ QUESTION. Why do eo many people we see around us «eem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable by indigestion, con stipation, dizziness, Voss of appetite, coming Up (,f flic food, yellow xkln, when for 75 cepts we will sell them Shiloh’S Vltallzer .guaranteed to cure them? Sold by Goodwyn & Small Drug Company, corner Cherry street and Cotton avenue. Need Britamimca? Youth ANOTHER ESTIMATE. New York, Sept. 6.—The financial on<l Commercial Chronicle ha* tasut'l it* Her* tember cotton crop report, it places the crop tor the year ending September 1, lin. at 7,527,211 bale*, with export* or G.ttMiM balea Stock on hand, 183.737 bale*. The crop In the previous year was 6,717.1 *2 bale*. For Malaria, Liver Trou- b3.e J orIndigeetion,use BROWN’S IRON BITTERS’ ACADEMY OF MUSIC. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 13. Davia & Keith's Famous Fabric oC Fun. Mu35<c awl Movement, THE HUSTLER. The Laborer*: John T. Tierney, Hor ry WdSfxi, June* P* Smith, Jtainew F. C\j-S.io Ed J. ileffcrnin, J. B. Bradley, Ernwt WTlion. Thomas H. Humphries, M. C. KeynuCda, Alice Hutching*. Irene Hernandez. AlumSe Mayo, Julia Taylor, Gertie aniMnzftoa. M'l). GLtnlou, Sonar* U& Gonehit t and other ortjbiea. Price* 25 cerej* to 21. Reserve aeuta at LwWen & ttlurjic House. Is the period, ft Is (hen that the wind Is freest from care, the Imagination unhampered, the memory most retenllve^the eye brightest, and the nature most ausceptible. What a boy reads In this period becomes so Indelibly impressed upon his.nature that ft becomes a part of his very character. This is a time when a parent's responsibility Is greatest. It Is not enough to tell the boy what he ought to become. Most boy* are not overly susceptible to didactic teaching. You can usually lead him a mile easier than you can drive him a rod. See that he has the proper surreundlngs, and • little encouragement, and it la surprising how readily he develops a taste for the best in literature. Let that taste be developed, and there Is little danger as to his future. It war. Who said; “ Show me what booka a boy reads, and 1 will read you his destiny. * How Impor.ant It Is, then, that your home should be provided with books of the highest character. Fairy talcs, and even, perhaps, “Dulfalo Bill" stories, have their place as developers of a (aste for reading, a sort of literary milks, aa It were, but unless the bdV soon shows a preference for the stronger meat of practical knowledge, history, travel,^tc., you may be •ur« that he Is mentally unsound, or that there has been something radically wrong In his education. The Encyclopaedia Britannic* has rightly been termed "the concentratod essence of the whole world's wisdom." Let ybur boy read Its interesting pages, and he will soon look with disdain upon "flashy " literature. . W* are continually underestimating a boy's capacity for large ideas. There Is nothing^ so attractive as truth. Civ* him the materlfl out of which to construct lafke Ideas. Put. Brltannlca In the home, where he can consult H continually, and as he attains manhood ha will find no place In literary or professional life to which he may not asptre. Seize the present opportunity to provide * proper library for your home. It requires an Investment of but Ten Cents * day. If you order from Thh Atlanta Constitution while it may be had at introductory prices. Op call at branch offleft, SOS Mulberry street, Macon, Ga., where you will And In the, Brlttanlca reading rooms com plete sets of this magnificent library and receive courteous attention. WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE ■ OPENS SEPTEMBER ID. Tho faculty will bo the sstno as It was Inst session mainly. Our nlm to keep tho Institution abreast of the pro gressive spirit nrul methods of the ad vanced cduouttonsil movements of this ago. While Whoring for the thorough intellectual training of tour young wo men, wo Shall also seek to give them thoso finer gruoos nnd oharms that como from Musk:, Art and Elocution. The old Wesleyan with Us unrivaled prestige la without n peer In this Southern country, nnd parents and guardians send from distant states fliat their daughters or wards may be able to say they wore educated nt the WcslWfn, The moral for the Mneon people points Itself. You cannot afford not to givo your daughters theso bene fits, when iflto brlng3 them to your doors. Mrs. J. B. Cobb is Indy principal For terms, etc., nddr^wi REV. JE.H.ItOWJE, PRESIDENT. (Former principal Semlary for Young Ladles, Virginia.) ADMINISTRIATOR'S SALE. By virtue bf an oilier from Blbto coun ty count of ordinary, passed at the Au gust term, 1834. of sitd court, will he ttdd on ttoe flrWt Tuesday In (Met*. 1831. between the legal hours erf sale, betas Ithe court house d'»r of Bibb county In ailicon. Cti., the ftHowlng do- scribwl propsihy belonging to ttoe es- tnite of Mrs. Many Hogan, late of raid tSmrity, deceased. Dor She purpose of pitying the debits orf Said estate und Dir dldtrfbuttan among Htoe holm of eald ostulte, Itowtlt: One lot, with Improve- merle ittocroon, lying anil being In the city of Moron. Ga.. on Plum street, be tween Second a-ml Third ell roots, Md knlivrn as the residence of the de ceased. uni being oily lot No. 553; said lot being 62 1-2 feet front and 210 feet deep, more or less. Terms of oule. cosh. W. A. DAVIS, AdmlMMmi'lbr 'Ehltabe Mary A. Hogan, SIIElflPF'8 SALES. Georgia. RSib County—Wilt be sold bdfore the oouik house dtur In the city of Macon (luring tlie legUl haunt of sale on the first Tuesdiv In Otitofeer next the following dpaerltoed ptiopetlty, levied on to oUtfisfy ceitntn state and county tax 0. fas. for ttoe yclir 1833, to-wlt: One lot. wltih it tsootory frame (here on. tn VInwJXe d’zl.rlct. on pMOUc rUld running from Cetumtous road +■'! For syth roed past VtnevMo staltlon; known as the Old reildence rjf Leroy Napier, Including tar.ll within fence surrounding St. Levied oh as ttoe property of estalte of Leroy N.ioter. Also, fifty Hares, mono or less, In Rut land UiZtrlrt. bounded rest toy Robert Brice nnd Mrs. Ftollendi ve, vouth by James Bullock. John Thomas and Mrs. O •tab, WKt fay Mrs. Adeline ItX'TJu, and John Shakes end noi'tli toy J tan Stokes. Levied on out "he nroneiiy Of Calvin Thomas. O. S. WXdWTCOTT. Sheriff. BIBB COUNTY SHERIFF HALEB. . Wl'.l be cold befbre the oaurt house door In the city of Moron during ttoe legal fra urn of sate’on the first Tuesday in Oatatoer next: Lot No. 2, 1n Mock t. routhwest com mons. in dhe etty orf Maoon, Bibb coun ty, Oa. levied on us Che propetrfy of Jiohn Herrington anil Uzrie Hetrlr.f on to (UltUfy a Justice court fi. fa. lamed from the 601 Sa district «. M. In favor of C. F. Gar-sin vs, John Herrtne.'m nnd lilzfte'Healsahan. K. WK3TCOTT, Sheriff CLAY’S COFFIN STOKE UUHAiir SU1LL1NU. BOUND VOLUMES The great popularity whloli this mflgrnlficent work has o/ttalnedl la serial form tins led us to make an arrangement wltli the publishers by wtololi wi can offer bound volumes ut an almost unheard of price. t Sights and Scenes of the World was first published as a high-class artwork, and was eold toy subserlptlofi only. A few copies of ths original edition remain unsold, and wo have so cured them for the benefit of our readers. They are printed upon extra heavy mauve-tinted enameled paper and upon one sldo of ttoe paper only] making a book twice as thick as the twenty-one parts would be. The work manshlp Is superb, aa they were tho first Impressions from the original plates. They ore elegantly and strongly bound, with specially deslgnel titles on side and back, tho Russia edition having martolo edges and the ful Morocco gold edges. By taking all there was left of the original edition wi are enabled to rifer this unsurpassed work at the following very, attructlvt prices; , , ;, | In best English' doth (publisher’s price, 30.50; our price, 33, f ~ ; In hit Morocco, (publisher's price, 37.60); our price, 33.50. |i, In full Russia, (publisher's price 33): our price, 31, , j'U fl In full Morocco, (publisher's prloe 310); our price, 31.60., ' ' ] For out-of-town orders remit 60 oents extra and (tho book wlll. be deliverel to you by prepaid express, securely pocked. This Is An Unusual Opportunity To procure this king of all art worksat a ridiculously low prlco and should be taken advantage of at once, as only a few axe left. Remember that thi book is complete and all ready for the library, or centre table; 250 1ull-pagi views, size 11x13 Inches and printed upon one side of tho paper only. Eacl picture la worthy of a frame. Samples cun toe seen at the office of the Telegraph’, Where an orders Shoult toe addressed. . Rand, McHally & Co/s ATLAS OF THE WORLD ramr-two MANY ENTIRELY NEW BOOK. MAR FEATURES METHODS. Theo <£S£ logical Anthropo ^ Bio Gbeo Topo Hydro Historic Praotio Systematic Statistic Politic Patriotic Education. Economic Emblematic HISTORY of the WORLD'S PEOPLE. CENSUSof 1890. Biographies of Prominent Men. Portraits of tho World's Bright Men. STATISTICAL CHARTS and DIAGRAMS. GAZETTEER and' ATLASL AL Three hundred and forty-fiv« pages. Bound in iineBt quality English cloth. . Printed upon fine calend ered paper vrith marbled edges. REGULAR RETAIL PRICE, $7.50. Cut out coupon and send It with TWO DOLLARS, and we will send you a copy of the magnificent work. Sizo, II1-2 z 141-2 inches. Out of town purchaser* to pay caning*