Newspaper Page Text
Spring Place Jimplecute
Carter tfc Iloartsoll, Putolisliors.
v OLUMK XVI
THE 54TH CONGRESS.
ROUTINE OF HOUSE AN1> SENATE
BRIEFLY CHRONICLED.
Summary of Bills and Resolutions
Presented and Acted Upon.
THE HOUSE.
The house, at Tuesday’s session,
passed, without division and practically
without objection, the bill making ap¬
propriations for fortifications and coast
defeuses.
Its passage was advocated by Haincr,
republican, of Nebraska; layers, dem¬
ocrat, of Texas; Bartlett, democrat, of
New York; Livingston, democrat, of
Georgia; Hemenway, republican, of
Indiana, and Cannon, republican, of
Illinois, all members of the committee
on appropriations, and Mr. Baker, re¬
publican, of New Hampshire. The
latter criticised the committeo for not
going further and appropriating all
the money asked by Generals Flagler
and Craighill.
Mr. Berry, democrat, of Kentucky,
was the only opponent of the bill. He
said the money would be better spent
in building ships than in fixed bat¬
teries.
The secretary of war estimated that
88,045,133 could be expended in the
coming year. The bill carries specific
appropriations amounting to $5,842,-
337; and authority is given the secre¬
tary of war to make contracts involv¬
ing the further expenditure of $5,542,-
276, making the total authorized ex¬
penditure iu the bill $11,370,613.
The following shows the aggregate
amount appropriated and authorized
by contract under each subdivision of
the bill, namely: Gun and mortar bat¬
teries, $5,260,000; sites for fortifica¬
tions, $350,000 ; preservation and re¬
pair of fortifications, $50,000; sea
walls and embankments, $17,975;
torpedoes for harbor defense, $100,
000; armament for fortifications,
$5,502,673; proving ground, Handy
Hook, N. >f., $38,000; Watertown
arsenal, Alassachusctts, $43,500; Bene
cia arsenal, California, $4,500;
Watervliet arsenal, New York, $3,105;
ordnance and fortification board, $100,
000; Fortress Alonroe, sewerage sys¬
tem, $9,260.
The house agreed to the conference
report upon the legislative, executive
and judicial appropriation bill as fai¬
ns the conferences had agreed, and or¬
dered another conference upon the
matters still in dispute between the
two houses of which there are some¬
thing over 100 out of 314 items added
by the senate. At 4:25 o’clock the
house adjourned.
The national soldiers’ home con¬
sumed the time of the house ».t Wed¬
nesday’s session and at times the dis¬
cussion was warm. At no time was it
without interest. Mr, Hull, republi¬
can, of Iowa, started the discussion by
calling up the joint resolution provid¬
ing for the election of four governors
of the board in charge of the National
Soldiers’ home, to succeed those whose
terms expire the present month. The
resolution includes General W. B.
Franklin, of Connecticut, to succeed
himself; General T. J. Henderson, of
Illinois, to succeed General John C.
Black; General Goorge W. Steele, of
Iediana, to succeed himself; and Gen¬
eral G. L. Beale, of Maine, to succeed
Fessenden.
Air. Hull said that Air. Blue, repub¬
lican, of Kansas, desired to discuss the
resolution and endeavored to come to
some understanding with him in re¬
gard to the limit of debate.
Mr. Blue, holding aloft a bundle of
papers, said he held in his hand a num¬
ber of affidavits charging General
Franklin, and the man Smith, gover¬
nor of the soldiers’ home at Leaven¬
worth, for whom he was responsible,
with brutal and oppressive treatment
of the inmates of the Leavenworth
home. He thought that the house
should hear what he had to say in be¬
half of the 2,000 Kansas veterans in¬
carcerated in that home. A lively and
long drawn out discussion then en¬
sued. Finally, on motion by Air.
Hull, the house, at 5 o’clock, adjourn¬
ed Until Thursday, an agreement hav¬
ing been reached between him and
Air. Blue that the vote ou the joint
resolution should be taken at 3 o’clock.
The fight against the re-election of
General W. B. Franklin, as a member
of the board of managers of the Na¬
tional Soldiers’ Home, resulted in the
defeat of those who opposed him, the
house at Thursday’s session voting 149
to 59 to continue him on the board as
recommended by the committee on
military affairs. There was a three
hours’ debate before the vote was
reached.
It was arranged by unanimous con¬
sent on behalf of Air. Henderson, re¬
publican, of Iowa, that Wednesday
and Thursday of next week be set
aside for debate on the bankruptcy
bill, the vote on its passage to be
taken after the reading of the journal
on Friday. At 4 :35 o’clock the house
adjourned. oldfashioned field day
Friday was an
in the house, with radical variation. It
was private bill day under the rule when
the bills to pays claims arising out of
the war, which in the past afforded op¬
portunity and excuse for lighting bat¬
tles of the rebellion over again, were
SWUNG PLACE, MURRAY COUN'l t. GA:. THURSDAY. APRIL 23. 189B.
under consideration during the day,
however, the contest was waged, largely
bv republican members who advocated
the payment of the bills reported by
the committee on war claims,and thosi
who favored postponing, and some of
the statements were startling in their
bitterness.
Mr. Walker, republican, of Massa¬
chusetts, was almost violent in his de¬
nunciation of the policy which pro¬
scribed the puymeut of these claims.
Dramatically he declared that no rob
btr born on the Rhine ever equaled
the government of the United estates
in robbery of honest creditors. He
attacked the leaders of the house,
charging them with purposely prevent¬
ing the consideration of bills for the
payment of just claims, asserting that
extraordinary rulings of the chair, in
committee of the whole, were resorted
to to aid in carrying,out that policy.
Mr. McCall, republican, of Tennes¬
see, and Mr. Evans, republican, of
Kentucky, appealed to the house to
pay the claims of loyal men from the
south.
Air. Ray, republican, of New York,
charged that to enter upon the pay¬
ment of them would compel the next
administration to issue bonds from be¬
ginning to close.
Messrs. Dockery, of Missouri, and
Grosveuor, of Ohio, made political
speeches in connection with their com¬
mon position to the payment of the
claims, the former asserting that re¬
publican legislation in the past, and
the latter that democratic administra¬
tion was reponsible for the present
condition of the treasury. The net
result of the day’s discussion was the
rejection of one bill and the passage of
another.
Air. Pickier, republican, of South
Dakota, reported the general pension
bill prepared by the committee on in¬
valid pensions and it was recommit¬
ted.
At 4:50 o’clock tho house took re¬
cess until 8 o’clock, tho evening session
to be for the consideration of private
pension bills.
At the evening session of the house
nine pension bills were considered and
ordered to be reported to the house
with favorable recommendations. A
large part ol the time was spent upon
the bill gi anting a pension of $75 a
month to the widow of Brigadier Gen¬
eral Fred Vanderveer, who was origi¬
nally colonel of the Thirty-fifth Ohio
Volunteer Infantry. The amount of
the pension was reduced to $50 a
month, and efforts were made to make
it $30, a proposition which received
considerable support among the re¬
publican mombers.
THE SENATE.
After a set speech in the senate Tues¬
day by Air. Squire, republican, of
Washington, iu support of his bill
making large appropriations for sea
coast defenses, the rest of the session
was taken up in the consideration of
the Delaware election case, Air. Chan¬
dler arguing at great length in favor
of the claim of Air. Dupont to the va¬
cant seat in the senate. The other side
of the case is to be sustained by the
senator from Delaware, Air. Gray,
democrat, who holds that Governor
Watson was entitled to cast his vote in
the legislature as a state senator and
speaker of the senate; and that hav¬
ing so voted, there was no majority
for any candidate. Air. Gray intimat¬
ed that his speech would probably
close the case on that side. Air. Hoar
gave notice, however, of his purpose
to address the senate in support of
Air. Dupont’s claim, so that a decision
of the question is not yet in sight.
The fact of Senator Alorrill, of Ver¬
mont, having attained his eighty-sixth
birthday, with more than half his life
spent in congress, was recalled
in the chaplain’s opening prayer, in
which the senator was truthfully de¬
scribed as hale in body and clear,
sound and vigorous in intellect.
At 5 o’clock p. m. the senate ad¬
journed until Wednesday.
In the senate Thursday the Peffer
resolution for an investigation of the
bond sales was presented and a strug¬
gle for precedence occurred, Cullom,
Allison and Hale urging appropriation
bills. It was finally determined to
consider the bond resolution and Air.
Hill (Dem., N. Y.,) took the floor to
oppose the resolution.
Air. Hill said this was a populist res¬
olution and no one had a better right
to control it than Peffer. It was pop¬
ulistic and hostile to the issue of all
bonds. Air. Hill declared that the iu
vestigation was proposed without any
changes or grounds for imputing
wrong done. Mr. Peffer wanted the
bond investigation because he thought
there was a popular curiosity about
the bond issue.
Senators who wanted this investiga¬
tion should have made specifications.
The course was extraordinary and was
taken because no one wanted to be re¬
sponsible when it was found that noth¬
ing wrong had been done. It was pre¬
ferred to take the gossip of the street
and newspaper insinuations rather
than actual well known facts.
When Mr. Hill resumed his speech,
began Thursday, on the bond investi¬
gation resolution the senate chamber
Friday was almost empty, the senators
being either in the committee rooms
or in the cloak rooms. Tho chamber
soon filled up, however, in anticipa¬
tion, of Air. Hill’s speech. The gal¬
leries were well filled despite the ex¬
cessive heat of the day.
“^ell the ‘ifrxitli.”
Mr. Hill did not conclude. His
speech was against the passage of the
PelTer resolution to investigate the
bond sales of the present administra¬
tion. Mr. Hill saved his streuth fo •
a protracted fight by having read at
the clerk’s desk the various laws rele
tive to the redemption of greeubacl ,
and quotations from President Cleve¬
land’s messages on the financial ques¬
tion.
After a short executive session, the
senate adjourned over at 5 :30 o’clock
until Monday.
The proposition to adjourn over
Friday was antagonized by Air. Chan¬
dler and others, and the vote upon it
was 35 to 28.
REPUBLICANS AT LOUISVILLE.
They Organize With Bradley Forces
in the Lend.
The K< nlucky republican state con¬
vention called to elect four delegates
at large to the national republican
convention and instruct them as to
the state’s preference wns called to or¬
der at Louisville Wednesday after
uoon. A lively fight between delegates
which took policemen to quell prefaced
the proceedings.
Hon. John W. Yerkes, chairman of
the state central committee, called the
convention to order, after which the
Rev. Dr. Waltz prayed for the dele¬
gates. Air. Yerkes then delivered an
address, and when the name of Gov¬
ernor Bradley was mentioned the del¬
egates cheered wildly.
A reference to McKinley was greet¬
ed with yells that could be heard a
block. Air. Yerkes rend a telegram
from Congressman Evnns, urging the
convention to put a' strong sound
money plank iu the platform. On be¬
half of the McKinley forces, W. O.
Root nominated Judge Goorge Denny,
of Lexington, for temporary chairman.
Judge Thomas Z. Alorrow was nomi¬
nated on behalf of the Braclleyites.
The roll call then proceeded with
numerours outbreaks, whenever a con¬
testing county was reached, and it was
three hours before the call was com¬
pleted and the secretary announced
the result—Alorrow 833, Denny 742,
showing a Bradley majority of 91.
Judge Alorrow then took the chair and
the business of organization was con¬
tinued. The usual committees were
named and at 6 o’clock the convention
adjourned until 8 p. m.
When the convention met at 8:30
o’clock the committee on permanent
organization reported recommending
Charles Blanford, of Breckenridgo
county, for chnirmnu, and Lyons, of
Newport, nominated George Denny,
Jr., for chairman, but consideration
of the report was postponed until after
report of the credentials committee,
which announced it would not be
ready for an hour and a half. During
the interval Judge Denny delivered an
impassioned speech, which called forth
repeated applause from the AlcKiuley
supporters. .
At 11 o’clock the committeo on cre¬
dentials reported seating the contest¬
ing delegations of Jefferson, Logan and
Warren countips, a compromise being
effected between the McKinley and
Bradley members, each taking half of
the delegations.
The report of the committee on per¬
manent organization was then adopted,
attempts to nominate Judge Denny
and Oliver Root for chairman being
ineffectual, and Charles Blanford took
the chair. The committee on rules re¬
ported at 11:15 and the report was
adopted.
At 12 :10 a. m. the convention ad¬
journed until Thursday.
CONCEDED TO JOHNSTON.
The Montgomery Advertiser Says He
Will He Governor.
Tho Montgomery Advertiser con¬
cedes the election of Johnston, the
free silver candidate for governor, he
having secured at least 304 of the del¬
egates to the Alabama state, eonvention.
Editorially the Advertiser says
that Air. Clarke has fought one
of the finest battles for sound
money in the history of the state,
and he has received the support
of a large majority of the demo¬
crats of the state. It considers John¬
ston’s nomination due to letting down
the bars by the state committee, by
which he secured enough opposition
votes in close counties to change tlie
result. It considers that Air. Clarke
has achieved a great moral victory,
which will be far reaching iu its effects
on the party, though he loses the
personal regard ol' the nomination.
The president issued his annual
Behring sea proclamation Thursday
warning sealers from plying their
vocation during the closed season—
May 1st to August Dt. The procla¬
mation similar to tho others issuer
mi past \ ears.
REMEMBERED THE CHURCHES.
The Will or Tobacconist John Pope
I’robated.
The will of Air. John Pope, vice
president of the American Tobacco
company, was probated iu tho Henrico
circuit court at Richmond, Va., Tues¬
day. The estate is valued at $1,750,
000, and the bulk of it is left to Air.
Pope’s brother and three sisters. There
are bequests of from $1,000 to $5,000
to a nutnberof churches and charitable
institutions.
NATIONAL CAPITAL
GOSSIP OF WASHINGTON IN
BRIEF PARAGRAPHS.
Doings of the Chiefs and Heads of the
Various Departments.
The case of Rev. A. J. Diaz, an
American A'iig citizen, who was reported
as arrested at Havana, came be
forfiie Th.Ojepartment department of state Friday.
thrih«visul immediately cabled
general at Havana to take
for'Hmir /ual steps trial. for his protection and
bouse committee on ways and
mo ’felias decided to report favorably
the .*1.11 to repeal the section of- the
Wi;‘ -‘^se t >n act which gives free alcohol
for, in the arts and manufactures.
Th-Anternal revenue officials have ac
kiF pledged their inability to carry
ou; le provisions of the law. Great
frt , jt are said to be possible under
tin , iw and many large claims have
becf| piled up against the government.
toL^from ^/ivate Constantinople advices received state at Wasbing- the Red
No<Yne Or $>s is doing a great work in Armenia.
is interfering with them, and
theiporte has declared, in writing,
both to the English and American lega¬
tions, that no one shall interfere with
the great charitable undertaking.
Every permit that has been asked for
has been granted. The Red Cross
agents are in the heart of the recently
disturbed districts and special protec¬
tion is given them.
Senator Bacon has given notice of
an amendment he will propose to the
sundry civil bill providing: “That the
secretary of the treasury be, and is
authorized and directed to pay over to
the Cotton States and International
Exposition Company all those por¬
tions of appropriations heretofore
made under the act of April 18, 1894,
for the building and for the exhibit by
the government at the Cotton States
and International exposition, at At¬
lanta, which shall remain unexpended
after all the liabilities incurred by the
government on account of said build¬
ing and exhibit shall have been paid
off and discharged.”
The Deficiency Bill.
J'he house appropriations commit
teo completed the general deficiency
bill, the last of the general appropria¬
tions, Saturday. It was reported to
the house by Chairman Cannon. The
measure carries the appropriation of
$4,791,340, divided as follows:
State department, $33,107; treasury
department, $1,074, 267 ; fish commis¬
sion, $78,105; Smithsonian institution,
$1,046; District of Columbia, $116,-
210r war department, $607,114 ; navy
department, $199,832; interior de¬
partment, $304,871; postoffice depart¬
ment, $1,094; out of postal revenue,
$1,421, 600; department of justice,
$251,337; government printing office,
$190,850; library of congress, $269;
house of representatives, $104,145;
j udgments United States courts,$1,572;
judgments court of claims, $143,647;
judgments, Indian depredation claims,
$40,528; audited claims, $169,819.
In addition to the sum recommended
in the bill tho urgent deficiency act,
passed iu February, appropriated
$6,305,436, to supply deficiencies in
appropriations for the support of the
government during the current and
prior fiscal years, thus making the to¬
tal for deficiencies appropriated and
recommended for this season, $11,
096,776.
The following statement, a part of
the report on the bill, shows the
amount of each of the general appro¬
priation bills as passed by the house,
he date of passage, amount of urgent
deficiency act, as it became a law,
amount of accompanying bill, amount
of miscellaneous acts approved to date,
amount of permanent appropriations
and aggregate of the whole:
Agriculture, $3,215,310, February
tl8 ; army, $22,275,902, February 19 ;
diplomatic and consular, $1,630,058,
January 28; District of Columbia,
$5,418,930, April 9; fortifications,
$5,842,337, April 14; Indian, $8,420,-
445, February 25; legislative, $21,380,-
1 65, March 6; Alilitary academy,
$448,117, January 20; navy, $31,647,-
239, Alarch 26; pensions, $141,325,820,
January 17; postoffice, $91,819,557,
Alarch 11; river and brfrbor, $10,351,-
860, April 6; sundry ‘$374,613,449. civil, $29,836,992,
April 2. Total, Ur¬
gent deficiency act, $6,305,436; general
deficiency, $4,791,340; miscellaneous
acts, $315,024 ; permanent annual ap¬
propriations, $119,054,160. Grand
total, $505,969,401.
Internal Revenue Receipts.
The internal revenue receipts for the
nine months of the current fiscal year
from official figures made public
by Commissioner Aliller aggregates
$111,179,075, an increase over the cor¬
responding months of 1895 of $183,-
597, exclusively derived from tobacco
and beer. The principal items of rev¬
enue were; Spirits. $61,525,454, a de¬
crease of $2,377,415; tobacco, $23,-
257,507, an increase of $1,151,189;
fermented liquors, $24,059,737, an in¬
crease of $1,758,071; oleomargarine,
$996,329, a decrease of $188,892, and
miscellaneous, $340,046, a decrease of
$118,987.
61 a Year In Advance
GROWTH OF THE SOUTH.
The Industrial Situation as Reported
for the Fast Week.
Reports received during the past
week of industrial and business affairs
in all parts of* the south from more
than twenty-five hundred correspond¬
ents show that the cotton mills in the
south are fully employed, with one im¬
portant exception, and in that case a
strike will be soon adjusted. Some
large mills are coming into operation,
and there are reports of more. Low
priced cotton is more than offset by
low prices for cloth. Manufacturers
complain that there is no margin for
profit, but none of the mills have shut
down for that reason. The new crop
is in good condition and the weather
is favorable for its growth. It is evi¬
dent from the reports that a very large
area haB been planted, bat it is not
time yet to make up reliable estimates.
Southern iron continues to be in
large demand. The combination
among large producers has made prices
firmer, and an advance averaging 25
cents per ton for the various grades of
iron has been reported in Birmingham.
Prospects are that there will be a
lively summer in the furnace dis¬
tricts, and that quotations will be
maintained if not advanced, in which
event wages will not be reduced again
as was feared. Very heavy sales of
southern iron have been made during
the past week, and some large orders
have been received, so that, for some
weeks to come there will be much ac
tivity among iron produoers.
The lumber trade is increasing in
amount and prices are firm. The ter¬
ritory in which southern lumber is
sold is growing rapidly, as has been
particularly noted by the shipments
this spring. Wherever a new market
is opened, either for pine, cypress or
hardwoods, it is always kept. The ex¬
port trade is very good,and is increas¬
ing week by week.
General business is good, bnt there
is complaint of much competition and
of price-cutting. Spring trade has
been an improvement on that of
last year, and prospects for the
truck and fruit growers are favorable.
This business is growing to v ry large
proportsons in all parts ol t te south
where railroad facilities are ..vailable.
Among important new industries or¬
ganized or incorporated during the
week are the Atlanta Bicycle and Ma¬
chine works, of Atlanta, Ga., capital
$100,000 ; an addition to the plant of
the Chattanooga (Tenn.) Foundry and
Pipe works, to cost $100,000,
and the Valdosta Guano company, of
Valdosta, Ga., capital $60,000. The
Wilson Aluminum oompany, capital
$50,000, of Holcomb Bock, Va., the
Tropical Electrical company, of Key
West, Fla., the Martinsburg Electric
company, of Alartinsbnrg, W. Va., and
the Springer Oil and Gas company, of
Wheeling, W. Va., each with $50,000
capital have also been chartered. The
Texas Automatic Light company ha3
been organized at Houston, Tex., with
$50,000 capital, the Smith-Dimmick
Lumber company, with the same capi¬
tal at Newton, Ala., and the Pasqua
tank Lumber company, capital $40,
000, at Norfolk, Va. The Chester
Mining and Alanufacturing company,
capital $25,000, has been chartered at
Roanoke, Va., the Inman Compress
company with the same capital at Au¬
gusta, Ga., a $10,000 cannery is re¬
ported at Cookville, Tenn., and
the Calvert Compress company, capi¬
tal $10,000, has been formed at Cal¬
vert, Tex.
There is also reported a foundry and
machine shop at Owensboro, Ky., mar¬
ble and granite works at Dallas, Tex.,
cooperage works at Alexandria, La., a
$10,000 lumber company at Donaldson,
Ark., and a large saw mill at Gloster,
Alias. The new buildings of the week
include an $8,000 court house at Ver
noD, Fla., a $10,000 jail at Lake City,
Fla., a seven-story office building at
Atlanta, Ga., and one to cost $125,000
at Alemphis, Tenn., a $13,000 school
building and a $35,000 residence at
Louisville, Ky.—Tradesman (Chatta¬
nooga, Tenn.)
BURDEN’S DIAMONDS.
Two Former Servants Arrested for
Their Theft.
Two men giving their names as Dun¬
lop and Turner, describing themselves
as gentlemen servants, were arraigned
in Marlborough street police court,
London, charged with having in their
possession twenty-eight diamonds, ag¬
gregating £3,000 in value, for the pos¬
session of which they were unable to
give any satisfactory account. The two
men weffe remanded for a week with¬
out bail.
Police Inspector Froest searched the
lodgings of the men and found jewelry
worth $20,000. It is believed the jew¬
elry is the proceeds of the robbery of
the residence of I. Townsend Burden,
in New York, some time ago.
Two cablegrams received by Air.
Burden leave no doubt that the mys¬
tery surrounding the robbery is at last
cleared up. The first was from J. S.
Morgan & Co., his London bankers,
and notified him that Robert Dunlop,
formerly his butler, and William
Turner, formerly his second man, had
been arrested with the diamonds in
their posset si >n.
Woeey and the grave digger get on
well together.
NUMBER 9.
If You
ARE GOING TO
Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas,
Texas, Nebraska, Louisiana,
Colorado, Utah, California,
Oregon, Washington, Mex
ico, New Mexico or Arizona,
And will send me a postal oard or let¬
ter stating where yon are going,
when you are going, where
you will start from, how
many there are in yoor
party, what freight and
baggage you have,
I will write you or call at your
house and furnish you with
the fullest information regard¬
ing routes, lowest rates of all
classes, besides maps, descriptive and
illustrated , , mnd , pamphlets, , resort
books, Hot Springs guides, etc.
Cheap farming lands in Mis¬
souri, Arkansas, Kansas and
Texas.
L A. GALLAGHER,
SOUTHERN PASSENGER AGENT,
Missouri Pacific R'w'y
and IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE.
103 Read House,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
(JHARLES N. KING,
Attorney-at-Law,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
J # J. BATES,
Attorney-at-Law,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
Special attention to oolleotiozu and
criminal practice.
Y # L. WATTS,
Attorney-At-Law,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
Prompt attention to all business.
Q L, HENRY,
Attorney-at-Law,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
Will practice in the courts of this and
adjoining counties.
J # S. FANN,
Dentist,
DALTON, GA.
Solicits voivr tmtronaaa
JjeNELLY & HEARTSILL,
General Job Printers,
CLEVELAND, TENN.
Mail orders will receive prompt atten¬
tion. Send for prices and
samples of work.
rfHOMAS J. BRYANT,
Livery Stable,
DALTON, GA.
I have bought the entire Livery
business of Calaway & Longest, and
solicit your patronage.
L P. BAGWELL, M. D.,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
Offers his professional services to the
people of this section and solicits a
share of the patronage.
W. ANDERSON,
Physician and Surgeon,
SPRING PLACE, GA.
Professional services offered to the
people of this section. Cells cheer¬
fully answered day and night.
J. A, PRICE, M. D.,
SUMACH, GA.
Will practice his profession in this
and surrounding country.
Will be at the Temple Honse on the
first Tuesdays in eaoh month for ths
purpose of examining and treating
Aoute and Chronic diseases.
f e have Money to Loan at 6 per cent
On farm or city property in any Mo¬
tion of country where property has a
fixed market value. Money ready far
immediate loans where security and
title is good. No commisaion. W«
solicit applications. Blanks furnished
upon request, ALLEN A OO.,
40-42 Broadway, N. Y«