Newspaper Page Text
CHARLTON COUNTY HERALD.
VOLUME XIiI. NUMBEER 39.
President Sends Message to Con
gress on Personnel of Navy.
The President Says That Under Present Con
ditions the Promotion of Officers of
Lower Grades Is Stagnated.
Washington, D. C.—Young blood in
the command of the navy was the
keynote of a special message which
President Tait sent to congress, urg
ing legislation for improving the per
sonnel of the fighting force and to
remedy what the president termed
“an abnormal condition, the result ot
past legislation.”
Under conditions now existing the
president declared the promotion of
officers of the lower grades was
stagnated to the great detriment of
the service and the country, and be
cause nearly every officer who re
tained his health was allowed to pass
through the various grades and be
retired as rear admiral, the greater
number of commanding offivers had
had inadequate experience.
Some of the most important chang
€B which the president recommended
were,
To create higher ranking flag offi
cers. The size of the fleet now de
mands two grades above rear admir
al. In the Atlantic fleet there should
be an admiral in command, a vice ad
miral for the second squadrom and
rear admirals for each of the other
two divisions.
The personnel of officers and men
should be based on the tonnage of
effective ships and increases or de
creases of ships would increase or de
crease the personnel in a fixed pro
portion. Provisions should be made
against sudden fluctuations in the
personnel, however.
With one million two hundred
thousand tons of ships as now author
ized, the ultimate personnel would
reach three thousand line officers and
midshipmen and sixty thousand en
listed men. The officers as now
would be drawn from the naval acad
emy with additions from the ranks.
A reorganization of the retirement
‘scheme would fix the rate of pay of
_retired officers on their time of ser
wice. The president believes that too
- many oOfficers reach the rank of se
t‘ ,;33 _;Oa J flfld : »o, “t::
“be ] ] nge.‘ ¢ e :
During the next eleven years, if the
proposed measure becomes a law,
there will be about one hundred and
thirty-eight retirements from ordi
nary causes against three hundred
and four during the last eleven years,
with a cost of one-fourth of the lat
ter.
In urging the need of the proposed
legislation that the younger officers
may be eligible for promotion and be
come qualified to command the fleet
and squadron, the president pointed
to the fact that under the present ar
rangement one hundred and sixty of
ficers would enter the junior lieuten
ant’s grade each year, and that only
fc;rty a year would be promoted out
of it.
“lI am strongly of the opinion that
the future of our navy will be seri
ously compromised unless the ages of
our senior officers are materiaaly re
duced and opportunity given for ex
perience and training for battleship
and fleet commands,” the president
said.
Deadly Toll Taken by Water.
New York City.—The loss of life
by drowning among summer bathers
of New York, New Jersey and Penn
sylvania amounted in 1909 to 1,550
deaths, according to figures made
public here by officers of the United
States Life Saving Corps. New York
is shown to have paid the heaviest
toll, with a total of 836 lives lost,
of which 284 were children, .
Will Appeal World Case.
Washington, D. C.—As a result of
the cabinet meeting, Attorney Gene
ral Wickersham telegraphed to Dis
trict Attorney Wise, at New York, to
note an appeal from the decision of
Judge Hough dismissing for want of
jurisdiction the indictment of the
Press Publishing Company (the New
York World) on the charge of libel
in connection with the Panama canal
cases.
His Wife Bathes in Whisky.
New York City.—Julian Zoro, a
restaurant proprietor of New Bruns
wick, N. J.,, was acquitted of selling
liquor without a license and selling
on Sunday, which it was explained
that Mr. Zoro was in the habit of
taking whiskey baths. When this
unique plea was made it won the jury
instantly.
Sea lsland Growers Stick.
Charleston, 8, C.—The Sea Island
Cotton Beed association voted not to
dissolve, although there was some
talk of this in the fact of “leakage”
of seed and a turning from the plant
ing of long staple to the more profit
able crop. The seed men will look
further into the propositions to start
a thread mill here and other kindred
industries.
Holding Cotton for 15 Cents.
Montgomery, Ala.—Nineteen thous
and bales of cotton are stored away
in Montgomery warehouses and are
demanding a price of 15 cents per
pound. Owners of the cotton an
nounce that the staple will not be
released until the demand is com
plied with by cotton brokers.
MEAT TRUST INDICTED.
Six Great Packing Companies and Twenty-One
Packers Must Stand Trial.
New York City.—Six great packing
companies and twenty-one packers,
several of them multi-millionaires, so
cially and industrially prominent,
were indicted by a grand jury in
Hudson county, New Jersey, charged
with eenspiracy in limiting the sup-
Ply of mekt and pdultry.
The indictment.is drawn up under
the law ot New Jersey, which pro
vides, upon conviction, a maximum
penalty of three years in the peni
tentiary, or a SI,OOO fine, or both.
The offense is extraditable, which
means that practically the meat bar
ons of this country must either suc
cessfully escape extradition or come
to Jersey Citl for trial.
~ Pierre Garven, the public prosecu
tor of Hudson county, announces he
will forthwith notify the defendants
of the indictment and will be ready
to force extradition in every case
None, he says, will be spared.
The defendants as named are as
follows:,
Corporations: The National Pack
ing Company, Armour & Co., Swift
& Co., Morris & Co., Hammond Pack
ing Company, G. H. Hammond &
Co.
Individuals: J. Ogden Armour, A.
Watson Armour, Louis F. Swift, Ed
ward F. Swift, Charles H. Swift, Ed
ward Morris, Ira N. Morris, Arthur
Meeker, Edward Tilden, L. A, Carton,
Thomas E. Wilson, Thomas J. Con
ners, F. A. Fowler, L. H. Heyman,
James E. Bathgate, Jr., George J.
Edwards, Frederick B. Cooper, D. E.
Hartwell, Henry B. Darlington, A.
A. Fuller, Lemuel C. Patterson.
The indictment, which bristles in
its arraignment of the men named,
also refers to ‘divers others” as be
ing responsible. These latter, how
ever, are not specified.
The foregoing list of names, it will
be seen, represents the very back
bone of the great packing industry,
containing, as it does, two Armours,
three Swifts and two Morrises, all for
the most part residents of Chicago,
together with less important figures
lin the packing world. Their indict
‘ment brings to a climax the first con
certed action in the east to fix re
sponsibility for the prevailing abnor
mally high prices of commodities.
The indictment states that mere
driblets of the supply were put on
the market at stated intervals, small
quantities agreed upon by the defend
ants, thus to curtail and restrict the
supply for the purpose-of fictitiously,
prices to, the Publie.”: .« My 40 &
oss alleßed tq, have been sustained
by the. public‘by this alleged crea
tion of artificial prices, but ware
houses are held specifically to blame.
By this means, it is charged, the de
fendants were successful in keeping
off the markets large quantities of
‘meat and poultry which, if put upon
‘the markets, would have been suffi
cient to meet reasonable demand.
~ TO FIGHT PEACH DISEASES.
Government Experts to Be Stationed
at Barnesville, Ga.
Barnesville, Ga.—Large peach grow
ers of this city have induced the bu
reau of plant industry and entomol
ogy at Washington to establish here
an experimental and demonstration
station for the purpose of showing
the fruit growers how to control the
two deadly enemies of the peach in
dustry, namely, curculio and brown
rot.
For some time they have corre
sponded with the authorities at Wash
ington and succeeded in getting the
department to send representatives
here to look into the situation. Dur
ing the coming season each of these
departments will have a representa
tive in the peach belt of this vicinity.
A building rented by the govern
ment and the necessary apparatus
will be installed at once. Mr. W. M.
Scott of the bureau of plant industry
and Mr. A. L. Quaintance of the bu
reau of entomology will be in charge
of the station.
No Arbitration to Stop Strike.
Philadelphia, Pa.—ln s‘gite of the
constantly increasing demands by re
ligious bodies and others that arbitra
tion be resorted to, to settle the
strike against the Philadelphia Rapid
Transit Company, officials of that
company declared that no proposi
tion looking toward arbitration in any
form is being considered by the board
of directors.
Newsy Paragraphs.
A souvenir of the capture of a
southern blockade runner during the
civil war, an old box containing about
$35,000 in Confederate bonds, has
been found in the customs house in
Boston, Mass. The discovery was
made during the removal of the cus
toms house property to temporary
quarters while a new tower is being
constructed on the old building.
It was announced before the Acad
emy of Science at Berlin that Mme.
Currie, who, with the late Professor
Currie discovered radium, has suc
ceeded after one hundred and forty
days of research in obtaining a tenth
or a milligram of the new element
known as polonium. She states that
it possesses a radioctivity superior to
radium, but disappears rapidly,
whereas radium conserves its energy
indefinitely. Polonium 18 said to be
five thousand times rarer than radi.
um. The tiny speck produced was
the result of treating five tons of
pitchblend with hydrochloric acid, It
is kept in a vase of quartz and the
vase is split and cracked in all di
rections from the rapid chemical de
composition caused by the polonium,
FOLKSTON, GA., MARCH 3. 1910,
FARMERS' OPPORTUNITY
Southern Planters Should Take
Advantage of High Food Prices. -
Macon Telegraph Shows How It Would be Ad
vantageous To Plant Less Cotton and
More Grain. ,
Macon, Ga.—The stock of money in
this ceuntry today is approximately
$3,130,000,000. Ten years ago it was |
$2,340,000,000. This s a gain of
$790,000,000, or approximately 80 per
per cent. g
Authoritive statistics show that the
1909 wheat crop was 8.3 busheles per
capita, against 8.63 bushels per capi
ta ten years ago; the corn crop
dropped from 34.9 to 30.9 bushels per
capita; the oats crop from 12.4 to
11.1 bushels per capita; the hay Crop .
from 1 ton to 3-4 of a ton per capita;"
and the number of food animals,
swine, eattle and sheep, fell from 2.5°
to 1.9 per capita. B
In the matter of meats the govern-&
ment returns issued on, the 25th of*
January show, under the head of
swine (hogs) that the total suppliesd
in 1900, of 54,000,000 fell to 47,000,
000 in 1910, a decrease of nearly 154
per cent. Other cattle, in 1909, 48.'
000,000, fell to 47,000,000 in 1910. =
The. number of cattle killed under;
the inspection law in the United
States in 1907 was 7,621,717, in 1009
it had fallen to 7,325,337; during'the
same period there was an increase
in the number of calves killed from
1,763,574 to 2,046,713. The receipts:
of hogs at the markets fell 13.8 per
cent from 1908 to 1909, -~ .. 8
In the matter of the productidh of
fruits, the leader and standard .(be:
cause it keeps longer) apples,
United States, have fallen from
000,000 barrels in 1866 to 21,000,
barrels in 1909! 2
Here is money, per dollar, d
ing in its purchasing power
of a 30 per cent increase in volums
Here is an increasing deficit :}:
field food crops per capita. Here
a marked decrease in hogs and &
tle supply. Here is a decrease in
the leader among all the fruifs -
ples) of approximately 70 p
On the top of all this is
age tariff of 60 per cent on
elgn foodstuffs. A
gT IO AL B, LOCSC S .
eT | B ODIEY SO YOO L ¥ '\.\,i
‘the tariff—the prices of beef, pork
and its by-products, mutton, chickens,
eggs, butter and milk, and all other
food products—taken on an average
—have never been as high as nowj
barring of course the war prices of
the ’6o's. Is not this the southern
farmer’s golden opportunity? ili%fl
The Telegraph has shown in previ.
ous articles that in 1860, when the
population in Georgia was 1,057,286,
there were in this state 2,036,116
hogs. In 1907, with a population of
2,700,000 there were only 1,690,000
hogs. With the population more
than doubled, the number of hogs
has been reduced nearly one-half!
The Telegraph has shown that, in
1860, there were 299,688 milch cows.
In 1907—308,000—an increase only
of 8,312, That in 1860, there were
oxen and other cattle, 706,194. In
1907, 680,000—decrease of 26,194!
That in 1860, there were 512,618
sheep. In 1907, 269,000—a decrease
of 243,618!
These figures are surprising, and
vet they are based on actual statis
tical returns.
The Telegraph has shown that in
1890, when Georgia’'s population was
1,837,358, Georgia’s farmers owned
1,627,008 swine. In 1907, when the
population had increased to 2,700,000,
the swine owned by Georgia farmers
decreased to 1,599,000—a loss of 28,-
008. That in 1890, the sheep owned
by Georgia farmers numbered 411,876,
In 1907 they had decreased to 269,000
—a loss approximately of one-half!
That in 1890, Georgia owned 354,618
milch cows. In 1907 the number fell
to 308,000—a loss of 46,618,
All of these figures are amazing—
but they are collected from the most
reliable sources. They call to tae
farmer with irresistible eloquence and
force. They cry aloud to them to
plant less cotton and more grain; to
raise more cattle and hogs-—not as a
patriotic thing, but as a profit-mak
ing business. It is the farmer’'s op
portunity, His day has come if he
is wise enough to read the signs of
the times and take advantage of it.
Food is the first and the last of
the natural man. All men must eat.
Everything else is secondary, We
en go naked and live in the woods
a 8 the neathens do, but we must eat.
It takes a pound of cotton to buy a
pound of meat. A pound of meat
can be raised more cheaply Lhan a
pound of cotton. A farmer can eat
his meat but he cannot eat his cot
ton,
The money supply has grcewn fas
ter than the food supply. The farm
production for the last four years
have been low in comparison with
the increase in other forms of value.
Manufacturing enterprises, manufac
tured materials, stock and bond cor
porations have more than tripled in
the Ilast ten years, The farmers
have not kept pace-~—Macon Tele
graph.
Georgia News in Paragraghs.
The number of mules sold in the
gsouthern part of the state this win
ter exceeds by several hundred the
number sold in any former season,
and the prices paid are the highest
on record.
. GEORGIA NEWS NOTES. :
;To encourage the boys and girls
|of Lowndes county to do some *spe
ieific work this year, and to stimulate
'terest in the farm, County Schoo:
Commissioner C. L. Smith is arrang
lnz to award some very handsome
pflzes to the pupils of the rurai
,l,chools. Prizes will be offered to the
*boys under eighteen years of age to
e awarded to the most guccessful
| growers of certain crops, and to the
;5!11'1 pupils of the schools who show
the greatest proficiency in cooking,
I needle work, flower culture and poul
| try raising.
| By the middle of March the state
- will know, in facts and figures, just
how much progress was made in
'good roads construction in Georgia
“during the nine months of 1909 (from
| April 1 to December 381) that the
l‘convicis were on the roads. S.
| McCallie, state geologist, is compil
l Ing the record. and this information,
-&howing how many miles of road
f.each county has built, how much it
%ogt, ete., will be published in the
| form of a bulletin by tne state geolog
.ical department.
| A cotton gin company of Columbus
' received an order from southern Rus
.Bia for three carloads of ginning ma
| chinnery. Shipments of Columbus
| made cotton gins are made to Afica
firegularly.
. Congressman S. A. Roddenbery,
from the Second congressional dis
%trtct of Georgia, it is now. Governor
%firown forwarded to Mr. Roddenbery
E is commission and issued a procla
mation to the effect, that he had been
g;'g"blected to flll the vacancy in that
g*:tssembly caused by the death of the
?{' ate Honorable J. M. Griggs.
. By unanimous vote, Shellman ex
' pressed her confidence in the bright
“future of the city in a water and
" Bchool bond eletcion for $13,000. This
B’fih Shellman's third successful election
_for improvement bonds. The city had
& complete system of electric light
. and water works when the population
was only five hundred and twenty.
:fiij the last five years Shellman has
“doubled in population. When the
improvements are made no city in
n(*.;' uthwest Georgia will have a bet
pter system of water works or prove
“miore inviting to homeseekers,
). The Rome and Northern railroad
ill “extend its tracks at once from
to Tunmell Hill, a distance of
rty. miles, provided the peo
é fi . ; ‘,'(‘ , saa “., ."d
Mions _:-,-,‘3" avinE o W
b " ‘,’j. .;;f?.‘y-*g.,;'%,_,f *
\ of H. M. Stuith Cand t h
TP WL 14y out a-Ire 8§ ragiafy
88 possible from the present termi
nus of the work to Tunnel Hill. This
is a small town on the Western and
“Atlantic railroad, about twenty miles
- above Dalton, and is the natural pass
‘through the mountains. The territory
_from Gore to Tunnel Hill is one of
the richest agricultural and timber
sections in the state, and thousands
~of dollars of trade will come to Rome
‘over the tracks of the new railroad
that cannot get there now under or
dinary circumstances.
At a meeting of the democratic ex
ecutive committee held at Moultrie,
Jasper county’s primary was set for
April 15. Politics are warming uyp,
and a large number of candidates are
in the field. .
The board of trade of Commerce
has already raised more than SSOO,
consgisting of cash and premiums, to
be awarded in a corn contest to be
held here this fall. Several hundred
dollars will yet be raised, and the
contest promises to be one of the
-most helpful, in encouraging the cul
ture of corn, of anything of the kind
that has ever been held in this sec
tion of the state.
Although the year 1909 is recorded
as having been the most prosperous
Year in the history of Statesboro, the
deposits in the three banks showing
considerably over a half million dol
lars, and the building improvements
showing a vast increase over any
previous year, this year promises to
exceed by far that of 1909 in build
ings, the biggest boom that has ever
struck Statesboro now being in its
infancy, and as a result more busi
ness houses are planned for immedi
ate erection than were built during
the whole of last year.
Another federal official treated
with contempt the orders of Judge
Fite of the Dade county superior
court. United States Deputy Collec
tor Crockett of Rome went to Rising
Fawn, broke the lock and the cigtern
room of the Cureton Distillery, re
cently placed there by order of Judge
Fite and entered the building.
Despite the most severe winter
known in Statesboro in many years
and up to a few days ago freezing
weather having been experienced,
fruit trees, especially peaches, are
budding.
Edward W. Johnson of Gainesville
i 8 the champion nineteen-year-old
farmer of northeast Georgia. On fif
ty-five acres in cultivation in wheat
and oats he made more than one
thousand two hundred bushels of
corn, sixteen bales of cotton, one
hundred and fifty-one, and one-half
bushels of wheat, one hundred bush
els of oats, tuirty bushels of goobers,
one hundred and fifty bushels of
Bweet potatoes, twenty-five tons of
good pea vine, popcorn and sorghum
hay; five gallons of sorghum; fatten
ed six hogs and made a vast quantity
of vegetables and popcorn. In addi
tion to the hay crop which he saved,
he saved six thousand five hundred
bundles of good four-hand fodder. His
best acre of corn made more than
eighty bushels, waile his entire crop
of corn made more than sixty bush
els per acre,
Dollar Saving Days
Prosperity dates from the first dol=
lar saved. If you are earning
money you ought to save some=
thing. @ What you do now
in the way of saving may
determine what the fu
ture will bring you.
We pay interest on
savings accounts
compounded quar=
terly at 5 per=cent, on
time certificates 6 per-cent.
Let us open an
account with
We are prepared to serve
the public in an accepta~-
ble way. Have you tried
us?
i’ F::" _‘_‘{ % ) ‘mh ,
FOLKSTON
T I el
R 1N EACH TOWN
, it
o I sample Latest Model * " and exhibita
A\ j‘\ making monehhn. W% 'ar ?fif&lfi:‘t‘&?}-fih}g - o':a!c'c" ol
;"' 3 \ .::%:::’fn v"}lgeEQ Qi ux:.?l you rec:;i ;: n‘:pp":l" of your bicyt}c. Vz: nhls
| .8. without ace si¢ in advance, pre; yeight, an
\ il . |“ ] aliow TEN DAYB’hL"Bm%gm during which time you m‘fidfifie blc‘;clc and
A AR {ut it to any test you with, If you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish to
\ B “ (AR keep the bicycle ship it back to us at our expense and you will not be out one cent.
1 B\ A ’-‘ FACTORY PRICES We furnish the highest grnd': bicycles it is possible to make
; \ B X . at one small profit above actual I;ctory cost. You save $lO
N\ | SETE MNARIRR to $25 middlemen’s profits %fl ing direct of us and have the manufacturer’s guar
-3y POV B SUMEE 2ntee behind your bicycle. X ROT BUY a bicycle or a pair of tires from enyone
ok BERREI (Il at any Price until you receive our catalogues and learn our unheard of factory
’,’v‘ ] vq” “ Prices and remarkable special offers tohrldor agents. :
4 { whe ivi i
M\IRY QUL YOU WILL BE ASTOMISHED i) v eceive our beautial catelonue and
) ‘ e low prices we can make you this year. We sell the highest grade bicycles for less money
b v than any other factory. We are satisfied with sr.oo profit above factory cost,
BICYCLE DEALEMS. you can sell our bicycles under your own name plate at
P | double ™ “our prices. Orders filled the day received.
| SECOND HAND BICYCLES, We do wot regularly handle second hand bicycles, but
@y usually have a number on hand taken in trade by our (g,'hicago retail stores. These we ciear out
promptly at prices ranging from 83 to $8 or $lO. Descri})tive bargain lists mailed free,
GOASTER‘BRAKES single wheell‘dhnported roller chains and pedals, parts, repairs and
» equipment of all kinds at kalf the usual retail prices.
S@hso HEDGETHORN PUNCTURE-PROOF sfs 80
SELF-HEALING TIRES 7o /i ncocee onts
TO INTRODUGE, oNLY
The vegular retall price of these lives 15 g
$8.50 per pair, l)ui to ;"nhu’llm I’l we will H- |
llyou mplepary for 34 .80(cashwithorder §4.55), [ i ———r e A,
S I —pn ¢ P T loL LWT 11 T ',é” s \‘:d N
NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES [l U{l
'NAILS, Taeks or Glass will not let the [EEsEES Gakry .-mé’%‘?f'&'."
alr out. Sixty thousand pairs sold last year, \EEG————E_- b 14 J'\';‘x’ ”,?y'
Over two hum{red thousand pairs now in use, Pe A . -.,,\ .};’;--»
DEsch"lflfllMadcinnllsizcs.lti‘slivel{ L G SRR 0 NN
nndtfusyriding.vc?ldumblc:m(llincdins‘ldcwi h L e po TR ~"_.:“\;'.,. w
a special Huu{n);o lruhlmr, whi;‘lh never hccoxmis St 3.4 L
yorous and which closes up small punctures without allow. B
!n;,’ theairtoescape. We have hun(Yrcds of lettersfrom satis- I .R.x.t.'o. t‘h” thltzk rnb;wlr t':‘,'l';‘,l
fiedcustomersstating that thelrlireslmvconl{beeu pumged a ,a,'l', ..‘ml"" "l"’ it o e
uponceortwiceinawholeseason, They weigh nomore than ::: revén:rl:‘);)rcmt:rr'p This
anordinary tire, the‘puncturc resisting qualitiesbeing given tlr: will outlast .m'"' other
by several layers of thin, specially prepared fabric on the make—SOFT, KL !!ST’:[O a
tread. Theregular price of these tiresis §8.50 per pair,but for EASY nmufia &
advertising purposes weare mnkinfinspecml fncto?' priceto P
the rider of only $4.80 per pair. All orders shipped same day letter is received, We ship C. 0. D. on
approval, You do not Imy a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented,
We will allow a eash discount of 5 per ccnt{lhcrchy making the price $4.65 per pair) if you
send FULL CASH WITH ORDER and enclose this advertisement, You run mno risk in
sending us an order as the tires may be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are
not satisfactory on examination, We are perfectly reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a
bank, If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster,
wear better, last longer and look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price, We
know that you will be so well pleased that when you want a l»icrcle you will give us your order,
We want you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer,
don't buy any kind at any price until you send for a pair of
FF You "EED TIRES Hedgethorn Puncture-Proof tires on approval and trial at
the special introductory price quoted above; or write for our big Tire and Sundry Catalogue which
describes and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual Rrires.
but write us a postal today, DO NOT THINK OF BUYING a bicycle
Do ”or WAIT or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and wonderfu)
offers we are making. It only costs a postal to learn everything, Write it NOW,
J 4. L. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL.
60 YEARS’
EXPERIENCE
: i e
L) ..V
WL
b ! ' 71 © ¥
( f¥ G ’ : R ‘i;‘,_ /I"-'i'f
i Hdh LS
R TRADE MAntS
R 0 g DESIGNG
Y CoPYRIGHTS &~
Anyone sending n sketeh and deseription m
quickly ascertain our opinion free w;u-lh«-r o
invention in probably patertable, Communio
tionastrictly confidentink, HANDBOOK on Patent
gent freo, Oldest ngency for securing patent. .
Patents taken throuzh Munn & Co. roselss
special notice, without chares, in the
p o .fi. " .
Scienfilic American,
A handsomely {linstrated weekly., Lorvzest alr
enlation of any scientite Jommak Ternis, ¥5 o
year s four months, $/. 20id by all nevsdonlers,
NN & Do, o 0 laroacwn. By Vork
M ), 38 I@roacwar, lgwy York
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