The people. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 1877-1884, May 22, 1879, Image 2

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?r ' ■ s=-s THE HEOl’LE . | ccutive is clothed with power and pat- roungc, so anti-llopublican in character IV, l»Q| < MKt|^ And. dcgrcc^ ao Joug- aa iie THURSDAI, MAY 22, 1879, Wk are not rwi| of our eorreapoi naible for the Ttews ohs. Political Rcflcctloiiw. The incongruous relations nt present ex isting between State and Federal author- itf, and the cver-recttrripg autagocieras between establishments, 6ncc supposed to be harmonious, naturally lead us to seek for the disturbing elements which lie at the root of the incongruity. We are not altogether satisfied with the commonly ^ received Democratic so lution, which would attribute all the disturbance to Republican or Radical usurpation. Wo think the disease lies deeper, *nd--will be found to a rise, in n great measure, from the want of corres pondence between a fixed and un bending form of government and changes in the people, both political and social, littfo contemplated by the sagos of 177ti. In other words, the Republic has out grown its small clothes, and the casual ol)serv<'r would bo as much at fault in his conceptions of the true workings of .American politics by a perusal of our Conatttution, as a visitor to the tower of London would bo in determining the mo<le of warfare adopted by modern Kn- glisl^icn, through nu inspection of the ponderous battle axe of Coeur De Leon or the defensive armor of Henry V. Wo find ourselves, ns Matthew Ar Hold observes, “With an immense sys- tem of TTMtituticms, established facts, sc ored i ted dogmas, customs and rules which have come to us from times that are not modern. In this system our political life has to be carried forward, yet wo have a sense that this system is net of our own creation, that it by no means corresponds cxact’y with the wants of our actual life, tliat for us it is with authority, so dangcrous^to pop! liberty, so long as he holds in hit bandu the menas of wide spread ruindins cor* ruptiou among a people gr^jdjr of offio«| just so lorn: will the jilacc be filled, not by tbo'most virtifcms and Capable, but by him who will be most subservient tp the intriguing politicians, to whose arts and powers of combination he fa indebt ed for his elevation. U- To all iutcuts and purposcs our gov ormnent like that of Great Britain is one of party rule. But murk the essen tial difference. In the latter it is a re sponsible rule, in the former it is irr'C' sponsible; in tile one, the governing pbwer is in reality a ministry chosen from tha-ranks of the dominant party, which party thus rules through their exponents, who are responsible fur their measures; in the other, a measure car ried by a party vote has no legitimate father, and the President may allow it to pass simply by non-action without incurring the slightest responsibility, yet he may by his veto power neutralize the most patriotic and vitally important measure of a majority in both Houses of Congre s and bring the Government to a stand-still, intrenching himself be hind his constitutional privilege, a step which no English monarch dare do, al though that power is technically vested in the sovereign. Since then we must necessarily be governed by parties, we would prefer that the power and authority so to be exercised, bo direct and responsible, not indirect, insidious or irresponsible ; that the party ascendant shall elect the Presi dent by a majority vote of both cham bers through joint ballot; ns is now, we linderstand, the practice in France under the new Republican Constitution; that the cabinet be chosen by the Exec utive from the loading members in eith- Five Roilrwads tn Court. We regmTSjit limifi spa$|rprovetA| , us from Tublwfcng allengjj|ftb adln table report of the proceedings of t body, which was kindly furnislicd us r oouy, Lev. -TUWtmmTr norntToBat: - WcTfitrsrJtr y n<-« «r |U for .!*> u,». being; that the right of veto oe taken from the President and instead thereof be, all of us who have tny power of working, dissolvents of this old system of dominant ideas aud facts ; what wo have to study is that wo may not bo acrid dinolvents of it.” It requires no .great sagacity to por- -vcivc that thrprMent Federal Con stltu- lion wos framed for a people possessing all the elements of Republican simplicity, homogeneous, unambitious, intensely patriotic, deeply imbuod with religious h utiincut, earnest fu their convictions, yet tolerant in their practice, whose very poverty formed the best safeguard of liberty, and the surest obstacle to social or political inequality among citizens. 'It mattered little with such n people what form of government they might adopt, provided it took in some cousidc- lallc degree its complexion from their own social and political condition. Wo still cling to their traditions in theory, but ^iu practice wc lure wandered far from their political faith and doctrine. Wc are its fiir advanced at the present day iu the artificial and abnormal condition of fupcr-civillzed life as any of the an cient monarchies of Europe, and had not the people of the United States been thoroughly imbued, both by traditiou aud 1 mg practice, with the art of self- government, their present Constitution would have long since utterly failed. Wc arc thus naturally led to inquire, whether this complicated artificial ma chine can be safely regulated by rules constructed for the guidance of a people altogether dissimilar from us in their tastes, habits, modes of thought aud po litical ideas. In the first place, then, wc assume that, iu accordance witli the general ten dency of nationalities iu the nineteenth century, a Democratic form of govern- uent canr alone satisfy the aspirations, intelligence ahd liberalism of our pco* pie. In what respect does our present Cons itution fail in giving scope and ef ficacy to-popular rule? It fails in its subordination of the representative branch cf the Government, iu which tho popular voice can alone find expres sion and the prepondcranoe given by it to Executive power through the vast patronage which the wealth of the na tion has throwu into his hands. There eao be little doubt that, with the excep tion of the Czar of Russia, there is no European ruler who has in his hands .greater means of mischief through ar bitrary ac‘ioi than the President of the United States.^ Ihc answer may be, he is .elective. True, but be is not necessari ly the popu'ar choice any more than the King of Poland was, alihrmgU chosen by mass suffrage on too phiins of War saw. On the contrary, thouglr nomi- mvly c’octive, the President has been- ol Ittfo the mere henchman and creature ol a P«w leading, ambitious and unscrup. ukius spirits, who, by skid in manipu lating awd* controlling conventions have succeeded ?* selecting the “ Mayor of the Palaco, 1 ’ white the people, like the Merovingian dynasty of Pranuo, have mocked with the possession of a iaal sovereignty. Wc all know that is no' more the popular choice President than Caligula was Em- of ! Rome ly similar authority. that there be vested.in him, under cer tain circumstances and grave contingen cies, the power of dissolving Congress and appealing to the people by new writs of election ; that the Presidential pat ronage be lessened by depriving him of the power to displirPe an officer of the Government, excejffVns now, with the advice and consent of the Senate and then only for cause shown; aud that all Federal ojficts tit held for a. fixed term of year* dad not at the pleasure of t/tc Executive, for it is our solemn con viction that the doctrine inargurated by Andrew Jackson, practically importing “ tn the victors belong the spoils,” was the heaviest curse ever entailed upon the -American people, and that it is responsi ble for many of our direst woes and ca lamities. It curdled the young whole some hie-blood ot the Republic, aud suffused through fho framework of so ciety a leperous tetter. It proved to tho young Hercules of the Western Hemisphere ‘ the robe stained wit.i tho i a pleasant and harmonious Hood of jNcssus,” which brought its wearer only agony and death. The Ifnd of the Ifxodim. So Heavy rains prevailed over a consid erable extent of territory west of St. Louis on Tuesday, benefiting the crops greatly. The officer* of the steamboU companies having headquarters iu this city aud the officers of the steamers playing between here and Now Orleans deny having refused transportation to colored refugees whenever the latter had money to pay their passage. They also deny that there has been any gen erally expressed disposition on tho part of merchants and planters to withdraw patronage from boats which carry immigrants. This has been done in few instances, but the desire to pre vent the negroes from leaving the South is changing, and now planters do not seem to care whether they leave or not The offloers of the latest ar rived boats say that they were not bailed on the way by negroes and do not believe there are any such numbers of refugees on the river banks as bos been stated. They further say that the excitement is fast dying out and will cease altogether In a short time. Iteccher In Rleiuphii*. A Memphis special says that Henry Ward Beecher was greeted by an au dience of four thousand people at bis lecture in Exposition Building on the night of the 14th. He waa presented to the meeting by Mr. Keating, of the Appeal, and bis lecture was frequently Interrupted by applause. At its close Mr Beecher presented Mr. Keating with a check for two hundred and fifty dollars, to be by him distributed be tween the orphan asylums of Memphis. The Chattanooga and Atlanta engage ments have been cancelled, and Mr. Baecher will return to Brooklyn bfi ac count of phytioal inability to fulfil them. While In Memphis Mr. Beecher has been treated with the utmost re spect, and his coming was the oocaslon of excursion trains being put on all the roads leading Into Memphis. They were all ertwded with people from Want Tennesee,' North Mississippi, North Alabama and Arkansas. W. A. Pearson, of Willistou, If we were . free to follow our own inclinai tions we should, in this issue, at least, lay political and and personal matters aside, but iu deference to the demands of our readers we compromise by gath ering from his account a rude summary of its most interesting incident!*. The session, the twenty-fourth in number, was held in the First Baptist jChurch of Atlanta, Gu. Some four hundred delegates were present, repre, senting a million and a half communi cants iu * the Southern States. In our own Staten there arc upwards of a hun dred and thirty thousand Baptists, and they sent to the Convention fifty-six delegates. Dr. J. P. Boyce, of Kcn< tuoky, was re-elected President of the Convention. 1 Mr. Pearson writes : “ It is composed of delegates chosen by State conventions and general associa tions, no distinction being made betwoou ministers and laymen, and is, therefore, a representative body.. The report of the Foreign MLesion IkunJ vyaa full nud interesting. Several devoted missionaries aro now at home from various causes. Devoted minis ters arc energetically prosecutiong their missionary work in Africa, China and Italy. Gross receipts for Foreign Mis sions during the past year amounted to $54,551, one-half of which was for the Chapel in Rome. > Over $ 1G,000 were received for Home Missions. Ur. Hartwell, for twenty years a missknary to China, has re cently been nppoined to Irbor among the Chinese in California. Deserved recog nition of the value of “ Woman’s W'ork” in aid of missions was given by the Convention, On motion of Dr. Whit' silt, of tfieTTieologToal Seminary, it was resolved that Rev. Joo, L. Dagg bo de. sired to draw up a catechism “containing tho substance of the Christian religion for the instruction of children and ser vants.” The resolution was heartily and unanimously adopted and the com pletion of this catechism will fill a vac uum in Baptist literature. Resolutions looking to a more cordial co-opernlbn with Northern Baptists, were adopted after a protracted debate and n committee appointed to bear fra. terr.al greetings to them. Eloquent and instructive addresses wore delivered by returned missionaries from Africa and Italy. Ur. Boyce, pres ident of the Theological .Seminary', de clared that it was necessary for the churches to contribute to its support, until the permanent endowment is com pleted. Able and .exhaustive reports on all the interests of tho church were read, Miscusscd and adopted. In earnest ag gressiveness the denomination is growing with its increased membership, and after SQsaiou the Convention adjourned sine die; its members returning to their labors at home with renewed strength aud a ful ler devotion to their holy calling. - • Occasional fires still occur through, long as the American Chief Ex- J out the State, Insure. - The Triumphant Kebcls. On both sides it is surprising to find what a revival of sectional feeling has occurred since the recent dead-lock iu Congress began. "Among the Republi cans there seems to exist a dispondcucy concerning the near future of the party, a bitter (iisgust at their misUkeu mag nanimity in the past, in ever having taken a horde of unhung rebels back into political fellowship after the close of the war, and a melancholy impression that the nation is on the verge of darker days than it has since 1861. With the Dem- ocrats, and there is distinction now be- tween those of the North and those af the South, the cause is exactly tho reverse. To them everything is bright at the action of the North enfranchising die Confederacy simply be cause hostilities had ceased, and regard it not as a thing to be at all giateful fur, but simply as the foolish doings of a very daft community. They openly boast that since the North was so anx ious for them to come back, they have cou'o back, and that too with a thirr£ for vengeance that has rankled f.'y 18 long years, hut which will now be appealed, and that they have' come back to stay. “We will,’' they say, “repeal all your enforcement acts to secure fair elections and then elect the next President, in spite of aU you can do.” Waite and Monday lost, be occupied in the discus- ution of «large number of questions of vital importance to the railroad Interests of the State, and, iu addition td the numerous members ,of thtf CharlestbtTbar who will appear In the cases, ex-Governor D. H. Cham berlain, ex-Judge Satnl. W. Mel ten. Oof. James H. Won and CapW William E. Earle have already arrived to 'take partin the argamenta. v ■ \ The fliat caso that will be taken up will be the Greenville and Columbia Railroad case. In this case, Mr. Chamberlain, representing 'Freeman Clark and others, holding the State guaranteed bonds, will file a bill ask ing the United States Court to take jurisdiction cf the case, vacate the ap pointment of Geo. James Connor as re ceiver the State Court, and appoint a new receiver. Ex-Judge Samuel Melton, with Capt. Earle, will repre sent the road. Tho South Carolina Railroad case will probably be next taken up. In this case the most Important questtons which will be discussed ore as follows : A motion will bo ,made to vacate tbe appointment of tho receiver, JoHo H. Fisher, ESq., by Judge Bond at Balti more, on the ground that he had. no jurisdiction to fnake the appointment outside cf the State pf South ,Curojina. A motion wifi also be made to appoint a referee to take testimony.generally In the casa; also io require the receiv er to give a new bond, with sureties re siding In tho State of South Carolina ; also a petition of tho present receiver for permission to extend the tracks of the road to the Cooper River and to erect the hecee&uy Ivharves at a cost not to exceed $35,000. In this case Mr. Chamberlain^ to gether with Mr. Corbin, will represent the complainants, Calvin Clafiin and others. Judge A. J. M^grath re^rek sents the purchaseis. . The 'Wilmington, Cofumbfu anif-Xu- gusta Railroad will also figure in court during the term. Messrs. Moise& Lee, of Sumter, will endeavor to establish a judgment obtained in tbe State Court as a lien prior to tbe mortgage upon tho road, under which mortgage pro ceedings are now pending fora fore closure and sale. Col. Rion, represen ting the receiver, will resist this mo tion. The Port Royal BHiiroad* will aW have a place iu the picture. This case will come up on a motion for confirma tion of sale and tbe reports of Special Master James Simons, Jr., upon the claims against the road, together with the exceptions to these reports. About the luckiest people wc know of are those who itrrested in stock of tho New York Elevated Railroad when it wasn’t considered of much account. Tho stock is now selliug at from IDO to 1!>7, and the dividends insured to holders are of almost startling dimen sion. An estimate that appears rea-’ sonablc ctmugh 1 places the cost of the road and rolling stock at four million dollars, and the expenses of operating and maintaining it at four hundred thousand a year. 3 be road is carrying about a hundred thousand passengers a day, which, at tho average fair of eight cents, makes about eight thousand dol-i lars a day) or about two million and a half a year. The road can thus pay its operating expenses and interest charge and still return a net-income every year ot nearly half the money invested in its constructien- ‘‘Thero’s millions in it,’’ and no mistake. °a|y f burp^H, Capt. Roof, of Lexington, has a com pletely equipped tannery. The first blackberries of the season has arrived iu Charleston. ■'The ioecrrpt^on op the tOonfederate Monument in Columbia contains 1,000 istbsrat .. . -io > ->.r . s * j. ... Negro hl&liw^j’aien‘in Georgetown and Cburteston are levying tribute on late travellers. Mad dogs were killed Is a half doz en counties last week. Several child ren were bitten, Tbo Spartanburg and Ashvllle Rail road la saw computed sritbin- miles of Hendersonvllle. : •. - The Edgefield people on the Abbe- vitto line are clamoring for the stock law, now that Abbeville has It. The South Carolfha Railroad netted some four thousand dollars frojn last week’s excursions to Coiuinbia and Augusta. Capt. R. T. Mockbee aud bis hands killed one hundred rats jn an hours’ time at hia mills iu Chester county the 6ther day. Tbe Summit Courier chrqnlclee the defth of a citizen from hydrophobia, three mon^hh after pe had been bitten by a rabid dog. Mr. Bates, of Orangeburg, donated several loads of buckshot to a equ&d of corn thietes, and a sheriff’s poese bad to pour oil on the troubled waters. The Charleston Deutsche Zcitung says that Beaufort county fs.tp£ ne gro paradise of South Carolina, and hundreds of them are travelling home, _C. McKiplay, the Charleaton News and Courier correspondent, has been appointed to the position of door-keep er of the UrS. Senate, at a salary of $1.440 per year. ' "f While loafers’ clubs are being reor ganized tbe editorial idlers are turn ing their attention to fishing. May their lines bo east in pleasant places and they go home with full hands. ».Z ' ' ' ' sLf" \ ■ ; ♦ Seven colored men sent to An derson jail last week, charged with whipping a c ilored brother. They tilled hia mouth with rags and heat tihn unmeieffully wftb a bug£y trace. Tip* Beaufort Artillery waa. organ- Ui lTjU, asived through the Revo lution aud bfon e a record sccviid , to none other m the land. The 2bth of June they celebrate their 103d anui- veisury, and they retain all of the es prit du corps they have been so fa mous for over an hundred years. They are to be presented with a flag by the ladies. Calhoun and Preston Societies of Wofford Cull-ge celebrate their anni versary on the 10th ol June. The an nual address will bo delivered by Gov. Colquitt, of Georgia, aod on tbo Sun day previous Bishop Wight man will preach the sermon before thq graduat ing class. Interesting, public debates oh the part of the students will also take place. , Just after we had gone -to press on lost Thursday afternoon the news «amc to us of the total destruction of the residence of Dr. \V. W. Murray in the suburbs of our town by fire. Though old the house was'large, substantial and comfortable. We are glad to hear that -there Is an insurance of $1,200 on tbe bouee, and that all tbe'furnirtoru was saved.—Orangeburg Times; No. 6. Orangcbarg Sweep. No. 4. Bates burg Sweep. No. 12. Diamond Point BullTongjue No. 13. CasV-Iron Ttjrfi SKovel. No. 0. Magnolia.Swecp. No. 1. Wrought Lapring. No, 7. HecUBolt. y/lv No. 8. Grass tlod- -1 No. 17. Singletree Irons, . * No. 2. Greenville Sweep. No, 15. Scraper. No. 14. Steel Turn Shovel. • Np, l.l. Greenville Bull Tongue, fto. 10. Steel Shovel Blade. f No. 5. Wpoyght Clevis. " ~ ghtrfe* No- J, .Wrought Clevis. No. id..JPlow Singletree. No. 18. Harrow Tcethl No. 19. arrow Teeth. r-r-rf-p——f— "Wood and Iron Keel Adjustable3?1<?>W ^tdclc, HART & COMPANY. CORNER lvi\G AND MARKER Aareuts for Avsrv (c Sons’ Plh»A . „ > ,. nov28 Cm A reporter found the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher sleepy and yawning just entering a sleeping car at Louis ville, Ky., two or three nights ago, but got five minutes’ talk with the preach er, who said that he Intended after a while to make another lecturing Uipr, through the South, had plve bis lec turing fees, which are $300 to $500 a night, to charitable institutions In the places where he lecture^. ^JJr. Beech er, ^peaking of his late trip through the South, said: H So for as I have STATE 0E SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF BARNWELL, ' Court of Common Fleas. rwroirerR, johbku axb ketaileu of u.— i j-. •*’ DRY GOODS* . - *1 riliUMlrf *•«>..• * 104 jJUSrU lS>(> BROAD ST.. BRiTRif iuTrotmi/' xirtr ATtiritfCAN Mowry. Albert H. Howry, and Glover, partners doing business Lewis D Wilson HW under nrm name of L. B. Mowry A Son, TliiflUlTti. against James Kelly, as ad ministrator of tho personal estate of Samuel.Daniels, dec eased, liaohoel Dan iels, Henry ('.. Daniels, Jennings S. Dan ieis, Samuel Daniels, Llijuli Dsn inis, Marion Daniels, Marion Daniels, known, Dejpndamg, Summons for Relief, a, Dypella Wi is, called hv tfii Js, ea veal ml Jamfs Daniels,; Daniels, and ,• name of me is un- e • l-s, (Complaint not served.) To the Defendants above-named— h».1 nn ‘ rmnnrtnnit v nf lifrhrlntr T love , are hereby Bummpr.ed and requl ed nail an opportunity oi judging I love f ^ answer the e,mjpla»!»t in this action the Southern peo pie. They P'^Ue kind, considerate antUtmthusIostic. I have lectured Ip Tiuvope and all over the United SteAefe, but never has it been my lot to-mest with more intelli- gen’ or better people than you Soutb- ‘ erners. The ovations tendered me at Memphis aud Nashville I coniider the pleasantest of my life. I only regret that I can stay no longer with you.” Why should a man be expected to get up a newspaper, and weigh every word of it by apothoco;kss’ weight, in a town where, six mouths of the year, the monotony grows as the skin on a rhinoceros and could not he penetrated with a crow bar ? It is an absurdity, and he who would be so unreasonable and inhumane as to exact such a thing of his follow-mortals ought to be a lean ox without a tail and beh of tb« Fourteenth Amendment io fly time.—Darlington News. chised, not even a citizen Staies t ,and with do pollt teal ambitions, may cluim imrbunity from reporters.” Mr. Du vis Works ob his memoirs in the evening, sn-Isays th«t he got enough of early rising in the army. He dis likes ihd manual labor of writing hod dictates to an amanuensis. Among the genuine pleasures of Mon. umental Day in Columbia, wefo^the hearty hand-shaking of old Confederate to a limb pomndes, and the revival of the mejiy associations of the past connected with the varied scenes of eauiy life. which is filed in the oflloo of the Clerk of Commou Heos tor tbo said county, and t» tervo a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscribei s, at their of* flee in the town of Biacitviile, in said coun ty, and State within twenty days after the 80( vice hereof, exclUBIvW of the day of such Sfti viee; and if you hul to answer tho com-. ,i e Well fiuitod to the Wauls of tins Section of Country, which is now being Offered at Prices' that cannot be Undersold in the South; i. Importing Direct, and having voutmeli with tho leading Manufacturocs in this (.’oqutry, with the Cash in baud to take advantage of every turn in tho market, I am enabled dnd pro pose to ofler Dry .Good* at wuth Prices that admit of tro Legitimate Coihpctitiotu WHOLESALE BUYERS . , . ■ ; . - Will do wpll to visit my Esteblfahmcnt if thev aim to obfa’u Goods at Rock' bottom Prices. n'li to the ladies of BaRNwell and surrounding Country their at' tention : is respectfully rd^ttosbri- t<>. the 4act that tey Retail lock is laid in fca/efufly Avitfi tbe view tn tin* requirement of CRy trade. Novelties, as they appear” in the Kuropoan and dtomf (i ^Iarkct^ arc prcsent^I wjtlioyt delay at Prices to. auit tlie most exacting. Uofr^spumlftiicfc Solicited'. jWrjiofor Samples. Orde» I*r»mptly,FiiJ«d and Fatisfiwtiou Guaranteed. ,; 1 u i' ’ i •> , J good. Goods at' cheap ptrictfs. r’rl plaint within the time aforesaid, the plain tiffs tn this actron will apply to tho Court for the relief demanded In the complaint. Ch April,. Dated Jut . .A. D 1878. DIDDLE A IZLAR, I’hiiuUflV Attorneys. j Heai.. [ J. J. DRABHAM, C. C. To the Defendants Jennings Daniels and Ozzte DanOWte- ' re— Take not iooiAhat the summons hi this Mr. Jefferson Davis doesn’t like to be interviewed and has made it an in variable rule not to subcult to It. - Surely," ho ..y., "1 »ho .m :en of the United 80th day of AjMeU. a. D. tm action, of whled the foregoing Dt a rmpyi of the Clerk of the was filed in the-offioe < 89-96 Dibble a izlar. Plaintiffs’ Attorneys, BiaCkville, 8. O. if— For Sale i 3 with dwelling uf five rooms, to good con dition, and all necessary out-biiudlnga In good order. Tho landle well adapted to Cotton and. Provision Crops, and lying about one-fourth of a mile from this place Is Cedar Bpring, which hd* valuable med leal getl retreai aprt-tf. rs.'xzra eat for invalids. TT" 1 . Estate Agent, BUtekv-Uis^C, ' S^^N^ltsUteA rt |« v / • AND Hie- BljCAt) ‘,^g^h, CA. WHOLESALE O OMMIHHfOWHOXJBE ► • *■ Hd ; eJ ~ C J .'j.* | j- -vji* 5 BOOTS AND M ji’-Trsq.*. f 1 SIIOFSri i. T » : irlesten, ‘138 3Ieetiug St. j’ (0[qj83ite’ jion IIotU) '^^rleston, Souflr ^aroliniL 1 Cheapest House hi the South. i • i i f 4 *- f • • ..t IUK l»*v* • Uijfftand w«‘l mwh-ImI d<*k ewi m< l-.rlx In \p uw 4 ( .t 1lls( ,th( VUIt Urt Wflfll , (HI ■ ’ "My jRZ glhfrliff I ve lan-e irufoio.n hr rrcry cl'■loirr <i omi- ft* the ^itr. VOl. (-an M>1{ ynff nui-gnMu nr*' Ih<> wnif »* .- Bw —- our JouV'M.-ct.lIt ar ^ diifll 1 TT.i tonM le”: f .-I'.q •' I^AV15G.r^l|v pul a*,r ilffi &wt| :C laifa<*d<af. promptly for our woll known brands of Flour, vi* : Ol Ha f! P TOP: afso, Medl, llritv, lh» .J J<Mt :t - »'> 4MK*. Proprlctopu. 1'^ ^ • - iiftH v ‘ . dbf l-otfreu vfTny^jv. -r,*i j we tire now prepaoei 16 fill orders UlLl’ KBwE, DOUBLE EXTEA, EX Uuui asd Block Peed. All Uoodh delivered in Dt« 71—V7‘ -