Newspaper Page Text
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
ABSOLUTELY PURE
A ROYAL GOOD TIME
Is What the Excursionists Had Who
Went to Lookout.
WAS A PLEASANT DAY ALL AROUND
And Was Most Heartily Enjoyed by Al
Who Went Up on the
Excursion.
• The excursion to Lookout was one
• of the most pleasant of the season.
Those who were so fortunate as to
be on hand are still talking about it.
While the crowd was not so large
as those who got it up desired it
to be, still it was made very enjoya
ble by the careful management of Mr.
H. S. Lansdell and panned out very
well.
Rhudy & Co. are making great
headway with their furniture sales at
their big store on Broad street.
An incentive to purchasers is the
fact that for thirty days, beginning
Monday last, they give ten per cent,
of each day’s sales to the St. Peter’s
■church fund.
They have a very handsome and
well selected stock of goods at the
very lowest prices, and it is the op
portunity of the season.
Saturday the ladies will have on
i hand ice cream and refreshments all
•day at Rhudy’s and invite all their
.friends to call.
Triday afternoon the members of
all the committees are requested to
meet at the library at five o’clock to
discuss important business.
The Rome Electric Street Railway
Company has donated one day’s pro
ceeds on all their lines to the fund. They
will take charge of the cars on Thurs
day, June 27+ a married lady, with two
young ladies to assist her on each car,
with music and refreshments at Lytle’s
park and refreshments at the North
Rome park.
The contribution committee, consisting
of Madames C. Rowell, B. T. Haynes,
H. S. Lansdell, John C. Printup,
Halsted Smith, A. R. Sullivan,
Junius Hillyer, W. H. Adkins,
■Samuel Funkhouser, R. V. Mitchell, W.
J. Nunnally, J. L. Johnson, Thomas
Fahy. T. J. McAffrey, A. Moses, J.
Loeb, Ike May, A. B. McDonald, J. A.
•Glover, E. L. Bosworth, H. D. Hill and
Ethel Hillyer Harris, will continue
the work of soliciting subscriptions
and it is hoped that they will meet
with a liberal response from every
• citizen of Rome.
The list naw amounts to over
<1,700.
Received During the Past Week.
Mikado, 32.25
Mrs. Wardlaw’s sale, 29.80
Crouch & Co., soda fount, 30.00
J. P. McConnell, 5.00
Dr. R. M. Harbin, 3.00
W. H. Coker, 5.00
Mrs. Smith’s lawn party, 12.00
Dansdell excursion, 24.00
Lawn Party. *
The juvenile society of the Second
Baptist church will give an iee cream
festival this evening on the lawn be
tween the Second Baptist and Second
Methodist churches, from 5 till 11
■o’clock. A pleasant time is antici
pated by all. Come out and help a
good cause. ~
AT THE CAPITOL.
I am in my seventy-third year, and
for fifty years I have been a great
sufferer from indigestion, constipa
tion and billiousness. I have tried all
the remedies advertised for these dis
eases and got no permanent relief. ,
About one year ago, the disease as
suming a more severe and dangerous
form, I became very weak and lost
flesh rapidly. I commenced using Dr.
H. Mozleys Lemon Elixir, I gained
twelve pounds in three months. My
strength and health, my appetite and
my digestion were perfectly restored
And now I feel as young and vigo
■orous as I ever did in my life.
L. J. Alldred,
Door-keeper, Ga, State Senate.
; State Capitol, Atlanta, Ga., Aug. 5, 86.
August, 1891.—1 again indorse the
Above letter. L. J. Alldred.
. WEDI>ED EAST NIGHT,
Two Prominent Colored People Married at
Church.
Last evening at eight o’clock, at
the A. M. E. church, J. H. Malone
And Alice C. Davis, two of the lead
ing people as the uppertendom, were
married, Rev. D. Strickland officiat
ing.
The bride is teacher of the fifth
1 grade in the public schools and one
the best in the colored branch of
P the schools, and the g.-oom is the
5 trusted employe of the Rome Brick
: company, having been with that con
cern for eight years.
The church was beautifully deco
rated; there was a large assemblage
present, and after the wedding there
was a reception given at the home of
the bride, No. 5 Gibson street," that
■was largely attended. ,
TOPICS OF THE TO WN.
Short Stories and Select Gossip Caught on
the Ran.
, While I was lounging around Cave
Spring, waiting for the Cannon Ball
train to take me to East Rome, via
Van’s Valley and the town with two
names; Hon. Felix Corput came
tlong with his grey mare and asked
ne if I would like to take a ride. I
;old him I was in a condition to take
anything I could lay my hands on,
md away we went toward the Valley
farms of the Big Cedar.
There is a fascination about, that
stream that is captivating. From its
head in the D ugdown mountains,
where the rhododendrOtis and the
mountain laurels dip fragrant
locks in the spray of Hightower falls,
all the way down to the Coosa river,
it is a stream that is fair to look upon.
There are more mill wheels along its
cour e than any stream of the same
size I ever saw.
We drove by Capt. Corput’s pet
farm where I saw a field of ten or
fifteen acres of as pretty corn as I
ever saw. His methods „of improve
ment, fertilization and cultivation,
are object lessons to those who per.
sist in slacker methods. He is going
to gather fifty or sixty bushels of corn
to the acre oft that field, and his
wheat crop, just harvested, was very
good indeed.
His cotton, though knocked all to
flinders by the hail storm, is looking
well, as in fact the cotton crops all
along the valley are as far as we
went. There are some splendid lands
along that "valley, and when we drove
to the top of Glenn hill, and got a
view of the valley, I don’t think my
eyes ever feasted on a more inspiring
scene.
It is a perfect picture of variegated
loveliness, just now, with the blue
peaks of Signaljnountain for a back
ground, and here and there a fine old
country home, with fruited orchards,
grassy meadows, waving fields and
lusty woodlands, with the flash of
sunlit waters intervening. The scene
was one to dream about and to treas
ure up in the heart for future con
sideration.
Capt. Corput has a farm of wood
land, valley and stream of 640 acres,
which is just so situated as to be sus
ceptible of the highest improvement
and if he carries out his designs it will
some day be an ideal farm. He is a
man of advanced ideas and is demon
strating the value of improved meth
ods, and outside of his personal at
tractiveness, is a very useful citizen.
We visited the mill that Connor
bought and the empty fish pond
where Connor’s carp used to sport in
in the transluctent waters. But the
cyclone blew the top of the mill off
and the rains came and the floods de
scended and washed the dam of the carp
pond and the carp of the dam pond into
the whenceness of the whither and the
pond is as empty as a last year’s bird’s
nest.
But as a compensation, there is a wa
ter fall there at that old mill that is sim
ply exquisite. The water pours over in
a crystal sheet and dashing down among
the willows loses itself in the placid
current and there is some scenery there
that is restful to behold. Harper’s hill is
the only eyesore oa the face of creation,
and it looks like it regretted the fact as
much as we do.
It was a few years ago, a beautiful
wooded eminence, rising in the mildest
of the valley, with Little Cedar brawling
always at its base. But Harper decided
that it was too good a bartering place for
evil spirits and he cut every vestige of
timber off. Now it stands there like a
bald-headed man at an Epworth League
meeting with the sassafras shrubs, like
stray bristles on its cheerless slopes.
It is a glorious country there along
that valley. Those |who have cultivated
and taken care of tjheir lands have some
of the finest farms in Georgia. It is a
land of corn and wine, milk and honey,
but it has never been brought up to that
high water mark of tillage which would
bring out all its grander possibilities.
Such men as Capt. Corput, and others
of his enterprising neighbors, however,
are doing all they can and will come out
triumphant in the end.
That scrofulous taint which has been
in your blood for years, will be expelled
bv taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the great
blood purifier. •
Fruit does not require cooking
when Miller’s preserving tablets are
I used. For sale by Crouch & Co. Im
THE HOME TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 2s. 18t»5
BURIED IN DEBRIS
The Narrow Escape ol a Number of
Workmen.
THE HEAVY ROOF FELL IN ON THEM
They had Neglected to Properly Brace it
and the Wind Brought it Down
About Their Ears.
Yesterday morning there came near be
ing a tragic accident in the rear of the
Burney Tailoring Company.
A number of workmen were engaged
in raising the roof of the rear end of the
building, and the contractor had raised
the roof with braces and jack screws till
it was on a level.
He had neglected to secure it laterally
and was just fixing to put in the braces
when a puff of wind came and the roof
began swaying, the props fell out of
plumb, and down came a portion of the
roof with a crash.
A cloud of dust filled the room and out
of the falling debris these men groped
their way and was greeted by the con ■
gratulations of the excited [crowd, who
expected to find that some of them had
been either killed or seriously hurt.
In a shotrt while the place was cleared
sufficiently for the contractor to resume
operation and the work was resumed
after the walls and roof had been more
carefully braced to avert a repetition of
the dangerous catastrophe.
“NOTIFY THE POSTMAN.”
Funny Idea. Concerning the Changing the
Name of New York.
The New York Sun is a gay old
paper, but now and then it finds a
foeman worthy of its steel. Here are
some communications in regard to
suggesting new names for the greater
New York:
To the Editor of the Sun —Sir: I
see by your paper that you are hav
ing some difficulty in determining
on a name for the united cities around
New York. I offer as a suggestion
the name Holyoke. We would will
ingly give up the name, and if you
took it it would be the means of mak
ing your town known in the world.
We could take New York for our
name. It would not hurt us, as we
are too well known to be forgotten.
If you wish to make the change I
will notify our postman. H. A. C.
Holyoke, Mass., June 17.
To the Editor of the Sun—Sir: Great
er New York is almost as bad a name
as Constantinople. “Great York” is
the name for the future city. Not
Old York, nor New York, hut Great
York, as short and true as it is possi
ble to put it. It keeps enough of the
old name for purposes of identifica
tion, and it is enough of a new name
to assauge Brooklyn’s repugnance to
taking the name of a rival. When the
new name and the new city are born
together no one’s susceptibilities can
be hurt, unless they are seeking a
grievance and excuse for objection.
Great York.
To the Editor of the Sun—Sir: The
communications you have published
concerning a new name for the con
solidated metropolis are interesting
and timely.
Columbia sounds well, and is com
memorative of one whose name the
people love to honor. W. O. D.
June 17, 1895.
Car fresh melons just re
ceived to be sold at low price.
Call on Gen. F. Chidsey &Son.
OFFICERS ELECTED
At a Meeting of the Member, of the Young
Men’. Library.
The annual meeting of the Young
Men’s Library association last even
ing six new directors were elected,
three of the old board holding over,
Messrs. Henry S. Lansdell, W. W.
Vandi ver and Alfred 8. Harper.
A resolution was passed providing
for the election of ladies to half the
positions on the board of directors.
The officers elected were Halsted
Smith, president; M. A. Nevin, vice
president; Max Meyerhardt, secre
tary; R. J. Gwaltney, treasurer; J. A.
Rounsaville, J. F. Hillyer, W. S. Mc-
Henry, Mesdames J. C. Printup, C.
Rowell and J. Lindsay Johnson, di
rectors.
The directors will meet Tuesday
afternoon next, at five o’clock, to
elect a librarian to- fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of Halsted
Smith, jr., and to attend to other
business.
SCHOOL TEACHERS
Are you going to Cumberland
to attend the Georgia Teach
ers’ Association ? It so, don’t
buy your tickets until you see
me. C. K. Ayer, ticket agent,
Home Railroad depot, toot of
Broad street.
Died In Texas.
The friends of Mr. Crawford Wingfield,
an old Rome boy, will be grieved to
learn of his death, which occurred at
Houston, Texas, on last Saturday the
15th. inst.
BURWELL YS BALLEW
A Vindication of the Defendant in the
Case.
IT GREW OUT OF THE FAMOUS CASE
In Which Col. A. W. Ballew Was Involved
In a Cause Celt*bre in the Federal
Court.
f
Yesterday the case of Burwell vs.
Ballew & Son, for the recovery of
|l,Boo in pension money, was called
in city court.
This is another phase of the cause
celebre, in which Col. Ballew was
tried in the federai court in Atlanta,
and a verdict rendered against him
sometime ago.
Lucy Burwell set up a claim that
Col. Ballew and his eon Hurley Bal->
lew, were due her the money for
.which they had compelled her to give
them a check, and which, through
her attorneys, Wright & Hamilton
and Wright & Henry, she demanded
back.
The testimony of Mr. J. King, of
the Merchants bank, was that she
carried her check to the bank, had it
cashed and counted, and then depos
ited it in the bank.
It was further proved that she gave
her own check to Hurley Ballew for
1,800 and odd dollars, drawn up in
the presence of witnesses, by J. B.
Chamlee, and it was further shown
that the act was done by her own vo
lition and expressed wish, and that
she had been bribed by either of the
Ballews to give this check.
The consideration proven was the
fact that it was on record in the
treasury department, that another
woman had drawn the bounty money
and monthly pages as the wife of the
soldier, whose wife Lucy Burwell
claimed to be, which had twice de
feated the claims of the latter in her
endeavors to get a pension prior to
the coming into the case of the Bal
lews.
Hurley Ballew took this Burwell
woman from place to plaee, to secure
proofs showing that she was the law
ful wife, and clearly establishing her
right to the wages and the pension,
for which service this money was
given.
The case was cut short, and the
judge decided that the jnry find for
tht defendants without leaving the
bench.
This was done, and was in the na
ture of a complete vindication of the
Ballews in this case, which has ex
cited so much interest throughout the
State. *
Important Meeting.
The committee of arrangements for
the approaching temperance conven
tion is called to meet at the First
National bank Saturday, June 22, at
9 o’clock, a. m.
Members are Henry Harvey, Seab
Wright, T B Broach, W S Simmons,
A W Ledbetter, W J Nunnally, J P
Bowie, B I Hughes, C I Graves, Zeke
Treadaway, J B Hill, John C Moore,
H B Parks, Dr Jas Ivy.
« H. B. Parks, Sec’y.
All Committees to Meet.
All the committees of the St. Peter’s
church building fund are requested
to meet at the library at five o’clock
Friday afternoon. All the ladies ur
gently requested to be present, as
there is business of importance to be
discussed. 2t
EVERETT COMES
Next Tuesday "and Wednesday Nights for
the Last Time.
Professor S. A. C. Everett comes to
Rome for probably the last time next
Tuesday and Wednesday nights.
Prof. Everetl is too well known to
Romans to need any words of intro
duction or praise. The marvelous de
monstrations of the gentleman’s hyp
notic power has been commented
upon by almost everybody in Rome.
Some believe in it firmly and some
doubt it seriously.
Whether you doubt or believe, the
fact is well established in Rome that
his exhibition calls forth no end of
enjoyment, and afford at the same
time a great deal of instruction in a
power that has become to be recog
nized.
The best people of Rome are inter
ested in this gentleman coming, and
two large and enthusiastic houses
will no doubt greet him on next Tues
day and Wednesday nights.
The price has been put at twenty
five cents, in order that all may see
this gentleman, and as this is proba
bly the last chance, you should not
miss it.
Seats on sale at Ralph Dille & Co.
under the opera house. I
Car of fresh melons
just received, to be
sold at low price. Call
on Geo. F, Chidsey &
Son. ,
Burney Transfer Company
handles baggage night ■ and
day. ’Phone |l3®, Armstrong
hotel. U
~We will paycash for buckle
i berries in any quantities.
9w Lillard A Co.
for Infants and Children.
MOTHERS, Do You Know that Paregoric,
Bateman's Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many Soothing Syrups, and
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine f
Do You Know that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons f
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics
Without labeling them poisons !
Do Yon Know that yon should not permit any medicine to be given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a list of
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Do Yon Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitches
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Do Yon Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use the word
“ Castoria ” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ?
Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection was
because Castoria had been proven to be absolutely harmless!
Do Yon Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for 35
cents, or one cent a dose! .
Do Yon Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, your children may
be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest ?
Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facta
The fae-simlle fa oa
signature of wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria*
is rows Ih Italy's Chamber.
Rome, June 20.—The scenes in the
chamber of deputies growing out of the
Socialist motion to extend general am
nesty to persons condemned by courts
martial for political offenses, which led
to an exchange of blows, have not
shaken the position of the cabinet. The
chamber of deputies will now take up
the work of passing the budget.
Cholera In Russia.
Washington, June 20.—Consul Gen
eral Karel reports to the state depart
ment from St. Petersburg that in the
government of Valyn, Russia. 81 cases of
cholera occurred, resulting in 25 deaths
from April 28 to May 11, 1896. In the
government of Podolsk the cholera has
entirely disappeared.
XK SOUTHERN
RAILWAY.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE.
In Effect May IS. 189 S.
No. 76* No. 77*
No. 74{ No. 72+ No. 73+iNo. 75j
5.35afn 4730 am lv ... Akron. ar 6.20 pm 6.23 pm
6.25 am 5.50 am .. .Greensboro.. - s.OOpmi 5.81 pm
7.43 am! 7.3oamMarion 6.15 pm 4 21 pm
9.00 am! 9.00 am ar.... Selma.... lv 1.15pml 3.00 pm
No. 60* No. 168+ No. 61* f N0.169+
4.4sam4.ooamlv..Meridian ar 10.80 pm 7.00 pm
5.53 am 7.00 am York 9.20 pm 4.25 pm
6.52 am 10.10 am!.. ..Demopolis.. - ■ 8.20 pm 127 pm
7.42aml2.3opmlar.Uniontown.lv 7.35 pm 10.40 am
9.00 am 4.30 pm, i ar Q _ lrna lv j 6.15 pm 6.50 am
9.10 am 2.30 pm (lv • s>e,ma, ar i 6.05 pml I.ooam
11.11 am 4.40 pm .Montevallo.... 4.12 pm 8.45 am
11.25amCalera 3.59 pm
11.49 am Columbiana... 3.37 pm
12.24pmChildersburg.. 3.06 pm
1.04 pm Talladega.. 2.31 pm
I. <o. 6.tOxford 1.50 pm No. 63t
2.15 pm 8.15 am ... .Anniston .... 1.40 pm 7.45 pm
2.40 pm 9.01 am . .Jacksonville... 1.02 pm 7.03 pm
3.05 pm. 9.49 am ... Piedmont.... 12.39 pm 6.22 pm
3.32 pm 10.40 am . ...Tecumseh,.. .l2.l4pm 5.37 pm
3.53pm!11. 17am . .Cave Springs. .11.55 am 5.03 pm
4.30 pm 12.20pmiRome11.20am 4.10 pm
7.05pml jar. ..Atlanta.. Ivi 7.30 am
East Bound. No. 37*!no. 39* No. 34*
Romp .... . 7. 1 v 3.15 am 4.35pm10.20am
Dalton 5.52 am 5.46 pm 11,36 am
ciiuv .i*nooga 6.35 am 7.10 pm I.oopm
Knoxvillelo.3oam 10.00 pm
Morristownll.4sam 12.16 am
Bristol . ...ar 2.35 pm 4.50 a m•
~3B* 36* 18* 37* [ 35* 17*
a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m.'p.m. p.m.
5.6 t 2.sslv..Birmingham.ar 10.2012.01
7.10 4.llPellCity 8.58110.46
7.40 4.4;Eastaboga.... 8.2510.16
8.1: s.lsAnniston 7.50 9.43
8.22 5.30 Oxford 7.35 9.31
8.57 6.00...Hef1in 7.018.57
9.09 6.11 '.Edwardsville... 6.50| 8.15
9.36 6.45 6.30Ta11ap005a.... 6.20 8.15! 8.00
10.55 8.05 7.55 . . Lithia Springs.. 4 55 6.45; 6.25
11. 8.50 8.50 ar.... Atlanta.... lv 4.10, 6.00, 5.30
a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m.|a.m.!p.m.
East Bound.| No. 38*i No. 36*
Atlantalvil2.oon n: 5700 pm
Charlotte 8.20 pm; 6.50 am
Danvillel2.ooam 11.40 am
Lynchburg 1.53 am 1.45 pm
Charlotteville 3.35 am 4.04 pm
Washington../ 6.42 am 8.30 pm
Baltimore 8.05 am 11.25 pm
Philadelphialo.2sam 2.56 am
New Yorkl2.s3pm 6.23 am
Bostonar 9.05 pm 3.30 pm
No. 38 Washington and Southwestern Lim
ited, Solid Pullman Vestibuled train Atlanta
to New York, carrying Pullman Sleeping car
Birmingham to New York. Dining cars Atlanta
to Greensboro and Washington to New York.
No. 36 U S. Fast Mall Pullman Drawing
Room Buffet Sleeping cars Atlanta to New
York'
South Bound.No 36*'No. 38*
Birmingham lv 2.55 pm 5.86 am
. ar j 8.50 pm 1140 am
Atlanta lv ■) g.iopm 4.10 pm
Maconl2.loam 7.10 pm
Brunswick 7.00 am
Jacksonvillear|lo.3oam
Train No. 38 carries Sleepers Birmingham to
Atlanta.
Train No 36 carries Pullman Drawing Room
Buffett Sleeping Car Birmingham to Jackson
ville.
•Daily, tDaily Except Sunday.
{Sunday Only.-
W. H. GREEN, General Superintendent,
Washington. D. C.
J. M. CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, General Passenger Agt.,
Washington. D. C.
C. A. BENSCOTER, Assistant G P. A..
Knoxville, Tana.
Second International Conference Epworth
K eague.
One fare for the reund trip has been
authorized by the Southern States Pas
senger Association. Tickets to be sold
June 26th and 27th, 1'895, limited con
tinuous passage in both directions, and
good to return ten days from date of
sale; an additional limit of fifteen days
will be allowed, provided tickets are de
posited with ticket agent of the initial
line at Chattanooga on or before June
30, 1895.
Agents and representatives of the
Southern Railway will take pleasure in
furnishing any information desired rela
tive to this meeting. W. A, Turk,
General Passenger Agent.
C. A. Benscoter,
Ass’t Gen‘l Passg’r Agn’t.
Knoxville, Tenn.
The Popular Route
—To>
CUMBERLAND,
St. Simon and Tybee by the Sea
—IS THE—
Wera and Atlantic R. R.
Connecting in Atlanta with through
trains and Pullman sleepers for the sea
shore. Round trip tickets on sale at
very low rates, good returning as late
as October 31, ’95. For any other in
formation call on or write to
C. K. AYER, Ticket Agent.
$2.00 $2.00
ROUND TRIP VIA
The Southern Railway
TO
LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN
Saturday’s afternoon and
Sunday’s forenoon.
The Southern is the only line running
three first-class trains each way daily.
For particulars call on
T. C. SMITH. P. & T. A.,
Rome, Georgia.
C. A. BENSCOTER, A. G. P. A.,
Nnoxville, Tenn.
JAPANESE
ffiSVyj i
cure
A Hew end Complete Treatment, consisting ot
SUPPOSITORIES, Capsoles of. Ointment end two
Boxes of Ointment. A never failing Cure for Pile* or
even nature and degree. It makes an operation wltn
the knife or injections of carbolic acid, which are
painful and seldom a permanent cure, and often re
sulting in death, unnecessary. Why endure this
terrible disease? We guarantee 6 boxes
to cure any case. Von only pay for benefits re*
ceiv3.|aabox,efor% Sent by mail.
Japanese PILE OINTMENT, 25c. a Box.
mUCTIDATinN Cured, Pile* Prevented,
LUNb I IrA I lUH by Japanese LI ver Pellets
the great LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR and
BLOOD PURIFIER. Small, mild and pleasant to
take, especially adapted for children a use. fiO Doses
25 cents.
LADIES DO YOU KNOW
DR. FELIX LE BRUN'S
STEEL OND PENNYROYAL PILLS
are the original and only FRENCH, safe and r».
liable cure on the market. Price 4L00; eent bf
mail. Genuine sold only b» ,■