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’rorwRAPMB iALWAYS BOUGHT.
‘JRTSi « • MM..I. tit tl . -.iQr 7HK (I'HiAun LOMPSHf. NIW YOHK CITY.
LANDLORDS!
1 »o you know that we are the only exclusive rental agents in Ma
con. No other departments. 11 yon are not satisfied with your tn
come give us a Inal.
A. J. McAfee, Jr., & Co.
357 Third Street.
L Bovs’ * :j
!;■ Straw Mats, •••
[■ Bor 25 Cents *
•■ . 2
Not the flimsy, “sleezy,” cheap kind, but
b genuine good straw, good enough for any- 7
► body to wear anywhere. J
, k' . * J
Better ones, of course, at 50 cents. Jits 5j
v send the boy down; we’ll fit him all right. If J
F» goods arc not as represented your money j
7 back. ' d
r '1
| BENSON & HOUSER I
L-
• The Up-to-Date Clothiers.
k -1
No Book to carry around. No
T ckets to get lost. In using
Trading tumps simply have your
book at home and asK for Stamps
When you buy for cash. Every
member of the family can get
them. We give you orders on
merchants or elegant Premiums
valued ai $5.00 to $9.00 each.
Philadelphia Trading Stamp Co.,
Office Goodwyn’s Drug Store,
Macon, Ga.
Home Industries
and Institutions
Henry Stevens’ Sons Co.
H. SI IA ENS SONS t < \ Macon, Ga., Manufacturers of Sewer
and Railroad culvert pipe, fittings, tire brick, clay, etc. Wall tubing with
perforated bottoms that will last forever.
Macon Machinery.
MAI.L.\R\ BROS. & CO., dealers in Engines, Boilers, Saw
Mills. .Specialties—W atertown Steam Engines, Saw Mills, Grist Mill*
Cotton Gins.
Macon Refrigerators.
MUECKE’S Impioved Dry Air Refrigerators. The best Re
fngerators made. Manufactured right here in Macon, any size and of
any material desred. It has qualities which no other refrigerator or
the market possets. Come »nd <ee them nt the factory S«
Rainy Weather
Make see i grow if they are GOOD
We don’t have any other kind.
Plant now.
Streyer Seed Comp’y
466 Poplar Street.
DISSATISFIED
AT THE CAMP.
The Bovs Are Dispirited and
Uneasy Because of Bad
1 realm ent.
NOT HALF ENOUGH FOOD
Has Been Given to Them and They
Are in a Very Poor Condition —
Truth of the Situation.
Camp Northen. Griffin, Ga., iMay 14.-
The people as Georgia have not yet learn
ed the true situation tn camps here, nor
do they know of the dissatisfaction ami
la. k of < nth:isiasm that is evidenced every
where in t.nt camps. The newspaper cor
respondents here know ‘he u-’t ■ situation,
but as n'.iie oi them are eulisu l and have
to depend on the camp commander fur
their information, they have not drawn a
true picture of the situation.
in conversation with Mc-Oougald, of the
Journal and several other correspondents
tins morning, 1 protested that they were
not doing the suidi. rs Justice in publish
ing stories of their desertion and not ,iv
ing the conditions which caused rue men
to leave the camps. They said that they
well knew <>l me iack of enthus’ism ami
the display of poor management and fore
thought. tun tiiat they could nor afford to
offend the post officers, as they would
would then be cut off from much interest
ing news, f had it from the mouth of one
of the men that he had drawn a true pic
ture of the situation, and out of a snow of
patriotism his paper refused to publish it.
The dissatisfaction among the man has
been growing since the day we arrived
here, when, though we were among the
first to arrive in camps, we had to stand
in the sup, in ranks, for nearly an hour,
waiting to be assigned a street. We were
two hours late in arriving here, the men
were hungry, the sun was hot, and many
grumbled as they stood and waited for
captains to go to headquarters and look up
the officials. Matters were not mended
when it was announced that four and five
men would have to sleep in the small tents
where two men were sheltered during the
state encampment.
T have never seen enthusiasm such as
was displayed by the soldiers when they
first arrived, cool down so quickly and dis
gust take its place. The inadequate supply
of rations is no longer treated as a joke,
and the promises that were made to the
men that there would be plenty to eat
when the government took charge of the
post, have not been realized, 'ii anything
the supply of rations furnished by the gov
ernment is smaller than was that of the
state. The situation is growing serious,
and the men will desert in a body before
they will stand it much longer. To be
patriotic a man must be well fed, especial
ly when his country is one of the most re
sourceful in the world.
WHAT CAUSES DTSSATISFACTION.
Following are some of the reasons why
the men are dissatisfied:
First—They were promised army rations,
which is enough to feed anyone. So far
there are several articles of food on the
list of army rations that have not been
supplied at all.
Second—>No orders were even Issued to
the men as to what they should bring to
camp, as to what they were expected to
bring in the way of clothing and supplies.
They depended on the newspapers, where
it was announced that immediately upon
the arrival of the men they would be fur
nished clothing and equipment. So far not
a single article of clothing or equipment
have been furnished the men. They do not
know where they will get them. This lack
of forethought on the part of the proper
authorities has placed some of the men in
the embarrassing position of having to stay
in their tents while their clothes dangled
from a line in the sun. whose rays which
fell on the tent were not tempered to the
shorn soldiers.
Third-—Some of the companies have been
forced to move their quarters as many as
two or three times, and after they had
worked hard and put their streets in good
condition, had fitted up wash basins and
were well settled, they did not like the idea
of having to move when the order was
made necesasry by the fact that some of
the officials had blundered. The soldiers
have not yet-learned not to reason why.
Fourth—The news is being circulated
throughout the state that the men are de
serting, while the causes of the desertion
are not given.
'Firth—Chief among the reasons for dis
satisfactions is that the men often have to
leave the tables without having had their
appetites satisfied.
In speaking of the matter today a com
missioned officer said to me that he looked
for many desertions, and that under the
present conditions he could hardly blame
them, though in the present instance de
seition would be a most serious offense
Some of the officers are spending money
out of their own pockets with which to
keep the men properly .fed, and to keep
them from open rebellion.
Another cause for dissatrsfaction among
the men is to see the good things which
the post commandants have to eat. Equal
ity lines have not been drawn so tightly
that the men are satisfied to see some or
the officers revel in luxury, while thev are
in want. Bibb freezers of cream and fat
chickens load their tables, while a few
slices of col I. cloggy bread and fat army
bacon is furnished the men.
The official- have evii-ntiy seen that
they cai not get the regim-rts here ready
to move at once, and the camp has been
reorganized all over. early every com
pany was given new quarters today.
The feeling of the men is that if thev
were in the front they ecuij e XpP?t the
treatment they are recdvng now, bir
wm-n they are in camps ,'v rr < linnn.iTy
d’-ll.ng and while the eoun'ry has every
reason to fee,] them well. th=>y want better
and more of it —mostly more of it.
Goode M. Guerry.
HOWS THIS?
We offer one hundred dollars reward
for any case of catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
E. F. CHENEY & CO., Props.,
, Toledo, O.
We <he undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the lase fifteen years and be
lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi
ness. transactions and financially able to
cany any obligations made by their firm,
est <*c t ruax, wholesale druggists
Toledo. O.
Walding, Kinnan <fe Marvin, wholesale
druggists. Toledo. O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Price 75c per bot
tle. Sold by ai idruggists. Testimonials
free.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
LOW RATES TO GRIFFIN.
Via Central of Georgia Railway Com
pany.
For all trains Saturday. May 14th and
for morning trains Sunday. May 15th, the
Central of Ceorgia Railway Company will
■sell round trip tickets Macon to Griffin
at one fare —-limited to Sunday night re
turning. J. G. Carlisle, T. P. A.
I have been a sufferer from chronic diar
rhoea ever since the war and have used
all kinds of medicines for it. At last I
found one remedy that has been a success
as a cure, .and that is Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.—P. E.
Grisham. Gaars Mills. La. For sale by H.
J. Lxrnar & Sons, Druggists.
MACON NEW EVENING,“MAY 14 t&gu.
NOT GUILTY
OF DESERTION.
It is Too Strong a Term to
Attach to the Action
of I witty.
The following card from 'Mr. H* M.
Twitty, who has ‘been severely censured
tor leaving the Hussars before’ be was
mustered in may put the matter in a dif
ferent light and forms his defense for his
action.
Tne action of Mr. Twitty is the same as
that taken no doubt by many hundreds of
men throughout the country. Their action
has been condemned but there are condi
tions that have to be taken into consider
ation and it is unfair to stamp the man
who thinks twice ibefore he takes so im
portant a step as a deserter.
The term deserter is one of the deepest
reproach.
Desertion is a crime and a felony. In
all countries the deserter is a marked man
tor ine and he stands ou a par with the
lowest criminals.
The punishment for desertion in the field
is death, it is not .therefore, right that
Mr. twitty and those who have been
placed in toe same position with him
should be classed with the criminals who
are past cousidi ration.
Editor Evening News: I have been
deeply mortified and chagrined upon read
ing two articles in recent issues of your
paper, one a clipping from the Atlanta
Constitution, and (lie other a special com
muiiieatiun iroi.i jour correspond, nt at
Grinin. 1 trust you will permit me to say
this much tuiougii your columns in denial
of certain assertions made in the articles
designated above. It is well understood
by all who are informed upon military
matters that a soldier cannot desert until
lie is sworn in—and the word desert can
not apply to one who refuses to be mus
tered in. When a man volunteers for ser
vice, he reserves the right to leave the
ranks at any time before being svyoru in
as a soldier.
In the last article mentioned, your cor
respondent states that I shirked my duty,
etc. Immediately before 1 left Macon with '
the Hussars, I was under medical treat
ment—under a skilled specialist of this
city, and was hardly fit for service when
1 volunteered, but in my anxiety to go,
I awaited the decision of the army surgeon
to inform me definitely upon this point.
While at the camp 1 was for a while un
able to leave the tent, but while sick went
on guard duty for one night out of the
three I was at the camp. The fact of my
sickness was duly reported to the assistant
surgeon and Captain Bell, and was gen
erally known throughout the camp. Prior
to my leaving Macon I had been confined
to bed sometime with the same trouble
which rendered me unable to do my full
quota of work at the camp.
The other assertions reflecting upon me
as regards iny discharge from the camp
are as untrue as the previous, so far as
the hissing, etc., is concerned. My reasons
for leaving the camp, besides being deeply
personal, and involving the health and
almost life of one who on a bed of sick
ness, with anxious solicitude prayed my
return, were based upon assertions made
to me by men in the camp, who being in
a position to advise me, stimulated my
latent desire to leave by advice that should
a man knowingly take the oath of a sol
dier, knowing his incompetency in point
of health the probabilities of a dishonor
able discharge were great, when this fact
was discovered.
I repeat that I knew that I had full
liberty to leave the eamp at any time be
fore taking the oath and there is no rea
son why an overzealous correspondent
should be allowed to imbue the minds of
the public with misrepresentations of
fact.
Personally I regret that I was forced to
ask to be discharged, and no one went out
with more enthusiasm or a deeper sense
of duty than I, and it was humiliating to
me to take the step circumstances and
conditions necessitated, 'but I feel that I
have done no one wrong, cast no reflection
upon myself or the Hussars, and certainly
feel no shame or remorse.
I have spoken thus at length in exten
uation of the charges made through your
paper, and trust a sense of justice and
equity will prompt you in giving this pub
lication. Thanking you in advance for the
solicited courtesy, I am cordially and
truly yours, Howard M. Twitty.
MOZELEY'S sEMON ELIXIR.
A Pleasant Lemon Drink. Regulates the
Liver, Stomach, Bowels and Kidneys.
For biliousness, constipation and ma
laria.
For indigestion, sich and nervous head
ache.
For sleeplessness, nervousness and heart
failure.
'For .fever, chills, debility and kidney
diseases, take Lemon Elixir.
Ladies, for natural and thorough or
ganic regulation, take Lemon Elixir.
Fifty cents and $1 a bottle at druggists.
Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozeley, At
lanta, Ga.
GRATITUDE.
Dr. H. Mozeley—Dear Sir: Since using
your Lemon Elixir I have never had an
other of those fearful headaches and
thank &od that I have at last found a
medicince that will cure those awful spells.
Mrs. Etta W. Jones, Parkersburg, W. Va,
MOZELEY’S LEMON ELIXIR.
I have suffered with indigestion and
dysentery for two long years. I heard of
Lemon Elixir; got it; taken several bot
tles and am now a well man. Harry Adams,
No. 1734 First avenue, 'Birmingham, Ala.
MOZELEY’S LEMON ELIXIR.
Cured my husband, who was afflicted with
ulcers on his leg for years. He is now as
sound as a dollar after using two bot
tles. The Lemon Elixir cured other cases
like his and cured a friend whom the
doctors had given up to die, who had suf
fered for years with indigestion and ner
vous prostration. Mrs. A. E. Seville, Wood
stock, Ala.
MOZELEY’S LEMON HOT DROPS.
Cures all coughs, colds, hoarseness, sore
throat, bronchitis, hemorrhage and all
throat and lung diseases. Elegant, reliable.
Twenty-five cents at druggists. Prepared
onlj- by Dr. H. Mozeley, Atlanta, Ga.
LOW RATES TO GRIFFIN.
Via Central of Georgia Railway Com
pany.
For all trains Saturday, May 14th and
for morning trains Sunday, May 15th, the
Central of Georgia Railway Company will
sell round trip tickets Macon to Griffin
at one fare —limited to Sunday night re
turning. J. G. Carlisle, T. P. A.
Many soldiers now feel the effects of the
hard service they endured during the war.
Mr. George S. Anderson, of Rossville, York
county. Penn., who saw the hardest kind
of service at the front, is now frequently
troubled with rheumatism. “I had a severe
attack lately,” he says, “and procured a
bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It did
so much good that I would like to know j
what you would charge me for one dozen I
bottles.” Mr. Anderson wanted it both for :
his own use and to supply it to his friends I
and neighbors, as every family should have j
a bottle of it in their home, not only for j
rheumatism, but lame back, sprains, swell- I
ings, cuts, 'bruises and burns, for which ■
it is unequalled. For sale by H. J. Lamar ;
& Sons, druggists.
Piles, I'lles, t'lles :
Dr. Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment wilt
cure Blind, Bleeding, and Itching Piles
when all other Ointments have failed. It
absorbs the tumors, allays the Itching at
once, acts as a poultice, gives instart re
lief. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile O'ntment
la prepared only for Piles and Itching of
the private parts, and nothing else. Every
box la warranted. Sold by druggists, or
sent by mall an receipt as price, 60c. and
81. M per box.
WILLIAMS M F'G. CO.. Prop's.,
. _ Clafalaa*. O.
s - - i
i
• ZM 5
• I£Z Al s
4 a. SxOf. g
2 £<: i
• - C
s i
: I
» '!s' % ZWt
I'" f •
I FREE BOOK for MEN I
3 MP
® telling all about my wonderful invention, the Dr. Sanden Electric J
® Belt and Suspensory, now used the world over for all results of youth- S
E ful errjus, nervousness, drains, im potency, lame back, varicocele, etc. 2
® Established 30 years. Above book mailed in plain sealed envelope. •
@ Write to-day. ■
§ Dr. T.A.SAN DE N,826 Broadway, New York, N.Y. J
flagged the Moon,
you vvuu: Uiiiiiir ;i.i ; . lory, ” Raid
the ib adiiija! ruHi-oi:*! so. .sue,(or “11, s u
good one on .Joe Git.-i.i,. <mb' of our fel
lows Joe’s tt gsis.si ... ... s t a Kidder him
self, bill, the buys are i:u,ii;g i!,; sr turn nt
him now. If. imir.erns( tip >n tim Trenton
yards a lew nights ago. Jut: & train was to
be side (iacKotl at Nke avenue. Weil,
when tin; train iu)iv..iat that*point Joo
jumped < ‘ and ran ahead to the switch.
He throw lim switch over and waved his
lantern to the engineer to come ahead.
The next, minute Joe happened to glance
due ea .t down the tr.-iek, ami ho nearly
dropped his lantern with (right. There
was tii. great round headlight of another
engine bean ing down upon him on rhe
very tn., k : is train was about to take.
Recovering hinibeif, lie swung his lantern
furiously, at the same lime shouting:
‘Puli out! Pull out! Don’t you see her
comii gr’ The engineer jammed her up
and stopped short. ‘What, s the matter'?’
he Minuted. .Joe had gathered s, me ivw
knowledge in the meantime, and Ids ex
pression changed completely Ho didn’t
say anything, but simply gave the signal
to '‘go ahead ’ When the engineer pulled
into thetraik. he saw the lull moon climb
ing up over the track ■? ml ahead of him.
Joo I.mi s-inqly liaggeu tfce mooli, that, s
all. ” —Philadelphia Record
A Glimpse of Gotham’s Chinatown.
Doyers street as seen from Chatham
square station was decidedly damp and
gloomy. Few Chinamen w ere abroad and
those that were wore somber, rainy day
clothes. A negro boy came from behind
the angle in the lower side of the street
and stood in front of the first two gray
wooden houses on the upper side and
whistled. A window was raised and a
tiny little girl with bright golden curls
leaned out and clapped her hands. The
negro boy pulled an apple from his pocket
and tossed it up to the child. Once, twice
she missed it and laughed. A Chinaman
stopped and looked up. On the third trial
the apple went into the window. The child
disappeared. The window was closed.
The negro hoy went back across the
street. Doyers street, which tor a time had
been brightened by the golden curls, again
became dusky like the spider’s web when
the butterfly has gut iron of its meshes.-
New York Commercial Advertiser.
J
tff Death’s Saddle-Horse.
Sf I When a man has over-
jgr f I worked himself, and
I neglected his health,
YY C>-J< until he finally realizes
f*— <L3C” -SI that he is a sick man, he
too frequently goes to
some obscure physician
who has had very little
experience or practice; the result is a wrong
diagnosis and the wrong treatment. A man
in this condition, if lie continues to work
and takes the. wrong medicine, is really
making himself a saddle-horse for death.
Under these conditions, what a man really ■
needs is the advice and treatment of a phy
sician of wide experience and practice, Dr.
R. V. Pierce, for thirty years chief consult- )
ing physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and
Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., makes ■
no charge for answering a letter from a man i
or woman in this condition. The Institution j
of which he is the head is one of the great- '
est in the world. He has practiced in one i
spot right in Buffalo tor thirty years, and
his neighbors honored him by making him
their representative in Congress. Doctor
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery cures
indigestion, biliousness, impure blood, ma
laraia, and wasting diseases. It cures 98
per cent, of all cases of consumption.
Honest druggists supply it when called for
and don’t advise a substitute.
“ Some time ago I wrote you and described my '
case,” writes Mr. Janies Considine, of Patsy,
Crawford Co., Mo. “ You advised me to take
your ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ and ‘Pellets.’
1 followed your advice, and by the time I had •
taken three bottles of the ‘Discovery’ and one
bottle of the ‘ Pellets ’ I was greatly benefited. I
became regular in my bowels, and the pain in '
my back left, and I have not had a chill since I i
got through taking the first bottle. X cannot |
recommend it too highly.”
It used to cost $1.50, now it is free. Dr.
Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser.
1008 pages. Over 300 illustrations. For a ;
paper covered copy send twenty-one one- i
cent stamps, to cover mailing only, to the |
World’s Dispensary Medical Association, ;
No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y.; cloth '
binding io cents extra.
- |
V •- a? J, l- Gis a tjon-poisononr
p iiic-dy f.,r Gonorrli..'•.
t!llCl' .-t. Rp<-r:nMorrh<>-:i.
gfaSf in Ito 5-Hy.yß unnatural •!:
Gnuanteed < haria s, or any infianiTiia
ii net stnaiuro. lion, irritati .n or ni--...
Prevents ootagioo. tioh of m n i-11 s no rn
l, ra’n - .Non astringent
U.S A, ? r SP »‘ t in wrapp r
L y r-'-fircrvK. pr.-pai.l, ft,
GEORGIA, Bibb Count. To the Superior
Court of Said County:
The petition of the Jones Furniture '
Company respectfully shows: That on the ;
11th day of November, 1897, it was duly
incorporated by an order of the Superior
Court of said county, a body corporate and
politic under the corporate name of the !
Jones Furniture Company, for the purpose
of carrying on a general wholesale and re
tail furniture and house-furnishing busi- ,
ness: and that it has been duly organized 1
under said charter, and is carrying on the !
business authorized by said charter.
Your petitioner desires to amend its
aforesaid charter by changing the corpo- i
rate name from the Jones Furniture Com
pany to that of the Georgia Furniture i
Company: and that said corporation shall !
have all the rights and privileges under
the new name of the Georgia Furniture
Company, that it had under itf> original ■
name of the Jones Furniture Company,
and that said charter as amended, with all i
powers, privileges, rights and immunities
by its said charter conferred, be continued
under its aforesaid charter as amended, for
a term of twenty years, with the right of
renewel at the end of that time.
Wherefore your petitioner prays the
granting of an order amending its said
charter by changing its name to ’bat of •
the Georgia Furniture Company, with ail !
the rights and privileges under its new ;
name that it held under its original name.
And your petitioner will forever pray.
R. K. HINES, Petitioners’ At
R. K. HINES. Petitioner’s Attorney.
I, Robert A. Nishet, clerk of Bibb Supe
rior Court, do certify that the above is a
true copy of the original petition as the
same appears on file in said clerk's office.
This April 16th. 1898.
ROBERT A. NISBET, Clerk. 1
D. . A ’
mPefeatep
For Hire? Years He SufTered Could
Hardiy Breathe al Niftht One Nosirii
Closed for Ten Years.
Mr. A. M. Rumsey, of De Leon, Texas,
was a sufferer from Catarrh in its
worst, form Truly, his description of
his sufferings seem little short of mar
velous. Instead of seeking his conch,
g-lad for the night’s coming, he went to
it with terror, realizing that another
long, weary, wakeful night and a
struggle to breathe was before him.
De Leon, Texas.
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah, Ga.,
GENTS: 1 hare used nearly four bottles of
P. P. P. I was afflicted from the crown of my
head to the soles of my feet. Your P. P. P.
has cured my difficulty of breathing, smother
ing, palpitation of the heart, and has relieved
me of all pain. One nostril was closed for
ten years, but now I can breathe through it
readily.
1 have not slept on either side for two years;
tn fact, I dreaded to see night come. Now I
sleep soundly in any position all night.
I am 50 years old, but expect soon to be able
to take hold of the plow handles. I feel glad
that I was lucky enough to get P. P. P., and I
heartily recommend it to my friends and the
public generally.
Yours respectfully,
A. M. RAMSEY.
The State of Texas, [
County of Comanche, | si ' :
Before the undersigned authority, on thin
day, personally appeared A. M. Ramsey, who,
after being duly sworn, says on oath that the
foregoing statement made by him relative to
the virtue of p. P. P. medicine, is true.
A. M. RAMSEY.
Sworn to and subscribed before m- this,
August 4th, 1891.
J. M. LAMBERT, N. P.,
Comanche County, Texas.
CATARRH CURED BY P. P. P.
(Lippman s; Great Remedy) where all
other remedies failed.
Woman’s weakness, whether nervous
or otherwise, can be cured and the
system built up by I‘. I’. P. A healthy
woman is a beautiful woman.
Pimples, blotches, eczema and till
disfigurements of the skin are removed
and cured by P. P. P.
P. P. P. will restore your appetite,
build up your system and regulate you
iu every way. P. P. P. removes that
heavy, down-in-the-inouth feeling.
For blotches and pimples on the
face, take P. P. P.
Ladies, for natural and thorough
organic regulation, take P. P. P., Lipp
man's Great Remedy, and get well at
once.
Sold by all druggists.
LIPPMAN BROS., Apothecaries, Sole Prop'rs,
Lippman’s Block, Savannah, Ga.
I>. A. KRATSNU.
A £ijUi *
General (liidnrt.nker and Embalmer,
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.
Caskets, cases, coffins and burial
■'obes; h.’arse ami carriages furnished
c> al! funerals in and out of the city.
Undertaker’s telephone 457. Re»i
ieace telephone 4ML 5*2 Mnlharry
•re, M»W»TS Ge
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GgJiCERS EVniYWIILRh.
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