Newspaper Page Text
W. A. SINGLETON, Editor &, Pro’p.
VOLUME 111.
KATEB AND RULES FOR LEGAL ADV ER
TISEMENTS.
tfhorlff ,cvv :*;
Mni'tu*UZfl ft fd iaIPH, CHCIi It vy
Tat (’oltactor*" *!**. ' Yj V
Citation for Loiter* of Administration *nd
Administration
Oimr.ltaiiKliii' oixl Uxi'entorriilp J-™
Application for leave vo sell land for one sq r.. J.
Notico to del,tom ami creditors...... ....... 4. I
1 and aalca laf square, ft, each adrtill "m 1... 3.0
Sales of perlalialdo property, per square I.M
Et ray notice, ftO dayn '
If ole* 111 ni to foreclose niortiwiCß per sq r.... i*
Itulea to eathtdisti lost pipers, per square.... 3.W)
Itnlcs In perfeet services n (Uvorae 10.0
Application fur Homestead ■ •
All I,cl Advertisements must be paid lor au
“Sflaml. Ac., by Administrators Fye.utors
or Guardians, are required by law to be lielu on the
Kirst I’nesdav lntbo month, between the hours o
Urn In the forenoon and three hi the atieruoon. at the
Court llotise in the county ill which the property is
*' Notices of these sales must bo given in a public ga
rolled the county where the land lies, if there ho
unv, ami if tlicre is no paperpubliHlimi in tli • county
in the uearest gazette. or the one having tin:
Orgeat i!LS3 circulation iu said county, 4U days
property must be,
clveu in like manner ten days previous to sale day.
R Notice to the debtors of creditors and an estate
,U Noticetlud applicaUon wfll be" made to the Court of
Ordinary for Leave to Sell laud, Ac., must be publish
a'&r?or[etmr.e o k r , Administr. t !on,Ouard i,.n
aliip, etc., must bo published DUdays— for Dismission
from Administration, Guardianship and Executorship
Foreclosure of Mortgage must lie publish
ed monthly for four months—for establishing lost
nanemfor tno full space of three moi.tbs-for com
pulling titles from Executors or Administrators,
where bond has been given by the deceased, the lull
bo published twice.
Publications Will always bo continued aecordingto
these, the legal requirements, unless otherwise ->r
dcred.
fjroftssional totte.
“ JE M. J$UT r l\
ATTOKNEYAT LAW,
BUEVA VISTA. OA.
DR. E. T. MATHIS,
Buena Vista, Ga
Gills left at my office or residence promptly
attended. Dee24-ly
SIMMONS & SIMMONS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
AMEIIICUS, GEORGIA.
March 10-1 yr.
F. L. WISDOM, M. i.
BUENA VIST A, GA.
BSg-Calls may be left at my resi
dence at a hours of the day or
night.“ l gs*r
BS. 18, filiiiton & W. SS. Iliutou,
ATTOKNETB AT LiW,
BUENA VISTA. GA-
Will practice in the Courts of this State,
and the District and Circuit Courts of the
United States, inch3l-ly.
J. W. BRADSY,
ATTOR NEY AT LAW,
AJIISHICUSI GEORGIA,
Office oil Lamnr Street.
Prompt attention given nil business. Col
lections made. Will practico in the counties
Lee, Macon, Marion, Schley, Sumter, Web
r, Dooly, Terrell and Worth.
DENTAL WORK
—Tt you WANT—,
Good Dental Work
CALL ON
Dr.D.P. HOLLOWAY
at bis office over Davenport & Smiths’
Drug Store, Anterieus, Ga.
sept 11-lyf
wTp. bubt,
DENTIST
S 3 - GA
Continues to solicit the patronage of the good
people of Marion. Satisfaction guaranteed, and
atlreusonab'.* price*- , , ...
Special inducements offered to those who will
arrange to visit my office to have their opera
tions performed. my22-tf
JAS. L. BRASINCTON,
T Al Xj Q XL,
HULN A VIST ,Y, Gf A.
Would respectfully announce to the public
and Vie friends that lie is still nt his post;
jeady for all kinds f tailoring—Cutting, Muk
i ng; Repairing, Cleaning, etc. Those want
jiijj, measures to send ler suits can get then)
of him. 8®” Latest styles and fashions al
ways on hand. JAS. L. BKASINGION
FBXHVTCH MOUSJS,
( PUBLIC SQUARE,)
AMEKICUS, GA.
1 S EASON, - -Propritor.
first Class accommodations, Two Collars per Day
bSP-No efforts will bo spared to make tho
'FbkHch House” tho popular liotel ot'Aracr
iens.. Tho best fare that the market affords,
po’ito ami attentive servants and comfortable
sleeping accommodations will alwvs bo
found at this House. It is convc uiently situ
ated to the bn ■ 1 : ' lion of th- city, tho
post office and the dei>ot.
t .”” ” ■* ”
A Blessing on the Dance.
Oh, Mnsbr! let dis givth’iu tin’a blessin
in yo’ sight !
Don’t joilgo ns hard for what wo docs —you
I noWH it'a Clirismus night;
An’slide hnlunro oh-do yoah, wo docs as
right’s wo kin—
lif danoin's wrong—oh, Mnslir ! let do time
excuse do sin ! *
Wo labors in in do viu’yn’d—working hard,
aid wol'kin’ trne —
Now', ishorely you won’t notus, ef wo cats a
grapo or two,
An’ takes a lc-jtlo holiday—a lectio rcstiu
spell—
Bekase, ncx’ week, wo’ll start in fresh, an
labor twice an well.
Remember, Mashr —min’ dia, now —do sinful
ness of sin
Is pendin’ ’pon de sperritt what wa goes and
and >es it in;
An’ iu a righchis frame ob min’ we s gwiue
to dance an’ sing;
A fjelin* liko King David when lie cut do
pigeon wing
It seems to me—indeed, it do—l mbbbe mout
be wrong—
That people raiy ought to dance when Cliris
mus comes along;
Dos dance bekase dey’s happy—like de birds
hops in do trees;
De pine-top fiddle soundin’ to de bow'in’ ob
de breeze.
Wo has no ark to dance afore, like land's
pbropbst king;
We lias no harp to sound de chord to helji u s
out to sing;
But, ’cordin’ to gifs we has, we does de best
weknows—
An’ folks don’t ’spiso do vi'let flower bekase
it aint do rose.
Irwin linssell in Scribner
A Chapter of First Things.
The first almanac was printed by
Geo. Tan Purbach, in 1160.
The first copper cent was coined
in New Haven ia 1787.
First watches Were made at Nu
remburg in 1177.
The first omnibus was built In Pa
ris in 1527.
The first college in the United
States was for.tided in IG3G.
The first compass was usod in
France in 1140, though the Chinese
arc said to have used lodestonc ear
lier.
The first chimneys were introduced
into Rome from Pudua in 1368.
The first newspaper advertisement
appeared in 1G52.
The first air pump was made in 1650
The first algebra originated with
Diophontus, in either tho lourth or
sixth century.
The first balloon ascension was
made 1783.
The first national bank in the Uni
ted States w T as incorporated by Conn
gress December 31, 1781.
The first attempt to manufacture
pins in this country was soon after
the war of 1812.
The first printing press in the Uni
ted States was introduced in 1692.
Coaches were first used in England
in 1568.
Cas was first used as an illuminat
ing agent in 1702. Its first ase in
New York was in 1827.
Tho first glass factory in the Uni
ted States, ol which we have definite
knowledge, was built in 1780.
Gold was dlsCAi vci cuf in California
in 1848.
The first use of a locomotive in this
country was in ffis29.
The first horsti railroad was built
in 1826-27. •
The first daily newspaper in the
United States was published in Bos
ton, September (25, 1090.
The first religious newspaper, the
Boston Iteconf, was established in
1815. (
Organs arc! Said to have been intro
duced into churches by Pope Yital
ianu about L>. 670.
The first steel per. was made in
1803.
The first, machine for carding, rov
ling and spanning cotton, made in tbo
United Stmts, was manufactured in
1786. I
Envelopes were |rst used in 1839.
The fujst comply, sewing machine
was patAited by bias Howe, Jr., in
BUENA VISTA, MARION COUNTY, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1878.
The first iron steamship was built
in 1830.
Ships were first “copper bottomed”
in 1
The first telegraph instrument suc
cessfully operated by S. F. Morse, the
inventor, in 1835, though its utility
was not demonstrated to the world
until 1811.
The first lucifer match was made
in 1820.
The first steamboat plied on the
Hudson in 1807.
The ontiro Hebrew Bible was print
ed in 1488.
The first society for the exclusive
purpose of circulating tho Bible was
organized in 1805, under tho name of
the British and Foreign Bible Society
The first society for the promotion
nf Christian knowledge was organized
iu 1698.
Kerosene was first usod for lighting
purposes in 182 C.
The first Union flag was unfurled
on the Ist of January, 1776, over the
camp at Cambridge. It had thirteen
stripes of white and red, and retained
the English cross in one corner.
The first steam engine on this con
tinent was brought from England in
1753.
Tho first saw maker’s anvil was
brought to America iu 1819.
Tho first .temperance society iu this
country organized in Saratoga county
N. Y., in March 1808.
Glass was early discovcrod. Glass
beads were found on mummies over
3,000 years old.
Glass Windows were introduced in
to England in the eight century.
The first telescope was probably
used in England iu 1008.
A MEXICAN MONSTROCITY.
A Coy With a Transpaient
Heart, Eyebrows Under His
Eyes, and Other PecuJiarari
iics.
Tho Mnzathland Occidental, a Mexi
can paper, containg an account of an
extraordinary phenomenon in human
nature. The mother of this living cu
riosity is named Antonio Garcia, resid
ing in Eosario, State of Sinaloa. Her
husband is named Lorenzo Eobriquez,
a native of Chapuderos, District of Con
cordia, in the same State. About a year
ago slny l gave birth to another child
which promises to develop into a moa
strocity. This boy child was born at
Copala, and as soon as the phenomenon
was known to exist, the parents had
good grounds to believe it would be
stolen, so they moved to Eosario. The
child according to the story of its pro
genitors, was born without other defect
than having an indentation on its skull
in tho shape of a cross. But in a little
while the head commenced to grow
enormously, and at the end of one year
was from 12 to 14 inches in diameter,
the indentation, in an other sense may
be said to resemble a handgrenade, in
the form of a cross, commencing at the
forehead and running back to the nuca
or nape of the neck. The other part of
the cross extends from ear to ear. The
indentations aro from two to three inch
es in width and slightly covered with
hair. lu the night-time, by putting a
light aoross the head, the brains and
other material can be plainly seen, ns if
a lighthouse was shining upon them.
The eyelid of this creature, instead of
being above the eye, are below, and al
most encircling it, going upward. The
forehead has almost disappeared on ac
count of the deformity of tha head. Tho
whole body is extremely rickety, and
tho skin appears to stick to the dry
bones. The monstrocity weighs a
littlo over ton pounds, is healthy, avid
promises to live many years, and is be\
loved by its parents. Dr. Bio has offer
ed to make a scientific study of the phe
nomenon, and the result of his investi
gation will bo given to the public.
A young mother, in Wilmington, ex
plaining christening to her five-year old
boy, told him that when he was chris
tened he “would be one of God’s little
lambs.” “And will I have hind legs
and baa ?” eagerly asked llio boy.
A. DKMOCUA.TLC FAMILY 3ST 10WSPA T? LIR.
GEORGIA NEWS.
*
“Aunt Phoebe,” a worthy old col
ored woman died in Macon recently
at the advanced ago of 111 years.
Tho colored people of Augusta are
rjtkfcwtvorlng to raise SIOO,OOO to es
tablish a cotton factory.
The gralid jury iff Jasper county,
Ga., appointed a committee in each
militia district to report all vagrants
About 150 persons—men women
and children—from Georgia and
South Carolina, left Atlanta Tuesday
for Texas.
A Mr. Dodge is constructing a nar
row ganged railroad in Telfair county
leading from McErchin neighborhood
to Powell’s landing on the Ocmulgce
river.
A Monroe county farmer made fif
teen bales of cotton on eighteen acres
of land this year. He drains his bot
tom lands and plants them in corn
and always make a plenty.
Sundi Church, in Talbot county,
has had a harvest of a Sabbath
School corn crop recently, and we ex'
pcct to hear more of such gatherings
next year, but let all things be done
in order.
Ed Dumas (col), who is charged
with having murdered Mr. Ballard,
in I’iko county, about two months
ago, was captured in Hawkinsville, a
low days ago.
Savannah News: A correspondent
writing from Mid town, Berriort coun
ty, informs us oi the incendiary burn
ing of the corn crib and contents of
Mr. L. J. Sir mans, of that county, re
cently.
Lagrange Reporter : A negro in
fant was scalded to death recently,
near the colored Baptist church in
this place. Tho nurse was holding
it near the fire, ou which was a large
pot of boiling water, when the cl ild
gave a spring and fell foremost into
the pot, causing instant death.
Mrs. Harmon, of Tennille, has a
cow which produced 208 pounds of
butter in eight months, besides what
was consumed by the family, and
furnished to the the sick neighbors.
Columbus Enquirer gives an ac
count of a dastardly decoying, and
rape of a young girl, seven years old,
whose mother works in the Eagle A.
Phoenix Factory. The vidian, Joo
Cranlord, is still at large.
Oglethorpe Echo: A firm in this
county has sold an old mule every fall
for five years, and had to take it back
each time upon the note falling due.
It is again on the market.
Messrs. Gann and Reaves cultiva
ted within the corporate limits of
Athens, this year, eighty-five acres,
with the following results: Wheat,
300 bushels; potatoes, 350 bushels;
35 two horse loads of pea vine hay;
40 two horse wagon loads of forage
corn, and four large pons of shucks.
In addition they have raised and will
kill 200 pounds of pork.
Tho works at the salt springs near
Syracuse, N. Y., are the most exten
sive of any in tho United States and
produce 6000,000 bushels salt annual
ly. Those at Kewawha, Va., produce
noarly 2000,0000 bushels annually.
The salt Springs at Grand Itapids,
Mich , is 660 feet below the surface,
and one gallon of the water yeilds 12
ounces of salt.
A salt rock was found near Albing
don, Va., 230 feet below tho surface —
though borne into 166 feet it has not
been passed through.
The salt springs in Cantharides,
.Upper Canada, produces about eight
ounces of salt to one gallon of water.
Otihndaga Salines have yeilded 30
ounces^of salt to the gallon of water.
The springs in Virginia have produc-
ed 50 ounces to the gallon of water —
18 gallons racking a bushel, while at
Booth’s Lick,'.Missouri, 450 gallons
make a bushel oNmlt, The Dorwich
springs’ water, iiv\Et)glaud, is ono
lourth of its weight Wt.
Wonder.
When a young man is a clerk in a
store and dresses like a prince, smokes
fine cigars, and drink nice brandy, a
- theatres, balls and the like, 1 won
der if he docs it all on the avails of his
clerkship? When a young lady aits in
the parlor all day, with her fingers cov
ered with rings, I wonder if her mother
don’t wash and do the work in the
kitchen ? When a deacon of the church
Bells strong butter, recommending it as
sweet, I wonder if lie does not rely on
the merits of Christ for salvation?
When a young lady laces her waist a
third smaller than nature made it, I
wonder if her pretty figure will no j
shorten life some dozen years or more,
besides making her miserable while she
does live? Whan a man goes three
times a day to get a dram, I wonder if
lie will not, by and by, go four times? 1
When a young man is depending on his
daily toil for his income and marries a
lady who does not know how to make
a garment, I wonder if he is not lacking
somewhere, say about tbe top, for in
stance? When a man receives a peri
odical or news paper, weekly, and takes
great delight in reading it, but neglects
to pay for it, I wonder if be has a soul
or a gizzard.
“Plantation Manners.”
“The Southern gentlemen witli the
plantation manners are finding the
Republican Senators to be a much
different sort of people to those Nor
thern doughfaces who disgraced them
selves along in 1856-9. The Cheva
lier Bayard grew eloquent in depict
ing the honorable lineage of Ham
burg Butler, the South Carolina
claimant, chaining his right to a seat
on account of his high birth. Mr.
Hoar replied in an epigram. Said
lie: ‘lt is not a question as to the
blood in Gen. Butler’s veins; the ques
tion is as to the blood on bis hands.’
It took backbone to say that sen
tence.”—[lndianapolis Journal.
If Senator Butler were indeed the
bloodthirsting ruffian his Radical en
emies represent him to be, that would
have been the Massachusetts Hoar’s
last epigram; for Butler would have
then and there seized the cowardly
slander by the throat and mopped
the Senate floor with his portrudiug,
venomous tongue.— Sav. News.
Gods Alarm Clock.
Now, conscience is God’s alarm clock.
God has wound it up so that it may
warn us when we are tempted to do
that which is wrong. It gives us the
alarm. It seems to say, ‘’Take care God
sees you. Stop.” How important it is
to have a conscience that will always
warn us of the danger of sin! But if
we desire such a conscience, we must be
willing to listen to it. If we stop when
it says “stop,” if we do what it tells us
to do, then we shall always hear it.
But if wc gets in the habit of not heed
ing its warning, and not doing what it
telles us to do, then, by and by, we shall
cease to hear it. Our conscience wil'
sleep, its voice of warning will be hush
ed,and we shall then be like a ship at sea
that Las no compass to point out the
right way and no rudder to keep it in
that way. —Nashville Advocate.
Another Remedy for Hog Cholera.
Mr. Taplcy B. Owen, of this county,
informed us the other day that he had
certainly found a remedy for hog chole
ra. It is simply a strong toa made from
the common poke root. The poke is a
weed that may bo found in abundance
on every farm, gather tho root, make a
strong tea from it and mix it with slops,
and it will prevent cholera. Mr. owen
has tried it successfully, and we regard
him as a man of the strictest veracity.—
[Hawkinsviville Dispatch.
No colored military companies are
allowed in Ohio. Two such organiza
tions in Cleveland were disbanded the
other day by Adjutant General, in obe
dienco to the law of the State, which
says that only “white male citizens”
can put on military toggery. That law
was passed by the Republicans.
Tho Rio Grande river is navigable
for steamers to Camargo, five hun
dred miles from tho gulf; the Trini
ifcy 250 miles; the Neches and Ange
lina, 200 miles each; the Sabine over
200 miles. T lie Brazos river is navi
gable for about 100 miles, and could
c op cncd several hundred.
Chicken Cholera.
A correspondent of tho New Orlean
Picayune recommends p Ison oak as
a remedy for chicben cholera, and
adds : “During the present year this
disease made its appe trance among
my fowls and killed a great many.
After trying many remedies to no f
ft-ct, I heard of this. To my astonish
ment, it raised some fowls which were
perfectly prostrated and unable to
walk. It was not used long among
my fowls before the disease left the
yards, and I have seen no appearance
of it for over four months.
The way to prepare tho vino for use
is to cut it into pieces, sufficiently
short to place in a kettle, in order to
boil them, being careful not to allow
the hands to touch tho vines, using
tongs, or get them wet with the tea
as there is danger of being poisoned
After having boiled tho pieces sufli
ciently long to mako a strong decoc
tion, wet hominy with it and feed
plentifully bothg the sick and well
fowls for ten or twelve days, or as
long as there is any appearance of the
disease among them. The combs o(
the fowl generally show their condi
;ion of health. I hope if any reader
of your worthy paper sees this, and it
proves effectual as a remedy, he will
let the public know it.
J. W. McNeil.”
Died of Joy.
Says the Fall River (Mass) News :
Last week a Mrs. Clinton, an Irish
woman, arrived in this city from Eng
laad, intending to pass her remain
ing years with her daughter, a mar
ried woman, living at Globe Tillage.
She had another daughter living in a
neighboring State, and the two had
made up a purse to pay their mother’s
passage to this country. Airs. Clin
ton arrived the first of the week, and
went directly to her daughter’s house.
A few days after her arrival tho sec
ond daughter came to visit her, bring
ing two grand children whom the old
lady had never seen. Going to the
door to meet them, the grandmother
lifted tho children from the carriage
and when the daughter alighted, em
braced her with, “Oh dear, I have so
longed to see you for the last time,
and it is the last time 1” saying which
she sank into a chair and expired be
fore any aid could be given her.
Sundorsvillo Herald.]
Asa Lawson.
This notorious desperado, who was
tried and convicted on Tuesday, 31th
inst., for an assault with an attempt
to murder R. G. Strange, in Novem
ber, 1864, after being sentenced to
ten years labor in the penitentiary,
made his escape on Friday night last.
He cut through the partition of the jail
and then the door of the room being
open, his way was clear, and softly
deccnding the stairs made his escape.
We learn from Dr. J. B. Roberts,
that he also went by the name of
Dave Whitaker, Asa Whitaker and
Asa Lawson in Missouri where he
was captured. Ho is about 5| feet
high, thickset, giugcrcake color and
weighs about 150 pounds. Tho par
ty capturing him will not only bo lib
erally rewarded, but will also bo do
ing tho public a service.
ltesuU of Change.
Wo were told yesterday that just
after the revolution, three young ex-
Confederates located in New York to
practice law. They barely made a
living. Finally they agreed to
draw (draws to see which should re
main as a lawyer, which become a
preacher and which a doctor. The
novel test was made, and each car
ried out the agreement. The
preacher has become a bishop. — En
quirer-Sun.
New York Herald: The Baptist
clergymen of Philadelphia have pi
ously resovlcd to try the efficacy of
prayer on the hard times, and sug
gest the 10th of January as a day of
national humiliation. But Congress
meets that day and what is the use
of praying while it is in session ?
Annual Subscription $2 00
The Cott'ce Trade.
Spocint dispatch to tho N. V. World.)
Cincinnati, December 18. — Recent!
developements regarding tbc troubles
between the coffee dealers of this city
and New York shows that the tide erf
trade is turning very rapidly
South. Your correspondent, in an in- 1
terview with the dealers to-day, learned
that, at least, one-half of the coffee pur
chased for this market is now bought
in Mobile and New Orleans, and that
those markets are rapidly growing in
favor. The dealers say they can butr
more cheaply in the South, from the
tacts that those ports are nearer the Rio,
and also that they there buy direct Irom
the importers saving tbc percentage
formerly paid to New York jobbers,
ihe St. Louis and Pittsburg daa’ers aro
also buying largely in the South now.
The fact that tbeae three points annual-,
ly buy over three hundred tliuosanl
bags of coffee makes this a matter of
considerable interest to the dealers of tho
South.
A Iliver on Fire.
Last Monday night a mile of the
Passaic river was on fire through the
town of Patterson. The flames, in
some cases leaped from the surface
of the water to more than a hundred
feet high, and great were tho con
stervation and alarm in the city; but
fortunately no very great loss of
property resulted. The cause of tho
fire was a colision of two oil trains,
by which large quatiticsof petroleum
were let loose in tho culvert leading
to tlio river. t The fire was tho
strangest sight ever seen.
The Action of Gen. Gordon.
A Special to the Chicago Times has
this of which dm don’t believe a word:
He (Senator Gordon) was placed in a
terribly trying position. Senators Mor
gan, Bed Hill, M. C. Butler and Lamar
told him he could only do one thing if
he hoped to hold up his head in the
Sonth again, and that was to challange
Conkling. Mrs. Gordon, a handsome,
black-eyed brunette, insisted, too, that
her husband must challenge Conkling.
Gordon is an extremely sensitive man.
Ill's prominent position and the necessa
ry storm of obloquy that would be rain
ed upon him and his people for the re
vival of the duello here all Weighed
upon him.
A Rome paper says that Mr. M. A.
Wimmpee, of Floyd county, will be six
ty years old the 20th of June next. He
has been married twice, had sixteen
children by his first wife, H boys and 5
grls, and 7 boys and 7 girls by his last
wife, 30 in all, the oldest is 4*2years old.
and the youngest at the breast. Ho
lost 7 sons in the late war. Mr, Wim
peo is a hard-working man, a good citi
zen and is doing a good part by all his
children. All are loved and respected
by those who know them. The old
gentleman is a stout and able bodied man
in good health and is hard as a light
wood knot and bids fair to live many
years longer.
South Braintree., Mass., Decem
ber 21. —Last night the three-story
shoo factory of P. & N. Copeland &
Cos., was burned, with its contents,
including SIO,OOO worth of ma
chinery, 35,000 sides of solo leather,
a lai’gc quantity of finished and parif
ly made goods, patterns, lasts, etc.
The loss is from $50,000 to $60,000.
One hundred hands are thrown out
of employment.
It b reported that Hilliard, United
States tninieter to Brazil, was a passen
ger on tbo steamer Parana, recently
wrecked on the Brazilian coast and that
the steamer’s state-rooms wero plunder
ed by a gang of Italian passengers, after
she went a shore. It may be presumed
that tho representative of this great re
public did not suffer much from the out
rage.
Central and South California aro
said to be favorably situated for the
culture of coffee, and that it is becoiu-
I ing a profitable production.
No. 13
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