Newspaper Page Text
12
NYE ON THE
NEW YEAR.
It Isn't Well to Bo Too Much of a
“Jolly Dog.”
William Relates a Very Pathetic
Box Office Scone.
The Landlord Who Kan a Hotel at Hur
ley, and Something About
That Place.
(Copyright by Associated Press.)
The new year brings with it many hopes
mid fears, joy and regret—hopes mid
fears for the future, joy mid regret for
the past. A great French philosopher
suys that lifter forty we should be very
grateful if we tire not absolutely and coh-
TKKETS • 0
i ■
■Uh
V I J
IwA
/ \x«4
/Z /
"NO SEATS, 1 SAY!”
stantly unhappy. This ought, to buoy up
those who are only unhappy every four
years or every alternate four years.
1 like to sit down on the first day of
every year for a few moments and think
over the good I have done. It does not
take long. 1 can mostly attend to it
is’fore breakfast.
Then 1 I’lin attend to my regrets for
duties unperformed during the rest of
of the day. But 1 am a poor regret ter
ami soon tire of this.
The glad new year should be more wise
ly used. We should not only regret just
enough to chastise ourselves, and then
with a firm and rigid upper lip proceed to
do better. Some people do not allow
their sorrows to heal but keep them open,
torn and bleeding, just, ns weak and cow
ardly soldiers sometimes create and man
tain ghastly sores in order to avoid a
coming battle. Wo niURt cheerfully go
forth to meet our duty with each return
ing year, and the home Is the best place
to investigate a man's efforts. There are
a good many “jolly dogs” in this world;
but, as < Irejflien Buys: “Did you oversee
the wife dog? She sleeps in
a see the children
of a curs of the
dog?
be
jolly dog may be as binnrilkjD
regrotter. Let us
overdo tine Gog business wilh siva.ii
and exliaußt ourselves, sji_ llpil at
hifiio we may be more civil .
Fartion me for moralizing on the glad
now year, but thflife ought to be one day
in each year when we put our past out
on the line and look it over and pound it
with a broom to knock out the harvest of
selfishness and unkitiduess.
Enough of the glad new year!
I.ast evening there was a pathetic
scene nt the box otliee in Paris where we
spoke for the benefit of a thrifty church
society under the auspices of the ladies
committee. As usual in such cases the
seats were sold the day before. Paris
generally is regarded as the wickedest
and most immoral city in the world, but
Paris, Illinois, should not be confused
with Paris, Prance.
We came at noon and registered at the
Hotel Bristol, on the Place A'endolmw-t
pronounced Plass Vendome —and in the
.•veiling we began after prayer meeting,
it being Wednesday evening. At !• o’-
clock a tired man, with tall, heavy boots
mid the sad air of one who had been thir
ty years trying to prove that agriculture
was one of the most delightful occupa
tions known to humanity, asked the
man at the box otliee window for a good
seat..
” 1 f you had been here yesterday,”
said the ticket seller, “you could huve
bought, a seat, but not to day.”
“Sir?” said the man.
“Seats all sold yesterday,” was the
gentle reply.
“1 didn't hear what you said." answer
ed the old gentleman, unrolling his ear
and placing a hand with a red mitten
on it behind the ear.
"No seats, 1 say!" was the hurried an
swer in n loud tone.
"Not even in the orehister?”
“No!”
“Whassay?”
“No!"
“Well, that's all all over me., Comc
fourteen miles over a road that‘s froze
tighter than the top on a new bile, and
can't hear nothin over eight foot to save
my life, and got to buy standin, room.
Louisiana ami the girls has got (.he latt
on me this time."
Much has been printed throiigliout the I
United States regarding the eomljtioß ol I
society at Hurley, Wis. Probably some I
of it is true, it is said that the people !
there are mostly miners who h ive beet. !
imported from abroad under contract:, i
Some of them were caught in Polauo
alive, and others wore snared in Russia.
They talk their own language, drink al- i
eohol when depressed mentally and chew;
tobacco in the English language.
Several times the world has been star- ;
tied by the news that a large stockade :
had been established in a forest a few
miles from Hurley, and that young girls
were being kidnapped from Chicago to be
locked up in these stockades to lead
wicked lives or to be cruelly slain and
buried at midnight in the asparagus bed j
adjoining the prison. It was a sad tale
and aroused much sympathy, but later
information shows that those girls were
kidnaped from Boiler avenue, and that
they also hung on the flank of the Union
army during the war. They have thofe
fore arrived at the age of discretion. IT
they did not care to be kidnaped they
could have gone right away from there.
We mot a retired landlord from Hurley
on the train to Alpena the other day. He
was a handsome young fellow of Irish
birth and was dressed in purple and
line linen. He also wore a high silk hat,
with a broad band on it. and his golden
hair seemed to have caught the glpuitf of
a dying day in October. He was just
tiie kind of man to make a low. dirty,
drunken, imported murderer mad, he
looked os cool and clean and sweet.
He had been at Hurley running a hotel
He had woru a white vest one day last
summer to market, also a tall hat. He
did not get his marketing, but. he got a
wealth of tobacco juice on his white vest,
and his hat was found on the roof of the
opera house after ten days had sped on
winged wings.
Hurley has seven or eight opera houses
which are open every day in the year.
The audiences are entirely men folks, and
opera glasses are not called for. The
Sabbath is set aside as a day for recover
ing from the Saturday night debauch,
but the recovery also requires Monday.
jag has n world-wide reputation and
speaks for itvelf.
Social matinees are held In the morn
ing to accommodate the miner* who
work at night and cannot see society ex
cept in the daytime. Men wear their
hats and smoke Cable tobacco—l. e., to
bacco that one can smoke in Wisconsin
and smell in Europe. Wearing their
hats nt these theatrical performances is
a cheap imitation of the custom among
ill mannered Indies, but the tobacco hab
it they have picked up out of tht-i • ,v
heads.
The opera fa in the line of comic opera,
and consists of varied specialties, and is
played by artists who wear thin property
clothes on the street, and their tights
whim on the stage show bow high their
bbOt legs come when they are dressed for
tho street.
The girl who sings about the picture
that was turned, toward the wall lias an
Aeloean nose, tHrough which she sings a
sud lay. She stands on the outside of
her feet n« she warbles, and there are
traces of sadness on her face, also traces
of iron ore around her waist. Possibly
soiile ope has loved her—some man under
the influence of drink. I mean—and with
his iron covered arm has clasped her ore
and ore, only to be repulsed by those
thoughtless word.-, “Oh, go and chase
yourself!”
And so he has gone away, leaving her
there alone to face all those people, and
sing and try to bo guy. Girls ought to Is'
more careful what they say to mon who
are intoxicated.
I once knew a young lady who told a
man to avaunt under thone circum
stances. and now, although she is happy
and wealthy, she is an old maid.
How mil<-li better it is to have some one
you enn call your own, no matter how
worthless and low, than to be an old
maid!
Hurley is gay and lively with its for
i-ign tongues hoard here and there, the
merry music of the orchestra of the near
est theatre, and the dull thud that
strikes one’s ear as he is richly repaid for
wearing eyeglasses ou the street, or
wiping his nose with a handkerchief.
I can imagine a sweet voiced onjenew
girl elocutionist reading one of Brown
ing’s poems to those great, strong, manly
fellows who wear whiskers wherever they
ha upon to spring up, and who drink to
Mixcess.
We did not play Hurley.
I would not mind playing the Siberian
tallow candle circuit, but Hurley does
not appreciate real art.
Opposite to us one day in a Pullman
there was a pair of newly wedded people.
I was reading, but the story was too
massive for me, treating of fin de cycles
nnd one thing or another, and of living
for a purpose, and of getting a firm grasp
on the tail Os the age in which we live,
and so forth, and thus I sort of listened
to the bright, and childlike talk of the
two sweet things cuddled up there to
gether, with her little gray gloved baud
now and then gliding through his
whiskers, in such away as to make time
feed he was one great solid mass of whis
krs, whereas he only had a little
“aiders,” which looked like ear muffs
that had worked forward.
“And so wo go to New Orleanls,Ambrose
she asked as she opened her new trav
elling bag and took u new cake of soup
to smell of.
“Yes." said Ambrose, scowling at the
toe'. of his new boot, which was hurting
him, I judge, “we take the Q. and C.
from Cincinnati, or we take the luxuri
ous Illinois Central which has such cun
ning little depots all along its line, and
we will spend a week in New Orleans.
“And what is New Orleans like, Am
brose?” she asked in a sity way, nestling
her head under his arm, jvilh her nosu in
his cigar pocket. i
“New Orleans is an Joi d city of the
south,” he said, “with ereoleg and croco-
>f 11,
THE NWLY WEDDED PAIR.
diles ill it, and a shell road, so called be
cause the two armies shelled each other
along that road in the war.
“New Orleans," be said, looking has
tily at hi# cuff, "is also a great sugar
market for the plantations along tho
river."
“Oh. how sweet!” she said. “We will
go out to plantation where they are
making sugar, and wo will make wax
sugar. ■ Did you ever eat any of that,
Ambrose?"
"No. What is it?"
‘Why you just twke the hot sugar,
you know, and pour it on the suow. It
is real good.”
She will make a good wife to him, 1 am
sure, and will order things from the mar
ket. She will order her croquettes by
the set ami live for weeks on purple cold
slaw because it matchs the tablecloth.
But Ambrose will not care —that is, for
throe or four weeks—and then he will
have the colic some night, ami she will
T.'ilk to him about his heart and how to
keep it ever true to her, when it is not
his heart that is hurting him at all. and
she will put a beautiful pale blue night
shirt on him to roll on the floor in till the
doctor comes, and the doctor will, after
he has heard the history of the case, take
her aside and tell her if she really does
love Ambrose -she had better get goods
that will match his interior decorations
instead of the tablecloth, and he will re
cover. and by and by they will acciden
tally know something.
RHEUMATISM CURED.
Potsdamer's Red Star Store, Lake City,
Florida.
P. P. P. Manufacturing Co.:
Gents—Having suffered with Rheuma
tism for some time, and tried a groat
many remedies, but could find no relief
until 1 used your great and beneficial
P. P. P. I recommend it to suffering
humanity. Yours,
J. POTSDAMER.
TOO SHORT.
“Those are the shortest days in the
year,” said Miss Jimpson to her hus
band.
"What of it,” asked Jimpson testily.
“I’m just as short as the days and a
blamed sight shorter since you came back
from that shopping expedition.”—Buffalo
Express.
THE MOST PLEASANT WAY
Os preventing the grippe, colds, head
aches, and fevers is to use the liquid
laxative remedy Syrup of Figs, whenever
the system needs a gentle, yet effective
cleansing. To be benefltted one must
get the true remedy manufactured by
the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For
sale by all druggists In 50c. and bottles.
WITH A RING.
The wii.ier girl who is described as
dressed to kill Mould doubtless be classi
fied as ah i"f -Dj I •.■He.—Washington
Sbir.
THE AUGUSTA WEEKLY CHRONICLE, JANUARY 11. 1893.
Fartano’.'firuUe.
"1 WDpts OTfcfs v' J,
>£4/ '■ ■ flu
I \ Hn / I u
k nJ
“Now that I have spent a good deal of
money in putting up my establishment 1
will wait, with the hope that fortune will
smile upon me.”
If
“Ah, now! That’s it-only when I say
three, smile pleasantly. One, two”
//*'?
~ 'l/
“THREE!”
..Lila ’
.-'"r
“What a fool I was to mention that
smile!”—St. Nicholas.
LeAoN ELIXIR.
F-or iwiiouHne.*. Coniux»*Aon, Malaria,
ColA. and m.. Grip.
ynr Indigestion, Sick and Nervous
Headaches.
For Sleeplessness, Nervousness and
Heart Diseases take Lemon Elixir.
Ladles, for natural and thorough organ!
regulation, take Lemon Elixir.
Dr. Mozely’s Lemon Elixir is prepared
from the fresh Juice of Lemons, com
bined with other vegetable liver tonics
and cathartics. 50c. and tl bottles at
druggists.
Prepared only by Dr. H. Mozely. At
lanta. Ga.
A PROMINET MINISTER WRITES.
After ten years of great suffering from
indigestion, with great nervous prostra
tion, biliousness, disordered kidneys and
constipation, I have been cured by Dr.
Mozely’s Lemon Elixir and am now a
well man.
Rev. <’. C. DAVIS. Eld. M. E. Church
South, No. 28 Tatnall St.. Atlanta, Ga.
GRATITUDE.
Dr. H. Mozely—Dear Sir: Since using
your Lemon Elixir I have never had an
other attack of those fearful sicks head
aches. and thank God that 1 have at last
found a medicine that will cure those aw
ful spells. MRS. ETTA W. JONES,
Parkersburg, West Va.
THIRD PARTY OFFICERS.
The Election in Glascock the Quietest f >
Years.
Gibson, Ga., Jan. 5. —The election for
for county officers for this, Glascock
county, yesterday was the quietest elec
tion known here for years. The third
party candidates had an easy walk over,
there being no opposition on the democrat
ic side except the office of sheriff.
All the democratic candidates withdrew
from the race, with the exception of J.
D. Newsom, who remained in the race for
sheriff to the finish, but he was defeated.
Glascock has a full corps of third party
officers for the next two years. The fol
lowing were elected: For ordinary. J.
C. English, the present incumbent: clerk
superior court. John P. Allen; for sheriff,
George N. I’sry; county treasurer, T.
A. Walden; tax collector, J. S. Snider;
tax receiver. C. B. Sammons; surveyor,
Wilson Glover; coroner. Richard Warren:
county commissioners, Wm. Hart. Dr. R.
T. Lasiter and J. B. Pool. We will
wait and see what the business capacity
of these gentlemen will develop iu the
next two years.
Rheumatism was so bad that James
Irvin, of Savannah, could hardlj- walk
from pain in his shoulder and Joints of
his legs. P. P. P. tPriekley Ash. Poke
Root and Potassium) was resorted to
and Irvin is well and happy.
SHE WAS 117 YEARS OLD.
Columbia, S. C., Jan. s.—Flora Fon
taine, colored, died in this city today at
the ago of 117 years. She was brought
here a slave at the age of 15 years, 102
years ago, by Col. William Dessausure,
and has lived her ever since. She knew
Columbia when it was but a plantation
settlement. She is the mother of 13
children, of whom two daughters and
three sons are still living here. Up to
three weeks ago she could thread a needle
without difficulty, and she was always re
markably healthy. She was familiar
with the history and personally acquain
ted with all of Columbia’s oldest inhab
itants and could talk freely and entertain
ing of them all.
A CLUB DISBANDED.
Columbia, S. C., Jan. s.—(Special.)
The Woman's Central World's Fair
club, of South Carolina, was disbanded
today by reason of the refusal of the
■ legislature to make the appropriation
for a state exhibit at the Columbian
exposition. A resolution was unanimous
ly adopted to notify the associate clubs
throughout the state that further efforts
would be useless and that the work had
I terminated.
Many Persons are broken
down from overwork or household cares.
Brown’s Iron Bitters Rebuilds the
system, aids digestion, removes excess of bile,
■ i’li'i cures mabp'ia V?t.ibe genuine-
LIQUOR LAWS
CREATE TROUBLE.
The Governor to Decapitate Of
fending Treasurers,
And Says the Laws Will Certain
ly Be Enforced.
A Plan to Prevent Anyone from Becom
ing a Dispenser.
Columbia, S. C., Jan. 5. —(Special.)—
There is a storm brewing in this state
as the result of the dispensary law which
is to go into effect next July. Matters
are in a turmoil and it looks as if the
- dogs of war will be let slip.
f Governor Tillman has just returned
. from Clemson College, and on learning
of the action of some of the county treus
_ urers in furnishing receipts to barkeep
ers, stating that the money was for liq
uor licenses, he expressed himself very
freely and pointedly in regard to the
matter. The fact is that in some half
dozen counties the county treasurers
have given licenses for the year ana
specified in their receipts that the money
was paid for the privilege of selling liq
uor "for the year 1803.” This of course,
appears to be a point in favor of the
barkeepers, as the time specified for the
law to go into effect is the first of next
J uly.
The Governor said that tills was in
direct violation of the instructions tel
egraphed each treasurer by the Attor
ney General. ‘You may be sure,” said
he, “that 1 am going to look into this
violation of instruetious, and as soon as
I find out which treasurers have diso
beyed orders I will relieve them of their
duties and appoint, despite primaries
or anything else, men who are capabh
of taking instructions.”
When the Governor was asked about
the future of the law and the opposition
it was likely to incur in the courts, he
replied: “Yon may say for me that the
bill will go into effect on July 1, next,
as certain as it is an act, and it will
be enforced too.” •
"Even if the courts should intervene!
“Yes, despite the courts or anything
else.”
The Governor said that possibly some
of tlie treasurers might not have received
the instructions, and that he would give
each one a hearing before he chopped his
head off. Said he:
“Nobody is, or can boa part of the gov
ernment who will not hold up the laws,
as interposed to him by the proper au
thorities.”
In Berkely county the law seems to be
utterly . repudiated. The county treas
uere htus advertised to the effect that
he will issue permits to take out licenses
in incorporated towns, and will also issue
licence to retail liquor in the county.
The county commissioners have advertis
ed that they will issue bonds for licences
to retail liquor in the county.
The sentiment in Spartanburg county
is that tho application of any person to
be a dispenser will not be indorsed, and
the law requires that such application
cannot be considered unless a majority
of I lie free-holders sign it. The same
appears to be the situation in Kershaw
county.
The Abbeville Press and
vises the Governor, in the
city councils licensing the batw* 1
to law, to employ constables,
are not sufficient to try
then call for federal aid. iTml
The Register
the cities as netion of
laws of South GurJffi" defiance to the
The) Registe/todaxJ’Hna. A writer m
, “W clove th.
wish I"'iu prosperity, but the
■MAA of tlie women ami children of South
appeal for help, and they will
i be heard.”
The Governor received the following
communication yesterday:
I To bis excellency, B. It. Tillman com
mander in chief over the military and
civil services of tlie state of South t'ar
' olina (Charleston not excepted): The
incorporated cities and towns of the
state are now granting licence in direct
violation of the state laws. Why should
not these charters be revoked by the see
i retnry of state or the powers that be?
; If you should, in your judgment, deem
it to place any city or town in the state
under marshal law and require military
force to protect the laws of the slate,
call ou the one-gallus and wool-hat boys
of the Piedmont belt. Make the city by
the Sea know that our motto is equal
rights to ail, special privileges to none,
■ that the laws of the state must be re
spected even by Charleston itself. To
i violate a law is had. To conspire with
I others to violate the law is worse. Has
the city council by the Sea been guilty
of these charges? Yours to command,
AN OLD SOLDIER.
■ Piedmont belt. Jan. 3. IS!*.",.
GAKI IKS
B,e
Sick Headachynnd relieve all the troubles inci
dent to a bilious slate of ihe syntein. such as
Dizziness, Nausep« Bro a Nine? < Distress after
eating. Pain in tbo; Side. &e Whik< their most
remarkable success lias been shown iu curing
SICK
Headache, yet C/r.rxn’s Little Liver
are equally* vahiao.e in Constipation, curing
and preventing this annoying complaint, while
they also correct a’-i disorders of the stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Even if they only cured
HEAD
Achs thev would bo almost priceless to those
who suffer from this distressing complaint:
but fortunately their goodness aces not end
here, and thus* who onee try them will find
these little pills valuable in so many ways that
they will not be willing to do without them.
But after all sick hsad
AOHE
is the bane of so many lives that here is where
we make our great boast. Our pills cure it
while others do not.
Carter's Little Liver Ptt-ts are very small
and very easy to take. Ona or tw o pills make
a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do
not gripe or purge, but by their gentle action
please all who use them. In vials at 25 cents;
five for sl. Sold everywhere, or sent by mail
CABTBS MSSIBMS CO., Nsw T:rL
W M M M &
PARKER’S “
HAIR BALSAM
Clear.«cv And beautifies the hair.
|NMg&&r v** Promotet “ luxuriant growth.
' wSSSS Never Fails to Restore Gray
fCfX'Cl' J. -efctfil Hair to its Youthful Color.
JWwM Cun* scalp ditexse* & hair tailing.
and at Prugg-.cs
U»e Parker’s Gmper tonic, h cures the worst Cough,
Weak Lungs, Debility, Indigestion, Pain, Taae in time. 5U cU.
COLLEGE, Augusta, Ga. One of the most com
plete Institutions in the South. Actual Business; College
Currency. Many graduates in good paying positions.
Full course, 4 months. Shorthand and Typewriting also
taught. Fie? trial kswns. Send *br circular.
CASTOR IA
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Imants
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms aud allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea aud Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas*
toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
“Castoria is an excellent medieino for chil
dren. Mathers have repeatedly told me of its
good effect upon their children.'*
Da. G. C. Orqood,
Lowell, Mass.
•* Caistoria is the best remedy for children of
which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
interest of their children, and use Castoria in
stead of the various quack nostrums which are
destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sending
them to premature graves.”
Dr. J. F. Kincheloe,
Conway, Ark.
The Centaur Company, T7 Murray Street, New York City.
i. SHBHIB’S DIM KM.
Science now admits that all diseases are caused by la
visible living microbes.
I W V J&T - CONSUMPTION
11 \ * s tlie wasfe and inflammation produced by tho tubercle
Sk S parasite or lung u.oth.
W* % IBKIGHT’S DISEASE
mMm Nk is the work of the kidney microbe.
B V V JMS A ECZEMA
■ I. T .jp- ■ is caused by a microbe in the cores of the skin. ,
V L* 3 TYPHOID FEVER
1, ,ji.rfla fe TAiy*■ ■ - jc j g by a microbe in the blood and intestines.
V ’/ DIPHTHERIA
Ve„ «c ir by a microbe in the throat. A separate and distinct ml-
crobe has been found for every disease, and to etfectual
]y d es troy these parasites and cure, a medicine must be
powerful antiseptic, and a thorough blood purifier.
V RADAM’S MICROBE KILLER
these qualities. It is the only medicine that can be taken in large enough quan
couwb stop fermentation and thoroughly purify the entire system. It contains no drugs,
water charged wddi powerful gases, pleasant to take and.
but iw u | j n j ts c w.. e ts a magic greater than tliat of QUININK,
OPXU 4, and acting as nature's new and
’ more effid » v,_ for in uiv of the violent and fatal ailments
of the blodu,’p'ltEE.
Fiftv page lflk_ y
CIM € GWTCHIUS,
548 roa( l Street, jlugusta, Ga.
- ■ - - - ■•
I W I W
The best Gentleman’s Shoe on earth for the money—s 2 50. Made of
best calf uppers, with oak leather bottoms, and every pair warranted to
give satisfaction- All sizes, sto 11, C, D and E widths. Lace and con
gress, plain toe and tip. Send trial order.
JNO. P. DILL COMPANY, J
p, S. Repairing nicely done while you wait. Write for catalogue.
JESSE THOMPSON & CO.,
DOORS, SASH,
BUNDS,
Lumber, Lathsand Shingles
AXTGtITSTA. OA-.
AOSOSTA CARBIVAL DATES, JAN. 24, 25 and 26th, 1893.
JY CLEVEI.AND C. IFt.
Boss PLOWS,
$1.25 each.
. ! ’ ■ ■ b-bs-
H-° u ' . ’ *<»■•&z-’»-7-
’’• ••
GRE.Y'T SACrtIITICE.
DAY TANNAHILL, 733 and 735 Broad st., 726-8, 734-6 Reynold st.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
What is
Castoria.
“ Castoria is so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prutcriplioa
known to me.”
IT. A. Ascnaa, M. D.,
11l So. Oxford St, Erooklyn, N. Y.
“ Our physicians in the children's depart
ment have spoken highly of their experi
ence in their outside practice with Castoria,
aud although re only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products, yet we are free to confess that ths
merits of Castoria has won us to look with
favor upon it.”
Ukitid Hospital and Dispsnsarv,
boston. Mass.
Aixcn C. Smith, Prtt.,