Newspaper Page Text
E NEWS ITEMS
/
CULLED FROM MANY SOURCES
BRIEFLY PARAGRAPHED.
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Happenings of General Interest to
Georgia Readers.
The Argentine Republic has in¬
creased its appropriation for an exhibit
at the Cotton States Exposition. The
amount of the increase is not known.
...
The supervising architect at Wash¬
ington, D. C., has completed his test
of Stone mountain granite. It stood
all tests admirably and will be accept¬
ed for the Kansas City public build
ing. The bid was for $325,000.
Many of the farmers of Oglothorpe
county have adopted the plan of pay¬
ing their hands on a basis of the price
of cotton next fall. They agree to
give them tho proceeds from thousand so many
pounds of being the staple, one
pounds about the average
named.
• • *
The Athens foundry and machine
works have closed down for several
weeks. It will start up again soon in
ita regular line of work. There is a
rumor tq the effect that a party of
gentlemen are at work organizing a
company to take charge of this foun¬
dry, but this is denied by the manage¬
ment.
General orders No. 2 have been i«
cued by Brigadier General E. T.
Sykes, as adjutant general and chief
of staff, announcing the staff of the
nontenant general. Ordinary W. L.
Calhoun Iisb been honored and is on
the staff of Lieutenant General H. D.
Leu with tho title of judge advocate,
general.
• • •
The railroad sensation in Savannah
jn»t now is the proposed charge of
$500,000 Which it is said that li. T.
Wilson A Co., of New York, will make
against the Southwestern Railroad
Company for standiug security on tho
supersedeas bond in its appeal from
the decision of Judge Jackson on its
liability for oertaifi of its moitgage,
■
t The sundry civil appropriation bill
was completed and reported to the
bouse of representatives at Washing¬
ton Tuesday. For Georgia it carries
appropriations as follows: Savannah
public buildings, $100,000; quaran¬
tine station at Brunswick, $1,350; im¬
proving Savannah harbor, $856,250.
It also provides for a survey of the
Robert N. Ely, who was attorOey
geuersl of the state of Georgia under
the administration of Governor Col¬
quitt, died at tho Fulton county alms¬
house last Monday afternoon. He Lad
l»eeu ccmfiued to the place for more
than two years and bad been in a bad
state of health ever since be first en¬
tered the institution. Mr. Ely was
-known throughout the eutire
especially in his old home in
iwest Georgia. During his term
as attorney-general, he fulfilled the
duties of the ofltae in a most efficient
manner. Attar nis term expired, how¬
ever, be began dripkiug, and it was
not long before he wae a total wreck,
ith physically and mentally.
m-r?
Several hundred advanced women,|
who have given the subject earnest
thought, ana have concluded that they
have a right to vote, will assemble in
Atlanta on January 80th, next, to hold
their annual convention. They National will
meet under the name of the
American Suffrage Association, which in
is the largest suffrage association
the world, and the convention will be
the twenty-seventh annual one. It
will be composed of several hundred
of the brainiest women of America,
and the proooediogs will be marked
with unusual interest. As the question
of woman suffrag e is growing in inter
year.the^^^H^^^H will tion that will
4ba told in Atlanta be, perhaps,
tha moat interssting that haa aver been
e
The will af the late ex-Senator Jo¬
seph E. Brown haa been filed for pro¬
bata in solemn form hi tha oflee of
Calhoun at Atknta. Tha
of n
bean involved in
direction to ail tha' great for
The bulk
goes to the
probated in family. solemn Tha farm will
- on
i$ii Monday fat February, in
involved fa
• P*
of rani fa
to m
....... ..... ..
fy
a
-
-•
in making returns have arrived fr< in
Washington. Collector Trammell.a*
timatea that under the income tax law,
15,000 persons and corporations in
Georgia will have to make returns.
Atlanta contains about 2,000 of these;
Savannah about I,COO; Augusta about
000; Macon about 700 and Columbus
about 400.
A feature of the income tax law not
generally understood perhaps is that
the exemption of $4,000 does not ap¬
ply to corporations. An individual
cun have an income of $4,000 before
he pays the tar of 2 per cent; but a
corporation’s net income is taxed.
That is, if a corporation has for in¬
stance, an income of $200, it must pay
a tax on that amount of two per cent.
Collector Trammell estimates that
about fifty per cent, of those who are
required to make returns of their in¬
comes will have to pay the tax.
In the case of individuals, the blank
forms will be sent to every one thought
to have an iucome of over $3,500. In¬
dividuals are exempt from $4,000 of
income, but $3,500 is the figure
named, so that no fish will escape the
government nets. Furmerswho raise,
according to the present price of cot¬
ton, 140 bales of cotton will be re¬
quired to send in returns.
Every corporation in the state, large
or small, if it operates under a char¬
ter, will have to make returns. Part¬
nerships on the other hand will be vir¬
tually exempt up to the $4,000 limit,
because blanks will be sent to partners
as individuals.
*
To Organize In Georgia.
Colonel W. A. Broughton, who was
appointed by tho national conference
at Jackson, Mias., president of the
Georgia association for the reduction
of the cotton acreage in tbia state, is
full of enthusiasm for the successful
working out of the scheme. He bus
implicit faith in .the work that has
been started and is confident that tho
people of Georgia will take a hand in
the undertaking and do their full part
in the work of bringing about more
favorable conditions for the farmers of
the cotton crowing section.
Colonel Broughton i» just tbo kind
of man for the place to which lie has
been appointed by tho president of
the American Cotton Growtrs’ Protec¬
tive Association. Hois prominent in
Georgia, having always been closely
identified with the best interests of the
farming people of this state. He was
for a long time a leading member of
the state alliance, and when it comes
to consulting the farmers’ interests he
is broad-minded enough to lose sicht
of all political spirit. He is himself a
prosperous and successful farmer and
a cotton grower on a large scale. . „
Speaking of the organization-of the
work in Georgia the Colonel says:
“I will appoint the county presi¬
dents as soon as I cun secure suitable,
aotive tnen, who will act with me, and
who are willing to devote most of their
time for the next two months for the
general interest and benefit of the
agricultural classes. Tho main feature
in the plan, as you will readily see by
reading it, is to rodnee the ootton
acreage. The obligations are not
brndiug unless 75 per cent of the
ootton growers in 80 per cent, of the
cotton counties sign the agreement to
reduoe their acreage at least 23 per
cent. After getting up all the statis¬
tics of oottou aoreage and signatnres
of the ten ootton growing states and
the one ootton growing territory, the
state presidents and executive oom
mittee will meet in New Orleans the
1st of April, and if the proper nupber
of cotton growers have joined the binding asso¬
ciation the obligations are
and operative.
“By this plan you see at least three
fourths of the ootton planters will be
on the tame footing, and only a few
small mindsd, miserly farmers will
clear up new grounds and sage fields
for more ootton. If this reduction of
only 25 per coot of aoreage would re¬
duce the number of bales of ootton,
say 25 per cent (taking Mr. Neil's
enormous estimate for this year’s crop
of 10,000,000 bales), then we would
have only 7,500,000 belea would of ootton for
next year's crop, which be about
1,000,000 bales less than actually need¬
ed to supply the world’s dementi, and
by that crop we would get not less then
10 to ISi cents for every pound of it.
“If the daily end weekly press of
Georgia will help us in thia work I be¬
lieve we will be eooomafuL There is
ao politics in this association. The
doors populists, ere open to democrats, republi¬
cans, Jeffersonian democrats,
prohibitionists all alike. It allows the
woman's suffragist, if shy be a ootton
grower, to oome in and vote for the
reduction in cotton acreage; it opens
its doors to all woes and allows the
oolored man to enlist in thismove
t for the prosperity of the south.
It fa BO or political organisa¬
tion, but allows ail to help, os in the
few ths upbuilding of the farm¬
ing interest of the ootton growing
states, whether furnishing aetnally growing cot¬
ton fur or the supplies or money Ilia
cultivation vf oottop.
to
unless the people of the
operate, with me, hat if they do, I
will pot forth all my energies and
a fa the
of
the
i fa ths^nSiiTon srehaliofth. the
id Wedneada rwiw
( viiL rgf |fass ml ye mw^mmwmfwm
iff®
held the first of April in New Orleans,
which is to the final national conven¬
tion for the purpose of patting the
plan into operation.
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.
An avalanche broke over part of
Bardonericja, Italy, the southern ter¬
minus of the Mount Genis railway.
Eighteen Italian soldiers were buried
under it.
Bio Janeiro advices state that there
is considerable excitement there as to
the result of the accusations against
Peixoto, Castilho, Monteiro and oth¬
ers, presented by a congressional com¬
mittee
At Manuel Hilton’s sawmill, near
Alto, Texas, the boiler exploded, kill¬
ing four colored men, Tobe Richards,
Alex Lewis, Will Lewis and Abner
Lee. Alexander Hamilton, Richard
Lofton and Noah Miller Were slightly
injured.
Twenty thousand dollars worth of
new machinery has arrived from Bos¬
ton, for the South Boston iron works
at Middlesboro, Ky. The plant will
soon start up. It is the only gun and
ordinance plant in the south, and em¬
ploys 500 skilled workmen.
Two children playing east of San
Luis, Potosi, Mexico, discovered a
cavern. Several men explored the
cave, revealing an iron chest, filled
with Sprnish gold coin, amounting to
between $250,000 and $350,000. It is
believed that the money was placed in
the cave by Franciscan monks.
G. H. Ramsey & Co., the oldest and
one of the most popular grocery firms
in Jackson, Tenn., have made an as¬
signment for the benofit of the credit¬
ors. E. A. Brooks, sheriff of Madison
county, was made assignee. The assets
and liabilities are not known. Slow
collections and the tightness of the
times caused the failure.
Augustus Potter, superintendent of
tho Russell mills, ChiltonvOle, Mass.,
has left town and his accounts are in
bad shape. Tho compauy will proba¬
bly lose between $5,000 and $6,000,
and private individuals will lose heav¬
ily. Potter left for Boston, saying he
would return at night. He has had
two fictitious names on the pay roll
for two years, on which he had drawn
$2,500 from the company. He bor¬
rowed money in amounts ranging from
$100 to $700 from private parties.
ATLANTA’S LRXOW
Exonerates Baker and Recommends
Suspension of Detectives.
Tho Baker-Wright committee at At
lauta, agreed on a report at miduight
Thursday night, Amos Baker was
cleared of the charges against him.
The suspension from the foroe of Chief
of Detectives Wright and Detectives
Looney and Cason was reoommended.
Wholesale investigation of the entire
polioe and detective departments by a
special council committee of five was
asked for.
This report of the committee is for
the consideration of the general counoil
and that body has the right to refuse
to receive or reject any portion of it.
In the meantimo the most sensational
feature is that the committee recom¬
mended the suspension of the three
detectives who have figured so promi¬
nently in the investigation of the
charges against Baker.
It was accepted as a fact by all the
members of the board of polioe com¬
missioners and assumed as a certainty
by Captain J. W. English, chairman
of that board, that the commissioners
would be left to deal with anything
that might have beed found to be dam¬
aging testimony against the detective
or police department. the
Upon this point, however, com¬
mittee found no difficulty in arriving
at n decision. They were acting as
trusted representatives of the general
council and it whs to this body they
were to look. The members of the
Baker-Wright committee decided that
the oonnoil and the mayor vere the
powers carrying on the investigation
and that it was to these that further
investigation should be looked for.
--y*
CONDEMNING PERIER.
Frenchmi Say He Acted Cowardly
tn Resigning.
Cable dispatches from Paris state
that at a meeting of the ministers held
for the purpose of discussing ths
changed situation in view of the resig¬
nation of President .Caaimir-Perier,
there waa a fall attendance of the
members of M. Dupuy's cabinet and
the gravity of the position was folly
taken into consideration.
A meeting of the socialist members
of the chamber of deputies was also
called for the purpose of deciding upon
the oonree to be panned by the so¬
cialist group in view of the election of
M. Cesimir-Perier’s , and
discussing the availability of candi¬
dates. Aa the resignation of the esbi
net, followed by that of tha president,
is regarded by the group as a Socialist
triumph, it is med that the leaders
of that organisation will n
thoroughly ag gr essive M. Casimer-Perier attitude. in
Tha action of
abandoning his office fa the face of
drawml at Uxia time Sean
ice.
¬
▲ • 1
*■
V
HORRIBLYMANGLED
NEARLY A HUNDRED PEOPLE
HURLItfb INTO ETERNITY
By Powder Explosions During a Fire
in Butte, Montana.
At 9:55 o’clock Tuesday night, the
fire department of Butte, Montana,
responded to a call from box 72—the
call of death to nearly the entire de¬
partment.
The fire waB either in the store of
Kenyon Connell, or the Butte Hard¬
ware Company’s warehouse, There
was a rumor that there was powder in
the buildings, and this reached the
ears of the firemen as soon as they ar¬
rived on the scene, but it was denied,
and, after a moment’s hesitation, they
began fighting fire.
The men had barely started to work
when there was an explosion which
shook Butte to its very foundations.
The powder in the warehouse blew np,
spreading death and ruin to all who
were near. All bnt three of the fire¬
men were killed. It is believed that
in the first explosiou only three fire¬
men were killed.
There were heroes among the spec¬
tators, however, and as soon as the
stun of the 6hock passed away, while
some ran in terror, others immediate¬
ly began pulling the mutilated bodies
of the firemen and the injured from
the proximity of the flames. From
all over the city people began moving
toward tho fire aud the crowd had
greatly increased within five minutes.
Just about that length of time after
the first explosion, a second explosion
almost equal in volume to the first
heightened the terror all over the city
and Bpread death and desolation among
scores of citizens.
Parts of bodies were hurled hun¬
dreds of feet away. A man near the
Northern Pucific water tank was al¬
most struck by the leg and thigh of a
human being, driven by the force of
dynamite from tho fearful scene.
There were still heroes left to help
pull the shrieking wounded and the
groaning dying to a distance, but the
people up town hesitated. There hail
been two explosions and there might
be mores-- There were rumors of car¬
loads of powder in the vicinity,besides
that stored in tho warehouses.
Five minutes later a third explosion
did come, but it was a mild one, and
it was believed that very few if any
were injured by it. The disaster bad
all occurred in fifteen minutes, the
most horrible in the state’s history.
Like a Scene of Battle.
The terrible scene after the explo¬
sion resembled a field of battle more
than anything else, Tho dead were
strewn everywhere and the groans of
tbo injured and dying, presented a
scene altogether unearthly. Blood and
brains were spattered about, Here
were legs and arms, scattered aronnd
were pieces of flesh and entrails. It
was sickening.
Betweeu the Northern 'Pacific and
the Great Northern depots, a space of
300 feet, the grouud was literally cov-'
ered with paris of hnnian beings and
with the dead and injured.
The scene was oue of utter and ab¬
solute destruction. The houses in the
vioinity were as thoroughly wrecked as
if a cyclone had passed through them.
One of the re»cuing corps gathered
27 dead bodies iu one pile. Eight were
in another. Two and three were in
groups here aud there. The rescuers
pulled some of the bodies ont still
quivering, the remnants of the human
beings still groaning while legs aud
arms had been torn off. Shapeless
trunks quivered and died in the arms
of the living.
The work of reacno was prosecuted
in earnest. Every vehicle in the city
was brought into service to carry hundreds away
the scores of dead and the
of injured. The hospitals were filled.
The spare rooms in the hotels were
taken and private honses were thrown
open where it was necessary.
It is estimated that 75 to 109 per¬
sons are already dead, and it is impos¬
sible to get the names on account, of
the mangle condition of the remains.
It is likaly that many will never be
identified. Investigation bnt adds to
the horrors of the terrible accident.
The brilliant glaro of the* skies from
the flames of tha burning buildings
passed away only to be succeeded by
tha leaden gray ef early morning, thus
giving to the awful scene a fitting
canopy. Who la Responsible?
There is the greatest popular indig¬
nation over the storage of nitroglyc¬
erine, giant powder aud o$er explos¬
ives in ths heart of the city which is
responsible for the borroc. An inves
tigaiion will be instituted to discover
who is responsible, and if it is found
that any public offieuda are to blame
for tha violation of the city ordinances
they will find the climate too warm for
these. On the other baud if the mer¬
cantile firms who owned the explosives
foand to have violated the law de¬
liberately they will raffer financially
The people catastrophe are thor
orer the
one answer for it.
from *11 ihM bp learned, the total
that went up in
ly thirty
twenty tons of giant
ET in
at
at :.#-?
L, s
22X1
PRESIDENT FAURE.
A-NEW CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF
FRANCE ELECTED.
The Assembly at Versailles—Faure
Wins on the Second Ballot.
The French national assembly, com¬
posed of the senate and chamber of
deputies, met at Yeraoilles at 1 o’clock
Thursday afternoon to elect a new
chief magistrate. In anticipation of
the meeting the usually placid palace
of Versailles, where the election took
place, was humming like a beehive.
The senate is composed of 300
members and the chamber of 584, A
president is elected for seven years by
a majority of the votes of the national
assembly. ' .
M. Challemel LaCour, president of
the senate, the presiding officer of the
national assembly, called the senators
aud deputies together at 1 p. m. The
proceedings were no sooner opened
than M. Henri Michili, revisionist,
asked leave to address the assembly
with the object of recommending the
convocation of a constitutional assem¬
bly. The president refused to hear
him and ordered that the first ballot
be taken. This was proceeded with
amid considerable excitement in the
galleries, and in the great hall which
were crovded to their utmost capacity,
with notables representing every pro¬
fession.
The following are the official figures
for the first ballot for president: M.
Henri Brisson, 344; M. Felix Faure,
216; M. Waldeck Rousseau, 195. The
number of scatteri lg votes was not
announced. A majority of the total
number of votes cast is required to
elect. As they differed greatly from
those current in tho lobby, many of
tho members of the national assembly
demanded an adjournment, but M.
Chalemel-Lacour ordered that a seo
ond ballot be taken. Soon after this
it was announced that M. Waldeck
Ronsseau had retired in favor of M.
Faure.
Faure Elected.
Tho announcement of the second
ballot was made amid a terrible din.
The Brissoaites were so busy groan¬
ing, cheering and reproaching their
neighbors that they paid no attention
to Challemel-Lacour when he arose
and read the figures. The president’s
voice w as quite inaudible and his hands
trembled violently. The figures gen¬
erally known were then only approxi¬
mate—Fanre 430 and Brisson 361—
but they sufficed to show that Felix
Fanre was the new president of France.
The scene was absolutely devoid of
solemnity or dignity, The Brissouites,
who had not only ceased howling,were
joined by other malcontents and the
windows were fairly shaken by the in¬
describable tumult, Tho radicals
mounted chairs and benches,shouting:
“Down with this president, elected by
tho right. ”
The socialists ran up and down the
aisles howling “Down with the thieves!”
“Down with the Congo adventurers!”
“Down with the Panama scoundrels!”
Occasionally, when the din subsided
for a moment, the socialists would yell
in an ear-splitting chorus: “Hurrah
fpr the social republic 1” “Hurrah
for the social revolution!”
There have been five presidents of
tho third French republic.
M. Thiers, elected August 81, 1871;
resigned May 24, 1873; died Septem¬
ber 8, 1877.
Marshal MacMahon, elected May 2,
1873; resigned January 80, 1879; died
October 17, 1893.
Jules Grevy, elected January ,30,
1870; ^p-elected December 28, 1885;
resigned Decembtr 2, J 887; died Sep.
tember 9, 1890.
M. Carnot,elected December 6,1887;
assassinated at Lyons Juno 24,1894.
M. Caaimir-Perier, elected Juno 27,
1894; resigned January 15, 1895.
SENATORIAL ELECTIONS.
State Legislatures Choose Their Rep¬
resentatives la Congr e ss.
The following state legislatures bal¬
loted for United States senator last
Wednesday: legislature in
New Hampshire—The William E. Chan¬
joint session elected
dler.
Massachusetts—The legislature in
joint session declared George F. Hoer
to be his own successor.
Maine -The election of William P.
Frya to succeed himself was formally
announced by the legislature in joint
session.
Colorado—The legislature in joint
session re-elected Edward O. Wolcott
to the United States senate. Lsfe
Penoe, the nominee of the populist
party, received a complimentary vote
from the memlera of that party in the
assembly.
Montana—Lee Mantle,of Butte, and
T. H. Carter, of Helena, were elected
United States senators in joint
bly. Both are repnblieeoa. Mantle
gets the short term end Carter the long
term.
Nebraska The legislature met joint¬
ly and listened to the announcement
of the election of John M. Thurston
es United States senator.
A
A judgment for $140,000
against the HnnfaviRo Bolt Line
fa of
Central Trust of H<
of
(Can.) World,
-
S ~r~ ii
HAWAIIAN AFFAIR
AN ATTEMPTED REVOLUTION p,
THE ISLANDS REPORTED
'
_
Secretaries Gresham and Herbert Co#,
fer Over the Matter.
Earl|- Saturday morning Sec-rett*.
Gresham received foimal notice that
there had been an attempt at revol®.
tion near Honolulu on the sixth of thk
month. The notice came in the shap.
of the Willis, following telegraphed dispatch from irom Mini*
ter San Fran,
cisco:
Hon. W. Q. Greeham. Secretary 0 i
State, Washington, D. C.:
At Waikiki beach, five miles from
the executive building, on the nigjjj
of January 6. an uprising of Hawaii,
was reported. It was several hundred
strong, and well supplied with arm*
and ammunition, and commanded bt
Captain Nowlein and R. W. Wilcox 1
Hon. C. L. Carter, late commi*.
sioner, was killed the first night
There has been desultory fighting
every day since, without further Iom
of life or property to the government.
Three royalists were killed and fifty
taken prisoners. Over fifty non-com
batants, mostly whites, were arrested,
including three attorney generals and
many prominent citizens.
Martial law was declared January 7,
and no vessels allowed to leave. All
other islands are reported quiet. The
crisis is thought to be over, but ex¬
citement is still intense.
President Dole expressed to mo hii
gratification that no national ship haa
been in port during this disturbance.
The arms are reported to have been
brought from Vancouver by the steam¬
er Norma. Willis. ”
Gresham and Herbert Confer.
Soon after he benched the ntate de¬
partment, he sent to the navy depart¬
ment for Secretary Herbert, and the
two cabinet officers engaged in a close
consultation for half an hour, respect¬
ing tho advisability of sending a naval
force at once to Honolulu.
FUNERALS AT BUTTE.
Burial of the Bodies of the Unfortun¬
ate Firemen.
The death of M. L. Miles increases
the number of the dead as the result
of lost Tuesday’s fire and explosion st
Butte, Mont., to fifty-four. It has
just beefi reported that an infant,
name not learned, was killed iu the
nurse’s arms in South Butte by flying
pieces of iron fbasiDg through the wall
of the house. XThree children were
driven insane by concussion and six
men cannot recover. The funerals ol
the dead firemen took place Friday af
ternooD. People attended from nearly
every town in the state and busi¬
ness was entirely suspended. One cof¬
fin filled with shreds of human flesh,
was labelled Marshal Cameron, Assist¬
ant Marshal Sloan, Dave Moses and
N. P. NerliDg. Eight unclaimed bod¬
ies were buried by the relief commit¬
tee. Tenders of financial assistance
were received from San Francisco,
8pokane, St. Paul anti many other
oities and thankfully decliued, as the
committee can meet all demands fron
the home subscriptions.
TURNEY TO BE SEATED.
Chairman of the Republican Commit¬
tee Has no Hopes for Evans
A special from Chattanooga says:
Newell Sanders, chairman of the state
republican committee, iu an interview
regarding the contest law provided regards by
the legislature, says that he
the law as imperfect, and a mere ex¬
cuse for seating Turney. * that
This is important for the rfcson
it is good evidence of the fact that tbv
republicans have no hope of seating
Evans.
MISS STEVENSON DEAD.
The Daughter of the Vtee-Presldeat
Passes Away.
Miss Stevenson, daughter of Vice
President Stevenson, died -Efiday at
ternon at Asheville, N. C. SlJW be j
been ill for several months.
ATLANTA MARKETS.
COBBXCTKD WSXKLX.
Groceries.
Boasted oofiee S3.10 K» ft _
V . Ihp*
—Chaise i0o; fair 10a; prims lte.
SttikUrd OrtM^while BTtDiUifld 4Uc; off m
Ns* Orleans^en relk-w U
Syrup—New kettle Tt~
sngwhoese £ 0 £ 85 o
SO0AV: green Sett-dSy, lOaWe. ft tfr. jnfHH
choice 6VJe. ndo,
tee tls 70c.
Fall 80&
tt-XC#0L73; $l7i
kegs Craefcsre—Soda ■
Sc. _ _
ginger snap* Or»trtS-Y C«edy—Camwna ■_»!,
6K; W. fancy JS liQU*. K^dsJ-KegsW.*- ***
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Country Produce.
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