Newspaper Page Text
^ily Supplies a Pohlmau’s Supply Store.
•H
'fcri
‘J
«MS
-S 2 A YEAR,
r
s C. BUSH,
at Law
Urn e i
COWl'ITT. GA.
k«UBti a rivet
all business cn-
JHO
i donalson,
and Counselor at Law.
; i ) .-■ r 1 . Will practice
. * , . ns counties, and
"’^alc.Diract.
|c6fLL & O’HEAL.
|»rn e y s
at Law.
UlSKKlWiE. HA.
omul "vcr the post of-
hedical card.
[. J . Morgan
, t i jij. ,.fr» i; to the drug store,
i,v Dr. Harrell. Resi-
ilfi sir-" 1 - * ""O °* Shotwcll,
jib! will reach him.
DENTISTRY.
|. C u r r y , 13 . D . S .,
, op ,i =lailv at his office on South
,= up .|.|ir«, in 15. Johnson’s
Ur' In* i- n a=!y I" attend to the
<public at reasonable rates.
dec-5-78
l L.H. PEACOCK,
j i his professional serv-
■Aepeuphtot Cambridge and vieiui-
ksOTfhmtpt .1 P. Harrell & I>ro
on West end of Broughton
irterhscait be found at night.
lilJ.11-
tthPtBT. WM. K. HARRELL.
(TAlElHi ck HARRELL,
leys and Counselors at Law,
B.ll.VRKllMiK. GA.
ietrlmv? formed a poparttltership
hf:n n«:u«* of i albert & llartAIl
pvtic* of law. Will practice in
NTtsofth . Vlh&ny Circuit. Office
inat's store.
M 14.1882. *
ALBERT 17,'KTER,
|E$i;t2 and Collecting Agent.
UISBKIIUJK, BI'.OUGIA.
♦ rut tii receive the patronage of
p* Tt property to sell or rent, ro
I* All business placed in
i rivejve prompt attention. I
' r m lands, investigate titles,
ius! protect from tresspassers.
” T ■-the the collection of had
: A the worse the claim
atteiu ; | w ;i> pj ve
P” : •'■’t t solicited.
,lt"2.
DAVID E. HOLLEY,
w! Pair.lsr& Paper Hanger,
|Baim;Mi*t:i:. gloruia.
’ •'1 here [ tike this method
■”-■ ‘tit* public that I am prepared
. ’ -doting, such as Grain—
\ nnr.rhing. Gilding and
•: •> as Patter Hanging A
? ttt' r U'Tiie ot twelve years war.
! a -'••vtauteemg satisfaction or no
heave orders at Pope & Grace’s.
(L 1» F. HOLLEY.
'Ai-CO L WYGAN r
| ern traits ant! Vegetables,
-■'Nb GENERAL—
Mission Ucatsrcha
4 • n^N n Mnvt, Near Warren.
NEW YORK CITY.
■ established Bank, or the
F !t==r any information
- 2 ® jme «-
' i'‘*‘* t'.ink of'Xew York City
[D. Ch ‘
pale ■
v-
BAINBRIDGE, GA., THURSDAY MORNING, JUNE 14, 1883.
VOL XII--NO. 35,
EDITORIAL BREVITIES.
■ Ar. A
L. BAT
T L E,
■ Di n
list.
H. ■
S Store, AY
est Ride
■
c dental cut
ine, and
So nuike 1
is office
H-
sh. Office
hours 9
jnn.lBt)
Bad eggs have as pious a look
as good ones.
^ 9
Joseph enjoyed fhe seven year
itch, but it made everybody else
scratch.
The man who lets well enough
alone is tlie^hap who always useB
cistern water.
The artesian well system is
proving a success in Florida. The
wells bring copious supplies of ex
cellent water in nearly" every in
stance.
The latest agony is for a young
lady to have a dog tc mat ;h her
dress. We’d like to see a crushed
strawberry- dog—in fact any kind
of a crushed dog.
The population of the city of
Atlanta has increased in two
years over twelve thousand, ac
cording to the city directory-,
which is no doubt correct.
The Macon Telegraph charges
Fulton county with having 2,000
illegal voters, and says “the re-
iusal to indict them shows that
the Fulton Grand#ury winsat vio
lation of law.”
The new postal law makes the
taking of a newspaper and the re-
fusel to pay for the same, theft,
and any person guilty of such an
action is liable to criminal pro
ceedings, the same as if he had
stolen goods to the amount of sub
scription.
Ben Butler’s advice to the ne
groes is to vole for the men whose
acts have been friendly to their
race, by- w hetever political name
they may he called, and not be
misled by- loud professions of can
didates what they will do.
A negro seci’et society’ is said to
exist in Valabusha county Miss
issippi, the members of which are
bound by o&th to perjure them
selves in courts of law to protect
brother members. Not long ago
one of the members disclosed
some of the secrets of the order
and was whipped almost to death.
If those farmers who put up un
der-boiled syrup would go to the
railroad depots and see the num
ber of barrels ot syrup hurstad
from fermentation and wasted, we
think their interest would induce
them to boil it thoroughly to pre
vent this loss. If properly boiled
or evaporated it will net ferment,
at least wit bin twelve or eighteen
mouths.
• LINE & CO.
.nd Produce
-i.utiAli i S.
No. 5 Clinton St,,
UOSTOX, mass.
f a 5 ci:ns wade a'Speciaiiiy.
* i Richardson & Barnard,
Savannah 8. g. Co.,
Lisenbaker, Valdosta,
'"•by, Ga ; T. F. Black
Ca; J. 11. Daniels,
Six thii%s, says Hamilton, are
requisite to create a happy home.
Intergrity must be the architect
and tidiness the upholsterer. It
must be wanned by affection and
lighted up with cheerfulness, and
industry must be the ventilator,
renewing the atmosphere and
bringing in fresh salubrity day by
day, while over all, as a protection
canopy- and glory, nothing will
suffice except the blessing of God.
Among the first things that
should claim the attention of our
law makers when they shall have
assembled in July next is the en
actment of a dog tax. The people
clamor for it, and are entitled to
it in the iji^cwTimn oi A> /tii life'
atid property A dog that is worth
owning is worth paying a tax on;
the remaindar should be imme
diately dispatched, and the cry- ot
hydrophobia and murdered sheep
hushed.
Conyers Weekly: The Repub
lican party of Georgia now have a
permanent situation in the coal
and iron mines of the State.
What is woman's greatest
sphere ? asks a correspondent.
Answer: Woman's greatest fear
is a mouse.
electric light is pronounced
a suceess in Columbus, and several
firms have contracted for the light
for their stores.
Georgia has 3,846 factories,
working 17,S71 hands with a capi
tal invested of 818 930,120, pay-ing
in wages $4,844,508,115.
The reduction of the tax on to
bacco was a great blessing to some
body, no doubt ; but we notice
that the weed costs just the same—
no more, no less.
The. season is pending when
much meat eating becomes
a hygienic sin for which the de
linquents pay by numerous dis
comforts experienced by- the over
heated body.
The coronation of the Czar cost
about $10,000,000—two thirds the
cost of the New York and Brook
lyn bridge, and more than the
whole debt of Georgia. Royalty
is a costly thing, and the money-
all comes out of the people.
Whenever a public official
steals the public money-, the pa
pers invariably allude to his gre'at
respectibility and his excellen
habits of life; and
FIFTY DOLL IBi A MONTH.
Is What a LaGnsnge Lady Is Clearing
With Seyen Coy? s.
LaGracge Reporter.
Mr. Dditor : I noticed, a few
weeks since, a request in the local
columns of your paper that some
one would give y-ou a description
of Mrs. Dr. McCain's creamery.
I have waited till this week, hop
ing some one else would “write it
up” for y-ou. But. finding no one
does it, I concluded to take it
upon myself to do so. Mrs Mc
Cain shrinks from hating her
name and affairs brought before
the public, but I thing she has
inaugurated such a great industry,
and one likely to prove so bene
ficial to the ladies of this and ad
joining counties, that I have ob
tained her consent to state all the
facts about the matter.
Mrs. McCain uses Moseley’s
creamery- and Stoddard’s churn.
She milks seven cows, five of them
with their first calves, and has
sold regularly all this year from
twenty four to thirty- pounds of
butter a week, at thirty-five and
forty cents per pound. Besides
the butter, she sells $10 00 worth
of buttermilk pPr month. She
pay-s for all the labor she has to
employ, outside of her own family
with buttermilk—gives her milk
er fourteen gallons a week to assist
Lamar and Wade, her two little
sons, to milk. The buttermilk
she sells pays for all the food she
has to buy- for her cows. She
j gives them wheat bran and cot-
_ . .... . „ i on seed meal, and they have at
the deficiency-—”il there is any”— j j ar
will be made good. We notice ’
however, that it is never
good,” not even by the
men.
“made
bonds-
Thomasville Times: The follow
ing is the exact acreage of melons
along the line of the Savannah,
Florida and Western Railway, as
reported by Major Ellicft, of the
Dispatch line: Wavcross, 75;
Naylor, 300; 146 and 145 mile post.
245; Valdosta, 1005; 160 mile
post, 140; McKee’s. 250: Ousley-,
800; Blue “Spring, 1SS; 171 mile
post, 291; Quitman, 971; 177 mile
post, 239; Dixie, 345; 183 mile
post, 54; Hardaway, 40; Bacon-
ton, J00; Flint, 50; Camilla, 200;
Cairo, 60; Whigham, 10; Bain-
bridge Junction, 25; Bainbridge,
159.
St amor
ton
11 ‘-cave Bainbridge
ft t ‘ ,n l Thursday for Red Bluff
- - I ding.
»j j. v 11 hry.-tnl 9.
[ Wvertown.
kjjj: ‘ -' lur Lightfoot's Landing
slates.
^ 11C H; To Cheevertown $1.00
V: 1^3 4. E. MORGAN.
Manager.
“An Indian woman awoke in
tlie night and found her jaw dis
located.” It is a mighty mean
man who will come home at mid
night and softly break his wife's
jaw while she is asleep, in order
to escape a curtain lecture in case
she should awake. A man guilty
of such cruelty would deceive his
wife a lO the cause of his late
hours. It may be barely possible,
how, ver, that her husband is not
guilty, and that she dislocated her
jaw while dreaming that she was
giving him “a piece of her mind.”
A remarkable phenomenon oc
curred at Independence, Iowa,
during a heavy thunder storm on
the night of the 1st inst. Many-
were aroused by a pelting against
the windows, and supposed it to
be hail, others thought it caused
bv bats. ’ But the next morning
thousands of birds were found all
over the city, some dead and some
alive. Wherever a door had been
open the place would be full of
them. It was a literal shower of
birds, and how and whence came
they- ? In size the birds were a
trifle larger than a snow bird, and
their color much like that of a
quail. No such bird was ever seen
there. One theory is that tliey
were drawn into the vortex ol a
Southern cyclone, and carried as
far as Independence, where they
were dropped.
-55s>n.m choosing a wife, or the
woman acce^S- a hu5ban,1 > an
bundle of wheat or barley-
to each cow every night. She
has, of course, all she gets for her
butter clear, making, on an aver
age $50 monthly. Besides this,
she has enough milk to keep
several of the nicest pigs you will
see within a day’s journey of La-
Grange fat. She has orders from
Columbus and Atlanta for 500
pounds of butter monthly, but
cannot, at present, fill such large
orders. And such butter? It is
the nicest I ever saw. Regular
“Gilt Edge”—beats the “New
York Gilt Edge.” because of its
exceeding sweetness and fresh
ness.
To any one who buys a creamery
like Mrs. McCain’s, her experi
ence will be of great value. She
did not find it exactly easy- to un
derstand and manage at first, but
she has learned all about it now
and has no trouble at all. To use
her own expression.
“It is the easiest way to make
money” she ever tried, everything
about it is so delightfully clean
and fresh. She has the whole
concern, creamery-, churn arid
butter-worker, all in the wide hall
in her house, and it is really orna
mental. Mrs. McCain thinks if
every farmer’s wife in the county
were to set up a creamery- it would
not overstock the market; and
she is right. Butter, sueh as she
makes, can never be a dnigAvf' 1 '
to find a make* at feinunera-'ive
-prices. ,
Returned to Her Northern Home.
I X’uaitlj Xe<rs and Adcer'irer.
Mrs. Bacon, wife of the late
Capt. Benjamin J. Bacon, who, to
getlier with his youngerst child,
was killed in the cy-clone in this
county on the 23rd of April—the
particulars of which tragedy-
are familiar to the readers
of the News and Advertiser—has
returned with her two survivin
children to her former home
Massachusetts.
Mrs. Bacon was left destitute by-
the storm, and it will be gratify-ing
to of our readers to know what
was done for her by- the people of
this community, amongst whom
she came a stranger from the
North only- a few months ago.
The ladies of the city made up a
supply- of clothing for Mrs. Bacon
and the children; the Citizens'
Relief Committee paid the funeral
exjjenses of her husband and little
boy; the doctor’s bill for th
wounded boy- and Mrs. Bacon was
paid; Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Walters
carried the mother and children
to their home on the day of the
storm and took care of them free
ofcbaige until they left for their
Northern home a few days ago. In
addition to tills Mrs. Bacon was
presented with $300‘in cash by the
Citizens’ Relief Committee, and
the Savannah, Florida and West
ern Railway, with its character
istic liberahtv, furnished her with
free transportation for herself and
children and their baggage to
Boston, Mass.
Worth Knowing.
Half a teaspoodful of common
table salt dissolved in a little
cold water, and drank, will in
stantly relieve heartburn or dys
pepsia. ’ If taken every morning
before breakfast, increasing the
quantity gradually to a teaspoon
ful of salt and a tumbler of w-ater
it will in a few years cure any-
^case of dyspepsia, if at' the time
,n due atteution is paid to the diet.
There is no better remedy- than
the above for constipation. As a
gargle for sore throat it is equal
to chlorate of potash, and is en
tirely safe. It may be used as
often as desired, and if a little is
swallowed each time it will have
a beneficial effect on the throat
by cleansing it and by allaying
irritation. In doses of 1 to 4 tea-
spoonfuls in half a pint to a pint
ol' tepid water it acts promptly- as
an emetic, and in cases of poison
ing is alway-s at hand. It is an
excellent remedy for bites and
stings of insects. It is a valuable
astringent in hemorrhages, par
ticularly for bleeding after the
extraction of teeth. It has both
cleansing and healing properties
and is therefore, a most’excellent
application for superficial ulcera
tions.
The Reporter’s I'nn>‘V
From tlm Waterbury (Coen.)
“Who is that angrF-‘ 0 °'' in ?
man ?” “That’s mv sori- be is a
reporter.” “Does TepJ r ^ ers a L
(fcvays look mad ?” “No? always. -
“What ails that one. ”£• has
been to a church supp Wasn’t
platform, ijeu-can't even exam
ine it inteb’gently until are
■MR L'Bb platform. If yon slip
around the hack way- you’ll find
the trough dry. But step on the
platform, and tho water and the
faith will come together without
any trouble—certain aud sure and
abundant.”
exchange says, has no protection. ! he iiiYltc-d f ‘ a .NA.23AUS-
The individual may have been
married in halt a dozen different
counties or States, or may have
been divorced legally or by fraud.
In no event is there any metod of
finding out the true state of the
case and great risk® are incurred
almost without number every
prettiest girls irUoL-Uirish urged
him to go.” I should think he
would have liked that.” “He did.
And each oi' those girls wanted
him tc give “my table a special
mention.” “Did he get any sup
per?” “Of course he did. He
bought a five-cent sandwich for a
year. If associations were formed i quarter and ate it after the rest
in every locality for the purpose i got through.’, here is he going
of investigating flaws in marital j now ?” "lie is going to the office
titles, just as in real estate, per-j to write that the parish church
sons seeking to enter the married J supper last night was a most
• state, would be afforded, at a : agreeable success. Tne lovely
sm ali cc^r. the means ol knowing faces of the lair maidens in at
tendance on the tables were only-
whet her they had sole amlexclu
sive right and possession el the
property- in question, or whether
they must share it with one or
morcother persons.
rivaled by the charming liberality
with which they- dispensed the
finest of viands.’’ “Are reporters
ever* sarcastic ?” “No, my son,
never.’’
Faith.
Rev. Sam Jones, the revivalist,
talking to a man of week faith,
the other day-. The doubter asked
if Mr. Jones could not give him a
demonstration of religion.
“None, - ’ was the reply. 2You
must get inside the fold and then
the demonstration will come of
itself. Humble yonrself, have
faith, and y-ou shall know the
truth.”
“In other words, I must believe
accept it before it is proven,
and believe it without proof.”
“Now, hold right there. Out
west they- have a place for water
ing cattle. The cattle have to
mount a platform to reach the
troughs. As they step on the
platform their weight presses a
lever, and this throws the water
into the throughs. They- have to
get on the platform through faith
and that act provides the water
and leads them to it, Tour are
like a sm^rt steer that slips around
to the barn y-ard and peeps in the
trough without getting on the
platform. He finds the trough
dry- of course, for it needs his
weight on the platform to force,
the water up. He turns awyj-
disgusted and tells everybody
for there’s no water in the t-bugh.
Another steer not so smart, but
withjmore faith, gets o^-o the plat
form, the water springs into the
trough, an<]A^ Marches up and
’ ’ * ^ wav with re-
Bud Luck.
Many- failures are set down to
bad luck, when, in fact, it wa;
only bad neglect. Sometime:
it is bad ignorance, and both are
generally without proper excuse
though reasons are alway-s abun
dantly stated why the troubles
were unavoidable. Now, what
we are here in this world for is to
learn how to do things right—to
occupy the time in the fulfillment
of high duties no individual is at
liberty to shrink or neglect. To
perform these duties we must be
educated, trained, drilled into
them, and he who has opportuni
ties, and neglects their advantages
does not deserve success, and may-
fairly consider “bad luck” Iris
estate. No matter what calling,
profession or industry we choose,
the same obligation or necessity
devolves upon us to fit and pre
pare ourselves for its perfect exe
cution.
THE
SOUTH-WEST GEORGIA Li\D AGENCY,
Httssoll & Brown, Ag’ts.
BAINBRIDGE,
GEORGIA.
You’ve got
Messrs. Palliser, Falliser & Co.,
of Bridgeport, Ct., the well-known
Architects and Publishers of
standard works on architecture,
have lately issued a sheet contain
ing plans and specification of a
very tasteful modern eight-room
cottage with tower, and also with
tho necessary modifications for
building it without the tower, and
with but six rooms if desired. In
its most costly form, the outlay is
estimated at 83000; without the
tower it has been built, for $2500 ;
and if only six rooms are* included
the co#t may be reduced to $1700
or $2000. Details are given of
mantles, stairs, doors and usings,
cornices, etc. The publishers ha- e
jI on the found it the most popular plan
How to he Nobody. *
—TM3 easy to be nobody, and we
will tefl Go to
the drinking saloon to spent! NCILL
leisure time. You need not drint
much now—just a little beer or
some other drink. In the mean
time, play dominoes, or something
else to kill time, so that you will
be sure not to read any useful
books. If you read anything let
it be the cheap novels of stomach
full and your head empty, and
yourself playing time killing
games, and in a few years you will
be nobody, unless yon should turn
out a drunkard, or a professional
gambler, either of which is worse
than nobody. There are any
number of youn^ men hanging
around bar parlors just to gradu
ate and be nobodies.
they have ever issued, and state
that it has been adopted in more
than five hundred inst ances within
their knowledge. The same firm
issue specifications in blau
adapted for frame or brick build
ings of any cost; also forms o
building contract, and several
books on modern inexpensive,
artistic Cottage plans which are of
great practical value and conven
iences to everyone interested.
Offer to buyers the following briefly
described Real Estate —improved and mum-
proved in the
14TH DISTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY.
L0I3 of Land Nos 157, 25ti, 217, 215.133, 301,'
175, 9, 225, 28.
15TH DISTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY,
Lots Nos39G, 391, 391.
17TH DISTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY
Lots Nos 71, 396, S3S, 343, 392, 321, 241,'
279, 174, 287, 264, 165 166.
30TH DISTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY,'
Lots Nos 35, 149, 178.
21ST DISTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY:
Lots Nos 217, 374, 97. 103, I, 115,163.107,
175, 309, 267.243, 320. 336.
27TH DTsTRICT OF DECATUR COUNTY;
260, 216,-176, 58, 59.
These lots are all.full, having 250 acres'.
in each, and will be sold in lots to suit tho
purchasers.
W’e also hav;c control of a largo quantify
cf lands in the connties of jViller, Early;
Baker. Mitchell and Irwin, besides a num
ber of desirable lots in the city of Bain-'
bridge—improved and unimproved.
Parties wishing lands for turpentine,
timber, farmin ' or other purposes, will find
full description and all necessary informa
tion in our hands. .
■ N. B.—Non-resident, land owners will be
faithfully served, their lands leased,
returned, looked after and protected against
trespassers, aud if for sale, advertised and
sold for a reasonable charges. Business
respectfully solicited and satisfaction
guaranteed.
D. A RUSSELL & BROWN,
Real Estate Agents,
Bainbridge, Ga.'
Rule Nisi lo Foreclose Mortgage*
^^EORGIA, Slilier County :
In the Superior Court. Present the Hon.'
Arthur Hood, Judge of said Court.
J. C Nelson as agent, 1 Mortgage &e.
vs. I
J. G. Norman. J April Term. 1882
It appearing to *he Court by the petition
of J. 0. Nelson accompanied by the note
and mortgage need dated 15th day of Febru
ary 1831, tiie Det’t. J. G .Norman made and
delivered J. C- Nelson as agn’t his promis
sory note bearing date the day and year
aforesaid whereby the Dei’t promised on or’
by the fifteenth day of October- Eighteen
Hundred and Eighty One next after the
date thereof to pay J. C. Nelson an agn’t.,
or bearer the sum of one hundred and sixty
Dollars for value received and that after
wards on the day and year aforesaid the
Dcf t J. O. Norman the better securing the
the payment of said note executed and
delivered to J. C. Nelson as agn’t his deed
of mortgage whereby the said Deft. mort-.
gaged to J. C. Nelson as agn’t. Weet half
of lot of land No.J-16) forty-six in the 13th
District of said co*unty of Miller state of
Georgia, containing one hundred, and
twenty-fi ve acres more or less, and it further
appearing that there is yet due on said
note and mortgage the sum of seventeen!
and 85—100 Dollars which is unpaid.
It is therefore ordered that said DeUt.
J. G. Norman do pay into court on or be-,
fore the 1st day of the next term thereof *
the principal interest and costa due on said
note or show cause to the contrary if any
he can. And that on the failure of the
Deft, so to do the equity of redemption
iu and io said mortgaged premises he for
ever thereafter barred and forecloeed. And
it is further ordered that this rule be pub
lished once a month in the Baiubridg*
Democrat previous to the next term of th«'
court or served on the Deft. J, G. Norman
or his special ng’t. 9t attorney at least.
(3) months previous to the next term of
this court. Akthub Hood,
J, S. C. P. C.
GEORGIA, Hiller Couity ;
Ct.efk’3 Office Super ton Court,
I certify that the above Rule Nisi, is a
(rue extract frnm the Minutes of this Court
(and that an order was taken at the April
Term 1883 of said court to perfect service
by publication.) given under my hand and
seal of office, This May 7th 1883.
J. W. Lotikq,
May 9-l-a-m-4-m Clerk.
We give below the verdict of the
United States Inspectors on the
sinking- of the Wylly.
After reviewing all the evidence
before us, we give it as our opinion
that the accident to the Steamer
George W. Wylly in striking the
pier or the Fort Gains bridge,
and sinking on the night of April
11,1883, whereby theirteen per
sons were drowned, was an un
avoidable accident as taken froiQ
the testimony.
We therefore exonerate the
officers, agents and owners of tho
steamer George W. Wylly from
all blame. [Signed.] P. Wise.
Das’l Fry.
Lqpal Legislation.
Notice is hereby giveu that the wt-
dersigaed will apply to the Legislature'
of Georgia at its July session far *
special Aet to be entitled “An Act t<f
allow Dickenson & Allen to buy seed
cotton at S‘eam Mill in Decatur county
Georgia between 3un rise and sun down’
and at no other time and to keep a *
record of the names from whom bought
and. the quantity <fcc.
Dickenbox k Alum,
—1 m Steam Mill, Ga.,-
Local Legislation—Notic*.
Application will be made ta the General
Assembly of Georgia, at the July eeesieu,
for the passage of the following Bill, vis;
“An Act to Pi chibit the Sale of Intoxi
cating Liquors in (he County of Miller, and'
for Other Purposes therein Named.”
April 23, 1883. wCiTinmi.
<T7'CONOMY IS WEALTH” ia a maxim’
IA we all admit as truth, yet it is n-more
a truth than the fact that you can yotf
Family Groceries, all the year round X
low as you can anywhere in Bainbridge at
1- H-y POHLMAJP8'