Newspaper Page Text
.) Per Annum.....(6.80
•••«»«« *''*<* • I’W.
- 'v'r •
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----quare for the first
»'*£«Wa*
„tarerti«m»lor Varuss lew
r .^_. »i^with
* |»rtiau»ri»h ;
irtUbe
> their advertisements longer
—
i going the rounds of the
r’ernmivaoUt man who
1 vintage* from 1793 to
jm not be purchased for
S a bottle. It is such
s M these that make com-
Tim IS THE -If!!* ' PllIET. ■irLiiim
.
.
i any brains, con-
it, it must
dohur its
and injuring it* pocket. An
« position is an anomalous one,
to say the least of it.
bie to separate the la¬
the collective citizen,
does not please the
in for a good share
is that the news-
their friends are.
who reads a news-
a newspaper All
, yet gives his busi-
other concern,
he detests, is not a
paper. Admira-
i will not ran a newspaper.
- toe many men who expect
,ve in their interest,
welfare by whoop*
the town in which
business who coolly
support by which
small newspaper can live,
an editor laboring week
week oat through the columns
for the upbuilding of his
its business, is cheap when
community do not ac-
wbfch alone
„ and make it more en-
and useful la promoting their
community's interest in
»the paper is located.
**A owrorrioN, not a thk-
, on."
columns of the
morning we hud In
that the plate
have secured a
of their business; in anoth-
satinet production is to be
by shutting down the
U third, that the Standard
has abandoned one
'another; in a fourth that a
Is in progress at the
continued accounts
down of business con-
other places, may be said to
* a reasonable doubt if the trL
of the high protective system
produced an industrial
for the laboring man, after
Above is from the Boston
Burdened with war taxes
I of life, with wages
r going down and thousands'
being thrown out of
, the promises made to
f men by Protection hire-
»the election now appear in
,of hoBow mockery indeed,
i surprising in Pennsylvania,
f heart of Protection itself, to
Philadelphia Times saying:
confront* most of our
1 enterpries, and failures are
1 entry day, solely because
»maty protection country of
world that taxes raw materials
• industrial products, and taxes the
ngeessariM of life for labor to the ex-
f taking nearly one-half of In¬
fer taxes which are not
the government. There
frHfhtisflTidfi wko saw thin
r before the late elec-
l voted to refuse obedience to
I now the irresistible article of
- or universal depression
with money more
; than ever before, are face to
i the business of the country,
is party of power refuses to
I It will surely be broken. There
i one hope for our industries—
i of product—and it
1 only by free raw ma
i juat protection to the
» Catarrh in this section of the
»•* other d i seas es pet together,
e last lew years was supposed to
For a great many years Doe-
I it a local d is ea se, and pre-
id by constantly
has proven catarrh
‘ therefore
HaH’s
rF. J. Cheney
Each State executive committee,
one delegate *
Each president of State Alliance to
appoint one delegate;
The object of said meeting to he¬
ist. To decide upon the necessity of
all the States co-operating in the con¬
flict with the jute bagging trust.
2d. The ability of the order in each
State to assist in the conflict.
8d. To ascertain whether, in the
adoption of a substitute, a sufficient
supply can be secured for all sections;
and, if not of one substitute, to de¬
termine how many substitutes will te
necessary, Mid what quantity of each.
4th. To adopt measures for the
guidance of the brotherhood through¬
out the season and select appropriate
committees to carry out their plans.
For the purpose of utilising time
and assisting the work, a committee*
composed of Dr. J. T. DeJarnette, of
Georgia; H. P. Bone, of Alabama;
T. A. Clayton, of Louisiana, is here¬
by appointed to collect data as to
supply and cost of the different sub-
ttnd re P° rt to the meeting as
«>on as convened.
Vice-President L. L. Polk is appoint¬
ed a committee of one to extend an
invitation to the jute bagging trust
to present anything they may have
to say to this meeting, if they so de¬
sire, either written or oral, and to ex¬
tend the same invitatationto the va¬
rious jute, cotton, pine-straw, or oth¬
er bagging manufacturers,
“Can’t eat a thing." Hood’s Sarsaparilla
is a wonderful mediefns tor creating an aj
tits, regalntingdigeetion.and giving strep j
* A Pretty Little Scene.
A boy carrying a huge, bouquet of
roses, entered some phlox, Cottage heliotrope Grove and
pinks a avenue
years of age. The little one was as
pretty a blondinette as one can see.
than the car was filled with the per¬
fume of the roses and heliotrope. The
little girl soon discovered it and quiok- the
ly gave up her observation from
car mother window. and began She teasing approached for her
aomo
of the flowers. Finally when she
found out that her mother could not
^Will ’oo dive me turn flowers!” She
asked.
The chances were nine to ten that
ste.-s dssuss.fi pinned to her
off. Quickly the little girl jumped ix*
got the seat. But it was the wrong
on on
side from that off, on which the the other boy was.
She and jumped looked out went of the to window. seat, She
saw the boy, and Then die, noticing putting her,
Waved his hand. she.
her rosy fingers to her mouth, threw
him two, three kisses. It was so sweet¬
ly, gracefully done. Then she settled
down and inhaled her flowers.—Chi¬
cago Tribune.
* Their Deaths Foretold by a Ghost.
Robert Withers, M. A. Vicar of
(lately, England, in 1708, relates, in a
publication of that time, the following
singular story of the supernatural
“Mr. Grose went , to see Mr. Shaw
on the ie talking! 2nd 2nd of ol in August the evening last Mr. As Shaw they
says: smoking *Qa 'Un jms the 21st pipe of last and IPH month, reading | as I in I
was a
my study, between eleven and twelve
o'clock at night, fellow in comes St John’s Mr. Naylor Col¬
of
lege, but who had been dead for four
years). When I saw him I was not
much affrighted, and I asked him to
sit down, about which, hours, accordingly, and talked he did to¬
for two we
gether. I asked him how it fared with
him. Of He I old said: acquaintances ‘Very well.’ with Were him? any
our
‘No’ fat which I was very much
alarmed), - ‘but *i Mr. Orchard will be
with if me very soon, nofstay and you not long
him he he would refused, 110 a he little had Ioug- but
er, but ,
three days’ leave of absence, and he
had other business.’
“Mr Orchard died soon after. Mr.
Shaw is now dead. He was formerly
genuous, fellow of St John’s College—an in¬
but his good death man. ho had. I knew college nim there; liv¬
at a
ing apparition”—^Cincinnati at Oxfordshire, and here Enquirer, he saw
the
The Invalids Hope
Many seemingly ineurabh* case* of blood
poison, catarrh, scrofula aud rheumatism
have been cured by B. B. B. (Botanic Blood
Balm), made by the Blood Balm Co., Atlan¬
ta, 6a. Write to them for book filled with
convincing proof.
6 W. B. Snider, living sevenmilee from Ath¬
ens.,Oa.. writes: “For several years 1 suffered
with running nleers, which doctors treated
and prononneed Incurable, A single bottle
of B. B. B. did me more good than all the
doctor*, I kept on Bring it am' and every ulcer
hnnlirrf/*
D. Cl Kinard A Son, Towaliga. Ga., write:
W* Induced a neighbor to try B. B. B. for
catarrh, which he thought incurable, as it
had resisted all treatment. It delighted him,
mad continuing its ass ha was cared sound
and well.”
R. H. Lawson. East PointOa.,writes! “My
wife had scrofula 15 yearn. She kept grow-
8he lost her hair and her skin
broke oat fearfully. followed. Debility, emaciation
and no appetite Alter physicians
and and namerons numerous advertised an*wnunun. medicines tailed. wnu., 1
tried B. B. B., and her recovery was rapid
wad complete.'’ ftecor,
ralfereu Baltimore, back Md., writes: “I
...a weak and rheumatism. B
B. B. has proven to be the only tgedieine that
are relief.'’
A FTshJValued by afLady.
What fish te most valued by a lady ?
Let her ring the glad news
Dr. loggers' Huckleberry Cordial,
ber child tt-oin a case of cramp
and relieving it toothing.
.paper 1
' place
at
ild and precious stones crowning
great Rangoon pagoda was thrown
down and injured.
The trustees of the building called
the people for subscriptions for a
new one, and In throe weeks a sum of
180,000 80.WWV rupees was collected. It
was notified that the melting of the
and silver woi ould take place and
that it would be the last opportunity
contributing. of * the ‘he pagoda In one two or large the cruci- large
.
silver. placed, oji‘ one for * gold, of the
for Hundreds men
women, girls, boys and small chil¬
passed by, dropping their silver
or gold ornaments into the crucibles,
handing their precious stones to the
for the purpose of being set in
the bird’s wing. Women
and covered with
passed by. and, taking a con]
Those who had no gold put ru-
pee coins into the silver cru •uciblee
handed over others to the clerk for
the use of the affiled pagoda; their even the beg¬
gars came and mites.
All parted with their treasure with¬
out give a sigh, for and, such in fact, devout seemed glad
to it a purpose.
All their good .deeds are so many
neaven. xno emans went in a diamond oouy oi
twenty weirfunir men seventy-five and presented carats, a which
is in to the bo placed as The the chief silver ornament melted
amounted to rupeesthe f, 580 rupees, gfld that melted collect¬
ed CU to IAJ U,UA>U 8,525 a vijfiwo, and vuo urotwu to w
18,800 rupees, the precious stones
riven were valued at 22,000 rupees.
The wing wing that that fell fell down down was was valued valuedat at
it 122,500 will rupees, worthl75,000 and the one to replace
be rupees.
The umbrella ornament at the oan) top
of thesanmpago^ (|be B hawd^ g
six lacs of rupees. with It is and of is pure actually gold,
richly fifteen set feet high, gems, although at ltsprea-
ent elevation it does not seem two
high, feet. and, and The JH. pagoda hillock Itself te which 828 feet it
stands the on _____
surrounded te te about about by 100 100 the feet. feet. barracks The The pagoda of the
te
is built—Si James’,<jaaette.
She Hod No Time (o Tend Bird..
clocks)—Now Dealer {to there’s countryman something looking at
the of clocks, sir. When unique the
m way
hour begins a bird comes out from the
top and sings ‘‘Cookoo.’’ For instance,
I turn the hand to 3 o’clock, and now
the bird comes outand sings “Cookoo”
three times.
wife)—By Countryman Mariar, (enthusiastically, dont that beat to
gum,
Wife—That kind o’ clock may do
furpeopio who’ve got lots of time, but
lt d take mo half the forenoon every¬
day Bazar. to look after the bird.—Harper’s
Declined .With Thanks.
Yee, Oscar, it te true many of the
famous poets have suffered from infer dys¬
pepsia, but it is an error to
that dyspepsia is an infallible sign of
genius. It is only «n and evidence disordered ef an
liver. imperfect-digestion Yourpoem, entitled a “The first
Dandelion of Spring,” is merely one of
the symptoms of a bilious attack.
The next time your system is out of
order, take Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pur¬
gative Pellets. They will restore the
liver to its normal state, and prompt-
i_____
lets’ r are entirely harmless—which is
more than can be said of your poem,
Oscar.
h trade in all parts, by if
*cing goods our machines,
where the
tbem, we wlilst _____
person in each lOcsiify.lhc wry
best scwing.machiue made to
the ‘Vfo world, wftloltw u kh ail the aHachroems
r end frees con^lrt*
'our costly and valuaLlr srt
. s. in return we mk that you
'show what wj» rend, lo Hiotc who
may call nt your holm', and after Sc
(months »ll hhBii become your own
>p«rty. This grand wachhie U
ide after the &in£«r paients,
bich Imre runout; before patents
rnn out it sold for&iKJ, with the
attachments, and new sells for
sswing-maehrne in t. a!, and the
wsafxsrc'.
FOR MEN ONLY*
CUBE Eolomwi
Robert, Hobio «iXHOOD full, Kwloroi. Ho* to
>M *7 .SUt.v Toorttorloo, oab Voralfa ContriM
i business. -Spare mo
Positiveiy Cv
•i.HAiwr setet*
;e ledge or tcs. s?: -
<; ( -. >
_____ , _____ ___^ A
sssjss?ss^isfrte.';i
Address In confidence r’-„ ■ ■
i , SPECIFIC ------C0-, ca, I 186 Race St., Ciec :.:
mm HAIR BALSAM
sS?a^E.: HiNDF.net; :i§.
: -
mcc of purifying the Wood can¬
.
not be overestimated, tor without pun blood
you cannot enjoy good health. ,,
At this season nearly every one needs a
good medicine to purity, vitalize, and enrich
the blood, and we ask you to toy Hood’s
EWtiUai- r ecu liar Sarsaparilla. It strengthens
M( j builds up the system,
creates an appetite, and tones the digestion,
while lt eradicates disease. The peculiar
combination, proportion, aad preparation
of the vegetable remedies used give te
to iteeif
ether medicine hassnch a record of wonderful
cures. If you have made up your mind to
buy Hood’s Sarsaparilla do hot he induced to
take any other instead. It ts a Peculiar
Medicine, and is worthy your confidence.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is told by SB druggists.
She wed by C. L Hood A Co., Lowell, Vase.
100 Doses One Dollar
M': Pills LIVER
FOR TORPID
A to rpid liver de>«nge»a the who’ r yn-
Sick Headache,
Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu¬
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
There la no better remedy for these
common disease* than Tutt’s Liver
Pills, a* a trial will prove. Price, 8Se.
Sold Everywhere.
THE GRIFFIN OIL MILL.
Application tor Charter.
GEOBGIA,
Spalmno County,
for themselves and such others as
may be associated with them, desire to be in¬
corporated and made a body corporate nnder
the name of
“The Griffin Oil Mill.”
The capital stock of said company will be
(120,000) twenty thousand dollars with the
privilege’of hundred increasing the same to (1100,000)
one thousand dollars, divided into
shares The business of ($100) said one hundred dollars each.
of company not to com¬
mence until 15 percent, of the capital stock
has been paid in.
The officers of said company shall consist
of five directors to be chosen annually by the
stockholders: President, from said directors there shall
be elected a Vice President, Secre¬
tary lie and Treasurer.
objects of said
erect and operatx
«n ftol | f,flp»ry
into euenjorms as said company may
and the selling of the same, and to do eaeh
and every other act necessary to successfully
carry on and conduct a cotton oil mill.
To buy and hold such real estate and per-
sona! property as is necessary to the success¬
ful carryingonsaid To take take manufacturing deeds, enterpris-
notes, mortgagee and
other seenritiet nrities for goods and property sold as
they see proper.
To sue ana be sued, plead and be unpleaded
and have a common seal
Wherefore, be filed petititioners pray that this pe¬
tition in the Clerk’s office of the Supe¬
rior Court of Spalding county and be publish¬
ed as. required order incorporating by law, and that the court the
pass an < them nnder
corporate te name aforesaid for the lull term of
twenty years with the right of renewal, with
full power to eary on such business as afore¬
said and to exercise all powers necessary to
contemplated successfully accomplish such the objects and
titioners will by corporation. And pe¬
ever pray, etc. .
M. L. BATES,
B. B. BLAKELY.
W. A. BAT 1ATES,
J.‘ P. NICHOLS.
GEORGIA— Spalding County.
1 certify that the foregoing is true and
cor—’ ‘----“ "■ ” '* ~
fill
1889, and dnly recorded on
of; Witness my band and seal of said Court
date above written.
- . W. M. Thomas, Clerk.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
fVRDINARY’S kJ OFFICE—Spawmno Coun-
B. Mills, ty, Geoboia, administrator March 22nd, 1889.—John
as of Elizabeth G.
Mills, deceased, has capital applied to me for leave
to sell ten shares stock of Central BE.
est certificate ......... Company amounting any oi of :tofonrhum to Georgia, four _ hundred one inter- dbl-
lars due by ' same Company, Cor— ny, - tor for distribution. diet; «—*•--»—
Let til pe ed showcanse before
the Court of Ordinary of said county, at my
office 1889, in by Griffin, o’clock on the first Monday in May,
ten a. m., why such leave
should not be I,W. granted
(3.00. ---- W. HAMMOND. Ordinary.
f V7 (BDINABY’S ty, Georgia, OFFICE—Spalpinu April 3rd, 1889.—To Coun- John
deceased:
of Ordinary of this county, fora settlement
R, at said
ten , o’clock .....__________, 1880, settle¬ by
a, m, and submit to such
ment as in default the Court will proceed in
your absence to make such settlement.
(8.00, E. W. HAMMOND, Onffnaiy.
POSTPONED
Administrator’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Si By virtue AUHNO CoCNTY. the
of up order from court of Or
nary of Cobb county. Georgia, will be sold oa
lot gia, lying between "of
in tit* city Griffin and State of
Georgia, of said k' own and diatingnishef a»Tot in the
plan city of Griffin number four
W in square number twenty-nine (J9), oon.
twining one half acre more or lean. Said half
acre to ASMwSBSatfsas be divided into three lota of equal
a
e street mb raring and alley. a two-roots bouse the on Betty corner of
All known as Tay-
lor lot. : Soid ts mnt of .the estate^ said Betty
of debts and
payable Nov. eight cash, balance
interest from data 1st, of 1389, sale. with oer went,
ANDREW J. ROGERS, **
Vdministrfttor r of of ” Betty *' ^ *“ Taylor.
for Incorporated Educational by and
Its
place on each of the other ten month* in the
year and are all drawn In public, nt theAcod-
emy of Music, New Orleans, La.
FAMfcP FOR TWENTY YEARS,
For Integrity of its Drawings, and
Prompt Payment of Prizes,
, I Attested an follows:
“We do hereby for certify the that Monthly we supervise and Semi- the
arrangements all
Annual Drawings of TheLoniriaua State Lot¬
tery Company, and in person manage and
control the Drawings themselves, and that
the same are conducted with honesty, fairness
and in good faith toward all parties, aud we
it advertisements.”
will pay all Frizes drawn In T
State Lotteries which may be presented at
our conntera: ■ 5 *- s -
Grand : Monthly : Drawing
Atth, & y ^?u*, 0ric ^
Capital X’rinse. #300,000
Hrive^flO; 100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars Each,
Quarters (5; Tenths (3; Twen¬
tieths (:
U8T OP PHIZES.
1 TFMBfcw Prize op (300,000 is............ (300,000 100,000
lPm**op 100,000 50,000 is........... is..„........ 50.000
1 Prize Prizes op 10,000 25,000 is.....------ 25.000 20.000
2 op are..........
5 Prizes op 5,900 1,000 are.......... 25.000 25.000
25 Prizes op are.........
100 Prizes or 500 are.......... 50.000
200 Prizes op 300 ore.......... 60.000
500 Prizes or 200 are.......... 100,000
approximation prizes.
100 Prizes of (500 are.................. 50.000
100 100 do. 300 ore.................. 20.000 30.000
do. 200 are..................
TTHMQUl, PRIZES.
99 Prizes of (100 art............. 199,900
099 do. 100 are............. 99,900
3,134 (1,054,800
Note— Tickets drawing Capital Prizes are
not entitled to terminal Frizes.
County, Street _ _ residence, wi
and Number. More rapid re¬
turn mail delivery will be assured by enclosing
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DAPPHIN,
New Orleans, La.
Exchange, Draft or Postal Note. We pay
charges of (5 on Currency sent to us by Express in
sums or over.
Addrett Registered Letters Contain¬
ing Currency te
weer *ml»ab* iamiak jsaxh
New Orleans, La.
is REMEMBER, GDABANTEED that thenayment of Prizes
BY FOUR NATIONAL
highest tions Courts; therefore beware of all imita¬
or anonymous schemes.
ONEDOLLAarkthe the price of the smallest
part: or fraction of a Ticket ISSUED BY US
in ered any for Drawing. less than Anything Dollar in swindl our name of-
a is a
May Sheriff’s Sales.
1*7ILL TT day BE in May SOLD next, ON THE before FIRST the door TUBS ol
the Court House, in the city of Griffin, Spald¬
ing County^Georgia, the following described
Logoff and No. 35, containing 202% acres
li half of lot No. 84,
res.said land bring i
1 Georgia, of C. 8. Westmoreland, bounded as
ed. MaryE. Ellis, nistratrix of in W. possession, J. J_____._______ legal-
tenant
ly notified. time (6.00.
Also, half at the lot same No. and place, wiUbesold
west of 82, about two miles west
of Griffin, bounded north by Mt. Zion road
and land ol Geo. C. Stewart, on the east by
Mrs. McDowell and B. H. Johnson, on the
south by lands of Mrs. L. C. Johnson, on the
road west by a the road running from the Mt. Zion
to Allen Thomas place, containing
one hundred acres. Levied on and sold by a
Justice Court# fa issued from 1065th District
G. M. of Spalding County in favor of Patrick
A Geo. Brooks D. Johnson, vs. Robert L. Skinner. C., and turned Levy made by
over to
me. Robert Skinner, tenant In possession,
legally Also, notified. the (6.00.
at same time and place, will be
sold, one undivided one-third interest in one
house and lot known as the Wright Bowdois
place by fronting William on Solomon street, bounded
west Scandrett, south Bishop by place, east hy Willis
aawsagasaS^g ed one-third interest *“ an " alley and of north ' totem* by
in one tract land in
North Griffin, coatamingthree or four acres,
alley and west by &rs;, street, 5 being s;g
m anew i
extension of Sixth atreetjaud the property of
T. W. Thurman, McLeroy, White and J, D.
in Boyd; what and is known one undivided the one-third interest
as John Neal place in
South Griffin containing one acre more or
er And south hy 8troziw. Levied on by vir¬
tue Of two Justice Court fi fas in favor of Frank
M. Pott* vz, William E. George, from the
Justice Court of the I001stDist.G.M., HstDist.G.M„ Spald¬ Spald-
ing and county. turned Levy made by J. C- Little, L. C.
over Br to me. Tenants in poseee-
son Also, legally at " the notified. - * time -
same and plate, will be
sold on* undivided Vi interest in one house
and lot in the city of Griffin, known as tbs
B. W. Doe home place, fronting on Solomon
street, the bounded north by an alley, east by
lands of Mrs. MoUk H Thompson, by south
by Solomon street and west Thirteenth
street, Levied containing sold one and one-half acres
on and as theproperty fastened of Charles
B. Doe by virtue of a fi from Spald¬
ing County Court in favor of L. Cohen A
Co. vs. Charles R. Doe and other n fas in my
Tenant in possession, Mrs.MoUieH
Thompson, Also, Also, at the legally notified. time and place, (6.00.
a' same ont'of will be
sold fifty acres of land, being ths sontk
east comer of lot No. 180 hi the 3d land dis¬
trict ol Spalding Comity, Georgia, bounded
north by balance od lotNo. ISO, east by J. U.
falQ MfiuBiflCl ffllllff vO« aATred OIL
by 1001st-District virtue of s Justice Court fi ta is¬
sued from 6. M of Spriding
itors ot
__ &S*£3r % J £
”TT88
s* '
•
;
aoo.000:
A.TX-AJSrr-a, QBOEOU,
s - iV ■, a|
striooHnre and , industrial
Ths M««nlMd owan of Southern Urn ptegnu of ths I
i guaranteed clreulation in every Southern and Wastsra Stats.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS. :J
»AHIKL I.KKU col anl, dm el th. rtl*n irt*
R. J. REDDING iz the abl* and thorouzhlY sqnlppsd A.zktant Oommlrnkner of ^
th* State el Gsorgtei as wellaz an experknesd writer. Taor. J, 8. NEWMAN U in d
A».R.m> j p,ste Experiment Station, and stands in th* frost rank et agricultural edi
writers in tha South. With theza eminent writers ar# assoeiated a seer* or mors *f*_
prefa«Jonal a^teultural writer.-where __
mate sontributors—lnelndlnfi not a few month!, ,
el«a Dover* very department of fcm man»gement and household work, makiat Ths €
ton Mis most complete, attractive and valuable acrioultaral journal in the Heath, tat
bain, worth more than a whole year's subscription to any turner who reads and think I fe ■
noetion with his work. will be found
ItslUnstrstions are snporb. and every department fall te overfiewtet -
ter to Inrtru rt . enlUbten and entertain. Eaeh number te worth th# cam shifted for tl__,
‘Ndfa^llv'canafierdtebe without One THE Bqilar SOUTHERN CULTIYAT0R. the twelve anmbsis New te eemT tel
send In your eubzeriptions. Only per annum,
▼•lam* ot extensive Information useful to all elassez. E to orre d hy Prwe mmd Fnpb as i
for tha farm, fireside and oountin*-room. Snbzcription, I
ate., addrais CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING
THE <
Geo. W. Harrison, > Drawer 8, Atlanta,!
Manager .) I Send far temple copy.
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