Newspaper Page Text
«I And Ayer's Cherry Pectoral an
Invaluable remedy tor colds, coughs,
and other ailment* of the throat and
lungs." -M. S. Randall, UM Broadway,
jUbkny.N.Y. Ayer's Cherry
••I hare used Pectoral
tor bronchitis and
Lung Diseases,
for whloh I believe it to he the greatest
medicine inthe world.”—James Miller,
Caraway, N. 0. ft&y
“My wife had a distressing cough,
with pains in the side and breast. We
tried various medicines, hut none did
her any good until I got a bottle of
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral which has cured
tier. A neighbor, Mrs. Glenn, had the
measles, and the cough was relieved by
the use oi Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. I
hove ne hesitation in recommending
this medioine.”—Robert Horton, Fore,
man Headlight, Morrillton, Ark.
“Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral cured me ot
a severe cold which had settled on my
lungs. My wile says the Pectoral helps
her more than any other medicine she
ever used.”—Enos Clark, Mjt. Liberty,
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
rtirtsm bt
Or. J. C. Ayer to Co., Lowell, Mass.
Bold by »U Druggists. PrioeSl; six bottles, *4.
If You Have
Ms Pills
sasffs^S&dKSSn'SH feller from them. Nicely sugar coated,
SOLD EVERYWHERE,
»e,v 'dvmisements.
^/ Circuli Jars of Clark’s Business
j 2 Uolle ge, Erie, Pa. Special
Owns mailed free.
HINDERCORNS.
SXLY 1
tron dslwttve nutiltion. Take in time. Ne. and SL«i
'leanses *waEtm and beautifies the hail
remotes Fails a luxuriant to Restore growth, Grsy
ever Color.
Hslrto itsYoBthful
revonU Wo- and Dandruff si.OOatDrngsrlsts. and Hair tailing
THE GLORY OF MAN
STRENGTH VITALITY!
How Lost! How Rffi
KNOWTHYSElf.. THE SCIENCE
____
and Physical Debility, Imparities of the Blood.
ExhausteoVitality
^Untold miseries
< work. «aw It contains 5 fco agrsS royal 8vo. tea Besattfo)
finding, embossed, fall paces, gilt Price only *1.00 bj
null, ‘ postpaid, concealed — If in plain wrapper. '----- Din*
— you s'
on .Dr.Parker NERVOUS__
and a corps
________________ imay be consulted, * eoni- conA-
denttalhr. THE PEABODY by mail ot MEDICAL in person, at the office of
No. 4 Balflnch St., Boston, Mom., INSTITUTE, to whom Ml
orders for books or iettess for advice should bg
directed as shove.
W. L. DOUGLAS
83 MM£ „f!i?Fo
Examine W. L. Douglas f 2.00 Shoes tor
entlsmeu and ladies,
FOR SALE BY
SCftEUERMAN & WHITE,
CRim*.
LIPPMAN BROS.,T Wholesale Agents, Sa
nnnah Go. Iune25dAwly
jmu, ri;®
WHELESS STAMP
_ PRESS CO-
748 REYNOLD nOLD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA
Agents Wanted! Catalogue FREE!
RUBBER STAMPS, SEALS,
BADGES, CHECKS,STENCILS,
STEEL STAMPS, &c.
Sole Manuftcturcrs of
ThuWheless SelMnkIng Rubber
StamD Printing Prea*
■ ~
Which Spring Up
from the tlasu or the Trees end Drew
ou Their Strength and Vigor— Uow end
When to Dv This.
Among other Industries of neglected
orchards ore the suckers which are al¬
lowed to spring up from the base of the
stems. When the trees are young, and
these suckers are only a year old or less,
they may be pulled up without much
labor and the trees preserved in a neat
and thrifty appearance (Fig. 1.) But if
neglected they will become large and
thick and are difficult to remove, and
they draw largely on the strength and
vigor of the trees. (See Fig. 2).
THRIFTY TREE — RUINED BY SUCKERS.
The owners then attempt to get rid of
them, but they are too strong to be pull¬
ed, and as a resort they are cut away
with knife or ax once, leaving the stubs.
These send up more new suckers and the
condition of the tree is worse than be¬
fore. Timely removal of these sprouts
is easily performed, and a neat and hand¬
some .symmetrical shape is preserved.
If done while the trees are in a thrifty
state of growth or some time during
midsummer, they are much less liable to
sprout again than when performed while
the trees are dormant. If the suckers
have not been allowed to become too
large, they aro easily pulled off by seiz¬
ing the upper ends with both hands,
placing the boot between sucker and
tree, and giving a sudden pressure with
the foot and a sudden jerk with the
hands. This gives a clean removal, and
they will not sprout up again as when
short stubs are left by cutting them off.
Ih addition to the foregoing advice,
Country Gentleman adds;
It will not be forgotten by intelligent
orchardists that the removal of iny
growing part while the tree is growing
tends to check its vigor; but in the case
already mentioned, the removal of the
suckers, which are drawing so largely
on the strength of tho tree, is the btnaller
of two evils; and it fa better to get rid of
them at once, without danger of their
springing up again, than to have them
ruin tho beauty and symmetry of the
trees -j
_
Benefits Derived from Cultivation.
Just how much cultivation fa required
for a particular crop to prevent loss from
neglect, and how many times it should
he repeated, says the agricultural editor
of The World, depends so much upon
the crop itself, and Other circumstances,
that no general rule will be applicable to
all cases. Of course, corn and potatoes
require more of what we call cultivation
tluui do wheat and oats. There are some
results arising cultivation from frequent and even
shallow which are extremely
important and which are independent of
what fa commonly called clean culture—
that fa. keeping the crop free from weeds
and grass.
All growing plants require moisture;
without a seasonable supply their growth
will be checked, and if the crop fa not
wholly lost the yield will be disappoint¬
ing and unsatisfactory. Most persons do
not fully appreciate the importance of
cultivation as a means of supplying mois¬
ture. As rains are periodical, and as at
certain seasons long periods of dry weath¬
er intervene, the moisture must be fur¬
nished through the medium of cultiva¬
tion. The earth fa the great storehouse of
moisture from which all living plants
draw their supply. The water in the
earth is either going downward from an
excess poured on the surface by rains or
being drawn upward by capillary become attrac¬
tion when tho surface has hard
ahddry. Hence the importance of break¬
ing this dry crust, or rather not permit¬
ting it to form, by frequent cultivation pr
such a stirring of the soil as breaks up the
capillary connection, arrests the ascend¬
ing moisture and holds it within reach
of the roots of the plants in a mulch of
loose soil instead of allowing it to reach
the surface rfivd be wasted in evapora¬
tion. '
^
The Weevil in Pea* and Beans.
Seed peas and beans can be rid of
weevil larvae in several ways. One and
the simplest way fa to plunge them for
a few moments In boning water. An¬
other and a very good and effective one
fa what fa called the bi-sulphide of car¬
bon treatment. The seed fa put in a
tight box or barrel, a small vessel con¬
taining half a gill of bi-sulphide of car¬
bon placed upon toe seed and the re¬
ceptacle kept tightly closed for at least
forty-eight hours. The drug will then
have evaporated and permeated all
through the seed so that every weevil is
killed. Don’t Overlook that the vapor is
extremely inflammable. The operation
should to carried on outdoors or in an
open shed, and the seed when emptied
out kept away from light or fire.
Here and There.
Bee keepers are reporting very favor¬
ably on Alsike clover as a honey plant.
Dominique hens make good mothers.
According to Tho Poultry Journal all they
are, in fact, difficult to beat as pur¬
pose fowls.
Pigeons like a little green food occa¬
sionally, as a change from grain diet
A good way to save all the properties
of droppings fa to daily throw the earth
over the previous night’s droppings.
Then once a week remove to barrels or
boxes; you thus compost as gathered and
saved. Droppings thus saved may not
bo-worth their weight in gold, hot will
save the money spent tor the same quan¬
tity of guano._ ..
Biair Says It’s Att Bight.
Mr. 8. 0. Blair,Chicago,says: “We
coaid not keep house without your
Clarke’s Extract of Flax Skin Cure
and Cough Cure. Wehave used both
for numerous trouble, recommend especially the Congh for
our chUd. We
Cure to every family having children
We used it for Whooping and satisfactory Cough witt
remar kbly quick it for any and re
suits, and use every
I! you want the best toilet soap get
Clarke’s Flax Soap, 25 cents. Ask
I)r. N. B. Drewry, Drugist, for these
preparations. ■
IflM* »" A
her morula ou tho stage*
has done that ad nauseam. I want to
discuss the young lady’s shanceof
getting The speaker a living.” well
was 1-cmorne*’ a known she ac¬
tress. By ‘ Miss ambitious meant
any young woman for a ca¬
reer “Young on ihe. people, stage.
both the boyaand idea that girls,
are moral very questions apt to they jrct being hood¬ on
are
winked ; that llio world has conspired
to stuff Ilium up with morel notions
that are not based on facts, and their
skepticism ncruneuU is apt their to lead them account. into ex So
on own
1 want to take up this question of the
stage the business as a profession poiut of for view—a women from
that I hear but myself phase
never any one
talk about
“To bugm with, 1 will «uy that 1
was a member of said profession for
three companies years, and played all with of all sorts of
sorts part*-sou
brettes, old women, loading juveniles,
leading and Texas walking ladies—from
New York to and from Texas
to Oshkosh. 1 gave it up as an intol
erablo trade, though a beautiful art
Ami 1 was as much influenced to that
coui-so perienced. by what I saw as by whut I ex¬
‘The fact fa wo are not a dramatic
race, and wo in the mass have no very
acute perceptions as to what is or is
not good ; we take anything that is
sufficiently “Miss Lcmorne advertised. will bo equally jus¬
tified in her course if she has any kind
of capital notoriety; would anything give her that place with in less
a a
dime museum. That is tho sort of ten¬
derly and when green young I. thing begin I telling was. How
am to you
what a hopeless crusade you are enter
ed upon? Of course it is not absolutely
hopeless; you will not neglect to re
mind mp that there aro people who
have succeeded in it.
“Let me tako up oneof your earliest
delusions first You wore influenced
to think of going on the stage because
you position saw a hopeless for non-competcnt You said get to
a season.
yourself: that to start ‘Well, with, if she what can do as not well 1
as may
dot l am a great deal bettor fitted for
the place than sho is.’
When “Your in reasoning was terribly astray.
competence any suececdingyou profession you see know non-
it is bad place for the competent may
a
The non-eompetents afffe not in the
competenis fore, as you imagine, not to because be had— the
are
they are always to be had—but be*
to the which swift, nor the battle to the
strong, fact is a very sad and
depressing the thing however to cheerful the swift it and
look strong, the other people. may
to
“Just why this self evident propo¬
sition does not work better in reality
is a complex question. I have many
theories in my head as to why the
stage elaborating is thus, but there is One no thing time only here
for them.
Til mention, and that is that no one,
probably knows what not excepting do until yourself,
you can you are
tried.”—New York Star,
Hood’s Jt Won’t Sarsaparilla Bake Bread.— In do other impossibili¬ words
will not
done, ties. submit Its proprietors proof from tell plainly what of it has
ssurces unques¬
tioned reliability, suffering ond from asked disease you frankly it
you are any or affec¬
tion caused or promoted by impure Hood’s blood
low state of tne system, to try
parilla. The experience cf others disappbited is
assurance that you will not be
The Silent Teamster,
“The teamster, as one of tho types
of tho frontier, is seldom introduced
in print without all usious to bis ingen¬
ious and picturesque profanity; where¬
as it is his silence, rather than his utter¬
ances, that gives him, among bis
brethren of the way almost the dis¬
tinction of a species.
“The sailor has his ‘chanty,’' refrain: tho
negro boatsmaa his rude marching we
read of tho Cossack’s wild
chorus of the ‘begging song,’ of the
Russian exiles on the great Siberian
road, of the Persian minstrel in the
midst of the caravan, reciting, in a
love high, and singing magic voice, beguile tales of battle the and
to way.
For years the parlor vocalist has rung
the changes upon barcaroles and Ca¬
nadian boat songs, but not the most
fanciful of popular composers has ven¬
tured to dedicate a note to the dusty
throated Voyager of the overland trail.
“He is not unpicturesque; he has
every claim that hardship can give to
popular sympathy; yet, even to the
most inexperienced his in silence imagination, along those he
pursues fateful roads, way of which will
tne names
soon be legendary. As a type he was
evolved by these roads to meet their
■exigencies. He was known on the
great Sante Fe trail, on the old Ore¬
gon Siat trail, on all tho historic pathways
have carried westward the story
of The a restless railroads and have a determined driven him people. from
the main lines of travel: he is now
merely the link between them and scat¬
tered settlements difficult of access.
When the systems of ‘feeders’ to the
main track are completed his work
will be done. He will have left no rec¬
ord among songs of the people or
enough, lyrics of 4ho this way, and enduring in fiction, oddly silent
most ana
of beings will survive—through the
immortal rhetoric of his biographers
—as one whose breath is heavy with
curses. "—Mary Hallock Foote u Cen¬
tury.
Too well known to need lengthy
vertisements—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy. 50 cents, by druggists.
Self-defense Against a Dangerous Foe
Forewarned is not forearmed in the case
ho incur the risk of an attack
fortifying safeguard, Hostetter’g
ifested Bitters, in miasma, the shape prolific of bilious breeder remittent of evils and
chilis* and fever, ague cake, dumb ague, and
the calenture ot the Isthmus and
American coost, is nullified and rendered
harmless. Our western pioneer settlers and
miners, dweHera and in tropic in lowlands, and
tants of dwellers malarious
in this country and many quarters of
She globe, have for years been acqvaihted with
fact and are constantly provided with
this nnporoBeled QDpftr<elcd defensive medicine and
edy. All disorder of the he stomach, stomach, livi liver and
bowels, rheumatic and kidney complaints and
rheumatism conqured by it. „
-
'Mp
i
liaMi
,..
ease, secka a remedy which will com-
l ately eradicate from hfa system every
germ ot blood poison, that the ones he
loves—his wife oad hfa children—may be
saved, the experience of others comes as
i mighty revelation. Common sense teUs
him actual results tue the only sure proof
of curative virtue. Read the following
•rue testimony: .
Twelve years ago I contracted a terri¬
ble case of Wood horrible. poisoning. 1 My afflic¬
tion was truly had bo appe¬
tite, did" not impaired, sleep well at throat night, my full diges¬ of
tion v.'.'.s my was
ulcers, and in fact I was a total wreck.
1 had been under the treatment of several
r.i.ied several „„ months, ___ receiving . . . ben¬ ....
no
efit whateve r—the dreaddfaease still clung
tome.
Three years ago I was laid up with
rheumatism. My knees were drawn up.
in such a position that I could not leave
my bed for months. ,
Last summer the disease seemed to re¬
new its attack upon me with all the rav¬
ages of death. My life was a lingering
torture, wtll amil when had friend despaired of mine of ever get¬
ting mended D. D. B. a I began recom¬ it
to use at
once, and find myself permanently cured.
Westmorland, I refer to Rtv. Dr. C. C. Knott, Davis, Garrett Dr. John ft G.
and others who know of Bro.,
Euuurous ruy
case. for 1 rerlly I cheerfully believe it recommend is the best medicine B. B. B.,
for the blood In the world.
J A*. L, Bosworth, Atlanta, Go.
During bottle the of month U. B of February four-year 1 bought
one B. for my old
boy, who had what doctors term heredi¬
tary blood poison, and to my utter aston¬
ishment one bottle cured him. In Feb¬
ruary my elder son, twelve years of age,
was his legs, literally and covered terrible with ugly sores biffi on
head. He a cured with eruption bottles on
was two ot
B. B.B. As a quick blood cleanser it has
no equal J A kes H ill, Atlanta, Go.
For r several several years years I i have have been been suffer! sutiermg
a. constitutional blood poison, which
has resisted the treatment of odr licit
physicians, and the use of the most noted
medicines.
i was covered with' a copper-colored
eruption loss of appetite, nil over my body and limbs, with
back, aching of excruciating joints, general pains in debil¬ my
ity, emaciation, failing my off hair,
Of ny sort
throat and great nervousness. I became
incredulous, en-ugh but being told that B. B. B.
Wis a sure blood purifier and that
it did not require a patient to use a gross
before, tike. Within lie was two cured, weeks'time jNcommenced 1 felt Im¬ its
proved. ! have taken about ten bottles
•• 4 ( l • • " ■<"<■ and sprightly as any man.
My appetite and strength have returned
and my hair does not tall out. I do not
hesitate to say blood that B. B, B. has no equal
as who a general wifi only purifier, bottle and ill any One
itse one v. be oon-
vincsd.that it has no equal in these pbrls
1 still continue its use, as it is Asplehdjd
tonic and keens my system in a fine con¬
dition. You nave the liberty 1 to direct any
sufferer to*me ia prison.
K. P. B. Jokes,
Atlanta, Ga.
(S on the
I believe i actuauy swouowea a
medieine in vain hope,! efforts to to cur cure the dfa-
ease. With little finally fiaoll y ac ted on
and my despondency wu somewhat dis¬
pelled. I kept using it until I had taken
sixteen bottles, and all the ulcers, rheuma¬
tism, and ether horrors of blood poison
have and disappeared, wall again, after and at last experience I am sound of
an
twenty years of torture
A. P, BktossoK, Atlanta, Ga.
B. B. Kennbsaw, B. Company—M Ga, Sept y* Dear 11,1881. Sir;
great pleasure in acknowledging
the great at benefit benefit my my wife wife has h; derived from
yonr for great and wonderful medicine, B. B.
B. tmoyem ‘ '
We had attention from shine of the most
her. ever rec6vering. Her mouth was one
solid ulcer, and tor two months ok more
her body was broken out with sores until
she lashes lost and a beautiful eye-brows; head in of fact, hair, she also seemed eye¬
to be a complete wreck
bottles of Blood Baku medicine has done
To-day clear from fay wife scrofulous fe perfectly taint, healthy and and she
any
This is to certify that three years ago l
had below my the left knee, leg caused amputated by blood four poison inches
and bone affection. After it was ampu¬
tated there cariie a running ulcer on tht
end of it that measured ftiches one
way and 4K laches the other, and coo
the best doctors tn Charlotte. felts T heard oi
menced H. B. B. Was 120 pounds. Whey
I had taken three bottles 1 gained 81
pounds in weight; when I had token
twelve bottles I was sound and welL but
continued taking until I had taken fifteen
bottles. I now weigh. three 188 Inches pounds high. atm
measure five feet and
s.s.s
m WS1LB OffSIT
The world outfit to
done for mein tne cure
which was so had tu to
Me by the physki.tns
went to be tret ted. <n.:
mescopy of ans.iKT-
IRwift’s Specific, r.i-1 1 uiiingH. I got
MUtf /rnmt^ ; - v
ATCCtlc.-. t‘l|
sound and
return of the< dnudfnl dJjeajc.
Mbs. Asa Botbwhx.
An Sable. Mich;, Dec. ». ’38.
Band far books on Blood Btseucs MtlWini
. "■’IffiST'SiSrik
’ HINDBRCORMS.
PARKER’S GINCER TONIC
ss^sstfaiiat Th* bte»t of *11 itauGJe*
■■tht bn
1 imji
-- ■{ MANDPACTBRRR8 OP>
a^,Blmcte,Dpo« •m tmom. m •
We are hete, and here to stay and have fill on hand
a large stock of Vi
DOORS, SASH AND RUNDS1
which wo defy competition on. WtrKnve a large stock of “bone dry lum
ber,’ of of Monldings, the finest vuality Mnritlm, and IhtAustere, can ftinmnitreihe very beet Just goods, the In the
way He., etc,, we can beat best is
price you can get anywhere I And ns for Window and Poor Frame* oars
the born place and to raised conic. in Uciirpiu, Ours fa nnd u “Iiobk- have dcvotedsttir.mrtire enterprise,” ui«d wc timennd ore home attontiofl folks;
to working wood for the post twenty yefirt, and ckim to Iftiow how W
work to the best advantage. We also employ good workiwn, who under¬
stand how to do the work. For these nnd many other reasons we might
name, We heartily we claim thank a right the to public patronage generally of the for people. liberal and
solicit continence of the very patronage,
a same.
DON’T FORGET THAT WE WILL HAVE.
jor the present Fruit Keep Drop, the 20 to 80 thousand CRATES, made abroad, right here
by our home labor. money here instead of going and
heip boom aur twon and eountry. Don’t forget the place.
Office— Flanters’ Waeehouae. Factory, 18th Street, Griffin, Ga.
(THekly Ash, fsksl Meet iM o
' ‘
——dumb Fosmni c OF Alii FORMS Aim STA9K3 OF
To« win
jnat sattetMMMi to* th* «m ot on
Mow nut *««••< Jhrimrjr, Imtmitrj
whoso Wood l»In «n in . udi Honda*
i, old Gbroclo UlMrs t bauaftM by tb* vraodoma Mate m*
SYPHILIS SCROFULA
!,Vf ;?*!.. :: ’ ! - '•
■
^■sasssiaas
itOi ■*-' : Sold by all Progglata,
r. P. r, is. a inaMMto met aa
uceUcnt »ppittMr. bonding up the WHOkcaaut Davaatnw.
lyctem npkUy. H you ora wk and Tfa wPfa t, lATAIXAB.Ofa
(Mbfeoad ** May by * F. *, *>d pi l
•mS....... ......
RHEUMATISM
' ' ' I "”l* l ■■ i II I M ill I I l lOfatt .ll l l M il I I ,J.. .....—■ ».
t. H, II. TIMS TAME N,
In effect August 18th. 188®.
No. lS~H>AiLt, Except 8tntt>ay.
Leave Griffin. .....5:15 a. m.
jLirivsAtJftDtft..............................* r .8*00 **
No. 16—Dlitr, Except Scxday.
Leave Arrive Atlanta.... Griffin...,-------------- .......... ........ ..........6:08p. ...8:05 m.
*’
i No. 17—SoBBAY 0*UT,
..........................
No. 18—8 b»uay Orly.
Leave Atlanta.............................3:00 p. m.
Arrive Griffin...................................5:00 “
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon.............. 8:80 a.m.
Arrive Griffin............................ 5:25 “
“ Atlanta................................7:00 »
No. 11 —Dairy.
No, 1 —Daiut.
Awiv® “®«2 0HI9o.......... n — ............-......1:42
Leave “ ............. .................••••4:00
Arrive Atlanta.............. i».»•»••••••••*•• ••••••♦•••••••5:40
■' ' , . No. 18 -Daily.
Macon............... t 0:10
Leave — p.m.
Arrive Griffin,.......... Atlanta........±........ 9:00 *•
“ 10:40 “
‘.’I . Nbt 24 -Daily. V-
Leave Atlanta----------------------------- 6:50 a. m.
Arri T * M^:::..:!::::::::::.::::r.r.:::“ioffi 7
“ o -
No: ia-DAiif.
Leave Atlanta................................2:15 p. m.
Arrive Grilliu...................................4:00 “
“ Macon................. ...6:15 “
■'’■'■No. iL-Diitr.
Leave Atlanta......... ...—i .............. 7:05 p. ra.
• « - ■<Na;i4-DA«,Y. ’ ‘ 5
Leave Atlanta.............................. 9:05 a. m .:
Arrive Griffin..............................10:4$ 44
44 M&eon 1:00 p. m.
H o, 37 -tom*. ^
Leave Gnfiiji. ........... 8:80 a. m.
“ Newnan.............. 10:20 ft.QA «
Arrive Carrollton......... ...... :88
JTVV- • . ;rt ' No* 38—Pilt.Tw' i ]
Arrive Griffin^..... . .........................7:20 “
No. 29 —Daily, except Sukoay.
Leave Griffin......................... ....1:30 p. m.
Arrive Newnan-—..................—...,4:30 “
Leave;'' ............... .-7:00
Arrive Carrollton-----------------
’ No. 80 —Daily, Except Suhdat.
Leave Carrollton......... ..............:®:45’n.m
ArriveNeWnaa. ------- .-—7:36 “
Leave Newnan....................... --8.05 “
Arrive Griffin,..,—10.85
IST-For further,information relative to tick¬
et rates, best routes, mhedik. REID, Ac., write to
or coil on JNO. L. Agt.,
B. T. CHARLTON, G.- ti JL,
, Savannah, Ga.
%£:: :
u g-*.
•
t *mu *
c»w 't a '
.
■ M r is s sl
BY FAB
Th^M aaii ChmpesttoBgef toie
—TO—
SEW YORK OB BOSTON
-18 VIA-
: SAVANNAH
--AND THE-
OCEAN : STEAMSHIP: LINE
~*w-Qf TPHJB— ;
Central Railroad of Georgia.
SUMMER EXCURSION 1ICKETS
No ; sole at reduced red d ,ii;,xS§s ~ 1 “"- M
w on "" ra
turn until October 8
Go East by Sea and You’ll not Regret ft
' Passengers, before purchasing tickets via
tber the Agent information may station be had to by applying t»
at your qr , (
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