Newspaper Page Text
—AND--
IS
—
Orlflln, Georgia, Jan. IS, 1390.
Mkiitl Piper qf Spalding Co.
■» ■ j i . yny . i l
Advertising Kates.
'WfclAL!
B rats* os for the Dally
The 8fc. LobIs Dispatch says that
Hon. Levi P. Morton is the most ver¬
satile of all or possible vice presi¬
dents. No other man, now living,
conld rnn a railroad in Canada, a
bank in London and a buffet in
Washington without getting his
mind oil bis official business olpresid-
iug over the United States Senate.
There is only one soda ash factory
in the United Slates, and that is con¬
trolled largely by foreign capita), and
yet the managers had the cheek to
go before the Congressional Commit-
tee and ask for a tariff doty of $5 a
ton on soda ash. This is one of the
iniquities of the Republican “protec¬
tive” system, that oto or bail down
tnen are “protected” d” afe' in>> the expense
of the balance of the sixty million
people of the country.
---- ---—
_
When the name of a man, or an
as
be recognised as a synonym of the
business, then advertising has ac¬
complished its perfect work. Hoyler
means confectionery; Tiffany, sug¬
gests diamonds, and Delmonico,
good dinner.
In this connection note the follow¬
ing paragraph: awful.
Miss Prim—Oh i it wbb _
didn’t inind their stealing the silver
and my jewelry, but when one of
those burglars entered my room and
, • W * F • W. a. 1 . * _ -— t— *rL$ m /a
^ V/'m .-I
tfon.—-(Mousey's Weekly. hu
Here the professional writer of
morous paragraphs constructs a
joke relating to the recently develop¬
ed erase for amateur photography,
and in order to givo an appearance
of reality to his item and convey
the Impression that he knows where
of he wiites, he uses the word
“Kodak,” because that word has
through advertising, become identi¬
fied with photography. Thus the
manufacturers of this instrument
reap the benefit of free advertising.
People read this item and are lead to
inquire “what to a ‘Kodak ?’ ”
Flashlight pictures cannot betaken
with a “Kodak;” but that fact <Rd
not deter the para graph er frqm
making use of the word which has
become the synonym of camera.
forIiovkrnor.
Who will be the next Governor of
•Georgia? to the question .which to
now perplexing the politicians and
the press, and the man who can an¬
swer it to requested to come forward
and relieve their anxiety.
There are now two avowed candi¬
dates in the field, Northen and Liv¬
ingston, but as they both depend
upon the same element for their nom¬
ination, it is not thought either one
will reach the goal.
Congressman Biount, of Macon,
has-been suggested as u possible can¬
didate, but he to too shrewd a politi¬
cian to enter a campaign at so early
a date, and it to said that he is more
desirous of completing his twentieth
year in Congress than to occupy the
executive chair. It to possible, how¬
ever, that he may come in os a com¬
promise candidate, as he is a man of
great political strength.
Col. J. H. Estill,of Savannnah, has
been suggested. He is a man of fine
executive ability, of unswerving in.
tegrity, and would snake a model
governor. AsHontheast Georgia has
not had a governor for many years,
the people of that section feel disposed
to urge their claims, and if they are
listened to Col. Estili will l»e their
choice.
There are a great many men in
Geotgia Who would fill the executive
choir' with.credit, but the position to
so pporiy paid that many could not
afford to accept it, much lees make a
canvass for it.
Btatk or Oslo, City or ToLano.t
LvcAB-Coenr. / '
DOLLABb for each und every raw of Catarrh
; subscribed in ray
1 VBTUlWr, December, A. A.i/. D. 1886. If
A. W. GLEASON,
flSEAJ,.] Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and
" r upon the bloodand mucous ««r.
system. Send for ttattmonmie,
■
[ENEY A CO., Prop*-, Toledo, 0. I
by Druggists, 75*.
722- BRICK.
Sun predicted
1 all ah
Ittoe
aucus for
Senator m
ature being
era tic w be elected
was tlie m Hind the only, lead¬
ing candidate for the position, and
the nomination is most fit and in
every way suitable.
Naturally the Republican papers
were opposed to him asa representa¬
tive Democrat and formulated all
sorts of vague charges of corruption
and bribery against him—chargee
that probably were fully as truthful
and trustworthy as the ballot bo*
forgery against Campbell. Natural¬
ly, too, to anyone who knows any¬
thing of Ohio politics, there was a
very noisy protest and campaign
made against Mr. Brice by the chronic
kickers inside the party, and some
not thoroughly reliable Democratic
Mipers Joined in the hue and cry
against “the millionaire candidate,”
while supporting other millionaires
who were candidates.
All thw was expected, and is ensily
taken for what it is worth. But we
are grieved to see a few true Demo¬
cratic papers taken in by these spec-
ions pretenses. That staunch ally of
tariff reform, the Atlanta Journal,
bad the following editorial on Fri¬
day:
“Calvin 8. Brice has been nomina¬
ted for the senate by a caucus 6i the
democratic members of the Ohio leg¬
islature.
‘•The methods by which this nomi¬
nation was secured forth were the so denuncia¬ question¬
able as to draw
tion of leading democratic papers,
and a vigorous protest from a num¬
ber of prominent Ohio democrats,
headed by Mr. Thurman himself.
“Mr. -jar. Brice once is is known kbowb to mow be nctzrjrui- acorpor-
tlon man, nf of oonltnl capital and his triumph tho the iwinlo people,, to a vie- ril of
tory intrigu.* nnd probably mraw over money,against
the better and honest sentiment of
rembbeanton
upon our p o lit ica l int e grity .- The
people nation. have no part in such a nomi¬
It to the power of money
overriding the will of the people.”
Let us examine into these chargee,
serious only when coming from a
source that might mislead even an
honest and impartial inquirer.
What were the questionable meth
ode alluded to?- They have been
spoken of only in such terms as the
Journal uses, without a specific in¬
stance of anything wrong. The only
heading Democratic paper’that could
have been referred to to the World,
which opposed Cleveland’s adminis¬
tration, and has often opposed the
Democratic party, more vigorously
than, for sensational purposes, it
assaults Mr. Brice. As for the
“prominent Ohio Democrats,” they
are all of them just about as promi¬
nent as “Mr. Thurman himself”—
who to not the Old Roman, but sim¬ f
ply a blatant rind degenerate son o
the grand old man, who is always
getting hto father's name mixed upin
some mess of hto owa doing. Young
Thurman has no standing in the par¬
ty, and the other kickers are mainly
from the Republican stronghold of
Cleveland, which might be Democrat¬
ic but for their strifes and would-be
leadership.*
That Mr. Brice was the almost
unanimous choice of the people is
pretty evident from the dissatisfac¬
tion of tho politicians. But we know
it from the expressions of the coun¬
try press, which alone represents the
Democracy of Ohio, there being no
leading Democratic organ in the
State. Toke the case of Representa¬
tive Brown, of Hancock county, in
the Democratic stronghold of North¬
west Ohio. He did not vote for Brice,
and only reluctantly abides the de¬
cision of the caucus. Yet the paper
of that county has sought and ob¬
tained expressions from every lend-
ing Democrat in the county, nine-
tenths of whom were for Brice. If
there was any undue /Influence in
this case, it was by the opponents
and not the friends of Brice.
If Mr. Brice was not the candidate
of the “better and honest sentiment
of his own people and of his own
purty,” we will ask the Journal the
same question that the Macon Tele¬
graph has failed to answer—Who
was? Was it. millionaire and high tariff
manufacturer Thomas, who was the
next highest, candidate, and who
had never been heard of as a Demo¬
cratic leader before?
The fact is that Cal. Brice is all
right. He is a good Democrat ami
an honest man though rich—an ad¬
vocate of tariff reform and a good
worker—and we dislike to see a sen¬
sible contemporary led away by
senseless clamor. ?
Sensible People.
will have nothing to do with “cure-
alls”—medicines that are advertised
to cure everything from a chilblain to
a broken neck. Read the list of dis¬
eases that Dt Pierce’s Golden Medi¬
cal Discovery will cure: Affections of
the throat and lungs, incipient liver, con¬
sumption, disordered sore
throat, bronchitis, asthma.catarrh,
ulcers, tumors, and swellings caused
by scrofula and bad blood; fever and
agus and dropsy. This seems like a
curt-nil, but it to not. This great
“Discovery” will really cure it all these
complaints blood simply which because they purifies depend
the upon ’
and builds up the weak places of the
body. By druggists,
ws~s
SCROFULA
It* Ural irapwrUy to the blood,riM*.*»-
csraalatins In the sUad* <* 0* W*k,pro¬
duces unsightly tops or swriltaf*; which
causes ’painful running sorts on the arms,
legs, or leetj which derelope, ulcer, in tM
eye*, ran, or mt, often causing M u ri n e s* o*
deafness; wlUch U the origin of pimples, can¬
growths, tho many otherM "
cerous or
ttra« Usually ascribed to “tanar-
tautening upon the lungs, cause*-—e---
and death. Being tho most anden*, IMs tho
most general of all disease* or affectious, for ,
very few persona are entirely free from It.
How It Bo Can CURED
By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which, Wr
tho remarkable cures it has accomplished,
often when other medicines have failed, ha.
proven itself to he a potent and P**tolar
medicine for this disease. Some of these
cure, are really wonderful. If you suffer Pom
scrofula, be sure to try Hood’s. Saraxpartto.
** ||y daughter Mary was afflicted with scroi-
utous sore heck frqrothe time she wasHmonttiS
old tin the became six years of age. Lump*
formed In her neck, and on* of them after
{rowing to the size of a pigeon’s egg, beeame
a running sore lot over three years. We gave
her Hood’s Sarsaparilla, when the lump ana
all Indications of scrofula entirely dis¬
appeared, and now she seem* to he a healthy
•MW." J. S. Cablii-X, Nauright, N. J.
i N. B. Be sure to get only
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
(■'old by all druggist*. gl;st*f®r»*. LowsU, it***-
by C. I. MOOD * CO., Apothec»rie»,
IOO Doses One Dollar
{. 1 .1 HE ME SO.
In effect. December 29tli, 1880.
No. 15 —Daily.
ArriveAtlanta....—..........—...........8:00 Leave Griffin ..................
No. 1ft—Dsn, y.
Leave Atlanta............................. W
Arrive Griffin.................................
No. 8 —Daily.
Leave Macon..................................
Arrive Atlanta................................7:0C Griffin...................................
No. 11 —Daily.
Arm«Griffin..............................■"*, Leave Macon.................. ,£®£ •
Atlanta.............................. MM u
“
No.,1— Daily.
Leave Macon..................................
AirifoOrifflii.......... ..........................-.....“ ............
Leave Atlanta.................................o:*5 “
Arrive
No. 18 —Dau.y.
ORIKFIBf
the corn-
u town to
mated rather
hisapent several
strong hotel at
Rome during the past autumn, was
discussing the etroject with the
fribuue the other day:
“Take myowncAseaannexamffie,”
said he, “l aw not an extravagant
man nor in any sense given to display,
and yet within these three or fonr
weeks in Rome, have emptied out of
my pocket $800 which has gone
into the pockets of the merchants,
the cigar men. the fruit stores, the
bookmen, the livery stables, the
street ear lines, the flower gardens
und the hotel, making each a general
distribution as to put the sum into
general circulation. 1 ain neither
wealthy nor prodigal.” Now suppose,
says the Tribune,thatduringthe win¬
ter or summer seasons, bdth of which
are incomparable in Rome, that, an
average of only twenty leisurely peo¬
ple a month, or say two hundred
daring the seasons spend each only
$100 a mouth or $1,000 in a season
in Rome as a pleaure resort. Here
we have $200,000 in good money
putin circulation in Rome as the
outcome of only 200 guests during
the year, which is a remarkably
small estimate, as is the amount of
mouey each leisurely guest would be
likely to spend. Millions of money
are turned loose this way every win¬
ter in Jacksonville, Florida, and St.
Augustine, Florida, and at Thoinns-
ville, in South Georgia and the peo¬
ple of those cities reap golden har¬
vests out of the tides of travel, living,
most of them, all summer on the
profits of the winter.
The Tribune writer contends ............... m
apber earnest that Rome is a better
and <* healthier . «. i , resort _ i ii____! than either z.1 Jack T_.
sonville or Thomasville. May be so;
and il so, bow much better then is
Griffin, selected by a St-u: board of
eminent gentlemen as the healthiest
Arrivo Griffin............................
“ Atlanta.............................
No. 2 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta...................
Arrive Griffin.... Macon................................10:25 ...........................,,
“
Nd. 12 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta...........................p. m.
Arrive Macon..................................6:35 Griffin...................................4:00
*•
No. 4 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta................. T'Oo P ™
Arrive Griffin........................8:40
'■ Macon.................. .....11:00 *--
No. 14 —Daily.
Leave Atlanta..............................10:43 p. m.
Arrive Griffin................................12:04 2:00 a. ra.
“ Macon................... a. m
No. 83— Daily.
Leave Griffin............................... 8:80 a. IB. •
“ Newnnn............................10:20 Carrollton.........................11
Arrive
No. 34 —Daily.
Leave “ Carrollton...........................*:20 5:25 p. m
Arrive Griffin...................................7:20
No. 81 —Daily, except Sunday.
Leave Griffin...............................12:01 p- 1 m.
Arrive Carrollton...........................4:55
No. 82 —Daily. Except Sunday.
Leave Carrollton..-...........................5:45 a. m
Arrive Griffin............... 10:35
ts#“For further information relative to tick
et rates, beet routes, schedule, REID, Ac., write to
or call on JNO. L. Agt..
E. T. CHARLTON. G. P. A.. Griffin. Ga.
among
Griffin is a much better
even for pulmonary troubles
Jacksonville or Thomasville.
records of the city in catarrhal
pulmonary cases, far superior
any city in the South, abundantly
this position, while onr
low death rate, and
remarkable exemption from
sorts of disease, will stand as a
for any claim we may make
a winter health resort. It goes
Baying that in the summer
beautiful metropolis of Middle
has nothing beyond it for
and comfort.
Now, to it not strange that we have
never bnilded upon these surpassing
to make Griffin one of
leading summer and winter
in the South—a half way
for the spring and autumn
to Florida, and a steady
of people during the whole
So long as we ha veno modern
hotel to attract them, and in fact
no accommodations to offer
them if they come, of course we can
not expect any visitors nor any
in this way. But with a
modern and capacious and well kept
hotel, not necessarily a very costly
our advantages could not fail
capture a full share of the restless
who are flitting about between
North and South, and from place
to place within our ovrii and adjoin¬
ing states.
If we would once, in good earnest,
begin this work of building n hotel it
would grow mightily upon our
hands.
A New York manufacturer who,
probably, believes in calling a spade
a spade, has named his place of busi¬
ness : Hell Gate Brewery!
Thoy “Meiin Business.”
For many years the manufacturers
of Dr. Sages Catarrh Remedy ha vs
offered, in good faith, $500 reward
for a case of Nasal Catarrh which
they cannot cure. Tho wonderful
Remedy has fairly attained a world
wide reputation. If yon have dull,
heavy headache, obstruction of the
nasal passages, discharges falling
from the head into the throat, some¬
times profuse, watery, and acrid, at
others, thick, tenacious, mucous, pu¬
rulent, bloody and putred; deafness, if hacking there to
ringing in the ears,
or coughing to clear the throat, ex¬
pectoration of offensive matter, to
gether with scabs from ulcers; the
voice being changed and has a nasal
twang; the breath offensive; smell
and taste impaired; sensation of diz¬
ziness, with mental depression, debility, hack¬
ing cough and general nasal eotarrh. you The
are suffering ffOm
more complicated your disease, the
the number and diversity of
Thousands of cases an¬
without manifesting half of
above symptoms, result in con¬
and end in the grave. No
is ho common, more decep¬
and dangerous, less understood,
more unsuccessfully treated by
lAppman's Pyrafuge
u tonic nnd an appetizer and a sub-
cure for chills and fever, dumb
anil malaria, as thousands will
'.-V.
hi*
THE
Xt
Oaeionse and Georgia. lotiiJirr Jvwrtaii'it** , * Wl|^ vtol Sp» w -1
ingCounty, quarter of acre of land, bounded
an
si'iss 2wsa house and lot owned
nk rood-south by Neal, nrnl wc«t by
’ —- nve
R. Cleveland. levied on
»Of n fl fa issued from the
turned over tome.
Ordinary’s Arivert se ue.ns.
i
^T^tetatherefore .lid ! s t £ eha8 1
to cite aB persons concern-
not be dLchargeo ^m of dismission hi. odminfstration on the first
and receive letters
Monday in ApA^fg*. 0rdinary
IHBIBSSS to me for letters ol administration county, on the ]
estate of Matilda Han, late of said
d 1£etoU coneerucd show cause 1»- i
(W persons of Ordinary at my ote n |
fore the
ORDINARY’S OFFICE^paldino Coos
report and filed the same in my office
All persons concerned are notified to file
objections to the same, if any they have,
,
^to^thereforetocite all persons concern-
not be discharged Irom his administration, first
and receive letters of dismission on the
"* r, urtw.
LIPPMANJJBROS., Wholesale Agents, «
vnnnah Ga. juen25d*wlya
Georgia Midland & Gulf HI.
rime Table, Effective Thunday 2nd morn¬
ing, January,
■
-
NORTH BOUND.
Leave Columbus......................... ..1:00 p. m.
Arrive Griffin.............................. ...8:50 “
** Atlanta......................... ...5:45
Leave Columbus..,,..................... ...4:30
Arrive Griffin..., ...7:30
Atlanta...................... .9:80
SOUTH BOUND.
Leave Atlanta....................... m ,7^0a. re
Griffin.......................... .8:28
Arrive Columbus......—......... .. .....11,:25
iA>ave Atlanta ................... :..... 2:15p.m.
•• Griffin.................................. 4:05 “
Arrivive Coin minis....................... .7:00
SUNDAY TRAIN-NORTH BOUND.
Leave Columbus.........:. .... ............7:0(f«. m.
Arrive Griffin.............................'....10:00 “
“ Atlanta............... 11:80
SUNDAY TRAIN-SOUTH BOUND. ,
Leave Atlanta......;....,....................7:00 a. m.
\ Griffin...............................8:28 “
Arrive Columbus...........................11:25 “
V jvertiiemen'.k
TO ADVERTISERS
A lit tot 1000 newspapers ints
8T pljation—FREE. .TES AND SECTIONS wil on ap
To those who want their ad vertising to paj
we can offer no better medium for thorough of
und effective work than the variou sections
onr Select Local List.
GEO. Pr BOW ELL-4. CO.,
Newspaper advertising Bureau,
1 a Spruce street. Now ork
n W.LL PAY YOU
ff von propose going West or North sent, to
w rite to me. I represent the Short Line.
FRED. D. BUSH, l). P. A.
isISdAwftm Itinntn. Oa.
QUHE8 SALT HHEUM, PILES
TETTEB. BURNS
^SCALDS, SORES,
WOUNDS, IN¬
FANT'S SORES
! And CHAPINS,
'SORE NIPPLES
AN INVALU¬
ABLE REMEDY
FOR CATARRH
/rt eCTS Riuaslc Poairivt naueoirra Guanairrxc scu
< * IT on *
For 8afe liy N, R. Drrwiir.
W. X DA V
EW F ttuivs
:i> at}—
a* vis i
sjuk. sssa^r- DAVIS.
CLOTKIttC HOUSE 1
t l Have *r an ... Unusually r mna iiallv Hfliwfatnfns Hnn)teome Rtock Gtoek ()( of a
Suits and Overcoats, 'jm
Beautiful Styles and Fabrics. f 1
HATS! wo“ ONl>3
And , “ J1 lust *"" 1 the sweetc of Cravat#
Call for Charlie Wolcott, or Louis Niles, who w give you
OEO. R. WILCS.
__HHNHY
THE FRRQRS ofYDUTHandNANHjJOG*
EXPERTHCMETRE^ -DDSiTiVE
................. iCURE* !
iry.No^Sl uoiumniu **OORE AMO EES.
“I HEARD A VOICE* IT SAID,
Grai^S,2“ou»S3.| represents the Court in his petition, On y
to re-ord, that he has fully J
fPe<l and entered on Thrash estate.
administered Jos. s all
This is therefore to cite pereoM con-
ce-ned, kindred and creditors,to show eanre
if any they can, why said execntor should
not be disoharged from his administration,
and receive letters of dismission on the first
/“kBDINARY’S O OFFICE-Spaldino Coun
ty, Geobgia. January 6th. 189<K—T. J.
Brooks, trustee for Josephine Brooks, Ida Adair, L- Kobt. ®TP N. ks
Brooks, Joseph L.
and Epsev T. ^iteon, has trusteeship. applied for letters
of dismission from Kis
Let all persons concerned enow cause be-
fore the Court ol Ordinary, attny office in
Griffin, on the flrstMonday in February next,
by ten o’clock a. m.. why such letters
* h nOtbe rw HAMMOND. Ordinarv
83.00
/ \RDINABY’S OFFICE.—Spalotng Cow
VXty, V/ TY, Geobgia. UKOKUIA. Jan. j»u. 6th, vwj 1890.—J. M. v*
Wells, Weilsi ’ Administrator appiies o» estate sell ” o! Dorcas lot lot wild wild x.
— - for * leave to - one —e
land in Lumpkin county, at public or < private
Let all persons concerned show cause be¬
fore the Court of Ordinary at my office in
Griffin, on the first Monday in February
next, by ten o’clock a. m., why such applica¬
tion should not be granted. HAMMOND, Ordinary.
$3.00. E. W.
EOBGIA—Spalding County.—W hereas,
VX Mary A. Bnrdett, administratrix ol
Presley Bordett. represents to the Court
in her petition, duly filed and entered on rec¬
ord, that she has fully administered Presley
Bartlett’s estate. oil
This is therefore to cite persons
ad, kindred and creditor*, to show cause,
any they can, why said odministratnxrtould
uot be discharged from her administration
and receive letters of diHmieeion on the
Monday in April E. W. 1890. HAMMOND. Ordinary
$6 15.*
TO WEAK MEN
Big O has given onlvsr
sal satisfaction In the
i cure of Gonorrhoea and
I Gleet. 1 prescribe It and
feel safe In recommend¬
ing It to all luOtarere.
J. 8TOXEB, EJ>w
Decatur, III.
PB-ICS.E1.G*.
Sold by Druggist*.
FoaekLB
i.rep A
___(mhjm mh
slat oBMeaa makt am oI
iSrein.'AH rea tei to Soto
[ttdllMMiiwMm. duller Hi* be-
“ “ "
v
unnatural in its appetite
dve have etronff indicatioae
core for thi* it B.
i
poke Boot iuh! pot®®^feuu»)
POSITIVE CUBES OP ALL POEMS AJTO STAGES OF
- MAKES
P. P. P. iplen-1 yon win regetn flesh and strength.
Physicians endorse •• e endelldiseeee* resulting
oombtnstion, *nd prescribe it with I Weste of energy
did aUl from oyertezing the system are cured by
grest ssttsfcotion for the cures at of P«
forms end stags* of Primary. Secondary j thO UB6
Syphilis. Syphilitic Bhou- Ladies whose ryiteme are poisoned end
and Tertiary I whose blood is In an Impure condttlondne
mstlsm, ScrofUiou* Oo» end Sores, tomenstrael irregnlerlttss erepecuMsrty
Olaadnier Swellings, Bheumatom, Kill-1 benefited by the wonderful tonic and
ney Oompleints. old Chronic Ulcers that j
8 YPHIL 1 SI SCROFULA
have resisted ill treetment, Oetsrrh, Shin blood cleansing properties of P. P. P.
D y—»—.. Chronic Femalo Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and P ota s s i um
»n« »rr .
fvo qpUints. Mercurisl Poison, Tstte.. Bold by all Druggists.
| Bcsldheed, etc., etc. un>SAX mmom h ProprtetsMrs,
P. P. P. a a powerful tonic and an
excellent appitlzar. building np the wholesale Dmrestavs.
system Eendteel rapidly. If yo* ere week end Lippmsn Block, SAVAXXAB, GA.
tadly try P. P. P. end
I rheumatism
| ..Jew AdverlUwmts.
POIHTERS.”gg Tg5
rartUsmleer
r mi s p ar g e r s <«.*. ••
•sad k s s l s l ogse of sl.soieg.
PARKER'S BALSAM u
HAIR and beautifies the hair,
es growth.
tes a luxuriant Grey
rer Fails to Rasters Color,
lair to Its Vosthful falling
rrente Pandraff and hair
M^ndLSlJIOatteTigggte ^ m
CHICHESTER'S ENGLI8H
PENNYROYAL Diamond PILLS. Brand.
Rod Cross
The only tellable Hill for rale. Safe a«4
•ore. Ladle?* auk Driiffflfit for the 1)1 o-
uond lJruifl, in red hmuJUc boxra, raalcd
with (stamp*) blue ribbon. for particular* Tukeno and other. **ltetlef Beadle, far
Chemical Ladles,* ir ‘ lrtter ' h * malt yam * Pa T €r -
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Eclectic Magazine
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